Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT)

 - Class of 1937

Page 1 of 162

 

Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 162 of the 1937 volume:

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V Q13 , A bf .fx 'J H , W ' ' -0.0 'J As- in -Q W Iv, E npx L bf, , 8, 1 .1 .J Q ' 1' -3 n,- if 'U . . 5 I I . -i f THE LOOMISCFLLA NY 1 1937 BEING THE YEAR BOOK OF THE LOOMIS SCHOOL PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS '35 'is' WINDSOR, CONNECTICUT THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 TO NATHANIEL HORTON BATCHELDER TO HONOR THE ACHIEVEMENTS OF TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AND TO RECORD OUR FAITH THAT IN THE YEARS TO COME ACCOMPLISHMENT YET RICHER ' SHALL REWARD H15 WISDOM AND DEVOTION PAGE 4 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR - CONN. An Appreciation We have tried to build a place where it would be easy to be good and to be friendly, and we have tried to build a place of such beauty that our pupils should take inspiration from it. It is significant that these Words, spoken by Mr. Batchelder at the dedication of Founders Hall in 1917, should have lingered, as we are told, in the memory of one who heard them uttered, while all else that the speakers said on that occasion has been forgotten. These words have been remembered because they reveal a spirit and an ideal. There- fore, in dedicating this volume to Mr. Batchelder to mark the twenty- fifth anniversary of his appointment as Headmaster, we would compli- ment him not merely for his distinguished record as an educator, or for any technical excellence, although we are proud of these things, we know that he has taken care that the methods of the school should exhibit the spirit of progress tempered with common-sense, and that he has caused Loomis to win the respect of the educational world. But he also has made it plain to all who come to Loomis that no man may call himself educated, unless to intellectual training and social success he has added the ability to love goodness and to practise friendship and to be sensitive to beauty. Because these are qualities which Mr. Batchelder not only com- mends but possesses, we tender him at this happy time both our congrat- ulations and our affection. PAGE S N- ...X I Q - 'v , f-r ff at X Q. - -mv ,,-.mg K .,. ..-nik? yi.. '9- fu 5 93529 Q:: - ll Albffi I In 54 4 ,I gs WN! .14 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR TRUSTEES JENNIE LOOMIS ARTHUR P. DAY ROBERT W. HUNTINGTON LOUIS R. CHENEY NATHANIEL HORTON BATCHELDER JAMES L. LOOMIS ALFRED W. OLDS EARNEST T. ANDREWS C. EDGAR BLAKE JOHN M. LAIRD OFFICERS ROBERT W. HUNTINGTON, President JAMES L. LOOMIS, Vice-President 1937 THE HARTFORD-CONNECTICUT TRUST CO., Treasurer JENNIE LOOMIS, Secretary PAGE 8 .I 1' I 1 v '. , 1 we .1 'B 9, , ,- L '. S f Q1 059 SOSQAX DN XIX.:-.z'b Q X KF X 'Vg Q50 wr 'S Q -o 'N 593 awe' 193' 1, 'Q wb L...- PAGE 9 -u 3 111105 11 ... qua 10 .L 1v1 IB?'1'3l I SGXIBLLI F' fx 1 E 0-'Sw si fvwfs .W VJ 5 Q bgqeffg, awww Q, -Z1 SMD' sv-Q -D400 -S:-1: '-:?: '1.. HSNQQTN 'vga A N.: QE' ,-21' -N500 .Q ,V--1' :www , '-'rv E i'f'q'j'fngE , .5-1 - Eiecwfv-S . wwgs-gSg,ga Q 5-'Sw i'f5f0 Ph P+: 91 I8 01110 P a 01:11 0.901 0 Y 112 If U1 UI 9 11123 101 1 I0 KX -4 ,... Q. 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P 01 P -' A I .1a-1g1p 01111, 109119.10111 a .10 su1o0.1 11:1ooS .10 su100.1 .11 11 Kes 11u0p a1d0ad sums 9- II. , A' I.- - ' 11 .1 1 saop .1 . 1011 S- sa 11011 51 1111 pu? .191 1 II l - . 1 nnnuvvv 9 vvvvvv va n an nn vvvxfs -...J ,- :':,11'.L1:1rw,1 1 P g 5, , l 1 ' . I V ' ' -.1-74 5 liaigi' llri II...-, gg, 4 U -1 1 59393 Bbw eitfin ' 1' Q ' I ' V Q LIQQMAQLQW , l M . ,gf - X v -----....-., 1 -,dw ' Fl -if '.-jiurf J., 1 N, h 1 Wa -1, if U -- ' tr Q, 1 ix-- nix. ag., I -. - ' ., L A t I .' Qt.. - f ivyf, ' wwf Wk fm QI, A ..-5 . qui RL A -o LOOMIS SCHOOL WINDSOR CONN. NATHANIEL HORTON BATCHELDER, A.M. Headmaster A. B., Harvard, 19015 A.M. 19023 A.M. Qhonoraryj, Trinity, 1918. Appointed Headmaster 1912 ULRIC BROWER MATI-IER, Ph.B. Senior Master. Mathematics Ph.B., Sheffield Scientific School, 1904. Appointed 1914 RENIi CHISRUY, Licencie-es-Lettrcs Senior French Mash-r Bachelier-es-Lettres, Universite de Paris, 18999 Licencie-es-Lettres, Sorbonne, 1907. Appointed 1914 HOWARD RANDLETT MoRsE, A.B. Business Manager A.B., Harvard, 1912. Appointed 1915 KNOWER MILLS, M.F., A.M. Master of Balehelrler Hall. Latin A.B., Harvard, 19075 M.F., 1911, A.M., Columbia, 1929. Appointed 1918 JOHN EDMUND BARss, A.M., D.Litt. Master of Taylor Hall. Senior Latin Master A.B., Acadia, 18915 A.B., Harvard, 1892g A.M., 1893g Research Student, Cambridge, l913g D.Litt. lhonoraryj, Acadia, 19163 A.M. Qhonoraryi, Trinity, 1936. Appointed 1919 WILLIAM COGSWELL CARD, A.B. Music A.B., Acadia, 19125 Graduate New England Conservatory of Music, 19173 Graduate Student, New England Conservatory of Music and Harvard, 1923-24. Appointed 1919 ERNEST WILLIAM EVENSON, S.B. Business Bay Path Institute, Springfield, Mass., 19205 S.B., College of William and Mary, 1932. Appointed 1920 ARTHUR NORMAN SHARP, A.M. French, German A.B., Boston University, 19195 A.M., Harvard, 1920, Sorbonne, 1920-21. Appointed 1922 ROBERT WALTER HosItINs, S.B. Master of Mason Hall. Senior History Master S.B., Harvard, 1923. Appointed 1923 DAVID NEWTON, A.B. Senior English Master A.B., Princeton, 19233 Graduate Student, Harvard, 1926-27. Appointed 1923 JoI-IN MCARTI-IUR GATES, B.P.E. Physical Education, Mechanical Drawing B.P.E., Springfield College, 1926. Appointed 1926 FREDERICK GALE WI-IITEI-IEAD, S.B. Science, Mathematics S.B., University of New Hampshire, 1926. Appointed 1926 SIDNEY LovETT EATON, A.M. Master of Warham Hall, English A.B., Harvard, 1927g A.M., Syracuse, 1931. Appointed 1927 TI-IoMAs ELDRETI-I FINLEY, JR., A.B. Mathematics, Hislory A.B., Harvard, 1927. Appointed 1927 GEORGE BROOKS SAVAGE, A.B. Science A. B. Hamilton, 1927. Appointed 1927 PAGE 11 ,x ,W 3 , ff -' A . . ' ' xi in 1 h A ' kj V FSH T' ' , . ,xl ' -2 F K , B , f - ' 4 A If , h f I I' A V , - .3 ' 5 . - .4-4. 1' I' 'I ,. 1? 2't'5,'lw cj 1 lag 2.0 4: ' F33 'J A 1 1 h ' MH.: . 12 .. V... .'!77L'4, ,i --A if 'IM1 ' M A J ,,.,,. ,, , , , ,,-,, .A ,sfiri , 1-vm 4 3 1.2-Bw, . 24. lirffif' jg: x '4-'E,2'54, ' , . , -f' -r - 1, : ' , s I fffff: -:':A '. ' X 1 '3i,.'-,.I'i'LF- T 6 A ' . A . ,' Ja - gi! Q Q x , , 7 9 2 r --M ,, . U I 5 Q I '!- - v .1-., .,. 1 . X Y A 1 4' - I fi -jzf ff ,' if th x J. w r -11 3 E -vu- is Q-AL v, ,,-1 -H.-. , airs? Q 4,1 Big, V ,1.j.k'f., I PA LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN A.B., Williams, 19335 A A.B., Brown, 1934, A.M., GE HULL PLATT MAYNARD, A.B., M.B.A. Assistant Business Manager. Mathematics A.B., University of California, 1923g M.B.A., Harvard, 1925. Appointed 1928 CHARLES AUoUsTus PRATT, JR., S.B. Mathematics, Physics Harvard, 1924-28. S.B., Trinity, 1933. Appointed 1929 FRANCIS OLMSTED GRUBBS, A.B. French A.B., Princeton, 1930. Appointed 1930 HERBERT PI-IILo CATLIN, A.B. Mathematics A.B., Amherst, 1928. Appointed 1931 RICHARD BOYD BALLQU, A.B. QOn leave of abscncej English A.B., Amherst, 1931. Appointed 1931 RALPH DELAPLAINE BRITTON, S.B. Science, French S.B., Trinity, 1931. Appointed 1931 LLOYD WRIGHT FOWLES, A.M. History, Latin A.B.. Bowdoin, 1926, A.M., Harvard, 1933. Appointed 1926-30, 1933 GERMAINE ROUGET CHBRUY, Bacheliere-es-Lettres Art Bacheliere-es-Lcttres, Sorbonne, 19155 Associate Societe Nationale des Beaux Arts, Paris. Appointed 1932 JOHN MASON TILNEY, A.B. German, Mathematics A.B., Yale, 1913. Appointed 1933 NORRIS ELY ORCHARD, A.B. French, English A.B., Yale, 1933. Appointed 1933 SPENCER BROWN, A.M. English, Latin, French A.B., Harvard, 19305 A.M., 1932. Appointed 1930-31, 1934 MAR1'1N HAROLD JOHNSON, A.B. Classics, History mcrican School of Classical Studies, Athens, 1933-34. Appointed 1934 HOWARD EVERETT NoRR1s, A.M. Chemistry A.B., Wesleyan, 19325 A.M., 1933. Appointed 1935 JosE1-I-I SAVOIE STOOKINS, A.M. French 19365 Sorbonne, 1932-33, Diplome d'Etudes dc Appointed 1936 DouCLAs DIXON MCKEE, A.B. English, Public Speaking A.B., Yale, 1932. Appointed 1936 Civilisation Francaise. HANs HOLLSTEIN Latin Universities of Konigsbcrg, Bonn, Vienna, Berlin, Marburg, 1928-34g Staatscxamen, 19354 Princeton Theological Seminary, 1935-36. Appointed 1936 CHARLES WESLEY BLISS, A.B. - Tutor A.B., Hamilton, 1933. Appointed 1936 13 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 To DAVID NEWTON XVISE AND KINDLY TEACHER, WHOSE WARM SMILE AND KEEN WIT WILL BE MISSED AT LOOMIS, THE CLASS OF 1937 EXTENDS ITS SINCERE WISHES Fora SUCCESS IN HIS NEW VENTURE. PA GE ..- vm S U1 ew- -1 W Q vi 'D' 0 D- 6 V7 34 ,.. 03 P' -1 .... 0 rv fb -1 '35 0. 5 eu 2 E. C 2 3 0 3 :Q 'YG 3'3- Q 'U O m 0 1111 ,fini 4:11:41 !f1Q'7.'Xw 3 L I-Llp fe we ef Mi! rllmmgs -uni 'sn I-'ngsacra' 1 f,.. ' N , 'W , If. um, ,k Az' W Mid' -H1iiIHi1li IM .,wm Q + 2 v l i BRYCE MCLELLAN 1 18 1935 I-us UNJBRSTAIIIJING SPIRIT LIVES IN TI-ESE BGDKS F011 'rw BoYs ' ' , I l , 1 Ig, K ' ' f 15 ' M I 775515,-5 K N AL 'V ' - I , , ,j 3' ,L I, h if .V , I . -- I . I , . , , , I . A ' I , . ' V. V, I 0 A c 0 0 ,I . 4 V . U K ,H Q. , I . 2 ., A Q. f 2 E S li. Si .2 'Ie LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. JOHN ADAMS ATCHLEY 262 Oakwood Road Englewood, N. J. Arch Arch the Batch Boy Honor Roll, 1934-35, 1935-36. 1934-35-Founders, Wolcott Soccer, Winter Track, Track, Radio Club, Jun- ior French Club. l93S-36-Batchelderg Wolcott Soccer, Winter Track, Track Squad, Radio Club, Glee Club. 1936-37-Batchelderg Second Soccer, Winter Track, Tennis, Radio Club, Glee Club, Political Club, Batchelder Dorm Committee. Williams PAGE 17 ALBERT SIDNEY ASHMEAD 15 Ridgewood Road Windsor, Conn. UAShl! UAV! 1933-34-Day Fellow, Ludlow Junior Football, Baseball, Hockey. 1934-3 5--Day Fellow, Ludlow Junior Football, Junior Basketball, Tennis, Glee Club. 1935-36--Day Fellowg Ludlow Junior Football, Junior Basketball, Track, Glee Club. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Ludlow Senior Football, Cross Country, Winter Track, Track, Glee Club. Worcester Tech THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR WALTER SCOTT BARTLETT 433 East 51st Street New York, N. Y. Scotty Honor Roll, 1933-34. 1933-34-Founders, Ludlow Soccer, As- sistant Hockey Manager, Ludlow Tennis, Darwin Club, Art Club. 1934-35--Mason, Ludlow Soccer, Junior French Club, Darwin Club, Art Club. 193 S-36-Warhamg Second Soccer Team, Wrestling Squad, Darwin Club, Art Club, Rifle Club. 1936-37-Mason, First Soccer Team, President Natural History Division of Darwin Club, Art Club, Nautical Club, Art Editor Loom Board, Rifle Club. Yale 1937 DONALD TEMPLE ATKINSON 344 Fern Street West Hartford, Conn. uD0nn 1936-37-Day Fellow, Football Team Hockey Team, Baseball Team, Student Council. Worcester Tech PA GE1 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. WILLIAM GEORGE BAUSCH 260 Dorchester Road Rochester, N. Y. Bill I'I0r10r Roll, 1935-36, 1936-37 1935-36-Taylor, Wolcott Football, Fencing, Track, Log, Publications Board. 1936-37-Taylor, Wolcott Football, Fencing Team, Riding, Student Council, Log, Publications Board, Senior Vigilance Committee. Princeton PAGE 19 ELLIOTT MAXCY BATES S5 Pleasant Street Gardiner, Maine Maxcy Eric Batesey Honor Roll, 1934-35,1935-36,1936-37. 1934-35-Tavern, Mason, Ludlow Soc- cer, Fencing, Work Projects, Radio Club. 1935-36-Masong Ludlow Soccer, Fenc- ing Team, Work Projects, Art Club, Art Librarian. 1936-37-Mason, Ludlow Soccer, Fenc- ing Team, Tennis, President of Art Club, Ping Pong Club, Art Librarian. Williailas THE LOOMISCELL MILES HOWARD BERLINER 7 Lyons Place Larchmont, N. Y. Booker Jigaboo 1936-37-Batchelderg Gym Team, Dar- win Club. Colgate ANY FOR 1937 DAVID DEMAREST BELLIS, JR. 700 Soldier Hill Road Oradell, N. J. Dave Roomy Butch 1932-3 3-Founders, Ludlow Soccer and Hockey, Track, Dramatics. 1933-34-Taylor, Second Team Soccer, Ludlow Hockey, Gym Team, Track, Dra- matics, Sophomore Reception Committee. 1934-3 5-Batchelder, Soccer T e a m, Hockey Team, Track, Vice President Press Club, Endowment Fund Working Committee, Batchelder Dorm Committee. 193 5-36-Batchelderg Soccer T e a m, Hockey Team, Track Squad, Vice Presi- dent Press Club, Student Council, Batch- elder Dorm Committee, Endowment Fund Executive Committee, Spring Dance Committee. 1936-37-Batchelderg Soccer T e a m, Hockey Team, Track Team, President Endowment Fund Executive Committee, Student Council, Batchelder Dorm Com- mittee. Wesleyan PAGE 20 LOOMIS SCHOOL CHARLES ROSS BICK 9 Prospect Park West Brooklyn, N. Y. Charlie Cosmo Toddy HOHOI' Roll, 1936-37. 1936-37-Batchelderg Wolcott Junior Football, Senior Basketball, Track Squad, Political Club, Press Club, Debating Team. Yale PAGE 21 WINDSOR ' CONN. FRANCIS RIGDON BERRY, JR. 2 The Court Rochelle Park New Rochelle, N. Y. Red 1934-35-Founders, Wolcott Soccer, Winter Track, Wolcott Tennis, Darwin Club. 1935-36-Mason, Captain, Wolcott Soc- cer, Winter Track, Tennis, Darwin Club, Endowment Fund Working Com- mittee. 1936-37-Masong Soccer Team, Fencing, Tennis, Secretary-Treasurer of Darwin Club, Mason Dorm Committee. Cornell THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 FRANK JOHN BOYLAN 395 Riverside Drive New York, N. Y. Blarney,' Bunny 1934-3 5-Poke Inn, Second Soccer Team, Gym Team, Second Track Team. 193 5-3 6-Taylorg First Soccer Team, Wrestling, First Track Team. 1936-37-Warhamg First Soccer Team, Gym Team, Golf Team, Loom. Amherst RICHARD FRANK BLANCHARD 46 Arlington Road West Hartford, Conn. Dick Honor Roll, 1934-35, 1935-36, 1936-37 1934-35-Day Fellow, Ludlow Junior Football and Hockey, Track, Chess Club. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Assistant Foot- ball Manager, Ludlow Hockey, Track, Orchestra, Chess Club. 193 6-37-Day Fellow, Ludlow Soccer, Senior Basketball, Track, Glee Club, Sec- retary-Treasurer Chess Club. Dartmouth PAGE 22 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. JOHN FRANK BROOKS 330 Essex Street Salem, Mass. Brookso Beaver J Honor Roll, 1935-36. 1934-3 S-Taylor, Batchelderg Allyn Sen- ior Football, Club Hockey, Track, Presi- dent Stamp Club, Press Club. 1935-36-Founders, Allyn Senior Foot- ball, Second Hockey, Track, Golf, Sec- retary-Treasurer Junior Class, Vice Chairman Allyn, Log Board, Press Club, junto, Glee Club, Choir, junior Dance Committee, Student Council. 1936-37--Mason, Football Squad, Co- Manager Hockey, Track, President Log, President Publications Board, Chairman Allyn, Athletic Council, Vice President Student Council. Harvard PAGE 23 BEVERLY WARD BRISTOL 16 Manor Road Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. Bev 1934-35-Inhrmary, Mason, Ludlow Soccer, Second Fencing Team, Tennis, Darwin Club, Rifle Club, Orchestra. 193.5-36--Mason, Second Soccer Team, First Fencing Team, Tennis, Glee Club, Darwin Club, Rifle Club. 1936-37-Mason, First Soccer Team, First Fencing Team, Glee Club, Darwin Club, Rifle Club, Log Photographer. Yale l THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 ROBERT CRANDALL BUSH 41 West Hill Drive West Hartford, Conn. Bullet Bob', Honor Roll, 1933-34, 1935-36. 1933-34-Day Fellow, Wolcott Junior Football and Basketball, Tennis, Rifle Team. 1934-35-Day Fellow, Wolcott Senior Football and Basketball, Senior Baseball, Rifle Team. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Wolcott Senior Football and Basketball, Track, Rifle Team. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Wolcott Senior Football, Wrestling, Tennis. Princeton LOGAN BULLITT Falmouth Foreside, Maine Red Loggie 1934-3 5-Tavern, Dr. Bissell'sg Wolcott Senior Football, Second Football Team, Track Squad, Stamp Club, Junior De- bating Team. 193S-36-Batchelderg First Football Team, Winter Track, Track Team, Vice President Political Club, President Stamp Club, Press Club, Debating Team. 1936-37-Founders, Warhamg First Soc- cer Team, Winter Track, Track Team, Student Council, President Stamp Club Cresignedj, President Press Club, Presi- dent Political Club, Debating Team. Harvard PAGE' 24 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. GOUVERNEUR MORRIS CARNOCHAN, JR. Bernardsville, N. J. Gouv,' Gouvie Governor 193 2-33-Founders, Ludlow S o c c e r, Fencing, Track, Chess Club. ' 1933-34-Taylor, Ludlow Soccer, Fenc- ing, Track, Chess Club, Junior French Club, Rifle Club. 1934-35-Warhamg Ludlow Soccer, Win- ter Track, Track, Chess Club, Rifle Club, Dramatic Society. 1935-36-Warhamg Ludlow Soccer, Cap- taing Winter Track, Track Team, Chess Club, Press Club. 1936-37-Taylor, Second Soccer, Win- ter Track, Track Team, Press Club, Loom Board. Harvard HERMANN CHRISTALLER Backnang Wurttemberg Germany Chris 1936-37-Warhamg Ludlow Football, Stamp Club. PAGE 25 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 CASPER HENRY CITRON 35 East 9th Street New York, N. Y. Cas Cap 1935-36-Mason, Wolcott Junior Foot- ball and Basketball, Second Tennis, Chess Club, Chess Team, Political Club, Debat- ing Team, Assistant Basketball Manager. 1936-37-Mason, Wolcott Senior Bas- ketball, Tennis Team, Basketball Mana- ger, Athletic Council, Chess Club, Chess Team, Debating Team, Table Tennis Club, Rifle Club, Political Club. Harvard FRANK PHILLIP CHRISTIAN 645 Taylor Avenue Scranton, Pa. Pl'1il', Chrisn Xi0n 1933-34-Founders, Allyn Junior Foot- ball and Basketball, Track, Gym Team, Art Club, Radio Club, Stamp Club. 1934-3 S-Batchelderg Allyn Junior Foot- ball and Basketball, Track, Endowment Fund Working Committee, Dramatic Society. 