Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY)

 - Class of 1946

Page 1 of 176

 

Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1946 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1946 volume:

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M ,.,f,, ..- the horace mannikin PUBLISHED BY THE HORACE MANN SCHOOL FOR BOYS 23I WEST 246 STREET, NEW YORK 63, NEW YORK DEDICATED +o Mary J. Webb ix ,,,,,,.,, 4U 'l HEN we liil llwe l-lill six years ago, we recall llwal on llie receplion commillee was a guiel young lady willn a clweerlul look in lier eye. ln our ascenl lo seniorily, we were going lo see a lol ol llial clmeerlul loolc and also a lol ol somellwing else llwal lay belwind il. We probably didnl re- alize il llmen-bul we do now-llial lwere was someone in wliom we cou'd pul lrusl and lailln. For in llie inlricale workings ol llie Library, we lound a lriendly band lo guide us llwrouglw llie wealllx ol lileralure llwal lnad been carelully molded during llie Iasl decade. We lound someone who liad llwe awesome abilily lo locale even llwe mosl obscure arlicle in llwis riclw reservoir ol lcnowledge. For l'1er enlliusiasm, conscienlious spiril, and deyolion lo llie scliool and ils sludenls, llne IQ46 HORACE MANNIKIN is respecllully dedicaled lo Mary J. Webb. 5 win 3' V uf N This IQ46 ediTion oT The HORACE MANNTKIN, we desire To leave wi+h The TaculTy, The sTudenT body, and especially The Seniors, a Tond memory oT a Tine school year. The MANNIKIN is Horace lv1ann's yearbook: and, as such, iT should recall To all oT us, even years aTTer deparTing Trom The halls where we linger'd, a worTh-while year in pleasanT and imformal surroundings. So inTormal and yeT respecTTul is The associaTion beTween sTudenT and Teacher aT l-LM. ThaT we have aT- TempTed To bring To memory This Triendly spiriT by empha- sizing inTormaliTy ThroughouT The book. Qur arTicles are inTended in an inTormal vein To describe a year's acTiviTies, and To porTray members oT The sTudenT body and TaculTy as we wish To remember Them. We have Tew Tormal phoTographs This year, only Tor Seniors and sTudenT oTTicers, emphasizing raTher a large number oT candid shoTs showing l-lorace Manners in Their mosT com- mon acTiviTies. We Thus presenT you wiTh This ediTion oT The l-TCRACE lvlANNlKlN in The sincere hope ThaT iT will bring cheerTul recollecTions oT l946. John l.angsdorT and Allan Newmark 3 xr , ,, f :rg S N. ww x MwnQ-f V , le I ' K f 2: 'Av Z. ' f 9 lx 1 nf .sf X '6' W, X S 2 i kv ff x W A f fi ' 'ff x ff xv ! 4 fn 1 ,V x 4 , ? X aff, 'f dh, 1 1 Q , K. I !V, a Q -V- Q, f. X K' Qu... cfwrs C wr,.g4..,f INCE I92O, Dr. Charles C. TillinghasT has capably served as l-leadmasTer oT l-lorace Mann. During These pasT TwenTy-six years, his name has become synony- mous wiTh ThaT oT The school: mainly because oT his personaliTy, The school has become as greaT as iT is. Dr. TillinghasT has become an inspiraTion To all l-lorace Manners. l-lis Upper and Lower School chapel exercises are awaiTed by all sTudenTs. l-lis sense oT humor is apparenT in any speech he gives: and mosT l lillToppers will long remember his jokes, such as lT The subways don'T run, you will. As l-lorace lvlann's number one rooTer, Dr. TillinghasT can be seen aT almosT any home encounTer and aT many away games. AT The beginning OT This year, Dr. Tilling- hasT Took charge oT a big TooTball rally and, according To his cusTom, TaughT The school The Indian Cheer. Our headmasTer also parTicipaTes in aThleTicsp in The spring he can be seen playing Tennis, baTTing Them ouT To The inTield, or, perhaps, holding down TirsT base in a TaculTy game. During The winTer Dr. -l'illinghasT proves ThaT he sTiII knows how To shooT seT shaTs Tram The sidelines. Dr. TillinghasT's wide range oT knowledge is someThing oT amazemenT To all sTudenTs aT l-l.lv1. From his experience as an exchange Teacher in Germany in l9l3, he is an experT aT German. l'le can subsTiTuTe equally well in Mr. Nagle's LaTin or in Mr. BaruTh's English classes, whenever There is need Tor an exTra Teacher. l-lis knowledge oT words and Their derivaTions, Too, is well known To The school. Dr. TillinghasT Takes an acTive inTeresT in all I-LM. social aTTairs. l-le has been aT The canTeen probably more Than any oTher l-lorace Manner. ln addiTion, he regu- larly aTTends all class dances. Dr. 'l'illinghasT is besT known To The SixTh Form Tor The long hours he spends Trying To geT all Seniors inTo colleges. The individual aTTenTion he gives all senior problems and The knack he has oT learning every boy's name are some OT The ways he shows his devoTion To The school. In recogniTion oT The TacT ThaT Dr. TillinghasT's is The greaTness ThaT is l-lorace Mann, The P.T.A. This year had his porTraiT painTed by The Tamous arTisT, Mr. John Johansen. A reproducTion oT This porTraiT appears on The opposiTe page. . n 84 -.. N W W 1 MR. JOHN T. VAN SANT R. John T. Van SanT, AssociaTe HeadmasTer, came To The hill in I9l2 To devoTe all his Time To The upkeep oT The physical and Tinancial side oT Horace Mann. A graduaTe oT De Pauw UniversiTy, he is one oT The Tew men s+ill aTTached To The TaculTy who were presenT when The school moved up To Riverdale. Previously The headmasTer oT GreencasTle High School in Indiana and a Tormer Ma+h Teacher, he has done wonders collecTing money Tor such proiecTs as The library and The new lunchroom. SilenT and reTiring, he commands greaT respecT among The TaculTy and The sTudenT body. Many a Maniac has TelT Mr. Van SanT's iron hand clasping his arm aTTer breaking a sTudy hali window or cuTTing To The TronT OT The lunch line. He is The TirsT person To inTerview prospecTive Horace Mann- ers and is also head oT The H.M. DormiTory. ln These posiTions he has builT up The school and iTs members To iTs presenT high level. MR. ROBERT F. PAYNE DMINISTRATIVE AssisTanT and Head oT The Science DeparTmenT, Mr. RoberT F. Payne is H.M.'s jovial physics insTrucTor. Though he possesses a love Tor children, he never leTs sTudenTs geT The besT oT him. He is The ToremosT obsTacle To play skippers, chronic sleepers, and absenTees. A hard- ened lisTener To excuses, he hands ouT slips and lecTures alTernaTely. Popular Mr. Payne graduaTed Trom Union in l9l I and commenced a Teaching career which broughT him To H. M. in I9I9. Full oT mirTh, he brighTens up Physics sTudenTs oTherwise dark lives by demon- sTraTing quick 'sTudenT prooT me+hods Tor solving problems. He is a lover oT gadgeTs and Takes greaT pride in his workshop. His Tamous grin spreads Trom ear To ear as he expounds his TavoriTe subiecTs: railroad accidenTs7 campsg and, once every year, his Tamous discussion oT SanTa Claus. H966 NE oT The largesT groups aT l-lorace Mann is The English DeparTmenT, which is headed by Dr. William l'l. Blalce, As senior adviser he spends a greaT deal oT his Time preparing The SixTh Eormers Tor college. When noT direcTing The Glee Club or cavorTing in Wednesday morn- ing assemblies, he designs haTs, wriTes poeTry, and pracTices panTomime. Mr. l-larold ChrisTie Clausen and The Dra- maTic Club are synonymous aT l-lorace Mann. l-lis main inTeresT sTill lies wiTh The EirsT and Second Eormers, To whom, ever since l923, he has im- parTed The arT oT cliagraming. The EiTTh Form adviser, and menTor oT all school publicaTions, is Mr. AlTred E. l3aruTh. Aside Trom Teaching EiTTh Eorm English, lvlr. B. runs a bus service, Camp MacArThur, and The Chess Club. l'le claims ThaT The only Thing he hasn'T done is murder a l'lorace Mann sTudenT l-lorace lvlann will sorely miss The presence oT Mr. Leese Tor one more year while he Teaches aT Alabama. ln Tive years aT HM. he has ably TaughT Third Eorm English and American l.iTera4 Ture. A disciple oT Edgar Allan Poe. Since l944, Mr. Donald l. CarTy has been nursing The budding TalenTs oT many sophomores. As EourTh Eorm English Teacher, he has ably insTrucTed in The inTricacies oT American l.iTera- Ture. l.enT To l-l.lvl. unTil The mid years by Man- haTTan Prep, he has done a man-sized iob. ATTer Tour years absence while serving in Uncle Sams Navy, Mr. John Reeves has reTurned To Till The spoT vacaTed by Mr. Leese. A graduaTe oT Horace lvlann in l932, he TaughT music and English beTore The war. Mr. Nisswender ioined The l-l.M. TaculTy early in January also To help Till The vacancy leTT by lvlr. l.eese. Mr. David TaTem, a graduaTe oT Randolph-Macon college in Virginia, came To The hill in February To Talce over lvlr. CarTy's worlc. Gfadaicaf language LTHOUGH The Classical Language DeparTmenT is made up oT only Three persons, iT cerTainly is one oT The besT aT Horace Mann. The head and senior member oT This group, Mr. William J. Nagle, TirsT puT in his appearance in I9I I, aTTer Teach- ing in Brooklyn and aT Hackley and being HeadmasTer oT The Newman School, This Harvard man Teaches LaTin and Greek equally well, buT his greaTesT pride is The IO3 NeediesT Cases Drive, which he has engineered Tor 20 years. For many years Horace Mann's head linesrnan, Mr. Nagle Takes an acTive parT in aThleTics and serves also as chairman oT The TaculTy Club CommiTTee. The only woman insTrucTor aT Horace Mann is Miss A. Berdina MclnTosh. She primes The FirsT Formers in genTlemanliness, prepares Them Tor a sTudy oT Toreign languages, and acTs as Their class adviser, Une oT her greaTesT inTeresTs lies in The social Tield, where she capably conducTs all TuncTions on The hill. She mainTains corre- spondence wiTh The Horace Mann alumni and Takes an acTive parT in The P.T.fN. For The pasT 23 years, Mr. WalTer l. MeTcalT has made his presence TelT in school. As l.aTin insTrucTor, he keeps his classes in order wiTh The merciless aim oT his chalk and keeps Them in humor wiTh his puns. For many years he has coached J.V. base- ball and TooTball, Turning ouT some amazingly good Teams. He assisTed Mr. BaruTh in running Camp MacArThur during The pasT summer and has recenTly decided To Tound a camp oT his own. I 4 A6 i0l'g HE size is no indicaTion oT The imporTance oT The HisTory DeparTmenT. AlThough There is no permanenT head oT This group, Mr. Charles D. Gerow acTs in ThaT capaciTy. Ever since I9l4, he has been a popular Teacher oT EirsT and Second Eormers. An ardenT Republican and a rabid World Series Tan, he keeps his classes busy wriTing l.iTe on a Medieval Barony and varied reporTs on Renaissance painTers. A sTricT disciplinarian, he always manages To make The punishmenT TiT The crime. ln Tormer days he ran Camp Moosilauke and Took an acTive inTeresT across The Tield. Yale's giTT To Horace Mann came in The Torm oT a remarkable Track sTar, Mr. AlberT M. Briggs. An experT in AncienT and Modern European HisTory, he devoTes much Time To poliTics and currenT evenTs. Besides advising The Speakers' Club Tor The pasT Tew years, he has been insTrumenTal in The Tlourishing oT all exTra-curricular acTiviTies aT Horace Mann. ATTer acTing as direcTor oT Camp Moosilauke Tor many seasons, he became direcTor oT his own camp, Camp WrighT. The newesT addiTion To The HisTory DeparTmenT is Mr, Philip LewerTh. A Track sTar and capTain oT The Lions' baseball Team, he came To The hill Tor his TirsT Teaching iob. Mr. LewerTh expounds The Theories OT American HisTory To The Seniors and somehow manages To concocT gruesome ouTlines. He helps wiTh baseball and J.V. TooTball. Besides These varied iruTeresTs across The Tield, he has Taken acTive inTeresT in exTra-curricular acTiviTies, advising The DebaTing SocieTy and The SporTs Club. He has done remarkably well in Tilling Mr. lVlarTin's shoes. I 5 km My QMM' f Wnafkemaficd ATHEMATICS aT Horace Mann is under The skillTul TuTelage OT Tive men. Head oT This deparTmenT is Mr. Dean Moore, who has been propounding The mysTeries oT solid geom- eTry To baTTlecl seniors since l9l9. He keeps well nourished by eaTing many boxes oT candy won Trom his 'ldumbbellsf' An experT aT chess, he also Takes greaT pleasure in Tishing on The ST. Law- rence and umping baseball games. An arch GianT Tan, Mr. Thomas J. Kalligan TirsT came To Horace Mann in T920 and ever since has been Teaching The workings oT The slide rule To budding maThemaTicians. A maTch box collecTor, he keeps his classes mysTiTied boTh by his philosophy and his weird marking sysTem. AlThough Mr. John T. Gilmour sTudied To be a civil engineer, he ended up Teaching Horace lvlanners The ways and means OT geomeTry and algebra. During The TirsT World War he served in The Army as a capTain, and he used his experi- ence To Train HillToppers in miliTary drill. Every morning he drives in Trom his Tarm wirh eggs Tor members oT The TaculTy. Mr. Carl H. Crandall, a younger member oT The TaculTy, proved hirnselT invaluable To H.lVl. by coaching Tennis and oTTen Turning ouT unde- TeaTed Teams. He leads The ouTdoor group on vigorous hikes Through The neighborhood, capably runs The booksTore, and This year served as ad- viser To The l:ourTh Form. During Mr. LiTTle'5 absence, he did a whale oT a iob wiTh The sTage crew. He Teaches maTh in spare momenTs. Mr. Gordon Miller, Though he lecTures l:irsT Formers on The beginnings oT algebra, does mosT oT his work across The Tield, where he coaglqeg varsiTy baseball and baskeTball and acTs as assis- TanT coach during The TooTball season. 0 6!Ql l'L HE Modern Language DeparTmenT is com- posed oT six Teachers. Mr. FrnesT R. Dodge, who heads This group, is a Teacher oT long sTand- ing aT Horace Mann, This being his ThirTieTh year. His versaTiliTy is proved by The TacT ThaT he TuTors Spanish and German and has wriTTen TexT boolcs in boTh Those languages as well as in French. When noT worlcing in his garden, he advises The PhoTography Club. l929 saw Mr. John Oliver, a connoisseur oT French arT, a TranslaTor oT French poeTry, and a Teacher oT French, arrive aT Horace Mann. He uses his experience in summer sToclc companies To review DramaTic Club producTions. A Tew oT Mr. Charles B. Anderson's peT proi- ecTs are The LinguisT, The Summer Review, The Riverdale Kennels, and Lower School Tennis. DespiTe all This he has Tound Time To Teach Clnguagg French, German, and General Language -- This pasT year only The lasT Two - while worlcing Tor his DocToraTe aT Columbia. ln Three years aT H. M., Mr. J. William Wood, Jr., has made a place Tor himselT on boTh sides oT The Tield. As soon as his French classes are over, he can always be seen cheering Tor H.M. Teams or reTereeing baslceTball games. From PuerTo Rico comes Mr. Juan C. Garcia. AlThough new To Horace Mann, he has TaughT French aT PoiTiers, France: Memphis: and New Orleans. He secured his L.L.D. aT Laval Univer- siTy, Quebec. Also aT Horace Mann Tor The TirsT Time is Mr. Ludwig Wagner, Teacher oT German. AlThough he Teaches aT Columbia Grammar every morn- ing, he manages To inspire aTTernoon classes aT Horace Mann. dence N recenT years The Science DeparTmenT has gained greaT prominence aT Horace Mann. Heading This deparTmenT is Mr. RoberT F. Payne, The sole physics Teacher, who doublos as adminisTraTive assisTanT To Dr. TillinghasT. He Takes greaT pride in his workshop and in The mulTiTude oT gadgeTs in The physics lab. None oT his sTudenTs will ever TorgeT his Tallc, Do you believe in SanTa Claus?'l He is ably assisTed by Dr. Harry H. Williams, a member oT The FaculTy Guidance CommiTTee, His TirsT iob was as a chemisT in a coal mine, and Trom There he changed To Teaching aT Penn lv1iliTary Academy. ln I937 he arrived aT H.lv1. and has been Teaching Chem and advising The Science Club ever since. He won The MANNlKlN dedicaTion in T943 by reason oT his congenialiTy and greaT paTience. Qne year ago Mr. Frank Branley puT in his appearance aT Horace Mann. He Teaches Second and Third Form General Science and has wriTTen a TexTboolc enTiTled 'Seven and EighT Tor his classes. AlThough only aT school a shorT Time, he has already gained The posiTion oT guidance head oT, and adviser To, The Third Form. While working Tor his MasTer's Degree aT Columbia, he neverTheless Tinds ample Time To advise The Lower School Science Club. Mr. Charles T. Avedisian arrived aT Horace Mann in I944 and sTarTed Teaching biology To The l:ourTh Form as a side line, while coaching The TooTball, swimming, and Traclc Teams. As oT laTe, he has gained added renown in view oT his recenT acquisiTion oT a delighTTul human slceleTon named l'Charley's AunT. I 8 Ma-I---3s,.T1 f Quill. . . .Ti HA' 'P w9....,,'g fri ,Mins LTHOUGH The aThleTic deparTmenT was hiT hard by The deaTh oT Ump Tewhill, iT has ably carried on Through The pasT year. Mr. Roger Readio, Treasurer oT The GA. has Taken over The iob oT running The aThleTic sTore and oT planning The Team schedules. Besides capably coaching The J.V. BaskeTball Team in The winTer, he spends all season aT his biggesT iob, coordinaTing all aThleTic acTiviTies. VarsiTy baskeTball and baseball Tlourish under The guidance oT Mr. Gordon Moose Miller, who also acTs, in The Tall, as line coach Tor The TooTball Team, coaches Third Formers in all maior sporTs, and Teaches maTh To l:irsT Formers. Mr. Charles T. Avedisian has made a name Tor himselT as auThor oT The Unbalanced as righT guard Tor The New York GianTs, and as l-l.lvl.'s TooTball, swimming, and Track coach. ln Two years I 9 he has produced Two remarkable swimming Teams. Mr. WalTer l. lvleTcalT and Mr. Philip l.ewerTh acTed as co-menTors To The J.V. Baseball ancl FooTball Teams, The laTTer helping ouT in baseball and Track also. Mr. Carl Crandall has Turned ouT consecuTively excellenT Tennis Teams, several oT Them undeTeaTed, while Mr. Anderson aided Lower School Tennis players. lvlr. lvlilTon Jahoda, beTTer known as Pop, has coached soccer Tor Two years aT l-lorace Mann, and in his second year Turned ouT an undeTeaTed Team. Mr. Shaughnessy conTinued his 20 year old boxing course aT HM., This year again sTaging an exciTing boxing TournamenT on ST. PaTrick's Day. Mr. Sigward has reTurned To l-l.lVl. aTTer serving in The Army, To Teach iiu-iiTsu, while Mr. Jolley aided The deparTmenT by helping in Lower School play and in Track. A W 4 V 4 ' A' ' ff . sw 11,1 Q N, s .ff -- . f A , 4 ' sw 'gf' flf' I Vw? Ufhw -Sie!! LL The deTails and working oT school liTe rnusT pass Through The oTTice. To Take care oT This immense job, some seven people, in addiTion To Dr. 'lillinghasT and Mr. Van SanT all conTribuTe immeasurably To school liTe. For over 20 years Miss Anna M. Shay has served as ExecuTive SecreTary OT The oTTice. She ably assisTs Mr. Van SanT in all Tinancial maTTers, acTing as his personal secreTary. Mrs. Jane Crandall is an invaluable aid To all Seniors, since she does much oT The oTTice work on Their college applicaTions. ln her capaciTy as Dr. 'l'illinghasT's personal secreTary, she Tigures ouT The sTandings in The diTTerenT classes. From Englewood Business School, Horace Mann received Miss Edna GunTher. She Tends The Telephone board and in her spare Time has proved an excellenT painTer. The announcemenT oT her engagemenT was guiTe a shock To many hopeTul seniors. Mrs. Anne Weber has served in The oT'Tice since l939, excepT Tor The Time she Took OTT To geT married. She Takes care oT The ouTer oTiice, and helps Horace Manners To geT ouT oT Trouble. Miss Marion DenTon is a newcomer To Horace Mann This year. Coming Trom Commerce School in Yonkers, she made an immediaTe hiT wiTh many pupils. Mrs. Jane Chase TirsT came To Horace Mann unmarried, buT soon aTTer, she leTT The TaculTy wiTh one less bachelor. While Mr. Chase has been serving as naval aTTache in Moscow, she has consisTenTly helped ouT in The oT'lice. Mrs. Avedisian, Too, has been OT assisTance in running The ouTer oTTice. Dlzgfdfy For a school ol ils size, Horace Mann has one ol lhe besl libraries in lhe counlry. Miss Webb has acled as chiel librarian lor six years, aller serving lor seven years under Mrs. Brainard. Possessing an amazing abilily lo lind slrange inlormalion, Miss Webb has aided innumerable inlormalion-seeking hillloppers. Besides leaching Firsl Formers lhe mys- leries ol lhe library, she is an imporlanl member ol lhe assembly commillee. Mrs. Payne is ollen seen around lhe library help- ing Miss Webb. Whenever an exlra assislanl is needed, she is on lhe iob, lalqing care ol lhe boolcs. .ibiefeficfi One ol lhe leasl apprecialed laslcs around school is perlormed daily by Mrs. Pearl C. Randel, lhal ol leeding 500 sludenls and lacully. This year in a remodeled lunchroom, Mrs. Randel accomplished lhe amazing laslc ol leeding over 750 persons on Falhers' Day. .gfCLg8CI'6i f The prewar weekly slagecrall classes were re- sumed lhis year upon lhe relurn ol Mr. Frederick Lillle lrom lhe Navy. Mr. Lillle, an l-l.M. graduale, also acls as adviser lo lhe Slage Crew and direcls lhe conslruclion ol all Dramalic Club sels. ufiic The Music Deparlmenl is due a greal deal ol credil lor ils excellenl music assemblies and lor lhe very successlul Wednesday morning sings. Mr. Arlhur Warwiclc serves ably as lhe leader ol lhis group. l-le inslrucls in lhe piano and organ, bolh ol which he plays equally well. Through his inlluence he has broughl many line musicians lo l-lorace Mann assemblies. Mr. Edmund Wall, an ex- perl wilh lhe clarinel, inslrucls boys in any ol lhe woodwind inslrumenls, while Mr. Presli, who comes lo l-lorace Mann lrom lhe Army, serves as orcheslra leader and violin leacher. 1 l , f W f f V kv if 7- fa L :VKX ,, JL ff ' Q f y , xy ' -1 5 4 1, ' ,. ff I'- Ziff! w- f, ,, 'iff' A Q0 ,J 1 ,4 ,, ,Q K Aw ,ff 7 ax - 9, , f inf. Y 4 W' z 6 ff 1, ly fy X , ,V 7 ,ff ' K Q , k Mr I M Zi 4 Q. ff! f XCA, f x W f 4 , Ai Y 1 ' 7 , 2 A ' f 'A r 0 K I , M r, .1 ,,,, f , 4,4 ,f f' W ' f V M. . N 6 f f 1 , N, WW 1. e Z ,WMV if ,, X 242 W, f ,f X Q , BQ M qua , M' f ,wg G' f fy' f N Q fig' ,fs yi , V Z 'fr I ws as ix JMB 5 1 , ., , , 2 1 , f Vffi,ff' 1, - ,- ,W 2 -, ,U k 1,0 V ,z 14? f . 'M , ' zfmwf, ' 'N X ,fy ', N A , I N VKV4 , ,K . , .- ,. fc, , ' y I F K 4, W A 'Q W MQW, ' .M A ,N ' h x f -' X ' 'f' ': we-fx ..x. . , . , , - f y Mn' if L iv' Q ,I , ' , , I 5 L, ' Wg' lp- ff 1 ff 4 ,fm A' ' 2 ML , 'iffy ' Q ' 1' , Wifi 'f f I ,s 'WA L-fm - uf, , V' mms! x W 4 WJ., ,U-gf . Z X 1 2 -S Q u , z N ,,, gf: I ,tag 6: W' V 54 if , , xwf 7 2 I ' S 5 ' . if Boffom Row: Schoen, Morris, Marlin, Pressman, Bilgore, Dr. Blake, Mori, Anfhony, Weilz, Speiler, Schneider, Kulkin. Second Row: Boros, Richard., Greenufeld, Schwartz, Berdon, Bernslein, Fuller, Spanel, Rubin, l-lonrg, Melicow, M, Solomon, Alrgcr, Third Row: Hirsch, Pincus, Green, l-laugaard, Bachrach, Gluck, n Cohen, Sreinberg, Galler, Binder, Smilh, Goodfe. Top Row: A Rosenberg, J. Feinberg, Rofhchild, Lavine, Kau rnan, Ingber, Schlesinger, Corsi, Waddell. NE warm Seplember morning way back in The year l94O, a sorry-looking group ol eleven and Jrwelve-year olds slumbled down Jrhe sleps of 'rhe subway slralion al 242nd Srreel, peered a+ a couple of respeclable ealing esrablishmenls, and silenlly plodded up a long, sleep mounlain unlil il had reached a gray shrine ar The lop, bearing The name of lhe l-lorace Mann School for Boys. ll is dirliculr, as we look back on ir now, lo Jrhink of Those 42 lirlle urchins as 'rhe beginnings of Jrhe Class of '46, bul somehow we accepl il as Jrrue. As we Jrimidly sellled ourselves in lhe sears on Jrhe lefr side ol lhe audilorium, we were aware of a noble barralion ol gods silling on our righl. They were called, Presidenjr Paul Bilgore ...A Boffom Row: Kluger, Deifscn, Rose, Meer, Chen, Goodrich Sarnoff, Newmark, Goldslein, S. Solomon, Bookman, Goldman, Singer, Second Row: Sussman, Heineman, van Laer, Levin, Jacober, Hofrichler, Weisberg, Zabar, Baer, Rolh, Neger Johnson, Osbourn. Third Row: Lehman, Wolfsie, J. Rosenberg Langner, Langsdorf, Ellis, Davis, Sneresky, S. Feinberg, Loeb Arnspiger, Cornick, Corcoran. Top Row: Frelwell, Ross, Wilkin son, Blinken, Munroe, Van Gelder, Holme, de la Chapelle Messifer. as we soon found our, Seniors. To be a i member ol Jrlwal elile sociely was like reach- ing lor The moon and rlie larllwesl slars. lr was somelbing for us only lo wisb .and pray lor, and somelwow we fell llwal we could never make il. Dr. Tillingliasl greeled us and aclually seemed To know some of us from llwe srarr. We fell llwal if Tliere was one friendly band in rlwese unfamiliar surroundings rliar rlwere were probably many more. We were riglil. Miss Mclnlosln also greeled us and promprly began lo baffle our naive brains willi ber Monday alle:-noon educarion sessions. Bewilderedly, we began lo learn a slrange new language called Synlax and began cramming for lworrible examinalions on lndirecl Obiecls and Demonsrrarive Pronouns. Under Miss Mclnloslfs domineering rulelage we learned Hue inlriguing operarions ol: llie Comb and Jrlie Naillile and were fold rlnar There were Men employed To reporl on unbecoming aclions in Jrlwe subway. Senior adviser Dr. Blake wilb Q' Treasurer Pressman, Vice-Presi- denr Mori, and Secrelary ,Q Anrlwony. W., There were oThers who held us in check Too. ln lvlr. Gerow's hisTory class we reconsTrucTed The Tallen ciTies OT Babylon and Greece and learned To respecT The generosiTy oT ThaT benevolenT genTleman when we Tound ThaT we could buy back Tor only TiTTy cenTs our own pencils and pens leTT in The classroom The day beTore. Mr. Clausen TaughT us how To diagram simple, compound, and complex senTences and had us memorizing passages oT poeTry. Soon The halls began To echo wiTh chanTings oT: The Assyrian came down like The wolT on The Told, And his cohorTs were gleaming in purple and gold .... WiTh Mr. Anderson we Traced arTisTic language maps, combed The dicTionary Tor unusual word derivaTions, and Tried To reciTe The Greek alphabeT in Three seconds TlaT. We worked diligenTly on The LinguisT and Tramped The sTreeTs To obTain adver- TisemenTs. Allan Newmark Tramped The TarThesT and goT To be Business Manager, breaking all TradiTion. And Then There was Mr. Chandlers ''never-To-be-TorgoTTen-no- maTTer-how-you-Try geography course, in which ll2's and 59's were given ouT gen- erously wiTh no marks in beTween. ln The Spring we elecTed Franny Chen PresidenT, .lim Powell Vice-PresidenT, Mack Young SecreTary, and Sam Lindsay Treasurer. WiTh These boys To lead us, we began To Train Tor The day when we could deTeaT our haTed enemy, The Second Eorm, in The Friday rip-ball sguirmishes. ln a bloody engagemenT in April we meT These cruel oppressorsy and, alThough The injuries were heavy on boTh sides, somehow we TelT ThaT we had come ouT on Top. The year Tinally ended, and we eagerly looked Torward To The day ThaT we could siT on The oTher side oT The AudiTorium. l-lowever, as Second Eormers, we sTill could see no more Than a Third oT The sTage. Losing no Time in showing our superioriTy To The EirsT Form, Though, we were ready To beaT The living daylighTs ouT oT Them aT every opporTuniTy. Mr. Gerow Took up where he leTT oTT in ancienT hisTory and broughT us Trom The Dark Ages To The eighTeenTh cenTury. We Tound ourselves siTTing up nighTs compiling inTormaTion Tor The long LiTe on a Medieval Barony and Renaissance arTisTs' reporTs. l-lorrible punishmenTs were concocTed Tor violaTors oT The sereniTy oT The classroom, and even The mosT reTined were wriTing ouT a hundred Times - I musT noT use my 'Weekly News Review' as a weapon oT oTTense or deTense or as an asTronomical ob- servaTory. We read Ivanhoe and Evangeline Tor English and creaTed epic poeTry in The sTyle oT l-liawaTha while Mr. Gilmour coached us in ariThmeTic and sold us eggs on The side. Some oT us rallied around The crimson banner and Tollowed The daunTless l-larvard rooTer, Mr. Nagle, inTo his classroom where we soon Tound ThaT The LaTin language was Tar Trom dead. We also learned ThaT iT was unhealThy To use The words Thing , 'imaTTer , aTTair , and Winchell in ThaT genTleman's presence. Jim Powell was PresidenT ThaT year wiTh Bill Green as Vice-PresidenT, Mack Young as SecreTary, and Larry Goodrich as Treasurer. Mr. Gerow was our loyal adviser, and Eddie Housepian, The non-voTing represenTaTive To The G.A. Gur class meeTings were mainly occupied wiTh plans To amend The G.A. consTiTuTion To enable Eddie To voTe. l-low well we remember The big day when Billy Green advanced our aims To The enTire sTudenT body, and how cleiecTed we TelT when The amendmenT Tailed To geT a Three-quarTers' maioriTy by only a Tew voTes. 