Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1957

Page 1 of 100

 

Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1957 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1957 Edition, Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 100 of the 1957 volume:

HF ,J X-.4 .1 V 941: 1 A-, M, ,, ., - ,J K I S My wx. anemia' u 2' I 'ml msuwvmmmu nmx.f'.S4.auue'.3a,. wfnulw xwxxtsg:f'wJ,:mmm:wwm..wsmf,f. f uv f Iwf 1:2 H 1,av x smws-v:-m:f+,awmu.:?-1www' 4- A. -v 1' F 1 :fu '9-' -wx W-zziu'-Vwrm.-' aw.: ,Nba-'Av :Q-wg:sammymz'..1:m:w.mw.mavwl,1s-wa,A. was ex Iiwis ,.,.'M E AN M H TC DU HE -u I E. 3' TD Q. o- N: -F T VD cn fD 5. o 'I Q Q U1 U1 'Fu I O THE COLLEGIATE SCHOOL, NEW YORK CITY Ulpeafbahbns S a symbol of the unique relationship we have enioyed with this man, the Class of l957 dedicates this Dutchman to Andrew Hathaway. The fact that we may address him as Andy rather than with the traditional Sir is indicative of a rapport which exceeds the boundaries of the usual teacher-student relationship. We have enioyed the personal interest he takes in each of his students, as well as the remarkable sense of humor he uses to en- hance the math courses. Mathematics is a broad field, and Mr. Hathaway has demon- strated his versatility by teaching all four years of the subiect. ln addition, he has brightened the Collegiate vernacular with such expressions as Abysmal! , indicating that your score on that par- ticular test should be placed on a sliding scale with no bottom, and Dash it off! , which is an order to do in one evening what in any other school would be a term paper. Mr. Hathaway is of great assistance to the Journal as Faculty Advisor, wielding the censor's pencil with a cry of This is slander! , and also is on the starting five of the Faculty basketball team. He has made a vital contribution to Collegiate and to our class. As we leave, we say fondly: Spike, you've been great! N recognition by the Senior Class of his achievements at Collegi- ate, Robert Carlson occupies a position of honor in this yearbook. A professional actor who has appeared on the Broadway stage, Mr. Carlson first brought his talents to Collegiate in l952, when he directed the Drama Club in a polished performance of Thunder Rock. The following years saw his reputation grow with such suc- cesses as The Hasty Heart, The Ninth Guest, Three Men On A Horse, The Rainmaker, and You Can't Take lt With You. Mr. Carlson be- came a full-time member of the Faculty in l955, at which time he began reorganizing the library, as well as teaching classes in speech. Las? year he assumed leadership of the Glee Club, which has flourished under his direction, giving two concerts a year in addition to participating with four other schools in a program at Hunter College. Perhaps Mr. Carlson's most outstanding qualities are his endless patience and understanding. No matter how trying a situation or how complex the problems of a production, he is always poised and calm, As an actor and a musician we have found him a gifted artist, as a teacher we have found him a warm and sympathetic friend. The Class of i957 dedicates this Dutchman to Robert Carl- son as an outstanding member of the Collegiate community, 9 MR. RCJBERT CARLSON MR. AN DR EW HATHAWAY www! TO THE CLASS OF l957 VERY class has a unique quality and is al- ways remembered for it. Your class has left with us a strong impression of maturity and the dignity that comes with the acceptance of re- sponsibility. Anyone meeting you in the hall would immediately recognize you as Seniors. It has been a rewarding experience to watch this development and it has been accomplished by you as individuals and as a group. Our good wishes go with you and the hope that these attitudes of friendliness and under- standing-so characteristic of Collegiate-may continue to grow and find expression in your lives. WILSON PARKHILL A MESSAGE FROM THE HEADMASTER MESS FROM PRINCIPAL TO THE CLASS OF l957 OR the past five years it has been my pleasure to write a message to the Senior Class in the Dutchman. Since this will be my last oppor- tunity to use this space, may I direct my thoughts, not solely to the Class of I957, but to Collegiate School as a whole. For a member of the faculty as well as for a student, it is a privilege to be associated with Collegiate. The experience is one which is pro- fessionally stimulating, personally rewarding, and spiritually refreshing. Each one of the student body will, I feel sure, look back on his years here with feelings of affection and of gratitude -grateful for the opportunities and demands for learning, affection for the school which con- stantly demonstrated sympathetic understanding and impartial iustice. With each of the Senior Class go our very best wishes for accomplishment and happiness in the years to come. Use well the experience of these years at Collegiate School. WILLIAM LAVERACK ,V f 5 if A W A bl W1 gi! f ,ff I f Top row, left to right-Mr. Stade, Mr. Carlson, Mr. Mitchell, Mr. Sturges, Mr. Ely, Mr. Lothrop, Mr. Hollander, Mr. Adams, Mr. Tuttle, Mr. Gilmartin. Second row-Mr. Marteney, Mr. Cook, Mr. Hathaway, Miss Lucas, Mrs. Griffiths, Miss Kiethline, Mrs. Ashcroft, Mr. Ballard, Mr. Calvacca. Third row-Mr. Gallenkamp, Mrs, Crane, Mrs. Hathaway, Mrs. Bergen, Mrs. Fisher, Miss Morse, Miss Hayes, Mrs. Novak, Mrs. Dorrian, Mrs. Pearsall, Mr. Batcheller. Seated-Mr. Komoski, Mrs. Mutch, Mr. HoHmann, Mr. Becker, Mr. Parkhill, Mr. Laverack, Mr. Barker, Mrs. Ewell, Mrs. Mershon. Absent-Mr. Evans, Miss Hecht, Dr. Morris, Mrs. Yacobellis, Mrs. Simmons. COLLEGIATE SCHOOL FACULTY I956-57 WILSON PARKHILL ............................................,.........................,,...,.,..,.. ...,..... H eadmaster Williams, A.B., Columbia, M.A., Williams, LL.D. WILLIAM LAVERACK ........................,.......................,..................... ...............,..............,...................,,.., P rincipal Harvard University, A.B. HENRY ADAMS ...........................,....,..................,............ ......,.... E nglish, Room Teacher, Class Xl Dartmouth, A.B., Harvard, M.A. FLORENCE HOCH ASHCROFT IMrs. Earl F.l ...,.............,....,..,............................ Remedial Reading Brooklyn College, B.A., Columbla University, Teachers College, M.A. LYMAN J. BALLARD ..............................,.......,...............,.....................,................,..... Physics and Chemistry University of Michigan, B.S., M.S., Columbia University STEPHEN BARKER ............... Head of the Senior School, History, Room Teacher Class XII Williams, A.B., Columbia, LL.B., M.A. ROBIN BATCHELLER ........,....,,..............................................,....................... ..... .......,..,,....,..,.. ..............., A r t Oregon State College, Department of Education JOSEPH F. BECKER ..................,......,.................................................... Director of Athletics, Arithmetic Columbia, B.S. JUDITH RIKER BERGEN IMrs. Frederickl ......... ............ R oom Teacher, Class III Bennington College, B.A. EMILIO J. CALVACCA .................................... ......... ........ ........... L a t in, Senior School Williams, A.B., Princeton, M.A. ROBERT CARLSON .....,...............,..,................................... Librarian, Dramatics, Senior Glee Club Riverside Junior College, Columbia, Theodore Irwin Studio CHARLES T, COOK .,,,,,,,,,,,.,........,,......... Arithmetic, Social Studies, Room Teacher, Class VI Trinity College, B.A. OBED B, ELY ,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,..,..............., French, Senior School, Room Teacher, Class X Franklin and Marshall College, A.B., Columbia University, M.A. DAVID RANDOLPF EVANS ...,................................... English, French, Room Teacher, Class VII Yale, A.B., M.A. 9 KATHLEEN EWELL IMVS-i -----..,f,-,............ HSCICI of the Primary School, Room Teacher, Class l Maryland College for Women, A.B., Columbia University, Peabody Conservatory of Music ALINE S. FISHER IMYS. CUVIISI ..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,s,,,,,.w,.,,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,,,,w.,,,.,,,w,,,,,.,,,, Room Teqqherl Class IV Sweet Brier College, B.A., Teachers College, Columbia, M,A., Bank Street College of Education, Certificate GECRGE V. GAI-I-ENKAMP ........................................., English, French, Room Teacher, Class VII Amherst, B.A., Middlebury, M.A., Harvard, Ph.D. JOHN J. Gll-MARTIN .....,,.........................,.........,.......,......,...,..........,.,.., Assistant Director of Athletics American College of Physical Education, B.P.E., Columbia, B.S., M.A., Phys. Ed. JOAN H. HATHAWAY IMrs. Andrewl ............,.,.,,....,.............,..,,.,.,........, Room Teacher, Class IV Wheelock College, B.S. Ed. ANDREW HATHAWAY .............,....... Mathematics, Senior School, Room Teacher, Class Xl Cornell University, A.B. ANN H. HAYES ,.A,,....,.............,...........,.............,...,.....,..,...... ..,,....., R oom Teacher, Class ll Lock Haven Normal College, Columbia SUSAN HECHT ....,..,,.......,,.....,..........,s................,.,s ..s....,....... ......,.. R o om Teacher, Class l Vassar College, B.A. ALAN J, HOFFMANN ,,...sss,...,.,.,,....,,.,,........ ........,..,.., ..s......c,..s.......,........................................s..... B i ble, Shop Rutgers University, B.S., Columbia, M.A., Union Theological Seminary, Pacific School of Religion ROBERT B. HOLLANDER, JR. .,.,,,, ,, ,..,...., English, Latin, Room Teacher, Class Vlll Princeton, A.B., Columbia, M.A. MILDRED KIETHLINE ...., s,,.,.,.,,,,,,,.. ,,,...,.s,. ........is...................,,, ...,s,.,....., .,...... R o o m T eacher, Class lll Mansfield State Teachers College, Penna., A.B., Columbia University, M.A. P. KENNETH KOMOSKI Head of the Junior High School, Social Studies, Latin, Room Teacher, Class VIII Acadia University, Nova Scotia, A.B., M.A. EATON S. LOTHROP, JR ....... Science, Senior and Middle School, Room Teacher, Class VII Bowdoin College, A.B. DONA LUCAS ,,,,,,,,,...c,i,s,s.,,, .i,.....,...,....,...,,....LI,.....,,........,,,............... R oom Teacher, Pre-Primary Class Bennett Junior College, Diploma, Child Education Foundation, B.S. GEORGE D, MITCHELL ,,.,,,,,...,,,.,c,...,..,..,.....cc, English, Social Science, Room Teacher, Class V Dartmouth College, A.B., Columbia, M.A. DR, MYRON L, MORRIS ..,..,.s,..,..,........,.........,.,...........,... ......,..,,..,,......,.s......,,,,......., S chool Physician University and Bellevue Medical College SALLY B. MORSE ,.........,....,...ss.s,,,,,c,,, A.,.......,..,.......,,..,... .....,,.... A s sistant Teacher, Primary School Duke University, A.B. MARIE LOUGHNEY MUTCH IMrs. James E.I .....,,...............,..,..................... ........,......,..... M usic Studied with Jean de Reszke, Diller-Quaile School of Music ELIZABETH LIANE NOVAK IMrs. Alfred B.I ..,..,.................,A.,....,,.s.....,....... ..,s.,,..... S chool Nurse Ontario Civic Hospital School of Nursing GEORGE GUSTAV STADE ......s,................,.......,.A,............... ...,..... H istory St. Lawrence University, B.A. PERRY M, STURGES w,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Y.,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,I.,..,..........,,ss.,..... French, Room Teacher, Class IX Yale University, A.B., Middlebury College, M.A. JQHN H, TUTTLE ,.,,,,,,,,,,,sss,s,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,....,.,..,....,.........,,....,........,.., Room Teacher, Class V Reed College, A.B., Columbia University, M.A., Ph.D. RUTH W, YACOBELLIS IMrs. Charlesl ,.....s..........,......,...,........,......t............ French, Primury School Boston University, A.B., Yale, M.A, IO ADMINISTRATIVE ROSEMARY CRANE IMrs.l ,..,...,, ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,, S e cretary EILEEN SIMMONS IMrs. Fredericl ...........,. ............ S ecretary ETHEL A. MERSHON IMrs. Albert R,l ..,,,,,,,, ......,....,I,,,v,Y......... B ursar GORDON B. MARTENEY ......,,,.......w...,,,,,,,.. ,II,...... A ssistant Busrar IRENE PEARSALL IMrs. Johnl ,,....,,A,, ..,,..,., A,,...... .......,I.......A.,A A s s istant Bursar ELIZABETH GRIFFITHS lMrs, Philipl ........ ,AI,,,.IA. A nnual Fund cmd Alumni Secretary CATHERINE DORRIAN IMrs.l ........,.. ..i...... ,......,i .....................,..,.., R e c eptionist Counselors RONALD BUB CARMEN MARNELL JAMES REX BARKER MICHAEL J. CROSBY EDWARD M. DWYER ANDREW J. FARRISSEY JOHN M. FLYNN CARMELO MALDONADO THOMAS MCANDREWS DANIEL P. SHEERIN PAUL F. SHERIDAN PAUL A. TREMBLAY ARTHUR WILSON ...School Superintendent COLLEGIATE SCHOOL BOARD OF TRUSTEES l956-57 SAMUEL B. PAYNE .............. ..........,...... P resident REV. EDGAR F. ROMIG .......Ys s...,A,.,L V ice-President HARRISON W. CONRAD ........ ........,... S ecretary ROGER F. MURRAY 2nd ....... ............. T reasurer Carroll A. Boynton William L. Burbank Edgar H. A. Chapman Harold H. Cook Reginald A. Cook Robert V. Cronan Howland Davis Charles Dollard Ambrose Hardenbergh William W. Yeager I I Madison H. Lewis Mrs. John L. Loeb Russell Lynes Mrs. Charles McLane Rev. Ernest R. Palen Miss Jean F. Mitchell Wilson Parkhill Donald C. Platten George S. Stephenson 12 Lgwzfbwx MlCHAEL PETERS BLANC Entered llth Grade History Club il2i, Drama Club lil, l2l Gle Club fill Color Group Orange. VERY member of this year's Senior Class has some dis- tinctive feature, and Mike's is utter silence. ln a class period punctuated with raucous outbursts and cynical obser- vations, Mike's quiescence is a cause of wonderment and a pleasant relief. His ability to sit quietly and listen atten- tively to the teacher with apparent lethargy has won him the affectionate nickname of Vitamin Pill. But Mike's seeming lack of vigor is not to be believed, for in class meet- ings he voices his opinions emphatically, proving to one and all that those corpuscles are red! Mike spends a large part of his school day in extracurricular activities. Besides lend- ing his talents to the History Club, he opens his mouth wide for the Glee Club and the Drama Club. A mainstay of the Collegiate stage, Mike will be remembered for his hilarious portrayals of Eeyore the Donkey in Winnie the Pooh and Donald in You Can't Take It With You. Although we feel that Mike would find great success as a salesman of spring fever tonic, we wish him the best of luck in whatever career he chooses. I4 VF CJ neil 'rf X t W'f! 2 X Q K E X 060 gn Q 1 gt g Entered Pre-Primary Class Dutchman fAssistant Club Editor 11, Club Editor 121, Drama Club l9, 101, Glee Club 110, 11i, Journal l9, 10, 11, 121, Yorkville Youth Council 1101, Color Group Orange. UGS is the anarchist of the Senior Class when it comes to education. Mathematics is repugnant, chemistry is droll but useless, history is nice, though a bit on the boring side. French-only a native can hope to speak it fiuently. English is important, but those books have too many theses. They should be read for their impact and beauty, not dis- sected with scalpel and forceps. But Peter's acting and writing have more than occupied the time that most of his classmates spend on school work. Evening courses at Stella Adler's, summer stock, and a Shakespeare Festival in 1956, as well as an array of plays and stories, bear witness. The creation, interpretation, and appreciation of emotion, not rational scholarship, have been Bugs' love. Four years of college seems to lead in a direction opposite to his interests and will be forgone in favor of a serious stab at acting. He leaves Collegiate with many memories of himself and his spontaneous wit, and he regrets that the hair of certain teachers has grown a shade whiter through his presence. His classmates hope to see him on Broadway in the future. Who knows? He may be favorably reviewed in As We See It some day. PETER BOGDANOVICH 15 Entered lOth Grade Student Council lll, l2l, Student Court lil, 12, Secretary l2l, History Club lil, 'l2l, Glee Club lPresident 12, Madrigal Group 12, Sextetl, Journal lSports Editor il, l2l, Ten- nis l'l2l, Student-Faculty Committee ll2l, Yorkville Youth Council UO, ill, Class President ll2l, Manager of Orange and Blue ll0l, Color Group Orange. PAUL FREDERICK BUBENDEY HE name of Paul Bubendey will go down in '57 annals as the biggest dealer in many a year. A sunny Saturday afternoon will find Paul, a devotee of the Sport of Kings, in front of the two dollar window at Aqueduct. He has endeared himself to the more sporting members of our class A A with his frequent and accurate tips on the nags. A skillful - ', 'iff' pool player and a card sharp with remarkable luck, Paul 'K' -q'yg5':5lc-LL 2 ix. has spent many evenings with us until the wee hours of the ., morning at the class's renowned Friday night card sessions. Paul has his erudite side, however, with classical music be- ing his great love. We have often seen him emerge from the Record Hunter with a newly-purchased stack of Wag- nerian discs. His musical interests are visible at school, too, where as President of the Glee Club his fine tenor voice has added much to the concerts. A respected member of the Student Council and Secretary of the Student Court, he has done a fine iob in keeping the lower classes on their toes. We all look forward to the day when, hard-pressed for a pair of ducats to the Met opening, we will encounter Paul scalping tickets outside the Opera House. in l Y 16 ICHARD CERRUTI is the funniest person in the Senior Class. No day goes by without our sampling some of his hilarious humor, An expert at the delicate art of teacher-baiting, Dick is constantly catching the faculty oft guard. Although not actually a member of the faculty, Dick supervises the scheduling of tesiss and the organization of the curriculum. As Head of the History Department, he instructs Mr. Barker in the teaching of the courses and also UE, M it writes critical letters to the authors of the texts. Mr. Adams 3' , 0 is greatly indebted to Dick, who keeps order in English gf. Z. lg, class and corrects him whenever necessary. Messrs. Chiao 3 .' H- and Newsom have expressed their gratitude to Mr. Cerruti, F4 Q. k 1 whose tutoring swept them into Cum Laude in a blaze of R, Cerrutean glory. ' - Dick's prowess on the gridiron is known throughout the league. His six feet and four inches towering over the opposing center has caused members of other teams to com- ment apprehensively, Whadda they got, college guys? He has also been a member of the Drama Club stage crew for two years, and in the last production held the office of Keeper of the Nightingales. We wish Dick the best of luck as he leaves for New England and college. RICHARD JOSEPH CERRUTI 4 1 . ' . 1 Entered 5th Grade Student Court 1121, Dutchman 1Assistant Business Manager 111, French Club 111, 121, Science Club 1121, History Club 110, 11, 121, Camera Club 110, 111, Drama Club 111, 121, Glee Club 191, Journal 110, 11, 12, Assistant Advertising Manager 10, Advertising Manager 11, 121, Football 111, 121, Basketball 1101, Baseball 19, 10, 121, Track 191, Color Group Blue. 17 Entered 7th Grade X Cum Laude 111, 121, Dutchman 1Assistant Club Editor sf ll, Club Editor 121, French Club 19, 10, 11, 121, Science Club 1121, History Club 19, 10, 11, 12, Secretary-Treasurer 11, President 121, Football 19, 10, 11, 121, Basketball 1Fresh- man Team 91, Tennis 1121, Junior Classical League 19, 10, Secretary-Treasurer 101, Glee Club 19, 10, 11, 12, Ac- companist 11, 12, Madrigal Group 11, 12, Sextet 121, Student-Faculty Committee 1121, Color Group Orange. RAYMOND YU CHIAO URELY Ray is the most energetic scholar of our class. We all laughed when, in English class, he violently argued some point in literature and then, proving his familarity with the particular work being discussed, defended the opposite view equally well. His exclamations of But no, that's im- possible! and his lengthy interpretations were observed with much amusement, But we all laughed out of the other side of our mouths when he was elected to Cum Laude in the Junior year, and we all rushed out to buy the textbooks which should have been purchased at the beginning of the year. Ray continually amazes us with his wealth of knowledge in both the Humanities and the Sciences. He has done an admirable job as President of the History Club, organizing debates, lectures, and a highly successful political rally. The Glee Club is indebted to him for his strenuous efforts as accompanist and his vain efforts to keep us on key. Ray also holds the distinction of being a four-year man on the football team. We shall remember Ray for his friendly smile 1usually hidden behind a book1, his perseverance, and most of all for his remarkable achievements at Collegiate. 18 , jf ,V U f .11 K 472 1 X Rf ,R ll It 9 w l Entered 9th Grade ETE is the outdoorsman of the Senior Class. Besides be- ing a fresh air fiend 1he can't concentrate unless all the windows are open, even in sub-zero weathert, he loves rural living and looks forward to a career in agriculture. Pete will certainly use the most modern methods in his chosen profession since he has a great interest in the scien- tific world. An Assistant Professor in the Physics Depart- ment, he frequently comes to the rescue when Mr. Ballard is stumped by an apparently insoluble problem. Mr. Hath- away would be lost without Professor DudIey's two definitive works in the field of mathematics, Euclid was Wrong and Why Johnny Can't Add, Subtract, Multiply, or Divide. Pete is an outstanding performer on the athletic field as well. Football captain and a polished player at every posi- tion, he has been largely responsible for the many openings our backfield finds in the opposing line. He is also a valuable asset to the baseball team, where he plays in the outfield. During the off season Pete stays in study hall and opens windows. As Pete drives that motorized plow into the future we bid him a fond farewell. PETER ANTHONY DUDLEY Student Court 1111, Science Club 1121, History Club 1121, Drama Club 110, 11, 121, Athletic Association 1Treasurer 121, Football 19, 10, 11, 12, Captain 121, Baseball 110, 11, 121, Track 1101, Class Vice-President 1121, Color Group Blue 1Captain 121. 19 Entered 7th Grade Student Council 19, 10, 12, President 121, Dutchman 1Assistant Sports Editor ll, Sports Editor 121, Dance Com- mittee 110, 11, 12, Co-Chairman 121, French Club 19, 10, 11, 121, History Club 19, 10, 11, 121, Drama Club 110, 11, 12, Business Manager 121, Glee Club 111, 121, Journal 19, 10, 11, 121, Athletic Association 19, 10, 11, Secretary 10, Vice-President 111, Football 19, 10, 11, 121, Basketball 110, 11, 12, Freshman Team 91, Baseball 19, 10, 11, 121, Student- Faculty Committee 110, 121, Class Treasurer 191, Class President 110, 111, Color Group Orange 1Captain 121. WILLIAM STANLEY WESTERMAN EDGAR lll VERY school has its leaders, and Terry certainly falls into this category. President of our class for two years, he left that position for the more important one of Student Council President, in which capacity he has supervised a smoothly-functioning organization which concerns itself with all phases of our school life. Besides being Business Man- ager of the Drama Club, he portrayed the title role in The Rainmaker and the romantic lead in You Can't Take It With You. Terry also stars in athletics and can boast of be- ing a three-letter man 1he was forced to purchase a new wordrobe on which to sew all those letters1. On Thursday nights and Saturdays Terry works as a sales- man in the paint department at Gimbel's 1 Lady, you just can't paint your kitchen chartreusel 1, and in what little free time he has left accomplishes his duties as Vice-Presi- dent in Charge of Entertainment for the class's exclusive 1three members1 Greenwich Village Set, An enthusiastic lumberiack, Terry plans a career in forestry. Study hall often finds him hacking at Dudley's ankles with the window pole and yelling 'tTimber! We are confident that Terry's diverse abilities will bring him a great measure of success in the future. 20 ml. 1 Xl ll Q l m! -1 -5 4 Ymgffiwl 'll 'J v s 1 4 9 ., Q. S they think back to it, the Seniors reioice in remember- ing the day when Pete Gessner entered the narrow portals of the tenth grade room. A spirit of mature cama- raderie and a Gessnerian sense of humor have been felt ever since, for Pete has gently worked his way through three years with us and has won a large number of close L? friends. Academically well above average, Gess has also V, E' k assumed a position of leadership athletically and socially. F l' E ' Football, basketball, and tennis, Sacred Heart and Nightin- V? gale, duties of Alumni Editor and Student Council Treasurer, .ff wh i 'N , I all have tried unsuccessfully to distract him. Beer parties, 1 I Greenwich Village, and the cinema have similarly tailed to 1 e,.X,, 1 WF P- 4' to make him a playboy, but everything has been instructive and entertaining. Pete's only enemies have been made in English class, where his Freudian interpretations of Dos- toyevsky and rash claims that Hamlet suFlered from an Oedipus complex have appeared unfathomable to all. The fall of 1957 will find either Harvard or Amherst enlivened by Gess's presence on the campus as an engineering or psychology major, and vacations in New York next year will see Pete and the Downtown Boys reconvening for an- other blast and a few nostalgic memories. PETER DAVID GESSNER x xxx Qs xx W s X f Entered 10th Grade Student Council lSecretary 11, Treasurer 121, Dance Com- mittee lll, 12, Co-Chairman 121, French Club l1O, 11, 12, Vice-President 121, History Club UO, 11, 12, Secretary- Treasurer 121, Journal 110, 11, 12, Assistant Alumni Editor 10, Alumni Editor 11, 121, Football UO, 11, 121, Basketball 110, 11, 121, Tennis UO, 111, Baseball l12l, Student-Faculty Committee llll, Evaluating Committee llll, Color Group Blue. 21 LEWIS HAYS GOLDMAN O day at Collegiate when Lew is around passes unblest by a heavy dose of his renowned Rabelaisian wit. To the entertainment and desperation of the faculty, to the cheers of the appreciative Seniors, Lew is always ready to oblige his listeners with a wise and earthy quip. His monthly Pencil Sketches and Underground have a loyal group of followers, and his dramatic efforts in Three Men on a Horse and his own adaptation of Winnie the Pooh have made him a favorite with the Lower School. Not a follower of conventions, Uncle Lewis has acquired an extraordinary number of acquaintances among Manhattan's high school elite. A social gathering is never unknown to him, and but a daring few take place without his presence. The Peach- tree is his familiar alternate address, the Penguin Bar a favorite site for evening revelry. Lew has given a mundane prestige to the Senior Class, and he represented it abroad by cutting a dashing figure in Paris and Monte Carlo during his Christmas vacation. Acknowledged by all to be the prototype of the informed man of the world, he has an intellectual curiosity which should assure his success in law, teaching, or whatever he chooses after four years of college. 22 Entered 4th Grade Student Council l121, Dutchman lSenior Class Editor 121 French Club HO, 11, 121, Science Club I121, History u 111, 121, Drama Club 110, 11, Business Manager 111 e Club 110, 11, 12, Madrigal Group 11, 12, Quartet Journal 19, 10, 11, 121, Tennis l1O, 11, 121, Student Facu W Committee HO, 111, Evaluating Committee 1111, Class Secre tary 111, 121, Color Group Blue. QQ? I! I I nf? 'f u 1 sg Ii Qftltgjl S vu f 632567, 1' 1 Q '- V 1 f it iii 'l' lf N If itswff 'I 7 fi , gens ,.,, t.1,M11'.s1, 1 lynx Nasa!!-25 Nt.. Qglfgsba F 2 . M 4 it Entered 3rd Grade Dutchman 1Assistant Photography Editor 121, French Club 19, 10, 11, 121, Science Club 1121, History Club 111, 121, Camera Club 19, 10, 11, 12, President 121, Glee Club 111, 12, Madrigal Group 12, Quartet 121, Journal 19, 10, 11, 12, Advertising Manager 10, Managing Editor 10, 11, Editor-in- Chief 11, 12, Student Adviser 121, Athletic Association 19, 10, 11, 12, Vice-President 11, President 121, Football 110, 11, 121, Basketball 110, 11, 12, Freshman Team 91, Baseball 19, 10, 11, 121, Junior Classical League 1101, Color Group Orange. L, who has a great many extracurricular activities, can often be seen hustling around school in the perform- ance of some duty. He is an outstanding athlete and has been a mainstay of Collegiate's teams. Jake's speed and aggressiveness on the gridiron strengthened the team's ground plays, and it was the wise quarterback who gave him the ball for that badly-needed touchdown. The strong right arm of Al has ensured the baseball team of a bullet- like fastballg when he's on the mound, the opposing bat- ters often find that they are swinging after the catcher has the ball. A natural choice for the position of Athletic Asso- ciation President, Al supervises Collegiate's complex varsity program. Al is a hot property not only on the athletic field but in the school's monthly iournalistic effort as well. He has performed the mammoth task of editing the Journal and has produced so effective a sheet that the Columbia Scho- lastic Press Association cited it as an exemplary publication. An ardent shutterbug, Jake is seldom without his camera around the school. Al looks forward to a law career, but whether he becomes a Darrow, Hearst, or DiMaggio, we know he will reach the top of his profession, ALBERT LIONEL JACOBS, JR. 23 Entered 3rd Grade Student Council 19, 10, 111, Student Court 110, 11, 12, Judge 121, Dutchman 1Assistant Class Editor 11, Class Editor 121, French Club 110, 11, 12, President 121, Science Club 1121, History Club 19, 10, 11, 12, Vice-President 111, Drama Club 111, 121, Glee Club 110, 11, 12, Madrigal Group 12, Sextet 121, Journal 19, 10, 11, 12, Club Editor 121, Football 1101, Tennis 19, 10, 11, 121, Student-Faculty Committee 1101, Evaluating Committee 1111, Class Secretary 19, 101, Class Vice-President 1111, Color Group Blue. VLADIMIR D. LEHOVICH UTHOR, philosopher, iurist, thespian, linguist, satirist- ah, Lehovich, we find you indeed a genius! With dynamic individuality Leo pervades every phase of our school day. A firm believer in the strict disciplining of young children 1a young child being any person under the age of seventeen1, Vladimir, using his official capacity as 11 Student Court Judge, strives to transform each student into a young gentleman, in spite of the Faculty's prohibition of lyf corporal punishment. A thespian of considerable talent, Leo has seared memo- ries of two brilliant portrayals into the minds of Collegiate playgoers-File, the bashful deputy of The Rainmaker, and ' the uproarious Kolenkhov of You Can't Take lt With You. After touring Europe during the summer, Leo returned A with impressive tales of Parisian life, as well as a few catchy K2 Phrases. This made his selection as President of the Cercle x ' J' Francais an obvious one. Leo's sophisticated wit is exhibited monthly in the Collegiate Underground column of The Journal. A first-string berth on the Tennis Team rounds out a full and varied Collegiate career. Vladimir will surely leave his mark on the world. 