South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI)

 - Class of 1932

Page 1 of 174

 

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1932 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 174 of the 1932 volume:

RD 193 2 CARDINAL ANNUAL THE TWENTY-SECOND YEARBOOK PUBLISHED BY THE PUPILS OF SOUTH DIVISION HIGH SCHOOL MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN JUNE, 1932 . ,, ,,,L. ,,,.L, . ,, K,.A .... . . ,w5.,... f W K ff A X 'Q-'wid' . Vw. mr: 1' .Q--ffl A -f - -is-sex N: A A A L R, Y FCDREWORD EVERY window lighted, every door thrown open. A reunion is in lull svving at South Division. Grads ol long ago are strolling leisurely through the corridors. ln the doorway ol A, they pause to remarl4 to each other, H-l-herels the old assemplylll Before the ollice they halt again. HSame old sanctuml Do you rememper...?H With a laugh they pass on to repeat the vvords in all their variations. Gut ol love and respect lor the lamiliar haunts ol our school days, the theme ol this yearhool4 has been built around the intimate corners ol the old school. There is the ollice, austere and lorhidding, to he entered only Hon pusinessn. -l-hen there is the pig stage where vve shivered vvith joyous stage lright, the gym locl4er room, resounding vvith the din ol returning tracl4 men, the nevv Hlittle theatrell in ld, the scene ol all our clup programs and senior meetings, and lastly, the stairvvays and corridors vvhere so many secrets vvere conlided and so much important nevvs exchanged. -l-hese are the places vvith vvhich vve associate the most precious memories ol our youth. EDITORIAL STAFF EDITOR ---- I-IOWARD KASSULKE ASSISTANT EDITOR - - EDWARD I-IEMPEL LITERARY STAFF EDITOR ----- HARRIET OWLEY DEPARTMENTS - - - ARLINE I-IUENNEKENS JANUARY SENIORS - ELEANOR I-IALVORSEN JUNE SENIORS - . DOROTHY THIEL CLUBS - - - . EMILY DETTLAFF SPORTS - - - 2 ELMER ELIAS EDWARD OANAVAN HUMOR A 3 FREDERICK ADLER ROBERT MCCABE ART EDITOR - - - SABINA WACLAWSKI ASSISTANTS: MURIEL GERMANSON, SIDNEY HAM- BLING, JAMES I-IENNINO, ALEXANDRA OBREMSKI. FERN RASMUSSON, FRANK ROVSEK, ALICE SKAR- PINSKI, MAROUERITE SPICUZZA, ELAINE SPONI-IOLZ BUSINESS MANAOER - CLARENCE STEPI-IAN C O N T E N T Administration . The Faculty Departments The Seniors . . .lanuary Class June Class Honors Athletics Clubs . Side Lights . Advertising . ADM l-llc heart of the school-our ohfice. From here the life and activities ol two thousand students are directed. By cloclc, calendar, tele- phone, and typewriter the daily routine is regu- lated. l.ong lines ol ahsentees applying lor re- admission slips, worl4men getting their orders, teachers consulting records, Mr. Thompson preparing lor a broadcast, all transact their business in the shadow ol the ottice cloclc. NISTRATION wwxzgffzfz gfvv :ig f ,134 Xf W 1 . . ., 4.2. f-3:1 hz' . . . , H -mils' a: W -mfs fm., Q3 fa- S X-E Q r' ' YQ ' ki 3 ,Q f 1, S vw X A 11 I 1- 1 x ,yi L . ,,fQ E a fx 5- .M-fggwffai . 1 X 4. 0 1 , Q I 5, I a ' f if 5316 . ,,AZ , .. 'QE ' H WI-IOEVEI2 VCU ARE earnestly entreat you to dispatch your business as soon as possihleaand then depart-unless you come hither lilce another l-lercules-to lend some Friendly assistance-For here will he worlc to employ you and as many as enter this place. ffxldus Manutius had the above inscription on the door of his Work- room in Venice in 1501, This inscription hangs in the inner otficej QW .,., Y --za! rf f L x . 53 ' MQ: up mi.. K .. ,hh --,,,::m:s1e-- - ww -1-'1'fiE?.Q1gRk-21L,,H1t22 ,,.. . , W 'if1w lQz!iife,f. , , CARDINAL ANNUAL I Mr Blddlck Mr. Bergland Mr. Blair Mr Brown Mr. Book Miss Black MR. BIDDICK Mr. Biddick, our new Teacher oT biology, iusT revels in The exciTernenT oT hunTing, and The con- TrasTing TranquiIliTy oT Tishing in some secluded lake. MR. BERGLAND Music gives one a cuITuraI Training ThaT he can- noT receive Trom ofher subiecTs, says Mr. Bergland, who is also inTeresTed in all Types oT aThIeTics. MR. BLAIR AIThough bowling, says Mr. Blair, inTeresTs me as a pasTime, I like oTher sporTs also. I am Tond oT Taking parT in, or seeing, any aThIeTic evenT. MR. BOONE Mr. Boone is all bailed upl l-le likes To Throw big balls down an alley, sock IiTTle balls around The greens, and aTTend balls in his spare momenTs. MISS ALLEN Marshes and swamps inTeresT Miss Allen because They are The naTive haunTs oT biological specimens. Indoors, she enioys reading good books oT hisTory. MISS BARRY ViTamins Tor man and beasT, wiTh special em- phasis on The dieT oT her peT dogs, give Miss Barry much To Think abouT. And The dogs never complain! Mr, Boone Miss Allen Miss Barry Mr. BechToId Miss Barsness Mrs Bernfeld MR. BROWN Yassuhl Yassuhl An all-conference Torward was Mr. Brown when he played Tor good old Franklin College. The Thrill oT The game sTiIl remains Tor him. MR. BOOK C-r-e-a-kl Mr. Book sTeps gingerly in search oT advenTure. EvidenTIy his hikes carry him inTo de- serTed houses, old mills, and oTher spooky places. MISS BLACK Back To naTure is Miss BIack's idea oT culTivaTing a hobby. She insisTs ThaT anyThing connecTed wiTh The greaT ouTdoors simply Thrills her To deaTh. MR. BECI-ITOLD True To his sporTsman's naTure, Mr. BechTold is Tond oT TrouT Tishing. Give him moonIighT and a lake when The Tish are biTing, and he is happy. MISS BARSNESS WiTh her hand on The wheel and her TooT on The gas, Miss Barsness gaily answers The call oT The open road, eagerly searching Tor inTeresTing sighTs. MRS. BERNFELD Paris and Vienna are The ciTies Mrs. Bermceld es- pecially enioyed during her Travels Through Europe. She wishes To visiT Mexico in The near TuTure. I4 CARDINAL ANNUAL Miss Buss Miss Breif Miss Congdon Miss Churchill Mr. Charly Mr. Dunkel MISS BUSS Miss Buss Toils vaIianTly each summer To over- come The arch-Toes of her vegeTable and Tlower gardens, The weeds. I-ler TavoriTe diversion is swimming. i MISS BREIT Up in The air, ThaT is, Trom her ninTh Tloor aparT- menT, Miss BreiT Takes picTures OT Lake Michigan, aeroplanes, sea gulls, and boaTs. A IoTTy hobby! MISS CONGDON ExhilaraTion and acceIeraTion are Two Things Miss Congdon craves while in a boaT. WaTer, in large quanTiTies, supplies The recreaTion ThaT she likes. MISS BRABAND The decisive acTion oT hisTory and The lure of dis- Tance in geography holds The aTTenTion oT Miss Braband, who likes To read Those Types oT IiTeraTure. MISS CAVANAUGI-I We have a Sherlock Holmes in our midsT. Miss Cavanaugh sTaTes ThaT her TavoriTe hobby is read- ing bloody crime sfories or Tales oT creepy mysTery. MISS DeCOU RCY The smell QT grease painT, The glare oT TooTIighTs, and The chaTTer oT nervous acTors add a pIeasanT relish To Miss DeCourcy's work in public speaking. I 5 347121, - 1 -sw f . Miss Braba nd Miss Bradshaw MISS CHURCHILL The gay laughTer and chaTTer of girls are very reTreshing To Miss Churchill, who annually chaper- ones her Shield girls aT Their conTerence aT Army Lake. MR. CI-IARLY Tinkering wiTh Tools and making Things appeal To Mr. Charly. I-le also enioys gardening because iT brings him inTo inTimaTe conTacT wiTh naTure. MR. DUNKEL Herding sheep, riding horseback, and Trapping coyoTes hold a cowboy appeal Tor Mr, Dunkel, who spends all oT his vacaTions on his MonTana ranch. MISS BRADSI-IAW Don'T you Tell a single soul whaT I'm going To say. IT's a secreT-Miss Bradshaw reads and IisTens To mysTery sTories whenever she possibly can. MR. COFFEEN Mr. CoTTeen believes ThaT music haTh charms To sooThe The savage breasT. Thus, when he isn'T coaching The Yannigans, he plays The piano ac- cordion. MISS DURBROW Miss Durbrow apparenTly prefers ancienT man's original means oT Travel-eper pedes. I-ler perTecT day consisTs OT a sTrenuous hike and a swim aTTer- ward. Y Q: E y ,,, , .. if Q ' l K im, 'riff , A if . 1 f il Miss Cavanaugh Miss DeCourcy Mr. CoT'Teen Miss Durbrow CARDINAL ANNUAL . ' ggi 1.2 Miss Davis Mr. Goodrich Miss Foelske Mr I-Ieineman Mr. Hansen Miss I-IaTz MISS DAVIS Miss Davis is someThing oT an inTerior decoraTor in her spare Time, Tor she loves To malce hoolced rugs and TapesTries wiTh which To beauTiTy her home. MR. GOODRICI-I The soIemniTy oT The ToresT and The music oT The pines and naTure in The rough are equally appeale ing To Mr. Goodrich, our band and orchesTra leader. MISS FOELSKE A rising curTain, a lighTed sTage, and Then The play wiTh iTs unToIdmenT oT ploT and characTer- all These are The breaTh oT liTe To Miss Foelslce. MISS GEIL Even speech Teachers have Their big momenTsl Miss Geil would don overalls and spend her spare momenTs building unique sTage seTs and painTing TIaTs. MISS GEORGE To gaTher as many anTiques as possible is Miss George's aim. She also enioys playing goIT and baskeTball, making rugs, and lisTening To The opera. MRS. DICKINSON An ardenT TooTbalI and baslceTball Tan is Mrs. Diclcinson. She is one oT The Tew women who Icnow The diTTerence beTween a punT, a pass, and a Touch- down. Al Miss Geil Miss George Mrs Dickinson Miss T-Iampel Miss Feeney Mr GusTaTson MR. I-IEINEMAN Surely iT is To be expecTed ThaT Mr. I-Teineman lilces all Torms oT aThleTics, buT who would suspecT him oT cuITivaTing a garden oT beauTiTul Tlowers? MR. HANSEN The old maxim, There is no place like home, holds no TruTh Tor This Teacher. Time permiTTing, he would Traverse This globe Trom ocean To ocean. MISS I'-IATZ MoToringl WhaT joy! declares Miss I-IaTz. Dur- ing her leisure Time, This is iusT one means oT sa'Tis- Tying her ardenT desire To Travel Tar and near. MISS I-IAMPEI. VVas solIIs? And, beTore you can answer, she is again absorbed in German hisTory. All oT This comes oT Miss I-Iampel's having been educaTed in Berlin. MISS FEENEY Classical music TascinaTes Miss Feeney. She oTTen aTTends concerTs To lisTen To The maiesTic sTrains oT a Rachmaninohf or BeeThoven composiTion. MR. GUSTAFSON Mr. GusTaTson iuggles Tiguresl Nol Nol I-Ie's noT The miserly presidenT oT a corporaTion or a rail- road buT The head boolclqeeper aT SouTh Division. I 6 CARDINAL ANNUAL Mr Hannann Miss Hughes Miss Kleinheinz Mr Mc6arTy Miss Lehmann Mr. LiTTIe MR. HAMANN Mr. I-Iamann, our EsperanTisT, says EsperanTo esTas Ia neuTraIa helpa Iingvo de la TuTa monde lis The neuTral help language oT The whole worldl. MISS HUGHES VersaTiIiTy is The rnoTTo of Miss I-Iughes, who is inTeresTed in numerous Things, alThough she obTains rnosT enioymenT Trorn good plays, books, and music. MISS KLEINHEINZ Up norTh, where The ouT-oT-doors oTTers so many new inTeresTs, Miss Kleinheinz geTs pleasure Trom Tramping in The woods and exploring hidden places. MRS. HINTZ Mrs. I-IinTz simply can'T resisT a smooTh dance Tloor and a swaying walTz. Besides enioying danc- ing, she deIighTs in seeing a speedy, daring, auTo race. MR. HANNEMAN Champ! This TiTle disTinguishes our versaTile business manager,-Mr. I-Ianneman. I-Ie is The own- er oT several silver Trophies Tor golT and bowling. MR. KEITHLEY The whack oT a Two hundred yard drive in golT or The crash OT a sTrike in bowling-boTh sounds Thrill Mr. KeiThIey, our new commercial Teacher. I 7 Mrs. HinTz Mr, I-Iannernan Mr KelThIey Miss LockharT Miss Ludwig Miss Jones MR. McGARTY lndusTrial research work inTeresTs Mr. McGarTy. During a recenT European Tour, he aTTended indus- Trial meeTings in London and aT The UniversiTy oT Paris. MISS LEHMANN I hope some clay To drive a golT ball over Two hundred yards, says Miss Lehmann. Besides goIT, she enjoys The sTudy oT ancienT glassware and china. MR. LITTLE Camping in The wilds or escaping The madding crowd -wesT as Tar as YeIlowsTone and easT as Tar as Niagara Falls-Those are Mr. LiTTle's hobbies. MISS LOCKHART Miss LockharT finds her greaTesT inTeresT in sTudy- ing The acTions oT The average boy and girl. No doubT, her classes aTTord her a wealTh oT maTeriaI. MISS LUDWI6 Reading hisTorical novels graTiTies Miss Ludwig's longing Tor diversion aTTer working hours, probably because she maiored in hisTory aT college. MISS JONES We have in our midsT a bonnie TarmereTTe, When noT Teaching, Miss Jones Tinds greaT pleasure in milking cows. piTching hay, and Threshing grain. CARDINAL ANNUAL Mr Learned Miss McGaf'fey Mr. Morsfad Miss Marhenne Miss Nagle Miss O'Brien MR. LEARNED Splash! This is Mr. Learned indulging in his lavorile sporl, surf-riding. Everyone cannol' adapl himself quile so easily, much less a bookkeeper. MISS MCGAFFEY Miss McGaI:Iey chooses swimming as her favo- rile sporl. She says she enioys diving info lhe cool, refreshing wafer and feeling Ihe waves surge over her. MR. MORSTAD Is Mr. Morslad a hunlsman? I-le musl be, be- cause he admils Thai in winler he hunls for wild animals, while in summer he hunfs for wild golf balls. MISS McDERMOTT The clumsy grizzly bears, shaggy lions, and soar- ing eagles al Ihe zoo find a lailhful friend in Miss McDermoH', for she loves all animals and birds. MISS MOLER Philosophy in all ils phases, psychology, hislory. and world affairs all hold Ihe allenfion and inleresl of Miss Moler. Golf is her ouldoor hobby. MR. MADISON Replacing Ihe furl and making birdies occupy mosl' of Mr. Madison's lime on Ihe golf course. I-Ie enioys Ihis sporl mosl, because il' keeps him lil. Miss McDermoH Miss Moler Mr. Holden Miss Mausz MISS MARI-IEINE Playing conlracl' bridge, as well as learning more aboul' if, Thrills Miss Marheine mosl, probably be- cause fhere is so much compefilion in fha game. MISS NAGLE Don'I you know my hobby? Why, iI's riding around in Ihe counfry on a horse, preferably a4I'opl Miss Nagle declares when speaking of her pasfimes. MISS O'BRlEN Kodak as you gol Miss O'Brien's lavorile pasfime is faking snaps of counfry scenes. She fries Io make a Irip every summer in her frusly Dodge. MR. HOLDEN Mr. Holden receives a l'hriII from helping boys design lovely homes. I'le insisls Thai' he likes a li+IIe bil' of everyfhing and noi foo much of any- I'hing. MISS MAUSZ Miss Mausz's diversion is horseback riding. When noi' clashing along al' breakneck speed a-lop a horse, she loves Io whizz aboul' in her nifly Nash. MISS MONSEN Novels and biographies, Miss Monsen's iavorile Iypes of Iileralure, lake up mosl of The lime she has for enioymenlr. Golf also has Hs alfraclions. I 8 Mr. Madison Miss Monsen CARDINAL ANNUAL Mr Nelson Miss Ouirk Miss Pidd Mr Severy Mr. Sherman Mr. Schardf MR. NELSON BoTh large and small baITs, Mr. Nelson drives Them Tar and wide wiTh a will. Golf and base- ball, when in season, are my chieT inTeresTs, says he. MISS QUIRK From CAESAR and VERGIL To civics-whaf a leap! YeT Miss Quirk avers ThaT These menfal gymnasTics give her greaT ioy and much sTimuIaTing varieTy, MISS PIDD When Miss Pidd says, Now, I'II iusT add a pinch oT This, epicureans smack Their lips, Tor They know Thai' The resuITs will be a superIaTive dish. MRS. REED Rugged hills, bubbling sTreams-and mounTainsI Such scenery is Mrs. Reed's ioy. Driving The car herseIT adds a Thrill To The pleasure. MISS PARISH Gurglel blubl and Miss Parish comes up To in- dulge in a new swimming sTroke. The summer passes all Too quickly To perTecT her improving Technique! MISS McVETY AmaTeur dramaTics and Tennis rank high in The esTimaTion oT Miss McVeTy. She enioys geTTing ouT of herself and acTing The parT of anoTher person. I 9 Mrs. Reed Miss Parish Miss McVeTy Miss Sickels Mr. Sears Miss Scherkenbach MR. SEVERY Singing in church choirs and aT social gaTherings aTTords Mr. Severy, who is an ardenT lover oT music, diversion Trom The daily grind of rouTine work. MR. SHERMAN The sharp crack oT a hard-driven homer, The momenTary scramble Tor an elusive pigskin, The Thrill oT The hunT-each has iTs momenT Tor Mr, Sherman. M R. SCI-IARDT Tennis is greaT sporT and resTores my sylphlike Tiguref' Thus says Mr. SchardT, who slams a wicked ball across The neT on balmy summer days. MISS SICKELS Since eaTing is one oT The Tine arTs, Miss Sickels Tinds ThaT cooking is her hobby. Needle-work, Too, plays a prominenl' parT in her daily work. MR. SEARS Much Tavorable commenT was eliciTed Trom on- lookers IasT summer by Mr. Sears's prize garden display. They envy his gardening skill: we, his versaTiIiTy. MISS SCI-IERKENBACI-I Dark, occuIT, and absTruse mysTery holds a secreT enchanTmenT Tor This Teacher. I-Ier inTeresT in Ed- gar WaIIace's mysTery sTories needs no explanaTion. CARDINAL ANNUAL Miss Sch'nidT Miss Spifzner Miss SrnerIinski Miss Terry Miss Sfone M TiIIo son Miss WrigI'iT Miss WhiTham Mr. Thompson Miss Zoller MISS SCI-IMIDT Miss SchmidT's hobbies change wITh The seasons. Now, since hand-made Iamp shades are in vogue, she has Taken up The making and painTing of shades. MISS SPITZNER AnoTI'ier CuIberTson TanI Miss SpiTzner spends her spare Time reading ruIe books and poIishing up her bridge game. She wears ouT many a deck oT cards. MISS SMERLINSKI Tennis and swimming Take up much oT Miss SmerIinski's Time in summer. ATTer a good game oT Tennis, she Iikes noThing beTTer Than a vigorous Swim. MISS TERRY When she is noI managing reTracTory CARDINAL weekly workers, Miss Terry, preTerring The ouT-oT- doors Tor her Ieisure momenTs, drives, swims, or hikes. MISS STONE QuainT yeT TascinaTing is Miss STone's hobby, ThaT oT salifary Traveling in her Ford. She aIso enioys swimming and TwirIing The diaIs oT her radio. M R. TILLOTSON A canvas and some coIors, uninTerrupTed soIi- Tude, and a dash oT inner urge are all ThaT Mr. TiIIoTson asks oT The gods To gIadden his Ieisure hours. MISS WRI6-I-IT Snap goes The shuTTer, and Miss WrighT has suc- cessTuIIy capTured anoTher image oT some beauTi- TUI scene To add To her already exTensive caIIec+ion. MISS WI-IITI-IAM WhaT wonder ThaT Miss WhiTham Tinds IiTTIe TempTaTion To Ieave Milwaukee when her own beau- TiTuI home sTands iusT above The shores oT Lake Michigan? MR. TI-IOMPSON The gaThering oT picTures and Persian rugs Tor his aparTmenT is The hobby oT Mr. Thompson. I-Ie enioys cooking Turkey dinners wiTh aII Their Tixings. MISS ZOLLER Can'T you iusT see Miss ZoIIer Tuning in on her TavoriTe programs? She is an appreciaTive IisTener. PaTrioTic sTrains, in parTicuIar, appeaI To her. 20 mi . , x 322 .G 5 A fi pp fi? 0 E, 'Z Q 1 , If Qi hfy d I H T I Th pffqd T hp hh hp T yTI HISTORY g ph f The d Ip T are ghT b f u.s.in civics Th I we HISTORY ORE and more is The need Tor hisTory impressing iTselT on The minds oT high school sTudenTs. They are beginning To realize ThaT There is more To The background oT a counTry Than knowing who discovered iT or when, so, To acquainT Themselves wiTh real TacTs, They rely upon The vari- ous courses in hisTory To imparT These. In ancienT hisTory we are Taken back To The delighTTul realms oT EgypT, Greece, and Rome. The dark ages are porTrayed in medieval hisTory, while modern hisTory Traces The growTh oT The German, French, and oTher greaT empires. Civics is direcTly associaTed wiTh The aTTairs oT social and com- muniTy liTe and becomes a greaT asseT in good ciTizenship. ENGLISH TEVENSON, ElioT, Shakespeare- reading The works oT These auThors, The besT There are in The world oT liler- aTure, helps us To discriminaTe beTvveen whaT is lasTing and whaT is TransiTory. Precis wriTing Teaches us how To puT The . subsTance oT a lengThy arTicle inTo a Tew gripping senTences. Public speak- ing Tells us where To Tind The maTerial Tor speechesg how To prepare and de- liver Them. And our English Teachers, who guide us Through These inTricaTe mazes, make our classes The brighT spoTs oT our day. ENGLISH Day by d y o u r k I dg f Th world f d Th g Through Th Idy f lneraf dl g g 22 HN FOREIGN LANGUAGES FOREIGN LANGUAGES By The sfudy of moder languages we endeavor To exfend The spirif of in Ternafional brofherhood We seek To undersfand Th culTure of a glorious p T E sniTT. A breaTh oT culTure Ticlcles our nosTrils. lnsTead oT The all Too common Ain'a, a reTined sophomore gushes, Vous comprenez, n'esT-ce pas? AnoTher, explaining a iolce, ends wiTh, SiehsT du? Si, l si, senor, is The laughing reply. The explanaTion? Why, Toreign languages have us in Their grip. This year The German classes cenTered Their worlc around The one-hun- dredTh anniversary oT The deaTh oT GoeThe, The German poeT and drama- TisT. EnrollmenT in The German classes approached The Tour hundred mark. Spanish, imporTanT in The commercial world, French, The language oT diplomacy, and LaTin, The lcey To The classics, are always popular. MATHEMATICS VER since man's creaTive insTincT led him inTo vvorlcing wiTh concreTe maferials, he has required maThemaTics. ln our presenT civilizaTion, we see on every hand mighTy maniTesTaTions oT The use oT maThemaTics. Massive, Tow- ering slcyscrapers, wide, spanning bridges, solid, resisTing dams, and Thousands oT oTher engineering proiecTs owe Their erecTion To This basic science. Because oT iTs many uses in daily liTe and The Tine discipline iT gives To ThoughT, SouTh Division oTiers eighT semesTers oT maThemaTics. MATHEMATICS This advanced g Try class is Threading I ay Th ough males f p plex- q Tria gl d T ge- d ' p p T or 23 ffm Th Egypl b Il lhe py d fh G k the P fh lh R lhe C I d ual I' l d l h p lheir l l l l pl and ky p 'fh l II lasl lh gh l MANUAL ARTS MANUAL ARTS I-IE ancienls believed in Vulcan, lhal lireless worker who, deep in his caverns underground, lashioned wonderlul lhings ol lhe melals wrung lrom Molher Earlh. We, being modern, have no lime lor such naive lancies. And yel, il, some day, you should happen lo be in lhe neighbor- hood ol Room I I and should place your ear lo lhe ground and Iislen, you mighl be inclined lo believe lhal lhe ancienls were righl. For, in lhe un- derground caverns ol Soulh, Vulcan slill has his devolees who, wilh roar ol 'Forge and clanlc ol hammer, remold dull shapes ol melal inlo shining inslru- menls lhal arouse lhe crallsman's pride. In lhe mechanical drawing room above, are lhose who plan and pul on paper lhese visions ol man's brain. FINE ARTS ROM earliesl limes lhere has exisled in lhe soul ol man lhe desire lo por- lray, wilh his hands, lhe lhings aboul him. In childhood, how we liked lo drawl We loved, when we were in lhe lcindergarlen, lo draw apples. very red as lo cheelcs and very bilious as lo leaves. Or sunsels-simply unbeliev- able sunselsl We loved lo mould pully inlo ligurines, large and lumpy, or small and slqinny. The unguenchable longing lo malce lhings is ardenlly encouraged in our arl classes every hour ol lhe day. FINE ARTS The I f lhe fine d the b lf I b g d velop d h P 'r g mod I g d d 9 find y lh f gl olee g f I body in r' I' 5585 C 0 I 6. a ' e HOUSEHO..D ARTS lv1El.l.S like muTTinsl Why, why musT Those domesTic arTisTs always choose TourTh hour To display Their skill? Oh, well, men musT eaT is The answer, we suppose. BuT iT's hard on us hungry ones iusT The same! This year The girls oT The Household ArTs DeparTmenT have done much service work. The girls oT The cooking classes baked pumpkin pies and molded cranberry Telly Tor Tamilies in need oT a Thanksgiving TreaT. The sewing classes have done admirable work in remodeling cloThes Tor The needy. When The girls senT ouT a call Tor old cloThes. our sTudenTs readily responded, sending in an ample supply. l-lappy children received The new old cloThes, which were The praise-worThy work oT our sewing classes. MUSIC UCT-l progress as The lvlusic DeparT- menT is making! A member oT The harmony class is wriTing a symphony in Tour movemenTs. The Milwaukee Phil- harmonic OrchesTra has promised To play iT aT one oT iTs rehearsals. New eguipmenT is being boughT Tor The insTrumenTal room, and already a Chinese gong and Turkish cymbals have been secured Tor The orchesTra. ln The band TournamenT held lasT spring we won second place. Grabow- ski wiTh his bariTone and Lukaszewski wiTh his oboe won Third and TiTTh places. Music I Th d p + + fu- r K l P d kis, d D h + gm 2' pp 'ff fhffbdii- 25 f- P- -, ep HOUSEHOLD ARTS Much is pl shed T g The gi I f S 0 u T h D ion for Th p + I ph f fT d T I f Wea g se g d cooking II I d d Th co off d by Th deparf T T bl g I g danc- g d g k b y d q I phy Ily II I p Ih Ih prob- I I Ih Id This I I I b I n our I dd Iy d ' I I I d ly Iasks. GYMNASIUM e OLII' SICB In- PHYSICAL TRAINING I-IOOPS-a leapl I-le made iII Who? JusI a he-man Irom SouIh doing his daily dozen down in Ihe gym. I-lave you ever passed Ihe boys' gym when Ihe eighIh hour class was in session? II so, you have prob- ably been chilled by Ihe uncanny, hearI-rending moans IhaI issue Irom wiIh- in. Wrong