Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)

 - Class of 1942

Page 1 of 104

 

Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1942 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1942 Edition, Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 104 of the 1942 volume:

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' V , , 1 3, Hex: .3 -1 - '5 fa,-.,5.L f :rf ' -' 'p - X ' w g 'Q , . .R 159- rt, A 'fm If in-XX fp. 3 X x ,bflkg X Q4 ,AQ kk bi Cihx U it ,WX iffy 4-1 K' ' '- ', -..f fa.: X ,,,, .'-,'- T' '- ,4,'- ,.3.f- I-1 ' , ' ,i'N:Xx yqilyw 41- ,' :F ,- .gt ' ' ju' :RTP H Q, Q 1:-F:K'bJ.L Y . X543-' 132.13 V' Kp.-yy --Ar-.zrvg ' ' .1 gk 11 1.2 - :A W1 ., '- ..ff55'51x5fS.HafW' 1- A .miixzie Q 5rs 'S:i.Qs.va.Tf BLUEPRINT Dr. Colston 2 The Making Of America Edited by LEONARD HIRSCH, SOLOMON TEPFER, MILTON WILNER 4 Ode to Peace CALMAN AMBROSY 10 The American WILLIAM A. LYONS 11 Cosmic Rays JOHN SCHEPP 12 Challenge Accepted HERBERT F. LOWE 14 Discourse on Gravity HOWARD BERNSTEIN 15 Machine Shop Monologue JERRY GREENBERG 15 Memoirs of a Lathe HARRY BROWN 16 Blind Man RICHARD THORPE 17 Flanders, ra poem FRED OEss 20 That Time Is Best, u poem KENNETH HOLDEN 21 In Step with the Theme Compiled by JOHN SCHEPP 22 A Day in Tech STANLEY ROSENELUM 25 The Spirit in the Man STUART H. GESCHEIDT 26 The Prayer, rt mdio Jcripl ALLAN DROSSIN and HOWARD BROWNSTEIN 27 Penny Wise, Dollar Foolish ROBERT KUDLICH 28 My Mothers Face, a poem GEORGE KIRSCH 29 Mathematics HARRY BLUM 30 The Immense Universe VIRGIL FICARRA 32 His Decision, a play CHARLES CRONIN 53 Squirrels EDWARD DWYER 34 Experience: Te-ch's Courses IRWIN BRODELL 35 A Day in Tech, a cartoon CHRISTOPHER LUPIA 40 A Time and Place for Everything KENNETH HOLDEN 42 A Dog's Life CHARLES JONES 44 For You, 4 poem FRANCIS THOMPSON 44 The Three Words EPHRAIM SCHAEFFER 45 Science in Sports WM. G. MCCORMICK 46 Tech Sports Edited by MEL POSIN 47 Editorials 52 Mr. Sjogren, Honorary President Of January '42 55 Class of January 1942 56 BROOKLYN TECHNICAL H. S. ALBERT L. COLSTON, Principal 29 Fort Greene Pl., Brooklyn, New York Dr. Colston FI scum OF EDUCATION OF 'rr-as CITY OF NEW YORK BROOKLYN TECHNICAL HIGH SCHOOI1 TWENTY-NINE FORT GREENE PLACE 1 BROOKLYN, NEW YORK TELEPHONE: STKILINU S-DI!! ALBERT L COLSTON January 5, 1942. To the Seniors: The theme this year, I am told, is to be 'Experience'. Now, I am not going to impersonate the 'Voice of ExperienceW,that well-known radio personality, who advises how to adjust nearly all human difficulties. If I could give you some canned experience from which you could dip when your trail got very rough, I would gladly do it, but I do not know enough to do that. I have not had enough experience. Just because one man has lived longer than another does not mean that he has accumulated a larger and better store of experience. It depends on the training and quality of the man. Some acquire wisdom and understanding more easily and more rapidly than others. If one has followed a given interest he will pick up and assimilate quickly everything related to that interest. His observations in that field will store ideas and habits of thought very quickly. There are sometimes unhappy associations with the word experience. I go to look for a job. The prospective employer says he would prefer to have a man with experience. I wonder how I am going to get what he calls 'experience' in a given line if I cannot get a job in that line. Finally, becoming quite humble, I ask if I may show him what I can do, - and then, if he is a bit hard up for men, he gives me that chance and I Wstrut my stuffn. Being properly trained or educated, I have that stuff. I do not worry about your getting employment. This is the time when the technical man is needed both in the armed forces and in civilian life. It looks as if that rather modest looking technical high school founded about twenty years ago had a real mission to perform. The apathy which tended to freeze its development then has largely disappeared. The skies look much brighter as we take our rightful place in the scheme of things, educational and industrial. Sincerely yours, THE MAKING OF AMERICA Compiled and edited by LEONARD HIRSCH, 735 SOLOMON TEPFER, 793 MILTON WILNER, 76 FOREWORD M MERICA has been made by m l people and their experi- lir gg g ences-the people of far- off lands, the people of America's past, and finally, L .5 the people of today. Espe- cially at a time like this, it is well to inquire what the America is that has resulted from these experiences. What are her ideals? What are her pur- poses? To that end, we here present a series of short compositions written by students of the senior year, relating their own experiences and those of their fami- lies, and thus showing a cross section of American life as represented by Tech. In so far as possible, the material has been arranged in chronological order so as to illustrate the growth of the American spirit. First of all, then, America is made of the combination of virtues brought to our shores by our European fore- fathers. The Greehr, the first democratic people, gave America their lore of liberty. 'The glory of Greece,' .said my father, a veteran of the Balkan wars, in speaking of his native country, 'was slowly dissipated through a. series of invasions, culminating in the Turkish occupation, from which we were freed in 1821. But in 1912, the Balkan war broke out. However, with the help of our Serbian allies, we defeated Turkey once again, and later, Bulgaria, who 4 laid claim to Thrace. Our battles were fought with courage, and people sent their loved ones for the cause of free- dom. Greece has always revolted against oppression, andl predict that the Greek people will rebel against the present tyrants'. Our Dulrh forefatherr heflowed upon ur :heir remarkable ingenuily. My father, who formerly lived in Rotterdam, Holland, tells about how, forty years ago, in that city, a floating drydock was built for the city of Port Natal, South Africa. To transport the drydock, it was necessary to board up two ends and fill it with bags of coal to be used as fuel for the two tugboats used on the long trip. If either of the boats needed fuel, it would go along- side the dock and get the coal, while the other tug pulled the dock. In calm weather, the drydock was pulled along the top of the water, while in rough seas, it would be sunk ten feet to make easier transportation. The complete trip took three months and was hailed as a great achievement in ocean transporta- tion. The following story illurtraler the rourage and Jelf-rarrijire of lhe English people. A packet of important papers had been entrusted to the care of Captain Snow, my grandfather, who, as a pas- senger, was carrying them by sea to New York, and thence to the nation's capital. The Armahella II plowed under and slowly righted herself. Captain Snow, peering out of a window, saw a figure lying prone on the deck. Rushing out, he fought his way through the swirling waters of a receding wave un- til he reached the unfortunate and dragged him to the waiting hands of several persons who had witnessed this feat. When these people looked around, Captain Snow had disappeared over the side. The Irish hrought to us their great sense of humor. Perhaps their love of fuzz sometimes led them to tell tall stories. At any rate, you he the judge of this one. It was Sunday, and my grandfather, Mr. Simon O'Hollern, was thirsty. Now he could not buy any beer in New jer- sey because its sale was prohibited on Sunday. He knew where he could buy it, but he would have to cross the Hud- son River to get there, and the ferry boats were not running so early in the morning. Grandpa did the only thing left to do. He donned his bathing suit, which had skirts and prisoner's stripes on it, took his beer can, and swam across the river. His pint can had a tight cover and a handle. Grandpa pur- chased the beer, slid into the water, and started back. He looked very com- ical because he had to swim with his head two feet out of water and his body almost in a vertical position. He held the beer can with the handle be- tween his teeth. When he finally reached his barge, Grandmother and Mother congratulated him for his swim, be- cause there was no salt in the beer. But there was a one pound sea bass swimming around in the beer, quite drunk. To this day no one in the family has ever been able to explain how the bass got in. No doubt if we could have examined further into the ancestry of Tech boys, we might have found examples of the qualities of character that other na- tionalities have given us. But let these illustrations suliice, for America's more immediate past has also contributed. America is made of the fight, adven- turous spirit, and humor that have characterized the eventful existence of her people through the generations from the Revolution to the present. Evidenfes of the adventurous spirit that made America are all around us, espe- cially on Long Island. Here a bullet hole tells a dramatic story. During the summer, I received an invitation to visit Sagitos, a stately manor that stands on the north side of Montauk Highway in East Islip. I had been told that the house was built in 1699 by a New Amsterdam merchant, Stephanus Van Cortlandt, and I natural- ly was anxious to see it. On visiting the place, I was impressed by the care taken to preserve the colonial architec- ture, but when I was in one of the rooms, I was thrilled to find a bullet embedded in the wall. When I inquired of my host how this had occurred, he told me that when Long Island was held by the British troops, they made their headquarters there. A revolution- ary spy fired a bullet at Sir Henry Clin- ton, but missed, and the bullet embed- ded itself in the wall. I never found out what happened to the adventurous revolutionary. A visit to the Revolutionary War fort, Fort Ticorzderoga, will also recall adven- turous days of the past. Last summer I had the privilege of visiting Fort Ticonderoga. The fort is on the top of a slight slope right above the banks of Lake Champlain. Inside, one may see displays of articles of Colonial warfare-rifies, cannons, uni- forms, and ammunition. He may also inspect the room in which Ethan Allen had his headquarters. It is impossible to look through the crude glass of the windows of this room without seeing images that are greatly distorted. As the visitor leaves the fort, he is chilled by the formidable aspect of the cannons protruding from the stone wall and is saddened by the old Indian pottery maker, one of the last of his kind. The lrefnendoni pre-war ifnznigration proclureil many economic problemr for the innnigranl. How he fought to exirl and lo belter hir existence is here relaled. Life was growing increasingly dif- ficult for the immigrant, who was try- ing to support his growing family in their shabby apartment in the East Side slums. He had a hard time providing the necessities of life on his eight dol- lars a week for fifteen hours a day in a sweatshop. Life was even more diHi- cult when there was no eight dollars at all. There was a union and later a strike. The grocer didn't sympathize, nor could the children go without food. But finally things changed, and there was a new job. Life was much pleasant- er with the consequent better pay, shorter hours, and Saturday and Sun- day off. The immigrant went to night school, became a citizen. He took his family to the museums, to the aquarium, and to Coney Island. So that his chil- dren would not grow up in the slums that produced criminals, he moved to Brooklyn. There I was born. IV ar fame, war the like of which had never been fought before, for the jiri! lWorlzl War introduced many inaehinei which made fighling a diffirult art. The airplane with iff armament way one of the mort intrirate of the new rnarhinef. Since my father was a machine gun 6 instructor at Kelly Field during the first World War, it was his duty to teach the pilots in training the tactical use of the Lewis machine gun. Part of this training entailed the assembling and dismounting of the gun. This op- eration had to be done blindfolded in three minutes. It all depended on the pilot's sense of touch and the ability of his body to distinguish between differ- ent parts of the gun. One pilot in the squadron could accomplish the entire operation in one minute. There were many Jacriffef on the field of baffle in the war. Many of ui have some relative who can dercribe lhe fight r.rt hand . A group of men including my father are sitting in their dugouts after trench duty. A messenger arrives with an order. It is for a mass attack in an hour. The men prepare. They wait. The signal is given. Waves of American, English, and French soldiers charge across the field. Airplanes drone over- head. The staccato of rifle fire fills the air. The Germans give. Their line crumbles. The Allied soldiers won the battle of St. Mihiel, but hundreds were left behind on the field. Some were dead, others wounded or gassed. To this day, my father suffers from the effects of the gas, and he still bears a long jag- ged scar on his arm. The war wa: not all battle and killing. A whimsically humorous account of thore bloody days i.r related thai. My uncle was nervously serving sentry duty on his first night at the front. As he paced up and down, he noticed the moon reflecting off a dis- tant object. 'Probably -a bayonet,' he thought. Twice he challenged, then, as it is a sentry's privilege to shoot if he gets no answer, he fired. Advancing cautiously and searching the ground, he found a tin can with a neat bullet hole. Although he was proud of his marks- manship, he said nothing to his bud- dies of how he challenged and 'killed' an old tin can. Many zfelemm were lor! in the poi! war fouflziiofz, but one ma11'.r delermimz- lion and n7dU?lIflll'0lIJ' .rpirif wired bi! 6'IIlP!0ylllEllf problem in lbir exciting but bazardolzr way. After the first World War, my father, just returned from the front, found it difiicult to obtain work, so he accepted a position as an overseer on a rubber plantation in Africa. In this capacity he had a number of interesting experiences, in one of which, display- ing exceptional daring, he quelled a group of troublesome native workers single-handed by standing in their way with a respect-commanding shotgun in his hands and fear in his heart as they tried to advance toward his bungalow. Both the natives and my father were scared, but it was the natives who re- treated while my father stood his ground. From the old generation to the new one, America has always been able to take it and take it with a smile. The heritage of grit, perseverance, and courage of our ancestors lives with us in the present. This is illustrated by the following experiences taken from the work and play of modern Americans. The titles are indicative of some of the qualities of American youth of today. FACING DIFFICULTIES Thick, dry, choking dust rose in clouds to cover the long thin line of young hikers that tramped wearily along a dry hot road- way. Here on this hot stretch of sand called the Zumie trail by the scouts of Camp Ranachqua marched a group of tired kids averaging about twelve years of age. We went on that hike just for the fun of it, and what fun we had! Tramp- ing for hours without water, chasing rat- tlesnakes away from our food supply one morning, and climbing a little hill called the Wildcat fone thousand feet almost straight upj in a sudden rainstorm, were just a few of our adventures. But we broke two records. First, we were the largest group ever to go around the trail, and second, we broke the time record for group trips. Not one of the fellows said he wouldn't go again if he got the chance. That was two years ago, and now we are planning to make the whole forty mile trip again this winter. That's Scouting for you, yet some call it a sissy's game. Last summer I held a job which is one of the comparatively little known occupa- tions of this vast city. I was employed by an automotive warehouse as a messenger, my duty being to deliver automobile parts to any section of the city. Without being too lacking in modesty, I may say that I found my job similar to that of the Pony Express. Although there were no Indians waiting in ambush, there were other haz- ards. I had to cross streets thick with au- tomobiles when I was carrying large, clumsy, and heavy packages. I recall one time when I had to cross Broadway at Forty-second Street while carrying such bulky articles that one of my eyes was temporarily out of use. Needless to say, the automobiles seemed to me then like Indians ready to attack me at the Hash of a signal fgreen lightj. The messenger of today must also possess the speed and alertness of the Pony Express rider, for time is valuable, not only to the customer, but to the boy himself, since he is paid according to the number of trips he makes in a day. So you see that except for the type of ob- 7 stacles, there isn't must difference between the modern messenger and the Pony Ex- press rider whom he applauds in the movies with such hero worship. Finding it necessary to work, I ap- plied last summer to the Swedish-Ameri- can Line for a job in the galley, where I had heard they needed helpers. I was assigned to the Ham Com. My job was to wash dishes and peel potatoes when necessary. After a few days I discovered that the job was not as easy as it had seemed at first. My day was full from the time that I washed the breakfast dishes through the afternoon potato peeling to the last supper dishes at nine o'clock, af- ter which I tumbled wearily into bed only to be awakened by the assistant steward, who had found more work for me to do. Later when we got into the tropics, I found the work almost unbearable. The galley was below the water level, and the heat was horrible. The steam from the hot dish water filled the galley, making it almost impos- sible for the workers to see each other, I felt weak all the time, and I must have lost about two pounds a day. When we returned to New York, very few of us signed on for another trip because we had had a taste of the deplorable working con- ditions aboard this floating sweatshop, and we did not think the dollar a day wage worth it. FACING DISCOURAGEMENT One day this summer when I had had it thoroughly impressed upon me that I must work, I set out and made the rounds of employment agencies in New York. I went to many, and I found the results uniform, The directors of personnel seemed pleased with my educational qual- ifications, but rejected my application be- cause of lack of experience. As I rode home, I couldn't help asking myself this vital question: 'How shall we young peo- 8 ple ever get work if every employer wants experience and no one is willing to give it to the newcomer ?' RECOGNIZING LIMITATIONS We had had terrific rains while we were camping on a small island. One morning we awoke to the sound of rush- ing water, and when we hurried to the river's edge, we found that not only had our boat been swept away, but we were endangered by a fire which had been started by lightning and was rapidly spreading. We began to construct a raft, but we were no match for the speed of the fire. The roaring inferno, the fierce clouds of smoke, and the stifling heat forced us to the river's edge. No matter where we turned we had little chance of escape, and indeed we had given up hope when some forest rangers came to our rescue. From this almost disastrous experi- ence I learned that even with man's mod- ern experience as a scientist and tech- nician, he is powerless when Nature is aroused. COURAGE I was employed as a power press op- erator this summer, and the work was so monotonous that it was difficult enough to keep awake after a full night's sleep. But when my friend, the other operator, came in one morning having had only four hours' rest, I was sure something was going to happen. Putting aside my fears, I got on with my work and had stamped perhaps a hundred metal strips when the air was rent with a hysterical scream of pain and fear. I knew by in- stinct whence it had come, and I hurried to my friend's side. As a result of his having dozed at the machine, his thumb was so badly crushed that it had to be amputated. It is true that his accident was the result of his own carelessness, but I cannot help admiring him, because I know that now, despite his handicap, he is back on the job. - EN DURANCE Prepare to mount! Mount! We swing into the saddles and wait. Forward ho-oo! Out of the camp and onto the dusty roads we ride. At the head of the troop the guidon flaps in the breeze. The rhyth- mic jingle of the horse gear is a lullaby. An hour passes. We walk our horses, trot, and walk again. Another hour goes by. We travel over paved and unpaved roads, through Helds, woods, and towns. Three hours, and I begin to tire. I long to slouch in the saddle. The stirrup boot buckle cuts into my leg. Now we dismount and adjust equip- ment. The captain strides up and down the line. Keep working those horses' legs. Horses tire, men don't. That's what he thinks. Four hours, and we're really fatigued. Inadvertently I slouch. Sit up there, Kali, the sergeant bawls. At last we reach our bivouac area. But the day's work isn't over yet. Picket lines have to be set up and the horses groomed, fed, and watered. Finally the ordeal is over, and we eat, too. Then we relax, and someone sings out, This is the life-nothing to do but eat and sleep. SELF-SACRIFICE 'Steady now. just a bit more and we'll be through.' This was the doctor. Yes, it was a blood transfusion to save my life. For weeks I had been in a sick bed in the hospital, and finally I had lost so much blood that a transfusion was necessary. more nervous than anything else. All that I could really think of was the red fluid of life coming from a rubber tube into a glass container, ready for my eager arm. But this was not the first. There were nine others. So now I'm made up of many different kinds of Americans-English, Irish, Scotch. But best of all I like to think that I am an unofficial member of the R.A.F. because the Englishman who gave me some of his blood was a captain of the Royal Air Force. IN CONCLUSION The opinion has often been ventured that the deeds men do testify not only to their traits and characteristics but also to the inherent strengths and vir- tues of their forefathers. If we apply this reasoning in trying to anticipate the character of Americans of the fu- ture, we can see them combining the courage, perseverance, and integrity of this era of Americans with their own innovations toward perfection. We therefore need not worry about the future of our nation, but may truly agree with Benjamin Franklin when he referred to America's sun as a rising, not a setting sun. Acknowledgment is made to tbe fol- lowing boy: for their contributionr: Tele- mabor Lainar, 811, Wilbur Van Eyrden, 873 Paul Norrir, 73, james Weaver, 793 Robert Higginr, 72, Howard Goodman, 73, Milton Wilner, 76, Robert Hojjtman, 713 Walter Pyrkowrki, 793 Cbarler Mei- Jelbacb, A615 Sidney Flaum, 711g Wil- liam Scavotl, 72g Stanley Wojtarzek, 79g George Walrb, 88 g Tbomar Hayes, D61g William Crane, 79g Gur Manfredi, 710, William Kallmeyer, E625 Morton Did it hurt? Well, a little bit, but I was Handler, 75. ':-2:5-.1L.L 'q ,rvxrtil tl-' 0,15 f ., , , l'fHflff!. ' AIA . 1' ll' f 'ff 2 L I ' T M ' . - -fre, X 1--Y - , , IDX 1 7 I ODE TO PEACE By CALMAN AMBROSY, E53 A thousand, thousand years ago, Our ancestor, the ape, Perched high upon a lofty tree, Above his roaring enemy, Dropped cocoa-nuts of spheroid shape, Upon the beast below. And then the primal man appeared, No cocoa-nuts used heg A piece of skin he took, and string, And made himself a whirling sling, Then sent his stone unerringly- The weakling now was feared. Then passed a time, a long, long time, The knight came on the sceneg Chain armor, cap, and vest he wore, A heavy shield and lance he bore, He fought for country and for queen- But soon passed knighthood's prime. For now the smoking hre-arms came, Small use your armor, knight! The strong, the weak, the short, the tall ln war are equal, one and allg For skill is now the badge of might, And not brute strength or fame. In every stage, alas! we see Man fighting against man, It's not to help man that he tries, But from his brother's fall to rise, And grasp all treasures that he can, But long this will not be. Another day is drawing near, The pen shall rule that day, At first the populace will use The pen to injure and abuse, But even now, a voice I hear, This too shall pass away. For slowly man will learn to wield His pen in the noblest way, Then, only then, will cease this strife, Then, man will aid man in this life, The brute unto the god shall yield, And joy shall hold full sway. THE AMERICAN By WILLIAM A. LYONS, 89 I QIGHT before you stands an American who unfortu- E4 ,E nately does not exemplify xr ,V every citizen of this democ- . XR racy. He is, rather, what every citizen should be if we are to have democracy in its purest form. His philosophy of life has been expressed by Bertrand Russell in a recent magazine article, that is, he does not feel that as one person he is too insignificant to do anything worth while to beneht mankind. This quality is shown in the way he partakes of the privileges accorded him by the fathers of the Constitution. Every year at election time he is to be found at the voting polls in the local school, fully prepared to cast his ballot for his choice. To him this choice is very impor- tant and therefore he always acquaints himself with the background and quali- ties of the man he is to vote for. He re- alizes he must do this if he is to preserve his rights for himself and for posterity. This American is vitally concerned with our present foreign policy. He thinks that the moral point of view has been ignored by many people and since Britain is defending the ideals of democracy, then we, as the foremost practicers of the dem- ocratic form of government, should give aid to Britain, In following up his belief that foreign dictators are a definite menace, regardless of what expanse of ocean separate our shores from theirs, he has registered for civilian defense. His daily life consists of rising at seven-thirty on week-day mornings in or- der to be at work at nine. Wlien he goes home at five he looks forward to supper because, as he tells the boys at the of- hce, his wife's mind is chock full of darn good recipes. just as he likes to brag about his wife's cooking, he also takes pride in his children and well he might, for their characters are being helped in their development by the hour or so which he spends with them each night, talking with them and helping them with their homework. In this way he teaches them to use their minds to their best advantage. In the evening he also listens to the radio and reads the eve- ning paper and entertains or visits friends with his wife. Sunday is a day of rest for him. He at- tends church in the morning because he feels we cannot have unity within our country without faith. He is a strong sup- porter of the inter-faith leagues, believ- ing that these movements are the most potent cures for lack of unity. He is not the type who talks religion in one breath and then condemns his fellow-man for his shortcomings in the next. He knows that good will brings about faith and this in turn brings about an unbreakable fed- eration of mankind. This American enjoys Sunday after- noon because his youngsters derive so much pleasure from the automobile rides they take, the beaches and picnic grounds they visit, or the indoor games they play if the weather is not favorable. Tomorrow is his best day for it is to- morrow he will accomplish something else. This something may be trivial but it will be an accomplishment. Today was a tomorrow and today he strengthened the bond between himself and his family and between himself and mankind. This man does not preach democracyg he practices it. 11 s COSMIC RAYS By JOHN ,....: ECAUSE of its inherent mysteries nothing is more fascinating in current sci- entific research than the i , study of cosmic rays. The investigations combine pre- cise experimentation with reasoning and with the romance and grandeur of astronomy. The rays themselves, in spite of all the characteristics that have been attributed to them, appear to be either infinitesimal- ly small, charged particles, or waves of extremely small length. The present in- vestigations concern themselves with de- termining their exact nature and the meth- od of their origin. In order to understand the study, we must first learn something about the instruments employed. The simplest of these is the electro- scope. It consists of a metallic rod in a container, but insulated from it, from which two metallic leaves are suspended. If an electric charge is applied, it travels through the rod to the leaves. These swing out because they both acquire the same charge. It was found that no matter how perfect the insulation, the leaves soon began to collapse, thus indicating the loss of the charge. The assumption was made ,that the air was filled with ions, that is, atoms with an electric charge, Those ions with the proper sign were attracted to the electroscope, where they were neutralized, thus gradually robbing the instrument of its charge. To account for the ions, it was thought that particles or rays traveling through the atmosphere collided with atoms and ion- ized them. These rays may be counted by the 12 SCHEPP, 85 Geiger-Muller counter. It consists of a wire stretched within a metal container. A voltage is applied across the two com- ponents almost high enough to cause an arc. Now any ions inside the device will be attracted to one terminal, and thus cause an electric current to flow. After suitable amplification, this operates a counting device. By the use of a third device, the Wil- son Cloud Chamber, we may actually see the path of the ray. A glass cylinder is fitted with a piston and filled with warm air saturated with water. When the piston is drawn down, the air expands, and in so doing is cooled. It is now supersatu- rated and if possible, the water will con- dense. To do this, however, it must have a nucleus, which may be either a particle of dust or an ion. If we have taken care to purify the air, we can see the path of cosmic rays by watching water condense on the ions in the trail of the rays. Armed with these devices, scientists began investigations. At first it was thought that the rays came from radio- active material in the earth, especially since one such material, radium, had been discovered only a short time before. It was found, however, that the particularly penetrating rays sought became weaker when the instruments were apparently surrounded by radioactive material. Later, balloon ascensions showed that the in- tensity of the rays increased with altitude, and this led scientists to believe that the rays originated from beyond our own planet. Since little variation in intensity is noticed at various times of the day, it is doubtful whether they come from any one heavenly body, such as the sun. In- deed, this last fact strongly suggests that the rays are formed throughout all space. We leave now our logical progression and come to that phase of the research work which cannot, at present, be sub- stantiated, for the mystery of the origin of cosmic rays remains exactly that-a mystery. However, two of the foremost scientists of our day have advanced theories which may be combined into a daring vision. The theories will be ex- plained briefly here. The old distinction between matter and energy is discarded. The two may be interffhanged, though their total must re- main the same. Now let us imagine a star traveling through space. Out of the emptiness about it, it draws to itself soli- tary atoms. Little by little its mass and density increase. As the pressure on the center of the star rises to fantastic heights, the atomic systems can no longer with- stand it, and electrons and protons com- bine. The matter disappears, but energy is liberated. This energy is used to heat the star until its entire contents are in a gaseous state. Then, when further energy is created, it escapes as radiation. How- ever, if all the energy so created remained in space, the sky would be everywhere ablaze with light. Therefore, from the energy of the radiation, new atoms are constantly being formed. These eventu- ally are attracted to a star, to repeat the cycle. It is at this point the conversion of energy into matter-that cosmic rays are thought to be formed. To corroborate this theory, -it has been pointed out that the formation of the four most common ele- ments in space would allow for the four wave lengths in which cosmic rays are suspected to exist. The theory, when set against the mil- lions of years and vast distances associ- ated with the galactic systems, forms a breathtaking panorama of the creation and death of the stars. Even more, it shows us the wonder of mankind's true greatness. For, unable to leave his own tiny planet, unaided by anything but his own intellect man has forced aside one by one, the veils with which nature sur- rounds herself, and with the knowledge so painfully won, has gained mastery over the world in which he lives. 