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

 - Class of 1939

Page 1 of 162

 

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1939 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collectionPage 7, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collectionPage 11, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collectionPage 15, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collectionPage 9, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collectionPage 13, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collectionPage 17, 1939 Edition, South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 162 of the 1939 volume:

RDINAL ANNUAL 19 1939 CARDINAL ANNU THE TWENTY-SIXTH YEARBOOK PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS OF SOUTH DIVISION HIGH SCHOOL MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN JUNE, 1939 EDITORIAL STAFF CO-EDITORS - - - NORMAN GAVIN KENNETH LENTZ LITERARY STAFF EDITOR - - -' VIRGINIA WLECZYK COPY EDITOR - - GLADYS BLANCHARD ASSISTANTS: RUTH AMBORN, DANIEL HOPKINS. ANNA KLOTZ, MARCELLA KOENIG, RAY MEYER. MARY PETUSHEK, JEAN WITTE, DOROTHY ZELMER. LUCILLE STAMMER, MARY JEAN MORLEY, FAITH LUEBKE, ETHEL CHRISTIE, EVELYN BERNINGER, VIOLET ANDERSON, LORRAINE LEWANDOWSKI, ELEANOR BURZINSKI, SYLVIA TUROWSKI, PATRICIA LEUTHN-ER, WANDA SANEK, DONALD ERICKSEN, MILDRED BARBIAN, HERBERT BOG-E, HARVEY BAER- WALD, CHESTER SCHMITT, SHIRLEY RAMUS, JOE POTOCHNIK, JEAN MUNZER, ALICE DREWS ART STAFF CO-EDITORS - - - MILDRED BARBIAN DONALD ERICKSEN BUSINESS EDITOR - FRANKLIN KONKEL CANDIDS EDITOR - - SYLVIA LESNIAK ASSISTANTS1 ELAINE ABENDROTH, MILDRED BERG- MANN, REGINA RZECZKOWSKI, RUTI-I WEGNER. ADELINE WENTA BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS MANAGER - JULIA BAKALARSKI CIRCULATION MANAGER - DOLORES FUGLESANG Norman Gavin Mildred Ba rlaian Kenneilw Lenh Donald Ericlcsen Virginia Wleczylr Sylvia Lesnialc Gladys Blanchard Franklin Konlcel wfwrw i'l'1,'fs'Y -1 wgygv' gif A 'auxin v S f 'L.'- :V -,-' 5 if J ' f ' 'V f f Q l A M D In R 3 f Air v of SOUTH Divisbm and vldnif fr -only MR. CROUT I SOUTH DIVISION IN I900 To The alumni by whom The TradITions and The True Shoulder To Shoulder spirIT oT SouTh are perpeTua+ed, This book. May These we aTTecTIonaTeIy olecIicaTe pages recapTure The vivaciTy, The glamour, The ol The careTree olays oT Their youTh. Tresh bea uTy, an MR. COBLENTZ God 'rook care fo hide Thai counhfy Till I-le judged I-lis People ready, Then I-le chose me for I-Iis whisper, and l've found I+, and i+'s yours! MR. BOOK VICE-PRINCIPAL WheTher iT is change, inTormaTion, supplies, or records ThaT we wanT, we can always obTain Them in The OrganizaTions oTTice Trom Mr. Book. However muddled we are abouT busi- ness aTTairs when we enTer, he sTraighTens us ouT and sends us on our way reioicing. MISS ALCOTT CARDINAL ANNUAL PigTails secured by huge bows lThe loops wired, mind youll Torm a vivid recollecTion oT Miss AlcoTT's school days. Today she uses oTher meThods To annoy Treshman and sopho- more boys. She helps To supervise and Tabu- laTe our diagnosTic TesTs. O Tempora, O moresl MISS ALLEN SCIENCE CLUB ThaT laTesT developmenT, visual educaTion, rneeTs wiTh Miss Allen's hearTy approval, Tor how beTTer can she inTeresT her sTudenTs in The world oT living Things? And always she ad- vances her own educaTion by reading The laTesT books. MISS BARRY CARDINAL WEEKLY Teaching liTeraTure ThaT will help young people To Think beTTer, To see more beauTy, and To live happier lives gives greaT pleasure To Miss Barry. As an adviser To The Cardinal weekly, she supervises The club reporTs and arTicles. MRS. BERNFELD GIRLS' CLUB A graduaTe oT SouTh Division, Mrs. BernTeld reTurned aTTer college To Teach modern hisTory and French in her old alma maTer. She divides her spare Time beTween assisTing in Girls' club programs and coaching conTesTanTs in The declamaTory conTesTs. MISS BLACK MASK AND WIG AnyThing connecTed wiTh The TheaTer arTs meriTs The enThusiasTic supporT oT Miss Black. In less inTense momenTs she diligenTly searches Tor sTudenTs To whom she may unTold The glories oT Emerson. Music and The new books oT The year occupy her leisure. I 2 MR. BERGLAND TENNIS COACH In The serious Mr. Bergland lurks a mis- chievous lad. I-le won Tame aT college by seTTing alarm clocks To go OTT aT regular inTer- vals in The organ room during chapel sevice. STill a regular Tella , he Teaches hisTory in a way ThaT his sTudenTs never TorgeT. MISS BARSNESS GIRLS' CLUB AII aboard! Trains, planes, and seven-league booTs To all parTs oT The world daily. From lTaly and Oklahoma, sTudenTs Travel in The geography classes oT Miss Barsness. As chair- man oT The Girls' club, she TurTher gains con- TacTs wiTh growing youTh. MR. BIDDICK ASSISTANT COACI-I Pulling Things aparT To see whaT makes Them Tick in biology and explaining The why oT whaT in physics is The work oT Mr. Biddick. Our speedy assisTanT baskeTbalI coach deTesTs Tardy sTudenTs, alThough he enioys his asso- ciaTions in The classroom. MISS BATZ GIRLS' CLUB Much Too reTicenT is Miss BaTz To please us, buT she TacTTully blames her silence on a TruanT memory. However, we are conTenT To know her as a Teacher oT mafhemafics who gives much aTTenTion To The individual and reioices in his progress. MR. BLAIR CI-IAIRMAN OF SCIENCE The mosT pleasing aspecT oT science To Mr. Blair is iTs unlimiTed possibiliTies and iTs Thou- sand new applicaTions each year. WiTh This inTeresT in his sTudies he combines a hobby oT collecTing sTamps Through Toreign correspond- ence in EsperanTo. MR. BECI-ITOLD BASKETBALL COACI-I My peT peeve? Answering quesTionsl corn- plains Mr. BechTold. Our beloved coach did give us some inTormaTion abouT his earlier days. An amusing memory is ThaT oT a disgrunTled Teacher breaking a ruler while Trying To wal- lop a pupil. We wonder who The kid was! MR. BOONE SOPHOMORE COUNSELOR Once, precocious BerTus Boone showed his bewildered algebra Teacher how To work prob- lems. Today he iniecTs maThemaTical bacilli inTo us wiTh skill and precision. As counselor Tor sophomores, Mr. Boone enioys especially his daily conTacT wiTh sTudenTs. MISS BRADSHAW CENTURY Good Queen Bess is preparing To meeT The Armada, or Napoleon is TighTing The BaTTIe oT WaTerloo as Miss Bradshaw recreaTes Tor her classes The glories oT a bygone age. And, consisTenT woman, she pursues as a hobby colIecTions oT hisTorical biographies and oT anTiques. MR. COFFEEN ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT The compleTeness oT Those Tlashy SouTh Divi- sion TooTball uniTorms can be accrediTed To Mr, CoTTeen and his associaTes, who have charge oT all aThleTic eguipmenT. He Tinds recreaTion Trom The deTails oT This work in The pages of Carlyle and Ruskin or in music. MISS DeCOURCY CLASS PLAY CreaTing picTures oT liTe upon The sTage and Training sTudenTs in The speech arTs are The ioys oT Miss DeCourcy, Small wonder Then ThaT The inTiniTe varieTy oT Dickens's porTraiT gallery, as well as modern biography, aTTords her pleasure Tor her creaTive eTTorTs. MISS CONC-DON CHAIRMAN OF HOUSEHOLD ARTS The chairman oT our household arTs deparT- menT looks Toward The Time when social Train! ing and Tamily relaTionships shall be TaughT To girls and boys alike. She advocaTes ThaT masculine inTeIligence be harnessed To help pull The load oT domesTic diTTiculTies. MR. CAJSKI POLISH CLUB Mr. Caiski likes his iob because iT aTTords him an opporTuniTy To exercise an inTeresT in science. FurThermore, he highly approves The recogniTion in educaTion oT individual diTTer- ences in pupils and The broadening oT high school curricula To meeT These diTTerences. MISS CHURCHILL SHIELD CLUB A drop c-T wisdom here, a word oT encour- agemenT There sTimulaTe The men+aI growTh in adoIescenTs ThaT pleases Miss Churchill besT. All Things ThaT savor OT common sense, excepT maThemaTics, meeT wiTh The approbaTion oT our Shield club adviser. MISS BREIT GIRLS' CLUB Helping young Tolk To acquire a Tlawless Technique in shorThand and TypewriTing is Miss BreiT's aim in her commercial work. BUT she advocaTes more Time in The learning oT These skills: Tor hasTe, she says, desTroys The Thor- oughness so necessary To business. MR. CHARLY CUSTODIAN OF KEYS Keys, Thousands oT 'ern, all neaTly TickeTed, surround Mr. Charly in his privaTe oTTice. When anyone is locked ouT or up, he comes obligingly To The rescue. WiTh The same cour- Teous paTience he unlocks The mysTeries oT French and German Tor his sTudenTs. MR, BROWN ATHLETIC MANAGER Daily, all oT us come under The waTchTul eye ol: Mr. Brown. BUT seniors especially musT beware The menTaI snares he seTs Tor Them. Once in, iT Takes The eTTorTs oT an enTire class To exTricaTe a colleague Trom The iron logic wiTh which The ProTessor has bound him. MRS. DICKINSON INFIRMARY CuT, bruise, or burn is capably TreaTed by our own peT docTor, Mrs. Dickinson, who holds daily clinics in The inTirmary. In addiTion, she is The guardian oT aThleTic cerTiTicaTion, ThaT mysTerious process ThaT can make or break our supermen. MR, DRABINOWICZ HOBBYCRAFT CLUB This inTeresTing commenT comes Trom Mr. Drabinowicz. STudenTs have losT The power oT imaginaTion Through The eTTorT oT schools To enTerTain insTead oT To develop Them. By a vigorous pursuiT oT arT and hobbycraTT he is doing his besT To combaT This decline. I 3 MR. HEINEMAN TRACK COACH A speed demon himselT, wiTh I38 medals and Tive records in Track To his crediT, Mr. Heine- man capably direcTs The acTiviTies in Track and cross-counTry aT SouTh. Nor sTops he There. His hobby is collecfing blue ribbon awards Tor his prize dahlias every Tall. MRS. GREENWALT FRESHMAN COUNSELOR Mrs. GreenwalT runs The losT and Tound deparTmenT Tor The Treshman kids and does a magniTicenT iob in helping Them To Tind Them- selves. Seeing Through Johnny and seeing Johnny Through is, in her opinion, The mosT signiTicanT advance in educaTion. MISS FOELSKE CARDINAL ANNUAL Under The sTimulaTing guidance oT Miss Foelske, our Annual emerges each year Trom The chaos oT copy and prooT. Under her magic Touch, organized ThoughTs evolve Trom The chaos oT senior minds. WiTh undersTanding and wiT, she converTs her scalawags To Bill Shakespeare in spiTe oT Themselves. MR. GOODRICH DIRECTOR OF BAND GiTTed wiTh a glorious voice himselT, Mr. Goodrich devoTes his energies To culTivaTing The arT oT song in oThers. He is The one man whom we readily Torgive Tor Turning his back on us: Tor when he does, we know ThaT sweeT sounds and harmonies will issue Trom The band. MISS HAMPEL GERMAN GUILD None oT us will soon TorgeT The beauTy and The digniTy oT The ChrisTmas pageanT, ThaT age-old sTory oT human appeal, puT on by Miss Hampel and The German Players' guild. EnTerTainmenT aT SouTh reached a new high in ThaT perTormance. MISS DURBROW ASSEMBLY 309 Here's a Teacher who considers The pupils The besT parT oT her work: and, believe iT or noT, her peT peeve is long assignmenTs. The mosT amusing recollecTion oT her own school days is haTs resembling dishpans. Heaven alone knows whaT she Thinks oT The l-iaTs OT Todayl MR. DUNKEL SCIENCE CLUB Verily, dear old golden rule days become a realiTy Tor Those oT us who daily waTch Mr. Dunkel, The man abouT A, paTrol his morning beaT, ruler in hand. Small wonder ThaT aTTer such regular exercise he conducTs his chemisTry classes wiTh unparalleled vigor. MR. GUSTAFSON ASSEMBLY I28 Mr. GusTaTson applauds The change in The educaTional menu Trom Tood-Tor-The-gods subiecTs To subsTanTial corn-beeT-and-cab- bage dieTs ThaT esTablish a pracTical basis Tor earning a living. In Teaching his commercial classes he pracTices his preachings. MISS GEIL CLASS PLAY When Miss Geil carries an evening cloak, a birdcage, a TeakeTTle, and sundry arTicles Through The corridors, we know ThaT The class play is in order. The resT oT The Time she develops poise, personaliTy, and sTage pres- ence in kids who have The nerve To Take speech. MR. HANNEMAN BUSINESS MANAGER Floyd Hanneman wiTh a Tloy-Tloyl He Tells us he had a shy and reTiring disposiTion in school. Now he's a high-pressure salesman. Whenever he Teels a verse coming on, sTudenTs TighTen Their grasp on Their pockeTbooks- only To loosen iT willingly laTer. MRS. FREEMAN CHESS CLUB EveryThing Trom bodices To buTTons comes up Tor dissecTion in The creaTive cloThing classes TaughT by Mrs. Freeman. Girls' club and Chess club highlighT her busy days, which she especially enioys when The kids are good . MR. HANSEN SCHOOL CASHIER T'Since youTh parades beTore us consTanTly, we never grow old, says Mr. Hansen as he bends over Torbidding ledgers and daybooks. AlThough loyal To The cardinal, he has no use Tor red in his accounTs. lT is a preTerence ThaT he TransmiTs To his sTudenTs. I 4 MRS. KEYES CENTURY Now There's Mrs. Keyes, direcTor oT our CenTury of Progress. Many The youTh and maiden who has learned To speak wiTh The Tongue oT men and oT angeIs under her guidance in declamaTory conTesTs. Her avo- caTion? Home-making, oT course. MR. KEITI-ILEY JUNIOR COUNSELOR The exTensive opporTuniTies Tor assisTing pupils in liTe advisemenT work bring inTiniTe saTisTacTion To Mr. KeiThley. He is never Too busy To help solve The problems oT some iolly iunior who may have gummed up his program Through careless managemenT. MR. HOLDEN NATIONAL YOUTH ADMINISTRATION Generalissimo oT The army of NYA workers aT SouTh, wiTh Tevered brow and busy pencil Mr. Holden balances iTs budgeT and parcels ouT wages. However, when summer besieges him, he gladly moves camp To geT away 'From IT all . MISS JONES MASK AND WIG A diminufive bundle oT energy is Miss Jones, one OT our dramaTic coaches. And how she puTs inTo pracTice her belieT in modern educa- Tion, To Train The whole child, physically, com- mercially, and hisTrionicaIlyI A pupil's success is her success. MR. KRUEGER FOOTBALL COACH AIThough Mr. Krueger is singularly reTicenT abouT his personal aTTairs, yeT we know him and his work suTTicienTIy To sTaTe ThaT his maior inTeresTs in school cenTer abouT hisTory and physical educaTion. No one needs To be Told ThaT he is an able TooTball coach. MR. LEARNED BOOKSTORE Bookkeeping and hisTory occupy Mr. Learned's Teaching hours. As his exTra-cur- ricula acTiviTy he manages The school book- sTore. When asked which phase oT his work he enioys mosT, he prompTIy answers, STudenT conTacTs. He also admiTs ThaT he is a sTamp coIlecTor. MISS KAGEL GIRLS' SPORTS In The girls' gym There is always an aTmos- phere oT greaT acTiviTy whose moving spiriT is Miss Kagel. She sTands aT The head oT her classes ably demonsTraTing Tor her sTudenTs The rules Tor exercise, The procedure Tor games, and The principles oT posTure. MISS HICKS ComparaTively CENTURY new To SouTh, Miss Hicks has already casT her IoT wiTh The CenTury LiTerary socieTy. OuTside of her regular com- mercial work she Takes a lively inTeresT in IiTe advisemenT and musical educaTion. MR. HICKMAN ASSISTANT COACH Thoroughly modern in his aTTiTude Toward educaTion, Mr. Hickman endorses The new inTeIIigence and achievemenl' TesTs and The greaTer degree oT self-expression among pupils. He divides his Time beTween maThe- maTics and baskeTbalI. MISS HUGHES BOOKSTORE WiTh a preTTy smile and a gracious, Thank you , Miss Hughes exchanges pads of paper Tor nickels over The booksTore counTer. WiTh homework The villain oT her school days, she musT pracTice leniency as a disher ouTer oT iT now. MRS. HUNTER GIRLS' SPORTS One, Two, Three! One, Two, Three! and relucTanT pounds disappear 'From any well- padded Treshies and sophs as Mrs. HunTer Ticks oTT The counTs. Seasonal ouT-oT-door programs and sporTs keep her happy and busy. The only exercises ThaT annoy her are algebraic. MISS KLEINHEINZ GIRLS' CLUB To assisT girls in preparing Tor The good secreTarial liTe is The mission of Miss Kleinheinz. Toward +ha+ end she careTully Trains her charges in The arTs OT accuracy, neaTness, and skill: Tor shorThand and Typing require Thal' kind of efliiciency. MISS McGAFFEY THE NOOK The gingerbread house oT Tairy-Tale lore has noThing on The enviable dwelling occupied each noon by Miss McGaTTey, Submerged in candy bars, she hypnoTizes The nickels ouT oT our pockeTs wiTh ThaT sweeT smile. And being hungry bruTes, we pay and pay and pay. MR. LEMANOWICZ POLISH CLUB Mr. Lemanowicz enioys The social conTacTs made Through club work and Teaching. He was a very popular boy in high school, being The only man-Thing among IZO girls. Mag- niTicenT disTracTionsI How ever did he man- age To geT his assignmenTs done? MISS McDERMOTT GERMAN GUILD In our LaTin classes we oTTen Travel round The world in eighTy ways wiTh Miss McDermoTT, whose globe-TroTTing experiences greaTIy en- rich our undersTanding oT The subiecT maTTer. Her humor plays like sunIighT over The shadowy consTrucTions oT classical IiTeraTure. MR. LILJEBLAD FRESHMAN COACH A keen inTeresT in young boys, plus a sense oT humor, plus a capTivaTing personaIiTy, add up To The sum ToTal oT Mr. Lilieblad, a Hercules of The TaculTy. InocuIaTed wiTh his sponTane- iTy and enThusiasm, The Cardinal Boys' club has had an acTive year. MISS LOCKHART GIRLS' CLUB Miss LockharT's mosT amusing recoIIecTions oT her school days are sTricT Teachers and a Triendly rival named GusTie. Her abiIiTy To enTer inTo The acTiviTies of The Girls' club ex- plains her popuIariTy among The girls. MR. MADISON FORUM MeeT The unoTTicial hosT oT SouTh Division, The grand policeman oT CaTeTeria alley and all poinTs abouT. AssisTing in Forum, he has coached many Teams To vicTory wiTh his help- Tul hinTs. He Tinds his mosT paIaTabIe inTeI- IecTuaI Tid-biTs in books on philosophy. MISS MARHEINE GIRLS' CLUB STudenT sTenographers never cease To marvel aT The sparkling vivaciTy oT Miss Marheine, who herseIT suggesTs The ideal secreTary. A bond oT genuine Tellowship exisTs beTween her and The girls whom she is grooming Tor oTTice po- siTions in a busy ouTside world. MISS MARTIN CENTURY When The clicking oT The TypewriTer dies and The would-be secreTaries scurry home, Miss MarTin oT The commercial deparTmenT Tinds a sancTuary in The picTuresgue pages oT Charles Dickens. Her peeve is The lazy sTudenTq and her ioy, The ambiTious sTudenT. MISS MAUSZ CARDINAL ANNUAL WiTh ruler and Triangle Miss Mausz labors all year, planning The picToriaI secTions of our memory book. In addiTion To Teaching, she enioys helping plan seTs, cosTumes, and sTage IighTs Tor school presenTaTions. She loves her work, and we love The work she does. MISS McCONOCHE DECLAMATORY CONTEST Miss McConochie, SouTh Division's Howard Hughes, made The Trip Trom New York To Chicago in Tour hours. Her TavoriTe pasTime is reading. Miss McConochie admiTs Shakes- peare was her TavoriTe auThor in high school only because his sTories were The shorTesT on The IisT. MR. LITTLE MANAGER OF THE NOOK Who doesn'T appreciaTe The wholesome good TasTe oT Mr. LiTTIe in his managemenT oT The Nook? To counTerbaIance This TooTh- some Task he devoTes his working hours To maThemaTics and his leisure To arhlefics. MISS LEHMANN DIRECTOR OE ORCHESTRA Music and more music is Miss Lehmann's soluTion Tor The ever-increasing leisure Time acTiviTies oT youTh. HerseIT an accomplished pianisT, she spends her IiTe in working wiTh young Tolk who long To produce beauTiTuI music. I 6 MR. McGARTY BUSINESS MANAGER Along wiTh Bing Crosby, Mr. McGarTy cenTers his inTeresT abouT The race Track. Unlike Bing, however, his vocal acTiviTies are noT musical. lnsTead, he voices endless appeals Tor TickeT sales To Till our coTTers. PubIiciTy is The breaTh oT IiTe To him. MISS McVETY SENIOR REVUE Semi-annually Miss McVeTy puTs her dainTy Tinger inTo our school pie and pulls ouT The plum oT The senior revue. NOT asTonishing Then ThaT in her opinion The mosT noTeworThy advance in educaTion is The increased oppor- TuniTy Tor sTudenTs To develop Their manifold TaIenTs. MR. NOWAK ASSISTANT COACH The opporTuniTy To mold The characTer oT TuTure ciTizens is The reason Tor Mr. Nowak's deep inTeresT in his work. I-lis coaching in TooTbaIl and Track gives him many chances To realize This incIinaTion. MISS PARISI-I CARDINAL WEEKLY Copy conTaining red-blooded Anglo-Saxon verbs, a Duke's mixTure oT senTence openings, and horse sense Till Miss Parish wiTh IiTerary glee. An aTTempT To adiusT sTudenTs To IiTe, wheTher Their goal be college or work, she considers a noTabIe advance in Teaching. MR. NELSON SCIENCE CLUB QuieTly and eTTicienTIy Mr. Nelson goes abouT his daily Tasks. Nor Science club, nor science classes, nor science sTudenTs have ever been known To ruTTIe his sereniTy. WhaT a man To harness The explosive powers oT chemisTryl MISS POUNDSTONE GIRLS' CLUB In Miss PoundsTone's classes gay young Things learn To dress wiTh TasTe and inTeIIi- gence. This wee biT Teacher, who ioined us only IasT Tall, has already won many hearTs by her gracious and capable assisTance in our school problems. MISS NAGLE CARDINAL ANNUAL ExTracTing Trom a Tough guy a conTession ThaT poeTry ain'T so bad Thrills Miss NagIe's pedagogical soul. WhaT energy she has IeTT aTTer accomplishing such a labor oT I-Iercules, she devoTes To her advisership OT The Cardinal Annual. MR. NOLD ASSISTANT COACI-I Besides playing cenTer wiTh The Golden Gophers, Mr. Nolcl also capTured The heavy! weighT championship in wresTIing aT Minne- soTa. To balance This purely physical prowess, he made music a hobby and, like a loyal Mid' wesTerner, chose Hamlin Garland Tor his Tavor- iTe auThor. MISS MONSEN GIRLS' CLUB Freshmen shake and seniors shiver under The sTern eye oT Miss Monsen, The cusTodian oT our aTTendance, AIThough her obiecTive is The Training oT The whole child, she is primarily concerned ThaT he should be There To receive iT. And believe us, he comesl MISS PIDD CAFETERIA Under The able managemenl' oT Miss Pidd, a hungry school ThaT daily Torms in bread lines is appeased wiTh savory enTrees and nuTriTious desserTs. In her home economics classes she iniTiaTes eager cooks inTo The mysTeries oT The poTs and pans. MR. MORSTAD FORUM To make The school a seeThing hoTbed oT argumenT is The ambiTion oT Mr. MorsTad, MasTer oT DebaTe. FurThermore, he endeavors To keep his social science courses abreasT oT The TasT-changing TwenTieTh cenTury. MISS OUIRK ASSEMBLY 3lI Found! The magic key used by Miss Quirk. Molded of a soTT voice, a sweeT disposiTion, and a proTound knowledge oT LaTin, iT opens every hearT. When inserTed in The rusTy locks oT ancienT language, The porTaIs swing wide To reveal rich, TorgoTTen Treasure. I 7 MR. SCHMIDT ASSISTANT COACH STudenTs geT The same kick ouT oT hisTory when iT is adminisTered by Mr. SchmidT as The ol' pigskin geTs Trom The squad which he in- spires. There is no resT Tor him from coaching duTiesg Tor in The Tall iT's TooTbaII, and in The spring iT's Track. MISS ZOLLER GIRLS' CLUB PeTiTe and energeTic Miss Zoller iniTiaTes aspiring oTTice assisTanTs inTo The secreT riTes oT shorThand and Typing. WhaT seems in The be- ginning such an enigma oT hooks and curves To sTudenTs becomes aT IengTh a useTuI skill under her able guidance. MISS STONE SENIOR COUNSELOR Chief guide To success Tor embryonic gradu- aTes is Miss STone. In her oTTice rise moun- Tains oT daTa abouT enTrance requiremenTs. whiTe collar careers, and dirTy shirT iobs. In direcT conTradicTion is her conTenTion Thal' she moves aT glacier speed, an inch a cenTury. MR. THOMPSON SCIENCE CLUB Mr. Thompson rues The TacT ThaT high schools Today have a Tendency To educaTe Tor play and pleasure. Having an arTisTic abiIiTy, he enioys coIIecTing and grouping rare picTures. This physics Teacher is also adviser To The Science club. MISS WILSON SHIELD CLUB Capable cooks are made Through venTures inTo culinary mysTeries in Miss WiIson's house- hold arTs classes. She deIighTs in her Teach- ing conTacTs and her assisTanT sponsorship oT Shield club. Oddly enough, here is a Teacher whose peT peeve is homework! MR. SHERMAN SCHOOL LOCKSMITH Whole-hearfedly Mr. Sherman enioys his work-all oT iT. AIThough he sTyIes himself Maker oT The Keys, so parsimonious is he Thal' noThing shorT oT an order Trom The Supreme CourT oT The UniTed STaTes can induce him To shape a biT OT meTaI To TiT inTo a lock. MR. RASINSKE ASSISTANT COACH No TurTher need oT IiTe advisernenT Tor Mr. Rasinske, I-Ie is happy in his Iob because iT is The Thing he wanTs To do. EorTunaTeIy Tor us, TooTbaII and baskeTbaII are included in his desire. MISS SICKELS LOS AMIGOS The cordial Buenos dias cIase oT Miss Sickels encourages many a skepTicaI sTudenT who is inclined To wonder wheTher casTIes in Spain are noT really igloos in Iceland. There is a spiriT of camaraderie in her classes ThaT deTiniTeIy dispels all gloom. MR. SASKOWSKI SENIOR REVUE VersaTiIe pedagogue ThaT he is, Mr. Saskow- ski Teaches hisTory, helps shape The revues, and also encourages his assembly To pull down IOO per cenT in The subscripTion drive Tor The Cardinal weekly. No half-way measure Tor himl MISS TERRY CARDINAL WEEKLY So women can'T organize, eh? Well, iusT sTudy Miss Terry's newspaper seT-up and learn whaT real eTTiciency is. WiTh all our hearTs we hope she will oTTen realize her wish-Top- rank ediToriaIs and a sTaTT Thal' can TuncTion wiThouT coddling. MR. SEVERY NEWSBOYS' CLUB Like a True scienTisT, Mr. Severy deplores The good old days when ladies swepT The sTreeTs wiTh Their Trailing gowns and reloices in modern hygiene and saniTaTion. FurThermore, he sTresses The spiriT oT social responsibiIiTy so viTaI To democracy. MR. SEARS STAGE SUPERVISOR WheTher ChrisTmas program or class play, The seTTing is noT compIeTe wiThouT The super- vision oT Mr. Sears, our sTage manager. On his ATIanTean shoulders also resTs The respon- sibiIiTy ol: keeping The speaker sysTem aT SouTh in good voice. I 8 MISS SCHMIDT LIBRARY Card cafalogues, aufhor files, readers' guides, publishers' lisfs are all searched by Miss Schmidf fo locafe fhe mosf elusive refer- ence fhaf fhe mosf inquisifive feacher can assign. She is ever ready fo help fhe sfudenf who finds himself confronfed by a problem. MRS. HINTZ SECRETARY Pleasanf surroundings and cheerful co-workers are appealing elemenfs in Mrs. l-linfz's worlc. Always prompf herself, she cannof forgive fardiness in ofhers and demands everyfhing buf a deafh cerfificafe from culprifs who fake an exfra forfy winks o' mornings. MRS. CZAJKA SECRETARY The very frim person behind fhe counfer in fhe office is Mrs, Czailxa. Reporfs, files, and records hold no ferrors for her mefhodical mind and nimble fingers. Buf mark! She has ofher falenfs, foo. She swings a mean racquef and can cool: like Oscar of fhe Rifz. Miss KIRCHENWITZ JUNIOR CLERK You've all seen her foiling daily fhrough fhe absence lisfs of Soufh Division. Who? Miss Kirchenwifz, of course. Twice a year, aspiring seniors flood her wifh college enfrance blanks. Yef she manages fo wade fhrough and sfill find fime fo devofe fo her singing MISS MOLER l.ast September Miss lvloler retired from time faculty of Soutli Division. Mathematics students vvlio left room 128 will always be grateful for lier tlworougli and inspi- rational instruction. Winning tl'ie students, admiration and respect, slwe impelled tlwem tovvard lnigli standards ol individual tlwinlcing and common sense reasoning.