Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL)

 - Class of 1935

Page 1 of 192

 

Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1935 Edition, Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collectionPage 7, 1935 Edition, Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1935 volume:

is w if 0 0 Y. Y' P? I 0 Yi ? 1 E3 SSA 53: . 0. Qgifgfffi iwfgifif .7 23 Q? wg Qi A A 3 - I IN MEMCDRIAM Mrs. Sally Richards was a+ all limes pariicularly inieresied in The boys of ihe school. Prior 'ro her illness no boy could become ill upon Jrhe campus wi+hou+ enjoying her morherly inieresi and 'render personal care. During her years of aciiviiy she was 'rhe kindly counsellor of boys who, insfincfively recognizing her sound iudgmeni and fine qualiries of fairness. iusiice and honesiy, soughl' her our 'For advice upon queslions viral lo 'rheir happiness and success wifhin The school. Chocolafe parries. +hose happy afiernoon gaiherings of The boys and lhe faculiy in her apar+- meni +o enjoy +he warmih of her hospiialiiy and cheer, have become an insiiluiion here. These semi- monihly parfies, sraried by Mrs. Richards some seven years ago. were her very eliiecfive way of iniecling in+o ihe boys' lives a pleasani inierlude from 'rhe ineviiable monofony of school appoinimenfs. Mrs. Richards' keenly developed sense of beauiy manifesred ilself in her infense in'reres'r in an undersianding of rhe arls, in her love of flowers and landscape gardening, and in her impeccable good iasfe in inferior decoralion. Seldom has a school been so highly favored in 'rhis respeci. Largely 'rhrough her perseverance has LFA's curriculum been enriched by The addifion of courses in 'rhe fine and manual arls. These courses cons+i+u'ie 'rhe fulfillmeni of Mrs. Richards' long sianding vision 'io afford an oppor+uni+y for rhe boys of ihe school 'ro express 'rhemselves in lerms of beauiy. Possessing a keenly alerl' in+ellec+ and indomiiable courage and forliiude, she sirove ever in 'rhe ways of her loffy ideals +0 climb 'rhe sleep ladder 'rhal led foward perieclion in all her' underiakings. The expression, li can be done, in iis mosl' comprehensive applicaiion, besr summarizes Mrs. Richards' noble life. She has passed on leaving Lake Foresi Academy a be++er place in which +o live. SILVER ANNIVERSARY EDITIQN T H E CAXV published by the Class of Nineteen Hundred and Thirty-fave O OF THE LAKE FQREST ACADEMY LAKE FQREST, ILLINOIS TI-IE FIRST CAXY This, The I935 Caxy, being The TwenTy-TiTTh oT iTs Iine, iT is appropriaTe ThaT iT should conTain, besides The names oT The TirsT sTaTT members and Hs edHors-in-chieT, aT IeasT a TragmenTary hisTory oT iTseIT, a Tew words as To iTs raison d'eTre, and, IasT buT by no means IeasT, an answer To The TrequenT query: Why The name 'Caxy'? ' From iTs incepTion in I892, The ForesTer, The annual oT Lake ForesT College, conTained an Academy secTion. This arrangemenT noT being enTireIy saTisTacTory To eiTher insTiTuTion, during The school year, I9IO-I I, several members oT The senior class concluded ThaT The Academy should have an annual oT iTs own, and wiTh The advice and counsel oT William IvIaTher Lewis, Then headmasTer, They seT To work. The I9I I Caxy, a highly commendable piece oT work, was The resulT. The seIecTion oT a suiTabIe name Tor The new pubIicaTion was one oT The problems oT The I9I I sTaTT members. I-Iowever, Their search did noT lead Them Tar aTieId. The choice oT The word Caxy Trom a line oT one oT The Academy's oIdesT cheers - Caxy, coax, coax, coaxI - was a wise one, Tor even Today iT is doubTTuI if This usage oT The word has been dupIicaTed. The hisTory oT This old cheer, in iTs original Torm, daTes back To The Frogs, a play wriTTen in The FiTTh CenTury, B. C., by The Greek poeT. ArisTophanes. This ancienT comedy Takes iTs name Trom a subordinaTe chorous oT Trogs croaking IBrekekekex, coax, coax, brekekekex, coax, coax, coaxll on The banks oT The River STyx as Bacchus and Charon, Two oT The pIay's characTers, Terry across The sTream. Thus iT is hoped ThaT The perpeTuaTion oT This ancienT word presages IongeviTy Tor The Caxy and Tor LFA. Funk Edgerfon Gerould Hufchinson Newion Bailey TI-IE FIRST CAXY STAFF Frank A. GerouId ........ Edifor-in-Chief Roberf B. Newion I-Iarris Funk ........., Business Manager Dean Edgerfon . . .Associaie Edirors Thomas C. I-Iufchinson s...,... IIIusJrra+or Ausiin Bailey EDITORS-IN-CI-IIEF I9II I9I2 I9I3 I9I4 -John C. Hawkins I 9 I 5- I9I6 -DonaId D. James IQI7- I9 I 8- I9 I 9- IQZO- I92I- I922- -Erank A. Gerouid Roberi B. Newron -LeRoy C. Wheeler Edwin S. Mayer Jack R. Gardner J. Clark Miller I-Iiram M. Nowlan Don D. Swain I-Ierberi C. IXIichoIIs Edward C. Mack l923-Gerald A. Gibbs I924-David K. RusseII I925- I926 I927 l928 I929 I93O I93I I932- I933- Richard W. Black Edward C. I-Ioeischer, F. WiIIiam Eoulkes, Jr. WiIIiam I-I. Baker, Jr. DonaId E. Garrify Leonard I-I. EasseI'r Charles A. McCaII RusseII W. Buddinqion Frederick Asher I934-Andrew N. Rebori, Jr. I 935-Charles S. Roberfs Jr. DEDICATICDN To express The appreciaTion oT The sTudenTs and alumni oT Lake ForesT Academy Tor his long and disTinguished period oT serving here, we oT The Caxy sTaTT appropriaTely dedicaTe This, The Silver Anniversary EdiTion of The Caxy, To MR. EDMUND JOSEPH RENDTORFF, who is now compleTing his ThirTy-TiTTh year as Science lv1asTer. Always a loyal Triend, kindly counsellor, excepTional Teacher and rare humorisT, Sned, as he is aTTecTionaTely known To hun- dreds oT old boys and undergraduaTes, has, by his rugged characTer and lovable disTinguishing TraiTs oT personaliTy, en- deared himselT To The hearTs oT more Than eighT generaTions oT LFA boys. During his long and inTimaTe associaTion here, his sTrengTh oT characTer has counTless Times leTT iTs impress upon Those oT us TorTunaTe To have come under his TuTelage, To The end ThaT AD VIROS FACIENDOS-For The Making oT Men-has become a Truly living moTTo. STAFF BGARD Charles S. Roberls . Samuel E. Bennelr . Chrislian A. Dresch, Jr. Eugene R. Head . . James R. McLaughlin . Mr. James L. Preslini EDITCDRIAL ASSISTANTS Roloerr Alexander H. Leslie Arlass. Jr. John S. Berlcson Garellson D. Brehm Milburn Buller Roger A. Crowe James B. Garnell Harris B. Haywood Hallock B. Hoffman ADVERTISING ASSISTANTS William Connon, Jr. Harry H. Dickson Alberl R. Fleischmann, Jr. M. Ernesr Greenebaum Ill Richard C-3. Holden Jack A. Kallis Richard M. Liyingslon . Edifor-in-Chief . Associale Edilor . Assislanl Edilor Pholographic Edilor Business Manager Faculry Adviser William Y. Hulchinson Vicror H. Munneclce, Jr. Charles Norman Bradley J. Palmer Charles R. Seaborne E. Dale Shaffer Arlhur C. Sullivan, Jr. G. Marlin Sus Charles W. Vogl Peler Malcolm James B. McCahey, Jr. Ward C. Pearl, Jr. Richard T. Raymond Samuel J. Sherer Frederick G. Wacker, J George W. Young, Jr. Y' PICTORIAL IXITEIXIT ADIVIINISTIQATICDN CLASSES Seniors Juniors Sophomores Freshmen Socieras I-Ionorum ACTIVITIES SIudenI' Go PubIicaIions Orafory Dramalrics Music ArI'S SOCIAL ernmenI ATHLETICS Physical EducaIion Boxing I Riding Inrermeoliafe AII1IeIics EooIbaII BasIce'rbaII Swimming Track BaseI3aII GOII Tennis FEATURES Snapsnois CaIenoIar Caricalrures Personnel ADVERTISING S F REWCDIQD Realizing that our interest in this boolc will increase with the passage ol years, vve have herein endeavored to review comprehensively and informally the events of l.FfAx,s seventy-seventh year to the end that in the years to come the 1935 Caxy will adequately serve as a price- less allnum to revive in our minds those happy days spent at LPA. Cf? '14, 2 55 V YL X ff ' LI 11' , .k,,,m.l' rm K I gg N '11 , 4 YI' 1 1' ' 'Wa b rx M., l -ia, ,QW ,xy 3' A-, - ,, W . '. 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A 'Fiw-F g , :MQ QA, C? 'V .K W 8 ff . fp Qi ,..Qg ,,A .5- , , ,W Y -3 Q, ilk , Y. ' 4 .ff kv, .0-if f ' a ' ,R ' bf ,S -5,5 '4 t Mnfw, v3f5S?'4w-gf rv 9 'n,,,.A1 n m ,xx Hd , is og si Q by 'X mn 'nl' X vm' f K xg .. K ,hgale If 'gr 1 if it 5 mv v Q L' my . ,ir X f-e. fin., -, N. - www' , ' f xx V N M, AY '? HL.f. , ' - f , 5fms1,- , ,CT g,g?2g' ,..Wy pf ' 115: , ,,,,,32'f ' 'Vw-f I . f , f V ,wuz V53 Qfxfg .fir , 3 ef? ADMINISTRATIGN TI-lE BCDARD OF TRUSTEES IT is noT oTTen ThaT we see The Board oT TrusTees, bu+ we know ThaT They have a viTal inTeresT in The acTiviTies oT Lake EoresT Academy. They have shown Their inTeresT in The making oT The Academy The school ThaT iT is Today. We, oT The class oT nineTeen hundred and ThirTy-Tive, realize ThaT we owe This body oT men a greaT deal, and we wish To Thank Them, one and all. Charles E. Glore. . , ......... PresidenT Logan T. McMenemy ,.i....,. SecreTary Frank W. Read .4., ..r...,,. T reasurer E. L. BaTemen DeEoresT l-lulburd E. W. SargenT George W. Blossom, Jr. Louis E. LaTlin, Jr. Louis E. SwiTT A. B. Dick, Jr. ClayTon Mark RoberT J. Thorne G. Corson Ellis John W. Richards C. M. Trowbridge John GriTTiTh E. L. Wyman TI-TE ALUMNI ASSCDCIATICN The ber! Jecurity for the welfare of the Academy is found in the loyalty and devotion of ber mm. Organized in l906, The Lake EoresT Academy Alumni AssociaTion includes in iTs membership more Than TwenTy-Tive hundred alumni and Tormer sTudenTs. Aside Trom iTs purely social TuncTion in arranging The several enThusiasTic old boy gaTherings held each year, The AssociaTion exerTs an increasingly beneTicial inTluence upon The aTFairs oT The school. The members oT The AssociaTion exTend To The Class oT i935 a cordial welcome inTo The ranks oT The alumni, and urge Them ever To be mindful oT Their common bond- The memories oT Those happy years aT LEA. Cornelius M. Trowbridge, '86 . ,PresidcnT James G. Ehrlicher, '2l ...,.., SecreTary William S. Kline, '95 ...... Vice-PresidenT George l-l. LamberTon, '90 .... Treasurer JOHN WAYNE RICHARDS, MA. Headmasler Mr. Richards is mosl famous fo people for his new plan in educalion which has made marvelous sfrides in The pasl few years. However, lo us, sludenls al Lake Foresl Academy, who are in conslanl conlacl wilh him, he slands for somelhing lar grealer Jrhan educalion. He is a man wilh a greai under- slanding of boys, derived from long experience and confacl wilh Them. His devolion To LPA is un- bounded, and his friendly and sound crilicisms and suggeslions have ollen saved us emloarrassmeni or even froulole. Vvfe will never forger lhis rnan who af all limes is Jrhinking of our good. We offer a loasl lo a man who, when faced wilh Jrrouble and anxiely, can slill carry on his splendid worlc: and, above all, a Jroasl lo a friend. Ohio Norlhern Universily, I896-IQOI: Principal of New Vienna High School, Ohio, I900-l905: Yale, IQOSWIQO67 Holchlciss School, l906-I9I3, Headmasier al' Lalce Foresl Academy, WI3- TT-IE FACULTY During our Tour years aT Lake ForesT Academy, we have come To know This TaculTy oT ours. The seemingly sTricT and digniTied masTers have become close Triends To us, helping us in Times oT Trouble and advising us in our underTakings. AT Times The TaculTy have been sTricT wiTh us, buT now we see ThaT They were only looking ouT Tor our own inTeresTs. They have done much in helping To develop us and in aiding us To reach our goal--manhood. We will oTTen look back upon The delighTTul days spenT wiTh These undersTanding men. As we leave, we hope ThaT The TaculTy will remember us in The same way ThaT we remember Them--as genTlemen and Triends. EDMUND J. RENDTORFF Science . Well, fellows, There goes The whisTle. Run away and play a while. ln This manner Sned dismisses his would-be chemisfs and physicisTs from his informaTive yeT humorous lecfures on Dalfon, Avragadro, and The Daily Slush. A familiar picTure To all who aTTend LFA is ThaT of Sned reTurn- ing from breakfasf every morning wiTh his piTcher of cream. SomeThing should also be said abouT The Gracie Allen and Squirrel Clubs borh of which Sned founded. In spiTe of his aversion for Fords, he really puTs his courses across. B.S., and MS., Universify of Wisconsin, I89l-96: C-5raduaTe STudenT, NorThwesTern UniversiTy, I897-987 lvlasfer aT Lake ForesT Academy, 1899- ARTHUR L. EDS-ING-TON LaTin Sa-a-a-y, broTherl Aren'T you ever gonna geT This sTuTf7 Read iT. lT's English. As a resulT of This ouTbursT some poor learner really geTs down To business and does some accuraTe Translafing. However, don'T be misled by This liTTle skefch. By naTure Mr. EdgingTon is really guief and unconcerned, excepT in The case of a misTranslaTed ablaTive absoluTe. He is perfecfly conTenT To remain peacefully in his firsf floor Durand abode unTil spring, when a yearning beckons him To The Track, where he puTs his hearT inTo The coaching ofa wellfdrilled squad. B.A., Ohio Wesleyan, l908g M.A., Harvard Universify, l9l I-I21 Masfer aT Lake ForesT Academy, l9I5- EDWARD L. MILNE Tv1aThemaTics Mr. Milne's courses are sfiff buT inTeresTing. His brisk and precise manner makes everyThing he does perfecT. To pass one of Mr. lVlilne's exams one musT know a considerable amounf of maTh. There are many sTories abouT him. WheTher True or noT, They are all complimenTary. Une who knows him can readily undersfand This, for behind ThaT sTern counTe- nance is a warm and friendly spiriT. B.S., NLS., Universify of Illinois, I892-96: Masfer aT Lake l:oresT Academy, l9I8- THEODORE H. GOULD English lT is a greaT Task ThaT faces Mr. Gould each year-ThaT of preparing all seniors for college English. He has done This admirably for many years, Taking an unfailing inTeresT in each sTudenT. His record in College Boards shows his abiliTy To puT across his course. His quieT manner and genialiTy make him a friend To everyone, young and old. Ohio STaTe Universify: Kenyon College: A.B., Harvard UniversiTy, I892q Masfer aT Lake l:oresT Academy, I9I8- DANA W. NISWENDER English Swinging himself blifhely fo fhe corner of his desk, Mr. Niswender arranges his nofes and books in perfecf order before imparfing fo his sfu- denfs in English Five a knowledge of modern drama, poefry, and novels. Aside from feaching, he ably coaches Banfamweighf Baskefball. When all ofher work is over, he furns fo anofher hobby of his, fo sfrum quiefly on his guifar. We will long remember Mr. Niswender for his disserfafions and crificisms of Henry Ford and fhe Chicago Tribune. Ph.B., Kenyon College, l922g A.lv1., Ohio Sfafe, I928: Graduafe Sfu- denf, Universify of Chicago, I93O-3I: Ohio Sfafe, l9327 Masfer af Lake Foresf Academy, I927- J. HOBART TUCKER Lafin and Psychology Princefon, Lafin psychology, book clubs, operas, lecfures, symphonies, and Gargoyle Club can spell only one word, Tommy, This brighf young masfer of our fair insfifufion is indeed well versed in educafional processes. Those who know him will vouch for his companionship in all acfivifies. The abilify fo adapf himself fo any sifuafion and fhe nafural way in which he accepfs fhaf sifuafion are more fhan remarkable. l-le is undersfanding of all our affairs because he has experienced fhe same fhings. As a resulf of fhis, Tommy is fhe one fo whom we usually go fo pour forfh our immense froubles. A hosf of friends, drawn more or less by a magnefic personalify, swear allegiance fo Tommy, and we hasfen fo include our- selves in fhis aggregafion. B.A., Princefon Universify, 1923-273 Masfer af Lake Foresf Academy, l927-- LLOYD lvl. BERGEN Afhlefic Direcfor This year Mr. Bergen sfepped info a very difficulf posifion. ln foofball he was faced wifh a schedule of Junior colleges and Teachers' colleges, all of which were ouf of Ll:A's class. ln spife of fheir handicap, fhe Varsify made a good showing. The losses in foofball, however, were compensafed by fhe baskefball record. Mr. Bergen has succeeded in bringing LFA's afhlefic policies back down fo where fhey belong and has done a greaf iob wifh an almosf impossible sifuafion. We know he'll keep up The greaf work. B.S., Princefon Universify, l924g lvlasfer af Lake Foresf Academy, I927-3I. l934-- EDWARD ARPEE Mafhemafics and Hisfory Alfhough Mr. Arpee had an addifional prodigy, in fhe form of lil' Sfephen, fo fake care of fhis year, he did nof confine his efforfs fhere. Each Monday morning he did his good furn by serving eggs and bacon fo a few guesfs. Besides fhis, he fook greaf delighf in fhe sfudy and insfruc- fion of rhe insfallafion of elecfrical appliances. One fhing you can always be sure of is fhaf you will have chicken for every meal af Mr. Arpee's fable. Mr. Arpee is one of fhe firsf masfers you meef, and because of his consfanf ioking and good humor he is never forgoffen. BS., Princefon Universify, l922g Princefon Theological Seminary, 1924-27, lvlasfer af Lake Foresf Academy, 1930- ROLAND C. BARNFATHER French and Spanish Mr. BarnTaTher is noTed Tor his inTeresT in LaTin America, his grey sporT roadsTer, and his piano-playing. When The playboys oT Remsen House sTarT in Tor a liTTle roughhouse, he is usually on The job wiTh his Hold iT down. ATTer school he can usually be Tound asleep in his room or darTing in and ouT oT Lake ForesT in his car, The envy oT every boy. The Rem- seniTes will never TorgeT ShaT's homecoming parTy when Barny proved whaT a good sporT he really is. His deTense oT DarTmouTh againsT The on- slaughT oT Yale and PrinceTon supporTers has made a name Tor him in The Tield oT debaTe. The Triend and adviser To every boy, we wish him The besT oT luck. A.B., DarTmouTh College, I925q Middlebury VermonT Spanish School, I93O-347 MasTer aT Lake ForesT Academy, 1930- E. HUGH MATHESON French This year The king oT EasT House leTT his loyal subiecTs sorrowing and became a day sTudenT. This TacT, however, did noT prevenT him Trom up- holding The repuTaTion as The A-a-aranges' mosT ardenT boosTer and aid. ln class he is The same energeTic, TorceTul, and humorous Teacher, con- Tinually drawing his inTricaTe charTs To aid in The seemingly hopeless Task oT enlighTening The sTudenTs on The Tine poinTs oT French grammar. BUT seriously, iT a boy wanTs a proporTioned mixTure oT excellenT pedagogy and cheerTul good-Tellowship, he will Take one oT lvlaTTy's French courses. B.A., UniversiTy oT ManiToba, l9l ly lVlaniToba Law School, l9l4q Pro- vincial Normal School, Winnipeg, Canada, l9223 lvlasTer aT Lake ForesT Academy, l93O- ELIOT F. OVFRDORF HisTory and Law JusT a minuTe. l don'T give a hoorah-l WhaT you Think. Thus we hear Mr. OverdorT in one oT his Tamous HisTory Classes aT LFA. IT you have never heard The sTory abouT The crosseeyed iudge, you have missed a rare TreaT. Mr. OverdorT has many, many Troubles wiTh Three classes in HisTory and one in Commercial Law, buT, in spiTe oT These, we have yeT To Tind a sTudenT who Tails in his Tinal examinaTion in HisTory. And, greaT aTTer-dinner speaker ThaT he is, Mr. OverdorT never Tails To say aTTer each meal, Shall we all rise in one body? OmiTTing HisTory noTes and selT- responsibles, we Tind Mr. OverdorT always happy around The campus. B.A., M.A., Penn STaTe, l922-32: GraduaTe STudenT, UniversiTy oT Pennsylvania: 6raduaTe STudenT, Harvard Law School, I922-24: LL.B., BosTon UniversiTy oT Law, I924-281 GraduaTe STudenT, Harvard UniversiTy, l928: lv1asTer aT Lake ForesT Academy, 1930- EDWARD A. RYAN English and Science ln spiTe oT The TacT ThaT Mr. Ryan leTT The campus To begin his married liTe in Town, The English and ChemisTry classes reTained a Tine masTer, while The aThleTic Teams were lucky enough To keep The services oT a mosT eTTicienT coach. Ed is much respecTed and exTremely popular, noT only among Those who are TorTunaTe enough To be TaughT by him, buT also among all Those wiTh whom he comes in conTacT. As a real genTleman and a Truly good sporT, The school wanTs more oT his calibre and hopes To see The versaTile and compeTenT Mr. Ryan on The TaculTy Tor many years To come. B.A., BeThany College, I923-273 GraduaTe STudenT, Ohio STaTe Univer- siTy, I929-33: M.A., Ohio STaTe UniversiTy, I9343 MasTer aT Lake ForesT Academy, I93O- HUGO BROEKER German and T-lisTory My sTarsl Where is Cherry? Thus Doc checks up on The boys in his new abode. The noises in SouTh I-lall may have caused Dr. Broeker To move To The second Tloor EasT, buT They have in no way impaired his abiliTy To keep his German and l-lisTory classes awake by his subTle humor and his well Tounded commenTs concerning The words oT The TexT. l-lis consTanT srudy enables him To bring new lighT on The senTences oT The hisTorian, while one's curiosiTy compels one To lisTen Tor The Doc To break ouT wiTh an Alia and explain ThaT in The course oT Tour hundred years The meaning oT The word dishpan has changed To Tloor mop. Many oT The graduaTing Seniors will carry away wiTh Them The memory oT busy buT pleasanT hours spenT wiTh This genTleman von dem VaTerland. Wir werden ihn nichT vergessen. B.A., STaTe UniversiTy OT Nebraska: M.A., UniversiTy oT Berlin: Ph.D., UniversiTy oT Berlin, I927: MasTer aT Lake EoresT Academy, I933- T-IOWARD C. JENSEN Sub-Freshman Courses and Spanish lT was in The ColgaTe game oT '29. l wenT whippin' ouT There Tor a long pass and was in The clear, buT The ball bounced oTT my shoulder. I losT The game Tor ole Wisconsin. Thus Mr. Jensen modesTly relaTes one oT his Thrilling TooTball experiences. The LighTweighTs will aTTesT To his TooTball abiliTies, as he coached Them Through an undeTeaTed season. LeT iT suTTice To say ThaT Mr. Jensen is an immaculaTe dresser, an all-round aThleTe, and a greaT Triend To all. B.A., UniversiTy oT Wisconsin, I928-32: MasTer aT Lake EoresT Academy, 1933- RAYMOND L. KRUEGER MaThemaTics GranTed-True, ye-al BuT Ah-ha! By These sounds we know ThaT eiTher The DocTor and never-pass Shank are having a verbal baTTle over The meriTs oT The CulberTson sysTem or ThaT Doc and his class of merry geomeTricians are once again on a happy liTTle soiourn inTo The land oT knowledge. During The daylighT hours, Doc Krueger's Time TloaTs speed- ily by because oT his Tennis Team worries, his classes, and his Tamous ice- cream-cone beTTing: aT nighT, Remsen I-louse and his iolly liTTle Tamily oT QuinTic curves occupy his waking hours. ln spiTe oT DocTor Krueger's being one oT The busiesT men on The TaculTy, he is never rushed To The exTenT ThaT he hasn'T a pleasanT word Tor everyone: and This, combined wiTh his desire To help wiTh homework, makes him one oT The mosT popular men on The TaculTy. NorThern Illinois Teachers' College, T923-25: A.B., M.A., UniversiTy oT lllinois, l925-28: Ph.D., MarqueTTe UniversiTy, l928-33: MasTer aT Lake EoresT Academy, IQ33- JAMES L. PRESTINI MaThemaTics and Manual Training For a second Time The genTleman Trorn Yale has venTured back To brave The TorTures oT exisTence on The TourTh Tloor oT EasT I-louse. Uncle Joe is sTill sTruggling To Torce