Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH)

 - Class of 1971

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Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH) online collection, 1971 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 272 of the 1971 volume:

9t m. -js iUlii QEhJ J COUNTY PUBLIC I 3 1833 01845 2232 GC 977.102 G22HA, 1971 ' ■.}V ' ' - s aNYX 1971 ' Hawken School Gates Mills, Ohio Volume VIII DEDICATION I He that is thy friend indeed. He will help thee in thy need. — Robert Barnfield IKE It happens in a flash but the memory of it lasts forever. It cannot be begged, borrowed or stolen, but it is of no earthly good to anyone until it is given away. So if in your hurry you meet someone who is too weary to smile, leave one of yours, for no one needs a smile quite so much as he who has none to give ! It takes only 17 muscles to smile . 43 muscles to frown. Conserve energy! Thorn McAn Shoe Stores SMILE!!! If I had wings, no one would ask me, should I fly . . . The bird sings, no one asks why! I can see in myself wings as I feel them — If you see something else Keep your thoughts to yourself I ' ll ny free then! Yesterday ' s eyes see their colors fading away They see their suns turning to grey You can ' t share in a dream you don ' t believe in — If you say that you see and pretend to be me You won ' t be then! How can you ask me if I ' m happy going ' my way? You might as well ask a child at play! There is no need to discuss or understand me — I won ' t ask of myself to become someone else — I ' ll just be me! — Peter, Paul and Mary ■ y 4 . . My heart leaps up when I behold A rainbow in the sky: So was it when my life began; So is it now I am a man; So be it when I shall grow old. Or let medic! The Child is father of the Man; And I could wish my days to be Bound each to each by natural piety. — Wordsworth Dawn to dawn a lifetime The birds sing and day ' s begun The heavens shine from dawn to dusk With golden rays of sun. People on their way Beginning a brand new day All over hearing people say, It ' s a beautiful day today. People in the streets Rushing everywhere. Moving fast, and now I know They ' ve got to get somewhere. People on their way Beginning a brand new day. All over hearing people say, It ' s a beautiful day today. — Bob Mosley (Moby Grape) ■ T. - i — , -, . ■f -L ■V 1, «i The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. What is called resignation is confirmed desperation. From the desperate city you go into the desperate country, and have to console your- self with the bravery of minks and muskrats. A stereotyped but unconscious despair is concealed even under what are called the games and amusements of mankind. There is no play in them, for this comes after work. But it is a characteristic of wisdom not to do desperate things. — Henry David Thoreau Looking at the snow and trees that grow outside my window Looking at the things that pass me by. Wondering if where I ' ve been is worth the things I ' ve been through — ending with a friend named sunny skies. — James Taylor O for a life of Sensations rather than of thoughts. John Keats After all, no one can ever give the exact measure of his needs, of his thoughts, of his sorrows. Human language is like a cracked kettle on which we beat out tunes for bears to dance to, when all the time we are longing to move the stars to pity. Gustave Flaubert, in MADAME BOVARY ' -r. -v TTi — .. t mmgm • •Ml ' e . -J IN MEMORIAM . v i JAMES ALBERT HAWKEN Not like the men of the crowd Who all round me to-day Bluster or cringe, and make life Hideous, and arid, and vile: But souls tempered with fire. Fervent, heroic, and good. Helpers and friends of mankind. Matthew Arnold COME WHAT WILL Dedication Word Pictures In Memoriam Faculty 19 Senior Pole 91 Underclassmen Lower School 99 Activities 113 Athletics 131 Candids . . Commencement 205 Ads Wings To Fly 261 FACULTY ■! ' ♦ j JAMES B. YOUNG HEADMASTER iatnennern© Thomas Bryan Ruth MacMaster SENIORS EVERETT ANDERSON My twelve years at Hawken have come to a dose and foremost in my thoughts is the caHbre of education made available to me. It is my intent that I reflect the discip- line of learning inculcated at Hawken as I further my schooling at the University of Rochester. It is with unhappiness that I will recall that I was a non-participator so far as school spirit is concerned. During my primary years, it was very evident that I was a very poor athlete. As I went on to middle school, I was even more convinced of this fact. This lack in me held me back from making friends and my shy nature became only more so. I always had the desire to co-operate in helping my school but I grew into a rut unless I was directly approached. Hawken has made an impression on me — although I feel I have not made an im- pression on the school. I believe it is the aggressive outgoing student who derives the most from a school with the personality of Hawken — each boy on his own. I would like to leave the following quotation of Eric Fromm ' s from his MAN FOR HIMSELF as a small contributing thought: ... there is no meaning to life except the meaning man gives his life by the unfolding of his powers, by living productively; ... HUNT AUGUSTUS Entered 1958 Aside from the sixth grade riot Hunter ' s not a bad guy. When I came to Hawken, it took him only two weeks to render me a whimpering wretch. Since then, however, subsequent to his pejorative salutations (mis- eries rendered: he has become increasingly mellowed and more or less come into his own. The fact that this transition took the better part of the first four years I knew him, (since 7th grade), is, I think, much to his credit. Also to his credit is the fact that while most of his friends are word-men, big-talkers. Hunter is a do-bee; He is much of the drive behind the Forestry Comm. and the proverbi- al perpetrator of our plans. But he ' s not a function, he ' s an engineer, and when the gang ain ' t nothing ' but hobos, he ' ll be running ' the train. P.M. JONATHAN P. BASS ACTIVITIES Bookstore Committee 2,3, Co-Chairman 4 Affirmative No 2,3, Editorial Board 4 ATHLETICS One on One 1 Brewer 3 Festering 1 Scatoiogy 3,4 When all the laughter dies in sorrow. And the tears have risen to a flood. When all the wars have found a cause. In human wisdom and in blood. Do you think they ' ll cry in sadness. Do you think the eye will blink. Do you think they ' ll curse the madness. Do you even think they ' ll think. When all the great galactic systems. Sigh to a frozen halt in space. Do you think there will be some remnant. Of beauty of the human race. Do you think there will be a vestige, Or a sniffle or a tear. Do you think a greater thinking thing. Will give a damn that man was here. — Kendrew Lascelles RICHARD D. BECHTEL Activities Soccer Tennis Pong , — — Calliope Onyx Outsiders A.F.S. 1,2,3,4 1,3,4 4 4 4 2,3 4 ANDREW GEORGE BING Entered 1959 ACTIVITIES Onyx 4 Red Key Society 3,4 We Want Your Money Record Co. 4 Cleveland Cruisers 3,4 Beachwood Fight 2 Sons of Liberty 2 D.M.G. 2,3,4 SPORTS Soccer 1,2,3,4 Track 1,2,3,4 Winter Spirits Committee 4 Who do you want to call? Where do you want to go? Always looks so good on the outside. When you get to believin ' it ' s true then you know. That you ' re on your way. People tug on your shirt, say you ' re lucky, Yout got everything you want but you don ' t, Yet you dare not say. — Bread DAVID GRAHAM CLARKE Entered 1966 What can one say? Dave is a warm and understanding person. He is willing to give up his time for others no matter what the reason is. He is always in a good mood or can easily be put in one. Dave is the backbone of this year ' s undefeated swim team. He seldom took a first place (not to say that he didn ' t try for it) but anyone knows that the second and third place points are, at times, equally as important in winning a meet as the first place points. He is seldom satisfied with his work as a student as well as a swimmer but knowing that he will become greater if he works gives him the initiative to do better . To say Dave is not an adventurer is a simple lie. Being a Hawken Out- sider, he has explored many areas close by. Aside from seeing America by foot or on the family ' s snowmobile, he has covered half of Europe and especially the country of Finland as an A.F.S. student to that country. The next area to be explored is that of women. Dave is truly a sincere kid. His goals are set realistically and the fact that he is warm-hearted makes him many friends and few enemies. Z.F. ACTIVITIES Glee Club: I Forestry Committee: 2,3 Outsiders: 2,3,4 A.F.S. Committee (co-chairman): 4 A.F.S. Foreign Exchange Student to Finland: 3 ATHLETICS Tennis: I Soccer: 1,2 Track: 3,4 Swimming: 1,2,3,4 Member, G.L.A.C. Volleyball Team; Champs: 3 Runner-up: 4 ROBERT POOLE CREASE, JR. Bob Crease wil! run for political office someday. He will probably succeed in getting elected, just as he has succeed in winning the respect of many students at Hawken. Bob came from Philadelphia to join us three years ago. He is the school ' s foremost expert on Congressional af- fairs (including Mr. Schlesinger). He can checkmate you in chess before you can say, Bella Abzug. He can pin you on the wrestling mat (if you weigh 105 lbs.) quicker than you can say Tony DiGiovonni. Despite these extracurri- cular activities, Creaser maintains a high honor average. Bob ' s senior project saw him whisked off to Washington, D.C. to straighten out Charlie Vanik. Someday maybe Bob Crease will be heard to shout; I am the Pres- ident (and make no mistake about it!). w mSUSSBlffWBmsbamf page is the outcome of hours of time and one else our inherent laziness would have it is we have not done enough. 1 cannot re- call a time when he was truly angered; nei- ther can 1 recall a time when he complained. He will never hang up his hockey skates or stop feeling the blues; more importantly he will never stop being himself. The blues is like that beautiful feeling of hope deep in my heart. To me, Peter is that blues. Peter: Unpretentious, selfless, nimble, lover of life, a disciple of the blues. This is what he is and always will be, and I know only a hand- full like him. Whatever val- ues I have left out do not matter, for they are assured- ly good. He is a genuine human being, uninhibited and without a sense of evil. What you see here on this effort of a few people. For any- stopped us far short of here. As PETER ANTHONY DEWOLFE THIS PAGE IS DEDICATED TO ALL MY FRIENDS (you know who you are) WARREN DUSENBURY Welcome aboard Mr. Pilgrim, the loudspeaker blared; any questions? Billy licked his lips and thought for a while. Finally he asked: Why me? That is a very (human) question to ask, the loudspeaker replied. Why you? Why us for that matter? Why anything? Because the moment sim- ply is. Have you ever seen bugs trapped in amber? . . . Yes . . . Well, here we are trapped in the amber of this moment. There is no why. Mr. Dusenbury could rule the world (for that matter any fool could) or possibly even save it (being a mes- siah saviour is not too difficult these days) if he only wanted to; the ability is there but the initiative is the prob- lem. When asked about this appar- ent apathy he calmly replies; Don ' t bother me with such trivia; there are more important things for me to worry about . . . somewhere ... (from THE K. Vonnegut Jr. SLAUGHTER- HOUSE-FIVE) • . Red rubber bands around the wrist; why? Oh, they might be useful someday, you say . . . haircuts were never meant to be enjoyed; I don ' t care what little tyrant of a director, Emerman, says. How the hell did you ever get to be an American ambassador. Wads of dark (greasy) locks lie scattered on my lavender carpet — tragic! Ah but why don ' t you see that the world around you cramps your style? Hmm . . . you always did like to sleep, to dream and to watch your dreams (we are all but what we dream) . . . (all words, mere words, meaningless words) C.C. (with help from a friend) DANIEL ROBERT EMERMAN Ah yes, if only I could bear to be alone, I mean prattle away with not a soul to hear. Not that I flatter myself you hear much, no Willie, God forbid. Days perhaps when you hear nothing. But days too when you answer. So that I may say at all times, even when you do not answer and perhaps hear nothing. Something of this is being heard, I am not merely talking to myself, that is in the wilderness, a thing I could never bear to do — for any length of time. Samuel Beckett HAPPY DAYS HOWARD GREGG EPSTEIN ACTIVITIES Player ' s Society 1,2,3,4 concessions Manager 4 Technical Director 4 Red Key Service 3,4 Glee Club 2,3 Secretary 3 Library Committee 3 ATHLETICS Soccer 1 , Manager 2,3,4 GARY WALTHER FIORDALIS Entered 1959 ACTIVITIES Glee Club 1,2,3, President 4 Youth Council 2,3,4 Onyx 3, Business Manager 4 Red Key 3,4 A.F.S. Committee 4 Bookstore Committee 4 ATHLETICS Football 1,2,3,4 Swimming 1 Wrestling 2 Baseball 1 Tennis 2,3,4 Scholastic Art Show, 1 Place 3, 2 Places 4 Some of us are leaders and some of us are led, but there are only a few of us who are willing to serve. Zip is one of those few. A large, lovable, sometimes flying fortress. Zip does not make enemies and seldom finds cause for anger. He learned how to play aggressive football but prefers to help and not hurt. Although athletically in- clined, he has not placed this first among his goals. Hard and dedi- cated work, whether it be in the classroom, on the playing field, or applied to his many outside activities and interests, is an adequate description of Zip ' s enthusiastic nature. He loves to laugh with un- controlled volume and, speaking of volume, the walls can hardly wait until that booming voice has graduated. The yearbook has nev- er seen a business manager as diligent and well organized as Zip was this year. Along with this. Zip handled the organization of the A.F.S. Fair and the presidency of the Glee Club, where he tried his hand at conducting and soloing. And now, having seen the French firsthand, he has decided to give the Hawaiians the added pleasure of another Fiordalis and will be conducting his senior project on the island of Oahu, helping to restore the sailing vessel, THE FALLS OF CLYDE So shall end the Hawken career of Gary Fiordalis, the anchor man of five sons, and this phase of the Fiordalis family ' s 54 years of investment in Hawken. PAUL ROGER GALLINI The sot you see above laid out on the Pong table has just overdosed on the hops. There is no cause for alarm, however, and I believe it is the first time in four weeks (since the last Pong match) that he has put his mind to rest. You see, if you had asked him seven hours prior to his release what he wanted to do, he would have likely replied Nothing or I don ' t know . Ask him now. He will smile and say Dry out and soak up another six. I don ' t mean to suggest that he lives out of a bottle; he knows better. I only mean to point out the occasional reversion to this curious lunch-box state is a well deserved panacea to almost vigilant boredom. Why is he bored? Because he knows better. He is pleasant in the morning, and is averse to ego-tripping. He is confidently uncertain (which resembles temperance, but is not) he likes fried chicken for breakfast. I used to run track with him. We had a fine time punishing ourselves. It is hard work and is pointless, other than as exor- cism of the soul. And I picture him running through the woods on pace, without stumbling. He leaves fallibility to be desired. M ROBERT WILLIAM GOODLOW The time I have always dreamed of, wondered about, has arrived: graduation. To graduate from the Twelfth Grade is indeed a great event; it is at this time when a person can truly define and assess his values. One should become conscious of his attributes and his deficiencies so that he will be able to better surmount life ' s tests. In these past years Hawken has helped me in gaining much of the strength and knowledge I will need for the future. As we look forward to moving on to college I wish the best to everyone of the Hawken Class of ' 71 . %Wf iJ ACTIVITIES Outsiders 2,3,4 Glee Club 1,2,3,4 Youth Council 3,4 Player ' s Society 3,4 Afro-Am Society 2,3 Chapel Committee 4 ATHLETICS Soccer 1 Track 1,2 Cross-Country 3 P.S. — Long live the SCRC! (Senior Class Reunion Committee) gress is the minstrel of love and compassion • he will first gnarl and then snort then gasp and finally laugh violently • seemingly hesitant, he is actually confident and carefree • he plays a sweet and mellow song, listen and love it. j.m. JON GRESSEL Though it is true that Gres is the victim of accelerated growth, and is consequently an eighteen year young dirty old man, and that his groveling snort is enough to turn off Dr. Calderone (and that he did go out and get a brush-cut just to alienate his friends) he is a true human being (when he is sleeping). Duke Duke Oh Duke Oh Oh Duke This is the ode of Duke This is my ode of Duke slf it were Duke ' s ode Would he mention his five o ' clock shodow .