Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT)

 - Class of 1945

Page 1 of 192

 

Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT) online collection, 1945 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1945 volume:

E ,,,b , , , 4 - , ' 'V 3- 93905 2fN if '1Lfif'f fpwyy EQLUL S1 SJW of MQ W ,pf JAWVMQWJ mf, M ws cfbfLff'f XM mfggmgf W WW by Q51 u MMWAHWJHIL7? mm W O9 . XM Mk Sn.ewa.q,,.gff,gZgg I 3fW, 5' M0 X C1-i JW XM if '33, 69M 5247 im wr, X ...- xv wt fi I J 1 1 1 r -N. 'Q' 5 v-1 iii 5 Qs.. i i' :XY 5' rf 31 gS?.s K .rg ,, THE I CHIANZA UUMPILEII ANU PUBLISHED FUI'- THE STUDENT BUIIY BY THE GP-AIIUATING CLASS UE THE HUTCHHISS SCHUUL LAI-QEVILLE, UUNN. DEIJICATIUN We of the Class of 1945 recognize how much the students of Hotchkiss have been indebted to Mr. Taber during the past thirty-two years for his faithful in- struction and friendly supervision both in the classroom and on the athletic fields. In order to show a very small part of our gratitude for the interest he has taken in us and in the classes that have preceded us, We dedicate this issue of the Misch- ianza to him. Page four l Now, what was that rule? The coach looks on They're off! Page five Q-1.5M-. 3 A, . K x .. . X' a- , X Yi f 1 fd .V ' . ,J- 1 ' ,X , -,Nix 4 . ww A 1 f--ew wg f, . , .. ., N . W ,yi . . 'J 'k ff' 'in .. 7 It 1-if 'rw' .sw fs ix.. K ,, 21.3, fx-ni' ,J- N ,f,id. Q., X ms, f ' w fig f . , E s-A 4? A . 'Y H my Pagr sim f.,,,. ms .. 5 , ff , 1. l. X .Q xi. X, P .Alix -..'.s A f ,W M lk x'LA X ' x EA . .ff , fx 1 1: ,. f-. . g , Y Zig' Q Y n' Q 4' T ff 911 idx 1 ' 1- R f :ff2iZg5x'qj1f 'if- 1 THE TRUSTEES MR. JOHN P. ELTON, Waterbury, Conn. ARTHUR MORRIS COLLENS, Hartford, Conn. fPresidentj GEORGE VAN SANTVOORD, B.Litt., L.H.D., Lakeville, Conn. HAROLD STANLEY, New York City HENRY LOCKWOOD deFORREST, B.A., Plainfield, N. J. HOWARD F. LANDON, L.L.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 Manchester, Conn. DR. DICKENSON W. RICHARDS, JR., New York City EDWIN FOSTER BLAIR, New York City JOHN EDWARD BIERWIRTH, New York City JOHN EDWARD ELLSWORTI-I, 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 se-uen GEORGE VAN SANTVOORD M.A., LITT.B., D.H.L. Hotchkiss, Class of 19083 Yale College, 19125 Bishop Berkley's scholar in Yale Graduate School, 1912-19135 Rhodes Scholar from Connecticut at Oriel College, Oxford, 1913-1916, taking the degree of B.A. in the Honor School of English Language and Literature in 1915, B.LITT.' in 1917, and M.A. in 19235 ambulance driver with the French Army, 19165 Assistant Master at Winchester College, England, 1916-1917g Sergeant, 39th U. S. Infantry QCroiX de guerrej, and Second Lieutenant, 167th Infantry, in France, 1917-19193 Instructor and Assistant Professor of English in Yale University, 1919-192 5 5 Professor of English Literature in the University of Buffaio, 1925-19265 received the degree of Doctor of Humane Letters from Williams College, 19343 PresidentiaQ Elector, 1936 3 Member of Civilian Board inspecting the U. S. Naval Academy, 19373 Life Member of YaQe Corporation, 193 85 Mem- ber of Board of Trustees of Hotchkiss School, Emma Willard, and Union TheoQogical Seminary. THE HEAIJNIASTER LAXWRICNCIQ WASHINGTON MURPHY Assistant Headmaster Mathematics Vanderbilt University, 19083 Professor of Mathe- matics, Georgia School of Technology, 19091 M.A., Harvard, 1916, Instructor in Mathematics, Case School of Applied Sciences, 1916, and Culver Sum- mer Schools, 1915-19173 Master in Mathematics, The Hotchkiss School, 1917, Assistant Headmaster, 1930. Page ten FACULTY HARRY J. WEILER Resident Physician B.A., Allegheny College, 19135 Captain, Field Ar- tillery, 1917-19195 M.D., P.S., Columbia University, 1923, Presbyterian Hospital, 19255 Assistant Physi- cian, The Hill School, 1925-19275 Physician, The Hotchkiss School, 1927. HOWARD ALFRED TABER Physics B.A., Brown University, 1910, Rhodes Scholar at St. John's College, Oxford, 1910-19133 B.A., Oxford, 1913, and M.A., 1938, Master in Physics, The Hotch- - kiss School, 1913. DENISON FISH Music B.A., Princeton, 19065 Organist and Choirmaster, St. Mark's School, 1910-1918, Master in Music, The Hotchkiss School, 1918. Page eleven ' JOHN MCCHESNEY English B.A., Amherst College, 1908, Instructor in Phil- osophy, Columbia University, 1909-1911, and Uni- versity of Colorado, 1915-1917, Master in English, The Hotchkiss School, 1919. CARLE LAWYER PARSONS English The Hotchkiss School, 1909, B.A., Williams, 1913, Instructor in English, Adirondack-Florida School, ' 1913-1921, Master in English, The Hotchkiss School, 1921. HENRY C. EDGAR English B.A., Lafayette College, 1905, Master in English, Pensacola Classical School, 1906-1909, Master in English, The Hill School, 1909-1922, Master in Eng- lish, Shadyside Academy, 1922-1923, Master in Eng- lish, the Hotchkiss School, 1923. JOHN KNOX BODEL Science Punahou Academy, 1924, B.A., Wesleyan, 1929, M.A., Harvard University, 1940, Master in Science, The Hotchkiss School, 1929. Page twelve EDWARD RICE HALE Mathematics Phillips Andover Academy, 1919, Master in Mathe- matics, The Ardon School, 1919-1920, B.A., Univer- sity of Maine, 1926, The Lake Placid School, 1926- 1931, Master in Mathematics, The Hotchkiss School 193 l. RICHARD CROCKER GURNEY THOMAS PEABODY BLAGDEN Art and English The Hotchkiss School, 1929, B.A., Yale, 1933 ,Studied at Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Mas- ter in Art, The Hotchkiss School, 1935, in English 1942. 1 English Philips Exeter Academy, 1924, Ph.B., Brown Uni- versity, 1928, B.A., Oxford, 1930, Rhodes Scholar, Christ Church, Oxford, 1928-1931, Master at Rivers School, 1931-1933, Master at Texas Country Day School, 1933-1935, Master in English, The Hotchkiss School, 1935. CHARLES E. BERRY German and History B.A., Bowdoin College, 1926, Master in German and History, Brewster Academy, 1927, M.A., Har- vard, 1931, Ass'n. of the Teachers of German, Mas- ter in German, The Hotchkiss School, 1936. Page thirteen GILBERT M. SMITH French and Athletic Director Dummcr Academy, 1921, B.A., St. Stephens Col- lege, 19254 Sorbonne, 1928-1929, M. A., Western Reserve University, 1932, University of Besancon, 193 85 Instructor in French and Latin, Dummcr Acad- emy, 1925-1928g Instructor in French, The Hawken School, 1929-19365 Master in French, The Hotchkiss School, 1936: and Athletic Director, 1944. WILLIAM N. STAKELY Chemistry B.S. in F..E., Georgia Institute of Technology, 1917- 1922, Yale University, 1923, M. A., Columbia, 1932, Instructor in Science and Mathematics, The Suffield Academy, 1925-1937, Master in Chemistry, The Hotchkiss School, 1937. 1 REV. JOHN M. MULLIGAN Bible B.A., St. Stcphen's College, Columbia University, 1932, Episcopal Theological School, Cambridge, B.D., 19363 Master in Bible, The Hotchkiss School, 1937. Page fourteen WALTER T. WILSON Mathematics B.A., Dartmouth College, 19173 U. S. Army Cap- tain, Ordinance Department, 1917-1919, Instructor in Mathematics, The Monson Academy, 1920-1922, and Harvard School, Chicago, 1922-19255 and the New York Military Academy, 1925-19335 Master in Mathematics, The Hotchkiss School, 1937. l ALLAN SPENCER HOEY Greek and Latin B.A., Queensland University, 19295 B.A., Oxford University, 1931, Senior Research Student, Oxford, 1932-19333 Department of Classics, Yale University, 1933-1935, M.A., Oxford University, 19383 Ph.D., Yale University, 19405 Master in Latin and Greek, The Hotchkiss School, 1941. PAUL TEMPLE History B.A., M.A., Harvard University, 19073 Master at Choate, Tome, and Pawling Schools, 1908-19423 Mas- ter in History,'The Hotchkiss School, 1942. I ATWOOD LEVENSALER English and Public Speaking r B.A., University of Maine, 1936, Master in English, Rockland High School, 1936-19375 Instructor in English in Yale University, 19435 Master in English and Public Speaking, The Hotchkiss School, 1939. GEORGE D. KELLOGG Science The Hotchkiss School, 19353 B.E., Yale University, 1939, Master in Science, The Hotchkiss School, 1942. Page fifteen LAWRENCE ABBOTT Mathematics B.A., Harvard University, 19245 with The National Broadcasting Company, 1934-19425 Contributing Editor, TIME magazine, 1942-19433 Master in Mathe- matics, The Hotchkiss School, 1943. JOHN DeBOER CUMMINGS History Sergeant, U. S. Army, 1917-1919, Sc.B., Kenyon College, 19223 A.M., University of Michigan, 1923, A.M., Columbia University, 19385 Universities of Southern California, Munich, Moscowg Master at San- ford School, 1923-1924g Northwestern Military Academy, 1924-19255 Kenyon College, 1925-19263 Lenox School, 1926-19365 and at The Cranbrook School, 1936-19435 Master in History, The Hotch- kiss School, 1943. RUSSELL A. EDWARDS , Latin A.B., Yale University, 1937g University Fellow, Yale University, 1937-19383 Instructor in Latin and Ancient History, Suffield Academy, 1938-19433 Master in Latin, The Hotchkiss School, 1943. GEORGE P. HOWARD French B.S., Harvard University, 19203 Universite de Montpellier, 19263 Master in French and Spanish, The Morristown School, 1920-19255 Head of Modern Language Department, The Hackley School, 1926- 19433 Master in French, The Hotchkiss School, 1943. Page sixteen WAYNE P. STILES Latin B.A., Amherst College, 1916, Instructor in Latin, Greek and Mathematics, Mercersberg Academy, 1916- 1918, Sergeant, Field Artillery, 1918-1919, Suffield School of Law, 1925-1926, Instructor in Latin and Mathematics, Tabor Academy, 1929-1930, Senior Master and Instructor in Latin and Mathematics, The Catalina Island School, 1931-1935, Instructor in Latin, The Hun School, 1935-1937, Master in Latin, The Tamalpais School, 1937-1941, Master in Mathe- matics and Latin, The Southern Arizona School, 1941- 1943, Master in Latin, The Hotchkiss School, 1943. as s' HEYWOOD HUNTER Mathematics School, 1943. Pianoforte B.A., Reed College, 1941, Master in English, Reed College, 1 1941-1942, Instructor in Piano- forte, The Hotchkiss School, 1942. B.S., Columbia University, 1926, Master at St. Bernhard's School, 1927-1943, Master in Mathematics, The Hotchkiss MALCOLM WILLIS ,Q-....,,,, PETER BEAUMONT French B.A., Oxford University, 1933, M.A., 1934, Diplo- mas Frieburg University, Germany, 1935, 1938, Paris, Instructor in English, The Hermann Lietz School, Germany, 1934, Lektor, Frieburg University, 1935, Instructor in French and German, Harden School, England, 1936, Baymount School, Ireland, 1937, Tabor Academy, 1939, Master in French, The Hotchkiss School, 1944. ARTHUR HOWE, JR. Mathematics and Latin The Hotchkiss School, 1938, Rugby School, Eng- land, 1938-1939, Yale College, 1941, Major, Ameri- can Field Service with British Middle East Forces, 1941-1943, Master in Mathematics, The Hotchkiss School, 1944. Page seventeen RICHARD MANSFIELD HAYWOOD Latin, Greek, and Spanish Dartmouth College, 1926, Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, Ph.D., 1932, Evans School, 1927-1929, Johns Hopkins University, 1932-1944, Guggenheim Fellow, 1939-1940, Master in Latin, Greek, and Spanish, The Hotchkiss School, 1944. THOMAS PRICE STEARNS History y B.A., M.A., Washington and Lee University, 1928, Master at Salisbury School, 1934-1942, Sergeant, U.S.M.C., 1942-1944, Master in History, The Hotchkiss School, 1944. CHARLES ALEXANDER SEIBERT French, Spanish Williams College, 1924 B.A., University of Paris, 1932, Columbia University, M.A., 1933, University of North Carolina, 1940, Master in French and Span- ish, The Hotchkiss School, 1944. ' ALEXANDER RENNY Physics, Mathematics The University of St. Andrews QScotlandQ, Re- search in Chemistry, 1919 C.A., 1927 B.Litt., Ph.D. fMath.j , 1940 D.Sc. fChem.j, 14 years in Secondary Schools in Britain, 1934-1936 Warwick Academy, Bermuda, 1936-1941 Upper Canada College, Toron- to, 1941-1943 Headmaster, Warwick Academy, Ber- muda, 1944 Ashbury College, Ottawa, Master in Physics and Mathematics, The Hotchkiss School, 1944. WILFRED T. GRENFELL English and French New College, Oxford University, B. A., 1930- 1933, Secretary to the Technical Delegate of the League Council to the Government of China, 1933- 1934, London University, Diploma of Education, 1934-193 5, Dover College Junior School, Dover, Eng- land, 1935-1936, M.A., Oxford, 1937, History Teacher at St. Marks, Southboro, Mass., 1936- 1944, Field Representative, O.W.I., in England, 1944, The Hotchkiss School, 1945. 'c Page eighteen ' N 'm .Q I gk i K 1 wx. ,L bv X . W 0 ,an- W , 0, 32 E' N I 5' .iw-wx, gym , ' Mq,,M.,,vf f xr. 'S Sf. , xxx! .wX.,--.- NPN Q' A 435 5. ,X I ax. x ,X 'X W M gg 'N xx . X Q Ls? .X S ,SWS Az K fa Q N Xl, A -eiiaggax.. -. Y , 5, -ff K' Q S.. QR A fm' R KE N: . J A Y. .ffm - S his Sa k .1 x ix. Q X Ns?-. - V: Q. Ps QM ,RNS S X 5 3893 ,Q , V M i ,22 Sh? .-Aff QQ ,A Cf' ' ,'-' ...A , -I ' 3' .JN . '-9, .Q . Yf,-A A . 1 :vin '1 If wg fx, ff ,QVC 4.4 , N 7,1 V. NM, .1 z 4 - , .4 - l,,,t 'Wim' JOHN M. ALLEN 6 Quaker Center Scarsdale, N. Y. ..-Iohnna ujohnny., Yale Marines Ah, come on, Bob, don't Worr about Y garbage-cans. EIUWARD EVERETT ALLEY, III 366 Heights Road Ridgewood, New Jersey ..Ed,,, ..Eddie,, Williams Navy Well, back home therels a guy who-'i Page twenty-two 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Hackcr's Hockey, Class Swim- ming Team, Class Baseball Team. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Football Team, School Football Squad, Championship Touchball Team, Championship Club Basketball Team, School Basketball Squad, Club Baseball Team, School Baseball Squad, Cast of The Moon Is Down, Knickerbocker Holiday. 1943-44 . . . Championship Club Football Team, School Football Team, Club Basketball Team, School Basketball Team, School Baseball Squad, 3rd Honor Roll 1st Semester, Fuuxfus, You Carft Take If Willa You, Muc's Monologue, Refund, H.D.A., Associate Editor MISCHIANZA, Class Secretary 1st Term, Student Council. 1942 -43 . . . Monahan Club Lightweight Football Team, All-Star Lightweight Football Team, Club Hockey, Club Baseball Team, School Baseball Squad, Band. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Football Team, School Football Team, Boxing Instructor, Club Hockey, School Baseball Team, Manager of Syncopators. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Football, School Football Squad, Club Basketball, School Basketball Squad, St. Luke's Society, Woods Com- mittee, Woods Squad. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Football, School Football Squad, Club Basketball, School Basketball Squad, St. Luke's Society, General Offi- cer on Woods Committee, Woods Squad. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Hockey, Baseball, Dayboy. 1942-43 . . . Baker Club Lightweight Football, Club Baseball, Day- boy. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Football, Club Basketball, Captain of Lightweight Baseball Team, Dayboy and Five-Day Boarder, 3rd Honor Roll, Lightweight All-Star Baseball Team. CHRISTOPHER H. BALLOU Chester, Vermont uchrisn, ujap., Marines Py, gholly. Who stacked the dishes? MAYNARD C. BARTRAM, JR. Sharon, Conn. Bart , Mayne Yale Navy What, are ya kiddin', kid? Page twenty-th ree SEVIER BONNIE, JR. 18 Brownsboro Hill Louisville, Ky. Doc , Roscoe , The Colonel , Buckwheat , Jap Yale Armored Force Watcl1 that talk! I woulcln't want to have to punch one of you Yankees. HAMILTON BUSSER BOWMAN 630 South Winden Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa. Ham , Horner , Homely-Bones' Sniffles , Lips Yale Merchant Marine Sp:-t-t-t-t Page twenty-four 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Soccer, School Soccer Squad, Second Hockey Champions, Club Swimming, Club Tennis, School Tennis Team, Runner-Up School Tennis Tournament, Syncopators. 1944-45 . . . Club Soccer, School Soccer Team, Club Hockey Champions, School Tennis Team, Casts of Gmrgc Waxhilzglfmri Slrpl Here, L'Anglais tel qu'on Parle, H.D.A., Alliance Francaise, Man- ager Glee Club, Third Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club, Club Football, School Basketball Squad, School Golf Squad, Cast of Dr. Faushlx, Assistant Editor of Record, Glee Club, Chem-Physics Club, Syncopators, Band. 1944-45 . . . Club Football, School Football Team, School Basket- ball Team, School Track Squad, Ski Club, Junior Batmen, Record Editorial Board, Syncopators, Band, Glee Club, Chem-Physics Club, Walkers Club, Geo-Political Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Skiing, Track, Cast of Naughty Naughl, Choir. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Soccer, Skating, Woods Squad, LIT Heel- cr, Choir. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Club Soccer, Skating, Tennis, LIT Board. 1944-45 . . . Hoyt Club Soccer, Club Hockey, Track, LIT board. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Championship Touch Football Team, Band, Orchestra, School Swimming Squad, Class Swimming Team, Class Baseball Squad, Photography Club. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Football, Championship All-Star Touchball Team, Band, Junior Syncopaters, School Swimming Team, Rvrorif, Dramat Business Boartl, Club Track Team, Mi1ler's Maraud- ers. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Football Team, School Football Squad, Syncopatcrs, H.D.A., School Swimming Team, Club Championship Swimming Team, Band, Associate Editor of Record, Club Track Team, School Track Squad, Cast of Grraf Calherinr, 4th Floor Raiders. 1944-45 . . . Monahan Club Championship Football Team, School Football Team, Cast of Yellow lack, Marbella, H.D.A., Band, Glee Club, Syncopaters, Captain of School Swimming Team, Captain of Club Swimming Team, Member of Debating Society, Secretary of Ville Squad, Club Championship Track Team, School Track Team, junior Batman, Sunday Luncheon Club, Walker's Club, Dance Committee, Revorll Sports Editor. RALPH E. BRANDLI Mendham, N. j. Rollo , Rudolf Yale Ca nnon Fodder Bourgeois canaille. THOMAS EVANS BRITTINGHAM, Ill Stillmuven Greenville, Delaware Big Britt , Moe , Large Tom Williams Navy You guys are obviously all immoral boors. l Page twenty- five CARLETON CHADBOURNE BROWER Putnam Place Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Bud , Carl , Greek,', I-lomericos' Along the cool sequestered vale of life he kept the caffeinated tenor of his way. EDWIN NASH BROYLES, JR. 4405 Bedford Place Baltimore 18, Md. Ed , Hard Broils' Yale American Field Service Let's have lots'a chuckles. l Page twenty-six 1941-42 . . . Sequestered. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Soccer, Club Swimming, Club Track, School Track Squad, Record, Orchestra, Band. 1943-44 . . . Sequestered with Oak Leaf Cluster, Fishbaiters' Guild. 1944-45 . . . C-lub Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Captain Club Swimming Team, School Swimming Team, Captain Club Track Team, School Track Team, Record Board, Casts of Yellow luck, George Washington Slept Here, L'Anglais Tel Qu-On Le Parle, Marbella, H.D.A., President of Alliance-Francaise, Orchestra, Band, Cum Laude, Jules Cult, H.A.C., Poetry Prize, Latin Prize, Valedic- torian. 1944-45 . . . Assistant Coach of Hoyt Lightweight Football Team, School Football Team, School Hockey Team, Assistant School Track Coach, Student Council, Casts of Yellow jack and Mafbfzh, Dissi- pared Dieties, H.A.C. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Class Hockey, Class Baseball, Class Swimming, Band, Third Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Baker Championship Club Football Team, Champion- ship Club Hockey Team, Club Swimming, Championship Club Track Team, School Track Team, Band, Cast of Knickerbocker Holiday. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Soccer, Club Hockey, School Hockey Team, Club Swimming, Club Track, School Track Team, Syncopat- ers, Glee Club. Nui 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Lightweight Football, Club Basketball, Club Track, Third Honor Roll, Band, Orchestra, Fourth Floor Raiders. 1944-45 . . . Taylor Club Football, Middleweight Football Team, School Basketball Squad, School Track Team, Hotchkiss-Taft De- bate, Decoration Committee, Cum Laude, Spanish and History Prizes. r DAVID J. BRYAN 621 College Rd. Lake Forest, Illinois Dave , Gorrop I'm Very sorry, I don't think so at all. ROBERT STANLEY BRYAN 2242 Woodscrest Lincoln, Nebraska Bob , Phantom , Swish Yale Army 'Sure, Brit, you can check my Spanish. Page twenty-seven WII.LIAM RIENWICK CAMPBELL Highf'ields Lambertville, N. J. Bill Princeton Navy Combat Aircrcwman Well, I can leave now, the food's gone. HENRY ALAN GEOFFREY CHAPMAN Sunset Hill Road Bethel, Conn. ..Chippcr,,, uchappyn, .ichapny UAPEH Army My arms do NOT hang below my knees. 1 Page twenty-eight 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Class Swimming Team, Track Squad, Choir, Photography Club. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Lightweight Football Team, Light- weight Football All-Stars, Skiing, Club Swimming Team, School Track Team, Club Track Team, Ski Club, Photography Club, Choir. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Heavyweight Football Team, Boxing, Club Track Team, School Track Team, Dramat Lighting Mgr., H.D.A., Lighting for Pinafon-, Choir. 1944-45 . . . Monahan Club Championship Football Team, School Second Football Team, Capt. of Club Championship Hockey Team, School Swimming Team, School Track Team, Club Track Team, Co-President of H.D.A., Dramat Lighting Mgr., Choir, Library Committee, Pigeon Club. 1941-42 . . . Woods Squad, Skiing, Class Baseball. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Soccer, Ski Team, Pony League Base- ball, Band, Science Club. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Soccer, School Soccer Squad, Skiing, Woods Squad, Pigeon Club, Sequester Club, Rifle Team, Associate Editor of the Lil. 1944-45 . . . Taylor Club Soccer, School Soccer Team, President of Ski Club, Captain of Ski Team, Captain of Second School Soccer Team, School Track Squad, Pigeon Club, Rifle Team, Assistant Business Manager of Lil, Junior Batmen. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Ski Club, Class Swimming Team, Class Baseball Team. 1942-43 . . . Baker Championship Club Lightweight Football Team, School Lightweight Football Team, Ski Club, Club Swimming Team, Pony League Baseball, Cast of Kflirkerboclwr Holiday. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Football Team, Ski Club, Ski Committee, School Swimming Team, Assistant Business Manager of Lil, Club Swimming Team, School Baseball Squad, Stage Crew. 1944-45 . . . School Football Team, Baker Club Football Team, School Skiing Team, Swimming Team, Ski Committee, H.D.A., School Baseball Squad, Chairman of Lil. 1941-42 . . . Tennis, Hockey, Baseball, Choir, Woods Squad. 1942-43 . . .Hoyt Club, Football, Club Hockey, Pony League Baseball, Choir, Woods Squad. 1943-44 . . . Woods Squad, Hoyt Club Hockey, Pony League Base- ball, Choir. 1944-45 . . .Hoyt Club Football, Woods Squad, Club Hockey, Club Baseball, English Club, Glee Club, Choir. BLAIR CHILDS, JR. 3321 Dent Place Washington, D. C. Mule , Little Rcddic , Red ' Yale U. S. Merchant Marine Don't give me none of your lip, l1ub. SIDNEY S. CLINE Amenia, N. Y. Stew , Steamboat , Tug Yale Army Well, if it isn't one thing, it's another. Page twenty-nine DAVID ALDEN CLITTER 709 Webster Avenue New Rochelle, N. Y. UDAVCH' HCM.. Yale Army Yes, Dick, you can borrow my ph lab report. ysics- JEFFERY W. COOK 259 Tuttle Parkway Westfield, N. jeff , The Thump , Thumper,' Yale Army jersey is xo the best state. Page thirty 1942-45 . . . Monahan Club, Skiing, Tennis, Siegle's Corridor, Choir. 1943-44 . . .Monahan Club, Skiing, Tennis, Glce Club, Choir, Woods Squad. 1944-45 . . . Monahan Club Soccer, Manager of School Ski Team, Ski Club, Tennis, Glec Club, Choir, Chem-Physics, Photography Club, Panel Club CCompulsory Membershipj, English Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Skiing, Track. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Football Squad, Basektball, Champion- ship Pony League Baseball Team, Cast of The Moon Is Down. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Football Team, School Football Squad, Club Basketball, Championship Pony League Baseball Team, Cast of Rcfuml, H.D.A. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Squad, Class Hockey Squad, Tennis Squad, 3rd Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Baker Club Lightweight Championship Football Team, All-Star Lightweight Football Team, Club Hockey Squad, Tennis Squad, War Emergency Radio Service Club. 1943-44. . .Baker Club Football Squad, Club Hockey Squad, Sequcster Club, Pony League Baseball, Dramatic Assistant Electrician, Syncopator Electrician, War Emergency Radio Station, WKJA, H.A.C. A 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Hockey, and Baseball Teams, Choir, Band, 3rd Honor Roll lst Semester, 2nd Honor Roll 2nd Semester, Photography Club, Cast of Naughfy Nanghf, Math Prize. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Lightweight Football Team, Club Hockey Squad, Pony League Baseball, Choir, Band, 2nd Honor Roll, Cast of On Horrourzl Time. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Championship Club Lightweight Football Team, Club Hockey Team, School Hockey Squad, Lightweight Football All- Stars, Pony League Baseball, Band, 3rd Honor Roll, Cast of Dr. Fauxlux, H.D.A., Treasurer of Chem-Physics Club, Editor of MISCH, Math Prize. 1944-45 . . . Hoyt Club Football Team, Club Hockey Team, School Hockey Squad, Tennis, Photographic Editor MISCH, Co-President Photography Club, President Chem-Physics Club, H.D.A., N. Y. Herald-Tribune Agent, English Club, Cum Laude, Debate. , JOSEPH PLATT COOKE, VI 4393 Royal Place Honolulu, Hawaii Q-Joes, M. I. T. Navy Pay up, Wl1itcon1b. KENT RANSOM COSTIKYAN, JR. 50 Afterglow Ave. Montclair, N. KI, Kent , Cos , Scoop , Kaint , Kenter Yale Navy No, Childs, you can't borrow any more Misch pictures. 1 1 l Page thirty-one WILLIAM MONTGOMERY CRUIKSHANK Gaywood Monticello, Illinois Cruiker , Cruik,', Bill,' Yale Navy Have you read the one about the--? WESLEY M. DIXON, JR. 95 South Waukegan Rd. Lake Forest, Illinois Wes , Wessix , Wet Wes , Web-Well Yale Marines Things are coming to a head, let's squeeze 'emf' Page thirty-two 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Football, Club Swimming, Club Track, Choir, Glce Club, Rifle Team. 1944-45 . . .Club Football, Club Swimming, Club Golf Team, School Golf Team, Glee Club, Rifle Team, Opera Club, junior Batmen. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Class Hockey, Class Baseball, All-Star Class Soccer Squad, Band, Choir, Photography Club. 1942-45 . . . Baker Club Lightweight Championship Football Team, School Lightweight Football Team, Club Hockey, Club Golf Team, Stage Crew, Record, Photography Club. 1943-44 . . . Baker Football Team, Baker Hockey Team, School Hockey Squad, Captain Baker Golf Team, Baker Swimming Team, Associate Editor of Record, Stage Crew, H.D.A,, Cast of Grvul Calherinc. 