Trinity Pawling School - Scroll Yearbook (Pawling, NY)
- Class of 1934
Page 1 of 96
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 96 of the 1934 volume:
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CIjc 1934 SCROLL $ufoltsf)eb bp tl)t Mentor Class of Satoltng i wi fainting, JL ?. :)Ja(uiing j cljool Scroll So fftrs. jFrrbrrirk ICutbrr (6amatu dlmttnr tlir iBnarJ of Ehitors respertfully hrhirate thin 1334 issue of SHE i (ÂŁ2 (0EE to pxprrss its apiirrriation for all slir has hone for pawling rluml anb its $tud?nt Inbij â1934 5 6 U hr Jarultij FREDERICK LUTHER GAMAGE. A.B.. A.M.. D.C.L. BROWN UNIVERSI! V Headmaster Ementus Chaplain FREDERICK LUTHER GAMAGE. JR.. B.S. MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OT TECHNOLOGY Headmaster HORACE EBEN HENDERSON. A.B. BOWDOIN COLLEGE Executive Secretary GEORGE WILLIAM ANDERSON. A.B. YALE UNIVERSITY Latin JAMES MONTAGUE ELLIOTT. A.B. UNIVERSITY OP CHICAGO Mathematics ERNEST JACOB REITER. A.B. MUHLENBERG COLLEGE Science and Mathematics ALBERT JAY HILL, A.M. WILLIAMS COLLEGE English DOYLE REVERE LEATHERS. M.S. GETTYSBURG COLLEGE History. Physical Director EDWARD LINUS HERRICK. A.B. BROWN UNIVERSITY Spanish WALTER TRUMAN BOWLES. B.S. UNIVERSITY OP VIRGINIA French REGINALD NELSON CLEMENT SPRINGFIELD COLLEGE Athletics MILNOR BOWDEN MORRISON, M.D. School Physician 1934 7 8 t tt t) e n t o ti t r n m t n r â jJatulhtg Jscluml jltrolll (Uu' JJrrfcrla § pnuir JJri'fiul Patrick Henry Gorman, Jr. JJrt'ft'rtii Allen Lindberg Cyrus Foss Tibbals, III Howard Frederic Van Bomel Leon Stivers Wiles, Jr. 1334= 10 â˘jJatulmg Srljnnl Sam 11= ahr (Emtnril ittmbmi James Harris Broidrick Patrick Henry Gorman. Jr. Allen Lindberg Cyrus Foss Tibbals, 111 Howard Frederic Van Bomel 1934 li Srluml Alma ittatcr Pawling, hear thy sons who love thee Sing in worthy praise, Pledging to our Alma Mater Loyal hearts always. Faith and courage, thy foundation Spread afar thy fame: We revere thee, Alma Mater: Honored be thy name. Those who go from out thy portals Hallowed mem'ries bear Of the days of earnest striving For thy glory there. Here we gather, strong in spirit, Singing joyfully. Ever steadfast in devotion. Pawling, hail to thee! 1934 I 2 1 0 r m s ÂŁ Ifm m Benedict. Raymond Tyrrell Ridgefield. Conn. Broidrick. James Harris Orange. N. J. Canfield. Robert Withington. Jr. West Hartford. Conn. Doty. John Rionda New York. N. Y. Gorman. Patrick Henry. Jr. Bronxville. N. Y. Hasselhuhn. Charles Graf. Jr. Rutherford. N. J. Lindberg. Allen Westfield. N. J. Martin. William Alfred Carden City. N. Y. Moore. Frederick Foster. Jr. Nutley. N. J. Moss. William Francis. Ill Upper Montclair. N. , . Paddock. William Annin Katonah. N. Y. Parker. Gerald Scott New Brighton. S. I. Parsons. Douglas Van Nf.ss Mt. Kisco. N. Y. Thompson. John Arthur Flushing. N. Y. Tibbals. Cyrus Foss. Ill Mahwah.N.J. Van Bomel. Howard Frederic Rye. N. Y. Wiles. Lf.on Stivers Huntington. W. Va. 1934 14 =|la(uliug j cljonl j crnll Jfnrm (Officers Allen Lindberg Howard Frederic Van Bomel Patrick Henry Gorman, Jr. President Vice-President Secretary â˘JJaftilmg Sclunil Occuli Raymond Tyrrell Benedict âBennyâ âDieâ 'Dicite R. F. D. 5 Ridgefield, Conn. 19 1-32âHead Bov of Fourth Form. Honor Roll. Best Examination in Ele- mentary Algebra. Best Examination in Advanced English. Acolyte Guild. Midget Football Team. 1 0 32-33âHonor Roll. Best Examination in Intermediate Algebra. Weekly Board. Acolyte Guild. Congress. Thitrd Foot- ball Squad. Swimming Team. I hird Baseball Team. 19 3 3-34âHonor Roll, Weekly Board, Aco- lyte Guild. Congress. First Football Squad. Swimming Team. Third Baseball Team. HARVARD James Harris Broidrick âHarryâ âSkipâ â Brodâ 177 Clairmont Terrace, Orange. N.J. 1 9 3 2-3 3âAcolyte Guild. Whittlesey Prize for Most Deserving Boy. First Football Squad. Swimming Squad. Track Squad. 193 3-34âCouncil. Weekly Board. Gift Committee. First Football Squad. I rack Squad. Babson institute 1334 16 Robert Withington Canfield, Jr. âBobâ' âCanâ 1 1 Chelsea Lane West Hartford, Conn. 1931 32âThird Football Team. Track Tea m. 1 9 32-33âWeekly Board, First Football Squad, Track Team. 1 933-34âWeekly Board. Dance Commit- tee, First Football Squad. Track Team. Hobart John Rionda Doty âJackâ âSpicâ âChicoâ Central Tuinucu Tuinucu, Cuba 1 931-32âBest Examination in Elementary French. Best Examination in Elementary Spanish. Midget Football Team. Swim ming Squad. Third Baseball Team. 1 932-3 3âThiid Football Team. Swim- ming Squad. Third Baseball Team. 1 933-34âGift Committee. First Football Squad. Manager of Swimming. Third Baseball Team. Tennis Squad. Amherst Patrick Henry Gorman, Jr. âPat Little Caesar 182 White Plains Road Bronxville, N. Y. 1929- 30âHonor Roll. Acolvtc Guild. Soc- cer Team. Third Hockey Squad. Third Baseball Team. 1930- 31âAssistant Sports Editor of the Weekly. Acolyte Guild. Assistant Foot- ball Manager. Third Hockey Squad. Third Baseball Team. 1 931-32âSports Editor of the Weekly. Acolyte Guild. Third Football Team. Third Hockey Team. Track Team. 1 932-33âAssociate Editor of the Weekly. Acolyte Guild. Congress. Congress Debate. P:irst Football Squad. First Hockey Squad. Track Team. 1 933-34âSenior Prefect. Council. Editor- in-Chief of the Weekly. Secretary and Treasurer of Sixth Form. Acolyte Guild. Speaker of Congress. Winning Debate Team. Commencement Address (Sixth form Address to Underforms'). First Foot- ball Team. First Basketball Squad, Cap- tain of Track Team. Dartmouth Charles Graf Hasselhuhn. Jr. âChuck âJunie 41 Park Avenue Rutherford. N. J. 19 32-33âAcolyte Guild. Basketball Team. Baseball Team, Tennis Team. 1933-34âCommencement Speaker (Class Prophecy), Football Team. Captain of Basketball Team. Captain of Baseball Team. Brown =1934 18 :)Ja(iiIittg jScljonl ferali Allen Lindberg Alâ Lindyâ â'Guinzâ 8 Stoneleigh Park Westfield. N. J. 19 30âThird Basketball Team. Track Squad. 19 30- 1 Acolyte Guild. Glee Club. Third Football Team. Third Hockey Team. Track Squad. 1931- 32âAcolyte Guild. Glee Club. Third Football Team. Swimming Squad. Track Squad. 1932- 33âVice President of the Fifth Form. Commencement Address to the Sixth Form. Acolyte Guild. First Football Team. First Ho;kcy Squad. Track Squad. 1931-34âPrefect. President of Sixth Form, Council, Chairman of the Dance Com- mittee. Associate Editor of The Scroll. President of the Athletic Association. Acolyte Guild. Captain of First Football Team. Manager of Track. Amherst William Alfred Martin âMiserableâ âBillâ âAlfieâ 72 Whitehall Boulevard Garden City, L. I. 1933-34âLiterary Editor of the Weekly. First Football Squad Track Squad. Cornell § i m. 19 Frederic Foster Moore, Jr. âFred'' âFossâ 142 Brookfield Ave. Nutley. N. J. 1929-30âSoccer Squ.'d. Swimming Squ'd. Golf Squad. 1930 31âFall Golf Squad. Swimming Squad, Golf Squad. 