Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT)
- Class of 1944
Page 1 of 174
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 174 of the 1944 volume:
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S V, 5, 5 , x iv '-- A My D '5 99 ff M E HOTCHKISS SCHOOL QW' d ,gtg Ma E. Huis' 7 'L i 3'- Wu M: 81- ll r x 1 L, 4 v 1 if ' Q' L s 'E -.3 Mtg. 4 D , ,f - e, .... ,,,,, in fp I 1' ,. Zip 2' 5. ww 'L H A. 4 A ,..i iv- 'QZV' gf? , I , - f4 ?'2 'i1 , K f V.. - - , 1, , f P . Vyll WA , i I , V I ' Q H - :fn , Kam fl 4,- 0 1? I' 3 f'5 .1- e 2' in s W Mfv an ,iff- ,1 wx- 1 nj hp 1 Af' , i f ., avfibk THE 1944 I CHIA Z COMPILED AND PUBLISHED EDB THE STUDENT BUDY BY THE GPIADUATING CLASS DE THE HUTGHHISS SUHUUL LAKEVILLE, CONNECTICUT Page four J, f, Ks' , r ' , -few. ' V 5- . N., ..f.k-Q-f:s?ggf Eg is . 'P' EDWARD F. JEFFERSON After thirty-five years of service invaluable to Hotchkiss, Pop Jefferson is leaving the Hill. In recognition of all he has done for the school and the boys he has taught and lived With, as well as some token of our respect of the sort of man he is, to him We of the class of nineteen hundred and forty-four dedicate our Miscbianza. EDWARD F. JEFFER5 THE HOTCHKISS SCHO LAKEVILLE. CONN. ZIQTXU2, CQQAA, iq 44 I - I awww W-aww, M W5 MQW QVMQYQQLMLEWMMW WLM WW ' fjffl' Sfmafcbm, IQIOWWS MMG QQM' C,Q,aA,u I . QIWVCEKL d,8-SMAFIUA' 'J ' Wd' Oixmjh i.m..,,,Q M Www A-W3fQgWCQ,?,QfWB55 ' 0 VlJ'-EDO., 3iwX4 WQMWME 91 ,Q , fy, amwmwu io .--row M WWJHMM fmw.1,1w3mWmf9 :Mwv,i?ff wzwwf W QW ,LM Wmm S effwirmb f, '. Q x I . -p -na fx, 1 5 . ', 'jf I. 4. !'x1 5 . .. f-1 F .,.t . . hx' mi' v L if jx rib .2 I , MB, :- - 1' .... : ,fad f 4 EJ 1 Q v gl! ,U JP :sv ununrzz-1. 'wuz-an-:mann Mxzvnn x1n.gm1 unimnzxn THE TRUSTEES REV. JOHN CALVIN GODDARD, D.D., Salisbury, Conn. MR. JOHN P. ELTON, Waterbury, Conn. ARTHUR MORRIS COLLENS, Hartford, Conn. QPresidentj GEORGE VAN SANTVOORD, B.Litt., L.H.D., Lakeville, Conn. HAROLD STANLEY, New York City HENRY LOCKWOOD deFORREST, B.A., Plainfield, N. J. HOWARD E. LANDON, LL.B., Salisbury, Conn. GEORGE PARMLEY DAY, M.A., New Haven, Conn. HON. ARTEMUS L. GATES, B.A., Washington, D. C. FRANK DEXTER CHENEY, B.A., South Nlanchester, Conn. DR. DICKENSON W. RICHARDS, JR., New York City. EDWIN FOSTER BLAIR, New York City. JOHN EDWARD BIERWIRTH, New York City. JOHN EDWARD ELLSWORTH, Simsbury, Conn. A. WHITNEY GRISWOLD, New Haven, Conn. ROBERT J. H. KIPHUTH, New Haven, Conn. THOMAS WAGNER, Lakeville, Conn. MR. CHALLEN R. PARKER, New York City. Page s ghf GEORGE VAN SANTVOORD MA., L1TT.B., D.H.L. Hotchkiss, Class of 1908, Yale College, 1912, Bishop Berkley's scholar in Yale Graduate School, 1912-13, Rhodes Scholar from Connecticut at Oriel College, OX- ford, 1913-16, taking the degree of B.A. in the Honor School of English Language and Literature in 1915, B.LlTT. in 1917, and M.A. in 1923, ambulance driver with the French Army 1916, Assistant Master at Win- chester College, England, 1916-17, Sergeant, 39th U. S. Infantry CCroix de guerrej, and Second Lieu- tenant, 167th Infantry, in France, 1917-1919, In- structor and Assistant Professor of English in Yale Uni- versity, 1919-1925, Professor of English Literature in the University of Buffalo, 1925-1926, received the de- gree of Doctor of Humane Letters from Williams Col- lege, 1934, Presidential Elector, 1936, Member of Civilian Board inspecting the U. S. Naval Academy, 1937, Life Member of Yale Corporation, 1938, Mem- ber of Board of Trustees of Hotchkiss School, Emma Willard School, and Union Theological Seminary. THE HEADMASTER 'I I .- 'F 4 , Al 'A J A I , 4: 'if' P11511 ti The 1944 MixvfJir111:z1 would like to take this opportunity to offer apologies for the omission of notice of the retirement of Howell North Wfhite at the close of the last school year. As L1 teacher and .1 friend he will long be remembered .ind keenly missed. F CULT LAXVRENCE WASHINGTON MURPHY Mathematics Vanderbilt University, 19085 Professor in Mathematics, Georgia School of Technology, 1909, M.A., Harvard, 19165 Instructor in Mathematics, Case School of Applied Sciences, 1916, and Culver, Summer Schools, 1915-1917, Master in Mathematics, The Hotchkiss School, 1917, and Assistant Headmaster, 1930. WILLIAM C. POWLE Physical Training and History Master in History, 1941. B.A., Wilhams, 1931, Harvard Business School, 1931- 19324 Master in History, Governor Dummer Academy, 1932-19353 Freshman Athletic Director, Williams, 1935- 19385 Physical Director, The Hotchkiss School, 1938, and HARRY J. WIELER Resident Physician B.A., Allegheny College, 19135 Captain, Field Artillery, 1917-1919, M.D., P.S., Columbia University, 19233 Pres- byterian Hospital, 1925g Assistant Physician, The Hill School, 1925-1927, Physician, The Hotchkiss School, 1927. Page elerfn THOMAS PEABODY BLAGDEN Art and English The Hotchkiss School, 19293 B.A., Yale, 193 3g Studied at Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Master in Art, The Hotchkiss School, 193 S, in English, 1942. RICHARD CROCKER GURNEY English Philips Exeter Academy, 19243 Ph.B., Brown University, 19284 B.A., Oxford, 1930, Rhodes Scholar, Christ Church, Oxford, 1928-1931, Master at Rivers School, 1931-19333 Master nt Texas Country Day School, 1933-1935, Master in English, The Hotchkiss School, 1935. CHARLES E. BERRY German B.A., Bowdoin College, 1926, Master in German and His- tory, Brewster Academy, 1927, M.A., Harvard, 1931, Ass'n of the Teachers of German, Master in German, The Hotch- kiss School, 1936. GILBERT M. SMITH French Dummer Academy, 19213 B.A., St. Stephen's College, 1925, Sorbonne, 1928-19293 M.A., Western Reserve Uni- versity, 19325 University of Besancon, 1938, Instructor in French and Latin, Dummer Academy, 1925-19285 Instruc- tor in French, The Hawken School, 1929-19365 Master in French, The Hotchkiss School, 1936. UC filIZlI'fl 1 If I ,- WILLIAM N. STAKELY Chemistry B.S. in E.E., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1917-1922, Yale University, 1923, M.A., Columbia, 1932, Instructor in Science and Mathematics, The Suflield Academy, 1925- 19373 Master in Chemistry, The Hotchkiss School, 1937. l I WALTER T. WILSON Mathematics B.A., Dartmouth College, 1917, U. S. Army Captain, Ordnance Department, 1917-1919, Instructor in Mathe- matics, The Monson Academy, 1920-1922, and Harvard School, Chicago, 1922-1925, and the New York Military Academy, 1925-19333 Master in Mathematics, The Hotch- kiss School, 19 3 7. REV. JOHN M. MULLIGAN Bible B.A., St. Stephenis College, Columbia University, 1932, Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, B.D., 1936, Mas- ter in Bible, The Hotchkiss School, 1940. ALLAN SPENCER I-IOEY Greek and Latin B.A., Queensland University, 1929, B.A., Oxford Uni- versity, 19315 Senior Research Student, Oxford, 1932-1933, Department of Classics, Yale University, 1933-1935, M.A., Oxford University, 1938, Ph.D., Yale University, 1940, Master in Latin and Greek, The Hotchkiss School, 1941. W l Page fifteen The Smiling Irishman He Missed, of Course Open-Door Policy Two M uses Meet Stop Leaning On the Shovel Q Z Where's Mrs, Stakely? Nice Hat, Eh? Two Abbots and no Costello The Great Bear ff ,44wf,, , , ,,, M5 MMM! CLASS UP 1944 Page fwrwfy-ofuf Page IIFFIIZEHS UF THE CLASS UF 1944 1940-41 Fall Term President... ............,, Secretary .... ,,4.,.. 1941-42 President .,.,. G. McCurdy Secretary .... P. H. Swift 1942-43 President ...... .,.. ....... A . G. Kirk Vice-President .,.. .. ,.1, G. R. Wright Secretary ,.., . G. McCurdy Treasurer ,,,. J. Murphy 1943-44 President S. Hayes Vice-President P. H. Swift Secretary . V. A. Coombe Treasurer f1l'e'111g-fwfr G. R. Wright Winter Term .P. H. Swift W. D. Bevis J. G. MeCurdy P. H. Swift S. N. Lord A. G. Kirk P. H. Swift G. R. Wright J. Calhoun H. C. Dangler J. H. Dykema S. Cathcart S Spring Term W. D. Bevis J. W. Johnson P. H. Swift J. W. Johnson P. H. Swift W. D. Bevis A. G. Kirk S. Hayes T. H. Lyrrle J. C. Calhoun F. C. Painton H. F. Dangler CLASS HISTORY One dreary Sunday afternoon last term I went up to I-Iughie Dangler's room just to listen to his unique victrola, the one with static, applause and commercials. As usual, a couple of guys were sitting around bulling. Van Marx greeted me with his bright little smile and said, Holy corduroy, look what just blew in. There's a fine upstanding member of da class, huh, I-Iughie? Just as good as you, little black Sambo. Come on in and pull up a seat, said I-Iughie with his face full of potato chips. So I sat down on the bed, and then perceived Swift slouched in the corner, blended with the other black shadows. What smells in here, Dangler? It's almost as bad as Stan Stone's room prep year, Swift recol- lected. Judas, what a stench that was! Lim- burger cheese, Polish bologna and birch beer, and Lord knows what else Dempsey kept in that bass drum in the closet. And remember him and Stone carting all that stuff up from the ville in their little red wagon? 'zYeh,,' Van Marx said, and da night all dose guys were caught by Birge in Dempsey's closet. Not foo funny! Murphy in da one side, and Pidge praying in de udder when Birge shined da light inf' The door opened and Bugs Bigelow and Bill Blair breezed in, sensing that a bull session was in its embryonic stages. Well, gents, what's the topic for this afternoon?,' We were reminiscing about the good old days in Buehler with Dempsey and Stone. 'KDidn't they have some radio with a great wiring system through drawers and boxes and behind the mirror? Bigelow asked. And those bulletins Dempsey used to get out and post all over the place about the weather, prizefights, election returns, and news of the Canadian base- ball leaguesf, t'Of course Birge knew he had the radio the whole year. He must have liked the guy a lot. Yeah, but I know some cookies he dirfn'f like,', said Big. Remember those water pistol Page fwenfy H11 ee fights that used to rage up and down the stair- well?,' ' Yes, and da time Murphy shot Birge in da face through da bathroom door, said little Paul, utinking it was Andy Hotchkiss trying to get ' as lI'1. Lord, but he was mad that night, Bigelow remembered. He didn't stand for much hors- ing aroundf, Especially the time whoever it was threw that overripe fruit down the stair-well, and Charlie, the janitor, almost had a hemorrhage about it,', said Blair. Yeh, and I heard that MCCurdy took the rap for most of it, Dangler said. Speaking of raps, said Billy Blair, what was the good news on all those beds that were smashed on Gus Gurney's corridor? The good news wasn't so good, going by what the faculty and Harry jones had to say to Bakerf' I said. Good old Bake. The little Dutchman's face brightened. I-Iow about dat couch in da common room when Baker and Kelly and all dose guys jumped on it? That was one sweet job,H Bigelow laughed. Springs popping out, splinters, and a bill to Bake's father for about a hundred and fifteen bucksf' Swift had been cogitating in his corner, and now he drew our attention with a gurgling sound. What's the trouble, Cecil? Swallow your bubble gum?', Just thinking of the time Seliggi got a bit annoyed when some of the boys gave him that snake, and followed it up by fumigating the room with cocoa. Do you think he was angry I asked, expect- ing a rise out of Swift. Oh, no. Nothing like that! He just threw his little hatchet and bowie-knife at everybody in the corridor, till we took them away.', Yes, you did have some rather tawdry char- acters on that corridor, Phelps. if f 1,- .dh I seem to remember some trouble with greasy John and some of his friendsf, Bigelow smiled. 'fOh, yesf' said Swift, changing the subject, and Darling Dickie Stevens came down to pre- side over some of those Hrst floor sessionsf, That guy, said Blair, could sling more of it than even Jake the Snake. He and Pidgeon used to get together, and when it wasn't the Civil War, it was a four-way smash-up with twenty drunk niggers. He had some scrapes with Mista Piss, too, and Mr. Wilson didn't think it was at all amusing that Stevens couldnit factor fxu-yzj after four years of first-year algebra. Pidge got Fish sore as a devil, remarked the Dutchman, with blowing sneezing powder around in da choirf, You're not kiddingf, said Bigelow. Denny claimed it was varnish coming off the pews that made everybody sneeze, but Pidge knew betterf, At this moment there were shuffling foot- steps in the corridor, and the slouched figure of Sheridan Norton Lord appeared in the doorway, clutching a drawing pen in one simian hand. Hi, Sher, old kid, we greeted him. Hi, fellas. Hey, have any of you guys seen Al Gardner around? he inquired, squinting from one blurred face to another to make sure Al wasn't present. Sorry, kiddo, wrong room.', Come on in, child of misfortune, join the session,', said Bigelow. Well I'1l tell ya what, fellas. See ya around. I've gotta see a man about some important stuff, but I might drop around later. Can we count on that, Sher, I asked. Okay, okay, lay off it. Well, I'll see you guysf, With which he shuffled on down the corridor and left us to our reminiscing. I remember Sherry's room prep year with everything but the kitchen stove hanging on the walls, especially baseball stars and hockey play- ersf, And one of himself which he obligingly au- tographedf, laughed Bigelow. XVe sat silent for .1 while. I-Iughie was clean- ing his fingernails with .1 victrola needle. Swift's face brightened and he said, Say, do you guys remember the night of the faculty play rehear- sal? XVe all groaned. 'I'Ii.n was the worstf' I remembered. l never saw so much hell raised in one nightf' said Blair. I swear for about three hours the whole of Bueliler was in an uproar. Birge's boys, led by Chielets Orr and Andy Hotchkiss, wag- ing war on the first floor in pitch darkness, and Kelley and Baker shooting craps with luminous dice. And Bommer Murphy and Bottomley and Johnny Luke dragging junius Close down the corridor on his mattress. Oh, well. that was just routine for Poonf' I laughed. Almost every day there was some dis- turbance up there, led by the Stinky Two. Good old Poon, I heard he became quite the boy when he went to New Haven. D0n,t we all?', The conversation lapsed. Yeah, we really lost some colorful characters at the end of Prep year, Billy Blair mused. Stone and Dempsey and that guy Hogan with his slingshots. water pistols and a strongbox full of snakes. But we got some nice ones lower mid year to make up for it. huh, I-Iughie?,' said van Marx. Quiet, black boyfl snapped Hughie, I donlt like your attitude. Come here and say dat, Mr. Mole. Like a rodent. Dangler sprang simultaneouslv with van Marx into the closet, followed by Bige- f qc five ffI'.ff-six .Ami low and Swift. Scuffling sounds, prolonged groans. Then Dangler emerged with a smile, fol- lowed by Bigelow, and then the Dutchman stag- gered out and collapsed on the bed. Swift, hav- ing found food of some sort, remained in the closet, from which came munching sounds from time to time. , as 'Lower mid year was more fun on the whole, said Blair, resuming the chain of our thought. XYf'e knew what the story was a little more. The war coming along cramped our style a littlef, Bigelow said. Remember the lamb chops and even steak we used to get once in a while? I laughed. Yeah, even the rusty razor blade Murphy picked out of his stew one night at Mr. Jefferson's table. The Poof couldnlt believe it until he held it six inches in front of his mous- tachef' There came a sharp rap on the door, and who should appear but Bob I-Iincks and Grand Michel Bonner. Don,t tell me that this is a bull ses- sionf' Michel asked in stentortian tones. l What is the first thing that comes to your mind when you think of lower mid year?,' we asked them. 'Aplarorliief' said Bonner. Kneller, said Hincks. Why, were you one of Baron George's fav- orites? Bigelow asked. NO, but I know someone that was, Hincks said, looking coyly at Swift. What do you mean? Swift ejaculated. That's ridiculous! Everybody knows he liked Stevie Garner a lot betterf' '4With Gifford running a poor secondf, Blair added. That third floor of Coy was pretty rough at times, Bonner said. Big Dick Needham had a hard time defending his fortress against Bottom- ley, Coombe and Garner. Q'Coy wasn't anything compared with Kip- huth's corridor in Main, though, Hincker said. You're not kiddingf, Bigelow joined in. What a group of characters we had up there: Davy Elliot, Wes Orr, Charlie Stachelwhistle, Murph, Panda, Cwordie Wright, Mac McCurdy, Jay Mirkil, Roose Heymann, Bondie Garvan, and Big Russ Kelleyf, Oh, do you remember when Kelley had that radio, and everyone used to ask him how his RA-diator was? And the time he and Baker cooked macaroni on a little stove in Kelley's room and the Kip smelled it and they told him there wasn't enough to go around. Oh, come now! said Blair. Yes, they did,', Hincks agreed. Listen, Kel- ley was threatened with being thrown out so many times that finally the Duke said if he did one more thing he wouldn't be recommended for the Marine Corps. Know the next thing he did? What? The Duke noticed him wearing a sport coat on Sunday,', Hincks laughed. As a matter of fact he did get bounced not long afterward, but the straw that broke the camel's back was throw- ing a trunk through someone's door on Ernie Andrewis corridor. Big Roose didn't do too well at Culver, eitherf' said Swift. One day, or maybe it was two, then he moved on to Cheshire and roomed with Billy Baker. What a combination. Van Marx's face brightened again. I re- member Rusty Heymann with all dat confetti in Stachelwhistle's hair, and dose talcum powder Hghts and water fights with Garvan and Big Wes Orr. Who was that lovely creature who was here Lower-Mid year off and on for about two weeks? I asked. You must mean Bummy Bumsteadf, said Bigelow. XVhat a creep! Remember those Sunday morning sessions in Main, said Ilangler, when Elliot and Driscoll would lock lllL'l11SClVCSlll Iilliot's room and knock each other out telling funny stories?,' Good old Davy, I smiled. I swear, Garvan and Kelley used to get him in those Sunday aft- ernoon poker games and clean him for ten years, allowance and most of his inheritance. Yeah, but Bondie got his cleaning, toof' Hincks remarked. l'll never forget the night Kip caught him. He tried to hold his breath and the smoke started Coming out his earsf' He was awful stupid to think he Could get away with that indehnitelyf' said Bigelow. Dumbo really felt badly about kicking him out.', I'm not kidding you,', I said, Kiphuth was one of the most popular guys that ever hit this place. And donit think he didn't have a good time while he was here. I remember him having a few beers in the ville and then coming to coach our class baseball team, rigged out in tennis sneakers, a little baseball cap, and trifocal glasses. He was trying to hit flies to the outfield, and the result was out of this worldf, He didn't know as much about baseball as he might have, if you know what I mean, said Hineks, twiddling a mechanical pencil between his long, neurotic fingers, but the team sure had a lot of fun with him. As I remember it we had some pretty good athletes that yearf' Blair said. IJidn't we win the class championship in swimming?', Yes, and in hockey, too, Michel Bonner added. We couldn't quite make the grade in football though, with Pidgeon pestering Mr. Berry to be put in the game every two minutes, and Joe Morschauser insisting on playing his own brand of football. t'Oh, I'll never forget the classic remark Gus Gurney got off at the table one Sunday when some soprano choir-boy was singing in Chapel. What was that? l'Gurney said the soprano must have been playing football with Morschauserf' We all laughed. The door swung open and the face of Sherry Lord appeared. Good Lord, back so soon? Hi fellas. Say has Al Gardner been in here?', UNO, Sher, not todayf' Geez, I wonder where the guy's gone. Well, see you aroundf, The door Closed. I'l1 never forget Lord in Maitland's Latin class. Every day weld hear some remark about leaving Old Westbury in an old brown sneaker. Turret-top used to get Sherry so self-conscious and confused that by the end of the class he'd be speaking Mr. Maitland's Swahili instead of Latin. Garvan enjoyed that class, too, I added. Every day or so Maitland would tell him to UW kee his nicotine-stained fin ers out of si ht and P g 3 tend to his stint of translation. Bonner laughed. That licentious old peda- gogue gave Caesar's Gallic Wars the shadiest going over they ever saw. Between questionable jokes and risque syntax he managed to keep us interested all year, which is saying a lot for a Latin class. Jerosch's French Ha was nice too, huh, Paul? Here we go againf' van Marx sighed. Jerosch would say, 'van Marx, translate!', settle urbanely in his chair and the class would go into mild disorder for a while. Some gem would always come out of this manglef' With which Jerosch would say, 'Have a lemon', Blair remembered. Those Comp tests he gave were cute, too. He'd take off five points for spelling his name wrongf, That class was pretty much fun, thoughf, III! gf I said. Nesbitt Conyngham and MacCurdy conversing pleasantly throughout the class, and big Dick taking off his shoes in the back row. Battling Bob had a pretty good time with us, even though we did beat him at his own game of razzingf' A heavy tread was heard in the corridor, and we were not long in detecting the portly and myoptic figure of AI. Ilutchins Ilykema IV, swaying in the doorway. Wl1t'i'e have you been, Ifaustus? Bigelow asked. If you must know, I've been playing wild west with the Blagden children. Wl1at were you, jelly, an old squaw? UNO. I was a piebald ponyf' He strode into the room without further invitation and col- lapsed on the bed, which sank considerably clos- er to the floor. Speaking of classes, were any of you guys in Dumbols History II? I asked. I wasf' answered Willie Blair. I wouldn't have missed it for anything. So was the unbeatable combination of An- drew Hotchkiss and Lloyd Garrison Hooker. Hotch engineered it so that Hooker pushed De- laney's desk off the platform while he was sit- ting at itfl And Chan Moore used to get hysterics and not be able to answer the questions Kiphuth asked him. Then we drew little dumbos and bun- nies on the board before class and Kip would erase them the minute he saw themfl flzzrizf I I,ll never forget Kiphuth the night that that darn fire alarm went off at three in the morn- ingf' laughed Hincks. He came groping and mumbling out of his room like a little blind dwarf, and the first thing he heard was a string of Dutch profanity, eh, Paul? Paul changed the subject. Remember the night before spring vacation when they locked Big jay Mirkil out of his room?', Oh, yes, said Dangler. He was in Al Kirk's room, and Andrews and Kiphuth made the rounds at about 10:30 to see if anyone was vis- iting. Mirk wasn't in his room and when they came to Kirk's room, Mirkil hid Linder the bed. Andrews searched all over Main and finally locked Mirkis door. When Kip looked out about an hour later, there was Jay, sitting on his trunk reading the Pbiladrljzlaia Il161Ilil'f'1'.,, Phelps sat scratching the back of his head with a compass. Dykema groaned for no reason and rolled over on the bed. Upper Mid year in some ways was the most colorful of the class's careerf' Phelps observed. l In some ways not so colorful, toof' I added. I'1l never forget the sensation of seeing a wraithlike figure float down the fourth corridor of Alumni. And when I found out it was as- signed to watch over the corridor all year, I almost cashed in the chips. The door opened and in breezed E. J. Pidgeon, Si Cathcart, and Roosty I-Ieymann. s Greetings, gates. I-Iow'd the golf go, Hoose? we asked. Not bad. Pidge got so sore he threw his five iron into the bushes off the third fairway, and then couldn't find it. We all laughed. That's not true, Eugene scowled. Ah was so sore Ah never looked for it. If Ah can't reach the green with that club, Ah never want to see the thing againf' I thought you guys were playing with Hayes? Swift asked. We were, Si laughed, but we left him down in the hockey pond. What do you mean? UI-Ie drove a brand new ball into the pond and then claimed he could see it in the water. So we told him to take off his shoes and go get itf' K'What happened?', He got stuck in quicksand, and then the swans started attacking himf, I bet he went for that in a big way, said Phelps. 'lWe couldnat stay around there all nightf, said Pidge. 