„,j„ in seventh grade 413 how we threw berries at him (we never hit him with sticks) of Duke I think of football . . . and how we be good because he was gargantuan . . . and hd k that . . . and how we thought he was too dumb rawBPss to hold a position of responsibility . . . and he denied us that . . . and how we thought he loved power and he d us that. Duke has transcended the love of power. Unto what I cannot say. The past is real and It is clear. But now is the present, and the present is incom- prehensible. 1 cannot say where Duke is now, fot even his vision is blurred. I can only say what ! feel. Dufc feels bet- ter this year , . Duke even feels good to me this ' . How he feels unto himself; cannot jMy, for this is :ir, . de of Duke. [NIEL HA] 5 1 jf ij i i DAVID JOEL HELLERSTEIN W: . A 1 Vladimir: Well, shall we go? Estragon: Yes, let ' s go. They do not move. (WAITING FOR GODOT) A bursting inner crime . . . Should I (abstract creation of a nonexistent mind) deign to reveal my true character in the pages of the Hawken Onyx? I doubt it. Instead, I ' ll foil your rushing eyes with some assertive garbage, and permit you to only vaguely comprehend the foolish complexity of my situation. In seriousness, though, I should give a review of my senior year, to better explain my unique and periled position. I grew my hair long and talked about repressiveness. I went to Rhine- lander ' s party. I learned (from the experts, Orr and O ' Day) how to cruise on Saturday nights, and I began to write. The faculty finally kicked me out (euphemistically on early senior project) for insubordination. I love tormenting teachers and was getting quite good at it. Other things: I like playing violin and drawing and sleeping and talking and eating and sex. As I said, I write, but a year- book is not a place for tormented philosophizing, and as you, the celebrated Reader, are certainly reading this merely for pleasure, I have spared you . . . Well, what are you waiting for. Reader? Go on over to Holden. 4 STEPHEN HOLDEN Steve Holden has been going to Hawken since 7th grade. But few people at his school know Steve. I guess I sorta do — at least enough to create the illusion of summing up Steve for his Senior Profile. Steve has a sharp but simple mind. What! An insult to a friend. you readers might indignantly cry. But this is really a well-concealed compliment. You see, while the rest of us gradually go crazy from Identity crises and who am I dilemmas, Steve well be quite sane wondering what record to buy or where to go skiing or how drunk to get; you know, simple, mundane things like that. It ' s not that Steve hasn ' t wondered about all the crucial questions. He has. But he has decided that the answers are unimportant to his well- being. Steve will live a long happy life while the rest of us endure nerv- ous breakdowns, commit suicide or suffer some equally unpleasant result of our tendency to complicate mat- ters and thus cause depression. In ten, or twenty or thirty years, I can sorta envision myself talking to Steve (my-self in a straight jacket, of course). Well, Steve, where to this weekend? Aspen or Vail? And what ' s that under your arm? Ah . Led Zepplin 17? No! I don ' t like Led Zepplin I see you ' re looking at that chick. Yah! She ' s sorta fine. (Warren Dusenbury) Hey! I ' ve got nothing to do today but smile. Soccer 1,2,3,4 Outsiders 1,2,3,4 JONATHAN HULL Jon Hull is Hawken ' s unrecognized freak. HE doesn ' t drink or smoke dope and even has been known to speak affectionately of his parents. But wherever Hull goes he carries an atmosphere which is far more bizarre than any durg induced experience. He ' s a queer mixture of uninhibited spontaneity and repressed ego. His problem is that he is unrecog- nized for his originality and wit among his peers and is constantly a target of their abuse. However he remains stalwart and hopefully he will always be himself which quite possi- bly is the most complex personality I have ever known. ' V vu I ¥ J 4 1 i 0m b e ti JONATHAN IZANT Who else would go tramping through the snow to get a picture of snow tracks? Who else has Mr. Marcee for a pal? Who else could run out of gas five times in a year and a half? Who else would go paddling down the Grand River in a rubber raft? Who else would buy tickets for a Hawken play in advance (but forget money for parking)? Who else would drive around Shaker Square 17 times (just because it was his 17th birth- day)? Who else has a cat (Tiger) that ' s famous? Now I ask you — Who else could be all these things But the one and only Jon Izant. Who else tries as hard as Jon does? Who else is as kind and understanding as Jon is? Who else remembers the little things which are so important in life? Who else is as insane but as fantistic as Jon is? And most important of all — Who else in the world knows what a Snerd- body-fudgrass really is? %A before LANCE GRAYDEN KINSEY This dude means business. One lool( into his steely eyes has frozen scores of strapping studs with virtual terror. He detests levity and only last year punched out no less a bear than Rich Amsden for merely smiling. He has a passion for perfection and is said to have spat when he found that he had scored a mortal 799 on his English achievement. He likes his women fast and his action furious and once carried a pocket llask of grain alcohol to dancing school. His dual cam hemie under glass T-bird eats Mach Ones for breakfast, and he cruises for steak and potatoes when the boys are messin with burgers. It was in Trage- dy one fateful day that Mr. Pickering had the temerity to spoof an interpretation of Lance ' s. Lance leapt to his feet, fists clenched, eyes wild with wrath. Thats not funny, hissed Lance. Mr, Pickering ' s hands trembled, his voice quavered as he croaked Pin a rose on me; go ahead; I want you to. To say that Lance has brought fear to the halls of Hawken is an understatement: Coach Timateo calls him sir. Akight, I guess I am stretching the truth a bit. He DOES drive a T-bird. Mann says he saw Lance at a cast party talking to a faculty member who was just the tiniest bit oiled. Mann, auditing their conversation briefly, claims he was unable to discern which of them had been denting the bottle, despite Lance ' s insistence that he was dry as a bone. Lance is living proof that the best sense isn ' t always good sense. P.M. after ■ l Most students at Hawlcen feel that Johnny is a good man and here and now I intend to dispel that rumor. He is not a good man ; he is far too complex an indi- vidual for that. The epithet implies noth- ing more than tacit affability and it would be a great injustice to dismiss him so Hght- ly. He is a man of many emotions, but he rarely displays them to any but his closest friends. He is extremely shy however he shows his strength on the wrestling mat and baseball diamond. There is a lot more to Johnny than one can first discern look- ing at his quiet figure walking through Hawken ' s halls. Too often his shyness is mistaken for a lack of personality, but to those who know him his personality shines through his shy mask. JOHN HENNING LINDGREN You ' re the son of your father Try a little bit harder Do for me as he would do for you With blood and water, bricks and mortar He built for you a home You ' re the son of your father So treat me as your own, Elton John For this land was permeated with dying; this bounteous land, where plants grew overnight, where Jonas had watched a mush- room push from the carcass of a drowned beaver and in a few hours swell to the size of a hat — this bounteous land was saturated with moist and terrible dying. . Saturated and overflowing! ThefeelinghauntedJonas ' sdaysandtorturedhissleep.O, Jesus, light of life, fill the darkness. He was being smothered. He was being drowned. He felt he might awake some foggy morn with moss across his eyes and one of those hellish toadstools sprouting in the mist from his own carcass. ' No! ' — Ken Kesey On my way I followed All a dozen roads to ends That tremble and fade M idst the bleach of recollection. With confidence the sun will hide And the sky will not spit rain To quench the parched words That whisper rough and rasping On the plain. Often we waited too long For night to fall and spell our heat. And desperation made dark and coolness meet. Nighttime only hid what still remained. How many mornings did we wake To find that solitude and order ' s rape Yet fraught our sleepless minds With the pain of no escape. Woke, waking, I awoke To see splintered sunlight edge Pine forest bed. Bend and shine all over me And break softly to gentle laughter In the leaves, the breeze. And thinking sighs Its just the morning. Nothings changed, Nothing But the light and the laughter And the ease of being born. PETER DUSTIN MCCREARY BILLY MCKAY Checking the physical education records, and looking under the name of McKay William , one would find height: 5 ' 2 , weight 118 lbs. Billy has grown more than anyone else sipce ninth grade in more ways than one. No one knows the torment he went through when he felt that he was selling out to people who not only might not care, but also represented things he might even detest. These moments of torment were few for Billy because he is a lover. He loves to feel the surge of grace as he moves in basketball; he loves to hear the words of men describing their ladies; and though he is sometimes afraid of the scope of his mind he loves to feel his control of words formulating. I treasure my relationship with Billy not because he is Black, but because I am white. He had to make greater concessions to understand me than I did to love him. — Tommy Thompson IF A MAN HASN ' T FOUND SOMETHING HE WILL DIE FOR, HE ISN ' T FIT TO LIVE. — Martin Luther King THANK YOU FALETTINME BE MICE ELF AGIN — Sly Stone ROBERT KARL FRIEDRICH MANN Bob is a bad — . In fact. Bob is the baddest — at Hawicen. He steps onto the wresthng mat; he hasn ' t slept for three weeks and he hasn ' t eaten since November. He gives his 475 pound opponent a super bad — stare and it psyches out not only the bear he is about to brawl with, but also the visitor ' s bench, the crowd and the referee. He steps forward undaunted; what keeps him going? Courage? The disciplined mind? Guess again. The frenzied match begins and Bob apphes submission holds to the eyes, neck and lower regions of his foe ' s helpless body. He finishes the man with his famous submission headlock which he learned while he wasamember of a Cleveland Heights street gang that used to tangle with anything that moved. Bob is not vengeful or spiteful contrary to the opinions of several faculty members. He may be a masochist and he may love to brawl, but hateful he ain ' t. And anyone who thinks he is can step outside and engage in a more basic rhetoric. Hey Bobbie, lets go get ripped, drink a lot of wine, get a nice woman and beat up a Prepper. Ya. NICHOLAS HUGH MINCHIN . Good-eye mighty! ; Good-eye, cobber! A foreign figure approached me in the hall. Bloody kangaroo, I thought, What the fire does cobber mean? Hey Nick, how was the big R? His face turned pink with excitement or embarrassment or perhaps excited embarrassment. You loved it, Minchin, didn ' t you? Never said a thing, might, never said a thing. Nick Minchin is the epitome of the All-American Aussie. Nick, Jack Armstrong Minchin, is always bright, cheerful, and ready with a smile. He is quick and charming and the girls say he has a sexy voice . I noticed Nick without a smile one day, perhaps the first time during his stay in America, and I went up to him to find out what the problem was. Are you homesick, Nick? Sort of. Mighty. I ' ve been here three months and I haven ' t seen one outhouse. Realizing the pain of homesickness, I led Nick back onto the straight and narrow path, and in two shakes the well-known smile returned to his face and the color returned to his cheeks. When Nick leaves the States he will be missed. He has left his mark on the minds of many people. Nick is an exceptional human being. Nick is my friend. L.K. IT I JAMES PRINCE MORSE i ' m losing status at the high school, i used to think that it was my school, i was the king of every school activity, but that ' s the horror of what will become of me. the other night we painted posters, they played some records by the coasters, a bunch of pom-pom girls thumbed down their nose at me, they had painted tons of posters i had painted three, i hear those secret whispers everywhere i go, high school spirit ' s at an all-time low. i ' m gonna try like mad to get my status back todaySTATUS BACKBABYSTATUSBACKBABY f.z. FREDERICK REID MUELLER I ' ve never met anyone quite the same as Fred. Maybe I see the oddities of his style so clearly because I have been his friend since I met him, as a lowly frosh. At that time Fred was the one who, when he walked into a room, was pelted with chalk and erasers and then caught and blamed for the crime by Bulldog Warner. He was the one that was at- tacked in the halls and dragged on the floor for no reason, only to be chastised by a faculty member for it; Mueller, get up off the floor you ' re always getting into trouble, don ' t you have anything better to do. Maybe Fred hasn ' t changed very much; it could be that the rest of us no longer take advan- tage of his natural style. Spontaneity has always been a part of him. One day he brought Mr. Small a half frozen duck that he had shot the day before when he had cut school to go hunting. Even this year, faculty check to make sure certain people are in school on opening day of hunting season. Recently, in his advanced technique, Fred went skiing in Aspen, without finding out if he could find a place to stay. Certain Hawken skiers found Fred on their couches and fioors for a night. This was over Christ- mas vacation, but he came back, to be in Cleveland, on New Years Eve. He stopped in his house and said hello to his Mother, then he called me (I wasn ' t home) and quickly left in search of a party. The next day I called and found that he had left for Peak and Peak for the day. Later on he called my house where he got a message to come over. Do you mean like for the evening or for the night? He ' s sleeping in any room now. Thats all part of Fred. There are countless stories that are circulating now, but I will tell you only one more. Fred was home alone; his parents and family were on a camping trip. After about a week of bachelor living my parents recieved a knock on the door there was Fred, holding his towel. I don ' t like taking showers in an empty house. Can I take one here? How could you say no? I was surprised to hear about it when I got home . . (Fred had gone). 