1931 -32âFall Golf Squad. Swimming Squad, Tennis Team. 19 32-33âBest Examination in Advanced Spanish, Fall Golf Squad. Swimming Squad. Captain of Tennis Team. 1933-34âFall Golf Squad. Swimming Team. Captain of Tennis Team. Track Squad. Amherst William Francis Moss, III Billâ âWillieâ 10 Bellcgrove Drive Upper Montclair, N. J. 1930-31âKor.or Roll. Weekly Board. Aco- lyte Guild. Midget Footbali Squad. Swim- ming Squad. Golf Squad. 193 1 -32âHonor Roll. Weekly Board. Aco- lyte Guild. Captain of Midget Football Team, Swimming Squad. Golf Squad. 1 93 2-3 3âHonor Roll, Weekly Board. Aco- lyte Guild. Congress. Third Football Team. Swimming Squad. Tennis Squad. 1 93 3-34âValedictorian. Honor Roll. Weekly Board. Congress. R. Oakley Ken- nedy Prize for Best Prepared and Delivered Speech in Congress Debate. Associate Editor of The Scroll. Captain of Third Football Team. Swimming Squad. Tennis Squad. Dartmouth 1934= 20 William Annin Paddock â˘â˘Bill Charley Joe Springbrook Farms Katonah, N. Y. 1930- 31âHead Boy of Third Form. Hon- or Roll. Best Examination in Elementary French. Best Examination in Elementary English. Weekly Board. Acolyte Guild. Midget Football Team. Third Hockey Team. Track Squad. Third Baseball Squad. 1931- 32âHonor Roll. Weekly Boat'd. Acolyte Guild. Glee Club and Octette, Midget Football Team. First Hockey Squad. Track Squad. 1932- 33âHonor Roll. Sports Editor of the Weekly. Acolyte Guild. Congress. Third Football Team. First Hockey Squad. Track Squad. Third Baseball Team. 1 9 3 3 - 34âEditor-in-Chief of The Scroll. Honor Roll. Managing Editor of the Weekly. Acolyte Guild. Congress. Win- ning Debate Team. Third Football Team. First Basketball Squad, First Baseball Team. Princeton Gerald Scott Parker Park Jerry 204 Franklin Avenue New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. 19 30-31âMidget Football Squad. Midget Hockey Squad. 1931- 32âThird Hockey Squad. Manager of Third Baseball Team. Golf Squad. 1932- 33âBest Examination in Ancient History. Literary Editor of the Weekly. Sergcant-at-Arms of Congress. First Hoc- key Squad, Swimming Squad. Assistant Manager of Baseball. Golf Squad. 1933- 34âSports Editor of the Weekly. Sergeant-at- Arms of Congress. Third Football Squad. Swimming Squad. Man- ager of Baseball. Harvard 1034= 21 Douglas Van Ness Parsons Dougâ Appletrees Mount Kisco. N. Y. 1 933-34âAssociate Editor of The Scroll, Acolyte Guild. Eirst Football Team, Third Btsketball Team. Track Team. Tennis Team. Third Baseball Team. Princeton John Arthur Thompson Jackâ Tommyâ 3535 161st Street Flushing. L. I.. N. Y. 1934âSwimming Team. Baseball Team. Brown 1934 Cyrus Foss Tibbals. Ill Cyâ âTibâ âLittle B.â Mahwah. N. J. 1929- 30âHead Boy of Second Form Honor Roll. Vice-President of Second Form. Acolyte Guild. Midget Football Team. Third Basketball Squad. Third Baceball Squad. 1930- 31âPresident of Third Form. Honor Roll. Acolyte Guild. Midget Football Team. Swimming Team, Golf Squad. 1931- 32âHonor Roll, Acolyte Guild. Third Football Team. Swimming Team. 1 932-3 3âHonor Roll. Secretary and Treas- urer of Fifth Form. Acolyte Guild. Con- gress. First Football Squad. Swimming Team. Tennis Squad. Track Squad. 1033-34âPrefect. Council. Honor Roll. Acolyte Guild. Congress. Congress Debate. First Football Team, Swimming Team. Track Squad. Dartmouth Howard Frederic Van Bowel âDutchâ âBoom-bangâ âVanâ Greenhaven Rye, N. Y. 19 30âSwimming Squ d Golf Squad, Ten- nis Squad. 1 930-31-Vice-President of Third Form. Third Football Team. Third Hockey Team. Swimming Squad. Tennis Squad. 1931-32âPresident of Fourth Form. Cap- tain of Third Football Team. Swimming Team. Tennis Team. 1 932-33âPresident of Fifth Form. First Football Team. First Hockey Team. Swimming Team. Tennis Team, Track Squad, First Baseball Squad. 1 933-34âPrefect. Vice-president of Sixtn Form. Council. Chairman of Gift Com- mittee. Dance Committee. First Football Team. Captain of Swimming Team. First Basketball Squad. Track Team, First Baseball Team. Dartmouth Leon Stivers Wiles, Jr. âBoog âStokes' âLeonâ 1 535 Fifth Avenue Huntington, W. Va. 19 2-3 âBest Examination in Plane Geometry. First Basketball Squad. First Baseball Squad. 1 9 3-34âPrefect. Commencement Speaker (The Spirit of Pawling), First Football Team. First Basketball Team, First Base- ball Team AMHERST m n n r r f o r m 9 â jJalulhtg djonl j rrall; IFiftb UTorrn Bickford. Harold Davidson Buffalo. N. Y. Calderone. Anthony Robert Hempstead. N. Y. Elting. Richard Ellenville. N. Y. Ferguson. John Sharp , Middlebury, Conn. Flanagan. Frederic Fionn Poughkeepsie. N. Y. Gorman. John Craven Bronxville. N. Y. Grover. Milton Monroe, Jr. Wingdale. N. Y. Heyniger. Richard Lambert Waterbury. Conn. Howe, Mortimer Cooley Greenwich. Conn. Hull. Frederick Ambler Danbury. Conn. Jones. Edwin Howard. Jr. . Waterbury. Conn. Mason, David Woodrow .....................Larchmont, N. Y. Noll, William Theodore . Quincy. III. Palmer, Eugene Colton...................New York. 1V. Y. Patton, John Alexander . . Paoli. Pa. SUSSDORFF, JAMES Eyland .....................Orange. Calif. SUTPHIN. Stuart Bruen Cincinnati. Ohio Townsend. Kiliaen Van Rensselaer New York. N. Y. I urner. James Bain Chappaqua, N. Y. Wallace. Charles Guthrie....................Buffalo. N. Y. Webb. Burton Hamilton Clifton Springs. N. Y. WlDDECOMBE, ARTHUR REVELL...............Silver Lake. S. I. Williams. Lloyd George .................Great Neck. N. Y. Woollard, Robert Holland ....................Albany, N. Y. 1034= 26 Jatuliua Srlmnl Situ 11 JFifth iFornt (Offirrrs Frederic Fionn Flanagan John Sharp Ferguson William Theodore Noll President Vice-President Secretary 1934 27 Jfmtrth Jfornt Chalmers. Henry Bishop.......................... Quogue, N. Y. Green, Egbert Toefey, Jr. Pawling, N. Y. Laing. William Armstrong. Jr......................Amissoille, Va. Moore, Thomas OâNeil . . Nutley, N. J. Noren, George Alexander, Jr................White Plains, N. Y. Sanbern, Frank. Jr. Bronxuille, N. Y. VlNER, Henry Allen.............................Cincinnati, Ohio 1934 28 iFmtrllt iFitrnt (i)fttrrrri Henry Bishop Chalmers President William Armstrong Laing. Jr. Vice-President Egbert Toeeey Green, Jr. Secretary |Jafolutg jidfndi allini JFurm Brunn, Richard Adolph Neu; York. N. Y. Butler. John Vincent Great Neck. N. Y. French. Frederick Filmore. Jr. New York. N. Y. Howe. Charles Henry Greenwich. Conn. McKinney. Stuart Bontecou Ithaca. N. Y. Morrison. Milnor Bowden. Jr. . . Pawling, N. Y. Murphy. George Frost, Jr. Pleasantville, N. Y. Nason. Joseph Gates ...... . . Westboro. Mass. Schweppe. James Jewett Scarsdale. N. Y. Sherwood. Alfred Douglas Old Greenwich. Conn. Shinn. Davidson Fairchild Rhinebeck. N. Y. Snyder. John Alfred. II . . Grymes Hill, S. I. Webb. Charles Wallace. Jr. Clifton Springs. N. Y. Wells. Ralph James . . Waterbury, Conn. 1934 30 (Hrirft Jfnrm (Ofttrmi George Frost Murphy, Jr.................................................President James Jewett Schweppe..............................................Vice-President John Alfred Snyder. II Secretary Jafalutg