24 Q Qxxmxx t. it 15,1 Er 'Ama '19, 1 li fi 55' ' Q 5 z fy g, Lv Ji L3 .-,. ' . X ., 1 ,fzvdtm l . 11:5 Entered 9th Grade Student Court 1101, French Club 110, 11, 121, Drama Club 111, 121, Glee Club 110, 11, 12, Madrigal Group 12, Quartet 121, Journal 1121, Football 110, 11, 121, Basketball 110, 111, Baseball 110, 11, 121, Junior Classical League President 10, 111, Class Vice-President 1101, Class Treasurer 1111, Color Group Orange. HE tramp of motorcycle boots and a baritone Hey, Daddy O invariably signify the advent of Peter Mus- canto on the scene. An American with a f1uent command of French, Muski, as he is known to his comrades, has en- hanced many a school and social function since he entered the class of '57 four years ago. He has proved his loyalty to Collegiate by three years' quarterbacking on the foot- ball team, by spirited playing on the basketball team, and by his quick running on the diamond. Though considered a connoisseur of the Brearley Juniors in particular, Pete has a knowledge of many of the ieunes filles de New York. Muski is an old roue of the Paris bistros, but has a knowl- edge of Fifty-Second Street that has enabled him to lend a touch of Dixie to the Twelfth Grade and that has made many a day pass quicker by manifesting itself in snatches from some Handy or Basie motif. His free time is spent in read- ing, attending the cinema, hunting light game at his Con- necticut residence, and looking forward to a summer of sailing along the Riviera. Yale and foreign affairs are Pete's goals for the immediate and distant futures, and for the present: Salut, Pierre. v ,, PETER VERRIERE MUSCANTO 25 math and physics and has put in many hours of work as Entered 11th Grade Cum Laude 1121, Student Council 1121, Dutchman 1Editor- in-Chief 121, Science Club 111, 12, President 121, History Club 111, 121, Glee Club 1121, Journal 1Assistant Literary Editor 11, Literary Editor 121, Basketball 1Manager 121, Soccer 111, 12, Co-Captain 121, Student-Faculty Committee 1111, Class Treasurer 1121, Color Group Orange. GERALD HIGLEY NEWSOM N omnipresent cheerful disposition and extraordinary mental ability best typify Jerry. ln his two years with us, this boy has amazed us all by his near perfect marks in Editor of this yearbook and President of the Science Club, as well as working on student government and the Journal, Extrascholastic responsibilities include the lengthy and un- paid tutoring of Washington Square classmates. .lerry's aca- demic talents saw testimony in his admission to the Cum Laude Society this year, and his close rivalry with unrelent- ing Raymond Chiao has flourished since 1955, culminating recently in a neck-to-neck contest for valedictorian's hon- ors. Jerry's interests are not limited to work alone, for he has found time to construct a ref1ecting telescope and be- come a fair expert on astronomy, frequently going to bed early to arise at 2 A.M. for a few hours of star gazing and observation from his Greenwich Village rooftop. An excel- lent four years are a certainty for Jerry at the University of Michigan, and the field of science gives wide openings to his intelligence and pleasant nature. 26 i X Q -. - 1 ,f ff' W-, MSOGR Q? lg 4,1510 U IP 1 , it 1 'ix f' Q31 i..x L 5 f X ' ltr! ' 3 , cs . 1 sms, le - N Q , . 1 Mt. . Cl ' .cI.t1nH1 W F e X in ' .n-m- . .limits i it . H 1 Q '4 og 1 'si k.1 t I S ,te 14 1 1 Si 5 ff-g 1,:.'L ' 5,7 isivffg-111 Y . 1-' ,915 V3 3' . Q-PF K Qfnqg I ' -Qi I H 1 fvil xg ' E l 1 r ' H . I xe- . , 1 1 A' , e- ' V L s ' , 0. 1, ' AH1r1ON PETITE 2 - COPNEXJ-112 ME A' Yozsc D ' PEACH TREE ' .Line 4 4.2 j s--. '31 'flu' Alllxl, 0 - . I ': I l If ' Q A.: I I 5 I N' I- I I Q 1'-'ix Q 9 N WY it . Entered 8th Grade Student Court 1121, Dutchman 1Business Manager 121, French Club 19, 10, 11, 12, Secretary-Treasurer 121, History Club 19, 10, 11, 121, Camera Club 110, 11, 121, Drama Club 19, 10, 11, 121, Journal 19, 10, 11, 12, Circulation Manager 10, 11, 121, Football 1Manager 121, Basketball 1111, Tennis 110, 11, 121, Studenl'Faculty Committee 1111, Yorkville Youth Council 111, 121, Color Group Blue. ERNARD has added to the Senior Class a continental touch which he brought to us some tive years ago. Fluently bilingual, he has made many French Club speeches and has proved to be the terror of the French lV course. As Business Manager of the Dutchman, his was the un- fruitful iob of rousing the Senior School out of its lethargy to bring in ads. Bernard has many interests, among them art 1paintings and porcelain1 and voluminous reading 1Saint- Exupery and Henry Miller1, both of which make him one of the best-informed Seniors. At school his characteristic is getting good grades with an absolute minimum of work. Friday and Saturday nights might find him cavorting with a cosmopolitan group of East Side Collegians, and spring sees him at 238th Street occupying his tennis berth. Sum- mers-ah, back to the old country for a bit of fun and relaxation. Business is Bernard's choice for the post-college life. Currently finishing the last volume of Proust, he thinks of a happy day in the coming years when he will be able to open his bulging porte-monnaie and start on a never-end- ing series of transatlantic voyages-visiting friends in Paris, coming back to visit Collegiate, then oft again to Paris. BERNARD THIERRY SELZ 27 Blue. MICHAEL STANLEY SHEIER O be seen at every school event is Michael Sheier, ac- companied by his all-seeing camera. One of the Senior Class's Old Guard, he has been a Collegiate inmate since the beloved Fourth Grade days. Mike knows well where the good news picture liesg the .lournal's photos and the pains- takingly-posed candid shots viewed herein are largely the fruit of his hard work. Apart from focusing, Mike was a soccer letterman as fullback and an important cog in the basketball team, valiantly filling the sweatsocks of the un- thanked manager. A good swimmer, Mike spends his summers as a lifeguard on the shores of New Jersey lhe was once seen rescuing a cake of soap from the laboratory sink, witnesses were favorably impressed by his deft technique1. ln the course of this last year he made one rather amusing academic mis- take, when writing on the First World War, he turned in a small book and was consequently downgraded for excess verbiage. But the Seniors don't condemn Mike for this lone offense and wish him the best of luck for days ahead. 28 Entered 4th Grade Dutchman lAssistant Photography Editor 11 Photography Editor 121, History Club 111, 121, Camera Club 110 11 Secretary-Treasurer 121, Glee Club 191, Journal lAsslstant Photography Editor 11, Photography Editor ll 121 Basket ball fAssistant Manager 11, Manager 12, Freshman Team 91 Baseball 19, 10, 11, 121, Soccer 19, 10, 11, 121 Color Grou Q 1 Wig ' Lv' r D4 - X et? 'fx -.. C 1' rj:-ip? 2 -rg '.s-uigilggkz f Ji e e ci . A R, kt- est WA CH 3 THE , F' llllllillil E-UDQBE F-Ummm E-Um N230 F5332 EEO-Um E BQELOEE LQEUEDCUZ QUE' Omc-EO EIU:-Url XOEOEX 25:56- EUUUD X-Uma NCUCOID-Q61 he-Cum X9-COEOWUBO UEEPL E-UmU0am 30502 mr-Q 66?-QEEOU :COZEUQLQQ4 UMSE: HQAO-O-EUCD ECUE NN3 COIDQDUUO 035305 EEOTVOF-to L9-Cam EQEUEC- E:-BUw EEO-Q5 Bu-Cwtcm xmgoraq E2-Um QSUW XECDOU LO-or-:OU omcmtoz LBWQOL EELS E055 Broan: 6600 x-204 CUTOEI COELEQ SWMUBXU QEEEUCUI mEmEm WEEVUW UENUQ-Em gc-O EEEU Co E225 mgwm -OOF-Um UEXOEM GCELO mwtr-Uoml me mr-35555 wma--S of DEED--E :omg-2-Om: 2: B 3:82 . fur-W C22 3305- QCSOE-UM 9:8-DU-UU mtg +0 EmEmCo98n- XF-E2 EO mv-Uiwz E 92 he L2-C5 mgg-Ur, DEV-UP Qcgcl QIONSL I: mmm mn-Ou ME 2 mr-Q9-GQOLQ :EUC-UU: Emoeow ZXMEOE of is mlm io MEOUI roon XODZOU w-UQEEQZ +0 EO: E -WCEC-Bw :V-cog :E - WZOCOEE mr-rmwi: WEWWUEE 1vmm3aoED :Er-UOWUE U 2 mr Sm: :GC-Om fo r ice- mlm'-I :mgohw NSIOUE? 2: Chao: mmwmo-mmym E-DUW-UCQQBL :mi xg 52505 .gy NEW: USQO C010-Lmozi MCU-Q 9:2003 SOMUOUQQ 6-U:-DI COIUEODE EES, VT-UEBN N-M--M-Im Nam Eowgmz OP-L4UwDE IU-POIMI mmogi 7-525400 N-mzwwm-O NZUDM PM-ADEQ O4-IU :DN-EU VM-DZmmDm IUSOZJRH-Oom UZ4.-m QEDZ IW' PLAN OF THE DAY Thursday, June 6, 1957 Uniform of the Day for Students Slacks and Sport Shirts C.R.A. Tennis Shorts and Polo Shirts Chapel Cutaways and Spats Telephone Monitors George Gravitationalpull M. Monroe Faculty Study Hall Duty: 9:25-10:05 Alexander Azimuth 10:05-10:45 Bosworth Becketbend 10:45-11:25 Chauncey 0'Coverdown 11:25-12:05 Aries Firstpoint 12:05-12:45 Gaudeamus Igitur 8:00-Building opens. Song for the day: lung ls Busting Qui Q Er, Al Jacobs solo on the tenor uke. ' 8:25-Student Council meetingg breakfast will be served. 8:55-First bell. Senior Class will assemble for aspirin call. 9:05-Chapel. Hymn for the day. B225 of Ages, sung flat and one bar late by Senior Class. 9:25-First period. Those eligible for senior privileges will be shown movie: The Brazilian Coffee Industry. 10:05-Second period. Privileged seniors will view films of the Dempsey-Tunney fight. 10:45-Third period. Privileged seniors will tour Cafe Intimo. NVolunteersn for Red Cross blood donations will assemble in 10 Downing Street. Bring own tourniquets and proof of insurance. 10:50-Faculty meets to act on above dissenters. 11:25-Fourth period. Senior Class will be invited by their homeroom teacher to cocktails at The Lighhouse. 12:05-Fifth period. Class representatives will collect Esquire subscriptions. Glee Club rehearsal for the following sections: Tenor I, Tenor Il, Bass I, Bass II, I Cos 0. 12:45-Lunch. Roving quartet of cooks will serenade students: You Get Ho Bread With One Meat Ball. 1:00-School closed until Commencement Exercises. 4:30-Commencement Exercises. 5:25-Bernie Selz will recite The End of a Perfect Day. 5:27-Police Department alerted. 5:30-Commencement Exercises ended. Notes: Any straggling to pick up diplomas will result in disciplinary action. SfSgt. Horace Gungho, United States Army, will be in the church parlor following the Commencement Exercises to speak with any interested Seniors. 31 1 1 1 I 1 32 .Moi X' Qa- 88 Massey 33 Top row, left to right-A. Chambers, R, Karpt, P. Cook, M. French, Pfc. Cuthell, W. Dobbie, D. Hays, D. Messineo, Middle row-H. White, T. Mearin, T. Sewall, D. Kyle, A. Barlos, F. Rusch, W. Cunningham, D. Goldfarb, R. Hart. Seated-H. Little, J. Giddings, P. Carleton, R. Everett, P. Gorman, W. Finley, P. Callaway, P. Duggan. Absent-P. Oppenheimer, P. Bacsak. THE .IUNIOR CLASS CLASS Xl-MR. ADAMS, MR. HATHAWAY Robert Everett .....,. ................ P resident Peter Carleton ,...... ..,...., V ice-President William Finley ........ ....,...... S ecretary Paul Gorman ....... ........ T reasurer 1--..,,,,.,- O the Juniors who had been in Mr. Hatha- way's Ninth Grade home room, it was a distinct pleasure to welcome back their old friend as co-supervisor of their class, along with Elev- enth Grade veteran Mr. Adams. Although thwarted at times by some of its more unruly elements, the two have done much to help the large class to realize the true importance of dili- gence in studies and to cover much ground on the road to maturity. More notably than in the academic field they have distinguished them- selves in athletics, comprising the core of the tennis and soccer teams and supplying some of the leading baseball and basketball stars. The class is also well represented in the High School's clubs, its members played an important part in the big dramatic eFfort ot the year, You Can't Take lt With You, especially in the backstage department, and contributed much toward the success of the Glee Club's big performance. We feel certain that this year's Juniors will demon- strate their full merit as Seniors and will do an excellent iob of leading the school next year. Standing, left to right-J. 'Vale, R. Thorne, A. Bourgeois, J. Walton, S. Botein, P. Gina, J. Adams, P. O'DonneIl, R. Grant, J. McCormick, P. Knowlton, A. Mini. Seated-D. Lorch, F. Winkler, L. Popkin, J. Long, T. Ohl, D. Twiss, J. Morse, J. Linksz. Absent-J. Norton. AN, these cool cats-well, they'll lust drive you crazy if you don't watch out. This is the carefully-phrased opinion rendered by both the faculty and the paternal Seniors on the present Sophomore Class. A group of chess- playing intellectuals but one short year ago, the Sophomores have grown in wit and stature lyes, particularly in staturel to the point where they may be counted on to lead Old Collegiate suc- cessfully in another two years. They are athletic lfootball, basketball, danc- ing-classl, they are musical ithe Continentals is one of Collegiate's best existing iazz bandsi, they have the spirit of youth, the vigor of the maturing young. They did an excellent job in the school play and have supplied the Glee Club with several of its best voices and many of its most disruptive elements. They are well repre- sented in Collegiate clubs and are well liked by the two older classes. What more, save occa- sional peace and quiet, could one ask? Nothing, that's what! The Sophomores, with their increas- ing emotional stability and mental maturity, augur well for the future of the school. THE SOPHOMORE CLASS CLASS X-MR. ELY Terriss Ohl ....,. ,.,.,,,..,,,,,,,,,. P residenf James l-Ong ------...--.- ........... V ice-President Leonard Popkin .....,.,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 5 ec,-efqry Donald Twiss ..,,,,,, ,,,,.,,,w,. T reqsuref Top row, left to right-L. Phillips, S. Muscanto, D. Penner, W. Jones, J. Goldsmith, J. Hunningher, A. Matter, D. Warburg, J. Hammond. Middle row-R. Frank, M. Bartos, H. Edgar, J. Lardner, R. Vander- warker, J. Hazard, N. Popasian, B. Beaver, D. Reed. Seated-J. Kronenberger, P. Ascoli, T. May, D. Vories, P. Janover, J. Pleshette, G. Cooke, P. Liberti, W. Goldbeck. Absent-S. Chamberlin, T. Dooling, J. Morwood, S. Palmer, D. Salvo, R. Young. THE NINTH GRADE CLASS IX-MR. STURGES Daniel Salvo ....... ......... P resident Thomas Dooling ...... ,........ S ecretary John Hazard ....... ......... T reasurer 3 HE Ninth Graders this year found themselves at the head of the new Junior High School instead of at the bottom of the Senior School where they had expected to be. The same as last year, they proved themselves excellent leaders. As a step toward efficient self-government they established a monitor system for the period in the morning before classes start, with the boys taking turns as monitors. A full third of the class regularly appeared on their academic Honor Roll, and the products of the boys' artistic efforts pleasantly decorated their room. Furthermore, they were well represented in the Junior High Debating, French, History, and Glee clubs, formed the nucleus of the football team, and had an excellent basketball team of their own. As an experiment in advancements for superior students, seven Ninth Graders took an ancient history course which went further than the regu- lar course, including such things as a detailed study of Plato's Symposium. HE Eighth Grade has found itself infiuenced by many of the important innovations taking place in the Middle School. These changes, facets of the new program for greater participation and responsibility on the boys' part in manage- ment of student affairs, include the Student- Faculty Committee and the recently-formed clubs. The Student-Faculty Committee, a council of five boys and three teachers, meets regularly to dis- cuss disciplinary problems and class government, the club program has introduced French, history, science, debating, iazz, and camera organiza- tions on the middle-school level and has attracted much attention to these subjects. Both the Com- mittee and the clubs, although still new and experimental, have been successful in at least one respectg they have shattered student apathy and passivity, and have aroused very positive interest in almost every class member. Also worthy of mention is an excellent chapel program, sponsored by this class in the form of a debate to resolve which nation was in the right, Egypt or Israel, during the recent crisis. 2 E THE EIGHTH GRADE CLASS Vlll-MR. KOMOSKI William Daniel ............ ,,........,.....,...,.,,,,............ P resident Williqm Wingate ,,tt,A,, ,,...... V ice-President Daniel Hofstadter ....., .......---.- 5 SCYGTOYY William Wingate ..... ,,,..... T reasufer CLASS VIII-MR. HOLLANDER Lionel Goldfrank .........,.,,,...........V............,............ PreSiCler1l Edward Ohl ,,,,.,,,,,,,, ...s..... V ice-President David Linksz ....... ................ S ecretarv John Lewis ,,,,,, ,,,,,,... T reasurer Top row, left to right-T. Garson, J. Lewis, W. Oursler, B. Howze, C. d'Aulremont, D. Mazel, D. Linksz, P. Buchman, T. Taussig, W, Murch, T. Roeder. Middle row-D. Hofstadter, E. Margolis, W. Daniel, W. Floyd, C. Sills, C. Swift, J. Stearns, J. Mulligan, L. Goldfrank, H. Mende, W. Wingate, S. Wolff, D. Edgerton. Seated-J. Boyack, R. Rau, J, Klein, J. Bostwick, A. Linburn, E. Ohl, S. Wolfson, F. Born, R. Stephenson. Absent-C. Bachman, M. Johnson, R. Rusch, J. Taylor. LASS Vll has shown itself to be scholastically quite capable, with a number of prospects for great academic distinction in the Senior School, The boys work very well as a group, thus being able to conduct their affairs efificiently. As in some of the other grades, they instituted a monitor system by which each student, as mon- itor, could build up some sense of responsibility. Moreover, the boys elected members of an honor roll on a basis of scholastic achievement and, more important, citizenship. Simply for their own benefit, they covered their bulletin boards with material on a diFFerent topic picked each week by two boys in each home room. They also set up a system of desk inspection whereby the boys, taking turns as inspectors, insured the maintenance of neat and clean classrooms. THE SEVENTH GRADE CLASS VII-MR. GALLENKAMP, MR. EVANS Thomas Curtis .,...r ........,. Gayle McGuigan .....,. Cameron Clark ....... John Webber ..,s.. CLASS Vll Ting Pei ......,.,..,.,.,.s,,,.... Frederick Koyle ..,... Bernard Pinsker .... Roger Slobody ...., , ......................................President ..........Vice- President .,.......,,...Secretary ..,.......Treasurer MR. LOTHROP . ..........,Y.s...............,.........s President .....,....Vice-President .........,...Secretary ...Treasurer Top row, left to right-D. Moore, G. Stiebel, L. Loomie, G. McGuigan, C. Doremus, P. McGuigan, T. Haight, N. Wolfson, J. Bonnabeau, L. Hanson. Middle row-M. Balcheller, R. Davis, R. Haupt, F. Marshall, T. Block, M. Cusick, S. Coords, D. Voeth, R. Knapp, J. Southby, C. Clark, J. Webber, D. Gilpatric, D. Dillon, R. Slobody. Seated-T. Curtis, F. Koyle, D. Karpf, D. Phillips, T. Pei, B. Pinsker, R. Dryfoos, V. David, P. Hartmann. Absent: J. Lane. 5W N A la ta 'E ll il 3.5, THE SIXTH GRADE CLASS Vl-MR. COOK Thomas Goldsmith .,...,.., .....,.. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, P r esidenf David 5lCher .....,... ........ V ice-President Philip Gulley ,w,.w,A.,, .......,,., S ecretary Alexander Nagel ..... ,,,,,,,,,,, T reasurer LTHOUGH small in numbers, the Sixth Grade has made up for its size by effort and initia- tive. ln athletics, the class has had a successful season in both soccer and basketball and looks forward to ioining the Junior High School squads next year in these two sports. The class play, The China-Handled Knife, was a hit with all, Nagel, Sicher, Ross, and Landsman were among those outstanding. Bingo-board, a new game becoming popular in the Middle School, has gained the enthusiasm of Class Six, which feels that several of its members coulcl well become officers of the Bingo-Board Club, a recent but well-received organization. This year has found the Middle School re- markably free of such articles as water pistols, Ripping cards, comic books, and other signs of undiscipline and gross immaturity. The Sixth Grade, according to Mr. Charles T. Cook, has been instrumental in setting a fine example. With this added to its many other credits, the Sixth Class seems certain to become one of the lead- ing groups in a few years. Standing, left Io righi-S. Johnson, B. Breimer, D. Bauer, D. Oppenheimer, P. Thompson, J. Lesser, C. Landsman, P. Dawson, M. Knight. Seated-V. Yuan, S. Schmemann, T. Goldsmith, P, Carrie, J. Howell, D. Sicher, A. Nagel. Absent-B. Bramson, B. Byrne, T, Cooke, P. Gulley, J, Ross, R. Smith. Top row, left to right-M. Barnes, H. Duggan, M. Fox, E. Welch, J. Kriendler, J. Sorin, M. Psaty, R. Sher- man, D. Butterworth, R. Miness, D. Johnson. Middle row-R. Penner, L. Hastay, D. Hanson, M. Knapp, C. Stewart, L. Vacchina, R. Stone, W. Steinway, P. Mendlow, N. Malliarakis, J. Meyer, C. McQuade, D. Budge. Seated-A. Ewell, M. Diana, T. Herzog, G. Davis, R. Webb, R. Murray, D. Pei, J. Maxwell, W. Smadbeck. Absent-W. Bacon, K. Stuart. THE FIFTH GRADE LASS V has been very busy with all its aca- CLASS V-MR. TUTTLE demic activities, including English, history, Roger Murray ....,.. Donald Hanson .. Nikita Malliarakis Richard Penner ..,.............President Vice-President ......,.....Secretary CLASS V-MR. MITCHELL Laird Hastay ...... ................ P resident Mqtfhew Fax ,,...,.,,,,,, ........ V ice-President William Steinway ...... ............ 5 GCTSTUYY Richard Webb ...... ........ T reusurer if f -f 4 , e g if to Q ,es ' Q E science, mathematics, French, and spelling, In history the Fifth Graders have been studying about the settling of the Dutch and English ex- plorers in the New World. They are also very fortunate to have as their C. R. A. counselor and basketball coach one of the nation's top basketball players, Ted Dwyer, who built up a fine Fifth Grade team with the good material available. Showing very commendable school and public spirit, they won the Canned Food Drive contest with an amazing number of cans contributed and also gave some money to the Hungarian Relief Fund at Christmas time. ln two of the Thursday-morning assemblies both sections of Class Five staged enioyable performances. Thus in many different respects this Fifth Grade class shows promise of a bright future. Top row, left to right-D. Klein, R. Whidden, J. Steiner, J. Liebmann, W. Hess, R. Milano, R. Conder, T. Webber, J. Hamburger. Middle row-V. Marshall, M. Newburger, D. Steinway, T. Hess, R. Sherman, J. Adams, D. Bishop, E. Hunningher, J. McVeigh. Seated-M. Stearns, D. Henkel, J. Hardy, A. Ganz, J. Moederle, K. Nasholm, J. Goldtrank, M. Shulman, G. Muser. Absent-T. O'Connor, M. Thompson, A. Woiciechowski. PLIT into two sections, the Fourth Grade has had a difficult but satisfactory year. Long division has been a stumbling block at last over- come, and the arithmetic tables necessary for its mastery have been learned, but at a great cost in work. History and geography have included the study of primitive peoples, the boys learned about the importance of climates in relation to tribal life, as well as the emphasis to be placed on natural resources. Much effort has been spent on dramatics, with Mrs. Hathaway's group stag- ing a well-appreciated Halloween program and a piece entitled The Princess Who Couldn't Cry, while Mrs. Fischer's section rendered a Pilgrim play for Thanksgiving and a quiz program in which the students described animals and the audience participated by attempting to guess what beasts were being talked about, with pen- cils awarded as prizes. The Fourth Grade reioices at the thought of the long summer vacation ahead, but looks for- ward to getting back next year and continuing its education. THE FOURTH GRADE CLASS IV-MRS. HATHAWAY Anthony Ganz ........ Roger Sherman ....,,.. David Henkel ......... John Liebmann ............. CLASS Victor Marshall ..... Daniel Bishop ,...... William Hess ........... Jay Hamburger ,.,,,,... Al ...................President ...........Vice-Presid ent .,..,.,,......Secretary ............,.,......,Treasurer IV-MRS. FISHER 1 M iki 1 ,..................President .Vice-President ....,.........Secretary ......,,..Treasurer J x ,. 1.1, f mx , f Q-if f , HE Third Graders organized different groups whereby they got a chance to see how well they could manage their own alifairs. ln their class meetings each Tuesday morning they en- ioyed presenting and discussing many interesting topics. They have spent both an illuminating and an entertaining time tracing the development of our city from the time of the early Dutch settlers. For this purpose the class took a trip to the Museum of the City of New York, where they could get a clearer idea of how the people of those early days looked, dressed, and behaved. ln addition to their regular academic work, the boys participated enthusiastically in class plays, art projects, and the Lower School Gym Carnival, some tried their hands, rather success- fully, at playing the recorder. 1711521 1 gif Hin th! I-ca .-il '.vlIi Ili! ff, 2' , fmfilf I 'l la 05-fag? :.1'xM, - .. U THE THIRD GRADE CLASS lll-MRS. BERGEN Anthony Levi ..v.............. ............ . .. .........,...w... President Richard Khalidi Dean Allison ...... .....,...Vice-President ............Secretary Tim Garson ..,....,............................,.,..s....,...w............ Treasurer CLASS Jack Kriendler ,..,.. Lee Goldsmith Tom Kaufmann . Stewart Diana ...,... Ill--MISS KIETHLINE .................President ......... Vice-President .........,..Secretary .........Treasurer Top row, left to right-G. MacArthur, D. Collins, S. Shapiro, J, Bachman, J. Swarts, P. Burke, G. Carroll, P. di Saint'Agnese, T. Weddell. Middle row-J. Kriendler, J. Weldon, E. Sarshad, W. Sorin, T. Kaufmann, C. Komor, J. Reinus, P. Friedmann, M. Nagel. Seated-R. Khalidi, J. Buchman, J. Spaulding, A. Garson, S. Nagel, A. Levi, S. Diana, D. Allison, K. Gudgeon. Absent-L. Goldsmith, A. Smcidback, B. Wallace. T .,,,gyfgyz.n .,-.nf . U - 4:g4' i M K -WW ' 11.5. THE SECOND GRADE Room teacher-MISS HAYES HE Second Grade has gone through many struggles in trying to become Good Citi- zens at a seven year old level. In trying to live up to Mr. Parkhill's high ideals of politeness, courtesy, and no subway pushing, the second graders have had numerous pitfalls-then a new start and progress again. This was the first class to win the beautiful mouse trophy designed by Mr. Batcheller, which was awarded for the boys' quiet entrances to and exits from the art classes. Aside from learning good citizenship, this group has developed in the three R's and has contributed to the fine arts in music and artwork by way of both individual and group efforts in music, dramatics, and creative painting and sculpture. The Second Grade has been vitally interested in and alert to the events and person- ages of our country's history, especially the background involving the Indians. ln comparing their own environment with that of these primitive people, they learned that the Indians had only such resources as the land around them could provide, and that good living or poor living depended on the natives' use of their environ- ment. Standing, left to right-P. Chamberlin, T. Wolfson, G. Cahoon, M. Newburger, C. Haberman, T. Bailey, J. Clayburgh, C. Blake, J. Felt. Seated-S. Pei, D. Hunter, S. Sicher, J. Necarsulmer, K. Dyke, D. Fried- berg, G. Hofeller. Absent--D. Haslay. Top row, left to right--J. McNulty, M. Friedmann, E. Khalidi, A. Katz, S. Arnstein, T. Thompson, R. Medalie. Middle row-L. Smadbeck, P. Hess, T. Russell, J. Frizell, A. Sherr, B. Garnanl, F. Vogel, W. Achtner, R. Haim. Seated-D. Forer, C. Beeson, J. Miller, R. Sweet, C. Phillips, M. Wallslein, C. Dische. Absent-S. Breimer, .l. Budge, .l. Sasaki, T. Welch. THE FIRST GRADE Room teachers-MISS HECHT, MRS. EWELL iw: di HE boys in Class I have been eager, curious, and busy. Throughout the year they have been constantly learning so many new things. At first they were busy getting used to the desks and chairs, to waiting to take their turn, and to working for longer and longer periods of time. They shared their experiences in discussion and by drawing pictures and telling stories. They en- ioyed looking at books and learning to read them. Through many practical experiences fol- lowed by oral and written practice, they devel- oped their understanding of numbers. Science and Social Studies also played an important role in their school life. Interested in seeds and plants, the boys planned demonstrations and shared their knowledge of that subiect and many others. They learned about life in a big city through map-making, picture exhibitions, and trips, much interest was developed in the geog- raphy of New York City. The First Graders seem full of enthusiasm for learning all sorts of facts about their immediate environment. Sffmdlng, left to right-D. Thorne, S. Ryan, R. Williams, R, Bailey, R. Kahn. Seated-R. Cushing, P. Marshall, P. Ohrstrom, J. Keifter, A. Soong. Absent-E. Boyd, W. Given, R. Hamburger. HE thirteen active boys of the Pre-primary group have this year enioyed their first taste of school life with the understanding care and guidance of Miss Lucas and Miss Morse. One of the first of their many interesting projects was to build a small community out of boxes which they cut up, pasted, and painted into houses, shops, and farms. ln addition, they did quite a bit of block- building, fashioning