NH. f v . .V 1 W, x4., -I my ,V ,L N .1 , Y Y. . t N , ,A in Ak ,K K, ,V ,V gk 1, I ,fr k..V C, A ., I . , K, ,gn,,m? 45 3. , , Sai ' ' x ' ' ' . v Zi 95, ,Q . bf. f if Wu ?E Z S V lf? - , , ' -f . ' xyqgzg ,ew - V . .. ,g 1 ,n I . is v 3Q.A.,,Lf . -. . , SZ. H Mzr f I 3 !9wZ,4 . ,vw .9 Nw f KT K lv-Q, . gi? M, V .M ,swf 515555: QR?.iw,'jV3MfW1,,1igygg A V - , K Ag. V .msn ww M 2 wfuz ,f.w+f- - K L x 1- ..,, 7- x Mfiffjif fw vwssff' V f xg-ff x . -. vyff :za 1 ,J ,.,,. , ,X mf yy, 035 . ,WM 1 xi St. Paul, Minnesota June, 1951 Wafuuafwl... The purpose ol a school annual is lo serve as a high- speed lens-io slop and accuralely lo record lhe passing panorama of school lile. These guiclc glimpses oi lhe school year are lo needle our memories and evoke our nosialgia in Jrhe years 'ro come. In This year's annual, we are allempl- ing noi only iailhiully lo record, buf also io criiicize lhe preseni, and in some small way assisl in molding lhe iulure. We have Tried nor io dislori lhe iacls, buf To presenf our recommendalions from an unbiassed poini of view. We can only hope, as each new class compleles ils years oi slrudy ai ihe Academy, Thai if can look baclc ai ils slay here wiih as much saiislaclion and pride as can rhe class of I95I. Russ Collins Sieve DeCosler Ed Emerson ,.,. Diclc Slrand , . . . . . Co-Edifors-in-Chief Associale Edilor . ........ Sporls Edilor Rudy Driscoll ,.,. .,.. A dveriising Manager l-leclor Ruperilf l-lugh Klein I Marry Field . . . Wally Riichie, . Adverfising Siaii . ..., Pholographer . .,..., Arlisi To Edward Mason Read in lwope llwal llwe nexl lilly years will be as successlul as llme lasl lilly In Memoriam Russell F. Varney In The early winTer oT I9I6, a young DarT- mouTh man who had been Teaching aT a small school in New l-lampshire accepTed an oTTer oT a posiTion on The sTaTT oT The SainT Paul Academy. l-le was never allowed To TorgeT ThaT he wroTe us ThaT he had had some experience in a dormaTory . How- ever, our leTTer inviTing him To come asked Tor his signiTure on a Torm oT accepTance, so The spelling honors appear To be even. In wriTing abouT him, his headmasTer said ThaT he exercised greaT ingenuiTy in mak- ing apparaTus in his laboraTory, Thereby sav- ing much money. ThaT TalenT grew and Tlourished during his ThirTy-Tive years aT The Academy. ln TacT iT was a legend ThaT any missing arTicle could be Tound in The labora- Tory, incorporaTed in a conTrapTion which would bring ouT The answer To The second decimal place, and ring a bell when The re- sulT was achieved. To The very end oT his liTe, he reTained ThaT charming, eager, youThTul enThusiasm which made him a su- perb and an inspiring Teacher. T-lis parT in The creaTion oT The School ThaT is now The Academy was greaT. Russ was versaTile. Too. A champion ski- iumper aT DarTmouTh, he reTained ThaT skill, and had many young disciples. In The winTer OT l9I7, he was TempTed by The TerriTying ski-jump on whaT is now Edgcumbe Road, and Tried iT ouT-successTully. For years he coached The B Teams in TooTball and baseball. An auThoriTy on sailing, he had charge oT a TleeT oT boaTs aT Camp Lincoln, on Lake T-luberT, mainTaining, insTrucTing, and building. During his eighTeen monThs in The Army in The FirsT World War, he devel- oped such skill as an insTrucTor in pisTol and riTle shooTing ThaT he was moved Trom camp To camp as a Teacher. ln ThaT Time, he rose Trom a PrivaTe To a FirsT LieuTenanT, and when he reTurned To us in January, I9l9, he eagerly Took charge oT The drill, which he developed in a way ThaT was original and characTerisTic. Some Teachers are liked, some respecTed, and some loved. We admired and respecT- ed Russ Varney, buT mosT oT all, we loved him. l'le had a rare combinaTion oT charm, loyalTy, genTle sweeTness, and sound sTrengTh oT characTer, TogeTher wiTh a sparkle oT youThTul enThusiasm. l'le was The oldesT in service and The youngesT in hearT oT all oT us. -John DeQuedville Briggs 6,-W, ga Y ' E 3 Leflz Edward M. Read Heaclmasler Lower Le'F+: Jolwn S. Filcli Assislanl Headmasler English, Hisfory F1igl1+: Maximilian Spcrer Head of Lower Scliool Mallwemafics ln lasl year's SPAR, a lliorouglw accounl was given ol llie lacully ol llwe scliool lrom ils lounding lo llie presenl. -llierelore, il would be redundanl lo discuss llwese meme bers ol llie lacully again. l-lowever, since llwe publicalion ol lasl year's boolc, many voids lwave appeared in llie leaclwing ranlcs. ll will be our purpose lo sliow lwow rliese vaf cancies have been lilled, and whal changes lfiave been made in llwe curriculum. llwe llwree losses surlered by llie sclfiool were The unlimely deallw ol lvlr. Varney lasl sunwner, lbe reluenwenl ol PAr. Boggs as lweadmasler, and llie lorllwcoming reliremenl f x ... Board of Trus+ees Top row: R. M. Collins P. W. Frenzel B. 6. Griggs, R,0rdway, W. P. Rilclwie W, E.Ward, Bolfom row: C, l.. Ames, E,lv1.Read, W. H. Lang, R. B, Shepard J. M. l-lannaforcl . . , s . , , .s . .as . . Z 1 ' ..,. . . ,..,., 2 i ,- ,.,. . 'M , I :'I'. .f:2 - .5-if. .r.3' :ef1. . V , ., . .2 .in - , , ,, 1 .,.:,, , ,..V,, :,V:, , ..... ,V,,, ffiiyzgz 4 j, Q , l,,,., Q ,..,. , ..,.- .... N .,.... -.-.- . 4 haf. sw, .-aw v :,' if all .,.'- 'f w e sm- . ,,.,, ., .W s 3 , gi fu 4 ka? .-,rg 4 ,V 5192 I F - : il. , - may :. : ,- ' 5: :?':g-,er x c Q as 1 . rx A .3 T mf ' E52 if Ziff in A 4 ' Ur v 1519? ,P s 5 hcl I 1 4 N. ff .L me 2 15:35 .35 5 93' T49 'bg' i , ' rx Z I , i Y' gn 1 'R vw- if f i: 3-ls-W-, 23251 . Left Frederick H. Ameluxen MaThemaTics, Physics RighT: V' i i Kennefh B- Hunfer I .wi E English Z. li. , if MQ. ,. B Ei. 45 ' ' T H..-. .,., ., iff sflif iggg f l fiifgfgigffkigi T A .M wi ..f..f:... f':j:E: - Q ,fer . Mirg frg, , r ' ' . 2 y Lower Rlghlf ' Albed M' 5m 'l' Q ,Ti . .,A. 4 a Lan fi . X Eg '- ge A , 'X' :figr.f:2' .,., ' - T s oT Mr. Blanpied as head oT The French De- parTmenT. lvlr. Varney's duTies, in which he has, in The words oT The dedicaTion oT The I947 SPAR, Through his unTiring eTTorTs and invaluable aid revealed To us The science oT living , have been ably assumed by lvlr. Anfieluxen in Physics and Dr. John ScoTT oT lvlacalesTer College in ChemisTry. The change in The headn'iasTership has proven To be sound, and, in The words oT Mr. Briggs, Though The ship has changed capTains, iT is sTill in saTe hands. lvlr. Reads deTermined naTure and Triendly personaliTy promise suc- cess in The years To come. AlThough lvlr. LeTT: D. RoberT Blanpied French Right: Paul W. Wilkinson German, Music W fx, ,EM -W 4' LeTT: Dr. John Scolf ChemisTry RighT: Ella M. Lewis Lower Rig hT: Office l-ligh School. When The class was well under way, Miss Lewis Toolc over The Taslc. This course is oT obvious value, and will be oT- Tered regularly Trom now on. lylay we also pay TripuTe To Those parTicif panTs in our school liTe who oTTen go on un- noTiced, buT noT unappreciaTed, such as The ianiTorial and lciTchen sTaTTs, which are essen- Tial To The eTTicienT running oT The school, even if oT secondary irnporTance when com- pared wiTh The signiTicanT parT ThaT The Tac- ulTy plays in molding The minds and char- acTers oT iTs sTudenTs. A school's only hope Tor The TuTure is a Tair, eTTicienT, and inTelli- genT TaculTy. Leffz JaniTor Righfz Prudence R. O Library Typing, Office ElizabeTh J. Po John OTTersTa 'CL' 'Emi A Qifffffffw-fm, is Am! wtf Ji H QE wx 'SUB' -. 1... Awww Mm w, if f vu ,,,,,,,..,-.f,,.,.,.n1w sy . .sw .NAR 4 af, 19 ' A-K nm. ,Gum 75 VW, ln-:ln sssi , mmm LAURENCE MICHAEL BUTLER, JR. l3irsT FooTball Team l:irsT l-lockey Team MasTer SergeanT in MiliTary Crack Squad Manual oT Arms Team Tennis Team 0:0 IT is very easy To misiudge a person whose acTiviTies Tend Toward The lighT and Trivol- ous. As mosT people who have heard oT lvlike BuTler's unusual anTics will Tell you, he is one oT Those people. l-lis lasT year's expe- diTions Through The sewers oT The ciTy re- ceived schoolwide Tame, and his spiriTed, and oTTen causTic, verbal exchanges wiTh va- rious masTers rank among The TavoriTe senior Torms oT diversion. STrong evidence oT his gaudy and imaginaTive naTure is presenTed in his car broughT back Trom a summer ex- pediTion To Nebraska, a S45 red and yellow buckeT oT bolTs, which on occasion would Tiredly crawl down The local ThoroughTares, making noise oT sTeam-roller proporTions, un- Til iT was Torced To undergo The lasT humili- aTion oT being abandoned To The Police Tow- Truck. However, we have presenTed only one side oT The picTure. Few people realize ThaT Mike has one oT The quicker and sharper minds in The class, and wiTh a liTTle more ap- plicaTion he could receive one oT The high- esT averages. In sporTs, he was displayed ouT- sTanding TighT, and, despiTe his lack oT heTT, held down a guard posiTion on The TirsT Team. If a premium were paid Tor originaliTy, lvlike would have no TurTher Tinancial worries, and his pleasing blend oT humor and deTermina- Tion are cerTain To be as valuable in The Tu- Ture as They are Today. A p li Page T F .- fi, if , C2 'Z , 1' 137: Sf if W 1 ij ' .Z if 1 P g sixTeen RUSSELL MAUL COLLINS, JR. Manager oT l3irsT l:ooTball Team l:irsT LieuTenanT in lVliliTary CofEdiTor in ChieT OT SPAR Glee Club Tennis Team Prize Speaking l-lead OT Upper School Three Years lnTramural BaskeTball Now and Then STaTT Color Guard DramaTic Club ozo From somewhere in The disTance, The com- plex and maThemaTicaily precise counTer- poinT oT a Bach Tugue is heard. Suddenly a sTarTiing change Takes place. Beiore The con- cluding chord has driTTed away inTo silence, The windows begin To raTTle and plasTer cracks away Trom The ceiling as The Dark- Town STruTTers' Ball reverberaTes Through The building. By This Time, you have prob- ably guessed ThaT Rapid Russ Collins is aT The piano. As versaTile a sTudenT as he is a pianisT, Russ' grades reach sTraTospheric heighTs in every subiecT. IT has been sug- gesTed ThaT The reason Tor Russ' success in all oT his endeavors is ThaT he sTricTly ad- heres To a TemperaTe and whaT some mem- bers oT The senior class musT Think To be an ausTere way oT life. ATT-er looking aT his accomplishmenTs, noT The leasT oT which is becoming co-ediTor oT This yearbook, one is almosT TempTed To Tol- low his sensible way oT liTe. Perhaps Russ' True genius is ThaT in spiTe oT This sensible way OT liTe, he sTill manages To have as good a Time as anybody else. Taking These Things inTo consideraTion, iT can be said ThaT The school will noT be The same when Russ' wraiTh-like Trame driTTs oTT To college wiTh The Tall breezes. CHARLES TERRENCE CONNOR l-lead AThleTic Manager Supply SergeanT in lvliliTary Color Guard Glee Club Now and Then STaTT lnTramural BaslceTball Tennis Team l-leadmasTer's Prize 0 6.6 Terry somewhaT resembles The bass parT in music. OTTen iT's hard To recognize iT. buT iT iT were missing, iT would leave a Tremen- dous gap ThaT would be noTiced immedi- aTely. AlThough Terry isn'T very imposing, noT only The senior class, buT also The whole school would suTTer because oT his absence, Tor Terry is The mainsTay oT Those unsung heroes, The members oT The managerial sTaTT. IT is he who makes sure ThaT The Tield is limed Tor The big game, and who lceeps The aThleTic sTore sTocl4ed wiTh Those essenTials such as Tape and laces. ln addiTion To his qualiTies oT diligence and willingness To worlc, Terry has oThers iusT as valuable, which have earned him The re- specT and admiraTion oT The school. lT seems ThaT Terry is TaTed To do worlc ThaT is shunned by mosT people, Tor he is also Circu- laTion Manager oT The Now and Then-a iob ThaT requires loTs oT hard work and is very seldom appreciaTed by mosT oT us. Because oT his ouTsTanding aTTribuTes, Terry is Truly a very imporTanT member oT The class. His conTribuTion To The school is well appreciaTed, and iT would be very hard, indeed, To geT along wiThouT him. 'E Q, I .A 1 lf 'Ill ul X 1 ll 0' f- e' o ,ii 5 Gi M 'c I sf- I 902. ' 'll L 9 7 I J I I 4 +5945 T'-' . - :IT . Rl 'll nhl 'fl :T ll, l I I lugllzgly uzllflxflfxlg .ji 4117 x A T T12 f 3 1 I I hnurn I 1 is T 5 I I ....... 3 - T41 I 'v Q Q 5' 5 'fih llulnnx Z 1 T ' .- -'F -1? -f -7: ' 'I 1 u.:al'.IA T' 332,11 :gan Page eighTeen WL DAVID ZABAN COOK Second FooTball Team FirsT T-lockey Team FirsT Baseball Team Now and Then STaTT Second LieuTenanT in lvliliTary Drum and Bugle Corps Glee Club 0:0 A person looking Tor Dave in The halls is noT Taced wiTh a very diTTiculT iob. Your ears will lead you To The place where an exuber- ance oT laughTer is being displayed over a hammed-up reproducTion oT Uncle lvlilTie . When approaching him while he is in This mood, one is sure To be meT wiTh The gues- Tion, Well, whaT do you wanT To do, make a Tederal case ouT oT iT? However, These spells oT laughTer may be momenTarily in- TerrupTed by a piTiTul groan, which is The resulT oT a gruesome Physics problem. Through his drive and perseverance. Dan- gerous Dave , as he is known To his Dean Room cronies, has mainTained a good scho- lasTic record. This TraiT has also helped him reach The Top in The Drum and Bugle Corps. and has enabled him To parTicipaTe in all The Academy's major sporTs. ln addiTion. he has managed To become Unca Ken's righT-hand man, an easy Task Tor This Tamed golTer, who wields a mean driver and a deadly puTTer. Allin all, I Think we can say ThaT Dave has Two ouTsTanding TalenTs. The TirsT one is ThaT he is always picking The righT Time To be con- Tused in Physics, and The second is ThaT he heads The lisT oT every gorgeous damsel on boTh sides oT The river. STEVEN COLE DeCOSTER PresidenT oT Senior Class STudenT Council FirsT FooTball Team lnTramural BaskeTball Second Baseball Team MasTer SergeanT in MiliTary Crack Squad Manual oT Arms Team Color Guard Co-EdiTor in ChieT OT SPAR CirculaTion Manager oT Now and Then French Medal STage Force 0 060 Probably no boy has conTribuTed more To The school life aT The Academy Than STeve. This TacT becomes evidenf aTTer one glance aT The imposing lis+ oT achievemenTs above. The remarkable Thing abouT This lad, how- ever, is noT The quanTiTy, buT The qualiTy, oT his accomplishmenTs. The maxim, ThaT which is worTh doing is worTh doing well, seems To be The besT descripTion oT STeve's aTTiTude. l-lis abiliTy To sTick wiTh someThing unTil he is saTisTied ThaT iT is done as well as possible is a qualiTy which Those who are TorTunaTe enough To work wiTh him can well appreciaTe. The TirsT Thing one would noTice abouT This boy upon TirsT meeTing him is his congenial naTure. A seemingly perpeTual smile adorns his Tace, and he is always ready To meeT any siTuaTion wiTh a wiTTy remark. ATTer TirsT ap- praising a siTuaTion by ThaT remarkable adf iecTive, wickedy-wick, he proceeds To