13 W CHALLENGE ACCEPTED By HERBERT E. LOWE, ss, scribe 2 -jr VERY EVENING at Liber- 'r V ty Lake, to the strains of classical music, 'the colored 2-ll fire would supplement the A , . Q :QQ I lltl, . ',f1 . I A M U vt f orchestral arrangement and 1 2 I rifilill ri, I tual: spectators would sigh en- raptured. That was at the World's Fair and in 1940. The colored fire was combusting chemicals carried to their peak above the tumbling fountains by rockets. Rockets are containers which are propelled by the generation of gases of high pressure and these gases are in turn generated by combusting material . . . rocket fuel. Man grabs a box and cries, I have a rocket! How shall I send it soaring into the sky ? The doors of the laboratory fly open and fling a challenging invitation, I am the way. Come! Man enters and gropes. In time the delicate glistening tubes contain sulphur, charcoal, zinc dust, potassium nitrate or chlorate, and salts of barium and strontium, Why has he chosen these from the thousands of avail- able compounds? Come! Let's see. There, the sulphur bubbles and burns with a slow steady blue flame, He adds this to the potassium chlorate. A hammer descends! . . . the explosion leaves par- ticles of burning sulphur. Now, throw in the zinc dust, the charcoal. Good, we have the noise, the explosion, and also . . . a flash of flame. The strontium! The barium! And sodium! Don't hit it. Touch a match. Ah, Man has burned his 14 hand. That sudden flare! The roar! See? Smoke has billowed forth. Did he feel the air rush past? He did. He's reaching for the mortar. Water! Pestle! Nitrate, not chlorate-chlorate explodes! Zinc dust! Then the rest! I have it now. Watch, soon it will dry. Sun it! Dry it! Grind it! Wet it! Mould it! Now! The tube! The head! The stabilizer! Shaky hands! Flickering lights! Man is at the climax of his search. He mumbles, have a rocket. This fuel will make it 'fly. I light the match, the fuse. Point it up. This way, not that, for it will hit the house! Up, not down! The noise! The swish! Do you hear it? It's working. The gases pour out. The rocket rises. Up, high up! Fifty feet! One hundred feet! Two hundred feet! The secondary fuse is burn- ing. It has burned to the explosives' chamber. The rocket blows up and col- ored lights fly in all directions. Are there tears in Man's eyes? Does he rejoice in his creation? No, he is a brute. An un- feeling, senseless brute! And so, Man, as in his other fields, has groped his way through the darkness to his present height of knowledge. Many believe that in rocketry he has but reached his first step, that in the future better fuels will be discovered and instead of colored lights, the chamber will carry powders of war and destruction. Maybe. Later they will carry men-to the planets -to the stars. Man will once more enter the laboratory doors and accept the chal- lenge of the unknown. DISCOURSE ON GRAVITY By HOWARD BERNSTEIN, css Dear Diary, X 11 .,., . ERSONALLY I l'l3VC al- , QA' gi ways thought that the sup- gliyll ply of gravity that the 'V' jill. earth holds would some gf jg, day run short. Yesterday this tragic event occurred. About twelve o'clock noon people noticed that they were getting lighter and lighter. In three hours there was absolutely no gravity whatsoever. Walking down the street, I saw a car hurtling towards a man. Instinctively I shut my eyes. When I opened them, I saw the oddest sight I ever hope to see. The car had hit the man but since it had no weight it had not hurt him. But the car! It had used the man as a springboard and was hurtling towards the outer strato- sphere. Because it no longer had any weight it could not get hack to earth. The man in the car was doomed to go flying around the stratosphere till he died of old age. Everywhere I went I saw similar tragedies happening. It does not do any good to put lead in your pockets because lead is now no heavier than feathers used to be. The subways are full because the people think that is the only place where they are safe. I am now prac- tically the only person on earth who is above the surface. I saw a child throw a ball attached to a string into the air. When the ball came to the end of the string the child left the ground and went flying after it. It is getting pretty dark and I'll have to close this page. My keep- er says that if I don't go right to bed, he will put one of those uncomfortable jackets on me. Good night, dear Diary. MACHINE SHOP MONOLOGUE , , By JERRY GREENBERG, A43 AY, SAM, just look at those lathes! We'll have some I bet. And say, look at that big machine over there. I .H-H M wonder if we'll ever get to use thai. Those pulleys up there look complicated! Oh, well, I guess we'll learn all about this stuff sooner or later. Boy, I just can't wait 'til we start working those lathes! . . . How do you like that? Two weeks gone, and the motors haven't even been started yet! I'm sick of writing and draw- ing . . . Hey, fellows, didja hear what the teacher just said? We start work today! il q ' fun when we get started, I P I O Here are the assignments . . . Whoopee! I'm on the engine lathe. just let me at it! I-Im! Pretty complicated apparatus, if you ask me! Let's see. First, I gotta clamp on the lathe dog, then put the stock be- tween the centers . . . Oh, oh. It doesn't go. Hey, Mr. Blenderman, my work's too big for the lathe! Oh, I see. just move the tail stock back. Smart man, that Mr. Blenderman. There! All set up. Now to start the thing. I wonder which lever he said to use. That one doesn't work. This one didn't start it either. Ah, there it goes! That's funny. Nothing happened. 15 What's that, Sam? I forgot to put my tool bit in? Thanks. What's that you say? My automatic feed lever is in reverse? Whaddya mean? Watch, I'll show-. I guess you were right. Maybe I'd better get a new center. That one's no good any- more. ' At last! There it goes-not a bad cut, either, even if I do say so myself. How're you making out, Pete? What, you're fin- ished already? Here, let me measure it. Say, you're six thousandths off! Whaddya mean? My mike's just as good as yours. I paid sixty cents for it, it oughta be good. just take that job up to the teacher, and see what he says. Oh, he has marked MEMOIRS OF A LATHE it already. What did-Oh, 95? Pretty good job. I expect to get only about 90. There! The cut's finished. Now to stop the automatic feed. Hey! It doesn't stop! Cmere, Pete, quick! How do you shut it off? Say, you're turning the wrong knob! Oh. It stopped. Maybe you were right. Mr. Blenderman, will you work this, please? Yes, I know it's a little long, you see, I-What? Six thousandths undersize? But it's just right according to my micrometer! Look-! Er, did you say 65? Oh, you did. What, Sam? No, 65. Oh, well, we all can't get good marks, I guess. But I still think his micrometer is wrong! By HARRY BROWN, D51 MACHINE shop on the second floor of the Brook- Q A c lyn Technical High School X was my home for nine long H ' H I years. I belonged to a fam- - ily of twelve engine lathes. There I stood looking out over Fort Greene Park while class after class went by, each heaping abuses on me. At first I was happy. All this was new to me. The clamoring, the excitement, the rush and hubbub fascinated me. But after a few years the clamoring irritated me, the excitement unnerved me, and the tumult and chaos tired me so that I was exhausted when night came. During the day some of the definitely not-mechanically-inclined boys cursed me, flooded me with oil, threw my gears in while I was in motion, and strained my every bolt by forcing me to do impossible tasks. After a few years of this, I was worn out. I wished then that I could have been left to rest in the ground next to that little piece of copper. My gears were 16 half-stripped for the third time and I moved with a clank and a groan in every part of me, but there was no relief. Class after class came and went, each mistreat- ing me more than the last and still I looked over Fort Greene Park and longed for that bit of red-headed copper. Finally my plight was realized. I was taken out and sold for junk. Here I am now waiting my turn to be reborn. I had heard of this place from some of the older lathes in the room. They had told me that a great future awaited me here, that I would thrill to new experiences just as I had when I first arrived at Tech. What my future will be, I have no idea. Perhaps I shall be part of a battleship for the Navy, or a part of a bridge, or an automobile, or a dozen other different things. All I know is that it will be thrill- ing to find out. Here comes the crane,- I am up in the air-now over the fur- nace-the jaw is opening-down, down, down-the fire is rushing up towards me -I Wonder if I will ever see that piece of copper again-Goodbye. BLIND MAN By RICHARD THORPE, A61, Scribe j:lll Q:-A OHN MARKWYN was . greatly annoyed. Worse, anger. But he restrained Q himself, so that the boys, Bill and Kipper, wouldn't notice it. They were really trying to cheer him up, by talking so much. his mood bordered upon .. r' ii? He had been cooped up in this dingy hotel for five weeks, now, and it had soured him. But that wasn't what bothered him most. What did bother him was his eyes. He couldn't see. Kipper was talking. It won't be long now, Mark. Soon as you can see again, we'll get back at 'em and do it proper. Do it proper, he thought. just be- cause he hadn't shot the guard right away, he had muffed a neat bank robbery. The guard had shot him, though, just nicked him properly across the head to make him blind. A door opened in the room. He jumped, startled. But Doc's voice re- assured him. How are you, Mark? He didn't an- swer and Doc went on. I know just how you feel. It's nine P. M. now, you haven't got much longer to wait. just take it easy. He cursed himself, silently. He was the most feared gunman and thief in the country, but he had missed a couple of thousand dollars, because he hadn't both- ered to shoot a man. He had shot him afterwards though, so the boys told him, but he hadn't known it at the time. The boys had seen that he was shot, that time at the bank, and they had taken him away before the cops came. He nearly went crazy when he found he was blind, but the boys had brought him here, where the cops wouldn't find him so easily. Then they brought Doc for him. Doc could be trustedg he was no squealer. Doc had said that he wasn't blinded for good. He could operate on him, and fix his eyes. So Doc had done it-for a price, of course. The boys had told him that the cops were combing the city for him. He'd been hunted before, but this was different. If they found him before he could see again, he would have to depend upon the boys, and Doc. But just in case, he was ready. His pistols were in their holsters at his shoul- ders. He kept them with him all the time: he never took them off. He heard Bill's voice, Wait till we go at it the next time, Mark. We'll kill everybody first. That wasn't intended as a joke. Bill meant what he said. But it angered him, just the same, to hear them talk,-and not see them. Bill's remark shattered his restraint. Shut up! he snapped at them viciously. Shut up! All of you! Get out! Take it easy, Mark, Doc warned in an alarmed voice. Get out! Okay, Mark. Okay. Bill spoke sooth- ingly. He heard them all go out, to the next room, and close the door behind them. To and fro-the length of the room- he strode nervously. He was tense. The room was quiet, now. Slowly, he drew a cigarette, put it to his lips, drew a match 17 to light it. His hands weren't trembling. There was just an inward tremor, as if the blood was jerking rapidly back and forth so that he could feel it. He wasn't scared either. Well, at least not cowardly scared. After all, this was the first time he had undergone such an experience. He sat down. He continued smoking, blowing forth volumes of smoke after each puff. He smoked without holding the cigarette with his hands. It dangled, wedged in, from his lips. The upper part of his head was swathed in bandages. They covered all his hair, his ears, and his eyes. He really wasn't scared though. Not he. Doc, outside, would remove his ban- dages tomorrow, and he would see again. Doc had said so. just now he had to have patience. just a little patience. He'd have to wait only a little while longer. He had become used to being without his eyes during the past five weeks, since the raid. Anyway, the guy that almost blinked him didn't have his eyes nor his ears. He didn't have anything. He was dead. He went over to the cot. He knew where it was, he knew where everything in the room was. He knew every detail. That's how used he had become to having his eyes covered. He lay down on the cot and tried to go to sleep. After a while he rolled over on his stomach, partly on the left side. The gun in the shoulder holster there hurt him, so he took it out and held it in his right hand. He crushed out his ciga- rette and fell asleep. He awoke with much the same feeling of tension and inward excitement. The room was as silent as before. The boys in the next room must have taken him fully at his word when he'd told them to shut up. They were good boys, Bill and Kipper. They were loyal. Doc toog he was all right. Sure. 18 It seemed to him he must have been sleeping a long time. He must have been sleeping for at least twelve hours. Why, today was the day Doc would remove the bandages. His tenseness increased. He sat up, and drew another cigarette, lighted it. The room was as quiet as ever. The tremors in his hands went up his arms, soon per- vaded his entire body. It sort of sickened him. It was like-like-as though it was eating him up. He started to sit down again, but felt that his queer feelings could be better contained standing. He drew heavily upon his cigarette, the burning smoke in his lungs giving him strange strength. The quiet became fierce, he felt it pounding steadily in his head. It became almost an actual thing. It added to his tension. If only he could see! That would chase it all away. He stood motionless in the room feel- ing alternately drunk and powerful as he sucked in and blew out the smoke. Then he walked across the room to where he knew the chair was. Before he reached it, the cigarette burned his lips furiously. He smacked it away with his hand, attempt- ing to spit it out at the same time. He smacked his lips so hard that they bruised against his teeth. He cursed. The tremors returned to his hands, in their most violent form. His hands shook. In an effort to keep them still they wan- dered to his head, to the bandages over his eyes. He couldn't help it. Tentatively, he felt the bandages. He knew just how they were put on. He knew where the last piece of adhesive tape was. And he pondered, he con- sidered pulling it off. After all, Doc would take it off today. So why wait? Why should he have Doc take off the bandages in front of the boys, who'd be staring at him as if he were a ghost? His mind was made up. He felt the adhesive tape again, ginger- ly. He fumbled at its edge, gripped his fingernails under it and started to pull. It came off, sort of-reluctantly. Then it was off, and his hands fell almost to his shoulders, from the unexpectancy. Slowly he raised his hands to his head again. Already his head felt lighter, more empty. His hands touched the soft gauze bandages. They were thick, wrapped around his head like a Hindu's towel. Hesitantly, he fumbled for an end. He found it. He hardly felt the bandages as he peeled them off his head. Once he was startled when he thought he felt pain about his eyes. But he was mistaken. At last he came to the final bandage. It was a small piece of gauze, placed di- rectly over his eyes. It stuck there. He waited a while, trying to steady his hands. Then he pulled it off. His eyes were closed. His whole body trembled violently. Even his eyelids trem- bled. He waited a while longer. Then he opened his eyes. At first he thought he could just barely see the room. He imagined he saw it in- distinctly, darkly. He blinked his eyes, as if to clear his vision, then opened them again. He waited. He couldn't see. He couldn't see! He was blind! He became suddenly nauseated but he controlled himself with choking gasps. He felt hot, then cold by turns. He felt he had to get out of the room. Suddenly, he became aware of a sense of complete loss. He didn't know where the door was any more. He didn't know where the chair was, or the cot, or any- thing in the room. He no longer had any idea of the room's situation. Everything was black, much blacker than it had been before. The silence was more silent than before. He was lost. Fighting back sobs of fear and hys- teria, he began to grope. His knee struck the chair, but he regained his balance without falling. He was cursing and pray- ing at the same time, inwardly. Then his outstretched hands struck the wallg he drew up to it and began to feel along as close to it as possible. He came to the door. He had to feel all over the door before he could End the knob. He turned it, and pushed the door open. Still, silence greeted him. He had to swallow twice before he could speak. His voice was such a hoarse whisper that he could hardly understand himself, Bill! There was no answer. Doc! Kipper! Still silence. He could no longer contain his hys- teria. He screamed, Bill! Kipper! Doc! Not even an echo answered him. He burst into a scream of rage and terror. In it were curses and prayers -inter- mingled with rasping sobs. For a moment he had to stop, to regain his breath. His imagination had been inflamed, so that his next outburst was in a different tone. He only cursed, this time the treach- ery of his comrades-Bill, Kipper, and Doc. He cursed them with the worst pro- fanity he could think of. He swore dire revenge upon their black souls. They'd sold him out, that's what they'd done. Doc hadn't operated on his eyes to hx them. He'd blinded them, for sure. They'd all sold him out. They'd gone and left him, blind and helpless, for the cops. A door opened somewhere in the room. He whirled toward the sound, his hands flashing to his holstered weapons at his shoulders. He couldn't see a thing, but his ears were keen, and strained. ' For the love o' mike, Mark, shut up! You want the cops to hear you? It was Bill who spoke. So they'd come back. Maybe they thought he didn't know yet. 19 Bill! Kipper! he screamed. You double-crossing rats! He went on, pro- fanely. His pistols were in his hands now. Mark! What are you doing with those bandages' off? He heard Kipper ask this question, but he paid no attention to it. His rage had surmounted his senses. He fired five swift shots in succession, mov- ing the guns in a short range so as to be sure to get them both. He was sure he had, when no response came, other than a sharp gasp. He didn't even hear their bodies fall. Mark! Mark! It was Doc's voice, this time, in a ghastly, frightened tone. He fired one shot, directly toward the voice. He heard Doc gasp, a dying gasp. He'd heard such gasps before. Then he heard Doc's body slump to the floor. But Doc was not dead yet, for he heard him utter, in a choking, coughing whis- per, Mark! What in heaven's name-? FLANDERS I'm blind, he grated in explanation. You made me blind, you- He heard Doc's mighty labor for breath. Then when he spoke, he seemed to have regained some articulation, though still choking and coughing. The bandages-weren't supposed to -come off-till tomorrow! The last word was uttered in the last breath. john Markwyn felt as if a physical force had struck him simultaneously on either side of his head. He was stunned. His hands dropped mechanically to his sides. His pistols clattered to the Hoor. He was stupefied. He hardly heard the rush of feet pounding up the stairs outside the room. He did not notice the loud knocking up- on the door, nor even the crash of the door breaking in. But he plainly heard the surprised exclamation, john Mark- wyn! and he knew that it was the cops. By FRED oEss, C61 Cold is the night. The stars shine bright Guiding the way, endlessly wide, Over the fields of Flanders. All quiet now Where friend and foe Lie side by side, row on row, After the thunder of battle. Long is this night, But it tells of light Shining again, after four years tight, Over the hills of Flanders. Time has passed. The die is cast, And once again the explosives blast Into the hell of Flanders. 20 THAT TIME IS BEST By KENNETH C HOLDEN E45 some Wlmen the lrst red glow of the sunset hrs thetl And h1s hy no one hcen tlestrretl Wlmen gold clouds 1re drrk md the sky 15 thm grow n Anal the brelth of the Elrth hrs LlllDS,LLl rn nts tone Wlmen the elty hes lnnt ln the sun s lfterglow Anl the hustlrng tr1H1e rs llgxglng lnel slow Wlmen the hfe of the dry h1s lost nts zest Th lt rs the tune when the arty rs best Wl1en the gusty wrnrl Slltks to 1 gentle hreeze Wlxen the hlrd grrnd ol dlytxme goes wrth more else -ll-'- Wllerm the day s work mel worry ire oxer md done Anal night s work 1nd Hurry hue not yet hegun When the mrs hurry home through the yellow street hght And the gls sweetened ur when elly srys Good might' Before the moon s up when the sun s out of srght Tis the time that IS hest twrxt dry mtl twlxt night IN STEP WITH THE THEME Compiled By JOHN SCHEPP, ss g 5iQjANY STUDENTS, keeping in step with the theme of .X the Bllzeprizzl this term, . have submitted accounts of ,':'Jp, their own personal experi- igg ences. An attempt to clas- sify them reveals the wide variety of interests and tastes which oc- cupy the minds of Tech students. The experiences range from those of a fresh- man who attempted to sell an elevator pass to a member of the service squad, through various sporting activities, to the impressions received by students traveling in foreign lands. DANIEL MCCARTHY, E21, was the unfortunate Freshman. He relates how, through the good offices of a Senior, he became the proud possessor of an ele- vator pass for the negligible sum of fifteen cents in coin of the realm. He was, how- ever, speedily disillusioned in his first venture into the teachers' elevator. There- upon, I decided to sell the pass at a profit of Eve cents. I forthwith accosted a worthy looking student, and proceeded with a two minutes sales talk, but the next instant I found myself whisked away to the floor manager's office by the junior lieutenant ffor such was the object of my sales talkj. The floor manager, surveying me with a malevolent eye, wrote me out a detention slip for five days. Undoubt- edly the resulting confinement increased the offender's respect for business ethics. All of us have marveled at the preci- sion of radio broadcasting. At least one student has not only marveled at, but almost destroyed that precision. Let LEONARD FELDMAN, A21, describe his behind-the-scenes visit to a studio. 22 Near the close of a program I was asked to go to a control panel and shut off the lights in an unoccupied studio. Not wish- ing to show my ignorance, I proceeded to try each switch until I should rind the correct one. fAh, thoughtless youthlj I tried an end switch. To my utter dis- grace and embarrassment, all the lights in Studio Three, where a broadcast was going on, went out. Fortunately, the emergency lights functioned, and disaster was averted. MICHAEL WIEDMAN, A11, took advantage of an opportunity open to all of us. Here he describes his sensations on viewing New York City from one of the great skyscrapers. There were a number of bridges stretching gracefully across the winding, snakelike rivers. Looking down, I saw a jumbled mass of ants, which in reality were people. Soon bright lights be- gan twinklingw-evening was approaching. In a few minutes the city was a blaze of light. The panorama of the metropolis was enhanced by the beautiful display of brightly colored lights and neon signs. The city was alive in its sparkling glory. All of us have heroes. They may be athletes, characters in history, statesmen, or simply people we know and admire in our daily lives. In many cases, we can never meet them. One Technite, AL- BERT LANDA, of E22, did have the satisfaction of meeting his own hero, Ad- miral Byrd. The great event occurred af- ter a lecture by the Admiral. As Albert left the theater, . . into the lobby came the Admiral. A host of people followed, asking for his autograph. The crowd car- ried books, letters, and speeches of Ad- miral Byrd, but I tore a page from my school copybook and took my place in line. My turn came. My heart throbbed. The Admiral asked me for my paper. I handed it to him, and watched as he put his John Hancock on it. Then he of- fered me his hand. Little did he know how I had dreamed of this moment. Most of us know the excitement of a real hurricane only vicariously. To JAMES YOUNG, E22, however, a hurricane is a very real thing. While he was journeying in the South, a great storm blew up. The skies grew dark, the wind began to blow violently, and the trees began reaching for the earth. I became desperately fright- ened. Branches started flying from the trees as they continued to sway and creak under the force of the wind. Out of nowhere, a tree fell across the path of our bus with such a noise that I became hysterical. We remained there for the du- ration of the night-a night I'll never forget. The next morning, when they ar- rived home, the savage power of the storm was attested to by the number of houses that had been destroyed, and by the scenes of confusion everywhere evi- denced. Those Technites who yearn for the great open spaces evidently find ways to satisfy themselves, even though they live in the heart of Brooklyn. Several students related events which occurred on hunting or fishing expeditions. Here, DONALD RASHAP of C21, describes a hunting trip. The snow was glistening on the ground and a sharp tangy wind was whistling through the trees when we started out in the early morning. We car- ried on our backs heavy packs, and across our backs guns sparkled as the sun's rays hit them .... There were many thrills that day and night, flying across the ground on snowshoes, waiting with bated breath to fire, the spine-tingling thrill as the rifle bucks against your shoulder and the target falls, the deepening twilight with the sunset shining across the snow, and finally the camp in the wilderness and the howls of the wolves. In a similar way, JOHN DENNER- LEIN of E21, captures the atmosphere of a partridge hunting trip. Sunday morning we were up bright and early, and after breakfast we went out in the woods again. The weather was dry, and all the leaves were on the ground, leav- ing all the trees but the stately pine en- tirely bare. The air was crisp and so were the small twigs that waited for somebody to step on them, so as to snap and warn any game nearby. It would seem that luck is not always on the side of the hunter, for the author says, perhaps rue- fully, The partridge is a fast bird, and you have to be a little bit faster to get him. As a form of excitement, JOSEPH MURPHY of C11, recommends weak fishing. On one trip, he had become dis- couraged at lack of success, but then, . . there came a vicious tug at my line, and the rod bent so that the tip and butt ran parallel. After about twenty minutes of give and take, when I was as tired as a dog, the hsh was subdued, and was hauled into a boat by means of a net. The last story represents a happy end- ing, but less fortunate was MARTIN KAPLIN of Fl2. He tells how he went fishing with several others, and, at one time, had attracted a fish to his hook. The fish has by now eaten off most of the worm and is trying for the piece that is over the hook. Then, as if from no- where, a line is dropped a few feet away from you. The slight ripple catches the fish's attention, and the new and juicy worm has his affection. With a dart, he jumps upon the worm and sinks the hook deeply into his mouth, Then, as though lightning has struck, he is pulled to the surface, the proud possession of-the cap- tain. More unusual in the long list of Tech- 23 nites' experiences were those of the stu- dents who had travelled to foreign lands. Among them was GREGORY FERREN- TINO of A13, who in 1939 traveled to Greece. A few days after our arrival, we went on a tour of Athens, the capital city of Greece. We visited the famed Par- thenon, with its sturdy marble columns. It was a beautiful sight to behold, this ancient temple, which had withstood the storms