- Title
- Pasadena Chronicle, May 12, 1933
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-
- Date of Creation
- 12 May 1933
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-
- Description
- Student newspaper published and edited for the Associated Student Body of Pasadena City College weekly during the college year by the journalism students.
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Pasadena Chronicle, May 12, 1933
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FEATURES
Persecution of the Jews — present
issues, background. “Our Era.”
Harold O. Weight’s “Llano del
Rio — ghost town.” FeaturePage.
"Here’s the final warning!” Box-
head story on this page.
jjac-titicna
(П]готс1с
Mouthpiece of 4000 Junior College Students
Vol. XXIV
Pasadena, California, May 12, 1933
Carnival Plans Move
Rapidly As 40 Clubs
Arrange for Booths
Mast and Dagger Officials Declare That Pre-interest
Has Increased Twenty-five Per Cent
In ‘Rent’ of Ground Space
Did you ever go through a Chinese horror room? Are
you lucky at Tango? Do you enjoy watching pledges being
unceremoniously dumped into a water tank? Do you dance?
Do you eat? Do you enjoy viewing the latest styles?
These are but a very few of the amusements which will
prevail at the annual Mast and Dagger Carnival next Friday
afternoon and evening.
JENNISON IS NEW
DIRECTOR
Fred Jennison will replace John
Krumm as director of the A. W. S.
Fashion Show which will be given
as a concession to the Carnival.
Krumm has to leave school early
and is pressed for time.
Changes in the cast have been
made to the effect that Fred Greigs
will portray the role of Philip. Bob
Coop, formerly cast in the role, is
ineligible to participate. Fred
Greigs has had previous experience
as the lead in “The Bronx Cheer,”
parts in various Alhambra high
school vaudevilles, and also in the
junior and senior plays.
Ashton Nickerson will take the
part of Mr. Ginsberg. Nickerson
has formerly acted, in ‘The Bronx
Cheer,” “College Capers,” the
South Pasadena operetta, and in
Playhouse productions. At present
he is with the Foothill Players in
“The Prince Who Played Piper.”
Girl Athletes
Will Banquet
In Local Club
Mrs. Leland Atherton Irish
To Be Guest Speaker
At Affair
W. A. A. members will convene
for their annual banquet May 25 at
the Pasadena Athletic club. Mrs.
Leland Atherton Irish will speak
on “Womanliness and Our Social
Contacts,” and there will be a pro¬
gram of mKusical selections and
dances.
Awards will be made and the
newly elected officers installed.
They are: Frances McNemey,
president; Joanna Pupis, vice-
president; Anna Crumm, recording
secretary; Mary Cornett, corre¬
sponding secretary; Roberta Vail,
treasurer; Sophia Tajima, parlia¬
mentarian.
Sports managers who also will be
installed, are Kay Bowers, hockey;
Nancy Kellogg, basketball; Dor¬
othy Tollefson, handball; Josephine
Paulson, archery; Tubby Sanders,
hiking.
Lois Messier will be toastmis-
tress. Lila Suiter, president, has
charge of the affair.
Elva Lois Kellog
Will Sing Here
Presenting Elva Lois Kellogg
assisted by Margaret Crozier, Mast
and Dagger are sponsoring a song
recital in the music hall Wednes¬
day at 8:15 p. m.
Vocal selections by Miss Kellogg,
who is a mezzo soprano, include
"None But the Lonely Heart” by
Tschaikowski, “M orgen!” by
Strauss, and “He Shall Feed. His
Flock” from the Messiah by Han¬
del. She will also offer numbers
from the modem school of music.
Mrs. Kathryn Barnard and Mrs.
Amy Grau Miller, J. C. music
maestras, are the instructors of
Miss Kellogg and Miss Crozier, re¬
spectively.
At present the school vocalist is
singing in the Warner Brothers
production, “Gold Diggers of 1933”
as yet not released. She also placed
second in the last Atwater Kent
contest for the San Gabriel valley
district.
