THE VERDICT
I was delighted to see that the people who pick sports figures for
the Daily Pilot’s sports hall of fame finally got around to picking my
old friend Harold (Hal) Pangle. Of course, they are seven years too late.
In 1992 I wrote an article for the Pilot about Hal. I must admit, it
wasn’t about his football prowess -- for reasons that I hope will become
apparent. Rather, it was about another part of Hal’s life, far removed
from the gridiron.
When the Rendezvous Ballroom opened in 1928, it was a nickel-a-dance
joint. Hal and I were gate boys, or ticket takers, there one summer. A
group of us, seven to be exact, manned so-called gates through which the
dancers went onto the dance floor. Each dance cost the couple a nickel.
So it was our job as gate boys to see to it that each couple deposited a
nickel ticket into a box when they went out on the floor. So far, so
good.
However, at the end of each dance it was also our job to herd the
dancers off the floor so that they could pay another nickel for the next
dance. To do this we gate boys took long ropes which connected the gates
and went out onto the middle of the floor and herded the dancers off the
floor, much like herding a group of cattle into the corral. In so doing
we would from time to time annoy one of the male dancers as his partner
was being dragged off the floor. Altercations were frequent, and this is
where Hal Pangle enters this deathless yarn.
We gate boys were a fairly typical bunch of high school kids. Scrawny
would be a charitable description. All but one. That one was Hal Pangle.
Hal was a veritable giant of a man, even as a kid. He never took
advantage of his size. He was quiet, modest, friendly, but he was big and
he was brawny.
And so when one of us gate boys was about to suffer great bodily harm
at the hands of a male dancer who resented his female partner being
yanked off the floor, we would yell, ‘Pangle!’ at the top of our lungs.
Hal would drop his rope and come trotting over, all 250 pounds of a man
who could scowl with the best of them when the occasion demanded. All of
a sudden the irate dancer became docile, almost apologetic.
Now, that’s the Hal Pangle I remember, not the great football player who
received All-American recognition.
You see, I went to USC during the late ‘20s and early ‘30s. At that
time, USC was a football powerhouse. National championships were regular,
Rose Bowls were automatic, All-Americans were a dime a dozen. And so it
was one year we were on our way to another national championship. We had
a 25-game winning streak when tragedy struck. A lowly Oregon State team
played the great Thundering Herd to a 0-0 tie. And they did it with an
11-man squad, no substitutions. And my old friend Hal Pangle was the
powerhouse of that Oregon State team, racking up huge yards as a
fullback, them becoming a devastating tackle on defense. It was a sad day
for Troy.
So that’s why I choose to remember Hal Pangle as the genial giant who
repeatedly saved me from bodily harm one summer at the Rendezvous, rather
than that dirty so-and-so who ruined USC’s chances for another national
championship.
If this doesn’t make sense, it’s because you didn’t go to USC during its
football powerhouse days.
JUDGE GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His column
runs Tuesdays.
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