Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY)

 - Class of 1950

Page 1 of 88

 

Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection, 1950 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1950 Edition, Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 88 of the 1950 volume:

4 X 1 1 ' aka ' SS.. ' Eff Q R xi- 'xvey . . p 5:3145 'DQJ7 'V '-XF ix::. 5 LJ' AIWAI1 ,Qffgfi u.::::! .A 1 ig, uma . ' H N WI ?f'167'l ml, 'f 'sm X ' 1- MA'!lN Emi, E, X 5 ' 55 A' xxxlfsfj W , 'K J 5 QQ , '!:5u , y ', ,, ,F Jisff K , f 1' F gi, Q f 1-lcrvacz G10Q,61Q,g clvcrpl f761ppaqua-- NQ,wYork V . 'H , , 2 p 4 Q 9 ,, , . vrbvfeddtfnn-M. 1' f-Qi is .s.a5'a.nEQ-,C V 'mf.Im-i.Qt,. .V -X dz.-nlziglfiscdrlfi r W. n if , 4 'S i M, A ,, .im , I , rf ' . ' V1 4 N V 'K 4 A .d 5 2411 +2 L. ' W Fld 3 K ,. FOR E W 0 R D' ' I V V t V. .ft-1 l The Class of 1950 leaves Horace Greeley, a year of appre- '. 'SJ'-1 hensive self-appraisal by the world. The mid-centenary is a time when we stop for a moment and look back-satisfied with solid accomplishments and goals won, and disheartened with compro-. mised ideals and places where we left road. p .g, We of this class are going, though, neither in a spirit of confidence nor rueful defeatism. In spreading out from a profit- able and enjoyable time at Horace Greeley we are well aware of both opportunities and hazards ahead, but most of all, oi yo 1 4 .-T1 . Q51 u V ' . . . . . . . , -9 4 wise and solicitous preparation given us during our tirne'l3qel f . . .l' 0' .ayiv ' Q ,-Y i 1 V :- af, ,'. 31,-f, ,.an 4,4 . VV. 5 'lf' ' . 'aan h ,, . . 1. 4 -0 4 ' 'Ri . Q Q, b mfs: fig? ,, - 254. .-'. pf... ,f- ,,. , ,J ., .,-,V Z1f.,V,tr --V Q N.. . ,V -- v1'.l-' . A .H ut, -.K . ,.,. . , . Writ' 5 . 5 - Lv A '.V f-fv'l 1. .4 .-., .,,, 1 iq., 1 if ..,-.Q 'ee X -...va . .i. nv .5 M lf.. t c QC.. g. 3: lofi .ly P ,:rif'viF.. -' S:-fnff ' -5- 3 A . i ,, ., . if x L ,. , wx Y... A,MC1hw,, J .. N, . ,, '. 4 if nj. . . . . .'.i . .ax- ' wot -,' -jf It . Y'::.v If . .Ls . , 7' F, Al- ,, I ic., x Y- fi' .uf HORACE GREELEY HIGH SCHOOL THE HORACE GREELEY HIGH SCHOOL ALMA MATER Oh, halls of Greeley High Ring out, ring out, ring out again For love of students past, And students who will come. Hold up, oh Greeley High, Hold up your motto grandg We hail thee as the best Of high schools in the land. -By NANCY BAKKEN, 3 Class of 1948 SYLVIA M. KURSON ALICE M. BARRY D E D I C A T I O N In sincere appreciation for the generous help and faithful backing they have given us, we, the Senior Class, dedicate the 1950 Quaker to Miss Kurson and Miss Barry. 4 I . y my -. I -A I l-t-,g ff1n, V, -15.1, THE ADMINISTRATION Mn. WILLARD MR. GRAFFLIN MR- BALDWIN High School Principal Diiffict Principal DM of Smdenfi On the shoulders of these three men rests the machinery of Central School District No. 4. Mr. Willard, High School Principal, was responsible for the super- vision of nearly four hundred students of grades seven through twelve. It is diflicult to overestimate the complexity of Mr. GrafHin's tasks, for he had to assume the high school duties after Mr. Vlillard left, as well as all the brunt of the construction of the new elementary school. Our beloved Mr. Baldwin did his job efficiently and successfully as always, placing nearly all the seniors in good positions either in colleges or employment. 5 SOCIAL STUDIES ELIZABETH M. GOODELL, Earlham, A.B., Columbia, M.A. MARGARET STEWART CLibrarianD , Middlebury College, A.B., M.A., B.L.S. SYLVIA M. KURSON, University of Maine, A.B., M.A. CLARE A. RISOLI, College of New Rochelle, B.A., Columbia, M.A. JANE A. STEARNS CNot Shownb, Middlebury College, B.A.g Columbia, M.A. ENGLISH LEROY F. SPEAR, Springfield College, B.S., Colby College, Boston Univer- sity. CHARLES F. TAYLOR, New York University, B.S., M.A. MARGARET BURKE, Longwood Col- lege, B.S., University of Virginia. ALICE M. BARRY, Smith, A.B., Columbia, A.M. RICHARD E. LAWRENCE, Univer- sity of Minnesota, B.S., Teachers' Col- lege, Columbia, M.A. HELEN ROBERTSON CNot Shownj, Bridgewater, Mass., B.A.g Columbia, M.A. MATHEMATICS LANGUAGE JEAN V. FENN, Middlebury, B.A. Yale, M.A. JEAN E. MURPHY, Syracuse Univer- sity, A.B., M.A. 6 MARY B. HANLEY, New Paltz State Teachers' College, B.S., Columbia. CHARLES TETELMAN, New Paltz State Teachers' College, B.S., Colum- bia, M.A. RALPH R. REINHART, New York State College for Teachers, A.B., 'Aff A SCIENCE INDUSTRIAL ARTS R. BRUCE MCGILL, Alfred University, A.B.g HOWARD R. JUNKER, New jersey State New York University, M.A. Teachers' College, B.S., New York Univer- CLARENCE J. HOUMIEL, sf. Lawrence Um- Swv, MS' versity, B.S., Columbia University, M.A. FRANCIS W. KIEPER, Oswego State Teachers' College, B.S.g New York Univer- sity, M.A. ARTS EVELYN S. KNAPP, Pratt Instituteg Univer- PAUL W. HERRINGTON Clnstrumental sity of Delaware, Pennsylvania State Col- Musicb, Fredonia State Teachers' College, legeg Columbia, B.S. B.S. AGNES CHIAPPINELLI CVocal Music D, WALTER J. LAVOY, Oswego State Teachers' New York University, School of Education, College, Buffalo State Teachers' College, B.S., M.A. B.A.g Albright Art College, Art Degree. HOME ECONOMICS, COMMERCE, HEALTH PHYSICAL EDUCATION HELEN E. GORMAN, University of Bulfalog Buffalo State Teachers' College, B.S. CHARLES M. POLLOCK, University of Ala- bama, M.S.g Teachers' College of Columbia University, M.A., Harvard Law School, LI.B. HELEN L. ROGERS, Vassar Brothers Hospi- tal, R.N.g New York University, S.N.T. 7 MARGARET V. KIEPER, Cortland State Teachers' College, B.S. H. MARK WI-IITTLETON, JR, Cortland State Teachers' College, B.S., Hobart Col- lege. LEROY F. SPEAR. IEANNE B. IRWIN, Pennsylvania State Col- lege, B.S. Seated: Miss Calabres, Mrs. Pollock, Miss Dykeman, Miss Colby CBritish exchange teacherl, Miss Parmelee, Mrs. Wakelee, Miss Kabatchnick, Mrs. Kiley, Miss Bryce, Miss Aldrich. Standing: Mr. McGuire, Mr. Russo, Miss Hamblen, Miss Maloney, Miss Troyanovich, Miss Conboy, Miss Sliker fPrincipalD, Mrs. Moore, Mrs. Sapiel, Miss Radley, Mr. Allard, Mr. Whitsitt. THE ELEMENTARY FACULTY As we leave Horace Greeley High, we look back upon our Grade School days and wonder how the patient teachers ever put up with us. If it weren't for these helpful teachers, an important part of our education would have been lost. It was in those grades we learned to write, count, draw, spell, and live together as a group. We owe a large tribute to these understanding teachers who helped us take our first steps in the field of education. --ww-on--M .. P -if I an-zi - -fs'-.4 R1 -,wr 455:54 THE SOCIAL CALENDAR 1949-50 SEPTEMBER 7-First day of school. After a riotous but profitable summer, the Seniors run into the open arms of Miss Kurson and Miss Barry. Their first look at Mr. Willard confirms all high expectations and the year is on. SEPTEMBER 24--After two years of Grade Z ballplaying Greeley beats Croton 20-7. Never heard such yelling. ' ' SEPTEMBER 30--The Quakers maul Bellows 14-6. Heard from Bellows player at half: How can they be winning? They're playing clean! OCTOBER 7-Someone says we played Irvington, but nobody seems to know who won. Professional ethics, we guess. OCTOBER 14-Chappaqua 19, New Canaan 6. Seniors' fourth and Csniffj last Sadie Hawkins Dance. Hang it, maybe we won't be so glad to get out of H.G. as we thought. OCTOBER 22--Mount Kisco bows, 15-6. And well they may. Just retribution, boys. OCTOBER 28-Greeley 26, Briarcliff 6. The G.O. football dance-mighty success. NOVEMBER 5-Katonah drubbed in second half, 21-13. The Indians find their white ,shmoo embellished with an orange-and-blue H.G. that mor- ning. Surprise! NOVEMBER 15-New York Freedom Train in Chappaqua. Signed papers and cute guards. DECEMBER 7-Connie leaves for New Hampshire in the teariest auditorium on record. Ken takes over in mid-stream--a tough job in any league. DECEMBER 21-G.O. formal, the best ever. New dresses, shiny tuxes, corsages, washed cars. Christmas holiday begins. JANUARY 13-Mr. Willard leaves in the second sad assembly of the year. JANUARY 23-26-Midyears. MARCH 11-All-Star Game-Greeley really shone tonight with all our stars out on the floor: Joe, Bob and Nicky. MARCH 10-Aged Freshman dance with plenty of Greeley jive. MARCH 17-At the Sophomore dance, everyone got his Irish up. MARCH 18-All sports dinner-A free meal and more boys than girls. MARCH 24-25-Senior Play--What 4 Life-what a play. Oh, Henry! APRIL 5-17-Easter Vacation-Colleges are out and the fun begins. APRIL 21-Trib. gave a collossal movie and dance. APRIL 28-Exhibit. H.G. does itself proud. MAY 26-Junior Prom. Greeley shines and a new prom queen. JUNE 22--The headache of regents, but they do end this school year. JUNE 2 5-Baccalaurate service this afternoon. JUNE 26--The graduation of the Senior class of 1950 and the beginning of summer vacation. 9 Seated Walker, Miss Murphy, Harcourt, Griggs. Standing: Studdiford, Olson, Futth, Leavitt Goutell Diamond, Harper. 'THE QUAKER' 1950 Except for its informal aspect, this picture of the yearbook staff heads does not tell the story. No picture can recapture Monty's vain attempts to make himself heard, the frenzied search of Nancy and Sally for a theme, or Ada's tireless collection of every teacher's name and degree. Nor can it show the joyous last-minute avalanche of advertising from jimmy, or Lee's high-pressure promotion of the book to the stud- ents. Barbara's steady plugging on typewritten copy and Lynn's rather breathless accounting is not shown and, all in all, the picture depicts a calm repose, especially on the face of Miss Murphy, that it is difficult for us who produced this book to recognize. The staff will remember the work on THE QUAKER of 1950 as a highly disorganized, very confusing and most enjoyable session. We extend our most hearty appreciation and thanks to the printer, whose patient understanding on missed deadlines and general amateurishness was so helpful. 