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Tti~<br />

r=ACULT~<br />

..


HEPNER<br />

OUTCALT<br />

O PLETI '6 his first year as the<br />

C ?resident of San Diego State<br />

college, Wal er R. Hepner, commands<br />

he good will and respect ~f<br />

the entire college because of his<br />

grea cepecity for friendship, tireless<br />

store of en husiasm, and unusual<br />

grasp of educational problems. As a<br />

climax to untiring efforts of the last<br />

administration, regional status wa,s<br />

secured early in he year, and PresIdent<br />

Hepner's energies have been<br />

direc rng the progress of the coll~ge<br />

toward fuller development in meeting<br />

the educational needs of this community.<br />

'RVING E. Outcalt, Vice-President,<br />

and head of the English department,<br />

has, in the twenty-four years he has<br />

been at State college, combined<br />

scholarship with such a feeling for the<br />

beautiful and significant in literature<br />

and life that the classes he conducts<br />

are always crowded. His keen appreciation<br />

of the humorous, his friendliness<br />

and alertness of mind have<br />

made him one of the best loved<br />

members of the faculty. State's high<br />

cultural standards are largely due to<br />

the influence he has exerted as an<br />

educator and in distinguished literary<br />

achievements of his own.<br />

II


ARTHUR G. Peterson, Dean of<br />

Liberal Arts and Professor of<br />

Economics. by his knowledge of vocational<br />

problems, together with the<br />

keen personal interest he takes in the<br />

s udents who come to him for advice,<br />

has made it possible for him to guide<br />

many students into worthwhile acivi<br />

ies. He is one of the most<br />

enthusiastic workers in extra-curricular<br />

activities.<br />

MARY Irwin McMullen, combines<br />

great personal charm with an<br />

understanding of college problems<br />

inherent in her duties as Dean of Women.<br />

Her guiding spirit has insured<br />

the success of many campus activities.<br />

Her leadership when attending<br />

State college, and her excellent<br />

service as placement secretary has<br />

been continued by her competent<br />

guidance of student affairs in her<br />

present position.<br />

A. G. PETERSON<br />

McMULLEN<br />

CHARL~S E. Peterson, in his dual<br />

capacity as Dean of Men and<br />

track co~ch, displays in both, the<br />

cheery disposition and willingness to<br />

help others that has endeared h' t<br />

th t' rrn 0<br />

th<br />

e en Ire student body<br />

.<br />

H'<br />

e ISone<br />

f<br />

0<br />

e fmost energetic and tireless worker~..<br />

or State, and has done much '<br />

gaining th In<br />

e CO-operation f if<br />

for th II 0 CI rzens<br />

e co ege.<br />

AULT<br />

JESSE W. Ault, Dean and Professor<br />

of Education, is largely responsible<br />

for the high standards maintained<br />

by San Diego State college<br />

in the field of education. His thorough<br />

and comprehensive understanding of<br />

modern educational methods has<br />

enabled him in his capacity as advisor<br />

to teachers in training to contribute<br />

service of inestimable worth.<br />

I)<br />

C. E. PETERSON<br />

12


Walter R. Hepner, A.M.<br />

President<br />

Irving E. Outcalt,<br />

M.A.<br />

Vice-President and Professor of English<br />

J. W. Ault, M.A.<br />

Dean and Professor of Education<br />

Arthur G. Peterson,<br />

M.A.<br />

Dean of Liberal Arts, ex-officio in general charge<br />

of lower division studies, Professor of Economics<br />

Charles E. Peterson,<br />

A.B.<br />

Dean of Men and Associate Professor of Physical<br />

Education and Director of Physical Educe ion for<br />

Men<br />

Mary Irwin McMullen,<br />

A.B.<br />

Dean of Women and Placement Secretary aoJ<br />

Associate Professor of Educational Guidance<br />

John R. Adams,<br />

M.A.<br />

Associate Professor of English<br />

Georgia<br />

C. Amsden<br />

Associate Professor of Commerce<br />

Guinivere Kotter Bacon, M.A.<br />

Training Supervisor and Associate Professor 01<br />

Education.<br />

O. W. Baird, M.A.<br />

Professor of Physics<br />

Fred Beidleman, B.Mus.<br />

Associate Professor of Music<br />

Gertrude Sumption Bell, M.A.<br />

Professor of Psychology<br />

Marjorie Kelly Borsum, M.A.<br />

Assistant Professor of Art<br />

Baylor Brooks, B.A.<br />

Assista nt Professor of Geology<br />

Elizabeth McPike Brown, Ph.D<br />

Assistant Professor of French<br />

Leslie P. Brown, Ph.D.<br />

Professor of French and S . h<br />

panlS<br />

Leo Blakely Calland M S<br />

Assistant Professor ~f PhY~ical<br />

Roy E. Cameron Ph 0<br />

Professor of Ec~nom'ics'<br />

Vinnie B. Clark, A.B.<br />

Associate Professor of G h<br />

eograp y<br />

Education<br />

Faculty<br />

Ka herine E. Corbett. AM.<br />

TralO109 Supervisor and Associate Professor of<br />

Educe Ion<br />

8mer Allen Messner, M.A<br />

Ass,stant Prof ssor of Ch mistry<br />

Chesney Rudolph Moe, M.A.<br />

Ass,s an Prof ssor of Physrcs<br />

Abrehern P. Nesetir, Ph.D.<br />

Professor of History<br />

Jernes Ensign Crouch. M.S.<br />

Assis lin PIO essor of Biology William L. Nide. M.A.<br />

Professor of Educehon, Sup rv.sor of Public<br />

School Practice Teaching<br />

Erby Ches er Depu y, Ph.D.<br />

ASSOClll e Professor of Educa ion and Principal<br />

o T rlllOing Sc 001 Lena Patterson, M.A.<br />

Associete Professor of Art<br />

Florence L. Srm h Dickhaut, M.A<br />

Pro essor of EnSlis<br />

Jo n or imer Gleason. M.A<br />

Assls Professor of II hema ICS<br />

orris Hubberd Gross, A.B.<br />

Direc or 0 A le ICS lind Associete Professor of<br />

p YSlclIl Educe Ion<br />

lise Haman<br />

I 5 rue 0'<br />

In<br />

, B.A.<br />

Edi h C. Hammac , B.A<br />

Ttl In9 Sup ""SO, cd seele e Professor of<br />

Edue Ion<br />

Raymond Carver Perry, Ed.D.<br />

ASSistant Professor of Education<br />

Paul Lewis Pfaff, B.A.<br />

Instructor in English<br />

Walter T. Phillips, M.A<br />

ASSOCiate Professor of French and Spanish<br />

Mabel M. Richards, AM.<br />

Training Supervisor and Associate Professor of<br />

Education<br />

Donald James Robertson, AB.<br />

Instructor in Commerce<br />

Dudley H. Robinson, M.S.<br />

ASSOCiate Professor of Chemistry<br />

Doro y R. H rve.y, M.A.<br />

P of ssor of Bo ony Spencer L. Rogers, A.M.<br />

Assistant Professor of Anthropology<br />

Rober D. H rwood, Ph.D.<br />

P of ssor 0 Zoology<br />

Marion Lyon Schwob, M.S.<br />

Associate Professor of Physical Education and<br />

Acting Director of Physical Education for Women<br />

Evere Gee. J c son, A.B.<br />

noel e Pro essor of A,<br />

Florence I. Shafer, AB.<br />

Instructor in Physical Education<br />

Myr Ie Elizabe h Johnson, Ph.D.<br />

Pro ssor of Zoology<br />

Sybil Eliza Jones. M.L.<br />

5S'S n P,ofuso' of English<br />

Joseph Sumner eeney, Ph.D.<br />

Instrue or I English<br />

Genevieve Kelly, A.<br />

Ins ,ue 0' III Soc ology<br />

Charles B. Leonard. Ph.D.<br />

P,ofesso, of His 0''1'<br />

Lotin<br />

W. T. Skilling, M.S.<br />

Professor of Astronomy<br />

Charles Roberts Smith, A.B.<br />

Instrudor in Physical Education<br />

L. Deborah Smith, A.M.<br />

ASSOCiate Professor of Music<br />

Marian Peek Smoor, A.M.<br />

Training Supervisor and Associate Professor of<br />

Education<br />

Christine Springston, B.M.<br />

Associate Professor of Music<br />

Harry C. Steinmetz, A.M.<br />

Associate Professor of Psychology and Philosophy<br />

Lewis B. Lesley. Ph.D.<br />

Professor of Hlsto,y John Paul Stone, M.S.<br />

George R. Livingston. M.A.<br />

....ssocla e P,ofessor of M Ihcmlllrcs<br />

Head Lib,arian and As,ociate Professor of library<br />

Instruction<br />

Alvena Suhl Storm, M.A.<br />

Associet Profes or of G ogrophy<br />

Mabel Coy Trail, M.A.<br />

Instructor In English<br />

Franklin D. Walker, Ph.D.<br />

Plof~ssor of ngllsh<br />

Hilde M ri Kr mer Willker, M.A.<br />

Instructor to G, rmon<br />

Curtis R ynolds Walling, E.!:.<br />

ASSI~t~nt Professor of Mllth, matics and Indus<br />

trial Arts<br />

Dorothy E. Wright, R. N.; M.A.<br />

Assiste nt Prof ssor of H olth end Hygi Me<br />

W. H. Wright, M.A.<br />

ASSOCiate Prof S50r of Commerce<br />

ASSOCIATE MEMBERS OF THE<br />

FACULTY<br />

Floyd<br />

Dean<br />

Adams<br />

Instructor in Industriol Educotion<br />

Blake<br />

Instructor in Meteorology<br />

Marian Evans, B.S.<br />

Ir.struetor in Education<br />

Jerome J. Greene, M.E. in E.E.<br />

Instructor in Physics lind Mathematics<br />

Donal<br />

Hord<br />

Instructor in Art<br />

Edwin Athelstan<br />

Ross, A.B.<br />

Assistant Professor of lndustriel Education<br />

Will J. Stanton,<br />

Ll.B.<br />

Assistant Professor of Law<br />

Frank M. Watenpaugh, M.A.<br />

Instructor in Commerce<br />

ASSISTANTS<br />

Althur James O. Anderson, AM.<br />

English<br />

Muriel Bennett, B.A<br />

Physical Education<br />

Virginia E. Culver, A.B.<br />

Training School<br />

Robert S. Hoard, A.B.<br />

Zoology<br />

John D. Wimmer, M.A.<br />

History<br />

14<br />

15


Representative Aztecs<br />

THE committee for the sele~tion of Representative A:tecs announ~es<br />

that on the basis of service, loyalty, and scholarship the following<br />

have been chosen:<br />

I. Alfred Alexander<br />

2. Dorothy Armstrong<br />

3. Phillys Barker<br />

4. Barney Carman<br />

5. Don Clarkson<br />

6. Barbara Freeman<br />

7. Ernest Hom<br />

8. Abbie Johnson<br />

9. Mary Lindley<br />

10. John Tyers<br />

Signed,<br />

Mary McMullen<br />

C. E. Peterson<br />

Doris Gledhill<br />

Chloris Kersten<br />

Eugene Kendall<br />

Associated Students' Honor Award Certificates<br />

Barbura<br />

Freeman<br />

GOVERNMENT<br />

Abbie Johnson Don Clarkson<br />

JOURNALISM<br />

Alfred Alexander<br />

DRAMATICS<br />

Anna Just<br />

DEBATE<br />

Ernest Hom<br />

Beatrice Schnugg<br />

James Fisher<br />

Gladys Fleiss<br />

MUSIC<br />

TREBLE CLEF<br />

MEN'S GLEE CLUB<br />

Kenneth Hensell John Tyers<br />

, ORCHESTRA<br />

Susan Spaff d R b .<br />

or 0 ert Hamilton<br />

Frederic<br />

Helen<br />

Shiveley<br />

Sanders<br />

Viola<br />

Vogt<br />

John<br />

Butler<br />

FOOTBALL<br />

Barney Carman Ch I L aresee AI Churchman<br />

16


The Class<br />

of '36<br />

WALTER HARLI • "lightning"<br />

the football teams<br />

which he managed for two<br />

years called him. This is<br />

ihe fastest action picture<br />

we could get of him. • •<br />

DOROTHY ADAIR<br />

A. B.• Zoology<br />

Transferred from Adelp~i<br />

College; Phi Sigma Xi; Reedrunners;<br />

Westminster Club.<br />

DOROTHEA BATES<br />

A. B., Elem. Jr. Hi-English<br />

BETTY BELL<br />

A. B., Art<br />

Art Guild; Sh n Yo; Sl' P,<br />

d. nt Int r Soronty Council 3:<br />

cr S. tary J. A.W.S.<br />

INA MARIE BODIE<br />

A. B., Elcm. & Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

T,omf no-d from VIIII


JONATHAN T. BUCHANAN<br />

A. B., Zoology<br />

Transferred from Pacific Union<br />

and University of California,<br />

Berkeley.<br />

ABBIE JOHNSON, one f<br />

Theta Chi's more enthusia~.<br />

tic politicians. She brings<br />

success to any of her in.<br />

terests, which seem to be<br />

centered just now, on a<br />

prominent singer. Hi there<br />

John. .. .. " '<br />

CHARLES "ICE HOUSE"<br />

WILSON, once voted the<br />

most beautiful member of<br />

the football team by a<br />

delegation of feminine experts.<br />

It is rumored that he<br />

was an Omega Xi.<br />

MARJORIE DAISY FLETCHER<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Romanc Lan.<br />

EI Clu A7t~ca: L C rei<br />

Franc"ls; W tminst r Clu :<br />

Juniof Wom n' Athl tic R p-<br />

r s ntetlv ; S nier Announc •<br />

m nl Challmlln.<br />

MRS. G. T. BURCHARD<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Social Science<br />

Gamma Phi Zeta.<br />

CATHERINE ELLEN FOWLER<br />

A. B., Ec:onomic:s<br />

i Gamma Mu; Pi Phi p-<br />

silon: Ph, Sigmll Nu.<br />

STANLEY BURNE JR.<br />

A. B., Art<br />

Omega Xi; Treasurer AM.S.<br />

4; Baseball I, 2, 3, 4; Basketball<br />

I; Football 2, 3.<br />

LOIS MOORE CHATTERLEY<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Romance Lan.<br />

Alpha Mu Gamma; Kappa<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta Pi; EI Club Azteca; Le<br />

Cercle Francais.<br />

JEAN DAVIES<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-English<br />

Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi.<br />

BARBARA FREEMAN<br />

A. B., PhYlic:al Education<br />

Cop and Gown; C tz ; Skull<br />

and Dagg r; Ph, Sigma Nu;<br />

Physical Education Club; S c-<br />

r t"ry A. S. B. 3; Vic 'Pr sid nt<br />

A. S. B. f; Vic ·Pr sid nt W.<br />

A. A. 4; S cr tery Junior Closs;<br />

Vic Pr sid nt S nior C I a s $:<br />

"H ro Worship".<br />

JOHN DAVID BUTLER<br />

A. B., Economics<br />

Oceotl; Tau Sigma; Kappa<br />

Phi Sigma; Lettermen's Club;<br />

Commissioner of Finance 4;<br />

Vice-President A.M.S. 3; Basketbell<br />

3; Football 2, 3, 4.<br />

MARJORIE G. CHILCOTT<br />

A. B., English<br />

Alpha Mu Gamma; Gamma<br />

Psi; Le Cercle Francais; Westmonster<br />

Club.<br />

WILLIAM C. deLANNOY<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-English<br />

Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi; Skull and<br />

Dogger; Maskers; One-Act Ploy<br />

Tournament 1,2,3.4; "As You<br />

like It" 2; "Twelfth Night" 3;<br />

Class Play I, 2; Assembly<br />

Committee 4.<br />

JOHN ALBERT GORDON JR.<br />

A. B., Chemiltry<br />

Lernbde <strong>Del</strong>ta L e m b do;<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta PI Bete:<br />

ALICE F. CARAGHER<br />

A. B., Physical Education Sp.<br />

Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi; Cetza; P. E.<br />

C I u b: Roadrunners; Hockey;<br />

Tennis; Swimming.<br />

DON CLARKSON<br />

A. B.• Jr. Hi-Social Science<br />

Blue Key; Skull and Dagge;;<br />

Kappa Phi Sigma; Lettermen s<br />

Club' President AM. S. 3;<br />

President A. S. B. 4; "Mad<br />

Hopes"; "Hamlet"; "Twelfth<br />

ight"; Basketball 2, 3, 4,<br />

Captain 4; Baseball 2, 3.<br />

LOIS DEMING<br />

A. B., Art<br />

Transferred from Hoi m by<br />

College; Epsilon Pi Theta.<br />

DE LAWRENCE GOSET<br />

A. B., Commerce<br />

BERNARD RALPH CARMAN<br />

A. B., Commerce<br />

Transferred from Virginia J.<br />

C.; Blue Key; Tau Sigma'<br />

Lettermen's Club; 5 t u den;<br />

Council 3; President AM.S. 4'<br />

Inter-Fraternity Council 3 4:<br />

Football 2, 3, 4. "<br />

MARGARET COLE<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Foreign Lan.<br />

EI Club Artece : Amotl.<br />

RENE DUPREE<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Physical Ed.<br />

Blue Key; Oceotl; Leitermen's<br />

Club; Student Council<br />

2, 3, 4; Football I, 3; Track<br />

2, 3, 4.<br />

JANE ELIZABETH GREEN<br />

A. B.-English<br />

Trensferred from Brawley J.<br />

Co; Keppe Theta; Amotl.<br />

EDITH ELIZABETH CARNE<br />

A. B., Geography<br />

EI Chuckawallas;<br />

Club Azteca. Roadrunners'<br />

'<br />

EMELINE FRANCES CRANE<br />

A • B., Music 5<br />

Treble Clef I, 2, 3, 4, .<br />

JOHN JOSEPH DYSON<br />

A. B., Chemistry<br />

<strong>Del</strong> Sud oeste Distribution<br />

Manager 3; Assistant Football<br />

Manager 2; Basketball Manager<br />

4.<br />

MRS. ARLINE HAMILTON<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Soc;,,1 Science<br />

Skull and Dogger; Kappa<br />

Theta.<br />

J 0 H.N T Y E R S, State's<br />

operatic star of many successes,<br />

.attributes his outs<br />

"S<br />

tan d in g<br />

ec<br />

hi<br />

,evement in<br />

weethearts" to the ver<br />

ab!e coaching of a golde~<br />

haired you n g lady who<br />

knows how. » " "<br />

20<br />

G. ELIZABETH CRJDGE<br />

A B Elem.- Arl<br />

Tau Z~ta"Rho; Art Guild.<br />

THELMA CURTIS<br />

H' Rom Lan.<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. '-. Kapp~<br />

Alpha Mu Gamma,<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta Pi; EI Club Azteca.<br />

JAMES BOWMAN FISHER<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Music<br />

Transferred from EI Centro<br />

J. C.; Glee Club 3; Orchestra<br />

2; Glee Club Accompanist 3,<br />

4, 5; Santa Barbara All College<br />

Orchestra I.<br />

GLADYS BLANCHE FLEISS<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-History<br />

Transferred from Santa Barbara<br />

State; Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi;<br />

Orchestra 2, 3, 4.<br />

MARIAN STOOKE: one of<br />

the reasons that Phi Sigma<br />

Nu is tops in scholarship.<br />

She also manages to be<br />

one of the more lady.like<br />

politicians.<br />

2/


RODERT S. HAMILTON JR.<br />

A. D., History<br />

lntemetionel Relotions Club;<br />

Psychology Club; Assistent in<br />

History; All Southern Californie<br />

Symphony Orchestre 2, 3;<br />

Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Orchestra<br />

I, 2, 3, 4; Assistont Concert<br />

Master 3; "Desert Song" 3;<br />

"Sweethearts" 4; Shakespeare<br />

2.<br />

WALTER VERNE HARLIN<br />

A. D., Economics<br />

Tau S i 9 m a; Lettermen's<br />

Club; Press Club; <strong>Del</strong> Sudoeste<br />

3, 4; Football Manager 3, 4.<br />

H A Z E L SCOFIELD, carrying<br />

out the traditions of<br />

Alpha Mu Gamma and Mu<br />

Sigma Pi, pounds the piano<br />

energetically, plays a mean<br />

string bass in the orchestra,<br />

sings with Treble Clef, and<br />

is a linguist of no mea n<br />

ability.<br />

DON "C A SAN 0 V A"<br />

CLARKSON, in true Algerian<br />

manner. rose from<br />

bookstore janitor to become<br />

A. S. D. prexy by an<br />

overwhelming majority. being<br />

the only one in the<br />

race, thus carrying out the<br />

K"ppa Phi Sigma tradition'.<br />

Incidentally we believe that<br />

Don is of Russian descent<br />

due to his five year plan,<br />

he hopes.<br />

CHARLES ROLLINS LEE<br />

A. B., Physical Education<br />

Tau 0 Ita Chi; L tterrnen's<br />

Club; Football 2, 3, 4; Baseball;<br />

Tennis; Golf; Track 3, 4.<br />

ERNEST R. LILJEGREN<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-History<br />

Gamma Psi; Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi.<br />

SAMUEL GEORGE HARTER<br />

A. D., Zoology<br />

Phi Sigmo Xi.<br />

KENNETH COVER HENSELL<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Zoology<br />

Alpha Phi Omega; G lee<br />

Club I, 2, 3, 4.<br />

ABBIE MARIE JOHNSON<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

Cap lind Gown; Skull and<br />

Dagger; Pi Phi Epsilon; Theta<br />

Chi; Student Council I, 2, 3.<br />

4; Vice-President A. S. B. 3;<br />

Chairman Assembly Committee<br />

2; Rally Committee 4;<br />

"The Enemy" 2; "Our American<br />

Cousin" 2.<br />

MARIE LUCILLE LINDLEY<br />

A. D., Elem. & Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

Cap and Gown; Keppe<br />

<strong>Del</strong>te Pi; Roadrunners; Social<br />

Committee 3; Student Council<br />

4.<br />

FRANCES HATHAWAY<br />

A. D., English<br />

Transferred from Trinity College;<br />

Phi Sigma Nu.<br />

OLIVE HOCKADAY<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-English<br />

Cap and Gown; Pendragon;<br />

Skull and Dagger; Stu den t<br />

Drama Guild; Maskers; Theatre<br />

Guild; One-Act Play Tournament-Tragedy<br />

Cup 3; Spring<br />

Concert 2; "Fashions" 4.<br />

DONALD E. JOHNSON<br />

A. B., Mathematics<br />

Gamma Psi; Eta 0 meg a<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta; Men's Glee 4.<br />

JOHN EDWARD LOWRY<br />

A. B., Economics<br />

Tau Sigma; Band I, 2, 3, 4;<br />

Orchestra I, 2; Basketball I.<br />

MARY HATHAWAY<br />

A. D., Social Science<br />

Phi Sigma Nu.<br />

ERNEST F. HOM<br />

A. B., Economics<br />

Alpha Mu Gamma; Tau Sigma;<br />

Toastmasters; 0 e bat e<br />

Team 2, 3, 4.<br />

RICHARD KAWAGISHI<br />

A. B., English<br />

Aztec Japanese Club.<br />

PAULINE LUKENS<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

Kappa Theta.<br />

EDWARD JOY HAWKEN<br />

A. D., History<br />

Tau Sigma; International Relations<br />

Club.<br />

MARY HELEN HUEY<br />

A. B.• English<br />

Tronsferred from Brawley J.<br />

c.<br />

MRS. BETTY KING<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

AGNES PATRICIA LYNCH<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

Skull and Dagger; Maskers;<br />

Gamma Phi Zeta; Roadrunners.<br />

LAURENCE CLEMENT HEAD<br />

A. D., Physical Education<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta Pi Beta; Footba II I'<br />

Track I, 2, 3, 4; Cross Coun:<br />

try 2, 3, 4.<br />

MARY V. HUTCHINSON<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-English<br />

Transferred from Chaffey J.<br />

C.<br />

DANIEL W. LANGSTON<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

Tau Sigma; Eta 0 meg a<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta.<br />

REAGAN E. McCHRISTY<br />

A. B., Chemistry<br />

Lambda <strong>Del</strong>ta Lambda.<br />

JAMES FISHER, as one<br />

~an s~~, rattles not the<br />

bones but the "ivories".<br />

His timely chords have covered<br />

many discords. Ask<br />

the Men's Glee Club. • "<br />

22<br />

JAMES M. H. HUTTON<br />

A. B.• Economics<br />

Tau Sigma; Press Club;<br />

Toastmasters Club; Secretary,<br />

Senior Class 4; <strong>Del</strong> Sudo~ste<br />

3,4; Glee Club 2,3; Marrhinq<br />

Unit 3; "One Mad Night" 4;<br />

"Tempest" 4.<br />

ELIZABETH JENKINS<br />

A. B•• Elem. & Jr. Hi-Gen. Sci.<br />

Phi Sigma Xi; Phi Sigma Nu,<br />

WILLIAM LARS LARSON<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Physical Ed.<br />

Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi; Lettermen's<br />

Club; Track I, 2, 3, 4; Basketball<br />

4; Baseball 2, ,3 4; Captain<br />

4.<br />

ANTOINETTE M. LAYCOCK<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-History<br />

Epsilon Pi Theta.<br />

MARJORIE FLETCHER, one<br />

of State's versatile linguists,<br />

is often busily engaged in<br />

athletic activities. She is<br />

interested in dogs, and ilt<br />

present is concentrating on<br />

a "DEVil DOG". dawgonnit,<br />

Marjorie. "<br />

23


JEAN MOORE<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

Cop and Gown.<br />

CATHERINE F 0 W L E R<br />

quiet, unassuming, yet bear:<br />

ing out the Phi Sigma Nu<br />

reputation of beauty plus<br />

brains, is the last survivor<br />

of Pi Gamma Mu. Mother.<br />

ing little Campfire girls is<br />

her particular hobby. .. ..<br />

VIRGINIA URBANI is perfectly<br />

at home speaking<br />

French, Spanish, Italian, as<br />

well as her native English.<br />

Winning foreign essay contests<br />

is easy for her. She is<br />

president of l.e C ire I e<br />

Francais and Alpha Mu<br />

Gamma.<br />

FREDERIC ALLAN SANDERS<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Geography<br />

Amotl; Roadrunn rs; Westrmnst<br />

r Club; M n's Glee 2,<br />

3, 4.<br />

VIRGINIA MORRISON<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

Phi Sigma Nu.<br />

ELMER LE ROY SCHICK<br />

A. B., Commerce<br />

Tau Sigma; D Ito Pi Bete.<br />

RUTH FRANCIS MURPHY<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

Kappa Theta.<br />

HAROLD LYNN PHILLIPS<br />

A. B., English<br />

Aztec Bible Club.<br />

RUTH KITIREDGE RAUSCH<br />

A. B., Social Science<br />

HAZEL ADELE SCOFIELD<br />

A. B., Elem.-Music Special<br />

Alpho Mu Gamma; Mu Sigmil<br />

Pi; Le Cercle Frenceis:<br />

Treble Clef 3, 4; Orchestre I.<br />

HOWARD NIEDERMAN<br />

A. B., Chemistry<br />

WALTER PHILLIPS<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-Art<br />

ROBERTA RHYNE<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

Transferred from U. C. L. A.<br />

HELEN SHIVELY<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

Treble Clef.<br />

MONTGOMERY NUTIER<br />

A. B., Physical Education Sp.<br />

Transferred from Riverside J.<br />

C.; Lettermen's Club; Track 3<br />

4. '<br />

ROBERT N. POLLARD<br />

A. B., Physical Education<br />

Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi; Track I, 2,<br />

3, 4.<br />

JANET ROBERTS<br />

A. B., Economics<br />

Pi Phi Epsilon.<br />

ELINOR SOULE<br />

A. B., Junior High-Art<br />

Keppe <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi; Art Guild;<br />

Roadrunners.<br />

JOHN RAYMOND O'MARA<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Physical Ed.<br />

Transferred from Santa Ana<br />

J. C.; Baseball I; Football 2<br />

3, 4. '<br />

ELIZABETH I. POWELSON<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

Transferred from EI Centro<br />

J. C.; Westminster Club; Y.<br />

W. C. A.; Marching Unit 3.<br />

ELEANOR G. ROBYN<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-French<br />

Cetze : Kappa The t a; Le<br />

Cercle Francais.<br />

SUSAN SPAFFORD<br />

A. B., Geography<br />

Roadrunners; Orchestra.<br />

Tau<br />

JOE J. PARRIS<br />

A. B., Commerce<br />

Sigma.<br />

DORIS RAND PRITCHARD<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-English<br />

Transferred fro m Northern<br />

Illinois State Teachers & Bill·<br />

ings Poly; College Y; Westminster;<br />

<strong>Del</strong> Sudoeste 4.<br />

JOSEPHINE RODRIGUEZ<br />

A. B., Romance Languages<br />

EI Club Azteca.<br />

DWIGHT STANFORD<br />

A. B., History<br />

Tau Sigma; Phi Lambda Xi;<br />

Weselyan Club.<br />

GEORGE WALTON, when<br />

not busy breaking records<br />

or his leg on his motor.<br />

cycle, fences and makes his<br />

accordion talk. He seems to<br />

~ave f?und, in his putter.<br />

,ng w,th chemicals, the<br />

secre~ of perpetual youth.<br />

He IS often mistaken for<br />

one of the training<br />

children. .. ..<br />

school<br />

24<br />

MARGARET P. QUINNELLY<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci. and Art<br />

Art Guild; Kappa Theta.<br />

HENRIEITA ANN RAU<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-History<br />

Cetza; Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi.<br />

WILLIAM J. ROSSI<br />

A. B., History<br />

HELEN RUMSEY<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

Transferred from Central J.<br />

C.<br />

ALB R A D T doesn't of<br />

course, feel in this mood<br />

all the time. He is, perhaps,<br />

the most helpful and able<br />

man in State drama as well<br />

as being one of its more<br />

permanent members. .. »<br />

25


THOMAS ARCHIE STONE<br />

A. B., History<br />

Blue Key: Oceotl; Phi Lambda<br />

Xi; Photophans; Westmin<br />

ster: Freshman Handbook 3;<br />

Student Council 2, 3; Finance<br />

Board 3; Secretary A. M. S. 3;<br />

Football I; Track I.<br />

MARION L. STOOKE<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

Cap and Gown; Phi Sigma<br />

Nu; Comr.nittee Chairman A.<br />

W. S. Board 3; President A.<br />

W. S. 4.<br />

RENE DUPREE, one of<br />

State's better milers. He is<br />

one of the reasons for the<br />

popularity of limes and<br />

lemons in the cafe, so the<br />

girls think. Student government,<br />

drama, and being<br />

well liked are his avocations.<br />

JOE PARRIS, one of the<br />

leading lawn loungers and<br />

campus playboys, will bet<br />

on almost anything if given<br />

the proper odds. L10yds is<br />

said to be bargaining for<br />

him.<br />

PHILLYS WILCOX<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

C tze : W 0 men's Physical<br />

Education Club.<br />

KATHRYN ROSE WILLIS<br />

A. B. Elem.-Phy. Ed.<br />

Cetza: Wom n's Physical Education<br />

Club.<br />

MARJORIE STOSE<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Social Science<br />

Cap and Gown; Sigma Pi<br />

Theta; A. W. S. Board 3;<br />

Treble Clef 3, 4.<br />

HELENA THOMPSON<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

FRANCIS ROSE VOSBURGH<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Social Science<br />

Maskers; Pendragon; Skull<br />

and Dog g e r: One-Act Play<br />

Tournoment I, 3; Sophomore<br />

Ploy 2; Christmas Ploy 3; Orig<br />

inal One-Acts 3; Revivol 0 nd<br />

Shakespeare 3.<br />

CHARLES L. WILSON<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-General Science<br />

Omega Xi; Lett rmen's Club;<br />

Football I, 2, 3, 4; Basketball<br />

2, 3,4; Track 1,2.<br />

MARY M. SWARNER<br />

A. B., Art<br />

Cetze: Art Guild; Tau Zeta<br />

Rho.<br />

CHARLES THURMOND<br />

A. B., Chemistry<br />

GEORGE WALTON<br />

A. B., Chemistry<br />

Lambda <strong>Del</strong>ta Lam b d a;<br />

Fencing Club; Aztec Follies I;<br />

"Romeo and Juliet"; Manager<br />

of Fencing Team 2, 3; Fencing<br />

Team 3, 4; Foils Squad 3, 4.<br />

TED WILSON<br />

A. B., Physical Education<br />

Kappa Phi Sigma; Lettermen's<br />

Club; Football I, 2, 3,<br />

4; Wrestling I, 2, 3, 4; "R. U.<br />

R." 2.<br />

EDNA EVELYN SWINK<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

Transferred from University<br />

of Redlands.<br />

WILLIAM R. TINKER<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Economics<br />

Blue Key; Tau Sigma; l.ett<br />

rrmens Club; Senior Class<br />

President 4; Yell King 3.<br />

GLENN A. WARREN<br />

A. B., Physical Education<br />

Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi; Lettermen's<br />

Club; Baseball 2, 3, 4; Basketball<br />

2; Football 2, 3, 4; Track<br />

3, 4.<br />

MARY KATHERINE WING<br />

A. B., Geography<br />

Roadrunners.<br />

MAYDE SYKES<br />

A. B., Elementary<br />

HOWARD B. TURRENTINE<br />

A. B., Economics<br />

Blue Key; Kappa Phi Sigma;<br />

Inter - Fraternity Presided 4;<br />

Treasurer Senior Class 4.<br />

CATHERINE NADINE WELSH<br />

A. B., Elem. & Jr. Hi-Soc. Sci.<br />

Epsilon Pi Theta.<br />

GEORGE WORTHINGTON<br />

A. B., Junior High-Art<br />

Art Guild; Epsilon Eta.<br />

BETTY THOMPSON<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Social Science<br />