jS'duml Scroll (Cluu'r IC ators William F. Moss, III William A. Paddock -----------â-1 = 32 â˘jjatuling Scium! jSmrli Athlrtir AasitriatUnt (Offtrrrs Allen Lindberg .... President William Theodore Noll Vice-President Howard Frederic Van Bomel Secretary ahp Gxmiiitic (Eommiltcp The Headmaster George William Anderson Ernest Jacob Reiter Doyle Revere Leathers Jatuiing j$c(ttuil Scroll IfmitluiU Richard Elting Allen Lindberg M anager Captain SCHEDULE Pawling 2 Deerfield 6 Pawling 0 N. Y. M. A. 6 Pawling 13 Salisbury 0 Pawling 0 Hotchkiss 43 Pawling 6 Westminster 20 Pawling 0 Albany Academy 7 1934 36 â˘jJafolutg Jklunil jskrnll iFnnthall lirant tCrtlrr iflru Charles G. Hasselhuhn. Jr. Left End Leon S. Wiles. Jr. Left Tackle Cyrus F. Tibbals. Ill Left Guard Howard F. Van Bomel Centei ALLEN LindbERG Right Guard Richard L. Heyniger Right Tackle Anthony R. Calderone Right End Patrick H. Gorman. Jr. Quarterback Charles G. Wallace .... ... Left Half Harold D. Bickford ............... Right Half W. THEODORE Noll (Captain-elect) Fullback SUBSTITUTES Henry B. Chalmers Frederick Doll. Jr. Douglas V. N. Parsons Philip S. Reichers 1934 37 = JaluIiny j rliuol JFnnthciU filrmau This year the Pawling eleven faced a very hard schedule: consequently, a high percentage of victories was hardly to be expected, but the fighting spirit with which the team played, and the sportsmanship with which it accepted defeat when it did come, makes this year's eleven deserving of worthy praise. The line was the best factor of the team, for it opened up much better holes than the heavier lines that opposed it. Moreover, its tackling on defense was all that could have been desired. In the backfield Noll and Wallace were the outstanding men. Noll's defensive ability and Wallace's running ability were outstanding. Bickford and Gorman also gave their best for the team, but the latter was inclined to fumble. Pawling opened its season by meeting a strong Deerfield team and lost by a 6 to 2 score. In this game the Red and Black played a fighting brand of football, and it looked for a while as if Pawling would win, but the Deer- field boys proved to be too strong. However, the game with N. Y. M. A. proved very unsuccessful: four times the team was within scoring distance; twice within the two-yard line: but each time a fumble or a bad pass from center stopped the chance for a score. The game ended with the Cadets victorious. 6-0. Despite this defeat the team came back the next Saturday to defeat Salisbury, 13-0. The backfield was driving much harder, and did not fumble once. Each line buck netted substantial gains before the Salisbury secondary defense managed to close in and stop them. 1934 38 JFnotball iRrmrnt In the game with Hotchkiss the Pawling team showed that while it might not be as good as its opponents, it had sportsmanship in the face of an over- whelming defeat, and the spirit to keep on fighting to the very end. Despite the desperate play of the Red and Black, Hotchkiss scored seven times on beautifully executed plays to win. 43-0. Next week Pawling met a large and heavy Westminster team, and suffered a 20 to 6 setback. Westminster seemed to get the majority of breaks. The score was tied during the first half, but at the beginning of the second half Westminster scored on a criss-cross from the kick off. This play netted them fifty yards, and from that time on. despite Pawling opposition, they twice- crossed the goal line. In the last game of the season which was played with Albany Academy the Pawling team made the best showing of the year, even though the score was 7-0 against them. There were few fumbles and Albany only completed two passes. It was unfortunate that one of these passes resulted in a touch- down for the victors. Outside of this score the Red and Black held its oppon- ents to small gains, with the exception of two or three long end runs. In the middle of the season the eleven suffered injuries which undoubt- edly were greatly felt. Captain Lindberg and Heyniger received leg injuries and were out of action for almost half the games. Hasselhuhn. Wiles, and Tibbals made an excellent combination on the offense, and Wiles was out- standing at right tackle. Van Bomel played well on the defense, and Calderone was one of the best all around players in the whole line. 1034 J9 â jJaUiIing jlclunil js m ll= (Ihirit JFmitliaU (Iram iCettrr Thomas O N. Moore Kiliaen V. R. Townsend George F. Murphy. Jr. Milton M. Grover. Jr. Frank Sanbern. Jr. William A. Paddock James B. Turner William F. Moss. Ill John C. Gorman........... Stuart B. McKinney Egbert T. Green, Jr............ iflnt ...........................Left End Left Tackle ........................Left Guard Center Right Guard Right Tackle Right End .........................Quarterback ...........................Left Half Right Half ........................Fullback 1934= 40 ]Ja(ulutg j cluml Jhrull Hasrball Geralds. Parker Charles G. Hasselhuhn, Jr. Manager Captain SCHEDULE Pawling 12 Riverdale 8 Pawling 7 Canterbury 11 Pawling 0 Hotchkiss 7 Pawling 5 Salisbury 4 Pawling 6 Milford 9 Pawling 3 N. Y. M. A. 8 Pawling 12 Hackley 3 Pawling 2 Hotchkiss 14 Pawling 14 South Kent 15 Pawling Storm King (Canceled) 42 ijJafoluuj J ciuml Scroll Handrail arum Setter ifleu Charles G. Hasselhuhn. Jr., ss. James B. Turner (Captain-elect). 2b.. cf. John S. Ferguson, rf. Frederic F. Flanagan. 2b.. 3b. Richard L. Heyniger. lb. John A. Thompson, p., cf. W. Theodore Noll, 3b.. p. William A. Paddock, c. Burton H. Webb, p. Leon S. Wiles, Jr.. If. Howard F. Van Bomel. rf.. c. Gerald S. Parker (Manager) â˘Â 3 UaafhaU Irutiuu The hitlessâ 1934 baseball team, captained by Charles G. Hasselhuhn. Jr., star shortstop, was not good enough to merit the wondersâ part of the phrase, for it had only a mediocre season in winning three of nine contests during the season. With only three lettermen returning from the previous yearâHasselhuhn. Turner, and NollâCoach Clement had a difficult job on his hands. In addi- tion to the comparative inexperience of the majority of the players, he was also faced with a lack of hitters and of battery material. However, after three weeksâ practice, the nine opened its season by winning a sloppy game against Riverdale, 12-8. The team lined up with Thompson pitching, Paddock behind the bat, Heyniger on first, Turner at second. Noll third, Hasselhuhn short, and Ferguson. Wiles, and Van Bomel in left, center, and right fields, re- spectively. Hevniger's home-run featured the defeat by Canterbury, 11-7, in the second game, which was a see-saw battle from the start to finish. Thompson, Webb, and Noll took turns on the mound, but none of them pitched effectively enough to assure the Red and Black of the game. In the third game the nine suffered a very disheartening loss to Hotchkiss, which triumped, 7-0, behind Hoover's effective no-hit pitching. No Pawling man got past second base, and eighteen