10 . ' - 5 ' I ' J f ' wg . THE QUAKER, STAFF Editor-irr-Chief ....... Assistant Editor ...... Business Manager ....... Faculty Adviser ....... .--...-nu .au--.-.--..-. Literary Staff NANCY WALKER, Editor MARY ANN JOHANNSEN CYNTHIA MILES TEDDY BANNING BARBARA ANDERSON MONTY FURTH ADA HARCOURT LYNN GRIGGS JEAN E. MURPHY CHARLOTTE HARRIS SUsAN FIGGATI' SALLY GOUTELL JIMMY LEAvI'I'r LEE OLSON ELLEN MACAULAY Photography Staff ANDY STUDDIFORD, Editor LEE DIACK SANDY PARSONS Art Staff SALLY GOUTELL, Editor ' LOIS VANDBROBF MARCIA SVIRSKY KEN HIGGINS Sports Staff JACK DIAMOND, Editor JIMMY LEAVITT SALLY GOUTELL RONALD BAKER DICK TIERNBY A GERRY DIAMOND VIRGINIA COLBERG DOROTHY CALEY BILL JUDD Lois VANDEROEF ADA HARCOURT DOROTHY CALBY TEDDY BANNING Advertising Staif JIMMY LEAVITT, Head LILLIAN SCI-IROEDER JOAN TIERNEY TEDDY BANNING Typing Staff BARBARA HARPER, Head MAUREEN SCHUMACI-IER JOAN THOMAS Circulation Staff LEE OLSON, Head RONNIE BAKER MARY ANN JOI-IANNSEN JOAN THOMAS CAROLYN MILLER Il MAUREEN SCHUMACHER CYNTHIA MILES JOAN THOMAS CONNIE LUNDVALL LOIs VANDEROEF LYNN GRIGGS . SUSAN FIGGATI' JANE MCINTYRE GBRRY DIAMOND CYNTHIA MILES TW WWW x mga f'fQ'!vllbwe -nr E 'v 'WY'-! '!fesf-N14. we-rs sr-Nwamqwpllpylns isfvwoii -weve-nugi - : Y:-T- . ' Y' A . L- . A we I F X Y, Ui Q , M, PROSPECTUS OF 1970 IRON ARM is currently posing for pulp ads that read I was a 96 pound weak- ling... 1 DAVE is under fire from the government, which is bringing an anti-trust suit against him to break up his used-car combine. DOT, head nurse at the St. james Infirmary fthe Bellevue morgue to the uninitiated J , has been writing a book entitled, How to Treat the Ailing Vanderoeff' BOB C. is doing a drummer-boy act at the Raisin Roof which ends when he throws Eddie M. into the cymbals. ROBBIE is posing for those hat ads in which you see the back of a beautiful head of hair with one of Schiapparelli's productions on top. JANET made the headlines the other day when the news came that her recording of Stormy Weather'T had started four fires around record shops. BARRY is teaching Advanced Theoretical Non-Euclidean Solid Geometry at Mc- Sorley's Ale House in N. Y. C. JANINE is at work on her eighteenth tome on World War I, while Miss Barry wears out four blue pencils a day reading proofs. IACK'S sports column in the Daily News has just broken the world's record for circulation-nobody has pointed out that several thousand copies per day go to somebody named Goutell. NANCY has started off on a new venture to add to her Dartmouth-sweatshirt in- dustry: selling Indian-head pennies to Big Green rooters for a dollar apiece. GAY, with her cooking feature in the Herald Tribune, has relegated Clementine Paddleford to the comic books by appearing with a Higgins Pie that combines pickles, rneringue, onions and chocolate sauce. MONTY has set up the first non-stop jalopy route from Chappaqua to Chapel Hill, with provision for mail carrying when he isn't whizzing along it himself. SALLY is working as top technical adviser and test-driver at the Ford plant, Henry II figures that if his cars can stand that they are O.K., and consequently advertises them as Sal-proof. WERNER pulled out every last hair on his head backstage at the Met last week when Bobby Sanders hit a blooper in singing Faust BUD has rnade his second million by selling rights to his smile to Pepsodent. He acquired his first as president of U. S. Steel, during which time he announced that irate stockholders were a cinch comparted to H. G. Seniors. LYNN drills her four West Point-bound sons every day in full uniform while their father, General Schwoob, gives several addresses per year at Annapolis. ADA is giving lessons in How to sing without making noise at Nantucket nowa- days. She fills in her off hours as a stenographer at Central High School. BARBARA H. is teaching the nursery-school kiddies at Cisqua the mysteries of ffxl and trigonometry. MARY is working hard at her new jobs of President of the W.C.T.U., the A.S.P.C.A. and several church etc. groups. She is sure of being the hrst woman President of the U. S.-- on a platform of put the 1950 Committee of Twelve in the Supreme Court! CHARLIE is raking in the dough from his new inventions-the radio tube that will not burn out or break, the record that will not wear or crack, and the record changer that plays for three days without being touched. KEN has started a concern which deals in radiator-cap ornaments, turn-and-bank indicators, fox-tails and other necessities for the teen-age automobile. 12 -...,,,,,,,,,,...' Y f M- . ,?..?,,,..,,!,wW,.,,,..-, f,3,3,q,,,,,,,7:wf-.V -V-,.lf.m.-mvpv N . y 1, JOE, having made his reputation with the Evil Little Book series, is now running a vast clearinghouse for glass-tubing blowpipes, hydrogen sulfide kits and ventriloquist lessons for chemistry classes all over the country. JIM L., the Hrst professional valedictorian in history, is touring the country with Monty Csalutitorianj. They are billed as 98.6fZp and 97.2W. NIKKI is turning out reams of torrid copy for Helena Rubinstein, the best known of which is How does your lipstick hold up in ablacked-out game room? Young EDDIE MADLEY JR. has just made the N.W.I.L. All-Star Team while in the seventh grade--the lirst player at 6'7 to do so. BARBARA M.'s new book, The Ramifications and Complexities of Instructing in Modern Secondary Schools, for some reason isn't selling any copies at all. PETE M.'s Sonata for Sousaphone and Zither has the critics simply wild-an ambiguous comment. - PHIL'S Dance Studio for the Slick Boys is a marvelously successful enterprise pro- viding real competition even for Art CMurrayD Jerkey. JIMMY M. is swabbing decks for the naval reserve, while he hums Anchors Aweigh. BOB M. is sitting home taking care of little moose C pluralj and running out in the middle of the night to feed sugar pills to his sick patients. Today is Murphy Day for FRANK down at Yankee Stadium, all of the Chappaqua folks are going down to honor their home town boy. LEE is Chairman in charge of the New Canteen for tired U. N. members complete with swimming pool and bowling alleys down cellar. NICK'S eleven sons, who make up the All-Palmieri football team at Chidester Uni- versity, ran away with all the positions on this year's All-American Team. Peace now reigns throughout the world due to Cornell trained dietician PAM PROCTOR, whose theory is, the way to a Russian's heart is through his stomach. BOB S. makes an average of 20 phonograph records a day. His latest recording of My Darling is on its way to the top on the Hit Parade. LIL is singing a successor song to Chloe : Howie? Has Anybody Seen My Howie? HOWIE gets up at 5:30 every morning to feed the chickens before starting on his rocket taxi service between Millwood and Paris. Little Little BILL JR. age 3 is advertising himself as the only ninth child of a ninth child both of whose parents' names are Smith. Costumes by SHERRIEQ' can be seen under all of the new Miss Rheingold billboards. While on duty as a forest ranger ANDY fell out of a tree and his pipe set the whole Redwood forest on tire. MARCIA is in charge of a special railroad from Connecticut to Millwood carrying mail from Arnie every hour on the hour. JOAN spends most of her time chasing the four Huber boys around the living room in their miniature blue Dodges. LOIS has just finished the floral decorations in Buckingham Palace for Bonnie Prince Charlie's wedding. From there she will go to New York to manage the flower show at Grand Central Palace. NANCY'S new Laughing Record is the hit of all the society parties given by Ellen Macaulay. PETE won an Academy Award for his glamorous, amorous performance with Dotty Lamour in Road to Kisco. BUZZ tours the country to inspect his chain of drugstores, the only ones with floor- shows while you wait. 'I3 CLASS HISTORY When we stepped shakily into the upper halls for the first time, took an uncertain look around us, and settled down into the ways of seventh grade, the class of 1950 really began to move. The first thing we did was to sell the most War Bonds of any class in the school in 1945, for which we received the coveted honor of getting a free ride on an army duck We managed to sell the most of just about everything and our projects seemed always to turn into successes. We gave an auditorium program entitled Our People in eighth grade, who can ever forget Art Jerkey gushing forth with Disperse Ye Rebels ? In the ninth grade we launched our Sadie Hawkins dances which caught on like wildfire. Gay was Miss Sadie Hawkins one year, and our mystery tune was How Come, Baby, How Come. We snared the Tribune banner in tenth grade too. We set a new pattern by our unique junior Prom: flowers, southern colonial, and no crepe paper! Gay was our lucky queen and Pete Costa provided the music. Our Senior Year was terrific. We bumped into the milkman on our way to homeroom every morning, no bell ever rang, and we all jumped out of our skin from Miss Kurson's blast on her whistle. Barry and Art always had the most apropos remarks in homeroom meetings. We were proud as we could be of our Nicky who made the all-county, and all-Metropolitan football teams at guard. We were also terribly thankful to Lee, who did so much hard work in getting us the Canteen. Macaulay's parties topped them all and never failed to be a success. All in all we have loved every minute of it and hope that Greeley will at least notice we are gone, because, although we hate to admit it, we're going to miss seeing each other in old H.G. gg. I4 S 19 gf? f G xx. fr' 'N 'fi fb Y 4 K ' .. 