Cetza; <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi Phi; "Our<br />

American Cousin" 2.<br />

BERNARD JOHN TYERS<br />

A. B., History<br />

Blue Key; Skull and Dagge~;<br />

Eta Omega <strong>Del</strong>ta; Lettermen s<br />

Club; President Junior Class 1;<br />

Student Council 3, 4; "Hamlet";<br />

Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4:<br />

"Robin Hood"; "Chimes of<br />

Normandy"; "Desert Song";<br />

"Sweethearts"; Basketball 2, 3:<br />

Swimming.<br />

MARGARET H. WENNBERG<br />

A. B., Zoology<br />

Phi Sigma Xi.<br />

CHESTER GRANT YOUNG<br />

A. B., Mathematics<br />

Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi; Tennis.<br />

DOROTHY ARMSTRONG<br />

d~spite being kept bus'<br />

wlt.h political angling anJ<br />

being one of Phi Sigma<br />

Nu's ~rain trusters, manages<br />

to enjoy the crooning of<br />

o.n,e of the Student Coun-<br />

Cil. s popular<br />

tainers.<br />

radio<br />

It<br />

enter-<br />

26<br />

It<br />

VIRGINIA THERESA URBANI<br />

A. B., Romance Languages<br />

Alpha Mu Gamma; EI Club<br />

Azteca; Le Cercle Francais; International<br />

Relations Club.<br />

MARY HELEN VEED<br />

A. B., English<br />

Cap and Gown; Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta<br />

Pi; Sigma Pi Theta; Secretary<br />

W. A. A. 2, President 3.<br />

FAITH WHITTEN<br />

A. B., Jr. Hi-Social Science<br />

Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi; Internationel<br />

Rei a t ion s Club; Le<br />

Cercle Francais; Roadrunners.<br />

GORDON E. WIGGINS<br />

A. B., Economics<br />

Blue Key; Tau Sigma; <strong>Del</strong>ta<br />

Pi Beta; International Relations<br />

Club; Press Club; Toastmasters;<br />

Student Council 4; Editor,<br />

<strong>Del</strong> Sud oeste 4; Men's Glee<br />

Club 2, 3; Cross Country I, 2.<br />

PHYLLIS BARKER, one of<br />

State's nightingales who is<br />

now interested in psychology,<br />

re-enacted the story<br />

of "Ben Hur" at San Diego's<br />

Exposition by captivating<br />

the master of the<br />

chariots there.<br />

27


PAUL A. YOUNG<br />

A. B., Economics .<br />

Teu Sigme; Teu <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi;<br />

Besketbell I, 2, 3.<br />

YUKIE FUJIMOTO<br />

A. B., History<br />

BILL TINKER dispenses the<br />

"GAS" in more ways than<br />

one. Although a member<br />

of the "Bachelor's Club" he<br />

has punctured many a fern.<br />

inine heart. Born April first<br />

he claims to be fool proof.<br />

We wonder? » • •<br />

The Class<br />

of '37<br />

Other Graduates<br />

RICHARD B. BARTLEn<br />

A. B., English<br />

Gamma Psi; Sigma Lambda;<br />

Glee Club 1,2; "Robin Hood".<br />

KATHERINE ORMA 10 ES<br />

A. 8., Elem.-Soeial Science<br />

Art Gild.<br />

LINDSLEY<br />

JOHN S. CORNELIUS<br />

A. B., Junior High-English<br />

Transferred from U. C. L. A.<br />

LOUIS DePABLO<br />

A. B., Economics<br />

Tau Sigma; Basketball I, 2,<br />

3.<br />

GEORGE FORD<br />

A. B., Zoology<br />

Phi Sigma Xi; Alpha Phi<br />

Omega.<br />

VERNON CHARLES FOX<br />

A. B., Elem.-Physical Ed.<br />

Track Manager 4.<br />

and<br />

JOSEPH WllLIA ROSE<br />

A. 8., Jr. H_Fol. l "guag<br />

Tr n f r RII; I t·<br />

U e.<br />

MEMBERS of the class of '37, upholding the tradition obtained in their<br />

first two years as being the dominant class in athletics, captured<br />

the interclass fall track championship. The juniors also played an important<br />

part socially by aiding in some of the more successful social affairs of the<br />

college.<br />

One of the outstanding class affairs was the beach party which was<br />

held in the latter part of May.<br />

Enthusiastic leaders of the juniors were Byron Lindsley, president; Bill<br />

Crawford, vice-president; Marjo Koch, secretary; Gene Kendall, treasurer;<br />

Peggy Stewart, women's athletic representative, and Frank Heryet, men's<br />

athletic representative.<br />

. CRAWFORD KOCH KENDALL STEWART HERYET<br />

29


The Class<br />

of '38<br />

The Class<br />

of '39<br />

CLARKE<br />

LOVEALL<br />

I, NITIATING the freshman class into college the sophomore class aided'<br />

by "Oceotl" sophom ' . f - h Id<br />

' ore men s service reternity, e several successful<br />

meetings of the Court of Traditions.<br />

Although losing the annual push ball contest to the freshmen, the<br />

class of '38 dominated<br />

lower class activities.<br />

Many sophomores held important offices in the school, increasing<br />

the prestige of the sophom I Th -_<br />

ore c ass. e outstanding social event was the<br />

joint dance of the freshman-sophomore classes.<br />

_ Officers of the class were Owen Clarke, president; Helen Eastman,<br />

vice-president· Jane Grant t D- k<br />

' , secre ary; IC Ault, treasurer' MacArthur<br />

Gorton, men's athletic representative. '<br />

COMPRISING more than one-third of the student body, the freshman<br />

class reached a high pinnacle in class attainments. Gordon Hall and<br />

Bill Lyle were chosen as the school yell kings. The freshman-sophomore<br />

;push ball contest resulted in a well-earned victory for the freshmen. A<br />

-spring dance given by the combined lower classes proved to be one of the<br />

-outstanding successes of the year.<br />

Responsible for the class achievements were Bob Loveall, president;<br />

;Bill Lyle, vice-president; Marion Rufing, secretary; Bob Merritt, treasurer;<br />

Marie Smedley, women's athletic representative; Frank Galindo, men's<br />

-ethletic representative.<br />

")<br />

~ ../<br />

EASTMAN<br />

GORTON<br />

LYLE RUFING MERRITT SMEDLEY GALINDO<br />

mlll""""''',IN'''',II''"",.<br />

30<br />

3\


Alumni<br />

Association<br />

STICKNEY<br />

ENJOYING a most successful year the alumni association played an<br />

important role in the furthering of the college's interests. A stronger<br />

bond of friendship within the group, a closer relationship to the campus,<br />

as well as an increase in membership, have been the outstanding attainments<br />

of the association. All affairs were scheduled for approximately<br />

every three months and were well attended, showing a growing interest in<br />

the organization.<br />

A dinner honoring Coach Calland and President Hepner began the<br />

activities. The next event was a very successful dance at the San Diego<br />

Club. At a meeting held at Scripps cottage, the alumni were entertained<br />

by Skull and Dagger, honorary dramatic fraternity. On April 24 a benefit<br />

bridge party was undertaken at the San Diego Club to raise funds for<br />

State college scholarships. The annual homecoming banquet in June, with<br />

President Von Kleinsmid of the University of Southern California as the<br />

principal speaker, culminated the year's activities.<br />

Officers of the association for the past year were Jefferson Stickney,<br />

J~., president: Anne Powell, first vice-president; Mary Edith Lane, second<br />

vlce-pre~lIdent; Nancy French, recording secretary; Georgia Shattuck, correspond,~~<br />

secretary; Carl Esenoff, treasurer; Jim Lowrie, publicity; Robley<br />

Veall, William Lyons, Bryant Kearney, directors.<br />

!3()()1\ II<br />

ACTIVIT<br />

POWELL<br />

LANE<br />

FRENCH<br />

.j'f<br />

ESENOFF<br />

U~ITI:()<br />

JTATI:J<br />

32


G A S<br />

R L T<br />

A<br />

D<br />

V<br />

U<br />

D<br />

I<br />

0<br />

U<br />

0<br />

N<br />

A<br />

E<br />

N<br />

M<br />

M T 0 N<br />

A E R T C<br />

N<br />

R<br />

A<br />

P<br />

L<br />

I<br />

G<br />

R<br />

A<br />

S<br />

E 0 E<br />

R<br />

R<br />

N<br />

S<br />

K<br />

I<br />

0 S<br />

E 0<br />

N<br />

•<br />

N<br />

T<br />

I)J~"<br />

I..'j<br />

L ()<br />

e<br />

I-<br />

I'"<br />

f<br />

~:/f!..::::::::::::·· .. I<br />

//' --1-. -,.::::. .-,<br />

:...<br />

\'>"<br />

r<br />

It II I'<br />

, . \\<br />

i\ I'<br />

III<br />

l\ ,...<br />

\'\<br />

\\ .....<br />

....c-; /<br />

.....;.... ,//<br />

.....;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,"<br />

/;'<br />

COMPLETING his eighth<br />

year<br />

f . . h<br />

0 service In t e position of Graduate<br />

Manager, Alvin Morrison is the one man who k . t h th<br />

. nows JUS were e<br />

money comes In and where it goes out.<br />

By his compet t . . f<br />

en superVISion 0 all financial activities of the student<br />

body, Morrison has been able to offe th t d . .<br />

. h " res u ents a maximum of benefits<br />

Wit a minimum of expenses.<br />

His duties consist of preparing the stud t b d b d .<br />

the Aztec Sh L . en 0 y u get, managmg<br />

ops, td., a corporation h' h<br />

th f . w IC operates the bookstore and<br />

e ca e on a non-profit basis and the ..<br />

'f h ,supervIsion of all business arrangements<br />

or t e school.<br />

D ON Clarkson capably filled his administrative position throughout<br />

the past year and continued to have ever increasing popularity with<br />

the student body.<br />

He attended the conferences of the Pacific Presidents' Association,<br />

where he gained new ideas and discussed pertinent problems with the<br />

student leaders of the colleges and universities of southern California. He<br />

was always working for better co-operation between the faculty and the<br />

student body, and planned with others the future development of the<br />

campus.<br />

As the head of the Student Council, Don Clarkson was instrumental<br />

in inaugurating new and important reforms in student business, always in<br />

the interests of harmony and progress.<br />

34 35<br />

""~<br />

~ ...,.


BUTLER CLARKSON KOLLER STONE MORRISON<br />

FREEMAN<br />

SMITH<br />

BUTLER<br />

Finance Board<br />

THE student executive officers for the year, in addition to President<br />

Clarkson, included Barbara Freeman, Helen Smith, John Butler, Gordon<br />

Peterson, and Abbie Johnson.<br />

~a~bara Freeman, as vice-president of the Associated Students, acted<br />

as o~lclal hostess of the student body, and was in charge of the Jolly-up<br />

parties, one of the mos t success f uI social ' ventures at San Diego State<br />

College. In her ,minis ad ' ist rat' rve capacity'<br />

she served quite capably on the<br />

St ud<br />

ent C cunei].<br />

Helen Smith sec t ' d .<br />

, ,re ary, Issue notices of the Student Council as well<br />

as serving as recorder of the inut f h .<br />

'. rrunu es 0 t e Council meetings.<br />

Working With the finance board J h B I . ,<br />

adJ'usted b d t d f ,on ut er, cornrrussroner of finance,<br />

u ge nee s or the stud t b d d<br />

in all financial matters. en 0 y, an represented the students<br />

Gordon Peterson and Abb' J h<br />

Council to serve th E ,Ie 0 nson were elected by the Student<br />

on executive Board d ' , .<br />

both worked hard d i 'f an assist In ItS functions. They<br />

Council. an jusf led the faith placed in them by the Student<br />

Student Officers A LTHOUGH the Student Council determines the policy and Mr. Morrison<br />

acts in its name, duties of the Finance Board require it to<br />

analyze all the expenditures and budget cuts. This year copies of last<br />

year's budget and estimates for the coming term were passed to council<br />

members in order to give a clearer understanding of the budget items.<br />

In several cases appropriations were increased as in the debate team,<br />

golf, baseball, and other minor sports. The Aztec engraving budget was<br />

cut. Additional expenditures for the Exposition College Day, the newlyinaugurated<br />

Hall of Fame, and swimming were added.<br />

The Finance Board is composed of the president of the student body,<br />

the graduate manager, the commissioner of finance, elected by the student<br />

body, and two members of the student council. elected by that body.<br />

John Butler, Commissioner of Finance, presided at the meetings of<br />

the Finance Board, which consisted of Alvin Morrison, graduate manager;<br />

Don Clarkson, president of the student body, and the two council memoel<br />

s , B',II Koller and Thomas Stone.<br />

'~"'I"'IIIII"'II"IIIIIIIIIIIf1<br />

..~I'<br />

36


CLARKSON LINDLEY LOSEY LESLEY PFAFF<br />

Assembly Committee<br />

ARMSTRONG<br />

DUPREE<br />

NOON<br />

AULT<br />

JOHNSON<br />

PETERSON<br />

CHURCHMAN<br />

KOLLER<br />

STONE<br />

CLARK<br />

LINDLEY<br />

TYERS<br />

Student Council<br />

CLARKSON<br />

LINDSLEY<br />

WIGGINS<br />

REAL POLITICS slipped into the St d "<br />

the spring semester it u ent CO,unctl election this year. For<br />

' , . was necessary to fill f ies F<br />

upper d IVISlon and three fro th I di _ , our vacancies rom the<br />

Jan~ary, but }t was necessary~o heold: er IVlsl?n. An elec~ion was held in<br />

up Inaccuracies which were said to havrevote I~ February. In order to clear<br />

As a whole the Student C 'I e, crept Into the first election<br />

h<br />

armony an<br />

d<br />

were able to p<br />

ounci enJoy<br />

,e<br />

d '<br />

Improve<br />

d<br />

cooperation<br />

' .<br />

and<br />

student activities, which fo t ss dmb ny Important measures, and promote<br />

groups. sere etter understanding between campus<br />

One important committee com<br />

~ent ~ouncil members was appointe~ots~d ,of three fa~ulty and three Stuf<br />

or,i y Harvbey, George R. Livingston p ad ~ahPus Imp,rovements. Mrs.<br />

acu y mem ers; and Don Clarkso B an 0 n D. Wimmer were the<br />

served for the student body. n, ob Duncan, and Hector Dolbey<br />

It was unanimousl d<br />

must receive th C Y ~~ree that all student pro] t d '<br />

usi f th e ouncil s approval Thi ojec s an organizations<br />

col~g~ e college name by organizati~n~~v~ d. as ne,cessitated by the<br />

• 0 Ired y representing the<br />

UNDER the direction of a hard working committee, the student assemblies<br />

for the last year provided interesting and educational<br />

entertainment, featuring prominent speakers who brought new ideas and<br />

personalities to the eyes and ears of the student body.<br />

Faculty members of the assembly committee included Dean Mary<br />

McMullen, Deborah Smith, Paul Pfaff, Lewis B. Lesley, and Mrs. Smoor. The<br />

student members were Mary Lindley, Frank Losey, Don Clarkson, and<br />

Bill deLannoy.<br />

Thomas Wood Stevens, director of the Old Globe theater at the<br />

Exposition, spoke September 27th on contemporary problems of thetheater.<br />

His talk was sponsored by Skull and Dagger, honorary drama<br />

fraternity, which later presented Dr. Franklin D. Walker in a review of<br />

the Pulitzer prize winner, "The Old Maid".<br />

Sigmund Spaeth, nationally known "tune detector" I spoke to a<br />

delighted audience which extended even to the outside of the little<br />

theater. He traced the origin of modern songs, and demonstrated many<br />

humorous musical peculiarities on the piano.<br />

United States Senator Elbert D. Thomas of Utah reviewed the armament<br />

situation and world conditions since 1918, at a well attended assembly<br />

on November<br />

Max Miller, the<br />

21.<br />

renowned writer, entertained at another regular assembly,<br />

when he rambled in a humorous and unusual manner about his<br />

writings and experiences. Collegians were impressed with his sincerity and<br />

personality, and went away from that assembly with kinder thoughts for<br />

poor, down-trodden authors.<br />

The committee certainly deserves credit for their fine work in bringing<br />

all of this talent to State College. The assemblies showed one thing beyond<br />

a doubt, and that is the inadequacy of the little theater. With<br />

students turned away from most every assembly, it can plainly be seen that<br />

thf next progressive development should be a new auditorium.<br />

'flII",I"'II''''"''',',I''''''''II<br />

38<br />

39<br />

__________<br />

!1'iI


FREEMAN BURTON CLARK WELLS GLEDHILL<br />

Social Committee<br />

HEADED by Barb~ra Freeman, the Social Committee established and<br />

ta e ~~dnsted the h.lghly suc~essful Jolly-up parties, held in Scripps cotth<br />

g h tt ethgymnhaslulm, starting early in the fall semester and continuing<br />

roug ou e sc 00 year Dave Bomber er f th Y M C A I d<br />

lively games at th f t J II' g ,0 e...., e the<br />

was combined with th S J II y-up~. On ~ebruary 5, the freshman reception<br />

Th J II e. 0 y-up In ~ ga a no-date affair in the gymnasium.<br />

m ' e 0 y-,uP committee combined with the W AA for an event in the<br />

en s gymnasium on March 13 h ' ,<br />

April Fool's day the bi t ff', w ;n hwomen VISitors were honored. On<br />

when a colorful carni;ale~':h al: k It em all was held in the gymnasium,<br />

tellers, confetti all became ~ a~tln emonade, g~mes, danci~g, fortune<br />

series of parties which acco PI' h oJ ~~e'party. ThiS was the climax of the<br />

better acquainted. mp IS e err purpose of making the students<br />

TURRENTINE<br />

Rally and Yell Leaders<br />

Y ELLS and rallies were led b G<br />

, ~uring the football seaso: ordon Hall, ~ill Lyle, and Bob Peterson.<br />

POSition, where Art Linklett ,stjdents met In the Ford Bowl in the Excere':l0nies.<br />

Coach Leo CaO:n~n a u~nus, and Bill Tinker were masters of<br />

the first time at the rally, which w:a\ll~oduced to the student body for<br />

The yell leaders condu t d s e October 4.<br />

the San Jose game, and led ~h a rll" y at the railroad depot on the eve of<br />

~11~oIThgamO' Novem.ber 7. Li9h~i~; ~/:~~ ~S"the dAztec field before the<br />

m . e r,a res received the aid of th "H "an a dance featured the<br />

en organized and pledged to yell at ell ow Ing Hundred" I a group of<br />

a games.<br />

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CAPABLY led by President Barney Carman, Associated Men students<br />

went through a busy year, featured by the first annual "Dad's Day"<br />

held in lieu of the former barbecue, and the introduction of an opportunity<br />

for students to interview prominent business men of San Diego in regards<br />

to the futures of vocations and fields of study. This vocational service<br />

aided students in determining study programs and in learning of opportunities<br />

and present conditions in their probable life work.<br />

Out of town students were honored at the first of the fall semester<br />

with a boat ride arranged through the co-operation of the U. S. S. Ranger.<br />

Men visited the Ranger, were given a ride around the bay on a large excursion<br />

ship, and met afterwards at the Chamber of Commerce for<br />

refreshments, entertainment and words of welcome by school leaders.<br />

Officers of the AMS who planned the boat ride as well as all other events<br />

of the year included Art Clarkson, vice-president; Tom Stone, secretary;<br />

Stanley Burne, treasurer, and Dean C. E. Peterson, faculty advisor. Dean<br />

Peterson materially aided many of the programs with his knowledge and<br />

experience in work with men students.<br />

A luncheon honoring principals and vice-principals of high schools of<br />

San Diego and vicinity was held before the Santa Barbara football game,<br />

with the purpose of cementing better relations between local high schools<br />

and the college. New men students were feted at the AMS stag in the<br />

gymnasium in the fall and in the spring term a smoker was given in the<br />

men's club rooms in conjunction with the Jolly-up dance for new students.<br />

High schools interested in the college activities were benefited by a<br />

football contest for high school men between halves of the College of<br />

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41


A, CLARKSON STONE BURNE<br />

Pacific football game. Medals were awarded for punting, passing, and<br />

football relay.<br />

Other events during the year were: a dance for San Diego and Whittier<br />

college students after the second Whittier-San Diego basketball game;<br />

a dance after the Redlands University football game in the Pompeiian<br />

room of the San Diego hotel, where the Redlands team and visiting students<br />

were guests; and an AMS program at an assembly at La Jolla<br />

junior-senior high school, featured by vocal and instrumental numbers,<br />

short talks about the college by AI Churchman, Coach Morrie Gross, and<br />

Carman, and an exhibition by the college fencers.<br />

Dad's Day, perhaps the most important event of the year for men<br />

students, was held on March 28. Fathers of men students attended the<br />

baseball game with Occidental and the track meet with Redlands in the<br />

afternoon and in the evening were royally entertained at a huge banquet<br />

and s~oker program in the gym, where songs by the glee clubs, fencing,<br />

baamln~on, and wrestling exhibitions were given, all of which brought<br />

fathers Into a closer contact with the many and varied student activities.<br />

Intro~uced by Dean and Coach C. E. Peterson, honored guests who have<br />

contributed to the tr,aditions of the college were presented. Awards were<br />

glven}o Professo.r Irving E. Outcalt, who wrote the words for "Fra Junipero<br />

~erra ; to Dr. ~dfred M. Knudtson, author of "Fair San Diego"; to Franklin<br />

Archer, designer of the official Aztec symbol; to Grace Walker Allen,<br />

who wrote "Purple<br />

"On San Diego."<br />

Mountains", and to Mrs. Jane France Elliott author of<br />

The men receiving AMS medals for distinguished service were:<br />

B kF~btlfall-Edmund Smyth Music Department-James Fisher<br />

as e a -Byron Linsley, Linden Art Department-John Barlow<br />

Burns Fencing-George Walton<br />

, Tr~ck-Kenneth Ray Drama Department-AI Bradt<br />

Publications-Alfred Alexander Outstanding Athletes-Ed Smyth,<br />

AI Churchman<br />

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THROUGHOUT the past year, the Associa~ed Women Students have<br />

been successful in carrying out an interesting and com~lete program,<br />

due largely to the efficiency, enthusiasm and co-operation of board<br />

membe~. h b<br />

To connect and support all women's activiti~s on the campus as een<br />

f th A W S With this in mind, It has sponsored freshman<br />

the purpose 0 e . .. , hid' F h<br />

. t ti eek co-operating with smaller organizations In 0 Ing ros<br />

onen a Ion w , , d f II d b<br />

activities and entertaining at a picnic luncheon In the qua 0 owe y<br />

a short assembly. b ide I<br />

In co-opera ti Ion WI 'th the Associated Men Students, a oat n e hIn<br />

t he b ay an d a VIS ' 'It to the U. S. S.<br />

Ranger followed by a party at t e<br />

Chamber of Commerce hall was given for out of town students.<br />

Irene Tedrow, a leading actress at the Globe Theater at ,the Exposition<br />

, . was t he spea ker a t a n A . W .. S assembly in November. MISS Tedrow b<br />

spoke' on "The Stage as a Career for Women." Following her talk, mem ers<br />

~f the board were introduced. ,<br />

A formal Jingle-Belles banquet in December at the Elks club was the<br />

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42<br />

43


outstanding social event of the fall semester. Mrs. Walter Hepner was<br />

officially welcomed to the college by the women students, and former<br />

A.W.S. presidents were guests of honor.<br />

Second-semester freshman girls were welcomed in February at a Doe<br />

Dinner in Scripps cottage, preceding the Stag and Doe dance which replaced<br />

the usual freshman reception.<br />

In March, the A.W.S. sponsored the revival play "Fashions". Proceeds<br />

were placed in a fund for a piano for Scripps cottage. Also durin3<br />

March, representatives of the board attended an A.W.S. conference at<br />

Occidental. Those who attended were the officers, including Marian<br />

Stooke, Doris Gledhill. Helen Clark, and Helen Eastman. An A.W.S. conference<br />

at the University of Colorado in Boulder, Colorado, was attended<br />

by Marian Stooke, this year's president, and Doris Gledhill, next year's<br />

president-elect.<br />

In May, the annual Feminine Frolics was presented. Following an outdoor<br />

supper on the quad, skits were presented in the little theater. A cup<br />

was presented to the group giving the best skit.<br />

A. W. S. officers for the year were Marian Stooke, president; Doris<br />

Gledhill, vice-president; Helen Clark, secretary, and Helen Eastman, treasurer.<br />

Women's organization representatives were Maryanna Peterson, intersorority<br />

council; Mildred Robertson, W.A.A.; Irene Kline, out-of-town<br />

girls; Betty Lonie, College Y, and Jane Wells, Cetza. Committee chairmen<br />

were Helen Jean Barthelmess, first semester, and Geraldine Weber, second<br />

semester, social chairman; Marie Hildreth, program; Chloris Kersten,<br />

Scripps cottage, and Evelyn Tanck, publicity.<br />

VUI3LIC.ATI()<br />

J<br />

GLEDHILL<br />

KERSTEN<br />

. CLARK<br />

PETERSON<br />

EASTMAN<br />

WEBER<br />

HILDRETH<br />

WELLS<br />

TANCK<br />

KLINE


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THE PROGRESSIVE development of San Diego State College reached<br />

. an all ti~e high in. the last school year when the long sought for "resionel<br />

status was achieved, giving the college the right t d th d<br />

"T h "f ... 0 rop e wor<br />

eac .ers rom the official title. Endeavoring to keep in step with the<br />

expansion of th~ college, the 1936 <strong>Del</strong> Sud oeste has been published in the<br />

regula~ 9 b~ 12 Inch college size. Many other new advances have also been<br />

made In this yearbook in an effo rt t 0 rea IIy crea t e samet h' Ing representative .<br />

of the growth of San Diego State College.<br />

the ~~ .t~e printing of the book, the. off-set process enabled the size of<br />

dditione! n pages, end-sheets, and view section to be increased with no<br />

a. . Ilona h S· cost over . pre VIOUSannua . Is. A' n innovation . in the photo-mount-<br />

. IngthIn t e eruor . section was und er t a k en WI'th t he desi esire to . Increase interest<br />

In a section he Seniby the novel use f' f I h<br />

0 In orma snap-s ots of prominent memers<br />

0f<br />

t e Senior class.<br />

b<br />

The- darrangement i which was use d ] In t h e Organization .. section was<br />

d<br />

.<br />

eve<br />

'"<br />

Iope In order to<br />

.<br />

b<br />

a<br />

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ance pic<br />

. t<br />

ure sizes<br />

.<br />

and not with any thought of<br />

d rscnrmnetlon. By uSing the histori h .<br />

officers of all the fr t I . :s, t. e pledge pins, and the lists of<br />

would become b tat erna or~anlzdatl~ns It was hoped that all the students<br />

e er ecqueintc w<br />

Ith th ese groups. The Sports lay-out<br />

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Was designed to secure larger pictures at no extra cost and to give equal<br />

recognition to all athletic participants.<br />

Realizing a need for more publicity for the 1936 <strong>Del</strong> Sudoeste, a<br />

beauty contest was sponsored by this publication. Dick Powell, famous<br />

Warner Bros. screen star, willingly consented to pick the three most beautiful<br />

girls from a group of photographs sent to him. News concerning the<br />

contest was printed in downtown newspapers, and also in the Collegiate<br />

Digest supplement to The Aztec. The contest gave San Diego State college<br />

as well as <strong>Del</strong> Sudoeste a great deal of publicity, and it is hoped that<br />

similar contests will become a traditional function of <strong>Del</strong> Sudoeste. The<br />

results of the contest can be found in the special beauty section.<br />

Another new idea used in connection with this yearbook is the Senior<br />

Honor Roll of ten outstanding students. A committee of student and faculty<br />

members were appointed to pick these ten students on


<strong>Del</strong> Sudoeste Std~~<br />

S<br />

A<br />

GORDON WIGGINS<br />

Editor<br />

ROBERT KEN N EDY BOOK I<br />

Assistant Editor JAMES HUTTON<br />

Editor<br />

ALFRED ALEXAN DER<br />

GEORGE SORENSON<br />

DONALD LUSCOMB BOOK II<br />

Art Editors ORVILLE NORDBERG<br />

Editor<br />

ELAINE BROWN<br />

GEORGE BAKER<br />

W.A.A.<br />

EVELYN HENNING<br />

RALPH VERNACCH IA BOOK III<br />

Art Staff STANLEY BOJENS<br />

Editor<br />

TECHNICAL STAFF<br />

BOOK IV<br />

LOTTIE MITCHELL<br />

DORIS NOBLE<br />

Editor<br />

WALTER HARLIN<br />

ROBERT FALCONER<br />

MARYANNA PETERSON<br />

GORDON PETERSON<br />

BOOK V<br />

BILL KOLLER<br />

DURLIN FLAGG, JR.<br />

EVELYN TANCK<br />

Manager<br />

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5 T ARTING a week before official registration in September, and continuing<br />

throughout the school year, The Aztec, weekly newspaper, was<br />

issued in six pages instead of the usual four, although it was necessary a<br />

few timesto issue a four page edition in order to stay within the budget<br />

allowance.<br />

The paper again won high national honors in the rating by the<br />

National Scholastic Press association.<br />

The Aztec presented news of interest to the college in an interesting<br />

manner through news stories and features. Members of the staff attended<br />

two conferences to discuss problems and exchange ideas, meeting with<br />

other members of the Southern California Press association at Santa Barbara<br />

State College in the fall, and again in the spring they met at<br />

Occidental College. Both conventions aided in the promotion of better<br />

~-\<br />

~ ..)<br />

M'ddl R Front Row' Ke d W' .<br />

I e ow: Bojens, Hutton, Alexand' Nnnbely, 'gg,ns, Sorenson.<br />

Back Ro . H I· L er, 0 e, Browne H . N d<br />

w. ar In, uscomb, Peterson, Tanck, M'itch:llnln{'1 or berg, Vernacchia, Koller.<br />

, a coner, Peterson, Baker.<br />

48


elations between the colleges of the southland, and in the furthering of<br />

good journalism.<br />

Alfred Alexander was editor for the year, and Lottie Mitchell served<br />

as associate editor. Orville Nordberg was the news editor. Evelyn Tanck<br />

was editor of the society page, Dave Ferris capably handled the editorial<br />

page, while Elya Breslerwas head of the sports section.<br />

Several new members<br />

were added to the staff during the year. With the co-operation of<br />

Durlin Flagg, advertising manager for all San Diego State College publications,<br />

the paper was increased to six pages, thus giving all activities and<br />

organizations ample publicity.<br />

Individual members of the staff won awards, headed by Alexander<br />

Front Row: Cormier, Carpenter, Bishop, Thomas, Clark, Griffith.<br />

Middle Row: Danforth, Wirt, Barron, Tanck, Alexander, Mitchell, Mcintosh, Dorsey.<br />