1935-36-Batchelderg Allyn Senior Foot- ball and Basketball, Track Team, Glee Club, Log Board, Dramatic Society. 1936-37-Batchelderg Soccer Team, Allyn Senior Basketball, Track Team, Cheer Leader, Advertising Manager of the Log, Choir, Batchelder Dorm Com- mittee. Princeton PAGE 26 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. VAN ALAN CLARK, JR. Suffern, N. Y. Van Ah, Youth Honor Roll, 1936-37. 1935-36-Taylor, Allyn Soccer, Gym Team, Track, Glee Club, Radio Club. 1936-37-Taylor, Allyn Soccer, Fencing, Manager of Track, Glee Club, French Club, Athletic Council, Darwin Club, Nautical Club. Williams PAGE 27 HAYS CLARK Suffern, New York Slug Hank 1933-34-Founders, Wolcott Senior Football and Baseball, Wrestling. 1934-35-Batchelderg Wolcott Senior Football, Wrestling Team, Track, Glee Club, Endowment Fund Working Com- mittee, Rifle Club. 1935-36--Mason, Football Team, Wres- tling Team, Track Team, Glee Club, Choir, Table Tennis Club. 1936-37-Batchelderg Fencing Team, Track Team, Glee Club, Choir. Cornell THE LOOMISCELL WILLIAM RICHMOND TILLING- HAST CROLIUS 246 Turrell Avenue South Orange, N. J. Big Bill Cap'n Wild Bill Honor Roll, 1934-35. 1933-34--Founders, Wolcott Junior Football and Basketball, Tennis, Endow- ment Fund Working Committee, Rifle Club. 1934-35-Batchelderg Wolcott Senior Football and Basketball, Tennis, Endow- ment Fund Working Committee, Log Board, Dramatic Club, Rifle Club, Pub- lications Board. 1935-36-Taylor, Captain Wolcott Sen- ior Football, Manager Basketball, Tennis, Log Board, Dramatic Club, Political Club, Publications Board. 1936-37--Taylor, First Football Team, Wolcott Senior Basketball, Winter Track, First Track, Log Board, Loom Board, Dramatic Club, Vice President of Nauti- cal Club, Taylor Dorm Committee, Pub- lications Board. Brown ANY FOR 1937 ROBERT EDMUND COOKE 2 Hillcrest Road Windsor, Conn. Bob Bobby Cookie Honor Roll, 1933-34, 1934-35, 1935-36, 1936-37. 1933-34-Day Fellow, Allyn Junior Football and Basketball, Second Baseball Team. 1934-3 S-Day Fellow, Allyn Senior Football, Second Hockey Team, First Baseball Team, Junior French Club, Soph- omore Reception Committee. 1935-36--Day Fellow, Allyn Senior Football, First Hockey Team, First Base- ball Team, Secretary-Treasurer Junto, Vice President Junior Class, Student Council, Dance Committee. 1936-37-Day Fellow, First Soccer Team, First Hockey Team, First Baseball Team, Secretary-Treasurer Junto, Secre- tary Council, Dance Committee. Yale PAGE 28 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. QUENTIN BURRITT DEMING 128 East 19th Street New York, N. Y. Chip Dem-Dem Honor Roll, 1933-34, 1935-36. 1933-34-Founders, Wolcott Soccer, Gym Team, Tennis, Darwin Club, Dra- matic Club. 1934-3 5-Taylor, Wolcott Soccer, Fenc- ing, Tennis, Darwin Club, Dramatic Club, Junior French Club, Sophomore Reception Committee. 1935-36-Taylor, Wolcott Soccer, Fenc- ing Team, Tennis, Darwin Club, Dra- matic Club. 1936-37-Batchelderg Wolcott Soccer, Fencing Team, Manager Tennis, Darwin Club, Dramatic Club, Cercle Francais, Junto, Second Tennis, Political Club. Dartmouth PAGE 29 FRANK MCDOWELL LEAVITT DAVIS 4 Oklahoma Terrace Annapolis, Maryland Leave-it Honor Roll, 1934-35, 1935-36, Winslow Declamation Prize, 1936. 1933-34-Tavern, Spring Soccer. 1934-35-Batchelder, Warhamg Ludlow Soccer, Fencing, Tennis, Junior French Club, Dramatic Society, Third Prize Winslow Declamation Contest. 1935-36-Warhamg Co-captain Ludlow Soccer, Second Fencing Team, Rugger, Dramatic Society, Log, Chess Team. 1936-37-Warhamg Captain Second Soc- cer Team, First Fencing Team, Tennis, Dramatic Society, Senior Editor of Log, President Chess Club, Warham Dorm Committee. U. S. Naval Academy THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 WOODRUFF WILLIAMS DRIGGS 100 Connecticut Boulevard East Hartford, Conn. 1K 0dy,, 1935-36-Maher House, Wolcott Foot- ball, Second Hockey Team, Second Base- ball Team, Glee Club, Orchestra. 1936-37-Taylor, Wolcott Football Team, Wolcott Basketball, Second Base- ball Team, Glee Club, Orchestra. Trinity WARWICK MALCOLM DINGLEY Deep Dene, Top Park, Gerrards Cross Bucks, England Ding Dingle,' 1936-37-Batchelderg First Soccer Team, Gym Team, Track Team, Riding, Table Tennis Club, Badminton Club. PAGE 50 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. ROGER RUSHMORE EARLE 727 Spooner Avenue Plainfield, N. J. K1Rog,Y 1933-34-Founders, Second Baseball Team. 1934-35-Batclxelderg Second Football Team, Gym Team, Second Baseball Team, Sophomore Reception Committee. 1935-36-Warhamg First Football Team, Track, Rugby Team, Student Council. 1936-37-Warhamg First Football Team, Track, Student Council, President Senior Class, Warham Dorm Committee. Yale PAGE 31 RICHARD STEEL DURKES 722 East Fellows Street Dixon, Ill. Durkin Dork Bishop 1936-37-Batchelderg Fall Tennis Squad, First Basketball Team, Golf Team, Log Board, Glee Club. Amherst THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 WILLIAM HENRY FARNUM 15 0 Woodrow Street West Hartford, Conn. uBil1n 1933-34--Day Fellow, Cross Country, Winter Track, Ludlow Baseball. 1934-35-Day Fellow, Cross Country, Winter Track, Ludlow Baseball. 193 5-36-Day Fellow, Cross Country Team, Winter Track, Ludlow Baseball. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Cross Country, Winter Track, Track. Antioch WILLIAM WALTER EYERS Farmington, Conn. Brassy Bill 1934-35-Stermer House, Allyn Soccer, Rifle Team, Rifle Club. 1935-36-Mason, Allyn Soccer, Fencing, Rifle Team, Chess Club, Darwin Club, Radio Club, Secretary Rifle Club, Chem- istry Club. 1936-37-Studio, Allyn Soccer, Rifle Team, Fencing, President Rifle Club, Darwin Club, Chess Club, Trap Club. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute PAGE 32' LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. ROBERT CASTLE FISHER 416 Ocean Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Bob Fish 1935-36-Mrs. Sellers, Allyn Senior Foot- ball and Basketball, Winter Track, Gym Team, First Track, Log, Publications Board. 1936-37-Warhamg Allyn Senior Foot- ball and Basketball, Tennis, Log, War- ham Dorm Committee, Publications Board. Tufts PAGE 33 1933-34 1934-35 Football DAVID WILLIAM FAY 162 Collins Street Hartford, Conn. Sheriff -Day Fellow, Football, -Day Fellow, Basketball, and Basketball, and 193 S-3 6L-Day Fellow, Allyn Junior Baseball. Allyn Senior Baseball. Allyn Senior Football and Basketball, Track Squad. 1936-37-Day Fellow, First Football Squad, Allyn Senior Basketball, Track Team. Harvard THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 EDMUND ERNEST FRIEDRICH S2 Lexington Avenue Holyoke, Mass. Fred Ed Fritz Honor Roll, 1934-35, 1935-36, 1936-37. 1934-35-Maher House, Ludlow Foot- ball, Second Hockey Team, Ludlow Base- ball, Glee Club, Orchestra, Endowment Fund. 1935-36-Mason, Second Soccer Team, Second Hockey Team, Second Baseball Team, President Glee Club, Orchestra. 1936-37-Warhamg First Soccer Team, Ludlow Basketball, Second Baseball Team, Vice President Senior Class, Student Council, President Glee Club, Orchestra, Senior Dance Committee. Cornell RICHARD HENRY ARTHUR FORSCHNER 22 Sunnyside Way New Rochelle, N. Y. Dick Forsch Hey, you 1934-3 S-Tavern, Allyn Senior Foot- ball, Fencing, Track Manager, Radio Club, Chess Club, Jazz Orchestra. 1935-36-Warhamg Soccer, Fencing, Track Manager, Radio Club, Chess Club, Athletic Council. 1936-37-XVarl'1amg Fencing, Track, Chess Club, Radio Club, Nautical Club. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute PAGE 34 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. WILLIAM GAY Hillandale New Hartford, Conn. Bill Willy Honor Roll, 1933-34, 1934-35, 1935-36, 1936-37. 1933-34-Founders, Ludlow Soccer, Lud- low junior Baseball, Tennis, Chess Club. 1934-3 5-Mason, Ludlow Soccer, Lud- low Senior Basketball, Tennis, Chess Club, Junior French Club. 1935-3 6-Mason, Ludlow Soccer, Lud- low Senior Basketball, Tennis, Chess Club, Chess Team. 1936-37--Mason, Captain Ludlow Soc- cer, Ludlow Senior Basketball, Ludlow Baseball, Mason Dorm Committee, Glee Club, Log, Chess Club, Chess Team. Harvard PAGE 35 JOHN GATTMAN GANTZ 4 Frederick Place Mount Vernon, N. Y. Qljoei, 1935-36-Mason, Allyn Senior Football and Baseball, Political Club, Junior De- baring. 1936-37-Batchelderg Allyn Senior Foot- ball, Basketball, and Baseball, Political Club, Table Tennis Club, Debating. Harvard THE LOOMISCELL JAMES ALLISON GORDON Short Hills, N. J. Waxy Gordy Sifter', 1935-36-Maher House, Wolcott Senior Football, First Hockey Team, Wrestling, Track, Stermer Merry Christmas Club, Stamp Club, Glee Club. 1936-37-Taylor, First Football Team, Wolcott Senior Basketball, Track, Glee Club, Choir. Williams A N Y F O R 1 9 3 7 CHARLES BANCROFT GOODRICH 144 Maplewood Avenue West Hartford, Conn. Goody Honor Roll, 1933-34. 1933-34-Day Fellow, Wolcott Soccer and junior Basketball, Tennis. 1934-35-Day Fellow, Wolcott Soccer and Junior Basketball, Tennis, Junior French Club. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Wolcott Soccer, Assistant Manager Wrestling, Wolcott Track, Junior Debating Team. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Wolcott Soccer, Manager Wrestling, Wolcott Tennis, Stu- dent Council. Trinity PAGE 36 LOOMIS SCHOOL STUART HAMILTON 240 Montclair Avenue Newark, N. Hammy 1935-36-Founders: Wolcott Junior Football and Basketball, Endowment Fund Projector. 1936-37-Mason, Wolcott Senior Foot- ball, Wrestling, Tennis, Political Club. Lehigh PAG E 37 WINDSOR ' CONN. TRACY GRISWOLD 238 West 6th Street Erie, Pa. Griz 1935-36-Taylor, Second Soccer Team, Golf Team, Loomiscellany Board. 1936-37-Warhamg Riding, S q u a s h Team, Golf Team, Loomiscellany Board, Political Club, Glee Club. Yale THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 JOSEPH ADOLPH HARTMAN 160 Oxford Street Hartford, Conn. Qjoeil 1933-34-Founders, Wolcott Junior Football, Wrestling, Tennis, Rifle Club. 1934-3 5-Batchelderg Wolcott Soccer, Wrestling, Tennis, Rifle Club, Junior French Club, Darwin Club. 1935-36-Batchelderg Wolcott Soccer, All-Club Soccer, Wrestling Team, Ten- nis, Rifle Club, Darwin Club. 1936-37-Batchelderg Second Soccer Team, Wrestling, Riding, Darwin Club, Rifle Club, Riding Club. Harvard SYDNEY PACKARD HARRISON 676 Main Street Hingham, Mass. QlSven,3 lQBenjl, Qlsydm Honor Roll, 1936-37. 193 5 -3 6--Taylor, Ludlow Soccer, En- dowment Fund Working Committee Political Club. 1936-37--Warhamg First Soccer Team Tennis, Political Club. Williams PAGE 38 LOOMIS SCHOOL ROBERT HORACE HINCKLEY 98 Sylvan Avenue West Hartford, Conn. Rabbit Bob 1933-34--Day Fellow: Allyn Junior Football, Basketball and Baseball. 1934-35-Day Fellow, Allyn Junior Football, Captain Allyn Junior Basket- ball, Second Baseball. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Cross Country Team, Allyn Senior Basketball, Captain Second Baseball, Swimming Team, En- dowment Fund XVorking Committee. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Captain Allyn Senior Football, Second Basketball Team, Second Baseball Team. Wesleyan PAGE 39 WINDSOR ' CONN. WILLIAM BRADFORD HASTINGS 165 Farmington Road Longmeadow, Mass. Brad Sugar 1933-34-Founders, Allyn Senior Foot- ball, Gym, Tennis, Darwin Club, En- dowment Fund. 1934-3 S-Taylor, Allyn Senior Football, Wrestling, Gym, Track, Sophomore Re- ception Committee, Darwin Club, En- dowment Fund. 1935-36-Taylor, First Football Squad, Cross Country, XVrestling, Captain Gym Team, Track Team, Endowment Fund Working Committee, Darwin Club. 1936-37-Taylor, First Wrestling Team, Captain Gym Team, Track Team, Cheer Leader, Endowment Fund Executive Committee, Senior Dance Committee, Coach of Freshman Gym Class, Chair- man Loomis Peace Action. Amherst THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 CARLYLE WARNER JONES 9 Aqueduct Place Yonkers, N. Y. Bud Jonesy Honor Roll, 1934-35. 19 3 3 -34-Founders, Wolcott Junior Football, Wrestling, Track. 1934-3 S-Warhamg Wolcott Junior Football, Wrestling, Track, Junior French Club. 193 S-3 6-Warhamg Wrestling, Track, Glee Club. 19 3 6-3 7-Warhamg Wolcott Senior Football, Track, Glee Club, Publications Board, President of Loom. Harvard RODERICK HORNE 22 Emerson Street Brookline, Mass. Rod Rodnick Mike 1935-36-Stermer House, Allyn Soccer, Winter Track, Track, Glee Club, Ster- mer Merry Christmas Club. 1936-37-Mason, Allyn Senior Football, Track, Wrestling, Glee Club, Cheer Leader, Dance Committee, Mason Hunt Club, Choir. Colgate PAGE 40 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. LAWRENCE MCCULLY JUDD, JR. 2643 Makiki Heights Honolulu, Hawaii Bub Kukai Black Judd 1936-37-Poke Inn, First Football Tcam, Track. University of Hawaii PAGE 41 RICHARD STOKES JONES 14 Presidents Place Kingston, N. Y. Dick Gomer Slinger 1935-36-Masong Ludlow Football, Sec- ond Basketball Team, Track Squad. 1936-37-Masong Ludlow Football and Basketball, Track Squad, Cheer Leader. THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 DANIEL FRANCIS KELLEY, JR. 9 Atlantic Avenue San Juan, Puerto Rico Dapper Dann Kel 1933-34-Founders, Allyn Soccer, Fenc- ing, Tennis, Stamp Club, Radio Club. 1934-35-Taylor, Allyn Soccer, Fencing, Tennis, Stamp Club. 1935-36-Warhamg Second Soccer Team, Second Fencing Team, Tennis, Loomiscel- lany Board, Stamp Club. 1936-37-Batchelderg First Soccer Team, First Fencing Team, Golf, Riding Club, Loomiscellany Board, Vice President Stamp Club. Cornell NICHOLAS FIENRY JORALEMON 458 Fairview Avenue Orange, N. Nick Jerry Bind,' 1935-36-Poke Inn, Second Football Team, Track Team, Wolcott Basketball, Rifle Club. 1936-37--Mason, First Football Team, Track Team, Darwin Club fPl1otographic Divisionj. PAGE 42 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. SPENCER ALONZO KLAW Carmel, N. Y. Spence Beaver Honor Roll, 1934-35,1935-36, 1936-37. 1934-3 S-Founders, Ludlow Senior Foot- ball, Winter Track, Ludlow Baseball, Log Board, Junior French Club, Peace Action Steering Committee. 1935-36-Taylor, First Football Team, Ludlow Senior Basketball, Track Team, Feature Editor Log, Loomiscellany, Jun- ior Dance Committee, Student Council, Dramatic Society. 1936-37-Masong First Football Team, Ludlow Senior Basketball, Track Team, Log Board, Loomiscellany, Business Man- ager Loom fretiredj, Dramatic Society, Dance Committee, President Student Council. Harvard PAGE 43 DOUGLAS STROTHER KENNEDY 87 William Street Worcester, Mass. Doug Ken 1933-3 4-Founders, Wolcott Senior Football, Wolcott Hockey, Tennis, Stamp Club, Rifle Team. 1934-3 S-Taylor, Wolcott Senior Foot- ball, Second Hockey Team, Golf Team, Junior French Club, Stamp Club, Rifle Club. 1935-36-Taylor, Wolcott Senior Foot- ball, Second Hockey Team, Second Ten- nis Team, Stamp Club, Log, Handbook, Publications Board. 1936-37-Taylor, Fall Tennis, Wolcott Senior Basketball, Tennis Team, Stamp Club, Log, Handbook, Glee Club, Pub- lications Board. Harvard THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR EDGAR CRAWFORD LEAYCRAFT, JR. Woodstock, N. Y. Pete Peter Lea 1933-34-Mason, Wolcott Soccer, Fenc- ing Team, Tennis, Junior French Club. 1934-35-Mason, Wolcott Soccer, Fenc- ing Team, Tennis. 1935-36--Mason, First Soccer Team, Fencing Team, Track Team, Glce Club. 1936-37-Mason, First Soccer Team, Fencing Team, Track Team, Glee Club, Political Club, Subscription Manager Loom. Harvard 1937 WILLARD JAMES LAWRENCE 7 Fernwood Road West Hartford, Conn. Bud', Willie Larry Flo Honor Roll, 1933-34. 1933-34-Day Fellow, Wolcott Soccer, Junior Basketball and Baseball. 1934-3 5--Day Fellow, Second Soccer Team, Wolcott Senior Basketball, Wol- cott Baseball, Sophomore Reception Com- mittee. 193S-36-Day Fellow, First Soccer Team, Second Basketball Team, Track, Debating. 1936-37-Day Fellow, First Soccer Team, Wfolcott Tennis, Debating. Dartmouth PAGE 44 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN EDWIN RAY LEWIS, II 227 West Central Street Franklin, Mass. Ned 1932-33-Founders, Allyn Soccer, Fencing, Assistant Track Manager. 1933-34-Mason, First Soccer Team, First Fencing Team, Assistant Track Manager, Junior French Club. 1934-35-Mason, First Soccer Team, First Fencing Team, Track Manager, Ath- letic Council. 1935-36-Mason, Captain First Soccer, First Fencing, Track, Dance Committee, Athletic Council. 1936-37-Masong Captain First Soccer Team, First Fencing Team, Dance Com- mittee, Athletic Council. Tufts PAGE 45 ROBERT MACDONALD LESTER, JR 425 Riverside Drive New York, N. Y. Les Jeeter Jake B0b' 193 S-3 6-Stermer House, Batchelder Allyn Football, Second Basketball Team Track Team, Stermer Merry Christmas' Club. 1936-37-Taylor, First Football Team Allyn Basketball, Track. Duke THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 DANIEL BRAZIER LIBBY 125 Vaughan Street Portland, Maine 1936-37--Batchelderg Wolcott Soccer and Tennis, Glee Club. Dartmouth WILLIAM REYNOLDS LEWIS 95 Brookview Avenue Bridgeport, Conn. Bill Will 193 5 -36-Taylor, Wolcott Soccer, Gym, Track, Rifle Club. 1936-37-Batchelderg Wolcott Soccer, Track. Nichols Junior College l l n PAGE 46 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. JOHN WORTH LUND Riverside, Conn. jack johnny Honor Roll, 1935-36. 1934-35-Founders, Allyn Soccer, Gym Squad, Tennis, Endowment Fund Work- ing Committee. 