oT- Ter an amazingly simple anTidoTe. The Deacon is especially noTed Tor his remarkable skill wiTh The pool cue. l'lis adepT- ness aT This sporT would sTrike Tear inTo The hearT oT even The mosT TalenTed pool-room Johnny . A boy who possesses such wide and va- ried TalenTs will undoubTedly Tind ThaT liTe holds many opporTuniTies Tor him. 1 a XXHUIIZ c j if N g-I-is llil l El Q xr., 4 Ali 1 X ll' ' YQ f T in r 615 if I P g TwenTy T sail RUDOLPH WEYERHAEUSER DRISCOLL CapTain oT FirsT FooTball Team PirsT l-lockey Team Tennis Team Maior in MiliTary Carley Award STudenT Council Glee Club STage Force Aurelian Award AdverTising Manager oT SPAR 0:0 ATTenTionl echoed down The ranks as Major Driscoll appeared, all decked ouT in shiny buTTons and numerous areas oT brass. Quickly he sTared each and every unruly buck privaTe inTo The ground, and Then, reaching The end oT The cringing rank, Turned smarTly, and walked sTraighT ouT oT The door, seTTling down soTTly on The senior bench, Thus ending a Typical hard day oT drill. BuT all oT Rudy's energy was noT spenT aT drill. Rube worked hard as The Adver- Tising Manager oT This year's SPAR, and missed many a warm classroom because he was ouT in The cold collecTing ads. As a maTTer oT TacT, he missed so many classes ThaT iT was rumored ThaT he would have To be senT his diploma in a selT-addressed enve- lope. Besides being on The SPAR sTaTT and The Major in MiliTary, Rudy was also capTain oT This year's TooTball Team and a mem- ber oT The STudenT Council. His acTiviTies have been so many and varied ThaT he can be called The mosT versaTile member oT The class. OuTside oT school, Rudy's Triendliness makes him well-liked by everyone, and he is cerTainly desTined To excel in The many Tields in which he has already shown TalenT. EDWARD PAYSON EMERSON Manager oT Second l-loclcey Team lvlasTer SergeanT in lvliliTary Color Guard Glee Club DramaTic Club Williams Cup AssociaTe EdiTor oT SPAR Vice-PresidenT oT Class 0:0 The name Ed Emerson means many Things To The boys oT The SainT Paul Academy. To some, iT means a mad scienTisTg To oThers, iT can only mean The Triendly underTalcer. BuT To all, iT means one oT The more versaTile boys in The senior class. Ed has always been an honor sTudenT, and aT sixTeen, he quali- Ties as The youngesT member oT The class. l-lis inTeresTs are noT all scholasTic, however. Ed has graced The sTage oT The Academy Tor many years now, usually playing a raTher pompous old dowager To perTecTion. Ed is also The winner oT The Williams Cup Tor scholasTic improvemenT, an amazing TeaT Tor a boy who has always mainTained an honor average. When noT in school, his main inTeresTs seem To lie in music. This lilce is maniTesTed in various ways, noT The leasT OT Them being playing The 'cello. l.asT year, Ed was so bold as To organize a chamber music group. ap- propriaTely named The ConTra ArTem Trio , buT The rehearsals were consTanTly be- ing inTerrupTed by iraTe men Trom The l-lu- mane SocieTy, who insisTed Thar The musi- cians reTrain Trom TorTuring The neighbor- hood caTs. A lad who can say so much in so liTTle ThaT Mr. l-lunTer calls his English Themes ScoTch Telegrams , Ed seems desTined To go Tar in any Tield. ,'- 5' li? sri l 6 -' A J 1 ' - 7 T FQ If UQ l.. fl 'Q ' ii cu ll M - ,lx L... M 2 '9 Q15 uz al I. li. Page TwenTy e F4 I 6 I. T llk VV' za K ' ' Alle? QT Trrfy h FI MARTIN LEWIS FIELD Tennis Team Ski Team DrarnaTic Club STage Force PhoTographer oT SPAR STringer Cup SergeanT Second Class in IvIiliTary O 0.0 To This boy we owe The I95I SPAR. No he isn'T The ediTor, or The adverTising man- ager. I-le is The phoTographer. Few people realize ThaT This man is The mosT essenTial member oT a yearbook sTaTT. The yearbook almosT invariably goes as iTs phoTography goes, and TorTunaTe, indeed, is The annual which is blessed wiTh a good phoTographer. IvIarTy's painsTaking and oTTen Tedious work, and his amazing diligence have proved in- valuable To This year's sTaTT. I-le has used his hard-earned knowledge oT phoTography To The advanTage oT The Now and Then also, To say noThing oT The pracTical value oT his hobby To himselT. OuTsTanding as a Tennis player, he rose To The posiTion oT TirsT man on The Tennis Team in his iunior year. I-lere Too, IvIarTy excelled, leading The Team To vicTory in Two ouT oT The Tour maTches played. Above all, IvIarTy is The True Triend oT all his classmaTes. The members oT his class will always remember him Tor his generosiTy in enTerTaining everyone in an ouTsTanding way aT his Tamous Club 79 , I-le has lived wiTh his classmaTes in a spiriT oT co-operaTion which has earned him Their respecT and ad- miraTion. Indeed, iT can never TruThTully be said ThaT MarTy I:ield's years aT The Aca- demy were wasTed. LEOPOLD ARTHUR HAUSER, III FirsT FooTball Team Second Hockey Team Tennis Team SergeanT Second Class in MiliTary Crack Squad Manual oT Arms Team RiTle Team Glee Club DramaTic Club Ski Team AdverTising Manager OT Now and Then STage Force O 0.9 IT you were To hear groans oT disbelieT issuing Trom The Dean Room, you could be sure Thar Leo was Telling one oT his weird Tales. This noTorious Traveler has had many experiences working in a lumber camp in Oregon. AT one Time during his sojourn in The Far WesT, Leo was robbed oT his belong- ings, To say noThing OT The daring advenTure oT hiTch-hiking all The way To Oregon and back! During his sTay There, he also pur- chased a dilapidaTed old Ford, which he prompTly sold To The TirsT unTorTunaTe vicTim he could Tind aT a TorTy-dollar proTiT. Per- haps he is desTined To become a used car dealer. All oT This work wasn'T Tun, however, Tor Leo was geTTing himselT in shape Tor TooTball The Tollowing Tall. A member oT The Team Three years, Slee played barh halTback and Tullback Tor The Blue and Sold. ln The spring, Leo is a prominenT member oT The Tennis Team, and will probably press Jackie Kramer Tor The world's TiTle some day. Cn The dance Tloor, Leo lbeTTer known by his maTes as Slee-IV1eaTs l is one oT The more waTchable members oT The senior class, perTorming The Lindy To perTecTion. All in all, Leo is cerTainly an asseT To The senior class, and his Triendly aTTiTude and personaliTy make him one oT iTs mosT popu- lar members. :J 'T Q2 1 I Q X if tl Ain 2 Sl I f X 1 'T 1 ? . s--. 5 s's.p ij' X - 1-NN ., . Jul - f f. , ' . ' 3 'LJ' l ff,441!i,'u:,' ,,-g,- so J gf N1-.rf-f-'vine xzwlw ..-1 Nfwfsvspip, xauxrsvwc' -.fs.z'wfunsa ii if aw? -asf s, Nz 5.1.1 3? Nfxl Page TwenTy-Tour lic VICTOR PAUL HAUSER. JR. l:irsT l-loclcey Team FirsT Baseball Team Second FooTball Team GolT Team l:irsT LieuTenanT in lVliliTary Commander oT Crack Squad Manual oT Arms Team DramaTic Club G-lee Club 6 O00 Upon TirsT meeTing Vic, you would prob- ably be greeTed wiTh a Triendly l-low are you, you old KRABATCT-l? This is Typical oT Vic's good humor and Triendliness, which have made him a TavoriTe among his class- maTes ever since The days baclc in The Junior School. l-lis greaT love Tor The ouT-oT-doors is apparenT Trom his skill in hunTing, golT, and sailing. Duclcs, pheasanTs, and parTridge dread The Tall hunTing season, and run Tran- Tically Tor cover when They TirsT caTch sighT oT Vic. Their eTTorTs are oT liTTle avail, how- ever, Tor They cannoT escape The Trained sighTs oT his TrusTy riTle. Vic has masTered The arT oT The clubs, also. A veriTable pro on The golT course, he amazes even lvlr. l-lunTer wiTh his low scores. Sailing is The sporT in which he really shines, however. l-le has won many Trophies by racing aT WhiTe Bear. The name oT l-lauser and sailing go TogeTher almosT as well as ThaT oT Kramer and Tennis. Vic displayed his prowess and leadership as capTain oT The Junior VarsiTy Two years ago, and as commander oT The Craclc Squad This year. l-le is a caTcher on The baseball Team, and ably supporTs his wing on The hoclcey Team. l-lis scholasTic sTanding has been a deTiniTe crediT To The school. A very amiable characTer, indeed. FRANKLYN MEAD HILTON FirsT Foafball Team FirsT Flockey Team Tennis Team FirsT Baseball Team CapTain in lVliliTary Carley Award Crack Squad Manual oT Arms Team STage Force Glee Club 020 Cn casTing a quick glance across The Dean Room bench during a sTudy period, your eyes would be arresTed by a brawny lad wiTh curly red hair, and a big grin on his Tace. You would undoubTedly be looking aT Frank l-lilTon, who has compiled one oT The mosT impressive records in sporTs and miliTary oT The senior class. Frank has shown himselT To be a hard- TighTing compeTiTor in all sporTs. ln TooTball, he was a member oT The varsiTy Tor Tour years. l-le was also a sTarTing wing on The hockey Team Tor Two years, and To compleTe his aThleTic career, Frank played a liTTle var- siTy baseball and a loT oT Tennis in The spring. Frank has also excelled in miliTary. While a member oT The Crack Squad, he won The Carley Award, The honor besTowed yearly on The cadeT who does The besT iob in The manual oT arms compeTiTion. ln addiTion To winning This coveTed award, Frank has be- come The capTain oT Company B. To compleTe The picTure, iT is necessary To menTion Frank's sense oT humor, which never Tails To amuse his Dean Room maTes. l-lis combinaTion oT leadership and aThleTic abiliTy, TogeTher wiTh his keen sense oT hu- mor, makes Frank one oT The mosT popular boys in The senior class. N 4X ev ,E it 91' x J 1.'1 f v gf X an J I X 'D f J , Q g i 1' .af f 34 M ll' mf: 'I pg!! r .. 11' f .K Q. 'ihlifl E E: T gl 9 'Q I I PQ Y vw! 5 U O ,gs Q- '1 ,earn E' Qi g 4 ri i-'Q sz X ' X jj .4 aff' ni as 9 I 5 X I , -L Tl I' ,V N .JT l js W 2 agar, as-in T qi T T L I f Lu jf g f,,l. N ' we Page TwenTyf BRUCE VERNE KEMPER FirsT T:ooTball Team CapTain oT Second FooTball Team Ski Team Tennis Team Manager oT FirsT l-lockey Team Glee Club MasTer SergeanT in MiliTary Crack Squad AdverTising STaTT OT Now and Then Manager oT STage Force Drum and Bugle Corps RiTle Team O 0.6 ln every class There seems To be a me- chanic, and The mechanic oT This class is deT- iniTely Bruce Kemper. From The Time in FirsT Form when he consTrucTed a miniaTure bell sysTem To annoy masTers in sTudy hall, Bru- cemo has been making or suggesTing all sorTs oT inTernal gadgeTs Tor The desTrucTion oT mankind. Always ready To guoTe The prices on all The laTesT model Chryslers and PlymouThs, as well as Their exclusive TeaTures, Bruce seems desTined To become ST. Pauls own Mad Man Munz oT car and Television Tame. Besides being a member oT The TooTball Team, Bruce has been on The adverTising sTaTT oT The Now and Then, co- manager oT The sTage Torce, and in The Glee Club. In The MiliTary, he was The second in command oT The Crack Sguad. A beTTer Than average saxophone player, Bruce, along wiTh Dick STrand, aTTempTs To organize a band known as The Melody Brewers , buT so Tar bookings have been Tew and The proiecT has never received The crediT iT deserves. Per- haps The besT concerT The Brewers have given was one presenTed Trom a moving car on Lake ST. While Kemp and STrand played Onward ChrisTian Soldiers , De- CosTer leaned ouT The window shouTing, We're saved! There were, unTorTunaTely, no converTs. HUGH ELLIOTT KLEIN AdverTising Manager OT PublicaTions FirsT l-lockey Team FirsT FooTball Team GOIT Team FirsT LieuTenanT in MiliTary 0 0.9 Hugh, one oT The mosT indusTrious boys in our class, is probably besT-known Tor Two Things: The zeal which he puTs inTo his sTudies, and The equal zeal which he puTs inTo his various and nefarious schemes, which are The deligh+ oT The English class and Mr. l-lunTer. English class is T-lughie's piece de resisTance , Tor iT is here ThaT his humor and playTulness show up besT. Parrying The humorous ThrusTs oT Mr. l-lunTer is l-lugh's delighT, Tor he is well-equipped Tor Them wiTh a ready wiT and a quick Tongue. l-lis miliTary commission has been well-earned, and wiTh his disciplinary gualiTies, he has made his plaToon one oT The besT in The baT- Talion. Also, we owe our Thanks To This Czar oT QualiTy-Foods-Tor-Less-lvloney, Tor he was responsible Tor organizing The adverTising sTaTTs oT The yearbook and The paper This year. As Tar as his social liTe is concerned, l-lugh is The mosT Tormidable poker player since Royal Flush Paper, and has been known To relieve many oT his playmaTes oT much OT Their candy money and sTreeT-car Tokens. Girls? OT course! Need more be said? All in all, l-lugh is a well-rounded young man wiTh guiTe a Tine TuTure ahead oT him. 1-iillfifi 13 951 X Qi CA RMT! 3 LEONS EQ' ARTS CK Y 5 V Q .i-T: . git:-Qi? APPLES .1 sc C 'ivy ,mt QF T U wi llllfff U Q. 