1 wouldn ' t have thought that he would bring a towel with him. BRUCE H. NICHOLSON NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY Class of 1975 The best way to summarize this experience at Hawken would be to say that it was exciting in the begin- ning, tough in the middle, and now I am happy to be leaving. Ironically, I learned as much, if not more, outside of the classroom than inside. I anx- iously await the promise of college; equipped with a fine education and a Hawken diploma. This space on my senior page is dedicated to two gentlemen, MR. CHILTON THOMSON and MR. THOMAS BRYAN each of whom, in his own way, helped to make these four years worthwhile for me. BILL NORTH liMH 1 m • Activities Football 1,2,3,4 Baseball 1,2,3 Swimming 1 Red Key 3 Afro Am 3 Glee Club 1 PhilO ' Bryon Chorale 4 (founder and conductor) f mm The Phil O ' Bryon Chorale TIMOTHY WILLIAM PATRICK O ' DAY If one were to select a member of this year ' s senior class who has displayed the diversity that a Hawken student can have, Tim would be a logical choice. At different times of the day he can be found typ- ing the notes from a Student Council meeting, organizing a rap ses- sion at the HB dorm, taping up page four of the Aff. No, integrating by parts, leaving town with Pick to attend a conference on education, offering critical insight of player and female spectator alike at a bas- ketball game, or doing just about anything that might improve ei- ther himself or his school. Academically, Tim is one of the class top scholars. Athletically, he has earned more than his share of varsity letters. Through his many accomplishments, however, he remains a casual sort of guy, conveying the good student picture without being known as a grind. Ha wken ' s first Top Teen, Tim is basically just a plain, nice guy, hardly one to participate in those infamous cut sessions. Respect- ed by students and faculty alike, perhaps the most unusual thing about him is his desire for excellence, for it seems he strives for (and usually achieves) it along any path he chooses to follow. — M.W. — B.W. ACTIVITIES Student Council Secretary 4 Affirmative No 2,3, Sports Editor 4 Red Key Society 3, Chairman 4 Youth Council 4 Onyx 2,3 Assembly Committee 4 Glee Club 1 Phalanx? 3 Mugwumps 4 Mr. Pickering ' s Valet 4 ATHLETICS Baseball 1,2,3,4 Basketball 1,2,3 Football 1,2, Varsity Manager 3 PARKER MURRAY ORR, JR. He explained to her why it was hard to find a satisfactory job or work to do. He liked working with a power drill test- ing the rocky envelope of the shore, but then the employers asked him to take a great oath of loyalty. What! cried Rosalind. Do you have scruples about telling a convenient fib? No I don ' t. But I felt uneasy about the sanity of the director asking me to swear to opinions on such complicat- ed questions when my job was digging with a power drill. I can ' t work with a man who might suddenly have a wild fit. Why don ' t you get a job driving one of the big trucks along here? I don ' t like what ' s in the boxes, said Horatio sadly. It could just as well drop in the river and I ' d make mistakes and drop it there. Is it bad stuff? No, just useless. It takes the heart out of me to work at something useless and I begin to make mistakes. I don ' t mind putting profits in somebody elses pocket — but the job also has to be useful for something . Why don ' t you go to the woods and be a lumberjack? No! They chop down the trees just to print off the NEW YORK TIMES! JEFFERY JOHN PETRENCHIK Time it was, And what a time it was, It was . . . A time of innocence, A time of confidences. Long ago . . . It must be Long ago, I have a photograph. Preserve your memories They ' re all that ' s left you — Paul Simon Soccer 1,2,3, co-capt. 4 Ski Team, co-capt. 4 Track 1,2,3,4 Calliope Art Ed. 4 W.S.S.C.4 Something ' s wrong that restless feeling ' s been preying on my mind. Road maps in a well-cracked ceiling the signs aren ' t hard to find. Now I ' m not saying that you ' ve been mistreated No-one ' s hurt you nothing ' s wrong. A moment ' s rest was all you needed So pack your things and kindly move along. f — James Taylor MURPHY REINSCHREIBER ACTIVITIES AFS 2,3,4 Onyx 2,3,4 Beachwood Fight 2 Fish Softball 3,4 PONG (charter member) 4 Riebinschiebineeber can only be depicted by running through an average day at the dump. me; You ' re late again Surf. Surf: Yeah, an ' here comes Rocket — I ' m sca-rewed!! Ron: Morning Murph. Surf: Aren ' t you even going to ask where I ' ve been? I ' ve got a great excuse. Ron: Save it. I ' ve given up. Surf: It ' s not much fun anymore. Bing; Where ' s Reid ' s money Murph? Surf: (aside):Will someone get this b opper and his records off of my back. Surf: Hey, Mac, wanna break for the D.Q.? me: Sure, but you ' ve got Spanish. Surf: N.W. I got bounced in 59.6 sees. — a new record. me: O.K. Let ' s blow this pop stand!! Surf: (in his Sunbeam mixer): You wouldn ' t believe what happened down at I.U. last weekend . me: Keep dreaming. Surf. Surf: Where ' s the PONG game next weekend? me: Who cares? You ' re never gonna beat da wop and me. Surf: You just wait until I get a good partner. The last one was a woos. me: (back at the dump) I gotta to go. They need a fourth upstairs. If you didn ' t understand this, it ' s O.K. ' cause most of it ' s inside anyhow. Thus, the only possible conclusion; ya gotta see it to believe it. — M.H. For me or anyone to write a review of Eric ' s life is absurd, but many images float through my mind. Some of them are not suitable for this and I could never mention them all. Eric Hale Rhinelander. Tall, thin, sparkling eyes, ready laughter. Stories about stab- bing pink marshmallows to make them white, white lines on Canadian Thruways might eat him, cleaning house, running up mountains. Nova Scotia ... it goes on and on. Eric Hale Rhinelander. What? Let ' s go Blueberry picking. Blueberries? Are you kidding; me pick Blueberries? Yeah, it ' s one of those basic joys of life. Oh, wicked funny! Let ' s go! A few minutes later we arrive at the patch. Plunk, Plunk, Plunk. I ' m supposed to fill this entire huge can full of these little teeny tiny berries? Yep, keep going it practically fills it- self. Have you heard the princess jokes? Those aren ' t funny. Plink, Plunk, Plunk, Plink. My Union Labor Laws say I don ' t have to do this. I have to get double overtime, work- men ' s compensation, social security bene- fits, etc. Okay, send me a bill and please don ' t eat all those Blueberries. The plink plunk gradually fills the cans and we re- turn home. Now to sort them out. All of - — t- those? Yes? FORGET IT! So we went f swimming and the peons on the beach thought we were all hippie freaks ! J.M. I met Eric running rampant through Ned Ford ' s woods three miles from nowhere, screaming MARSHMALLOWS MARSHMALLOWS. He shook my hand, over and over, up and down, down and up. He greeted us with three steaks, Lebanese bread, and marshmallows that he had hidden in the pockets of his baggy blue overalls. There was complete darkness and he tried to convince me that he could see in the dark, while everyone else lit matches. After feeding us all, he disappeared into the woods. AHHWW AHHWWW is all you could hear from about two miles away. It got quiet and we carried on conversation. When out of the blue, like a streak of greased lightning, MARSHMALLOWS MARSHMALLOWS AWK and fade. The next day he talked me out of going to summer school for a week while my par- ents were away. He staged a Marshmallow massacre on three girls in a swimming pool, after he coaxed five people into heaving around 3000 marshmallows at them. At 11:00 P.M. Wednesday night we saw a commercial about a ' soft and creamy girl ' in Beyond the Planet of the Apes so we went to see it. Eric wore a raincoat, rainhat, galoshes and sunglasses through the entire movie. When the film got bad he crawled around on the fioor of the theatre. They would not give us our money back, so we went home. At three his father called asking why he never comes home anymore. At 3:30 his father picked him up. Big Deal! Does anything bad ever happen to Rhinelander? J.C. Drink no longer Water but use a little Wine for thy Stomach ' s sake and thine often Infirmities . . . Saint Paul, the Apostle 1 Timothy, V.23 Eric Rhinelander is characterized by his laugh that scorns reality. His only real dilemma is finding a female with the same laugh. Together they would deny everything that should be. Freddv JEFFREY RIDDLE In a short time at Hawken I have had many experiences that will always live with me. However the most exciting experience that I have had is running cross country. When I first came to this school I did not plan to go out for cross country; however, when I was asked to try it for awhile I decided that I would. From then on I have enjoyed running cross country. It gave me a different sensation each time I ran. Each run was like an entrance into a new world, a world of concentration and of falshbacks into the past or even the future. Hardly is the concentration focused upon the present until that stretch run when suddenly your mind goes blank and every muscle in your body pulls and stretches until pain and exhaustion become one gust of breath that pushes you across the finish line. Such a sensation can not be experienced in any atmosphere but the one that cross country provides. U nder the crust ol dirt You can hear the rock Singing to the veins of ore A hymn. Deep tunes are I n tile bowels of rock. Turn the knob — no, not that one — The one at the tip of your breast. Can you h ear it now? Have your ears become silver. Nickel or copper? Are Rumblings beginning To make you afraid? Then burrow your way to the light With your fingers and your tongue. RICHARD MICHAEL SAHLEY When the sun is singing, when the wind is playing whisper games, and it ain ' t too hot at all, look out, cause old Ricky ' s raisin happy hell in the heart of the woods where the road parts the stand and there ain ' t no brand of right or wrong. See, its alright, too, where there ain ' t no burgers in coats and ties and soft soled shoes walking around tellin what you ought and oughtn ' t, no sir, the laws are pale laughter and dusty shafts of sun-sigh where the road turns to dirt (and sometimes mud), and all that ' s left to say is So what, hey? As it happens, as it didn ' t happen, but might have, Rickey ' s ridin the road in from the Caves end, but see, it ' s been rainin a piece and the road is mighty muddy. Now Rickey would surely rather walk, but he ain ' t walkin, he ' s drivin and it doesn ' t occur to him to leave the car at Caves and walk in, cause he ain ' t that hot on thinkin ahead, right? I guess he figures that since the noon hour is bright and hot the road must be okay, but he ' s at fault there, cause it isn ' t. Don ' t matter, though, cause there ain ' t no particular place to be, and when it is evident that the trusty Mustang ' s not movin any more, Rickey is left to his own devices. So what. If you happen to be wandering out from the courts bout this time, you just may come upon a scruffy near naked nature nut sittin grinnin on the hood of his car guitar-pickin playin real pretty, and if you look a bit closer you ' ll see there on the roof is a gallon bottle of Crib with quite a dent in it. Don ' t ask no questions, cause lately he been a thorny bugger, and he ' s inclined to smile and let you on to where you can go. But don ' t you do it, cuase he don ' t mean no harm, and if you ' re easy enough and let it be, its gonna be alright, and a fine afternoon besides. For one throb of the artery. While on that old grey stone 1 sat Under the old wind-broken tree, I knew that One is animate. Mankind inanimate phantasy. CRAIG EVAN SAINT-AMOUR ATHLETICS Soccer — 1,2,3 Swimming — 1,2,3,4 Track— 1,2,4 Tennis — 1 SAKS CHRISTOPHER REYM)LbS SCHENK ft xpressed in the blue - Marshall McLuhan Well there ' s this kid back home rtamed Shiverick, and you mention the blues, and that ' s this kid Shiverick. He and his Ma land in hand. He doesn ' t like to perform, too shy; ' course his jug band beats any other hollow. ' : in first grade. Back in those days, they made every effort to separate the Iwini net any brothers who habitate so well together. It where they wrestle? Reminds me of a kid named Shiverick; amazing wrestler. Came back from a back operation to beat his brother, and that ' s they say .... Hey, do you have a copy of Blum? What? Well, I need to find out the exact dates of the Transcendental Movement in America. In the middle of my dinner party, e wants to learn the American History he didn ' t learn from Schles. Course I didn ' t learn it either. He aced the nent, I didn ' t. ember this woods party, off the Snake Hill Valley, Chagrin Falls; David, Paul, Big Fat Woman, Irooks, Rick, Jamie, Cocaine Blues, Peter, Jerome, Tommy, even a recorder. Amazing. Back in the Green luick Days. Amazing car. Simply Superb. Better than the Pontiac. And then there came David, Hunt, Paul, Tommy, Rick Co. writing an ecology paper even Dnger and better than Senior Science 69 ' s. Amazing. And I was sitting in his room and there was An Anthology of Blues Lyrics, sitting on the able. So it goes. ... C.A. ■Wi« Paul isn ' t black, he ' s red, but he ' s as down-home as hominy grits. He plays a bad harp and runs mean old vibes up and down the walls. But try to talk to him. I mean illiterate. This guy didn ' t even speak English until he was four- teen, and even then all he could say was, What are you doing? You ' ve just sliced off your finger with an axe, and you ' re a little upset. I mean there ' s a lot of blood and bone and swearing and tears, and Paul, too, who rolls up like a lunch box on wheels and queries the depths of your agony, What are you doing? Hoping you choke on a harp, Paul. Today this guy stumbles into class like a ham on rye. It is evident that the better half is nowhere to be seen. Where ' s David, Paul? I guess we forgot him Good, Paul. s i ff ' PAtJLSHlVMiCK Before I get into the customary praise showering and character contrivance, note that it is true that this guy does talk like he has a dinner roll in his mouth, that he did, in fact, walk into doors at the middle school (not doorways, DOORS), that, in class, he can barely blink without offending the teacher, that he knows a great deal and is hopelessly impressed by the scope of irrelev- ance. He whips around the halls like a rhetorical question turned faint and funny. He is actually kind of funky in a polished man- ner, thus his patter is so ironic that it generally elicits no response that is appropriate, and after having words with him, one is usually a bit vague as to what has occured by way of rationale. He would advise you not to bother with it. Though his energies are not directed to support of the temple of academia (the one which brings Mr. Pickering to a vacant starejust empty with long- ing), he is busy all the time with any