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Page 28 text:
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24 CARDINAL ANNUAL Mary Pillar Lucille Mocgenburg MARY PILLAR NVhat shall we do when our sparkling Mary leaves us? Her unique giggle is one of the attractions of the corridor, and it will be a lonely place without her. However. we envy the grumpy old bachelors whom her merry laugh will cheer when she goes a-nursing, as she is determined to do, At present, Girls' Club and Civics Club claim her when she is not at RoloiT's rolling a strike or laughing. It won't be a hardship to be sick when Mary's around. LUCILLE MOEGENBURG Lucille Moegenburg, known as Lu, is a friendly, brown-eyed girl of a quiet, unas- suming nature. Lu entered South from the Sixteenth Avenue school. and proceeded to work toward the winning of her diploma, which would enable her to become a stenographer. Her efforts earned her the dis- tinction of a monitorship. Thoughts of her will remain with many who knew her as the girl with the friendly smile. Joe Pavlcje Henry Napierala JOE PAVLEJ E Joe Pavleje, who is known to his comrades as Shamrock. doesn't look Irish, but judging from the nickname, we should guess that he hails from the vicinity of Cork at least. Bay View was his Hrst stop, South his second. Joe put his accounting work to good use in his bookkeeping job with the Cardinal staff. He remembers best his habit of watch- ing the weekly Cardinal being made up. South wishes him great success and happiness in his future work. HENRY NAPIERALA The curious appellation of Nap is the possession Henry Napierala of the Elective Course cherishes. He entered from St. Adalbert's school, and while at South he be- longed to the Boys' Glee Club and the News- boys' Club. He wrote occasionally for the Cardinal: in fact, his experiences there de- veloped in him a live interest in newspaper work. Tennis for outdoor and' reading for indoor sport are his favorite pastimes. JOSEPH PARADOWSKI Joey Paradowski, who calm- ly tips the scales at thirteen stone, came to South from St. Adalbert's school. During his last three years, he has gone out for football and has made two emblems, one in '26, and one in '27, His size and grit made him a feared tackler, for when Joey hove himself at a man, the enemy knew that he had been hit. Not surprising then th:t Joey describes his outstanding experience in high school as studying football. playing it, eating it, sleeping it. and talking about it. It will be difficult to rind another athlete as con- scientious, skillful, and keen as Joey. It will be difhcult to find a chap more pleasing in all ways than Joseph. South will miss him at the football season. Joseph Paradowski
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Page 27 text:
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JANUARY CLASS Russel Liebnow Frank Mazurek RUSSEL LIEBNOXV Only four short years ago Russ entered South from Grant Street school and regis- tered in the Science Course. Since then he has maintained an average of eighty-five per cent in all of his studies, and has found time toadevote himself to sports. He reached the height of his ambition when he became a member of the snappy South football team of 1927. Besides all this. he takes an active part in all summer and winter sports and finds time for Science and Civics Clubs. FRANK MAZUREK Muzzy is a whale of a fellow in size and achievements. for didn't he make the Ac- counting Course? And didn't he win his emblem in football? And didn't he belong to the Boys' Glee Club? And didn't he rollick through the class play in the guise of a statistical poet? And isn't his laugh the heartiest. and his wit the nimblest in school? He says he likes movies and dancing, but We say that we like Frank. 23 Violet Luedke Georgette Moran VIOLET LUEDKE Enter Jane Ellen. alias Violet Luedke. She is a distracting young person. arch, dainty, humorous. quick, impulsive, and piquant --so say the stage directions and we agree. South is grateful to Grant Street for giving us such a delightful heroine. Not only did she charm us with her role in the class play but with her talent for verse- making as well. She was active in the Girls' Club and was made president of the Girls' Glee Club. GEORGETTE MORAN Just by her nickname Georgie, one knows what an active, boyish girl she is. She's a good scrapper too-witness her campaign that ended in admitting girls into the exclusive Civics Club. As a reward for her efforts she walked off with the secretaryship of that active organization. In addition she belonged to the Girls' Club and the Glee Club, and to that other one which best suited her tastes, the Athletic Association. ALPHONSE MEDVED It was a loss to Bay View and a gain for South Division when Al Medved joined the Cardinal ranks. A quiet, modest chap he is, with a decided penchant for verse making, and a concealed admiration for Shelley. It got out one day in a theme. Many will remember Al as a member of the Hi-Y. as the humor-editor of the weekly, as a player on the senior basketball team. but above all as an emblem man of if the 1927 football team. Out- side of school Al lives on any kind of sport, but whatever game he plays, he plays it fair and square. He delights chiefly in playing basketball at which he is a whiz. Al is truly an athletic lad well equipped for the game of life, which he will play squarely, a spectator dares prophesy. Alphonse Medved
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Page 29 text:
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JANUARY CLASS Z5 Teddy Pogorzelski XVilliam Radtke TEDDY POGORZELSKI Teddy--even to this day of seniordoml He came in 1923. but stayed only two years. when he decided to see what the world held for him. His absence was brief: he returned to fulnll his contract. In '27 he earned his football numeral, an achievement that gave him great satisfaction. Most astonishing of all, he confesses that he enjoys sitting upon a mossy bank in silent meditation and angling for the finney prey. There's no accounting for tastes! WILLIAM RADTKE Of course, he's Bill-no one christened by the dignified name of William is anything else. The rest of his cognomen is Radtke. Forest Home Avenue sent him to South to enroll in the Elective Course from which he is now graduating. Automobiles form the major interest of his life: in fact. he re- gards his service in the auto shop at Tech as his most valuable experience. XVe expect some day to hear of Bill, the master mechanic. Lydia Reinkc Lorraine Reid LYDIA REINKE i Lyd is a preposterous contraction of Lydia, yet we like it, because it refers to our own Lydia Reinke of the Stenographic Course, After her graduation from Grant Street school, Lydia entered South. and later be- came a general reporter on the Cardinal staff, where she worked diligently. As an assistant monitor of Row 6 she also served her school. Fussing around with books delights her soul, and so it is not strange that library work at- tracts and delights her. LORRAINE REID Lorraine Reid is called Lorry for short. She entered from Grant Street school to take up the Elective Course. She was a member of Girls' Club. Forum, Century. Science Club, and the Cardinal business staff. She took part in a memorable debate at the Forum in which she argued the possibility of Henry Ford's five-day week plan. What she most enjoyed was soliciting ads for the Cardinal. TERRY REIMER Terry's interests reside in the very front ranks of modern progress. They all center about aviation and model aeroplanes. Although he is all up in the air outside of school, in school he joined heartily in the work of the Civics Club, the Cardinal Chess Club, and the Boys' Glee Club. His first experience in singing before Assembly A is his most poignant recollection. And twice he saved the reason of the stage coach by hooking up the lights in class plays. His go- ing will cause regret on the part of many of his friends. A re- turn visit to his alma mater will bring pleasure to these same friends. They often wonder if he is not taking up aviation just so he can follow in Lindy's footsteps and become a national hero. Terry Reimer
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