26 As haughTy Third Eormers and champions OT The Lower School, our Throng swelled wiTh mass inTilTraTions Trom oTher schools, and SenioriTy seemed a liTTle closer Than a disTanT sTar. School was geTTing harder, buT iT was much more Tun. We plowed Through English wiTh Mr. Leese, picking up an amazing amounT OT inTormaTion on The way, debaTed on Communism in Mr. Briggs's class, and were amazed ThaT Mr. LaTham's General Science Midyear was a maTching quesTion ThaT spelled ouT l-l-G-R-A-C-E M-A-N-N. Several OT us were biTTen by The ExTra-curricular AcTiviTy Bug, joining The Record, The Library CommiTTee, and The Microscope, Science, Ship, PhoTOgraphy, and Erench Clubs. Bill Green won The Presidency wiTh Larry Goodrich, Erancis Chen and Jim Powell in The Vice-PresidenT, SecreTary, and Treasurer oTTices, George lThe liTTle Napoleonl STeiner was G.A. RepresenTaTive. Under The guidance OT Mr. Nagle, our adviser, we invesTigaTed The inTricaTe workings OT a naval base and The Brillo soap TacTOry. The EourTh Eorm was noTeworThy Tor Two reasons: our enTrance inTo The Upper School and The sTarTling appearance OT Jim EreTwell. Gur classes became more varied as we soughT To Tind our besT inTeresTs. Mr. Dodge's lplus andl minus sysTem TerriTied some oT us while Mr. LaTham's movies OT animal dissecTions had a decided eTTecT on everyone who Took Biology. Those Taking The course beTore lunch had diTTiculTy eaTing, and oThers who Took Biology aTTer lunch had diTTiculTy reTaining Their's. A Tew hardy souls Took Greek. We elecTed Larry Goodrich PresidenT, Bill Green Vice-PresidenT, Mack Young SecreTary, Jimmy Powell Treasurer, Bob Blinken G.A. RepresenTaTive, and Mr. Crandall Adviser. The wonderTul moonliT class dance ThaT year was only rivaled by an ear- shaTTering assembly announcemenT by Eddie l-lousepian, who used a live revolver To adverTise The parTy. The Team OT Marcus and Silver enTerTained us royally in assembly also. Then we were debonair Juniors unTil The day we meT Mr. BaruTh, who prompTly removed The superioriTy complexes we had assumed. l-le gave us Shakespeare and Shelley and KeaTs sTraighT Trom The shoulder, and aT The end OT The year we all agreed ThaT Uncle AI could read MacbeTh beTTer Than Maurice Evans, Though we could never guiTe believe ThaT caTs in England were Tour TeeT long. Some OT us were Taken in by romanTic lyrics and began reciTing love sonneTs To enrapTured girl Triends. Explosions were heard daily in The Chem Lab as were The piTiTul moans oT Mr. Dodge's sTudenTs, lamenTing The lengThy assignmenTs in La Rana Viaieraf' We saw our class- maTes in maior club oTTices and on VarsiTy Teams. l-lomework was really geTTing hard. Our class exalTed The iron sTrucTure OT our hero and class adviser, Charley Avedisian, and chose Bill SarnoTT PresidenT, Paul MorT Vice-PresidenT, Eranny Chen SecreTary, and Paul Bilgore Treasurer. Larry Goodrich reporTed The G.A. doings and served as Manager OT The newly-Tounded CanTeen. We deeply TelT The loss OT our beloved Triend, Ump Tewhill, in The spring OT ThaT year and were moved by The beauTiTul service The school presenTed in his memory. We rejoiced The ending OT The European war. Miss McInTosh renewed acguainTances wiTh us as we mapped ouT a dazzling shindig Tor The Seniors in The Torm OT a glorious CommencemenT dance. Our own class prom was noThing shorT OT TerriTic. 27 now seemed quiTe an ordinary one. BUT we had come To love and respecT The halls where we lingered and were proud in The ThoughT ThaT maybe The presenT PirsT Form was holding us in awe. Dr. Blake, our TaiThTul and inspired adviser, TrighTened us wiTh his ThoughT Process and his TesTs which looked so easy when you TirsT looked aT Them. WiTh Dr. Blake we Took aparT l-lamleT and aTTempTed To puT him back Togelher again in The iuicy mid-year exam. T-le encouraged us all wiTh his happy belieT ThaT no one would aTTend college This year, Though Dr. Tillinghasf TervenTly hoped ThaT some oT us would be accepTed. Mr. LewerTh, The Columbia Tlash, saw ThaT we didn'T geT away wiTh anyThing in American hisTory, and Tiendishly invenTed new schemes To pull down our averages each week. Some oT us who had Tormerly connecTed Mr. Payne wiTh a happy smile and a pleasanT manner oT lisTening To play-skipping excuses received a severe iolT in physics classes. We TelT The sTrain oT coming in laTe on Monday mornings, bleary-eyed Trom a weekend wiTh beauTiTul women and college applicaTions. Paul Bilgore served as PresidenT: Paul MorT was Vice-PresidenTg Telly AnThony, SecreTaryq and STan Pressman, Treasurer. Larry Goodrich, Bill SarnoTT, and Francis Chen ran The G.A. Green and Blinken ediTed The Record, Newmark and LangsdorT, The MANNTKTN, Galler The QuarTerly, and Loeb The Manual. Chen, Blinken, Green, T-leinernan, Newmark, and Schlesinger were The leading scholars in our unusually brainy class, while Johnson, Goodrich, MessiTer, MorT, Gans, Corcoran, and SarnoTT were The ace aThleTes. We marveled aT The undeTeaTed Soccer and Swimming Teams and will long remember The A.A.P.S. swimming Tinals and The EasTern Prep School lnviTaTion BaskeT- ball TournamenT in Bronxville. April 6 was our April Pool's Day, and mosT oT us sweaTed ouT The six hours oT College EnTrance Exams, Though considerably shaken wiTh Spring Tever. Many oT us recovered in Time Tor The ele- ganT Senior Prom The nexT week- f' QQ' ' we end and Trenziedly searched clos- eTs Tor our TaThers' moThball-in- TesTed Tuxedos. ln The Tinal weeks we experienced a new Tondness Tor The securiTy oT our Alma MaTer and a Teeling oT uncerTainTy regarding our TuTures. In days To come we shall wiTh nosTalgia Think back upon Class Day, The happy, lighT-hearTed senior play, and Dr. TillinghasT's Tinal. solemn, sTirring words .... And Then one day in June we were walking slowly up The hill To receive our diplomas. We knew we could make iT. 28 OWEN H. ALPER Owen won The Tond affeclion of his classmalres early because of his abilify 'ro Jralce a iolce as well as engineer one. lnleresfed in magic, he forwarded The Magic Club un+il ilrs disconlinualion. Spealcers' Club and Debaling Sociely. A lceen mind Tor sporls aided The occasional wriling of an On The Bench column. Business Head ol The Record in The Sixlh Form, Owen golf special commendalion from Mr. Melcalf Tor his ellforls as a J.V. Foolballer. ARISTOTLE A. ANTHONY Probably one of The besi-nalured guys in H.lvl.'s hislory, Telly was deserve edly elecfed Senior Scribe This year. His pleasanl smile could be viewed on The gridiron and especially on +he cinders where he was an ace speedsler. Three years of crooning in The Glee Club and seven in The baihlub enabled Telly +0 sing wilh 'rhe Quarlel and Small Chorus. Vehemenlly denies lhal he is relaled To a cerlain Greek philosopher. OWEN TELLY 29 DAVID SAMUEL ARNSPIGER Army iiTTer-bugged inTO Horace lvlann in The Third Form. He made a sloT Tor himselT in aThleTics, playing VarsiTy FoOTball and Jayvee Baseball, Though This year a Trick knee benched him. One OT Those lucky boys who can geT ouT OT bed aT 8:59, Arny's den is The TavoriTe hangouT OT all hillTOp card sharps. He is Tamed Tor his anTics on The dance Tloor where he reigns as king OT The hep caTs. ALLEN KING BACHRACH Since enTering H.lvl., AI has proven himselT To be a king OT The cinders, his IOO-yard dash being The envy OT all. Cn The Glee Club, Als rapidly changing voice seriously endangered ThaT club's appearance Tor a Time. However, AI pulled Through and now chanTs sTolidly in The bass secTiOn. An excellenT dancer and Tine sTudenT, he could oTTen be Tound aT parTies wiTh an enviable daTe, explaining The Lame Duck AmendmenT, or Marshalls decisions, no doubT. DAVE 30 AUSTIN ROBERT BAER Ausrin spenl moslr of his one year aI I-I.IvI. concealing his birlhlolace, which was - you guessed il - Brooklyn. Easily Ihe besl arlisl in school, his line illuslralions were highlighls in The Quarlrerly and The Iv1ANNIKIN.An indusrri- ous member ol Ihe Model Railroad club, AusIin's experience in locomo'rives won him Iop Ioerlh on Ihe reiuvenaled cheerleading squad, and he was very much responsible for +haI organiza+ion's ac'riviIy This year. I-Iis homework headache: Senior Malh. WALTER EVAN BERDGN Waller has a calegorical Iile of every iolce ever published. When he wasn'I referring Io Ihis weallh of mirlrh or conrriving a Ianlaslic scheme wilh Ross, Waller could be found crealing a SIaIion I'I.M.S. column or loor+ray- ing someone or anolrher on Ihe slage. As Presidenl of Ihe Debaling Socie+y he molded a fine aggregarion Ihis year. Waller is slill Trying 'ro live down Ihe Iime he clipped off a Iie al a loarly. AUSTIN WALTER 3 I HENRY BERNSTEIN Rellecrive l-lenry found a love lor books which has followed him Jrhrough his school life. A vigcrous oraror as his hisrory class will Jreslify, l-lenry is a iirslr-class debaror and a member of 'rhe Debaling Sociely. l-lis speech in assembly lor Mayor O'Dwyer will long be remembered for irs humorous sides. A flare for Jrhe imaginarive led our guier friend 'ro The since dissolved Magic Club for a year. In a schoolwide dog conlesl Jrwo years ago. a laculry commirlee led by lvlr. Anderson awarded l-lenry's dog a blue ribbon. SEYMOUR M. BEZOZI Si rolled up Jrhe hill in his Soph year and has since provided grear lun for a selecr circle wirh his sense ol humor. Essenrially inleresled in enrer- lainmenr, Si joined Jrhe orcheslra, Glee Club, and D.C.F.M.O. enlerlainmenr commirlee. A manager ol amaleur bands on Jrhe ourside, he blows The bugle if so provoked. ln his senior year, his sense ol business was evidenl when he began To murmur Ho himself ar Jrimesl Adsl - Adsl - Ads! Worked for rhe MANNIKIN in Jrhis caloaciry. HENRY SY 32 PAUL STANLEY BILGORE Slurdy, deep-voiced Pablo, Ihe piclure of heallh, easily caplrured +he Presidency ol Ihe Senior Class aller a Tine performance as Junior Treasurer. For Iwo years a J.V. Poolball slar, Paul progressed as far as Varsily in his senior year. A Record Board member, Paul was a familiar name when associ- aled wilh On The Bench. Also a Glee Club member and a dependable worker on Ihe IVIANNIKIN Edilorial Board. IRWIN D. BINDER Irwin, whose iolqes always seemed funnier Ihan Ihey were, was a member of various clubs as well as head of Ihe Program CommiHee ol Ihe Spealcers' Club. I-Ie dislinguished himself on Jrhe business boards of Ihree publicalions and also Ihrough his hard work on Ihe Jayvee Baslcelball Team. Because ol his unusual knowledge of Spanish, Irwin very much endeared himself Io Mr. Garcia during his lasl year on Ihe I'Iill. PABLO IRWIN 33 ROBERT JAMES BLINKEN Since his appearance on Ihe hill in Jrhe second Iorm, Bob has really been around. I-Iis Iine physique and singular humor were parlricularly noliceable as Co-Edilor ol Ihe Record and a Varsily Baslcelball and Baseball slandoul. Blinlcs olher acIivi+ies include The phenomenal achievemenl of becoming Quarlerly Ediror in his iunior year, G.A. represenlalive in Ihe Iourfh Iorm, Slci Club scribe, and inslrumenlalislr in Ihe orcheslra. These achievemenls, coupled wilh some Ierrilic marks, won praise Irom everybody. -Archon. WILLIAM B. BOOKMAN A residenl of Los Angeles, Bill migraled Io New Yorlc Cily and, for a shorl Jrime, Io DeWiII Clinlon. I-Iowever, radical circumslances caused a Irans- Ierence Io The hill. Cnce here, Bill Iell eagerly info Mr. Moores clulches and has been arguing a losing ballle of boxes of candy ever since. A Iull- bacl: on The Soccer Team. Bill arrived a bil Too lale Ihis year for a Ieller. On Ihe Chess Club, he won a repulalrion for his weird shirl and Iie com- binalions. BOB BILL 34 HOWARD SANFORD BOROS Howie and his Tan enTered The vesTigal halls OT The Alma MaTer in The FiTTh Form. His bewildering TalenT On The keyboard quickly esTablished him as a masTer OT such: resulT-a place in The OrchesTra and a secreTarial posT in The Music Club. AsTonished by The possibiliTies OT modern chemisTry, Ben- gal was blown harmlessly inTo The laps OT The Science Clubbers by virTue OT a hydrogen explosion. Also in The Speakers' Club. FRANCIS CHEN Franny was blown by a monsoon inTo The midsT OT l-l.M.'s sTuclenT body and proceeded To aTTach The Presidency OT The FirsT Form To a long lisT OT high honors. His prowess as a linguisT pronounced him a member OT The SocieTy soon aTTer. Served on The Record and Manual EdiTorial Boards, and was MANNIKTN AssisTanT EdiTOr. SecreTary OT his class in The Third and FiTTh Forms, Fran excelled in VarsiTy Soccer Tor Three seasons. Crowning success meT The scholasTic genius in The Torm OT GA. SecreTary's posT in his senior Term. 213-' FRANNY 35 HOWIE - N X Q -5. - .. X LAURENCE MARTIN COHEN Larry became known among his Triends as a criTic OT The Tine arTs, and among The resT oT The school as The TalenTed conducTor oT The NoonTime Symphony. Vice-PresidenT oT The Music Club, oicficial record purchaser Tor The school's collecTion, and a scienTisT on The side, Larry was a Two year member OT The Science Club. Because OT a serious buT genial aTTiTude Larry won The respecT oT his classmaTes. JOHN JOSEPH CORCORAN Corky, The kid, came To H.M. in his senior year. An excellenT aThleTe, John was All-STaTe end on The DwighT Morrow FooTball Team. He was iusT as excellenT on The Hill and was The sparlcplug oT The HillToppers' eleven. A Tine basl4eTball player, Corlcy was The nemesis oT opposing Tives wiTh his Tancy wesTern shoTs. His excellenT high-iumping and discus Throwing made him The possessor oT an assorTmenT oT New Jersey aThleTic medals. LARRY CORKY 36 ROGER PHILIP CORNICK Rollicking Roger roared his way pasT scanTy resisTance inTo The cloisTered corridors OT Alma MaTer Horace Mann aTTer leaving The desolaTion oT Yonkers Tor a beTTer educaTion. Tex's greaT disposiTion has made him popular wiTh many on The hillTop. Played VarsiTy and J.V. TooTbalI and argued incess- anTIy buT To no avail wiTh Mr. IvlarTin IasT year. LenT his bariTone To The Glee Club and hopes To solo one day -- wiTh The IvIeT, no doubT. PHILIP DCNALD CORSI Phil came up The H.IVI. ladder all The way Trom kindergarTen. He greaTly surprised Mr. LewerTh by knowing nearly every word of The hisTory book. A sTar Track man Tor Two years. Phil also showed his aThleTic prowess by being an ace merman. His Tall physique could oTTen be seen aT The CanTeen, where he served diIigenTly. A member OT The LinguisT board in his TirsT year on The Hill. R06 PHIL 37 HENRY RICHARD DAVIS l-lank came To us in The l3iTTh Form in a raTher guieT manner. Reserved and respecTed, he soon made a name as an ace baskeTball player. A TalenTed arTisT, Dick drew Tor The QuarTerly and laTer ioined The newly-Tormed ArT Club. Sang in The Glee Club and learned oraTory in The Speakers' Club. A 'grade A' dancer, Dick held The inTeresT oT many aT his TirsT Tew dances. ATTerwards, he was readily accepTed as having gualiTy. SAM LOUIS DEITSCH DiminuTive Sam soon showed ThaT he had plenTy on The ball excepT in size. A Tine arTisT, he skeTched Tor The '45 MANNHQIN, The QuarTerly, and The Summer Review, OT The laTTer OT which he was ArT EdiTor. A spark plug oT The D.C.F.M.O. EnTerTainmenT CommiTTee, Sambo worked hard obTaining a jukebox and geTTing noTables To enTerTain. Famous Tor his Tine collecTion oT iazz recordings, Sammy is also a Tine drummer. W, HANK SAM 38 .1 DONALD DE LA CHAPELLE Ducky is anoTher Tellow who has been around Tor years. A DramaTisT in The TirsT Torm, he remained relaTively inacTive unTil The TourTh, when he joined The Glee Club and wound up as iTs SecreTary-Librarian This year. PubliciTy head oT The CanTeen, Don was responsible Tor many humorous announce- menTs when we were Juniors. A Record Board member and original carToon highlighTer on The QuarTerly, Don was also an eTlicienT VarsiTy Baseball Manager. ELLIOTT FREDERICK ELLIS Suave and obliging Elly saunTered inTo his TirsT reciTaTion in EiTTh Form one breezy morning and proceeded To win a hosT oT Triends. EsTablishing a liTerary TooThold Tor his love oT sporTs, he Tried ouT Tor The Record, worlced diligenTly Tor On The Bench, and Tinally won The posT oT SporTs EdiTor. Played MeTcalT-ball in The spring and dribbled in The WinTer. Also a mem- ber oT The SporTs and Glee Clubs. Looked sophisTicaTed buT really wasn'T. 5? ouciw . I 4 ELLY 39 JOEL M. FEINBERG lnimiiable Joel, wilh his Jap acceni, laughed his way inlo l'l.lVl. from Music and Ari. Joined lhe Glee Club and learned +ha'r one mus+ sing, rarher Than clown, To remain a member. A skier oi greai meril, Joel has been a main- siay of The Ski Club lor Jrwo years. Ari Edilor of The '45 MANNIKIN, he leni his Jralenr io ihe Quarierly This year as well as lasl. A line aihlele despile his slighlr slralure. Joel called signals on Jrhe Varsiry lhis year and played sleady lennis for 'Doc Crandall's ieam. STEPHEN H. FEINBERG Fresh oul ol Bronx Science, suave Sieve slipped inio lvlr, Baru'rh's vauliecl room in rhe Fillh Form. Tall and broad shouldered-heh-he easily asiounded l-l.lvl.'ers by his remarkable combinarion of ihirsl for knowledge and iusl plain lhirsl. Bedecked in a while splini and a badly mangled arm, he quickly caughi on lo The l-lorace lvlann way -- eaiing ar lVlike's or drinking pop al Andy's. A member ol Jrhe Sporls Club, he also worked for Jrhe Quarierly. JOEL STEVE 40 z 6 Y' JAMES FRETWELL STreTch was probably The mosT loolqedvup-To boy in The school. lvlainTain- ing an average heighT oT 6 TT. 6 in. in his Three years' soiourn on The Hill, he puT size and power To good avail by aiding The Soccer Team To garner many vicTories. Jim's Siberian assembly announcemenTs will long be remembered as will boys who Tail To reTurn Trom said expediTions. A Senior PaTrol leader oT Troop SOI, STreTchwell was also D.C.l:.M.C. DecoraTions CommiTTee Chairs man Tor Two years. BERNARD FUTTER Felix enTered H.lv1. in The l:ourTh Form and guieTly Took his place in The Class oT 46. His compleTe modesTy and good naTure overwhelmed mosT people as he soon became one oT The class's beTTer sTudenTs. Besides belong- ing To The Chess Club, Ping Pong Club, and The Music Club, Berney was Tor Two years an ouTsTanding member oT The Soccer squads TirsT Team. QuiTe a Tine Tarmer in The summer Too. STRETCH BERNEY A. 41 riff , W '- WT f V, ,Y , , ,W DAVID T. GALLER Dapper Dave, who wriTes poeTry ThaT only Dave Galler and a child prodigy in The TirsT Torm can undersTand4 ran The QuarTerly This year, When noT ouT peddling his bow Ties on Madison Avenue, he preached The iazz gospel in The Record and gleeTully led his cohorTs up To his room To lisTen To his radical music. Dave has a Tongue Tor The Romance languages and Teaches French To his Temale acquainTances. Also MANNIKIN Managing EdiTor and wriTer oT mosT Senior wriTeups. STANLEY SIMON GANS An old companion oT Eddie Kullcin, STan achieved Tame in oTher Tields Too. l-le was a highly skilled aThleTe, well lcnown Tor his Tine aim in basl4eTball and Tlawless Tielding in baseball. STan was The business manager oT The I945 MANNlKIN, The TirsT FiTTh Former To garner This posiTion, and The Treasurer and charTer member oT The SporTs Club. l-le Tired baseball averages aT any- one in range and lcepT classes amused wiTh his humorous ad-libs. DAVE STAN 42 'Qll-. SANFORD GLUCK ATTer Three years ol iusT hard work, Sandy, besT lcnown Tor his blond wavy hair, showed his real abiliTy in The Senior Class as one oT The schools besT acTors. l-lis perTormances in The DramaTic Club will noT easily be Tor- goTTen. l-lis musical abiliTies also came To lighT Through his worlc in The Glee and Music Clubs. Sandy amazed all by bringing over Tive hundred dollars worTh oT MANNIKIN ads To become assisTanT business manager. DONALD H. G-OLDMAN Don enTered The sacred halls in The Second Form and immediaTely made himselT aT home in These new surroundings. l-le Tound his greaTesT inTeresT lay in reading. Every day Don could be seen sTruggling Through ponderous novels. AddicTed To sTagecraTT, he ioined The ranks oT The unsung heroes and busied himselT by building and painTing scenery. QuieT and obliging, Don Tound ThaT iT is besT To mind onels own business and cooperaTe wiTh all. Z'il! we -vw... a?g,h sg x A 4, , 'V SANDY Kl '-5 .,., DON - , nb-u 43 N6 GABRIEL L. GOLDSTEIN Gabby spolled lvlr. Oliver one allernoon and decided Io allend I-LM. lor curiosi+y's salce. Leaving lhe almosphere ol Sluyvesanl in Ihe dusl, he joined Ihe Sporls Club and lhe Quarlerly Arl Board, meanwhile, selling Ihe lalesl Ioaler slyle in iackels behind Sludy Hall. Across Ihe lield Gabby look a lilcing Io Mr. Melcall and pullered around on The J.V. Foolball and Baseball Ieams lor Iwo years. WILLIAM G. GOODE Izroliclcing and happyfqo-luclcy, Bill passed a breezy lhree and a hall years on Ihe hilllop. A crallsman al hearl, he eslablished himself as a Siberian in his senior Ierm. I-Ie was an aclive member ol Ihe Gun Club, unlil ils arsenal exploded Ihis year. OI greal slamina, he hiked wilh Doc Crandall lor several seasons. A veleran ol many snowball lighls, Bill will willingly display his ballle scars Io any inquisilive Lower Schooler. f GABBY BILL 44 LAURANCE VILLERS GOODRICH Goodie sTarTed OTF wiTh a bang in The TirsT Torm, aTTached a hosT oT Triends as a Tollowing, and gaThered suTTicienT voTes To become Second Form Treasurer. Vice-PresidenT The following year, and class PresidenT in The suc- ceeding year, Larry became our envoy To The ExecuTive CommiTTee in his Junior year, reaching iTs Presidency in The SixTh Form. An all-round aThleTe, Goodie played varsiTy TooTball, Tennis, and baslceTball. Also D.C.F.lvl.0. insTigaTor and a real swell guy. -Archon. SEDGWICK WILLIAM GREEN Sedge blew inTo The hallowed hall oT l-l. lvl. aT an early age and resorTed To poliTical sTraTegem To garner The FirsT Forrn's recogniTion as a public speaker. Joined The DebaTing SocieTy and became iTs PresidenT in his Junior year. PresidenT oT The class in iTs Trosh Term, Vice-PresidenT in The FourTh Form, and GA. Club RepresenTaTive in The l:iTTh Form, Bill reached The Top as Co-EdiTor oT The Record in his Senior class. BoasTed an envious average besides. -Archon. if? L W-5, Z ' 'WZ Q1 MTW T LARRY ssssf We -'T eeeee -ess A ssii ' SEDCSE 45 HOWARD GREENFELD A Tair wind blew Howie inTo l l.lvl. in The Third Tormq and, once deposiTed, he was always seen in hoT acTiviTy. As l:eaTure EdiTor oT The Record, Howie shared a Taxi wiTh Joan McCracken and bursT inTo almosT every acTress' dressing room on Broadway. A FooTball Co-Manager, he made The casualTy lisT by pracTically slicing OTT his index Tinger wiTh an orange kniTe. He served very caloably as AssisTanT EdiTor oT The MANNIKIN, LAURENCE N. GROSS Larry enTered H.M. in The '45 summer session and gained an amazing mark by creaTing on The subway a Tour-line poem which even+uaIIy ended up in The Summer Review. Larry roused endless inquiries as To who Marylyn was and, wisely enough, merely laughed. A sTurdy member oT The Music, DramaTic, and Glee Clubs, Larry TurTher disTinguished himselT across The Tield by his Tine work on The Tennis squad. r' HOWIE LARRY 46 'F 'T S WILLIAM PAUL HAUGAARD Bill arrived a biT laTe in The SixTh Form buT noT Too laTe To digesT The siTuaTion and TormulaTe a Tine record. lvlusically minded, he played a red4 hoT corneT in The orchesTra and sang in The Glee Club. An Eagle ScouT upon his advenT, Bill was soon appoinTed To The posT OT Co-AssisTanT ScouTmasTer in Troop 5Ol. A member oT The Spealcers' Club, Bill puT his endowmenTs To worlc here as well as in obTaining high marlcs. ANDREW D. HEINEMAN AT l-LM. since KindergarTen, Andy has Tollowed his ancesTors Through The halls where we linger'd and Tinally became a Senior, accumulaTing some excellenT grades on The way. ln beTween dragging along his Trunlcload oT books and Throwing challc aT Green, he amassed a long lisT oT acTiviTies, becoming an EdiTor oT The MANNIKIN, QuarTerly, and Manual, and a member oT The G.A.E.C., The LinguisT SocieTy, The Glee, and DramaTic clubs. A Soccer Tullbaclc To booT. BILL ANDY 47 BERNARD HIRSCH Bud Talked his way in and ouT oT predicamenTs Tor Tour years aT l-l.M. Trained regularly in The Speakers' Club and, proving himselT a superior sales- man, he received recogniTion as Quarlrerly Business Manager and Business Managers' RepresenTaTive To The C'.A.E.C. His muTual undersTandings wiTh Mr. Oliver highlighTed Third year French and added Tun To a good course. Buddy also Took an inTeresT in The newly Tormed SporTs Club and was a mem- ber oT our class's Soph and Junior Social ComrniTTees. GEORGE HOFRICHTER George Traveled To l'l. M. every day Trom SuTTern, New York. Seemingly undaunTed by This Trip, he was an explosive member oT The shorT-lived Gun Club. For Two years, George could be seen busily experimenTing in The lab Tor The Science Club, when he wasn'T aT The chess board. He gained The somewhaT dubious honor oT never going To a l-lorace Mann dance or To play Tor Two years. BUDDY GEORGE 48 JOSEPH HOLME A happy smile and winning personaliTy liTTed Joe To populariTy on and around The l'lill. A naTive oT Riverdale, he raged inTo school aT 8:l5 To weave wondrous Tales oT wondrous Temmes. Big Joe won a sTarTing posiTion as halTbacl4 on The Soccer Team aTTer having been an auxiliary man Tor Two years. Though generally repuTed as a wolT, Joe was double-crossed by his Triends when The Senior Poll was Talcen. WILLIAM M. HONIG Bill mounTed The hill in The FourTh Form, and Tinding The l-l.M. way oT liTe very enioyable, never again reTurned To Columbia Grammar. l-le was a daunTless dribbler on The Jayvee baslceTball courT and a calculaTing clouTer on The diamond. Billy joined The Music club and dynamically sTood Tor The beTTer music . . . classics, iT says here. A mean man wiTh a ping-pong racgueT in his hand. he pinged, or ponged, his opponenTs inTo submission. JOE BILL 49 M. STEPHEN INGBER Big, blond Sleve swam info l-l.lvl. in 'rhe Fourlh Form and has been doing +ops'ryle work across Jrhe field ever since. A lover of pholography, he decided afler a maiorily vojre +o become Presidenf of Jrhe Upper School Pholography Club. Famous for his selecl circle conlabs in Mr. Briggs' Ancienl Hislory class, Sleve inlends 'ro fighl The Communisls when he becomes of comrade age. A Science clubber in his Senior year. JAMES L. JACOBER Jalce saunlered over from lvlamaroneclc in lhe Fiflh Form and prompifly moved his brown and while saddle shoes. his guns, and his praclical iolce humor inlo 'rhe dorm. Praclically Jrhe only cheerleader in his inilial lerm, Jim was pleased lo find many cohorls surrounding him as a Senior. A rilleman in Jrhe Gun Club un+il he shol all lhe olher members, Jake warbled sweelly in Jrhe Glee Club and belonged +o 'rhe slci aggregalion. STEVE rX. ' ' JAKE 50 it i i 'I WILLIAM L. JOHNSON Modesl Bill was 'lhe allfrourd Riverdae boy who wer- a host Q? Frefds al Horace Mann. A hee alhlele, he played leo heich 5ecvoal ah' h oy a knee Injury fhis year. Thfs did roi tcp hm hom cef?'m. 'g as eve ef ehe fines? mermen and lraclc sprlnhers in lhe schools hlslofy. BW 'Sl-'SEC 'H malhemallcs ard sparkled on ihe dahce deer. Baihess Mafager Q5 ahe Dramalic club, his lavorlle eayirg Is, You Jap, you. H. SHELDEN KAUFMAN Shelly hrs? showed his face Tru ahe louwh lofm alder com -Q hem Wade unior I Q oo. e rece3ve a oasslon 'of e ra'Qa?s lfilm 1 f, 'Jef J I-l gh S h l H d y I L F 4 V O and laier was eleceed Preslden? of fhe French Club. Ma23'Q use cf Vs a ?e c lafenls, Shelly served Faifhlully on lhe Quadefly Ad Bcafd a'c dd a QCCG - 1 r - -r. 