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Page 132 text:
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. ....,-...... ,..................................,...H................. ...........................-.-.........,.........,... gum.: . gl, , g:v:,.- Yi . Y . .Z Y Y-.. .-............,....-.....-...-..... ----ZZ ' Q L11 1... ,rlwsa ,. .s .5 1 5 r'-- ::r- ' -:zz-:a.:::w::::v.:::..::'1::r...... ..-.... If-.,if,ff:,,:. ' 0 1 L2 i.Z ,,Gt,,... ,... gh aa- 5 ft, in - ,X 4 I is E , im., 4, ,..,.,A. ..,... .. ...,.,. . ....A,.,, .. ,M,A,.. . ,.A.. ,.,,,.. .N ..... ,..s.W....-...-...sa...--ss cis Field. This lad is a good hurdler who developed in one season. He is also a note- worthy high jumper, besides being good for other jobs in track and Held. Ed Schnieder, like Red Smith, is a fighter. He will try anything once. He tried track and became a letterman in the gruelling 880. He knew less about the 880 than he did about track when he mme out! In the big meet he went in with the odds against him and came out with a HY on his sweater and a ticket to the lettermen's din- ner. Schnieder is a good, in fact, an excep- tional. furlong runner. He is a real all- round man and has proven himself better than good in every track event. Haunschild is a sticker and his chosen distance is the SSO, where he shows promise of following in the footsteps of that per- fect athlete. joe Holland, Red Smith's pre- decessor as captain. He is well fitted for a distance runner and may be induced to try his ability in the mile, a field that is not overcrowded. The team has another sticker in the person of Korkoian. VVhen this husky youth fin- ishes a race. everyone knows that he has given all he has to his team and his school. His preference is the 440, the hardest of races. He also makes a c1'editable showing in tossing the 12-pound shot. Harold Mayor is another double-furlong runner. Although he has never tried any Held events before, it is rumored that he may surprise us in the broad or high jump. Mayor is also a good furlong runner and may take this event instead of the 440. Gehring, who has become a Senior. is an old letter-man. He has the enviable power of unleashing a powerful sprint at the end of a 220 which very often wins the race for him. Lloyd Kung is a double threat man. Kelly will have a run for his money to keep this big runner behind him on the sticks. The chinless WOI1ClC1'i, will have his hands full to vault higher than this man, who is an excellent support to the team at any time. Steffan and jones are as inseparable as the Siamese Twins. These two boys, as One Hundred Twenty-eight unlike as any two human beings can be, are always found entered in the same event. jones is always dividing first place honors with Stetfan in the races and they run any- thing up to the 880. jones excells his side kick in the broad jump, however, while Stetfan proves that a powerful frame in conjunction with a skilled set of muscles may put a shot out to a great distance. Herbie Schmidt is still a Junior and we see no reason why he shouldn't cop a first in the junior 50 next year. He was displaced by Brodage and Beumer last season, who had every advantage over him, but he should now lead his field to the tape. Streck is another boy who deserves credit for his work last season. He distinguished himself in the broad jump and sprints with a worthy competitor in Senne. These fel- lows should come through with excellent performances next year. Shultz took second place in the midget broad jump last year and will, no doubt, better his performances in the junior divi- sion this year. He is no piker when it comes to sprinting and we expect him to offer competition to the best that the other schools can offer. Eslinger is an all-round midget. He has shown up well in both the high jump and 50 and will alone will tell whether he can keep up his good work with the juniors. Now for the students-the future students at Beaumont. In all of this history of a brilliant existence enjoyed by Y eatman, there were only two times that a really enthusi- astic student-body turned out to see its team perform. The few men mentioned in this description that will return next year form a winning team by themselves, but we will have many, many more men to choose from at Beaumont. Could not the new student- body at the new school support its team in a new way? Think it over and let the teams of Yeat- man, alias Beaumont. be proud of their student-body for the first time. Now I will endeavor to say something about our sterling coach, Mr. R. C. Lewis.
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Page 131 text:
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....................-.....,,..., .... ....... ..... ..,. .,..,.. ....,., . . .,- .... .... ...........,--........ ,-M....-....s............t..t.,..................-...,,.,-. :,. . ...,,., is V . .Q at E it -lui' J .---- -?ff2f:fffff!- El .. ., ., .. .. ... . Elgffrg--1 Q ,Z Ag 1 I:::'3f.Y.'ii..-n:::...2ZZZ..-..,Zl.. ...M LTJSZT''I'IIZ1J.ZL.Z.TI.l'1'LI'l.'l'If.'L..JIIIIZZZLLZ,Il'I...I1,TZIIT2Z..'1'..I.fIlf,,..l.TZZlIJjITZLIf'ZIZIIJLSZIZJII.'L',I2'lLI.'IZf.ILlI'f...! 5L...L:.g4.'I5:::..:.....a.....va -....-...,..a.....,,................a...-....... ...... ...s...,..'k...........-...-...... .,... ........s...,...,... - W, -,H ,T-f,,............