1935-36--Batchclderg Second Soccer and Hockey Teams, First Tennis Team, En- dowment Fund Wforking Committee, Table Tennis Club. 1936-37-Batcheldcrg First Soccer, Hockey and Tennis Teams, Batchelder Dorm Committee, Endowment Fund Ex- excutive Committee, Cruising Division of Nautical Club, Table Tennis Club. Williams PAGE 47 HAROLD FRANKEL LUBCHANSKY 894 Ocean Avenue New London, Conn. Lub Lubber 1934-35-Poke Inn, Second Football Team, First Basketball Team, Second Baseball Team, Log Board. 1935-36-Batchelder, Mason, First Foot- ball Team, First Basketball Team, Sec- ond Baseball Team, Student Council, Log Board, Publications Board. 1936-37-Taylor, First Football Team, First Basketball Team, Student Council, Managing Editor Log, Chairman Wolcott Club, Publications Board, Senior Vigilance Committee. Harvard THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 DONALD MILLER 206 Highbrook Avenue Pelham, N. Y. 193 3 - 3 4--Tavern, Founders, Ludlow Football, Second Basketball Team, Track Team. 1934-35-Warhamg Football Team, Bas- ketball Team, Track Team, Junior French Club. 1935-36-Warhamg Football Team, Basketball Team, Baseball Team. 1936-37-Warham, Founders, Football Team, Captain Basketball Team, Student Council, Warham Dorm Committee, Chairman Ludlow Club, Senior Commit- tee, Athletic Council. Pennsylvania THOMAS SERGIO MEDEROS, JR. Acorn Farm Katonah, N. Y. Tom Mud Beery Honor Roll, 1936-37. '1933-34-Founders, Allyn Soccer, All- Club Soccer, Freshman Baseball Team, Dramatics, Darwin Club, Rifle Club, Radio Club. 1934-3 5--Batchelderg Allyn Soccer, All- Club Soccer, Second Hockey Team, Track, Dramatic Society, Log Board, Darwin Club, Radio Club. 1935-36-Batchelder, Second Soccer Team, Second Hockey Team, Dramatic Society, Log Board, Radio Club. 193 6-3 7-Batchelderg First Soccer Team, Dramatic Society, Log Board, Secretary- Treasurer Radio Club, Political Club, Batchelder Dorm Committee. Princeton PAGE 48 Q0 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. RICHARD WILLIAMS OLMSTED 1100 Main Street East Hartford, Conn. Dick 1936-37-Masong First First Basketball Team, Team, Ping Pong Club. Dartmouth PAGE 49 Almsc Football Team, First Baseball l JOHN ROBERT MONTGOMERY, JR. 42 Elm Street Windsor Locks, Conn. Stan Monty Bob 1933-34-Day Fellow, Allyn Junior Football, Hockey, Tennis. 1934-3 5-Day Fellow, Cross Country Winter Track, Tennis. 1935-36-Day Winter Track, istry Club. 193 6-37-Day Winter Track, istry Club. Fellow, Track Fellow Track Yale Cross Country Mana ger, Chem- 3 Cross Country, Manager, Chem- THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 SCUDDER MERRILL PARKER 157 Tremont Street Hartford, Conn. Scud Porks Honor Roll, 1933-34, 1936-37. 1933-34-Day Fellow, Ludlow Junior Football, Winter Track, Ludlow Tennis. 1934-35-Day Fellow, Cross Country, Ludlow Senior B-asketball, Second Tennis Team, Junior Debating Team. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Ludlow Senior Football, Second Basketball Team, First Tennis Team, Librarian. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Fall Tennis, First Basketball Team, First Baseball Team, Librarian, Student Council. Williams FREDERICK ALLEYNE OTIS, JR. 21 Harwich Road Providence, R. I. 'iTed Mike Goose Fred 1934-35-Tavern, Mason, Allyn Soccer, Wrestling Squad, Tennis, Log. 1935-36-Warhamg Allyn Soccer, Wres- tling Squad, Tennis Squad, Log fre- signedj. 1936-37-Warhamg Fall Tennis, Wres- tling Squad, Tennis and Golf. Nicholas Junior College PAGE 50 LOOMIS SCHOOL ARTHUR REDFIELD PHILLIPS Towne Hill Montpelier, Vermont uBrudn uljhiln 1936-37-Batchelderg Ludlow Football, Basketball, and Baseball. Yale PAGE 51 WINDSOR ' CONN. RICHARD HAVENS PAUL 855 College Avenue Elmira, N. Y. Dick Honor Roll, 1933-34, 1934-35, 1935- 36, 1936-37. 1933-34-Founders, Allyn junior Foot- ball, Fencing, Tennis, Darwin Club, Dramatics. 1934-3 5-Taylor, Allyn Junior Football, Second Fencing Team, Tennis, Chairman Sophomore Reception Committee, Presi- dent Junior French Club, Darwin Club, Dramatics. 193 5-36-Taylor, Co-captain Allyn Jun- ior Football, Second Fencing Team, Cerele Francais, Secretary-Treasurer Darwin Club, Dramatics. 1936-37-Batchelderg F i r s t Fencing Team, Tennis, Riding Club, President Darwin Club, President Cerele Francais, Photographic Editor Loomiscellany fre- signedj, Stamp Club, Glee Club, Choir. Cornell THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 JOSEPH ALBERT POLACK 401 XValnut Street New Orleans, La. , Joe Honor Roll, 1935-36, 1936-37. 193 S -36-Maher House, Wolcott Senior Football and Basketball, Track, Glee Club, Darwin Club, Log. 1936-37-Batchelderg Wolcott Senior Football and Basketball, Track, Radio Club, Circulation Manager Log, Publi- cations Board Executive Committee, Bus- iness Manager Handbook, Darwin Club QI-lead Photographic Divisionj. Tulane GUERARD PIFFARD 1133 Evergreen Avenue Plainfield, N. Gerry Cim 1934-35-Dr. Bissell'sg Ludlow Soccer and Tennis, Cercle Francais. 1935-36-Dr. Bissell'sg Ludlow Tennis, Secretary-Treasurer Cercle Francais. 1936-37-Warhamg Fencing Team, Vice President Cercle Francais, Glee Club. Williams PAGE 52 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN NEIL YOUNG PRIESSMAN, JR. Park Circle Short Hills, N. J. Farmer 1936-37-Batchelderg Second Soccer Team, Loom Board, Nautical Club, Rid- ing Club. Cornell PAGE S3 HERBERT THOMAS POTTER, JR. 730 Park Avenue Plainfield, N. J. Scrog Bud 1936-37-Mason, Wolcott Senior Foot ball and Basketball, Tennis. Princeton THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 WILMOT BEN RECTCR 71 Hillcrest Road Windsor, Conn. Bill Honor Roll, 1936-37. 1933-34--Day Fellowg Allyn Junior Football, First Wrestling Team, Allyn Junior Baseball. 1934-35-Day Fellow, Allyn Junior Football, First Wrestling Team, First Golf Team, Golf Club. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Allyn Junior Football, First Wrestling Team, Second Baseball Team. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Allyn Senior Football, First Wrestling, Second Base- ball Team, Golf, Loom, Art Club, Glee Club. Trinity JOHN HART PURINTON IO Murray Street Waterbury, Conn. jack Honor Roll, 1933-34. 1933-34-Founders, Ludlow Junior Foot- ball and Basketball, Tennis. 1934-35-Batchelderg Ludlow ' Junior Football, Second Hockey Team, Tennis, Sophomore Reception Committee, Junior French Club. 1935-36-Taylor, Ludlow Football, Sec- ond Hockey and Tennis Teams. 1936-37--Taylor, Ludlow Football, Hockey, Tennis Squad, President Ping Pong Club. Massachusetts Institute of Technology PAGE S4 LOOMIS SCHOOL JOHN BLAKE RODGERS 68 Mooreland Road Melrose, Mass. Doc Jean Baptiste 1935-36-Maher House, Wolcott Senior Football, First Hockey Team, Wolcott Senior Baseball. 1936-37-Taylor, Wolcott Senior Foot- ball, First Hockey Team, Wolcott Senior Baseball. Bowdoin PAGE SS WINDSOR ' CONN. JOHN HOLLISTER RISLEY 27 College Avenue Waterville, Maine Jack Ris RiZZle 1935-36-Taylor, Fall Tennis, First Hockey Team, Art Club, Loomiscellany Board, Table Tennis Club. 1936-37-Founders, Fall Tennis, Cap- tain Hockey Team, Tennis Squad, Stu- dent Council, Secretary-Treasurer Senior Class, President Junto, Editor Loomiscel- lany, Senior Committee, Athletic Coun- cil, Art Club, Dance Committee, Publi- cations Board, English Exchange Scholar. Amherst THE LOOMISCEL JOSEPH NICHOLAS RUSSO 581 Broadview Terrace Hartford, Conn. K1Joe,, 1935-36-Day Fellow, Allyn Football, Second Hockey and Baseball Teams, Log, Glee Club, Concert Orchestra. 1936-37--Day Fellow, Allyn Football, Golf, Log, Glee Club, Concert Orchestra, Rifle Club. Trinity LANY FOR 1937 ALBERT BARNARD ROOT, III 138 Collins Road Waban, Mass. Alu Reggy Honor Roll, 1934-35. 1934-3 5-Poke Inn, Allyn Soccer and Junior Basketball, Track. 193 5 -36-Batchelderg Allyn Hockey. 1936-37-Taylor, Captain Allyn Soccer, Track, Rifle Club, Political Club, Riding Club, Vice President Nautical Club. Middlebury l PAGE 56 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. WILLIAM ARTHUR SCALLY, JR. 27 Park Avenue Windsor, Conn. Bill Seal 1933-34-Day Fellow, Wolcott junior Football, Basketball and Baseball. 1934-35-Day Fellowg Wolcott Junior Football, Second Hockey and Baseball Teams. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Wolcott Senior Football, Second Hockey Team, and First Baseball Squad, Manager Athletic Store, Student Council. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Wolcott Soccer, First Baseball Squad, Glee Club, Student Council, Manager Athletic Store. Bentley School of Accounting and Finance. PAGE 57 PHILIP MINOT SAVAGE 41 Lancaster Avenue Worcester, Mass. Phil 1934-35-Foundersg Assistant Football Manager, Wolcott Hockey, Captain Golf Team, Log, Publications Board. 1935-36-Batchelderg Wolcott Soccer and Hockey, Tennis, Log, Publications Board. 1936-37-Taylor, Fall Tennis, Golf Team, Log, Publications Board. Williams THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 l JAMES MADDOCK SHAW 44 Merriam Place Bronxville, N. Y. llJiml, Honor Roll, 1934-35. 1933-34-Founders, Wolcott Soccer, Junior Basketball, and Tennis. 1934-35-Warhamg Wolcott Soccer, Wrestling, Wolcott Tennis, Junior French Club. 193 5-36-Warhamg Wolcott Soccer, Basketball, Tennis, Editor-in-Chief Handbook, Glee Club, Publications Board. 1936-37-Taylor, Wolcott Soccer, Squash Team, Tennis, Chairman Hand- book, Glee Club Qresignedj , Secretary- Treasurer Publications Board. Williams GEORGE DUVAL SCHROEDER 50 East 72d Street New York, N. Y. Gus Goon 1933-34-Tavern, Dr. Bissell'sg Allyn Junior Football and Basketball, Senior Baseball. 1934-3 S-Batchelderg Allyn Senior Foot- ball, Second Basketball and Baseball Teams. 1935-36-Warhamg Allyn Senior Foot- ball, Second Basketball and Baseball Teams. 1936-37-Warhamg First Football, Bas- ketball Teams, and Track. Dartmouth l PAGE 58 LOOMIS SCHOOL BRUCE MIDDLETON STEERE 34 Sunny Brook Road Bronxville, N. Y. M'sieur le Bcruf Honor Roll, 1935-36, 1936-37. 1935-36-Poke Inn, Track, Captain 1936 Interscholastic Sailing Championship Crew. 1936-37--Batchelderg Squash T e a m, Track, President Nautical Club, English Exchange Scholar. Yale PAGE S9 WINDSOR ' CONN. RICHARD JUDD SPILLANE Simsbury Road Bloomfield, Conn. Doc Dick 1933-34-Day Fellow, Ludlow Junior Football, Wrestling Team, Boxing, Lud- low Junior Baseball. 1934-35 -Day Fellow, Ludlow Senior Football, Wrestling, Ludlow Senior Base- Ball. ' 193 5-36-Day Fellow, Ludlow Senior Football, Wrestling Team, Ludlow Senior Baseball. 1936-3 7-Day Fellow, Ludlow Senior Football, Wrestling Team, Tennis and Golf. Dartmouth THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 PAUL TRAUTMAN 1237 jackson Avenue New Orleans, La. Traut Bruno,' Huey 19 3 4- 3 S-Founders, Ludlow Junior Football, Boxing, Track, Junior French Club, Art Club, Glee Club, Darwin Club. 1935-36-Batchelderg Ludlow Senior Football, Hockey, Track, Art Club, Dar- win Club, Radio Club, Glee Club. 1936-37-Taylor, Ludlow Senior Foot- ball, Hockey Manager, Track, Vice Pres- ident Art Club, Glee Club, Radio Club, Cercle Francais, Art Editor Loomiscel- lany, Athletic Council, Publications Board, Choir. Yale BARNARD SACHS STRAUS 1 West 81st Street New York, N. Y. Barney Big Barnen 1934-35-Founders, Allyn Junior Foot- ball and Basketball, Tennis Team, Con- cert Orchestra. 1935-36-Warhamg Allyn Senior Bas- ketball, Tennis Team, Glee Club, Con- cert Orchestra, Table Tennis Club. 1936-37-Batchelderg Allyn Senior Bas- ketball, Captain Tennis Team, Glee Club, Concert Orchestra, Table Tennis Club, Athletic Council. Harvard PAGE 60 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. ALBERT WILLIAMS VAN BUREN ISS Chestnut Street Englewood, N. Van-Van Wimpy Squren 1934-35-Tavern, Founders, Wolcott Senior Football, Wrestling, Assistant Track Manager, Endowment Fund Work- ing Committee, Junto. 1935-36-Batchelderg Assistant Football Manager, Winter Track, Track Mana- ger, Glee Club, Endowment Fund Working Committee, Athletic Council, Junto. 1936-37--Batchelderg Football Manager, Winter Track, Riding, Manager Glee Club, Loom Board, Nautical Club, En- dowment Fund Executive Committee, Riding Club, Batchelder Dorm Commit- tee, Athletic Council, Junto. Middlebury PAGE 61 LEWIS EDWARD UPHAM 165 Collins Road Waban, Mass. I.ewie,' Up 193 6 -3 7--Batchelderg Allyn Football First Hockey and Baseball Teams. Bowdoin 3 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 GEORGE EDWARD VON GAL, JR. Ridge Lake Farm Danbury, Conn. June Von Eddie', 1933-34-Founders, Ludlow Senior Foot- ball, Second Hockey Team, Track, Dar- win Club. 1934-35-Batchelderg Ludlow Senior Football, Second Hockey Team, Track, Darwin Club, Junior French Club. 1935-36-Batchelderg Football Team, Hockey Team, Track, Darwin Club, Press Club. 1936-37-Mason, Football T e a m, Hockey Team, Track, Press Club, Dar- win Club, Student Council. HENRY GERARD VANDER EB 84 South Quaker Lane West Hartford, Conn. Van Hank Moose 1933-34-Day Fellow, Wolcott Senior Football, Basketball and Baseball. 1934-35-Day Fellow, Football Team, Second Basketball Team, Captain Sec- ond Baseball Team, Loomiscellany Board, Publications Board. 1935-36-Gymnasium, Taylor, Football Team, Basketball Team, Baseball Team, Loomiscellany Board, Badminton Club. 193 6-3 7-Gymnasium, Captain Football Team, Wrestling Team, Captain Baseball Team, Business Manager Loomiscellany, President Athletic Council, Senior Com- mittee, Chairman Fall Dance Commit- tee, Warham Dorm Committee. Wesleyan PAGE 62 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. FREDERICK IRVING WALSH, JR. 1026 Prospect Avenue Plainfield, N. ecRo0n1ys9 uccupcxx uB0bon ulrvn 1932-33-Founders, Ludlow Junior Football, Hockey and Baseball, Dramatics. 1933-34-Batchelderg Ludlow Junior Football and Hockey, Tennis, Junior French Club. 1934-35-Batchelderg Ludlow Senior Football, Second Hockey Team, Tennis, Endowment Fund Working Committee. 1935-36--Batchelderg Ludlow Senior Football, First Hockey Team, Track, Swimming, Golf, Endowment Fund Working Committee, Glee Club, Choir, Table Tennis Club. 1936-37-Batchelderg Captain Ludlow Senior Football, First Hockey Team, Track, Student Council, Vice-President Endowment Fund Executive Committee, Glee Club, Batchelder Dorm Committee, Senior Committee, Choir. Princeton PAGE. 63 GEORGE TOMPKINS WALLACE Greensboro, Vermont Farmer Gramp 1954-35-Poke Inn, Allyn Football, Gym Team, Track Squad, Glee Club. 1935-36-Taylor, Cross Country, Gym Team, Track Team. 1936-37-Warhamg Gym Team, Wres- tling Team, Track Team. Amherst THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 ARNOLD EASTON WHITE 2110 Dorset Road Ann Arbor, Mich. Arun 'Wvhitiev 1935-36-Warhamg Wolcott Soccer and Hockey, Golf, Rifle Club. 1936-37-Warhamg Wolcott Soccer, Golf, Nautical Club, Radio Club. RICHARD PARKE WELCHER 115 Steele Road West Hartford, Conn. Belch Dick Honor Roll, 1933-34, 1934-35, 1935'- 36, 1936-37. 1933-34-Founders, Gym Team. 1934-35-Warhamg Allyn Senior Base- ball, Chess Club, Junior French Club. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Allyn Junior Football, Chess Club. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Wrestling Team, Glee Club, Chess Club, Ping Pong Club. Holy Cross PAGE 64 LOOMIS SCIIOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. WlI.l.lAM FDXVARD WINSLOW 8 Kellogg Street Wintlsor, Conn. Bill Windy 1933-34-Day Fellow: Wolcott Junior Football and Basketball. 1934-35-Day Fellowg Wolcott Junior Football and Basketball, Sporting News Correspondent. 1935-36-Day Fellow, Wolcott Junior Football, Log Board, Press Club, Sport- ing News Correspondent. 1936-37-Day Fellow, Agricultural Work, Sporting News Correspondent. Teachers' College of Connecticut PAGE 65 JAMES BRENGLE WINEBRENNER 267 Frederick Street Hanover, Pa. jim Dutch Honor Roll, 1933-34. 1933-34-Founders, Allyn Football and Basketball, Track. 1934-35-Batchelder, Allyn Football and Basketball, Track, Sophomore Re- ception Committee, junior French Club, Loomiscellany Board, Publications Board. 1935-36-Founders, Football Team, Al- lyn Basketball, Golf, Student Council, Loomiseellany Board, Dance Committee, President Junior Class. 1936-37--Batcheldcr. THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 GEORGE FERNAND WOOD, JR. 820 Hobart Avenue Plainfield, N. J. 19 3 6-3 7-Batchelderg Wolcott Senior Football, Hockey Team. Princeton FENDALL GREGORY WINSTON, III 3226 158th Street Flushing, N. Y. Win 1934-3 5-Tavern. 1935-36--Poke Inn, Track, Stamp Club, Junior Debating Team, Political Club. 19 3 6- 3 7-Batchelderg Track, President Stamp Club, Political Club, Nautical Club. Massachusetts Institute of Technology PAGE 66 1 , 4. -1, fs. .5 .,'i' 11 1 4 L C v ff, 'L '.4,,x 1 at Vt I , x ' ,. , 1 ' -- 1 V 11 ' pq, .. l,.w.VAK'1- :,,-J., , f. X . 4,1 V 'a 1 ,,1 ,. Q: 'mm Q L1 if I J 1 V VY .lu W JI f . ,V xv' Y' 4 I 11' V... ,,. ,.5,A g' V 1 , ' A nf. , . , UPU . . ' vu- fx Wkx 5. 'Q' ,- f41..ggffA . Q,- . f ' W. F 1 . 6 -' H' H . XMI. .v , f . . . K: ,w - ,Lf mf,J-gfg,3.3..:Q','fiifif Ky 7 -2 4- M ' ' 1 ' 31- 3 ' ff-Y' ' 'f5'.Q ' ' , '-af. A .' ' .lf X 'V f Ys'S'.'?.A j'zE': 52-f5???11!5s-Nik? E he .. .1 , K . , : ., -K -. l V: v...f,::,. a :W- . A .. A . ,H .V , Q ' ,.-yfz' ,I Wai., l. W 5.4 A Tm .1 4 . H 'QE' .k4'L tw-.ww ' , x 4: , W- . V ' ' . -.. '. J MN . g, , - - L .K V . . - I -' 1 ' ,. wx, . ,M ., V . f . - -+A: b qriqig x . . I.. ni .fm , A 'V , 1 I wif 3 Q ff, N 4. su.. L. tv. ,x.,N,t,,,.KA , . ' Vg '9 'f, f'i, , ,-mf . H ,, K 1.,'- ' Q qv X rj! . A 4' , .