1944-45 . . . Baker Football Team, School Middleweight Football Squad, School Hockey Team, Captain Baker Golf Team, School Golf Squad, Cast of Yellow lack, H.D.A, 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Championship Club Football Team, School Foot- ball Squad, Club Basketball, Second Team Basketball, School Track Squad, Rrmnf hceler. 1944-45 . . . Club Football Team, School Football Squad, School Basketball Team, Captain of Club Track Team, School Track Team, Rbcrorii Assignment Editor, Dance Committee Chairman, Student Council. 194l-42 . . . Red Cards. 1942-43 . . . Blue Cards, 1943-44 . . . Golf Squad, Second Honor Roll. 1944-45 . . . Woods Squad, Captain Hoyt Golf Team, School Golf Team C L d , um au c, Second Honor Roll, Library Committee, Founder of Progressive Party, Frey's Casino, Cast of Macbrlb, Lord Prize. I C HERBERT H. DOW 923 West Park Drive Midland, Michigan Squirrel , Stub , Animal',, 1-lerbine , Rowdy Dow Yale Navy Oh Mead, she is soooo muldy! HARRY DURNING 972 Woodycrest Ave. The Bronx, New York Hank , Dank Hank , Blue Standout Yale Nurses Aid 'lYou wouldn't smoke either if you only had one lung. Page thirty-three RICHARD C. EGBERT 7 Marion Road Upper Montclair, N. J. Dick , Dicker , Eggie , Boort Yale U. S. Mcrchant Marine Cadet Corps Who says I'm a wolf? CLINTON N. ELY R. D. 1, Ambler, Pa. Yale Marines Page thirty-four 1941-42 . . . Tennis, Touch Football Team, Hockey, Class Golf Team, Chem-Physics Club, Band. 1942-43 . . . Cast of Knickerbocker Holiday, Band, Record, Chem- Physics Club, H.D.A. Business Board Heeler, Third Honor Roll, Woods Squad, Monahan Club Soccer, Club Hockey, Tennis, Boxing. 1943-44 . . . Advertising Manager of Record, Band, Glee Club, H.D.A., Chem-Physics Club, Third Honor Roll, Woods Squad, Cast of Mr, Mac's The Great Impresurio, Club Hockey, Assistant Man- ager of Track. 1944-45 . . . Exchange Editor Record, Band, Glee Club, Chem- Physics Club, Photography Club, Opera Club, Geo-Political Club, Co-Manager Track Team, Library Committee, H.D.A., Woods Squad, Club Soccer, Club Hockey. . E 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, School Wrestling Squad, School Track Squad, Secretary of Class Winter Term, Student Council, Upson Prize, 3rd Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Football Team, School Football Team, Lightweight Basketball, Club Track Team, School Track Squad, President of Class Winter Term, Student Council, Edwards Prize, 2nd Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Football Team, School Football Team, Club Basketball, Club Track Team, School Track Team, Mr. Mac's Bond Rally, Managing Editor Record, Treasurer of Class Winter Term, Vice-President Spring Term, 3rd Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Football, Woods Squad, Baseball, 1944-45 . . . Taylor Club Soccer, Middleweight Soccer Squad, Ski- ing, Woods Squad, Tennis, Manager School Tennis, Herr Berry's Not-So-Secret-Seven. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Skiing, Class Baseball, Choir, Photog- raphy Club. 1942-43 . . . Baker Lightweight Football Champs, Hacker's Hockey, Boxing, Club Track, Sequestcr Club, Choir, Glee Club, Ski Club. 1943-44 Sequestcr Hang-Over, Baker Waterboy, Club Lightweight Hockey, Boxing, Club Track, H.D.A., Exchange Editor of the Lil, Glee Club, Finally Readmitted to Long Triangle Society, Ski Club. 1944-45 . . . Life Member of Sequae Club, Club Football, Ski Club, Club Hockey, Co-Captain Lightweight School Hockey Team, Club Track, Business Manager of Lil, Assistant Business Manager of H.D.A., Glce Club, Georgian Bay Piscatorial Society. I l THOMAS LIND EPSTEIN 19480 Canterbury Detroit, Mich. Ep , Eppie , Iipper , Tomnsco U. of Michigan Army As they say at the race track, 'Turf'L--'i DALE VON PRIEF FARDELMANN Lloyd Neck Huntington, Long Island, N. Y. up Stinky , Fardy , Fardle , Mole , Whaler , Priefcr , Von Pricf' Yale Navy The hell with Princeton! Yalc's got a Yacht Club!! Page thirty-five GUSTAV FLEISCHMANN Maple Avenue Peekskill, N. Y. Gus , Gussie , The Voice , Gustav Princeton Navy Aw, shut up. WALTER GUERNSEY FREY Deer Run West Cornwall, Conn. Walt',, Uncle Walt , Cherub , Walden Yale Navy Pokcr? Why, no, sir! just a friendly game of whistf' Page thirty-six 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Class Baseball Team. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Football Team, Hacker's Hockey, Pony League Baseball, 1943-44 . . . Club Football Team, School Football Squad, Club Hockey Team, Pony League Baseball. N i 1941-42 . . . Golf, Band, Choir, Third Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Soccer, Lightweight Basketball, Boxing, Choir, Third Honor Roll, Band. 1943-44 . . . Club Soccer, Club Basketball, Choir, Glce Club, Band, Stage Manager of H.D.A., Sequae Club, Rifle Club, Third Honor Roll. 1944-45 . . . Club Soccer Team, Championship Club Basketball Team, Golf, Glee Club, Band, Editor of MISCHIANZA, Cum Laude, Second Honor Roll, English Club, Stage Manager and Co-President of H.D.A., Class Gift Committee, Georgian Bay Piscatorial Society. 1942-43 Q . . Baker Club Championship Lightweight Football Team, All-Star Lightweight Football Team, Club Second Hockey Team, Tennis, Cast of The Moon Is Down, Band, Business Board of the Record, Second Honor Roll, Latin Prize, Math Prize. 1942-43 . . .Club Football Squad, Club Second Team Hockey, Captain Pony Baseball Team, All-Star Pony Baseball Team, Assistant Business Manager of the Record, Glee Club, Syncopaters, Casts of Dr. Fuusfux, You Can't Take It With You, and The Great Cafherine, Second Honor Roll, Decoration Committee, Class Secretary, Spring Term, Student Council, Latin Prize, Math Prize. 1944-45 . . . Club Football Team, Hockey Team, and Golf Team, School Golf Squad, Middleweight Football Squad, Glee Club, Band, Syncopaters, Head Cheer-Leader, Business Manager of the Record, Cum Laude Society, Debating Team, Casts of Yellow lack, George Washiuglon Slept Here, Macbeth, and L'Anglais Tcl Q'on Le Parle, Treasurer of Class Fall Term, Student Council, English Club, Geo- Political Club, Hunting and Fishing Club, Second Honor Roll, Sun- day Lunch Club, Dissipated Dieties. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, Hoyt Tennis School Tennis Squad, Ville Squad. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, School Ten- nis Team, Ville Squad. CHARLES STEDMAN GARLAND 4 Charlcote Place Baltimore, Maryland Charlie , Chuck , Car , Oyster Yale Navy Don't you boys worry about a thing- I'll put a man on it. J. D. GIBBONS Ramsbury Pembroke, Bermuda Dave , Gila , Geebon Harvard Army Oh, don't be a jackass, Oakes. Page thirty-seven DAVID A. GIMBEL King Street, Greenwich, Conn. Dave , Nails , Mauler Yale Marines What do you mean, Dixon is captain of the Ville squad? LAWRENCE B. GOODMAN 1016 Fifth Avenue New York City ..Larry,,, ulvaln, ..Benny,,, ..Go0dy,, M.I.T. Navy Ah, shucks, you're spoofin' me again. Page thirty-eight 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Class Hockey, Class Baseball, Third Honor Roll. 1942-45 . . . Monahan Club Lightweight Football Team, All-Star Lightweight Football Team, Club Swimming Team, Track, Boxing, Record, Second Honor Roll. 1945-44 . . . Monahan Club Football Team, Club Swimming Team, Boxing, Track, Third Honor Roll. 1944-45 . . . Monahan Club Championship Football Team, Casts of Yellow jack, Mucbclh, Boxing, Club Swimming Team, School Swim- ming Squad, School Football Squad, School Track Squad, Class Gift Committee, H.D.A., Third Honor Roll, Cum Laude. l 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Skiing, Track, Chem-Physics Club. 1942-43 . . .Taylor Skiing, Track Team, Band, Chem-Physics Club. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Football Team, School Football Squad, Skiing, Club Track Team, School Track Squad, Third Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Club Soccer, Woods Squad, Tennis, Chem- Physics Club, Photography Club, Pigeon Club, Third Honor Roll. I944-45 . . . Taylor Club Soccer, Manager School Hockey Team, Tennis, Photography Club, Co-Chairman of Medical Club, Al's Din- ing Club. 1942-43 . . , Baker Championship Club Lightweight Football Team, All-Star Team, Hockey, Basketball, Tennis Squad, Editor of the Lil, Choir. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Football, School Football Squad, Cham- pionship Club Basketball Team, School Basketball Team, Boxing Instructor, Championship Club Tennis Team, School Tennis Team, Editor of the Lil, Editorial Chairman of the Lil for 1945, Chem- Physics Club. FRANKLIN M. COULD 32-37 168 Street Flushing, N. Y. ..Fmnk,,, UI. JUN, ..Gimp,,, UF- Mg., The Mad Gouldern Yale Does Macy's tell Gimbel's? RICHARD BARNWELL GRIMBALL 18 Legare Street Charleston, South Carolina Dick , Arab , Dave',, Charlie Yale Navy Page thirty-nine PETER HAAREN Valley Road New Canaan, Conn. Dutchman , Pinus Pete I hope it isn't a Wild party, I only live nine miles from there. JOHN FREDERICK DENNIS HASKELL 3482 Holton Avenue Westnaotint, Montreal, Canada Denny , Den , Blimey , Canuck', McGill Royal Canadian Navy Smitty, which pair of my shoes do you have now?', Page forty 1942-43 . . . Seigle's Beagles, Baker Soccer Team, Ski Club, School Baseball Squad. 1943-44 . . . Baker Football Team, School Football Squad, Cast of Fauxlux, Baker Hockey Team, School Baseball Squad, Boxing Tourna- ment, Record. 1944-45 . . . Baker Football Team, School Football Squad, Treas- urer St. Luke's Society, Assistant Business Manager Record, Student Council, School Hockey Team, Decoration Committee, Cast of George Wrlxhinglon Slrpl Herr, Captain School Baseball Team. l I 1943-44 . . .Hoyt Club Football, Club Skiing, School Baseball Squad. 1944-45 . . . Hoyt Club Football, Club Basketball, School Baseball Squad, English Club, Junior Batmen, Membre Inactif d'Alliance Francaise. 1944-45 . . . Taylor Club Football, School Middleweight Football, Club Hockey, Tennis. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Hacker's Hockey, Baseball. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Soccer, Championship Club Swimming, School Swimming Squad, Club Baseball. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Soccer, Championship Pony League Baseball, All-Star Team, 1944-45 . . . Monahan Club Soccer, School Soccer Team, Club Swimming, School Swimming Squad, Decoration Committee. JAMES WALTON HERRING Marshall Ridge Road New Canaan, Conn. Qzxlimuxy nRed-n Yale Navy Ideas for a show? LANSING COLTON HOLDEN 34 Green Avenue New Canaan, Conn. Lance , Hole , Golden Holden , Wop Mule Princeton Paratroops Why do I always have to sleep with the PM Page forty-one l l ROBERT GAFFERS HOWLAND 7 Tallmadge Place Mcchanicville, N. Y. Bob , Bugs , Mechanicville , Bugs Bunny Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Navy Really, boys, Mechanicville is a city. OTIS LIVINGSTON HUBBARD 385 Wisconsin Avenue Lake Forest, Ill. Ode , Bear Tracks , Hub , Odor Yale Marines You're all right, Fig Bar, you're a good boy. Page forty-two 1944-45 . . . Hoyt Club Football, Middleweight Squad, Club Swim- ming, Tennis, Chem-Physics Club, Glee Club, Photography Club, Junior Batmen. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Class Hockey Team, Class Baseball Team, Band. 1942-43 . Taylor Lightweight Football, Lightweight All-Star Squad, Taylor Hockey, Taylor Baseball, School Baseball Squad, Record. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Football, School Football Squad, Taylor Hockey Team, School Baseball Team, Associate Editor of the Rrmrd, Fourth Floor Raiders. 1944-45 . . . Co-Captain of Taylor Football Team, School Football Squad, Captain of School Hockey Team, School Baseball Team, Record Editor, Rennygades. 1944-45 . . . Baker Club Football, Club Swimming, Tennis, Hunt- ing and Fishing Club, chem-Physics Club. 1941-42 . . . Captain Class Football, Class Hockey, School Tennis Squad, Club Swimming Team. 1942-43 . . . Baker Championship Club Football, Club Swimming, Championship Club Hockey, Championship Club Track, MISCH Heeler. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Football, Captain Championship Club Bas- ketball, School Football Squad, Club Tennis, School Basketball Squad, MISCH Associate Editor, Woods Committee, Class Treasurer Spring Term, Student Council. 1944-45 . . . Co-Captain Baker Club Football, School Football Team, School Basketball Team, Tennis, President of Class Fall Term, Class Secretary Winter Term, St. Luke's, Secretary of Student Coun- cil, President of Baker Club, Chairman Woods Committee, Chairman Decoration Committee, Circulation Manager of MISCH, Dramat Business Board. JOHN L. HUNTER 63 Center St. Gowanda, N. Y. Joe , Hunt , The Big Swede THOMAS W. HUNTER 399 Rivard Boulevard Grosse Pointe, Mich. ncapny ..Hen rin, ..-I-omn Yale Paratroops So what if she is only five-one? Page forty-three CHARLES L. HUTCHINSON 209 Lake Shore Drive Chicago, Ill. Hutch , Chucky Yale Army Air Corps You can't launch a ship every day, you know. EDGAR JADWIN 3700 Massachusetts Avenue Washington, D. C. llEdl!, QlEddyy! Princeton Army I'm serious this time, Hutch, I'm through with women for good. Page forty-four 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Class Hockey Team, Tennis. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Football Team, School Football Squad, Club Hockey Team, School Baseball Squad, Record, President of Class Spring Term, Student Council. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Club Football Team, Captain School Football Team, C-lub Hockey Team, Second School Hockey Team, School Baseball Squad, President of Class Fall and Winter Terms, Student Council. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Championship Touchball Team, School Swimming Team, Class Baseball Team, Talbott Cup. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Football Team, Championship Touch- ball Team, Captain Club Swimming Team, School Swimming Team Band, St. Luke's Society, Club Track Team, School Track Team, Lower Classmen Club Cup. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Football Team, School Football Team Captain of Club Swimming Team, Co-Captain of School Swimming Team, Band, St. Luke's, Captain of Club Track, School Track H.D.A., Lower Classman Club Cup, Converse Cup, MISCHIANZA J 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Swimming, Baseball, Photography Club, Third Honor Roll, Ville Squad. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Football, Swimming, Pony League Baseball Photography Club, Lil Heeler, Ville Squad, Third Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . , Taylor Football Team, Swimming, Pony League Base- ball, Vice-President of Photography Club, MISCH photographer, Third Honor Roll, Stage Crew, Associate Editor of Lit, H.D.A. Rifle Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Hockey, Class Baseball Team. 1942-43 . . . Baker Soccer, All-Star Soccer Team, Lightweight Bas- ketball, Pony League Baseball, MISCH, Band, St. Luke's Society. 1943-44 . . . Baker Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, Baker Bas- ketball, Baker Track, Cast of Dr. Fauxlux, Associate Editor of MISCH, St. Luke's, Band, Basement Boys. 1944-45 . . . Captain Baker Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Cap- tain Balter Basketball Team, Captain Baker Track Team, Captain School Track Team, Student Council, Vice-President of St. Luke's, Headwaiter, junior Batmen, Secretary of Class Fall Term, Vice-Presi- dent of Class Winter Term, Student Council, Business Manager of MISCHIANZA, Band. x RICHARD B. KREMENTZ, JR. Wyndover Camden, Maine Dick , Bull Yale Navy .- New Jersey, tl1at's a hellava place. BENJAMIN WOODS LABAREE 1090 Ridge Road Hamden, Conn, .rBcn,,, uspidern, ..Lab,, Yale Navy All right, Stcvc, I'll save you a place with the dishwashers. Page forty-five EDWARD B. LEWIS, III 1040 Fifth Avenue New York City, N. Y. E.B. , Ted , Louie , Rumplcstiltskins', Gnome , Lewer , Dumbo , Tedder Lu Yale Merchant Marine You notice, boys, I didn't get voted biggest buller either. CHARLES E. LORD S75 Park Avenue New York City, N. Y. Ears , Little Ears , The Ear , You name it. Yale Navy Th:1t's all right, you can get away with murder when you're cute. Page forty-six 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Swimming, Captain Class Golf Team, Track. 1942-43 . . .Monahan Club Soccer, Championship Lightweight Basketball Team, Posture, Tennis. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Soccer Team, Championship Club Swim- ming, Basketball, School Tennis Squad, Posture, History Prize, Public Speaking Prize, Third Honor Roll. 1944-45 . . . Club Soccer, School Soccer Team, Club Basketball, School Tennis Team, Editor MISCHIANZA, Sequester Club, Walk- er's Squad, May 26th Entertainment Committee, Debating Society. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Class Hockey, Class Baseball Team, Ski Club, Choir, Cast of The Inspector General, French and Latin Prizes, Second Honor Roll in Fall Term, First Honor Roll in Spring Term. 1942-43 . . . Captain Taylor Lightweight Football Team, Light- weight All-Star Football Team, Taylor Hockey, School Baseball Squad, Casts of On Borrowed Time, Knickerbocker Holiday, The Moon Is Down, H.D.A., First Honor Roll, Record Heeler, French and Greek Prizes, Choir, Ski Club. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Football Team, School Football Squad, Taylor Hockey, School Baseball Team, Casts of Dr. Faustus, You Can't Take Il With You, H.D.A., Associate Editor of Record, First Honor Roll, Greek Prize, Ski Club. 1944-45 . . . Co-Captain Taylor Football Team, School Hockey Squad, Taylor Hockey Team, School Baseball Team, President of Taylor Club, Cum Laude, Casts of Yellow lack, George Wushinglozr Slept Here, and Macbeth, Co-President of H.D.A., Chairman of Record, Second Honor Roll, Chairman of Library Committee, Class Gift Committee, Terry Prize, Dissipated Deities, Progressive Party, Jules Cult, Frey's Casino, Taylor Club Prize, Headmaster's Prize, Greek and English Prizes, Ski Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, Class Hockey Team, Tennis, Choir, Pigeon Club. 1942-43 . . . Baker Soccer, Hockey, Swimming, Tennis Squad, Pigeon Club, Ski Club, President Second Floor Main Turtle Sweep- stakes, Siegle's Beagles. 1943-44 . . . Baker Soccer, Hockey, Swimming, Tennis Team, School Tennis Squad, Vice-President Pigeon Club, H.D.A., Advertis- ing Manager H.A.C. of MISCHIANZA, Nubian Buffalo Chips Society, 1944-45 ...Club Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Captain Baker Hockey Team, School Hockey Squad, Club Swimming Team, School Swimming Team, Club Tennis Team, School Tennis Squad, Chairman of MISCHIANZA, Business Manager of H.D.A., President of Pigeon Club, Ski Club, Dissipated Deities, High Priest of Jules Cult, H.A.C., Cast of Marbella, Teagle Prize, Hunting and Fishing Club, English Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Swimming, Track Heeler, Body-Build- ing, Gusher Club, Choir. 1942-43 . . . Soccer, Red-Cards, Skiing, Track Heeler, Sequestcr Club, Scagle's Beagles, Choir, 1943-44 . . . Club Football, Club Skiing, Track Heeler. 1944-45 . . . Club Football, Middleweight Football, Chess Tourna- ment, Wood Squad, Ex-Mid Play, Sequester Club, Correctives. PETER MATTHIESSEN Riverbank Road Stamford, Conn. Pete , Matt , Matty , Pietros , Lucky Pierre , Suavete , The Curly God Yale Navy WINSLOW MAXWELL 49 Hcnhawk Rd. Great Neck, N. Y. Max , Maxer , Muscles , Win , Winnie , The Claw M.l.T. Army Oh, well, things are tough all over this year. Page forty-seven PEYTON H. MEAD 941 Mountain Road West Hartford, Conn. Oaf , l'Body , Teddy Bear , Squire , Peytwang , Adonis Williains Army Ay, Dow, kindly keep your face closed. WILLIAM H. MULLINS 854 So. Lincoln Ave. Salem, Ohio Moon , Mocker , Moonbeam , '1Muleinz Yale Merchant Marine One more remark from you, Lord, and- Page forty-eight 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Soccer Team, Band, Choir, Club Ski Team, Ski Club, Club Track Team. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Football Team, Club Ski Team, Ski Club, Club Tennis, Glee Club, Record Editorial Board. 1944-45 . . . Monahan Club Championship Football Team, School Football Team, Cast of Yellow lark, Captain Club Ski Team, School Ski Team, Cast of L'Ang1aix Trl Qui' L'O11 Parlv, Dance Committee, Glee Club, Secretary of Class Spring Term, Student Council, English Club, Rworrf Editorial Board, Captain Club Track Team, Ski Com- mittee, School Track Team. l 1941-42 . . . Prep Football, Swimming, Tennis, Orchestra, Band, Choir, Student Council, President of Class Winter and Spring Terms, Member of T. P.'s Bridge Club, Science Prize, Third Honor Roll. 1942-43 . . . Baker Club Football, Basketball, School Track Squad, Choir, Orchestra, Band, Student Council, President of Class Fall Term, Secretary of Class Spring Term, Cast of Knirkvrlvorker Holi- day, Co-Winner of Edwards Prize, Second Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Football, Skiing, Band, Orchestra, Student Council, Vice-President of Class Fall Term, Secretary of Class Win- ter Term, Six Weeks Vacation at Sheepshead Bay, listill Prize, Cum Laude, Second Honor Roll. 1944-45 . . . Merchant Marine guarding '4S's interests in Engle- wood, Permanent Class President. 1943-44 . . . Baker Lightweight Football, Club Swimming, Cham- pionship Pony Lcaguc Baseball, Stage Crew, Chem-Physics Club. 1944 45 Club Football Club Track Sta e Cr w - . . . . , , g e , Cast of Mur- llffb, Woods Squad, Chem-Physics Club, H.D.A. 1942-43 . . , Taylor Soccer, Dramat, Band, Third Honor Roll, First Prize Art Contest. 1943-44 . . . Club Soccer, Band, Record Business Board, Second Honor Roll, Stage Crew, First Scholar of Class. 1944-45 . . . Club Soccer, School Soccer Squad, Record' Business Board, Stage Crew, Cum Laude, First Honor Roll, First Scholar of Class, Club Basketball. V l EMORY HAMILTON NILES, JR. 5600 Waycrest Lane Baltimore 10, Maryland Em , Embriago Harvard Yale Now if you guys were going to a good collegctn FR ANCIS FITZ RANDOLPIHI, JR. 895 Park Avc. New York City Frank , Randy , Panda Yale Navy Air Crew My good man, Africanf' Page forty-nine ALFRED H. RAUBITSCHEK 1113 Bromley Ave. West Englewood, N. J. uRabbitn, mrkaubyyy uAls, Yale Navy She may live far away, but it's not futile. THOMAS R. REMINGTON 350 Ambassador Drive Rochester 10, N. Y. Tom , Rem , Mickey , Remmcr , Rhodopygous Princeton Marines Line up behind Dixon, Durning, you'rc going too. Page fifty 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Club Lightweight Football, All-Star Football Team, Skiing, Wood Squad, Pony League Baseball, Record Editorial Board, Guppy Club, Pigeon Club, Chem-Physics Club. 1944-45 . . . Club Football, Manager School Football Team, Skiing, Club Baseball, Chairman Medical Club, Chairman Guppy Club, Record Board, Pigeon Club, Herr Berry's Not-So-Secret-Seven. L l Football Team, Hoyt Basketball 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Championship Team, Pony League Baseball, Editor of Lil, The Nubians. 1944-45 . . . Hoyt Football Team, School Middleweight Football Team, School Basketball Team, Hoyt Baseball Team, Editorial Chair- man of Lit, Cast of Macbeth, Dissipated Deities, Jules Cult, Progres- sive Party. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Football, Tennis. 1944-45 . . . Club Football, Club Basketball, Tennis. 1944-1945 . . . Monahan Soccer, Second School Soccer Team, Club Basketball, School Tennis Team, Glce Club, Cast of Yellow luck. V JAMES J. ROPER R.F.D. No. 4 Ridgefield, Conn. UJIJ-U, UROPCU, ..Jim,. Williams Merchant Marine Lct's take a poll. RICHARD EDWARD ROBINSON San Ignacio 22, Altos Habana, Cuba Sugar Ray , Sugc Antioch College Army Now my Brother .,.. Page fifty-one DOUGLAS SCHWALBE 1050 Park Ave. New York, N. Y. Oscar , Dough, R0ebottom , 'lRoe , 1. Crudlas The trouble with Mr. Taber is he's too methodical. JACK li. SEITNER 1833 Willow Branch Terrace Jacksonville S, Florida Bubbles , t'Bub , jake Qthe plumberf' Massachusetts Institute of Technology Navy Scitner to Niles, . . over! Page fifty-two 1941-42 . . . Correctives, More Correctivcs, Still More Correctives, Band, Choir, Photography Club. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Soccer, Club Basketball, Choir, Photogra- phy Club. 1943-44 . . . Wood Squad, Assistant Track Manager, Cast of Dr. Fausfus, You Can't Take It Will: You, The Grraf Catbcrinc, H.D.A., President of Photography Club, Assistant Advertising Manager of Record, Assistant Rcmrfl Photographer. 1944-45 . . . Club Soccer, Manager School Track Team, President Photography Club, Advertising Manager Record, Photography Edi- tor Rrrorzl, Cast of Yellow Iaflz, George Wuxhifigffzli Slept Herr, H.D.A., Black Shoe Club. l I . .1 , 1 , , , . - wa, N ,G wh L ry, 'K-tff'..,,,-W. A , ' mg-',.., ,a - 7 ltgepaml-5 M. g .1 fgxilrmmigf-A wa, ,L '- .mf , I ua' ' .J 'A 1- we ,af yu .. .07 'f fi 11 .P ' : .: ' -gr ,K-F, A ' -X ,S ,-5 . fx I ,., f - 1. 4 , ,Me eve Q A' ' . f 1 ,-'3 Q k'4,.,f +ve ' na, . .1 .. 1941-42 . . . Swimming, Baseball, Radio Club, Piano. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Soccer, Club Hockey Cskating to youj, Tennis, War Emergency Radio Service Club Station WKJA. 1943-44 . . . Club Soccer, Club Hockey, Tennis, Radio Club. 1944-45 . . . Club Soccer, Club Skiing, Tennis, Radio Club, Teacher of Radar Course. 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Class Hockey, School Tennis Squad, Third Honor Roll, Vice-President of Class Spring Term, Student Council. 1942-43 . . . Baker Championship Club Football Team, School Foot- ball Squad, Club Hockey, Club Tennis Team, School Tennis Squad, Vice-President of Class Winter Term, Student Council, Record, W'oods Committee, Third Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Football Team, School Football Squad, Club Hockey Team, Club Tennis, School Tennis Squad, Gun Team, Secretary of Class Fall Term, Vice-President of Class Winter Term, President of Class Spring Term, Woods Committee, St. Luke's Society, Associate Editor of Rerord, Student Council, Third Honor Roll. 1944-45 . . . Baker Club Football Team, School Football Squad, School Hockey Team, Captain of School Tennis Team, Gun Team, Vice-President of Class Fall and Winter Terms, Treasurer of Class Spring Term, President of Student Council, President of St. Luke's, Secretary of Woods Committee, Managing Editor of Record, Third Honor Roll, Permanent Class Secretary, Glee Club, Chairman of Hunting and Fishing Club. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Team, Class Hockey Team, Tennis, Third Honor Roll, Choir. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Lightweight Football Team, Club Hockey Team, Club Baseball Team, School Baseball Squad. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Club Championship Football Team, School Foot- ball Squad, Club Hockey Team, School Hockey Team, Club Track Team, School Track Squad, Decoration Committee. 1944-45 . . . Captain of Hoyt Club Football Team, School Football Team, School Hockey Team, School Baseball Team, Decoration Com- mittee, President of Class Winter Term, Student Council, St. Luke's Society, Club President. CHARLES ROBINSON SMITH SHEPARD 824 Fast Forest Avenue Ncenah, Wis. Shep , Chuck , Charlie , Charles Chubby , Boor , Fadda Yale Army No, it isn't Neema. God, you'rc ignor- ant! JOHN SHETHAR Milton Point Rye, N. Y. Joe , Turtle , Weasle Yale Marines A slice off a cut loaf is never missed. h Page fifty-three STEPHEN SICARD 351 East 58th Street New York, N. Y. Sic , The Nipper , Steve I am not! WILLIAM S. SIMPSON JR. Southport, Conn. Bill,', Simp , Simper , Simbaggers , The Mandrel Ye Gods and little rubber battleshipsf' Page fifty-four 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Class Baseball, Appendicitis, Choir. 1942-43 . . . Lightweight Football, Pneumonia, Pony League Base- ball, Choir. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Lightweight Football, Captain Club Champion Hockey, Pony League Baseball, Pony League All-Star Team, Choir, Glee Club. 1944-45 . . . Club Heavyweight Football, Champion Club Hockey Team, School Baseball Squad, Choir, Glee Club, Dishwashing. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Lightweight Football, Big Bill's Posture Class, Dramat Stage Crew, 1943-44 . . . Club Football, Club Track, Stage Crew. 1941-42 . . . Class Football Squad, Skiing, Ski Club, Class Baseball, Choir. 1942-43 . . . Baker Club Soccer, Choir . . . Gone westg back next year. 1943-44 . . . Baker Club Soccer, Lightweight Hockey Team, Ski Club, Pony League Baseball, Sequae Club, Assistant Editor of Lil. 1944-45 . . . Baker Club Soccer, Middleweight Soccer Team, Club Hockey, Club All-Star Hockey Team, Ski Club, Sequae Club, Club Baseball, Club All-Star Baseball Team, Advertising Manager of Lil, Dance Committee, English Club, Membre inactif d'Alliance Fran- caise, Walker Club, May 26 Entertainment Committee. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer Team, Class Hackey Team, Class Baseball Team. 1942-43 . . . Hoyt Club Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, Swim- ming, School Baseball Squad, Dramat. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Club Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Club Hockey, Club Swimming, School Baseball Squad, Dramat. 1944-45 . . . Hoyt Club Soccer Team fCaptainJ, School Soccer Team, Club Swimming, School Baseball Team, Dramat. DENNISTON LYON SLATER Locust Valley Long Island, New York Denny Skins , Den , Denny Satyr , Denner Yale Army Air Corps Hit the beaches! Here comes Rumpel- skins. HALBERT MAITLAND SLOAT, JR. 2101 Connecticut Avenue Washington, D. C. Hal , Halbo-Ballcap Yale, Williams Navy Got your 'Daily News', Wes? P1192 .fifty-five JOHN W. SLOAT 2101 Connecticut Avenue Washington, D. C. Sleepy , Ulrike , Gorgeous , Marcellus Yale What was our assignment for yesterday?', ROBERT DURANT SMITH 40 Patterson Avenue Greenwich, Connecticut Smitty , Beaky , Beak , Meatball Yale Army Air Corps By definition, Communism and Social- ism are two different things, you stupid blimey, and I don't worship Stalin even though he is a good man. Page fifty-six 1941-42 . . . Choir, Class Soccer Team, All-Star Soccer Team, Class Hockey Team, School Baseball Squad. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, Monahan Hockey Squad, Boxing, School Baseball Team, Record, Band, Cookie Club, Kneller's Fellers. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Soccer Team, School Soccer Team. Monahan Hockey Team, School Hockey Squad, Championship Monahan Swim- ming Team, Monahan Baseball Team, School Baseball Team, Band, Orchestra, Associate Editor of the Record, Wilcox Cup, Arachobae. 1944-45 . . . Captain Monahan Soccer Team, Captain School Soccer Team, Championship Monahan Hockey Team, School Hockey Squad, Ski Club, School Baseball Team, President of Band, Syncopators, President of Glee Club, Morals Committee, Make-up Editor of Record, Music Department of Maclzcth Production, Georgian Bay Piscatorial Society. S l 1944-45 . . . Taylor Football, Championship Taylor Basketball, All- Star Baseball, Taylor Baseball, Junior Batmen, Hunting and Fishing Club, Senior Representative to Study Hall. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Club Lightweight Football Team, Cast of You Can'I Take If with You, Club Hockey Squad, Pony League Baseball Runner-ups, Assistant Editor of Record. 1943-44 . . . Club Football Squad, Second Team Club Hockey, Club Basketball, Boxing, Baseball Squad, Copy Editor of Record, Casts of Thr Moon Is Down and Catherine The Great, Sequester Club. 1944-45 . . . Club Football Team, Middleweight Football Team, Championship Club Basketball Team, H.A.C., School Baseball Team, Cast of Yellow lack, Co-Sports Editor of Record, Debating Team, Gift Committee, H.D.A. E 1942-43 . . . Woods Squad, Pony League Basketball Team, Cham- pionship Pony League Baseball Team, Second Honor Roll, Seigle's Beagles. 1943-44 . . . Baker Soccer Team, Woods Committee, Baker Basket- ball Team, Pony League All-Star Baseball Team, Decoration Commit- tee, Cast of Faustus, French Prize, First Honor Roll. 1944-45 . . . Baker Soccer Team, School Basketball Squad, Golf, Treasurer Woods Committee, Glee Club, Decoration Committee Third Honor Roll, English Club, Progressive Party, Cum Laude. , , rt g W ,W FRANK FELDER SOMMERS, JR. Wind Point Racine, Wisconsin Ham Hands , Father , Feld , Philosopher , Fruit Bar Yale Office of Strategic Service Ya, but wl1o's going to cut the loaf first, John, what with life being the way it is? DAVID THORNE STEFFEN 975 Ridge Road Hamden, Conn. Red , Lobster , Cherub Yale Navy Hope springs eternal. Page fifty-seven MARVIN HERBERT STEMPLE 207 Clent Road Great Neck, N. Y. Marv , Weasel Yale Army Give me a stick. I'll kill it. CHARLES STEWART 10 Beechwood Road Bronxville, N. Y. Charlie , Jake Yale Some of us prefer women, Hubbard. Page fifty-eight 1942-43 . . . All-Star Lightweight Football Team, Club Basketball Team, Pony League Baseball, One of Duck Soup Boys . 1943-44 . . . All-Star Lightweight Football Team, Skiing, Pony League Baseball, Chem-Physics Club, Pigeon Club. 1944-45 . . . Hoyt Club Football, Skiing, Tennis, Chem-Physics Club, Pigeon Club, Hunting and Fishing Club, Junior Batmen, 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Hockey, and Baseball Teams, Choir, Second Honor Roll, Championship Touch Football Team. 1942-43 . . . Monahan Club Track Team, Second Honor Roll. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club Lightweight Hockey Team, Winner of Middleweight Boxing, Club Tennis, Lit, Third Honor Roll. 1941-42 . . . Captain Class Soccer Team, All-Star Soccer Squad, Basketball, Class Baseball, Orchestra, Band, Choir. 1942-43 . , . Taylor Club Soccer Lightweight Basketball, Taylor Track Squad, Orchestra, Band, Choir. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, Taylor Bas- ketball, Track, Orchestra, Band, Choir, Editor of MISCH. 1944-45 . . . Captain Taylor Soccer Team, School Soccer Team, School Basketball Squad, Skiing, Track, President of Orchestra, Vice- President of Band, Secretary St. Luke's, Managing Editor of MISCH, Student Council, President of Class Spring Term, Class Gift Commit- tee, English Club. 1942-45 . . . Taylor Soccer, Pony League Hockey Team, Tennis, Choir, Eagle Siegle's Beagles. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer, Lightweight Hockey Team, Pony League Baseball Team, Member H.D.A., Choir. 1944-45 , . . Taylor Soccer Team, Co-Captain Middleweight Soc- cer Team, Taylor Hockey, Tennis, English Club, Membre inactif d'Alliance Francaise, Assistant Business Manager H.D.A., Advertis- ing Manager MISCHIANZA. THOMAS PENNEY STEWART 17 Grover Street Auburn, New York ..-I-emu, ..-1-0mmy.., .--I-.P-D Princeton Army Bios-the science of life. HENRY NEVILLE TIFFT, JR. 167 East 82nd Street New York 28, N. Y. Henrau , Hank , Timer , Navel , uclappn Princeton A.S.T.R.P. Sorry, but some of us are born, live, and die that way. Page fifty-nine EDWARD REMINGTON TROWBRIDGE 2 Rhode Island Ave. Providence, R. I. Ted , Ed , Trow Yale Army Honest, it's true. STHSES B. TWITCHELL, JR. 44 Fernwood Road Hamclen 14, Conn. Twitch , The Mechanical Brain Yale Navy Haben Sie das Deutsch studiert? Page sixty 1944-45 . . . Monahan Club Football, Middleweight Football Squad, Club Basketball, Club Track. 1942-43 . . . Baker Club Lightweight Football, Club Swimming, Hacker's Track, Orchestra. 1943-44 . . . Club Lightweight Football, Club Swimming, Second School Swimming, Club Track, Orchestra, Chem-Physics Club. 1944-45 . . . Club Football, Club Swimming, Club Track, Manager of Swimming Team, School Track Squad, Orchestra, Band, Junior Batmen, Chem-Physics Club. 1943-44 . . . Monahan Club, Ski Club, Wootls Squad. 1944-45 . . . Wkrods Squad, Track Squad, Skiing, Chem-Physics Club, Photography Club, Panel Club fcompulsory mcmbcrshipj. 1941-42 . . . Started coming! 1942-43 . . . Finally arrived! Baker Soccer, Skiing Club Golf Team, Ski Club, Cookie Club, Les Nlimports, Kneller's Fellers, Rrvorrl. 1943-44 . . . Baker Soccer, Club Golf, Cast of You Cdfflf Tulu' Il With You, The Grraf Catherine, Chem-Physics Club, Arachobae, H.C.E. Club, Assistant Editor of Rrmrrl, Second and Third Honor Rolls. 1944-45 . . . Club Soccer, School Soccer Squad, Captain Club Champion Ski Team, School Ski Team, Club Golf, School Golf Team, Cast of Yellow Iafle, George Washirrglorl Slept Herr, and L'nf1glaix Trl Q1l,0l1 Lv Parlr, Ski Club Executive Committee, Alliance Fran- caise, H.D.A., Syncopaters, Greengroin Quartet, Georgian Bay Pisca- torial Society, Mr, Berry's Not-So-Secret-Seven, Rennygades, Editor- ial Chairman of Rrmrd, Third Honor Roll, Cum Laude. VVILLIAM GRAY UP DE GRAFF 700 Sarbonne Road Los Angeles 24, Calif. ..UpPy,., ..Bi1l,, M.I.T. Army Down for my Math again? JOHN BEMIS vmci-1, JR. 3921 Idaho Ave. N. W. Wasl1ii1gton,I7. C. Bcemer , Seed , jay , ,Iohncr Yale Merchant Marine Dr. Kenny has such . . . eh-uh . . . zum!-derful manners . . as far as tI1at's concerned ! !! Page sixty-one PAUL B. WELLES 615 Vine Street Scranton, Pa. P.B. , Deacon , Pope Yale Navy You won't have an suck when our Y time comes, Cline. FRED F. WHITCOMB 702 No. 56th Strcct Omaha, Nebraska Woody , The Voice , Maestro Harvard Naval Air Corps Just wait till you guys hear my band some dayf' Page sixty-two 1941-42 . . . Class Football, Woods Squad, Golf, Choir. 1942-45 . . . Hoyt Club Soccer, Woods Squad, Assistant Manager Track. 1943-44 . . .Woods Squad, Hoyt Club Swimming, Manager of Track Team, H.D.A., Chem-Physics Club. l 1942-43 . . . Monahan Soccer Team, Hockey, Syncopators, Choir, Monahan Tennis Team. 1943-44 . . . Leader of Syncopators, Choir, Monahan Soccer Team, Hockey, Monahan Tennis Team. 1941-42 . . . Class Soccer, Swimming, Class Baseball, Choir, Se- quester Club. 1942-43 . . . Taylor Soccer, Championship Lightweight Basketball Team, Supermen, Tennis, Choir. 1943-44 . . . Taylor Soccer, Basketball, Tennis, Choir, Sequester Club. 1944-45 . . . Taylor Soccer, School Soccer Team, Championship Club Basketball Team, Club Tennis, School Tennis Squad, Choir, Glee Club. 1942-43 . . . Baker Championship Lightweight Football Team, All- Star Lightweight Football Team, Club Hockey Squad, Club Tennis Team, Cast of Knickerbocker Holiday, Chem-Physics Club, Member War Emergency Radio Service Club, Band, Record. 1943-44 . . . Baker Football Team, Baker Swimming Squad, Baker Hockey Squad, Baker Tennis Team, Dramatic Association, Member War Emergency Radio Station WKJA, Chem-Physics Club, Exchange Editor Record, Glee Club. LAWRENCE SCRIPPS WILKINSON 334 University Place Grosse Point, Michigan Wilk , Wilkie , Larry , Rouge Yale Navy But, sir, I didn't know- ROBERT WOOD WILLIAMS, JR. 917 Poplar Hill Road Baltimore, Maryland Bob , Vultu re , Vultch Yale Navy u No, Whitcomb! It varies inversely as the square of the distance, not directly as the cube. Page sixty-three ROBERT W. WOLCOTT, JR. Beaver Creek Farms Downington, Pa, uwolcn, uBobn, zzAlex1x Princeton American Field Service Get to bed, Hall, you'rc keeping us awake. FREDERICK WILLIAM WOODWARD Pine Plains, New York Zeke,', Frecl,', Injun Yale Army Air Corps Dear Mr. Lewis, This is my brag shett, as ainy fuel kin plainy sea. Page sixty-four 1942-43 . . . Manager All-Star Football Team, Minor League Bas- ketball Team, Hoyt Baseball Team, School Baseball Team, Assistant Editor of Lit. 1943-44 . . . Manager School Football Team, Hoyt Basketball Team, School Basketball Squad, School Baseball Team, Circulation Manager of Lif. ' 1943-44 . . . Monahan Football, Skiing, Track, Band. 1944-45 . . . Monahan Football, Skiing, Track, School Track Squad Band. 1943-44 . . . Hoyt Soccer, Club Basketball, Choir, H.C.E. Club, Cast of You Can'l Tulzc Il Will: You, Grrat Catherine, Short Story Prize, Arachobac, H.D.A. 1944-45 . . . Hoyt Championship Soccer Team, School Soccer Squad, Club Swimming Team, School Track Squad, Casts of Yellow jack, George Washington Slept Here, Marbella, lst Prize in Mid Art- Drawing, Best Supporting Role Prize, Art Prize, Debating Team, Glec Club, Editor of MISCH, H.D.A., Greengroin Quartet, Renny- gades. 1945-44 . . . Monahan Lightweight Football, Club Basketball, Pony League Baseball, Orchestra, Band, Syncopators. 1944-45 . . . Monahan Football, Club Basketball, Golf, Assistant Manager Football Team, Band, Herr Berry's Not-So-Secret-Seven. I EVANS WOOLLEN R. R. 14, Box 455 Indianapolis, Indiana Ev , Chub , Compare Yale Don't think it hasn't been 82'ish, ,cause it has. BURTON LEWIS ZEMPSKY 114 Colony Road New Haven 11, Conn. Burt , Zemp , Zcmper But, Sir, he doesn't deserve two shots for that! Page sixty-five Page sixfy-six SIIMETIME lVlElVlllEl'rS UF THE CLASS Frederick F. Auerbach Thomas O. Bretherton J. vrrrrghrr W. Brown H. J. Connell James B. Crosby john P. Cunniffe John J. Crrrras Samuel Gnrfinkel Nllfilliam P. Herbert Marshall R. Herron, jr. Wzilter Helmuth Robert S. Leventhal Jeremy P. S. Montagu Sidney T. Oakes Williain Palmer James W. Patton Willis Rnnney William J. Rosenblum Harold R. Selfridge Norman S. Woolwoi'tl1 Allen Alley Ballou Bartram Bonnie Bowman Brandlie Bri ttingham Brower Broyles Bryan, R. Bryan, D. Campbell Chapman Childs Cline Clitter Connell Cook Cooke Costikyan Cruikshank Dixon Dow Durnin g Egbert Ely Epstein Fardelmann Fleischmann Habitat With Janie With Boys Mistreating Chapman Sharon Other peoples' rooms Looking for food Library Walker's Bed With Duke Mrs. Up de Graff's room Near food With Stewart Ski jump Under the table In dark places His room Woollen's room With Evelyn In trouble Everywhere In the gutter Behind the athletes Meadis room At church At the grindstone In a leopard skin In the common room Boat house With Hutch ,rw ,, ,.- -1-rw ., '-77 1-- Famous for Build, lack of ankles New Jersey friends Stride Ears, grin Tactlessness Gulping Unecessary polysyllables Baiting Brilliance, vaguencss, voice Chest, suction Boy Scouting Profuse eating, build Energy Long arms Boorishness Enunciation You name it Accent Lips Hair, sharpened pencils Enthusiasm Golf scores Mealy mouth Laugh, hair Communism Grinding Simian build Chest Good nature Laugh, voice u ce u Appropriate song Big Noise From Winnetka jersey Bounce Wood Choppers Ball Local Boy Black and Tan Fantasy Sweet Sue The Little Goose It Could Happen to You Carelessn Life is just a Bowl of Cherries Whispering A Little Bit Independent Yes, We Have No Bananas Straighten Up and Fly Right Coming Thru The Ryev Sleepy Town Train Flying Home Back Bay Boogie Wang Wang Blues I Must See Annie Tonight EC-Stacy The Dirty Dozens Poor Butterfly Little Boy Blue Somebody Loves Me Georgia Grind I Don't Know Why just One of Those Things Smilesn Don't Be Ridiculous Page sixty-seven Frey Garfinkel Garland Gibbons Gimbel Goodman Gould Haaren Haskell Herring Holden Howland Hubbard Hunter, J. Hunter, T. Hutchinson Jadwin Krementz Labaree Lewis Lord Matthiessen Maxwell Mead Mullins Niles Randolph Raubitschek Remington Habitat At the Casino Lake trail Oyster Bay On the Lake Trail The basement Behind a clarinet Woman's lingerie dep't. With The Ock With Smith Common Room Putting Childs to bed Hunter's room In an H sweater His room With Shep With Eddie With Hutch Ville bound In the dining room Larue Installed In intrigue Johnson-Smith catalog In the Minor Also with Duke On the runway Backstage Delicatessen Snow-bound Page sixty-eight Famous for Andree G. C. Maitland Fishing, fish stories Nicknames, oil Sallow skin Fur-bearing trout Hirsute appearance Unctiousness Square jaw Square head Promoting Orange coat Teeth, Merit Badges Shambling gait Prussian haircut Face, childhood sweetheart Clothes, winged scapulae Speed Sloppiness Piety, oratory Subterreanean appearance Hunger Right word at wrong time, Jules Illicit peddling Oafishness Breaking rules Soft-shoe dancing Handiness Guinea Pigs Low metabolism tt 1: rt u zz u u u u u 1: tt u me Appropriate Song Let's Take the Low Road Home A Smooth One Isle of Golden Dreams One Meat Ball Benny Rides Again Jack the Bellboy In a Little Dutch Garden You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby Strange Music Jumpin' at the Bedside Cornsilkv South Rampart Street Parade Without a Song I Wanna Get Married I Know How To Do It Washington Whirligig Central Avenue Shuffle Ain't Misbehavin' Stampin' at the Savoy Baby Face Heaven Can Wait Anything Goes Body and Soul Breathe on Me, Breath of God Your Feet's Too Big A Good Man Is Hard to Find Things Ain't What They Used To Be Kansas City Moods Robinson Roper Schwalbe Seitner Shepard Shethar Sicard Simpson Slater Sloat, H. Sloat, J. Smith Sommers Steffen Stempel Stewart, C. Stewart, T. Tiff t Trowbridge Twitchell Up de Graff Veach Welles Whitcomb Wilkinson Williams Wolcott Woodward Woollen Zempsky Habitat Shoveling Home In black shoes Radio room Student Council Nursing the turtle In a dilemma In Mole's den Persecuting Lewis Under the ballcap Behind the trumpet Study hall In a seance Frey's casino In Stiles' room Eating Englewood Tiffting In a bull session Nazi Party With relatives With Woollen Hurling Thunderbolts Leading a band You tell us Hovering Kitchen Pine Plains With Levo Common room Famous for More shoveling W'eek ends Mrs. Sycamore Green tie on St. Patrick's Day Sherlock Holmes hat Moth-eaten cranium D'ya like it? Awkwardness Offbeat humor Ball cap Camel's hair coat Disreputable appearance Drugstore philosophy Glowhead Two-tone coat Kneller-baiting, Fairy calls Five o'clock shadow Gullibility Bull Mechanical movement Eating habits Voice Preaching Hair, Maestroship Scarcity Black bathing cap Right aim, humor Endurance Overacting Pepsodent smile ze u All the Things You Are lf Q! The Mole ff .. If If ll Seein' Red fl Il Cl u ce u u u u tl et u Appropriate song South of the Border They Can't Take That Away From Me Roe's Room I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles Little Brown Jug Semper Paratus Sugarfoot Stompn Take Me Out to the Ball Cap Boy Meets Horn Crazy Rhythm Knockin' at the Famous Door' Dippermouth Blues Speak Low I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan Bewitched u as Ferdinand the Bull I Got Rhythm Tea for Two Roe's Room I'm just Wild About Harry The Joint is Jumpin' Don't Get Around Much Any More You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby Marie Song of the Open Road Roe's Room Keep Smilin' Page sixty-nine CLASS HISTORY The class of 1945 was begotten in the Fall of 1941, one of the two momentous events of that year. The last pre-war Prep class, we arrived in a swirl of private cars and ostentatious black ties, with Black Harry and the numerous Dufours shang- haiing what fell behind and whisking them into great, black sedans with mercenary glee. Nobody was glad to see us-we cer- tainly weren't glad to see each other-and a series of unorthodox liasons born of des- peration sprang up all around. After several weeks of sniffing each other in the manner of dogs, however, the picturesque qualities of the class began to come to the fore. They were led by a round youth of enormous voice and diameter named Cunniffe, a big, hairy, red thing who called himself Crosby, and Lloyd Gar- rison Hooker, who never did get himself adjusted to any class of his own. The above were managed by the persuasive tongue and wallet of a boy named Auerbach, who op- erated a den of iniquity in the far reaches of the third floor. In stiff competition with the above were a latent menace named Montagu, another named Woolworth, who Page seventy was a hangover from the year before, a rotund sadist who changed his name from Meadows to Maxwell in the confusion, and a vaudeville team named Leventhal and Brittingham. The act was shattered year- ly, however, by the persistent departure of Icky Bob for the West, he spent the first three months of the first three years with us and was never seen again. The faculty was equally impressive. The first shock was being herded like cattle in- to the arena of the Study Hall, where a gentleman named Coolidge fell upon us like the wolf on the fold, he was followed in this respect by Big Russ Birge, a pro- fessional pussyfoot who hung out on the third floor and spent most of his time in Auerbach's room looking for Brower. In the afternoon we were sold down the river to Yogi Campbell, a brutish, swarthy rene- gade from a Kultur Camp, who passed his time pounding our meager bodies to a jelly and shouting at Big Ed Flar-ty. Mr. Par- sons, two Mr. Bacons, Mr. Berry, and var- ious others seemed to take an interest in us, too. Foremost among the various others was the author of The Educational Pbilosoploy of National Socialism, well be- loved by boys and masters alike, Baron Kneller, who cultivated a select clientele for the sporting nights in Coy Hall. The first big event was the song meet- ing, the last of its kind that Hotchkiss would ever see, due to the growing in- fluence of the State Police. For the first time we were treated to the golden voice of Gussie and the elephantine Wiles of the yet unchristened Thumper, who formed a bizarre quartet on the stage with Maxis and the Red Ape, and the size of the Seniors was appalling to us. The Gusher Club came and went, as did hopes of the event- ual change of atmosphere around Montagu, who departed from this school after a two- year stay covered with virgin humus from head to toenail. The heir to Gimbel's Basement fell victim one night to an at- tack of itching powder and created quite a disturbance, three bookies with punchcards lured the sporting set into a gambling ring and harvested enough capital in one week to compete with the financial circle of the Au, and Matthiessen and Lord slashed each other's doors to bits in an orgy of knife throwing which ended drastically when Doc Northrop opened the door in time to be pinioned, mortally wounded, to the wall. The Johnson-Sgith craze subsided like a pooh cushion toithe relief of all, and we trooped homeward, cognizant of nothing but the facts of life, with nothing but our shiny leather bow ties and the seeds of Hotchkiss cynicism to show for the ordeal. We were Hotchkiss boys, we said, and no- body questioned us for a minute. The Winter Term was dominated by the nefarious activities in the room of Lewis and Frey Who, with the help of Wilkinson, succeeded in fomenting an almost contin- ual riot in their room. The Red Wonder finally bit the dust of sequestration under the multitudinous censures dealt out by the outraged authorities, but not before he had succeeded in propelling an opponent through his window and half way to the infirmary. Gary Hooker hibernated in Hunteris room, bunking in the top of the closet, while the grotesquely tall youth from Delaware ambushed Rudolf every Sunday morning and hauled him into his lair, in the process of which the poor child was ravaged of his Sunday paper and cast brokenly into the corridor. The Purple Plague reaped a terrible toll, the most spec- tacular incident being contributed by Shethar, Cunniffe, and Pinckney Herbert, who announced his intentions dramatically over the eclairs and proceeded to unload on Captain Coss, present always at the scene of a crime. The lines outside of the jug reached half way to Lakeville, and rapid exeunts from every gathering disrupted George's New Deal efficiency no end. The term ended gloriously in a colored-tie up- rising of huge proportions, the ties having been purchased surreptitiously the day be- fore at Barnet's. They were worn one out- side and three under the shirtfwhich con- fused the Seniors no end. Such infamy as that of Judas Iscariot Parsons, however, hamstrung our well-laid plans, and the subsequent carnage was frightening to be- hold. We departed in radiant content- ment. The Spring Term saw the planting of the seeds of Moss Herron's departure when Gus Gurney tracked down a flagrant bottle of 88 proof in his dictionary. Dave Bryan, pitching for the Prep nine, capped a glor- ious career by rendering Ben Dowd hors de combat for the benefit of Mrs. Bacon and Mrs. Fowle, while the Deacon admitted de- feat in a valiant battle with his heathen classmates. The term was climaxed by a second uprising which Was highlighted by the unplanned passage of Tad Shepard out of Bull's window on the first floor. The hated cravats, food-spotted and weary, were strung in glorious array around the dining room, but the day was ruined by a decisive 9-2 massacre at the hands of Hill on Hoyt Field. We returned Lower Mid year in a blaze of false friendliness and incited the Preps with boorish snobbery, a treatment that was ended ingloriously by Red Jordan at Gussie's expense. Page seventy-one A familiar face among the new boys was that of Icky, but he soon returned once more to the heart of the West. Ed Alley, his friends, and his linen arrived in splen- dor, as did Fred Whitcomb and Peyt Mead, while Dick Grimball, Pete Haaren, Chris Ballou, the Navel, and Pete Siegle made their presences felt on Second Floor Main. Nor should Diamond Jim Curtis be for- gotten, nor Sid Oakes, nor Dave Gibbons, who fast adapted themselves to organized crime under the Baron. Curtis, with his winning naivete, was addicted to stamped- ing the garbage collector's horse and wagon and lasted only a year, at the end of which time his peroxide-tinted locks disappeared over the horizon. Another addition of note was a youth