-llie driving principle ol ner ovvn life, Use your timen, vvas exemplified by lfier unwavering service to time sclwool. Faculty and students vvisli lier liealtlw and happiness and many years in vvliicli to enjoy lwer freedom. l Miss FRENCH Thousands ol men and women the world over revere the name ol Margaret French as teacher, counselor, and Friend. ln the early years that made history at old South Side and established its traditions, the gracious presence ol lVliss French vvas a vital part ol school lile. Nlemories ol her stately dignity, clear thinlcing, and human understanding are the cherished privilege ol gratelul alumni. She served as teacher from 1895 to 1914 and as vice-principal from 1914 to 1926. l-lers was the motto ol lcings, Hlch dien. CI serve.D The year I9I8 saw The women oT The TaculTy eagerly doing Their biT in The Sock club. For Their eTTorTs They won high praise Trom The Red Cross. Under The leadership oT Samford A. Hooper TourTeen inTrepid TaculTy members adminisTered The aTTairs oT The high school back in '95. zmafw C. Barber L. Whipperfield A. Wood W. NoTbohm L. Lewandowski H B b . ar ian HONORS Leading The Eebruary graduaTes were Celia Barber and Willard NoTbohm as valedicTorian and saluTaTorian. BoTh sTudenTs did much debaTe work, and in addiTion, Celia received an English book Tor laudable work, while Willard was elecTed To a place on The class commission. In June Lorraine WhipperTield and Audrey Wood shared TirsT honors, and Hugo Barbian and Lorraine Lewandowski shared second honors. Audrey, a member oT The June commission, rounded up news Tor The school paper and held oTTices in CenTury and Girls' club: in her iunior year The English deparT- menT awarded her a book. Eor her work as copy ediTor, sTar reporTer, and headline wriTer on The Weekly, Lorraine WhipperTield had her name engraved on The Junior Girls' English cup. Lorraine Lewandowski wore ouT ribbons as a TypisT Tor The Annual and eTTecTively proved her asserTions in debaTing. Hugo, also a member oT The class commission, served as ediTor oT The Weekly and in his iunior year received The Alumni T4 English book. Conquering The hearTs oT sTudenTs wiTh persuasive charm, Genevieve Kucan and Edward I-lalamka were elecTed represen- TaTives oT The mid-year class. Genevieve had her name engraved on The Junior Girls' English cup and won The posT oT associaTe ediTor oT The Weekly. GaTher ye rosebuds while ye may , and Eddie heaped a baskeT. A sTarleT oT The TooT- ball squad, Edward won The chairman- ship oT The class commission, The sporTs ediTorship oT The Weekly, The Alumni sweaTer, and The TegTmeyer cup. DisTincTive personaliTy and scholarship won Tor Mildred Barbian and Harvey Baerwald The Treasured honors oT repre- senTaTive girl and boy oT The June class. As receiver oT an English book, member oT The class commission. and arT ediTor oT The Annual, Mildred proved her leader- ship. The diminuTive l-larvey's collecTion oT honors ToTaled emblems in Track, TooT- ball, and baskeTball, class commission, The Alumni sweaTer, and The W medal. G. Kucan H. Baerwald M. Barbian E. Halamka M. KosTer M. Morley MasTery oT English, personaliTy, and hard work won English prizes Tor several promising iuniors. Marion KosTer, copy ediTor oT The Weekly, and Mary Jean Morley, member oT The Annual liTerary sTaTT, will have Their names engraved on The Junior Girls' English cup. ChesTer SchmiTT, headline wriTer and sTar reporTer, was awarded The Alumni English book, and John l-laTTon, headline wriTer and cub reporTer, won The TegTmeyer cup. For abiliTy in classroom and in TooTball Charles MenTkowski was given The Alumni sweaTer. OuT oT The Torensic Trays emerged eighT conTesTanTs who TurTher engaged in spiriTed skirmishes Tor CenTury awards. RoberT STroThenke and Florence Werner won The gold and silver pins in oraTory, while Wanda Sanek and Sophie PluTa won TirsT and second places in declamaTion. Music and chess inTeresT The oraTors, Florence having direcTed The Mask and Wig opereTTa, and RoberT having served as presidenT OT The Boys' Cvlee club and oT The Chess club. As vice-presidenT oT The Polish club Wanda cherished The lang- uage oT Warsaw, and as a member oT The Annual sTaTT wroTe miniaTure biographies oT The graduaTes. held special aTTracTion Tor Sophie, TavoriTes being Mask and Wig, and CenTury. ln addiTion, she served as a prompTer Tor The June play. Clubs her LaTin, class Bob Their names engraved on The CoblenTz BaskeT- and For valuable service in baskeTball, Beierle and Francis BurdiTT had ball Trophy. Beierle also was sTaTe ciTy discus champion and second in The shoT-puT aT The sTaTe meeT. BurdiTT his leTTer in TooTball. Because oT her leadership, scholarship, and musical progress, Mildred BarTle was Roy musi- WON awarded The Civic Music medal. Trumbull won The Lyric medal Tor his cal acTiviTies and scholarship. Mildred's liTerary leanings resulTed in The associaTe ediTorship oT The Weekly. Roy, The denT oT The Boys' Glee club, was presi- even more widely known as The singing newsy oT The Newsboys' club. By such eTTorT as These sTudenTs have shown are small successes Turned inTo major achievemenTs. R. Trumbull R. STroThenke W. Sanek R. Beierle F. BurdiTT J. HaTTon C. SchmiTT C. MenT M. BarTl lc 6 F. Werne S. PluTa ANNUAL LITERARY STAFF Gladys Blanchard Wanda Sanek Mary Jean Morley Sylvia Turowski FaiTh Luebke Norman Gavin Virginia Wleczyk KenneTh Leniz EThel ChrisTie pf' rl Like prospecTors in search oT gold, The liTerary sTaTT oT The Annual Taps The sources oT imaginaTion Tor ideas To produce snappy senior snaps. Yes, The conquesT oT The quesTionnaire la palTry 650 oT Themi is The maior problem oT The sTaTT. To any observer The Tables in The Annual room look like an abandoned candy shop, Tor in a box labeled Ye Olde Brande are TaculTy wriTe-ups: in anoTher whose legend reads For people under nineTy are The senior snaps, while a NuTTy Bar conTainer holds The names oT underclassmen. CUT oT The con- Tusion emerges a TriumphanT sTaTT wiTh a liTerary vicTory over The guesTion- naires. Planning, designing, and mounTing The Annual on paper was The work oT The I939 Annual arT sTaTT, which consisTed oT nine 5TudenTs under The direc- Tion oT Miss Eleanor Mausz. By uniTed eTTorT They soughT To make This mem- ory book more original, more beauTiTul, and more compacT Than any oT iTs predecessors. Taking picTures, scaling picTures, cuTTing picTures, pasTing pic- Tures Tilled Their days and ruined Their nighTs. BuT They persisTed. Their goal was To make This book The besT book, Their slogan, We do ToisT cless woikl Wha+ do you Think? ANNUAL ART STAFF Elaine Aben r RuTh Wegner Franklin Kon e Sylvia Lesnia Don Ericksen A , Ll, iz. , .V-9 - sal 4 .vie H 4.4-NL. .V , .ix as - V , Regina Rzeczko Adeline WenTa Mildred Bergm n Mildred Barbie ' d oTh k I k DoroThy Hald Genevieve Kuca n WEEKLY LITERARY STAFF John HaTTon Marion KosTer Mildred BarTle Herberi' Boge Hugo Barbian Edward Halamka ine Whipperfield June Gross STarT killing! PasTe The ears on! Grab a broom and sweep up The re- mains! These are iusT The echoes OT The weekly massacre in The Cardinal oTTice as The sTaTT swings inTohacTion wiTh scissors, pasTe poT, and blue pencil nig T. sighT oT dummies, galleys, despairing head wriTers Their Tousled hair and sTill more Tousled ideas, spells know, iT means only anoTher issue. busTle, rusTle, and Tussle, comes noT only a panTing an orderly, Tinished Cardinal, hoT oTT The press. on a crucial Wednesday To The uniniTiaTed The cluTching desperaTely aT lunacyg buT To Those who YeT, ouT oT The husTle, TriumphanT sTaTT buT also Jeepers, creepers, Jeepers, creepers, Cardinal? Please, won'T you subscribe? Won'T you buy a To such sTirring melodies, swingmasTers Goodman l-lanneman and Lom- bardo lVlcCfarTy sTand up and sway SouTh The Cardinal weekly way. Jiving along wiTh Them is The Weekly business sTaTT, whose duTies on The bandwagon require Them To secure adverTisemenTs Tor The school paper, disTribuTe Car- dinals To subscribers, and pack and mail copies To merchanTs who adverTise. Believing ThaT All Cvod's chillun goT rhyThm , salesmanship classes appeal To The iiTTerbug elemenT To supporT Their enTerprise. BUSINESS STAFF Ervin Pohl Ed d war Maiche Julia Bakalarsk James HolTon Jerome CarlTon Vilas Kading Leonard lgielsk Dolores Fuglesa g LeRoy Gilmore KenneTh Wood WILLIAM BEHLING A man's man is Bill. Only he-man sporTs, such as baseball and TooTballg he-man books by Kipling: and he-man subiecTs like maThemaTics inTrigue him. TalkaTive girls hold no charm Tor This rugged specimen oT viriliTy. RUTH AMBROSE Being called The baby oT The Tamily irks me, says RuTh. LeT us give you a Tip, RuTh. Being The baby oT The Tamily has advanTages when IT comes To washing dishes. ATTer all, The baby needs resT. MARION ANDERSEN Marion is navy-minded, hence The name, Admiral. ls iT The gobs? She was a member oT Girls' club, Shield club, and CenTury, and had a parT in The class play. She enioys waTching TooTball games or-players. Fickle girll CELIA BARBER Celia, The girl-abouT-school, earned honors in Forum and CenTury, won an English award, and procured a TasTy biT in The class play. WhaT is leTT oT her TasTe she lavishes on spagheTTi and meaT balls. HELENE BARTOSZ Book learning iusT doesn'T appeal To Lena. There's noThing like The grind oT oTTice pracTice To add spice To The rouTine oT her day. People who Talk a loT, buT say noThing, are her pei irriTanT. NORMAN BENESCH Girls who can iell iello in The six delicious Tlavors have The key To Norman's hearTg buT if They Talk Too much, all They geT is raspberry. All vigorous sporTs Tind Norman a worThy disciple. 28 RUTH AMBORN Under dim lighTs saxaphones moan low. The spoTlighT Talls on a sulTry swingsTress oT song. Our RuThiel Her blond charm has caused many a lad To warble, Are There any more aT home like you? MADELEINE AMSCHLER IT you are a True liTTerbug, you can'T help appreciaTing Maddie's superla- Tive arT oT Truckin' on clown. She loves singing, yodeling, and Orson Wells. BuT she also has a pracTical side- she adores breaded pork chops. HARVEY ANDERSEN Verbal nonsense does noT appeal To Andy. However, The Thing ThaT does appeal To him is a chicken dinner wiTh all The Trimmings. Remember. Andy, an ounce oT moderaTion is worTh a pound of Alka-SelTzer. NATALIE ARSENOVICH Nicki collecTed Two TournamenT medals Tor Glee club, The presidency oT her music appreciaTion class, and a parT in Briar Rose. Singing in a choir and in an opera chorus Till her leisure hours wiTh music. ROBERT BEIERLE Our Moose is a huge animal wiTh greaT aThleTic procliviTies. He has emblems in TooTball. baskeTball, and Track, besides sundry medals. Al- Though he proTesses To love chicken, he doesn'T realize ThaT The word has a plural. RUTH ADLER The work oT TooTie's liTe is her cam- paign againsT back-slappers. Her moTTo is, Slap back-slappers back. TooTie deserves a verbal slap on The back Tor going Through Tour years of high in Three and one-halT years. HENRY BLASINSKI Hank's inTeresT cenTers in biology: chicken, ham, pork, beeT, and duck. His scalpel works violenTly aT The sigh+ oT caTs, Though wheTher They be caTs ThaT iive or caTs ThaT howl is a quesTion. JESSE BLUNT Poor Jesse can'T quiTe Tigure ouT why some girls reTuse To dance wiTh him. Jesse, leT us advise you-your TavoriTe pasTime is wresTling and They, noT being well-versed in adagio dancing, preTer To sTay on The saTe side, SALLY BORKOWSKI Edgar Wallace's mysTe ry sTories Thrill her: movie queens raise exciTing dreams oT sTardomq hamburgers TempT her Tinicky palaTeq buf To Tell The honesT TruTh, Typing is her greaTesT ioy. IT requires The leasT eTTorT. JACK BRUSSOCK Pull on your raincoaTl Here comes The villain oT The class play wiTh his squirT gun. When noT drenching his Triends or emoTing Tor Miss DeCourcy, Yock spends his Time swimming and skaTing. Allied arTs, eh whaT? HARRY CERTALIC WanTed: a iiTTerbug To Teach Slew- TooT The laTesT TangleTooT dance craze. IT will noT be a diTTiculT underTaking, Tor he won a numeral on The Tennis squad and is able To TwisT himself inTo any Torm oT knoT. ALPHONSE CICHUCKI The world is promised a greaT ana- TomisT soon, Cichu knows all abouT The innards oT creepers and crawlers and knows whaT makes Them Tick. His TalenT TurTher displays iTselT in a love oT Trog legs. LESTER BETZ Shrimps have a cerTain TascinaTion Tor LesTer. Are small creaTures The laTesT vogue? He loves maThemaTics, Tor his mind clicks easily on Tigures. Building model airplanes also inTer- esTs him. JUNE BRAUER Brown Eyes loaThes anyone who oTTers her a liTT in a car. One oT The vanishing pedesTriansl This golden- ThroaTed warbler capTured TirsT place in Girls' Glee club and second place in The a cappella chorus. LEONARD BRUESER Doggone Those doggy boys who show oTT in The corridor, says Spuds as he Bruesers pasT. He does noT like poTaToes as his nickname mighT indicaTe, buT he is a supporTer of ThaT old Chinese dish, chop suey. Phooeyl BESSIE BUCKOVICH Shy and reTiring, BeTsy moves calmly along buT gnashes her TeeTh in rage when Teased. QuieT? Yes, buT she could yell wiTh The besT oT Them when Soufh romped down The Tield Tor a Touchdown. LEONA CHELMINIAK V DespiTe her nickname, Cleo, which smacks of The siren oT The Nile, Leona modesTly admiTs she swings a mean Suzie Q, swims a clever crawl, skaTes a perTecT 'Figure eighT, and enjoys a iolly murder sTory. JAMES CONLEY ln our midsT is a second Popeye, Tor Jim adores spinach. BuT he prompTly dances away The energy iT gives him. His TavoriTe Tood also supplies him wiTh The viTaliTy he needs To keep pace wiTh his TavoriTe novel, The Call oT The Wild. 29 JOHN DOUGHERTY So you wanf fo be a friend of Jack's? Well, iusf be sure you chew your gum quiefly. And if you wanf him fo be your pal for life, freaf him fo a round of golf followed by a duck dinner. PEARL ANN DRUCH f Excepfionl Boopie revolfs againsf swinging fhe classicsl Acfive in club life as secrelary and vice-presidenl' of Girls' club, she climaxed her school career wifh fhe assisfanl' direcforship of fhe class play. SIGMUND DANIEL His favorife' food is fried chicken. l-lis nickname is Legs. Puf fhem fo- gefher, and you have fried chicken legs. MARY DONNER Wifh a bag of popcorn in one hand and a Reader's Digesf in fhe ofher, lvlifzie spends her leisure hours. Danc- ing and baking are her ideas of hav- ing a wonderful fime. Boys of Soufh, please nofel VIOLET DRAN KOFE Warning, fufure cifizens of fhe world! Violef, cold-blooded business woman, is on a rampage. She wanfs money and more money. Fellows, hang on fo yours. She's an affracfive gall Thaf is alll JOSEPHINE DZIURDZIEWSKI ' Mechanically Jo's fingers bound over fhe fypewrifer keys, buf in her mind she envisions a perfecfly arched body slipping info fhe wafer. She looks af shorfhand characfers, buf wha? she sees is a iiffering iifferbug. 30 CHARLOTTE CZAJ KOWSKI Closing her beloved fexfbooks means opening cookbooks-if a sparkling diamond prophesies anyfhing, Picking ouf popular diffies on a piano and devouring fried chicken are Chuckie's hobbies. DOROTHY DALEY Menfion pumpkin pie wifh whipped cream, and Cherry ecsfafically closes her eyes and sighs: menfion business, and she perks up efficienfly: menfion dancing, and she glides gracefully ouf upon fhe floor. HELEN DONAJ Rx for Frenchie: a round or fwo of golf each week: frequenf applicafion of fhe Good Earfh: candy in modera- Hon: a warm muffler fo preserve fhaf lovely alfo voice: and a very small dose of sludy. ARTHU R CZAJ KOWSKI Cy is one of Soufhls handsome foof- ball, frack, and baskefball heroes, who hopes fo become a Nelson Eddy some day, Affenfion, girls! Only fhose skilled in fhe ancienf arf of frying po'k chops need apply. CLARA CZEMIERYS Squeeiie crams her leisure fime wifh roller skafing, swimming, hiking, danc- ing, or delving headlong info a book fo fhe accompanying snap of her be- loved chewing gum. No wonder her favorife subiecf was sfudy hour. RAWLAND ENG Clickl Clickl One of fhose candid camera fiends again. l-le snaps info fhings quickly, because he clicked in fhe class play fry-oufs. Affer fhe casf was developed, he found himself in The proofs. ELEANORE KUBIACZYK Snaps, now an ardenT Tollower oT Girl ScouT acTiviTies, hopes in The Tu- Ture To don a whife cap and uniTorm. To gain her unqualiTied admiraTion, one musT be able To concocT ThaT greaT Hungarian mysTery-goulash. CARROLL FLEWELLING When Carroll enfered SouTh an up- per classrnan opened The door, and in Flew-elling. As a cinder pacer and a member oT The TooTball squad, Carroll consisTenTly proved himselT an asseT To The school. OLGA GOLOB ETTicienT, compeTenT, duTiTul, capable -This only half describes Olga, The perTecT sTenographer oT The TuTure. She's also hoping To geT a Tall, dark, and handsome boss. BuT Then, whaT girl isn'T? ROY GOEDE Knockl Knock! Once again preTTy girls have gained admiTTance To a boy's hearT. ln place oT sTudies and exTra-curricula acTiviTies, Roy boldly chooses girls as The mosT TascinaTing subiecT. GEORGIA GRIVAS Munching a hamburger in The depThs oT a big divan, gripping her book wiTh Tense Tingers, and living Through Thrill- ing momenTs wiTh Sherlock l-lolmes, Jor rouses only aT The sighT OT a com- panion Tor Tennis. STANLEY GWIAZDOWSKI Squeaky readily proclaims ThaT all girls are his peT peeve. BuT he Tem- pers This heresy wiTh The excepTion, All buT one! No wonder he likes The miliTary liTe beTTer Than The liTe oT a sailor. X PAUL e-RUHN f Remember The man wiTh The candid camera? l-le's Yo Yo. A True Ger- man, Paul Thrives on sauerkrauT and spareribs. No doubT ThaT is where he goT The exTra energy To play bas- keTball and To TooT his TrumpeT. DOLORES GAPINSKI CareTul, boysl SchaTTsy promises To shooT on sighT all males who call girls dames or skirTs. She is noT only adepT aT, manipulaTing shooTin'-irons buT embroiders while waiTing To bring down her chicken dinner. WILBUR GESS AlThough Wilbur has only been here one semesfer, he hunTed up Miss DeCourcy, bagged The parT oT Johnny in The class play, and barbecued his spoils unTil well done. You can easily Tell ThaT hunTing is his TavoriTe sporT. DOROTHY ANN GNIOT Since she liked shorThand because iT was a new language To her, DoroThy mighT also aTTempT EsperanTo. OT course, IT iT proved harder Than an- TicipaTed, TrequenT doses oT KaThleen Norris Tor relaxaTion would be com- TorTing. EDWARD HALAMKA , Ed's pasTime is kicking oTT wiTh a chocolaTe malTed and downing iT Tor a loss. l-lis honors, chairman oT The commission, hero in The play, and represenTaTive boy, are equalled only by his leadership oT The TooTball squad. GERALDINE FLACH SleuThing Tor The soluTion To Ein- sTein's Theory keeps Jerry's inTeresT Trained on physics. Occasionally, she Takes Time ouT To riveT her avenging glance on Those who massacre The King's English. BuT her digniTy van- ishes beTore an ice-box cake. 3 l JAMES HANSEN Boys, have you a secref desire To have broad, manly shoulders and be husky generally? Follow Jim in his guesT Tor chop suey. This saTisTying delicacy enabled him To win swimming and skaTing meeTs and To play TooT- ball. MARCELLA HEIN V Marcy, only girl on The class com- mission, played The TlighTy Mrs. Dela- Tield in Two Girls WanTed. EurTher- more, gold and silver medals give evidence oT her musical TalenTg while hordes oT Triends prove her populariTy. CHARLES HENDRICKSEN Chuck enioys hunTing woodchucks. How many chucks would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck would chuck Chuck? l-le wood like To have chucked senior meeTings when he had a pile oT homework. GERTRU DE HEYER WiTh a perky whiTe cap on her blond curls, Sarah oT The senior class play, OT Science club, and Shield club plans To Tollow in The TooTsTeps oT The Lady wiTh The Lamp. Remember, doc- Tors, don'T call her GerTie. ROBERT HUEBSCHEN Girls! WhaT a Tind! Here is good- looking, curly-headed, brown-eyed Bob, who, above all Things, enioys baking. Those who make noises while eaTing need noT apply. His TavoriTe meal is a compleTe Turkey dinner. CHESTER JAECK We have a super-salesman among us! WiTh a sTack oT poTaTo pancakes To build energy Tor his dynamic cam- paigns, CheTa Tries To argue, I may noT be good'lookin', buT l'm powerful cuTe! 32 HELEN HARAMIS Love-Tive. Don'T geT excifed, Tor' This is iusT a score Trom Tiny's TavoriTe game, Tennis. When noT swinging a wicked rackeT, she enioys reading in- TormaTive books and lisTening To The radio. CLARA HELLMAN This LiTTle One has been among us only one semesTer, having come Trom WesT Milwaukee laden wiTh honors. Was her Tine Tore-nsic work relaTed by chance To her Tondness Tor big red TomaToes, ThaT magic source OT energy? DANIEL HOPKINS Commander's peT peeve is quesTion- naires, buf There is no quesTion in his mind when iT comes To pork chops. AlThough a Track sTar, Danny Tound iT raTher diTTiculT To sTay erecT when Taking roll in A. ROBERT HU BERT Buddy seems To be suTTering Trom high blonde pressure. To cool OTT, he spends his leisure Time doing The LambeTh Walk. During The summer he carries clubs. Will iT be diamonds in The winTer? EEATRICE JAN KOWSKI Calling all cards! Calling all cards! Bea collecTs posT cards Trom all over The world. Boys who chase girls are her peT peeve. Wouldn'T we girls like To know where she Tinds ThaT Type! HELEN JAWORSKI Beloved conTides To us ThaT boys are The chieT discords in her song oT liTe, buT her nickname belies This. For The presenT her ThrillingesT aTTaire d'amour is wiTh chicken. Can iT be a challenge, boys? MARY JEZIORSKI Soaring Through The azure sky and doing a loop-The-loop are The dreams of Speedy, who hopes To be an aviaTrix. SeT a dish OT mock chicken legs before her, and she power-dives inTo iT wiTh a deTermined swoopl DANIEL KAMOSKE SwifT-flowing evenTs oT an hisTorical naTure do noT appeal To Slow-and- Easy. However, he is a speed demon when iT comes To playing baskeTball. Some people can do Things TasTer when There ain'T no pesky book larnin' MARY KANIEWSKI CarroT Top sold ads so successfully ThaT she became adverTising manager Tor The Cardinal weekly. We hope she'll be able To adverTise The TacT ThaT homework, her peT peeve, should be abolished. JANICE KNUDSEN Janeece, wiTh The accenT on The ee, Thinks There's noThing more enjoyable Than a Shakespearean drama, unless iT is a sTeak smoThered wiTh onions. A mellow moon and Twinkling sTarS inTeresT her-she likes asTronomy. RUTH KNAPPER Science, Shield, and sociology-The S's have iT. Have whaT? ThaT cer- Tain someThing Thai' aTTracTs Gloomy. As Peoria in The ChrisTmas play she Tickled The Tunny bone oT every sTu- denT. How come They call her Gloomy? RICHARD KOLANOWSKI Dick's TavoriTe Tood is po'k chops. He complains he's no STepin FeTchiT: conTinually running errands irks him. HisTory is his favoriTe subiecT, and he likes The American brand of humor so ably concocTed by Mark Twain. HARVEY JOHNSON ThaT unscrupulous business man, Mr. Hancock, Trom The senior class play loves To spend his Time Thinking abouT Tigures and curves-in an archiTecTural way. Harvey hopes To make a living some day as a rnasTer-builder. ANNA KLOTZ Lookie, lookie, lookie, here is Cookie! She's The liTTle German lass who deTesTs Too much make-up. Hiking, roller skaTing, and baskeTball keep ThaT waisT line down, Tor she insisTs on chocolaTe pudding, her TavoriTe dish. DOROTHY KLOSS RadiaTing smarTness and efficiency, Klossy lighTly passes Through life, con- TenT To pore over a book or bound abouT a Tennis courT. Her only regreT is ThaT her sisTer will noT obey The hands-OTT-my-cloThes policy. MILDRED KLUG Alfhough all Tangled up in her TavoriTe Tood, spagheTTi, Millie 'Finds Time To unwind Tor The purpose oT squelching inquisiTive people who in- quire if AI Klug is a relaTive. Why, Millie, no likee big TeeTsball man? SAM KATSEKES yff Fiddling around didn'T keep Greek Trom being seven Times elecTed eT- Ticiency experT in orchesTra, and being selecTed chairman of a harmony class. Music noTes are his correspondence medium, and scores and scales, his liTeraTure. MARCELLA KoENie ' f Rosebud, in conTrasT To her genrle name, coerced row lO To subscribe one hundred per cenT Tor The Car- dinal weekly. Shield club, LaTin club, The Annual sTaTT, band, and orchesTra were among her oTher conquesTs. 33 ALVIN KOSIVIATKA The laboraTory was Alvin's TavoriTe haunT1 nexT came his moTher's kiTchen. ChemisTry and French Tried poTaToes vied Tor TirsT honors wiTh him. He was a member oT The Cardinal Boys' club. ELEANOR KOWALSKI Eleanor and Li'I Abner agree in Their inTense desire Tor po'k chops, buT Shrimp goes a sTep TurTher and preTers hers wiTh mashed poTaToes. Her dislike oT conceiTed people is surpassed only by her love oT dra- maTics. ALICE KRUKOWSKI CloThing, gym, and Toods have made Kruks's liTe aT SouTh rosy. Why? They are subiecTs wiThouT homework, and a girl inTeresTed in sporTs and dancing wouldn'T have Time To slave over books, KENNETH KRAEM ER Girlsl Here is a man who eaTs anyThing. BUT don'T leT your hopes soar Too high. lT's Thumbs down on girls wiTh him. KenneTh divides his Time beTween building model airplanes and devouring Edgar Allan Poe. PATRICIA KUFEL PaT, The Shirley Temple of SouTh Division, is peeved abouT her curly curls. lV!haT Tools These women bell BUT she TorgeTs her annoyance in such aTTracTions as English, shrimp salad. swimming, and cross-word puzzles. VIOLET LOUD WiTh six subiecTs on her program This semesTer and wiTh a iiTTerbug complex, Vi sTill escapes Those TellTale red circles on mark day. She burns The midnighT oil over Poe's chillers and Rohmer's Thrillers. 34 MARION KOWALCHUK Marion loves To ponder guainT and curious volumes oT TorgoTTen lore. HisTory carries her away To The classic beauTies oT long ago. Only The savory odor oT chop suey can bring her back To The presenT. GENEVIEVE KUCAN The honor oT being represenTaTive girl and Miss Timoney in Two Girls WanTed Tell inTo Genie's capable hands. She wroTe her way inTo an ediTorship oT The Cardinal weekly and was awarded The Junior Girls' English cup. JULIETTE FELDMANN Judy says Spanish was her easiesT subiecT because iT is a language OT romance. Her peT peeve is Hello, JulieTTe, where's Romeo? Well, any- way, il' is beTTer Than Hello, JulieTTe, ainTcha' goT no Romeo? LORRAINE KUETTNER AlThough Penny's peT peeve is U. S. hisTory, she makes up Tor iT by liking geomeTry, skaTing, and dancing. Her deTerminaTion To become a Flor- ence NighTingale is so greaT ThaT she inTends To do or die To achieve ThaT goal. RUTH KU NATH America, your TuTure social prob- lems are solved. RuTh has all The answers Tor guesTions perTaining To The people's welTare, ThaT is, if you can Tear her away Trom her spareribs and sauerkrauT. RALPH LU ECHT A man's man is Rocky, whose pe? peeve is girls and whose TavoriTe Toods are harclTack and dill pickles. WiTh such convicTions, how could he spend his spare Time excepT in playing TooT- ball and baskeTball? FREDRIC MAIER ExTraI ExTraI Read all abouT iTI ThaT's EriTz when imporTanT news breaks. Besides a profound inTeresT in The microbes oT The science world, he enioys The producTs oT The poulTry yard. Fried eggs are delicious, eh whaT? G-LENWOOD MARTIN Many a Tair maiden's hearT has done a back-Tlip as she gazed aT handsome Glen. I-Iero oT The class play and member oT The senior class commission, he garnered his share of glory aT SouTh. BETTY MEIER Pulses will quicken under The capable Tingers of This prospecfive nurse. Ears glued To The radio speaker, Becky spends her leisure Time in caTching The newesT Thing in quesTion bees, plays, and music. RAY MEYER WiTh a dimple in his cheek and a malTed milk in his hand, Ray smiles his way Through IiTe. ATTer a success- Tul sTruggle wiTh deadly maThemaTical brain TwisTers, his dimple wins again. FLORENCE MICI-IALAK EIossy's TavoriTe pasTime is To spend a nice guieT evening engrossed in one oT Edna Ferber's novels. BuT, she sTipulaTes, There musT be a dish of velveTy, chocolaTe ice cream aT hand in case her inTeresT flags. BETTY MORLEY 'I A Tlash of color, a cloud oT dusT, ThaT's BeTTy Boop. She belonged To many clubs, did Cardinal work, played a lead in The class play, and in a Thrilling bouT wiTh Olson, won The name oT Slugger. STANLEY MARKEL Galavanhng across counTry won PeanuTs Two emblems Tor his winning sTride. lvIaThemaTics is his TavoriTe subiecT. Keeps you Thinking, says STanley. We ask, AbouT whom? ALICE MCCABE Besides an inTeresT in Girls' club, Irish Tound English absorbing. This liTTle colleen believes a knowledge oT grammar and puncTuaTion indispense able To sTenography. BuT really she's human: she adores hoT Tudge sundaes. AUDREY McQUEENEY A leader among girlsl IT's really True of Audee, who devoTed her Time and energy To Shield club, CenTury, Girls' club, and Los Amigos. I-Ier Triendly smile illuminaTed The class play when she did The parT oT Sarah. ANGELINE MICHALAK Mickey's TavoriTe Tood is daTes, WhaT girI's isn'T? Can There be any relaTionship beTween The TacT ThaT she loves daTes and Thai' her TavoriTe book is Nobody's Boy? More power To you, Angeline! WILLIAM MILLER Junior has no paTience, especially when iT comes To Teaching people. His moTher's cooking is mosT success- Tul in smooThing his ruTTIed spiriTs, buT archiTecTural drawing Takes his mind oTT his Troubles even sooner. JOHN MURLEY IT you walk down a cerTain sTreeT on cerTain mornings of every week, you will see Jaia walking a cerTain girl To school. She musT have ThaT cerTain someThing To win a place in his liTe, Tor his peT peeve is girls. 35 LA VERNE NEHRING l-lere's one ol lhe lemperamenlal leading ladies in Two Girls Wanled. Gadabouls in A who dislurbed her daydreams provoked La Verne's wralh. Whal miracle keeps her waisl line slim when she likes all loods? WILLARD NOTBOI-IM From lhe diary ol a lreshman: l wonder why he hales lo be called Willie? If l were on lhe class com- mission, lhe debaling leam, and in lhe class play, lhal li++Ie maller wouldn'l bolher mel Oh, such is genius! ROSE ORLIKOWSKI Debil lhisl Credil lhall Rulh bends over her ledgers and iournals, lor she wanls lo be an ellicienl bookkeeper. She relaxes, however, by reading lhe lalesl novels and careening aboul on roller skales. RUBY PERSTK The liny blond whirlwind rushing lhrauqh lhe halls eighlh hour was Percy, lhe busy business manager ol lhe class play, Noiseless and ellicienl, she is any employer's long-soughl, dreamed-ol slenographer. VIOLET PALUSZYNSKI ll bookkeepers wanl lo lind lheir mislakes, Violel will gladly assisl lhem when she isn'l skaling, hiking, or reading. She gels beller resulls if a dinner ol a luscious sleak and onions is her reward. MARY PETUSHEK Her chosen playmale is a medico's skelelon. Voluminous lrealises on pon- derous biological subiecls make up her lighl reading lisl. A morbid person- alily? No! Jusl inleresled in her elecled profession, nursing. 36 BERNARD NORMAN Oh, lor lhe lile ol a soldier, sighs Barney. Thal being lhe case, Bernard oughl lo change his lavorile lood lrom cake lo hardlack. ln' preparalicn lor lhe mililary life, Nor- man parlicipales in all sporls. JANE OGRODOWSKI Try lhisl A hearly laugh clears- Jane's mind ol inleresling, bul some- limes liring, social sludies. Il lhal doesn'l work, she reads her lavorile- book. The Rosary. ll her brain is slill foggy, sporls bring relief. WALTER OPALAK A lhumb-nail skelch ol Wally: Favorile lood-corn chowder: book- If l Were King: sporl-loolballq sub- iecl-chemislry: h o b b y-collecling rocks and slampsq peeve-noise wheni he's sludying. EMILY PALUSZKA Millie Paluszka is being a lillle bil like Nick De Popolus, because she is, all lhe lime liking a candy bar lo be her lavorile aulhorpuss. Yes, l would' be meaning O. Henry. Do you grab! me? MARTHA PAJACZKOWSKI Marlha is quile domeslic. Collecl- ing recipes llor lulure use?l is her' hobby. She is also adepl al needle- work and lhe olher housewilely arls. We recommend Fuzzy as lhe number one candidale lo succeed in malri- rnony. JUNE PFOTENHAUER Dubbed Floaling Power by her' lriends, June lives up lo her nickname by gliding ecslalically lo lhe slrains ol sweel music. To make headway wilh her, young men should carry pepper- minl candy in lheir pockels al all limes. GENEVIEVE PILACHOWSKI Yes, sir, her favorife food is po'k chops. She doesn r need a Sadie Hawkins' day, because she can lruih- fully say, Love is on ma' side. She wishes Thai' her nickname, Gena-wee- wee, were gone wiih 'l'he wind. RUTH POHL Red craves acfion noi only on ihe gridiron buf also in a book. She enioys wafching Sou+h's fooiball 'l'eam, felling us her broiher is The main affraciion. No blond Adonis 'Figures in her idea of romance-bookkeeping figures. RUTH POTRYKUS Should auld acquainlance be fora -go+? Pal won'+ forgel any of her friends, for she collecls greeling cards -myriads of 'em. She doles on Laiin, believing il' 'lo be a help in olher subiecis. LOIS RAASCH Resolved by Eagle Eye, Thai' home' work for fhe week-end be abolished. Vice-presidenl of senior orcheslra and secreiary of her music appreciaiion class, Lois believed fhal' sludies infer' iered wilh her social aciivilies. DOROTHY PRUSCHA Anolher dicialorl Bul Fuzzy will dicfafe slyle decrees in her hoped-for fashion colony. Democralic Doro'rhy's pei peeve is snubbing, Jrhough 'iis whispered she herself is an arislocral' of Jrhe lap-dance. GLENWOOD RISTOW My kingdom for a horse! And ii befier be a good one, because Augie adores fhis 'Risiow-cralic spori. He mounis his favoriie sieed-if 'lhe beasi can iake if-al leasl once a week To gallop in search of romance. VIOLET PINTER Do-re-mi. Lisienl li's Susie singing because she loves ii. We love il, loo, and don'f wonder in Jrhe leasi Thai she clinched iirsr division honors 'lor Soufh in fhe music iournameni' lasl spring. CLYDE RUDOLPH In spife of his par? as The colored chauffeur in Two Girls W a nled, Snooky's lasfes are raiher orienfalg his favorile food is chop suey and rice. His serious Thoughls are given 'io scoul work. GERTRUDE POSPYHALLA Hey! Quil' shoving! Gerlie will have none of il, This being pushed aboul ihe corridors. Bui' she will have pleniy of sauerkraul and pigs' fails. Large doses of swimming and ice skaling consliluie her sporl' prescrip- lion. GENE RAMUS More liver and onions righi over here, orders Squire. ln spiie of his zesl for 'rhese delicacies, Gene keeps down ihai waisiline by sirenuous par- iicipaiion in baskelball and YMCA work. DOROTHEY RINAS Reading good books and reading music are Doi's iavorile pasiime. Taking her musical ialenls seriously, she labors diligenlly lo achieve a degree as feacher of music. However, she fakes lime oui' 'ro sew and play. JUNE RIEDEL , - . , r She has rhyihm! Pee Wee leven Thai' can be sungl rippled up and down fhe scale uniil she won an em- blem. Noi salisiied wilh vocal gym- naslics, she senf her nimble 'lingers rippling over i'he keys ol a iypewriler. 