again--Ihe boys in our advanced gym class are merely aIIempI- ing some diIIicuII sIreIching exercise. Volleyball and basIceIbaII help girls Io reIain IhaI school-girl charm. II you don'I believe iI, aslc any member oI Ihe girls' gym classes. The skill, grace, and speed wiIh which our girl aIhIeIes play Ihese games would cause Diana Io develop an inIerioriIy complex. COMMERCIAL OLD your pencils righI and don'I Ioolc aI your machine! Thus Mr. GusIaIson guides IuIure business men and women Ihrough Ihe IribulaIions OI oIIice pracIice. BuI oIIice pracIice is noI Ihe only opporIuniIy IhaI Ihe com- mercial classes oIIer. While booldceep- ing sIudenIs Iceep ledgers oI business IransacIions, oIher sIudenIs delve inIo commercial law, or sIruggIe wiIh ariIh- meIic and spelling. Even Ihose noI in Ihe course realize Ihe need OI business Iraining and suppIemenI Iheir sIudies wiIh commercial worlc. COMMERCIAL He d I Iyp I add g h I dg and I I I I ac h I I d Ih QI' P l I 9 of Ih I b Id 26 SCIENCE Ho Th gs wor a -Th Ts science. sics c ass is e I ChemlsTry and b each.deaIs wiTI1 Th io og , wi I e. SCIENCE CIENCE may be apTIy deTined as The TiTIe To The romanTic drama oT progress. Man has sTolen many oT naTure's secreTs and used Them as a barricade Tor himselT againsT discomTorT and danger. The men who are shaping our desTiny are The scienTisTs. In Their hands lies our TuTure, granTed ThaT an indeTiniTe exTension oT exisTence awaiTs us. AIThough The enTire Tield oT knowledge may be considered The province oT science, iT is possible To inTroduce The sTudenT To only iTs basic branches, such as general science, biology, chemisTry, and physics. The science course, dealing wiTh such diversiTied TacTs, is one oT The mosT popular in The school, Tor iT prepares The sTudenT Tor many vocaTions. LIBRARY UPILS wiTh library slips sTandI Pass! Thus The Teacher in A sends us oTT To The library, ThaT inviTing sanc- Tum aT The wesT end oT The second Tloor corridor. There Ivliss SchmidT relieves us oT our slips, and we enTer. BeTore using a boolc, we glance around. The room is so homey wiTh iTs Tables and rows oT boolisl Everyone is absorbed: The aTmosphere is resTTul. IT would be well Tor everyone To Torm a library habiT, says Miss SchmidT. HA boolc is a medicine boTh easy and beneTiciaI To Take. LIBRARY I The d T Miss S hmidT, fr h d en- iors mingle To b in The fields of Iii T nd h f d science in sea a - 27 diiional knowledg k d hy H phy I ngag d proving, by exper T i Tion, The laws of d posihon of Thing h isTry, wiTh m a T T d b' I y 'Th I'f l-lE old maliogany desl4 and tlwe glinting call bell, standing against deep Folds ol cardinal velour, l4eep laitlwlul watclw over Assembly fax. At intervals, alter weel4s ol unremitting toil, a class play is presented, or a program comes to pass. l.ast scene ol alll'-in grave procession, tlwe seniors File across tlwe stage to receive tlweir passports into tlie world ol vvorl4 and business. ENIORS 3 CARDINAL ANNUAL rf Bernice Eckerl Edwin Hauk Roberl McCabe Eleanor Halvorsen Clemenline Wien JANUARY CLASS COMMISSION ERMII us lo inlroduce Clem, Bernice, Eleanor, Eddie, and Mack, llne members ol llie January Commission. Mack, llie chairman, was represenlalive boy, an oulslanding allilele, and winner ol llue Cenlury Medal in llme oralorical conlesl. Senior Girls' Club, CARDINAL, and ANNUAL lcepl Eleanor, our secrelary, exlremely busy. Bernice loolc care ol llie lunds, and, allliougli all linancial business came up al one lime, Bernice wealhered il lilce a good sliip in a slorm. Clem, our valediclorian, was a greal assel lo bolh class and commission. Eddie was llie good all-around man wllo made our senior dances a suc- cess by llie slieer lorce ol his personalily. The dances arranged lor by llmese sludenls proved lo be deliglwllul al- lairs, wliile llie class banquel was a splendid success. To us, lliis capable group was lcnown as llwe commission, bul lormally lliey were Roberl IVlcCabe, Eleanor I-lalvorsen, Bernice Eclcerl, Clemenline Wien, and Edwin I-laulr. 3 I CARDINAL ANNUAL Jeanneffe Barlow Marlon Beaver George Barr Harry Bielawski Abraham Bell Irving Brykczynski JEANNETTE BARLOW JeanneTTe wishes To re-enTer Soufh, noT as a sTu- denT buT as an English Teacher. The TheaTers, The beaches, and The linlcs Tound her a regular devoTee. GEORGE BARR As Bud was in a hurry To become an elecfrieal en- gineer, he finished in Three and a half years. Per- Torming experimenTs in physics TascinaTed him. HARRY BIELAWSKI Curley was remembered Tor his porTrayal ol: Ben Wade in KEMPY. ThaT grand Time aT The band TournamenT aT Menasha was one oT his cherished memories. FRANCIS BUKOSKI EuTure sTudenTs oT SouTh may read oT Francis as Babe RuTh ll. AT leasT, ThaT was The way his in- clinaTion lay when graduaTion Trom SouTh overToolc him. AGNES BARNEY Never absenT or Tardy-ThaT was Agnes's excep- Tional record. DeTerminaTion and puncTualiTy also won Tor her The office oT TacToTum oi Senior Girls' Club. WALTER ARAZINIY Law and sporTs held Two possible TuTures Tor WalTer. A lawyer's posiTion would give him a living, while Pepper MarTin's Tame would saTisTy his soul. Francis Bukoslci Agnes Barney Agnes Bregar DoroThy Blank MARION BEAVER The happy Times spenT aT Girls' Club had a prominenT place among Marion's Treasurecl memo- ries oT SouTh. To aTTain success in business was her aim. ABRAHAM BELL To play in some symphony orchesTra, and, on The side, To compose an opera or Two was Abie's am- biTion. With his magic Touch, noThing was im- possible. IRVING BRYKCZYNSKI Irv hoped someTime To be as prominenT as FriTz Kreisler. Then, Too, he insisTed Thai' Tennis excelled all oTher sporTs Trom a recreaTional sTandpoinT. AGNES BREGAR Ag's mosT exciTing hobby was wriTing To sTu- denTs in Toreign counTries. Poor Teachers who had To TranslaTe Those leTTersl Nursing was her ambiTion. DOROTHY BLANK Long novels composed DoroThy's TavoriTe read- ing. She enioyed medieval hisTory more Than mod- ern. DoroThy was an ardenT rooTer aT all oT our games. ELIZABETH BEMIS A poeTess was in our midsT! Because ol: her in- TeresT and success in boTh English and modern poeTry, ElizabeTh decided To wriTe Tor her daily bread. 32 Walfer Arazny Elizabelh Bemis CARDINAL ANNUAL l Dorolhy Bulch Alice Cleveland Newman Deqenlesh Slephen Cl-iarnoleski Roberl Crone Bernice Eckerl Aqraoine Dominiak James Diliberl DOROTHY BUTCH Dol wasn'l an old-lashioned girl, bul she loved lhe complicaled arls ol cooking and sewing. When she was nol doing eilher ol lhese, she swam and danced. ALICE CLEVELAND We all miss Alice's pleasing personalily. She liked besl lo skale and dance. To imagine hersell in a nurse's unilorm was exlremely pleasanl lo her. NEWMAN DEGENTESH Newman's grealesl arnbilion was lo become a doclor. lf he pursues his palienls iusl as assidu- ously as he did goll balls, he oughl lo be an ideal M. D. STEPHEN CHARNOLESKI Allhough Sleve was in lhe Science Course, his secrel passion was mechanical drawing. He had lond hopes ol becoming a successlul archilecl. ROBERT CRONE Allhough Bob inlended lo become a drallsman, he lound lime lo preside over Cardinal Boys' Club and lo manage lhe business ol lhe CARDlNAL weekly. BLANCHE ELLSWORTH B. A., M. A., Ph. D.-lo wrile a lew such lellers aller her name was Babe's aspiralion. Thal she cornpleled her course in lhree years deserved menlion. 33 Doroll-ny Deqenlesh Lillian Denlkush BERNICE ECKERT Dancing, loolball, January Class Commission, and an accounling course all lound a place on Bernice's calendar. Bookkeeping was Bee's lavorile sludy. ' AGRAPINE DOMlNlAK Dancing look much ol Agrapine's lime: bul she also enjoyed skaling, her lavorile sporl. Prompling in lhe class play was her lhrilling experience. JAMES DILIBERT Even lhough Jake was small, he surely was a live wire. Jake loved excilemenl and never passed up a good laalball game or a rough and lumble scrap. DOROTHY DEGENTESH Good books , said Dol, are my grealesl de- lighl. As lhe charming lillle molher in KEMPY she won eve-ryone's hearl. She wished lo become a nurse. LILLIAN DENTKUSH The posilions ol vice presidenl and secrelary ol Forum were Lilly's conlribulions lo school lile. Bridge and dancing look mosl ol her leisure lime. PEARL EGIDE Mickey enrolled in lhe Slenographic Course bul was also inleresled in German. Al Soulh, she was a line dancer and an ardenl member ol Girls' Club. Blanche Ellsworlh Pearl Eqicle CARDINAL ANNUAL Leroy Eisenberg Margaref Gergo Florence Finfak J Emil G e Arlhur Grabowski John Gradisnik LEROY EISENBERG Boom! Bangl lzzy was linkering wilh his old Ford, His business abilily won him The manage- menf of The foolball feam. He wished To be an aviafor. MARGARET GERGO This was odd! Marge wanled lo be an aulomo- bile mechanic. Perhaps moloring, her liavorile sporl', warned her lo become acquainled wilh aufomobile parls. FLORENCE FINTAK My, your lemperalure's risingl Flo hoped l'o be saying lhis a few years hence, for her grealesl ambilion was lo be anolher Florence Nighlingale. GLEN GERKE Glen wanled lo pore over accounfing books in an olilice. Whal +o do in his spare lime? He had none, for his idle momenls were spenl in wood working. GENEVIEVE GLAZEWSKI Maybe Jean planned +o end This economic Trouble by applying her skill l'o l'he business game. She greaily enioyed her 'ryping posilion for 'rhe CARDWAL. CARL EVERS Science claimed Carl's allenlion and led him a merry chase lhroughoul his school life. As he had pep galore, his oulside lime was devoled lo sporls. Glen Gerke Genevieve Glazewski Carl Evers Ervin Glisch Raymond Goersch Carl Godager J. EMIL GUSE Skyscrapers, bridges, and homes will rise from 'rhe pen of Archilecl' Guse. The inlricale Theories and laws of physics held many a puzzler for him. ARTHUR GRABOWSKI Eins. zwei, drei, spielenlu Thai memorable Ger- man band would nol have been complele wilhoul Art He was also remembered as a clever malhe- mafician. JOHN GRADISNIK Ever forge? anyfhing? Well, when we did, we asked John, who kepl records of everylhing. He also confessed lo an incurable mania for lheme wrifing. ERVIN GLISCH Slugger was gradualed from lhe Eleclive Course. When he was noi playing baseball, he could be found on The golf links any fine day. RAYMOND GOETSCH Ray's'hobby was summer 'rouringg cushions or brake rods, we can'+ lell which. ln school, he varied his program wilh alhlelics and Cardinal Boys' Club. CARL GODAGER Recalling Jube's baskelball career, one couldnur imagine him quief enough fo be an underfaker. He agreed 'rhal if was a dead job buf hoped 'ro manage. 34 CARDINAL ANNUAL 4 Vernon Harsh Dororlhea Hinz Edwin Hauk Rufh Hire Eleanor Halvorsen George Heymann Rufh lngraham Lorraine Holfz Charles Jaeck Mae Jackson George Janowilz Aloysius Jasinski xp Q VERNON HARSH Given a drawing pencil and a friangle, Verne was happy! He liked mechanical drawing. Swim- ming and baskerball vied for honors as his favorile sporf. DOROTHEA HINZ Hinzie's iavorile sporf was Tennis: her hobby, lypewriling. Wiih such high grades in shorihand, if was noi surprising 'rhal' she wanled lo be a sl'eno. EDWIN HAUK Eddie Hauk--daring iournalisi. Thai was Eddie's ambirion for +he fuiure. His work al' Soulh was rewarded by a place on The January Class Com- mission. RUTH l-llTE Temperamenial Kale in KEMPY and heroine in BELLS or CAPlsTRANo were Ru+h's achievemenls in her school career. She also was Glee Club presi- denl. ELEANOR HALVORSEN ' Rusiy hair buf noi a rusly mind! Senior Girls' Club and Glee Club claimed her as an oliiicer. The class commission found her an able secrelary. GEORGE HEYMANN Moiors and lsoais drew George iusl as a magnei draws iron. His chief assei was his abiliiy io enioy himself anywhere ancl al any lime, even in school. 35 RUTH INGRAHAM Music is invigoraiing io +he mind and soul. Thai was lhe reason Boofs liked il'. Delving info fhe deepesf realms of fine lileralure was her hobby. LORRAINE HOLTZ Whal mallered lirosry nose and chilly 'loes lo Lorry, our only Sepfember graduale. if she could skim across 'lhe ice? The golf links lured her in summer. CHARLES JAECK Wherever There was foolball, lhere was Chuckles. He led +he I93I learn, and he hoped some day io become fooiball menlor al some prominenl college. MAE JACKSON lvlae's school life was iusl chuck lull of ihrills. The grealesl' were being chosen To play lhe par? of Jane in KEMPY and of Chiquila in 'rhe operelia. GEORGE JANOWITZ Racing pigeons was George's idea of real sport Because of il's inlricacies, animal raising absorbed his inreresl and will perhaps be his vocalion. ALOYSIUS JASINSKI Aloysius? Never! Jusr plain Ollie ro all. Al- ihough Ollie was an emblem winner in foofball, his mainslay during school hours was public speaking. CARDINAL ANNUAL ' Anihony Kosharek Edgar Koch Eleanor Krawczyk Wallace Lehsien Florence Lehmkuhl Roberl McCabe ANTHONY KOSHAREK Anlhony was a philaielisl. Yeh, iusl' anolher siamp colleclor. Leliy loved also io experimenl, so chemisfry and physics were his 'favorile classes. EDGAR KOCH An ardenl follower of lhe Boys' Club was Edgar, chiefly because of ifs lively debales. As he was an enlhusiaslic bowler, his dream was a perfecl' game. ELEANOR KRAWCZYK Noi even CAESAR could frighren Eleanor, 'For al La+in she was a whiz! As Ell seemed 'lo cour+ dilili- cull lhings, she chose nursing as her vocalion. BERNICE LEE Office praclice acquainled Bee wilh office work and wilh 'the business world. Shield Club gave her an opporlunily lo make friends and companions. MADELYNE KRASINSKI In fhis versarile personalily 'lhere resided a love of art an ambiiion 'lo be a nurse, an enlhusiasm for dancing and swimming, and of course, fool- ball. IRVIN KRENEK The crack of a clean-cul single or lhe lense mo- menl wilh fhree on base--bolh gave Curly a real ihrill. He longed 'lo be an alhlelic coach. Bernice Lee Madelyne Krasinski Hedwig Nowaczyk Gerhard Liedike WALLACE LEHSTEN ln alhlelics, Wallie perlecled himself in swim- ming. baskelloall, and handball. ln his sludies, he liked a good argumenl' in civics and social problems. FLORENCE LEHMKUHL The iacl 'rhal English lileralure changed as ihe years wenl on, made English very inleresling To Tommy. She was gradualed from The Eleclive Course. ROBERT McCABE Hello, folks! This is 'Mack al lhe Mike' speak- ing. Bob found il dillicull' 'lo eke our lime for aihlelics and his column buf never for being cheer- ful. HEDWIG NOWACZYK Alihough Hany loved money, she was far from being a gold digger, for her hobby was old coins. As her vocalion, l-lany chose elemenlary school leaching. GERHARD LIEDTKE Garry was an ambilious youlhl Allhough he worked diligenlly lo be a draflsman, he found con- siderable lime fo raise small animals and Tropical fish. EMILY MATUSZAK If smiles help 'ro make a compelenl slenographer, Emily will rafe firsl-class. On vacations, she enioyed spending her 'lime fishing and camping. 36 Irvin Krenek Emily Mafuszak CARDINAL ANNUAL Margaref Moe Lucille Meyers Woodrow Mifchell Lorraine Neubauer Miccio OTTo Anna Razbornik MARGARET MOE ThaT happy Iaughl IT was Marge's. She engaged in aThIeTics all oT her Tour years and goT her greaT Thrill when she received her baslceTbalI emblem. LUCILLE MEYERS Lu emerged Trom The STenographic Course. She enioyed emuIaTing The Technique oT The Tish when she wasn'T malcing dress designs ThaT were sTylish. WOODROW MITCHELL Whal' ShorTy enjoyed mosT was dancing, dancing, and more dancing. In school, he loved To dissecl' earThworms and Trogs under The guidance oT Miss Allen. ALVIN MORGENROTI-I Morgie was graduaTed Trom The Manual ArTs Course. I-lis inTeresT cenTered in wriTing Tor The CARDINAL weekly and in acTing as an assisTanT sTage direcTor. MARION MIDDLEMAS Alfhough There was noThing anTique abouT Marion, her inTeresTs cenTered in old curios. Very modern was she ins her love oT swimming and dancing. MARGARET OLSEN Marge could dig up anyThing Trom rugs To soldiers' uniTorms when acTing as properTy manager Tor Girls' Club. She aimed To be a priyaTe secre- Tary. 37 Alvin MorgenroTh Marion Middlemas MargareT Olsen EdiTh Neukirch Virginia Moe Leo Nikora LORRAINE NEU BAUER Lorry Tinished The Tour-year ElecTive Course in Three years. As Tennis was her TavoriTe sporT, she enTered The girls' TournamenT in her Third year. MICCIO OTTO GoThic arches and Romanesque columns meanT someThing To Max, Tor he wanTed To be an archi- TecT. I-Iis summer monThs were spenT on The Tennis courTs. ANNA RAZBORNIK In These days oT conTracT bridge, Ann sTood ouT as an exponenT OT chess. And, whaT's more unusual, she lilced The game, because iT made her concen- TraTe. EDITH NEUKIRCI-I Edy wanTed To become a nurse, buT, woman-like, she reserved The privilege oT changing her mind. EdiTh's TavoriTe sporTs were Tobogganing and slQaTing. VIRGINIA MOE Virgie's sweeTness won many Triends Tor her. She was moniTor oT Row I6, presidenT oT Senior Girls' Club, and a member oT CenTury and Shield Club. LEO NIKORA PresidenT oT CenTury, a diploma in Three and one-haIT years, a parT in The class play, and presen- TaTion oT The senior class giTT were Leo's achieve- menTs. CARDINAL ANNUAL RuTh Schmus Edward SchuepperT Leona Roeglin Irvin Rubow Marie Romaszewski Leona Schmiel RUTH SCHMUS A-chool RuThie loved To snoop around dusTy buT TascinaTing bookshelves. She also found Time To swaT The ball over The neT under a scorching sun. EDWARD SCHUEPPERT PeTe inTended To swell The ranks OT The peda- gogues. l-le was happiesT when he could glue his ear To The radio and pick up some exciTing TooTball game. LEONA ROEGLIN Quick! The Tire-house! Leona was al' iT, burn- ing up The TypewriTer keys. When she was noT per- TecTing her accuracy aT Typing, she enioyed reading. RUTH REICHENBACH A long, icy hill, a Toboggan, and Triends. 'l'haT's all a person needs To have Tun, said RuTh. She enioyed The varieTy ThaT Shield Club oTlered. FRANCES SOBOTA Frankie couldn'T TorgeT her sophomore year. She served aT a banqueT Tor ThaT championship TooTball Team! To be a privaTe secreTary was her aim in liTe. MABEL REICH Heel, Toe! Turnl lvliss Reich insTrucTingl Curl-yTop had ambiTions oT becoming a dancing Teacher. She swam, moTored, and danced in her spare Time. 0 RuTh Reichenbach Frances SoboTa Mabel Reich Alberf RosTkowski Henry Raniszewski Emily RozmaTosm IRVIN RUBOW Six TeeT OT aThleTic abiliTy-yeT he didn'T wanT ever To grow up. Wherever There was eiTher laughTer or TooTball, There lrv was cerTain To be. MARIE ROMASZEWSKI May was willing To work Trom The boTTom up in order To be a privaTe secreTary. She narurally chose shorThand and Typing as her TavoriTe subiecTs. LEONA SCHMIEL Leona's second name should have been ambiTion. She planned To be a posl'-office clerk during The day and To give accordion lessons in The evening. ll ALBERT Rosrkowski Foo+bal , said Al, TaughT me whaT real sporT- manship is. Physics was Al's TavoriTe sTudy, buT he also derived greaT enioyme-nT Trom his music. HENRY RAN ISZEWSKI Hank had an early sTarT in his chosen proliession oT medicine. AT a very Tender age, he delighTed in sampling all The herbs in The medicine cabineT. ElvllLY ROZNIATOSKI And l said-and she said-. A Tamiliar sound whenever Em was engaging in her TavoriTe diver- sion-Talking. Only books or candy could sTop her. 38 CARDINAL ANNUAL s Oscar Sfram Raymond Sfahl Joseph Sfaszkunas Lorraine Sfadler Beniamin Sobek Leonard Sommer Delphine Tomzak Doris Taff WalTer Trepfow Loraine Vogf Edgar Sieverf Dolores Sfirn OSCAR STRAM The love for Tall, sTaTely pines defermined Ossie's vocafion-a foresl' ranger. l-lis aThleTic abiliTy was rewarded by leffers in Track and foofball. RAYMOND STAHL Ray wanfed To become a righf-handed Leffy Grove. l-le loved fishing, buT The only Things he succeeded in bringing home wiTh him were some fishy sTories. JOSEPH STASZKUNAS Baseball was duck-soup for Snakes. Joe wanfed Things varied. l-le liked maTh because of The hard work iT required: gym, because of The eTforT iT Took. LORRAINE STADLER To be a cog in The wheel of business was Larry's ambiTion. She found office pracfice inTeresTingly different Music proved a diversion for her. BENJAMIN SOBEK Big Ben an invenTor? Well, ThaT's whaf he hopes To be. l-lowever, Three numerals and an emblem gave mufe Tesfimony of his abilify on The cinder squad. LEONARD SOMMER To be a hisfory Teacher was Len's ambiTion. Cenfury and Science Club occupied his Time. We'II remember his large cowbell aT The foofball games. - 39 DELPHINE TOMZAK Acquainfances of Tommy were forTunaTe, for Their names wenf down in her diary-and such secreTs as iT conTainedl ln summer she enioyed swimming. DORIS TAFF Full of smiles, pep, and ginger was Dodie, whose secreT passion was horseback riding. As sisTer RuTh in KEMPY, she was very lovable and inimiTable. WALTER TREPTOW Shy Kempy, The plumber of class play fame, was Wally. lf iusT didn'T do To geT inTo a row wifh him, for Though vanquished, he could argue s+iIl. LORAlNE VOGT The disTincTive honor of being saluTaTorian of The class wenf To Loraine, moniTor of Row 8. She longed To be a sfenographer or a privaTe secreTary. EDGAR SIEVERT When Eggs wasn'T spending his spare Time worka ing on some algebra problem, he was kepT busy as a member of The sTage crew or The Cardinal Boys' Club. DOLORES STI RN One more Tennis playerl BeTween Tennis and Translafing VERGIL, DOT had her hands full. She liked LaTin besT, because iT was such a helpful subiecf. J CARDINAL ANNUAL ArThur Bohle Sylvia Waszkiewicz Lorraine WegehaupT ClemenTine Wien Jane Zarzycki ARTHU R BOT-l LE A wise old owl, This Tellow ArT, Tor, Though he leTT SouTh during his senior year To become a clerk, he reTurned To Tinish his course aT nighT school. SYLVIA WASZKIEWICZ WriTing a perTecT ariThmeTic exam was one oT Sylvia's achievemenTs. She wanTed To be a business woman, sTarTing aT The boTTom and heading upward. LORRAINE WEGEHAUPT Lorraine was a combinaTion oT The ancienT and modern. LaTin was her TavoriTe sTudy, while Tox- TroTTing To The laTesT iazz Tune was her peT di- version. ANDREW WESOLOWSKI Andrew said he inTended To enTer The business world aTTer being graduaTed Trom The ElecTive Course. Golli, Andy allowed, was his TayoriTe sporT. EVELYN WERNER Evey enioyed sTudying German, because Trans- laTing TascinaTed her. The winTers were noT long or cold enough To saTisTy her greaT hunger Tor sl4aTing. ALFRED WAHLBERG Winner oT The Boys' OraTorical conTesT, school cheerleader, and Tinally The crabby old pa in KEMPY-ThaT was AI's record aT SouTh. NOT so bad --eh? Andrew Wesolowski Evelyn Werner Alfred Wahlloerq June Wick Rose ZapleTal Erria ZinTek CLEMENTINE WIEN Our valedicTorianl l-low she loved To discuss inTellecTual maTTersl l-lisTory, Clem said, showed her The misTalces oT The pasTg There-Tore she enioyed iT JANE ZARZYCKI Janie won'T mind The nerve-racking duTy oT a librarian, Tor iT will lceep her close To books. She goT many a sore ThroaT Trom rooTing Tor The Team. JUNE WICK Algebra? Oh, ThaT was Tun! said June. She was graduaTed Trom The ElecTive Course. ln her spare Time she collecTed poeTry and enioyed dancing. ROSE ZAPLETAL An arT insTrucTor was Rose's goal oT achieve- menT. SergeanT-aT-arms oT CenTury, and arT worlc on The CARDINAL ANNUAL Tilled her 'few idle momenTs. ERNA ZTNTEK ' Erna liked English, buT when Mr. Depression ban- ished her hope oT conTinuing school and becoming an English Teacher, she chose To be a sTenographer. 