number of inclinations, from astronomy to music (guitar, piano, violin etc.) to bad-mou- thing Nixon, and he has even been known to claim, after a particularly packed weekend, that he never sleeps anyways. He en- joys the not-so-common ability to amuse himself. He is, contrary to first impression, all there, and, as far as I know him, in per- petually true form. But nobody is entirely consistent. Okay. He does not wear a leather jacket or carry a knife (he has never attempted to comb his hair, let alone grease it). He knows for- ty-seven languages, but deigns to speak only a few of them, and even then, only one at a time. DEANSKYLAR I wish I had a rose. I find myself wanting badly to express my love for the people I have grown up with. So many people share this indis- tinct acknowledgement of my love that it would be wasteful and foolish to even b egin to name them . I remember moments and hours and sometimes days of fantastic excite- ment, joy and serenity. Yes, I find tranquil moments not only in quiet places where I am alone with people I want to be with — but I also enjoy observing my friends at their candid best. Seeing my friends excell and prosper fills my heart with prosperity. I grow slowly stronger as my feelings deepen for the people around me. I have never found any- thing more comforting than to fall back on the strength of my feelings for other people. This faith, belief, dream I hold so close to my heart spurs me to continue planning for the future. Allowing myself to con- jure up a farm in my sleep is the most daring thought I am capable of. Imagine hearing your friends playing the blues on the porch. Imagine them coming and going as they please. Imagine them all sitting down to an incredibly lush table of home grown vegeta- bles, fruit and eggs. Im- agine them all retiring with their wives or lovers at 9:00 p.m. after more music and singing. I do . . often. JOHN CLIVE THOMPSON RODNEY DAVID VESE ! : f LOST Desolate and alone All night long on the lake Where fog trails and mist creeps. The whistle of a boat Calls and cries unendingly, Like some lost child In tears and trouble Hunting the harbors breast And the harbors eyes. CARL SANDBURG ANTHONI VISCONSI II A spirit beyond possession With freedom to flow together or be alone Absorbing sensations of nature Aware of pain and confusion Yet moving on with unshattered strength N.S. ATHLETICS Soccer Baseball Skiing ACTIVITIES AFS Four School Committee Onyx H.B. Dorm Winter Sports Spirits Committee MARK WARREN ACTIVITIES Affirmative No 3, Editorial Board 4 Players ' Society 1,2,3,4 Outsiders 2,3,4 Glee Club 1,3 Bookstore 2,3, Vice-President 4 Phalanx 3 Mugwumps 4 Organic Chemistry 4 ATHLETICS Crosscountry 2,3,4 Tennis 1,2,3,4 Its Academic 3, Captain 4 Freshman Wrestling 2 Honors 1 ,2,3; High Honors 4 NMSQT FinaUst Math Award 2,3 Not one to beheve a student ' s role is essentially passive, Mark Warren has availed himself of Hawken ' s resources to the fullest. In the classroom, he is not content to sit back confused and dream of the past or the future. Rather, he is inventive (the Warren — plugging-in theorem of Advanced Mathematics), logical, vocal, often controversial and usual- ly right. Independent in mind and spirit, he is able to cut through the abstract implications of an indefinite integral and concentrate on the numbers at hand. But much of Mark ' s work has been spent outside these hallowed halls. He has appeared on every Hawken Its ' Academic team in history (both of them), produced the thespians winter production, hiked through the Smokey Mts. with the Outsiders, earned recognition in cross coun- try, and quit the newspaper 17 times. If one would take the time to remove the outer shell, one would find an individual with an insatiable love for Flaw- ken, innocent starlets, wacky clothes. Organic Chemistry, sock hops at Orange, and cruising in a red Camaro after basketball g ames. Appropriately enough, he is one student who will leave his mark on the school. ,- 1j V :is ««fc 1 : 1. 1 Li BERNARD BARUCH WEISKOPF ACTIVITIES Affirmative No 2,3 Assistant Sports Editor 4 Red Key Society 3,4 Youth Council 3 ATHLETICS Football 1, Manager 2 Statistician 4 Basketball 1 Wrestling 2,3,4 Baseball 1 Golf 2,3,4 If I could only affect one person, to make him better in some small way, then my four years at Hawken have not been spent in vain. I believe that I have more than accomplished this goal. In future years, I feel that I will be remembered, both for what I did and what I tried to do. If one notices a Hawken jacket at the Stadium, Arena, or any other sports palace in the country, it probably is on Bernie Weiskopfs back. With all due respect to Hors- burgh, Fazio, France, Stitt and all the other sports nuts who have graced these halls, Weiskopf reigns as Haw- ken ' s number one fan. On any given weekend, one is li- able to find him following his instincts, namely, the Mets, Bruins, Buckeyes or pro golf namesake Tom . More importantly, Bugsy has brought this same dedi- cation to Hawken. He worked long hours on the Aff No, at Hawken ' s summer Day Camp and as the sports corre- spondent for the local media. He furthered the twentieth century art of football prognostication, affording his peers the chance to put their money where their mouths are, and came up a winner of the PD Pool. He also introduced Strat-O-Matic Football to a Hawken clientele and served as commissioner, owner, winningest coach, most valuable player and referee in the league. Whether by participating (in golf and wrestling) or spec- tating (at any Hawken athletic event) Bernie embodied the finest tradition of sportsmanship and fair play during his Hawken career. — Tim O ' Day ' i. vi EDWARD M.WRIGHT Edward Michael Wright was a young man of many personalities or should 1 say disguises. He had accomplished the feat of being able to change his personality, as one changes outfits, to fit the occasion. It depended largely on who he was with, what activity he was involved in, or what the interest of the other person was: In other words, he prepared a face to meet the face. This enabled Michael to associate with many different types of people, from profession- al bums to intellectuals, in order to broaden his scope on life. He chose his friends differently from most people; he chose them by what they had to offer each other. A very complacent indi- vidual, he found a place among true friends who always, in one way or another, would benefit from his acquaintance. To Michael, school simply served as a way to further his experience in life. The few sports that he did indulge in helped him pass the time — his biggest problem — besides being entertaining to him. In all respects, eh was a young man who would have always continued to grow morally and become involved in the true living of life. Maria Stewart March 3, 1971 Honor and shame from no condition rise. Act your part well, there the honor lies. Wright on! CLASS OF 1971 SENIOR POLL FUNNIEST Kinsey 12 Saks 1 1 Young as Headmaster 3 MOST POPULAR Sahley 16 Visconsi 6 Me 1 (Nicholson) Me 1 (Augustus) FAVORITE TV SHOW Dick Dasterdly Show 10 Dating Game 10 Gilligan ' s Island 1 (Minchin) Young Lawyers 1 (Bing) FAVORITE ACTRESS Mardee Brown 28 Geraldine 13 Suzie Skin Flick 8 Ann-Margaret 1 CHILTON THOMSON FAVORITE TEACHER AWARD Mulroy 20 Pickering 15 Marsee 2 FAVORITE SCHOOL Wooster School of Thought 32 Nursery 1 1 Beachwood 5 (10th grade) E.R. KAST HEADMASTER AWARD BIGGEST INTELLECTUAL Hart 247 Phillips 27 Mr. Pickering 20 MARIO BOIRADI NOSE AWARD North 2 Skylar 52 P. Barney ' 4 Sahley 2 Yours 1 BIGGEST FARMER Shivericks 37 HARRY FIGGIE JOCK AWARD Hull 10 Reinschreiber 27 Vese4 Visconsi 15 Mr. Greenjeans2 Emerman 9 Jim Brown 1 FAVORITE PASTIME Abuse 24 BIGGEST BUFFER Pong 12 (Rhinelander, Sahley 27 Visconsi, Humphries, McCreary 20 Reinschreiber, Bing, Files 6 Kinsey, Petrenchik, Class of 1971? Gallin, Bechtel, O ' Day, Mueller, Warren) BIGGEST MOUTH Solitaire 1 (Hull) Hull 55 LAZIEST BEST DATES June 19th 55 Bing 18 Rhinelander 14 Mr. Brewer 1 MARK KENNEDY BIGGEST BEST MACHINE LUSH AWARD Visconsi 24 Rhinelander 26 Morse 17 Petrenchik 24 Hulls Gallin 5 Phase III Vette 91 (Skylar) SENIOR ROLL CONT. GOLDEN SHOVEL AWARD J.Lovell55 BRUNO TOMAINO ALL-TIME LOSER AWARD Mueller 22 SkylarS Cavaliers 1 (Weiskopf) MARIO ANDRETTI BEST DRIVER AWARD Hart 54 No Comment (Skylar) BOB DYLAN DOUBLE IDENTITY AWARD Larry Siege! 19 Pete McCreary 1 (McCreary) BIGGEST STUD Rhinelander 33 Reinschreiber 18 Randy Studd 2 BEST FLICK Rent Collector 19 Woodstock 17 Grand Prix 1 (Skylar) FAVORITE NIGHTSPOT Doc Zones 14 Hullaballoo 8 Skylar ' s Room 4 Bed 2 CUTEST Little Freddy 28 D.Clarke 10 Humphries 1 (Nan Kirk) MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED Hart 25 Visconsi 14 Holden ,367 THE RUDOLPH VALENTINO AWARD Skylar 2 1(991-0030) McCreary 9 Benny 2 Humphries 1 (Humphries) BEST BOD Garner 3 (T.V„T.T.,D.H.) Randy Studd 50 Marc Byrnes I (Byrnes) BEST DRESSED Visconsi 14 Mr.KarkU McKay 7 Mann Vi MR. JUNOD MOST MISSED AWARD Barney 20 R. Ibsch20 McCreary 3 Australia 1 (Minchin) MOST TALKED ABOUT GIRL Mardee Brown 40 Garner 10 Mrs. MacMaster 1 (Sloane) MOST LIKED GIRL Mrs. Friedell 30 Mardee Brown -40 Any Girl 13 Mrs. Vogel 1 (Augustus) Hollis 3 Susan 1 (Bing) BEST BASHES Sahley 55 REMANING MEMBERS OF HAWKEN ' S ORIGINAL CLASS OF 1971 LEFT TO RIGHT: P. Orr, A. Bing, T. O ' Day, Shivericks, M. Little, G. Fiordalis, E. Anderson. FIRST GRADE Anderson, Allan Chace Anderson, Charles E. Austin. Richard Brown. King Caputo, Kit Charbonneau. Michael Denemark, Alec Evans, Dwight Fitts, Rodney M. Goodfriend, Harry A. Hayes, Scott B. Keeney, Michael C. Lemmon, Pax MacKenzie, John Moss, Bruce Perkins, Leigh Rebel, Larry Rogers. Edward S. White, Frank Jr. Williams, Scott SECOND GRADE Barney, Prescott Lindan, Nicholas Tennen, Robert THIRDGRADE Bissell, Edward Jones, Thomas H. Miller, Tyler Murfey. William FOURTH GRADE Bowler, Scott Burry, Edward Dykema, Samuel Ferfolia, Mark Ford, Edward SEVENTH GRADE Birch, Robert Briggs, Peter Frederick, Alan Heald.Seth King. Richard Marcus, Lee Marshall, Stanton Port, Eric Pink ham, Steven EIGHTH GRADE Harris, Charles Miller, Jeffrey NINTHGRADE Figgie, Harry Sherm, Jay Volk,John TENTH GRADE Madison. Julian Peskin, Larry FORMER MEMBERS OF HAWKEN ' S CLASS OF 1971 grade entered One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh; but the earth abideth forever . . . The sun also ariseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth to the place where he arose . . . The wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about unto the north; it whirleth about continually, and the wind returneth again according to his circuits . . . All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full; unto the place from whence the rivers come, thither they return again. — Ecclesiastes Everett Anderson Hunt Augustus Jon Bass Rick Bechtel Andhe Bing Dave Clarke Bob Crease Pete de Wolfe Warren Dusenbury Dan Emerman Howard Epstein Zip Fiordalis PaulGallin Bob Goodlow Jon Gressel Duke Hart Dave Hellerstein Steve Holden Jon Hull Mac Humphries Jon Izant Lance Kinsey John Lindgren Mark Little Pete McCreary Billy McKay Bob Mann Nick Minchin Jamie Morse Fred Mueller Bruce Nicholson Bill North PhilO ' Bryon Tim O ' Day Parker Orr Jeff Petrenchik John Phillips Murphy Reinschreiber Eric Rhinelander Jeff Riddle Rick Sahley Craig Saint-Amour Steve Saks Chris Schenk Dave Shiverick Paul Shiverick Larry Siegel Gean Skylar Nat Sloane Tommy Thompson Rod Vese Tony Visconsi Mark Warren Bernie Weiskopf Mike Wright University of Rochester Duke University Washington University Haverford College University of Miami College of Wooster Amherst College Kent State University Clark University Sarah Lawrence College Union College College of Wooster Cornell University Columbia University George Washington University Dartmouth College Harvard College University of Denver College of Wooster Hobart College Middlebury College Vanderbilt University College of Wooster Lafayette College No College Plans Ohio Wesleyan University University of Wisconsin Undecided Cleveland Institute of Art No College Plans Northwestern University Ohio University American University Yale University Middlebury College Lawrence University University of Pennsylvania Undecided Case- Western Reserve University Hamilton College No College Plans Babson Institute Northwestern University Wesleyan University Allegheny College Lake Forest College University of Chicago Colgate University Macalester College Baldwin-Wallace College University of Notre Dame University of Colorado Wesleyan University University of Rochester Tufts College Rochester, New York Durham, North CaroUna St. Louis, Missouri Haverford, Pennsylvania Coral Gables, Florida Wooster, Ohio Amherst, Massachusetts Kent, Ohio Worcester, Massachusetts Bronxville, New York Schenectady, New York Wooster, Ohio Ithaca, New York New York, New York Washington, D.C. Hanover, Hew Hampshire Cambridge, Massachusetts Denver, Colorado Wooster, Ohio Geneva, New York Middlebury, Vermont Nashville, Tennessee Wooster, Ohio Easton, Pennsylvania Delaware, Ohio Madison, Wisconsin Cleveland, Ohio Evanston, Illinois Athens, Ohio Washington, D.C. New Haven, Connecticut Middlebury, Vermont Appleton, Wisconsin Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Cleveland, Ohio Clinton, New York Babson Park, Massachusetts Evanston, Illinois Middletown, Connecticut Meadville, Pennsylvania Lake Forest, Illinois Chicago, IlHnois Hamilton, New York St. Paul, Minnesota Berea, Ohio Notre Dame, Indiana Boulder, Colorado Middletown, Connecticut Rochester, New York Medford, Massachusetts UNDERCLASSMEN • ' ' . LOWER SCHOOL LOWER SCHOOL FACULTY Mr. Stephens Mrs. Grinnell, Mrs. Kit- tredge, Mrs. Critchlow, Mrs. Zimmerman, Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Jackson. Mrs. Althouse Mrs. Boyle Mrs. Kent Mr. Lowe Mr. Mead Mrs. O ' rourke Mrs. Swan Mrs. Tucker SEVENTH GRADE FRONT ROW: D. Boyd, S. Dorsky, S. Biehle, D. Bell, M. Glass, C. Calhoun, D. Freedman, B. Bole, B. Cohen, C. Carey. BACK ROW: J. Bruml, B. Col- lins, B. Bray, T. Bowerfind, B. Gries, J. Bramson, J. Cornelison, E. Busch, J. Gibans, M. Freer, D. Allen. m nV Hri ' iiiJr L Rx ' ; ' ' «f Ik ■ S ' ' ' ' ' v ' ■m iol FRONT ROW: R. Lavrich, C. Newell, S. Lindsay, R. Partington, T. Zingale, J. Powell, B. Herman, D. Weizman, F. Harris, C. Maras, J. O ' Neill, R. Nash. BACK ROW: T. Hruby, J. Horvitz, M. Wil- Hams, T. Hayes, B. Smith, M. Khol, J. Roberts, A. Weiner, D. Maynard, D. Laughhn. ■■--mmmmm : ! ! SIXTH GRADE FRONT ROW: J. Conner, Y. Ralston, D. Stevenson, P. Rome, P. Meisel. SECOND ROW; K. Robinson, R. Jones, L. Hatch, D. Arter, J. Monger. TOP ROW: M. Glass, M. Coleman, P. Lavich, C. Ford, G. Treco. -««..