'o wi D ,si Rf cf3Jm i L. I 3 0 E U of' M -Q x , A A ' - fg , ' - ' Q9 vr - , m Q--7-is nl. is 1 5 'P' gi-ir? -Q ,xr frgfi 'hf'WfRr-55-N,pT :Zh Qi., L'y'2:r-,agp-A ui Page TwenTy-eighT ANGUS McLEOD MAIRS FirsT l3ooTball Team lnTramural BaskeTball CapTain oT FirsT Baseball Team FirsT LieuTenanT in MiliTary Crack Sguad STudenT Council Glee Club DramaTic Club Prize Speaking STage Force 0 9,0 Angus, oTherwise known as The Goose , seems To be The naTural choice Tor The aTh- leTe oT The senior class. A regular halTback on The TooTball Team, The Goose is also a sTar baskeTball player, and capTain oT This year's baseball Team. Besides These sporTs, Tennis, sailing, and golT Take up much oT Angus' Time when noT in school. Besides sporTs, he enTers inTo oTher phases oT The Academy liTe such as Glee Club, Now and Then, and The STudenT Council. Angus seems very deTermined To become anoTher Frankie Laine, and his raTher powerTul bass voice may be heard aT all Times echoing Trom The Dean room bench. ln The lVliliTary, Angus has been in The Crack Squad and is now a TirsT lieuTenanT. l-le is a boy oT deTiniTe ideas, and usually everyone geTs an opporTuniTy To hear him, Thanks To The amazing sTrengTh oT his voice. There have been many aTTempTs on The parT oT The masTers To Tone This voice down, buT so Tar no progress has been made. Perhaps he could make a career oT hog- calling! BuT aTTer all The kidding is over, The Goose sTill sTancs ouT as one oT The lead- ers in his class. His ever-ready good humor and his naTural abiliTy Tor command make him a boy To remember. BRUCE ROBERT MONICK FirsT FooTball Team CapTain oT FirsT l-lockey Team Tennis Team FirsT LieuTenanT in MiliTary Crack Squad Manual oT Arms Team Business Manager oT Now and Then PresidenT oT STudenT Council Glee Club 024 The senior class oT T951 can well be proud To have Bruce Monick as one oT iTs members. Bruce is one oT The rnosT indusTrious boys ever To enTer The Academy, and has many unusual accomplishmenTs, including his radi- cal cross-handed sTyle oT hiTTing a golT ball. Endowed wiTh naTural abiliTy To parTici- paTe in all sporTs, Bruce was a Tine quarTer- back in TooTball. l-le reached his aTheTic peak during The winTer, when his skill was em- ployed in playing hockey. Bruce has received The STu Mann Award, a Lucky Lure and a Plague SuiTable Tor Framing , Twice, and This year was capTain oT The Team. During school, Bruce is mosT oTTen seen racing around The halls, eiTher on his way To The Library, where he sTudies or presides over STudenT Council meeTings, or else dash- ing up The sTairs To The Now and Then room, where he musT sTraighTen ouT The Tiles, which he conTrols as Business Manager. Because oT his husTle, his colleagues have appropriaTely chrisTened him GeTukasTank . As you can see, The Tank has his TuTure cuT ouT Tor him, and he is well prepared, Tor he already has an oTTice picked ouT in The CourT House. l-le has The whole EasT Side voTe and probably more, Tor who could miss wiTh such a personaliTy and campaign sTraTegy? X' :mm-: 'T' 0 1onoF11lE T I xx K. I C702 RIGHT. his V ' T' '- -TF l AB , i ly T T i ,M l i all kfil' g ThirTy TERENCE GARNER O'BRIEN l:irsT l.ieuTenanT in lVliliTary Drum and Bugle Corps AdverTising STaTT oT Now and Then DramaTic Club STage Force Glee Club RiTle Team Second l:ooTball Team Second l-loclcey Team Second Baseball Team 0 0,0 WhaT are you doing nexT weelc end? This is The guesTion ThaT Terry invariably Throws aT you The TirsT Thing Monday morn- ing. LaTer in The day he is apT To approach you and say, l've goT The scoop! FirsT Thing aTTer school Friday aTTernoon, we can go . . eTc. Terry is a boy who can always Tind someThing To do, and There is sure To be a whoopie when he is around. Among The TirsT To venTure across The river To our Twin ciTy neighbor, and engage The boys over There in a sTiTT baTTle Tor The girls, was This pride oT The SainT Paul Acad- emy. l-lis Tame among The Tair sex reaches all The way To Arizona, a place which he Tre- guenTs when he becomes Tired oT school. Terry has an energeTic sense oT humor, which always enables him To be The liTe oT The crowd. l-le also sTarTed an Academy rooTing secTion ThaT proved To be very suc- cessTul. l-le is always ready To proTecT The downTrodden sTudenTs and, in doing so, pre- senTs ample evidence oT his capabiliTies as a lawyer. ln miliTary, he has progressed Trom privaTe To lieuTenanT. Through his persisT- ence and drive, Terry has made himselT so essenTial To The school ThaT iT is doubTTul how Mr. Read will geT along aTTer he leaves. THOMOND ROBERT O'BRIEN Firsl' FooTball Team Ski Team Second l-lockey Team Tennis Team SergeanT Third Class in MiliTary Crack Squad Manual OT Arms Team DramaTic Club STage Force AdverTising STaTT OT Now and Then Glee Club RiTle Team Drum and Bugle Corps 0 0.6 The mosT red-headed OT The wild SummiT Avenue Tribe OT O'Briens is one OT The noTe- worThy members OT The Senior Class. Long- hair fspoken liTerally, noT TiguraTivelyl is co- proprieTor OT ThaT inTamous esTablishmenT, O'Brien's Casino, so oTTen The scene OT class week-end revelries. BeTween his spiriTed Tlur- ries OT ping-pong, in which his beTTer cannoT be Tound, and his daring exploiTs in his green demon OT The highways lwhich is eiTher an Oldsmobile, a l-lupmobile, or some kind OT mobilel, he manages To Take parT in mOsT OT The exTra-curricular acTiviTies around The school. Tome is also one OT The inTernaTional seT. WinTering in sunny Arizona, and summering on The wild shores OT The ST. Croix, he has a collecTion OT sTickers on his suiTcase To rival ThaT OT Duncan l-lines. l-le has a sporT Tor every season also, wiTh TooTball in The Tall, skiing in The winTer, and Tennis in The spring. Tomy has a ready sense OT humor, and can usually enliven a dull momenT wiTh iokes his TaTher has Told him. l-lis Triendly person- aliTy and high spiriTs are a valuable asseT To The senior class, and add varieTy To iTs ac- TiviTies. 'T l , r l r '4 L X ?Sl Pag e ThirTy ZZZ QFFICE ' fe f O o H0uR5' ,Z lll - ,li , -W H gs Kxl X Page ThirTy-Tw BS A JAMES HECTOR RUPERT Second FooTball Team Second l-lockey Team Tennis Team Crack Squad SergeanT Third Class in lvliliTary Glee Club AdverTising STaTT oT SPAR 0:0 While walking down The corridor To The Dean room, The reader suddenly Teels a sharp Tap on his righT shoulder. Upon look- ing To The righT, however, he discovers, To his amazemenT, ThaT There is no one in sighT. IT is only Then ThaT our unsuspecTing vicTim realizes ThaT he has come Tace To Tace wiTh The incomparable Rupe . Sure enough, up- on looking To The leTT, he Tinds himselT gaz- ing upon The counTenance oT his Tiendish TricksTer, a counTenance which is invariably covered Trom ear To ear wiTh a wide and Triendly grin. l-lecTor, as you have probably already guessed, is The pracTical ioker oT The senior class. T-Te is always ready wiTh a Triendly prank or a perTinenT wisecrack when- ever Things geT dull, and is undoubTedly des- Tined To succeed Ralph Edwards as The lead- erin +haT disTinguished Tield. When T-lecTor is noT devising some Tiend- ish ioke, he Takes a very acTive parT in The Boy ScouTs. l-le has received counTless hon- ors in This Tield, and, on week ends, is almosT always aTTending eiTher an Order oT The Arrow meeTing or a Pine Bend gaThering. There is one Thing which his classmaTes can depend on. When l-leck says he'll do a Thing, he does iT! I-lis never-Tailing dependa- biliTy has proved invaluable To Those who have worked wiTh him, and a boy who pos- sesses such a Tine gualiTy is cerTain To gain The respecT and admiraTion oT his Tellows. WILLIAM CUTLER SCH RADER FirsT I:ooTball Team l:irsT I-lockey Team l:irsT Baseball Team Crack Squad Manual oT Arms Team CapTain in lvIiliTary SecreTary oT STudenT Council Sporfs EdiTor oT Now and Then I-lead oT Class Two Years 0 0,0 ETTiciency plus! This well-used, and oTTen underesTimaTed, phrase seems To apply To Bill in parTicular. I-le very seldom appears To be expending any oT The energy sTored up in his lanky Trame, which Torces him To bend low Tor all doors under seven TeeT. NeverTheless, IT can be said ThaT Bill is one oT The mosT indusTrious and versaTile boys in The class. The Sleeper . as Bill is known Trom The ST. Croix Valley To The TronT oTTice oT The I-lod Carriers Union No. l32, has come by This nickname Tor various reasons. IT you were To look in aT The door oT any-SixTh Form class, you would undoubTedly see Bill in The back row, crouched down in The seaT, head in hands, Tor The major parT oT The class period. The sly manner in which Bill worked himselT To The Top in Local No. l32 lnow he is even allowed To aTTend meeTingsl, and The meThod employed by him To move ouT in TronT as one oT The class week-long week-enders are sTriking examples oT his unassuming TacTics. BuT don'T leT This name Tool youl ln all oT his acTiviTies, oT which There are many, he has shown himselT To be a hard worker. Bill has proven ThaT if iT's an apparenT easy- going manner which makes Tor success, he has Tound The righT meThod. Q f ,Q T i l llll Page Th y F I '14 .. TS If 7' 19 ff ff Af- u 'l f 'N gk ff 7 0 ThirTyfTour RICHARD EDWARD STRAND Second FooTball Team Manager oT FirsT l-lockey Team FirsT Baseball Team Glee Club STage Force RiTle Team SporTs EdiTor oT SPAR Now and Then SporTs STaTT Second LieuTenanT in lvliliTary Drum and Bugle Corps 0:0 Dick STrand is a big boy. JusT look aT him and you can see. l-lis Two hundred and TiT- Teen pound Trame Towers aT leasT a TooT above The heads oT his classmaTes, and iT is hard To believe ThaT he was once a nineTy- seven pound sTripling. BuT Dick is a big man in oTher ways. His school spiriT and greaT inTeresT in school aThleTics have earned him The imporTanT iob oT SporTs EdiTor oT This yearbook. He receives his repuTaTion as a sporTs greaT Trom The UniversiTy oT Min- nesoTa leTTer iackeT which he wears. ln TacT, he has oTTen been misTaken Tor ClayT Tonne- maker by admiring Tans. Dick's masTery oT The horn has landed him a commission in The Drum and Bugle Corps. and a posiTion in The school's immorTal, yeT dying, combo, The Melody Brewers . STrando is noTed Tor his genial naTure and disposiTion. You rarely see him wiThouT a smile on his Tace. CorrecTion: l'le's usually laughing hearTily. l-le will laugh aT anyThing, even his own iokes, usually sTolen Trom such magniTicenT wiTs oT our day as Morry Am- sTerdam. Dick is also noTeol Tor his gen- erosiTy. l-le will do almosT anyThing Tor his Triends. BuT don'T Try To Take advanTage oT him. Remember his Two hundred and TiTTeen pounds! CHARLES TUTTLE WOOD l-lead OT Lower School FirsT FooTball Team CapTain in Inframural BaskeTball FirsT Baseball Team FirsT LieuTenanT in MiliTary Commander OT Drum and Bugle Corps EdiTor in Chief oT Now and Then French Medal FosTer Prize Margolis Prize RiTle Team Time TesT Winner DramaTic Club STudenT Council Glee Club 0:0 Perhaps The reader has been driving along a broad, open road wiTh The sun shining down Trom a cloudless sky and The birds TwiTTering merrily in The Trees, when sud- denly a series oT loud explosions renT The peaceTul air. Or perhaps The counTryside was plunged inTo gloom, and The aTmosphere was 'Filled wiTh Thick, greasy smoke, reeking oT parTially combusTed oil and gasoline. IT such a Thing has happened, The reader may resT assured ThaT iT was noT The aTomic bomb, iusT ThaT Terror oT children and old ladies-The Charles Woodmobile. This Tan- TasTic machine occupies only a small parT oT Charlie's Time, however, Tor he is a very versaTile person, as can be seen Trom The mulTiTudinous lisT oT acTiviTies above. There are noT many people who can come home Trom TooTball pracTice and relax by playing a MozarT piano sonaTa. AnoTher oT Woody's noTeworThy aTTribuTes is his vasT sTorehouse oT knowledge. lT There is a ques- Tion abouT anyThing, Trorn ancienT hisTory To nuclear physics, iT is always broughT To him. WhaT is remarkable is ThaT while ediTing The Now and Then, he also spends much Time in Minneapolis, and sTill manages To geT excel- lenT grades. This mixTure oT versaTiliTy, exu- berance, and knowledge gained Trom vol- uminous reading is The one and only Charlie Wood. X CD 12 i W XY' ch! .-if - -Q 'e. K .riqpx 153 1 2.4 rt l -f 3 se T , 1 5 Xu . 7 s ' . 56 - --K . : I -,ms l N 'I 317' Il TRI' Page Thirfy-T Stmfemii E1 M J MIT S T i on, ecre crvg Thomas PaTTerson, PresidenT M l Tchlxiss, Vice-Presidenfg John RaTigan, Treasure PREP Usually, mosT oT us Tind iT very diTTiculT To adapT ourselves To a new environmenT. So iT is wiTh The Prep Former! During The TirsT Tew days oT The Fall Term, one can see These shy and somewhaT bewildered novices slipping inconspicuously Through The halls, gazing wiTh awe aT The glamorous new liTe oT The Big School . UnTorTunaTely, however, This siTuaTion is buT shorT-lived. BeTore long, These angelic Tigures will be TransTormed in- To howling hellions, raging Through The pre- viously sacred halls oT The Academy, and raising Cain in general, having been insTrucT- ed in This arT by Their able FirsT Form men- Tors. They have become very polished in This deparTmenT, boasTing such experTs as Door- mouse Slade, Marshmallow l-loTchlciss, and Skinny Reay. Such social lions as Johnny Roe and Larry Farnham Tind ample opporTuniTies To display Their charm aT The T p w: Blalce, Roe, FosTer, Rahgan, T-ToTchlciss. Middle row: J, Mairs, Farnham, von Bergen, Kueppers, Drew, Reay. BoT+om MilTon, M. Parish, Slade, PaTTerson, T. lvlear P g ThirTy-eighT FORM numerous parTies To which The class is TreaT- ed. MosT oT The members oT The class give venT To Their silvery soprano voices in The Lower School Glee Club, and many oT Them aTTend The Young Peoples ConcorTs, given by The Minneapolis Symphony OrchesTra. Under The direcTion oT ThaT haTed TyranT, l-lugh Klein, Their plaToon gave a very cred- iTable exhibiTion drill aT The IvloTher's and FaTher's Dinner This Tall. There are also many promising aThleTic greaTs in This class, among Them Parish, Kenyon, and PaTTerson. The dis- Tinguishing TeaTure oT This class, however, is iTs scholasTic record. Led by such brains as lVlilTon, RaTigan, and Drew, and inspired by scvoral inTercsTing courscs such as AriThe meTic, lwhere Mr. Sporer conducTs his small one-man side showl, English, Geography, Science, and Reading, Thoy have builT up a phenomenal class average. By The Time our Prep Former has Tinished his TirsT year aT The Academy, he has been compleTely absorbed in iTs unique liTe. I 'igf l Can Hear H' Now - The Soup, Thai ls! Diligence Personf d A-w-w-w Two RcacTions To a Camera Huh? T Finlay Lewis, Vice-Presidenh William Pederson, President Roberf Fobes, Secrefa ry-Treasurer FIRST When a sTudenT reaches The FirsT Form, almosT all shyness has been overcome, and iT is during This year ThaT The greaTesT amounT oT Tooling around Takes place. A D in conducT is a common occurrence, as The l:irsT Form manages To pracTise and im- prove upon all The inTamous plans which Their TerTile minds have devised in The Prep Form. AT This poinT, They are sTill Trying To avoid any responsibiliTy, and are cerTainly noT spending any sleepless nighTs worrying abouT The rude awakening which will come To Them in The Second Form. ScholasTically, They have The easiesT year in The school, which provides much Time Tor Their exTra- curricular acTiviTies. In aThleTics, They are led by Fin Lewis and Bill Pederson, oT whom The laTTer has been reTerred To by Coach Hud- son as Chuck OrTman Junior. They are divided beTween The C and B Teams, Top row: l-lubbs, Figge, Pederson, Musser, T. l-lolmes. B, Klein, T. RiTchie, WolT, Fisher, Harris, Middle row: Abbe, Davidson, Rapp, Ameluxen, Gardner, WaTz, Weschcke, Spilhaus, McCully, Goldenberg, BoH-om row: Rose, l-luse, J, Mears, l-lansTein, Sommers, Nash, F, Plowrnan, Quick, Lewis, C, Ward, PlaTT. AbsenT from picfurez Fobes. Page To rTy FORM wiTh l2oTund Klein on The A Team. ln miliTary, The FirsT Formers are almosT ex- clusively in The Third PlaToon oT Company B, and again are paced by Pederson, who won The Junior Manual oT Arms compeTiTion while in The Prep Form, an unprecedenTed TeTe. Socially, The l:irsT Form begins Danc- ing School, which is a TurTher venT Tor ex- cessive exuberance, and is always The scene oT almosT any kind oT acTiviTy excepT danc- ing, usually perpeTraTed by one oT The class characTers, Charcoal Ward, King Fish- er, or l-lorrible l-lansTein. PracTically The whole class is in The Glee Club, blending Their soprano voices wiTh Those oT The Prep Form. They also have one oT The more dis- Tinguished musicians in The school, Jasha Abbe, whose violin Torms an imporTanT parT oT The ConTra ArTem Trio . The class can also boasT a scienTiTic wizard, AThelsTan Spil- haus, who showed The school how To malce inexpensive meTeorological insTrumenTs. The