37 STEPHANIE SAFFRAN A TaIkaTive STeTTi direcTs her murder- ous verbs especially aT Teasers who commenT on The euphony oT her name. Though an arclenT TooTbaIl Tan, she can'T disTinguish a TiTTy-yard line Trom The one lvloTher uses on Monday. KENNETH SAS Yas suh, yas suh, he's George Wash- ingTon Lincoln, The redvheaded darky in The class play. Though he didn'T mind chauTTeuring Two Girls WanTed, he'd raTher polish a chesT oT drawers Than shine an auTo Tender. LOUISE SCHNEIDER Number plee-aze, number pleeeazeln Louisa is paTienTIy working Toward The iob oT her dreams. She wanTs To be superinTendenT oT a Telephone com- pany, and yeT she's The girl who haTes To repeaT anyThingI HELEN SERAFIN Kay Kyser, and no one else, will play The appropriaTe diTTy when Helen marches down The aisle, Tor organ music doesn'T appeal To This iiTTerbug. The Tun in speech and The Thrill oT drama are more To her liking. ANN SHTAIDA One pug nosel A perTecTly good pug nosel Who will buy my pug nose? walls Annie in despair. LiTTIe does she realize how iT has helped her To sniTT aT Those delicacies, Tor she so loves To cook. DOROTHY SMUKOWSKI Torchy was up To baT. The girls' gym was silenT while all IisTened Tor The resounding crack oT a homer. Baseball is DoroThy's idea oT real sporT, alThough she does noT Turn up her nose aT dancing, golT, or Tennis. 38 MARIE SALB This German club member Tinds an ouTleT Tor her excess energy in doing The Cherry I-lop and LambeTh Walk, and in cuTTing Tigure eighTs on The ice. She appears on These occasions clad in cosTumes oT her own Tashioning. JAN ET SCHADE Jan's love Tor arT is beyond com- parison. I-Iowever. we don'T know wheTher she means The subiecT or an individual. Playing second Tiddle in her aTTecTions is blueberry pie, her TavoriTe Tood. AUDREY SCHWECHEL You may call her Tommy buT never Hi ya, Babe. AT IeasT if you do. sing iT, and she may Torgive you. Audrey belonged To The Glee club and won an emblem in The music TournamenT. FLORENCE SEVERSON To geT along wiTh Blondie, a True Scandinavian, reTrain 'from pouTing or TiTs oT anger. This peace-loving damsel devoTes much oT her Time To sewing. Can iT be ThaT we have anoTher Schiaparelli in our midsT? VIRGINIA SPICUZZA For reIaxaTion give Specks geomeTry and Aesop. The one gives her in- spiraTion Tor drawing Figures, The oTher, Tor Tabricajring Tables. We wonder whaT cream puTTs and ham, her TavoriTe Toods, give her. Indiges- Tion, probablyl BETTY SPEAK I-lush ma mouTl I-Iere's a souThern gal who doesn'T Think only oT Tried chicken, aIThough she loves iT. She admires The sTaTeIy Tigures oT The minueT buT adores The inTricaTe sTeps in bookkeeping. ETHEL STACHOWIAK Wimpy would gladly pay you Tues- day Tor a hamburger any day. WiTh a book by Mark Twain and a plaTe sTacked high wiTh These onion-crowned morsels, she enioys a perTecT evening aT home. JANE STROMMEN Gridders are in luck, Tor Suzy Q is Their sTaunchesT Triend. She says she'II proTecT The whole bloomin' Team. Can she handle IT? We wonder if ThaT is why shels Taking up nursing. MARTHA STOLARCZYK An acTive Iassie, MarTha seeks diver- sion in a brisk game of Tennis or an exciTing session on a baskeTball courT. Maybe she needs such sfrenuous exer- cise To recuperaTe Trom exhausTing herseIT on dry jokes, her peT peeve. VIRGINIA TOMCZYK GaTher round, boys, Tor if you sing, Ginny will adore you. JusT as she loves To race around The dangerous curves and angles oT shorThand, so she abhors The genTIe gyraTions oT a slow walTz, MARGARET TUCHOLKA Whizzl There goes Peggy spinning by on roller skaTes. I-ler spinning is due To her spinach dieT. I-Iorrorsl She spends her spare Time Tleeing from Fu Manchu or solving mysTeries wiTh Nayland SmiTh. LUCILLE STAMMER Fuzzy has a mania Tor Things neaTly and uniTormly done. This pre- cision and hard work won her a place on The Annual IiTerary sTaTT, a iob as TypisT on The Weekly, and a moniTor- ship oT row 20 in A. ALBERT UDOVICH AnoTher vicTim oT push-ups pleads wiTh his Triends noT To inTerrupT him while reading his TavoriTe novelisT, Zane Grey. Of course, an inviTaTion To eaT Tried chicken is noT considered an inTerrupTion. ISABELLE STU DER BaTTered and bruised, Issy sTaggers home aTTer a ruThless aTTack on a pig- skin. Oinkl Oinkl MasculiniTy, be- ware! Girls are invading your aThleTic Tields again, Tor Issy plays TooTball on an all-girl eleven. HENRY SZYMCZAK Gabby didn'T Take parT in any acTiviTies aT SouTh, because he was Too small when he came here. Is he anoTher one Too small Tor his size and Too young Tor his age? Maybe he was born Too soonl ALICE TOWELL This member oT The senior band marched away wiTh a medal aT The ciTy TournamenT. Teaching a Sunday school class, reading Hope Baldwin. collecTing poems, and hiking, riding, and dancing keep Alicia dashing madly abouT. CHRISTINE UDOVC I'm iusT a quieT, Timid girl, wails Pinky when Teased abouT her boy Triends. Because she loves children, she has decided To become a gover- ness. Admirable Training, GhrisTine, Tor womanls high desTInyl LILLY VIRGIN Truly a disciple oT The English course, Dolly abhors TriTe expressions and hearTily condemns Their use. Sing any lilTing melody, however, and she will ioin in The chorus, Tor she is a coming soprano. 39 RICHARD VOLKE All aboard! nol on lhe l-liawalha, bul on Dick's midgel lrain lhal goes zooming lhrough his minialure lown. Yel he conlends lhal his pel peeve is anylhing clone in loo big a hurry. Consislenl man! WANDA WEISTO Amazing sludenls wilh her larnin' in class, hounding news lor The Cardi- nal weekly or scurrying lo her many club meelings, Bonnie won lhe nom cle plume ol Windy and a place in our honor chapler, Arclurus. ROBERT WILBERT ' . Roberl is one ol Soulh Division's slrong, silenl men. If his lesl papers resembled his queslionnaire, he cer- lainly buflaloed his leachers inlo giv- ing him his credils. Or did he use chloroform? LORRAINE WOBSHALL Swimming, dancing, and reading fill Blondie's leisure lime, For singing, which plays a big parl in her lile, Blondie received her iusl desserl land l don'l mean iellol lwo shining pins lor her work in Glee club. IRENE WOZNIAK lrene has no lime lo daydream because her lavorile paslime is keeping busy, especially when lhere is sleak wilh mushrooms. She doesn'l like in- quisilive people, because she'd ralher lislen lhan lalk. INEZ YOUNG Perpelual-molion lnez gnashes her leelh al slow people. ln addilion lo nourishing lwenly-lwo scrapbooks, she reads omniverously, holds ollices, knils, crochels, corresponds, worships all sporls, and lrequenls lhe movies. 40 CAROLYN WAGGONER Poor hislory book! ll was dread- 'fully neglecled lalely, because Lynn was loo busy wilh parlies. Sho! Sho! Lei' us pul you righl-nol wilh parlies, bul wilh a parly on a sleigh-ride parly. HARRY WESOLOWSKI Girls, girls, lel us +elI you a secrel. Do you know we have an Adolphe Meniou righl here al Soulh? Yes, ma'am, he is lhe suave, sophislicaled Harry himself. Don'l rush him, lair maidens: his iob is his big +hrilI! JEAN WITTE Jean is a loyal supporler ol school alhlelics, nol having missed a lool- ball game in lhree years. Being a Wille girl, she won lor herself a place on lhe Cardinal Annual slall and in lhe hearls ol her classmales. LILLIAN WORZELLA Academics? Nol No! No! No! Boys? Woo-wool Why nolf7 was Fili's nonchalanl reply when asked lhe reason lor her prelerence. Whal powerful lascinalion lhis simple sub- iecl does holdl DOLORES YAGLE l-ler nickname is Yoyo, bul her grades don'l yoyo: lhey slay up. Her inleresls exlended in all direc- lions, up lo lhe physics lab, down lo lhe music room, and anywhere al all lo lind a lennis courl. EUGENE ZAMJAHN Zarn is making plans lor his lulure dream house, his caslle ol romance. l-le's also on lhe lookoul lor a cook lo live in il who can prepare chopped meal, mashed polaloes, and sweel corn. Don'l push, girls! DOROTHY ZELMER l-liking, swimming, and roughing if in general keep Dorofhy physically -fif, while verbal gymnaslics provide her wi+h menfal exercise. Her abilify 'ro iuggle words dexferously made her in- valuable fo The Annual sfaff. LEONA TROY Lee's love for shorlhand cannol be denied. All mysferies fascinale her, and fhis subiecl' is iusl' anolher puzzle. 'Tain'+ funny, McGee, is her reforf fo all poinlless jokes. They're puzzling, Tool GLADYS PIERSON Pul-lease! Don? crack your knuckles, complains Prez. However, her campaign againsl' knuckle crackers did nor prevenf' her parficipalion in Girls' club, Cenfury, and l-lobbycrafl' as well as in 'rhe oralorical conlesf. SOPI-IIE ZLOTOCHA Sl'uden'rs will quail before fhis fulure feacher of Polish, for her per peeve is idleness. She does have a soil' spof, however, for chocolafe pie crowned wifh gobs of whipped cream. OTTO BETH KE Page Miss Foelske. l-lere is a senior whose favorife aufhor is old Bill Shakespeare. Will wonders never cease? Affer a few hours of poring over rhe Bard of Avon, Gabby relaxes in a nice quiel baskelball game. IRENE GWIAZDOWSKI Skeezix, as every good Girl Scout loves nafure. This presidenl' of Polish club has had experience behind The foollighfs since she was lhree. May all her affemprs on +he sfage of life have happy endings! NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY FEBRUARY . CELIA BARBER PEARL ANN DRUCI-l EDWARD HALAMKA MARCELLA HEIN DANIEL HOPKINS MARCELLA KOENIG GENEVIEVE KUCAN BETTY MORLEY WILLARD NOTBOHM LUCILLE STAMMER WAN DA WEISTO 4 I CLASS COMMISSIONS ElecTed To such duTies as selecTing The giTT and plan- ning The bangueT oT The February class were Edward l-lalamka, chairman, RoberT Beierle, Marcella l-lein, Glen- wood MarTin, and Willard NoTbohm. RepresenTaTive boy, sporTs ediTor, Alumni sweaTer, NaTional l-lonor socieTy, and The TegTmeyer cup were only some oT The honors gaThered by Ed l-lalamka. Bob Beierle excelled in all sporTs. The Moose broke sTaTe and ciTy discus records. and as baskeTball capTain had his name inscribed on The CoblenTz Trophy. Marcella l-lein's guoTa oT honors consisTed oT The parT oT Mrs. DelaTield in The class play, The vice-presidency oT CenTury, medals in music, and elecTion To The Na- Tional l-lonor socieTy. Glen MarTin, The bashTul Adonis oT The class, Thrilled all as DexTer WrighT in The class play. l-lis exTra-curricu- lar acTiviTies included Science club and CenTury. Willard NoTbohm graduaTed wiTh second honors, buT his work in Forum, The senior revue, and in Two Girls WanTed proved ThaT books alone didn'T hold his inTeresT. To lead Their class. The June seniors chose l-larvey Baerwald, chairman, Hugo Barbian, Mildred Barbian, l-lerberT Boge, and Audrey Wood. Class commission chairman and represenTaTive boy, l-larvey Baerwald was also all-ciTy halTback and winner oT The Alumni sweaTer and The W medal. ElecTion as represenTaTive girl, The Annual arT ediTor- ship, a Junior English book, and The accepTance oT The February class giTT were achievemenTs oT commission member Mildred Barbian. l-lerberT Boge Tound Time To be sporTs ediTor oT The Cardinal as well as a TooTball hero. l-lis maior sTage role was ThaT oT Mr. Gashwiler in The class play. Mr. EdiTor was T-lugo l3arbian's TiTle Tor a year on The Weekly. Ex-presidenT oT The Science club and winner oT The Alumni English book, he appeared as Jimmy in MerTon oT The Movies. OTTices in Shield and CenTury and The presidency oT Girls' club kepT Audrey Wood, recipienT oT a Junior English book and a sTar reporTer on The Weekly, busy. Edward Halamka Harvey Baerwald Marcella Hein Mildred Barbian Willard NoTbohm Hugo Barbian Glen MarTin Audrey Wood Roberf Beierle HerberT Boge RICHARD ALSCH Dick has no hobby unless TooTbaII can be classed as such. This ambi- Tious young man wiII Travel To Carroll To TurTher his educaTion. His one and only desire-sorry, girls-is To play TooTbaII wiTh The Packers. VIOLET ANDERSON A pIaTinum blonde, buT a naTuraI, is Blondie. She haTes To be Teased, buT banana cream pie easily sooThes The secreTary oT Mask and Wig. Boys, you have compeTiTion-she's in love wiTh BooTh TarkingTon. IRENE ARMBRUSTER Terry is a ping pong and badminTon enThusiasT. She keeps up her sporl' average by regular doses oT macaroni and cheese. Poe sTories send iusT The righT Type of shiver down her back on a rainy nighT. JULIA BAKALARSKI Figures inTeresT Julie-Those ThaT inhabi+ Iedgers. I-Ier Two years as bookkeeper on The Cardinal weekly aTTesTed To ThaT TacT. The TavoriTe subIecT oT This aguaTic and Tennis experi' was, of course, bookkeeping. MILDRED BARBIAN Barbs Travels in seven-league booTs along The Honor highway. Repre- senTaTive girl, class commission, An- nual arT ediTor were service sTaTions on her way. A secreTI She longs To be a Joan Davis on The screen. HUGO BARBIAN Here is I-Iugo. EdiTor-in-chieT oT The Weekly, presidenT oT Science club, vice-presidenl' of CenTury, and winner oT The Alumni book were only a Tew oT The honors won by our TuTure chemisT and presenT soda ierker. ELAINE ABENDROTH Abby is senior parTner oT Abby and Mudy Inc. and TirsT soprano in The overTure Trom Daisy La IvIoo's caTTIe show, Ferdinand The Bull. Her warbl- ing is second only To her arT work which is, quoTe ToisT cIess unquoTe. ROSE ANDRASZCZYK SiTTing in TronT of a mirror Tor hours and creaTing new coiTTures ThaT Tollow The modern upward Trend is a warfh-while and inTeresTing hobby Tor Rosy. WhaT girl wouIdn'T love To go upward in such a manner? HARVEY BAERWALD ' AII-ci+y haITback1 alumni sweaTer wearer: emblem winner in Track, TooT- ball, and baskeTbaII were iusT some of Punchy's aTTainmenTs. Two D's dominaTe his IiTe. One is dancing and The oTher-DoT's guT, I-Iarveyl SEVERINE ANDRYSZEWICZ Hawaii should aTTracT Severine, The TuTure sTenographer. There she can escape loud gum chewers, phoTograph beauTiTuI scenery, eaT her Till oT pineapple, and read Mark Twain be- side The pounding surT. GEORGE BANASZYNSKI Some day in The TuTure we may see George hiTTing and caTching 'em Tor a big league ball club. An ardenT supporTer OT Sinclair Lewis is Ace, who is also inTeresTed in social problems. EUNICE BANASZYNSKI Truly, Eunice's TasTes are exoTic. They include horseback riding, clay modeling, and The whiTe meaT oT chicken. For condimenTs she Turns To sociology. 43 LUCILLE BARNISH Ba lrl nish all worries aboul nol being beaulilul. When you wanl lo crash lhe movies, Lollee will be lhere lo glamorize you. She's a whizz al beauly cullure. DELORES BARTSCH Who is lhe lirsl in line lo gel shrimp salad? Who reads books by Zona Gale? Who enioys swimming, lennis, and dancing? Who wishes lo work in a privale ollice? The myslery person is Delores. EARL BENSKE The B's have il, lor Earl loves base- ball and baskelball. Why nol? He won a numeral in lhe laller. He liked salesmanship because il inlro- duced him lo more lriends. Sho', sho', Earl, you've enough already. MILDRED BENKEY Take a prelly Viclorian blush, some inleclious laughler, mischiel galore: mix wilh a hearl as big as a slreel car, and a mind lhal works like chained lighlning. Preslol You have Millie, lhe marvelous. ARTHUR BEHNKE Jillerbugging and lhe iuicy meal he loves help Arl lo condilion lor lrack meels. He doesn'l conline his love lo meal bul will eal anylhing and everylhing. Cave caneml ARLINE BER6 Typewriler keys, piano keys, and lhe righl key all inleresl Tiny. The lirsl is lun because she likes lo see her lingers lly, and lhe olher lwo are necessary lor her hobby-music. 44 MARTIN BAU ER Good morning, Mr. Bauer, was lhe greeling an ellicienl secrelary gave her new employer, prominenl in ll-ie newspaper game. On closer inspec- lion he proved lo be lhe amiable Marlin, gradualed lrom Soulh in June, 1939. RAY BEHL Don'l lry bossing Mossy. He hales il. Slill he confesses lhal lhere are persons-and persons, some ol whom prevenl a lellow lrom doing cerlain lhings. lsn'l lhal bossing, Mossy? DOROTHY BARTOSZAK Sh! Myslery shrouds lhe almos- phere. Our lulure librarian is en- grossed in an S. S. Van Dine murder. Bul, by cracky, lel's break lhe spell. Look, Dol, a cul ol luscious shorl cake smolhered in whipped cream. We winl LLOYD BEH REN DT Exlral Exlra! This member ol lhe Newsboys' council inlends lo be a chemisl. We hope his plans clon'l blow up. Bul, alas, apparenlly no lormula can make lhe girl 'friend puncluall MILDRED BARTLE , Two years ol experience as a re- porler on The Weekly slall won Shorly lhe coveled posl of associale edilor. Away 'From lype and copy she draws her bow across her violin and slips inlo a world ol sweel reveries. DEAN BERGER Allhough he is nol an aulhorily on dynamile, Dean is lasl learning lhal explosives in small places lend lo expand. When he isn'l dozing over a guiel game ol chess, he bangs oul a smashing game ol len pins. MILDRED BERGMANN Swish! Swish! Mudy is aT iT again. AT whaT? Why painTing and draw- ing, of course. She has chosen Tor her hobby, vocaTion, avocaTion, and TavoriTe subiecT-arT. BUT swimming and Tennis someTimes diverT her. VIVIAN BIALCZIK Tiny and Timid is Viv! She oT The sunlike hair possesses many sTerling qualiTies: buT because she believes silence is golden, They are hidden. Viv, you're as good as gold! THEODORE BOESE PuTTin' Things down is Al's ioy in liTe, be iT lines in mechanical drawing or pork roasT. ConscienTiously pro- pelling a sphere aT uprighT inanimaTe obiecTs is Alwin's TavoriTe sporT. Bowl- ing? Could be! GLADYS BLANCHARD Rich wiTh The wealTh of youTh, a lovable personaliTy, and a keen mind, Gladys is a Triple ThreaT To any hearT. For her TaiThTul work on The Annual and copyreading Tor The Weekly, we wish her The success she deserves. HERBERT BOGE 7 A ' - To be a maTh shark, a sporfs ediTor, and an emblem winner Took a versaTile chap like Herby. Besides, he was one oT The Triendliesf kids in school. Warn- ing! PoTaTo pancakes demolish even The mosT sTreamlined figure, Herb. FELICIA BORKOWSKI Found aT lasT-a modern phenome- non! Phil, a rara avis and Jack-oT- all-Trades, noT only plays The guiTar, sings, and dances buT loves To cook, keep house, and care Tor children. GvenTlemen, The line Torms aT The righT. EVELYN BERNINGER DirecTors, beware! A dark-haired beauTy will soon oTTer sTiTT compeTiTion To all oT you. Vice-presidenT oT The German guild, Evelyn will long be remembered for her excellenT produc- Tion oT The ChrisTmas pageanT. CHARLES BLOCK Dr. Black, blonde specialisT, pre- scribes blue eyes, good looks, and Towheads as The pe-rTecT sTimulanT Tor men's hearTs. AlThough he is noT a psychologist braggarTs are Tiled away in his memory as his peT peeve. EVELYN BODIEN Do you like To swim, dance, roller skaTe, play Tennis, and Then seTTle down To read a book while you eaT ice cream and lisTen To Kay Kyser? If you do, look ouT Tor Evelyn, because she'lI be looking Tor you. RAYMOND BOETTCHER ThirTy chocolaTe pies every Thursday would be Ray's plaTTorm if ever he ran Tor oTTice, and To geT Them he'd voTe Tor himself. When noT eaTing pie he bowls, plays baskeTball, and rides a bike. RUTH BONNEAU Did you ever see a dream walking? Well, l did. This one loves poTaTo chips, Poe's works, and a cerTain some- one on The baskeTball Team: in Turn, RuTh's loved by everyone who knows her. KENNETH BOURKE FuTure piloT Ken enioys skimming Through The clouds even beTore he geTs his angel wings. Shy and reTiring, he may be SouTh's Lindbergh or Corrigan some day. 45 AGNES BROZEWSKI Doing her planTing early by winning The iunior Tennis championship, Toby hopes To blossom as The winner oT The world Tennis TiTle. To qualiTy herselT Tor The TuTure, she is also acquiring skill in The culinary arTs. DOROTHY BRUSS A lake, a book, and lunch beside her-whaT could be sweeTer? DoroThy Tinds This an ideal combinaTion. Hiking and dancing also do Their share in making Those blue eyes sparkle. LEONA BRZEZINSKI ' LiTe in Holland wouldn'T appeal To l.ee-The claTTer oT wooden shoes an- noys her. She would TorgeT The shoes if a good book and a sundae were provided Tor her inTeresT. Any oTher inTeresT? ELEANOR BU RZlNSKI JiTTerbugs, beware! This beauTiTul maiden is seT agin you. She'll do her swingin' on a Tennis courT. Chicken Topped wiTh A Tale oT Two CiTies makes This Typing demon gloaT. DELORES BUDDENHAGEN Speech was Dorsey's TavoriTe subiecT, Though we wonder why any girl needs To Take speech! Her pei' peeve? People who whisTle aT her. TweeTl TweeTl ROSE BU REST-l l-loney's TavoriTe acTor is Richard Greene, because she preTers bruneTTes wiTh dimples. WhaT abouT ThaT blonde? Perhaps he losT ouT because he called her Shrimp. 46 MARY BRETTZKA A sparkle oT wiT, a dash oT viTaliTy is Mary. When noT lisTening To Kay Kyser's orchesTra, she can be caughT in The kiTchen munching macaroni and cheese, her TavoriTe dish. Men? Yes, if They are The liTe oT The parTy. FRANCIS BURDITT WhaTTa manl BuTch won honors and emblems in baskeTball and TooTball. This speedy aThleTe plans on coming in lasT oT his Tellow graduaTes in The maTrimonial race. CHARLOTTE BU DZISZEWSKI Gay LiT2a loves bicycle riding, buT she'll clamp on The brakes whenever chop suey or chile slips inTo sight When called a small Try, she boils. SooThing novels by BooTh TarkingTon cool her raging Temper. HARVEY BULGRIN Treasurer OT Cardinal Boys' club, Harvey inTends To make someThing oT himse-lT in The TuTure. ThaT is, oT course, if There's anyThing leTT To work on aTTer he indulges in his TavoriTe sporT oT ski jumping. MARGARET BUCKO Bucko Peggy rides again! Away To a dance, buT waTch ouT, you iiTTerbugs. Tor This Two-gun gal will shooT ya down if your Tlying hooTs hiT her, Whoa! We have To rein in a liTTle. She really is a quieT iockey, PAU LINE BU RDETT Add up a popular liTTle blonde, a reTormed iiTTerbug, an ardenT baskeTf ball rooTer plus a spagheTTi Tiend, and your answer is Pauline. You can prove iT's she wiTh a bag oT poTaTo chips. DOROTHY BUSSE Meer This masler af drawing boih friends and picfures. Dofs genial manner is a magnet and her ariislic abilify is de-lighl' in her assorrmenr of skills. DELORES CARLSON Splash wenf Delores as she won second place in rhe Girl Reserve swimming meer. Floafing along on ninery grades, DoDo became monilor in A. Loyalry, service, and characrer made her vice-presidenr of Shield club. CECILIA CIEPLUCI-I Cecilia believes fhai everyone oughi' fo specialize. Affer eighf semesrers of English emerged fhis maslerpiecez My days ar Soulh are almosf pass- red: all l can say, if was fun while if lasredf' STEPHANIE CZECZUGA Allhough Srephanie wanrs 'ro be an aviarrix or an aclress, she'll selfle for a good husband. She collec'l's sfarnps and boys' rings when successful. In her livelier momenfs she fools around wirh cook siovcs and horses. MARIE ANN CROWLEY Though she won r 'rolerafe being called Babe, she'll answer lo Minnie. Our of school, dancing and swimming keep her occupied and in school, speech 'fakes firsl place. Who needs a course in speech ro answer fhe righf man? LEONA CZAJ KOWSKI Clusrers of cherries, blood-ripe, drippingly luscious. Oh, Cherry Pie, my Cherry Pie! A+ Times Lee severs herself 'from fhese delecrable dreams 'ro carch up on ping pong and checkers. FLORENCE BURZYNSKI To rhose inreresled, be it known Thai Florence is noi a sisler lo Eleanor. A slender brunelfe, Elo doles on beaufy cullure and loves any kind of sporl from swimming 'ro ice skaring. ROSEMARY CARRICK Rosemary's 'iavorife subiecls were shorrhand and fyping. If she carries our +he business of an office as she carried oul' The business of school, she'll surely earn fhe sreak dinners she loves so well. ETI-IEL CHRISTIE A personaliiy as sparkling as her eyes has won hoards of friends for Erhel. Copy reader for The Cardinal, she knew her periods, commas, and queslions. Or did she? Her liavorile 'food is gum: no wonder her figure is willowyl DIANNE COTEY Foriy-love! Dianne wilh a dexfer- ous move wins 'rhe game. Besides Jrennis, her ioys include bicycling, skaf- ing, and swimming. Her disappoinr- menls are always appeased wifh choco- lale cake. ROBERT CYZMOURE By The lime he is sixiy-five lBob 'rhinks lhaf is long enough for anyone ro livel, he wanfs fo realize his greal- esf ambifion, 'ro play a 'renor sax in a big-name band on Broadway. NORMA CORNELL 1 'f Toofer plays a drum. A misfake like +ha+ is hard io beaf. Alrhough Norma's las? name is Cornell, as presi- denr of senior band she was far from corny. 47 EDNA DROZEWSKI PaTience is a very useTul virTue Tor Edna. She likes Thick books, espe- cially Lorna Doone. BUT don'T slap Eddie on The back To show you ap- prove oT her, or she'll disapprove oT you. EUGENE DZIADOSZ Flash! I-Ie likes To sleep in sTudy halls and revels in annoying Teachers lespecially Mr. I-Iannemanl by wriTing poeTry. Turning To oTher lyrical works, his ThoughTs wander To sTrawberry shorTcake and big lunches. DO RCAS EDWAR DS Dorcas was vexed when we Talked abouT her dimple. When she puT away her physics book or Threw her skaTes inTo a corner, she hunTed Tor picTures oT ships. Was she in+eres+ed in The ship or The sailor? ARTHUR DU LDE Doodle doTes on oysTer sTew, The SaTurday Evening POST, chocolaTe cake, and girls. Alfhough This booksTore clerk can ToleraTe bookworms, he draws The line aT oTher insecTs, noTably iiTTerbugs. ALICE DREWS Alice is a dreamy girl who dreams hopeTully oT a perky whiTe cap perched saucily on her black curls. IncidenTally, she will capTivaTe young inTernes' hearTs as parT oT her hospiTal duTy. EARL EI-IRLICI-IMAN GeTTing up early is a Trial To Earl. A member oT The all-ciTy senior orches- Tra and all-ciTy quarTeT, he loves classical music. AdvenTure sTories and amaTeur phoTography vie Tor his paT- ronage. 48 JOYCE DICKINSON Dickie Bird says her main ambiTion is music, IT seems Play, Fiddle, Play oughT To be her Theme. She plays TirsT violin in The all-ciTy orchesTra buT played second Tiddle aT school. LAVERNE DETTLAFF Love is an iTching sensaTion oT The hearT ThaT you can'T geT aT To scraTch. A modern deTiniTion. BUT, Romeos, Laverne prefers Shakespeares version, Love makes heaven drowsy wiTh iTs harmony . G-ENEVIEVE DUGAN Gene considers a kiTchen wiTh iTs poTs and pans an ideal place. ITs only rival in her esTimaTion is The radio. Lucky Tor Charlie McCarThy ThaT she isn'T connecTed with Skinny Dugan's Tamily Tree. ARTHUR DZIEDZIC In The dim recess oT a secluded room a shorT Tigure bends eagerly over a Table. This isn'T, however, a seTTing Tor an Edgar Allan Poe sTory, buT Tor ArT busily pursuing his hobby oT developing phoTographs, DANIEL DUEWELL Rah, rah, rahl Three cheers Tor This TooTball player and numeral win- ner. ArT craTT made him Teel impor- TanT. Girls, Izzy loves spagheTTi, louT gold-diggers-noT. IRVING ENGEL . One oT Three cheer leaders: presil denT oT Mask and Wig: secreTary oT Glee club: and lead in The class playl BeTween courTing, eaTing cheese TorTe. and sTudying To be a cerTiTied public accounTanT, he leads a busy IiTe. EUGENE FILUT Counselor of The Newsboys' club, Flu+e loved 'ro hear +he click of Type! wriler keys. Baseball, foolball, and Tennis afforded him olher enlerlain- menl. Anyfhing lhal inferrupled The pursuil' of his homework peeved him. FLORENCE FELSKI Know where lhose noles wenl Thai you didn'+ gel in A? Flo didn'r pass Them on, 'cause nole passing is her pe+ peeve. When nol reading Poe or ealing polalo salad, blonde Flor- ence lrips a lighl' 'lianlaslic foe. GLADYS EVERETT From 'rhe Twinkle in her dark eyes one would never guess lhaf Gladys fakes life seriously, Yel' she does. The inlricacies of shorfhand enlhralled her because 'rhey may lead +o a iob. ERICH FRANK Wielding fhe slick in iunior band. Erich has a genuine love for all 'ihings musical. No+ 'ro be one-sided lhough, he saves a lil'+le affeclion 'For sporls and chicken soup. MILTON FALK Mill'on's pei peeve is his cule nick- name, Ossie, Allhough Zane Grey and shorlhand offsel 'lhis annoyance, Ossie would ralher gulp chop suey lhan dribble a baskelball. VIOLA FONTAINE Thoroughly feminine, Vi devoles her- self lo sewing and looking handsome, lesl 'rhe candid camera calch her off guard, When vigorously inclined, she lakes 'ro baseball and hiking. VIVIAN FORTUNE Though Miss Forfune is her name, good forfune is her aim. Besides secre+ary and ireasurer of German club, lhis forlunale miss was also presidenl' of her music appreciaiion class. l-ler loves are Edgar Allan Poe and polafo chips. WILLIAM FLANERY Zingl Swishl Billy's slender bow has lel anolher arrow hir lhe bull's eye. Archery is his favorile sporl. Aeronaulics is his life's ambilion. Play- ing Beel'hoven's music on his sweei pofafo is his pei' paslime. DEWAINE FISCI-IER Slrikel I+ sounds like baseball, buf 'ro Wayne i+'s bowling, his iavorile sport Girls! If you would wend your way down his alley, don l be spare wifh her beelisfeak done rare. BERTHA EWALD Birdie is a roller-skaling fan. A lip. lf you should accidenfally call her Tools, paciiy her wi'l'h a book by Kalhleen Norris and a bowl of chop suey. ERVIN FINTAK When Ervin, numeral winner in lioof- ball, isn'+ slruggling wilh bookkeeping, he's enjoying swimming, archery, and Jrennis. Braggarls irrilale him, buf a iuicy pork chop always soolhes him. DONALD ERICKSEN Gleaming foils capfivafe This fenc- ing enfhusiasl, This Don Juan. Allhough he confesses he likes dales merely be- cause his iavorile subiecl' was hislory, we wonder if +ha+'s why he prefers blondes. All genllemen dol 49 NORMAN GAVIN WiTh creaTive and pracTical abiliTy our ediTor-in-chieT piloTed The Annual Through rolling seas of copy. Ship ahoy, CapTain! Experl' navigaTion has broughT us safely To porT. MANETTE FREITAG She shall have music wherever she goes. As Tollower oT Paderewski, ManeTTe will seek her Iaurels on The concerT sTage. Troubles never Trouble her, Tor when she smiles They're Gone wiTh The Wind. CARL GLAZEWSKl Carl was iusT a blond sTreak as he rushed abouT To all his acTiviTies aT school. Special inTeresT in The Polish club gave him The oTTice of presi- denTQ special inTeresT in people gave him many Triends. MAXINE FUHRMAN Come, TonTo, we have work To dol Heigho-ho, Sil-ver! Yes, liTTle Mackie is inTeresTed in WesTern Thrillers. ls There a cowboy in The crowd? DO LORES FUGLESANG Fugle-sang while she was Tishing early on a summer morning. Because oT This we are surprised ThaT she caughT anyThing aT all, buT she did use The righT baiT To land adverTisers. She handled her line quiTe well, Too. LEROY GILMORE He runs down The Tield wiTh The greaTesT oT ease, This member oT The champion cross-counTry Team. IT books were only a cinder paTh, liTe would be smooTh indeed To Curly. 