'KHe'll be along in a little while.', Hey, Pidge, remember those corridor meet- ings with Steady Eddy Spencer where we used to tell him everything but the facts of life? You're not kidding. You mean McCurdy and Wup Moore told him the facts of life and a few things besides. Hooker,s antics in Alumni had Edmund slightly confused, too, I joined in. One night, Suspence was giving a feed for some of his lower- mid friends and I-Iookie decided to appropriate the pie. There was a small riot following Hook- er's entrance, which brought Clip Parsons up from the third floor at a dead run. Just about the time Gary got a good grip on the pie-plate and was making for the end-zone, Parsons came in. Rastus thought he was just one of the oppo- sition and gave him the old elbow. It's a good thing Carle doesn't have a bad temper. Of course the funniest event of the year took place two flights down, Jere declared, when Mr. Fish asked a certain boy if a certain ex- clamation came out of a certain room, and the certain boy replied that Certain Person hadn't been around recently. Yes, Cathcart agreed, it was one of Mr. Fish's most difheult years. The heavenly trio of Long, Curley, and Heymann rode roughshod over his more aesthetic nature, what with cold mackerel, glued door-knobs, and ONE MORE DAYI' signs, not to mention shrieks that would wake up Mrs. Ham. We sure did all of it, Si, Rusty protested. Well, Pfohl and Butler and Allen and Chic- lets Orr caused a little trouble now and then. Say listen, Bigelow broke in, isn't anyone going to say a good word for the Moles? Hughie smiled and went on cleaning his toenails. Sure say a good word for dem, van Marx laughed. What a bunch of rowdiesln l'll thank you to keep quiet, I-Iughie snapped. I agree with you, Paul, Blair said. Any poor creature who had to venture down on that mildewed corridor to sell Ilramat tickets or the I.it fif they still pay money for the I.itj would be lucky if he ever saw the light of day again. Mad Onion O'Neil and the original Mole over there would pounce on him, and his life wouldn't be worth barking about. Talk about muggers, how about the Ed- munds boys and their private war on Smoker- Booger, said Swift. They did everything but mash his head with one of their ten-pound po- ratoesf' There was a shuffling sound in the corridor, the door swung open, and a silence fell on the room. Then Pidgeon shouted, Oh, Lawd, Lingie! JJ Hayes was standing there, his pants rolled up above his knees, bare feet black with mud, hold- ing his shoes in one hand and an orange drink in the other. Neat guysll' he said to Heymann, Cathcart, and Pidgeon. I even had to borrow a dime from some prep that I'd never seen before for this fhe waved the bottlej. You ought to be glad Frankenstein Mercer gave you anything, looking like that, Heymann laughed. I-Iow'd you make out with the swans, Winkf' jelly-Faustus asked. One bit my leg and I hit the other with my putter, Hayes admitted. Kill it? I don't know. I didn't stick around to seef' Hayes then went into the bathroom to Wash his feet in the basin. The nearest this school ever came to anarchy was that song meeting riot we had with the seniors, fall term of upper-mid year, Blair stated. The whole corridor from East to the dining room was littered with broken glass from the pictures and the shreds of clothing torn off in the scufflef' And we got sore when we weren't able to get into the Auditorium, said Bonner, so We stormed over to Mem. and took it out on rho first floor rooms. Walter Wilson didn't think so much of that. aj' -ev, - For complete chaos, how about those black- outs in Alumni? Dykema broke in. In one of those things upon the fourth floahf' said Pidge, we decahded to make just as much noise as we could. So we all got at one end of the corridor and went to it. Coombee's moose horn and crow call added considerably, I said, until coach Fowle sprinted up to see who was being bludgeoned, and we ended up sitting beside our doors the next after- noonf' The only safe place to be during one of those blackouts was the basement, Hughie said, with one of his sly smiles. Van Marx grunted. I wouldnit of gone down dere for every pearl in da Queen's crownf' Speaking of pearls, the Poof really dropped some in History III. Remember 'kissing the cornerstones and laying the babies'? And when we came to the Opium Wars, Dykema laughed, we were informed that 'opi- um is a drug-forming habit'. Also whenever we'd do anything wrong, Pop would threaten to defenestrate us, said Cath- cart. The first couple of times Hayes thought he really meant it and didn't say a word the rest of the class. f'The things I'll always rememberf' I said, are good red meat, Savonarola,s cell, shades of Richelieu, and 'cuius regio eius religio'.', How about Happy Henry,s victorian Eng- lish III, Blair said, with those records of Twelfth Nightf' All I remember is Sir Toby Belch giving out, said Swift. And by the time we were finished with the Elizabethan Theater I felt Iyd been an usher there. just then Billy Butler and Jayce Crosby came in and sat on the floor. Butler found one of Dangler's Hsh nets in the corner and began tick- ling the bare ankle of Jere Dykema with it. l'Oh, Dykema, don't tell me you have had your pants peggedll' Butler demanded. No, I haven,t had my pants pegged, said Jere testily, pulling his foot away. It,s just that these gray flannels always shrink when I get them back from Bisself' For a moment I thought yould gone a la MacKenzie. I heard that MacKenzie had his pants so pegged that the crease ended up sideways and he had to use a shoe-horn to get into themf, Yes, Willets was a pretty unusual character. I remember that perperoni sausage that he used to eat and those pictures in his room of his colored friends in New York night spots. Hey, O., were you one of the guys that got censured in Big Dick's room upper-mid year? No, I was not. Tom Harmon Hall never got his claws on me. He gave out twelve or thirteen censures in Needham's room though, didn't he? Yes, a substantial part of the class got caught roughhousing in there. Everyone except Need- ham, who was there legally. Say, Michelf' said Hincks, weren't you one Page thirty Hu ec -Pggv X gr fhZ'I'fjl--l f ' of the jokers who sent that letter about Dick to Anne fwith an 'e'j at Dobbs Ferry? Afraid so, said Mike, giving us his Calox smile. Guess she didn't write to Richard much after thatf' said Bigelow. Guess Richard broke off his correspondence rather abruptlyln said Needham emphatically, having been standing outside in the corridor. Come on in, Suavetef' Blair said, offering the overturned wastebasket as a seat. Upper-mid year really ended with a bang. didn't it,', I mused. just as a snap judgment l'd say two or three bangs. That banquet we gave for the guys that weren't coming back was a howling success. I'll never forget DeeLong strutting in as a Zoot- suiter, dressed in Horace Brown's suit and Wiltl Bill Berger's ten gallon hat. Those prizes they gave were pretty funny. too, Heymann laughed. That great decaying bone that Wink got stank up his room for a week. How about the blood plasma for Bryan Reid and the hair net for Geff Neuhaus's scalp-tone haircut?,' I liked Dykema's rather pointed parting speech, said Crosby. You would, Dykema grunted. Oh, well, he was only warming up to the valedictory, weren't you, Jere?', Butler asked. Donlt embarrass me, said he rolling his soul- ful eyes. What were the other bangs that the upper- mid year ended up in? asked Swift. XVell, for one thing, Dr. George Kneller gave a going-away party for young Les Gunther, and they both had a staying-away party. XVe don't talk about that, said Cathcart. And then the boys got rid of a little steam on the second and fourth floors before we left for the summer, said Bonner. XY'e were given a chance to collect it again H ...wail .. . X 2? 4. , W' in Main next year. We didnlt have too bad a time of it though, with distractions such as kidding gabby lower mids who got in our war and smashing down the wall in Speedy Joe Rob- erts' room. Yeh, said van Marx, and Mr. Kellogg's mobiles and talks about marriage kept us amused, when Sugi Patton and Helmuth and Brower weren't taking ive-day week-ends. How about Peter Denault's week-ends, said Dangler. He had so many interviews and Was- serman,s that he didn't have a chance to feed his white mice or play his Chinese recordsf' Don Singer appeared in the doorway clad in purple scarf, polo Coat, and bare feet. There was a chorus of Glad t' see ya!', and a mass ro- tation of palms toward the smiling, curly-haired fellow in the doorway. Hey, Don, whatls on the menu for tonight? asked Dykema. Cafe au lait and crullersf' Is that all? Well, Jere, for you-I got hamburger. Come on in a little later and I'l1 warm it up for you. Peachy, Don. G'bye fellas. He closed the door. Remember the times Singer used to have with in Mrs. Simmons at the table? Not LPVJ' fumq! And when he went to the train to meet Gretchen for the dance? How about Hooker's Blind Dates? Hook almost made some enemies over that manoeuvref, Tony Vevers, Bud Painton and Willie Dyer came in. Greetings, men, said Dangler, I don't know where you can sit but if you can ind a place your welcome to it. Little Willie Mole-brain, you been playing any ball lately? asked Pidgeon. Yeah, I was just having a game of pepper outside with Guinz and Sherry. Say, Bill, are you going to get in any college before your number comes up? Well, I was considering a semester at Hardin- Simmons or maybe Virginia Union. Page thirty-fiv.'e Heymann reached into the closet and brought out Dangler's tennis racket with which he pad- dled Willie once or twice. Say, cut it out. Don't you know I'm sensi- tive? I don't think I like you boys. Well, I guess I'll be going, said Hincks, get- ting up to leave. Meeting at the Sunday Club? Heymann asked. I'm afraid I don't know what you meanf laughed I-Iincks, making a hasty exit. Give my best to Dick and Al, said Hey- mann as the door shut. I wonder if they keep a couple of empty chairs for Hooker and Baur? I mused. Crosby pinched Butler playfully, which started them off. Aren't you 400 boys supposed to live peace- fully together? asked Swift. Only the Four Doors, explained Vevers. The Panel Club is never peaceful. What's the Panel Club?'l Dangler asked. Dykema informed us. A group of boisterous children who go about kicking out the panels in each other's doors. They also sponsor music, such as Gracie Fields singing 'Walter, Walter Lead Me to the Altar,' which they play voluminously on Crosby's Magnavox every 7 a. m. Just to drown out Dynamite Jim Damon's playing 'Boogie Woogie Maxixe', O. added. Say was there really a schism in the 102 club or did I-Iulme and Sergeant Bork decide not to play hard to get? asked Painton. I think they paid their fees and were accepted back, said Bonner. But they never let Moon in after he refused to go on with his Leaps for Life. I guess they never got him to leap from the moose in the common room.', Rux Strong came in followed by George Deg- ener. Levo claims that Mr. Mac is going to feed the English Club spiked cider at the next meeting, Strong announced. I wouldn't be surprised, said Blair. Mac may claim heis ninety years old but I think itys nearer to nineteen. I swear everytime I go into his class I expect to come out with cancer, or if minus a clavicle. When he caresses those femi- nine endings I sometimes think he should be more than an English teacherf' I-Ie sure adds a lot to a simple course in Eng- lishf' said Bigelow. Our class wasn't quite the same after Doc Curley and Wupper left though, said Blair. Wupper wasn't gone for good. His return was quite noteworthy. 'iNoteworthy is mild for itf' Hughie laughed. Al Kirk and I put him to bed in the jug after he greeted both classmates and faculty members in a rather carefree way. Butler remembered something funny. 'What was it Tall Paul Temple said to you in class one day, Jere? All the assembled voices joined in. Unk, unk! deary!', No, it wasn't that, said Butler. It's all right to be in love, Dykema, but don't do it in herell' Cathcart volunteered. No, not that,', Butler shook his head. Do ou ever do an thin in here but warm Y Y g the seat? Bonner suggested. 'II-Iayes is the only one he ever said that to, said Pidge. Wink paid attention in only one class and that was when we went over the ad- ministration of Rutherford Bf, You know, said Dangler, the last year went pretty smoothly, despite the war and every- thing. I think the Duke liked our class better than most, said Blair, and that shows that we had something in general on the ball. The Poof had a good time the last year, too, said Painton. I'11 never forget his face when he found out that the oriental rug was for his Sans Souci down in New Jersey. I really ex- pected something to come rolling out when he opened it.', Well, fellows, I hate to do this, Dangler announced, but Ilve really got to get to work sometime, and it'll take me long enough just to get the room straightened up after you hood- lums leavef, What the devilll' I said to Phelps as we were going down the sairs. I never expected to get the Math done an wa this afternoonf' Y Y HOW THE CLASS POLL Done Most For Hotchkiss: Bevis, Wright, Calhoun, Swift, Dangler. Done Hotchkiss For the Most: Hooker, Baur, Hincks, Hall, McKenzie. Most Influential: Bevis, Wright, Swift, Kirk, Calhoun. Most Likely To Succeed: Blair, Dykema, Roberts, Lyttle, Dangler. Most Popular: Swift, Lord, Hayes, Dangler, Wright. Most Versatile: Wright, Gifford, Blair, Lyttle, Bevis. Most Energetic: Dangler, Moore, Coombe. Laziest: Neuhaus, Hooker, Degener, Hincks, Baur, Biggest Grind: Zeus, Foster, Palmer. Greatest Improvement: Cahill, Denault, Degener, Coombe. Brightest: Roberts, Neuhaus, E. P. Edmunds, Zeus, Blair. Wittiest: I,yttle, Leisenring, Dykema, Neuhaus, Wright. Least Civilized: Leisenring, Hooker, Heymann, Chase, Hincks. Most lixtravagant: Heymann, Swift, Meier, Hooker, Strong. Best-Natured: Lord, Denault, Hayes, Moore, Bevis. Handsomest: McCurdy, Murphy, Kirk, Wright, Seligman. Best Dressed: Mirkil, Cathcart, Murphy, Funsten, Harrison. Most Optimistic: Denault, Moore, Kirk, Hayes, Hooker. Most Pessimistic: Lord, Morschauser, Crosby, Reid. Biggest Buller: Harrison, Hooker, Kirk, Lowry, Heymann. First To Marry: Kirk, Hooker, Lord, Moore. In Worst With the Faculty: Hooker, Baur, Pidgeon, Hincks, Class Baby: Butler, Lord, Cahill, Pidgeon. Noisiest: Pidgeon, Hooker, Harrison, Leisenring, Curley. Biggest Swiller: Pidgeon, Hooker, Hincks, Heymann, Moore. Purest: Zeus, Roberts, Denault, Damon, Herbert. Most Likely Bachelor: Pidgeon, Gordon, Bancroft, Fish, Kneller. Biggest Drag With Faculty: Strong, Hooker, Blair, Dykema. Biggest Roughhouser: Hooker, Leisenring, Gordon, Dangler, Bancroft. Gets Away With Most: Hooker, Baur, Jebb, Hincks, Heymann, Sloppiest: Hincks, Baur, Hayes, Swift, Guinzburg. Biggest Damn Fool: Singer, Hooker, Hincks, Rosenblum, Gunther. Crudest: Coombe, Hooker, Gunther, Morschauser, Chase. Biggest Red-Card Artist: Dykema, Brown, Heymann, Meier. Favorite Waitress: Evelyn, Janie, Catherine, Mrs. Howard, Alice. Biggest Operator: Kirk, Blair, Mirkil, Hooker, Dangler. Most Gullible: Lord, Hayes, Denault, Moore, Mirkil. Most Original: Lyttle, Leisenring, Moore, Lord, Singer. Future Sugar-Daddy: Hooker, Meier, Moore, Harrison, Mirkil. 14' fliirfg-e'iylzf CLASS VOTED Best Corridor: 3rd Mem, 4th Mem, 4th Alumni, Basement Alumni, lst Mem. Best Soldier: Morschauser, McCurdy, Hooker, Calhoun, Mirkil. Sport: Football, Swimming, Soccer, Basketball, Hockey. Extra Curricular: Dramat, Ville, Bulling, Lit, Butting. Boys' School Other Than Hotchkiss: Andover, Exeter, Taft, Deerfield, Hill. Girls' School: Farmington, Walkers, Dobbs, Chatham, Westover. Future Occupation: Father, Engineer, Doctor, Barfly. College: Yale, Princeton, M.I.T., Harvard, Williams. Newspaper: Times, Tribune, News, Record, Journal American. Movie Actor: Flynn, Cooper, Grant, Pidgeon, Stewart. Movie Actress: Bergman, Home, Turner, Montez, Hayworth. Automobile: Ford, Buick, Cadillac, Jeep, One With Gas. Favorite Branch of Service: Navy, Army Air Corps, Marines, Army, Navy Air Corps. Orchestra: Ellington, T. Dorsey, Basie, Miller, J. Dorsey. Topic of Conversation: Sex, You make your own up. Type of Girl: Loose, Blonde, Brunette, Well-rounded Cuddly. School Grievance: Plague, No Women, Food, B.B., Duke. Favorite Beverage: Milk, Coke, Beer, Scotch and Soda, Rum. Favorite Magazine: Life, Esquire, Time, Readers Digest, New Yorker. What Hotchkiss Needs Most: Women, Good Food, No sopranos in choir, Off days. Campus Character: Stakely's cat, George. Most Pleasant Event of Year: Graduation, Mid-Dance, Holidays. Characteristic Most Typical of Hotchkiss: Depravity, Cynicism, Broken down Organ, White shirts on Monday. COURSES Hardest: Hale's Math, Birgeis Latin, Temple's History, Doc's Math, Miller,s French. Easiest: Duke's Bible, Spud's Math, Mac's English, Case's Spanish, Hoey's Latin. Most Valuable: Math, Physics, Mac's English, Chemistry, Duke's map-making. Most Useless: Duke's Bible, Music, Latin, History, Choir. Favorite: Mac's English, Spud's Math, Chem., Doc's Math, Physics. Dullest: Temple's History, Smith's French, Case, Edgar. FACULTY Most Popular: Mac, Levo, Jerosch, Spud, Doc. Hardest To Bluff: Hale, Doc Weiler, Duke, Fowle, Spud. Most Entertaining: Mac, Levo, Duke, Jerosch, Spud. Faculty Playboy: jerosch, Levo, Parsons, Mac, Fish, Cummings. Most Brilliant: Duke, Hoey, Kneller, Northrop, Gus. Most Non-Essential: Hall, Simmons, Fish, Siegle. Influenced You Most: Duke, Mac, Levo, Wilson, Kneller. Page fh i1'ty-nine Big Ccunsoredj. I was noi drunk: Rye is where I live. 1940-41 . . . Choir, Golf, Wroods Squad, Tennis. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, Basketball,Tennis. 1942-45 . . . Taylor Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, Basketball, Tennis. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer Team, Basketball, Taylor Tennis Team, Chem.-Physics Club. Bernsacks , Cobra', But I don't care what the rabbit population of Salerno is! i ANTI IONY BRANT BERNHARD 118 liast 54th Street, New York City Cornell, Dartmouth U. S. Maritime Service 1940-41 . . . Class Iiootball, Championship Touchball Team, Ski Club, Class llasehall, Cllmir, Railroad Club. 1941-42 . . . Kippy's Corridor, Ski Club, Class Baseball, Choir, Dramat Stage Crew. 1942-43 . . . Iloyt Club, Lightweight Iioolball Team, School Lightweight All-Star 'l'e.1m, Ski Club, Class Seminar, Lighting Manager of Dramat, Choir, School Base- ball Squad, Lighting for Ijllli' Huy Blur, Society of Moles. 1943-44 . , . Championship Hoyt Football Team, Ski Club, Lighting Manager of Dramal, Decoration Committee, Honorary Member of the 400 Club, The Octet, The Infernal Triangle, Zoot's Recruits, Chemistry-Physics Club. JOHN EMERSON BIGELOW 66 Milton Road, Rye, N. Y. Princeton Army Air Corps 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer and Baseball Teams, Skiing, Cast of The Monkeyk Paw, Richard of Bordeaux, and Pvfrifz-rl Forest, Member of Hotchkiss Dramatic Associa- tion, Choir, 2nd Honor Roll, English Prize. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer and Baseball Teams, Skiing, Cast of Naugbfy-Naughl, and Tin' Izzspeffor-General, Hotchkiss Dramatic Association, Choir, Glee Club, 2nd Honor Roll, Latin Prize, English Prize, Assistant Editor of Record. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, B.T.O. Champ Touchball Team, Skiing, Tennis, Cast of Knirlzerborker Holiday and The Moon Is Down, Hotchkiss Dramatic Association, Editorial Chairman of Remrd, Choir, Glee Club 2nd Honor Roll, Dennieis Pennies, F. W. Club, Latin Prize, First Belin Prize, Frencli prize. 1943-44 . . . Captain Taylor Soccer Team, Hockey, Taylor Tennis Team, Cast of XVILLIAN1 D, BLAIR, JR, Dr. Fausflzs, Hotchkiss Dramatic Association, Chairman of Rvforrl, Cum Laude, Bowie, Maryland 2nd Honor Roll, School Soccer Team, Dissipated Deities, Yale Bill',, W'ill , Bacchus . NAU' VJ'ho's been emptying my mail box, and what did she have to say, fellas? I rrgr' forfy 1940-41 . . . Class Football Team, Chemistry-Physics Club, Weather Bureau, Baseball, Third Honor Roll. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, School Football Squad, Band, Stage Crew, Chemistry-Physics, Weather Bureau, Track Team, Third Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Championship Baker Football Team, School Football Squad, Third Honor Roll, Stage Crew, Chemistry-Physics, Band, Cast of The Moon IS Down, School Basketball Squad, Track Team, H.D.A. 1943-44 . . . Baker Football Team, School Football Team, Glee Club, Third Honor Roll, Chemistry-Physics Club, Cast of Doctor Faustus, Championship Baker Basketball Team, School Basketball Team, Cast of You Carft Take If With You, Track Team, H.D.A. Mike , Ca Michele P a Dammit, she is! ..Bob,,, ..sarge,, Do you want a contusious saab, maybe?,' l ROBERT H. BORK 522 Dickson Ave. Ben Avon, Pa. U. of Chicago Marines nahan Basketball 1943-44 . . . Monahan Football Team, School Football Team, Captain Mo Team, Captain of the Second School Basketball Team, School Baseball Squad, 102 Club, 400 Club. ..Art,, ?,, The Chinese have a proverb for it. What have you got for it MICHAEL K. BONNER 10 East 81st St. New York City, N. Y. M.I.T. Army 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer, Diving, Golf, Boxing Championship, 102 Club. ARTHUR BRODY 47 Raritan Ave. Highland Park New Jersey Princeton Naval Air Corps Page foi 'ty-one l 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer Team, Championship Touehball Team, Skiing, Tennis, Ski Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, Cast of Passenger To Bali, Skiing, Ski Club, Tennis. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Soccer Team, Dennie's Pennies , Ski Club, Chemistry-Physics Club, Associate Editor of Lit, Skiing, Tennis. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Soccer Team, Chemistry-Physics Club. Ski Club, Dissipated Deities , Editorial Chairman of Lil, Skiing, Geo-Political Club, Tennis. Brownie , Kib , Hossie , Pluto'l And as I was looking in through the transom , . .' HORACE S. BROVVN 435 East S2 Street 4 New York City, N. Y. Yale U. S, Merchant Marine Cadet Corps 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer Team, Tennis, Choir. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, Tennis, All-Star Soccer Team, Hacker's Hockey, Stage Crew. 1942-41 . . . Taylor Soccer Team, All-Star Soccer Team, Assistant Stage Manager, H.D.A., llacker's Hockey, Cilee Club, President of Dcnnie's Pennies . 1943-44 . , . Taylor Soccer Team, Captain Taylor 2nd Hockey Team, Track, Hacker's llockey, Assistant Stage Manager, H.D.A., Casts of You cidllif Toki' lf Wifb You and The Gmlf Cifflawrirlv, 400 Club, Co-Manager of Hockey Team, Chemistry-Physics Club. Bill , Will , -'wa1, ' I wish Comp were here now. He'd see my point. l 1 WILLIAM CONVERSE BUTLER 1090 Crescent Lane W'innetka, Illinois Yale U. S. Coast Guard 5340-41 . . . Football, Swimming, Baseball, Choir, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club, op. 194142 - ' - F00fb2ll, Championship Class Swimming Team, Baseball, Choir, Band, Glee Club, Shop. 1942-43 . . . Winners' Lightweight Football, Classic Seminar, Championship Swimming and Track Teams, Ski Club, Glee Club, Choir, Band, Phillips Prize, Shop. 1943-44 . . . Coach Baker Lightweights, School Swimming Team, Ski Team, Track Team, Rifle Club, President Chem-Physics Club, Third Honor Roll, Band, Glee Club Orchestra, sk' C1 b C ' 1 ' ' i u ommittee, Octet, Cast of You Can t I1 Wzib Yau, Cutty , Motors GEORGE FRANCIS CAHILL, JR. Guess that quelches you, Airmount Road Suffern, New York Yale Navy Page forfy-fzvo 1 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Football, Hockey, Track, School Football Squad, School Hockey, School Track Squad, St. Luke's, Choir, Glee Club, Ski Club. 1243-44. . . . Captain of Championship Hoyt Football Team, Assistant Coach School Lightweight Football Team, Hoyt Club Hockey, School Hockey Team, Pony Baseball, Vice President St. I.uke's, Student Council, President of Class Winter Term, Vice President Spring Term, The Sage,s Ravine Club, Woods Committee, Zoot's Recruits. ricalriy ul-Ioonn, rrJ.C.ix, uhlackn, rrDemi,,, UI-Ionest J-ohn??,, I really cracked that exam and expect a 62. l Recruits, lrDuncll, 11NePh!7 DUNCAN ARGYLL CAMPBELL , Cherry Tree Rd. l Albany, N. Y. Cornell Army 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer, Hockey Team, Golf Team, Choir, Photography Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Championship Hockey Team and Golf Team, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Soccer, Hockey, Swimming, Golf Teams, Associate Editor of LIT, Chem-Physics Club, Golf Squad. 1943-44 . . . Club Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Captain of Monahan Hockey and Golf Teams, Chairman of Lit, English Club, Treasurer of Class in Winter Term, Student Council Decoration Committee, Co-stage Manager, Hotchkiss Dramatic Association, Chem- Physics ,Club, Geo-Politics Club, ZOO1I,S Recruits, School Hockey and Golf Teams. Si , Countess I'l1 take any blind date at all, but please, God, not from Roger's Hall. Must I really ask for a week-end, Uncle George?3' JOHN CLARK CALHOUN, JR. 17 Spruceland Ave. Springield, Mass. Yale Navy 1943-44 . . . Ski Club, Champion Baker Ski Club, Ski Committee, Club Track, Zoots SILAS STRAWN CATHCART 10 South Green Bay Rd. Lake Forest, Ill. Yale Navy Page forty-three ball and Baseball Squads. 1943-44 . . . Band, Orchestra, Taylor Club Soccer and Basketball, School Soccer Squad Co-Captain School Basketball Team, School Baseball Squad. Chasey , Chaser , Farmer You mean you never heard of Pine Plains? 1 l CLYDE CHASE Main Street Pine Plains, N. Y, Yale Navy 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer and Baseball Teams, All-Star Soccer Team, Pidgcon Club, Gun Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer and Baseball Teams, All-Star Soccer Team, Wrestling Squad, Pidgeon Club, Gun Club. 1942-43 . . . Championship Hoyt Soccer and Basketball Teams, Track Team, School Soccer Team, School Basketball Squad, Gun Team, Third Honor Roll, French Play, Decora- tion and Woods Committees, St. Luke's Society, President of Rifle Club, 400 Club, Shadow Club, Hoyt Club Prive, McMillan Cup, Misch Heeler. 