Back Row: Ferris, Frame, Berryman, Bresler, Nordberg, Falconer, Coffin, Sale bey.<br />

whose submitted news story was the best among hundreds in a large<br />

contest. John Barron continued his excellent linoleum cuts on the editorial<br />

page, while Ralph Vernacchia added to the sports section with<br />

cuts of prominent athletes. Vernacchia also made cuts which were compiled<br />

into a pamphlet and given to outstanding winners of athletic awards.<br />

ASSOCIATE NEWS SOCIETY LITERARY<br />

SPORTS<br />

THE AZTEC STAFF<br />

Editor............. . Alfred Alexander<br />

Associate... Lottie Mitchell<br />

N ews Ed<br />

't lor ...<br />

Orville Nordberg<br />

Society Editor... Evelyn Tanck<br />

Society Staff: Betty Thomas, Elaine Browne, Gene Bishop, Elizabeth Kemp,<br />

Mavoureen Page.<br />

Editorial Page Editor.... . . ..Dave Ferris<br />

Editorial Staff: George Dorsey, Margaret Bock, Bob Falconer, Everett<br />

Coffin, Marjorie Newell, Robert Kennedy, Ashleigh Mc-<br />

Intosh.<br />

Sports Editor................ . Elya Bresler<br />

MITCHELL NORDBERG TANCK FERRIS BRESLER<br />

Staff: Carmack Berryman, Bill Buehlman, Alvin Bucklin, Joe Frame, Orville<br />

Nordberg, Jay Hershey, Joe Hurwitz, Sam Patella, Glen<br />

Wirt.<br />

News Staff: Bob Falconer, Philip Cormier, John Wolzmuth, Minabel Layton,<br />

Ed Griffith, Wilmer Shields, Orville Danforth, Constance<br />

Bowman, Bernice Bonsignor, George Saleebey,<br />

Graciamae Carpenter, Peggy Conners.<br />

50<br />

__________ ~ iIII


' .<br />

.. ,-<br />

BENTON BRESLER TANCK LA DUE<br />

Handbook<br />

FOR th~ first time, all students receive? th~ freshman Handbook, which<br />

contained the student body constitution, lists of organizations and their<br />

purposes, and timely advice to new students. Elya Bresler was editor<br />

assisted by Orville Nordberg, Tommy Stone, and 'john Barron. '<br />

End Zone<br />

END Zone, with pictures a~d notes on the games, was again edited by<br />

. Jack Benton. The magazl.ne was issued at all local football games in<br />

whl~h t~e Azt~cs played. Natlon~1 advertising was secured by Durlin Flagg,<br />

making It possible for the magazine to be given away free to all.<br />

Student Directory<br />

A ~IREC:~~Y containing the names, addresses, and telephone num-<br />

. ers 0 a . acuity members, state employees, and students was ub-<br />

~ted d for the ~Irst time through the sponsorship of Blue Key. A~red<br />

exan er was In charge of Its issuance.<br />

CONTINUING its popular policy established last year, EI Palenque,<br />

college literary magazine, represented a variety of subject-materials,<br />

tastes, and moods. Short stories featured the fall issue, while the spring<br />

publication was an informal-essay number.<br />

"Color Schemes", an article on vari-colored political groups by Dr.<br />

E. L. Hardy, former president of State College, was the No. I contribution<br />

of the fall issue. Harry C. Steinmetz, associate professor of psychology and<br />

philosophy, composed the feature essay for the spring Palenque on an<br />

original philosophical occurence, titled "Utopia, Dream or Destination".<br />

Written exclusively for the point of view of the student, Professor Steinmetz'<br />

thesis emphasized that the construction of Utopias is only justifiable<br />

with a destination in mind. Dream Utopias are rendered useless without<br />

programs in action. An ingenious Utopian symbol was used as a pattern<br />

for the essay, a symbol that included all the logical approaches to a<br />

Utopian discussion.<br />

Evelyn Tand and Bette La Due co-edited the fall magazine, with<br />

Alfred Alexander, short story editor; Dave Ferris, essay editor; Richard<br />

Bartlett, poetry editor; James Parker, book review editor, and Lottie<br />

Mitchell, manuscript editor. In the spring, Dave Ferris was assistant editor,<br />

and Elya Bresler was manager of sales. Mrs. Florence Dickhaut was faculty<br />

advisor throughout the year.<br />

No contests were held during the year, since a sufficient amount of<br />

first-class material was available without this stimulant. A ten cent book<br />

was offered which, incidentally, was a paying proposition to the student<br />

body.<br />

EI Palenque<br />

'""'''''11'''"'"1'11'''''''''''''<br />

52


Publicity<br />

Bureau<br />

Ci-1ARLES BYRNE ,<br />

CHARLES BYRNE again was head of the publicity bureau, supplying<br />

local and outside papers with news of athletic events as well as other<br />

activities of the students. Byrne increased sport publicity of the college in<br />

local papers by a good third, and has given the college a 200 percent increase<br />

in space in outside papers.<br />

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First Row: Hensell, Nelson Stanle M '<br />

Second Row: Weimer Sanders F G.k ornson, Bock, Kr.ox, Coker, Fisher Wurr<br />

Third Row: Ortiz, Nichols Mag'ee r'Srt' "T'th, B~'dleman, Axtell, Jensen, Spad'e, Va; Buskirk<br />

FOYlth Row: Fettis, Berrym~n, Cas~ H IZ, i~rsA Jmdton, Woodward, Brown, Johnson, Gault.<br />

-, ewortn, n rews, Hoto, Wood, Cowles, Owen, Hendel.<br />

. Front Row: Nelson, Vogt, ~tratton, Gess,ler, Smith, Eo.. F~ows, Kllrtz, Bousman,<br />

Middle Row: Swan, Hardy, Bowler, Crandall, Remick, HildrPtI1, ~rst Fronce, Mormon, Rufin3'<br />

Shiveley.<br />

Back Row: Spear, Maiss, Ritchie, Alderson, Gray, Scofield, Bryon, Crone, Smith, Stose, York.<br />

Men's Glee Club<br />

PARTICIPATING in co t<br />

Club continued it t ndc~trs, prfogra~s, and operettas, the Men's Glee<br />

s ra I Ion 0 service t th hi' h<br />

and busy schedule duri th h I 0 e sc 00 Wit an extensive<br />

ring e sc 00 year<br />

The club was selected in the fall' .<br />

radio hookup as a lead' 'h semester to sing over a Pacific coast<br />

State College day giveln~ mthenfSc<br />

il<br />

orus, and sang in the Ford Bowl on the<br />

nine a Memb . h<br />

Concert, at the Ryan Fi Id Ch . t . ers sang In t e annual Christmas<br />

e ns mas party at th Cit E I ' .<br />

ma,s party, at the First Methodist church' elY mp oyees Christ-<br />

University of Redland in the srsri ' and the Glee club contest at the<br />

s In e spring The GI<br />

to culminate a years' activit Thech ee sang at June commencement<br />

IVI y. e c oruses of th tt "S "<br />

were f rom the Glee club ith II e opere a, weethearts<br />

tion of Fred C B 'dl WI a programs and activities under the direc-<br />

. el eman.<br />

, John Tyers was president of the '<br />

sisted by Milo Wo d' . group dUring the year. He was as-<br />

W elmer, " librarian Mr 0 , F' vice-president· h h' J ames F IS h er, secretary, and Bill<br />

. . IS er was t e ac . f<br />

School songs were featured b th cornpenist or t~e year. .<br />

Day program in the gym' Yh e chorus at the first annual Dad's<br />

ti h nesium, w en ma h<br />

ime t e words and melod f "0 . ny parents eard for the first<br />

All yOn San Ole " d "F<br />

appearances of the M 'GI go an ra Junipero Serra".<br />

appreciation.<br />

. , ens ee were<br />

receive<br />

. d<br />

Wit<br />

. h<br />

enthusiasm and<br />

Treble Clef<br />

TREBLE CLEF, Women's Glee Club, was one of the most active organizations<br />

on the campus during the year. They appeared before<br />

numerous groups in the city as well as presenting the annual concert in<br />

the Church of the New Jerusalem and participating in the Inter-Collegiate<br />

Glee Club contest in Redlands, April 18.<br />

Among the more important engagements of Treble Clef were appearances<br />

before Sponsors' club, Coronado Rotary club, University Christian<br />

church, Music Teachers' association, college open house, on April 26,<br />

annual Treble Clef concert on the campus, May 8, and participation in the<br />

senior commencement exercises, June 12. Choruses for the operetta were<br />

taken from the club, and many members had leading roles.<br />

The Christmas concert was given, at Hoover Senior high school. Treble<br />

Clef was presented in solo groups and also combined with the Men's Glee<br />

and the orchestra for Handel's Hallelujah chorus. The highlight of the<br />

evening was the Cantata, Sir Oluf by Ware, which was sung by Treble<br />

Clef with June Bowler and John Tyers, soloists.<br />

Treble Clef won cups in the inter-collegiate contest in the year 1930,<br />

1932, and 1934.<br />

56<br />

57


Left to right: Maiss, Stratton, Gessler, Alderson, Ritchie. First Row: Young, Vogt, B. Capps, Thelin, Martin, Kline, Palmer, Crandall, Thompson, Kelley.<br />

Second Row: Finnigan, Rosenthal, Mytinger, Weimer, Moore, George, Read, Higgins, Stratton, Fleiss,<br />

Davis, Swan.<br />

Women)s Quartet<br />

Third Row: Beidleman, Kahn, McLean, Lewis, Powers, Ortiz, Graham, Lahman, M. Capps, l.ee,<br />

Loser, Robbins,<br />

Fourth Row: Johnson, Cowles, Walters, Floto, Merrill, Stanley, Fisher, Hamilton, Lenhart.<br />

T HE ,Women's Quartet had a busy year in filling all the engagements<br />

. V;hlch the entire ,T:eble Clef was unable to fill. They appeared before<br />

SOCial, service. and CIVICgroups In the city, aiding to publicize the college<br />

through the medium of good music.<br />

Left to right: Barstow Knox We' F .<br />

, , 'mer, enn, F'sher, Johnson, 'W"ood, Jensen, Van Buskirk.<br />

Men)s<br />

Octette<br />

THE men's Oetette, under Fred C B idl d'<br />

for the Aztec t h . el eman, irector, sang over KFSD<br />

programs, ate House f H it lit h ..<br />

and appeared during the year at th EI Co, ospi a I y at t e Exposlti?n,<br />

P.-T A North Park Bu . CI be ejon Rotary Club, Hoover High<br />

. ., smess u a d ith th M ' .<br />

year, as well as several oth ,n WI e en s Glee during the<br />

er appearances.<br />

Orchestra<br />

T HERE are 47 members in the orchestra and they are all usually tired<br />

and hungry when it comes time to go to rehearsal from 4:00 to 5:30<br />

every Tuesday and Thursday afternoon. But despite the discomfort of cold<br />

and heat they go to practice just the same because they enjoy working<br />

together with their conductor, Mr. Beidleman.<br />

On June I, 1935 they drove to Los Angeles in the morning, played<br />

on the Festival of Allied Arts program in the evening, won first place in<br />

the orchestrel division, and drove home that night. They have been invited<br />

to go again this year.<br />

It is very seldom that an organization remains active after graduation<br />

exercises, but the orchestra certainly did last year. They played two concerts<br />

in the Ford Bowl at the Exposition during the summer vacation. On<br />

June 19, Margaret Capps was elected president of the organization.<br />

Nine of the outstanding members went to Santa Barbara for the AII-<br />

College Symphony Orchestra on March 17. The whole orchestra played<br />

at the open house program in April. On May I and 2 the operetta "Sweethearts"<br />

was given at the Russ Auditorium, and only a few selected<br />

musicians from the orchestra were allowed to play. The orchestra again hau<br />

the "last word" when they played the recessional at commencement.<br />

Band<br />

PLAYING at rallies and football games, the 30 members of the State<br />

college band were a colorful lot with their red jackets, and they materially<br />

aided the spirit of sportsmanship when and where they played.<br />

Directed by Mr. Ray Forsythe, a widely experienced b.an~ leader, t~e<br />

group practiced twice weekly in the training school auditOrium. A trip<br />

to Whittier for the night football game was a high point for the season.<br />

58<br />

59


I/S h /I<br />

weet earts<br />

VICTOR HERBERT'S operetta, "Sweethearts" was selected to be San<br />

Diego State's spring presentation of the music department, to carry<br />

on the tradition of an operetta every spring. Previous productions have<br />

been "Robin Hood", "Chimes of Normandy", and the "Desert S ong " .<br />

Mr. Paul Pfaff and Norman Rock, former Aztec student, were the<br />

co-directors in charge of the dramatic end of the production. Musical<br />

directors of the production were Mr. Fred Beidleman and Miss Deborah<br />

Smith. The cast numbered nearly 100 students who were members of the<br />

Men's Glee Club and Treble Clef.<br />

This was the first year that the operetta gave two performances, May<br />

I and 2 at the Russ Auditorium. Rehearsals began the second week of<br />

March, and constant hard work on the production resulted in excellent<br />

performances. John Tyers and June Bowler again had leads as in the" Desert<br />

Song." Tyers took the part of Prince Franz and Miss Bowler the part of<br />

Silvia. . Other leads were Rosalie Maiss as Liane· , Don Coker as Lt. Karl;<br />

Ed Griffith as Slingsby; Wayne Frye, Van Tromp; George Dorsey, Caniche;<br />

Anita Gessler, Paula; Giles Brown, Mikel; Margaret Ritchie, Jeannette;<br />

Rosaleen Remick, Clairette; Ashleen Crandall, Babette; Harriet France,<br />

Lisette; Mary Beth Gray, Toinette, and Helen Shively, Nanette.<br />

60


BRADT<br />

Theater Guild<br />

WITH its purpose<br />

h<br />

th<br />

e supervIsion<br />

..<br />

and guidance of all dramatic prouc<br />

t· Ions, t e Stud t Th .<br />

d<br />

drama classes, aided in then e~ter Guild, corr:posed of members of<br />

staging of product' t the selection of productions and helped in the<br />

. Ions a e college.<br />

Officers who led the The G' .<br />

AI Bradt, as presid t o d hater u.ld dunng the year were headed by<br />

en . ura t as be b f<br />

materially aided in II d . en a mem er 0 many casts and has<br />

. a rernetic effort t St t 0 h ff' .<br />

Roselie Maiss, secretar . Bill Ko s a .a e. t er 0 icers Included<br />

Gorton business m y, lIer, executive secretary, and Sheridan<br />

, anager.<br />

MAISS<br />

KOLLER<br />

GORTON<br />

Big Game<br />

Varieties<br />

SPONSORED by Skull and Dagger, the first annual pre-game review,<br />

"Everything Goes In College" or "A College Course in Two Hours",<br />

was presented November 15, the night before the Redlands game, to a<br />

highly pleased audience. The theme was a satire on college life, the program<br />

representing a typical college announcement forming the continuity<br />

for the 39 acts presented by organizations and individuals.<br />

. The show was conceived and produced by George AI Berry, producer<br />

of "Aztec Follies of 1932", ably supported by a staff led by Bill deLannoy,<br />

director, and Harold Otwell and Gordon Wiggins, cast managers, Dialogue<br />

was written by Lauran Clapp and Clara Marie Bolio and several<br />

other clever writers wrote skits for their particular groups. Original songs<br />

included were by Charles Cannon, Brown Bradshaw, Ralph Thompson, and<br />

Berry; including numbers entitled "Co-educational Blues" and "Blue Book<br />

Blues". Music was furnished by Frank Losey's orchestra.<br />

Principals were Ruth Heller, Art Clarkson, and Charles Taylor as the<br />

"Three Stoogents" and Helen Wetzell as the Herald. Organizations represented<br />

were: Women's Quartet, Press Club, Phi Xi, IC Speech Arts, Phi<br />

Lambda Xi, Art Gu:I:l, Kappa Phi Sigma, <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi Beta,' <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi Phi,<br />

and the college faculty. Individual performers were Dr. Joseph Keeney,<br />

Elya Bresler, John T vers. June Bowler, Anna .lust George Walton, Beltram<br />

Hubbard, Edward Ortiz, Leopoldo Contreras, Eleanor Smith, and Lubin<br />

Barbachano.<br />

The little theater was presented with several new spot lights from the<br />

profits of the show.


h IIF II<br />

as ions<br />

W 1~~i~:~r~raySU~~~rptby thtedsttuhdent,body and faculty, State's annual<br />

, resen e ree ti mes M h 12 I 3 d<br />

year's melodrama was "F hions" I ,arc , ,an 26. This<br />

as Ions , a pay of th C 'I W '<br />

manner similar to that f "Th D k e IVI ar period. In a<br />

o e run ard" "F h' "<br />

affair but has so altered :th th ti ,as Ions was once a serious<br />

. w, e irnes th t it d<br />

1he dark, s::heming villai th ~ I prove to be a laugh riot.<br />

clear-eyed hero were "l n , ." s~deet heroine and the broad-shouldered,<br />

muc h In eVI ence t th I I<br />

t he actors along with verbal and 0 e ,ars~ crowcs that helped<br />

Under th d" vegetable contributions.<br />

e rrcction of Sybil Eliza Jo<br />

the play was the sev th i , nes and the drama department,<br />

en In a series f 'I I<br />

of the college. 0 revive pays given by students<br />

Characters included Gertru-' I '<br />

fany, Arnold Spencer' M Tif] c c, p ayed by Olive Hockaday; Mr. Tif-<br />

Dorsey; Adam Truem'an,r~us~e~1'lk~;.na Just; Colo~el Howard, George<br />

Helen Clark; Millinette, Dolores B ' ~r. Fogg, Bill Koller; Saraphina,<br />

Bradt; Count Jollimaitre, Russell Ffi~~.n~T:lnkle, Bob Hawl~y; Snobson, AI<br />

The curtain acts by Jack Stafford e e, Howard McBride.<br />

of the evening. Their renditi f and June Bowler were the "targets"<br />

I Ions 0 ro ti<br />

great delight by a highl ,m~n IC songs were received with<br />

y responsive audience.<br />

"One Mad Night"<br />

/I ONE MAD NIGHT", student body dramatic production, was presented<br />

to large crowds on May 14 and 15 in the little theater.<br />

The play was a mystery comedy in three acts centered around the plot<br />

of an innocent girl who is wrongfully detained in an insane asylum. The<br />

antics of the inmates helped to provide the farcical aspects of the comedy.<br />

Don Cutter, the lead, was played by Russell Alkire, while the feminine<br />

lead, Lucille Marcy, was played by Willene Whitcomb. The supporting<br />

cast was: Wing, Elya Bresler; Priscilla, Dixie Lindsey; John Alden, James<br />

Hutton; Mr. Hyde, George Dorsey; Lady Macbeth, Robert Walker; Dr.<br />

Bunn, Bob Hawley; Mrs. Kluck, Virginia Hughes; Gertrude Finch, Mary-Em<br />

Hardie; Mrs. T. A. Finch, Bernita Offerman; Depression, Thelma McCarthy;<br />

,Artemus Burke, Everett Coffin, and Danny Siletto, Tom Hutchens.<br />

Joan Wallace was in charge of scenery painting, while James Hutton,<br />

Peggy Riddle, and Mary-Em Hardie took care of finances. Dick Hathaway<br />

was stage manager, while handling the costumes were Margaret Corbett,<br />

Dolores Bacon, Thelma McCarthy, Dixie Lindsey, and Robert Walker.<br />

1Ao'''_.<br />

ra<br />

64<br />

65


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Debate Team<br />

THE Varsity Debate squad, coached by Paul Pfaff, speech arts in.struetor,<br />

had a very busy season this year. In all the numerous meets with other<br />

teams the Debate squad used the topic of "Resolved: that Congress be<br />

empowered by a two-thirds majority vote to override any decision of the<br />

supreme court declaring acts of Congress unconstitutional."<br />

The team conducted the San Diego City debate tourney and oratorical<br />

contest on December 13, creating interest in debate circles in the city.<br />

The Staters defeated La Moyne team of Memphis, Tennessee, to win a<br />

gold cup. They attended the Redlands tournament February 8, and later<br />

debated in an exhibition held at Pomona. After meeting the University of<br />

Southern California on May 14, and Whittier, Caltech, Occidental, and<br />

La Verne on the next day, the squad attended the oratory contest at<br />

Pomona May 17, and met UCLA May 24 at the Exposition. Most of the<br />

meets were away from home.<br />

Managed by Charles Burton, members of the team included: Ernest<br />

Hom, Allen Bailey, Lionel Chase, and Lester Wahrenbrock. Mr. Pfaff<br />

believed that much more interest was shown in the debate work than there<br />

has been in the past.<br />

'"IIIII""nlN'"''''II''III'·''''<br />

68<br />

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P<br />

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San Diego High School players. The two held in the spring continued the<br />

W. A A. program of emphasizing recreational games by offering that type<br />

of sport. The March Play Day introduced the college to girls from city high<br />

schools and was followed by supper and a program of skits put on by the<br />

different schools. The April Play Day was held on Friday of Health Week.<br />

Posters, footprints and other reminders were placed around the campus<br />

all week and after the Play Day supper a posture contest for college and<br />

high school girls was held.<br />

Badminton enjoyed greater popularity this year than it has previously.<br />

A singles ladder tournament was held each semester, with a new, "streamlined"<br />

perpetual trophy donated by W. A A going to the winner. At the<br />

beginning of the second semester a doubles tournament was held so tha'(<br />

the girls would keep in practice; Miss Muriel Bennett and Miss Florence<br />

I. Shafer participated in this one by popular request.<br />

The annual spring Water Frolic was held at the Y. W. C. A in May.<br />

Sorority, non-sorority, and other campus groups entered teams.<br />

An innovation this year is Mrs. Schwob's social dancing class for both<br />

men and women. Sponsored by W. A. A, this class was held once a week<br />

in the activity room of the women's gym. Individual and class instruction<br />

was given by Mrs. Schwob, who built up the group to a large membership.<br />

This year's officers were Janet Franklin, president; Barbara Freeman,<br />

vice-president; Janet Hoon, secretary; Helen Smith, treasurer; and Mildred<br />

Robertson, representative to the W. G. A board.<br />

A N or~anizatio~ that in~lu~es every woman on the campus, the Wo-<br />

, men s Athletic Association has- had a very successful year, fulfilling<br />

ItS purpose of sponsoring physical and social activities on the campus to<br />

an even greater degree than heretofore.<br />

W A A did . .<br />

. . . I ItS part to Introduce and orient freshmen women to the<br />

campus by giving them apt . the versi " b<br />

ar y In e varsity gymnasium In Novem er.<br />

Recreational games of k' did ..<br />

many In s were p aye under the direction of<br />

Helen Smith prizes for high d d<br />

' scores were awar e ,and supper was served.<br />

. Three Play Days were held this year instead of the former one. The<br />

first was a Hockey Play Day which was held in the fall for a group of<br />

"'''~<br />

f""<br />

FREEMAN<br />

HOON<br />

SMITH<br />

ROBERTSON<br />

70


Women's Sports SWIMMING, under the direction of Miss Florence Shafer, enjoys a<br />

larger popularity and a consequently greater turn-out than any other sport<br />

UPON the retirement of M' J . R d T "<br />

ISS essie an anner, for thirty years head<br />

of the Women's Physical Education department, Mrs. Marion Schwab<br />

be.came head of the department and Miss Muriel Bennett joined the staff.<br />

MIss Florence I. Shafer is the third member of the department.<br />

in this department. Weekly instruction is given at the Y. W. C. A. plunge<br />

for both beginning and advanced students.<br />

Class work included the technique of breast stroke, back stroke, side<br />

stroke, crawl, and diving. At the end of each semester the standard life<br />

saving test was given by M iss Shafer and those that passed it were<br />

awarded Red Cross certificates.<br />

"',1111""',11,',1111111111111, •• "<br />

72


A feature that was taken advantage of by many women students was<br />

the free swims donated by W. A. A.<br />

GOLF classes drew an even greater number of co-eds this year than<br />

formerly. The practice field was changed from Emerald Hills to Presidio<br />

Hills Driving Fairway, and Mr. AI Abrego, manager of the fairway, acted<br />

as coach.<br />

An added incentive to improvement was frequent class tournaments<br />

with free tickets to the fairway going to the winners.<br />

ARCHERY was popular both in classes and as an after-school sport,<br />

Beginners practiced at 20 yards and as their scores improved, practiced at<br />

the Columbia Junior range of 30, 40, and 50 yards, or the Senior range<br />

of 40, 50, and 60 yards.<br />

The turfed field in front of the physical education building made an<br />

ideal practice field. Added interest was given to the sport this year by<br />

"small-animal hunts" with painted targets planted about the field.<br />

HOCKEY was one of the most successful after-school sports. Players<br />

were divided into upper division and freshman teams, with play-offs providing<br />

a major interest. The season was ended with the Hockey Play Day<br />

and Spread.<br />

TENNIS classes conducted by Miss Muriel Bennett were among the<br />

most popular of women's physical education classes. Stroke technique was<br />

taught and practiced on the courts at the end of the turfed field.<br />

Basketball, volleyball, baseball, and soccer were other successful sports.<br />

A horseback riding class was sponsored by the department, but no credit<br />

was given for it.<br />

Emphasis this year has been on recreational sports. Since these games<br />

hav.e been growing in general interest, it was decided by the physical education<br />

department to try to advance their popularity locally by a pron?unced<br />

drive in that direction. Equipment for deck tennis,' badminton,<br />

ping pong, paddle tennis, and handball was available for those desiring<br />

it at any time of the day.<br />

13f)()1\<br />

III<br />

() T<br />

Tuesd~y and .Thursday afternoons have been set aside this year for<br />

t~: pr.omotlo~ of Interest in these games. Small groups or individuals desiring<br />

instruction could receive it then.<br />

74


.',:"<br />

IUSCOMB ANO<br />

.sOReNSON


t=UUTI3ALL


OXy<br />

LA VERNE<br />

SANTA<br />

BARBARA<br />

SANTA<br />

BARBARA<br />

LA VERNE<br />

OXy<br />

Varsity<br />

Football<br />

FOOTBALL for 1935 was ushered in at San Diego State with a new<br />

coach and a type of play which was new to the followers of the Aztec<br />

elevens in past years.<br />

However, the Calland-coached men received the plaudits of their<br />

followers In two O} the best games seen in the city stadium in past years.<br />

In one of these bits, the locals turned back one of the favorites in the<br />

conference, Redlands, to the tune of 13 to 7. The Aztecs beat the north.<br />

erners at their own game with lateral passes accounting for the two<br />

touc~downs. In this game, John Butler, stellar all-conference guard, scored<br />

the first touchdown of his career when he took a lateral pass and galloped<br />

15 yards to pay dirt.<br />

In another game which stamped the Staters as one of the best teams<br />

seen here, the Montezumans surprised more than 10,000 fans by trouncing<br />

the strong Loyola Lions in a non-conference game by a score of 6 to O.<br />

Meeting ,the. S,anta Barbara Gauchos in the first game of the season,<br />

~he Red Devils finished four quarters of play with the Santa Barbarans<br />

Just where they started, the final count being 7 to 7.<br />

'I ~ week later, Occidental came to the city stadium for a conference<br />

~ht t: 'th ~hl Aztecs and the two elevens battled on scoreless terms during<br />

e ,rdst a f, so closely were they matched. However coming out for the<br />

secon h alf Bill Ad' T' h I f h<br />

R d h' ' n erson s Igers s owed too much reserve power or t e<br />

w:s s7 irts a~d scored after five minutes of play. Final score of the clash<br />

to a rn favor of the northerners<br />

The Calland men u d th . I' f d' d t<br />

in e conf se err new y- oun passing power to a van age<br />

In a Con erence cont t 'th L V<br />

th Ides WI a erne on the local gridiron and were on<br />

toe ~ng h~ of b 14, to 6 Score. The tilt was featured by a 96-yard run<br />

on a h ,ofuC , owdnI' y Jim McMichael who had intercepted a Leopard pass<br />

IS our-yar me.<br />

Dieg:~:~ugh beater .13 to 0 by the conference champions, Whittier, San<br />

up one 0 Its best defensive games of the season against the<br />

Poets on the northern field in a night game. The Staters wer~ handicappe~<br />

by the loss of several re.gulars th~ough i~juries. Joh,n Duich proved his<br />

ability by doing outstanding work In backing up the ~lne.<br />

The 1935 squad wound up its season in a game with San Jose State on<br />

the northern gridiron. Handicapped by the loss of reserve power, the<br />

Aztecs went into an early lead but greater power by the San Jose team<br />

soon told on the Aztecs who came out of the fray on the short end of a<br />

24 to 9 score.<br />

The outstanding performances of several Staters during the season<br />

was recognized. John Butler, guard, who was picked on the all.confer~~ce<br />

mythical eleven for the third consecutive year, brought further recog~lbon<br />

to the college when he was named first string guard on the ASSOCiated<br />

Press Little All-American. This team is selected each year for the.purp~se<br />

of honoring outstanding players in the smaller colleges and unlverslbe<br />

throughout the country. Only one other Pacific Coast play:r was ,named<br />

on the first squad. Ed Smyth, end, was selected on the first string a ll -<br />

conference eleven.<br />

The following were awarded letters at the completion of the season:<br />

Seniors AI Churchman guard; John Butler, guard; Bernard Carman, centedr;<br />

Charles " Durland, center; Charles Lee, fullbac. k J' unl~rs, Ed S,m~ thI' hen If~ .<br />

Hideo Higashi, halfback; Allen Lovine, quarterback; Jim McMlc a~ '. ~<br />

back; Gil Callies, quarterback; Joe Frame, end; Jay Hershey, tac e: /n<br />

Slavin, end; Roger Stern, tackle; Jack Yount, gu~rd. Sopho.mores, rrn<br />

Blethen, halfback; John Duich, fullback; Roger Hopkins, guard; Jim Hughes,<br />

tackle; T. S. Walker, end; Walter Harlin, manager.<br />

Whittier "' ..<br />

Redlands ........<br />

San Diego "'.. ... .......<br />

Santa Barbara .....<br />

Occidental ...<br />

La Verne... ....<br />

FINAL VARSITY FOOTBALL STANDINGS<br />

Won Lost Tied<br />

4 I<br />

3 I<br />

2 2<br />

2 2<br />

....., I 2<br />

o 4<br />

o<br />

I<br />

I<br />

1<br />

I<br />

o<br />

Pel.<br />

.800<br />

.750<br />

.500<br />

.500<br />

.333<br />

.000<br />

'UI'''''''''''''''''''''"'',I •...",<br />

78


()J'<br />

'- ~)<br />

I- [)<br />

o<br />

I~<br />

Front Row, left to right: Borders, Jeter, Metzger, Scott, Reynolds, Baskerville, Hansen, Rex, Hutchens.<br />

Middl~ Row: Robinson, Rainey, Ratner, Lund, Bartlett, Stone, Murray, Burke, Ve noni<br />

B~ck Row: Smith, Nagle, Selleck, O'Connell, O'Conner, Joslin, Muehleisen, Bucklin, Huffman, Meyers,<br />

Galindo, Sterling, Warren.<br />

Freshman Football<br />

GOING into action for the first time, the Smithmen journeyed to Imperial<br />

Valley where they met the Brawley Jaysee outfit in a night<br />

game on October 4. Although hampered by the lights and desert heat,<br />

'the Babes came out on the long end of a 6 to 0 score.<br />

In their second time out on October I I in the city stadium, the<br />

Staters, after leading the strong San Diego high gridders for three quarters<br />

by six points, were unable to stop a strong rally by the Hillers in the last<br />

period. Starr, husky Hilltopper, took the ball over for the tieing score and<br />

converted to win the game for the Cavemen.<br />

In a preliminary tilt to the Varsity-LaVerne game in the stadium October<br />

/9, the Frosh eked out a 6 to 0 win over the Sixth Marine Division. A<br />

pass, Metzger to Reynolds, was good for 15 yards and a touchdown.<br />

Making their second trip away from the home field, the Papooses<br />

met Oceanside Jays2e on the northern gridiron and although threatening<br />

to overtake the Beachers several times, superior power spelled defeat for<br />

the locals. Final score of the tilt was 27 to 13. .<br />

In the last game of the season for the Freshmen, the Staters were<br />

ncsed out by the powerful Submarine Division eleven November 2 at<br />

Sports Field. After holding the Subs on even terms during the first half,<br />

the Smith men succumbed to two drives of the Sea Divers which resulted<br />

in touchdowns. Trailing by 14 points, Metzger maneuvered the Staters<br />

down to the Sub three-yard line, from where he took the ball over for the<br />

locals' only score.<br />

At the close of the season, the following men were awarded their<br />

numerals for service on the squad: ends, Robinson, O'Connor, Bucklin,<br />

Lund; tackles, Muehleisen, Joslin, O'Connell, Meyer; center, Huffman;<br />

guards, Hansen, Nagle, Rex; quarterhacks, Metzger, Stone; halfbacks,<br />

,Bartlett, Reynolds, Galindo, Vanoni; fullback, Scott, and manager, Tom<br />

Hutchens.<br />

I3AJI\~TI3ALL<br />

""""""''''''''''''''''1111''''1<br />

83


Varsity<br />

Basketball<br />

COACH Morris Gross gave followers of the State College basketball<br />

five one of the best defensive clubs in the history of the local institution<br />

during the 1935-36 season. Blessed with a couple of "eagle-eye"<br />

forwards and a sharpshooting center, the Aztecs put on their best showing<br />

of the season in the two closing games played with the Marine Base five<br />

of San Diego. The Leathernecks boasted the strongest outfit in local Base<br />

history. Playing before a capacity crowd in the State gym, the Marines<br />

eked out a 44 to 41 win over the Grossmen on March 6. Coming back<br />

the following night on the same court the Aztecs took an early lead and<br />

kept up a fast pace throughout the remainder of the game which had<br />

spectators on their feet during most of the second half. Final score was<br />

40 to 48 in favor of the Gross-coached men.<br />

In the early part of the season, the famous Broadway Colored Clowns,<br />

a barnstorming outfit, fell victims to the strong State five to the tune of<br />

30 to 17.<br />

, ~f experience can be taken as a criterion for the production of championship<br />

teams, State College's prospects for the 1936-37 season are exceptionally<br />

bright, with nearly every member of last season's outfit<br />

returning next year. Of the eleven lettermen, all return next basketball<br />

seaso~. B~ron Lindsley, former Grossmont high school star, in addition<br />

to bel,ng h,g~ point man for the past season and being elected honorary<br />

captain of his team, was named by team mates along with Linden Burns,<br />

another Grossmont casaba artist, as the most valuable player on the<br />

squad. Burns has been selected as captain for next year.<br />

Both Lindsley and Burns are two-year lettermen and have one more<br />

year of :arsity play. Jack Fitzgerald, who first played basketball at Point<br />

~oma High, took third scoring honors although he only played on the State<br />

five from the beginni f th 1936' ,<br />

, mg 0 e spring term. Fitzgerald has two more<br />

years of varsity playas does Wilbur Kelly, Bill Buehlman, Jim Williams,<br />

Jack Anderson, and Ben Palmgren. Lettermen who have but one year<br />

left to perform for the Aztec five are Dick T azelaar, Ed Smyth, and Joe<br />

Frame.<br />

Non-lettermen who will return next year are Bill Rossman, Carmack<br />

Berryman, Alex Goldie ' and Dick Ault . And erson an d AI ex G 0 ldire are<br />

f<br />

t rans ers f rom'. Pasadena J aysee, w hil ue S myt, h w h0 earned his letter on<br />