and tempests of three thousand years. It truly showed the glory that was Greece. J. NEUBERGER of F22 tells a similar tale. That one day in which I stayed in Paris I will remember all my life. Never will I forget the sight, when the Arch of Triumph, under which rests the Unknown Soldier, loomed before me. Always will I recall the sights I saw from the Eiffel Tower, the magnificence of the world fa- mous Cathedral of Notre Dame, and the lights of the great city reflected in the blue waters of the Seine. At least two Technites have experiences to tell that should make other students pause and think. Here ROBERT KLEIN of A21 tells of his life in Austria after the country came under the domination of Germany. We were very fortunate because nothing happened to us that did not also happen to other people. By this I mean that my father did not have to go to a concentration camp, nor did my mother have to scrub the streets, as so many others had to do .... At last, in September, 1938 ,... we were free to leave Austria. Before we crossed the bor- 24 der we were thoroughly searched, but eventually we reached Zurich in safety. . . . At Cherbourg we boarded the 'Queen Mary.' During the four days we spent on the boat I had the first good and carefree time in six months. On the fifth day we arrived safely in New York. On the nine- teenth of September, 1938, we completed our journey to freedom. J. BENDER, A21, describes the hard- ships of his youth in Germany in the fol- lowing sentences: Our sole purpose in life, it seemed to me, was to work to pay taxes and debts. Meat was served only on Sundays, or when visitors came. Potatoes were served every night, and the only fruit was apples, cherries, and oranges, that is, when in season, and then only at high cost. I was growing up and life seemed to look harder each year. My fu- ture, since one must be wealthy to go to high school-was that I should, like all the others, learn a trade when I graduated from grammar school .... Today, how- ever, I am attending Brooklyn Tech and hoping for a future career as an en- gineerf' On reading through these excerpts, one is struck by the number and variety of experiences described. Each one repre- sents a moment in some student's life that will long be remembered. Is it not fair to assume that each one of us has a similar memory, perhaps trivial, perhaps impor- tant? Think a moment. What event in your life remains most clearly in your memory? What was your most interesting experience? A DAY IN TECH By STANLEY ROSENBLUM, A62 NE DAY I arrived at Tech at the usual time f9255J, got a late pass and two ' ceeded to my class with a spring in my step and a whistle on my lips. The morning passed quickly and soon I found that it was time to go to gym. I usually have a good time in gym, but as I found out later, this was not to be the case today. It came like a bolt from out of the blue, when Mr. Onorato informed us that everyone in my line had to skin the cat. Like most Technites I had never been within ten feet of the highbar and I had hoped to graduate from Tech without getting any closer. We lined up in front of the highbar, like condemned men wait- ing to be beheaded. Soon I heard the teacher say, It's your turn now, Rosen- blum. Amid the encouraging remarks of my classmates, such as, You can break your neck only once, Rosy, I proceeded to try the exercise. I mounted the bar with much help from the teacher and my classmates. Then I put my feet through the space between my hands and found myself in a very awkward position. I : days' detention, and pro- looked around and saw that even Mr. Prestopino looked like a giant from where I was. Soon the blood started to rush to my head and my stomach began to feel queer so I disentangled myself and dropped off the bar. I thought I was pretty good and that I might even become a squad leader with a little practice. I was awakened from my reverie by the sound of Mr. Onorato's voice saying. That was terrible so you'll have to do it over again. I remembered how my stomach ached and how my head felt so I said that I wouldn't go through that again for all the tea in China. That is when I first met my Group Adviser. He is a swell fellow, but I wish I had met him under better circumstances. That afternoon I was literally a broken man for I now had seven days' detention. On the train home I carefully planned to run away and join the foreign legion. The next morning I was at school bright and early, at 8:00, waiting for Mr. Parker. I had found out from my Dad that the United States had no foreign legion and I had decided that Tech wasn't such a bad school after all. .JW P W !,,f,,::,,G,,,,,,,,,.,,,...g: ..... .... ....... ,,',??:,g., , , .2 fr' 1 -. Ag. ,, '-Q, .-s fl ' -- I ..........--.....,..,.....st . 25 26 THE SPIRIT IN THE MAN i 1 STUART H. GESCHEIDT, 711 Long ago, when nature Started Man upon his climb Along the endless road of life Witli others. Soon the time Came when 'twas found That he was better than the rest. Of Mother Nature's children Man became, by far, the best. 'Tis said the gift of reason Lifted him above the brute. True though this is, there's something else That's really at the root Of the ease with which he bests The lower groveling pack. One thing has made him speed his march Ahead, instead of back. 'Tis not an instinct of the beast. His secret of success. lt is the will to better life, That no beast can possess. The brute's content to live If his hunger's satisfied. Man, for things far from this bound Has dreamed, and fought, and died. He's gone far on the endless Road of life since he began, Could he have done it, if there were No Spirit in the Man? No matter which of Earth's Great far-flung races you would scan You'd always see, and glaclden, that, There's Spirit in the Man! lah. THE PRAYER By ALLAN DROSSIN, 71 and HOWARD BROWNSTEIN, 71 Many prorninenl radio it-rip: wrilerf, during the pair few yearr, have tended lo adapt for radio presentation zfarioui' literary forms: the short Jlory, the play, the novel, and, mor! revently, poetry. The following radio Jrript if an adaptalion of Amelia jorephine Burr'r poenz, The Prayer. SOUND: Walla walla of zfoieer, squeak- ing wagon wheels, hoof heatr, row hells, ovvarional rifle rholr. MARIE: How much more of this, Mother, how much more? MOTHER: Hush, Marie, I don't know, dear. Emile, do you think the dog is- still alive? The children were so fond of him. EMILE: Were lucky to have escaped with our own lives without worrying about the dog. MOTHER: Yes-yes. I pray that Charles can withstand this hardship. CHARLES: Mommy, I'm hungry. MOTHER: Yes, I know, Charles, dear. But we must keep going-just a little while longer. SOUND: Hoof heats' mining near. EMILE: frallingj Soldier, how close be- hind are the German troops? SOLDIER: Four or five miles. You'd better hurry if you want to keep out of German hands. Hurry, good peo- ple, hurry! SOUND: Horfe galloping away, uoiref of people rifing, general exrilenzent rising and Ihen fading into MUSIC: Up .frrong and ou! fart. NARRATOR: Query quieflyj I saw these people. I saw them on the road. In August, 1914, the German army in- vaded Belgium, creating havoc among the peasants by forcing them from their homes, destroying their property, forc- ing them to flee. Stray shrapnel claimed many innocent lives. Many parents were left childless, and many children were left parentless. Some people might lose faith, but these did not. Even children retained their faith in the face of Hre-with the blood of their parents soaking into the earth. SOUND: Shells hunting and mafhine gun fire up and under. NARRATOR: I wonder what you would have said if you had been in Furnes with me that night. It was ruin past all words, horror where joyous com- fort used to be, and death-not clean, quiet death, for all day long, the great shells tore the little that remained like vultures on a body that still breathes. All day-but the night was still. SOUND: Shell fre and gun! out quickly. NARRATOR: I looked about the ghastly wilderness that once had been the vil- lage street and saw no other life ex- cept a Belgian soldier, shadowy among the shadows, and a little group of chil- dren creeping from a cellar and hur- rying home. One, older than the rest- so little older I-mothered them along till all at once a stray shell whmed suddenly out of the gloom and burst near by. SOUND: Quick foolxtepf. MARIE: Come, children, we must hurry home. SOUND: Shell hurrting rlofe hy. Crying of children. PIERRE: Do you think there will be something to eat tonight? SOUND: Shell bursting. 27 US... ANNA: I'm frightened, Marie! MARIE: But no! You mustn't be fright- ened, Anna. You mustn't cry. That is not brave, that isn't French. Look- there is a crucifix. Come-let us say our evening prayer. NARRATOR: I was there and I saw it. I saw her lead her frightened brood across the way to where there stood a roadside Calvary, bearing its sad, in- domitable Christ. Strange how the shells will spare just that. I saw so many - There they knelt, poor inno- cents, hands folded and eyes closed. I stole across and stood behind them. MARIE: We must say our prayers. Our Father which art in heaven . . . CHILDREN: Hallowed by thy name . . . MARIE: Thy kingdom come . . . CHILDREN: Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven . . . SOUND: Shell hunting flare hy. MARIE: ftrying lo control Johrj Give us this day our daily bread . . . fPau.re ar Jhe waits for rerponre which doex not come, then repeating urgently, Give us this day I know, I know, prayer Qrohhing Give us this day for-for- ALBERT: Forgive we forgive those our daily bread . . . but we must say the quite openly nowj our daily bread and us our trespasses as who trespass against SOUND: Childrerfr voicer repeating lhe rert of lhe Lord'J Prayer with Alberfr voice leading all of them. Keep low in hachground as NARRATOR: I turned, amazed, to see who spoke the words that they could not. It was the soldier of the shadows. I raised my eyes and looked into the face of Albert, the King. I have no words to tell you what I saw . . . only I thought that while a man's breast held a heart like that, Christ was not-even here-so far away. SOUND: Voirer, with Albert leading, up into lrizfmphanl VOICES: For Thine is the Kingdom, the power, and the glory forever. Amen. MUSIC: Up to crercendo and ont. PENNY WISE, DOLLAR FOOLISH By ROBERT KUDLICH, 711 OBODY is sillier than the amateur photographer who save a few pennies I do not mean to imply that the photographer should avoid all but the most expensive equipment, but he should avoid that equipment which gives inferior results. There is a great deal of good equipment on the market, reasonably priced. But the photographer who buys a cheap, second hand enlarger may have to discard it and buy a new one, a procedure which is 28 obviously a waste of money. Photography is an expensive hobby, and money is pre- cious. For Christmas I received a good cam- era-not the best, but one capable of pro- ducing good results. I immediately went out and bought an exposure meter-not the accurate and expensive photo-electric type, but the cheap and inaccurate ex- tinction type. Then my troubles began. Instead of getting the good, accurately exposed negatives my camera was capable of producing, I got either black, dense negatives or negatives without images. I finally had to buy another meter, this time a good one. But even this experience did not cure me. It is said that a baby once burnt will avoid fire, but not I. A few weeks later I went out to buy a flash-gun. There is a flash-gun made especially for my camera, and since it 'is reasonably priced, I natu- rally tried to get that first, but none of the camera stores I went to had it in stock. I finally went to a well-known camera store and bought, second-hand, a well-known type of gun. I was delighted with my bargain -until after I had tried to use it. It worked fine-sometimes. I wasted more than half a dozen fiash- bulbs before I finally discarded the gun. The Hnal result was the purchase of a new gun. The price of the first one I chalked up to experience. There are none so deaf as those who will not hear, and there are none so dull as those who will not learn. I was in a camera store, just looking around, when I came across a bargain in enlarging paper. At least I thought then it was a bargain. I should have known better. The paper was plainly labeled seconds, and it cost only about half of what I had been used to paying. I bought a package and took it home to try it. Thank goodness, I didn't buy more! I went through the usual pro- cedure involved in enlarging, and all MY MOTHER'S FACE went well until I put the print into the hypo. When I turned on the white light, I saw that the print had a distinct yellow- ish tint. I figured it might be the fault of one of the chemicals, so I took a piece of paper which I knew to be good and went through the same procedure. Because the result was a good, normal enlargement, I knew that the paper I had bought at a bargain was at fault. This was the final proof needed to convince me that false economy in photography leads only to more expense and disappointment. I have learned from these experiences something that most older people already know! You get only what you pay for and nothing more when you buy some- thing. Of course, there are exceptions to every rule. A man may pay a dollar for an old broken camera and find that he has bought a museum piece, but cases like these are rare. Usually if you pay a dollar, you get a dollar's worth and nothing more. A photographer who wants good results should buy equipment which has been found satisfactory by other photog- raphers. If he buys used equipment, he should buy it in a reputable camera store, and should inspect his prospective pur- chase before buying. If he follows these rules and remembers that one gets noth- ing that he doesn't pay for, he will not go far wrong in buying his equipment. By GEORGE KIRCH, A41 Of all the things I'll ever love, A beautiful tree in a beautiful place, A red, red rose, the coo of a dove, I'll always love my mother's face. A colored leaf is a thing to see, And a thrush's song my heart enthralls. But of all the things I've ever seen, My mother's face is best of all. The sail of a schooner against the sky, Day-dreaming, while looking into space. Following sea gulls across the sky, I always see my m0ther's face. 29 MATHEMATICS By HARRY BLUM, 81 C The Human Element in Mathematics in which 1 he humanizes the use of r I HEN I reread Stephen Lea- WK cock's essay, A, B and j ,' - I letters in mathematics, I thought of the uniqueness of mathematical perspective, a subject which can lead to endless speculation. Do you shudder when you see an in- volved math problem? Of course you do. It's a natural reaction. By looking at the peculiar artihciality of math problems, however, you can enjoy your math. The unpredictability of solutions to math problems is really amazing. You start out with any number of men going upstream, downstream, and across the stream, only to find that half of them are going at the rate of a steamboat and the others either aren't moving at all or are rowing backwards. This is only a simple type of problem. You really have trouble when you have hounds chasing hares, or vice-versa-for math makes no claims that its problems are realistic and you have to consider the facts that they have different sized steps, that they take dif- ferent numbers of steps per minute, that they run in several time belts, and last but not least, that railroad trains interrupt them regularly. Even if you had problems like this in England, where fox hunters have right of way over trains, you would still have the chases interrupted for trains. The problems have no consideration for the law. Mathematicians are even worse than lawyers, for lawyers endeavor to get around the law, while mathematicians make problems which break the law. Math problems have not only a claim 30 on unpredictability, but also on impracti- cability. An interesting example is to start off on a work problem. If a man can do a job in four days, two men can do it in two days, four men in a day. Carrying this to an extreme we find that 34,560 men will do the job in a second, or to put it in another way, if everyone in the United States chipped in on the work, the job could be done the instant Congress ap- propriated money for it. The money could then be shared by all the people in the United States for everyone did a little work on it, and at the rate that our government is appropriating, everyone could get about one hundred dollars for that one job. One rush project every month would solve our economic prob- lem. Then you have problems dealing with distance. If two people travel away from each other at varying speeds, you have to spend thirty minutes in order to figure out how far apart they will be after a given length of time, and then it does you no good unless you expect to get a job figuring out Parcel Post rates for a moving mail order house whose cus- tomers live in trailers. Even then it would pay you to put on a few extra cents worth of stamps instead of wasting a half hour. The exchange of money example is a type of problem which stands out in its uselessness. Two people keep giving each other money, and after each exchange they compare their amounts of money. If you want to find out how much money they have, you must figure out some alge- braic equation and solve it. It seems to me that if these two people want to know how much money they have, it would be much easier to count it. Another type of problem about as use- less is the one involving comparison of ages, One person tells another that in a certain number of years he will be a certain number of times as old as the other person, and that in a different num- ber oif years, their ages will compare dif- ferently. It then takes some time in order to figure out how old the second person is. My experience shows me, however, that if a person wants you to know his age, he tells it to you outright and that if he doesn't want you to know his age, he keeps it a secret. fThis is especially true of women., I don't End people giv- ing their ages in such a form that one must use mathematics to get the answer. Witli all I have said against math, how- ever, I find it has its good points. Some time ago I read an item in the newspaper saying that a man was arrested for speed- ing and was acquitted without fine. He proved to the judge by mathematics that he couldn't have been speeding. He pointed out his rate and the distance it took him to stop. He then spent several hours explaining to the judge that he couldn't have stopped in that distance if he had been speeding. I sometimes won- der if it was worth his time, however. In spite of these disadvantages, how- ever, you can enjoy your math. Next time you come across a problem, think of the mental state a person would have to be in, in order to devise such a problem. Or better still, when you get any of those legal or contract problems Qyou know the kind I mean. A person leaves his fourteen children a certain number of coconut trees and tells them to divide the trees among themselves in proportion to the in- verse squares of their ages, instead of just telling them what each one should getj , just try to think of a situation where a man would want to say something in such an involved form. You, too, will eventually come to my conclusion, which is that people who make up math prob- lems seek the most impossible and im- practical situations for something that could be done simply, and you will prize your clearness of mind even more highly. L1 31 THE IMMENSE UNIVERSE By VIRGIL FICARRA, 84 f NCB AN astronomer said the sky completely, but if stars were to shine only one night every ten years, Q on that night, everybody would stop and gaze in wonder and amazement at the beauty of the heavens. Since they have no regard for the heavenly bodies, they consequently do not know or do not care to know any- thing concerning them except that which may satisfy their natural curiosity, This curiosity ranges from wanting to know simple things or causes to wanting to know what even science has been unable to answer. However, an appreciation and realization of the size of the universe is enough for the layman to begin with. 6 -'R xi S that many people ignore A The relative dimensions of the universe are of general interest, and can be shown by the excellent illustration given by Sir john Hershel, a famous English astrono- mer. He said, Place on a well-leveled field, a globe two feet in diameter which would represent the sun. The planet Mer- cury, will be represented by a grain of mustard seed on a circle, 164 feet in diameter, as its orbit. Earth would be a pea on a circle 450 feet in diameter and so on with other planets. On this same scale the nearest star would be represented by a globe two feet in diameter, 8,000 miles away on the opposite side of the earth. While this scale is hard to visual- ize, the fact that it takes light four years 960 C559 52 at the rate of 186,000 miles per second to reach the nearest star adds to the difli- culty. On account of those enormous dis- tances, astronomers began to use a new unit of measurement, in order that the distances would have some meaning. For convenience, they chose the distance light travels in one year as a unit which they called a light year. Expressed in ordinary units, a light year is equivalent to six trillion miles, a distance which is beyond human comprehension. The nearest star is four light years away while the farthest known star is over one million light years away. Many countless millions of other stars, beyond the range of our most pow- erful telescope, are at inhnitely greater distances away. As for the sizes of these stars, the sun, which is in reality a small star, has a diameter 109 times greater than earth while Antares, another star, is 450 times greater than the sun. This may give people a vague idea of the true size of the universe. Yet, when they hap- pen to glance at the sky, they don't even think of the inconceivable size of the universe, nor do they realize that they are only a minute, insignincant particle in it. On the contrary, they always think that they are the center of everything and that everything is for their benefit. A knowledge of astronomy will change the attitude and viewpoint they have in many ways. GQ?-7 HIS DECISION By CHARLES CRONIN, E51 Setting: A street in any average town. A girl is walking along on the sidewalk which is bounded on one side by a fence. This picket fence is backed by the house from which the girl has just come. A young man of about eighteen years comes running onto the stage from the right. He calls. JOE: Hey, Dot! Wait a minute! QThe girl looks back and starts to walk faster the other way. By this time the boy has caught up. They stand a little to the left of the stage.J JOE: Are you still angry with me? QDot looks at him with contempt and tosses her head.j JOE: fpersistentlyj Oh, come on, you know it wasn't my fault. DOT: fspeaking, but not looking athimj The only thing I know is that you made a date and then broke it the same night. JOE: But, Dot, it was urgent. I wanted to take you to the dance, but Bill Cobb booked that job for my band that night. He had no chance to consult me. You see, that name band had suddenly can- celled the dance date and the manage- ment chose my band. That means we have the leading band here. But listen to this, Dot. fexcitedlyj After the dance, a union oflicial approached me and said that he could get me a good job if my band joined the union and turned full professional. We're going to do it, Dot! QDot seems vastly inter- ested, until joe looks at her, and then she returns to her former cold self.J Once we get this job in New York, we're all set. No more small town corn groups. It's a big time now. Please, Dot, don't spoil it by being angry with me. You probably enjoyed yourself, anyway? Who took you? DOT: Horace Wimpel-isn't that he coming here now? Qlooks to the rightj JOE: Qdisgustedlyj Yeah, can't we sorta ditch him. The little guy gets on my nerves. DOT: Are you jealous? JOE: Well, maybe I am. DOT: fgigglesj Well, all right, Joe, I'll forgive you if you promise me one thing. fSuddenly acquires a serious look.j If you still want me to be en- gaged to be engaged to you, you'1l have to give up your saxe and band. JOE: But Dot, that's my whole future! I know that I'm going to get some place in that line. Don't make me walk out on the boys in the band. DOT: You heard me, Joe. JOE: QLooks at his pngers, which he moves as though he were playing his saxej All right, Dot, you win. DOT: I'm sorry, Joe, but after all, I never see you any more. You are either playing somewhere, or rehearsing, or arranging music or-well, you're al- ways busy, and I don't ever get a chance to see you or be with you. JOE: Qstill downheartedj Yes. fHorace appears on the scene from the rightj DOT: Hello, Horace. HORACE: Hello, Dot. Hi, Joe. JOE: Hello, Did you have a nice time at the dance? fwithout waitingj That's good. QReturns to brooding and deep thought.J HORACE: Well, as a matter of fact, I didn't. Dot didn't dance with me at all. 33 fD0t Marker him, but Horace if ig- norant of it.J All she did was to stand around the bandstand and watch your band. Or should I say watching you? JOE: Huh? fvery nmcb Jzlrprixeclj I didn't see her. HORACE: How could you? There were at least fifty others who liked your music so much that they stood around, instead of dancing and taking a chance of not hearing your saxe and band. JOE: Dot, is this- HORACE: Sure, it is. Didn't she tell you that she was going to have her uncle SQUIRRELS hire you to play at his Hotel Astor? JOE: frelievedj Oh, Dot! DOT: You know darn well that I wouldn't let you give up the one thing you love. U0 lnerrelfj Besides me, I hope. JOE: Of course! I'd never take a big chance like that. I would never give up my saxe or my band. fBolh go walking of-Jtage, arm in arm, completely obliviour of Horace, who mmdr muringj HORACE: Mm, just like the movies. fCurtainj By EDWARD DWYER, D21 :N-kfi 't ARLY ONE spring, the A grass and trees were grow- ing green on the rolling hills. The weather was ex- L. sunshiny, and I felt like walking up to the main road in our town. I walked along the paths leading to my destination quite briskly, pausing only for a second to watch a group of squirrels feeding on acorns that were lying in the path. Odd little creatures, squirrels, always running busily around, climbing trees, storing nuts, and feeding themselves. If f cellent, the day warm and P- A- K +4 Well, I reached my destination at the time the sun was almost directly above me. The cars were whizzing by and I was watching them intently when it happened. One car sideswiped another car and -the latter went straight into a wooden guard rail, which was just off the roadside., A whole line of cars stopped and it seemed as if hundreds of people came from no- I 34 where to see whether anyone was injured. Suddenly the door opened and a man stepped out. He was about forty years old, nearly six feet tall, and partially bald. He stepped around to the front of his car only to see that it had been cracked open by the guard rail. There was a look of anger and hurt in his eyes. Suddenly he turned around, looked at the crowd, and asked someone to take him to town. The people all stared at him until a young girl stepped forth and offered to drive him. The man got into her car and they drove away into a long line of cars. The people watching soon dispersed and the wreckers came to move the damaged car off the highway. I started for home. The sun was going down, a still' wind was blowing, and I walked briskly, stopping only to watch a group of squirrels eating nuts in the pathway. Strange creatures those squirrels, always eating or storing food, always hurrying around bumping into one an- 'other, and helping one another. tw s W4 T lsggdll ,iw Q EXPERIENCE: TEcH's COURSES By IRWIN BRODELL Phorognphs by DAVID GOTLIEB, VUILLIAM RIKIER, and RALPH KAISPR In Tech we have a form of education that is unique. We utilize the principles upon which en- gineering is hased and apply them to modern appara- tus with which we work. The aims of Tech's courses are to provide a source of material for industry and other activities to draw upon. The role of the engineer in our world today is one of major importance. The discipline and pattern that are followed in the courses of instruction in our school equip the hoys to enter all fields, thoroughly competent to take orders and carry them out to the hest of their ahility. The prime purpose in all of Tech's courses is to make an etiicient and accurate worker of a young man in whatever he does whenever he does it. X MECHANICAL Fitting in with the problems of today, the Mechanical Course prepares pupils for responsible positions in the manufacturing industry as well as for entrance to an Evening Engineering College. Most of the graduates choose to increase their knowledge by work- ing in the factory during the day , and attending college in the evening. czmlirvh Their training qualifies them for jobs in machine shops and in drafting rooms. The experience acquired while Working with precision tools on lathes, milling machines, boring mills, shapers, radial drills, and grinders, also on in- spection work, make them valuable to their employers. The work in Machine Design is based upon a knowledge of Strength of Materials and the application of mathematical formulae to the solution of machine parts such as gears, cams, bearings, shafts, and keys. Academic subjects are coordinated with the practical subjects. Requirements of the Course include the standard four years of English, three years of Mathematics, Economics, American History, and Science, as well as the study of detailed mechanical subjects. The responsibility of positions allotted to Tech graduates of the Mechanical Course is sufficient proof of its effectiveness. ART The Art Course is the only course in Tech that varies from the general fields of engineering using as its sub- ject matter representation and applied art. The fields of commercial advertis- ing and industrial art take most of our graduates. The boys have been thor- oughly skilled in drawing through ac- Kaitfr tual study of human and mechanical motions. Industry has compelled artists to express products or plans logically to the public so that they will sell. Much fine work has come from the students enrolled in the course. Each term Art students work for the Blueprint and you may see their work in this issue. Their excellent work may also be seen on display throughout the building. They take an active part in pageants that are presented at Tech. Art motivation is stressed so that the students will be able to express almost anything in a sketch or picture. As the course is in a specialized field, the entrants are limited and requirements strict. The trained commercial artist will find many branches of art and industry open to him. 56 ARCHITEC- TURAL The Architectural Course consisting primarily of building construction and architectural drafting enables its grad- uates to enter a held of intensely grow- ing importance. The problem of hous- ing millions employed in defense pro- jects has been left for those men with long experience in this line and the younger men with a sound knowledge Gmlich of the subject. As this great program draws upon teclmical schools and other institutions where these construction subjects are taught, Tech figures quite high in supplying such material. ln Tech the boys have the added advantage of backing up their construction and drafting work with the engineering aspect, that of principle applied to practice. The actual construction of a frame bungalow in the large Building Construction Shop is supplemented by the drafting room practice, mathematics, and strength of materials. Many graduates find their way into large drafting offices of architects and of construction firms. JI COLLEGE PREP Although not specific as to what branch of engineering it stresses, the Technical College Preparatory Course embraces a varied curriculum that su- persedes the general academic courses usually given. Aiming primarily to pre- pare boys to enter the engineering schools of universities and institutes, Gogligb it also equips them to take their places in any of numerous industries where their general adaptability may be trained to a specialty. The course requires higher mathematics including solid geometry, intermediate and advanced algebra, and trigonometry, which are applied directly to problems concerning the drawing, machine design and topographical subjects. Comple- tion of all the required subjects of English, physics, and all the shopwork, including a full program for Grade liight is required for graduation. 