50 SHIRLEY GLASER To be an airplane piloT is Shirley's ambiTion, buT The only Thing up in The air so Tar is The plan. She now enTerTains The idea of being a phar- macisT iusl' Tor The Tun of mixing Things up. You may go up yeT, Shirley. VERNA FROEMMING CrysTal ice and crisp cold air make an ideal seTTing Tor- Verna's TavoriTe sporT oT skaTing. Only a high moun- Tain oT chocolaTe ice cream can arresT her when she glides swan-like round The rink. MARION GEIGER STar reporTer on.The Weekly and presidenT of The Players' guild, This dark-eyed German Traulein reaped her harvesT of honors. CulTure and beauTy, noT beauTy culTure, are her chief ambiTions, she claims. RALPH GELHAR lT Can'T Happen Here may be his TavoriTe book, buT we all know iT did happen here, Tor Gel pole-vaulTed To success in Track and smashed Through in TooTball. And he wriTes lyrics. BERTHA GABRIELSON According To mosT girls Birdie is in reverse-she haTes boys and loves spinach. Imagine! Her poeTic inclina- Tion has led her To compose over Three hundred poems, and her liTerary ambiTion is To aTTempT a novel. GENEVIEVE GLASS Glass, eh? OughT she To be handled wiTh care? And howl Jen promises To annihilaTe anyone who iokes abouT her lasT name. She can do iT, Too, because Tennis and swimming have given her a mighTy righT arm. RUTH GOERTZ A bag oT Tudge, a bicycle, and an open road: or a TooTball game and a boTTle oT rooT beer are The loves OT Tomboy. l-'ler indoor aoTiviTies are lisTening To The radio and reading novels. LESTER GOTTH EARDT AnoTher chap longs To board The wagon To Typing Tame. A six-TooTer and only sixTeen, he was one oT The youngesT in his class. WhaT an armTul oT baby! Know him? He was The pessimisTic chap you saw in The halls OT SouTh. JANE GORSKI A game oT soliTaire sprinkled wiTh a liTTle daydreaming and boTh mixed well wiTh any 'Fashion book is Jane's idea of proTiTably spenT leisure Time. AT some TuTure day Janey may learn To care Tor you-in The hospiTal. MATTHEW GRABNER AlThough he almosT blew a house aparT, MaTTy sTill wanTs To be a chemisT. Model airplanes employ his Tancy, buT he haTes To see girls puTTing on make-up in public. JUNE GROSS A smile and a hearTy laugh de- scribe June, Tlashing reporTer Tor The Cardinal weekly. A Typing speed demon, she hopes To be privaTe secreTary To a wealThy business man, preTerably one wiTh a handsome son and a soda TounTain. WILLIAM G-ROB JusT a kid named Bill who has a nose Tor hisTory and geography. Like every American boy, he suTTers Trom baseball and TooTball Tever ThaT comes and goes wiTh The seasons. EDWARD GLOWACKI To hurT him is To enrage him: To enrage him-well, look ouT. He'll mow you down as he did so many on The gridiron. Give This I75-pound Tackle a good book and a peck of apples, and you won'T see him Tor a spell. FLORENCE GROCHOWSKI Raising The besf asTers in The neighborhood is Toby's pride and ioy. The acTion and varieTy oT hisTory Thrill her, Too, She Takes To ham- burgers as a duck Takes To waTer. CECILIA GRABARCZYK C-C craves chocolaTe candy, clubs, and classes. Though he-he as a chuckle is a Thing she abhors, in The Torm of a male he's a Thing she adores. RUTH GREVENOW Bound up in The TheaTre arTs is RuThie. AcTing or play wriTing would suiT her well, buT she opines ThaT she'll wind up pounding a TypewriTer despiTe her dreams oT a Puliizer prize or Academy award. LEONA GROCHOWSKI Did you ever see ThaT dream walking down The hall? IT was Lee, who en- ioyed looking like an animaTed page Trom Vogue. People who Tell dumb iokes and laugh aT Them are noT her Triends. MARCELLA GROSZ Muzzie is going To breeze Through The sky as an airline hosTess. An all- round aThleTic: miss is she, who plays a saxaphone and likes horseback riding. Besides all This, she does iusTice To chocolaTe cake and chile. 5 I DOROTHY HALD As fhe sirains of +he Blue Danube faded away, a diminulive figure picked up a half empfy bowl of popcorn and wen? back for more. She was our sfar reporfer, headline wrifer, and radio acfor, prelly Dorolhy Hald. FLORENCE HALBRITTER Hey. you high haisl Be'r+er gel' down off your high horses. Flo won'+ like you because sluck-ups are her pei peeve. Any one may call her Honey: il's her nickname! CARLE I-IANNEMANN Order in 'ihe sfudy hall! was The cry of fhis Cenlury sergeanl-a+-arms. When Carle wasn'+ banging fhe gavel, he was swimming or going Over +he Top wiih Ar+hur Guy Empey. DOROTHY HANSEN Doing as she pleases and gelfin' whaf she wan+s are +his perl young lady's pe? ambiirion. Wirh her de- vasiaiing smile and laughing blue eyes, we fhink she'll go far. Don'+ you? EDWARD HEJKE Duck! lf's only Eda shouiing 'lor some of his 'lavorile dish. ln Ciceronian fashion he declaims, Amo ie, LaTina , adding hurriedly in Eng- lish, because i+'s new and inferesl- ing . ALMA HEINRICHS She's a home loving person, This Alma, quile an unusual Thing in fhese modern days. Give her lhe ingredi- enis 'for a delicious cake, a few yards of maierial for a dress, or a room for inferior decoraiing, and waich her go fo work. 52 DIANA GUADAGNI Everybody's friend is Diana. Bu! call her Dena, and you are no longer dear in her eslimaiion. Somelhing of a irailor io lialian lradilion, Diana's lavorife food is sauerkraul and spare- ribs, no! spaghefii. GERALD HANSEN ln+o a bowl of good naiure drop one las? iiiferbug, add a flair for archileclural drawing, and an abiliiy in malhemaiics. Mix well wilh lhe presidency of Cenfury, and you have Jiggs. BEREN ICE GUTKOWSKI Allhough her nickname, Blondie, allies her +o our favorife Funny-paper characier, her pei' peeve keeps her our of Popeye's class. because she hafes spinach. Like Blondie she af- fecls up-To-The-minuie slyles. DONALD HANSEN Who buf Don could dislike con- ceifed girls wiih 'fhe same inlensiiy +ha+ he liked apple pie? An emblem winner in irack, a newsboy, and a fulure counselor-al-law, he was a very busy young man. LYDIA HAVLIK Wirh While Banners flying, Lydia will s+ar+ her career as a privaie secre- lary. Praciicing shorfhand wi'rh fre- quenf 'rime our for a piece of cake was her idea of having a wonderful lime. ELSIE I-IANSON Two D's has Blondie! Dramafics and dogs. Mask and Wig and The Cen- lury Lilerary sociely made one dream come True. And ye? she should be good al dog raising, loo, because Blondie already has a Ken L. LEONARD IGIELSKI Eagles is a doggy Tellowg you see he raises springer spaniels. NuTs To him is noT insulTing because ThaT's his TavoriTe food. Len also plays shaTs- kopT and dislikes kibiTzers. DOLORES HILBERT ATTer a sTrenuous evening OT swing- in' iT To The uTmosT oT her windabiliTy, Lolly is peeved aT geTTing up early in The morning. Required books wor- ried her inTenseIy unTiI she discovered The old formula, DoniT read 'em . JAMES HIPPERT Jimmy, solo corneTisT in The band, has hopes OT becoming America's number one swingoIogisT, especially wiTh beTTer music by Jim HipperT. He admiTs ThaT Two Things Take up his Time, his TrumpeT and a preTTy girl. ROBERT HOLTZ Any sporT appeals To him, buT bas- keTball is Tops. His only hobby is phoTography, which Takes up mosT OT his Time. ATTer graduaTion he hopes To secure a posiTion as a mechanical draTTsman and also To se- cure a blonde. IDA HELLER Well, well, so They call her Idaho! BeTTer sTill, she has The unique hobby oT making miniaTure shoes. In The lasT analysis, however, her inTeresT in biology will be The big TacTor in de- TerminaTing her liTe work. AL-RAY HYBICKI En gardel Weakly parrying The re- peaTed aTTacks oT creamed vegeTabIes and broiled veal, This Tencing devoTee lunges boldly Toward scienTiTic knowl- edge. Hand in hand wiTh his Tencing aspiraTions runs a yen Tor Dumas. LORRAINE HEMPEL If you walk wiTh your nose in The air, you would noT only be in danger oT bumping a posT, buT you'd oTTend one oT The sweeTesT and quieTesT girls in school. So-head downl VIRGINIA HJORT Every Time a Tire engine pounds pasT, Virginia rushes ouT To pracTice. You see, she's sTudying To be a siren like Hedy Lamarr. If she can'T do ThaT, she'lI sTudy sociology and voci- TeraTe on The debaTe Team. I ELAINE I-IJORTLAND I WanTed: one large TrouT To hook on To Elaine's Tishing pole. Will EaTher NepTune please accommodaTe The liTe-long ambiTion of This P. K. lPreacher's Kidl? MARY HOLDEN Even wiTh spinach as her TavoriTe Tood Mary will noT break a record, Tor her hobby is coIlecTing popular phonograph records. She inTends To sTudy occupaTionaI Therapy aT Mil- waukee-Downer. OSBORN HOLTON AlThough Trom Norway, Ozzie quick- ly adapTed himself To our way. Han- dling The gavel aT CenTury, The money aT Cardinal Boys' club, and debaTes aT Forum kepT This TuTure maThe- maTician in a consTanT Triangle. RUTH IMM Here's a Truly domesTic girl who can really cook-she worked in The cafe- Teria. RuTh likes pearls, Too, buT noT The kind ThaT develop in oysTers. She likes The ones used in kniTTing a sweaTer. 53 PHYLLIS JAKUBCZAK Wriling such lolly poelry as Mr. l-lanneman's and selling merchandise in his inimilable way are lhe aims ol lovely Phyllis. Bul chile and Seven- leen lill her lo heighls ol inspiralion. EDWARD JAN KOSKI To win lhe hearl ol lhis anli-iiller- bug iusl leed him some homemade lomalo soup. Jack London is his besl pal, because he never leases Ed aboul his prelly hair. LEONARD JASZEWSKI Chills race up and down Len's spine: his knees knock and his leelh challer when final exams loom. However, when il comes lo sociology, he leaps over lhe chasm of despair and lands on lhe shore ol ioy. ALICE JARZYNA A sporly miss is Penny. Eighl se- meslers ol gym have kepl her in con- dilion lo enioy all sporls, especially baskelball. For less slrenuous aclivily she reads and collecls unusual piclures. ROBERT JENDUSA 'f Xi, Row-berl wanls lo play G-man. Thugs, do nol hide. He is looking lor an ideal woman, a girl who can keep quiel. Cheerleading and band spoiled him: he wanls lo blow his own horn. Well, il pays lo adverlise. MAVIS JOHNSON Punchy had a snow-while dog lhal lollowed her lo school, bul he em- barrassed her less lhan did lhe lacl lhal she was lhe lasl lo lake her seal in A before roll call. Early lo bed, Punchyl 54 ERVIN JOHNS Devolion lo science has bred in Erv an accuracy lhal rellecls ilsell in sporls. Caplain of a championship baskelball leam, he also uses his hoop lechnique in landing newspapers on porches. CHARLOTTE JANIK Did you ever meel a girl who loves lo wash dishes? Toolsie is her name. Besides washing dishes she has a knack lor doing malhemalical problems and collecling recipes. HARRIET JAKUBOWSKI Jackie's soul delighled in English. She claimed il helped her wilh her cross-word puzzles. Wilh pearly while leelh and a Deanna Durbin smile she hopes lo lread lhe palh ol life lo a model's career. DOROTHY JANKOWSKI Ouivering iello, crowned wilh a snowy mounlain ol whipped cream, breaks down Dolly's aversion lo snob- bish people. Keys, whelher on a lypewriler or piano, lascinale her, reading and goll fill her lleeling momenls ol idleness. STELLA JAROSZEWSKI You could never lind Whiley wilh nolhing lo do: lor she enioys knilling, sewing, dancing, swimming, roller skal- ing, saleswork, and ollice work. She plans lo gel work as a sales clerk, as a slenographer, or as a laclory worker. RODNEY JOHNSON Gone lo music are all Rodney's lalenls and powers. Harmony lo him is lhe besl lhing in lile, lor il enables him lo symphonize or syncopale lhe musical lhoughls lhar race conlinually lhrough his mind. RUTH JOHNSON Sh-h-hl NOT here. RuTh was pro- gram censor of Cenfury. When play- ing sweeT music on The piano or cello, she was TransporTed from The cruel world of censorship inTo a land of fudge sundaes-celesfial blissl HERBERT KALLIES Under a spreading banana Tree wiTh a shorT-wave radio seT beside him is The spoT where Herb would be if he had his way. Even now, when The wires and baTTeries aren'T humming, he resorTs To Kipling. VIRGINIA KAMINSKI SecreTary of CenTury, lead in The class play, monifor of row I4, Buzzy made herself heard around school. Alfhough she proclaims her deTermina- Tion To remain a spinsTer, her hearT weakens aT The sighT of The sTruTTing male. LORNA KASDORF WhaT a leapl Lorna iusf wenT over a high iump. She dreams of being a mannikin and should succeed wifh ThaT flaming Top and friendly smile-if she doesn'T eaT Too much ice cream. JUNE KASTEN Calling all elecTric fans, calling all elecfric fans! WanTed-one slighT breeze To furTher 'l'orchy's ambiTion of being a second ScarleTT O'l-lara. l-low- ever, if her ambiTion goes wiTh The wind, we hope her face won'T be RheTT. NATHALIE KEN DZIE IT is hard To reconcile such vigorous acTiviTies as roller skaTing and Tennis wiTh quieT NaThalie. YeT she insisTs They delighf her and ThaT she loved office pracfice because iT was acfive. LORRAINE KAISER PhoTography, skafing, Tobogganing and reading, as wellas eafing breaded po'k chops, occupied a loT of Lor- raine's Time: buT she sTill managed To a+Tend Shield club, CenTury, and Girls' club. Busy girl, b'goshl PHYLLIS KALUZYNSKI Someday Phil hopes To replace BeaTrice Fairfax in giving advice To The lovelorn. Meanwhile she sTrug- gles wiTh her own problems and em- ploys her spare Time in looking up new words and definiTions in The dic- Tionary. ARTHU R KARAGANIES This suave youTh was presidenf of The Cardinal Boys' club and also The gay LoThario in The class play. fXrT's hobby is hunfing, and he hunTs bru- neTTes. l-le wanTs To be Top archiTecT among archiTecTs. PHYLLIS KASPRZYK l, Bufch whizzed on a gym floor, Tid- dled in The orchesfra, and wracked her brain for The Cardinal. l-ler biT for The class play was done as properTy girl. An imposing array for such a small bundle of vivacifyl EMIL KENDZIE Emil was The Goo Goo man of SouTh. Girls, if you wanT To raTe, don'T comb your hair or powder your nose when he's looking. Our Lochinvar loved hisTory-To learn whaT oTher people are accomplishing. GLADYS KENNEDY Jeepers, creepers, where'd you geT Those peeperslu mighf well apply To laughing, dark-eyed Gladys. WaiTing for a sTreeT car banishes The Twinkle, buT fried chicken brings iT back im- mediaTely. 55 JUDITI-I KENNEDY Judy Tinds naTural phenomena in- TeresTing. We hope she doesn'T make her Trombone TooTing a phenomenon To The neighbors. She's an ouTdoor enThusiasT and goes indoors only Tor Shakespeare. I-le's a loT To go in Tor. ROY KOCH Looky, looky, looky, here's anoTher Cooley. No, iT isn'T a bake-r's dream: iT's iusT Roy. WiTh a song, a girl, and iello lall Tlavorsl This TuTure radio Tenor is in his glory. VIRGINIA KLINKWITZ Musically inclined, Jeanie pracTices piano and violin in her deeper mo- menTsq buT when iT comes To relaxa- Tion, she likes noThing beTTer Than a Rohmer mysTery and banana cream pie or a swing orchesTra and a iiTTer- bug parTner. MARY KODRICI-I The bugs have iT. WheTher sTudying bugs in biology or imiTaTing Them on a dance Tloor, Mary enioys herselT. This graduaTe oT The sTenographic course also goes in Tor bowling and Tennis. FRANKLIN KONKEL While deTT Tingers and clever ideas won Frank a responsible iob on The Annual arT sTaTT, his happy humor won him Triends among TaculTy and sTudenTs. l-le was in all respecTs a regular guy. VIRGINIA KOPYDLOWSKI Jinny, movie-sTruck Tessie oT The class play, likes To delve deep inTo a hisTory book. Maybe iT's because she's inTeresTed in daTes. Dancing, swim- ming, and reading books abouT Tamous people are her peT pasTime acTiviTies. 56 ERVIN KIELMA ThaT proverbial EasTer bonneT is The bane oT Erv's exisTence, Tor women's haTs are his peT peeve. To geT away Trom Them, Erv, who is a mem- ber oT The sTage crew, builds and drives bobsleds. ALICE KORNACKI Alice's hobby is collecTing old coins. Don'T we all? To shock This gal called PeanuTs, ask her To wriTe a Theme: To make her mouTh waTer, menTion sTraw- berry shorTcake. BEVERLY KOLB Bev sTruck a nice balance beTween musical and social inTeresTs, Tor she was secreTary oT band and TacToTum OT Girls' club. ThereTo she added a wholesome parTicipaTion in sporTs and a love of maThemaTics. FRANK KIPI-IART T CompleTely sold on The ouTdoor Iife, Frank is deTermined To become a ToresTer or a Tarmer. When we re- member him in English class, we won- der whom he'll argue wiTh Then. The wiTe, perhaps? DOROTHY KOPYDLOWSKI A quieT girl is DoroThy who inTends some day To Travel. She prepared her- selT in school by Taking hisTory and by reading books oT advenTure. She also enioys Iisfening To The radio and going roller skaTing. STAN LEY KLATKIEWICZ Wham! Nag iusT popped ouT in The baseball proTession. We're sling- ing balls of luck aT him TasT and Turi- ously. LeT him noT TorgeT To connecT wiTh a home run Tor success. We're rooTin' Tor him. BERNICE KRAFCI-IECK A crunch and a crackle ol pages. Aha! lhal's Bernice munching polalo chips and reading Of Human Bond- age. And she's holding oul on a deep, dark secrel. ls he dark, Bernice, and handsome? BETTY KOTLAREK Girl Scoul Belh hopes lhe lille ol caplain will be allached lo her name. No wonder. She mel her hearl lhrob al a scoul meeling, bul he musl share her love wilh sporls and chop suey. DOROTHY KRAWCZYK Found! A girl who did her home- work wilhoul lhe aid ol a radio! Long walks and a good book look up Dorl's lime when she wasn'l slruggling wilh an algebra problem or digging inlo a lruil salad. DOLORES KROLIKOWSKI Do, a member ol lhe Girls' club and Polish club, delesls people who lalk loudly in public places. She delighls in ealing luscious slrawberry shorl cake or in reading exciling novels. ELEANOR KU BACK! Blondes aren'l so dumb. Trained lor secrelarial work and having re- ceived excellenl grades, loo, lhis liny bundle ol elliciency indulges in skal- ing, lennis, dancing, and hiking lor paslime. CHRISTINE KU FEL l-low Bulch came lo be her nick- name remains a myslery. One lhing is cerlain, however: Chrisline delighls in viewing lhe cinema slars, preferably wilhoul lhe accompanimenl ol gum chewers. Scrapbooks fill her spare lime. MARCELLA KOSAK Tooler's noles run up lhe scale when she calls lor cheese lorle. Nexl is her desire lor a Kay Francis wardrobe wilh originalily as lhe keynole. Page lviarcella's lairy godmolher. STANLEY KOZINSKI A llash! An illuminaled zigzag slreaks lhrough lhe halls. ll's Lighlning in person. ln addilion lo circulaling The Cardinal weekly he enioys punch- ing keys and pushing levers in ollice praclice. DORRIS KRATSCH Honey Chile look speech because il helped her lo overcome nervousness: yel she had poise enough lo model and do exhibilion dancing. She hales being lorced lo do anylhing. STANLEY KROLICKI To K. K., chicken soup, a book by Roberl Louis Slevenson, and lyping and shorlhand are all O.K. l-le obiecls lo boys calling him K. K., bul how aboul lhe girls? MARJORIE KRUSICK Take a brillianl chemislry sludenl wilh a craze lor collecling pholo- graphs and a lailhlul member ol lhe iillerbug clan who linds Sevenlh Heaven iusl loo, loo- Pul lhem logelher, and lhey spell lviariorie. MABEL KUETHER When Mibsy isn'l sewing or reading, she's picking hersell up lrom lhe lloor. Roller skaling is hard lo learn, isn'l il? Bul all's well when some one consoles her wilh a hamburger, her lavorile lood. 57 STELLA KUZMA Oh, whaT a girl is STah-shahl Every- Thing Trom poTaTo pancakes To Brew- ers' auTographs and The Mill on The Floss hold a viTaI inTeresT Tor her. O WordsworThI Thou shouIdsT be living aT This hourl CHESTER KUMELSKI TwenTy years hence ThaT spoT on The wall mighT be CheT if chemisTry con- Tinues To inTeresT him. Baseball and Tennis, sTamp coIIecTing and STevenson Take up mosT oT his spare Time. VICTORIA KUPCZAK She geTs along wiTh you quiTe well. Oh, yes, she does. Vickie and her shorThand are inseparable pals. BuT BooTh TarkingTon, skaTing, and dancing come in Tor Their share OT her aTTec- Tion, Too. ERVIN KUSMIEREK School acTiviTies didn'T inTeresT him aIThough he liked To phoTograph Them. I-Ie didn'T Take an acTive parT in sporTs buT had inTeresTs oT oTher sorTs. I-Ie goT many pokes Tor cracking unfunny iokes. ELINOR KUSSEROW Carefully combing her curls is sweeT Elinor's avocaTion. Gloomy days Tind her indoors reading The Good EarTh or embroidering. Clear nighTs find her ouT-of-doors on her way To dance or To see a movie. ERMINA KWINT When noT engrossed in waTching a baseball game, Erma is oTTen Tound sunk deep in The easiesT chair around. She usually has a bag of pop-corn in one hand and a WashingTon Irving book in The oTher. 58 JOSEPH KUMBERA Cake exciTes Joe's salivary glands. Being inTerrupTed exciTes his anger. The CounT oT MonTe CrisTo exciTes his imaginaTion. GuiTar music exciTes his Tingers. An exciTing boy. ERWIN KU NATH PheasanTs, beware! Buddy is already smacking his lips in anTicipaTion. WiTh ThaT melodious voice oT his he'II lure you on, and popl you're p. v. Ia pIaTTer vicTiml. RICHARD KU PPER Ladies, make up your minds, ad- monishes Dickie. I-Iowever, he'lI Tor- give buT noT TorgeT anyone who can Turn ouT a humdinger poTaTo salad. NexT in his esTimaTion rank The works oT Shakespeare. Ah! JOSEPH KU RYLO This modesl' young presidenT of The Science club and sTar hurdler oT The Track Team wishes To be an aviaTor. Seems Tunny-peculiar, buT he burns when anyone splashes cold waTer on him in The shower. PENTTI KUUSINEN PuTTI PUTTI Weighf liTTing, Track, and blondes are PenTTi's Thrills: ques- Tions, his peT peeve. To be a corn- mercial arTisT is his aim in IiTe, and he does love pineapplel JOHN KULINSKI IT aids reasoning, is John's de- Tense oT maThemaTics. Spare momenTs Tind him sTamp colIecTing or enioying Zane Grey's WesTerns. STrawberry shorTcake sweeTens his TasTe aTTer sour iokes. NORMAN LAACK PresidenT of Newsboys' club, Norm preTers Zane Grey's novels To ladies' haT sTyles. When he isn'T sTudying girls, a sul9iecT he never hopes To masTer, he's dancing or swinging a racqueT. JUNE LEMANSKE Versafile, indeed, are The acTiviTies of June: Tor They include LaTin club, economics, wriTing verses, and spa- gheTTi. WhaTl No aThleTics? Oh, yes, spagheTTi! HERMAN LANGE This curly-headed, daydreaming youTh likes swimming, archery, and ping pong. He was graduaTed from The maTh course, buT physics was his besT subiecT. He is a Triend To all boys and The idol oT all girls: his hair geTs 'em. SOPHIE LATAWIEC Remember The girl who had a cheer- ful smile Tor everyone? RighTl IT was Sophie. Her oTher accomplishmenTs included everyThing Trom cooking To wriTing poeTry and Trom sewing To Tap dancing. EDWARD LADWIG Edward was an old Timer aT SouTh. l-le had seen many Treshman classes come and senior classes go, buT he couldn'T seem To Tind The combinaTion To Their success. Ladwig was a nu- meral winner oT '35, HILKKA LAITILA AlThough born in Tar-away Finland, Hickey has Tound happiness here and a place in The hearfs oT her Triends. Our greaT American dish, hoi' dogs, is her TavoriTe Tood: and pedaling miles on a bike, her TavoriTe pasTime. LORRAINE LEMBKE IT Lorraine Tinds herselT aT The ver- Tex of a modern Triangle, her knowl- edge oT maTh will solve The problem. So Tar she's been winning her love on a Tennis courT and has hopes oT bag- ging The girls' Tennis championship. LEWIS LARSON Lewis, beTTer known as Louie, was The direcTor in The senior class play. He walked around yelling aT every- Thing and Talking To noThing and no- body, iusl' like a real direcTor. BERNARDINE LANG-E Bernardine liked English because iT proved ThaT some people can wriTe Things oThers enioy. For one who emulaTes The Dormouse, she has chosen sTrenuous amusemenTs, Tennis, TooT- ball, and Truckin'. DOROTHY LANG Boys wiTh bad manners irlc her: swimming in a pool delighTs her: choc- olaTe ice cream TempTs her: neverThe- less, none oT These diversions Takes her mind oTT Lanny Ross. Can'T some one else do iT? X RUSSEL LEFEVRE Russ is as corny as They come: ThaT is, we mean To say ThaT he likes corn on The cob. Yassuhl Tresh Trom The Tield. Cardinal as in Boys' club is Tine, says Russ: buT cardinal as in girls' cheeks, Aw nuTs . KENNETH LENTZ Crashl Bangl Clang! Red's warm- ing up on his big bass drum, ready To swing ouT in rhyThm. BUT he prompT- ly Torgoi' Gene Krupa when his edi- Torial duTies on The Annual called Tor his aTTenTion. 59 DAN LESTER A clash ol words and slarlling lacls in a rocking debale served lo sellle Dan's reslless spiril. And he lripped lhe lighl lanlaslic wilh remarkable skill. Such an energelic youngsler is bound lo win his case. FLORENCE LEWANDOSKI Snip! Cul! Pasle! lnlo Florence's scrapbook goes a piano, lypical ol her lalenl. On page lwo are pine- apple sundaesq page lhree, books: page lour, radios, and page live, her pel peeve, slang expressions. RICHARD LEWANDOWSKI Knock! Knock! ll's only Richie prac- lising in lhe school ol salesmanship. Wilh his soll melodious guilar he will be able and lhen loisl his wares on unsus- lo serenade his cuslomers pecling viclims. The villain! DOROTHY LEWAN DOWSKI Sleeped in Dickens, Dorolhy linds il easy lo correspond wilh an English lriend who keeps her inlormed aboul lhe dillerences belween English and American lile. Hail Brilannia, Dol! ROBERT LITZAU A genlleman ol all genllemen is Roberl Francis. He enioys physics bul shrinks lrom algebra. When nol riding his bicycle or playing lennis, he dreams ol an airplane piIol's license or ol a loresler's lookoul lower. FAITH LUEBKE Lovely lo look al and delighllul lo know is lhis slar reporler lor The Vileekly, slall member ol lhe Annual, vice-presidenl ol Girls' club, and lreas- urer ol Mask and Wig. Failh ponders Emerson's essays and revels in inlricale malh problems. 60 SYLVIA LESNIAK This candid camera liend is sure lo click in any clique. Having clicked on lhe Annual arl slall, she shol un- suspecling viclims-by laking lheir piclures. The scallawag! Where is she hiding now? We'd like lo lind her, loo! PATRICIA LEUTHNER When Pal's ship comes in, she's going lo have Lloyd her payroll lo wrile her. Meanwhile she wholesome lhings as ming, and wriling lor C. Douglas on books iusl lor has done such reading, swim- lhe Annual. LORRAINE LEWANDOWSKI Thal clicking? Lorraine's lypewriler. She made records lor speed and accu- racy lrom lhe lime she began lo lype. She's nol only a sweel kid bul an inlelligenl one as well. And how she did work lor lhe Annual! HAROLD LONN Round and round he goes. Nol only is his head spinning in geomelric circles, bul il whirls round lhe six- day bike races loo, as a speclalor ol course. If polalo pancakes were sold like hamburgers, he would never be hungry. ANGELINE LOBRACO Presenling Angeline, graduale ol household arls, who is skilled in lhe inlricale science ol keeping a home. When nol busy in lhe kilchen, she scurries around in pursuil ol lhe elusive dusl speck. Good hunling, Angie! I ERWIN LUTHER ' Shrimp Lulher, lulure chemisl, enioys music. The German, Chess, and Boys' clubs helped make his school days more pleasanl. When nol reading The Crisis, he wraps himsell in llalian spaghelli. MARJORIE LUTZKE WiTh an English complexion and a Tlair Tor creaTing her own cloThes, Margie should be a huge success aT The dancing parTies she so adores. I-ler serious momenTs are devoTed To English. JEAN Iv1ac6REGOR I-IooT mon! This wee Iassie deTies The ThriTT oT The ScoTch and Treely spends her Time in sleeping. Take care ye dinna say, So whaT? , Tor she doesna like iT. Laddies, she craves an emblem! JOSEPH LUZAR Joey is an ardenT lover of music. AIThough he has masTered The piano accordion, his TuTure does noT lie in This Tield. I-lis ambiTion is To become a grocer. AT presenT he is a scala- wag. H. F. MURIEL MANKE Timid songbird ThaT Muriel is, she's capable oT Tlying inTo a rage when a girl wears ankle socks wiTh high-heeled shoes. Don'T IeT iT Trouble you Too much, Muriel. Girls will be girlsl ERVIN MATUSZEWSKI I-lo-huml I-lusky's ambiTion is To be a poeT. BuT, alas, wriTing Themes is his peT peeve. Can his Themes be geTTing verse? Don'T shooT: we sur- renderl VICTOR MATI-IEA Among all The sporTs, Track and TooT- ball Tickled Vic mosT. I-le can also Tickle his accordion keys To produce sweeT music. Noisy girls in The sTudy hall irriTaTe him, louT he can concen- TraTe on a pork chop anywhere. WALTER MAJCI-IER This TuTure engineer has bridged his high school course in Three years. A member oT The sTage crew, Wally spenT his Time drawing Tloor plans and machinery plaTes as well as sTage curTains. WILLIAM MACI-IAN A bariTone player was Bill. I.asT spring he Took second prize in The music TournamenT. This spring he capTured a place in The all-ciTy senior band. NexT spring he hopes To com- pleTe The symphony wiTh a preTTy girl. ADELINE MALINOWSKI STruTTing along The corridors and displaying SouTh's TickeT-sale emblem is our super-saleswoman. FooTbaII, danc- ing, and hiking are her TavoriTe sporTsg and her hobbies are making Triends, eaTing hamburgers, and lapping up chocolaTe sundaes. DORIS MALSACK For her vocaTion Dorrie has chosen To become a nurse. BuT Tor her own pleasure she's rarin' To go places, Thumbing her way To advenTure, espe- cially if The road leads To a shrimp salad. SYLVIA MASTELERSKI ConTrary womanl Slivers loved physics because iT was The easiesl' subiecl' To TorgeT. Never mind, Sylvia, mosT peopIe's memories are The Things They TorgeT wiTh. PEARL MANN Swimming in a crysTal blue lake, hiking, and bike riding under The sTarry summer skies keep This curly- haired, blue-eyed Daisy busy. A heap- ing plaTe oT cream puTTs makes her eyes sparkle. 