4-O THE JANUARY CLASS GIFT Doris T ff WalTer Tr pf Harry Bielawl Dorofhy Deg Tesh Alfred Wahlberg KEMPY EMPY was The TiTle oT The Three-acT comedy presenTed by The January class on The elevenTh and TwelTTh days oT December, I93 I. KEMPY had a vivacious ploT ThaT cenTered abouT an egoTisTic daughTer, who, in a TiT oT disconTenT, married a visiTing plumber wiTh big ambiTions. She TelT iusTiTied in doing This because he undersTood her- he had read her book and had sworn To marry The auThoress. l-lowever, aTTer TemperamenTal rucTions, his m a r r i a g e was an- nulled, and he was Tree To espouse ThaT demure puss, his wiTe's young- er sisTer. BuT The ploT was noT The main Thing, There was The casT ThaT in- TerpreTed iT so well. Imagine Al Wahlberg as Dad Bence, The reTired harness maker. Even during rehearsals, he lived his parT and conTinually mislaid his lenseless specTacles. lvla Bence, DoroThy DegenTesh, had a mean Time wiTh powdered wigs ThaT would shed Their powder all over The place. Mae Jackson, as Jane Wade, Their eldesT daughTer, had a desire Le Nk Sufh l-:TH MZ J r 42 Orin Wagner Russel Lehsfen Clarence Felk Claire Hempe Frank STub k Milf B q KEMPY To discuss daTes, dresses, and dances wiTh her cohorTs beTween cues. Harry Bielawslci, as Ben Wade. her husband, was The Eddie CanTor and chieT mischieT maker oT The casT. KaTe Bence, The impaTienT maiden and would-be heroine, was played by RuTh l-liTe, whose lovely voice added much To The inTerpreTaTion. RuTh Bence, The demure and whimsical younger s i sTe r, was played by Doris 'l'alT, who, wiTh her plumy-Tailed Pelfinese dog. guiTe carried The day. Kemp James, The aspiring ar- chi+ec+, who plumbed Tor a living, appeared in The person oT our shy and reTiring lNalTer TrepTow. Leo Nilcora, as Dulce lvlerrill, when his cue was called, could in- variably be Tound in The wings playing mumbleTy-peg wiTh The prop boy. Miss DeCourcy direcTed The casT, buT much crediT musT also go To Mr. Sears and his TaiThTul crew oT sTage hands. wiThouT whose sl4illTul worlc no play could be puT across The TooTlighTs. 43 M SD C urcy CARDINAL ANNUAL VlcTor Anderson MaTThew AlTenhofen Cecelia Ambroz Sophie Andrzelewski Harry BarneTT Sylvia Andrzeiczak VICTOR ANDERSON Vic enioyed American l-lisTory immensely. Bas- keTball and Tennis were his maior sporTs. Boys' Club gave him much pleasure as an ouTside acTiviTy. MATTHEW ALTENHOFEN MaTT had Tew rivals in maThg Thereliore he aspired To become an engineer. l-le was ediTor OT The CARDINAL and also a member oT The class com- mission. CECELIA AMBROZ Amby's pleasanT disposiTion made her a TavoriTe. She held many oTl:ices in clubs, worked on The CARDINAL, and was a member oT The class com- mission. BERNICE BEl-lLlNG Auburn locks earned her unique name. RusTy, an all-around girl, was inTeresTecl in everybody. Lively baskeTball games Topped The lisT oT sporTs for her. FREDERICK ADLER Poor Andy, ranch 'foreman of THE Neizyous Wneckl WhaT Trouble FriTz encounTered when he assumed ThaT parTl Worse Than being a cl-iemisT, eh Erin? ANNE ACKERMANN Wouldn'+ illness be a pleasure wiTh a nurse like Anne? When Trip wasn'T sTudying public speak- ing, she was Tollowing The call oT The open road. Bernice Behling Frederick Adler Anne Carl Anderson Sophie Bagrowski Sfanley SOPl-llE ANDRZEJEWSKl QuieT and unassuming, Sophie Tound real enioy- menl' in belonging To Shield Club. A graduaTe oT The STenographic Course, she hoped To be a secre- Tary. HARRY BARNETT Blinding glory ThaT almosT ouTshone The sunl Above These Tancy neckTies loomed l-larry, Perhaps he goT his color schemes Trom sTudying The specTrum. SYLVIA ANDRZEJCZAK Sylvia's nickname was Blondie-very indicaTive oT her Tair hair. Babe RuTh had a rival when Sylvia came To baT, Tor baseball was her TayoriTe sporT. CARL ANDERSON Cula, a member oT The Science Club, expedred To be a chemical engineer. Whenever sTamps or rare coins were menTioned, Cula was bound To be near. A SOPHIE BAGROWSKl lnTerior decoraTing or Teaching were Sophie's ambiTions. One OT The Tew girls To Take mechanical drawing, she yeT was graduaTed Trom The English Course. STANLEY ADAlVlSKl STanley's obiecTive in life was admiTTance To The bar. l-le did very good work as an oTTicer oT The German Club and also sTarred as a Tennis player. 44 CARDINAL ANNUAL Blank Colleen Bird Marion Bielefeld e Leona Berg Vivian Bendlin GORDON BLANK Gordon had inlenlions of becoming a school leacher. His grealesl source ol enioymenl in school lile came lrom his hislory class and lhe Lalin Club. COLLEEN BIRD While playing lennis. Silver lhoughl ol lhe slories she loved. Or perhaps she gol ideas lor heroines when she wenl lo Girls' Club meelings and lo Shield. MARION BIELEFELD Music and dancing held inleresl lor Marion, who was a member ol Girls' Glee Club, She aspired lo a slenographic posilion bul enioyed sporls also. CARL BERNDT Carl anlicipaled being a scienlisl lor some geographic sociely. ln school, his lavorile sludy was physics. l-le devoled his spare lime lo hunling, SYLVIA BERG Slivers belonged lo lhe Senior Girls' Club and Shield. l-ler lavorile sporls were hiking and swim- ming. She played bridge wilh enlhusiasm and success. CELIA BODA Cele's smile was ollen seen al Girls' Club, INTER Nos, and Cenlury. She liked lo dance and play lennis. Being a privale secrelary was her goal. 45 Carl Berndl Sylvia Berg Celia Boda Florence Benich Ralph Benning Roberl Berg FAE BELL ln sporls, Fae selecled a peppy game ol lennis as lopping. Al school, she prelerred shorlhand and lyping, since lhey were valuable lo a secrelary. LEONA BER6 Lonie boasled lhe hobby ol leaching Sunday School. To lhis, she devoled considerable lime. ln her leisure momenls, she loved lo play a game ol lennis. VIVIAN BENDLIN Viv, a quiel lillle lass, was monilor ol Row I4. She liked Spanish and wanled lo be a leacher ol lhal subiecl. She was an enlhusiaslic loolball lan. FLORENCE BENICH Everyone knew her as Babe. Devoled lo French, she yel desired lo become a privale secrelary. She liked lo swim, and everyone envied her summer lan. RALPH BENNING Coils and lranslormers inleresled Ralph, as did lhe girls who skaled on lhe neighboring ice ponds. ll was seldom lhal a cold nighl kepl him al home. ROBERT BERG English held unusual inleresl lor Bob. He en- ioyed lislening lo courl cases and hoped lo be- come a lawyer. l-'le was gradualed in lhree and a hall years. CARDINAL ANNUAL Evelyn Bronikowski Wilford Borkenhagen Lucile Bushardl Anila Buchholz Harold Branlzeg Elsbelh Buenle EVELYN BRONIKOWSKI Piclure Evelyn al an ollice desk, pounding a lypewriler, lor she expecled lo be a privale secre- lary. She lound diversion in dancing and swime ming. LUCILE BUSHARDT The associale-edilorship was l.ucy's reward lor her labors in all phases ol worlc on lhe CARDINAL weekly. For pleasure, she delved inlo hislory books. ANITA BUCHHOLZ Wherever lhere was ice one lound Anila, lor slcaling and lobogganing provided a big lhrill lor her. l-ler grealesl ambilion was lo worlc in an ollice. FLORENCE BRYNELSEN Elossie's greal ambilion was lo be a nurse. She had beller plan on liguring oul human puzzles, inslead of cross-word puzzles il she wanls lo succeed. ELLEN BRECKENRIDGE Everyone lcnew Ellen as Red, She was a loyal member ol Girls' Club lor lour years. l-ler lavorile diversions were hiking, lennis, and loolball games. RUTH BU DDE Buddy's ambilion lo become a social worker was probably lhe oulcome ol her hobby, leaching Sun- day School. Besides lhal, Rulh was an ardenl lennis lan. Florence Brynelsen Ellen Breckenridge Rulh Budde Celia Budny Marguerile Bremser Mildred Bremer WILFORD BORKENHAGEN Connie Mack, lalce nolicel Borlcy was a budding baseball slar who really loved lhe game. This curly-haired chap enioyed lishing in lhe norlhern woods. HAROLD BRANTZEG Forel And lhere was l-larold on lhe goll course again. This while-headed boy, sludying physics so vigorously, hoped lo become an elec- lrical engineer. ELSBETH BU ENTE Perhaps slenography and chewing gum don'l mix, bul Belly was addicled lo bolh. Too, she lilced reading and driving a car. Don'l mix lhem, Elsbelhl CELIA BUDNY Celia's posilion on lhe CARDINAL slall and her monilorship in A consliluled her chief achievemenls al Soulh. She was a conslanl member ol Girls' Club. MARGUERITE BREMSER Marge abhorred correcling papers, bul she en- ioyed leaching: consequenlly she was lo be a gym inslruclor. Everylhing in science held her inleresl. MILDRED BREMER Millie surely was pep personiliedl She lilced lo play lennis, lo swim, dance, slcale, and yell luslily al loolball games. She was vice presidenl ol German Club. 46 CARDINAL ANNUAL Jeanelle Cybulski Emily Delllalf Carl Cooling Dorolhy Chrlsllanson Helen Carlson Dorolhy Clausen J EAN ETTE CYBU LSKI Jimmie's ambilion was lo be a secrelary, lor she enioyed shorlhand and lypewriling. Sunburns and colds eller swimming and skaling didn'l laze her. EMILY DETTLAFF How lhal diminulive person did lrisk aboul from CARDINAL ollice lo Girls' Club meeling or lo class commission conlerence! A regular whizz-our Emily! CARL COOLING Carl was going lo give Palrick Henry a run lor his money and be a lawyer loo. He lilled his spare lime wilh baske+baII and a-hunling ol lhe deer. ARLINE CWIKLINSKI Lynne had wanled lo become a nurse ever since she was a liny lol. Her lavorile indoor sporl was public speaking, and lennis look up her lime oul- ol-doors. HELEN CLARKE My Wild Irish Rose -lhis appellalion made lrish leel like assassinaling people. She liked many sporls, lennis, swimming, skaling, baseball, hiking, and dancing. ANN DETTLAFF Ann's lavorile subiecl was household arls, Her hobby was reading love slories. Boys, beller guard againsl girls wilh paslimes like Ann's! 47 Arline Cwiklinski Helen Clarke Ann Delllalf Marion Carlson Janice Burns Eleanor Demlow DOROTHY CHRISTIANSON Demure Dol liked ollice work and shorlhand. Swimming was her lavorile sporl. She liked lo lake diclalion and hoped lo become a slenographer. HELEN CARLSON Helen inlended lo go lo Slale Teachers' College lo become a leacher. Whal a break lor lhe pupils! Skaling and lennis were her lavorile sporls. DOROTHY CLAUSEN The beaulilul, blond heroine ol lairy lales was personified by Dol. Anyway, how she did ballle her way lhrough dillicull physics assignmenls! MARION CARLSON To become privale secrelary lo a Wall Slreel business man was lvlarion's ambilion. Shorlhand and lyping were her lavorile subiecls while al Soulh. JANICE BU RNS Jan liked lo swim and dance. She spenl many days doing bolh al lvluskego Beach. Al school, she slrove lo become an ellicienl slenographer. ELEANOR DEMLOW Eleanor was an enlhusiaslic supporler ol baskel- ball during her high school days. Traveling was her hobby. We hope you see lhe whole world, Eleanor. CARDINAL ANNUAL Roliia Druse R. Leonard Drapp Lenore Diesch Eleanor Dziczkowski Donald Doepke Frank Dra an R wski Sfanley Drabinowicz Prosper Domagalski ROLITA DRUSE This happy, smiling girl was sorry io leave Souih and her beloved Shield Club. ln her sophomore year. she aifended ihe Naiional High School Orchesira. R. LEONARD DRAPP Girls! A rip. Curly iniended io be a baker someday. Savvy? Physics was his pei subieci, and canoeing wiih 'ihe dames, his weakness. Whaf 'iunl LENORE DIESCH Lee proved her love of vigorous sporis by win- ning emblems. She won one for The swimming championship ai Shield Club and one in senior baskeiball. ELEANOR DZICZKOWSKI This lass siudied dancing for pleasure and exer- cise. Blondie's iavoriie sporis were baskeiball and swimming, while English was her iavoriie siudy. DONALD DOEPKE Don, a graduaie oi 'rhe Eleciive Course, wanied io become an accouniani. His 'iavoriie siudy was bookkeeping. He made ielescopes during his spare lime. FRANK DRAGAN Happily for Freckles, of The Science Course, his iavoriie siudy was physics. Experimenis iascinaied him. Swimming and philaiely were his hobbies. Frances Dworzak Waller Dziadosz Irene Dziadu ewicz RALPH DZIERZEWSKI Curly was inieresied in sciences: ampuiaiing worms was evidence enough oi Thai. He adored cross-word puzzles and liked besi io play iooiball. STANLEY DRABINOWICZ Alihough poeiry and ari were only hobbies for Sianley, he produced prize-winning works in each. He enjoyed siudying liieraiure of various couniries. PROSPER DOMAGALSKI Fear gripped him! His beloved had-. Alas! Prosper's weakness was romances. He simply had io read novels uniil The happy endings were reached. FRANCES DWORZAK Fran, being graduaied from 'ihe Eleciive Course in Three and one-half years, hoped 'ro be a uni- 'iormed nurse. She belonged io Girls' Club and Laiin Club. WALTER DZIADOSZ Jusf imagine wise-cracking Wally as The digni- fied and reserved head oi a huge business! To aiiain Thai heighi, eveniually, was his worihy am- biiion. IRENE DZIADULEWICZ A iuiure 'reacher should have a good foundaiion. Irene began hers wiih recogniiion as a reporier and an honorable meniion in 'rhe poeiry coniesi. 48 CARDINAL ANNUAL Emily Dzledzlc Dorolhy Engbloom June Ealon Erdrnann Elmer Elias Edna Engelhuber EMILY DZIEDZIC Millie was one of Miss O'Brien's helpers al 'rhe candy counler. Oul of school, she enioyed swim- ming, loaslcelball, and golf. Nursing was her vocalion. DOROTHY ENGBLOOM Dorolhy, also lcnown as Do+'ly, would like To slarl as a slenographer buf advance +o a secrelaryship. l-ler favorife sporls were swimming and slcaling. JUNE EATON Rip enioyed hislory. Even Though she didn'+ al- ways remember hislory dales, she never lorgol her social dales. She inlended lo sludy beauly cullure. MARGARET DZlURDZlEWSKl Margarehs favorile diversion was 'ralcing shorl- hand nofes, loul franscribing lhem was anolher sfory. Neverfheless, she hoped fo become a sfenographer. LOIS ENGEL Lois's hobby was having fun. We never 'lorgol her splendid Washingfon fall: in A or her reporfing abilily. Whal was her ambifion? Journalism. EDWARD DZIENNIK Edward enioyed rnalhemafics so much lhal he Tool: eighl semeslers of if. l-lis name was engraved on 'rhe Teglmeyer Cup in I93I, Edward liked golf. 49 Margarer Dziurdziewski Lois Engel Edward Dznennik Norma Engelke Annelle Ekzell Alfhea Ebeling LAWRENCE ERDMANN BuJrch's vocafion was avialion: he aclually in- fended lo be a second Lindbergh. A maior emblem in '32 was his achievement Slcaling inleresled him. ELMER ELIAS Mori, lhe fough guy in lhe class play, was only a minor achievemenl ol Al's. l-le was presidenl of Cenlury, chairman ol 'rhe commission, and repre- senlalive boy, EDNA ENGELHUBER Eddie could be found al' any foolball or baslcel- ball game. l-ler desire was lo become a secre'l'ary. Swaying 'lo 'the Tune ol music also enlhralled her. NORMA ENGELKE Allhough Norma finished 'rhe Mafh Course, she enioyed gym and dramalics most As presidenf of Shield, she gave lhe club a very prosperous year. ANNETTE EKZELL Miclcy, 'rhe speedy lypisl, was going fo be some luclcy execulive's secrelary. Dancing, foolball, and lraclc occupied a greaf deal of her valuable lime. ALTHEA EBELING From lhe Eleclive Course came Thea, whose aim was lo falce diclalion. When she wasn f wriling leflers or sailing, she was To be found al Cenlury. CARDINAL ANNUAL L s F If Gord ,F en Max F'li iak Frar?cJiIseFiIiipc?vrilcz R FFFiuiak Angelinelgeorge LOUISE FULTON Dixie Lou was rapidly becoming an experr swim- mer. She gained much enioymenr from lhal sporf. While al' Soufh, English always was her liavorife sludy. GORDON FELZEN We had a 'iulure professional baseball player in Gordon. How he loved Jrhe nalional game! While ar Sourh, Gordy became +he presidenl' of lhe Boys' Club. MAX FILIPIAK Speedy, a frue sporisman, played foorball, bas- kelball, and iennis. Because his favorife sludy was chemisiry, he chose pharmacy as his life work. DOLORES FREISINGER Dolores was happiesl when swinging a Tennis rackef. She enioyed alfending ihe movies and reading. She was gradualed from Jrhe Slenographic Course. KENNETH GAULKE l die happy, 'lhey used ro say. l have driven wirh Red! Ken delighled in making unforfunale passengers squeal when he drove his brakeless cars. JOHN FRANGESCH Muscle! He was 'rhe fellow who wanled fo be as greal' a fooiball coach as lhe famous Knuie Rockne. Jokes and old songs were his chief delighis. Dolores Freisinger Kennefh Gaulke M. Jane Farquhar Rufh Eriksson f '1 ' FRANCIS FILIPOWICZ From gridiron lo clinic was The course lhal' Flip had marked oul' 'for himself. The class voled him a member of irs commission and class lreasurer. RAYMOND FILIPIAK Ray's lufure hung in fhe balance when he launched his model aeroplane. I+ llewl And lhe elaled Snooky delermined lo become an aero- naulical designer. ANGELINE GEORGE Singing and French confribufed 'ro Arigy's enioy- menl' al Soulh. She ailended innumerable loolball games. To become a privale secrefary was her ambirion. M. JANE FARQUHAR A s'l'udious girl was Mary Jane, whose favoriie sludy was physics. Cooking and serving delighled her. She was also an aclive member of 'ihree clubs. RUTH ERIKSSON For four years Skippy was aclive in band and or- chesira. Lasl year, she played in lhe Norlh Cenlral High School Orcheslra and al 'l'he Milwaukee Harp Conveniion. GERTRU DE GAGNON A pelile maid wifh French ways was Gerlrude. Her sunny disposilion and cheerful smile won her a hosl' of friends. Skaling was her lavorife sporl. 50 John Frangesch Gerfrude Gagnon CARDINAL ANNUAL LaureHa Goefz Dorofhy Goiny Dorghy Gilson Florence Golla Raymond Gorski Luci e Gruenewad LAU RETTA GOETZ Lorraine or Laureffa? ll was hard fo fell one fwin from fhe ofher. This happened 'ro be Laureffa, who enjoyed skaling, dancing, and playing Tennis. DOROTHY GOINY Dorofhy, she of lhe sparkling personalify, ex- celled in dancing and fennis. She will soon be counfing pulses and remperafures insfead of love sefs. DOROTHY GILSON Combine speaker, singer, and skafer, and fhe fofal was Smiles. She wanfed +o become a sfenographer buf courfed foo fhe life of a blues singer. LORRAINE GOETZ Mufzie, which franslafed means loved one, hoped To be a privafe secrefary, She enioyed assisfing Mr. Book in fhe office. Scrap books were her hobby. LORRAINE GODERS Nursing--golf--bridge. A range of diversified pleasures, buf Lorraine liked fhem all. Nursing will send her info hospifal 'rraining nexl' Sepfember. CHARLOTTE GILCHRIST l-ler name in elecfric lighfs, a greaf fheafer, a milling crowd eager fo see fhe sfar-fhese were fhe dreams of Dimples, alias our Charloffe. 5 l Lorraine Goefz Lorraine Goclers Charloffe Gilchrrsf Jane Grogan Grace Gunderson Dorofhy Grosklags FLORENCE GOLLA As long as secrefaries were noi in demand, Flor- ence was safisfied +o be a bookkeeper. She was an acfive person, parficipafing in all school evenls. RAYMOND GORSKI Going down? Pefe's besf fhumb flashed in an arc, and soon he was enjoying his favorife sporf, hifch-hiking. ln school, hisfory fascinafed him. LUCILLE GRUENEWALD Lucille wished fo wrile books, and, because of fhis loffy ambifion, she sfudied characfers and used fhe inferesfing ones as figures in her sfories. JANE GROGAN A sparkle of wif, a dash of vifalify was Jane, our humor edifor. She acfed also as presidenf of Forum, and held offices in ofher clubs. She adored fennis! V GRACE GUNDERSON A romanfic person was l-loney, for she dofed on love sfories. l-'ler ambifions were fwo in number, fo become a nurse and 'ro become a second Helen Wills. DOROTHY GROSKLAGS Dorofhy liked fhe oufdoor sporfs of fennis and swimming, and fhe indoor sporf of reading. She liked office pracfice because if had fhe afmosphere. , CARDINAL ANNUAL Dorolhy Henderson Clarence Hansen Karol Grzeszkiewicz F. Bruce Harrison Melvin Hall Ramona Halvorsen DOROTHY HENDERSON Dorolhy was lorever visiling sick people-any- way, she loved lo cheer lhem. When she wasn'l doing kind deeds, she pleased hersell by playing lennis, CLARENCE HANSEN Clare sludied lo be an accounlanl because he believed in building upon a lirm loundalion. Oul- side ol school he enjoyed drawing and loolball. KAROL GRZESZKIEWICZ Sergeanl always wanled lo be a physician, so he sludied chemislry and physiology. When Charlie had nolhing lo do, he enjoyed radio concerls or read. BETTY HAUB Debaling was Belly's pel aclivily-and how she could argue! She belonged lo Shield, Girls' Club, and Forum. Belly liked swimming, goll, and lennis. VIRGINIA GEYER A prelly smile, dancing leel, and you had Virgy. She enjoyed Girls' Club and wriling minules lor Cenlury. She was also sergeanlfal-arms ol Forum. ROSE HAUERWAS Rose, who has always wanled lo become a nurse, was inleresled in horseback riding and dancing. She was on lhe baskelball leam lor lour years. Belly Haub Virginia Geyer Rose Hauerwas Jerome Halamka Thomas Hanlon George Hayne F. BRUCE HARRISON Peewee lo us, Depuly Sherill Dan in lhe class play, bul Bruce in polile socielyl Wilh so many appellalions, he mighl well plan lo enler loreign lrade. MELVIN HALL Sonny's ambilion was lo be a llier. To prepare himsell lor his calling he buill model aeroplanes. He could, however, lind lime lor baseball. RAMONA HALVORSEN Brighl-eyed Mona enjoyed learning lo operale machines in ollice praclice. She liked besl ol all lo allend Thrilling loolball games and lo swim. JEROME HALAMKA Cockie was a baseball fiend and was lorever pre- dicling lhe oulcorne ol lhe games. Because ol his inleresl in conslrucling lhings he enjoyed shop work. THOMAS HANLON Tom was delermined lo become an engineer. He was mosl enlhusiaslic aboul Spanish, while lhe building ol model boals consliluled his principal diversion. GEORGE HAYNE ' George increased his vocabulary the day he look up goll, especially aller missing parl ol lhal game. Music held him spellbound in his leisure lime. 52 CARDINAL ANNUAL ' , .1 ix. .J of Helen Holmes AlberT Honeclc Hassel Housfon DoroThy Hoff Laura Hinz Loraine Hilgendorf HELEN HOLMES Helen was a Tall, digniTied blond. Physics pro- vided much ioy Tor her. She liked To swim, dance, slcaTe, ride, and aTTend Shield Club meeTings. ALBERT HON ECK AlberT was inTeresTed in hisTorical TacTs. GOIT was his TavoriTe physical diversion. He won dis- TincTion as an oTTicer in The LaTin and Science Clubs. HASSEL HOUSTON We admired The persisTence Hassel showeo in his maThemaTical work. Hallie enjoyed playing Tennis, Tor iT is a game which requires precision and slcill. IRENE HENDERSON Brown-eyed, vivacious PaT was Thrilled when she goT a service emblem. Her hobby was Talcing down songs over The radio, Thereby improving her shorThand. JOHN HEUER Playing a sTirring march or an overTure pleased John, our clarineT player, greaTly. He was grad- uaTed Tro anual ArTs Course wiTh a high sTanding. ADA HINZ Ada undersTands. So wenT The Tale when hearT gualces shook our soulsl She was an ardenT mem- ber oT INTER Nos and Treasurer oT Girls' Club. 53 Irene Henderson John Heuer U Dolores Hess MonT:'j'5'fTfef7'Pf'Ea'iis'Ton DOROTHY HOFF DoT's pen pals, oT whom she had almosT one hundred, lived in various parTs oT The globe. When she wasn'T wriTing To Them, she was playing Tennis. LAURA HINZ Lovable, laughing, and lively was Larry. Oh, Tor The liTe oT a carefree vagabondf' sighed Laura, who loved To hilce on a brighT, sunny morning. LORAINE HILGENDORF Happy, blond Lorry planned To become a sTef nographer and, some day, a privaTe secreTary. Vfhenever possible, she enjoyed sRaTing, swimming, and reading. DOLORES HESS ShorT buT sweeTl ThaT described Dee's one year aT SouTh. She brighTened our horizon, and we were sorry To lose her. Her ulTimaTe goal was nursing. MONTGOMERY HOUSTON Crack! And anoTher bunny biT The dusTl Lee spenT his leisure learning The ins and ouTs OT a riTle. The crack OT an auTomaTic was music To his ears. JANE HOPPA Janie dashed abouT wiTh a maTh book in one hand and a Tennis raclceT in The oTher. And They elecTed her To The class commission and made her represenTaTive girl. Ada Hinz Jane Hoppa ,wfwm ... ,...,, 4- .Q . . Y Offo Hueffner Alfred Ouade uThgdgi,eus Jak.ubew.sk.L John Jackson Evelyn Jasinski Pefer Jehowski OTTO H U ETTN ER ln fhe class play, Oflo slarred as The blusfering millionaire fafher, Jerome Underwood. All of his olher inleresfs cenfered around musical acfivilies. ALFRED QUADE All looked forward fo being an accounlanl. He enioyed playing baskefball al Soulh. Anofher of fhe favorife sporfs in which he indulged was base- ball. THADDEUS JAKUBOWSKI Living in fhe mounfains of Pennsylvania for four- feen years was Ted's early life. And whal a rider he was! He infended fo be a courf reporfer. SADYE INGRAHAM Auslin was confenl' wilh a cook book in her hand and The ingredienfs for candy around her. Shield Club, Cenfury, and CARDINAL work occupied her leisure. , ARLINE HUENNEKENS Whal an array of possibilifies life held for Arlinel She dreamed of rhe house beaufiful, of becoming a librarian, and of being a celebrafed aulhor. CHARLES JACKSON Slonewall reveled in The ioys of mechanical draw- ing. He was a member of rhe cross counfry feam and wished some day lo be a professional ball- player. af? Sadye lngraham Arline Huennekens Elvira Jens Benny Jedrzeiewski JOHN JACKSON Collecfing slamps and playing golf were Johnnyls chosen pasfimes. Algebra and physics were his favorife subiecfs. He desired fo become a physician. EVELYN JASlNSKl Travelling in far places lhrilled Jackie, and, fo gain Jrhe means for if, she hoped fo become a sec- refary and lo grab off some fennis crowns on fhe side. PETER JEHOWSKI Pefe wished 'ro become an agriculfural experi- menlalisf ar Monlana Sfale College. As Jrhe Ox- onian in THE Nexvous Wkeck he sen? us info spasms, don'f cha know! ELVlRA JENS I Elvira, known as Vi fo her many friends al' Soulh, was noled for her cheerful smile. Her favorile sfudy was malhemafics, because il' exercised her mind. BENNY JEDRZEJEWSKI Benny, realizing 'rhe imporfance of accounfing in business, fook a deep inleresf in office praclice. Besides reading, he enioyed golfing and hiking. LIANE JOHANNSEN Lee-fhal was shorl' for Liane, you know. Her hobbies were reading and swimming. Taking lhe roll of Row I5 was one of Lee's happiesf memories. 