Arts Magazine
Going on Sale
Covering all phases of art, the
Arts magazine went on sale at the
book store Wednesday for 10 cents.
Edited by Mary Dumas and Bert
McLeod, the magazine boasts all
illustrations with the exception of
three, done by students.
The different departments in¬
clude: art, edited by Harvey
Thompson; music, Allan Burt;
household arts, Helen Ator; and
drama, Jack Hamilton.
FLOATS WILL PARADE
DOWNTOWN
At a recent meeting presided
over by Dale Roe, Mast and Dag¬
ger president, representatives of
almost 40 organizations planning
entries in the big show met and
completed final preparations.
Booths for the Carnival will be
arranged around the north side of
the Men’s Gym as in previous
years. Leland Houghton, Mast and
Dagger member in charge of con
struction and distribution of booths,
has announced that due to the
great amout of pre-interest in the
event the great number of clubs
and organizations entering the
ground space of past years has
been increased by over 25 per cent.
Will Sell Scrip
Scrip will be sold inside and out¬
side the show and. all booths and
entertainment features will be per¬
mitted to accept scrip only from
the participants.
The dance which will be held on
the outside Men’s gym floor will
be run similiar to the large dance
floors at the nearby beaches with
a single scrip ticket necessary for
a couple.
Bob Fellows and his 11 piece
dance band, now playing regularly
over a Los Angeles station, will
present the rhythm. Lancers will
be in charge of guarding at the
dance.
Novelty Numbers
Two interesting novelty numbers,
“The Municipal Davenport” and
“Thanks Awfully,” are being pre¬
pared by Bauble and ells, lower di¬
vision dramatics club.
Organized as a publicity stunt
to aquaint the students and towns¬
folk with the big event, a parade
will wind its way down town on
Thursday afternoon. The proces¬
sion will assemble on south Sierra
Bonita street. The line of march
will continue around, the driveway
in front of school and on down
Colorado street to the flagpole.
Like a Circus
A complete list of all entries in
the Carnival would read like a ros¬
ter of a traveling circus with mid¬
way, side shows and all.
Doughnuts, throwing darts at
balloons, a nail driving contest,
chicken trick, bowling alley, Punch
and Judy show, fun house, ring
throwing contest, pie shop, and a
one act play will all contribute to
the entertainment during the eve¬
ning.
Success Insured
The following school organiza¬
tions are participating to make the
Carnival a success: A. M. S., A.
W. S., Abracadbra, Adelphote,
Aeolian, Albibetes, Areopagites,
Big P, W. A. A., Bauble and Bells,
Baccalaureate, D.S.R., Frosh Class,
Gunaike, Junior Class, M. O. S.,
One club, Pamphile, Phenix, Phil-
othian, Phylo, Players Guild, San¬
skrit, Sequoia, Senior Class, Soph¬
omore Class, Silver Screen, The
Club, Triple S, Women’s Rifle, Y.
M. C. A., Y. W. C. A., Zama, Lan¬
cers, and Spartans.
Students to
Aid Quake
Sport Dance
To help the junior colleges dis¬
turbed by the recent earthquake,
presidents of the junior colleges of
Southern California met at Comp¬
ton recently to settle plans for the
benefit dance to be staged at the
Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles,
June 9. Compton has been named
chairman of the dance committee.
Only Four Bits
Since the price is only 50 cents
a bid, over 5000 students from all
of the local junior colleges are ex¬
pected, to attend. Bids are to be
divided among schools to insure an
all junior college meet. Student
leaders plan to make this the first
of a series of customary events of
the school year, and to use this
means of fostering good will
among schools of this territory.
Sport togs will be in vogue, with
Everett Hoagland’s Rendezvous
Ballroom orchestra, a well known
feature at Balboa, engaged to play.
In addition to the orchestra, spe¬
cialty programs from each junior
college will present various types
of entertainment, and, novel stunts
are assured. Tryouts will be held
and only the best of the group will
be given.