37 STRUCTURAL The finest example of the struc- tural world today is the city in which we live. Within the limits of New York City you may find every applica- tion of civil engineering in the sky- , scrapers, modern highways, sewers, tunnels, and bridges. Facts studied by students in Tech's Structural Course form the basis upon which this work Kaiser is built. Boys learn many of the de- tails related to the design and construction of structural members of large buildings. Many of the principles of physics involving forces and mathematics are utilized in the Structural Course. Survey- ing is an interesting part of this course. A well-remembered sight in Tech is the group of boys surveying on the hills of Fort Greene Park. The students learn to use the instruments which the surveyor uses to determine line and grade on a job in order to draw maps of the grounds. Taping, compassing, transit work, leveling, planimeter, and alidades form the main part of the courseg and from notes taken in the field with the aid of these instruments, maps are drawn. The Structural Course deals with several of the important branches of civil engineering-always at the high school level. From this training received in Tech a student can tell whether he will succeed in the work of the civil engineer. ELECTRICAL Applications of electricity, although products of years of research, have rapidly increased in our times and have become an indispensable part of our living today. Tech boys delve into all aspects of electricity, scientific, the- oretical, and practical. Electricity and its uses forms a base for advanced Riker work in the actual study of electrical apparatus. Theories of currents, cir- cuits, motors, and rectifiers are taken up. There is a course in radio. In our electrical shops appara- tus is repaired and constructed, and a study of motor winding is made. Electrical drafting includes the fundamentals of assembly drawing, circuits, and symbols. Students are equipped to enter many of the branches of commercial electricity as well as to study electrical engineering in college. As the various fields of electrical engineering such as communication, and research electrical engineering, become more and more important to us today, more boys become interested in Tech's Electrical Course and prepare to enter these fields with a sound knowledge of the fundamentals. 38 AERONAUTICAL The American aeronautical industry plays one of the most important roles in the vast scheme of National Defense. The aeronautical course of our school helps supply this vital industry with men capable of filling positions necessitating self-reli- ance and sound reasoning as well as basic train- ing. Men with these qualities quickly find them- selves in drafting rooms and engineering oiiices doing stress analysis and aerodynamic work in- stead of just remaining in the shop as ordinary workers. Freincle The aero course in this school includes a thor- ough shop training, a well-rounded study of aerodynamics, engine shop experience, a celestial navi- gation course, and aeronautical design and power laboratory. Many of the past graduates, with the knowledge obtained through this course, have acquired positions in some of the leading aircraft plants of the country. Some have gone to Glenn L. Martin in Maryland, others to the Brewster, Republic, and Grumann plants on Long Island. ln this way they and Tech are helping in the defense of our nation. CHEMICAL i The Chemical Course ranks, in theory and prac- tice, on a par with courses given in colleges and is designed to provide those boys that do not in- tend to enter a college of engineering the basic study of advanced and applied chemistry. General chemistry is required for one year in all courses but in the Chemical Course analytical chemistry and chemical engineering are taught. The high- X light of the course is the Industrial Laboratory where commercial methods of production and ap- plied chemistry are taught. The study of quantita- tive and qualitative analysis leads many into re- Kaiser search field and others into chemical engineering. The research chemist leads the way in the industrial field. The staffs of large production firms employ research chemists who continually seek to better living conditions. Graduates also find positions in munitions factories and in many phases of our defense program. 39 T igwm-LD Social Sfudies f 5 65,3 il I IT Vlachxne Sh GSE? , N, ,. ' 1. 115 '31 .4-5'ff.?f2fj'54 5fi1': -I-:.5-.rg fg 1 gg: ---': 1f'o-gel, Q ' Q -.':'.j-:1 f-'j..f.:-1-f ,A '5'.:4:-'ill --.1151-I HQ?-11'.g ' r,4'4'- - 2-29211-H 3-Rl . 'u,fu'Q .,.. , . , .1' 'f N 5 1 lc I Q! . ,-0 I lndusir-nu! ,hw . I ' MM , f3El2., 13 floor-H 1 I l is 5525? H-flxfikfw., ,fi fron? vow in EYEFSM CSWFLD T I 1, JIM SSBIPEJ , wawf,,xx H 1 N2-,'3'fv 1 X Csw: Mschcmiccxl Yvcxwigg I- W Novi uh on g' W Qowsq W is ' if , E6 4: ff SQNLW ,. gg Q- 'X Q5 vf , AKXZ: o ' 1' I H Q We Q22-- -9 , I Q-, 'E' SEY'OY'lCk'A1TiC3 X55 2 Cofaisv-ma L- U 'M fl A nn in F4 A TIME AND PLACE FOR EVERYTHING By KENNETH HOLDEN, E43, scribe ,A HERE IS a.time and place for everythrng, and this, to saurs. It is all very well for them to have roamed pri- ' meval forests, but they do not make ideal house pets, being rather larger than houses. Had Pro- fessor Chisholm realized this, and let the creatures be where they had been found, these adventures would never have oc- curred, and much trouble would have been avoided. 7 I I ,Q my mind, includes dino- for But Professor Chisholm didn't have a keen realization of anything and only thought of bringing home the perfectly preserved mummy of a Triceratops. So it was that one morning there ar- rived at the door of his laboratory a gi- gantic case of what appeared to be ice, under which labored a truck, and atop which perched the professor, returned from some foolish foreign place. He was not a particularly brilliant man, but just now he showed an explosive exuberance. Lafayette, we are here! Come, my loyal assisters, unload this truck off the case and I shall show you the only, the one and only specimen of a complete Triceratops ! Dr. Adrian, the other assistant, and I then did as he bid and unloaded the truck from its case. Get the axes now, my lads, and we shall disencumber the glorious carcass of its disgraceful ice pack. There was a second mistake. Was the professor willing to leave well enough alone, and be content with merely look- 42 ing at the beast through the ice? No, he must needs defrost it, for no good rea- son, and thereby destroy a tranquillity which had existed for ages. However, be that as it may. We fetched the axes and soon were at work on the ice, aided by the heat which soon had rivulets of water cascading down all sides. A storm came up when we were half done and we moved our scene of opera- tions into a large barn. And now a strange thing happened. I was standing under a large bone neck- piece which formed the armor of the animal, when there came an extraordinary clap of thunder and the barn was filled with lightning, And two miracles OC- curred. I survived, undamaged, though the head of the axe melted, as had all the protective ice. Then the neck on which I was standing swayed, and the dead creature stood up, knocking down the now flaming barn. I lost my balance but managed to clap a hand on the top of the neckpiece and hang on. Apparently the flames had frightened the dinosaur, for giving a thunderous snort he started off at a run. How he had revived, I didn't know. Perhaps he had been en- joying a beauty nap, in which case it didn't do much good. Maybe the light- ning had something to do with it. At any rate I was clinging to his neck, not caring how he had revived. I espied tlie pro- fessor and Dr. Adrian racing after me futilely and was struck with a brilliant idea. Tearing the leaves from my note- book I scribbled a note on each of them and flung them to my pursuers. The thing I was riding had no inten- tion of slowing down. He hit a barn and destroyed it, annihilating the livestock. He crossed a highway and overturned a parked auto, creating a tie-up. On reach- ing a town he raced up the main street, damaging the asphalt, a few shop win- dows and a few pedestrians. Soon, be- cause of all this, there was a procession of police cars screaming after the Tricer- atops -frightening him worse - but all had sense enough not to get too close to the animated volcano. Finally the auto containing the Pro- fessor and Adrian appeared. I waved to them, and with a terrific burst of speed they overtook me and tossed me a cable which I had wanted. You see there are two long horns which protrude like pipes from the front of a hood of a Triceratops. Their appearance had suggested to me handle bars so I, conceiving the idea of passing a pair of reins from them, had asked for a stout anchor cable. I now proceeded to carry out my plan and, after several attempts lassoed both horns. I then bore down on them with all my weight. The results were surpris- ing. Either the sudden jerk and conse- quent lifting of the head stopped the beast or the thought that he was being attacked from the front did it. He came to a violent stop, and I was flung clear over his head, landing painfully in front of him. There was now a terrific hullabaloo over the damage wrought, so we were again in the laboratory before I had a chance to inquire of the Prof: What are you going to do with this animated juggernaut? Hm ? the professor hummed, an astonished look on his face. Apparently he had never considered the question. He'll have quite a considerable feed bill, you know, I added. What were you going to do with the carcass ? asked Dr. Adrian. Why, sell it or exhibit it, replied the professor with a dull frown. Then we'll do the same with the animal. Which we did. I had been right, though, about the feed. Luckily the mon- ster didn't eat meat, but he could-and did-eat anything else conceivably edible. To eat sufficient food, he had to keep at it all day, even while being exhibited. The money spent for feed took nearly all we made and the business barely kept the dinosaur alive. Of course the professor could never bring himself to sell his wonder. One morning we noticed a sluggish- ness that had come over the animal. Being that way was his usual condition, but to- day he was too lazy even to eat. We realized this must be very serious and called a brigade of veterinarians. It soon developed that our Tricer, as we called him, had caught a cold. The life of an exhibit had been rather hard on a beast like Tricer. People and scientists had been forever wanting to crawl over him, which would have worn his upholstery out, or else they were getting in his feed trough or trying to give him a diet. There were even those who wanted to take a cross- section. Therefore we weren't too sad when the Triceratops died. What to do with the corpse was an- other problem. To bury him would have required an excavation the size of an apartment house foundation, and to pre- serve him would have required tons of ice daily. This last thought resulted in the idea of sending him back where he came from. So it was that the next spring the pro- fessor took him back to the Arctic, where, had he had any sense, he would have left the dinosaur in the first place. 45 A DOGYS LIFE By CHARLES JONES, C61 K tis HE SNOOZED in the sun on the back porch, i ls Spotty thought, Well, you y ' live and learn. Yes, I M Emi,-lf, guess I've learned about all 1 there is to know. I know lots of things, such as: 'Don't track mud into the house after you've taken a roll in the dirt. Don't eat soap, it makes you sick. Don't bark at strangers. Leave the chickens alone!' Most of these items were made rules so that people could use the expression 'a dog's life.' All fun was taken away from a nice, self'respecting puppy. 'Don't chew this. Don't chew that.' Why what else is there to do? Why can't human beings ?n l leave us alone just then a strange assortment of fur, legs, and tail came around the corner. The kitten was young, even younger than Spotty. She was far away from home in the basket ten feet away. Spotty looked up and sniffed. He didn't like that scent somehow, He walked over to the kitten warily. Then he growled. It wasn't loud, but it was enough to frighten the kitten. The kitten turned and scrambled to safety FOR YOU into the basket. Spotty, having driven off the enemy, was not content. He fol- lowed. This was something to enliven his afternoon. He peeked into the basket. There were five sprawling forms. The enterprising miss who had had her ad- venture with him was in the corner. Spotty dipped his nose at one of them. It squeaked! He continued to nose the kitten around the basket and was having a wonderful time-until the cat came. Somehow, when Spotty looked up from the kitten into those eyes, he didn't feel well. It was like the time he had eaten the soap. The cat lunged, and Spotty ran away, followed by this screeching mass of claws and teeth. He limped up the porch stairs, panting, glad that he was in peace and quiet. He crawled to his sunny spot and flopped down, his mauled nose between his paws. Well, he'd learned something more: Don't play with cats. He would have a hard time remembering all those rules. A dog's life, that's what I'm leading. He glanced at his lacerated tail. Oh, well, you live and learn, went to sleep. and then he By FRANCIS THOMPSON, C51 When everything goes crooked, And seems inclined to rile, Don't kick, nor fuss, nor fidget, just--you-smile! lt's hard to learn the lesson, But learn it if you'd win, When people tease and pester, Iustlyouigrin ! 44 When someone tries to do you, By taking more than half, Be patient, firm, and pleasant just-you-laugh! But if you find you're stuffy, fSometimes, of course, you willy And cannot smile, nor grin, nor laugh, just-keep--still ! THE THREE WORDS By EPHRAIM SCHAEFER, D41, Scribe OLD, BLEAK, and wintry was the morning, and all of Midvale were walking or riding here and there, with faces contorted by the biting wind. Everybody was freezing from the cold, erdthat is every- body except jim Darling. His face stood out like a watchman's searchlight on a dark night. But, of course, there was ample reason for his abounding happi- ness. Polly had spoken the three words he'd been trying to make her say ever since they'd met a month ago. Now he need not go home from work at night with a determined look on his face and promising himself that he would do it this time. He'd done it and was happy. Finally he reached the office and skipped up the stairs to work. All day long he sat at his desk, but his mind was not on his numbers. He wanted to get home and hear Polly speak those words again. As hour after hour passed, jim the people in the fair town Darling grew restless, and when six o'clock approached, he could hardly keep his eyes off the clock in the oflice. At last he was dismissed for the day. Now, he thought as he hurried home, I shall hear those words again. How people laughed at rne. I showed them! Then he thought with delight what his friends had told him. You'll never make her speak to you, one cynic had said. Another had said that he was foolish to waste his time. Give up, and be satisfied with having her around. Others, too, had spoken along the same pattern, but in spite of their ridicule he had won. Now he was rushing home to make sure she hadn't forgotten, How could she forget? Hadn't he drummed the words into her mind re- peatedly? Abruptly this new chain of thoughts was stopped as he reached the house. I-Ie rushed up the stairs taking out his keys as he climbed. Opening the door he burst into the room and confronted her. In a low commanding voice he said, Polly, repeat what you said this morning. Re- member? Polly fluttered awhile and then squawked: Awk, Polly wanna cracker, Awk. 45 SCIENCE IN SPORTS By WILLIAM G. MCCORMICK, ss ERE'S the windup . . . the pitch . . . the batter takes . . . it was a mighty close one, but there can be no argument, as the umpire is always right I What? Impossible! bawls a Brooklyn fan. No, even this will soon be made pos- sible, with the aid of never-fail electric- eye umpire to judge balls and strikes. The ball will cut electric eye beams, and immediately on the scoreboard will flash the little tin box umpire's undebatable verdict. just think . . . no more pop- bottles hurtling through the air . . . no more fans howling Kill da ump! . . . no more fights between players on the field. Why, what a sissified game baseball would become! I have a sneaking sus- picion that one-half of the Dodgers' box-office appeal lies in the great game they play, and the other fand most im- portantj half, the many fights on the field. And where would the Dodgers be if they couldn't kill an ump every once in a while? Of course, there are literally hundreds of scientific improvements in the world of sports that will really increase the en- joyment of the game, and improve the actual playing and the playing conditions. High-speed repetitive-flash cameras can take as many as 120 successive photo- graphs of your motions as you go through a single sequence of swinging a golf club, throwing a baseball or bowling ball. By studying these pictures you can easily tell where your faults lie, and where improve- ment is needed. Baseball pitchers can see whether their fast ball is really fast, by means of a photo-electric meter, which actually measures the bullet-like speed of 46 the ball. In fact, two leading magazines have almost conclusively proven, with the aid of the afore-mentioned camera, that those outcurves, incurves, screwballs, or what have you, that batters have been swinging at for many decades, just sim- ply don't curve. lt's all an optical illusion, they say, and they can prove it. Next they'll be telling us that the bat curves around the ball! Next comes the lazy sportsman's sec- tion. Science can make the hardest, most tiring game so easy that even a child can do it. For the lazy golfer, one manu- facturer makes a special motor-scooter just for chasing the ball around a course! One printer got a bright idea and made paper tees with advertising on them, which makes them so inexpensive that they can be left where they lie, after the tee-off, by the super-lazy golfer who finds it too much strain to bend over. Science can also do the opposite, and make sports more exciting. Some people find it bad enough to stay upright on a surfboard, skimming over the tops of the breakers, but imagine a surfboard with an oilsilk sail to make the board go two to three times faster! People usually think of polo as a fast moving game, with no need for any pep- ping up. But now, the players are using motorscooters instead of horses, to chase the pill around. These iron steeds never tire, can be maneuvered more easily, and the motors can be stepped up to make the scooters go much faster than old Dobbin ever dreamed of going. So, whether you play baseball, polo, golf, or whether you just watch, you will find science in sports just ahead of you, changing the game every day in every way. TECH SPORTS Edited By MEL POSIN Photography By DAVID GOTLIEB, XWILLIAM RIKER, and RALPH KAISER Of all the ways of gaining prohtahle experience during a high school course, active participation in the sports program of that school is perhaps the easi- est and most enjoyahle way. A greater award awaits a player than his final letter. In having played on the learn he has gained experiencef-experience whereby he has acquired the qualities of sportsmanship, of per- severance, of cooperation, and of loyaltyfcharacter- istics necessary to successful living. Rikvr FOOTBALL Riker Bedlam bursts loose among the Tech fans as Cassidy smashes over from the one-yard line for a touchdown in the Tech-Tilden game. After being held scoreless for two consecutive games, it appears as if the team is on the verge of victory. Suddenly a hush falls over the stands. The referee has signaled for the ball on the one-yard line. One-two-three-four- five yards he paces off against Tech. Offside penalty. From here, although the team tries valiantly, they fail to produce a score and the game ends in a deadlock. This exemplifies but one of the many hard breaks suffered by the gridironers this season. Starting off with a 13 to 0 victory over jeffer- son, the Tech warriors had visions of another great season, but these visions were sadly dis- sipated by a powerful Erasmus aggregation by a score of 27 to 0. The final blow fell when a much heavier Lincoln eleven virtually threw our team backwards. Scoring practically at will, the Honest Alves rolled up a 52 to 0 count. Not daunted by this lopsided score, the team met Tilden the following Saturday and pro- ceeded to fight them to a standstill. Hope again soared high, but again it was sadly shattered by a loss of 44 to 0 to Boys High. However, school spirit rose and tension filled the air the next week as Tech was to meet her arch- enemy, Manual, the school that a Tech football team has yet to beat. After a game which featured hard blocking, tackling, and running throughout, the final score was Tech 6, Manual 13. The final game of the season was played against Adams on Thanksgiving Day. Again heavily outweighed, the Tech gridiron gladia- 48 tors fought a valiant but unsuccessful battle, losing 27-0. The heavily unbalanced scores seem to point to a weak and ineffectual team. However, this is not the case. Bad breaks during games and a long list of injuries kept the team from proving their real ability. Among the men deserving special recogni- tion because of their fine playing are Warren Kimmerle and joe Cassidy, whose hard running and passing kept the team in the game, Don Vesley, whose fine punting kept the opposition in hot water, and Rosario Gulizia, who called the signals from the quarterback position. Bul- warks on the defense were Skiliington at center, co-captain John Miller at tackle, and end Ed O'Beid. Attention should also be given to Bill Lunoe and Ed Haltenhoif, who started the season as mainstays of the team, but who, through injuries, were forced to leave early during the term. PING PONG The Ping Pong team, under the direction of Coach Seideman, has been practicing for the past few weeks in the upstairs gym. As there is no league, the team has to schedule its own games and therefore a definite schedule is not possible. The team sends invitations to other schools who if they accept them, come here to play and then invite us for a return engage- ment at their school. The team, composed of veterans Steiker, Wolf, Schwartz, Burstein, and Stone, appear to have a championship combination as indicated by the results of several of their matches. Riker HOCKEY Early this term it was doubtful whether a P.S.A.L. hockey schedule could be arranged as two high schools had dropped the activity. This lowered the number of teams entered below five, the number necessary to form a league. Plans drawn up to include private schools were not accepted, and it appeared as if no games were possible. However, the team organized and began practice, and was fortu- nate that the other schools reconsidered drop- ping from the league, with the result that the league continued to exist. The team opened the season on Friday, N0- vember 14, at the Brooklyn Ice Palace. Al- though favored before the game, the pucksters lost to an underrated Manual sextet by a score of 2 to 1. Even in losing, however, the team showed itself a powerful defensive club and one likely to give the league trouble in later games. On the forward wall of the team will be Rannow, Minor, and Louisg the defense will be composed of Captain Ed Haltenhoff and O'Heidg and the net-minding duties will rest on the shoulders of Angus. Riker Ruler CROSS COUNTRY As the Tech Cross Country Team began com- ing in during their heat in the City Champion- ship Meet held on September 27, it was noticed that Gavin, one of the mainstays of this term's team, was absent from among the leaders. He later came limping in, a sorry twenty-third, but he had ample reason. He had lost a shoe dur- ing the race and had run over a mile on rocky uneven territory with a bare foot-a fact which certainly points out the fight and tenacity of Tech athletes. The team closed out another very successful season by placing Hfth in both the statewide and city championships and by capturing Bor- ough of Brooklyn honors. Undefeated in any dual meet, the team entered the Borough meet with high hopes of repeating last year's per- formance of setting a new low in team scoring. Paced by Captain Bert Liss, the team tied the record of 24 points set by themselves the pre- vious year. Following this meet, the final City Championship meet was held. Again paced by Captain Liss, the team finished fifth, and nar- rowly missed finishing in a higher position. In the final Interscholastic Meet, the Everett T. Grout Memorial Cross Country Run, held at Schenectady, New York, the team, competing against the best runners of the state, placed fifth, and so closed a fine season. As previously mentioned, Bert Liss, captain, played the starrin role in these meets. Other members of the team were jerry Alperstein, john Green, jack Fisher, Robert Gavin, Tom Feeley, Hans Hinz, and Jerry Garguilo. 49 i l Riker BASKETBALL Techs hopes for another highly successful season were somewhat dispelled by a fast and straight-shooting Lane five by a score of 51 to 30 in our lower gym on Tuesday, November 18. Noticeably absent from our quintet were Lanky Paul Yesawich, high-scoring center, and Big Red Tellefson, outstanding guard of last yea1 s team. Although the team appeared to suffer from a bad case of nervousness in the first half, they seemed to settle down during the remainder of the game. As the nervousness supposedly came from the team's relative inex- perience and as we have four more games yet to play before the official P.S.A.L. season gets under way, we can still look forward to a fairly good season. Only one veteran of last year's squad re- mains, Nick Sharko, guard of last year's varsity quintet, who captains this term's team from the same position. Competing for the other posi- tions are Rubel, Small, Millman, Invar, Sturm, Marmorel-r, and Casper. 50 SWIMMING As many of the swimming coaches through- out the city were dismissed early this season, there will be no official P.S.A.L. tournaments during the coming term. Tech's own mermen suffered from this ruling, as without a coach they couldn't practice. However, later in the term new swimming teachers were secured, and the team began to take shape. To date, they have participated in a few un- important dual meets in which they have shown themselves to be fairly powerful. The team is composed mainly of veterans of last year's squad. McMahon, captain, Thuliot, Schwartzer, Horst, Dietz, and Zwirn are the free-stylersg breast-strokers are co-captain Wair- shauer and Kessler, back-stroking will be Ge- scheidt and Ormond, while on the board will be Callahan. Kaiser RIFLE TEAM The Rifle Team, under the able guidance of Coach Shary, expects to go places this term. No dual meets are scheduled as yet, although the team has had several offers from other schools to participate in some. However, the team is, at present, devoting most of their time to practice for the coming Stock Exchange meet in which they hope to sustain Tech's excellent record there. Following this meet, which the team has been given an excellent chance to win, they will participate in several dual meets with other schools till the end of the term. Captain of the sharpshooters is Rutkin, while the rest of the team, composed mainly of veterans, con- sists of Kilarjian, johnson, Minisy, Reville, Willizlms, and Manager Wolff. INTRAMURAL SPORTS Through the cooperation of the members of the Health Education Department and various other members of the faculty, Tech has long been able to boast of one of the most com- plete intramural programs in the city. We have had in Tech, at one time or another, intramural soft-ball, ping-pong, swimming, basketball, handball, and bowling. The two main events on the intramural sports calendar this term were handball and bowling. Handball is handled by the Health Education Department. Through a series of eliminations, a class team eventually reaches the Finals after which, if they are victorious, they receive a Brooklyn Technical Intramural letter. The method chosen in intramural bowling is much more interesting. Under the direction of Mr. Balsam, a call was sent out asking all those interested in participating in the sport to report. Then they were divided up into five- man teams, each team taking as a name the name of a metal such as Platinum, Nickel, etc. Bowling between teams has begun and will continue throughout the term. At the end of the term, awards are made to the outstanding teams and players. A good intramural sports program benefits the school by giving an opportunity to play to boys who love the game, but whose lack of natural ability prohibits their participation on varsity squads. lt provides these boys with the opportunity to develop, through experience, those qualities of sportsmanship so essential to good citizenship and successful living. Gotlieb Riker BOWLING Bowling, although one of the youngest of Tech sports, is one of the most popular activi- ties, as evidenced by the large turnouts when a new call for candidates is issued. Because many schools do not have bowling listed among their extra-curricular activities, there is no in- terschool league, a fact which makes it hard for the team to schedule games. Nevertheless, a varsity squad has been organized around Kos- tyrka, Rudy, Tornquist, and Koeritz, veterans of last year's team. Highlighting this year's bowling schedule will be two matches: first, the varsity-faculty match, in which the chief aim of the varsity squad will be to avenge their ignoble two-pin setback by the faculty last year, and secondly, a father-and-son match between Technites and their athletically inclined fathers, which will probably be more fun than an exhibition of skill. 