54 Charles Jackson Llane Johannsen CA NAL ANNUAL ArThur Kasprzyk EdiTh Kappel Harry Klempen Viola Kloehn Evelyn Kowalkiewicz Elmer Kirchenwlfz George Kipharf John Kazmierski Joseph Konieczny Florence Kinfop Bernice Kallas Howard Kassulke ARTHUR KASPRZYK ArT loved sporTs. He played baseball and en- ioyed skiing and skaTing. Woodworking proved To be his hobby, while science was his TavoriTe sTudy. EDITH KAPPEL As a TypisT on The CARDINAL weekly sTaTf, EdiTh was a success. Boyl And maybe she didn'T Take greaT pride in her achievemenT as moniTor in A. HARRY KLEM PEN AlThough Harry chose science, his aim was To be an audiTor. The sTudies, music and English, Took up his spare Time. He aTTended Three band Tournae menTs. VIOLA KLOEHN ReciTing Topics in hisTory appealed To Viola. She loved To meeT new people and analyze Their vari- ous personaliTies. Her Triends all called her Vi. EVELYN KOWALKIEWICZ AmbiTions and vocaTions don'T always agree. AT leasT noT in Ev's case! AlThough she dreamed oT becoming a modisTe, Ev infended To pound The keys. ELMER KIRCHENWITZ AI chose ToresTry as his vocaTion because oT iTs oufdoor life. Pigeon racing also held his inTeresT, buT he loved dancing, swimming, and handball. 55 GEORGE KIPHART Skippy wanTed To be an engineer, because iT required brain work and mafh. NOT merely maThe- maTically minded, he enioyed hisTory and oTher culTural subiecls. JOHN KAZMIERSKI Casey, The silenT and demure, meekly admiTTed his hobby was wriTing on whaTever subiecT came along. This explained why he liked his Theme as- signmenTs. JOSEPH KONIECZNY Like all big business men, Jokers enioyed golT and Tishing. l-le was graduaTed from The AccounT- ing Course and hoped To work in an ofTice some day. FLORENCE KINTOP Florence always liked Spanish. She was enrolled in The STenographic Course and some day will be The privaTe secreTary oT a Tamous Spanish Toreador. BERNICE KALLAS The wanderlusT maniTesTed iTselT in Bernice. She liked besT To Travel, buT she also enioyed swim- ming and dancing. Her TavoriTe subiecT was biology. HOWARD KASSULKE Besides ediTing This book, Spider played on The baskeTball Team and made his numeral. For amuse! menT, he bossed his sTaTl and railed-aT Teminine Toibles. CARDINAL ANNUAL LleseTTa Koch AgaTha Krieg JeanneTTe Kraszka Irene Kopaczewski Jack Krueger John Krygier LI ESETTA KOCH SeTTa's TeeT simply couldn'T lceep sfill when she heard music. Her goal was a privaTe secreTaryship. Her TavoriTe sTudies were shorTharid and Typing. AGATHA KRIEG DoTTy loved To cool: and so scored in her do- mesTic science classes. She hoped To sTudy The Teaching oT deaf children and laTer To Teach primary grades. J EAN N ETTE KRASZKA Jane's ambiTion was To become a nurse and sooThe her Tevered paTienTs. l-ler TavoriTe amuse- menTs were baseball and making delicacies Tor The Table. ELEANORE KRUEGER Smiling Bunny was Tond oT dancing, singing, and Tennis. Music enchanTed her, TooTball Thrilled her. She hoped To become a sTenographer some day. ETHEL KRATZAT Vim, vigor, and viTaliTy-ThaT was Kay, The dis- penser oT happiness. Her TavoriTe sTudy was pub- lic speaking. Her TavoriTe ouTdoor sporT was swimming. ALMA KRUG Alma yearned To become a nurse. A MinnesoTa hospiTal will draw her Tor Training. She was also an enThusiasTic Talkie Tan-The movies, oT coursel Eleanore Krueger ETheI KraTzaT Marie Kieker Carl Krause IRENE KOPACZEWSKI lrene's ouTsTan-ding arnbiTion in liTe was To be- come a privaTe secreTary. We wish you luck, lrene. Of The sporTs, she lilced dancing besT of all. JACK KRUEGER STeve, The sheriTT in The class play, was Tar re- moved Tronn an engineer, yeT if Jack could be as good an engineer as a sheriTT, his TuTure would be assured. JOHN KRYGIER Jaclc was inTeresTed in all sorTs OT sciences and had a craving Tor experimenTing. l-le worked on The ANNUAL sTaT'T and was capTain oT The swimming Team. MARIE KIEKER MeeT The privaTe secreTary, Rie. RegisTered as a sTenographer, she hoped To hold an oTTice iob, her TondesT dream. Reading was her TavoriTe amusemenT. CARL KRAUSE Advice To The siclc-Carl had an ambiTion To be- come a docTor, Because oT his inTeresT in biology, he should succeed. l-lis TavoriTe sporT was Tennis. FRANK KUKOVETZ KooT's TavoriTe hobby was raising whiTe mice. rabbiTs, and squirrels. l-le also liked To Tish and spenT much oT his Time in NorThern Wisconsin wiTh rod and reel. 56 Alma Krug Frank KukoveTz Evelyn Kusz Edna Larsen CARDINAL ANNUAL Ellen Kuiawski Ervin Kumelski Evelyn Lee Leroy Lange Bernice Krause Marlon Kubalek Helen Krzyzanowski Slanley Kucinski lrene Lewandowski Lillian Larsen EVELYN KU SZ Quile an unusual hobby is reading aboul lhe elhics ol medicine, bul Ev was an unusual girl. Nursing was her goal: and chemislry, her lavorile subiecl. ELTEN KUJAWSKI Ellen's inleresl in business organizalion inspired him lo become a cerlilied public accounlanl. He enioyed nolhing beller lhan a good lennis malch. ERVIN KUMELSKI Erv, who was enrolled in lhe Science Course, in- lended lo become a lirsl-rale pillaroller. Lalin, malhemalics, and baseball were also weaknesses ol his. EVELYN LEE Shrimp! Whal an exlremely inappropriale name lor herl She loved lo allend musicales, and, by way ol variely, became prolicienl in household arls. LE ROY LANGE Remember Lee as Mr. Alden in lhe operella and as Judd Morgan, lhe slern lalher, in THE Nenvous WRECK? And he was presidenl ol Boys' Glee Club loo. BERNlCE KRAUSE Speedy! Bernice's nickname suiled her lo a T, lor she seemed lo be everywhere al once. To be a physical inslruclor was Speedy's chiel ambilion. EDNA LARSEN Tall, blond, wilh blue eyes-Edna was a lypical Norslci. She revelled in a game ol goll lollowed by a cool swim, or in a quiel evening playing bridge. MARION KUBALEK Being gradualed lrom lhe Science Course, Pee Wee hoped lo become a dielilian. She experienced a greal lhrill when she allended lhe band lourna- menl. HELEN KRZYZANOWSKI A privale ollice, a lille such as secrelary-lhis Helen was slriving lor. She enioyed reading dur- ing leisure momenls. We knew her as a graceful dancer. STANLEY KUClNSKI l-lunling and lishing were lhe lavorile sporls ol lhis chap lrom Norlhern Michigan. l-laving begun lo sludy radio, he planned lo perlecl himsell in il. IRENE LEWANDOWSKI lrene had a mosl' disarming smile. Being lond ol German, she corresponded wilh sludenls in Ger- many. Teaching, as a career, allracled her greally. LILLIAN LARSEN Three hearlsl was Lil's pel phrase. No, she wasn'l playing wilh menis hearls lhis lime: il was bridge. Shield and Girls' Club loolc much ol her lime. 57 y CARDINAL ANNUAL Rulh Luedlce Eugene Liwski Grace Loebel Eleanore Lilewski Gwendolyn LindquisT Roloerf Lingcnfelder g.. Y RUTH LU EDKE AT menTion OT music, Rufus was all ears. l-ler achievemenTs included The NaTional High School OrchesTra, The all-ciTy band, and Two band TournamenTs. EUGENE LIWSKI There was a crooner in our midsTl Nina's asso- ciaTion wiTh our singing clubs iusTiTied his aspira- Tions. WaTch ouT, you Vallees, Crosbys, and Columbosl GRACE LOEBEL Giggles' TavoriTe sTudy was biology. EvidenTly she enioyed dissecTing, Tor she chose nursing as her proTession. She also enioyed cuTTing up on The ice. CHARLOTTE LADTKOW Since CharloTTe's TavoriTe sTudy was Spanish, she hoped some Time To visiT Spain. She was a mem- ber of Girls' Club and a graduaTe oT The ElecTive Course. ARMENTA LU BA ArmenTa wanTed To become a secreTary. She said her TavoriTe subiecis were English and shorT- handl Her reason? They were The easiesTl SmarT, eh? BERNARD LEWANDOWSKI Here we had anoTher eager aspiranT Tor The po- siTion of aeronauTical engineer. Ben served SouTh as a member oT Cardinal Boys' Club and Science Club. CharloTTe LadTkow Armenfa Luba Harold Liloan Leona LundquisT ELEANORE LIJEWSKI STenography and household arTs aTTracTed El. EiTher one prepared her Tor The TuTure. Girls' Club and senior dances made liTe inTeresTing Tor her. GWENDOLYN LINDQUIST ThaT wee colleen, Gwen, always declared her TavoriTe subiecT was physics. She was an ardenT TooTball Tan and was inTeresTed in dancing and swimming. ROBERT UNGENEELDER ' For Tour years Bob played The clarineT in our band. l-lis TavoriTe sTudy was Spanish. He en-ioyed spending The early mornings ouT on a golf course. HAROLD LIBAN Lib was going To maior in medicine, one sign was his choice oT The Science Course. He was aThleTic, preTerring golT and baslceTball To oTher sporTs. LEONA LUNDQUIST Swede, Lee, or GreTa Garbo? This demure miss answered To all. She liked To swim, dance, read, and hilce. She hoped To become a privaTe sTe- nographer. IZELL LUTHER lzell was an unusual girl, Tor she didn'T Tall: much buT accomplished a greaT deal. She wanTed To be a sTenographer and, some day, a privaTe secreTary. 58 Bernard Ize if CARDINAL ANNUAIJ Carl Manske Eleanore Malmsfrom Eleanore Maciaszek anne Marvin Lois McGrane , lrene Markowski CARL MANSKE Napoleon was shorTq so was Carl. ShorTy, a mainsTay on our swimming Team, hailed Trom The Manual ArTs Course. ChemisTry and radio ap- pealed To him. ELEANORE MALMSTROM Ellie's violin did double duTy. She was a mem- ber oT our orchesTra and oT The all-ciTy high school orchesTra. ln summer, she enioyed her morning dip. ELEANORE MACIASZEK She had brown hair, sparkling eyes, and was nicknamed BeTh by her Triends. Because she liked To Take dicTaTion, BeTh chose To become a sTe- nographer. JOSEPH MACT-lAN Mac Tried To imiTaTe The Arkansas Woodchopper X xy playing mounTain ballads and cowboy songs on The harmonica. l-lis ambiTion was To be a, band masTer'. ANGELINE MALISZEWSKI Angie, a lover oT English, acTually enioyed wriT- ing Themes. l-ler greaTesT Thrill was seeing her Theme or poem in The CARDINAL, She enjoyed swimming. LORRAINE MATTICK To become an eTTicienT nurse Tor some docTor was her ambiTion. Dimples Tound diversion Trom rouTine in swimming and reading. Dancing was her hobby. 59 Joseph Machan Angeline Maliszewski Lorraine Mafhck Mary McCullough Nick ManhoTT ElizabeTh Mazurek LORRAINE MARVIN The high sTandards oT CenTury appealed To en- ThusiasTic Lorraine, who was an acTive member and a lover oT dramaTics. English was her TavoriTe subiecT. LOIS McGRANE QuieT, decorous Lois enjoyed swimming and read- ing, buT The TheaTer appealed To her mosT. She Typed excellenTly and hoped To become a secreTary. IRENE MARKOWSKI Faa+ball had an enThusiasTic Tollower in Renie, who missed only one game during Tour years. Tennis and Tudge also kepT her busy-and oh, whaT Tudge! MARY McCULLOUC-1-l-l JusT imagine Taking your Troubles To Nenie, whose ambiTion was To become a lawyer! She de- voTed mosT OT her Time To reading mysTeries and romances. NICK MANI-IOFF Biology and maTh were Nick's besT subiecTs. Raising Tropical Tish was a pasfime wiTh him, while archiTecTure was his vocaTion. Classy? We'll sayl ELIZABETH MAZUREK BeTh loved To read blood-curdling sTories and Then TrighTen her Triends by Telling Them. She was inTeresTed in baskeTball and sold heaps oT Tickefs. CARDINAL ANNUAL Mildred McMurray JeaneTTe Meyer Raymond Naegele KenneTh Niskern Arfhur Musolif Marion Mickelson William Raymond Narloclr Olive Nilson AnasTasia Murawski Raymond Mosiman Esrher MILDRED McMURRAY Tickling The ivories and becoming a Teacher were Mac's obsessions. When The iogging horse would leT her sTay a-Top, she really enjoyed riding. RAYMOND NAEGELE Ray was one oT Those chaps who gave up golf Tor The TwenTieTh Time. l-lowever, he sTuclc To archiTecTural drawing so he mighT become a greaT builder. KENNETH NISKERN KenneTh was a scienTiTic-minded person. l-le hoped To become a chemisT in a manuTacTuring planT. l-le was inTeresTed in chemisTry, physics, and aviaTion. ARTHUR MUSOLFF ArT aspired To become a chemical engineer, so he enrolled in maTh. ChemisTry challenged his in- TellecT, buT swimming appealed To his sporTing naTure. MARION MICKELSON ATTer an absence OT a year, Marion reTurned To be graduaTed from SouTh. Many OT her hours were spenT in The service oT The ANNUAL as a sTe4 nographer. WILLIAM Mll-lELClC M, U. Rah! Rah! Tor old MarqueTTel was Bill's TuTure yell. l-le planned To enroll in The Civil Ene gineering Course. l-le enioyed swimming and physics. JEANETTE MEYER Sparkling personaliTy, sassy reparTee, gracious digniTy combined To malce Jan our valued chum and comrade. ln scholarship and club work she ranlced ace high. RAYMOND NARLOCK Ray was Thai' Tall, angular moniTor oT Row 6 who Tound sTamp-collecTing righT up his alley. AlThough he was in The Science Course, his peT sTudy was maThemaTics. OLIVE NILSON Olive, our chemisTl l-ler TavoriTe sTudy was chemisTry, her TavoriTe club was Science Club, and she wanTed To work in one of The greaT research laboraTories. ANASTASIA MURAWSKI Wee, brown-eyed ShorTy admiTTed she had a passion Tor heighT. Gladly would she have added a Tew inches To her sTaTure. She was devoTed To Girls' Club. RAYMOND MOSlMAN Ray, moniTor of Row I8 and an acTive Tennis enThusiasT, was TascinaTed by The romance and beauTy oT Spanish. l-le was graduaTed Trom The ElecTive Course. ESTHER MYERS l-larrieT Underwood, socieTy dame and clinging vine-This was BeTTy's role in The class play. Whai she really wanTed eyenTually To become was a nurse. 60 CARDINAL ANNUAL Oslrowskl Henry Nowinski Alexandra Obremski Pagenkopf Sophie Olszowy Edward Orbik FRANCES OSTROWSKI Slcaling wilh her classmales was one of Eanny's londesl memories. She worlced hard on Salurdays in order 'lo complele The Slenographic Course al Soulh. HENRY NOWINSKI I-lanlc's smile was lo be envied, lor il allracled lhe ladies mighlily. I-le was enrolled in 'lhe Com- mercial Course as he inlended fo become an ac- counlanl. ALEXANDRA OBREMSKI Whal's a live Ieller word meaning personalily plus? ll's Sandy. I-ler hobby was working cross- word puzzles. She was an officer ol Girls' Glee Club. CHARLOTTE PALKOWSKI A love sel on youll' And Cheve won anolher lennis malch. She played in lhe semi-finals in lhe lournamenl. Dancing and swimming were her olher hobbies. I-IARRIET OWLEY Ambilion-I-larry exacllyl Some ol her achieve- menls were ANNUAL lilerary edilor, rnonilor of Row IO, slar reporler and copy reader lor lhe CARDIN-AL. CORA PETERSEN Pele lilced lobogganing wilh a crowd ol good sporls. On lhe side, however, she was going lo be a slenographer, because she lilced shorlhand and lyping. 6 l Charlolle Palkowski Harriel Owley Cora Pefersen Esther Olzansky Phyllis Nowak Rulh Pavllck VIRGINIA PAGENKOPF Ginger wanled lo be a lraveling leacherl Bul, since she also lilced drarnalics and The arl of slage make-up, she may end as a famous screen aclressl SOPI-IIE OLSZOWY Nol conlenl wilh being a slenographer, Sophie wanled also lo become an operalor of office ma- chinery. l-ler favorile sludy was, of course, lype- wriling. EDWARD ORBIK Success in selling liclcels ol: all Icinds came nalural fo Edward, who had many lrue friends in school. I-le chose lhe newspaper world as his lulure goal. ESTI-IER OLZANSKY The girl wilh lhe perpelual smile -'lhose were lhe words we used 'lo describe Eslher. She was very fond of volleyball, swimming, dancing, and reading, Pl'IYl.LlS NOWAK Phil disliked serious people. Thal was because she was so gay, peppy, and lull of lun. To be a privale secrelary for sorne genius was her ambilion. RUTH PAVLICK Ambilious Rulh would hurniliale herself by be- coming a mere slenographer il demands for secre- laries were scarce. lvlyslery slories were her hobby. Evelyn Pociecha Lillian Pewarun CARDINAL Elmira Pellmann Mallhew Penoske Rudolph Pechauer Mildred Perry EVELYN POCIECHA Vlfords can'l explain Ev's popularilyl She played baslcelball for lhree years, swam on lhe champion- ship leam ol Shield, and was monilor ol Row 17. ELMIRA PELLMANN Misey spenl much ol her lime lyping lor lhe CARDINAL. She was aclive, loo, in Cenlury and Girls' Club. l-liking and swimming also appealed slrongly lo Elmira. MATTHEW PENOSKE Einslein? Poohl A slighl genius compared lo lhe one Mallie hopedclo be. l-le wished lo sur- pass lhis Tilan by bealing him al his own game, malhemalics. CLAUDINE PRIEBE Claud and ollice praclice wenl hand in hand. lor she wanled lo become a privale secrelary. ln her spare lime, she enioyed swimming and slcaling. AN N PETRAN Ann's greal craving lor aclion was ollen salis- lied in a speedy lennis game. To enjoy a good laugh every day was her hobby. Quile an unusual one! CLARENCE POI-lL l-lomel Home! yelled Clare. Don'l worry. l-le was only walching his lavorile sporl, baseball. Besides baseball, he was also lond ol reading. ANNUAL Claudine Priebe Ann Pelran John Podlesnik Gladys Peol LILLIAN PEWARUN Alwavs a cheerlul smile-lhal was Lillumsl She linished high school in lhree years, and who wouldn'l be proud ol lhall She liked lo play lennis. RUDOLPH PECHAUER Numbers lo Rudy meanl lwo lhings, malh or musical numbers. l-le was quile an experl piano accordionisl, and could juggle 'figures like an ac- counlanl. MILDRED PERRY Micky wanled lo be a greal diver and an ac- complished pianisl, lor swimming and music were her special inleresls. Analyzing in biology was her long suil. JOHN PODl.ESNlK The grealesl ol Jaclc's achievemenls was lo be gradualed lrom Soulh in lhree years. l-le enioyed especially lhe sludy ol planls and animals in his biology class. GLADYS PEOT Gladys, also called Lolly, had hopes ol become ing a privale secrelary. Whizzing down a slide and lripping across a dance lloor were her hobbies. EUGENE PANKOWSKI A more ardenl baseball lan lhan Gene could nol be lound. When he was nol reading baseball news, physics and slamp collecling look mosl ol his lime. 62 0 Eugene Po CARDINAL ANNUAL Roslkowski Edna Prochnow Walfer Rodenbeclc Susan Reufer Irene Prisfavok Evelyn Ran-ifhun Rapkin Hildegarde Rarh Ernesl Ross H EN RY ROSTKOWSKI Hank loved physics-one reason why he selecled 'rhe Science Course. He played lhe piano well, so music vied wilh mailer. l-le was monilor of Row 7. EDNA PROCHNOW Sprechen Sie Deulsch? Edna did, for she had 'raken German lhree years and belonged ro fhe German Club, Make a big hif wifh Edna by speaking German. WALTER RODEN BECK Eighf semeslers of Spanish made Wally quile a caballero. There was nolhing slow aboul him, for he raced in amaleur skaling meels for lhree years. SUSAN REUTER Who could forgel' Susiel She was one of our mosl' ardenl foofball fans. Dancing, lisfening lo good music, and playing fhe piano were her paslimes. IRENE PRISTAVOK Rene, a prospeclive privafe secrelary, was grad- ualed from 'l'he Sienographlc Course. Tennis? Yes. Girls' Club? Uh-huh! Work on 'll-ie CARDINAL? Absolulelyl EVELYN RAMTHUN Wilh pencil and paper, Evelyn produced much. She became a sfar reporler for lhe CARDINAL. l-ler ambirion? To become an organisl or a iournalisl. 63 Josephine Prizwan Rufh Roeglin Fern Rasmusson MARION RAPKIN Sunny, lhe dancer! We all saw her dance for various clubs, and we were noi' al all surprised lhal' she was going +0 be a professional dancer. HILDEGARDE RATH l-lildegarde, a connoisseur of lileralure, loved 'lo read 'rhe 'famous aufhors she mel in English. She enjoyed Shield Club and gloried in good music. ERN EST ROSS Can you imagine Skinny's being inleresfed in pholography? Well, he was. To drive a golf ball 'For one hundred yards in a slraighl line lhrilled him. JOSEPHINE PRIZWAN Jo loved Spanish and wanled lo be a secrerary. Nolhing is lefl 'lor us lo believe buf lhal sl1e'll soon be faking diclalion from some Spanish senor. RUTH ROEGl.lN If dreams come frue, Rufh will lravel here and abroad when noi' engaged in her favorife sporl, hiking. Ol her sludies, she liked olllice praclice besl. FERN RASMUSSON ll was a dire sfruggle for Fern lo decide belween surgery and arf, buf ar+ Finally won. A place on 'lhe class commission was proof enough of her popularily. CARDINAL ANNUAL Lydia Ruzicka MaTThew Rzonca Lydia Sazama George Ryan RuTh Schoeneman Edward RuTkowski LYDIA RUZICKA English was a mosT TascinaTing and helpTul sub- iecT To Lydia. Girls' Club, Shield Club, and music gave her many happy hours boTh in and ouT OT school. LYDIA SAZAMA QuieT buT eTTicienT, her TavoriTe sTudy shorThand, Lydia's success as a sTenographer was ineviTable. She enioyed The progress oT Girls' Club. GEO RGE RYAN Georgie enrolled in The Science Course. He cared mosT Tor public speaking buT was happy, Too, when collecfing sTamps. His TavoriTe sporT was golT. LORRAINE SCHOLL Goldie was a member oT Glee Club and was enrolled in The ElecTive Course. BeTore becoming a sTenographer, she wanTed To enTer MarqueTTe UniversiTy. SYLVESTER RUTKOWSKI AThleTic Syll FooTball, swimming, and Tennis oc- cupied his Tirne. BuT how This lad could dance! Senior dances were never compleTe wiThouT him. MIRIAM ROTBLATT Miriam was a phenomenon! She was graduaTed in Three yearsl This brillianT child wanTed To be eiTher a maThemaTician or a playground insTrucTor. Lorraine Scholl SylvesTer RuTkowski Miriam RoTblaTT Dolores Schallock VioleT Ruck Anne Schimenz MATTHEW RZONCA MaTT loved To collecT sTarnps. He devoTed his leisure momenTs To his sTarnp album and dreamed oT becoming as greaT a philaTelisT as Mr. J. Uihlein. RUTH SCHOENEMAN RuTh, a graduaTe oT The ElecTive Course, hoped To become a Teacher. Her hobby was bridge, buT, of The sporTs, golT and swimming aTTracTed her especially. EDWARD RUTKOWSKT Here was a zealous member oT The Newsboys' Club and Science Club. Ed was graduaTed Trorn The Science Course and hoped To become a greaT engineer. DOLORES SCHALLOCK Take This leTTer, Miss Schallockf' These words Dodo, oT The STenographic Course, wanTed To hear. ln her spare Time she enioyed roller skaTing. VIOLET RUCK Anyone inTeresTed in a good housewiTe need only consulT Vi. She liked To cook, bake, and plan menus, She also enioyed dancing and swimming. ANNE SCHIMENZ Anne was a cub reporTer on The CARDINAL and presidenT oT German Club. We knew her Tor her sporTsmanship, She enioyed baskeTball and shorT- hand. 64 CARDINAL ANNUAL Schroeder Rulh Schwechel Hazel Schullz Sczesny Leon Seralin Evelyn Searing JOHN SCl-IROEDER Yes, sir, in lhe class play, Junior presided wilh dignily over lhe Underwoods' gas buggy, loul in school he huslled around and made a numeral and an emblem. RUTH SCHWECHEL Schwechie was anolher girl who was seldom seri- ous. She gol much enioymenl lrom baslcelloall and volleyball. Public speaking was her lavorile sludy. HAZEL SCHULTZ Demure and sludious, wilh a perl smile lor ev- eryone-lhal was l-lazel. She was a member ol lhe CARDINAL ANNUAL slall and assislanl monilor ol Row l9. MARCELLA SENGER Marcella was always cheerlul. She liked shorl- hand and was gradualed lrorn lhe Slenographic Course. Swimming and slcaling occupied her spare lime. STANLEY Sl-lEA Shea, ol lhe Eleclive Course, was looking lor- ward lo becoming a loresler. lmagine Slan a loreslerl Reading and swimming lilled much ol his lime. LOUISE SCHAFFNER Looy was lhe lypical ouldoor girl. She spenl her leisure lime boaling, lobogganing, and play- ing ouldoor games. She also enioyed reading a good boolc. 