The mysTeries oT Algebra Through The somewhaT resisTanT heads oT his groaning sTudenTs, while in The aTTernoon one can usually Tind him working in The midsT oT a cloud oT sawdusT in The Shop. Seriously, Those who comprise his classes and The Caxy STaTT uniTe in Thank- ing Press Tor his able advice and leadership. B.S., SheTTield ScienTiTic School, Yale UniversiTy, I93O: School oT Edu- caTion, Yale UniversiTy, T933: MasTer aT Lake EoresT Academy, l933-- JOHN W. Sl-IANK English and Public Speaking Docfor Shank came fo us lasf year fo fake over fhe public speaking deparfmenf. l-le has since faken over several English classes and fhe re- sponsibilifies of Eaculfy adviser fo fhe Specfafor. l-le may be found in Soufh l-lall, frying fo quell fhe riofs and, af fhe same fime, fo advise fhe sfudenfs of his English classes who are sfunned by fhe College Board re- quiremenfs. l-lis musical abilify has also come info evidence: he furnishes fhe piano accompanimenfs af fhe chapel services as well as an occasional solo. We have become affached fo fhis quief, friendly genfleman and hope fo see ofhers of his fine calibre on fhe campus in years fo come. A.B., Offawa Universify, l928: M.S., Norfhwesfern Universify, l932: Ph.D., Norfhwesfern Universify, l934q Masfer af Lake Eoresf Academy, l934- LELAND M. ATWOOD Arf and Mechanical Drawing lf was Mr. Afwood who gained for us fhe opporfunify of riding in fhe new Dymaxiam aufomobile. lf is Mr. Afwood who is greafly responsible for fhe excellenf appearance of fhis book. lf was Mr. Afwood who fook such greaf inferesf in our newly formed Riding Club--fo say nofhing of fhe excellenf Arf course which he offers fo budding arfisfs in his Remsen l-louse sfudio. This man is a greaf assef fo our very capable Eaculfy, and he handles his exfensive dufies very effecfively. Universify of Michigan, Masfer af Lake Foresf Academy, I934- Cl-IARLES K. HELFRICK, JR. Physiology and Commercial Geography You can'f puf anyfhing over on me-l'm wise fo you. So you fhoughf fhis was a snap course, eh? Thus Mr. l-lelfrick addresses his physiologisfs, Flack and Websfer, in an efforf fo gef a liffle more work from fhem. Anofher of Mr. l-lelfrick's favorife acfivifies is fhe dancing class. A liffle known sfory abouf Mr. l-lelfrick's dancing class was fhe fime when Shaffer asked, Oh, Sir! will you frip fhe lighf fanfasfic wifh me? His unders sfanding of young men has been appreciafed by his friends, many of whom graduafe fhis year. B.S., Universify of Illinois, l933: M.S., Universify of Illinois, l934g Masfer af Lake Eoresf Academy, l934- FRANK SIMMONDS Boxing This year a new addifion was made fo our afhlefic deparfmenf in fhe form of Mr. Simmonds. l-le feaches boxing fo fhe many 'Fellows who seek poinfers in fhe manly arf of self-defense. l-le is well qualified for fhis posifion as boxing insfrucfor, for he is American Legion champion of lhe l6O-pound class. Mr. Simmonds furned fhe liffle gym info a real fraining room wifh parallel bars, mafs, weighfs, medicine balls, and a punching bag. Many fellows benefifed from his insfrucfion fhis year, and we hope fhaf fhis newly infroduced sporf can confinue. B.Phys.Ed., Miami Universify, l93l CLASSES SENIOR CLASS I-IISTCDRY lT was four years ago ThaT we, The class of I935, enfered LFA, a Trifle awed, buT, neverfheless, enfhusiasfic abouT The four years of college preparafory work which lay ahead of us. As Bo-iacks back in I93I, we liTTle dreamed ThaT The ideas and fond hopes held so high in our imaginafions would ever maferialize. T-lowever, as prep -school days, monThs, and years passed and as we climbed from The sTaTion of sophomore class To iunior class and finally To our goal, senior class, These dreams became realized and carried ouT, in some cases parfially and in oThers wholly. AT The beginning of our freshman year and all Through our remaining years we looked Tor and found leadership in Two members of our class, namely: Chuck Roberfs, presidenf of The Senior class and edifor-in-chief of The '35 Caxy: and l-lerb Flack, presidenT of The STudenT Council and superlafive aThleTe. They represenfed us and carried ouT our ideals in all insTances. IT is needless To say ThaT a class having Two such' good leaders was harmoniously unified. The year T934-35 shall be remembered as one of accomplishmenT and progress, bofh of which were due largely To The unified efforfs of The Senior class. As Tar as social life is concerned, The Senior class has always been The leader: and This year's class held up The former Tradifion wiTh greaf success. The Mid-Winfers FesTiviTies are always, for The mosT parf, run by The Senior class. Mid-Winfers This year, including The Gargoyle Club, Glee Club, '35 Follies, and ArT Exhibif, was The mosT successful week-end parfy in many years: and The Formal Dance on Safurday nighT was The crowning achievemenf. Since The founding of Lake ForesT Academy in l857, There has noT been a class as young as ThaT of l935. The average age This year is nearer sevenfeen Than nineTeen, as in former years. On The oTher hand, no class has accomplished as much as The class which was graduaTed This year. Our apparenf youTh was by no means a deTrimenT To our aspiraTions. Our by-words have been progress and advancemenT wiTh as liTTle Tolly as possible. The examples of our progress and advancemenT are many and diversified. In The field of dramaTics and debafe, members of our class have been ouTsTand- ing and vicforious. The Gargoyle Club plays, The Follies of boTh I934 and I935, and The declama- Tion conTesT of loofh years found unbounded TalenT in our class. ln The Gargoyle play of i935 The leading roles were Taken by seniors, and The Follies of This year was made by The seniors: for before They showed Their sTuff, The Follies looked raTher flabby. For scveral years senior classes aT The Academy have eiTher sfepped around or sfepped over new ideas and Trends, because eiTher They infringed upon Tradifion or They involved Too much work. Our class, however, inTroduced some pracfical ideas inTo use. A commiTTee composed of Three members of The faculfy and four members of The sTudenT body choose TwenTy members from The sTudenT body who are besT suiTed To be councilors, and from This lisT The sTudenTs selecT Ten To serve on The council. This sysfem is a greaf help To Those sTudenTs who find difficulfy in iudging who should be elecfed when They have such a large field from which To choose. The sysfem affords a more selecT and smaller field for The voTers. The much-Talked-abouT new sysfem of elecfing class officers was puT inTo effecT by our class. ln The pasT, a class officer was elecfed To serve The enTire year. The new sysfem held ThaT officers should be elecfed every Term so ThaT new men are puT on an equal basis wiTh The old men affer The firsf Term. This class has noT been hesiTanT To Try ouT new plans and sysfems, alThough ofhers were somefimes skepfical abouf Them. Being a younger Senior class was an advanTage in one respecf- we were anxious To be more progressive Than The older classes before us and To fighT more for Things we wanfed. Alfhough we have made a few misfakes, we feel ThaT we have aided in laying anoTher imporTanT milesfone in The hisfory of a greaf school, LFA. Fifth Row: A. Sullivan, Palmer, I-lunl, Dresch, Mcl.aughlln, Haywood, Melcalf, Rulledqe, Sus, Keller: Fourlh Row: Beaujean, Seymour MacWilliams, Garnelf, Teevan, Minney, Knoibler, l-larmon, Flaclc, Wead, Bolcum, J, Sullivan, Buller, Rendall, Croker, Kleeg Thlrcl Row Shaffer, Derllinqer, Long, Huey, Macpherson, l-lull, lqlehearl, l-lulchinson, Websler, Bennell, Keagy, Kupperman: Second Row: Sfiles Gelall, Vlclcery, Colangelo, Ryclcolzl, Alexander, Smllh, Grlllln, Greenebaum, Taylor, Dorwln, Landrelhg Gaidzilc, Rockwood, Crowe, Schuelle, Rolnerls, Munneclce, Bleier. OFFICERS Firsl Term Second Term Presldenl ..,.. ,... C harles Roberls Charles Roberls Vice-Presidenl . . , .... David Minney Marlin Sus Secrelary .... .... l-l erberf Flack Ralph Rockwood Treasurer . ,.., Ralph Rockwood David Minney Flrsl Row: Sleele, l-lead, Duncan Thlrd Term Marlin Sus Charles Roberls Vlfaller Cherry Samuel Bennell Second Row: Bennefl, Sus, Virff Row: Roberls, Flaclr, lvllnney, Rockwood, Cherry, ROBERT ALEXANDER '34-'35 Orange Club Yale VarsiTy Track 45 LighTweighT EooTball 4: LighTweighT BaskeTball 43 Orange Baseball 4: SpecTaTor STaTT 4: Caxy STaTT 4. This promising young TuTure Chemical Engineer Trom Elossmore is noTed all over Remsen T-louse Tor his goode naTured disposiTion and willingness To work. ThaT unTor- TunaTe dormiTory resounded all year wiTh cries oT geT ouT and Take a cuT: and, whenever These words were heard, The house knew ThaT Al and his playmaTe, Ered SmiTh, were aT iT again. Al disTinguished himsehf in his one year aT LEA in aThleTics, scholarship, and iournalisTic work: and his carToons Tor The Caxy will go down in hisTory. Al's generosiTy and cordialiTy have won Tor him many Triends aT Lake EoresT, and we predicT ThaT These qualiTies, TogeTher wiTh his abiliTy To plug aT a Task unTil iT is accomplished, will assure him social and scholasTic success aT Yale. JOHN ALDEN BEAUJEAN '32-'35 Orange Club Cornell BanTamweighT EooTball 27 SocieTas T-lonorum 3, 4. l-lere we inTroduce Beau, The sun-Tan boy Trom ThaT dis- TanT sTaTe in The souThland, Elorida. Crock lTo MaTTy, crocodile To youl is repuTed To be quiTe a sailor: buT, in spiTe OT The lack OT his TavoriTe sporT here, he has adapTed himselT well To our cold norThern climaTe. This quieT-mannered chap is consisTenTly on The high-honor roll: and, when a biT OT help is needed in maTh, Alden is a very compeTenT lad. ln addiTion To These Things, Beau always looks Torward each day To a liTTle Tumbling under The able direcTion oT Mr. l-lehfrick. AT oTher Times, he may be Tound Tinkering wiTh his radio or reading. John expecTs To aTTend Cornell aTTer leaving LEA. WiTh his persevering naTure, Alden should do well aT The college oT his choice and laTer as an engineer. SAMUEL EVANS BENNETT '30-'35 Black Club Univ. oT Virginia VarsiTy EooTbaII 5: VarsiTy Baskelball 5 lAss'T Mgr.I: Var- siTy Baseball 4, 5: VarsiTy Swimming 4: LighTweighT Foo+balI 4: LighTweighT BaskeTbaII 5: BanTamweighT EooTbaIl 2, 3 lCapT.I: Black Baske+baII 2, 3: Black Baseball I, 2, 3, 4, 5: Caxy STaTT 3: Caxy Board 4 lSporTs EdiTorI, 5 lAssociaTe Edi- Torlg Gargoyle Club 4, 5: Eollies I, 2, 3, 4, 5: EooTbaII Dance CommiTTee 4, 5: Mid-WinTer Dance CommiTTee 5: Junior Dance CommiTTee 3. Wheh's DawThy? drawls Sam as he swings inTo one oT his TavoriTe imiTaTions-ThaT oT lvlr. PresTini. Sammy has a greaT Tame hereabouTs wiTh his imiTaTions oT Those proTound philosophers-The TaculTy. Mr. GverdorT well knows These apish abiIiTies Tor he has long suTlered Trom Them: buT rahIIy There is more To Tell abouT our prodigy. Sammy has a marvelous giTT-ThaT oT giving spiriT To his Tellow men. This was shown by The way The Team would pep up wiTh him as quarTer-back lasT Tall. Because he is so Tun-loving, Red has gained numerous Triends and has become a well liked Tellow abouT The campus. Well, aTTer Tive years iT has To be good- bye: buT iT is wiTh regreTs ThaT we say iT To This red head. EDWIN WILLIAM BLEIER '33-'35 Orange Club Cornell VarsiTy BaskeTbaII 4: VarsiTy Baseball 3, 4: VarsiTy Tennis 3, 4: LighTweighT EooTbaIl 3, 47 LighTweighT Baske+balI 33 Orange EooTbalI 4: Glee Club 3: Eollies 3, 4: EooTball Dance CommiTTee 3, 4: I-Iomecoming CommiTTee 3: Mid-WinTer Dance CommiTTee 3, 4: Junior Prom Dance CommiTTee 3: CommencemenT Dance CommiTTee 3, 4. Nose is one oT These elusive dayboys. We do know, how- ever, ThaT he is an acoIyTe in The Episcopal church. We also know ThaT This doesn'T Take up a greaT deal of his Time, Tor we oTTen hear oT him as being guiTe The man abouT Town. LasT year Nose was guiTe an end on The undeTeaTed LighT- weighT Team, and, as a resulT, Ed plus Orange and Black all-sfars equalled one broken schmelIer. Thus, The moniker, Nose. Ed changed To Tullback This year and surprised us all by making a swell line plunger. AIThough he has been wiTh us only Two years, we have learned To like him well: and we wish only Thaf we could have seen more oT him and could have known him beTTer. RICHARD DRUMMOND BOKUM '33-'35 Black Club Princeion Varsiry Foorball 4: Black Foolrball 3: Black Baslcefball 4. Well, well, here is Jrhe would-be Bing Crosby of 'rhe campus. Diclc has been frying for Jrwo years for Thar lille. Those who live on The lhird floor of Easl House can vouch for Diclc's 'rolal disregard for Jrhe laws lil: rhere be anyl of music. I-lowever, Bolce redeemed himself by playing a bang- up game of foo+ball for lhe Varsiry lasf fall, in spilre of a couple of brolcen ribs received ai' rhe beginning of 'rhe sea- son. Bolcie noi only shines in alhlerics, for his name lrequenl- ly appears on high honor rolls. Always smiling, Bolce has one of 'rhe sunniesl disposirions in The school. Belween his a+hle+ic prowess and nalural scholaslic abilify, he should go far a+ Princeron. MILBURN BUTLER '3l-'35 Orange Club Yale Varsily Foo+ball4llv1gr.lg Caxy Slafl 4: Ar+ Club 2, 3, 4: Foolrball Dance Commiflee 4. An inquiring l-ley, you, where have you been all lhis lime? and lvlodie Buller has iusl' pur anolher iardy Varsily foorballer on lhe spot buf l don'+ suppose lhe guilry one received a very severe penally for his crime because lvlodie is really a swell Gent l-le is probably one of 'rhe mos? promising young arrisis who have a++ended fhis school in many years: and, as you old boys will remember, +ha+ display of his al Mid-Winlers several years baclc was a sensalion in ilself, lvlodie is cerlain lo a++ain grear heighrs in Jrhe world of arls. ln his four years al Lalze Forest Modie has accom- plished many fine lhings. And, alfhough we are sorry lo see him leave, we all know rhal Jrhe college he plans lo alrend will receive a well-rounded genrleman. WALTER LORRAllNlE CHERRY '33-'35 Orange Club Yale VarsiTy FooTball 33 VarsiTy Baseball 41 VarsiTy Track 3, 4: Orange BaskeTball 3: Orange Baseball 3, 4: Orange Track 3, 4: STudenT Council 41 SocieTas l-lonorum 3, 43 Caxy STaTT 3, 41 Gargoyle Club 37 Olee Club 3, 4: Follies 43 Orange DebaTe 4. An all-around lad, we say-an aThleTe OT noTe, a saxo- phone player oT noTe-s, and a sTudenT of The highesT Tone. A Typical picTure oT Bud is ThaT oT a hungry boy who eaTs long aTTer The resT oT The sTudenTs have leTT The dining room. Bud's exceedingly cheerTul disposiTion has gained greaT populariTy Tor him. l-lis enThusiasm and his abiliTy To make Triends are his greaTesT asseTs. A high honor-roll sTanding has been one oT his achievernenTs Tor Two years. His un- sehcishness, his helpTul naTure, his Trankness, and his sTead- TasTness in any purpose show ThaT he has a characTer To be admired. Bud will climb To The Top rung oT anyThing he underTakes. STouT Fellah! MARVIN JOHN COLANGELO '34-'35 Black Club Yale VarsiTy FooTball 45 VarsiTy Track 4: Black BaskeTball 4: Follies 4: Glee Club 47 Black DebaTe 4. Mike is ThaT dark, handsome lad who lives undisTurbed arnidsT The noise and conTusion oT TourTh-Tloor EasT T-louse. Few Tellows realize ThaT our own Mike is quiTe a Rachman- inoTT, and Those who don'T know ThaT he plays exTremely well have never experienced a real Thrill unTil They have saT on The Reid I-Tall landing aTTer supper and have heard Mike pracTicing. This lad has an unbounded knowledge oT every- Thing, especially Europe, Though he's never been There. BuT This isn'T all: Mike has a marvelous abiliTy aT wriTing, es- pecially in imiTaTing a cerTain Tamous essayisT. lAsk Mikel The only Things ThaT boThered Mike This year were solid and Trigg bur Then, who wouldn'T be boThered by Them? Mike is a boy who TighTs hard Tor everyThing he geTs, and we predicT a TruiTTul TuTure Tor This hard-working and learned genTleman. WILLIAM JOHN CROKER '3l-'35 Black Club Kenyon VarsiTy Tennis 2, 3, 4: LighT BanTamweighT BaskeTball I, 2: BanTamweighT BaskeTball 3, 4: ArT Club 2. Suh, does ThaT apply To day-sTudenTs as well? The boy who hears These words coming Trom The balcony oT The chapel knows ThaT They have been spoken by William Croker, who is no doubT wondering wheTher he can geT home in Time To pick up sTaTion OOR Trom New Zealand on his new radio oT The poTency LimiT Squared, or wheTher he will be able To play his usual Three seTs of Tennis. Small William came To us Trom BosTon Tour years ago wiTh his pleasing EasTern accenT and sunny disposiTion. l-le is no longer small William: his disposiTion is sunnier, and The lvliddle WesT has had liTTle eTTecT on his accenT. ROGER ALLAN CROWE '3l-'35 Orange Club l-lamilTon VarsiTy FooTball 4: VarsiTy Track 3, 4: VarsiTy Swimming 4: LighTweighT FoobTall 21 LighTweighT Baske+baII I: Orange l:ooTball 3, 43 Orange BaskeTball 2, 3, 4: Orange Swimming 3: Orange Baseball 27 Orange Track 3, 41 STudenT Council 3 lAss'T Councilorl, 43 SocieTas l-lonorum 2, 4: SpecTaTor STaTT 37 SpecTaTor Board 4: Caxy STaTT 3, 4: Gargoyle Club 2, 3, 4: Glee Club 2, 3, 4: OrchesTra 27 ArT Club 3, 4: Follies 3, 41 Orange DebaTe 3, 4: FooTball Dance CommiTTee 3, 4: Homecoming CornmiTTee 2, 47 lvlid-WinTers Dance Com- miTTee 3, 4: Junior Dance CommiTTee 2, 3: CommencemenT Dance CommiTTee 4. Do you know why They call me graphiTe? Because l'm so smooTh. Thus we inTroduce Rog. Rog's Two worries This year were geTTing The SpecTaTor arTicles in on Time and keep- ing Track of his Tan mail. Rog is Tamous Tor his originally concocTed dance sTeps, buT only a chosen Tew have had The opporTuniTy OT wiTnessing Them. Roger is possessed oT a beauTiTul Tenor voice and an unbounded knowledge oT French. l-lis porTrayals in The Gargoyle Club's producTions Tor The pasT Three years have been excellenT. ln addiTion To This, he is a STudenT Councilor and an aThleTe OT noTe. We surely say wiThouT being misTaken, To l-lamilTon we send a well-rounded genTleman. JACKSON BROOKS DERELINGER '32-'35 Black Club PrinceTon VarsiTy GOIT 2, 3, 4: LighTweighT EooTball 3, 4, LighT- weighT BaslceTball 3: BanTamweighT EooTball 2: BanTamweighT BaslceTball 2: Blaclc Traclc 23 STudenT Council 3 lAss'T Coun- cilorl, 43 SocieTas l-lonorum 3, 4-y SpecTaTor STaTT 4: Caxy STaTT 47 Glee Club 2, 3: EooTball Dance CommiTTee 3, 45 Homecoming CommiTTee 3, 4: Mid-WinTers Dance CommiT- Tee 3: Junior Dance CommiTTee 3: CommencemenT Dance CommiTTee 3, 4. The crowd was breaThless, awed, even speechless, as dapper Jaclc arrived. Ever since Then, DerT's genial dispo- siTion and abiliTy Tor hard work have made him a leader among his classmaTes. During This Time, his enThusiasTic worlc in l.ighTweighT TooTball and baslceTball has consTanTly pro- vided inspiraTion To his TeammaTes3 while Tor The lasT Two years, Jack has bolsTered The VarsiTy golT squad wiTh his consisTenT playing. Aside Trom his aThleTic achievemenTs, his acTiviTies are wide and varied. They range Trom worlc on The STudenT Council To-oh, yes, we almosT TorgoT- Eerry T-Tall. In oTher words, Jack is a raTher experienced young man, and we're sure he'll malce good wherever he goes. CHARLES KENNETH DORWIN '34-'35 Black Club Yale VarsiTy Tennis 4: Black Swimming 4: Glee Club 47 Black DebaTe 4. YouI-Bang!-Crashl?l-GeT ouT oT here! Come on, Dorwin, Scraml This is a sample OT The noises Trom The conTinual Remsen Tree-Tor-all To which Ken is a greaT con- TribuTor. Ken usually comes ouT oT some room Tlying-any- way, he's always on The boTTom. Who would Thinlc ThaT This guieT-loolcing chap's manner could be so deceiving? Did you ever see such a beauTiTul crop oT blonde hair? JusT loolc aT how ThaT lock oT hair sTands ouT above his Torehead. Thus we describe Kennie, a boy wiTh a disposiTion as sunny as his home sTaTe, CaliTornia. AlThough Ken has been insTi- gaTed inTo rough-housing by his rowdie neighbors, he s+ilI reTains a Triendly and genTlemanly gaieTy. CHRISTIAN ALBERT DRESCH, JR. '3I-'35 Black Club Johns Hopkins Varsily Track 3 lIvlgr.l, 4: Lighlweighl Foolball 2: Lighl- weighl Baskelball 2: Banlarnweighl Foolball I: Banlam- weighl Baskelball I: Black Foolball 3: Black Track 4: Sludenl Council 3 lAss'l Councilorl, 4: Caxy Board 2 lArl Edilorl, 4 lAss'l Edilorl: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: Foolball Dance Com- millee 4: Homecoming Commillee 3, 4: Mid-Winlers Dance Commillee 3, 4: Junior Prom Dance Commillee 2, 3: Com- mencemenl Dance Commillee 4. Chris is lhal serious-minded chap who always lends lo his own business. He is a lad ol lew words: bul, when he does speak, you can resl assured lhal lhose lew words will be words ol wisdom. His prized possession is a colleclion ol Symphonic records. He is one ol lhe lellows in school who appreciale lhe symphony, and he lakes greal delighl in explaining il lo his buddies. Bul, as he leaves us lor Johns Hopkins and a long, ledious medical career, we wish lo say lhal we know he'II succeed because ol his persever- ance and because ol his slrenglh ol characler. We exlend our besl wishes lo a genlleman and a lriend. GORDON BALL DUNCAN '3l-'35 Orange Club Illinois Varsily Foolball 4: Varsily Track 3, 4: Varsily Golf 4: Lighlweighl Foolball I, 2: Lighlweighl Baskelball I: Orange Foolball 3: Orange Baskelball 2, 3, 4: Sludenl Council 4: Class Ollices 2 lTreas.l: Socielas Honorum 4: Caxy Slall 3: Arl Club I, 2: Foolball Dance Commillee 4: Homecoming Commillee 3, 4: Junior Dance Commillee 3. Como esla! Wilh lhis phrase one can easily recognize Dunc's salulalion, as he comes down lhe corridor in Reid Hall. EI senor is a producl ol Waukegan and seems proud ol il. His majoring in Spanish ranks him as one ol Mr. Barn- lalher's slaunch admirers ol lhal beaulilul and llowing lan- guage. His congenial mood and philosophical ideas on lile have made him a popular lellow on lhe campus during his lour-year slay al LFA. The Waukeganile always has lhings well planned and carries lhem oul precisely. He resides in lhal ancienl bul home-like edilice, Remsen: and his lailhlul obedience lo lhe demagogue, Barnlalher, in checking up on lhal dorm and snapping lhe lighls oul al len has proved him lo be an amiable leader. A HERBERT NORMAN ELACK '3 l-'35 , Orange Club Darfmoufh Varsify Eoofball I, 2, 3: Varsify Baskefball l, 2, 3: Var- sify Baseball 2, 3: Varsify Track 1, 3: Varsify Swimming 4: Orange Swimming I, 2, 3: Orange Track 2, 3: Sfudenf Coun- cil 3 lSergeanf-af-Arms-Third Terml, 4 iPresidenfl: Class Offices 2 llpresidenfl, 3 lPresidenfl, 4 iSecrefary-Firsf Terml: Sociefas Honorum l, 2: Specfafor Sfaff 3, 4: Glee Club 3: Follies 4 lMgr.l: Orange Debafe 4: Foofball Dance Commif- fee 3, 4: Homecoming Commiffee 4 iMgr.l: Mid-Winrers Dance Commiffee 3, 