'Al K - r AML Q I , g,A M ' loo or drawmg. Gwved wfm a oesre Tcr afgume, ,, he wa: aaa a 1 enfce' of 'lhe Spealcers Club. P, BLLL I-U Y 5 I my ALAN CHARLES KLUGER Al and his sense oT humor arrived here in Time To sTarT compiling a Tine scholasTic record. AI was on hand To become a sTar sprinTer on The cinders and has been a mainsTay on The Traclc Squad Tor Three seasons. An apT French s+uden+ was AI: and, To supporT This, he became one oT The early advocaTes oT The now-lax French Club. Also on The Library STaTT and in The Music Club, he Tried To perTecT a Spanish accenT like ThaT oT The Linguaphone record. EDGAR ALLEN KULKIN Loquacious Eddie sTallced up The hill in The EirsT Form and was amazed To Tind such a large insTiTuTion awaiTing him. Soon Tound an ouTleT Tor his TalenT in lvlr. Briggs' hisTory courses and was, ThereaTTer, branded someThing souTh OT The border. A veriTable Red Barber, Eddie nesTled behind The P.A, milce Tor guiTe someTime and reTereed upper school baslceTball when no one else was available. His humor was parTicularly eTTecTive during singing assemblies. AL EDDIE 52 Y 1 f LOUIS KU RRELMEYER Big Lou, who was a member of Jrhe Class of '46 for so long, hor-fooled if our lasl summer. While ar l-l.M. he and his chessmen were Jrhe nemesis oi many schools and Columbia now finds him happily silualed al iirsi board. A Varsily gridiron gianl, l.ou bowled over his opponenls, lhen sliced Them +o ribbons as Caplain of rhe Fencing Team. Fdilor ol lhe I945 Summer Review, Jayvee calcher, and lvlarh wizard. JAY B. LANGNER Good nalured, smiling Jay came +o l-l.M. from rhe Franklin School, Wilh him he broughf along an unusual knowledge ol music, which he used well as Presidenl of lhe Music Club, Jay also served as music criric lor lhe Record and as a prominenr member of Jrhe French Club. Alhlelically, he was no slacker, being one of fhe slrong iaclors on Jrhe Varsi+y Foolball line, l-lis o+her line, wilh The women, was also well known. LOU JAY 53 JOHN JEFFREY LANGSDORF Johnny, who has been aT l-l.lv1. in inTervals since KindergarTen, reTurned Trom The WesT lasT year To spread his good-naTured humor. WroTe a popular STaTion l'l.lV1.S. column Tor The Record as a TiTTh Tormer and was inducTed inTo The l.inguisT SocieTy. John won Tame as MANNIKIN Co-EdiTor, Tound Time To be QuarTerly AssisTanT EdiTor, and appeared in The DramaTic Clubs On Borrowed Time and The Valiant A soccer leTTerman, he idled in poeTry when noT visiTing in New Rochelle. JACK WALTER LAVINE Jaclc be+ Rubin and Binder ThaT he could ouT-bowl Them The TirsT day oT school, and l-l.lvl. has been The alley ever since. One Tor a good laugh, Turk perTormed as well as he could acTively and passively. Played VarsiTy Base- ball and place-lciclfed on The gridiron in his senior year. A Science and Biology Clubber, Jaclc was scienTiTic To The end. Specialized in unique inTerpreTaTions oT melody on Wednesday mornings. JOHN JACK 54 E. BARRY LEHMAN Posing secre'ry as a plugger lor lpana rooihpasre, Barry manifesled an early inreresi in mechanics and science. Aifer 'rwo fedious years of lugging equipmenlr from school 'ro The dorm, he succeeded in embezzling lhe pos? ol Model Railroader Presideni. A chemisl also, lhe Grin made his producl llpanal quieily in The Chem Lab, and lhen sold il lo Firsl Formers. Vice- Presidenl' of lhe Science Club and soccer fullback, he also scribbled a liille for rhe MANNIKIN. IRA M. LEVIN Of mild lemperarnenl and nor easiiy provoked, lra decided Jrhal rhe girls around l-l.M. were superior ro Those al Sfuyvesanr, and irelclced up Jrhe hill in ihe middle of his soph year. Served capably on 'rhe Ari Board ol Jrhe Quarfrerly and lurrhered arlislic lalenf by joining Jrhe Ari' Club in his Senior year. A shurlerbug by inclinalion, lra snapped Zabar in many poses. ln a less aclive vein, he sal behind Jrhe Library deslc for 'rwo years. BARRY IRA 55 MICHAEL A. LOEB AT Tour years oT age good-naTured Milfe Turned up enThusiasTicaIly aT a Horace Mann IcindergarTen shindig and Tor ThirTeen years has been aiding This insTiTuTion wiTh his alTruisTic eTTorTs. As The ediTor oT a reiuvenaTed Manual, Mike showed liTerary quaIiTies TurTher exempliTied as Co-EdiTor oT The LinguisT AnThology and as a QuarTerly and MANNIKIN assisTanT ediTor. Also Co-Chairman oT The Library CommiTTee, The DebaTers' secreTary, and G.A.E.C. member. An ace socceriTe and J.V. basIceTball hoopsTer besides. SIDNEY MARTIN Mild-mannered Sidney enTered The Tolds oT The Maroon and WhiTe in The TirsT summer session, ScienTiTicalIy inclined, Sidney puTTered wiTh phoTography and Tinally became a Tull-Tledged member oT ThaT club. ConsTrucTive, he decided on The STaqe Crew as an ample means To his end. A sTudious and reTlecTive characfer senT sloeculaTing Sid To The Chess Club, where he learned ThaT a IcnighT and a horse are one and The same. MIKE SID 56 GEORGE MEER, JR. A naTive oT Baghdad, George abandoned his sheilc's heriTage in Tavor oT The Maroon and WhiTe. ModesT and reTlecTive, George worlced diligenTly on The Library CommiTTee where he could Tind relaxaTion. Turning To more acTive work, he ioined The Siberians as well as The Science and PhoTography Clubs. AlThough one oT The smallesT in The class, George Tound Time To dabble aT J.V. BaslceTball and was one oT The braver dumbbells who sTucl4 iT ouT Through Mr. Moore's senior maTh class. DANIEL MELICOW Danny, oTherwise lcnown as Madame BuTTerTly, TluTTered inTo l'l.M. in The l:irsT Form. A sTudenT oT The drama, he succeeded in obTaining The Pres- idency oT ThaT club in his senior year. lnTeresTed in chess also, a volley oT voTes pulled him in as ThaT clubls leader in The same year. Worlced occasion- ally on The QuarTerly and exchanged blows wiTh Willy Eisner across The Tield during boxing pracTice. GEORGE DAN 57 SAMUEL S. MESSITER, JR. Sam, beTTer known as lchabod, came To l-LM. Trom Sunny CaliTornia and planned an aThleTic career Tor himselT. Figured in VarsiTy FooTball Tor Two years where he Tound Thaf he could punT The pigskin TurTher Than anyone else. A baseball and Track sTar besides. Sam won TirsT place in The iavelin Throw aT The A.A.P.S. inTer-school meeT lasT year. A Ski Clubber, Sam also can build beauTiTul model airplanes and speak Japanese TluenTly. LEWIS MORRIS Flashing his happy smile, Lewis served up cokes To CanTeen visiTors Tor Two years. ElecTed by The school lasT spring To be chairman oT The ReTresh- menT CommiTTee Tor The D.C.l:.lvl.0., Lewis was repeaTedly praised Tor his eTTorTs in The Cave lnn. Feverishly oraTed in The CurrenT EvenTs Club and saT in on SporTs Club meeTings. Lewis was a lineman on The J.V. EooTball squad, Tinding The dorm a splendid place To resT his aching bones. SAM LEW 58 PAUL R. MORT Since lhe Lower School, collegiale-looking Paul has been a leading Horace Manner, serving as Vice-Presidenl in +he lillh and sixlh forms. Having a poweriul voice, Paul managed lo make ir reach from ihe Glee Club 'ro shoul- ing encouragemenr on rhe Foolball Varsily. Played J.V. Baskelball and Base- ball as well as Varsily Track. Paul s knack for news exlended 'ro The Record, where he wrore enihusiasrically for fwo years. HENRY E. MUNROE Due lo iniury incurred lasr summer, Hank, a second slring guard on Choaies Conneclicul slale championship loolball Team Jrwo aulumns ago. was unable io play on H.M.'s gridiron Jrhis year. Finding less rough company on lhe Jayvee squad, he slarred For Jrwo weeks and again was forced 'ro drop our, lhis Time wilh a lorn ligamenr. When nol' wresiling wilh lra Sussman, 'Jrhe Duke was a kingpin of dormiiory life. rn: CN vw- Pnu L DUKE 59 MM .7 .v,, -V--L . H ..--................ Mlm EDWARD B. NEGER Eddie came in his Trosh year and decided To swim Tor l l.M. l-le has suc- ceeded in obTaining Two maior and one minor leTTers and is a poTenTial breasT- sTrolcer. Worlcing Tor various publicaTions, Ed chose phoTography as his de- parTmenT and became PhoTogralohy EdiTor oT The Summer Review and Quar- Terly. A capable ad-producer, he garnered The posiTion oT Business Manager oT The Tormer publicaTion in The '45 summer semesTer. ALLAN JAY NEWMARK AI asTounded l-l.M. Tor six years wiTh his brillianT marks and Tremendous acTiviTy. STarTing oTT wiTh a silver cup in General Language, he became a member of The LinguisT SocieTy and, recenTly, co-ediTor oT The AnThology. AcTive on all loublicaTions, Al was MANNIKIN co-ediTor, associaTe ediTor oT The Quarlrerly, and a Manual ediTor. Co-chairman oT The Library CommiT- Tee, and a member oT The STage Crew and Science Club, Al also managed Traclc in his iunior year and Soccer in his iunior and senior years. EDDIE 60 6-,A ,iw JAMES BURR OSBOU RN Ozzie became a TirsT Tormer aTTer many years down aT l2OTh STreeT and has progressed up The ladder. By virTue oT a voice unequaled in The loclcer room, he aTTained The posT OT singer in The Glee Club. Slaved Tor EreTwell in his senior year and slammed The ping-pong ball Tor Two seasons. VarsiTy BaslceT- baller and SocceriTe, Jim proved To be The besT all-around member oT The laTTer squad. Track sTar, in addiTion. GEORGE LION PINCUS George was anoTher member oT The DormiTory Tribe. However, he was more sedaTe Than oThers and managed To reTain his wiTs. lnTeresTed in sciences and music, he was accepTed in boTh clubs. A BroolclyniTe was Pinlfy, so he decided To enTer The SporTs Club iusT To insure The Tavorable sTanding oT The Bums. Was able To ascend To senioriTy in Tive years, an aTTribuTe which several have Tailed To achieve in six. JIMMY GEORGE ,.Mw9!'91ru.. ol STANLEY JOEL PRESSMAN Dizzy, lcnown lor his ready smile, even when in a casl up To his hip, has aslounded l'l.M.'ers by ioining almosl every club. Besides belonging To clubs, he was Concerl Masler ol The Orcheslra and Secrelary ol The Thesloians. l-le climaxed all, Jrhis year, during lhe '45-'46 class eleclions, being chosen Senior Class Treasurer. Slan also served as Circulalion Manager ol Jrhe Record for lwo years and as MANNIKIN Pholographer. JACK RICHARD Jaclc, wilh 'rhe ready grin, fled from Jrhe madness of Yonlcers Jro l-lorace Mann in lime 'ro become one ol lhe class's leading scholars. Selling aside his brains for a spell, he i'OOlC oflicership in Jrhe Science and Music Clubs, becoming Jrreasurer ol bolh. Jaclds lilerary capabililies led lo his becoming Managing Edilor of lhe Quarlerly and an aclive member ol Jrhe MANNHCIN Edilorial Board. The pigslcin claimed Jrhis versalile cherub as Varsily and J.V. Manager. Also became Arhlelic Represenlalive on Jrhe G.A.E.C. DIZZY JACK 62 JOSEPH P. ROSE, JR. Joe drove up lo Jrhe pearly gales in I943 To slarl his l-l.M. school career. Champion al rip-ball and ofher sporls involving disseclion of various lower schoolers, Joe cared mosl for lhe social ouflook of life. A hepcal. a groove boy, a iive hive, or whalever you choose, Joe gained his greafesr renown by virlue of his safari each morning To school in his sedan. ALAN S. ROSENBERC-5 Alan, a pin-siripe man, arrived a bil laie al l-l.M., buf managed +o calch The bandwagon for a successful senior year. Amiable and cooperalive, he loolc li+'rle Jrime in winning friends and popularily. A good alhlele, he made his marlc in baslcelball and baseball, playing on bolh varsily Jreams under Moose Miller. Al also lenfr his lalenfs lo +he Glee Club, proving Jrhal his was one of Jrhe linesl voices lhe school has ever heard. JOE AL 63 ,JA JULIAN M. ROSENBERG Julie halTed when he saw l'l.lvl. Tor The TirsT Time, and, deciding iT was large enough To hold boTh him and Bob RoTh, enTered. I-le immediaTely esTablished himsehc as sharp on Top by joining The Tencing squad. A melodious asseT To The Glee Club, Julie provided any noTes reguired ouT oT The normal ranges The Speakers' Club lenT an ouTleT To his emoTions, and he won iTs Vice-Presidency in The SixTh Form. GaThered ads Tor The lVlANNlKllNl and became The leader on ThaT publicaTion's Business Board. ROGER ROSS Lanlcy Rog oT The l'll comb my hair when l Teel lilce iT group had a Tiendish eye Tor ridiculous exciTemenT, parTicularly demonsTraTed on The I.R.T. An imposing inTerpreTer oT The Dewey Decimal sysTem, he sTallced The library subduing FirsT Formers. Roger won Tame as a TalenTed acTor and Record humorisT. Palled around a loT wiTh Berdon, a comparision which resembled lVluTT and JeTT. PromoTed The populariTy oT The Squire 'l'heaTre by his Tre- guenT paTronage. JULTE R06 64 ROBERT S. ROTH Bob iiTTerbugged inTo The Third Form a biT on The shorT side. l-le showed he had whaT iT Takes by since ioining The J.V. and VarsiTy gridiron aggre- gaTions. A Tine ball player and aThleTe, Bob proved his arTisTries by drawing MANNIKIN and QuarTerly cuTs in his iunior year. ln his senior Term he ioined The ArT Club and helped TurTher The success OT This new organizalrion. Also on The Spealcers' Club and The D.C.l:.M.O. EnTerTainmenT and Finance Com- miTTees. DONALD SYLVESTER ROTHCHILD Don sTrolled Through The blessed porTals in The FirsT Form and prompTly became a member oT ScouT Troop 5OI. OpporTuniTy lcnoclced when The Linf guisT beclconed, and lanlcy Don caughT iT To become a member oT The Lin- guisT SocieTy. lvleT Mr. Briggs and decided To become an asseT To The Speakers' Club, only To arrive aT The posT oT PresidenT as a Senior. This year Don became Senior PaTrol Leader oT The ScouTs and was acTive on The CanTeen's EnTerf TainmenT CommiTTee. BOB DON 65 'w,. HOWARD G. RUBIN l-lowie, alThough diminuTive in size, showed aT an early daTe his griT and pluclc among his Tellow class members. Played on The J.V. Gridiron Tor Two seasons and bravely wenT on To TooTball, Track, and swimming - all VarsiTy. Encouraged by a love Tor The absTracT, l-lowie ToughT his way inTo The Science Club only To wonder why he couldn'T be lilce FreTwell. Bowled a good Trame and even encouraged an alley To be esTablished in The hall leading To The assembly. WILLIAM SARNOFF Big Bill Toolc a liTTle Time, buT by his senior year had succeeded in amass- ing some noTable posiTions. Vice-PresidenT oT The G.A.E.C. and PresidenT oT The Juniors were probably ToremosT. A Truly amazing player on The clay courTs, Bill won The Tennis TournamenT Trophy Twice and The '45 A.A.P.S. doubles. Also a meriTorious basl4eTball player, he played VarsiTy ball Tor Two years. As Tor The liTerary side, Bill worlced Tor The Record in his senior year. HOWIE BILL 66 . JAMES RODNEY SCHLESINGER Jimmy's crewcul could olien be seen in Ihe miclslr of a hol polilical dis- cussion. While he wasn'I advocaling some radical program, Jim was probably giving ou+ a gruesome assignmenl for Jrhe Record in his Managing Ediior capaciiy, making poisonous gas in The Chemisiry Lab, whipping some poor Boy Scoul info line, or wriling feverishly for The MANNIKIN. Jim always boasied a remarkable average and saved money by making his girl friends pay Ihe bill. MICHAEL SCHNEIDER A newcomer Io school Iasl' year, Mike quickly orienied himself Io his new home. Quielr and unassuming, he was seldom seen and less oflen heard. I-Ie asiounded Iellow Sixfh Formers by reading dala on Ihe hisfory ol Ihe lowans preparafory Io Taking Ihe renowned reading Iesl. Lisied as one of Ihe Senior CIass's beHer sludenls, Mike has also Taken par+ in ex+racurricuIar aclivilies. 1 9 in JIMMY MIKE 67 Q 7 ew ski? t .5 LAWRENCE CARL SCHOEN A Brooklynile, Larry was born Jrhere and allrended Brooklyn Tech. Soiourning ar Franklin lor a while, he decided Thar The l-lilllop could besl saiisly his needs. A slurdy Soccer man, he made his mark in Jrhal sporl as le-H inside, as well as running in Track. A clarineiislr in ihe Qrcheslra, Larry also sang in lhe Glee Club. Wrole good liclion and olher worlhy Quarlerly malerial. HARRY H. SCHWARZ l'II lake anylhing in my snide, said l-larry one brighl morning in '-ll and slrode up The l-lill lor live years wilh Jrhal plan. An arJris+ from +he school of Dali and Picasso, l-larry's illuslralions broughlr on many lrighlened expres- sions from Quarlerly readers. l'lis line slories eslablished his sanily however. Running presses and selling Jrype unlil lhe Prinl Club folded, l-larry succeeded in ealring his fill by becoming a lunch line circulaior par excellence, LARRY HARRY 63 Q X 4Q.,Q NORMAN SHERESKY Big Norm puf his nose fo fhe ground and following his brofhers foof- sfeps, crawled up fhe hill - on all fours. l-le sfayed up nighfs feverishly fhinlcing up ideas for Sfafion l-l.M.S. columns for fhe Record and esfablished himself as a poefry inferprefer in fhe dayfime. Appeared af fhe office window in fhe Third Form and spenf much fime fhere affer fhaf. Normy helped fo wrife The senior play when nof raving abouf his girls. DONALD SINGER lvloonshine sfruffed around for fwo years before Mr. Crandall had wif- nessed his sfamina on fhe clay courfs. Now, high-ceded raquefeer, Don has furfhered his fame in afhlefics by acquiring a lvlanagership in J.V. Baslqef- ball. Presidenf, as well as founder, of l-l.lVl.'s popular Sporfs Club, Don could offen be seen af 2:25 fuforing aspiring youfhs in fhe differences befween Babe Rufh and Charley. lnferviewed a hosf of sporf celebrifies for fhe Record and Quarferly. NORMY DON 69 BARRY FREDERICK SMITH Barry has been a Horace Manner ever since he can remember. When he was TirsT able To wallc SmiTTy Tondly grasped his Kodak and wenT ouT inTo The world To snap liTe as The camera saw iT. As a resulT he is an ace phoToq- rapher Tor each and every H.M. publicaTion and naTurally was chosen as lv1ANNlKlN PhoTography EdiTor. Two-year member oT The Science and PhoTog- raphy Clubs and Vice-PresidenT oT The laTTer in his senior Term, he was an arTisT To booT. Also on Mr. lvleTcalT's J.V. in The spring. MAURICE HOWARD SOLOMON Maurice and The smile oT beauTy sTrode on The heels oT The Muses during his Three year sTreTch aT Horace lv1ann.One oT The Tew who could read Shelley To The saTisTacTion oT Mr. BaruTh, he creaTed some dacTyllic diTTies oT his own. A Tine Tenor voice eased Maurice inTo The Glee Club and Small Chorus. He was a sparlcplug on The Senior play commiTTee, as well as Tormer J.V. pigslcin ace and Traclc man. BARRY MAURICE 70 SANFORD DAVID SOLOMON Born in Brooklyn, Sandy became an American when he moved To Wes? End Avenue and an endless source ol pleasure from nearby Calhoun. Com- mercially educaled af Commerce, Snalce slarled a conlraband flow of guns and ammunilion inlo The school iusl in lime Io Iound Ihe Gun Club, ol which he was immedialely elecled Presidenl. DAVID LOUIS SPANEL Pleasanl-Iempered Dave lell I-I.M. lor a period buf decided Ihal The original choice was Ihe besl and relurned in Ihe Izourlh Form. A member ol The Linguisl Sociely, Dave relurned Io a group of honors, including Vice- Presidency of Ihe Debalors, Secrelary ol Ihe Pholrography Club, member ol The MANNIKIN Edilorial Board. A valid member ol The Record and Quarlerly, Dave was also Associale Edilor ol Ihe Manual and will be remem- bered for his Ierven+ announcemenls aboul class rings. SANDY DAVE 7 I ' f Wu :s xx.. - , 6' 5 x x x .- I N W' NB x X CLIFFORD SPIELER Clif-I, lhe answer lo a micro-biologisls dream, has been spieling sporls and whal-noi al l-l.lvl. since lhe Third Form. I-lelping lo eslablish lhe newly Iormed Sporls Club, his inleresls ran parallel lo achieve lor him a posl ol Secrelary in lhal club as well as manager ol Varsily swimming lor Ihe pasl Iwo seasons. Aclive on lhe Record and Manual, Clilzl allained his goal by becoming Business lvlanager ol lhe laller publicalion in The Forlh Form. WILLIAM C. STEINBERG Immaculale Bill saunlered around school since his enlrance as a freshman and proved his inlenlions by lencing and playing ping-pong. Gradualing lo lull-scale lennis, he held his own nicely. A Jralenled pianisl, Billy could hold an audiences allenlion wilh his rendilion ol lhe I-long Kong Blues. A sell- made rhumba dancer, Bill mighl be singled oul as self-slyled. CLIFF BILL 72 QQIE IRA LEWIS SUSSMAN Born in Broolclyn and migraTing aT an early age To Florida, where he sTill resides when noT in school, good-naTured lra came To The hillTop in The summer oT '45, An appreciable desire To build a beTTer aTomic bomb senT him groping his way Through masses oT TesT Tubes To The Science Club. AlThough a laTe-comer in our midsT, Ira, neverTheless, has Taken an acTive parT in school liTe. RICHARD GEORGE VAN GELDER Van won himselT a horde oT close Triends by his inborn sporTing sense. A member oT The gang since The Second Form, he selecTed a mass oT clubs To aTTend, including The Science Club, oT which he became PresidenT in his senior year: The PhoTography Club, becoming noTorious as a prize winner: and The Model Railroad Club. PlenTy oT energy and guTs marked Van as a good beT Tor J.V. and VarsiTy FooTball and Baseball. Also was one oT The mosT resourceful IVIANNIKIN phoTographers. IRA VAN 73 NICHOLAAS VAN LEER lvlr. Dodge's second fiddle, brolher ol a former Van l.eer, Nicky - lhe mad Dulchman - had an exlremely lough lime 'rhis year. Handicapped seriously by mashed and broken bones somewhere in his Tool, he slruggled along al HM. while Messiler carried his books up lo lhe lhird floor and Arnspiger lossed lhem back down. A gilled imilalor of all worlhy H.lvl. lulors, he has become a leading box ollice allraclion. Nicky look a ride on an ice flow and had lo be fished our of The Hudson River in March. HUGHES CROTHERS WADDELL Ted, and his unusual way of explaining lhings, slrolled inlo sighl ol The Alma Maler in The Third Form. Ted soon found an oullel in The Ski Club, of which he slid inlo Presidency in his senior year. Did excellenl pholography work Tor lhe Quarlerly and MANNIKIN. An innale desire lo bool if around led our boy lo lhe Soccer Team. Gradualed lo The Varsily, where he played almosr any posilion Tor Tour years, slarring as goalie lhis year. NICKY TED 74 LEONARD R. WEISBERG Quiet good-nalured Lenny came +o H.M. in The Fourih Form from Joan of Arc Junior High. During 'rhe las? Jrhree years he rose from a high second lenor in fhe Glee Club lo a bariione in 'rhe same aggregaiion. He also was an aciive member of fhe Music, Chess and Ping-Pong Clubs. Lenny could also be seen almosl every day reciling one of his unforlunafe jokes. STEPHEN BERNARD WEITZ Sloclcy Sieve headed for lhe Music Room even before he came +o his firsi recilalion. Aifer arranging an assorfmeni of violins, clarineis, Jrubas. and French horns for praclice, he decided To loolq al The resl of Horace Mann. Having quickly reiurned To Mr. Warwiclcs, Sieve decided +o vary his ac'riv- ifies. Therefore he joined +he orchesira as iirsf violinisi, played J.V. Foolball and Baseball, and figured in Jrhe Sporis Club rosier. LENNY STEVE 75 X f My X My , MARTIN GALVIN WILKINSON, JR. 'lowering IVlarTy has been a Horace Manner Tor as long as he can remem- ber: ThaT is, since ElemenTary School. Socially minded, he probably aTTained his TinesT achievemenTs Tor The school as Chairman oT The Class Social Com- miTTee in The Soph and Junior years, and as Chairman oT The enTire schools commiTTee as a Senior. lVlarTy was also VarsiTy Baseball Co-Manager Tor Two years, and PresidenT ol The Glee Club in The SixTh Form. STANLEY WOLFSIE Tall STan came To HM. Trom Admiral I:arraguT Academy in his junior year. Shedding his suede sandals, he played high class VarsiTy BaslceTball and Baseball. A billiard experT, STan can hold his own in TighT compeTiTion. Plans To gaTher greenbaclcs one day in a world-publicized demonsTraTion wiTh Shelly Kaulman. STan's inborn abiliTy To sing placed him on The rosTer ol The Glee Club Tor Two years. AnoTher member oT The bush-growers' socieTy, he is marlqed as one To receive a pair oT silver shears aT graduaTion. MARTY STAN 76 fw- 450 l SAUL ZABAR Saul and his syslem of impressions and imilralions of l-lilrler, Slalin. and Lew Lehr have amused The class endlessly during his Jrwo years slay on Jrhe hill. Answering To Mr. Dodges Zabbah regularly, Saul soon discovered even his name bore humor. Born in Brooklyn, he was conlinually selling fish 'ro Kluger and Boros. A member of The Slci and Music Ciubs. he also gleefully made glee in 'rhe Glee Club under Dr. Blalces cocked eyebrow. Saul inlends lo spend lhe nexf few years excavaling lor long-losl anceslors. SAUL 77 V :W ff 1 -A 1 X 'Qi r ' ' eq sy, xr A gf' A, Maj' fi' J aff 5 V A A d Q xg - Q f X . -, if W MOST PERSONALITY l lARDEST Sl'llRKER Bilgore Messiler Zabar Rose Goodrich Shereslcy MOST TYPICAL HORACE MANNER BEST ATI-ILETE Goodrich Goodrich Chapelle Corcoran Johnson Johnson MOST RESPECTED MCDST ORIGINAL Goodrich Langsdorf Mori Kullrin Chen Blinlxen MOST POPULAR MOST AMBITIOUS Goodrich Green Bilgore Galler Anlhony Blinlcen MOST VERSATILE BEST NATURED Goodrich Holme Blinlcen Davis Corsi Goodrich BEST STUDENT CLASS WTT Chen Kulkin Heineman Shereslcy Newmark Langsdori HARDEST WORKER MOST MODEST Newmark Chen Chen Anlhony Schlesinger JOlWf1SOV1 78 enior OJ-Ti ILT T A 57f2RI I I -I f v loiniond LEAST APPRECIATED Newmark Johnson I-Ieineman MOST SOPI-IISTICATED Ellis Wilkinson Gross BEST MIXER Ginger Ale Goodrich Sarnolif DONE MOST FOR I-IORACE MANN Goodrich Green Loeb DONE I-IORACE MANN FOR MOST Messiler Sheresky Kulkin BEST DANCER Arnspiger Davis Schwarlz BEST DRESSED Wilkinson Gluck Sarnoflt U, ,ur qii' ,lil CLASS WOLF Bezozi Arnspiger Gross CLASS WOMAN I-IATER Newmark Holrichler Holme BIGGEST DRAG WITH FACULTY Blinken Goodrich Newmark TI-IINKS I-IE I-IAS BIGGEST DRAG WITI-I FACULTY Lehman Melicow Rolhchild MOST COLLEGIATE Chapelle Arnspiger Sarnoicl FAVORITE TEACI-I ER VViIIiams Payne Oliver FIRST COLLEGE CI-IOICE I-larva rd Yale Princelon Mr www K- ,f , Q' Z 'Qffy . V 4 9' v f ll ig fi QW ,H if . UM? ,W?, E s e ,w,,,, hx f X ,S f 1 Q wi? ,f Q5 ,ex . fff f .S , X Qh,A. l Msf ,, fwhrh if.g5gg 7 fa 4 F 0 if Sikh BoTTom Row: Parish, Judson, R. Kaplan, LandorT, EssenTeld, GarTinkel, Heyman, Dr. Williams, BronsTeen, Kulka, Weisberg. Sopkin, Mendelson, STampleman, Harkavy. Second Row: Mar- Tuscelli, Babbin, Baumann, Pearlman, BucksTein, WallersTein, Selinka, Kuhn, Berley, Cole, Adler. RoTherberg, Elkon, Mayer, PorTeney, Berliner. Third Row: Eisner, Sussman. Handrnan, TillinghasT, Feldman, Max, Posner, Heller, Marcus, Rose, Serchuck, Briskman, Weil, Levy, LipTon. Top Row: Heirnan, Rogers, Marshall, Farber, Freeman, MoscowiTz, P. Schlesinger, HoTTman, Lowen, Resnick. HE largesT class in school, wiTh I I7 members, This year's FiTTh Form made iTselT TelT in every phase oT Horace Mann liTe. The Juniors were conspicu- ous Tor The enThusiasm wiTh which They enTered inTo every acTiviTy. AT The TirsT class meeTing, Mickey Heyman was elecTed To The presidency. ThroughouT The year, Heyman was noTable Tor his successTul eTTorTs To bolsTer class spiriT. Meyer Liberman and RoberT BronsTeen came inTo oTTice as vice- presidenT and secreTary respecTively, while Treasurer John Gambling did an exTremely quick and eTTicienT iob oT collecTing class dues. The Class oT '47 was represenTed on The ExecuTive CommiTTee oT The G.A. by PeTer Max. Dr. Williams was The very popular class adviser. For even so large a class, The Juniors had a surprisingly long lisT oT Tour-and Tive-honor sTudenTs. Leading The class was Michael Cohen, Tollowed by Andreas LowenTeld, Michael lovenko, Alan Judson, PeTer Schlesinger, Howard Fox, Ned Sack, and Donald Marcus, To menTion only a Tew. FiTTh Formers played a leading role in exTra-curricular acTiviTies. They made up a large porTion oT The newly Tormed SporTs Club, while many Juniors appeared in The Glee Club, The Music and Speakers' Clubs, and The DebaTing SocieTy. Dave TillinghasT was The Horace Mann manager in The D.C.F.M.O., while Ned Sack and John Gambling also held imporTanT posi- Tions in The adminisTraTion oT The CanTeen. TwenTy members oT The class were on The Record ediTorial and business boards. This Tigure speaks Tor iTselT in evidencing The widespread inTeresT which The class Took in publicaTions. Many joined The QuarTerly board. The class oT i947 was really ouTsTanding in The Tield oT aThleTics. Seven oT The sTarTing eleven on The VarsiTy TooTball Team were Juniors. They in- cluded Ackerman, Sokolin, Farber, Heyman, TillinghasT, Cavanagh, and Rogers. Gambling, RaTelson, HoTTman, and Liberman also saw much acTion. 