51 THE BLUEPRINT EDITORIAL STAFF EDITOR: Herbert F. Lowe. ASSISTANT EDITORS: Calman Ambrosy, Irwin Brodell, joseph Farley, Kenneth Holden, John Hoops, Irwin Lichtenstein, Ronald Pond, Melvin Posin, Robert Roeloffs, John Schepp, Robert Search. PHOTOGRAPHY STAFF: David Gotlieb, Ralph Kaiser, William Riker. BUSINESS STAFF: Peter DeVasto, Anthony Daguanno, Lester Kravitz, William Lyons, Robert Mason, Irving Mortin, Robert Rollins, William Schneider, David Wallace, Clifford Weir, Lester Zvekan. TECHNICAL: The Marlin Printing Co., Printingg Scientific Engraving Co., Engraving: The Arthur Studios, Parlmilr. BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Chairman, Miss Boole: Literary-Mrs. Feldschuh, Mrs. Greenberg, Misses Bennett, Buck, Coleman, Strong, Messrs. Flaumenhaft, Gold, and Seidemang Art-Mrs. Nicol: Business-Mr. Gregor. THE THEME The theme of this issue of the Blueprint is EXPERIENCE. Between the covers are tales of experience of the past, of the present and of the future. The Making of America is the most outstanding example in our literary section. It relates the experiences of the forerunners, the builders, and the protectors of democracy. In Step with the Theme by john Schepp, contains the experiences of those who will soon be active citizens of our democracy. The essay Challenge Accepted hints of experiences mankind will some day have. The pictorial section of Course Experiences is designed to start a train of thought in your mind. For the senior it will bring memories of whirling discs and volumes of notes. For the freshman it will stimulate conjectures as to what experiences the future will hold. Experience is the best teacher. Man is the best pupil. That is why he has risen to his present height. It is apparent in our complex world that almost everything we do is attempted on the advice of somone else's experience. just as reasonable is it for us to assume that posterity will form its decision and act on the authority of our experiences. We might liken Life to a book that is being lwritten, the name of which is Experience. You and I are writing our chapter while reading another. Men of the future will read ours. It would seem then that we have a charge to fullillg that is, we must guide our experiences insofar as possible to make each chapter better than the succeeding one. Man has built a promising civilization on a foundation of experience and with a capstone of achievement. The men of Tech will not forsake their heritage. I. B. 52 THE COVER A Most of us have heard the saying, You can't tell a book by its cover. And most of us realize that every rule has an exception. We contend that the Blueprint is that exception. You will notice that the front cover symbolizes the culmination of four years of study in one of the world's finest polytechnic high schools. As it should be, youth is rushing forth into life with face smiling and heart confident. The picture seems to say, We are youth and we are ready to meet any challenge the world may offer. On the back of the magazine we Seniors see ourselves as we were four years ago. Our eight terms here have offered us a wealth of experiences, some good and some bad. However, the worst have been but ephemeral while the triumphs do and shall exist timeless -in our memories. The students who modeled for our two remarkable photographs represent each of the senior and each of the freshman prefect classes. For the actual photographic work we take our hats off to Mr. F. M. Schwartz of the Mechanical Drawing Department who did such a splendid job and for the typographical design we make another bow to Mr. Truesdell. If our inside material lives up to the standard set by the cover, all the efforts of the staff will have been properly rewarded. H. F. L. THE TYPE FACE We are in a technical school. Let's not take so many things for granted. We can begin right now by noticing the type in which the bulk of the Blueprint material is set. It is called Garamond, after its designer Claude Garamond, who lived in the 16th Century. just think, this same type face has been appearing in printed matter and has survived the criticisms of printers for four centuries. An exciting history has accompanied Garamond type into the New World. In 1642 Cardinal Richelieu in his conquest of Sedan obtained the type and took it to the Imprimerie Royale which was the most important printing center in the world. Today, Garamond type enjoys popularity just as widespread as it did in that finest period of French printing. Printers everywhere agree that it is among the most readable of type faces in existence. Then too, there is the display type we use for titles and such, called Stymie. This has been derived from an old Egyptian design, but it is far removed from its crude ancestors. It is now a true contemporary type, reflective of our modern times just as Garamond is reflective of 16th Century France. Stymie has a simplicity of functional form which, added to its style-smartness, makes it useful for a wide variety of advertising and com- mercial printing. Perhaps you've never noticed, but now you should! All type does not look alike. Some printed matter is harder to read than others. Types can be handsome or ugly, light or dark, large or small, As technical students we should all be aware of this. Look- and see. I. L. 53 SPECIALIZATION and COOPERATION Speriuliztztion and Cooperation. They run hand in hand like 'Arry and 'Arriet. Even from the beginning, groups of people have specialized and become skillful in some held of endeavor, and through cooperation they have made their productive capacity reach even the highest requirements. Without specialization and cooperation, life as we know it today would be impossible. How could we have our bread if we had to grow the wheat, mill the grain, and bake the loaf ourselves? We might have it. But would we also be able to have any clothes, cars, or radios if we had to make all these things alone? The answer is obvious. In 1776 Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nationr laid down the first element of mass production when he stated the principle of the division of labor-that men must divide their efforts and Jpeciulize in one part of an industry in order to produce the most possible. One man makes the nut, another the bolt, and still a third tightens the two together. It can be seen that even though specialization exists, it is only due to the cooperative efforts of the three men that the finished product is made. Let us show how the principles of cooperation and specialization work in something close at hand--in the production of the Blueprint. In the Blueprint, one can Hnd fif he looksj photographs, drawings, stories, essays, and contributions by various clubs. Surely, it is obvious that a great deal of specialization went into the construction of this publication. The Art Staff decorated and designed layouts for poems and stories. The Print Shop designed the typographical layouts. The Photography Staff took pictures of the various teams and activities. All of these departments require skill and a definite technical knowledge of their respective subjects. The Scribes, the Radio Script Club, and the Drama Course contributed the various types of literature in which they specialize. Specihc staffs direct the distribution and sale of the finished product. fPrinting is done outside of the school.j And last, but far from least, we have the students themselves whose literary efforts constitute the body of the Blueprint. But even with all these various agencies, the Blueprint would come to naught if it were not for the element of cooperation. The job of organizing the various agencies into one cooperative body falls to the Editorial Staff which might be called the entrepreneur of the Blueprint. With the aid of Directors it selects manuscripts, writes editorials, and, in general, sews the Blueprint together. Throughtout the entire production, the specialists cooperate. Even the members of the staffs are broken up into specialized bodies. If this were not so, the many brains would be knocking each other into whirlpools of confusion and inefficiency, And so it is throughout life-specialization and cooperation enter into every field of endeavor. Specialization and Cooperation insure success and efficiency. R. S. THANKS ARE DUE For the initial letters and decorative designs in this Blueprint, we are indebted to the following artists: William Ahrens of B65, Jay Anderson of D63, Eugene Blatz of 84, Harold Boye of D61, George Cody of D62, Stanley Flakowicz of D63, George Knepple of A52, Robert McCarthy of 75, Frank Mirrione of B62, joseph Munsch of F43, Allen Nelson of 75, john Nobriga of D62, john Taffner of 75, Francis Thompson of C51, Edward Tucker of B52, Meyer Tuckschneider of F61, John White of 75, and Christopher Zajic of 75. 54 ll -lg-Tlwe Seniors :f-N- lr1'l'lni.s'l'fme of 5'l'res5 IT will lae well for us To ponder: M swam. -rec:-anocoqv roar:-:UR 'ru-le. WELFARE. OF ALL. PEOPLE. OR ONLY A PART? H -l-lne answer' 'lo This queslfon is loelng fouglwl oul' in pl-lysical and spirilual l:a'l'l'lefl'elds Tlae worlcl over, as well as fn all schools of Technology, 1nalusTrial laboralorles, and faclorles. As Americans we are cledicalecl To Tlme welfare ofall f-v lnence American Teclwnology needs musl' be aleclwnology ofwelfare for all . We do nal' see eye To eye willw 'llnose wlvo woo malfe race,creecl, or color a prerequfslle. Qmember 'llmls as you 'lake your slalfons ln f Info Tlae laaTl'le o ' o I lol CLASS OF JANUARY, 1942 President Vice-President JOSEPH A. CEONZO C. EDWIN HALTENHOFF 537 Rogers Avenue 8902 Colonial Road Electrical Cgufge, Math Help Squad, Structural Course. Captain of Hockey T, Service Medalg Stage Electrical Team for 3 years, Sweater T, Cham- Repair Squadg Radio Clubg Televi- pionshrp Team 1938, Gold Charm, sion Clubg Math., English, I. P., and Silver' Medal, All-Scholastic Team, History Certificates, Honor Rollg AU'C1fY Team? Foorball, TL Tfilfk Arista.-Businessg Evening College. Team, Tl P1'C5id6f1f Of G-O-S G0- Oflice Squad, Tg I. P., Math., and F. Dr. Certificates.-Lehigh University. SCCICIHIY Treasurer DONALD J. BATES 8909 1863, Street LAWRENCE c. LARSON H0lliS, L- I' 934 80th Street Electrical Course. Golf Team, Tg Lurlqhwom Slluafill Television Clubg Electrical Course. Library Squad, Service Squad, Secretary, Capt., Hon- BTHS. Service S uad Mod T. I P orary Capt., T, School Service C. . ' q T ' ' ' Medal 1. P., Math., Hist., Civics, MSS, F- Dfw Engllshi and Math' English Certificates.-Businessg Eve- Ceff15C2feSZ HOUOF RON--Bl1Sifl6SSL ning College- Evening College. 56 HAROLD A. ABRAMS 91 Wloodruff Avenue College Preparatory Course. General Office Squad, T, Longfellows, T, Color Guard, Captain, I. P., Math., and English Certificates, Honor Roll. -N. Y. U. ALFRED J. ADINOLFI 100 Gatling Place Mechanical Course. Track Squad, Intramural Handball, Popular Sci- ence, Popular Mechanics Salesman.- Business. KENNETH GEORGE ALBRIGHT 8415 107th Avenue Ozone Park, L. I. Architectural Course. Library Squad, Lockerroom Squad , Lunchroom Squad, Service Squad, Maj. T, I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Cooper Un- ion School of Art. EUGENE F. X. ALBRO 107-24 124th St. Richmond Hill, L. I. Chemical Course. Intramurals, Stage Crew, BTHS, S.O.S., I. P. Office Squad, T, Lunchroom Squad, So- cial Studies Otlice Squad, Mod. T, Mimeograph Squad, Locker Guard, Chem. Society, Power Laboratory Squad.-Business, Evening College. HQ venue cal Course. Orch., T, Band, od. T, Dance Orch., Mod. T, Har- monica Club, BTHS, Music Dept. Award, I. P., Math., and English Certificates.-Business, Evening Coll. lI,LIAM www ANDREW ALEKSUK 556 Bristol Street Structural Course. S.O.S. Squad, I. P. and F. Dr. Certilicates.-Georgia Tech. RALPH j. ALLIEGRO 526 Avenue X College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, T, Captain, Honor Roll, I. P., Civics, and Math. Certificates.- Brooklyn Polytechnic. ROBERT H. ANDERSON 133-61 245th Street Rosedale, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Library Squad, BTHS, Math. Certificate.- Alfred University. WILLIAM A. ANDERSON 721 55rd Street Electrical Course. Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Business. LEONARD ANDORS 2020 Avenue X College Preparatory Course. Hand- ball, BTHS, Survey, Reporter, T, S.O.S., Jr. Lieut., T, Pool Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., and History Cer- tificates.-Business, N.Y.U., Evening. KENNETH J. ANHALT 135-05 227th Street Laurelton, L. I. Electrical Course. Track Team, Math. Otlice Squad, BTHS, Library Squad, BTHS, History Club, I. P. Certifi- cates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. EDWARD ASHRAWY 736 46th Street Art Course. Squad Leaders' Club, Blueprint Art Editor, Geom. Cover Contest Winner, Mall: Student Cover Contest Winner, G.O. Poster Con- test, 3rd Prize, Allied Arts Club, Mod. T, Poster Club, F. Dr. and Math. Certificates.-Pratt Institute. BENJAMIN BABITZ 2149 72nd Street Mechanical Course. Library Squad, Mod. T, I. P. and Math. Certificates. -Business, Evening College. HANS BAKKE 47 Montgomery Street Valley Stream, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Locker- room Squad, BTHS, Sales Bureau, T, Stage Crew Manager, T, Mimeo- graph, BTHS, Pool Squad, BTHS, Medical Office Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. 57 SALVATORE E. BAMBARA 394 Second Street Chemical Course. Chemical Society, Motion Picture Booth Squad, Audi- torium Acoustics Squadg Public Ad- dress Squad, Electrical Preparation Room Squad, Mathematics, English, I. P., History, Civics, and F. Dr. Certificates, Arista.-Cooper Union. ANTHONY T. BANKS 717 Hendrix Street Structural Course. I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Business, Evening Coll. WILLIAM F. BARBALICH 440 East 145th Street Bronx, N. Y. Electrical Course. Intramural Swim- ming, Gold Medal, Radio Script Club, Service Squad, T, Television Club, Math., English, Civics, and History Certificates.-Brooklyn Poly- technic. ARMAND J. BARONE 26 Belvidere Street College Preparatory Course. Floor Managers' Squad, BTHSg Stamp Club, I. P. and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll. -- Business, Evening College. JACK BAROUCH 2053 59th Street Chemical Course. Baseball, Basket- ball Intramurals, BTI, I. P., Civics, Math., and English Certificates. - University of Southern California. DONALD I.. F. BARRETT 179-10 Anderson Road St. Albans, L. I. Aero. Course. Library Squad, BTHS, Blueprint Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, Assistant Class Treasurer, jr. Book Club, Math., I. P., and History Certificates. -- Business, Evening College. LAWRENCE E. BEHR 135-07 234th Place Laurelton, Queens Electrical Course. Rilie Team, Ser- vice Squad, Glee Club, BTHSQ I. P., English, History, Civics Certificates. -Pratt Institute. 58 RICHARD A. BEHRENS 3706 Quentin Road College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Baseball, Basketball, Swim- ming, Bronze Medal, G.O. Squad, Switchboard, T, Sales Bureau, Mod. T, Participation in Clarirlmar Carol, S.O.S., Math., History, I. P., and Civics Certificates. - Oswego State Normal School. ARNOLD C. BENAS 101-35 94th Street Ozone Park, Qcueens Electrical Course. Trac Team, Mod. T, Pool Squad iLife Guardj, T, General Office Squad, T, Intermedi- ate Band, BTHS, Fife, Drum and Bugle Corps, BTHS, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. ERIC N. BENSON 92 Gelston Avenue Structural Course. I. P., Math., and F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. NATHAN S. BERGER 65-10 Fresh Pond Road Ridgewood, Brooklyn Electrical Course.-Business. LOUIS L. BERKMAN 2809 West 25th Street Mechanical Course. Handball Team, BTHS, Intramural Basketball, BTI, Lunchroom Squad, Pool Squad, Ser- vice Squad, Mod. T, Locker Guard, Tech Science Bulletin, Chemical Club, I. P. and Civics Certificates. -Business, Evening College. MURRAY BERMAN 6 Hampton Court College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Swimmingg Ping Pong, Bas- ketball, Chemistry Office Squad, S.O.S., History CertiHcate, Honor Roll.-Cooper Union. ALBERT B. BERNAUER S986 216th Street Queens Village, I., I. Electrical Course. Bowling Squad, Library Squad, T, Television Club, Radio Club, Current Events Club, Math. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. FRED F. BERNSTEIN 132-17 101st Avenue Richmond Hill, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Floor Managers' Squad, Print Shop Squad, I. P., Math., Civics, F. Dr. Certifi- cates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. STANLEY BERNSTEIN 1630 West 12th Street College Preparatory Course. Track Team, BTHS, Hygiene Office Squad, President, T, Public Speaking Soci- ety, Survey Reporter, T, Current Events Club, Publicity Director, Lunchroom Squad, Biology Club, I. P., Math., English, F. Dr., and History Certificates, Honor Roll.- Cooper Union. MORRIS BERRIDGE 36 Grant Avenue College Preparatory Course. S.O.S., Jr. Lt., T, I. P. and Civics Certifi- cates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. JOHN J. BERTORELLI 107-35 1I5Il'l Street Richmond Hill, I.. I. Art Course. Rifie Team, BTHS, Blue- print Art Staff, Applied Arts Squad, Muzhematirr Szudenz Cover Design Contest Winner, Math., I. P., F. Dr., and Art Certificates.-Pratt Institute. THEODORE J. BEYSENS 1241 Third Avenue New York City Mechanical Course. Intramural Track, Swimming, Service Squad, BTHS, Allied Arts Club, BTHS, Strength of Materials Squad, Blueprint Squad, Lunchroom Squad, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates.-Business. ARTHUR T. BIEHL 121-O8 95th Avenue Richmond Hill, L. I. Electrical Course. Squad Leaders' Club, BTHS, I. P., F. Dr., and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Brooklyn Polytechnic Evening Coll. JOHN P. BIERSCHENK, JR. 582 East 35th Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling Squad, Swimming Intramurals, Cam- era Club, Lunchroom Service Squad, Math., English, Civics, I. P., F. Dr., History Certificates, Honor Roll.- Brooklyn Polytechnic. PAUL BISHOP 187 16th Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Service Squad, T, Group Advisers' Office Squad, Math. Cer- tificates.-Business, Evening College. EUGENE J. BLATZ 60-65 Catalpa Avenue Ridgewood, Brooklyn Art Course. Orchestra, Service Squad, Blueprint Art Staff , Art Certificates. -Pratt Institute. HENRY BLECHAR 448 Decatur Street College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, BTHS, Group Advisers' Squad, T, Math Help Squad, Secre- tary, T, Math., I. P., F. Dr., History, Economics, and English Certificates, Arista, Leader, Honor Roll.-City College. ALVIN I. BLOCH 460 East 49th Street Structural Course. Library Squad, T, I. P. and Civics Certificates.-Bush ness, Evening College. HENRY BLOCK 517 Pulaski Street Mechanical Course. Floor Managers' Squad, I. P. Certificates.-Business. RICHARD BLOHM 310 73rd Street College Preparatory Course. Library S uad, BTHS, Math. and Civics Cer- tigcates.-College. HARRY BLUM 1420 Clay Avenue Bronx, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Orches- tra, T, Music Squad, History Club, Executive Committee, I. P., Math., Civics, and English Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Business, Evening College. 59 HERMAN D. BLUM 103 South 8th Street Art Course. Math., I. P., English, and F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. HARRY BOLLE 602 Quincy Street Electrical Course. Math. Certificates. -Business, Evening College. WARREN C. BOSCH 1929 Menehan Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Basketball, BTI, Service Squad, Jr. Lieut., T, Library Squad, BTHS, I. P. Office Squad, BTHS, Lunch- room Clean Up Squad, Supervisor, Fife, Drum, and Bugle Corps, I. P. and Math. Certificates. - Business, Evening College. JOHN T. BRABANT 827 69th Street Mechanical Course. Track, Rifle, Hockey, S.O.S., Civics Certificates.- Business, Evening College. WILLIAM BRADLEY 755 East 138th Street Bronx, N. Y. Electrical Course. Radio Script Club, Television Club, I. P., Hist., and English Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. JOSEPH J. BRETTSCHNEIDER 2302 East 22nd Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling Squad, Handball, Intramural, Lunch- room Service Squad, Pride and Prejudice, Cl1rirtmur Carol , Civ- ics, English Certificates, Honor Roll. -Cooper Union. IRWIN BRODELL 26 Benris Avenue Franklin Square, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Math Help Squad, T, Gold Service Medal, Blueprint Literary Staff, French- American Club, Secretary, Service Award, Delegate, Blue Party Man- ager, Tech Science Bulletin Staff, Science Fair Delegate, Physics Club, Chess Club, Math., English, I. P., History, Civics Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-University of Mich. 60 PHILIP E. BROUILLET 534 East 38th Street College Preparatory Course. Golf Team, Track Team, Library Squad, Mod. T, Math. Ofiice Squad, BTHS, I. P. Office Squad, BTHS, Jr. Lieut. Service Squad, T, Math. and F. Dr. Certificates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. EVERETT D. BRYAN 575 Glenmore Avenue Mechanical Course. Print Squad, T, Service Squad, Mod. T, I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. VICTOR F. BRZOZOWSKI 6039 56th Road Maspeth, N. Y. Electrical Course. Math Help Squad, Mod. T, Service Medal, Radio Club, Squad Leaders, I. P. and Math Cer- tificates, Honor Roll. - Business, Evening College. JOSEPH BUCALO 1553 76th Street Aero. Course. Handball, Football In- tramurals, BTI, Baseball, Mod. T, Library Squad, BTHS, Astronomy Club, Lunchroom Squad, Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Stevens Institute. EUGENE P. BUCK 3121 Farragut Road College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Library Squad, BTHS, Sales Bureau, BTHS, Service Squad, Cam- era Club, French Club, I. P., Math., and English Certificates, Honor Roll. -Business, Evening College. ROBERT W. BUGGELN 2613 Avenue J College Preparatory Course. English Office Squad, Mod. T, Library Squad, Mod. T, Math Help Squad, Squad Leader, T, Gold Medal, Print Shop Squad, BTHS, I. P., F. Dr., Math., and English Certificates, Math. Hon- oll, ono oll. Lafayette. LIAM M. BURKE 823 Fifth Avenue Mechanical Course. I. P., Math., English, Civics Certificates.-Business. WILLIAM L. BURLINGAME 9516 80th Street Ozone Park, L. I. Aero. Course. Intramurals, Lunch- room Squad, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll. - United States Naval Academy. JOHN BURNSIDIE 5420 Avenue T Chemical Course. Library Squad, Door Squad, Math. Certificates. -- Business, Evening College. RAY G. BUSSMAN 131-26 Francis Lewis Boulevard Laurelton, Long Island Electrical Course. Drum and Bugle Corps, BTHS, Band, T, Locker Room Squad, BTHS, Math. Ofiice Squad, BTHS, Library Squad, BTHS, G.O. Sales Bureau Squad, BTHS, I. P. Squad, Math. Certificates.-Business, Evening College. ANTHONY N. BUTTINO 1126 40th Street Structural Course. Baseball, BTHS, Intramural Baseball and Basketball, S.O.S. Squad, Intermediate Band, Math., F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Evening College. THOMAS J. BYRNE 2823 Snyder Avenue College Preparatory Course. Baseball, Mod. T, Service Squad, Mod. T, Chemistry Office Squad, Math. Cer- tificate.-College. JOHN J. CALLAHAN 47-24 41st Street Long Island City, I.. I. College Preparatory Course. I. P. and Math. Certificates. - Business, Evening College. IRVING CASPER 2220 Strauss Street Electrical Course. Basketball Team, BTHS, Mod. T, T, Locker Room Squad.-Business, Evening College. LEE CASS 1 Parade Place College Preparatory Course. Cross Country Squad, Mod. T, Track Squad, BTHS, Public Speaking So- ciety, Pres., T, Radio Workshop S uad, Mod. T, Plays-Iuliur Caesar, Cciyrirtmrzr Carol, Announcer, Narra- tor, Actor, Stations WNYC, WNYE, Represented Tech, Stations WNEW, WHN, Tech Representative in Amer- ican Legion Oratorical Contest, 1940 Oratory Medal, Dance Orchestra, T, Glee Club, BTHS, Longfellows, T, Survey, BTHS, English Declamation Contests, I. P., Civics, and English Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. WILLIAM M. CASSIDY 657 59th Street Mechanical Course. I. P. Certificates. -Business. LAWRENCE J. CEPELAK 92-24 212th Street Queens Village, L. I. Electrical Course. Manager of Bas- ketball Team, T, Allied Arts Club, Television Club, Service Squad, Jr. Lieut., Lieut., Inspector, T, I. P., Math., and English Certificates. - Stevens Institute of Technology. RAFFAELE L. CERVONE 595 Coney Island Avenue Mechanical Course. Print Shop Squad, S.O.S., Math. and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business. SAMUEL B. CHANIN 100 Pulaski Street Structural Course. Math. and F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Cooper Un- ion Evening College. THOR O. CI-IELSEN 202 62nd Street College Preparatory Course. Math., I. P., and History Certificates.-Bus iness, Evening College. LOUIS D. CHIRILLO 544 Ralph Avenue College Preparatory Course. Intramu- ral Baseball and Basketball, Lunch- room Squad, Print Shop Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-New York State Merchant Marine Academy. 61 HRISTEN 21 ight Court Me a l ourse. Service Squad, jr. 'eut., , I. P., Math., and Eng- lis r cates.-Business, Evening o LEONARD L. CIACCIO 7624 16th Avenue Chemical Course. Glee Club, BTHS, Math Help Squad, BTHS, Terk Sci- ence Bullelin, BTHS, Library Squad, T, Lunchroom Squad, Math., I. P. History, and Civics Certihcates, Hon- or Roll, Arista. - Cooper Union Night School, Business. ALEX S. CIECHANOWSKI 289 Eckford Street Aero. Course. Service Squad, Math., I. P., F. Dr., and Civics Certincates. -Business, Evening College. PAUL J. CIOFFI 437 Lafayette Avenue Electrical Course. Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Business. THEODORE CISEK 597 Manhattan Avenue College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Basketball, Sales Bureau, BTHS, I. P. and Math. Certificates. -Cooper Union. DONALD R. CLARKE 71-02 162nd Street Flushing, L. I. Chemical Course. Chemistry Society, Chess Club, Radio Club, I. P. Certifi- cate.-Business, Evening College. ANTHONY S. CLARO 98 Franklin Avenue Architectural Course. Basketball Squad, Library Squad, Wood Shop Squad, Math. and History Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Business, Stew- art Tech. 62 MORRIS J. COHEN 1370 41st Street Electrical Course. Cut Slip Squad, BTHS, Locker Room Squad, Math., I. P., and History Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Business, Evening College. STANLEY M. COHEN 5911 Avenue N Architectural Course. Football Squad, Allied Arts Club, Wood Shop Squad, Lunchroom Squad, Service Squad, Math., Eng., and History Certificates, Honor Roll.-Pratt Institute. CHRISTOPHER P. COLOGER 180 Boerum Street College Preparatory Course. I. P., Math., F. Dr, Certificates.-Business, Evening College. SALVATORE A. CONIGLIARO 269 Sackett Street College Preparatory Course. Handball Intramurals, BTI, Bookroom Squad, T, Mimeograph Squad, BTHS, Math., Eng., and I. P. Certificates.- Business, Evening College. JOSEPH A. CONROY 135-34 121st Street Richmond Hill, Queens Chemical Course. Swimming Team, BTHS, Natatorium Leaders' Squad, T, Squad Leaders' Club, BTHS, In- tramural Swimming, Two Gold Med- als, Football Squad, Chemical So- ciety, Chem. Prep. Squad.-Long Island University. JOEL H. COOPER 515 East 45th Street Architectural Course. Bowling Squad, Allied Arts Club, Math., English, I. P., Civics, F. Dr., and History Certificates, Honor Roll.-Pratt In- stitute. CARLTON COPLOWITZ 2807 West 15th Street Aero. Course. Intramural Baseball and Swimming, BTHS, Natatorium Squad, Mod. T, Allied Arts Club, BTHS, Math. Help Squad, BTHS, I. P., Civics, Math., F. Dr., English Certificates, Honor Roll. - Purdue University. ANDREW T. COULTER 54 Menahan Street Mechanical Course. Service Squad, I. P., Math., Civics, and History Cer- tificates, Honor Roll. - Business, Evening College. LEONARD COWEN 468 Chester Street College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Pool Squad, English, Math., and History Certificates, Honor Roll. -C.C.N.Y. BARTON K. CROSS 3906 Avenue K College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Swimming, Bronze Medal, Public Speaking Society, Secretary, T, Library Squad, Mod. T, Math. Help Squad, BTHS, Print Shop Squad, BTHS, Math. Certificates.- University of California at Los An- geles. NEWBOLD O. CROSS 245 East 26th Street College Preparatory Course. Camera Club, Vice-President, Modern Lan- guage Office Squad, Glee Club, I. P., Math., F. Dr., and English Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Yale University. WILLIAM J. CROSS 114-31 120th Street South Ozone Park Mechanical Course. Bookroom Squad, T, Power Laboratory Squad, Mate- rials Testing Laboratory Squad, BTHS, Math., English, Civics, I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. VINCENT P. CULLEN 2135 Kimball Street College Preparatory Course. Interme- diate Handball, Mod. T, French Club, F. Dr. and Math. Certificates. -Pratt Institute. CONRAD j. CULTRARO 1526 West Ninth Street Aero. Course. I. P., Civics, Math., F. Dr. and History Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Business, M.I.T. JOSEPH C. CUMMINS 1262 78th Street Electrical Course. Intramural Soft- ball, Baseball, BTHS, Radio Club, Historical Society, S.O.S., Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Business, Evening College. ANTHONY E. DAGUANNO 112-36 197th Street Hollis, L. I. Aero. Course. Intramural Swimming, Bronze Medal, Track Squad, Math. Office Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, Astronomy Club, BTHS, Math., I. P., Eng., Hist., F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. HAROLD E. DAHL 88-41 213!l'l Street Queens Village College Preparatory Course. Book- room Squad, T, Mimeograph Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., History Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Business, Col- lege. GEORGE J. DALACOPOULOS 2235 East 7th Street College Preparatory Course. Math. Certificate.