1943-44 . . . Captain Champiorship Hoyt Soccer Team and Basketball Team, Captain School Soccer Team, School Basketball and Tennis Teams, Class Olficer Fall Term, Secretary Student Council, Chairman of Decoration and Woods Committes, Secretary of St. Luke's Society, Managing Editor of Miifh, Second Honor Roll, Hoyt Club, Tennis Team, Sages Club, Zoot's Recruits, Gun Club. Coombie , Ape Child Look, Oof, Pigs. ' V. ANDERSON COOMBE , 2363 Grandin Road l Cincinnati, Ohio 1 Yale Navy 1939-40 . . . Class Soccer, Tennis, Orchestra, Band. 1940-41 . . . Sabbatical Year in the Old West. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, All-Star Soccer Team, Hacker's Hockey, Orchestra, W - . oods Committee, Photography and Chem-Physics Clubs. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Soccer Team, All-Star Soccer Team, Hacker's Hockey, Casts of Knickerbocker Holiday, and The Moon Is Down, Orchestra, Woods Committee, Chem- Physics Club, 1943-44 . . . Monahan and School Soccer Teams, Hacker's Hockey, Dramatic Association, Casts of Dr. Faustus, You Can't Take It Willa You, and The Grrul Katherine, President of Orchestra, Secretary of Woods Committee, Championship Monahan Second Team Hockey, ,C Chem-Physics Club, 400 Club. JOHN O. H. CROSBY HJ-O-Us NJRSCH, ujasonn Brllxljfifghmayxr I heard that Dykema is too drunk to speak properly. Yale Army Page fo:-fy-four 1942-43 . . . Band, Orchestra, Taylor Club Soccer and Basketball, School Soccer, Basket- 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Class Baseball, Choir. 1941-42 . . . Class Baseball Team, Band, Choir, Glee Club. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Football Squad, Taylor Golf, Orchestra, Band, Glee Club. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Football Team, Syncopaters, Band, Glee Club, Orchestra, Zoot's Recruits. ujackn, ujohnu, uDOCn Oh, letis not have all this fooling around. l K'Diamond Jim If you want to be blue, join the 102. JAMES GRAHAM DAMON Quarters E, U.S.N.T.S Farragut, Idaho Yale Navy 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Track Squad, Boxing Championship Touchball Team, Choir, Orchestra, Music Appreciation Group, Guppy Club. 1942-43 . . . Baker Football, Skiing, Captain Baker Track Team, School Track Team, Headwaiter, Choir, Glee Club, Syncopaters, Orchestra, Moles. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Football, Ski Club, Captain Baker Track Team, Captain School Track Team, Student Council, Third Honor Roll, Vice President of Class Winter Term, Treasurer Spring Term, Business Manager Record, St. Luke's Society, Choir, Glee Club, . . 1 Orchestra, Sages Ravine Club, New York Times Agent, Octet, Dance Committee, C ass Gift Committee, English Club, Zoot's Recruits. ul-Iughieu, uljanglen, HI-Iugess, r1Dangis If you think 5be's good, come to Lake Forest. JOHN THOMAS CURLEY 70 Linden Ave. Bridgeport, Conn. Yale New York State Maritime Academy, USNR 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Soccer, Hoyt Swimming. Golf, Geo-Political Club, 400 Club, 102 Club HUGH F. DANGLER 155 N. Mayflower Rd. Lake Forest, Ill. Northwestern V-12 Page forty-fire GEORGE I.. DEGFNER Millerton, N. Y. Yale Navy 1942-41 . , , Plmlugrapliy Club, Monahan Soccer, Skiing, Wcmcmds Squad. 1943-44 . . . Pliolography Club, Monahan Soccer, Skiing, Wrmcids Squad, Tennis, Pigeon Club, Rifle Club. Din1out , Pete The Hend's on the loose' DAVID G. DUTTON, JR. 117 Academy St. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Yale Naval Air Force Page fm'fy-s1'.f 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer, Class Hockey, Sequcster Club, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club, Weather Bureau, Choir. 1941-42 . . . Hacker's Hockey, Choir, Glee Club, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club 1942-43 . . . Lightweight Football, Hacker's Hockey, Assistant Manager School Baseball Photography Club, Chem-Physics Club. 1943-44 . . . Championship Hoyt Football, School Football Squad, Second Hoyt Hockey Team, Manager School Baseball Team, H.D.A., Photography Club, Chem-Physics Club, 400 ..Deg,., ushorty., Somebody after it. ELIAT WARDEN DENAULT, JR. 167 Newbury St. Boston, Mass. Yale Navy 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Skiing, Ski Team, Tennis. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, Skiing, Track, Ge0rge's Corridor, Dramat Stage Crew. 1942-43 . , . Baker Championship Club Track Team, Shadow Club. Soccer Team, 2nd School Squad, Club Ski Team, School Ski Team, 1943L44 . . . Club Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, Vice-President Ski Club, Cham- A A Cl pions ip ub Ski Team, Pony League Baseball, Glee Club. Dave , Daver , Dav Something makes me think Mr. Spencer is angryfl v 1943-44 . . . Monahan Football Team, Monahan Basketball Team, School Basketball, School Baseball Squad, 400 Club, Geo-Political Club. Willie , Ra-ra , Willie Longhairn, l'Bill', PLEASE, don't talk that way about Helen. Naugbt, Inspector General, Member H.D.A. 1942-43 . . . Soccer, Skiing, Tennis Council, Secretary o ass in e ..DYke.,, upan., All this and crud too. 1 ,K l JERE HUTCHINS DYKEMA 410 Lakeland Ave. Grosse Pointe, Mich. Princeton Army 1942-43 . . . Joint Member Lower and Upper Middle Classes, Monahan Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Basketball, Associate Editor Lit, Non-Coms. 1943-44 . . . Captain Monahan Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Basketball, Assistant Ed't rial Chairman Lil, Headwaiter, Track, Cast of Dr. Fauslus, Cum Laude, German 1 o Club, Walt's Domain, Silent Sufferer of Adjoining 102 Club. Pete , Pete-rah , Petros t? Would you like to wait on Table 1 tonigh WILLIAM PATRICK DYER Clapboard Ridge Danbury, Conn. Notre Dame Marines t B Ii Nau la! 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Tennis, Skiing, Band, Casts of Pai5c'11gc'r o a , g y , Assistant Editor Record, Casts of O11 Borrowed Time, K11iclzerbocke'f Holiday, Moon Is Down, Denny's Pennies, H.D.A. Ucorrl, Casts of 1943-44 . , . Hoyt Soccer Team, Skiing, Tennis, Managing Editor R Dr. Fauslus, You Carft Take It With You, The Great Catlacrinc, President I-I.D,A., Student f Cl W' t r Term, Dissipated Deities. PETER SPENCER FOSTER London, England and 1761 Stillwell Ave., N. Y. C., N. Y. Deep Springs Page forty-seven EVERFTT FRANK, JR. S06 Springfield Ave. Cranford, N. J. Princeton Navy V-6 1942-43 . . . Chem-Physics Club, Glcc Club, Soccer. Skiing, Choir, Tennis. 1943-44 . . . lloyt Clminpionship Soccer Team School Soccer Squad Chem Ph sics 1 y ' Y Club, Choir, Glen: Club, Third Honor Roll, Tennis, Hoyt Swimming. Randy , Funbun , Funsl , Fairfax lt's St. Louix, not St. l.0lIl'l'.H WILLIAM ALLAN GARDNER Key West, Fla. Yale Naval Air Station Page forty-eight 1942-43 . . . Baker Lightweight Football, Baker Basketball, Track, Glce Club, Associate Editor of Record, Znd Honor Roll, Cast of Mrlifre Pullarlin. 1943-44 . . .Baker Lightweight Football, School Lightweight Football Squad, Baker Basketball, Baker Track, Cum Laude, Third Honor Roll, Glec Club, Geo-Politics Club, Editorial Chairman of Record, 102 Club. uEyesn, uzeeny nz-Z-Zu Come on gang, no more quiet riots in this room. ' nh RANDOLPH FAIRFAX FUNSTEN, JR. 19 Wydown Terrace St. Louis, Mo. - Princeton Naval Air Corps 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Football, Hoyt Hockey, Hockey Squad, Baseball Squad, Band. HAI!! She wasn't good looking, but - 1945-44 . . . Baker Athletics, Third Honor Roll, Geo-Political Club. Moon',, Mooner No, no, Hulme! You're barking up the wrong treef' A if 1 THOMAS HENRY GUINZBURG 16 East 64th Street New York City, N. Y. , Yale Marines 1943-44 . . . Non-Coms, Baker Basketball Team, Captain School Tennis Team, Dissipated Deities. Jake the Snaken, jim',, jefferson Davis Down, Falstaff, youyre not running this race! RICHARD BENNETT GORDCN 3723 Brighton Rd. Pittsburgh, Pa. Harvard 1940-41 . . . Class Football and Baseball Teams, Choir, Ski Club, Chem-Physics Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Baseball, and Basketball, Ski Club, Cast of A Pasxvngcr to Bali , Championship Touchball Team, Choir, Rrmrd. 1942-43 . . . Club Football, Club Basketball, Club Baseball, School Basketball Squad, School Baseball Team, Choir, Assignment Editor of the Rrvonl, Ski Club, Octet. 1943-44 . . . Club Football, Club Basketball, School Football Squad, School Basketball Team, Glee Club, Geo-Political Club, Managing Editor of the Record. ..-I-Omv, ..GuinZ., What's mine's my own, and what's yours is mine too, Frank! JAMES DAVIS HARRISON, JR. Ruxton Road Ruxton, Md. Yale Marines Page forty-nine 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Hockey, Tennis, School Tennis Squad. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Basketball, Boxing, School Tennis Squad. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Football, School Football Squad. Taylor Basketball, School Basketball Team, School Tennis Squad, Treasurer of Class Spring Term, Student Council, Decoration Committee. 5-is v 1941-42 . .- SC 1943-44 . . . Taylor Football, School Football Squad, Captain Taylor Basketball, Co- Captain School Basketball Team, Taylor Tennis, School Tennis Team, President of Class Fall Term, Student Council, Decoration Committee, Zoot's Recruits. W'ink , Lingie'l, Winker Scottie , I-Iix Ii Don't get fresh with me or I'11 rock ya! OTT ll. HAY1-IS Spiegel Grove lfremont, Ohio Y .ile Navy Class Socrcr, Skiing, Tennis. Chem-Physics, Choir. 1942-41 . . . linker Soccer, Baker Basketball, llakcr Gulf, School Golf Squad, Chem- Physies, Choir, 1943-44 . . . llaker Soccer, Baker Basketball, Baker Golf, Chem-Physics, Glee Club, Choir, Cico-Political Club, lfnglisli Club, 3rd llonor Roll. I lcrbn, Pink , Pankncc , Herbone You know what l say to you. PAUL FRANKLIN WILLIAM PINKNEY HERBERT 328 Vanderbilt Rd. Asheville, N.'C. Princeton Navy 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer Team, Gun Club, Class Golf. 1941-42 . . . Main Club, Class Soccer Team, Class Golf, Gun Club. 1942-43 . . . Championship Hoyt Soccer Team, Sequester Club, Chem-Physics, Denny's Pennies, School Golf Squad. 1943-44 . . . Championship Hoyt Soccer, Hoyt Basketball, Club Track, Zoot's Recruits, Chem-Physics Club, English Club, 5rd Honor Roll. :fRuSS,,, QfR0osvy, ul-Ioosu, Q-I-Iuggyny -:Hymie-s Yeah, yeah, I know he let me go duck-hunting last fall, and to Sun Valley last Winter, but why couldn't I go to Quebec for the opening of the trout season? I-IEYMANN 3499 Brookside Rd. Toledo. Ohio Yale Navy Pnyi' fiffy 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer Team, Class Hockey, Class Baseball. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, Swimming Squad, Track Squad. 1942-45 . . . School Soccer Squad, Taylor Soccer Team, Sequester Club, School Swimming Squad, Taylor Swimming Squad, School Track Squad, Taylor Track Team. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Football Team, Taylor Soccer Team, School Swimming Team, Taylor Swimming Team Captain, School Track Team, Taylor Track Team, 400 Club. Bob , Hincker , Whacker , Hank,' Take it easy, no one can be this far from school. Golf Team, School Golf Team, 102 Cluh. liskipli Geesaulsse. MILTON GEORGE HULME III 25 Briar Cliff Rd. Ben Avon Heights, Pa. M.I.T. Naval Air Corps 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Class Hockey, Photography Club, Record, Dramat Stage Crew, Choir, Band. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club, Championship Soccer Team, Club Tennis, Editor of Record, Assistant Stage Manager, H.D.A., Bind- l943-44 . . . Hoyt Club Championship Soccer Team, Club Hockey, Club Track Team, Assistant Stage Manager, News Editor of Record. utlebern, mekickxyy u-Iebbyn Yeah, I guess itls merely a small animal scurrying amongst the leaves. ROBERT WARNER HINCKS Pine Orchard, Conn. Yale Army Air Corps 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer Team, Taylor Basketball Team, Basketball Squad, Taylor RICHARD TRAVOR JEBB 150 Chapin Parkway Buffalo, N. Y. Yale Navy Page fifty-one Al.AN G. KIRK ll 200 South St. Morristown, N. -1. Princeton Navy 1940-41 . . . Class liooihall, Class llockey, Track Squad. 1941-41 . . . Second Swimming Team, Coach of Class Swimming Champions, Converse Novice Cup, SCQUCSICF Club. Track Squad. 1942-43 . . . Baker Soccer Team, Cast of Mailrz' Pulbelin, Syncopators, Shadow Club, School Swimming Team, School Track Team, Woolwrirtli Fumigation Committee, Sage's Ravine Club, Spencer's Dispensers, 1943-44 . . . Bad Boys of Main, Baker Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Captain of Swimming Team, Sage's Ravine Club, Baker Track Team, School Track Team. Lim , Tedder , Leisenstein', Vcntre Bleu! Lyttle's Shaving Again! ROBERT E. LITTLEJOHN 33 Sth Ave. New York City, N. Y. Navy Yale Page fifty-fzvo 1941-42 . . . Kippy's Corridor, School Football Squad, School Hockey Squad. School Base- ball Squad, Manager Orchestra, Dramat Business Board. 1942-43 . . . President Class Fall Term, St. l.uke's Society, School Football Squad, Taylor Football Team, B.T.O.,s Champion Touchball Team, Vice President Class Winter Term, School Hockey Team, Taylor Hockey Team, Secretary Class Spring Term, School Baseball Squad, Business Board H.D.A., Manager Orchestra, Cast of Maifrr' Palbclin. 1943-44 . . . The Dissipated Deities, Treasurer St. Luke's Society, Business Manager Mixcbianza, Co-Business Manager H.D.A., Reception Committee, Dance Committee, Taylor Football Team, School Football Squad, School Hockey Team, Championship Taylor Hockey Team, Taylor Tennis Team. Al , Apollo , Admiral Oh, she's just the most wonderful girl in the world! .ag r?3llf4i fQl'.i':' lW9nK'iZff A EDWARD B. LEISENRING, JR. Glenn Road Ardmore, Pa. Luftwaffe Yale 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer, Class Hockey, Class Baseball, Choir. 53941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Class Hockey, Skiing, Class Baseball, Photography Club, Stage rew. iDiZ1,igZ3ar3hg'.Cl:1I1cllnahan Soccer Team, Monahan Hockey Squad, Baseball, Stage Crew, 1943-44 . Monahan Soccer Team, Monahan Hockey, Swimming, Baseball, Photography Club, Chairman Dance Committee, Assistant Stage Manager. Lit , uBOl3,', uB0lDby',, '!Mike What's this about Bronxville? 1940-41 . . . Class Football Team, Class Hockey Team, Class Baseball Team, Choir, Ski Club, Champion Touchball Team. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Captain Championship Class Hockey Team, Class Base- ball Team, Championship Class Touchball Team, Ski Club, Choir. 1942-43 . . . President of Class Winter Term, Student Council, Captain Championship Baker Lightweight Football Team, Champion Touchball Team, Captain School Lightweight Football Team, Baker Hockey Team, Baker Baseball, School Baseball Squad, Ski Club. Cast of Knickerbocker Holiday, and Mailre Palbelin, Decoration Committee. 1943-44 . . . School Football Squad, School Hockey Team, Baker Football Team, Baker Hockey Team, Decoration Committee, Ski Club, Zoot's Recruits, Dissipated Deities, English Club, School Baseball Team. Sherry , Shed , Squint , Pres , Shere', ' God it's fun to hack somebody else once in a while. , ,,, ,M f'f4 8 Efiwie Jack , ,Ionnie , Long John That's not the way it should be. Now in California JONATHAN BELL LOVELACE, JR. 619 Mountain Drive Beverly Hills, Cal. Princeton Navy 1940-41 . . . Choir, Carpenter Shop, Football, Skiing, Tennis, Railroad Club. 1941-42 . . . Choir, Carpenter Shop, Soccer, Skiing, Golf, Railroad Club. 1942-43 . . . Club Soccer, Skiing, Hoyt Golf Club. 1943-44 . . . Glee Club, Hoyt Soccer Team, Skiing, Hoyt Golf Team. u-In, rrLoWyn, ustinky-i Ruts can't last any longer than you want them to-four years. fy, -WNW wa., 4 ,fs +1 qffa, , ., 4 I SHERIDAN N. LORD East Hampton Long Island, N. Y. Yale Army Paratroops 1943-44 . . . Baker Soccer Team, Baker Basketball Team, School Second Team, School Baseball Squad, Third Honor Roll, Gift Committee, 102 Club. JOHN LOWRY, JR. 21 Summit Ave. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Princeton, Yale Navy V-12 Page fifty-three 1 .xi 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Lower Middle Lightweight Football Team. TCTHUS- 1942-43 . . . Monahan Football Team, Monahan Basketball Squad, Monahan Golf Squad Chem-Physics Club. 1943-44 . , . Captain Monahan Football Team, Varsity Football Team, Monahan Basketball Team, Monahan Golf Team, Science Club, 102 Club. Litch',, Big Litch Sorry, Brody, no pros in this game. lilTCl'lll'Q I'1iT1iR LOWRY ' 812 lrwin Drive Burlingame. Cal. California al Berkeley Naval Air Corps 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer Team, Soccer All-Stars, Skiing, Baseball, The Prlrifimf lforeil, Third llonor Roll. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, Soccer All-Stars, School Ski Squad, Baseball, A PllXXl'Il,Lft'f In llilll, Second Honor Roll, History l'ri7e, Art Prize. 19-12-41 . . . School Soccer Team, Ski Team, Club Golf Team, Muiln' Palbvlin, Editor of AlH'lIlil!l'Lil, Sage's Ravine Club, 400-F Club, Second Honor Roll, Art Prize, Shadow Club. 1943-44 . . . School Soccer Team, Ski Team, Track, Sage's Ravine Club, Sequester Club, Chairman of the Miichiuuza, Cum Laude Society, President of the Ski Club, President of Class Spring Term, Second Honor Roll, English Club, H.D.A., Art Prize, Gus , Goose , Thor , The Nose I refuse to go out on a limb concerning the publication date of the Miscbiunzaf' THORNTON H. LYTTLE - - 463 S. Curson Ave. Los Angeles 36, Cal. Harvard Marine Corps 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Hockey, School Track Squad. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Hockey, School Track Team, 1942-43 . . . Club Football, Basketball, School Track Team, Chem-Physics Club. 1943-44 . . . Club Football, Co-Captain School Football Squad, Swimming, Captain Club Track, School Track Team, Chem-Physics. B'll l Dammit, she isn't. XVILLIABI L. MARTIN 64 Vfall St. New York City, N. Y. Princeton Navy Iluflf filly-fufli 1940-41 . . Class Football Team, Championship Touehball Team, Class Tennis Team, School Tennis Squad. 1941-42 . . . School Swimming Squad, Class Swimming Team, School Tennis Squad, Walker's Club. 1942-43 . . . Baker Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, School Swimming Team, Baker Swimming Team, Baker Track Team, School Track Team, B.T.O. Touchball Team, Glee Club, Business Board H.D.A. 1943-44 . . . Captain Baker Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Captain Baker Swimming Team, Co-Captain School Swimming Team, Baker Track Team, School Track Team, Business Board H.D.A., Dissipated Deities, The Octet, Matt , Big Inch , Mattie , Square Head As far as 1'm concerned they're all dumbf' Boxing. Team, Boxing, Weekend Society, Second Belin Prize in P Record, Boxing, Zoot's Recruits, English Club, Tennis. Ron, Rohn , Rosebud , Great God JOHN CALDWELL MATTHIESSEN 2 Oak Knoll Terrace Pasadena, Cal. Yale Naval Air Corps 1940-41 . . . Class Football Team, Glee Club, Class Swimming, Tennis. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Class Swimming, Tennis, Gun Club, Glee Club, Correctives 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Football, Swimming Team, Record, Business Board, Glee Club, Gun ublic Speaking. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Soccer, Captain of Hoyt Swimming Team, Circulation Manager of the If you really want to know come to Mem and ask for Roef' ROGER S. METER 1910 Southwest Clifton St. Portland, Ore. Yale CPost Bellumj Army Air Corps 1942-43 . . . Woods Squad, Monahan Basketball, Monahan Track. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Football, Woods Squad, Monahan Basketball, Monahan Track, Geo-Politics Club, English Club, 400 Club. Ham, '1Mine , Little Chuml' Come, gentlemen, let us not be carried away. STANLEY NELSON MINOR, JR. 3700 East John St. Seattle, Wash. Page fifty-five CHANDLICR MOORE Ardsley Park Irvington-on-Hudson New York State Princeton Merchant Marine 1940-41 1941-42 1942-43 1943-44 Class Football, Class Hockey, Track. School Football, Class Hockey, Tennis. Baker Team and School Football Team, Swimming, Tennis. Baker Football Team, School Football Team, Baker Hockey, Zoot's Recruits ..Wup,,, .fwuppersi Let's get out of this Ere trap. 1940-41 . . . Clan lfootball, Hockey, Tennis Teams, Choir, Third Honor Roll. l94l-42 . . . Class liootbnll, Basketball, Baseball Teams, Glee Club, Choir, Boxing QClass llatj , Clmmpionsliip'l'ouel1b.1ll Team. 1942-45 . . , Taylor Soccer, Basketball, Baseball Teams, School Basketball Squad, Choir, Cilee Club, Assistant Manager of the H.D.A., Business Board, Society ofthe Moles. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer, Basketball, Tennis Teams, School Tennis Squad, Glee Club Co-Manager of the H.D,A., Business Board, Iiditor on the Mi.v1'lJianza, Reception Commit- tee, lznglxsh Club, Zoot's Recruits, the Octet. Dick , Suavc Dick , Swisk Dick , Dickcr This grind is enough to exhaust one CYRII. NELSON George St., Near Landing Lane New Brunswick, N. Y. Princeton Navy Page fifty-six if ' 1-.eh RICHARD H. NEEDI-IAM 942 Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Ill. Northwestern V-12 1941-42 . . . Choir, Record Staff, Class Soccer, Swimming, Tennis, Boxing fClass Hatj Cast of Naughty Nuugbf, French Prize, First Honor Roll, Kiphuth's Kewpies. 1942-43 . . . Choir, Record Board, Club Soccer, Basketball, Track, Parsons Prize, Second Honor Roll, Chairman of Carnegie Music Committee. 1943 -44 . . . Choir, Assignment Editor of Record, Club Soccer, Basketball, Track, Zoot s Recruits, English Club, First Honor Roll, Cum Laude, Chairman of Carnegie Music Committee. Zeus,' That, sir, is a faux pas of the first water. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Soccer, Skiing, Track, Haircut, Associate Editor, Chief Copy Editor Record, Cast of Knickerbocker Holidag, Third Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Red Card, Soccer, Skiing, W'oods, Mile, Record Assistant Editorial Chairman, Vice-President of Geo-Politics Club, 400 Club, Four Door Club, Cast of Graaf Catherine, Third Honor Roll, Terry Prize. NICE., uceoffu, ujeefns uxewien, ..Neu,,, ustinkyny ..Der Schoeneu Ol Southern thursus! Bacchus of the veldtln Band, Boxing. Hotchkiss Dramatic Association. Bush , Guppy'l, Omie CLARENCE BUSHNELL OLMSTEAD 161 Windsor Aye. Buffalo, N. Y, Yale Army 1942-43 . . . Monahan Lightweight Football Team, School Lightweight Team, Monahan Basketball Team, School Basketball Squad, Monahan Golf Team, Associate Editor Rerord, Decoration Committee. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Football Squad, Monahan Basketball Team, School Basketball Team, Monahan Golf Team, 400 Club, Four Dcor Club, Geo-Political Club, English Club, Decora- tion Committee, Secretary of Class Spring Term, Student Council, Sports Editor of Record. Bud , Paint , Paintbrush , Narcy Blobfroy. Having a wonderful time. NVish you were her. GOTTFRIED NEUHAUS 131 South Ocean Aye. Freeport, N. Y. Yale U-boat 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Hockey, Baseball, Choir, Band, Kippy's Corridor. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Soccer, Hockey, Tennis, Record Board, Glee Club, Pigeon Club 1943-44 . . . Monahan Football, Hockey, Tennis, Boxing, Feature Editor Record, Glee Club, English Club, '44 Bridge Club, Pigeon Club, Reception Committee, Infernal Triangle FREDERICK CHARLES PAINTON, JR. Kettle Creek Road Vfeston, Conn. Yale Army Page fifty-seven l W11.1.1AM lfDMUNl1 1'AI.M1iR 100 South Arlington Ave. liast Orange, N. Yale Navy 1940-41 , . . Prep l-oollmall SKlll.lLl,SWVllYllI1lllg Squad,Model Airplane Club. 1941-42 . , . lower' Mid lfuolball 'l'e.un, Dramat Business Board. 1942-41 . . . Baker liglilweigln lfootball Team, All-Star Iaglitweiglit Football Team, l7enny's Pennies, 11.1J.A., llaeker'x lloekev Squad. 1941-44 . . . Sequesxer Club, Co-Captain Baker Lightweight Football Team, All-Star lightweight liootball Team, 400 Club, Panel Club, Class Gift Committee, School Swimming 'l'C.l1l1, Captain Baker Lightweight Hockey. Pete 'Dykema, may l have permission to cat some of my food? EUGENE JOHNSON PIDGEON 294 South Highland St. Memphis, Tenn. Yale Naval Air Corps Pllflf' ,I'f'ff1l- f!1f1f 1942-43 . . . Choir, Rreoril. Soccer, Hockey, Tennis, First Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . English Club, Chem-Physics Club, Geo-Political Club, Choir, First Honor Roll, Monahan Soccer, Basketball, Boxing, Tennis, Cum Laude- Bill , Skull , Palm W'hat's the matter with Joisey?' CORNI-ILL N. PFOHL R.F.D. No. 3 Bradford, Pa. Cornell Army Air Corps 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Class Hockey, Class Golf, Photography Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Championship Class Hockey, School Golf Team, Pigeon Club, Chem-Physics Club. 1942-43 . . . Club Football, Championship Club Basketball, Captain Ho t Golf Team, S h ' Y c ool Golf Team, Shadow Club, Chem-Physics Club, Pigeon Club, Cast of O11 Borrowed Time and Knickerbocker Holiday, Assistant Editor of Lif. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Championship Club Football, School Football Squad, Hoyt Basketball, S h l B k ' ' c oo as etball Squad, Captain Hoyt Golf Team, Captain School Golf Team, President of Pigeon Club Reception Committee, Chem-Ph ' Cl b ' ' . ' ysics u , Zoots Recruits, Advertising Manager of Llf, Blossom Cup. Pidge , Rebel',, Gene She's not so young, anyway it's better to rob it than to E11 it, 1942-43 . . . Summer School, Wo 1943-44 . . . Woods Committee, Skiing, Tennis, Chem-Physics Club. uwilln, me-I-exn The eyes of Texas are upon me? 1 4 JOHN C. ROBERTS Peh Hsa Lu Nanking, China Yale Army Air Corps 1943-44 . . . Baker Lightweigh Tennis, Geo-Politics Club, 400 Club, Four Door Club. ..BiH,,, ..R0Se.,, ..Gui,, Let,s harmonize. ods Squad, Baker Soccer, Skiing. Ski Club, Geo-Political Club, 400 Club, Baker Soccer, WILLIS RANNEY 338 Army Blvd. San Antonio, Texas M.I.T. Army Air Force 1940-41 . . . Skiing, Track, Orchestra, Band, Choir, First Honor Roll, Latin, Bible, Math Book Prizes, Music Prize. 