South High School - Tiger Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN)

 - Class of 1933

Page 23 of 168

 

South High School - Tiger Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 23 of 168
Page 23 of 168



South High School - Tiger Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 22
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Page 23 text:

intendent of the Minneapolis schools. 7 ww ' Succeeding him as principal of South l y c High School the following fall was Mr. f 42 C. L. Sawyer. In the fall of that same year Mrs. Baier was succeeded by Miss i y Lela M. Klampe, who is still one of the X members of the South High faculty. ,Nfl V' Ianuary 2, 1893, is another red-letter if ex., , day in the history of South High School. On the morning of that day the y g i'l new building at Twenty-fourth and A H If Cedar avenue, a site which was once y .r - occupied by a hay market, was ready ...VVWV ff .fiv1,,.,M for occupancy and to it were transferred A xigqg y the entire high school division and a . 's,4' , V. , fK41if 7 portion of the seventh and eighth l ffii gff f gff i fjx grades. The high school sections occu- i WTL! pied the second and third floors and the ir? f if .i i'ili lower grades the lower floors of the ix new building. The enrollment num- i bered about 250 high school students iwwwmwy W um ,A and about 200 seventh and eighth grade students. l The dedication ceremonies for the new building were held Friday evening, Ianuary 6, 1893. Superintendent Iordan gave the address of welcome. The presentation of keys was made by Mr. Robert Pratt, chairman of the building committee, and the response was made by Mr. A. T. Ankeny, president of the board of education. There were short speeches by Mayor P. B. Winston, President Cyrus Northrup of the University of Minnesota, D. K. Hosmer, Professor Sven Oftedahl, the Rev. C. I. Petri, and by other members of the school board and of the South High faculty. Proud were all the students to enter the new building but proudest were the Mu. A. N. Ozms G.-xriiwin' wrrii OLD Corifcr' Horse i f HT ag gg! Ei Il9l

Page 22 text:

lHCLll l1C the f:1rst UI'lLlLlllCS to FCCCINC d1plom1s from South H15h The ever ' We clses were held 111 whlt was then the IDUTIIIILI 11 B11pt1st churth It Twenty htth llld BlOOH1lI11fIUll The provram conslsted ot three es 81,8 The Cream of L1te 1nd How to Slum lt by L11L1e Luce, Sp1de1's hy Florence Wheeler, Our hdLlCdI1Oll hy Nellle Y IICS, a11 or lllflll, Thoughts on Commencement hy Henry Byorum, 1 rec1t111on, M1ee ll Pl1y hy Maude Amonson, 1 d1scuss1on, Resolved Th ll R1p V111 Wl1llxlC was More bllll1CLl Agamst th 111 Slllillllg, the lt ,pr- in-1 'f' 'Uwe F5 X firm 1t1vc hemg lI'ULlLCl by Fred Dust1n and Henry Somsen, the negauve hy Amy Horton 1nd Dell1 K1rtland 1nd 1 1 1led1ctory essay hy K 1te MdCDCf111lLl The Cllpl0fH11S were presented hy Super 1nte11dentI E Br 1LllCy The UCLJSIOII VVIS 1lso 1 memorable MR L L SWHR one for the small group of faculty mem hers who must have been yustly proud of 11111 vroup The Pl'll1Clp11l VVIS Mr L M ord 111 1nd the 1nstructors were Mrs Florence Bner, Germ 111, M1ss c,1I'0l1llC P Bell lmguages Mr ohn H Cook SCICIICC, MISS Helen A F1held h1storv and l11l1UL1lUCS, M155 Mlyheth Hurd, draw 111g MISS Mlry Kerr, m1them1t1cs, M159 Eleet1 Potter mathem1t1cs, Mr M H Towner, m1nu1l llfdllllllg, MISS C9516 L Van Vhet, Llflll, IVIISQ M1ra Wheeler, sc1ence, 111d M1ss Grace F W1tts, Enghsh For Mr ordm the OCCISIOII was even more SlU'l11f:lC,lllf, for thu cl ISS was to he h1s l1st of whlch he was to he pr111c1p1l About th lf very t1me he W 19 elected super F' S111 111 H1111 IX H495 yyxf 'I l 6 1. , r, 11 f uf- ' 1 1 ' f'1 1, Qiimxf mr A11 A l Cage' ul THE 1933 TIGER 1111 1 l A , 511:14 f 111- . . Q1 S L 1 S V A .ew . ,X , 4 - 1 A 1 , 1 1' Y . 1 - 1 ,. 1' 1: 1 yi ':. - 1 ' Qing Z 5 V L L 1 1. ' 1 ' 1 , - ' ' 5 1 5 Y ' ' .N 1' 1 , 1 1 o A Q . Q .. ,. H ' , ' . V, W W 3 .1 1, 1 Z ,W ,iff 4' ff 1 Y- 11 -, , - i 11 - vs 1 ' y ' 1 . 3- 1 , fu ,' x 1 A an 1 I - 19 I 1 1 4 7' ' :V ' e ' if 7 2 1 . , . . - - , 3 , 1 2 .' , ' ff ' 1 . , 1' . 1 K , . 1., i 1 1 1 M2152 . , , ' 1 . 5 ff , ,. lf' . 1 1 .1 , ' J Tuff - , f 5 1 1 .' 52:35 1 ,, 1 'jig' 1 s- - -- - 11 ' 1 V 1, A , , . - f , ,lf 15 - ' ' ' A 1,5293 X 'V 1 gf , 1 ' 1 .O 1 1 av- . 1 A , 1 ' . . ' 'x fin- ' fl 'L p ' L 7 ' 1' Q 155' Q, ' 1 f X t, I' f 1. . . ,f Jigga 'P gig 1,1 ' Wx V V . yf - 1 . , Q J,-Q, 1 .1 f .' ,' H 1 - ' ' - ifygizy 2 15' . 1 1 .1 . - 'H 2 u 1 t 1 .....,.,1, ..,.. ...... 1 1 ..., ..... , , -1.m-1,1, . 1, Lx. L K. L , , t , , . . , . K 1 U . ' 11 . . . I 1 1 . 1 1. V 1 I N 1 1 b - T . 1 n Y 1 1 11 1 . , 1 , . I . , , 1 1 I , 1 I h K b 1 L T g 11 1 1 1 . ' 1 , ' 1 1' . . . 1' ' 2 1 1' ' . 1 1' . 1 11' '1 . :sb '1 1 '11 '1 1 1' ' ' 1 L . 1 L 1 ' 1 ' , , - Z , 'I ,L b ' : 1 : A1 SF: Q 5 ' If ' Vi