-Business, Evening Col- lege. MURRAY DAVIDSON 1369 53rd Street College Preparatory Course. Track Team, I. P. Office Squad, T, Lunch- room Squad, T, I. P. Certificates.- Business. RAY E. DAVIS 5304 Amboy Road Huguenot Park, Staten Island, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Glee Club, BTHS, Math. Certiticates.- United States Naval Academy. PAUL R. DBCICCO 6816 16th Avenue College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Physics, Camera Clubs, Math., I. P. Certificates.-Brooklyn Poly. 63 KENNETH E. DE GENNARO 195-20 198th Street Hollis, L. I. Mechanical Course. Intramural Track, lst Lieut. Service Squad, Maj. T, Honor Roll, F. Dr., Math. Certifi- cates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. JOHN E. S. DE JUNG 191 Jefferson Street Chemical Course. Library Squad, Natatorium Squad, Chess Club, Math. and English Certificates.-Ore gon State College. GEORGE S. DELIANITES 688 Nostrand Avenue Mechanical Course. Intramural Base- ball, Football, Locker Room Squad, Math., I. P., and Civics Certificates. -Business, Evening College. THOMAS A. DE LORENZO 7902 13th Avenue College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Pin, Intramural Swimming, Silver Medal, French-American Club, Blueprint Squad, BTHS, Natatorium Leaders Squad, BTHS, Camera Club, Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Brook lyn Polytechnic. JOHN V. DELVECCHIO 6812 10th Avenue Mechanical Course. Print Shop Squad, T, Service Squad, T.-Pratt Institute. ROBERT G. DEMPSEY 3740 81st Street jackson Heights, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Intramu- ral Swimming, Basketball, Blue Party Class Representative, S.O.S., Math. Certificates.-N.Y.U. FRANK DENTE, JR. 687 Degraw Street Electrical Course. Math., F. Dr. Cer- tificates.-Business, Evening College. 64 VINCENT C. DE SANTI 145 Conselyea Street College Preparatory Course. Math. Certificates.-Business. PETER J. DEVASTO 1110 Avenue X Electrical Course. Football, BTHS, Swimming Intramural, Gold Medal, Baseball Intramural, BTI, Service Squad, Mod. T, Teeb Science Bul- letin, BTHS, Television Club, I. P. Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. ALFONSE DEVIVO 587 Greene Avenue Electrical Course. Lunchroom Squad, Math. and English Certificates. CHESTER DIETZ 971a Putnam Avenue College Preparatory Course. Swim- ming Team, Mod. T, Bowling League, Pin, Intramural Swimming, Gold Medal, Baseball, BTI, Basket- ball and Track, Natatorium Leaders' Squad, BTHS, History Club, Execu- tive Committee, French-American Club, Service Squad, Lunchroom Squad, Honorable Mention Alexan- der Art Medal, Jan. 1940, History, Math., I. P., Civics, and F. Dr. Cer- tificates, Honor Roll. - Syracuse School of Forestry. ANTHONY D1 SANTI 2366 East 2nd Street College Preparatory Course. Locker Room Squad, S.O.S.-Cooper Union. MILTON B. DOBKIN 1459 West 8th Street College Preparatory Course. Service Squad.-Brooklyn Polytechnic Inst. LEO DOLINER 550 Saratoga Avenue Mechanical Course. Service Squad, jr. Lieut., T, Mimeograph Squad, Mod. T, I. P., Math., and Civics Certificates.-Business. JOHN F. DONNELLY 458 Clermont Avenue Flectrical Course Bowlin Team , . . g , Bronze Medal, Baseball, Manager, jr. Inspectors Club, Radio Club, Math., I. P., Civics Certificates.- Business, Evening College. ROBERT L. DOW 121 Clinton Street Hempstead, L. I. Electrical Course. Service Squad, T, Television Club, I. P., English, and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.- Business. EUGENE H. DREW 2752 East 21st Street Structural Course. Track, Mod. T, Cross Country, BTHS, Intramural Baseball, BTI, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Brook- lyn Polytechnic. HAROLD DROBBIN 472 Van Buren Street Aero. Course. Intramural Baseball and Track, BTI, Library Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, Current Events Club, Astronomy Club, Phys- ics Club, Service Squad, Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Business, Evening College. MICHAEL DUBEY 2810 Avenue I College Preparatory Course. Survey, Features Editor, T, Bookroom, T, Model Club, Chess Club, English, Math., I. P., Civics, History, and F. Dr. Certificates, Arista, Honor Roll. -Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. STEWA T EL 1721 H a id , yn ourse. I. P., Math., F. r., and Civics CertiHcates, Honor ioll.-Business, Evening College. EDWARD F. ECKHARDT 60-83 67th Avenue Ridgewood, Brooklyn Electrical Course. I. P., Civics, Math., ind English Certificates, Honor Roll. -Business, Evening College. LEONARD EDELSTEIN 101 West 60th Street New York City College Preparatory Course. Tennis Team, J.V., Math. Help Squad, BTHS, Math., English, and History Certificates, Honor Roll. - U. S. Naval Academy. WALTER H. EDGE 625 West 155th Street New York City Electrical Course. Radio Club, Stamp Club, I. P., Math., and History Cer- tificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. D RANT W. 5 th C rse ivi and a C ' ates. B - tec ic.1 SAM ELHAI 2375 84th Street Aero. Course. Track Team, BTHS, Senior Group Advisers' Ofiice, BTHS, Math. Help Squad, BTHS, Math. Office Squad, BTHS, Blueprint Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad' Stamp Club, Radio Club, I. P., Math and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll' Arista.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. s -1 9 JOSEPH D. ERCOLANO 328 Fourth Street Electrical Course. Mimeograph Squad, I. P., Math., and English Certifi- cates.-Business, Evening College. FRANK W. ERNES 415 95th Street Electrical Course. Math., I. P., Eng- lish, and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. SHERMAN ETTLINGER 706 Cleveland Street Chemical Course. History Club, I. P., Math, fCertiHcates. - Business, Eve- ning College. 65 MARTIN FAHRER 758 Belmont Avenue Chemical Course. Service Squad, BTHS, Blueprint Staff, I. P. Office Squad, Locker Room Guard, I. P., Math., English, and History Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. JOSEPH H. FARLEY 94-32 199th Street Hollis, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Bowling League, English Of- fice Squad, T, Blueprint Literary Staff, Survey Distribution Squad, Print Shop Squad, BTHS, Survey Dis- tribution Squad, Physics Club, Cur- rent Events Club, I. P., Math., Civ- ics, History, and English Certihcates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Virginia Poly- technic Institute. KENNETH D. FAUST 257-31 148th Avenue Rosedale, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Swimming, Service Squad, Jr. Lieut., T, General Office Squad, BTHS, Pool Squad, BTHS, Floor Managers' Squad, Cafeteria Squad, Physics Prep. Squad, Acted in Dick- ens' A Cbrirtmar Carol and in Pride and Prejudice, Math., Dr., and I. P. Certificates.-N. Y. S. Agricultural and Technical Institute, Cornell. MORTON FEINHOLZ 54 West 82nd Street New York City College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Math. Certificates.-Business. EDWARD FELTEN 711 Woodward Avenue Ridgewood, Brooklyn Chemical Course. General Oflice Squad, BTHS, Chemistry Office Squad, I. P. Certificate.-Business, Evening College. ROY . FERNS 811 T ' C Mech 'cal ntramural Base- bal I4 . ., Math., and English s .-Business. VIRGIL F. FICARRA 8201 14th Avenue Aero. Course. Service Squad, Jr. Lieut., Mod. T, Astronomy Club, Tech Weather Bureau, Chess Club, I. P., Math., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 66 EUGENE L. FIELDHAMMER 3914 47th Street Sunnyside, L. I. Structural Course. Intramural Hand- ball, Bowling, Magic Club, Service Squad, Surveying Squad, Math., F. Dr., and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business. RUSSEL GE 127 0 Aven Rich ' e 'c e. lish a . . ARTHUR T. FINDLAY 5911 Catalpa Avenue Ridgewood, Brooklyn Electrical Course. Intramurals, Mim- eo. Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll. - Business, Evening College. LEO M. FINEGOLD 1711 Sterling Place College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Pool Locker Squad, Society of Technical Magicians, I. P., Math., English, and F. Dr. Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. JERRY L. FINKEL 261 West 22nd Street New York City College Preparatory Course. Intramu- ral Handball, Basketball, General Ofiice, BTHS, S.O.S., Building Con- struction Squad, Orchestra, Camera Club, I. P., Civics Certificates. - N.Y.U. MICHAEL F. FIORILLO 115 Mulberry Street New York City College Preparatory Course. Har- monica Club, Mod. T, Natatorium Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, BTI-IS, I. P. and Math. Certilicates. -Business, C.C.N.Y. WILLIAM J. FISCHER 6941 Myrtle Avenue Glendale, L. I. Aero Course. Basketball Intramu- rals, Lunchroom Squad, Floor Man- agers' Squad, BTI-IS, Math., I. P., Civics, F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business. WII.I.IAM P. FITZPATRICK 698 Dean Street College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Locker Room Squad, Mimeo- graph Squad. - Business, Evening College. EMANU FRADKIN If 14 1 ree Mo el Building I , a b English Cer 7 N I I 1 I' I Mechanical -. o . ibrary Squad, BTH , - 'gg S uad, BTHS, SIMS ti I a 'I ' 4 1 P . - 5 ' ' ' .ii 1 - 7 PETER E. FRANZESIE 658 East 48th Street Electrical Course. I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. JOHN C. FRASCA 1024 76th Street College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Paddle Tennis, BTI, Model Club, French-American Club, Phys- ics Club, Library Squad, Math., I. P., Civics, and English Certificates, Honor Roll. - University of Notre Dame. IRA L. FREINCLE 1856 East 7th Street Aero. Course. Math. Help Squad, BTHS, Senior Group Advisers' Squad, BTHS, Math. and I. P. Cer- tilicates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Busi- ness, Evening College. JEROME FRIEDMAN 307 Hancock Street Aero. Course. Track Squad, Group Advisers' Squad, BTHS, Service Squad, BTHS, Floor Managers' Squad, BTHS, Senior Office Squad, BTHS, Astronomy Club, I. P. and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Mississippi State College. DONALD L. GAA 1417 East 28th Street Electrical Course. Motion Picture Booth Squad, Service Squad, Math., Civics, and F. Dr. Certificates.-Bus iness, Evening College, JOSEPH GABAY 2215 Mermaid Avenue Electrical Course. Swimming Intra- murals, General Office Squad, BTHS, Mimeograph Squad, Mod. T, Public Address Squad, Pool Squad, I. P., Math., and Civics Certificates.-Bus iness, Evening College. ROBERT F. GAFFNEY 2123 Ryder Street College Preparatory Course. Library Squad, BTHS, French Club, Lunch- room Cleanup Squad, Math. and His- tory Certificates.-Business, Evening College. PATRICK V. GALLAGHER 411 99th Street Architectural Course. Pool Squad, Major T, Library Squad, BTHS, Bldg. Construction Squad, Lunch- room Squad, S.O.S., Glee Club, I. P., Math., F. Dr., Civics, and Eng- lish Certihcates, Honor Roll.-Busi- ness, Evening College. LOUIS GALLENSON 25 Bogart Street College Preparatory Course.-Army. WARREN GALLI 7716 11th Avenue College Preparatory Course. General Office, Switchboard, Mod. T, French- American Club, Math. Club.-Brook- lyn Polytechnic. PAUL GARBER 2799 Brighton Sth Street Mechanical Course. Intramural Squad, Manager, T, Health Education Of- fice, T, Floor Managers' Squad, T, English, Math., I. P., F. Dr., History Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.- Purdue. WILLIAM GARBER 2799 Brighton 8th Street Mechanical Course. Intramural Base- ball, BTI, Intramural Squad, Co- Manager, T, Health Education Of- fice, T, Floor Managers' Ofiice, BTHS, Math., English, History, and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista. -Purdue. 67 THOMAS F. GARVEY 20 Verandah Place College Preparatory Course.-Busi- nessg Evening College. HENRY C. GEFERS 1286 Madison Street Mechanical Course. Strength of Mat. Squadg S.O.S., Corporalg I. P., Math., and English Certificates.-Business, Evening College. ANTHONY GENIS 322 Irving Avenue Ridgewood, Brooklyn Mechanical Course. Service Squad, Print Squad, Mod. TQ Math. Help Squadg Radio Club, Current Events Club, Materials Testing Lab. Squad, Mod. Tg Physics Clubg I. P. and Math. Certificatesg Honor Roll, Ar- ista.-Businessg Evening College. STANLEY J. GERASIMCZYK 8818 95th Avenue Ozone Park, L. I. Structural Course. I. P. Certificate.- Business. CALVIN A. GIROUX 121 Brooklyn Avenue Structural Course. Math., Eng., and History Certificatesg Honor Roll.- Business. ARTHUR GOFSTEIN 2906 Mermaid Avenue College Preparatory Course. Book- room Squad, Mod T, Service Squad, I. P. and History Certificates.-Busi- nessg Evening College. AARON GOLD 26 Whitney Avenue Floral Park, L. I. Chemical Course. Chem. Society, Math. Certificate.-Business. 68 ALLAN I. GOLD 1867 East 12th Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Ping Service Squad, BTHSQ Math., English, F. Dr., Civics, and French Certificatesg Honor Roll.- Businessg Night School. ROBERT J. GOLDBERG 559 Linden Boulevard College Preparatory Course. Survey, Managing Editor, T, Delegate to C.S.P.A.g Longfellows, BTHSQ Math., I. P., History, Civics, and English Certificatesg Honor Roll.-Georgia Institute of Technology. LEON M. GOLDFEDER 103 Ross Street Electrical Course. Survey, BTHSg General Office Squad, BTHSg Social Studies Oftice Squad, BTHSg Math. Certificates.-Businessg Cooper Union Evening College. ARTHUR M. GOLDSCHMIDT 3505 Wayne Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Electrical Course. Service Squad, Mod. Tg Television Club, Secre- tary, I. P. and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege. MURRAY GOLDSTONE 40 Tapscott Street Aero. Course. Baseball, Football Squads, Service Squad, Treasurer, Tg Longfellows, T5 Bookroom Squadg Senior Office Squad, BTHSQ Group Advisers Squadg Astronomy Club, Tech Weather Bureaug Aristag Hon- or Rollg History, I. P., English, and Math. Certificates. - U. S. Naval Academy. SEYMOUR GOLUB 2811 Brighton 7th Street Electrical Course. Swimming Intra- muralsg Track Squadg Allied Arts Club, Tg Radio Clubg Tech Science Bulletin, Tg I. P. Office Squad, Tg Electrical Preparatory Room Squadg Station WNYE Squadg S.O.S., Mod. Tg I. P., F. Dr., Mech. Dr., and Civics Certihcates.-Brooklyn Poly- technic. CECIL R. GORDON 108-62 167th Street Jamaica, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Glee Club, Mod. Tg S.O.S., BTHSQ I. P. and Drawing Certificatesg Honor Roll.-N.Y.U. WILLIAM W. GORDON 537 Ovington Avenue College Preparatory Course. Library Squad, Mod. T, I. P. Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, Service Squad, Math. Office Squad, Vice-President, Mod. T, Civics, F. Dr., and Math. Certificates.-Georgia Tech. DAVID L. GOTLIEB 1957 East 3rd Street College Preparatory Course. Mimeo- graph Squad, T, Hygiene Office Squad, T, Camera Club, Stamp Club, Current Events Club, Blueprint Staff Photographer, English, Math., I. P., and History Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. SANFORD GRALITZER 310 Brighton Beach Avenue College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Squad, Manager, T, Squad Leaders, BTHS, Track Squad, Intra- mural Paddle Tennis, Handball, BTI, Locker Room Squad, Medical Exam. Office, T, Floor Managers' Squad, Mod. T, Stamp Club, Current Events Club, Math. Certificates.-Business, Evening College. EDWARD A. GRAUSE 9020 214th SUSE! Queens Village, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Swim- ming Pool Squad, Captain, Major T, Intramural Swimmin' Teams, Man- ager, Major T, Tec? Science Bulle- lin: Math., Eng., I. P., and Civics Certificates.-Business. BERNARD GREEN 1l46 56th Street College Preparatory Course. Mimeo- graph Squad, Mod. T, Lunchroom Squad, I. P. and History Certificates. -Brooklyn Polytechnic. SHERMAN GREENBERG 199 Patchen Avenue College Preparatory Course. Tech Science Bulletin, Mod. T, Library Squad, BTHS, Chem. Soc., Physics Club, Current Events Club, History Society, English, Math., History, I. P., F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.- City College. JOHN H. GREENE 900 Ogden Avenue Highbridge, Bronx, N, Y. College Preparatory Course. Cross Country, T, Silver Shoe, Track, Mod. T, Squad Leaders', BTHS, Bowling Squad, Attendance Pin, Math. and I, P. Certificates. - United States Coast Guard Academy. EDWARD GREENWALD 1716 Caton Avenue College Preparatory Course. Math Help Squad, T, Gold Medallion' I P., Civics, Math, English, and His- tory Certilicates, Honor Roll, Arista -Business, Evening College. DANIEL V. GREGORIO 9 Spencer Court Electrical Course. Math. Certificates -Business, Evening College. MICHAEL F. GRIFFIN 508 Eighth Street Electrical Course. Allied Arts Club, President, T, Television Club, So- cial Studies Squad, I. P., Math., and Civics Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. LAWRENCE W. GRITZ 138-37 97th Avenue jamaica, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Library Squad, T, English Oflice Squad, T' v Chemistry Office Squad, Stamp Club, Pool Squad, BTHS, Model Club, Locker Squad, Service Squad, BTHS, Blueprinz Distribution, Surve Dis- tribution, Allied Arts Clug, T, Leather Club, BTHS, Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Cooper Union. NORMAN GROTENSTEIN 482 Hegeman Avenue Mechanical Course. Service Squad Inspector, T, Switch Board Operator BTHS, Mimeograph Squad, BTHS' Floor Managers' Squad, BTHS, I. P., Civics, and Math. Certificates.-Bust ness, Evening College. 9 a BRUNO GRUENWALD 4646 Broadway New York City College Preparatory Course. Long- fellows, Mod. T, Chem. Ofiice Squad, BTHS, Library Squad, BTHS, Math. Help Squad, Mod. T, Survey, BTHS, F. Dr. Certificate.-Brooklyn Poly- technic. FREDERICK A. HAAS 7270 61st Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Aero. Course. Floor Managers' Of- Ece Squad, Lunchroom Squad, I. P. and Math. Certificates. - Business, Evening College. 69 GEORGE B. HAAS 3726 65th Street Woodside, L. I. Mechanical Course. History Club, Current Events Club. - Business, Evening College. NORMAN G. HADDAD 1070 75th Street College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Swimming, 'Gold Medal, Foot- ball Squad, Orchestra, T, I. P., Civics, Math., English, and F. Dr. Certificates.-Purdue. LOUIS C. HAGER 10141 126th Street Richmond Hill, L. I. Structural Course. I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. JOHN W. HAGGERTY 1554 East 21st Street College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Squad, T, Intramural Baseball, BTI, Glee Club, S.O.S., Floor Man- agers' Squad, H. E. Squad, Math., English, I. P., F. Dr. Certificates.- Georgia Tech. ROBERT O. HAGMAN 4113 7th Avenue College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Basketball, Blueprint Squad, French-American Club, Math., I. P., and History Certificates, Honor Roll. -Webb Institute of Naval Archi- tecture. ROBERT V. HALABI 162 Court Street College Preparatory Course. Cheer Leader, Secretary, T, Service Squad, Locker Room Squad.-Brooklyn Poly- technic Institute. ANDREW R. HALLDEN 86-22 252nd Street Bellerose, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Sym- phonic Orchestra, T, Music Office Squad, General Office Squad, BTHSg Math. and F. Dr. Certificates.-Rose Institute of Technology. 70 HERBERT HALVORSEN 976 54th Street Mechanical Course. Cut Slip Squad, BTHSg Lunchroom Squad, I. P., Math., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business. CARL H. HAMANN, JR. 91 Hale Avenue Aero. Course. Track Team, Mod. T, Longfellows, T, Power Lab. Squad, Math., English, F. Dr., I. P. Cer- tificates, Honor Roll.-U. S. Naval Academy. FRANK G. HANEMAN 241-18 Memphis Avenue Rosedale, L. I. Chemical Course. Switchboard Oper- ator, BTHS, Senior Group Advisers' Squad, BTHS, Chem. Society, I. P., Math., and Mech. Drawing Certifi- cates.-Cooper Union Evening Col- lege. DONALD D. HANFORD 110-01 101st Avenue Richmond Hill, L. I. Chemical Course. Intramural Swim- ming, Medal, Lunchroom Squad, Physics Club, Chemistry Club, I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Business, Brooklyn Polytechnic. ROBERT A. HANSEN 8908 Hollis Court Boulevard Queens Village, L. I. Mechanical Course. Math, English, I. P., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Antioch College. HARRY P. HANYE, JR. 246-07 137th Avenue Rosedale, L. I. Structural Course. Natatorium Lead- ers' Squad, BTHS, Strength of Ma- terials Squad, English Certificate.- Business, Evening College. MOSES H. HARARY 1963 62nd Street Architectural Course. Math. Help Squad, BTHS, S.O.S.g I. P., Math., and English Certificates, Honor Roll. -Business, Evening College. FRANK HARDEJ 480 12th Street Mechanical Course. Math. Certificates. -Business, Evening College. ARTHUR L. HATHAWAY 392 New jersey Avenue Mechanical Course. Service Squad, BTHS, Floor Managers' Squad, English and Math. Certificates. - Business, Evening College. RAYMOND F. HAUGHTON 104 Crescent Avenue Staten Island, N. Y. Chemical Course. Lunchroom Squad, Sheet Metal Shop Teacher's Assis- tant, 2 yrs., Locker Room Guard, I. P., English, Civics Certificates.- Business, Evening College. FRED F. HEDIGER 12 Sidney Place College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, First Lieut., T, Longfellows, T, Print Shop Squad, BTHS, Dutch Dozen, Math., English, I. P., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.- University of Michigan. WILLIAM W. HEDIGER 12 Sidney Place College Preparatory Course. S.O.S., N. Y. Herald-Tribune Squad, Senior Group Advisers' Squad, Math., I. P., md Civics Certificates. - Business, University of Michigan. WALTER O. HEITZ 109-06 Van Wyck Boulevard South Ozone Park, L. I. :hemical Course. Mimeo. Squad, General Oflice Squad, Library Squad, Sroup Advisers' Squad, BTHS, Terla frienre Bulletin: F. Dr. Certificate. -Business, Evening College. FREDERICK HELLER 3385 Fulton Street Iollege Preparatory Course. Math. lel Squad, T, Gold Service Medal, 'erz Science Bulletin, BTHS, French- tmerican Club, Service Button, 'hysics Club, Math., English, I. P., Iivics, and History Certificates, Hon- r Roll, Arista.-Cooper Union. LEO HELLERMAN 593 Central Avenue College Preparatory Course. Orches- tra, Mod. T, Print Shop Squad, I. P. Math., English, History, and F. Dr Certificates, Honor Roll.-City Col- lege. HENRY HELVE 826 43rd Street College Preparatory Course. Baseball, T, General Ofiice Squad, T, Camera Club, I. P., Civics, History, Math., F. Dr. and English Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. JAMES W. HENNEBERRY 61-63 Eliot Avenue Maspeth, I.. I. Mechanical Course. Softball Intra- murals, Locker Room Squad, I . P. and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.- Business, Evening College. ROBERT C. HENNESSEY, JR. 255 East 25th Street Mechanical Course. Track Squad, Intramural Basketball, BTI, Intra- mural Table Tennis, Historical So- ciety, English Ofiice Squad, Math., I. P., and Civics Certiiicates.-Bush ness, Evening College. INGOLF H. HENRIKSEN 17 Capital Heights Road Oyster Bay, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Track Team, Model Club, Math., I. P., F. Dr., and English Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. JOHN B. HEPBURN, JR. 91-40 Winchester Boulevard Queens Village, L. I. Aero. Course. Intramural Swimming and Basketball, S.O.S. Service Squad, jr. Lieut., T, Lunchroom Squad, I. P., Civics, and Math. Certihcatesg Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege. EDWARD W. HERNES 221-37 Murdock Avenue Queens Village, L. I. Chemical Course, Bowling Team, Sil- ver Medal, I. P. and Math. Certih- cates, Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. 71 r AUGUST F. HEUER 258 Nichols Avenue Electrical Course. Print Squad, BTHS, . Intramural Mgr., T, Felt, H. E. Of- hce Squad, Mod. T, Stage Crew, T, F. Dr. and Math. Certificates.-Busb ness. WARREN F. HICKS 6914 Fort Hamilton Parkway College Preparatory Course. Ice Hockey Team, BTHS, English Office Squad, BTI-IS, I. P., Civics, English, and History Certificates.-Business, Evening College. MELVIN HILL 1012 Avenue K College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Baseball, BTI, Intramural Handball, Concert Band, Current Events Club, Astronomy Club, Chem- istry Club, Math, English, I. P., His- tory, and Civics Certificates.-Bush ness, Night School. HAROLD HILLOWITZ 7401 Metropolitan Avenue Middle Village, L. I. Aero. Course. Rifle Squad, Assistant, Allied Arts Club, T, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates. - Cooper Union Evening. SEYMOUR A. HIONAS 128 67th Street College Preparatory Course. Current Events Club, Historical Societvg Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Brook lyn Polytechnic. LAWRENCE HIRSCHL 3033 Brighton 14th Street College Preparatory Course. Rifle Team, BTHS, jacket, Survey, Re- porter, News Editor, T, Delegate to Columbia Scholastic Conventions, Radio Club, BTHS, S.O.S., BTHS, Civics, Math., English, I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.- Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. MAX J. HOBERMAN 159 East 56th Street College Preparatory Course. Math. Club, Radio Club, Chess Club, Gen- eral Ofiice Squad, BTHS, Math Slu- denl Staff, Orchestra, T, Math., English, I. P., and History Certifi- cates, Math. Bronze Medal, Honor Roll, Arista. - Business, Cooper Union Evening School. 72 CALVIN A. HOEFFLER '17-23 Linden Street Ridge ood, Brooklyn c anical ourse. Intr mural Bas- flce all, t . a ' ory Certifi- ca s.LB' lege. I FRANK E. J. HOEGLER, JR. 376 Palmetto Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Aero. Course. Blueprint Squad, BT HS, Senior Ofiice Squad, BTHS, Li- brary Squad, T, Cafeteria Squad, Service Squad, Glee Club, English, I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. GEORGE J. HOFFER 205 East 32nd Street College Preparatory Course. Nata- torium Leaders' Squad, BTHS, Math. Help Squad, BTHS, Chess Club, I. P., Math., and History Certificates, Honor Roll.-Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. MILTON HOFFMAN 892 East 94th Street Electrical Course. Mimeograph Squad, T, Society of Technical Magicians, Service Squad, I. P., Math., and English Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Business, Evening College. JOHN C. HOOPS 113-27 204th Street Hollis, L. I. Architectural Course. Bowling League, Captain, Intramural Basket- ball, Allied Arts Club, Mod. T, English Ofiice Squad, T, Survey Dis- tribution Squad, Lunchroom Squad, Math., Civics, and F. Dr. Certifi- cates, Honor Roll, Arista, Vice- Leader.-Pratt Institute. WILLIAM H. HOOPS 201-01 Linden Boulevard St. Albans, Long Island Chemical Course. J.V. Basketball Team, Lunchroom Squad, Chemistry Club, English Ofiice Squad, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Night School. RUPERT HOOVER 656 Gates Avenue College Preparatory Course. Allied Arts Club, BTHS, Math. Certificates. -Business, Evening College. EDWARD I. HORN 1485 Sterling Place College Preparatory Course. Group Advisers' Ofiice Squad, Math. Ofiice Squad, BTHS.-Business. HARVEY HOROWITZ 1444 Park Place College Preparatory Course. General Ofiice Squad, T, S.O.S., BTHS, Biology Laboratory Assistant, Cam- era Club, Participated in Clnristmar Carol, Pride and Preiudiref History, Math., English and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege. MARTIN HOROWITZ 2347 63rd Street College Preparatory Course. Survey Staff, Physics Club, Tech Science Bulletin Staff, Math., English, I. P., Civics, and F. Dr. Certificates.-Bush ness, Night School. HOWARD L. HORSTMAN 70-45 67th Street Glendale, L. I. Mechanical Course. Senior Executive Committee, Math., I. P., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. WILLIAM C. HOSFORD 1634 East 7th Street Chemical Course. Chem. Prep. Squad, ' Camera Club, Chem. Club, History Club, Current Events Club, I. P., Civics, Math., and History Certifi- cates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. PAUL D. HUBBE 424 First Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling Squad, Gold Medal, Band, Mod. T, Radio Script Club, Astronomy Club, Secretary, Blueprint Staff, Math., English, I. P., F. Dr., History, and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Cooper Union. ROBERT HUCH 64-13 68th Avenue Mechanical Course. S.O.S., Mod. T, Floor Managers' Squad, Math. Cer- titicates.-Business, Evening College. JOHN J. HUGHES 7401 4th Avenue Electrical Course. Intramural Swim- ming, Silver Medal, Service Squad, Library Squad, T, Math., I. P., F. Dr., and Civics Certificates.-Georgia Tech. ABRAHAM HYMAN 1020 Park Place College Preparatory Course. Track, Radio Workshop, Major T, Group Advisers' Squad, BTHS, Hygiene Squad, Radio Club, I. P., Civics, English, Math., and History Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-C. C. N. Y. LOUIS ISRAEL 558 Van Siclen Avenue Electrical Course. Squad Leaders, Math. and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Radio and Television, Na- tional Schools. ARTHUR H. JAEHING 9105 80th Street Woodhaven, N. Y. Mechanical Course. Blueprint Squad, BTHS, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business. ALBERT F. JAHRSDOERFER 8315 Myrtle Avenue Glendale, L. I. Aero. Course. Service Squad, T, Chess Club, Math. Certificates.- Business. CHARLES JANKELOFF 217 Madison Street College Preparatory Course. Math. Help Squad, T, Service Medals, Math. Ofiice Squad, BTHS, Library Squad, BTHS, Math. Club, Librar- ian, French-American Club, Chess Club, Chemical Society, Math., His- tory, and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Cooper Union. ALBERT A. JENSEN 6212 60th Lane Maspeth, Queens, N. Y. Mechanical Course. I. P. Certificate. -Business. 73 JOSEPH A. JOEL 6514 Avenue T Mechanical Course. Service Squad, Natatorium Leaders' Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, Math. Certificates. -Business, Evening College. KENNETH P. JOHNSON 2057 58th Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Gold Medal, Chess Club, Current Events Club, I. P., F. Dr., Math., and English Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Business, Evening College. EDWARD F. JONAT 6221 Eliot Avenue Maspeth, L. I. Mechanical Course. Library Squad, BTHS, Group Advisers' Squad, Lockerroom Guard, Math. and Civics Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. MYRON JONES 1953 77th Street Mechanical Course. Library Squad, BTHS, Service Squad, Mod. T, Math. Certificate.-Business, Evening College. FREDERICK JORGENSEN 1374 East 55th Street Aero. Course. Band, BTHS, Chemis- try Otiice and Music Ofiice Squads, Math. and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-U. S. Merchant Marine Academy. ROGER R. JURY 8430 85th Drive Woodhaven, L. I. College Preparatory Course. English Office Squad, T, Survey Circulation Squad, Math., I. P., and Civics Cer- tificates, Honor Roll. - Columbia University. PHILIP KAFTOL 193 Martense Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Silver Medal, Current Events Club, I. P., Math., English, Civics, and History Certificates, Honor Roll. -Cooper Union. 