Maybe Clark Gable
Movie stars and stage celebrities
will be on hand to add interest to
the program being prepared, and
favorites are sure to be on hand to
satisfy every movie fan.
Bids are expected any time by
Virginia Keim, A. W. S. president,
who announced that bulletins and
posters would be displayed as soon
as they arrived.
Sing Lyrics From Old Love Story
Courtesy Maryland Studio
All is mythical in this German folk tale — members of this “quar¬
tet” are really soloists. From left to right, they are: Robert Hen¬
dricks, Christina Welles,, Mary Novis White, and Arthur McCulloch.
Filipino Club
Offers Event
With an impersonation of Har¬
old Lloyd as a special number, La
Filipino club of which A. M. Tur-
rell, counselor, is adviser, was in
charge of the assembly program
this morning.
The program included: school-
day sweethearts (in djaleet), by
Gilbertine Laymay and Vincent
Yerro; sax solo, Amador Bagasao;
songs and dances, impersonating
Harold Lloyd, Vincente Yerro; Les
Filles des Cadiz; pacing (Filipino
folk song), Gilbertine Laymay;
piano solo, Prof. Quintin Anenao;
and planting rice, folk song and
dance, by Gilbertine Laymay and
Vincente Yerro.
La Filipino officers are: presi¬
dent, Mariano Ibay; vice-president,
Isaac Ignacio; secretary, Theodoro
Limjuco; and treasurer, Santiago
Baggas.
Creative Class
Enters Contest
Interest in the Pi Delta Kappa
short story contest is being shown
in several creative writing classes,
many of whose members are plan¬
ning to submit manuscripts.
Miss Harriet McClay, club ad¬
viser, urges all students to partici¬
pate as the competition offers val¬
uable experience as well as worth¬
while prizes of books, being do¬
nated by Miss Eleanor Homer,
librarian. Both lower and upper di¬
vision students are eligible to com¬
pete. There is a limit of 5000
words set for the stories, which
e due to Miss McClay by next
Friday.
P. J . C. Symphony Orchestra
To Play Mozart’s Concerto
Mozart’s Concerto in “C” major for flute, harp and orchestra, hav¬
ing one of the most unusual histories of any composition, is to be
presented on the final concert of the P. J. C. symphony orchestra by
Helen Lesh, harpist, and, Frances '
Musical Fantasy Plays
Tonight With Cast in
Thespian-Choral Roles
‘Rose Maiden’ Company Will Sing and Act in Show
Presented This Year in Lieu of Operetta;
Mary Novis White Is Roseblossom
By Ruth Windham
With a double cast of singers and actors, the “Rose
Maiden,” fantasy which this year is to replace the music de¬
partment’s opera, will be given tonight in the auditorium at
8:15 o’clock.
While Mary Novis White sings the part of Roseblossom,
: _ _ _ _ _ ZT~Z - •'Doris White will portray the part
New Triumph 1 “ * -eco"dJ,‘,E'
*ь«™
*™,.
W on by R. O.
Scoring their second national tri¬
umph within the year, the Pasa¬
dena jaysee R.
О.
T. C. sharp¬
shooters defeated junior colleges,
high schools, and. military aca¬
demies, to win the national junior
intercollegiate championship.
Captain Geoffrey Galwey was
notified Tuesday of the victory of
Sergeant William B. Morgan’s
riflemen who led the Ninth Corps
area and the nation. Following
closely on the heels of the Hearst
trophy victory, the double win
makes this a bannet year for P. J.
C. marksmen.
The matches are shot out in
three stages, with 15 men compet¬
ing and the highest ten in each
stage counting. Cadet Major Wilkes
captained the team composed of
James Arnold, Joe Arnold, Brock-
sieper, Dike, Hewins, Howard,
Hunkee, Kilius, Paule, Pierson,
Rusth, Townsend, Tugby and Wood.