named Patton, of becom- ing appearance and fascinating character- istics, who changed his allegiance daily from the Third Reich to The Imperial Jap- anese Navy and who enforced his ideas by pounding his head against the wall. Owing to a suspiciously Oriental appearance he was christened Sugi, and he lived up to the name with commendable spirit. Sugi, un- fortunately, was depressed by the unfavor- able progress of the Wehrmacht after E1 Alamein and took to the hills with an ac- complice named Gsell after two enlighten- ing years. Felder, of the concave chest and concave morals, put in his appearance and became class philosopher by unanimous consent, along with Handy Randy, fresh from St. Paul's. I ngr' Sl l'f'Hf1l-f7l'0 The Legal Eagle was master of the tech- nical censure, and an acute auditory nerve was continually applied to keyholes in the war against Crime, Inc. The climax came with the notorious ice cream episode, an ingenuious plot hatched in the evil minds of Dave Bryan and Matt and engineered by the Messrs. Ramsey and Knode, neither of whom stayed to tell the tale, due to other deeds, by which a pint of melted artificial flavoring was spumed over the floor of the Eagle's nest by his own hand. This, plus a remark on the bulletin board concerning the similarity in attitude but not appear- ance of our hero and Errol Flynn authored by Joe Cooke, plus the relating of Levan- tine jokes in loud tones outside his door, brought about a stirring climax and sub- sequent adjustments. The early fall was interspersed with Senior raids and general brawling, one of which carried away Teddie Lew to the bowels of the basement for the spectacular beating of the year. A blacklist of six, whose beds were to be pul- verized, became five when a new boy nam- ed Howard Baxter took up residence for the evening in the nameplate of 204, while Stiles attacked Gorgeous George with a me- chanical impulse and far from satisfactory results. The Turtle Racing Sweepstakes came into prominence in the Spring Term, when a spirited animal named Mad Fool proved himself a paragon among turtles, although T. P.'s Blue Gonkin showed oc- casional talent at getting out of the circle in time to win. Coy Hall featured the dubious attraction of the baronial suite on the third floor, where Mr. and Mrs. Kneller entertained nightly for the benefit of the lightfooted. Hutch and Eddie politely declined after a while and gave up the cosy-chat-with- George idea entirely. Downstairs an inter- esting sport came into prominence, origi- nating with expectorating in people's hair and ending with over-zealous attention to the subtler needs of Diamond Jim. Passage in Coy was inevitably met with saliva and was hazardous at best with the strongest support, as the day school method of attack came back into popularity. Felder, Who seemed to have a flair for being caught red-handed, was apprehended for propell- ing Coke bottles out of Mead's window, the first of a series of similar misdemeanors, but he escaped another time by foxy foot- work which proved too much for Mr. Miller. Peyton, unfortunately, suffered the brunt of those philosophic caprices and was handed two censures before the light dawned. The Spring was punctuated by the sequestration of Stinky and Uncle Walt, who were nervously skirting Won- onscopomuc in a canoe when the steely eyes of Suave Bob Jerosch fell upon them from the bushes. No one has ever ex- plained what he was doing in the bushes, but there have been interesting specula- tions. Norm Woolworth, meanwhile, got a trifle out of hand and offered some of the I'l10St individual deeds ever to grace the halls of Hotchkiss. He eventually depart- -. ed, leaving only a token gift behind, a suit- case full of old clothes which was smuggled in a quiet ceremony to the incinerator. In stiff competition with Siegle, Steady Eddie, and the Triumphant Glowhead was a colorful linguist who acquired a variety of nicknames, chief among them being Twitch , Fodder-wing , and Joe N'- Importen. He owned one suit between him, which he wore on Sundays, and was possessed of the most tremendous capacity for free food that has ever been seen any place any time. Twitch had a very un- happy stay at Hotchkiss, we regret to say, owing to an inexplicable hostility incurred on all sides. The climax came one Satur- day night in study hall, when a restless in- mate winged a novel at him for his inso- lence, and he was subsequently stoned from the room, a beaten man. When last heard of, he had acquired a new suit and had moved in on Middlesex, where he is affec- tionately known as the Creeper to this very day. Upper Mid year came in with an influx of talent, led by the inimitable Sammy Garfinkel and sporting such worthies as Rem, Honer, Heavens Evans, who was to inherit wholesale the female roles from Ears and the crud dialectic from Levo, and Herbie Dow, whose hair was to contribute everything to the calibre of the Dance Committee picture. Tom Hall got more than his share of the roues, supported by Big Tom Bretherton, who made a big im- pression of a sort, and the raids of the fourth floor upon the rest of the building became a nightly occurrence. The most memorable remembrance of this situation was the hideous discovery of five pounds of missing Garland groceries in the laundry bag of a tall, black-haired youth, who sub- sequently holed up in the jug until the scandal subsided. The only unmolested rooms were in a select section on the third floor, in which delicious continental food was prepared in great abundance with greater aroma, predominantly garlic. The evident interest of Gould and Raubitschek in the vivisection of small rodents was sec- ondary to the moral that people should leave bad enough alone. On the third floor the Elfin Trio, boast- ing Connell instead of substitute Schwalbe, came into being and punctuated the air with feline Veach sounds, bravura laugh- ter, and a Back Bay twang which was es- pecially noteworthy when referring to Mista Pahs. Jakie Stewart of the malevo- lent nature and angelic grin organized a fraternal organization called the Fishbait- ers' Guild, the password of which was Poisson and the object of which was the systematic persecution of one of the oldest Hotchkiss traditions. The climax came one afternoon when a phonograph suddenly burst forth into raucous song in the middle of study hour, the Poiss and the Pars skill- fully tracked the disturbance to the door of Slater, who proved to be not among Page sevmlfy-fozlr those present in the room. As a matter of fact, owing to a secret pulley system, the door was securely barred on the inside with- out having anyone behind it, which con- fused the hounds of the law no end. En- raged yelps of Slay-tahl rent the golden afternoon, and although eventual measures were taken to curb the disturbance, the day ended in a Pyrrhic victory. The Vulture, meanwhile, confessed to an earthly relationship with a large, enthusias- tic lass who called herself Lee-Lee and Vulture Daddy,', which is a lot to ask of anybody. Daddy spent the bulk of his time at Farmington and Lee-Lee spent the bulk of hers with Daddy, and everyone was happy, especially the fortunates who shared the letters. Stewart, too, had cultivated an entente at Farmington to which either party was loathe to admit, but it disinte- grated rapidly after a sporadic courtship, while Priefer and Halbo maintained the spurious igloo tactics of Lower Mid year and fought it out for the hand of the cam- pus princess. Among the new arrivals was a small, foxlike man who was almost as tricky as Russ Birge, but not quite. Apparently he was acquainted with everybody, certainly everybody you could name, and in spite of an embarrassing sequence of events ma- chinated by Dick the Fin, he kept up an admirable poise, bulwarked by a splen- diferous car, a Russian smoking jacket, and a green corduroy suit. The place took on a truly cosmopolitan aspect which the com- bined forces of the displaced fashion plates were hard pressed to match. just the oppo- site was Walt Helmuth, who daydreamed his way through two terms, only to retire sleepily and prematurely to East Hampton, Long Island, where he became president of the High School. Big Stoop, meanwhile, continued his prepossessing start of the year before and was nailed by the Student Council in a hush-hush sequester which caused morbid speculation as to the pur- pose of the Jap hand grenade in Joe Cooke's boudoir. The purpose became evident when the Pride of Philadelphia's Main Line lured two of our hapless innocents into the cabins and piled them with marijuana and local talent, but the obvious merit of the Bronze Adonis salvaged all three from dis- aster. T. O., however, was on borrowed time, and when last seen he was celebrating his nineteenth birthday in Leon and Eddie's, preparatory to flunking the Coast Guard Academy mental tests. Embryo enraptured his floor with a Scarecrow interpretation of soft-shoe danc- ing, while Thumper spent his evenings cor- rupting the spotless innocence of the Nip- per with the scaliest program of hoaxes and depravity seen in many a moon. Jakie and Pietros waged a continual warfare on Big Bush and Nick Frog, who were baited un- mercifully at every turn, but they proved to be mediocre game after the tempestuous Kneller campaign of the year before, cli- maxed by the threat of dismissal and the life-saving departure of the Baron for sur- roundings less Philistine. And Willie was the first low blow to the third floor dig- nity, when a lynching party threw him fully clothed, in the shower, only to scat- ter before the terrifying invective of Judas's Priest. The second featured the Oyster, aided and abetted by large Otis, who appropriated the elevator for a morn- ing to escort his trunk up from the base- ment. Unfortunately it got a flat at the third floor, and Pansau charged out of his lair in time to cast his orbs on the distrait face of Gar, who made the mistake of og- ling him demurely around the edge of the door. The resulting explosion was rather spectacular and continued for several per- iods. The end of the year saw the found- ing of the H. A. C. by a week ending quar- tet, an organization which grew in number over our last summer at Hotchkiss. Our last year arrived with but a third of the original class, some twenty of our best members having left for military ser- vice, including Moon, Childe, Newbold, and Hutch. But some Worthy additions were made, including Amirkhosrovi, who appeared on the school list alone. Ed Broy- les joined the Biltmore contingent and proved to be an asset to the class all around, Rick Robinson, the Cuban blackamoor, made his presence felt, both on the shovel- ling line and on the tennis team, and Bugs Howland showed us graphically what seven years as a Boy Scout could do for a lad. We looked forward to a year of serenity, su- premacy, and sobriety, but it proved to be a year of decision, derision, and confusion, mostly confusion. As Seniors we took over our duties to the school in rather startling fashion, in- augurating our term with a feed for the Preps. The latter proved very little except that these Preps weren't any more recep- tive to bribes than we had been. A series of farcical song meetings ollowed, none of which showed us off to advantage, and the realization eventually came to us that brute force was the only solution, we found this out in May. Our advisees proved obliging enough, the calm before the storm, and the great, sprawling class of Upper Mids proved to be more sound than fury. The temper of the work remained as impossible as ever, Harry Jones remained a fixture, and the showers didn't operate in Memorial. We stretched our toes to the radiator, took a long drag on our Venus No. 1 pencils, and sighed with the easy familiarity of the home. After several days of whispered conjec- ture, however, a strange, square face was finally glimpsed in the shadows of the third floor, which announced, after emerg- ing all raw and red from the cocoon, that it was alive and was even now in residence. It then barked a sound spelled A-uh! three times and disappeared. Alexand-a-uh had come to stay, flanked by a large enigma with whom he had clandestine trysts. An- other new master was Mr. Thatcher. Two less crudite additions to the staff were a brace of gentleman-janitors with pomaded moustaches and stirring athletic records and builds. The apples of Mr. Simmons' eyes, they added considerable tone to the surface of the school, but un- fortunately the local hot spot, the Village Tavern Blue Room, ensnared their souls and before long had them completely in its power. The tragedy occurred one fair morning when they were still under the influence of the den. They tried to sleep it off in the corridors, and when the fore- man berated them with some asperity for lying down, they kindly offered him their condolences with a pat on the back and whisked off arm in arm to contemplate the merits of the Venus de Milo in the Library. Their pay checks were forthcoming, but half an hour later they were located on the fourth floor of Alumni, sitting backwards on the water closets, where they crouched philosophically for a day or two conversing in low tones about beagles. The Fall Term was fraught with in- trigues and incidents. A Baltimore week- end for two proved so attractive that a whole legion latched on to the crowd and swarmed like locusts to the House of Gar- land, including the Wet One, who joined the Garrison Forest squad on a double tick- et. The Ear, meanwhile, was having the East Hampton letterv difficulties that seem to be so prevalent in the family, Rem was again enmeshed by the wiles of the Farmington philosopher, and the Curly God, ostensibly off the rocks, seemed to spend most of his time on the Millbrook and Poughkeepsie road. The Dance pro- cC0l1fi111ll'l1 011 page 150D Inge seventy-six President Seereta ry President Secretary President ,,,e Vice-President Secretary Treasurer President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer UFFIUEHS UP THE CLASS UF I945 1941-42 F all Term 1942-43 H. Mullins PP PPC. N. Ely 1943-44 P P PC. L. Hutchinson PP PPPPPP P W. H. Mullins P PC. R. S. Shepard P C. N. Ely 1944-45 P PPT. Hunter C. R. S. Shepard PPPB. Labaree P PPPC. Garland Winter Terrn W. Mullins C. lily C. N. lily C. Shepard C. L. Hutchinson C. R. S. Shepard W. H. Mullins Allen J. Shethar B. Labaree C. R. S. Shepard T. Hunter Spring Term XV. Mullins C. Sherard C. Hutchinson W. H. Mullins C. Shepard C. N. Ely T. Hunter C. Garland T. P. Stewart R. S. Bryan C. R. S. Shepard P. Mead Page sc venty-so vcr 1 ff Page svvwzfy-cigllf I946 President Secretary President Secretary President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer rr,. UFFIUEBS UF THE CLASS UF I946 1942-43 Fall Term 1943-44 . . F. D. Montgomery ,, . ,C. Matthiessen 1944-45 . C. F. Lufkin . . D J.ESri11 C .D F. D. Montgomery C. Matthiessen Winter Term . .,.,,.r F. D. Montgomery H. Belin, IV C. F. Lufkin F. D. Montgomery P. C. Lambert H. Belin, IV T. W. Merritt C. Leboutillier Spring Term F. D. Montgomery C. F. Lufkin C. F. Lufkin J. Estill H. Floyd C. F. Lufkin P. C. Lambert C. Matthiessen Page seventy-nine . . . Q vw ' K . . ' K 5 K. if .Q N 1. 5 . M. . , . 1- -. . - ' His. . . . -' f-'Y-LZ' 6 -f-- ifkv .. i-flf--V.---.. ...gg -s -- -- -num KS -. Y - - s K L gg - XS - x 2 . f fa- 3 S X1 ' - ,,.. A . X,m.X , S .A1L .A .. .Q I. .31-Q. Q K, at , 3 N R .. 1. f S 5:55. X Q 4- ff as M' gf fl.i-.sg X .. s ff- A A W -i M. -. J.. ' -.fi-Q H .3 --A S 761, , ' S ' ' ana . A - ., f Q. U. wig- 'g . . L - X if .. A , X , f -2 Q. x fi ff 1,9 gg.. ' , M - f Q y -' .: .- if' S' M .- w i is Q55---fx .1 V225 f- S ' .4 X g. A-' wb ' N is 1 '- .J .. 1-2 V . - f. . .. . . v 1. . . Q- .- . - P W : 1... -. :QIEMM -- AN 1 K. .1 . z...-:-1:5 '--fs-vw H - - 9 - x .L - -N 'fi S + if fx' 1 -'sfww - 4. . H -sg -- .,., Q V' J gg, .- 3 ky- ' - .K V L if , Q. 55 wt -S , F , - R '- 4 .if fs Q X5 , - K - ST. E i ' Q . H we 'M '- . . I 5 . 3 fa - . . L A ,. . 3?- ...........p... ., M., . KK..-xgmgwl.. I -M W . W- .. . ,.. W .F X VN.. g ,Agy-3 'F . fg,,..fQfl in 'VX . w. va, -f w. g .S 2 1-N 'M A' -- ' fi' Y- ' 1' 5 --.ffffi Q' - Ax ' K K 5 . Q S . t 8 .X K .A o ', as ,W ' ' Q S M ' 5 .v K Kap vs N . . V. ,, 2 A .. 0' , if Af. XM., + -' W ...X fi -S :W if LL ..-...gg 4 -,az F x ' ' .. ... - h Q - Q . V'-1' 3' Q 11 .. -' 5- . , . R .vhg-mf ff .R ei V . . .-,X S K.. V. + OFFICERS UF THE CLASS UF I947 1943-44 Fall Term ' Wilater Term President . D. Ely Vice-President - . ,74, S. Austell 1944-45 President , , . , , D. Ely D. Ely Vice-President .. . Zabriskie D. Debost Spring Term D. Ely J. Zabriskie S. Austell J. Zabriskie Page viyhfy-one ef ,- : 1' 'fl' f .ww . 4 Q 5' r Q k YF Q' N, SQ L A ,ps , A nf J fm g k X m if 2 , K ,Z ,xg av . ' . S k .mfs ii Lk 5 ' - . . M.. S f'1l?f :fi A N A L N A ki Z 3 A xt' A Q, W5 fix Sp- Q 2 1d Q-Qiifw H' 'P'-H --im: A1-5 si.: , TM, f 3 QQ-f y. -wr' . ,.. -Qi, 3 'rf , OFFICERS UF THE CLASS UF I948 1944-45 Winter Term Spring Term President ,.,r,, , WR. Childs R. Childs Vice-President ,, is ,,ss , R. Mills h paug D. Murray Page eighty-fhrve u 'lx gd' vvft . ling? A 5 I W, 'hi f LKF '7- Q. -- . , JJ'h Tift ef .,h,. W .- 1 'R r ' s,ii,,f-'fQf? '4 .. V --51 :. j J , K ff -ff, 1 '- ' ff - , Q - ' -Q. K A k HN ' Kg ,nQ1Q K2 ,Q R. a . ' pw A X . ,.. W Q f, - Q4 F' Q' r Al 1 QLQA, pri 'f 5 an KW' A we CLUB FOOTBALL At the opening of the Taylor season this year, a runaway battle between Hoyt and Monahan was predicted, both of whom had plenty of seasoned material, while Baker and Taylor were slated to wind up the procession in that order. By the end of the second round, however, Monahan had clinched first place, with the Taylor club a dark-horse runner-up, and the Blue and Grey following closely in that order. The Green, under Mr. Gurney's able and experienced direction, swept over all opposition, operating from a powerful short punt formation, effective on the ends and tackles. With the exception of two close skirmishes with Taylor and Hoyt in their opening games, Monahan easily conquered all further opponents by wide margins. Much of their success can be traced to Captain Montgomery's vicious blocking and running, ably assisted by the strong footwork and passing of Ed Motch and Bud Austell, and a stalwart front wall paced by Peyt Mead, Bill Johnson, Lucky Lufkin, and Frank Wright. The Taylor club, under the valiant ef- forts of coach Stearns, proved to be a sur- prise success, handicapped as they were by mediocre material. With the exception of two defeats by Monahan, they handled all comers with comparitive ease and took over second place. The hard-hitting line was paced by Otis Hubbard, Bill Boyd, and Jules McAfee and the backfield was led by Paul Van Dykeis brilliant broken- field running, with Charlie Lord's kick- ing a decided asset. Hoyt was the pre-season champion with a startlingly impressive roster but was hamstrung by the loss of Bill and Bo Kelly and the temporary loss of Herb Dow. Charlie Bonner's aggressive tackle play, however, made up in part for the losses of key linemen. The backfield was potentially the best in the league, with an all-star quartet of Shethar, Sellwood, Calhoun, and Estill, but erratic play accounted for the failure of Mr. Hall's men, who had moments of smooth and powerful play. Baker, experimenting with the T, just did not have the co- ordination to make it work. The Grey were finally forced to resume the single wing of last year and although consistently outplayed were never outfought. Blair Childs and Co-Captain Chuck Shepard held a weak line together with their startling play, while the ball carriers were led by Co-Captains Tom Hun- ter, Ham Bowman, and Pete Haaren, who played good games in the face of little blocking. Coach Berry's well-led men were a potential threat but remained potential. A superior spirit was in evidence this season, with the intra- mural rivalry well established. The respective teams showed an interest which practically insures the continuance of the club system, even in post-war years. LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL The lightweight football season proved to be even more suc- cessful this year than it was last, competition being very close and spirited. The teams, moreover, had masters for coaching this year, Messrs Stakely, Howe, Kellogg, and Hale ably filling these positions. The season opened with a 13-7 victory for Monahan over Taylor. While that same afternoon, a slightly superior Baker team defeated Hoyt, 8-6. In the Taylor-Monahan contest it ap- peared as if the game would end in a 7-6 victory for Taylor, when in the last ninety seconds of play, Witwer caught a long pass and raced for the winning touchdown. Taylor had little difficulty in winning its next two games over Baker 14-0, and Hoyt 25-18. Monahan after beating Hoyt 13-0 was defeated by Baker 7-0. This placed Baker, Monahan, and Taylor in a three-way tie for first place. In the second round Monahan made another last minute score to take Taylor 6-0. They also won their other two games which gave them first place for the season. Taylor was held to a 0-0 tie by Baker and then trounced by Hoyt dropping to third place. Despite a second defeat handed out by Monahan, Baker managed to finish in second place. With only a week of practice behind them two all-star light- weight teams met a 130 pound Berkshire team on Taylor Field. The teams coached by Mr. Berry and Mr. Stakely and led by Cary Matthiessen and Hazard Campbell had no difficulty. Witwer went through tackle on the third play for a touchdown. Hotch- kiss scored seven more times before the game ended. Three touch- downs were called back, however, and the score ended 30-0 in our favor. ' - Q me. 53' W, - ' F it 5 sJ N ,5Q g 9 S 9 E E 5 sr. psf RR Y 5, S ifgtiag vi it-Mai 45525 2 -WY 5 f 'I' 5 Standing: March, Van Dyke, Broyles, Bowman, W. Boyd, Lufkin, B. Childs, Shethar, Raubitschek,manager Seated: T. llunter, VV. johnson, XVrigl1t, Montgomery, captain, C. Bonner, Calhoun, P. Mead. SCHOOL FOOTBALL The club season finished, coaches Smith, Gurney, and Stearns picked a school squad to play our two outside games. Since Captain Fred Montgomery was the only returning letterman, it was necessary to pick a team from the new ma- terial. This resulted in a very spirited but light team which did not have the polish of former years. The Loomis team came to Baker field for the first game on November 11th. The visitors not only outweighed our team, but also completely outplayed them. In the last quarter with the help of John- ny Shethar's running Hotchkiss was able to show Loomis that there was still some fight left despite the beating they had re- ceived during the first three periods. Van Dyke helped to stave off the first attack by recovering a fumble on our own five yard line. This respite was short lived, however, for immediately after recovering a poor punt, Fleischman of Loomis came through our whole line to 1 :gr wigllfy-eiglzl score standing up. The extra point being made, the first half ended with Hotchkiss trailing 0 to 7. Trying desperately to recover the ground they had lost in the first half. our men were hit before they could get started. Intercepting a pass, Howe of Loomis raced forty yards down the sidelines for the sec- ond touchdown. A little later Captain Marcello intercepted another pass and went on for the final score of the game, Montgomery having blocked the try for the extra point. Hotchkiss tightened up after this and stopped Loomis for the rest of the game. Sellwood and Shethar pushed the ball down to the two yard line where the game end- ed with the score standing 0 to 19. A powerful Berkshire eleven came here on our dance weekend to hand out a 6 to 19 defeat. Again outweighed, the Hotch- kiss team put up a good fight but was still unable to score until the last minute of play when Van Dyke went around right end for a touchdown. Berkshire, however, had been able to score twice during the first period and again in the third. The scores of the two games are hardly indicative of the spirit and fight of the school team. Outweighed and inexperi- enced, they did remarkably well against their seasoned opponents. MIDDI.liW'liIGI-IT FOOTBALL After a hard but successful season of interclub football, a squad of thirty play- ers was chosen to make up the middle- weight squad which was to plav Berk- shire. Although there were only ten davs of practice, coaches Hall, Kellogg, and Howe had their teams all ready and Wait- ing by the day of the LILIIDC. On XVednesday, November 15th, the team left for Berkshire. The game final- ly ended in a 0-0 tie, but it was a hard- fought contest from the first whistle to the last. The Blue showed drive on the ground, led by Captain ljstill's running, while the Green showed prowess in the air. The contest started slowly with the first quarter ending in little more excitement than an exchange of punts, but the second quarter saw Hotchkiss starting to roll: but penalties here and there prevented too many gains. Berkshire failed to gain much, either through the line or around the ends, the holes being plugged by XVatson, Rem- ington, Davis. and Wliitlcmck. The second half followed about the same course as the first with Berkshire threaten- ing on passes and Hotchkiss trying a few of their own, but neither team managed to score. And thus the game drew to its scoreless end, with the Blue vainly trying to shake Andrews loose on possible scoring plays, and the Green still fighting hard. CLUB SOCCER As the fall term got under way it was ap- parent that soccer's popularity had not di- minished during the past year. Sports writers again favored Monahan because of its numerous veterans, and picked Baker's balanced team to offer the most opposi- tion. The underdog Hoyt eleven, however, showing exceptional teamwork, proved it- self able to take the title early in the season. Monahan for the third consecutive year took the runner-up position while Baker and Taylor fought it out for the cellar. Competition was keen throughout the sea- son, and the standard of the games was considerably higher than that of former years. The Hoyt team, sparked by Hal Sloat's thirteen timely goals, proved too much for the other clubs. The halfback line of Moody, Lambert, and van Marx worked with Prep goalie Louis Ruckgaber to stop all opposing lines before they scored. Mr. Hunter did an excellent job as coach, and deserves much credit for the team's good playing. Monahan, although well coached by Mr. Beaumont, lacked sufficient teamwork to take first place. There was too much dis- organization during the first few games to prevent being beaten. Captain Jack Sloat was able to make his men work together by the end of the season, and with the help of Doc Bonnie, Ted Lewis, and Lanse Hold- en managed to follow Hoyt quite closely in the final standings. Taylor club under Mr. Blagden's guid- ance, lacked material for a championship team, but was able to turn in a creditable performance. Tom Stewart, Geoff Chap- man, Brower, Randolph, and Wilkinson formed the nucleus of the team. Several new boys showed exceptional ability and should receive much credit for the good playing. The Baker Squad under Mr. Stiles' di- rection, although fairly strong on the de- fense, lacked the scoring power to win. They upset the highly reputed Monahan team 3-2, but otherwise were unable to stay at the top, and tied with Taylor for third in the league. I if.