4: Junior Dance Commiffee 3: Com- mencemenf Dance Commiffee 4. Have you ever had cocoa wifh cream? This is one of l-lerb's by-words. l-le mainfains fhaf fhis inspiring drink is responsible for his Herculean physique. Herb received fre- quenf leffers from Miss Madeira's and Vassar. On close inspecfion we found fhaf all fhe fair ones address him as Bunny, This was a greaf revelafion fo us, buf lef's give if a resf for a change. Herb's suffered long enough from fhaf name. Herb was elecfed presidenf of fhe Sfudenf Council fhis year and handled fhis difficulf dufy wifh a greaf deal of finesse. Herb is a greaf favorife wifh young and old, and we cerfainly hafe fo see fhis genfleman and all-around swell fellow leave us fhis year. GEORGE WILLIAM GAIDZIK, JR. '33-'35 Black Club Carnegie Tech Varsify Foofball 4: Varsify Swimming 3: Black Foofball 3: Specfafor Sfaff 3, 4: Gargoyle Club 3, 4: Follies 4. This year we were glad fo find fhaf George had finished his experimenf wifh shirf, collar and fie combinafions. Many will remember him as fhe boy who affended and leff classes af any fime he pleased. This cerfainly does nof mean, how- ever, fhaf George lacked inferesf in his school's acfivifies. He has done splendid work in Gargoyle Club and in Debafe. He has made a name for himself af fhe Academy fhrough his oraforical abilify, which resulfed in his being crowned Prince of Peace in fhe '34 Declamafion Confesf. Those who have read his fhemes in various edifions of fhe Spec- fafor expecf George's exfraordinary wrifing abilify fo carry him far. Above all, fhe sfudenfs and masfers admire him for his mafure bearing and unassuming ways. JAMES BARNES GARNETT '3l-'35 Black Club DarTmouTh VarsiTy Track 4 llvlgnly VarsiTy Swimming 4: Black BaskeT- ball 2, 3: Caxy STaTT 4: Gargoyle Club 47 Glee Club 47 OrchesTra 21 ArT Club 2: Follies 4. We were all glad To see Jim ioin up wiTh us This year as a boarder. ATTer leaving ThaT Swish-OTT-campus gang, Jim agreed ThaT boarding liie was Tar beTTer Than commuTing. However, our Triend, Rock, almosT convinced him one aTTernoon ThaT he should be a clay boy again. AlThough Jim missed his SaTurday nighT dances along The NorTh Shore, he soon learned ThaT our SaTurday nighT enTerTainmenT could easily Take The place. Jim is quiTe a social lighT, Though, and is in his elemenT when he is gliding abouT The smooTh- polished dance Tloor. l-le is famous Tor his original dance sTeps and Take iT Trom us, They are plenTy dippy. In all seriousness Though, Jim is a Tine Tellow, and we haTe To lose such a Trank and cheerful Triend. CHARLES DANIEL GELATT '34-'35 Orange Club Wisconsin VarsiTy Swimming 4: VarsiTy Track 47 Orange Baseball 4: SocieTas T-lonorum 4: SpecTaTor Board 4. Charlie, The boy who reads Three novels aT one Time, is one of The besT liked sTudenTs of EasT l-louse. Charlie is always having a group oT boys in Tor a Teed. From his Tamous ice-box. Whenever a book revicw or a Theme is needed by some poor unTorTunaTe, Chuck is always willing To oblige. l-lis Themes are masTerpieces, and his humor is subTle. GelaTT is a quieT boy who is never ouTspoken. AlmosT all The magazines ThaT are prinTed can be found in GelaTT's room, and he will always consider subscribing To one more. No maTTer where Charlie goes To school, he will carry oTi The honors. MORTIMER ERNEST GREENEBAUM lll '33-'35 Orange Club Arizona VarsiTy EooTball 4: VarsiTy Tennis 4: Orange EooTball 43 Orange BaslceTball 3, 4: Orange Baseball 4, Orange Traclc. One oT The nerviesT, ToughesT guards ThaT l have ever coached, was The way Coach Bergen complimenTed Ernie's TooTball abiliTy. This in iTselT will cause LEA To remember him Tor a long Time, buT There is someThing-ThaT is-con- cerning cerTain weekly beTs beTween Ernie and a cerTain Plane GeomeTry masTer OT our Tair insTiTuTion. Ernie invari- ably won, bur queerly enough The loser never made good his losses. Maybe we'd beTTer noT say any more abouT These liTTle TransacTions as They are probably TorgoTTen by boTh parTies by nowg and we'd haTe To renew The baTTle. ln spiTe oT all This, Ernie did noT suTTer a loss in spiriT, as he was always on The up 'n up. l-lere's hoping Greenie remains in The pink. GUS MITCHELL GRIFFIN '34-'35 Black Club lvl. l. T. VarsiTy Tennis 41 LighTweighT Basl4eTball 4: SocieTas l-lonorum 4: SpecTaTor STaTT 4: Caxy STaTT 4. Gus is The school's only auThenTic KaneTucl4y Cunel. lT seems ThaT he received a raTher dishearTening leTTer Trom home The TirsT Term. l-le had made The TirsT honor roll, and his pappy wroTe him an episTle sTaTing ThaT if Gus didn'T sTarT To work and geT some good grades, he'd have To leave school and reTurn To The ole KaneTucl4y home. This liTTle episode reminds us oT anoTher second-Tloor RemseniTe who was under The same handicap. lThaT's all righT, MarTy.l ln Gus' case, however, we Tound ThaT he'd been spending Too much Time aT Bing Dorwin's on holidays. Gus immediaTely goT down To business, Though, and managed To sTay wiTh us Tor The Tull year, much To our pleasure. There's one Thing we're saTe in saying abouT Gus. ThaT even if he made only The TirsT honor roll all year, he's The cream oT The SuThin crop. HENRY HOLBROOK HARMON '3 l-'35 Black Club Yale ArT Club 2, 3, 4. When wriTing abouT a residenT oT Highland Park, iT is always cusTomary To say, John Doe comes Trom ThaT liTTle hamler in The wilds lcnown as Highland Park. However, we are noT going To do This, as Highland Parlc is noT merely a hamleT: and we are noT wriTing abouT John Doe. H. H. is one oT The day-sTudenTs who believes ThaT cloThes malce The man. As a maTTer oT TacT, he is very much in The running as The besT dressed Tellow in school. Harmon is a social hound oT The TirsT waTer. He Tells us ThaT The waTer is Tine and ThaT we should Try iT. Seriously Though, we wish H. H. all The luck in The world and hope ThaT he will never TorgeT his alma maTer. GEORGE PRICE l-TAYWOOD lll '32-'35 V Orange Club Purdue VarsiTy EooTball 4: VarsiTy Swimming 2, 3, 4: Orange FooTball 2, 3, 4: Orange BaslceTball 3: Orange Baseball 2: OrchesTra 2, 3, 4: ArT Club 2: Follies 3, 4: FooTball Dance CornmiTTee 4: Mid-WinTers Dance CommiTTee 4. Many good Things could be said abouT PaT, buT members OT The Third Tloor gang Torbid iT. The reason is simple. PaT plays whaT is labeled as a cheese box or oTherwise lcnown as a guiTar. Wailing, languid, screeching sounds emerge Trom Mr. Haywood's mouTh To The accompanimenT af said box. Mr. Tucker lwe Thanlc himl Took The gee-Tar away Trom PaT Tor a while, buT The soliTude was so greaT ThaT EasT House resembled a counTy morgue. We did noT realize iusT how good PaT was unTil he sTarTed playing wiTh Kennie Klee's Highland Park Howlers, an up-and-coming band. We wish ole Joe Haywood success aT dear ole. 9f lM EUGENE RALPH HEAD '33-'35 Black Club Cornell Caxy Board 4 lPhoTographic EdiTorl. Here's To Gene, The busiesT man on The campus. He's The man behind The counTer aT The gym sTore, and he's The one ThaT checks aTTendance aT meals. He can make you Teel ThaT you are geTTing The greaTesT bargain in The world in The Torm of a Tive-cenT candy bar. He can give cuTs in a way ThaT robs Them oT Their sTing. ln addiTion-To This, Gene Turns in consisTenTly good grades even Though he is Taking solid and Trig Trom Mr. Milne and Physics Trorn Mr. RendTorTF. SomeThing should also be said abouT Gene's elecfrical appliances which are one of The seven wonders oT The campus. We also wish To Take This opporTuniTy To Thank Gene Tor his swell phoTographic work, samples oT which can be viewed ThroughouT This book. .w'l'N M BURT ELLS HUEY '34-'35 Black Club lowa Tumbling 47 Black Track 4. IT you wanT To borrow a purple shirT, polka doT panTs, yellow socks, green spaTs, or any oTher smooTh regalia, you can be sure OT obTaining iT Trom BurT. OT course, There is no reason why you should wanT anyThing like ThaT: buT, if you should, BurT's your man. BurT never wears panTs, vesT, and coaT ThaT maTch excepT on Sunday. ln spiTe oT his smooTh cloThes lwe'll Torgive him ThaTl, we cannoT help Teeling ThaT BurT really means well: and we haTe To leave This happy-go- lucky chap who always has a cheery greeTing Tor everybody. However, we are sure ThaT we will noT lose Track oT BurT when he goes To college as LEA holds an open-house Tor him always. gear, , 2f,W, cle., ...J,2.1,., 704 fl M 4 4ff N'1 rw. hfgoafi f JEAN RTCHARD HUFF '34-'35 Black Club STanTord VarsiTy Baseball 4: VarsiTy Track 45 LighTweighT BaskeTball 47 Black Baseball 47 Black Track 4: Caxy STaTT 47 Winner oT DeclamaTion ConTesT '34. Here we have a man oT precise and disTincT TasTes, and These TasTes indeed vary. We know him as one who Takes superlaTive care concerning his appearance. There is some- Thing very sTabilized and deTiniTe in his pursuiTs7 his walk indicaTes quickness oT mind and TransmiTs an air oT Treshness: and his humor Tends To The appreciaTive side. Seldom is The occasion ThaT one doesn'T Tind HuTTy Tully ready To enTer inTo any kind oT Tun or devilish course: he's a man who likes a good Time and knows where To Tind iT. And, wifh all his lighT-hearTed aspecTs, we cannoT avoid seeing ThaT here is one who appreciaTes Tine Things: and, knowing him, you'll see he's keen. Really, Jean's a Bo ThaT wenT places and is going places. HENRY WEBB HUNT '34-'35 Black Club lllinois VarsiTy FooTball 43 VarsiTy Track 4. Zowiel Who is ThaT coming around The corner? A blue car? Well, ThaT musT be Bud, as There is sTill Two minuTes beTore class. Bud lives in WinneTka, buT spends mosT OT his Time aT school. ln spiTe oT his greaT lack oT weighT, Bud played VarsiTy TooTball This year aT righT end. He geTs greaT delighT in coming back Monday morning and Telling us abouT The swell daTe he had over The week-end. In This respecT Bud has The advanTage over his pal, Bing Dorwin: buT we are sure ThaT They will geT TogeTher on The subiecT during vaca- Tions. We are sorry ThaT he didn'T leave The porTals oT New Trier sooner because we cerTainly enjoyed having him wiTh us This year. WILLIAM YOUNG I-IUTCI-IINSON '30-'35 Black Club Cornell Varsily Foolball 3, 4, 5: Varsily Track l, 2, 3, 4, 57 Varsily Swimming 5: Lighlweighl' Foolball 21 Lighlweighl Baskelball 3: Banlamweighl Foolball I: Banlamweighl' Baskelball lg Black Foolball 51 Black Baskelball 2, 3, 43 Black Swimming 4: Black Track I, 2, 3, 4, 51 Sludenl Council 3 lAss'l Councilorl, 47 Class Oiclices I lPres.l, 4 lVice-Pres.l: Socielas I-lonorum 2, 3, 4, 51 Specialor Slalrl 4 lAss'l Edilorl, 5 lliclilor-in-Chiell: Caxy Slrafl 4, 51 Gargoyle Club 3, 4, 5: Glee Club 2, 3, 4, 5 lLeaderlg Orcheslra 2, 3, 4, 5: Follies 2, 3, 4, 53 Foolball Dance Commillee 41 I-lomecoming Commillee l, 2, 31 Mid- Winlers Dance Commillee 41 Junior Dance Commillee 3i Commencemenl Dance Commilrlee 4. A good fellow, if lhere ever was one-lhal's I-lulch. Jusl lake a look al lhis lor a lisl of allrribulesz a ready sincerily al lhe righl lime: an inexhauslible supply ol humor, an ever-willingness lo assislg sound judgment slabilized by underslanding and loleranl ideals, a lriendly personalilyq and loyally. Thal's a lol lo say for a chap, bul we know whal we're Talking abou? here. Bill's giiled musically loo: we have known ol his abilily on The saxophone and wilh Jrhe Glee Club for a long lime. lncidenlally, see an aihlelic career in lhe dala above. Truly LFA loses a mosl loyal of sons JOI-IN GILTNER IGLEI-IEART, JR. '3 l -'35 Black Club Norlhweslern Varsily Foolball 5: Lighlweighl Baskelball 31 Banlam- weighl Foolball 27 Orange Baskelball 4 llvlgnlq Black Base- ball 2, 3, 4, 5: Speclalor Slafl 4, 53 Gargoyle Club 4: Follies 51 Foolball Dance Commillee 5. lnlroducing Iggie, anolher member of The P.G.'s who pulled up on lhe campus lasl fall lo our very greal surprise. Lasl spring il' was a real problem 'ro find someone who would slep inlo Gil's shoes when he lefl. I-lowever, his relurn for anolher year solved lhis problem. Gil's rogue's gallery cul from Film Fun was one ol lhe seven wonders ol 'lhe campus fhis year. I+ vied wilh I-lerr Doklor Broelcer's pipes 'lhal were localed righl nexl door 'ro lgg's room. The Pride ol Evansville is one of lhe mosl likeable lellows on lhe campus and is seldom wilhoul a smile for everyone. The school really loses a swell fellow, bul wherever he goes we wish him 'lhe besl of luck. GEORGE CHRIS KEAGY '33-'35 Black Club Duke Varsiry Golf 41 Black Eoorball 3: Black Baskelball 37 Black Swimming 4: Follies 4. Now, boys, wi+hou+ a doubi The Perfeci Circle Pis+on Rings are The besi on 'rhe marker. And why shouldn l' lhey be? They are made in l-lagersrown, Indiana-'rhe meiropolis of lhe Middle Wes+. So Chris blows. l-lowever, ii is nor for norhingg lor, as you all know, l-lagersiown is a' melropolis in iis own righi, having one newspaper, The l-lagersiown Exponenl. We don'r hold Thai againsl' him, lhough, because of his likeable disposirion and unforgeliable laugh. Keagy is known by many names. One of ihese is +he boy wi+h Jrhe perieci build or you +ell 'em, Earl Leider- man, you did ir. H is hard io find Chris when he isn'+ hard ai work on his Algebra or German. l-lere's wishing him luck wherever he goes. SHERMAN ELY KELLER '3l-'35 Orange Club Washinglon and Lee Lighlweighr Foorball 3, 4 lCap+.l: Banramweighl Fool- ball I, 25 Banramweighl Baskelball l, 2: Siudeni Council 4: Socielas l-lonorum l, 2, 3, 43 Caxy Siafi 3, 4: Orcheslra I, 2, 3, 47 Follies I, 2, 3, 4. Among +he fai+hiul day-siudenrs ar Lake Foresl 'rhere is one who has done his uimosl for Jrhe school and his 'Fellow associaies. l-le is a lilile fellow wilh a big personaliiy. l-le has one of lhe nnoslr diverse disposirions on +he campus, being boih serious-minded and exrremely foolish. Bong's daily baffle wirh Ed Rendall became a fealure of Dr. Krueger's Plane Class lasl year. Kell also has serious rnomenls as is proved by his high ranking on lhe iirsl honor roll. Sherrn's size has noi hampered him in Jrhe leasi as he was 'rhe caprain and a fighring end on rhe Lighiweighl 'ioorball squad. We are sure Jrhal Prof Keller will be a success info wharever walk of life he may go from here. KENNETH HASKEL KLEE '32-'35 Black Club Michigan SocieTas l-lonorum 2, 3, 4: OrchesTra 3, 4: EooTball Dance CommiTTee 4. Kenny is The boy wiTh The lighTning-like Tingers, who, aT The piano in Reid l-lall during The inTermissions, lighTens a boy's Tour-sTraighT day wiTh music. When he's noT aT The piano, one can usually Tind him in Mr. Milne's room, learning shorT cuTs in his TavoriTe subiecTs and inbibing Charlie's subTle humor. Even Though Ken does well on any golf course, his TavoriTe sporT is known To The Academians by The name- graTTing: and he does iT quiTe admirably. l-le has been known during his sTay aT The Academy as a hard worker and as a boy who seems To know where he is going. l-lis only vice is punning, buT we Torgive him ThaT because oT his consTanT ioking and good spiriTs. ARTHUR REED KNEIBLER, JR. '33-'35 Orange Club UniversiTy oT Pennsylvania VarsiTy EooTball 3, 4: VarsiTy BaskeTball 3, 4: VarsiTy Track 3, 43 VarsiTy GolT 3, 47 Orange EooTball 4: Orange Swimming 3, 47 Orange Track 3, 47 STudenT Council 4: Glee Club 47 Follies 4. Through The ages Kenosha has senT us a hos+ oT swell guys. l-lere is The laTesT conTribuTion, ArT. While The big Tellow had his hands Tull To keep The pace seT by These Tormer Kenosha-iTes, we're sure ThaT he more Than succeeded. As a Tackle in VarsiTy TooTball, he made many an opposing line ineTTecTive and consTanTly lenT moral supporT as well as physical supporT To his Tellow linemen. ATTer TooTball comes baskeTball, and Tor Two years ArT's play on The VarsiTy has helped iT Through many Tough games. BUT, unlike many aThleTes, he seems To be able To crack The books as well, and has been on The honor roll consTanTly. We all Teel ThaT anyone wiTh The versaTile abiliTies oT ArT should go Tar' anywhere. JOHN THOMPSON LANDRETH '3l-'35 Black Club lPres.I Princelon Varsily Foolball 3, 4i Varsily Goll 4: Black Baskelball 3, 4: Caxy Slall 4. . . and lwo luna-lish sandwiches. Here is a lypical piclure ol Jack lelephoning an order lo Krall's during eve- ning sludy hours. To Jack, beller known as Grandma lo lhe lirsl-lloor boys, goes lhe cemenl molorcycle lor being lhe biggesl graller. When Jack lorsook his day slude pals lhis year and joined lhe lirsl-lloor gang, we lhoughl lhal he would sellle down. However, Jack looled us. School hadn'l been in session lor more lhan live days when Jack lell lor Chicago lo see a doclor. We won'l go inlo lhe resulls ol lhis Iillle lrip, bul lel il sullice lo say lhal il ended very humorously lor GranoIma's neighbors. In spile ol ..lack's escapades, he upholds a very good record, as well as being Presidenl ol lhe Black Club. Jack is really a card, and his humor keeps lhe boys laughing al all limes. Here's luck lo a swell genl. www PHILIP liNIl.l.IAlvl LONG '34-'35 Black Club Wesl Poinl Varsily Baseball 43 Black Foolball 47 Black Baskelball 4: Black Track 43 Socielas Honorum 4. Phil is lhal quiel boy wilh lhal Soulhern drawl lrom some sleepy lown down in soulhern Indiana. He spends mosl ol his lime in lhe various rooms ol his lourlh-lloor pals. In spile ol his various argumenls wilh his buddies, Garry and lvlac, Phil linds lime lo sludy on his lhree lVlalhs and al lhe end ol lhe monlh usually appears al lhe head ol lhese classes. Phil does nol conline his abililies iusl lo Algebra, however, lor his olher grades are equally high. Lillle is known aboul lhis guiel and elusive chap excepl lhal he minds his own business and is liked by everyone. JOI-IN FRANCIS MACPI-IERSON '33-'35 Black Club Princefon Varsify Track 5: Varsify Golf 4, 57 Lighfweighf Baskef- ball 4, 5: Black Baseball 51 Black Track 57 Specfafor Sfaff 4: Gargoyle Club 4. Why are you lafe, Mac? Well, Sir, I was sfraighfening up fhe library befween periods. Thus we infroduce Sleepy lvlac from Springfield. The only fime when Mac is in a hurry is when he is on fhe frail of food. I-lowever, on fhe golf course Mac is hard fo beaf, as many fellows have found ouf from experience. When he and Brad Palmer sfarf falking abouf Springfield, fhe besf fhing fo do is fo say fhaf you have fo make a 'phone call-we know from experience. Ivlac is always ambling abouf fhe campus wifh a sad look on his face: buf when he sees some- one wifh food, he is as happy as can be. In spife of his hunger, lvlac's genial words and good humor have won him many friends, and LPA wishes him fhe besf of luck in all fufure years. JAMES RAYMOND MQLAUGI-ILIN '3 I -'35 Orange Club Wisconsin Orange Foofball I, 27 Specfafor Sfaff I, 21Caxy Sfaff 27 Caxy Board 3 lAdv. lvlgr.l, 4 lBus. lVlgr.Ig Arf Club I, 2, 43 Foofball Dance Commiffee 4: I-Iomecoming Commiffee 2, 31 lvlid-Winfers Dance Commiffee 4: Junior Prom Dance Com- miffee 3: Commencemenf Dance Commiffee 4. Wifh a click of his heels, his hand exfended, and a cheery, I-Iello fhere, kid, Jim greefs you. I-Iis genial nafure makes him guife suifed fo his posifion on fhis book. He is fhe bisz man, and he cerfainly gefs fhe ads. Of course, we don'f mean fo say fhaf he goes every day fo gef fhern, buf he goes guife consisfenfly fowards Chicago. lvlac is one of fhe mosf generous and friendly companions fo fhose who know him, buf he is hard fo cross. I-Ie is a member of fhe firsf-floor Easf club and is always ready fo lend assisfance fo fhe sifuafion. Wherever Jim may go, he is going fo win because of his personalify, his nafure, and his cleferminafion fo gef fhose fhings he has sworn fo gef. JOHN MacWlLLlAMS Ill '33-'35 Orange Club DarTmouTh VarsiTy BaskeTball 4 llvlgnl: VarsiTy Track 4: VarsiTy GolT 3: Orange l:ooTball 31 Gargoyle Club 37 Glee Club 3, 4: FooTball Dance CommiTTee 4: Homecoming CommiTTee 4: Junior Dance CornmiTTee 3. The Academy is losing one oT iTs mosT popular young men This year when iT loses Mac. As sunny and cheerTul as his naTive CaliTornia climaTe, he is well liked by all, Though sornewhaT handicapped by his TrequenT associaTions wiTh a cerTain big drawling bad man abouT The school. Mac has succeeded very well here in The eyes oT his classmaTes. l-le has been a mainsTay oT The Gargoyle Club in his Two years aT The Academy, giving an excellenT perTormance as Abe Lincoln in The play oT '34. OT course, he's minus The whiskers, having shaved Tor This picTure1 buT The likeness oT Abe is sTill There, if one looks closely. We are sincerely sorry To see him go, buT we know he has To leave. We wish him all The success in The world aT DarTmouTh and hope ThaT he will corne Through wiTh Tlying colors. So-long, Mac, and good-luck. WALTER BRADFORD METCALF '33-'35 Orange Club STanTord VarsiTy Tennis 4: l.ighTweighT BaskeTball 4: Orange BaskeT- ball 37 Orange Baseball 3, 4. Wally, Tilling Them wiTh his dry humor, is The pride of The second Tloor RemseniTes. Aside Trom Wally's puns, he is a very able baskeTball and baseball player. The Oranges can Thank him Tor The many poinTs he scored in his successTul eT- TorTs Tor vicTory. IT Wally is noT engaged in adverTising his home Town, he is speaking abouT his French class. lv1aTTy is always Telling Wally how dumb he is, buT Wally doesn'T care. lnsTead he keeps Trying unTil he passes The condiTionals. l-le has also shown LFA ThaT he can play Tennis very well. During his Two years aT LFA, he has made many Triends, and we are cerTain ThaT his good naTure and wiT will be missed on The campus nexT Tall. DAVID GROVER MINNEY, JR. '32-'35 Orange Club Slanlord Varsily Foolball 3, 4: Varsily Baskelball 3 lCapl.l, 4: Varsily Baseball 2, 3, 4: Varsily Track 2, 3, 4: Varsily Tennis 2: Orange Foolball 2: Orange Baskelball 2: Orange Swimming 3, 4: Orange Baseball 2, 3, 4: Sludenl Council 4 lSergeanl-al-Arms - Fall Terml, lVice-Presidenl - Winler Terml: Class Ollices 3 lVice-Presidenll, 4 lVice-Presidenl- Fall Terml, lTreasurer-Winler Terml: Socielas I-lonorum 3: Speclalor Slall 3, 4: Caxy Slall 3, 4: Glee Club 3, 4: Arl Club 2: Follies 2, 4: Foolball Dance Commillee 4: Home- coming Commillee 2, 4: Junior Prom Dance Commillee 3: Commencemenl Dance Commillee 3, 4. I-lonesl lo Pele. You sure have gol a lol lo learn. Thus Dave drawls lo his roomie, Sliles. Like his room- male, Dave has many worries lhis year. ll seems lhal every lime Dave gels a job, il has lo do wilh collecling money. Fellows gol so lhal when lhey saw Dave approaching, lhey lurned and ran. ln addilion lo lhis Dave lrelled aboul his lrig and solid, and he ollen remarked in his inimilable manner, Boy, I iusl can'l gel lhis slullf' ln spile ol all lhis lrouble, Dave really did a marvelous job lhis year, as you can see lrom lhe record above. No one can help liking