- .-A' . , .I ..,. 4 . 3. WJ. 1 I A ..,. . 5: . ' 7 I i O D ,,,,,s. i. F' U f tc: may , v 1 R' if ' 4' .. q..,3--,M L M35-, , . V,-,,5,. ,.-Wix. ,sm N. Ve' f, M x 4 ' -' Q 1, --1 .' L' form . ., -' CA 'Xe9. 1. ' ' 3 , J I W . 4 W K' M V V - . U .Wm .'. , . .-' ' . g5-4 ' -.. . .',X',xm 5, V, .1 ., ' .q 1 kb.. .gl ' - ,i .55 - f . x ' v, .mais 45 f- 5- ' -fs.. i- .- 1 , , , .V , ' , J-ff - . mg -, Q.. ' -V H f nu. ' .1 ' rsifw? ' ' . . X . W-'J 4 n '-fr.. : . ' .1 A , I J' ,' Q 'Ln L . .., , , .., I , .1 . , , , K -Q gf' - '. - if - H ,Y I 1 og, ' . .. 'h '-. an A Vhijw. 4, .7 ' 1 ' ' . ,HO ' n ,I . . , , ' , - A . ,I 1 n. ',4 4I 'A 1 .- 1 F N ,.,V , A . 2' , 4. I D Kfd ffN,.,i.v I 'UE ' ' 'f v , s. il: - x ,,., 1 I 1 .N ,, . 51 I 4. THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 How The Class Voted X Done Most for L00miS-KLAW 45, Bellis 23, Brooks 8 Most Popular-BROOKS 60, Klaw 15, Vander Eb 10 Most Likely to SuCC66d-KLAW 43, Brooks 17, Cooke 15 Biggest Grina'-STEERE 51, Gay 21, Earle 13 Most Literary-KLAW 21, Steere 19, Carnochan 18 Class CIOWW-GORDON 42, Vander Eb 16, Joralemon 8 Most Optimistic-RISLEY 21, Dingley 18, Brooks 15 Most Pessiinistic--W. LEWIS 17, Mederos 16, Parker 15 Best Drag With Faculty-KLAW 78, Brooks 4, Earle 4 Tries to Have-CooKE 17, Hartman 17, Gantz 17 Best Blujer-VANDER EB 16, Gordon 15, Boylan 13 Sinoothest-SAVAGE 62, Lester 5, Bellis 5 Most Saifoir-faire-BOYLAN 21, Risley 12, Winebrenner 10 Thinks he has-ATCHLEY 31, Lester 16, Savage 11 Best Dancer--BRISTOL 24, Kennedy 23, Gordon 13 Thinks he iS-KELLEY 26, Archley 17, Spillane 13 Easiest G0iHg-VAN BUREN 24, Russo 16, Miller 16 God's Gift to Women-RISLEY 43, Miller 11, Walsh 6 Thinks he iS-ATCHLEY 18, Steere 14, Klaw 12 Hd1Z6!S01116Sf-BAUSCH 26, Friedrich 22, Risley 15 Says Most Thinks LEHSL-WINSTON 25 , Joralemon 19, Straus 15 Says Least Thinks MOSf-DINGLEY 17, Friedrich 16, Brooks 15 Social Light-ATCHLEY 21, Kennedy 10, Christian 9. Most Energetic'-KLAW 34, Cooke 10, Risley 9 Most Dependable-EARLE 34, Brooks 25, Risley 17 Most Eccentric-GAY 28, Piffard 16, Winston 14 Best Afbl6f6LMILLER 59, Vander Eb 25, Lubchansky 2 Thinks he iS-CROLLUS 40, Vander Eb 33, Cooke 7 Biggest S ponge-LESTER 18, Leaycraft 16, Klaw 13 Most GBHETONS-PIFFARD 48, Fay 20, Schroeder 4 Best Naturea'-BROOKS 30, Russo 15, Piffard 10 N0iSi6Sf-JORALEMON 31, Winston 18, Gordon 15 Biggest Line-ATCHLEY 23, Vander Eb 19, Boylan 15 LuCki6Sf'-KELLEY 17 , Dingley 13, Crolius 12 Unluckiest-WINEBRENNER 31, Farnum 14, Vander Eb 10 Done Loomis for MOSf-KLAW 21, Forschner 18, Bausch 11 Biggest Tarzan-Like COWZPIBXTHASTINGS 46, Wallace 30, Fay 4 Best-Dressed-SAVAGE 47, Winebre-nner 11, Steere 7 Nicest Personality-RISLEY 30, Brooks 22, Dingley 13 Biggest Big Timer-KLAW 28, Berliner 18, Crolius 16 Biggest Glad-Hander-KLAW 36, J. Rodgers 15 , Old Clothes Man 10 Best Bock-Beater--VANDER EB 39, Hastings 24, Gilpin 8 Best Bock-to-Beat--JORALEMON 25, Atkinson 18, Montgomery 9 Best Smile-R1sLEY 25 , Fay 17, Dingley 15 Cut6Sf-WALSH 18, Bristol 16, L. Davis 14 e Biggest Beery Boy-MEDEROS 26, Vander Eb 15 , Hinckley 12 ,, I ' , ' A f' - ' 5 IV . Q, y 'iff X A .X 1 9 ' '-f 2 ' 'W , .- B xy' K4 tk I' I x' 'Q ' 4 D --Um-f 1 A, ' Q N ,V 'rw K L g . 'A W I X, if 3 -' b I 5 Y , 1 A 1 WL if ' 121--Y 4 .-X,:i:,I,, . K P' ' l ,, , f yi .:.Ir- ' -un.: N L ' V r '7g:47fjr'E 1 Y , 3 1 ,x V R, A N f , - . 5 w-1 -rx. f' ' - F sf. ei ... .. Q L,LLflIM7.,.. V, . VI I '5 Q - -4 ,, ,, Q Q I L'-' ll Mft ' 5 3 1 Lf, B 1g A 1 ,f ffff' . ? , ,A 4. , ., .Q 'K ,.' ' ' H' il, I I 'T r ?t'?'T5f m ' -4 ' . :1':'fJ ' W' if , 3' v ..'!'nks-7-I ,. -1, ' - ! S AA, 1 I ' I . J f .9 , 4. J ' -. nw- I ,qi N .J . , .f , .5 ,. 'i'f.: '!7? g 1 N 'I , . rr: g QM? M- '. . Kg .. 1 yy x , h K 1-- mlu 49 ,JL1 7 XXX 4 QJQ H, 4 1 ..q:+4a+ff1 - QW-,'-T,. can LEA La., X . ' L ' 5,-,rj-K . A ' L-.kjq-21,-, -, 4' U' 4'-N ',fJ3FJP'X?C2':vf55 fl8Q'S'11f!2i1!31'i1'!l ' 'ff 11? - . ,, M Y a,l, xflgi , 'ff' , N I' 53 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 Commencement Inne 12, 1937 GNVENDOLEN SEDGWICK BATCHELDER PRIZE for Industry, Loyalty, Manliness SPENCER ALONZO KLAW JOHN MASON TILNEY PRIZE for Excellence in Athletics and Scholarship ROBERT EDMUND COOKE MRS. THOMAS WARHAM LOOMIS MEMORIAL PRIZE for Highest Scholarship in Senior Class WILLIAM GAY ROBERT EDMUND COOKE EVELYN LONGMAN BATCHELDER PRIZE for Sportsmanship EDWIN RAY LEWIS, 2ND ANDREW DE WOLFF BARSS PRIZE JOHN HOLLISTER RISLEY CHARLES EDGAR SELLERS MEMORIAL PRIZE ROGER RUSHMORE EARLE LOOMIS PRINCETON CLUB PRIZE JOHN DEMAREST BELLIS, JR. JOHN FRANK BROOKS HERBERT P. PAGE MEMORIAL PRIZE BRUCE MIDDLETON STEERE NEW ENGLAND FEDERATION OF HARVARD CLUBS PRIZE for Excellence in Scholarship ana' Outside Activities THOMAS FRANCIS O,LOUGHLIN, JR. GEORGE W. SANFORD, JR., MEMORIAL PRIZE ROBERT LEE MOORE FIRST SCHOLAR OF JUNIOR CLASS ROBERT THOMAS SCEERY FOR ART FOR MUSIC ERIC MAXCY BATES JOSEPH NICHOLAS Russo PAUL TRAUTMAN PAGE 70 GE 5 is? DNITIIIIHL Nl N008 H u-1 Z DNITIIEIHL 1 L 4 Emi Vg :M we fl we I , . L Q V 1536? .Y ii Il alll. Iii L I A I lu , JW Qu 7 , gg F5---if ,fd .P fu 4 :V 4.3 A -af iw ab 23 v riff! .ly nn 'v 14 u 'xx 'F - n - w, .x 1,5 -if -f Q4 ' T4 1 ' , V .5 .XQ ,, V., ,A 1 I . K 'J . if ' fbi' H43 , g Q T ,-F 2 X , , ,, ,,. 1- S: His. ' v, in ,V . 'rm-..1. ' 'T gp B4 r, 1 Q, 'Q gr if ' 'fe' if A ' ML l' I him List of Students Baker, David Wolverton Barbe, Stephen Klein .. Barber, John Randolph Barker, Sydney Morse . . Barr, Oliver James, 3rd .... Beaty, David, 3rd ..... Bidwell, John Swindells Bissell, Addison Hayes, Jr. . . Brainerd, Edwin Grenier . . . Brinckerlioff, Clarke ........ Broadwater, Robert Bowden .... Butler, William Cullen Morris, Calnen, Henry Joseph, Jr. ..... . Case, John Warren ........ . . . Chase, Ira Thomas ............ Church, Hollis Fayette, Jr. .... . Cole, John Archibald Chamberlain Conklin, George Winslow .,.... Cooper, Robert Henry .... Cumming, Robert Stone . . . Davis, Merriam ........ de la Montagne, John ...... Douglas, Barton Marsh, Jr. . . Eddy, Roger Whittlesey ..... English, James Boyce ......... Ewart, Clifford Bateman, Jr. .. Floyd, George Fleming, Jr. .. . . Fowler, Robert Beals ....... Fowler, Theodore Austen .... Glass, Edgar Toll, Jr. .... . Green, John Burchenal . . . Griswold, Tracy ........ Grover, Ralph Wier .......... Hamblin, John Lawrence ....... Hamerslough, Philip Haas, Jr. .. Hathaway, Melvin Spencer .... Hickox, Charles Frederick, Jr. .. Hinckley, Robert Horace, Jr. . . Hirsch, Arthur Zachary, Jr. . . . Hubbard, Winchester Loomis .... Hull, Shelley Fremont ......., Huntington, William Chester .. . Hurlbut, Merritt Edward .... Ingersoll, Richard Howe .... Jones, Francis Edward, Jr. .... . Kyte, George Joseph ........... Leaycraft, Edgar Crawford, Jr. . Lewis, Edwin Ray, 2nd ........ Matthews, William Procter, Jr. . McClure, John Dean Gillett .... McClure, Samuel Sidney, 2nd .... McGee, Thornton Clemons ..... McKennee, Robert Huntington . . Meigs, Martin Schenck, Jr. .... . Brown, Seldon Lester ............ . Jr. Junior Class . . . . . . 36 Locust Ave., Troy, 35 Hamilton Road, Scarsdale, 1217 Windsor Ave., Windsor, 104 Neal St., Portland, N. Y. N. Y. Conn. Maine .. 20 Everett Ave., Norwood, Mass. 212 Conewango Ave., Warren, 53 Church St., Windsor Locks, . 23 Auldwood Road, Stamford, . . . . . 10 Kellogg St., Windsor, 137 Rich Ave., Mount Vernon, Penna. Conn. Conn. Conn. N. Y. . . . . . . . . 73 Alder St., Oakland, Md. 3 Winslow Place, Scarsdale, Conyngham, N. Y. Penna. .............. 81 Fern St., Hartford, Conn. 1661 Crescent Place, N. W., Washington, D. C. . . . . . . . 200 Claremont Ave., New York, South Windsor, . . .. Sasqua Road, South Norwalk, . . . 15 Deerpark Road, Great Neck, . . . 355 Wethersfield Ave., Hartford, . . . . . . . 12 East Boulevard, Rochester, ............. 390 Broad St., Windsor, 198 Chatterton Parkway, White Plains, . . . . . . . . 16 Ridgewood Road, Windsor, Newington, 56 Washington Circle, West Hartford, Q i .i ................ Ardsley-on-Hudson, 232 Grove St., Montclair, . . ...I 38' Ellsworth Road, West Hartford, N. Y. Conn. Conn. N. Y. Conn. N. Y. Conn. N. Y. Conn. Conn. Conn. N. Y. N. J. Conn. . . . . . . . . . 80 Winter St., Norwood, Mass. . . . . . . Sunset Farm, West Hartford, Conn. . . . Beach Tree Lane, Essex Fells, N. J. . . . . . 238 West 6th St., Erie, Penna. . . . . . . 91 Hudson Road, Bellerose, N. Y. . . . . . . . . . . 53 Park Ave., Windsor, Conn. 93 Steele Road, West Hartford, Conn. 78 Walden St. West Hartford, Conn. ......... 196 Main St., Westerly, R. I. . . . 98 Sylvan Ave., West Hartford Conn . . . 40 Faneuil Place, New Rochelle: N. Yi . . . . 916 Windsor Ave., Windsor, Conn. OldLyme, Windsor, . . . 576 Farmington Ave., Hartford Conn. Conn. Conn . . .. 2500 Highland Ave., Rochester: N. Yi 203 Brace Road, West Hartford, Conn. .. 88 Bainbridge Road, West Hartford, Conn. Woodstock, N. Y. . . . 227 West Central St., Franklin, Mass. Glendale, Ohio . . . 2133 R St., N. W., Washington, D. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Brookfield Centre, Conn. . . . . . 11 Highland Ave., Windsor, . . . . North Compo Road, Westport, Conn. Conn. Elm St., Concord, Mass. gll 1 , 56 vw.. 1 rr- . I-1 5 W X.-JN-'T I 4 .n 5. it 0 lx' 7. Miner, Weldon ........... Moore, Robert Lee ........... Morse, Howard Randlett, Jr. . O'Loughlin, Thomas Francis, Jr. Oppenheimer, Alexander Joske . Ost, Edwin Max, Jr. ........ . Otis, Frederick Alleyne, Jr. . . .. Parkhurst, Eliot Francis ..... Paul, Justus Williams, Jr. . . Robinson, David, 3rd ....... Rodgers, Paul Cochran, Jr. . . . Sceery, Robert Thomas .... Schafer, Lawrence Alder ..... Schillinger, Francis Stephen . . . Scott, Walter Hawley, Jr. . . . . Shultz, George Pratt ...... Stites, Francis Henry ............ -z Thenebe, Charles Elliott ..... Trowbridge, James Rutherford, Vernlund, Robert James ..... von Gal, George Edward, Jr. , . . Whiting, Alfred Nathaniel .. . Wiggins, Guy Arthur ....... Williamson, Addison Heaton . . Wolfson, Joseph Maurice . . . Wood, William Franklin . . . Akutowicz, Edwin James Atkinson, Robert Boone . . . Atterbury, Kirby, Jr. ...... . Austin, George Lawrence, Jr. . . Avery, George Mitchell ..... Benson, John Alexander, Jr. . . Billings, Guy ............ Bouse, Samuel Garner .... Charles Hinkle .... Brown, Brown, David Pickwoad .... Brown, Philip Hayward, Jr. . . Bullitt, John Marshall ..... Fred Moody ...... Carey, Cheetham, Richard Morris . . Childs, Stephen Hopkins .... Clark, Bernard Woodruff .... Clark, James McConnell .... Collier, James Dabney, Jr. . . . Collins, James Foster ..... Davenport, David Coit .... Davis, Carlton Morris .... Davis, Paul Thompson . . . Davis, Wendell ............. Diaz, Manuel, Jr. ............... . Dickinson, Edward Everett, 3rd Doe, Whitney Conant ........ Doty, Archibald Colville, Jr. . . . Du Bois, Arthur Wood ........ Field, Robert Eugene ..... Gaillard, Eyre Davis . . . 300 Porter St., Manchester, . . . . . . 4 Hillcrest Road, Windsor, . . . . . . . . . . . Loomis School, Windsor, . . . . . 540 New Britain Ave., Hartford, . . Joske Hill, Arcadia Place, San Antonio, I Q i i ....... 85 Penn Drive, West Hartford, Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Texas Conn. . . . . . . . 21 Harwich Road, Providence, R. I. . . . 64 Hazard Ave., Providence, . . . . . 108 Kenyon St., Hartford, . . . . . . . . Colonial Court, New Canaan, Forest Place, Glendale, . . . 486 South Quaker Lane, West Hartford, 490 Prospect Ave., Hartford, Station 16,Windsor, . . . . . . 903 Bellevue Ave., Syracuse, . . . 156 Rockwood Place, Englewood, . . . . . . . . . . 4 Walbridge Road, West Hartford, 2nd ....... 126 Cooper Ave., Upper Montclair, . . . . . . Sunset Farm, West Hartford, . . . . . Ridgelake Farm, ....... 13 Westland St., Danbury, Worcester, Lyme, . . . . 1662 34th St., N. W., Washington, . . . . . . . . . . 23 Cobb Ave., White Plains, 11 Brookline Drive, West Hartford, Sophomore Class Station 21,Windsor, . . . . 344 Fern St., West Hartford, Enfield St., Enfield, . . . . . . 62 Highland St., West Hartford, . . . 144 Trevor Court Road, Rochester, .... . . . . . . . .. 44 Filley St., Windsor, . . . . . 15 Bishop Road, West Hartford, JohnsLane,Ambler, .........................Wayland, R. I. Conn. Conn. Ohio Conn. Conn. Conn. N. Y. N. J. Mass. Conn. N. J. Conn. Conn. Mass. Conn. D. C. N. Y. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. N. Y. Conn. Conn. Penna. . 1729 North Cascade Ave., Colo. Springs, Colo. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Clubway, Hartsdale, ........... .. 23 Clubway, Hartsdale, N. Y. N. Y. ..................FalmouthForeside, Maine . . . . . . . 8 Fernwood Road, West Hartford, 374 North Quaker Lane, West Hartford, Conn. Conn. . . . . . . . . . . . Whitehall Farm, Block Island, R. I. South St.,Litchfield, Suffern, .......... 1934 Vinton Ave., Memphis, 201 North Quaker Lane, West Hartford, Conn. N. Y. Tenn. Conn. Juniper Ranch, Santa Fe, N. Mex. G 1Y2.Council Rock Ave., Rochester, N. Y. . . . . Northfield Seminary, Northfield, Mass. .......... 390 Broad St., Windsor, . . . . 150 Jackson Ave., Pelham Manor, ......... . . North Main St., Essex, Conn. N. Y. Conn. . . . . . . . . . . . Ayer Road, Harvard, Mass. . . . 4 Delavan Terrace, Yonkers, . . . . . Whitehall Apt., Haverford, 101 West 57t?St., New York, 325 East 79t St., New York, N. Y. Penna. N. Y. N. Y. luillllllllllln ., . vu ,-u I Q !1 IIFUIII HIIPIII bQ:5H rip' In riffs. nm ff, H Shi! Liwi . w 1 4 1 I f ,ry- ,g.v 'fl S 2-51 V 'ls N 3 0,5 H1 . ,Y ' fx' +G,-P .lad , 5 f 1. lui, P ---Q ' ! FD LAS CI AN HM PRES 'THE 5, .u ','Q!-.gk 'QW KP, 'fi' . 'ibgrju-, 1 .u ,tx . gin t - .xffnd ?v-U. 4x IF 1. m I Greeley, Hugh McLean . .. Green, Alfred William ..... Grinnell, Herbert Langsdorf . . . Holcombe, Shepherd Monson . . . Holsworth, Charles Wayne .... Hoskins, Robert Heywood .... Johnson, Kenneth Clark, Jr. . . . Johnson, Leonard Babcock ..... Keffer, William Ward .......... Kellogg, Henry Birge ........... Knickerbocker, Charles Herrick Knowles, Howard Stanley ...... Lancaster, Edward Sewall, Jr. . . Lyon, Clarke Seth ......... McAndrews, James Francis .... McAvoy, James Francis, Jr. McCarroll, Thomas James, Jr. . . . Mitchell,.John Randolph, Jr. Moore, James Howard, Jr. . . Morse, Anthony, Jr. ........ . Morse, Robert Dickinson, Jr. . . .. Mott, Stanton Overton ....... Nelson, George Clinton ...... Ogilby, Lyman Cunningham ....... Ogilby, Peter Brinckerhoff ........... Oliphant, Malcolm William Thomas Olmsted, Theodore Dwight, Jr. .... . O'Malley, Edward Adams, Jr. .... . Pelgrift, Robert Youngs ..... Power, Stuart Edgar ...... Purinton, Charles Murray . . . Putnam, Gerald Robinson .. . Ransom, Julius Ford, Jr. . . . . Richardson, Carlos Albert, Jr. . Rogers, Herbert Frank ..... Ross, Austin ............ Rowley, Samuel Dunham .... Ryan, Thomas Joseph ..... Schatz, Walter Gordon ....... Stacy, James Cornell ........... Stephenson, Thomas Edward .... Swan, Donald Kennedy ....... Sweet, Elliott Boyd ......... von Wedcl, Jerrold ....... Welles, Robert Winslow . . . Whittier, David Horn . . . Young, Paul Francis .... 1717 Kendall Ave., Madison, Wis . . .. 830 Belvidere Ave., Plainfield, N. J . . . . 66-14 Booth St., Forest Hills, . . . . . . . 79 Spring St., Hartford, . . . . . . . 900 Windsor Ave., Windsor, N. Y Conn Conn . . . . . . . . 39 Andover St., Hartford, Conn 135 Beechmont Drive, New Rochelle, N.Y . . . . . . . . . . . 96 Union St., Norwich, Conn . 42 Four Mile Road, West Hartford, .. . 49 North Beacon St., Hartford, Sewanee, Conn Conn Tenn . . . 98 Clifton Ave., West Hartford, Conn . . . 62 Ten Acre Road, New Britain, Conn . . . . . . . . 118 Madison Ave., Holyoke, Mass . . 280 Grandview Terrace, Hartford, Conn . . . . . . 93 Hillcrest Road, Windsor, . . . . . . 32 Elm St., Windsor Locks, .. 59 Lynwood Road, Scarsdale, Conn Conn N. Y . . . . Indian Head Road, Riverside, Conn . . . . 1639 Challen Ave., Jacksonville, Fla . . . 10 Ridgewood Road, Windsor, 911 President St., Brooklyn, . . . . . . . 93 Main St., Suffield, . . . 115 Vernon St., Hartford, . . . . 115 Vernon St., Hartford, Conn N. Y Conn. Conn Conn ......................Annapolis,Md . . . 1606 Boulevard, West Hartford, . . . . . 16 Cambridge St., Manchester, . . 61 North Main St., West Hartford, Ackerman, George Smith .... ............ 9 03 Prospect Ave., Bethlehem, Anderson, Gordon Noren .... Anschutz, Bradley Steele . . . Ball, Warren Wilson ....... Belcher, Donald William .... Berman, Elihu Herbert ..... Brush, Thomas Stewart, Jr. . . . . Buchanan, Thomas Fraser, Jr. .. . Burrill, Gerald Drayton ........ Conn Conn Conn . . . . . . . . . . . Mariposa Drive, Redlands, Calif. . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Murray St., Waterbury, Conn. Mountain Spring Road, Farmington, Conn . . . . . . . . . 110 Preston St., Windsor, Conn . . . . 28 Mason Drive, New Britain, Conn .. . . . 905 Bellevue Ave., Syracuse, N. Y. 64 Evergreen Ave., Hartford, Conn. . . . 1046 Asylum Ave., Hartford, Conn . . . . 583 Circular Ave., Hamden, Conn . . . . . 49 Sherman St., Hartford, Conn . . . . 900 Windsor Ave., Windsor, Conn . . . . . . . . Avon Road, Farmington, Conn. . . . . . 270 Highbrook Ave., Pelham, N. Y. . 