82 rm- ...i,'f! ' v 4 , 'sw-f f:. W Bo++om Row: Friedland, Marioccio, Lili, Rabkin, Ackerman, l-lurowilz. Schlosser. Woods, Gambling, Liberman, Borner, Lefkowilz Newhouse, Lowenleld, Wellz, Lederer. Second Row: Weinhausen, Malkan, Nacller, Marenya, Enrich, Roerner, Sweeibaum, Hirschield l-lall, Greenfield, Levin. Wolf, Kallman, Marine, Hacker, lovenko, Third Row: Gallinek, Meyer, Zinman, Levine, Sands, Fox, DeWiH, Eeresler, Thomas. E. Kaplan Lifshey, Cavanagh, Eielcls Buchanan. Top Row: Frame, Evans, Siaplefeldl, Jonas, Lehrer, Rafelson, Cohen, l-lafm Marks, Sack. Max, P, Schlesinger and Jonas led Jrhe Eiiurh Form conlingenl on The J.V, eleven, while Frame and Sack were slarlers on The soccer learn. Earber, Jonas, Bronsleen, Tillinghasi, Max, Ralelson, and Eisner played Varsily baskele ball, while I-leyman, Sokolin, l-lacker, and Sopkin were on The swimming Jream. In The spring Farber, Max, Tillinghasl, l-larkavy, and Eisner clouled Jrhe ball for Mr. Millers nine, while Ackerman and l-loiclrnan slarred in Jrrack. Pearlman, Bronsleen, Marshall, and Schlesinger were among Mr. Crandalls slalwarl nelmen. M LW weft. , ,. ,. an in ' 'E n C CF - - ol F 5235. Nr wa was au- 22160 1 31 4.4 ' S-1 X X' 1 gh. Q Leif: Presidenl Mickey Hey- man. Righf: Dr, Williams and Secrelary Bronsieen, Treasurer Gambling, Viceelnresidenf Lib- erman. 83 6-W., 57 1 I W 431-5,5 rg T-L63 ll-v ,.. V, gf! --'1 rf.-L Ui. 3 ' ff 2' fl' 1 BoH'om Row: -a'5-a':Aa See S'e5' M -e's'e 7-1: V' e' ?:se VaQ::' Srcfck W'e :'fg 4: C:SKy Nasssax' Lee Vgse-. Second Row: :a':'ge' se':e'g 3'ee e: Cfa' e:'as Sa'ge' f4 e -'fsz' ?::e 'e 3 Sege Vrge Va :'. Ceceei Third Row: Cczse' gate' -azccs 4'a e' 'Q-se 'a' Ea'gse' Ec : --:s:' l. ' E. ?: 'c Sazcfsr.. Top Row: Y'-': 'se' C:f :' H--A.e's ' es F.c:-:' F-fxwes Cg'e'. i Z A OURTH gsfmers eseafy :Va +Ferr1se ves '1 67 Lf:om': abe cGsTf'c if Olflff Havlfg bee' kf'gc s ' eee Lowe' Scecc :fe yea' 'ie 'ef year Fey are acpa'e y q.7'e :csseo-e 'a5 'f fee Ucce' Seite. Tefs years Fcwrie Form, GEEOQQPE rc ex:es ce -3 +?e me was QLICK as eve' IMO TPS if 0I'I7l sw 'g of Uppe' SCPCC a: v'i'es x-.f L1 ei '?'e efefgy wee? T's 5a'ge wmbe' of seudefs can Q mqref, Rage' Rcse was eiered Seceofvwcfe pfesdee' v:?'1e 'Ffael G'Yee'+ s+epce-d 'rio ine v':e-cfesbeecy. Pee Magee- was 'Ee :ass scice. wF'1e W7 Tam Rogefs?cLmoe:1 Fs eassfv1a'es Ie' s?fe7' dees. Heefy Bewgsef ei-ecied ai We end of as? yea' made 'Fe Ticwee Form s Mews vcw- -3 'Pe fese of We Gefera5 Assc:'a+'o Execefve Comm?-ee. T?e esv'se' elec-ell by Tee Seabo- mofes +545 yea' was Mf. Cfafoaf He gave mavy ?1e cies s.gges'o's dufiwg THE dass meeiegs. The Cfass 05 48 maZ +a e:J a qccci s:?'c es': fecofd 4? cqghou? We yeaf. Headfrg fee use cl Eye' stsens wefe Ffaek Reneebefg. Reoefe Po?+ef, Edward K e, Mev S'e7f Safa' Jeeas ew: R':?a'd We d g. The Foufe Fcfmefs weve Fe' clubs ff a DAQ way +PVs year. The Dfamaeb Chen We Gfee Che aed 'Fe Deba47'q Soeevy afefecsed may Scsiomefess 2.-.Wie 'Ee dass was asc fecfeseffeo Jfe Sseakefs Cub afo five Music P , s ,. , . .. . , s . . , , I Cue. Pfam Renessefg ecweveo 'Pe C ST 'evo' cv oe 'Q cresioerv OT 'he Carre? Eve S Cnc. Members as 'ee C ass Q5 48 C' +e Reccrd Edecfa Beard wefe Hevry Bafgsef, Los-:el Bevefofje Paw G' ee , Reber? Ja'cvef afd W21!?am Rcgefs. Me ' Va'ge was a'v:'g 'Fe Record ad-ccfececfs. DJTFQ We 5cc'Ce seasce. Lo.-.e1Bev9 5fj9 Nd Jam KEGG? 'wefe abte ko make We Va's y squac. Br? saw Qcfskiefacfe acafc' df g fee ?a5s. li J.V. 34 5 . .i E 1 ' ., Roger Rose,PresidenT. Treasurer Rogers, SecreTary Magoon Vice Presidenf Gilberl' and adviser Mr Crandall TooTball, Louis l.iTT, Charley Jacobs, and Paul SchulTz were among The leading players. Klauclc, Covici, l.iTT. and Beveridge carried The class laurels on The J.V. baslceTball squad. The ace swimmer oT The class was Rene Jacobs, while Klauclc, LiTT, Schneider, Judson, and Jonas sTarred in baseball. This FourTh Form has gone Through iTs Treshman year in The Upper school wiTh Tlying colors. NexT year The class will assume a leading posiTion in The Upper School. BoTTom Row: Jonas, Gordon, OworeTsky, GoodTri-end, VeiTl'i, Troy, Gilbert Rogers, BeinsTein, WeisbardT. Auslander, Beiar, Goodman, Gold. Second Row: S. Kline, Bogen, J. BernsTein, Weil, Holland, Toscanini, Zessman, Sandler, Goldberger, Caligor, Schneider, Gilman, Frey. Third Row: Friedman, Wilhelm, Pinlcus, Blank, Leeman, PoTTer, Margolis, Janover, Levinson, Goldberg, STein. Top Row: Lloyd-Jones, Simon, Beveridge, BernsTein, Grossman, Shulz, Blauner, ReTTenberg, Babbin. 4325? s ssss do l , Treasurer WolTT, Vice-PresidenT Wallace, Adviser Mr. Bramley, and PresidenT Michael Sporn. SecreTary Tarcher. 3 S The class oT '49 leaves The Lower School, iT can look baclc on a well Aung! rounded and evenTTul year. IT seT an excellenT example Tor oTher Lower Schoolers, and assumed leadership in many diversiTied acTiviTies. Michael Sporn, who was secreTary in The second Torm, was elecTed To The presidency oT The Freshmen, wiTh MonTe Wallace becoming vice-presidenT. In The race Tor secreTary an exacT Tie developed beTween Roger Youman and 0I l4'1, Jeremy Tarcher, and a run-OTT was held. Tarcher became scribe: and Carl WolTT, presidenT The year beTore, was elecTed Treasurer in anoTher very close voTe. Andrew PoTolc had been elecTed in May To The posT oT GA. represenTa- Z i 'i Top: Alexander, Snyder, Si- mon, MasTer, Greenberg, WinsTon, MeTzger, Silver- sTone, l-lerTz, Pollack. Mid- dle: Auerbach, LevenThal, l-lellinger, L. Van Gelder Asher, Shapiro, PesTronk, M. Rubin, Love, PoTok STrauss, A. Heyman, R. La ngsdorT. BoTTom: Zucker- man, Gold, Pauker, FiTz- paTrick, Mendelsohn, Fine- sTone, WolTT, Wallace, Cohen, WeinsTein, Gold- man, Weinberg, Bardos. Top: Wuorinen, Gerdes Abramson, KuTchukian, Bi Sands, M. Gluck, N. de la Chapelle, NighTingale, B. Solomon, G. Marshall, Brun- sTeTTer, Block, LivingsTon. Middle: Blau, Nordlinger Joseph, ProsniTz, Youman, T. Jacobs, Taub, Kleid, SoiTer Ader, l-larTley, Ro- senheim. Boffomz SchwarTz, Lansky, Tishman, Sprung, Cohen, Tarcher, Mr. Bran- Iey, Sporn, STern, WorTh, Rosenbluh, Garcia, M. Kaufmann, MaTuzewiTz. WW Tiveg and wiTh The choosing oT Mr. Branley as TaculTy adviser, The lisT was compleTe. The academic record oT The TorTyniners was excellenT, wiTh many Top- grade sTudenTs. Mike Sporn, Teddy Jacobs, Carl WolTT, Tom Bardos, Andrew PoTok, STephen Nordlinger, Lucien Gordon, and Gordon Marshall were The leading scholars. By Tar The mosT imporTanT exTra-curricular acTiviTy oT The Freshmen was science. Under The compeTenT guidance oT Mr. Branley, popular general science insTrucTor, a Science Club was organized: buT since over ThirTy boys Turned ouT, The club was divided inTo Two secTions. Larry Van Gelder was elecTed presidenT oT The Monday secTion, and MonTe Wallace was appoinTed leader oT The Wednesday group. The Lower School PhoTography Club was anoTher organizaTion ThaT Tlour- ished This year. Bob WorTh was presidenl' oT The iunior shuTTerbugs, who heard many a valuable Tip on camera hunTing Trom Mr. Crandall. The Fresh- men also parTicipaTed in an ArT Club Tounded by Billy NighTingale, a promis- ing carToonisT. This club drew many posTers Tor The War Service ComrniTTee and The D.C.F.M.O. As is The case in mosT classes, aThle-Tics occupied a prominenT place in The Third Form program. Norman de la Chapelle, who was capTain in The B League, and MonTe Wallace were chosen capTains oT The A League. Roy Garcia, Marv Rubin, Bob Ader, Gordon Marshall, and Danny Alexander showed up well and may be prospecTs Tor Messrs. MeTcalT and Avedisian. Soccer was also well represenTed, wiTh John Gerdes and Frank BrunsTeTTer rival capTains in a league ThaT gave The varsiTy seconds several Tough baTTles. Sands, Rubin, Garcia, Jacobs, and Pollack sTarred in baseball and baskeTball. Thus, encouraged by a successTul Freshman year, The class oT '49 is ready To enTer The Upper School. 87 X ff fi Treasurer Sherry, Adviser Mr. Gerow, SecreTary GoToTT, and Vice- PresidenT Jay Janis. Preside nT Rose. 2C0l'l 0l l'l'L AST year a group oT boys enTered l-lorace Mann as The Class oT I95O. They spenT a year under The sTricT scruTiny oT Miss lvlclnTosh and emerged This year as Tull- Tledged Second Formers, well versed in all phases oT school liTe. The class oTTicers were elecTed during The cusTomary early parT oT The year, buT The elecTion was delayed somewhaT by an exTremely close voTe Tor all oTTices. The Tinal counT Tound Jay Janis as presidenT, lasT year's presidenT Elihu Rose holding down The duTies oT vice-presidenT, Sam GOTOTT as class scribe, and John Sherry in charge oT class Tunds. Mr. Gerow, Tollowing a cusTom oT long sTancling, was unanimously voTed The class adviser, in which capaciTy he has served Second Formers Tor many years. Shapiro was elecTed represenTaTive To The General AssociaTion ExecuTive CommiTTee, an honor iusT recenTly aTTorded The Second Form. The Second Form showed exTremely high scholasTic abiliTy. Among The beTTer sTudenTs in The Torm were Shapiro, one oT The highesT in The school: Deep STevensp Sherryq and Diclcinson. The Second lzormers enioyed hisTory wiTh Mr. Gerow, slaved over Their l.iTe on a Medieval Barony, and learned The inTricacies oT maTh wiTh Mr. Kalligan and lvlr. Gilmour. The mysTeries oT diagramming a senTence were exposed by Mr. Clausen in English, while some boys Toolc up TirsT year French or LaTin. 88 In exTra-curricular acTiviTies The Second Form showed saTisTacTory inTeresT, which ToreTells avid club parTicipaTion in TuTure years. Bugs Baer and Wade STephens were leaders oT The Lower School Chess Club, which proved Through The year To be a very acTive organizaTion, Freund was also an imporTanT member oT This group. Weil and Ludlum represenTed The Second Form in The Glee Club, blending Their Tenor voices To The basses oT The Upper Schoolers, while Bregman and Robinson had The disTincTion oT being The class bookworms. The Form was also well represenTaTed in The Horace Mann ScouT Troop by Dickinson, Baer, and l:inesTone. Across The Tield The boys showed promise oT being an exTremely aThleTically minded Torm. ln B League TooTball greaT inTeresT was displayed and Two very even Teams ToughT iT ouT all Through The season under The guidance oT Mr. Jolley. Boys who excelled in TooTball were Frankel, RaTelson, Janis, Schlossman, and Weisberger. The highpoinT oT The season was a game againsT The A League scrubs, which, happily Tor The Second Form, was won by The B Leaguers. Also down in The park The Second Form parTicipaTed in Lower School soccer. Weil and STephens were ouTsTanding, and The season ended wiTh an All-STar Team playing The VarsiTy Scrubs. AlThough The challengers played an excellenT game, The Upper Schoolers were Too much Tor The All-STars: and boTh games ended in deTeaT. During The baskeTball season The Second Formers migraTed To The rooT, where They were again under The supervision oT Mr. Jolley. Four Teams were chosen, and iT was an open TighT all The way up To The lasT game. Janis, Schlossman, RaTelson, Dickinson, and GOTOTT showed promise oT someday becoming VarsiTy maTerial. ln The spring season boTh baseball and Tennis had a large TurnouT. Shapiro, l-lieTala, Sherry, l-larmon, and Dee were excellenT neTmen. Two acTive Teams were Tormed in baseball, wiTh Weisberger, Schlossman, RaTelson, Dickinson, Janis, Freund, and Baer sTanding ouT. The Second Form compleTed iTs second year aT Horace Mann ready and willing To sTep inTo The Third Torm, The sTep Thaf will Take Them inTo ThaT all-imporTanT phase oT liTe, high school. BoTTom Row Levinson, Robinson, AdelsTein, LeTT, Sherry, GOTOTT, Mr. Gerow, Janis, Rose. Kaye, Schoenheimer, Weil, Dreisen, Kahn, Morchand. Second Row: Rubin. P. Weil, Dee, l-Tubner. Shapiro Rafelson, Ludlum, FinkelsTein, Grossman, SabeT, YourkeviTch, Guise, T-lieTala, Baer, GleiT. Top Row: Cohen, Lowen, Bregman, Dickinson, Frankel, Schlossman. Weisberger, STephens, BriniTzer, Freund Friendly. Merrill. Racoosin, Burk. jimi 0l l'l'l AVING spenT several days oT TesTing and orienTaTion beTore school sTarTed in SepTember, The moTley crew oT 38 FirsT Eormers, The class oT I95I, was raTher well acquainTed wiTh The various phases oT liTe aT l-lorace Mann when iT climbed iTs way To The l-lillTop on ThaT TaTeTul TwenTy-TourTh oT SepTember, The newcomers soon became more acguainTed wiTh each oTher and wiTh l-l.M. and readily Tell in sTep wiTh The acTiviTies oT school. While The oTher classes held Their class elecTions early in The year, The EirsT Eormers waiTed paTienTly, as is The cusTom, unTil The beginning oT March, beTore Their elecTions were held. Having been brieTed by Miss MclnTosh on The proper procedure, They chose Raymond Chen, Andrew Freund, and Johnny STeinberg Tor candidaTes Tor The presidency. The race was exTremely close, buT aT The end Chen emerged vicTorious as presidenT by Two voTes. Freund, in Turn, won The vice-presidency Trom STeinberg by Two voTes. Marcus was elecTed class scribe, and Vesell gained The posT oT Treasurer. In academic work, Chen and STein led The Tield wiTh Tour honors each. The subiecTs conTronTing The subfsub-Trosh were general language, hisTory, English, maThemaTics, and The weelcly subjecTs, music and library. ln general language The class was guided by Mr. Anderson, The creaTor oT The course, and was TaughT The classiTicaTions oT languages and The TormaTion and derivaTion oT English, as well as The Greelc alphabeT and The origin oT Hremacadamizingu. The mosT imporTanT job, oT course, was The publishing oT The LinguisT , Tor which many arTicles were wriTTen ThroughouT The year. The class did iTs own wriTing, ediTing, and Tinancing wiTh The help oT Mr. Anderson: and proudly presenTed Their magazine To The school aT The end oT The year. Abrams was The champion ad-geTTer Tor The LinguIsT . In hisTory, The class oT 'BI wriThed under The reTorms oT Solon and The puns oT Mr. Gerow, buT emerged Trom The course wiTh knowledge, more or less. STeinberg and Marcus excelled in This subjecT. English was given by Mr. Clausen, and in This subiecT The EirsT Eormers learned The inTricacies oT grammar. ThaT coniuncTions are puT on a doTTed BoTTom Row: Bogen, STeinberg, SoneT, Weinberg, KaTz, Gross, STein, Farber, Abrams, Weiss, Levine. l-lilTon, Chen. Second Row: Zuckerman, LiTshey, Cowles, Bachrach, Tausend, Daniel, Youngwood, Dudd, Klau, Fay, Thomas, Vesell. Top Row: Pollock, LaurenT, Freund, Levy, SalTzman, Woodrow, Jacobs Marcus, Udell, Levine, Woerner, Schneider. Left SecreTary RoberT Marcus, Vice-presidenT Andrew Freund, ancl Treasurer Elliof Vesell Rigl'1T: PresidenT Raymond Chen. line and ThaT a semi-colon is used To puncTuaTe a compound senTence, connecTed by a coordinaTe coniuncTion buT wiTh inTernal puncTuaTion wiThin one or boTh oT The independenT clauses, are Two TacTs which will undoubTedly be remembered by all EirsT Eormers, as will The regular Monday Tallcs, which proved boTh inTeresTing and valuable in The way oT experience. STein and STeinberg came Through wiTh high averages in English. Mr. Miller TaughT The maTh classes, in which percenTage and compound inTeresT were drilled inTo The now Thoroughly conTused l:irsT Eormers. Zuckerman proved himselT a good maTh sTudenT. The TundamenTals OT music were TaughT by Mr. Blake, and some boys managed To undersTand The principles oT sound which seemed so conTusing To Senior physics sTudenTs. Miss Webb explained To The class every Monday The proper use oT The library's TaciliTies, and gave The sub-Trosh poinTers which will help Them ThroughouT The higher Torms. Miss MclnTosh conducTed a class in special English, a course preparaTory To Toreign language sTudy. ln This course The meaning oT synTax, among oTher Things, was carTully explained. Across The Tielcl, The EirsT Eormers proved Themselves acTive in aThleTics also. LiTshey was probably The besT all-round aThleTe. ln The Tall, l.iTshey and Farber played TooTball, while STeinberg and Woerner represenTed The class in soccer. Freund, Vesell, and Chen were The Tennis players oT The Torm. In winTer The FirsT Form baslceTball league consisTed oT The Gwls, Ravens, Eagles, and l-lawlcs, capTained by LaurenT, SoneT, LiTshey, and KaTz, respecTively. The Owls won The pennanTq and LiTshey, Chen, LaurenT, SoneT, SalTzman, and KaTz were The ouTsTanding players. Berlinger was The class swimmer, and l.iTshey The Traclc sTar. Chen was The champion ping-pong player. WiTh many members excelling in boTh scholasTic and aThleTic acTiviTies, The class oT 'Sl seems To conTain many TuTure leaders OT The school and has possibiliTies oT being an excellenT class. Miss MclnTosh acTed as class adviser, and under her guidance The TiTTy-one-ers goT OTT To a good sTarT in Their TirsT year. 9 I We 2 W k 77 X , , 04 xx as M QQ Wm, fn , 2 , w f 5 W W Y If! 104 ' f W f ,f M , YW , X ff W f. A? ,I If , , 7 V W f activi Xyxllllfgf TE THE ff- -.... -':--- --- 'Z 5 5 ARCHONS 5 7 N Q! Hi 'fq lll .xgrckon Sociefg O receive The Archon award is To receive The highesT honor besTowed aT Horace Mann. According To iTs Greelc derivaTion, archon means The leader oT leaders. AT Horace Mann, a school in which every boy is expecTed To be a leader, and in The Class oT '46, in parTicular, iT has been especially hard To single ouT cerTain boys who have excelled all oThers in The qualiTy oT leadership. MosT noTable oT all Seniors having This qualiTy were The Three Archons This year: Larry Goodrich, RoberT Blinlcen, and William Green. STarTing OTT in The TirsT Torm by lceeping Traclc oT pluses and minuses in The General Language Class, Larry has conTinually held oTTice, evenTually aTTaining The Presidency oT The General AssociaTion in his senior year. As The guiding lighT oT The CanTeen during his junior year, Larry has successively been PresidenT and Chairman oT The EnTerTainmenT CommiTTee. Treasurer oT his class in The second, Vice-PresidenT in The Third, and PresidenT in The TourTh Torms, Larry was G.A. RepresenTaTive in The TiTTh. The French and Glee Clubs and The VarsiTy FooTball, BaskeTball, and Tennis Teams have all beneTiTed Trom his services. Bob Blinlcen, Too, has combined The qualiTies oT good leadership wiTh aThleTic abiliTy To compile an amazing record. General AssociaTion RepresenTaTive in The TourTh Torm, he was The only sophomore ever To run Tor SecreTaryship oT This organiza- Tion. On The Slci Club and a member oT The OrchesTra, Bob's main TorTe was publica- Tions, where he served as AssociaTe and Co-EdiTor oT The Record and EdiTor oT The QuarTerly. Billy Green, Co-EdiTor oT The Record This year and l:eaTure EdiTor lasT year, held his Tair share oT class oTTices. Vice-PresidenT in The second and TourTh Torms, he was PresidenT in his Treshman year and G.A. Club RepresenTaTive in The TiTTh Torrn. Founder oT The Club Council, Bill was PresidenT OT The DebaTers and an imporTanT cog in The Speakers' Club. 94 WILLIAM GREEN ROBERT BLINKEN LAURANCE GOODRICH llflamifg gferg HE goal oT all Horace lvlann aThleTes is mem- bership in The VarsiTy Club. To become a member oT This honorary socieTy an aThleTe musT earn TwenTy poinTs, receiving major leTTers in aT leasT Two diTTerenT sporTs. The class oT '46 is proud oT iTs unusually large conTribuTion To This exclusive group. STan Gans TirsT earned his poinTs in The FourTh Form when he received Two poinTs Tor VarsiTy FooTball, and a maior leTTer, Tour poinTs in VarsiTy Baseball. STan wenT on in his Junior Year To gain a maior leTTer in Basl4eTball as one oT The Team's mosT valuable alTernaTes. He also won a leTTer in Baseball. AT The laTTer sporT he proved To be an excepTionally Tine shorTsTop. ln his Senior year STan once again Turned To TooTball, and as a quarTerbaclc Tor The TirsT parT oT The season he received Two poinTs. ln The winTer and spring he again repeaTed his perTorrnance in BaslceTball and Baseball. Larry Goodrich disTinguished himselT as an ouT- sTanding aThleTe in his Sophomore Year as a mem- ber oT The VarsiTy FooTball and BaslceTball squads. He received a major leTTer in The Tormer sporT and Two poinTs in The laTTer. ln The FiTTh Form Larry was a regular halTbacl4 on The FooTball Team and a sTarTing guard on The VarsiTy Five. He be- came one oT The mainsTays oT The Tennis Team, and he received a regular leTTer, good Tor Three poinTs. ln his lasT year Larry conTinued his good work, This Time as a Tullback in TooTball and again as a leading member oT The BaslceTball and Tennis Teams. Bill Johnson made VarsiTy Club wiTh plenTy To spare. STarTing wiTh one poinT as a member oT The Jayvee FooTball Squad in The l:ourTh Form, he was a greaT asseT in every sporT in which he parTici- paTed. He earned Three leTTers in VarsiTy Swim- ming, Two oT Them maior. Gne oT The ace Tree- sTylers, Bill was also The Top diving man. AT Track, Tor which he also won Three leTTers, Bill ran up good Times Tor The 220 and he was also an experT STanley Gans Larry Goodrich Bill Johnson 96 in The hurdles. Coming back To TooTball, Bill gained Two poinTs in h's Junior Year and a maior leTTer In his Senior Year. ThaT season was unTorTunaTe Tor Biilg aTTer showing greaT promise as a halTback in The early parT oT The season, he was sTopped by an iniury in midgeason. Sam lv'lessiTer received poinTs in all Tour maior sporTs. ln his Sophomore year Sam received one poinT Tor TooTball and Two Tor baseball. l-le showed greaT improvemenT in his iunior year, winning a leTTer in VarsiTy FooTball. Sammy was a sTellar end and kicker in This sporT. l-le also gained one poinT Tor capTaining a eague basket ball squad. lT was in The spring season Though ThaT Sam gained his greaTesT success. NoT only did he win a leTTer in VarsiTy Baseball, in which he was a hard-hiTTing cenTer Tielder, buT he also was awarded Two poinTs Tor his broadiumping on The Track Team. As a Senior Sam again proved valu- able in FooTball, Track, and Baseball. Paul MorT is anoTher member oT The VarsiTy Club who received poinTs in all maior sporTs. Al- Though he won poinTs Tor baskeTbalI and baseball, Paul was aT his besT on The gridiron and on The Track. A TooTball player on The VarsiTy since The FourTh Form, he became a key player on The Team in his Senior Year. Driving hard Trom The halTback posiTion, Paul was always a sTrong scor- ing ThreaT. On The Track Team Tor Two years, he showed his speed, by running a TasT 220, and his sTrengTh, by sTarring in The Tield evenTs. AT This wriTing iT is also probable ThaT Bill SarnoT'T will earn VarsiTy Club membership. This six-TooT-Two Torward on The VarsiTy QuinTeT has earned Two maior and one Jayvee leTTers. IT is on The clay courTs ThaT Bill has really sTarred. Already having a regular Three poinT and a maior leTTer in Tennis, Bills making VarsiTy Club hinges on a maior leTTer in Tennis This spring. ATTer The MANNlKlN had gone To press, iT became apparenT ThaT Jim Osbourn would prob- ably earn a niche in The VarsiTy Club. AlThough his picTure does noT appear, his parTicipaTion in soccer lall-ciTyl. baskeTball, and recenTly in Track has won him a mass oT poinTs. Sam MessiTer Paul MorT Bill SarnoTT 97 SeaTed: Andrew PoTolc, Francis Chen, Mr. Readio, Larry Goodrich, and William SarnoTT. STanding: Bernard Hirsch, PeTer Max, Michael Loeb, Henry Bangser, Jack Richard, and Andrew Heineman. Missing: David Shapiro. enema! .xgfifiociafion OMPOSED oT acTive and responsible members, The General AssociaTion ExecuTive CommiTTee has made This year an unusually successTul one Tor G.A. acTiviTies. Besides iTs usual duTies and many less imporTanT acTions, The ExecuTive CommiTTee underTool4 Two oT The mosT imporTanT issues ThaT have ever come up beTore iT. In The spring elecTions, Larry Goodrich was chosen, by a large maioriTy To lead The GA. as presidenT. Runner-up Bill SarnoTF auTomaTically became vice-presidenTp and Francis Chen was elecTed secreTary, also by a large margin. The represenTaTives oT The Second, Third, l3ourTh, and l:iTTh Forms were, respecTively, Shapiro, PoTol4, Bangser, and Max. Loeb won The posT oT club represenTaTive, and Richard ThaT oT aThleTic managers represenTaTive. Deadlocked in a long baTTle Tor The posiTion oT business managers' represenTaTive, Heineman and Hirsch decided To serve alTernaTely. Mr. Readio, who, as Treasurer, Tools care oT all The Tinances oT The GA., also had a voTe in The G.A.E.C. The TirsT iob was The making oT The GA. budgeT oT 558000, which was done This year by The whole G.A.E.C. insTead oT a Tinance commiTTee. The requesTs oT clubs and publicaTions were heard by a commiTTee headed by SarnoTT. In general, The appropriaTions were The same as Those oT I944-45. The largesT Task underTalcen was The rewriTing OT The enTire consTiTuTion, which 98 was done by a ConsTiTuTion CommiTTee, led by chairman Heineman. Because oT The re- peTiTious, unnecessary, or inaccuraTe clauses and poor arrangemenT oT The old ConsTiTu- Tion and By-Laws, more Than slighT revision was required. All unnecessary maTTer was cuT ouT, so ThaT The new consTiTuTion would be a concise, yeT accuraTe docTrine, con- Taining only The TundamenTal poinTs, which would need liTTle revision. The parTiculars on The elecTion oT oTTicers were puT inTo The By-Laws. ProporTional represenTaTion in The G.A.E.C. and a new plan To creaTe a house oT represenTaTives were boTh voTed down. A second imporTanT Task in which The G.A.E.C. Toolc parT was The problem oT im- proving The personaliTies oT The boys in school. A sTudenT commiTTee was chosen To discuss The characTer TraiTs oT a good ciTizen oT Horace Mann and To malce a lisT oT qualiTies on which The TaculTy could give each boy a characTer raTing. The purposes oT This commiTTee and This sysTem oT raTing Treasurer Mr. Readio PresidenT Larry Goodrich were To improve' The school by raising The characTer sTandards oT Horace Manners. and To help The sTudenTs realize ThaT a good personaliTy is as much To be desired as a high academic sTanding, iT noT more so. By a unanimous voTe, The G.A.E.C. de- cided To ioin The lnTer-School Congress, a newly organized group oT privaTe schools, whose purpose is To promoTe inTellecTual, culTural, and social relaTions. Though The l.S.C. was poorly organized, The ExecuTive CommiTTee hoped ThaT some advanTages may be derived Trom iT in The TuTure. The War Service CommiTTee, wiTh Loeb as chairman, meT wiTh Tremendous success in The VicTory Bond Sales. The commiTTee, wiTh The help oT The enTire sTudenT body, sold over 575,000 in bonds and sTamps, ex- ceeding l-l.M.'s guoTa by 533,000 QTher acTions oT The G.A.E.C. included The esTablishmenT oT a Tund Tor aThleTic eguipmenT and organizaTion oT a Cheerlead- ing Squad, . -.,.,. .. I -. .vang- '.. . 1 ' L.A.. . FQQ ' -A, -L....., X3 N- N v-,vii .VA A L., gt . K-Y5id.L Q, 11 IW 5: W wk M ,. Y' 2? FQQ N, if S f -1- F' . . ,, , , k 1-' X' 3,5 Vx, Q S Q, -x NX we --.. sk?- Q a t ' ' f 1 rf Nm N. X -v- iw,w-,-ae ki -xix . ' , . . ig L ,X 3 . 'XL , ..5s. ,- 1 s , lx MY .1 - M.-Nvwxvvxl.-sw:-wv Q- - Y - +G Qf r Q sz 1 4 L 1 K Q Q 'f ----'ff .fsfff I X x. lf' 'fa ' ,.i'xQ .. X .WX .. ,, - WHPQUF' Sl' ' ' wk x -Nw .v ,.- Q 'pe . 