1 a I. 5239 - Ji ' 'nfl J 'W gf, K' vga 4 X R iu ' is 1-.v 422: ',, H 0 -51.5-P . -'GJ RONALD IRVING BAKER Iron-Arm . . . mighty terror . . . dramatist extradordinary, ahem! . . . baseball pro . . . Bought your year- book yet? He if happy that knoweth himxelf not to he otherwise. Attended Pennsylvania Military School for two years, Baseball 3, 4g Inutramurals 3, 45 Dramatic Club 3, 4g Mixed Chorus 3, 45 All-State Mixed Chorus 4g Yearbook 4. DAVID ALLAN BAKKEN Dave . . . Ken's chaulfer, mechanic and confidante . . . lowest 16 . . . plays Spanish like a bazooka . . . ad- dress mail to room 221. luJtice ir truth in action. Committee of Twelve 5, 4g Presi- dent 45 Service Club 2, 39 Class Vice- President lg Nominating Commit- tee 1, 39 Senior Play 4g Senior Boys' Quartet 45 Mixed Chorus 3, 4, Basketball 3, 4g Track 2, 5, 43 Foot- ball 49 Greeley Tribune 1, 2, 32 Treasurer 35 G. O. 1, 4, Youth Club 35 Evaluating Committee 4. Hs-clvx DOROTHY LOUISE CALEY Dot . . . aborable smile . . . smooth and sleek . . . dates with Bob . . . beauty at its best . . . our nurse . . . friend to all. Beauty is its own excuse for being. Greeley Tribune 2, 3, 45 Dramatic Club 2, 3g Chorus lg Yearbook 45 Senior Play 4g Intramurals lg Red Cross 1. 17 1. - ' We 0 .fi Q 5129 ,lf ' ' 3,5 .ns ,. -.- '? kv. f as ROBERT HAMISH CLARK Bob . . . Scotch . . . drummer . . . wild hair . . . bursting with enthusi- asm . . . red socks. We mm! laugh before we are happy- Band 3, 4, Track 2, 3, 4, Dramatics 3. ROBERTA CLARK Robbie . . . earrings . . . swimming . . . The Prioress . . . gardening . . . a boy from Long Island. 'The blue eyes of rprmgtzme. Transferred from Athol High School in Mass., Dramatics 4, Greeley Tribune 4. JANET DARLING jan . . . baby talk . . . Bobb-ee . . . rosy checks . . . team, team, team, . . . home is where the heart is . . . bubbling laughter . . . puppy-dog eyes . . . monkey. Good thing: come in :mall packaged' Hockey 3, 4, Basketball 3, 4, Cheer- leading 3, 4, Dramatic Club 2, 3, Vice-President 4, Service Club 3, 4, Athletic Council, President 4, New Castle Youth Club 3, Vice-Presi- dent 4, Girls' Glee Club 2, Year- book 4, jr. Prom. Attendent 2, 3, Candidate for Miss Greeley 4. 'IB K xx 1 X X ml P X x 5 j , etdljztsy . X . 1? x 1, i '3,' wg, N95 f if uw A A-xi ww- - sr' aut., - at I 3 Q. Gm , K3 1 xi A-G Mft Q , . BARRY DEICKLER Barry . . . workman . . . baseball hat . . . red hair . . . Bedford . . . bane of Senior homeroom . . . sharp dres- ser out of school. No firmer, but not quite a mint. Baseball 2g Chorus 2g Greeley Tribune 2. JANINE DEVYS France . , . what hair . . . that green car . . . Whooping Cough . . . philosophy . . . satirist supreme of American education . . . C'6tait trois strikes! The only reward for virtue ir virtue. JOHN PATRICK DIAMOND jack . . . smiling Irish eyes . . . snappy clothes . . . sports reporter . . . hall conversations . . . yeah . . . Notre Dame fanatic . . . works only for a large Sally-ry. A good beurt'r worth gold. Baseball 2, 3, 45 Football 2, 3 , 45 Yearbook 1, 2, 3, 43 Sports Editor 45 Greeley Tribune 1, 2, 33 Intra- murals 1, 2, 3, 4g Senior Play 4g Foot- ball Manager 2g G. O. 4. 19 . If uv 1 28+ gf . AY ' , 1 If If Gxq r' f LY' NANCY MCCORMICK DREHER Nan . . . Dramatics, dramatics, and dramatics . . . horses, especially Kil- roy . . . swimming . . . canoeing . . . Mlle. la Tortue . . . perfectionist. Style is the dress of thoughts. French Club 1, 25 Sketch Club 15 Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3, 45 President 4. GAY FORSYTHE Gay . . . Blonde bombshell . . . cheerie . . . sweaters n' skirts . . . a dream in a formal . . . laughing blue eyes . . . We-ell? . . . jalopies. Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. G.O. 1, 25 Committee of Twelve 3, Vice-President 45 Service Club 3, 45 Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Cheerlead- ing 2, Captain 3, 45 Hockey 3, 45 Basketball 3, 45 Homeroom Presi- dent 35 Leader Corps 45 French Club 25 Yearbook 45 May Queen 3, Atten- dent 25 Candidate for Miss Greeley 45 Senior Play 4. MONTGOMERY T. FURTH lan lil0UT'l D l .1 fb 5: Monty . . . 16 . . . math fiend . . . Mons Gomericus . . . Ego veto Q censeo . . . editor of Yearbook . . . . ev jeep . . . can do anything. Q! , 5 ,, ,. . Q 5 . Q A N Success awazts you tn whatever you , . D, A undertake. 1 il L Track 1, 2, 3, 45 Dramatics 1, 2, K' 5- 3, 45 Creative Writing 35 Intramut- X .5- als 1, 2, 45 Senior Pla 45 Class Presi- f J? dent 35 Editor-in-Chief, yearbook 45 Xp' Mixed Chorus 3, 45 Senior Boys' Quartet 45 Committee of Twelve 45 Evaluating Committee 3, 4. 20 'E Z I ,Q u g tvmyv at 4 . 4 sic SALLY GOUTELL Sally . . . that waistline . . . Goodle . . . Rings on her ingersn . . . hockey . . . 'Tm just a country boy . . . artistic Sal. Art is the perfection of nature. Hockey 3, 45 Sketch Club 1, 2, 4, Intramurals 3, 4, Yearbook 2, 4g Art editor 4g Greeley Tribune, Sports Editor 4, Dramatic Club 2, 3g Senior Play 4. WERNER I.. GRAF Werner . . . Ballet, and theatre pro . . . bubble, bubble, toil and trouble . . . music soothes the savage heart . . . opera. Music is the universal language of mankind. Track, manager 4g Intramurals 1, 2, 5, 4, French Club 2g Creative Writ- ing 3g Dramatic Club 2, 5, 4, Senior Play 4g Mixed Chorus 3, 4. BERTRAM S. GRIFFITH Bud . . . terrific parties . . . Will the meeting come to order? . . . cute smile . . . first bass of the quar- tet . . . Near You . . . Dancing in the Dark . . . The Great Lover. ln every thought sincere. Service Club 1, 3, 4g Dramatic Club 3, Mixed Chorus 2, 4, Youth Coun- cil, Treasurer 43 Band 1, 2, 35 Vice- President 4, Boys' State Alternate 3, G.O. 3, 4g Track 34 Boys' Glee Club lg Auditorium Committee 4g Presi- dent of Class 4, Senior Play 45 Athletic Council, Treasurer 4. 21 3' DRANATI 6 mv '11', Q 2 A .A 3 N AND' f X C fu 0 qi 5'3 '4.0 fy: ig ta 5 1 ' 'E 'T qv - -1...-.. A i x LYNN THOMAS GRIGGS Lynn . . . dramatics . . . The Point . . . cars . . . pretty shoes and more shoes . . . always treasurer of some- thing. lt matter: not bow long you live, but how well. Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3, 45 Treasurer 53 Class Treasurer 2, 3g French Club 2g Creative Writing 35 Yearbook Business Manager 4g Athletic Coun- cil Secretary 3g Service, Club 3, 4. ADA HARCOURT Ada . . . blonde . . . one way ticket to Boston . . . Ader . . . knit two, purl two . . . Nantucket . . . Please buy a Yearbook . . . Take a letter . . . Senorita La Paloma. Service and companiombip form a matcblen pair. Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3, 4g Vice- President 35 Girls' Glee Club 25 Greeley Tribune 3, 43 Yearbook Assistant Editor 4g Leader Corps 3, 49 Basketball Manager 4g Senior Play 4g Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4, Corn- mittee of Twelve, Secretary 4g Class program chairman 3g Social Com- mittee 4. BARBARA JEAN HARPER Barbara . . . tall and quiet . . . future biologist . . . canoeing and cake-baking . . . basketball . . . Blue IV's captain . . . Larry. A peace above all earthly dignitie: it still a quiet comciencef' Dramatic Club 1, 23 Greeley Tribune 3, 4g Typing Manager 4g Red Cross Representative ,lg Yearbook Typing Manager 4. . 9 22 x 1. ul 015' pc 562368 0 R' All We A : J. if 1 f BQ, - 45' V X N . . 595 ,T em gg, A ...N v . xe- Q ID 'VI iv ' A MARY HEILMAN Mahry .. . ardent athlete . . . wrinkle nose . . . lover of Maine . . . wears others' clothes . . . hates Chinese food . . . A rolling stone never boils. From ber Jball read the perfect way: of honor. Class President 1, Vice-President 2g Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3, 43 President 3g G.O. 1, Committee of Twelve 45 Youth Council 2, 3g Girls' Chorus 2g Mixed Chorus 2, 39 Band Secretary 5, 4g jr. Red Cross President 4g Jr. Representative to Red Cross at Wellesley 3: Hockey 3, 4g Basket- ball 5, 4g Leader Corps 5, 4g Jr. Varsity Cheerleader 3, Captain 4. CHARLES HEURTLEY Charlie . Chas . . . iceman's handshake . . . Radio mania . . . ob- serves Scotch silence . . . scientist. Silence if more eloquent than words. KENNETH HIGGINS Kenny . . . smiles . . .yellow jalopy . . . Sir Gaylahad . . . Basketball pro . . . just netvous. The force of bi: own merit make: bi: way. G. O. President 4g Vice-President 45 Service Club 3, 43 Committee of Twelve 33 Football 3, 4g Basketball 2, 3, 49 Vice-President of homeroom SQ Senior Play 45 Sketch Club 2. 23 V V. JOSEPH R. INFANTINO Joe . . . Swish . . . certain eye for 1 fi Cf. -4 Vw W. K .E 4 ' if s 4. Ei . 3 4 E 1 E sv ,, 3. Q5 ri lf, a. ,., ,. Q fs Ei if 1 Zi : Fl gig! p Vt 'tl if QQ? S N 1-3 ,f 'K , Sli. 11' Jew- ,..Z ' 1 53. 4' 3 i 1 K4 that basket . . . devilish gleam and horsy laugh . . . always on the go. Wit maker itr own welcome, and level: all distinctions. Basketball 1, 2, 3, 45 Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4g Committee of Twelve 3, 4, Service Club 3, 43 Class Vice-Presi- dent 4, Athletic Council, Vice-Presi- dent 43 Mixed Chorus 1. JAMES E. c. LEAVIT'I', JR. Jimmy . . . Joe College . . . Henry . . . loud clothes . . . saddle shoes . . . hair that stands out straight .. . . makes anyone laugh . . . track man . . . has brains but doesn't always use them. A laughing eye, a nimble wit, a friendly heart, that? all of it. Track 1, 2, 3, 4, Football 1, 2g Mixed Chorus 2, 3, Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3, Treasurer 4g Senior Play 4, Intra- murals 1, 2, 3, 45 Yearbook 1, adver- tising manager 4. ELLEN R. MACAULAY Nikki . . . fabulous parties . . .busy Editor . . . anybody got any news? . . . happy helper . . . fiend for knit- ting sweaters and making clothes. The Jecret of .tucceu is comtancy to purpoxef' Greeley Tribune 1, 25 News Editor 3, Editor-in-Chief 4, Creative Writ- ing 3g Yearbook 1, 2, 4, Senior Play 4. 