29 Four Mile Road, West Hartford, Conn. . . Ardsley Ave., Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. . . . . . . . . . . 46 Kelsey St., Hartford, Conn. . ............ R. F. D. No. 10, Fairfield, Conn. . . . . . . . . . . . 10 Beverly Road, West Hartford, Conn. Freshman Class Penna. . . . . 225 Palisado Ave., Windsor, Conn . . . . . . . 28 William St., Ansonia, Conn. . . . 592 Poquonock Ave., Windsor, Conn. 550 Prospect St., Westfield, N. J. 132 Terry Road, Hartford, Conn. . . . 322 East 57th St., New York, N. Y. 166 Palisa Ave., Windsor, Conn. 153 Montcla ve., Montclair, N. J. Penna. Cadwallader, J. Augustus, Jr. . . . . A 1 . . . . . Fairfield rrace, Yardley, Campbell, Kelly Abbott ........ Carey, James Clayton ...... Chamberlain, Rodman Wright, Clark, Lewis Hathaway .... Clark, Richard Callender . . . Costello, Mark Hamilton, Jr. De Chiara, Albert Henry . . . de Ma Carty, Pierre Cormac Dieuaide, Francis Stewart . . . Donohue, Stephen ....... Dorchester, John Wesley . . . Duncan, Gordon Groah . .. Earle, Robert Horace ...... Faulkner, Francis Frederic . . Fowler, Bigelow ........... Ghent, Walter Hughes ..... Gidman, Justin Verner .... Gilbert, Edward Holmes, 3rd .... Goslee, Sherwood Henry, Jr. Gowans, John Alexander ..... Hammond, David Quick, Jr. Harris, George Copeland .. . Hayward, John Lovering . . . Hoffman, Walter Knox, Jr. . . Howe, Edward Redfield .... Howe, Henry Almy, Jr. . . . Howes, Maurice Hatheway . . . Hull, Richard Lawrence . . . Jewett, Nelson Holland .... Joffe, George Frederick ..... Jones, DeWitt Clinton, 3rd . Kennedy, Roderick ............ Lindstrom, Walter Swornsbourne Little, Ellis Frank .............. Mead, Donald Arthur ..... Morse, Richard Ketcham ..... Peck, George Lyman, 2nd .... Petersen, Clinton Wadleigh .... Rice, Alfred West ........... Robertson, Thomas William, Jr. Schneider, Lawrence Louis, Jr. Shaw, Stanford Henry ....... Aberdeen Apts., Shawsheen Village, Andover, . 8 Fernwood Road, West Hartford, . . . . . 338 Lincoln St., New Britain, . . . . . 833 Windsor Ave., Windsor, Windsor, . . . . . . 2 Beekman Place, New York, 157 West 57th Sc., New York, 33 Hillcrest Road, Windsor, Mass. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. N. Y. N. Y. Conn. ... . . . . . . .. 77 Cedar St., Chicago, Ill. . . . . . . . 359 Windsor Ave., Wilson, . . . . . 25 Poquonock Ave., Windsor, 86 Newport Ave., West Hartford, . . . . . . 727 Spooner Ave., Plainfield, Conn. Conn. Conn. N. J. ... .......150 Court St., Keene, N. H. . . . . . . . . . . 80 Winter St., Norwood, Mass. . . . 114 Garfield Road, West Hartford, ...,... . 486 Broad St., Windsor, . . . 153 Stamford Ave., Stamford, . . . . . . . 45 Church St., Manchester, . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Prospect St., Windsor, Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. . . . 38 Washington Terrace, East Orange N. 32 Portsmouth Terrace, Rochester, 95 South Main St., West Hartford, . . . . . 65 Bloomfield Ave., Windsor, . . . . . . . . 31 Atwood St., Hartford, . . . . Washington House, Wellesley, . . . . Club House Road, Windsor, Watertown, . . . . . 38 Hodge Ave., Buffalo, . . . 46 Willow Road, Woodmere, . . 83 Dwight Place, Englewood, . . . . . 3 Brooklands, Bronxville, . . . . . . . . . 33 Filley St., Windsor, . . . 54 Nunda Boulevard, Rochester, 21 Risley Place, New Rochelle, . . . . . . . 15 Mason Drive, New Britain, . Cragswold Apartments, Scarsdale, . . 1162 Enfield St., Thompsonville, . . . . . . 50 Rankin St., Worcester, . . . . . . . 23 Freeman St., Hartford, 23 East 74th St., New York, 18 Brookwood Road, South Orange, Simpson, Josiah James Linsly . . . Present address: Northford, Conn., Rochester, Smith, Clifford Wilbur, Jr. . . . . Smith, Frederick Tyler .... Smith, Thomas Aloysius . . Smithers, Brett ............ Tenney, Henry Martin, Jr. . . . Thomas, David Gordon ..... Thompson, Irvin Preston, Jr. . . . Thurnauer, Warren ......... Tilden, Samuel Jones ......... Trautman, Joseph .............. Turner, Richard Greenleaf, Jr. Vesey, Nathaniel Henry Peniston, Wadlund, Robert Reed ....... Walker, John Horace, Jr. .... . Welch, Charles Aloysius,f5Jr. . . Wolvin, Roy Mitchell ..... Yntema, Hessel Edward, Jr. . . . HJri. .. . . 150 East 72nd St., New York, . 60 Sharia Ibrahim Pasha, Cairo, . . . . 197 North Oxford St., Hartford, Salisbury, . . . . . 21 Hillcrest Road, Windsor, .. . 1124 Windsor Ave. Windsor, N. Y. Conn. Conn. Conn. Mass. Conn. Conn. N. Y. N. Y. N. J. N. Y. Conn. N. Y. N. Y. Conn. N. Y. Conn. Mass. Conn. N. Y. N. J. N. Y. N. Y. Egypt Conn. Conn. Conn. Conn. . . . . 15 Kenilworth St., Pittsfield, Mass. . . . Hawthorne Ave., Port Chester, N. Y. WinterHaven,Fla. 1237 Jackson Ave., New Orleans, La. . . . . . . . . 14 Fiske St., Worcester, Mass. 160 Clearfield Road, Wethersfield, 97 Newport Ave., West Hartford, 121 Branford St., Hartford, ................Devonshire,Bermuda Conn. Conn. Conn. . . . . . . . The Hermitage, Dorval, Quebec . . . 1005 Lincoln Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich. PAGE 79 ow G+ N Y Y 46, 'QF I' NG LUC 1 h N cmsnss T . 0 STRIP KING 4' , N 1 , uzns su E QM 5 - EASON'S L ST B U ggq ERS,FAM l -' J ' . 1 nuugh In-fur - ri 0 . 'rg Kino 'hut it ww I D' X I ' h h '-- '55 xfzzu is h ig . fa ff ff1f.'lL'f.12f1- . fffmffl lp ' , 555, 2 gh! to use t Sf-nior Path - I E' I ,,,: C f, lon of Sn-nio vm dnytimm 2? gm eg similarly - ivilogei ure W ' B UE- . . V V . , , , 4 yd lifgggnehzf I !u:.1T'uFl1 th S gig h ' ' h f 'Q Zeissgurte C :Ka tpgivil t 3 -' nio - ltation, t1 v Seniors A -. er c :H h -1 - THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 GE THE STUDENT COUNCIL LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Student Council President .............................. S. A. KLAW, '37 Vice President .... . . . . . . . . J. F. Bnooxs, '37 Secretary ............................ R. E. Cooks, '37 The year has been a lively one for the Council, not because it faced tre- mendous difficulties, but because of having in its membership some very ambitious and inquiring minds. It undertook a thorough restudy of the basis of Student Government, both here and in some other schools, and made several suggested amendments to the Constitution. These were thoughtfully drawn up and presented to the school in a mass meeting, followed by several class meetings. Mimeographed sheets were distrib- uted and presumably studied. The gist of the proposals was to make the Council smaller for more effective work, to formalize consultative relations with the faculty, and to provide for the removal of inefficient or uninterested Councillors by quasi judicial procedure. All of the pro- posals commanded a considerable vote, but none reached the necessary two-thirds of the whole school. The net result, nevertheless, was much spirited discussion and more thorough understanding of the nature of our government, which is exceptionally broad and democratic. Few schools would have entrusted the matter of revision of a Student Government Constitution to committees of boys, and a final vote of rhe school, without interference by the faculty. Representation in pro- portion to numbers means inevitably a Council of increasing size. Both for deliberation and action this introduces difficulties which may, however, be surmounted by appointment of committees and sub-divi- sion of responsibilities. PAGE 81 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 Endowment Fund President ........................ D. D. BELLIS, JR., '37 Vice Presirlmzf . . . . . . .... F. I. VVALSH, JR., '37 Faculty Adviser ......................... MR. EVENSON With a grand flourish the Endowment Fund finished off last year the payments on the athletic fields, the project for which the Committee was originally organized. Immediately after the flood the Committee undertook the commendable task of replacing the floor in the Gym- nasium hall and the two front rooms with tile. Already this obligation has been discharged, and S100 donated to the Library for the purchase of books in science, and S112 has been devoted to the construction of much-needed new bleachers. As a reward of virtue, past and present, the Endowment Fund is going to be established in palatial quarters in the new Palmer Hall. A generous room that can on occasion seat fifty will be appropriately finished with benches around the wall and small movable tables. There will be two counters and a large working space, where refreshments can be prepared for athletic teas and even for dinners of school organiza- tions. The profits at least should not decrease, and there should be an annual income of about S1500 to devote to good works. The next projects are not yet selected, but there are many facilities within the scope of the Undergraduate Endowment Fund that will be taken up from time to time. The work of the Committee since its inception is a great dem- onstration of loyalty and efficiency. P A G E 8 2 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN ENDOW'MlLN'l' FUND Wolaxlxc COh1N1l'1 l'lZ12 Som-lomolua RECEPTION COMMITTEE Iwxcaxa 83 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 f , . 1 .ffi , 'Y , any ,, . g-55 .11 3 45 ' le A PAGE 84 THE GLEE CLUB LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. The Musical Clubs President ................... E. E. FRIEDRICH, '37 Manager . . . . . .... A. W. VAN BUREN, '37 Directors ...................... MR. CARD and MR. KAHL With some twenty experienced singers the glee club started with a good nucleus. There were many candidates and a large number were retained through most of the year. As usual, there was difficulty in finding enough first tenors, though there was a superfluity of second tenors and basses. The first appearance was in the singing of carols on Founders Ter- race at Christmas time. The annual festival at the Bushnell with Choate, Taft, Hotchkiss and Deerfield was the great event of the year. The concert as a whole was rated by critics as one of the best that we have ever held, and popular opinion rated Loomis high among all the clubs. Unfortunately, the annual concert with St. Margaretis School had to be canceled because of illness there. The club sang for our guests at the time of the spring dance and gave the usual concert at Commencement. The range and variety of selections was large and most interesting. Classi- cal composers such as Palestrina, Bach, Dowland, Morley, Schumann and Franck were studied, together with a variety of Russian, Bohemian, Irish, and French folksongs and a few Negro spirituals. The concert orchestra, with a particularly good trio of violinists in Russo, Straus, and Driggs, rounded into shape under Mr. Kahl's guid- ance for an admirable performance at Bushnell, where Loomis constituted a full third of the combined orchestra. Russo played the solo part in one of the pieces. XVorks by Hadley, Schubert, and Brahms were performed during the season, which was climaxed by the Commencement concert. PAGE 85 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 Dramatic Society Famzlly Aflvissrs .,... M. CHIQRUY, MR. ORCHARD and MR. MCKEE In reality there is no Dramatic Society, at least there are no officers and no formal memberships. Rather, a group of interested boys gather round faculty advisers and from time to time plays are presented. The first play to be give was a Scotch'piece, The Pie in the Oven, directed by M. Cheruy. The traditional Thanksgiving Day frolic was held in the evening with magnificent impersonations by Klaw. Mr. McKee also presented a stirring tale of the Kentucky Mountains, an hilarious farce that set the keynote of the day. Mason Dorm., collab- orating with Mr. Orchard, gave the school an insight into a broad- casting studio as it might be and perhaps is, with side play, local allu- sions, and ad-libbing not in the script. Later, the freshmen, coached by Mr. Norris, with stage effects by Mr. McKee, did scenes from Iulius Caesar very effectively. On the Spring Dance Weekend Messrs. Orchard and McKee presented Eugene O,Neill's Emperor jones, and on Com- mencement, of course, there was a senior show with the usual gaiety and abandon. PAGE 86 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. .N ' -...Leann-. - -4. Darwin Club Prrxiilvnt .....,.. ..... R . H. PAUL, '37 Vin' l'ri'siJr'r11 ..... .... Q . B. DEMING, '37 Sl'l'f!'flIf.j'-TVfl1XIll't'f . . . . . . li. R. BERRY, JR., '37 Iiarnlly Ailrixvr ..........,..............,... MR. MILLS The Darwin Club has carried on its usual program of meetings, discus- sions, lectures, and motion pictures on various scientific subjects. In addition, Mr. Norris of the Natural History Division has continued vigorous work at the Plantation. Much more land has been cleared, fif- teen hundred young trees planted, and the cabin much improved. It has been an excellent opportunity for boys to get back to nature and enjoy meals in the open or occasional weekends at the cabin. Mr. Norris also took some members on a geological trip along the Connecticut and sponsored a visit of a group to the Wesleyan laboratories. The Photo- graphic Division has been lively, inspired by the camera craze that has swept over the school. Candid snapshots and carefully taken views have both been in evidence. The Carnival was as good-natured, as noisy, and as profitable as usual, and the funds raised have helped materially in the projects of the Endowment Fund. PAGE 87 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 Junto President ....... ........ .... J . H. RISLEY, '37 Secretary-Treasurer .. . R. E. COOKE, '37 Faculty Adviser .......................... MR. GRUBBS Junto, the organization through which the school focuses its charities, underwent a considerable change of routine this year. Along with its charitable functions, Junto has always provided an opportunity for those boys who wish to discuss social, moral and reli- gious problems. The policy has formerly been to hold meetings for this purpose, whenever it was possible to have a guest speaker to con- duct them. This year to afford the boys a more active part in the dis- cussions and to increase interest in them, a new plan was evolved. Loomis masters, instead of guest speakers, preside over and stimulate discussions without curtailing the students' opportunity for stating their own views. A total of over nine- hundred dollars raised this year and coupled with last year's surplus of one hundred and twenty dollars went toward filling the community chest, aiding the family of Joseph E. Goodrich, a former Loomis master, and helping the Skac family. Smaller donations have been made to the Newington Home, Tuskegee Institute, Hampton Institute, and the Twillingate Hospital in Newfoundland where John Olds, '23, is physician. By means of sacrifice dinners, enough money was raised to distrib- ute Christmas and Thanksgiving baskets among the needy. PAGE 88 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. ' b 'n..n..'v. The Political Club Prvsidcnl ...... . ................. L. BULLITT, '37 Svvrcfary .... ........... R . I-I. GILPIN, '38 lfavully Adzfixi-rx ............ Mix. I-Iosxms and MR. Fowuas This year found the Political Club more active than ever. Not satisfied with open discussions and home speakers, it went to neighboring insti- tutions to seek the conditions there. The club invited quite a few out- side speakers to talk to the school in chapel. The beginning of the Fall term was spent in home discussions and minor debates among the members. The outstanding affair of that season, however, was a joint meeting with the Chaffee School at Mr. B.'s house. Mr. john W. Colton, associate editor of The Hartford Cour- ant, was speaker for the evening on the Spanish situation. During the Winter term Chaffee School invited us to their abode where Mr. Yutaka Minakuchi gave a talk about Japan and its relations. Wethersfield Prison was also visited. Upon returning everybody expressed their praise for the easy-going at Loomis. During the Spring term Mr. Young, a professor at Albhorz Col- lege in Persia, gave a talk in chapel about existing conditions in Arabia and Persia. We were also fortunate enough to have Mr. Tone, Commis- sioner of Labor, deliver a speech concerning the labor conditions in this state. He pointed out the necessity for the Child Labor Amendment. With a nucleus of twelve returning members the club again hopes to have a very successful year next year. PAGE 89 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 Debating Debating was a success this year as shown by the number of tryouts and by the interest of the school. We had home-and-home debates with Deerfield and Hotchkiss. Decisions were not rendered, however, a critic usually criticized both sides for good and bad points taking care not to render a deinite decision for any side. The subject with Hotchkiss was An amendment to the Constitu- tion authorizing Congress to regulate conditions of labor throughout the country is desirablef' The home team taking the affirmative consisted of F. Jones, M. Davis, and Gantz. The negative side had Lawrence, L. Bullitt, and Bick. We were fortunate enough to have the Chief Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court as critic, Mr. W. M. Maltbie. The subject of the Deerfield debate was Resolved, that the House should approve President Roosevelt's policy for the reform of the federal judiciary. The home team consisted of Miner, L. Bullitt and Gantz. The negative was represented by F. Jones, Lawrence, and Citron. Mr W. Orick of Trinity College was the critic of the latter debate. With a nucleus of ive returning men we hope for another suc- cessful team. PAGE 90 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. l i Art Club President ...... ................ E . M. BATES, '37 Vin' President . . . .,.. P. TRAUTMAN, '37 Ifarlzlly Adviser ............... .....,... M Miz. CHIQRUY The Art Club has enjoyed a busy year. In addition to their own studies and the pursuit of their own creative work, the members have con- tributed to general school activities by furnishing posters, illustrations in the Loom, or whatever else might be requested. On Friday evenings in the Art room there have been talks by members or by masters, or open and lively discussions. Of particular interest have been the talks by Mr. Johnson on Greek architecture and two comprehensive discus- sions of the Romantic Revival in France by Mr. McKee. Exhibitions have been held from time to time, particularly for the spring Prom and Commencement. Three members have executed large panels depicting different phases of Art at three significant periods of history to decorate the south wall of the Art room. PAGE 91 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 M- r ..:f-fig? Chess Club Prcsideni .... ..... F . M. L. DAVIS, '37 Sefrcfary ..... .... I R. F. BLANCHARD, '37 Coach and Azlwsvr ......................... MR. MATHER This year's Chess Club made a great increase over last year's club both in membership and in activities. The ladder competition was carried on throughout the year with President Davis, Secretary Blanchard, Cas- per Citron, Bill Gay, and Stacy at the top. In their three matches, the Loomis team won 1, tied 1, and lost 1. It defeated Kingswood, and split even with the green of Deerfield. Stacy had the best average with two Wins and no defeats, and Pinky Bul- litt won his only match in competition. Dick Blanchard won two out of his three games, while President Davis and Bill Gay each won one of three. Other members of the team included Citron and Hubbard., Many new schemes were tried by the team under the expert direc- tion of Mr. Mather. The season was a successful one for the Club and the team, and they look forward to fine seasons in future years. PAGE 92 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Radio Club l'r'1'.viJvf1l ....,... ..... A . C. DOTY, '38 Sl'l'l'4'fdl'vj'-iI'N'dXI1Y'l'l' . .... T. S. MIQIPIHIKOS, '37 lltlfllll-Y Aflrixrr .,..................... MR. WllITlilIIiAlD This year the Radio Club has again had an unusually large number of members. Most of the Club activity was carried on in the Fall and Winter terms, and during that time frequent meetings were held, with talks by Mr. Wliitehead on the electronic theory of radio. At the spring Carnival for the Endowment Fund the Radio Club held a successful exhibition of radios, and other electrical apparatus, much of which had been made in the cupola this year. The Club was not able to operate an amateur transmitting station this season, as there has not been a licensed operator in school. However, several club members have been studying code, and hope to have obtained their licenses by the opening of school next year. As most of this year's members are returning in the Fall, the Radio Club expects to have an even better and more successful season next year. Pixels 93 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 i i v v The Cercle Francais President ....... ..... R . H. PAUL, '37 Vice President . . . . . . ..... G. PIFFARD, '37 Adviser ................................... M. CPIIQRUY The Cercle Francais is an organization which helps to inform 'the students of its club about the French life, language, literature, and customs. This year the Cercle Francais had very few members, but there were enough to make all the meetings very enjoyable. Monsieur Cheruy gave frequent talks on all phases of French life and people that he had known while in France. One particularly inter- esting talk was on the famous sculptor Rodin who was a good friend of his. Subsequent talks were given by the club members. All these talks and all conversation are carried on in French. The members of the Club have read over two French plays, Le Voyage de Monsieur Perrichonv and Les Jumeaux de Brighton .' The latter was written by Tristan Bernard. Newspapers, books, and other French literature have been read by the club members. PAGE 94 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Junior French Club I'r1'sii1ml ................... C. M. PURINTON, '39 Sven-tary .... . .. D. C. DAVIENPORT, '39 Trrwxzzrcr ....... .......... I . P. TnoMPsoN, '39 Aflrixvr .................................. MR. GRUBBS The Junior French Club, again under the able direction of Mr. Grubbs, had a very successful year. The club increased its membership to eighteen and is endeavoring to create an interest in French life throughout the sophomore class. The organization, made up entirely of sophomores, heard many talks on French life by Mr. Grubbs and the club members. The purpose of the club is to get a better understanding of the French language, cus- toms, and life. The talks are all based on these subjects. Later in the year the members were helped in the mastering of the language. Many boys use this club as a stepping stone to greater knowledge of French and a membership in the Cercle Francais. The latter organi- zationis adviser, Monsieur Cheruy, gave a few talks on French life at the end of the year. Refreshments were supplied at each meeting for the club members. PAGE 95 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 ' , ' r.-f. N ,.,.. The Loomis Nautical Club Prcsideni ........................... B. M. STEERE, '37 Faculty Advisers .......... MR. EATON and MR. HOLLSTEIN The Loomis Nautical Club, a new organization, sprang partly from interest aroused by Loomis,s winning the Clifford D. Mallory trophy, the interscholastic yacht-racing championship. Partly it derived from a larger group of ardent yachtsmen, faculty and boys, than Loomis has ever before had. Organizing early in the fall, the members divided into Cruising and Racing divisions. The former held weekly meetings dur- ing the late fall and winter, discussing sea-going problems and practic- ing chart navigation. The Racing group held study sessions of rules and situations, analyzing thoroughly the North American Yacht Racing rules. The winter season was climaxed by an evening's talk by Winthrop Warner, '20, Middletown yacht designer and broker. The officers and advisers chose a crew of ive to return to Marion in defense of the Mallory trophy. Three of these were to sail in the Herre- shoff E boats, two to form a crew for the smaller Zips. The success of the Nautical Club's initial year depended largely upon the enterprise of Bruce M. Steere, '37, captain of the victorious 1936 crew, president of the organization, William Crolius, '37, who headed the cruising division, and Albert Root, '37, who served as racing head. Active faculty advisers were Messrs. Eaton and Hollstein, while Honorary Commodore Batchelder lent prestige by his membership. PAGE 96 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Dance Committees FALL DANCE H. G. VANDER EB, '37, Clzairvmn R. R. EARLIZ, '37 S. A. KLAW, '37 S. F. HUl.L, '38 R. HORNE, '37 E. R. LEWIS, II, '37 SPRING DANCE R. R. EARL12, '37, Clmirnzan W. B. HAS'I'lNCiS, '37 J. H. RISLEY, '37 S. A. KLAW, '37 E. E. FRIEDRICH, '37 J. DE LA MONTAGNE, '38 P- C. BRINCKIERHOFF, '38 R. W. EDDY, '38 The Fall Sports Dance, with the gym decorated like the Yale Bowl, cli- maxed the Fall Term. In May the best-attended and probably most successful two-day dance in Loomis history saw the gym transformed to the Bowery of the '90's by the combined efforts of Committee and Art Club. PAGE 97 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 e J of' +2 ' lf! J' ff a x 48' 651' 99' Of, I ,, Qu 0' ' ' 5 gyms! J' 'ii sf 09 Q? - f 4' if' Q 1' f 41 4' ,U f -e -S ' e -9' fs? ,s if x 1, .1 if 5 5 Q ,1 R- ff , if y Nyifvfy .f'f.'?? U'.f'fiJ lv N' fi '55 QP! 5 ,Ly ve4'6,s7! ia 1 i nf . f ,xx 4 1 4 ,,- 4 , Shea Q H fa- QQ' I vw' f,v'H,,:F ' , .- ' I-, -is- N 9 . , .1 my 'Y' 0-P' U, 6, F f fm Q69 5 Q , . V t ,ax-ff... m 1. ' -ytvfy.. ,Q ,, t is 4- QD asLf'l.w' .cf X V , G 'Aw in 1-tfyqq' - 'XXS2 A ' EV' .J . U .mfs -:Lf .1 xx ak 4 Y. 0 ,, .00 ,- , ' 0 , uf wr' --1' X 'EN' 14' lu, 1009! 'X QQ .f ,N .. f U' ..,-ww-' ,an 1 1 ,,.r I l 4 Q dn If x.- ni Y, . 1 . L 1 nn -,QM , og . L3 Eh' umiili.--W-N-I-ma 0 ill l0 qlu long . Q1lqpi.Qm1,S M5-Q 5-. um.. up: .... llliihsgglpm 5 lu. I.. s K X -:gif ., ,,. f 'eg Publications Board The revised Publications Board continues to function effectively. Instead of competition for advertising, there is now cooperation. Every boy in school is automatically a member of the Publications Association, as he is of the Athletic Association. There is an inclusive fee on a Community Chest principle, with budgetary needs carefully assessed and at last adequately met. The lilfllllfbliflfl greets both new and old boys at the opening of school and presents both traditions and necessary regulations clearly and effectively. The Log issues weekly with its current history of Loomis, except as on occasion it steps aside for the Loomis Lug, pink sheet featuring the Mustophle family. It is still a question Whether the Lug or the Smiler issue was the greatest journalistic feat. The Loom ap- pears from time to time, as the quality and quantity of student literary productions Warrant. The Press Club furnishes accounts of Loomis events for New York, Boston, and Hartford papers. The Looizziscellnlzy summarizes the happenings of the year in type and pictures. Each is indispensable and all prosperous. PAGE 98 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN The Log Board Pf!'.Yit1l'fIf ............................. J. F. BROOKS, '37 Businvsx Managcr ,...... C. B. EWART, '38 Managing Editor ..... .. H. F. LUBCIIANSRY, '37 Aflzfrrlising Manager . ............... F. P. CHRISTIAN, '37 Svnior Ealilors S. A. KI.Aw, '37 P. M. SAVAGE, '37 F. M. L. DAVIS, '37 W. T. CROLIUS, '37 T. S. MEIJEROS, '37 G. A. WIGGINS, '38 Assovialc' Ezlilvrx W. G. BAUSCH, '37 J. B. GREEN, '38 R. B. BROADWATER, '38 M. S. HATHAWAY, '38 M. DAVIS, '38 A. Z. HIRSCH, '38 R. S. DURKES, '37 D. S. KENNEDY, '37 R. C. FISHER, '37 C. H. KNICRERBOCRER, '39 W. GAY, '37 T. F. O'LOUGHLIN, '38 S. D. ROWLEY, '38, Photographer J. N. Russo, '37 Assixlant Business Managers J. A. POLACK, '37, Circulation Manager P. H. HAMMERSLOUGH Faculty Advisers MR. GRUBBS MR. MORSE PAGE 99 '3 di THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 The Loomiscellany Editor ........... ...... J . H. RISLEY, '37 Business Manager .... . . . H. G. VANDER EB, '37 Photographic Editor . . . . . . V. A. CLARK, JR., '37 Art Editor ......... .... P . TRAUTMAN, '37 Diary ........... .......... ........ S . A. KLAW, '37 Associate Editor ......................... J. GREEN, '38 Assistant Business Managers T. GRISWOLD, '37 D. F. KELLEY, JR., '37 The Board Wishes to express its thanks to Mme. Cheruy, Mr. Finch and Mr. Batchelder for fruitful suggestions and constant helpfulness. This anniversary volume is presented with the hope that it will be a treasured Souvenir of a significant year of Loomis history. PAGE 100 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. The Handbook R. H. GXLPIN, '38 J. M. SHAW, '37 D. S. KENNEDY, '37 J. A. PoLAcR, '37 The Press Club E. F. PARRHURsT, '38 G. M. CARNOCHAN, JR., '37 MR. GRUBBS J. M. BULLITT, '39 N. H. QJEWETT, '40 C. R. BICK, '37 PAGE 101 The Loom G. A. WIGGINS, '38 G. J. KYTE, '38 J. B. GREEN, '38 P. H. BRoxvN, JR., '39 R. B. BROADWATER, '38 R. H. MCKENNEE, '38 A. W. VAN BUREN, '37 C. W. JONES, '37 G. M. CARNOCHAN, JR., '37 W. R. CROLIUS, '37 N. Y. PRIESSIWAN, JR., '37 I t I THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 STAMP CLUB RIFLE CLUB GE LOOMIS SCHOOL - WINDSOR - CONN. The Alumni Association Prexident ......................... SIDNEY L. EATON, '23 Vice-Presidenis Davin H. SWOPE, '25 CHESTER H. LOOMIS, 332 Wii.i.IAM P. PRATT, '24 W1I.LIAM H. MORRIS, '32 Secrvlary-'I'reaxurrr ..... . . . ERNEST W. EvENsoN, '20 Ass'f Secrzdary .... . . . GEORGE B. SAVAGE, '23 Ass't Treasurer ................... HULL P. MAYNARD, '19 The Alumni Association's year, 1936-37, has been active. By vote of the members, the officers of the previous year carried over, pending reor- ganization into groups in large centers. This reorganization has been going forward: active district groups now exist in New York, New Haven, Boston, and central Connecticut. Each of these districts has held at least one dinner-meeting, electing its own officers and appoint- ing a delegate to serve on the executive committee of the entire Asso- ciation. At time of going to press, the delegates had not gathered. At their approaching meeting, the executive committee will elect new ofii- cers for the Association. In addition to group reorganization, class contacts have been radi- cally revised by the establishment of a class agent system. Through this change each class has several agents, each having seven or eight members with whom he is to keep in close contact. Already a good many gradu- ates, unheard from for several years, have responded to this more per- sonal method of approach. The aim of the Association is to issue a new directory soon. The Association's outstanding project for the year has been the erection of the new Charles E. Sellers Memorial. This useful monument a granite-trimmed brick seat to stand on the terrace rising to the east above the new athletic fields, was planned by Mrs. Batchelder, who has done the bronze commemorative plaque for it. Alumni contribu- tions have paid for the memorial, a very welcome addition to the school's beauty as well as a fitting tribute to one of Loomis's great teachers and spirits. In addition to the erection of the Memorial, the Association has retired some of its decreasing debt on the Alumni Locker Wing, taken active part in the celebration of Mr. Batchelder's twenty-fifth anniver- sary as Headmaster, and continued its publication of the unique Alumni Bulletin. The Association welcomes graduates of 1937 to its ranks, and re- joices in the inclusion of these new and loyal Loomis Alumni. 9 PAGE 103 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 'H' .ai B PAGE 104 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Palmer Hall Palmer Hall, which is rising on the West side of the quadrangle as the Year Book goes to press, is the realization of a hope long-cherished, made possible at last through the generosity of Miss Virginia Palmer of New London, whose bequest came as a complete surprise. Miss Palmer and her sister, Miss Theodora, desired to make a memorial at Loomis to their father, Frank Loomis Palmer, and wished it to take the form of a build- ing for general use. The total gift was SS00,000, and it was provided that not more than half be used for the erection of the building, the balance to be invested and the income used for upkeep, maintenance, and operation. In architectural form Palmer Hall will be more monumental than any other building except Founders. The four tall limestone columns will give accent at the middle of the quadrangle. The social room, extending from front to rear, and opening on porticos and terraces on both sides, will be the largest general purpose room in school, available for athletic teas, meetings of parents, informal dances, and other special events. There will be both men's rooms and ladies' rooms close by. Two married masters will live in the building, one at each end, and their quarters will be entered from the north and south through gardens instead of directly from the covered way. Other special features are a tuck shop to house the activities of the Undergraduate Endowment Committee and provide a congenial setting for dinners of school organizations, and a large air- conditioned game room in the center of the basement for ping pong or what other games are popular from year to year. At the north end of the basement there will be lockers and showers as in Batchelder Hall. The upper floors will be used for sleeping quarters for at least one unmar- ried master and some thirty boys. Palmer Hall provides much needed facilities and relieves pressure at many points. No longer will masters' kitchens be upset for the prepara- tion of school teas. No longer must boys live at remote houses in the village. No longer must we endure such a shortage of class rooms, since boys can be evacuated from most of Founders. No longer will the library be overcrowded by casual readers and serious students, since rooms in Founders can be made into departmental libraries. This great gift is accepted by all connected with Loomis with gratitude, but with two regrets: that they could not have known Miss Palmer to thank her per- sonally, and that she could not have seen and rejoiced in the stately struc- ture which will bear her father's name. PAGE 105 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 'am' 1-wuw f - - . The Cheer Leaders I. T. CHASIQ, ,385 F. T. CHRISTIAN, '37g R. HQRNE, '37g R. S. JoN1as, '37g XV. B. H.xs'r1NGs, ,37 Gul I1 kc-tb t cl B 'S 'WHT I fvfwgz I ' Q I i V I I , 1 ' . A - Well vsday, 35 to ' . l rvsembling n foutlrall, rz a has all gamma - b I kcp me upon thu ' punents all th- first to one pnlnt. behi rf llw sz-vunrl q - -A uluifl' '-' 'ici w ' ,- ' , L 'X , f g E. - O b I I I . 