FirsT Form, as a well-balanced class, can eagerly loolc Torward To The Upper School. Roofi g S T Jonalhan Morgan, Secrefary-Treasurerg Richard Kyle, Presi- denfg Peler Vaughan, Vice-Presidenf. SECOND ll is nol unlil he reaches Jrhe Second Eorm rhar 'rhe happy-go-lucky Lower School play- boy leels The lull imioacl ol an Academy educalion. l-le suddenly finds himself con- lronled wilh such lerrilying monslrosilies as Lalin, Algebra, World l-lislory, and high- school English. Since he receives This shoclc one year earlier lhan Jrhe average school- boy, he is guire nalurally barlled al lirsl by Jrhese new sludies. Al any raie, lhis impres- sive array ol courses has an amazingly sober- ing elllecl on his yel unramed spiriis. l-lis average, which he has hereiolore mainlained al a maximum level wilh a minimum ol el- lorl, immedialely lalces a plunge, and he is laced wilh lhe cruel realizalion lhar he musl al lasr worlc. Even such wizards as Briese. Morgan, and Tad Bagley find il increas- ingly hard lo slay on lhe Eirsr l-lonor Lisl. In addirion To Jrhe increased burden ol home- Top row: lrvine, Norris Eiinn Crosby, l-loll, Quigley, Earl, A. Holmes, Blacque, B, Plowman, Cross. Middle row: Counrryman, Levy, Nelson, C. Comfort lviader, Frohlicher, l-lamm, Ford, Ahl R, French, J. lviogilner. BoHom row: Jacobs, P. Bagley, Taylor, Syro, Briese. Vaughan, Kyle, Morgan, Anderegg, Wesrman, Morlon, J. Parish. Absenf 'From picfure: Braclceli Page lorry-fwo FORM work, They have been handed The addiTional responsibiliTy oT choosing one oT Their class as a member oT The STudenT Council. There are, neverTheless, such care-Tree individuals as Blacgue, Bushman Ivlader, and STinky French who reTuse To be daunTed by This new barrier called homework , and who conTinue To amuse Their classmaTes wiTh Their hilarious anTics. Si Ford and l-lod Irvine keep The girls in hand, while The boys sTop over aT l-lamm's poolroom Tor a Tew games. They have Their aThleTic sTars, Too, in Kyle, Crosby, Vaughan and HOTT, and Their hockey Team, ably coached by lvlr. Brooks, played six games, Two wiTh Their TradiTional rival, Blake. Taking all These Things inTo consideraTion, This year's Second Form seems To have made The diTTiculT TransiTion Trom The Lower School To The Upper School in sTride, and They will undoubTedly Tind Their TuTure liTe aT The Academy so much The pleasanTer. The Social Lions Page TorTy Frederick Driscoll, President William Budd, Vice-President David Beadie, SecreTa ry-Treasurer. THIRD ln The Third Form, The sTudenT has almosT compleTely recovered Trom The severe shoclc which he received in The Second Form. l'le has become accusTomed To hard sTudying, and The somewhaT easier schedule is a wel- come relieT. This year, There rages a hoT dislouTe over The choice beTween French and German which each sTudenT musT malce Tor himselT. By This Time, a sTudenT can solve The riddle oT Room 7. l-le no longer cringes when menTion is made oT going inTo The woods , and he has begun To masTer The arT oT ad lib sigh+ TranslaTions. This class is also oTTered a new Biology course, TaughT by lvlr. Rasmussen, which is noT oTTering The boys Too much Trouble. One weelc only Thir- Teen boys Tlunlced. The class is led aThleTic- ally by Two gianTs, Dracula Driscoll and Paunch Frenzel. BoTh perTormed well on The FirsT l:ooTball Team, and were imporTanT Top row: W. Budd, Frenzel, F, Driscoll, T-loskins, CarpenTer, Zell, Tierney, Neher, Middle row: l-lasTings, Johnson, Koch, D, Seymour, STaTTord, R, Bacon, Tilden, Seabury, Mayo. BoTTom row: WinTer, W, Ward, OpsTad, Kansas, Burr, BaumeisTer, D. Bacon, Laidlaw, Beadie, Page TorTy-Tour FORM members oT The l-loclcey and Basl4eTball Teams, respecTively. l-lowever, noT all oT The aThleTes oT This class are members oT The varsiTies. Co-eTTicienT perTormers who have excelled are PeTe Ward, John Seabury, Weed Seymour, and John STaTTord. The class boasTs no ouTsTanding sTudenTs, buT, led by Beadie and Mayo, iT manages To up- hold a decenT class average. They are al- ready acTive in The publicaTions, conTribuT- ing a Tew oT The beTTer wriTers To The Now and Then, and Their sTellar phoTographer, Flash Bulb Koch To The SPAR. The voices oT The Third Formers are sTill changing on The whole, limiTing Their membership in The Glee Club To a Tew, who will undoubTedly be ioined by many oThers nexT year. They are learning saTe driving Trom lvlr. Broolcs, which should bring a sigh oT relieT To The lips oT many luclcy pedesTrians. Being Tresh- men, The Third Formers are always high in spiriT, and are apT To possess an excess oT exuberance, buT This is almosT always ouT- grown soon, and is To be expecTed. s-s-s-s-l l p' Tringer, Secrefary, Louis Klein, PresidenT, Pefer R cl b h V Pe d Tg Wallace Rifchie, Treasurer FOURTH When an Academy boy reaches The FourTh Form, he finds himself rapidly becom- ing a man of The world. Being fairly well reconciled To The rouTine of schoolworlc, his aTTenTion is drawn To oTher fields. By This Time, his voice is probably compleTely changed, and he becomes inTeresTed in The Glee Club. l-le will also find himself being wooed by The Now and Then if he is a prom- ising wriTer or ad-geTTer. Boys from This class form a good parT of The Craclc Squad, Too, and iT is in This year ThaT They really begin To Talce parT in school acTiviTies such as These. This is especially True of This year's FourTh Form. IT has conTribuTed many promising aThleTes To The yarsify Teams, Bill Langford, Eddie STringer, and lvlorf Shapiro. Shapiro already holds The Top baTTing average of The baseball Team, which he compiled as a Freshman. The class also shines socially, led T p Ingham, J, Comforf, l-lolman, Sfringer, Poffle, Langford, R. Pryor, Dahlin, J, Budd. Middle row: W. Collins, R d b sh, T. l-lilfon, Gesell, D, Bagley, E, Schrader, lvl, Seymour, Sfeyenson, Reifz, BoTTom row: W, Rifchie, E, Dean, J. M T Shapiro, Chapin, C. Hauser, N. lvlogilner, Guyer, L.l4l P g T Ty-six ein. FORM by such charmers as Tom l-lilTon and T-lub Dahlin, and liTe never geTs dull wiTh Those slcilled enTerTainers Buddha Schrader and Bruce PoTTle on hand To liven Things up. BUT don'T Think ThaT These boys are so busy par- TicipaTing in ouTside acTiviTies ThaT They never have Tirne To sTudyl On The conTraryl They looasT a very high class average, gain- ing Their insloiraTion Trorn Those Tarnous schol- ars, Zeke Raudenbush, Lou Klein, and John lvlilTon. In addiTion To conTinuing Their lvlaTh and LaTin courses, They conducT Tre- guenT debaTes in Their English classes, and, aT one Time during The year, They exhibiTed Their slcill in This Tield beTore The school. To compleTe Their array oT inTeresTing courses, They sTudy governrnenT under The direcTion oT lvlr. Read, and made several Trips To The STaTe l.egislaTure This session. Such a versa- Tile class is cerTain To prove invaluable To The liTe oT The school in The years To Tollow. Age of En asclfg hikl Pass The Crib Sheel' Thomas Ma+Tson, Vice-President Charles Briggs, President John Ramaley, Secrefa ry-Treasurer. FIFTH l-lave you ever wondered whaT caused The larighT gleam in a l5iTTh l:ormer's eyes? The reason is opviousl The end is near. Soon The day will come when he can enioy senior privileges and Torsalce The ausTere condiTions oT The STudy l-lall Tor The pleasanTer aTmo- sphere oT The Dean Room Bench and The Senior Room. l-lowever, noT all oT The iuniors' Time is spenT in wisTTul conTemplaTion oT The TuTure. fXlThough Tew in number, They have made many imporTanT conTribuTions To school liTe. No one in The class can boasT a specTacular average, buT all oT Them are good enough To mainTain a very respecTable class average. They have The choice oT pur- suing eiTher l-lisTory or ChemisTry, as well as French or German, and lvlr. Ameluxen is consTanTly sul3miTTing Them To a Thorough propaganda campaign Tor Senior MaTh, sTaT- ing ThaT iT is an essenTial course Tor living in Top row: Swanson, P, French, Aichele, Wallace, Alexander, A. Pryor, Middle row: MaTTson, Blaul, Busher, Briggs, Knapp. BoT+om row: Merrill, SchwarTz, DilworTh, ScoTT, Ramaley. Page TorTy-eighT ' FORM our modern alornic world. They are well- represenled on The lirsl Teams by Dirly Paul Aichele and Ev Dilworlh in loolball. and Jock Rarnaley, Gus Schwarlz, and Aichele in hockey. Socially, The Fillh Form cannol be equalled. You mighl find lhern playing poker al Dilworlh's or Pryor's or oul ernulaling Romeo wilh The Twin Cily beau- lies. The class has a Jralenled pholographer in Dick lvlerrill, some ol whose piclures appear on lhese pages, and a masler eleclrician in John Budd, whose liendish gadgels Tascinale lhe less ingenious sludenls. The combined in- venlive genius of The class has also devised 'rhe Klobber Klub . a nefarious sociely Tor The propagalion ol cruelly lo pedeslrians, which has a sleadily expanding enrollmenl, and which will undouloledly reduce lo chaos The eslablished syslern of law and order. Such an aclive class will undoubledly prove To be an assel lo lhe school as lhe Senior Class of l952. pp.. Be Chemisf y' M + E y Salurday N , ' 5 The Wonders of Science J' Azfhlafm I First Team Football f ,U A -ff - N - -fn ., T p ow. M , Rasfrussci T-T 'rai Larforo Fremei, F, Dfisci S inner, Shapiro Mr. Brafnoper, J. Budd. Middle row: Connor, R ey Mcnick DeCfss'f3f W, Sihraoer A, ivlairs Dm-:TTT Amfvfirwr Agree Ps. CCTli'S, Bolfom row: L, Hauser, T. R, OB es l:.T'1-fc' is iris- T VX'co'1 4 TiTTy-Two The T950 SPA. TooTball season was probably The mosT disasTrous in iTs hisTory. The Acads crawled Through Their eighT game schedule wiThouT even coming close To a win. There were many glaring wealc- nesses in This yearls Team, weaknesses which remained Trom The beginning oT The season To The end. alThough much work was done To correcT Them by coaches Rasmussen and BraTnober. Cn oTTense, There was a deT- iniTe need Tor Teamworlc and The maximum oT eTTorT needed on every players' parT To malce a play go was also missing TreguenTly. AlThough everyone puT in Top eTTorT aT Times, They could never geT TogeTher aT The same Time and malce a play really worlc When on deTense, The inabiliTy To Taclcle hard was guiTe cosTly To The Team. In glanc- ing aT The sTaTisTics, one noTices ThaT S.P.A. goT more TirsT downs Than mosT oT iTs op- ponenTs. This is explained by The TacT ThaT whenever an opposing ball-carrier brolce Through The Acad line, The chance oT going all The way Tor a Touchdown was o1uiTe good. ln iTs opening game, an overconTidenT SPA. eleven bowed To Breclcs scrappy lvlusTangs 25-l2. Led by decepTive halT- baclc Richie Ahern, who Tallied Three Touch- downs, Breclcs 7-6 halT-Time advanTage ciuiclcly developed inTo an insurmounTable lead in The Third guarTer. The S.P.A. scor- ing was done by lVlorT Shapiro and Riclcy Driscoll. STill overconTidenT, The Acads dropped a 25-6 decision To Concordia's ComeTs. The SPA. oTTense could never geT going, excepT Tor Two long marches. Cn deTense, The SPA. line played well, buT The secondary had iTs diTTiculTies. ST. Cloud CaThedral was The Academy's nexT opponenT. ln This game, The Crusaders' passing aTTaclc was Too much Tor The S.P,A. secondary, alThough The Bluesox line, led by capTain Rudy Driscoll, played well, and The Acads losT 27-2. ST. Cloud's Tine passer, Bob Kosel, compleTed Tour long passes Tor Crusader scores. ln Their nexT Two games, The Acads showed a decided laclc oT drive. ln losing To Columbia l-leighTs 33-6, S.P.A.'s oTTense never did geT sTarTed, while The l-leighTers' powerTul single wing aTTaclc made The Acad deTense lools lilce a sieve. The only brighT spoT oT The game Tor S.P.A. '19 Captain Driscoll Takes Time OuT Would-Be S.P.A. Tackler S Th cl Baclcfieldz A. Mairs, STr1nger, Moniclc, Aichele, Alexander. Line. F, DeCosTer, was Bruce lvloniclcs inTercepTion oT a laTeral and subseguenT 92 yard run Tor a Touch- down. The Acads dropped Their nexT sTarT To a surprising ShaTTuclc Team 3l-I3. The Shads' end runs and long passes gave S.P.A. a Tough Time ThroughouT The game. The Acad oTTense improved in This game as passes To lvlairs and l-lilTon were respon- sible Tor Two Academy Touchdowns. The Acads probably played Their bes+ TooTball oT The season againsT SouTh SainT Paul. AlThough The Paclcers, who were de- Tencling STaTe Champions, won 48-26, The Acads played TerriTic ball in The lasT halT. Behind 34-7 aT The halT, The Bluesox ToughT l-lilTon, R. Driscoll, T. R, O'Brien, Wood, BuTler, Frenzel, hard in The lasT Two guarTers, and Tallied Three Touchdowns. The mosT ouTsTanding TeaTure oT The game was The passing com- binaTion oT guarTerbaclc Bruce lvloniclc To righT end Franlc l-lilTon, which raclced up a ToTal oT l2O yards in I3 compleTions. In Their Tinal Two games, The Acads slip- ped noTiceably. SlighTly overconTidenT aTTer The SouTh SainT Paul game, The Team was beaTen badly by Blalce 59-O. The l-lillTop- pers' speed was Too much Tor The Acads, who could do noThing righT in This conTesT. The Team came baclq againsT CreTin, how- ever, and, alThough beaTen 26-O, iT played a Tairly good game. The S.P.A. oTTense Page Ti Blake Skiris The End Lang My 34.-is 'asm .30-7 'X Why Noi' Block For Him? Paunch Frenzel Moves in For Taclcle worlced Tairly well, and The deTensive line also played good TooTball. The secondary, however, had iTs diTTiculTies, and CreTin's passing game was responsible Tor iTs Touch- downs. ATTer such an unsuccessTul season, Tew players can be singled ouT Tor Their good play. CapTain Rudy Driscoll played his hearT ouT in virTually every minuTe oT each game. Charlie Wood and STeve DeCosTer also played well in The line. and in The back- Tield, Bruce lvloniclc played hard and did a good job oT calling plays. Ed STringer's phenomenal punTing also helped The Team a greaT deal. QuiTe a Tew players will re- Turn Tor nexT year's Team. Bill l.angTord, lvlorT Shapiro, Paul Aichele, Dean Alexander, Jock Ramaley, Rick Driscoll, and STringer, all oT whom perTormed well in The paclofield This year, will be back along wiTh PeTe Frenzel, Ev DilworTh, and John Holman in The line. Several players Trom Mr. FiTch's second Team will also help nexT year's var- siTy. Sandy Knapp, MaTT Zell, Jim Wallace, Tad Seymour, Gus SchwarTz, and The Pryors all played good TooTball on The second Team This Tall and will undouloTedly sTrengTh- en nexT year's Team. Baclxfield: Rarnaley, L. l-lauser, LangTord, F. Driscoll, Shapiro. Line: W. Schrader, STrand, V. l-lauser, DilworTh, Kemper, Knapp, Holman, Page TiTTy-Tive Langfmrd hi? hard by Era-:Sn mckier Concordia back qefs bear hug Efake r Ga? Me jump on 'eml There H is. Sieve! Grab Iii Oops! Hilfnn Qui? misses one. O W5 a feuchdownf Second Team Football . ...Ahh u.