24 - I . so ll 0 sw ns:-4 ,4 5' S ffm: fan b rv ,-,N ,4 if :fl 1 2 x X lg N 3. X , Alf, iv S' IJ YQ faeelznxfe L., Gllililb I ' EDWARD JOHN MADLEY Ed . . . truck driver . . . gaiety is life . . . Park party crasher. A :mall body often harbors 4 great soul. Track 2, 4, Intramurals, basketball 1, 2, 3, 45 Football 1, 2, 3, 43 Base- ball, 1, 2, 4, Greeley Tribune 3, 4. BARBARA MATHEWS Barbara . . . can make a pen work wonders . . . Do you mind if I sketch you? . . . poetry . . . Cute blouses. 'The poet can reach where the .nm can not. Creative writing 3, 45 Sketch Club 1, 2, 3, French Club 15 Jr. Red Cross 2, President 35 Vice-President 4. PETER B. MCCORISON Pete . . . Pleasantville . . .composer . . . plays a mean tuba . . . fanatic at the piano . . . janitor and roof expert of the Canteen. Friendly counrel can of many foerf' Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President 34 President 4g Greeley Tribune 1. 25 5 xe, X. IP5 On .x 5 ll! 4 x L ,b 5. 1 'x ialllf E 1 awww-1. new-w 15 9 3. D' 'E 1 RSA fi if PHILIP MCLAUGHLIN Phillie . . . smooth dancer . . . that shy look . . . warm-climate-lover . . . will light for what he wants . . . his blue buggy never gets mentioned in school paper. Friendship ir the hand of reason. Football 1, 2, 33 Basketball 1, 2, In- tramurals 1, 2, 33 Freshman Basket- ball team 1. JAMES ARTHUR MORRISON jimmy . . . quiet, but with a sprinkle of dashing . . . cackling laugh . . . new shoes. - Give every man thy ear, but few thy voice. Football 1, 2, manager 1, Track 1, 25 Senior Chorus 33 Intramurals, Foot- ball 3, 4g Basketball 1, 2, 3, Prop Committee Senior Play 4. ROBERT R. MUESER Bob . . . Moose . . . tall, dark and handsome . . . pastel-colored shirts . . . . letters from Mary . . . staunch basketball center . . . life guard. ReaJon and judgment are the qualities of a leader. Vice-President of Class 33 Home- room President 23 Service Club 3, 4, President 4, Committee of Twelve, Vice-President 33 G.O. 3, 4, President Athletic Council 35 Football 2, 3, 43 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Track 2, 3, 43 Volleyball and Basket- ball Intramurals 1, 2. 26 Lo R194 4 xi .Quant 5:4 V J I 1: , . , I h, fl in Qu. ' . . ow e 'P N. -si ' 'fl fi i 722216 L Oz FRANCIS MURPHY Murph . . . big joker . . . outstand- ing on the baseball diamond . . . twinkle in his eye . . . the fun flies fast and furiously. The quiet mind if richer than a crown. Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4g Football 2, 34 Basketball Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. LEE SPENCER OLSON Lee . . . promoter . . . history Bend . . . Canteen President . . . G. O. worker . . . low-down bass . . , Mac- beth . . . Toni? Hit affetf are n high ambition and the ability to attain it. G. O. 1, 2, 35 Greeley Tribune 1, 2, Yearbook 1, 4, Circulation Manager 4, Dramatic Club 3, Basketball Manager 5, Football Manager 1g Mixed Chorus 5, 4, Youth Council 3, 4, President 4. NICHOLAS PALMIERI Nicky . . . Honest Nick . . . smile for everyone . . . terror on any athletic field or court . . . friend of the world . . . Oh, go to health! Tough, but oh to gentle. Baseball 1, 2, 5, 4, Football 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, Service Club 45 Committee of Twelve 4. 27 5 Ye ts, I We Q1 .ii f, t . X y mf. ,u.,3,s . X 9 K ,,1,.,.,H,,- . vtqt:'.s'..m 1 - Q., .V -is g'55.'.f.a1y. ' ,mVg,f:-5,','.nf, V H t,'Ii't'nIhn 'lf.. t i ,mf,w.. t ,,, ? , RX 7 ' x '41, if 9 xxx 40,21 Q M5 PAMELA ANNE PROCTOR Pammy . . . super cheerleading jump . . . last walker . . . quiet . . . darling smile . . . chic wardrobe . . . loves the out-of-doors. Silence if the fence around wisdom. Committee of Twelve 4g Varsity Cheerleader 3, 43 Hockey Manager 4g Sketch Club 1, 2g Creative Writ- ing 4g French Club 2. ROBERT BYRON SANDERS, JR. Bob . . . tall and handsome . . . Rapsody in Blue . . . sweet tenor . . . versatile . . . green convertible . . . I'm Always True to You Darl- ling. Make mine muxicf' Attended Lower Merion High School, Ardmore, Pennsylvaniag Football 4g Mixed Chorus 43 Boys' Quartet 4g Basketball 4g Baseball 4g Youth Club 4. I LILIAN HELEN SCHROEDER Lil . . . sultry eyes . . . swell ward- robe . . . knirs sweaters . . . admires butch haircuts . . . fickle. I um wealthy in my friendff' French Club 23 Service Club 3, 4g juniorVarsity Cheerleader 3gVarsity Cheerleader 4, Intramurals 1, 2, 5, 4g Hockey 3, Basketball 3, 43 Dram- atic Club 1, 3, 43 Girls' Glee Club 25 Greeley Tribune lg Yearbook 4. W 28 V 09 I- : A 1 ix , f i f ., C16 Ciwi ' ipwfom s xc l k llpokxwlo XXX nw l-C IQQ6 X. HOWARD RALPH SHU'I'E Howie . . . Oh gee . . . Millwood Manor Taxi . . . tackling tactics . . . locker 313 leaner . . . history dream- er .. . Where are You? . . . crew cut. The man that hlusher is not quite a brute. Track 35 Football 1, 2, 3, 45 Base- ball 1, 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM D. SMITH Little Bill . . . Smitty . . . famous for pink socks . . . fiend in Chem. lab .... sly smile . . . Nancy's pet peeve . . . vice versa. Nothing is imponihle to 4 willing heart. Service Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-Presi- dent 4g Committee of Twelve 25 G. O. 2, 45 Vice-President 4, Dram- atic Club 2g Baseball 2g Track 35 Football 1, 2, 3, 45 Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4. SHARON LOUISE SPALDING Sherri . . . passion for convertibles . . . Chinese nails . . . broken toes . . . dirndl skirts and wide belts . . . Deep Purple. She hath a mind as round at a hell. Service Club 3, 4g Leader Corps 45 Greeley Tribune 2, 3, 4g French Club 25 Class Treasurer 4g Secretary for Service Club 4. 29 u Vo M me 1 L+ -tw , W we ,Lf Wmw ANDREW D. STUDDIFORD Andy . . . photo nut . . . gun-mad sportsrnan . . . keystone of football line . . . Ahnda . . . connoisseur of food and women. Friend.rbip'.r the wine of life. Football 2, 3, 4g Baseball 2, 4, Dram- atic Club 1, 3, Mixed Chorus 3, 4, Yearbook 2, 3, 4. MARCIA SVIRSKY Marcia . the artist . . . naturally curly hair . . . colored socks . . . dis- rupter of Tulsa, Oklahoma. The good and wire lead quiet liver. Sketch Club 1, 2, 3, 4g Creative Writing 33 Yearbook 4. JOAN TIERNEY joanie . . . freckles . . . Jo . . . giggles . . . fun to be with . . . Service Clubber . . . heart breaker . . . Chee. Quiet, to be ture, until you know her Service Club 3, 45 Greeley Tribune 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club 1g Sketch Club 2, 3, 45 Hockey Manager 3: Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4. 30 sv'-an Ll Q 53 lx' 444. Xfl- ', vsfjl at xt! fgf 1 tt ' 7 . Sax X fi ' x lx 9 r l .s ' + .16 -5, I X LOIS VANDEROEF . . . corsages . . . sweaters with the sleaves pushed up . . . Paul . . . painting . . . knitting . . . Mother Mistress of the Novices . . . sweet- ness. There if no wealth like a quiet and peaceful mind. Sketch Club 1, 2, Mixed Chorus 3, 4, Girls' Chorus 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club 5, 4, Yearbook 4, Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4, Basketball 4, Senior Play 4, Greeley Tribune 1. GEORGE WALKER Pete . . . long drink of water . . . motorcycles . . . rare and subtle humor. Men of few word: are the bert men. Dramatic Club 3, 4, Yearbook 39 Mixed Chorus 3, Track 1, 2, 3, 4, Football 2, 4. NANCY WALKER Wiggly . . . sparkling eyes . . . talkative . . . cute blush . . . giggling personality . . . King Tut talk . . . smart as a whip . . . lovable Nancy . . . Chinese food. Nothing it rarer than true good nature. Dramatic Club 1, 2, 3, 4, program chairman 3, Leader Corps 3, 4, Cheerleader 4, Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4, French Club 2, Greeley Tribune 3, 4, Yearbook 2, 4, Literary Editor 4, Class Secretary 1, 2, 3, 4, Basket- ball 3, 4, Senior Play 4. 31 we '1'v'+x '15 ,,,. ,f x,,., I P i L . r F. SHENTON WRIGHT Buzzy . . . Cadman clerk . . . look busy . . . wolf in sheeps' clothing . . . wavy hair . . . where rhere's mis- chief, there's Buzz. Oh, for a tlaoumnd tongues. Dramatic Club 33 Greeley Tribune 25 Assembly Manager 3g Nominat- ing Committee 4g Intramurals 1, 2. 32 .iw .r , X Abmmws v f M i -A 4 I A k - Ti? -6521212521: , 5594 Km Lf 1 Q ff X 3' 5 1 In W: , 0 . ,. Q - - N 1 1' 4 - ' 'F 'Q M ff X 5, ey fi 3 A4 K X-W JN 15 , c , 'I 3 C-I 1 5 A 'pk ' xi- X V A ' ' Z Q? ' F K ' -1- V' if A raw! X I 1 X -Q I Q -df ' A ' XJ xficki, A may V gl X ' . -4 I kj J Fw . . U 4 si xszirf I A vx. f , if N -N 5:1-f., 4 E 2 5 'J 3 5' ' QQ ' Y ' 1 1 3 TJ 'E 1' O R AC x xl J 5 x-,5.,,a. Q g FK 1 A QQVC',5k'g:5G1,f5ftg':'J I , s - W X Qa ' 5 J f C ' f Q K 3? Lk 'S TA' N3 4 'Ll ' X.- gl ,Q 'Q J 'lex L f f :QS : X KF: iv: Q 85 Kxcj Z , '21 R4 7 '13 S :- E-1 43157: - l 14 ,l'-XWM' A f 4,-'J -13765 'Z 1: f- S' 1' 'Z or 5 -.- , X? :rm -9 'ix ' .X 1' X ' Q S . 4 ' b ' 'J if , '-is? 7 ' fx- X 5 ' 6, giixxg 'F ' X glut.. .Ai T? s . A , X 'L Y 4 '-if -5 qv-Lang HUAINS . LVE SEE OURSELVES... CLASS DREAMERS BEST DANCERS Sharon Spalding, jimmy Morrison janet Darling, Phil McLaughlin MOST FUN Jimmy Leavitt, Nancy Walker CLASS LOVERS Gay Forsythe, Ken Higgins CRADLE ROBBERS t 12? A s by . ' 5 f xy Y a 'V 1 1 X-, VX, J X K XX 34 BIGGEST EATERS Ellen Macaulay, Howard Shute BEST LOOKING janet Darling, Bob Mueser TEACHERS' PETS Tklfxnan En.