-.L I . 1 1 L . iifi A ' BAKER T E A M S TAYLOR 1 - Q HOYT C L U B MONAHAN Hack Row: Randolpli, lloldcn, XY'ilkinson, P. Maltliiesxcn, Lambert, Brower, Ford, Chapman lironi Row: Moody. lionnie, Stewart, -I. Sloan, ll. Sloat, Lewis, Labaree. SCHOOL SOCCER The varsity soccer squad was picked from the clubs late in the season and had barely a week of practice as a unit before the Loomis game. This was regrettableg the material in Mr. Hunter's hands, not- ably the fast forward line, was individually the finest in several years. Our individual play was so much better than theirs that the Loomis team hardly showed up our lack of practice. After one fruitless opening rush Hal Sloat scored on a pass from Tom Stewart. Loomis kicked off but immediately lost the ball, which only left their territory for two abortivc attacks on our goal. Near the end of the quarter Captain Jack Sloat bounced a hard shot off the Loomis goalie's knees and brother Hal followed up brilliantly for our second score of the day. In the second quarter our line, somewhat confused by the vigorous Loomis heading, let up on the pressure. Loomis fought hard and continually carried the ball to us. Sev- eral attacks were broken up by fullbacks Holden and Randolph, but Loomis pene- trated twice and only Moody's spectacular saves prevented tallies. The third quarter found Loomis' play improved by a vari- ation in the halfback line. Hotchkiss, with the support of their halfs Brower, Lambert, and Ford, kept well down the field. The infrequent Loomis scoring bids were brok- en up by our defense, McKee replacing Holden. Bonnie and Lewis Worked smooth- ly on the wings and near halftime a melee before the Loomis goal resulted in another score for Hal Sloat, his third of the day. ln the last quarter the Loomis eleven lost its punch and Hotchkiss, despite the sub- stitution of two fresh wings, Wilkinsoia and Matthiessen, was equally powerless. The game ended a 3-0 victory. At NWatertown under unfavorable condi- tions, we faced a very different type of op- position and went down, 4-2 to our first defeat in two years. Witla an extra week of practice but handicapped by an un- accustomed heavy wind, we were unpre- pared for the big, fast Taft men with nine games behind them and played a wretched first half. Our inspired recovery in the third quarter was not enough. Page 11.inr'fy-flz rc r' In spite of a driving down-field wind to help them our slow starting team was un- able to score in the first period, while Taft was getting two fluke goals kicked off Hotchkiss men. Their aggressiveness kept the ball up more than half the time, giving the strong Hotchkiss line few shots. The second quarter the ball stuck in our half of the field, we still could not judge the wind. Goalie Moody was bombarded, the Taft center finally drilled a long hard shot be- tween his fingers and the crossbar for their first earned score. Later a penalty kick for pushing against Lambert netted Taft their fourth and last goal. In this period We were totally outclassed and lucky to get off so easily. In the second half Hotchkiss did the seemingly impossible, we outfought and actually outplayed the Watertown team. Soon after the kickoff Bonnie on right wing tricked the Taft centerhalf for a clear pass to Jack Sloat, who carried the ball to one of the Taft goal posts and set it up before the other, where Hal was waiting for it. For our second score a few mnutes later this routine was Varied slightly-Jack intercepted the ball himself and was far- ther back when he passed it. The goalie was unready to do anything with HaI's shot but gape at it. With the wind against them again in the final quarter the Hotchkiss line stabbed deep but was unable to sustain its attacks long enough to score. It was well support- ed by the rest of the team back to Ben La- baree in goal, but the Taft lead was too great. These last two quarters saw the best soccer of the year. In spite of its brevity and the disappoint- ment at Watertown, the season must be called a successful one-much credit to coach Hunter. X .kv QQ ,Q L S xiii? R L 'N N X IQ? XX K S Qu of Q if 5' ' J . ,Q :iff I -'M H35 , I 3 T , 1 2 . -...S QW ,V-Q.. A gf l-. 'NWSQQ F. AQ 1 ' I 5 n 0 M' . 1 I , . , , . X -4 ,gif H g N' , , . , W. ,f ,fm , A ,M , rv N k '4'9'3- 4 A bflg M2 -f 'L in ,fwmw ek M ' . - ,W xx- bv . vgvzb f-as , W . . Rx bf Y J .J wgx'-w, , M M -3' N, fm-1, 43' K Lf'i'4'ifn ..,,z, X. f .M X me N ' 7f W ' f,'mQff1m . ,,,-M wk f 'V' Qu, ff , N, ,f,, mf 9 91' . 0. , 7 - S1 A ,, ,,,, A www? , N V A, .,.vf,,:E -A N x , , My f -,,.5,sr,f ' y W A 3 A -A '.,., lfA1,1, IJRAMAT The llotchltiss Dramatic Association has, under the guidance of 1Jireetor1.even- saler. become one of the most popular ex- tracurricular activities. 1t is not surpris- ing, therefore, that the 1 a1l presentation, Sidney 11oward's Yifllmt' luck, was enthus- iastically acclaimed by everyone. The play was an effective Ll1'.11111lI1l.LlI1Ol'l of the conquest of Yellow liever. which prior to 1900 remained a serious challenge to medicine. The action began in Dr. Stacltpoole's 1,ondon laboratory in 1929. lfrom there, by the use of a flash-baclt, it went to XVest Africa where Stoltes in 1927 was experimenting with the disease. But the main theme was XValter 1leed's experi- mentation and success in isolating the dis- ease in 19110 in Cuba. It was not until 1929 that Staeltpoole discovered a vaccine which news he annotmced as the final cur- tain descended. Dillman and liord were undoubtedly the best performers of the evening and, al- although both newcomers to the Uramat, handled their roles with surprising confi- dence and slsill. Dillman easily assumed the patient determination of Maior Reed, and lford treated the equally difficult role I'rlg1r' niilrljf-sf,r of Lazear in an excellent professional man- ner. Brower, another newcomer, gave a very praiseworthy rendition of Dr. Stacli- poole. Brittingham and Lord should be commended for their portrayal of the two soldiers that acted as Reed's guinea pigs, while XVool1en executed the difficult role of Dr. Finlay with considerable ability, Deserving notice too. are Dixon, Robinson. Hubbard, and 1,asell, whose radical notions offered comic relief to the serious plot. Problems of scenery were solved by the stage crew under XValter13rey by construct- ing a two-level set, disregarding realism. Only props essential to the action were used. Since the general atmosphere was left to the effective use of some 200 light- ing changes, Bill Campbell and his crew should be greatly complimented. Pete Matthiessen and the Business Board also worlsed bard loolsing after the interests of the H. D. A. The success of the production may be attributed to the interest and ability of the students, competently directed by Messers Levensaler and lfdwards. By skillful and enthusiastic worlt, the actors, stage crew, and business board achieved .1 triumph well earned after long weeks of labor. ,W Z ai FALL DANCE ARTICLE The long-awaited Fall Dance finally slunk sheepishly around the corner, almost as coyly as the beauteous bevy which goes hand in hand with it. Homericos and the Oyster were detailed as a two-man recep- tion committee and seemed to handle the matter efficiently enough, depositing the guests at their respective places of lodging, provided by the smiling ladies of the fac- ulty, where they were duly collected by the student fortunates. Surviving a painful lunch we led them dutifully to the carnage and cheered manfully but in vain for the Blue Wztve, which experienced a supreme indignation in spite of the colorful cheer- ing section. Felder informed Joyce audi- bly that that was life, kid, to which she agreed. Life struck back, however, when the plucky one returned from a blanket hunt to find that Fortunate Pierre had pulled a coup d'etat and was ensconced in his berth of honor fsee pictures belowj. Following an impressive tea at the Head- masters, enlivened by the espionage activi- ties of the Groveris attractive but treach- erous behemoth, we hied on our way to the field of battle, the syncopators, and first view of Tommyis work of art. Doc bravely led his men and proved surprisingly effi- cient, everything going off well in spite of the efort of the upper mids to operate, i. e. Jules McAfee. Herbie and Harry produced Steady Eddie Witstein and his Redskins, curiously enough, who performed in customary laud- able fashion to the fourth dance, carrying on in spite of Rem's tails and an empty house during the fifth round. A fine time was had by all as the Ops and Happy Hank reigned supreme: intermission, as usual, was fraught with suspense and intrigue, elimaxed by an investigation of the chapel by the afore-mentioned Happy One, who was showing his girl the place, too. By the end of the sixth everyone had returned to the fold and saw it through to the bitter end, complete with undimmed lights and Stags, but glorious nevertheless. A con- spiracy among the faculty dampened the home-taking slightly, as squatter's rights prevailed in the downstairs living-rooms, but we seemed to be a fortitudinous class and bore our burden in good grace. Silent Steve, under the influence of the Stinky Two, confessed all afterwards in 115, and there was a lot, too. Mercy, Stephen! The girls were forbidden to breakfast, a principal flouted by the redoubtable Louis- ville Marge, but we scraped up in time for chapel and the eventful withdrawal to the heart of the Berkshires, where the Mouse struck gold and Ears struck a snag. After the customary jollity and sporting over the verdant greens, the woolly steaks, potato chips, flaunted H sweaters fwhich Otie's little trick burst through at the shouldersj , and hilarious return, we all journeyed to Millerton for the fond farewells. All, that is, except Bemis, who was left in the dust due to poor footwork and spent two dollars worth of taxi in time to see the train pull out. All together a fiesta of the first de- gree, with beautiful girls, beautiful weath- er, and the Vulture also beautiful. FALL HETBUSPECT SEPTEMBER -Mr. Willis, I presume? -W'e are advisers to the seventy deadly sins. --Two more veterans of 225 E. 47th St. confess. -Sammy coy on subject of 17-year old model. -C.E.L., in family tradition, hungrily awaits East Hampton letter. -Physical director comes through with first off-day as Ville Squad inaugurates and we throw the preps a feed, God bless us. -First holiday celebrated by Bash Bish rock fight. -The Klondike Kid eanters in out of the night. OCTOBER -Birth of thinking club. -Dissention in ranks-still no song meeting. -Wesser joins G.F.S. Intrigue club with B-Bo and Rowena. -The Sing-Sing annual arrives in state. -Willis' table rebels, requires combined forces of Duke, Spud, and Sarge to quell riot. -The deities ride again. -Ears heads for metropolis to shatter infernal love triangle. --Holiday: Eddie and Mat go home with other Poughkeepsie boys, to attend college. -Song meeting: Seniors manage to subdue preps with help of Duke and Bill Cruikshank. -Proud prep parents appear in force. -Big Wes takes big plunge-uuh, uuh, Rowena. -A memorable day in the annals of Hotchkiss. Amen. -We try again, as preps lift voices, more in disdain than song. -Baltimore expedition gains apalling number of self-invited recruits. -Doc's daughter solves Sammyis dance problem for him, doublefold. -Another holiday: big surprise, with half of congregation in Levis. -Fortunate Pierre and the Gnome join the Bird and the Behemoth in New York. -Hot Krotz caught with wood nymph at cabin 6. -Some of you have told me I'm a good coach, some have implied I'm a good coach, and most of you know I'm a good coach. The rest of you can leave. F LL l'iETIHlg'l'EUT NOVEMBER -T. R., the Colonel, and the Oyster apply for dates at 115. -Soccer team defeats local odors, trains, and referee, and incidentally, the Loomis team. -Newest outrage on part of organ is mistimed, as Spud is observed seated joyfully apart from usual ringside seat at crime. lt wasn't Ilia! funny, Mr. Murphy! -Redoubtable Bobbie refuses second Hotcllkiss dance in two years, and her father didn't come here either. -Steve's girl semi-equipped with two parents and a granny. -Prep uprising. Bubbles, left in wake of senior raid, is savagely ravaged of his tie of Irish green by Prep guerrillas, Ears, over-enthusiastic, is sent to showers by Hodgekins. -Deities dissipate as Sammy hits the low road, mourned by all, and goes hunting for the Great Bear. -Ventre Blue, they're here! The Rrz'o1'1f tells us about the bonfire rally we didn't have on November 10. -Stop ogling, Kelly! Some of them are almost human. -The episode of the pregnant beagle. -Fleischmann, in his enthusiasm for a red card, bites ther- mometer in half and loses seven places in line in resultant confusion. - Yellow jack proves too much for Ock as the D. Crudlas Roebottom fiasco comes to a head. -Love-lorn Rem leads Black Shoe Club in plate-passing. - Lee's Dream startles first floor. -Denny assumes name of Tifft as irate nurse accuses him of obscenity at clinic. DECEMBER -jake Stewart and friend arrive in 115 at 1:15 A. M., pass entire return visit to school unseen. -Pluclxy Prief assaults Captain -lack with intent to kill. Lower-Mids at table 3 taken by surprise by Mr. Greenfells sudden appearance at, or as, the head of the table. Black shoes gleam under plate-passing concession for third Sunday in row. Off to Piping Rock. w 1 ,QE WINTER TEFL 51 'K mx-ig? .. W M5 A fe ,of 't 1 CLUB HOCKEY The 1945 Club hockey season was finally brought to a close when Hoyt defeated Taylor 2 to 1 to climax the end of two rounds of spirited competition between all four clubs. Monahan was victorious in its game by finishing a half point ahead of Baker in a thrilling, hard-fought game. The winning goal was scored for the Big Green by Sicard on a pass from Bonnie which put Monahan in undisputed first place for the season. It was a close battle between these two clubs, Monahan and Baker, with Baker ahead until the very last game. With a forward line of Camp- bell, Murray, and Ballou, coupled with the alert defense play of Farwell and Johnson, the Monahan sextet was able to stave off the attacks of a determined Baker team which boasted the fast skating of Salas, Jerry Earl, and Pullman as forwards, bol- stered by the strong defense work of Capt. Pete Matthiessen. Hoyt beat out Taylor for third place with two victories and four defeats, while Taylor brought the rear, los- ing five and tying one. Capt. Hal Sloat and Joe Estill were Hoyt's stars, while Fer- guson and Charlie Lord were the mainstays of the Taylor team. The club season was a successful one, in spite of poor skating conditions most of the Winter. The games were run off well, and due credit should be given to those who spent many hours shov- eling the only rink that was not under three feet of snow. The coaches of the respect- ive squads should also be commended. In the middle of the season two outside games were played with the Millbrook sec- ond team. For the first game Coach Gur- ney took a combined Baker and Monahan squad there and brought back a 4 to 1 vic- tory. Fardelmann of Baker starred in the net, and each club notched two tallies against the Millbrook six. ln the return game at Hotchkiss, a team composed of players from all four clubs handed the visi- tors a 2 to 0 defeat. These two outside games did much to add to the spirit and success of the 1945 club season as well as the sportsmanship and spirit of the respec- tive club teams themselves. Page mn' l11mdr1'd fhrce -- X . We - ph L x Q X 1 SCHOOL HOCKEY The hockey season this winter was an especially successful one with fairly good skating conditions and seven outside games, under a regular schedule, of which Hotch- kiss won five. Ably coached by Mr. Hall and Mr. Taber, the team was considered the best seen at Hotchkiss in some time, with last year's entire second line, van Dyke, Lufkin, and Sellwood, returning as the first line. Hubbard, another member of last year's team, did a fine job as goalie as well as captain while Shethar and Cal- houn made up the defense. Belin, Robbins, and Dixon comprising the second line, al- so did an excellent job, backed up by Broy- les and Boyd at defense. The first two games, both with Taft, were rather disappointing. The NVater- town skaters, although completely outclass- ed by the boys from the Hill, turned a few lucky breaks into scores to win by the tight margin of I-0 and 3-2, which was lost in a hectic last period. In the Berkshire game on a windy rink, the Hotchkiss sharp- shooters found their marks and won 6-1, van Dyke ringing up 4 tallies. The next game with the NWilliams Freshmen, was equally successful, Hotchkiss scoring every period, the score being '5-2, and letting XX'illiams score only twice in the last five minutes of play, when a Hotchkiss man was out on a penalty. The games that followed with South Kent and Kent also resulted in victories for Hotchkiss. The visiting South Kent team lost to the score of 6-3. W'e traveled to Kent and subdued a highly-rated Kent team 4-1. The season was brought to a triumphal close by an invitation game with the Army Plebes at West Point. The team was un- fortunately handicapped by the absence of Sellwood and Shethar. However, an early score by Boyd, playing right wing in place of Sellwood, set the pace for Hotchkiss, and the team, playing superb hockey, made four more goals before the game ended 5-2. Page mu' lluwlrefi jfie Nl! A Y 3 .TE CLUB BASKETBALL 194 5 While the school squad was practicing in the Old Gym, club basketball compe- tition was organized under the guidance of Mr. Beaumont and Mr. Stiles over in the Monahan Gymnasium. The Senior league was won by the Taylor club, with Baker close behind, Monahan finishing third, and Hoyt in the cellar. Witlm the aid of sharpshooters Carpenter and Healy, the Red team got off to an amazing start. going ten games before be- ing defeated in the last two contests. De- spite the elevation of these two top stars to the school squad in midseason, Taylor was able to coast to victory with Captain Sommers, Frey, and John Diller support- ing their lead. Not until Baker triumphed in the next to last game of the season was the Red's undefeated record blem- ished. The runner-up Greys, paced by Captain Ben Labaree and guard Tommy Clark, lost four games, the last an upset by Hoyt. Several one-basket games were snatched by Baker, and these made the dif- ference in the final standing. The third place Monahan Club lost several close decis- ions which deprived them of a better show- ing. Captain Buff Campbell's flawless long shots and Burt Zempsky's steady guarding were outstanding while the addi- tion in mid-season of Charlie LeBoutillier strengthened their line-up considerably. Four victories over Hoyt were all the Green were able to take, although this record is not indicative of their ability. Occupying the cellar throughout the season although with brilliant upsets over both Baker and Taylor, the Hoyt team had several mem- bers of great ability, Bill Freeman with deadly accuracy from anywhere on the court sparked the team, along with Bill Shaffer and Jack Lind. High scorers for the season were Bill Freeman of Hoyt with 170 points, Ben La- baree following with 123. Although play- ing in only six games, Carpenter amassed 107 points. Page one hundred seven The lightweight league was won in the last game when Monahan defeated Baker. Paced by Captain Tuttle and Dick Childs, the Green came from behind to take the championship. Runner-up was Baker, who until their last game defeat by Monahan were league leaders. Captain Tilson and Vivian were the outstanding members of the Grey. Starting an amazing late season drive, the Taylor aggregation, with the addition of Don Ely, established themselves well in the third place position. Skip Na- len and Firestone were also point getters for the Red. The cellar was occupied by Hoyt, led by Captain Harper and Louis Ruckgaber. In both these leagues there were many promising players, who, with the return- ing members of the school squad, make next year's varsity very promising. SCHUUL BASKETBALL Basketball was born at Hotchkiss in 1943, when an inexperienced Blue quintet defeated Regional. The following year bas- ketball achieved minor prominence when the team took three out of three games. That was a starter, but the season this winter pushed the rise of the sport over the finish line. Fnthusiasm was so great, as a matter of fact, that it was decreed a major sport at the end of a successful season, in which we dropped but two out of seven matches. The first loss accrued was at the hands of Cranwell, as the fast breakv game of the Hotchkiss quintet failed to click on Cranwell's smaller floor. Taft, which boasted a very powerful team this year, fell upon the Hotchkiss quintet and defeat- ed it with considerable ease. The other games, however, told a different story. After first defeating Berkshire, the team went on to down Kent by a very close mar- gin in two successive games with them. The Blue then went on to conquer the Pittsfield Boys' Club team and to again come out on top over the Berkshire five. Witli Captain Howie Floyd, Paul Lambert, Dick Ford, Ed Motch, and Ross Sharp and a strong supporting group, plus Coach Stearns' fast-break offense, our opponents suffered very badly indeed. Next year's prospects seem decidedly fa- vorable. Three of the first quintet will re- turn, and an experienced squad offers many capable players to fill in the vacan- cies. The team will be led by Co-Captains- Elect Dick Ford and Paul Lambert, and we hope will be handled efficiently again by Coach Thomas Stearns. SKIING The Hotchkiss skiers were this winter the recipients of the best atmospheric con- ditions imaginable, or in short, a bounteous supply of snow. The skiing began on the first day of the winter term and continued unabated until the last week in February, which accounted for an excellence of ski- ing and jumping unrivalled in many a year. During this lengthy period we were for- tunate to arrange for a rather active sea- son, obtaining meets with Regional High School, Forman, and Salisbury. In addi- tion, an invitational Quadrangular meet Page one hundred nine was held to top off the season, with the Salisbury Plankers, Forman, and Salisbury participating. The excellent Hotchkiss ski team, led by Captain Chapman and ably assisted by Art Dutton, Blair Childs, Pey- ton Mead, and Bill Kelly vanquished all except the Salisbury slalomers, to Whom our skiers bowed on January 25, but later conquered. This date, however, proved an important milestone in the history of Hotchkiss skiing, as Chapman, with his amazing leap of 66 feet, shattered the school jumping record of 65 feet, set by A. Morrison in 1937. The Ski Club, with Chapman as presi- dent, A. Dutton vice-president, and Mr. Hale secretary, who went through the usual formalities of handing out emblems to those who had passed their trail tests, and also, in continuing the improvements begun last year, did considerable work enlarging and clearing the trails. Especially noticeable was the remarkable number of accomplish- ed skiers who had joined the ranks at Hotchkiss this year. Among other im- provements was a test designed to deter- mine those skiers whose ability made it safe to take advantage of Reed's Hill. Skiing this year was characterized by a great in- crease in interest among novices, many of Whom were soon able to pass the trail test, having spent much of their spare time prac- ticing. Hotchkiss skiers, all in all, due to the excellence of the ski team and the abundance of snow, had a truly successful season. ,mv .V-.. ., X 3 if '1 p 3 155.- I - ' ,, X XX L A , ' . . . s A H, ' 1 - 3 Q E Q 1 1,2 fA L. , . ,..: X. , ,. W WW? M QT, 523 i me fwzw EW , ,wx A mm , , 'f X kQ1?::s?i1Q: F : M1 X A X ag? ,, 'f ' fi' Q t A N . , ,Q pri :1 gg! , ig N N :S 'Q Z' A 'K - fw ifwc. - 'fi I ,. I A S x, -Q fjfi-if Ng sf Q A w .fr V J Y few 2 4 5 4 2 ? 'H U52 'spa Mi iw NGEUHGE WASHINGTUN SLEPT HERE On February 22, George' Wfczsbilzgforz Slepi Irlvre, the mid-winter play opened for a record four-performance run. It was to all accounts a smash hit with Hotchkiss playgoers. After last year's hilarious You C4117 Take if Wifln You, Director Leven- saler now produced another Kaufman and Hart opus but one with a slightly differ- ent tone and mood, less slapstick and more subtle sarcasm than the previous YCTIWY. At this rate we will soon look forward to the mid and the Kaufman-Hart festival annually. Although G. W. S. H. was but .1 semi-success on Broadway several years ago, the Dramatic Association seemed to get the best out of it and convey smoothly to the audience the hysterical trials of de- veloping 'that place in the country'. Little Newton Fuller buys an ancient, dilapidat- ed farmhouse in Bucks County CG. W. never slept there but Benedict Arnold didj. For three ensuing acts wells are drilled, re- pairs are made, manure and gravel are bought in copious quantities by the graft- ing old hired man, deeds are dug up, and hurricanes punctuate every other scene. In truth the Whole play is a series of rather unconnected, amusing incidents. Doc Bonnie achieved a masterful effect in the part of energetic Newton Fuller, be- ing sympathetically keen and enthusiastic throughout. Ev Worullen tackled the acid- ulous Annabelle with golf clubs galore. As blustering and repulsive an Uncle Stanly as any one would want was skillfully cre- y -shw- 'Q' A -X H F -Q5 ' 'Sf M :iff '. V WW, L 1, My K -- K 1 Y . y 2 W J 53 - PM :I K il - ' 1 , V . E fi iff '59 , Q SE- ' sf . if if ,,., Q Q N-A x f 6 g A ' 63555: 13?-W 1- YV' mn- ga? -5 k ' A W?95Fi3:-Q-31:F3351 , 7 ' u . 