Dave. I-lis congenial and lriendly manners have made him a greal leader among his class-males. Greal work, Fiddler, we know lhal you'll keep on doing your besl. VICTOR I-IENRY MUNNECKE, JR. '3l-'35 Orange Club Illinois Varsily Track 4: Varsily Tennis 4: Lighlweighl Foolball 2, 3, 4: Lighlweighl Baskelball 4: Banlamweighl Foolball l: Orange Foolball 4: Orange Baskelball 2, 3: Socielas I-lonorum l, 2, 3, 4: Speclalor Board 4 lAss'l Edilorl: Gar- goyle Club 3: Glee Club 3: Arl Club I, 2: I-lomecoming Commillee 4. Jusl aller len every nighl a paller ol liny leel can be heard along lhe lirsl lloor hall ol Easl I-louse. ll one should happen lo gel a glimpse ol lhe source ol lhe noise, one would see many paiama-clad youlhs lA.C.S., B.J.P., and J.R.H.l sneaking inlo a cerlain room al lhe lronl ol lhe house, known as Duke's place. The inhabilanls ol lhis dive are lhe Duke himsell lpiclured lelll and his roomie, Georgie. ll you should happen lo gain access lo lhis room, you would probably hear- The grealesl Iillle place in lhe counlry: lhere isn'l a beller college anywhere. Yes, sir, lhal's Illinois. Thus Duke converses wilh his buddies. As he aspires lo become a chemisl, we hope lhis lriendly and well- liked chap linds all he is looking lor among his relorls, lesl lubes, and beakers. My BRADLEY JOHNSON PALMER '33-'35 Black Club Amhersf Varsify Golf 3, 4g Lighfweighf Eoofball 3, 4: Lighfweighf Baskefball 3, 47 Black Eoofball 43 Specfafor Sfaff 3: Spec- fafor Board 4 lSporfs Ediforlg Caxy Sfaff 3: Caxy Board lfxfhlefic Ediforl 4: Mid-Winfers Dance Commiffee 41 Com- mencemenf Dance Commiffee 4. On fhird floor Easf we find a happyego-lucky fellow who always has a good joke fo fell you. I-lowever, don r gef fhe wrong idea of Brad, he doesn'f converge wifh fhose humor- isfs, Skeez and Snead, Brad is guife a golfer, and is Sporfs Edifor of fhe Caxy and fhe Specfafor. If you are looking for fhe fashion plafe of fhe campus, Brad is fhe man. When he wears his plaid panfs, yellow-sfriped shirf, black bow fie, and grey buckskin shoes, he even beffers Esquire. I-le and his pal, Macpherson, hail from Springfield: and, from whaf we hear, if musf be quife a rah-rah fown. I-lis chief frouble is worrying whefher he will gefa leffer from Kay in fhe morning mail. Brad is headed for Amhersf, following in fhe foofsfeps of his brofher: and we know he'll succeed in anyfhing. EDWIN CGAN RENDALL '3I-'35 Orange Club Princefon Varsify Tennis 2, 3, 45 Lighfweighf Eoofball 37 Banfam- weighf Eoofball 2: Lighf Banfamweighf Baskefball lg Class Offices I I-I'reas.l: Sociefas I-lonorum I, 2, 3, 4: Specfafor Sfaff I, 3, 4: Gargoyle Club 3: Glee Club 3: Orange De- bafe I, 4. The odd fhing abouf Ed is fhaf he knows beffer, buf he rarely realizes-or somefhing. If is cerfain, however, fhaf Ed does fry af everyfhing fhaf he underfakes, and if is very seldom fhaf he fails. Ed's favorife sporf is fennis, and lef us fake fhis opporfunify fo fell you fhaf he's gof plenfy on fhe ball in fhis game. The second-floor Easf boys found if an invariable facf fhaf I-layseed would become a close and conversafional friend during sfudy hours. Maybe he mighf have run ouf of ink, or have losf his brofher-anyfhing fo be fhere af fhe wrong fime. Af any rafe, if can never be said fhaf Farmer Ed wasn'f ready fo smile-even when Sherm Keller was fwisfing his arm. We know we'll miss Ed, and we'lI never forgef him. CHARLES SHEPHERD ROBERTS '3 I -'35 Orange Club PFIHCGTOH Varsify Golf 3 lMgr.l, 43 Lighfweighf Foofball 3, 4: Lighfweighf Baslcefball 3 lCapf.l, 4: Banfamweighf Baskef- ball 27 Lighf Banfamweighf Baslcefball I: Sfudenf Council 4 lVice-Presidenfl: Class Officer I lpresidenfl, 4 lfiresidenf- Isf and 2nd Termsl: Sociefas Honorum I, 2, 3, 47 Specfafor Sfaff 4: Caxy Sfaff 2: Caxy Board 3 lAss'f Ediforl, 4 lEdifor- in-Chiefl, Glee Club 3, 4: Orchesfra 2: Arf Club 2: Follies 3, 47 Eoofball Dance Commiffee 3, 4: Junior Dance Com- miffee 3, Mid-Winfers Dance Commiffee 41 Commencemenf Dance Commiffee 4. ' Chuck is a four-year man wifh a record of which fo be proud. Wifhouf a doubf he is one of fhe oufsfanding chaps in school and holds fhose offices which were besfowed upon him as a resull' of his fellow-sfudenfs' appreciafion of his abilify, namely: Presiclenf of fhe Senior Class, Vice-Presidenf of fhe Sfudenf Council, and Edifor-in-Chief of fhe Caxy. Truly, fhis is one heavy obligafion for anyone, and Chuclc did a splendid iob. He had a co-operafing Senior Class and puf ouf an incomparable yearboolc. As an ardenf supporfer of afhlefics, fhe lcid excels in Lighfweighf foofball, baslcefball, and Varsify golf. Indeed, his eager spirif and shrewd infel- lecf hold wifhin 'rhem all fhe shades of humor, advice, under- sfanding, iudgmenf, indusfry, and friendship. RALPH KANOUSE ROCKWOOD, JR. '32-35 Black Club Princefon Varsify Eoofball 4 lCapf.l7 Varsify Hockey 2: Lighf- weighf Eoofball 3 lCapf.I: Banfamweighf Eoofball 27 Blaclc Baslcefball 3 llvlgrxly Blaclc Swimming 3: Blaclc Traclc 3: Sfudenf Council 4: Class Offices 4 lTreas. Isf Term: Sec. 2nd Terml, Gargoyle Club 4 llVlgr.l7 Eoofball Dance Com- miffee 4: Mid-Winfers Dance Commiffee 4. Ralph is fhe Iiffle fellow who played Varsify fullbaclc fhis year and hurled his I37 pounds af ZOO pound opponenfs. If doesn'f seem possible fhaf a fellow of RocIcy's size could sfop fhose big fellows in fheir fraclcs, buf he diol fhis re- marlcably well. In .appreciafion of his undying fighf and loyalfy his feam-mafes elecfed him capfain of fhe '34 eleven. This is probably fhe greafesf afhlefic honor obfainable af LEA. This, however, is only a small parf of fhe name fhaf Ralph has made for himself here. In acldifion he is an offi- cer of fhe Senior Class and a member of fhe Sfudenf Coun- cil, which shows fhaf his abilifies are nof confined fo afh- lefics alone. We will always remember Ralph for his dash- ing Paclcard and his unbeafable argumenfs: and, moreover, his all-around pleasing personalify. We will always say fhaf he is a real genfleman and a frue friend. PAUL l-TUNTLEY RYCKOFF '34-'35 Black Club NOrThwesTern VarsiTy Tennis 4: VarsiTy Swimming 47 Black BaskeTball 4. Awl YOu're crazy. The diTTerenTial OT a STUTZ is shaped like an oblong box and has a worm gear. Thus The auTo- mobile encyclopedia OT The school inTorms some unwary debaTer over auTomobiles ThaT he is slighTly misTaken. Any quesTions concerning auTOmobiles ThaT are TlaunTed in TronT OT Paul are sure To be answered. For a liTTle while aT The TirsT OT The year, Sned and his proverbial sTinkers goT The besT OT him. Lafer he goT The besT OT The Physics, buT he has yeT To ouTdO Shed, AlThOugh Paul is nOT very acTive in aThleTics, he manages To receive a greaT deal OT aTTenTiOn as a resulT OT his jokes which aT Times are iusT a TriTle On The sTale side. LPA sTamps him wiTh The label OT swell guy. WILLIAM WARREN SCHUETTE '34-'35 Orange Club Wisconsin VarsiTy FooTball 4. From a Tamily OT illusTrious aThleTes comes one Bill SchueTTe OT lvlaniTowoc, Wisconsin. On The TirsT day ThaT he came ouT Tor TOOTball pracTice, we knew Thai' some TirsT- sTringer would be playing second-sTring. Sure enough, in a very Tew days Bill was playing TirsT-sTring end. ln The Ameri- can College game Bill received a broken leg which kepT him ouT Tor The resT OT The season. Bill, ouTside OT being a sTar aThleTe, is by Tar The mosT cheerTul and The besT naTured Tellow On The campus. Sned's Physics holds no Tear Tor Bill, and his name is oTTen Tound on The honor roll. LeT's give a hearTy send-OTT To a swell genT. JOI-IN HOWARD SEYMOUR '34-'35 Orange Club Arizona VarsiTy BaskeTball 4: VarsiTy Track 47 VarsiTy GOIT 43 SpecTaTor STaTT 4. LasT Tall BaTavia, Illinois, senT us I-Iowie-The-Adonis. RighT Trom The sTarT he began To gain a repuTaTion Tor being one oT The besT dressed Tellows on The campus. The sheik excels in baskerball, where his six TeeT Two inches are used To a greaT advanTage. Seymour seems To live Tor week-ends and vacaTions, aT which Time he can ioin his parTner-in-crime, Bill O'NeiII, an alumnus oT LFA. I-Iowie is a charTer member oT The infirmary graTTers' club, which is a rapidly growing or- ganizaTion. I-Iis only Trouble came Trom Physics and Shed, who declares ThaT The Adonis is The dumbesT yeT. We hope as he goes To college ThaT he will remember ThaT There is a common bond beTween us ThaT begins buT does noT end aT LFA. ELMER DALE SI-IAFFER '3I-'35 Black Club Kenyon VarsiTy l:ooTball 3, 4: VarsiTy Track 3, 4: VarsiTy Tennis 3, 45 LighTweighT BaskeTball 4 lIvlgr.l7 BanTamweighT BaskeT- ball I lMgr.l: Black FooTbalI I, 21 Black BaskeTbaII 3, 4: Black Swimming I: Black Baseball 4: Black Track 3, 41 SpecTaTor STaTT 27 SpecTaTor Board 3 lBus. Mgr.l, 4 lBus. Mgr.l7 Gar- goyle Club 4i Glee Club 3, 47 Follies 3, 47 Caxy STaTT 4. I wanT ThaT you should be my Tra-a-an. WiTh This we are inTroduced To This characTer, Mr. Elmer EllsworTh Dale ShaTTer oT Chicago and LexingTon, Ky. Four years ago our Dale, a chubby lad oT ThirTeen, enTered The premises To be- come a sTudenT aT Lake ForesT Academy. LiTTle did we realize Then ThaT we had wiTh us a TuTure Tackle Tor The VarsiTy and an all-round good Tellow. Yes, Dale is now all oT ThaT and more, Tor he has been a greaT aid To lvlr. Tucker in The Gargoyle Club and a prominenT member of The Track squad. Oh, yes, and iT you wanT any dope on The horses, here's your man-he's given many a good Tip. AlThough Dale has noT been TorTunaTe enough consisTenTly To evade nighT sTudy hall, he has done quiTe well in his sTudies, so much so in TacT, ThaT we are willing To place our beT on him as a success in college. And so, wiTh a parTing goobye, we sincerely wish good luck To ShaITe, a swell Tellow. FREDRICK SMTTT-l '34-'35 Orange Club Ohio Wesleyan Varsily Track 43 Lighlweighl Foolball 4, Lighlweighl Baskelball 41 Boxing 4. From Circleville, Ohio, which some people laughingly say is localed somewhere in Ohio, comes Snake-l-lips Smilh. Freddie lold us when he came lhal he wasn'l much ol a slu- denl bul he sho lacked lo hev a good lime. lvlr. Overclorl will back us up when we say lhal Freddie is nol lhe besl ol sludenls, as sludenls go: bul lvlr. Jensen will vouch lhal Freddie is lhe laslesl lhing lhal ever gol inlo a loolball suil. Many limes lasl lall lhe lillle lella had us on our leel as he lore oll one ol lhe speclacular runs which helped make lhe Lighlweighl leam an undelealed one. Track is one ol Freddie's olher lavoriles where he consislenlly showed his heels lo opposing dash-man. JOHN LAWRENCE STEELE '33-'35 Orange Club Darlmoulh Varsily Track 3, 4: Varsily Tennis 41 Lighlweighl Foolball 4i Lighlweighl Baskelball 43 Orange Track 3, 47 Follies 4. This lacilurn and persevering lad is a member ol lhe day-sludenl crew. l-lowever, Johnny is nol as quiel as he appears. The name ol Sleele has long been lhe lerrilying name which molhers use lo quell lhe crying ol lheir babies. Like all clay sludenls he is an elusive bird, and il is only occasionally lhal we gel a glimpse ol him: however, lrom whal we see ol him, we are aware lhal he is immaculale in his dress and precise in his sludies. Aboul lhe campus his ardor lor lhe Orange cause and his genialily have made him one ol lhe lew lellows wilhoul an enemy. We all wish him success. STEWART LEE STILES '34-'35 , Orange Club Wisconsin VarsiTy Eoofball 47 Varsify BaskeTball 4: VarsiTy Track 47 VarsiTy Baseball 4. This year The Academy acquired anoTher STiles Trom The Green Bay wilds, much To The approval of everyone. Hav- ing had a broTher here before him, STu was raTher familiar wiTh The school and made rapid sTr'ides Towards becoming one of The mosT likeable Tellows on campus. STu was a Spar- Tan on our weak TooTball squad This Tall and was one of The main TacTors for The Team doing as well as iT did. BaskeTball was ano+her one of his chief inTeresTs in which he sTarred consisTenTly. However, his acTiviTies were diversified, for he Took greaT pains wiTh his sTudies. All in all, he had a very successful year, and we're sorry we could noT have him wiTh us for a longer period oT Time. However, we wish him all The luck in The world aT Wisconsin and hope ThaT he conTinues To be as successful There as he has been here. SAMFORD PHILLIPS STOLL '34-'35 Black Club Universify of Chicago VarsiTy Swimming 41 Black BaskeTball 41 Golf 4. From The sunny souTh, ThaT is SouTh Chicago, comes Sam SToll. Sam, early in The TirsT Term, gained The repuTaTion of being The King of nighT sTudy hall and has won undispuTed TiTle To iT. Sam had The sympafhy of The school when iT was learned ThaT he had The misforTune To be Taking Three sub- iecfs from Pop Overdorf liT you know a worse TorTure, Tell Sam abouT iTl. Besides having To worry abouT Pop, Sam has To ward off Bill WebsTer, a self-appoinTed SToll-Tor- menTor. Bill's consTanT Tormenfing someTimes geTs Sam down buT never ouT, and before The year is over we hope To see The Tables Turned. DespiTe The TacT ThaT Sam lives in Remsen, he has refained his genTlemanly TraiTs and has noT fallen inTo Their peculiar and someTimes shocking diversions. ARTHUR CLIFFORD SULLIVAN, JR. '32-'35 Black Club PrinceTon VarsiTy BaskeTbaIl 4 IAss'T Mgr.l7 LighTweighT FooT- ball 3 llvlgnl, 4: BanTamweighT BaskeTball 2: Black BaskeT- ball 3: Black BaskeTbalI 3, 4: Glee Club 43 Homecoming CommiTTee 4. Who is ThaT busy man wi+h The gIin+ in his eyes? lT's none oTher Than lvlrs. Sullivan's lil boy, Sully. Poor Grandma LandreTh, who lived underneaTh him, was in dire disTress all year Tor Tear ThaT Sully's coal mine would lead iTs bur- rower inTo his room. Nobody knows iusT whaT all This dig- ging was abouT buT Sully: so we all hoped Tor The besT. Sully had a greaT many Troubles This year, including his eIaboraTe Telephone sysTem and his IeTTers To The Tair damsels oT Lake Shore Drive. Sully is The originaTor oT mosT oT our campus sayings, and his wiT is unexcelled. LeT iT never be said ThaT a Sullivan ever pulled an aged ioke, is one oT his adages, and This always holds True. In all seriousness, Though, ArT is a clever and cheerTul lad, and we know he'Il be appre- ciaTed aT PrinceTon. JOHN EDWARD SULLIVAN, JR. '34-'35 Black Club Fordham VarsiTy FooTball 4: VarsiTy BaskeTball 47 VarsiTy Track 41 VarsiTy Baseball 4. Approaching in The disTance, like The sound oT a Train, is a dull roar. Soon Three large cars roll Through The campus and sTop beTore an ancienT ediTice. Jack sTeps ouT easily and accosTs us, Say, is dis here de Academy? This phrase easily idenTiTies Junior. Though by now he has IosT much oT his WesT-side accenT, he sTill reTains his TighTing Irish spiriT, which readily showed up on The aThIeTic Tield. Besides prov- ing himselT adequaTe academically, Jack played a swell game oT TooTball and baskeTball. In addiTion, he has a genial characTer, he is easy To make Triends wiTh, and he has a consTanT sense oT humor. GEORGE MARTIN SUS I '33-'35 Orange Club Yale VarsiTy Baseball 3, 4: VarsiTy Tennis 4: Orange Baseball 3, 47 STudenT Council 4: Class OTTices 4 lVice-PresidenT 2nd Terml: SocieTas l-lonorum 3, 4: Caxy STaTT 47 Glee Club 4: Homecoming CommiTTee 4, IT anyone were To ask us who made The mosT progress in LFA, we would say lVlarTy Sus. lvlarTy has been wiTh us only Two years, buT has held posiTions such as Vice-PresidenT oT The Senior Class and has been a member oT The STudenT Council. l-lowever, These are only a Tew oT lvlarTy's accom- lolishmenTs. Georges accomplishmenTs on The aThleTic Tield are varied. l-le was a member oT The VarsiTy Baseball Team and VarsiTy Tennis Team. You would be Tain To Think ThaT George goes in only Tor sloorTs and exTra-curricular acTivi- Ties, buT This is noT The case. l-le has been on The honor roll consisTenTly. We wish The all-round good Tella lolenTy oT success. FRANK WYLLIE TAYLOR '34-'35 Orange Club Cornell Orange l:ooTball 47 Orange BaskeTball 41 Orange Track 4: SpecTaTor STaTT 4. l-lere is Frankie-The liTTle-known man oT indusTry. Frankie resides on TourTh Tloor EasT where he keeps his neighbors Trom sTarving by Throwing Teeds. IT is known ThaT Frank is somewhaT OT a Tumbler-ThaT is, he and his Triend l-luey spend a greaT deal oT Time aT iT, wheTher They Tumble or iusT Tall is noT exacTly known. lT seems Thaf Frankie is also some- whaT OT a TormenTor-ThaT is, he sees To iT ThaT Gus GriTTin has a good Time in Sned's Physics class. Some day his luck will Turn Though-ThaT is, Sned will Turn Trom The board and caTch Frank in The midsT oT his pranks, and Then-l Anyway, in spiTe oT l:rank's impishness, we will long remember him Tor his Tun-loving and genial characTer. JOHN MONTAGUE TEEVAN '3l-'35 Black Club Princefon Varsify Foofball 45 Varsify Swimming 2, 3, 4: Black Foof- ball 37 Black Swimming l, 23 Sociefas l-lonorum I, 2, 3, 47 Specfafor Sfaff 2, 3, 43 Gargoyle Club 3, 4: Black Debafe 2, 3, 4. The mufual admirafion sociefy of Teevan and Teevan now breaks up by fhe deloarfure of our own Teevie, fhe boy wifh fhe irrepressible sense of humor. Monfy refurned fo fhe second floor of Soufh Hall fhis year in order fhaf Dr. Shank mighf nof have foo difficulf a job in managing fhe boys who reside fhere. Teev can usually be found in someone else's room eifher arguing abouf fhe governmenf or punning in his own inimifable fashion. Teevan, lvl., combines high grades wifh good fun and parficipafion in afhlefics, having been a member of bofh fhe Varsify foofball and swimming feams. Good luck, Teev-and keep smiling. EARLE BROOK WCKERY, JR. '33-'35 Black Club Duke Varsify Golf 3, 4: Lighfweighf Baskefball 4 llvlgr.lI Orange Baskefball 3 llvlgnlg Specfafor Sfaff 3, 4. To all his friends Vic is known as fhe man fo come fo for advice of all kinds for all occasions. l-le possesses fhaf valu- able qualify of knowing whaf fo do af a cerfain fime. Be- cause of fhis qualify, af LPA he will be long lasfing, because of his sincerify and appreciafion of friendship. l-le has made very greaf sfrides in his sfudies during fhe fwo years he has been here. As well as sfudies, his oufside acfivifies have been very large in number. Some of Vic's big momenfs were his almosf daily leffers from Kenosha and his weekly frips fo Chicago. Vic says fhaf he wenf fo see fhe docfor, buf we have our own ideas abouf fhaf, and fhey don'+ seem fo cue in wifh Vic's. Vic may be a bad graffer, buf he's a good golfer and a swell fellow, so fhaf makes up for if. 2 QW A HJ DAVID MORSE WEAD '34-'35 Orange Club Michigan Orange Debale 43 Tumbling 4. Bur always remember, aeroplanes can land in frees. Tlius we bear Dave debaling on llie gueslion Will llwe Aeroplane Replace llwe Aulomobileff' in Dr. Slnanlcs Englisli Four class. We won'r go inJro llie resulls ol lliis argument bu+ Dave really sliines wl'ien il comes lo Open Forum discussions, llial is, wlien lie doesnur lall oul ol bis cliair. Dave, lwowever, lias a bad laull-llnal' ol reminding lvlaslers llial lliey lnave lor- gollen lo give a quiz lal leasl so says llie lourlli period English Hislory classl. Wlwen Dave graduales lliis year, we will be losing a lellow willn a rare frail-a conlinual ' 'vd disposilion. Orange Club Varsily lzoolbal I -L .,L,anl 3, 4: Orange Foolb. X J: Orange Basel ball 3, 4. A liearly laugln accompanied by a clweery l-li-Boys, and Big Bill Websler is once again among a group of lnis many lriends. Webby is one ol llwe lriendliesl, lwappiesl boys on llie campus, and liis congenial manner bas gained liim many pals. Bill is an all-round allilele, being a liglnling cenler on Jrlie Varsily loolball learn, a snappy second baseman on llwe baseball club, and a valuable assel lo llwe baslcelball sguad. Tliis is an allilelic record lo be proud ol, Bill lives in Soulln Hall, wliere lne greally aids lvlr. Jensen in lceeping peace and guiel. Webby liails from l-loopeslon, lllinois, and possesses llwal good old lllinois spiril which will carry liim lar in llie lulure. LCDWER CLASS GFFICERS JUNHOR CLASS WARD 5. 630014, Pres7demL PIERRE B. AIMAN, Vicefpresidenlr HARRIS B. HAYWOQD, Secrerery CHARLES NCJRMAN, Treasurer OMORE CLASS xerl ew. Eden? CN JOHNSON. Vice-Presidenr AUL A. ELORIAN, Secrefary HALLOCI4 B. HQFFMAN, Treawrer FRESHMAN CLASS GECJRCQE NN. YQUNG, JR.. Rresidemk HCMER H. JOHNSON, Viceepresidermlr WARD C. PEARL, JR., Secrerery HAMILTQN S. RCDSS. Treasurer ' 'nv gn Q ii, ',Ai'1 ' u N m'g J r' wr FourTh Row-Berkson, Rendell, W., SToll EpsTein, Seaborne, Ross, G., HenTges, Third Row-Russell, HuTchinson, R., Wacker, Cook, STiles, J., Leech, Sherer, EusTice Norman SmiTh, C. Second Rowe-Burdick, Leishman, HuTchinsOn, Vogl, Haywood, H., Aubrey, Walker. Kallis, Aiman. FirsT Row-Morrison, STern, McCurdy, Lernbcke, LiTTleTield, Vail, Keller, Fox, ATlass, Rause. JUINIICDR CLASS This year we began To have more OT a Teeling OT responsibiliTy. We realized ThaT we were The coming leaders and ThaT now was The Time To develop Those leadership characTerisTics. This year many members OT our class sTepped inTo posiTions OT prominence, and They Tilled Them To The besT OT Their abiliTy. Ward Cook, our presidenT, represenTed us on The Council. We were ably represenTed by Ward Cook and Harris Haywood in The Gargoyle producTion, TNhaT Happened To Jones. Many Juniors gained prominence in The realm OT aThleTics. Many received varsiTy leTTe-rs in TooTball, baskeTball, baseball, and swimming: and The maioriTy OT The lighTweighT Teams were composed OT Juniors. Many OT us who played lighTweighT baskeTball lasT year Tound places on The championship varsiTy baskeTball Team. Tennis, gOlT, and Track also Tound us playing imporTanT parTs. We Teel ThaT we are ready To uphold The name OT LPA nexT year in whaTever The sporT may be. This year The Junior Prom was one OT The gayesT and mosT successTul dances. We learned a greaT deal Trom managing This parTy, and we know ThaT The experience will be valuable To us nexT year when we have To manage The oTher dances. The publicaTions, The Caxy and The SpecTaTor, were well aided by a Tew TalenTed members OT our class, who showed ThaT They had The abiliTy in The Tield OT iournalism. The Follies and musical clubs gave many OT our classmen Their opporTuniTies To make a good showing, and They made The mosT OT Them. The percenTage OT honor sTudenTs was high, which speaks well Tor The Juniors as Tar as scholasTic sTanding is concerned. We Teel, aTTer The record OT This year, ThaT we are ready To Take over The responsibiliTies OT leading The school To anOTher successTul year-we, The class OT '36, are prepared. 