Plans are going forward for
presentation of the Hearst trophy,
won for the second consecutive
time. In all probability the award
will be presented to Sergeant Mor¬
gan and his riflemen next Friday
with high army officials taking
part in the ceremony.
Drama Workshop Puts
On Two Productions
Haws, flutist, accompanied by a
portion of the orchestra.
Mozart personally had a violent
prejudice against both the flute and
harp, but was commissioned to
write the concerto by a certain
Count Guion, a very excellent flut¬
ist whose daughter was quite pro¬
ficient on the harp. Disliking both
instruments as he did, the composer
wrote what is considered one of
the greatest works of this type.
Other numbers on the program
will be Beethoven’s “First Sym¬
phony,” “Lohengrin,” by Wagner,
Beethoven’s “Egmont Overture,”
and the Intermezzo from “The Jew¬
els of the Madonna,” by Ermanno
Wolf-Ferrari. The concert, which
preced.s the appearance of the or¬
chestra over the Columbia chain on
the Hollywood Bowl hour, June 3,
is to be given free of charge.
BULLETIN
Coach Leland C. MacAuley’s
upper division water spaniels
stroked their way to a 48-36 vic¬
tory over Fullerton last night in
the losers pool.
“Thursday Evening,” a play
which has proven successful in the
drama workshop class, recently
was given at St. Mark’s Episcopal
church. Plans are now being made
for another presentation in the
near future. Those taking part
were Dorothy Jackson, Virginia
Daly, and Phyllis Upton. John
Krumm directed.
Honor Students Play Hooky
In San Berdoo Mountains
Those hanking highest in intel¬
lectual ratings were privileged
characters last Tuesday. Members
of the C. S. F., numbering 65,
played hookey from 8 a. m. to 5:30
p. m.
Riding in two busses to Glen
Ranch, in the San Bernardino
mountains, accompanied by Miss
Kathleen D. Loly, head of the for¬
eign language department and ad¬
viser to C. S. F., and David M.
Spaulding of the biological science
department, the scholars turned
athletic as their time was divided
between hiking, swimming, shuffle-
board, horseshoe throwing, base
ball, and tennis.
with Gene Borger presenting Allan
the forester in choral form as Mau¬
rice Corbett enacts it. Robert
Hendricks and Keith Alexander will
share honors as Spring, while Ar¬
thur McCullough and Hugh Minton
present Winter.
Other dramatists, who will assist
in portraying the plot in a series
of old-world tableaux, are Paul
Arvin, outlaw; Hester Coolidge,
gardener’s daughter; and Ruth
Fassett and Edwin Reed, immortal
lovers. Stanley Taft, Rupert; Vir¬
ginia Vail, Maybelle; Christina
Welles, Marguerite Schmidt, and
Walter Pollack make up the music
cast.
Keith Alexander, depicting
Spring, will be garbed in green,
yellow, and white cellophane, while
Winter, portrayed by Hugh Min¬
ton, will be dressed in white and
blue. The rest of the dramatics
group will wear brilliant medieval
robes.
Story of the production, adopted j
from a German folk tale by Fred¬
erick E. C'owen, concerns the Queen
of the Flower Fairies, who, weary
of a life of unbroken calm, prays
of newly- returned Spring that he
will bestow on her also the gift of
love he bestows on man. He warns
her of the risk she runs, but finally
(cont. on Page 3.)
Ronald Royce
Wins Contest
In the third and final elimina¬
tion held May 1, Ronald Royce was
chosen to represent Pasadena jun¬
ior college in the Redlands decla¬
mation contest with preliminaries
scheduled for tonight and finals to¬
morrow.
Fifteen students competed in the
first tryout from which three were
chosen. They were Ronald Royce,
was chosen to represent Pasadena
junior college in the Redlands dec¬
lamation contest with preliminaries
scheduled for tonight and finals to¬
morrow.
Fifteen students competed in the
first tryout from which three were
chosen. They were Ronald Royce,
Bill Caldwell, and Susan Whit¬
comb, all of whom contested in the
finals.