-. a- - - ..,.............N.........t. and can leave any competitor in the dust on the track. ' A third CZl.l'1'0l'-l10p is Gilbert VV'agner. It seems that a red-headed boy must make his feet move fast on the cinders. VVagner ran in the 220 last year and made a good show- ing in spite of his size. It is hoped and expected that Wlagner will make some of the big boys look sick and show them that the bigger they come the harder they fall. Peter Braroe is a necessary element on the track field. He is still a Junior and has been practicing diligently at the weights for some time. lVe hope to see him turn the tide of his bad luck to that of good luck. Now we are confronted by another obsta- cle-to other schools! This one is one of those speedy red-headsg Red Fischer by name, He is a furlong threat of unlimited ability and we hope that as he climbs to a Senior berth he will settle down to real, hard work in the keener competition encountered here, so that his speed will be brought out to its best. One of the brightest things we have to look forward to in the coming season is the running and pole vaulting of Hochstadt. artist, swimmer, fancy diver, gymnast, pian- ist and what not. Dan can do practically anything and has an assortment of medals to prove it. VVe expect that-since he is still a junior-he will break the records Andy Gump should have set. Dan shows preference to the century and is better than best in this race. Red-heads inherit speed and elasticity. So it is with Red Baumer. This man, under the tutelage of Brodage. collected a few points for Yeatman and a letter for himself in the finals, when he forced the teacher to his best eHorts to displace the pupil in the Junior 50. Among all these speed kings is Brodage. This lad, recently aged to the Senior'shelf, is promising fame to himself and to Beau- mont by his past work in the pits and on the cinders, Brodage, last year's Junior cap- tain. is a tow-headed youth who has broken the Junior 50-yard dash record three times in practice meets. He was Yeatman's high point in the finals with two second places. One in the fifty and one in the broad jump, where he threatens all the seasoned Senior jumpers. If the school could turn out more Smiths and Brodages. who could foretell what the future might hold? A sixth red-head on our team is an excep- tion. Unlike the others, he chooses the weights and the middle-distance. He runs the 880 equally as well as the 440 and is a comer in the 12-pound shot. This is Harold Rosenthal, Rosie, a good all-round man. As successor to johnny Frederickson we find john Umbeck, a quiet, bashful boy without a threatening exterior, but when one sees his long limbs get into action he sees something like a miracle. John soars into the air and clears the flimsy bamboo by a good margin, leaving the spectator gaping. Then. to prove that it wasn't an accident, he does it again with the stick a little bit higher. VV e have high hopes in this humanized air- plane. ' A seventh red-head is little Red Thomp- son, an untried dark-horse. Judging from his'brother's performance, however, it would seem that he has the makings of a cham- pion: judging from looks-he is a miniature of his brother. Davison, an overgrown sheik, will always be too young to be a Senior: he is a hard worker and a sticker. No one ever knows what he will enter, and coach uses him as a sort of decathlon expert. George has per- fect form in running and is one of those who is out every night of the season to return to the shower with 'lthat tired feel- ing which comes from doing one's best. Now we return to Eddie Heilmann, the midget captain. He ran the hurdles last year and made the coveted HY over the difficult obstacles. He is a real performer on the cinder road to fame which he has traveled with great speed. He was a good choice for captain as he handled this department very well. He is also a coming star in the shot put and pole-vault. Heilmann is not alone on the hurdles. He has an associate. Howard Zulauf, who took first place in this event last year at the Fran- One Hundred Twenty-seven
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Page 133 text:
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. -..,.,..,,.,.,,...,,...,......., ......,,.... .... ...,..,........,.. .... ....-.....................,....-,........... ... ,...............,.........-.-...,.. ...........--......-.,-....,......-..........................,......,,,..... ---'sw ,a v:1y:za- :.- s . .ag Aa:::f,r::,:.'.::::x::e:1:':. ::::,.xru.L:.::.:::rr::rs:mar.:-L':-::-::.:r:::r.':-:i':::::::.1-nm-.-..:n-r::::.:z.:::::2L:'5 ta- , ' 2 id --'- . , f ,. . ,. .., ...f -,fs .-. , as -s . , . -. f gs, 1 53 i ,2 :ze asa: .43 f-5: ..:g. fa '1?ZJ5,1v? X ff- is-as ses E N 1 r 1 ef. 1 :, , .... ..ff3k,...,...,! e 3: ...J-. . ., H, -.1 X- . s -,..+s - A 2 .-1 -1-1 M ,.,.,,-.,.......-----l.--...,...a..,......-...M..-....t.,a..s.-..........s-.,,,...,.-.,-.-.. .J , , -ua.::,..e..L..,-.... L....l'.I11fZ:.-I-..----w----....,....,,,.,...........,...,....-1--.-...................,..-...---Q---.----4'-'v - - -- '- -X ................,.....-..-,-.-...........-..-...........,.,.-M.,...-..,......,..,......-...-...a.......a-..-.,..-....v..-.---...-.....,.-... . . f - , W, -............ . ,,.. . - .1 .... ,............-, He has coached track for the school in a way that every athlete is proud of. He has undreamed of pep and enthusiasm, which he puts to a good use in coaching. It is through him that the fellows get their fight and spirit to win. He sets laws at the begin- ning of a season and they are respected and obeyed. These simple words cannot tell a mere fraction of the appreciation we have for him, but I am sure he will know what we mean. We would like to see him with P. S. Last, but not least fjust politej, there is a fellow on the team named Burton Kelly. Besides being the school's best gymnast, he is a wonderful track and all-round man. He can do anything, but he specializes in the high hurdles and broad jump. He stretches his Apollo-like limbs over the high sticks in a manner which indicates that he is the next champion. He is speed personified and has perfect form. He is also used to coming down out of the air in the farthest end of the new school for the rest of his life. He's a real coach and a real fellow. As we look back over this record of track we see that hand in hand with brain develop- ment came the chance for that of brawn. Sport in the school furnished for partici- pant and rooter the other necessary quali- ties for all-around manhood. Initiative, brain and brawn have been built and the Yeatman annals may now be closed devoid of any discrepancy. the sandpit. VVhen he smacks his trusty right foot on the take-off board, he goes sailing through the air and a few minutes later something is seen to come down at the other end of the pit. It is he, and as he picks himself up and dusts the sand oif his suit, he listens for the distance, which is always close to the other end of the measur- ing tape. EVERETT BRODAGE, Ianuaiy, 1927. One Hundred Twenty-nine
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