4-rvgi, mr 1 'xV'N .W-5- -5'-il A ' Wg. in J' 'P I 'Ye 'if' if Second Row-Preus. Johnson, T.. Wampler, Bobbe, Nell, Coale, l-loliman, Burch. Firsl Rowflirehm, Dana, Loeb, Bliss, Teevan, J., Guy, Lipperl, Armour, Florian, Raymond. SCDPHCDMCDRE CLASS As our second year al LPA passes on, we begin lo realize whal privileges and opporlunilies are ours il only we slrive lo make use ol lhem. We can say, wilhoul conceil, lhal we have improved greally in our lwo years al lhe Academy. We have learned lhe value ol hard work and lhe benelil we laler receive lrom il. We are looking lorward wilh greal eagerness and anlicipalion lo our lhird year when we really begin lo lake over our responsibililies in lhe running ol lhe school. Our class has many boys who look promising in leadership abilily: and we, as a class, hope lo develop sullicienlly lo give lhem lhe backing and supporl necessary lor a successlul Senior year. We have many aims, hopes, and goals, which mainly concern having a successlul Senior year pree ceding our enlrance lo college. Vwfe realize lhal lhe experiences lhal we are going lhrough al lhe presenl lime will be benelicial lo us in lhe years lo come: so we are making lhe besl ol lhem. We are laking advanlage ol lhe opporlunilies exlended lo us in lhe lorm ol exlra-curricular aclivilies, such as lhe Caxy, Speclalor, Gargoyle Club, Follies, and Glee Club. Qur class presidenl, Gene Dixon Guy, has been appoinled lfdilor-in-chiel ol lhe '36 Speclalor Slall, 'lhis is a rarily, as lhal posilion is usually lilled by a Senior. Qur class made a ralher good showing in alhlelics, as many ol our members were on alhlelic leams, includ- ing lhe varsily loolball and lhe championship baskelball squads. We leel lhal we have done our share lhis year and likewise beneliled lrom il, and we are ready lo lace whalever may come. Second Row-Allen, Whipple, Bolin, Peabody, J, P., Peabody, S. A.. Fleischrnann. Livingsfon, Firsf Row-Mandel, Casfle, Conon, Holden Sfiles, G., Ross, l-l., Pearl, Johnson, H. l-T., Buehler. FIQESI-IMAN CLASS Nearly every successful man has had a humble beginning and has risen fo success by conscienfious work, diligenfly underfaken. The Freshman class is on fhis basis af Lake Foresf Academy. Unbounded opporfunify awaifs fhem if fhey will buf puf forfh fhe efforf and co-operafe in fhe besf inferesfs of fhe class. The course sef for fhe following fhree years of preparafory life is defermined in fhe freshman year. The beginning of fhe fresh- man year is like a ship seffing sail for a disfanf porf. If fhe course is sef righf and fhe ship guided wifh a sfeady hand, fhe ship will reach ifs porf safely, wifh a successful voyage behind if. The Freshman class of l935 did nof appear fo be one of any exfraordinary promise af fhe oufsef of fhe year. As fime passed, however, and fhe school year was well half over, if was noficed fhaf falenf and inifiafive of some degree were presenf in fhe class. The Senior class always pays parficular affenfion fo fhe Freshman class, as fhey know fhaf evenfually fhis class will be fhe imporfanf class af LFA. Fufure councilors, class officers, afhlefes, and honor sfudenfs are in fhis class. lf will be some years before fhey will reach fhese sfafions or rungs on fhe ladder of fame, and we hope fhaf fhe Seniors of fhis year will come back from fime fo fime fo see whaf develop- menf and whaf hopes have been fulfilled for fhem. The Freshman class has shown fhaf if has fhe maferial from which fufure men may be moulded. This class has greaf possiloilifies and promise in all fhe various acfivifies which go fo make up preparafory school life. SCDCIETAS l-ICDNCDRUM Every year Tor The pasT Tour, during which The New Plan has been in use, more and more Tellows have succeeded in making The SocieTas l-lonorum. This is probably The mosT accuraTe baromeTer oT The success oT The Richards New Plan, and The inspiraTion and earnesTness wiTh which The boys are doing Their work are The resulTs oT This. The New Plan, Tounded by lvlr. Richards aT Lake ForesT, was indeed a greaT sTep Torward in The Tield oT learning. lvlr. Richards and The members oT The TaculTy should be highly praised Tor Their unTiring eTlorTs To make iT The success ThaT iT is. The plan consisTs oT a change in The arrangemenT oT classes so ThaT The periods roTaTe and sTagger. By This meThod a sTudenT, Tor Tour weeks in succession, never has The same class The same period each day in each OT The Tour weeks. ln This way no single subiecT will have preTerence over any oTher, as iT is a well-known TacT ThaT cerTain periods are more advanTageous To individual sTudenTs Than are oThers. SelT-Responsible periods come Tor each subiecT one nighT ouT oT every week. One hour and ThirTy minuTes oT work is assigned To be done wiThouT any ouTside aid. The Tollowing day There is a TesT given on The ground covered in The SelT-Responsible. The second halT oT every class is devoTed To quieT direcTed sTudy. l-lere a sTudenT is able To do his nexT day's lesson and ask quesTions abouT ThaT which he does noT undersTand. ln This way The sTudenT is able To avoid being delayed in his homework by one minor problem. The TacT ThaT every class is well represenTed in The socieTy, The Seniors having The greaTesT number. shows ThaT This plan is successful ThroughouT Tor all ages and classes. ThaT iT is excellenT Tor college preparaTion may be clearly shown by The unusually high record oT Those boys who have graduaTed during The pasT Tour years, even Trom The middle and lower porTions oT Their class. This, however, is no sign ThaT The requiremenTs are easy, Tor a Tellow musT have a second honor-roll sTanding Tor a whole Term. This is no simple Task, Tor iT means ThaT he musT mainTain an average oT eighTy or beTTer. l-ligh TribuTe musT be paid To all Those Tellows who have aTTained This honor Tor excellenT work. Second Row-Fox, Crowe, Wacker, Bobbe, Lipperf, Epslein, Teevan, J., lvlunnecke Sus. Firsf RowAl?ober+s Klee Slnles J Guy I-lufclwinson, Burdick, Duncan, Livinqsfon. Sliles, G. ROLL Andersen, G. Arlass Beauiean Bobbe Crowe Derflinger Epslein Dickson Duncan Fox Florian Gelall Griffin Guy l-lolliman l-lurcninson Keller Klee Lipperi Livinqslon Long Morrison Munnecke Preus Roberfs Russell Sliles, G. Sfiles, J. Sus Teevan, J. Teevan, M Wacker ACTIVITIES STUDENT GOVERNMENT For many years, now, nearly all The nafions of The world have been governed by a democrafic form of governmenfq and, on The whole, This form of governmenf has proved To be successful. Here also aT Lake EoresT Academy our own form of democrafic or sTudenT governmenf has proved To be very successful. The sTudenT governing body, which is selecfed by The popular voTe of The sTudenTs, is called The Sfudenf Council. The elecTion of The Councilors and Council officers is held aT The beginning of each Term. The number of members of This governing body is limifed To Twelve, Ten of whom are chosen from The boarding sTudenTs and Two of whom are chosen from The day sfudenfs. WiTh a Councilorship There is affached no special privileges. However, more Than ever before, a fellow who has been chosen as a Councilor has To be on his guard, because he is open To greaT crificism af all Times for his behavior and aTTiTude. Each fellow, before he becomes a Councilor officially, is asked if he wishes To serve on The Council, so ThaT he may secrefly decline if he feels so disposed. The many and varied dufies of These boys are: firsT, To supporf The school rules: and secondly, To discuss and consider any quesTions which may arise concerning The sTudenT body as a whole. lf is also The duTy of The Councilor To reporT breaches of imporTanT rules To The Council. The Council iTself works enfirely independenfly of The faculTy, buT co-operafes wiTh Them in any maTTer ThaT mighf arise ThaT concerns boTh The faculfy and The sfudenfs. Concerning school rules, The Council's purpose is To aid and To sef sTraighT again any sTudenT who has infringed a rule. ln This way, The case may be kepT from faculTy acTion, unless, of course, The case has gone beyond The power of The Council or unless The Council cannof reach any conclusion. The Council works very efficienfly and effecTively and offen Triumphs in maTTers where The faculfy has no power. This body, The Sfudenf Council, is an essenfial and beneficial organizafion in The school. , To be elecfed To The STudenT Council is considered a greaT honor. lT shows This boy ThaT his fellow sTudenTs TrusT and respecf him. In addiTion, a Councilor musT have all The various qualifies of leadership: common sense: The abilify To disfinguish beTween righf and wrong: school spirifp and, above all, friendliness and co-operafion. WiThouT The co-operafion of all The school, The Council would be a complefe failure. Thus, To be elecfed a member of The STudenT Council aT Lake Foresf Academy noT only gives The member a greaf experience wiTh differenf Types of people, buT also besfows upon him a greaT honor. Second Row-Dresch, Munnecice, Sfiles, S., Hufchinson, Duncan, Cook, Sus, Rockwood, Keller. Firsf Row-Crowe, Minney, Flack, Cherry, Roberis, Schueife, Kneibler. Presidenf ...,.. Vice-Rresidenr .... ,.., Secreia ry ....,. Sergeanfvai-Arms Firsf Term Herbe-rr N. Flack ,Charles S. Roberfs Roger A. Crowe David G. Minney, Jr. Second Term Herberi N. Flack David G. Minney, Jr. Roger A. Crowe Arlrhur R. Kneibler, Jr. Third Term Walier L. Cherry Vv'ilIiam W. Schueire Arfhur R. Kneibler, Jr. VVilliarn Y. Huichinson PUBLICATICNS AT The presenT Time Lake ForesT Academy has Two publicaTions. The yearbook, or annual, which is called The Caxy, is celebraTing iTs Silver Anniversary This year. The derivaTion oT The name Caxy is explained in The TronT oT This book. The school paper which is issued every Three weeks is called The SpecTaTor. This name was Taken Trom The SpecTaTor oT Joseph Addison and Richard STeele, Tamous Tor Hs Sir Roger de Coverley Papers. The SpecTaTor has a Board oT eighT sTudenTs and a sTaTF oT approximaTely TwenTy. The purposes oT The SpecTaTor are many. lTs main aim is, oT course, To presenT The news of The school. H gives a compleTe and concise accounT oT all aThleTic conTesTs and maTches. The paper has a liTerary secTion which includes book reviews wriTTen by The sTudenTs. The l-lonor Rolls appear in The Spec aT The end oT every monTi'i. The ediTorial page, in addiTion To ediTorials, conTains a column called The Hall of Fame, wherein appears picTures oT, and arTicles concerning, prominenT Seniors. A new column was conceived This year called The DeerpaTh Review. This sTrip dealT wiTh currenT movies appear- ing aT The Lake ForesT TheaTer and proved To be very popular. The paper conTains an alumni page which gives news oT prominenT alumni in college and elsewhere. AT Mid-WinTers a picTorial ediTion was issued, which included picTures of all Mid-WinTer acTiviTies. There has been a marked improve- menT in The SpecTaTor This year: The FaculTy Adviser, Dr. Shank, and The EdHor, l-luTchinson, should be greaTly complimenTed on Their successTul producTion. The purpose oT The Caxy, as oT all annuals, is To serve as a reminder oT prep-school days in TuTure years. lT also serves a greaTer purpose, buT only To Those who are acTive in creaTing iT. There are many advanTages To be gained Trom serving on The Caxy STaTT. OT course, The ediTorial sTaTT learns some of The Tiner poinTs oT composiTion, buT There is more Than ThaT. Members oT The sTaTT learn' how To work wiTh oTher people, and The Board gains execuTive experience. The business sTaTi members, in Their quesT oT adverTisemenTs, make conTacTs and learn To meeT people. This year, being The Silver Anniversary oT The Caxy, The Board has done iTs uTmosT To produce a book worThy oT The TiTle oT Silver Anniversary EdiTion. We naTurally have Tried To publish a book ThaT will appeal To every one. We wish To Take This opporTuniTy To Thank all Those who have been insTrumenTal in making This book a success, Tor This yearbook demanded a greaT deal oT care in prepara- Tion. We hope ThaT iT will be kepT Tor years To come so ThaT each and every sTudenT will have some- Thing To reTresh his memories oT The good Times oT The pasT. Now ThaT The work is nearly over, This Senior Board is very sorry ThaT iT cannoT look Torward To anoTher year oT This greaT experience. So we leave This annual, The Silver Anniversary Caxy, hoping ThaT iT will be worThy oT The school whose name iT bears. f af 2 M 'W M '51 if :', gf '-,,,, ei' ' fa V' ' S n V23 , K K My A 4 'K i Y I , . 4. .lu 4 , A . ri J My . W , K4 . . . ., af , .L 5 ax fy 7 ' can-N' - M M j 5 . Qh l :: m 2: 1 W i , ' ' 8 K 2 if 4 J iii I I ,i, , an 49 Aa .LK .yr pf N L ' f ,H i 'S A .- 3 , v F , , i s 'f ,V Q., ' ,, W, ,myky 4-w 5 ' ,. t 4 ff, f E33 tfv -I Q V v N. M' , V57 V1 5 .Adi Q-fig ' S 'W js. 2 H W 5, V L I' Q' 1 MM W, , .- , K ' : H F , f F-, X 'l X N - M 17 W M '- f 'ff Qwfggixf I ' ' s253QE5g1J?g1Q,f', 'mv , it H ,LAV , W X V ,Q W 144 w W , ff if x rf M ORATOIQV OraTory is represenTed in Tive ways aT Lake EoresT Academy: by Public Speaking periods oT all English Classes, DebaTe, The SenaTe, The DeclamaTion ConTesT, and Senior Chapel Speaking. Knowing how To speak in public is a greaT asseT, and every Tellow should geT some kind oT experience aT iT. These Tour Torms oT public speaking are all diTTerenT Trom each oTher, so ThaT each sTudenT has a good choice Trom which To selecT his TavoriTe Type oT speaking. Public speaking is also conducTed in con- necTion wiTh all English classes. The debaTing Teams meT wiTh bad luck This year. JusT as They were going To begin research aT The Lake EoresT Library, The school was confined To The campus because oT measles. As a resulT oT This, The annual Orange and Black debaTe was puT OTF unTil Sunday, May l2Th. As This book goes To press beTore ThaT daTe, we will have To give The prospecTs insTead oT The resulTs. The Teams are coached by Mr. OverdorT, who excells in public speaking himselT, being a member oT boTh The Illinois and Pennsylvania Bar AssociaTions. The Black Team is made up oT Colangelo, Dorwin, Guy, ShaTTer, STiles, and Teevan, while Their worThy opponenTs, The Oranges, are Cherry, Crowe, Flack, Rendell, Vogl, and Wead. The quesTion Tor debaTe is-Resolved: ThaT The UniTed STaTes governmenT should cancel The Allied War debT conTracTed To carry on and To conclude The World War. The Oranges are The aTTirmaTive and will probably build Their argumenT upon The Three Tollowing poinTs: l. U. S. should cancel Tor moral reasons: 2. Tor economic reasons: 3. Tor poliTical reasons. The Blacks in The negaTive will probably build Their argumenT upon The Tollowing Three poinTs: I. moral obligaTions are noT impelling reasons: 2. economic reasons do noT necessiTaTe cancellaTion: 3. poliTical reasons do noT iusTiTy cancellaTion. The main speeches will lasT Tor Ten minuTes, while The rebuTTal speeches will be Three minuTes each. AT The presenT Time The iudges have noT been chosen, so we say may The beTTer Team win. The SenaTe is composed oT TwenTy-one Seniors, They being The only ones eligible Tor membership. The SenaTe is an open-Torum discussion and meeTs every Sunday nighT aT 7:45 Tor an hour. The sub- iecTs Tor discussion are chosen by a commiTTee and posTed on The bulleTin board a Tew days prior To The convening. To add presTige To The meeTings, each member is supposed To be a SenaTor Trom a diTTerenT sTaTe oT The union. Mr. Tucker is TaculTy adviser To The organizaTion. IvlarTy Sus is presidenT, Rog Crowe is vice-presidenT, Chris Dresch is secreTary, Chuck RoberTs is Treasurer, and Herb Flack is sergeanT-aT-arms. There are Two DeclamaTion ConTesTs. The TirsT one is held during The TirsT Term and is called The Prince OT Peace ConTesT. The Two winners oT This are piTTed againsT The Two winners aT Ferry l-lall on The Tollowing Sunday nighT. Jean l-luTT won The preliminary This year, wiTh George Gaidzik a close second. ln The inTer-school conTesT, however, The TiTle was won by lvliss PaTricia Wilson Tor Ferry Hall. The oTher DeclamaTion ConTesT is held aT CommencemenT, and The prize is The l-lead- masTer's Cup. This conTesT, however, is kepT wiThin The school, The cup being presenTed aT. The Class Day Exercises. The idea oT Senior Chapel Speaking was conceived by lvlr. Richards a Tew yearsago and has been exceedingly popular ever since. Each morning Two diTTerenT Seniors Take over The exercises, one To conducT The religious parT and one To presenT his Topic oT The day. The speakers are encouraged To use buT Tew or no noTes ThaT They may learn To Think on Their TeeT and To acquire poise in speaking. Each English class has cerTain periods seT aside which are devoTed To public speech under The guidance and insTrucTion oT Dr. Shank. Thus each sTudenT many Times a year has Training and experience in public speaking. V if 'J V , I x V 3? Lf M , EW 'V f ,TW .V My 'R ., 'T 'V '11 ww 1 , .. ' V ,g VY V VV V1'1,,.WgV Lw1lVe VVV 'V' ' A ' ,H - - V ' V V VH V + QV :V V V,-. , w V' ,.,,VVV,fv , my V' ,V'VVV .fn V, ' V ' Vw .Vf:VVfVV+w'fg , A . 1 ,fs - .V , a ' V., V Q . VV ,-mvifx - , V'-. W Asif- . faq! -Mg Vw, V VV V V V , ,f .,mt.v, 'ASV-Vf N' V KV' ,'wsxy ' . 1 . -'Vi,r 'J .V 5 - V V V ' ' ff .-V 'V VV 1 V P V, W., - - V V .,fV.V,-ff MVQW1 ,fV,wV,. , Vw' - ff- -f mm. - X,- Vx . A 4 2 - 'r - . 4' V3 V' 'av if V 'L' . 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S W , 9 3,3 r ,, ,, a, ,ff M .V A V, , w ,VN 2 g wa , f5j-V, 'ia-gkjqfiiigg f1i:5j5iVViVgVx?3ii 3,52 ifx1i.WgwiV-u.5ig3g:,V4 51 N 1-. V j f ' A 1 'V A J V- 'qgw gVy,vV Vs gg L V , V V N -V e V V V VV 1 V - Vvwvkw' A -V V? 5 -MQW Q WK V - 'Ji VV - QV V, V, V . , V A 'V V V V M ' VV2f,gCf?225fi-V T s'vkz5V'wV -mi' V1 SM 1 , . -I V'V. I A fA3,yQ,5aV,V qfvhf My- 5 QAIQQ,-V 5, X Hwgt ,,A.L?.Vg1- ' ' Vx V ,V -We gf mf in Q, , . A ' V ,wy,?g:2,r ,Vf ffj5?V5T,VV5,, 5' V Wi . VM, . V,,VZVj5,,'b1gV'L'V , ,VeV,i,,.v ff: P , , ff ,7 ' V .1 i, , vi,,V,ifgf2igf,V2,m-xiE'2VV?2gfES?g22'1VffQf'?f'?aV11358 VVVV g35'f,VfQV1g,f24,3 , 3 V A A V V- f' ' DRAMATICS The Gargoyle Club of LPA represenfs our bid for dramafic prominence. Prominenf if is as exemplified by fhe many fine proclucfions fhaf have been sfaged in fhe pasf several years. The club has been very ably direcfed by Mr. Tuclcer for fhe lasf seven years. Being an accomplished acfor himself wifh experience in professional producfions and fhose of fhe Triangle Club of Princefon, he is a quife capable direcfor. Whaf Happened fo Jones - a farce comedy in fhree acfs-was presenfed before a large Mid- Winfers crowd in fhe Ferry l-lall Audiforium on Safurday, March second. The play dealf wifh fhe escapades of one Jones, a hymn-book salesman, who is posing as fhe Bishop of Ballaraf af fhe home of Ebenezer Goodley-a professor of anafomy. When fhe real Bishop arrives, fhe fun sfarfs. The ending was happy for all, and fhe audience applauded for many curfain calls. There were several of fhe casf who were oufsfanding. Dale Shaffer and l-larris Haywood as Mr. and Mrs. Goodley had fhe audience confinually in laughfer wifh fheir domesfic humor. Jaclc Derflinger I ,Bland- 2 ,, a if Q Q 5 2 is ' E L7 ' 'F i , is if ? K 3 ,f S 3 3 1 M Y R' 3 4, , A ? . I avg if Y k Q r 5 f ' 5 ' A A3 ,L 5 fi? V L xl qs r 3 L -' 'W 'y-' ,fig.., rsxfgr 1 fy A V S Q 4 KK it , Q, , Q ,v: I W, ii W 1 i , 'fl ' Y 1 H-vw-Q-Q-10,-uf..-.,,,,.h,,,, , W. A.,..L.W,fm...-..... V Q '! played The lead, having The parT of Jones, and did a Truly remarkable piece of acTing. George Gaidzik and Sam BenneTT upheld The sfar comedy rolls wiTh greaT success. Ralph Burch, The sfage manager, iT is needless To say, Turned in his usual flawless job. The Task of puTTing on This play was a difficulf one. Early in Ocfober Mr. Tucker held Try-ouTs for membership in The Club from which he selecTs The members of The casT. Pracfices sTarTed in November, and Things wenT well unTil February. AT This Time we began To have a skirmish wiTh scarleT fever: acTion was slowed up and There was much uncerTainTy as To when The Mid-Winfers fesTiviTies would occur: also Two parfs had To be assigned aT The lasT To Two sTudenTs who had noT even read The play. Mr. Tucker made a final aTTempT, Telling The fellows To forgeT everyfhing buf The play: Then sTarTed on a schedule of several rehearsals per day. The casT worked as They never had before. When The Time finally came for The producfion To go on before The audience, iT was indeed a finished producf. IT was unanimously agreed ThaT This play ranked among The besT ever To be given by The Gargoyle Club. FOLLIES A On Friday evening, March I, l935, a large, excifed, and eager Mid-Winfers crowd surged To be The firsT To see The laTesT of Mr. BarnfaTher's super producfions, namely: The VarieTies of l935. Mr. Barnfafher was ably assisfed in The producfion by Mr. ATwood. Various acTs were suggesfed and presenfed for The show by nearly every one. However, The besT of These applicanfs were Taken To be improved upon and Then presenTed, Up To The nighT ThaT The show was presenTed, The producers were holding Their breaThs and crossing Their fingers. Their fears were for naughT, Though, as a beTTer show has never been seen. The curfain rolled back wiTh a noise resembling ThaT of an ox-carT Tull of hoT Tamales Traveling loeTween Tia Juana and Mexico CiTy on a hoT day. The scene was laid in a barber shop, and in The only chair of said shop saT our WalT Cherry aTTended by The E. E. Dale Shaffer, suh. Their humor magnaTe number one-HerberT Norman Flack, Esq., came upon The scene in a loud and noisy manner. NoT good barber-shop harmony and a clash of slap-sTick ensued, and The scene ended. Scene Two found The Three vagabonds in SwiTzerland, cuTe, n'esT ce pas? They sang anofher exceedingly lousy song, and The curTain and The roof came down. The crowd picked Themselves up from The aisles and seTTled down for The nexT acT. Three sfooges-Messrs. Roberfs, BenneTT, and Haywood-and an aspiring sfooge wiTh an Hawaiian guifar produced boTh pleasanf singing and amusing humor. Their program was opened wiTh a number, Love is JusT Around The Corner, sung by The Three sfooges-liTTle sTooge having gone ouT for hamburgers. Scene Two of acT Two finds George Washingwell aT Valley Gorge. Wi+h The aid of sound equipmenf donafed by The Columbia Broadcasfing Company, George was given grounds for commenT on The Washingfon and New York mail plane. Mr. Overdorf, a Teacher of l'hisTorie- acienne eT moderne, as porTrayed by BenneTT-made his appearance. Wifh puns and coffee and remarks abouT Harvard, Pop goT along famously unTil one false move caused him To be done away wiTh, and The scene ended. This acT came To a close wiTh an excellenf rendifion of We've GoT Love and a Dime, by The Trio. The crowd goT back in The aisles, and The curTain fell down for The Third acT. This acT found The EasT Prefzel circuiT courT in session. Numerous masTers of Lake Eoresf Academy were broughT before The courT. The firsT case broughf The people versus T. T. Princefon Tucker. The Ia+Ter became inflamed during The inquiry abouT his Mayalayan Lama coaT and leTT The courT. Mr. Edward Double- lv1inT Milne was charged wiTh chewing gum. Edward L. was nonchalanf ThroughouT The proceedings and finally became so bored ThaT he lefT The courT. AfTer a brief courT recess, E. J. Sneddorf was charged wiTh numerous violafions. However, his consTanT iabbering abouT his summer home puT The judge, jury, and courT To sleep. NexT case broughf before The courf was Mr. Abe, l am a nighT owl, Edgworfh of Hillsboro, Ohio. Mr. Edgworfh denied all charges made by The prosecufing aTTorney. This ended The Eollies of '35. A good Time was had by boTh specTaTors and Those who Took parT in iT. Here's hoping we have one To equal iT nexT year. Third Row-Harmon, Andersen, 6. Llpperf, Sfiles G., Weed Holdpn. Second Row--Affass, Mr, Barnfafber, ML HQWEQ irsi Row--Bleief, Guy, K9Her, McVX!iHEams, Flack, Cherry, Shaffer, Bokum. MUSIC The Bells oT ST. Mary's .......... .,..........,. E mmeTT A. Adams Roger A. Crowe, '35 ChrisTian Dresch, '35 Dale ShaTTer, '35 William HuTchinson, '35 NeapoliTan Love Song ..... ......,............,..................,.... V icTor HerberT Roger A. Crowe, '35 One NighT oT Love .... .,..................., ,...... V i cTor ScherTzinger Dale ShaTTer, '35 MomenT Musical .,,.. ...........,.....,. .... O p . 