houses in which their pet hamster, Brownie, usually became the official tenant. The results of these architectural etiforts ranged all the way from airports to the Empire State Building. On the days that the weather was nice they went to the park to run around and play on the swings, slides, see-saws, and monkey-bars. What a grand time they had! They have learned to print the alphabet and write numbers so that next 'fall they will be ready for the First Grade. THE PRE-PRIMARY Room teachers-MISS LUCAS, MISS MOORE ff Lf i R ,f a i Mbbfbkx Standing, left to right-R. Chico, Mr. Adcms, Mr. Hollander, Mr. Ba.ker, G. Newsom. Seated-Mr. Becker, Mr. Calvacca, Mr. Paxkhill, Mr. Laverack. Absent-R. Karpf. CUM LAUDE HE Cum Laude Society seeks to promote learn- ing and appreciation of knowledge among the students by recognizing outstanding scholas- tic achievement. The Collegiate chapter, while increasing its influence in the school, has been expanding in importance in the national organ- ization also. Mr. Parkhill, hitherto Regent of District Ill, was elected National Deputy President General of the Society. Mr. Parkhill's plans for improving the Society include setting up a central oftice, modeled after the Phi Beta Kappa system, with an executive secretary to relieve the heavy duties at present handled solely by Cecil Ewing, the National Secretary General. Locally, the Chapter for the first time in its history initiated a father and son into the Society together. On December l9, Dr. Carroll V. New- som, President of New York University, and his son Jerry, a member ot the Senior Class, were honored in this unique ceremony. After the tra- ditional presentation of keys, Dr. Newsom gave a talk on the lack of originality of thought among many members of our present-day society. .1- I ,jf , iq l '. fA-sb., vu gg it 7-4 - F - -- - ...,.,...President Mr. Wilson Parkhill ......... MY. Emilio .l. CC1lVC1CCC1 .,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,V S eqrefqry The annual Spring meeting was held on April T3 at Trinity School, where students from Ger- many, Turkey, and Sweden discussed the educa- tional systems in their own countries and re- counted their experiences in American schools. At a later ceremony, Robert Karpf, a Junior with high scholastic achievements, was welcomed into the Cum Laude Society. Michael MacDonald, a member of the class of l956, was initiated shortly before commencement last year. Standing, left to right-E. Ohl, G. Cooke, R. Stephenson, A. Chambers, P. Carleton, G. Newsom, J. McCormick, R. Thorne, J. Southby, T. Pei, D. Sicher. Seated-P. Gina, V. Lehovich, W. Finley, W. Edgar, P. Gessner, P. Bubendey, L. Goldman. Absent-T. Haight. hx' Inj, - 1 f p 'T HE Student Council, in its twenty-second year of operation, completed one ot its most successful years. Under the leadership of Terry Edgar, the Council ratified several important measures, of which the passage ot a long-needed electoral system was perhaps the most important. The plan, giving the High School more voting power in school elections, assigns each boy from Class Six up an ascending number of voting points. When these have been tallied, the High School vote will be adiusted to sixty per cent of the total. ln other affairs ot the school the Council took an active part in meeting new problems as they appeared. The controversial honor system was debated and finally voted down, with honor rolls being instituted in its place. Extending the Eighth Grade class bounds and granting permission for STUDENT COUNCIL William Edgar ...,.,, ....,.,.. P resident Peter Gessner ........ ......... T reasurer William Finley .....,... .,,.........,............,.,.., S ecretary Vladimir Lehovich .....,. ............. S tudent Court Judge Paul Bubendey ..... ..,..... S tudent Court Secretary the printing ot a school literary newspaper were other high points in the year, ln addition, a joint meeting with the Student Council of a girls' school was arranged at the end of the year. The Student Court, a subsidiary of the Coun- cil, completed its most unusual and perhaps most successful year. The unusual angle was that the number of cases before the Court during the year totaled two. Under the gavel of Judge Lehovich, the Court was able to eliminate the vast numbers of trite, unimportant cases that had been a hindrance in past years. This was indeed a worthy accomplishment, as was the excellent semblance of order kept throughout the school. Standing, left to right-R. Karpf, V. Lehovich, W. Finley, W. Edgar, A. Bartos, R. Chico, D. Kyle, R. Everett. Seated-M. Sheier, B. Selz, G. Newsom, A. Jacobs, P. Bogdanovich. Absent-P. Oppenheimer, P. Duggan, L. Goldman, A. Chambers. DUTCHMAN UBLISHED each year by the Senior Class and bought voluntarily by every member ot the student body, the Dutchman is the result of the combined efforts of various members of the Senior and Junior Classes, the Camera Club, White Studios, and the Kelly Publishing Corp. This year, under Jerry Newsom's leadership, the Dutchman Board has endeavored to produce a yearbook for the modern reader-that is, with lots of pictures. Realizing that most ofthe articles in the book, including this one, will be read by very few students, the writing staff decided that the addition of features would make the year- book more readable and much more enioyable. Accordingly, the irrepressible wit of Lew Gold- man and Leo Lehovich was used to compose The Crystal Ball, As the Gods See It, and Plan for the Day. The most ditificult problem for the Board during the year, however, was not words but money, or rather the lack of money. The ad campaign, which pays for most of the Dutchman, got off to Gerald Newsom .,.... ............. E ditor-in-Chief Bernard Selz ...,....,. .,...... B usiness Manager Lewis Goldman .......... ........... S enior Class Editor Vladimir Lehovich ..............,,,,................,...,,,, Class Editor Raymond Chiao, Peter Bogdanovich...Club Editors William Edgar ,..............,....................... Sports Manager William Finley ...,..... ......,.......,,........................ A rt Editor Michael Sheier ....... ....,.,...,........... P hotography Editor Donald Kyle ......,.............. Assistant Business Manager Robert Karpf .................,............... Assistant Class Editor Peter Duggan, Albert Chambers Assistant Club Editors Armand Bartos ........................ Assistant Sports Editor Robert Everett ........,.,.,.,.................. Assistant Art Editor Peter Oppenheimer, Albert Jacobs Assistant Photography Editors an extremely bad start but picked up after awhile so that the Board could pay for the dif- ferent pictures and descriptions it had planned. WICE during the past year Collegiate's halls were graced by the tones of one of Lester Lanin's many bands. These two occasions were the annual formal dances presented by the Dance Committee for the annual formal fee. The first one was held on January l8, and being a bit early in the year to be called a Christmas Dance, it was appropriately titled a Winter Dance. The night was cold and the weather man cooperated with the theme of the dance by pro- viding a thin layer of snow. Disregarding the elements, however, the boys turned out in swarms and the dance was a great success. lt was noted by the long stag line consisting of a handful of teachers and a grand total of two boys that the collection of girls was among the best ever to enter the school. On May l8, the day that the Juniors were enticed by College Boards for the first time, the , ttf ' i its 3 ,. -ig , WHY, ,- 52 .' Jil Regs 423 if ? fr Dance Committee presented its second party. Once again the school was the setting and the familiar notes of Mr, Lanin were heard. To re- mind the Juniors of the 3-hour exam taken that morning, the Dance Committee appropriately chose a college theme, with many pennants, col- lege wastebaskets, etc., decorating the Chapel At the evening's conclusion all seemed extremely satisfied with this year's extravaganzas. The Dance Committee was headed by Pete Gessner and Terry Edgar, who, with considerable help from the younger members, were able to present two excellent dances and, at the same time, improve the sometimes doubtful financial position of the Dance Committee. Although some boys wanted to have the spring dance at some hotel, it is felt that almost all were satisfied with the way things turned out. DANCE COMMITTEE William Edgar, Peter Gessner ,.,.,,,,....., Co-Chairmen Left to right-Pfc. Cuthell, P. Gessner, W. Edgar, R. Hart. Absent-L. Popkin, J. Goldsmith, G. Cooke. ,W fw....... E CERCLE FRANCAIS, le plus vieux et le plus venerable institut de Collegiate, a decide cette annee de completement changer ses habi- tudes. Avec cela en tete les officiers du Cercle, au lieu de servir le traditionnel chocolat chaud, maintenant regale les membres avec du French Ice Cream. Le but du Cercle est d'instruire les membres dans la langue et la culture frangaise. On a meme mis en place une nouvelle regle qu'on ne doit parler que le Frangais pendant les soances du Cercle. Au commencement de l'annee Monsieur Selz, le vieux roue du Cercle, a pclrle sur les plaisirs FRENCH CLUB Vladimir Lehovich ss,,, ,,,,,,, P resident Peter Gessner ..... ...,,.., V ice-President Bernard Selz .... ....,. 5 ecretary-Treasurer et les beautes de Paris. Monsieur Sturges a suivi avec un discours sur la difference entre les ca- thedrales grecques et romaines en France. A la prochaine seance Monsieur Selz a parle encore une fois sur quelquechose bien francais-l'art culinaire. Les membres ont appris comment faire une omlette aux truffes et un coq au vin dans la foret vierge de New York. La derniere seance a eu comme orateur Monsieur le Prince de Leho- vich qui a instruit les membres sur l'Existentialisme de Jean-Paul Sartre. Maintenant tout le monde sait que l'existence precede le sens et avec cette nouvelle information les membres sont partis pour leurs vacances d'ete qu'ils vont tous passer en France. .M xx i w A. F ai- jf' ll, 'i Standing, left to right-P. Muscanto, A. Bourgeois, D. Kyle, W. Edgar, R. Cerruti, R. Chiao, L. Popkin, R. Karpf. Seated-L. Goldman, B. Selz, V. Lehovich, P. Gessner, A. Jacobs. ITH the passage of a Constitution taking up most of the Science Club's time last year, this year's members were determined to spend the meetings on scientific subiects. At the first meeting, Mr. Hathaway gave an intriguing lec- ture on the inner workings of an IBM digital computer. Although the workings are quite com- plicated, everyone seemed to get a clear picture of the fundamentals involved, The next meeting was devoted to the election of new members and the showing of a movie, A ls for Atom, describing the theory behind nuclear fission. In place ofthe third meeting, the Club took its annual trip, this year going down to the Telephone Company's building on Seventy- third Street. In what all agreed was a fascinating K '16 Xl experience, the members viewed the labyrinth ot wires forming the dialing system, learning how the right connections are made and how the dial tone is formed. At the last meeting, the members decided on a new program of student participation for next year, with smaller membership and more meet- ings. The discussion was followed by elections, with Peter Oppenheimer, Mike French, and Tingey Sewall elected President, Veep, and Sec- retary-Treasurer respectively. The year ended with high hopes that the Science Club, along with the French and History Clubs, could have a revitalized approach toward making the club system an important part of school life next year. SCIENCE CLUB Wax Gerald Newsom ..... ......... P resident -- 'LE q .. Ek a Peter Oppenheimer ...... ....,... V ice-President I Q?jl Robert Everett ....... ........ S ecretary-Treasurer Q .2 Q MTW-'P fsstfn- - KMA .,,.' SWAWEQ ' I f Quite. R 5 ,Sym- 1 -. - Yft, . T' 'ii 7 f - gf W 1 ' if 1. ff- , f VS fu E I I PFW: , 'Mtn ' Standing, left to right-T. Mearin, H. Little, T. Sewall, R. Chiao, D. Kyle, W. Finley, R. Cerruti, P. Dudley, P. Duggan, R. Hart, A. Jacobs. Seated-V. Lehovich, A. Chambers, M. French, G. Newsom, R. Everett, R. Karpf, P, Carleton. Absent-P. Oppenheimer, L. Goldman. Top row, left to right-L. Goldman, V. Lehovich, L. Linksz, W. Edgar, Pfc. Cuthell, W. Finley, J. Goldsmith, A. Matter. Second row-P. Bubendey, P. Callaway, J. Adams, A. Bartos, T. Sewall, F. Rusch, L. Popkin, 5. Botein, J. Walton, J. Hunningher, J. Chamberlin. Seated at piano-Mr. Carlson, R. Chiao. Third row- J. Giddings, B. Beaver, G. Newsom, D. Messineo, A, Jacobs, P. Muscanlo, P. Duggan, H. Little, D. Penner, J. McCormick, P. Gina, H. Edgar, R. Everett, T. Mearin. Kneeling-L. Phillips, S. Muscanto, M. Bartos, R. Young, J. Pleshette, J. Kronenberger, R. Frank, J. Lardner. Absent-T. Dooling, P. Ascoli. GLEE CLUB FTER various auditions and eliminations, forty-three boys showed up for the first re- hearsal of the Glee Club. A few short weeks later, the first program, presented in the Chapel, was welcomed with extremely enthusiastic ap- plause. The Club sang such varied pieces as When Morning Lights Awake Me, Thanks Be To Thee, and The Surrey With the Fringe on Top, ending with the rousing and complicated Musical Trust. Also on the program were several excel- lent contributions by the Madrigal Group and two sextets. Immediately after this concert, the Club went into rehearsal for the Five Schools' Concert, held in the large Hunter College Auditorium on Feb- ruary l6. Besides ottering tour songs alone, Collegiate joined tour other schools in The Hundredth Psalm and Let Their Celestial Concerts All Unite. The third and tinal concert was held May 27, again in the Chapel. Beginning with superb renditions of works by Brahms, Tchesnokov, and Wagner, the Glee Club went on in a lighter vein to sing Song of the Open Road, Hallelujah, and J' wr Paul Bubendey ..... ......,.......,, P resident Raymond Chiao ......,. .,.............. V ice-President William Edgar ........... ........ S ecretary-Treasurer James McCormick ..... ..........,,,.,...,,,,.,,.. L ibrarian Ohio River Farewell. The charming sextets lost a member each and became quintets, giving su- perior versions of Blue-Tail Fly, Lost in the Stars, and Soon Ah Will Be Done, among others. As in the concert at Hunter College, Maestro Paul Bubendey conducted the group, with the same beautiful results. However, the credit for this year's success should go almost entirely to Mr. Carlson, whose patience and work have made the Glee Club a worthwhile experience, Top row, left to right-L. Hanson, P. Gorman, T. Mearin, J. Vale, L. Goldman, D. Mazel, G. Newsom, M. French, J. Giddings, F. Marshall, W. Wingate, C. Sills. Second row-R. Everett, J. Long, V. Lehovich, M. Sheier, W. Edgar, R. Cerruti, W. Finley, A. Bartos, T. Sewall, Pfc. Cuthell. Seated-B. Selz, P. Bubendey, P. Gessner, A. Jacobs, A. Chambers, P. Bogdanovich. Absent-T. Dooling, J. Walton, P. Oppenheimer, D. Kyle HE Journal, Collegiate's news publication, monthly brings its readers all the school news that's fit to print and some that's not. Led by Editor-in-Chief Albert l The Big Beat stays or else! l Jacobs and, the second half of the year, by Albert l The Big Beat stays out or else! l Chambers, the Journal strives to bring Collegiate in all its glory to the student body, the faculty and the alumni. In spite of the various pleas to strike out certain columns, the dififerent departments have continued to function normally. The Half Moon, edited by Mr. Newsom, again printed the stu- dents' literary endeavors, the Collegiate Under- ground, written by Messrs. Goldman and Leho- vich, remained the school's gossip column, Pencil Sketches, also penned by Mr. Goldman, gave short biographies of our Faculty members, The Big Beat, by Messrs. Jacobs and Edgar, con- tinued the controversial report on rock 'n' roll music l?l, and As We See lt, by Mr. Bogdano- vich and his Friend, continued to laud and criti- cize many plays and films. By the way, the Journal, like the Dutchman, now has the voluntary support of the whole school. JOURNAL itor-in-Chief Albert Jacobs ........... Albert Chambers ......... ......... M anaging Editor Robert Everett ....... ,......... B usiness Manager Gerald Newsom ..... .....,........ L iterary Editor Paul Bubendey ....... ..,,....... S ports Editor Peter Gessner .....................................,.....,.... Alumni Editor Michael Sheier, Pfc. Gibbons Cuthell Co-Photography Editors Bernard Selz ...... ........ C irculation Manager RiChard Cerruti ......... .......... A dvertising Manager Vladimir Lehovich ......,, ,,.,,.,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,.,,,,,,, C lub Editor William Finley ....... ' Editor Andy Bartos .............................. Assistant Alumni Editor John Giddings ...... Assistant Advertising Manager Paul Gorman ...............,....,.......,, Assistant Sports Editor PHOTOGRAPH of Mr. Hathaway beating Sewall on the head with a piece of rubber hose. A picture of Lew Goldman doing push-ups. A shot of Mr. Calvacca playing the bongo drums. A photo of Mr. Barker giving a hoot in Hades. Who gets served with the libel suits that result from all these incriminating snapshots? None other than the clicking, busy little photographers of the Camera Club who, with camera in one hand and birdie in the other, hop around the school and elsewhere if necessary to take in- teresting and varied photos of our more notori- ous personages. Sometimes disguised as girls, rocks, or bums, these men, under the leadership of Albert The Big Beat Jacobs, supply most of CAMERA CLUB Albert Jacobs ....... ,,.,,.........,..,,,.., P resident Michael Sheier ....... sss,,,, S ecretary-Treasurer the pictures for the Journal and most of the candids for this publication, Through the facili- ties of a newly-built darkroom in the new build- ing the photos can be quickly and easily proc- essed. Other activities ot the Club include discus- sions of photography and lectures on various phases of picture taking. The two lectures this year were on the subiects of professional pho- tography, by Mr. Ralph Grant, and photographic emulsions, by President Al Jacobs. And so the Camera Club continues. Whenever you hear a click or you see a flash of light you may be sure that a Camera Club member is not far away. Hey Mike, when are you gonna show me those pictures'?ll! stfil wllllltu s l 33882 X :li - :J ., Standing, left to right-J. Giddings, D. Twiss, Pfc. Culhell, W. Dobbie, D. Kyle, M. French. Seated- T. Sewall, B. Selz, A. Jacobs, M. Sheier. Absent-P. Oppenheimer, D. Hays. ., .1 , Top row, left to right-T. Mearin, B. Selz, P. Dudley, J. Linksz, T. Sewall, Pfc. Cuthell. Second row- M. Blanc, V. Lehovich, J. Adams, P. Carleton, H. White, J. Giddings, S. Botein, J. Walton. Seated- D. Kyle, J. McCormick, W. Edgar, W. Finley, P. Callaway, A. Chambers, F. Rusch. Kneeling-P. Muscanto, P. Gorman. Absent-P. Oppenheimer. J uma coueeeruvnauss 0' ,g 3 1-' essnv-1-Av.. enufsfun snuwnggg gas! f E FEBRUARY SATURDQYNEVE ggi 1. At :fauna - rt J '35 2 A ' :vs EQ 'Z ea qu ..., 'x 8. , vnu Q si .U . e... . 4, i in ...S ... X f g Q EFEIRIIAIY V E 722 3lum.. mo Q35 ' f Jlvl Gal, l-l OU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU, the famous comedy with a delightful moral, was the Drama Club's highly successful production this year. Thanks to the patient, expert guidance of Mr. Carlson, the Club's director, the play at- tained the same perfection evident in The Rain- maker last year. At the numerous rehearsals, he even took time to give the actors technical ex- ercises and valuable professional tips on the best method to enthrall an audience. Few people realize how much work and time go into a major production of this type, the actors and stage crew willingly gave their afternoons after school as well as many Saturdays for rehearsals, iron- ing out the defects which might detract from the impact of the play. The many emotions, from the live-and-let-live relaxation of Jon Walton to the DRAMA CLUB William Finley ,..... .....,.,..,,,,,........., P resident William Edgar ...... ......... S ecretary-Treasurer frustrated rage of Peter Callaway were convinc- ing and realistic. Outstanding comedians in the play were Jim Linksz, whose costume was ridicu- lously funny, Vladimir Lehovich, the ballet master who kept exclaiming Eet Steenks! throughout the play, and Michael Blanc, whose mad dashes to buy pickled pigs' feet were truly memorable. Terry Edgar, playing the romantic lead, Steve Botein, Donald Kyle, and James McCormick also turned in performances which were a credit to the Drama Club. Much of the credit for the play's success should go to the Club's artist-President, Bill Fin- ley, who, besides painting much of the realistic sets, created imaginative advertisements in the school halls and in the Journal. Continuing the precedent of last year, seven budding actresses from the Nightingale-Bamford School took part in the production and helped to make the re- hearsals thoroughly delectable. Standing, left to right-T. Goldsmith, J. Kreindler, D. Dillon, W. Wingate, J. Linksz, J. Mulligan, R. Rusch, F. Marshall, M. Barnes. Seated-T. Curtis, J. McCormick, A. Bartos, A. Jacobs, P. Gorman, P. Dudley. ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION UNCTUALLY at 8:30 every Wednesday, one will find the Athletic Association in another one of its early morning meetings which keep the recreational program at Collegiate running smoothly. This committee is responsible for the welfare of the teams, by collecting dues from the students and selling school iackets, hats, and banners, the A. A. has been able to supply each team with necessary equipment, transportation, uniforms, and referees. A schedule is given to each student to keep the school informed of the dates of games and the progress of the teams through the year. In an effort to build school spirit, the A. A. sponsored a rally in the Chapel last fall, in addition to several skits performed during the year by Bill Finley, Tony Mearin, and Paul i Haven't you ever seen a MAN before? i Gorman. As a result, there was a noticeable im- provement in attendance at sporting events, especially at basketball games, where the cheer- ing section helped to give the Orange and Blue the extra spark and fight necessary to win. , W-4. f . A . ' 9- ,. W We o 55 , ---1 - 'g ' Albert Jacobs ..................,...........,.... ........,...,...,, P resident Armand Bartos, Paul Gorman ......... Vice-Presidents Peter Dudley ...,.,......... .......... T reasurer James McCormick .....,. ,......,,, S ecretary The increased importance of the Athletic As- sociation this year is due to the hard work of President Albert Jacobs, who has worked toward making the A. A. a vital part of school life. As in the past, however, the most credit should go to Mr. Becker, whose knowledge of athletics has been invaluable in advising the Association and helping it toward another successful year. FTER five years of hard work the History Club has finally established itself as one of the largest and most active organizations in the school. Many of the activities this year have been based on the l956 Presidential elections, for two weeks, the Collegiate students partici- pated in a series of debates, which culminated in an assembly devoted to campaign speeches. After the speakers had voiced their opinions, a vote was taken to determine the school's pref- erence. ln both the popular and electoral counts, Eisenhower won an overwhelming endorsement from the student body. The first regular meeting of the History Club was a debate on the topic Resolved: H-Bomb tests are dangerous and should be abolished. Steve Botein spoke for the affirmative, opposed 'Amps ,rv lun li ..lA It I Qc-05 V 7912: lx ,,-swf V 9 N ps. Q it 577 115341 DSN . 1 J cl is Q. 0 Qu .,, - . un' i sa. ' -Q . s If n 45, ,F 1 1 ., . .-1' 2-X .Ly by Albert Chambers for the negative. At the next meeting, the Club listened to the record of John Brown's Body, a recording describing the events and emotions of the Civil War. President Raymond Chiao arranged for a lecture at the next gathering, which proved to be the most interesting program of the year. Richard E. Webb, Director of British Information Service in this country, spoke on all phases of British prob- lems in the modern world. This first-hand ac- count of British foreign policy and relations with the United States since the Suez crisis provided the members with a different viewpoint of the problems presently facing our government, as well as an understanding of a vital part of mod- ern history. HISTORY CLUB Raymond Chiao ...... ............ P resident Peter Duggan .... ............... V ice-President Peter Gessner .....,.. .......... S ecretary-Treasurer Top row, left to right-P. Gorman, J. McCormick, M. Blanc, P. Dudley, T. Mearin, G. Newsom, W. Finley, J. Adams, D. Twiss, L, Popkin, J. Walton, A. Jacobs. Second row-A. Chambers, S. Botein, P. Gina, D. Kyle, l.. Goldman, W. Edgar, R. Cerruti, J. Linksz, A. Bartos, M. Sheier, F. Winkler, M. French. Seated-B. Selz, P. Gessner, V. Lehovich, R. Chiao, P. Duggan, R. Karpf, P, Carleton. THE CRYSTAL BALL PARIS, May 14, 1959-Bernard Selz, an itinerant French student, was arrested in the Louvre for throwing a small rock at Leonardo Da Vinci's famous portrait, the Mona Lisa. The painting, which is protected by a glass pane, is only slightly chipped on the elbow. Selz, when questioned as to his motive, said, I iust got sick and tired of looking at that stupid smile! CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., April 25, 1963- Mike Blanc, rock 'n' roll artist and the idol of millions of American teenagers, arrived at Chattanooga Airport today to visit his home town. He was welcomed by a screaming mob of leather-iacketed boys and girls, who attempted to rip off his clothes and touch locks of his hair. After being escorted to safety by police, Blanc distributed auto- graphed photos and sang his latest release, See Ya 'Round lf Ya Don't Turn Square. ACAPULCO, Maxico, June 14, 1964-This city was the scene yesterday of the surprise wedding of Jayne Mansfield, glamorous screen star, and Peter Dudley, a New Jersey milk farmer. Said the former Miss Mansfield, lsn't he the cutest thing you ever saw? Dudley had this to say: I first met her when her Cadillac got a flat tire on the road that goes past the north forty. Man, it was love at first sight! Witnesses were Pfc. and Mrs. Gibbons Cuthell. Mrs. Cuthell is the former Alison Brown, a staff worker for the Salva- tion Army in New York. HOLLYWOOD, February 28, 1966- The Brown Derby was the scene early this morn- ing of a fist fight between Frank Sinatra and Associated Press photographer Michael Sheier. The battle started when Sheier at- tempted to snap a picture of Sinatra and his current girl friend, Elaine Stewart. Miss Stewart screamed and Sinatra let Sheier have it with a left hook amidships. The scuffle was broken up by waiters who had to tie Sinatra to a chair. Sheier was lead bleeding to the washroom, where he was soon restored to some semblance of his former self. OVANDO, Montana, Dec. 12, 1966-Two hundred men searching for three days have at last discovered Terry Edgar, Director of the Montana Forestry Service, and his wife, who were lost in a blizzard thirty miles north of Ovando. Mrs. Edgar, who was Miss Rheingold of 1964, is suffering from expo- sure. Edgar, the most decorated war hero since Audie Murphy, is in good condition. PHENIX CITY, Alabama, July 2, 1967- Peter Muscanto, fighting young District At- torney of this city, has announced his in- tention to run for re-election in November. The first honest D. A. that Phenix City has had in twenty years, Muscanto is responsible for cleaning up crime in the municipality and ferreting out members of the underworld. Despite syndicate opposition, Muscanto is confident that he will be victorious at the polls. Interviewed in his office today, Mus- canto confidently stated that I can run on the laundry ticket and lick those political bums! BEIRUT, Lebanon, June 20, 1968-E. Rich- ard Cerruti, reportedly the wealthiest man in the world, arrived here yesterday on the last leg of his iourney to Jordan. Cerruti has iourneyed to the Near East to purchase Jor- dan from the impoverished King Hussein for a one-way ticket to the French Riviera and 100,000 shares of common stock in Cerruti Enterprises. After meeting with his secretary in charge of Near Eastern affairs, Cerruti told reporters: Who is this Nasser guy? He can be bought. BOSTON, Aug. 27, 1969-Vladimir Leho- vich, world-famous author, arrived here to- day to begin his battle in Superior Court against the censorship ban on his latest novel, Bon Bons For Breakfast. This work, hailed by critics throughout this country as well as abroad, was banned by the local censor for Iicentiousness, particularly in one passage, the notorious love scene in which the sky moved. Joyce and Flaubert bat- tled the narrow-minded, I can too, said Lehovich, who is involved in the fourth liti- gation since the publication of his first novel, ldylls of the Left Bank. ROME, April 8, 1970-Albert Jacobs, an American tourist, was iniured in St. Peter's Square of the Vatican City today. Trapped in the traditional Easter Sunday throngs, Jacobs was slightly trampled as he sought to join the other worshippers in cheering the Pope as he made his annual Easter message to the world. Jacobs is reported in good condi- tion and is recuperating in his suite at the Excelsior Hotel. HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 5, 1972-Warner Bros. has announced the completion of their latest picture, Comanche Territory, starring Peter Bogdanovich and Sonny Tufts, and featuring Natalie Wood. This will be the fifth picture for Bogclanovich, who has enioyed a mete- oric rise to stardom after being discovered as an usher at the Trans-Lux Theatre in New York. NEW YORK, Feb. 12, 1974-Nino's La Rue was the scene of another midnight brawl last night as Lucky Lew Goldman, Manhat- tan's irresponsible millionaire, played host to thirty iuicy Rockettes. Alice