strike-outs were recorded against the visiting team. Despite the seven runs scored against him, Jack Thompson pitched his best game of the season against a far-superior team. Going into the seventh and final inning with the score tied at seven-all and doing wonderfully behind Ted Noll's delivery, the Pawling team bogged down and could not stop a Milford rally of four runs in the following game. One run in its half of the last frame netted the Red and Black nothing, as it lost its third straight contest, 9-6. In this game Flanagan became a regular at second base replacing Turner, who moved out to center field. Salisbury fell by the wayside in the next game. 6-5, as Turner singled down the third base line to score Noll and to break a tie in the last inning. =1934 44 Haarhall SUutirut Thompson, Webb, and Noll all saw service on the mound for the Red and Black when it scored its second win in five starts. Noll of Pawling and Williams of Salisbury both hit home-runs. New York Military Academy downed the Pawling nine. 8-3, in the following game played under unusually adverse conditions. Van Bomel replaced Paddock on the receiving end of the battery and played well in his first game behind the bat. Playing its best game of the year, the nine defeated Hackley. 12-5, at Tarrytown. Noll hurled a good game, until he tired in the seventh and got into trouble. Hasselhuhn, moving over from shortstop, finished the game in good form. Good base-running and fourteen hits accounted for the victory. Hasselhuhn hit a homer, but it was no good because of his failure to touch second base when rounding it. In the annual Spring Reunion Day game and the second contest of the two-game yearly series, the Pawling team was again victim to the Blue of Hotchkiss. This time the score was 14-2. Hoover set the Red and Black nine down hitless for the first six innings: but in the ninth, with Hodge pitch- ing his third frame in the game. Thompson doubled to score Heynigcr and Wiles, who had reached base by a single and fielder's choice, respectively. In a see-saw battle with South Kent. Pawling suffered a 15-14 setback the next Wednesday. The team was credited with six errors, and was unable to pul( through, although garnering eleven hits. The final game scheduled with Storm King was canceled because of rain. Captain Hasselhuhn. Captain-elect Turner. Ferguson. Flanagan. Heyniger. Noll. Paddock. Thompson. Webb. Wiles, and Van Bomel received their letters. With Turner, Ferguson. Flanagan. Heyniger. Noll, and Webb returning next year and with recruits coming up from the Third Team, which tied Kent for the Housatonic Valley Junior Baseball League title, the 1935 season should see a winning team all the way. 1934 45 â jJaluliitg rlmnl j crnll ICrttcr ifli'tt Milton M. Grover. Jr. (Captain), lb. Raymond T. Benedict, p. Egbert T. Green. Jr.. 5b. Edwin H. Jones. Jr., cf. Stuart B. McKinney, c. Douglas V. N. Parsons, ss. Kiliaen V. R. Townsend. If. H. Allen Viner. rf. Charles W. Webb. Jr.. 2b. John R. Doty, 2b. =1034 â˘Â 6 r a c â )Ja(u(iug js r(uml Scroll (irark Allen Lindberg Patrick H. Gorman, Jr. Manager Captain SCHEDULE Pawling 54 Hotchkiss 72 Pawling 58 Hackley 41 Pawling 46 Bronxville 44 Pawling N. Y. M. A. (canceled) Pawling Irving (canceled) 1934= 48 pjiulmg School Enroll arark Šrant iCrttrr liiru Patrick H. Gorman, Jr. John S. Ferguson (Captain-elect) Anthony R. Calderone Henry B. Chalmers Frederic F. Flanagan Thomas O'N. Moore Douglas V. N. Parsons James E. Sussdorff Howard F. Van Bomel Allen LindbeRG (Manager) 1934 49 GJrark ftwirut With its captain. Patrick H. Gorman. Jr., leading the way, the track team ended its 1934 season with a successful record of two in three meets won. Although five meets were originally scheduled, two of them were canceled because of the weather. Untried and untested, since the N. Y. M. A. meet was canceled after a heavy rain storm had made the track more like a mud puddle and swimming pool than a hard-dried cinder path, the team engaged the Hotchkiss men at Lakeville in its first meet. Despite the fact that it took half, or seven, of the first places in the opening encounter with the Blue, the Red and Black went down to a 72-to-54 defeat. The scarcity of second and third places, caused not so much by the performances of the squad itself, as by the smallness of it. spelled defeat for the gallant invaders. Sussdorff, the wonder boy lrom the Coast and Sunny California, did his native state proud by garnering fifteen points in taking firsts in the broad jump and shot put, a second in the discus, and a third each in the javelin and low hurdles. Captain Gorman, running like a frightened hare, tied the existing school record in the 100-yd. dash in ten flat, in addition to capturing first in the furlong race. Hackley was the victim in the teamâs first victory, 58-41. Gorman led the scorers with fifteen points, by winning the 100-yd. dash, the 220-yd. dash, and the broad jump. The Pawling invaders took seven of the eleven first places, as Gorman scored thrice. Parsons won the mile, Chalmers the half- mile, Van Bomel the discus, and Ferguson the low-hurdles. Second places by Ferguson, Sussdorff, Parsons. Flanagan, and Canfield coupled with thirds scored by Calderone, Van Bomel, and Ferguson completed the Red and Black's total score. The supposed-to-be third meet scheduled with Irving after being post- poned because of inclement weather was finally canceled when Irving failed as a result of a misunderstanding to appear on the newly scheduled date. 1934 50 â )Julultug primal SmiK arark iSntirut On a lightning fast track the Pawling men engaged in their only home meet of the season. Behind the record-smashing running of their captain, the team nosed out the Bronxville High School team, 46-44, by taking a first and third in the final eventâthe furlong dash. In the first event Gorman with a time of ten seconds. Following that he took one jump in the broad jump and thereby assured Pawling of a sweep in this event as a result of his third. Midway during the meet Gorman again came back to the track to run his only 440-yd. dash in competition in his career at school and smashed, broke, and shattered the twenty-year old standard of 52 seconds by running the distance in 50 flat, a time exceedingly good in prep-school competition. With his first in the 220-yd. dash. Gorman completed the day with a total of 16 points to take high-scoring honors for the second time in three meets. After Pawling had swept all three places in the broad jump, Bronxville retali- ated by taking all positions in the discus. Numerous seconds and thirds scored by the Red and Black track men gave them the necessary points to take the meet by the slim margin that they did. For the season Captain Gorman was high-scorer with 41 points. Captain- elect Ferguson second with 29, and Sussdorff, Parsons, and Flanagan next in order with 26. 