65 -A will Marcella Senger Slanley Shea Louise Schallner Rulh Seversen Blanche Serafin John Schuele LYDIA SCZESNY Selling a seal in A lhrilled Lydia, and so did manipulaling lhe ollice machinery. She was neilher absenl nor lardy during her lour years al Soulh. LEON SERAFIN Quile an eccenlric lad was Leon, a graduale ol lhe Manual Arls Course whose lavorile sludy was lrigonomelry, l-le played ping-pong lor relaxalion. EVELYN SEARING l-lere's a girl who lranscribed shorlhand noles lor pleasure. Mickey inlended lo be a perlecl sle- nographer. Jusl as earneslly did she go in lor hllcing. RUTH SEVERSEN Rulhie, a graduale ol lhe Eleclive Course, hoped lo become somebody's slenographer. l-ler layo- rile sporls were lennis, swimming, baslcelball, and bowling. BLANCHE SERAFIN Blanche longed lo dash oll lellers lor a big busi- ness man. Her mosl pleasanl recolleclion ol Soulh was receiving a seal in A during her freshman year. JOHN SCHUELE Physics was John's lavorile sludy, bul his lunch period broughl him mosl delighl. Perlecl al- lendance earned him lhe assislanl monilorship ol Row 2l. CARDINAL ANNUAL Alice Skarpinski Sylvesler Slelmaszewski Earl Smilh Margarel Slark Roberl Slaben Bernice Sohrweide ALICE SKARPlNSKl Can'l you iusl hear lhis lulure denlal hygienisl say, Open your moulh and say, 'Ah '? Thal should bring resulls. Al enjoyed biology and arl- crall. SYLVESTER STELMASZEWSKl Cy believed he was deslined lor lhe noble proe lession ol engineering. Teachers liked him lor his beaulilul penmanship, which so lew sludenls possess. EARL SMITH Earl pursued a very successlul alhlelic career. l-le earned numerals in lrack and loolball. His nexl grealesl love was-er-ah-malhemalics. JUNE SPOTTS Spolzie said, ll lhere is anylhing l like beller lhan dancing, il is more dancing. She enioyed laking noles and wanled lo be somebody's secre- lary. ADELE SIDEK She was so adepl as a cellisl lhal she was ac- cepled by lhe Nalional l-ligh School Orcheslra ol l932. Girls' Club and Cenlury claimed her as a member. RUTl-l STOLL A sweel nickname, Honey, graced Rulh, who en- ioyed arl and reading. She read lhree books each week and worked cross-word puzzles in her spare lime. June Spolls Adele Sidek Rulh Sloll Maryann Slawicki Edylhe Slaflord Kerrnnl Smaller MARGARET STARK Margarel was versalile and enlhusiaslic in her work and play. She was monilor ol Row 2l, presi- denl ol Science Club, and a member ol lhe ANNUAL slali. ROBERT STABEN Bob, who lor lhree years was one ol our slage hands, inlended lo become a drallsman. His hobby was swimming. l-le also liked baseball and baskelball. BERNICE SOHRWEIDE A mischievous minx, Bernice, who was always ready lo laugh wilh someone. l-ler ambilion was lo be a denlal hygienisl. She was very lond ol skaling. MARYANN STAWICKI Energelic Maryann! Al any lime, she was will- ing lo lravel, dance, or hike. l-ler ambilion was lo walk lsome more hikingll along corridors-as a nurse. EDYTHE STAFFORD Wedy's ambilions reached lhe lop ol Ml. Ever- esl, lor she desired lo be a second Gainsborough. Skelching sludenls unawares was one ol her many paslimes. KERMIT SMALTER To become an avialor and circle lhe globe in eighly minules was Wings' ambilion. Taking parl in baskelball, lrack, and goll look up his spare lime. l as Eli Surges DoroThy Swensen CARDINAL ANNUAL l ,, , .. I Wanda Szpakowski Ralph STudernann George TafT Ludmilla Szymanski ELI SURGES Eli came, he saw, he conquered. Blondy's big- gesT Thrill was speaking in A. l-le enioyed all sporTs Trom TooTball To ping-pong. Long may he pingl WAN DA SZPAKOWSKI AlThough Tiny was peTiTe, she nonchalanTly ac- cumulaTed crediTs galore in The English Course. She balanced This heavy dieT wiTh Tennis and dancing. RALPH STUDEMANN Slicing up frogs-ThaT was whaT DuTch liked To do. AeronauTics also inTeresTed him. He liked To hunT and Tish, buT preTerably To hunT The bounding bunny. SOPHIE STOPAR ShorTy, a sparkling personaliTy wiTh a ready smile, was presidenT oT German Club, a TypisT Tor The CARDINAL, and a member oT iTs business sTaTF, RUTH TEHAN We all knew WooTie Trom The candy counTer. She has been There since she was a sophomore and will miss ThaT genTeel occupaTion much aTTer grad- uaTionl 'DOROTHY THIEL DOT was always willing To assisT in any way she could. l-ler Tennis serve was TasTer Than chain lighTning. ANNUAL work monopolized mosT of her Time. 67 Sophie STopar RuTh Tehan Warren Thompson RuTh Thompson DOROTHY SWENSEN CARDINAL reporTer, corresponding secreTary oT Senior Girls' Club, and squad leader in Shield Club were only some oT The posiTions ThaT DoroThy held. GEORGE TAET ln l93I, TaTTy was a member oT The cross coun- Try squad. In The summer, swimming occupied mosT oT his Time. His TavoriTe subiecT was public speaking. LUDMILLA SZYMANSKI Linda, our PorTial She wanTed To be an' aTTorney, Tor law inTrigued her. She played baskeTball Tour years and was a member oT The championship Team. WARREN THOMPSON CapTain Tommy, The pride oT Row 20, spenT his leisure Time selling baskeTball TickeTs Tor his Triends. OTherwise, he Tound Time To swim and play golT. I RUTH THOMPSON There never were enough senior dances Tor RasTus. She greaTly enioyed swimming and skaTing and was an acTive member oT INTER Nos and Girls' Club. CLARENCE STEPHAN Clarence, he oT The prize TighTer's hair cuT, was in love-wiTh baseball! Some day he'lI be a Tamous shorTsTop Tor The AThleTics or maybe The Yanks. Dorofhy Thiel Clarence STephan CARDINAL ANNUAL Angelyn Turk Anloinelle Tomasino Gladys Tishack Clemenl Trnmborn Jeanefle Trzeszkowslxi Claudia Tyler ANGELYN TURK Greal sporl il was lo walch sprighlly Sally Mor- gan, alias Angy, gambol Through THE Nervous WRECK. And once she go? IOO in an algebra ex- aminalionl ANTOINETTE TOlVlASlNO Baseballl Wherever lhere was a bal and a ball one was apl io find Ann. Somelimes broken win- dows resulled from hard hir home-runs or foul balls. G,-LADYS TISHACK Ei'li's lavorile school aclivily was gymnaslics. l-ler hobby was collecling songs. old and new. Swimming and roller skaling afforded her exercise. MARION TRAWICKI Mickey enioyecl The beauliful friendships formed a'l' informal club meelings. She enioyed dancing, buf, being a nalure lover, she enioyed camping more. RUTH UNKE Ginger! Thai' was Rulh, who liked lo work in 'rhe library. She was a real swimmer and a Lalin sludenl supreme. She enjoyed lranslaling CAESAR! MARY TON DRYK Swimming, skaling, and hiking were Mary's favo- rile paslimes. She was gradualed from 'rhe Sle- nographic Course. To be a slenographer was her ambilion. Marion Trawiclii Rulh Unke Mary Tondryk l-lerberl Toelz Earl Villwock Roberl' Van Lanen CLEMENT TRlMBORN Clem gol his greafesl ioy in playing on 'rhe championship Assembly A learn in 'rhe Jungle League. l-le was a member ol 'rhe Cenlury and Science Clubs. J EAN N ETTE TRZESZKOWS Kl Jean wished 'ro be a privale secrelary or a piano leacherl Don'l' you wish you were a pupil? l-ler favorile sludy was French. Oui, oui, mademoi- sellef' CLAU DIA TYLER Claudia was going 'ro be a floral designer and own her own florisl shop. Al' any lime, she could be found galhering arlicles and piclures as memenlos. HERBERT TOETZ Herb was like mosl olher lishermen, lhal is, he liked 'lo fish only when The linny lribe was hungry, l-le liked lo hunl, lhis bloodlhirsly young blade. EARL VILLWOCK Rumus inlense love for malhemalics gained him The name, Algebra Shark. l-le inlended lo be- come an eleclrician. l-lis lavorile sporl was base- ball. ROBERT VAN LANEN Bob was a lover ol nalure and an enlhusiasl aboul ouldoor sporls, among which lennis and golf were his lavoriles. l-lis obieclive was archileclure. 68 CARDINAL ANNUAL Orin Waqner Richard Weber Eugene Wesolowski Alfred Wldish Evangeline Wegner Florence Wardynski ORIN WAGNER Whifie, one oT our valuable sTage hands, was ene rolled in The Science Course. His TavoriTe sfudy was physics, and he infended To become a chemisT. RICHARD WEBER Dick chose foreign languages. He spenl' nine years on Greek, German, LaTin, and French. He loved baskelball and was happy when fixing ma- chinery. EUGENE WESOLOWSKI Gene, a corking aThleTe, inTended To go To Mar- que'rTe To sTudy law. He was on The TooTball, cross counTry, and swimming Teams aT SouTh. ELEANOR VOLK Al Tell' The call of The wanderlusli Hiking Through The wilds oT surrounding localiTies was her idea of a good Time. A privaTe secreTaryship was her aim. MILDRED WENZEL Whimsical and demure, yes, even a lil'Tle shy. BUT Mildred's quieT ways capTured many hearTs. She hoped To become an exacTing Teacher of English. ELEANOR WEBER Ellie enrolled in The English Course, wroTe sfories and poems, and goT her arT work inTo The ANNUALS of I93O and l93l. She liked swimming and dancing. 69 Eleanor Volk Mildred Wenzel Eleanor Weber Helen Wedemever Sabina Waclawski Henry Vogl ALFRED WIDISH EirsT Al earned his manager emblems in aThleiTics. Then came The climax of his career, The lead in THE Nekvous WRECK. And he almosT wrecked us wiTh laughTerl EVANGELINE WEGNER DiTTerenT was her name, and diTierenT was she! She read abouT The lives of missionaries and evangelisTs and was going To enTer a Bible lnsTiTuTe. FLORENCE WARDYNSKI Florry, a graduaTe of The ElecTive Course, aspired To be a secreTary. since shorThand was her Tavorife subiecT. ln her leisure Time she danced. HELEN WEDEMEYER ln summer, The wanderlusT lured Mickey, Tor she delighTecl in Traveling in The WesT. While aT school, she enioyed English, public speaking, and LaTin. SABINA WACLAWSKI QuieT Bina showed abiliTy in her TavoriTe sTudies, La+in and arT. She was arT ediTor of The i932 ANNUAL and was graduaTed Trorn The LaTin Course. HENRY VOGL Field and sfream were welcome sighTs To Hank. When noT cleaning his gun, This boy could be 'found sTudying chemisTry, his prospeclive vocaTion. CARDINAL ANNUAL John Zuzek Phyllis Zienfkiewicz AnThony Woiciechowski Irene Zazemblowski Hilberr Wiese GerTrude WiTTig JOHN ZUZEK Johnny was a member oT ThaT crack cross coun- Try Team. He probably goT experience by playing golT. This archiTecT-To-be aimed To build caThedrals. PHYLLIS ZIENTKIEWICZ The ElecTive Course claimed Phil as a member. Perhaps she selecTed psychology as her hobby be- cause iT helped To develop her abiliTy in sales- manship. ANTI-IONY VVOJCIECHOWSKI Tony's greaT desire was To masTer, as Tar as possible, The Tield oT chemisTry. Besides radio and elecTriciTy, Tennis Took up a greaT deal oT his Time. STANLEY WISNIEWSKI STan loved To dig ouT exTremely hard maTh prob- lems. GeTTing a IOO in geomeTry was his greaT Thrill. I-le also liked To Tinker wiTh a busTed radio. EUNICE ZEIDLER ColIecTing and mounTing picTures oT worms was Eunice's hobbyl IT was hard To imagine her rising aT Tive o'clock To play Tennis. NeverTheless, she did. JEANETTE WILCHINSKI Books oT Travel, English liTeraTure, and shorThand were JeaneTTe's enioyable sources oT recreaTion. She inTended To become an English Teacher. STanley Wisniewski Eunice Zeidler JeaneTTe Wwlchinskl Henry Wozniak H. Gordon Wise Mary Wyborski IRENE ZAZEMBLOWSKI ThaT Trim whiTe Tigure on whom your eyes opened in The hospiTal was Ike. She played base- ball and parTicipaTed in many oTher games To keep in Trim. HILBERT WIESE Arab liked To play Tennis and golT unTiI he couldn'T sTand up. Bridge was a secondary pasTime wiTh him. He inTended To become a liThographer. GERTRU DE WITTIG Speed was whaT GerTs craved. She Tound iT in her TavoriTe sporT, which was Tennis, and in her lavoriTe sTudies, which were shorThand and Type- wriTing. HENRY WOZNIAK General Nuisance was a very musical chap. He masTered'boTh banio and violin and hoped some day To become a noTed musician. Swimming was his TavoriTe sporT. H. GORDON WISE Gordie liked The scienTiTic world. Physics was his TavoriTe subiecT and helped him in The con- sTrucTion oT his model airplanes. BaskeTball was his sporT. MARY WYBORSKI Mary was anxious To become a privaTe secreTary, so please won'T some kind business man hurry up and hire her? She enioyed INTER Nos very much. 70 CARDINAL ANNUAL SENIOR FAREWELL THOUGI-IT leaving Soulh would be much easier. A senior's lol isn'l lhe besl aller all. I-low I wish I could live lhose lour years over againI Such lhoughls fill our minds as our Iasl day al Soulh draws near. For lour years we have anlicipaled lhis day-lhe day when we should leave Soulh lor lhe Iasl limel As lhal lime approaches, we place in lhe background visions ol dances, banguels, and programs, and our lhoughls dwell, sorrowlully perhaps, upon Commencemenl Day. To lhe girls, il is a day ol beaulilul gowns and dainly gills: lo lhe boys, a day ol llashy lies and spilly suilsg bul lo every senior, il has a lar deeper meaning. There are visions ol a solemn procession, an inspiring pro- gram, and lhen-lhe crowning re- 7 I ward-a diploma, all signilying lhe larewell lhal means brolcen lriencl- ships and new responsibililies, lor all lhe lies lhal have bound us will be severed when we march oul ol As- sembly A lor lhe Iasl lime. Yel, lhal day has comel No more shall any ol us climb lhese sleps as sludenls ol Soulh. We are lorn away lrom il in a day, bul an asso- cialion buill lhrough lour evenllul years cannol be so easily brolcen. When we leave Soulh, we linish an- olher chapler in our lives, a pleasanl chapler lhal no doubl will be lol- lowed by harder and longer ones as lhe years roll by. Bul, as in lhe pasl, we are delermined lo lollow our slogan Shoulder lo Shoulder, lhe ballle cry lhal has always lqepl us on lop. CARDINAL ANNUAL J H ppa, Fern Rasmussen, Cecelia Ambroz, Elmer Elias, Frank Filipowicz, Mallhew Allenhofen, Emily Delllafl JUNE CLASS COMMISSION r ORE llnan seven good adieclives would be needed lo lell lnow good llwe June Class Commission was. Elmer Elias, gavel-lnolder ol llie Cenlury and sporl scribe ol llme CARDINAL, was llme chairman. Emily Delllall, wlio was presidenl ol llie Senior Girls' Club and associale edilor ol llme CARDINAL, look over llme pad and pencil as secrelary. Erank Eilipowicz, lrack and loolball man, was llwe J, P. Morgan ol llne commission. And an able lreasurer be made. lvlallliew Allenlfiolen was llwe edilor ol our CARDINAL and llwe winner ol llie l-larvard Book in l93l. Cecelia Ambroz lneld llfie vice presidency ol Girls' Club and lor llwree years served on llme CARDWAL slall. Busy Jane l-loppa was associale edilor ol llme CARDINAL and was elecled represenlalive girl. Fern Rasmusson, our all-around sludenl, conlribuled muclm arl work lo lhe ANNUAL. 72 l X x f M Hg , M32 if il ff if 'QC M D C y El EI OH H H L y L g J o h n Schr der, B Harrison, A g lyn ed Widish, Esfher l SAL kJ ck Krueger, Pefer ias, ner, o THE NERVOUS WRECK HEN The EasT meT The WesT in a big splash oT rollicking humor, The June Class of 1932 called The resulT THE Nrrevous Wizecic and pre- senTed This Tarcical comedy as iTs class play on May I3 and l4. Turning bandiT because OT a girl is one oi The misTorTunes oT l-lenry Wil- liams, a nervous young EasTerner. The girl, Sally Morgan, daughTer oT Jud Morgan. a rancher, persuades l-lenry To elope wiTh her under Talse pre- Tenses, in an old Ford, because her TaTher has Traded her To STeve Wells, The sheriTT, Tor a horse. STeve, by The way, is a Tormidable Two-gun cus- Tomer whom one wouIdn'+ wanT To meeT on The prairie wiThouT a chaperone. While escaping, l-I e n r y r o b s Jerome U n d e r- w o o d a n d his Tamily oT Their gasoline and Takes reTuge aT a ranch ThaT belongs To Underwood, a l- Though This TacT is unlcnown To l-len- ry. Andy Nabb, The Toreman, and William Kuhnke OHo Krueqer Howard Fleming Sfanley D b Leo Swifalski Roberf Siab rargn Wagner ifon Berg Roy Budde Elmer Elias Bruce Harrison Angelyn Turk Alfred Widish Frederick Adler Leroy Lange Ja k Kruege THE NERVOUS WRECK Morf, a cowpuncher, press Henry and Sally info service fhere, for fhey are shorf of cooks. ln disguise, Henry serves fhe Underwood family olog-bis- cuifs and ofher palafable viands, and, affer fhree acfs of Wesfern comedy, as well as romance, he and Sally fall in love. Alfred Widish fook fhe parf of l-lenry, while Sally, his lady-in-waifing, was played by Angelyn Turk. Jud Morgan was done by Leroy Lang: and Sfeve Wells, by Jack Krueger. Dan, fhe depufy sheriff, was Bruce l-larrisong Andy Nabb and Ivlorf were played by Fred Adler and Al Elias. Jerome Underwood, fhe wealfhy Easfern genfleman, was played by Offo l-lueffnerg his ee ee A S daughfer l-larrief, by Esfher Myers, and Chesfer, his son, lafe from Ox- ford, by Pefe Je- howski. Tim, fhe chauffeur fo fhe Underwood fam- ily, w a s J o h n SchroederJr. lvliss De C o u r c y di- re-cfed fhe play. OH Hueffner A g lyn Turk P fer Jehowski Esfher Myers 75 Alfred Widish J hn Schroeder CARDINAL ANNUAL Roberf McCabe Jane Hoppa El H REPRESENTATIVE STUDENTS NOTHER year has passed, and Tour more names have been engraved on The RepresenTaTive STudenT Cup. The January Class elecTed Eleanor l-lalvorsen and RoberT McCabe, and The June seniors chose Jane l-loppa and Elmer Elias. Eleanor l-lalvorsen proved worThy oT This disTincTion, because she served as vice presidenT oT Senior Girls' Club and as a member oT The class com- mission. She was also The chairman oT The January biographies commiTTee Tor The ANNUAL. VersaTiliTy apTly described RoberT McCabe, Tor he was an eloguenT oraTor, a capable reporTer, and a sTurdy aThleTe. Bob won The CenTury Medal, and his original humor in The Mack aT The Mike column drew many a laugh Trom iTs readers. A numeral and an emblem in TooTball and Two oTher numerals in Track proved Bob's aThleTic abiliTy. l-le was also chair- man oT The class commission. Jane l-loppa was vice presidenT oT Junior Girls' Club, secreTary oT INTER Nos, and a squad leader oT Shield. For her TaiThTul services To The CARDINAL, Jane was rewarded wiTh an assisTanT ediTorship. She was also a member OT The class commission. MorT, a ranch hand in The senior class play, was Elmer Elias. l-le was chair- man oT The class commission and compeTed in The Tinals oT The boys' ora- Torical conTesT. FurThermore, he was sporT ediTor oT The CARDINAL and was presidenT oT CenTury. 76 CARDINAL ANNUAL T R Tk k Rufh Eriksson Leroy Schoemann Elizabefh Bemis I R b HONGR STUDENTS USICAL abiliTy and service To The school were considered in cleTer- mining The Two music awards. RuT1 Eriksson was awarded The Civic Music Medal. She played on The TluTe, harp. piano, and piccolo. She was a member oT The band and orchesTra Tor Three years and played in The NorTh CenTral l-ligh School OrchesTra. The All-CiTy l-ligh School OrchesTra, and aT The NaTional l-larp ConvenTion. The Lyric Music Medal was presenTed To AlberT RosTlcowsl4i, a chap wiTh a clear Tenor voice. AI was a member oT The band and sang in The Boys' Glee Club and in The chorus. lrvin Rubow and Leroy Schoemann were The winners oT The W Medal and The Alumni SweaTer respecTively. Because he was boTh an ouTsTanding sTudenT and an aThleTe, lrv was given The VV Medal. T-lis oraTorical abil- iTy was shown when he spoke in A on ArmisTice Day. lrv was capTain oT The l93l TooTball Team and has Three emblems ancl a numeral in TooTball and Two emblems and a numeral in Traclc. ExcellenT in aThleTics and sTudies, Leroy Schoemann was awarded The Alumni SweaTer because he had The highesT average among The TooTball players. The second poeTry conTesT which was sponsored by SouTh was won by ElizabeTh Bemis. l-ler poem, Ti-IE SACRED GIFT, Tells how The poeT Tinds God in The caThedral, noT when iT is briqhTly illuminaTed, buT when all is hushed and quieT aT duslc. 77 CARDINAL ANNUAL CI T W Lucile Bushardf Loraine Vogf Roberf McCabe H T O l HONOR STUDENTS UST a mass oT Tigures? No, indeed! Those numbers represenTed grades Tor diligenT sTudy and applicaTion. ATTer The Tigures were ToTaled and averaged, iT was Tound ThaT ClemenTine Wien was The valedicTorian oT The January Class and Loraine VogT was saluTaTorian. ln June, TirsT honors wenT To Lucile BushardT and second honors To l-larrieT Owley. AlThough blind, ClemenTine compleTed her course in Three years. She was acTive in INTER Nos, Girls' Club, and CenTury. Loraine was The moniTor oT Row 8. She did noT Take an acTive parT in school acTiviTies, buT her ouTside inTeresTs included Tennis, TooTball, and swimming. As associaTe ediTor, Lucile BushardT played an essenTial parT in malcing up The CARDINAL. She was an acTive member of Girls' Club and German Club and was a debaTing enThusiasT Tor Forum. ExcellenT scholarship won Lucile The moniTorship oT Row l2. Much of l-larrieT's Time was spenT on The publicaTionsg she did all phases oT CARDINAL work and was liTerary ediTor oT The ANNUAL. She was also moniTor oT Row IO, a squad leader in Shield Club, and a parTicipanT in The girls' declamaTory conTesT. RoberT McCabe was awarded The CenTury Medal in The boys' oraTorical conTesT Tor his delivery oT NATIONAL APOSTASY. Besides being an oraTor, Bob was represenTaTive boy, a member oT The class commission, a versaTile aTh- leTe, and The originaTor oT The Mack aT The Mike column in The CARDINAL. 78 CARDINAL ANNUAL g T Sp Mildred Plohr Leroy Schoemann Emily DeTTlaf'f Ed d H p I HONOR STUDENTS OR The TirsT Time in The hisTory oT The school, The iunior girls had a chance To earn an award Tor excellence in English. The Alumni Associ- aTion presenTed The Junior Girls' Cup To The school. Each January and June, The sixTh semesTer girl who has showed The greaTesT apTiTude in English during her Three years will have her name engraved on This cup. This year, The honor was accorded To Mildred Plohr in January and To lVlargueriTe Spicuzza in June. These girls were chosen, noT alTogeTher be- cause They had The highesT averages in English, buT because They had The abiliTy To grasp The culTural as well as The pracTical value oT ThaT subiecT. The coveTed prizes, The l-larvard Book and The TegTmeyer Cup, were awarded To Two iunior boys as usual. Edward l-lempel. The assisTanT ediTor oT The ANNUAL, aTTained The highesT scholarship in English, and ThereTore had his name inscribed on The cup. A versaTile aThleTe, Leroy Schoemann, was presenTed wiTh The l-larvard Book because oT his high average and varied ouTside acTiviTies. The CenTury Medal was won by Emily DeTTlaTF, who reciTed LITTLE SPECK or GARNERED FRUIT in The Tinals oT The girls' declamaTory conTesT. Emily's oTher accomplishmenTs were being associaTe ediTor oT The CARDINAL, presi- denT oT Senior Girls' Club, and moniTor oT Row l9. English awards have been presenTed To The boys Tor several years, buT noT unTil This year did The girls have an equal chance To disTinguish Them- selves. Now They have The Junior Girls' Cup, and They are saTisTied. 79 T l-llc slamming oi loclcer doors, incessant cliatter, slirielcs from tlwe sliowers,tl1e slapping ol towels tell us tliat tlie boys liave just come in lrom practice. Between bursts olvvit and snatclwes oi song, meets are won and lost over again, games are discussed, and good-natured panterexclnanged. Graduallysilence settles over tlie loclcer room. A lwastily discarded sweat sliirt, a pair oi slioes carelessly llung on a penclw, announce tlwat tlwe tracl4 season continues tomorrow. HLETICS CARDINAL ANNUAL Schroeder Joe Foren, Ray Jaeger, Wilfred Jaeger, Clarence Sfephan, Irene Henderson, Ed Orbik SOUTH - KENCSHA OUTl-l was repulsed in Tue TirsT game oT The season bya score oT I3 To 6. The TirsT halT oT The game was clearly marlced by aggressive maneu- vers on The parT oT Kenosha. They repeaTedly smashed The SouTh line Tor long gains, owing To The inexperience oT The Cardinal linemen. The Nash gridders crossed The Cardinal goal early in The TirsT guarTer, and Their Try Tor The exTra poinT was compleTe, To our biTTer disappoinTmenT. Our courage was resTored when Karshna inTercepTed a Torward pass on The Redbirds' 30-yard line and , W . raced down The Tield Tor a Touch- down. The aTTempT Tor The exTra poinT by lciclcing was blocked. ln The second halT, The Cardinal eleven began To TighT as only a Car- dinal Team can. Because oT a Tum- ble, The Nash gridders were able To cross The unguarded Cardinal goal. Their lciclc Tor The exTra poinT was bloclced. Through The enTire game, Coach Bergland subsTiTuTed, giving every man a chance. AlThough SouTh was baTTered by a sToclcier line, The Car- dinal Team showed real TighTing spiriT, and Kenosha knew They had played a real game oT TooTball. J M ll 33 B ll YG g p lous 4-R k ff W T K T k D wski, Ramlow, Spangenberg, Wolff, Nowakowski R 3 R I S g K I d I k W II ger, STram, Smifh R 2 FI p Th p S h d Coach Bergland, Jasinski, Bedenick, Hirschinger R I J ck G d k M C b C Ta R b S h K h E d U OW, C 0el'T1v3I'lf1, SFS ha, F mann THE SQUAD I-IEN Coach BergIand issued his call Tor CardinaI gridders This TaII, he was answered by a group oT one hundred enThusiasTic, would-be gridiron heroes, Tro m whom The I93I CardinaI Team was evenTuaIIy molded. The major IeTTer men reTurning and ready Tor baTTIe were CapTain Rubow, McCabe, Gradisnik, I3iIipo- wicz, and Jasinski. These veTerans were a Io I y assisTed by STram, Schroeder, Karshna, Thompson, and Schoemann. AIThough The Cardinal-cIad war- riors were noT TorTunaTe enough To enioy a successTuI season, The boys ToughT hard To uphold The school TradiTions. Coaches Bergland and I-Ieineman worked conscienTiousIy in deveIop- ing a bunch oT green boys, who in The WesT and Tech games proved Their abiIiTy. Seven empIem men make prospecTs nexT TaII IarighT. each Bergland v Rubow Coach Heineman cwer T p R ow- u h, Winler, ern , in er, apl. , is ern, L R M I Ch y W dl IC J N k R k P h I k A Middle Row-Foren, lMgr.l, Kefchum, Niederschmidf, Komorowk C k M S Th S g d E M C ff IC hj B h df J b B I R d b k K I G g p I SI' M L - o een oac , e ren , s, ro THE YANNIGANS l-IE Yannigans, in case you do nof know, is a squad composed of fhe fourfh feam in foofball. They give fhe coaches a chance fo see whaf fhe youfhful candidafes look like, fo develop maferial for fhe firsf feam, and fo give fhe boys a fasfe of compefifion. The pasf season proved fo be fairly successful for fhem. They fin- ished wifh a record of wins over Wesf Allis and Bay View, losses againsf Wesf Milwaukee and Bay View, and fie games wifh Pio Nono and fhe Margueffe l-ligh Freshmen. According fo Coach Coffeen, fhe players who were oufsfanding in fheir work were Capfain l-larvey Windler, af full back, Frank Cherny, af leff half, and l-larold Ruck and Connie Nowakowski, af righf half. Ofhers who performed favorably were Kuhn, a fackle, Winfer, cenfer, Czerwinski, a guard, Sagadin, an end, and Komorowski, a guard. 