51' . , f -- 'E i K W -, ix- ..A,.:- -- -- n 1 I ,Jw 3, Q11Wv3azEiwTm, tance the Syncopaters battled their instru- ments proficiently to several different tunes. After a quiet interlude punctuated only by a smooth, almost oily, drum break, the group retired to the sumptuous spread so characteristic of our dining hall and presently to the houses of the faculty ladies, where the guests were left to gird themselves for the fray. The latter was opened by none other than E. Wittsteiii, who performed with customary benevo- lence, confining his enthustiastic violin to its proper duty as a moral support and cut- ting out the polka and waltz as feature attractions. Furthermore, the stags were efficiently weeded out in time, the lights weren't overly flagrant, and the faculty discretely, perhaps loftily, kept to a speci- fied location for their activities. A renegade stag, as a matter of fact, temporarily es- caped detection and created considerable confusion, but when the boys in red fled the bandstand at the stroke of twelve, the status quo had been reestablished. Sunday produced a battery of would-be wood nymphs, garbed in outsized leviis and borrowed H-sweaters whom we escorted to the various cabins for the day. The Deit- ies once again moved in on Mr. White's lux- urious villa, Priefer and a quick-thinking squad had appropriated the boathouse, and the remainder took to the woods. Britt and john even accompanied the swell dates to the station, curiously enough. The train pulled out in a whirl of screams, inter- spersed with cat-calls, and a huge sigh roll- ed over picturesque Millerton. It was part- ly of frustation and despair but mostly of relief. 7 RETRUSPECT - WINTER TERM JANUARY Roll call finds missing members, as Otis and Homericos confess. Piping rock rehashedg Quient has notes on his deeds in Room 19. J. de B. still slow on the uptake in chapel responses. Renegades seep in as inspection finds that l'l.1rry was with us all the time. -Mule folds up in pool with dissipated gasp. Fel, Matt, and Dum-Dum nursing plans for Rosemary Hall, a school. -Surprise holiday-variety causes sqeals of delight. Obscenely sexual movie too much for fans, who spiel about own experiences. Plague-riden McLean, in confusion of moment, opens wrong door and unloads in eloset. Big Ed, also confused, devours raw Alka-Seltzer pillsg enough said. Roper's bun-impaling finger splint ruins appetites right and left. --The demise of the Medical Club rats. -Tiger Tom and Shellshock have it out in office of Physical Director. -You're not having ber up, Gnome! -More news on the State Police. -Great Bear brands Matt's Mech. drawing as worst ever seen. -Kitty Snow comes through with another wet one. -Uppy sprains ankle donning skis. FEBRUARY -We stand examined and are found wanting Cvaeationj, as German and Spanish reap terrible toll. -The Fin and the Voice return in sailor suits. -Tall Paul banishes gleeful delinquents to Parris Island methods. -The Peter comrad fiasco begins. -Broyles unloads eokes at Duke's feet, losing five months suction at a single blow. 8 9 10 12 Swank Hank inaugurates Curly God cult on tail end of I first floor. -The class philosopher commences three-week seance in Jug. --Wills still after elusive Homericos, who is after Herring. -Sally Wlmiteheatl, Tom? This is so sudden! 13-Tifft having girl his parents don't know-Merciful Heavens, 16 17 Henry! -Domestic crisis arises, as Peyt's date's father is to preach on crucial sabbath. -Wfoollen having either Ellen, own, or spurial Gorgon, 01' all three. 18-Slater and Lewis eommit arson, as Cos and Mary battle flames. 19-Lindoo has two swell dates for Britt and John. 20-Broyles handles tall Betty at last moment. 22-The Gnome and the Queen and the Curly God. 23-George Wasliington slept here, too. 24- Swell datesi' arrive. So do girls. 25-Their girls gang up on Tifft and Herring. 26-Lord in love with cute blind date, everyone else in love with wrong girl, two deities swear off on all girls. 27-H.D.A. Business Board appropriates Mrs. Van's taxi, leaves her behind, as Henrau gets his signals mixed. 28-Gud and Homerieos get initiation from Woollen's date. Sorry, Chub. MARCT1 1-Shellshock bites the dust. 3-Uneouth basketball team takes over Taft tea dance. S-Henrau and Teddy make a pledge. 6-Stookey massacres trapped sparrow in the Jug with S, throaty cries, as Elizabeth sobs brokenly. Honer and the Duke make plans for Hot Springs. 9-Swimming team invades New York State Kultur Camp. 12-Swank Hank foments a revolt of the oppressed. 13-The Progressive Party results-Sucre Bleu! 15- 16- The muekrakers are downed by the weight of Capitalism. Departure. W-L. --,-..ii.l 'yt' ,ur '45 A O giw QE Walken .2 Q Q -.WAN Wwmkw A , K,-may ,M ...-...W 7- - .- -M -NM., W N H -.... W N , f-a,...w:a.: ... -M-s....,,, r-N....,w ...sy M Giv- 'F . if 233 n ff ' V595 if . F ,f PY X, mff f fm 51 aura gg .. Eg? 'nas' ' fr SCHOOL BASEBALL The Spring term began well with fine weather that allowed the school baseball team to get right to work, although subse- quent rain and cold somewhat hampered their activities. Ater a week and a half of practice, the team downed Salisbury in a practice game, 10-4, pitched and won by jack Sloat, and followed that up with an 8-1 victory over the Regional High School the following week. An 8-5 win over N. Y. Military Acad- emy made it three straight for the Blue be- fore a hard hitting Arlington team took a 4-2 decision in one of the best games of the year. Jack Sloat and Frank Sommers pitched well, and the team fielded smooth- ly behind them, but the necessary punch was lacking at the plate. Next on the sea- son's schedule was a trip to Berkshire that marked the first appearance of Dick Sell- wood on the mound, after his recovery from pneumonia. Hotchkiss won easily, 12-2, led by the slugging of Boyd, Cal- houn, and Capt. Pete Haaren, whose total of fourteen runs batted in for the season was outstanding. On a cold rainy day the Blue nine play- ed Cranwell on Hoyt field in a game lim- ited to seven innings by the weather. The infield made four errors in one inning, which, coupled with a few hits by the visi- tors, gave them a five run advantage, but Johnny Shethar's pinch-hit single with two out in the seventh brought the score that gave Hotchkiss a 5-5 tie. A powerful Kent team came here next and slugged their way to a 6-3 victory as Hotchkiss batmen again failed to come through, but on the follow- ing Monday, May 14th, the team journey- ed to Taft with better results. Taking an Page one lzundrcd ninvfm 11 -W 'as ' A 'G 1 .-.-1-1----.W . early 4-1 lead behind the fine pitching of Dick Sellwood, the Blue fell apart in the eighth and allowed Taft to tie up the score with a three-run rally. The tie lasted un- til the top half of the twelfth, when Jack Sloat singled in the winning run in an ex- citing 5-4 victory. A return engagement with Regional proved easy for the Blue as, with Sommers on the mound, they coasted to an 11-3 vic- tory. A trip to Kent followed during exam week, in which Hotchkiss, minus the services of Hal Sloat and Lord, failed in the attempt to avenge the previous de- feat and succumbed to the Kent power, 12-3. Two Kent homers were instrumen- tal in their victory as the Blue were unable to hold their opponents down. In the final game for the senior members of the team, Loomis Came here to play on the day be- fore graduation. They boasted an unde- feated team and a pitcher with an average of eighteen strikeouts per game, and he lived up to previous reports as he shut out the Blue with two scratch hits by Lambert and Haaren. There was a tense scoreless tie until the eighth inning when Loomis picked up three runs and added two in the ninth on a double-squeeze play to make the final score 5-0. The season was on the whole good, with six wins four losses, and a tie. Near the end the team was weakened because of sen- iors taking exams and eventually leaving the Hill, but the gaps left were capably fill- ed, giving others a chance to gain the ex- perience necessary for a good season next year. in . if 5 'R JN Q 'Q is Q i VRQ . U 355 S Q Q! hm' 'mv , .EM L - Gp Q i , A 'lffm 'Y W fifx ak. 'Q af ' pf , ff M FN ' rw ly s fm? A .X Ar SN 2' JN N15 N' f 6 ,H 'Q S' 'v..'-H' I ' 9' wh 1 ' . , 9 ,Y TRACK An early spring gave Messers Smith and Berry ample time to whip a very promising track squad into shape for a four meet sea- son. The distance runners were put through Mr, Berry's latest nightmare in the form of running the golf course at regular in- tervals. Mr. Haywood took control of the sprinters while Mr. Kellogg guided a strong field squad. A week before the first outside meet, two dual club meets were held, Baker fac- ing Hoyt, and Monahan against Taylor. Captain Labaree's Grey Squad overpowered an undermanned Hoyt aggregation and despite Herbie Dowis efforts, emerged the l Page one lzlzzlflrerl fIl'?1lfjl-f1L'0 victors. Monahan, with many potential stars had more difficulty with Taylor but with Peyt Mead's leadership, the Green was able to overshadow Bud Brower's brilliant distance Work. The first outside contest facing the Blue was a quadrangular meet with Deerfield, Wilbraham, and Loomis, on the latter's oval. It was with little optimism that the Blue squad entered the fray, but before the afternoon was half over it was apparent that Hotchkiss had the strength to rake the meet. Bud Brower showed himself as an excellent distance man when he took the mile and got second in the half. Willie Campbell contributed another 5 points with an easy victory in the pole vault, which he attained without even taking off his sweat pants. The two work horses of the Hotchkiss squad, Don Ely and Eddie Motch, together acquired well over twenty points and the Blue squad were assured of at least a tie when the relay came up. By grasping second place behind a fast quartet from Wilbrahain, Hotchkiss took their first meet of 1945 by 47 points to Wil- braham's 43. Arlington High School came over from Poughkeepsie the next Saturday in an ef- , f ii If 1 sig A .,., 1 , ,R fort to wipe out their loss of last year. Nev- ertheless, they were sadly disappointed as once more the strong Blue squad set to work on them. The runners from Hotchkiss were absolutely unbeatable as Motch won the 100, Dow took the 220, Captain Ben Labaree victorious in the 440, Montgomery in the half, and Tilson in the mile. Again Don lily showed his agility as he won the shot and discus and Campbellis reliable victory in the pole vault was also present. An overwhelmingly successful afternoon was climaxed by the relay team outdistanc- ing the opponents to add the final points in favor of the Blueg as the score of 72 to 32 indicated, the Blue squad was Well on its way to another successful year. W'ith the scheduled meet for May 19th with Taft rained out, the next contest for Hotchkiss was with Pittsfield High School. These visitors were also attempting to av- enge the terrific trouncing they received the year before, but were no more success- ful than Arlington. The performance in the field far outshadowed the track ac- complishments which consisted only of victories in the 440 and 220 by Captain Labaree and Eddie Motch respectively. Don lily paced the weight tossers and also won his high jump specialty although outdone by Eddie Motch's heave of 120 feet in the light discus. The relay team again completely overwhelmed what the opposition could offer and the meet was won, 76 to 37. The Taft meet, postponed until the day following our victory over Pittsfield, was by far the n10St exciting and closest con- test of the season. The Blue squad, weak- ened by the absence for various causes of three of its top performers, traveled down to Watertown in an effort to make 1945 .wx fi x w-ew Q. YH SSX 5- - . 0 Q - .M m A , f , , ,. M gg sw 5 1 L . , A Vg x di .5 35.9 Q, 'W 2 , A l 1 V . ,.g,. ., . , 4 I K - ., M- K in ,. . S 5 E L -X. Mi . Y a X 5, .M . , S k .f Mws- irfx ,gg A , . , .7 ' f 4. A ,,,,.. S.,-. . . , ..,, f Y : ...F hw X,..s, ,, 5 . . i.,L . A wwmvwv' Kwikmmw ANR h h .W- ' hm.. . Gsmgavlxp A in :M . -af .,. if .X :R -K- mwwsw A ,. 'Wi Q. A f ,- 'if' . K 'Yi' mn-'K 1. ,N Af 8 xxx I ,Q ,A 54 7,1 F up 'K Q 5 , Q Q R12 ,' nf v 1 .'Q'i,-f ly. ' T x 5 K V wx .f ,w Qf waxx y, .V It X is Ty - W fi 175'-'. I ig. .1 F 6 Q N i i A: K x .K K' -Mfg ' aa, . 5 ' ', 4' ', 1' . :dl 1 . . ff f , if X V V X' ff xy sg, f h, -l,?,lA: MfL!g f'x ,S 3 . g 1 X 4. : S M35 ..- . . K an bxgxf r -K 3 sf Qfzigff, - Q-.. 2 '- f.4: 'V A'Q '16 3 af? . 1 55 rv mix .. - . wfwww. f'b ffa . .-r Y 3 . . Sig? ..5?':5a '..f- fi 1 TICNN IS Tennis suffered this year from almost perpetual rain, which nearly curtailed the proposed schedule of meets. The round of club matches which was planned had to be cancelled entirely, as did the school tennis tournament, in spite of what looked to be the most promising Spring in years in March. The school team, however, man- aged to complete a relatively successful season, playing five matches between Nlay 8, and May 23, inclusive. Under the leadership of Captain Charlie Shepard, the Blue trounced Kent in their first match, 7-2, dropping only two sin- gles matches. The following week, how- ever, a Loomis team inched over a victory of 5-4 in a match played at Loomis. Dick Childs and Shep won their matches and two doubles were taken out of three. Deer- field's powerful squad, led by Bill Smith and the Mathey brothers, crushed us 9-0 on May 12, in spite of spirited playing by an inferior Hotchkiss sextet. A 6-3 count against Taft on May 16 proved our effec- tiveness, although played on a strange court, Childs, Shepard, and Robinson lost their singles, and a hectic doubles session ended with three more tallies for the Blue. The season ended badly, however, a match played on the Kent courts saw us defeated in a series of close matches by a score of 6-2. Captain Shepard alone took his sin- gles, while Carey and Pete Matthiessen managed to salvage a point in the doubles, one doubles match was called because of time. The tennis team this year boasted Doc Bonnie, Dick Robinson, Charlie Shepard, Dick Childs, Ted Lewis, and Chimp Han- dy, with the Matthiessens helping out in the last match. The prospects for next year are very promising, with three of the above returning and a strong squad in the making under the able direction of Mr. Hoey, to whom much credit is due as usual. Page one hundred twenty-fwc GOLF This spring the golf team, though some- what hampered by continually rainy weather, nevertheless had quite a successful season, winning three out of their five matches. The season's opener was a match with Hob Nob, which was lost by a rather one- sided score of 6 1 2-2 1 2. The captain, Wailt Robbins, was up to his usual high standard of play, and Larry Carpenter, though losing a close match, turned in a very creditable performance. The second match, against Choate, again turned out badly for the Blue, as they came out on the low end of a 71 2-1 1 2 score, but from then on through the rest of the sea- son all was clear sailing. A weak Taft team was downed 8-1, and following that Page one lllailrlwrl f11'f':Lfy-six came a re-match with Choate. llveryone played better-than-usual golf that day, and as a result, the Hotchkiss team came out victorious, winning 6 1 2-2 1 2. The fine play in general of the whole team, Robbins, Carpenter, Durning, Belin, Veach, and Cruiltshank, should be commended. The last match was one with Taft, which the Blue again won, this time 7-2. Club golf did very well this year also, the regular season ending in a hard tie for first place between Baker and Taylor, but in the playoff, the latter proved superior, winning 4-2. Monahan, though ably eaptained by Robbins, didn't seem to have the power the other clubs did, though for a while there was a close race between that and Durning's Hoyt squad. Hank Belin captained the victorious Taylor squad, while John Veach was head of the Baker team. The season was climaxed this year by some very close tournament play, and when Walt Robbins and Larry Carpenter found themselves facing each other in the finals, it was anybody's guess as to who would win. A11 was even after the first 18 holes, but the second day Robbins' steadier play- ing became evident and he finally won four up and three to go, but the tourna- ment was indeed much closer than it has been in a good many years. fw. I .'j,,- 44 XVOOIJS SQUAD During the present crisis the woods squad has done more than ever before for the country. XVithout the help of Mr. Nvilson and his crew, many farmers would have lost a great deal of money, to say nothing of valuable food products. In the course of the past few years the work crew has offered its much needed help to the far- mers in the vicinity. Indeed these farm- owners are not ungrateful, offering the boys regular wages for their Work. This fall potato picking was the most common type of work. Last year and several pre- vious years the woods squad and even the entire school has done its part in this war, such as picking apples, another job in which farmers needed help. Thus it is KX, obvious that many crops would have been ruined if the woods squad had not lent its helping hand. However, in the winter there were no crops to pick. That did not mean the work squad stopped its functioning. -lust before winter many masters were helped by members of the squad in removing the weeds from their gardens. Then the ski trails were prepared for winter skiing. Alf so there was the laborious task of cutting wood, for which the squad was named. This used to be their sole job, but the war has brought on many additional tasks. A great deal of praise should be given to the woods squad for their outstanding accom! plishments in the past year. 4'- SPRING DRAMAT At the end of the winter term Messers Levensaler and lidwards screwed their cour- age to the sticking place and announced the Spring play, Mi1f'fn'1'f1. Chosen for the leading role was Frank lford, whose career had been inconspicu- ously inaugurated the spring before with a spearcarrier part in GI't'LIf CTtlffJt'1'flI4'Q he had made his first impression in Yellow lurk with his portrayal of the wild, unfor- gettable Lalear. Tfvans Xlffoollen, having made a delayed escape from the Moscow Art Theatre with his outstanding support- ing performance as Dr. Finlay and his keen and caustic Annabelle, brought slightly more experience to Lady Macbeth. lt was the performance of these principals as well as the inspired staging that put Mm'- ffvllw over. Ford's sustained intensity car- ried the play at a high dramatic level. His was by far the finest performance in a lead- ing role we have seen since Faustus. The concentrated potency of NWoollen's Lady Macbeth laid him rather more open to the criticism of overemphasis but gave strength to the vivid moments of the part. Atwood Levensaler's unit set for Mac- beth was the finest the HUA has ever built. It was beautiful in itself, read Priya' om' llmfrlrvcl fzilwllfy-eiglzf Mr. lfdgarls review, adaptable to every incident, cleverly designed to create an ill- usion of depth on a stage actually but four- teen feet deep. It was painted with such a carefully planned combination of colors that it changed compltely with the chang- ing colors in the lighting. The lighting was magnificently conceived-in color, in angle, in appropriateness to mood, in va- riety . . . We have never had a more mag- nificent, a more effective, or a more artis- tic setting on the Hotchkiss stage. The direction was swiftly paced and the trim- med-down Orson Welles script was used fwith changes and interpolationsj for dra- matic effect. The music and sound effects reinforced the visual impact of the set- ting and pointed the moods of successive situations with not only success but amazing luck, considering how little slips in timing could have ruined scenes. The solo trumpet behind was a particularly fe- licitous touch. The whole production had a suggestive quality, an implication of more than is said directly-not through under- statement, however, but light dramatic overstatement. But this sort of thing may be whim and should not supplant the sound praise this achievement deserves. lllarffrflw scored one of the most memorable successes in HUA history. 3 gl? F iillllrdu ,vw Q 4 '4 nk s ml vi' , g GR UU TIU Graduation began on Thursday at Mrs. Van Santvoord's dessert and ended with some finality in the liast Room of the Bilt- more on Saturday night. Most of us felt out of place: for the first time in four years or a large fraction thereof we belong- ed nowhere, our affiliations and associations were being severed at an appalling rate, and the firm earth of the future was distant and indistinct. By Friday morning the bulk of the ex- aminations had been coped with, and when the class banquet rolled around that eve- ning, all but a select quartet were safely under the wire. Permanent Class Presi- dent Mullins arrived for the party, and foremost among a series of adequate ora- tions was Maxieis informal resume of our infamous careers, which was delivered with some enthusiasm and received in similar fashion. At every seat was found a place- card, contributed by the class artists, man- aged by Nipper Steve, and the majority were illuminating in the extreme. NWC fared well on a royal lobster platter, con- cocted in the bowels of the kitchen by an unknown hand. Saturday morning was a turmoil of packing and renegade parents, who floated nervously and helplessly about on the out- skirts of the arena. Not until we marched into the quiet, crowded chapel for the last time did the realization of what was hap- pening occur to us, the awards were de- livered by Mr. Smith and Mr. Van Sant- voord, the valedictory was delivered by and with a Grecian beauty, and we stood up and sang Fair Hofcfakiss. In forty-five minutes '45 became alumni, but we were Hotchkiss boys, nevertheless, and marched as such into the glowing afternoon. I an ,nv we .N K. urwwyz xx , .. -Nipper sets down ultimatum, Ba 30-We hear stories of Sammy, his post-grad wo HETHUSPECT - SPRING TERM APRIL Too early Spring, too early term, early to bed, and two Earls. Dale, only half recovered from fcsting in Amenia, full of wild tales about The Hudson . Navel claims that the old grey Henrau ain't what he used to be. Af H t t 't Sp gf - s or un eri isn rin ever. seball team or U.S.C.G.R. Sugar Ray and the Doctor angrily exchange tennis lessons. Even the embryonic Republicans are startled. -Otis still on first in spite of the Ock. -Mrs. Mitchell, handicapped without glasses, Wants to know whether Matt is student or Mr. Howe. f l Pars for suffocating -The Leper gets the heave rom tie the Cherub in the prune whip. -Dank Hank breaks into the Retonf sports column with the lousy capitalists. -Homericos breaks track pledges at the Ruban Bleu. -Rumpelskins introduces Big Dick to a Bennett group as Sugar Ray on train as jules Obispo rides to Hotchkiss in triumph. -Holiday in sub-zero weatherg A third Bennett expedition proves Denny to be as humorous as ever and Rem as sus- ceptible. -Jules introduced to class, meets with varying popularity, and bites the Ear in the confusion of the moment. -Peter inaugurates series of three-day physicals. 27-Big Jim Roper gets fourteenth week end, sets record. 