16, and 13 points respectively. Letter awards were made to the above five men and also to Van Bomel, Chalmers. Calderone. and T. O'N. Moore. A special award was granted to Gorman for his breaking the school record in the 440. With the return and natural improvement of Ferguson. Flanagan, Chalmers, C.alderone. and Moore. Coach Leathers should have a good nucleus with which to form his 1935 team. tied the school record for the second time in the season in the 100-yd. dash 51 ÂŽrark iRmiriUi Event Record Holder Year 100-yd. Dash 10.0 C. Taylor Wettlaufer 1928 Patrick H. Gorman. Jr. 1934 220-yd. Dash 21.2 C. Taylor Wettlaufer 1927 440-yd. Dash 50.0 Patrick H. Gorman. Jr. 1934 880-yd. Run 2 03.4 Henry Brigham 1910 Mile Run 4 30.6 Henry Brigham 1910 High Hurdles 16.2 Wesley M. Oler 1912 Low Hurdles 26.2 Ralph V. Hilands 1909 Rollo G. Jermyn 1914 High Jump 6 3 H Wesley M. Oler 1912 Broad Jump 21 9 Roderick W. Smith 1914 Pole Vault 11 6 Albert B. Lambert 1921 Shot Put 47 6' 2 Erskine F. Perry 1918 Hammer Throw 163 9 John S. Dickerson 1926 Javelin 149 7 Kenneth Weeman 1928 Discus 110 5 Bertram N. Carvalho 1930 Interscholastic record when made. 1934 52 m $ i n o r o r t â˘jJatulurg J riftrol Scroll HaakrthaU George A. Noren. Jr. Charles G. Hasselhuhn, Jr. Manager SCHEDULE Captain Pawling 16 Storm King 15 Pawling 20 Trinity 19 Pawling 18 Berkshire 46 âŚPawling 19 Canterbury 17 Pawling 23 Gunnery 34 Pawling 22 Kent 40 Pawling 18 Berkshire 37 âŚPawling 23 Canterbury 27 âŚPawling 26 Gunnery 65 Pawling 29 Storm King 33 Pawling 42 Riverdale 26 âŚPawling Kent (canceled) âŚDenotes Tri-State Basketball League games. 1934 54 tkuikrthuU U fum iCrttrr ifli'tt Charles G. Hasselhuhn. Jr. RICHARD L. HEYNIGER (Captain-elect ) David W. Mason.................... Leon S. Wiles, Jr................. W. Theodore Noll.................. Left Forward Right Forward .......Center . Left Guard . Right Guard laukrthall tHruuuu The basketball team this year faced a hard schedule of opponents, numbering such teams as Canterbury. Berkshire, Kent, and Gunnery, in its first year of competition in the newly formed Tri-State Basketball League. The season was most disappointing as the team, strong with potential material, never got going the entire winter and ended in the cellar of the league. After taking two games by last minute points of one-point margins each in tune-up contests, the Red and Black quintet met a fast Berkshire five in its first league game and was downed by the Green and Gray whirlwind attack. 46-18. The visiting team had already played one game in the league besides three outside teams and was more experienced than its opponents. Canterbury fell in the following league contest. 19-17. By stemming a last-minute rally the Pawling players were assured of victory. In the next game the cocky, undefeated Gunnery five barely escaped defeat as the Red and Black battled it on even terms until the final two minutes when the attack bogged down and the Maroon and Gray pulled away to win. 34-23. A little too sure of themselves, perhaps, the Pawling team fell before the shooting attack of the Kent five, 40-22. as the League season rolled around to its half-way mark. Following the postponement of the second Storm King game, the quintet entered the sec- ond half of its Tri-State schedule against Berkshire. Although ahead for some time in the first half and displaying a good attack against the heme team, the visitors succumbed as its attack slowed up in the second half and the five lost. 3 7-18. Again the Pawling attack bogged down in the next game with Canterbury, when the Blue trailing all the way came from behind to take the game in the last few minutes. 27-23, and to send the Red and Black into the cellar. Before a gathering of house party guests the Gunnery five, needing the victory to assure it of the league championship and a bit frightened by Kent s surprise win two days before, swept the Pawling men off the floor in routing them. 65-26, after leading at half-time, 33-13. Not once could the invaders cope with the flashy Maroon attack and its uncanny shooting on its home floor. The final league game with Kent was canceled because of an epidemic, and the team ended its season by swamping Riverdale. 42-26, after Storm King had revenged its previous defeat before Christmas. 3 3-29. The first five consisting of Captain Hasselhuhn, Captain-elect Heyniger, Mason, Noll, and Wiles received letter awards. With only Wiles and Hasselhuhn missing next season, the team should certainly show up much better in the league than did this yearâs team. 1 934 56 ŠIririi illaskrthaU Šram â˘SCrtlrr Iflnt James B. Turner (Captain) ............................ Left Forward Douglas V. N. Parsons................................ Right Forward Milton M. Grover, Jr....................................... Center Egbert T. Green. Jr.....................................Left Guard John C. Gorman ........................................Right Guard 1934 57 urimmum Howard F. Van Bomel John R. Doty Captain Manager SCHEDULE Pawling 51 Albany Academy 24 Pawling 41 Peekskill M. A. 34 Pawling 24 Canterbury 21 Pawling 39 N. Y. M. A. 33 Pawling 30 Westminster 35 Pawling 42 Hotchkiss 23 1934 58 utimnttmi aram â BIrttrr iflpn Howard F. Van Bomel Thomas O N. Moore John A. Patton (Captain-elect) Raymond T. Benedict Harold D. Bickford John A. Thompson % Frederic F. Moore. Jr. Cyrus F. Tibbals. Ill JOHN R. Doty (Manager) All eight members of the above team were awarded special letters by the Athletic Committee for having broken or having participated in the breaking of school records. 1934 59 â jJafulutg j eluuil Scroll $urimmm$ Ufoufeut Although it did not win every one of its six meets, the 1934 swimming team will go down in the annals of Pawling School's records as the best in its history. Breaking and shattering again at least two records in every meet and climaxing its season by smashing six records in seven racing events in the Hotchkiss meet, the Red and Black mermen set a total of nine new records during the course of the season in which it won four of six contests. Albany Academy was met and defeated in its own pool at Albany. 51-24, as Captain Van Bomel broke the pool record in the 100-yd. breast stroke and the medley relay team bet- tered the existing mark. The following week the mermen downed the Peekskill Military Academy tank team, 41-34. while breaking three records in its march toward its glorious season. Although it broke three records in its next meet, the team lost to Canterbury. 