51- A-f Q, . - 4'-v'--1 1007 orace anni in N The lasT day OT school one year ago, Allan Newmark and John LangsdorT cheerTully sTarTed To draw up a layouT Tor The '46 MANNIKIN aT The engravers, adiourned wiThin halT an hour, and deparTed on Their respecTive vacaTions, AlmosT daily correspondence beTween These Two chaps resulTed in one imporTanT decision - The MANNIKIN needed money. Newmark now added To his correspondence a long lisT OT gullible seniors To whom he senT innumerable reguesTs Tor ads. Only one replied, and wiTh a TorTy buck noTe. Mean- while, The everTaiThTul engraver gave up The MANN- IKIN accounTg The prinTer oTTered To do boTh The prinTing and engraving: and plans were laid anew. A Tiendish idea was evolved by The ediTors. All The prospecTive board members were To wriTe a i950 word class hisTory as a TryouT. The Tollowing did: FirsT There was Dave Galler, appoinTed Managing EdiTor and assigned The diTTi- culf Task OT scribbling The Senior wriTeups. WiTh his slanderous pen, Dave compIeTed abouT Three-TourThs oT The class, doing a bang-up iob. IT any oT you Senior's dislike your wriTeup, iT probably belongs To The addiTional quarTer wriTTen by Langsdorli, GreenTeld, and Heineman. Then as The year progressed, Andy l-leineman was made AssociaTe EdiTor and Mike Loeb, Francis Chen, and Howie GreenTeld were named AssisTanT EdiTors. Loeb and l-leineman pooled Their TalenTs and came up wiTh an excellenT TaculTy secTion. They painsTakingly invesTigaTed The Teachers' careers and arranged brieT skeTches on each, according To deparTmenTs, These wriTeups are enTirely inTormal in sTyle as are The accompanying phoTographs - a new TeaTure oT The '46 MANNlKlN. Greemfeld proved To be a very able and versaTile slave oT The ediTors, TrequenTly accompanying Them on Their iaunTs To The Kelly Publishing Company. Chen care- Tully rewroTe and prooTread much oT The copy, puTTing To good use his skill in English. AcTually Newmark and l.angsdorT drew up The layouT wiTh Mr. RoberT Kelly and Mr. l-larry Mellor buT kepT changing iT as The capiTal increased. Originally planning on a 33,500 basis, The G.A. alloTmenT oT Sl,500 was increased by an amazingly eTTicienT business board unTil 54,800 was reached. 54,8007 ThaT's a loT oT moolah, isn'T iT? By allowing anyone wiTh S40 worTh oT ads To join The business board and by holding Tive separaTe managerial conTesTs, IOI EdiTors John Langsdorl: and Allan Newmark chalk up a phone bill. This amounT was collecTed. Julie Rosenberg broughT in over S600 fvorTh oT ads To win The posT oT Business Manager. Close behind were Bob RoTh and Sandy Gluck, becoming assisTanTs. ln The Fillfll Form, Dick Roemer won AssociaTe Business Managership, While Sian STrauss won The Lower School posT. No amounT oT praise is Too greaT Tor Barry SmiTh, The PhoTogra- phy l-leadman. While l-LM. sTudenTs were siTTing up nighTs gulping down black coTTee and cramming Tor TesTs, Barry was consuming gallons oT hypo and dozens oT Tlashbulbs, Taking and processing some Truly magniTicenT phoTos. Barry did all The clever dividers and monT- Business Chief Julian Rosenberg agues, making good use oT his arTisTic and phoTographic TalenTs. Ably assisTing Barry was liTTle Johnny Small, who proved To be a masTer aT Taking informals. STan Pressman, The procrasTinaTing phoTobug, Took some excellenT TooTball snaps buT gave up upon discovering ThaT all his prinTs had Turned yellow. Van Gelder, The elder, and Dave Spanel were also in There piTching. Ted Waddell, who unTorTunaTely Tor The MANNIKIN graduaTed aT The hahc year, Took addiTional inTormals and sTarTed on Trick phoTography Tor The Senior Opinions. This proiecT, however, had To be dropped upon Teds deparTure. The ever dependable ChidnoTT STudio aided The MANNIKIN immensely, Mr. Solon Taking all The acTiviTy and Team groups, Mr. Zee, The class phoTographs, and Mr. Gray, The senior Tormals. NOT unTil iT was Too laTe did The ediTors discover ThaT new arTisTic TalenT lay in The Senior class. By Then, AusTin Baer, The ArT EdiTor only had Time To embark on one ThirTy-hour proiecT, ThaT oT skeTching The school. This realisTic piece oT work appears on The end sheeTs. LefT: PhoTography EdiTor, Barry SmiTh, Righfr ShuTTerbugs Dave Spanel and Johnny Small plan a snazzy snapshoT. IO2 Borfomz Seafed: nie'e a' Lee: Newfarc Largs::': Gale' 5-'Q G'ee':e :, Sfandinq: C-e- Le '5'1 R':'e': Sc' esrge' G'ee1 i.a'g'e' a': S:a'e, Missing: :e la C'a:e e Wlkinsc' an: B gcre, Led by Andy Lowenield and Pere Schlesinger, several Fiilh Formers did much oi rhe grueling rouiine work' Mike Cohen, John Gambling, and David Tillinghasf helped our foo. ln addirion io all fhese hard working board members Mr. Alfred Barulh, 'rhe MANNIKIN adviser: Mr, Roberi Kelly, Mr. Armand Prusnack, Mr. George Van Sicklen, Mr. Fred Fuchs and Mr. l-larry Melor of Kelly Publishing- and Mr. Gray of Chidnofi generously gave rhe edirors rheir paiienl advice and professional knowledge wi+hour which ihe MANNIKIN could never have been published. Seaied: B -:e' Rcemer Rc S. Gpcr e':x S a-ss. Standing: D. We S:a'e' a'ci G'-ee':e C. Missing: Bezczi, Gcccieic Coie. Garfnke, E. Gross a': K, Le5'. IO3 RCU? Record ediTors, Green, Blinlcen, and Schlesinger. HE Record, under The direcTion oT co-ediTors Tor The TirsT Time in iTs hisTory, had a highly successTul year. Record polls oT The sTudenT body, held ThroughouT The year, revealed ThaT readership had reached a high percenTage oT The school. Six page issues were again The l4eysTone oT Record policy, and Tour page issues ap- oeared only when The newly revived sporTs supplemenTs were being prepared. These supplemenTs, oT which Three appeared during The year, came ouT aT The beginning oT The season oT The maior Teams, and conTained individual wriTe-ups OT The players, which included such perTinenT daTa as weighT and heighT. Record co-ediTors Bill Green and Bob Blinlcen decided aT The beginning oT The year To concenTraTe on puTTing ouT a good, all-around newspaper. To This end, a con- servaTive TronT page make-up was mixed wiTh an imaginaTive inner-page TormaT To produce a paper ThaT combined digniTy and inTeresT. AnoTher move oT The ediTors was To reviTalize The TeaTure deparTmenT. l-lowie GreenTeld was appoinTed TeaTure ediTor. Under his direcTion a sTeady sTream oT in- Terviews wiTh imporTanT and well-known personages such as Mrs. RoosevelT, The N. Y. mayoralTy candidaTes, and Times man William Laurence appeared, plus many TeaTures abouT Top-noTch Broadway perTormers. The nexT ediTor appoinTed was Jim Schlesinger, who goT The managing ediTorship posT. Under Schlesingens waTchTuI handling. such diTTiculT problems as geTTing people To go To The prinTer or The engraver, or geTTing arTicles in on Time, were rapidly solved. IT was because oT Jim's eTTicienT worlc ThaT The year ran OTT as smooThly as IT did. IO4 S orrs edilor lor 45-46 was Eliiolr Ezis. Carelull combfeo sfarisrics on Vars-rv Y 1 reams and inreresring, well wrilren On rhe Benchs were a hghfgh- cl ihis years sporrs deparlmenl, aiong wirh excelenl coverage ol all arhleric evenls. lnauguraled This year lo carry our The srandard oi rhe Reccro were several new columns, The Record Loolcs Back, The Music Box, and Lerner lo rhe Edilorf Aller a lapse of one year, Sfalion l-l.M.S., she mosl widely read column in she Refordwa'eyen ed Al gl-l eM D ofl Jyl.nner c , s r 'uv .ar , reo.acin orac anrers. avi' aaer ai ai -. Ro er Ross, Waller Berdon, and Norm Shereski de iohred rhe readers rhrouohoulr rhe f - J year wirh 'rhe malerial lhey poured inro rhe Music Box and l-l.M.S. ln every Record poll, rhese columns, along wilrh rhe learures, ied all olhers. Arricles on clubs and lesser known l-lorace Mann aciivilies gave exlra-curricular work a large boosr in increasing rhe number ol boys parlriciparing in school aTTairs. Wirhour The hard worlc pul in by business manager Owen Alper and rhe ad- gerlring slaves on lhe board, This years Record would have been impossible. Wirh rhe edirors spending huge amounlrs lor rhe many exlra-page issues fha? were run 'his year, Owen s already dilliculr job was made even harder. Despi+e rhe conslanlr pressure upon il, rhe board managed lo lceep rhe Record in rhe back lhroughoufr much of rhe year. Circularion manager Sran Pressman and his assisranr Jim Berliner lcepl Jrhe Record circulaled lrhroughoul The school. ln addirion, Sian mainrained a large number of exchanges wirh orher schools lhroughour rhe narion. BoH0m Raw: E, Grass, W, Rogers. and i-l, Farber. Second Row: A. Zuckerrfar, J. Small, A. Ackerman, C. Soie er. A. Judson, A. Lowenfeld, D. Kalimar R. Janover, E. Lederer, ard F. Gilberi. Third Row: J. Langner, M. Loeb, E. Waisl, L. Beveridge. S. Gans. W. Evans, D, Galler D. Rose, C. Thomas, M. Cohen, and W. Berdon. Top Row: H. Bargser. J. Gambling, F, Chen, A. Maris, P. Mcrf, O. Alper D. Spanel, E. Sack, R. Reemer, and P. Bilgere. - s' - Sf' IOS v Seafed: Roemer, Babbin, Alper, and R. Lowen. Sfandingz Binder, Ber- liner, and Leeman. ExperT news coverage was insured by a large ediTorial board consisTing oT boys inTeresTed in all branches oT school liTe. Every Torm was represenTed on The sTaTT, wiTh mosT oT iTs members being Juniors and Seniors. Over Ten wriTers held places on varsiTy squads, while even a larger number were very acTive in clubs. The ediTors mainTained a policy oT assigning arTicles To Those boys who were mosT inTeresTed or acTive in The subiecT To be wriTTen abouT. To be sure oT having The besT possible coverage, each new member oT The board was aslced whaT he would mosT lilce To wriTe. The Tive Lower Schoolers serving as wriTers conTribuTed arTicles To The Record dealing wiTh The Lower School, enabling The Record To lceep in closer conTacT wiTh The FirsT, Second, and Third llormers Than iT had in previous years. Green and Blinlcen saw To iT ThaT The ediTorial column was well employed during The enTire year. Searching ediTorials on all phases oT school liTe lcey- noTed The vigorous and TorThrighT policy ThaT was TelT by everyone who did any worlq on The Record. IO6 Publ caT ons adv ser Mr. AlTred E BaruTh Ihr ignrarr iililzmn illrrnrh Published weekly, except vacation and examination periods, by the students of the HORACE MANN SCHOOL FOR BOYS, West 246111 si repr , New York city. WILLIAM GREEN, ROBERT BLINKEN Co-Editors JAMES SCHLESINGER i . Managing Editor ELLIOTT ELLIS Sports Editor HOWARD CREENFIELD EDITORIAL BoARD H. Bangser '48 Dee Lowenfeld W1 Berdon . '46 Gambling Marks L. Beveridge '48 F. Gilbert Mort . P. Bilgore '46 E. Cross Roemer F. Chen '46 R. Janover Rogers M. Cohen .. '47 . Kallman Rose W. Evans '47 . Lederer Ross H. Farber '51 . Loeb Sack 1: Ackerman '47 . Caller Zuckerman 'A BUSINESS BOARD OWEN ALPER . . Business Manager C. Babbin '48 M. I-Iandman ...,.. .... ' 47 D. Jonas , , . M. Babbin '47 P. Heiman '47 P. Lehman P. Baumann '47 . Hurowilz STANLEY PRESSMAN Circulation Manager JIM BERLINER MR. ALFRED BARUTH, .. Faculty Adviser -in-Chief .Feature Editor Sarnolf , .. '46 Shapiro '50 Sheresky '46 Spanel '46 Spieler '46 Tarcher '49 Thomas '47 Langner '46 Roemer . ......, '47 Mangel '48 Assistant Ns. Sfewarf Judson and Ellioii Ellis clneclc 'the copy up in Yonkers, as Bill Green maps oui Jrlie iayoui for The nexi issue. nfw' 5- Y' NZ? ft anlcy Jim Schlesinger shows Rec- rd Prinier, Mr. Gray, how 'fo sei Type. ,J ir E3 Quarferfy EdiTor Dave Galle r. HE QuarTerly oT I945-46 proved one oT The besT in recenT years. Even Though cosTs were sTill high and Time was shorT, Dave Galler, The ediTor, managed To pi-esenT Tour excellenT issues To The school. Under The guidance oT Mr. AlTred BaruTh, The previously dull QuarTerly was very much enlivened. The Tairly recenT sysTem oT a conTribuTing board was dropped because oT iTs ineTTiciency and inabiliTy To presenT good arTicles. lnsTead, The ediTors reverTed To The old sysTem oT being given maTerial by The various English Teachers. This plan did noT bring in a varieTy oT arTicIes, buT Through iT The QuarTerly received The besT wriTings oT The school. The Tinal selecTion oT arTicles To be prinTed was made by The ediTors oT The magazine. Allan Newmark and Jack Richard were associaTe and managing ediTors, respecTively, while John LangsdorT, Andrew l-leineman, and Michael Loeb were assis' TanT ediTors. David Spanel, Calvin Thomas, Andreas l.owenTeld, Jim Borner, Norman Rabkin, and Ed Lederer assisTed in The picking oT The besT arTicles and were key men on The ediTorial board. Much crediT Tor The enlighTening oT The magazine goes To The hard working arT board. KauTman, Davis, Baer, Levy, Feinberg, DeiTsch, and SmiTh conTribuTed illusTra- Tions Tor many sTories, while Chapelle added his carToons To The QuarTerly. l-larry Schwarz placed surrealism in This magazine Tor The TirsT Time and did some oT The rnosT original work ever published aT l-l.lvl. A new policy OT The ediTors Tound excelIenT drawings on The TronT cover insTead oT phoTographs. PhoTographers Barry SmiTh and Ed Neger, Too, added much To The QuarTerly's inTeresT. IO8 This year's QuarTerly boasTed more poeTry Than The magazines oT The pasT. John LangsdorT and EdiTor Dave Galler hiT The Type oTTen wiTh Their work, while Bill Green, Bob Blinken, Mike Loeb, and Francis Chen also broke inTo prinT wiTh Their verses. The mainsTays oT The QuarTerly were The boys who conTinually supplied The magazine wiTh Tine wriTing. Larry Schoen and AusTin Baer boTh proved To be Tine creaTors oT TicTion, specializing in characTer and mood. Allan Newmark kepT The school posTed on The laTesT scienTiTic developmenT, while Andrew l-leineman creaTed several TeaTures on ships. Jack Richard and Michael Loeb were represenTed by boTh TicTion and TeaTure wriTings, while Larry Grosss play added To The varieTy. Andy LowenTeld concocTed essays, as did Jim l3reTwell. One oT The TinesT pieces oT wriTing was ThaT oT FourTh Former Semour lsenberg: FiTTh Former PeTer Schlesinger presenTed The TirsT Table prinTed in The l-LM. QuarTerly. lT was The policy oT This years sTaTT To accepT aT leasT Two Lower School arTicles each quarTer, and many new iournalisTs were revealed by This pracTice, The work oT all These boys puT TogeTher made one oT The mosT enTerTaining series oT QuarTerlies in Horace Mann's hisTory. ln The beginning oT The year iT was decided To make The QuarTerly less conserva- Tive. Business Manager Bud l-lirsch, wiTh his assisTanT Ed BucksTein, rounded up The money, so ThaT EdiTor Dave Galler could employ as much color as possible. The TiTles oT arTicles, insTead oT being in The same prinT and place, were novelly arranged. lllusTra- Tions were TrequenTly employed in various paTTerns, and each page was planned diTTerenTly. Dave Galler's Tine work was primarily responsible Tor The success oT This maga- zine, as was The splendid cooperaTion oT The English deparTmenT and The hard work of Mr. AlTred BaruTh, The TaculTy adviser. Besides wriTing several arTicles and poems, Saller pracTically planned The layouTs singlehandedly and managed To geT ouT all The issues as prompTly as possible under The presenT siTuaTion. A greaT deal oT work was done by The FiTTh Formers on The sTaTT, and iT looks as if They are very well prepared To Tollow in The TooTsTeps oT This year's Tine ediTors. Seafed: Jack Richard, Allan Newmark, and Dave Galler. STancling: John Langsdorf, Michael Loeb, and Andrew l-leineman. IO9 N iTs ThirTieTh year oT publicaTion, The Manual was published greaTly changed Trom any one previously prinTed. For The TirsT Time, illusTraTive phoTographs were added: and The Tormal sTyle oT The previous Manuals was replaced by a more inTeresTing, inTormal one. The purpose oT The Manual was To be enjoyable as well as inTormaTive. Michael Loeb and David Spanel were ediTor-in-chieT and associaTe ediTor, respec- Tively. Andrew Heineman Took over The worries oT Tinance while also serving as an ediTor. Francis Chen, Allan Newmark, and Andreas LowenTeld aided in The posiTion oT ediTors1 Barry SmiTh Took charge OT The phoTography deparTmenT, while James Ber- liner served as circulaTion manager. This group meT TrequenTly during The summer vacaTion To plan The book and wriTe The arTicles. Because oT publicaTion diTTiculTies The 6l,l'llfi6L Top: EcliTor-in-Chief Michael Loeb. BoTTom AssociaTe EdiTor David Spanel. Manual arrived a liTTle over a week laTe buT oTTseT Tardiness by excellence. lTs cover was similar To ThaT oT The previous year and was prinTed in Tour colors. There was a new leTTer Trom Dr. TillinghasT, Tollowed by an inTroducTion wriTTen by The Manual board. Andrew Heineman and Andreas l.owenTeld prepared a new hisTory oT The school, more lengThy and more modern Than The one which had been used Tor over Ten years. The club arTicles were broughT up To daTe, and several new clubs were added. ln place oT The old arTicies on The diTTerenT publicaTions, The presenT ediTors wroTe arficles abouT Their own publicaTionsg and parTs oT These were added To The old inTormaTion. Andreas l.owenTeld compleTely revised The secTion devoTed To sTudies, clariTying many conTusing parTs and including more recenT inTormaTion. Allan Newmark Took on The iob oT wriTing The aThleTic and library secTionsg and Francis Chen drew ex- :ellenT diagrams oT boTh libraries, which, unTorTunaTely, were received Too laTe Tor publicaTion. David Spanel did a masTerTul iob wiTh The G.A. consTiTuTion by col- lecTing parTs noT known To exisT and Tinally presenTing The consTiTuTion in iTs enTireTy, a TeaT which had never been done beTore. The records oT all Horace Mann Teams Tor The pasT Tive years were lisTed. Six phoToqraphs by Barry SmiTh and a new Type Tace suggesTed by The prinTer greaTly enlivened The book. Michael Loeb, The ediTor-in-chieT, deserves The highesT praise Tor The TinesT Manual in l-l.M.'s hisTory. SeaTed: Andrew l-leineman, Dave Spanel, Michael Loeb, and Francis Chen. STancling: Andreas Lowen- Telcl, Barry SmiTh, James Berliner, and Allan Newmark. O.K., Heineman, whaT's The ioke? inguirif Top: LinguisT originaTor: Mr. Charles B. Anderson. BoTTom: This years LinguisT EdiTor, George Driesen. OR The elevenTh year in succession. The Horace Mann LinguisT, highly praised language maga- zine oT The FirsT and Second Forms, again was pub- lished under The guidance oT Mr. Anderson. The magazine, which was sTarTed Ten years ago as an experimenT Tor his new General Language classes, has long since passed The experimenTal sTage, and is now well enTrenched as an l l.lvl. insTiTuTion. l-lav- ing already prinTed an anThology To coyer The l:irsT Ten issues, The l.inguisT This year sTarTed on iTs second lap. lEdiTed by George Driesen OT The Second Form, who was elecTed by a voTe oT The Ten STar Club.. The spring magazine incorporaTed mosT oT The pre- yious layouT sysTems, buT insTead oT playing up one or Two long TeaTures, specialized in many shorTer arTicles, The ediTors were especially TorTunaTe This year in ThaT They received a large amounT oT adyerTising. The l:irsT Formers all piTched in Tor Their magazine, wiTh The resulT ThaT all records. boTh class and indi- vidual, were broken. Elihu Rose and Bob RaTelson ably handled Their posTs as Business and AdverTising Managers. ll2 Seafed: Beveridge ReTTenberg, Mr. Dodge, Mr. Anderson, Dr. TiIlinghasT, D. Tillinghasf, D. RoThchild, C. Thomas, and Sporn. Sfandingz Wolhf, Heineman, Loeb, BronsTeen, Magoon, Janover, M. Cohen, D. Rose, Shulz, lovenlco, Spanel, A. Heyman, J. Langsdori, Love, Newmark, and L. Van Gelder. Miss- ing: DeWiTT, Sack, Bangser, BrunsTeTTer, Culviner, Goodfield, Haim, Lloyd-Jones, Sanger, and Forbes. inguidf Sociefg HF LinguisT SocieTy is a group oT abouT sevenTy-eighT boys who have shown an unusual inTeresT in General Language and The annual magazine, The LinguisT. Since This publicaTion was sTarTed eleven years ago under The direcTion oT Mr. Ander- son, boys Trom Ten Horace Mann classes have been inducTed inTo The SocieTy. Mr. Charles B. Anderson, The Tounder oT General Language and The LinguisT aT Horace Mann: Mr. FrnesT R. Dodge, The head oT The Modern Language DeparTmenT7 and Dr. Charles C. TillinghasT, whose knowledge oT words and word derivaTion is apparenT To any one who aTTends assemblies, are The TaculTy members oT The LinguisT SocieTy. As a celebraTion oT The TenTh anniversary oT The LinguisT lasT year, This organizaTion published a boolf, The LinguisT AnThology. EdiTed by Allan Newmark and Michael Loeb, This boolc conTained The besT arTicies published in The Ten years oT The LinguisT's exisTence. lTs 96 pages conTained TeaTures by Francis Chen, Michael Cohen, Paul Sack, and George Bailey, along wirh TwenTy-Two oTher pieces. Mr. Anderson, a pioneer in The Tield oT General Language, conTribuTed an arTicle dealing wirh This course. The LinguisT AnThology was due mainly To The worlc oT The members oT The class oT '46, among whom were The ediTors, John LangsdorT, Andrew Heinernan, Don RoThchiid, Francis Chen, and David Spanel. Mr. Charles B. Anderson deserves a greaT amounT oT praise Tor Tounding General Language classes, The LinguisT, and The SocieTy. He has esTablished a TradiTion which is bound To lasT a long Time. II3 Seafedz Berdon, Ross, Melicow, Mr. Clausen, Pressman, and Langsdorlt. Sfandingz L. Van Gelder. Sandler, Duberman, LiTshey, Gluck, Richard, Spanel, and Sporn. ramafic HIS year once again The DramaTic Club enioyed an acTive and successTul season, alThough iT was handicapped by bad breaks and numerous sicknesses. Under Mr. ChrisTie Clausen's ever vigilanT and rewarding direcTion, The club sTruggled Through The year To perTecT Two delighTTul plays. WiTh his opTimisTic help, many new mem- bers were broken in and old sTars were repolished, wiTh The resulT ThaT The excel- lence oT acTing developed remarkably as The season progressed. WiTh Daniel Melicow aT The helm, The club early embarked upon iTs new plans. By The end OT The TirsT guarTer, The presidenT, who ioined The Club in The second Torm, agreed in a conclave wiTh mosT oT The veTeran members on a schedule oT Tour performances. Originally inTending To puT on The ValianT, Sham, My ClienT Curly, a Tamous Corwin scripT, and a Three acT play, They soon discovered ThaT The course as They had planned iT was Too demanding, and They laid aside all work on Curly. Already, however, The TirsT Two plays had been casT and were well on The way To acTual presenTaTion. As Time wenT on, iT was hoped ThaT The ValianT could be given in an assembly beTore The ChrisTmas recess. However, The play, Twice posTponed because oT The illness oT The acTors, was noT Tinally presenTed unTil well inTo January, and Then iT showed signs oT The long lapse oT Time beTween rehearsals. The casT, ably headed by Roger Ross and John I.angsdorT, consisTed mainly oT veTerans oT one or Two years. The lead, James Dyke, a Tall criminal wiTh a knack Tor Shakespeare, was wonderTully porTrayed by Ross. ResplendenT in Temale make-up and a long, blue dress, Bob Sandler, as Josephine Paris oT The wiry red hair, moved Warden T-lolT, played by John II4 Langsdorf, 'ro allow her io quesiion deaih-desrined Dyke. Ed Weisl, a newcomer, sym- paihized wilh rhe condemned in his role as Faiher Daly, while l-loiclman and Lilshey carefully followed Their mas+er's bidding. A dramaiisl oi long repule, Ross, who played The iaiher in Marriage Proposal' by Chekhov, given Jrhree years ago, showed up bril- lianlly. Langsdorf and Sandler, bolh members of lasl seasons hir, On Borrowed Timef' were equally pleasing in rheir diiiliculi roles. All in all, Jrhough Jrhe show was sligh+ly disappoinling, Jrhe pillalls were soon gapped as plans were iormulaied lor 'rhe spring produciion. Well before Mid-years rolled around, Presideni Melicow and Secrelary Pressman were cogilaiing over ihe seleciion lor Jfhe command performance in lhe spring. A commiliee of club men finally decided on Arsenic and Old Lace, afler much de- liberaiion in which Mr. Clausen and various members ruled againsl such plays as You Can? Take H Wiih You, and l Killed Jrhe Counif' As soon as The choice was made, The feverish work began, and wirhin some Jrwo weeks lhe ienlaiive casl was picked. Wiih rehearsals and memorizaiion well launched ihe Siage Crew also embarked on Hs man-sized iask. Polished and well-conceived, Arsenic and Qld Lace was presenled wilh much fanfare ai a gala evening per- Top: Mr. Clausen, Dramalic Club Menior. Boifom: Dyke lRoger Rc-ssl, a guard lAr+ie l-loflmanl, and fhe girl lBob Sandlerl eagerly awail confirmafion ' of 'rhe deaih senlrence from 'rhe Warden lJohn Langsdorfl- The Valiant H5 lormance. This lime indeed lhe aclors lived up lo lheir repulalions and lurned in an applaudable rendilion ol lhe hilarious comedy. Mr. Oliver once again lurned lo lossing oul orchids lo his lavorile slars. As belore, Roger Ross showed real lalenl, lhis lime playing lhe parl ol Jonalhan, and loolcing every bil as handsome as Boris himsell. Dr. Einslein, enacled by Waller Berdon, leamed up wilh his unscrupulous parlner lo scare lhe limid and lo llabber- gasl lhe Old Aunls. Morlimer Brewsler, high hal and all, was Sandy Gluclcs spilling image, while Teddy, lhe Panamanian wilh lhe shovel, bore a remarlcable resemblance lo Si Bezozi.-charge! Marlin Duberman and Bob Sandler leamed up lo murder lhirleen innocenl men while slill hiding under a cloak ol lcindliness. Joel Feinberg as Gibbs and Auslin Baer as Wilherspoon bolh were excellenl, as was Melicow's O'l-lara. Togelher wilh lhe supporling roles, lhe maior aclors succeeded in presenl- ing lhe larce in lrue Broadway slyle- minus lhe prolanily. Unlorlunalely, as lhe year progressed il became apparenl lhal lhe one-acler, Sham could nol be slaged. Poslponed lime and again because ol illnesses, no suil- able dale could be lound lor ils presenlalion in assembly. Direcled by Melicow, lhe casl was lo have included Waller Berdon as lhe lhiel, Sandy Gluck, Marlin Duberman, and Warren Meyers. Much credil lor lhis years success musl be given lo lhe Slage Crew. Wilh Mr. Lillle as direclor, lhe Siberians were always on lhe iump lo lurn oul realislic sels lor lhe plays. Frelwells beaulilully produced Valianl sel will long be remem- bered lor ils suggeslive lorce and solemnily. Equally praiseworlhy was lhe magni- licenl Arsenic and Old Lace slaging. Wilh Mr. Clausen's aid, lhe Dramalic Club lhis year lurned oul a lull season ol worlhy presenlalions, hampered only by bad luclc bul nol by a dearlh ol lalenl. Lell: Wilh greal delighl, Ross slrangles Berdon while rehearsing a scene lrom Arsenic and Old Lace. Righl: The Valianlf Langsdorl, Lilshey, and Sandler. II6 The Siberians ere-cT The Arsenic and Old Mr. Lifrle lsecond Trom leTTl direcTs Holme. Lace SeT: Walker, Frerwell, S. Jonas, and Haim. D. Rose, and Legrand. Sfage l QLU NDER The direcTion oT iTs PresidenT, Siberia Jim l:reTwell, and iTs adviser, Mr, Fred LiTTle, who iusT This year reTurned To Horace Mann Trom The Navy, The STage Crew has had a mosT acTive year. The reTurn oT Mr. l.iTTle has meanT ThaT Those par- TicipaTing in sTagecraTT now receive college crediT Tor Their worlc. 'The crew meT regularly on Mondays To do The acTual worlc on DramaTic Club seTs and on Thursdays Tor a class conducTed by Mr. Li++Ie. SomeTimes, moreover, during The lasr minuTe rush beTore producTions, various members meT on SaTurday To caTch up on Their work. The hardesT worlqers on The preparaTion oT DramaTic Club seTs were Marshall, Goldman, l-lolme, Walker, l.eGrand, Lee, and Danziger. WiThouT The hard worlc puT in by These boys, none oT The year's dramaTic hiTs would have been possible. 