6 I INEZ McCARTHY Charlie's honors included offices in Girls' club and Girls' G-lee club, and membership on The Weekly sfaff where she skefched faifhful pen porfraifs of her classmafes. Her charm will assure her of ever-increasing disfincfion. EUGENE McCULLOUGl-I Gene, as fhis good-looking lrish- man is commonly called by his friends, is a greaf sporfsman. He excels in ping pong, baskefball, baseball, and skafing: buf fhe sporf which demands mosf of his affenfion is fennis. LILLIAN MEN KE To fhe sfamp collecfor we recom- mend fhe sfamps from Lillian's mail. Pen pals in England, lreland, lfaly, and even Soufh Africa keep her busy. We hope her sfudies af Deaconess hospifal do nol' diminish her corre- spondence. GLADYS MERKEL ' Gladys hopes fo be direcfor of a social cenfer. To prove her abilify she offers a love of singing and danc- ing. This finy senior hafes people who call her Shrimp: yef, her favorife food is shrimp salad. BETTY JANE MITCHELL Cufl shoufs fhis pefife bruneffe, of fhe class play, willingly fry again. assisfanf direcfor and her profeges Sh-h, fake if from us. A bowl of hof chile will melf fhis woman's cold hearf any fime. EDNA MILLER Meef fhe singing mermaid, who is fhe proud owner of a Red Cross life- saving emblem. Pefife Eddie pasfes her friends during her spare fime--in her picfure album! 62 JEAN MAUGER lf's Paris in spring for some, bui if's fennis in spring for Jifferbug Jean, wifh swimming in summer, foboggan- ing in winfer, and hobbycrafl' all year round. You can always bribe her wifh a buffer pecan sundae. ARTHUR MCCURDY Desisf. Speak nof of your girl friend when Arf is around. If irks him. However, playing fhe sousa- phone and being librarian of fhe band quife compensafe him for any foolish chaffer. ELENOR MEISNER Mademoiselle Zorina may soon have fo play second fiddle fo la ballerina Elenor in fhe world of fhe popular ballef. Tall, slender, and graceful, Bunny was prominenf af Soufh as a dancer and a fumbler. LEONARD MODLlNSKl Wifh fhe aid of mechanical drawing Len will be able fo build his bridges before he comes fo fhem. Af presenf he is merely inferesfed in drawing a slice of iuicy meaf loaf fo bridge fha? hungry feeling. ANITA MITSCHKA Beware! Don'f disfurb Ani+a's fhoughfs while she gazes upon her daring celluloid hero. However, for a bowl of chile she would even refuse fo glance his way. For how long, we wonder? EVA MOEHLE The gal wifh fhe confagious giggle -fhaf's Liffle Eva. She-'ll giggle for you all fhe fime if you'll supply her wifh bowls of chile or gef her a well- paying iob when she leaves school. DOROTHY MUELLER Nursing and ping pong combine sTrangely To Torm DoT's vocaTion and avocaTion. Her yen Tor hisToric plays makes us wonder how she is on daTes. The pracTical value oT LaTin ranks iT TirsT on her hif parade. LEONARD MOHR A sporTsman if ever There was one! Bicycling, Track, swimming, boaTing, and TooTball Till all of Len's spare minuTes. His TooTball numeral reioices his hearT. A knowledge OT auTomobile parTs supplies him wiTh diversion. DOLORES NAREWSKI Golden brown French Tried poTaToes casT sunny beams inTo The corners OT Nocky's mouTh. More sunbeams dance when This sporT enThusiasT is reading a book by Mary RoberTs RineharT. WILLIAM MURRAY Here's The chap who makes girls' hearTs do carTwheels, who wisecracked his way inTo The play, who won The oraTorical in school and sTaTe. He sees The movies when he has money and would adore bowling if he knew how. Up, Bill, and bow. MARY MURPHY Mary, known To her Triends as Murph, enioys ThaT popular acTiviTy, sleeping. She simply haTes To have her peaceTul dreams disTurbed and charges ThaT The coTs in The inTirmary were mosT comTorTable. GERALDINE MURRAYL Feel ThaT wind! ThaT was Geraldine going down The aisle. Time: 8:3l. NoT only has she music in her soul buT also in her soles. Jerry, secreTary oT The band, dances divinely To a dreamy walTz. JOHN Slap! muscles MOSINSKI Slap! Moses sTraighTened kinky Tor The aThleTes. As manager of TooTball and Track, he rubbed ouf many an ache. ln addiTion, he sooThed The boys wiTh a song in his low, croon- ing voice. LUCY NIEDZIALKOWSKI The adiecTive conservaTive TiTs Lucy. She lives quieTly and reads much. NeiTher a socieTy girl nor an aThleTe, she would be happiesT wifh a dominanT man or wiTh one of inTellecTual TasTes. Lines Torm righT and leTT. JEAN MUNZER Buzz shows a preference Tor physics. because iT explains The why oT com- monplace Things. However, blondes are noT commonplace To him, Tor he can'T undersTand The why of Them. MARGOT N ESS Coming Trom Norway, seeing The midnighT sun, and gazing aT The sky- scrapers of New York may be The reasons why MargoT likes To Travel. ln addiTion To skaTing, her spare Time is spenT in reading advenTure and mysTery sTories. WALLACE MUEHL Here's a boy who really plays The saxaphone. Cob-Webs won TirsT prize in The STaTe Music TesTival. NoT con- TenT wiTh ThaT, he won TirsT, second, and Third places in The DisTricT Music TesTival. WALTER MUTH l-le's Popeye, The sailor man, Tor he regularly eaTs his spinach, and his TavoriTe hobby, sporT, and leisure Time acTiviTy is boxing. He preTers his Olive Oyls wiThouT make-up. 63 I-lEDWlG NIEDZIEJKO WiTh a leTT hook To key G and a righT To key Y, l-ledy punches The TypewriTer wiTh liTTle Tear oT a punch in reTurn. ln The TuTure she hopes To keep on hiTTing The righT keys-as a singer. MARGARET NIKORA Nicka may some day become a greaT invenTor because she likes To Tinger machines. Bicycling, horseback riding, and dress designing are her TavoriTe leisure Time acTiviTies. GEORGE ORDANEFF Two loves has OrphandorTTer, physics and chess. l-lasenpTeTTer and phoTog- raphy raTe second wiTh him. As sergeanT-aT-arms oT The Cardinal Boys' club he served in The capaciTy of oTTicial bouncer. RUTH OLSHESKE Behind Those Two dark Twinkling eyes reasons a keen mind, which made RuThie a TavoriTe wiTh Teachers and sTudenTs. This Tormer presidenT oT Los Amigos doTes on Spanish and hamburgers. LORRAINE OSBORNE ShorT and snappy buT always in Tune-ThaT's Lorraine in a peanuT shell. A whirl oT dancing, a dash oT shorT- hand, and a TasTe oT The mysTeries oT Poe consTiTuTe her perTecT clay. 'Ow does she do iT? MARJORIE OTTO Know how To paddle? we asked. Oh, yes, quoTh she and proved iT. ln Two seconds we were drenched. Besides her skill in canoeing, This lass is a champion aT Tudge making, skaT- ing, and ioking. 64 LORRATNE NIERS Lorry noT only swings To The Tune, VarieTy ls The Spice oT LiTe, buT she lives up To iT. GraduaTing Trom The elecTive course, which oTTers varieTy, she's going To The College ol: Music To swing up The ladder OT success. MARIE NOWAK Hello, CenTral, give me a line. ln The TuTure The cheery-voiced operaTor who geTs your number may Turn ouT To be Marie. Giggles is her nick- name: we wonder how she goT iT. EVELYN OLBINSKI Every morning aT eighT Evie Took command oT The inTirmary. As They marched by-nicks, knocks, bruises, or sore heads-all were TreaTed by This compeTenT person who aspires To be- come a regisTered nurse. ELEANORE NOWICKI Eleanore is known To her Triends as Ginger. Somehow ThaT name seems To TiT her, Tor she is snappy, always happy, and heaps oT Tun To be wiTh. ShorThand and Typing are a parT of her naTure. ARLENE O5lvlAl.OSKl She's escaped! For all The years oT her life Arlene has gone unnicknamed. The head OT such a Tormal maiden can'T be Turned by Tancy phrases or Tiowery praises, She iusT doesn'T like TlaTTery. LORRAINE PAESCHKE Smile and Lorraine smiles wiTh you. Be selTish and she'II leave you alone. Dancing and skaTing make her liTe a ioyTul experience. Frenchie's design Tor living is To design her own cloThes. SHIRLEY PAPLACZYK Lee is a versaTile humorisT as well as an inveTeraTe bookworm. She hopes To marry a docTor who will cheerTully pay her Tines on overdue library books. DELORES PARADOWSKI Dodo's greaT ambiTion lies in drama- Tics, buf The CiTadel, a couple oT ham- burgers, and a band playing Deep Purple conTenT her excepT on winTry nighTs: Then a movie sTarring Tyrone Power is The Thing. BERNICE PARSKE Nicky was probably The only vice- presidenT in exisTence who had a loT To say. She held her posiTion in Forum. Besides, she is The dream girl oT every young man. She can sew and iron, buT mainly she can cook and bake. BEVERLY PELKOFER Pudgy's ambiTion is To become very compeTenT in Taking shorThand dicTa- Tion. Work hard, Beverly. Someday you may be sTar secreTary To The handsome sTar whose picTure you gaze aT so longingly now. LEONA PICK In her dream casTle Picksie sees noT a Prince Charming louT a dress shop. Here she will spend her hours in designing, sewing, and doing her own bookkeeping. Such ambiTionl We hope iT's noT merely a TanTasy. RAYMOND PELT STrange, wasn'T iT, ThaT a graduaTe of The hisTory course would raTher have worked in a woodwork class? Appar- enfly he preTers To learn his hisTory incidenTally - Trom sTamp collecTing, noT Trom hisTory books. EDITH PAGENKOPF WiTh chorus her TavoriTe subiecT and her spare Time spenT in sTruTTing her sTuTT as a mannikin, This enThu- siasTic miss will creaTe herselT a new iob as a singing model. l-Ter greaTesT delighTs are making Tudge and eaTing iT. ALICE PARES SenTimenTal maidens do noT raTe wiTh Alice. She's all Tor The vigorous liTe and hopes To casT her loT wiTh The Women's AThleTic associaTion. For inTellecTual exercise she reads The Mill on The Floss. CATHERINE PAWLOWSKI STaTely and Tall, KaTie won us all wiTh her quieT charm. STeak wiTh onions and The CounT oT lvlonTe CrisTo, however, have won her. ConquesTs are so variousl LAWRENCE PIEK Pieky loves To Talk and goT his chance as The loquacious DirecTor I-lenshaw in The class play. LaTin was his TavoriTe subiecT. Perhaps he TelT ThaT English wasn'T suTTicienTly Torce- Tul Tor his verbal explosions. ROSE PESZCZEK Blue Eyes would love To Till The air wiTh lilTing melodies as soloisT wiTh a well-known orchesTra. ln TacT, she'll gladly sing Tor a supper oT breaded pork chops any day. LORRAINE PIOTROWIAK Oh, To be an acTressl is Lannie's Theme song. She had a parT in The senior class play and in a radio skiT. She walked Through our halls wiTh books in her arms-books ThaT were way overdue. 65 FLORENCE PIVONKA A conTirmed iiTTerbug is This gradu- aTe oT The sTenographic course. Flo- de-do can dance, read, and Take shorThand-buT can she cook? She'll have To if she wanTs To win ThaT Tall, dark man. DOROTHY POKORA This Garbo doesn'T vanT To be alone: she is very acTive in social and dramaTic clubs. A iuicy sTeak smoTh- ered in onions is her TavoriTe sTage properTy when she is casT as a dinner guesT. DOROTHY PON I EWAZ Can dancing be The reason DOT is such a liTTle miTe? WhaT an inTecTious smile The girl hasl One look aT Ihaf sweeT Tace, and we grin like Cheshire caTs Trying To be like her. JOE POTOCHNIK Our pasT TooTball varsiTy end and TuTure civil and chemical engineer loves The chicken soup ThaT only moTher can make. He oughT To know someThing abouT The arT oT cooing since his hobby is raising pigeons. GEN EVIEVE PRAWDZIK Gen iusT can'T decide whaT she's going To be and why, buT she does know she likes spagheTTi. TalkaTive boys and girls are her peT peeve. Tsk, Tsk, and we do so like To Talk! HELEN PRITZLAFF A long-sTemmed beauTy is PreTzel, who Turns eager eyes To whiTe caps and uniTorms in her TuTure wardrobe. OT course, she won'T wear Them always. WiTh baking bread as her hobby she's sure To win a hubby. 66 NORBERT POZNANSKI A Tall, dark, shy caballero, This presidenT of Los Amigos. He spends much of his Time Talking Spanish To people who can'T undersTand him. To keep him conTenTed a class in hisTory wiTh a TavoriTe Teacher would do perTecTly. CATHERINE POCIECHA She is a reading enThusiasT. Her FaTher's DaughTer is her 'FaTher's daughTer's TavoriTe book. No swing or iiTTerbugging Tor This serious young lady. ln her TavoriTe sociology, she mosT enioyed The sTudy OT man! RICHARD POPEK Bing, To The Tellas, hopes someday To become a singing sTar of The eTher waves. He is an enThusiasTic speech sTudenT because iT will help him Tace The world beTore a microphone. MARGARET PRICE Icy gives 'em The cold shoulder. Ham, her TavoriTe pasTime, should be neiTher roasTed nor half-baked buT musT be well done. Ferris wheels enThraIl her, buT aT hearT she's iusT a liTTle iiTTerbug. RALPH PREY In his gas model airplane he's riding high buT may ride higher and drop lower when he Takes up aviaTion in The Tall. He Took OTT in The class play Try-ouTs and landed The parT oT Rosy RosenblaTT. SOPHIE PLUTA ChapTers OT her TavoriTe novel served wiTh chocolaTe sundaes give The moniTor of row II a TasTe OT heaven. Her scholarship has kepT To a sTeady honor course Through her years oT high school. ALICE RATKOWSKI While reading her TavoriTe book, Al Tunnels inTo a delecTable mounTain oT ice cream, and presTo, This luscious solid disappears. Aha, a TuTure sTe- nographer moves a mounTainl JAMES RADDATZ Jim scales The heighTs aT six TeeT Tour and aTTribuTes all To choco- laTe candy. The inTricacies oT me- chanical rnovemenTs TascinaTe him. In accord wiTh These preTerences he has planned his liTe work. DOROTHY PU LVERMACHER There was no place like The band room, and noThing like playing scales, giggled Giggles. Do, re, mi, Ta, sol'S, and oTher queer buT TascinaTing sounds emerged daily Trom her clarineT dur- ing pracTice. ALLEN PRIVATT Chugl Chugl Engineer PrivaTT aT The wheel. Models oT Trains are his nighTly dreams: braggarTs, his peT peeve: corned beeT is his TavoriTe once a week: and Leo Edward's series, all he reads. LEONA RETZER Lee creaTes appeTizing dishes and proudly displays her kniTTing. This social reTormer plans To be a good SamariTan and help Those who can'T help Themselves. Don'T TorgeT To help yourselT, Too, Lee. RAYMOND RAPPA WheTher iT's dropping his Tishing line inTo cool, deep waTers or hunTing in crisp, auTurnn air, Ray Tinds pleasure in iT. ln sTudying sociology he Tinds pleasure in a milder degree. JOSEPH PROCEK Girls! Joe's moTher has done one oT you a good Turn. She made him do housework. ThaT was preparing him well To make some girl a good husband some day. PHYLLIS PRZYBYLSKI ln dancing, Phyllis is deTiniTely anTi- iiTTerbug. Her TavoriTe book is MagniTicienT Obsession, buT Mr. Hanne- man's poems are a sTupendous obses- sion wiTh her. ln The laTTer you're noT alone. SHIRLEY RAMUS NoT only did Shirl earn herselT a iunior liTe saving emblem, buT she Threw The Annual a liTe belT when she volunTeered To help Type The mounT- ing waves oT copy ThaT Threafened To engulT The sTaTT. RUTH RADSKE Even Though RuThie loves To make candy, no nickname sTicks To her. During leisure momenTs she reads comics or serials. ln preparaTion Tor The business world, This sTenographer Took commercial subiecTs. RUTH REITER SOS RuTh's calling Tor a millionaire who can spare her such drudqery as work. Physics TascinaTed her, buT she was happiesT when her TeeT beaT oul' The rhyThm of The laTesT song hif, or when There was a call To Come and geT iT! LA VERN RENNPFERD Swimming in a clear, blue lake or diving wiTh relish inTo a bowl oT chop suey are equally delighTTul To This aTTracTive senior. To TloaT inTo an oTTice iob aTTer graduaTion is her peT arnbiTion. 67 x ALICE ROBAKOWSKI ' A liTe OT rusTling uniTorms, sTarched caps, and The odor oT eTher beckon ash-blond Alice. She can be seduced Trom surgery, however, wiTh a plaTe of sTeaming spagheTTi or an operaTic aria. IRENE ROPELEWSKA WiTh Polish club acTiviTies, poTaTo salad, and Tennis Taking up some oT her Time, Blondie also Tinds pleasure in dancing and reading. FurThermore, she was hisTorian Tor The Polish club. CHESTER RUPINSKI Come on, all you maThemaTiciansl Add Deanna Durbin To all blonds: subTracT one blond, Mae WesT: and your sum will equal Pinky's chieT inTer- esT in life. Do you blame him Tor wanTing To go To sea? WANDA SAN EK Always on The go are These Tive TeeT OT dynamic energy. The vice- presidenT oT Polish club is a skaTing and swimming enThusiasT. To relieve The Tension oT work on The Annual, This devoTee OT Paderewski Tickles The ivories. ESTHER RYSTICKEN SkaTing, dancing, swimming, and waTching baseball and TooTball games appeal To EsTher. She can sTand almosT anyThing excepT razzing abouT her laTesT hearTbeaT. We're aTraid you'll iusT have To grin and lisTen. ALBIN RUTKOWSKI Algebra, geomeTry, Trigonomelrry, bingo! And Bingo cerTainly wins. WiTh his knowledge c-T numbers, he's noT aT all supersTiTious abouT being rnoniTor oT row I3, Warning, girls! I-Ie's sure To geT your number. 68 CECILIA ROGOWSKI I-lave you ever asked Cecilia To Tell you abouT herself? WiTh a smile lurking all The Time and wiTh ThaT ially Twinkle in her eyes, she smilingly answers, l'm Frank abouT all Things . CARL RULLMANN IT silence were golden, Carl would be a millionaire. Beside his sTrong and silenT acT, he specialized in cab- ineTmaking and was elecTrician oT The sTage crew. Shockingl lsn'T iT? VIRGINIA ROSSMANN Give her The B, The I, The N, The G. The O. Yes sir, give her bingo. WiTh a liH'le porker lher booTy Trom The gamel sizzling in The pan, Ginger is conTenT To digesT The Tales OT Pearl S. Buck. DOROTHY RYBACKI I I-leyl I-Iool Swingaroolu sings This human cyclone, Truckin' on down The avenoo. She may go inTo business, buT her hearT lies in The WesT. FORREST SAN DOW DoTing on ice cream and moping over bi-crevassed iokes, Forry delves inTo The why and whereTore oT ma- chines by The painTul process of dis- sembling. Is ThaT why physics is Tops with This piscaTorialisT? REGINA RZECZKOWSKI I-lm! Reggie is an arTisT in more ways Than one. TalenT won her The viceepresidency oT l-lobbycraTT and a place on The Annual arT sTaTT, buT TasTe won her The crown in cake baking. ESTI-IER SKIBA IT you're looking Tor sweeTness and simpliciTy, you'll Tind iT in The sixTy- Tour inches oT EsTher. She expecTs To become a sTenographer wi'I'h a iob, an oTTice, a boss, and The usual Tollow-up, dicTaTion. AUDREY SCI-IMIDT If you meeT SchmuTsie in The cor- ridors, and she muTTers, Fill her up, don'T worry. She's pracTicing Tor her debul' as a gasoline aTTendanT. She also claims ThaT sewing has iTs Tine poinTs. And howl EDITH SCHUTZ Snookum's pei' peeve is people who have peT peeves. AIThough her Tavor- iTe subiecT is lunch, she is inTeresTed in music, having sung The lead in The opereTTa and Tripped The lighT Tan- TasTic in The class play. ADELINE SELIN IT Adeline accomplishes her aim, we'II have a Lady HaIIibur+on and a good SamariTan rolled inTo one. Her knowledge oT hisTory inspires her To Travel, her obiecTive is To be a nurse among The Iepers. GLADYS SCHATTSCH N EI DER To puT The glad in Gladys give her a dish oT spagheTTi and a book by Sinclair Lewis, or Tour yards oT silk, The IaTesT dress paTTern, needle, Thread. and scissors, WiTh The laTTer she mighT also Trim her lasT name. ZELDA SKEBO Mi-mi-mi-mil Up and down The scale runs The silvery voice of Prima Donna Zelda. Because she ambled Through The corridors slow as molasses in January and aTe her leisure hours away, we nicknamed her Pokey-Porky. RAYMOND SCI-IENK English is Ray's TavoriTe subiecT aIThough he's a boTanisT aT hearT. A second Burbank, he graTTs Trees and cross-pollinaTes Tlowers. Through care- Tul coaxing and pruning, he sprouTed up in The class play as Pa MonTague. GERTRU DE SCI-IOENEELDER You'll know G-erTie by her sparkling smile and red hair. This Daisy Mae should be a grand pal Tor some Li'l Abner lspelled ArTl, Tor They have one Thing in common, pork chops. WALTER SEN KOWSKI If you heard Larry play his saxo- phone and didn'T gel' iiTTery, you made a hir wiTh him. ATTer a wresTling bouT This Tollower oT S. S. Van Dine relaxed wiTh a hisTory book. LENORE SKALECKE LisTen, World! Can you believe IT? Lenore liked all of her subiecTsI Per- haps she goT such sTrengTh of mind Trom The raw carroTs she loves so well. NORBERT SEROWSKI PicTure The old wiTch mumbling over her boiling cauldron. lnTo iT she dumps Two shorThand books, Treasure Island, hamburger 'n onions, and a harmonica. The vapor rises and be- hold-Mac! CASIMIRA SIKORSKI K-K-KaTy will have many beaux waiT- ing aT The k-k-kiTchen door Tor The delicious meals she learned To cook aT school. However, we hope her abiIiTy To draw a sTeady bow does nol' preclude The possibiIiTy of a sTeady beau. 69 JOHN SKIKTEWICZ John's main inTeresT is bouncing around on a baskefball courf. Girls are mosT of his oTher oufside acTiviTies. No more school for him: he's going To work. GLADYS STEFAN K Whaf could be finer Than a dress designer gifTed wifh a beaufiful voice? A gold medal in The STaTe Music Tournamenf proves Sunshine's abiliTy To sing. She's never sharp, she's never flaT, she's iusT nafural. ERVIN SOBOLEWSKI Curliels vaulTing ambifion is To be- come a draffsman, buf he'll leap aT The opporfunify fo become a baker or a barber. ConfidenTially, a soda ierker's iob will suffice. Such choosi- nessl Tskl Tskl HILDEGARDE SOBCZAK ln Tufure years, when Mickey has had her fill of chop suey and has read The lasf novel by Deeping, she can reminisce abouf her successful reigns as presidenf of Shield and secrefary- Treasurer of Forum. EDNA STACKOWSKI Grinding wheels and flashing feeT are The delighTs of diminuTive Edna, who wanTs To be a Sonia Henie on roller skaTes. Only a Tarkingfon novel can lure her away from her skafes. ARTHUR SMITH Pondering over The inTricacies of radio is ArT's hobby, buf he expecfs To make if his vocafion Too. ArT's peT peeve is pef peeves. He likes physics and pork chops. 70 GEORGE SMITH George is always going To be above The clouds-in his airplane. He is making models now, buT lafer he plans To do someThing big, like pilofing a clipper? ANNA SMYCZEK This commercial-minded lass has To Think in figures all day. For diversion she embroiders figures in brighf colors and waTches The rhyfhmic movemenTs of figures on The baseball field. FLORENCE SOBANSKI If a genfleman prefers a lady, lovely and smarT, leT him casl' his eyes on Florence. BuT leT him remember ThaT alfhough There is only one woman sporTs announcer now, when Flo gradu- afes, fhere will be Two. ALBERT SPORS Al claims Thaf his pef peeve is girls who ruffle his brown locks. We won- der. SouTh's all-cify guard was a demon on The gridiron and hopes some day To coach oTher demons for The game. HELEN STANASZEK To see her is a pleasure: To know her is a privilege. WiTh a crisp uni- form, a Twirl around The counfer, a swiff punch of The regisfer, JiTTerbug comes abrupfly To a swinging sTop To serve her cusTomers. HELEN STEFFEN Helen's plan for The fuTure lies in becoming an exTremely privaTe, privaTe secreTary. WiTh shorfhand and Type- wrifing her favoriTe subiecfs her voca- Tion is well chosen. Type away, Toy! JAN ET STOECKER There's noT enough leisure Time in The world Tor Jay To pursue all her TavoriTe acTiviTies oT Tennis, swimming, and cycling. And when vigorous enTerTainmenT palls, she Turns To such simple Things as economics! LORRAINE STREHLOW Lorry may like Track meeTs buT she haTes runs-in her sTockings. For The home lover she would cook: wiTh a sporTsman she would skaTeq and wiTh anyone she would go To The movies! ALPHONSE STROMBERG Alphonse, an admirer oT pineapple TorTe, naTure, sporTs, and 'Feminine pulchriTude is a pleasanT Tellow. This survey oT his preTerences may noT accounT Tor his many Triendships, buT The TacT remains, he is popular. MARTHA STO LARCZYK A wl-iisTling wind whirred 'round her head, a chill ran down her spine, a run crepT up her sTocking. MarTy Threw down in disgusT an inTeresTing Seaman mysTery. HAROLD SVIEN Plans Tor becoming a manual arTs Teacher and building model airplanes ThaT Tly comprise l larold's TuTure. l-le's one oT Those cross-counTry champs. MeThinks he even runs when he's ouT wiTh his besT girl, HELEN STRAMOWSKI OT course, Bunny isn'T bored when she enioys such a diversiTy oT pleasures as dancing and kniTTing, economics and Tried chicken. She served as a commiTTee member Tor CenTury. WALTER STUCKERT Zingl go The sTrings oT Wally's rackeT as iT swings Through space. ShuTTle go Wally's TeeT swinging across The ballroom. Dribble goes The ball as he swings iT inTo The buckeT. 6reeT- ings, GaTe, leT's celebraTe1 FRANCES STROSCHIN A TanTasy oT The TuTure. A sTarchy Tigure in whiTe glides up long, siIenT halls. lT's our Red, now a nurse, who once reveled in English hisTory buT Tound her kingdom in a hospiTal. JUNE STUEDEMANN English, speech, physics, LaTin, alge- bra, and Typing-a hard program like This is iusT child's play Tor SkooTerbug who aims To Teach Toreign languages. Nelson Eddy used To be her hero. Alas! DONALD SU RGES Splashing in cool lakes or enioying Jimmy Dale's sTories are Don's TavoriTe leisure acTiviTies. Physics, besT Teacher OT our surroundings, sTood highesT among his subiecTs. ln sporTs, Don's TavoriTe parT is ThaT oT specTaTor. STELLA SWITALSKI ln This versaTile personaliTy There resides a love oT arT, an enThusiasm Tor dancing, an ear Tor music, a TasTe Tor rhyThm, and a ThirsT Tor Tun. Whaf more can The mosT TasTidious man wish? ALBERT SUSEK Susie manages The baskeTball and Track squads, buT who manages Susie? A baskeTball game aT Madison Square Garden, a world series play-oTT, and a Rose Bowl conTesT would TulTill The dream oT his young liTe. 7 I ADELINE SZYMANSKA Whoops, my dear! Final exams are Sleepy's peT peeve. buT she reached perTecTion on her shorThand paper. When she doesn'T geT enmeshed in The pages oT a Van Dine mysTery, she does dine on chicken soup. CHESTER SZYCI-ILINSKI Ship ahoyl CheT is sailing his homemade sloop! Trig books and noisy people are leT+ behind. WiTh Jack London Tor a companion he would go on any advenTure. NORBERT SZYMANSKI Taking Things aparT and puTTing Them TogeTher again is The ambiTion oT This would-be mechanical engineer. Homework puT Nobs in a Deep Purple mood, buT roasT beeT made liTe rosy again. ANG,-ELINE TENEROWICZ This resTless aTom of energy venTs her enThusiasm on all The sporTs. buT mainly on baskeTball. ln The TuTure, if iT weren'T Tor The prospecT oT Tor- bidding TexTbooks, Tener would like To go To college. IRENE TINGER Here is one OT The swimmingesT girls aT school. Irene is iusi' a liTTle over Tive TeeT Tall, buT she's a minia- Ture Torpedo when anywhere near waTer ThaT's deep enough To swim in. MARGARET TROJANOWSKI Wherever she is, you'll hear a giggle. Margie is prone To mischief, and she surely is able To perTorm iT. Roller skaTing, volley ball, reading, and sing- ing are her pleasures ouT oT school. 72 EDWARD SZU RGOT ProTessional baseball is The goal Ed's aiming aT. Leisure Time Tound This TooTball emblem winner scouTing or increasing his knowledge of his Tavor- iTe subiecT, speech. Ed's Sure-goT a grudge againsT anTi-noTe passers. HARRIET THEOHARRIS -A poeTess in The making is This diminuTive lady who spends her Tree Time wriTing verse. Her chieT regreT is ThaT she can'T sTarT school all over again. ROSE SZYMANSKI Topper is on Top all The Time when There's a call Tor horseback riding or baseball. Her days will be devoTed To inTerior decoraTing. Make iT inTerior, Rose, buT never inTerior. ERVIN SYKORA Ervin Tavors blonds because he likes experimenTs. l-le is going To be a sailor, so naTurally he'll have a girl in every porT. This is suTTicienT proof ThaT he wanTs his blond elemenTs varied. GLADYS TREPTOW Believe iT or noT, here's one girl who hasn'T a peT peeve. She's peeved Trying To Think of one. Since You Can'T Take lT Wifh You, Gladie roller skaTes, Trying To give iT away. ROBERT TROYK An inveniror oT model planes in his own modesT way, Bob enioyed algebra and geomeTry. Even while playing baseball and TooTball, This newsboy was invenTing-alibis. DOLORES TRU DELL She srnilingly confesses ihaf she has no hobby, excepl' of course, foolball players. She'll see 'rhai he keeps in iraining, loo, 'for she's going in Jrraining herself as a nurse. IT's band- ages and uniforms for her. SYLVIA TU ROWSKI Pondering over gerunds and idioms, Sylvia 'iriumphanlly emerges wifh her Laiin Jrranslafion. When noi busy wilh homework assignmenls. she dashes Jrhrough 'rhe corridors in pursuii of Thai' efernal arlricle for The Weekly. EDMUND WALCZAK When Ed isn'+ laking shofs, he's shooiing fakes or refakes. He divides his leisure Time. Hall: of if is speni on baskeiballq rhe ofher half on pho- Jrography, his hobby. HELEN VOCLOW You'll be her besl pal if you iusl remember noi' io forge? 'ro refurn fhal' ceriain borrowed arlicle. However, a banana cream pie casually slipped in will smooih Jrhings over. ff N X V Rica-MRD WALLRATI-i Our rah-rah boy is a greaf lirile kidder. Dick says his favoriie books are wriH'en by Einsiein. l-le's infer- esfed in brighi sfars a+ nigh? bu+ in small dark girls ai all Jrimes. EVELYN WATERSTRAT A very refiring child is Evie, whose only love al preseni' is iyping. Wiih True economy she combines her hobby and her sporf info one, and roller skafes. I I ROY TRUMBULL Bing! Tuning or crooning-he does fhem equally well. His musical inclina- fions are evident He is a member oi a dance orchesira and also of Boys' Glee club. Sing, Bing, sing! KATHERINE TUCHTENHAGEN Charles Boyer, Bob Hope, or a good book is all Jrhal is necessary lo saiisfy fhe inleresi' of liffle Kalie. She's small, buf her ideas are big. Call her Shorfy if you wani' +o see her rise above her normal heighi. RENATA TUZINSKA Reno is giffed wifh fha? priceless possession, a keen sense of humor. Never lose il, olifen use if, Renala, and always add your smile. She keeps herself busy wiih Jrrick bicycle riding. HENRY UREDA Thai bone-crushing guard of our 'iooiball ream is noi really as fough as he appears. ln realify he is a lover of fhe pure and simple lhings of life, 'ihe girls. HAROLD WARFORD 4 Jus+ his good luckl ' Tha+'s wha? we heard when This Cardinal 'flash slipped 'em 'rhrough +he hoop. We could always depend on Warfie, bu? 