41-24. as the Blue took surprising firsts in both relays. Van Bomel snapped the breast stroke record again, as Tibbals repeated his record-breaking performance in the back stroke and Webb did likewise in the forty-yd. free style. Canterbury's five firsts and its numerous seconds and thirds gave it its margin of victory. All five firsts taken in the following meet against N. Y. M. A. at Cornwall were won in record time. The medley and free style relay teams set new marks as did Webb in the 50. Tibbals in the back stroke, and Thompson in the 200 free style. The free style relay team's victory assured the Pawling team of its 39-3 3 win in the final event. Again Pawling set four more records in its four first places against Westminster, but the Black and Gold was too strong in the second and third places, winning 3 5-30 to ad- minister the Red and Black its second defeat of the season. The tank team ended its triumphant season against the Hotchkiss swimmers. 42-23. and climaxed its record-breaking activities in shattering six of seven racing marks. The Blue was able to take only two first positions in the Red and Blackâs parade to victory over the visitors. Webb set a new 40-yd. free style mark. Thompson a new 200 yd. mark. Tibbals a new back stroke record. Captain Van Bomel a new breast stroke time, and both relays broke the records which they had set earlier in the season. Only the 100-yd. free style and the fancy diving went to the Hotchkiss men. As a result of their nine records set during the schedule and season, all members of the team received special awards which were granted by the Athletic Committee. Captain Van Bomel. Captain-elect Patton. Benedict. Bickford. T. O N. Moore, F. F. Moore. Jr.. Tibbals. Thompson, and B. H. Webb received these awards. Of the lettermen Patton. Bickford, T. OâN. Moore, and B. H. Webb will return next year. In addition to these men there are several other swimmers who have much ability, but who were unable to show their prowess as a result of the team's record-breaking performances throughout the season. 1534 60 urinunnut Sernriis Event Record Holder Year 20-vd. Free Style :08.3 Lenox H. Rand 1917 40-yd. Free Style : 19.0 Burton H. Webb 1934 50-yd. Free Style : 25.6 Burton H. Webb 1934 100-yd. Free Style : 59.3 Cyril Hendrickson 1924 200-yd. Free Style 2:11.6 John A. Thompson 1934 220-yd. Free Style 2:36.0 Wilson P. Tanner 1930 50-yd. Back Stroke : 30.1 John S. Dickerson 1926 100-yd. Back Stroke 1:10.8 Cyrus F. Tibbals, III 1934 50-yd. Breast Stroke : 34.-4 Henry M. Locwy 1934 100-yd. Breast Stroke 1:16.5 Howard F. Van Bomel 19 34 Plunge for Distance 60' in :40.2 John J. S. Mead 1924 Fancy Dives 102 pts. R. Vail Bontecou 1918 120-yd. Medley Relay 1:11.0 Cyrus F. Tibbals, III Harold D. Bickford Burton H. Webb 193 1 1 60-yd. Free Style Relay 1:21.2 John A. Patton Thomas OâN. Moore John A. Thompson Burton H. Webb 1934 200-yd. Free Style Relay 1:50.0 John A. Patton Raymond T. Benedict Frederic F. Moore, Jr. John A. Thompson 1934 Interscholastic record when made. 1934 61 S?clunil iEenniS IGrttrr ittru Frederic F. Moore. Jr. (Captain) W. Theodore Noll David W. Mason (Captain-elect) Douglas V. N. Parsons James B. Turner schedule Pawling 6 Gunnery 3 Pawling 2 Canterbury 4 Pawling 5 South Kent 0 Pawling 4 Storm King 1 HIM 62 ahr ÂŁ rroU iTItr Eiittorii Editor-in-Chief W. Annin Paddock Business Manager James B. Turner Associate Editors Allen Lindberg William F. Moss, III Douglas V. N. Parsons 64 â jJatulini.] jsduuil Jhmllâ (Ihr lUrrkhj w Jjf V V w V ÂŁ n i f $ V i - w ⢠y ⢠v ÂŤ8 nr 1 j - ;1 i ft 9 9 I 1 Efottorial S'taff Editor-in-Chief Patrick H. Gorman. Jr. Managing Editor Associate Editor W. Annin Paddock William F. Moss. Ill Sports Editors Raymond T. Benedict Gerald S. Parker Literary Editors Anthony R. Calderone William A. Martin Frederic F. Flanagan Kiliaen V. R. Townsend George A. Noren. Jr. Burton H. Webb ihisinciis jptaff Business Manager Assistant Business Manager James B. Turner Milton M. Grover. Jr. Circulation and Exchange Manager Ass't. Circulation and Exchange Manager Robert W. Canfield J. Harris Broidrick Faculty Adviser Mr. Horace E. Henderson =--------------------------------=1934=------------------- -- 65 Arnhttf (Suili) 6 .? 9 t  v ÂŁ V - ty ÂŤ v ' ÂŤ. j ,ÂŤ 9 ⢠'ÂŤ i f v ? V  . - W % 1 âş 9 4 11 ⢠Patrick H. Gorman. Jr. President liinulirni VI V Raymond T. Benedict Richard Elting Robert W. Canfield, Jr. John S. Ferguson Patrick H. Gorman, Jr. Frederic F. Flanagan Allen Lindberg John C. Gorman William F. Moss. Ill W. Theodore Noll William A. Paddock John A. Patton Gerald S. Parker Kiliaen V. R. Townsend Douglas V. N. Parsons Cyrus F. Tibbals. Ill Howard F. Van Bomel James B. Turner =1934 66 â jJaluItug Srluml Scroll Congress Debate Affirmative William F. IVloss. Ill Richard Elting Cyrus F. Tibbals, III. alternate Npgatiur William A. Paddock Patrick H. Gorman. Jr. James B. Turner. alternate â jJalultug School (Cmturrss (Offirrrs Mr. Horace E. Henderson Patrick H. Gorman. Jr. William F. Moss. Ill Gerald S. Parker President Speaker Clerk Sergeant-at-Arms iiUmhrrs VI Raymond T. Benedict Patrick H. Gorman. Jr. V Richard Elting William F. Moss, III William A. Paddock John C. Gorman James B. Turner Burton H. Webb Gerald S. Parker Cyrus F. Tibbals, III The annual debate was held on Friday evening, May 18, and was wit- nessed by the Faculty, Student Body, some Alumni, and some Parents. The subject was: Resolved, That President Rooseveltâs New Deal is such a success as to demand the full support of the American people. Mr. Horace E. Hend- erson was in the Chair and the Judges were Messrs. Frederick L. Gamage, Jr., George W. Anderson, and Albert J. Hill. The R. Oakley Kennedy prize for the best prepared and delivered speech went to William Francis Moss, III. of the Affirmative: but the judges awarded the debate to the Negative team. 68 â˘)Ja(uIutg Sduuil mtl( Dance Committee Allen LiNDBERG ..... Chairman Robert W. Canfield. Jr. Howard F. Van Bomel Frederic F. Flanagan 1934 69 Commencement Aprakprs Presidentâs Address Allen Lindberg Address to Underformers Patrick H. Gorman, Jr. Presentation of Class Gilt Howard F. Van Bomel Valedictory William F. Moss. Ill Spirit of Pavuling Leon S. Wiles, Jr. Class Prophecy Charles G. Hasselhuhn. Jr. Underform Address to Sixth Form Frederic F. Flanagan (Sift (CmumittiT Howard F. Van Bomel .... Chairman J. Harris Broidrick John R. Doty â1934----------------------- = 70  It m o r â j.latuliug j cljnnl Scroll sbixtl) Jform personalities Most typical Pawling man Lindberg 6, Van Bomel 3 Best all-around man Van Bomel 8, Lindberg 3 Done most for Pawling Gorman 1 1, Van Bomel 4 Done Pawling for most Moore 4, Doty 3 Most popular Lindberg 8, Van Bomel 3 Best athlete Van Bomel 9, Wiles 4 Most likely to succeed Moss 6, Paddock 5 Best natured Martin 7, Canfield 3 Wittiest . . Hasselhuhn 7, Moss 5 Noisiest Martin 9, Paddock 2 Biggest roughhousers . Benedict and Moss (unanimous) Handsomest Van Bomel 7, Thompson 5 Cutest . . Benedict 4, Doty 4 Kicks the most Moss (unanimous) Best build Van Bomel (unanimous) Best dressed Van Bomel 1 1, Gorman 2. Lindberg 2 Sloppiest Tibbals 5, Lindberg 4 Most conceited Gorman 11, Van Bomel 4 Most modest Benedict 6. T ibbals 5 Laziest Canfield 8, Moore 5 Most energetic Paddock 6, Gorman 4 Class grind Gorman (unanimous) Class baby Benedict 9, Moss 3 1934 72 Jform personalities Class clown Worst Mexican athlete Least appreciated Biggest drag with faculty Least appreciated by faculty Worst nuisance................ First to get married Biggest woman hater Talks most, says least Talks least, says most Easiest to bluff Favorite master.............. Favorite school other than Paw Favorite college Favorite movie actress Favorite movie actor Favorite newspaper Favorite magazine............ Favorite sport Favorite school honor Hardest course Easiest course.............. ...................... Parker (unanimous) Van Bomel 6. Martin 3. Paddock 3 Broidrick 4, Parker 3 Gorman (unanimous) Hasselhuhn 5. Canfield 2, Paddock 2 Parker (unanimous) Hasselhuhn 5. Van Bomel 5 Martin (unanimous) Gorman (unanimous) Lindberg 4. Tibbals 4. Hasselhuhn, 3 Hasselhuhn 4. Gorman 3. Martin 3, Parker 3 Mr. Elliott 9. Mr. Reiter 4 ling Miss Bennett's 5, Hotchkiss 4 Amherst 5. Dartmouth 4, Princeton 4 Elissa Landi 5, Toby Wing 5 Bob Montgomery 5. Frederic March 3 Times 6. Tribune 6 Collier's 6. Esquire 3, Time 3 . . Loving 8. Football 5 .....................Week-end (unanimous) Physics 5. Chemistry 4. English 4 Spanish 4, Latin 3 73 â jJafolhtg Srlmnl Scroll SI Štnijp in Jfrenclj Romantic Drama (As presented by the French VI Class) 10:43 A. M. The bell rings for French VI. The first of the boys arrive in the classroom. Mr. Bowles walks in. 10:44.9. Seventeen thumps are heard as Parker comes down the eight flights of stairs from the top corridor. He just edges through the door as the last bell rings. Mr. Bowles: Martin, can you tell what the reason is for this subjunctive in act three of Tarlufte?â Miserable: Erâahâ-ahem, well er ah---------- Walt: Poof! Hasselhuhn, you tell him! Charley, do you realize that you simply must know the technical reason for every form in this play to understand it fully?â Chuck: A d'autres. Agnes fumes and writhes and starts to shake. Loud laughter peals across the classroom. Agnes finally gets Paddock to answer the question. Martin: Aw gee, I knew that. Mr. Bowles: Martin, you didn't know it a minute ago, besides, we don't care.â Poor Howe has been looking at Benedict and starts to smile, so Walt, who is so fed by this time that his hands are trembling, addresses him in wrathful manner: Howe, if you don' stop makinâ those idiotic faces. Ah shall be obliged to employ disciplinary measures! Do you understand? Hein? Howe: Er ah. wh-what does disciplinary mean? Walt: OO mah gawd! Ah, Martin. letâs see if you can answer some- thing now. How was Tartuffeâs hypocrisy proved to Orgon?â Martin: I forget.â Mr. Bowles (sarcastically) : Lindberg?â Gins: (under his breathâ roast! ) aloudâ Waal, I think he was under the table when Tartuffe and Elmireâwell, you know.â Act I âClass beginsIâ 74 tubp in Jf rend) Romantic Drama Martin: âAw gee, I knew that.â Walt lifts up that broken foot. Walt: Miserable! Martin, will you kindly do us the favor of not expressing yo' thoughts out laoud â Martin: âWell you do. sir.â Bowles comes down on that bad foot with a bang, lets out a yelp that is mistaken upstairs for a fire alarm, jumps up so hard he hits his head on the ceiling and knocks the plaster off the chapel walls, and lands on the floor, trying to put his foot in his mouth. ACT II Class concludes! After a full ten minutes of peace, while âBenedicite answers questions, Martin starts it again by putting his big feet up on the front bench. By a little ingenious shifting of weight. Van. Nigger, and Thompson manage to tip the bench over: and poor Agnes makes the mistake of opening his mouth again. Martin,â he bubbles. Why can't yo learn to keep yore feet where they belong I suppose befo' long, yo'll be puttin' them on my dining-room table!â Martin: âOh! Is that so Well that's the payoff! Bowles: âMartin, yo git aout o' heah, and write me a full translation of todayâs lesson!â Martin: (Leaving in a dignified manner) I won t do any such thing. I've done all the French I'm gonna do today. Luckily for the sanity of all concerned, the class ends shortly afterwards. Of course. Mr. Bowles gets fed again when the outgoing Sixth and the incom- ing Fifth (Rabble to you) stage their daily little scrimmage at the door, but it all passes off quite quickly, and. two days later, the boys are to be seen, wandering mournfully hither and yon, and soulfully announcing that there are to be no more rodeos as Martin and Mr. Bowles have staged a reconciliation. 75 |Jafaltng jScluml Scroll Clj e of if a tn r SUSSDORFFâHe deserves the honor becauseâwell, just ask him. BRUNNâbecause he is such a nuisance and cannot take a hint. PADDOCKâbecause he hasn't lived up to his reputation. NORHNâbecause he has taken Paddock's place by knowing all the news and because he sings like Bing Crosby. WlLESâbecause he is the typical black man from the South. HASSELHUHN and LlNDBERGâbecause they are the sourest ones in school. I he WOLVESâfor several reasons. BENEDICT. Moss and Tibbalsâbecause they can make the most noise on the Sixth Form corridor. NOLLâbecause he is the brains of THE organization and because he is also the engineer of it. VlNERâbecause of his French board. Mr. REITERâbecause he still uses the same pet phrases after 18 years. Gormanâbecause he copped all the Sixth Form personalities and because he slept without any blankets during the blizzards last winter. Mr. Hendersonâbecause Up in Wiscassetâ. Mr. HillâAsk Garbo. 76 NOW SHOWING at the $atolmg School JMapljousr with the original cast of illegitimate actors Wonder Bar ............. Lost Patrol ............ Men in While She Loves Me Not As Thousands Cheer . . Ah! Wilderness All the Kingâs Horses I. Myself Little Man. What Now? Jig Saw................. The Drunkard Tobacco Road . . . These Two............... Pursuit of Happiness The Shining Hour Love Kills.............. New Faces............... No More Ladies........ Chocolate Soldier Trial by Jury Stand Up and Cheer The Trumpet Blows 20 Million Sweethems Whirlpool............. No Greater Glory Voice in the Night The Show'-off One Is Guilty. Here Comes the Groom Where Sinners Meet Me and the King Bottoms Up People Will Talk Invitation to a Murder Private Scandal Murder on the Blackboard Havana Widow's Sunday Teas Doty and Moore The Waiters Charley ....................Susie The How'c Brothers Yom and Agnes Gorman Bidge ..............English VI Viner To the Shack Van and Carol Week-end Five oâclock Benny and Park ................... Park. After the Prom Wiles . The Council .................Holiday At 7:10 ____ Noll Sixth Form Corridor The Swimming Team Brunn E. J. and the Show Boat The Fifth Form Brod The Orpheum Gorman and F. L. G., Jr Brunn Burt Webb Brunn and Park ..................Paddock Topics in English VI class What Spic left behind 1934 77 |Ja(ulmg SH'luml Scroll Jf2tgl)t on tl)f Cop Corribor 7:01 P. M. The Sixth arrives on the corridor, exhaling the last draughts of smoke from their lungs. 