-. .s f T p w. ScoTT L, Klein, Tnden, J. ComTor., Ze.: Sevenson, Carpenrer E, Schrader, W. Collins, Middle row: Briggs, D. , T, l-lirfon Mawson, Knapp, PcT'le T, 6, OiBrien. R, P'yor V, Hauser, Mr. T:iTch. Boffom row: Wa'iace Schwarfi, i L - A P or M Seynfcur Kemccr R Bar Rauoerbus C CK Coach Fifch Encourages The Team T AlThough iT could gain buT one win and one Tie in six games, The Academy Junior VarsiTy displayed some Tairly good TooT- ball This season. There were Times in every game when Mr. FiTch's charges could push Their opponenTs all over The Tield. lncon- sisTency, however, was The nemesis oT The squad, especially deep in Their opponenT's TerriTory, and in only The Breck game were The blocking and Tackling consisTenTly good. The Seconds opened Their season againsT De LaSalle wiTh very liTTle pracTice under Their belTs. AlThough mosT oT The game was waged beTween The Two 30 yard mark- ers, an SPA. Tumble on iTs own I5 yard line gave De LaSalle The break iT needed To gain a 6-O Triumph. ln Their nexT game, The Acads revenged The TirsT Team's loss To Breck by Trouncing iTs J.V. 43-O. Gus SchwarTz led The SPA. scoring parade wiTh Three Touchdowns. ln Their nexT game, The underdog Acads dropped a close I2-8 decision To CreTin. Behind I2-O early in The game, The FiTch- men Tallied a saTeTy and Then a Touchdown To make The score I2-8. Their besT chance To win was muTTed in The TourTh guarTer, when They Tumbled wiTh a TirsT down on The CreTin Two TooT line. The FiTchmen dropped Their nexT one 7-6 To ST. Phillips. AlThough Dick Pryor scored Tor The Acads aTTer a long march down The Tield, The exTra poinT, which was The diTTerence peTween a loss and a Tie, was muTTed. ln Their pooresT Tackling exhibiTion oT The year, The Acads dropped a 20-7 decision To Blake. Blake, which had very TasT backs, made monkeys oT The FiTchmen wiTh Their reverses and end runs. ln The lasT game oT The season, The FiTch- men rallied To a 6-6 Tie wiTh Concordia. Playing on Concordia's dusT bowl Tield, The Acad OTTense couldn'T geT sTarTed un- Playing Ring Around The Rosie? Busher aT Work Til quiTe laTe in The game, when iT rolled To one Touchdown and almosT To anoTher. The besT play ThroughouT The season was pro- vided py capTain Bruce Kemper in The line, Sandy Knapp aT line-backer, and Gus SchwarTz aT Tullback. SchwarTz Goes Over For a Score HH Him Low! GeTTing Ready For The Real Thing Page TiTTy-nin Mmm W. Q -4. 'Www LQ 4' W .m..,.4n1-lr WH Wi. ,WMS SRQJYMGK Sv. Y.Q2?!5B3Q Nm V ,fr if ew ? W.: A Team Top row: D, Bacon, Frohlicher, B, Ploughman, Johnson, Ahl, l-lamm, lvlader, Neher. M dell row: Mr, B lc K h Bl q A. Holmes, HasTings, D. Seymour, B. Klein. BaumeisTer. BoH'om row: Chapin, STaTTord, J. lvlilTon, G y C RiTchie, E. Dean, Mayo, Crosby. ln sharp conTrasT To lasT year's successTul series, The coeTTicienTs This year could raclc up buT one win and one Tie in Their annual six game seT wiTh Blalce. The A Team had The worsT record, Talcing iT on The chin Twice Trom Their l-loplcins rivals. AlThough The A Team was unable To win a game, iT learned guiTe a bil oT TooTball Trom iTs new coaches, lvlr. Broolcs and Mr. Jack lvlurphy. Considering The TacT ThaT The A's played againsT bigger and TasTer opposiTion all season, They did raTher well. ln preparaTion Tor The Blalce series, The A Team had scrimmages under game condi- Tions wiTh a couple oT Tairly Tough Teams, and Trom Them iT gained much valuable experience. Blal4e's end runs spelled deTeaT Tor The A's in Their TirsT game 27-O, while in The second conTesT They were ouTToughT 2l-O. Those players who did The besT iobs during The Blalqe games and ThroughouT The season as a whole seemed To be co-capTains Wally RiTchie and Charlie l-lauser, Ed Dean, Len Johnson, and Fred Crosby. Fling lTl er Around B Team . A mailman in ., A v T p : Davicscn Gardner Spillweus, T. RiTchie Wa'Z, Nelson Go derberg WalT, Nl, Mogflrer. Middle row: Mr. S'niTh, B M g L 'dlfaw J T'a sT' Brackev P Bagley Pvneluxen, Syro, WsesTman T, l-lolrres, l-loslcifs, BoTTom row: Rapp, l. Coumrv Kyle Seffbufi, VV. Wlafo Heade W'r'er, Karsas Ford 'Q French. Johnson Closes in on Beadie T ThaT's a This year, The B Team, ably coached by lvlr. SmiTh, had The besT season oT all The coeTTicienTs. In TacT, IT was The only Team in The school able To win a game Trom Blalce in TooTball. The presence oT good spiriT and Tine all around Team play was The margin oT vicTory in This game. The TirsT game was won by Blalae I3-O. An end run and a recovery oT an SPA. Tumble gave The game To Blake, even Though mosT oT The game was ToughT in mid-Tield. In The second Blalce game, The B's were vicTorious To The Tune oT I4-7. ThroughouT The conTesT, The B's played excellenT ball, boTh on oTTense and deTense. OpsTad, Ward, and Seabury all played Top-noTch TooTball in This game. The newly insTiTuTed inTramural program gave These boys a good deal oT pracTice under acTual game condiTions, and also. in giving every boy a chance To play, iT showed who The besT players were. The players who did The besT iobs all season long were Ward, OpsTad, Seabury, Beadie, and Kyle. C Team Top row: PlaTT, PaTTerson, Reay, Roe, T, Mears, T, MilTon, Rose, Norris, Cross, Kenyon, lvl, Parish, Drew, von Bergen, Middle row: Mr, Hudson, Figge, Nash, l-loTchlciss, J. Mairs, McCully, Anderegg, RaTigan, Somrners, J. Mears, Jacobs, Blake, Farnham, Swanson, Bo+Tow row: T-Tubbs, Fobes, Fisher, F, Plowman, Lewis, Vaughan, lrvine, Pederson, C. Ward, J, Mogilner, MorTon, l-lansTein, Musser, Look aT Thai' lnferference lvlr. T-ludson's Team played Tairly well on The whole This Tall. DespiTe The TacT ThaT The C's could gain buT a Tie and a loss in Their Two game series wiTh Blalce, many players did very well all season. ln Their TirsT Blalce game, The C's losT 20-O. Their oTTense, which looked so good in prac- Tice, Tizzled, and only Bill Pederson's run- ning and passing could gain ground. Blalce's wide end sweeps proved disasTrous To SPA. in This game. ln The second game, The S.P.A. deTense sTiTTened considerably, and iT compleTely sTopped Blalce's end runs, which comprise iTs whole aTTacl4. S.P.A.'s oTTense was al- ways ThreaTening, however, and The C's gained a lor oT ground borh by running and by passing, buT were unable To score. The game ended in a scoreless Tie. Playing consisTenTly good TooTball ThroughouT The season were Bill Pederson, PeTe Vaughan, PeTe lvlusser, John RaTTigan, and Flod lr- vine. lrvine in The Open Page sixTy-Three First Team Hockey 2' . Nnh,,S,: Top row: Briggs, J. Budd, Cook Alexander Crosby, Shapiro, Connor, Kemper. Middle row: Mr, BraTnoT:er Stringer, A'chele SchwarTZ, F. Drisccl, Ramaley, Knapp, STrand. Mr. Sporer. BoTTom row: R. Drisco' K'ein, F. l'lilTon, Monick, W. Schrader, V. T-lauser, BuTler. My-NUM-JAM. ., ,vu-,,,.L-M Coach S Page sixTy-Tour porer and CapTa During iTs I95I season, The SainT Paul Academy hockey Team Taced one oT The ToughesT schedules oT any Team in The sTaTe, and, considering This TacT, did well To com- pile a record oT nine wins, eighT losses, and Tive Ties. During The TirsT TwoeThirds oT The season, The Acad pucksTers posTed several very crediTaple perTormances, buT also losT and Tied some games which They should have won easily. In The lasT parT oT The season, however, The Sporermen pulled TogeTher and played Top-noTch hockey in nearly every game. The S.P.A. sexTeT opened iTs season early in December by Trouncing a highly-regarded Mechanic ArTs Team 7-O. A week laTer, The Acads Took on Murray, This year's Region IV champs, winning 4-2. In Their nexT game, The Acads meT EveleTh's Bears, The besT Team in The sTaTe. EveleTh, led by The besT high-school hockey player in The counTry, John lvlayasich, beaT The Acads 5-O in a well-played conTesT aT Williams Arena. ln Their nexT Two games againsT ST. Thomas and lvlarshall, The Sporermen losT To The Toms 3-2, and barely Tied a very mediocre Marshall sexTeT I-I. Then, perking up some- whaT, They wenT on To beaT T-lumboldT, Tie RochesTer, and Trounce a weak ShaTTucl4 Team 6-I. During The nexT Tew days, The un- predicTable Bluesox dropped a 3-O decision To CreTin and Then, playing Tine hockey, Tied a superior Johnson Team 3-3. aT one Time holding a 3-I edge over This year's Region l champ and runner-up in The sTaTe Tourney. The S.P.A. sexTeT played iTs worsT hockey oT The season in iTs nexT Two games, drop- ping a 3-I decision To Blalce and Tying ShaT- Tuclc 3-3 in a snow sTorm. Then, led by Cap- Tain Bruce lvloniclc, The Team began To Tunc- Tion smooThly once again and gained a 4-3 vicTory over RochesTer. Drawing a bye in The TirsT round oT The MinnesoTa PrivaTe School TournamenT, The Acads swepT pasT Blalce 2- O, and wenT To The semi-Tinals beTore losing To Champion ST. Thomas 4-I. fXTTer sTruggling Through a I-l Tie wiTh Breck, The S.P.A. Team began To play iTs besT hoclcey oT The year. The Sporermen suT- Tered a close 4-3 loss aT The hands oT CreTin Bill Schrader Moves Up The lce in a TerriTic game, and Then wenT up To Win- nipeg To resume The rivalry wiTh ST. Johns- RavenscourT, barely elceing ouT a close 2-I win over The Tlashy Canuclcs. Barely back Trom This Trip, The Acads losT To Johnson's greaT Team 4-l. ln Their nexT conTesT, S.P.A. showed Breclc some real hoclcey, winning 8-2. The Sporermen almosT brolce a 29 game All-STaTe John Mayasich Scores For EveleTh Page sixTy-Tive v. I 4 Defense: Klein Aionee. Line: winning sTreaIc in The nexT game wiTh ST. Thomas, buT, aTTer leading 3eI aT one poinT, They succumbed To The Tom's superior sTrengTh 4-3. In Their Tinal game oT The sea- son, The Acads smaclced Minneapolis WesT 6-O aT Williams Arena. IT anyone is To be singled ouT Tor his all- around Tine play and leadership, iT musT be CapTain Bruce Ivloniclc. Bruce ne++ed TwenTy- Tour goals and added nine assisTs Tor ThirTy- Three poinTs, a ToTaI which has been sure passed only once aT The Academy. OTher seniors who played Tine hoclcey are Bill Schrader, Franlc I-IiITon, I'-Iugh Klein, and goalie Rudy Driscoll. ProspecTs Tor nexT year's Team are good, wiTh CapTain Paul Aichele leading seven reTurning IeTTermen and several oTher promising players onTo The ice nexT December. Page sixTy-six Id I-Ii Ton, NN. Player IVIonicIc Schrader I-IiITon Klein Aichole Ramaley Schwarlr I-Iauser Knapp Driscol F S'rir1g'i-f BLIIICV Cook Crosby Team Qoporevs Goalie Driscoll. R Shapiro Qpponenm PoinTs Penalties Scnraoer Monicln. STATISTICS Games Goals Assisfs 22 24 9 33 22 I2 I7 29 22 I4 I3 27 22 4 3 7 22 2 2 4 I9 3 I 4 QI O 4 4 Io 2 I T I I I I 2 I9 I O I I5 I O I o O 0 O 2 O O O 2 O O O 22 64 5 I I I 5 22 SI 32 53 Games STops Goals Ave. 20 364 47 .386 2 24 4 ,357 22 423 64 ,Bbq TEAM STANDING Won LOST Tied Percenfage 9 8 5 .523 5 2 5 6 4 O I I I I O I O O 27 43 ShuTouTs 2 I 2 l v SPA SPA SPA SPA S.PA. SPA SPA. SPA S.PA SPA SPA S.PA SFA SPA S.PA 1 SPA. SPA SPA. S.PA S,P.A SPA .if it SPA. SCORES Meclianic Pxrls Murray Eveleflw Sf, Tlwornas lvlarslwall l-lurnboidl Roclwesler Slialluclc Crelin JOl lVT5OH Blalce Slnailuclc Roclwesler Blake Sli Tlwornas Breclc Crelin , . Ravenscourl Jolinson 8 Breclc 3 Sl, Tliornas 6 Wes? ' Privafe School Tournamenl 2 4 .,.. f I y E A ,YW f if -J Goalie Rudy Driscoll gflff Defense: Slringer, V. Hauser. Line: Rarnaley, F. Driscoll, Sclwwarlz. Page sixly-seven Second line sefs up e play Gus Schwarfz goes affer Hue pus? A , .Li nk - ' -A ,Gif qc' f n -x 4 31 . 1. A 91 51! 3, ' 33' ii iw? I .,x' ' 'f in 1- Sf 5' Kg , ff ..1 Shapiro slides, saves score! ,. Monicl sinks one ff? 4 e ofher way Hugh! Hilfon and Manic! foiled by Biake goalie if rw -Q-' - Hauser clears puck againsf Evelefh - -fn--uv.-.--.. 'w- xlu Q3 ' 'W ,QF sr - - Fi yi- .- 5, , . CI-iHd D Second Teom Hockey F' f-nr 4' My AIG i 2 9' Q T p 'VT l-l r, TJ. Bar r T fuer ?'1'i'7 lx 1L'IT Vv. L Qssiad 'Wwvr-r, Middle row: R. fin C, l-T 1L.i'P' , Q V fvli J J l BoTTom VOW' 2 ff env T. Ha 'T TT- r T-li' ,l. Cf T f' 1, Hilion and Holman Q ig iscusses STraTegy WiTh Capiains 'Wx ge Mr. l-ludson, Taced wiTh his annual prop- lem oT building a Team Trom new and relae Tively inexperienced players, did anoTher Tine Top oT coaching and succeeded in de- veloping a very sTrongT well-balanced sexe TeT, which won six, Tied one, and losT buT Three encounTers. The only Team The T-ludsonmen couldnlT deTeaT was Johnsonls undeTeaTed band oT slcaTersT who Tipped The Acads 4,3 in The season's opener, and Then came hack again To win The reTurn game 4fI. The only oTher deTeaT came aT The hands oT Cre-Tin in The season's second ouTing. These opening de- TeaTs aT The hands oT Johnson and CreTin served To sTimulaTe The Team To greaTer per- Tormances in The Tollowing games. The Tollowing SaTurday. The Team Traveled To FaribaulT To overpower ShaTTuclc 6-I in a ragged, buT spiriTed, game. The nexT weelc ST. Thomas Tell 2-O, in a game which was much more one-sided Than The score would seem To indicaTe. Following This vicTory, The Acads proceeded To Trounce Blalfe 7-l, and Tie Murray I-I aT Como. By This Time, Mr. Hudson had developed a sTrong scoring aTTaclc, consisTing oT Two well-balanced lines led by Ren Guyer and Johnny Seabury. OTher Torwards who spear- headed The oTTensive aTTaclc were Len John- son, Tom T-lilTon, and John ComTorT. The de- Tensive chores were handled by Three sTal- warTs, John l-lolman, Ernie Schrader, and George Burr. Coach l-ludson was able To play eiTher Bruce PoTTle or Dave Seymour in The neTs and be sure oT Tine goal Tending. ln The lasT Tour games oT The season, The J. V. really Turned in Tine periformances, win- ning Three and dropping The oTher To John- son's swiTT skaTers. The Acads blanlced Blalce in The reTurn game 4-O, and shuT ouT Breclcs lvlusTangs 6-O. ATTer Their deTeaT aT The hands oT Johnson, The Acads closed Their season wiTh Their besT eTTorT oT The year, nosing ouT CreTin 4-3. This polished perTorm- ance againsT a very sTrong Raider Team should be crediTed To excellenT coaching and a sTrong, underlying desire oT The play- ers To improve Themselves in every game and pracTice session. IT loolcs as if many oT These same boys will be playing imporTanT roles on The varsiTy nexT winTer. bmi KT? H UW ' Wins A N-MW Nexi' Sfop' Penal T li T lr'T r 2 as PoHle Comes OuT For Save GeT The Rebound' Basketball Langford Goes Up For Rebound INTRAMURAL This year, a new sysTem oT choosing Teams Tor inTramural basIceTbaII was inauguraTed. Under This sysTem, The Three upper Torms comprise The nuclei oT The Three Teams, and The Treshmen are divided among Them. IT was obvious Trom The won and losT record ThaT The Teams were noT well-balanced, buT many games, especially during The TirsT parT oT The season, were close, requiring over- Times in