85 Harvey Windler C ach Coffeen CARDINAL ANNUAL The Sfonewall Crumbles Kolodzieiski SOUTH -WASHINGTON l-lE firsT game of The ciTy conference! The firsT meeTing of The foofball elevensl A sTrong Washingfon gridiron machine clashed wiTh The Car- dinal eleven. The whole show cenfered around Cruice of The Purgold squad. Cruice was responsible for Three Tallies. ln spiTe of our bulldog defense. The powerful Washingfon backs rolled up a score of 25 To O. The Cardinal eleven foughT biTTerly. Rubow and McCabe were parficularly ouT- sfanding for The hard foofball ThaT They played on boTh defense and offense. Rubow's punfing in The firsT guarfer was grafifying, for he held The edge over Neubauer of Wash- ingTon. The Redbirds' meffle was clearly revealed by The magnificenf defense They puT up laTe in The final quarfer. The Purgold eleven had baTTered Their way down The field To The I-fooT line. The Cardinal defense rose To The occasion, however, and The Three pow- erful Purgold aTTaclcs were Thrown back wifh no gain. The sTudenT fans deserve crediT for The cheering Thaf They did. The aTTendance aT This firsT game was very safisfying and heralded similar crowds aT The following games. Rawl Wallinger CARDINAL ANNUAL Mud-Pups SOUTH - BAY VIEW l-lE homecoming gamel The sTands, usually Tilled To overTlowing, showed greaT empTy spaces. The rioTous blaze oT color was bedraggled by pouring TorrenTs oT rain, and sTiclcy papers lay abouT in heaps. The score aT The end oT The muddy Tussle was O To O. Only brealcs saved The Bay View eleven Trom deTeaT. Tor The Cardinal gridiron machine enTirely ouTplayed The Red and Blaclc. Four Times The Cardinals pushed The ball inTo scoring posiTion, buT each Time someThing saved The day Tor Bay View. ln The TirsT quarTer, SouTh pushed The ball down To The Bay View I5-yard line. A Tine pass puT The ball on The 3-yard sTripe. l-lere The Cardinal advance ended, Tor Bay View re- covered a Tumble. ln The second guarTer, Jaeck puT The ball inTo scoring posiTion by slcirTing righT end Tor 35 yards To The 5-yard line. The gun ended The half beTore anoTher play could be pulled. ln The TourTh quarTer, Two passes. lvlcCabe To Rubow, advanced The ball 25 yards To The I5-yard marker. The deTense TighTened, and SouTh losT The ball on downs. The Mud-Pups sTarTed anoTher march laTe in This quarTer, buT again The gun barlqed beTore a score could be made. 87 R bow CARDINAL ANNUAL Hold Him! Jaeck SOUTH - NORTH OUTT-l baTTled gamely againsT NorTh, buT The Blue and WhiTe eleven Took advanTage oT brealcs To score a l2 To O vicTory. None oT The Tal- lies were caused direcTly by The wealcness oT The SouTh line. A cosTly Tum- ble, early in The game, robbed The Redbirds oT a chance Tor a Touchdown. ATTer a punTing duel beTween Gueppe oT NorTh and Rubow oT SouTh, The Cardinal eleven goT The ball on The enemy's 40-yard line. McCabe reeled OTT 22 yards on a spinner play, and Rubow's cenTer plunges carried The ball To The IO-yard line. On a Talce place kick, McCabe ToTed The ball around leTT end To The 6-yard line. On The nexT play, a Tumble was recovered by NorTh. A Torward pass com- pleTed our downTall, scoring The TirsT Touch- down Tor NorTh. ln The TirsT Tew minuTes oT The second halT, W. WeTel recovered a iuggled laTeral pass Tor NorTh and pranced 40 yards Tor a Touchdown. ln The lasT quarTer, Filipowicz brolce Through and recovered a Tumble. A pass To puT The pigslain on The IO-yard line. Tackle STram Jaeclc smashed oTT Taclcle, buT The NorTh de- Tense sTiTTened, and The ball died in The Red- bird's possession. Hi ng 88 CARDINAL ANNUAL F l P Closing ln SOUTH - LINCOLN REAKS, breaks, and more oreaks. A Tew TliTTing seconds ThaT spell vic- Tory Tor one eleven anc deTeaT Tor Their opponenTs. The Cardinals ouTplayed The Lincoln squad, buT The Tew seconds ThaT iT Takes To run 55 yards gave Lincoln a 6 To O vicTory. The Cardinals had one scoring chance, early in The TirsT quarTer, and a sec- ond and more serious ThreaT laTe in The Third guarTer. ATTer a Tew punTs in The TirsT guarTer, Lin- coln Tumbled, and l-lirschinger recovered on The Lincoln 42-yard line. A pass, McCabe To Thompson, puT The pigskin on The 23-yard line. ATTer Two plunges and an end run Tailed, Raw- lins punTed. Much oT The TirsT guarTer was Taken up by The punTing oT Curro oT Lincoln and Rubow oT SouTh. As a Tinish To The punTing exhibiTion, Rubow goT OTT a greaT kick ThaT spiralled 55 yards and over The goal line. Lincoln scored once in The second guarTer. Jaeck inTercepTed a Lincoln pass on The 30- yard line. Line plunging and spinner plays carried The oval To The 45-yard sTripe. The nexT play, a Torward pass, Tailed as Behm nabbed The ball and pranced 55 yards Tor a Touchdown. 39 McCabe CARDINAL ANNUAL lnferference Minus Efdmam' SOUTH -WEST UD! lvludl And more mudl An exTremely heavy downpour oT rain TransTormed The dry gridiron inTo a gooey mass oT slime. The crash oT sliThering bodies could be heard in The grandsTands. SouTh Thrilled everyone by holding WesT, The TavoriTe, To a scoreless Tie. SouTh ouTplayed The WesT Team Trom The TirsT kick-oTT To The Tinal gun. Rubow sTarred in This brillianT game. DespiTe The muddy Tield, The Cards, Twice in The TirsT guarTer, slid and sguirmed Their way To a poinT wiThin The WesT 25-yard line. A long pass and Rubow's plunges consTi- TuTed our TirsT ThreaT. On The I2-yard line. however, WesT held The Cardinals To downs. A Tew minuTes laTer, Rubow haclced his way To The 20-yard line, buT here WesT recovered a Tumble. As a Thrilling Tinish To an exciTing TirsT guarTer, Rubow slashed OTT Taclcle and calmly rambled 3l yards beTore being smeared on The WesT 36-yard line. McCabe and l-lirschinger aided Rubow's assaulT. The Cardinal bacldield sguirmed iTs way To The IO-yard sTripe buT again losT The ball on downs. ln The second halT, WesT began a serious oTTense ThaT ended when The Cardinal line held The WesT squad To downs. The remainder oT The halT proved unevenTTul. Tho p 90 CARDINAL ANNUAL Schoemann Models in Clay SOUTH - TECH l-lE final game! In a lasT supreme elTorT To rise from The conference cellar, SouTh played a fine game on The muddiesT field of an enTirely muddy season. The Redheads decisively Trounced The Boilermakers I4 To O. An ugly, irregular lump of mud and leafher sliThered along The gridiron floor: punTs Traveled a scanT 20 yardsg forward passes were impossibleg yeT The gridiron heroes sTruggled gamely on. The Tech Team puT up a good TighT, buT They were unable To cope wiTh The playing of The Cardinals. The only real punT of The game occurred laTe in The opening chapfer when Rubow goT oTf a 35-yard booT. This was very long when compared wiTh oTher IO-yard punTs. The Tech eleven had one chance which They mighT have Turned inTo a Tally, buT a penalTy made The soaring hopes collapse. Our firsT marker was derived from a plunge Through cenTer by Rubow. A punT, bloclced by Gradisnik, flopped over The goal line, and Thompson Tell on iT Tor The second Tally. Bofh aTTempTs for The poinT afTer a Touchdown were Turned info poinTs on crash- ing drives over cenTer by The SouTh Tull back, Rubow. 9l edik I F l CARDINAL ANNUAL Touchdown? Bedenik THE STADIUM IT!-HN a block oT The sTadium! The air reverberaTes wiTh a low hum. Now The noises grow To a roar, as school answers school wiTh cheers. The voices oT The cheerleaders shrill ouT above The din. Two hours ago This same place was peaceTul and unpeopled. Now iT has suddenly been en- mM,.s-.1.mMmei.-f,f,mww:QL-,Q-.,J,:.az .,,..' . T, , f.-f 11--M,.,mf dowed wiTh liTe-youThTul liTe. On The Tield, our men are lined up. ln The sTands, hand- clapping begins. The game is on! lT is a close conTesTq buT, The closer The game, The peppier The crowd. The sTands, aT TirsT only Thinly popu- Iafed, Till wiTh a iesTing hosT oT rooTers. Con- TeTTi is Tlying, haTs are waving, and candy boys are calling! The crowd shrielcs as The end drops a pass! They Tear in To bloclc punTs, or make heroic Taclcles in Their mind's eye. Oh, To be ouT There! The sTeady roar gradually subsides when The bands march ouT To sTruT Their sTuhf. AT The beginning oT The second halT, The sTadium is bedlam. The uproar conTinues. Then, aTTer a mighTy whoop Trom The winning school, The crowds pour ouT and, aTTer halT an hour, The sTadium is a silenT Tield wiTh only sTrewn paper To Tell iTs sTory. As This boolc goes To press, The conTracTors are remodeling The sTadium so ThaT iT may rival all oTher sTadiums in improvemenTs. Karsh 92 CARDINAL ANNUAL J ' k' Hard Aground OUR PROSPECTS OOTBALL! A liTTle early To Think abouT iT, buT we cannoT help being enThusiasTic. We have seven emblem men and one numeral winner Tor nexT year's Team. The cenTer oT The line will be Talcen care oT by Bunny Schoemann. Wally Wallinger and Eddie Kolodzieislri will be guards. Span- genberg, Kuhn, RieclchoTT, and Kromrai will have To TighT iT ouT Tor The Tackle posiTions. CapTain Jerry Gradisnik will probably hold down leTT end, buT There will be much opposi- Tion aT righT end wiTh Ruclc, Ramlow, and WolT all TighTing Tor The posiTion. Rawlins, Hirsch- inger, and Karshna, Three emblem winners, will probably be placed aT Tull baclc, leTT halT, and righ+ halT respecTively. WaTers, Windler, Cherney, and Nowalcowslci are expecTed To sTage a baTTle royal Tor The coveTed guarTer baclc posiTion. These are noT The only ones ThaT will geT posiTions. The posTs will go To Those who TighT hardesT and prove To The coaches ThaT They have The ever essenTial gualiTy, Team- worlc. l-lave we a chance Tor The champion- ship? SouTh Division always has a chance! Roclcne's words hold good Tor us, They may ouTplay you, buT They won'T ouTTighT you! So here's To you, SouTh! May The I932 Cardinal aggregaTion be a championship squad! 93 ST am CARDINAL ANNUAL ,u1 'f 5 'TSrX Wesolowski, Henn, Volzgen, Reger T ff S CROSS COUNTRY INNER oT sTaTe and mid-wesT championshipsl ThaT s how The success Tul l93l cross counTry squad can be classnfied The cardinal- clad boys swepT To Their TirsT v1cTory by deTeaTing Mil waulcee STaTe Teachers' College, 20 To 35. The SouTh aces, TeiTel- baum and STampTel, raced home TirsT and second respecTively. Willard Rudiger, a iunior, was selecTed as capTain oT This greaT crew. The nexl' Cardinal vicTim was Shorewood, and our l-lill and Dal- ers ran Them inTo The earTh To The Tune oT 22 To 33. The boys, show- ing The eTTecTs oT The eXcellenT coaching oT Arlie SchardT, de- TeaTed Shorewood, even Though The Gold CoasTers' ace, Lee Pray, TroTTed horne TirsT. Clipping along, despiTe a d v e r s e weaTher condi- 94 Rdg Sfp Plk CARDINAL ANNUAL T Tlbaum, Polaski, Rink, STampfeI CROSS COUNTRY Tions The Team walloped WesT aT lvliTchell Parlc, wiTh STampTel showing his heels To STocl4ey oT WesT The pluclcy Cardinal aggregaTion, showing no respecT Tor a sTrong WashingTon Team again Triumphed. The score, 2l To 34, convinced Coach SchardT ThaT he had a greaT Team. The Tollowing week The Cardinal harriers deTeaTed The Bay View Team, I9 To 36. Tearing along in driving rain, The big Trains gave a marvelous exhil:niTion oT speed and endurance. Coach SchardT's proTeges Then surprised all by capTuring The sTaTe TiTle. Riverside pulled a TasT one and nosed ouT SouTh in The ciTy meeT. The Cardinals, however, sTaged a Tine comeback and bumped This P Tormidable opponenT aT The mid-wesT meeT. closing a mosT successTul season. Co h B hfold, Schulfz, Coach Biddick, Chrisfie, Leack, Schalk, Wiese, Kas- sulke, Churchill, Cherny, Mufh, B ber INTERSCHOLASTIC BASKETBALL FTER TwenTy-Tive years, baslceTball was again adopTed in Milwaukee as an inTerscholasTic sporT. ConseguenTly, SouTh Division, recruiTing bas- lceTeers Trom iTs Jungle League and inTer-class Teams, Tried a whirl in The TasT-sTepping SouThern CircuiT. The TirsT games oT The season were Thrillers. GeT This! ln The TirsT encounTer, SouTh came back in The lasT TiTTeen seconds oT play and won Trom Bay View I8-I6, on a long-arched shoT by Rudigerl The sec- ond baTTle, againsT a powerTul Lincoln quinTeT, sporTing a highly-geared oTFensive Team, Toolc The wind ouT oT The Cardinal sails wiTh a 23- l 8 Trimming. lXlexT, SouTh and Tech had Their oTT-day. SouTh copped a weird exhibiTion oT baslceTball by a score oT I2-IO. ArT l-limmelspach enabled SouTh To win. The Cardinals, sTarTing Their second round oT compeTiTion, losT To a surprisingly sTrong ViewiTe Team 22-l7. NexT, The Lincoln Team annihilaTed a TighTing buT ouT-classed Cardinal Tive 40-l2. ln The Tinal game wiTh Tech, The Cardinals were beaTen again. STeady baslceTball pulled SouTh down inTo a Triple Tie Tor The second place by a 3l-I 7 score. ln The Tinal baTTle, Lincoln barely nosed ouT WashingTon To annex The ciTy championship. Conf T BASKETBALL SQUAD Scho Coa h B hT ld B d k Capf Th p H I p ch C h B dd k Rdg R M SH I R I g Kass lk lTl-l a gasp oT relieT, pracTice breaks up. l-leaded by LiTTle Bull Bede nik and Speedy Thompson, The lads rush Tor The showers. BuT soon, all The Troubles are TorgoTTen, as Rudiger, The SouThern song bird, leads The dribblers'quinTeT ina chorus oT They have cuT down The old pine Tree . ln The locker room, Dead Eye l-limmelspach, Wally Rawlins, and Big Bull Schoemann Tell The world They're here Tor some odd reason. FriTz Ramlow and l-lowie Kassulke puT Their heads TogeTher and discuss Things ThaT have no connecTion wiTh baskeTball. They are assisTed by ShorTy STephanl Work was The password under The command oT Coaches BechTold and Biddick. The Team Tried hard, buT lack oT experience caused iTs deTeaT. Considering ThaT This was The TirsT Time in TwenTy- Tive years ThaT baskeTball had been played, The re- sulTs were saTisTacTory. BuT The TuTure is brighT. There are Tive experi- enced men reTurning. Schoemann, Rawlins, and Rudiger will hold down The Torward posiTionsg Ram- low and l-limmelspach will monopolize The guard posTs. SuTTer, Cherny, ChrisTie, SchulTz, and Schalk should make The compeTiTion inTense. 97 B kef? LoTh Godag Sfeph Georgac p lous Wiese Trimborn Kassulk JUNGLE LEAGUE GAIN we Tind The annual comba'T oT The Jungle League is a howling success. The purpose This year, according To The Old lvlaesTro, Mr. BechTold, was To selecT a Team To represenT SouTh in The newly-creaTed high school basl4eTball league. The Deer, represenTing Assembly A, ToughT Their way To an undispuTed championship when They sTamped on The ouT-classed Bears 30-5. The Ter- riTic drive oT The Assembly A Team enabled Them To score aT will, while Their powerTul deTense clamped down on The unTorTunaTe Bruins. The brighT spoTs in The Assembly A vicTory were LoTher, Godager, and STephan. who lcepT The Bear guards busy on oTTense. For The Bears, Wise, lVluTh, and Hueb- schen Tried valianTly To sTop The ir- re s i s T i ble Deer. Some o T Th e s e p l a y e r s m a d e The varsiTy. Cenier Ball Scch k Lea k Rawl Chr T Barb Sch lk Pol k Rink INTER-CLASS BASKETBALL ISTORY repeaTs iTselTl The Tlashy Junior guinTeT came ouT on Top Tor The second consecuTive year by deTeaTing The much lauded Senior five ZI-I3. The boys who bore The larunT oT The deTermined aTTac:l4 Tor The cham- pions were ChrisTie and Les Schallc, Torwardsg Sir WalTer Rawlins, cenTer: and Ray Barber and John Leaclc, guards. For The Seniors, l-lowie Kassullce, Mac lVlacLaren, Quade, and Kreneli were The ouTsTandi'ng loaslceTeers, all playing a greaT game. The sorry Sophomores and TighTing Freshmen had a Tairly successiful sea- son and displayed a greaT deal oT promise. lVluTh, Wise, lVlerTes, Repenselc, and Franlco- wial4 w e r e T h e o u T- s T a n d i n g pro specTs. Good maTe- rial was To be Tound in These Teams. 99 Off-side L dwiq, Alic Han- H zel Wesfphal Dora I y R u T h K ppel, k b h, R Sfem- EI Sp h I Cripps, FI ence ac e GIRLS' BASKETBALL ETER a TasT and Turious race, The senior girls' oaslceTball Team capTured The inTerscholasTic basceTball championship. The moTTo oT The Team, One Tor all, all Tor one, was parTly responsible Tor Their brillianT vicTory. No one oT The girls worked Tor individual honors, buT all worked Tor The good oT The Team. Lenore Diesch, capTain oT The Team, was sTar Torward as well as The high- esT individual scorer during The enTire race Tor TirsT place. She ToTaIed 2I9 poinTs Tor her Team. I-Ier parTner, Emily Dziedzic, Tound iT possible always To be where she was needed. The remaining members oT The Team, namely The guards and cenTers, also learned The lQeynoTe oT co-operaTion. I-lelene Zachau, RuTh Reilc, Rose I-lauerwas, Lucille Bahllre, Evelyn Po- ciecha, RuTh Schwechel, and Lillian Szymanslci, made up The resT oT The winning Team. Eollowing closely on Their heels were The speedy Juniors. Rose STemper and RuTh Kappel, The Tor- wards oT The Team, Tound iT very easy To worlc well TogeTher. The rangy cenTer, I-lazel WesTphaI, was responsible Tor keeping The ball in iunior TerriTory during mosT oT Their games, Thereby helping The Torwards in Their endeavor To secure poinTs. The Sophomores, a speedy, hard-driving combin- aTion, who always surprised Their opponenTs wiTh The unusual, gave The Seniors a good scare on sev- eral occasions. Isabelle Welsch and Alyce STrachoTa were The sTars oT The ouTTiT. Block Th T T GIRLS' BASKETBALL Greenies, Freshmen-call Them whaf you will-will soon malce use oT The valuable experience They gained This year. From now on-loolc ouT, Juniors and Seniors, They have Their eyes on emblemsl Doris Budde, Treshie Tor- ward, was The ouTsTanding player and high scorer oT The Team. She seemed To have a good eye Tor dropping The ball inTo The baslceT as we saw by The number oT poinTs she rang up during The season. AlThough The Seniors capTured The TiTle, The games were noT one-sided nor wiThouT Thrills. On The conTrary, There were momenTs when The Thrills and spills were plenTy, and even The unruTTled calm oT The Seniors seemed disTurbed. The deciding baTTle was played February I I, when The Seniors won an undispuTed vicTory over The aggressive Juniors, 39 To 26. Good Teamworlc on The parT oT I-lelene Zachau l and RuTh Reilq, iumping and running cenTers respec- Tively, l4epT The ball during mosT oT The game in senior TerriTory, where Lenore Diesch anc' Emily Dziedzic, Torwards, Toolc good care oT iT by drop- ping iT Through The hoop when chance permiTTed. As a resulT oT rough playing, eighT Touls were made by The Seniors, buT, luclsily Tor Them, only Two were Turned inTo poinTs by The Juniors. The Seniors came Through wiTh Tlying colors and had an undeTeaTed season, while The Juniors Tol- lowed wiTh The loss oT Two games. lvliss Cavanaugh and Ivliss Ludwig, gym insTruc- Tors, coached The Teams during The season. IO I Pivon Miss C gh R Th 'l k L Il -ei , B hlk Hele Z h LII Szym k E ly P h Len D h R Th Schw H I od El gh: Ping Q Z K 5527 U3 5w3O?l 30,33 .Q O--' Cflcg-N4Z?, 53H'E,l' 5 MQ 03-P5' Q, 'O'2TQ: MDFQ- o:fD3-.Q. 0 3: 2255? lI+lgcn gimcnm 'OSEC' Q. U2 CDCDKQ 0' CDO -CDD 5.2-f-0 1-+-QE -4- DQ :O-0.0: -of o. LQ-Deo: 2,32 lmlg :s-C-.-I QJDN4 V--f--P O-'TQ 53070 w- 0 gm IQQS 301115 3903 3U7:F2, LQON43 CD3' LQ -swim 7 o:O..gtD 25-1141.01 0.01-' A 3- m W m Q QT H cn- 3 CAJ UT m U7 9 o 3 o U m 3 Q 5 1 3- 'Ji 5 -+- 7 Q1 Q 3 o 3 Q4 Q 3 Q E o 3 9 G o OWU Q10 Q3 OWCD -2 -I 'J' CD U O U O U1 E CD 1 fD 4 OJ I .O C. E 3' CD O. O' N4 4 CD U3 0 2 -4- 3 2 LQ. 3 2. U'1 T' LJJ X U'1 3 FTE G'+l'l'l -.Q-2 303-9- eno- 'O-. 552-5 Dru LQ Q: 5.332 Q3Q Q, Q. K+, - No? ?31 coo O 9.3-H 7 353- 35m -1-O fam C073- 359 :ol L,,- 'S DJ 5-2 US-+ 322 3 530: -130- 3i++U 23509 N4- -HO O V'-1-F -HQ, 3-3-0- XIBQCDN4 ONQJKDU7 wi CDQJ -Pgn Q, O O1.n- ws S-Og rv 55+ .OJ-8 3' U25 :+7O.+C DU-1fD'+' CLTHCD usQJ ,,,-Q O-. TCQE33. 