7:01 Zi. Vulture Joe departs for parts unknown, but generally conceded to be dark brown in color. 7:05. Benedict goes into 210 for Latin class. 7:15. Parker ambles into Parson's room with a physics book in one hand. Sniffs hard and declares he smells graham crackers. Martin, who is sitting on the bed. but is partially invisible because the bed isn't built for his bulk, utters sounds of disgust; but Parsons obligingly starts for the closet. . . . 7:20. Graham crackers fast disappearing, and Martin. Parsons, and Parker arc deep in a bull session. All the latest hot tipsâon toast with mustard. 7:25. Martin gets started on the latest discourse he and Webb have had on surgery: but. luckily, a chorus of howls, shrieks, grunts, sounds of flying books, and sundry ripping noises occasioned by tearing clothes is heard down the corridor. Only the Senior second formers. 7:30. On continuation of the uproar in 210. the peremptory tones of Mr. Hill are heard down the corridor: All right! For the last time. I've had enough of this infernal roughhousing in here! Benny! Get out! Moss! If this happens again. I'll have to penalize you! (Heads peer out of doors, and Benedict is seen to creep sheepishly out of 210, dragging the remains of his clothes. Moss peers mischievously out of the door.) 7:33. Tibbals comes out of the closet. 7:35. The Spic. the Nigger, the Dutchman, and Moore start a bridge game in 238. 8:00. Park goes to see if Dicite has any eatsâer, we mean can the Virgil be done. 8:15. Benedict sneaks back into 210 to (finish the Virgil?) 78 :|lafaltng J cfycml JgfcroU= !H Jftigfjt on tfje ÂŁop (Cornbor 8:20. Chuck comes up from Hendo's with three more lines of that speech written. He goes down to 238. 8:30. The bridge game breaks up when Chico deals himself thirteen spades off the bottom. The Wolves go down to Walt's room to snap weeds and listen to Wayne King. 9:00. The Wolves return to the corridor and begin to think about that Chern. Boog: âAw now, I coulda got Jan Garber if you-all woulda quit razzin' me.ââ 9:15. The Senior Prefectâs voice is heard downstairs: âYes Mr. Gamagc. Yes Mr. Gamagc. YES. INDEED. Mr. Ganiagc. 1 think it's a GREAT idea.-â 9:17. The senior prefect comes upstairs. âJeez, Fritz has got another of his crazy ideas.-â-By the way. did you hear I chinned 1001 times today? 9:30. Broidrick and Canfield, the original club members, come up from evening study. 9:33. Moore and the Spic go down to Herrickâs room to snap one and listen to Eddie Duchin. 9:35. The Nigger joins Chico and Moore. 9:45. Benedict, Martin and Parsons go to bed. 10:00. The corridor reassembles, except for Paddock. 10:50. Jerry decides to flick the lights. 10:55. Jerry finally leaves that baseball report long enough to flick the lights and walk down the corridor. 11:03. Vulture Joe returns to the corridor, proclaiming that he hasn't cracked a book all night. Now we know itâs brown that gets him those marks. Or maybe the beer coat does his studying for him. 11:05. The lights go out, and all is quiet. Moss and Tu-Ball go down to play bridge with Walt and Jerry. 79 ffiafolmg petroni j§cro(l =â JfnmouS apings of Jfamous ittastrrs (It is hoped that the readers, familiar ivith the following esteemed masters will put due emphasis where needed.) G. W. A.âA-a-a-a-a-lliteration. W. T. B.âSon. beware of the pitfalls that lie beneath thy feet. R. N. C.âParker, did you see where that ball went? J. M. E.âOh. Gawd, Pat! You talk too much: you might stop and think a little! F. L. G.. Jr.âNow. Bobby, take your time now, Bobby. Think straight. H. E. H.âWo-w-w-w! Ge-e-e-t ou-u-u-t! --------Now up in Wiscasset-----. E. L. H.âYou don't want to learn this: you won't learn it: and you say 'I'll be damned if you'll make me learn it.' A. J. H.âAll right, come on now. let's hurry! D. R. L.âYou made a good throw there. Better come out for this sport. E. J. R.âOh. yea-a-h! How do you get that? Just suppose you show the boys how you did it. 1934: 80 % tl u r t t c m c n t COMPLIMENTS OF MR O G LINDBERG ESTABLISHED 1818 l fii5 Ifitrnishiuns, Hats lioc5 MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Preparatory School Suits Brooks Brothersâ ready-made suits for Spring and Summer for boys of Preparatory School age arc made in our work- roomsâinstead of being purchased from outside manu- facturers who supply all kinds of retail establishments all over the country. This means that we use only materials of our own importation or domestic selectionâmany of which are not generally found elsewhereâand that the workmanship, style and wearing quality are ol a very high standard. Suits are made either with natural or square shoulders. âDriveâ BRANCHES NEW YORK: ONE WALL STREET BOSTON: newbury cor. Berkeley street EDWARD J. DUFFY, INC. CONTRACTORS New York City 83 THE PAWLING SCHOOL âTuck Shopâ Pawling. N. Y. E. M. CROWE Everything Electrical â˘'RADIOSâ1 Pawling. N. Y. ALEXANDER A. SLOCUM 0 SONS. Inc. Dodge. Plymouth U Studebaker Sales and Service Goodyear Tires and Tubes Pawling. N. Y. GAS OIL COLMAN LUMBER CO. BUILDING MATERIALS Pawling. N. Y. JIM ADAMS College Tailor New Haven. Conn. Made to Measure $27.50 - $45.00 Suits and Topcoats 1173 Chapel Street Compliments of BATCHELDER. SNYDER. DORR 0 DOE CO. Producers of Fine Foods Boston. Mass. Compliments of WILLIAM E. WOOLLARD, Esq. 84 ALLEN T SPOONER AND SONS Pier and Harbor Contractors Pier 11. North River New York City A Brick Container in position to dis- charge contents onto truck. Container holds 3.000 brick. 36.000 to a car. and can be unloaded in less than tour min- utes. Insures greatest efficiency and economy. VARIOUS TYPES OF CONTAINERS AVAILABLE FOR SPECIAL BULK OR PACKAGE FREIGHT. THE L. C. L. CORPORATION 230 Park Avenue New York TOPPING BROTHERS MARINE HARDWARE Varick Street New York City 85 JOSEPH ROSENTHAL 0 SON Wholesale Dealers Domestic and Foreign Fruits and Produce POTATOES A SPECIALTY 448 Main Street Poughkeepsie. N. Y. Compliments Compliments of of MR. O. K. DOTY A FRIEND Telephone 138 PAWLING HARDWARE and IRON CO.. Inc. âEverything in Ffarduiare Oil Burners and Electric Refrigeration H. s. LOPER. Mgr. Pawling, N. Y. LIVE in one o J iiiv JetL A mo A conveniat FINE J-loteh Whether you choose The Biltmore or The Commodore, two of New York's finest, and certainly the two mos convenient, you will be living in the very heart of New York. Your train brings you to within a few steps of your room ... no taxi... no time lost in traffic ... and you're only minutes away from smart shops, offices, theatres . . . Express subway at the door. Enjoy this ultra-convenience together with Bowman- Biltmore service and comfortâat these moderate rates. BOWMAN-BILTMORE HOTELS CORPORATION DAVID B. MULLIGAN. PRtSIDtNT i i THE COMMODORE Single Room from $3. Suifei from $8. (Parlor, Btdioom o d Both) THE BILTMORE Single Room from $4. Suites from $12. (Parlor. 1,4,oom o d Both) i 87 A k A § E
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.