1941-42 . . . Class and All-Star Soccer, Second Honor Roll, Phillips Prize, Kiphutlfs Corridor, School Wrestling Team, Class Baseball, Orchestra, Band, Choir. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Soccer, Taylor Baseball, St. Lukels Society, Orchestra, Band, Choir Music Prize, First Honor Roll, Greek and Math Book Prizes, Spencer's Dispensers. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer, School Soccer Squad, Hacker's Hockey, School Track Squad President St. Luke's Society, Decoration Committee, Orchestra, Band, First Honor Roll Sequester Club, Sage's Ravine Club, Music Prize, Hcadmastcr's Prize, Cum Laude. uspeedyn, ..J.C..., ujoe., I don't care, Ted, you still ought to try the Army Air Corps. t Football Team, School Lightweight Football Squad, Skiing, WILLIAM A. ROSENAU Redding Ridge, Conn. .. U. of Connecticut Navy Page fifty-nine v w a Al.AlN ROBERT SIZLIGMAN lli Central Park Xvcst New York City, N. Y. M.l.T. lfrench Naval Air lfurct . 1942-43 . . . Monahan Soccer Squad, Short Triangle Squad, Scqucstcr Club, Correctivcs, Monahan Tennis Squad, Chem-Physics Club. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Soccer Squad, Championship Monahan Swimming Club, Tennis, Chem-Phyxics Club. Don , U.K. . Sing , Singbad Here I am, Gretchen, gladda secya. RUXTON ROBERT STRONG W ayzata, Minn. Navy Air Corps Page sixty 1940-41 . . . Soccer, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club, Skiing, Ski Clllb, CJFPEMU' Shop, Tennis. 1941-42 . . . Soccer, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club, Skiing, Ski Club, Carpentry Shop, Tennis. 1942-43 . . . Soccer, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club, Skiing, Ski Club, Assistant Editor Lil. 1945-44 . . . Soccer, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club, Dramat Photographer, Ski Club Officer, Captain Hoyt Ski Team, Lil Photographer, Swimming Team, Track, 400 Club, Frenchy , Alaiaiaiaine , Zig-Zag Get-ve it to me. DONALD K. SINGER 225 Overlook Rd. New Rochelle, N. Y. Yale Navy 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer, Photography Club, Chem-Physics Club, Class Swimming. 1941-42 . . . Second School Soccer Team, Second School Swimming Team, Photography Club, Chem-Physics Club. 1942-43 . . . School Soccer Team, Second School Swimming Team, Tennis, Dramat Stage Crew, Assistant Editor Lil, Photography Club, Chem-Physics Club, Monahan Soccer, Monahan Swimming Team. 1943-44 . . . School Soccer Team, School Swimming Squad, Tennis, Monahan Soccer Monahan Swimming Team, Photography Club, Chem-Physics Club, Stage Manager, Business Manager Lil, Panel Club, 400 Club. NRUXU' ..B0b,, No, George, let me do it. I've got the matchesf, 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Hockey and Baseball Teams, School Skeet Team, President ot Class Winter Term. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, School Hockey Squad, Secretary of Class Fall and Winter Terms, President of Class Spring Term, Student Council, Cast of A Passenger to Winter Terms, President of Class Spring Term, Student Council, Cast of A Passenger fo Team. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Football, Hockey and Track Teams, School Hockey and Skeet Teams, School Football Squad, Secretary of Rifle Club, Secretary of Class Winter Term, President of Class Spring Term, Student Council, Pigeon Club. 1943-44 . . . Captain of School Hockey Team, School Football Team, Captain of Taylor Hockey and Co-Captain of Taylor Football Teams, Taylor Track Team, School Skeet Team, Student Council, Decoration Committee, Circulation Manager of Misrbianza, Zoot's Recruits. if uLouie.,, ..Nig,,, uphelperny Hoof., But Sir, it was only a beer and besides-l- . PHELPS HOYT SWIFT 810 Ridge Lane N Lake Forest, Ill. l Yale Army O 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Lightweight Football Team, School Lightweight Football Team, Hoyt Hockey Team, School Hockey Team, School Baseball Squad, Cast of Knickerbocker Holiday, Chem-Physics Club. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Championship Football Team, School Football Squad, Captain Hoyt Hockey Team, School Hockey and Baseball Teams, Chairman of the Reception Committee, the Infernal Triangle, Zoot's Recruits, Geo-Politics Club. ul-Iankn, uvvann Hey, Big, How about W.T.I.C.? I'm getting homesick. E Y 1 HENRY VAN DYKE 155 Scarbourough St. ' ' Hartford, Conn. Yale , Naval Air Force X l l 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer and Tennis, Woods Squad, Railroad Club. 1941-42 . . . Monahan Soccer and Tennis Teams, Pigeon Club, Sequester Club. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Soccer Team and Tennis, Pigeon Club, Woods Committee. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Soccer and Track Teams, School Track Squad, Dance, Decoration l ' Cl b S R ' e Club, Steamer and Woods Committees, St. Luke's Society, Geo-Po itics u , ages avm Society of Main. uDutChyn, rrvanaw A1lwright-so I don't speak de English language. k PAUL E. A. VAN MARX 1225 Park Ave. New York City, N. Y. M.I.T. Army Page sixty-one 1942-43 . . . Baker Club Soccer, Baker Club Track, Assistant Editor of Record, Copy Editor of Record, First Prize for Mid Art Exhibit. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Soccer, Baker Club Track, School Track Squad, School Record for Cross-Country Run, Assistant Assignment Editor of Record, First Prize for Mid Art Exhibit, 400 Club, Geo-Politics Club, Four Door Club, English Club. ..-I-onyn, nveve., Let me remind you that the most beautiful word in the English language is murmuring. ANTHONY 'MARR VEVERS 114 Canner St. New Haven, Conn, Higlipoint, Highgate, London, N. G. Yale Army 1941-42 . . .'Class Soccer, Skiing, Tennis, Hacker's Hockey, Choir, Stage Crew, First Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Soccer, Second Soccer All-Stars, Club Hockey, Hacker's Hockey, Choir, Glee Club, Stage Crew, Member of H.D.A., Assistant Editor l,il,Cl1em-Physics Club, Chemistry Prive, Second Honor Roll. 194344 . . . Taylor Soccer. Taylor Second Hockey Team, Taylor Tennis Team, Haeker's Hockey, Assistant Stage Manager, Casts of Dr. lfauxlux, You Cdlllf Take ll With You, and Reflnnl, Member of H.IJ.A., Circulation Manager of Lil, Choir, Glee Club, Chem-Physics Club, Second Honor Roll, German Club, Cum Laude, Panel Club, 400 Club. XVoody , Doc , Francois , Fran I know it sounds eruddy. but it was funny when I heard it. FRANCIS A. WOOD -A ' 225 Ballantine Parkway Newark, N. J. Yale Medical Corps 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer Team, Championship Taylor Hockey Squad, School Hockey Squad, Chairman Class Gift Committee, Zoot's Recruits, School Tennis Squad. Woost , Joe , VVeb-foot , Banjo-Eyes , 'Kj.P. Now our Lil was a school teacher when she went West, but . . JOHN PHILIP WORCESTER 576 Lincoln Road Grosse Pointe, Mich. - .a Williams Army Air Corps Page sixty-t ICO 1941-42 . . . Kippy's Corridor, School Football Squad, Championship Class Hockey Team, School Baseball Squad, Photography Club. 1942-43 . . . Coach Championship Lightweight Football, School Soccer Team, Vice Presi- dent Class Fall Term, Secretary Class Winter Term, Secretary Student Council Spring Term, Championship Baker Hockey Team, School Baseball Team, B.T.O. Championship Touchball Team, Saunder,s Cup. 1943-44 . . . Dissipated Deities, St. Luke's, Dance Committee, Treasurer Class Fall Term, President Photography Club, President Student Council, Photographic Editor Miscbiunza and Record, Cast of Dr. Faustm, Baker Football Team, School Football Team, Baker Hockey Team, School Hockey Team, Baker Swimming Team, Captain School Baseball Team Saunder's Cup, Baker Club Cup, Sherwood Cup, Jadwin Trophy. Boiler room you say-I'm not as dumb as you lookf, GORDON REYNOLDS WRIGHT 6 Dexter Place Cincinnati, Ohio Yale Army 4 1 i 1 1 At the close of last year the class of 1944 lost more than thirty boys who were, or shortly i would be, eligible for armed service. These boys, l l who under ordinary Circumstances would have graduated with the rest of the class in the spring of 1944, are considered full members, and as such have their place in the Miscloianza. Page sixty-three COMPTON ALLYN 2181 Ridgeway Road Dayton, Ohio Yale V-12 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer, Photo'ra h Cl l Sk ' W pher of Rerlml. 1941-42 . . , Claws Soccer, Photography Club, Skiing Track Squ1d Staff Photo 1' sl f . , . . , . g at mer o Revoril, Drama! Stage Crew. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Soccer, Secretary of Photography Club, Skiing, Track Squad, S Q I l ' ' ' ' tif P iotographer of Rifuril, Assistant Stage Manager H.D.A., Photographer of Miirhi The Society for Better Greek. Wild Bill , Big Bill That reminds me of vacation! WILLIAM DAVID BEVIS ' Scarsdale Manor North Scarsdale, N. Y. Yale V-12 Page si.:-ty-fozir 1940-41 . . . Class Football Team, School Swimming Squad, Third Honor Roll. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, School Swimming Squad, Third Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . School Swimming Team, Baker Swimming Team, Glee Club, Associate Editor of Record, Second Honor Roll, Dennie's Pennies. .Compo Let's strengthen our alliance against Orr and Dyltemaf' l g p y ua, img, ood's Squad, Assistant Photogra- unzn, WILLIAM MERRIAM BART BERGER I 124 Marion St. Denver, Colo. Yale American Field Service 1940-41 . . . , , , , ce resi cnt of Class Winter Term, President Spring Term, Student Council, Third Honor Roll. Class Football, Wood's Squad, Tennis Orchestra Band Choir Vi P 'd 1941-42 . . . School Football Squad, Woods Squad, Class Baseball, Associate Editor Remrzl, Orchestra, Band, Choir, Glee Club, St. Luke,s. 1942-43 . . . Championship Baker Football Team, Woods Squad, Championship Baker Track Squad, President of Orchestra, Choir, Band, Glee Club, Associate Editor Record, Chairman of Recoid Spring Term, St. Luke's, Head Waiter Spring Term, Vice President of Cl . . . . ass Spring Term, President of Student Council Spring Term, Society of Moles, Permanent Class President. Bill',, Bever Duck , Goohlah,' Why don't you wise up and embezzle a grand, Hughie? 1940-41 . , . Class Football Team, Class Hockey Team, Class Baseball Team. V 1941-42 . . . Baker Football Squad, Baker Hockey Squad, Class Baseball Squad, Cast of Passenger to Bali. W f 1942-43 . . . School Football Team, Monahan Football Team, Monahan Hockey Team. Tom , Blackie , Hey You You must of heard of New York. It's a suburb of Greenwich. THOMAS H. BLACK Riverside Road Greenwich, Conn. Princeton Sea Bees 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Class Baseball, Third Honor Roll. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Boxing, Class Baseball, Dramat Business Board, Third Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Football Team, School Football Squad, Championship Basketball Team, School Basketball Squad, School Baseball Squad, Decoration Committee, Chem-Physics Club, Third Honor Roll, Cast of The Moon Is Down. Botit,' K00kie , Let's flake out. ROBERT BOND BOTTOMLEY 16 Springfield Ave. Merchantville, N. Y. Yale American Field Service 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Skating, Baseball, Pigeon Club. 1941-42 . . . Swimming, Class Baseball, Pigeon Club, Kippy's Corridor. 1942-43 . . . Assistant Football Manager, Woods Squad, Club Baseball, Co-Manager of Dramat Business Board, 400 Club, Pigeon Club, Shadow Club, Cast of On Borrowed Time. V Panda , Nez , Gon-Gonn ML Spencer is out. The evening is pregnant with possibilities. JOHN CONYNGHAM W'ilkes-Barre, Pa. Yale Marines Page sixty-fire EDWARD PERRIN EDMUNDS 1941-42 . . . Second Honor Roll, State Latin Exam, Class Football, Scliool Golf, Math Prize. 1942-43 . . . First Honor Roll, Scliool Ski Team, School Golf, Leading Scliolar First Semester, Honorary Member of Moles. .,Ed,. Pick it up Zec Balls. , 22 High Street Fort Fairfield, Mc, Bowdoin Navy 1941-24. . . Class14imi1a,ill,Sc1wo1Skiing 'l cam, Second Honor R0l1,Golf. 1942-41 . . . Monalmn lioollmll, Captain Monaliiin Skiing Team, School Ski Team, Gulf, 'liliird llonor Roll, Honorary Member of Moles. lfyclmlls , Pow 'You sliould linvc sccn llmt Potato crop. GORDON LAWRENCE GADDIS 2481 Stratford Road Cleveland Heights, Cleveland, Ohio Harvard Army Air Corps Page sixty-sz'.1' CLARENCE POWERS EDMUNDS 22 High Street Fort Fairfield, Mc. Yale V- l 2 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Hockey, Tennis, Homer QVia Mr. jerosclij. A man's reach should exceed his grasp. 1942 . . . Band, Syncopators, Class Football, Class Baseball, Class Skiing. 1942-43 . . . Band, Syncopators, Monahan Football, Monahan Baseball, Monahan Skiing. Stever , Captain Steve He's a neatie. 1 1 Upson Prize, Second Honor Roll. Baseball Team, St. Luke's, Third Honor Roll. ujackny ucgiffn, ustann Who'll we get tonight? STANLEY EASTON GIFFORD, JR. 2 East South St. Hanover, N. H. Dartmouth V-12 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Boxing, Wrestling Squad, Tennis, Assistant Editor of Record. School Current Events Prize. 1942-43 . . .Hoyt Soccer, Basketball, Tennis, Boxing, Co-Editorial Chairman of the Record. Phil , Goody , Philbert,' Heigh ho, that man is mad with power. ' 1941-42 . . . School Football, Winning Touchball Team, Ski Club, School Baseball Team St. Luke's, Edward's Prize, Second Honor Roll. STEPHEN H. GARNER, JR. 367 South Main St. Attleboro, Mass. Dartmouth Army Air Corps 1940-41 . . . Class Football, NVinning Touchball Team, School Baseball Squad, Ski Club 1942-43 . . . School Football Team, Winning Club Football Team, Ski Club, School PHILIP GOODHART Overbrook Farm Riverbank Rd. Stamford, Conn. Cambridge University British Army Page sz'.1'ty-seven FIDXVARD BARR GOOIJNONW 212 Iippineot Ave. Riverton, N. M.I.T Navy 1940--41 . . . Carpentry Shop, llailruad Club, Class Baseball, Vfood Committee. I9-ll-42 . . . film Soeeer, Skiing, Carpentry Sliop, Railroad Club, Class Ilaseball, Wcirials c-UI11I11IIIL'K'. 1942-43 . . . Munalian Soccer Team, Co-Manager of Carpentry Sliop, Skiing, Track, Nvuoils Committee. IIiggy , Fu77ball , uI:U77.n Hey, you guys ought to see the new plane I just finished. XVILLIAISI PETERS KETCHAKI S01 McGilura Blvd. Seattle, Vvvasli. Yale Army - Page si.:-fy-1'1'glzt 1940-41 . . . Cast ofRifbu1'n' of Bordrau, Choir, Railroad Club, Pliotogrupliy Club, W'ork- shop, Skiing, Tennis, First Honor Roll. 1941-42 . . . Choir, Photography Club, Associate Editor of Rfrrmf, Skiing, Tennis Second Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Assistant Managing Editor of Rl't'0Vl1, Choir, Glce Club, Lightweight Football Team, Skiing, Track, Member of the H.D.A., Second Honor Roll. ..Ned.., ..Ed.. Hey, NWup! What D'ya say we take a cruise in the Hindenburg? ROBIN DAVID STEWART HIGI-IAM Mill House, Little Sampford Essex, England Clare College, Cambridge, Eng. Royal Air Force 1942-43 . . . Monahan Football, School Football Squad, Club Basketball Team, Track. Ketch He's a beautf' 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Band, Skiing. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Soccer, Basketball, Track, Band, Casts of O11 Borrowed Time, Knicker- bocker Holzrluy, and The Moon Ix Down, Member of H.D.A., Glee Club, Third Honor Roll. ..D0n,,, ..LeS,,, uspencei, The moving finger writes. S4 DONALD S. LESLIE Wolf Road, R.F.D. No. 1 Erie, Pa. Princeton Army 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Soccer All-Stars, Skiing, School Tennis Team, Casts of Nuugblg Naughi and Inxperior General. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Soccer Team, Skiing, School Tennis Team. HDD, ..Dit,,, ..Didi,, Later, Hoose, Later. DENNIS IRVING LONG g A 1401 South 4th St. Louisville, Ky. f Yale Army Air Corps 1940-41 . . . Captain Class Football Team, Class Hockey, Swimming and Baseball Teams. 1941-42 . . . School Football Squad, School Hockey Squad, Boxing, Record, Class Baseball Team. 1942-43 . . . Club Football Team, School Football Squad, Club Hockey Team, Boxing, School Second Go lf Team, Woods Committee, Record Business Board. johnny , Luke , Slewfoot Say, Rog, how can we wangle another week-end? Z- JOHN A. LUKE 17 East 89th St. New York City, N. Y. Yale Army Air Corps Page sixty-nine ,IOHN Ci. MCCURDY 7315 lilbow l'hiladclplii.i, Pa. Yale Navy V- 19-40-41 . . . Captain Class Soccer Team, Soccer All-Stars, Skiing, Track Squad Second Team, Photography Club. 1941-42 . . . School Soccer Team, Wrestling Squad, Track Squad, Class Swimming Team, Class Boxing, President of Class Fall and Winter Terms, Student Council, Kippy's Corridor. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Football Team, School Squad, Club Swimming Team, Club Track Team, School Track Team, Class Ofhcer Fall and Winter Terms, Photography Club. ApechiId'l, Mac , ,I.G. Give 'em hell. 942-41 . . . Mon.ih.in l7null1.lll,1lockeV, and 1iaselml1'11-aim Mac 'l'.1kelive, WILLETS PAUL MCKENZIE Belmont, N. Y. Yale Navy 11341-42 . . . Class Football and Golf Teams, Championship Touch Football Team, Main en. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Football, Basketball, and Tennis Teams, Championship Touch Football Team, School Basketball Team, A ' B ' JOHN MACLAY MIRKII. Meadowlane Farm Newton Square, Pa. Princeton Marines Page Sf'l'l'llfy uhlayw, 1rMirk:, ssistant usiness Manager of Dramat You're nice, fellow, there is nothing to youf, 1941-42 . . . Class Football and Track Teams, Woods Squad, Band. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Football and Track Teams, Woods Squad, 400 Club Alumni. George,', Morcheechee , Chechen Reprisals will come, Paul. You know what happened to Holland. JOSEPH MORSCHAUSER III 125 Livingston St. Poughkeepsie, N. Y. i Army 1940-41 , . . Class Football, Hockey, Track, Chem-Physics Club. 1941-42 . . . Captain Class Football, Hockey, Baseball, Chem-Physics Club, Kippy's Corri dor, Heeled Dramat. 1942-43 . . . Baker Football, Monahan Basketball, Captain Monahan Track, Student Coun cil, Manager of Dramat, Decoration Committee, 400 Club, Shadow Club. Murph',, Rabbi , jack , J.B. ?,, Why don't you go out for sports JOHN B. MURPHY Tarrytown Rd. Pleasantville, N. Y, Yale Marines 1941-42 . . . Class Football, School Ski Team. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Football, School and Club Ski Team, Club Track, Third Honor Roll, Society of Moles, Chem-Physics Club. ..O,N,,, ..O,ner,,, ..O,nie,,, Noonan, ..W0P., Whatsamatter boy, don'tcha wanta live any longer? RICHARD N. O'NEILL Lakeville, Conn. Dartmouth Marines Page seventy-one CHAR1.1'iS PRIQNTISS ORR Wfoodland Rd. Pittsburgh, Pa. Yale 1941--I-.Z . . , Cllmir, Orchestra, Rrwml Assistant Head, Soccer, Boxing, Skiing, Tennis 942--4.1 . . . Iii-mnIAssisx.n1r Pliotograpliic Editor, Wcirzds Squad, Tennis, Skiing. Big W'es l.exec1'et du bonlieur, c'est de ne pas rendre mallaeureux. BRYAN S. REID 788 W'ooclland Rd. Lake Forest, Ill. Yale Marines Page seven fy-1 wo 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Yogi's Correctives, Class Tennis. 1941-42 . . . Class Football,Class Tennis. 1942-43 . . . Glee Club, Chem-Pliysics Club, Dennie's Pennies, Assistant Manager of Hockey. Chick , Cl1icklets , Cl1unk', No, Wink,1 l1aven't got your French book. ll ROBERT WESLEY ORR 280 Searsdale Rd. Crestwood, N. Y. Princeton Army 1939-40 . . . Arrived. 1940-41 . . . Ski Club, Science Club, Golf. 1941-42 . . . Ski Club, Science Club, Track, Soccer Manager. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Soccer, Skiing, Track, Science Club, Rifle Club, Third Floor Choric Group. ..Joe,,, ..Bee,,, ..Hemo,., ..Bye., There's no snake like a slimy snake, eh, Van? 1940-41 . . . Class Football, Skiing, Track Squad, Chem-Physics Club. 5 1 1 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Skiing, Boxing, Track Squad, Chem-Physics Club, Stage Crew, Band. 1942-43 . . . Baker Football, Boxing Instructor, Basketball Squad, Track Squad, Assistant Stage Manager, Chem-Physics Club, Band. Cliff , Dan Beard , Girlie , Stant Yes, sir, Big Mil-ref' Physics Club. GIFFORD H. STANTON 24 Vista Drive Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. M.I.T. Navy 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, School Ski Team and Track Squad, Chem-Physics. 1942-43 . . . Baker Football, Track and Ski Teams, School Track and Ski Teams, Chem- ..Don,,, ..Big Don., b t throu h this French course if you don't Come, come, how do you oys expect me to ge g cooperate? DONALD D. TUBBS Maplewood, N. J. I l Princeton Marines 1942-43 . . . Taylor Football Team, Sports Editor of the Record Spring Term, Skiing, Wwds Squad. Van , Vansacs Pardon me, John, but would you please give Male a pint of blood an JOHN DONALD VAN NORDEN 26 Wallbrooke Rd. Scarsdale, N. Y. Yale Army Air Corps Page seventy-three NX'II.l.IAM G. VOSBURGI1 laikcvillu, Conn. Army Air Corps 1940-41 . . . Class Soccer, Second Ski Team, Class Baseball. 1941-42 . . . Captain Class Soccer, Soccer All-Stars, Ski Team, Class Baseball. 1942-43 . . . Hoy: Club Soccer, Ski Team, School Baseball, Monorary Member of Moles Vossy , SWamper I'm afraid you guys are much too young. 1941-42 . . . Srlmul Surccr Squail, Cfliampiunnliip I.Owcr-Mid Hockey Team. 1942-41 . . . Mun.1l1.1n Ifootball .md lluclwy Teams, Ilnyl Baseball Squad, Glcu Club, Cast of KlIIl'kt'l'lIIll'Ll'V' Ilnlnlny, 1'e.My l.ct's go down In tliu Golf Sliup, Tum. BAKER, WILLIAM, JR. BANCROFT, FREDERIC W. BAUR, R. A., JR. BIVINS, J. ARTHUR BROWN, JEREMY CLOSE, JUNIUS B., JR. DEMPSEY, JOHN B., II DOUGLASS, MALCOLM W. GARVAN, J. BOND Page' svzwzfy-fwzzf' S. JOHN L. WAY 85 Walbridgc Rd. WLS: Hartford, Conn Yale Army Air Corps SUMETIIVIE MEMBERS UF 1944 HOGAN, ROBERT R. , JR. HOOKER, J. G., JR. HOTCHRISS, ANDREW D., JR. JOHNSON, JAMES W. RELLEY, RUSSELL P., JR. PARSONS, E. B., JR. STEVENS, A. DICKEY STONE, L STANLEY, JR. WEILER, JOHN M. WOOLWORTH, NORMAN S BUMSTEAD, JOHN R. ELLIOTT, DAVID W. HARRISON, RAY HARRIS, C. JEREMY KINNE, ROBERT BLAINE STEDMAN, JOHN WAY GUNTHER, L. G. STACHELBERG, C. G. I p m. A V. Q -w. ,u 1 5 '- r V V , - .. V. V gang .V 5-0, 'V is ?.':- , ,, . V f ,.. . v ' 2 ' V 'f .. , f ' 'S 5 1 4 . .- ' -V., - '- --4 ' A' - .f -' . is ' f - 7' 1 V,J- is -flleunfl f- 5f.a V 1 V VV ,VV V- .VL ...Q :V V V. St! ,ly :. Al.. V A, ,.4,' V . fy- - V' -' 'a A . , 'Z' f . 1. A', i- 4, - - fivfaig, 2 .VM 5' N Vf. V if v A 'W V . - fm 5 .V -IV , Vw. gg' a . , f r Az-V,.?.' s'f V' -.:. ' 1 ti, 6, .iv 1 . . ,r 1 .y 4, . . 'f-if :ff-V'f'w! f - I ' V ' J-:VV ' ' - V 1-f 1 Eff Sbaffqr . 0 A-H.A ' +- A F-. -V- 1, .- Q1f'1z'. , , ' K 75 ..g,, .32 gi L, , ,. .A '!v,57'?V x: xfa' q:i?b',, fl?-I ' 2, 'Q-5? k tg. 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'ff V+ ,, .'V,fi' ' f ' '- ew V -fgrwm' , 'V 4 . ,,. V WV, KV- VV 2--uv. ,fV i, N: Xmf- V. ,iV,g. .V , f' V- ,--.V'.. ..' V A . ,Veg - ,V . .- A. W' d,':w'0ef3- V .. Q, - ' fo - V -.f 2 'A 11 . -' , Q31 'f H. Jjzx' 1-427. -QVV ,315 ,' .1A'Jf,,.,V, , M P'-'M f ' V ' ' ' V, ,f' 'V V: , ' . ,.V,:- ' ' . 'wfvy ,V ew ' W -- ,',..f:,,- ' VV -ir' W Q ' , H , Vi, . , ,' ' f V., VV:,g,, V ,2 , --I A ,., , V v -' . f . V ' f . V rr h--V Mg . V -. 'V sv F.: V V ,lp Vfgf . gig HMP , V ,4,V:. f Vt .. 1 A MV: . V H9-'af V, . V, V . V . VVV- q.N5,r,Q..AV .V . Q' 3 . 91.-,FS , 'V , V , V , V. tw: '11 ' V 'illm ' Vr. V Vu V V Q . . Hd.. -MV img IIFFIIIEHS UF THE CLASS UF 1945 Fall Term President A AA Secretary A , President ,...,..., ,,,.... W . H. Mullins Secretary AA A AA.. C. N. Ely Presidentu AAAA A AAAAAAAA C. L. Hutchinson Vice-President A ,AAAA W. H. Mullins Secretary AAAAAAA A, AAAAAA AC. R. S. Shepard Treasurer AAAA AA C. N. Ely Page smwzfgf-sz'.v 1941-42 Winter Term A AAAA AW. Mullins .,,C. Ely 1942-43 C. N. Ely C. R. S. Shepard 1943-44 C. L. Hutchinson C. R. S. Shepard W. H. Mullins J. Allen Spring Term W. Mullins C. Shepard C. L. Hutchinson W. H. Mullins C. R. S. Shepard C. N. Ely T. Hunter C. Garland C f i Pflyf Vwffy-Se President Secretary President Secretary.. Page screzzfy-e'1'glzf IIFFIIIEHS UF THE CLASS UF 1946 Ifall Term .Montgomery . .C. Matthiessen 1942 -43 Winter Term F. D. Montgomery H. Belin IV 1943-44 C. F. Lufkin F, D. Montgomery Spring Term F. D. Montgomery C. F. Lufkin C. F. Lufkin J. Estill Q 947 13.4.5 Page seventy-nine UFFIUEISS UF THE CLASS UF 1947 1943-44 Full Term Winter Term Spring Term Prcsndcnt .... . ,,,.,,,... ....,, D . Ely D. Ely Secretary. A , ..,.... R. Austell J. Zabriskic Page eighfy .ev A, x new .k!xz. '. 'w Pla La ,'s Q J 1 1, ff WV '.4 an f ,Q , I, ,V V . Q M 8395 Q 8 4- ' sg , , ,M :v 5 ' Q: ' 4 f V I 17 ,M K n 4 nr A 5 U . M 3- .31 QL kv. -. am, ,,'1- 5, ,L 4 hwy-,5 .- V , . 1.-0' -pri , 1' 5 1 -'Qhla 1 ,,- f ik , Q1 3, L1 I 4- '- -- , V, 35.1. s., 5, K ., ,Q -' A vu ',n g ' -. - fx' ' -'-rv..-- f -, x VAJ.f,A4, C- 'I A EA it 1.1. K , 'Q .A. I 4' 1 . 1 ,' , ' - Q'-7. sr -' ' ' ' J W' J Y '. , Q -V -I5 i 'f-'N' '. f' ,' ' ,U al Q 'Q I ' '1 --'An Lf fit fl' 7 LQ .f -4'-.V - ,- 1 Y. - 3-, A fag' 4 - .. , Q U.. AA, lp , 1 n ' X 'Xa sg,-' X . .NN ' . .1- Nxx 33335. Riff , I 61,4 ' 'I' rt.. - I f ff? . f 4 ,191- 'f.'xg QA fvlv' ' nu, Qs 1 ,1 . .,,..L? L' -.2 'A I i I? I .if '95 ' Ii' 3 ' . Q 14 1 va ,. . -s , 3 ,,,,,,. 'AW' A I-Fad Y' Pi . , - 1 g A . 