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Prenty Ware & Ray Karsian - Ann Arbor High School Football Team, September 1950 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Prenty Ware & Ray Karsian - Ann Arbor High School Football Team, September 1950 image
Year:
1950
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, October 25, 1950
Caption:
PREPARATION PAYS OFF ON THIS MANEUVER: A careful workman is Ray Karsian, Ann Arbor High's conversion point artist, who, as indicated here, uses a tape to make sure his stride and distance will be correct. The result have been important, too. In six games, Karsian has been asked to kick conversion points after 20 of the Pioneers' 21 touchdowns. He's been right on the beam 17 times, nine of them in a row, and has missed but two while having one blocked. He didn't take the shot at the other possible point because a Pioneer penalty had made it a 35-yard kick and the longer-booting Bob Randall was asked to try. Karsian's most important conversion of the season came after the Pioneers' third touchdown against Bay City Handy. It had to be good to avoid defeat. Despite a poor center pass Karsian booted the ball clear out of the field, nearly taking Holder Mike Rodriguez' hand with it because the latter was so hurried he hardly had time to set the ball down. Shown holding the ball for Karsian here is Prenty Ware who shares the chore with Rodriguez.

Bob Randall - Fullback, Ann Arbor High School Football Team, September 1950 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Bob Randall - Fullback, Ann Arbor High School Football Team, September 1950 image
Year:
1950
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 16, 1950
Caption:
STARTS PIONEERS ALONG 1950 VICTORY PATH: Fullback Bob Randall, coming back strong this year after missing most of the 1949 season with an injured leg, counted Ann Arbor High's first touchdown in quick fashion as the Pioneers opened by beating Toledo Scott last night. Randall wheeled 20 yards up the middle into pay dirt before the game was a minute old.

Fourth Graders At Carpenter School With Their Model Of A River, April 1959 Photographer: Duane Scheel

Fourth Graders At Carpenter School With Their Model Of A River, April 1959 image
Year:
1959
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, April 14, 1959
Caption:
EVERYTHING BUT WATER: Fourth graders in Mrs. Doris Bordine's room at Carpenter School inspect the paper mache model of a river, complete with bridges, that was made by the children during their study of the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence Seaway. A combination assembly and open house was held at the school today during which children and teachers from the school, parents, and pupils from Mrs. Eldora Brummet's fourth grade room at Dicken School visited the project. Children shown here are (left, front to rear) George Ralph, Elizabeth Phillips and William Beard, and (right, front to rear) Diane Bishop and John Hogan. Twenty-six children worked on the project.

Lawton Music Instructor, Carroll Hart, Instructs Choral Class, September 1964 Photographer: Doug Fulton

Lawton Music Instructor, Carroll Hart, Instructs Choral Class, September 1964 image
Year:
1964
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 10, 1964
Caption:
Getting in the sing of things are these fourth, fifth and sixth grade choral pupils at Lawton Elementary School, one of two new schools open to students for the first time this fall. Music instructor Carroll Hart gives the youngsters some instructions for the coming school year. Lawton School is off Greenview just southwest of Ann Arbor High School. The other new elementary school is Thurston which is situated between Prairie and Georgetown in the Orchard Hills-Bromley subdivision areas.

Students In Rebecca Randolph's Scarlett Middle School Class Discuss Chelsea Clinton, December 1992 Photographer: Phil Rezek

Students In Rebecca Randolph's Scarlett Middle School Class Discuss Chelsea Clinton, December 1992 image
Year:
1992
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, December 13, 1992
Caption:
Donta Hicks, 13, shares his thoughts in Rebecca Randolph's (right) Scarlett Middle School class on whether Chelsea Clinton should go to public or private school in Washington, D.C.