Crinklemerkin, sixth from the left in the current Music Hall revue, was heard to say, I like Lucky Lew. He's cute . . . He's rich. After a pink cham- pagne nightcap, the party retired to Mr. Goldman's 814 Fifth Avenue seraglio. CHICAGO, Sept. 1, 1980-At the annual Toy Fair here, Raymond Chiao, President of Choys, lnc. , the largest toy manufactur- ing company in the world, spoke to two thousand toy dealers from all over the coun- try. Said Chiao: We must not sacrifice the intellectual quality of a toy to make money. Although Longfellow once said, 'The richest man in the world is the one who's weaIthy,' we must forget that in striving to make bet- ter toys for American youth. Chiao has fourteen children. NEW YORK, Jan. 17, 1981-Paul Buben- dey, head of the syndicate which controls New York's slot machines, made a spectacu- lar appearance in Foley Square today to appear at the Congressional inquiry into vice and gambling in New York State. Bubendey, when asked if he had any silent partners in the kewpie doll business, replied, Are you kidding? It's iust me and the dolls. NEW YORK, April 16, 1984-Peter Gess- ner, eminent marriage counselor, arrived at New York International Airport today after a six month trip to England. Citing the four- poster as the key to marital happiness, Gess- ner stated that Great Britain's low divorse rate is largely due to the fact that twin beds are almost entirely unknown in Merrie Eng- land. NEW YORK, Dec. 12, 2001-The Board of Trustees of New York University has an- nounced the resignation of President Gerald Newsom, effective in June. Although his resignation claimed poor health as the rea- son, it is commonly known that Newsom was forced to resign because the Violets have had six successive losing football seasons. In fact, one University professor, who re- fused to be quoted, safd that Newsom was recently heard to say, What can you do with only a S5000 proselytizing fund. l Y I 1 62 Lgialfx HIS year the football team, under the leader- ship of Captain Peter Dudley, had certain difficulties to overcome. The turnout for the squad was considerably less than in years past. With two of last year's starters lost through graduation, two positions had to be filled. After three weeks of strenuous practice, the team took the field against Oakland for the first game of the season. Oakland scored first, but THE FOOTBALL TEAM Collegiate quickly evened things up on a touch- down by Terry Edgar. Neither team was then able to score, and the half ended with the score tied 7-7. ln the second half the Oakland squad again scored first but the Collegiate team soon began to pull away. Al Jacobs, with a touchdown and an extra, put us ahead l4-l3, Edgar added another six points on an end run, and Collegiate was ahead 20-13. At the end of the third quarter, Oakland made the score 20-19, but by tallying again in the fourth quarter Edgar and Jacobs gave Collegiate a substantial lead. Coach Gilmartin then put in the second team, which made a very creditable showing, although Oak- land did manage to score one more touchdown. The game ended with the score 32-26. Unfortunately, the ioy caused by the Oakland game was rather short-lived. The following Fri- day the team played Halsted and suffered its first defeat, The final score was 27-8, a defeat attributed primarily to the lack of defense on Standing, left to right-J. Giddings, T. Sewall, H. White, R. Chiao, R. Hart, D. Messineo, R. Grant. Seated-Pfc. Cuthell, P. Gessner, P. Muscanto, P. Dudley, W. Edgar, A. Jacobs, B. Selz iManagerl. Collegiate's part. After this game the afternoon practice sessions were dominated by pass de- fense practice in preparation for the coming Montclair contest. On November 2 our traditional rivals, Mont- clair, came to town, bringing with them not a football team but four or five football teams. Collegiate found itself so helplessly overpowered that Montclair ran away with the game 46-6. For its fourth game the team went down to New Jersey to engage Croydon Hall. The game ended with Croydon Hall winning l9-O. The fact that we didn't score at all gives evidence that the team wasn't playing heads-up ball, in fact, this was the worst game the team played all season. Blocking and tackling were poor, to say the least, and our offense wasn't organized at all. The last game of the season was against McBurney, and this time it was Collegiate that had the score to settle. The team went right to work, and before McBurney knew what had hit them Collegiate was ahead, never to be bet- tered. Al Jacobs set up the first touchdown with an end run and, on the next play, carried the pigskin across for the score. Edgar passed to Pfc. Gibbons Cuthell for the extra point, making the score 7-O. On the second play of the second quarter Edgar ran around end for another six points and then threw a pass to Tingey Sewall for the seventh. With a minute to go in the first half Edgar intercepted a McBurney pass and ran it all the way back for another touchdown. The extra point was missed, however, and the half ended with Collegiate out ahead 20-O. Early in the second half McBurney managed to crack the Collegiate defense to score. On the ensuing kickoff Peter Muscanto took the ball on our ten yard line and ran it all the way back for Collegiate's fourth tally, which made the score 26-6. On the first play after receiving our kickoff, McBurney fumbled. Al Jacobs recovered and carried the ball across for Collegiate's final touchdown, making the score 32-6. At this point the second team took over, holding McBurney to one TD. As we were setting up another touch- down, the game ended with Collegiate ahead 32-13. The record for the season is two wins and three losses. Although this is not a winning sea- son we feel that it is a good one. Football at Collegiate faces one very serious problem-manpower. And next year the team will lose five men, most of whom have been play- ing since their Freshman year. We should like to say hearfelt thanks to these boys: Captain Peter Dudley, Terry Edgar, Al Jacobs, Peter Gessner, Peter Muscanto, and Ray Chiao. Standing, left to right-G. Newsom lManageri, J. Linksz, F. Rusch, P. Gina, J. Adams, A. Jacobs, M. Sheier lManagerl. Seated-P. Gorman, P. Gessner, A. Bartos, W. Edgar, P. Cook. THE BASKETBALL TEAM HE Collegiate Varsity Basketball Team had a better season this year than it has had for many years. Although still hampered by a lack of material, the team did a creditable iob. ln its first game the Varsity got oFf to a rather shaky start by losing to Halsted 78-59, but in the next game the team avenged this loss by defeating the Alumni 42-40. This was one of the two most exciting games of the season, with the outcome in doubt until the final buzzer sounded. When the clock showed only five sec- ond left to play, the score was Collegiate-42, Alumni-40, the Alumni, desperate for one last shot, managed to get a lump-ball under the Var- sity's basket. The tension mounted, and while everybody in the gym stood up and held his breath, Jim Linksz outiumped Mr. Hollander and batted the ball to the other end of the court. Pete Cook chased it down the floor and iust had time to take one wild shot before the game ended, giving Collegiate its first win. The next contest was with Staten Island. The team was all set to go out and win, and they did. This game was another close one-until the fourth quarter. At the end of the third period Staten Island led 42-40, but in the next eight minutes the Varsity turned on the steam and scored 24 points to Staten lsland's 7. The final score was 64-49. Our cross-town rivals, Loyola, handed us our second loss in the next game. Since Collegiate never seemed to get going, Loyola walked away with the game, 63-39. Locust Valley had the same effect on us, after the long trip out there we came home defeated by the same score, 63-39. The next two games were very close and tough ones for Collegiate to lose. Englewood came to town and beat us by six points, 43-37. li' was unfortunate that two of our starters, Paul Gorman and Terry Edgar, were absent from this game, because the score would probably have been in our favor had they been in action. Ed- gar was still absent when the game with McBur- ney was played. Even though Andy Bartos scored 25 points, the Varsity was defeated 50- 4l. Had the team been at full strength for these games, it is probable that Collegiate would have two more wins to its credit. Following these two losses the team was fully primed to meet Wardlaw. Collegiate won the rather one-sided game easily, 52-37. Then Bar- nard gave us our worst beating of the season, 76-30. After that humiliating defeat the team romped through its next game with Staten Island and beat the boys from Richmond for the sec- ond time, 53-32. Next on the agenda was an- other meeting with Loyola, a game that the team really wanted to win. By playing cautious and possessive ball, Collegiate managed to win a very difficult game, 46-42. The next three games found Collegiate on the short end of the score each time. The first, with Woodmere, was close until the last four min- utes. Then, when the chance of victory was greatest, Collegiate panicked and literally threw the game away. A game with Fieldston fol- lowed, and the Varsity iust never seemed to get going, losing 60-39. The third game was a re- turn match with Woodmere and, because of Collegiate's disorganized style of play, Wood- mere won again, this time by the score of 52-39. The last game of the year compared favor- ably with the Alumni game for excitement and was by far the most entertaining. For the first time in recent history Collegiate held a Student- Faculty basketball game. The Faculty team con- sisted of those five stalwaris of the N. B. A.. Sweetwater Gilmartin, Tricky Ken Komoski, Jumping George Stade, Knee Socks Hathaway, and Elbows Hollander. Gallant they may have been, but a basketball team they were not. But then, neither was the Varsity after three weeks without practice. The two teams were evenly matched and the game went right down to the last seconds before Andy Bartos dropped in the winning basket to give the Students the victory, 44-43. We feel that the game was a success and that everybody enjoyed it, including the Faculty, some of whom were nursing bruises for the rest of the week. The prospects for next year's team look very good indeed. Only three Seniors, Terry Edgar, Pete Gessner, and Al Jacobs, will leave this June, and with the help the Varsity will get from this year's Ninth Grade squad, the chances for a winning record will be excellent. THE BASEBALL TEAM S it had done the previous year, the Col- legiate Varsity started the season by losing to New York Friends. Although the score was 5-O in Friends' favor, the teams were evenly matched in all respects except pitching. Collegi- ate's two hurlers, Art Antenucci and George Lynes, were wild, whereas Friends' had excellent control. For our next game we played Halsted, with the situation exactly reversed. Lynes had found his control and it was the Halsted pitchers who were wild, They walked 16 men as Collegiate won easily l9-7. On April 23 the team played McBurney. In perhaps the most exciting game of the season, we won 7-6. Terry Edgar started the game, was relieved by Lynes, and then came back to strike out the last two batters as the bases remained loaded. The next day we iourneyed out to Locust Valley to play Locust Valley Friends. We might iust as well have stayed home, for we were defeated T6-2. The team committed ll errors and played its sloppiest game of the season. Against Wardlaw the team made a better showing. Behind the l2 strike out pitching of Edgar, Collegiate won 4-3. ln another close con- test we beat Fieldston 7-6, in a game that wasn't decided until the Fieldston pitcher walked across the winning talley in the last half of the seventh inning. Woodmere handed us our third loss of the year by beating us ll-O. Collegiate committed 8 errors and suffered from lack of control on the mound. We lost to Englewood in our next game, al- though it looked for a while as if we could rally and win. We faced a l2-l deficit going into the last of the seventh inning, when we caught fire and scored five runs. Unfortunately, however, we stopped there and Englewood won by the score of T2-6. Staten Island then came to town and almost went home with a win. But almost is not close enough, Collegiate was the victor lO-9. On May l5 the Varsity played its last game of the season. Barnard was our opponent and bettered us TO-5. The team's record for the season was 5-5. Although not a winning record, it was the best Collegiate has had for many years. Since we will lose only three men, Lynes, Dighton, and Silverman, and with good support from this year's freshmen, we are looking forward to hav- ing a winning season in l957. Standing, left to right-A. Chambers, T. Ohl, Pfc. Cuthell, P. Gina, M. Sheier, P. Dudley, P. Muscanto. Seated-R. Everett, P. Gorman, A. Jacobs, W. Edgar, P. Duggan. Standing, left to right-J. McCormick, S. Botein, V. Lehovich, J. Linksz, P. Gessner, R. Chiao, D. Kyle, M. French. Seated--B. Selz, P. Callaway, A. Bartos, R. Karpf, J. Adams. THE TENNIS TEAM OR the second straight year, Coach Komoski's tennis team has brought back a winning season for Collegiate. As in the previous year, one of the main factors in producing these re- sults was the winter tennis program, operated by Mr. Komoski, which created interest in the game and gave Collegiate a head start in get- ting the players into shape. After elimination playoffs, the squad was cut to ten men, who then prepared to play their first scheduled match against McBurney. On April 25th, the team lost a very close contest, which wasn't decided until Callaway and Kelly lost at second doubles, 2-6, 6-4, 5-7. The final score was 3-2. The follow- ing match against Loyola two days later was perhaps the most exciting of the year. After we had won both doubles matches and had lost second and third singles, Andy Bartos squeaked out a victory, 6-8, 6-4, T3-ll, thus giving us the match. Led by co-captains John Graves and Ted Widmer, the team rolled up a 3-2 victory against Barnard and followed three days later, on May 4, with a devastating victory over Locust Valley Friends by a score of 5-O. Thus the stage was set for our most important match of the season. A victory over Fieldston would put us in a tie for first place in the M. A. A. P. S. League. Things looked bright when Andy Bartos won his first singles match, but bad luck hit us. Ted Wid- mer and Bob Karpf lost a very close first doubles match, 3-6, 7-9, followed by Pete Callaway at third singles losing in a thriller 4-6, 5-7. ln a vain attempt Graves at second singles and Le- hovich and Kernan at second doubles almost pulled out victories. The final score, however, was l-4 in favor of Fieldston. But the team re- covered and proceeded to whitewash Staten Island. A period of bad weather cancelled prac- tice sessions for the next game, and the weak- ened team lost to Trinity, T-4, with John