-fl-. Taming. 'IWQUUQ ..AS NANCY WALKER ...... SALLY GOUTELL ........ CON NIE KETCHUM ......... NANCY WALKER ........ ELLEN MACAULAY ......... ..... SALLY GOUTELL' ........... ....... I W 5,1 ,.-my-V V-rv f. -.m,,,,,, OTHERS SEE US Moxt fun Bane of the copr Bext athletes Zaniest Beft parties Moft dangerous on wheel: ELLEN MACAULAY ......... ...... M oft dangeroux on foot. JAN IN E DEVYS ......... Teacberir pets NANCY WALKER ........ ........ B iggeft eater: ....... SALLY GOUTELL ....... ....... A libi artist! ....... JANET DARLING ............. .............. C las: loverx ......... LILLIAN SCHROEDER CONNIE KETCHUM .. Done H.G.fortlae most. Donetbe rno5tforH.G.. SHARON SPALDING ....... ........ C las: dreamer: ....... CONNIE KETCHUM .. ADA HARCOURT ...... LYNN GRIGGS ....... JANET DARLING ...... JANET DARLING ...... LYNN GRIGGS ....... Clan promoter: Cradle robbery Most collegiate Cutext :mile Mostfun onadate..... Clan actor: JANET DARLING .......... .......... B est dancers ......... BARBARA HARPER ......... ........ S een but not beard NANCY WALKER ...... ........ H eard but not seen NANCY WALKER ...... ..... S illiest laugh ..... JANET DARLING ...... ....... B est looking ....... 35 MONTY FURTH RUBY HUBER NICK PALMIERI PETE MCCORISON BUD GRIFFITH RUDY HUBER ART JERKEY .. ........ MONTY FURTH ART JERKEY RUDY HUBER BOB SANDERS JAMIE YUILLE BUD GRIFFITH .. ...... FRANK MURPHY . ........ MONTY FURTH BILL SMITH BOB SANDERS KEN HIGGINS BOB SANDERS MONTY FURTH .. ......... PHIL MCLAUGHLIN CHARLIE HEURTLEY RUDY HUBER WERNER GRAF BOB MUESER .. V, ,F - lu tglllllltll unhfleslnm ani 'crass OF NINEFFEN-HUNDRED FIFTY Alias THE NIFTY FIFTY We the class of '50, being void of mind, but full of spirit, do bequeath to those listed below our most precious possessions. To Mr. McGill, we leave the fond memory of four awful years of Furth and Leavitt on the track team. To Miss Kurson, we leave 50 contest winners. To Miss Barry, we leave text books that do not change. To Mr. Houmiel, we leave fountain pens that need no refilling and unbreakable lab equipment. To Mrs. Fenn, we leave the remains of a schmoo. To Mr. Reinhart, we leave an electric mixer. To Mr. Spear, we leave a shield. To Miss Murphy, we leave unlimited funds and a filing cabinet for next year's year- book. To Mrs. Keiper and Miss Irwin, we leave a gold whistle and stable basketball rules, and to Mr. Whittleton, we leave 11 miners' headlamps for late football practice. To the future seniors of H.G. some of our cherished belongings: To 1. Them that hills of Dogpatch 2. Cathy Fressie 3. johnny Schaub 4. Nancy West 5. Judy Clement 6. Ellen Roberson 7. Barbara Stahl 8. The juniors 9. Nobody 10. Johnny Shure 11. Donald Caetano 12. Next year's cheerleaders 13. George Holloway 14. Future talent shows 15. Mickey Warburton 16. Dick Tierney 17. Gerry Diamond 18. Future yearbook editors WE LEAVE Our Sadie Hawkins Dance Cnever again to be used but to be kept in memory of our beloved classb Our H202-hydrogen peroxide jimmy's collegate saddle shoes Nancy's giggle Sally's hockey stick Ellen's silly questions Our famous parties The cafeteria and the jukebox Our wealth Mary's clarinet Howie's jalopy Our six cheerleaders' ability Andy's pipe Mary, Gay, Nancy, and Ada's silent singing Pete W.'s height Rudy's mailbox jack's drivers' license Monty's gray hair and wrinkles 36 W fav, ' Q' ' Q? ! ' D Ji? 01- !. XX X l 1 8 wk' -if ' fig f5g ii:ff2: '7 X X X15 f A M f , R f P4 TW -ll . X X 4!C: gy N T4 - , W ' -X 1, . f ' fl! - qc- xi .'5g -. ff f fgx ,sh md Q Mein' Liffsf Ul7l'0r.r 'P Bottom row: Miles, Hutchinson, Snyder, Kluge, Roberson, Stahl, Ortlieb, Griffith. Second row Romaine Chidester, Burke, Anderson, Deare, Lundvall, Fressie, S. Smith, Warburton. Third row Nicolaysen, Eilers, Niebuhr, Fingar, Carlier, Marasco, Schumacher, R. Smith. Top row: Plate Angell Banning Tierney, Pappalardo, Chaleski, Pearson, Carrozza, Laughrey, Lenz. THE UNIOR CLASS The juniors had a top-notch year. Led by Mickey Warburton, they gave a most popular movie, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, as well as the traditional Junior Prom, always a success. There was much plan- ning and work put into the spirited race for G.O. ofhce in the spring. The Class of 1951 entered its senior year with a high percentage of representatives on both boys' and girls' varsity teams, the newly formed Honor Society and many other activities, and was in general very well prepared for an outstanding senior record. Half of this page was contributed by the Junior Class. 38 From Row: Davin, Sanders, Barrett, McCorison, Tuthill, Ziller, Durgin, Wallis. Second Row: Elluzzi Parsons, Fyfe, Freeman, Kuperschmid, Deering, Clark, Huberth, Wheeler, Fowler. Third Row McIntyre, Diamond, Mann, Ehrman, West, Mergentime, Simon, Walsh, johannsen, J. Nardozzi B. Nardozzi, Moore, Bell. Fourth Row: Pappalardo, Devys, Schumacher, Thomas, Vasquez, Trapani Prigitano, Green, Klassen, Burkhart, Butte. Fifth Row: Schloemer, Mitchell, Burns, Buebendorf Carlson, Diack, Holloway, Houlton, Schroeder, Frost, Svirsky, Turner, Judd. THE OPHOMCRE CLASS The Sophomore class came out with flying colors this year in the field of sports. Both boys and girls were well represented in intramural and interscholastic games. Peter Svirsky was G.O. Treasurer, the first Sophomore in Horace Greeley to hold this office. In the fall the class of '52 gave their project Sinbad the Sailor and on March 17 they sponsored a dance. Both projects were well received by the students. The class participated in all school activities proving themselves to be one of the most industrious and efficient groups in H.G. They are looking forward to a more successful junior year. Half of this page was donated by the Sophomore Class. 39 1 First row: Foulds, Hogan, Heurtley, Vanderoef, Monteiro, England, Goutell, LePage, Simms, Bates Donham. Second tow: Clement, J. Scott, Deickler, Figgatt, Flint, Freeman, Spalding, Harper, Park DuPont, Baker, Gillespie. Third row: Cain, Dreher, Smith, Forsyth, Raymond, Rodriguez, Nichols Oehman, Roth, Mueser, L. Panetta, P. Deems, Madley. Fourth row: 1. Panetta, Jockers, Patterson Wascheck, Johnson, Kattau, M, Deems, Johnston, Proctor, Wilson, Harris, Macklin, Wickenden Fifthirowz Corrigan, Iverson, Caetano, F. Scott, Boshes, Karol, Warren, Hesslein, Deyo, Law, Brickey Welsh, Houmiel, Goldbeck. Sixth row: Lehman, Macaulay, Hochreiter, Schaub, Thomas, Chtistenson Blacker, Shute, Terwilliger, Trapani, Wright, Sheldon, Holmen. THE FRE HMAN CLASS The Freshman Class, led by Frank Lehman, has accomplished much as a whole and individually this year. With the support of the rest of the high school students, they gave a dance in March which was highly successful. An enthusiastic and ambitious class, the Freshmen are now fully pre- pared for further High School life. Half of this page was contributed by the Freshman Class. 40 ' Bottom row: Freeman, Gedney, Heminway, Elliott, Mitchell, Hansen, Latane, Hoeft, Sylvester, Ryer Williams. Second row: Gommi, Blacker, Harcourt, Paine, joy, Goble, MacBain, Lawrence, McKenny Bisco, Swenson. Third row: Foulds, Mathews, Durgin, MacLaury, Romaine, Brundage, Lynds, Angell Winckler, Thomas, Sellner,-Bernson, Renaud, Jenkins, Molnar, Wedgewood. Fourth row: Wessels Biltchik, Barrett, Mahoney, Hoffarth, Kadel, Chapman, Herrington, Graiflin, Morabito, Wehse, Reiger Fifth row: McGarry, Davis, Neibuhr, Saari, Craig, Warren, Lyons, Ross, Dunn, Yoars, Fleischer, Slader Dedde, Caetano, Mitchell, Elluzzi, Cannella. Top row: Butte, Torsleff, Hungerford, Denniston, Piper Harrell, Tuthill, Kugelman, Wintersteen, Decker, Noller, Selleck, Henzel. THE EIGHTH GRADE The class of 1954, led by President Eric Harrell, has taken an enthusi- astic part in school activities this year. The production of Fort Apache marked their first project and was a great success. We hope that their achievements will be as favorable throughout high school. Half of this page was contributed by the Eighth Grade. 41 Q n First row: Jockers, Page, Simon, Stearn, Volckhausen, Brown, Van Urk, McCann, Fleischer, Haskins Second row: Johnson, Sundberg, Goldsby, Hamblen, Mitchell. Hecht, Cassell, Brooks, Reed, Eilers Third row: Chidester, Prigirano, Viscomi, Harris, Curtiss, Parsons, Lawrence, Angell, Washburn Brownell, Kattau, Sedgwick. Fourth row: Gooding, O'Neill, Pearson, DuPont, Orser, Romaine, Esty Shipman, Brown, Kluge, Chaplin. Fifth row: Kiefer, Davion, Lopez, Jaeger, O'Brien, Black, Gilburg Bogaty, Trainer, Lauber, Lang, Whitman, Russell, Noller. Sixth row: Broadbent, Birch, Pykett, Baiker Robinson, Burns, Murtfeldr, Piller, Hochreiter, Nash, Kunath. THE SEVE TH GRADE The seventh graders were a little shaky on the seventh of September, but after the first month we got used to the crowded halls and changing classes. The G.O. gave a junior High Dance on December 19, and our grade put on a bang-up roller skating party later in the year. The ofhcers were: Billy Volckhausen, president, Alan Gilburg, vice president, John Trainer, secretary and Carol Hamblen, treasurer. Half of this page was contributed by the seventh grade. 