0Ther parTs oT The STage Crew were The proiecTion booTh crew and The public address sysTem operaTors. The Tormer group, which operaTes The slide machine Tor The Wednesday morning sings, consisTs oT Thomas, MarToccio, and Sanger: and iT is To This TerriTying Trio ThaT Mr. Blalce gesTiculaTes when The lyrics, Soup, soup, we all wanT soup . . TloaT on To The screen upside down. The ProiecTion BooTh group is also in charge oT all movies Thar are shown in The audiTorium. The Public Address sysTem, run by Frey and STapleTeldT, broadcasTs all VarsiTy games upon The Tield and also sTands ready To help when any social aTTair needs iTs aid. CrediT Tor The success which has aTTended The acTiviTies oT The STage Crew This year should go boTh To The members, who have puT in much Time and hard work on sTagecraTT, and To presidenT l:reTwell and adviser lvlr. LiTTle, whose consTanT direc- Tion and aTTenTion have played a considerable parT in making The year a good one. IT7 L SeaTed: Alper, Gilbert Sack, Mr. LewerTh, Berdon, Spanel, Loeb, and Lowenfeld, STanding: Leclerer, Jovenlco, l-l. BernsTein, Marks, Green, Janover, C. Jacobs. and Melicow. megafing ociefy HROUGHOUT eighT monThs oT acTiviTy The DebaTing SocieTy mainTained a policy which embodied a Trend Trom The old school Type oT pure argumenTaTive, compeTiTive ora- Tory To a more inTormal, open-minded, and cur- renT-evenT conscious sTyIe oT debaTing. This was accomplished by several means: TirsT, by noT employing consisTenTly The Mid-WesT De- baTe Bureaus sTandard NaTional Topic, buT insTead using several Topics oT conTemporary, naTional, or local inTeresT1 second, by presenT- ing an assembly debaTe, eliminaTing rebuT- Tals, on The New Yorlc CiTy mayoralTy race: and Third, by adopTing The 'Town lvleeTing oT The Airl' TeaTure oT inviTing guesTions Trom The audience in This assembly program. Responsible in large parT Tor This new policy was The clubs presidenT, WalTer Berdon. Dave Spanel, lvlike Loeb, and Ned Sack served as The oTher oiclicers: vice-presidenT, secreTary, and Treasurer, respecTively. PresiclenT Walfer Berclon TilibusTering --.-...,,,,, ,ww -gl-, Don Rofhchild, Speakers' presidenl, 1 A' , 1 N sl.. 4 if , H151 in if ' Cru Ill-l lilrle variarion from Jrhe procedure of former years, The Speakers' Forum compleled anolher season ol invaluable prac- Jrice in public speaking and in keeping abreasr ol public evenls. Two lealures, however, erlecled a decided improvemenlr in Jrhe club. By dinl ol presidenl Don Rolhchilds conslanl surveillance, Jrhe al- ready large allendance was improved and kepl near ils maximum. Also, The Speakers' Forum Conslilulion, Jrhe seven arricles of which were composed by secrelary Andreas Lowenleld, conrribuled, however inconspicuously, To 'rhe eicliciency of Jrhe club and will wilhoul doubr aid in lulure years. Julian Rosenberg performed Jrhe dulries of vice-presidenl al Jrhe Thursday meerings of Jrhe club, and Mr. Briggs conlinued as Jrhe club's adviser. Speech-deliverers of parricular dislrinclion, in addilrion lo The olilicers, were Ned Sack, Andy l-lacker, and Bill Green. Seafedz Judson, l-laugaard, Sack, Rosenberg, Mr. Briggs, Rolhchild. Lowenfeld, and Hirsch. Sfandingz Gilbert Hacker, Barley, Marks, Green, Janover, Pincus, and Binder. YWOJJ aidoa CLA HIS year The Model Railroad Club once again changed The loca- Tion of iTs layouf. The Club was sfarfed in l942 in Mr. Payne's physics lab, from where iT moved To The liTTle room neif To The book sfore. IT Then moved To more spacious quarfers under The grandsTand, and from There To The dormiTory. LasT year The Casey Joneses were back underneafh The grandsTand, buT This fall a permanenf place To seT up The Tracks was found in The physics lab. Barry Lehman, who was elecfed presidenf for The second sTraighT year, guided The Model Railroad Club Through an ambiTious program. A new consTiTuTion was wriTTen, in which The purposes of The Club were redefined along more liberal lines. This revision of The laws provided for enTry inTo The Club by boys who would oTherwise have been refused membership, and Thus creafed more inferesf in model railroading. In The pasT, The policy of The Club was To admiT as a new member no one who was noT an accomplished model builder- elecTrician. ln The fufure, The membership will consisf noT only of The aforesaid Type of boy, buf also of boys who show sufficienf inTeresT To learn These skills from The old members. Because of The slowness of reconversion, The Model Railroad Club had quife a biT of difficulfy in obTaining boTh Tracks and engines for iTs 518 inch gauge pike. EquipmenT from pasf years consisfed of a swiTch engine, a heavy freighf and passenger engine, and several freighT and passenger cars. Some addifional apparafus for use by The railroaders was obfained from boys aT school, as well as from second hand sTores, and The Club looks forward To a bigger and beTTer supply nexf year. Lehman flashes his celluloid bridgework aT engineers Bogan, Morris, R. Van Gelder, C. Babbin, B. SmiTh, C. Jacobs, and Heller, while sfokers, Geller and Heineman lwho sneaked info The picfurel feign inTeresT. I2O The Ping Pong Team: l-lonig, FuTTer, Weisberg, Osbourn, l-larber, Chen Cohen Jollofsky and Troy lNG-PONG, as a sporT, is growing TasT in populariTy aT H.M. This TacT is evidenced by The large number of boys who go ouT Ln Tor The sporf. The ping-pong Team and The group are Two diTTerenT organiza- Tions TighTing Tor The Tables, The manager oT The sporT as a whole, 011 Leonard Weisberg. arranged a schedule oT Tive TournamenTs, in- cluding a reTurn maTch wiTh Columbia Grammar. Because oT The size oT The group, a smaller squad had To be picked To compose The Team. Even Then iT was diTFiculT To cuT The squad down To The necessary seven, and so The squad was leTT aT Ten. The TournamenTs were played wiTh Two doubles and Three singles maTches. The ranking oT The Team was deTermined by a Tournamenlr, end- ing wiTh a bouT beTween JolloTslcy and Weisberg. The Team consisTed oT Chen, JolloTslcy, Weisberg, and Harber, named in order oT ranlc, playing singles: while Chen, FuTTer, Osbourn, and l-lonig comprised The Two doubles Teams. The Team was above average in abiliTy, and The prospeclrs oT a Tine squad nexT year are good. The Team had some diTTiculTy This year because The G.A.E.C. made no approprialrion Tor The sporT, and many oT The expenses had To be meT by The various members oT This group. l2l SeaTed: Sandler, Newhouse. Meer, Schlosser, Miss Webb, L. lngber, Zessman, Newmark, and Loeb. STanding: I-leineman, F. Chen, K. Levin. I. Levin, L. BernsTein, R. Lowen, L. Cohen, Ross, Pressman, S. Judson, D. Rose, Marks, C. Thomas. Berliner, Duberman. and Friedland. eg rainy ommiffee l-TE l-lorace Mann library derived a greaT deal oT beneTiT Trom The various library commiTTees. Boys Trom The Third To The SixTh Form conTribuTed much OT Their Time To everyThing Trom planning exhibiTs To puTTing away books. Donald Newhouse was elecTed chairman oT The TiTTh Torm group, and planned The exhibiT OT The besT prose wriTings in English LiTeraTure. Jim Berliner and Kenny Levin did much work on The library scrap books and served along wiTh The oTher members oT This commiTTee in running The library during The 3:lO period. The FourTh Forrners proved invaluable To This phase oT school liTe by Their con- sTanT work in The library. While These boys did noT parTicipaTe as much in working on exhibiTs They spenT many hours doing The menial Tasks OT The library wiThouT receiving any pay. Such iobs as mending, puTTing away books, Tending The magazine room, and oThers requiring equally hard work were well Taken care oT by The FourTh Formers. The Third Form, Too, did iTs Tair share oT The work. They were TaughT all abouT The workings oT The library and The various iobs ThaT would be open in The TuTure. The number OT Third Formers ThaT enThusiasTically joined Their commiTTee give promise oT good years To come when The presenT workers graduaTe. The SixTh Formers wenT Through The year wiThouT elecTing a head, buT Their work proved none The worse Tor This. These old sTandbys ran The ChrisTmas Book sale, The mosT successTul in years, and also helped Tend The desk. Many plans such as The Book oT The Week, The New Book secTion, and The secTion Tor duplicaTes were originaTed by The Seniors. The large number oT boys on The Library CommiTTees and The Library STaTT have been a greaT help To This deparTmenT and have helped iT To be in The Top lOO percen- Tile oT high schools in The counTry. , 172 gr... 64.4 HE Glee Club, ably direcled and advised by Mr. Blake, concluded one ol ils besl seasons lhis year. Under Marlin Wilkinson's walchlul eye and The merciless enrollmenl book of secrelary Donald de la Chapelle, lhe group quickly developed inlo a smoolhly work- ing organizalion. Besides The chorus, an oclel was also formed, wilh Maurice Solomon, Alan Rosenberg, Paul Morl, and Jim Jacober as slandouls. Bolh groups performed in Jrhe as- semblies and away al such places as lhe Dallon School. The club was well supplied wilh lorly voices, and was able lo render many old lavoriles. BoHom Row: Ludlum, Schlosser, Ackerman, Selinka, Zabar, Roemer, C. Babbin, Liberman. and R. Cohen. Second Row: Cooper, Jacober, Gans, Weis- berg, D. de la Chapelle, Wilkinson, A. Rosenberg. Mort Anlhony, and Beveridge. Third Row: P. Weil, Kuhn, Pressman, J. Feinberg, Evans. Lehrer, Kulkin. Nadler, Eisner, and Ellis. Top Row: J. Rosenberg, A. Bachrach, Resnick, D. Rolhchild, Munves, S. Gluck, Elaugaard, and Feldman. l .TT Orchea fra fy HE OrchesTra, under iTs leader, Mr. Joseph PresTi, once again had a mosT successTul sea- son. Besides providing l-l.M'ers wiTh music Tor The Wednesday morning sings, The group also gave The school a concerT laTe in The year. FeaTured in This concerT, besides The regular OrchesTra, was a clarineT quarTeT, organized and led by The con- cerT masTer STan Pressman. A small iazz group was also heard. Answering The demand Tor a school band, a Tew members oT The OrchesTra provided some appro- priaTe music Tor The TirsT TooTball game: buT They were noT presenT Tor The oThers. The OrchesTra This year had an unusually large group oT clarineTisTs. There were seven in all: STan Mr' P'e5H' O'CT'eST'a adviser' Pressman, Larry Schoen, Bob Blinlcen, Bill Rogers, Andy LowenTeld. Charlie Jacobs, and Bob l.iTshey. The lone TluTe player oT The wind secTion was Lowell Beveridge. The brass secTion had some unusually spiriTed playing by Warren Meyers on The Trombone. This secTion was rounded oTT by The Two TrumpeTers, Bill T-laugaard and Pascal Covici. Andre Ellcon, STeve WeiTz, AusTin l-leyman. and Jerry Serchuclc were The Jaclc Bennies oT The group: Howard Boros lenT his TalenTs To The ivories. Ed Weisl made good use oT The new seT oT drums which were given To The OrchesTra. As usual Mr. Warwick was a greaT help because oT his organ playing on Wednesday mornings. The OrchesTra during rehearsal. I24 SeaTed: Soros, C. Thomas, Greemfeld, L. Cohen, Langner, Richard, Galler, and FuTTer. STanding: Kluger, Honig, Zabar, E. RoThchild, A. Bachrach, Zinman. S. Gluck, Weisberg, Elkon, lovenko, and Hall. udic NDER The presidency oT Jay Langner, The Music Club compleTed a successful sea- son This year. Mr. Warwick was TaculTy adviser, The oTher oTTicers were Larry Cohen, vice-presidenT, and Jack Richard, secreTary-Treasurer. Aside Trom The oTTicers and adviser, much crediT Tor an especially good year should go To The remaining regular members, who were all OT The highesT sinceriTy in Their aim oT TurThering Their musical knowledge. The acTiviTies oT The club This year were many. Various members gave Talks on diTTerenT composers and Their works, illusTraTing These Talks wiTh recorded musical selecTions. Composers oT The laTe romanTic period and The modern period were emphasized. A number oT very inTeresTing musical quizzes in which The members would Try To idenTiTy recorded selecTions were given, The winner receiving a prize. QuiTe a Tew discussions were held This year on music or Topics relaTed To music, The TirsT oi These, done as an experimenT, was on Applause. As This was quiTe successTul, These discussions were conTinued. For The enTire school The Music Club played iTs regular parT in managing and planning The musical assemblies and gave musical quiz programs. OuTside oT school many small groups oT club members enioyed TogeTher boTh :oncerT and opera. As a member oT The Junior Gpera Guild, The Club senT delegaTes To The meeTings oT This organizaTion. l-lowever, one accomplishmenT oT The Club sTands ouT. Early in The year, many boys joined who knew liTTle abouT music, buT who grew To be real lovers oT good music. T25 Q2 Seafedz WeiTz. R. Van Gelder, Spanel, SrniTh, Mr. Dodge, S. lngber, and Schoen. Sfandingt Meer, L. lngber, Wolf, Siegel, MarTin, Parish, Gallinek, Goode, Rose, Levine, Marlruscelli, l. Levin, Harkavy, Levinson, Mangel, Rogers, Small, and l-lurowiTz. HE mosT imporTanT acTiviTy of The PhoTography Club This year was The discovery in The dormiTory oT an excellenT darkroom ThaT was available To boys aT school. This room, which had been unknown Tor abouT Ten years, proved To conTain a wealTh oT phoTographic maTerial, including many developing Trays and prinTing Trames, a mosT convenienT sink, and Two Tine enlargers. This room was a greaT assel' To The club, as many boys did noT have a lighT-prooT place in which To work. The phoTographers held regular meeTings each week under The direcTion oT STeve lngber, who was presidenT Tor The second sTraighT year, and under The supervision OT Mr. Dodge, The TaculTy adviser. The oTher oTTicers were Barry SmiTh, vice-presidenT: Dave Spanel, secreTary1 and Michael l-landman, Treasurer. Spanel wroTe a consTiTuTion aT The beginning oT The year To deTine clearly The purposes oT The Club. The usual pracTice aT The meeTings was To have one member each week lecTure on some branch oT phoTography or some Type oT camera. Many diTTerenT Topics were dis- cussed, and all Types oT cameras were displayed. Probably The mosT inTeresTing oT These Talks were Those by John Small on The workings oT The Tlash bulb, and by Larry Schoen on Trick phoTography. There was greaT enThusiasm in The enTire school Tor a picTure-Taking conTesT spon- sored by The PhoTography Club shorTly beTore mid-year exams. The rules permiTTed prinTs oT any size and required an enTry Tee oT TwenTy-Tive cenTs Tor Three picTures. Many Tine shoTs were submiTTed To The board of iudges consisTing oT Miss Webb, Mr. BaruTh, and Mr. Dodge. I26 cience HERE is no doubT ThaT This year was one oT The besT ThaT The Science Club has ever seen. Under The able guidance oT Dr. Harry H. Williams, Richard Van Gelder as presidenT sTeered The Club Through iTs TourTh year oT exisTence. The oTher oTTicers were Barry Lehman, vice-presidenTg Dave Galler, se-creTary, and Jaclq Richard, Treasurer. AT The beginning oT The year, iT was decided by The Twelve remaining members Trom The previous year ThaT in order To accomplish anyThing worThwhile iT would be necessary To limiT The number oT members in The club. ln This iighT The old members selecTed, Trom 35 applicanTs, Twelve new members. These boys were chosen in consider- aTion oT Their sinceriTy and Their inTeresT in science. For The TirsT Time The boys in The Club decided To work TogeTher on some one Topic insTead oT working individually. AlmosT unanimously chosen as The TirsT Topic was nuclear physics, in conecTion wiTh The aTomic bomb. This was pursued by means oT Tallcs wiTh Dr. Williams and various members on diTTerenT phases oT This subiecT. Several club members gave Tallcs on oTher subiecTs, such as specTroscopy and radio. AnoTher TirsT by way oT Science Club accomplishmenTs was The presenTaTion oT Two assembly programs during The second semesTer. The TirsT oT These was a repro- ducTion oT a radio broadcasT, The EinsTein Theory. This explained The TundamenTal parTs oT The EinsTein Theory oT relaTiviTy. The second show was a series oT demon- sTraTions. Emphasis was laid on experimenTs showing chemical magic. AnoTher acTiviTy oT The Science Club was The TormaTion oT a commiTTee which lcepT The members oT The Club inTormed oT currenT happenings in science by posTing on The bulleTin board in The chemisTry lab picTures and arTicles oT scienTiTic inTeresT Talcen Trom magazines and newspapers. BoTTom Row: Rablcin, l. Sussman, M. Babbin, Cole, and Borner. Second Row: Meer, J. Schlesinger, Richard R. Van Gelder, Mr. Williams, Lehman, Galler, and H. BernsTein. Top Row: H. Rubin, Baumann, L. BernsTein, SmiTh, Lavine, Levine, MoscowiTz, L. Cohen, Binder, and F. Chen. l27 Lowenfeld makes a craffy move as L. Cohen, Fuller, Serchuclc. Weisberg, and J. Schlesinger wafch closely. 64856 e6tI'I'l HIS year fhe Horace Mann Chess Team was faced wifh fhe difficulf faslc of defending ifs crown as cify champion wifh only one of fhe firsf four players from lasf year's all-winning aggregafion refurning. Under fhe leadership of Louis Kurrelmeyer, and before him Eric Plauf, Horace Mann had annexed four legs on fhe cup presenfed each year fo fhe winning school in fhe New Yorlc Cify Privafe School Chess League. Five legs are required for permanenf possession of fhis cup, and chances were fairly good fhaf fhis frophy would be added fo fhe many ofhers acquired by Horace Mann fhrough fhe years. This year was marked nof by fhe absence of any oufsfanding chess players, buf rafher by a preponderance of good ones. Consequenfly fhere were hard sfruggles for all posifions on fhe feam, and if was nof unfil several mafches had been played fhaf fhe line-up was definifely chosen. Andy Lowenfeld, fhe remaining holdover from lasf year, and Alan Turoff, who was alfernafe man lasf year while sfill in fhe Lower School, held down fhe firsf and second posifions respecfively. A fournamenf was held in fhe fall fo defermine fhe ofher members of fhe squad: and lo boys originally furned ouf for fhe confesf, which shows fhe ever increasing inferesf in school in fhe Ngreafesf of infellecfual delighfsf' This year fhe fournamenf was conducfed by feam capfain Andy Lowenfeld enfirely aparf from fhe Chess Club. Thus if was nof necessary fo affend a meefing every weelc in order fo be on fhe feam. Larry Cohen, Leonard Weisberg, and Jerry Serchuclc did excepfionally well in fhe fournamenf and fhereby became fhe leading candidafes for fhe fhird and fourfh boards on fhe feam. I28 : T-,, Standing: Holland, FirTh, E. Kaplan. S. Judson, L. BernsTein, Berliner, Duberman, and Morris. Seafed: Sandler, Schlosser, ReTTenberg, Mr. Briggs, Rose, Newhouse, and Gold. ll,l'l 2I'li gillelflfri lTl-l The beginning oT This school year a group was organized around a nucleus OT sophomores To presenT among Themselves each week a discussion oT Topics oT currenT inTeresT. This organizaTion, called The CurrenT EvenTs Club, was acTually an ouTgrowTh oT a similar club in The Lower School lasT year. AT each meeTing a program commiTTee, The chairman oT which was Charles Gilman, proposed Tour or Tive Topics Tor discussion. WiTh These Topics beTore Them, The club would Then selecT one To be spoken on Two weeks Trom ThaT daTe. For each Topic The pro and con sides would be presenTed. Following These Two prepared speeches would come inTormal discussion Trom The members oT The club. ln This argumenTaTive aspecT The CurrenT EvenTs Club resembled The DebaTing SocieTy. The main diTTerence beTween The CurrenT EvenTs Club OT This year and ThaT oi lasT year was The classes To which The members belonged, This year The club was open To boys oT any Torm, while lasT year inviTaTions were open only To Lower Schoolers. AT The end oT lasT year Three oTTicers were chosen: Frank ReTTenberg as PresidenT, Howard Blank as Vice-PresidenT, and Roger Rose as SecreTary. EnTrance To The Club was relaTively simple, An applicanT was merely required To gain a maioriTy oT Those in The Club To consenT To his admission. AlThough mosT members were FourTh Formers, There were several l:iTTh Formers in The group. They were Jim Berliner, Alan Judson, Ezra Kaplan, Don Newhouse, AlTred Schlosser, and George WallersTein. Lewis Morris was The sole represenTaTive oT The Senior class. Tops in speaking abiliTy were Duberman, Gilman, Newhouse, ReTTenberg, and Rose. OTher acTive speakers were Mangel, Morris, Schlosser, and Troy. ElecTing Mr. Briggs as Their adviser, The club chose several Topics oT exTreme naTional and inTernaTional inTeresT. The main one was Should The U.N.O. be enTrusTed wiTh The aTomic bomb? I29 Seafed: Frank VeiTh, James WeisbarT, Dan Rose, Ted Waddell, Mr. Crandall, Alan Ackerman, STan Pressman, and Barry Lehrer. Standing: John Small, Howard Goodman, Charles Jacobs, Saul Zabar, Kenny Levin, Meyer Liberman, and George Meer. .Sli OR a long period during The T945-46 winTer, The Ski Club was TrusTraTed by The absence oT The one Thing essenTial To iTs livelihood, snow. For several weeks noT a Tlake oT iT was To be Tound in Van CorTlandT Park, so ThaT The skiers were Torced To Take weekend Trips away Trom The ciTy. The TirsT oT These was Taken in The TirsT week oT February To PiTTsTield, MassachuseTTs. The only Tull-blown Trip was made during The ChrisTmas vacaTion To ManchesTer, VermonT. l-lere several members oT The club obTained reservaTions aT a lodge and re- mained There Tor a week. Upon The reTurn home oT parT oT These skiers, an addiTional Two wenT To Canada. There They engaged in highly advanced skiing Through sloped ToresT Trails. Excluding This one long Trip and The several weekend ones, The Ski Club's acTual acTiviTies virTually sTopped There. WiTh hardly any snow in Van CorTlandT Park, The group was limiTed merely To discussions OT skiing in weekly meeTings during The winTer season. AT a Tew oT These conclaves movies were shown. One meeTing saw Three pasT, presenT, or TuTure presidenTs oT The Ski Club in aTTendence. PresidenT Ted Waddell was Torced To resign in February because oT his acceleraTed graduaTion aT ThaT Time. Upon his deparTure, Joel Feinberg was elecTed To serve in Waddell's capaciTy Tor The resT oT The year, while aT The same Time Charles Jacobs was chosen To head The club nexT year and To be Vice-PresidenT This year. John Small, a sophomore, was elecTed SecreTary-Treasurer. lvlr. Crandall was selecTed as adviser aT The beginning oT The year. l3O riy Wilki ocia .fdcfivified ESUMING a pre-war cuslom, 'rhe social season gol oici lo a rousing s+ar+ wiih Jrhe iirsl ioolball dance in four years. Jiving Jro Jrhe Moon Noclrurne' rhyihm a huge crowd oi Fiiih and Sindh Formers showed up for ihe gala Oclrober I2 evenlr. The fol- lowing nighlr Jrhe Youih Canlreen on l2O+h Slrreei opened, coniinuing on aliernare Sal- Gn, head C? ai! H-M' Scday acmmesl urdays for The resl oi Jrhe year. Manager Dave Tillinghasi, Loweil Beveridge, Ned Saclc, John Gambling, and Larry Goodrich are Jrhe boys chiefly responsibe lor Jrhe Can+een's success. Cn April I2 ihe Seniors brushed ihe duslr off iheir luxedos and made for Jrhe Hampshire l-louse and rhe iradifional Senior Prom. Earl Carpenrer supplied ihe music, Paul Mori and his commiilee arranged Jrhe deiails, and a good 'rime was had by all. Shorily aiierwards, Fourih and Fiifh Form parries were held in lhe gymnasium, which was decoraied wiih gay lighis, clever Jrrimmings, and beauiiiul women. Frank Gilberi and Pele Schlesinger were in charge of rhe respeclrive affairs. Miss Mclnlosh and Marly Wilkinson should be hearlily congrarulaled for Their sincere erioris in planning lhis years social program. Leff: Julie Rosenberg and Eddie Neg-er saunrer info fhe Carseen under 'he prcre' rheir gorgeous girlfriends. i : ocx ai, cur ar ne ' ave nr - 'f e anreen, R hi' C li 'h ll C I A h C KEVIN, I3I Top: Salzman, D. Jonas, WallersTein, Sack, Gambling, Bogen, SoiTer, Schneider. Middle: Bangser, Nadler, D. RoThchild, E. RoThchild, R. Pinkus, STapelTeldT, Gerdes, Haugaard. BoTTom: Mr. Payne, Dickinson, Berlinger, Klau, SchleiTer, Nordlinger, Sporn. R. Rose, FreTwell. .Szvuf 300010 NDER The guidance oT Mr. Payne, l-l.M.'s ScouT Troop had iTs usual acTive and successTul year. Five paTrols - The Moose, The Owl, The Elk, The Beaver, and The Flying Eagle -- consTiTuTed The Troop as in previous years. John Gambling, Henry Bangser, RoeliT STapelTeldT, Ned Sack, and Paul Nadler were The leaders oT These paTrols. Because oT The Tie in The elecTions Tor Senior PaTrol Leader - Don RoThchild Taking one balloTing and Jim FreTwell The oTher - boTh boys were appoinTed To acT ioinTly as Senior PaTrol Leader. The hikes and Friday meeTings were run mainly by These boys. To assisT Mr. Payne, whose duTies were Tar Too heavy Tor any one individual. Jim Schlesinger and Bill Haugaard acTed as Junior AssisTanT ScouTmasTers Tor The year. They handled many oT The Time-consuming iobs and much oT The deTailed work wiTh which Mr. Payne had Tormerly been burdened. AlThough aT The beginning oT The year There was a large number oT places avail- able, These openings were Tilled quickly1 and The Troop was broughT up To iTs Tull complemenT. l-likes across The river To The Boy ScouT ReservaTion aT Alpine and To Ardsley, approximaTely Twice a monTh, were The chieT ouTings oT The Troop. AT The end oT The year There was The annual Three-day hike To Kane's Open, To climax one OT The mosT successTul years in The Troop's hisTory. As usual The Troop served aT all school TuncTions in all capaciTies which would be oT help. The adminisTraTion Tound iTselT depending more and more on The ScouTs' aid. I32 l00l'f:5 UNCTIONING for ride rms? rme mis year. fre Soofs C -o orofeo 'o oe owe oi rife mos? popuiar of Horace Marr s exrra-:urr':.:ar ao-iv'-Teg, Uagef +9 5536-- 1 ' -, - r - - ' -, r 1 . , . y I srib oi :rs presidemr, Dor Srger, add rs Taoufy adv ser. Vu Pr o Leweffy-, me Club boasred ore ci me 'argesr membersifos fr fre sorooi. Tre orre olfces were Hefd by Bob Brorsreerw, wro acred as v':e-oresiderr' Cir: So'e'e, sesrerarxf' Srar Sars, rreasifert ard Ed Kukir, civakmam of +35 Cfggfam cypra'-59. Air ?r'e'r weeliy meefrgs rbe Sporrsrrer dsoasseo rre CC-'QE ol 'be V-fee4 i' 're arriferfo word ard Frequevy reid difzzes. ard or sbeoiai cooasors moves. lrreresr- ing discussbfs were reid me visfrirg sborrs oeieorides. s' or as Loo Dei? 'obo. Proving Es koowiedge af rre ariwferio v'fC iG. rre Soorrs Cab rook over a Toesday airerroof: assembiy ard preserred a QQEZ modeied alrer lfrormasfoo Piease. bob resuired ir an edioyabe program. The baskerbaii programs, which were pubfsried for ai Varsfif bome games. were made possibfe, ro a corzsiderabie exlrerxr, rhrough me erqoris of she Sborrs Clubs orrqcers and member. Singer was Ediior-ir-chieir ard he was assisred by Spieier, Kuiicin. and Eiiidrm Eiiis, aii of whom deserve a greaf dea- of credif For me dualiry of rheir inrovarion. The Sporrs Ciubbers, despilre Hwe 'i,6Ci fha? Huis was rlriefr inirfai year in Horace Mann s exirra-curricular circle, go? off +0 a promising sfarf and are desrined ro remain on Hue Hi.l+op for many years +o come. B0'H'om Row: Eliis Garimkef Swee'baum Roefrer Ackerma' a'd Morfs. Second Row: Ov-'ore'sw Lederer, Soicciirw, Mr. Lewer+r, Sirger, Sbieier, Kuiicir. Libermar. and Seiwka. Top Row: Aiper, W. Eisver, Lipfor. R. Sards Pincus, Fox, S. Feivberg. Evars, J. Feirberg. Cava'ag' ard Horig. 