some cases. Lou KIein's sophomores, who came ouT vicTorious wiTh Tour wins and one loss, were paced by PeTe Raudenbush and Bill I.angTord, who played consisTenTIy well ThroughouT The season. In a TighT race Tor second place, Charlie Woods seniors nosed ouT Audie Pryorls iuniors bv a Tew percenTage poinTs. In The IasT weeli oT The season, There was a championship pIayoTT series. Pryor's Blues drubbed Wood's Reds in The TirsT game, 32-I4, and in The Tinal qame, KIein's Cfolds sTeam-rollered The Blues, 33-I4, Tor The championship, ending The in- Tramural season. Page sevenTy-Two FIRST BASKETBALL TEAM Because oT a shorTened inTramural sched- ule, This year's varsiTy players had much more pracTice and many more games Than in previous years. AIThough The squad was marked by youTh and inexperience, Coach Rasmussen laid The ToundaTion Tor success- Tul Teams in The years To come, largely Through hard worlc on TundamenTaIs. The cagers losT Their opening game To BrandT's Indians by a close score, and Then ouTclassed The CreTin C squad, 34-25. Because oT sloppy ball handling, The Team losT Their nexT Three games To Neighborhood I-louse, Murray B Squad, and ST. PauI's Church. NexT, a hard ToughT vicTory over I-Iarding B Squad was Tollowed by losses To BrandT's Indians, CenTraI B Squad, The IvIinnesoTa Farm Campus, and Blalce. Vic- Tories over The CreTin C Squad and U-I-Iigh were Tollowed by anoTher Trouncing aT The hands oT Blake. The regular season closed wiTh a pair oT saTisTying vicTories over I-Iarding B Squad and The Farm Campus. All The Team members under I6 were enTered in a neighborhood house Tourna- menT, in which, aIThough losing boTh Their games, They received The runner-up Trophy because oT The disquaIiTicaTion oT oTher Teams. In scoring 26 poinTs in The Tinal game, Jump Ball Blake Scores Frenzel Shools A Tussle For fhe Ball Pele Frenzel showed himsell Io be Ihe Team slar, and if he is an example ol Ihe new baslqelball Ialenl, il should nol be loo long before Ihe baslcelpall Ieam is playing var- sily Ieams. INDIVIDUAL SCORING Games Poin+s Poinis per game Frenzel ....., I7 I83 IO.8 Langford .,.. I6 IO8 6.8 A. Pryor . , . . I3 67 5.2 INTRAMURAL SCORERS Raudenbush ..... 51 poinls, IO.2 poinrs per game A. Pryor ,.., . , 50 poinls, IO poinls per game Ivlairs ,,.. . ,, 44 poinls, 8.8 poinls per game Frenzel . , . . 36 poinls, 7.2 poinls per game Langford . , . 33 poinls, 6.6 poinls per game S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A. ... ... S.P.A. .. ... S.P.A. .. ... S.P.A. .. ... SCORES BrandI's Indians ., . Crelin C Squad ., Neighborhood House Murray B Squad . S+. PauI's Church ... I-Iarding B Squad . BrandI's Indians .... Cenlral Junior Varsily Minn. Farm Campus , Blalcew.. Crelin C Squad , U-I-Iigh ,, .. Blake . , .,,....,. , , I-Iarding B Squad . Ivlinn. Farm Campus. Sr. Alberrs .. ., . Pe+e's Place .. Frenzel Tips One In Langford Tries fo Block a Sho! m 'i1 H wars M1 'MM l.lw First Team Baseball .T T' . , Yfffk.-f ,M rnussen, Middle row: Connor, T-lolman, SchwarTz, Knapp, L T g A S h der, Shapiro, ang Ord. Since There are only Three leTTermen re- Turning To play varsiTy ball under Coach Roy Rasmussen This year, The chances Tor a sTrong Team are indeed slighT. In several pracTice games up To May l, The squad showed ThaT hiTTing was iTs wealcesT poinT. OT course, The Tielding was rough aT The ouT- seT, buT iT has improved consTanTly as The Team worked hard in preparaTion Tor iTs reg- ular schedule oT TourTeen games. The piTch- ing, when The warm weaTher Tinally arrives, should be adeguaTe. The ouTTield seems To be sTrong deTen- sively, while iT has poTenTial baTTing sTrengTh. LeTTerman lVlorT Shapiro, who led The var- siTy in hiTTing lasT year wiTh a specTacular .435 marlc, is in leTT Tield, and Eddie STringer, a very consisTenT hiTTer, is in cenTer. John l-lolman and Dick Pryor will probably alTer- naTe in righT. Oddly enough, all Tour OT These players are sophomores. Led by Caplain Angus lvlairs al shorlslop, lhe inlield may develop inlo a slrong delen- sive unil, allhough ils hilling remains a ques- lion mark lrom day lo day. Slarling al lhird is Bill Schrader, while Gus Schwarlz appears lo be lhe besl lirsl sacker. ln all probabilily, Dave Cook will gel lhe nod al second. Mean- while, Pele Frenzel, Sandy Knapp, and Pele Ward will all serve as ulilily men. Il lhey can manage lo keep lhe ball in lhe slrike zone, lhis year's pilchers shouldn'l be loo bad. Bill lngham has shown llashes ol brilliance in his appearances on lhe mound and Dick Slrand has acquired enough speed lo indicale lhal he will help bolh in slarling and reliel assignmenls. Once again lhis year Dean Alexander's nilly assorlmenl ol curves will probably have lhe opposing hillers breaking lheir backs in vain. l-landling lhe calchers is crack calcher Bill Langlord. Bill, anolher leller-winner lasl year, is displaying some polenl hilling, and lhis year may also do some pilching. We hope lhal by lhe lime lhis yearbook is published, lhe baseball leam will have amassed a respeclable record. Capla Shapiro Plays Bunl Schwarlz Back at Fursl in Time Y M7561 ibmm? ....Q.fL. 4 J fx NVQ f Kali. Pifchers: Alexander, Sirand, Ingham. Q. Page sevenry-six Ouffieldz Shapiro, Srrinqer, R, Pryor, Holman. SCHEDULE S.P.A 7 Wilson . .. . S.P.A 4 Murray ....,.,... I I S.P.A. . . . , 5 Mechanic Arls . . ,. S.P.A 7 Marshall ..,. .,. I6 SPA 2 Concordia ,. . . . SPA. .. .., I5 Marshall ...., ..,, I I S.P.A. .. S.P.A. .. S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A S.P.A . , Mechanic Arls ..,. . . Blake ....,.... Creiin . ShaHucl4 ,. Breclc .. Blalce . ..,..,. , . Qlliiill Scores of games before May 8 Ca+cher Bill Langford Infield: W. Ward, W. Schrader, Frenzel, Schwarfz, Cook, Knapp, A, Mairs. Page sevenfy-seven Tennis B K T rney, i rs i , V-' ', 5- -51 H . X W., Wood, Mr. Bianpieo Rur:rerT, T. R, O Brien. FronT row: R4 Driscoll, l.. l-lauser Pied, Monick, BuT er. Q MarTy AT The wriTing oT This arTicle iT looks as iT The Tennis Team will have a very successTul season. A squad oT veTerans is reTurning, boasTing such sTars as Bruce lvloniclr, Rudy Driscoll, T-lecTor RuperT, lvlarTy Field, and Leo l-lauser. l-lugh Tierney, who TransTerred Trom ST. Thomas This year, also is one oT The leading lighTs oT The squad. T-Tis play was good enough To geT him inTo The lNlaTional Junior TournamenT lasT year. The big problem in The Team has been The developmenT oT younger boys. WiTh The excepTion oT Tierney, all The resT oT The aToremenTioned boys are Seniors. To help bring along The younger boys, lvlr. Blanpied has embarked on a program oT increased insTrucTion so ThaT more boys will come along. Several show signs oT developing inTo good players. WiTh eighT or nine scheduled maTches, The Tennis Team is playing more schools Than They have played in many years. The whole Tennis program aT The Academy deTi- niTely seems To be on The upswing. Golf MaTTson, Guyer, V. Hauser, H. Klein, R. Collins ATTer a lapse oT Tour years, golT was again puT on The agenda oT Academy sporTs This year. The l95I Academy golT Team was organized by Vic l-lauser, who headed iTs Tour oTher members, l-lugh Klein, Tom MaTTson, Russ Collins, and Ren Guyer. STarTing ouT slowly This spring in pracTice sessions aT l-lighland GolT Course, There Tollowed a period oT sTeady improvemenT among The Team, Trom which a reasonably poTenT Tiyesome emerged. Displaying noT only experience, buT also The abiliTy To work as a uniT and conseguenTly To grab vicTories, This capable guinTeT, coached by lvlr. SmiTh, mainTained an enviable record in iTs inTer- scholasTic compeTiTion wiTh a hosT oT Tine Teams ThroughouT The surrounding region. While The golT Team was successTul This year, The prospecTs Tor nexT year are very encouraging. Ren Guyer and Tom lVlaTT- son, boTh Tine golTers, will reTurn To lead sev- eral oTher promising golTers onTo The linlcs nexT spring. IT seems cerTain ThaT golT will soon be a regular parT oT The Academy aTh- leTic program. Page 14ci1la6iiwL 1 7 nu Q X 1' 9 xi Y if Military The miliTary deparTmenT OT a school is in- Tended To give The sTudenTs a sense oT re- sponsibiliTy and discipline, and as such has been very successTul in some schools. l-low- ever, in our school, There has arisen an in- diTTerence and a laclc oT respecT Tor The miliTary program. During The pasT year, some imporTanT sTeps have been Talcen To increase The sTudenTs' inTeresT in This pro- gram. The oTTicers have Tormerly been appoinT- ed in June oT The year preceding ThaT in which They were To serve, and Thus did noT have To compeTe direcTly Tor Their posiTions. which in Turn losT some OT Their signiTicance. Under The new sysTem, The oTTicers are ap- poinTed in The Tall oT The year in which They are To serve, aTTer lceen compeTiTion Tor all posiTions. This sysTem will insure ThaT The boys who have The necessary gualiTies oT leadership and responsibiliTy receive The commissions. Page eighTy-Two A sense oT responsibiliTy is implanTed in The younger boys by The new sysTem oT choosing non-commissioned oTTicers. Even The PlaToon SergeanTs, Tormerly Juniors and Seniors, are now chosen Trom among The members oT The plaToon, and all oTher non- commissioned posTs are also Tilled by com- peTiTion among The members oT The pla- Toon, wiTh every boy geTTIng a TryouT Tor each posiTion. l-lowever, These reTorms have noT com- pleTely done The iob. There are sTill many Things ThaT musT be done if our miliTary pro- gram is To reach iTs maximum eTTecTiveness. We mighT suggesT ThaT a more sTringenT Torm oT punishmenT Tor oTTenses would make The boys Take The miliTary more seriously. IT The reTorms begun This year are exTended in The TuTure, The miliTary program will serve iTs purpose. BuT if They cannoT be made eTTecTive, The miliTary can only ob- sTrucT The purpose Tor which iT was insTi- IN MEMORIUM AlThough Sarge Boylie was no longer l aT The Academy aT The Time OT his deaTh This winTer, he was sTill remembered and loved by The upper Forms OT The school. The Sarge in his ThlrTy years in The army served in every parT OT The counTry and in Panama The Philippines and China and held every non commissioned ranlc The army OTTers ATTer reTiring in l942 he came To The Academy and became head OT The IvliliTary DeparTmenT coach OT The riTle Team and coach OT The F1rsT Baseball Team UnTil his reTlremenT in IQ48 Sarge car ried ouTh1s duTies admirably and managed To insTil inTo all his pupils his inTeresT and his enThusiasm His avid lnTeresT an miliTary malces :T TiTT1ng ThaT we pay TribuTe TO him in This secTiOn OT our yearboolc because iT vOTed a greaT deal OT his Time and energy 1, 1, M B was To This phase OT school liTe ThaT he de- . - Mas er Sergean Andrew . oylre CRACK SQUAD Back row: Busher, P, French, RuperT, Dean, Kemper. Middle row: F. Driscoll, C. Hauser, LangTord, SchwarTz, FronT row: FirsT LieuTenanT V. Hauser commanding, L. Hauser, Briggs, T. HilTon, MaTTson, Alexander. Page eighTy-Three SENIOR MANUAL OF ARMS TEAM -v4 T, -- - 4 1 I W A .A X win K , f ' W M . f ,A , , H . Q , 7 ,, L.. K Back row: Mavsow fwlrmerl E, Schrader, F, Drlsioll, T. R. QBr?er T. l-Wfon, Sihwarfz. Fronf row: Opsnid, C4 Hamer Langford, mmndef, eww Beam. JUNIOR MANUAL OF ARMS TEAM , . A ,, .N E. 5 . ' . ' 'P' f , Back row: Harris, Blacque, Crosby, Hmm, lv1cCuUy, Briese. Fronf row: Paffersom, Figge, Fobes, Pederson lwinner1,Amdereqq T. Milfon. Page efqhfy-four MANUAL OF ARMS Because The winTer weaTher does noT al- low ouTdoor drilling, much work is done dur- ing The WinTer Term To sharpen The members oT The BaTTalion in Manual oT Arms on days when snow removal is noT necessary. This worlc culminaTes in a series oT compeTiTions aT The end oT The Term To pick The Twelve- man Senior and Junior Teams. Finally, each Team holds anoTher eliminaTion To choose The besT cadeT in drill, The Senior winner re- ceiving The Carley Award, and The Junior winner, The Sporer medal. As usual, The com- peTiTion was lceen, wiTh Tom MaTTson winning over Rick Driscoll in The Senior Tield, and Bill Pederson garnering The Junior honors Tor The second year in a row, wiTh Milce Flinn a close second. The compeTiTion was iudged by CapTain l-lassler and SergeanTs l-lall and KunTz oT The Marine Corps. Capfain Hilf DRUM AND BUGLE CORPS ,Q .. Us ,mmf . Back row: Swanson, Koch, Levy, C. ComTorT, R. Bacon, A, Pryor, STrand. Middle ro D B gl y J Pa sh R F h M y Knapp. Froni' row: FirsT LieuTenanT Wood commanding, W. Collins, Merrill, J. M p Student Council Top row: Scoll, Wood, Langlord, lvlairs. Bollom row: DeCosler, W. Schrader, Monicl, R, Driscoll, l In pasl years, lhe Sludenl Council has been able only lo suggesl lulure changes in ils operalion al lhe end ol ils lerm in ollice. This year, lhe Council can review wilh pride lhe accomplishmenls il has made during lhe school year. In addilion lo ils lormer du- lies, il made many imporlanl revisions in lhe Council Conslilulion, which provide lhal all lhe members ol lhe Council be elecled lrom lhe enlire Upper School, lhal voling privileges and represenlalion be granled lo lhe Second and Third Forms, and lhal lhe Council be elecled in lhe Spring ol lhe year preceding lhal in which il is lo serve. ll also revised lhe old syslem ol collecling money lor charilies by successlully inaugu- raling a uniled appeal, lrom which il ap- proprialed lunds lor lhe various causes. ll is also considering increasing lhe powers ol lhe Council, lhus giving il more respon- sibilily in running lhe school. This new power should malce lhe council an ellicienl inslilulion in lilling lhe posilion lor which Page eighlyesix Bruce Moniclc, Presidenl il was inlendedg namely, lhal ol a liaison be- lween lhe lacully and lhe sludenl body, and should encourage lhe sludenls lo use lhe Sludenl Council box more lreguenlly and lo beller purpose. Spar Photo Contest FIRST PRIZE Won by Ted Koch This year, the SPAR statt sponsored the tirst photography contest ever conducted at the Academy. The purpose ot this con- test was to encourage photography among the student body and to obtain interesting intormal shots ot school lite. Martin Field, statt photographer, directed the contest and was on hand to give advice to the aspiring student photographers, In addi- tion to the appeal ot the slcill itselt, there were thirty-tive dollars in prizes to stimulate interest in the contest. Each month, the best picture entered that month appeared in the Now and Then, and the luclcy winner received tive dollars. From these monthly winners, the two best pictures were chosen to appear on this page, the winner receiv- ing another ten dollars, and the runner-up, tive dollars. The pictures were iudged on the basis ot