Graves being the only winner. Collegiate, for the second year in succession, may well be proud of its tennis team. Although we did not end up in first place, we came ex- tremely close. lf it hadn't been for a few bad breaks we could have been the league leaders. The Krosner Memorial Trophy was given to John Graves, whose sportsmanship, team spirit, and playing ability was of the geatest asset to the team. This year we have lost Ted Widmer and John Graves through graduation, but several good Juniors and Seniors, including Andy Bartos, Bob Karpf, Pete Callaway, and Leo Lehovich should make another fine record. Top row, left to right--R. Karpf, J. McCormick, M. French, H. Little, D. Hays, A. Chambers. Middle row- R. Everett, D. Kyle, J. Linksz, W. Finley, A. Barlos, M. Sheier, F. Gina, T. Mearin. Seated-P. Cook, G. Newsom, P. Callaway, P. Gorman, P. Duggan. THE SOCCER TEAM HIS year marked the third year of existence for the Senior School Soccer Team. Even though the team played against varsity squads, we ended up with three wins and only one loss. Coach HoFtmann's strategy was to concentrate as much power as possible in the halfback line, which could then alternately support the for- ward line on drives toward the the opponent's goal and drop back to reinforce the Collegiate defense when the other team threatened to score. This policy worked well during the season, with the offense pouring ten tallies through the opponents' goal as compared with the six which were scored against us. Captained by center halfback Pete Callaway and fullback Jerry New- som, the team also included center forward Pete Duggan, insides Paul Gorman and Mike French, outsides Hugh Little and Bob Everett, halfbacks Don Kyle and Jim McCormick, fullback Mike Sheier, and goalie Pete Cook. Having been beaten by Browning in two over- time periods the year before, the team was all keyed up for them and at RandalI's Island on October l6, the Orange and Blue won a bit- terly contested game by the score of 2-l. Dug- gan and Everett made the tallies. Eight days later, Collegiate had a field day at the expense of Horace Mann. With two goals by Gorman and one each by Duggan and Little, the team won 4-O. We were hoping to get revenge on Wardlaw for our defeat at their hands last year, but the first two wins may have made the team a little overconfident. Collegiate met the top- rate New Jersey team on November 9 and came out on the short end of a 3-O score. The game was actually closer than the score would seem to indicate, however. With a 2-l record, the team was determined to beat last year's record when we broke even. The players' hard work the last week of the season culminated in an emotionally- charged game with Woodhull. Everett, French, Duggan, and Gorman each booted the ball past Woodhull's goalie, while the Collegiate defense stood off a last minute drive by our opponents to win 4-3. ln spite of its lack of experience, inadequate practice facilities, and experienced opponents, the Soccer Team gave Collegiate the best record of any upper school sport this year, an achieve- ment of which the players may certainly feel proud. fv- I f I l 'xx x 44 2 4' 2 X 4' 'Q xx Q cg A X . --, y hs 'V' fr! . Q 0 4 4 fsgx fT,.pQi ' A is 'fu y 4 W' ' Q ' ' y m X x , 13-tb S . L.: I' 1sv.g wi V . . . QQ , I :P-' Mmhu X r-, ' Qggg, - 1,v:1r1urp,uU A 01' ' , L MQ '53 ggmsurmm 455691 YE955Wf...04 E ,lb W ' - r- A fd ab' Jdiwv!-i 511. ,I 'Nw ' V4 A ev 85' 920 ff' .71 r 2402195 ff, jf U 630 xx lu AI i 'H llh Gul I -Q ' .r 'D I ckuglijr., .- ONVPU 5'5 '- ' 'Q r V - x n' 71 TAX TABLE FOR comes uvgoea 55,000 N01 c ul me Yme uwenug me adyusled gmss mcome 100 enter 'undmg K0 the mxmtm 01 exemnmns named 00 me A Xi lui Ync me on ' ' , une R, 05431 x, xg, W gf? X 7. And you ave! And yo' Sknge '-x Smgka lx ma 'lP4nun- ma 5?-I x BM X855 mauked-lmamed mamed-lm: Xuan 001500 lhead 0K person 'Ib' hung '-a house- hhng -la - '4 hom sepa- wx may fl N has sepa xamew N X ff' 2, 325 02,550 050415204 5454 22350 2, 2,15 505 3 505 105 ,315 2, 400 3X0 X 3X0 19C 2,400 2,425 544 3 504 19 2. 425 2, 450 510 1. 040 50 0 2. 415 323 323 24 025 E 525 2 1 ,-10.2 K Compliments Compliments of of A. SCHNEIDER MISS GEORGE HARRIS Classes in Dancing Tkufalgar 9-4226 Best Wishes L. RO S Sl BURT HANFT 1298 SECOND AVENUE orner 68th Street NEW YORK 21, N. Y. Il ll l l 72 n nnnn nn inn vUU ' SUEZHUNGARY cnisns SPM.. 1: , . I.'orN Irl'nr,,y uclear 1 Power.--n Ili lqrird ,Z 'f'..u n. 1, . ' 1 1 ,,,- A....4...-t'.'rg,, ,Z,,,,f new .wiunrm-,N have necessitated z ' pendent and miln New All-Europe Accord nnnttt msJ2.22e..2f.4 . ll WR lm Urged b llenhauer 'H ' nnninninniiziii How Much De Headlines Mean To YUU? HEN you open your daily paper, don't you often feel as though you had walked into the middle of a movie or a play? As though you had missed the heginning of the action? Headlines proclaim a diplomatic crisis in one part of the world, an uprising in another, a coup d'etat in still another. You wish you knew precisely what lies hehind the current action so you could hetter under- stand the current scene-perhaps anticipate the next. If you do feel this way, if this is the kind of news coverage you want, you should he reading THE RE- PORTER regularly. For THE REPORTER regularly gives you the whole story, in detail, written so that you get all the pertinent facts clearly and concisely. It searches out so much more news, uncovers so much original information, that it has already won ten major awards for outstanding journalism. 73 BRIDGES UNIOI nate Hawaii Inquiry E d .Sa . '1 1 n 5'9 of Wanin Btu I abor Head , power oIL s Ha 'nu Nu you nl. U' Def 8-Ai .- mile hearmr ' , in Hs- , R Ra? t k Y Ohuei rx 11 f a gl Y 5' su A5gtSC'Tg,93tCfRga tr Senfel' harem tm ' C M0545 09 et been 3' has 6 gets 5, over W E Mess mn gn N we mieCiLBY5l1i:r2ev mtxua V he mth wo, 6 X nd! . aO9e M0 b tmml to ,erxU'Sl'e:Mt n cflfmecl Q x nnnn oenisii PARTY anon -+ and Thrgg nu.. on Hints US. ncessions' d Free 34 . io fAPtfRe o con. Qgellhou Enlun hi of fh,.,,, - me U-' - fo! B'7t.unn '1f..,L f 'YA l -in . ' . Up' lf hr ff1.'0nLll'r'l'7c':i C RI Pmhtfggl f e t .1 nqfe ff: ,eg lh 'To On W SON PC deem' cw!-,I mr Va' 'E I mm Russians and Ice Across Country MELINKOFF'S For Camp Supplies 1594 York Ave. BU 8-2419 Plaza 5-7687 OPTOMETRIST WILLIAM ROTH, O.D. 900 FIRST AVENUE Bet. 50 and 51 sis. New York 22, N. Y, Office Hours 9:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. And by Appointment Phones LEhigh 4-7550-1-2 FROSTED FOODS PARK AVENUE GROCERS Delicatessen - Fancy Fruits and Vegetables 1065 PARK AVENUE Bet. 87 and 88 Sts. New York 28, N. Y. PECK 81 GOODIE 225 WEST 52nd STREET New York City REgent 4-2749 ANGEL'S LUGGAGE STORE Complete Line of Trunks, Bags and Leather Goods 1649 SECOND AVENUE Bet. 85 and 86 Sts. New York 28 Phone AT 9-6293 Strictly Hand Service ENGLERT'S PARISIAN LAUNDRY French Cleaning and Dyeing 1161 FIRST AVENUE TAYLOR-MAID SERVICE, Inc. 796 LEXINGTON AVENUE New York 21 TEmpleton 8-7171 Jacques C. Taylor SAcramento 2-3894 SAME DAY SERVICE PEERLESS CLEANING 81 DYEING CO. THE CONTINENTALS Music for Parties and Dances For Information, Call RHinelander 4-7101 or BUtterfield 8-3614 PARK VIEW MARKET 74 EAST END AVENUE Corner 83rd St. REgent 7-6300 'M HR51 AVENUE Qualify Service WE DELIVER Near 86th Street New York City .fveryihing for ,he Tablet. Clrcle 7-9566 Cafe Brittany, Inc. RESTAURANT FRANCAIS Lunch and Dinner 807 NINTH AVENUE Bet, 53 and 54 Sts. New York City Yves Seveneant KAUFMAN PHARMACY J. Kaufman, Ph.G. 1067 PARK AVENUE Bet. 87 and 88 Sts. New York City Phones LEhigh 4-1328-1329 EAST VIEW CHEMISTS J. 84 D. Schneider, Ph.G. 84th St. and East End Ave. NEW YORK Phones: REgent 7-4311-8284 The Modern Pharmacy MAYFLOWER VALET SERVICE 4 WEST 62nd STREET New York City REgent 7-8900 FLORISTS ANNENBERG 84 ERICKSON, Inc. 1000 MADISON AVENUE Bet. 77 and 78 Sts. New York 21, N. Y. MOLE'S BARBER SHOP House of Stars - Stage, Screen - Tv 1026 LEXINGTON AVENUE 6 Complimenfs of 21 BRANDS, Inc Q 75 LITERARY SERVICES Manuscript, Criticism, Revision Editing, Ghosting, Typing, Research TRANSLATING French - Italian - German Call University 5-8105 Compliments of Mr. and Mrs. .IULES MENDEL RE 4-8926 SPOT CLEANERS 92 EAST END AVENUE Bel. 83 and 84 Streets NEW YORK 28, N. Y. Sarkis Boniukelian NOW YOU CAN CHANGE TO THE FINEST FILET MIGNONSI Change now for these fine fillet mignons Itender- loinsl which are cut right on our premises from aged U. S. Prime Graded Steer. The finest meal you'll ever eat. Each fillet weighs from 5 to 8 lbs. 52.25 per lb. MARYLAND FOOD MART 412 AMSTERDAM AVENUE NEW YORK 24 A FRIEND Compliments of CURRAN AND CO. Compliments ot A FRIEND ENdicon 2-7290 -1 DU BARRY RESTAURANT Broadway at 77th Sl. NEW YORK, N. Y. MAY KNITTING COMPANY RAYBURN S. KING Funeral Directors 148 EAST 74th STREET BU 8-9800 -E ,l-QF, 9 I mg' .i ul.- ' 7 va 'Gwenty Gne 'west Qifry ,Second .Street nal ' fa If i If M-'4!e9v.2 L 2975452425 ii! xx 2 111 Q 77 GREAT OAKS CAMP oxFoRD, MAINE A Camp for Boys - 6-16 Established in 1924 Located on 150 Acres of Land Bordering on Two Lakes All Comp Activities Including Horseback Riding Long Canoe and Pack Trips JOSEPH F. BECKER, Director WARNER BROS. are most pleased that our presentation of GIANT is conveying its message of brotherhood to so many young people of America Tel. RH 4-6155 WE CALL AND DELIVER HARRISON CLEANERS French Dry Cleaners Expert Alteration and Pressing All Work Done on Premises 1377 THIRD AVENUE Bet. 78 and 79 Sts. NEW YORK CITY H. W. Harrison TRafalgar 7-4644-4555 Prompt Delivery DI PALMA BROS. 159 coiumsus AVENUE Near 67th Street Meats - Poultry and Game Groceries - Fruits and Vegetables Florence for Finer Foods FLORENCE MARKET 985 PARK AVENUE Bei. 83rd and 84th sis. NEW YORK CITY BU 8-4557 - 4558 - 9464 - 1171 GEORG JENSEN, Inc. 667 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK 22, N. Y. Presents Georg Jensen Silver, Royal Copenhagen Poreclain and outstanding collections of crystal, dinnerware and furniture from which to choose a perfect gift. The Child Study Association of America 132 EAST 74th STREET NEW YORK 21, N, Y. Cordially invites Collegiate School to visit Associ- ation Headquorters, browse through the Children's Exhibit and a display of books and pamphlets for parents. Monday through Friday-10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Or send for o free copy of the Associations Publications List MAISON FRANCAISE COLVILL Cleaners and Dyers 1433 SIXTH AVENUE At 59th St., N. Y. C. Cl 7-4839 Cl 6-4357 Complimenfs of IRON GATE PRODUCTS, CO., Inc 424 WEST 54'rh STREET New York 19, N. Y. 5 Sole Distributors DELICACIES AND SPECIALTIES CDF JACK AND CHARLIE'S 21 79 MAYO FOOD MARKET Individual Service A F R I E N D Fruits, Vegetables and Prime Beef 1528 YORK AVENUE BU 8-5809-10-ll-12 Compliments of R U D L E Y ' S A FRIEND OF For That Delicious Snack Compliments of MARTIN'S GIFT BASKET SHOP COUNTRY RIDGE ESTATES 1042 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY Compliments of FOOD STORE ELDORADO MARKETS, 1924 BROADWAY Inc. NEW YORK 23, N. Y. Q SPRAGUE ELECTRIC COMPANY Electrical and Electronic Component NORTH ADAMS, MASS. 81 ANNE POPKIN Real Estate 18 WEST 55th STREET Telephone TRofoIgc1r 7-2281-2 A. J. BAUER CO., Inc. Apothecories Since 1890 197 Columbus Ave. Ai' 69th St. New York 23, N. Y. TRofolgor 3-6370 - 4-9199 M. Diglio', P. ltclliu, Props, LUCERNE BARBER SHOP Service Deluxe 205 WEST 79th STREET Bet. Broadway and Amsterdam Ave. New York 24, N. Y. Air Conditioned Compliments of AN UNCLE Compliments of W. B. HICKEY .I. LEON LASCOFF 8. SON Lexington Avenue at 82nd APOTHECARIES BU 8-9500 ATwoter 9-2150-1 Orders Promptly Delivered EMPIRE FRUIT EXCHANGE The Finest Fruits and Vegetables 1188 MADISON STREET Cor. 87th St. New York City BERNARD HOUSEWARES, Inc. 1053 MADISON AVENUE New York 28, N. Y. TR 9-0002 RAPPAPORT'S TOY BAZAAR, Inc. Compliments of 1381 THIRD AVENUE A FRIEND At 79th sr. New York 21, N. Y. WOMRATH'S BOOK SHOP A FRIEND BUtterfieId 8-2419 MEI.NIKOFF'S Distinctive Apparel for Men - Women - Children 1594 YORK AVENUE Cor. 84th St. New York 28, N. Y. 2219 BROADWAY New York 24, N. Y. Compliments of A FRIEND Compliments of EUGENE D. McGAHREN SANDE DRUGS, Inc. 21,61 BROADWAY At 76th St. New York City Phone TRcfc:lgor 7-6825-6826 Q C I f THE PARENTS' ASSOCIATION OF COLLEGIATE SCHOOL Q Complimenfs of A FRIEND FRENCH CLUB SCIENCE CLUB HISTORY CLUB 8 1 Complimenfs of BARROW, LEARY COMPANY Investment Bankers SHREVEPORT, LOUISIANA Complimenfs I of AN UNCLE OF BRUCE AND TOM CURTIS 85 Compliments I of SUTTON COSMETICS, Inc. JAMES J. MORRISSEY nc. Truckmen I 415 WEST 25th STREET New YORK CITY Compliments I- of MR. HARVEY Besf Wishes IRVING BRISKIN 1 mistakes will happen! but you Won't be making a mistake if you remind mother to buy... womanlwlay BUtterfield 8-9231 REgent 4-8140 DIETZ MARKET Prime Meats, Philadelphia Poultry Fruits, Vegetables and Groceries 964 LEXINGTON AVENUE At 70th Street NEW YORK 21, N. Y. THE MANNES COLLEGE OF MUSIC l57 EAST 74th STREET NEW YORK 21, N. Y. Courses Leading to the Bachelor of Science Degree, Diploma Post Graduate Diploma Preparatory Department Instrumental Classes Music Workshop Instrumental Instruction For Information Call the Registrar Regent 7-4476 The Lightest in Luggage ATLANTIC Grasshoppers - Vale Paks - Carryalls LUCKY'S LUGGAGE SHOP 2235 BROADWAY TR 4-6877 NEW YORK 24, N. Y. Compliments of A F R I E N D THE COLLEGIATE ALMA MATER Thy name and fame to us are dear, Our pride in thee is strong, Thy years of fruitful work appear Three centuries along. Thy care for us, fond mother, aye Our loyal love demands, Thy noble past, full-crowned with deeds, Our inspiration stands. And thine the present, still to mold Our lives to do thy will, Make clean our ways and sweet our souls, Our days with service fill. And in the years that are to come Our lives shall sing this song, God bless thee, fair Collegiate, Our hearts to thee belong. Compliments of THE GLEE CLUB 89 CHARVIN, Ltd. UNUSUAL cms FRYXELL 81 HILL, Inc. Opticians 47 EAST 57th STREET Compliments of AUSTIN .I. FUREY LOUIS FRIED 81 SON Jewelers 2163 BROADWAY Near 76th Street New TRafaIgar 7-5544 I I York City Compliments of A FRIEND TAITZ JEWELERS Watches, Jewelry Repairs 1889 BROADWAY Bet. 62nd and 63rd Sis. Compliments of DANIEL J. FALLON Bet. 50 EDLICH PHARMACY Chemists Since 1882 89,6 FIRST AVENUE and 51 Sts. New Phone: ELdorado 5-7199-6288 York City Compliments of the Junior Class 1 1 5 Best Wishes fo THE CLASS OF 1957 Q 92 ,-Immww wen--mX'.n.:1v++ n--51 gf' 1 - ' W , ' ML ' x .A fs, ' ,W 4 .fx X, ra w Awami mmm i . I , -fr, ?f1FQi1 ' .n . -1 , 154 'F if 'Y . 'D' ' 43 ,rf 5 5' ' s. , ' if 5 , ' -H-114 :'.2wf,:sw'N1!'wrv'1vs'f mzff:-,w:f:,wf . 1 1-f 1


Suggestions in the Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Collegiate School - Dutchman Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952


Searching for more yearbooks in New York?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online New York yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.