28-The boys begin to turn on Dank Hank and the cross he bears for labor. rk, and a curious girl named Steele. SPRING IHETHUSPECTS CUNT. MAY -jules cult formed as rumors circulate about his sex. -Big Ed claims she's too small. - ules, after a two-week trium hal so'ourn in Mem, en ineers P l - S a coup d'etat and leaves for parts unknown, mourned by all. -Steve still searching room, but pas de Jules. -Jules, after three days in radiator pipes, returns sheepishly to QFCCI BCDIICIX COI'lflI'lgCI1f. -Fadda Fel ushers in false V-E day with Buckle Down Winsockin. -V-E day. Rain. -Swan hamstrings the Goldfish from behind. -Iiord takes a Brodie in Muvllvlb dress rehearsal. -The boys operate as Woollen poses unnoticed. -Muriel goes home-Hubbard speculates. -A victory over Taft. -Campbell gets acknowledgement of Mr Berr s note of ' t - Y praise to the MacReady. -Mr. Stcrns takes solemn oath that no one shall pass. - Lucy gets a final going over. jules loses faith in himself and the Woi'ld because of failure to shed. -The Curly God casts aspersions on fertility of budding poctess for biggest faux pas of year. -The Durn decides to review for histor exam at 7:00, Y gleans a 90. -German club comes through with customary post-exam bellows of indignation. -Brower fails Physics, proving anything can happen. Tread- way prize vote finds Randy confident of carrying Prep ballot. -Brower paces Noyes to second place in mile, oblivious to hoots of mob. -Stewart tormented by vision of Merch-Int Marine occu ation . . p of Englewood hostelry. Cheary old Max highlights class fish fry. The Ropers arrive, ten thousand strong, and we're off in a cloud of dust. :ffl HU THE CLASS VOTED DONE MOST FOR HOTCHKISS-Mullins, Shepard, Hutchinson, Ely, Labaree, T. Stewart. DONE HOTCHKISS FOR THE MOST-Maxwell, Bretherton, Curtis, Brower, Sommers, Broyles Larue, Leverty. MOST INFLUENTIAL-Mullins, Shepard, Hutchinson, Allen, Ely, Garland, Broyles. MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED--Mullins, Shepard, Garland, Ely, Stewart, Hutchinson, Lord. MOST POPULAR--Shepard, Hutchinson, Mullins, Hunter, Allen, Shethar. MOST VERSATILE-Brower, Lord, J. Sloat, Mullins, Hutchinson, Hunter, jadwin. MOST ENERGETIC-Campbell, Costikyan, Shepard, Ely, Dow, Schwalbe, H. Sloat. LAZIEST--Brower, Woodward, Maxwell, Twitchcll, T. Hunter, Thumper. BIGGEST GRIND-Egbert, Durning, Ely, Steffen, R. Bryan, Whitcomb. GREATEST IMPROVEMENT-Maxwell, J. Sloat, Brower, Lewis, Slater, Sicard, Chapman. BEST ATLETE-Jadwin, J. Sloat, Hutchinson, Hunter, Shethar, Hubbard, Brower. BRIGHTEST-Lord, Brower, Randolph, Garland, Steffen, Durning, Frey. WITTIEST-Garfinkel, Wolcott, Matthiessen, Bonnie, Maxwell, Lord, Chapman, Durning. LEAST CIVILIZED-Childs, Woodward, Ely, Hubbard, Wolcott, Veach, Sommers, MOST EXTRAVAGANT-Slater, Lewis, Brittingham, Auerbach, Curtis, Maxwell. BEST NATURED-Shepard, Fardelmann, Hunter, R. Bryan, Mead, Ely, Garfinkel, Frey. HANDSOMEST--Hunter, Allen, Shethar, Haaren, Jadwin, Holden. BEST BUILD-Allen, Hunter, Chapman, Campbell, Mead, Woodward, D. Bryan. BEST DRESSED-Slater, Matthiessen, Bonnie, Brittingham, Campbell, Hutchinson, Lewis. MOST OPTIMISTIC-Fardelmann, Shepard, Maxwell, Dow, Costikyan, Campbell, Garfinkel, MOST PESSIMISTIC-Durning, Lewis, Brandli, Lord, Garfinkel, Sicard, Haaren, BIGGEST BULLER-Mathiessen, Sommers, Bretherton, Trowbridge, Curtis, Robinson, Lewis. FIRST TO MARRY-whitcomb, Curtis, Allen, Bretherton, Remington, Mathiessen, Ballou. IN WORST WITH THE FACULTY-Fardelmann, Brower, Garfinkel, Hubbard, Curtis, Maxwell. CLASS BABY-Lord, Brandli, Brittingham, Shethar, Woollen, ,Schwalbe, Remington, Chapman. No1s1EsT-woodwafd, Smith, Cook, Childs, Wolcott, Howland, Schwalbe. BIGGEST SWILLER-Remington, Slater, Dixon, Mead, Maxwell, Brittingham. PUREST-Ely, Campbell, Stewart, Sicard, R. Bryan, Seitner, Labaree, Steffen. BEST SOLDIER-Ely, Fardelmann, Allen, Hutchinson, Ballou, Herron, Sommers, H. Sloat. BIGGEST SPONGE-Childs, Hubbard, Matthiessen, Campbell, Haaren, Sommers, Cook. MOST LIKELY BACHELOR-Durning, Brandli, Sicard, Up de Graf, Patton, Cline, Howland Maxwell. BIGGEST DRAG WITH FACULTY-Mullins, Broyles, Ely, Shepard, Hubbard, Hutchinson, Durning Garland. BIGGEST ROUGHHOUSER-Chapman, Campbell, Woodward, Childs, Wolcott, Allen, J. Sloat Grimball. GETS AWAY WITH MOST-Maxwell, Sommers, Hubbard, Oakes, Garfinkel, Garland, Matthiessen Garland. GETS AWAY WITH LEAST-Fardelmann, Brower, Wilkinson, Hubbard, Frey, Garfinkel, Lewis. SLOPPIEST-Childs, Maxwell, Helmuth, Sicard, Hubbard, Smith, Brower. CRUDEST-Brittingham, Cruikshank, Williams, Sommers, Childs, Hubbard, Woodward, Costikyan MOST TYPICAL HOT CHKISS BOY-Remington, Stempel, Dow, Shepard, Haaren, Frey, Holden, Hunter, Allen. BIGGEST RED-CARD ARTIST-Tifft, Slater, Durning, Brandli, Lewis, Veach, Haskell, Clitter. BIGGEST OPERATOR-Matthiessen, Lewis, W'hitcomb, Allen, Remington, Brittingham, Garland Egbert. Page one hundred thirty-four 3 5 2 H , MOST GULLIBLE-Tifft, Trowbridge, Costikyan, Gimbel, Howland, Cline, Seitner, Lewis. MOST ORIGINAL-Brower, Matthiessen, Garfinkel, Maxwell, Patton, Seitner, Bowman. FUTURE SUGAR DADDY--Slater, Maxwell, Lewis, Ely, Curtis, Sommers, Haaren, Garland. MOST ABSENT MINDED-Brower, Montague, Whitcomb, Childs, Herring, Up de Graf, Who Cares? MOST CONSCIENTIOUS-Steffen, Ely, R. Bryan, Durning, Clitter, Mullins, Egbert, Shepard. CLASS FAVORITES INDOOR SPORT-Basketball, Sleeping, Eating, Roughhousing, Flying, Fairy Tales, African Dom- inoes, Vcrbolen- OUTDOOR SPORT-Football, Baseball, Hockey, Tennis, Skiing, Long Triangle, Gambolling, Durning. EXTRA CURRICULAR-Dramat, Miscla, RECORD, Band, Bed, Ann Gordon, Lit. BOY'S SCHOOL OTHER THAN HOTCHKISS-Andover, Exeter, Choate, Hill, Deerfield, Kent, Taft, Loomis. GIRL'S SCHOOL-Farmington, Emma Willard, Westover, Dobbs, Garrison, Nearest, Any. FUTURE OCCUPATION fAfter Warj-Father, Doctor, Engineer, President, Graft, Daisy Pusher, Orphan Annie junior Commando. COLLEGE-Yale, Princeton, Williams, Harvard, M.I.T., Cornell, Slippery Rock Teachers. NEWSPAPER-N. Y. Times, Tribune, Daily News, RECORD, Daily Worker, Hobo News, Police Gazette. MOVIE ACT OR-Cooper, Flynn, Bogart, Johnson, Chaplin, Grant, Superman. MOVIE ACTRESS-Bergman, Allyson, Lamarr, Garson, Temple, Woollen, Tierney, Nancy Wannago. AUTOMOBILE-Ford, Buick, Cadillac, Chrysler, Jeep, Isotta-Fraschini, Dusenberg, Frump. FAVORITE BRANCH OF SERVICE--Navy, Marines, Air Corps, Navy Air Corps, NVACS, I.R.A. ORCHESTRA-T. Dorsey, Goodman, Miller, James, Shaw, Barnet, Hampton, Ellington. TOPIC OF CONVERSATION-Pul-eeze!! CAssorted Votesj. TYPE OF GIRL-Any, Censored, Naturally Sophisticated, Homemade, Uncivilized, High 'Yaller, Typical American. SCHOOL GRIEVANCE-Food, Plague, Lord Installed, Sloat's Cornet, Plumbing, Elfin Trio, Joe Nimporte, Manager's Club. BEVERAGE-Milk, Coke, Scotch, Flit, Kreml, Tom Collins, L'eau de Vie, Pea Soup. MAGAZINE-Life, Time, New Yorker, Esquire, Breezy Romances, Peep. WHAT HOTCHKISS NEEDS MOST-Less Boys, More Garfinkel, Less Cynicism, New Kitchen, Four W'ell-placed Bombs, A Good RECORD. CAMPUS CHARACTER-Bill, Francis, Elizabeth, Strange Fruit, Top Hat, Flesh Gordon. MOST PLEASANT EVENT OF YEAR-Graduation, Vacation, Holidays, Dance, Roper's Weekends. CHARACTERISTIC MOST TYPICAL OF HOTCHKISS-Cyncism, Griping, Tiffting, Plague, Greenshirts on Thursdays. WORST CATASTROPHE-W'oolworth, This Poll, Fleischman,s Voice, Day After Vacation, Plague, Hotchkiss, Girls. BEST YEAR-Senior, Next, Upper Mid, Lower Mid. Prep, Sub-prep, The Year After Iirn Dead. BEST CORRIDOR-Stiles', I-Iall's, Wilson, Parsons, Siegel, Gurney, Levo, Alumni Basement. FACULTY MOST POPULAR-McChesney, Stiles, Levo, Murphy, Gurney, Stakely, Taber, Fowle. HARDEST TO BLUFF-Hale, W'ieler, Duke, Murphy, Wilson, Parsons, Temple, Gurney. MOST ENTERTAINING-McChesney, Levo, Duke, Gurney, Edwards, Murphy. FACULTY PLAYBOY-Parsons, Levo, Hall, Cummings, Mac, Edwards, Jerosch, Renny, MOST BRILLIANT-Duke, Hoey, Renny, Gurney, Berry, Bodel, Simmons. INFLUENCED YOU MOST-Duke, Gurney, Mac, Berry, Parsons, Hale. Page one hundred thirty-five STUDENT COUNCIL Senior Members C. R. S. Shepard, Chairman T. W. Hunter, Secretary B. L. Labaree P. Haaren H. H. Dow lf. Broyles R. S. Bryan T. P. Stewart J. N. Shethar C. S. Garland, Jr. P. H. Mead Junior Member R. Childs Page one himdrerl thirty-six Upper Mid Members C. LeB0utillier C. F. Lufkin H. Belin F. D. Montgomery J. G. Estill P. C. Lambert G. C. Mutthiessen H. O. Floyd T. W. Merritt Lower Mid Members D. Ely D. Debost S. Austell J. B. Zabriskie THE NHSUHIANZA BUAHIJ Peter Matthiessen, Chairman Thomas P. Stewart, Managing Editor Kent R. Costikyan, Photographic Editor Evans Woollen, III, Editor Walter G, Frey, Editor Edward B. Lewis, Editor Benjamin W. Labaree, Business Manager Thomas W. Hunter, Jr., Circulation Manager Henry N. Tifft, Jr., Advertising Manager Page mu' lzvlmirml fhirfy-smvevz THE BECUBD BU!-XRD Charles E. Lord, Chairman Charles R. S. Shepard, Managing Editor John B. Veaeh, Editorial Chairman Carleton C. Brower, Assistant Editorial Chairmin Herbert H. Dow, Assignment Editor Peyton H. Mead, Assistant Assignment Editor John W. Sloat, Makeup Editor Frank F. Sommers, Co-Sports Editor Thomas E. Brittingham, Co-Sports Editor Hamilton B. Bowman, Copy Editor Wesley M. Dixon, Editor David A. Gimbel, Editor Otis L. Hubbard, Editor Alfred Raubitschek, Editor Charles S. Garland, Business Manager Peter Haaren, Assistant Business Manager Francis F. Randolph, Circulation Manager Douglas Schwalbe, Advertising Manager Richard C. Egbert, Exchange Editor Page one lmmdrvd fliirfy-ciglzt THE LIT ISUAIHIJ Blair Childs, Chairman Thomas R. Remington, Ifditorial Chairman Ralph Ii. Brandli, Associate Editorial Chairman Wfilliam R. Campbell, Photographer Dale V. P. Fardelmann, Business Manager H. A. G. Chapman, Assistant Business Manager Dennis L. Slater, Advertising Manager Page one llllllliffd flzirfy-nine CUM LAUDE SOCIETY lilczfted in Ocfobcr Carleton C. Brower Kent R. Costikyan, J Walter G. Frey, III Charles S. Garland, Jr. David A. Gimbel Charles E. Lord, H Francis F. Randolph, David T. Steffen Page mu' lzmzdred forty f. Elvclezl in May Robert S. Bryan Harry M. Durning, Jr Franklin M. Gould Charles R. S. Shepard Stiles B. Twitchell, Jr John B. Veach, Jr. Clifford G. Loew, jr. CLASS GIFT CUNUVIITTEE XV. Frey, III C. Lord I . Sommcrs D. Gimbcl T. Stewart ST. Llll-iE'S SOCIETY Cf. Sl1cp.1rd, l'rcQidcnt 'lf Stewart IJ. lk-bust l'. Ilnnrcn H. Bclin D. Iilv 'l'. Hunter J. C.1lh0un Ci 4 I. Sllctlmr P. Lambert U . Tilson . McClure lf. Montgonmcry Pago one l1IllIdl't'd furfy mir , .. Q.. 7 GLEE CLUB Firsf Tenor Bonner A S Childs, W. S. Dutton, Assistant Orr, T. Plumley Robinson, C. W. Bovey Brown, J. C. Chambers Birmingham J A , 7. . M Firsf Buss Frey Sloat, J., President Bonner, C. Calhoun Dana, E. S. Davis, W. McAfee Van Marx Dana, W. D. Tilson Zabriskie 2ll18gCl S:'c'011d Tenor Bonnie, Manager Fardelmann Garland Mead, P. Shepard Sieard Steffen Wilkinson Parsons Seaman, Vice-President Lasell Rogers, J. A. Tuttle Stookey THE ORCHESTRA Director: Mr. Fritz Kahl CDied Dec. l944J Mr. Samuel Fermon Stewart, T., President McKee Nixon Twitchell, S. B. Brower Westover Robbins Hoyt Bryan, R. S. Hunting Johnson, M. T. Robinson, G. B. Rodgers, J. S. Chambers Svvoml Buss Clitter Cline Cruikshank Egbert Howland Robinson, R. Dreyfous Fleischinann Merritt DeCordova Ely Noyes Spen Cer Vivian E XV. Stebbins J. Diller J. Rogers J. Rodgers S. Austell Sopranos R. Abraham G. Cowen K. Dawson S. Dixon D. Dodge . M. Hall G. Lutliy G. D. Mead B. Mills T. Up de Graff Twlors S. Austell S. Birmingham J. Hinelis P. Pluinley C. XV. Robinson J. A. Rogers S. Sieard J. Stookey L. Wiilkinson G. Baird M. Johnson R. Chambers THE CHOIR J. Hoyt J. Shirk Basses N. Arons XV. Campbell S. Cline D. Clitter THE BAND J. Sloar, President T. Stewart, Vice President R. Bryan T. Brittingliam H. Bowman B. Zempsky XV. Frey C. Garland J. Seitner R. Egbert S. Twitcllell B. Labaree G. W. Mead W. Robbins A Bonner A Hunting J. Parsons D Andrews T. Merritt G. Nixon G B. Robinson H Barhydt B. Hall D Platt B. Bryant T. Costikyan XV. Davis N. dc Cordova C. Fleisclimann P. Spencer J. War1'en XV. XVestover l DA NCB COMMITTEE Dow Slater Bonnie DlfCORATlON COlVllVll'l4TEE Garland Sllcthar Haaren Steffen Hunter, T. W. Campbell Hubbard Brittinglmm Mead Holden Bryan, R. S Slont, H. M Page one hundred forty-fozw . 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 most for the life and character of the boys of the school, was awarded to Charles F. Shep- ard. 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 hfs class, was awarded to Frederick D. Montgomery. The HOYT OGDEN PERRY PRIZE, presented to that member of the Sen- ior Class who has completed his school course in four years and taken part ex- tensively in chool activities while excelling in deportment and punctuality, was awarded to Thomas W. Hunter. THE HEADMASTER'S PRIZE, offered to that member of the Senior Class who has maintained the highest rank of scholarship for the last three years of his school course, was awarded to Charles E. Lord. 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 conscientious in the performance of duty, was awarded to Howard O. Floyd. 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 Charles E. Lord. THE TEAGLE PRIZE, awarded to that member of the school who shall write the best essay on some subject connected with Books and Reading, was awarded to Peter Matthiessen. 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 improve- ment, perseverance, and courage in the face of difficulty, and was awarded to Harry M. Durning, Jr. THE LYALL DEAN MEMORIAL PRIZE, for outstanding service in the Choir and Glee Club, was awarded to David A. Clitter. THE ART PRIZE, offered to that pupil who has made the most progress in art, was awarded to Evans NVoollen. THE POETRY PRIZE, offered to the composer of the best poem, was award- ed to Carleton C. Brower. THE PARSONS PRIZES for excellence in Senior and Upper Middle History were awarded to Robert S. Bryan. 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 dormi- tories, is the most notable for his conduct, conscientiousness, and future promise, and was awarded to Thomas P. Stewart. Page one hundred forty fwe -11 ATHLETIC AWARDS THE JADWIN TROPHY, awarded to the best athlete in the Senior Class, was presented to John W. Sloat. The WYCKOFF CUP, presented to that member of the track team scoring the most points, was awarded to Ed Motch. THE WILCOX CUP, presented to that member of the baseball team with the highest batting average, was awarded to Paul C. Lambert. THE SAUNDERS CUP, presented to that member of the baseball team through whose hitting the most runs are directly scored, was awarded to Peter Haaren. THE CONVERSE CUPS, for boys in swimming contests, were awarded to Morgan Murray in the open class and to William R. Campbell in the novice class. THE TENNIS PRIZE, presented to that boy who through his unselfish loy- alty makes an outstanding contribution to the team and to the school by his all- around fine play, was awarded to C. R. S. Shepard. THE PROBASCO CUPS, for the winner and runner-up in the school golf tournament, were awarded to Walter Robbins, the winner, and L. E. Carpenter, the runner-up. THE BLOSSOM CUPS, for the medalist and runner-up in the qualifying round of the school golf tournament, were awarded to L. E. Carpenter, the medalist, and Walter Robbins, the runner-up. THE PHYSICAL DIRECTORS FOOTBALL AWARD, presented to that boy who through his unselfish loyalty makes an outstanding contribution to the team and the school by his all-around fine play, was won by Frederick D. Mont- gomery. 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 Stephen Sicard. THE HOTCHKISS CLUB PRIZES, presented to that student who through his enthusiasm, ability, leadership, and competitive spirit has done the most for his club, were awarded to Thomas W. Hunter of the Baker Club, J. N. Shethar of Hoyt Club, Frederick D. Montgomery of Monahan Club, and Charles E. Lord of the Taylor Club. THE LUCIAN SWIFT STRONG MEMORIAL AWARD, presented in memory of Lieutenant Strong, 1940, of the U. S. Army Air Force, to that boy who by loyalty, leadership, and fine spirit makes the greatest contribution to the soccer team and to the school, was awarded to Halbert M. Sloat. THE TALBOTT CUP, presented to that swimmer who is a member of the junior or lower-middle class who has been most valuable to the swimming squad by his efforts, performance, and spirit, was awarded to R. H. Blum. THE EDWARD F., III, AND PHELPS H. SWIFT AWARD, presented to that boy who by loyalty, leadership, and fine spirit makes the greatest contri- bution to the hockey team, was won by Paul Van Dyke. Page one hundred forty-six WEAHERS UF FOOTBALL W. M. Dixon F. D. Montgomery, Capt. C. F. Lufkin S. Austell C. W. Bonner H. B. Bowman W. Boyd E. Broyles I. M. Calhoun B. Childs T. W. Hunter W. R. Johnson R. Kenyon C. F. Lufkin P. H. Mead E. R. Motch J. N. Shethar F. M. Wright P. C. Van Dyke A. Raubitschek, Mgr. HOCKEY O. L. Hubbard, Capt. W. Boyd H. Belin V. Brown E. Broyles I. M. Calhoun SKIING A. G. Browne B. Childs A. C. Dutton C. Gsell H. M. Hamlin A. I. Hunting XV. G. Kelly E. R. C. Smith J. B. Veach D. A. Clitter, Mgr. GOLF H. BELIN W. M. Cruikshank H. M. Durning J. B. Veach W. S. Robbins L. E. Carpenter W. S. Robbins R. M. Sellwood J. N. Shethar C. R. S. Shepard P. C. Van Dyke BASKETBALL H. O. Floyd, Capt. F. R. Ford T. W. Hunter P. C. Lambert E. R. Motch J. R. Sharp TRACK B. W. Labaree, Capt. C. C. Brower R. S. Bryan W. R. Campbell H. H. Dow F. D. Montgomery D. Ely E. R. Motch T. A. Clark C. W. Bonner D. Debost THE IVIINUB SOCCER J. W. Sloat, Capt. S. Bonnie C. C. Brower H. A. G. Chapman F. R. Ford L. C. Holden B. W. Labaree P. C. Lambert E. B. Lewis P. Matthiessen S. C. Moody F. F. Randolph H. M. Sloat T. P. Stewart L. S. Wilkinson C. G. Loew, Mgr. THE H G. Tilson D. Schwalbe, Mgr. R. Egbert, Mgr. BASEBALL P. Haaren, Capt. O. L. Hubbard P. Lambert W. R. johnson J. M. Calhoun W. Boyd R. Sellwood C. E. Lord J. N. Shethar H. M. Sloat J. W. Sloat F. F. Sommers S. Moody, Mgr. SWIMMING M. J. Murray SKIING H. A. G. Chapman GOLF W. S. Robbins IIHU SWIMMING T. E. Brittingham , C J. R. H. Blum P. C. Forbes B. Childs C. C. Brower I. P. Holmes G. E. Labalme T. W. Merritt H. H. Windsor S. B. Twitchell, Mgr. TENNIS S. Bonnie i E. B. Lewis R. E. Robinson C. R. S. Shepard C. Handy R. H. L. Childs T. L. Epstein, Mgr. apt Page one hundred folty seven HDTCHRISS TRACR AND FIELD RECDRDS 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 10 174 inches 22 feet 1 inch 181 feet 6 inches 49 feet 2 inches 11 feet 6 374 inches 167 feet 1 374 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. L. 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. H. Brown, 42 HCTCHRISS CLUB TRACK 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 hundred forty-eight 10.8 seconds 53.3 seconds 2 minutes 6 seconds 4 minutes 53.7 seconds 28.7 seconds 5 feet 3 inches 19 feet 11 172 inches 45 feet 7 172 inches 9 feet 3 inches 127 feet 10 172 inches 105 feet 7 inches 1 minute 39.2 seconds E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan H. F. Dangler, '44, Baker H. F. Dangler, '44, Baker Brower, '45, Taylor 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. N. Ely, '45, Taylor H. F. Dangler, '44, Baker D. J. Bryan, '45, Baker M. K. Bonner, '44, Baker lJ. C. Matthiessen, '44, Baker F. D. Montgomery, '46, Monahan T. E. Brittingham,'45,Monahan E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan F.. R. Motch, '46, Monahan 40 60 100 220 100 100 180 160 300 400 150 200 40 50 100 220 100 100 150 180 160 200 HUTCHRISS SWIMMING RECORDS Yard Freestyle Yard Freestyle Yard Freestyle Yard Freestyle Yard Backstroke Yard Breaststroke Yard Individual Medley Yard Freestyle Relay Yard Medley Relay Yard Freestyle Relay Yard Medley Relay Yard Freestyle Relay HUTCHRISS Yard Freestyle Yard Freestyle Yard Freestyle Yard Freestyle Yard Backstroke Yard Breaststroke Yard Medley Relay Yard Medley Relay Yard Freestyle 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 WAR SWIMMING 19.5 seconds 25.1 seconds 56.8 seconds 2 minutes 26 seconds 1 minute 6.4 seconds 1 minute 13.1 seconds 1 minute 29.7 seconds 1 minute 49.6 seconds 1 minute 19.6 seconds 1 minute 43.6 seconds D. W. Shook, '42 D. W. Shook, '42 J. L. Nammack, '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. Wells, '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 RECORDS E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan E. Jadwin, '45, Monahan L. L. Marshall, '43, Hoyt M. Murray, '46, Baker 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 forty-nme GLASS HISTORY fC01Zfi11lL6'd from page 761 duced such items as the Saga of Tarquin Sicard, B-Bo instead of Rowena, the im- mortal Downey with her ventriloquist's dummy, and the Kansas City meat pack- er's child, Jackie. The pregnant beagle appeared for a three-day reign of terror, inhabiting every bed on the first floor with varying success, while the fantastically dank merger of the Elfin Trio and Green- groin Quartet promoted such spawn as Crud and the glaring prominence in the public eye of the I. Crudlas Roebottom af- fair. The Black Shoe Club, meanwhile, assumed the plate-passing concession for the whole year, Glowhead was conducting a daily purge in his class of the undesirable element led by the Mule, and Dale von Prief, blinded by range and love for Skippy, attacked Marcellus Sloat with all the vigor in his Quasimodo body. We left for Pip- ing Rock with two terms to go, a Rabelais- ian fiesta thrown by Den-Den which saw half of our cosmopolites under the table. The Winter Term produced a few more adherents to the ideals of the H. A. C., along with a frantic rehashing of Piping Rock. Durning, after a vacation with Marxian literature, announced dramatically that his hatred for a certain three or four capitalists was intense and set to work lay- ing the foundations for the sensational bid for power by the bourgeois canaille at the end of the term. The Rosemary Hall dance became the cynosure of attention, along with Gentleman Jim's finger splint, which transformed the meal from a formality to an occasion. The latter was good for sev- eral more week ends during the term, but Elmo had to come here during the Spring to find out what people were thinking. The Dance came along, the repercussions of' which gave birth to Mother Farmington's threat to prevent a Hotchkiss boy from ever darkening her door again, and the exams were followed by the misguided exits of the History delinquents to the less Page one hundred fifty subtle methods of the Sarge. Big Ed pulled the first of the two prize-winning faux pas of the year when he dumped a sack of cokes at the fast-approaching feet of the Duke, following the heinous deed closely with a burst of verbal indiscretions enlightening to hear. The Duke had been slightly ag- grieved already at encountering one of the girls staying at his house in the corridor while sporting a doggy suit of red flannel. The famous Memorial fire occurred in all its pungent glory, and the hideous details of the Stookey Massacre electrified the school. When questioned, the criminal snarled, Awr, it was already stunned, but his answers as to how the bird arrived in that condition were dubious in the ex- creme. The significant event of the term, how- ever, was the formation of the Progressive Party by a motly crew of would-be poli- ticians and reformers under Dank Hank. Seizing upon the people's friend, Bob Bry- an, as the key man in their surge to power and utilizing the spectacular voice of I. Douglas and the vacillating tactics of Brit- tingham to the utmost, they captured the public imagination almost overnight, the public, however, offered only a meager re- sistance. A serious blow in the form of a stuffed ballot, in which twelve new mem- bers were added to the class, undermined their connivings by causing a revote, be- fore which the masses came to their senses and permitted but a third of the ticket to be new blood. The Progressive Party as such brought about very little, but its value lay in the fact that the class for the first time since Prep year took an interest in what was going on. By the time we re- turned for the last term, it had been for- gotten, but its effects, if late, were lasting. A potentially beautiful Spring opened with a week of summer weather, as for the first time the cliques and factions of the class began to appear in their true light of unimportance. This renovation grew as the days passed, and by Graduation we were a unit once more. We stopped momentar- ily in our frantic rush to look around and were impressed. The death of President Roosevelt was another sobering fact to us, even in such a Republican stronghold as Hotchkiss. The honors for popularity during the Spring term were enjoyed equally by Iules Obispo and Muriel Horgan, who shared a common interest-to be specific, the nabbing of a man. Jules was a six- foot reptile of immense charm and poise, who won the respect of the entire school, including the Ock. Before he had lived here a week, the Jules Cult was formed, a group of worshipul followers who catered to his every whim and burned incense over the fires of Baal for him on St. Vladimir's Day. Muriel had some fairly rare follow- ers, too, but she kept just ahead of them and just behind the Boys, to the conster- nation of a certain full-haunched youth who shall go unmentioned. Bennett J. C. came into prominence, both with T. R.'s buddies and Den-Den's hired girls, not to mention a few biologi- cally inclined people fascinated by Rum- pelstiltskin. Walker's took in a clientele which called themselves the Walker's club, originally enough, and even Farmington drew some habitues due to the efforts of Honer, who had picked up where Rem disdained to tread. The seeds of the class party and banquet were sown, the ques- tions of the Graduation absence of Bemis and the Egg were coped with somewhat brutally, and Little Reddy hit the trail for King's Point, leaving behind the un- mistakable impression of the north end of a south-bound mule. The finals proved to be laden with rabbit punches and general treachery, for even Homericos was signally defeated in Physics. Slater, conversely, passed every one the first time by dint of some vital, mysterious force within him which had heretofore confined itself to his wallet. The right words at the wrong time once more escaped the pen of Lucky Pierre, who handled with cosy informality the fertility of a budding poetess, later ru- mored to be a sister-in-law of Mr. Mac. The high mark in History was a seventy- five, although only one person missed more than very tenth question, while the dis- ciples of Paul, convinced to a man that they had foundered miserably, were dealt out the most grandiose grades since the days of the Duke's Bible. The class ban- quet and Graduation followed in rapid succession. On May 26 we dissolved as a group, not as a class, for the versatility and potential power of '45 had manifested itself during four years on the hill in a manner of which we can only be proud. We have been accused of cynicism and cliques, of disunity and lack of spirit, and such cen- sures are not unjustified. But the im- permanence of these detracting qualities came forth even before we left, for our final term as Hotchkiss boys produced a unity of spirit and purpose which we recognized as ours, a unity which was the true Class of 1945 and the purpose of our formative years at a school from which we shall be proud to have graduated. Page one hundred fifty-one Andrews, D. J. 4.v. - Arnold, C. T. ,..... .. Bacon, J. L. Ballou, F. R. .... - Barhydt, H. ..........., - Belin, H. .................... . Birmingham, S. G. .... . Bonner, A. S. ....... - Bonner, C. W. ..... . Boyd, W. A. ........ . Brown, J. V. W. ...,, - Brown, K. C. .......... . Calhoun, J. M. ....... . Campbell, H. K. Childs, W. S. .... Clark, T. A. ........ - Coughlin, R. L. ...., - Crandall, F. W. ..,,.. . Dana, E. S. .......... . Davis, W. S. .... . Dewitt, E. ........ -. Doherty, M. K. ....... . Downe, E. R. ...... - Dreyfous, F. J. Dutton, A. C. Earl, J. M. ....... - Estill, J. G. ....... . Farwell, C. W. Ferguson, J. P. .... - Feuer, S. B. .,., . ..,.. . Fleischmann, C. ...... I Floyd, H. O. . ..... - Ford, F. R. ..,.......... . Green, J. F. ................ . Greenhalgh, W. W. ..... . Handy, C. .......,........ ,- Hotchkiss, C. F. Hunting, A. I. Johnson, W. R. ...... L Jones, R. L. ......,.. . Kebbon, R. A. . .... .. Kelly, W. B. .... . Kelly, W. G. ....... - Krotzer, L. S. ....., - Labalme, G. E. .... - Lambert, P. C. .... . LeBoutillier, C. .... . Limburg, P. R. .... . Loew, C. G. ...... Lowe, R. A. .... - Lufkin, C. F. .... - Page one hundred fifty-two GLASS UF I946 ............... 7 Rochambeau Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 17 Courseview R. D., Bronxville, N. Y. ,. .... 48 Elston Rd., Upper Montclair, N J. . ........... 360 Olney Rd., Providence, R. I. 111 Canner St., New Haven 11, Conn. Waverly, Penn. 127 Long Hill Drive, Andover, Conn. 109 North Detroit St., Buchanan, Mich. .. ........ .- 10 East 81st St., New York, N. Y. Loudonville, N. Y. Port Deposit, Md. Port Deposit, Md. 145 States St., Springfield, Mass. 806 Deleware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. 607 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh 6, Pa. 34 Hadden Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 623 Ford Ave., Kingston, Pa. 1519 Wightman Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. .....,.. 31 Birch Rd., West Hartford, Conn. West Redding, Conn. 34 North Woodland St., Englewood, N. J. , .................. 440 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 25 East End Ave., New York, N. Y. .... 17 Audubon Place, New Orleans, La. 117 Academy St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 217 Touraine Rd., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. 12 East 97 St., New York, N. Y. 765 North Sheridan Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. 23 Linden Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. 1502 East LaSalle, South Bend, Ill. Winding Creek Farms, Kaderia, Ohio -- .. 20 Monument Ave., Glens Falls, N. Y. Southport, Conn. 45 Strathmore Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. Springsbury, Berryville, Va. Riverdale-on-Hudson, N. Y. 9 Murray St., Binghamton, N. Y. , .... .. 