05111015 Q.O.2TiOJ Q15':0f m -Q-QJQJLQDGJET 43- CD03 KO so to f-Wim s:3'-+- 5j'QJ.QQJ'-Lg 213442- C010-CD-1-2 3:12, OCZ 'Wil 3 2 ++Ua -4- :Tm 2ggml7 LQ 5 01? '2. O.: CDLQ on --+- 2- io E53 mm O3 QQ: 1- O.. T'QJ -I m. :- 5 Q32 2:52- '4 Z 5 N Hirs h g and R I Do Th L TRACK nal Track responsibiliTy resTed on Rubow, McCabe, Rinlc, Sommers, and l-lir- schinger. SouTh placed her hope in The weighTs on Rubow. lVlcCabe's speedy legs were depended upon in The cenTury and 220 yarcl dashes. Rinlc repre- senTed The Redbirds in The half mile, Sommers in The broad iump, and l-lirschinger in The pole vaulT. When The STaTe MeeT rolled around, Sommers, Rink, Rubow, and Hansen placed in Their evenTs. The 1932 sguaol had a Tine record To live up To, buT lack oT experience has held Them back. As a resulT, The 1932 cinder Team does noT compare wiTh Those oT The oTher seasons. I-lirschinger, a reTurning emblem man, is The mainsTay oT The Team. His perTormance in The pole vaulT ranks SouTh as a winner in This evenT. A hard baTTle marlced The meeTing oT SouTh and Bay View. Five slim poinTs gave SouTh The vicTory. Though lo s s e s Tor SouTh were recorded aT many meeTs, The boys on The Team reTuse To be discouraged. V I g kand T y si IO3 ST f The 220 Gy T Sp l T T g f Th A I Gy M T GYMNASIUM YM acTiviTies aT SouTh Division exTended noT only To gymnasTic ex- hibiTions in l93l buT also To baseball and volleyball. The Tumbling Teams, under The experT guidance oT lvlr. BechTold, rolled and TwisTed Themselves inTo second place in The CiTy MeeT. PrisTavolc, R. Vahl, and Elias displayed The greaTesT agiliTy in Class l, while E. Vahl and Ramlow sTarred in Class ll. The baseball season, rolling along, Tound l.oTher, Krenelc, Manslqe, and Schoemann scinTillaTing in The sTrong Cardinal line-up. The hard hiTTing OT l.oTher, combined wiTh The sTrilce-ouT craTT oT Schoemann's arm, won sec- ond place in The ciTy TournamenT Tor SouTh. Spilcing Their way To championship in Two ouT oT Three divisions, SouTh ably demonsTraTed The arT oT vicTorious volley- ball To oTher less success- Tul ciTy high schools. Thompson and Kassulke became immorTalized by Their abiliTy. Volleyball closed a successTul sea- son oT gymnasTic work. Due To available maTe- rial, hopes Tor nexT year soar. Do is IO4 Carl Manske, Leslie P T vok, Robert Weeks, H ld Kinzer, Clarence Ben g Geo ge Trawicki, F k Kui ki Jack Kryq SWIMMING TEAM I-IE baby in The Tamily oT sporTs is The swimming Team. WiThouT The TaciIiTy oT a home pool To aTTracT prospecTive maTeriaI or a diving board To groom poinT winners in The diving evenTs, iT managed. under The leader- ship and coaching oT Mr. I.iTTIe, To make good showings againsT all The Teams and To wresT one vicTory Trom NorTh Division. The TirsT Team consisTs oT eighT members, Tive oT whom swim The crawl: John Krygier, who is also The capTain oT The Team, Carl Manskep I-Iarold Kinzerg RoberT Weeks: and Leslie PrisTavok. Two swim The breasTsTroke, Clarence Benning and George Trawickig and one swims The backsTroke, Frank Kuiawski. Kuiawski deserves cornmendaTion Tor his consisTenT winning in The backsTroke evenT. I-Ie also proves an unbeaTabIe lead-oTT man in The medley relay Team, in which Benning swims The breasTsTroke and Kry- gier, The crawl. All should be congraTulaTed on The pioneer work They are doing so cheerTuIIy. Indeed, wiTh This sea- son's experience, They will bring home The Iaurels oT vicTory in Tu- Ture years. I Lf Buoys UESDAV night, Centuryiwednesday night, Boys' Club, Ihursday night, Girls, Club, and so through the vveelc. Assembly B has come to hold very pleasant associations for us, because in its intimate surroundings vve have Iound lun and relaxation a-plenty. Tense moments ol contests and programs ol uproarious laughter have alternately lured us to our Iamiliar meeting place, Hthe little theater.H ACTIVITIES ,-.K ,- QQ !' ML 4 M' mv wa , mm. ,,.mx1x,,E59 1 --251. .J :gig , 1 I X Pearl Kaiser, Herbef S h H Dorofhy Rusch, Karl B rT I Sophie Sfopar, C I a Sfephan, Scoff Tomfer, R y mond Graff, Sadye Ingr h CARDINAL BUSINESS STAFF NDER lvlr. l-lanneman, The business oT our publicaTions has TuncTioned admirably. CrediT is also due The salesmanship classes Tor Their eT- TorTs in securing subscripTions and adverTisemenTs. The business manager Tor The TirsT semesTer was RoberT Croneg adverTis- ing manager, Clarence STephang and boolclceeper, ElTen Kuiawslri. Then Clar- ence STephan became business manager, Sadye lngraham, adverTising man- ager: Sophie STopar, l-larry Zabloclri, and SylvesTer STelmaszewslci, assis- TanTsg and Karl BarTel, boolclceeper. NEWSBOYS' CLUB N heaT or cold, rain or snow, our newsboys are on The sTreeTs delivering Their papers. The Newsboys' Club meeTs Trom 8:lO To 8:30 o'cloclc, be- cause The members are unable To geT away Trom Their work aTTer school. The meeTings are held in Room 3 I4 every TirsT and Third Tuesday. The TirsT semesTer Tound Byron SiTes, presidenTg Raymond Pinczlcowslci, vice presidenTg MiTchell K r a u s, secreTaryq and Leonard Wilke, sergeanT- aT-arms. The nexT semesTer made Raymond Pinczlcow- slii, presidenTq M i T c h e ll Kraus, vice presidenT, Ron- ald l:aTh, secreTaryq and G i I b e r T Schwonlce, ser- geanT-aT-arms. WalTer Froncek, Ervin Szulczew- ski, Sfanley Lonfkowski, Mifch- ell Kraus, Charles Hill, Earling Farness, Pefer Bach, Leonard Wilke, Ervin Bulgrin, NorberT Miksch, Norberf Lewis, WalTer Walenfa, Walfer Adamanski, GiIberT Schwonke, Raymond Pinczkowski, Sylvesfer Schweda Rufh Woda, A d y P cz- kowski, Muriel KI Fe- I ia Paczko k R th Di- a Floren B k ski, E d I h P I' G ace OI h ky JUNIOR GIRLS' CLUB ND swear fhaf l shall endeavor fo mainfain-. Row upon row of girls, righf hands raised, eager faces upfurned, re- peaf fhe pledge fhaf makes fhem members of Junior Girls' Club. If is a solemn ceremony fhaf follows fhe rollicking fun of inifiafion, buf if leaves one of fhe choicesf memories of our high school days. Under Arline Wellhausen, presidenf: Anfoneffe Redovick, vice presidenf: lvlarion Rusch, secrefary: Anna Redovick, freasurer: Clara Dziedzic, facfo- fum, in fhe firsf semesfer: and Norma Behling, presidenf: Clara Dziedzic, vice presidenf: lviary Tamse, secrefary: Bernice Gardocki, freasurer: Flor- ence Benesch, facfofum, in fhe second semesfer, fhe club flourished. CENTURY I-IRILLING was fhe original play, WHAT! given by fhe firsf semesfer officers of Cenfury. The officers were presidenf, Leo Ni- kora: vice presidenf, Offo l-lueffner: secrefary, Virginia Geyer: freasurer, John Jackson: program censor, Dorofhy Degenfesh: sergeanf-af-arms, Lorraine lviarvin: and, for fhe second semesfer, presidenf, Elmer Elias: vice presidenf, Beffy Proehl: secrefary, lvleliffa Hueff- ner: freasurer, Ralph l-lermann: pro- geanf-af-arms, George Krafsch. Beffy Proehl Kafherine Wambach MeI'H'a Hueffner Elm Elias gram censor, Kafhryn Wambach: ser- G K f I1 Raiiphg H ra sc l 4 Dor Thy H Th R IT D Ma M k I L D Ele R k L E g I Flo ce H In k R Th Eriksson, Beffy H b J Grogan, HarrieT O I y R Th Luedke, Marion Ka SENIOR GIRLS' CLUB LGEBRA and shorThand are deserTed, homeworlc is TorgoTTen, as girls hurry To Assembly B Tor meeTings oT Senior Girls' Club. The ChrisTmas play FIAT LUX and a TascinaTing Travel Talk on India by Mrs. WhiTe were The ouTsTanding programs oT The year. Virginiarlvloe, presidenTg Eleanor I-Ialvorsen, vice presidenTp Jane Hoppa, secreTary: Jane Grogan, corresponding secreTaryq RoliTa Druse, Treasurerg and RuTh Reilc, TacToTum, led The club in The TirsT semesTer. They were suc- ceeded by Emily DeTTlaTT, presidenTg Cecelia Ambroz, vice presidenTp Dor- oThy Thiel, secreTaryg DoroThy Swensen, corresponding secreTary: Ada I-Iinz, Treasurer: and Jane Thielges, TacToTum. FORUM ' ESOLVED, ThaT The cabineT Torm oT governmenT is preTerable To The presidenTial Torm oT governmenT. So Forum argued Through The yearl The oTTicers Tor The TirsT semesTer were presidenT, Ivlary Goralcg vice presidenT, Byron SiTesg secreTary. Flor- ence I-Iassebroolq Treasurer, Elenore Rozanslfeg sergeanT-aT-arms, Solomon Tishbergq and Tor The IasT semesTer, presidenT, Solomon Tishbergg vice pres- idenT, Byron SiTesg secreTary, Muriel Germansoni Treasurer, lvlarion Jenlcinsq sergeanT-aT-arms, John O'lNleill. N ma E g Ik L Ie Bush df Byron Sifes I I I Solomon Tishberg BeTTy Haub .,,, ..., .,,,. ., , ,,. Irene Dziadulewicz Mariorie HolTz Marion Bielefeldt Angelyn Turk Ilma Kirchenwiiz A I' H k r ine uenne ens Alexandra Obremskl GIRLS' GLEE CLUB T was The unusual privilege oT The Girls' Glee Club, This year, To appear on The January CommencemenT program. Because The Theme oT The pro- gram was The Two hundredTh anniversary oT George WashingTon's birTh, The girls sang Two numbers selecTed Trom eighTeenTh cenTury music. The oTTicers Tor The TirsT semesTer were RuTh I-liTe, presidenT: Alexandra Obremski, vice presidenT: Eleanor I-lalvorsen, secreTary: DoroThy Gilson, Ii- brarian: and llma KirchenwiTz, assisTanT librarian. For The second semesTer, They were Dolores Freisinger, presidenT: Irene Dziadulewicz, vice presidenT: Ilma KirchenwiTz, secreTary: Jane Olsen, librarian: and Arline I-luennelcens, assisTanT librarian. ' INTER NOS IELDER oT The sTaTeliesT measure ever molced by The lips oT man. This TribuTe well expressed The senTi- menT oT INTER NOS aT The bimillennium oT Vergil, on OcTober I9, l93I. OTTicers Tor The TirsT semesTer were AlberT I-lonecli, consul: I-Toward Kas- sullce, vice consul: Jeanne BesT, praeTor: Eleanor Redenz, guaesTor: and Irene mesTer, Arline I-luennelrens, consul: RoliTa Druse, vice consul: Jane Eber- hardT, praeTor: Gerald Miller, guaesTor: and Lois Druse, aedile. Edward BaTTerman, AnToneTTe Redovick, Neil Wolff, Alexandra Obremski, Mar- lorie Moody. Blanche Kosrog, Sabina Waclawski, STanIey Drabinowicz, Frances Dworzak, Helen Duerr, Leroy Nirenberg, GerTrude Dorszynski, DoroThy Barlelsen, Blanche KeaTing STarl4, aedile: and Tor The second se- NickZg Lma M Y Y George K I h William G g p I Roberl D h BGYS' GLEE CLUB I-IE Boys' Glee Ciub made ils Tirsl appearance in Assembly A on Armis- Iice Day. Ils coniribulion lo lhe program was Iwo negro spirirual songs We again heard Ihe club al Chrislmas wilh a chorus of sixly-Tive boysi who sang THE Soue or THE VOLG-A BOATMAN, Vivre L'AMouR, and Goon- BYE, MY LovER, GooD-BYE. Members also parlicipaled in a radio program. The officers of The club for The Iirsl semesler were Arlhur Kempa, presi- denrg Leroy Lange, vice presidenrg William GeorgacopuIos, secreraryg and George Ringle, librarian. The nexl semesler found Leroy Lange. presidenlg George Kralsch, vice presidenlg Avery Wood, secrelraryy and Srerling Wirih, librarian. DEUTSCHER VEREIN I-IIS club has an informal almosphere lhal no olrher cIub can boasr. The members. under lhe able direclion of lheir officers and Mr. I-Iamann, made a splendid showing al a Goerhe program dedicaled lo The grear German poei. The Iirsl semesier officers were pres- ideni, Anne Schimenzg vice presidenl, Laurelra Goelz: secrelary, Sophie Sloparq lreasurer, SlanIey Adamskig sergeanl-al-arms, Frieda Krieg: and for lhe Iasr semesrer, Sophie Slopar, Mil- dred Bremer, lone Gehrke, Lois Engel, and lone Perry respeclively. Sph Slp I Pfry I Ghk Ad yDb IM fhf ICI dfA'rh M ff P Z Sp Th II3 d Hfl . S. ar O I eo- R Th E k H y KI p J h H OH H H R b T L g felder R Th L dk BAND O greaTIy has The band grown ThaT iT was necessary To organize a iunior band. The senior band now boasTs abouT sevenTy members. During The pasT year The band again added Iaurels To iTs crediT. AT The band TournamenT in Ivlenasha iT won ss-cond place in sighT reading Class B, and second place in The conTesT oT Class B. ArT Grabowslci placed Third wiTh a bariTone solo, and Ben Lulraszewslci placed TiTTh wiTh an oboe solo in The individual conTesTs. In a conTesT aT Lalce Parlc wiTh The bands oT Iviil- waukee and The surrounding ciTies, we also placed high. Mr. Goodrich enTered The group in Class A oT The EasTern Wisconsin Band Tournarnent where They played The RosAMuNuE and ZAMPA OVERTURES. CARDINAL BOYS' CLUB GAIN The Cardinal Boys' Club suc- ceeded in creaTing beTTer Tellow- ship, developing characTer, and advis- ing The boys in preparaTion Tor Their liTe worlc. The oTTicers Tor The TirsT semesTer were RoberT Crone, presidenT, Edgar Koch, vice presidenTg John Themmes, secreTaryg Gordon Felzen, Treasurer: and VicTor Anderson, sergeanT-aT-arms. Their posiTions were Talcen over The Tol- Iowing semesTer by Gordon Felzen, VicTor Anderson, BenedicT Bagrowslci, Willard Drews, and Ralph IvIarcheTTi. Gord F I Ralph M h TT Vicmo A d Wi d D Ben B g k I Dor Thy H IT Jack B k TT Dol B y k Adel S d k Eug K T ORCHESTRA ITI-I The many opporTuniTies oTTered To sTudenTs by The School Board, The membership oT The senior orchesTra has grown To TiTTy musicians. Ivlr. Goodrich, The direcTor, Teaches The group how To direcT and play some oT The more diTTiculT symphonies. In Ivlay, The orchesTra enTered inTo compeTiTion wiTh The Class A or- chesTras OT Milwaukee and The surrounding TerriTory in The EasTern Wis- consin OrchesTra TournamenT. Three members oT The orchesTra, RuTh LuedTke, bassoon, Adele Sidek, cello: and CTTO I-IueTTner, viola, were accepTed inTo The IXIaTionaI High School OrchesTra, whose meeTing was held in Cleveland. SHIELD CLUB I-IE year I932 ends The eighTeenTh which Shield Club has spenT in an endeavor To spread good will among all creeds and naTionaliTies. The Tri- angle, iTs symbol, signiTies The muTual supporT oT Body, Mind, and SpiriT. The oTTicers Tor The year were Norma Engelke, presidenTg Jane Grogan, vice presidenTg Irene Dziadulewicz, secre- Taryq RoliTa Druse, Treasurer: and Elvira Jens, scribe. Shield Club, during The pasT year, did iTs uTmosT in social acTiviTies as well as in chariTy. r El J RIT D N GEgIke J 9 I D dlwicz EI El E ly DeTTl Hi J Hopp M Idred Plohr .ane Grogan Avery Wood M Hhew Alfenh f Edward Dziennk L I Busha df C I A b CARDINAL WEEKLY STAFF l-lERE'S my head? Who's goT Those ears? CuT ThaT one! Peeping inTo The oTTice while The sTaTT is engrossed in The Techni- caliTies oT iournalism, we see The ediTor energeTically wielding a pasTe brush over The surTace oT an old issue, while The associaTe ediTor sTands ready To aid in pasTing The arTicles as prearranged. Perched on Tables, precariously balancing on The edges oT chairs, are The headwriTers, Thumbing The dicTionary, wriTing, counTing, crossing ouT, be- ginning anew-The unsung heroes oT The weekly sTaTT. MaTThew AlTenhoTen. The ediTor, was aided during his Term oT oTTice by Lucile BushardT, Emily DeTTlaTT, and Jane l-loppa. ANNUAL ART STAFF l-lE pleasing appearance oT The I932 ANNUAL is due To The splendid eTTorTs oT The arT sTaTT. The cover iTselT, which, even aT TirsT glance, promises more delighTTul surprises inside, spells simpliciTy and digniTy. The TeaTure ThaT disTinguishes This ANNUAL is The dominance oT The picTorial elemenT. The arT sTaTT consisTed oT Sabina Waclawski, ediTorg Elaine Sponholz, Frank Rovsek, MargueriTe Spicuzza, James l-lenning, Fern Rasmussen, Alice Skarpinski, Sidney l-lambling, and Muriel Germanson. Jam H ng, F k Rovs k AI e Ska p k Fern R musson, Sid y Hambl ng, Muriel German nan, Sabina Waclawsk arg T S pic u z I I6 Elain Sp holz Edw d H p I Har T O I y Cle T b Elm El Fred Adl Edw d C Mar M k I How d K Ik Emily D TT ff Cel B d y Dor Thy Th I Arli H k ANNUAL LITERARY STAFF ILENCE or bedlam reigned alTernaTely aT The oeginning and end oT ev- ery day when The liTerary sTaTF was aT work. QuesTions were hurled back and TorTh. Then, in The heavy sTillness, noThing sTirred buT acTive brain cells and scribbling pens. Amid The peace and clamor, The ANNUAL was compiled. FirsT hour, I-IarrieT, I-lowie, and Eddie prepared manuscripTs and dis- cussed policies. EighTh hour. lvlarion, Clem, and I-lowie counTed characTers and revised wriTe-ups. Then, Too, Mrs. Reed's prooT readers worked. Then-The ANNUAL wenT To press! AnoTher scramble over, buT who on The sTaTli would have given up his parT in The ioys, sorrows, and problems? SCIENCE CLUB I-IE populariTy oT The Science Club is well deserved because oT The educaTional and original programs pre- senTed. The oTFicers Tor The TirsT semesTer were MargareT STarl4, presidenTq Dor- oThy Thiel, secreTaryg Audrey Reich, vice presidenT: Avery Wood, Treasurer, AlberT I-I o n e c I4, sergeanT-aT-arms. Those elecTed Tor The second semesTer were I-larry BarneTT, presidenTg Avery Wood, secreTaryq AlberT I-Ioneclc, vice presidenTq lvliriam RoTblaTT, Treasurer, ArThur I-lolTz, sergeanT-aT-arms. H y B TT A Th H IT Fern Rasmusson Alberf Honeck Margaref Sfark I Avery Wood Miriam RoTblaTT l-lE hell rings. A clatter ol feet through the corridors and on the stairways, a tumult ol lile ready to begin a new clay. More hells. Sighs ol reliel at the freedom between classes. We chatter gleefully over the events ol the day. Three ten. Another rush ol leet,this time clown the steps and away. A few loiterto exchange parting messages. Then silent,cleserted hallways ancl staircases. School life is over for the day. LIGHTS X 4. , ,. :wifi M' 'Q 1? ',.1 ! 1-L , b'Ab I ? gf, Q .525 ,Tn :A I 25 39 W-gmfsgg My I T I E Lincoln Tallies Two Our Navy Sophomore Scrappers Under Dark Suspicion Tha'l s Far Enough, Nor The Sfunl' Team Heave Ho, Pocllesnilcl Cap+ain lrv fu.. ,II v . -cal, X f Q' V :Q 2 3 W is ,.........................-- gggg if sw Sw ,X M , 'Em 43 yi YQ R. x'4x if QT V 153 .,, 'NVQ' 5? 'Nw ' EX vis? if X f A! ,KV ,, . .. ,W 9 it sw .,-.f,-,AX waning Wea, xx 3 JANE GROGAN IRENE DZIADULEWICZ MARION MICKELSON ALFRED WIDISH ,mgz 1 nf' f' Q i RUTH ERIKSSON 3 a CECELIA AM BROZ DOROTHY SWENSEN HARRIET OWLEY 3 MARION KUBALEK ELMER ELM- ROBERT VAN LANEN HOWARD KASSULKE ENGELKE NA WACLAWSKI 4, W' Q HUENNEKENS ,,.,.,.,..M-4-f-' , H -19,9 9 f ,jk H .A , ACK Knuscsen A , V',, A JA SW ' Q AZ 'l , V ,, ig, W ff 5 . KY ' NEIL WOLF JEANETTE MEYER AVERY WOOD LEONA LUNDOUIST BRUCE HARRISON KENNETH GAULKE DOROTHY THIEL FERN RASMUSSON MARGARET STARK BETTY HAUB FAE BELL , T EUNICE ZEIDLER - N E D EI-HND great doors and Windows ol plate glass, the merchants ol the South Side are ready to serve us with promptness and Cour- tesy. A spirit ol good fellowship binds these loyal neighbors to our school, so that, in all things of common interest, they stand Hshoulder to shouldern with South Division. VERTISERS ,.,4...... sam ,V,, ..,,,. , .W , 1 . 15 ' m i ., . ,1.. ,,., 4 I '-.. 1 L, ak 'L..-L 1 A . f f42'f'w n J Q '15 v,-. 1 ' . Q+f:1:. yew, - M ,wtf .-3 gif fm gp 1 w2?F'5:'f 4 Q K R 'il f mf.,M:C.k,,n,,pxiy, , f 51.- ifi , I 5 fa - 12835 62.575 ur .ag 5 sa x3 ' -Q Q 55 5 V lf it : CARDINAL ANNUAL The F, I-I, BRESLER CG PICTURES Works of Arf t EQ ' . ' ' -52 If If' It ig I I ' 1 I ' .lnggsslla '? Y? ETCI-IINGS - PRINTS - FRAMING FURNITURE 50 gd CARDINAL CALENDAR Do I hear suppressed groans? Yeah, Tor on SepTember 9 dear ol' vacaTion is ended, and King School resumes his reign once more. SepTember IO. A call is senT ouT and I4O oT our he-men appear Tor pracTice. Only seven IeTTer men re- Turn To do and die Tor dear old ALMA MATER. SepTember I2. Ouchl Our Teach- er-aThleTes have gone in Tor horTicul- Ture, iT seems. Mr. I-Ieineman wins a cup Tor Tlower growing. SepTember I7. ConsTiTuTion Day. Mr. PoTTer delivers a masTerIy address over our new speaker sysTem. ANNUAL SepTember I8. Considering how our cross counTry men Try To beaT each oTher aT a meeT Tor places on The Team. we oughT To be champions. Well, Time will Tell. SepTember I9. NoT so good! SouTh, using 39 men, is ironed ouT by The sTeamroIIer Trom Kenosha, The score-I3 To 9, buT The vicTors Tind The sTreeT bumpyl SepTember 24. EighTeen embryo cheerleaders TesT ouT Their peT yells and Teeble gesTures in A. Jerry Miller and Bill Oeorgacopulos are elecTed The new big noises. SepTember 26. Oil SouThI To- day we have been smeared again, This Time by The sTrong WashingTon Team, 25 To O. if? Q3 l I Orchard 9850 I I I ll-IE BADOEIQ PRESS Emil I-I. E. Meier COMMERCIAL PRINTING I I I I332 So. 6Th ST. Milwaukee, Wis. SL as I34 CARDINAL ANNUAL SC OS Phone Miichell IO84 l-l. SUTTER GRANITE and MARBLE Ce. MEMORIALS - MONUMENTS I-IEADSTONES l5OO S. Muskego Avenue Milwaukee, Wis One block soullu of Greenfield and S. l6+l'a S+. SQ and 3 30 Wisconsin State Bank So. I6+l'1 Slreel and Greenfield Ave. Capilal and Surplus and Profil fl3750,000.00 A STRONG NEIGHBORHOOD BANK Sc 25 CARDINAL ANNUAL 80 OS Good Luck and BesI Wishes I3attersor1's Drug Store ROBERT LEE PATTERSON, Prop. HPATRONIZE YOUR INDEPENDENT NEIGHBORHOOD MERCHANT I IOO So. I6'rh S+reeI 1 Phone IvIi+cheII 0852 - Cor. WashInqIon Milwaukee, Wis. 30 Q3 QC O3 CongraIuIa+Ions Io Jrhe I932 GracIuaIes SCHATTSCHNEIDERS FUNERAL HOME I655 S. IVIusIcego Avenue Phone Milrchell O37I CARDINAL ANNUAL SepTember 29. Well, we all lcnow a real paper when we see one. Today I2OO oT us subscribed Tor The CARDI- NAL. OcTober I. The Junior Girls meT new members and Then danced. I have no inside inTormaTion, Tor I wasn'T There, buT I beT They had a swell Time. OcTober 2. We saw Abe Lincoln and lvlrs. Abe aT SouTh. IT really was Judge Bull and lvliss Feeser, who pre- senTed an episode Trom The liTe oT Lincoln. lvlore ouch! Now Mr. Sears has goT him a prize, Too, Tor gardening in WesT Allis. OcTober 3. Bad news! No game Today, buT grunTs Trom below pro- claim SouTh s+iII To be in The cellar. OcTober 7. This is The +en+h birTh- day oT Shoulder To Shoulder . OcTober IO. Ugh! Who'd a Thunlq ThaT a bunch oT TooTbalI players could make mud pies? ATTer herculean eT- TorTs To IiTT Their TooTsies Trom The loam, The Team won O To O. I-Iome- coming wiTh Bay View! In The eve- ning The alumni liTTed up Their voices in song. OcTober I2. Hello, SouTh Divi- sion. Mr. CoblenTz gives us The glad hand over The spealcer sysTem. Oh, yesl We have a gongl Well, well, so old ChrisTopher Columbus paid our glorious land a so- cial call on This day many years ago. ST QS HRELIANCE MEANS RELIABILITY RELIANCE Building and l.oan Association 2536 W. NaTionaI Avenue Ins+alImen+ STocl4 Tor Savings Paid-up STocIc Tor InvesTmenTs Phone lvlilrchell 8289 Milwaukee 20 :S I37 l CARDINAL OcTober I5. Pig-Tail Day! A rioT oT color and proTusion oT bows greeT our masculine eyes! Oh, well, There are bows and beaux! OcTober I6. Roses are red: vio- leTs are blue. This poeTry conTesT is slapping me Too. OcTober I7. NorTh I7. SouTh O. SouTh played, Too! Oh, well! BeTTer luclc nexT Time. OcTober 2l. l-lurrah Tor The l93l CARDINAL ANNUAL! IT has received an almosT maximum score Trom The Na- Tional ScholasTic Press. OcTober 22. l-lowie Kassullce is ediTor oT The I932 ANNUAL. Good luck To you, l-lowie! Our sympaThy, lvliss Foelslce! pe ! ANNUAL OcTober 23. Our cross counTry Team sTreTches iTs legs and wallcs away Trom WashingTon 2I To 34. OcTober 27. The January seniors assume Their digniTy and nominaTe a class commission. OcTober 29. lvliss D e C o u r c y names KEMPY as The January play. We rush To The library Tor copies. OcTober 3l. Ol' Voodoo's goT us. Lincoln Talces home a TooTball, 6 To O. November 3. Whe-e-e-e! W e annex STaTe Cross CounTry TiTle! We're all Tired ouT-Trom cheering. November 5-6. No school. Now To caTch up on sleep. 6? l l Open Day and NighT Albert ldrusldcwitz i FUNERAL DIRECTOR l LADY ASSISTANT i r l l T 2:01 w. MiTchell S+. lvliTchell IOI3 I38 CARDINAL ANNUAL SC OS? A fi is I ,.,A, lo l'lave Your School Actually l.ive Between the Covers olYourfAxNNUAL is fhe imporfanr purpose and aim of your ANNUAL. Lei us help you puf your school-in Hs enfirefy, wHh all Hs ideals, Hs life and spirH and genuine fone of sfudenl days-loefween lhe covers of your ANNUAL. Only wilh high-grade workmanship, wHh infelligenl, sound advice and cooperalion such as we offer. can you hope io successfully and efleclively express and porfray all +his in book form. And H cosls you no more lo have our exceplional service .... in 'fact cosls less fhan lhe usual charge for The commonplace and ordinary. Your Class l-las Bul One ANNUAL . . . Can You Af- ford To Be Saiisfied WHh Less Than The Best When If Cosfs No More? 'A A- -iid f L . -f Us in is Q N A ,M Q. of :fx . ffwqsk s V s wks. 5 'F ' gs isa. P72 Vis: ifvzrry-lisigfffiieaasgxsfz fils 'f:ff:l?'wL- -iv:i'v f'ff i:551xe V Y MILWAU KEE v v v MARQU E'l l'E 3337 sus w wluunmoo sr. Tflyfffj C7'1,77fZL1!97f'J' v v tnzvnoruz CARDINAL ANNUAL PC Q? Layton Park Monument Co., Inc. ARTISTIC MON UMENTS AN D HEADSTONES 29OI W. Foresf Home Avenue Phone Orchard 0358 Milwaukee ELMER C. SENFT LET US MODERNIZE YOUR PLUMBING I7OO W. Greenfield Avenue Mifcnell 43l8 SQ .3 Q, CARDINAL November ll. ArmisTice Day! The public speaking classes shiver as They deliver. November I3. Class play casT an- nounced. Wally, Al, DOT, RuTh. Leo, lvlae, l-larry, Doris, and Woo-Ti are The luclcies. November l4. We miss deTeaTing WesT by six poinTs. The score remains O To O Tor posTeriTy! November 20. ElizabeTh B e m i s wins The poeTry conTesT wi+h Ti-ie SACRED GIFTH! November 2 I. SouTh beaTs Tech I4 To O in The lasT game oT The season. The rain showed up prompTly wiTh The crowd. ANNUAL November 2I. The cross counTry Team is now The TirsT Annual lvlidwesT l-ligh School Cross CounTry lv1eeT Champions! WhaT a TiTle! WhaT a Team! November 26-27. Good old Thanlcs- giving! PlenTv To eaT and loTs oT Time To recuperaTe! December 4. Eleanor l-lalvorsen and RoberT McCabe are represenTa- Tive boy and girl. Also, Clem Wien is valedicTorian, and Loraine VogT, saluTaTorian. December ll-I2. The class play KEMPY is a huge success. Woo-Ti, The Pelcinese, is The mosT decoraTive piece oT TurniTure on The sTage! Q3 JCDSEPI-I E, SMELTS Equipped lor Complete Examinations AssociaTe - May SuiTe 2I4, BuTTer Building E. Burliiend lVliTchell and S. l3Th SQ QS. l4I CARDINAL December ll. Basl4eTball is onl SouTh Talces an I8 To I6 Thriller Trom Bay View. December I7. Girls' Club cele- braTes wiTh a program under The spreading ChrisTmas Treel December I8-January 4. Merry ChrisTmas and I-lappy New Year, ev- erybodyl January 5. By This Time probably all our New Year resoIuTions are brolcen. Never mind, IQ33 is anoTher year. January 8. SouTh barely wins a TighT and Thrilling basIceTbalI game Trom Tech I2 To IO. January I I. The girls aT 5ouTh geT inTo acTion in baslceTball, The Seniors deTeaTing The Juniors 35-24. WhaT a gamel ANNUAL January I6. All high schools in The ciTy are represenTecl aT The music con- vocaTion aT Tech. January l8. I-li, Tr e sh ie s, wel- come! On This day even lowly soph- omores Teel grown-up To see you in our halls. ' January I9. Four oT our aspiring oraTors sTrive manTully in The conTesT, and Bob lvlcCabe comes olT wiTh TirsT honors. Bravol January 20. Finally, The Juniors deTeaT The Seniors in inTerclass baslceT- ball To come ouT on Top. January 25. ExaminaTionsl The besT parT oT Them is ThaT aTTerwards we can go home and sleep and sleep. January 28. Final g r a d e day. Well, ThaT's all over unTil nexT se- mesTer. TTT CongraTulaTions and The l3esT oT Luclc I BROWN 84 BEI-lBfXL,llvl I y sERvlcE I coMw1ERciAL Pnoroeiaf-wus I ' 327 w. NaTionaI Ave. I KODAKS AND SUPPLIES GOOD KODAK FINISHING I The I-Iome oT GlossiTone Kodak PrinTs I .I I42 CARDINAL ANNUAL Q' Q3 BIRI2 PHARMACY DRUGGlS-l-S A Slore Thal Greels You wilh a Smile Phone lvlilchell 4825 Soulh lvluslcego and Wesl Greenfield Phillip Grunclmann Co. Dealers in COAL, WOOD, AND COKE I328 So. Tenlh Slreel' Phone Mifchell 3979 Old Number 496 Flffh Avenue S, QS CARDINAL ANNUAL PRINTING TI-IAT SATISFIES Anylrhing from a Calling Card +0 a Newspaper -I-Iwe IVIiIWauI4ee -I-imes THE SOUTH SIDERS' I-IOME PAPER 83I So. SIII Slreel Iv1i+cI1eII SIOO 5 P3 QE OS NO CHARGE FOR USE OF OUR HOME RECEIVING VAULTS FIQANTZ Phone IvIi+cI1eII 0239 I92I W. Greenfield Ave. Milwaukee be 03 77777-,777777 CARDINAL January 29. The February grad- uales have lheir commencemenl ex- ercises loday. Good luck, and God bless lheml February l. Cver 2200 pupils are milling lhrough lhe halls. Wol a lilel February I2. Today every one lhoughl ol Lincoln and gained inspira- lion lor lurlher work in school lrom his example. Bay View in a surprise win over Soulh beal us by a score ol 22-I7. February I9. Again Soulh gels lapped, lhis lime by lhe champion Lincoln guinlel by a score 40-I2. February 22. Washinglon's birlh- day. Mr. Coblenlz gave us an inler- esling comparison ol Washinglon and Lincoln. Music and speeches resound lhrough lhe day. 5? ANNUAL February 26. Tech gels even by lrouncing us 3I lo I7, bul slill lhey lie us in lhe scramble lor lasl place. March 8. Whoops, loday leach- ers balance accounls in lhe usual spill ol mark day. March ll. Class play is chosen. Il is THE NERvous Waeck, a weslern comedy. Lel's be loyal and lry lor a parl iusl lo give a lillle compelilion. lvlarch I7. Here's lhe class com- mission: Ivlallhew Allenholen, Ce- celia Ambroz, Emily Delllall. Elmer Elias, Frank Filipowicz, Jane Hoppa, and Fern Rasmusson. A dandy bunch! Felicilalions. March 22. Edward l-lempel, a iunior, is appoinled lo lhe posilion ol assislanl edilor ol lhe CARDINAL AN- NUAL. 08 We Do Amaleur Finishing scHui.lZ g sluuio WE PHOTOGRAPH ANYTHING I226 S. I6lh Slreel Orchard 4274 Milwaukee, Wis. .i Se aa T45 CARDINAL ANNUAL EL OO Dear Graduates: Prosperify and success are The wishes of your phofographer V I.. HAGENDQRFF Yr Vx 631 WEST NATICDNAL AVENUE Mi+cl1ell I9I7 Bc O3 CARDINAL April l. No Tooling-Ten AN- NUALS will be given away To Those who can maTch song TiTles wiTh pages in The I93I book. We biTe. April 8. The characTers Tor THE Nmzvous WREck are announced. They are Widish, Lang, Angelyn Turk, Krueger, l-lueTTner, EsTher Myers, Je- howski, Adler, Elias, l-larrison, and Schroeder. Arline l-luennekens and Fern Rasmusson compleTe The Tech- nical sTaTT. April I4. Al Elias and Janie l-loppa are represenTaTive sTudenTs. April l5. Our TirsT Senior Dance. The vicTorious Ding Dongs parade abouT The Tloor while The Toiled Do Dos slink ouT oT sighT. ANNUAL April 22. lT's a long sad sToryl The Track Team Takes a vicious belTing Trom EasT. The score resembles 85 To 23. April 27. Lucile l3ushardT and l-lar- rieT Owley carry oTT The valedicTory and The saluTaTory. April 29. Emily DeTTlaTT wins The declaml For once in my liTe l picked The winner beTore The conTesT sTarTedl April 30. I4OO have subscribed Tor The yearbook. May 2. l-laving iusT come ouT oT my daze, l wish To sTaTe ThaT on April 30 The Track squad losT To The lvlar- gueTTe Trosh, 66 To 4-l. The highlighT was a seven way Tie Tor TirsT place in The high iump. lvlay 5. The annual Girls' Club lvlay parTy Takes place. 