B he Aztec gr,ld outfit last season, is a transfer from Citrus Junior College.<br />

erryman hails from Fullerton Jaysee.<br />

Although not winning the conference casaba title, the Staters,<br />

under the tutelage of Coach Morris Gross, made an outstanding<br />

team and individual point record during the 15-game season. However,<br />

four of these tilts were non-conference affairs, while the conference games<br />

were double-headers.<br />

The Aztecs amassed a total of 526 points during the season as against<br />

498 by their opponents. This averages a fraction over 35 points per game<br />

as against an average of slightly over 33 points per game for the opposition.<br />

Byron Lindsley, stellar State forward, took high scoring honors for the<br />

1935-36 season, compiling 134 points to his credit or an average of nearly<br />

nine per game. Second honors went to Linden Burns, center, with 73.<br />

Following are the individual scoring for the season:<br />

Lindsley<br />

Burns _<br />

Fitzgerald<br />

Buehlman<br />

Anderson<br />

Palmgren<br />

Tazelaar<br />

Kelly<br />

_<br />

__<br />

_<br />

_<br />

_<br />

___134<br />

73<br />

69<br />

65<br />

60<br />

38<br />

16<br />

Williams 14<br />

Smyth _ _ -- 9<br />

Frame _ _ _ ----- 6<br />

Goldie __ 6<br />

Larson __ _ __ 4<br />

_<br />

Rossman- 4<br />

__________________________________ Berryman _. 4<br />

15 Ault _---------- 4<br />

SEASON GAM E SCORES<br />

Jan. 11________ _ .State 27; Alhambra 27<br />

Jan. IL __________________---.state 38; Santa Barbara 35<br />

Jan. 18_____---.state 25; Santa Barbara 22<br />

Jan. 24_______ ___.state 30; Broadway Clowns 17<br />

Feb. 1__________ __ ______State 30; Olsen Swedes 40<br />

Feb. 7__ State 37; Redlands 43<br />

Feb. 8 __.Stete 25; Redlands 39<br />

Feb. 14_________________________________ .Stete 32; Whittier 30<br />

Feb. 15___ __.Stete 34; Whittier 42<br />

Feb 21________ .Stete 38; La Verne 18<br />

Feb. 22___________----- State 40; La Verne 36<br />

Feb. 28___ _ .Stete 48; Occidental 3 I<br />

Feb. 28___________ State 40; Occidental 36<br />

Mar. 6____________________________________-.state 41; Marines 44<br />

Mar. 7._________________________________________ State 40; Marines 38<br />

"•.""","""",,,,,,,,'"u'"',,"""<br />

84<br />

85


Front Row, left to right: Metzger, Bartlett, Tatum, Baskerville, Gault, Patella, Scott.<br />

Back Row: Muehleisen, Kirkpatrick, Salvin, Thompson, Alward, Heger, Sefton, Smith.<br />

Freshman<br />

Basketball<br />

I N A SERIES of /3 games which comprised the freshman casaba calendar<br />

during the 1935-36 season, the yearlings, under the guidance of Coach<br />

Charlie Smith, won eight tilts and dropped five. The frosh, defending<br />

champs in the conference, finished this year in second position.<br />

However, in points scored, the Babes made an enviable showing,<br />

piling up a total of 365 points to 355, the total number made by their<br />

opponents. Bud Thompson, center, grabbed high scoring honors for the<br />

season with 72 points in 12 games played. However, his points per game<br />

average was bettered by Walt Sefton who made 69 digits in 7 games<br />

played.<br />

In conference tilts, the Frosh were defeated by Redlands by a 30 to<br />

27 score, won from Whittier 38 to 28, swamped the La Verne team 33<br />

to 21, and split a pair of games with Occidental. The first was won by<br />

the Tigers, 47 to 27, while the locals copped the second game, 34 to 28.<br />

During the season the Smithmen met such teams as the Black-Foxe<br />

Military Academy, Sweetwater High, EI Centro J. C., Grossmont, Oceanside<br />

J. C., Army and Navy Academy J. C., and the Markel-Johnson<br />

quintet. The following men were awarded their numerals: Sam Patella,<br />

Walt Sefton, William Salvin, Bud Thompson, Leroy Alward, Vernon Heger,<br />

Art Metzger, Bill Bartlett, and manager Gene Muehleisen.<br />

86


All Conference<br />

Meet<br />

UNDAUNTED by the fact that the dual meet championship was won<br />

this year by the strong Occidental team, Coach' C. E. Peterson's<br />

track and field performers climaxed their regular season which began with<br />

a win over Compton J. C. early in the year, by bringing State the all-conference<br />

championship for the _second consecutive time.<br />

Although upsets, which had appeared to yield the locals what seemed<br />

to be certain points occurred, the Aztecs went on to nose out Occidental,<br />

50 to 47. Whittier came third with 26 points. Ray Day, lanky State hurdler,<br />

came through to set a new Aztec record in the low hurdles when he covered<br />

the 220 sticks in :23.7. This mark also tied the conference record set<br />

II years ago.<br />

What had been counted on as a sure first place, the broad jump, went<br />

to Yeager of Santa Barbara who handed State's Leland McPhie his first<br />

defeat of the season and in doing so, set a new conference mark in the<br />

event. McPhie, qualifying early in the day for the broad jump, suffered<br />

injury to both ankles in the pole vault. However, his jump in the morning<br />

was good enough for second place.<br />

Kenny Ray, State "iron" man, surprised to take the pole vault, making<br />

the best jump of his career, winning at 13 feet one inch. Other first place<br />

winners for Peterson's outfit were Ernie Viau in the mile, Frank Heryet in the<br />

880, and Gene Kendall, who tied agel of Occidental in the high jump.<br />

At the completion of the all-conference meet Coach Peterson na~ed<br />

the following as lettermen: Robert Durbin, Frank Heryet, Ernest Vieu,<br />

Lowell jones, Russell Alkire, Russell Flint Ray Day, Kenny Ray, Selwyn<br />

Hartigan, Leland McPhie, jim McMichael, Eugene Kendall, and Charles<br />

Lee, and Vernon Fox, manager.<br />

Team members at the completion of the season elected Kenny Ray<br />

as the most valuable man on the squad and re-elected Selwyn Hartigan<br />

to captain the 1937 team.<br />

All-conference results:<br />

VARSITY DIVISION<br />

Broad jump: Won by Yeager (SB); second,<br />

McPhie (S); third, Herbert (0); fourth, Rejebien<br />

(0). Distance, 23 feet 2 7-8 inches. (New<br />

conference record).<br />

S~ile run: Won by Viau (S); second, Durbin<br />

( ), third, Hooper (S); fourth, De Moulpied'<br />

(W). Time, 4:37.4.<br />

Pole vault: Won by Ray (S); second, Lockwood,<br />

(R) and McMichael (S), tied; fourth,<br />

McPhle (S) and Ogel (0), tied. Height, 13<br />

feet I Inch.<br />

440-yard run: Won by Kilday (0); second,<br />

O(i~)er (R); third, Jones (S); fourth, Bowlus<br />

. Time, :49.4<br />

on~20-yard low hu;dles: Won by Day (S); secf<br />

'h Yeager (SB); third, Richardson (W);<br />

ourt ,Joh~son (0). Time, :23.7. (Equals con-<br />

record).<br />

ference<br />

Shot put: Won by Kilday (0); second,<br />

Huttchlhnson (W); third, Johnson (R); fourth,<br />

Dre 880-<br />

TiC<br />

a (W) . D' ISt ance, 42 f eet 10 1-4 ' Inches.<br />

R y rd run: Won by Heryet (S); second,<br />

~)gers, (0); t~ird, Schmidt (W); fourth, Alkire<br />

( . Time, 1:59.<br />

100-yard dcsh: Won by Isett (0); second,<br />

Kilday (0); third, Ray (S I; fourth, Case (R).<br />

Time, :09.9. ' h d<br />

120-yard high hurdles: Won by Ric ar son<br />

(W); second, Hartigan (S); third, Joh~son<br />

(0)' fourth, Grey (SB), Time, :15,2. ,<br />

Hi'gh jump: Kendall (SI and Ogel (0), bed<br />

f f<br />

' t· th'd Williams (0) and Crawford<br />

or Irs I Ir 1<br />

(R), tied. Height, 6 feet 2 inches. .<br />

Discus: Won by DletTich (W); sec~nd, Camp<br />

bell (SB); third, Lingenfelter (W); fourth,<br />

Wheatley (0). Distance, 134 feet II 3-4 Inchek~<br />

Javelin: Won by Johnson (R); second, Loc<br />

wood (R); third, Lee (5); fourth, Eagl eman<br />

(R). Distance, 171 feet IlIz Inch. d<br />

220- ard dash: Won by Isett (0); secon ,<br />

Case (R); third, Rollins (R); fourth, Langsdorff<br />

(OT)~O_~:' r~2nl:.8Won by Baker (W); second,<br />

Durbin (S); third, Hall (0); fourth, V,au (S).<br />

Time, 10:05.4. d 5 Di·<br />

Relay' Won by Occidental; secon, a'b<br />

ego; th'ird, Redlands; fourth, Santa Bar ara.<br />

r 3'23 I (New conference record). ~<br />

irne , . ',' D' '0 50 Occidental 4/,<br />

Final pOints: San leg 'R dl d 26 La<br />

Santa Barbara 16, Whittier 26, e an s ,<br />

Verne O.<br />

"n<br />

, ;1<br />

.1,'<br />

,'/<br />

,l;/<br />

~~......<br />

...):::.,::::~;::::::::::::~~,<br />

\~ ,./<br />

~ ..:/'<br />

~--_ .._........::::::...:...<br />

...._~_.-<br />

""""""""",,, .. ,,,,,,,"' ...,"', ..,,'" {\ t ;<br />

89


Varsity<br />

Track<br />

WITH a group of la~t year's ~onfer~nce championship squad forming<br />

a. nucleus for this season.s OUtfl~, the State College cinderpath<br />

aggregation made a strong showing during the season, winning all of its<br />

conference dual meets with the exception of that with Occidental which<br />

the Aztecs dropped by a score of 67 1-3 to 62 2-3.<br />

The team, led by captain Selwyn Hartigan, ace hurdler, the Staters<br />

traveled north to Eagle ~oc~ for the conference relays, an early season<br />

meet. Oxy walked off With first honors with San Diego close behind. The<br />

locals accou.nted for thre: first places, two of which were record-breaking<br />

events, one In the broad Jump and the other in the 440-yard shuttle relay.<br />

. Although no meet scores were kept, the Staters gathered 15 digits<br />

In the annual Long Beach .Relays held March 16. Competition included<br />

some of the best athletes In southern California.<br />

. In:their first dual meet, t~e Montezumans showed surprising strength<br />

In tuknlng back Compt?n Junior College, the final score being 73 to 58.<br />

Fran. Heryet, ~rack middle distance runner, started off the afternoon's<br />

~h0rlSg spree .wlth a win in the 880, coming across the finish line in 1:59.8.<br />

e taters.pded up some extra points in the pole vault which they swept.<br />

. Followl~g the Compton meet, the Aztecs took on the strong Uni-<br />

~e~hty of ~mona track squad coach~d by Tex Oliver. A wet field caused<br />

anwge.Ihnthe plans, the meet having been shifted to the city stadium<br />

ova. I<br />

ff th A' It the State rs Iea diIng b y I 2 -3 POints . before the relay was run<br />

ode eIlzonans grabbed the lead held by the Peterson-coached quartet<br />

aln nose hout the latter to take the meet by a score of 66 2-3 to 64 1'-3.<br />

none 0 f<br />

to b t<br />

t<br />

t<br />

e<br />

F<br />

best<br />

k<br />

events<br />

H ~<br />

f th<br />

e<br />

d<br />

ay,<br />

J<br />

arrett, Arizona<br />

.<br />

half miler, surprised<br />

ea ou ran eryet In the 880.<br />

th IIn aI meet which was to st amp th e A zt ecs as f h . . -<br />

0 c ernpionship calibre<br />

Th: RCd sDme. and defeated Redlands on the State field on March 28:<br />

e eVIs r overwhelmed the Bulldogs with a 75 to 56 score. Case,<br />

Redlands sprinter, had to run the IOO-yard dash in :9.9 seconds to beat out<br />

Kenny Ray, State sprint star. Nine first places were taken by Peterson's<br />

men. In a meet with Occidental which had been postponed once because<br />

of rain Peterson's charges met their first defeat in conference contests<br />

when the Tigers won enough field event points to win by a ?7 1-3 to 63 2-3<br />

score. New meet records were established by the Aztecs In the 880, twomile<br />

run, and the mile relay.<br />

Meeting La Verne and Whittier in a triangular meet .on the local<br />

field, the Staters completely outclassed their opponents to Win by a score<br />

of 104112 to 42112 for Whittier and 12 points for La Verne. Kenny Ray,<br />

sensational sprinter, broke the existing State re~or,d for the 220 yard<br />

dash, galloping home ahead of team mate McPhie In 21.4 seconds.<br />

In their longest trip of the season Peterson's charges journeyed to<br />

Phoenix, Arizona where they competed in the annual ?reenv:-ay Rel~ys.<br />

The Staters finished only behind the University of Arizona In t,he final<br />

standings and nosed out U. S. C. During the course of the affair, Fra~k<br />

Heryet crack middle distance runner for State, lowered the Aztec mde<br />

, . ' b hi If' 4·31 3<br />

record when he completely outclassed the field to Win y irnse In . .,<br />

With the all-conference meet out of the way, the Staters traveled to<br />

Santa Barbara where the Santa Barbara Relays were held and Pasad out<br />

of the meetwith third place, yielding only to U. C. L. A. and.Pasa ena<br />

J: C. Outsta.gding performances were turned in by, Russ ~lkir:'lth~usah<br />

tionel sophomore star, and Frank Heryet, ~eteran ~der .. Alkire, bei~<br />

taking sixth in the 880 ran in the best time of his brief caree~, d·g<br />

, , h' 'I d time In<br />

clocked in 1:59.8. Heryet placed second In t e rru e an was<br />

4:26.5. f h<br />

, d h St t brought urt er<br />

With only a four-man team entere , tea ers I F<br />

. . hid thi d i the annua resno<br />

recognition to the college when t ey p ace ~r In , . thi d the<br />

Relaysj.one of the coast's outstanding track claSSICS. In wln nln J<br />

f rr 's<br />

Aztecs' beat out U. S. C. and the strong Olympic club squa rom an<br />

Franci~co.<br />

\i'<br />

100-yard dash-Kenny Ray .....<br />

220 d d h .... :10<br />

-yar as -Kenny Ray ..... .... :2 1.4<br />

440 -yar d d ash-Lowell Jones ..<br />

880 d .... :51.8<br />

-yer run-Frank Heryet.<br />

M<br />

'I .... 1:58.3<br />

I e run-Frank Heryet. ...<br />

Two-mile run-Bob Durbin .... 4:31.3<br />

f20-yard high hurdles-Sel~ynHart;g " .9:57.9<br />

nO-yard low hurdles-Ray Day... an ... : 15.2<br />

.... :23.7<br />

BEST TRACK MARKS DURING 1936<br />

Running broad jump-Leland McPhie 23' 2"<br />

High jump-Gene Kendall. . 6' 2"<br />

Discus throw-Tom Stone 121' 7"<br />

Shot Put-AI Churchman. . .. 38' 10"<br />

Javelin-Jack Pierson 176' 10"<br />

Pole vault-Kenny Ray. . 13' I"<br />

Mile relay-Russ Alkire, L. Jones, Russ Flint,<br />

S. Hartigan 3:25.5<br />

SAN<br />

EVENT NAME<br />

100 yards K. Johnson<br />

220 yards K, Ray<br />

440 yards H. Jones<br />

880 yards L. Petersen<br />

Mile<br />

F. Heryet<br />

2-mde R. Booth, Durbin<br />

120 h. h. S. Hartigan<br />

220 I. h. R, Day<br />

Shot B. Leonard<br />

DIEGO STATE COLLEGE TRACK AND FIELD RECORDS<br />

YEAR<br />

1928<br />

1936<br />

\933<br />

1929<br />

1936<br />

1936<br />

1935<br />

1936<br />

1933<br />

RECORD<br />

:9.8<br />

:21.4<br />

:50.1<br />

1:57.1<br />

4:31.3<br />

9:57.9<br />

:15<br />

:23.7<br />

46' 8"<br />

NAME YEAR RECORD<br />

EVENT<br />

141' 8'/8"<br />

Discus B. Leonard 1933 190' 101/2"<br />

Javelin W. Petersen 1929 150' 3"<br />

Hammer J. Brose 1930 6' 3ft<br />

1<br />

High jump W. Larson :~~~ 14' !f2"<br />

Pole vault Jack Rand 1936 23' 2"<br />

Broad jump L. McPhie 1927 3:25.2<br />

Mile relay Gu y FBoxd tun O. Worden<br />

L. Hoyt, F . oy s ,<br />

"""11""'11""""""1111"""<br />

90<br />

91


Front Row, left to right: Peterson, Lamke, Berdel, Wiegand, Juras, Patella, Baskerville, Seidel, Siegel,<br />

Noon, Manager.<br />

Back Row: Burrows, Chase, O'Connor, Salvin, Young, Bucklin, Owen, Robinson, Gault.<br />

Freshman<br />

Track<br />

CINDERPATH artists who performed on the 1936 frosh squad were able<br />

to line up but four practice meets in addition to the all-conference<br />

meet at Redlands on May 2, but in those four meets, the yearlings demonstrated<br />

that this years outfit was one of the strongest in frosh history.<br />

Meeting San Diego High in their first time out, the Babes took a first<br />

place in the relay which won the tilt for State. Final score was 57112 to<br />

551 12. Clair Berdel, middle distance star, and Alvin Bucklin, sprinter, took<br />

high scoring honors for the day, each winning two events. .<br />

In a triangular meet on the Montezuma field, the Staters showed their<br />

potential power by taking a first in every event except the relay and winning<br />

over the La Jolla and Coronado high schools. Ed Young grabbed<br />

four firsts to take scoring honors.<br />

In their third time out, Coach C. E. Peterson's spikesters smothered<br />

the Herbert Hoover track team to the tune of 69 1-3 to 42 2-3. Berdelof<br />

the frosh, ran his fastest mile, coming across the finish in 4:37, exceptionally<br />

fast time even for varsity runners.<br />

Grossmont high school was next on the list and succumbed to frosh<br />

performers, the final score reading 76 to 28. Berdel and Bucklin again<br />

won their favorite events, accounting for four first places between them.<br />

Because their relay team was disqualified through a technicality, the<br />

freshmen were deprived of their second consecutive conference championship<br />

in th annual loop meet held at Redlands. However, the Papooses<br />

we:e but one-half a point behind the winners, Occidental, who had 57'12<br />

pOints. Clair Berdel set a new frosh mile record by easily taking the event<br />

In 4:35.6.<br />

Frosh numeral winners were Alvin Bucklin Sam Patella Clair Berdel,<br />

Lionel Chesc, F:ed Lamke, Paul Seidel, Ed~ar Young, Grant Burrows,<br />

Elmer Siegel, Milan Juras, Walter Gault Henry Wiegand and Lloyd<br />

Baskerville. "<br />

I3AJ~I3ALL<br />

92


I ed to advantage. In the ~irst<br />

In conference clashes, the Aztecs s::ow th werful Whittier nine,<br />

circuit tilt for the Smith men, the locels tripped ei o e Churchman led<br />

4 to 3 on the Golden Hill diamond. In the ~econ gam the highly touted<br />

h<br />

' " 14 t 3 victory over<br />

IS team mates to an Impressive 0 I th lot<br />

Oxy nine. The locals literally hit the ball ~I ovher e 'the Staters met<br />

h f ' t t' dUring t e season, "t<br />

Traveling north for t e Irs ime d d 2 to a decIsion 0<br />

their only defeat of the seeson when they roppe a<br />

the conference leading Santa B':Hbara ~auchosf play at Redlands<br />

Coach Charlie Smith's nine ended ItS co~ ~re;ceWith the seven-hit<br />

University on May 2 by trimming th~ Bu"ldh.~~~ ~he'Aztecs staved off a<br />

pitching of big AI Churchman and time y ~ I~~~ tilt.<br />

last inning attempt by the northerners to c p I d members elected<br />

At the completion of the season thehlocah squ: nd Bill Larson, Th.e<br />

h<br />

'h AI Cure man H k' Bill<br />

as onorary captains for t e szason, h h Roger op Ins,<br />

following were awarded their letters:, AI C ~rc ma~ill Larson, Ed Smyth,<br />

Raaka Hideo Higashi Glen Garbanl, Stand urne:<br />

, 'd N I Gar nero<br />

Jack Yount, Jack Anderson, an orva


DURLAND<br />

HARLIN<br />

LI N DSLEY<br />

DYSON<br />

HARTIGAN<br />

Captains<br />

CHURCHMAN<br />

FOX<br />

LARSON<br />

BOJENS<br />

CHARLES "Sunday" Durland, veteran center, was chosen by his t~ammates<br />

as honorary captain of the squad. For basketball, Byron LIndsley<br />

was elected to head the squad for the 1935-36 season, while next<br />

year's leader will be Linden Burns.<br />

Selwyn Hartigan led the Aztec track squad during the 1936 season.<br />

AI Churchman, pitcher, and Bill Larson, outfielder, were elected as honorary<br />

captains of the baseball team. Art Metzger was elected fresh football<br />

captain.<br />

Clair Berdel, middle distance runner, was chosen to lead the frosh<br />

tracksters in the minor sports, Chet Young captained the tennis squad, and<br />

George Walton headed the Aztec fencers.<br />

Managers<br />

WALTER Harlin served as varsity football manager for 1935 winding<br />

up two consecutive years in that capacity. John Dyson took over<br />

the duties for Coach Morris Gross' basketball aggregation, while Vernon<br />

Fox served in the managerial position for the tracksters.<br />

Freshman managers were Tom Hutchens, football: Gene Muehleisen,<br />

basketball. Vernon Fox assumed the job for the freshman cinderpath team.<br />

In the minor sports, the following were in charge: Orville Nordberg,<br />

fencing; Tom Goodson, tennis; George Saleebey, wrestling: Glen Wirt and<br />

Jim Blethen, boxing.<br />

Stanley Bojens, as sports editor of <strong>Del</strong> Sudoeste, performed a service<br />

fully comparable to that of a manager.<br />

96


Secon/i~s:w Ri: it<br />

I:~t ~ohtg~t: Burton, Wharton, Silva, Seltzer,<br />

, rig : erryman, Searle, Bailey, Case res. Alward,<br />

Tennis<br />

WITH Charles his squad Burtonseriously had d~a. kene d , b y e I' Igl ibil~ty rulings" student coach<br />

of heralding the return of St a t Ifflcuhlt time moldln,g a ,tennis team worthy<br />

Aft ies of a e to t e conference In this sport<br />

er a series 0 practic t h h .<br />

Redlands and w t bema c es, t e varsity made its debut at<br />

of the conferen~:.m~he YA~~e of<br />

l<br />

the most ~o~erful teams in the history<br />

saved from a rout b II" ecs ost all their singles matches, but were<br />

Score: Redlands 7. YStPUtIng<br />

2<br />

out two of the three doubles engagements.<br />

Th ' , a e, .<br />

e following day A 'I 18 th '<br />

with the Poets. W'th th P!' , ey traveled to Whittier for a match<br />

four matches all with th d a~~~rnoon well spent, the score stood tied at<br />

Young and Buehlm ~ ~CI Ing doubles match yet to be played. With<br />

Young reached f an eh!o~lng a comfortable lead in this match, Captain<br />

was necessary toord a<br />

f<br />

ITt tOh ne and sprained hs ankle so badly that it<br />

State, 4. e au e match to Whittier. Score: Whittier, 5;<br />

April 25, Occidental c t S '<br />

termined squad f M tame 0 an Diego and was greeted by a dematches,<br />

and the O I t c~Fezumans who took all but one of the six singles<br />

I: score: State 6. 0 e 30wn to drop two of the three doubles games. Final<br />

~. Th' , xy, .<br />

'm<br />

;/////","" Chet Young<br />

e following<br />

Ja<br />

men<br />

S<br />

r<br />

ei elve ' d<br />

..<br />

I<br />

etters: Bill Buehlman, Clelland Wharton,<br />

.....I!!!..:::::::: •.~. f Nichols. Nu~era~e:er ear,e, Dick Ault, Carmack Berryman, and Bert<br />

/'111I- "',,:, Ernest Casares, Vincenf ~Iven to the following freshmen: LeRoy Alward,<br />

fj ~ \.:::.... va, Norman Seltzer, and Allen Bailey.<br />

(<br />

f f I~' ~~ '\ ... \ t,Jf<br />

P a, \, 'Ii<br />

, ~ ; f<br />

\<br />

.~~\ /<br />

!'fllllllllllllll""",IIIIIIIIIII'"<br />

~'" //J 9<br />

,,/1 8<br />

...... ;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;/<br />

Left to right: Gorton, Pfefferkorn, Scott, Goldie, Palmgren.<br />

Swimming<br />

ONE of the most outstanding performances of any State athletic team<br />

during the past year was that of the swimming team, under the direction<br />

of Coach Morris Gross. Because the sport is considered a minor<br />

one, the Staters participated in only one meet during the season, that of<br />

the all-conference held at the University of Redlands on May 9.<br />

With o~ly four men representing State College, the locals gathered<br />

enough points to win second place in the circuit standings, with Occidental,<br />

boasting a 17-man team, grabbing first honors with 56 points.<br />

The Grossmen accounted for 30 digits.<br />

Charles Scott and Mac Gorton shared high point honors for the season<br />

in doing so, each will have his name inscribed on the Colonel Ed<br />

Fletcher trophy, awarded each year to the highest scorer.<br />

Scott placed second in the 220 and 440-yard free-style in addition<br />

to being a member of the winning 200-yard relay team. Gorton took<br />

second in the 50 and IOO-yard free-style events. Other point winners for<br />

State were Alex Goldie, who was third in the IOO-yard free-style and second<br />

in the diving event, and Eric PfeHerkorn, second in the 200-yard<br />

breast-stroke.<br />

99


Left to right: Tyson, Fitzgerald, Walker, Luscomb, Kerian, Hurlburt, Jones, Boysen, Pfefferkorn, Lee,<br />

Golf<br />

WITH one of the strongest teams in the college's history, the Aztec<br />

golf squad won over Santa Barbara and Occidental colleges by<br />

overwhelming scores. Under the direction of Coach Leo Calland, the<br />

Staters met the Gauchos twice, defeating the northerners each time by<br />

a 12 to 0 score.<br />

In a series of matches with the Bengals on the Oakmont Country<br />

club course in Los Angeles, the local team drubbed the Oxy players by a<br />

score of 9 to O. At press time, an all-conference match was contemplated,<br />

although a definite decision had not yet been made.<br />

Charles Lee, former county amateur champion, led the local outfit<br />

and at the completion of the season won over Don Luscomb and Jack<br />

Fitzgerald in playoff matches to determine the winner of the Charles<br />

Dietrick golf trophy for 1936. This trophy is awarded each year to the<br />

outstanding member of the team. The other member of the four-man<br />

squad was Lynn McLean. In an effort to promote more interest in the<br />

game, plans are underway for an extensive golf program next year.<br />

Prospects for next year's team are bright with several good men<br />

coming up from the ranks of ineligible players. Bob Tyson, one of the top<br />

notch players in the county, was declared ineligible for team play this<br />

year: but will be back for next season's squad. Don Boysen, anoth: r<br />

ranking golfer, likewise was ineligible, but will report for the team again<br />

next year. Only one man will be lost through graduation, that being<br />

Charles Lee.<br />

Front Row, left to right: Harrington, Block, Hayden, Walton, McCormack. ~ubbard ..<br />

'Middle Row: Harlow, Morrison. Wolgast, Manzeck, J, Spore. B, Spore, ermen.<br />

Back Row: Harper, Gavin. Whitney. Varney. Cushman. Nordberg,<br />

Fencing<br />

WITH an extra allotment included on the budget for fe~cing du~ing<br />

1935-36, the sport became one of the most popular In the minor<br />

d h d<br />

' t' f Coach Robert Manzeck,<br />

divisions on the campus. Un er t e irec Ion 0<br />

both the foils and sabre teams met some of the best fencers in southern<br />

California during the year. .<br />

, During the fall, the Aztecs met the Los Angeles Junior College In a<br />

I<br />

'F Ilowing was a match<br />

match and dropped the decision by a c ose margin. 0 ,<br />

cJ which the Staters easily won.<br />

with the San Diego Army and Navy Aca emy If d AI<br />

Members of the foils team during the fall semester were A re exd<br />

Russell Alkire. Sabre team<br />

ander, George Walton, Paul Kraemer, an d W It<br />

, 0 'II N dberg Roy Harlow, an a<br />

members were Harrie Whitney, rVI e or ,<br />

Harrington.<br />

d<br />

. h d turn match with the Army an<br />

The spring semester team first a a re 0<br />

d ts i series of close contests. n<br />

Navy Academy and beat out the ca e s In a , II U C LA<br />

I J rnor Co ege, . . . .,<br />

May I and 2, Manzeck's men met Los A nge es u<br />

the Hollywood Athletic club, and U.S.C. G e Wal.<br />

duri th pring term were eorg<br />

Members of the foils team Urlng e s b<br />

I Ha den Sabre team mem ers<br />

ton, James Spore, Paul Harper, and Stan ey Y . I B'II V ney and<br />

, . 'Wh' Roy Har ow, I ar ,<br />

Included Orville Nordberg, Harne itney.<br />

d b Orville Nordberg.<br />

James Spore. The team was manage Y<br />

",",111"'"',11,"",',1,'"",,.<br />

101<br />

100


Boxing<br />

Front Row, left to right: Blethen, Sullivan. Danforth, White, Johnston, Harris, Wirt.<br />

Bad Row: McChristy, Pollard, Beckett, Cockrell, Coffin, de 10 Cruz.<br />

WITH the acquisition of new equipment during the spring seme.ster,<br />

interest in the boxing classes at State College has taken a decided<br />

upbound since February. . .<br />

Classes are held seven hours per week under the direction of studentcoaches<br />

Jim Blethen and Glen Wirt.<br />

During the past year the boxers have presented bouts on three different<br />

occasions, in addition to two cards of inter-class bouts.<br />

Some of the best and most willing boxers this year were: Bill Beckett,<br />

Ricardo de la Cruz, Bill Ehmke, Magner White, Bob Johnston, Harold<br />

Baker, and Fritz Lamke.<br />

ALTHOUGH lacking somewhat in participants during the year, the<br />

State College wrestling team with Morris Gross as advisor, and<br />

George Saleebey as student coach, engaged in inter-squad competition<br />

for the most part in addition to entering the annual A. A. U. county<br />

tournament, met the southern California champions from San Diego High<br />

School. The Aztec entry marked the first time a State team had entered<br />

the<br />

A. A. U. tourney.<br />

The locals took third place behind San Diego High and the Army and<br />

Navy Y. M. C. A. Suke Aizumi won second place honors in the 126-lb.<br />

class while George Sa lee bey was second in the I 12-lb. division.<br />

Lcft to right: Azumi, Cormier, Cockrell, Marrow, Saleebey, Wheeler, Schwab, Farwell, Moore.<br />

Wrestling


Inter-Fraternity Sports<br />

INTER-FRATERNITY sports, always the source of keen competition on the<br />

campus, were under the supervision during the 1935-36 season of AI<br />

Churchman, who acted in the capacity of athletic commissioner with<br />

Coach Morrie Gross as athletic advisor to the inter-fraternity council.<br />

Eight Greek letter groups competed in the four major sports and four minor<br />

sports during the season which began on October 21 with the round-robin<br />

in touch football.<br />

No varsity lettermen or frosh lettermen were eligible to compete in<br />

the annual contests and a plaque was awarded the leading fraternity in<br />

each sport at the completion of the respective tournaments. To the<br />

fraternity with the largest number of points at the end of the season goes<br />

the Paul Mott trophy.<br />

In the touch football playoffs, top honors were divided by Eta Omega<br />

<strong>Del</strong>tas and the Phi Lambda Xi's with five wins, one defeat and one tied<br />

game each. However, because of the tie, the two teams met in a special<br />

game and superior power and deception put the Hods in front by six<br />

points. Although threatening several times, the Phi Lambda Xi's were<br />

unable to cope with the Hods' attack.<br />

Following the gridiron tourney, the eight fraternities went into the<br />

basketball playoffs on January 7. Kappa Phi Sigmil, boasting one of the<br />

best casaba outfits in past years, went through its schedule with five wins<br />

and one tie game to clinch first place. Second honors went to Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta<br />

Chi and Eta Omega <strong>Del</strong>ta who tied with five wins and two defeats apiece.<br />

The third sport participated in by the Greek letter groups was track<br />

which was run off on March 3 and 4. After battling for points in the two<br />

day meet the Phi Lambda Xi's were able to muster enough places to pile<br />

up 52 points to take first place honors with Kappa Phi Sigma second with<br />

37'12 digits. Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi was nosed out by Sigma Lambda by one-half<br />

point for third place.<br />

The Tau <strong>Del</strong>ts ran up the first perfect record of the interfrat sport<br />

season when they went through a stiff volleyball schedule winning all seven<br />

of their games. The Hods pulled up their total point standings by taking<br />

second place with third spot going to the Phi Lambda Xi's.<br />

FoII~wing volleyball, the fraternities participated in the swimming<br />

meet which was taken by Epsilon Eta with 25 points followed by the<br />

Kappa Phi Sigs with 15. The Tau <strong>Del</strong>ts further boosted their total point<br />

s:ore by grabbing third. ,<br />

Winning in the second singles and the doubles and placing second in<br />

num b er ne Singles Eta Omega <strong>Del</strong>ta won the tennis title with a total of<br />