4, IJ 3 G 'ff yr- any V x ,A-, '-giffiif K ' , ,fb X rv ' :wff x . w -, :g ' 13'Ef 4 H-?4', Af , f ff' Q g 21' E , , , 5, , I .., ..,4 M, ww if jg mi 5 ' x Y: Q K 3.x mi. 1- i In September some three hundred boys con- verged on the Hill to start the school on its fif- ty-first year. Emotions were mixed. To some it was a new, strange experience, to others, the start of a new fall term was familiar and welcome. Autumn, especially in New England, is a won- derful time of year, and the superb weather gave the school opportunity to make the most of the season. Holidays, old friends to the initiated and wonderful events to all, and sunny after-- noons on Taylor field gave us this opportunity, for some of us the last. Scenes dreamed of out of classroom windows were brought to realization as the fall athletic season got under way. We didn't miss the for- mer school schedule of outside games as much as we might have, as the intramural club system, now in its second year, occupied the speculation of most of the school. CLUB FOOTBALL In the first days of the football season those who ventured the risky job of prophesying the league standings were put to shame, as they picked Taylor and Baker. The season, one of the closest in years, was a neck-and-neck race the whole way. Upsets and close games made Satur- day afternoon the most exciting part of the week. The standings were not definite until the final game, when Hoyt Won from Monahan to take the lead crown, followed closely by Mona- han. Taylor was in third, while Baker, last year's champions, finished in the cellar. Hoyt's big blue team, while lacking material, had enough fight and spirit to go to the top. They improved steadily under Coach Hallis di- rection from their first game until they were able to trounce a strong Monahan team, 30-0. Captain Calhoun, Johnny Allen, and Herbie Dow were mainstays of the line, while Hutchin- son worked with brains and legs in the backfield. Monahan, coached by Mr. Gurney, showed plenty of spark and a smooth-working T for- mation, the latter after hard practice. With their fine teamwork and spirit, the green team was a constant threat. Captain Lowry and Art Brody Limberlng Up were the backbone of the line while Ralph Knode, lired Montgomery, and Ed jadwin led the at- tack. The Taylor team's hard-hitting line and back- field lived up to their reputation and were always difficult opponents. Under Mr. Smitlfs coaching and co-captains, Swift and Martin, the red team had a way of hghting to the end. Clint Ely and Doc Curley, until the latter broke his collar- bone, worked from an efhcient single-wing for- mation, while such bruisers as Kirk, Hayes, Swift, Martin, and Chris Ballou handled the line assignments. A potentially strong Baker team was crippled literally and figuratively by a series of injuries which left backfield men Dangler and Wright on the sidelines. Coach Berry was unable to mold a very power- ful team with star performers such as Shepard, Mullins, and Hooker frequently out of action. The spirit and fight of Captain Chan Moore made up for some difiiculties, but a series of one point losses put Baker in the basement. BERKSHIRE GAME But the football season didn't end with the final whistle of the club games. The following day, amid snow and freezing weather, a school squad was organized and started intensive prac- tice for a game with Berkshire. The squad was lighter than usual, and Coaches Fowle and Gur- Curley Stopped ney decided to use the T formation, requiring close eo-operation and steady practice. The game was played the day before the fall dance, but the boys managed to keep their minds on their business. Captain Hutchinson, calling the plays from the halfback position, and Gary Hooker at the other halfback post provided running power for the blue team. Quarterback Gordon Wright handled the kicking and passing, while Fred Montgomery turned in an excellent job as block- ing back. Dangler Cuts Back ,, f f 9 ii Hutch Gathers Momentum The line was a combination of skill and powerg Johnny Allen, flanked by Chan Moore and Clint Ely, held up the center of the line with Rich Lowry and Art Brody at the tackle positions. Ends Swift and Bonner played excellent ball, completing seven out of seven passes attempted. 4 4 , All Hands On Hook From the opening of the game it was obvious that Hotchkiss had the superior team. The long gains by the blue offense culminated in a score by Wright early in the game. Berkshire's offense was completely stopped. Untimely fumbles held back Hotchkiss for a while, but spectacular running by Hutchinson and Hooker resulted in another touchdown, scored by the former, and the half ended with the score 14-0 in favor of the blue. Berkshire started the third quarter with new Extra Point Pass if -. 1 H U lj, '75 1., - - ln? ni' K ,. .R p5'i' . s wr! 3, I Mau . fl nv ' ,. 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J'-lf nimv M .N -fp J 4, f ,Q- h I-0 ,f A , 3 . ,,,, if ,fig V' W ,I .V Tilson Cuts Through Center LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL Lightweight football enjoyed its second suc- cessful season this fall as the four spirited eight- man teams fought for the club championship. The only thing which might be said to have de- tracted from the success of the season was the lack of coaches, as only Mr. Hale and Mr. Stakely were available. In the first game of the season the Taylor team, led by Bill Jones, clashed with the Hoyt team under the leadership of Dick Sellwood. For a while it seemed as though the Red team might be victorious, but Sellwood completed a pass to Handy to tie the score at 7-7, and the game ended with no further scoring. On the same afternoon a strong Monahan club led by Lufkin gained the lead in the pennant race by crushing a Baker team captained by Rosenau and Pfohl. In the next two weeks Hoyt and Taylor easily rolled over Baker and Monahan. The fourth game of the season proved to be the decisive game as Hoyt and Taylor, tied for the leadership, met for the second time. The blue proved too power- ful for the red and won 25-14. Baker aided by Lufkin Caught on End Run A 'T the services of Pete Pfohl managed to tie 2 out of her last 3 games but could not get out of the cellar. Taylor finished second and Monahan third, At the end of the regular season an all star team was molded by Mr. Hall to meet Berkshire on the 20th of November. The green team had the advantage of size but was unable to cope with the shifty running of Capt. Sellwood and the fine blocking and passing of the Hotchkiss team. The blue easily went to a 9-O victory. This victory closed a season notable for keen competition and good football. ' ' f If Dutton Does Highland Fling CLUB SOCCER The ever-increasing popularity of soccer was brought to light last fall as a large group of boys turned out on the LIPPCI' level of Taylor lfield. As practice progressed it appeared that the star-studded Monahan club would top the circuit with a well-balanced Hoyt team close be- hind. Taylor and Baker looked about on a par for the third place position. However Hoyt success- fully defended their title of a season before by beating Monahan on the last day of the season. A lighting Taylor outfit earned a tie with the Green for the runner-up honors, while a steadily improving Baker team was forced to settle for last place. The competition was exceptionally keen this year, with all clubs playing close hard- fought games. Outstanding for the championship Hoyt team were Captain Andy Coombe and Hal Sloat on the forward line, Dave Gibbons at center half, and Moody in the goal. Under the experienced guidance of Mr. Hunter, the team progressed steadily and, despite a mid-season setback by Taylor Scores Gibbons Saves the Day Taylor, showed it had the stuff to win the pen- nant. Taylor, coached by Mr. Blagden, gained what it lacked in individual talent by having a well- balaneed team which co-operated well. The for- ward line, with Capt. Blair at center and Need- ham at left wing, was particularly outstanding. Noteworthy in the Red defense was the work of Chase at halfback, Bernhard and Wood, full- backs, and Pollock in the goal. Monahan on the other hand was loaded with individual Stars, but the team was unable to work together effectively until the latter part of the season, when Mr. Miller's excellent coaching almost turned the trick for the Green. Captain Peter Foster, Jack Sloat, O. Crosby, and Rux Strong were particularly brilliant for the Mona- han squad. The Baker team, under Mr. Stiles' direction, after getting away to a poor start acquired new life late in the fall, being undefeated in their last three games. Defense in the persons of Capt. John Matthiessen, Gus Lyttle, Ted Leisenring, Ballet Dancing Leaves Its Mark 1g1vu- w Q.-V W- ,ms-QV at . , 5 , 'N . - f fam . Dave Dutton, and Ben Labaree was the best part of the Gray team. The forward line, upheld mainly by Tom Bretherton and Pete Matthiessen, frequently lacked che necessary scoring punch. From Baker's standpoint an extended season might easily have changed the club standings. CLUB TEAMS Hoyt Monahan Taylor Baker Page ninety-one School Soccer Team DARROW GAME The school soccer squad was composed of the six top performers from each of the four teams of the club league. Practice for the squad started the Monday before Saturday's game with Dar- row. Under the expert coaching of Mr. Miller, assisted by Mr. Blagden, a well-balanced team was molded in just five afternoons of intensive practice. At the end of the week the following team, led by Captain Andy Coombe, was drawn up: Coombe at right wing, Jack Sloat right inside, Tom Bretherton at center, Hal Sloat left Capt. Coombe inside, and Bill Blair at left wing. Supporting this last line were halfbacks, reading left to right, Gibbons, Matthiessen, and Foster. Gus Lyttle and Rux Strong as left and right fullbacks re- spectively, and Oren Pollock in the goal com- pleted the best Hotchkiss soccer team since the Fall of 1940. As soon as the contest got under way it was apparent that the visiting team had been over- estimated, and the Blue outplayed Darrow throughout the game, First to score for Hotch- kiss was Hal Sloat, and his team-mates soon fol- lowed suit, rolling up a total of seven goals to the opponent's two. Accounting for five of the seven Blue tallies were the Sloat brothers, Hal and Jack, who, with Captain Coombe, displayed an excellent exhibition of offensive soccer. Tom Bretherton and Bill Blair were responsible for the other scores. Johnny Matthiessen,s brilliant heading, and Gibbonls and Foster's speed and virtuosity left little work for fullbacks Lyttle and Strong, though they managed to get off a few long kicks. At the close of the game, also the end of the season, it was generally agreed that 1943 had been one of the best years for soccer the school has had. The sole regret was the loss of inter- scholastic games, where, it was felt, the team would have met with unparalleled success. NON-COMS A group of some 20 boys, who, because of physical disability or disciplinary action, were unable to participate in the organized sports, formed the Non-Coms. This group, led by Mr. Van Santvoord and Mr. Wilson, lent their badly needed assistance to some of the farms nearby. The boys helped ease the acute labor shortage by working five afternoons a week, and some even sacrificed half of a holiday to work. Much Mr. Wilson at Work Potato Crew of the fall term was spent harvesting potatoes at Mr. Bauer's farm on the Lime Rock road, where the group picked 5200 bushels. Later in the term the boys helped harvest corn on Admiral Hart's farm in Sharon. The last part of the term was spent in cutting cordwood in the school Woods. This was the least of the tasks cheerfully accomplished by the squad and they left at the end of the term knowing they had made a real contribution to the war-effort. l-lusking Com fm' BOND RALLY After the fall term was rolling on its way, a group of seniors put their heads together to decide just what attraction was needed to sell more bonds and stamps. Out of the get-together came FRANK SINATRA. He sings, he sways, he makes them swoon, but he wouldn't come to Hotchkiss, so Don Singer had to do. The pearly teeth and artistically messy locks were Donls, but the voice was a recording machine's inter- pretation of the real thing. The preps and Janie didn't know the difference anyhow. Posters, telegrams and Don gave plenty of foreshadow- ing so that pockets would be unloaded at the auditorium door. Miss Lord Explains Why Sinatra and B. U. Co To- gether f!Y17r'flj-funn' Singnotra Mobbed Wfright, directing the cast, finally whipped some scripts together in History class and held a few confused rehearsals before the final pI'O- duction. It didn't help much, however, for the Master of Ceremonies, Bill Blair, lost all notes but nobly ad libbed his way to Hotchkiss M. C. fame. Bill's introduction led to the hurried entrance of the disheveled Sinatra, chased by a screeching mob of fans Qseniors draped in Doc's best lipstick and Mrs. Stakelyls oldest skirtsj. Don in his alias swayed through his songs mid soprano shrieks comparable only to the prep sec- tion of the choir. Lights were turned up long enough for a humorous interview between M. C. Blair and gum-chewing Brooklyn gal QSherry Lordj, who explained just why Frankie', upset little girls' clockworks. The crooner ended his number and was triumphantly borne down the aisle. Meanwhile bond sellers had emerged from the confusion of the stamps, money orders, checks, stamp books, bonds, l. O. Ufs and chew- ing gum wrappers with an announcement of the total of approximately, very approximately, 81600. Af qv 'N -as mm, .,U uw, FALL DRAMAT The Dramatic Association has in the last few years grown in stature to such a degree that it now ranlxs near the top of the list, if not at the top, .is .in extra-curricular activity. Credit for this steady rise in popularity must first go to Mr. Atwood Levansaler, whose supply of skill, en- ergy, and enterprise seems inexhaustible, and secondly to the boys of the school, whose ability .ind tremendous interest have been remarkable. Ranking on 11 par with such recent I-I.D.A. successes as K11fr'k1'rf1or'kr'r Holiday and OH Bor- roiemf 'I'i111i', the fall production, Christopher Marlowe's The Traglcal Historic' of Doclor Faux- lux was a milestone of the organiZation's prog- ress. Rather a difficult play for a prep school to produce, and possibly for a prep school to digest, Dr. 1'vliIlXfHS posed several problems. Principal among these lay in the general content and at- mosphere ofthe play. A sixteenth-century drama of a man who sold his soul to the devil for worldly pleasures, full of mysticism and theo- logical considerations, is not easy to put across convincingly to an audience of prep school boys. But put across it was, and chiefly by some really exceptional acting ability. Highest praise should go to jere Dykema for his portrayal of Faustus, which, through inspiration and hard work, was responsible for a very large amount of the play's success. The supporting roles of Mephistopheles and Lucifer, played by Wfilliam Blair and John Allen respectively, were handled with great skill and subtlety. In solution to the other principal problem of production, the stage crew devised a set which discarded realism in an attempt to conform more with the general atmosphere of the play, principally by effective use of lighting. And of course behind the whole production, and modestly behind the scenes, were Director Lev- ansaler, and his very able assistant Mr. Edwards, to whom should go full recognition for the man- ufacture of another H.D.A. success. X W, CAST1 Back Row: Steffen, l-laaren, Wood, Labaree, Wright, Bonner, Bowman. Front Row: Foster, Schwalbe, K. Costikyan, Blum, McCarthy, Olmsted, C. Lord, Blair, Dykema, Allen, Crosby, T. Costikyan, Lind, Chambers, Garland, Seaman. Mephistopheles Fausfus and Duke The Clown and lmps THE SEVEN DEADLY SlNS Page Nngfy-S0 wan Millerton Coodbyes FALL DANCE SO-Beautiful Girls-50 was the principal attraction of the Fall Dance, climax ofthe term. The Dance committee, headed by Bob Littlejohn, didnlt disappoint us, and neither did the Decora- tion committee, led valiantly into the maelstrom by Chief Color Expert Coombe. The war put a crimp in the crepe paper, and one end of the gym was decorated in one color scheme, and the other end decorated, period. I know ten people in our class who will never forget Hookeris harem no matter how hard they try. Dyer has a knife sharpened for Hook, and as far as I know Singer is still retchin' for Gret- Chen. P t nz'Hcfy-eiglzf Some of the other minor notes picked up by your Winchell with the dictaphone ears: Oper- ator Lord, on receiving invitation to sit one out, thinks of Bobbie, says, Gee, hey, gosh, I'm sorry but . . .Hg Wupper in Naval Air Corps trousers, avoiding the Duke, sharp Syncopators at the tea dance, Damon to Hulme on Moon's girl, Who's the Ubangi over there? , Hulme to Damon, That's my sister. Damon, No, no, the one next to her. Hulme, That's my girl , Mullins cutting a very sharp rug, Swift leering at the Women as he passes the plate in chapel, the Deities in a hot session Sunday at Mr. White's cabin, Pidge'9 icebox on Pidge, Someone ought to teach that southern gentle- man some mannersf' Handsome ls 3 ,-T A As Handsome Does But What Will Handsome Do? when that wonderful Cverlt WAS OV61' nothing The end finally came, as it must to all terms, much was left of the fall term except the Com- on a bright sunny morning when we broke the mando run, Well-tended mailboxes, and oh such bonds and beat ir for Millerron, a burning desire for vacation. The Old Promoter The Deities in Review 3.1151 Aw r iiiismnvgururiivsisurr-uqim QW... vi' -,w 1 1 W 4 plz. Qi yqgh wtgvwfg' -.f X S , fs ' X, bw. S -J... i' BQ ' '5 . QE. iajws l F , A ' . x i . if FALL SEPTEMBER 18--Good-bye to vacation and back to the books. 19-Curley finally shows up-displays excellent imagination as hc explains the delay. 20- They Satisfy and It,s Toasted but our lungs find out nicotine is just nicotine. 21-Sherry can hold it no longer-we learn of summer moonlight and Bobbie. 22-After build-up, Lord awaits letter. 23-Denault receives consoling advice from his prep advisee. 24-Lord still expectant-for letter. 2 S-St. Luke's picnic for preps. Neuhaus starts prep youth movement while Cyril sings them naughty songs. 27-Holiday-Duke and Bobbie come through at last. 28-Duke saves preps and Up de Graff at song meeting. OCTOBER 2-Sinatra and girl friends give us entertainment as Uncle Sam takes in the bonds and stamps. 3-Doc Curley comes to breakfast still wearing bond rally's lipstick. How I love that tastef, 4-Preps growl across lawn-Skull hides in bottom drawer. S-Poof frowns on Seniors' voguish neckware. 6-Swift's ration points deprive village boarding house--school on bounds. . 7-Holiday expected. Duke in chapel, Today we shall have ---- an air-raid. 8-Stempel drops change in Math class-two seniors almost beat him to it. 9-First football games. Brody too tough-Hook knocked cold. 10-Duke grows red as Dykema instigates new chapel ushering plan, That's the way they do it in Grosse Pointef' 11-Off-day Lovelace loses heavily on World Series bets. 12-Holiday-Hughieys right again. 13-Smoking pledge-Wright seen selling cigars for last-minute puffs. 14-Hooker's on probation. Can he last? 16-Homesick seniors take brief trip to the big city under cover of cabin permission. 17-Amazingly dull sermon fails to penetrate Senior ranks. 18-Evy appears in exotic sweater. Number of Senior waiters quad- ruples. 19-Pidgeon on deserts Next time maybe they'll catch the horsef' 20-Hooker finally put in study hall. Hayes begins to work. 21-Willis startles congregation by extended organ prelude. 22-B.T.O.'s, Kirk, Wright, and Matt go to work in Duke's study, Doc Wieler is interested spectator. 24-B.T.O.'s are driven to cover by attack from Mem. 26-It's Cum Laude day, so Lyttle decides to shave off his sideburns. 27-Singer offers huge bribe to Misfb board to get his name in restrospect. O. K-1 D.K., you're in. 28-Seniors swim through practice as Fowle yields big whip. HETPIUSPECT 29-Duke hands out blue cards right and left. 30-Everybody in New York. NOVEMBER 1-Holiday. Village Restaurant out of bounds-Sages Ravine Club on bounds. 2--Pvt. Murphy arrives from Parris Island, resplendant with medals. 4--74 Beautiful Seniors have their formals taken. 5-This time Lord begs to be in retrospect. 7-Joyful athletes learn of school games. 11-First snow of season, i. e., football season. 13-Hoyt club cinches first place in all fall sports. Harrison arrives- Oh Lawd. 14-Sunday, but football team learns plays in chapel and practices in gym. 15-Snow and shivers fail to keep football and soccer teams from the playing grounds of Hotchkiss. 16-Hooker escapes sequestration as athletic department fights off tardy marks. 17-There go the postal regulations and there goes Knode. 18--Hincks will never come to if her mother comes too. 19-A week's practice proves the blue too powerful for Berkshire. Decoration Committee sees the golden sunrise-one more color to cope with. 20-Wow-the dance at last-No, Betty, I won't tell you why you can't have the gravy-I just refuse to pass it. 21-We settle clown for a week of bull sessions and memories. 22-Weather man discontinues his blessings-Wupper once more dons his towel for head-gear as hat and coat rule begins. 23--The Mole is out of the jug and back in circulation again. 24-Faustus is terriflc. 25-Thanksgiving-thanks given for holiday. 26-Brouha test- Wear shorts, we want to see your legs. 27-Zoot Case and Baur clash over doughnut. No apologies accepted! 29-Will Andy pop the question???? Do they need some ushers? DECEMBER 1-Berry to Hooker, Are the girls you know in N.Y.C. the hori- zontal or the vertical type? 2-Swift refuses to be called Othello. 4-Roho, disgusted after dance, chases 12-year-old but no can catch. 6-Remington buys new knife. Dictator Leisenring fears uprising of armed lower classmen. 7-Wink sheds many a tear in sad movie at Stuart. 9-After 26 years at Hotchkiss, Mr. Fish discovers that a victrola doesn't have an aerial. ll-Duke warns gum chewers to swallow or spit. Heymann spits. 12-Mr. Cummings starts mass migration to Russia by describing nude bathing to Geo-Politics Club. 13-Harrison finally removes his socks from lst floor's best basin. 15-Hold back those swinging doors-we're off!! Four Day Tomorrow lt's a Cold Day and The Brick Block's Closed Thus To All Preps Spring Fever Hoose Drops One Si and Hank First Out Funny Things Happen on Haystacks Three of Bessie's Boys Sunday Foursome and Caddy Mish Finally Makes If 4 f , an M, -we if Y M Hg! f if' 1 if .lf . A 9' v 'Y 5 4 Q if Y I -no-1 as .4 lbw Miq. U3 in Wg, if ki 79 'Q ,, Page one hundred three 'mites :as .1 'nge -l L . 1- --.... S w X ,QV V 1 . K - J: as 'gee :I -' ftp ,- vi 1 ' '1 ' -' , T- lp-',,, ' f '- .. I Gt, . ,T JK, i is 5 a l Sw 'fi if Nawsagw, M .- e! !2 an Q 1 2 Ns X 1 ld' wil Q ,Z ' .- ' 'L Nw u 4' 5 - , a -ls i -on 4 01 I ,QA lr. I ' - '51, ' . , Q Ja, 't il 1 Wu.-v 'CWQ Captain Swift School Team liacing the icy blasts of Old Man Wintei' for the second successive year under war-time con- ditions, the lads on the Hill experienced a term which was high lighted by the annual Mid-XVin- ter liestivities and brightened by the not infre- quent victories of several Blue athletic teams. If the hills and slopes were not covered with quite as much snow as one would have hoped for, this was somewhat compensated for by the emergence of the first Hotchkiss Basketball Team in the history of the school. A winter holiday, coming as a complete surprise, proved to be the pause that refreshed before the agony of mid-year exams. It remained for the Faculty Players, how- ever, coming out of retirement after three years, to provide a fitting climax with their riotous production of H.M.S. Pinaforcv, by Messrs. Gilbert, Sullivan, and Levensaler, on the eve of spring vacation. HOCKEY The hockey addicts, more favorably imbued with naturels gifts than their fellow skiers, enjoyed a season which saw a host of inter-club games and three outside contests with Kent. Underrated at the start, the speedy Taylor sex- tet, which included such varsity material as Phelps Swift, Paul Van Dyke, Al Kirk, and Otis Hubbard, quickly established their superiority over the favored Hoyt outht. Kent Action Shots In the struggle for the runner-up position, however, the teams were more even. Hoyt, led by John Calhoun and Henry Van Dyke, took second place as Baker and Monahan finished sec- ond and third respectively. Journeying to Kent for their first encounter, the Hotchkiss Six battled to a 1-1 tie on poor ice. Scoring first for Hotchkiss, Henry Van Dyke, who with Captain Swift and Si Cathcart comprised the first Blue line, blasted home a shot to put the visitors in the lead. The remain- der of the game saw the defense of Calhoun, Wright, and goalies Hubbard and Lord warding off constant Kent thrusts. In the last minute of play, however, Mclntyre of Kent, the spark- plug of his team, sneaked home the shot that tied the game. On February 14-th the Kent skaters traveled to Lakeville to renew the series. Playing far superior hockey in this game, the home team held a 3-0 lead mid-way in the first period. Cap- tain Swift scored first, the second line of Sell- wood, Lufkin, and Paul Van Dyke then scored twice, Sellwood and Can Dyke making the shots and Lufkin assisting. McIntyre tallied twice for Kent, but Swift clinched the game in the last period with his second goal. A last-minute, freak Kent shot failed to offset the Blue,s early advantage, the score remaining 4-3. The 19th of February witnessed the third and final encounter between these two teams. The Blue Lower Mid Line notched two early goals, and it wasn't until the third period that Shepard scored first for Kent. Another shot from Kent ice by a defenseman to clear the puck slid be- neath the Blue goalie's stick, tying the score. Three overtimes were played by the exhausted but willing teams, the final score remaining 2-2. Club Action Shots T ?'s'f ..,i,.. , .Lf Z M' '55, M. I3 yn 3 f f -at , -QQ, . 