-« i«i« FRONT ROW: D. McConnel, S. Sherman, B. Rogers, S. Kaufman, D. Visconsi. SEC- OND ROW: B. Brewin, F. York, R. Glayer, R. Saha. TOP ROW: R. Bower, J. Wilkin- son, H. Woodridge, B. Lantz, M. Folise. A ' FRONT ROW: S. Porter, D. Weld, M. Oliva, S. Beatty, D. Epstein. SECOND ROW: D. Yulish, J. Palmer, D. Murray, H. Bechwith, J. McDaniel. TOP ROW: J. Warner, B. Consolo, J. Schick, J. Smith, J. Logan, D. Eaton. FIRST ROW: R. Brown, C. Humphrey, M. Boyer, T. McCormack, J. Elder. SECOND ROW: J. Szabo, S. Reit- man, P. Artz, P. Whitehouse. THIRD ROW: T. Hoge, S. Healy, A. Najarian, S. Smith, S. Young. ABSENT: D. Ford, H. Wiley FRONT ROW: J. Whitehouse, D. Klunder, B. Goodman, T. Camper, D, Stephens. SECOND ROW: C. Easly, T. Farkas, R. White, A. Antoine, J. Doull, B. Hyde. THIRD ROW: P. Bucci, M. Lux, R. Kuntz, D. Lovell, N. Distad. FRONT ROW: R. Kaplan, D. Horner, B. Lerner, M. Marvan, B. Hontds. SECOND ROW. J. Hu- mel, M. Reid, R. Little. N. Goulden, P. Morris. THIRD ROW: M. Thompson, R. Ready, W. McCoy, J.Hsu, P.Carey. FIFTH GRADE FOURTH GRADE C f £ .pJ m ' f t H ' ■ V FIRST ROW: T. Beatty, P. Mor- ris, J. Gramentine, D. Cohn, J. Easterday, SECOND ROW: A. King, G. Reiss, M. Hays, R. Hoge, P. Padoliic. THIRD ROW: J. Hadden, F. Malinas, M. Shapiro, M . Howard, N. Johnson. FIRST ROW: L. Ghose, J, Snavely, P. Seidman, T. Camp- bell, S. Mintz, SECOND ROW: D. Goldberg, T. Quigley, C. Johnson, J. Posch, S. Aronoff. THIRD ROW: R. Wil- liams, M. Evarts, D. Aldrich, T. Liston, B. Powell. AB- SENT: G. Coles. FIRST ROW: D. Minnick, D. Chapman, A. Bray, D. Haw- ley, A. Bustamante. SECOND ROW: R. Coles, B. Luntz, T. Rosenberg, B. Schick, G. Doull. THIRD ROW: T. Hatch, S. Eells, A. Eckert, R. Vitale, S. Stone. FRONT ROW: E. Antoine, B. Gaddis, J. McWilliams, R. Davies, B. McDowell, K. Roby. SECOND ROW: Mrs. Carr, J. Horvitz, J. Stumpf, R. Weizman, F. von- Weise, J. Collis, S. Tucker, Miss Karklin. TOP ROW: T. Brooke, A. Cohen, J. Kaplan, D. Aldrich, W.Weber, J. Epstein: FRONT ROW: J. Barker, J. Sargeant, J. Yulish, R. Edgerton, N. Hyde, R. Deaner. SECOND ROW: B. Blau, J. Canty, D. Gries, O. Mueller, M. deWindt. TOP ROW: Mr. Poutasse, D. Easterday, B. Distad, E. Stay, S. Halle, D. Kaplan, J. Passov, Mrs. Hosmer. Absent: R. Caruso. THIRD GRADE :„- : f Wf f x. ir SECOND GRADE FRONT ROW: G. Roland, L. Murton, R. Canty, M. Hontas, A. Kohn, C. Boyer. SECOND ROW: D. Kaveny, M. Dettlebach, S. Snavely, J. Antunez, R. Krulak, R. Moore. TOP ROW: M. Hoffman, D. McCreery, G. Kirkham, R. James, D. Tucker, S. Warner, Miss C. Paull. Absent : J. Beasley. : :M i FIRST GRADE FRONT ROW: J. Hoffman, M. Dettel- bach, S. Mintz, S. McDowell, A. Gottlieb, J. Isbel. SECOND ROW: P. Blossom, D. Ludwick, M. Lindsay, P. Motta, A. Houghton, J. Marvan, D. Lovell. TOP ROW: Miss Felman, E. Hutchinson, C. Shipley, T. Cole, S. Frankel, B. Smith, J. Sing, Mrs. Palmer. FRONT ROW: A. Suzuki, G. Maras, T. Meeks, D. Anthony, S. Gottlieb, A. Chandrasekhar. SECOND ROW: Mrs. B. Morehead, B. Thailing. M. Schultz, J. Grunsweig, P. Blum, R. Evarts, A. Najarian, Mrs. McCormac. TOP ROW: K. Urban, D. Watson, J. Reavis, R. Wang, J. Eigner. KINDERGARTEN FRONT ROW: M. Gillinov, P. Tucker, D. Simmons, G. Hyde, R. Markowitz, B. Wirt. SECOND ROW: Mrs. Makepeace, D. Sogg, C. Nickles, M. Berlin, J. Lis, P. Kirkham, H. Hillenmeyer, Mrs. McCullough. TOP ROW: R. Weil, R, Kaplan, D. Reavis, B. Bryan, C. Rander. 1 r 1 FRONT ROW: R. Green, D. Mintz, T Oliva, S. Long, M. Young, E. Suber SECOND ROW: Mrs. West, D. Yulish, J. Warren, R. Najarian, D. Aldrich, J. Sherwin, S. Giegerich, Mrs. Small. TOP ROW: D. Grover, B. Bukovnik, T. Britschgi, A. Bell, B. Randorf, H. Kirkham. Certain- ly the high point of the year, for the AFFIRMA- TIVE NO at least, came in November, on the day of the Talk-In. That day editors Jon Bass, Jon Krotinger and Tim O ' Day were told of the appointment of James Young as Headmaster, even before most of the faculty knew. Between then (November 20) and December 3 those editors put out a special two-page issue first announcing the news to the school. Columbia Scholastic Press Association called the special issue a model, although it was produced under the tight- est production schedule (one week) in the newspaper ' s histo- ry. The rest of the staff was still able to publish a four-page issue before Christmas vacation, tying last year ' s record of five issues in one trimester. Eleven issues in all were printed during the year. Due largely to senior Bruce Nicholson ' s business manage- ment, the paper finished several hundred dollars in the black in June. The newspaper staff tried to get away from standard and routine arti- cles this year. The November six-page issue marked the inauguration of the Bulletin box, which became a regular feature from then on, allowing the paper greater flexibility in the type and number of articles which could be printed. In one issue two assembly speakers who presented opposing views (Congressman John Ash- brook and Mr. James Wilkinson) were covered in side-by-side articles of equal length under one large headline. Stories contained within a picture caption were also widely used this year to vary the make-up of the pages and present the news in more interesting form, (Information about the fall Ethics class ' s food drive, the Youth Council ' s Christ- mas party, the site of the Upper School water tower and the debate between Congress- man Ashbrook and Mr. Wilkinson at school was given this way.) The AFFIRMATIVE NO loses the talents and experience of senior editor O ' Day, assistant sports editor Bernie Weiskopf and Jon Bass, as well as that of the other seniors on the staff in ' 70- ' 7 1 , but the editors who will manage the pages this fall were all editors last year and so take over already well-versed in school journalism. (Jon Krotinger con- tinues as managing editor while Dan Selden takes over as news editor and Warren Zimmerman as sports editor). In addition, seasoned reporters Doug Moltz, Mark Sands, Doug Webb and Darryl Williams complete the editorial line-up and will help to publish, hopefully, one of the most interesting Hawken Newspapers ever. BOOKSTORE COMMITTEE ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE CALLIOPE CHESS CLUB i ' ' ■ . BJ ,i wSm E ||||H Mr. l!!% HF vflim l my ■]_ Jl ' m mu HiPkv Hli ' V n ll iif( II FORESTRY AND POLLUTION COMMITTEE I . 1 itiiuSI Pii ' Kl Hllbllil ii ifr ni iiii Ifti Illn iilr J s s! i- ' , ' v H l.- - -vv-. ..,■ |BH| ■ „ - r - - - ' - ' ' JEJH S Ui SM. ' tflf I g LIBRARY COMMITTEE ■ i-. 4i: fe ' iT ' ' Mf V . i . : i4 ' ' J 9 t:)m W ill ■ff %  L J ? 3 ? ..f h ' 4 tf fa p«- ' KV 1 1 £■ ■ : 1 g i t M 1 ' OUTSIDERS w m € V. 1 ' x Fi V rOih ■ ,(f s 037% n (mp x; ' ' LK. ' t INSTRUMENTAL ENSEMBLE - ski ' ' ■ - ! ?f 1 FOUR SCHOOL COMMITTEE Editor-in-Chief Chris Schenk Business Manager Zip Fiordalis Ads Manager Bob Hermann Photography Jon Izant, editor Mark Little Jim Caruso Pete Rickards Rick Ferris Upper School Faculty Murphy Reinschreiber Seniors Pete McCreary Candids Andhe Bing Tony Visconsi m Paul Gallin Hi- Murphy Reinschreiber Joe Slander Lower School Rick Bechtel Activities Lance Kinsey and Underclassman Athletics Tommy Thompson Junior Editor John Nulsen Faculty Advisor Lawrence Nelson RED KEY SOCIETY Although its presence went largely unnoticed, Hawken ' s Red Key Society survived its first full year with noteworthy successes . To explain, Red Key is first and foremost a service organization. At a time when aiding the establishment is looked on as being somewhat old-fashioned, members volunteered to spend free periods behind the reception desk or talking with visitors. At a time when some activities suffered from lack of interest. Red Key was perhaps too big, as it was impossible to determine exact- ly who was and who wasn ' t a member. The organization ' s main duties, however, dealt with admissions. Freshmen and Sophomores served as hosts for next year ' s applicants; Juniors and Seniors traveled to area schools to spread the Hawken story via discussion and slides. In addition, stu- dent hosts turned in evaluations of their guests, reports which became an integral part of Admissions Director Robert Wheeler ' s files. Red Key also took care of some of its previously unfinished business. A charter was written; Seniors Tim O ' Day and Paul Gallin, and Junior Tom Hall were elected officers. All in all, it appears the organization known as Hart ' s Hosts after its crea- tor, has found its niche at Hawken. PLAYERS ' SOCIETY For some of us it is performance, says the Player to Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in Tom Stoppard ' s play, for others, pa- tronage. They are two sides of the same coin . The 1970-71 Dramatic Season at Hawken School produced an ensemble of performers, a troupe of ACTORS, the opposite of people. The year began with the production of Arch Obler ' s NIGHT OF THE AUK, under the direction of Margo Cohn. A tragedy, Obler ' s difficult piece deals with the questions of man ' s fate in a supersonic and highly competitive world. The Winter production presented a lighter and more hopeful vision, as Ustinov ' s fanta- sy-comedy, ROMANOFF AND JULIET, under the direction of senior Daniel Emerman, pitted love against national rivalry. The Spring production, one of the most lavish ever seen on Hawken ' s non-stage, designed and directed by Mr. Schlesinger, rounded out the season with Moliere ' s difficult comedy TARTUFFE. The smash of the season, it dealt with religious hypocrisy and a comically pathetic bourgeois who, in his zeal to control his family and impose his own will on the lives of others, manages to be duped and controlled, cuckolded and robbed. The Players ' Society achieved professionalism in all three productions, and the season as a whole was diverse, entertaining, meaningful and theatrically exciting. STUDENT COUNCIL The contributions of this year ' s Student Council cannot be evaluated in terms of a concrete and indisputable record of accomplishments. Rather, the Council ' s true value can be best measured by the student body ' s increased interest in the school. Meetings were stimulating and thought provoking and discussion mushroomed into a highly successful Talk-In and a series of meetings with the school ' s trustees. With due respect to the energetic efforts of the underclassmen, this year ' s Council was led by six erudite and contro- versial seniors. The president. Rick Sahley, was Hawken ' s Pied Piper. Pleading for individual freedom of choice, Sahley led the fight to turn Hawken into a Nirvana based on love and mutual respect. While no one could disagree with his goals, his methods were widely debated. Vice-President Duke Hart, on the other hand, specialized in the more mundane concerns of the Council. He devoted much of his time meeting with members of the over-30 establishment (trustees, ar- chitects, landscapers, headmasters, etc.) and was instrumental in the newly planted trees along the roads. Secretary Tim O ' Day and Dave Hellerstein spoke of the Talk-In. In addition, O ' day added a journalistic flair to the weekly minutes and Hellerstein co-authored the Dress Code proposal with fellow Senior Parker Orr. Treasurer Peter McCreary kept the books steady, largely because Mr. Steven Kark, Faculty Advisor, had not co-signed his checks. Council spent much time discussing proposals which would have abolished bells, summer reading, mandatory fresh- man athletics, attendance rules, and the Dress Code. Although more have survived the vigorous tests of the Cramer committee and the faculty, one must not underestimate their effects. Time and time again, the classic debate of idealism vs. realism came to the floor. While those who proposed broad change were defeated, their enthusiasm and magnetism will likely have far-reaching effects on the direction of Hawken. d3 T™ - A ' iilk 1 MlitETICS r 4 ' 1 I . - ' ' CROSS COUNTRY Cross Country has been termed an individual sport, yet I the Hawken 1970 Cross Country squad was truly a team. Despite the much publicized loneliness of the distance runner, a closeness between the runners existed, achieved through common sweat, through common blisters. Alone, but sharers of a common struggle, all had to fight the furiously hot sun of August and the equally cold mud of November. All had to ask themselves why? All had to strip themselves down to the un- protected guts, to the fear and the confidence, from which a runner is born. To what extent a runner commits himself to this self-expo- sure determines not only his team value, but also his self- • worth. Yet few can consistently stand up to the pain and agony resulting from the nakedness of running — real pain, in the legs, in the pit of the stomach. And though the team as a whole lacked this ingredient of inconsistency, one individual exempli- fied its importance. He is Jeff Riddle, unanimously voted hon- ■ orary captain at the season ' s close, Hawken frontrunner in ■ every race of the season. What he had to do he did. Rids and Nick Minchin will be the only graduating se- niors from the top seven, but there ends the similarity. Where Jeff was consistent, Nick invariably was not, though he always finished high, sometimes with the aid of a big finishing kick. Nick did not like the cold weather. Tim Calhoun, Steve Whitehouse, and Mark Rorick supplied the rest of the points. Calhoun, though faltering at the season ' s end, had a fine sea- son as Hawken ' s number two runner, relying on a strong mental attitude to offset his extremely unorthodox, raw running form. Whitehouse, tagged a laggard from summer practice on, surprised everyone with his HAWKEN 24 EAST TECH 34 HAWKEN 24 CATH. LATIN 34 HAWKEN 18 SHAW 43 HAWKEN SHADYSIDE HAWKEN KIRTLAND HAWKEN BERKSHIRE HAWKEN PAINS. HARVEY hard work and strong finishes in late Octo- ber and early Novem- ber, highlighted by his Hawken Invitational run. Rorick, lacking blazing speed, relied on strength and stami- na to offset his weak- ness. However, a con- firmed hypochondriac Mark began to doubt his health. To instill confidence in himself he appointed himself co-captain. The other self-ordained co-captain, Bill Thompson, and Andy Poutasse shared the sixth and seventh spots the season. However, Steve Braman and Todd Harris occasionally broke into these slots. In fact, it was the : combination of Poutasse and Braman that upset John Hay. Though rarely dictating the outcome of a meet, Marc Rehm, Steve Calhoun, Paul Fonoroff, Blair Haas, Mark Warren, George Ankienko, Dan Selden, and Rob Goler were very much a part of the team. They practiced day after day knowing that they would receive I only recognition from themselves, their teamates, and their coach. And what can one say about the coach, Mr. Warner? During the season we said he was a merciless bastard, an obsessed fa- natic intent upon the sight of our guts exploding. But now, with the pain gone, we can say he is a really good coach and person. Yeah, in fact, it was a really good season (though we lost to U.S.) with really good people. And despite all this goodness we had a lot of fun. And that ' s more impor- tant than any existential committment. Oh, by the way, we had a 13 and 7 record to go along with two invitational victories . HAWKEN 1st PLACE CUYAHOGA HEIGHTS INVITATIONAL (FOUR TEAMS) HAWKEN 8th PLACE GILMOUR INVITATIONAL (SIXTEEN TEAMS) HAWKEN 1st PLACE HAWKEN INVITATIONAL (FIVE TEAMS) w HAWKEN 19 HAWKEN 20 BENEDICTINE 41 GILMOUR 40 HAWKEN 27 HAWKEN 19 JOHN HAY 30 HAWKEN 33 LUTH. WEST 42 HUDSON 22 FOOTBALL In this world where winners are carried through streets amid ticker tape and champagne, and frenzied cheers of We ' re number one! fill the fall air, and losers are chastised for falling in the great game of life, there exist certain individuals who have fallen asunder of the grea t god of victory. We, the football team, have sinned and must pay the price of being outcasts. Never mind the enjoyment we have felt and the knowledge that, becuase we were not pressured by tyrants hysterically screaming chants of war and there is nothing except winning, we have played the game of football without forfeiting ev- ery sane sense we possess. Through the sensitivity of Mr. Riser, Mr. Timoteo and Mr. Martin we were allowed to know each other under other circumstances than the football environment. There was no false spirit inspired