0 , . .<br />

23 points. Phi Lambda Xi with 1912 1 points nosed out Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi with<br />

18112 points for second place. <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi Beta was fourth.. ..<br />

Although two sports remained to be played off as this edition went<br />

t the inter-fraternity cup was expected to be fought for by the<br />

t~r::~:s~ding fraternities. Phi Lambda Xi led with a total of 33212 1 while<br />

the Tau <strong>Del</strong>ts were close behind with 315. Eta Omega <strong>Del</strong>ta had a total<br />

of 297 12 1 points.<br />

Phi<br />

With golf and indoor still to be played the point totals were:<br />

F. B. B. B. V. B. Track Swimimng Tenr.is Tolol<br />

Lambda Xi..... 87 1 12 20 40 100 30 55 332 1 12<br />

Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi ...<br />

55 65 75 40<br />

40 40 315<br />

Eta Omega <strong>Del</strong>ta .. 87 1 12 65 55 10 5 75 297 1 12<br />

20 100 20 75 55 0 270<br />

Kappa Phi Sigma ....<br />

30 10 5 30 75 20 170<br />

Epsilon Eta ...... --------_._---- -----<br />

35 0 20 10 10 115<br />

Omega Xi ... 40<br />

35 20 0 20 30 105<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta Pi Beta ...... 0<br />

10 0 20 55 0 5 90<br />

Sigma Lambda ..... --------------_.<br />

Inter-Class<br />

Sports<br />

A<br />

. . . fned to a few sports during<br />

LTHOUGH inter-class actiVities w~re h con I d bin affairs will probd<br />

t e roun -ro I<br />

the year, the enthusiasm arouse In<br />

tensi gram next year. d<br />

ably result in a more ex ensive pro d h . us classes first entere<br />

, f W It Hit e vane<br />

Under the direction 0 a erre I' k f lay there was a three-<br />

Aft era wee sop , ff<br />

the basketball tournament. er sev h In a series of playo s,<br />

, " d sop omores. I<br />

way tie between the seniors, Juniors, an L' d I won the interc ass<br />

h d b Byron In<br />

the sophomore five, coac e y<br />

s ey,<br />

championship. , ports in the college, drew<br />

Badminton one of the fastest growing s\' 'the city. Finalists<br />

, , f the best p ayers In .'<br />

a large entry list including some 0 . I B ton with Burton trimming<br />

. I hi nd Char es ur ,<br />

in the tourney were Bil Bue ma~ a b dminton honors for the year.<br />

his rival 15-8,6-15, 15-10,to Win the a , future years, Coach Robert<br />

With the idea of building up a tea,m In th<br />

ear Although no com-<br />

, tics dUring e y. d' f t<br />

Manzeck held a class In gymnas I 'II b bly be represente In u ure<br />

petition was available, the Aztecs WI pro a<br />

city<br />

tournaments.<br />

)<br />

104


Front Row, left to right: Saleebey, Higashi, Smyth, Durbin, Walton,<br />

Back Row: Scott, Burns, Ray, M. Gorton, Lindsley, Buehlman, Lee.<br />

Cup Winners<br />

T 0 OUTSTANDING athletes in the various sports at State College are<br />

awarded each year trophies, some donated by interested San Diego<br />

business and others given by former students. The most prized award<br />

given is that given to the man considered by the coaches as the outstanding<br />

.athl~te in college during the year. This trophy is awarded on a point<br />

basis, with scholarship, athletic ability, inspirational qualities, and valuableness<br />

to the athletic department, taken into consideration.<br />

This trophy, the William Lundberg cup, was donated by four former<br />

students at State in memory of William Lundberg, an outstanding athlete<br />

",:h~ was lost on the Mojave desert while working with the cup donors<br />

dUring the summer months.<br />

This year the award was given to Edmund Smyth and AI Churchman.<br />

Churchman was outstanding in football, track, and baseball, while Smyth<br />

was outstanding in football, track, basketball, and baseball.<br />

The Ren Thompson footall trophy, awarded to the most valuable man<br />

~as won by. Ed Smyth. The Jessop brothers trophy for cross-country running<br />

was given to Robert Durbin. The most valuable man award in<br />

basketball, donated by Paul Mott, was won by Byron Lindsley and Linden<br />

Burns. The Fo~ ?rothers' most valuable man award was won this year by<br />

Kenny Ray. William Buehlman was given the Dolph Muehleisen tennis award.<br />

Mac Gorton and Charles Scott shared honors in the Ed Fletcher swimming<br />

t~ophy. Hideo Higashi was awarded the Linn Platner baseball trophy,<br />

given for the man having the highest batting average during the season,<br />

while George Saleebey was the winner of the Werner Petersen wrestling<br />

trophy. The Charles Dietrick golf trophy was won by Charles Lee.<br />

13()()1\ IV<br />

()l2f7A~IZATI()<br />

""'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''<br />

...1'1<br />

106


o<br />

o<br />

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II<br />

I<br />

,<br />

'"""r<br />

,.\ILl<br />

'.fo\~<br />


FACULTY<br />

Dean A. G. Peterson, Paul Pfaff, Dean C. E.<br />

Peterson, Don Robertson.<br />

CAP and GOWN<br />

SENIORS<br />

Alfred Alexa~der, Bernard Carman, Alber:<br />

Churchmen. Don Clarkson, Rene Dupree, Gordon<br />

Peterson, George Sorenson, William<br />

Tinker, Howard Turrentine, John Tyers, Gordon<br />

Wiggins.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Gil Callies, Selwyn Hartigan, Frank Heryet,<br />

Byron Lindsley, Maurice Savage, Tom Stone.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Chancellor, Phillys Barker<br />

Vice Chancellor, Mary Lindley<br />

Scribe, Olive Hockaday<br />

Herald, Abbie Johnson<br />

Alexander, Carman, Churchman<br />

Clarkson, Dupree, Hartigan, Heryet<br />

Lindsley, Peterson, Sorenson, Stone<br />

Tinker, Turrentine, Tyers, Wiggins<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President, Gordon Peterson<br />

Vice President, Bernard Carman<br />

Sec.-Treas., Selwyn Hartigan<br />

Organized in the fall of 1932<br />

from a group known as the Council<br />

of Twelve, the Blue Key, honorary<br />

service organization for upper<br />

classmen, is now a member of<br />

more than one hundred chaoters.<br />

The mother chapter of Blue Key is<br />

located at the University of<br />

Florida.<br />

The motto of Blue Key is "Serving,<br />

I live," which has typified the<br />

spirit of the group in its projects<br />

underta ken th is past yea r, the most<br />

important of which were the publishing<br />

of the student directory and<br />

the continuance of the Blue Key<br />

employment bureau.<br />

".... 1<br />

"..,'<br />

Continuing its tradition of raising<br />

a scholarship fund for a worthy<br />

senior woman, Cap and Gown,<br />

honorary senior woman's org,anization,<br />

has again given a series of<br />

studio teas to ra ise the needed<br />

funds. Innovating a new idea this<br />

year, the members sponsored a<br />

successful quiet library drive. They<br />

also participated in a fashion show<br />

this spring.<br />

The membership of the club is<br />

limited to twelve senior women<br />

who are elected by the previou,s<br />

year's group on the basis of their<br />

past service to the school.<br />

Armstrong. Barker<br />

Freeman, Gledhill, Hildret,h<br />

Hockaday, Johnson, Kearns, Lindley<br />

Moore, Stooke, Stose, Veed<br />

FACULTY<br />

Dean MiJry McMullen.<br />

B L U E KEY<br />

"... ,1<br />

~~


SENIORS<br />

Morjorie Fletcher, Doris Gledhill, Doris<br />

Pritchard.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Klea Bissell, Thelma Gorham, Mildred Haworth,<br />

Virginia Hulbert, Chloris Kersten, Winifred<br />

Lee, Betty Lonie, Betty Morgan, Doris<br />

Noble, Ruby Mae Peters, Bernice Rohde,<br />

Doris Smith, Ruth Stanley, Neva Struve.<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Nan Carlson, Ahleen Crandall, Eleanor Engle,<br />

Marjorie Ernsting, Betty Goldsmith, Jane<br />

Grant, Bernita Offerman, Rose Perez, Genevieve<br />

Rainwater, Jean Shuyler, Alice Sieglinger,<br />

Sylvia Siayen, BeHy Wenger.<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Glory Abbott, Winona Bisher, Marion Bowler.<br />

Ida Corley, Melinda Eyesell, Donalda George,<br />

Dorothy Griswold, Mary Em Hardie, Ruth<br />

Hawley, Caroline Jasper, Betty Kemp, Lois<br />

Kennedy, Evelyn Koenig, Rosalie Maiss,<br />

T~elma McCarthy, Buta Medlar, Dora Newel.l.<br />

Jacqueline Read, Mary Roberts, Margaret<br />

Simison, Ruth Sontag, Melba Southern<br />

Carlson, Gledhill<br />

Goldsmith, Gorham<br />

Lon ie, Peters<br />

Sieglinger, Rohde, Stanley<br />

Frances Stafford, Geraldine Turner, Hele~<br />

Van Fleet, Dorothy Wallace.<br />

SPECIAL<br />

Margaret<br />

Curtis.<br />

CABfNET<br />

President, Bernice Rhode<br />

Vice President, Betty Lonie<br />

Secretary, Ruby Mae Peters<br />

Treasurer, Nan Carlson<br />

Membership, Doris Gledhill<br />

Race Relations, Thelma Gorham<br />

Pu~licity, Ruth Stanley<br />

SOCial, Betty Goldsmith<br />

Historian, Alice Sieglinger<br />

A subsidiary organization to the<br />

YWCA, the College Y is a campus<br />

group open to all women. The<br />

aim of the group is toward "creative<br />

living," and it embodies all the<br />

ideals that are characteristic of its<br />

mother organization.<br />

For the past year the activities<br />

of the group have chiefly been<br />

centered around its monthly supper<br />

meetings and weekly open<br />

forums held in Scripps cottage, at<br />

which race relations were the chief<br />

topics for the discussion.<br />

COLLEGE<br />

110<br />

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t)<br />

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iI//J'·..·<br />

.........<br />

I ~~:::::.--_ :::::::, ( :::::::::::-.- .. I<br />

». '\~<br />

I<br />

'/"-1-<br />

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:.l..<br />

1/ (: :x<br />

« r ~<br />

t ~<br />

• : \ I "'t<br />

/ / \I!' I \<br />

I'<br />

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.....-,;;;:::..-;/ - ;; ;,:/<br />

............. /.... '0. •••• "If'<br />

............. ,."<br />

D E L V E R S<br />

To further fellowship and study<br />

among geology students, <strong>Del</strong>vers,<br />

honorary geology [retemity. was<br />

founded in 1934. At fortnightly<br />

meetings the members have enjoyed<br />

social activities and listened<br />

to speakers on subjects selected<br />

as the theme for a three months<br />

period.<br />

During the past year, the m~mbers<br />

have completed the mapping<br />

of the Cuyamaca area, a project<br />

begun a year ago. A relief map<br />

showing the rock formations of San<br />

Diego County was also completed<br />

and is on display in the geology<br />

museum.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President, Norman Dennstedt<br />

Vice President, Clyde Snider<br />

Secretary, Fred Chilcott<br />

Treasurer, Clyde Snider<br />

FACULTY<br />

Baylor<br />

Brooks.<br />

HONORARY MEMBER<br />

Wm. T. Skilling.<br />

'MIIIINHINHI""""",,,"IHIJ<br />

III<br />

SENIORS<br />

Fred Chilcott,<br />

Holmes .<br />

Norman Dennstedt, Don<br />

Butzbach, Chilcott<br />

Dennstedt. Durbin<br />

Fowler, Holmes<br />

Kennedy, One. Payton, Snider<br />

JUNIORS B<br />

b ' Alexander Calhoun, Bob<br />

Harry utz e cn. k 0 Harvey<br />

Durbin, Marlow Fowler, Fran no,<br />

Seapy, Clyde Snider.<br />

SOPHOMORES Francis Wann.<br />

Bob Kennedy, Don Payton,<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Harry Simmonds.


FACULTY<br />

Dean Jesse W. Ault<br />

PHI SIGMA XI<br />

GRADUATES<br />

Marie B. Cook, Jeanne Davies, Sam We'mberg.<br />

Caragher, Chatterley<br />

Curtis, Da ny<br />

Davies, DeLannoy<br />

Heiss, Liljegren<br />

Lindley, Rau, Soule, Veed, Whitten<br />

SENIORS<br />

Alice Ca~agher, Lois Chatterley, Thelma 'Curt,s,.<br />

Roselie Dany: William DeLannoy, Gladis<br />

Heiss, Ernest. Liljegren, Mary Lindley, Henriette<br />

Rau, El,nor Soule, Faith Whitten, Mary<br />

Veed.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Elaine Browne, Esther Harder.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President, Marie B. Cook<br />

Vice President, Faith Whitten<br />

Secretary, Lois Chatterley<br />

Treasurer, Alice Caragher<br />

. Alph Sigma chapter of the national<br />

honorary educational fratedn,ty,<br />

Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi, was founde<br />

here in 1927 for the purpose of<br />

encouraging its members to a higher<br />

degree of devotion to social<br />

service by fostering high intellectual<br />

and personal standards.<br />

M.embership to Kappa <strong>Del</strong>ta Pi<br />

requires a high scholastic average.<br />

Biology and zoology majors of<br />

high scholastic standing are banded<br />

together in Phi Sigma Xi, organization<br />

for the furtherance of<br />

knowledge in biology.<br />

Organized this year from a<br />

group of interested students, the<br />

group now numbers twenty and is<br />

active in doing biological research.<br />

At their semi-monthly meetings<br />

held in the various member's<br />

homes, they have been singularly<br />

fortunate in obtaining notable<br />

speakers to lecture on recent biolog<br />

ica \ trends.<br />

Several of the members were in<br />

the group that went on a research<br />

trip into Baja California .<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President. Lee Arnold<br />

Vice President, Ian Moore<br />

Secretary-T rea surer , Robert<br />

Gardner<br />

Corresponding Secretary, Dorothy<br />

Adair<br />

FACULTY<br />

Dr. Myrtle Johnson, Dorothy Harvey, James<br />

Crouch, Or. Robert Harwood.<br />

Arnold, Adair<br />

Barker, Boye,<br />

Cloud, Douglas, Ford, Gardner<br />

Harter Jenkins, Johnson, Kalstrom<br />

Keller, Krae~er, Lahman, Walden, Wennberg<br />

ASSOCIATE MEMBERS<br />

Robert Hoard, Elizabeth Jenkins, Allen Keller,<br />

Viola Summermeier.<br />

SPECIAL STUDENTS<br />

Margaret Wennberg.<br />

SENIORS<br />

Dororthy Adair, Lee<br />

A Id<br />

rna,<br />

Clara Cloud,<br />

George Ford, Sam Harter.<br />

KAPPA DELTA PI "<br />

JUNIORS I J' Kalstrom, Robert Gard-<br />

Ralph Doug as. ames<br />

P<br />

aul Kraemer, Ian Moore.<br />

ner,<br />

SOPHOMORES R lahman, Joe<br />

Allen Barker, Cleo Boyer, ay<br />

Richards, Merideth Walden .<br />

.","""',UI,#,,,,"II',II,',IIIII<br />

1\3


FACULTY<br />

Dr. Elil beth Brown, L sli P. Brown, Walter<br />

1. Phillips. Hilda Walk r.<br />

o<br />

c E<br />

o T<br />

L<br />

MEMBERS<br />

LE CERCLE FRANCAIS<br />

Alfred Alexander, Fred Bankerd, Margaret<br />

Bock, Howard Brunson, Lois Chatterley, Marjorie<br />

Chilcott, Everett Coffin, Verina Cronburg,<br />

Marjorie Fletcher, Charlesetta Langenstein,<br />

Winifred Lee, Virginia Lutz, Frances<br />

Jane Moore, Betty Morgan, Eleanor Robyn,<br />

Hazel Scofield, Clyde Snider, Jacqueline<br />

Trenfel, Virginia Urbani, Faith Whitten.<br />

ALPHA MU GAMMA<br />

Lois Chatterley, Marjorie Chilcott, Bernice<br />

Clarke, Thelma Curtis, Ernest Hom, Ashleigh<br />

Mcl ntosh, Hazel Scofield, Clyde Snider, Jacqueline<br />

Trenfel, Virginia Urbani.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President, Art Clarkson<br />

Vice President. Bob Baughn<br />

Secretary. James Smith<br />

Treasurer, Eric Pfefferkorn<br />

Alexander, Brunson<br />

Chatterley, Chilcott<br />

Clarke, Curtis, Fletcher, Hom<br />

~ee, Lutz, Moore, Morgan, Robyn<br />

Scofield, Snider, Trenfel, Urbani, Whitten<br />

LE CERCLE FRANC/~IS<br />

Le Cercle Francais, organized<br />

for students studying French, was<br />

organized in 1933 to supplement<br />

study of the language with knowledge<br />

of French customs and culture.<br />

Officers<br />

President, Virginia Urbani<br />

Vice President, Fred Bankerd<br />

Secretary, Jacqueline Trenfel<br />

Treasurer, Betty Morgan<br />

ALPHA MU GAMMA<br />

Having its name linked with a<br />

large number of service projects<br />

this year, Oceotl, sophomore honorary<br />

service fraternity, has maintained<br />

the precedent set when the<br />

group was founded in 1933 and<br />

has proven itself one of the most<br />

active organizations on the campus.<br />

Projects participated in have included<br />

the Traditions Court, distribution<br />

of megaphones at football<br />

games, aiding at all AMS functions,<br />

and lighting and cleaning<br />

the "S."<br />

Alpha Mu Gamma, national<br />

honorary language society, is represented<br />

here on the campus by<br />

the <strong>Del</strong>ta chapter. The requirement~<br />

for membership are high<br />

standing In scholarship and in the<br />

language which is being studied.<br />

'..........<br />

FACULTY<br />

Dean C. E. Peterson.<br />

Asakawa, Ault, Barnes, Berkstresser<br />

Boughn, Bresler, Buehlman •. Burto n<br />

Clarke Clarkson, Cunningham. Dixon, Gorton<br />

Hayd~n, Koller, Larabee, Meiers, Pfe~ferkorn<br />

Smith, Shaffer, Vieu, Wharton. Willson<br />

Officers<br />

President, Jacqueline Trenfel<br />

Vice President, Hazel Scofield<br />

Secretary, Bernice Clarke<br />

Treasurer, Ernest Hom<br />

Editor, Virginia Urbani<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Russell Alkire, Moto Asakawa. Richard ~ult.<br />

Fred Barnes, Bill Berkstresser. Stanley BOlens,<br />

Bob Boughn, Hve Bresler, Bill Buehlmo n ,<br />

Charles Burton, Owen CIMke, Art Clarhon,<br />

Allan Cunningham. Bob Dixon, Ray Early,<br />

Frank Ferguson, Mac Gorton, Stan Hayd.en.<br />

Jim Hughes, James Johnson, Bill Koller. Giles<br />

L b Fred Meiers. Eric Pfefferkorn, Evan<br />

S~~aff:re, James Smith, Ernest Viau, Clelland<br />

Whart~n, Howard Willson.<br />

'~IIII"H"'III""IIII"""II"III<br />

114<br />

115


FACULTY<br />

Georgia C. Amsden, Dr. Roy Cameron.<br />

TAU<br />

S I G MA<br />

SENIORS<br />

Dorothy Armstrong, Constance Barba, Catherine<br />

Fowler, Janet Hoon, Abbie Johnson,<br />

Leah Levikow, Frances Jane Moore, Nada<br />

Moser, Helen Pollok, Janet Roberts, Zone<br />

Starr, Jessie Walker.<br />

Armstrong, Barba<br />

Clardy, Collins, Fowler, Hoon<br />

Johnson, Kersten, Lee, Moore<br />

Moser, Murphy, Oberg, B. Roberts<br />

J. Roberts, Robertson, Smith, Starr, Walker<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Elaine Browne, Betty Clardy, Adele Collins,<br />

Chloris Kersten, Winifred Lee, Ruby Murphy,<br />

Vivian Oberg, Barbara Roberts, Mildred<br />

Robertson, Doris Smith.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Zone Starr<br />

Vice President, Janet Hoon<br />

Secretary Treasurer, Janet Roberts<br />

Spring<br />

President, Mildred Robertson<br />

Vice President, Ruby Murphy<br />

Secretary, Doris Smith<br />

Treasurer, Leah Levikow<br />

Pi Phi Epsilon, upper division<br />

honorary economics sorority, was<br />

formed in 1933 for the purpose of<br />

stimulating interest among the women<br />

in the college in modern<br />

economic problems. This year<br />

they have followed and discussed<br />

at their bi-weekly meetings the<br />

general theme "Use of Leisure<br />

Time as a Social Problem."<br />

The monthly dinner meeting is<br />

addressed by a qualified speaker<br />

on the chosen theme.<br />

PI PHI EPS I LON<br />

116<br />

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(II<br />

Tau Sigma, economics fraternity,<br />

was founded May 14, 1930. The<br />

fraternitv has been especially fortunate<br />

this year in having been addressed<br />

by many of the leading<br />

business men and economists of<br />

San Diego. Thus its members have<br />

received an insight into present<br />

day problems which should prove<br />

invaluable in later life. Bi-weekly<br />

meetings were held through the<br />

year. On May 7th the Annual<br />

Founder's Day banquet and alumni<br />

reunion was held as a climax to<br />

the year's activities.<br />

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FACULTY<br />

Florence<br />

S. Dickheut.<br />

SENIORS<br />

Alfred Alexonder, Wolter Harlin, James Hutton,<br />

Gordon Wiggins.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Margaret Bock, Elaine Browne, Graciamae<br />

Carpenter, Stan Conant, Dave Ferris, Bob<br />

Kennedy, Bette LaDue, Lottie Mitchell, Doris<br />

Noble.<br />

Alexonder, Barron, Bock, Bresler, Burton<br />

Carpenter, Conant, Cormier, Danforth, Dorsey<br />

Falconer, Fay, Ferris, Harlin, Kemp<br />

Ke.nnedy, Le Due, Mitchell, Noble, Nordberg<br />

Shields, Tenck, Thomas, Vernacchia, Wiggins<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

John Barron, Carmack Berryman, Stan Bojens,<br />

Elya Bresler, Charles Burton, Orville Nordberg,<br />

Wilmer Shields, Evelyn Tanck, Ralph<br />

Vernacchia.<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Peggy Conners, Phillip Cormier, Orville Danforth,<br />

George Dorsey, Bob Falconer, Charles<br />

Fay, Betty Kemp, George Saleeby, Betty<br />

Thomas, Carl Ufen.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President, Lottie Mitchell<br />

Vice President, Alfred Alexander<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, Evelyn Tanck<br />

The Press Club, campus organization<br />

composed of students interested<br />

in publications, has as its<br />

purpose the aim to further knowledge<br />

of the publishing art. Its<br />

membership comprises nearly all<br />

those persons who contribute to<br />

The Aztec, El Palenque and <strong>Del</strong><br />

Sudoeste.<br />

Activities participated in during<br />

the past year have been the skating<br />

party at Mission Beach, press<br />

conventions held in Santa Barbara<br />

and Los Angeles, and the revision<br />

of the style book, a key to good<br />

newspaper writing.<br />

PRE S S CLUB<br />

SKULL and DAGGER<br />

Skull and Dagger, formerly an<br />

upper division organization, combined<br />

in 1933 with Pendragon,<br />

lower division group, to form the<br />

nucleus of dramatic activities on<br />

the campus.<br />

An honorary group, Skull and<br />

Dagger's chief aim is to further<br />

drama at State college. Members<br />

were active the past year in sponsoring<br />

the Big Game Variety show,<br />

and engaged in i'lll drama department<br />

productions, participated in<br />

the State College days at the Exposition,<br />

a nd sponsored assem blies<br />

in the Little Theater for students.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President, Willi'am DeLannoy<br />

Vice President, Emily Hatch<br />

Secretary, Anna Just<br />

Treasurer, Albert Bradt<br />

FACULTY<br />

Joseph S, Keeney, Dr. Lewis B. Lesley, Patti<br />

Patterson, Paul Pfaff, Spencer Rogers.<br />

SE~1f~e~S Alexander, Albert Bradt, Don Clarkson,<br />

William DeLannoy, Barbara Freeman,<br />

Emily Hatch, Olive Hockaday, Abbie Johnson,<br />

Agnes Lynch, John Tyers.<br />

Alexander, Alkire, Arbatch<br />

Bowler, Bradt, Bresler, Clerk, Clarkson<br />

DeLannoy, Flint, Freeman, Gorton, Hockadoy<br />

Hatch, Heller, Johnson, Just, Koller<br />

Lynch, Noon, Taylor, Ivers, Wetlell<br />

JUNIORS . I A batch June Bowler,<br />

Russell tlk(e H<br />

~~r: Da~e, Rus'sell Flint, Anna<br />

Helen M ar, t uNoon Francis Perry, Charles<br />

Just, argare '<br />

Taylor.<br />

SOPHOMORES Sheridan Gorton, Bob Howley,<br />

~I~:h ~:fll:;: Bill Koller, Scott Watson, Helen<br />

Wetzell.<br />

to<br />

'1'",,,,,,"""""11,,,"""11'.<br />

118<br />

1\9


FACULTY<br />

Mlh II r<br />

H m nn,<br />

SENIORS<br />

Ruth Au~tin, Fred Bankerd, AI Brodt, Genevi<br />

ve Burgeson, Fred Chilcott, Phyllis Hole,<br />

Kotherin. Jones, Betty Kearns. Svdne Kobu<br />

ch, Ellemer]e Pockord, Margaret Ouinnellv,<br />

G org Sor rison, Eleanor Soule, Mary Swarner,<br />

George Worthington.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Frances Box, Virginia Brems, June Draper,<br />

Russ II Flint, Evelyn Henning, Aileen James,<br />

Claire Lippincott, Don Luscomb, Ruby Moe<br />

Peters, Mory L. Smith, Jock Stafford, Neva<br />

Struve, Jane Wells.<br />

Austin, Averill, Barron, Box<br />

Brodt, Brems, Chilcott, Flint<br />

Hoi , Henning, Jam s, L. Johnson, R. Johnson, Kearns<br />

Kebusch. Lippincott, Lords, Luscomb, McOsker, Packard<br />

P t rs, Ouinnelly, Smith, Sorenson. Soule, Struve<br />

Swerner, Talbot, Tevlor, Vcme cchle, Wells, Worthington<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Lorraine Averill, George Baker, John Barron,<br />

Lucille Johnson, Don Lords, Margaret Me·<br />

Osker, Virginia Telbot, Rolph Vernacchia.<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Robin Johnson, Frances Lowe, Anne Peters,<br />

Kay Sumner, Nancy Taylor.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President, Ellamarie Packard<br />

Vice President, Sydna Kobusch<br />

Secretary, Phyllis Hale<br />

Treasurer, Frances Box<br />

Historian, Ralph Vernacchia<br />

Organized in 1928, the Art<br />

Guild, honorary group for art students,<br />

has as its purpose the encouragement<br />

of art appreciation<br />

and increased knowledge among<br />

its members. Among activities of<br />

the year was the drive for funds<br />

for the Aztec Statue. Donal Hord,<br />

nationally known sculptor, is to<br />

have the statue finished by the<br />

fall.<br />

ART<br />

G U I L D<br />

120<br />

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TOASTMISTRESSES<br />

TOASTMASTERS<br />

Established to promote improvement<br />

of speaking ability and to<br />

offer service to the school, Toestmasters<br />

and Toastmistresses held<br />

meetings during the year at Vincent's<br />

Dining room and at the<br />

homes of members.<br />

Each member gives s h 0 r t<br />

speeches which are criticized by a<br />

speaker of the evening with the<br />

purpose of improving posture,<br />

delivery, and organization of material.<br />

Toastmasters club was honored<br />

with acceptance as a chapter<br />

of "Toastmasters International,"<br />

the first campus group to become<br />

part of an international organization.<br />

Paul Pfaff, Spencer Rogers, and<br />

Miss Marjorie Davis were sponsors.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Toastmistresses<br />

President, Graciamae Carpenter<br />

Secretary, Carolyne Reed<br />

Treasurer, Bernice Bonsignor<br />

Social Chairman, Ruth Stanley<br />

Toastmasters<br />

President, Bill Berkstresser<br />

Vice President, Lionel Chase<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, George<br />

Burrows<br />

I:...,-,<br />

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BARKER B. CAPPS M. CAPPS SCOFIELD VOGT WARNER<br />

MU SIGMA<br />

Mu ~igma Pi, honorary music sorority, was organized in 1934 for the purpose of<br />

fulfilling a definite need at State College for a higher standard of musical performance<br />

and now numbers about twenty active and alumnae members.<br />

The sorority sponsors monthly concerts and special recitals of the members and<br />

takes an active interest in all the musical activities of the college. Meetings are held<br />

semi-monthly at the homes of the members, and every second meeting is devoted to a<br />

musical program given by members of the group. .<br />

Officers for the year were: president, Viola Vogt; first vice president, Margaret<br />

Capps; second vice president, Betty Jean Capps; secretary, Dorothy Warner; treasurer,<br />

Hazel Scofield.<br />

Members are: Faculty, L. Deborah Smith, Christine Springston; Seniors, Phillys<br />

Barker, Margaret Capps, Viola Vogt, Hazel Scofield, Dorothy Warner; Sophomores,<br />

Betty Jean Capps; Pledges, Anna Martin, Margaret Stratton.<br />

PI<br />

STANFORD<br />

ENGLE<br />

WESLEYAN<br />

CLEMSON<br />

McVEIGH<br />

J. P. STONE<br />

FOUNDATION<br />

D' State College was organized on De-<br />

The Wesleyan Foundation S:lub of San 11;~f college age. The group meets the<br />

cember 3, 193_~, fo~ all Methodist young pedfnner, business meeting, and. program. Th~<br />

first and third I uesaays of each ~o~th for: founded were; president, DWight S.tanford ci<br />

officers elected when the organlzabon wa elen Clemson; treasurer, Don McVeigh; an<br />

vice president, Eleanor Engle; seNcretarYf'f~ lected in February were Floyd Bunch,<br />

. O'd F e« 0 icers e<br />

social chanman, aVI enn.<br />

president, and Virginia Mill~, secretary... eetin with the Westminister group, /I<br />

Program for the year Included a !Oln~ m to th~ First Methodist Church camp et<br />

Mother and Father' dinner, a. mountain trip rtainers .<br />

Laguna and many interesting speakers and ente ttend~d the third annual sem,-for~:1<br />

Si;teen members of the. San ID~eg~ ~~~~he~n California at U. S. C. on Apri ,<br />

banquet of Wesley Foundation c u 0 M<br />

f hi b d Rev yron<br />

1935. P I St re the faculty advisors 0 t e c u an .<br />

Mr. and Mrs. John au one a<br />

Insko is the pastor advisor.<br />

HAMILTON WIGGINS YOUNG FRANKLIN LESLEY<br />

INTERN,ATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB<br />

The International Relations Club, whose potential membership includes the entire<br />

student body, spent an active year in furthering a better understanding of present-day<br />

world affairs through meetings of the group and through participation in the fifth<br />

annual Pacific-Southwest International Relations Club conference held at the Claremont<br />

Colleges, November I and 2.<br />

Some of the speakers presented by the local chapter included: Raymond M. Ked,<br />

world traveller and lecturer, L. E. Claypool, San Diego Sun, Captain George Winrow,<br />

South American explorer, Leonard R. Hall, Y. M. C. A. Secretary in China, and Mrs.<br />

Ida Nasatir, reader of historical plays.<br />

Aided by the Carnegie Endowment, the club maintains an up-to-date library on<br />

world affairs.<br />

Office.rs ~f th~ club d.uring the college year were Robert Hamilton, president;<br />

Gordon Wiggins, vice pres,d.ent; Margaret Young, secretary and Janet Franklin, treasurer.<br />

M.embers of the execubve board were the otficers and Jay Riddle. Dr. Lewis B.<br />

Lesley IS faculty advisor of the club.<br />

122<br />

~, .......<br />


CARAGHER CROSBY FREEMAN THOMAS WILLIS<br />

WOMEN'S PHYSICAL EDUCATION CLUB<br />

Alweys ective in campus activities, the Women's Physical Education Club this<br />

year mode itself on outstanding unit in State college social life by sponsoring a series<br />

ot Ploy days in which they invited high school girls to attend, giving them a chance to<br />

become acquainted with the school. They were also the guiding minds behind the<br />

April Fool's doy Penny Carnival, which met with unusual success. Included among<br />

other projects of a more serious nature was the compiling of records on physical education<br />

tests given to the girls of the school to aid in determining achievement standards<br />

tor girls in physical education activities.<br />

The Women's Physical Education Club is composed of both upper and lower division<br />

students, although only the upper division members have active status, while the<br />

lower division members are regarded as associate members. The group is organized to<br />

increase specialized training, to give members a chance to conduct group recreation<br />

and social affairs, and to promote the physical education department by work and play.<br />