originality, composition, and representation ot school lite. Our thanlcs go to Ivlr. and Mrs. Everett Kroeger who lcindly consented to iudge the contest, and several down-town photography stores, without whose co-operation the contest could not have succeeded. SECOND PRIZE Won by Franlclin Briese Page eighty Glee Club Top row: R, Collins, Frenzel, PoTTle, F, Driscoll, STrand, F. HilTon, R, Driscoll, T, R, O'Brien, Wood, Knapp, Raudenbush, Wallace, LangTord, Blaul, Second row: Quigley, L. Hauser, T. HilTon, A, Pryor, Dahlin, Alexander, V. Hauser, P, French, Kemper, lvlonick, A. lvlairs, D. Bagley, Swanson. Third row: Ramaley, MaTTson, R, Pryor, R, Bacon, Holman, J, ComTorT, E. Dean. Emerson, J. Budd, D. Bacon. Merrill, Cook, STevenson, BoHom row: C. Hauser, Chapin, W. RiTchie, ScoTT, Briggs, C. ComTorT, Flinn, Connor, T, G, O'Brien, Rupert Busher, L, Klein, ReiTz, J, MilTon, Cross. AT piano: W, Collins. Ever since lvlr. Wilkinson Took over The Glee Club in I947, iT has proved To be an organizaTion oT which The Academy is in- deed proud. One oT The disTinguishing characTerisTics oT This group is iTs reper- Toire, which lvlr. Wilkinson has liTTed above The level oT The Tolk song To The poinT where iT boasTs a varieTy oT good music. The Glee Club opened iTs season vviTh a perTormance aT The annual FaTher's and lVloTher's Dinner on November Io. This program included SancTus , by BorTnian- sky, lnTelice e Tu credevi , Trom Ernani by Verdi, and Voi che sapeTe Trom MozarT's The Marriage of Figaro, The laTTer by The Lower School Glee Club. AT iTs annual concerT aT C5illeTTe HospiTal Tor crippled paul Wlwqikgmnl Dg,ec+,,, children, The choral group repeaTed This Page eighTy-eighT program wiTh The addiTion oT a negro spiriT- ual, LisTen To The Lambs , by The A Cap- pella Group, and a ScoTch Tollc song, by The Lower School Glee Club. On February 2, The Glee Club perTormed Tor The TirsT Time aT l-lumboldT Fligh School, singing a Swed- ish Toll4 song, Prepare The Way To Zion , The air Q lvly Darling , Trom Pergolesi's The Music lvlasTer, The canon, Old Abram Brown , by BriTTen, and an impressive Trio, Qual voluTTa , Trom Verdi's l Lombardi. The big concerT oT The year was The Third Annual ConcerT wiTh The SummiT School Glee Club. AT This concerT, The proceeds oT which wenT To The Two school annuals, The Glee Club sang mosT oT iTs reperToire plus Two selecTions by The combined Glee Clubs, a group consisTing oT nearly Two hundred voices. These were a Tour-parT chorus, From The realm oT souls deparTed , Trom Gluclcs Orpheus, and The dueT Wir gehn nun, wo der Dudelsaclc' by Bach. A shorT perTormance on April I8, Ac- TiviTies lNlighT , and The usual perTormance Russ Collins, AccompanisT aT Prize Spealcing, concluded a very success- Tul Glee Club season, which was characTer- ized by The group's amazingly large mem- bership oT nineTy-eighT and iTs excellenT gualiTy. Lower School Glee Club Top row: Harris, Pederson, McCully, Quick, Ameluxen, WaTz, Rapp, T. l-lolmes, l-Tubbs, F. Plowman, Fisher. Middle row: Lewis, P T J lvl B g Abb T R'T hie Sommers Nash l-lansTein Fobes C Ward BoTTom row J aTTerson, ,lvlears, , ears, von er en, e, . ic l T 1 . . . . . lvlairs, Slade, Farnham, RaTigan, PlaTT, l-loTchlciss, l-luse, Blake, Roe, T, lvlilTon, lvl, Parish, Kenyon. AT piano: Chapin. Page eighTy-nine Su e Danielson and Charlie Wood sii one ou! Page ninety. Decoraiions: Af fer Christmas Dance ine Cnrisirnas Dance wnicn is ine annual barfy given by ine scnooi boilw for The re- iurning alumni and for ine pre-seni upper- Ciassrnen, iooic biace on Thursday evening, December QI. Preseni were l55 graduaies wno cnecked in af Roorn li and neariy 70 sfudenis wiin Tneir daies. ine nnusio was broyioeo by Pefcy i-iugnes and bis band, wno rendered a Qouoie oi noyeify wrnbersi in addiiion io nie usuai ofano o? irnooin dancing nnusiQ.i3urffi1ei' en eeiaiafnnnefii was broyioeo by We fesoonoing fendiiion of Cnariie Vwfooo Drone ang Bogie N ,o ne Die-Qi-:: n giiiiing oi Vic HV , Q Corof ang i' -auicfi CVCHCQ Soiiiafi i.-:bo Vonoaineo on' oaunied by ine snouidei' neigki ine deo ofaiionsi and keoi fine' in ooise inieriefence. oefsoife ine ine successiui even' ing canoe +o a Ciose ai fnidnigni wiin fbe ifadiiionai singing oi ine Scbooi Song, Mr. Briggs af ine piano Coiiaboraiing wiin Percy and ine bo ys. Decorafions: Before Cozy, Isn'f I+? Angus Mairs plays io an appreciafive audience af In+ermission Wl1a+ lund of a dance isH1a+7 A successful evening as 5 56 a Elisa W Gerrard Beck, DirecTor Dramatic Club WiTh This year's play, Lewis Carrolls Alice in Wonderland, Two Academy Tradi- Tions oT long sTanding underwenT a change. For The TirsT Time, Two evening perTormances were given, on April 6Th and 7Th. The ex- cellence oT The play is made obvious by The enThusiasTic response oT The audience on boTh evenings. The second unusual TeaTure oT This year's play was ThaT Tor The TirsT Time There was a girl in The casT, The leading role oT Alice being played by KaThy Kansas oT Linwood School. AlThough Two TradiTions were esTablished, The TradiTional excellence oT The DramaTic Club was upheld and even sTrengThened. The direcTor, Mr. Beck, Turned ouT one oT The besT plays ever produced here. Under his guidance, The acTors broughT ouT The subTle humor and hidden meaning oT The play To The TullesT exTenT. Special crediT musT be given To Ed Emerson and Wally RiTchie, who played The WhiTe and Red Queens R r . Merrill, L. Hauser, Chapin, Mayo, Dahlin, Field, P. French, F. l-lilTon, PoTTle, Kemper, R, Driscoll. Fronf row: Kansas, W. R O'Brien, T. G. O'Brien, De-CosTer, Shapiro, J. Budd. P g neTy-Two J- ,gw gj 'sv H ' fx? i X 5 -r Rear row: Kansas, Slade. Anderegg, Briese, Morgan, Frohlicher, Cross, Chapin, W. Rilchie, Spilhaus, R. French, Knapp, Dean, l-laslings, Eeadie. Fronf row: Quigley, Raudenloush, lvlallson, Kalhy Kansas, F. Driscoll, Wallace. respeclively, and also lo Bruce Kemper and music and unusual lighling, was lhal lhe his slage crew lor lheir eflicienl and noise- audiences were complelely salisliecl, and less scene changing. I+ can cerlrainly be saicl lell lhal They had Their money's worlh ol lhal Jrhe resull of goool acling ancl direcling, enlerlainmenl. l'l'hal's saying a lol in Jrhese clever slaging, ancl special ellecls, such as limesll Polfle and Shapiro lin horsel, R. Collins, P. French, Emerson R. French. Page ninely-lhree At the Academy Almost Everybody Reads the NOW and THEN 35 fl Top row: I.. Hauser, Connor, Kemper, T. R. OBrien. BoTTom row: T, G. O'Brien, H. Klein, Wood, Monick, W. Schrader. Yes, aT The Academy nearly everybody reads The Now and Then. ITS superior news coverage has gained iT wide recogniTion and increased readership, now well over The 200 mark. BoTh LiTe and The ATlanTic MonTh- ly have hailed iT as one oT The leading papers oT This cenTury. This conTidence cerTainly is noT misplaced. The sTaTT was headed This year by Charlie Wood as EdiTor, Bruce lvlonick as Business Manager, Bill Schrader as SporTs EdiTor, and Hugh Klein and Leo Hauser headed The Ad- verTising STaTT oT Tomy and Terry O'Brien and Bruce Kemper. Terry Connor was The slighTly overworked CirculaTion Manager, whose Thankless iob iT was To mail ouT The paper To a greaT number oT diTTerenT schools and subscribers. Through The eTTorTs oT The AdverTising STaTT, under The prodding oT lvlonick, more Than enough money was col- lecTed, and The Now and Then acTually clear- ed close To 5200. Page nineTy-Tour Besides making money, The paper also ran up several oTher remarkable achieve- menTs. The paper was puT ouT This year on a regular schedule, and Two more issues were puT ouT Than usual. Also The new sTaTT, headed by co-ediTors Torn lV1aTTson and Jim Wallace, have inTroduced a new handier- sized paper which improves The looks oT The sheeT no end. Various oTher new ideas are planned. The paper Took an acTive parT in school acTiviTies, sponsoring a dance and a liTerary conTesT as well as helping To pro- moTe The SPAR phoTo conTesT. OTher TirsTs included a special ChrisTrnas Dance issue and inTerviews wiTh various Tarnous person- aliTies such as Connie Mack and Paul-l-lenri Spaak. The new sTaTT will undoubTedly dis- card some Things and add oThers, bul will always keep in mind The Now and Then's policy oT examining, and someTimes criTi- cizing, The school in order To improve iT. At The Acodemy Almost Nobody Reads The SPAR lrregardless oT The TaceTious remark prinT- ed above, The SPAR is a well-enTrenched parT oT Academy liTe. AT The beginning oT each year, a handTul oT happily ignoranT seniors plunges enThusiasTically inTo The iob oT producing The yearbook. AT The end oT each year, The same boys emerge, Tired and wizened, buT vicTorious. On June I, or ThereabouTs, They gaze wiTh pride on The producT oT all Their labors, and somehow They realize The value To Themselves oT Their underTaking. Yes, There is no misTake abouT The TacT ThaT iT requires plenTy oT hard work on The parT oT every member oT The sTaTT in order To bring The school annual inTo realiTy, buT The value oT Their experience is im- measurable. By The Time The iob is over, nearly every member oT The sTaTT has par- TicipaTed in The ad soliciTing, and This rela- Tionship wiTh The Twin CiTy businessmen gives Them invaluable experience in dealing wiTh oTher people. This also is True oT The relaTionship beTween The yearbook sTaTT and The prinTer, The engraver, and The book- binder, all oT whom play an inTegral parT in puTTing ouT The annual. IT is becoming a yearly evenT ThaT each sTaTT aTTend The annual lNlaTional ScholasTic Press AssociaTion's Chicago conTerence dur- ing The Thanksgiving holidays. Besides The delegaTes' having a loT oT Tun, ideas are ex- changed, annuals are viewed, and lecTures are given by yearbook experTs. ln addiTion To The indirecT values which arise Trom The Task oT producing The annual, There is a real saTisTacTion in a iob well done. LasT year, Jim Barnes and his able crew assembled a SPAR which received a naTional raTing oT FirsT Class, iusT one level below The Top. We oT This year's sTaTT believe ThaT The year- book is well worTh The Trouble and Time which iT Takes To creaTe iT. mah my Top row: Field, W. RiTchie, l-l. Klein, Ruperf, Emerson. BoH'om row: STrand, DeCosTer, R. Driscoll, R. Collins. Page nineTy-Tive This could easily be called The end oT our yearbook. However, Tor Two reasons This is noT The end oT The book buT The beginning. FirsT, This is The beginning because The Tollowing pages, which were given by Triends oT The Academy, made The publishing oT This annual possible. Second, in a broader sense oT The word, This is The beginning oT our yearbook because The hopes and TorecasTs which we have made in our book can only be TulTilled in The TuTure. This page is reserved for salutations and signatures. of graduates and classmen of the St. Paul Academy BY I Y WAIJURF PAPER PRODUCTS C0 Whose business is the study and development of good Packing P f CCDMPLIMENTS Republic Hudson GF I. Kline Oldsmobile O The Volume Vendor 543 S+. Pe+er GA. 7446 N ATULATIONS Z ani CO GR M01 from your phofographer . . . I-4 O U S E O F B EA U T Y Disiribuiors Scimf Paul, Minnesofa C Same!!! Kfzaeqoz 354 Cedar S+ree+ ANY STYLE HAIRCUT 5 I .00 Wm. HAMM, Jr. W. H. LANG P q efy-eiqhf What do you think of Mr. Sporer's Practical Jokes? QQMPLIMENTS OF TWIN CITY BRICK CUMPANY Shift to COMPLIMENTS A ff, .1,, , QF , Malmon Pontiac -f?9?!AZ'!???I'f .gi Everyone Eats at the Iqmgg DQ-V-id CQ, INCORPORATED Makers o'F Q U A L I T Y LORD JAMES SPORTS WEAR l27 Easi' Nin+l'1 S+ree+ CAFETERIA e. J. DRUCK Snelling and Van Buren HARRY SHAPIRO JURAN 8: MUODY o Municipal Bonds o SAINT PAUL MINNESOTA Pg hdd Here's what you really want the family car to be . . . A BUICK 6- PASSENGER with . RADIO ' UNDERSEAT HEATERS ' UNDEITSEAL P TURNING LIGHTS P DELUXE SAFETY STEERING WHEEL 5 DEFROSTERS 5 PORCELAINIZE THIS COMPLETE PACKAGE FOR ONLY . . DELIVERED sr. PAUL BUICK gomrauv Paqe one Hu COMPLIMENTS OF American Hoist 81 Derrick A new masler came +o +he Academy +his year-Dr. lv1i+hralog Ameluxen, who as+ounded +he malhemafical world by his ileralive solufion of The frequency equalion. l-lere we see him explaining The inlregalion of lelrahedrons. Said Dr. Ameluxen: lf Jrhe inlerseclion of a hyperbolic paraboloid wi+h a non-simple polyhedron of genus q is proiecfed on a warped surface, lhen The limilr of 'rhe poly- nomial which re-presen+s 'rhe resulfing curve may be expressed as a conlinued 'frac+ion. COMPLIMENTS OF STAR PRAIRIE TROUT FARMS STAR PRAIRIE, WISCONSIN Page one hundred fhree P q one hundred iour I-I. BOCKSTEUCK COMPANY O jewelers and Silversmiths O 69 East Sixth Sireei PHONE CEDAR 0537 WM. BAUMEISTER CONSTRUCTION CO. GENERAL CONTRACTORS O 624 HAMM BLDG ST. PAUL 2, MINN DEPENDABLE! You have an independent, unfailing fuel supply with THE ORIGINAL BOTTLED GAS glean, quick economical for ooking o ater Heating Q Refrigeration n Home Heating Harnld E. w00d 8 NORTHWESTERN BLAUGAS CO. ,..,i',1:.'i'L :::,'Z1.',..,.. Company CALL NEstor 1328 UN DISPLAY! We have wonderful new . gas appliances for BLAU GAS THE ORIGINAL BOTTLED GAS Roper Gas Ranges Servel Gas Refrigerators Coleman Gas Water Heaters EsIablished1911 791 Hampden Ave., St. Paul 4 CALL Nistor 'I328 NORTHWESTERN llAUGAS INVESTMENT SECURITIES First National Bank Building Sctint Paul I, Minnesota y , dm IM, lffJJlowo't7Fw,e,7 Perhaps you've thought of Yellowstone as the land of frolicking bears and frothing geysers. lt is. But it's also the home ofthe spectacular Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, pictured here . . . of an unspoiled wilderness . . . rugged peaks . . . sparkling trout streams. Want to add extra enjoyment to your Yellowstone trip this summer? Ask your 7irai:eIAgent to route you via the Streamlined North Coast lar , Limited. Choose from three entrances to the Park... Gardiner, Cody, or the thrilling Red Lodge High Road YEILUWSTUIIE trip over the Beartooth Rockies. h:gf 'il 'W FREE YELLOWSTONE BOOKLET! Write now fo: r G. W. RODINE, Northern Pacific Railway, Sf. Paul l, Minn. MY! X GH:- O 9 NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY Z 1 . '- as - . ' mils .Maz45ZIecZ'dMf,M'zM4wZ' I EIOWSTQNE 'HAWK o+g. .i'fQ'Th 1'l' Page CQMPLIMENTS OF CORNING DONOHUE Inc. G R A N D CGMPLIMENTS C L E A N E R S QF . Merrill, Lynch, Pierce Fenner CX Beane 644 Grand Avenue Tradirional Cleaners lo Where the Discerning Buyer Finds QUALITY and VARIETY CROCUS HILL FIN1 9 BRAND O Grand Avenue Grocery and Meats 'fr WH SWE at ' ' NEY 794-796 Grand Ave. DA. 6501 MARSH 81 McLennan VY-12121 FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. ST. PAITL, XIINN. I N S U R A N 0 E Chicago New Yorl: San Francisco Defroif Washingion Pifrsburgh Minneapolis Bosion Buffalo Cleveland Columbus Indianapolis Milwaukee Dulufh S+. Paul S+. Louis Los Angeles Phoenix Seaifle Porfland Vancouver Monfreal Havana London P qe one hundred six I . BETWEEN 7TH 81 8TH ON WABASHA IN ST. PAUL ,E Qawczx- W 4 41 SEVENTH STREET W cwms - lk. . NEAR ROBERT -Jf+-- Agni ! -f-' in X X X X -- I - 1 1' I I' I I ' I. I I ROBERT STREET -9 JI I I I II E'I -ill' E ll NEXT TO FIRST MVME EL A I .J :T-' NATIONAL BANK 'T A -, , W :gif ..