by pugnacity and beligerence. No one felt hostile and no one took the position of the bully. We did our best ant that is all. There were as many moments of satisfaction, both individual and team, as those of disappointment. Some must judge a team by the number of victories alone. Winning is nice but it should come with the same values and goals, set by the individuals involved, without the compromise so often found in the successful man. For once, the values were truly those that can be the highest held in Ufe: the efforts taken by the coaches to allow nearly every member of the team to earn his letter by playing as much as the requisite demanded; the election of two truly sincere, sensitive people, Tom Hall and Rick Sahley, as opposed to the brash, out-spoken, commonplace leaders usually associated with football teams; the fact that through the careful planning and conditioning of Mr. Riser, only Chuck Hall and Chuck Stack received any serious injury at all. These are the things that will be remembered and admired. Scoreboard figures are quickly dimmed by deeper memories. If one has to have individual greatness as proof of success, one can point to Mark Marceletti ' s passing. He began his ca- reer this year better than any Hawken quarterback has ended it in recent years (apologies to Mr. Martin). The running of Lou Leathers, Jerry Tone, Mark Terkel and Tom Hall came to a peak when they amassed 385 yards and 27 first downs as the team let down to the Maumee Valley 28-28. The blocking of Zip Fiordahs, Chuck Hall, Paul Sala- mone, Chris Schenk and Graham Webster bares mentioning if for this effort alone. The defensive team always played to its utmost capabili ty, and did not give up despite the frus- tration of defeat, best exemplified by the University School game where, except for two early touch- downs, the Hawks yeilded only a field goal and a fourth quarter touchdown against the load- ed U.S. team. Sahley, Ghainous Smiley, Larry Folk, Fred Biehle, Todd Horn, Phil O ' Bryon, Lennie Perroti, Greg Bat- tle and Rod Vese stuck together with- out yeild ing to the frustrations and the desire to win. One can look to the Western Reserve game where a fourth quarter touchdown pass beat the Hawks 6-0 after a tremendous defen- sive effort by Battle, Perroti and Sah- ley repeatedly dropping the Reserve quarterback. One can look to the lone victory, or will eyes be drawn to it anyway? Hawken won 38-14 against Columbus Academy as Lou Leathers gained an even 200 yards through the holes made by tackles Fiordalis and Schenk . Versatility was also an important attribute of the team lead by its chief advocate, Bob Riser. He tried quarter- back; he tried defensive back; he tried linebacker; he tried defensive end; he did the punting; and just when he m i WWj m ' if ' . J ji l ' «j ' ii-.« K « H B jHH . H vl fwSi Wjm. . fk ' S ' ' ' flr ' dH V ' fcft ' f S fc «th - s - ' --% though he heard the coach say, ... about that left guard position , he decided he ' d liice to play offensive end and maybe that ' s why he played so well the last few games. Deriving meaning and enjoying something at the same time is a unique experience. Finding both in football was a surprise, yet the credit goes, not only to the players who were receptive to the management given them, but to Mr. Riser, Mr. Timoteo and Mr. Mar- tin, who made things that way. SOCCER I Soccer is a good game. It requires coordination and quick reactions. It is a game of fast control. It is spontaneous and hence demanding of the mind; and it takes guts. It is a hard, fast, thinking game. It is also a personal sport. Coach Simpson called the game the accumulation of many one on one confrontations. In these confrontations the responsibility is transferred entirely to the two opponents. If one man loses the ball, the whole team loses the ball. But the beauty of the sport lies in the fact that there is something be- yond this direct competition. There is a team and it is the team ' s victory; so that when you ' re working for yourself, you ' re working for the team. Soccer, instead of asking for the individu- al ' s subordination, asks rather for his coopera- tion in accomplishing a common goal. This is beautiful in that it satisfies the ego through the . direct competition but it also humbles the ego. Each player needs the other players to succeed by himself. The game grows one level higher when the one on one confronta- tions involve a pass to a third party. Somehow there is a great satis- faction in out -playing your opponent through cooperation. This breeds not merely success but unity and modest pride. I would say that modest pride characterized this year ' s squad. The team by no means started with such a pride. We had no depth, little experience, and little team work. The experienced four- Tony Visconsi, Paul Gallin, Eric Rhinelander, and Jeff Petrenchik — carried the squad in the beginning. They seemed to be the team ' s only hope and much of the team was content to let those four play the games. Early in the season, though, Paul was injured — to be out for weeks — as were Eric and Tony. So the team was left naked. This accounted for many of our close losses or ties. The team smol- dered for a while — but then we beat Brush and tied Hudson. In both games we had displayed a cooperation or teamsmanship which we had previously lacked. As the team regained its lost stars, con- fidence began to grow. s Kg i rKS iisg; We realized that we could be good as a team not a group of seven leeches and four players. As a result, we won the Maumee Tournament and beat a Sewickley I I -• team individually far superior to us. The season showed development of what I call modest pride. The team improved tremen- dously in personal skills; the appreciation for the sport was undoubtedly heightened — and the players realized that they had won because they were a team. Each indi- vidual could be proud of his personal efforts and growth and could become conscious of the team ' s combined growth. We could be proud of our- selves both as individuals and as a group of individuals. Hudson has lost only one game in the last two years. Sewickley had a 12-1-2 1 :i 1 F 1 1 msimji . viM««;j SWIMMING The 1970-71 Hawken swimming team was one of the most suc- cessful teams in the school ' s history. Rebounding from a 2-1 1 fin- ish two seasons ago, the team compiled a 12-0 dual meet record, swept the Independent School Swim League Relays and Championship meets, and finished in sixth place at the Eastern Interscholastic Championships at Lawrenceville, New Jersey. In just two seasons the team developed into the Cleveland area ' s number one team as well as one of the top teams in the state. The most important reason for this sudden turn about in the Hawken swim program was the addition of Jerry Holtrey as coach in 1969. In his first season the team compiled its first winning season ever, finishing second in the ISSL with an 8-5 record. His demanding workout schedule developed many of the area ' s top swimmers from boys who had been considered strictly rinky-dink in 1968. The highlights of this year ' s season were the teams three victo- ries over University School (as well as Shadyside, Kiski, Gil- mour, and WRA) in ISSL competition. This marked the first time that US had been defeated in league competition since its conception in 1964. The dual meet victory was most satisfying as the Hawken team discounted all predictions of a close meet in devastating the Preppers by a 58-37 score and setting six school records before the first standing room only crowd ever to wit- ness a meet at the Lower School. The team gained confidence and momentum from this victory and was not stopped until it met its goal of an undefeated season. As in any team, the swim team was composed of many individuals. The squad was led by Senior co- captain Murphy Reinschreiber, Sophomore Tim Hable, and Freshman Jim Atwater who between them held down six of the area ' s top times and whose times qualified them for selection on the All American Team. In addition there were Senior co-captain Paul Gallin, Craig and John Saint-Amour, Jim Molnar and Bruce Rankin. These boys were thought of as the team ' s depth and were the real reason for the unde- feated season. They were the team ' s second super- stars. The Saint-Am our brothers were ranked third in the area in their respective events. Last, but most important, are those boys who by hard work and rela- tive time drops unexpectantly developed into out- standing members of the team. This year this distinc- tion goes to three boys: Tim Goodfellow, Bob Lind- blad, and Dave Clarke. Goodfel- low came to Hawken this year following a year of JV swim- ming for Cleveland Heights. He finished the season with a 4:05 400 freestyle effort which placed him among the best in the city. Clarke and Lindblad significant- ly dropped their times to add four badly needed points at the Championship meet, as well as swimming in clutch positions all seasonfor the team. Looking ahead to next year, large holes in the line-up will be created by the graduation of Seniors Gallin, C. Saint-Amour, Clarke, Reinschreiber, and Steve Holden. There was only one Junior letterman, Jim Mol- nar, and if next year ' s team is anything like this year ' s squad, in respect to dedication and spir- it, 1971 will be remembered as only the beginning of a swim- ming dynasty at Hawken School. SCHOOL RECORDS 200 Medley Relay 1:45.5 (Atwater, J. Saint-Amour, Rankin, C. Saint-Amour) 200 Freestyle 1:50.2 Tim Hable 200 Individual Medley 2:01.9 Murphy Reinschreiber 50 Freestyle 23.0 C. Saint-Amour Diving 63.05 Brad Stirn— 1968 100 Butterfly 54.0 Murphy Reinschreiber 100 Freestyle 49.6 Tim Hable 400 Freestyle 3:53.5 Tim Hable 100 Backstroke 55.2 Jim Atwater 100 Breaststroke 1:05.0 John Saint-Amour 400 Freestyle Relay ,, (C. Saint-Amour, Atwater, Hable, Reinschreiber) WRESTLING This year ' s wrestling team had its ups and downs but all things considered we had an excellent season. We were a young team with as many as five sophomores and four freshmen seeing varsity action. Nevertheless our season was marked by several individual and team accomplishments. Foremost was winning the Hawken Tournament. After being annihilated the year before by the Kent State Universi- ty School team, Hawken, through an outstanding team effort, won the eight team tournament, edging out Kent State 91-85 and capturing three firsts, four seconds, a third, and a fourth in the process. To put icing on the cake, junior Tom Hall was named the outstanding wrestler of the tournament. Only slightly less impressive was our second-place finish in the WRA Quad. We took four firsts, and a second to surpass WRA and Hudson and finish second to wrestling power- house Medina Highland. Our finish at the National Prep School Tournament is equally impressive as we finished sixth out of over thirty teams and captured a first, a second, and a fourth in the tourney. Individually we had six wrestlers with outstanding seasons. Senior Captain John Lindgren (1 12) finished with a 14-4- 2 record, having taken second at the Hawken Tournament, WRA Quad and Lehigh. His only loss in dual competition came at the hands of top-ranked Tom Fink. Senior Paul Shiverick ( 145) finished 1 7-6 taking first in the Hawken Tour- nament, fourth at Lehigh and most, important, second at the Brecksville Tournament, which is considered to be second only to the State Tournament in degree of difficulty. His twin brother, David, (155) finished 13-5-1 taking a first at WRA and a second at the Hawken Tournament. Junior Tom Hall (130) finished with the first totally undefeated season in Hawken ' s history, 21-0. He finished first at the Hawken Tour- nament, first at WRA, and was the first Hawk to become cham- pion at Lehigh. He and his brother Chuck will be next year ' s co-captains. Junior Chuck Hall (167) finished with a record of 18-2-1, his only loss coming to state champ Brian Derov. He took first at both the Hawken Tournament and at WRA. Soph- omore Russ Risor (173) finished 12-4 taking first at WRA and second at the Hawken Tournament. Next year both Halls and Risor could easily go undefeated. Backing these stars up were sophomores Ken Berman (11) and Ipper Collins (126) with 9-8 and 5-9 records respectively. Both should play outstanding roles on next year ' s team. Guy Arnos 5-6 who shared 185 duties with senior, Chris Schenk improved a great deal during the year and should be one of the team ' s mainstays next year. Senior Bob Crease (105) was the hard luck guy on this year ' s team, losing many close decisions and facing three of the area ' s top wrestlers — Knecht, of Westlake, Brdar of Orange, and Evangelista of Painesville Harvey. Nevertheless, he managed to finish the sea- son with a 7-8 record. Junior Elliot Maras and seniors Rick Sahley and Chris Schenk filled in admirably during the season, Sahley edging out Press Star Joe Webster 8-7 in the final meet of the season. Underclassmen, Nino Motta, Dom Cornelia and Reg Shiverick all wrestled some varsity matches and their experience will aid them next year. This year ' s team was hurt by the loss of senior Bernie Weiskopf who was injured in a car accident mid-way through the season. JV Wrestlers who will help on next year ' s varsity are: Mike Bernstein, Ted Parran, Richard Crease, Steve Dandilides, David Skeggs, Jim Startzman, Rob Goler, Bill Reid and Jim Miller. The big disappointment of our season was our loss to U.S. With a combination of unfortunate referee- ing, outstanding efforts on the part of our opposition and just plain bad luck, we again fell to the maroon and black. But, next year, Preppers, watch out. I wish to conclude this article by expressing my sincere thanks to Coach Robert Tomateo who saw us first as human beings and second as wrestlers. He had the respect of the entire team, and without him our season probably would have been a fiasco. The basketball team played as well as they could in every game but two. They lost those two to Chardon and Orange, In the rest of the season, they played their best and won some good games. They beat W.R.A. by four points in one of the two best games of the season and they beat Maumee by one in the other. Each game was tight, each was really down-to-the-buzzer, and each was come-from-behind. For the p Hawken. Then on a xuuny uix) drove up in a little red Alfa. WSBf SSK Coach, ex-Wood- stocker and present Spanish teail Sff- ' flifftanial Carter, came to Hawken. With hi.s inspiration and coaching skills, along with the Aspen-4, Jeff Petrenchik, Mac Humphries, Tony Visconsi, and Dean Skylar, the nucleus of the formidable team was established. With help from juniors Pete Armington, and Chief Hohnes, sopho- more Dave Ford and any one else who happened to show up, the team took seven trophies in regional competition Petrenchik was the only one to advance in this competition to Class B from the starting point at Class C, but Visconsi and Humphries were on the verge of doing so at the end of the season. We bad several mishaps that can be expected from skiing. One time .Armington fell and had to be car- ried away by the Ski Patrol, and another time Petrenchik got a black eye when he came to close to a slalom pole. The team also compiled an undefeated dual meet record svith an overwhelming victory over St. Edward ' s. Unfortunately, the snow melted and so djd the team. And. since this is Cleveland, there is no gtiarantee that the snow will come back. Why couldn ' t Hawken be in Colorado? MR. MARSH