Officers for the year were: President, Kathryn Willis; vice president, Alice<br />

Caragher; secretary-treasurer, June Hasty.<br />

First Row: Wells, Grant, Johnson, Devis, James, McMullen, Wetzell, Roddie, Smith, Lonie, White.<br />

Second Row: Noble, Treiber, Martin, Kersten, Peterson, i.vde, Lyons, Street, King, Henning.<br />

Third Row: Welsh, Matchinske, Masterson, Robertson, Shimp, Gray, Weber, Carlson, Clark, Mitchell.<br />

CETZA<br />

~etza,. the honorary serv~ce organization for sophomore and junior women, was first<br />

organized In 1929. In keeping with its purpose, to further friendship among women<br />

~tude~ts, Cet~a. has taken an active part in freshman orientation week as well as assist-<br />

Ing With Femlnln~ Frolics, Open House, Playday, and other school activities. Dean<br />

Mary McMullen, In the capacity of advisor, has been a constant inspiration to the<br />

group.<br />

Officers were: president, Maryanna Peterson; secretary-treasurer, Charlotte Treiber:<br />

A. W: S. board representative, Jane Wells; planning committee, Evelyn Henning,<br />

Sally Martin, and Margaret Matehinske.<br />

124


This first beauty contest was inaugurated<br />

in hopes of creating interest in the yearbook<br />

before its publication. It served its purpose<br />

well, and now we offer the results to you as<br />

one of the campus highlights of 1936.<br />

JUDGE, DICK POWELL<br />

Dick<br />

Powell<br />

Warner Bros. studio<br />

Burbank, California<br />

Robert Kennedy<br />

Assist. Editor<br />

<strong>Del</strong>sudoeste<br />

Those who entered the contest were:<br />

Dorothy Armstrong, Dolores Bacon, Maude<br />

Bosler, Mary Alice Cutler, Monica Flanigan,<br />

Olive Hockaday, Janet Hoon, Abbie<br />

Johnson. June King, Virginia King, Corina<br />

McCall, Helen Mygrant, Virginia Riehle,<br />

Pat Rose. Norma Stark, Marian Stooke,<br />

Mary Swarner, Betty Thompson, and Helen<br />

Wetzel!.<br />

Dear<br />

Sir:<br />

From tha pictures you sent to me, I have<br />

selected first, Miss Pat Rose, second, Miss<br />

Y~rian Stooke, and third, Miss Olive Hockaday.<br />

I have done my very best IJr. Kennedy in<br />

picking the winners but I would like you and your<br />

co- workers to realize that it is very difficult<br />

to choose a beautiful girl from a photog~a:ph.<br />

Oftimes the true beauty of a ~erson does<br />

not show up in a photograph due to the various<br />

methods of lighting used by cameramen. In other<br />

words Mr. Kennedy I'm trying to get off the spot you<br />

have put me on.<br />

In closing let me thank you for asking me<br />

to be judge.If my judgement is good,congratulate<br />

me.If not ,it must be the eame ramant s fault.<br />

Kindest par.scna L regards and best wishes,<br />

First Place:<br />

Miss Pat Rose<br />

Shen Yo


Second<br />

Place (left):<br />

Miss Marian Stooke<br />

Phi Sigma Nu<br />

Third<br />

Place (right):<br />

Miss Olive<br />

Hockaday


PHI SIGMA NU<br />

Inter-Sorority<br />

Council<br />

Phi Sigma Nu was formed on<br />

our campus on January 19, 1925<br />

from members of the Petrel Rowing<br />

Crew, which was started in<br />

1916. The sorority colors are bronze<br />

and blue.<br />

ARMSTRONG<br />

T HE Inter-Sorority Council climaxed its affairs this year with the Inter-<br />

Sorority-Fraternity dance at Hotel del Coronado. Events of the first<br />

semester included an inter-sorority tea at Scripps for all freshmen women<br />

and a banquet at the U. S. Grant hotel honoring new pledges. During<br />

the second semester, the traditional pledge dinner was again held<br />

at the U. S. Grant. Phi Sigma Nu was awarded the scholarship cup both<br />

semesters.<br />

Officers of the council were Dorothy Armstrong, president; Charlotte<br />

Treiber, vice president; Virginia Chadwick, secretary; Betty Kearns, treasurer;<br />

Maryanna Peterson, A. W. S. representative; and Mrs. A/vena S.<br />

Storm, advisor.<br />

IJ/'"<br />

"<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Dorothy Armstrong<br />

Vice President, Helen Hathaway<br />

Secretary, Adele Collins<br />

Treasurer, Doris Gledhill<br />

Spring<br />

President, Marian Stooke<br />

Vice President, Doris Gledhill<br />

Secreterv. Tommyanne Clark<br />

Treasurer, Natalie Bartlett<br />

SENIORS<br />

Dorothy Armstrong, Catherine Fowler, Barbara<br />

Freeman, Doris Gledhill, Helen Hathaway,<br />

Mary L, Hathaway, Elizabeth Jenkins, Virgln,a<br />

Morrison, Marian Stooke,<br />

Albright Armstrong, Bartlett, Becst k<br />

. ' C rter M Carter, er l<br />

Borgerd,ng,. C. a I ' F 'eeman, Gledhill<br />

Collins, Ernst,ng, Fowe<br />

M<br />

Hathaway, Jenkins, Kerr<br />

G t H Hathaway" , R . h rt<br />

Gould ran" . M iss Mormon, ere a<br />

Koch, Lepore, Lcnte, S~ep'hens Stooke, Talbot<br />

Rohde, Rufing, Sommer, '<br />

JUNIORS Belle Carter, Adele<br />

Natalie Bartlett, Mary Maro Koch, Betty<br />

Collins. Mildred Gould, J<br />

Lome, Bernice Rohde.<br />

TREIBER CHADWICK KEARNS PETERSON<br />

, SOPHOMORES CI k Marjorie Ernsting, Jane<br />

Tommyan ne<br />

Grant VirgInia<br />

. aKr,<br />

err<br />

Virginia Talbot.<br />

PLEDGES . B st Mary Borgerdi~9'<br />

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130<br />

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131<br />

P gy Albright, Mane esv, Rosalie Mats.,<br />

es E a Lepore, S<br />

Carolyn Carter, Marian Rufing, Jane om-<br />

Shirley Re,chMt.<br />

R th Stephens.<br />

mer, U


FACULTY<br />

G rtrud~ S. 6 II, Audr y Pd rson.<br />

EPSILON<br />

PI THETA<br />

SENIORS<br />

Ruth Walker, Jessie Walker.<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Marion Belford. Helen Curtis. Corina McC~II,<br />

Bernita Offerman, Pearl Steele. Zelda Swanson,<br />

Rosemarie Zinkond.<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Virginia Hughes, Madeline Taylor, Nancy<br />

Taylor.<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Muriel Thoms.<br />

Epsilon Pi Theta was founded on<br />

the campus on March 6, 193 I. The<br />

sorority colors are silver, green, and<br />

pink.<br />

Belford, Curtis<br />

Hughes, McCall. Offerman<br />

Ste le, Swanson, M. Taylor, N. Taylor<br />

Thoms, J. Walker, R. Walker, Zinkand<br />

OFFICERS<br />

President, Ruth Walker<br />

Vice President, Carina :McCall<br />

Secretary, Marian Belford<br />

Treasurer, Rosemarie Zinkand<br />

Chaplain, Bernita Offerman<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Nadine Welsh<br />

Vice President, Geraldine Weber<br />

Secretary, Christine Burkett<br />

Treasurer, Betty Welsh<br />

Spring<br />

Alpha Sigma Alpha is the only<br />

national sorority on the campus.<br />

Founded in 190 I in Farmville, Va.<br />

Omega Omega chapter formed on<br />

our campus in January 193/ from<br />

the S. A. B. E. Club, organized in<br />

/925. The sorority colors are crimson<br />

and white.<br />

President, Betty Welsh<br />

Vice President, Antoinette Laycock<br />

Secretary, Sallv Martin<br />

Treasurer, lisa Connerey<br />

Vogt,<br />

Burkett, Deming<br />

Heller, Laycock<br />

Martin, Turrentine<br />

B. Welsh, N. Welsh, Weber<br />

FACULTY<br />

Dorothy R. Harvey.<br />

ALPHA<br />

ALPHA<br />

5 IG MA<br />

SENIORS<br />

Lois Deming. Antoinette Laycock, Viola Vogt,<br />

Nadine Welsh.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Sally Martin, Betty Welsh.<br />

SOPHOMORES h Hiler Constance Turren-<br />

Betty Brown, Rut e ,<br />

tine, Geraldine Weber.<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Ch risti ne Burkett.<br />

132<br />

133


SIGMA<br />

PI THETA<br />

SENIORS<br />

M Igc Burchard, Agnes Lynch.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Jen Alderson, Hcle n Ruth Krernes, Norebelle<br />

Lichty.<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

GI~dys Cole, Marjorie Cross, l.illie n Geren,<br />

juli~ Loperena, Evelyn Twitty.<br />

Alderson. Burchard, Col ,<br />

Cross, Donnelly, Forbes, France<br />

G r n. H. Krames, M. Krames, Lichty<br />

Lop reno, Lynch, Mills, Smith<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Dorothy Donnelly,<br />

Fr~nce, Mary Lou<br />

Margaret Smith.<br />

Marie Forbes, Harriet<br />

Krames, Virginia Mills,<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Helen Ruth Krames<br />

Vice President, Meige Burchard<br />

Secretary, Christine Sorenson<br />

Treasurer, Agnes Lynch<br />

Spring<br />

President, Agnes Lynch<br />

Vice President, Jane Alderson<br />

Secretary, Norabelle Lichty<br />

Treasurer, Lillian Geren<br />

S:gma Pi Theta was started on<br />

the campus in 1924. It was formed<br />

out of the Albatross Rowing Crew.<br />

The sorority colors are lavender<br />

and yellow.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Marjorie Stose<br />

Vice President, Betty Wilson<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, Ruthann Lyons<br />

Spring<br />

President, Marjorie Stose<br />

Vice President, Catherine Hessel<br />

Secretary-Treasurer,<br />

Lyons<br />

Ruthann<br />

Gamma Phi Zeta was founded<br />

on the campus in 1924. It grew<br />

out of a club that had existed since<br />

high school days. The sorority<br />

colors are blue and silver.<br />

FACULTY<br />

Florence S. Dickhaut.<br />

Bacon, English<br />

HI Kearns, Lyons<br />

Henderson, esse M Parker<br />

Martin, Mayes,V °ciesWilson<br />

Stose, Street, eec,<br />

SENIORS<br />

Marjorie Stose, Mary Veed.<br />

GAMMA<br />

PHI ZETA<br />

JUNIORS I Betty<br />

Catherine Hesse,<br />

Lyons,<br />

Betty Wilson.<br />

Kearns,<br />

Ruthann<br />

SOPHOMORES V"a English, James ie<br />

Dolores Bacon, ,rgM,nlti Martha Mayes,<br />

B atrice er In, k<br />

Henderson, e Catherine Par er.<br />

Betty Moses, Mary<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Phyllis<br />

Street.<br />

134<br />

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135


...<br />

FACULTY<br />

H ". t B. Stovall.<br />

KAPPA<br />

THETA<br />

SENIORS<br />

Nod Moser, Belly Thompsen.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

M ry Brth Groy, Doris Noble. Frances Shimp.<br />

Adoir, Groy, Herris, Howell<br />

Kemp, Knight, Kurtz, Long<br />

l.vde, MeOsk r, Mos r, Nelson<br />

Noble, Rond I, Shimp, Silv r, Thomes<br />

Thompson, Townsend, B. White, M. White, Young<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Ellen Adoir, Elizobeth Long, Louise Lvde,<br />

Morgoret MeOsker, Irene Silver, Peggy<br />

Townsend, Morgoret Young.<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Cecelio He rris, Corolyn Howell, Betty Kemp,<br />

Lois Knight, Peggy Kurtz, Jeon Nelson,<br />

Dorothy Rondel, Betty Thomes, Betty White,<br />

Morgoref White.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Mary Beth Gray<br />

Vice President, Ellen Adair<br />

Secretary, Doris Noble<br />

Treasurer, Frances Shimp<br />

Spring<br />

President, Frances Shimp<br />

Vice President, Nada Moser<br />

Secretary, Margaret McOsker<br />

Treasurer, Ellen Adair<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta Chi Phi began at the old<br />

college as a rowing crew, which on<br />

December 2, 1923 became the Fra<br />

Di Noi sorority, Italian for "At<br />

home among ourselves." The name<br />

was changed to <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi Phi in<br />

1928. The sorority colors are lemon,<br />

orange, and black.<br />

DELTA CHI PHI<br />

•I ~~') I··<br />

Kappa Theta was founded on<br />

the campus in October, 1923, as<br />

the Kama Club, formed of girls<br />

who ate lunch together. The name<br />

comes from the Spanish word<br />

"como"-"I eat." In 1924 it became<br />

the Kama sorority and in<br />

1931 changed to Kappa Theta.<br />

The sorority colors are lavender,<br />

silver, and green.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Pauline Lukens<br />

Vice President, Mabel Morton<br />

Secretary, Helen Mygrant<br />

Treasurer, Ruth Austin<br />

Spring<br />

President, Helen Mygrant<br />

Vice President, Beth Spence<br />

Secretary, Margaret Ouinnelly<br />

Treasurer, Eleanor Robyn<br />

FACULTY<br />

Georgio C. Amsden.<br />

GRADUATES<br />

Dorothy<br />

Cooper.<br />

Arbatch, Austin<br />

Davis, Green<br />

K ,. Lee Lukens<br />

Hamilton, relZlng er , Q .' nelly peters<br />

h M grant U1n ,<br />

Moore, Murp t: YI' 'Turner Van Buskirk<br />

Robyn, Rogers, S,eg Inger, '<br />

SENIORS , B tl tt Jane Green,<br />

h A t ' Maflan ar e , M<br />

Rut us In, I' L kens Jean core:<br />

Arline<br />

Ruth<br />

Hamilton,<br />

Murphy,<br />

Pau me<br />

Margaret<br />

~uinn'e/ly, Eleanor<br />

Robyn, Helen Rogers.<br />

JUNIORS Hasty, Helen Mygrant,<br />

Viola Arbatch, Lucy<br />

Ruby Mae peters.<br />

PLEDGES, Kreizinger, W· 'f d Inl re<br />

Rosalie DaVIS, Peggy Vivian Spence, Gel-<br />

AI ' S,egllnger, k' k<br />

Lee, Ice Ph lIis Van Bus If .<br />

aldine Turner, y<br />

136


SOCIAL SPONSOR<br />

Mrs. Leonerd Ellis.<br />

SENIORS<br />

Marie Hildreth.<br />

SHE N Y 0<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Virginia Chadwick, Charlotte Heron, Virg irue<br />

King, Jeanette O'Keefe, Florence Roddie,<br />

Janet Stryker, Charlotte Treiber.<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Mary Alice Cutler, Margaret Davis, Dorothy<br />

Donovan, Helen Eastman, Dolores Henderson.<br />

Chadwick, Cutler<br />

Davis, Donova n<br />

Eastman, Henderson, Heron, Hildreth<br />

V. King, O'Keefe, Rausch, Roddie<br />

Treiber, Hardie, Higgins, J. King, Smedley<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Mary Em Hardie, Adeline Hig g ins, June<br />

King, Marie Smedley.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Charlotte Treiber<br />

Vice President, Virginia Chadwick<br />

Secretary, Janet Stryker<br />

Treasurer, Marie Hildreth<br />

Spring<br />

President, Florence Roddie<br />

Vice President, Charlotte Heron<br />

Secretary, Virginia King<br />

Treasurer, Margaret Davis<br />

Phi Kappa Gamma was founded<br />

on February 10, 1924, by a group<br />

of girls who had been friends in<br />

high school. The sorority colors are<br />

green and gold.<br />

PHI<br />

GAMMA<br />

KAPPA<br />

." ..."""'""',,,,,,;"',,, ...,,,,,,,,,.,<br />

138<br />

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Shen Yo was founded in December<br />

/921 and was the first<br />

sorority on the campus. The sorority<br />

colors are Chinese red and<br />

mandarin blue.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Jean Barthelmess<br />

Vice President, Jean Mahler<br />

Secretary, Evelyn James<br />

Treasurer, Joan Wallace<br />

Spring<br />

President, Jean Mahler<br />

Vice President, Harriet Carrothers<br />

Secretary, Helen Wetzell<br />

Treasurer, Joan Wailace<br />

FACULTY<br />

Marjorie K. Borsum, Charlotte G. Robinson.<br />

'"",1111111""",',1"""",",111<br />

139<br />

SENIORS<br />

Betty Bell, Janet Franklin.<br />

Ames, Barthelmess, Bell, Carrothers, Clark<br />

Crawford, Denis, Flanigan, Franklin, Freshour<br />

Gannon Gessler, Howard, James, Kearns<br />

Mahler, E. Redelings, M. Redelings, Riddle, Rose<br />

Smith, Stewart, J. Wallace, P. Wallace, Wetzell<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Helen Jean Barthelmess, Helen Clark,<br />

ette Howard, Eleanore Smith, Peggy<br />

art, Peggy Wallace.<br />

Jean-<br />

Stew-<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

M h<br />

Harriet Carrothers, Evelyn James, Jean a-<br />

ler Elizabeth Redelings, Mary Glenn Roche,<br />

Pat~icia Rose, Joan Wallace, Helen Wetul.<br />

PLEDGES d L' 0 '<br />

Phyllis Ames, Betty Crawfor, OIS. enl~,<br />

Monica Flanigan, Marian Freshour, Sinclair<br />

G.annon, Anita Gessler, !"\dry -C. Ke ...rns,<br />

Margaret Redelings, Jay Riddle.


FACULTY<br />

Chri~brl«'<br />

SPrlrlg ton.<br />

SENIORS<br />

EI'z"beth Cridsc, ROI"lie Dony, Zone Storr,<br />

Mory Swerner.<br />

THE T A CHI<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Cherlottc Emery, Lois Mosterson, Mor30ret<br />

Noon, Moryonno Peterson, Mildred Robertson,<br />

Jon Wells,<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

l.orreinc Averill, Ellen Barr, Maude Bosler,<br />

Aileen Jernes, Virginio Riehle.<br />

Averill, Borr, Bosler, Cridg e<br />

Dony, Devis, Em ry, Jernes<br />

Mohoney. Mosterson, Noon, Peterson<br />

Rie hl , Roberts, Robertson, Robinson, Shreve<br />

Smith. Sontos, Storr, Swerner, Wells<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Bernice Devis, Rosemary Mahoney, Mary<br />

Roberts, Mary Robinson, Mary Shreve, Doris<br />

Smith, Ruth Sontag,<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Margaret Noon<br />

Vice President, Rosalie Dany<br />

Secretary, Lois 'Masterson<br />

Trea5Urer, Mildred Rooertson<br />

Spring<br />

President, Aileen James<br />

Vice President, Lorraine Averill<br />

Secretary, Rosalie Dany<br />

Treasurer, Mildred Robertson<br />

Tau Zeta Rho was founded on<br />

September 24, 1924, and grew out<br />

of the Triton RowinQ Club, which<br />

was founded in 1903 at the old<br />

college. The sorority colors are yellow<br />

and white.<br />

Theta Chi was founded on October<br />

24, 1929, being formed of<br />

members of the old Sphinx Club.<br />

The sorority colors are purple, 'silver<br />

and white.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Peggy Shallenberger<br />

Vice President, Helen Smith<br />

Secretary, Sue Cornell<br />

Treasurer, Janet Hoon<br />

Spring<br />

President, Janet Hoon<br />

Vice President, Jane Jessop<br />

Secretary, Mary Aigert<br />

Treasurer, Helen Smith<br />

d Cornell. Cunningham<br />

Algert, Clar y, oon Hyatt, Jessop<br />

Curtis, Erickson, H 'tt' McDonald, Mirow<br />

Johnson, Lehman, L'jj' Roberts, Schroeder<br />

Peck, Ragsdale" Rid Se~ith Thayer, Watson<br />

Shallenberger, Sieck, '<br />

SOCIAL SPONSOR<br />

Mrs. John Wimmer<br />

SENIORS<br />

Abbie<br />

Johnson<br />

TAU ZETA RHO<br />

~"'~'"'''''''''''''\'\''''''4'''''''''1<br />

JUNIO<br />

RS<br />

Janet Hoon, Bar b ara<br />

Roberts,<br />

Betty Clardy, Helen Smith.<br />

Peggy Shallenberger,<br />

OMORES Maret Hyatt,<br />

SOS~y Algert, Sue COLrinpepl:tt,Ba:t;y Ragsdale,<br />

Jane Jessop,<br />

Marian<br />

_<br />

Nan Watson.<br />

PLEDGES . h Betty C ur<br />

ti<br />

IS, D<br />

Mortha<br />

Id<br />

Emily Cunn,nn g t~hman, Lorna Mc R~ddle:<br />

Erickson'M Jea Barbara Peck,. PekggYKatherine<br />

PhylliS "ow, d Lucille Sieck,<br />

Naomi Schroe er,<br />

Thayer.<br />

140<br />

141


lnter -F ratern ity<br />

Council<br />

DELTA PI BETA<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta Pi Beta, youngest campus<br />

fraternity, was founded on November<br />

28, 1928, with membership of<br />

thirteen charter members. The fraternity<br />

colors are silver and green.<br />

U<br />

TURRENTINE<br />

I\JDER the direction of its officers, a successful and active year was<br />

completed by the Inter-Fraternity Council. Officers were Howard<br />

Turrentine, president; Barney Carman, vice president; Paul Kraemer,<br />

secretary; Charles Scott, treasurer; AI Churchman, athletic representative;<br />

and Dean C. E. Peterson, faculty advisor. Two representatives from<br />

each fraternity made up the council.<br />

Golf, touch-football, track, volleyball, tennis, indoor baseball and<br />

swimming were included on the Inter-Fraternity sports calendar this year.<br />

Under the able direction of AI Churchman, the events were efficiently and<br />

accurately run off.<br />

Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi was awarded the scholarship cup with a grade average<br />

of 1.3. The idea was originated this year to present to each semester's<br />

winner of the perpetual cup, a plaque to remain permanently in the hands<br />

of the winning fraternity.<br />

The Inter-Fraternity Council cooperated with the Inter-Sorority Council<br />

in staging the annual Inter-Fraternity-Sorority dance at Hotel <strong>Del</strong> Coronado.<br />

CARMAN KRAEMER SCOTT ' CHURCHMAN<br />

142<br />

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SENIORS<br />

Charles Scott, Stewart Wicklin, George<br />

Worthington.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

William<br />

Kuhn.<br />

Crawford, Eugene Kendall, Robert<br />

ETA<br />

OMEGA<br />

DELTA<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Eldred Peck, Eric Pfefferkorn, James Smith,<br />

Robert Tyson.<br />

Andrews, Benton<br />

Crawford, Dale, Downey, G. Harper<br />

R. Harper, Henry, Houser, Hudson<br />

Kendall, Kuhn, Lynch, Merritt<br />

Peck, Pfefferkorn, Saum, Scott<br />

Smith, Thomas, Verdeckberg, Waterman, Worthington<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

John Benton, Allan Dale, Tom Downey,<br />

Robert Harper, Wilford Hudson, Robert<br />

Merritt, Kenneth Saum, William Thomas, Jack<br />

Verdeckberg, Oscar Waterman.<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Nicholas Andrews, Gerard Harper, George<br />

Henry, Alan Houser, Dick Lynch.<br />

Eta Omega <strong>Del</strong>ta was started on<br />

the campus in 1922. It grew out of<br />

the old Hod Club which was organized<br />

in 1915 at the old Junior<br />

College. The fraternity colors are<br />

black and gold.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Bill Crawford<br />

Vice President, Bob Kuhn<br />

Secretary, Eugene Kendall<br />

Treasurer, James Smith<br />

Spring<br />

President, Bill Crawford<br />

Vice President, Bob Tyson<br />

Secretary, William Thomas<br />

Treasurer, James Smith<br />

Epsilon Eta was founded on October<br />

7, :921 and is the oldest<br />

fraternity on the campus. The<br />

fraternity colors are black and<br />

white.<br />

EPSILON<br />

144<br />

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OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Gordon Peterson<br />

Vice President, Bob Duncan<br />

Secretary,


FACULty<br />

Dr. A. P. Nesetir, Donald Robertson, Dr.<br />

Perry.<br />

SENIORS<br />

John Berglund, Everard Buche ne n, John Butler,<br />

Don Clerkson, John Cross, Allen Keller,<br />

Howerd Turrentine, Ted Wilson.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Herrv Butzbech, Roy Coleman,<br />

Allen Lovine, Jim McMichael,<br />

Jeck Yount.<br />

Borders, Bucha na n, Butler, Butzbach<br />

Clarkson, Coleman, Flint, Frame<br />

Hopkins, Keller, McMichael, McPhie, Meline<br />

Meyer, Nagle, O'Connor, Slavin, Smyth<br />

Stern, Sullivan, Turrentine, ,vernacchia, Wilson<br />

Russell<br />

Roger<br />

Flint,<br />

Stern,<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Gerald Casady, Ashby Cessou, John Duich,<br />

John Edwards, Roger Hopkins, James Johnson,<br />

Leland McPhie, George Nagle, Morris<br />

Schidner, Jerry Sullivan.<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Len Meline, Bill Meyer, George Murray, Bob<br />

O'Connor, Leonard Quamma, Everest Whited.<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Jack Anderson, Harry Atwood, Jim Borders,<br />

Joe Frame, Max Glass, Alex Goldie, Harold<br />

Graham, Ohan Kerian, Bert Nichols, Bill Salvin,<br />

Ben Slavin, Ed Smyth, Harvey Urban,<br />

Ralph Vernacchia.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

OM EGA XI<br />

Orr.ega Xi was founded on the<br />

campus in 1926. The fraternity<br />

colors are red and black.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

Fall<br />

President, John Berglund<br />

Vice President, John Butler<br />

Secretary, Russell Flint<br />

Treasurer, Jack Lovejoy<br />

President, Stanley Burne<br />

Vice President, AI Churchman<br />

Secretary, Roderick Langston<br />

Treasurer, Bill Kearns<br />

Spring<br />

Spring<br />

President, John Butler<br />

Vice President, George Nagle<br />

Secretary, Jerry Sullivan<br />

Treasurer, Roy Coleman<br />

President, AI Churchman<br />

Vice President, Jim Williams<br />

Secretary, Jim Blethen<br />

Treasurer, Ray Day<br />

Kappa Phi Sigma was founded<br />

on the campus on June I, 1926 by<br />

John Hobbs and Riney Salmon.<br />

The fraternity colors are black and<br />

gold.<br />

KAPPA<br />

PHI SIGMA<br />

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~curn . B<br />

H. C. Steinmetz, Charles Smith, C. .<br />

Leonard.<br />

SENIORS<br />

Bill Benton, Jack Benton, Stan Bu~nlf'<br />

Carman, Albert Churchman, I<br />

Charles Kerch, Roderick Langston.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

, Jim Blethen, Marlowe<br />

Bernard<br />

Kearns,<br />

Fowler.<br />

J. Bento~, Blethen<br />

C. Boyer, T. Boyer<br />

Burne, Carman, Churchman, D~y<br />

Fowler, Kelley, Krutzsch, Langston.<br />

Nagle, Stubbs, Valverde, Wolker, Wdhoms<br />

SOPHOMORES R Da Wilbur<br />

Cleo Boyer, Terry Boyer, ay Ybb Bill<br />

R b t Peterson, Jim Stu s,<br />

KelleY'd °T eSr Walker, Ralph Wallace, Jim<br />

Valver e, . .<br />

Williams.<br />

;~:~..:::::;:::::..... (<br />

'" /' ....vl~··· ~


FACULTY<br />

Peul Pfoff. Spencer Rogers.<br />

SENIORS<br />

Herold Corter, Gordon Hurlburt, Bill Meals,<br />

Dwight Stonford, Rolph Thompson.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Lee Arnold, Jerry Brennan, Bill Frash, Herbert<br />

Lyda, Larry Lydick, Charles Nelson, Don<br />

Noble, Kenneth Ray, Kenneth Stevenson, Tom<br />

Stone.<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Dick Ault, Fred Barnes, Bill Berkstresser, Owe n<br />

Clarke, Art Clarkson, Allan Cunningham, Ray<br />

Early, Dave Fenn, Frank Ferguson, Mac Gorton,<br />

Clarence Harris, Giles Larabee, John<br />

McGrew, Bill Merrill, Will Ross, Charles<br />

Springstead, Charles Stooke, Bill Swayne,<br />

Howard Willson.<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Vietor Bailey, Allen Barker, Vernon Dennis,<br />

Jack Edmond, Gordon Hall, Joe Hurwitz, Bil:<br />

Lyle, Louis Perna, Bob Richey, Howard Stone,<br />

Bing Williams.<br />

Arnold, Ault, Boiley, Barker, Barnes, Berkstresser PLEDGES<br />

Corter, Clerke Clarkson, Cunningham, Dennis, Edmond . Bill Chittick, Darwin Florea, Lowell Jones,<br />

Fenn, Florea, Gorton, Hall, Hurlburt, Hurwitz Joe McGaw.<br />

Larabee, Lyda, Lydick, Lyle, McGaw, McGrew<br />

Merrill, Nelson, Noble, Perna, pfaff, Ray<br />

Richey, Rogers, Ross, Springstead, Stanford, Stevenson<br />

H. Stone, T. Stone, Stooke, Swayne, Thompson, Williams, Willson<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Kenneth Ray<br />

Vice President, Bob Nelson<br />

Secretary, Dave Fenn<br />

Treasurer, Dick Ault<br />

Spring<br />

President, Tom Stone<br />

Vice President, Gordon Hurlburt<br />

Secretary, Larry Lydick<br />

Treasurer, Bill Merrill<br />

TAU DELTA CHI<br />

In Odober 1926, Tau <strong>Del</strong>ta Chi<br />

fraternity was founded by Guy<br />

Fox, Lawrence Hoyt, and Dr. Lesley,<br />

present faculty member. The<br />

fraternity colors are blue and<br />

white.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Glen Warren<br />

Vice President, Evan Shaffer<br />

Secretary, Robert Kennedy<br />

Treasurer, Chet Young<br />

Spring<br />

President, Chet Young<br />

Vice President, Paul Young<br />

Secretary, Robert Belville<br />

Treasurer, Roy Booth<br />

)<br />

Phi Lambda Xi began on the<br />

campus on November 16, 1925,<br />

with eight charter members, one<br />

of whom was Paul Pfaff, present<br />

fraternity sponsor. The fraternity<br />

colors are blue and gold.<br />

PHI LAMBDA XI<br />

148<br />

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FACULTY<br />

Dr. R. B. Harwood, Dr. Lewis B. Lesley.<br />

SENIORS<br />

Roy Booth, Bill Larson, Charles<br />

lard, Glenn Warren, Chet<br />

Young.<br />

149<br />

A. Bailey, R. Bailey, Boskerville, Belville<br />

Berdel, Bethord, Booth, Baughn<br />

Buehlman, Burns, Clork, J. CO""~t<br />

S Conant, Durbin, Gordner, Gorfleld<br />

ti<br />

H<br />

H' ood Heryet, Huffmon, Kennedy, Lorson: Lee<br />

ar Igare, arw, . 0 P II d Seidel<br />

L I L ' d I Luscomb Meiers, wen, 0 e r ,<br />

es ey, m s ey, ' If h C Y P Young<br />

Shaffer, Thompson, Vie u, Warren, Wo art, . oung, .<br />

Lee, Bob Pol-<br />

Young, Paul<br />

JUNIO RS B Stanley Conant, Bob Durbin,<br />

l.in d en urns, H t'<br />

B b Gardner Harry Garfield, Selwyn ar l-<br />

g~n, Frank Heryet, Byron Lindsley, Art Savage,<br />

Evan Shaffer.<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Bob Belville, Bill Bethard, Bob<br />

h<br />

Boug n,<br />

B'Il<br />

"<br />

Buehlman, John Clark, Orland Huffman, Jim<br />

Hughes, Bob Kennedy, Don Luscomb, Fred<br />

Meiers, Ernest Vieu.<br />

FRESHMEN 'L1 d Baskerville,<br />

Allen Bailey, Ray Barley, oy<br />

Julian Conant, Carlton Wolforth.<br />

PLEDGES T G d n<br />

Clair Berdel, Grant Burrows. om I o~ 'd o I<br />

James O'Connell, Don Owen, Peu el e.<br />

George Thompson, Bill Varney,


FACULTY<br />

Fronk Pornth.<br />

JUNIORS<br />

Joke Deitzer, Glenn Gorbani, George Gibb"<br />

l.ewrence Morgulis, Gordon Reynolds, Mau·<br />

rice Sevag e, John Scheidernen.<br />

SOPHOMORES<br />

Herold Boker, Cecil Fiske, Felix Landis, Ed<br />

Pitts, Peul Schneider.<br />

FRESHMEN<br />

Philip De Falco, Harry Greene, Richard Hath.<br />

away, Harry Jeter, Tom Pitts, John Quinlan.<br />

Boker, Fiske<br />

Gibbs, Hethewey<br />

Londis. Margulis, E. Pitts, T. Pitts<br />

Quinlan, Reynolds, Scheideman, Schneider<br />

PLEDGES<br />

Edwin Brewster, Lawrence Burke, Bryce<br />

Hughes, Wright Johnson, Roland Packard,<br />

Lambert White, Ed Young.<br />

OFFICERS<br />

Fall<br />

President, Cecil Fiske<br />

Vice President, Caesar Grassino<br />

Secretary, Ed Pitts<br />

Treasurer, Lawrence Margulis<br />

Spring<br />

President, Ed Pitts<br />

Vice President, John Scheideman<br />

Secretary, Harold Baker<br />

Treasurer, Richard Hathaway<br />

Sigma Lambda was founded on<br />

the campus in 1926. In 1929 the<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta. Pi <strong>Del</strong>ta fraternity merged<br />

with It. The fraternity colors are<br />

red and white.<br />

13()()1\ V<br />

L<br />

SIGMA<br />

LAMBDA<br />

Tlif


LU5COMB AND<br />

SOR,EN:.o~


DURING VACATION-MAX GLASS'<br />

INVITE YOU TO ~~S~ND OTHER AZTECS<br />

"W here the Airplanes<br />

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There is one<br />

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ASSOCIATED GASOLINE • S • . .. ;......<br />