94, No. 3, SchuberT and Prelude, ........... ......,... ....................... ..... O p . 28, No. 20, Chopin Charles Vogl, '36 Drink To Me Only wiTh Thine Eyes. . ......,.........,.. ...,...... O Id English Air Glee Club The Torpedo and The Whale ..,. .............. ,....... A u dran Glee Club Heidelberg lSTein Songl ..... ................. ,,.... G u sTav Luders Glee Club Alma MaTer ...,...... .,........,........ . ..McLeod Boyle, 'I4 Combined Clubs The above program is a reproducTion oT The one issued Tor The Mid-WinTers Musical Clubs Con- cerT. The Glee Club under The able direcfion oT Dr. Hugo Broeker presenTed a Tine program in almosT professional sTyle. For a while The organizaTion had Trouble geTTing under way, buT Dr. Broeker and leader HuTchinson soon overcame This diTTiculTy, and Tor The lasT Two weeks prior To Mid-WinTers received The uTmosT co-operaTion and aTTenTion. The resulT was a good program, many pleased lisTeners, and a saTisTied Glee'Club. Heidelberg lSTein Songl TeaTured incidenTal solos by Dale ShaTTer. AT The end oT This program The Glee Club led The audience in Fair Lake ForesT. A greaT deal oT rehearsing was required To prepare This program, and Dr. Broeker should be Thanked Tor his unTiring eTTorTs which Tinally produced such a splendid program. AT The presenT Time There are plans under way Tor a Three-day CommencemenT. IT These plans are realized, iT will probably mean anoTher perTormance by The Glee Club. The Caxy Board joins TogeTher in wishing Dr. Broeker and The members oT This organizaTion The besT success and may This enTerprise be as TruiTTul as The lasT. The members oT The club are as Tollows: FirsT Tenors Second Tenors FirsT Basses Second Basses Glenn Andersen, '40 Marvin Colangelo, '35 WalTer Fox, '36 WalTer Cherry, '35 WalTer Andersen, '36 William Connon, '39 George Keagy, '35 John Dana, '37 Roger Crowe, '35 Charles Dorwin, '35 John Keiler, '36 James GarneTT, '35 George Haywood, '35 ChrisTian Dresch, '35 James McCahey, '38 William HuTchinson, '35 Charles Norman, '36 David Minney, '35 John RuTledge, '36 ArThur Kneibler, '35 Charles RoberTs, '35 ArThur Sullivan, '35 John McWilliams, '35 Donald Russell, '36 Earle Vickery, '35 Dale ShaTTer, '35 Charles Vogl, '36 George Sus, '35 RoberT Walker, '36 The orchesTra was originaTed and direcTed by Mr. BarnTaTher. This organizaTion Took quiTe an imporTanT and sTrenuous parT in The Mid-WinTers Follies oT I935, playing Their own original arrange- menTs beTween scenes. The orchesTra also provided musical enTerTainmenT during several dinner hours in The dining room. The orchesTra has really done excellenTly This year considering The scarciTy of Time Tor pracTice. GreaT work, boys. We hope The orchesTra OT nexT year keeps up The good work. Piano, Saxophones, TrumpeT, Klee. HuTchinson Keller. Percussion, Cherry. Bass, Gaidzik. Leader. Mr. BarnTaTher. Violin, Vickery. VocalisT. Loeb. Haywood. H inn, g W E EQQQ., 4 :ma 5 N V P 1 in ' A I Af 43 ' , A ' ' X v..: V 'HQ' , V , , l15 fm Sw ' 4 ffm ' QL 2 , q,, ' , wiv? 75 ,Ji H, Ig A .,.k I .K A ,R E22 1 1 ff Y? gs f f Qs 2 5 W 2 VZ? f SL A ea, W 1 vu 4 YZ-V -' tk ,n ' 3 aff, ,, 'T 4 h . 5 .Q .s :- if 4 '15 7.1 1.. . 6 A , Q V, ,ga , , f. 7 ,fi , A ARTS AND CRAFTS During The pasT school year aT Lake ForesT Academy, a number OT inTeresTing prOiecTs have been Turned ouT OT The Tine arTs and The manual Training deparTmenTs. Under The supervision OT Mr. Leland ATwoOd, The Tine arTs deparTmenT has been greaTly developed. Mechanical drawing, Treehand draw- ing, painTing, and applied geomeTry are buT a Tew OT The Things ThaT have been done This year. Those having displays in The graphic arTs division were: Roger Crowe, John Dana, Frank l-luTchisOn, HOrTOn Johnson, Finley Leech, PeTer Malcolm, David Minney, Donald Murphy, ParliamenT Peabody, SanTorcl Peabody, John RuTledge, STuarT STiles, and Charles Wiggins. In The manual Training shop, direcTed by Mr. James PresTini, many new insTrumenTs have been added wiTh which To consTrucT The proiecTs designed in The arT class. A new laThe, capable OT Turning wood TwenTy inches in diameTer, has been insTalled, on which a large number OT Tine Trays and dishes, as well as lamps and bowls have been Turned. A meTal laThe Tor Turning dishes, a drill press wiTh dove- Tailing, rouTing, and morTising aTTachmenTs, and an elecTric sanding machine are a Tew OT The new implemenTs added To The shop This year. The exhibiTors in The manual arTs deparTmenT were: Milburn BuTler, ROberT l-leylmun, BurT l-luey, James McCahey, John McWilliams, Donald Russell, and Charles Seaborne. An original and unusual exhibiT was ThaT OT Eugene Head and Leslie ATlass. Their display was OT phoTographs. There was a greaT varieTy OT subiecTs, ranging Trom every day lighT bulbs To pieces OT driTTwOod On The shores OT Lake Michigan. On March TirsT, second and Third, when The Mid-WinTers FesTiviTies were being held, an excepTional exhibiT was given. The Tine arTs exhibiT included examples OT applied geOmeTry. Examples OT Treehand drawing and painTing aTTracTed much aTTenTion. The painTings were Trade-marks suggesTed Tor several OT The leading TransporTaTion lines OT The counTry. The main TeaTures OT The manual arTs exhibiT were Two rooms, each disTincTly Turnished. One room, a siTTing room, conTained Two easy chairs, a couch, a smoking sTand, and a bookcase. The designs OT These arTicles OT TurniTure were all original. The OTher room was a sTriking dining room. A Table, Tour chairs, and a chesT OT drawers were conTained in The room. The Table was seT wiTh wooden dishes and candle-sTick-holders. ln The l935 Chicago Flower Show, held aT The Navy Pier, April sixTh TO The TOurTeenTh, The original and uniquely designed dining-room Table, chairs and Tableware, which received so many Tavorable commenTs during Mid-WinTers here, won The Champion Special Award. This is The highesT award given in The Junior SecTiOn OT The Flower Show. A large display OT The arTs deparTmenT has been planned Tor The Three days during The Com- mencemenT Exercises. Already The boys Taking These courses are busy designing and building The new proiecTs. One prOiecT is a bookcase and a Tireplace combined: oThers are a coTFee sTand wiTh a mirror Top, Two lounge chairs, and a Table. The'Table is To be seT wiTh an original design OT wooden dishes. An aTTracTive salad ensemble has been compleTed, consisTing OT a Tray, mixing bowl, and eighT smaller bowls TO cOnTain The ingredienTs OT The salad. The Caxy has planned an exhibiT OT phoTOgraphic and graphic arT which exempliTies The Type OT work involved in producing This year's annual. UKIIUI Ili 4N...jN-,,,..3 D- I I X LU 1 LU I- Z 3 C3 E l LD Z 3 4 cz Q MODEL ROOM K. as 5 w.....wWf ' f , ,H-I' N, . qu. Y ' 'x 2 , 4 5 M, ' MUSE: K 7 x Yanni' ' ' ,, .w,.. ., ML -i S ,5 4- .MSS ,W ' ' K S- M 5 f is ,rf , . ' E X Q K Ny Q . X, a 5, V, W, X ,, zlfigriiiifiw, - fire, 5 X Q . , .f WTXVSQZ . liz, i , If ,wi . A , X x 'Hx we ' SGCIAI. SCDCIAI. EVENTS The social evenTs of The school year T934-'35 aT Lake EoresT Academy have meT wiTh greaT suc- cess. To head The long lisT came calling nighT aT Ferry Hall on SaTurday, OcTober TwelTTh. This inTormal dance was given by The TaculTy members of Ferry Hall so ThaT old acquainTances mighT be renewed and new ones made. ShorTly aTTer This on Thursday, OcTober sevenTeenTh, The Misses DoroThy and Merva Wilkins gave The TirsT of many delighTTul chocolaTe parTies. These parTies are always looked forward To by The old boys and give The new boys an opporTuniTy To become beTTer acquainTed wiTh every one. The Alumni Homecoming dinner was held on OcTober TwenTy-sevenTh, aT which There were Three hundred alumni and Triends of The school. ATTer The Annual Homecoming game, Mrs. Ehrlicher, wife oT Mr. James G. Ehrlicher who graduaTed in I92l and who is The SecreTary oT The Alumni associaTion, poured aT a Tea given by The school in Reid Hall. To end The monTh, came Hallowe'en, which was celebraTed by a gay parTy in The dining room, decoraTed in orange and black Tor The occasion. Thanksgiving holiday, coming on The TwenTy-eighTh and TwenTy-ninTh oT November, was a welcome recess. The FooTball dance, coming Two days laTer on December second, was an unusual success This year because oT The eTl:orTs of The various commiTTees in charge and The music rendered by Tommie HildebrandT and his orchesTra. VarsiTy leTTers were awarded To TiTTeen members oT The Team aT The dance. The Tall Term closed on December ThirTeenTh. On ChrisTmas day many boys who live on The NorTh Shore came back Tor The ChrisTmas parTy, which is given each year Tor one hundred boys Trom Chicago seTTlemenT houses. These parTies were sTarTed by Mrs. Richards some eigh+ years ago in an eTTorT To brighTen The lives oT many needy and deserving boys. The FaTher and Son luncheon held This year on December TwenTy-eighTh aT The Union League Club drew The largesT aTTendance in school hisTory: There were Two hundred presenT. Mr. ErnesT Palmer, oT The class oT '03, acTed as ToasTmasTer inTroducing speakers: Mr. John W. Richards, Mr. CliTTord W. Barnes, Mr. Edmund J. RendTorTT, and Mr. George W. Young, Sr. The winTer Term opened on January TourTh. On January nineTeenTh The EaculTy oT Ferry Hall gave The annual FaculTy Dance, To which a number of The boys were inviTed. ln The absence oT The ,, ,. ' Q1 4,4 X f I -WW ' 5 J 1-yn ' vw 'ff' Q: 54:51 x W -+L WA A . A W Q, Jfnyfx ,X A Qkufiha 9 - -- ' 7 '- L- 5 Q s., . ' H 5 , W QQ ' .L 5 15f.,f,w:, ,-, ,f ww ' A s VM 1 K I I Z., .V , fy Vx, gf lxivyx .wtgkgiggxafl ,fwqi-f, kg Q , . : g 7.2 'vi ,. X .5 , ,fy 4, f j, ,532W',1w,547 A - iw 'I' an , - A',5m,fuj J fm-I.,,.1,,fp, 3 W f. 'Qfyx M ,,,J5, NW? ,Qg3,j'-ffff -I .hw ,V Y A ag, f -, , -an 'f K .41 AV QM ' ' ' -'WTMA4 2 .f ' ' Q, V ' g',-Ml., ff- ' gg-KZ z UQ 'W' ' ' 5 ,, MH V' ,w'w',' ff?,fifwfwJf3f 1, ff' '13,-M ' ' 3-23 KUQVLV E '1wff..'V Wit N ff, 'E' ' fi V31 : .ww . -Q L Aw. .H 1N,1,,f., . ,ue 4 K f. 5 - ? ' 73, J jjvyj 'f' fr' A.. ,vu 6,25 38.3 ,fm f ,f w N1 ,. ,iff 'Cx l.Q, 45,,f7 I NVQ 2 A' P M' , g G 7' In 5 swf, ,pay ,W f 'Wd qw iv mi-11-,xi K, W , gig ,X xr 4 . K ,V - .L , , f .. ' 1 K -, . in ,Q M' 'N .K-iQ. -will f,?1?f5'3fRf W VJ 4 J da. gag eefss - ,W . M N 'y'f4m. nf?-1vA ' 'U TPM . 4 ' fx , I , 'ff . , I Q '64 'f e-qw, P ,. ' N w A mf f 234 V 1 A x ' v, 41i:I .' 1 , Ya. A 4 ' 3-.Lg iwiggdffrr sg' M 5 4 ' ' ' -M k , ' . N ' f , mi , 0, IL: Y Av, fy' -gk., ,Qi ng- .px ,M , 1, AW., 7- imyhwut .wh I ,Jw , 1,1 W . -, , ' ,, F f f,3F1f -A few- Q,-?,,,.'ef 9.-va - F , H+ ,. 'Ziggy ': x .M ...V -4 M 4,416 fn, 4 . , .V ,V X fn- . 3 f Afw'-S5311 . K W 1- f' Q ' ,QQ M, . , y NA .7 1' .5 ana' wx, A ff3'rfv1,,-.S I f., ak fvywx-X .. Q w 7. .As-Q' few., .ww V -'?W'ga qi, M f ' 41, f ' 'i H :fi 1 f.F gfw ff bi .' 'V 5 ' fifx,Q MG..-sf, q'ff '7'A335'.3l?-, ,,j.9 3195. 3 .1 Y jj WXQN-M ,J wmww , I Y W ,4,la:Vq:c:5Q.sLw.,f. R A N I , W ,,,,f, .77 W - fwf.g,1Jgq1'11fr+ A - 4 ' 1 , . f 5 5 , , M ,'.,' K, fx-f?w wS..F'?7v, . - , ,v -mga.. 4 7 'gf I r ,. R 1 1. Y :Q EU' N 7'1- Q 9 A .: ,A . ' ' . ff ,L . a .J . Q-. i ' .- ,- -, , 1 4 ,, , L' Q, ,Ai F f 5 . WX? Q lyairit .ns -. Y, ' , ,.L,..f-favi if , Em -'ng . ww. wily' A I7 , L1 - ,IQ , 'W Q , , , M Lggwfvf 'f' 1 -. 5' ,, - J , Q 1 ,, X . ,,L,L , V , .. f Qs .afrff , H 1, . , , 1 Z A gf' I -, ? 4 V WW' I ' ' k I 'aj . , fa ,Maw f, , -.V if Misses Wilkins, Mrs. E. J. RendTorTT gave ,a chocolaTe parTy on January ThirTy-TirsT. As iT was shorTly aTTer The ChrisTmas holidays, The decoraTions were red and green in accordance wiTh The season. February ninTh gave The Academy a pleasanT surprise. The SaTurday nighT's enTerTainmenT was held aT Ferry Hall. ATTer an exceIIenT exhibiT oT magic, Miss Tremain, The principal, inviTed The boys To sTay Tor an inTormal dance. Again anoTher welcome chocolaTe parTy was given by The Misses Wilkins on February sevenTeenTh. ExciTemenT was running high abouT Mid-WinTers, which was only a Tew days away, and, as mighT be expecTed, The Topic oT conversaTion Turned in ThaT direcTion. On March TirsT The long-anTicipaTed Mid-VVinTers arrived. School was over aT noon. During The aTTernoon The guesTs began To arrive and The FesTiviTies began. Tea was served in The Richards' home. ATTer dinner The Glee Club and The Follies puT on a very good show. The Glee Club was under The direcTion oT DocTor Broeker, and The Follies was ably direcTed by Mr. BarnTaTher. BoTh groups did excepTionally well. ATTerwards an informal dance was given in The gym. Never before had The gym been so well decoraTed. HearTy praises wenT To The various commiTTees in charge. The decoraTions were carried ouT in green, whiTe, silver, and red. On The Tollowing morning, SaTurday, March second, The FaculTy Tive was deTeaTed by The VarsiTy All-STars by one poinT in a Tive minuTe overTime, which shows ThaT The TaculTy is noT so old as iT seems. ln The aTTernoon The Gargoyle Club, under The direc- Tion of Mr. Tucker, presenTed The play, WhaT Happened To Jones, a mosT enTerTaining play in Three acTs, wriTTen by George H. BroadhursT. ThaT nighT aTTer a Tormal dinner, The Tormal dance was given aT The gym. Sunday morning The guesTs deparTed abouT Ten o'clock. During The enTire Three days a very Tine and unusual exhibiT was held in Reid Hall. This exhibiT was oT The arT and manual Training deparTmenTs. An added aTTracTion This year was The iniTial appear- ance oT a Tine display oT phoTographic arT. The phoTographic deparTmenT oT The Caxy has done a greaT deal oT work To make This possible. The guesTs oT The Academy greaTly admired The splendid craTTs- manship oT The obiecTs displayed. For The Triends oT The Academy, who live in Lake ForesT, a special Tea was given Sunday aTTernoon Trom Three unTil Tive. Mid-WinTers was a greaT success, and one oT The besT week-ends ever given by The Academy. March ninTh, Ferry Hall gave iTs Junior Prom, aTTended by a large number oT The boys oT The Academy. On March TwenTy-TirsT, school was closed Tor The winTer Term, and a much needed resT aTTer The sTrenuous preparaTions enTailed by Mid-WinTers was enjoyed. As The winTer Term was Too Tull To permiT a Term holiday, Spring vacaTion was exTended Two days, and The spring Term began April sevenTh. On Thursday. April eighTeenTh, The Misses Wilkins gave a very charming chocolaTe parTy. Spring Tlowers were The cenTer piece on The Table. Every year during The spring Term, The Richards have dinners Tor The enTire school. TwenTy-Tive or ThirTy boys and masTers each week enjoy The warm hospiTaliTy aTTorded Them. The Tables are seT ouT in The garden when The weaTher permiTs, and dinner is served in buTTeT sTyle. SaTurday, May elevenTh, The Junior class gave The annual Junior Prom. The decoraTions were green and whiTe and mosT original. The ceiling was a green and whiTe checkerboard eTFecT. DirecTly in The middle OT The Tloor was a small aTTracTive TounTain. As The book musT go To press, we shall have To puT an end To This calendar: however, There are a Tew more Things leTT on our social calendar. SomeTime aT The end oT May or The TirsT oT June The Caxy Carnival is To be held. This combined dance and Tun parTy is given under The auspices oT The Lake ForesT Academy year book, The Caxy. This will indeed be a gay parTy, as iT will include a Tloor show, TeaTuring local TalenT. To wind up This year's social evenTs, The CommencemenT Exercises on Friday, SaTurday, and Sun- day, The TourTeenTh, TiTTeenTh, and sixTeenTh oT June are To be The grandesT oT The school's sevenTy- seven years oT hisTory. Two dances are planned, one inTormal and The oTher Tormal. AnoTher arT exhibiT is well under way wi+h many proiecTs. Also during These Three days, There is To be held The Tennis Tinals, always a Thrilling maTch To waTch. There will be The annual DeclamaTion ConTesT and Class Day Exercises as well as a shorT play on SaTurday. Sunday will see The GraduaTion Exercises and The close oT one more glorious year aT Lake ForesT Academy. A , ,,.MM.Mf?L,1, VQfY03 'T LW, my ' t r s Q? if x i, ga 4 3 AP Myzyyzz W j an J L?'ff W ,v u me 115 59? 'r 2 2 f 5 3 Fx 2 P , ,1 Q ,mf ATI-I LETI CS A k:fA. Y 1.. 1 is -Q,.:'k Ifq se M -: - .ki Third Row-Mr. HelTriclc, Klee, Taylor, Airnan, Johnson, H. H., Holden. Second Row-Burdick, Dorwin, Huey, Vv'ampler. FirsT Row- Head, Seymour, Beauiean, Leech. PHYSICAL EDUCATION ln addiTion To The already organized Team aThleTics This year, Three new Types oT physical developmenT acTiviTies were organized. Above is picTured The Tumbling and wresTling class which was under The able direcTion oT Mr. HelTriclc. Besides physical developmenT gained by The members of This organizaTion, They acquired some oT The Tiner poinTs oT wresTling. The boxing Team was under The direcTion OT Mr. Simmonds and vied wiTh Mr. HelTriclc's boys in The use OT The Training room, which incorporaTed everyThing Trom a punching bag To medicine balls. The Riding Club was organized This year by lvlr. Arpee wiTh The assisTance OT Mr. ATwood. Any Tellow who wished To ride was adrniTTed To The club, and Through The inTluence oT Mr. Arpee and Mr. ATwood The would-be riders secured as mounTs The TinesT oT horses belonging To The OnwenTsia CounTry Club. The Riding Club wenT on Their excursions abouT Three Times a weelci and, led by Mr. Arpee, They covered a greaT deal oT The beauTiTul Lake ForesT TerriTory. All The bridle paThs were aT Their disposal, and They saw many beauTiTul scenes oT The surrounding counTry which would oTherwise have been missed. Riding is a greaT sporT, and every school should have some lcind OT riding class. We are glad To say ThaT This sporT has been inauguraTed To sTay aT Lake ForesT Academy: and, as iT has provided much enioyrnenT Tor Those who rode This year, may iT' provide much more pleasure Tor Those Tellows who will come here in TuTure years. 