42 fx:- 1 vii I X v 2 . . RITE Cjnvz If E Q98 MITTX ox: 60 Top Row Buebendorf, Warburton, B. Smith, Mueser, Diamond, Bakken, Griffith, Olson Kuper schmid Second Row: Davion, Decker, Harrell, Biltchik, Piper, Karol, Patterson, Goutell, Mr Rem hart Bottom Row: Harris. Snyder, Sanders, Svirsky, Higgins, Smith, Kluge, Macaulay. THE GE ER L ORGANIZATIO The G.O. got off to a good start under the able leadership of Connie Ketchum, our President. We sold Qlfk of the G.O. tickets, which is better than any previous year. In the middle of a busy autumn, we were faced with the sad news of Connie's leaving and the problem of no Vice-President after Ken Higgins' promotion to President. However, we brought forth a Christ- mas Formal, a Junior High dance, and sports dances. We organized a French Drive for each month starting in December. The G.O. spent time solving the rivalry problems with Katonah. An inter-school dance was given, and plans made for future projects. When the Vice-Presidency was filled after a close election, by Bill Smith, our executive meetings resumed their full size. Mr. Reinhart has been our helpful advisor. This page was donated by the General Organization. 44 Front Row: Infantino, Forsythe, Bakken, Harcourt, Furth. Back Row: Miss Barry, Warburton, Proctor Palmieri, Stahl, Heilman, Mr. Rhinehart. THE COMMITTEE OF TWELVE The Committee of Twelve is the judicial body of our school. It is composed of ten students elected by the student body each spring, and two faculty members, Miss Barry and Mr. Reinhart. This year, under their president and chief justice, David Bakken, the Committee elected the new Service Club members, ran many suc- cessful fire drills, and tried cases, exacting punishments according to the demerit system organized in 1949. 45 First Row: Darling, Schroeder, Smith, B. Mueser, Higgins, Angell, Snyder, J. Griffith. Second Row. Stahl, Tierney, Forsythe, Flint, Griggs, Harris, G. Mueser, Warburton, Mr. Taylor. Third Row. Huberth, Palmieri, B. Griffith, Vanderoef, Karol, Kuperschmid, Deering, Infantino, Pearson. THE SENIOR SERVICE CLUB The Senior Service Club, which acts as the school's police force, is an organization fairly unique to Horace Greeley. The members regulate traiiic in the halls, assist during fire drills and auditorium programs, and keep order in the gym at basketball games. Members are elected by the Committee of Twelve to serve for the rest of their high-school term. This year, headed ably by Bob Meuser, and beginning the season with an initiation some- what quieter than previous ones, the Club carried on its duties as well as always. Sitting: Chaplin, Sylvester, Harcourt, Henzel, MacBain, D. Angell. Standing: Jaeger, Lawrence, Fleischer, B. Angell, Prigitano, Mr. Taylor. THE JUNIOR SERVICE CLUB The Junior Service Club, under the direction of Mr. Taylor, is made up of two repre- sentatives from each of the seventh and eighth grade homerooms. This year Mike Pierce was president of the club. The Junior Service Club assists the Senior Service Club by collecting attendance slips and cards, distributing notices, standing at assigned posts, taking hall duty during periods and nrher such funCti0nS. Sitting: Fingar, Flint, Barrett, Wright. Standing: Mr. Reinhart, Mrs. Kieper, Miss Risoli, Mr. Baldwin THE NOMINATING COMMITTEE The Nominating Committees job is to go over every nomination for school offices to see if the nominee will be able to carry the added responsibility. The committee is ably advised by Mr. Baldwin, Miss Risoli, and Mr. Reinhart. THE HORACE GREELEY CHAPTER NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY Charter Members, Election of Spring 1950 BARBARA MATHEWS, '50 ADA HARCOURT, '50 PAMELA PROCTOR, '50 JOSEPH R. INFANTINO, '50 MONTGOMERY FURTH, '50 KENNETH HIGGINS, '50 JANINE DEVYS, '50 RAYMOND SMITH, '51 JUDITH ORTLIEB, '51 SHIRLEY SMITH, '51 Kneeling: Angell, Schumacher, Smith. Sitting: Lundvall, Kluge, Slader, Snyder, Romaine. 'PHESAFETY SQUAD This year the Safety Squad has shown great improvement in aiding the direction of school bus traffic. The Squad consisted of ten high school girls, and it was their job to see that the school was assured of bus safety. They kept the younger children from behind the busses and other areas of danger in the parking space, and saw that children were trans- ferred safely from one bus to another. Sitting: Kluge, Burkhart, Heilman, Mathews, Mrs. Fenn, Tierney. Standing: Burns, Nichols, Smith, Mclntyre, Wintersteen, Kattau, Pillar, Warbunon, Blacker, Thomas. THE JUNIORRED CROSS The junior Red Cross, with Mary Heilman as President, started its season with a Miss Greeley Contest and Fund Drive. The students cooperated with enthusiasm with their food donations for the two Milbank Homes at Thanksgiving. A group of girls showed their spirit by doing volunteer work at Grasslands Hospital. The workers raised money for a School Chest by selling pieces of cake during lunch hour. The shop classes made the chest and the students brought the articles, while the G.O. donated a soccer ball. j.R.C.'s last big project was a party given at the Children's home. Entertainment was provided by the school band and chorus. We are all proud of our year's accomplishments because we feel that at last we have been recognized as an organization which helps others and for which everyone can work. Bottom row: Forsythe, Anderson, Banning, Schroeder, Scott, Flint, Freeman, West, Durgin, Griggs Bell. Second row: Heilman, Stahl, Grithth, Miles, Laughrey, Leavitt, Darling, Dreher, Tuthill, Cain Slader, Harper. Third row: Deems, Bueti, Clement, Wilson, Deare, Romaine, Fressie, Hutchinson Roth, Baker, Mueser, Ziller, Walsh, J. Clark, Klassen, Fourth row: Dreher, Burkhart, Butte, Davin Harris, Sheldon, Green, Mitchell, Graf, Baker, Smith, Deyo, Fingar, Marasco, G. Walker, Roberson Top row: Harcourt, Wickenden, Iverson, Vanderoef, Hogan, XVelsh, Figgatt, Spalding, Furth, Burke McCorison, R. Clark, Mergentime. THE DRAMATIC CLUB The Dramatic Club, with Nancy Dreher as president, had a hne sea- son in 1949-1950. The year was certainly a full one, what with producing The Cradle Song during the fall, seeing As You Like It in New York and participating in the one-act play contest which it had won two years in a row, besides carrying the weekly routine of job assignments and work in business meetings. Another successful year in 1950-1951 seems a certainty. Half of this page was contributed by the Dramatic Club. 49 Barrett, Mclntyre, Diamond, Thomas, Park, Raymond, Rodriguez, johannsen, N. Walker. Fifth row: Left to Right: Svirsky, Terwilliger, Nichols, Goutell, Piazza, Oehman, Tierney. THE SKETCH CLUB The Sketch Club, under the direction of Mrs. Evelyn Knapp, was very active this year. We were shown techniques in work with silk screen by Mrs. Lamb, who gave us a lecture on design. Other people who talked to us this year were Mrs. Weiss and Mr. Guinzburg. We worked with such media as charcoal, watercolor, ink, pastel and finger paint. Sitting: Durgin, McCorison, Miss Kurson, Fressie, Hutchinson. Standing: Ortlieb, Mathews, Bell, Proctor. CREATIVE WRITING Is this poetry or prose? That line doesn't scan! But it did when I wrote it! The time between Monday seventh periods traveled quickly. Poems, essays, short stories or just plain sketches were composed at every moment the frantic creators could grab-lunch hour, between periods or in study hall. A heavy package went in from the class to the Scholastic contest, and the results were successful as always. Front row: Thomas, Klassen, Mathews, Houmiel, Paine, Shure, Foulds, Wascheck, Cannella, Grafilin Freeman, Herrington. Second row: Sheldon, Dreher, Orser, Davis, Griffith, Buebendorf, Iverson Wickenden, Heilman, McCorison, Grafrlin, Freeman, Houmiel, Denniston, Birch, DuPont, Craig Welsh. Last row: Mr. Herrington, Angell, Spalding, Chaleski, Schumacher, Clark, Law, Goble, Joy Figgart. THE HORACE GREELEY B The senior band, led by Mr. Herrington, instructor, with the help of Pete McCorison, president, has accomplished much during the past year. In new uniforms, the band has played for football games, Friday auditorium programs, the Harrison Music Festival, graduation and many other community projects. Now the members are all looking forward to a bigger and better year of 1950-1951. 51 First Row: Oehman, J. Smith, Wilson, Forsyth, Wright, Harris, Lenz. Second Row: Spalding, Banning, Deems, Trapani, J. Sanders, Davin, Park, Sheldon, Gillespie, Thomas, johannsen. Third Row: Deems, Mergentime, Bueti, Lundvall, Barrett, West, Mann, Roth, Walsh, Diamond, Mclntyre, Smith, Bell, Miss Chiappinelli. Fourth Row: Roberson, McCorison, Ziller, Deems, L. Madley, Baker, B. Madley, Schumacher, Clark, Klassen, Vanderoef. Fifth Row: Chaudruc, Graf, Baker, Sanders, Furth, Grifhth, Bakken, Olson, Studdiford, Wickenden, Eluzzi, Hesslein. THE MIXED CHORUS The Mixed Chorus had a successful year under Miss Chiappanelli, returned from het year as an exchange teacher in the school system of Glasgow, Scotland. The chorus gave two special assembly concerts as well as singing for the Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter programs and the Baccalaureate and Commencement services, A selected group was sent to participate in the All-State Chorus at the annual N.Y.S.S.M.A, festival in White Plains. First Row: Robinson, Kluge, Hecht, Brownell, Lawrence, Sedgwick, Harris, Wedgewood, Hochreiter. Second Row: Eilers, Lawrence, Blacker, Goble, Durgin, MacLaury, Brundage, Brooks. Third Row: Noller, Mitchell, Fleischer, Heofr, Heminway, Parsons, McCann, Curtiss, Washburn, Angell. Fourth Row: Baldwin, Noller, Pillar, Chaplin, Kiefer, Russell, Slader, Fleischer, DuPont, Yoars. Fifth Row: Esty, Whitman, Paine, Williams, joy, Sellner, Thomas, Lopez, Jaeger, Page, Haskins. THE JUNIOR CHORUS The junior Chorus has had a successful year with Miss Chiappanelli. The