EIBERLING TIRES • NATIONAL BATTERIES • COMPLETE LUBRICATION<br />

'-<br />

BEST WISHES TO THE<br />

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CHEVROLET DEALERS FOR 13 YEARS<br />

I SAN DIEGO<br />

=<br />

Long After Men and<br />

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A Reputation Endures » »<br />

It is difficult to<br />

live up to a<br />

quality standard,<br />

and to a professional<br />

ideal, but<br />

these are the<br />

business traditions<br />

which endure<br />

and make<br />

a reputation of<br />

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Sincerely,<br />

LOUIS M. WINN<br />

OPTICAL Co.<br />

506 BANK OF AMERICA BLDG.<br />

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Telephone Main 3203<br />

NEW STYLES AND FINISHES<br />

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You will enjoy having your prints made 00<br />

NUSILK in the DOUBLE DECKLE Style<br />

-A Bunnell Exclusive Fioish-<br />

It Costs No<br />

More.<br />

BUNNELL PHOTO SHOP<br />

151


Train<br />

KELSEY JENNEY<br />

For Business<br />

Since 1934 more than a hundred former State College students<br />

have entered the commercial life of San Diego by taking advantage<br />

of our intensive business training courses.<br />

"LEARN<br />

TO EARN"<br />

COMMERCIAL COLLEGE<br />

"Since 1887"<br />

1060 C STREET FRANKLIN 7418<br />

FOR NEARLY 50 YEARS<br />

The Name<br />

Thearle ~11usic [0.<br />

640 BROADWAY<br />

has stood for the<br />

BEST IN MUSIC<br />

IN SAN DIEGO<br />

We have endeavored always to promote<br />

the idea of Better Music in OUf Homes,<br />

Schools and Community. We shall continue<br />

to stand for those ideals so long<br />

as we remain in business.<br />

Whether you are<br />

selecting an inexpensive<br />

COMPACT,<br />

A WATCH<br />

or a<br />

DIAMOND<br />

RING<br />

It is the aim of the Jessop<br />

organization to always give<br />

you specialized service and<br />

accurate facts about the mere<br />

han dis e you contemplate<br />

purchasing.<br />

J. Jessop & Sons<br />

JEWELERS<br />

1041 FIFTH AVENUE<br />

Staple and Fancy Groceries<br />

Finest in Fresh and Smoked Meats<br />

Fresh Baked Goods<br />

I I.. )<br />

_-<br />

Garden<br />

Fresh Fruits and Vegetables


THE UNION<br />

95c per<br />

wqr ian llItrgn Intun<br />

month<br />

Daily and Sunday<br />

G Every student should regularly<br />

read a good newspaper<br />

• It is the only way to keep<br />

abreast of world events<br />

• Subscribe to and read the<br />

UNION-TRIBUNE<br />

Tus<br />

TRIBUNF<br />

65c per month<br />

Daily<br />

wqr 1£urntng IDrtbunr<br />

- -- -_ ..-- ----<br />

RUBAIY A T OF A COLLEGE SENIOR<br />

(With no apologies whatever to Omar Khayyam)<br />

Oldy<br />

Wake! for the Sun, who scattered into Flight<br />

Street lamps before him from the Ways of Nighf,<br />

Drives Night along with them from Heev'n and<br />

strikes<br />

The Tower turrets with a shaft of light.<br />

Before the phantom of False morning died,<br />

Methought a Voice within the Caff loud cried,<br />

"When all the tables are prepared within,<br />

Why nods the drowsy breakfaster outside?"<br />

And, ere the bell rang, those who stood before<br />

The Caff shouted, "Open then the Door!<br />

You know how little while till Eight O'Clock,<br />

And then till lunch it is three hours and More,"<br />

Now the New Term reviving Old Desires,<br />

The thoughtful Undergrad to Ouad retires,<br />

Where Frats have made some little Green to grow,<br />

And one can smoke without the V etc, "F' Ires. I"<br />

JI'~'<br />

MOST POPULAR<br />

San Diego's<br />

'J<br />

SKATING PALACE •<br />

Playground<br />

DANCE<br />

To the Music of<br />

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I... B" -ch At<br />

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SKATE<br />

AT SAN DIEGO'S<br />

'''''''''''''',N,""","'''''''''IIt<br />

157<br />

Southern California's<br />

~. FINEST BATH HOUSE


The gr ds ind ed r gon with all their dough,<br />

And the scholarship cup where none may know.<br />

But still a bubble fizz s on the Coke,<br />

And many ring the Undergrods still blow.<br />

With me about the row of Tables strown<br />

That just divides the Nameless from the Known,<br />

Where fame of Prof and Student is forgot-<br />

And peace to Prexy on his swivel-Throne!<br />

Come, buy a coke, and have another flingl<br />

Plenty of time to study when the Spring<br />

Semester comes. Terms have the meanest way<br />

Of flitting-and the Term is on the Wing.<br />

Whatever campus you may light upon,<br />

Whether your Course or light or heavy run,<br />

The Coke of Life keeps fizzing drop by drop,<br />

The Cigs of Life keep foiling, one by one.<br />

Each morn a score of Troubles brings, you soy.<br />

Yes, but where go the cores of Yesterday?<br />

And this first six weeks' Ex that brings the Flunks<br />

Sholl Clerkson toke, end Corman, too, away.<br />

Well, let it toke theml What have we to do<br />

With all the great Alumni who are through?<br />

Let Prex end Petey bluster as they will,<br />

Or Andy call to supper-heed not you.<br />

WESTERN SALT CO.<br />

A San Diego<br />

Product<br />

H. G. Fenton Material Co.<br />

A Book of Boners underneath the Bough,<br />

Some menthol'd Cigs, a pack of Cards, and Thou<br />

Beside me loafing in the sunny Ouad-<br />

Oh, College, it were Paradise, and how!<br />

Some for the Glories of the Grid, and some<br />

Sigh for the straight A Average to come.<br />

Ah, toke the "snaps" and let your Credits go,<br />

Nor heed Requirements and Curriculum.<br />

Look to the blooming Co-eds round us, "Lo,<br />

Laughing'," they say, "Into the class we blow,<br />

At once the sweet excuses of our smiles<br />

Charm, and their Treasures on the Prof bestow."<br />

And those who burn the Midnight Tungsten late,<br />

And those who hit the hay, or keep a date,<br />

Alike to utter ignorance succumb,<br />

Called on in classes that begin at eight.<br />

With<br />

$15,000 in New<br />

Improvements<br />

Latest<br />

And<br />

Scientific<br />

Equipment,<br />

Miller Service<br />

Gives a<br />

New and Greater<br />

Automotive<br />

Service<br />

•<br />

OSSJER<br />

STUDIO<br />

rrWhere Photography is an tArt"<br />

OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER<br />

for<br />

()~L JUI)()~JT~~ l'lJf3<br />

SAND • GRAVEL • CEMENT • STEEL<br />

and BUILDING MATERIAL<br />

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San Diego, California<br />

UNIVERSITY<br />

AVENUE<br />

32nd to Herman " San Diego, Cal.<br />

1871 Fifth Avenue<br />

San Diego, California<br />

Phone Franklin 2456<br />

158<br />

159


th i, h ( upon<br />

tim ov r won,<br />

, Oh, F m th t 90 S<br />

n th y r gon I<br />

nd Comm ncem .nt<br />

r, with hi S.<br />

n w n his w y.<br />

xts n v r mor<br />

An hIs r vlving drink in shek rs S n<br />

Upon h coun r wh r our Ibows I n-<br />

h,' n upon It ligh Iy, for who knows<br />

rom wh f ir Ibows gon It got its sh n?<br />

h, F lIow·S u ents, III th Gloss tho t cl rs<br />

o-d y of p s R grets and future Fears.<br />

Tomorrowl-Why, Tomorrow I ml'ly be<br />

Mys If Grad. wi h Credits in rr ers.<br />

For some we new. the liveliest end b st<br />

Th From h Profs, lucten] B's have pressed.<br />

H ve drun heir Co es a Round or two before,<br />

Their Sh ep-s ins n, in gown and mortar dressed.<br />

And we. h now rna e merry in the Room<br />

They left- h. h vy is th Student's Doom!<br />

Ourselves mus we before the Doctors DOSS<br />

And t ke our Sheep-skins, to make w~y-for<br />

Whom?<br />

Ah, make the mos of what we yet may spend,<br />

Before we too unto the S age ascend,<br />

And then to look for Jobs, and be forgot,<br />

Sons Coke, sans Fog, Sans Cuts-unhappy End!<br />

Alike for those who for Today prepare,<br />

And those who through the Syllabus do stare,<br />

Alumni from the heights of wisdom cry,<br />

"Fools! your Reward is neither Here nor There."<br />

ke p<br />

p.<br />

SAN DIEGO<br />

t<br />

Among<br />

•<br />

c<br />

the lou-est<br />

in tbe Nation ...<br />

SIN( L January I this territory<br />

ha: enj yed cle tric service at<br />

rates "AMON I TIlE L W·<br />

E T IN THE NATI N".<br />

This tarement i ba .J on an<br />

ofli inl urvcy just relea ed by<br />

the United tares overnrnenr,<br />

and is an imporran;<br />

contributing factor to omrnunity<br />

growth and developm<br />

nt.<br />

The millions of visitor to<br />

our new 1936 Exposition will<br />

be impres ed by these and<br />

other fact, and it is fortunate<br />

that the series of rate reductions<br />

covering the past several<br />

year, places us in such a favorable<br />

position to attract<br />

neighbors. The S:lO Diego<br />

Consolidated<br />

Gas and Electric<br />

Company is happy to have<br />

co-operated in rhis regard,<br />

and considers it is a partner<br />

with its customers in all programs<br />

for community building.<br />

In return we hope you<br />

will help us spread the good<br />

news of low gas and electric<br />

rates along with other advantage<br />

among our Exposition<br />

visitors.<br />

CONSOLIDATED<br />

GAS & ELECTRIC COMPANY<br />

READ THE SUN<br />

Why, all the Grinds and Whizzes who discussed<br />

Of Studying for a Life Work-they are thrust<br />

Into Blind Alley Jobs, and take for Wage<br />

Whatever Capital decrees they must.<br />

Myself when green did eagerly frequent<br />

Lobby and quad, and heard great Argument<br />

About it and about, but evermore<br />

Came out more muddled far than in I went.<br />

With them the seed of Wisdom did I sow,<br />

And in my own nut hoped to see it grow,<br />

And this was all the Harvest that I reaped-<br />

"We come in beanies, and in mortar boards go."<br />

"Better"<br />

Protected<br />

Daily and Sunday<br />

FOR NEWS OF STATE COLLEGE<br />

ACTIVITIES AND SPORTS » »<br />

MOUNTAIN<br />

MEADOW<br />

~MILK<br />

• Highest Test Milk from<br />

"Healthy Higher Altitudes"<br />

•.. Sanitary metal bottle<br />

cap protected from Dairy<br />

to your table.<br />

Phone H. 2486<br />

Daytime<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ivery<br />

TRY OUR DELICIOUS ICE CREAM<br />

. Into this College, not knowing<br />

The why nor whence, like Coed's gushes flOWing,<br />

And out of it, as Hot Air from a Prof,<br />

I know not whither, willy-nilly blowing.<br />

What, without asking, hither hurried Whencd<br />

And without asking Whither hurried henc 7<br />

Oh 'many an hour of these forbidden cuts<br />

Mu~t down the memory of that insolence!<br />

Up from the High School through the Senior GISt<br />

I rose, and even on the Council sete,<br />

And many a Knot unraveled by the Rood;<br />

But not the Master-Knot of Student FIlte.<br />

-<br />

Our Covers Are<br />

MOLLOY MADE<br />

WESTERN<br />

at<br />

2857 NORTH<br />

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Through<br />

SAM BABCO K<br />

Pacific Coa~t<br />

Representative<br />

-<br />

.~~i<br />

~<br />

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""611111111"""""""""""'1<br />

161


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AZTEC HOPS CAFE<br />

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'W'by Go 10 Town, TF'e h'l/le it or<br />

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PII NB RANDOLI'll J 462<br />

45th & fL A) N an Diego,<br />

AMERI<br />

Loueu<br />

810 Fifth Avenue<br />

AN CUT PRICE STORE<br />

PriCI?J on<br />

DRUG<br />

TOBACCO<br />

and<br />

UNDRIES<br />

Main 353~<br />

PIERCE MARKET» » »<br />

Retail • lf7bolesale<br />

QUALITY<br />

WELLMAN,<br />

• •<br />

MEAT<br />

PECK & CO.<br />

"Flavor Famous Foods"<br />

EIGHTH and J STREETS<br />

SUNIFORNIA<br />

CANDIES<br />

"Pure <strong>Del</strong>ighl in Ellery Bile!'<br />

MADE IN SAN DIEGO<br />

nlifornin<br />

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Hillcrest 3 1 7 7<br />

PULLMAN<br />

CAFETERIA<br />

1240<br />

Fifth<br />

Avenue<br />

VINCENT'S DINING ROOM<br />

2720 4th AVENUE<br />

LUNCHEONS • DINNERS<br />

BANQUETS<br />

SCHIEFER & SONS<br />

Hi!. 7702 or Hi!. 2355-J<br />

• SHOW<br />

• FIXTURES<br />

371 EIGHTH AVENUE<br />

MORGAN'S<br />

CAFETERIA<br />

CASES<br />

Conlinuous Serurce<br />

6:45 a. m. to 7:30 p. m.<br />

1047-49 SIXTH AVENUE<br />

PATTEN - BLINN LUMBER CO.<br />

"Since 1880"<br />

LET US HELP YOU BUILD WITH<br />

AN F. H. A. LOAN<br />

First and Island Ave.<br />

Phone Main 7134<br />

162<br />

~F"<br />

L<br />

tJ<br />

ll)<br />

f)<br />

1-<br />

J/""<br />

I I' .... :.~:::~:., ..<br />

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163<br />

Distinctive School Annuals<br />

THE planning,<br />

printing<br />

and binding of school annuals has become a specialized part<br />

of our production. To satisfy the school, the faculty, and the<br />

. W ud to have served the<br />

students is our constant aim. e are pro<br />

following schools throughout the years,<br />

C II 1932-33-34-35-36<br />

"D I S d te" San Diego State 0 ege<br />

e U oes e .. ,<br />

"The Gray Castle" San Diego High School 1933-34-35-36<br />

"Dias Cardinales" Herbert Hoover High School 1932-33-35-36<br />

S D. Army & Navy Academy 1933-34-35-36<br />

"The Cadet" .<br />

.. , Coronado High School, .. 1934-35-36<br />

"The Poppy" . 'h I 1933-34-36<br />

Point Loma High Sc 00 ...<br />

"The Pointer" . 936<br />

. Union High School ... 1<br />

"EI Recuerdo" ... Grossmont<br />

Neyenesch Printers, Inc.<br />

PRINTERS<br />

LITHOGRAPHERS<br />

2580 K STREET<br />

I N 4 I 0 I<br />

PHONE MA NIA<br />

SAN DIEGO, CALIFOR<br />

==


GOODWILL INDUSTRIES<br />

of SAN DIEGO COUNTY<br />

"Not Charity But a Chance"<br />

Call FRANKLIN 7553 and the Goodwill<br />

truck will call for your discarded<br />

materials.<br />

;<br />

"WASTE INTO WAGES ...<br />

JUNK INTO JOBS"<br />

That was the Text to which I had no Key;<br />

That was the Prof through which I could not see.<br />

Some little talk awhile of B and A<br />

There was, and then 'twas only C and D.<br />

Books could not answer, nor the Grads that mourn<br />

Their wasted days, of pleasant Ease forlorn.<br />

Not even the Registrar, although she spent<br />

An hour upon my record, and some SCorn.<br />

Then of the mighty Curve that works behind<br />

The Grade, I lifted up my hands to find<br />

A Hint about the Mystery, and I heard<br />

From Perry himself, "It's best to go it Blind."<br />

San ~iego's<br />

Department<br />

Complete<br />

Store<br />

Congratulates<br />

the Class<br />

of /36<br />

Then to the lip of this aluminum urn<br />

I leaned, the Secret of my Course to learn:<br />

And Lip to Lip it murmured, "While you're here,<br />

Drink; flunked out once, you never may return."<br />

And if the Coffee you drink, the Nut you Dunk<br />

End in what All begins and ends in-Flunk,<br />

Think then you are Today where Yesterday<br />

You were-at least your mind is clear of Junk.<br />

Why, if the Stude can fling his Books aside,<br />

And in his Chevvie on the Highway ride,<br />

Were't not a Shame, werc't not a Shame for him<br />

In the dull Classroom prisoned to abide?<br />

=<br />

Modern<br />

Eating &<br />

Heating<br />

Equipment<br />

• Fabrication<br />

• Ventilating<br />

• Air Conditioning<br />

of Metals<br />

INGLE MANUFACTURING CO.<br />

6th and<br />

C Street<br />

=<br />

San Diego<br />

Pacific Boulevard at Grape Street<br />

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA<br />

,I<br />

t··:-····<br />

;/~/<br />

(<br />

164<br />

\"


ave<br />

F<br />

'Tis but a Tent where ta ke their one -h our ' s res t<br />

Somnolent Students by a Prof addressed.<br />

Theo<br />

Bell rings, and emptied Se t 0<br />

a s receive<br />

the<br />

Still other Students, and official Pest.<br />

And fear not lest Commenceme~t closing your<br />

Account and mine should know the 10k<br />

' I e no more<br />

Theo local High Schools from that Bowl h d<br />

0 poure<br />

Millions of Bubbles like us- and even more.<br />

When you and I are from the Annual passed,<br />

Oh,o but the long, long while the School shall last,<br />

Which of our passing or our flunking heeds<br />

As the Sea's self should heed a Pebble-cast.<br />

Would you that p 0<br />

recious our Y ears 'R est-Cure<br />

spend<br />

About the Secret-quick about it, Friend!<br />

A Hair perhaps divides the False and True<br />

And upon what, prithee, may Grades depe~d?<br />

A Hair perhaps divides the False and True;<br />

Yes, and a single Pony were the Clue.<br />

Could you but find it, to the B. A. then,<br />

And peradventure to the Master's, too.<br />

But if in vain, down on the c1~ssroom flo r<br />

And at the Clock, and the unop n d Do r'<br />

You gaze Today, while you m~ C' h<br />

Tomorrow, when the qlJlllter-Tests er 0: r?<br />

Waste not your Hour, nor in the vein Pur UI<br />

Of A's and B's endeavor end dis U •<br />

Better be happy with e p~ssing Gr~d<br />

And Ex-Curric. Activities, to Bool.<br />

You know, my Friends, with whot e rev Cor u<br />

My Sophomore yeor, I took to cI oning Hou '<br />

Cut out old barren Study from my Sch I '<br />

And took more cuts than any Prof ellew .<br />

For "Le~rn" and "Get-By" though wi h<br />

Line<br />

And "Pass-and-Flunk" by Logic I defin ,<br />

Of all that one should study, I wes n 'er<br />

B plus in anything but Apple-Shine.<br />

Ah, but my Computations, fellows soy,<br />

Have broke the Terrors of the True-Felse.<br />

'Twas only lopping from the Gr~din9 Curve<br />

The piteous F and the impossible A.<br />

ul<br />

oy,<br />

end<br />

~ Schiller's have exceptional equipment which includes a wide choice of typ<br />

faces for lettering books, card cases, handbags and leather cases. In respon e to<br />

many students who have expressed the desire to have their names gold-lett red<br />

on their personal copies of this annual the Schiller Book Bindery has arrang d<br />

to do this at a very nominal charge.<br />

~ Owners of valuable cooks and magazines will be interested in knowing that<br />

now their copies may be preserved for an indefinite period. This service i<br />

offered by the oldest business concern in San Diego . . . the Schiller B ok<br />

Bindery at 11th Avenue and F Streets.<br />

q<br />

Rare old books can be preserved in their antique condi,tion, or new and ~od.<br />

ern bindings C2.n be made at this up-to-date plant. ThIS <strong>Del</strong> Sudoe te IS an<br />

example of superior modern binding by Schiller.<br />

scunnoL~~~'~D«)~B~F;tv<br />

INDERY<br />

OJ<br />

11th Avenue at F Street<br />

=<br />

» » » Main 3625<br />

169


Str ns ' is it not, thot of the Hundreds who<br />

B fore us p ssed these H lis of Learning through,<br />

Not one returns, on Founder's Day, to tell<br />

Any sure Scheme thet we h ve not tried too?<br />

The Themes and Notebooks of the Wise and<br />

Le rned,<br />

Who passed before us, and cs Seniors burned,<br />

Are h~nded on from Year to Year, and still<br />

Though copied fair, they are with D's returned.<br />

Ah, with the Finals my .fading Term provide,<br />

And when, perchance, I have from Cramming died,<br />

Then lay me, shrouded in Blue Books,<br />

By some not unfrequented Canyon-side.<br />

That even my buried Ashes such a snare,<br />

Of Getting-By shall fling into the Air,<br />

As not an Underclassman, passing by,<br />

But shall be overtaken, unaware.<br />

The Idols whereof I delight to brag<br />

Indeed have done a lot to break my drag;<br />

Have drowned my Glory in a frosted Cup,<br />

And sold my Reputation for a Fag.<br />

RETAIL<br />

and<br />

WHOLESALE<br />

PR_OTECTE<br />

27<br />

proteai: ns<br />

Yesterday this Day's Exes did prepare,<br />

Tomorrow's Silence, Triumph, or Despair.<br />

Cut! For you know not what you'll make, nor why,<br />

So let's light up, and show 'em if we care.<br />

Indeed, Indeed, Repentance oft before<br />

I swore-but was I cutting when I swore?<br />

And then came afternoon, and Cig in hand,<br />

I sneaked into the Ouad and cut some more.<br />

MIL<br />

by<br />

Arde"<br />

And this I know: whether the Fag alight<br />

Kindle to Wisdom, or consume me quite,<br />

One Whiff of it within the Hash-shop caught<br />

Better than in the Classroom lost outright.<br />

And much as Cokes have played the Infidel,<br />

And robbed me of my needed Credits,-Well,<br />

I wonder often what the Caff boys buy<br />

One half so precious as the stuff they sell.<br />

3404 ADAMS AVENUE<br />

I<br />

San<br />

Diego's Only Certified &<br />

Natural Vitamin D Milk<br />

AT YOUR GROCER » OR PHONE M. 9111<br />

FOR HOME DELIVERY<br />

RAJ FORD FLOWER SHOP<br />

DIXIE<br />

Member F. T. D. Assn,<br />

LUMBER<br />

& UPPLY COMPANY<br />

1115 FOURTH AVE.<br />

Phone Franklin 7101<br />

The Home of Real Home Service<br />

Let Us Help You Finance F. H. A.<br />

and other types of Loans.<br />

39n Ohio St. at Univ. Ave. Hill. 0963<br />

WALTER<br />

DIBB, JEWELER<br />

• RlNGS<br />

• DIAMONDS<br />

• REPAIRING<br />

440 C Street Suite 40<br />

SEA TANG<br />

COCKTAILS<br />

PEOPLE'S FISH CO.<br />

869 Harbor St. Main 4158<br />

"If it swims we have it,<br />

So why go fi,rhing"<br />

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF 1936<br />

MEN'S, WOMEN'S, CHILDREN'S FURNISHINGS<br />

Compliments of<br />

AZTEC SHOPS, Ltd.<br />

Alvin H. Morrison, Mgr.<br />

Clarence and Andy<br />

Esther Feeny<br />

Marjorie Posten<br />

..._-----<br />

/70<br />

~JI"<br />

[ lJ<br />

l[)<br />

oI.<br />

(<br />

~<br />

VT ······:~·,··.l<br />

-,..:. ....<br />

-, '.<br />

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: I<br />

1\ I<br />

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........_ ,;:.:" .<br />

................. ',1<br />

Would but some Angel Prof, before too late,<br />

Hold up the yet unfolded Roll of Fate,<br />

And make the stern Recorder otherwise<br />

Put down our Grades-or quite obliterate,<br />

Ah, Friends, could you and I with Prex conspire<br />

To grasp this dumb Curriculum entire,<br />

Would we not tear it into bits-and then<br />

, D . I<br />

Re-write it nearer to the Heart s esrre:<br />

Point Lorna<br />

FANCY FRUITS VEGETABLES<br />

Supplied to<br />

STATE COLLEGE CAFETERIA<br />

KLAUBER WANGENHEIM CO.<br />

• CANDY »<br />

ERIES » TOBACCO lOTIONS<br />

Wholesale Distributors GROC FURNISHINGS N<br />

PAPER »<br />

/71<br />

Yon pretty Cooed that looks for us ag~in-<br />

How oft hereafter will she take that pam,<br />

How oft at Registration look for us<br />

Through this same Ouad-and look for one in vOln!<br />

And when, 0 Clarence, you with Cokes sholl pass<br />

Before the fellows that should be in Class,<br />

And in your joyous Errand reach the Stool I<br />

Where oft I sat-turn down an empty Gloss.<br />

SEA FOODS<br />

-Rachel<br />

Harris Campbell<br />

BEVERAGES


SEVENTH<br />

B<br />

at<br />

TREET<br />

When You 'Plan Your Home<br />

Visit Scm Diego's Complete<br />

Department<br />

Store<br />

MONTGOMERY<br />

WARD<br />

Phone<br />

FRANKLIN<br />

7781<br />

"In Step With the<br />

March of Time"<br />

«A San Diego Institution»<br />

"Where practical training and effectiv<br />

placement service combine to essure<br />

positions in business for college troined<br />

men and women."<br />

W. Y. KIRKPATRICK, Mgr. CATALOGUE ON REQUEST<br />

REGISTRATION, OH,<br />

BY ORVILLE<br />

NORDBERG<br />

REGISTRATIONl<br />

"What are they openin' windows for?" said Freshman Number One.<br />

"To sign you up, to sign you up," the lofty Senior said.<br />

"What makes you look so white, so white?" said Freshman Number One.<br />

''I'm dreadin' what I've got to watch," the lofty Senior said.<br />

For they're registerin' the freshmen, you can 'ear the Dead March play<br />

The registrar's at 'er window, they're registerin' you today.<br />

They're takin' your high school emblem off, an' cuttin your stripes away,<br />

And they're registerin' the freshmen in the mornin'.<br />

Jl~A_<br />

a variety<br />

of special,delicious<br />

and appropriate<br />

ice cream flavors<br />

and molds for<br />

every occasion<br />

For That Party<br />

• There's nothing that fosters congeniality<br />

and friendship as well as<br />

traveling<br />

together.<br />

• For your next social event . . .<br />

Charter a Bus ... You'll be surprised<br />

at the low cost.<br />

• When entertaining out-of-town<br />

guests<br />

use our Special Sightseeing<br />

Tours to show them the city and<br />

points<br />

of interest.<br />

• For information ... CALLMAIN 3111<br />

TANNER MOTOR TOURS<br />

~I'<br />

( 'J<br />

L ()<br />

o<br />

"What makes the rear-rank breathe so hard?" said Freshman Number One.<br />

"They've run to get 'ere from afar," the lofty Senior said.<br />

"What makes that front rank man fall down?" said Freshman Number One.<br />

"Because 'e's stood in line so long," the lofty Senior said.<br />

They are registerin' the freshmen, they are marchin' them around,<br />

From the training school to the office where the money is plunked down;<br />

An' 'e'll sign in arf a minute all 'is bloomin' life away-<br />

0, they're registerin' freshmen in the mornin',<br />

"Why, I knew him when 'e was a goodly chap," said Freshman Number One.<br />

"Til 'ave to be good when in class e's trapped," the lofty Senior said.<br />

"'E used to be an important lad," said Freshman Number One.<br />

"Just another corn cob smoker," the lofty Senior said.<br />

They are registerin' freshmen, you must bid them now adieu<br />

For they'll never be the same again in a year or two.<br />

Raw high school kids, but they'll go far-<br />

After bein' registered 'ere in the mornin',<br />

"What's that so black against the sun?" said Freshman Number One.<br />

"It's freshmen fightin' traditions court," the lofty Senior said.<br />

"What's that that whimpers overhead?" said Freshman Number One.<br />

"It's childhood that's passin' now," the lofty Senior said.<br />

For they're done with the freshmen, they've collected the fees,<br />

From now on the frosh can't do as they please.<br />

Hal The young 'uns are a-shakin', while filling out programs,<br />

After a-registerin' in the mornin'!<br />

U. S. Grant Hotel<br />

Opet'ating<br />

THE GRAY LlNE<br />

172<br />

Main 3111<br />

" ...•~<br />

~ ...,.<br />

I~..<br />

r......<br />

J""<br />

,.I<br />

II<br />

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::::::,<br />

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173


A<br />

Acedernrc Orgeni1:etiors .... 107<br />

Ade«, Dorothy 113, 19<br />

Adeir, Ellen 136<br />

Albright, Peggy , .131<br />

Alderson, Jane 134-<br />

Alexender, Alfred 108, 114,<br />

118, 119, 19,49<br />

Aigert, M"ry 141<br />

Alkire, Russell ,.119, 62<br />

Alpha Mu Gemme , .114<br />

Alphe Sigrne Alpho ...•... 132<br />

Alumni 32<br />

Ames, Phylli~ , 139<br />

Anderson, Je ck 82, 95<br />

Anderson, Phil 19<br />

Andrews, Nicholes 144<br />

Arbetch, Viole 137, 119<br />

Armstrong, Dorothy .. , .26, 109,<br />

116, 19, 38, 131<br />

Arnold, Lee 113, 148<br />

Art 67<br />

Art Guild . .. 120<br />

Asekewe, Moto 115<br />

Assembly Committee 40<br />

Associoted Men Students 41<br />

Associeted Women Students.43<br />

A. W. S. Boord .44<br />

Ault, Deen J. W 13<br />

Ault, Richerd .. 83, 115, 148, 38<br />

Austin, Ruth 19, 120, 137<br />

Averill, Lorreine 120, 140<br />

Avoyer, Joe 143<br />

Aztec . 49<br />

Bocon, Dolores 135<br />

Bailey, Allen ., 149<br />

Bailey, Ray 149<br />

Bailey, Vietor .. . 148<br />

Baker, Harold 150<br />

Band 59<br />

Barba, Constance 19, 116<br />

Barker, Allen 113, 148<br />

Barker, Phillys 19, 27, 109<br />

Barnes, Fred 115, 148<br />

Barr, Ellen .140<br />

Barron, John 118, 120<br />

Barstow, Albert 143<br />

Barthlemess, Helen J 139<br />

Bartlett, Natalie 131<br />

Baseball 94<br />

Baskerville, Lloyd .. , , .149<br />

Basketba II ...........•..... 82<br />

Bates, Dorothea . . 19<br />

Belford, Marian 132<br />

Bell, Betty ........•... 19, 139<br />

Bell, Hewes 145<br />

Belville, Bob ......•...... 149<br />

Benton, Jack 147<br />

Benton, John 144<br />

Berdel, Clair 149<br />

Berkstresser, Bill . 115, 121, 148<br />

Berryman, Carmack 82<br />

Best, Marie L. ...121,131<br />

Bethard, Bill 149<br />

Big Game Varieties 63<br />

Blethen, Jim 77, 147<br />

Blue Key 108<br />

Bock, Bill . , ...•....... 143<br />

Bock, Margaret .118, 121<br />

Bodie, Ina Marie 19<br />

Bonsignor, Bernice .. ~.. .121<br />

Booth, Roy 19, 149<br />

B<br />

Borders, Jim ,., 146<br />

Borg rding, Mor / 131<br />

Bosler, Maude , 140<br />

Boughn, Bob 115, 14'/<br />

Bowler, June , .. 119<br />

Bowman, Constance 121<br />

Box, Fronces ., 120<br />

Boxing ,.... . . , .182<br />

Boyer, Cleo 113, 147<br />

Boyer, Terry .. , •.... , 147<br />

Brodt, AI 19, 25, 62,<br />

119, 120, 143<br />

Brems, Virginia ., 120<br />

Bresler, Elya 50, 53, 115<br />

118, 11'1<br />

Brown, Margoret 19<br />

Brunson, Howord 19, I 14<br />

Buchanan, Everord .. 146<br />

Bucheneri, J. T 20<br />

Buehlman, Bill 83, 115, 149<br />

Burch, Robert. . . . . .. 121, 143<br />

Burchard, Meige 20, 134<br />

Burkett, Christine . . 133<br />

Burne, Stonley .20, 42, 94, 147<br />

Burns, Linden.. , ..... 82, 149<br />

Burrows, George ... 121<br />

Burton, Charles ... ,39, 115,<br />

118, 121, 145<br />

Butler, John 19, 36, 37,<br />

76, 117, 146<br />

Butzboch, Horry ... , ... II I, 146<br />

Byrne, Charles .. 54<br />

C<br />

Calland, Leo ... 76<br />

Callies, Gil .. . .77<br />

Cap and Gown.. .. .... 109<br />

Captains .96<br />

Caragher, Alice .. , .. 18, 20, 112<br />

Carlson, Nan ,., 110<br />

Carman, Bernard ,20, 41,<br />

76, 108, 117, 142, 147<br />

Carne, Edith 20<br />

Carpenter, Graciamae .. 118, 121<br />

Carrothers, Harriet , 139<br />

Carter, Carolyn /31<br />

Carter, Harold , .. 148<br />

Carter, Mary Belle " .... 131<br />

Cetza . . 124<br />

Chadwick, Virginia ... 130, 138<br />

Chase, Lionel .121, 143<br />

Chatterly, Lois .... 20, I 12, I 14<br />

Chilcott, Fred .. I II, 120<br />

Chilcott, Marjorie .20, 114<br />

Churchman, Albert ..... 38, 77,<br />

94, 96, 108, 142, 147<br />

Clardy, Betty . I 16, 141<br />

Clark, Helen .. ,3?, 43,119,139<br />

Clark, John · ,77, 149<br />

Clark, Tommyannne .. . ... 131<br />

Clarke, Bernice , .. , I 14<br />

Clarke, Owen ... 30,38, 115, 148<br />

Clarkson, Art ,38, I 15, 148<br />

Clarkson, Don .. ,20, 23, 35,<br />

37,40,108,119,146<br />

Clemson, Helen .123<br />

Cloud, Clara .. . , . I /3<br />

Cole, Gladys ., 134<br />

Cole, Harvey .........•... 145<br />

Cole, Margaret 20<br />

Coleman, Roy .. . . 146<br />

College Y . i /0<br />

Collins, Adele .. . /16, /3/<br />

Conant, Stan 118, /49<br />

INDEX<br />

Conyers, Bob .. .121, 145<br />

Cormier, Phillip 118<br />

Cornell, Sue.. . 141<br />

Crone, Emeline .. . .. ,20<br />

Crowford, Betty 139<br />

Crowford, Williom .. . 144<br />

Cridge, Elizabeth .,.",.0, I~o<br />

Cross, Morjorie .. 121, 134-<br />

Crouch, Jomes 143<br />

Cunningham, Alan .. 11:", 148<br />

Cunninghom, Emily .. , 14/<br />

Curtis, Betty 141<br />

Curtis, Helen , .132<br />

Curtis, Thelmo 20, 112, 114<br />

Cushmon, Roymond : 143<br />

Cushman, Roy .... , .121<br />

Cutler, Mary Alice ... 138<br />

o<br />

Dale, Allan .. 144<br />

Danforth, Orville 118<br />

Dany, Rosalie.. . 112, I~O<br />

Davies, Jeanne .21, 112<br />

Davis, Bernice .. , . I ~O<br />

Davis, Margaret., 138<br />

Davis, Rosalie.. . .. 137<br />

Day, Ray , . . .147<br />

Debate , , .. , 68<br />

Dedication ., . .4<br />

DeLannoy, Williilm. ,21,112,119<br />

<strong>Del</strong> Sud oeste .46<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta Chi Phi .. . .136<br />