5 .ox i Q AX.: If L GHTWE GHT Third Row Smifh, F.. Alexander, INTERMEDIATE ATHLETICS The purpose of having inframural sporfs is fo give every fellow, large and small, a chance fo compefe on afhlefic feams. If is carried ouf quife exfensively af Lake Foresf, fhe policy being fo offer fhe opporfunifies fo every boy fo develop himself physically as well as menfally. The school is divided info fwo clubs, The Orange and fhe Black. Each 'ream is represenfed by a feam in every sporf excepf fennis and golf, where eliminafion fournamenfs fake fhe place of infer-club compefifion. In foofball and baskefball fhere are lighfweighf and banfamweighf feams. In lighfweighf foofball fhis year fhe season proved fo be very successful. Under fhe able and experienced coaching of Howard Jensen, all-conference end from Wisconsin, and Mr. lvlafheson, line coach, fhe lighfweighfs cruised fo an undefeafed-unscored-upon season. Af fhe end of fhe season, Sherm Keller, who was responsible for many an opponenf's loss around leff-end, was elecfed honorary capfain. The following received firsf-feam leffers: Alexander, Berkson, Bleier, Burch, Derflinger, Epsfein IMgr.l, Keller, lvlunnecke, Palmer, Ross, I-I., Smifh, Sfeele, Sullivan, A., Roberfs, and Young. All foofball players have fo gef fheir sfarf somewhere. If is on fhe banfamweighf squad fhaf LFA'S fufure grid sfars receive fheir fundamenfal fraining. The Banfies had a good crop of boys fhis year. Bill Connon and I-Iomer Johnson divided fhe honors in fhe backfield, while Bill Bliss, Bob Heyl- mun, and Dick Livingsfon fook fhe laurels in paving fhe way for fhe ball-carriers. In spife of fhe facf fhaf fhe Banfies gof off fo a bad sfarf by running up againsf feams much heavier and older fhan fhey were, fhey finished up fhe season in greaf sfyle, as shown by fhe record following: LFA-7, Liberfyville Freshmen-QI: LFA-O, Liberfyville Freshmen-267 LFA-O, Evansfon Lighf- weighfs--I9p LFA-7, Evansfon Lighfweighfs-20, LFA-7, Wesf Park Tigers-77 LFA-7, Morgan Park Banfies-7: LFA-25, Morgan Park Banfies-O. The following receive firsf-feam leffers: Allen, Bryan, Casfle, Connon, Dangler, Dickson, Fleisch- mann, I-leylmun, Johnson, I-lomer, Lifflefield, Livingsfon, Pearl, Sfiles, G. Because of fhe facf fhaf fhere were so few men ouf for club feams fhis year, fhe Orange and Black confesfs were called off unfil fhe end of fhe season when men from all feams could compefe. The Orange and Black 'reams were comprised mainly of Varsify and Lighfweighf men. The long-waifed-for confesf was held on a muddy field on fhe fwenf -fhird of November. Affer a see-saw, fhe firsf half in which neifher feam crossed fhe goal line, Jack Landrefh, presidenf of fhe Black Club, broke loose on an off-fackle play and accounfed for fhe firsf score. This was followed in fhe fourfh guarfer by an Orange fouchdown made on a cenfer plunge by Websfer, fhe Oranges' fwo hundred pound full-back. Near fhe end of fhe game, wifh fhe score fied 7-7, Bokum, Black half, scampered fhrough fhe fasf-waning dusk for anofher Black fally. The game ended Black I7, Orange 7. Alfhough if was a Black day for fhe Oranges, I fhink we're safe in saying fhe game was enioyed by everyone. As a whole fhe infermediafe sporfs of fhe second ferm proved fo be as successful as fhe record of fhe firsf ferm. An exfensive program was puf forfh wifh Lighfweighf, Banfamweighf, and Orange and Black baskefball. These feams occupy much of fhe winfer-ferm afhlefic program. This year fhe Lighfs had a furnouf of abouf fwenfy-seven boys, which was lafer cuf fo abouf fhirfeen. The Banfies -Mr. Jensen, Pearl, Ross, I-I., Kallis, Bolin, Epslein, Sullivan, A., Berkson, Keller, Mr. Mafheson. Second Row---Bleier, Young, Lifflefield, Palmer, I-lufchinson, R.. Roberfs. Firsf Row-Derflinger, Bobbe, Coale, Vail. Sfeele, Burch, Munnecke. Second Row-Common, Whipple, Dangler, Fleisclimanri, Bryan, Bliss, Mr. Arpee. Firsl Row- Mandel Dickson, Livinqslon, Jolnnson, Caslle, Malcolm, Siiles, G. Tliird Row+Taylor, Knoibler, Bolin, Crowe. Second Row-Bleier, Greenebaum, Websler, Mun necle, Kallis. Firsl RowiSmiTl1, F., Ross, l-l., Lilflefrield. Third Row-Pearl, Colanqelo, Bolcum, Cool, Young. Second Row-Haywood, H., Hufclwirison W., Landrelli, Sullivan, Dana. Firsl Row-Long, l-lunl, Sullivan, A., l-lufcliinson, R. LIGHTWEIGHT had over Two Tull Teams, while The Blaclc and Orange squads were comprised OT abour ThirTy players. The LighTweighTs, under The coaching oT Mr. Ryan, IasT ye-ar's varsiTy coach, came Through The season wiTh only Two deTeaTs. This Team is comprised OT boys under The weighT OT one hundred and TorTy pounds and is piTTed againsT Teams oT ThaT size. IT looked as iT iT mighT be an undeTeaTed season Tor The LighTweighTs unTiI Bud MeriIlaT had To wiThdraw Trom school because oT serious illness. Macpherson aT cenTer, Burch and Palmer aT Torwards, and RoberTs and Berlcson or Munneclxe aT The guards, did a good job OT puTTing LFA minor sporTs ouT in TronT. The season began before ChrisT- mas vacaTion wiTh a Tew days oT pracTice and a preliminary conTesT or Two, buT The scheduled games did noT sTarT unTiI January I6. The Team oT Burch, Palmer, I-IuTT, RoberTs, and Berkson deTeaTed ST. Albans aT LPA. IT was a slow and shorT game because oT The laTe arrival OT The visiTors, buT The Lake I:oresT LighTs came Through, I4-I2. Again LFA deTeaTed The ST. Albans Team OT This weighT7 This Time our represenTaTives whipped Them To The Tune oT 28-I8. The second game oT The year was againsT Todd aT LFA. The hosTs won, I3-I2, aTTer an exciTing see-saw game. Laclcing The guarding oT Berlcson, The LighTs losT To Bowen by The score oT I9-I5. Sullivan, anoTher Chicago high school Team, deTeaTed The LighTweighTs. The score This Time was 22-I3. The season ended wiTh an I8-I7 vicTory over Morgan Park. Mr. Ryan deserves praise Tor The deveIopmenT oT These boys, mosT oT whom had had liTTIe expe- rience and are sure of Tinding his coaching and The Team's playing a greaT beneTiT in years To come. The IeTTermen were as Tollowsz Alexander, Berkson, Burch, Macpherson, MeTcalT, Munneclfe, Palmer, RoberTs, ShaTTer lMgr.I, SmiTh, F., and Young. The BanTies also showed a good TurnouT as Mr. Niswender senT ouT The call. The games were close, well played, and The TighTing was ouTsTanding. LPA again showed iTs minor-sporTs power as The TighTing BanTies deTeaTed oppone-nTs oT Their own weighT. The leTTermen were as Tollox -..' s: ATlass, Andersen, R., Connon, Crolaer, Dangler, EusTice IMgr.I, I-Ieylmun, Loeb, Morrison, and Russell. The old rivalry beTween Orange and Blaclc clubs did noT leT up as The baslceTball season opened. I-Iowever, The Oranges Turned The Tables in This sporT, winning The series by The raTio oT Tour games To Two. ORANGE AND BLACK SERIES Orange Black January I8 . , .. I I I2 January 25 ... .. 2I 6 February I . . . . I9 I5 February 8 ... .,. 20 I9 February I5 .. .. 26 I9 March I .... ,,.. 3 6 I5 I33 86 Third Row-Mr. Ryan, Macpherson, Sfeele, Me-TcaIT, Alexander, GriTTin, Kallis. Second Row- SmiTh, F., I-IUTT, Munnecke, Berlcson, RoberTs, Burch, FirsT Row-Morrison, BenneTT, Young. Second Row-Mr. Nlswencler, Connon, Flelsclwmann, llvlnqslon, Euslice. Firsl Row-Sliles, G., l-leylmun, Crolcer, Whipple, Mandel. Second Row-Crowe, Neil, Epsfein, Kupperman, Mr. Arpee. Firsl Row--Taylor, Greenebaum, Leeclw, Keller, Burdick, Duncan. Second Row-Dr. Krueger, Walker, l-lulclwlnson, R., Sloll, Hulclwison, Slwerer, Warnpler. Firsl Row-Vail, Sliles, J., Long, Bokum, l-lufclninson, VV., Colanqelo. VARS ITV FCDGTBALL WiTh Mr. Bergen, a new coach, and Aubrey, BenneTT, Bokum, Cook, Crowe, Greenebaum, HuTch- inson, Kneibler, lvlinney, Rockwood, SchueTTe, ShaTTer, STiles, S., Sullivan, J., WebsTer, a new Team, The odds were greaT againsT LEA aT The sTarT oT The season. WiTh no leTTermen reTurning, Mr. Bergen had To spend several weeks Tinding his sTarTing lineup: consequenTly The Team was ToTally unprepared Tor Their TirsT games. The Team averaged less Than I65 pounds, having several backfield men, namely, BenneTT, Cook, and Rockwood, weighing less Than l4O. Some Teams ThaT LEA meT, such as Concordia, had Tew men, if any, as lighT as I65. IT iT had noT been Tor The TighT, griT, and hard work oT These boys, TogeTher wiTh The painsTaking coaching oT Mr. Bergen and Mr. Ryan and The Tricky plays enacTed by The Team, They probably would have been an easy vicTim Tor Their formidable Toes. As iT was, The line smashes by Rockwood and The end runs by Jack Sullivan and The OTT-Tackle plays by STiles kepT opponenTs ever on Their guard. The passing combinaTion oT eiTher STiles or Sullivan To The ends, Aubrey and lvlinney, proved eTTecTive. ATTer Two weeks oT pracTice The TirsT Team, consisTing oT SchueTTe, Walker, Greenebaum, WebsTer, Bokum, Kneibler, Aubrey, Sullivan, STiles, Rockwood, and Cook, chosen Trom a squad oT TorT , Taced ST.'Bede Academy on The home Tield. WiTh iusT a Tew signals, which were mainly line plays, The Team was confined To conservaTive playing and consequenTly were unable To make ground. The Team was on The deTensive mosT oT The Time: and evenTually The pounding goT To be Too much, The resulT being Three Touchdowns. Though deTeaTed, The Team was much wiser and experienced aTTer The encounTer. The Tollowing SaTurday our guesTs were WheaTon College Reserves oT WheaTon, lllinois. The will To win spiriT was presenT Trom The sTarT, and a heavy opposing line held no Tears Tor our boys. ATTer a Tew warm-up plays, The EoresTiTes goT Their bearings and proceeded To Trample, relenTlessly, upon our guesTs. LiTTle Ralph Rockwood wiTh his I35 pounds oT dynamiTe and low cenTer oT graviTy gave The WheaTon men much Trouble. This, coupled wiTh STiles' and Sullivan's running and passing, raised The score To 46-O. The whole squad saw acTion in This game. The American College oT Physical EducaTion arrived seven days laTer wiTh revenge in Their hearTs. We had deTeaTed Them Twice in '32 and '33, and They were deTermined To place Their name in The winning column. WiTh hard playing and several end runs by a mighTy TasT back, They were able To run The score To 9-O aT The end oT The halT. Lake EoresT's only large gains were around Their ends, as we were hopelessly ouTweighed in The line. Our Team was deprived oT a greaT end when Bill SchueTTe broke his leg in The laTTer parT oT The second quarTer. This incidenT dishearTened The Team and. alThough They Tried valianTly in The second half To save The game, Their ThoughTs were more wiTh SchueTTe Than The game. The game closed wiTh a score oT 25-6, which was saved Trom being a whiTe- wash by a dash oT greaT disTance by Jack Sullivan. The annual Homecoming game was honored by The presence oT Morgan Park Academy, one oT Lake EoresT's oldesT rivals. BoTh The Teams gave all They had in The TirsT halT: and, aT The half, The score sTood I2-6 in Tavor of The cadeTs. The second half was a hard-ToughT baTTle, wiTh boTh coaches leaving The sTarTing lineup in To TighT iT ouT. Lake EoresT held The limelighT in The second halT wiTh several scoring ThreaTs, buT lacked The Tinal drive. The alumni were boTh saTiTied and exciTed abouT The game. They leTT knowing ThaT, alThough LEA cannoT win all The Time, she has The spiriT and The courage ThaT cannoT be broken or alTered. The only Trip of The season led The Team To Concordia College in River EoresT. Here They showed Themselves To be a second-halT Team. The Concordia men made 3l poinTs in The TirsT quarTer and 6 near The end oT The second half. Mr. Bergen puT in some oT The lighT, TasT backTield men who were able To squirm Through and sTop The heav , lumbering backs of Concordia. These backs, TogeTher wiTh The line, were eTTecTive in holding The College men Trom scoring in The second halT. The game ended wiTh The score oT 37-O. On November TenTh, The 'Cads meT anoTher heavy Team-MorTon Junior College. Lake ForesT, wiTh line plunges and long runs, would Torge ahead, only To have lvlorTon Tie The score wiTh several oT Their unerring passes. The game conTinued in This manner and evenTually ended in a l9-I9 Tie. ln The closing game oT The season, iT was our honor To parTicipaTe in The Homecoming acTiviTies oT Elgin Academy. There were hundreds oT alumni presenT To see Their undeTeaTed Team in acTion. The specTaTors were disappoinTed aT The halT as The score sTood 7-7. Elgin had been Tavored To win by a walk-away. The second halT was more enjoyable Tor Elgin, buT noT Tor The EoresTers, Tor Elgin added Three Touchdowns To Their score. The game ended. as did The TooTball season Tor boTh schools, wiTh a 27-7 score. The capTaincy oT The '35 eleven was unanimously awarded To Ralph Rockwood, The l35-pound Tullback, Tor his TighT and courage. IT is needless To say ThaT he was The school's as well as The Team's choice. Tlwird Row-Mr. Bergen, Builer, Merillaf, Nell, Duncan, l-lenfges, Siiles, J., Rendall, W., Teevan, M., Minney, Guy, Crowe, lgleliearf, Bennelf, Mr. Ryan. Second Row--Dana, Bolcurn, Wallcer, Sullivan, J., Landreflw, Websfer, l-luicninson, W., Shaffer, Kneibler, Cvaidzilc. Firsl Row-Cook, Haywood, H.. Sclnuelfe, Rockwood, Greenebaum, Colangelo, Hunl, Aubrey, Sliles. SCHEDULE Od. 6-ST. Bede Academy llwerel. Ocl. 27--Morgan Parlc Milifary Academy lherel. Ocr. I2-Wlwealon College Reserves llmerel. Nov. 3--Concordia Teachers lllwerel. Ocl. 20-American College ol Plwysical Educa- Nov. IO-lvlorlon Junior College llwerel. lion lllerel' Nov. I7-Elgin Academy l+l1erej. f .. ..., .. . ., VAR S ITV BAS K ETBALL The Lake EoresT Academy baskeTball Team oT l935 has a record oT which iT may well be proud. The Team losT buT Three games oT The TourTeen played and won The Mid-WesT PrivaTe PreparaTory School TournamenT, in which were enTered Two oT The Teams which had deTeaTed LEA during The season. The leTTer men oT This championship Team are: Aubrey, Cook, Dana, Haywood, l-l., Kneibler, lvlinney, STiles, S., Sullivan, J., and WebsTer. The lineup used by Mr. Bergen consisTed oT Minney aT cenTer, STiles and Aubrey aT Torwards, wiTh Kneibler and Sullivan on The back line. Ivlr. Jensen, assisTanT coach, deserves much crediT Tor The success oT The Team. l-le was indispen- sable in Teaching and developing The shooTing oT The boys. The high poinT man oT The season was CapTain Dave lvlinney, wiTh I65 poinTs in The TourTeen games. The TirsT game oT The season was played againsT ST. Albans, aT home, on January I7. lvlinney and STiles sTarTed The aTTack during The TirsT halT, and LEA led, 23-4. The game ended, 39-I8, Tor The hosTs. On January 26, Culver was our guesT. Culver sTarTed The scoring by making a Tree shoT, buT was held scoreless The resT oT The halT, as LEA led, I5-I. The game ended, 26-8, Tor LEA. Sullivan High School were our nexT opponenTs, on January 3l. Jack Sullivan and Kneibler sTarTed The plays which showed LEA To be superior. The Sullivan High boys reTurned home on The shorT end oT a 29-I4 score. LEA's TiTTh game aT home was againsT Bowen l-ligh School oT Chicago. The Caxys led, I4-7, aT The halT. The game ended, 36-I I. The TirsT Trip Took The Team To ST. Albans. The SainTs led, IO-8, aT The half. LEA Touled Treely, Trying To regain The lead, buT losT, 26-2l. The nexT Two games were againsT Elgin. Elgin won The TirsT game handily, 36-I9. The score of The second game rocked back and TorTh, wiTh Elgin Tinally winning, 25-24. The nexT Two games were won very handily by LEA. Morgan Park lvliliTary Academy was The TirsT To Tall beTore The onslaughT by The score oT 32-23. Then, on March 6, LEA again showed iTs power by Trampling Culver, 33-I6. On lvlarch eighTh and ninTh aT Morgan Park, LEA walked away wiTh The Mid-WesT Prep School Tournament Their TirsT opponenT, LuTher, sTarTed OTT TasT wiTh six poinTs, buT were soon losT in The dusT, as The Orange and Black men won by a score oT 38-30. NexT NorThwesTern MiliTary Academy Taced Lake EoresT. Minney led The aTTack which ended in a 36-3l vicTory Tor LEA. The ST. Albans game was The besT game OT The Tour. Lake EoresT led aT The halT, I6-l2. T-laywood made ThirTeen poinTs To clinch The game aT 3I-26. The Tinal game was a poor one To waTch. LEA led, 29-2l, aT The half. LEA's speed and heighT proved Too much Tor The PleasanT View Team, and The Tinal score was 37 To 24, Tlwird Pow-Mr. Bergen, l-lenlges, Dana, Mr. Jensen, l-lavwood, G., Aubrey, McVVllllarns. Second Row---Bleler, Sllles, S. S ll n nelble' lvlinnev, Websfer. Flrsl Row--Nell, Haywood, H., Cook. Sullivan, Jan Jan Jan Jan Jan Feb Feb -S+. Albans lherel. -Elgin llnerel. Morgan Parlc llverel. -Culver llwerel. -Sullivan llwe-rel. Bowen llwerel. S+. Albans lllwerel. A, SCHEDULE Feb. Feb, Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Mar. Q.. I 7-- 6 8 8 9 9 Elgin lllmerel. Morgan Parlc lllwerel. -Culver lllwerel. -Lullmer lnslilule. -Norllwweslern Mllllary Academy -S+. Albans Acaclenny. -Pleasanl View Academy. SWIMMING This year The Junior and Senior divisions OT The Lake FOresT Academy Swimming Team cOmpleTed The mOsT successTul season OT The pasT Tew years by winning Three ouT OT Tive OT The regularly scheduled meeTs. This is an unusual record when compared To Those OT The pasT years when The Academy Teams seldom won more Than one meeT a season. The crediT noT only goes To The hard and diligenT work OT The members OT The Team, buT also To The Academy coaches, Gordon Kelley and James Kolinski, sTu- denTs OT Lake ForesT College, and Mr. HelTrick. Work began by shaping up The Team as soon as The TooTball season ended. A pracTice meeT was held wiTh DeerTield Shields during The lasT Two weeks OT The Tall Term, This meeT was lOsT by The small score OT 4l-42, buT The Senior Team made a very good showing considering The pasT superiOriTy OT The DeerTield Teams. However, The earnesT work OT The Team did noT sTarT unTil The beginning OT The second Term. Our regular season opened wiTh a meeT aT home wiTh Sullivan High School OT Chicago. This was lOsT by The Senior division, buT The Junior Team held Their own and losT by only six poinTs. Our hopes were raised Tor The Juniors, buT The Seniors sTill needed a good biT OT work. In The nexT meeT The Team appeared beTTer, as The Senior Team sunk Elgin Academy deeply. 35-28, As There was no Junior Team Trom Elgin in The meeT, The vicTory was enTirely Tor The Seniors. The Team showed greaT improvemenT over Their work in The Sullivan meeT and gave a promise OT a successTul season yeT TO come. On The aTTernoon OT February The sevenTh, The Academy swimmers won Their Third meeT in The home pool. This Time They deTeaTed Kelvyn Park High School OT Chicago. BOTh The Junior and Senior divisions overwhelmed Their opponenTs by a greaTer score Than ThaT by which The Seniors had Taken Elgin. The high spoTs OT This meeT came when Florian broke The 220-yard Tree-sTyle record wiTh The Time OT 3:O4.2 and when Brehm broke The IOO-yard backsTrOke record, The Time being I:24.8. ATTer This meeT The Team had a resT Tor a Tew weeks, during The Time OT Mid-WinTers, Tor There were no meeTs scheduled. However, The Monday aTTer Mid-WinTers The season was resumed again Tor a shorT period OT Two days during which The Team parTicipaTed in Two meeTs held away Trom home. The Tormer was 'held aT Kelvyn Park High School in Chicago. This meeT was lOsT by boTh divisions, To The greaT surprise OT all, as Lake ForesT had won The TirsT meeT wiTh Kelvyn by The decisive margin OT 55-23 and 37-23. The reasons Tor This deTeaT, oTTered by The members OT The Lake ForesT Team, were ThaT MidfWinTers was iusT over and ThaT Two OT our leading swimmers, GelaTT and Flack, were absenT. NeverTheless, The Kelvyn Park Team showed surprising improvemenT over Their work in The meeT OT The mOnTh previous. The home Team made a good showing in spiTe OT Their poor condiTion. The laTTer OT The Two meeTs was held aT Elgin Academy, where Lake ForesT deTeaTed Their opponenTs in The reTurn meeT. The lead was Taken early in The meeT and was held TO The Tinish wiTh The resulT ThaT The score was 42-32. The only close races in The meeT were The Two relays, as The OTher evenTs were easily won by The Academy swimmers. The lasT swimming evenT OT The year came when The Orange and Black Teams meT Tor Their annual cOnTesT. The swimmers were Those who had noT Taken poinTs in The VarsiTy meeTs in The evenTs in which They parTicipaTed, and also, any boys nOT on The swimming Team who wished To compeTe. The resulT OT The meeT was a greaT surprise To all concerned, as This was The TirsT Time in several years ThaT The Blacks had come close To deTeaTing The Orange Team. UnTil The meeT began, The losing Team had much conTidence because OT Their Tormer presTige and a more imposing lineup. The Blacks Trounced The Oranges by The wide margin OT 50-33. The meeT was quiTe exciTingg and many OT The races were very close, alThOugh The meeT did seem quiTe one-sided. Thus The swimming season was Tinished, puTTing new spiriT inTo swimming as a VarsiTy sporT and giving Teams OT years To come a record worTh remembering. lrd Row-Mr. Helfrlcls, Ross, Gu, Garnell, Flack, Brehm, Gclalf, Ryclcollr. Second Row-Dickson, Mcfiahey, Teovan, J., Livinqslo Elorlan, Voql, Ross, H. Flrsl Row-A-Haywood, G., Teevah, M., Russell. SCHEDULE Dec. 8-Deerfield Shields H. S. llherel. Mar. 4-Kelvyn Park High School llherel. Jan. 5-Sullivan Hlgh School lherel. Mar. IO-Elgin Academy llherel. Jan. I4-Elgin Academy lherel. Mar. I8-Orange and Black Meel. Jan. I8wKelvyn Parlc High School lherel. TRACK OuT upon The cinders This spring came many aThleTes almosT all of whom had wiThin Them The makings oT good Track men. ForTune, sadly enough, was by no means wiTh us: bad weaTher gave The Team buT Two weeks oT Training beTore iTs TirsT meeT wiTh Sullivan l-ligh School. l-lowever, The Orange and Black meeT lOranges 77, Blacks 40l maniTesTed some preTTy Tair maTerial. l-low The season will come ouT is anoTher maTTer, buT The Caxy musT go To press. The season's ouTlook is raTher opTimisTic. We have back wiTh The squad John Berkson, who was our ouTsTanding IOO and 220 yard dash man lasT year, Taking a TirsT in alrnosT every race he ran. OTher men compeTing in These dashes are Roger Crowe, Edwin McLain, and Fred SmiTh. Crowe, ChrisTian Dresch, and McLain have oTTered Their abiliTies To The quarTer-mile. John EpsTein, Charles C5elaTT, David LipperT, John McWilliams, and John STeele make up The men Taking parT in The mile and half- mile evenTs. The hurdlers are l-lerberT Bolin, Benno Nell, and George Young. Crowe, McLain, and SmiTh parTicipaTe in The running broad-jump. Jean l-TuTF and Nell are hopeful prospecTs in The high- iump. The pole vaulT is someThing we musT overlook, since LeRoy MerillaT, our hope Tor This year, is unable To be in school because oT ill healTh. HuTT and SmiTh, boTh inexperienced in This evenT, will, however, do Their besT To carry us Through, we are sure. Our weighT Team is a group we can depend upon. Richard Bokum, ArThur Kneibler, Edwin McLain, and STuarT STiles puT The shoT: William l-luTch- inson, Kneibler, and STiles Throw The discus: and George l-laywood, l-luTchinson, and David lvlinney have The iavelin compeTiTion in hand. There is more Than one oT These men upon whom we can well depend Tor our poinTs in The meeTs. Berkson is TasT, and on a TasT Track will do wonders. McLain, new This year, brings wiTh him a Tine record of 440 running. His Time on well rolled cinders varies beTween 5l and 52 seconds. l-le is To us whaT Fuqua is To Indiana. l-le also excels in The shorT dashes and The shoT puT, having Taken Three TirsTs in The Orange and Black meeT. Young, alThough noT very Tall, is sure To make us proud OT him when he crosses The Tinish line in The l20 highs or The 220 lows. Minney is going To ThreaTen The school record in The iavelin Throw This year. In The Tive meeTs lasT year he Took Three TirsTs, and his arm is in good shape This spring. SmiTh is new This year: we have seen him do some TasT sTepping in The dashes. l-lis broad-iumping is good Tor 20 TeeT and beTTer. GelaTT, also a Boiack, has a disTance sTride and Torm close To perTecTion, and wiTh The developmenT oT his endurance will make one oT The besT disTance men we have had in a long Time. Kneibler Took a TirsT place in The Orange and Black meeT, while l-luTchinson was a pressing second. They boTh may Turn ouT very successTully. Nell is swiTTly developing hurdling and high-iumping Torm: and, alThough he may Tind The cornpeTiTion wiTh oTher schools Too sTrong, he is very valuable To us, while his supporT will be indispensable in seasons To come. There is an excellenT opporTuniTy To have a good mile-relay Team wiTh Berkson, Crowe, Dresch, and McLain or a 440-relay Team wiTh Berkson, Crowe, McLain, and SmiTh. The Team has Tour coaches To guide iT. Mr. EdgingTon, head coach, has charge oT all The running evenTs: Mr. l-lelTrick coaches pole-vaulTing and high-iumping: Mr. Jensen assisTs in The hurdles: and Mr. Milne insTrucTs The conTesTanTs Tor The weighT evenTs. Under The direcTion oT These men and Through The Team's diligence, which has already shown iTselT, we anTicipaTe a successTul Track and Tield SSBSOD. Tliird Row-Mr. Edginglon, Nell, Haywood, G., Kneibler M nney S+ les S V Milne Secon Ro McLain Epslein Drescli, l-lulcliinson, Berlcson, Crowe, Lipperl. Firsl Row Gelall Kallis Young Sfnillw E Colangeo McWilliams April 27 May May May I8 May 25 June I 4- ll- SCHEDULE -Orange and Blaclc. Sullivan l-ligli Scliool llnerel. Wayland Academy lherel. Elgin and S+. Albans la? Elginl. Milwaukee Universily Scliool lllwerel. Morgan Park Mililary Academy lllnercl BASEBALL This year, fhe fhird year of Varsify Baseball af Lake Foresf Academy since if was sfopped in I928, fhe feam is sfarfing ouf on whaf seems fo be a very inferesfing and varied season. The schedule con- sisfs of six games, fhree of which are fo be played away from home. We have high hopes for fhe coming season and are confidenf fhaf Mr. Bergen