-.i'.i'T '+Niv,X ,LI-L ,. .Y.-- Y ' ' WW' I Vt, I f I NINTH STREET CQ I I I I I I I I NEXT TO MEDICAL if T QTZDIEZMD I, ARTS BUILDING In I I I I I SEVENTH STREET I ' ,,X 41 BETWEEN NICOLLET I I I AND HENNEPIN IN MINNEAPOLIS I I N E-Lx If L ' A if E f Q..-0 I ,PLMCEX 90' f , I X- ---YV- E 'XXX 7111515 Ill I I I I EEEE II I I I L53 I I I i 4 --E. I -- ,l: ':.a E' DEDEE A I-IENNEPIN AT LAKE LAKE STREET AT NICOLLET Page one Hundred seven DONNAY-REITZ INC gamma! Qwbzaotafza 1596 SELBY AVENUE 0 ML7711 SAINT PAUL 4, MINNESOTA Page one Hundred eiqlwf For Men of Extinction E., . . . . Lord Dalvert 's Dr, Marowe Wiiiisii-disiinzguisned ooianisi who nas fravcicd an over inc worid in his Scarnn for new and unusua pianrs. Shown Here are some oi inc planis he discovered in Quier Monqoiia, He has iusi cornpieied a rnarnrnoin scieniiiic Treaiise enriried, Mpiiyaiiiairic Treairneni oi Diseasea in Edqpianif' iBubLvieday, iufO.i Wny have so rnany iound rneir iavoriie drink is a beH'er drink when i+'s made wiin Lord Daiverfs niiric acid? Simpiy because no oiner acid can rnaicii Lord Daiverrs unique iiavor and disrinciive iigiiine-ss. For, oi aii ine miiiions oi gaiions we disiiil, oniy ine very cnoicesi' are ser aside for Lord Dalveri . . . cusrom blended for immoderaie men who appreciare ine iinesi. For an experience you wiii never iorgei, fry Lord Daiveri ionigiii. Your quesfs wi!! cornpiirneni your cnoice. Page vne iiundred nin. E A T Fabricated Structural C e Steel l Quality Chekd 0 ICE CREAM Saint Paul Structural Steel COG tor an added treat try l62 York Avenue ROYAL CRESCENT CE, 1767 Ice Cream Compliments of NORTH WESTERN-HANNA FUEL COMPANY 0 Since '7l 0 GA. 3712 28 E. Sth St. P hdd Enjoy more home comfort . . wifA gaziam Yfuoofanvl Wu-woo! Balsam-Wool guaranteed insulation helps make your rooms more com- fortable while it cuts fuel bills. V, Pre-decorated Nu-W'ood Tile, Plank and Panels quiet noise and insulate as they build new or old hoxnes. When building or relnodeling let Balsam-W'ool and Nu-VI ood nlake your home more enjoyable. ' 4 , ' 1- lk? f SULD THROUGH LUMBER DEALERS ONLY Ist NATIONAL BANK BUILDING nov INT PAUL . MINNESOTA woon CONVERSION comPANY fr s A Page one hundred eleven CHARLES W. SEXTON COMPANY INSURANCE W. 1580 First National Bank Building, St. Paul, Minnesota MINNEAPOLIS - NEW YORK, N. Y. - PORTLAND, OREGON - SAINT PAUL MINNESOTA K K X COMPLIMENTS R. C. SWANSON Camera Sales 8: Service Gus Schwartz and Bruce Monick Buy Their Fishing TacI:Ie af 321 St. Peter Street GOKEY COMPANY GA- 6268 SPECIAL SPORTING EQUIPMENT 94 E. 4th S+. St. Paul CENTRAL MOTOR CO. An Entire Block on University Avenue Complete One Stop Service STUQEXBIQKER 225 University Avenue STUSDUEQQQKER TRUCKS ST. PAUL 3, MINN. SERVICE P q e hundred iwelve C A T H C A R T 8: T MAXFIELD, Inc T fEstab1ished in 1886j CASU IN S U RA N CE EAL ESTATE SU ANAGEMENT OF P o ' d SU o S I A B d CQNGRATULATICDNS . . . AND BEST WISHES . , DAWSQN-PATTERSCDN Printersx Inc. W. A. LANG, Inc. I N s U III A N C E ST. PAUL FIRE AND MARINE BUILDING l20 W. Six+l1 S+ree1' CEdar 3724 S+. Paul, Minn. IEW Soilax CGMPLIMENTS fwggfflfiffjfg HMHW 7mWMWm ' LAMPERT LUMBER CO. lgmmox I. E. HANSTEIN Insurance Co' CCMPIIMENIS OF I50I Pioneer Bldg. S+. Paul, Minn. CE3794 A COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE LACTUNA INCORPORATED Manufacturers of High Grade Brushes sr PAUL 1, MINNESOTA STAGGERED SEATING FOR BETTER VISION SI. IIIUIS PARK IHEIIIER TWIN CITIES' LEADING SUBURBAN THEATER FIVE MINUTES WEST OF LAKE AND HENNEPIN O 45,360 INCH SCREEN O AMPLE FREE PARKING O PERFECT PROJECTION O COMFORTABLY AIR CONDITIONED O SMOKING LOGES I COURTEOUS SERVICE Paqe one bundre d OUR BEST WISHES FOR YOUR CONTINUED P R O G R E S S K L E N sum mnxfrs, mc. Serves YOU in your Neighborhood THE HOME OF FINE P I A N O S HADDORFF BUSH AND GERTS GULBRANSEN KIMBALL BODINE PIANO CO. 25 E. 6th Sr. N. W. Largest Dealers Whot's that I smell coming from the Lab? Gongfzafulafions fo flue ' Glass 06 1951 B. W. HARRIS MFG. CO. QQMPLIMENTS OF H 6. S COMPANY Wholesale Toiletries and Cosmetics K nbro -- thc finest in athletic cquipment, and I hp Towle and .lim Barnes know where to 2906 Clinton Avgnue South g 1 xr. . , MINNEAPOLIS KENNIQDX BROS, ARMS CO. BRANDTJEN 8: KLUGE, Inc. S.W. Corner Galtier at Como St. Paul 3, Minnesota P q hundred eiqlwfeem .. ' PZTSN- if ,,,, ,, 21 Power Mower NATIONAL MOWER CU. 839 CromweII Avenue ST. PAUL 4, MINNESOTA fiifx 38 Sickle Bor Mower 466' i - sz ff! I , 2: .X N-f .I 0 ' ! n ' pf BUSINESS TRAINING A PracIIcaI AsseI DAY AND EVENING CLASSES I d dull Inst t St t Any Mcnnday All B S bl I d OII M Ilines F PI I S B I I F 'IIIIes AI GI T g F B II nn 63 E. P I SIII SI. CEdar near 5333 Cedar SI. PRACTICAL BUSINESS SCHOOL The Minnesota Mutual iIe Insurance ompany The Victor-Winter Agency HOME OFFICE AGENCY H. B. VICTOR N. F. WINTER General AgenIs 156 E. 6th Street Paqe one Iwund d I HARCLD M. SCHWARTZ N. P. LANGFORD O . COMMERCIAL FINANCING LIFE INSURANCE Q 400 Guardian Bldg' 1603 University Avenue - Room 204 ST' PAUL if MINN- NEstor 7546 St. Paul W4, Minn. CQMPLIMENTS of Z. WILLARD FINBERG, C.L.U. Agency Manager The Great-West Life Assurance Co. St. Paul, Minnesot COMPLIMENTS OF ZWERENZ'S WHITE BEAR DRUG CO. Ph ne 380 - White Bear Lake, Minn. Compliments Star Launderers and Cleaners Dale 6551 839 University Ave. P hdd fx lx-' ' . A55 '.-- gf. ,X M 6,ff'!u'FX 'wiixfi-,Q 2 f Ax 1 01 ops QW H5 1 i fl 511 F537 aggmm 'l3 'f'M.f' -F W 1 T' -V , Y-X ,fzisyfiegyff A e A L.-'V q!,,, Young Men Approve of Our Famous AUTHENTIC CAMPUS STYLED CLOTHES Here at Rothschild's you can be assured you are getting the very latest, the very best in style- quality and value. Make our fourth floor your headquarters for the best for young men FOURTH FLOOR MAURICE L. ROTHSCHILD 81 CO. Robert at Seventh Pg hddt ty McGOVYAN'S za W. Sth STREET 799 GRAND AVE. CRUSHED RCDCK Pon TOW2754 DRIVEWAYS tJli:g'UA Imgimmi BUILDING STONE FOR WALLS, WALKS, PLUMBING 8 HEATING FIREPLACES AND HQUSE VENEERS Appliances Gas Heafing I' L. CO' IIIO Payne Avenue ST. PAUL, MINN. Saini Paul I, Minn. Office: Phone GA. 4303 Res.: DA. 4267 E bl' h d 1 Sta is e 910 Leonard I. iohnson Flowers for All Occasions ARCHITECT Florists Telegraph Delivery 2, 1247 Grand Ave. DE sow asses 217 Hamm Building CRANE CU. OF MINNESOTA BROADWAY AT FIFTH STREET St. Paul. Minnesota VISIT OUR SHOWROOM Plumbing Heafing Wafer Sysiems Apex Dishwashers Wa+er Sofieners Air Condifioning Equipmeni Pipe, Valves and Fi'I'+ings Pg iwddf Did you get .0OOO0000l? QS QQQSQ' Nwfxizgxxi 909 Johnson Parkway Best Wishes to the Class of 1951 Kalman 8: Company, Inc. I Investment Securities I Endicott Building McKnight Building SAINT PAUL I MINNEAPOLIS I P hdd Iw CGMPLIMENTS CALDWELL PHILLIPS CO. GF 0 W. F. PCIHGTSOTI DSTILCI1 E-1310 Ist Natl. Bank Bldg. SUDDHQS ST. PAUL 1, MINN. William Yungbauer 6 Sons There's e MATERIAL difference HNCORPORATEDP FURNITURE INTERIOR ' MAKERS DECORATIONS llgmpland llgmher Qljompanq 181 West Fourth Street at Exchange M9 E 8+h a+ Lafayelde Road SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA cedar 8531 To the Class ot '51 . . . The Saint Paul Companies etter their congratulations . . . And extend their best Wishes for the future to you, the graduates ot '51 . . . xt NRE AND x-qw M4049 .5 H I ft , ax. 0 S ,.,...e 'e-:-- 3 5' eIee I fl ,- S A,:,: I , ,,,,,. sluiipgwxt E '4 ,MN I S52 E a 'e '21: ::' -fee--. . , ' lu The St. Paul Companies -9 s . . 4' -N Sound Protecuon Against Loss '74, GQ' Q60 QQ3' 'S T. PAUL- P q one hundred twenty-tour Mullery Paper Box Co. Folding and Setup Paper Boxes Printing and Die Cutting Fibre Cans, Tubes and Cores Metal and Fibre Cans O DUST GUNS and SPECIALTY ITEMS COMPLIMENTS OF NORTHERN MALLEABLE IRON COMPANY M fffam-rw! Page one hundred + fy? Gd vw cook Look X caolas Robert at Sixth Billiard Team There was an air oT Tenseness and expecTancy in The darlc smolce-Tilled room. There were only Three Tigures visible, whose ghosTly Tigures, in The lighT oT a single well-shaded ceiling TixTure, were casT on a wide expanse oT green, The mosT imporTanT such area since The Tield oT l-lasTings. ATTer one's eyes became accusTomed To The sTiTling unwholesome aTmosphere, one could discern one Tigure, who was nervously and apprehensively awaiTing The ouTf come oT The shoT, anoTher, whose nose seemed To be rooTing in The lush green surTace, waTching The shoT Trom a close vanTage poinT, and a Third, whose body was conTorTed inTo The agonizingly painTul posiTion expedienT To The successTul execuTion oT The leTT english, semi-masse, sTraighT-rail, reverse spin, Torce Tollow, double carom, iump shoT, which he was aTTempTing To malce. This seemingly impos- sible TeTe would decide The conTesT. The maTch, being sTaged beTween Willie Sloppy and Willie Mascara Tor The undispuTed world's cue-ball weighT championship, was Tied aT 999,999,999,999,999,- 999,999,999,999,99'? billiards a piece. This was The deciding shoTl A gleam oT deTiance shone in Sloppy's sunlcen, shoclcingly pinlc pupiled eyes, as he liTTed his slender insTrumenT oT desTrucTion. WiTh a superhuman eTTorT, he sTeadied his hand, and execuTed The shoT. The cliclc oT The TirsT Two balls sounded deaTening in The eerie, Tense silence which pervaded The room. All eyes were Tocused on The cue-ball which rolled lazily, buT maiesTically, Toward The Third ball only To sTop a bare guarTer inch shorT oT iTs desTinaTion. The end had come. Sloppy's deiecTed, demoralized, deaThlil4e Tigure was seen To sTumble Trom The circle oT enlighTene menT inTo a darlcness more Toreboding Than The Middle Ages. T-lere we have porTrayed one oT The unsung heroes who have degraded billiards inTo The low posiTion which iT holds Today. This was one oT The Thousands oT bums who are billiard enThusiasTs. Page one hundred TwenTy-seven Compliments of a Friend Good Luck, Grads! o 50,000 Best Wishes trom the Staff ot the NorthWest's Leading Radio Station. 50,000 N B C Watts Attiliate Clear K S T P in the Channel Twin Cities 0 KSTP-TV KSTP-PM Publishers ot THEEEQEARMER 260,000 Subscribers inthe Upper Midwest Home ot the ITASCA PRESS Printing.. Fine quality printing . . . color reproduction . . . catalogs . . . sales promotion material . . . business torms . . . stationery . . . displays . . . books . . . package inserts . . . magazines . . . house organs . . . complete mailing service. Geared to high- speed, large-volume production, yet no job too small to get skilled personal service. Consult with us tor a combination ot quality, tast delivery, economy, and helptul service. Webb Publishina Company Printing Division TENTH AND MINNESOTA STREETS, ST. PAUL 2, MINN. PHONES: ST. PAUL, CE. 4I4l . MINNEAPOLIS, NE. 7336 P Q one hundred twenty-eight , H MW' -v WWF' QQ f . J.-W A W ss ..., - ..., .. f -. M . . .. ' f ' 3 4,5 - ' , , Ma ak Jr: V. 5 b '. my ,. w rt- w esQs's ,:- p ,X , , - ,gn , , .,,,,.fr5:a:::ag5:4 Wx, 1 ., prev: ., V. ,. 1, ' Q , f 1' 4 H Wg? 'assign ,:??-Miwsgs-KW .1-fi-' -::- P az 15 ..:5:5sgge5a51g1::5ega: Q 'sg ' kia 1 - ' s- if ' ' ,f . Q V V f ' 9 Q fi ef is ,F-if was as 2.2 T' A S' :V f , 7 . ' . ,f N ' , . Sf sr? 32' , ..M........ .fm.,.t.f . ,.,..w,.,.f -eslaa., Fonssr use wl1Hou1 ABUSE The above picture shows several mature Ponderosa Pine trees' that have been killed by pine beetles. It illustrates one of nature's ways of harvest- ing the old crop to make Way for the new. Each year nature harvests one-sixth as much timber as man. But timber crops harvested by nature con- tribute nothing to the welfare of the nation. True forest con- servation requires forest use, and forest use without abuse is forest conservation in its finest and most beneficial form. In ever increasing numbers, forest industries are practising true forest conservation. They harvest mature timber and put it to beneficial use while the methods of harvesting are so performed as to provide for the continued growth of tim- ber on the land. We are proud of the con- tribution our forest lands are making toward the well-being of America without undue sacrifice of the future produc- tivity of the forest. wnvnnnnnusnn Page one hundred twenty-nine SI. PAUL HUUSE PURNISHING CU. State, Municipal and , , Stanley Mining Co Corporate Securities '37 E M Shea Mutual Funds! ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA O - 0 Mannheimer-Egan, Inc. ESTABLISHED l93l Ist NATIONAL BANK BLDG. ST. PAUL I MINNESOTA L ESUPEQIQ I QNQ ES CEd 58I7 58I8 MINEM N ERS Compliments of PAPER, CALMENSON 8. COMPANY Iron and Steel Warehouse ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA hddh What do you think of Friday Lunches ? .,,45w,.,,my CQMPLIMENTS CF LIPSCHULTZ BROS. dfh fy Huber+ Whi+e, Jr, shows Phil French and Rudy Driscoll +l'le +ype of merchandise lhaf has made Whi+e's o ular +l'1 SPA men GAS More Sold in St. Paul p p than any other for more +han a quarfer cenfury. independent brand. Isi, Na+'l Bank Bldg eamfzlfimenifi of HARRY K. WOLKOFF DONALD M. WOLKOFF 9 e 1416 Pioneer Building GArfie1d 5357 NEstor 5798 Pg hdd+ hlyl GUULD-NATIUNAL BATTERY UUIVIPANY HAUSER 81 SONS WE TAKE THIS ' QPPQETUNTTY TO CONGRATULATE TEE 5UPP'ie5 ST. PAUL ACADEMY ON TTS 51 T ANNIVERSARY KEMPER MOTORS ConqTc:Ttu1cxtionS, SS-niorS! ST. PAUL TERMINAL WAREHOUSE CO. y-Thr CCDMPLIMENTS QF OLD PECRIA COMPANY, INC. f 740 Washing+on Avenue N. Minneapolis R Citizen's Ice and Fuel CATERING Company COMPANY 600 Selby Avenue ' 0 GRIGGS COOPER 8: COMPANY REMINDING You THAT: H O M E B R A N D on the label means Good Food on the table CQMPLIMENTS OP SCHNEIDER MOTORS INC. Studebaker Sales and Service M Your Downfown Smdebalcer Dealer Le+ serving you be our pleasure I65 PLEASANT AVE. CEdar 2766 - -2 xxvgvvwiyxv WW J A A 1 BOY GH ECW ZX A0 G : W 5 f uni :ily . I A Q , Q7 G gf 1 f will she be ga x .A Sem- 1 riff when she sees ,W I xg ..-2. 'Lhasa Flowers r Af are From- KK 5 2K Qi HOLM A OLSON eww f VJK Z4 ' WWW! 4' f 20 W SQ- st. c:E.7335 Ax, any U . gx?wQ?Tx n . W I S5ll'1t paul g Mmnesot 23 , r Page H d d H1 iyf COMPLIMENTS OF REAY ENGRAVING CO Cedar 8583 Sth Floor Brokerage Bldg. Engravers for The SPAR di
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