<strong>Del</strong>ta Pi Beta .. , .... 143<br />

<strong>Del</strong>vers. . . II I<br />

Deming, Lois .21, 133<br />

Denis, Lois .. , /39<br />

Dennis, Vernon ., . 148<br />

Dennstedt, Norman ... /11, 1/7,<br />

145<br />

Dixon, Bob _ / 15<br />

Donnelly, Dorothy .134<br />

Donovan, Dorothy .. 138<br />

Dorsey, George . . 1/8<br />

Douglas, Ralph . .. /13<br />

Downey, Tom .. 144<br />

Duich, John . , 76, 95<br />

Duncan, Robert 145<br />

Dupree, Rene 21, 26, 38, 108<br />

Durbin, Bob /11, 149<br />

Durland, Charles , 76, 96<br />

Dyson, John .. . .2/, 83, 96<br />

E<br />

Eastman, Helen<br />

Edmond, Jack<br />

Eklund, Paul .,<br />

EI Palenque ..<br />

Emery, Charlotte<br />

End Zone ..<br />

Epsilon Eta ....<br />

Epsilon Pi Theta .<br />

English, Virginia .,<br />

Ericksen, Martha<br />

Ernsting, Marjorie<br />

Eta Omega <strong>Del</strong>ta<br />

Evans, Ross ..<br />

Faculty ....<br />

Falconer, Bob<br />

Farwell, Richard<br />

Fashions .<br />

Fay, Charles<br />

Fencing .'<br />

F<br />

.. .43, 138<br />

.148<br />

/43<br />

... 52<br />

· ..... 140<br />

...... 53<br />

.. 144<br />

.... 133<br />

· ..... /35<br />

.... /41<br />

. . /31<br />

145<br />

.... 145<br />

.... /4<br />

'" I 18<br />

.. 143<br />

......64<br />

·II 8, /21<br />

'" .181<br />

Fenn, Dove .. .148<br />

Ferguson, Harold " .145<br />

Ferris, Dave ..... .50, 118<br />

Finance Board .37<br />

Fisher, Jernes , .21, 22<br />

Fiske, Cecil . .. 150<br />

Fitzgerald, Jack .. . 82<br />

Flanigan, Monica , . /39<br />

Fleiss, Gladys,.... .21, 112<br />

Fletcher, Marjorie ... 21, 23, 114<br />

Flint, Russell ..... / 19, 120, 146<br />

Floore, Vernon .143<br />

Florea, Dorwin ... 148<br />

Football. . . . . . . .76<br />

Forbes, Marie .. . 134<br />

Ford, George .. . .. 113<br />

Fowler, Catherine .... 21, 24,<br />

116, 131<br />

Fowler, Marlowe .... III, 147<br />

Fox, Vernon .. . . , .... 96<br />

Frame, Joe.. ,77, 82, 146<br />

France, Harriet , .... , . 134<br />

Franklin, Janet ,iO, 13'/<br />

Frazier, Henry 121<br />

Freeman, Barbara , 18, 21,<br />

36, 39, 71, 107, I 1'1, 131<br />

Freshmen , . . , .31<br />

Freshour, Marian . 139<br />

Fujimoto, Yukie .... 28<br />

G<br />

Gamma Phi Zeta .134<br />

Gannon, Sinclair 139<br />

Garbani, Glenn .. 94<br />

Gardner, Norval .... 95<br />

Gardner, Robert . /13, 149<br />

Garfield, Harry 77, 1~9<br />

Gault, Walter 1~5<br />

Geren, Lillian .. 134-<br />

Gessler, Anita 139<br />

Gibbs, George 150<br />

Gledhill, Doris -n. 109,<br />

110, 131<br />

Goldie, Alex .83<br />

Goldsmith, Betty . /10, /2/<br />

Golf........ . ... 100<br />

Gordon, John ......... 21, 143<br />

Gorham, Thelma .. I 10, 121<br />

Gorton, Mac.. ./15, 148<br />

Gorton, Sheridan ... 62, 119, 145<br />

Goset, DeLawrence 21<br />

Gould, Mildred.. ., /31<br />

Graduate Manager.. .34<br />

Grant, Jane.. .., .121, 13/<br />

Grant, LaMargolaine .121<br />

Gray, Mary Beth .... 136<br />

Green, Jane ... 21,137<br />

Green, Wilbur .. . . I I 7<br />

H<br />

Jr<br />

James.<br />

Hatch, tmiiy , , . 119<br />

Hatch, Robert 143<br />

Hethewey, Frances 22<br />

Hathaway, Helen 131<br />

Hathaway, Mary L 22, 131<br />

Hathaway, Richard 150<br />

Hawken, Edward 22, 117<br />

Haworth, Gordon . . .. /43<br />

Hayden, Stan I 15<br />

Head, Lawrence 22, /43<br />

Heller, Ruth I , " 133<br />

Henderson, Dolores .. 138<br />

Henderson, Jamesie .. 135<br />

Henning, Evelyn .. . /20<br />

Henry, George ... .144<br />

Hensell, Kenneth .. . .. 22<br />

Hepner, Pres. Walter 5, 10<br />

Heron, Charlotte 138<br />

Hershey, Jay ,76<br />

Heryet, Frank IOJ, 149<br />

Hessel, Catherine 135<br />

Higashi, Hideo 77, 95<br />

Higgins, Adeline 138<br />

Hildreth, Marie 44, 10'/. 138<br />

Hockaday, Olive 19, 22,<br />

109, I 19, /28<br />

Holberg, Earl 143<br />

Holmes, Don , I I I<br />

Holmes, Howord 143<br />

Hom, Ernest .. 22, /14, 117, 121<br />

Hoon, Jonet , .71, /16, 141<br />

Hopkins, Jeck 121, 143<br />

Hopkins, Roger .• , .. 76, 95, 146<br />

Hoskins, Lowrence .. . .... 143<br />

Houser, Alon. . . . •. .. . I ~4<br />

Howord, Jeenn tte ..... ,.139<br />

Howell, Corolyn . •..... 136<br />

Hubbi:lI, Wilson ,. , .•...... 145<br />

Hudson, Wilford. •• .. 144<br />

Huey, Mery H. . • ..•.•.... 22<br />

Huffmon, Orlend ....•.•.. /49<br />

Hughes, Jim . .. •.. .•.. 77<br />

Hughes, Virglnio ,.".132<br />

Hurlburt, Gordon . .. 148<br />

Hurwin, Jo .... .••.. . .. 148<br />

Hutchinson. Mery .22<br />

Hutton. Jemes •...• 18, n, 47,<br />

117, 121<br />

Hyott, M"rg"r ,. ,141<br />

I nter-Cless Sports 106<br />

Inter.Freternlty Council. . .1 ~2<br />

Inter.Froternity Sports ' .. 104<br />

Inter-Soror;ty Council 130<br />

Internotionol Rel"tions Cub.122<br />

Aileen .. . . . . .. 120, I ~O<br />

Jomes, Evelyn . '" ..... ,.139<br />

Hale, Phyllis , .120 I Jenkins, Eli1:ebeth 22, 113, 131<br />

Hall, Gordon 39, 148 Jessop, Jone 141<br />

Hamilton, Arline " .21, 137 Im-':.. I [) Johnson Abb,e. '" .20,23,38,<br />

Hamilton, Robert 22 ~ 101, 116, 119, 141<br />

~~nrddiboMOkaryE 1'3 5 8 3 ~.~.. JJo~nson, Don .....•... 23, 145<br />

, - m .. ... 01rson K l~ /23<br />

Harlin, Walter 19,22, 77,96, ()' ,a ellne .<br />

Johnson, luCIlle .....•..... 120<br />

II 7, II8 Johnson, Dr. Myrtle .. .. ... II 3<br />

Harper, Gerard " .144 Joh R b 20<br />

Harper, Robert .... 144 I' nSOn, 0 in •...•...... ,<br />

Harris, Cecelia .. 136 ~"'" • Juniors . ..•... . 29<br />

~:;~ei~t:a~~~l~<br />

B .. 96:·.·1~~',. ;.I~.~ ~ :::::.::' J,m,~"" :::<br />

174<br />

tJ<br />

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',\ i/............ I Ko Dip' 112<br />

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...·."u .... #',<br />

::..l.. Ka~~:Phi tSig~~·:::.::::: 146<br />

J<br />

""'''''HIIUN",''''''''',,,,,,,,<br />

175<br />

Kappa Thda .....<br />

Kawagishi, Richard<br />

Kearns, Betty .,<br />

. ... 1~7<br />

........ 23<br />

10'1, 120,<br />

130, 135<br />

Kearns, Mary C. , . , ... 139<br />

Keller, Allen .113, 146<br />

Kelley, Wilbur 83, /47<br />

Kemp, Betty .. , / 18, 136<br />

Kendall, Eugene I 17, 144<br />

Kennedy, Robert .. '" .47, III,<br />

liB, 149<br />

Kerr, Virginia .,.,..... . .. 131<br />

Kersten, Chloris .... 44, 1/6<br />

Kidder, Murdock .. 145<br />

King, Betty ' .. 23<br />

King, June 138<br />

King, Virginia , ,.138<br />

Kligman, Malcolm .121<br />

Knight, Lois. ""'" .136<br />

Kobusch, Sydne 120<br />

Koch, Marjo 131<br />

Koller, Bill .. .37, 3B, 62,<br />

115,1/9,121,143<br />

Kraemer, Paul .. ,.113, 142, 143<br />

Krames, Helen R. . .134<br />

Krames, Mary L. ... ,., .... 134<br />

Kreizinger, Peggy .. 137<br />

Kruhsch, August .147<br />

Kuhn, Robert 144<br />

Kurtz, Peggy 136<br />

L<br />

LaDue, Bette ., .. 52, 118, 121<br />

Lamp, Alice .. . . 121<br />

Landis, Felix .. 150<br />

Long, Elizabeth .. /36<br />

Langston, Daniel ... 23, 117, 145<br />

Langston, Roderick. .117, 147<br />

Larabee, Giles 115, "B<br />

Larson, William .. 23, 94, 96, 149<br />

Leycock, Antoinette 23, 133<br />

Le Cercle FranciJis ,114<br />

Lee, Charles .. . .23, 76, 149<br />

Lee, Winifred 114, 116, 137<br />

Lehman, Jean 141<br />

Lehman, Ray 113<br />

LePelle, Don .. ,.' .. 145<br />

Lepore, Eva .. . .. 131<br />

Lesley, Dr. Lewis B.. . ~O, 149<br />

Lichty, Norabelle .134<br />

Liljegren, Ernest .. 23, /12<br />

Lindley, Mary.. .23, 38, 40,<br />

112, 109<br />

Lindsley, Byron ... 29, 38, 82, 96<br />

Lippincott, Claire<br />

Lippit, Marian<br />

Long, Ernest<br />

Long, Robert<br />

Lonie. Betty. , .<br />

lOB, 149<br />

.120<br />

.141<br />

.123, 143<br />

.. 143<br />

44, I/O,<br />

121, 131<br />

Loperena, Julia .. 134<br />

Lords, Don 120<br />

Losey, Frank .' ' 40<br />

Loveall, Robert .31<br />

Lovine, Allen .77<br />

Lowry, John .. ,23, 117<br />

Lukens, Pauline .23, 137<br />

Luscomb, Don ... , .47, 120, /49<br />

Lutz, Virginia ., : :~:<br />

Lyda, Herbert<br />

Lyda, Louise ., , .. 136<br />

LydICk, Larry. . .....<br />

.121,<br />

39,<br />

148<br />

148<br />

Lyle, Bd' ., '.135<br />

Lyons, Ruthann .<br />

Lynch, Agnes 23, 119, 134<br />

Lynch, DICk .. , 144<br />

M<br />

Maheras, Christo .. , , .143<br />

Mahler, Jean . 139<br />

Mahoney, Rosemary , .. 140<br />

Maiss, Rosalie ,. , , ,.62, 131<br />

Managers ".,.,.".96<br />

Manos, George .. ,117, 145<br />

Margulis, Lawrence .... 150<br />

Martin, Beatrice . , . 135<br />

Martin, Sally .,.,."., ... ,133<br />

Masterson, Lois , . , /40<br />

Mayes, Martha .. , , 135<br />

McCall, Corine ...... 121,132<br />

McChristy, Reagan , .. , ... 23<br />

McDonald, Lorna , , 141<br />

McGaw, Joe . . .. 14B<br />

McGrew, John 148<br />

McKenna, Bill .., .143<br />

McKittrick, Gilbert .. . . 143<br />

McMichael, Jim 76,146<br />

McMullen, Dean Mary /3<br />

McOsker, Margaret .120, 136<br />

McPhie, Leland " .146<br />

McVeigh, Don , ,123<br />

Meirs, Fred .. ,115, 149<br />

Meline, Len .. . ,146<br />

Men's Glee . , 56<br />

Men's Odette . , , .5B<br />

Meredith, Mary E. .121<br />

Merrill, Bill ., ... 148<br />

Merritt, Robert, . , .. 144<br />

Meyer, Bill .. , .. /46<br />

Mills, Virginia ., .134<br />

Mirow, Phyllis ./4/<br />

Mitchell, Lottie .,.50, 118, 12J<br />

Moore, Frances J.. .. , , .114, 116<br />

Moore, Jean .. ,.24, 109, 137<br />

Morgan, Betty .. ,114<br />

Morrison, Alvin .34, 37<br />

Morrison, Virginia 2~, 131<br />

Moser, Nada .. .116, 136<br />

Moses, Betty. . . ,135<br />

Mu Sigma Pi., ,.122<br />

Murphy, Ruby .116<br />

Murphy, Ruth 24, 137<br />

N<br />

Nagle, George .<br />

Nagle, Walter ..<br />

Neiderman, Howard .'<br />

Nelson, Charles<br />

Nelson<br />

'<br />

Noble, Don .<br />

Noble, Doris .. ,<br />

Noon, Margaret<br />

Noon, William<br />

Nordberg, Orville<br />

Nutter,<br />

Mont30mcry<br />

o<br />

.. 146<br />

.... 147<br />

.. 24<br />

.... 148<br />

... 136<br />

47, 148<br />

.118, 136<br />

.38, 119, 140<br />

.. 145<br />

.50, 118,<br />

121, 143<br />

.. 24<br />

Oberg, Vivian ., 116<br />

Oceotl , ' / 15<br />

O'Connor, Bob .146<br />

Offerman, Bernita ,132<br />

O'Keefe, Jennette . .13B<br />

0' Mara, Raymond .24<br />

Omega Xi .. ' 147<br />

One Ad Plays 66<br />

One Mad Night. ' .. 65<br />

. I II<br />

Ono, Frank .. , , ... 59<br />

Orchestra .' 1/<br />

Outcalt, Irving E. ' ' , .' .' .<br />

Owen, Don 149<br />

p<br />

Pockard, EII~m~ne<br />

Palmgren, Ben ....<br />

Parker, C~therine<br />

Porris, Joe .<br />

Peyton, Don .<br />

Peck, B~rboro . • .•<br />

Peck, Eldred. .<br />

Perno, Louis .. .<br />

Peters, Ruby M~e. 110,<br />

Peterson, Deen A. G.<br />

Peterson, Bob. .<br />

Peterson, De~n C. E.<br />

Peterson, Gordon .<br />

I 0<br />

ell<br />

135<br />

2~.17, 117<br />

1111H<br />

1 ~ I<br />

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120, 137<br />

12<br />

117, 1~5<br />

,<br />

38. 108.<br />

117, 1~5<br />

Peterson, M~ry"nn~ ~~, 130, {~O<br />

Pf~ff, Peul .. " ~O, 12/, I~b<br />

Pfefferkorn, Enc . liS, I ~~<br />

Phelps, T"lm~dg 1~3<br />

Phi K~ppo Gomm~ 13d<br />

Phi l.ernbde Xi ..<br />

H8<br />

Phi Sigrne Nu.. 131<br />

PhiSigmoXi ....... 113<br />

Phillips, H~rold '.. 2~<br />

Phillips, Wolter .. " 2~<br />

Pi Phi Epsilon .... I 1/1<br />

Pitts, Ed .... 150<br />

Pitts, Tom ....•.• '.. 150<br />

Pollord, Bob .,...... 24, I ~9<br />

Powell, Dick.... .. .126<br />

Powelson, Irene ...•.. 24, 123<br />

Press Club ..•..... I 18<br />

Pritchord, Doris... 2~, 121<br />

Q<br />

Ouinlan, John ..<br />

Ouinnelly, Morgoret<br />

ISO<br />

2~,<br />

120, /31<br />

R<br />

Raaka, Bill............ .77, 94<br />

Radio........... • .. 54<br />

Ragsdole, Betty .. ,.. •. ..1 ~I<br />

Rally Committee ., ......• 39<br />

Randel, Dorothy .........• 136<br />

Rau, Henriett~ 24, /12<br />

Rausch, Ruth ..........•... 25<br />

Ray, Kenneth , ... ,..... ..1 i8<br />

Redellngs, Eliz"beth. . . 139<br />

Redelings, M"rg~ret .....•. 139<br />

Reed, Julio........ 121<br />

Reichort, Shirley , 131<br />

Reynolds, Gordon ,. 150<br />

Rhyne, Roberto . 25<br />

Richey, Bob 148<br />

Riddle, Joy ............•. 139<br />

Riddle, Peggy /41<br />

Riehle, Virgini" .......•. .140<br />

Roberts, Barbor" ...•.. , I b, I ~I<br />

Roberts, Jonet<br />

25, 11b<br />

Roberts, Mory 140<br />

Robertson, Mildred 44, 71•<br />

lib, 140<br />

Robinson, Mary ......•.... 1~O<br />

Robinson, Sydney /17, 143<br />

Robyn, Eleanor 25, 114, 137<br />

Roddie, Florence 138<br />

Rodriquez, Josephine ., .. , .. 25<br />

Rogers Helen 137<br />

Rogers,<br />

,<br />

Spencer ..<br />

1~8<br />

Rohde, Bernice ,110, 131<br />

Rose, P~tricia ...••... 127, 139<br />

Ross, Will , , 148<br />

Rossi, William 25<br />

Rossman, William B3, 117,145<br />

Rufing, Marian .,. . .. 131<br />

Rumsey, Helen E...•.•.•.... 25


s<br />

S n rs, Fred ne .. 25, /23<br />

Sum, K nneth, .. loB<br />

, Seh Id rmlln, John ••. " • 0 150<br />

SChlC:k, Elm r •... 25, 117, /'13<br />

SchneIder, P ul •.... . ISO<br />

Seh,oed r, N oml ., '" .141<br />

cofIeld, H lei". 22, 25, II ~<br />

Scott, Ch rlcs ..... 77, 142, 14~<br />

Seidel, P ul "" ..• ' .... 149<br />

S lied, Cherie, ....• ,.,. 121<br />

S nlO,s .••. " •.... " 18<br />

Sh Her, Ev n •..• • •• 115, 1'19<br />

Sh Ilenberger, PeSgy. . .141<br />

Sh rp, Bill........ .. 121<br />

Shen Yo .•..•. " 139<br />

Shields, Wilmer. ". , 118<br />

Shimp, F, nees ..•• . ..•. ,. 136<br />

Shively, Helen ....•... , 25<br />

Shreve, Mery 140<br />

Sieck, Lucille ..••...... .. 141<br />

S, s'inge" Alice .•.. , .110, 137<br />

Sigm Lembdll.... ,150<br />

Sigmli Pi Thctll . , 135<br />

Silver, Irene '" 136<br />

Skull lind Dllsge, .. .., ... 119<br />

SI yin, Ben........ 77, 1'16<br />

Sleyden, Syfvill .• ,.... . .. J 21<br />

Smedley, Mllrie 138<br />

Smith, C ,,011 . 143<br />

Smith, Chlls.. .. , .. 76, 94<br />

Smith, Doris 116, 140<br />

Smith, Elunor ., ..•....... 139<br />

Smith, Helen ...... 36, 71, 141<br />

Smith, Jllmes ..• '" .115, 144<br />

Smith, Mergllrd .. . 134<br />

Smith, Mllry L. 120<br />

Smyth, Ed " •• 77, 83, 95, I ~6<br />

Snider, Clyde ........ l l l , "4<br />

Sccie] Committee .. """ .'10<br />

Scciel O,gllnizllt,ons • . 129<br />

Sommer, Jllnc 131<br />

Sontllg. Ruth 140<br />

Sophomores ...•.... . 30<br />

Sorenson, George •.. 47, 108, 120<br />

Soule, Elinor. .. 25, 112, 120<br />

Spllfford, Suslln .. , .... " ... 25<br />

Spore, Burns " .,..... . .. 1'13<br />

Spore, Jllmes .... .... • ./43<br />

Springstced, Charles ..... ,148<br />

Stenford, Dwight.. , 25, 123, 148<br />

Stllnley, Ruth 121<br />

Stenlcv, Thien ...•. , , .. 145<br />

St rr, Zone ,.,. 116, 140<br />

St ele, Peorl """""'" /32<br />

Stephens, Ruth .. ,., " .. /31<br />

Stern, Roger .. ,., , ,76, 146<br />

Stevenson, Kenneth ,. /48<br />

Stewart, Peggy .", ".139<br />

Stickney, Jefferson " 32<br />

Stone, Howord ,." 148<br />

Stone, J, P... , .. ",.,., .. /23<br />

Stone, Thomes ... ",.,,26, 37,<br />

38, 42, 108, /23, 148<br />

Stooke, Charles ." ... ",.,148<br />

Stooke, Morion """" ,21,26,<br />

'13, /09, 128, 131<br />

Stose, Marjorie ... 26, 109, 135<br />

Street, Phyllis ."., .. , .. , .. 135<br />

Struve, Neve ., ., .120, 121<br />

Stubbs, Jim .... , , .76, 147<br />

Student Body Officers, .. , .. 36<br />

Student Body President.., 35<br />

Student Council .... "., 38<br />

Sulliven, Jerry .. ",." .. ,.146<br />

Swenson, Zeldo .. " .. , .... 132<br />

Sworner, Mllry .. , .. 26, /20, 140<br />

Swoyne, Bill .......... 121, 148<br />

"Sweetheorts" ..•..... . ,60<br />

Swimming ., , .. " 99<br />

Swink, Edna "'" , . 26<br />

Sykes, Maude , . , .26<br />

T<br />

Felbct, Virginio ..<br />

Tenc], Evelyn .,<br />

.120, 13/<br />

.44, 50,<br />

52, 118, /21<br />

Teu <strong>Del</strong>to Chi , 149<br />

Tou Sigmo ,.,." , .117<br />

Tou Zeto Rho .. , " .. 140<br />

Toylor, Charles .. , . . 119, 143<br />

Toylor, Madeline .. . . , . /32<br />

Toylor, Nancy 120, 132<br />

Tozeloor, Richard , ,.82, 145<br />

Tempest , , .. , . , 66<br />

Tennis ,.,', 98<br />

Thacher, Edwin "'" .. , I 17<br />

Thoyer, Katherine , ..... , . , . 141<br />

A<br />

Americon Cut<br />

Arden Doiries<br />

Price Store,<br />

,<br />

...• ,<br />

,<br />

,162<br />

, 17/<br />

J. Jessop & Sons ..<br />

B<br />

Bunnell Photo Shop. , " . '" ... '" , .. , , '5/<br />

C<br />

Campbell Chevrolet Co , .. , , .. , 51<br />

Centrol Service Stotions " , .. 151<br />

Clarence ond Andy , . , . .162<br />

o<br />

Walter Dibb, Jeweler .......•....•.... /70<br />

Dixie Lumber & Supply Co , , ,170<br />

Theatre Guild " 62<br />

Theta Chi , ".141<br />

Thien, Stanley. , , .. , 145<br />

Thing, Walter.,., .. , .. " .. /43<br />

Thomes, Betty ... , , 1/8, 136<br />

Thomas, William , /44<br />

Thompson, Betty "'" .26, /36<br />

Thompson, Bud 149<br />

Thompson, Helena 26<br />

Thompson, Ralph " 148<br />

Thoms, Muriel """ , . , 132<br />

Thurmond, Charles ,. , ... 26<br />

Tinker, William . /8, 26, 28,<br />

39, /08, / 17<br />

Toastmasters .. . , /2 i<br />

Toastmistresses /2/<br />

Townsend, Peggy .. . .. 136<br />

Track , 88<br />

Treble Clef.. '" .57'<br />

Treiber, Charlotte ..... /38, /30<br />

Trenfe/, Jacqueline , , .. 114<br />

Turner, Geraldine.. .. .137<br />

Turrentine, Constance , ... ,.133<br />

Turrentine, Howard .18, 26,<br />

39, 108, /42, 146<br />

Twitty, Evelyn . 134<br />

Tyers, John ... 20, 26, 38,<br />

108,119,145<br />

U<br />

Urbani, Virginia" ... 25, 26, 114<br />

V<br />

Valverde, Bill .. ." ... /47<br />

Van Buskirk, Phyllis ,. . .. /37<br />

Veed, Mary ... 26, /09, 112, 135<br />

Verdeckberg, Jack.,." .... 144<br />

Vernacchia, Ralph, 118, 120, 146<br />

Viau, Ernest , .. 115, 149<br />

Vogt, Viola .. .. 133<br />

Vosburgh, Frances 27<br />

W<br />

Walden, Meridith .. 113<br />

Walker, Jessie . /16, 132<br />

Walker, Ruth .121, 132<br />

Walker, T. S. "'" .77,94, /47<br />

Wallace, Joan .. . .. 139<br />

Wallace, Peggy,. . ... 139<br />

INDEX TO ADVERTISERS<br />

J<br />

K<br />

Kelsey Jenney Commercial College, 152<br />

Klauber Wangenheim Co.. . ,17/<br />

M<br />

Malloy Cover Company.<br />

Miller Service Co .... , ..<br />

Mission Beach<br />

Montgomery W~;d.<br />

Morgan's Cafeteria<br />

Mountain Meadow ·C;~a~~;i~;.<br />

F<br />

N<br />

H. G. Fenton Material Co "<br />

National Dollar Stores.,.<br />

.158 New York Costume Co ..<br />

G Neyenesch Printers, Inc ...<br />

Goodwill Industries .. , .....•.......... , 64<br />

H<br />

Hages Ice Cream , ....•.. , 172<br />

Hoover Drug Store 162<br />

1<br />

Ingle Manufacturing Co .. , 164<br />

o<br />

Osser's Studio .. , , .. " .<br />

p<br />

Patton-Blinn Lumber<br />

Peoples FISh Co...<br />

Co<br />

.. . , , " . 162<br />

Pierce Market , 170<br />

Pullman Cafeteria.. . .. " .. . . . . .<br />

. , ,<br />

.,162<br />

,162<br />

R<br />

. .. /52 Rainford Flower Shop ..<br />

Walton, George ... , .... 24, 27<br />

Warren, Glenn .. 18, 27, 76, /49<br />

Waterman, Oscar /44<br />

Watson, Nan 14/<br />

Wattenbarger, Clarence //7<br />

Weber, Geraldine ... 44, /33<br />

Wells, Gordon .. . .. , ... 145<br />

Wells, Jane 39, 44, /20, 140<br />

Welsh, Betty , 133<br />

Welsh, Nadine 27, 133<br />

Wennberg, Margaret, .. 27, 1/3<br />

Wesleyan Foundation . , .. /23<br />

Westminister Club '" ./23<br />

Wetze II, Helen , //9, 139<br />

Wharton, Clelland , . 115, 145<br />

Wheeler, Qick .143<br />

White, Betty .. . , /36<br />

White, Margaret "" 136<br />

Whitney, Harrie 143<br />

Whitten, Faith ... ,. 27, //2, /14<br />

Wiggins, Gordon ... ,27, 38,<br />

46,108,117,118,12/,143<br />

Wilcox, Phyllis ... , .. , ..... 27<br />

Wililams, Jack.. ./21, /48<br />

Williams, Jim .. . .82, 147<br />

Willis, Kathryn , 27<br />

Willson, Howard. . 115, /48<br />

Wilson, Betty .. . , ... 135<br />

Wilson, Charles , . ,21, 27<br />

Wilson, Ted 27, 146<br />

Wing, Mary K. .. . 27<br />

Wolfarth, Carlton 149<br />

Women's Atheltic Assn 70<br />

W. A. A. Board .. '" '" 71<br />

Women's P. E. Club 124<br />

Women's Quartette 58<br />

Woodward, Robert 117, 121<br />

Wcrthington, George .... 27,<br />

Wrestling ,<br />

120, 144<br />

102<br />

Y<br />

Yell Leaders 39<br />

Young, Chester., 27, /49<br />

Young, Margaret '36<br />

Young, Paul 28, / 17, 149<br />

Yount, Jack .. . .77, 95<br />

Z<br />

Zinkand, Rosemarie .. . ... 132<br />

. ... 170<br />

S<br />

Safeway and McMarr Stores 152<br />

San Diego College of Commerce .173<br />

San Diego Cons. Gas & Electric Co /60<br />

.161 San Diego Sun 161<br />

. /58 San Diego Union & Evening Tribune /57<br />

.157 Schiefer & Sons , , , .. , , , 162<br />

.172 Schiller Book Bindery, . . .. . 169<br />

. 162 Sears, Roebuck & Co.... . . 164<br />

.16/ See's Pies........... ......... ../7/<br />

Sunifornia Candies.. , .. "" ' .. 0<br />

. 170 T<br />

. . . . . . . . . ,/62 Tanner Motor Tours. ,<br />

" .163 Thearle Music Co .. , '" """<br />

v<br />

.159 Vincent's Dining Room ..<br />

W<br />

Ward's Typewriter Service ..<br />

Wellman Peck & Co .<br />

Western Salt Co .. , .<br />

Louis M. Winn Optical Co .<br />

•••• /62<br />

. 172<br />

, 152<br />

.162<br />

. /73<br />

./62<br />

... /58<br />

. .. /51 } "

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