08 Miss Brownis School of usiness, lnc. E. WELLS AND N. MILWAUKEE STREETS A commercial school oT recognized sTanding oTTers To high school graduaTes and college women super-Training in business subiecTs. Business execuTives appreciaTe This TacT and paTronize This school when They desire unusual service. As a resulT, Miss Brown's sTudenTs hold many oT The mosT inTeresTing posiTions in The ciTy. Call Broadway 2978 Tor an appoinTmenT. We do noT send ouT soliciTors. SUMMER SCHOOL-July 6 DAY scuooi ENRoLLMENT-mice G mam. lhalf-day Session-l Nie-HT scHooL-sepember Through June. SQ W T47 CARDINAL ANNUAL Ivlay IO. I see by The wrinkles ThaT senior essays are abouT due. lvlay I3. SouTh meeTs Tech on The Track. Dubo Rink Tinds ThaT he sTiIl can'T eaT beTore a Track meeT and remain perpendicular. Ivlay I4. I was duly impressed To- day by The June Class Play! All The parTs were well Taken. Widish's wiggling eyebrows will ever haunT my dreams. Ivlay I7. Ivlark day! Some oT us are sad, some are happy, and some-I Oh. well, why dwell on unhappy ThoughTs? May 27. We enioy an issue oT The CARDINAL. I sTruggIe Through one oT IvIaTT AlTenhoTen's ediTorials. May 30. Memorial Day! June I. I-leigh-ho everybody! The sleepy June days are here. June 2. Well, now we're all regis- Tered Tor The new semesTer. This is The TirsT Time The senior class realizes ThaT iT is really leaving Torever. June IO. I-Ionor day rolls around, and honors are showered upon The TorTunaTe ones. June I5. The ANNUALS appear and begin To pass Trom hand To hand To be auTographed beyond recogniTion. June I7. We receive our Tinal marks and quake. June 20-2I. We are examined. June 24. IT's all over. School's dismissed! TonighT The June Class oT I932 becomes a memory. ga A .......,...,,,A.,. i .v............ .......-.,..-.,,....-.-.-.-.1-...-:.4. .1.:4,.,,...,..-,.,,,,.,.,,.,.-.-.,-.-,..-.1.-.',.. .........,..,....................,.,.,.,.,-,-,-,-.-,-,-,-,,,4.',.,-,-.-,-,-....... I . +93 T ...,..,, 2 -'- '-'-'- '-'- '-'- '-'- ,,,,,. .,...., , Inguggwlght T ' ' iiiii I ............., , ' 1 fi? .5iEi3iE22i2EEEEiEE,,W :':i:1:1131:31:21111:1:i:31:2:1:2:i:1:':r X '.T.'. 1 :1:1:5:5:5:2:5f:1- ITIT., I:11:5:eff:5:3.1:3:2:2:fEr2f311:2-51K AJ.1.1.1.1.1.1...1.:.a.:.1 gigsgzgsgagsgagsgsgsggsgg25s22is2I1ffjp :fifQE21::g., Whatever the Sig-you'll find Spalding Eqmpment sc TT A..-uthenfic 3'5'ii'5'i'T'5'E'i'i'i'i'iiiwi5':':':'T' In every Spalding store you'11 find a Wide and Egg varied stock of every kind or' athletic goods 5 equipment, with experts to assist you in your choice-and at prices that fit every pocketbook. Drop in and see what a I-QQ mans 4 sw:1:1:g:g:g:g5g:2:2:22:5.lm Sfoffhas f0 Offef- .,... ii ii iiii 30, :ifizkiiizi51312313S2212:T:f:Q:f:Q33513:::gg3:53:133:3231::31315:53:31313:5313:3:gi:3:53:53:53:3:5:53:3:535353:3:1:1:3:3:3:3:3:3 -:ggg53:5313:31313:5:3:5:5:g3:5:5:3:1:5:ggggggg lag I48 CARDINAL ANNUAL IXICDIQAMPIQESS i'CCDVEl2S For High School and College Annuals are arlislically designed and col- oredq are genuine in Their linal appear- ance and reproduclion of delailg are made by a concern who lias manulaclured and designed cov- ers since IS64. Q Your prinler has samples ol Norarnpress covers ask him how a Norampress cover will lielp lo malie your annual more allraclive. -llie Nortli American press 728 Norllw Sevenllw Slreel Milwaukee, Wisconsin Bc av? CARDINAL ANNUAL S0 O? -l-he South Sicle Bool4 Store All The lalesl anol popular copyrighls. Up-To-clale slalionery. Largesr assorlmenl of clainly birlh- clay carols ancl cards for all occasions. New and Second-hand School Books Boughf, Sold and Exchanged Now localed al IOI8 So. 5Jrh S+. aa 08 Pb ES Service is assured you A Trial will convince you Layton l3arl4 Dairy Co. Dealers in l-llGl-'l QUALITY DAIRY PRODUCTS Phone lviifchell O3l8 dc aa CARDINAL ANNUAL Umar Baking Company FINE BREAD AND DOUG!-INUTS 2I3O W. Clybourn St. Scnneicler printing Company 49I6 W. Greenfield Ave. Layton Parlc State Bank MAKE Tl-IIS YOUR BANK CARDINAL JANUARY CLASS WILL We, The January Class OT SOuTh Division l-ligh School, COunTy OT Mil- waukee, STaTe OT Wisconsin, being in good healTh OT body, OT sound and disposing mind and memory, and de- sirous OT seTTling our high school aT- Tairs while we have The sTrengTh and capaciTy TO do so, do make, publish, and declare This To be Our lasT will and TesTamenT. We give and bequeaTh: To Emily DeTTlaTT, Eleanor l-lalver- sen's red hair and her Three besT Treckles. TO Erank Eilipowicz, Bob McCabe's curly hair TOgeTher wiTh his anTique Theme Tolder. To Sadye lngraham, JeaneTTe Bar- lOw's speed in leaving Assembly A. T60 hours a milel. ANNUAL To MaTThew AlTenhOTen, lrv Ru- bOw's six TeeT OT brawn and muscle. You bruTel To Jane l-loppa, Marion Middle- mas's abiliTy To iuggle a noon hour hoT-dog aT Erank's. TO Elmer Elias, Woodrow MiTchell's liTTle whiTe mouse-buT wiTh The ad- vice TO keep iT aT home, Elmer. TO Lucile BushardT, Virginia MOe's nOnchalanT sneeze during a physics experimenT. TO l-loward Kassulke, Leroy Eisen- berg's long legs and his pink spaTs. To Ada l-linz, Rose ZapleTal's mid- dle name Nona. To Al Widish, Al Wahlberg's leTT- handed gesTures Tor his parT in The class play. P0 ' 03 HEAT ,Il N every residenTial secTion OT greaTer Milwaukee wif you will Tind saTisTied users ready To enThusiasTi- Q l L cally vouch Tor The dependabiliTy, convenience K and cOmTOrT OT Their l-leil CombusTion Oil Burner insTallaTiOn. Don'T puT OTT The eniOymenT OT auTo- maTically cOnTrolled l-Teil CombusTiOn Oil l-leaTing- Decide now To invesTigaTe-Phone MiTchell 8000. e H E I L Eor TacTs abouT oil heaTirIg and The Heil C O M B U S T N CombusTiOn Oil Burner visil' The TacTory O l L B U R N E R display room - 3000 W. MOnTana STreeT. DIVISION OF THE HEIL co. i 3000 W. MONTANA ST. MILWAUKEE as as l52 CARDINAL ANNUAL 26 93 The Needed Kind ol Funeral Service O CONTRIBUTE mosl consideralely every preparalrion for The care of Jrhe one deparred, and every comforling 'rhoughl' for Those be- reaved, consrilulres The ainn and aH'i+ude and arrenlion of Borgwardr Sons' funeral service. Added 'ro Jrhal is a policy of co-operalion in The imporlanl maller of coslrs - assisling Toward price seleclrion wi+hin +he 'Family's aloilily 'ro pay. And such service is indeed Jrhe need a+ fhe Jrime. l:. J. Borgvvardt Sons, lnc. HDISTINCTIVE FUNERAL SERVICE I8I7 Wesf Nafional Avenue lvlllchell 8830 - 883 l be nd CARDINAL ANNUAL or QUALITY and SERVICE call the UNITY DYE WORKS INCORPORATED IOO8-I4 So. IST STreeT MiTCheII 3600 WE CLEAN AND DYE FROM TI-IE FINEST LACE TO THE LARGEST RUG WE SATISFY AII goods insured while in our care EMERGENCY SERVICE-If you call us beTore 9 A. M. we wiII Th clean and reTurn your rugs e same day The Trained IVIan Wins PracTicaI shop Training is oTTered in The following Trades day or evenings AVIATION, AUTOMOBILE EIecTric ReTrigeraTion EIecTric and AceTyIene Welding WRITE OR CALL FOR INFORMATION VisiTors are weIcome MILWAUKEE TRADE SCI-IOOI. :Ia og CARDINAL To shy liTTle Lois Engel, Agnes Bar- ney's rip-roaring high speed naTure. To Eileen Malone, a parT oT lrv Ru- bow's brawn and muscle, TogeTher wiTh a share oT Eleanor l-lalversen's red hair. To John Schroeder, Ben Sobek's bag oT peanuT shells, To be presenTed aTTer The class play. To Bob JohnsTon,V Leo Nikora's Theory oT how To end The depression. lEnd iT all or ioin The Toreign legion, which is iT?l To BeTTy l-laulo, Mae Jackson's bass voice, so ThaT she may sing her Tavor- iTe song, O SoLE Mio. To Ralph l-lermann, Carl Godager's abiliTy To explain EinsTein's Theory oT relaTiviTy. To Eddie Canavan, Edwin lzaac Isa- dore Abie l-lauk's hopes oT becoming ANNUAL sporTs ediTor oT Eskimo Ely Paper, which is The equivalenT oT The SouTh Side Times in The arcTic circle. To Angelyn Turk, RuTh l-liTe's besT hop-scoTch sTone and a blond wig Trom her mama doll. To Cecelia Ambroz, Clem Wien's abiliTy To Talk on any subiecT Trom The reason why They don'T sell leTT-handed razors To why smoked-Tish are noT sold in ATghanisTan. To Max, The ianiTor, Ollie Jasinski's Tireless Ford. To our dear Teachers, one hundred cases oT The besT aspirin TableTs To cure The headaches we have given Them. To The glee club, The TooTball Team's abiliTy To harmonize Frankie and Johnnie . in singing 52 lnTerior Woodwork - Radios Builders' Hardware - SToves ElecTric ReTrigeraTors Washing Machines SixTy Years oT SaTisTacTory Service The House wzfh the Repulahorz RELIABLE BARDWARF. ESTQQQSHED QUALITYWOODWORK eig ulirirg ca. l72O So. l3Th ST., aT W. MiTchell Phone MiTchell 2550 Be og I55 CARDINAL To Jane Eberhardl. Dorolhea B. l-linz's love lor six-day bicycle races. Jane has a bicycle, and she calls il Billy , To Jerry Gradisnik, Wally Trep- low's book on why lhe Sphinx was nol made wilh a smile on ils lace. To Vi Jens, Doris Tall's recipe lor making cemenl cookies. lCaslor oil is besl lor a slumick achel. To Aaron Teilelbaum, a keg ol her- ring lrom Ossie Slram's lish slore. Pass lhe prelzels and waler, men! To Ollo l-luellner, a Sanla Claus suil and a lew pillows lo play Sanla in James Diliberl's new play, Widen lhe chimney: lhe depression is over . To Pele Jehowski, Len Sommers's abilily lo balance a monocle. Ralher lopping. EEG ANNUAL To lvlr. Bechlold, a grey waislcoal lo malch his hol-cha spals. Laslly: Those who did nol gel any- lhing may be lhanklul and happy. We hereby appoinl Robinson Cru- soe lhe sole execulor ol lhis, our lasl will and leslamenl. We also revoke all lormer wills by us made. ln wilness whereol. we hereunlo sel our hands and seal al Milwaukee, aloresaid, lhis lwenly-sevenlh day ol January, nineleen hundred and lhirly-lwo. Signed and sealed by said January Class ol Soulh Division I-ligh School, who, al lhe same lime, in lhe presence ol each olher, publish and declare lhe same as and lor lheir lasl will and leslamenl and have subscribed lheir names as wilnesses lhereunlo. lSignedl Peler Pan Red Riding l-looc BEST WISI-IES TO GRADUATES , May Success Crown Your Ellorls in l.ile Moolgiijixrmacv i230 W. Milchell Sl. lvlilchell O55I SQ Q8 156 CARDINAL ANNUAL PC 09 COURSES INCLUDE: Advanced Accounling Audiling Adverfising Bookkeeping English Finance Commercial Law Credifs and Collections Dramafics Economics lncome Tax lnduslrial Organizafion lnvesfmenls Y C O L L E G E WILL nzfuu you Fora AN EXECUTIVE Poslnou Business Adminislralion for Young Men Secrelarial lor Young Women Universily grade subiecls and lexls. Free employmenl service Markefinq 'l Penmansnip Summer lerm begins July 5 Public Speaking 55le5m5PSll'P Special Courses Offered Seqcrejafual raining , Shorthand Write. phone or call E? SPENCERIAN COLLEGE Sfatistics 606 Easl Wisconsin Ave. Phone lvlarquelle 0880 Tvvinq Endorsed by Milwaukee Associalion of Commerce. gig O5 Always Worth l-laying GRCDWING Savings Account AT THE MARSHALL 84 ILSLEY BANK Soullw Side Office-4l4 W. Nalional Ave. Main Office - 72I Norlli Waler Slreel lvl l LW A U K E E The Oldesl' Bank in llxe Norllwweslz Founded IS47 MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM gg 2 CARDINAL ANNUAL BY KEEPING 0Ul?535'5EHsfED0WN MSCUE BROTHERS 622' AND GREENFIELD SG OR OTTO J. TEMPLIN WHEN WE YOU ARE THINK ' IN OF BUSINESS DRUGS FOR THINK YOUR OF US HEALTH 2200 W. Nalrional Ave. Milwaukee WIS gs od CARDINAL ANNUAL 90 V2 omc permanent ave Stuolio Mrs. Virginia Kowaleslci, Owner and Manager Our Own Parisian Chic Oil Wave - - 58.50 given exclusively in our Beauiy Shoppe Also Waves ai 53.00 - 55.00 - 57.50 - 5l0.00 - 5 Enfire I-Ieacl Curlecl - Marcel Eiziecr French Encl Curl NO LONG WAITING OPEN 9 A. M, TO 9 I7I9 So. I Iih S'rree+ P V2 Block Soufh of Mifchell Si. I2.50 P. M. hone O rch. 5476 Young lVlen's Suits Wi+h 2 Pair of Long Pan+s Sizes I4 Io 20 Slryleol +o meelr 'rhe exacfing demands of young men. Fabrics and Tailoring ihal' are ou+s+anding. Deep blues, fine grays, rich browns in new spring pai'- I'erns. Really marvelous suiI's. .... . At New Lovv Prices 5152.75 -- 516.75 -- 519.75 Stumpfs X 'S X f' f , fy I gif. I Q . X . iii! i if 637 N. WATER ST. 735 N, THIRD ST. W. NATIONAL AVE. 81 S. 5TI-I ST. N. 3RD 84 W. LLOYD STS. y N. IZTH 81 W. WALNUT STS, W. MITCHELL 81 S. STH STS. l CARDINAL ANNUAL . f:5:1:2:2:-'-- E- -f1:':,:-.-:-'f:'-:2:':-:- , -. :4-14:1 ',2 3--52':fff?QI'- , M M Y' ,W -Q, 0 N x , 4, , if 359,51 wmv- ,f Q I fr K I6 v 'agp 'I' N Q 1 C 'V 2,5 23 , 1 31 Q, ,' ' 3 , .fa 'x -' 1 'J' ..., .ff .-:':-:ae-:-:-:---. -I+'-fy-:Pi-r:': 4-1.X.a,3i-qv-.QPHQE-n:e4f,2 -29'-:f , A g.1f: ' -5gfgEf1f1'f1'1f11'f1?f 1Fw .v,,,. ,..-,.- I f-LQ.-,-,, 7-,.g..'.:,,.-.':-::g.g3.-ff.-:-:-14:IZ.-.'..f,':-. ., 1 ru 0- I ., 1 -1.-1 .pw-gi.-.11-: -:Qtr -:kv 33 '91 3 1 wx - Q A 'I' 2 5, 3' 312' 3 XF 1 'Wg , 4 ' I, 5 f sf 3 J 1 4 , I 9733, 8. 5 , A, wx 'A:Z': I'I. I'I Lo I1 m G V1 f I , I 84 S O F1 'A ' I FUNERAL SERVICE Phone Mi'rcIweII I575 I k 804 W. GreenIIeId Ave Mi wau ee I I QI' O9 Wherever you go- Io COLLEGE or UNIVERSITY InIo BUSINESS or a PROFESSIGN I-IEIQSCI-IELS CLOTHES Go Well I32I So. I6+I1S+. In ob CARDINAL Remember lhe movie on lhe Iile ol Julius Caesar? Well, lrom lhal lime on, I knew Al Widish was an aclor. Al looks so much like Julius. I came inlo Mr. Brown's room and mislook lhe slalue ol Julius lor Al gelling a bawl- ing oul lrom Ivlr. Brown. Thal reminds mel Here is parl ol a play I wrole. Aller lhe lirsl acl, I knew Shakespeare was no pal ol mine. -Curlainl Ah! The selling is a moonlil allernoon in Iceland. I see lwo ligures sorling cameI's hair lor lhe new collegiale coals. The lall one is barelool, in a luxedo. They are coming lhis way as lhey mounl lwo oslriches and swim loward us. I-lellol I recognize lhe genlleman and a lady, or is il lwo genllemen? Why, il's Irv Rubow and lvlahalma Ghandi, who is ANNUAL all dressed up in a bed sheel and a new salely pin. The lirsl day ol lhe new lerm every lreshie gels razzed. The day I remem- ber besl was lhe day when lwo second semesler lreshmen saw Jane I-loppa ldignilied seniorl coming lo school and lhrealened lo sel her on lhe bubbler. Lillle did lhey lhink lhal some day your piclure would be in lhe Jouizufii-eh, Jane? Emily Delllall, lhe girl whose lulure ambilion is lo read fish recipes over lhe radio, won lhe declamalory con- lesl. She says her success is due lo her work as presidenl ol lhe Senior Girls' Club. Fourlh guarlerg ball on lhe lhree- yard Iine. The releree holds gun: lwenly seconds lo play. Oul dashes VCDUNG MEN . . . wilh a llare lor Fashion will lind in Borchardl's clolhes lhe smarl slyling ol lhe well dressed college man. Come here lor your Sporlswear. BCDIQCI-IAIQDTS INCORPORATED 826 So. l6lh Sl. Phone Milchell 65I4 Au Near Nalional Ave. .111 ,,,S.,- cioleiuas, FIJRNISI-IERS . X and CUSTOM TAILORS 47 ggi i Ill PMROSDEAU T So Q3 I63 CARDINAL Elmer Elias, sTeps on Coach Bergland's peT corn, splashes mud on Joe I-leine- man's new coaT, and puTs his TooT in The waTer pail. Then The coach puTs in Aaron TeiTelbaum Tor Frank Filipo- wicz. The heighT oT my ambiTion is To see Sadye Ingraham and Clem Shrimp Trimborn do a solo dance aT one oT The senior hops: The heighT oT Shrimp's ambiTion is To be able To dance. Remember The lasT pig Tail day? Don'T you Think Celia Ambroz, Irma Jahnke, Jerry Gradisnik, and Jane Grogan had The cuTesT hair bows? Fern Rasmusson sure is a good roller skaTer. She makes a Tigure eighT by adding Tive and Three. The Shield Club skaTing parTy was a success as ANNUAL 90 per cenT oT The bunch aT breakTasT The nexT Three mornings were sTanding up. lVlaTTy AlTenhoTen is quiTe a Trig- onomeTry shark. Well, Try This one on your slide rule, MaTTy. If Ralph I-ler- mann's whiskers are yg oT an inch long, and Ossie STram's swimming suiT is size 40, whaT is on page I3 oT I3eTTy I-laub's diary? When AI Wahlburg, oTKErv1PYTame, was asked whaT he inTended To do aTTer graduaTion, he said, I Think l'll Take up re-Tireing . This may also be Tound on page l3I3 oT The I948 his- Tory books. Using The soup spoon Tor coTTee, eaTing sTeak wiTh The salad Tork, and drinking a gallon oT ice waTer, marked The high spoTs oT The senior bangueTs. 3' 33 M .,,. ' ATTer all, iT's The blend ThaT decides ff - 'f ill ,, g..g,. fi W . coTTee goodness. Back in The nineTieS. ygs- 1 I I Oscar Pieper's arTTul skill produced The ,g,, , rare blend known as GargoyIe. ITS .T i, - ' mellow TasTe and delighTTul aroma have 5, nw ., ,,,s been preserved Tor nearly haIT a cenTury. ,W , Freshness is essenTial - and regardless I I oT anyThing else - The CoTTee mosT re- ? 3, cenTly roasTed IS The TreshesT. RoasTed every day righT here in Mil- 5 Sold by leading Grocery and Delicafessen STores. l I64 CARDINAL ANNUAL CONGRATULATIONS, GRADUATES OE I932 I-Ie who does good Io enoII'1er, does aIso good Io I1ImseII-no+ only in +IIe ad, Iouf in +I1e consciousness of well-doing is IIIS reward. EGGERTSDBOOK STORE BOOKS AND BOOK SERVICE, NOVELTIES, PARTY GOODS, GIFTS. ART, SI-IOW CARD AND DRAWING MATERIALS, BLANK BOOKS AND OEEICE SUPPLIES EBKE C 006, 04000 '46 wool: cop, ualitq Backed by a Desire to Pleaoe Qfuwe 1903 B X5 CARDINAL ANNUAL DIAMONDS WATCI-IES SILVERWARE JEWELRY ENGRAVED STATIONERY PROGRAMS ANNOUNCEMENTS Manufacfurers and Designers CLASS -- CLUB -- SOCIETY PINS RINGS -- BADCSES i Jnde 84 Upmeyer CQ Jewelers - IVIiIvvauI4ee PIenIcin+on Building Where Wisconsin Ave. Crosses N. PIanIcinIon SI. gn nd CARDINAL ANNUAL ln KEMPY, Wally TrepTow had To geT a rub-down on his arms while he resTed beTween acTs so he could carry ThaT pockeT wrench around. Doris TaTT, our preTTy ingenue lsomeThing nice, l guessl owns The bloodhound ThaT slepT wiTh Wally on The soTa, and she says she Teeds him lThe dogl raw meaT so he will keep his Tigure. RuTh l-liTe, The charming heroine, can sing WHEN We WEREYOUN6, MAGGIE and make iT sound like The Lime l-louss Biuss. I Think Ben Bernie and The lads should know abouT iT. l.ooey l-lirschinger inheriTed his aloiliTy as a pole vaulTer. l-lis greaT grand uncle under Napoleon Bona- decoraTion Tor iumping Trom high places came inTo The l-lirschinger Tamily. l-lis uncle, Though, goT a black eye Trom Nappy. l iusT goT word Trom WalTer Win- shell ThaT our Time is up, l3uT, if we had a longer Time on The air, l could Tell someThing inTeresTing abouT each oT you. Well, don'T Throw sand in your kid broTher's hair and keep your nose Trom geTTing sunburned. This l:nroadcasT comes To you Through The courTesy oT The SouTh Di- vision l-ligh School, and Through The CARDINAL ANNUAL broadcaslring sysf Tem. This is sTaTion SDI-TS signing oTT, and This is your announcer lvlack aT The lvlike saying good-bye. parTe iumped oTT a haysTack and Cheerio. anded on Nappy, and Thus The TirsT Au revoir. BQ Y O U A R E O N L Y FOUR MINUTES FROM l l Bc - ai 167 CARDINAL ANNUAL SC Oi? JUS. A, RCDZEWSKI Distributor of Badger Candy Co. FAMOUS BRAND YANKEE CANDIES 1800 So. Layion Blvd. Mifcnell 7685 30 og O rne June Seniors of Soufh Division I-liglfi School, we ex- Jrend our mosi' hearjry con- grarularions. May you find The work you enioy mosr and carry if on To success. Franic Niicnelslci 1406 Wee Lapham S+. 5, Q8 CARDINAL ANNUAL T Creators and producers af FINE PRINTING For the eighth consecutive year that We have printed the CARDINAL it has won All-American Honors ...... 0 Printing Division THE QLSEN PUBLISHING COMPANY 505 WEST CHERRY STREET MILWAUKEE, WTS. 5 K CARDINAL To MarTin Zuzek, John Zuzek leaves The Tew excuses which he has noT yeT used on sunshiny days. To WalTer Rawlins, Jack Krygier leaves his grey spaTs, yellow Tie, red socks, and green scarT. To Willard Rudiger, Clarence STephan leaves his besT nickel-plaTed curling iron. To Mary Gorak, Ken Gaulke leaves one iar oT his paTenTed beauTy clay Tor her school girl complexion. To Ed STampTel, Ada l-linz leaves her highly adverTised undersTanding naTure plus The Tellow who adver- Tised iT. To Muriel Germansen, Angelyn Turk leaves The abiliTy To borrow diplomaTically a sharp pencil TogeTher wiTh The day's shorThand homework. E50 Phone Orchard 2242 ANNUAL To Donnie ScoTT, Eli Surges leaves his abiliTy To play boTh The ardenT lover and The grumpy husband. To Norma Behling, l-larrieT Owley leaves her apTiTude Tor guarreling wiTh ANNUAL ediTors. To The CARDINAL weekly and The AN- NUAL, we leave our peT Theories and hobbies. We, The seniors, hereby designaTe, appoinT, and ask The iuniors To carry ouT This, The lasT will and TesTamenT oT The graduaTing class oT June, l932. May iT go hard wiTh Them if They Tail To execuTe, TulTill, and comply wiTh These, our wishesl Sworn To beTore me, This TirsT day oT June, l932. M. T. Dome, ATTorney ouT Law. ES I i i l i i Gray Beauty Shoppe NEWEST METHODS IN PERMANENT WAVES We Specialize in All Kinds oT BeauTy , Work - ExperT OperaTors r l l sERvicE THAT SATISFIES l l6l6 So. l6Th STreeT l Block No. MiTchell ST. SQ ai Milwaukee, Wisconsin I74 AUTOGRAPHS .fx ' J, f 1 , f f- 5 V Taj, 6444 ,JJ-tu AXA!! - N... ,j ffm -.. f ' 5 f If .. A' , f ' j. l , f , f- fy , lf- . f ' A if-I '41 17' -6 15,11 A' 'a-,iff 'fwn jf! 1. 4 ,frflfff ' 314,14 bd, , ' r ff 'J' f 'W' 1 ' I f' xr. V, A16 I, for-7 N- ,-ll . X,-4.i,.x,i1 iff!! ,. fb, I Q 2 1 ?,..A 21. A. f - . , I , ,, JA 'fm f- 4 ff ' . A 4- Ig., 6 l I . I -Q Y'- r 4 . g'v!x,',-5? 4' Q 4' fad.. f u If ', ., -' -nk?-I-, '11, 'iff ls. xr 'A x ' I. 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Suggestions in the South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) collection:

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938


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