Page 24 text:

members of the senior class to whom fell the honor of being the first to graduate from that building. Preparations were enthusiastically pressed. The seniors were fetcd for days before and after their graduation. The large assembly room on the third floor of the building, then an auditorium seating some 800 persons, was made ready for the first commencement exercises to be held in the new building, just forty years ago this Iune. On the evening of Tune 15, 18193, twenty-Hve young men and women marched onto the stage, gravely took their seats, and waited for their president and saluta- torian, Iames V. S. Fisher, to open the exercises. The program included three essays, Nature1s Tailor Never Made a Mistakew by Emma Anna Olson, The Marble Waitethv by Ann May White, and lf You Want a Fort, Build a Fort by Daisie Loanna Walda Strom, two orations, nlilack Spiders by Thomas George Newgord, and Honesty in American Politics by Stephen Somseng a discussion, L'Are My Possibilities Greater Than Yours? by David Swensen and Nettie Amonson, and a recitation by Gertrude Libby. The salutatory, MWhen Genuis Wants to Ride, Any Day Brings a Horse, was given by Mr. Fisher, and the valedictory, '4The Aftermath of Influence, was delivered by Martha lijorhus. In 1899 Mr. Sawyer was succeeded by Mr. A. N. Ozias as principal. ln those hrst six years the enrollment of the school mounted so rapidly that it was necessary to eliminate the seventh and eighth grades and the building came to be used solely as a high school. ln this same year Mr. loseph lorgens joined the faculty as instructor in astronomy, political economy, history, civifcs, and mathematics. Mr. Ozias remained as principal until 1908 when he left to become the hrst principal of West High and his successor was Mr. Iorgens, who in the meantime had become the principal of Iackson School where he remained but a few years before he was called back to South to pilot it through its most trying and its most significant years. Crass or 18992 S. l'Ai11ffS.t, J. Uvoolwy, E. Hook1'j', fl. Ho1'tnrl, lf. Rollfrts, I . lluslin, I . PMI, Il, Sf11us1'r1, G. Jliller, f. Tirmll, fl. Uvizlimz. J. Nmilfz, ,1l. flair, ff. Ifolyrltt, I. Sfmrjvl1'ss, .lliss ldifirlif, ,llixt Ixiirr, ,llixs Hurtf, P. ffolm, If. B-Vorzzm S. lliflmlfl. f, Ivan fiofktlnufg. S. l'r'llz'r.vol1, .lliss limi l'fi1l, .lli'x. Bohr, .lIr. Cook, Ur. ,l0l'lltHl, pliiltifwlf, .lfiss Uiullx, l,. l,mt',. F. ffllttlzf, K, .llr1rlJr1'n1irf. .'1. Cn:-zzlrrlv. I. Ih1l1rlif11'. JI. xlfllorlxwly, C. Jlsh, Ai. Yalfs, 11, llniclcins, R. IX'il'lI.'I1Il1, 17. Uioolsry. 'ir xxx! I r I N W ii-INN our Ai., A A .4 hir' J 1 THE 1933 TIGER I Il' I

Suggestions in the South High School - Tiger Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) collection:

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South High School - Tiger Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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South High School - Tiger Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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South High School - Tiger Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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South High School - Tiger Yearbook (Minneapolis, MN) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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