74 SAMUEL B. KARP 1646 Union Street College Preparatory Course. Track Squad, Intramural Basketball, Base- ball, BTI, Football Team, Mod. T, T, Concert Band, Mod. T, Orchestra, Mod. T, Longfellows, BTHS, Print squad, BTHS, s.o.s., BTI-is, Math., F. Dr., and Civics Certificates.- Brooklyn Polytechnic. ABRAHAM KATZ 351 Vernon Avenue Chemical Course. Chemical Society, I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Busi- ness, Evening College. ABBY KATZMAN 348 East 92nd Street College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Basketball, Group Advisers' Squad, BTHS, Library Squad, BTHS, Service Squad, BTHS, Chemistry So- ciety, French-American Club g Scribes, N. Y. Times Agent, Foot- ball Ticket Agent, Math., English, I. P., History, and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-New York Uni- versity. LAWRENCE KAUFMAN 231 Herzl Street Aero. Course. Intramurals, I. P., Math., Civics, F. Dr., History, and English Certificates, Honor Roll.- Business, Cooper Union Evening. SEYMOUR A. KAUFMAN 3418 Church Avenue Structural Course. Baseball, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, Service Squad, Social Studies Office Squad, BTHS, English Office Squad, BTHS, Civics Certificate.-Business, Evening Col- ege. PETER I. KEEHN 99-10 Bellaire Place Bellaire, L. I. College Preparatory Course, Cheer Leaders Squad, BTHS, Football Team, General Ofiice Squad, S.O.S., .lUfli0r Lieut., T, Magic Club, Presi- dent, Library Squad, BTHS, Social Studies OfEce Squad, T, Math, Cer. tificates.-U. S. Naval Academy. EDWIN L. KEIL 317 72nd Street Structural Course. Service Squad, Math. CertiEcate.-Business, Evening College. ROBERT A. KEIL 60-42 Myrtle Avenue Ridgewood, Brooklyn Mechanical Course. Gym Squadl SCF' vice Squad, Civics Club, Math. Cer- tificates.-Business, Evening College. FREDERICK KELLER 685 Humboldt Street College Preparatory Course. Football Team, Intramural Baseball, BTI, Ser- vice Squad, Math., English, I. P., Civics, and History Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Cooper Union. SIDNEY KELLY 1935 East 33rd Street College Preparatory Course. French- American Club, History Club, Cur- rent Events Club, Radio Club, Math. Certificate.-College. JAMES B. KENNEDY 418 61st Street College Preparatory Course. Current Events Club, Historical Society, Math., I. P., History, and English Certificates, Honor Roll.-Cooper Union. RAYMOND G. KENNEDY 1338 Sterling Place Mechanical Course. Civics, I. P., and Math. Certihcates.-Business, Eve- ning College. ROBERT R. KILARJIAN 141 137th Street Belle Harbor, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Rifle Team, Stock Exchange Meet, Medal for Runner-up, Acting Captain, T, Model Club, Music Classes, Leather Handicraft Club, Lunchroom Squad, F. Dr. Certificate. - University of Virginia. JOHN W. KILLORAN 97-18 134th Road Ozone Park, L. I. Electrical Course. Intramural Basket- ball and Baseball, Drum and Bugle Corps, S.O.S., I. P., Math., and English Certificates.-United States Naval Academy. MARTIN J. KING 527 Baltic Street Electrical Course. General Othce Squad, Locker Room Squad, S.O.S., Lunchroom Squad, History Certifi- cate.--Business, Evening College. HERBERT S. KLAUBER 629 Avenue T College Preparatory Course. Cross Country, Mod. T, Orchestra, Mod. T, Dance Orchestra, BTHS, I. P. and English Certihcates.-Pratt Institute. HERBERT J. KLEIN 58 79th Street College Preparatory Course. Oper- ator, Radio Station WZCXN, T, President, Radio Club, T, I. P. and Math. Certilicates.-Brooklyn Poly- technic. SAMUEL KLEIN 5321 Eighth Avenue Electrical Course. Intramural Swim- ming, Bronze Medal, Radio Club, English, History, Math., I. P., and Art Certificates.--Evening College. BERNARD D. KLEINMAN 609 West 151st Street New York, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. French- American Club, Senior Class Assis- tant Treasurer, Camera Club, Ele- mentary Music Squad, Math., I. P., English, and French Certificates, Honor Roll.--Cooper Union. ROBERT B. KLEINMAN 570 East 31st Street Aero. Course. Intramural Table Tennis, Championship, BTI, Cheer Leaders, Acting Captain, Mod. T, S.O.S. Service Squad, First Lieut., T, Chess Club, Stamp Club, Math., English, History, Civics, and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. ROBERT KLEM 6402 45th Avenue Woodside, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Basketball, BTI, Model Club, Service Squad, Mod. T, French- American Club, Stamp Club, Asst. Editor, Pbilulekj Senior Delegate, Math. and English Certificates.- Business, Evening College. 75 KENNETH R. KLEMMER 2518 Avenue N College Preparatory Course. Math. Help Squad, President, T, History Club, Vice-President, Current Events Club, Allied Arts Club, Math., I. P., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll. -Carnegie Tech. ROBERT G. KLOPFER 66 Sullivan Street Art Course. I. P., Math., F. Dr., and History Certificates.-Pratt Institute. SAUL S. KNAZICK 1701 Quentin Road Electrical Course. Basketball, Ping Pong, Intramurals, Handball, Basket- ball, J.V., General Ofiice Squad, BTHS, Mimeograph Squad, Mod. T, I. P., Math., English, and Civics Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. HENRY BERNARD KNOWLES 170 Parkside Avenue Chemical Course. English and His- tory Certificates. - Brooklyn Poly- technic. STEPHEN KOCHANSKI 1140 Willoughby Avenue Mechanical Course. Math. and Eng- lish Certificates.-Evening College. ERWIN M. KOERITZ 114-57 175th Place St. Albans, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Bowling Team, Mod. T, Bronze Medal, Math., I. P., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Georgia Tech. ELLIOT S. KOHN 222 West 83rd Street New York City College Preparatory Course. Bowling Squad, Survey, BTHS, Bookroom Squad, Chess Club, I. P., Math., Civics, History, and English Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Cooper Union. 76 WILLIAM V. KOLACINSKI 147 East 38th Street Mechanical Course. History Club, Civics and F. Dr. Certificates, Per- fect Attendance.-Business, Evening College. ARMEN V. KOOCHAGIAN 255 Flatbush Avenue Architectural Course. Intramural Handball and Basketball, Allied Arts Club, BTHS, Civics, F. Dr., I. P., and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll. -New Hampshire University. RICHARD L. KORAI. 290 Empire Boulevard College Preparatory Course. History Club, President, Honor Roll, Math., English, Civics, History, and I. P. Certificates.-College, HERMANN KORTMANN 634 Bay Ridge Avenue College Preparatory Course. Math. Office Squad, BTHS, Blueprint Squad, BTHS.-Business. HOWARD S. KOTCHER 1292 Ocean Parkway Mechanical Course. Football, BTHS, Late Office Squad, T, I. P. Certifi- cates.-Business, Evening College. SIDNEY L. KRATKIN 3126 Coney Island Avenue Mechanical Course. Library Squad, BTHS, Math. Certificates.-Business, Evening College. PAUL KRAUSE 335 East 31st Street New York City College Preparatory Course. Chemis- try Sales Squad, History Club, Chess Club, I. P. Certificates. - Cooper Union Evening College. LESTER KRAVITZ 1870 East 28th Street College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Basketball, Bowling Squad, S.O.S. Squad, Group Advisers' Of- Hce Squad, BTHS, English, Math., and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.- New York University. JOHN J. KUHN 9 Beaver Street Electrical Course. Electrical Sta e Crew, Radio Club, Television Clug, History Club, Math., I. P., and Civics Certiticates.-Business, R.C.A. Institute. WILLIAM I. KUSHNER 618 West 177th Street New York City College Preparatory Course. Glee Club, Mod. T, BTHS, Music Squad, History Club, French-American Club, Current Events Club, I. P. and F. Dr. Certificates.-College. MITCHELL KUTNER 277 Quincy Street College Preparatory Course. Hand- ball Team, Sweater T, I. P., Math., F. Dr., and Civics Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Business. MARIO j. LACOVARA 210 East 7th Street Mechanical Course. Group Advisers' Squad, BTHS, Health Education Of- lice Squad, BTHS, English and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Busi- ness, Evening College. ARTHUR E. LAEMMEI.. 7026 Perry Terrace College Preparatory Course. Radio Club, Vice-President, T, Physics Club, Math., English, I. P., Civics, and History Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. GEORGE A. LAHN 14 Vandervoort Place Structural Course. Lockerroom Squad, History Certificates.-United States Avfny. TELEMAHOS G. LAINAS 9506 4th Avenue College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Handball, Service Squad, jr. Lieut., BTHS, Mod. T, Major T, Chemical Society, Physics Club, French-American Club, Math., I. P., and Civics Certificates. - United States Naval Academy. JOHN W. LAKE, ZND 50 87th Street College Preparatory Course. Math., English, and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Cornell. WILLIAM LAMBERTH 6804 60th Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Aero. Course. Math, and I. P. Cer- titicates.-Business, Evening College RICHARD M. LANDEN 165-22 145th Avenue jamaica South, N. Y. Aero. Course. Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Busi- ness, Evening College fCooper Unionl. HOMER L. LANE, JR. 413 74th Street College Preparatory Course. Glee Club, Major T, S.O.S., Mod. T, H. E. Squad, Floor Managers' Squad, Math., English, and I. P. Certificates.-Columbia University. PETER LANG 8 -04 14 h Street Q . I. Mech rse. Camera Club, Curre t Events lub, Historical So- ciety, Englis Math., I. ., Civics, and F. Dr. tag? onor Roll. -Business. HENRY A. LANGE 7617 97th Avenue Ozone Park, L. I. Electrical Course. Swimming Team, Mod. T, Intramural Swimming, Gold and Silver Medals, Library Squad, BTHS, Natatorium Leaders' Squad, BTHS, Camera Club, Math. Certifi- cates.--Business, Evening College. 77 GUSTAV LARSON 3954 48th Street Long Island City, N. Y. Aero. Course. Intramural Swimming, Gold and Bronze Medals, Cheer Leaders, Mod. T, Chemistry Office, BTHS, Astronomy Club, I. P., Math., and History Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Business. CYRIL V. LATIMER 849 President Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Service Squad, Math. Cer- tificates.-College. ALEX LAWRIK 682 3rd Avenue. College Preparatory Course. Histori- cal Society, Current Events Club, Math., English, Civics, and I. P. Cer- tificates.-Stevens Institute. ROBERT J. LEDER 95 Eastern Parkway College Preparatory Course. Track Team, Sweater T, Scholastic Hall of Fame, Cross Country Team, Sweater T, Member of 1940 and 1941 Brook- lyn Championship Teams, Basket- ball Team, Mimeograph Squad, T, H. E. Office Squad, Math., I. P., and Civics Certificates. - U. S. Coast Guard Academy. WILLIAM B. LEESEMANN 6281 60th Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Electrical Course. Math. Help Squad, T, Service Medal, Glee Club, BTHS, Television Club, I. P., Math., and History Certificates, Honor Roll.- United States Naval Academy. ARR A. NE Ea Mechanica Course. Chem. Squad, junior Book Club, Secretary, Math., English, I. P., Civics, F. Dr., and History Certihcates, Honor Roll.- Business, Evening College. HENRY M. LEIMAN 33 Herrick Drive Lawrence, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Math. Help Squad, T, Service Medal, Gen- eral Ofiice Squad, Mod. T, Math. Ofhce Squad, French-American Club, President, Service Awards, Chess Club, Camera Club, Math. Club, Physics Club, Astronomy Club, Math., I. P., F. Dr., and History Certificates, Arista, Honor Roll.- University of Michigan. 78 SAMUEL LEINER 675 Willoughby Avenue College Preparatory Course. All-City High School Orchestra, All-City High School Band, Tech Orchestra, T, Tech Band, T, Tech Dance Or- chestra, T, All Tech Music Sweater Award, All Tech Music Service Medal, New York Philharmonic Scholarship in Percussion.-Business, Evening College. EDWARD T. LEOPOLD 1305 86th Street College Preparatory Course. Tennis Team, Mod. T, Bowling Team, BTHS, 1st Place Gold Medal, 2nd Place Silver Bowling Pin Tie Clasp, Gym Lockerroom Squad, English Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. FRANK X. LERBINGER 714 Greenwood Avenue Mechanical Course. Current Events Club, Camera Club, Math., I. P., Civics, English, and F. Dr. Certifi- cates.-Business, Evening School. JOHN W. LESER 89-09 237th Street Bellerose, L. I. Chemical Course. Service Squad, BT HS, Math. Certificates, Honor Roll. -Business, Night College. LESTER LESSUK 2836 West. 55th Street Mechanical Course. Varsity Football T, Swimming, Bronze Medal, Lock- erroom Squad, Service Squad, BTHS, Math. and English Certificates. - United States Air Corps. s HENRY LEVINSON 141 East 95rd Street Aero. Course. Intramural Swimming, Pool Squad, Mod. T, Math. Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. IRVING LEWIS 355 East 52nd Street New York City Chemical Course. Service Squad, BTHS, Chemistry Club, History So- ciety.-Business, Evening College. MURRAY LEWIS 412 11th Street Electrical Course. S.O.S., jr. Lieut., Mod. T, Math. Certificate.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. ROBERT LEWIS 3620 Bedford Avenue College Pre aratory Course. Intra- mural Handgall, BTI, General Of- fice Squad, BTHS, Survey Staff, His- tory Club, Current Events Club, N. Y. Herald-Tribune Salesman, Math., English, and Civics Certificates.- Business College. IRVING LIBERTOFF 146 Van Buren Street Mechanical Course. Fife, Drum, and Bugle Corps, Mod. T, Mimeograph Squad, Mod. T, Service Squad, Math., Civics, I. P., F. Dr., and History Certihcatesg Physics and Television Clubs, Honor Roll. - Brooklyn Polytechnic. EUGENE LIBERTOW 1560 Coney Island Avenue Chemical Course. Historical and Chemical Societies, Chess and Physics Clubs.-Business. BERNARD LIEBERMAN 1643 East 3rd Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Library Squad, BTHS, Serv- ice Squad, Current Events Club, French-American Club, Lunchroom Squad, Math., I. P., English, Civics, and History Certificates.-New York University. HENRY P. LIEBOLD, JR. 5930 Linden Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Mechanical Course. Freshman Track, BTHS, Intramural Baseball, Chem. and Library Squads, Service Squad, Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Buck nell U. WILBUR LIEBSON 119-21 Metropolitan Avenue Kew Gardens, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Radio Club, Chess-Checker Club, French- American Club, Service Pin, History Club, Math. Certificate.-Business, Evening College. JULIUS LIFF 1150 Brighton Beach Avenue Mechanical Course. Intramural Squad, Health Education Office, Math., I. P., History, and English Certificates, Honor Roll.-Purdue. SEYMOUR LILKER 427 Linden Boulevard College Preparatory Course. Survey, BTHS, G.O. Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., and English Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-City College. HERMAN E. LINDNER 514 73rd Street Mechanical Course. I. P., Math., F. Dr., and English Certiicatesg Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. WILLIAM R. LINDROTH 812 Sterling Place College Preparatory Course. Baseball, Batboy, Floor Managers' OH-ice Squad, BTHS, Math., English, and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.- Purdue. LEONARD LIPKIN 672 Empire Boulevard Aero. Course. Lunchroom Squad, Math., I. P., Civics, and English Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. JOSEPH G. LISKA 135-44 94th Street Ozone Park, L. I. Mechanical Course. Blueprint Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., Civics, and F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. BERT L. LISS 105 East 16th Street College Preparatory Course. Track Team, Mod. T, Cross Country Team, Sweater T, 2 Silver Shoes, Captain 1941 Brooklyn Cross Country Cham- pionship Team, Member Brooklyn Eagle All-Scholastic 1941 Cross Country Team, National Educational Association Skyline Pageant, Bronze Award, Current Events Club, Math. and Civics Certihcates.-New York University. 79 MELVIN J. LISS 2787 West 5th Street Electrical Course. Intramural Foot- ball, BTI, Health Education Oliice, Mgr., T, I. P., English, Math., and History Certificates, Honor Roll.- Business, Evening College. ROBERT W. LLOVET 1317 Union Street College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Football Team, BTI, Lunch- room Squad.-Bucknell University. NATHAN LOMBROZO 366 Cypress Avenue Bronx, N. Y. Electrical Course. Math., English, and History Certificates.-Business' Evening College. LAWRENCE H. LONG 1035 85th Street College Preparatory Course, Squad Leaders', Secretary, Floor Managers' Squad, Service Squad: Math., Eng- lish. and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Lehigh University. IRA L. LOPATA 3111 Brighton First Place College Preparatorv Course. Football Squad: Intramural Softball, Intra- mural Handball, BTI: Camera Club: French-American Club: Print Shop Squad, Mod. T, I. P., Math., English, and Hygiene Certificates, Honor Roll. -Cooper Union. ROBERT A. LOUIS 72 89th Street College Preparatory Course. Ice Hockey, T, Intramural Baseball, Floor Managers' Office Squad, BT HS, Locker Guard Squad, Math., English, Civics. and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Cornell. NORMAN LOVITCH 523 Saratoga Avenue College Preparatory Course. Cheer Leaders', BTHS, Math. Help Squad, T, Service Squad, BTHS, Blueprint Squad, Radio Club, Physics Club. I. P., Math., F. Dr., and English Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.- C. C. N. Y. 80 HERBERT F. LOWE 1366 Flatbush Avenue College Preparatory Course. jr. In- spectors' Club, Math. Club, jr. Book Club, Chem. S uad, Mod. T, Blueprint Editor, Scribes, President, Math., I. P., and English Certilicates. -Bucknell University. IVAR LUNDSTROM 514 84th Street College Preparatory Course. Cheer Leaders', Bowling Squad, Sales Bu- reau, BTHS, I. P. and English Cer- tificates.-Pratt Institute. ANTHONY F. LUPARELLO 1134 73rd Street College Preparatory Course. Math. Certificate.-Business, Evening Col- lege. CHRISTOPHER LUPIA 414 Cornelia Street Art Course. Track, BTHS, Blueprint Art Staff, Mathematic: Student Car- toonist, Mathematics Cover Design Contest Winner, Art Squad, F. Dr., Art, I. P., and Math. CertiHcates.- Pratt Institute. DENNIS j. LYNDS 666 Nostrand Avenue Chemical Course. Swimming Intra- mural, Silver Medal, Historical So- ciety, Chemistry Society, Physics Club, Chess Club, English, Math., I. P., and History Certificates, Honor Roll.-Businzss, Evening College. WILLIAM A. LYONS 32-11 33rd Street Long Island City, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Public Speaking Society, Mod. T, Service Squad, Senior Class Executive Com- mittee, Floor Managers' Squad, French-American Club, Civics, Math., English, and F. Dr. Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Rensselaer. WILLIAM S. LYONS 338 82nd Street College Preparatory Course. Gym- nasium Squad Leaders, General Of- lice Squad, BTHS, Service Squad, BTHS, Historical Society, Current Events Club, I. P., Math., English, and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll. -United States Military Academy. FRANK R. MACRI 1230 69th Street College Preparatory Course. Pool Squad, Service Squad, Maj. T, His- torical Society, Current Events Club, Lunchroom S uad, I. P., Math., and F. Dr. Certizcates, Honor Roll.- Brooklyn Polytechnic. BENJAMIN P. MAKSYM 146-62 106th Avenue jamaica, L. I. Electrical Course. Allied Arts Club, BTHS, Blueprint Staff, Radio Club, Chess Club, Physics Club, Model Club, I. P., Math., F. Dr., and English Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Business. ROBERT W. MANN 111-14 Withoff Street Queens Village, We ical C r Office 5 , . a . Dr., Eng- i to , a ivics Certificates, or Roll' risfa.-Business, Eve- iing College. LAWRENCE F. MANNINO 135-34 125th Street South Ozone Park, L. I. Electrical Course. Math. and F. Dr. fertificates.-Business, Evening Col- ege. ALEX MANOS 211 Sixth Avenue Electrical Course. English, F. Dr., nd Math. Certificates.-Business. SAM MARCHAK 1371 44th Street Iollege Pregaratory Course. Squad .eaders' Clu g S.O.S. Squad, Math., i. Dr., and I. P. Certificates.-Busi- ess, Evening College PAUL C. MARCHI 51 Willoughby Avenue Iechanical Course. Materials Test- rg Lab. Squad, BTHS, Sales Bureau quad, BTHS, Service Squad, Phy- ics Club, I. P., Math., F. Dr., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.- -usiness, Evening College. ELMER D. MARGOLIN 53 Brighton 2 Path College Preparatory Course. Hockey Team, Manager, T, Squad Leaders, Ryerson Harmonica Band, Ryerson Service Squad, Ryerson Model Build- ers Club, I. P., Math., English, Civics, Shop, and Physics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Iowa University. LAWRENCE W. MARINO 1532 71st Street College Preparatory Course. Basket- ball Squad, French-American Club, BTHS, Service Squad, T.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. GEORGE F. MARLOW 1342 West 7th Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling Squad, Gold Medal, Service Squad, I. P. Certificate.-Business, Evening College. JACOB F. MARSHALL 194 East 37th Street Chemical Course. Longfellows, Mod. T, Library Squad, T, Physics Prep. Room, Chem. Society, F. Dr., M. D., Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.- California Institute of Technology. ROBERT J. MASON 8652 15th Avenue College Preparatory Course. Cheer Leaders' Squad, Mod. T, Business Staff of Blueprint, Service Squad, Maj. T, Current Events Club, His- tory Club, Interscholastic German Glee Club, I. P., Math., F. Dr. Cer- tificates.-United States Naval Acad- emy. EDWARD L. MATHEISEN 11 Lake Street Aero. Course. Mimeograph Squad, Astronomy Club, Service Squad, I. P., Math., F. Dr., and English Cer- tihcatesg Honor Roll.-Army Air Corps. ALVIN H. MAYER 945 West End Avenue New York City Aero. Course. Intramural Swimming Team, Bronze Medal, Natatorium Leaders' Squad, Pool Squad, BTHS, I. P., Civics, History, and English Certificates.-Purdue. 81 WILLIAM G. MCCORMICK 142-30 223rd Street Laurelton, L. I. Mechanical Course. Bowling League, Bronze Medal, Stamp Club, English, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certihcates. -Business, Evening College. ROBERT C. MCCRYSTAL 921 78th Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Ping Pong Team, Public Speaking Society, Mod. T, Library Squad, T, Allied Arts Club, BTHS, Camera Club, Math., English, I. P., Drawing, and History Certificates.- Business, College. LESTER J. MCFADZEN 135-36 115th Street Ozone Park, N. Y. Mechanical Course. Bowling Squad, Group Advisers' Office Squad, Ser- vice Squad, Blueprint Squad, BTHS, English Office Squad, BTHS, Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. EUGENE G. MCMAHON 1055 Lincoln Place Electrical Course.-Business. RICHARD E. MCMAHON 2038 Coleman Street Aero. Course. Swimming Team, Sweater T, City Championship Med- ley Relay '40, Gold Medal, Squad Leaders, Pool Squad, BTHS, Civics, I. P., F. Dr., Hist., and Math. Cer- tificates, Honor Roll.-Annapolis. ERNEST G. MEDER 5227 73rd Street Maspeth, N. Y. Arch. Course. Natatorium Squad, Strength Lab. Squad, BTHS, Squad Leaders' Club, Library Squad, I. P., Civics, F. Dr., Math., and Hist. Cer- tificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. JOHN H. MEDOLLO 310 Washington Avenue College Preparatory Course, Intramu- ral Basketball, BTI, Model Club, French-American Club, Math. Certifi- cates.-Business, Evening College. 82 WALTER E. MELIERE 31 Broadway Howard Beach, L. I. Electrical Course. Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege. HOWARD MENZIN 1451 East 14th Street College Preparatory Course. Survey, BTHS, I. P., Math., and English Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. GEORGE MICHALAKIS 542 East 51st Street Chemical Course. Chem. Prep. Squad, History Club, Current Events Club, 1. P., Maui., F. Dr., English, Civics Certificates.-Business. WALTER MICHELS 2106 Cropsey Avenue College Preparatory Course. Bowling Squad, Attendance Pin, Service Squad, Mod. T, Modem Language Othce Squad, T, Dutch Dozen, Pres., Participant in O.K. America , Re- porter for Srheinwerferf I. P., Math., English, Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. MATTHEW N. MILLER 32 Kosciusko Street College Preparatory Course. Library Squad, BTHS, Service Squad, Math. English, and History Certificates, Honor Roll.-Pratt Institute. IRVING MILLMAN 1433 47th Street Architectural Course. Basketball Team, T, Intramural Football, BTI, S.O.S., BTHS, Math. Certificate.- Business, Cooper Union Evening Col- lege. SAMUEL A. MILLS 115-09 217th Street St. Albans, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Library Squad, BTHS, Math. Certificates.-Business. DONALD L. MINOR 724 East 40th Street Mechanical Course. Hockey, T, In- tramural Handball and Basketball, Service Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, Math. and F. Dr. Certificates. -United States Merchant Marine Academy. EUGENE MIRITELLO 404 Applegate Court Mechanical Course. Intramural Ping Pong, Service Squad, Library Squad, BTHS, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Cer- tificates, Honor Roll. - Business, Evening College. WILLIAM A. MODERY, JR. 9541 211th Street Queens Village, L. I. Structural Course. Hygiene Oflice Squad, Service Squad, History Club, Civics Certificate. - Business, Eve- ning College. THOMAS J. MOORE 1688 East 46th Street Electrical Course. Co-Captain Base- ball Team, T, Brooklyn Eagle All- Scholastic, Math., English, and Civ- ics Certificates.-Business, Evening College. FRED MORING 19-14 21st Road Astoria, L. I. Mechanical Course. Math. Certificate, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege. ANTHONY JOSEPH MORREALE 60-83 Putnam Avenue Ridgewood, Brooklyn Electrical Course. Pool Squad, T, Print Shop Squad, BTHS, S.O.S., Eng., I. P., and Math. Certificates.- Business. IRVING MORTIN 152 Central Avenue Mechanical Course. Band, BTHS, Orchestra, Mod. T, Current Events Club, Survey, BTHS, Slide Rule Winner, Plane Geometry Cover De- sign Contest, S.O.S., BTHS, F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. JOSEPH D. MROZ 5420 69th Street Maspeth, Queens Electrical Course. Pool Squad, Tele- vision Club, I. P., Civics Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. RANDALL G. MUIR 132-22 82nd Street Ozone Park, L. I. Structural Course. Longfellows, T, Blueprint Room Squad, BTHS, Gen- eral Ollice Squad, BTHS, Mimeo- graph Squad, BTHS, Math., I. P., Civics, Drawing Certificates.-Poly- technic Institute of Brooklyn. GEORGE NAPACK 3311 Church Avenue Chemical Course. Intramural Paddle Tennis, BTI, Service Squad, Mod. T, Blueprint Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., English, F. Dr., and History Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. MARIO T. NAPPI 312 Hart Street Structural Course.-Business. BERNARD NEWMAN 341 Beach 67th Street Arverne, L. I. Aero. Course. I. P., Math., English, and History Certificates.-Business. JOHN B. NICHOLS 863 East 10th Street Aero. Course. Math., English, His- tory, Civics, Chem., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor R0ll.-Mas- sachusetts Institute of Technology. EDGAR W. NIELSEN 816 67th Street College Preparatory Course. French- American Club, Longfellows, T, Glee Club, Mod. T, Library Squad, T, Cheer Leaders' Squad, I. P., F. Dr., and English Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. 83 LESTER NIRENBERG 922 Lafayette Avenue College Preparatory Course. Swim- ming Squad, Radio, Physics, French- American, Glee Clubs, Math., I. P., English Certificates.-Brooklyn Poly- technic. MORRIS NIRENBERG 374 South 4th Street College Preparatory Course. I. P. and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.- Cooper Union, Evening. NORMAN NOSOFF 146 Chester Street Electrical Course. Service Squad, BTHS, Locker Room Squad, Math. Certificates.-Business. WILLIAM E. NOVEMBER 102-46 65th Road Forest Hills, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Survey, Advertising Manager, T, Group Ad- visers' Squad, BTHS, Longfellows T, English, I. P., Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege, C.C.N.Y. 1 JOSEPH P. O'BRIEN 1304 Avenue M College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Locker Room Squad, Math., I. P., English, Civics, and History Cer- ticates, Honor Roll. - St. John's University. ALVIN A. ODINTZ 78 Newport Street ' Structural Course. Baseball Team, Mimeograph Squad, General Office Squad, T, Switchboard Operator, Tech Football Band, English, Math. Certificates.-Carnegie Tech. JEROME ODZE 1265 55th Street College Preparatory Course. Shot Put Team, Print Squad, Major T, Point and Pica Club, Service Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math. Certificates.-Pratt Inst. 84 FREDRICK H. PAULS 1967 East 34th Street Electrical Course. Handball Team, Mod. T, Natatorium Leaders' Squad, Service Squad, I. P., Chemistry, and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll. -- U. S. Naval Academy. ROBERT F. PELZMANN 415 East 145th Street Bronx, N. Y. Mechanical Course. Track Team, BTHS, Materials Testing Lab. Squad, Pres., T, English Office Squad, Pres., Mod. T, Survey Circulation Staff, Mgr., Group Advisers' Office Squad, BTHS, Power Lab. Squad, Service Squad, Math. and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.--Business, Evening Col- lege. JOHN F. PETER 3207 Avenue S College Preparatory Course. S.O.S., Mod. T, Dutch Dozen, Natatorium Squad, BTHS, Floor Managers' Squad, Math. Certificates.-Pensacola Naval Air Station. ALLEN A. PETERS 362 Great Kills Road Staten Island, N. Y. Mechanical Course. Blueprint Squad, BTHS, Sales Bureau Squad, Mod. T, Math., I. P., Civics, F. Dr. Certifi- cates.-Mass. Institute of Technology. LEONARD PETRUK 95-15 Brisbin Street Jamaica, L. I. Mechanical Course. Intramural Bas ketball, BTI, Service Squad, BTHS, Power Laboratory Squad, I. P. Cer- tilicate.-Pratt Institute. JULIUS B. PEZZULLA 416 West 36th Street New York City Aero. Course. Squad Leaders' Club, Library Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, Math., F. Dr., I. P., and Civ- ics Certificates.-United States Army Air Corps. JOSEPH F. PIEGEL 119-49 Inwood Street South Ozone Park, N. Y. Mechanical Course. Print Squad, T, General Office Squad, BTHS, S.O.S., I. P., English, and Civics Certificates. -Brooklyn Polytechnic. ALEXANDER PIKULIK 281 New jersey Avenue Electrical Course. Mimeograph Squad, BTHS, Society of Technical Magi- cians, Lockerroom Squad, Service S uad, I. P., Math., and Civics Cer- tizcatesg Honor Roll.-Brooklyn Poly- technic. KALVIN POGOLOFF 1925 Stillwell Avenue Mechanical Course. Service Squad, Physics Club, Stamp Club, Book Club, Jr. Inspectors Club, Math. Certificate, Honor Roll.-Stevens In- stitute. JEROME POLLACK 1281 Eastern Parkway College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, T, lst Lieut., Current Events Club, Camera Club, Historical So- ciety, BTHS, Math. Certificates. - Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. THOMAS POLLOCK 720 East 95th Street College Preparatory Course. Model Club, Service Squad, Chem. Squad, Exhibition in Scientific German.