73111 1 H lfy L . 0 J 1 EC' Asia l 07 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR E F GE1 v-A NO NN Xl THLETIC COUNCIL THE A Q OO LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Soccer Captain E. R. LEWIS, II, '37 Managers G. A. WIGGINS, '38 A. N. WHITING, '38 Coach Mk. WHITEHEAD With the graduation of most of last year's team soccer seemed to have hard problems ahead. The first two games were dropped by rather close scores. Then, under the able coaching of Mr. Whitehead and the spirited leadership of Captain Lewis, the team struck its stride and was unde- feated. Lewis had the remarkable record of playing every minute of every game for two years, and nearly all of every game in his sopho- more year. His defensive work was superb and his long kicks things of beauty. A very good forward line was developed with English Exchange student, Dingley, on one wing and the veteran, Dave Bellis, at center. With the defensive work of Lewis and Captain-elect Butler this was a very strong combination. The victories over Choate, Tabor, and Taft were all sweet, but the Deerfield game was the high spot of the season. Deerfield Day was inaugurated with two soccer teams playing in the morning and first football in the afternoon. All the soccer players were guests at lunch, and the entire school guests at tea in the late afternoon. First and sec- ond teams played simultaneously, and both were victorious, the seconds by a single point and the firsts by 2-1, the lead alternating. Deerfield had previously been undefeated and hoped for a championship season. The playing was close and very hard throughout with very little to choose in skill, stamina, or spirit. Scores Loomis 1 Wilbraham 3 Loomis 1 Tabor 0 Loomis 0 Roxbury 1 Loomis 2 Taft 0 Loomis 2 Choate 0 Loomis 2 Deerfield 1 PAGE 109 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR GE1 N ND va XI SOCCER TEAM THE r-A C LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. The second team, coached by Mr. Hoskins, played three games against Deerfield, Williaxn Hall High, and Hopkins Grammar, winning them all. The victory over Hopkins, which brought its first team, was espe- cially notable. This promises good material to fill gaps in the first team line-up next year, since only four players were Seniors. F. M. L. Davis, '57, captained the team and D. Jones, '40, was manager. SifctoN D Socciiu Tm M , . ,msn W Trlzvm, luxoiz 111 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1957 GE 1 TEAM LL THE FOOTBA r-A I0 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Football Caplain H. G. VANDER En, '37 Managers A. W. VAN BURIEN, '37 S. F. Hum., '38 Coarhvs MR. MAYNARD Mix. PRATT Football made a good start with a nucleus of seven letter-men and a new mobile, unbalanced formation that seemed to have potentialities, and a passer and kicker in Captain Vander Eb whose work the previous sea- son augured well. At the end of the first half of the Kent game Loomis was leading by six points. At the beginning of the second half Loomis marched from the kick-off almost to Kent's goal line, only to lose the ball and then wilt completely under a barrage of passes and runs. The Taft game was very even, Taft scoring in the third quarter, but Loomis rallying with a varied passing attack which had been wholly lacking the week before. The Hnal score was Taft 7, Loomis 6, but with Loomis constantly threatening. Against Berkshire, after a slow start, Loomis showed everything that a team could want in offensive weapons and won handily. At that point the season broke badly. Choate had an excep- tionally mature, powerful, and well-drilled team. Loomis was once within two feet of a score but failed, while Choate made three well-earned touch- downs. Apparently, the team was discouraged and never really regained its spirit. Tabor, Kingswood, and Deerfield all won from the Maroon. In the final game Captain Vander Eb and two other regulars were on the bench with injuries. So ended an unlucky season for players and coaches who deserved a better fate. Scores Loomis 6 Kent 24 Loomis 0 Choate 21 Loomis 6 Taft 7 Loomis 0 Tabor 6 Loomis 31 Berkshire 7 Loomis 0 Kingswood 17 Loomis 0 Deerfield 26 PAGE 113 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 Basketball Capluin . ..........4......... D. MILLER, '37 Manager ............................ C. H. CITRON, '37 Coach ......................,........ MR. WHITEHEAD With the scalps of Taft, Choate, and Kent hanging from its belt, the 1937 basketball team chalked up eight wins out of twelve starts. Mr. Whitehead attempted a greater variety in both attack and defense than usual. With so much to learn the team started a little slowly, losing the two opening games, but then winning eight straight. It was certainly quality one of contest margin twenty- the best-drilled teams that Loomis has seen in years. The final with Deerfield was thrilling, with Loomis leading by a narrow until the very last moment, when Reid of Deerfield scored his third point for his team. Throughout the season the distinctive of Loomis play was well balanced team-work rather than the brilliance of a particular star. The second team had an extraordinarily successful season, playing more games than usual and winning them all, which makes the prospect for the future bright. Scores Loomis 26 Morse Business Coll. 32 Loomis Kent 23 Loomis 19 Suiheld 43 Loomis Hopkins Grammar 19 Loomis 2 8 Taft 17 Loomis Wilbraham 21 Loomis 35 Westminster 27 Loomis Kingswood 22 Loomis 26 Choate 22 Loomis Williston 48 Loomis 42 Berkshire 23 Loomis Deerfield 34 P A G E 1 1 4 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CON-N Tins SlacioNl1 BAsu1,'1'1ml,l, TEAM, UNlJlil liA'I'l'IlJ IN SEASON 1956-37 Tun GYM TEAM P A G is 1 1 5 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 , ...... .,.. .T. I I, W Hockey Captain . . . ...................... J. H. RISLEY, '37 Managers . . . .... P. TRAUTMAN, '37 and J. F. BROOKS, '37 Coaches ................... MR. SAVAGE and MR. JOHNSON With apparently good material and Mr. Savage and Mr. Johnson very enthusiastic, hockey seemed to be headed for a good season. Plans were made for flooding a new rink with high boards on the club soccer field. But the mildest New England winter in years destroyed the well-laid plans, and the projected rink was never used. There was some skating before Christmas. There was none until long after. For a time it looked as if the team might never play at all. Finally, the pond froze enough for a very little practice, and three games of a badly disarranged schedule were played. Two were lost by narrow margins, that with Hotchkiss by five goals, with several Loomis players out because of sickness. With winters as uncertain as ours are, the question is being debated whether hockey should not be an intramural sport, with such occasional games with nearby rivals as prove possible. The plan will probably be tried next year. Scores Loomis 0 Choate 1 Loomis 0 Hotchkiss 5 Loomis 1 Taft 3 PAGE 116 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Fencing Cuplain . ......... N. H. JEWETT, '38 Managrr .. . ............ S. H. CHILDS, '39 Crlarbrx ..,......,......... Mia. GRASSON and MR. MCKEE Under the leadership of Captain Holly Jewett, fencing had one of its very good years, scoring a victory over Yale Freshmen, which won a banquet from Mr. and Mrs. B., also over Andover and Dartmouth Sword Club, organized largely under the leadership of Bill Pellington, last year's Loomis captain, as well as many of its rivals in the State League. The team captured the State Sabre Cup, with Captain Jewett fin- ishing first for the season and Bausch second. The epee was nearly as good with Captain-elect Bristol high man in the state and Lewis well up. Under the guidance of Mr. McKee some of the novices have con- tinued fencing into the spring term, Bouse winning a foils tournament. With Bristol the only returning letter man, this development of new material will be most helpful. Scores Loomis Taft an Loomis Harvard Freshmen 16 Loomis Commercial Loomis Andover S Loomis Yale Freshmen Loomis Roxbury 6 Loomis Choate Loomis Mount Hermon 2 Loomis Hopkins Loomis Hillhouse 4 Loomis Springfield Loomis LQ Dartmouth S. C. ZZ PAGE THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 l Wrestling Captain ..,. ........ S . O. MOTT, '38 Manager . . . .... .... C . B. GOODRICH, '37 Coach .............................,.... MR. KAMINSKI Wrestling is the infant Loomis sport, in only its second year of fully scheduled matches. Technically, only half of the contests were victo- ries. Practically, this was very gratifying, as Wesleyan and Mount Hermon are more mature, and Taft and Choate more experienced. The match with Kent was the closest and most exciting, won by a single point. This was the Hrst meeting of the two schools in this sport. Captain Mott was again undefeated, completing one of the out- standing records not only in this sport but in any sport. Rector was also undefeated and won all his bouts by falls. Spillane was pinned only once. With these three men leaving next year will require new material, but the sport is gaining in momentum, and Coach Kaminski is devel- oping a considerable group that should progress rapidly. Scores Loomis SuHield 3 Loomis 13 Choate 21 Loomis Sp'gf'ld Tech High 8 Loomis 11 Wesleyan Freshmen 23 Loomis Taft 19 Loomis 16 Mount Hermon 20 Loomis Suffield 16 Loomis 162 Kent 15 Z P A G E 1 1 8 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. The Tennis Team Captain .. ...................... B. S. STRAUS, '37 Mazinger .... ..... . . . B. DEMXNG, '37 Coarb ...........................,........ MR. EATON The tennis team, made up of three veterans, Captain Straus, Austin, and Lund, and three recruits, Berr, Collier, and Bissell, did better than break even. The first team match against Taft was even closer than the S-4 score shows, since in every case but one the winner was forced to three sets. The only rout of the year was by Kent, which has had virtually the same team for three years. On the other hand, Loomis scored two clean sweeps. Straus generally played number one, though he occasionally relinquished that post to Austin, his doubles partner. At the revived Yale Interscholastic tournament Straus reached the semi-finals and Austin, the quarter-finals. Four of the team will represent the school at the Eastern Interscholastics at Rye. Though it has lacked an unbeatable ace, the team has been steady and dependable. Scores Loomis Taft Loomis 3 Hotchkiss 6 Loomis Hopkins Loomis 8 Kingswood 1 Loomis Tabor Loomis 7 Williston 2 Loomis Westminster Loomis Deerfield Loomis Kent PAGE THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 , 143 ,M A 4: A Hz l Tu! sif 9 fi '- f 1' Lx, - wk, ,R ,fren fm. X, - ,mi , QA 1 v PAGE 120 THE TRACK TEAM Pole Vnu 12 ft. B. VAN D. l'I1iDG1iS, '26 LOOMIS SCHOOL' WINDSOR' CONN. Track Team Caliluiu R. W. linnv, '38 Mumlgrrs V. A. C.1,ARK,jR., 37 ll. R. N10N'l'GOMIiRY, jk., '37 Courlwx Mu. Hosxms Mu. PRA'l I' Mn. Fowl.:-s Mix. Wlll'I'1-.1l1iA1l ' '..:L..4..kL Track started out with its usual large squad of coaches but few experi- enced competitors. Still, it made just an even break, finishing second in both triangular meets, winning one and losing one of the dual meets. Outstanding men were Whittier in the javelin, Steere in the hammer, Eddy in the hurdles, O'Loughlin in the discus, Kennedy in the broad jump. Leaycraft and Bullitt were better than average sprinters, and Joralemon a consistent high jumper. Scores Loomis 57 Moses Brown 65 Loomis 80 Westminster 46 Loomis 412 Choate 4822 Taft 38 Loomis 38 Williston 45K Deerfield 332 Amherst Interscholastics 11 points Iizrul Rvvonl Nunn' um! Class 100-Yard Dash 10 1f5 sec. H P. PAGE, '26 220-Yard Dash 22 sec. G. W. MAs'rAGI.lo, '24 440-Yard 19.1-ili 50 1f5 sec. G. W. MASTAGI.1O, '24 880-Yard Run 2 min. 6f10 scc. R. C. Moksii, '36 1-Mile Run 4 min. 42.6 scc. R. A. D15 MOUI,P1ED, '33 H C. NEARING, '36 One-half Mile Relay 1 min. 33.6 sec. Q65 W. PA1'1'i:RsoN, '35 Running High jump 6 ft. 1244 in B. VAN D. Hiincizs, '26 Running Broad -lump 21 ft. 9 in. C. C. HALL, '33 lt I2-lb. Shot Put 12-lb. Hammer Throw Discus Throw Javelin Throw 120-Yard High Hurdles 220-Yard l.ow Hurdles 120-Yard l.ow Hurdles 70-Yard High Hurdles PAGE 121 47 ft. 10 in. 159 ft. 3 in. 124 fl. ll in. 179 ft. 4 in. 16 lji sec. 24.8 sec. 13.7 sec 9.4 sec. S. T. J. D. B. N R. J. Ii. BARDIEEN, III, '33 N. FAIRBANKS, jk., '35 H. -IoiiNsoN, '30 L. BROOKS, '34 VAN D. HITDGIES, '26 ANDERSON, ja., '33 S. -l'WlEliDY, '34, j. D. D. Tooium, JR., '35 TOORIZR, jk., '35 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 2 ' 293 A xffvi E27 ' I Q R' 1 4 iff K2 fc PAGE 122 THE BASEBALL TEAM LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR - CONN. Baseball Captain H. G. VANDER EB, '37 Manager A. C. Do'rv, '38 Coach MR. GATES Mr. Gates took over the duties of head coach of baseball for the first time with only three veterans, Vander Eb as Captain and pitcher, Cooke at first base, R. Atkinson in the outfield. Randy Morse, and Thenebe had seen considerable service and Moore moved up to the regular posi- tion as catcher, with one of the best throwing arms we've seen. D. Atkin- son, R. Olmsted, and Upham were valuable new recruits. The early games found an uncoordinated team. Berkshire, undefeated, remained so. Loomis made seventeen runs in the 8th inning against Taft but lost in the ninth. We struck our stride against Westminster and won four straight games, including Kent and Hotchkiss. Then the tide turned. Unavoidable absences at one time or another by both Atkinsons, Cooke and Upham, all four at once in the Williston game, were a tremendous handicap. Only against Kingswood was the whole team together since midseason. Scores Loomis 1 Berkshire 6 Loomis 10 Kent Loomis 17 Taft 18 Loomis 6 Hotchkiss Loomis 4 Hopkins 12 Loomis 3 Deerfield Loomis 7 Westminster 6 Loomis S Choate Loomis 8 Roxbury S Loomis 7 Williston Loomis 1 Kingswood 4 P A G E l 2 3 THE LO-OMISCELLANY FOR 1937 WOLCOTT SENIOR FOOTBALL ALLYN SENIOR BASKETBALL LUDLOW JUNIOR FOOTBALL WOLCOTT SENIOR SOCCER ALLYN JUNIOR BASKETBALL PAGE 124 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN The Clubs Chairman . . .............. .... M R. HOSKINS Secretary .... ............. . . . MR. GATES ALLYN WOLCOTT LUDLOW Chairman Chairman Chairman J. F. BRooRs, '37 H. F. LUBCHANSKY, '37 D. MILLER, '37 Facully Adviser Faculiy Adviser Facully Adviser MR. MAYNARD MR. HOSKINS MR. CATLIN Intramural athletic competition at Loomis offers to everyone an oppor- tunity to participate in his favorite sport. The series of games between the clubs starts in the Fall with soccer and football. In the winter there are basketball series for both seniors and juniors, and there is baseball in the spring. In the late spring an intra-club track meet is held. The clubs are named after men who played a large part in the early history of Connecticut. The three clubs may be identified by their green, crim- son, and purple jerseys. The following teams were victorious in fall and winter sports: Senior Football, WOLCOTT, MR. NORRIS, Coach Potter, Scott, Wood, Billings, I. Thomson, Walters, Costello, C. Davis, Knowles, Bush, Burrill, Polack, Hamilton, Field, Bausch, Inger- soll, H. Rodgers CCapt.J , Barr, Diaz, Dieuaide. Senior Soccer, WOLCOTT, MR. HOLLSTEIN, Coach Thomas, Ball, Yntema, A. White, Grover, Stites, Scally, Walker, Libby, Schafer, Turner, J. Shaw, T. Fowler, Deming, Goodrich. Senior Basketball, ALLYN, MR. GRUBBS, Coach Hirsh, Fisher, Douglas, Kyte, Mr. Grubbs, R. Kennedy, English, Hurlbut, Huntington, J. Carey, Christian, Lester, Fay, Straus. Iunior Basketball, ALLYN, MR. FINLEY, Coach R. D. Morse, L. Clark, Petersen, Mr. Finley, Swan, Young, Berman, J. Paul, Joffe. junior Football, LUDLOW, MR. CATLIN, Coach Chamberlin, Wolvin, Nelson, H. A. Howe, J. Paul, Belcher, Harris, Benson, Duncan, Petersen, Floyd CCapt.j , Akutowicz, Collins, An- schutz. PAGE 125 4 fm IL 0 Q ..,.. 'T 'N A ' ' A - lu .- Q sys Mw- -, .mA xy. qi 'D' 'hh' ...Lx- o a-aa f I I' i 5 - J .-.X rj v L x f 9 . svn I b. , an . v N X Wx I n x X + 1, f 4 . - rawiw X .7LV'5 j .- - ' if we 1221? 'Q 9 . if n 4 i A .4 A? -n If me 1- li a I fe' Kf'f 'gdlzs f A 4 U ew ' i fog for 1. G ails? To' 5? 05 ,-,nv ff-- ,f ?-ff 3 W 5,22 -,wg-. vt 'o .A 2i'5 2'oO in p-.W ,li-1a2q, 4f0 01 f..va- 59 2,2 J ?:,'2,n59f'rvW2rw30'4.?5 in 1.4 6 A 9 p 4 1 f' J 1 0 Qi- g32,'33 Q,-523312 ' 5 v?'.f 9v9,-'51'-9? 54Q'?v '-ig?-9 'Z-o f ww 53- s n Gia I 29 none rest you FRN '? 's you come forces you to You come ti good and you go tn answered. li s il responsibility in the immediats life also. no matte: or an failure of it are nll too likely tr of entrance to col it is too late. They k- rationalization the junior or senio une Jump ahead o Why do if you nas pre vour lt. Nm hat ha a n ation. ,' ,egtwffxg - and WXKX ,fr I A 9? X6 .E .,,. V ,A I , . -, , ' - fqw-LA, 1 0 .. 'Ex - L V 4-fig?