'iirsf he had To be embalmed in ham- burgers and polalo salad. HARRY WAXMAN Life al' Sou+h lelil' Harry very liille lime for his iavoriie pursuifs of science and psychology. Bui despife The pressure of dulies af home, he man- aged To lake an acfive inferesl in his class work. 73 RUTI-I WELLNITZ Ice cream, reading, coIIecTing phoTo- graphs, Tennis, hiking, and dancing keep RuThy rnighTy busy. I-Ier Tavor- iTe subiecT was bookkeeping because she likes Tigures. Our TavoriTe sube iecT has Tigures, Tool LORRAINE WENTZ I SupersTiTious Lorraine puTs her righT shoe on TirsT Tor good luck. WiTh ouTdoor sporTs and an apple a day she manages To keep The docTor away. EVELYN WICKERSON Wickie's a domesTic soul who special- izes in Tabrics, noT TabricaTions. For recreaTion she rolls along on skaTes or dashes abouT in pursuiT oT Tennis balls. EVELYN WISNIEWSKI Evelyn believes in The old saying, The way To a man's hearT is Through his sTomach : Tor cooking is her Tavor- iTe hobby. IT you wanT her To eaT ouT oT your hand, Take her To a baseball game. JEAN WINKLER STop? Never! Jinny's always on The go. WheTher dashing around The courT or splashing in a pool, she's in a hurry. Expressive oT her speedy spiriT, her TavoriTe book is The Green LighT. LORRAINE WI-IIPPERFIELD GaTher honors while ye may musT be Wayne's moTTo, During her Three years she gained The TeaTure ediTor- ship oT The Weekly, The Junior English cup, and The moniTorship oT row 20. The answer To a Tired Teacher's prayer. 74 IRENE WELYTOK Irene creaTes picTuresque landscapes wiTh a Tew swishes oT her brush when she isn'T learning The IaTesT hiT on her piano accordion. The only arT in her IiTe will be an iT-noT a he. ISABEL WESOLOWSKI If There's a hoT Tudge sundae around, don'T be surprised To find Blondie digging inTo iT. ShorThand raTed second because she has a knack Tor Things on which she can use her irnaginaTion. VIRGINIA WLECZYK Take one good-sized, winsome dim- pleq add many curly locks: mix wiTh Two blue dancing eyes, STir well wiTh peTiTe charm. This recipe makes one Annual IiTerary ediTor and exceIIenT Tudge maker. DOROTHY WILKOWSKI Oh, whaT To be: a nurse or a Teacherl DorT is undecided. UnTiI she decides, she'II keep on enioying skaTing and hisTory. NeverTheIess, she'd raTher eaT pasTry or waTch a TascinaTing movie. DOROTHY WIENSERSKI LosT Horizon rnay be DoT's TavoriTe book, buT we hope she never loses sighT oT The horizon when ice skaTing. AmaTeur programs are her peT peeves. Wonder how she TeIT when we ap- peared in AI ENID WITTE Enie lives in a dream world of her own. ImaginaTiveIy she specializes in romanTic movies: acTuaIIy her maior inTeresT is chop suey. Anyone who slaps her on The back is iusT Too, Too . . . ALICE WNUK A gal who likes fo cook is Alice. Thaf's righf, Snookyg you know fhe way fo a man's hearfl Buf don'f consume your food audibly, fellows! She hafes noisy eafers. HERBERT WOLK Greefings, Safe, lef's draw a plafe! So Wack looks forward fo being a draffsman. He always wanfed fhe windows open in mechanical drawing. Perhaps he was experimenfing wifh draughfs. LORRAINE WRONIKOWSKI Ronnie enioys good music and walfz- inC1. She has a hoard of hobbies, for she doesn'f believe in having only one subiecf abouf which fo do all her Talking. TILLIE WOJTKOWSKI Alfhough Tillie's fingers are frained fo pound fhe fypewrifer, fhey move wifh equal facilify fhrough folds of ma- ferial, for she's also a skillful designer. Do we hear an offer of a iob? KENNETH ZACHER Ken doesn'f like if when someone approaches him and says, Zaf-cher girl friend? Alfhough he enioys eafing dumplings, he dislikes being razzed abouf his Apple Dumpling. C'mon, Ken, don'f be inconsisfenf. ROMAN ZASADA Nofice fo all college professors! Rome is bound your way wifh fwo perfecf examinafion papers besides sundry excellenf grades. ln keeping wifh his scienfific inferesfs, his hobby is collecfing mofhs. AUDREY WOOD 'I Hail our firsf woman presidenf! Well anyway, she is well-qualified, Acfive on The Cardinal weekly, moni- for of row l9, winner of an English book award, she was successively secre' fary, vice-presidenf, and presidenf of Girls' club. All hail! SOPHIE WOZNIAK Sophie flies an airplane in her dreams: she flies info a rage over digs and slams: she flies info ecsfasy over her favorife feacher. Can if be fhaf she is flighfy? KENNETH WOOD Wood is fond of hisfory buf fears he will never go down on ifs pages because feachers iusf don'f appreciafe him. They don'f undersfand me, he moans. Don'+ weep: a lof of people can'f undersfand Einsfein and his fheory eifher. LORAINE ZAFFRANN When l have fo do dishes, fhaf's my day off, says Larry. One smarf girl, eh? Crochefing and sewing are her spare fime pleasures. How abouf coqueffing? W HELEN YAUCHER A Wifh her Chrisfmassy name, Holly carols fha? because she appreciafes music, chorus was her favorife subiecf. Deck Soufh's halls wifh songs of Holly! Tra la la la la. FRANCES ZAITZ Her mom calls her Scofiy, her dad calls her Franky, buf we called her Fran. She liked fyping in school, and fennis, dancing, and reading oufside of school. Frances would like fo be a beaufician. 75 ROBERT ZILMER Der Fuehrer is a Duce of a 'IeIIow, says Bob, an amaTeur aufhorily on world hisfory. When noi involved in experimenfs for The Science club, he sTudied biology. Bodies are wha+ need cuhking up, noi maps, says he. MARJORIE ZWIEFKA Cream pie-sl ChocoIaIe cookies! Angel food cakes! On These delicious delicacies Margie could feasf for days and days and days. This couIdn'I' be The reason she's called Sugar, could iT? CHARLES ZIMNEY Bill, who is a skier, plans on making his Iongesi lump when he Ieaves high school and fakes an engineering course af Wisconsin. He believes in working when he should and playing af'rerwards. LUCILLE ZIELINSKI Tu+I Tu+I And now Tony invenIs a new form of amusemenl, Ieasing. ThaI s fine, if she can Take il' as well as dish if ouI'. IRENE ZIELINSKI JiHerbugging or waITzing-il' makes no difference To Reney. When noT dancing away her Ieisure Time, she's a++ending a movie-preferably an ex- cifing and advenfurous one. AUDREY ZELLA ' f Digging info ma'rhema'ricaI sfickers, Iabricafinq romanfic shorf sTories, skefching, and confinually making The honor roII show Audrey's ingenuify and versafile +aIen+s. However, she's iusT ano+her Baby Snooks-her hear? belongs 'ro Daddy. WILLIAM WOOD Billy was a good 'friend 'Io have if you Took malh. I-Ie dashed off problems because he Though+ 'rhey were such simple Things. The ma+hema+ics course, he claimed, was a snap. Well, af IeasT someone Though? so. NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY JUNE HARVEY BAERWALD SHIRLEY GLASER INEZ MCCARTHY I-IUGO BARBIAN EDWARD GLOWACKI BETTY MITCHELL MILDRED BARBIAN DOROTHY HALD SQPHIE Pl-UTA IVIILDRED BARTLE GERALD HANSEN ALBIN RUTKOWSKI EVELYN BERNINGER OSBORNE HOLTON GLADYS BLANCHARD VIRGINIA KAMINSKI HILDEGARDE SOBCZAK ROY TRUMBULL HERBERT BOSE JUNE RASTEN DELORES CARLSON FRANKLIN KONKEL SYLVIA TUROWSKI DONALD ERICRSEN KENNETH LENTZ LORRAINE WHIPPERFIELD NORMAN GAVIN LORRAINE LEwANDowsRi VIRGINIA WLECZYK MARION GEIGER FAITH LUEBKE AUDREY wooo 76 THE NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY ArcTurus ChapTer The NaTional l-lonor socieTy is To high schools whaT Phi BeTa Kappa is To universiTies. ln I92I a movemenT was sTarTed ThroughouT The high schools oT The counTry To granT sTudenTs some Torm oT recogniTion Tor ouTsTanding scholarship, characTer, leadership, and service in Their respecTive schools. ConseguenTly, a socieTy was organized similar To The honor socieTies already esTablished in colleges. Today more Than TwenTy-Three hundred chapTers ex- isT in The UniTed STaTes, PorTo Rico, l-lawaii, and The Philippine islands. The advanTages iT oTTers are numerous. IT sTimulaTes high scholarship, iT encourages a desire Tor pupils To render service To The school and To The communiTy, iT requires The pupil To check up and evaluaTe his gualiTies oT characTer, and iT Turnishes a sTimulus To develop Those TraiTs so necessary Tor leadership. The Tounders oT The NaTional l-lonor socieTy in high schools planned an organizaTion ThaT would arouse These gualiTies in sTudenTs. The maximum number oT members admiTTed inTo The socieTy is Ten per cenT oT The graduaTing class. To keep The sTandards Tor elecTion as high as possible, The enTire quoTa, aT Times, is noT Tilled. The sTudenTs elecTed musT be in The upper guarTile oT Their group. Mr. CrouT, an ardenT aclvocaTe oT The socieTy and one who had observed iTs wholesome eTTecT in oTher schools, This year became insTrumenTal in se- curing a charTer Trom The naTional headguarTers Tor us. ForTy years ago when SouTh Division was in iTs inTancy, The rays oT lighT Trom The sTar, ArcTurus, became dimly visible To The world. Now ArcTurus is one oT The brighTesT sTars in The heavens. Today SouTh sTands as a lighT To guide all who are eager To learn. ln I933 ArcTurus Tlooded The Chicago CenTury oT Progress wiTh iTs lighT. In l939 The lamp oT knowledge aT SouTh Division kindled in The minds oT The TorTy-Three sTudenTs elecTed To The NaTional l-lonor socieTy The desire To do Their share oT The world's work. Members oT The NaTional l-lonor socieTy are awarded pins or charms, The choice resTing wiTh The individual. The insignia is a Torch oT learning held aloTT To lighT The world. ln addiTion, cerTiTicaTes are given The sTudenTs on The nighT oT graoluaTion as TurTher evidence oT Their membership in The socieTy. As mem- bers come in conTacT wiTh oThers who wear The pin oT The socieTy, ThaT bond draws Them closer TogeTher. Since The emblem is worn universally, similar inTer- esTs oTTen uniTe in a warm Triendship members oT widely separaTed regions. We aT SouTh Division are proud ThaT our school has been granTed a chapTer in an organizaTion ThaT sTands Tor Tiner scholarship and service To humaniTy. We are cerTain ThaT The lighT oT ArcTurus will lead us ever on- ward To The highesT goals. E CLASS And in I893 if came io pass ihai a migh+y build- ing rose from oui ihe ear1'h ai Second and Madison, and if was called The Souih Side High School. Should auld acquainfance be forqoi An' days o' lang syne? .fEZ':,f?? if, 'Z L1 I ,ra 'fi af x 3 FRESHMEN I32 and 340 ROW 7: Donald Vanderpool: Leonard Samolinski: Virginia Reigel: l-lenry Kowalkiewicz: Richard Snohr: Alberl Tulas: Roberi' Tibby: Cafherine Rieldcoff: Margery Zingsheim ROW 6: Evelyn Pawlak: Helen Shiaida: Dorolhy Kuhrl: Cecile Samplaski: Richard Lemlce: Rosemary Poirylqusg Mildred Kneipholl: Earl Venne: Siener Moen ROW 5: Agnes Sherman: Donald Piemeisel: Kenneih Weber: Arfhur Rohde: Daniel Sing- er: Leonard Shippy: Marlyn Olson: Donald Plaski: George Siika ROW 4: Audrey Rydlewicz: Roberl' Rad+lce: John Slromrneng Richard Nowakowslci: Wal- lace Sue: Edwin Wasilewslci: Richard Yagle: Olga Mraz: Sylvia Perme ROW 3: June Zimmer: Bernadeiure Repenseli: Jeanne Wille: Lorraine Weslowslci: Gloria Turowslqig Beverly Konlqel: Evelyn Skoczynski: LoreHa Walczalc: Virginia Wolf: Doroihy Wisniewslqa: Mildred l-loneclq ROW 2: Belly Pelerson: Shirley Wickersheimer: Jeanellre Nicolai: Caiherine Yolcelich: Gloria Swanson: l-lelen Orlich: l-lazel Smilh: Lorraine Koch: Audrey Woida: Vivian Musha ROW I: Shirley Scale: Genevieve Trzesniewski: Kari Slcienalcl: Caroline Peierlin: Lucy Canales: Casey Rolerai: Eugene Michalalc: Ralph Reinke: Frank Polqrop: Calherine Monie 80 FRESHMEN 229 ROW 7: Frances Kolowicz: Carl Konlcelg Roberl Erdmann: Louis Kaslenq Gilberl Gris- wold: William Brovoldg Lorraine Gleason: Genevieve Malinowslca: Evelyn Glenslci ROW 6: Virginia Biegelg Eugene Kanlorskig Tom Filzpalriclcg Elden Baxlerg Ed Kaliszew- slcig Belly Jane Claypoolg Belly Jane Czailcowskig Dorollwy Derdzinslcig Carl Dzierzewslci ROW 5: Roberl l-laackq lvlyrlle Blake: Lorraine Lullwerg Eleanor Andriclwakq Marie Errnencq Richard lvlacieiczak: Floyd Galubinslqiy Leonard Krawczylcy Lorraine Dargo ROW 4: Conslance Brasledg Arllwur Engelbreclilg Lorraine Czerwinslcig l-larriel l-lagemann: Lollie Bzymelcg George Kernlolqey Lillian Mae llovslwelcg Tom lvlagnerg June Annborng Ray Kosrnalka ROW 3: Shirley Dreyer: Mabel Dylqasq Irene Golembiewslciq Lucille Kazmierskiq Waller Kwasiborslciq Faillw Brown: Bealrice Masson: Lorraine Lange: Gusl Cliandles ROW 2: lvlargarelh Boll: Virginia Cerag Lois Berningerq l-lelen Jeskeg Gladys l-lerieg l-lerrnine Frangesclig Eleanore lvlarkowg June Bzdawlca ROW l: Rila Fagar: Gerald Beierq Frank Faleliclwg Jean Doppelg Violel Goreclciq Eunice Hall: Alice Geclcler: Doris Berendlg James Filulg Slanley Lencliek FRESHMEN IO7 and l28 ROW 7: lvlargarel Chycinski: Leonard Krysinski: Glenn Bergmann: Normand Osborne: Fred Boehme: William Zahn: John Scepanslci: Richard Zvolanelc: Harvey Janus: Norberl Banaszalc ROW 6: lvlargarel l-leuss: Dagny l-luse: Dororhy Sirovina: Yvonne Cunningham: Grace Maruszalc: Dolores Czeske: Oerfrude Barfelalc: Lucille Budish: I-lelen Bieszlqa: Roland Lalus ROW 5: Joyce Behling: Virginia Boschlce: Mae Thurn: Eslher Belleau: lsabel Gulrlqowski: Donald Brever: Ulene Knighl: Arny Banferg Dorofhy Piszczek: Helen Wawrzyniak ROW 4: Virginia Anclrylcowslci: Nellie Fosmore: Virginia Brzezinslqi: Oerfrude Cichy: Dorolhy Branslai: Virginia Behrendl: Delores Kielcow: Edna Barrels: Shirley Barilingg Mary Lou Churchill V ROW 3: Florence Champa: Lillian Chaloupelc: Lawrence LueH'gen: Richard Gormley: Wilmar Buss: l-lenriella Branski: Leroy Doppel: Belly Blanclq: Eleanor Konieczka ROW 2: Chrisline Daughlry: Viola WolFfersdor'hC: lda Callahan: Dorolrhy Wihlifl: Alice Zyla: Florence Adamski: Wanda Cichucki: Francis l-larlr: Richard Dich: Frank Davis ROW I: Ray Zalolelalg Sylvesrer Zarzycki: John Mozer: Elaine Barwiclc: Dorolhy Semski: Ma+hilda Ciepluch: Joan Radzilcinas: Regina Kowalski: Rose Dudon: Dorolhy Albrecht Dorolhy Bessler 82 I I FRESHMEN I26 and I09 ROW 7: Arfhur Schmidt Roman Bialkq Jack Radfkeg Elmer Kowalski: Jerome Kowalski: I-Iarold Przygockig Kennelh Mafhewsonp Harry Ksobiechq Donald Purdy: Reginald Smifh ROW 6: Sophie Nagorskip Alice Paczocha: Virginia Kubackig Marion Gronningg Dororhy Sanders: Esiher Finlrakg Anna Srachnikg Karhleen Bushman: Irene Dziegielewski: RuI'h Urban ROW 5: Lorraine Pleckag Geraldine Kushawa: Imogene Roberfs: Dorolhy Rufzinskiq John Schmirz: Louis Gorskip Mary Jane Olloinskip Edwin Malusiakg Frank Rogalag I-Iarold Jan- kowski ROW 4: Phyllis Morley: Cecilia Chrzanowska: Margarer Piorrowskig Helen Rewolinski: Lorraine Kaminskiq Joseph Kofowiczg Arline Ziegler: Shirley Schalzrnanng Ellen Willy Roy Nowakowski ROW 3: Lydia Daniewiczp Seraphine Rakowskiq Agnes Polcynq Alice Schwabeg Irene Maiusiakg Virginia Klameckiq Roberr Wolfg Roberr Bialkq Wallace Schuenemanq Irene Pisulag Yolanda Malak ROW 2: Margie Orbanq Vicioria Marzec: Mary Ann Biedrzycka: Fred Curzang Alberl' Oslrengag Dorolhy Rennpferdp Elaine Siachnikp Bernice Pokorag Marion Schweifzerp Cecilia Krawczyk: Pauline Paucek ROW I: Verna Menger+7 Aileen Budish: Alice Broczekg Blanche Prirnozichg Evelyn Czu- binskip Belly Plohrq Waller Sarneckig Joseph Pszyloylskii Raymond Melchiorg Rudolph Anichi Roberl Marich , FRESHMEN l23 and l27 ROW 7: Norloerl Dolney: Harwald Glembin: LeRoy Hirsch: Harry Tischer: Clarence Haydock: Joe Swierlcowslci: Gerald Jaworslci: Richard Turlc: Clarence Evanich: Daniel Duilciewicz ROW 6: lvlardell Gavin: George Wasicelc: Vicioria Grezinslci: Julia Dunaway: Doris Jalculoowslci: Sylvia Slocki: Gerald Gaullce: Arnold Zolinski: Daniel Januchowslci ROW 5: Dolores Guzilcowslqi: Jeanneile Szwalkiewicz: Arline Gerlh: Shirley Goersch: Grace Halbriller: Alice Flak: Al Winslow: Ronald Flisowslqi: Sieve Wiiman ROW 4: Rurh Solqol: LaVerne Elier: Dorolhy Srelier: Virginia lvlulzolf: l.aVerne Wob- shall: Jeanerre Foolre: Berry Fuhrman: Rose Wachowialc: Marie Weber: Maureen Felder ROW 3: Audrey Wellnilz: Cecile Szymanslci: LaVerne Janeclcy: Myrile Hanson: Virginia Wisniewslci: Sylvia Welyrolc: Felice Kazrnierczalc: Anira Szuberi: Cecilia Jakubialc ROW 2: Alice Gradall: Florence Dombrowslci: Kennelh Gavewslci: Henry Wasielewslci: Daniel Walczak: John S+a'I'has: Clernenf Gliszinslqi: Delores Fedder: Violer Wipiiewslqi ROW I: Ted Szuloerr: Blair Dreyfus: Sylvia Furchlcar: Isabel Dziadosz: Grace Tuchien- hagen: Lorraine Turlcowslci: Angeline Wargoler: Virginia Felslci: Rosalyn Heling: Sylvia Policnik 84 FRESHMEN SOPHOMORES I24 and 234 ROW 7: Bruce Klein: William Kirchen: Ben Meyers: Gilberl Pokora: Joseph Pielcarslci: Edward Procelc: Daniel Manning: Leslie Felilan: Chad Lindner: Ray Polczynski ROW 6: Dorolhy Krall: Marcella Magierowslci: Rila Kulik: Virginia Kaczmarelc: Anna Kobylniclca: Dorolhy Krueslce: Mary Johnson: Gilberl Lalus: Lesler Malllce: Eugene Kucharsk ROW 5: Elmer Mahnlce: Emily Kapsh: Florence Pohl: James Madsen: Dolores Mick: Dolores Pelroske: Caroline Prescoe: Leona Teresinslci: Sophie Macieiczalc: Rose Page: Shir- ley Prilzlall ROW 4: Marian Kucai: Dorolhy Kohlmeier: Violel Mier: Rulh Pares: Mary Jane Kucan: Waller LeTendre: Donald Lupinski: Caroline Maiewslci: Belly Kell: Shirley Lainey ROW 3: Chesler Kosmalka: Lenora Mane: Leonard Pawlak: Dolores Napienlek: Corrine Olson: LaVerne Parslce: Grace Chiodelli: Frieda Marlcakis: Dorolhy Polikowski: Eslher Kurudza: June Dolge ROW 2: Clara Klamra: Bernice Mausser: Eleanor Mikolaiczylc: Jeanelle Olson: Bealrice Kloza: lrene Manlcowski: Ellen Ode: William Laveau: l-lenry Pumplun: Lavern Miller: Cecelia Mieszlcowslci ROW I: Carol Prymelc: Mabel Kaun: Emily Kraucunas: Geraldine Karas: Kalherine Lynch: Miriam Carlin: Belly Przybyla: Mildred Lauria: Anna Jusiel: Bernice Kobylniclci: Gordon Koszewslci SOPHOMORES 2l5 and l35 ROW 7: Arlhur Eberly: George Jenich: Jaclc Glaser: Clarence Clark: Bob Rielclqolf: Joy Borlcenhagen: Jerome Leszczynski: Joseph Drezdzon: Chesler Jozwik: Edmund Blasz- czynski: Eoresi Dunaway P ROW 6: Dolores Dziedzic: June Haiion: Caroline Eriiz: Edgar Shave: Roberlr Buenger: Lorenz Kueilner: Dolores Lulomslci: Geraldine Kasprzylc: Ari Bellis: Waller Zamiahn: John Slrzylcalslci ROW 5: Agnes Loilc: Elaine Walczykowski: Mary Masalcowslci: Raymond Reichling: Jean- e'l'+e Kloss: Lorraine Michael: Herberlr Rennpferd: William Woodward: Audrey Koepsel: Joyce Herrl ROW 4: Edifh VerBrugge: Geraldine Schneider: Geraldine Laylon: Audrey Badura: Helen Horvaii: Mary Ri'ra Koeiling: Virginia Kelly: Gerlrude Ololalc: Lawrence Znoroslci: Bob Glueclc: Jack Sleffen ROW 3: Margarei Duran: Frances Kowalkowslci: Doroihy Slrassburgg Rose Grove: Josephine Barlich: Audrey Wobshall: Virginia Janlciewicz: Dorolhy Plewa: Rulh Kwia'I'- lcowski: Julia Hanlce: Pearl Cornella: Lucille Gromaclci ROW Z: Delores Hoppe: Juliana Modlinski: George Orabowski: Ervin Gradecki: Ervin Kazmierczalc: Sophie Rzedkowslci: Delma Hill: Louise Kowalski: Germaine Berfling: Lillian Jans: Dorolhy Kennedy I ROW I: Belly Ann Lund: Anne Zaiec: Roland Dropp: Charles Prince: Lorella Eilul: Hope Ziebell: Es+here Lazaris: Norberi' Berendl: Lucy Kalinowslci: Lillian Hauerwas 86 SOPHOMORES 305 and 308 ROW 7: Roy Benlcendorl: Don Geslce: Jim Walrers: Dick Sirenlqe: Ari Roloil: l-lanlc l-lelmers: S'ruar+ Lefevre: Waller Blalce: Edward Paizwald: Donald Mylnarek: Edward Engelhardi: Viio Diciaula A ROW 6: Lucille Neeb: Roberi Baumgarr: Casimir Janiszewslci:Vivian Schoensee: Elaine Van Der Elsen: Elmer l-lioriland: Loreila Sonnenberg: Miriam Shapiro: Laverne Rubow: Carole Kerlin: Alrhea Schwechel ROW 5: Julia Bozuric: Margarel Berner: Edward Radomslci: James Dooley: Shirley Gehrlce: June Kloss: l-larold Ellingsen: Gordon Goeiz: Margareie Noslce: June Spiegel: Fred Riedel: Joe Marlqeiic ROW 4: Edna Grob: Marlha l-lueirner: lrene Zlomaniec: Roberi Greenlees: Dolores Smerlinslci: Gerlrrude l-lenlce: l-larriei Mueller: Doloris Biesiada: Marcella Galloway: Lorraine Schnoor: Lawrence Eirch: Glenn Budzien ROW 3: Virginia Tomaszewslci: Marge Spicuzza: Carherine Braden: Ruih Janz: Anna Zaczelc: Elsie Chrisiensen: Shirley Klamerr: Bernice Kraan: Reggie Wenia: Arline Hari- mann: Arlyne Nagorsne: Jerome Engbring ROW 2: Ray Gawronslci: Genevieve Binlcowslci: Deloris Schmidt Virginia Kellaway: June Possing: Elhel Junelc: Jim Kling: Eleanor Waldera: Elaine Schmidi: Mary Ellen Phillips: Delores Eilulr: Margarei Baars , ROW I: Dororhy Knepper: Margarel MaH'miller: Gerirude Tice: Doroihea McCrossen: Mae Flach: Hazel Winderl: Marian Perersen: Shirley Tollifie: Ruih Edwardsen: Rulh Ern: Audrey Eisenberg SOPHOMORES l22 and I34 ROW 7: Waller Slemplcowski: Edward Andrzeiewslci: Roberf Sue: William Srariha: Ray Dilimore: l-lenry Tuiino: Jack Dolge: Richard Dziurclziewslci: Silber? Dalke: Donald Lesholc ROW 6: Arnold Calfon: Maryann Towell: Anne-Marie Borge: Emerence Tomczalc: Rob- eri Dambruch: Viclor Ralhka: Lorraine Barlow: Jean Bevel: Eleanore Boehme: Frances Wolczewslci ROW 5: Kennelh Bain: Jayne Siachowslcig Ralph Lassen: Leonard Burzynslci: Joseph Krueger: l-larvey Wolf: James Kusierman: Florence Dembinslci: Elizabelrh Duerr: Edward Karshna ROW 4: Evelyn Brzeczlcowslci: Mary Slalhas: Donald Campion: Allan Slcryby: Richard Serowski: Roy Monson: Albin OH'o: Roy Towell: Ewald Duelge ROW 3: Dorolhy Szumnarski: Cyrilla Abramslci: Beary Barwiclc: Rila Mirr: Esiher Szwal- lciewicz: Vernel Thompson: Jean Deloczynslce: Elhel Eckslaedl: Regina Szweda: Emily Cielinslci: Eslher Drozewslci ROW 2: Fern Slevens: Florence Sfarzylq: Anila Milcsch: Dorolhy Kulwiclci: Cecile Bendylc: Evelyn Dobschuelz: Evelyn Dombrowslci: Evelyn Cieslinsld: Audrey Springer: Bernadine Zallran ROW I: Mildred Cummings: Helen Sowinska: Alice Durlciewicz: Geraldine Kulwiclqi: Irene Suchorslci: Sylvia Cichoclci: Marion Socoliclq: l-lelen Szulnara: Lucille Bury 88 SOPHOMORES 23I and ZI4 ROW 7: John Rozanslci: Sigmund Greevers: Russell Realin: l-lerberl Ryser: Raymond Jensen: Waller Juszczalc: Roberl Klosiewslci: Laverne Piechowslci: Evelyn Przybylska: Ber- nyce Schalloclf ROW 6: Roland Piechowslqi: Dororhy Schullz: Phyllis Anne Polalcowslci: Adeline Eberl: Phyllis Juszczalc: Roberi' Schauwilzer: Ray Kasinslqi: Roloerl Bielawslci: Edward Gember: Fred Engel: Florence Jalcubialc ROW 5: Mary PieJrrzynslci:Jane Sielcierslci: John Jubeck: Dorolhy Reiiher: Felice Przy- choclca: Doris l-lasmulc: Charles Gay: Chesier George: Howell Anderson: Irene Seebanlz: Evelyn Klosiewslci ROW 4: Gilberl Erendl: Bernice Fabin: Carolyn Kaminslqi: Dolores Polcora: Mary Pion- felc: Bernadine Kielc: Phyllis Jaroszewslci: Lois Nicholl: Slella Flalc: Bernice Falk ROW 3: Elizabefh Rolhermel: lvlarfha Samplaslci: lrene Pirog: Beverly l-lanel: Ellen Grzegorczylc: Shirley Eigner: Henry Grabowslci: Leo Po+ochnilc: Dolores Gurda: Janel Frilsch: Jane O++son ROW 2: Florence Rogalinslci: Audrey Wisniewslci: Virginia Burloulalc: Genevieve Kinow- slci: Alma Lohry: Lillian Przybyla: Camille Gawin: Alice Jalcubczali: Virginia l-lalerewicz: Eleanor Gradecki: Dorofhy Kloffa ROW I: Ida Greenspon: Germaine Feldmann: Darlyne Reichow: Virginia Powell: Delores Slruromski: lvlariorie Gregorich: Raymond Golembiewslci: John Swiecialc: Eleanore Piefrzalc: Muriel Ollson: Evelyn Przychoclca SOPHOMORES 2l7 and 230 ROW 7: Leonard Bayer: Arfhur Anderson: Roberl' Cook: Harold Novak: Waller Fred- richsdorf: Eileen LaBunde: Bonnie Brand: Joseph Lulzenberger: Leslie Fonlaine: Elmer Posself ROW 6: Anna Luzar: Clemenl' Eonlaine: Helen Shopik: Frank Malia: Theodore Andry- szewicz: Elaine Villwock: John Badura: Jack Hammond: Kenneih deLanguilleHe: Maihew Amann ROW 5: Virginia Lewinski: Gail Barczak: Rosalyn Sprifke: Bernice OH: Tony Drews: Roy Hursl: Richard Barr: Audrey Bernslein: Malhilda Bereziski: Rulh Marie Pefrie: Edwin Zalewski ROW 4: Yolanda Borchard+: Alberl Budzish: Eugene Daniels: Raymond Dykas: Jean Smukowski: LeeRoy Kosciesza: Marvella Iverson: Richard Ryback: Nina Akabovich: Eslrher Wilk: Roberi Trimberger ROW 3: Leroy Tepper: Doroihy Block: Johnny Czemierys: Ralph Miller: Belly Jane Buchholz: Roloerl Dennison: Delores Ruchalski: Mary Cvefan: Rosemary Kruse: BeHy Jane Young: Mercedes Dresden ROW 2: Rulh Branlzeg: Jeanne Bedell: Helen Bade: Myrile Eenner: Lucille Baldzikowski: Della Pavich: Rulh Kielzman: Irene Berezowiiz: Maloel Benning: Marion Chaneske ROW I: Leonard Pyszynski: Carl Kossow: Leon Schweda: Eleonore Markowski: Jane Carl- son: Elorence Breilzkap Ru+he Ackermann: Mae Barringfon: Lorraine Calabrese: Genevieve Dobiesz: Harrier Olecki 90 SOPHOMORES 24I and 243 ROW 7: Gerald Coonan: I-lerberl Flinl': Edward Lilly: Raymond Kallies: Roloerl Gogan: Daniel Giles: William Franlc: Eva I-Ieller: Audrey Williams: Frances I-leup ROW 6: Belly Jane I-lolh: Glenn Engeldinger: Joe Kocian: Leonard Wilhelmi: Raymond Eagen: Ralph Sropinslci: George Turowslci: Helen Johnson: I-lelen l-lanley ROW 5: Janel Baszynslci: Rolaerl I-lenrichs: Ervin I-lensialc: Violel Jashinslci: Alice Emery: Jane Kessler: I-lorlense Szmania: Caroline Narazinslqi: John I-lagen: Florence Baldewicz ROW 4: Lorraine Engel: Belly Brussocli: Jerome Barlle: Myron Ra'l'lcowslci: Dororhy Gruel: Joan Janssen: Joan Kessler: Belly Giesman: William Junek: Margie-Mae Wylie: Doris Lulher: Lucile I-lunl: Rulh Corler ROW 3: lsaloelle Adamczylc: Shirley Egide: Palricia Gilloerl: John Tanzer: Albin Giezycki: lvlillca Obradovich: John Gordon: Rosalie Zdanczewicz: Judilh Sosalla: Marie Gross: Norman Janlce ROW 2: Belly I-lursl: Florence Zyla: Euphrosine Werner: Jaclc Moering: Peggy Dolala: Viola Janlcowslci: Irene Gozyclci: Melvin Franz: Wesley I-Iealer: Grace I-loslqing: Irene Golemloieslci: Lorraine I-Iiggins: Felicia Solcolniclqi ROW I: Violel Ringle: Ermence Nowak: Jerome Eisold: Berry Schalzmann: Inez I-Ienn: Alice Jaeclc: Belly Forle: Pearl Slaal: Jeanne Puhelq: Lorella Gross: Evelyn Russell SOPHOMORES 3l0 and 242 ROW 7: Edward Ladich: Jean Anderson: Frank Zaloludowslci: Erneslr Ullius: Chesrer Jan- kowslciq Ralph Leiske: Margaref Vopalensky: Marneria Dahl: Irene Prebezichg Mary Jane Wesfphalg Lorraine Lewicki ROW 6: l-larold Manslaeq Eleanor Slcladanelc lrene Miller: Evelyn Nowalcowsl4i1 Delores Nordby: Lois Dahl: Gerard Rypeli Clarence Kurylog Eugene Kumberay Violel Wasilewski ROW 5: Be++y Urloang Irene Milickii Arline Ludwig: Eugene Dziadulewiczq Norberl' Wieclcowslcig Edward Michalalcy Frank Wisniewskig Chesrer Kolb: Elroy Mengeri ROW 4: Siella Zlolochag Arline Krauseq Gyda Ness: Evelyn Kosidowslcig Riia Wozniakg Margarei Yanialq Edna Wood: Mildred Rasporg Jennie Kulqlinslcig Evelyn Walker ROW 3: Ruphilia Langer: Regina Zydowicz: Lorraine Zaslrowi Jeaneire Tomesg Sophie Piwinskip Ann Zaniewslcig Gerfrude Woiciechowslci: l-lelen Kowalslcig Lorraine Kuehnq Erhel Wisialowslcig Winilred Miller I ROW 2: Mary Ann Lassa: Edna Nowickiy Evelyn Woldanslcig Donald Muziag Lucy Mar- rinog Lorraine Millerg Shirlee Trudellg Alma Willis: Lois Koehn ROW I: OHO Neumannp Florence Wisniewski: Cafherine Wood: Ruih Wegeriq Lucille Korlarelcg Dorolhy Kempg Florence Meyer: Dorolhy Wollq Doro+hy Kowalewslciy Grace Lassa 92 SOPHOMORES 309 and 3I I ROW 7: Gilberlr Tulraj: Jack Krahn: Wilbe-rl Weslphal: Rober'r Krafclweck: Carl Lunow: Edward Valeslci: Rober+ Redovick: Belly Glass: Irene Tomczyk: Margarei' Livingslon ROW 6: Juaniia Eausl: Donald Klug: Gerlrude Ollcowski: Kennellw Kosrog: Ervin Wypi- iewslci: Ray Keller: Ivlillon Lenfz: Audrey Lelwnerf: Roman Burda ROW 5: Ruperl Podjaslci: Oerfrude Komos: Donald Kressulc: Norberl Frellca: Darlene Kelly: Eugene Osfrenga: Ru+I1 Kreuger: Marian Kuiawa: Eleanore Kuczynslci: Ervin Pielrzalc: Daisy Ladwig ROW 4: Audrey Osborn: Dolores Lindow: Fay Linlc:Tl1addeus Paruzynski: Alyce Winskiy Frank Troyk: Norberf Toby: George Kopczynski: Sophie Lulqornski: George Lau ROW 3: Edward Luclcow: Joe Kuzel: Owen Wes+: Bernice Winges: Dolores Dibberf: Consiance Lamy: Eleanore Kendzierslqi: Anlronia Lubeselq: Leola Kloelwn: Jane Braden ROW 2: Ruin Lovold: Dororlwy Ziperslein: I-Ielen Kraszka: June Kejrfenbeil: Delpliine Tuczynslci: Florence Peskuric: BeH'y Lirzau: Ruflw Lulzlce: Lisabeila Kralwn: Maxine Kuiawski: Russell Lewandowslci ROW I: Lucille Zerwinslqi: Angeline Tomasino: Marie Tomasino: Rosalie Coffey: Anne Clwivolf: Lillian Andrade: Lorraine Krause: Rosalind Krug: Dolores Duranowslci: Mary Louise Carlin: Dolores Ziemslci SOPHOMORES 34l and 342 ROW 7: James Sizerp Don Reiiz: Ervin Nenckiq Waller Ollenburg1 Daniel Shoemaker: John Reynolds: Waller Orzechowskiq Frank Riccog Roberl Pauersq Kennefh Proeloer ROW 6: CliH'on Schalilery Byron Schmeling: Roberr Shand: Jimmy Peiersonq Howard Phillips: Joseph Murray: Ouen+in Ramsdellg l-lelen Siawickiq Margarel Thompsonq Evelyn Snifko ROW 5: Billy Schullzp Gerlrude Rehmg Edifh Meyer: Marie Roarky Dorofhy Roarkg Virginia Pio+rowskig Margarel Macieiewskig Frances Skiba: Waller Papke ROW 4: Norman Slobbeq Janer Miller: Audrey Mau: Louise Malensekg Alfred Sieg- manng Joe Spinellap Kennelh Scheifneri l-lelene Malinowski: Jane Pie+ura ROW 3: Belly Schumacher: Allan Menz: Irene Peszczek: Mary Schwarz: Helen Spryszakg Jean Ramlhuni Mary Rankin: Leona S+odolendkg Donald Nowak ROW 2: Delphine S+olarczyk1 Sylvia Rakowskiq Ellamae Soullyy Ruih Remikerg Phyllis Rieboldrq Pearl Sfeinmelrzq Belriy Marlzq Joseph Oleinikg Daniel Oleinik ROW I: Kalerine Sfoecker: Dolores Rakowski: Eugenia Prus: Delores Pfehcerkornq Shir- ley Slrelrerg Sophie Rakovvski: Dororhy Niemczynskiq Dolores Marheag Srella Pluiap Leona Schmidi 94 JUNIORS los and II9 i ROW 7: Lawrence Harding: Erwin Anderson: Sidney Herde: Vernon Ellingron: Arrhur Holifmeier: ErediJohn: Joseph Marinelli: Arnold Kramer: Paul Buddenhagen: Donald Hill ROW 6: Rulh Hanson: Ruih Oasiorowslci: Kenneih Blessing: Warren Gross: Richard Daniel: Grace Scheliner: Lorella Jack: Alvin Behnlce: Marion Drews: Arihur Elach ROW 5: Raymond Haas: James Moon: Delberf Bigsby: Kennerh Claffey: Melvin Luene burg: Eddie Kulclinslqi: Henry Kanlrorslci: Roger Bellarf: Craig Kennedy: Rolland Brown i ROW 44: Melvin Callies: Jane Hansen: Arlhur Behling: James Hildebrand: Roberf Daniels: Doroihy Cummings: Eleanore Kazmierslci: Helene Macieiczalcb: Lois Klein: Elrhel Polzin ROW 3: Eleanor Choinaclci: Virginia Farkas: Beverly Budzien: Belle Baur: Adeline Jas- hinski: Helene Czulra: Vivianne Boellcher: Eleanor Elayier: Lorraine Richards ROW 2: Luella Falk: Elaine Erdmann: Gerry llling: Marjorie Dolezal: Lucille Galewslci: Audrae Euhrman: Eslher Mazur: Genevieve Kubiaczylc: Eslher Goreclci: Lorraine Hinlzke ROW I: Bealrrice Lecus: Mary Beaumonl: Virginia Phillips: Mary Lauria: Bernadine Kubaclci: Dolores Jozwialc: Elrhel Feller: Dolores Czisz: Audrey Benion JUNIORS I36 and 306 ROW 7: Kennelh Kralcheck: George Nelson: Erwin Kassulke: Chesler Radllce: Elwood Peighl: Arlhur Koch: Kennelh Melms: Ernsl Kneisel: Roberl Plaulz: John Powers: Arlhur Raasch ROW 6: Eleanor Wasielewlci: Lorraine Kolpalc: Belly Tomaich: Arlhur Jewarl: Eddie Subel: Warren Gollon: l-larry l-laug: Franlcie Czerwinslci: Clillord Koss: Norberl Kom- assa: William Pralh ROW 5: Edilh Pelersen: l-lilia Lailila: Mariorie Knoblauch: Zenon Wasielewslci: Lillian Renk: Belly Ollo: Belly Ralzman: Dorolhy Modieslca: Rulh Barwiclc: Sylvia Miller: Mar- vel Moser ROW 4: Emily Punko: Leona Bury: Mariorie Klink: Doris Kirchenwilz: Muriel Luedllie: Elhel Michels: Mary Susha: l-larriel Reich: Hazel Raymond: Shirley Mueller: Gloria Oloersl ROW 3: June Kunalh: Vanelle Myers: Donna Wilson: Evelyn Turlqovich: Georgia Palmer: Rulh Napieralslqi: Leroy Johnson: Belly Olsheslce: Edna Shilopy: Frederick Pearson ROW 2: Angeline Szymaczalc: Eleanor Winslci: Alice Wieland: Rulh Wickerson: Adeline Zych: l-lelen Kasprzalc: l-lerberl l-laacls: Jennie Czarneclci: Alice Weislo: Dorolhy Rogowski ROW I: Josephine Manlo: Gerlrude Czernieiewslci: Toula Chandles: Rose Jendusa: Margarel Maier: Sylveslra Wleczyk: Lucille Prislavolq: Evelyn Mueller: Rosemarie Rys- liclqen: June Morgenrolh 96 JuNioRs B and :zu 4 ROW 7: Norman Josefialq: John Krafi: Richard Surwillo: Vicior Barnes: Daniel lvlakowslci: Paul LaSavage: Jerry Smeizer: Charles Mangless: James Reizer: Bolo Brunn ROW 6: lvlargarel Peierson: Elmer l-loernlce: Richard Kucharslqi: Alvin Krawczyk: Harvey Linslce: Roman Dren+l4iewicz: l-larry Kleczka: Arihur Klinlciewicz: Ralph Skobielew: Roman Smiqielslci ROW 5: Ralph Schlass: Ervin Janik: Clarence lvlichaud: Sianley Slizewslqi: Burl Smilh: Paul Kroliclq: John Theisen: James Krolick: Ervin Ravie: Della Srewarr ROW 4: Elorence l-loli: Roberi Warih: Daniel Simonson: Len Leszczynslqi: Naihalie Urban: Irene Danielslqi: John Mane: Jerome Woinowslci: Alfred Kowalski ROW 3: Chesrer lvlarinello: Alice Romaszewslci: Evelyn Szymczak: Rosa l-lrpa: Soliie Sak: Elaine Wepier: Doroihy Srriclc: Audrey Krogsiad: Arlene Tripp ROW 2: l-lelen Opalalc: Leona Klappa: Lorraine Kopsar: Eslrher Lewandowski: Clara Mikecz: Dorolrhy Swanlfo: Lillian Schauer: Belle Ramus ROW I: Lorraine Krainialc: Viola? Kepchya: Florence Krueger: Irene Timian: Beairice Boschlce: lvlargarei Schwarlz: Virginia Kuehn: Lorry Bieganowslci: Eveleen Bieganowski JUNIORS B ROW 7: Gene Melms: Alvin Mikolaiewski: Donald Carloerry: Tom Barr: Charles Dixon: George Benkendorf: Edward Green: l-lomer Cruilcshanlc: Earl Bernhardr: Ed Kaminslci ROW 6: James Churchill: Kennerh Zivney: Jane Buchholz: Norma Lubardo: Jack Bar- lich: Kenne+h Mueller: Roberr Murley: George Malecki: Bernard Lulqowslqi: Richard Dermody ROW 5: Eslrher Kendzierski: Berry Bullca: Dolores Machaiewslci: Ella Srolca: Norberlr Kurudza: Arrhur Bulcovich: Roy Eriksson: Roberi Lirzau: LeRoy Domagalslci ROW 4: Ralph Silcora: Berry Breulrzmann: Rulh Bronenlcanr: Clara Wozniak: Perer Docra: Herman Busse: Dorofhy Nadolny: Mary Jean Morley: Ray Crigger ROW 3: Maraloelrh Zilmer: Dorolhy Srengel: Dolores Walczylcowslxi: l-lerra Srriclc: Jennie Xinos: Eunice Zogg: Roloerr Napienieli: Roland Malalc: Ralph Nadolslci ROW 2: Berry von l-lorn: Elaine Koszewslci: Dolores Dziadosz: l-lelen Carazella: Lucille Trzesniewslci: l-lelen Albus: Janei' Baumann: Arlyn Scheefs ROW I: Doris Kieckhefer: Jane Laabs: Fanny Shurla: lrene Koria: Genevieve Kuligow- ski: Phyllis Kusial: Dororhy Walrhers: Jean Werner: Phyllis Moen: Elsie Moon 98 JUNIORS B ROW 7: Virginia Kloiia: Howard Traxel: Thomas Meyers: William Tollilfe: Howard Slroschin: Clarence Vopal: Ralph Kiizke: Gerald Ollenburg: Dorofhy Neacy: Esiher Ma- zurkiewicz ROW 6: Juliene Weber: John Grzybowski: Viola Krohn: Audrey Nolie: Andrew Muraw- ski: Judy Kopach: Einn Koller: Sophie Swiialski: Donald Mau ROW 5: Ered Keller: Roberl' Luechi: Bernice Walczak: Erances Mozina: Marcella Woiculis: Laverne Nowak: Mildred l-lamrnernik: Blanche Dauiienbach: Edwin Schulfz: Jerome Sidney ROW 4: Rulrh Bykowski: Dorofhy Markowski: Virginia Lewandowski: Florence Cala- brese: Mercedes Ciezki: Charles Menfkowski: Jack Muenzenberger: Wilfred Groh: Sieve Nieznanski: l-larry Budzisz ROW 3: Marion Andersen: Doroihy Berner: Earl Deiilaii: Elmer Beiz: Clarence Singer: Daniel Budisch: Virginia Mioike: George Siagg: Shirley Mariens: Kafhleen O'Connor ROW 2: William Richards: Grace Lipinski: Mary Wambach: Shirleyann Wolff: Louise Maicher: Clara Masiakowski: Anna Voigi: Eleanore Eoole ROW I: Rulh Konkel: Sophie Kolska: Eulalie Paruzynski: Doro+hy Langer: Ruih Lem- mer: Audrey Beduhn: Eleanore Char: Sylvia Margolis: Anne Berlinski: Ru1'h Mielke JUNIORS B ROW 7: Ray Domloroe: Geneva Vaillancourr: Dale Ellinglon: Arno Schaifschneider: Edward Dziedzic: Richard Neumann: Rubin Polzien: Bill Mullins: I-Ienry Przybylslci ROW 6: Marjorie Konlce: Virginia Rosploch: Dorolhy Baxler: Jeanefre Winslci: Doris Rydlewicz: I-Ielene Zuhlowslci: Mary Pszybylslci: Florence Ruchalslci: Virginia Schneider: Elaine Eelilan: I-Iarriel Buechner ROW 5: Marcella Klinlcosch: Olga Kowalchulc: Pearl Rad+Ice: Irene Ralcowslci: Anfonelle Rarlcowslci: Bearrice Boschke: Lorry Bieganowslci: Lucille Wenrland: Jeanne Samuelsen: Rurh Priebe ROW 4: Emily Mulh: Idella Mueller: Dorofhy Zoleclci: Margarei McGuire: Carherine Doyle: Lore++a Nencki: Dorolhy Manke: Viola Lang: Mary Livingslon: Dolores Lascelle ROW 3: Mae Moser: Lorraine Machan: Gladys Peardon: Geraldine Arne: Eugenia Lubinski: Dolores Zollalq: Phyllis Klinlqosh: Alice Nell: I-Ienrieiura Oszuscilq: Doris Luedfke ROW 2: Shirley Mylnarelc: Dolores Mylnarelc: Louise Mercurio: Mary Kraiewski: Shirley Knauer: Marjorie Radlke: Anne Siukis: Irene Pivonka: Erhel Laalsch: Doris Larson ROW I: Eleanore Zollalc: Lorraine Michalak: Irene Boselri: Margarel Mooney: Clari- Ioel Menlce: Thelma Paradise: Eslher Kusz: Borghild Sundby: I-Ielen Palaimo: Charlolie Lemmer IOO JUNIORS SENIORS A and B ROW 7: Jerome Carlfon: James Holionf Arlhur Ciachorowslci: Merron Helrners: Roloerf Wesolowslci: Gilberl Zube: Joseph Sizer: Eugene Weishan: George Schneider: Thomas Murray ROW 6: Chesfer Bugiel: Jerome Ralaiewslci: James Campbell: Heinz Prey: Daniel Schach+: Adelle Sonnenberg: Marlha Gabryelczylc: Anna Drew: Conrad Winderl: John Elier , ROW 5: Edwin Chilinslci: George Redenz: Leonard Vellc: Thornlon Kiphari: John Bindl: Grace Peardon: George Sauli: Aileen Monroe: John Blasinski: Louis Luedlce ROW 4: Harry Peplinslci: Siella Brodzilc: James Breifzman: Mary Ellen Burke: Alice Owsianny: Helen Bahr: Agnes Byczynslci: Helen Bach: Mary Fri'rz: Paul Kulclin ROW 3:i Harold Newcomb: Edwin Borowslci: Fannie Docfa: Irene Korylowicz: Noreen Boyle: Lorraine Piszlca: Rurh Phillips: Rose Dezelan: Mary Bufchar: Margarel DeMo'rro: George Ruziclcla ' - ROW 2: Genevieve Polochnilc: Olive Powers: LaVerne Sauer: Marilyn Rohde: Gloria Roedl: Lorraine Bessler: Frances Tlcauiz: Irene Neelsen: Irene Dolorowslci: Lucille Srnelelc ROW I: Angeline Sarneclci: Frances Fosmore: Edifh Bellis: Viola WeIIs'rein: Adeline Wenia: CharIoHe Baskin: Josephine Sazama: Margaref Schumacher: Evelyn Pafelslci: Delphyn Olszewski JUNIORS SENIORS A ROW 7: I-Ians I-Iuse: Sleve I-Ialmo: Roman Gorski: John I-Iallon: Roberl Slrolhenlce: Richard Weslphal: Beniamin Lane: Carol Ruff: Lorraine Sarnowslri ROW 6: Charles Wylie: Norman Sue: William Korloer: Erven Jaslcie: Herberl I-Iaydoclc: Paul I-Iuebschen: George Willie: Irvin Wachowski: Arlrhur Zolecki: Audrey Schullrz ROW 5: Emily Schwalbe: Roberlr Udovich: Armin S+odoIenaIc: Elmer Senfl: Roberl Clarke: Gerald I-Iansen: I-Iuberl Smaby: Irving Earaqher: Roman Dich ROW 4: Lenora Jennrich: Anna Golelz: Belly Morey: Belrlie Sprague: Lila Anderson: Jean Schallschneider: Edifh SIOII: Rulh I-Ialfmann: Agrapine Wozniak: Arleen Schmidlrlce ROW 3: Evelyn Sallo: Helen Szubelsld: Calherine Zuber: Jerome Paplaczylc: Millon Schnoll: Morris Lipeles: Warren Zamzow: John Crosby: Ervin Czernieiewicz: Eleanor Gurda ROW 2: I-Ienriella Conslanline: Margarel Puhek: Jane Krygier: Eslher Behrendl: Ber- nadene Perszewslci: Dorolhy Andrykowslci: Roseclare Keelan: Dorolhy Will: Chrisline Gor- nick: Evelyn Jahnlqe: Olive Radomslci ROW I: Eslher Perlaczynslci: Mildred Scherer: Rose Ereimann: I-Ielen Bilanslcy: Anila Ouade: Marcia Eedder: Eslher Rybacki: Mary Doran: Eslher Radai: Gladys Pichalska: Ger- Jrrude Terry IO2 JUNIORS SENIORS A ROW 7: Rulh Shippy: Lorraine Berrang: Roberl Grubich: Richard Agacinski: Roberl Kressin: Richard Dziennik: Eoresl Jahn: Guenlher Chrisl: Evelyn Lachmund ROW 6: Laverne Dougherly: Audrey Fiedler: Roloerl Ersson: Roberl Clucas: Arlhur Cook: Norberl Meyer: Don Fischer: Bob Borgwardl: Slan Slarzyk: Adeline Hollmeier ROW 5: Bernice Bernhardl: Olive Olsen: June Clark: Jane Mruk: LaVerne Marquardl: Elola Pepowske: Lorraine Hahn: John Naus: Edward Walkowiak: Norrine Huslon ROW 4: Eay Hein: Dolores Czerwinski: Rulh Ladwig: Winilred Krueger: Kalhleen Wie- sen: Dorolhy While: Violel Hansen: Virginia Wojciechowski: Alice Weinlein: Dorolhy Thompson ROW 3: Adeline Walczak: Marion Sloecker: May Kanlak: Joyce Frank: LaVerne Schall- horn: Maryella Sloddard: Wandeline Jasicke: Lillie Gallagher: Myra Gaiewski: Bernice Gavin ROW 2: Delores Oroszkiewicz: Marion Beikol: Mary Halmo: Dorolhy Hollz: Helen Kalsekes: Lorraine Hilgendorl: Rulh Salverson: Erilzi McLaughlin: Marlina Thompson: Rulh XIVegner: Evelyn Eausl ROW I: Rulh Schusler: Belly Trawicki: Annabelle Loveioy: Belly Ann Blixl: Doris Eck- slein: Florence Werner: Marjorie VerHagen: Helen Szpakowski: Alice Wisniewski: Lor- raine Phillips: Rulh Chudnoll JUNIORS SENIORS A ROW 7: Cl'1arlo+'re Pielc:Cl1es+er Janilc: Leo Kogullciewicz: Maurice Budney: l-larald Gade: Bob Paeschlce: Clifford Gundersen: Leonard Plaski: Cliff l-larslw: Arr Aleniczalq ROW 6: Riclfiard Zimny: Clyde Budzien: LeRoy Zimmerman: Alfred Gusiafson: Roberi Fischer: l-larry Wilrlcowslci: Frank Rozelc: Arr Panelc: Berl Engel ROW 5: Marion Kesler: Louise Hagen: Calnleen Curley: Marjorie Koclw: Jeanne Zimny: James Markiewilz: Russ Olsen: Allen Riebolcll: Joe Gaullqe: Mi+zie Wesl ROW 4: Florence Janilc: Eleanore Zilisclw: Geraldine Gow: Bernice Slcroloaclci: Amelia Fabiianciclw: Lorraine l-leilmanng Lorayne Pocieclia: Mildred Mau: Marion Ku+ner: Delores l-lerwig: Marion Siuclcerl ROW 3: Lorerfa Kloifa: Maiorie Jacobs: Evelyn Anfon: Lucille Gross: Clwrisline Nowa- lcowslci: Mildred Jonnson: Randi l-lollon: Alice Lovdalil: Lucille l-loward: Marion Zing- slieim ROW 2: Vinesia Kinlis: Doro+hy Linski: Belly Banrelmann: Margaref Marlino: Louise Leil- er: Margaref Spelc: Delou Brennan: Rurlw Sclwullz: Mary Ann Liban: Marcella Pinczlcowslci: Mary Jane Peddenbruclw ROW I: Gilberf Hallmann: Tessie Maslropieiro: Elaine Spear: Jean Kobs: Violel Sclwue- neman: Mildred Felslce: Marie Filz: Evelyn Jablonski: Florence Anderson IO4 JUNIORS SENIORS A ROW 7: Gerald l-loepfner: l-larold Koenig: Daniel Burzynslci: Howard Schlinslcy: Gordon Wyman: Florian Vopalenslcy: William Miles: Richard Czehno: John ZwiHer: Kennelh Wenzel ROW 6: Roberf Parlerson: Jerome Welch: Philip Biallc: Donna Duerr: Delberi Good- year: Clarence Rinlca: Richard Rielqlcoff: Norberi Schell: Dave Young: Roberf l-lansen ROW 5: Donna Derouin: Alice Widor: Dolores Wargin: Ed Lorloieclci: Mabel Trenilaqe: LaVerne Snyder: Joseph Kucher: Roberl' Beloi: Doroihy Annen ROW 4: Irene Nalrhe: Vilas Kading: Phil McGowan: Beverly Sosalla: Lorraine Konlcel: l-larry Graeven: Eslher Schmidi: Lucy Wiczynslci: Gene Benkowski ROW 3: Shirley Fallon: Marqarei' Brillowslci: Cafherine von Banlc: Doris Sieinberg: Jos- ephine Galanfe: Marion Hendricks: Bernice Schullz: Florence Zarzyclci: l-larold Blazelc ROW 2: Carol Wilhrow: Rurh Jaeck: Mafilda Milcecz: Pearl Rosean: Richard Konlcel: Dolores Kleczka: Dororhy Gorn: Mary Giordano: lrmgard Grolh: I-lelen Gilder ROW I: Adeline Joers: Regina Goslomslci: Audrey Jablonslci: Lorraine Janlcowslci: Ber- nadine Kazmierski: lrene Golemloieslfi: William Mehner: Allen Ladwig: Casimer Woldanslci: Berry Kulpinslqi JUNIORS SENIORS A ROW 7: Joseph Milqolaiczak: John Tuchollca: Jerome Woida: Marvin Kosler: Fred Palrz- lce: Lawrence l-larding: James Knufrson: Gilberl Konkel ROW 6: Edward Zielinski: Marvin Siclcinger: l-lenry Rozmarynowslci: Carl Klosiewslci: Mil- +on Szymanslqi: Waller Wood: Louis Smelelq: Richard Wood ROW 5: Roberl Newcomb: George Miller: Adrian Searing: Jerome Woinowslqi: Chesler SchmiH: Ervin Pohl: Ray Siedleclci: Ray Erdmann ROW 4: Eleanor Kowalski: Sylvia Kulinslci: Jennie Feldman: Audrey Bruss: Lorraine Wood: Sophie Maluszewski: Lucille Wargin: Dorolhy Amerpohl: Virginia Kling ROW 3: Dorolhy Schmidt Bernice Ruszkiewicz: lrvin Guefzkow: Kennelh Sweel: Lucinda Jagodzinslqi: Evelyn Woinowslqi: Ann Collins: Doroihy Kowalski ROW 2: Lillian Banaszalc: Evelyn Beurh: Bernadelrfe Tyczlcowslci: Evelyn Samolinski: Siella Eurmanslci: Gladys Zuehr: Eleanor Thorsiensen: Kalherine l-leinneclq: Veronica Wi+czalc ROW l: l-lelen Ziolkowslci: Anna Barlaczewicz: Leona Belier: Virginia l-lallman: lrene Mann: Virginia Schwaloe: Eihel Blanas: Mary Karioris: Alyce Gorslci IO6 JUNIORS SENIORS A ABSENTEES ROW 7: Cyrus lngraharn: Leon Doelger: Roberf Yench: Ernesf Lorenlzg Harvey Yeager: Alfred Reilerg Glenn Pe+erson: Frank Jankowslci ROW 6: Rulh Tucholkag Marcella Heling: LaVerne Higgins: Hazel lhne: Genevieve Belelc: Edward Kawczyhslqig Jerome Hybicki: Raymond Schools ROW 5: Norberl Worlalg Adrian Wrulcowslci: Herberl Baskin: James Klumpp: Dorolhy Tuchollca: June Olsen: Rose Russo ROW 4: Doloris Schweigl: Slella Konylowicz: Angeline Kowalski: lrene Chruszczynslcig Dororhy George: Hazel Sleveng Virginia Misorslci: Adeline lvlichalslci ROW 3: Jean Sloreyi Corrine Culligan: Margaref Heibel: Gladys Pokrop: Vanelle lvlyers: Dolores Czaslcos: Evelyn lvliellce ROW 2: Dorolhy Mafzellep Bernadine Wicznski: Jenny Gorniclq: Mary Magierowslcig Clar- ice Sleinmelz: lrene Dembinslcii Josephine Zemlang Cecilia Haplca ROW I: Shirley Lemberger: Rila Mogilka: Lois Banlelmanng Belly Nolfeg Josephine Collura: Elhel Henn: Josephine Orzelsliaq Audrey Baars: Josephine Swiecialc Tlvi From The record: When SouTh marched in The Third l.iberTy Loan parade, our TooTball and Track boys were asked To lead The educaTional secTion. CapTain BreTT and his valianT men, C5aarTz, Funclc, l-lansen, Oakland, Thomp- son, GrueTTner, l-lardy,Gardner, Healy, Mueller, Pixley, Kolpaclci, McLaughlin, l-lelnns, TuTTrulo, Kuenzli, lVleysT, and O'-Brien, launched a TradiTion in The his- Toric vicTories oT '95 and seT The sTyle oT Shoulder To'Shoulder, SouTh Side. TIES 1 fr ,M Y MMM ..,. ,LL ,W,,,,,.,w,,,n --:rw .A-uv, , ,,,um..W.,M ,, ,,..,X,f Ln-m,4 m,Av,.,.M ChrisTine Nowakowski VioleT Loud Madeleine Amschler EdiTh SchuTz BeTTy Morley GIRLS' GLEE CLUB Girls and more girls! FiTTy-Tour oT Them. No, iT isn'T The Roc4eTTes. lT's The Girls' Glee club ready Tor anoTher rehearsal in room IZO. IT asked whaT They like bes+ abouT The club, They answer, lVleeTing wiTh The Boys' Glee club every oTher day. The iarn sessions beTween bells are eagerly awaiTed by all. The club is iusT one big happy Tam- ily. On solo days, Triendly criTicisms are oTTered by The girls and lvliss Leh- mann. Though some are TrighTened aT TirsT To sing alone, They soon conquer Tear by appearing on The weekly pro- grams. This being TournamenT and TesTival year, The club learned many new songs. WiTh The boys They parTicipaTed in The all-ciTy TesTival in May and The TournamenT in June. BOYS' GLEE CLUB Ding, ning, nang, nong. Ah, ao, ee, oh, oo. Nonsense syllables and long vowels echoing Through The bandroom Tell The school ThaT iTs chorisTers are are aT iT again. l-lowever, These exercises are very necessary. Mr. Goodrich urges, Re- lax your jaw. SupporT The Tone wiTh plenTy oT breaTh. ATTer This The real work oT The day begins, pracTice Tor The TesTival and The Tournan'1enT. The boys really enioy Their work- especially when called upon To ioin The Girls' Glee club. lrving Engel Donald Schweicla Dean Berger Roy Trumbull KenneTh Wood EI or Zilich Isabelle Siuder Marion Kosfer y Wood Mariorie Koch Mildred SHIELD CLUB Ivly precious diary: I spenl all my coin al Ihe penny supper and ale loo much. II's grand Io belong Io Shield club, Though. I was mighlily impressed by The cere- monial wiih Ihe candles and 'Flow- ers. And when we sang, Follow Ihe Gleam, I nearly cried. We had a pariy for Ihe colored Girl Reserves. Such Iunl Sho' 'nuII, Ihey are powerful cule. ln addilion Io Thai can-can dance al Chrisimas, we carried oul our service proiecl wilh an Easier parly for Iwenly children. They've gol me believing in Ihe bunny again. Tonighl I came home wilh eyes red and swollen. Ivlolher couldn r undersland why I cried al our senior farewell. II was sad, Though. I haled Io leave, bul +here's always camp ahead. NEWSBOYS' CLUB Through parlicipalion in swim- ming, baslcelball, and skaling con- Iesls, Ihe newsboys again joined in Ihe program ol Ihe Newsboys' Republic. I-leld al limes conveni- enl Io lhe carriers, The evenis gave Ihe boys opporlunilies Io show Iheir alhlelic prowess which Ihey would noi olherwise have had. The Newsboys' council, composed of represenlalives from every home room, every row in A and B, mel ollen wilh Ivlr. Severy, lhe adviser, Io discuss plans for coming evenls. Owen Wesi' William Grab Edwin Borowslci Sidney Herie D ld E ltsen Mildred drofh Mildred HOBBYCRAFT CLUB Bang! The presidenT oT l-TobbycraTT is calling The meeTing To order. When The regular business is Tinished, The members gaTher inTo diTTerenT groups. Click! ThaT's The candid camera group. They're busy geTTing sTolen snaps Tor The Annual. IT, when siTTing in A, you hear Thar click, you'll know iT's one oT The camera Tiends. ln This corner is The posTer group. Their brushes Tly over The posTer boards To produce sporT and class play posTers. Look herel STudenTs benT over skeTching boards are looking ouT oT The windows. They're skeTching The houses on Lapham sTreeT. They may also be seen on Wisconsin avenue, aT The lake TronT, or aT The zoo on sunny SaTurday aTTernoons. Bang! The hobbycraTT meeTing is adjourned. MASK AND WIG Up wenT The curTain and Mask and Wig began iTs play TournamenT, cos- Tumed, direcTed, and sTaged by club members. l-lilarious comedies, musical revues, and minsTrel shows consTiTuTed The enTries. ATTer all was said and done, down came The curTain. One group was pronounced The winner, each perTormer in iT being awarded a blue ribbon in recogniTion oT his TalenT. Newly organized, lvlask and Wig specializes in play producTion. The club oTTers a chance Tor sTardom To all aspiranTs. lrving Engel lrene Timian Gladys Blanchard Sophie PluTa BeTTy Mifchell IoTTe Lemmer ArThur Koch ElizabeTh Bower I ,, CENTURY LITERARY SOCIETY l-Tear ye, all Barrymores, Gar- bos, and Toscaninisl CenTury is again beckoning you TO conTribuTe your TalenTs TO The honored Tradi- Tions OT The TheaTer. ThaT was The call issued by CenTury, and because OT a hearTy response The season was iammed wiTh merry enTerTainmenT. Accomplished singers rendered songs whose echoes will never Tade. I-low well ThaT chalk Talk arTisT knew his subiecT-girls. Those sTriking panTOmimes Tairly shook The sTage. l-lilariTy reigned aT The ChrisTmas cosTume parTy where laughTer and good Tellowship helped To make iT an OuTsTanding evenT OT The season. Lucky members won Treasured Cen- Tury pins as door prizes. Ivlelo- drama, comedy, Or skiT, CenTury had iT. GERMAN GUILD DelighTTul memories wil linger in The hearTs OT all who heard The German Guild's TuneTul lVlusikTesT, saw iTs impressive ChrisTmas pag- oanT and The OTher clever programs which have enTerTained members since The club originaTed lasT Fall. LilTing STrauss walTzes, rainbow Tolk d a n c e s, and side-spliTTing comedies have all been sparkling aTTracTiOns. COnTribuTing TO The eniOymenT OT The sTudenT body aT SOuTh has given experience and saT- isTacTiOn To members OT The Guild. Merion Helmers Milka Obraclovich Helen Johnson Hopkins Roberi Zilmer GerTrude Heyer SCIENCE CLUB Did you l4now ThaT SouTh's science laboraTories are more compleTe and The insTrumenTs more eTTicienT Than The mosT elaboraTe research eguipmenT oT TiTTy years ago? l-low conTenTed PasTeur would have been had he been able To use The microscopes in our biology laboraToryl WhaT a Thrill Tor Sir l-lumphry Davy To have had access To our chemical laboraTory wiTh iTs counTless TesT Tubes, Bunsen burners, and cabineTs oT chem- icalsl Michael Faraday would have deemed iT a miracle To have enTered our physics lab. The elecTric moTors, generaTors, and X-ray Tubes would have asTounded him. By joining The Science club any sTu- denT aT SouTh has access To These Ta- ciliTies. The only requiremenT is inTer- esT in a Tield oT science. GIRLS' CLUB Girls glowing wiTh conTenTmenT marched ouT oT A wiTh sighs oT, Wasn'T The sTyle show grand? Snap- py sporTs cloThes, Trilly Tormals, and Turry evening wraps had been modeled by Girls' club manneguins. WiTh a commenTaTor describing The cloThes, The show assumed a genuine commer- cial air. Besides The Tashion show, The ChrisTmas parTy and The lvlay TesTival were highlighTs This season. OldesT club aT SouTh Division, The Girls' club also boasTs The largesT group oT members. Mabel Kaun Rose Dudon lnez McCarThy E Th M lciewicz Carl Glazewslci Phyllis Kaluzy lc M y Pszybylslri Wanda Sanelc POLISH CLUB lrViTh a bang oT The new gavel, which incidenTally came Trom Po- land, The Polish club embarked on iTs TourTh year oT acTiviTy. By pro- moTing good will and Triendship, The club became bigger and beT- Ter. ln addiTion To The delighTTul programs aT each meeTing, a Polish speech conTesT was held To encour- age The use oT The language. This year will be a memorable one, Tor iT esTablished a new Tradi- Tion. Pins were awarded To Those graduaTing seniors who had done ouTsTanding worlc in The club. The presenTaTion oT These pins Took place aT The annual senior Tarewell parTy. The newly esTablished cus- Tom is To be eTTecTive every year. Thus ended anoTher season wiTh hopes Tor similar success in The TuTure. LOS AMIGOS PasTel de Trambuesas con crema lraspberry pie wiTh whipped cream, To you gringosl is iusT one oT The Things The members oT Los Amigos learned To order Trom a Spanish menu. To The sTrains oT lazy Argen- Tine rhyThm, senores and senoriTas Tangoed around The Spanish club room This semesTer. One oT The highlighTs was a l-lallowe'en parTy wiTh music and games. AlThough This year marlcs iTs oTTicial debuT aT SouTh, Los Amigos hopes To con- Tinue iTs progress in years To come. RuTh Chudnoff Ru+h Olsheske Norberf Poznanski John Mane FENCING Sounds oT clashing sword blades rang Through SouTh Tor The TirsT Time in school hisTory as Tencing was inTro- duced by Don Ericlcsen and Paul Gruhn, seniors experienced in The sporT. In The sixTeenTh cenTury, Tencing wiTh The small sword was common in Europe, and The Technique employed is The ToundaTion oT modern Tencing. Use oT The sword as a weapon died ouT aTTer The inTroducTion oT gunpowder, buT iT will always be connecTed wiTh ideals oT' honor and chivalry. AlThough The group aT SouTh was: small because.oT The cosT oT equip- menT, a beginning was made. Pro- TecTed by mesh maslcs, gloves, and iaclceTs, Tencers are in liTTle danger: buT They develop poise, alerTness, andf TasT Thinking. CARDINAL BOYS' CLUB Boysl Do you wanT To hear The laTesT news in aviaTion? l-lave you The: ambiTion To be a greaT aTTorney? Do- you plan To ioin The army or navy? Dur- ing iTs TirsT year aT SouTh The Cardinal Boys' club has oTTered inTeresTing Talks on These and oTher proTessions by men: who lcnow all There is To lcnow abouT Them. ln addiTion To vocaTional guid- ance The club gives excellenT Training in leadership. RecreaTion consisTs oT baseball, baslceTball, hilces, and pre-- paring various programs Tor The school.. Successiful? You beTl Joseph Kurylo Osborn HolTon RoberT Newcomb HuberT Smaby CHESS CLUB A knighT charges inTo The enemy lines, a casTle proTecTs The king, while oddly enough, The queen helps TighT The baTTle. This is all parT oT The game oT chess. Drawn up in baTTle array, black army meeTs whiTe, buT The brains oT The mas- Ters, noT Their brawn, are winning TacTors. Bishops dash down diag- onals, casTles and knighTs Take Toll oT enemy warriors: suddenly Through an opening, The gueen sweeps in. CheckmaTel The game is ended. Weary generals relax: one more baTTle is over. Then, LeT's have anoTher game! The war is on again. Once more baTTle limes Tormg warriors buT a Tew momenTs dead shine again in glory. So every Wednesday aTTernoon S o u Th 's players TighT Tor supremacy in chess, king oT games. FORUM When mosT oT us were wee Things back in I923, Forum was organized by Mr. lvlorsTad. Since Then The club has expanded wiTh Mr. lvladi- son as co-adviser. The naTional quesTion Tor discus- sion This year was: Resolved, ThaT The UniTed STaTes Torm an alliance wiTh GreaT BriTain. SouTh's Teams parTicipaTed in The lvlargueTTe clinic debaTes. Members are now working To develop poise and quickness oT ThoughT To aid Them nexT semesTer. Lois Dahl Lorraine Lewandowski Celia Barber Willard NoTbohm Bernice Parske GIRLS' SPORTS lnTeresT in girls' sporTs is becom- ing more and more keen. Formerly, acTiviTies were conTined largely To maT work, Tolk dancing, and games. Now These acTiviTies yield To more energeTic sporTs. OT course, our aThleTic Tield is an asseT, Tor iT allows The girls To parTicipaTe in Track evenTs. Perhaps in The TuTure archery and Tencing will be added To our growing lisT oT sporTs. ln The girls' gym This year The spoT- lighT was Tocused on aTTer-school ac- TiviTies. OT all sporTs ping pong was The TavoriTe. ln TacT, iT wenT over so big ThaT The gym Teachers hope To add Two new Tables To Their equip- menT. WiTh such a display oT inTer- esT, There was noT enough Table room Tor a singles TournamenT. How- ever, a doubles TournamenT was held and proved ThaT The girls could give each oTher plenTy oT compeTiTion. Those who baTTed Their way To suc- cess Tor The championship were Eve- lyn AnTon and Agnes Brozewski. AnoTher comparaTively new sporT which was greeTed wiTh enThusiasm aT SouTh was badminTon. ln previous years The girls hiT The shuTTle-cock back and TorTh, buT very Tew under- Took To learn The game. This year insTrucTions were given To a large group oT girls, and a TournamenT was sTaged. The winning shuTTle-cock slammers were Angeline Tenerowicz and Alice Pares. A raTher unusual acTiviTy, and cer- Tainly a good meThod oT exercise, was The iiTTerbug dancing every morning Trom eighT To eighT-ThirTy. For hockey and soccer enThusiasTs, The Tield ouTside oT school was a veriTable sevenTh heaven. The only Trouble was ThaT The weaTher didn'T permiT Them To use iT as much as They would have liked To do. OT course, The usual baskeTball and volley ball TournamenTs i were held. The sophomore baskeTbal Team Took The T championship by winning The one game played. Because Two oTher games were Tor- TeiTed, This Team was on Top. The players included ElizabeTh Duerr, capTain, Beverly l-lanel, BeTTy l-loTh, ConsTance Lamy, BeTTy LiTzau, Mildred Raspor, and VerneT Thompson. Alma Lohry EThel EcksTaedT Anna Kobylnicka Eleancre FooTe Agnes Brozewslci, Marcella Grosz, Helen Johnson, lvlany colorTul names decoraTed The volley ball TournamenT. BuT ouT oT The Cavaliers, The Oranges, The Reds, The Colliders, The Jeeps, The Blue Flashes, The Zephyrs, The SkyrockeTs, The Greens, The Purples, The Spikers, The I-Iigh l-laTTers, and The JiTTerbugs, The Sweeney Cru- saders rose The vicTors. The annual i938 spring Tennis TournamenT was noT Tinished so The players compleTed iT This Tall. Fore! Forel The girls were mosT inTeresTed in swinging ThaT club around. FirsT They pracTiced in The gym wiTh a rubber ball, and laTer They wenT ouT To some nice, quieT course and hacked away. Seriously Though, They really goT some good resulTs in golTing. Ivlany oT The baseball games were played ouT on The oval. There was noT enough room in The gym Tor Bonnie Brand, Grace HalbriTTer, Rose Andraszczylx, E comTorT, because a hiT inTo The bal- cony was ouT. IT is The girls' humble suggesTion ThaT if any one ever socks aball over The Tar end oT The Tence, iT should be counTed as a home run, if only by way oT congraTulaTion. More congraTulaTions Tor Audrey lvlau, a sophomore, and Diana Guad- agni, a senior, Tor Their high iumping. Each cleared Tour TeeT eighT, guiTe a iump Tor a girl. Then Too, There was The Treshman, Cecelia Jakubiak, who Threw The baskeTbaII 75 TeeT. Yes, we have had a compleTe and successTul round oT sporTs as well as reg- ular class work, To make a Tull, insTrucTive, Tun- promoTing pro- gram in The gym all year. Miss Kegel Mrs. Hu nTer William Murray Thomas Murray TENNIS Spring beckoned The 1938 Tennis Tal- enT oT SouTh Division. Among The 44 candidaTes reporTing were STucl4erT and Bill lviurray, ouTsTanding players To re- Turn To The squad. OTher reTurning numeral winners were Abrams, BenTz, FiTas, and Lassa. -Coach Bergland held high hopes Tor The new Team. DeTermined To malce a good showing, The Cardinal neTTers emerged vicTorious in Two clashes wiTh NorTh. WesT, how- ever, spliT The TilTs, Talcing The TirsT 3-2: Then SouTh nosed ouT WesT To reverse The Tally. In boTh clashes wiTh WashingTon, ThaT power house TlaTTened The squad 4-I. AnoTher disappoinTmenT came' when Juneau soared over The Redbirds 3-2, T , . -f ,ur ,. i ,-ffilfil-W ' J,.w-f ' buT The Tollowing monTh Juneau was deTeaTed 3-2. EasT conquered The Cards 3-2 and 4- I . UndaunTed, The racl4eTeers handed Lincoln Two Trouncings. A win and a loss wiTh RuTus King closed The sea- son. The Cardinal squad secured TiTTh place in The championship race. This year STucl4erT wiTh Bill and Syzamnslci comprised a sTrong singles Team. Assigned To The number one doubles Team were Tom Murray and Kroliclr. Of eighT sTrong compeTiTors, Coach Bergland named The second d o u b l e s combinaTion, Engel and Zoleclri. ATTer a bad sTarT in I939, SouTh's neTTers proved a serious ThreaT in The ciTy championship. MorsTad WalTer Muehl GOLF Clansmen oT SouTh Division gaThered To swing ouT, noT To The sTrains oT Loch Lomond, buT To The Tune oT lvly l-learT Belongs To My Caddy. Spring was in The air, The rolling hills oT The golT course had Turned green, golT Tever had seized The divoT diggers. BuT Coach MorsTad TelT ThaT his Team need- ed developing. l-le kepT The boys ouT oT ciTy compeTiTion buT sTarTed an inTer- mural league Tor pracTice under Tire. From The PGA The squad received new eguipmenT and boolcleTs showing The correcT grip, sTance, and posiTion. ATTer The lasT season's sTeady drill Coach MorsTad believes ThaT his Team is now ready Tor compeTiTion. Eagles and birdies will be The aim oT SouTh's craclc shoTs, who will aTTempT To con- quer WashingTon, Juneau, Pulaski, RuTus King, EasT, and CusTer. The re- Turn oT l-lugo Barbian and Ralph Prey, Two-year men, and Richard Wood, a Three-year man, seems promising. They will be supporTed by a Tine bunch oT newcomers, Edward Subel, Roger BellarT, Elmer l-liorTland, WalTer lvluehl, and Jerome BarTle. Each season These young linlcsmen play The usually vicTorious TaculTy who are sTeadier in The pinches. This year, however, The boys hope Tor a beTTer maTch. NOT only have They had more seasoning, buT This is Their chance To geT revenge Tor The Trials and TribulaTions oT The classroom. Richard W Ralph Prey Hug B b O Bl' i T .