'A Q Nfffs 5' , 0' il .I uv lf - l Q ,, x I hx Y Take Off SKIING IX second glimpse of snow ll few weeks later ,, , , . . was responsible for ll club jumping meet, also lht- llotehlxiss sltiers were this winter forced , , . . 4 won by the linker team, with individual places to the conclusion th.1t the school should have . . , A in the following order: Gus Lyttle, Baker cap- been located seveizil hundred miles to north- . - p , Q A h E tain, hrstg Lhnipmzln ofTL1ylor second, and Dave ward, which is .mother way of saying that we Dutton third This Wound up ,Ill the Club Com- suflered pitilully from Ll chrome lnelx ol snow. petition, the final Smmiing being, in descending A week and il lmlf of that precious white sub- Order Bqkcl, Tqylor Hoyt ,md Monqlnn , . , . , , . 1 L . stance at the be 'innin f ofthe term fave enou th w , , . . f I bij 2' A E' 2' The 5141 Club, with l,yttle president, U. Dut- timx or tae o fs to rr f to rt into some sort . . I Y d ll ld h ld if h D ton vice-president, and Mr. Hale secretary, went ,f 4,4 t t, , Q, N . c SNPQ m 0 ll? 'I L ay L Ort LPILUOUS through the usual formalities of handing out WOW Save UP f C 81053 3 Club Slalom meet, emblems to those who had passed their trail tests which was Won by Baker. The individual places and 31507 35 3 matter of fact, did Considerable were as follows: Seligman, the Hoyt teamys Cap- work enlarging and Clearing the trail develop- milk WHS Hrsr, followed by Dave Dutton and ments on Reed Hill, Lack of the necessary ele- Aff DUYYOH Of B11kCI' f1I1Cl Monahan FCSPCC- ment prohibited the use of these trails, how- UVCIY- ever. Flight lt's a Long Way Up Slalom 5 L ' 4 A . V . 5 . 'N lr' '4.i'wi.lVl'ilf'Q' ' I 322, .Y Y '-gli. 1 t v ' .-F fr . , 'V - , 6- 'ss A V K W' ,iritgji '-N. M . A ,, 3 D . is . 'ei V it 0, - V ' x it -Q , an ,at I Q . L SVVIMMING The swimming team, checked by war-time transportation difficulties, resorted to telegraphic meets, the one exception being the contest with Canterbury. In addition to these out- side meets, the Hotchkiss mermen splashed their w ay throu gh two rounds of inter-club competition. Monahan, the pre-season favorite, teamed with Taylor to tie the com- bination Baker-Hoyt aggregation 33-33 in the season's first meet. Fol- lowing this, the men of green com- bined with Hoyt and Baker respec- tively, leading the latter by a con- siderable margin at the close of the initial round. Swimming Squad The second round consisted of regular club meets, Monahan and Baker leading off by trouncing Taylor and Hoyt in that order. From there on in, it was merely a ques- tion of time until the two leaders should battle for the supremacy of the league. Monahan eventually defeated a strong and determined Baker force, as Hoyt nosed out Taylor with little to spare. Lower classmen figured largely in the Green triumph with Brittingham swimming a sparkling 1:1S.6 backstroke, and excellent races by both Motch and Merrit. Monahan again proved its superiority in the individual championship meet by defeating the hard swimming Bakerites. Jadwin, Merrit, and Brittingham led the way for the victors with Wright of Baker taking the diving honors. As the final relay approached, Monahan needed only a second to clinch the title, and clinch it they did. The school mermen emerged fairly well from their telegraphie meets. Winning the final relay by a mere one-tenth of a second, the natators outswam their Deerheld opponents by a 31-26 score. Following this initial triumph, the Blue easily sank Elgin Academy 36-21, but lost to a first-rate Clinton team the same day 11-46. But the season's highlight was the trip to Canterbury. After losing the first three events, Brittingham rallied the visitors with victories in both the 100-yard backstroke and freestyle. Two final relay triumphs, the latter of which was won in the excellent time of 1:46.2 by the quartet of Pfohl, Motch, Matthiessen, and Jadwin, provided the .1:..V. aww' an msn! .aw ,, 1m1mfmawmzw fv:4f BASKETBALL Basketball achieved a prominence this winter never before occupied when, after playing three rounds of club ball, the school team won three games from Kent, Berkshire, and Regional. Baker won the club league, beating out Taylor in the last game, while Hoyt brought up in third position, and Monahan slipped into the rumble seat. Baker started off poorly, but with Hunter and Grimball forming a hustling defense and with Ford's and Lovelace's strange tosses they finally came through. Hayes and Chase sparked the Taylor five, but weren't quite good enough to win the championship. Pidgeon and Lambert did their best for the disappointing Hoyt while Brody, Painton, and Dyer tried to keep the fight- ing Green from last place. After an arduous week of drilling, Mr. Fowle drove his would-be swishers for the impending contest with Kent. Hayes, Chase, Ballou, Allen, and Bonner went to the floor for Hotchkiss, bringing back a 41-29 victory. Co-Captain Hayes took top scoring honors by grabbing thir- teen points. A few days later the whole squad journeyed to Berkshire to play both first and second team games. Captain Brody led the second team to a 41-22 victory with the Blue playing excellent ball. Except for Grimballls substitution for Bal- lou, the first team was the same as at the Kent encounter, and once again, with Hayes leading the scoring parade, Hotchkiss conquered the home team 3 8-35 in a close and well-played game. The following week Hotchkiss invaded the Regional gym for a night game. The Seconds School Basketball Team swamped the Regional V s 33 19 Pidgeon and Garhnkel leading the attack The first teams co captains Chase and Hayes stole the limelight, each tossing a total of nineteen points, and the Regional team bowed to the undefeated Hotchkiss aggregation 50-33. It was the climax 4 of the first season of organized basketball, the sport which has at last come into its own at Hotchkiss. I-I.M.S. PINAFORE The school was sent off to spring vacation with an unexpected treat fresh before its eyes and ears. On the 15th of March the Faculty Players presented in one of their all-too-rare appearances the delightful Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera, Pimzfore. The inherent joyousness of the piece, aided by colorful costumes and set- ting, were well presented by the remarkable though not entirely unsuspected histrionic talent of the faculty, whose individualities were blend- ed and used to the greatest advantage by the always skillful director. Mr. McChesney's performance as Sir Joseph Porter, First Lord of the Admiralty, was a mas- terpiece of gusto combined with an even more remarkable restraint. As Captain Corcoran, Mr. Henry Edgar, always on pitch, gave a heart- warming and delightful interpretation. Equally memorable was Mr. Edward's bouncing Little Buttercup, the most professionally handled role of the play. Mr. Beaumont's falsetto Cousin Hebe was another feminine role well done, as was Mr. Bodel's touching performance as the sympathetic heroine, Josephine. Mr. Berry,s breathtakingly frightful villain and Mr. Kellogg's charming per- formance as Ralph Rackstraw provided an in- teresting contrast. The masters and ladies of the faculty skillfully co-ordinated their movements for an excellent and well-sung chorus of crew and relations, respectively. The Klrbys Arrive YOU CANAT TAKE IT XVITH YOUH As its contrihutioii to the .llllllldl Mid-Xlffintei' l'L'SllX'.ll, the llotchlxiss lJr.1111.1tic Association presented its version ol' the well-lxnown Hart- K.lllliI1l.lIl comedy, You Chlllil Take It With You. This play was in decided contrast to the dr.1111.11ic, e1no1ion.1l l .1ll production, Ui: lfaus- tusf' Paclxcd with action, .1 weird plot, ll very weird l'.1n1ily, and Al lot of slapstick, tl1e play proved .1 howling success with the student hody .1nd inany weelt-end guests alilxe. To Doug Schwalhe and -Iaclt Blum goes the lion's share of the credit, for hoth handled their difficult feminine roles in flawless fashion. Schwalbe's work was a masterpiece of restraint and intelligence, treating his lines accurately and syinpathetically. Blum handled his role of an The Duchess Serves Dinner '-Q V-.- , uv, attractive daughter, torn between love for her .ll'i5l0Cl'2lllC family and her handsome beau, with .xstonishing ease. A minor, hut glowing gem, was the worlc of Veach as Rhebii, the Sycamorels colored maid. The male roles, for the most part, were well acted. liranlx Wfood was aniusing as tl1e income tax collector who found the Sycamore family an extremely hard nut to crack. john Crosby in the title role of Martin Vanderhoff, the phil- osophical head of this strange household, af- fztbly created the illusion of old age. Others who deserve warm praise are Bushnell Olmstead, Charles Garland, Fred Montgomery, John Allen, the sequel to Rheba, and Williaiua Butler, who disclosed a talent too long veiled. Entrance Russian Style Butler Crosby Allen Levo Directs Stage Crew Finishing Touches Rounding Up Props More Play than Work Charlie Gets Womanized Final Dress Rehearsal Dance Committee Decoration Committee Syncopators MID D ANCE You,ve gotta get a girl-any old girl - Monday 20 girls, Tuesday 29LQ, Wednesday 29 QDenault's couldnyt comej, Saturday 34, posi- tively genuine girls. just why the girls were so hard to get, no one knows, but it took a week of campaigning before the bewildered, unsuspect- ing group of flowering femininity finally assem- bled on that breezy hill in the Berkshires where a wolf's howl is worse than his bite. Wires to Detroit melted as a threesome of po- tential telephone operators produced the incen- tive for their dates to travel 700 miles. The voices of Heymann and Worchester did the trick, while the admiral's nephew went further into debt with a singing telegram that finally brought the Ch, how wonderful from his blind date. A worried gent in the form of ,lim Damon sought advice from the experts on what to do with two girls, coming from two direc- tions, arriving at two different times, he finally ended up empty handed. Miss Porter's sent us 21 contingent of seven which did more than its share to make the week- end a success. Of course, Pidge's southern belle lost her voice at 9:30 but that didn't faze either her or the Hotchkissers. Pidge said she couldn't say now but could still swing a nasty left. The H. D. A. came through with a matinee success for the benefit of the mixed audience. Rumor had it that Moon Gordon wanted to take leading lady Blum to the dance, but that the rental agency recalled the costumes and trim- mings. Tea, tea dance, and dinner featen amongst a host of lower classmen torn between the prob- lem of whether to eat an unusual dinner or View an unusual spectacleb followed in customary order. All those dressed first were able to get a glimpse of Errol Flynn and learn how before the feature even got under way. Eddie Witt- stein, in spite of his name, produced rhythm rare to the old gym and amazingly kept it up all evening. Faculty wives had their biggest rush if, fe-A44 vf ffl, a f ,,.,. 2 V an 1 . ,H ,, ' 4 4' v f K 1 ,415 ' 4 jf f 'ff 'J , ,, . XMXV may W: ww, 0323 14 f , ,ZW f Sv a-'1 :J , f, - 4 p. 2 .W--1 f ' 'lf-fir ,Z ff 62 X , , D ,, , , 'VAN .77 F'.b 1 ,f , X I fxxxX XX wx Q 5 ' 4' 4? , , , g A , .ix fi , HJ f X f if . 1 , f, ' . 2 , MT 5, . ' ' w if . Av -3 '61 wx , ? ' if 4 4 , ' in A: W A' ' sf. . E 1 'W 2 5 In 'ff 5 4 ,95 .E ff I5 4, - h vc I . Q 7 f' , I V w 4 7 7 . . L f X A .4 ' 1 . H A 32 Q f if x,v,l?- ,- A .. X , .NA K l 44 -' F' ' .. '9' yr- 7.9.x Ll ' u .' neil? , , . ,g '. fi X ' Y I X O H F Q fn 'I V0 WINTER HETPIUSPECT JANUARY School returns. Theme club arrives with clean slate to permit new accumulations. -Waiters develop terrihc esjzrif de Corps under new sys- IICITX. -Denault after evening chapel: Gosh, what a sermon l -Duke forgets his hat and ends up in the jug. -Berry cuts athletics for fifth consecutive time. -Taber in physics class: Always pull down your shades at night-to conserve heatf' -Hockey players wonder whether Head Coachu Hall will start off game for Hoyt. -Duke's sermon extols qualities of childhood and makes preps feel good. -'43 Misch arrives. So soon? -Walter knows all, but slips up on surprise holiday. -Wupper tells Zoot where to go. -Singer rakes in dough as Don's Diner prospers. -Baker licks Hoyt in basketball, in spite of Pidge's ten points. -No Kent game, thanks to them. -Zeeballs complains: I'm not losing this argumentg just can't convince you guys to believe me. -Hooker sequesteredg thousands fight for room with built-in icebox. -Panel Club works on Selig,s room, puts 400 Club under four feet of water. -Swift on reps: Those guys donit respect a seniorg I P sit at the head of the table, and all they do is laugh. -Mr. Mac seen followed by crowds of worshippers in anticipation of English exam. -Exams startg Mac gets revenge. w'-W' iv ii gfgf-uZMM,,,:f V, 4 ..,.N.4. . 5 WINTER RETPIUSPECT FEBRUARY -Big Dick shows admirers how to swish 'em in. -Hayes pulls quickie in history examg can't write for fif- teen minutes. -Baur asks Spud if one must go to che dance if one has a girl up. -A few of the Navy boys, including Powers Edmunds, buzz in from New Haven for the week-end. -Bedlam reigns as Mac makes love to Ely, Brody makes love to preps, and Hess descends in parachute, while Willis plays boogie-Woogie. -Several preps seen in auditorium collecting pennies scat- tered by Damrosch McFish. Doc and Wupper depart in cloud of red, white, and blue. -Poof gets Zeebeels door out of Memorial coal bin, calls Neuhaus playboy for helping the Bork gang remove it from hinges. -Limburg greeted by tumult of applause leaving dining room, as Malcolm Willis resorts to force to settle dis- pute. -Zoot heard to scream in anguish as Worcester yells, Hey, remember Spud asked us not to pick on him l Lord flatly declares to third floor Mem. that he and Bobbie are washed up for good. Roho madly communicates with female worshipers as Mid-term dance approaches. B.T.O.'s are frenzied as epidemic of chickenpox threat- ens dance. Hook and Baur leave for Sflldjfillg after lights. Decoration Committee starts work. Giff Stanton rolls up. Mid-winter dance and play. -After-dance sentiment: Why don't you give it away, Babe? MARCH Boys trim Berkshire 35-28, thanks to Winkis thirteen points. Judge Dykerna argues for three hours with Judge Leven- saler to determine prize-winning painting in Mid ex- hibit. Berry gives Record staff a week off as he covers three pages with praise of You Can'f Take If wiflo Y011. School rushes to Millerton to find doors of Brick-Block Hotel sealed, thanks to Duke and Dewey. 2, , , w ,Z 9 'rw I f QV b fu 1 , , if , 4, , , f Q 1, I rf? Aw V, W , 257 , f'W?CW I .V KM, Y f r 4, az' X ,, 4 1 V, M 5 - f if In , ,I 1 rf . ,, ,' , X . Mi: Z., vl , 4 , 41 , 1, HV V 'f K vw 1 fl 4 4 is 44 4, ' , , .' 1 1 2 I 9 W I 1 'W M, , -5 ' J ,, ' ' ,W AJ pf V I , i 4 I V . W ,Q , V ' 4 , . , ,, ff ,,, M ,V ,f M ff f' 1' . - , 4 Af ',Qf'f6 , Q, A sw. -If' ' 5 wg. , N rm 5, ,, ' f Q -' 1 s , , , 1' jwp 4, ,, ' , ' I QW ,I 2 f ' ff W A ,f . I f V Q ,5 s 4 br: 1 , , M, , G 5 ,I ,4, V? ,ff I 4 Jah, gat' Y, ,Mfr ' w . , . in '- vw' fy, 7 ,wg 'uf'- , ' 1' 4,4 ',w'.'g..A ' ,, '- ' if Q 4 Q r ' ' .,,..,,Ar'fH,f Q Q . , , ' f . ' -vw V W . 9, , Y ....., , - 7' s I 4' '.', f , -Fun 4 '7- -' .-, , Vw 'pam 'V f -A ,. 4 -4.' , . ' ' 'U V, M x -N 'MW , ,,,, 1, XX on 455, A x'5, wi o 1 lx rn .1 . ,,,. , .-,, .ff ' Q'f!L , f 'f7:Qib'9 7 hfwfnftm' N 4f,,,v.--1-ff' ' ,,1vMf'., ' .f . QI., Wi ,lf 'Q f ,, 7 X X 'Y a V I ' ,.Q?' - ' - K 2' ,iff ,I sign-2' of - ' .-f,97 YQ' l',,h Q. I IW, V n I . .4 , I M ., . r I, W. , a , ,N v , I . 1. V. . , , , 4' . g . . ' 7. , 1 0, I , .l ?'V,,l I -i Q . ' , ' , ' . ' , . ,, .av k,.mQ,, , 1 , . A 0 , , . -. '- Q fr if ' f , 517 I 1 .4 V, we V an 4 . Q , , Ms Q 1- nv ' , ,S A Ngtlllffi x nxx 4 cient W t 9 'B l LTCHKI' , KUHKI' r qnxw Q N if 5 H 5 If Mix it Q 0- 'f 'f 'S 0 35 V N IA, i,, Baseball Squad WE RETURNED FOR THE LAST AND BEST TERM of the school year to a setting of sleet, rain, and mud, but in two weeks the last cold spell ended, and the prettiest spring for several years settled over the countryside. With the rebirth of nature came a revival of spirits that was echoed in the rush for the ath- letic lields, in the hopeful anticipation of holi- days to come, and for the Seniors in particular, in the climax of their careers at Hotchkiss. BASEBALL The baseball season this year, unhampered by the club system, was far superior to that of 1943. A comparatively green team ripened into a bat- tling nine which won five, tied one, and was de- feated only once. With Captain Gordon Wright the only returning veteran, Coaches Fowle and Gurney molded a club which, although it en- countered afternoons when nothing seemed to click, rose to corresondingly magnificent heights when the chips were down. The first contest for the Blue resulted in a not-too-diflicult triumph over the ragged lads from Berkshire. The 10-1 massacre witnessed u Hotchkiss team take the field which had the combination of Sherry Lord and Bob Wolcott as catcher and pitcher respectively, an inlaeld which included Hubbard at first, Wright at second, Lambert at short, and Jack Sloat at third, and the outfield of Tom Guinzburg in left Held, Charlie Lord in center, and Henry Van Dyke in right. Errors, clutch hitting, and fine pitching paved the way for this initial victory. Gaining experience and confidence the Blue took the measure of Regional High in their next encounter, 3-0, with Sellwood and Sommers do- ing the twirling. A strongly reputed team from Arlington High, Poughkeepsie, N. Y., became mere putty in the hands of Wolcott as he held them down to one run while his mates garnered four in their turn. But all those triumphs seemed to stack up the chips for an over-conhdent Hotchkiss team, which was held to a 1-1 tie by the supposedly weak Salisbury club. The game, decidedly a moral victory for the visitors, Went twelve spir- ited innings before the boys decided to call it a day. A partial revival occurred when the nine Wolcott Delivers Capt. Wright Lord Takes to the Air 'i met and defeated the Regional team for the sec- ond time, this one ending 6-1. When the day for the much talked about game with Kent finally arrived, a rejuvenated, scrap- ping nine went down and completely outfought the Kentsters in an exciting 3-2 victory. Into this one contest was rolled all the outside games that have been lacking in the past few years, and to win it the Blue had to come from behind. Bob Wolcott pitched one of the best games ever hurled by a Hotchkiss man, allowing but three hits, issuing no bases on balls, and striking out nineteen men. Both infield and outfield alike played creditable ball, and a timely squeeze bunt coupled with alert base running produced the winning tallies. The triumphant team that re- turned home that night was well satisfied, hav- ing completely earned the victory that meant so much to all. As an almost anti-climax, the third Regional game was played, and because of the Seniors' exams, minds were not altogether on baseball. The result was a lack of any hitting at all, errors, and poor base running, which combined into a 3-1 win for Regional. Not to be forgotten dur- ing the spring were che two second team games against Kent and Regional, the former of which we lost by a 2-0 count to the smoother-function- ing machine of Kent While the Regional game was so easy that Manager Degener was patrolling the right Held sector. Thus ended a good season which saw the Blue alternately rise to high and sink to low levels of play, with the highest of them all coming when it was most needed. Up on Taylor Field this spring many baseball enthusiasts participated in an active Pony league consisting of six teams named after a few of those of the Major leagues. Messrs. Hall, Howe, Case, and Stiles served as coaches and umpires. After two full rounds of games, Lanse Holden pitched his Cards to the championship, dropping only two contests. The victors were aided at the plate and in the field by Mark Knowlton. Close behind the winners were the Red Sox and Tigers in a deadlock for second place, the latter gaining the runner-up crown by winning all the second round games. The Red Sox were ably led by the battery of Zabriskie and Buff Campbell while Martin Le Boutillier pitched good ball to Charlie Garland for the Tigers and Dave Steffen took care of a great deal of the hitting. Track Squad TRACK Again the Track Teani was forced to resort to inter-club meets. Although at first glance the clubs did not seem very evenly balanced, all the contests were very close. Before the Seniors left, two all-star meets were run, both of which were taken by Baker, followed closely by Taylor. Monahan was a very near third, but Hoyt, ham- pered by the scarcity of men, failed to gain many points. All of the club records were broken with the exception of the relay, which was tied. Mike Bonner's broad jump of 19' UIQ was almost a sensation. The school track team, led by Captain Hugh Dangler, performed exceptionally well in the three scheduled outside meets. In the first en- Capt. Dangler Irzgi one lzmftifwl firtfzfjf counter with a visiting team, we trounced Ar- lington High School from Poughkeepsie. We swept all the running events except for the mile, in which Vever's 4: 52.3 won a first. Ed Motch's hundred in 10.3, combined with his second place in the shot, contributed greatly to the success of the team. Hugh Dangler took the 440 and 880 with ease, followed by Martin in the former and Montgomery in the latter. Ed ,Iadwin won the 220 in 23.9, with Herb Dow a very close second. In the weights both Clint and Don Ely excelled, but we took a beating in the high jump and pole vault, where Campbell's 10' 1 was good only for a third. The Hnal score was Hotchkiss SSM -Arlington 39 M. Four days later came the contest with Pitts- field High School in Massachusetts. In this meet Hotchkiss swept every event as Don Ely starred in the high jump, reaching the height of 5' 7 . The leading scorer of the day, however, was Hincks, who won the pole vault, and achieved second in the high jump and first in the javelin throw. Again the relay team was victorious in finishing the meet with a Hnal score of 84-11. ' After the departure of the Seniors, the lower classmen, with the aid of Matthiessen's two firsts in the high and low hurdles, defeated the Berkshire team 87-20. Much praise for a success- ful track season should go to our coaches, Messrs. Berry, Smith, and Kellogg, as well as to Captain Hugh Dangler. .L-sv in 4613001 Tn V, W f R W 5 Q E P, , -.r 'QW545 ,- 9' ,pf 452 44 A ,W f Vf L 4 If If U ML. ,wb ,K frm 7 . , 1 1 J ,K ,W ...m,,, We y Tennis Team TICNNIS The tennis season was completely successful this spring, as the sparsity of outside matches was made up for by a well-run club round, and the whole affair was climaxed by an exciting singles tournament, completed the day before Gradu- ation. Both outside matches were with Kent, one at Lakeville and one there, each of which was Won Capt, Harrison ' If HH' Illhlflltti li1l'tl1f-lj-f1l'O by the home team. The score of the hrst was Hotchkiss 6, Kent 3, and the second was Kent 5, Hotchkiss 4. Bonnie, Harrison, Hayes, Grim- ball, Gibbons, and Coombe played for the Blue in that order and comprised a very powerful team, handicapped by lack of practice. Baker won the Club League easily, encounter- ing spirited but ineffectual competition from the other contestants. With a strong team of Harri- son, Grimball, Shepard, Matthiessen, Williams, and Hunter, she only needed to carry one match through to the doubles to win. In the tournament, after three days of battle, Dick Grimball, Doc,' Bonnie, Gordie Wright, and Andy Coombe turned up in the semi-finals. Doc and Gordie defeated Dick and Andy, re- spectively, and then turned on each other. Wright won decisively by a score of 6-3, 6-0, to become school champion. Much credit is due to Mr. Hoey for his efficient organization and leadership and to Bill Black and his assistants for their splendid rejuvenation of the courts. Golf Team GOLF In golf, the powerful Monahan squad swept away all opposition to lead that department, with 5 matches won and 1 tied. Ably captained by Si Cathcart and boasting yet another member of the school squad, Walt Robbins, their only op- position loomed from Hoyt and Taylor, but in Capt. Pidgeon the end they mustered enough power to forge ahead despite Pidgeon's and Hulme's best eiforts. On May 6, the school team journeyed to Taft to test its prowess against the men of that school, and they found that they had enough to easily down the best that Taft had to offer. Walt Robbins, Si Cathcart, and Skip Hulme drubbed their opponents S-1. Pidgeon disposed of his man 4 and 2, and Hulme of his 5 and 4, while Cath- cart ran wild with 7 and 6. Robbins lost, 1 down, but both best balls triumphed. At the end of the qualifying