133 . , Q I j , W W V , Vw f MZ' gf ,I Q f 2 , X, ' Mila V V, ,., Q .. ,Q , M 1 , W A ff rm I f f7f..'2-JW' W9 WWW' XZ 22, 1 Q ' PQ , ,W lv HQ 4 ,,,, ' JWAWW , Y' ,gf ,W . , 4, 1 f , f , f u 2 f ,W awp., fm 'ld QL athle amifg goofgaf l-lE VarsiTy FooTball Team ended iTs season wiTh a record oT Two wins, Tour losses, and one Tie. Using The unbalanced T TormaTion under Coach Charlie Avedisian, The Team deTeaTed l-lalsTed and ST. Paul's, while losing To STony Brook, MonTclair, ST. John's, and lvloses Brown. The game againsT Poly Prep resulTed in a Tie. The Team, however, was beTTer Than The record shows. The backTield was paced by Al Ackerman, The righT halTback, who led The Team in yardage gained on The ground. FirsT aT Tullback and laTer aT leTT halTback, Larry Goodrich also played excel- lenT TooTball. Paul MorT, who played leTT halTback unTil his iniury during The Poly game, was a sTeady ground gainer, as was Bill Johnson, who was hurT early in The season. The quarTerback posiTion was very ably Tilled by ex-Tackle Bill Sokolin. Sokolin, new To The unbalanced proved To be one oT The besT oT recenT l-l.lvl. passers. Near The end oT The year, FourTh Former Lowell Beveridge, Telly AnThony, and John Gambling showed greaT promise as TuTure backTield aces. The line, alThough lighT, made an excellenT showing in mosT oT The games. OuT- sTanding were righT end John Corcoran, a newcomer Trom Englewood, who excelled on deTense, and Charlie Farber, who played consisTenTly well aT Tackle. The resT oT The line was made up oT Sam lvlessiTer, hard TighTing end: Jay Langner, an aggressive Tackle: Dave TillinghasT, who was ready To Till in aT any posiTion and who was ouT- sTanding aT guardg Jimmy Cavanagh, a hard charging newcomer aT guard: and lvlickey l-leyman, who Took good care oT The cenTer posiTion. GTher linemen were Rogers, l?oTh, Rubin, Van Gelder, Liberman, and Klauck, all oT whom worked hard ThroughouT The year. HALSTED The TirsT game oT The year ended in an easy l9-6 vicTory Tor l-l.lv1.ATTer a score- less TirsT guarTer, Al Ackerman Took The ball over Trom The Tive yard line To make The TirsT l-lorace Mann Touchdown oT The year. Sam lVlessiTer place-kicked Tor The exTra I36 poinT. Early in The Third quarTer l-lalsTed scored iTs TirsT and only Touchdown, buT Their Triumph was shorT-lived as l'-l.M. quickly made Two Touchdowns, one on a line plunge by Ackerman and The oTher by Bill Johnson, ending The scoring oT The day. STONY BROOK The conTesT againsT The Long Island Team was a diTTerenT sTory. STony Brook opened The game by quickly scoring Two Touchdowns To lead I2-O. l-lorace Mann, how- ever, Took To The air and reTaliaTed by scoring on a pass Trom quarTerback Sokolin To Sam MessiTer. The aTTempTed conversion was blocked ending The TirsT halT. Early in The second halT, The l-lorace Mann eleven Took The lead when Paul MorT wenT over Trom The TwenTy and Ackerman plunged across Tor The exTra poinT. The lead, however, did noT remain in The l'lillTopper's hands long, as STony Brook Took The nexT kickoTT and quickly scored Their Third Touchdown To make The score I9-I3. The nearesT Thing To anoTher T-l.lv1. Tally came early in The TourTh quarTer when Ackerman ran 70 yards Tor a Touchdown only To have The play recalled because oT an oTTsides penalTy. ShorTly beTore The close oT The game, The Long Islanders scored once again To make The Tinal score 26-l3. ST. PAUL'S Horace Mann bounced back Trom iTs deTeaT aT The hands oT STony Brook To de- TeaT ST. Paul's Academy 27-6. l'l.lvl. scored quickly in The TirsT period, MessiTer Taking Sokolin's pass over Tor a Touchdown. Ackerman Took The ball over Tor The exTra poinT. The second Tally came early in The second quarTer when Ackerman ran I8 yards Tor The score and again crossed The whiTe line Tor The exTra poinT. ST. Paul's made Their only Touchdown near The close oT The halT, when Koopman 5prinTed 55 yards around end. The second halT was all l-lorace Mann, wiTh Lowell Beveridge scoring Trom The six and lv1essiTer Taking anoTher pass Trom Sokolin Tor The lasT Touchdown oT The game. MONTCLAIR Slowed down by a muddy Tield, Horace Mann was deTeaTed in iTs TourTh game 6-O. AlThough They dominaTed mosT oT The TirsT halT, The l-lillToppers did noT possess LeTT: Larry Goodrich knocks ouT a Moses Brown player Tor speedsTer Al Ackerman. Rigl'1T: The coach looks downcasT aT a Tense momenT. I37 'W'-1. , i',y.fq4,1':?.ff. x-,,,f' , 1 vw f -V -ff ff :Mb-9 vi ff' 'I I .4598-'Q 4534? I 4' + ,TQ '- f fL'Yi I 5 gi! K 'Y 'gf s,f,7,',a I -.nf , '15, wan. 'V .fi fl-2-17:1 '?,f, , 4' 1. . 1 f . , ir, 5... 1' 5 uf A ' 2. 'ef' fe-33 5 .rj 62 , .34 4'- .2 , ,ri-:f f'- , QQ - '- ' VL , 54. 4 6 X ' '- 32 9 i Fins. 4 - x J, -fa.,-. 7 ,hw -QQ-. . 'nl J r I In--.J ThaT necessary scoring punch. Ackerman, however, Took The ball Through The MonT- clair line To go 60 yards Tor a Touchdown: buT The play was nulliTied because oT a penalTy. The Avedisianmen never goT ThaT close again, and MonTclair won The game in The lasT minuTes when Their sTar BuTTy Hague passed To McGee Tor The score. POLY PREP ln whaT was undoubTedly The mosT exciTing game oT The year, l-lorace Mann baTTled To a I3-I3 Tie wiTh Poly Prep. IT was an auspicious occasion since iT was The TirsT Time in This TooTball rivalry ThaT a Poly Team has noT deTeaTed an l-l.M. eleven. IT looked like anoTher Poly vicTory unTil early in The second halT when, wiTh The score I3-O againsT Them, l-l.M. drove down deep inTo Poly TerriTory and scored when Sokolin Boffom Row: Man- ager Richard, Gamb- ling, RoTh, AnThony, Liberman, Rubin, Bilgore, Ackerman. and Manager Green- Teld. Second Row: Coach Avedisian, La- vine, Cavanagh, R. Van Gelder. Tilling- hasT, Beveridge, Goodrich, Langner, J. Feinberg, and Coach Miller. Top Row: Corcoran, D. Rafelson, G, Rogers. M. Heyman, MessiTer, and Klauck. wenT over Tor a Touchdown on a guarTerback sneak The conversion was good and The score sTood I3-7, AlThough ThreaTening oTTen, The Avedisianmen did noT score again unTil laTe in The lasT period. This Time, MessiTer made a specTacular caTch oT Sokolin's pass To Tie The score. Ackerman Tried To buck over Tor The exTra poinT buT Tailed To geT pasT The Poly line. ST. JOHN'S The lasT home game resulTed in a 23-7 vicTory Tor ST. Johrfs. The Redmen ouT- weighed and ouTplayed The home Team ThroughouT The game. Led by McGuire, They scored in The second, Third, and TourTh periods. l-l.M.'s only score was on a pass Trom Sokolin To Corcoran in The lasT period. Ackerman made The exTra poinT. MOSES BROWN The Team Traveled To Providence Tor The lasT game, only To be beaTen 33-O. The l-lillToppers ToughT hard, buT The Rhode Islanders proved Too much Tor Them. The Trip, however, which included a nighT aT a hoTel and a Brown-l-larvard TooTball game, was a greaT success: and many Thanks are exTended To Dr. TillinghasT and Mr. Avedisian Tor making iT possible. I39 INNING only one game ouT oT Tour scheduled, The J.V. had a raTher mediocre year. The Teams played were oT a very high caliber and seemed To have Too much on The ball Tor The TighTing lvleTcalTmen. The Team's TirsT encounTer was againsT a very hard-hiTTing All l'lallows group. The laTTer drew TirsT blood early in The game by means oT an end-around which neTTed a Touchdown. The conversion was good, and All T-lallows led 7-O. ln The second quar- Ter a long pass made The score I4-O. The BronxiTes Tailed once more in The Third quarTer, and The game ended wiTh l-l.M. Trailing 20-O. Considering ThaT This was Their TirsT conTesT, The Maroon and WhiTe played quiTe well. Very Tew OT lasT year's veTerans had reTurned, and Tor an inexperienced squad The boys worked smooThly. Two weeks laTer The gridmen Took on Fordham Prep wiTh The hope OT coming up wiTh Their TirsT vicTory. Things looked very brighT Tor The Jayvees when STeve WeiTz chucked a pass To Don Jonas in The end zone. WeiTz Then converTed To make The score 7-O. LaTer The l:ordhamiTes sTarTecl To run wide around The ends. Qur weak secondary was powerless To sTop These aTTacks. The l.iTTle Rams goT Three Touchdowns in This way and came ouT on Top l9-7. The Poly Prep game Tound l'T.M. badly hampered by iniuries, lVlarTuscelli, sTar Tackle, hurT his back during pracTiceg and Jacobs was also ouT oT The conTesT. Poly had a TasTer aTTack and Took advanTage oT all The breaks To win 2l-O. l-lorace lvlann goT wiThin sTriking disTance oT The enemy goal several Times buT was never able To make a Tinal break-Through. lra Resnick capTained The lvleTcalTmen Tor This game and led The Team very capably. I4O . U jooflaf Louis LiTT breaks away Tor a sure T D The Jayvees obTained Their only vicTory oT The season by deTeaTing Rye CounTry Day School 25-7. The Maroon and WhiTe wenT ahead when WeiTz Tlipped a pass To PeTer Max, who ran Tor a Touchdown. Rye laTer Tied The score in The second period, only To have The HillToppers, led again by WeiTz, make iT I3-7 aT The halT. Eisner accounTed Tor Two Touchdowns in The TourTh quarTer and ThroughouT played an ouT- sTanding game. T-l.M. showed much more power in This conTesT Than iT had ever beTore exhibiTed. The line ouTcharged The WesTchesTeriTes aT all Times and puT on iTs besT show oT The year. This J.V. season was unique in Two respecTs. For The TirsT Time The unbalanced T TormaTion was used, and Two coaches direcTed The Team. Under Mr. MeTcalT and Mr. LewerTh The Team developed rapidly and looked Tar superior aT The end oT The season ThaT iT did aT The onseT. The unbalanced T, which was being used by The VarsiTy, greaTly improved The J.V. oTFensive. The TacT ThaT many J.V. players know This TormaTion will help Them when They play varsiTy TooTball. The Team iTselT had plenTy oT spunk and TighTing spiriT. Some of The sTalwarT members oT The squad were PeTer Max and Don Jonas, The Two ends and real leaders oT The Team: Owen Alperg HerberT l-lirschTield3 Ira Resnick: and Niel MarTuscelli. These lasT menTioned were all linemen. ln The backTield were STeve WeiTz, PeTe Schlesinger, Will Eisner, Louis LiTT, and Charley Jacobs. These boys should be excellenT prospecTs Tor TuTure varsiTy Teams. George Buchanan was manager. Top: Parish, Wormser, MarTuscelli, Weinhausen, Kramer, Evans. Middle: Mr. LewerTh, BucksTein, C. Schneider, Resnick, Meyer, Briskman, Jones, Haim, Jonas, Eisner, Schlesinger, Aboudi, WeisbarT, Mr. MeTcalT. BoTTom: Buchanan, EssenTeld, l-lirschfeld, Schulz, Alper, M. Babbin, WeiTz, Friedland. Max, Orlan, LiTT. Q 6 5. Q 4 T 41 is l4l The undeTeaTed soccer Team looks pleased as The season draws near The end. Coach Pop Jahoda and Manager S-Tanding Coach Jahoda, Elkon. FuTTer, Bookman, Schoen, Frame, Sack, Holme, Allan Newmark grin as Osbourn Marenya Toscan ni, and Manager Newmark. SeaTed on bench: Loeb. FreTwell, Takes a Tall during The McBurney Waddell Osbourn, and Chen. SeaTed on ground: Newhouse and Lehman. game. OCCQI' HE I945 H.M. soccer Team Tor The second consecuTive year Tinished iTs season wiTh The mosT Tavorable record OT all The Tall Teams. Coached by Pop Jahoda, The HillToppers ToughT Their way Through The schedule wiTh seven wins and Three Ties, To be The second soccer Team in Horace Mann's hisTory To remain undeTeaTed. The prospecTs Tor The season looked good aT The sTarT when, on The TirsT day oT pracTice, The Maroon and WhiTe swamped Bronx Science in a scrimmage. STrengThened by nine reTurning leTTermen, The Team gave promises OT making a good showing in The schedule arranged by manager Allan Newmark. The TirsT weak spoT ThaT developed on The Team was The posT oT goalie. There was no one who had ever had any experience wiTh This iobq buT The answer was Tound when Ted Waddell, a Tormer leTT inside, TransTerred To The goal, where he became one oT The mosT valuable members OT The Team. AT The halTback posTs, Too, There was a decided weakness. For righT halTback There was Hank Frame, who specialized in long kicks and in seTTing up scoring plays Tor The line. AT leTT halT There was Ned Sack, a Tireless TighTer, who compleTely boTTled up The Bronxville ace in ThaT imporTanT game, BuT There was a vacancy aT cenTer halT. From leTT wing came Jim Qsbourn, and all worries ended. By his Tricky dribbling and his abiliTy To Take The ball away Trom all aTTackers, he earned himselT The repuTaTion oT one OT The besT deTense men in The ciTy. AT righT Tullback There was Jimmy l:reTwell holding ThaT posiTion Tor The Third year. No opponenTs could geT by his long legs, and his long kicks conTinually sailed 40 yards down The Tield. Barry Lehman capably held down The iob oT leTT Tullback, and by his speedy playing he broke up many ThreaTening oTTenses. T42 Francis Chen, al cenler lorward, ouldislanced all l-l.M. scorers wilh his 7 poinls, and by his dribbling sel up many ol lhe olher l-LM. goals. Al righl inside, Mike Loeb, playing lor his lhird year, helped spark lhe ollense wilh his passing and pulled back on lhe delense when lhe games gol close, Al righl wing was Ralph Marenya, who consislenlly made olher delenses look weak by dribbling lhrough whole leams and lhen selling up scoring chances. Larry Schoen, a recruil lrom Franklin, slarred al lell inside. where his aggressive playing made him respecled by all Maroon and While opponenls. Bernie Fuller, lhe lell wing. swilched lrom lhe righl wing posilion he had held lasl spring and proved even more capable on lhe lell side, because ol his excellenl passes inlo lhe cenler. No line-up would be complele wilhoul menlioning subslilules like lell wing Toscanini and lell inside Elkon, who will bolh be key members ol nexl years leam. Joe Holme lilled in al any haflback posilion and ably relieved lhe slarlers when lhe going was lough. Wilh lhis excellenl line-up l'l.M. was sel lor ils opening game. De Will Clinlon, one ol lhe lop public school leams in lhe cily, was lhe lirsl lo lall belore lhe l-lillloppers. Ralph Marenya senl a beaulilully placed penally kick lhrough lhe uprighls lale in lhe lhird quarler, and Clinlon was never able lo calch up. Throughoul lhe game l-l.M. showed delinile superiorily, so lhe l-O score was nol an upsel. Horace Mann's worsl rival, Lincoln, was all sel lo win over an easy l l.M. leam: bul when Chen and Osbourn scored in lhe lirsl hail, and Toscanini pul one lhrough in lhe lasl period, Lincoin's hopes were shallered. They managed lo score on a penally kick in lhe lasl minule ol lhe game lo make lhe linal score 3-I. I43 The big guy in 'lronl is lhe Clinlon 'ruil back 'frying lo gel lhe ball away r Loeb. srnirking, and Chen, also Smirking Bronxville, undeTeaTed and unTied Tor Two years, was The nexT Team To Take on T-I.M. The Maroon and WhiTe, playing The besT brand oT ball exhibiTed all year, ToughT The visiTors all The way: and when Chen scored Towards The end oT The TourTh period, iT looked like The Third I-I.M. vicTory. BUT Bronx- ville evened up The score: and Toscanini Tallied Tor The Jahoda men, only To have The play called back Tor oTTsides. The game ended I-I. Bronx Science was an easy vicTory Tor I-I.M. An early goal by Chen gave Horace Mann The lead: and as he scored again, Tollowed by Tallies by Os- bourn and Elkon, The Team eased up, allowing one kick To slip Through The I-I.M. goal. The only side- IighT oT This 4-I vicTory was The sloppy playing oT boTh Teams. Riverdale was The TirsT away game, and Their Team managed To make Things preTTy hoT Tor The Maroon and WhiTe. Jim Osbourn scored a penalTy kick in The opening minuTes, buT Riverdale reTaIiaTed early in The Third period. The game seesawed back and TorTh, unTil, wiTh TiTTy seconds To go, Loeb blocked a goalie kick and converTed iT To make The score 2-I. Garden CounTry goT oTT To a good sTarT againsT The I'IillToppers by scoring on The opening play: buT when Loeb scored Two in a row, Tollowed by goals by Schoen, Osbourn, and FuTTer, The game was on ice, The visiTors managed To score once more againsT The second Team, so The game ended 5-2. I-I.M. OpponenT Score I DeWiTT CIinTon O 3 Lincoln I I Bronxville I 4 Bronx Science I 2 Riverdale I 5 Garden CounTry 2 I I-Iackley I 2 McBurney 2 Morris ITorTeiTI 3 STaTen Island O 22 9 Top: Bernie FuTTer and a Science man are racing Tor The ball. Who will geT There TirsT? We don'T know. Middle: Newmark serves up reTreshmenTs Tor Loeb and Schoen aT halTATime. BoTTom: Duck, Fran! ThaT baII's heaclin' Tor your noggin. The boys Trom l-lackley proved To be a biT Too big Tor The lighT Maroon and WhiTe Team To handle. Playing againsT many members oT l-lackley's varsiTy TooTball squad, The Jahodamen baTTled To a I-I Tie on a penalTy kick by Osbourn. l-lackley, Too, scored Their lone poinT on a penalTy booT. Unable To break iTs sTring oT bad luck, l-l.M. nexT Tied McBurney. Marenya opened The game wiTh a goal: and The score remained This way unTil The lasT period, when McBurney hurried across Two Tallies. Chen Tied iT up on a nice head oT Marenya's corner kick: and in The remaining Tive minuTes The l'T.M. line peppered The visiTor's goal wiTh shoTs, none oT which availed. The l-lillToppers had To be conTenT wiTh a 2-2 score. A Columbia Grammar game was called oTTg and Morris TorTeiTed To T-l.M., leaving only STaTen Island To play. The Maroon and WhiTe journey To ThaT disTanT land and played on a Tield so muddy ThaT iT Threw oTT The whole Team's game. Chen, Schoen, and Marenya Tallied Tor l-l.M,, while The deTense held STaTen lsland scoreless. Marenya scored The TirsT and lasT goals oT The soccer season, and wiTh his unassisTed Tinal Tally The game ended 3-O. The l-l.M. oTTense piled up an impressive 22 goals, while The deTense limiTed The ToTal opponenTs' scores To 9. Chen made seven poinTs7 Gsbourn Tive, Tour oT which were excellenT penalTy kicks: Marenya and Loeb each scored Three Times: and FuTTer, Schoen, Toscanini, and Elkon once each. The mosT noTable TacT abouT This Team and squad was ThaT There was always perTecT harmony among The players, which resulTed in excellenT Teamwork on The Tield. There was no one sTar, buT The good season came Trom The work oT every member. ln February iT was announced ThaT Jim Osbourn and Jim l:reTwell had been nominaTed as cenTer halT and righT Tullback on The All CiTy ScholasTic Soccer Team, while Chen and Loeb received honorable menTion as cenTer Torward and righT inside, respecTively. A pep Talk Trom Pop Jahoda. during The halT oT The Hackley encounTer. 145 Uardifg gadgefgaf HE T946 ediTion oT Horace Mann VarsiTy Basl4eTball mighT be Termed mediocre. NoT so much because oT The regular season's record OT seven wins againsT Ten losses, buT because OT The Tailure To capTure The iniTial crown oT The Ivy PreparaTory School League. EsTablished aT The beginning OT The campaign as TavoriTes To Talce The TiTle, The Maroon and WhiTe could do no beTTer Than Third place, Tinishing be- hind ST. Paul's and Poly Prep. How- ever, Coach Gordon Miller never gave up on his charges, and whaTever suc- cesses The HillToppers enjoyed during The season musT be crediTed To his inspiring TuTelage. Horace Mann Tandom was given a iolT aT The very beginning when Their Torces were downed by a TradiTionally weal: DwighT ouTTiT To The Tune oT 25- 22. Two days laTer, in H.Tvl.'s TirsT l.P.S.l.. TilT, an invading STony Brook Tive handed The lvlillermen Their second deTeaT by a 2I-T8 margin. Endeavoring To brealc ouT OT Their slump, Horace lvlann iourneyed To Trin- iTy To encounTer The Blue and Gold in Their second league Tray. ATTer obTain- ing only a 4-3 advanTage Tor The TirsT guarTer, The visiTors Tinally Tound The range, hiTTing consisTenTly To raclc up 4l-I7 counT aT The Tinal whisTle. The enTire sTarTing Tive played well, buT Charlie Farber sTole The show. The big cenTer, who had been held score- less in The TirsT Two conTesTs, bagged 20 poinTs. He was Tollowed by Dave 'l'illinghasT, who, playing Tor The TirsT Time aT a Torward posiTion, conTribuTed eighT marlcers. Holding The Columbia .layvee To a mere Two poinT advanTage aT halT Time, H.lvl. could noT maTch The visiTors' experience and sTamina The resT oT The LJ!! Upper: Bill SarnoTT Tallies againsT ST. John's. Lower: John Corcoran TighTs Tor The ball in The McBurney encounTer. T46 way, and 'finally succumbed 37-ZI. This ahah was roiewordhy ir ll16 'l' D6-lO4'l' ' lll' ' l'lVl 1 i u v iel ,.e live ina. was lo be '..i .s irsd srrir for ' fi ill c '.. f ir o'h dc an rd Third- Jrhe VTTGIOFLY oi Lhe ampa gr Cap a n J n C rror a r' ' rj has? held down The TOVVVGVO oosrors, Farber preformed af cerrer, while Bob Blinlcen ard Larry Goodrich were ar The guards. HM. played hosl ro Sr. Pauls icr fheir ?h'rd league game. ll was one of lrhose days when lhe Maroon and Whfie could do no+hihg wrong. They held The oposiffon fo I5 poirfs ll3 of which came in hrs? halfl while rhey, +hemselves, hif for 43. The home reams big guns were Farber and Corcoran who scored I6 ooinls ard I I pcfnas respeclrively. Alrhough she erhfre squad periormed credirably. guards Goodrich and Blinken pariicularly sparkled. lnauguraling ancfher rwo game ios'rg sdreak, she l-lflfop five Jrraveled io New Haven ro eroaoe Yale Uryersm s J.V. Orce adaln J J 7' , The visilors were gfvirg away roo mary years and after beirg very much in rhe game unafl iwo m'ru'es Lrcm -he 6'O, hoard rhemseves on ihe shor+ erd ol a 3525 cours. Bfrken ard Farber each garrered seven marlcers lor l-LM. The orher half oi sbs los'rg sareak resu red when Poly Prep emerged or rhe l-l'f'co :cr aromer l.P.5.L. er- courfer. Fauiry deiense was Tor she mos? parf, resoorspe hor 'he 34-29 deleai. Oiqersively Farber was hgh ffvh seven odrrs. Charging rhe rune io a f-we game vfrnfrg srreak, Corcorar ard Sran Gans ,ed fhe Mflermer TO vicrories over !LrCI6lSl i EVO 5'ory Brook, borh league a1?airs.The Adelphi game 675Oi6C l-LM. s ,fhoe squad io see acrior, as they cfcked for 45 coirrs uae 'he Brook- lyn boys garnered crly 27. Corcorar ,ed 'he scor'rg ff'-h -er oorrs buf Gans, Farber, Tfihghasr, ard G'JCU .Cl' were a cose oehro. The laffer anafr, fr Ssory Brocks gym saw 're Lorg lsarders lump ro a hai fime gag. Hgffexer. al'-er Brfer scored or 're 'rap-oh play To open fhe secord ha L, 'rere was ro s':o:'ag 'Moose Q1 C . Q 1 -'Kgs 'I f, le I 5' .Z ff? 1 I Y 2 w T 91, 5 .U-B Ag ger' errrr 1-1 -L-Q - ,fa-5-- r: Sam: rg. F :rg r., -z, -'1,,:, mfr ,, - ..- 'LE Vers r:::S'5'S. f., ' L. fa-. J: S V- - .:' ' hr' e Vaf Cs::- f :M-5 2 'rr r: Ir I er 22 I8 4I 2I 43 25 29 45 34 24 I2 55 23 2I 39 46 4l De . vs. DwighT 25 . vs. STony Brook 2I . vs. TriniTy I7 . vs. Columbia J.V. 39 . vs. ST. Pauls I5 . vs. Yale J.V. 35 . vs. Poly Prep 34 . vs. Adelphi 27 . vs. STony Brook 25 . vs. Poly Prep 26 . vs. Army Plebes 37 . vs. Adelphi 27 . vs. ST. Pauls 36 . vs. ST, Johns 40 . vs. Blair 45 . vs. McBurney 34 . vs. TriniTy 32 noTes I.P.S.I.. game. IvIiIIer's boys. Corcoran and Gans shared scoring honors wiTh Ten poinTs apiece, The IaTTer hiTTing mosrly wiTh seT shoTs and Corky doing his work Trom under The boards. The Tinal score was I-Iorace Mann 34, STony Brook 25. In perhaps The mosT hearTbreaking conTesT OT The year, Poly Prep, behind by Ten poinTs when The Tinal quarTer goT under way, rallied To nose ouT The visiTing Horace Mann Torces, 25-23. DeTeaT aT The hands oT The Dyker I-IeighTs boys aT any Time is hard To Take, buT This seTback was doubly biTTer in ThaT an l'I.IvI. vicTory mighT well have meanT TirsT place honors in The Ivy League. A roughly ToughT game Trom The iniTiaI lump, The Tired Maroon and WhiTe Tive Tound ThaT They could no longer keep pace wiTh PoIy's Tresh subsTiTuTes, and The advanTage ThaT The visiTors held was slowly whiTTIed down unTiI The score be- came aT 23 all, wiTh only seconds To go. Then, a sToIen loall was converTed inTo a Poly Prep baskeT, and whaTever hopes I-Iorace Ivlann had Tor a Triumph, van- ished. Por The Ivlillermen, CapTain Bill SarnoTT Topped The scorers wiTh eighT Tallies. WesT PoinT, N. Y. was The scene oT I-Iorace Mann's nexT conTesT. The I-IiII- Toppers came up againsT The Army Plebe hoopsTers and The superbly condiTioned CadeTs easily Triumphed, 37-I2. The upsTaTers' Three-man-break aTTack broke The back oT I-I.IvI.'s oTTense as well as deTense. Johnny Corcoran was The visiTors' sTandouT, puTTing Three Tield goals and one Toul Through The cords Tor seven markers. ReTurning To winning ways, I-Iorace Ivlann invaded AdeIphi's home grounds To vanquish The I.eague's cellar dwellers by a 55-27 margin. Once again big John Corcoran led The aTTack, amassing 22 scores by dinT oT accuraTe shooTing Trom all sides oT The courT. Charlie Farber Tallied seven poinTs beTore Touling ouT, a TeaT which his reIieT, Don Jonas, repeaTed. I'Iaving run up a 30-4 edge aT The haIT, Coach Miller experimenTed wiTh diTTerenT line-ups Tor The remainder oT The TiIT. AcTion aT WesT PoinT. LeTT: Don Jonas deTencls The sphere Trom a hosT oT STony Brook men. RighT: Charley Farber ouTlumps a Commerce opponenT in a pracTice game. Surprised by The vasT improvemenT in The Garden CiTy ouTTiT, The VarsiTy courTmen could noT regain poise in Time To check ST. Paul's, and were subdued, 36-23. Again iT was Corcoran, mainTaining his Top posiTion in The l.P.S.L. scor- ing race, who excelled, Tallying I4. The ST. John's Tussle, Two days laTer, was much The same sTory, wiTh The Brooklyn Redmen Triumphing, 40-2l. A highly TouTed Blair squad ran inTo a loT oT Trouble beTore ThwarTing The Millermen 45-39. The l-lillTop Torces, wiTh a revamped aTTack, played, perhaps, Their besT game oT The campaign. XNiTh guards Goodrich and Blinken sidelined because oT injuries, The Mar- oon and WhiTe sporTed a novel line-up To Tinish ouT The season. Forwards Gans and Max, cenTer Farber, and back men Corcoran and Osbourn reTurned Their Team To vicTorious paThs by beaTing McBurney and TriniTy in Their lasT Two encounTers. ln The Tormer aTTair, in which Gans and Max were high guns wiTh I4 and 9 poinTs respecTively, The Green was overcome, 46-34. A league baTTle wiTh TriniTy, The regular season's Tinale, resulTed in a Horace Mann Triumph, 4l-32. l-lard TighTing Jimmy Gsbourn proved his worTh wiTh his sTellar work under The boards and by dividing scoring laurels wiTh Gans. STaTisTically speaking, John Corcoran paced The Maroon and WhiTe scorers ThroughouT The season wiTh l25 poinTs To his crediT, Easily The mosT adepT Tloor- man oT The Team, Corky perTormed one Time or anoTher aT all Tive posiTions. Second To Corcoran was The big Junior, Charlie Farber, who racked up II2 markers Tor The campaign. Thanks Tor doing The unheralded work oT The squad go To Managers John Gambling and Bob Marshall and Thanks also go To Coach Moose Miller who, despiTe his eTTorTs To obTain an unblemished record, musT waiT unTil nexT year Tor ThaT never-losing combinaTion. I49 Manager P. Schlesinger Towers over The J.V. BaskeTballers and Their coach. SeaTed: G. Pincus, L. Beveridge, B. Lehrer, M. Loeb, A. l-loTTman. STanding: Manager P. Schlesinger, A. Kluger, K. Pearlman, L. LiTT, I. Binder, P. Baumann, A. SweeTbaurn, G. l-larkavy, Coach Readio. J. gaagefgaf OR The Third year, Mr. Roger Readio coached The J.V. BaskeTball Team To a suc- cessTul season. Playing a larger schedule Than in The lasT Tew years, The l'lillToppers won 8 ouT oT ll games. No Team deTeaTed The Maroon and WhiTe by more Than 5 poinTs, and in several games The J.V.'ers held TwenTy poinT leads. Even Though There was only one reTurning leTTerman, The squads prospecTs looked brighT Trom The beginning oT The season. AT Torwards There was a choice beTween Jerry Harkavy, Bob Kuhn, and Barry Lehrer. The TirsT Two, Though small in size, were experTs aT The TasT break, and l-larkavy's seT shoTs paved The way Tor several vicTories. Because oT Lehrer's 6 TooT 3 Trame, he proved invaluable under The boards and oTTen acTed in The capaciTy oT cenTer. ArThur l-loTFman held down The cenTer sloT and racked up many poinTs by his aggressive play on The oTFense. Louis LiTT capably managed leTT guard and amazed everybody by his seTs Trom halT courT and his cuTTing Through The middle. Mike Loeb, The oTher guard and only reTurning leTTerman, assured his sTarTing posT by his deTensive work and by seTTing up scores. Al SweeTbaum, George Pincus, Phil Bauman, and Kenny Pearlman all saw a loT oT acTion during The season. The opening game, planned by The capable manager, PeTe Schlesinger, was againsT De La Salle and was a 27 To 9 Triumph Tor The l-l.M.'ers. Lehrer's nine and Kuhn's eighT poinTs led The way To This easy vicTory, which was never close save Tor The opening minuTes oT The TirsT quarTer. A 62-I8 vicTory over a weak BenTley Tive conTinued The hoopsTers' winning ways. The visiTors puT up a game TighT, buT They were noT in The same class wiTh The Hill- Toppers. AnoTher easy vicTory was a home game againsT TriniTy, which The Maroon squad won 4l To 12. The main TeaTure abouT This encounTer was ThaT every member oT The J.V, squad scored. l5O BUT all good Things musT come To an end, and The Team was nosed ouT in an away game wiTh Poly Prep. HoTTman dropped in I5 poinTs ouT oT The 24 scored by H.M. as compared To Poly's 26. The HillToppers led aT The halT l4-I3, buT Tell way behind in The Third period and could never caTch up. The Maroon and WhiTe Tools revenge on McBurney in The second away game by Trouncing Them 54-29. This Time Harlcavy held The scoring honors wiTh I5 To his crediT in a rough and Tumble one-sided vicTory. In anoTher close game, The J.V.'ers bowed To ManhaTTan Prep 23-20. Behind I2-3 aT The end oT The quarTer, H.M, narrowed The score To I6-I2 by The halT, slouched in The Third quarTer, and puT on a lasT minuTe rally iusT Talling shorT oT The visiTors. LiTT counTed ll poinTs Tor The losers. Again Poly proved Too Tough Tor H.M., and playing on The Hill, snealced over a 26-24 vicTory. Behind IO-7 aT The halT, Horace Mann puT on a rally and pulled ahead wiTh The lead changing several Times, buT unTorTunaTely, The Tinal whisTle blew wiTh The J.V. aT The shorT end oT a close score. In The besT played game oT The season, The Maroon and WhiTe scored 4 poinTs in an overTime period To lick Xavier 3l-29. Coming Trom behind in The usual Horace Mann Tashion, The HillToppers Tied The game 27-27. As The overTime sTarTed, HoTTman Tapped To Lehrer, who laced in a perTecT seT, and Then Loeb added a pivoT shoT. Xavier reTaliaTed wiTh a lay-up, buT The deTense held, and Horace Mann was vicTorious. McBurney losT again To The Readiomen To The Tune oT 40-22 in as easy a vicTory as The previous one. The league All-STars were The nexT To Tall vicTim To The J.V. by a 50-I5 score, buT This was an unscheduled game. In The Tinal scheduled game oT The season, The J.V. Team was again vicTorious as iT beaT TriniTy by a score oT 35-27 on The laTTerls courT. LiTT and Harlfavy each scored ll poinTs. Left ArTie HofTrnan scoring againsT Poly Prep. Righfz Barry Lehrer rings up Two poinTs in The M-:Burney Tray. l5I new . - .