355 Plymouth Rd., Grand Rapids, Mich. Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y. 847 Sasco Rd., Fairfield, Conn. 432 North Linden Ave., Highland Park, Ill. 807 St. Georges Lane, Baltimore 10, Md. . ....... . ....... Buttonwood Lane, Darien, Conn. Chappaqua, N. Y. 944 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. , ,... Twin Brook Farm, Middletown, N. J. 60 East 67th St., New York, N. Y. 40 Central Park South, New York, N. Y. 6 Osborne Rd., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. -. ...... 411 Tuttle Parkway, Westfield, N. J. Kirby Lane, Rye, N. Y. McAfee, A. -. ...,.A. - 2261 Chestnut Hills Drive, Cleveland Heights, Ohio McCall, D. B. e7.i.,..,. .,...t.e, .. t,.,,,. , 210 East 74th St., New York, N. Y. MCCurdy, R. S. ....... .......,....e . ,,.,,e,.. 7 315 Elbow Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. McKee, W. .. ,.e.,,,,. ..,t, , Gould Farm, Great Barrington, Mass. McLean, C. I. ,,.,,.,,, ,, . .. 3219 Reba St., Houston, Texas Matthiessen, G. C. Mead, G. W. .,...., . Merritt, T. W. ...,. . Mitchell, W. ,,.... ,,t.. . Montgomery, F. D Moody, S. C. ,..,..,... - Motch, E. R. .. .... -- Muir, W. H. Murray, M. J. ....., . Nixon, G. H. W Orr, T. L. ........, , Osborne, R. E. .... ,. Parsons, J. H. ...... - Pixley, G. W. .,.., . Plumley, P. W. .... - Polichek, G. K. Pollock, O. T. Proctor, R. W. Pullman, W. C. Robbins, W. S. .....,. , Robinson, C. W. .... . Robinson, G. B. ....... , Saunders, D. R. Seaman, D. P. Sellwood, R. M. , Shaffer, F. S. . Shaffer, W. B. , Sharp, J. R. . ., - Silberman, A. E. Simmons, R. S. Van Dyke, P. C. L Van Marx, R. ...., . Van Tassel, P. . Westover, W. E. . Whitlock, R. T. Windsor, H. H. L Wiston, M. ...... - . L Riverbank Rd., Stamford, Conn. L 730 1st Ave., Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. , .,.. ,, ..,,, .,,, ,..,., R . F. D. 1, St. Charles, Ill. L .....,,............. The Cliff, Boyce, Va. . .... 1362 Astor St., Chicago 10, Ill. 505 West 8th St., Plainfield, N. . ............ 2750 Landon Rd., Cleveland, Ohio 174 Touraine Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. ,- 113 Audley St., Kew Gardens L. I., N. Y. 3310 Parsons Boulevard, Flushing L. I., N. Y. , 95 Woodland Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. H ........... 16 Manor Hill Rd., Summit, N. . .,..... 139 East 79th St., New York 29, N. Y. Paris Rd., New Hartford, N. Y. 'Z The Fessenden School, West Newton, Mass. ,. .,.. L 1085 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 1005 Maplewood Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. 123 Edgemont Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. -. ...... 700 Mayflower Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N. Y. 80 Berkley St., West Newton, Mass. 165 North Main St., Mt. Gilead, Ohio 2267 Delamere Dr., Cleveland, Ohio ..........,........ Bradley Rd., Milwaukee, Wis. Brushley Ridge Rd., New Canaan, Conn. -. ...,...... 14 Garden Place, Cincinnati, Ohio 3029 Fairfield Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio . 1315 South Main Ave., Sioux Falls, S. D. .. ....... 42 Brightside Rd., Stamford, Conn. , .,,..,. 610 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. ., ..... 171 Girard Ave., Hartford, Conn. 1225 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 40 Cohawney Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 1900 Ryons St., Lincoln 2, Neb. 81 West Rd., Short Hills, N. J. 2708 Central Ave., Middleton, Ohio L 344 North sth St., Reading, Pa. Woodhouse, T. . .... - .... 325 Lakeshore Drive, Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. Wyckoff, G. W. - ............... .................. , ....... Sewickley, Pa. CLASS UF 1947 Arndt, A. D. ........... ............ . ....... 2500 St. N. W., Washington, D. C. Arons, N. L., Jr. L -, Austell, S. ..... Baily, O. L. .... . . Baird, G. S. ....... - .- .. 18 Kensington Rd., Scarsdale, New York ,, 75 Wallkill Ave., Middletown, N. Y. 5 Grandin Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio Sound View Terrace, Greenwich, Conn. Page one hundred fiftu-th Beattie, S. B. . ,, , Beebe, D. W. ..,7 . Blume, R. H. .,,. .. Boots, R. H. Bovey, W. K. Boyd, J. H. .s Brown, A. M. o,oo , Brown, C. .,,, s Browne, A. G. .- Browne, H. G. L Bryant, B. H. ..,., ,,.,., . Carpenter, L. E. Chambers, R. A. Chapin, W. ,,,.,,. , Chapman, P. S. ....., Corban, R. E. .....e.... , Costikyan, T. W. Crimmins, M. L. .. . . ..,.,. 110 Mountain Ave., Summit, N. J. 239 East Palisade Ave., Englewood, N. J. 2 Rodney Lane, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. . ..e...t...i,.,...,e, East Hampton, L. I., N. Y. Westford Rd., Concord, Mass. 1805 Centrar Ave., Memphis, Tenn. R. F. D. 2, Winsted, Conn. 7 Gracie Sq., New York 28, N. Y. 721 Devon Ave., Los Angeles 24, Calif. 721 Devon Ave., Los Angeles 24, Calif. F. D. 2, Box 146, Springfield, Vermont 69 Crest Dr., South Orange, N. J. Katonah's Wood, Katonah, N. Y. ee....... 441 Woodland Rd., Sewickley, Pa. 2675 Green St., San Francisco 23, Calif. 79 Newport Ave., West Hartford, Conn. 50 Afterglow Ave., Montclair, N. J. Menlo Park, San Mateo County, Calif. Dana, W. D. ..... .. ,...,.,, Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N. J. Debost, D. ............. ......2...,.... H orseshoe Ranch, Beowawe, Nevada deCordova, N., Jr 33 Loockermann Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Diller, J. C. .... .. ,.e,...... ..., ....i,.e..,.e 9 E ast 67th St., Kansas City 5, Mo. Dillman, B. ......... ..... 2 Lingate Lane, Montecito, Santa Barbara, Calif. Duckham, W. H -. .,...,, . ,....,,.,.,.,....,. Green Hill Rd., Madison, N. Ely, D. .,..,.,....... 2 .,.,.. .. .,...,,.....,,, R. F. D. 1, Ambler, Pa. Forbes, P. C. ,.,,.. Franklin, H. F. 4115 Kioara, Coconut Grove 33, Fla. 24 Franklin St., Morristown, N. J. Freeman, B. W. ..... .......... . . ............,e., 2613 Handasyde, Cincinnati 8, Ohio Gifford, P. ,......,. .... e...,.,.,... . - .....,.e Penzance Point, Woods Hole, Mass. Greene, A. I. ,...... ,.... - 10 South Drive Kennelworth, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. Griffith, D. A. ...... ................,..,......, 2 0 Garden Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Grover, R. K. ...... . ...... Hudson River State Hospital, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Hall, B. .e.. ,,.... . L .,..,,,...e.. 344 North Roosevelt Ave., Wichita Kans. Hamlin, H. M. ,,,.. . ..,,.. .. ..,.. 2563 East Ave., Rochester 10, N. Y. Healy, L. H. .....,e..................... Waverly, Penn. Holmes, J. P. .- ...,....,............... - .................. Poughquag, N. Y. Houghton, L. O. .,,.s.s..,.,., .,....., Lakeville, Conn. Hummel, T. XV. . . ,.., . .,.. 74 Lord Kitchner Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. Johnggn, M, Yrgvrrf ,,YY,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,f, ,,,,., , ,.,, , , ,- 30 Sth Ave., New York, N. Juel-La1-sen, P, ..-.,., ,, Sleepy Hollow, R. F. D. 3, Great Barrington, Mass. Kenyon, R, .,,,. , ,,,. ., ,.,,. ..,.,..,,,,.,..............,...,..... B ox 193, Barrington, Ill. Kittfedge, J, ,.,..,.., ,..., . .,.... . .,,......... 1 52 Main St., Dalton, Mass. Knowlton, M. P. ..... .. 147 Aspen Ave., Auburndale, Mass. Ladue, W, ,,.,,,., . ...,. ., .,,,.,.,s. 50 Hampshire Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Lagell, W, ,.,.,. .,,.,,,,,,,,..,,,.,,...s.,. -- 11 Linden St., Whitensville, Mass. Lind, J. D, ...., . ..,. . L Brook Way, Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N. J. McClure, D, O, .,.,.,,,,..,,s,,,.,,i.,s.,,,,,.,..,,,..,.. Pine Orchard, Geneva, Ill. McDonald, A. J. .... Old Indian Hill Rd., Box 181-B, R. F. D. 1, McMillan, H. I. ...., . Menken, K. A. .,... . Miller, S. T. ........... . Neighbors, J. E. . . ,JAMA Hffu-fn1w Cincinnati 27, Ohio .. 1819 James Ave. So., Minneapolis, Minn. 230 Cliftwood, Oakhurst, N. 248 Provencal Rd., Grosse Point Farms 30, Mich. W .,..,s,..,,,.,...., ,, 1 Yates Blvd., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Noyes, H. D. .... . Payne, G. L. Parker, K. L. - ,.... .. Pfohl, J. M. .,... , Platt, D. N. ............... - Reynolds, E. S. ............. . Robertson, N. G., Rodgers, J. S. ......,.,...,.... - Rogers, J. A. ....,.,..,.... - Rose, M. ....,.........,...., .- Schullinger, J. N. Smith, E. R. C. Spencer, P. T. ,...., , Staples, D. H. ,.,,.,,, , Stebbins, W. C. ..,,,e. Steeger, H., IV Stookey, J. H. Sullivan, P. ....,, - Tilson, G. P. Tuttle, P. G. ,..... , Twitchell, T. .. Unz, T. .....,.,.,...,e - Vivian, R. P. ,,,.., - Warren, J. A. ,... . Watson, C. S. Weeks, J. K. L Whitney, W. A. ..,., . Wilcoxson, L. S. .,.v , Williams, G. H. ..... - Wills, D. J. ...,..,, - Witwer, G. O. Wright, F. M. .,... . Zabriskie, J. B. ..,. , Sharon, Conn. 201 Atherton Ave., Atherton, Calif. 22 East 47th St., New York, N. Y. Beechwood, R. F. D. 3, Bradford, Pa. , ,.,., ,,................ B ox 111, Madison, Conn. Normandy Farms, Dayton, Ohio Woodside, Waverly, Pa. 118 East 65th St., New York, N. Y. Reyfield, Westport, Conn. 55 East 86th St., New York, N. Y. . .... 1175 Park Ave., New York 28, N. Y. Stone House Farm, Peace Dale, R. I. 75 Handy Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. 106 Church St., Winchester, Mass. 151 Mullin St., Watertown, N. Y. . ...,. 1060 sth Ave., New York, N. Y. L .,,.,..,....,........,. ....,. ..,.......,., S h aron, Conn. 10 Johnson Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. 27 Charlotte St., Asheville, N. C. 18 Glenwood Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Siesta-Key, Sarasota, Fla. Sharon, Conn. ...i.,.,. 789 Belvedere Rd., Plainfield, N. J. . ........,,..,,....,..,,.b 33 Spirea Dr., Dayton 9, Ohio 1515 Club View Dr., Los Angeles 24, Calif. 1088 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 2216 East 2nd St., Duluth, Minn. 777 East Ridgewood Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. 917 Poplar Hill Rd., Baltimore 10, Md. Belle Haven, Greenwich, Conn. 3015 Robin Hood Lane, South Bend, Ind. . ...,., 25 Ledyard Rd., West Hartford, Conn. 1185 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. CLASS UF I948 Abraham, R. D. ..... ,...,.....,... . b..... 1 9 East 88th St., New York 28, N. Y. Ballou, P. C. ........ . Bechhold, R. ....... . Bijou, T. T. C. ..,. , Brent, R. S. ,.,..,.,..,, . Brittingham, M. i..... ..,.,.... . . Church St., Chester, Vt. -- 767 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. . .....,.. 546 East 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. .... 119 Edgemont Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 3 Westover Rd., Fort Worth, Texas Brokaw, W. V. .,...,. .,.,..,, .,..,... . .........,... 3 24 Barton Ave., Palm Beach, Fla. Burns, P. M. ,.....,. .,,b. 'Zi Shell Oil Co., Bogota, Colombia, South America Childs, R. H. L. , , .,.,.,..........,.. ....... 607 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh 6, Pa. Cowen, G. C. J. ., ,... ,,., 2110 Mandeville Canyon Rd., Los Angeles 24, Calif. Davis, G. P. ,,......- ..,.......... . ............... Lindwood Blvd., Nashville, Tenn. Dawson, K. G. .... . Deming, C. .,.. - Dixon, S. S. Dodge, D. E. Earl, J. C. ........... - Eckart, E. A. ..... - 254th St. 81 Palisade Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. 1165 Parkwood Blvd., Schenectady, N. Y. 95 South Waukegan Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. .. Breakahart Branch, Carson City, Nevada ..., . 217 Tourraine Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. .............. Calvalry Rd., Westport, Conn. Page one hundred fifty-five Page on Evans, J. S. ,.,.,,,, . ..... 770 Westleigh Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. Fir6St0nC, D. M. ..,..,. ,,.... R. F. D. 7, Medina Rd., Akron 3, Ohio Goldsmith, S. E. ..i, . Gregory, D. P. .,r. Gsell, C. C. ...rr Hall, M. B. Harper, C. L. ,..,,e - 970 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. S722 Dorchester Ave., Chicago, Ill. 8 Mont Joy Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. Millerton, N. Y. 745 Sheridan Rd., Winnetka, Ill. Hartung, D. B. .. .,... ,..........................,...,..,..,,.. M illerton, N. Y. Henricot, P. ......... ........ 1 040 sth Ave., New York 28, N. Y. Hincks, J. W. ..,..... .,..,............,...,, , . .,,..r.,, Farmington, Conn. Hodgkins, W. P. ,...... .... . . ,.......,.. 1430 Lakeville Dr., Chicago, Ill. Holden, H. .... . ........ .................. 7 80 Holmes Rd., Pittsfield, Mass. H0Oker, J. P. ....... ,....... 4 45 University Place, Grosse Pointe, Mich. Hotchkiss, F. T. ...... ...... 3 39 Rivard Blvd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. Howe, H. ...,......... .......................,.................... W ilson Ave., Rowayton, Conn. Hoyt, J. S. ...,. , .. .....,.....,, ,...... , ..., ,.............,. Riverbank Rd., Stamford, Conn. Keresey, T. M. ,....,. Waldorf Astoria, 'Zn Mrs. C. F. Kelly, Apt. 29H, N. Y. C. Kirk, D. .......... .,..,.,..,...........,................. 200 South St., Morristown, N. J. Kirk, R. ....,.. . ,.,... ......,....,,..,......... .. ............... 200 South St., Morristown, N. J. Kittredge, F. D. .,... .......... 1 52 Main St., Dalton, Mass. Labalme, G. ..... ......... 9 44 sth Ave., New York, N. Y. Lindley, D. ..,,r. . Little, T. J. ..,.. L Loeb, J. L. .,.,r,. - Luthy, G. L. .... 3 Mead, G. D. .,.., , Mills, B. F. ,.....r.,,. . Millspaugh, R. P. Murray, G. D., III ..,.i,., . Nalen, C. A. r. .,,,,r..r.. r Nelson, G., III ,,,i,..,, ,..,.., North, J. H. ....... , O'Brien, H. L. ---.------- 124 Merchant St., Princeton, N. J. 6047 Huxley Ave., New York, N. Y. Anderson Hill Rd., White Plains, N. Y. 10 Cole Court, Peoria, Ill., 730 lst Ave. South, Wisconsin Rapids, Wis. 1192 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Beachbluff Ave., Swampscott, Mass. ., ...... Llewellyn Park, West Orange, N. Y. S Spencer Road, Glen Ridge, N. J. 100 South Excelsior Ave., Butte, Montana 22 Willow St., Brooklyn 2, N. Y. 133 East 80th St., New York, N. Y. Roig, J. A. ..,.....,., ....,. 3 029 Brickwell Ave., Miami, Fla. Ruckgaber, L. A. ..r.,,. -. ..,,.,.,,,.., Old Brookville, L. I., N. Y. Salas, S. L. ...,......r... ....... H aller Inn, Williamstown, Mass. Salgado, C. E. P. ..... ,,..r... 4 East 72nd St., New York, N. Y. Sharp, P. J. ..............,., ..... 995 sth Ave., New York, N. Y. Sheperdson, R. XV. ,.,.. .,...... 6 Borgess Rd., Worcester, Mass. Shirk, J. J. .......,.... ..,. ..,,....,.... , . Irvington-on-Hudson, N. Y. Simmons, H. C. B. ..,.... .,..,,..,..,,..,.... 1 24 Jackson Ave., Bradford, Pa. Smith, R. W. ..........,.,, ,.,..... R . F. D. Guinea Rd., Roslyn L. I., N. Y. Sperber, J. ....r,.,,.r. r . .... 125 East soth St., New York, N. Y. Taylor, R. F. , .r...,,,.,.,.. l..,.... 2 24 South Massey St., Watertown, N. Y. Up de Graff, T. L. ..,.,. ,,.,..... 7 00 Sorbonne Rd., Los Angeles 24, Calif. Warner, A. T. ..,.,..,. .........,,...... SS Barlow Rd., Fairfield, Conn. Watkins, W. A. P. r.., ...,. 22S Onwentsia Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. Welch, E. C. ,,..,.,. .. .... 39 San Ysdro Rd., Santa Barbara, Calif. Wells, F. .....,..... e hundred fifty-six 6 Wells St., Brewster, N. Y. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS To Gus Little, whose intelligence, advice, and ready wit were guiding factors in both the 1944 and 1945 Mischianzas and whom we will remember always. For manuscript Charles Lord Carleton Brower For photographs Edgar Jadwin Robert Bechold Mr. Gilbert Smith Henry Windsor White Studio For advice Mr. Peter S. Gurwit, Jahn 81 Cllier Eng. Co. For dirty work: The heelers and associate editors, especially those who were not elected to the 1946 board. l Page one hundred fifty-seven INDEX TU ADVERTISERS I P age Airkem ...... . .... ........,.........,....v....,...,,...E... f...,. 1 3 Benton Review Publishing Co., Inc. ..,.... ...... 2 4 Best 85 Co. ....,.E. . ............ . ............,........... ....... 1 Borden's -. ....,...,.,.... ..... 1 6 Brooks Brothers e.......... ..... 2 Cinaudagraph Corp. .,,... .,... 5 Clark Equipment Co. ,..,e... .,... 1 0 Community Service Inc. ..,..., .f... 1 7 Dow Chemical Co. .u.., .t ..,... ,.,u - 3 Firestone Co. ............ . ...u.. 20 Fletcher Trust Co. .,... ,.... 1 7 Fuller Brush Co. ......,, .,.,.. 1 3 Galey 85 Lord, Inc. ......., ..... 1 1 Hugo's Novelty Shop ...,,,.. ..,,. 7 Jahn 81 Ollier .rr..,r.. , .,.. . ..... 23 John David ,,..,,.... ..... 1 2 Judge Magazine ..... .,... 2 1 Jules ....t....,...t........,t,..,t 6 Leverty's Pharmacy -. tr,..,,... 7 Loewy, Raymond, Associates -- ..,. - 7 McNeil, N. A., Co. t...,t...,t..., ..... 1 7 Mt. Ararat Farms .t....t,r...,,,...t,..t,,..r, A ...,,. ...... 1 0 New York Association for the Blind 6 Osborne-McMillan Elevator Co. ....,i,. . ....t - 5 Peacock, Grant A. ..,.,...,...it,....... ..... 4 Peavey, F. H. 86 Co. t....i,..t. ..,... 5 Popular Publications Inc. ...,. ....... 8 -9 Red Cross .... . ...,,.........,,.., ...,t. 2 Rogers Peet Co. ..... ,,,,.. 4 Rockwood 85 Co. ...,........t.....,.....s. .,ss.. 1 8 Salisbury Bank and Trust Co. . .,,..,,.. ...,,. 1 7 Scranton, Lackawanna Trust Co. ...,, ..... 1 0 Sharon Hospital ...t . ,.... ,s...,,...,,. . .... - 15 Strong-Scott Mfg. Co. ..,,t,. ...,,. 1 9 Sutton Engineering Co. t..,,.. 7 U. S. O. ........,.....,.i..,,i..... .,... 4 Victor Electric Products .,..s., ,,.,,, 1 1 Weems .........,...,,........i,ts . .,.. ..,., 1 3 White Hart Inn ....,.... ,r.., 1 9 Winston, Dr. G. I. 19 Wullschleger 81 Co. - .... ..... 2 2 Page one hundred fifty-eight P l' P lf 'YT' 'B' l' P l' l' l' P lr lr l' 'B' U U U 5 T 'B' WT 'IT U GOOD CLCTHES come from Best's Outfitters to young men who insist upon correct cut-fme woolens- nnd careful tailoring. f i 1 , 5 'J QW 1- G' . . f-L 'ffrk' A sport Jacket IS made of nr , ,ez wool broken herringbone , tweed, smart for town or I ,, ' gy. In country. Tan and brown l1:a Qy fy Z fflrpl yr mixture. rf L, .35 cf sm 36f04z. . . 21.50 i. l X-SW N ll r li Brown wool covert slacks. ill lf l 5, :N rl Waist sizes 30 to 38. . 1s.on lf Mil, Inf xgl ,I tilwlll - li Ay Cba-lk-stripe wool flannel 1' fi-Gigi. ly. ,r -ff? ' sultm tbe popular mecllum - l',f'l0' 'Nl 4 X gray. i l sim 36 to 42 , , . som nl ,. ,, 0 r ll , -4 . J N 1 li' Al l U .rl :- ' l 1 52,7 ,erik C4-,ggi rf.-r' -,-QT 1 in ' l , 1' ? Lf 'fl A 'f ,J in ,Q 1 u JL! I I,-,N V J , - ,XV Q xx , VX g -E , : A r r 0 if I :l t 'X 3 Kg W lll ll? 'J I 1 Ulla! r ' , ' Xl Q Q jo 90 4 5W ,Il 1-Ein! sf . 1 Q! .. . I E 51,1 X Xyxl T 0 . .1 I 'Sir r trrr 0 fy,'. j ,fl fff 040 H 7X r , if fqgkf' L' f Ntfif- 1 xt Qt! fr' 0 jf V R: 1 fl' li Pt ' ,X f E, 1 . kg? 1 X30 lik-'E lf , sys . K -- X 'fr V'- : Q? . df ,Lil Q' N' A ' 2 My ' ry-1 MN , A Y f 2 f r z I J y f r ff M Y. f ' f f l 'V XA, 'X MGH, 1 Alf? 1 4 4 V dxf? I 1 4 bl . aww: KV-Q' qw l' 'j 0 I IIAM 9 A .lgfxkvllll 4 ': Z I L...-ug?-1 '. I 1 rgegff-q2gci12f r i Q -- x A W: ' hlld my on ,P f ,ff f 575' rr ' 4, , Mail and phone orders flled r - Wlsconsin 7-5000 yy, ll' lllg j l r 'f lll rllll Q I 'y Postage prepaid everywhere in the U. S. ljr wg' f If V .r f PM ,I - ll , tag V ' ,,. 7 :ffl ' fin ,f ral ly .ef 1 N nah Ave. Gl'35l'l'1 s+., New York us, N. Y. g ' ,ga rf' L' ll ll Eos? Orange Garden City Brookline E' flf illlef fI...,,.. D-:...- ul 1- . rs f ' 'YT ESTABLISHED 1818 WCW, EiE aeQ3A nts l'llT5l1iIIQ5,55l5 3,-Shoes 348 MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH ST. NEW YORK 17, N.Y. LET'S LOOK AT THE RECORD In all the years we have been in business, we have probably completely outfitted more boys at more of the best-known schools and more undergraduates in the ranking Eastern colleges . . . than any other store you can think of. We know what's what at school . . . and so do the boys who come here Long Trousers Suits, 3532-9538 Sixth Floor Shop Suits, S43-S55 Country Jackets, Odd Trousers, Overcoats, Rain- coats, Shirts, Neckties, Socks, Pyjamas, etc. at corresponding prices B RA N C H E S ONE WALL STREET, NEW YORK 5, N. Y. 48 NIWBURY, COR. BERKELEY ST., BOSTON 16, MASS. I nllllullulllulllulllnllIllullulllllllllllllllllll GIVE TO THE AMERICAN RED cnoss Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories The City Drug Store In The Country The Store of Personal Service LEVERTY'S PHARMACY Lakeville, Conn. Phone 184 RAYMOND LOEWY ASSOCIATES Industrial Designers l New York Chicago South Bend Los Angeles Be Sure to Visit HUGO'S NOVELTY SHOP FEATURING Victor and Columbia Masterworks Decca Records Bluebird Popular Records And Hotchkiss Jewelry Many Other Items Telephone 370-ask for Hugo THE SUTTON ENGINEERING COMPANY l Manufacturers Of Processing Machinery For The Brass and Steel Industry l Bellefonte, Pennsylvania Page s Y ffffff ONE OF THE COUNTRY'S OLDEST AND FASTEST GROWING MAGAZINES Fresh, vital, different, the NEW AR- GOSY is rapidly filling a place left too long vacant on the country's newsstand. You'll find in its fourteen fiction stories the sort of robust, adventuresome, imagi- native tales you'Ve been looking for. You'll find new, stimulating ideas in its selected short articles on timely subjects and important people. You'll find easy-to-get, up-to-the-minute information in its many vignette features and capsule featurettes. You'll find honest, bone-tickling humor in its cartoons. A virile, lively magazine, you'll find in ARGOSY the sort of solid, Well-balanced entertaining reading America needs today. POPULAR P BLICATIONS, NC, ,ADVE TURE AMERICNS MOST-FAMOUS OUTDOOR FICTION MAGAZINE-AS EXCITING AS ITS NAME You can travel to far-off places-by plane or train or ship-any day you wish, the War and the Office of Defense Transportation fODT to youj notwithstanding. No pass- ports, no baggage, not even a priority re- quired. Whether it's a big-game hunting expedition in the African jungles, polar ex- ploration in the Artic wastes, a prospect- ing trip up the Amazon for wild rubber, or across our own American deserts for gold, or undersea in a diving suit for sunken treasure, ADVENTURE will take you along, once every month, on the kind of action-crammed voyage you've always wanted to make. 144 pages of the finest out- door fiction every issue by the men who have been to and adventured in the places they write about! 'Wi wwf n 1 , ' g ' Q I ' -,' l,'f'W'W. Ai A ' img! f, My Y 1 I ' , 1 ,I f A ' ' J Q W - ff --I 1. , P f It -455 .fi v Wm' a ll V I s ,Z I 54 .mf 'HW ' nw W J 205 East 42nd St., New York 17, .Y. SCRANTUN LACKAWANNA TRUST CGMPANY BEST WISHES FROM THE DISSIPATED I DEITIES OF 1945 SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA COMPLIMENTS OF CLARK EQUIPME COMPANY I I B hanan, Michigan NT famo Remember: just favor ' qsftvfffmf o'WkS'l.NM C With the Best W' Q lshe a Ffiendva S of MMU. if eatment. Ym noted for taking kindly to harsh why you'1l fmd my prcture on every pair of slacks or shirt or jacket made us fabric. Look for me in your ask for FIELDCLUB. VA S QF Vi - rotor Eleqytriv P d rg , w , IHC. mth Cmcinnati Oh. 1 M013 ,, Bw - V ent' Ifoners 1latOI'S P,,,,,, I 'TA a Vq,. 45 'T J, . 'XE' f Nxt' N ! x .1 .ag2:3,. 113118 gig. g2gpq1gy5g,ggng1g:f:3g:-A ,4 1 YOU SMARTER . . . There's a swing, there's a style, there's an alertness :e:z-z:212z:-+1-1 :-- : to Varsity-Town Clothes that immediately identifies them as the smartest in America. Varsity-Town, you know, makes only style clothing and so as '1 . . . . . speciahsts they are certain to excel ln fashion by doing this one particular job. You're always certain to be at your smartest in Varsity-Town Clothes. 4 msmc me mu ' I nm rom mmm nmuscas l '-f Q Law-sn rocnns mu Lancia Lomuun mom V o i .:.,it. A AT THESE CONVENIENTLY-LOCATED JOHN DAVID STORES IN NEW YORK B AY AT DEY Sr. FIFTH Ava. AT 4313 Sr. 1 3 7 W. 42D Sr. qopm 'n19P.M.y Bnonnwmf AT 32D Sr. noflow Prme twelve Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories THE SHARON HOSPITAL IN SHARON, CONNECTICUT Serving Every Resident i11 All the Surrounding Communities NEEDS YOUR HELP NOW All Enlarged and Better Building with Modern Facilities ls the Purpose of the Trustees of the Sharon Hospital LET US HELP THEM REALIZE THEIR GOAL OF 33001300 P f, 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!W It also makes strong men leap in the air, yelling, nBoy, oh, BOY!U Honestly, it's the creamiest, smoothest, eatingest ice cream you ever stuck a spoon in. And what's more, it's packed full of energy and nutrition value. Qggg for you. Enjoy Borden's Ice Cream . . . Itls-real 2925 BORDEN'S ICE CREAM i it'4 ' it'4 got to Jegooaf Pane smcteen COMPLIMEN TS OF Ghz COMMUNITY jflftfbkl' 'mfllgt EU. INC. Member of Federal Reserve System Member of Federal Deposit 5 Insurance Corp. Northwestern Connecticut THE N. A. MCNEIL Co. Est- 1874 IHC-1909 INSURANCE SALISBURY BANK Fidelity and Surety Bonds AND TRUST CO. E5 E Lakeville, Conn. Phone 250 LAKEVILLE, CONN. P g t unnmmmnnmunumuu-:nn Q, 1 WW Y SNYGN 01' O 'N vip xe VEGAS A 00x XAO xi ww X X, o 0 f 5 5 H530 2 xr: nsV'W'M 1. xx ww' x , ul 0 0 xl :EO x.Y-vw x ago-Q.,-.+ 'x 'Q o v.v4OOY::5Ff 3E o Q09 ' V. o :H f .mr- -' 1 o '- , K, U ,.,,. .. 1 N :YC The best eatin, you ever ate .... Rockwood's Famous Milk Chocolate Feasts Sc each ROOKWOOD Sz CO., BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Immm:umm:nnnunIuInnuI-IIInluin1IIInnnuonnumnmnnunnumnmmmnmunnnuunvmmnmmnnu-:mum unnnnmnnnmnmumumnmuumunInmmnunnnnunn GOOD LUCK TO THE CLASS OF '45 Pagr' f'l'fflIfPl'H A 050 K m 9' ,, A 6 KEEP BUYING WAR BONDS COMPLIMENTS OF THE STRONG-SCOTT MFG. COMPANY MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA COMPLIMENTS DR. G. I. WINSTON WHITE HART INN 3 Miles from Hotchkiss School Telephone Lakeville 440 Route 44-41 In the Foothills of the Berkshires E Fine Room Accommodations Screened in Dining Porch Excellent Food Colonial Tap Room E Open All Year ulllulnnnunnunnlnllnulnllulluuullllnllnullllluununuln nummumnmmmmmunu:ummmmmmmnuunummnuunanunnumlulanInInnumnnmnmmnnnu nuumnuumnumannumnun:nuuuumunmm Comrrilht. .......... .... . .... .......................................... 1945, The Firestone Tire Az Rubber Co. mm mnumnnnum nmmnmmmnnmnumuunnnunnuu :mnuuummmmnnnannn1nnluunnnnununuu JMPLIMENTS OF AMERICA HUMOROUS MAGAZINE .Afewbold 601, cfdzfor HCWAO ram' fha Army ...... fergeanff or fleufenanff' P COMPLIME NTS TO I THE HOTCHKISS SCHOOL FROM WULLSCHLEGER 81 CO. 1412 Broadway Cestablished 19083 O New York City --u-fv1f1- HEL- ' N - '- . ' f' mf, 1 'rf I ff fy 1 - w' r H 1 N' 1 I fffwf , X ' ' , N , ' 'HM z'.rfxMli1l5!I,i1f WMF. 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Suggestions in the Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT) collection:

Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Hotchkiss School - Mischianza Yearbook (Lakeville, CT) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950


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