- Business, Evening College. GEORGE E. POULOS 6211 Fifth Avenue Mechanical Course. Helped make Tech Garden, History and English Certificates.-Business, Evening Col- lege. ACHILLES A. PRINCIPE 135-18 Rockaway Boulevard South Ozone Park, L. I. Mechanical Course. Bowling Squad, BTHS, Blueprint Squad, BTHS, I. P., Math., F. Dr., English, Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Cooper Union Evening College. LOUIS P. PROKOP 177-15 150th Drive lamaica South, L. I. Electrical Course. Math. Certificate.- Business, Evening College. LOUIS J. PROVENZALE 3883 Flatlands Avenue Structural Course. Intramural Hand- ball, BTI, Pool Squad, BTHS, Sur- veying Squad, BTHS, General Of- fice Squad, Service Squad, Lunch- room Squad, Math. Certificate. - Business, Evening College. GILBERT G. RABINOWITZ 2047 Bay Ridge Avenue Aero. Course. Service Squad, First Lieut., Major T, Astronomy Club, Math., Civics, I. P., and History Certixicates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. BENJAMIN P. RANSOM 72 88th Street Electrical Course. Assistant Class Treasurer, Math Help Squad, BTHS, Radio Club, Physics Club, Astron- omy Club, Chess Club, History Club, English, Math., and I. P. Cer- tificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. WALTER RAUSCH 6520 Wetherole Street Rego Park, L. I. Chemical Course. I. P., Math., Eng. and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll -Business, Evening College. HOWARD A. REECK 3714 Avenue D Mechanical Course. Math. Certificate. -Business, Evening College. CHARLES F. REICHERT 1668 Woodbine Street Mechanical Course. I. P., Math., F. Dr., and Civics Certificates, Alexan- der Medal, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. THEODORE REINER 340 Starr Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Mechanical Course. Intramural Swim- ming Team, Bronze Medal, Service Squad, BTHS, Print Shop Squad, Mod. T, Math. Certificates.-Bush ness, Evening College. 85 STANLEY REISENBURGER 1242 East New York Avenue Mechanical Course. Intramural Base- ball, I. P., Civics, and Math. Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Stevens Institute. ALBERT S. RETTIG 2860 West 25th Street College Preparatory Course. Baseball, Mod. T, Math. Club, Secy., Math- ematirr Student, Asst. Editor, Math Help Squad, T, Service Medal, French-American Club, Le Clniron, Contributor, Stamp Club, Group Ad- visers' Squad, T, Math., English, Civics, History, and I. P. Certificates, Arista, Honor Roll.-Cooper Union. WILLIAM A. RHATIGAN 2068 East 12th Street Electrical Course. Intramural Base- ball, BTI, Intramural Swimming, Gold Medal, Swimming Team, Mod. T, Blueprint Squad, Natatorium Leaders' Squad, English, I. P., Civ- ics, and History Certilicates.-Busi- ness, Evening College. LEONARD P. RHINDRESS 808 Park Place Mechanical Course. Blueprint Room Squad, BTHS, English, I. P., and Civics Certificates.-Business. CHARLES H. RICE 89-08 240th Street Bellerose, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Math., I. P., and English Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-N.Y.U. NORMAN N. RICHMAN 4415 8th Avenue Mechanical Course. Math Certificates. --Brooklyn Polytechnic. CHARLES E. RIEFENSTAHL 9321 Vanderveer Street Queens Village, L. I. Mechanical Course. Math. and I. P. Certificates. - Business, Brooklyn Polytechnic Evening College. 86 FRED RIEGER 140-74 Burden Crescent Jamaica, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Bowling League, Silver Medal, English Oiiice Squad, Secretary, BTHS, Survey Cir- culation Squad, Current Events Club, Physics Club, I. P., Math., English, Chem., Civics, and History Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Cooper Union. WARREN C. RIKER 211-34 91st Avenue Queens Village, L. I. Structural Course. Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. JOSEPH F. RILEY 1742 Bergen Street Electrical Course.-Business. ERNEST RITCHIE 62 Hausman Street Mechanical Course. Squad Leaders, Co-Captain, Swimming Team, Li- brary Squad, BTHS, Service Squad, BTHS, Strength of Materials Squad, BTHS, Floor Managers' Squad, I. P., F. Dr., Eng. Certilicates.-Cooper Union. JAMES F. RITSCHEL 20-18 Palmetto Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Electrical Course. Intramural Hand- ball, Blueprint Squad, Math. Office Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad.- Business, Evening College. ROBERT M. ROELOFFS 812 59th Street College Preparatory Course. Math Help Squad, T, Service Medal, Eng- lish Oflice Squad, BTHS, Dutch Dozen, Math., I. P., F. Dr., and English Certificates, Arista, Honor Roll.-C.C.N.Y. EDWARD T. ROGERS 784 Hancock Street Electrical Course. Service Squad, BTHS, Pool Squad, BTHS, Math. Certificates.-United States Army Air Corps. HAROLD ROGERS 1822 Madison Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Mechanical Course. Math Certificates. -Businessg Evening College. ROBERT B. ROLLINS 1206 New York Avenue Electrical Course. Math Help Squad, Code Practiceg Adv. Theory, Tele- vision Clubg I. P., Math., F. Dr., and Civics Certificates. - Businessg Cooper Union Evening College. ARTHUR L. ROSENZWEIG 1020 East 2nd Street College Preparatory Course. March- ing and Concert Band, T3 Astronomy Clubg Math. Certihcates.-Columbia. SIDNEY B. ROTHENBERG 470 Shefiield Avenue Chemical Course. Cross Country Team, Co-captain, 1940 Boro Cham- pion Cross Country Team fI941j, Tg Track Team, T5 Service Squadg Lunchroom Squadg I. P. and Math. Certificates.-New York University. WILLIAM F. ROY 116-30 203rd Street St. Albans, L. I. Architectural Course. Bowling Team, Squad, BTHS3 Lunchroom Scuxadg 3rd Place, Bronze Medal, Li rary Service Squadg I. P., Math., and Civics Certificatesg Honor Roll. - N.Y.S.M.M.A. MARTIN RUBIN 350 Pennsylvania Avenue College Preparatory Course. Dance Orchestra, T3 Band, T, Astronomical Society, Music Squad, BTHSQ Ser- vice Squadg I. P., Math., History Cer- tificatesg Honor Roll.-C.C.N.Y. CLIFFORD F. RUPP 146-02 133rd Avenue South Ozone Park, L. I. Structural Course. Intramural Paddle Tennisg I. P. Certificate.-Business. GERARD T. RYAN 225-19 105th Avenue Queens Village, L. I. Mechanical Course. Freshman Track Squadg Longfellowsg S.O.S.g Blue- print Squad, BTI-ISg Locker Room Shquadg Math., I, P., and Civics Cer- tificates.-Business. CHARLES T. SALVIA 1455 DeKalb Avenue Mechanical Course. I. P., Civics Cer- tificates.-Evening College. NATHAN SAMBERG 171 East 96th Street College Preparatory Course. Bowling Squadg Chess Clubg Service Squad, Mod. Tg I. P., Math., History, F. Dr., Civics, Chemistry and English Certificatesg Honor Roll. - Cooper Union. JAMES F. SAMUEL 859 Myrtle Avenue Chemical Course. S.O.S.g Library Squadg General Office Squad, Floor Managers' Squad, BTHSg Assistant Treasurer of Senior Classg Math. and I. P. Certihcates. - Business, Evening College. ROBERT SANDAK 1 1600 Eastern Parkway Electrical Course. Service Squadg Radio Clubg Math. Certihcatesg Hon- or Roll.-Businessg Evening College. MARTIN SANDERS 666 Ocean Avenue Chemical Course. Longfellows g Chem. Prep. Room Squad.-College. FRANK A. SANTAGATA 6709 14th Avenue Architectural Course. Building Con- struction Shop Squadg Library Squad BTHSQ I. P. and History Certificates. -Businessg Evening College. r 87 JOHN A. SANTORA 222 Beach 85th Street Rockaway Beach, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Lunch- room Squad, History Club, Math. Certificates.-N.Y.U. WILLIAM A. SCHAEFER 69-30 61st Drive Maspeth, Queens College Preparatory Course. Dutch Dozen, Vice-President, Secretary, Treasurer, Der Scbeinwerfer, Asso- ciate Editor, S.O.S., Jr. Lieut., T, Modern Language Ofiice Squad, Mod. T, Print Shop Squad, BTHS, Fife, Drum, and Bugle Corps, I. P., Math., and English Certificates, Honor Roll. -Cooper Union. JOHN A. SCHEPP 105-52 118th Street Richmond Hill, L. I. Structural Course. Track Squad, Ra- dio Club, Chess Club, Astronomy Club, Secretary, Model Club, Radio Script Club, Late Office Squad, T, Blueprint Staff, Math., I. P., Hist., and English Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.-Business, Cooper Union. ARTHUR SCHLANG 3102 Brighton First Place Electrical Course. Recording Club, Advanced Theory Club, Code Prac- tice Club, Radio Amateur Club, BTHS, Math Help Squad, T, Spe- cial Award, Service Squad, Math. and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll. -Business, Cooper Union Night School. ALVIN L. SCHLOSSER 815 Lenox Road College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Physics Club, Chess Club, Historical Society, I. P., Math., Hist., Civics, Chem. and English Cer- tificates, Honor Roll.-M.I.T. JOHN V. SCHMALENBERGER 93-18 103rd Avenue Ozone Park, N. Y. Electrical Course. Swimming Intra- murals, General Ofiice Squad, BTHS, Mod. T and Mai. T, Math. and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Brook- lyn Polytechnic. AUGUST J. SCHMIDT 759 Madison Street Electrical Course. I. P. CertiHcate.- United States Navy. 88 LEO L. SCHNEIDER 253 Christopher Avenue Chemical Course. Football Team, BTHS, Mod. T, T, Intramural Foot- ball, Baseball, Chem. Club, I. P. Certihcate.-Business, Night School, WILLIAM C. SCHNEIDER 94-13 Plattwood Avenue Ozone Park, L. I. Mechanical Course. English Ofiice Squad, Mod. T, Glee Club, BTHS, Service Squad, BTHS, Math., Eng- lish, and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Georgia Tech. SOL SCHNEIDERMAN 157 Vernon Avenue Electrical Course. Stage Repair Squad, General Ofiice Squad, Lunchroom Squad, Math. and I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll. - Business, Brooklyn Polytechnic. ROBERT D. SCHONFELD 8454 127th Street Richmond Hill, L. I. Mechanical Course. Service Squadr- Business. HUGO J. SCHRANZ 270 West 11th Street New York City Electrical Course. Orchestra, T, Math. Certificates. -- Business, Eve- ning College. CHRISTIAN SCHULTZ 625 East 38th Street Aero. Course. I. P. Certificates. - Business, Evening College. DAVID SCHWARTZ 1684 West 2nd Street College Preparatory Course. Cross Country, T, Track Team, T, Bowl- ing Team, BTHS, Squad Leaders, Current Events Club, Chemistry So- ciety, Physics Squad, Service Squad, I. P. Certificate. JOSHUA I. SCHWARTZ 706 Lefferts Avenue College Preparatory Course. Glee Club, T, Floor Managers' Squad, Senior Oflice Squad, Chemistry Club, I. P., Math., French, Eng., History Certificates, Honor Roll.-C.C.N.Y. DONALD E. SCHWARZER 973 79th sneer U College Preparatory Course. Swim- ming Team, T, Bowling League, Longfellows, Mod. T, French-Amer- ican Club, Allied Arts Club, BTHS, Natatorium Leaders' Squad, BTHS, Print Shop Squad, BTHS: Sfrviff Squad, BTHS, Lunchroom Squad, F. Dr. Certificate.-Brooklyn Poly- tcchnic. ERMINIO A. SCUTARI 1827 Atlantic Avenue College Preparatory Course. Mimeo- graph Squad, T, Television Theory and Construction Group, Radio Ad- vanced and Elementary Theory, Ama- teurs, and Code Group, Math. Cer- tificates.-United States Naval Acad- emy. EDWARD A. SCZEPANSKI 9716 88th Street Ozone Park, L. I. Electrical Course. Assistant Class Treasurer, Math. and Civics Certifi- cates.-Business, Brooklyn Polytech- nic Night School. ROBERT W. SEARCH 8627 77th Street Woodhaven, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Swimming, BTI, Blueprint, Scribes, Service Squad, BTHS, Math., I. P., English, History, and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll, Arista.- Cooper Union. HENRY SECHTER 2970 Ocean Avenue College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Baseball, BTI, I. P. and Math. Certificates.-United States Military Academy. HAROLD D. SEGALI. 592 Snediker Avenue Chemical Course. Chem. Club, Cos- tume Squad, I. P., Math., and Civics Certificates.-Cornell. CHARLES E. SELIGMAN 8004 18th Avenue Mechanical Course. Blueprint Squad, BTHS, Materials Testing Laboratory Squad, Mod. T, I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Business. GEORGE G. SEMERJIAN 1919 Church Avenue College Preparatory Course. Lunch- room Squad, Service Squad, Math., Mech., and F. Dr. Certificates. - Georgia Tech. STANLEY J. SHAFTEL 50 Linden Boulevard College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Softball, BTI, Intramural Handball, Scribes, Glee Club, BT I-IS, S.O.S., BTHS, Survey, Quips and Smilings Editor, Mod. T, Win- ner Senior Declamation Contest, 1940, I. P., Math., F. Dr., English, and Civics Certihcates, Honor Roll. -U. S. Coast Guard Academy. HARRIS SHAPIRO 1277 Sutter Avenue Chemical Course. Physics Club, Chemistry Society.-N.Y.U. Evening College. NICK SHARKO 243 Bristol Street Aero. Course. Captain of Basketball Team, T, Lunchroom Squad, I. P., Math., and F. Dr. Certificates, Hon- or Roll.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. HENRY H. SHARPE 256 East 8th Street Mechanical Course. Materials Test- ing Laboratory Squad, Mod. T, Math., English, I. P., and Civics Cer- tificates, Honor Roll. - Business, Evening College. GEORGE E. SHEVLIN 64-35 65th Place Middle Village, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Fall, 1940 Cross Country Borough Cham- pionship Team, T, Track Team Mod. T, Intramural Swimming, Lunchroom Squad, BTHS, Floor Managers' Ofiice Squad, BTHS, I. P. Certificates.-U. S. Coast Guard Academy. 89 JOHN J. SHIELDS 133-35 119th Street South Ozone Park, L. I. Structural Course. Handball Squadg Historical Societyg Current Events Clubg S.O.S.g I. P., Math., and Civics Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. ARNOLD SIENKIEWICZ 969 Fox Street Bronx, N. Y. . College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, BTHSQ Mod. Lang. Office Squad, BTHS, Ass't Treas.g Math., Civics, F. Dr., and I. P. Certificatesg Honor Roll.-N.Y.U. HOWARD SILFIN 1035 East 10th Street Mechanical Course. Physics Clubg Math., English, and History Certifi- catesg Honor Roll.-Businessg Eve- ning College. WALLACE D. SILVER 1353 53rd Street Aero. Course. Swimming Team, In- tramural Handball, Swimming, Sil- ver Medalsg Natatorium Leaders' Squad, Math. Help Squad, BTHSQ Service Squadg Woodworking Squad, Presidentg Math., I. P., Civics, F. Dr., and History Certificatesg Honor Roll. ANDREW SIMIONE 214 Prospect Street Mechanical Course. Goggle Repair Squad, I. P. and F. Dr. Certificates. -Brooklyn Polytechnic Evening Col- lege. CALVIN SINGER 705 Belmont Avenue Electrical Course. Marionette Club, BTHSQ Math., I. P., English, His- tory, and F. Dr. Certificates.-Bush ness. FRED J. SINGER 499 East 49th Street Electrical Course. Service Squadg Math. and Civics Certificates.- Businessg Brooklyn Polytechnic Eve- ning. 90 l DANIEL J. SKURKA 8504 60th Road Elmhurst, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Footballg Math. Certificate.- Businessg Evening College. SEYMOUR SLOCHOWER 8321 21st Avenue Chemical Course. Baseball and Swim- ming Intramurals, BTI, Library Squad, BTHSg I. P. and Math. Cer- tificates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic In- strtute. RICHARD I.. SMEDES 189-11 Turin Drive St. Albans, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Radio Club, I. P., Math., F. Dr., and Civics Certificates.-Brooklyn Poly- technic. JAMES E. SMITH 978 80th Street Mechanical Course. I. P. and Math. Certificatesg Honor Roll.-Businessg Evening College. JOHN W. SMITH 264 6th Avenue Mechanical Course. I. P., F. Dr., and Math. Certificates, Honor Roll.--U. S. Naval Academy. CLYDE E. SNYDER 7139 67th Street Glendale, L. I. Mechanical Course, Lunchroom Squadg I. P. and Math. Certificatesg Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege. ROBERT T. SNYDER 950 4th Avenue Structural Course. Intramural Basket- ball, BTHSQ Natatorium Leaders' Squad, S.O.S.g Surveying Room Squadg Lunchroom Squadg Math. Help Squad, I. P., Math., Civics, and F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. STANLEY H. SONNENSHEIN 2631 Ocean Avenue College Preparatory Course. Locker Room Squad, I. P. and Math. Cer- tificates.-Cooper Union. LEONARD L. SORMANI 1068 65rd Street Aero. Course. Math., I. P., F. Dr., and History Certificates.-Business, Evening College. DONALD SPANIER 2509 Beverly Road . College Preparatory Course. Bowling Squad, Attendance Pin, Chess Club, Math. Club, Service Squad, Slide Rule Club, Current Events Club, President, Physics Club, Chem. So- ciety, Bookroom Squad, Physics Of- fice Squad, Math., History, English, Civics, I. P., and Chem. Certificates, Honor Roll.-N.Y.U. RALPH N. SPARAGNA 1752 West 4th Street Mechanical Course. Service Squad, Honor Roll.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. HELMUT J. SPITZLAY 1535 East 10th Street Chemical Course. Squad Leaders, Chemical Society, I. P., Math., and English Certificates, Honor Roll.-- Business, Evening College. MARTIN STARKMAN 1686 Grand Avenue Bronx, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Orches- tra, BTHS, Asst. Treas. Senior Class, Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.--N.Y.U. HANS F. STEEN 93 Halsey Street Mechanical Course. Math. Help Squad, Mod. T, One Year Service Medal, S.O.S., Corporal, BTHS, Materials Testing Laboratory Squad, I. P., Math., F. Dr., and English Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. HERBERT STERNITZKE 4415 Fourth Avenue College Preparatory Course. Service Squad, Dutch Dozen, Historical So- ciety, Current Events Club, I. P. and History Certificates.-Michigan State College. EDWARD P. STOLARSKI 154 26th Street Mechanical Course. Stamp Club, I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Business, Evening College. VICTOR STRICKHOLM 518 East 139th Street Bronx, N. Y. Mechanical Course. I. P. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege. JAMES A. SUNDSTROM, JR. 338 16th Street College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Baseball, BTI, Public Speak- ing Society, BTHS, Service Squad, Math., English, I. P., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Webb In- stitute of Naval Architecture. MARTIN SWICKLE 831 Lenox Road College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Basketball, Group Advisers' Olflce Squad, BTHS, French-Ameri- can Club, Chess Club, Elementary Radio Club, History and French Certificates, Honor Roll.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. FREDERICK L. SZATMARY 131-04 135th Place South Ozone Park, L. I. Structural Course. Historical Society, Current Events Club, I. P. Certifi- cate.-Businessg Evening College. PAUL E. TANNER 1517 East 59th Street College Preparatory Course. Concert and Football Bands, T, Chess Club, Math., English, I. P., and Civics Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. 91 WALTER A. TARZIA 58-14 59th Street Maspeth, L. I. Art Course. I. P. and F. Dr. Cer- tificates.-Businessg Evening College. WALTER H. TAZLER 90-16 178th Street amaica L I .I , - - Mechanical Course. Math. Certificate. -Businessg Evening College. IRVING TEMPKIN 132 Blake Avenue Electrical Course. Basketball Intra- muralsg Band, Mod. T, Math. and Civics Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. LEO M. THOMPSEN 1035 70th Street Mechanical Course. Print Shop Squadg Locker Room Squad g Math. Certifi- cates.-Business. GERARD j. TORGERSEN 240-30 Mayda Road Rosedale, L. I. Chemical Course. Camera Club, Blueprint Squadg I. P. Certificates.- Businessg Evening College. JAMES L. TOTH 171-09 Bagley Avenue Flushing, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Library Squadg Model Club.-Business. MILTON B. TRAGER 179 Dahill Road Mechanical Course. Print Shop Squad, Tg Math., English, Civics, and I. P. Certihcates.-Businessg Eve- ning College. 92 STANLEY J. Tuusz 341 Bradford Street Lunchroom Squad, Math. Certificates -Businessg Evening College, DAVID TUCHSCHNEIDER 797 East 161st Street Bronx, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Current Events Club, Vice-Presidentg Service Squad, lst Lieut., Tg BTHS Histori- cal Society, Camera Clubg Dutch Dozeng Math. Certificatesg Honor Roll.-Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. SEYMOUR TUREK 219 Madison Street New York City College Preparatory Course. Allied Arts Clubg Current Events Club, French-American Clubg Physics Prep. Room Squadg Service Squad, BTHSQ Math., I. P., History, F. Dr., and English Certificates, Honor Roll.- C.C.N.Y. VINCENT L. UJCIC 357 Bay Ridge Avenue Chemical Course. Swimming Intra- murals, Silver Medalg Library Squad, Mod. T, Survey, Mod. T3 Chemistry Societyg I. P., Math., English, and History Certificatesg Honor Roll.- Businessg Evening College. EVERETT T. URBANSKI 210 Jefferson Avenue Mechanical Course. Squad Leaders' Clubg Floor Managers' Squad, BT HSQ F. Dr. and I. P. Certificatesg Honor Roll.-Business, Evening Col- lege. EDWARD J. VACCARO 315 Sixth Street Electrical Course. Math., I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates.-Business, Eve- ning College. GEORGE W. VAN BUREN 665 79th Street Electrical Course. Intramural Basket- ball, Baseball, BTI, Football Squadg Football and Concert Bandg Group Advisers' Squadg Math. Help Squadg S.O.S.g Lunchroom Squadg Mimeo- graph Squad.-Business. Aero. Course. Service Squad, S.O.S.g WILLIAM H. VAN COTT 51-11 Manila Street Elmhurst, L. I. Chemical Course. Civics, History, and Math. Certificates. - Businessg Evening College. WILBUR R. VAN EYSDEN 557 47th Street Architectural Course. Intramural Baseball, Managerg Tech Bible Class, President, I. P., Civics, and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.-Business, Evening College. ROBERT E. VAN HARE 200 McDougal Street Mechanical Course. I. P., Math., F. Dr., English, and History Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-Business. GEORGE E. VAN ZANDT 267 62nd Street Mechanical Course. Squad Leadersg Longfellowsg Print Squadg Honor Rollg I. P., English, and F. Dr. Cer- tihcates.-Businessg Evening College. J. ARTHUR VENERUSO 58 Chester Avenue Mechanical Course. Squad Leaders, BTHSQ I. P., Math., and English Certihcates.-Evening College. RAYMOND J. VIEIRA 8411 Tenth Avenue College Preparatory Course. Squad Leadersg Floor Managers' Squad, Mathematics Certificates. - Norwich University. WARREN E. VIEIRA 8411 Tenth Avenue College Preparatory Course. Squad Leadersg Service Squad, BTHSQ Phys- cs Squad, BTHS.-Norwich. LOUIS R. VIGGIANO 640 St. Marks Avenue College Preparatory Course. Baseball, Tg Track, BTHSQ Group Advisers' Office Squad, BTHSg Math. Help Squad, BTHSQ Math., I. P., Civics, and F. Dr. Certificates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute. HENRY E. VOGEL 2751 Pitkin Avenue Mechanical Course. Foundry Squad, I. P. and Civics Certificates.-Bush ness, Evening College. BERNARD H. WAAG 430 Beach 130th Street Rockaway Beach, N. Y. College Preparatory Course. Intra- mural Handball and Basketballg Ser- vice Squad, Mod. Tg French-Ameri- can Clubg Stamp Clubg Math. and I. P. Certificates.-Purdue University. ERNEST E. WALERIUS 1324 78th Street Mechanical Course. Strength of Ma- terials Testing Laboratory Squad, Mod. T, Math., I. P.. and Civics Certificates: Honor Roll. - Stevens Institute of Technology. DAVID W. WALLACE 258 79th Street College Preparatory Course. Track Teamg Longfellows, Secretary, T, History Club: Honor Rollg I. P., Math., English, Civics, and History Certificates.-Cornell. JOHN E. WALLING 722 Dean Street Structural Course. Intramural Swim- ming, Silver Medal.-United States Marine Corps. GEORGE M. WALSH 97-21 88th Street Ozone Park, L. I. Electrical Course. Football, Mod. T, F. Dr. Certificates.-Holy Cross. 93 JACK WEBER 1046 54th Street Mechanical Course. Dance Band, T, Music Office Squad, BTHS, Sheet Metal Squad. - Business, Evening College. RICHARD L. WEBER 1816 George Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Mechanical Course. English Office Squad, Mod. T, Survey Circulation Staff, I. P., Math., English, and History Certificates, Honor Roll.- Business. JOSEPH WEINBERG 515 Christopher Avenue Electrical Course. Mimeograph Squad, Mod. T, I. P., Math., F. Dr., and Civics Certihcates, Honor Roll.- Business, Evening College. HAROLD R. WEINGARTEN 5521 12th Avenue Mechanical Course. S.O.S., BTHS, I. P. and Civics CertiHcates.-Busi- ness, Evening College. CLIFFORD L. WEIR 1859 Cornelia Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Chemical Course. Intramurals, Li- brary Squad, Mod. T, Blueprint Literary Staff, Survey Office, Chem. Office, I. P., Math., and English Cer- tificates, Honor Roll. - Business, Brooklyn Polytechnic fEveningJ. DAN WEISMAN 862 46th Street Chemical Course. Survey, Mod. T, Chemical Society, Stamp Club, I. P., Math., and English Certificates. - Business, Night College. JOHN D. WELSH 319 78th Street Aero. Course. Math., I. P., and Civics Certihcates, Honor Roll.- Business, Evening College. 94 JEROME F. WEST 130-06 135th Place South Ozone Park, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Blue- print Squad, G.A. Ofhce Squad, BTHS, Math., Civics, I. P., and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.- Pratt Institute of Technology. IVAR S. WESTERBACK 422 56th Street Aero. Course. F. Dr. and Math. Cer- tihcatesg Honor Roll. - Business, Evening College. GEORGE H. WHITTEMORE 815 Carroll Street College Preparatory Course. I. P., Math., F. Dr., and English Certifi- cates, Honor Roll.-College. GERALD J. WIDAWSKY 1751 67th Street Aero. Course. Track Squad, Track Team, BTHS, Stamp Club, Radio Club, Astronomy Club, Blueprint Squad, BTHS, Cafeteria Squad, Group Advisers' Squad, BTHS, Math. Help Squad, BTHS, Math., F. Dr., I. P., and History Certifi- cates, Honor Roll, Arista.-N.Y.U. JULIAN M. WIENER 2313 Benson Avenue Mechanical Course. Intramural Hand- ball, Service Squad, Math. Help Squad, Physics Club, Current Events Club, Math., I. P., and History Cer- tificates, Honor Roll. - Business, Evening College. JOHN H. WILFERT 77-11 66th Drive Middle Village, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Allied Art Club, BTHS, Library Squad, T, S.O.S., T, I. P. Squad, BTHS, Math. Ofice Squad, BTHS, Floor Man- agers' Squad, BTHS, English Certifi- cate.-Business. WILLIAM H. WILKINSON 148-11 Sutter Avenue South Ozone Park, L. I. Structural Course. Intramural Base- ball, BTI, Math., I. P., Civics, and F. Dr. Certificates, Honor Roll.- Business, Evening College. RICHARD R. WILLENER 1153 East 321-id Street Electrical Course. Elec. Prep. Squadg Math. Certificate.-Business. GEORGE F. WILLIAMS 1885 New York Avenue College Preparatory Course. S.O.S., BTHS, Mod. Tg Camera Clubg His- tory Clubg Television Club, Print Shop Squad, BTHSQ I. P. Certificate. -Stevens. JOHN A. WILSON 915 St. Marks Avenue College Preparatory Course. Radio Club, President, Tg Operator, Radio Station W2CXN, T3 Radio Theory Club, Secretary, Mod. T.-Business. THEODORE M. WINKERT 5104 Tilden Avenue Chemical Course. Library Squad, BTHSQ S.O.S., BTHSQ President Chem. Prep. Room Squadg I. P. and History Certificates.-Pratt Institute. HARTMUT A. WINKLER 1640 Ocean Avenue Architectural Course. Radio Repair Squad, BTI-IS, Television Clubg English, Math., F. Dr., and I. P. Certificatesg Honor Roll.-Business. ROBERT M. WISNER 545 56th Street Art Course. Squad Leadersg Assistant Art Editor Blueprinlg Math. Student Awardg Pageant Technical Staffg F. Dr. and Art Certificates.-Pratt Inst. GEORGE J. worms 953 Onderdonk Street Ridgewood, Brooklyn Mechanical Course. Math. Certifi- Cates.-Business. STANLEY WOLIN 8801 Shore Road College Preparatory Course. Nata- torium Leaders Squad, Tg Mimeo- graph Squad, Secretary, T3 Radio Othce Squad, BTI-ISg Switchboard Squad, BTHSg Math. Certihcate- Syracuse University. WALTER WORONA 119 St. Marks Place New York City College Preparatory Course. Library Squad, BTHSQ I. P. Certificate.- Businessg Evening College. JOHN W. WOZNY 189 17th Street Mechanical Course. Materials Testing Laboratory Squad, I. P. and Math. Certihcates.-Businessg Evening Col- lege. ROBERT C. YARDLEY 1830 Haring St. Aero. Course. I. P. Certificate.- Businessg Evening College. EDWARD M. YONKE 1858 Putnam Avenue Ridgewood, Brooklyn Aero. Course. I. P., Math., F. Dr., English, Civics, and History Certifi- catesg Honor Roll.-Business, Eve- ning College. E. JOHN YOUNG 178-32 Dalny Road Jamaica Estates, L. I. College Preparatory Course. Captain of Tennis Team, Tg J.V. Baseballg Football Squadg G.O. Sales Bureau, Tg Floor Managers' Squad, Math. and History Certificates. - Georgia Tech. DOUGLAS I. YUENGLING 295 Grant Avenue Mechanical Course. I. P. and Math. Certificatesg Honor Roll.-Business. 95 EUGENE J. ZOLA 3015 Church Avenue -Business, Evening College. ANDREW ZURICK 3399 12th Avenue Chemical Course. Bowling Squad, High Score Medalg Locker Room Guard, I. P. Ofhce Squad, I. P. and Math. Certificates.-Evening College. LESTER W. ZVEKAN 370 Elton Street College Preparatory Course. Squad Leadersg Longfellows, Vice-President Tg Survey Sports Staff, BTHSQ Cheer Leadersg English Otlice Squad, Math. Othce Squad, Library Squad, Service Squad, Chess Clubg Public Speaking Society, Mod. Tg Lunch- room Squadg Math. and English Cer- tificates.-Columbia University. SEYMOUR ZWIRN 1541 West 7th Street Chemical Course. Intramural Swim- ming, Gold Medalg Swimming Team, Tg Tech Science Bulletin, Tg Music Office Squadg Field Bandg Dance Orchestra, Math. and I. P. Certifi- cates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic Insti- tute. -and the following LEO R. ANASTASIA 183 16th Street College Preparatory Course. Floor Managers' Squad, Mod. T3 Math. and Civics Certilicates. - Business, Evening College. JACOB GOLDSTEIN 23 Bristol Street College Preparatory Course. I. P., Math., Civics Certificates.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. NICHOLAS G. MORIZIO 8226 18th Avenue Structural Course. Baseball, T, Intra- mural Basketball and Handball, BTI 5 Surveying Squad, Locker Room Squad.-Brooklyn Polytechnic. NORMAN NATHANS 1803 Neck Road Structural Course. Football, Tg Band, Mod. Tg Orchestra, Mod. T, Lock- er Room Squad.-College. SIMONE A. PALO 133 Utica Avenue Electrical Course. I. P., Math., and History Certihcatesg Honor Roll.- Businessg Evening College. SYLVESTER OLIVIERI 677 Sixth Avenue Mechanical Course.-Business. WALTER WILSON 144-49 230th Place Springfield Gardens, L. I. Structural Course. Baseball, Mod. Tg Basketballg Intramural Basketball, BTI.-Businessg Evening College. MARLIN PRINTING co INC teas: Structural Course. Surveying Squadg Math., I. P., and History Certificates. L. ' E ' L ' P 2? -f g Q - .. v p 4 339 .W v.f1:?y'vs' ,41+l' A K? U' 'Q' 1,1 V-,, l , . - 'iw L fgil 5? 4 xg, '35'VlQa2i54 Y 1E'gwf4sQ j?3gg5i2kfNgQk3?f?f5L241 v . - ' iffy PM f n P- 'Wff1ifQZL'f'r1 +fwA::yg SEQ? b z i QW daft ' ',- K'-y,-ff' 47 .iq .nXi1:.. 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Suggestions in the Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) collection:

Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Brooklyn Technical High School - Blueprint Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946


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