- gx.. fx, .. 1 .sg J' -,U si. K ,L ,,,. wimming eam OMPILIN6 The besT record in Horace Mann's swimming hisTory, This year's ediTion oT The Maroon and WhiTe Mermen earned The disTincTion oT becoming The TirsT undeTeaTed waTer Team To cavorT upon The l'lill. From The beginning oT l946, The charges oT Coach Charles Avedisian seT some new mark aT almosT every ouTing. WiThouT a doubT The biggesT shoT in The arm Tor The Team came in early January when STeve lngber, The record breaking Senior, ioined The squad. From ThaT day, The l-lillToppers resembled an unbeaTable aggregaTion, and unbeaTen They were. Sweeping Through Ten meeTs, dashing opponenTs inTo The surT, The Avedisianmen ran Their con- secuTive win sTreak To sixTeen in a row, a skein which remained unbroken aT The year's end. l:irsT on The lisT oT vicTims Tor The high-riding l'l.M. NaTaTors was nearby Man- haTTan Prep, which TelT The Maroon's oTTensive To The Tune oT 34-23. Ed Neger led Upending oT The Junior Jaspers by Taking The breasTsTroke. and Mickey l'leyman also scored, Tallying nine poinTs by virTue oT a vicTory and a Tie Tor TirsT. An l-l.M. weak spoT was broughT ouT as The Kelly-green Took TirsT and second in The 220, long a l lillTop sTronghold. More Than a monTh laTer, The Avedisianmen Taced l-lackley. and again broughT home The bacon 40-I7. ln This meeT, Rene Jacobs made his appearance as a 220 man and developed rapidly inTo a mainsTay oT The Team. CapTain Bill Johnson also reTurned To The squad aTTer a siege oT pneumonia. For The TirsT Time, The Maroon and WhiTe iuggernauT had reached Tull sTrengTh, and iT demonsTraTed This posiTion To The hapless l'arryTowniTes. Neger capTured his specialTy in The record-breaking Time 0:30, Thus seTTing pool and school records Tor The 50 yard breasTsTroke. NexT on The lisT Tor The EducaTors was a hard-TighTing Regis squad which losT l52 SprinTer Rubin belaTedly Take oTi following l-lacker lsplash in a 50 yard TreesTyle evenT 34 H.M. vs. Manl1'H'n Prep 23 40 H.M.vs. Haclcley I7 38 H.M.vs. Regis I9 36 HM.vs.All Hallows QI 40 H.M. vs. H.M.-Lincoln 26 3l HM.vs. Pieldslon 26 39 HM.vs.S+. Jol'1n's I8 47 HM. vs. Power Mem'l 44 40 HM. vs. Poly Prep 26 37lf2 l'l.M.vS. Adelphi I3'f2 Coacln Avedisian Jrensely wafclwes relay progress aqainsf Poly. a 38-I9 decision lo Jrlwe Horace Mann squad. Winners included Neger, lngloer,Jol1nson, Eisner, Jacobs, and Jrlwe 200 yard relay Team. Howie Rubin placed second as did Andy Haclcer.AlJrl'1is poinl, four Maroon Mermen were unbealenz Neger, R. Jacobs, Johnson, and lngber. Tlne viclorious Swimming Team. Sealed: M. Heyman, P. Corsi, W. Jolwnson, P. Heiman, R. Eisner, C. Jacobs. R. Jacobs, A. Haclcer, E. Neger. Sfanding: Mr. Avedisian, H. Rubin. E. Bernslein, D. Soplcin, Mgr. Spieler. I53 S . Displaying a powerTul aTTack, a sTrong All l-lallows Team visiTed l-lorace Mann and leTT on The shorT end oT a 36-2I counT. Minus The service oT R. Jacobs, The Maroon was under Tire unTil Charley Jacobs clinched The meeT wiTh his Third in The 220. l-l.M. had Talcen a 25-5 lead, buT The visiTors sTaged a comebaclc which broughT Them wiThin eighT poinTs OT The vicTors wiTh one evenT leTT. ln The TiTTh conTesT oT The campaign, l-l.M.-Lincoln gave The Avedisianmen a scare beTore The laTTer pulled away Tor a 40-26 vicTory. Neger, lngber and R. JGCOES won Their evenTs, buT Johnson was upseT, losing a slow I:O7.0 race in The l00. T-Teyman Tinished in his second dead heaT oT The year in The baclcsTrolce. For The TirsT and only Time, The Tray was undecided going inTo The Tinal evenT, buT The relay Team prompTly drowned all Lincoln hopes in Their home pool. ConTinuing Their merry march The NaTaTors splashed To Their TwelTTh sTraighT in The PieldsTon pool, 3l-26. The score does noT Tell The True sTory oT The meeT, as The visiTors experienced diTTiculTy in swimming in The EThical CulTure pool. Neger brolce The Tanlc record wiTh a 0:32. Triumph. Johnson and R. Jacobs were vicTorious, Ed BernsTein, T-laclcer, and lngber Talcing seconds. lngber was upseT by Phil Briclcner in The poor Time oT 0:28.0. ST. Johns Prep oT Broolclyn consTiTuTed The ThirTeenTh sTraighT squad To meeT deTeaT aT The hands oT The rampaging rnermen. VicTories in The breasTsTrolce, back- sTrolce, l00, 220, and boTh relays highlighTed The Triumph. Wins over Power Memorial, Poly Prep, which was The lasT meeT in which The Team mighT have meT wiTh diTTiculTy, and Adelphi Toilowed. lngber seT The 50 TreesTyle record oT 0125.3 in The TirsT named meeT. Bill Johnson in acTiOn. l54 yi-Y' i HM Slanding: Beveridge, R. Eisner, W. Eisner, DeWiTT, Sussman, Ellis, Roemer, Parish, Mr. Shaughnessy M. Babbin. Seafedz Schlosser. DworeTzlcy, WallersTein. Posner. oxing El.EBl2ATlNG his silver anniversary as l-lorace lvlann's boxing coach, Mr. WalTer Shaughnessy saw a sudden climb in The pOpulariTy oT his sporT, wiTh nearly TwenTy boxers Trom The Upper School alone. The added inTeresT oT a Trophy awarded by him drew also a large crowd oT specTaTors To The annual TournamenT in March. This increase was proporTionaTe To The increase oT good maTerial in The Tour weighT classes. All Three heavyweighTs puT on Tine exhibiTions ThroughouT The year. Rogers, having The disTincTion oT being The heaviesT man on The squad aT 220 pounds, used his weighT To advanTage. DuplicaTing his perTormance oT lasT year Dick Sussman oTTen dazed his opponenTs wiTh his powerTul righT hand blows. Beveridge, however, used a sTricTly scienTiTic sTyle. AlThough in The lighTweighT-middleweighT class, Tough newcomers lvlessiTer and Corcoran ToughT in sTyles disTincTive To Themselves, Willy Eisner was The greaT sTylisT. l-lis cagey weaving and Tuclced-in chin were asseTs and helped To make him The besT TighTer in his class. Perhaps The ouTsTanding improvemenT oT The year was made by Bob Eisner. The lone souThpaw and besT in aTTendance, he was a clean TighTer and always ready To learn. The largesT class was The welTerweighTs. Always aggressive and damaging in his bliTzlcrieg series oT leTTs and righTs, EllioTT Ellis was besT in This group. Spanel, coming in second, was more conservaTive, and, having a hard leTT iab, he was good in close- range TighTing. Weisel, Meyers, Parish, and Sands showed much promise, as did Wal- lersTein, Oppenheimer, Schlosser, and DworeTsl4y in The lighTesT class. l55 LeTT: Mr. Sigward shows Spanel how To ward oTT C. Babbin's lcniTe aTTaclc. RighT: C. Babbin Throws A. WeinsTein, as Roemer looks on. Jia jifdu new Torm oT aThleTics appeared aT Horace Mann This year. IT reached such pro- porTions as To puT iT on The level oT regular sporTs, wiTh Upper and Lower schoolers parTicipaTing in iT. The newcomer was iiu-iiTsu. lTs populariTy became evidenT as soon as lvir. Rod- ericlf l-l. Sigward reTurned Trom service in The SouTh PaciTic and was honorably dis- charged Trom The Army. l-lis classes in The course sTarTed soon aTTerwards, Tollowing a demonsTraTion in l-l.M.'s assembly. Mr. Sigward had long been insTrucTing in iiu-iiTsu. NOT only had he coached in Two conTinenTs, buT he had been selecTed immediaTely Tor Training The lViiliTary Police in commando-iiu-iiTsu TacTics in The Army. Upperschoolers pracTiced Twice a weelc in The visiTors' dressing room. The group was composed OT a pluraliTy oT FourTh Formers, alThough every class was represenTed. Dave Spanel was The Senior oT The group and early in The season helped Mr. Sigward coach The squad. The Juniors, Jaclc Freeman, Jack l.eGrand, and Dick Roemer were consisTenT in Their improvemenT. The large Sophomore aTTendance was composed oT ChesTer Babbin, Larry lngber, Tom Wallcer, and Allen WeinsTein. The iiu-iiTsu was unusual in ThaT iT exTended Through The Tall, winTer, and spring play periods. TacTics learned were generally deTensive, snapping inTo oTTensive. Examples were subduing kniTe aTTaclcs and brealcing sTrangle holds. The mosT specTacular Throw oT The many learned was The shoulder Throw. NeyerTheless as bone-crushing as The Training seemed, no iniuries were inTlicTed during The enTire season. SelT-prevenTion oT iniury was TaughT, such ThaT any member oT The squad could do whaT resembled a Torward somersaulT on concreTe pavemenT. I56 Manager George Meer WaTches as Julie Rosenberg and Bill STeinberg slash each oTher To ribbons. encing eam ENCING on The Hill This year was seriously hampered in Two aspecTs. FirsT, The squad was compleTeIy selT-coached. Coach Greco did noT reTurn as menTor This year. Second, oT Tive maTches scheduled Tor The season, Two were cancelled and only Three were played. Disregarding These obviously hindering TacTors. a small buT consisTenT group com- posed The squads enTireTy. Four oT Them comprised The Team. McBurney Traveled To Horace Mann To sTarT oTT The Tencing season. McBurney's man, Treves, was clearly The besT Toilsman oT The aTTernoon. However, Two oT The visiTors' men wenT down in deTeaT To The Maroon and WhiTe: The sole H.M. vicTors were Bill STeinberg and Mark l.iTT. January 23 saw Horace Mann lose To McBurney, 2-7. AlThough McBurney's key man, Treves, had graduaTed by The Time Horace Mann wenT away To Mcburney Tor a reTurn maTch, Mcburney neverTheless was able once again To deTeaT Horace Mann, on February 28. In The remaining maTch oT The year, The Tencers were unable To prevenT Their shorT record oT no wins and all losses. On February 20, The HillToppers were beaTen by Riverdale 6-3. An aTTempT To schedule a reTurn maTch Tailed. Two leTTermen oT lasT year reTurned To The I945-46 Team. boTh Seniors. One was Julian Rosenberg, capTain oT This yearis squad. The oTher was Bill STeinberg, number Two man. Bob LiTshey and Mark LiTT served as number Three and Tour men, respecT- ively. Fred Weisberg, Alan TuroTT, and Calvin Thomas Trained as subsTiTuTes. The schedule was arranged by Manager George Meer. As poor as The season's record may have been, iT does noT represenT The eTTorT exerTed by The Team in Training. Tuesday and Thursday aTTernoons always Tound The squad puTTing in an aTTernoon oT heavy work in The visiTors' dressing room. T57 amifg gariegaf lTl'l Coach Gordon Miller again aT The helm, aided This year by Mr. Philip D. l.ewerTh, recenT addiTion To The l'l.M. l-lisTory DeparTmenT, and ersTwhile Columbia baseball greaT, l-lorace Mann VarsiTy Baseball Tor l946 sTarTed The season boasTing seven reTurning leTTermen Trom lasT years sTarTing nine. l-lowever, The exodus Trom The l-lillTop oT The ever reliable righThander, Dick WinsTon, Tireballer Jesse Siegel, and The slugging backsTop, BurT lzriedericks, made Moose Miller's baTTery plans Tor This year very uncerTain. Dave TillinghasT and Dick Van Gelder were The Two reTurning moundsmen, and, wiTh one year's experience under Their belTs, provided mosT oT The necessary hurling punch. The caTching deparTmenT, Though, was leTT wiThouT any holdovers, and iT was The diTTiculT Task oT coaches Miller and LewerTh To recruiT polished perTorrners Tor This posiTion. The inTield lined up iusT as iT did a year ago. Mickey l'leyman used his lanky Trame To advanTage around The iniTial sack, providing a Tormidable TargeT Tor The oTher inTielders. AT The plaTe, The powerTul Junior could be counTed on To powder many a pi+ch againsT The leTT Tie-ld wall. Tiny Gerry Harkavy, Tormer J.V. second-sacker, once again perTormed his de- Tensive chores Trom The keysTone bag. A smoofh Tielder, The spiriTed FiTTh Former also chipped in wiTh imporTanT base bingles To keep Maroon and WhiTe rallies alive. ShorTsTopping Tor The Third consecuTive year was STan Gans, always reliable when iT came To sTopping balls hiT his way. Rounding ouT The inTield was Bob Blinken, who Tor The second sTraighT year was sTaTioned aT The Tar Turn. A polished perTormer aT The hoT corner, hard hiTTing Bob could always be counTed on in The cluTch. FlrsT Row: Mr. Miller, Farber. W, Eisner, R. Van Gelder, WolTsie, M. l-leyman, Blinken, Gans, Tilling- hasT, T-larkavy, Mr. LewerTh. Second Row: lfallman, Langer, Cavanagh, D. de la Chapelle, l-l. Levy, Lavine, SweeTbaum, Ellis. Third Row: Liberman, R. Rose, Max, MessiTer, D. RaTelson, Gambling, GoldsTein. l58 The Maroon and Whife pickef line found Will Eisner in leff field, Sfan Wolfsie in righf, and Charlie Farber in cenfer. Husky Willard, affer a season's experience in hedgehopping and in handling fhe caroms off fhe gym wall, was parficularly adepf defensively. His baffing prowess also played an imporfanf role in Mr. Miller's scheme of fhings. Pafrolling fhe difficulf righffield concrefe was Sfan Wolfsie's iob. l-lis rifle-like peg was a valuable assef fo fhe hillfop aggrega- fion as was his slugging skill. Sfan had fhaf covefed knack of hiffing fo all fields. Sfa- fioned befween Wolfsie and Eisner in fhe cenfer garden was fhe fleeffoofed Charlie Farber. Charlie, a hard man fo gef ouf when af fhe plafe, was a menace on fhe basepafhs foo. Soufhpaw Dave Tillinghasf loomed as fop man on fhe H.M. pifching sfaff. The hard- working Junior was mosf effecfive wifh his sweeping curve, and wifh his fasf ball hav- ing more zip fhan ever, many vicfories came his way. Anofher veferan, Dick Van Gelder was depended upon fo gafher his share of Hillfop friumphs.Third former Bruce Sands was an imporfanf find in mid season. l-lis relief pifching was a real aid in some of fhe fough encounfers. John Gambling and Donald Kallman also saw acfion on fhe mound. Wifh fhis aggregafion of falenf, fhe Hor- ace Mann Varsify faced a long and fough schedule, ably arranged by Manager Don de la Chapelle and his assisfanf, Marfy Wil- kinson. Top: Charley Farber swings . . . and misses. Middle: Sfan Gans scampers across firsf base while Dave Tillinghasf coaches. Boffom: A Columbia man gefs back fo base in fhe nick of fime as Mickey l-leyman affempfs fo pick him off. ,L- FirsT Row: BuclcsTein, GilberT, Greenberger, Caligor, EssenTeld, GarTinlcel, Toscanini. Second Row. C. Schneider, Gold, Slcolniclc, Beiar, La Guardia, Salzman, A. Jonas, DworeTslcy, l-lirTensTein, Soplcin, GoodTield, WeiTz. Third Row: Mr. MeTcalT, C. Jacobs, Aboudi, Klauclc, R. Sands, S. Judson, Lehrer, Covici, Evans, Marine, SmiTh, Heller, Cooper, J. BernsTein, Holland. FourTh Row: Posner, Goldberg, Weisl, M, Cohen, Danziger, L. LiTT, Enrich, Selinlca, R. l-lirsch, R. Weil, Roemer, Baumann, l-lirschTeld. . ,M gdbegdff GAIN Mr. WalTer MeTcalT did a Tine iob shaping a J.V. Baseball Team and build- ing The VarsiTy oT The TuTure. Swamped by a Tlood oT maTerial on The TirsT day OT pracTice, Coach MeTcalT had quiTe a problem selecTing The sTarTing lineup. ReTurning Trom lasT year's squad were such sTalwarTs as Evans, Sands, Rosenberg, GoldsTein, SmiTh, l-lonig, Feinberg, RoTh, and oThers equally valuable. To These were added many experT EourTh Formers such as l.iTT, Schneider, Jacobs, Toscanini, and Klauclc The problem oT Tinding The besT piTcher was a di1CTiculT one, wiTh many boys Trying Their hands aT The iob during The season. AlmosT as greaT a one was posed by The caTching posiTion. Mr. MeTcalT Tully earned all The crediT Tor The Jayvee's good season, since besides his Tine coaching, he made sure ThaT all members oT The squad had a Tine Time. l'l. M. vs. Riverdale l'l. M. vs. Poly Prep l-l. M. vs. MT. ST. Michaels H. M. VS. TriniTy l-l. M. vs. MT. ST. Michaels l-l. M. vs. Poly Prep ennid earn lTl'l eighT ouT OT The Ten regulars reTurning, This years Tennis Team loolsed Torward To one oT iTs mosT successTul seasons. Bill SarnoTT, number Two man on lasT years squad, was expecTed To Take over The number one sloT which Bob KelTon held yasT year. Close behind him were Joel Feinberg, Ken Pearlman, and Larry Goodrich. Doc Crandall also had his eyes on some oTher promising FourTh, FiTTh, and SixTh Formers. The TormaTion oT The lvy Prep School League placed The squad againsT some Tough compeTiTion. The league Teams are TriniTy, ST. Pauls, Adelphi, STony Broolc and PoQy Prep. OTher meeTs were arranged wiTh Columbia J. V. MonTclair Academy, and Scarsdale l-ligh School. The Team was also enTered in The A.A.P.S. Tournameni Firsi' Row: JollcTsky, Berns'eir-, Pearlman, BronsTeer. Second Row: Singer, STeinb-erg, Gcedri r Bachrach, Third Row: Pressman, P. Schlesinger, R, Marshal! J. Feinberg Sarnol. L '-f' -A-- ff1f iv.'.',, , ' .T T11 kk ....f...'-.-,-H..'.'f, . c -f--f-V xc.sVc.!I lol if ff'-' ' ' V. wfnl ' jyffai 4 Xml 4' flag Franny Chen pole vaul+ OACHED by Messrs. Jolley and Avedisian, The Track Team emerged guiTe success- Tully Trom a season oT six meeTs in addiTion To The annual A.A.P.S. meeT aT Baker Field. The Team seemed promising Trom The beginning oT The season, especially in Tield evenTs, Many Tield evenTs men reTurned This year To sTrengThen The Team: buT The squad was weak in long disTance evenTs, since many of lasT years runners had IeTT. SchwarTz, Abramson and ScheTzen, The milers oT The previous season, had all graduaTed, leaving only Telly' AnThony To Till The vacancies. AnThony usually ran The 440 and 880, buT was Torced To change To The mile under The circumsTances. l3ourTh Former Dick Sanger also Turned ouT Tor The mile and did guiTe well as l'l.M.'s second enTry. The 880 was also run by AnThony in The absence oT SchwarTz and Klauck, lasT year s halT-milers, ln The 440, Maurices winning sprinT was sorely missed, buT Andre Elkon, a reTurning Track sTar alThough sTill only in The TiTTh Torm, Tilled his place well. Beveridge also ran The 220, TogeTher wiTh Bnl Johnson, a high-scorer and impor- TanT cog in The Team. Johnson ran The 220-yard low hurdles Tor The Third consecuTive year. Alan Kluger, reTurning To do The 220 hurdles and broad iump, was l-l.M.'s second enTry, making The hurdles lineup The same as ThaT oT The previous year. Bachrach and Kluger held down The main posiTions in The hundred-yard dash. Newcomers Qgren and Ackerman Tried ouT Tor This evenT Tor The TirsT Time and proved To be good sprinTers. I62 lT was in The Tield evenTs, however, ThaT The Team had iTs sTrengTh concenTraTed. Sam lVlessiTer, The high-scorer and consisTenT winner oT The broad iump and iavelin evenTs, re- Turned To head The broad-jumpers wiTh his I9-TooT leaps. Bachrach, Kluger, Johnson, and Beveridge also won di2Tinc Tion in The broad iump. John Corcoran, on The Track Team Tor The TirsT year, Turned The high-iump inTo one oT l-l.lvl.'s sTrong poinTs by consisTenTly winning wiTh his sixeTooT iumpsl Osbourn, Bev- eridge, Johnson, and Chen supporTed him in This evenT. Chen was also The sole pole-vaulTer on The squad. The iavelin evenT was usually cinched by Sam MessiTer, who excelled in This evenT and won The A.A.P.S. senior iavelin Throw wiTh a specTacular heave oT over I34 TeeT. Corsi held down second place in This evenT. f , Xl, The discus was ably handled by Paul MorT, who sTarred W Tor l-l.M. in ThaT evenT Tor The second year. AlThough only a Junior, l-loTTman parTici- paTed in The shof-pu+ Tor The Third consecuTive year, and was anoTher consisTenT winner wiTh his Throws oT abouT 38 TeeT. Much crediT should be given To lvlr. Avedisian, who worked hard, worked The Team hard, and again Turned ouT a Tine squad. The schedule consisTed oT Three home games wiTh All l-lallows, TriniTy, and Poly Prep: an away meeT wiTh STony Brook: an ivy League inviTaTion meeT aT Poly Prep: and a quadrangular meeT aT George Wash- ingTon. UnTorTunaTely, however, none oT The resulTs could be ascerTained aT The daTe oT publicaTion. FirsT Row: Van Laer, Ackerman, Iv1arToccio, Cedar, Sanger, J. Greenheld, Mayer, Elkon. Second Row: Rubin, AnThony, Johnson, Chen, Corsi, Corcoran, Arnspiger, MorT, Schoen, Osbourn. Third Row: Mr. Avedisian, LipTon, R. Sussman, l-loTTman, Lifshey, G. Rogers, Levine, Beveridge, Mgr. FuTTer, Mr. Jolley. FourTh Row: Ogren, Janover, Feldman, PoTTer, Zinman, Resnick. I63 Alper, Owen H. Anfhony, Arisroile A. . Arnspiger, S. David . . Bachrach, Allen K. , Baer, Aus'rin R. Berdon, Waller E. Bernslein, Henry Bezozi, Seymour M. Bilgore, Paul S. , , Binder, Irwin D. .. Blinken, Roberl J. Bookman, William B. Boros, Howard S. Chen, Francis F. C. . Cohen, Laurence M. .. Corcoran, John J. Cornick, Roger P. Corsi, Philip D. . Davis, Henry R. Deilsch, Samuel L. cle Ia Chapelle, Donald C. Ellis, EIIioH F. . Feinberg, Joel M. Feinberg, Slephen H. Frelwell, James H. Fuller, Bernard ,..... Geller, David T. Gans, Slanley S. ., Gluck, Sanford 0. Goldman, Donald H. 2 .. Goldsrein, Gabriel L. Goode, William G. .... . Goodrich, Laurance V... Green, S. William .. ,, .. Greenield, Howard ....,., Gross, Laurence N. . . Haugaard, William P. . ,. Heineman, Andrew D. .. U Hirsch, Bernard Hoirichier, George Holme, Joseph . Honig, William M. Ingber, M. Siephen Jacober, James L. Johnson. William L. Kaufman, H. Sheldon Kluger, Alan C. enior .xdclclreazied . . I30 Easl 75 Sireel, New York 21, N. Y . 23l Slreel and Palisade Avenue, New York 63, N. Y ., 4445 Posl Road, New York 63, N. Y ,. I I92 Park Avenue, New York 28, N.Y , , 40 Wesl 77 Slreel, New York 24, N. Y 290 Wesl End Avenue, New York 23, N. Y .. 9 Easi 96 Sireei, New York 28, N. Y 585 Wesl End Avenue, New York 24, N. Y. 300 Cenlral Park Wesl, New York 24, N. Y .440 Wesl End Avenue, New York 24, N.Y , . I Canyon Circle, Yonkers 5, N.Y ,. 35 Easl 84 Slreel, New York 28, N. Y 90 Riverside Drive, New York 24, N. Y 4I7 Wesl l2I Slreel, New York 27, N. Y 20l5 Creslon Avenue, New York 53, N. Y . . , 23I Tenaily Road, Englewood, N. J . I2 Wellesley Avenue, Yonkers 5, N. Y 60 Easl 96 Sireei 969 Park Avenue I5l Cenlral Park Wesl 924 Wesi End Avenue 680 Wesl End Avenue 285 Cenrral Park Wesl 262 Cenlral Park Wesl IO6 Morningside Drive I60 Calorini Boulevard 49 Easl 86 Slreel , I2 Easi 86 Slreel 336 Ceniral Park Wesl 350 Ceniral Park Wesi, 473 Wesr End Avenue . . 94I Jerome Avenue , . 445 Riverside Drive , .,.. 44 Wesr 77 Sireel New York 28 New York 28 New York 23 New York 25 New York 25 New York 24 New York 24 New York 27 New York 33 New York 28 New York 28 New York 25 New York 25 New York 24 New York 52 New York 27 New York 24 I I33 Fii+h Avenue, New York 28 N Y 670 Wesl End Avenue, New York 25 395 Riverside Drive, New York 25 l75 Wesl 72 Slree-T, New York 23 300 Ceniral Park Wesl, New York 24, R. F. D. I, Sulziern 5263 Fieldsion Road, New York 63 225 Wesi 86 Sireel, New York 24 N Y 845 Wesl End Avenue, 784 Park Avenue, .. . Sycamore Avenue, . 44I Wesi End Avenue, , 205 Wesf 89 Slreei, I64 New York 25 New York 2I New York 63 New York 24 New York 24 N Kulkin, Edgar A. . Kurrelmeyer, Louis , Langner, Jay B. Langsdor?, John J. Lavine, Jack W. Lehman, E. Barry Levin, Ira M. . Loeb, Michael A. Mar?in, Sidney A. Meer, George, Jr. Melicow, Daniel R. Messi?er, Samuel S. Morris, Louis J. Mor?, Paul R. . Munroe, Henry P. Neger, Edward B. Newmark, Allan J. Gsbourn, James B. Pincus, George L. Pressman, S?anIey J. Richard, Jack Rose, Joseph P., Jr. Rosenberg, Alan S. Rosenberg, Julian M. Ross, Roger .. Ro?h, Rober? S. Ro?hchiId, Donald S. Rubin, Howard G. Sarno??, William Schlesinger, James R Schneider, Michael Schoen, Lawrence C. Schwarz, Harry H. Sheresky, Norman M Singer, Donald .. Smi?h, Barry F. . , Solomon, Maurice H. Solomon, Samford D. Spanel, David L. Spieler, I. Cliiclord S?einberg, William C. I095 Park Avenue, New York 28 . 548 Park Avenue, New York 28 336 Cen?raI Park Wes?, New York 25 N N N 225 Wes? 86 S?ree?, New York 24, N I I0 Riverside Drive, New York 24, N . IOI6 Fi??h Avenue, New York 22 N .5 Riverside Drive, New York 23 N . 983 Park Avenue, New York 28, N 37 Wes? 77 S?ree?, New York 23, N . ., 68-I0 I08 S?ree?, Fores? Hills, 225 Wes? 86 S?ree?, New York 24 .. . 33 Riverside Drive, New York 23 .46 Merrivale Road, Grea? Neck 4662 lselin Avenue, New York 63 238 Madison Avenue, New York 2I, .. .. 90 Riverside Drive, New York 24 I I60 Park Avenue, New York 28 450 Riverside Drive, New York 27, I84I Eas? 22 S?ree?, Brooklyn I8, 365 Wes? End Avenue, New York 24 . .. .. .... 273 Deval Avenue, Yonkers 5 1 N N N N N N N N I N N N N . I45 Wes? 86 S?ree? New York 24, N 975 WaI?on Avenue, New York 52, N 262 Cen?raI Park Wes? New York 24 N . I00 Riverside Drive New York 24 N 336 Cen?raI Park Wes?, New York 25 N . I075 Park Avenue New York 28 N 390 Wes? End Avenue New York 24 N 300 Cen?raI Park Wes?, New York 25, 55 Eas? 86 S?ree?, New York 28 229 Eas? 9I S?ree?, Brooklyn I7 i 1 N N N 295 Sain? Johns Place, Brooklyn I7, N . ...I77 Eas? 79 S?ree?, New York 2 I, N 998 I:i??h Avenue, New York 22 N .. I050 Park Avenue, New York 28, N . .. ..,... I2 Eas? 88 S?ree?, New York 28 N 275 Cen?raI Park Wes? .. 400 Wes? End Avenue , New York 24 , New York 24 . S?ock?on S?ree? lBox 575I, Prince?on, . 235 Wes? 233 S?ree?, New York 63 u N N N ......I5 Wes? 75 S?ree?, New York 24, N. Y. Sussman, Ira L. . .. .. .,...... ..... .......,.. H a ines Ci?y, Florida Van Gelder, Richard G. .. 475 Wes? I86 S?ree?, New York 33, N. Y. van Laer, Nicholaas . .. . ... ....I39 AI?a Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Waddell, Hughes C. 4940 Goodridge Avenue, New York 63, N. Y. Weisberg, Leonard R. Wei?z, S?ephen B. Wilkinson, Mar?in G., Jr. , . WoI?sie, S?anIey Zabar, Saul 545 Wes? End Avenue, New York 24, N. Y. Knickerbocker Avenue, Norwalk, Conn. . ..... 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Suggestions in the Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY) collection:

Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954

Horace Mann School - Horace Mannikin Yearbook (Bronx, NY) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 1

1955


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