-, A ' v. E! A ji 6-I it 'F ln- ff ,. H iq J. 5:-,i - . H K i ' - Q 1- X J 5 -. X W 'A X ii , in A L H M. gf? Q '-I' gk -AL HID Lg I l1uurirfB1.liuEu nl , fffgvvl H wx .. A '-' '!'!iifi'5:' L4 'ilf4f4 'L 1-ull -Q .. V, w. ..-..f--,..'- ' ., ...,ns.4-nf--Q..- ...,.......-Nf-ylhi- U 1 Q I Q I b 'YT Y xg . ,f-,wv llifq 101427: 'svn- . -,W ,W ,- . -- .A,. ,.,,.. ,. .A A ft.. T V : ' lv -w A 5,77 I, . . 1 I r . . .I 8,5 1' I , Y, . I , . , ',.5.,. -,,. - . .:,x l 1, .. ' x A4 ' I ,, g., L I-4. -- Qffw -WP mM',mwwQMf MM ' .Q:.n-rf' J , ,,.Ak,,, P g K f 4 1 nw . ,,, ' . ---' l .- , V V- V 1 , ,Y .1 1 9:m. ' , - .1-fp. -.. ... A-Qi, . Q l- 'A' ' 'W' ' ' K , l F if.-. ,,..f1u.:-',.., .. - , LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. Diary September Twenty-two suckers return five days early for football. Mr. Fowles has added che word pooker to his coaching vocabulary. Mr. Britton has gained twenty pounds. Mr. Savage is back, still addicted to bow ties. Messrs. Stookins, Hollstein, McKee and Croliusf?j join the faculty. Porteus has left us. Mr. Britton, at third day of football practice: Which come next to the center, the guards or the tackles?,' Lubchansky waxes rapturous over Paris in the summertime. Brooks has developed a pseudo- Western accent, burning Jerry Piffard up. Mr. McKee predicts that Loomis, like everything else he has been connected with, will fold in nine months. Minute Man dies a sad death when a whole Boston Brown Bread proves too much. Ocfober The insidious ravages of bockbeating begin to be felt. Joralemon's head changes three sizes after a week of steady pounding by Vander Eb. Mr. Fowles crashes into print when his renowned the early Ameri- can pioneer, etc. quotation appears in Life. Klaw, in school meeting, If you haven't anything better to do, go out and watch the soccer games on Wednesday afternoons. Cheerleaders' squad is harder hit by injuries than the football team. Five Masonites get caught sleeping out on the porch by a heavy rain-only four beds will fit into the room fPotter stays outsidej. Hays Clark gets appendicitis and the rear axle of the ambulance taking him into Hartford breaks under the strain. Mr. Mc- Kee achieves unfavorable publicity as the faculty adviser of the exclu- sive Dilettante Club. Charlie Bick gets badly bruised in a Hgh: with Phil Pratt. The Lug, The L0g's supreme effort, comes out in all its pinkness. Cheers for Mustophle', puzzle the Choate football team. Choate wins anyway. Mr. B. makes announcement, using only Mustophle. Olm- sted's Loomiseellrmy proofs look just like Rudy Vallee. Lubchansky for- gets to change his clock when we go back to standard time, and con- sequently gets to breakfast on time the next morning. Earle gets a hair- cut. Gordon joins a lonely hearts club. The Von Hindenburg breaks up an I. session. The Dionne quints appear at the Mason baby party. Mrs. Hoskins wins the pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey game. A relief ex- pedition, headed by that intrepid explorer, Guy Wiggins, rescues Forsch- ner from the depths of his desk, where he had been lost for days. Forsch- ner's only statement, I was looking for a penny I lost. Potter sticks his head through a window coming back from Choate. November Mott casts his first vote for Browder. Mr. Britton collects heavily on election bets. Paul Davis, a Landon man, crawls the length of the PAGE 131 T H E L O O M IS C E L L.A N Y F O R 1 93 7 senior path. Citron has to spend almost all first study hall in Bristol's closet, when Mr. Hoskins comes in to talk to Bristol. Mr. Orchard, Mederos, 86 Co. take Hamlet for an awful ride. Queen fBristolj : t'Yah, Hemlet, steek arrond! Larry Judd refuses to come out to football prac- tice unless the A. A. installs steam heat. Mr. Maynard admits for the first time in his coaching career that he's giving a fight talk. Mr. Mc- Kee ties Mr. B. in the annual Thanksgiving turkey carving race, but is disqualified for using his knee in the clinches. Mr. Fowles's fame grows as his little bon mot appears in Current Digest. C Professor Fowlesn this time.Q Risley gets the freshmen to call him uncle. Vander Eb plans to spend his vacation in the gym when we lose to Kingswood. December The Terror rears his ugly head. Thirty-odd feminine riots take over school for the dance week-end as the gala social event Cady., of the fall term arrives. The gym looks like the Yale Bowl CPD . Mott is responsi- ble for from four to seve-n girls at the dance. Dingley falls in love for the seventh time since coming to America. Straus is so nervous he doesn't eat anything from Friday night till Monday morning. Citron brings his aunt. Atchley rents the cupola by half hour periods. Mason Xmas carollers thrill the campus with renditions of Oh Little Town and others-collection: two odd shoes, an arctic, nine text books and a chair. january Griselda, minus master, has crashed the Courant. Earle admits to l i PAGE 132 'VK' , ' 3,--' x ..--, v Um, f- , A. , W 'ww js '?1?ffA iii? :A - +- V +'bf5:i2:I' If '- ' fn 1. 'f 5. f' yl 'N r YI IE 1 'Y' . I X , 4- x x a fn. 'fw 1? 1 , ., 1 iq...-:A Q gm 5 .W J rh K, N .... 1 . '?a vgr mg f ' r :ff .x if so ,7 . 4 . ff hits.- -Y, ,,.- ' 1,-' 4 as 1 - M., , ' Um :+.u:ft:f,:. ,g,..4iZP5S,5'Q'f e -fx , Lg' 2'1 , .119 , ,, g'v.'f'I'e:'kL' -f'-:Zvi - ..- K . Z, 'Q ,A Jffmg ,f ' . ,,.,, . ' 4'-1 ,fi . , A f. f-,Q .ag-.ig M ,C A ' , 7 gg ., ' ' f W-7 2 V, . ' ' N , , I MTWMhdh,.Q4 'wx r.-vw ,- ly, .Au T! Q is ' ' NX 'wif' wif ,re ,14f Q L . 'NN 5 1.5: X' '- N. 0 . w I D ,Pm ,M , s.?3qp-nzlixa, v 6 -11.9 3 rfWhw-1.2 uw . ' fe V -wf 1 . If x '. ' 1 ' . r 1 J, , J Q., '-,f .1 wi' xA - .' . 'i ,V 1 5:53 A - 4 1 . fy 55.1 .L '- . ,L X411---, , '- '. 1. wr fm .w24.:W'f n ' x ---.' ' V ' -ff X: ' f X ,X L 9 W s ' -V -xf X' N E X ? QP .1-'Q' J.- 4 A IJHQX y L: K A.. ' , 1 R Q-V 'M , f 1 ,, . :W 'L 5' ' 'xii A 3 X -4 . sc ,L ,, A .',.'n--I '- ' U. . .. in '- - 1 f ' ' ' ' .rx Lino L J. ful, ,- I32'.'-'f' -xg , ef' 7 f , --. l A. ' I '-1 ' 'Una 1. 3 V , .im ,V ' - , Q Q -1-wefgg-ff 5, , L s ' . . . A ,3-. '.'.'Af24'Lf 'f1F jM. 'F - . . .4 , ' - , L , . -1 -v, . r' '.-1- w' ,J .1-. - --.. '-'q -' lx , ,Z 79,1-f,fL',l, f': vtgfgy b A in ...tx . I-uh , lx 4. I - -I 1 A., :S .vi 5 'A' ff .. q,..- '-1 ' 5 f'?' , ' K, 1, xx ' '- ri' .qilfbf ,4 N dull I 1 egwg ing . xxx, f, 1 I, .. .' H- 1 ' ' 'H W. . L I ' ' , ': ' .' 1 w w- ,-9 - '-f 'Z v k - .... 'W' - 1 ' . 1 I , -,- ' H A ', ' + ' I ' ' , -, ,, .ev Xwhfg s , 1 1 und- -2353, gk A , ' A. 1 '..A. f-F ifi K . . 1 , . - I A - ' .1 .1 ,X l :Q:p f ,xn 5 'If V .g ---51, ,j M - I . 1 I -. Wu., -Q - gm E M r -iw . W 1- ' -7 -f ' -......-- W-s'If',z ' ' -. LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN. attending a coupla' dances during vacation. Cowboy Hewitt speaks on the Wild West fBirthplace: West Hartfordj . Lester spills a plate at the first annual Chaffee-Loomis tea dance on recognizing the chicken patties and peas. Chase crashes. Van Buren is found asleep under the piano the next Monday morning. Swing-it-Harry Orchard produces a Mason show. Tag-line: I've got a shovel on my scout-knife. Hockey team finishes month undefeated. Forthcoming Chaffee-Loomis Political Club meeting induces Mederos, big foreign affairs man, to join. Mr. Fowles: The smahtest thing the Republicans ever did was to persuade Lincoln to wear black--the spots didn't show. Miller falls out of an open exit in the Suflield gym. Gay, in school meeting, Wouldn,t that be chaotic? Risley: Uh, yes, uh, wouldn't it? Atchley makes the posture team. Lub finds Hymen's cart in his room. Joralemon muscles in on Hymen's territory. Mr. Whitehead chews his shoe down to the sock during the Choate game. February Master-mind McKee produces an O'Neill play, minus royalty. Choate is up in there again for favorite girls, school in L0g's annual space filler. Ecstasy voted favorite movie Ccensoredj. Christian hooks sign from Rosemary Hall, has to send it back with a note of apology. The boys from Mason give Von Gal and girl friend a warm reception. Gay is badly hurt in a pile-up-he couldn't stop remarking on the fact that Lawrenceville had Hal Kemp for its Senior prom. Savage is caught wear- ing the same shirt twice. Mason Beautiful Club thrives. M. Cheruy in class: Who plays the violin? Class, with one voice, Bauscb! War- hamites auction off the councilors' furniture. Candid camera catches Mr. Catlin asleep in chapel. March M. Cheruy in class, as Piffard combs his hair, Ah, Piffard, is it that you are at-Dorothy Arden,s? Mr. Whitehead, with term-end grumpiness, What's umpty-ump in that case, Case? Note on bulletin board in masters, oflice fper Mr. Matherj Any master who wants to see 'Idiot's Delight' see Mr. B.', Atchley takes up fencing. Loomis entertains Chaffee at tea dance. Chaffee girl to Mel Hathaway, Loomisite band leader and bass slapper, I think you're swell. Mel: I think you're pretty good too. Batch boys waylay Masonite Brooks and beat up on him. Masonites retaliate by putting Upham in the trash can and carry- ing him into the dining hall. King Kong Cooke and Ivan the Ter- rible Parker fight it out on gym night. Cooke's chest-wig sheds. Cosmo Bick hires himself out to Warham Country Day as a ringer. Kitchen gets mixed up and gives us hot cross buns a week early. Steere leaves five days early for an educational trip. PAGE 135 T H'E L O O M IS C EILL A N'Y F O R 19 37 April Atchley and cohorts spread terror at Darwin Club Carnival with shocking machine. Spook settles down at Loomis. Gordon starts a menag- erie. Lund is visited by a snake. Hartman is carried off to infirmary muttering, 1776-1776 after seeing amateur George Washington. Bells go off mysteriously at six instead of seven. Mason boys get sniped at from Taylor. Retaliation by Mason second involves Mr. Grubbs. Mason third douses second floor barber shop sextet sleeping C21 on porch. Spook has to be locked in a closet during school meeting. Mr. Stookins gets hooked for jury duty. Mr. Sharp meets the stiifest test of his linguistic career in trying to explain the E. R. B. grades in French. Sam meets his master when he tries to back out of an old-cartridge deal with Mr. Evenson and the rifle club. May Mr. Brown bets a butch. Mr. McKee is the object of a number of embarrassing cases of mistaken identity at the dance. Vander Eb lays plans for a private ground breaking prior to the official ceremonies on the site of the new dorm. End of the World is predicted when Gay flunks English. Roge Earle brings a girl to the dance. Mr. Cheruy's pronuncia- tion wins the New England interscholastics. Unknown feminine specta- torqat Choate-Taft triangular meet, just before Steere's record-breaking heave, I suppose every school has to have a man in each event. Priess- man is nearly inveigled into buying a patent mowing machine for the Loomis farm. Mr. Norris,s bass stands out in Julius Caesar crowd noises. Sam offers Mr. Johnson 35 cents for his smart new gaberdine. Nice goods-but I'm afraid for de little stripe, he is reported to have said. Brooks decides on his spring sport. Don Miller dislocates his knee during a long theorem. Batch starts trucking class. Dingley blossoms out at Chaffee carnival in his boating blazer. Vander Eb, at carnival, Who's that funny looking gink auctioneering? Girl, That's my Pop. Van- der Eb, i'So they tell me. I K Z A ,V-iiW - :S X .aalkr PAGE 136 -55 50 'Nb we mme, eva. AN yXXg'-I ed, ,Ll-'LA o VI, ox gan CCWXXS ezcxxo X PAG13 1 0 C' 'qu' 'J.a3' Fw: : -:E f' N w S' 0071? in 1 'fill ks: B sw '1 PT C am 4-v O amy r an Bminard C0 NNECTI HM EIS C. s-L THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 GE LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR 'CONN LOOMIS An endowed scbool, ojjfering progressive studies, including Business, Art, and Music, tbe maxi- munz of individual attention, Student Council elected entirely by tbe pupils, new fireproof buildings, extensive grounds, including four atbletic fields provided by tbe undergraduate Endowment Fund. General endowment permits continuance of S900 a year rate. N. H. BATCHELDER, A. M. Headmaster, The Loomis School WINDSOR, CONN. PAGE 139 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 START EVERY DAY RIGHT Uhr igartfnrh Glnurant DAILY SUNDAY 140 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN , 1 w l , 1 Y lx ISTAILISHED llll ibliii? r Hens ri1iShings.gt? 8811025 Munson AVINUI col. rouv-voulm nun g g k X IX, naw You A M ! wfgbt lhxl. , X. Clotheg for .sb ,L VHCHIIOH 5 W! Zllld W' 'Ki Summer .,,,...., on O mm Sport uuucnn Nlw YORK: out WALL lf I f l0l'l'0Nx nlwsunv col. ln: l: HARTFORD-CONNECTICUT TRUST COMPANY ARTHUR P. DAY Chairman JOHN B. BYRNE President r Ni ' ' l , ,il PAGE 141 THE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 V , ,,, Y , To the Classes of '38, '39 and '40: When you are hungry, l Patronize THE LOOMIS ENDOWMENT FUND STORE l A A A To the Class of 1937: l N' T H A N K s ll Compliments of WINDSOR GARAGE, INCL WINDSOR. CONN. 1 FRO-JQY PACKARD FORD ICE CREAM Sales and Service T COMPANY f Storage Accessories Repairs Washing Lubrication ' Batteries and Tires l ,N S1 Walnut Street Thomas I. Bouvier, '21, Mgr. tl HARTFORD CONNECTICUT Telephone 74 24 Hr. Service le 1 - ' are , PAGE 142 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN THE WINDSOR TRUST CO. Bank in Vfindsor r M. F. FOLEY CO. Boston's Real Fish House Conzplimwzfs of WINDSOR HARDVVARE CO. A BOSTON MASS. THE i D' G' STQUEHIIE3? CO' FC'!lfIll'illg Young Mcvfs Shoes W Druggistn ince and Hosiery Hospital and Sick Room Supplies James Lawrence and Son 255 So. Whitney St. 246 Farmington Ave. 197 Trumbull Street Hartford l68l Pork Street 774 Farmington Ave. HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT IAGIZ 143 HE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 ALBERT RICHARDS CO. Cgmplimgnlg of INCORPORATED Wholesale Distributors of THE WINDSOR COMPANY HARICOH Products WINDSOR CONNECTICUT 23-25 Commercial Street BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS I Compliments 0 f Everything Optical Everything Photographic THE THE HARVEY CS LEWIS CO. BRYANT 36 CHAPMAN CO' Opticians 852 MAIN STREET HARTFORD N Compliments of THE CLASS OF 1938 , V Wt PAGE 144 LOOMIS SCHOOL WINDSOR ' CONN H. ALLEN 6. soN -G I I. I. Sheppard, Prop. COAL YARD WINDSOR CONNECTICUT FISHING TACKLE GUNS 1 AMMUNITION 1 RIFLES BOATS '- MOTORS CAMPING EQUIPMENT SPORT CLOTHING CLAPP 86 TREAT, INC. HARTFORD CONNECTICUT BUSES 1 AVAILABLE FOR I SPECIAL PARTY WORK Frequent Bus Service between ' HARTFORD - COLCHESTER 1 NORWICH -NEW LONDON Connections for R. I. and Conn. Beaches and Shore Points HARTFORD TERMINAL 4 Union Place Cnear Asy1um1 W Phone 7-1185 - Jfif ' - ' p MASCOT BRAND1 Fruits and Vegetables CAREFULLY SELECTED Like Summertime Quality Ask your grocer for this Brand THE LOOMIS G WILLSON CO. Hartford Connecticut Comjrlimenls of THE ROYAL LAUNDRY WINDSOR CONNECTICUT IF WE MADE IT IT'S RIGHT DIEGES 5 CLUST Manufacturers ofthe 1937 CLASS RINGS 73 Tremont St. Boston, Mass. L'- PAGI2 145 i HE LOOMISCELL ANY FOR 193 HENRY KOHN CS SONS INCORPORATED IEWELERS SINCE 1865 Iewelry Silverware China Glassware Stationery Wholesale Distributors of MONOGRAM MOTOR OILS MIJNDGRAM f quAu'fY Q CLASS PINS AND RINGS 0 Q 9RlC9x 98UMc1inStreet DRUG CO' HARTFORD HARTFORD CONNECTICUT CONN. P. BERRY 85 SONS, INCORPORATED Hartford, Connecticut O Land O' Lakes Sweet Cream Butter G. FOX 8 COMPANY Est. 1847 H A R T F O R D CONNECTICUT'S LARGEST DEPART- MENT STORE! AN INSTITUTION--90 YEARS OLD .... ALERT, MODERN, BRIMMING WITH NE W IDE A S! THE PLAZA BARBER SHOP WINDSOR, CONNECTICUT PAGE 146 LOOMIS SCHOOL ' WINDSOR ' CONN MODERN UP-TO-DATE EQUIPMENT AGGRESSIVE ORGANIZATION SERVICE AT YOUR COMMAND RESULTS Official photographer to over one hundred and fifty school and college Annuals for the year 1937. Our representative will be glad to call on you. ZAMSICY STUDIO Yale Record Building NEW HAVEN CONNECTICUT 147 HE LOOMISCELLANY FOR 1937 THE R. E. JONES CO. P,,,,,,,m ,,,,, A A LOOMIS ATHLETIC STORE I BUILDING CONTRACTORS All Kinds of ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT I I and 15 Lewis Street SUPPLIES Hartford Connect cut V' Compliments of THE HARTFORD MARKET CO. MAIN AND MULBERRY STREETS HARTFORD CONNECTICUT PACE 148 I K il- .f.-. e '- f Ss 3 ' T f X E are proud ro include this among elee eeleeel year 1,ee1.e wlaicll we have designed e..,e1 ,eeeeleeeel in 1957. THE CASE, LOCKWOOD 81 BRAINARD Co. .Printers at the Sfgn of flue Stone Boolc HARTFORD - CONNECTICUT cial 49 The Loomiscellany for 1937 was designed and printed at The Sign of the Stone Book hy The Case, Lockwood and Brainard Company with illustrations in collotype Three hundred jifty Copies have heen printed of which this is No. 4 , Q., 1 yf ni r Li Q z .1 . ,, ., . . -,,,. . ,w.n,N,.,.,,,..M.v.-k,,..u.. . . 5-wwf f b,,aKA A, ,Ga-,A v 4 af. A ' '-,f . mf of . , V, My-K, . L ,, Kwr A xg ,Llx-vt' 3-'L 4 K' :7 4 . . wr' 1 , A , .,f 4 . ' Muff'-Qikwizf-1 V 1 . - , , M' f . .,W 1 ' . 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Suggestions in the Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) collection:

Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Loomis Chaffee High School - Confluence Yearbook (Windsor, CT) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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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.