Saying anything about Mr. Marsh except that he is a friend to us all, is to do him an injustice. EL MANNO TENNIS The young tennis team had a rough season. They did not improve enough from last year so their record was about the same as they played the same tough competition. Senior Dean Skylar, who finished the last half of the season playing first singles, found the compe- tition tough there. Junior Scott Herlands had the best record on the team, iO-3, playing third singles mostly. His ledger includes ten straight wins. Sophomore Andy Rayburn played disappointing tennis at second singles and did not equal last year ' s performance. The capturing of the Hawken Invitational Tennis Tournament championship was the major accomplishment of the team. Two of the three singles players won individual tro- phies by beating foes from Gilmour. Chagrin Falls, and Kenston. Skylar won two of his matches while losing one. The sophomore second doubles team of Jim Treco and Steve Braman won the same amount and senior Rick Bechtel and junior, John Thorp, won one and lost two at second doubles. First-year coach Robert Small rotated the second dou- bles team members throughout the season, looking for a winning combination from Be- chtel, Thorp, Treco, Braman, and Junior, CUffPaepke. mmni The season ' s most satisfying wins came over Orange, Gilmour, and Cha- grin Falls. They were all 3-2 victories. Skylar provided the spark against Or- ange as he beat a tough second singles opponent and both the doubles teams were victorious. The three singles play- ers won over the Lancers with Skylar and Herlands winning long, hard matches after Rayburn won easily. Skylar lost a heartbreaker to Chagrin ' s number one man, but Rayburn, Her- lands, and the first doubles team of Thorp and Bechtel made up the deficit. Next year ' s team looks promising. Only two seniors will leave and the freshman team of this year was excel- lent. Improvement is vitally necessary and definitely expected. SCORES OPPONENT HAWKEN 3-2 _ HAWKEN ORANGE UNIVERSITY 0-5 0-5 CLEVE. HTS. W.R.A. 1-4 1-4 SHAKER EUCLID 0-5 3-2 GILMOUR BRUSH 1-3 2-3 BEACHWOOD CHAGRIN FALLS 3-2 1-4 W.R.A. HAWKEN 11 CHAGRIN FALLS 10 _ GILMOUR9 KENSTON 3 « «9iKani i«ar«KaNt TRACK The 1971 Track season saw once more a team high in morale and relatively low in experience. Talent was certainly evi- dent, however — Jon Izant in the Discus, Jeff Petrenchik in the Long Jump, Paul Gallin in the 2 mile, Dave Clarke in the 880 and Nick Minchin in the 440. All provided valuable leadership and advice to the underclassmen and were central to the close-knit morale of the whole squad. Track as a sport involves not only striving to win, but striving to beat the clock lor personal improvement. With an incentive system introduced by Coach Riser, every boy on the squad improved in his event. No less than 6 records were broken as a result, and again se- niors predominated John Izant in the Di.scus, Paul Gallin in the two mile, Nick Minchin in the 440 and 880, junior Bob Riser in the low hurdles, and the mile relay team of Petrenchik, Maras, Clarke and Minchin, which broke the record by six and a half seconds. With three excellent coaches Messrs. Riser, Warner and Tupta the team had a successful and enjoyable season. Going into the final meet against U.S. it was 4-4. Although the .squad was aware that U.S. was on paper stronger, they were determined to show the Preppers what the could do. F ighting very poor running conditions, the final score came out in U.S. ' s favor 79 to 48, with Hawicen wins in the Long Jump, Mile, Two mile, 440 and Mile Relay, the latter two being events in which Hawken has been unde- feated in dual meet competition this season. The final meet on the home track was the Hawken Spring Sports Festival against Gilmour, Beachwood, and Cleveland Central Catholic. Conditions were ideal, and two Hawken records were broken in the course of the afternoon — Bob Riser in the low hurdles and Nick Minchin in the 440. The strength of the Gilmour team, namely Eric Pen- nick, predominated to give them first, with Hawken coming a strong second. The team is greatly indebted to our coaches for a great season, and particularly Head Coach Riser who kept the home track in excellent condition. 197rs strong crop of juniors should make the ' 72 team a great success and Hawken can look forward to a con- tinued and growing strength in Track. r-r- ' ! ,, j - «V BASEBALL The Hawken varsity baseball team of 1971 coached by rookie skipper Nat Carter had it ' s ups and downs. Although boasting only a 6-12 record, the youthful Hawks improved greatly during season and promise brighter horizons for Hawk baseball players in the future. With rarely more then 2 Seniors playing regu- larly, these younger Hawks gained much needed expe- rience for future years. We could boast two true su- perstars this year in Senior Co-captain Tony Visconsi and Junior Johnny Lou Leathers. Both elected to the all-independent first team. Leathers in the outfield and Visconsi at third. Their clutch play both in the field and at bat strongly contributed to whatever suc- cess we enjoyed this year. Visconsi ' s one-hit shutout victory over Glenville was the high point of the sea- son. Senior Co-captain John Lindgren displayed an amazing ability to reach base. Juniors Chuck and Tom Hall played solid all season and Tom was re- warded for his efforts by being named second-team all-independent in the outfield. I Perhaps the biggest sur- prise of the season was Sophomore Jim Startzman who took over first base at mid season and kept it by his consistent hitting and fielding. Other Soph ' s to look for on next year ' s team are pitcher MarcTerkel, 3rd sacker, Jer Tone, and 1st sacker, Fred Biehle. Haw- ken will sorely miss the serv- ices of sophomore, Jimmy Hayes, who will attend Hotchkiss next year. Junior Mark Marcelletti and Mark Corrado should, along with Terkel and Freshman, Rick Krejci, shoulder the bulk of next year ' s pitching burden. Marcelletti, who doubles as shortstop, knocked in three runs with a bases loaded tri- ple against Glenville and Corrado dazzles friend and foe alike with his deft work on the base path. Seniors Tim O ' Day, Hunt Augustus, and Tom- my Thompson served in utility roles. Augustus pitched, played second, and occasionally pinch hit. De- fensive artist Tim O ' Day played both first and out- field while Thompson, hampered by a late start, played shortstop and outfield. This was a rebuilding] year. Most of our losses: were due to lack of experi- ence. However next year ' s team, with 2 3 of this year ' s team returning, will havei gained the much needed experience and a winning Hawken baseball team should be the result. GOLF Scott Beck and Kit Comtois, the Kenston Kids, squeezed into the front seat of the Volkswagen Super Beetle, their golf bags draped across the back seat, atop the bag of driver Bernie Weiskopf. The scramble for air space in the blue bug typifies the struggle for the top four rungs on the lad- der of the 1971 golf team. Five golfers proved that they could consistently shoot in the low for- ties on either nine of the tricky Orchard Hills Country Club lay- out, and reserves ComtdJs, Pete Armington and Pete Rickards also recorded rounds in the low and mid-forties. The competition to gain a place in the starting lineup assured the Hawks of a strong showing in in- terscholastic matches. Two of the Hawk losses came against schools represented in the state tourna- ment in Columbus, Orange and Wickliffe. West Geauga and So- lon also defeated the Hawks, but these four teams were the only conquerors of Coach Robert Timoteo ' s Fearsome Fivesome of Bill Thompson, Weiskopf, Rod Vese, Beck and Jeff Blaugrund. The linksmen amassed eleven vic- tories, tying the basketball team, and only one behind the swim- mers, in number of wins for the 1970-71 school year. The golfers opened the cam- paign against Solon, in what was supposed to be a close match. However, the four Hawken scores cannot be revealed in this, a fami- ly yearbook. I mean, the under- the-breath language used on the links made Scott Wolstein ' s an- tics last year seem placid by com- parison. Oh yes — Solon won, 6 ' 2 - 1 ' 2 , as Vese tallied Hawken ' s points. Gilmour was the Hawks ' next opponent, and the clubsters weathered a one-under-par 34 at Highland by the Lancers ' Phil Goldcamp to win, 7 ViA Vi, in a six-man match. Hawken ' s scores were much more respectable; in- deed. Beck fired a 39, the lowest match score of the season. Cardi- nal fell to the Hawks, 7 ' 2- ' 2, as Thompson, Vese andBlaugrund scored two points each at Grandview. The Beachwood Bisons were to finish their season with an 8-3 record and the East Suburban Conference championship. Two of their losses were to come at the hands of the Hawks. Beck and Thompson paced the golfers in the 5 ' 2-2 Vi first victory, increas- ing Hawken ' s record to 3-1. Or- ange defeated the Hawks the fol- lowing day in a thrilling sudden death playoff. The Hawk golfers were to face sudden death twice again, and both times they would triumph. The Hawks easily defeated Cleveland Central Catholic in their next match, as Blaugrund fired a 40 at Highland. But WickUffe won a 5-3 decision the following day, as only Blaugrund and Beck could score for the Hawks. The nine-team Cardinal Invitational Tournament was next on the schedule, and the Hawks finished fifth. West Geauga, Wickliffe, Gilmour and Beachwood finished ahead of the Hawken foursome. Vese and Thompson shot 82 at Grandview for the 1 8-hole tourney. Beachwood ' s Dave Zabell carded a one-under-par 69 to capture medahst honors. The Hawks took their 4-3 record to Punderson State Park the following Monday, facing Chagrin Falls. Sudden death was the order of the day, as Blaugrund holed a 25-foot birdie putt on the final hole. The Hawks triumphed, as Weiskopf parred the extra hole. Gilmour and Richmond Heights also fell to the Hawk linksmen before the week ended. Beck and Weisdopf scored two points in each match, as the Hawks captured 7-5 and 6 ' 2-l Vi victories. Beck ' s 41 in the Richmond Heights match was the Hawken weekly low score. Chardon was the Hawk ' s eighth victim of the season the following week. Thompson, Balugrund and Weiskopf collected two points apiece in the 6-2 win. But West Geauga halted the Hawks at four straight, winning 6-2, as only Weiskopf tallied. In the Beachwood rematch, Thompson posted a 40, as Weiskopf and Zabell matched 41s. However, sudden death was again required, and Thompson, Vese and Blaugrund all parred the extra hole, giving the Hawks a five-stroke victory. Cleveland Central Catholic was again an 8-0 victim of Hawks Weiskopf, Beck, Blagrund and Comtois, as the golfers notched their tenth win of the season. Lutheran East, who had finished last in the Cardinal Invitational, trembled in fear of Timoteo ' s Thumpers, and finally forfeited the last match on the Hawken schedule. In post-season competition, ex-Coach James Young surprised by winning the Hawken Masters and Hawken Open with scores of 41 and 39, respectively. Mr. Young commented, Rumors of my demise are grossly exaggerated. Still, he set a new Hawken School record for most cigarette butts left on Orchard Hills tees (12). Indeed, the competition will continue on next year ' s squad. Vese and Weiskopf are the only seniors, and Thompson, a junior, appears the logical choice to fill the first position next season. Blaugrund and Richards are sophomores, and Beck, who diplayed tremendous potential, and Comtois, are just freshmen. Junior Armington will also vie for a starting slot as the linksmen battle to top this season ' s 1 1-4 mark. CANDID S The Onyx is a pseudo annual . ' Wrong way. Rod. ' It gets like this when it rains. Hey Lance, I think it ' s your deodorant . Right on. ' I use the long-distance deodorant. ft -.■■ ' ' ? , § L ■ ' ™ Okay, I know when I ' m not wanted. ' I BEANS I iOMi - «Mi 4 BEANS i ;;4 1 1 Enough said. ■ Lo-o-o-ok into my eyes. ' h plpp.. . Mh | , H 1 H ' ' H 11 Vtv m HmSkS V Bwk T tHttH. HHh Ik liifc ' - ... .... fe j: m « The good, the bad, the ugly, and Carter K i M P ' ■ ' Damn Yankee machinery ' Okay Jeff, where were you at 2:48 A.M. Sunday morning? ' You ' re right, that is an acid. Pong, the morning after. Who are those guys? ' Well pin a rose on my nose. ' im Would YOU buy a record from these guys? Talk about waiting in line. ood morning Freddv ir ?r Our Headmaster ' These chapels are kilhng me, ' ' I ' m telling you, it was this big. Senior Project You can pass out when you are through. ' Yes Larry, we are having Government today. V b?:ss f ' V - ( ,j i. t ■■■ r X - ABk ,. Try East Ninth and Chester. Mr. President You REALLY blew it. HARRY HIGH SCHOOL AWARD Speak Peasant! ' Fire me? I ' ve been here thirteen years. got seniority! Then this nine foot war monger stepped up to the plate. W ho is your tailor? Six down and one to go. To put it bluntly Fred, it stinks. ' This oughta do the trick . ' Greg? They name it after they make it . For tomorrow, read chapters 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 . Watch that last step, Jon Please sir, I didn ' t mean it. ' 4 i - ' ' jlm ' I don ' t think it ' s funny at all. ' f ' ' i The big T. What were they really serving at the physics party . : guys REALLY blov Tim, I ' d like to present you with this award for having the government class. HAWKEN SCHOOL (Uttmmtnttmtni Upper School Saturday, June Nineteenth Nineteen Hundred and Seventy-One W r ' ' ■ - M •-V I thought they ' d never le ADVERTISEME BiNiyiLLEjHIO FiiilOass. AUthellg. Offices: Chagrin Falls 247-8904 TheA.B.Sm!]theCo. Realtors Our sales people are professionals. They operate in the Real Estate field with hundreds of years of experience behind them. Investment Plaza 241-6263 Aurora 562-6188 Shaker Heights 751-8550 Rocky River ,331-6120 Lyndhurst 442-2690 Parma Hts. 888-5353 Gates Mills 423-3200 Pepper Pike 831-9310 HILLTOP HAS TWO CONVENIENTLY LOCATED OFFICES TO SERVE YOU IN THE HILLCREST AND HEIGHTS AREAS. OUR PROFESSIONAL STAFF OF FRIENDLY REAL ESTATE COUNSELORS WILL HELP YOU SOLVE ALL OF YOUR NEEDS IN BUYING OR SELLING A HOME. CALL TO-DAY — NO COST OR OBLIGATION Hilicrest 382-2000 Heights 382-3500 CHEMALLOY COMPANY INC. Serving The Steel Industry — Foundries Welding Rod Manufacturers Etc. With the newest innovations of Alloying Additions and Product Design 950 County Line Rd. Bryan Mawr, P. A. THE GREY SQUIRREL INC. Vanderbrook Florists and Floral Designs River Rd. Congratulations to the Class of 1971 FROM A FRIEND Gate Mills, Ohio 423-3124 G T Country Wear And Fine Gifts GUN TACKLE SHOPS Landerwood Gambier 13214 Shaker Square 921-7788 Hair Styling Razor Cutting Manicurist Hair Pieces Shoe Shine STUART ARCADE BARBER SHOP 2776 Van Aken Blvd. Shaker Square — East Appointments Available Phone: 561-8998 avk.es Colonial Beverage ORMELY RAY BELL ' S 17 N. Franklin Street CHAGRIN FALLS COMPLIMENTS TO The Onyx— 1971 From THE G.R. OSTERLAND CO. 2410 Scranton Road Cleveland, Ohio 441 13 MANAGEMENT RECRUITERS 27691 Euclid Ave. Cleveland, Ohio 44132 The biggest newspaper in Clevebnd isn ' t in Cleveland. It ' s in Outercity. 