chorus gave one special assembly program in the spring and also sang in the Christmas Pageant for the Grade School and their parents. Left to Right: Lane, Kattau, Brown, Hamblen, johannsen, Miss Stewart, Washburn. THE LIBRARY ASSISTANTS The Library Assistants have proved themselves to be a great service to the school. Their duties include filing pamphlets, putting away new books, making out slips for over- due books, and changing the bulletin board. For one year's service a certificate is given and for two years' service a pin. THE SENIOR BOYS' QUARTET The Four Fifths were organized one day in Septem- ber, and from their first public appearance at the Sadie Hawkins Dance in October the school and public were treated to enthusiastic renditions of barbershop, spir- itual and even religious melodies. They sang at school and church dances, both for teen-agers and adults, for assemblies and special programs, at the Legion Min- strel Show and in church services. Since they were sing- ing purely for the fun of it, no critical appraisal Cfrom anyone but Miss Chiappinellij and no earnest sug- gestions that they start training for Talent Scouts, was paid much attention to. Several recordings were cut, for Mr. Willard and the boys' respective girl- friends. They had a grand time. Bob Sanders, Monty Furth, Bud Grifiith, David Bakken 53 Bottom Row: S. Spalding, Laughrey, Barrett, Macaulay, Harper, Butte, Clark. Second Row Miller Chidester Miles, Mergenrime, Banning, West, J. Spalding, Davin, Johannsen, Schumacher Third Row Madley, Patterson, Simms, Johnson, Blacker, Mr. Pollock. Top Row: Shure, Holmen, Wickenden Christensen. THE GREELEY TRIBUNE The Greeley Tribune staff, under the diligent editorship of Ellen Macaulay and advice of Mr. Pollock, turned out a printed paper for the first time in several years, which came out in four pages every two weeks. Despite the race to meet printer's deadlines, and the scramble for ads and subscriptions, the paper greeted its readers with the Three R's column, sports write-ups, the ever popular Scoopie, and many other items of interest. Now the Tribune, having reached a high level of good looks and quality, is ready for many more years of news and comment with stand- ards just as demanding. 54 42' xx - 'Wi Jax f 1, A Q - ff fiim QQ ffw-Qw , 'f fy 4 '7X H ' if 0' WZ 5Q11f3f'w A vi? SP RT V QM vm J cf CP' 7 9 , v, Q G 1.1-X f w x ,Q-D xx - A.. ,-.ln rfb, V Evfqxg X H313 ' - 4- fn dp QJQ1 .-9 Miss Irwin, Mr. Whittleton, Mrs.Kieper, Infantino, Snyder, Darling, Griffith THE ATHLETIC COUNCIL The Athletic Council met every Tuesday morning. Its many activi- ties included renting busses for away games, and selling basketball schedules, feathers, decals and school buttons. The main undertaking of the year was the organizing and purchasing of ingenious favors for the All-Sports Dinner. 56 First row: Smith, Walker, Angell, Forsythe. Second row: Harcourt, Snyder, Chidester, Stahl, Romaine Last row: Hellman, Ehrman, Miss Irwin, Fressie. LEADER CORPS The Leader Corps is a group of sophomore, junior and senior girls chosen for their leadership ability, dependability, cooperation, sports ability and general attitude. They referee intramural games, assist with play days, and take care of athletic equipment. The girls' honor teams are chosen each year by the Leader Corps on the basis of an athletic rules exam and the girls' demonstration of the same qualities required of the Corps. 57 Left to Right: Smith, Proctor, Forsythe, Schroeder, Darling. THE VARSITY CHEERLEADERS For the second year, these five peppy girls have helped spur our varsity teams along. Under the able hands of Gay Forsythe, these gals have created school-wide enthusiasm for our sports and pep rallies. The new squad next year, with four places vacated by graduation, will have a hard job of living up to the spirit these girls have incited. THE JUNIOR VARSITY CHEERLEADERS junior Varsity basketball games support and interest has been speeded up almost IOOWQ this year by an entirely new squad except for the captain, Mary Heil- man. These girls have worked hard to think up new cheers and improve upon the old ones. We're proud of these live Wires and know you all are too. Top to Bottom: Davin, I-Ieilman, Trapani, Walker, Angell. 58 Bottom Row: Mann, Roth, Ziller, Ehrman, Smith, Darling, Panetta, Clement. Middle Row: Proctor Cmanagerj, Slader, Sheldon, Hellman, Goutell, Davin, Ketchum, Angell, Selleck. Top Row: Miss Irwin, Bueti, Stahl, Lundvall, Kluge, Snyder, Butte, Romaine, Forsythe, Chidester, Mrs. Kieper, Raymond Cmanagerb. THE HONOR HOCKEY TEAMS The first honor hockey squad under the leadership of Miss jean Irwin won two games, dropped one, and drew even on the fourth. Mt. Kisco and Pleasantville were defeated 3-2 and 3-0 respectively. Briar- cliff held the feminine Quakers to a 0-0 tie and Class B Bronxville handed them their lone setback 4-0. The second honor team with Mrs. Kieper in charge also had a win- ning campaign of 3 and 2. Successes were scored over Mt. Kisco 2-1, Katonah 3-2, and Pleasantville 1-0. Briarcliff edged the Orange and Blue 3-2 and Bronxville won 3-0. Three girls made the Stuyvesant Field Hockey Association Public School Team: Sally Goutell, Shirley Smith and Barbara Stahl. 59 'H 32 Pappalardo 2 years Holloway 1 year M .,, , FOCTBALL-1949 Palmieri 4 years Shure Co-captain Schloemer 4 years All-county '49 2 years Co-Captain All-metropolitan '49 W. Smith 3 years Mueser Fingar Carlson Higgins Studdiford 3 years 3 years Zyears 2 years 3 years Warburton Carrozza Houlton 3 years 2 years 1 year letterrnan letterman Schroeder 2 years Marasco R. Smith Fyfe Caetano Huber 2 years 1 year 2 years 1 year 1 at H.G. HORACE GREELEY SCHEDULE OPPONENT letterman 20 Croton-Harmon 7 14 F. E. Bellows 6 6 Irvington 13 19 New Canaan 6 13 Mt. Kisco 6 26 Briarcliff 6 21 Katonah 13 110 sg Sanders 1 at H.G. Yuille 2 years letterman First row: Yuille, Sanders, Studdiford, W. Smith, Mueser, Palmieri, Shure, Higgins, Fingar, Schloemer Pappalardo, Carlson, Carrozza, Warburton. Second row: Walker, Warren, Marasco, Frost, Fyfe, Scull Caetano, Rieger, Holloway, Schroeder, R. Smith, Houlton, Huberth. Third row: Mr. Whittleton ONeill Cmanagerj, Fowler, Plate, Schaub, Macaulay, Scott, Deering, Wheeler, Kuperschmid fman agerj , Mr. Spear. With Mark Whittleton and Roy Spear taking over the coaching reins, the 1949 Greeley football machine rolled to six wins, while suffering one setback. The lone setback was dealt by Irvington, 13-6, in a closely-contested match. However, the Quakers scored impressive wins over Croton-Harmon, F. E. Bellows, New Canaan, Mt. Kisco, Briarcliff, and our rival Katonah. In the latter contest the Quakers combined their strength and fighting spirit to come back after being behind 15-0 at half time and wound up on top, 21-13. The plaque, which symbolizes a victory for the winning school, was brought back to Chappaqua shortly after. Coach Whittleton, despite the loss of eight linemen and two backs through graduation, should have another victorious squad next season with lettermen Tom Schloemer, high scorer with 30 points, Mickey Warburton, Tony Pappalardo, Ronnie Carlson, Lee Fingar, and Tony Carrozza pacing the Orange and Blue 11 of 1950. Nick Palmieri, a stellar performer in athletics for four years, received all-county and all-Metropolitan honors by making the respective first teams. These are among the highest honors accorded high school gridsters and their teams. Congratulations to the coaches, players, managers, and all who made it possible to have a bang-up season. 61 Kneeling Palmieri, Smith, Infantino fcaptainD, Chaleski, I-liggins. Standing: Mr. Kieper Bakken Carlier, Marasco, Sanders, Mueser, Griflith Cmanagerb. VARSITY BASKETBALL 1949-1950 Under the leadership of Coach Frank Kieper, in his third year of varsity coaching, the 1949-1950 H.G.H.S. cage squad ran up eight vic- tories, while bowing nine times. With a league record of 4-4, our hoop- sters finished in a tie for third place in the N.W.I.L. All in all, they did well considering the tough schedule and the amount of material that was available. Senior and captain joe Infantino captured high scoring honors by netting 177 points. In the third annual all-star game the Quakers were represented by three players: Nick Palmieri, repeating from last year, Bob Mueser, and Infantino. The Orange and Blue nailed one berth on the all-league five, selected by Westchester publishers, officials, and coaches. joe Infantino received this award. 62 Kneeling: Schloemer, Scott, Kuperschmid, Panetta, Schroeder. Standing: Mr. Spear, Vanderoef Lehman, Freeman, Carlson, Holloway, Deering fmanagerl. Not shown: Warburton. JUNIOR VARSITY BASKETBALL The Junior Varsity went through a rugged- season, winning nine times and losing eight decisions. They compiled the same league record as the Varsity, 4-4. Floyd Scott led the squad in scoring by grossing 108 markers. Although the record for the Quaker juniors was not outstanding, many of Roy Spears cagers look very promising. This will be realized next year when the 1951 basketball season rolls around, minus seven from this campaign. 