-V r. fa-. - ' - -Q, wr f--, . - -. ,fy-M. ., 1-' .-fp, TRACK DeTermined To make a supreme bid Tor The coveTed WIAA TiTle, ZOO Track aspiranTs greeTed Coach l-leineman and The IQ38 season. Weekly inTra-squad meeTs helped The boys To shape one oT The sTrongesT Teams in The ciTy. On April I3 and I8 The Do Dos again van- quished The Ding Dongs 82-50. The Redmen opened Their ouTdoor season by dropping a 63lf2-49lf2 decision To a sTrong alumni lineup. Charles Beaudry garnered Three TirsTs Tor I5 poinTs. SouTh collecTed poinTs in every evenT as WashingTon's ciTy champs were upseT 6I-52 in The opening meeT. A seTback aT The hands oT a powerTul EasT squad Tollowed, 70 3X5- 37 2f5. Proving Their worTh in The Waukesha relays, The Thinclads placed second To EasT. ln The lasT dual meeT oT The season They easily Tripped up WesT. In The TirsT all-souTh side meeT The Cards collecTed a ToTal oT 85lf2 poinTs and recorded six ouT oT ThirTeen TirsTs. The squad reTurned Trom Madison wiThouT The WIAA TiTle, having landed in only TourTh posiTion. AT The close oT The season The ciTy meeT Tound The Team in second place. N d Paced by CapTain Beierle Those leTTermen who Turned in The mosT consis- TenT perTormances were Gelhar Baerwald, Grosz, l-lopkins, l-leidak, Kurylo, Pohl Wisniewski and Plaski Records included Beierle's discus shoT oT T33 TeeT 6 incnes and Gelhars pole-vaulT oT I2 TeeT 378 inches. L d PI k R l h G Ih Ch T J k ki, John Rozanski, James Moon, Harvey Baerwald STanley Markel, Donald Hansen, LeRoy Gilmore, Charles W W y CROSS - COUNTRY Cross-counTry was mosT successTul. Medals and emblems were awarded To l-lansen, Markel, Gilmore, and Wylie Tor consisTenTly good perTormances The eTTorTs oT These Tour wiTh The help oT DeWaine Fischer gave SouTh possession oT The ciTy Trophy. ATTer only Two weeks oT pracTice The Team meT Bay View in The TirsT conTesT oT The sea- son. Though The Redskin road pounders Took a TerriTic beaTing, I6-39, They were Tar Trom discouraged. ThereaTTer, Coach l-leineman's charges were vicTorious over WesT, EasT, WesT Allis, Pulaski, and Juneau, losing only To WashingTon. In The midwesT cross-counTry conTesT aT Janesville, SouTh's Thinlies placed sixTh, and in The sTaTe meeT in SouTh Milwaukee They capTured only a TiTTh place because oT The unusual lengTh oT The course. WiTh only a TainT hope oT a second place aT l:JesT in The ciTy meeT, SouTh surprisingly placed Tour men among The TirsT IO To Tinish and, scoring The greaTesT upseT oT The season, capTured The ciTy championship. Coach Heineman A LITTLE MORE UMPH BASKETBALL l-lail, champions! BaTTling every inch oT The way, SouTh's cagers ToughT To Their TirsT cham- pionship in nine years. WiTh only Two seTbacks The Cards came Trom behind many Times To win in The closing seconds oT play. To a 27-25 Tune, SouTh Took RuTus King's measure in The season's opener. An air-TighT de- Tense and a remarkable Toray oT baskeT-making gave The Redbirds a 39-22 win over Bay View. The Techmen handed SouTh iTs TirsT deTeaT 33-25. In The TirsT home game, The Red cagers romped To a 27-2l vicTory over Juneau. WiTh a sTory- book Tinish, Kamoske climaxed a whirlwind aTTack by sinking a push shoT in The lasT Ten seconds To ouTpoinT Pulaski 35-33. Chalking up 29 poinTs in The second halT, SouTh drubbed EasT 39-2I. Al- Though WashingTon apparenTly held The upper hand ThroughouT The combaT, a TighTing SouTh Tive salvaged The game when Moose Beierle scored a miracle shoT in The Tinal Ten seconds To win 30-28. CusTer's lasT sTand proved TuTile, Tor The Cardinal warriors scalped The invaders 30-24. Coaches Rasinske and B M ld Thoroughly ouTclassed in The TirsT halT oT The WesT baTTle, 5ouTh sTaged an- oTher Typical comeback as BurdiTT evened The score 25-25 in The closing min- uTe oT play. Chuck Benkendorif Tipped in a rebound To ice The game 27-25. l3urdiTT paved The way To vicTory over NorTh by a seven poinT scoring splurge in The overTime period. Two poT shoTs by BuTch and a long shoT by Engel gave The Tlu-inTesTed Cards a 34-30 win. DespiTe a Treak shoT by Baerwald and Jahn's long shoTs, 5ouTh Tell beTore l.incoln's aTTack 29-28. Rewarded wiTh emblems were CapTain Beierle, BurdiTT, WarTord, Benken- dorT, Baerwald, Jahn, and Kamoske. Engel and Benske received numerals. Becky goT a bronze baskeTball. T Row 2: Lipeles, Mgr. Susek, Murray, Kamoske, Kuusinen, Beierle, Benkendorf, Jahn, Paeschke, M Tk k Row I: Warford, Benske, Engel, BurdiTT, Baerwald, Hansen, Gunderson POPEYE BACKFIRE FOOTBALL l-ligh hopes Tilled The hearTs oT SouTh's coaches as They waTched sixTy gridiron prospecTs go Through Their paces in The opening sessions oT TooTball pracTice. While vacaTion days were TleeTing away, These sweaTing huskies were TaughT The TundamenTals oT blocking, passing, kick- ing, and punTing by Coaches Krueger, SchmidT, Nowak, Rasinske, Nold, and Lilieblad. The lasT Three named were newly-appoinTed members on The Cardinal coaching sTaTT. WiTh only Two weeks oT hard pracTice under Their belTs, The Redmen deTeaTed WesT Milwaukee I3-6 in a Typical opening game marked by TreguenT Tumbles, ragged play, and uncerTain Timing. The ouTsTanding TeaTure oT The game was Beierle's 75-yard run on an inTercepTed pass. SouTh Tared raTher poorly againsT iTs second Toe, WesT Allis, and losT a Tough baTTle 6-O. STarTing oTT The ciTy conTerence race wiTh a bang, The SouTh gridders warded oTT Bay View's Tamous popeye pass aTTack 20-I3. BrillianT oTT-Tackle running by The diminuTive Baerwald and Tine pass receiving by Pohl led The Cardinal oTTense. A sTrong WesT eleven seT back The Cardinal TiTle hopes wiTh a hard ToughT 20-6 deTeaT. The Cards iusT didn'T seem To click. WiTh a righT-abouT-Tace The SouTh warriors came ouT ahead againsT Tech's Boilermakers I3-O. A TirsT- halT whirlwind aTTack led by SouTh's speedy Baerwald and a lasT-halT deTensive sTand enabled The Cards To come ouT on Top. Playing The besT game oT The season, SouTh's gridiron Torces pushed back a sTrong lXlorTh eleven 28-7. EveryThing seemed To work. Taking advanTage Row 4: Coach Rasinske, Domagalski, Gaulke, Carberry, Gelhar, Beierle, Benkendorf, Zimney, Czehno, Busse, Coach SchmidT, Coach Krueger Row 3: Mgr. Prince, Glowacki, G. Hansen, Boge, Spors, Urecla, FinTak, MaThea, Kassulke, Duewell, Kleczka, Mgr. L. PoTochnik Row 2: Paeschke, Rozanski, Jankowski, WesTphal, Wachowiak, J. Pofochnik, Gunderson, RiebolclT, kowski, Mohr, Mau Row I: DocTa, R. Hansen, Engel, Borgwardf, Baerwald, Hdldmlia. BUFCTTH. P0l Il. MSHl'li0WSlYT. Ud0VTCh. NBUS Coaches Rasinske, Krueger, and S ch C h N lc, Lilieblad and Nold Q of every break and furning every break info a fouch- down, fhe Cardinals liferally fore fhe Norfh line fo shreds. The climax was a 60-yard run-back of an infer- cepfed pass by our fullback Burdiff. Baerwald scored fwo fouchdowns and kicked all four conversions for fop score of fhe affernoon. l-lopes for a cify championship fie were ruined by an aggressive Lincoln fearn fhaf foughf Soufh fo a 7-7 sfandsfill. lf was a seesaw affair from beginning fo end. Neifher feam could denf fhe ofher's defense wifh any degree of success. Pofochnik's 40-yard run gave Soufh ifs only fouchdown. Fading back, Harvey Baerwald flipped a pass fo Joe, who snake-hipped his way down fhe sideline for a score. For fhe firsf fime in nine years Soufh defeafed Easl 2l-ll before a horne-coming crowd of 2000 Soufh Divisionifes, including over 50 oldfirners, all grid leffer- rnen from way back. Affer Easf scored firsf, fhe Cardinal forces gained rnomenfunn and inside of five nninufes scored fwo fouchdowns. The firsf score, affer a rnarch from midfield. was produced on a freak shovel pass from Burdiff fo Beierle in fhe end zone. A I9-yard pass from Baerwald fo Pohl accounfed for fhe second score. The final fouchdown was made on a blocked punf. Baerwald plunged over from fhe one-yard line for fhe fally. The Soufh gridders finished a mosf successful season wifh four vicfories, one fie, and only one defeaf. Alfhough nof a heavy fearn, fhe Cardinals pos- sessed fine spirif and a lof of if. This was a highly successful season. The fellows cooperafed bofh in prac- fice and in games. lf was fun working wifh fhern. This year's feam was a fine sfepping sfone fo our ulfirnafe supremacy in foofball, declared Coach Krueger. Skruby, Greevers, de Languilleffe, Ullsperger, Radfke, Cook, Giles, Kallles, Marlnelll, Lenfz, Nelson, Coach Nold . Wasielewski, Schulfz, Subel, Polcynski, Ricco, L. Fonfaine, Eagen, C. Fonfaine, George, Blessing, Sfryzkalski Every SaTurday loyal SouTh DivisioniTes made The sTands fairly bulge. Urged by The cheerleaders, RoberT Jendusa, Irving Engel, and Richard Wall- raTh, The rooTers Tilled The air wiTh cheers, songs, and con- TeTTi. -l'haT old Shoulder To Shoulder spiriT oT The Tans gave The Team TopnoTch sup- porT. When The Tinal game was over, SouTh had again cap- Tured The aTTendance cham- pionship. Playing Their las+ game un- der The Cardinal were I3 reg- ulars. These were I-lerberT Boge, I-Ienry Ureda, and Al- berf Spors, guards, Edward Glowaclci and VicTor lVlaThea, Tackles, Joseph PoTochnilc and Ralph Gelhar, ends, Ervin Pohl and Harvey Baerwald, halT- backs, AIberT Udovich and Francis BurdiTT, Tullbaclcsg Rob- erT Beierle and Edward I-IaIam- ka, quarTerbaclcs. Many were The ho n o r s heaped on The gridders. Baer- walcl was unanimously chosen I h . e n Ch I d E I, J cI , d W I Tor The all-ciTy halfbaclc posT. Wea ers nge n usa a a Gelhar, end, was named on The second Team, and Spors, guard, Janlcowski, cenTerg Pohl and I-lalamka, halfbaclcsq and BurdiTT, Tullback, were given honor- able menTion. Pohl and Baerwald were named honorary capTains aT The an- nual TooTball bangueT December 2I, where I-larry STuhldreher, coach oT The UniversiTy oT Wisconsin grid Team, was guesT oT honor. All These ouTsTand- ing IeTTermen were only parT oT a Tine squad. I-Iigh praise To Those enThusias- Tic subsTiTuTes who helped SouTh achieve success. ReTurning Tor nexT year's baTTles will be Tour IeTTermen: Charles MenT- Icowslci, guarTerbacIcg RoberT Paeschlce and Charles BenlcendorT, ends, and ChesTer Jankowski, cenTer. A well-rounded group oT reserves and an un- usually excellenT crop oT B Team men should make The Cardinal Tough To beaT. HEROES 'l'hroughouT The l938 gridiron wars, The baTTle- scarred Cardinal brigade bowled over iTs Toes wiTh The mighT and precision oT an ulTra-modern war machine. Leading The RedcoaT army oT pigskin privaTes. Field Marshal l-lalamka baTTled opponenTs by his unerring choice oT plays. ThaT his TeammaTes mighT rip oTT yardage, Ed valianTly blocked ouT would-be Tacklers. On deTense, The mighTy miTe l-lalamka spilled enemy backs as he bolsTered The line. Com- ing up Trom The rear, ChesTer Jankowski reen- Torced Ed. This ouTsTanding sophomore cenTer Tlashed under punTs To mow down enemy ends. Jankowski's ac- curaTe cenTering on boTh dry and muddy gridirons added speed and conTidence To The backTield. As a reward Tor capable playing and hard TighTing, modesT CheT received all-ciTy honorable menTion. Crashing Through opposing linemen, ends Joe PoTochnik and Bob Paeschke and cenTer CheT Jan- kowski smashed enemy plays To smiThereens wiTh bruising Tackles. Paeschke aT six TeeT and PoTochnik aT Tive TeeT Tive were The lvluTT and JeTT oT SouTh. Aggressive charging, accuraTe punTing, and consisTenT snaring oT passes marked The play oT These Two boys. To geT The Cardinals ouT oT a TighT spoT, The giTTed Toe oT PoTochnik was TreguenTly called on To booT The ball Trom The danger zone. FleeT Paeschke, whose dainTy size I0's carried him over The chalk-lined gridiron under kicks, kepT The opposiTion conTinually on The deTensive. When Joe.booTed The pigskin, Bob or his running maTe, Ralph Gelhar, crashed down on enemy punT receivers. WiTh his long-reaching arms and his Towering heighT, rangy Gelhar snaTched BuTch BurdiTT's hand grenades Trom The TingerTips oT The enemy's anTi- aircraTT secondary. The debonaire Gel ouTToxed his wiliesT opponenTs who seldom succeeded in geT- Ting around his end or in boxing his Tlashy aTTack. When noT on The receiving end, he proTecTed BurdiTT's bulleT aerial aTTack, or, as burly Udovich came rumbling along, opened gaping holes Tor Those power-house line plunges. Smashing Tackles and iarring blocks were BurdiTT's conTribuTions To The Cardinal grid machine. ln our vicTory over EasT his cool Thinking resulTed in a Touchdown. During The closing minuTes oT The NorTh game, he inTercepTed a pass and behind brillianT blocking dashed 60 yards To The goal. WiTh Two years oT B squad experience Udovich developed inTo a hard-charging Tullback. On line- plunging rampages, he crushed enemy linemen wiTh surprising Torce. Backed by These Two Tullbacks, Tough Ed Glo- wacki repelled all enemy aTTacks. Like an explosive he blasTed opposing linemen ouT oT Their shoes whenever The BurdiTT-Udovich l.imiTed roared pasT. Ed upheld The scarleT Torward wall wiTh his hard- boring charges and eTTecTive Tackles.AveTeran sTalwarT, he baTTled Through- 61:5 ouT a grinding season and in spiTe oT injuries was sure To be in The Thick oT The ToughesT scrimmage. From The beginning oT hosTiliTies Till winTry blasTs sounded Taps Tor gridiron acTion, shiTTy l-larvey Baerwald slashed oTT Tackle Tor innumerable gains and Touchdowns. Behind The massive bulk oT The Moose, a diminuTive buT slip- pery Punchy sliced an asTonished enemy's TronT line To shreds. Baerwald, ' The TasTesT and shiTTiesT back in The conference, was unanimously chosen as all- prep back by ciTy high school coaches. As The spearhead oT SouTh's versaTile aT- Tack, he TrequenTly sTarTed power drives rolling wiTh a brillianT punT run-back. Beierle, a blocking halT, Tackle, and Tullback, plugged up leaks in The SouTh sTone wall. Whenever a ball carrier peneTraTed The Cardinal line, Bob dived over blockers To sTop The enemy ad- vance cold. SaTeTy-man Baerwald and The mighTy Beierle, TogeTher wiTh The Tackles, lvlaThea and BenkendorT, check- ed every enemy ThrusT. AlThough Chuck Benkendorf and Toor lvlaThea vied Tor The same posiTion, They cheered each oTher on when eiTher one received The sTarTing assignmenT. Al- TernaTing aT end and Tackle, lanky Ben- kendorT was a TargeT Tor BurdiTT's spirals as well as a baTTling mainsTay in The Cardinal deTense. When ZOO-pound lvlaThea became aroused, he sTunned enemy linemen and smoThered backs in a Tury oT rage. FighTing side by side wiTh Benkendorif and lvlaThea, Al Spors and l-lank Ureda, guards, opened holes Tor The Cardinal's oTTensive drives. Pulling ouT oT The TronT line, Al and l-lank, running guards, TrusTraTed opponenT deTen- sive men wiTh Their shaTTering blocks. Spors, who always seemed To be in The righT place aT The righT Time, baTTled and ouTToughT opposing guards ThroughouT The season Tor all-ciTy honorable menTion. l-lis hard, smashing shoulder charges TeaTured The Red ground-gaining barrage. l-lis quick Thinking, as he ploughed under raiding backs, sTumped The oTTensive aTTack and made eTTecTive SouTh's deTen- sive shiTT. PromoTed Trom The I937 Yannigan squad, Ureda saw acTion aT The all-impor- TanT guard posT. AlThough consisTenTly ouT- weighed by his opponenTs, l-lank puT up a sTubborn deTense againsT husky opposiTion. ForTunaTe in Spors's ouTsTanding all- Benkendorf Mafhea Tackles around play and Ureda's scrappy fighf, Soufh had an- ofher sfalwarf for fhe vifal guard berfh in fhe infrepid Boge, who winds up fhe leffer winners in fhe Soufh forward wall. l-lerberf Boge, who had been shiffed from his cenfer posf of fhe previous season, soon masfered his new assign- menf. From his favorife four- poinf sfance. he charged fhe enemy fronf, gave confidence fo his fellow linemen, and sfeadied fhe wh o l e feam. Whenever Erv Pohl or Chuck lvlenfkowski came racing on a slashing reversal, l-lerb opened fhe gap. Wingback Pohl, hardesf and suresf blocker on Soufh's squad, bowled over enemy defensive men like fenpins. Uba hif fhem so hard fhaf he offen knock- ed fhem for a somersaulfing loop. l-lis specialfy was a smoofh lighfning reverse. Pohl's speedy berfhmafe, lvlenfkowski, was anofher bruising fackler. Smash- ing opponenfs off fheir feef, Chuck led inferference wifh murcerous blocks. l-le was a Jack-of-all-frades and fhroughouf fhe season subsfifufec for fhe reg- ulars. f-le played any posifion wifh equal agilify bofh on offense and defense. ln l-lalamka, Burdiff, Udovich, Baerwald, Beierle, Pohl, anc lvlenfkowski, Soufh had fhe greafesf backfield in fhe cify. We of Soufh Division salufe one of fhe besf feams ever fo wear fhe cardinal. We give you al fhose sfal- warfs who so successfully foughf our gridiron baffles. MISS McVETY MR. SASKOWSKI EMCEES Flash! Miss McVeTy passes Mr. Saskowski in The hall. MagneT Saskowski nods and his lips quirk inTo a smile. AlThough we don'T know whaT ThaT means unTil The nexT revue, They undersTand each oTher perTecTly. IT is This com- pleTe circuiT oT ThoughT, This rapid exchange oT ideas, ThaT makes Them The co-workers They are. lvlosT oT Their clever Tancies Tor The revues are sponTaneous. When a scheme pops up in MagneT Saskowski's mind, oTT he goes To discuss iT wiTh Live-wire McVeTy. They have made an agreemenT never To disagree. There- in lies The secreT oT Their success. IT was This cooperaTion ThaT broughT us LiTe Begins aT 3:lO Tor The February revue and l-leavenly l-lash Tor The June revue. Miss McVeTy's name oT Live-wire suiTs her exacTly. ln TacT, iT doesn'T Tully express her boundless viTaliTy and energy, her Tireless eTTorTs. OuTside oT school she indulges in many diversions such as music, dramaTics, asTronomy lby moonlighTl, and sporTs. Rumor has iT ThaT she packs an unusually mean wallop in a Tennis game. No less is Mr. Saskowski a magneT. To be sure he doesn'T aTTracT scrap iron lunless you wish To class yourselT as suchl, buT he is undoubTedly an irresisT- ible currenT ThaT draws Triends To him. ln his gayer hours he composes oper- eTTas and plays The piano enTrancingly, while in more sombre momenTs he ponders The Thesis ThaT will win him a masTer's degree in hisTory. No wonder They geT resulTs. We say, More revues, and keep on Tlashing, you Two elecTric sparks. MUSIC Do you know how music began? Can you relaTe The sTories oT The popular operas? The answers To These quesTions on The growTh oT music, Trom The beaT oT Tom-Toms To modern swing, are discussed in The music appreciaTion classes. WanT To see a TuTure sTar oT The New York MeT? Pay The second hour chorus class a visiT. l-lere Those who daily warble like The birds oT spring rehearse The songs sung round The world. Are you able To Torm The melodic or harmonic minor scales Trom any maior scale? lT you're noT, ask a harmony sTudenT. ln The harmony class TuTure Bachs, Chopins, and SchuberTs are wriTing or playing Their musical inspira- Tions. Eager musicians arrange walTzes, marches, and hymns. Original songs and occasional symphonies or concerTos also emerge. During eighTh hour rehearsals oT The orchesTra, melodious sTrains oT cellos and violins aT work on a masTer composiTion caress The ear. Suddenly, silence. The melody revised mounTs again. Pages Turn, and a grace- 1 Tul walTz swings ouT Trom The sTrings. ln anoTher parT oT The building snappy marches seT TeeT To Tapping rhyThmically. -l'rumpeT TanTares, The sTeady beaT oT The bass drum, and airy TluTe and clarineT sTrains proclaim The band. PracTicing Tor TesTivals, con- cerTs, and TournamenTs makes These musical hours Tun Tor one and all. lvlany delighTTul momenTs are also enjoyed by sTudenTs iusT learning To play in The iunior band and orchesTra. ln shorT, There's music in The air aT SouTh. lvliss EsTher Lehman direcTs The orchesTra. chorus, and harmony class, while The bands and music appreciaTion classes are under The supervision oT lvlr. Louis Good- rich. lnez McCarThy Dean Berger Edifh Schuh 1 s 2 225 s YZ XS i mf g I 5: Q' ' ,, ..,.,. ,,, ' 't'g I if . Q 1 LL1-2 . 5' E I ,W 1 ' 35 4Q-.' A A Q '-if 4f--- f fgf sew '.gm3Qf'f1 f,, 1 A ,J V-f1 L wg' +5 f .. -F . ' ? K ,gl x xi z. Q x ,x FKA -.131 AQ. 2 QU. it , fu 4 x I . , E v ki , 15+ xfx Y, . K , X as 51, , S 1 Q fc r 1.m , GS ,L Q f ES , 5? b .Vs L m f 5 is l M W ' 1a ' 1,1-?!QZ 15 -'H fy. F, . K '1' , . ' is T,. ' tQff1,:'ff5.f Z ,5fTi'7 I 'L Ex x -- 1 , .A x ll FRN- f W 1251 Q P '1 Q X X ' f' 1 X .D M.. 1 fwgfislaxxfaawdf MERTON OF THE MOVIES JUNE CLASS PLAY C5asluwiler's guainf, old-fasluioned general sfore slid info view as Hue curfains parfed on Hue firsf acf of Hue June class play, Merfon of Hue Movies. Counfers lueaped wiflu fruif, sluelves laden wiHu miscellaneous cans, raclcs filled wiHu cloHues, and dummies designed for business buf draffed by Merfon for luis dramafics, glimmered in Hue dim ligluf of Hue oil lamp. l-lopeful exfras wiHu anxious faces saf in Hue casfing direcfor's office. A ricluly furnislued luome served as a background for busfling crews, cameramen, and exfras. A wluife boaf plunging on billowy ocean waves was illuminafed by bril- lianf blue spofs. Men diligenfly cuf and assembled long sfrips of film in Jeff Baird's o ff i c e. Pafferson's boarding luouse, a luomey place, was Hue seffing for Hue luappy ending. Tluese scenes, as well as Merfon's efforfs af lueroics, Flips's many breaflufalqing deeds, and Jeff Baird's comedy cluaracfers, Hue cross-eyed man and luis cowboy pal, were linger- ing memories of Huis rolliclcing comedy. Under Hue direcfion of Miss Geil and Miss Black, Hue resulfs of Hue play wiHu a casf of almosf sixfy people were very safisfying. As- sisfing Huem were Mr. Sears and luis sfage crew, sfudenf direcfors, cos- fume, properfy, and greenroom girls, prompfers, and arf sfudenfs. VERTISI 1939 CARDINAI. was made by COVER PRODUCTS DIVISION TIIE NORTH ANEWCAN DRESS MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN Eva R6 R3 09 June Oraduatesl Train for business in a school Ihal rnainlains high slanolarols of scholarship, business inlegrily, and ser- vice-bolh Io ils sluolenls and Io The business public. SUMMER CLASSES - July 6 FALL TERM - Seplember 6 MISS BROWN 'S SCHOOL JOSEPI-IINE WILSON, Presiclenl' 408 E. Wells SI. Ma. 2582 Free Placement Service alives I'ha'I' are on file. SEIXIIOIQS . .. GRADUATION PHOTOGRAPHS 6 Beauliful French Gray Porrrails a,,,........ 54.00 I2 French Gray Porlrairs and I 8xI0 Enlargemenr Colored in Oil .............. 6.00 I 8xI0 Enlargemen+-Colored in Oil .... 2.50 If you do nor wan? Io be re-pholographed, we Fountain Studio - HPORTRAITS OF QUALITY I226 Soulh Sixreenlh SI. Phone Orchard 4274 can furnish pholoqraphs from your Cardinal neg- 40 Af our Columbus Day program a panromime of unusual grace and beaufy expressed 'rhe solemn spirif of fhe day. Royal robes and gay Danish peasanl frocks, sparkling lighfs, and spiriled dancing unfolded The charming fairy lale of The Real Princess al Jrhe Winfer Fesfiyal and Baller. Time marched on when Jrhe WPA presenled ifs I-lisforic Coslume Pageanl af Souih. Beaufy of color, design, and workmanship marked each sfaqe piclure. SkiIIIuII1and and Trained eye a r e characfer is'rIc of Ihese builders of a mimic world our s+aqe crew RP RP CongraIuIa+ions and The Beslr of Luck BROWN 84 REHBAUIVI SERVICE COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS 327 W. Na+IonaI Avenue KODAKS AND SUPPLIES GOOD KODAK FINISHING The Home of Glossifone Kodak PrInIs csc JS LEARN TQ FLY IXICDW Flying Scliool Airplane Sales Aerial pliotograplwy BADGEI2 AIIQWAVS, INC. Opemtovs BROWN DEER AIRPORT On Highways 100 and 57. PIONEERS IN SAFE LOW COST FLYING ASK ABOUT OUR BUDGET PLAN pay as you Fly I3 I-I 0 N E I-IiIItop 39QO 93 I43 Summer School Classes begin June 26 and July 5 PREPAREDNESS Preparedness is Ihe Jrheme of fhe hour. Jusf as a nalrion musl be prepared for any and all evenrualifies, so should 'l'he individual be pre- pared Ior +he evenfualilies of life. Spencerian College can help you Io prepare because if offers courses on Ihe college level. Wrile for Cafaloq or Dial MarqueI+e 0880 Q COLLEGE, INC. 606 EAST WISCONSIN AVENUE MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN MAROUETTE 0880 COLLEGE-GRADE COURSES Commercial-Teacher Training C. P. A. Preparalion Sales Adminislralion Finance Cour+ Reporfinq lLegaIl Business Adminislrafion Office Managernenf Higher Accounfancy Priva+e Secrelarial Civil Service SI-IORTEI2 COURSES Medical and Denfal Secrelarial Office Secrelarial Sfenofypy Sfenographic Posf Gracluafe Courses Special Summer Courses Spencerian Trained Beller Trained 6 GS Open Day and Nighlr Alpert Bruslcicwitz FUNERAL DIRECTOR LADY Assismnr ZIOI W. Ivlifchell Slreel Phone Ivlllchell IOl3 So 98 ! 335 , Q . ,I- Q:J 5 x 3' ,idaqynf . ff.1 ? ' .. K W, X -f ...E Q? 1 , g' 'f ? if m f,,, .LWLQ A 5' lla ks! S L f J 5 u' ak - , my W s it fwziv Q f V I . If fi - - .swrfssfgsmfsfvmgsfzzeghsws::fz1 W . 1 3 5 ELSIE S CRAMMING FOR HER EXAMS- GRIDLEY'S REQUIREMENTS ARE SO TERRIBLY STRICT, YOU KNOW Qlziffey fbaidq eampanq OTTO J. TEIVIPLIN WHEN YOU THINK OE DRUGS THINK OE US 2200 W. NaI'IonaI Ave. DIQUGGIST V NVE ARE IN BUSINESS FOR YOUR HEALTH Milwaukee, Wisconsnn l uw PRI 'PED BY: The prinfers of old affixed Their names +o Jrheir handiwork wirh rhe keen pride of Craiursmen who are ever dererrnined To exceed Their besi efforrs. This same sloiri+ is Jrhe creaiive force behind our own work. Thai is why PrinJred by Olsen, of which Jrhis book is an example, is always an assurance of superb prini- ing and adveriising Craiursmanship. TI-IE OLSEN PUBLISHING CCDMPANV Marquette II35 . 505 W. ci-isiziav sr., MILWAUKEE, wus. Ex 09 9 I PRINTING Tl-IAT SATISFIESH Anylhing from a Calling Card +0 a Newspaper The IVliIwauI4ee Times THE SOUTH SIDERS' HOME PAPER 83I S. Elh Slreel Phone Mllchell SIOO NOW EVERY I-IOIVIEOWNEIQ CAN AFFOIQD IT! The cornplele Heil line ol oil healing and air condilioning eguipmenl includes all lypes and all sizes lo suil every inslalla- lion requiremenl - The very Ialesl addi- lion lo The Heil line is a highly ellicienl oil-Tired winler Condilioning unil lhal is priced so low lhal every homeowner can afford ill Free lileralure and recommen- dalions are yours lor The aslcing. Address: ITQEIFIE. 3000 W. MONTANA STREET, MILWAUKEE Phone: lvlllchell 8000 I T I I4 in 9fW5wnAhv S,oELLs EXCELLENCE AND RESPONSIBILITY I222-I224 W. MIIcI1eII SI. Phone MIIcI'1eII 4260 CLASS RINGS CLUB PINS SOCIETY BADGES TROPI-IIES MEDALS AWARDS SCHOOL STATIONERY PROGRAM INVITATIONS Bunde 84 Upmeyer Co. Easf Balcony . . . Plankinfon Arcade MIIwauIcee g Rx ' -: Y , i Wifi, --2' iv W 2 5, - ,,,V. ' J Q -llie Needed Kind ol Funeral Service O CONTRIBUTE mosi consideraiely every prepararion for Jrlfie care of ine one deparied, and every cornforring Hwouglir for llriose be- reaved, consiiruies 'flue aim and airirude and aiieniion of Borgwardlr Sons' funeral service. Added +0 flial' is a policy of co-operaiion in +l'ie imporlanr rnafrer of cosis - assisring roward price selecrion wiinin ine family's abilily To pay. And such service is indeed Jrlie need a'r+l'1e rime. l:. J. Eorgvvardt Sons, lnc. HDISTINCTIVE FUNERAL SERVICE l8l7 Wes? Narional Avenue Mllcliell 8830-883i Se 8 r B CAGERS PAST HISTORY THREE MUSCLE-TEERS GETTIN' SHUT-EYE CHILDREN'S HOUR UNLAXING CONGRATU- LATIONS SLOW MOTION GUSTIE TNNUAL-PUSSES MUDDERS DAD CROUT MAX EIlENSHAW'S ONEYS fANlTY FAIR Good Luck and Bes+ Wishes PATTEIQSOIXIS DRUG STORE HPATRONIZE YOUR INDEPENDENT NEIGHBORHOOD MERCHANT IIOO S. l6+h S+. Phone MI'rcheII 0852 ICor. Washingfonj MiIwauI4ee, Wisconsin do 8 I JOS. A IQOZEWSKI 'ISWEETEN THE DAY WITH CANDYI' Phone IvII+cheII 7685 52I W. IvIi+cheII Sireei 50 Q8 Y 4 SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN 1632- 1723 DESIGNER OF ST. PAUL'S CATHEDRAL, LONDON NSPIRATION which imbues and empowers men to high ideals of endeavor and accomplishment rather than only the acquisition of monetary wealth is evidenced in the service we give, in the expression and impression of the art work and the plate work we furnish. PREMIER ENGRAVING COMPANY Tesigners 818WWinnebagoS!. Engravers . Jflilwaukee, Wis. AUTOGRAPHS


Suggestions in the South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) collection:

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

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

South Division High School - Cardinal Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942


Searching for more yearbooks in Wisconsin?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Wisconsin yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.