74 suburban communities. With over 70% of Met- ropolitan Cleveland ' s purchasing power. Families with an average income of $14,567. Outercity is a $2 1 -billion market for every con- sumer product under the sun. And no newspaper covers Outercity better than the Sun. 17 local editions. Reaching 285,000 suburban fami- lies. Over 1 million suburban people. More than either of the dailies. And we pack a once-a-week wallop that ' s hard to ignore. An average of 200 pages of local news. The type of journalism that got the Sun papers voted the best newspaper of 1969 by the National Home Newspaper Association. Maybe that ' s why people spend three times longer with the Sun than they do with the dailies. Which means your advertising doesn ' t just go to more people who have more money to spend. It gets more visibility besides. Whatever you have to sell Cleveland, you ' ll sell more of it in Outercity. And that ' s where the Sun shines. ComCorp Sun Newspapers, 1224 Huron Road, Cleveland, Ohio 44115, 216-523-1800. 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Barber gives you the ex- tras . . . your best buy in Infra -Red Heating. Write for Deep Heat Folder 869. fteating Deep Heat Modular Burner Con- struclion Makes BTU Input Range Model Selection Broader— Gives You The Widest Choice In The Gas Combustion Specialists Since 191 BARBER MANUFACTURING CO. ■ SOLARFLO DIVISION B. R. BAKER HOWARD ' S 1007 Euclid Severance Chagrin at Lee we tell the forest from the skis Compliments of NICK SYLVESTER HAIRDRESSERS Eastgate Plaza Skiing is a people sport ... a lift line, a cold kiss, a hot toddy. And we have some very special people ... ski people. We think skiing. We dream skiing. We even speak skiing. And our years of experience with the equipment and our warm en- thusiasm for the sport are con- tagious. Catch the ' ski bug ' at Cleveland ' s favorite ski shop. .K Cleveland hts ohio S 12413 Cedar Road at Falrmount Boulevard Top of Cedar Hill • phone (216) 462-2420 What ' s Your Eye Q? Visit Barnet And Get A Chance To Find Out. BARNET OPTICAL in the Severance Center Medical Arts Bldg. MCFETRIDGE DRUG 3475 Fairmount Blvd. Cleveland Hts., Ohio 441 18 JAY ENGLE 20156 Van Aken Shaker Hts. BEMIS FLORIST Artistry In Flowers 4418 Mayfield Rd. LOTA KELLY 16614 Chagrin r. cHick Goslanzo e o GU elanJ S( le J)lreclor of CHoU 72434 Csdai dl ouA at Dairmount !B[ .-1 SHAKER HEIGHTS BEVERAGE 17112 Chagrin Blvd. Shaker Hts., Ohio, 44120 991-4400 561-3220 One of the Most Distinctive Wine Shoppes in the State of Ohio Call us Free Delivery ■.HJiii PTIGAL CO A complete service from the selection of your high quality, high-fashioned frames ... to the filling of your eye specialist ' s prescription accurately and speedily Phone, 462-2404 Hours 8 To 6 - Closed Wednesday Saturday 8 To 5 UNIVERSITY-FAIRMOUNT BARBER SHOP tj aix SlLjLUiq - J axoi Cut - c ait CoLozinq GARY GIORDANO LUBACK ' SEASTGATE RESTAURANT Charcoal Broiled Steaks Delicious Corn Beef Cocktails 1475 Som Center Road. Compliments of ANNE ALT INC DISELCO INC. 1447 Som Center Road LANDER CIRCLE SOHIO 2884 E. 116th St. 7941 Mayfield Rd. 1 BLOOM BROS. SUPPLY Headquarters For Just About Anything In Hardware — Plumbing — Electrical — Feed Or Appliances Cleveland Chesterland THE MARSHALL MOTOR CO. 6200 Mayfield Rd. Ford — Fairlane — Pinto — Maverick T-Bird Most People Are Partial To Marshall GA 1-5425 729-7336 A. J. HEIL FLORIST, INC. 3233 Warrensville Flowers by McClements Flowers For Every Occasion Member F.T.D. 921-3100 ONE HOUR MARTINIZING ' Jim And Mille Romeo 27730 Chagrin Blvd. Woodmere, Ohio 44124 Purveyors Of Quality Footwear 2Cn«tIf BlfOis Landerwood Plaza 831-1116 SHAKER MARKET 3245 WARRENSVILLE CENTER RD. Prime Meat Choice Fresh Fruit And Vegetables WE DELIVER SIMS BROS. BUICK COME VISIT A .(;■; V: , , one of ohio ' s newest ursest buick asencies M ' SALES-SERVICE-PARTS-RENTAL-LEASINC? EASY TERMS LOW PRICES-HIOH TRADE ALLOWANCES LARGE SELECTION OF USED CARS 21601 EUCLID AVE. 481-8800 Best Wishes To The Class Of 1970 MUTUAL OF NEW YORK Frank S. Treco., C.L.U. 740 Union Commerce Bldj Cleveland, Ohio 441 15 J chrew man LANDERWOOD PLAZA SOUTH PEPPER PIKE. OHIO 621-7343 HEIGHTS CLEANERS 12427 Cedar Rd. 462-2488 In this facility A e produce BUD Sheet Metal Enclosures for instrumentation . . . and we manufacture more than anyone else . . . furthermore, our products are preferred by most engineers ' •Vniiii! BUD Binin | ,c RADIO, INC. 4605 E. 355 St. Willoughby, Ohio 44094 216-946-3200 Dear Seniors, Now is yoiir chance for co-education. DON ' T BLOW IT! FRESHMEN Any Senior who looks here, has our congratulations! Freshmen, Class of 1974. CLASS AD Just remember. Seniors, next year you may be an immature FRESHMAN! ! But good luck anyway! 235 ueWij ia J al • • A. L, BECHTEL SON, INC. 5700 Superior Ave. Cleveland, Ohio 44103 Compliments of LIFETIME DISTRIBUTORS, INC. OUR BEST WISHES TO HAWKEN SCHOOL Marshall, Alan and Juddy Bedol MARSHALLAN PRODUCTS INC. 1971 W. 85th ST., CLEVELAND, OHIO 44102 Phone (Area Code 2 1 6) 63 1 -2400 Buy or Lease Either Way It Will Pay ToShop At Jay On Broadway Jay Pontiac. 566 Broadway, Bedford, Ohio 232-5000 A specialty food store that makes an effort to serve you well. Gourmet Foods An outstanding international collection of wonderful good eating foods. A Source of last resorts for the weird and unusual. Ice Creams Candies The largest assortment of fine candies anywhere plus our own chocolates and rich ice creams equals the best sweet shop in town. Health Food Store Being health conscious is in — we have the foods, supplements, vita- mins to make it go. High protein foods for the athlete. WEBER ' S moving with the times for 18 years. 1 8400 Euclid Ave. just east of Green Rd. Open monday thru Saturday, 10:00 AM to 9:30 PM We are brought into the world feeble and weak, yet we stand in need of strength; we. are destitute of everything, yet we want as- sistance; we are senseless and stupid, yet we have occasion for judgement. All that we have not at our birth, and thatwe stand in need of at the years of maturity, is the gift of education. — JEAN-JACQUES ROSSEAU Faith and Hope to the Class of ' 71. McDowell WELLM AN ENGINEERING CO. ICURY MACHINE COMPANY 1911 COMMERCE PARKWAY • WARRENSVILLE HEIGHTS, OHIO 44128 ■ (216) 292-710C REPCO is the Authorized Distributor for electronic equipment, components and supplies produced by the leading manufacturers (Consult us for all your requirements) RADIO ELECTRONIC PARTS CORP. 3235 Prospect Ave. Cleveland, Ohio 44115 216-881-6060 239 Happiness is Congratulations to the Class of 1971 from L-T PRODUCTS-BELLFORD METALS 25801 Richmond Rd. Cleveland, Ohio 44146 THE BREWSTER AND STROUD CO. OUTFITTERS TO MEN, YOUNG MEN BOYS Landerwood Plaza 30659 Pine Tree Road Cleveland, Ohio 44124 FINE HOME FURNISHINGS : AND INTERIORS f. SINCE 1880 8 East Washington St. I Gate Mills, Ohio Open Tues. ' til 9:00 Phone: 831-8200 Interior Systems 135 20302 Chagrin Blvd. Shaker Hts.,0. 44122 (216)751-7852 6167 Mayfield Road Phone 449- 1727 FOTO-CEN MANY RECEIVE ADVICE, ONLY THE WISE PROFIT BY IT. SYRUS We are proud of the host of Hawken men and their families whose discretion has brought them to Beatties for a fine diamond or watch. 11. IV. Kcattii ' M DIAMOND MERCHANTS 87 Years in Cleveland 11 17 Euclid 158 Old Arcade THE HAWKEN SCHOOL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Extends Congratulations To The Members Of The Graduating Class Of 1971 On Their Records And Achievements 1 And Wishes Them Continued Success 6 In Their Future Careers :x } A.M.D.M.A.M.J.N.J.P. g.b.k.b.m.b.f.bJ||H|: .;.-- ..| K.M. G.P. G.A. jj  _ ;■•■• 1 R.M. A. P. G.A. s.B. ' r .ima HF W.R. J.B. r. _ ' ■ C.R. R.R. J.C. H.C. 1 ' . . 1 ' J ' ft S.R. E.G. U ' .::. - 1 „ A.R. R.F.J.E. f ■■ ■ , ' . ?SJ J.R. A.R. J.S. D.F. S.G. T.G. ' M ■■ ' ■■■ ■ 9 P.S. G.S. T.S. T.H. R.L. S.H. B.J. J.H. w « A.S. 1_ J.H.J.H.R.H.L.H. B.S.J.S.B.S.K.S.B.S.M.T.F.T.J.T.W.T.P.V.D.W.C.W.E.W.R.W. ■ IL LEZIUS-HILES Creative Printers 1929 EAST 61st ST. CLEVELAND, OHIO 441Q3 (216) 432-2000 i,i. Best Wishes From BURGER KING 31305 VINE STREET — WILLOWICK 13573 EUCLID AVENUE — E. CLEVELAND 6251 MAYFIELD ROAD — MAYFIELD HEIGHTS BURGER KING 20650 N. Park Blvd., University Hts., Ohio 441 18 The Most Complete Phonograph, Record And Tape Stores In Cleveland. Rock Classical Folk Budget Classics BLUES DRAMA Jazz Spoken Word Pop Vocal Children ' s Pop Instrumental Humor Comedy 221 Euclid Ave. Westgate 771-4434 333-6566 RECORDS WE HONOR [master charge] TM WTCWAHK CUO 2 Severance Center Summit Mall 381-0858 867-3338 iHOP% NOW OPEN: Toledo, Michigan City, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, Houston, Springfield, Mo., Arlington, Texas, Riverside and Oxnard, Qalit. 249 Congratulations Class of 1971— Brand Advertising inc. Rockefeller Building Superior West 6tn Cleveland, Ohio 44113 Phone (216) 696-4550 Fred, Mac, Murf, and Lance, say BYE. Best Wishes To Class of 1971 GARRET PRESS Albert Furs Arthur ' s Babe ' s Beauty Salon Bentley Tie Shop Betty Lee Fashions Bill ' s Shoes Bill Tony ' s Barber Shop Bond Clothes Central National Bank Clark Hardware Cleveland Fabric Cleveland Trust Co. Davis Bakery D. O. Summers Diselco Lighting Fixtures Duncan ' s Flowers Eastgate Barber Shop Eastgate Beverage Eastgate Coliseum Eastgate Optical Eastgate Pharmacy Eastgate Restaurant Eastgate Shoe Service Eastgate Travel Fanny Farmer Candies Fashiontown Fisher Fazio-Costa Friedman Buick Hough Bakery Hughes Restaurant Hyde-Firestone Jo Vann ' s Gifts Kroger ' s Lee Jewelers May Som Shell Mentor ' s Magnavox Merry-Go-Round Morgan Hershman Nick Sylvester Hairdressers Pick-N-Pay Revco Drug Saints Sinners Second Federal S. .L. Smoke Shop Swift Cleaners Tom Sink ' s Furniture Wardrobe Shop Zayre SOM CENTER AND MAYFIELD RDS. ROUTES 322 and 91 off 1-271 Yes the world is the best place of all for a lot of such things as making the fun scene and making the love scene and making the sad scene and even thinking and kissing people and making babies and going swimming in rivers on picnics in the middle of the summer and just generally ' living it up ' Yes, but then right in the middle of it comes the smiling mortician. Ferlinghetti — T. Shively Don ' t ever buy a used Opel Kadett! — P. Armington Life is like an ice cream cone. You have to learn to lick it. Charlie Brown — T. Safford In the dust where we have buried the silent races and their abominations, we have buried so much of the delicate magic of life. D. H. Lawrence — R. Hermann (congratulations) You have never really laughed until you have cried. Unknown. — G. Brand Zoot Rolio! C ' est la vie. — Calhouns He who comes first, eats first. Eike Von Repkow — R. Hallstein Show my head to the people; it is worth seeing. Georges Jacques Danton — R. Austin When a man teaches something he does not know to somebody else who has no ap- titude for it, and gives him a certificate of proficiency, the latter has completed the education of a gentleman. G. Bernard Shaw — S. Whitehouse I hate these pistol brandishers. They cannot give an order without jerking a gun out. They probably pull out their pistols when they go to the toilet and order the move they will make. Lieutenant Berrendo — J. Thorp Wish I was a Kellogg ' s cornflake Floatin ' in my bowl takin ' movies, Relaxin ' awhile, livin ' in style, Talkin ' to a raisin who ' casionn ' ly plays L.A., Casually glancing at his toupee. — Punky Have a nice. — M. Rehm A bird in the hand, is worth two in the bush. — JM Cervantes: DON QUIXOTE, PartI,BookIV,Chapt.4 253 Compliments of CEDAR POINT For Dani — You know as long as I can remember 1 wasn ' t ever liable to give myse lf away. But it sure doesn ' t look like it makes a difference now, So I ' m gonna cry today. You know as long as I can remember Nobody ever got anybody back this way. And it sure doesn ' t look like I ' m gonna be the first. So I ' m gonna cry today. Are you turned off by my lack of composure. Please excuse my state, it ' s just that I know You ' re gonna take away something that 1 never had. That I thought was mme. You know as long as I can remember You and I never had to find ways to waste a day. But it sure doesn ' t look like you ' re gonna be around. So 1 guess I ' ll cry today. Are you turned off by this over-exposure Please excuse this mess, it ' s just ' cause I know You ' re gonna take away something that I never had That 1 thought was mine. (Todd Rundgren) — Andhe ■ . i fsiP «- tl r-i - „ pa iB H B ' B l ' l H Joe Fabeetz, Prop. PT THE LOFT w - Open Week-ends Holidays Our Best Wishes to the Class of 1971 ACCURATE MACHINE TOOL, INC. ORSEDGE BARBER STYLE SHOP HAIR STYUHS FOR Mm Exclusively FOUR GRADUATE HAIR STYLISTS • MEN ' S STYLING HOURS • RAZOR curs Z-.mS-M-UQti. Thru Frl. • COLORING 8:00-5:88-SatunJays • HAIR PIECES • fACIAlS APPOINTMENTS MANICURING £21 522-1262 ?„ 7h6 Chesterfield 1801 EAST 12fh McDonald Compliments of McDonald ' s 6225 Mayfield Road Mavfield Heights Compliments from WINTON PLACE, INC BENTLEY TIE SHOPS Eastgate Shopping Center All ties: $ 1 .50 Over 7500 ties on display Conventional and Wide Ties Apartments 1 190 Union Commerce Bldg. Cleveland, Ohio NETTLETON STEEL TREATING CO CO. 1371 East 45th Street Cleveland, Ohio 44103 PATRONS 1971 Mr. Mrs. G. B. Austin George L. Bing Mr. Mrs. Lewis R. Bostwick Mr. Mrs. Pierce Bray Mr. Mrs. Robert S. Burton V. J. Cianciolo Samuel F. Clarke Mr. Mrs. Lawrence E. Cohn Daniel R. CoUister Mrs. Julie Cornelia Cowell Hubbard Mr. Mrs. Robert P. Crease Mr. Mrs. Henry Eaton Mr. Mrs. Dan Freedman A Friend Robert D. Gries Mr. Mrs. Robert J. Groves Charles Priscilla Hall Mr. Mrs. Scott B. Hayes Dr. Herman Hellerstein Dr. Mrs. Donald M. Herman Kyman Business Forms Inc. Mr. Mrs. Samuel H. Lamport Milton Linden, M.D. Mr. Mrs. H. E. Lindgren William M. Liston LUBACKS EASTGATE RESTAURANT Mr. Mrs. Dave Margolis Mr. Mrs. Homer McDaniel C. B. McDonald Mr. Mrs. Ralph C.Miller R. St. Paul Morris Mr. Mrs. Werner D. Mueller Dr. Mrs. Frank Nulsen Mr. Mrs. Richard L. Phillips Mr. Mrs. David Rehm Dr. Mrs. Frederic Wm. Rhinelander Dr. Mrs. D. A. Rickards Dr. Mrs. Norman J. Rosenberg Dr. Mrs. Richard B. Schenk Sebastian Barbers Mr. Mrs. Harlan E. Sherman Mr. Mrs. Asa Shiverick, Jr. Dr. Mrs. Leonard T. Skeggs Locust Farms Arabians Mr. Mrs. Jessop Smith SUPREME GARAGE Mr. Mrs. John W. Thompson Mr. Mrs. Chilton Thomson Mr. Mrs. F. Jerome Tone,third Mr. Mrs. John Van Erp Wardrobe Fashions for Men Mr. Mrs. Robert C. Weiskopf Clyde E. WiUiams, Jr. D. A. Visconsi We acknowledge the generosity of these individuals who contributed to our success. SPECIAL THANKS TO: American Yearbook Company Representatives: Mr. Pete Prentner Mr. Larry Pernie District Supervisor: Dorothy Bermejo Fred Mueller Mike Bernstein Doug Webb Dr. and Mrs. Richard B. Schenk Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Izant, Jr. Fred Clarke James Suavely for his patience All those who sold ads All those who didn ' t sell ads WNCR All those who bought yearbooks and then again those who didn ' t Jamie Morse and his cover designs • THE ENDURING WORLD • . . . and so there ain ' t nothing more to write about, and I am rotten gald of it, because if I ' d a knowed what a trouble it was to make a book I wouldn ' t a tackled it and I ain ' t agoing to no more. But I reckon I got to light out for the Territory ahead of the rest, because Aunt Sally she ' s going to adopt me and sivilize me and I can ' t stand it. I been there before. — Mark Twain J y y y y . y - y jj Pii . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' - , l!4ll ' WtmHv I i! ■ ' ., I. ' f 9 ' 1i| A % X.


Suggestions in the Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH) collection:

Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH) online collection, 1980 Edition, Page 1

1980

Hawken School - Onyx / Red and Gray Yearbook (Gates Mills, OH) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 1

1981


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