The winner, speaking on “The
Sacrifice that Failed,” was chosen
by an unanimous vote of the
judges, who were Miss Jessie Pax¬
ton, Maurice Hoerger, and mem¬
bers of the debating class who
formed a committee to make the
third decision.
Ronald Royce was one of the
finalists in the Davis-Hall contest
last December.
DON’T MISS:
War as a profession — inside the
munition plant. Page 3, col. 3.
Sergeant Morgan’s crackshooters
score again. Page 1, col. 4.
Honor students play hookey again.
That’s news. Page 1, col. 3.
No. 26
Jaysee to
Entertain
Chairmen
Western Division Student
Body Presidents Will
Convene Here
Pasadena junior college will play
host to the student body presidents
of Long Beach, Santa Monica, Ven ¬
tura, Compton, Los Angeles, and
Glendale junior colleges at a con¬
vention today for the western di¬
vision of Southern California.
At a previous convention, P. J. C.
was elected president of the west¬
ern division and at a still later
date was made president of the
Southern California association.
Soup to Nuts
The program for the day will be
as follows: 1:30 to 2:30, registra¬
tion; 2:30 to 3, review of campus;
1 2:30 to 5:30, swimming at the
Flintridge Country club; 5:30, re¬
freshments; 6 to 7, business meet¬
ings of presidents; 7 to 12, dinner
dance at the Flintridge.
The business session will consist
of discussions of the earthquake
dance, possible ways to reduce the
budgets, a presentation of the jun¬
ior college constitutions that will
be the western division’s applica¬
tion, inter-school relations, and stu¬
dent body registration fees.
Invite Big Shots
Dr. and Mrs. John W. Harbeson,
Mr. and Mrs. James P. O’Mara,
student body officers, and members
of the student court and cabinet
have been extended an invitation
to attend.
Ben Berning, junior college presi¬
dent, is in charge of all arrange¬
ments.
Delegates to
Scholar Meet
Arrive Today
C.S.F. Life Members Will
Be Hosts, Hostesses
At Banquet
Delegates from neighboring chap¬
ters of the C. S. F. arrive this eve¬
ning at 5 o’clock for a banquet that
will be given in the social hall with
the life members of the P. J. C.
chapter acting in the capacity of
hosts and hostesses.
Each organization has been in¬
vited to send four members and an
adviser. After registering, they will
make a tour of the campus having
all points of interest brought to
their attention. A short program
will follow the banquet while
awaiting the showing of the “Rose
Maiden” in the auditorium.
- Lots of Towns
Chapters that will be represent¬
ed, are Alhambra, Antelope Valley,
Burbank, Canoga Park, Eagle
Rock, Glendale, Hoover high, Muir
Tech, North Hollywood, Pasadena
J. C., San Fernando, and Van Nuys.
Committees and their chairmen
are: general charge, Elizabeth Mor-
gridge and Eleanor Northrup; reg¬
istration and reception, Robert
Engle; campus tour, Margaret Ben¬
nett; tables and favors, Mary Alice
Gianetti; room, Fred Hoblit; pub¬
licity, Walter Moore; checking,
John Trever; and program, Mary
Leslie Hemler.
Teachers in Charge
Miss Florence Brubaker, Miss
Mabel Perry, Miss Sara Talbott,
and. Miss Mildred Wellborn formed
the faculty committee in charge.
Here‘s the Final
W arning
Future closed campus violators
will be punished with sentences to
eight-hour school and the court
proceedings including names of
those called in will be published.
The rule has been publicized so
that everyone is familiar with it
and from now on no excuses will be
accepted unless in writing from
Miss Catherine J. Robbins or James
P. O’Mara.
Signs will be placed at all en¬
trances as a final warning and, all
those who are seen off campus dur¬
ing club and assembly periods will
be reported. As it is impossible to
distinguish those persons who have
not been to school, no exceptions
will be made for those with free
second periods. No further warning
will be given.
(Signed) ERIC' EMERY.
Lancer President