round of the school tournament, Walt Robbins was the un- disputed winner of the Blossom Cup for the medalist with a sparkling 74, while Eugene Pidgeon took runner-up's honor with a 78. The Tournament's match play then got under way. As was expected, the finals brought together Robbins and Pidgeon for the 36 hole test. Rob- bins was just too steady for his opponent and finally won, nine and eight, to gain full posses- sion of the school's golf honors, the Blossom and Probasco Cups. Page one lzzmdred twenty th ce mi: ' p aft 1 i-A 5 ! a 1 5 , . ' x K . . I C Neuhaus as Catherine SPRING PLAYS This spring the H.D,A. experimented with an idea new to the Hotchkiss stage, presenting two short plays at one performance. Director Levan- saler chose for the first , Refund',, a farce con- cerning a disillusionad prep school student who The Captain Refuses has been a failure in life and returns to demand his tuition fees back. The one act play was an adaptation of that of Percival XVilde from the original German work by Fritz Karinthy. Some- how this performance did not measure up to high standards which Messrs. I.evansaler's and Ed- wards, previous attempts had set. In Refund everything departed from the usual I-I.D.A. pro- cedure. The set was of the constructive, that is, it showed only the outlines of objects in black space and made no attempt at realistic design. The acting was as good as could be expected from a dull script. Olmstead and Allen turned in satisfactory performances in an inferior play. In the aftermath, however, with the return and farewell appearances of several of the more familiar figures on the Hotchkiss stage, Great Catherine achieved a rousing success. The play, .1 satire on Iiuropean politics, was impressively staged in spite of the unfavorable weather con- ditions that prevailed during the first two acts. In his first, but what the audience soon wished were not to be his last performance in a Hotch- ltiss role, jeff Neuhaus dominated the production with his very convincing and well-enunciated portrayal of Catherine. Alere Ilyltema played his final H.IJ.!X. role as a drunken adviser to the very hilt, and Charles Garland also gave a good performance of a typical Ifnglish gentleman. Upon the shoulders of these three rested the bur- den of the acting and to them should go a large proportion of the credit for the success of the production-a success in which Directors, Stage Crew, Business Board, and actors all combined to provide the finished touches to another suc- cessful year in the long history of the H.D.A. Catherine Arises lnanilii 1 1111 lg, ! f af A Trip to the Zarina GRADUATION Once again graduation was moved ahead three weeks in order to give the weary seniors a short respite before their Uncle Samuel should put the touch to them. May 27th was the actual date of the ceremonies, but the days preceding the happy event were not devoid of excitement. What with tournaments, strength and Brouha tests, teas, and the insignificant but apparently necessary ordeals of exams, the sand in the glass seemed to run out all too quickly. On Friday evening before the eventful day, the class of '44 held their banquet in the school dining hall. With none allowed to procure a pass to the proceedings except for the honored few whose privilege it was to wait on their elders, much of what went on will probably never be known. But a trustworthy source has it that Miss Tobin produced a truly noteworthy meal, heightened and interrupted by the public appear- ances of various well-known campus characters Don Kept 'ern Laughing Farewell Banquet jonny Allen Pleads With Professors of the class, namely, Moon, Zee, Lips, Skull, and Ro. That prizes for almost everyone for almost anything at all were doled out seems fairly eer- tain. They whisper too that the speeches by Per- manent Class Secretary Calhoun and by Master of Ceremonies Lyttle were vociferously hailed, especially when the Prex. introduced the element of a certain party to be held the next night- which same was held, and the like of which New York and the neighbors and the cops and the guests and the hosts could never again survive. Graduation Day itself, with families throng- ing the halls and grounds, was held in a simple but serious vein. A buffet lunch, followed by coffee at the Van Santvoords, was climaxed by Graduation exercises. Diplomas and awards in many forms were dispensed by Messrs. Fowle and Van Santvoord. 'iFair Hotchkiss followed, and the class of 1944 passed down the aisle to become a part of the tradition and history that is the essence of Hotchkiss. Jr ba 49' l XX '77 Dangler Receives Trea SPRING P1ETPiUSPEUT APRIL -Spring term opens in flurries of snow. -Doc chains Catherine to desk, whiplashes thirty themes out of her. -Blair Childs warms up baseball team. -Swift makes trip to Poughkeepsie, lives in mortal fear of a certain Millerton bartender. -Sauve Dick Needham returns, starts writing book on how to prolong vacation. -Tubbs comes home for a big visit. -Dangler shows up and tells strange tales of lIlll'lIf pro- cedure. -Seniors wear out pants on C. E. E. B. exams. -B. T. Ofs start planning new trip to Ethel Walkei s. -Duke kills B. T. O. week-end plans with edict on 70W QIVCFZIKCS. -Bork borks Gimbel out of heavyweight crown. -CI'II!l sweeps senior class, starting with Dykema and 400 Club. -Ifirst ball game. Gurney pulls beautiful play and we beat Berkshire 10- 1. -Misch board eats up three years' profits at feed. MAY -The birth of Ugh! ughl dearie ll' Van Marx petrihed by rumors of All-Africander-Nilv ker-Zulu-Kaffer track team. -Ofhcial cramming season opens for exams. Wood puts early Biology Prize on brag sheet. Stylizecl set and lighting grace Rc'f1z11cf and CclllJt'1'im', respectively. -Dramatists eat income with Harry Jones' approval and assistance. English exams and ofhcial cramming season. Panel Clubls last meeting most successful, with biggest score of year. Seniors' parents help lock trunks as class of '44 passes into history. 'Q vi UM ve wi x Page one IlIlHC7l't'll ff4'emfy-5grg o ,, 2 Fl: , S' ' if vb girl! , qi . , M I' -., , 3 ...- -.vw ,- ' 1. ' . ak 'Wff ' '.l?'3i1'3x'f. Jffffffs. f .1f,..m,, f uf. SlfNlOR Ml'lMl5liRS G. W1'igl1t, Chairman A. Coombe, Secretary J. C. Calhoun H. Danglcr J. Dykcma S. Cathcart P. Swift S. Hayes T. Lycrlc F. Painton JUNIOR MEMBER D. Ely I rfc fl lfffffrffwrl f1f'f1ff.f1-flglfi STUDENT UUUNUIL UPPIQR M C. Hutchinson C. Shepard J. Allen W. Mullins C. Ely T. Hunter C. Garland LGWER MID MEMBFRS C. Lufkin F. Montgomery C. Matthiesscn J. Escill THE MISCHIANZA BOARD Thornton H. Lyttle, Chairman V. Anderson Coombe, Managing Editor Gordon R. Wright, Photographic Editor Richard H. Needham, Editor Alan G. Kirk H, Business Manager Thomas P. Stewart, Editor Phelps H. Swift, Circulation Manager Kent R. Costikyan, Editor Peter Matthiessen, Advertising Manager Page one lzzfffclrfd X Pugi ' mm om 11unrlf'1'ff' flflffll THE HEUIIHIJ ISUAHIJ Wfilliam U. Blair, Chairman Thomas H. Guinzherg, Managing Editor Everett Frank, Editorial Chairman Gottfried Neuhaus, Assistant Editorial Chairman Cyril I. Nelson, Assignment Editor Frederick C. Painton, Sports Editor C. Bushnell Olmsted, Feature Editor Richard T. Jebb, News Editor Gordon R. Wright, Photographic Editor Anthony M. Vevers, Assistant Assignment Editor Hugh F. Dangler, Business Manager Charles S. Garland, Assistant Business Manager Roger S, Meier, Circulation Manager Richard C. Egbert, Advertising Manager Robert XV. XWilliams, Exchange Editor Francis F. Randolph, Assistant Exchange Editor Douglas Schwalbe, Assistant Advertising Manager Peter Haaren, Assistant Circulation Manager 11 THE LIT BOARD Silas S. Cathcart, Chairman Horace S. Brown, Editorial Chairman Peter S. Foster, Assistant Editorial Chairman Alain Seligman, Photographer Ruxton R. Strong, Business Manager Eugene Pidgeon, Advertising Manager Francis Wood, Circulation Manager gg,.wn. i Page one Izzuzdred flzirfy-0116 Q CUM LAUIJE SOCIETY Elccfed in October: ElC'f'ff'dfl1 May: William D. Blair Peter S. Foster Everett Frank Thornton H. Lyttle Cyril I. Nelson john C. Roberts Francis A. Wfood U4 4 If I fired f1z1'rfjf-two Michael K. Bonner George P. Cahill V. Anderson Coombe Jonathan B. Lovelace Gottfried Neuhaus William E. Palmer CLASS GIFT COMMITTEE RECEPTION COMMITTEE H. Dangler H. Van Dyke, Chairman J. Lovelace Kirk C. Pfohl B. Olmsted J. Worcester Needham Pidgeon Strong Page one hzmclred thirty-three IUKIYS SOCIETY NWOODS COMMITTEE Roberts, President A. Coombe, Chairman C. Cnlho A. Coombe A. Kirk C. Bnllou C. Shepard B. Labaree E. Jadwin 7 f f If fl fllzffjf-fbffrff' Crosby C. Calhoun M. Calhoun C. Shepard D. Steffen T. Hunter C, linllou W. Runney P. Van Marx A. Dutton r.x1 1 ' THE GLEE Ist Tenor D. Clitter W. Herbert P. Mead C. Robinson D. Seaman S. Sicard 2nd Tenor NI. C. Calhoun J. Damon D. Fardelmann W. Frey R. Needham F. Wood I st Bass M. Bonner G. Cahill H. Dangler E. Frank C. Garland R. Littlejohn J. Lowry C. Olmsted 2nd Bass THE CHOIR H, Bowman Soprano Alto D' Bryan R. Davis W. Herbert ghlgzrulkshank H. Duckham J. Parsons R' E Lgton G. Labalme C. Robinson ' g ert McCarthy F' Fullsten P. Plumley T. Guinzburg W. Westover Tenor W' Rfjsenblum J. Zabriskie R7 Wllllams S. Austell W. Campbell D. Clirter W. Frey G. Nixon D. Seaman S. Sicard Y' ' 3' 1' 1' 'L' ' ' T' ul - L. Wilkinson F. Wood E. Woollen Bass S. Cline W. Cruikshank W. Dana W. Davis sam .wx f ...-, M r .e .1 T, .. -mr-. Y- . ..,,,. . -'A' - --'-H Q f wx'--'wzsuw vw.. - 4 .M b- R, ,,.,,,., . ,. ..,v,3.f-...ap-Q N. deCordova C. Pleischmann F. Funsten G. Mead C. Nelson W. Palmer H. Robinson W. Rosenblum F. Wfhitcomb Page one lzzmclred fhz fy iz e ,Mfr .,wQ,.,g!5 THE ORCHESTRA Crosby, Presiden t C. Chase G. C.1l1ill H. Dnngler Roberts T. Stewart B. Zempsky Inge one Izzrndred flzirfy-sz'.v W. Mullins C. Brower H. Connell S. Twitcllell G. Nixon W. McKee J. C. Roberts R. S. Bryan A. I. Hunting D. N. Platt A. S. Bonner D. P. Seaman F. W. Woodward R. A. Chambers T. P. Stewart B. L. Zcmpsky W. M. Mullins J. W. Sloat W. G. Prey G. W. Mead BAND F. F. Randolph J. E. Seitncr K. R. Costikyan B. W. Labarce R. C. Egbert C. C. Brower W. B. Kclly G. F. Cahill C. R. Chase W. S. Robbins H. B. Bowman T. W. Costikyan T. W. Merritt 1 www' W. -.rw..u,.. - -,-:uaixpf fg--f - ' ... v--.f -'Azz-nuun'.... -. PRIZES THE TREADWAY MEMORIAL PRIZE, in memory of Charles Denton Treadway of the Class of 1914, to be awarded to that member of the Senior Class who by his industry, manliness, and honorable conduct has done the most for the life and character of the boys of the school, was awarded to Hugh Frost Dangler. THE ESTILL PRIZE, founded by Mr. J. G. Estill for that member of the Upper Middle Class who has done the most to elevate the scholarship, spirit, and general tone of his class, was awarded to William H. Mullins. THE HOYT OGDEN PERRY PRIZE, presented to that member of the Senior Class who has completed his school course in four years and taken part extensively in school activities while excelling in deportment and punctuality, was awarded to Silas S. Cathcart. THE HEADMASTER'S PRIZE, offered to that member of the Senior Class, who has maintained the highest rank in scholarship for the last three years of his school course, was awarded to John C. Roberts. THE FIDELITY PRIZE, offered to that holder of a full scholarship who, during the year, has been most manly, industrious, and generally excellent in scholarship and con- scientious in the performance of duty, was awarded to Peter S. Foster. THE TERRY PRIZE, awarded to that member of the three upper classes who writes the best essay on some topic relating to American Citizenship, was awarded to Gottfried Neuhaus. THE CHARLES E. LORD PRIZE, is given to that member of the Senior Class who during his course at school has shown the greatest amount of improvement, perseverence, and courage in the face of difficulty and was awarded to John O. Crosby. Page one hundred thizfy sewn THE MUSIC PRIZE, offered to the pupil who has made the greatest progress in music, was awarded to John C. Roberts. THE ART PRIZE, offered to that pupil who has made the most progress in art, was awarded to Thornton H. Lyttle and Anthony M. Vevers. THE PARSONS PRIZES for excellence in Senior and Upper Middle History were awarded to Cyril I. Nelson. THE I-. W. MURPHY PRIZE for excellence in Mathematics was awarded to John C. Roberts. THE ALLEN PRIZE is awarded to that member of the Senior Class who, in the opinion of his classmates and the resident masters in the senior dormitories, is the most notable for his conduct, conscientiousness, and future promise, and was awarded to V. Anderson Coombe. ge one Izzzndred fl11'rfy-wiglzf ATHLETIC AWARDS THE JADWIN TROPHY, awarded to the best athlete in the Senior Class, was presented to Gordon Wright. THE WYCKOFE CUP, presented to that member of the track team scoring the most points, was awarded to Hugh Dangler. THE WILCOX CUP, to that member of the baseball team with the highest batting average, was awarded to Jack Sloat. THE SAUNDERS CUP, presented to that member of the baseball team through whose hitting the most runs are directly scored, was awarded to Gordon Wright. THE CONVERSE CUPS, for boys in swimming contests, were awarded to Edgar .Iadwin in the open class and to C. N. Pfohl in the novice class. THE SHERWOOD CUPS, for the winner and runner-up in the school tennis tourna- ment, were awarded to Gordon Wright, the winner, and Sevier Bonnie, the runner-up. THE PROBASCO CUPS, for the winner and runner-up in the school golf tournament, were awarded to Walter Robbins, the winner, and Eugene Pidgeon, the runner-up. THE BLOSSOM CUPS, for the medalist and runner-up in the qualifying round of the school golf tournament, were awarded to Walter Robbins, the medalist, and Eugene Pidgeon, the runner-up. THE MCMILLAN CUP, to the skeet champion of the school, was awarded to Hazard K. Campbell. THE PHYSICAL DIRECTOR'S FOOTBALL AWARD, presented to that boy who through his unselish loyalty makes an outstanding contribution to the team and the school by his all-around fine play, was won by Charles L. Hutchinson. THE PHILLIP WINSTON REESE MEMORIAL CUP, presented to that member of the Senior Class who in spite of physical handicap has shown the greatest improvement with emphasis on posture, was awarded to Everett Frank. THE HOTCHKISS CLUB PRIZES, presented to that student who through his enthusi- asm, ability, leadership, and competitive spirit has done the most for his club, was awarded to Gordon Wright and Richard Grimball on the Baker Club, Anderson Coombe and Charles Hutchinson on the Hoyt Club, Arthur Brody and Edgar Jadwin on the Monahan Club, and Phelps Swift and Clinton Ely on the Taylor Club. Page one lzzmrlrerl fhz 1 HDTCHRISS TRI-XCR AND FIELD RECORDS 100 Yard Dash 220 Yard Dash 440 Yard Dash 880 Yard Run Mile Run 120 Yard High Hurdles 220 Yard Low Hurdles High Jump Broad Jump 12 Pound Hammer 12 Pound Shot Put Pole Vault Javelin Throw Discus Throw 880 Yard Relay 10 seconds 21.6 seconds 51.3 seconds 2 minutes 1 second 4 minutes 31.8 seconds 15.9 seconds 24.3 seconds 5 feet IOKJ inches 22 feet 1 inch 181 feet 6 inches 49 feet 2 inches 11 feet 6M inches 167 feet lm inches 121 feet 6 inches 1 minute 33.8 seconds W. Reinmund, '03 D. Torrey, '03 W. H. Brown, '42 C. A. Brown, '42 G. B. Berger, '24 E. Taylor, '40 R. Bromer, '42 A. G. Morrison, '38 R. W. Goss, '25 W. I.. Hixon, '16 D. S. Craig, '39 M. Ford, '39 J. J. Ford, '37 R. Ely, '42 G. Sidenberg, '42 W. A. Morton, '42 C. H. Brown, '42 W. I-I. Brown, '42 CLUB TRACR RECORDS 100 Yard Dash 440 Yard Dash 880 Yard Dash Mile Run 220 Yard Low Hurdles High Jump Broad Jump 12 Pound Shot Put Pole Vault Javelin Throw Discus Throw 880 Yard Relay Page one lzznzdred forty 10.8 seconds 53.3 seconds 2 minutes 6 seconds 4 minutes 54 seconds 28.7 seconds 5 feet 3 inches 19 feet 11 M inches 45 feet 7M inches 9 feet 3 inches 127 feet 10 M inches 105 feet 7 inches 1 minute 39.2 seconds E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan H. F. Dangler, '44, Baker H. F. Dangler, '44, Baker A. Vevers, '44, Baker J. C. Matthiessen, '44, Baker J. McCurdy, '44, Hoyt M. K. Bonner, '44, Baker C. N. Ely, '45, Taylor W. R. Campbell, '45, Monahan R. Hincks, '44, Taylor C. Ely, '45, Taylor H. F. Dangler, '44, Baker D. J. Bryan, '45, Baker M. K. Bonner, '44, Baker J. C. Matthiessen, '44, Baker F. D. Montgomery, '46, Monahan T. E. Brittingham, '45, Monahan E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan E. R. Motch, '46, Monahan HUTCHRISS SWIMMING 40 Yard Freestyle 50 Yard Freestyle 100 Yard Freestyle 220 Yard Freestyle 100 Yard Backstroke 100 Yard Breaststroke 180 Yard Individual Medley 160 Yard Freestyle Relay 300 Yard Medley Relay 400 Yard Freestyle Relay 150 Yard Medley Relay 200 Yard Freestyle Relay 19.2 seconds 24.9 seconds 56.4 seconds 2 minutes 26.1 seconds 1 minute 6.6 seconds 1 minute 10.5 seconds 2 minutes 21.1 seconds 1 minute 19.4 seconds 3 minutes 21.5 seconds 3 minutes 58.5 seconds 1 minute 28.1 seconds 1 minute 44 seconds RECORDS D. W. Shook, '42 D. W. Shook, '42 J. L. Namrnack, '36 E. C. Roberts, '41 H. R. Prudden, '38 W. A. Morton, '42 W. A. Morton, '42 C. W. Morton, '37 E. R. Detchon, '37 H. S. Wilson, '37 E. S. Cooke, '37 H. Woolverton, '43 W. A. Morton, '42 L. L. Marshall, '43 R. A. Wfells, '42 W. A. Morton, '42 D. W. Shook, '42 L. L. Marshall, '43 H. Woolverton, '43 W. A. Morton, '42 D. W. Shook, '42 D. W. Shook, '42 P. L. Barnes, '41 E. C. Roberts, 41 R. S. Morton, '40 CLUB SWIMMING RECURDS 40 Yard Freestyle 50 Yard Freestyle 100 Yard Freestyle 220 Yard Freestyle 100 Yard Backstroke 100 Yard Breaststroke 150 Yard Medley Relay 180 Yard Medley Relay 160 Yard Freestyle Relay 200 Yard Freestyle Relay 19.5 seconds 25.1 seconds 56.8 seconds 2 minutes 32.3 seconds 1 minute 1 minute 1 minute 1 minute 1 minute 1 minute 6.4 seconds 13.1 seconds 29.7 seconds 49.6 seconds 19.8 seconds 43.6 seconds F.. Jadwin, '45, E. Jadwin, '45, L. L. Marshall, L. L. Marshall, Monahan Monahan '43, Hoyt '43, Hoyt H. Woolverton, '43, Taylor G. D. Talbott, '43, Hoyt H. Woolverton, '43, Taylor J. C. Matthiessen, '44, Baker G. D. Talbott, '43, Hoyt H. Woolverton, '43, Taylor G. D. Talbott, '43, Hoyt E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan W. Troy, '43, Baker E. B. Leisenring, '44, Baker L. L. Marshall, '43, Hoyt E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan W. Troy, '43, Baker E. B. Leisenring, '44, Baker L. L. Marshall, '43, Hoyt E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan Page one hundred fmty one WEABEBS UF THE FOOTBALL C. L. Hutchinson, Captain J. M. Allen M. K. Bonner A. Brody C. N. Ely L. G. Hooker E. Jadwin R. P. Lowry E. E. Alley C. Moore F. D. Montgomery P. H. Swift G. R. Wright R. W. Wolcott, Manager BASEBALL G. R. Wright, Captain E. E. Alley T. Guinzburg O. L. Hubbard P. Lambert C. E. Lord SOCCER V. A. Coombe, Captain W. D. Blair T. O. Bretherton S. S. Cathcart J. O. Crosby P. S. Foster J. D. Gibbons T. H. Lyttle J. C. Matthiessen O. T. Pollock H. M. Sloat J. W. Sloat R. R. Strong Page om' h1n1d1'cdf0rz'y-t'1vo S. N. Lord J. W. Sloat R. W. Wolcott G. Degener, Manager BASKETBALL S. B. Hayes, Captain C. R. Chase, Captain J. M. Allen R. B. Grimball M. K. Bonner HOCKEY P. H. Swift, Captain H. Van Dyke J. C. Calhoun A. G. Kirk S. S. Cathcart N. Lord O. L. Hubbard G. R. Wright R. M. Sellwood C. F. Lufkin P. C. Van Dyke QQH99 TRACK H. F. Dangler, Captain D. Bryan M. K. Bonner D. Ely C. N. Ely R. W. Hineks E. Jadwin J. C. Matthiessen W. F. Martin F. D. Montgomery E. R. Motch J. C. Roberts A. M. Vevers P. B. Welles, Manager TENNIS G. R. Wright GOLF W. Robbins THE MINUB H TENNIS J. D. Harrison, Captain S. Bonnie V. A. Coombe J. D. Gibbons R. B. Grimball S. B. Hayes GOLF E. Pidgeon, Captain M. Hulme S. S. Cathcart W. S. Robbins SWIMMING E. Jadwin J J. C. Matthiessen lCapta1ns E. B. Leisenring I T. Merritt R. W. Hincks T. Holmes T. E. Brittingham E. R. Motch BASKETBAL L C. H. Ballou F. R. Ford A. V. Coombe F. C. Painton P. Lambert ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS For manuscript: E. B. LEISENRING, Class History T. H. GUINZBURG For photographs: G. NEUHAUS A. VEVERS W. D. BLAIR R. R. STRONG G. L. DEGENER W. R. KREMENTZ For advice: A. R. SELIGMAN WHITE STUDIO PETER S. GURWIT, JAHN 81 OLLIER ENG. CO. MR. GILBERT SMITH For just about anything, including an unreasonable amount of typing THE HEELERS AND ASSOCIATE EDITORS MISCH BOARD HARD AT WORK Page' 0116 IZIIIIVIICCI 7'f.If'fy J. M. Allen.. E. E. Alley, III ..... .. C. H. Ballou ,,,. .. M. C. Bartram ,... S. Bonnie ,.,., .,,.,., H. B. Bowman .. R. E. C. Brandli .,,. T. O. Bretherton . , T. E. Brittingham .... C. C. Brower ...., D. Bryan ,,.,, R. S. Bryan , .. . . W. R. Campbell , . H. A. G. Chapman .. B. Childs , S. S. Cline D. A. Clitter H. Connell QI. W. Cook J. P. Cooke ,... ,.,, K. R. Costikyan ......, W. M. Cruikshank .... W. M. Dixon . . , H. H. Dow .... H. M. Durning... ,, R. C. Egbert ,,,,.. . C. N. Ely .,... ,,..,...,..,.. D. V. P. Fardelmann. G. Fleisehmann ..,...... W. G. Frey, III .......,.. S. Garfinkel ..., . .,... . C. S. Garland, Jr. ,.,... J. D. Gibbons ......... D. A. Gimbel ...,,.. L. B. Goodman .....,. F. M. Gould .....,... R. B. Grimball ,.,,.... P. Haaren ...,....,,...... J. F. D. Haskell ...,. L. C. Holden .... .... O. L. Hubbard .... .. T. XV. Hunter. .. C. L. Hutchinson .,... Page one hundred forty-four THE CLASS UF I945 3321 6 Quaker Center, Scarsdale, N. Y. .. ...... 366 Heights Road, Ridgewood, N. , .Chester, Vermont ., Sharon, Conn. Brownsboro Hill, Louisville, Ky. ....,..630 South Linden Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. Mendham, N. J ,,.,,....Spring Mill Road, Villa Nova, Pa. ,.,,...,.,..,,.... Stillmuven , Greenville, Del. ,......Putnam Place, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. ,.........621 College Road, Lake Forest, Ill. ,,,,,,.,.....,2242 Woodscrest, Lincoln, Nebraska ,. ....... Highfields Farm, Lambertville, N. Chilgrove,', Sunset Hill Road, Bethel, Conn. ent Place N. W., North Washingtoxi, D. C. ,. . , .Amen1a, N. Y. ,,,....,..709 Webster Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. .. ,. , Delano Park, Cape Elizabeth, Maine 259 Tuttle Parkway, Westfield, N. , . . 4393 Royal Place, Honolulu, T. H. 50 Afterglow Avenue, Montclair, N. ,. ,.,... ..,... ,..... ' 'Gaywood , Monticello, Ill. ...,...95 South Waukegan Road, Lake Forest, Ill. M923 West Park Drive, Midland, Mich. 972 Woodycrest Avenue, The Bronx, N. Y. Marion Road, Upper Montclair, N. . . .. R. D. 1, Ambler, Pa. . . Lloyd Neck, Huntington, L. I., N. Y. Maple Avenue, Peekskill, N. Y. . .. . .,,,.., ,... W est Cornwall, Conn. , 1125 Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. ..........203 Highfield Road, Baltimore, Maryland ..,..... .. ., Ramsbury, Pembroke, Bermuda .......Upper King Street, Port Chester, N. Y. 1016 Fifth Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. ........,32-37 168th Street, Flushing, L. I., N. Y. ,.,...18 Legare Street, Charleston, S. C. ....,,.....,Valley Road, New Canaan, Conn. .....,.221 Elderwood Avenue, Pelham, N. Y. 34 Green Avenue, New Canaan, Conn. .385 Wisconsin Avenue, Lake Forest, Ill. .H399 Rivard Boulevard, Grosse Pointe, Mich. .. ,.,..209 Lakeshore Drive, Chicago, Ill. E. Jadwin , R. Krementz ., B. W. Labaree .. gfvpr-11 Z N P4 2 'L . B. Lewis, III.. , E. Lord , . . Matthiessen .. , P. H. Mead ,... W. H. Mullins , .. E. H. Niles .,,...... J. W. Patton .... F. F. Randolph ...., A. H. Raubitschek .,.,.. T. R. Remington.. ,........3700 Massachusetts Avenue N. W., Washington, D. C. . ,...f'Wyndover',, Camden, Maine .1090 Ridge Road, Hamden, Conn. 1040 Fifth Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. ,. Riverbank Road, Stamford, Conn. ..,,,..49 Henhawk Road, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. 941 Mountain Road, West Hartford 10, Conn. ..,...854 South Lincoln Avenue, Salem, Ohio 5600 Waycrest Lane, Baltimore 10, Maryland ..Tisdale, Scarsdale, N. Y. ...895 Park Avenue,N.Y.,N.Y. 1 13 Bromley Avenue, West Englewood, N. J. 350 Ambassor Drive, Rochester, N. Y. J. Roper ......,..... .,..,,.,.. ...,, . . R. F. D. 4, Ridgefield, Conn. W. Rosenblum ..,.. . ..,. ..., 6 4 Cushman Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. I. D. Schwalbe ...... ...,.,. , ......,.....,....... 1 050 Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. J. E. Seitner ......,,....,., ........ 1 853 Willow Branch Terrace, Jacksonville 5, Fla. C. R. S. Shepard .... ......,...... 8 24 East Forest Avenue, Neenah, Wisconsin J. N. Shethar ..,.., ,... ..,,, . .... . . . ,,.. .. Milton Point, Rye, N. Y. S. Sicard .........,.... W. S. Simpson .,...,. ........ D. L. Slater ..,,..... H. M. Sloat .....,. J. W. Sloat ......... F. F. Sommers .... .. D. T. Steffen ...,.. .. M. H. Srempel ....,. C. Stewart ,....... T. P. Stewart .....,.. H. N. Tifft .,.......,. S. B. Twitchell ............. W. G. Up de Graff ..,.... J. B. Veach .......,... P. B. Welles .......,.... F. F. Whitcomb .....,,. L. S. Wilkenson ....,.., R. W. Williams ....,.,.. R. W. Wolcott .......,., .2767 Sunset Drive, Miami Beach, Fla. Port South Corners, Southport, Conn. 309 Boulder Walk Avenue, Locust Valley, L. I., N. Y. ,,........2101 Connecticut Avenue, Washington, D. C. ,.......2101 Connecticut Avenue, Washington, D. C. Windpoint, Racine, Wisconsin ,,...,..... . 975 Ridge Road, Hamden, Conn. 207 Clent Road, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. 10 Beechwood Road, Bronxville, N. Y. .. 