63 I Bottom Row: Vanderoef, Slader, West, Lundvall, Harcourt, Davin, Sanders. Middle Row: Miss Irwin Fxggatt Panetta, Clement, Meuser, Mann, Devys, Deickler, Mrs. Kieper. Top Row: Heilman Nat dozzi Smith, Darling, Chidester, Walker, Forsythe, Snyder, Stahl, Ehrman. GIRLS' BASKETBALL This year, instead of the usual two squads chosen by the Leader Corps, one basketball honor team was chosen after tryouts, consisting of twenty-one girls and three managers. One-fourth of the team con- sisted of freshmen who looked rather lost at times against some of our taller opponents. After hours of practice and expert coaching the girls were divided into two squads. Squad A started the season off right by beating Katonah 56-29, while squad B tied 25 all. Both squads were downed by Scarsdale 35-45, and 20-42, but came back into their own against Bedford with squad A scoring 34-23, and squad B 26-21. By the last two games several valuable players were missing because of ill- ness. Although the season ended with defeats from Briarcliff C21-29 and 18-295 and Pleasantville C26-49 and 34-345 the team enjoyed a suc- cessful season because they played good basketball. 64 Sitting: Dedde Cmanagerb, Carrozza, Higgins, Palmieri, Warburton, Murphy. Standing: Decker Cmanagerj , Chaleski, Schroeder, Schaub, Hardy, Marasco, Diamond, Davis Cmanagerb. BASEBALL 1949 The 1949 baseball nine had a mediocre season winning three games and compiling eight losses. Bob Hardy was the leading hurler with two wins, over Mt. Kisco 9-3 and Somers 9-5. Bob Schroeder beat Briarcliff 3-2 in an upset. Lettermen returning to the 1950 squad were outfielders Chaleski and Warburton, inlielders Higgins, Carozza, Murphy, and Diamond, pitchers Shure and Schroeder, and pitcher-catcher Nick Palmieri. Murphy was also the leading slugger, hitting at a .486 clip. While the 1949 team wasn't too successful, this year's squad should have a winning season with some valuable lettermen who are back. 65 TRACK-1949 Top row: Wheeler, Anderson, Ferguson, Fingar, Kuperschmid. Second row: Schloemer, Smith Clark Plate Deering, Robertson, Huberth, Boman. Bottom row: Hopkins, Walker, Mueser, Bakken, Futth Leavitt, Stahl, Quinby. The Greeley cinder men, winning three and losing two of a tough Eve- meet schedule, had a successful 1949 season. In the Class C Championships at White Plains, half-miler Ed Stahl turned in a fine record-breaking performance only to be nipped at the tape by an equally excellent Irvington competitor. Miler Erik Nicolaysen took a third place while Bob Clark and Bob Mueser tied for third place in the high jump. Charlie Boman won the pole vault and also placed in the broad jump. Three school records were broken in 1949. Ed Stahl set a half-mile record of 2:07.6, Erik Nicolaysen set a mile record of 4:52, and Charlie Boman set a pole vault record, going over the bar at 10' S . When spring practice rolls around in 1950, speedy Alan Quinby, de- pendable Ed Stahl, and flashy Charlie Boman will have graduated, leaving returning lettermen Monty Furth, Bob Clark, Pete Huberth, Erik Nicolaysen, and Jim Leavitt to carry the brunt of the point-getting assignments. These veterans, while teaming up with the new comets, could very easily make the 1950 season a winning one. 66 x .Q X Y, 'Vg-.5 .xf. cw., E-5,1 I 'sk J vs ws iv Q x swf' it 5:,. K - 8 . f . l '.',l,, AWK xvmif' L ii 5 7. I I' vs . .1-i'5 .- -Q A , I F ' Yu ,V,zi v n V1 . W M Q my x J?' . 421369175 . rv A? wm- vyfn, , 'W .L p .A 1 In Misa-QYA D hi? V Q. 4 vw-an fx LV m,., , , ,lf azz 1 -'-- .- f - -fi., A f Y X I V -3. Ve 'K QNX . ,YV-mf 1 . ,A ff 1 'x Q E I -is 6 V - 5 mf-CYNR 591' ' 'Aw Sf' 4.1, ffm fl 3517! I A ,,., V' fwr-fa. K' A pr-i fx W1 rm, 5 ' ..5..raseu!91l!F4 5'fT 125 72' ' -'Q P -fav: H GIRLS' INTRAMURALS Upon her entrance to high school each girl is permanently assigned to either the Orange or Blue League. Separate teams within each League are chosen by the Leader Corps for every intramural sport. A girl must participate in a majority of intramural games to qualify for an honor team. HOCKEY This year there were four hockey teams in each League competing against each other. The winning Orange team played against the winning Blue team in the playoff which resulted in the victory of Blue Team IV. Members of the winning team participated in a playday with neighboring schools, held this year in Chappaqua. BASKETBALL Each League had six basketball teams allowing the girls a chance to play in at least five games. The procedure for intramurals was the same as hockey, with Blue Team IV, Barbara Harper, captain, winning the final game against Orange VI. BOYS' INTRAMURALS FOOTBALL This year there was a three-team league in football intramurals. Each eight-man team played six games. The season ended with the Bulldogs, Ronnie Baker, captain, on top. Won Lori Bulldogs ....... ....... 4 1 Redskins ....... ....... 3 2 Eagles ........ ......................................... 0 5 BASKETBALL The Orange and Blue Leagues were divided into three teams, each team playing ten games. A two out of three game playoff was played by the team with the best record in each League. The two lead teams, the Knicks and the Capitols, both with a 7-3 record, met in the playoff, resulting in the defeat of the Knicks by the victorious Capitols. ORANGE BLUE Capitols ....................... 7 3 .700 Knicks ........................ 7 3 .700 Swishers ........ ........ 6 4 .600 Globetrotters ....... ..... 5 5 .500 Ironites ..... ........ 4 6 .400 Murderers ....... ..... 1 9 . I 00 68 ff H' 1' Q. -1 -3 's I 'Win ,, If Q, J A is 15-4, pg' 'K I iz! 'fv- ,fx-eau, I 1: buff HT ..lT 2592 ' Uni, L ' iii? -XE .f . sw Q , L ,,,9'4l fu. 2 .0 Q xg! nf fn, ..,, A - wi C ?? Q 5 K , 9, wwf Q 5, ,,,,. 1 Jem, S lbs SQMQ x Q lq S3 5 fel c N SQ 55- Q x - - W in Jfhe uakzr' C OMPLI MEN TS l CENTURY MUSICAL INSTRUMENT CCDMPANY GEORGE V EULEY I I I PHONE 9 8448 144 Mamaroneck Avenue Wh1te Plzuns N Y of be I l EVERYTHING MUSICAL Q A .A 1 1 George's Men's Shop C ompliment: f Mt. Kisco Furniture Exchange 0 C omplimentf of Doc HABER'S SHERIDAN'S FOOD STORE WHERE ALL BUY GOOD FOOD Chappaqua Pharmacy ROCK GATE FARM DAIRY MILK MILK PRODUCTS MILK BAR RESTAURANT Weftcbexters Moxt Modem Mzlk Plant BEDFORD HILLS N Y C omplzmentx 0 C0 'Pl e ff .lack Dlamond, Grocer Gordon s Jewelry Shop, Inc 27 East Mam Street Mr Knsco N Y MURRAY s sg S100 MR KUPERSCHMID C omplzmentx of A Friend , . ,.. 'f ' o Of I o I I ..,.. 'o o 73 .1.4... W' 'I HILLSIDE FLORIST Thomas H Hemlnsley Flower: or All Occauom by an Arm: Bulbr Vegetable and Flower Seedlzngr 22 KING STREET Phone 174 CHAPPAQUA N Y Eat at Tony s Twm Dmer Chappaqua N Y Quality Market Chappaqua N Y Complzmentr of Grlstede Brothers C ongratulatzom from Wright and Marshall Plumbzng Chappaqua N Y WILLIAM WEBER CORSAGES PLANTS and FLOWERS For HOME and GARDEN Telephone 1 0211 71 75 SOUTH GREELEY AVENUE DOYLE S Fon DUMONT WESTINGHOUSE TELEVISION SALES AND SERVICE Telephone 4783 MT KISCO N Y The Party Box ALEX JOUKOVSKY Chappaqua N Y Complzmenlr of Alys Moehlenpah Real Eftate Phone 191 45 Bedford Road Chappaqua N Y Complzmentr of Pleasantvllle Muslc Center Young and Halstead Co East Main Street Mt Kisco N Y Tel 4104 Armonk Chappaqua Katonah Call Ent 7011 l o O I 0 0 , - . 7 ' ' I 1 1 Florists Telegraphic Delivery Service O , Q . ' I , . . , . O l . , . . . , . , . . . 7 7 7 ' 74 W l I T -f 1 ,-ftrww 1- ww.-Q C. J. Daum Company Comflfmenff 01' - Sporiing Equipment - , 247 East Main Street Mt. Kisco, N. Y. carhsuno Shve MarkoE's Shoe Store -REBUlLDER5- - Quality Footwear- Phone 6862 35 East Main Street Mt. Kisco, N. Y. , , Frank's Cleaners Eric A. Nlcolaysen Real Ettate- Imurance Tels.: OfHce Chappaqua 1-0031- Res. 1-0052 C ongratulatiom' to the GRADUATlNG7 CLASS FROM CADMAN'S PHARMACY CHAPPAQUA BRIARCLIF F PLEASANTVILLE Page's Service Station Cor. King and Greeley Chappaqua, N. Y. C0mPlim2'1fJ of THIS SPACE CLEANED A Friend Try the BY Triangle Snack Bar Mr. and Mrs. Les Cutler Hamb rgerf, H ot Frankr, Sadat, C of Route117u Mt.Kisco,eIiI.Y. NEW CASTLE Harold F. Campbell - Surveyor - 75 Greeley Men s Shop C Z amp zmemx Brlcce1h's The G E Appliance Center Phones 6200 4254 BARCLAY HARDWARE CO 9 WestMa1n Street Mt Kxsco N Y INCORPQRATED Datyroogc ulilorlsl 25 Wheeler Avenue Pleasantvllle N Y owen y we COWZPIZMBHII of the CHAPPAQUA COAI. and FEED 'I H crane and Son Complzmefmo the Counfy 5607 COYP Greeley Barber Shop 177 East Mam Street Mt K1sco N Y C omplzmenu Greeley Hardware Co THE FASHION STUDIO MABEL S VESSELOWSKY Telephone 1 0809 Stanley, Your Hair Dresser 160 KING STREET C omplzmenlf of ADAMS MOTOR COMPANY MT Klsco, N Y DODGE PLYMOUTH I I I 37 East Main Street Mt. Kisco, N. Y. 'A' i' ir 0 o ' If of 0 76 Chappaqua Parent-Teachers Association Congmtulalef the CLASS OF 1950 453+ QUAKER CREDITS Photography by SCOTT STUDIOS Whlte Plams N Y Dedzcatzon Portmzls by WILLIAM CARLEBACH Chappaqua N Y Lztbogmploy by T OTOOLE 84 SONS Stamford Conn 1 1 - - a a ' ' - , . , , . 77 T,-..,.,' ,X , , H , W, , . A S-.,,N45Ah,.,,4.-pp. . ,fn 1 . UL- 19 J , .415 S 7 7 mm LQQOXH' MQAQP aww 152 i . v M QC' ' Awgwefjqbwp W Jack b:awuuL P? L wfQn., 6 ef FGA VX vmwou. Nqcqulagi Qs ag WWA 6,4 ,JM.,1.M db!! mb Qpqk '53 Www CWM OXMEE Hadxwws if 'V We 6 Wm GJ aw mm and X451-c NWN me QW? QP M140-it GAL! 5 5 DQQ., Pllfl mc QM pawn, LQ 9lJ,',.. ukma G C..S:t..SSM.,M a.,,g,fWfW DW, f3....,..,,x 71,3 fm Jw? Q9 Uqwaqq ,WW , ow-9wM 'Www U .. ,WW . o ,vs . . Q,,,..,: Q 77' mf- 'o' W ck-M ,WMM ' T OTOO E 8 SONS INCORPORATED LITHOCRAPHY 330046 PRINTING 3l JEFFERSON STREET STAMFORD C NN CTICUT TELEPHONE 4 9226 MASTERS OF THE GRAPHIC A25 ' LJ , DIRECT NEW YORK WIRE-MELROSE 5-4Il2


Suggestions in the Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) collection:

Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Horace Greeley High School - Quaker Yearbook (Chappaqua, NY) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965


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



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