17 Glover Street, Auburn, N. Y. . ., ....,..,.., .. Quogue, L. I., N. Y. 44 Fernwood Road, Hamden, Conn. .700 Sorbonne Road, Los Angeles 24, Cal. M3921 Idaho Avenue N. W., Washington, D. C. .. 615 Vive Street, Scranton 10, Pa. .... 702 North 56th Street, Omaha, Nebraska ..,,.....334 University Place, Grosse Pointe, Mich. ......,..917 Poplar Hill Road, Baltimore, Maryland ............Beaver Creek Farm, Downingtown, Pa. F. W. Woodward ......... ...,...,....,..,,,. ,. Pine Plains, N. Y. E. Woollen ....,...,.....,. ......... R . R. 14, Box 45 5, Indianapolis, Ind. B. L. Zempsky ..,.,,. .. 114 Colony Road, New Haven, Conn. Page one hzuzdred f0lty jzze J. U. Anderson . H. Barhydt . H. Belin A. S. Bonner, . C. W. Bonner W. Boyd . . . J. V. W. Brown K. C. Brown , J. M. Calhoun H. K. Campbell T. A. Clark R. I.. Coughlin F. W. Crandall E. Dana W. S. Davis M. K. Doherty R. Downe A. C. Dutton J. M. Earl T. L. Epstein J. G. Esrill H. J. C. Fahy. . C. W. Farwell J. P. Ferguson S. B. Feuer .. . C. Fleischmann H. O. Floyd. .. F. R. Ford ,. W. W. Greenhalgh R. A. Gsell ,... ,......., C. Handy .... .... ,..., C. F. Hotchkiss ,..,. A. I. Hunting .,,..,., W. R. Johnson ....,, R. L. Jones ,,,... W. B. Kelly ....,..., W. G. Kelly... L. S. Krotzer ...,,.. G. E. Labalme P. C. Lambert , C. Leboutillier ,.,, P. R. Limburg C. G. Loew gf 110 1IHIIffI'l'lf furfy-si.r THE CLASS UF I946 M2519 Granelin Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio ,, 111 Canner Street, New Haven, Conn. ..Waverly, Pa. , .. . 109 North Detroit Street, Buchanan, Mich. ..., .. ..,..,,... 10 East 81st Street, N. Y., N. Y. .Ross Court, Loudonville, N. Y. ,. Port Deposit, Maryland .. ,,., .... . ,... . Port Deposit, Maryland , ..... 145 States Street, Springfield, Mass. , ,..., 806 Delaware Avenue, Buffalo, N. Y. . 34 Hadden Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. .... 623 Ford Avenue, Wilkes Barre, Pa. . 1519 Whightman Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. . 31 Birch Road, West Hartford 5, Conn. , . . , ,.... , West Redding, Conn. ,. ,... 250 Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. , . .. . 25 East End Avenue, N. Y., N., Y. . 117 Academy Street, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. .. , 217 Tourraine Road, Grosse Pointe, Mich. 19480 Canterbury Drive, Detroit Mich. , ,. . 12 East 97th Street, N. Y., N. Y. . .... , ,. 155 East 82nd Street, N. Y., N. Y. .. 765 North Sheridan Road, Lake Forest, Ill. ,. . 23 Linden Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. . .,,, , 1502 La Salle Avenue, South Bend, Ind. . . cfo U. S. Embassy, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 20 Monument Avenue, Glens Falls, N. Y. , , .. ,, .. . .... .. ,,., Southport, Conn. , , Springsbury, Berryville, Va. , 8 Mount Joy Avenue, Scarsdale, N. Y. , 5026 Arlington Avenue, Riverdale, N. Y. . Murry Street, Binghamton N. Y. .. . 355 Poymouth Road, Grand Rapidsi Mich. . . 100 Greenway Terrace, Forest Hills .. Sasco Hill Road, Fairfield, ,N. Y. Conn. . . 807 Saint Georges Road, Baltimore 10, Maryland Button Wood Lane, Darien, Conn. .Chappaqua, N. Y. ,944 Fifth Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. ., .,Middletown, N. . . 6608 Southeast 32nd Avenue, Portland, Oregon ., . .. . . , Banksville Road, Bedford, N. Y. . .. . 6 Osborne Road, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. R. A. Lowe ., C. F. Lufkin ,. A D . McAfee .... . .. . B. Mecall ,......., R. B. McCurdy ....,.... W. McKee ....., ,, G. C. Matthiessen G. W. Mead... .,... T. W. Merritt .,..,.., W. Mitchell ....,....,,... F. D. Montgomery ....., S. C. Moody, Jr. ,... E. R. Motch ...,..,... G. H. Nixon, Jr. .,.,.. T. L. Orr ..,,.,.., , J. H. Parsons .,.... G. W. Pixley ...,..... P. W. Plumley ..,.... G. K. Polichek ..,... O. T. Pollock ..,,.... W. C. Pullman ....,. W. S. Robbins ...,... C. W. Robinson .... H. H. Robinson ..., D. R. Saunders... D. P. Seaman ...,..... R. M. Sellwood ,.,,.. F. S. Schaffer ....,,... J. R. Sharp ........,.., A. E. Silberman .,,., R. S. Simmons ....... P. C. Van Dyke .... R. Van Marx ....,.... S. K. Warner ...,..... W. E. Westover ,... R. T. Whitlock ,....,,. H. H. Windsor ..... G. M. Wyckoff ...., .. ,..... . .. 411 Tuttle Parkway, Westfield, N. J. .. ..,.... , ,... , , ..... ,, ,, ,,.... , , Kirby Lane, Rye, N. Y. ,...,..2261 Chestnut Hills Drive, Cleveland Heights, Ohio ., 28 Metropolitan Oval, N. Y., N. Y. .. 7315 Elbow Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. ., cfo Gould Farm, Great Barrington, Mass. Riverbank Road, Stamford, Conn. ,, Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. . .. . R. F. D. 1, Saint Charles, Ill. , ,, The Cliff, Boyce, Va. ,. . . .. 1362 Astor Street, Chicago, Ill. , 505 West 8th Street, Plainheld, N. J. .. . 2750 Landen Road, Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio .,..3310 Parsons Boulevard, Flushing, L. L, N. Y. ,. .,....... 55 Woodland Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. , ....,...,..,...... 139 East 79th Street, N. Y., N. Y. . Pars Road, New Hartford, N. Y. ,. .Hcfo The Fessenden School, West Newton, Mass. ., 1085 Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. , .,,. 1005 Maplewood Road, Lake Forest, Ill. .... 700 Mayflower Road, Lake Forest, Ill. , .,....... Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N. J. ,,,. 80 Berkeley Street, West Newton, Mass. . ...,. Fairview Road, Fox Chapel, Pittsburgh 5, Pa. 2267 Delaware Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio Station F, Route 9, Box 312, Bradly Road, Milwaukee, Wis. .,....,.................,,,,. Brushy Ridge Road, New Canaan, Conn. Garden Place, Cincinnati, Ohio ......,1315 South Main Avenue, Sioux Falls, South Dakota ., ,42 Brightside Drive, Stamford, Conn. . 610 Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. 155 Scarborough Street, Hartford, Conn. , ,.......,.,,.,... M1225 Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. Midchester Avenue, white Plains, N. Y. .......1900 Ryons Street, Lincoln 2, Nebraska . ..,.,.,...,..,.. 81 West Road, Short Hills, N. J. 2708 Central Avenue, Middletown, Ohio ....,....,201 Creek Drive, Sewicklcy, Pa. Page one hundred forty-scz'en A. D. Arndt ,, N. L. Arons .... S. Austell .,.. G. S. Baird .,,.. . J. R. H. Blum .,.. A. G. Browne, . H. G. Browne, R. A. Chambers R. E. Corban ., T. W. Costikyan R. H. Davis N. deCordova , J. C. Diller . W. H. Duckham D. Ely P. C. Forbes P. Gifford B. Hall, . . H. M. Hamlin, . J. P. Holmes A L. O. Houghton M. P. Knowlton W. Ladue . . . J. W. Lasell P. S. Lawson ,,..., J. D. Lind , .,., . J. McCarthy. .. . .. H. I. McMillan... K. A. Menken ,.... H. D. Noyes ..,,.. K. L. Parker ....,, S. L. Pettit ..,...., J. M. Pfohl ..,.,,. D. N. Platt .,...,. N. C. Reynal ....., N. G. Robertson J. N. Schullinger E. R. C. Smith ..,..... R. E. Smith. ,, W. B. Shaffer D. H. Staples . . W. C. Stebbins P. Sullivan Page one lzuzzdred fo1'z'y-eiglzl' THE CLASS Of I947 ......,.,2500 QU Street N. W., Washington 7, D. C. ....18 Kensington Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. Middletown, N. Y. .......Sound View Terrace, Greenwich, Conn. Rodney Lane, Great Neck, N. Y. .,.....,..721 Devon Avenue, Los Angeles, Cal. ..,....721 Devon Avenue, Los Angeles 24, Cal. 2, Katonah, N. Y. Newport Avenue, West Hartford, Conn. . ,........,, S0 Afterglow Avenue, Montclair, N. Redding, Conn. 33 Loockerman Avenue, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Lantana Avenue, Clearwater, Fla. ,......,.,......,Green Hill Road, Madison, N. J. HR. D. 1, Ambler, Pa. , M4115 Kiaora Street, Coconut Grove 33, Fla. . , ., .. ,.Woods Hole, Mass. 344 North Roosevelt Ave., Wichita, Kansas ,,.....,..,,2563 East Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. ,..,.,,..Poughquag, N. Y. . . ..........,,.,,,. ,,,....,. . . ,,,. Lakeville, Conn. .. 147 Aspen Avenue, Auburndale, Mass. . S0 Hampshire Road, Bronxville, N. Y. ,, , . 11 Linden Street, Whitensville, Mass. ,. .. ,, .,.Canaan, Conn. ...ZS Melrose Place, Montclair, N. . ,... , . ....,,... .....,,,,..,,, R oute 1, Paterson, N. J. 1819 South James Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. , 230 Cliftwood Road, Oakhurst, N. Sharon, Conn. , 22 East 47th Street, N. Y., N. Y. ....,,..1S0 Central Park South, Hampshire House, N. Y., N. Y. ,.......,.,..,.....,..........,., Beechwood , R. D. 3, Bradford, Pa. Box 111, Madison, Conn. .......4412 Santa Maria Street, Coral Gables, Fla. , ..,.........,...,......,.. .......,,...,,,.,... . ..Waverly, Pa. ,, 1175 Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. Peace Dale, R. I. Blankenbral Lane, Louisville, Ky. ,..,.,3029 Fairfield Avenue, Cincinnati 6, Ohio .cfo Station Hospital, Selfridge Field, Mich. Mullin Street, Watertown, N. Y. ,..,.,.10 Johnson Avenue, Binghamton, N. Y. G. P. Tilson .,,,, P. G. Tuttle ,..,. E. R. Tweedy.. T. J. Twitchell .... T. Unz ....,,..,......,, R. P. Vivian ,...... ,... J. A. Warren .,.. C. S. Watson ,......., ...,. J. K. Weeks ....,,,, ..,. G. O. Witwer.. J. B. Zabriskie .... .. M27 Charlotte Street, Asheville, N. C. , . . 18 Glenwood Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. . ,.. .Darien, Conn. ,. ..,,.. . . ,Siesta-Key, Sarasota, Fla. , . .,.. Silver Lake Road, Sharon, Conn. Belvidere Road, Plainfield, N. 515 College Boulevard, San Antonio 2, Texas 1515 Club View Drive, Los Angeles 24, Cal. H...,,......,......,,,.......Easthampton, L. I., N. Y. ...,...501S Robinhood Lane, South Bend, Ind. 1185 Park Avenue, N. Y., N. Y. Page one Izundred forty-nine INDEX TU ADVERTISERS Benton Review Publishing Co. Best 8C Co. ,i..iii.iiiiEi,..ii,.,i,iiii. , Borden Co. ,e,..,.ie , Brooks Brothers ,..iee..,iee,,,,eee Cape Cod Associates, Inc. evv... Crosse and Blackwell Co. .... S Community Service .r... S Don 's Diner Dow Chemical Co. Dufour's Garage . e.,eeee.e,.eee E Firestone Tire Sc Rubber Co. ,, Fletcher Trust Co. eeeere S Fuller Brush Co. Cvaley 85 Lord General Coal Co. S I-Iugo's Novelty Shop . 'Iahn 86 Ollier Engrav John David judge Magazine , ..io, Kingan 8C Co. ing Co. Leverty's Pharmacy e,..e. Monarch Steel Co. .,,, S N. A. McNeil Co. .,.,.,e,e.,.....,...e,......,..... - North Stamford Hills Ohio Plate Glass Co. Powell Valves Red Cross ,... Rogers Peet Co. ,,... - Protecti ve Ass'n ....e,a. Sages Ravine Club ,...rev,a...ee, Salisbury Bank and Trust aa..., S. Slater 81 Sons .,.a.., Strong-Scott Mfg. Co. .,,,e S U. S. O. .,,.iaa...e,.e..oe,- - United War Relief ee,. C o.e,... Westmoreland Coal Co. ,aa. . Page one hundred fifty 'B' if 'lf 'D' if 'Y 'lf U 5 U U 'lf ff Cxe fi -I il' Q? ,fffligi l! l j g . I I Nl 5' ' iv. xxsfsxfx I Y i 0 X .Xb f i v fl count on Bests cl for good clothes 4 Young, good-looking clothes that can stand the gaff of il school life-that's what you'l1 find at Best's, Where fine ul quality . . . correct style and X ' l . . . . UQ senslble PYICCS are traditional. G4 9 lf' J, i 1 .l 3 H . i 2 L' iw, l 7. flfll' . ' 'sill y ji. i .bf-gf f.,, 'LX iff, jjj- - ,J f U lov flify l. ff, -3-6-jg A la cl liirfifl XA! 1 '13 7' l . 1 Nflflfy ', '1 F -- X . XXIS : . . . , , ww 'ls' s .- i ,sal f Z 4 M65 f ' s '133s --L W 54.2 -ef 5, ,. -'f , I 5f1g1gfj1g',,' g Q ' 'l A W 15 . . lil 'K M W Year round gabardme topcont. 11 51, Q E U4 Wool-and-cotton. f Sizes 36 to 42 . . 37.50 ' I if Wool plaid sport coat X l f al ' 27 so 1' ' Sizes 35 to 42 .... . . W'0ol gabardine slacks. Brown or lit. If natural l l cl Wfaist sizes 30 to 36 .... 15.00 Mail and phone orders filled - Wisconsin 7-S000 0 X : pl Posfagc' prepaid f'l'f'l'j'1Ubf'l'6 in fiat' U. S. B e st 8g C o . Fifllw Ave. o+ 35th S+.. New York l8, N. Y. I4 Q N fl Q 4U East Orange Garden City Brookline ' Grosse Pointe Washington, D. C. J, JL ,L ,L ,L L J ,L JL J- J- ll Page one I1Iu1n1nnunnnunnuunn uuulu ESTABLISHED 1818 COE?E??55?Q3QD ans gurhil-ihingff, S55 afgh nes 348 MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH SIT. NEW YORK 17, N. Y. A Headquarters for Upper Formers 1 and College Undergraduates 5 Even with colleges so largely militarized 2 and the War's inroads into preparatory 1 schools-Brooks Brothers are prepared, 5 as always, in the Sixth Floor Shop to out- - fit College Undergraduates and Upper- 5 lformers in good-looking civilian clothes cgi f and accessories. mamma, -,,La5.5..,.. 1 Our standards are maintained through- : out-and prices, covering a sensible war- Now IN THE SECOND QUARTER OF OUR time range, begin at moderate figures. SECOND CENTURY 1818-1944 0 HKQANCHES As MAKERS or MILITARY KL NAVAL uos'roNnE:wn:w:' UN1FoRMs i THE N. A. MQNEIL Co. Est- we Inc. 1909 INSURANCE SALISBURY BANK Fidelity and Surety Bonds AND TRUST CO. uk 'A' Lakeville, Conn. Phone 250 LAKEVILLE, CONN. Page two ,fffiw . , 4 , ,ff f , 7- 4 Q- :4-1 , was-:Qs-5.4, .2-Q,-wi-:,-1'-1111? 11-232 -26519: eff-If . , 1: 5-:'f:34f5fi- -.Z.1V,,e'f'2ev A UR STORE rblli ,, X, Q 54 ff f f f g ff ' 3 fffyf 2 Z , 0 f 'T f f 9: flax X f , i X 15 , fff, O Ski , ..,, -,.1, ,-,, - V ,.,,,, V V .:.f!- , Q T S f 4, .1-., L ,,. , 5 I Xx ' ! NX X X I3 I G x X Zf , XXX 1 l , N T f ' O 7 I K V ,, ,f,.. V 4- -, , ,- V, ,,4,,,, , , v .. ,, ,, ..,,,,, VV , ,,,,. ,A , ,,,, H ,V,, 2-, ,,,.' 9 2,-7, . .- V - V f 1 Q , f f ff-' ,, , ,. ...... Mya ff .V 11,,j.,:1V . -. I ,' 3 V,-V,'1'-1512342411: V V M, , , V f, -, --,1--'wy,Vff4y:'ff T Qu ,,,, . f ,,,.,A.,... ,. .A T 'S u a he ,.A. N 'S rn f Ni X rf T , Ayr? INIIIVIIJIIM IIRAPERTUVIN UUUBLE BREASTEII MUDEL IN THE ElEGANT Ann ron vnu, ' mussrou wonsnns VVV Z MASH ,W if 9 5 Varsity-Town double-breasteds have style. The 4' 5:2 'WI broader shoulders, the casual chest, the low placed pockets, the exactingly pointed lapels, the easy fitting body lines. You'll look your best in a Varsity-Town Double. .T ,. V- 4 4,1 ff. A?- ,. H 3 ' Q ff. cl.ffQ?' we 1-:xg VV1 AT THESE CONVENIENTLY-LOCATED JOHN DAVID STORES IN NEW YORK F1F'rHAvE.Ar 43D ST. 137W.42D S'r.qopm'f119P.M.y BROADWAYAT 32D ST. BROADWAYAT DEY Sr Page th V.-Kg nnulmni--un' i,. ...nunI.H.IifI-iI1I,.'Hung-In--nnunnrn nnnnnnu nf-nun uunnu unununnu nnnun Ce! your clothes in a man 's store - Rogers Peet ! The modem Rogers Peet rates tops at many of the country's leading schools. Rogers Peet's fine all-Wool f ' Quality remains unchanged! f E never use Style jas a sugar coat for poor quality. Anybody can sell a man once. But it takes quality to keep him coming -all through school-and for the rest of his life! mf? Sigma' if gif! N A :, S fi 1 i F .i ff? ' ' N' yfaafmf ,Wm aamwai In Nrw York: And in Boston Fifth Avenue 131 h Sl rr-vt Warren Street Trlxmflnf Si al 41st Street uf Iirfmftwny at limurlxvuy 1zlBromf1eld St 4' f COMPLIMENTS OF THE MONARCH STEEL CO. Manufacturers of Speed Case Hlld Speed Treat Steels v v v Indianapolis and Hammond Indiana HMV' , -lw-Vw , ,f x ' fs- ff' Q , . -x- ,L , iv xr X x5 s .Il gf I f ' 15, A.,.i ,,f'Q i ry- s f - G Q .. l i .Q ' 2 K ,, ' V' J' V , V if 1 N.-Q ,237 - 'f L lb. . liz' 'R ' Z' X 1 , 'fwf5 ' ' :g , '- I 1,-1',.l,,.N'-V ,7 ,4 1' 1 7 1 'M - . . ,.,. ' ' .K ' N . . .... . .N X Q w Jaxx ig K Q' xx X X Q X I X X 1' . 5' X FQ' ix X K ' 0 I . jp- . .KN A X N 3, V .KO I 'wg X ,M 4' I 1 L X 1. H i x x N K 4 'KX X A X N 3 'V a S , .X vi: ' f- 'fa V Q' x f, vi V7 gi. A ' ,N . 1 4 A Ex M I X ,N H4010 x QQ 1 s, I 1 Q 2- gmt f X X NW R M ' R ' t 29 S ar Q X f S n i V t , f 5 F 1 EX f ar I f - Hg S -,MI ' IN RLHHIR V1 K x,nm.f.. U, x.,,.,f.f K. gg, Q ,, W0 1000 TODAY, Firestone factories all over the world are turning out War products for the United Nations. And after victory, Firestone will be ready with a wider range of products of higher quality and greater value than ever before. Lixlen to the Voire of Firexlone every Moudav evening over N. H. C. Qin xxx x , ' A W . 'W My I it 'f V wx. F- , A ,, NT?-Ya X 4 - ' xg ' ' .aa V. 1 o .t i afbege-. ll . Z Q K . ' xx Wx J A' W 1.11 v .,.. .r--g,,..r. .,.., .. ...A ,M-,,,--,,. s ' ' . ' - 'Wi ' l' iyright, 15N1fl,Tl1e Firestone Tin' k Rubber Co. Page five .W . 'TS nu nn MAGNES me fofion Something very remarkable is taking place at Freeport on the Texas coast. For the first time in history men are extracting magnesium from sea water. Magnesium is a metal-the lightest used for structural purposes. In Michigan the same metal is being recovered from brine drawn from wells near the city of Midland. These two Dow operations are closely related, one leading to the other, and both are vitally important to our war effort. They are one of the reasons why we have won air supremacy on our fighting fronts. How we came to have an abundant supply of magnesium, the extraor- dinary weight-saver, is an interesting story. Tapping a Subterranean Sea There is a prehistoric sea imprisoned more than five thousand feet below the surface of inland Michigan. Years ago a young chemist Puge' six them l'Cll O m began tapping this brackish water to see what he could make out of it. He found the water contained the chemical elements bromine, chlorine, calcium, sodium and magnesium. Bromine is a basic chemical very useful in the pharmaceutical and other industries. The ad- venturing chemist straightway developed a method to extract the bromine from the sub- terranean sea in commercial quantities at low cost. This production of bromine and bromides was the first serious American challenge to the European chemical industry and it was the beginning of The Dow Chemical Company, now producers of more than 500 chemicals indispensable to Industry and Victory. In chemistry one thing leads to another. With Dow, bromine was the first step. The Bromine process was adapted to the manufacture of FROM OCEAN WATER AND MICHIGAN BRINE COMES THE LIGHTEST OF ALL STRUCTURAL METALS chlorine. This step carried Dow into the field of chlorinated products, and the process of making chlorine produced caustic soda as a coproduct. Then, in 1915, Dow chemists tackled mag- nesium, another of those five basic materials found in the underground sea. A chemical and electrolytic process was developed to recover it, and America was thus provided with its first supply of magnesium-the Metal of Motion- the metal that emancipates moving machines from the thralldom of dead weight. Metal from Ocean Water That was really an industrial achievement of far-reaching importance, but a more spectacular ape eds Ihe IIigI'1I Ol p chapter in chemical history was yet to be written. Adapting the process employed in extracting magnesium from brine, Dow turned to ocean water as an inexhaustible source. By january, 1941, the sea was pouring into the great Freeport plants and the metal was rolling out. Pioneering that Anticipated War Needs These were fortunate developments for America and our pressing war needs. Magnesium weighs only one quarter as much as iron and is a full third lighter than aluminum. Thus as a structural material it is an ideal weight-saver. Used in the construction of airplanes it mate- rially increases their speed, range and payload capacity. These Dow products- magnesium, bromine, chlorine and hundreds of others-are the result of specialization in the chemistry of brine and the logical steps that followed. The story of their production from the resources of a pre- Ic1n9S rx historic sea and a bound- 5 W , less ocean is one of the ,fgqgf most fascinating chap- ,Z - -I ters in the histor of I Y Q ' fffofvg . f f gym' , - A America. f f Af ' KW?-' jr , ' 1 5 U' - .---'J' mflf' - THE DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY f J? 5, I, Gy? Z, ff! 5? f ' MIDLAND, MICHIGAN Q51 - ,,,- , a ff . in fl ' .' X .f New York - BosIon - Philadelphia - Washington - Cleveland - Deiroil . I I Chicago - Sl. Louis - Houslon - Sun Francisco ' Los Angeles - SeuHIe X., t it I , C s was s s W av V , gp V, MI,'.,z f ' ' 12 , . -3 I , Q . 3 ,.. I , 1 gy, . T, T ' .' l Q ' V , ' ff Cz K , ,. gi ,, 55, , 4 I A , - 1 5 ,I N Q- ' ' . 4 f'f ,f V l a I, . ' ' -W f - Z ,V CHEMICALS INDISPENSABLE BIRTHPLACE OF PRESENT AMERICAN MAGNESIUM INDUSTRY, MIDLAND, MICHIGAN, I9I6 T0 INDUSTRY AND VICTORY Page Seven Since 1706 For generations past Crosse Sz Blackwell food products have graced the tables of fine families throughout the World. This confidence continues and is merited by our 238-year record for fine quality foods. THE CROSSE Sz BLACKWELL COMPANY 'AFINE Fooos siNoE 1706 BALTIMORE, MARYLAND COMPLIMENTS OF THIRD FLOOR BOYS COY HALL gh? QIIZD xy BRUSHES FOR EVERY COMPLIMENTS OF PURPOSE 5 Personal Household GENERAL COAL Co Industrial THE FULLER BRUSH f CoMPANY 49 Pearl St, Philadelphia, Pa. Hartford, Connecticut Phone 2-3870 COMPLIMENTS OF NORTH STAMFORD HILLS PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION Ernestine Balmer, Pres J. Sage Keown, Advisory Comm. Alnore Huben, Vice,PreS- A. Sporton Materne, Fire Prev. . 1 Comm. Robert P' hawm' Mexican Repres' Andrew Varick, Jr., Fauna Birth Control Page Buy All The War Bonds COMPLIMENTS OF You Can Ulbe 4 jfletnbzr Ulrust Qllu. Indianapolis, Indiana THE sTRoNo-scoTT 4 fMFG.lHlWPANY 2 Member of Federal Reserve System Member of Federal Deposit Insur- Minncapolis, Minnesota HUC9 Corp- CAPE COD COTTAGES FOR RENT AND EOR SALE Located on SHORT BEACH IN CENTERVILLE, CAPE COD, MASS. A typical cottage contains Living Room, Dining Room, Kitchen, four Bedrooms and two Baths. All cottages have the privilege of using Pier, Dock, and Private Beach on the property. CAPE COD ASSGCIATES, INC. GEORGE GOODYEAR SICARD, President Mailing Address: 271 North Ave., Room No. 310 New Rochelle, New York Summer Address: Sea Pines , Centerville, Cape Cod, Mass. We shall be glad to mail Photographs, Descriptions, and Floor Plans. I... lm...-.- Page fm V V V Y Y Y The Outgoing D. Dis ooMPL1MENTs OF Wish Luck To THE The Dissipated Dieties of 1945 400 CLUB Y Y Y V V Y i' GIVE T O THE U. S. 0. if Best Wishes to a great Yearbook and a Great School From JUDGE Founded 1881 The National Magazine Of Humor and Satire W. NEWBOLD ELY, Editor Page el 72212 '1 a POWELL VALVE for fvezy 7law gonna! Heguizement This valve was specially designed by Powell to be used in the process of making Butadiene for Synthetic Rubber-one of Powells many contributions to ultimate victory. It is adapted for high tempera- tures-up to 14006 F. For almost a century, Powell has specialized on one job-making De- pendable Valves. Today, the com- plete line includes every type of valve - Globes, Angles, Checks, Gates, Y's, Reliefs, Safety Valves, Non-returns, etc., in bronze, iron, steel, pure metals and special alloys. Regardless of what the requirement may be-Whether for the precise control of steam, Water, oil, gas, or corrosive fluids-there is a Powell Valve to meet it. And Powell main- tains a staff of engineers and metal- lurgists to design and build special valves for special needs. Awards For WVOrk Well Done THE WM. POWELL CO. Dependable Valves Since 1846 CINCINNATI, OHIO :gc fIl'f'Il'6' 1 I A TIP FROM ELSIE, THE BORDEN COW Borden's Ice Cream is the kind that makes beautiful women shut their eyes and say, NMmmmm!N It also makes strong men leap in the air, yelling, NBoy, oh, BOYIN Honestly, it's the oreamiest, smoothest, eatingest ice cream you ever stuck a spoon in. And what's more, it's packed full of energy and nutrition value. QQQQ for you. Enjoy Borden's Ice Cream . . . it's real 392.914 BORDEN'S ICE CREAM i it'4 0 it'1 get to 6a good Page thirtee Y Y Y Conipliments of A FRIEND Y Y Y Y Y Y GIVE to the RED GROSS Y Y Y Repairing - Storage Gas and Oils DUFOUR'S GARAGE Good Cars for Hire Tel. 77-2 Lakeville, Conn COMPLIMENTS OF KINGAN 81 COMPANY YYY Blackford gl Maryland Sts. Indianapolis, Ind. ONE GOOD LOAN DESERVES ANOTHER OOO EVERY WAR LOAN o EVERY PAY DAY Ill BUY MORE AND MORE 'WAR BONDS V V V V Y Y COMPLIMENTS OF From a Canadian F1'i611d--- S. B. SUTPHEN V V V BUY WAR BONDS v v v Tl16 City Drug Store Be Sure to Visit I in Huoors T 16 OUHUY NovELTY sHoP The Store of Personal Service Featuring 5 Victor and Columbia 9 i Masterworks S Decca Records Bluebird Popular Records And Hotchkiss Jewelry Many Other Items Lakeville, Conn. phone 184 Telephone 370-ask for Hugo P f COMPLIMENTS OF 0 Q o WESTMORLAND COAL C0 o o o PHILADELPHIA, PA. COMPLIMENTS OF THE OHIO PLATE GLASS COMMUNITY CO. SERVICE INC. V V V V V V Flint, Mich. Detroit, Mich. T01ed010hi0 - Northwestern Connectic t Ft. Wayne, Ind Y Y COMPLIMENTS OF Apologies for THE THE IVIISCHIANZA LIT Y V P h 0 Compliments of A FRIEND 'lr ir COMPLIMENTS OF COMPLIMENTS OF 2 1 THE S' SLATER 81 SONS UNITED WAR RELIEF 'lr ir Page ni t fwwmw , treatment. taking kindiy to harsh find my picture m noted for ' why you'ii ' made that s bitt or gacket So is on every pair of siacks or s famous fabric. Look for me in your favorite tore. Remember: just ask for FIELDCLUB. IMI! 5 LHID 5 2,7077 Kiwi 'Y I Liz, 443018: had . 'igipsn it it1iv'0uAQqiii' 57 W 1 IMG. f w- Dry cieggnlttplpgxwiii Q 'M Sf- Nm My as i i A i',7''2f,.i.'k?I?gQ5-,.ii?.i'W'7'Ft?aal N3 noniistt or ClAMERT0B'1Kt211ig57 ' C OMPLIMENTS OF S QF D 9 uunu4,,,HI lun. In P mic r,4.,,ml 'f 4 E RAVINE CLUB Y 7,- 'N fax ZA K 'wiki AX I AT fx 5 f Z f 1 wif' R . 'VX I ml, A LOYAIL e always, to the cause of better- i Yearbooks 2 RJ JAHN Er' OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. , Makers of Hne Printing ' Plates for Black and Colon ', Artists - Photographers 8 1 7 VLWASHINGTON num CHICJFU Pk zgc fzvefzfy-one E Page fzvvrlfy-fun QIXQ Printed By BENTON REVIEW PUB llll'UI'lNJTilll'd Fowler, Ind. QXRQ L D sh-- Wf H F 78 TQ P ff , 'Rfk ease : 0 955 ,rf-vr' ffffgw - -, V I..,z..:::OH 3 Q WLS! N? 75 tn 5 2g1,Xff 'f '-Mu ia QW? M 3 ' Q, 4 .. , 6 f U- I fb X' ' -f H J - , W 5 5 df if A ' ? f - 7 'J 0 I ' 5, -ff , . 5. I lZl:o1ja rx K: ' - X' 5A YN N .- , - W! 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