will lead fhe boys fhrough fo a successful climax fo fhe already excellenf afhlefic year. If was encouraging fo see some fhirfy odd fellows sign up af fhe beginning of fhe season. Affer fhe firsf cuf fhere remained fwenfy fellows on fhe squad, and fhere is sfiff compefifion among fhese fellows for posifions on fhe firsf feam. Those men who have shown prowess enough fo be selecfed for fhe opening game wifh Morgan Park Milifary Academy are as follows: cafcher, Bill Websfer: pifcher, Jack Sullivan: firsf base, Dave Minney: second base, Ralph Burch, shorfsfop, Sfu Sfiles: fhird base. l-larris Haywood: leff field, Arf Lifflefieldq cenfer field. Ward Cook: and Sam Benneff, righf field. These men were backed by an excellenf group consisfing of Jim Aubrey, Dick Bokum, Gil lglehearf, Jim Sfiles, Willard Morrison, Bob Walker, and Walfer Mefcalf. As fhis book goes fo press, fhe feam has already mef Deerfield Shields l-ligh School of Highland Park in a pracfice game and Morgan Park Milifary Academy. ln fhe former of fhese games. which was losf by fhe Orange and Black, Coach Bergen fried ouf all of his men in af leasf one posifion and some in as many as fhree. From fhis game Mr. Bergen was able fo gef some idea of fhe manner in which his boys will play during fhe coming season. As fhere were no regular posifions and a few of fhe fellows were undoubfedly placed in fhe wrong posifion, Deerfield was able 'ro obfain an easy vic- fory, buf fhis by no means is an evidence of a poor Lake Foresf fearn. A welcomed revelafion came when Jack Sullivan was puf in as pifcher during fhe lasf innings of fhe game. During fhe firsf inning fhaf he pifched, he sfruck ouf fhe fhree Deerfield men who came up before him, and from fhere on held fhe Deerfield feam down so fhaf fhey could do pracfically nofhing. ln fhe laffer of fhese games fhe Academy feam showed decided improvemenf over- fheir work in fhe game wifh Deerfield. As fhe game was rained ouf in fhe firsf of fhe second inning, no exacf choice can be made as fo fhe beffer of fhe fwo feams: however, in fhe inning played Lake Foresf piled up a score of fhree runs fo one for Morgan Park. All of fhe oufs made by fhe LFA feam were sfrike oufs by fhe pifcher, Jack Sullivan. The fofal was four, fhree in fhe firsf, and one before fhe game was called in fhe second inning. Alfhough Jack is somewhaf a novice af pifching, he has shown surprising resulfs and should by fhe end of fhe year be an exfraordinary pifcher. Anofher oufsfanding man in fhis confesf was Bill Websfer, fhe cafcher. l-le made some really remarkable sfops and did an all-around good iob. Dave Minney showed his powerful hiffing abilify when he hir a friple in fhe firsf inning fo bring in fhree runs. The ofhers did fine work considering fhe bad weafher, and should be commended for if. We are looking forward fo beffer and warmer weafher for our games fo come and fo a highly successful season. Good luck fo you and your boys, Mr. Bergen. Third Pow-Mr. Bergen, Bolcum, Mlnney, Sullivan, J., Coolc, Garnefl. Second RowfSlxles, S., Bennell, Sflles, .l., Dana, Aubrey ndersen, G. Firsf Row-ljllleheld, Haywood, H., Morrison. May I May 4 May IO MayI3 May I8 SCHEDULE Morgan Park Mililary Academy lherel Culver Mililary Academy llherel. Chicago Universily School lherel. Lake Foresf College Freshman lherel, Chicago Universilry School llherel. May 20- May 22 May 24 June 4 Lalce Foresl College Freshman llhere La Grange Uherej. Morgan Park Mililary Academy llherel La Grange lherel. GULF AT The presenT Time, as This book goes To press, The golT Team has noT played a maTch. The prospecTs Tor This year's Team are noT so good, DerTlinger and Haywood being The only leTTer-men OT lasT year's Team who reTurned. The success oT This season has Mr. Tucker worried, buT we know ThaT someThing will Turn up To make The season a success. The DeerpaTh course, where The Team Takes iTs daily workouT, opened Monday, The TwenTy-second oT April. Prior To ThaT Time The squad pracTiced chip shoTs and shorT approaches on The pracTice TooT- ball Tield. The weaTher, raTher weT and rainy, has noT added To The hopes oT The golTers. However, The course is in much beTTer condiTion Than was expecTed, wiTh The excepTion oT The Tairways, which are sTill a liTTle rough. The scores Turned in To Coach Tucker Thus Tar have been on The whole unsaTisTac- Tory. The lowesT score has been a ThirTy-eighT, Turned in by Derflinger, Tollowed by TorTy-Tour, Turned in by Armour, Kneibler, Macpherson, RoloerTs, Six, and Vickery. The TirsT maTch is a Ten-man pracTice maTch wiTh 'DeerTield Shields High School on our home course. The probable Ten men in order will be: DerTlinger, Armour, Duncan, Six, Kneibler, Haywood, STiles, Sullivan, Klee, and Vickery-Macpherson ancl RoberTs being unable To play because of college- board classes. The TirsT oTFicial maTch is wiTh Sullivan High School oT Chicago on LFA's own sTamping grounds. IT is rumored abouT ThaT Sullivan's enTire Team shooTs in The low sevenTies. Since This is only a rumor, we'll siT TighT and hope Tor The besT. The Tollowing maTch is a six-man maTch wiTh New Trier on Their beauTiTul buT diTTiculT Indian Hill course. New Trier is usually preTTy sTiTT compeTiTion, and our chances Tor Taking This maTch are slighT. However, we know our would-be Joneses will do Their besT. Following This maTch are Two home maTches wiTh Milwaukee UniversiTy School and Chicago LaTin School. Milwaukee has Turned ouT good Teams in The pasT, and They probably will come down wiTh all Their power ready To give us a show. Chicago LaTin, however, is a new school on our lisT, and we hope ThaT This inaugural maTch will be The TirsT oT a long Triendly rivalry. These Two maTches build up To a climax, ThaT being our second annual maTch wiTh Culver. For many years in The pasT LFA has noT played Culver in any sporT. LasT year The golT Team renewed The old-Time rivalry beTween The Two schools, and This year iT was Taken up in baskeTball, Track, and baseball, as well as our renewed home-and-home maTches in golT. LasT year Culver Trimmed us on Their hilly and picTuresque course. This year we hope To Turn The Tables down There as well as aT home. This conTesT is Tollowed by a reTurn maTch wiTh Chicago LaTin on Their course, Medinah CounTry Club. Following This, we iourney down To Chicago's souTh side To meeT Morgan Park MiliTary Acad- emy, our oldesT rival, in an all-senior maTch. Our reTurn maTch wiTh Culver has been arranged To be played aT Glen View, one Sf Chicago's oldesT and mosT beauTiTul courses. We hope ThaT on This day we can show Culver The same marvelous hospiTaliTy ThaT They showed us down There. Following This maTch are Three reTurn maTches wiTh Milwaukee, Morgan Park, and New Trier, respecTively, To Tinish up The season. AlThough The season's prospecTs are noT so good as we could wish Tor, we know The season will be a success, Tor iT will be whaT The golTers make iT: and whaTever happens, There will be much Tun involved, you can be sure oT ThaT. . D rfl nger, Roberls. Macpherson. Kneiloler, l-lulchinson, Crowe. SCHEDULE May 4-Sullivan l-ligh School lherel. May 8 May ll May I5 May I8 Mav22 -New Trier lrherel. Milwaukee Universily School lherel. I -Chicago Lalin School yherel. Culver Mililrary Academy llherel. Chicago Lalin School llherel. May 24 May 25 May 29 June I June 5 Morgan Park Mililary Academy llherel Culver Mililary Academy lherel. Milwaukee Universily School llherel. Morgan Park Mililary Academy lherel New Trier lherel. TENNIS Wi+h five leffer-men refurning from Iasf year's sfrong feam, fhe prospecfs of a successful season for fhe Academy racquefeers appear fo be brighf. A squad of fwenfy-five boys reporfed fo Dr. Krueger as soon as fhe spring ferm opened. Affer a series of challenge mafches, fhe ranking was defermined as follows: No. I, Rendall: No. 2, Keiler: No. 3, Griffin: No. 4, Mefcalf: No. 5, Aflassg No. 6, Johnson: No. 7, Sus: No. 8, Croker: No. 9, Shaffer: No. IO, Russell: and Dorwin, manager. In fhe firsf posifion, Rendall, much improved from Iasf year, has sfeady ground sfrokes, behind which he can go fo fhe nef when an opporfunify presenfs ifself. Keiler, refurning for his fhird seascn, second ranking man, is nofed for his blisfering fopspin drive. Colonel Gus Griffin plays a sfeady backcourf game and adds a fouch of honor befween sfrokes wifh old Kenfucky wif. In fhe number four posifion, Mefcalf relies on his agilify and speed of foof. Aflass can be counfed on fo win many mafches wifh his sfeady defensive game. Johnson, Though inclined fo be somewhaf errafic, is capable of playing very good fennis. Sus has a sfrong forehand drive and a very hard firsf serve, buf, like Johnson, is inclined fo be errafic on some days. Bill Croker, son of fhe famous fennis professional, is fhe possessor of beaufiful form in all his sfrokes, buf his game is handicapped by a lack of speed. I-lowever, Bill should advance rapidly when he 'speeds up his play. To complefe fhe feam, Shaffer and Russell bofh are hard-working, sfeady defensive players. Several ofher men show disfincf possibilifies and may displace some of fhe boys on fhe favored Iisf af fhe presenf fime. Dr. Krueger, fennis coach af LFA, has faken a genuine inferesf in helping fhe boys form a sfrong feam-a facf well illusfrafed by fhe record of lasf year's powerful aggregafion. In his firsf year af Lake Foresf, Dr. Krueger developed a feam fhaf ended fhe season wifh nine vicfories, fwo fies, and only fwo defeafs. Wifh one-half of fhaf aggregafion back, fhe liffle Doc anficipafes as successful a season fhis year as Iasf. Six of fhe fen men on fhe squad are seniors, while Keiler, Aflass, Johnson, and Russell will have anofher year of prep compefifion. The firsf fhree meefs of fhe season have been rained ouf by fhose April showers which come in May. If fhe weafher gives us a break, fhe feam will open ifs belafcd schedule againsf Kenosha on fhe laffer's courfs on May fourfh. The Kenosha feam should be easy vicfims on fhe basis of Iasf year's record. Wayland probably will nof exfend fhe LFA racquefeers in eifher of fhe fwo encounfers wh'ch fhe feams will play. I-lowever, Lake Foresf will find sfrong opposifion when fhey square off againsf Culver, Milwaukee Universify School, and New Trier. Culver M. A. and LFA will be renewing afhlefic relafions in fennis affer a break of several years, and fhe encounfer should produce one of fhe besf mafches lof fhe season. Milwaukee Universify School, who defeafed fhe local aggregafion lasf year on our own courfs, may prove fo be a sfumbling block, especially since fhey will have fhe advanfage of playing on fheir home courfs. Two meefs wifh New Trier, an unknown quanfify, will round ouf fhe season againsf oufside compefifion. The open fournamenf for fhe school championship, fhe finals of which will be played as parf of fhe commencemenf exercises, has already sfarfed. Alfhough eighf men have been seeded, none is oufsfanding enough fo be af all cerfain of fhe fifle. ln fhe upper half of fhe draw, Rendall, Griffin, Aflass, and Sus are seeded: in fhe lower half, Keiler, Mefcalf, Johnson, and Croker are favored. Second Row-Sus, Johnson, T., Melcalf, Long, Griffin, r a rn r r son Russel All s Ke le S a e Rendall, Loeb. Apri May May May May May May May IZ7 I SCHEDULE Culver lvlililary Academy lherel. -Morgan Park lvlililary Academy lhere 4-Sullivan High School lherel. 8 II 22 25h 29- Kenosha High School llherel. Wayland Academy lherel. Culver Mililary Academy llherel. Milwaukee Universily School llherel. New Trier llherel. AZI. 5 Q jwff ZX X aff 5: ' N' x. -6' Q - X 4 W X fir 'in L 14 30 QQ, S ,1Ai I .i.Q , .:t, f , 'Wx MIM , Q 4 51 1 YW? L5 ' I I. mf r U Rf ' JW 1, B ll f 4' fo! DWR GIRDES N f - ' x fr Ill X I l ' M I .Q ff' xx 1 'ig' ' ff hx- X? f. o - 6 ' Il . K Ii X ' ' J , -:sr 4 5 XY if f ff II 'if 5 i . ,.:g1.f.V , 4511 H . mm nm V A 3- ' X C I. AK - or V cas za 0 - .V :A ' ' - L!! U 4 B. Q 'IQ L MQ f I: ' 'I , 8 .i an yzugl 2 V ww anna 0 , T ' 1 X I f is ,f c ' X -f ,, ' W 1 E f 'N ix me , 5 X san!! m HDL R 'A G rl 1 , -' v 'VUNA hw ggi ix I Find' N ,. 1!! W Q K,M 'Nl qv CALENDAR 1934-1935 SepTember 20-School opens wiTh address by The Rev. DocTor Prince. Bo's are royally enTerTained in The gym wiTh a real pink lemonade and cake parTy. 2l-Some oT The Bo's look raTher deiecTed: iT musT be The weaTher. 22-FirsT SaTurday aT school. 23-STudenT body TroTs off To church. Bill Rendall has an arrangemenT wiTh a beam in The aTTic oT EasT house. The resulT-The beam wins: lighTs ouT Tor Rendy. 24-Rendy Tries To commiT suicide in VarsiTy pracTice by beaTing his head on The ground. l-le sur- vives and is labeled as one wiTh a charmed liTe. 25-School reaches iTs normal Trend-Sned, aTTer a shorT siege oT illness, hobbles over To class To give The boys a nice juicy one. 26-Dame naTure wins again. lT rains: so lglehearT weakens and becomes The TirsT graTTer OT The year. 27-- lv1ighTy bushed exemplifies The Teelings oT The would-be TooTballers. According To Jack Sullivan, someone's nose is cold. 28-Even Though iT looks The same aT boTh ends, The Dyrnaxion is an auTornobile, and, in addiTion, iT runs. Welcome Mr. ATwood. Sned says ThaT a ChevroleT moTor would work exceedingly beTTer in iT 29-VarsiTy pracTice called oTT. The resulT is plenTy swish OTT campus. 30-WhaT! church again. Some oT The breThren are hoping ThaT This habiT does noT become chronic. OcTober I-CounTry Club days come To an end as The new sTudy-hall lisT goes up. FaculTy meeTing causes added worry. Dr. Kreuger TorgoT his seconds on desserT. 2-Bo's nearly deserT when They see The caps ThaT They have To wear. 3-Believe iT or noT, noThing oT any parTicular inTeresT happened. 4-Cicero does noT TrequenT Reid l-lall any more-The orchesTra is commencing To pracTice. One who checks up laTe is bound To caTch someone. Dieser is der DokTor. 5--Mr. OverdorT evidenTly is well known. Even Luigi Pirandello says, RighT you arel liT you Think you arel. Have you VarsiTy men a Tunny Teeling in your sTomachs? Pep meeTing wiTh Two cheer leaders geTTing very scarleT abouT The neck and ears. 6-VarsiTy loses To ST. Bede, I9-O. Old boys sTop wondering why and how as Minney Tinally breaks a dish. ' 7-PlenTy Senior GraTTs Today. STudenT Council elecTions' resulTs are announced in Vespers. 8-IT was heard ThaT someone said Those Yale Chronicles were The nuTs. 9-l-Terr DokTor Tools The boys: he Talks over The 'phone in German. SToll is looking backward, or maybe iT was Talling backward ThaT l was Thinking. IO-l.ighTs Take down EvansTon, l8-O. VarsiTy scrimmages EvansTon l-ligh. Will someone please explain The Theory oT The mulTipliciTy oT selves To lggy? Il-BanTies lose To LiberTyville, I9-O. Big Rendall passes ouT reTurning Trom nighT sTudy hall. I2-l-lappy days are here again. VarsiTy spanks WheaTon College Reserves 46-O. JusT like old Times. Will someone please sTop The Chapel bell? l3-VarsiTy FooTball Squad goes To Chicago To see The various TooTball games. I4-Some are beginning To draw rough draTTs OT The leTTers ThaT They are going To send To The Ferry l-lall girls They meT lasT nighT. I5-lVlasTers are perTurbed as The aTTernoon class is called OTT Tor Caxy picTures. SToll rises To populariTy. I6-Mr. Zip Pearl amuses The boys in nighT sTudy hall. lggie cracks a 78 in French. Address mail Tor Mr. MaTheson To Alice Home l-lospiTal. I7-Seniors have individual picTures Taken Tor The Caxy. BanTies lose To EvansTon, I9-O. I8-Wonder why everyone wanTs To siT aT Mr. Jensen's Table. JusT The same we approve oT his choice. Georgie Tries To cuT l-lowie ouT. A sun V, im. M ti-xzms ...., .1 f, ummm V. ,W Munn ',t!uUZ!Hllu1 fl -1 5 ,sawn gf, ,..,, I9-Marshall Eield 81 Co. has a display oT winTer Tashions in The EasT House music room. 20-VarsiTy bows To American College oT Physical EducaTion, 26-6, Bill SchueTTe losT To VarsiTy Tor The resT oT The season wiTh a broken leg. PicTure in chapel-BusTer Crabbe in King OT The Jungle. 2l-The HeaThen wrap Specs in order To geT ouT oT church. New boys give Their word OT honor To Mr. Richards. 22-LighTs Tie a much heavier Team Trom LiberTyville, O-O. Coach Jensen claims a moral vicTory. Mr. Milne dispenses wiTh The enjoyable personaliTy oT one Dick Guy in nighT sTudy hall. 23-Chapel--l wish To see The EaculTy in my oTTice: also Keagy, Guy, and SmiTh. Some wild ass TorgoT ThaT he had an exTra-help class. SomeThing oughT To be done abouT SaTurday nighT lighTs. 24-How is your scholasTic apTiTude? Wead much bewildered by The whole Thing. 25-Dave LipperT puTs Ed Wynn, Joe Penner, and Joe Cook in The shade during Gargoyle pracTice. 26-Mr. Jensencalls oTT LighTweighT pracTice. ThaT is iusT abouT The pay'oTT. 27-Local boys Take iT on The schnozz Trom M. P. M. A. beTore a large Homecoming crowd. Well, The decoraTions were nice anyway. 28-The 8:45 absence boys arrive back looking as iT They had Tried To Take Two absences in one. There is Talk abouT going To The Fair Tomorrow. . 29-ATTer much debaTing and much To Sned's disgusT, a holiday is declared. Jack l.andreTh played hosT To some oT The boys aT his house in EvansTon. IT you don'T believe me, ask Palmer. 30-Holiday was Too much Tor Doc Krueger. Young HuTch beaTs him To seconds on desserT. The decoraTions are sTill up in The Dining Room. 31-EruiT, cider, and doughnuTs-Hallowe'en. November I-Bill SchueTTe reTurns To The baTTle Tield. Big Rendall Tinally gives up and goes home? second Tloor EasT geTs iTs TirsT resT since SepTember. 2--The Waukegan GazeTTe Takes picTures oT The wonder Team Tor Their April TirsT issue. Mlle. Cow breaks loose and makes Things hard Tor LighTweighT and BanTy pracTice. 3-LEA-0, Concordia College-37. NUTT said. 4--There were reservaTions Tor TwenTy-Tour aT The EdgewaTer lasT nighT. 5-EirsT anniversary oT TirsT-Term holiday. Doc Krueger's schedule is all upseT. He had To Trade Tables wiTh DocTor Shank. 6-'Tis rumored ThaT lglehearT is going in Tor Opera in The big way. A grand ToTal of TiTTeen ouT Tor VarsiTy pracTice. 7-LighTs whip EvansTon High 34-0. Coach Simon Legree Bergen conTinues To beaT The conceiT ouT oT The VarsiTy. ReTakes oT Senior picTures rouT Mechanical Drawing class. 8-The caT is ouT oT The bag. Charley explains why he does noT like gum: I, iT sTinks. and 2, chewers look like hogs. LandreTh gives up and leaves. Big Time in EasT house aTTer lighTs. 9-From The looks oT Tommy, he Tound ouT abouT The rough-house lasT nighT. Second and Third Tloors in 5:30 sTudy hall. I0-The EasT House DocTor TorgoT To play The lasT sTanza oT The morning hymn. Charley very much disgusTed: he claims ThaT he was iusT geTTing warmed up. ll-ArmisTice Day. DeclamaTion conTesT held aT 8:45. HuTT IsT, Gaidzik 2nd, and Crowe 3rd. PlenTy STudenT Council meeTing. I2-DelighTTul Tea served in room six beTween 7:30 and 8:30 Tor Mr. Webser. The whole EaculTy dished iT ouT. Gargoyle Club is going in Tor heavy pracTices. I3-School Trip To Elgin called oTT. School once more reTurns To normalcy as Grandma LandreTh's pleasanT Tace is once more seen abouT The campus. T4-Three sTuTTed shirTs Take OTT Tor The Opera-Tommy, lggie, and Sammy. l.andre+h again disappears. I5-Mr. Tucker iuggles and shuTTles The Gargoyle casT. MaTTy's daughTer is The Topic oT conversaTicn aT supper. I6-HorTon, we suggesT ThaT you read The Spider and The Ely, or geT anoTher spider. I7-VarsiTy puT up The besT TighT oT The year, buT loses To Elgin 27-7. Movie- Here Comes The Navy. Gloria STuarT rises To populariTy. I8-Mr. Arpee delivers speech in Vespers- The Bible and How lT Was Derived. 1 J I9-WinTer sporTs begin. Some oT The baskeTeers land in The lnTirmary. HUTT can'T Take iT. 20-CongraTulaTions, CapTain Rockwood. Various sTories heard as To caliber and mannerisms oT The All-Lake CounTy Team. Zi-The aToremenTioned go To The Opera again. Where's LandreTh? 22- The day sTudy-hall graTTing sTarTs in earnesT. Was The Opera Too much Tor you, lggie? 23--The quesTion: To have eleven o'clock lighTs on SaTurday nighT or noT To have Them. Blacks Trounce Oranges, I3-6. ' 24-GraTTers in The InTirmary geT up Tor Two classes, Then swish oTT campus. 25-DeclamaTion ConTesT held aT Ferry Hall insTead oT Vespers. Anyway, we Tried hard. 26- Aw nuTs.f' guess who? 27-lggie Takes a crowd To The Opera as his gaasT. 28-Thanksgiving recess begins wiTh an address abouT overeaTing, eTc. 29--Everybody wishes everybody else a happy Thanksgiving Day, or were you Teeling Too bad To do any wishing? 30-'Twas The day aTTer Thanksgiving and noT a graTTer in sighT. VarsiTy baskeTball holds nighT classes in The College gym. December I-FooTball Dance greaTly enjoyed. Music by Tommie l-lildebrandT and Co. Many sighs and cries as The young ladies deparT. 2-PlenTy leTTermen Today. The CounT oT MonTe CrisTo receives The praise oT E. E. O. 3-VarsiTy and LighTs lose To DeerTield in pracTice games. FirsT snow. 4--The Caxy Takes picTures oT The WinTer sporTs. - 5-VarsiTy sTeps on CenTral Y. M. C. A. oT Chicago, 52-21. LighTs squeeze ouT a win over EvansTon, T2-l l. EusTice is an arTisT when iT comes To Taking care oT visiTing Teams' uniTorms. 6-OTTo Vogl challenges all comers To The TiTle oT TooThbrushing King. 7-Talk abouT posTponing vacaTion Tor a week. The plan meeTs opposiTion. 8-Those more TorTunaTe leave, while The resT sTay To suTTer unTold agony. 9-LasT Sunday in school This year. IO-Exams. I I-More exams. I2-And sTill more. I3-C'esT TouTe. SECOND TERM January 3-Flunkers reTurn. 4-Flunkers Take exams and The resT oT The school, save abouT TiTTy, reTurns. 5 6 7 - l will never be able To geT down To work. Week-enders no sooner arrive Than They leave Tor Their TirsT week-end. -Vespers--The TirsT oT The New Year. . -Barney, per usual, is on The proverbial limb over The Follies. Mr. HUTT, Try sleeping in your own room Tor once aT nighT. We bid welcome To The Andersen Trio. 8-School swells To capaciTy as l-luTch, Crowe, and Sullivan arrive. 9-Mr. MaTheson, a la ScoTland Yard, looks Tor PeTer Malcolrn's brieT case. LandreTh is back again. IO I! I2 T3 Flack is looking Tor some chess players. A -Alumnus, Ken Rich, pays The school a visiT. LandreTh conTesses ThaT he has become a day sTudcnT. -The Chess Club makes iTs bow To socieTy. Flack has even goT a TournamenT under way. FirsT week oT school over, and Tommy is sTill in a good humor. IT musT be The Gargoyle Club: iT so, give Them a medal. -Red IeTTer day, Sned TorgeTs how To Tinish one oT his jokes: McLaughlin obliges. George Young is cerTainly going in Tor laTe parTies. -STudenT Council elecTions are held under The new sysTem. Where was everyone aT breakTasT? f ,, A, W'- . , 1 iii... I4-McLaughlin sTarTs ouT in earnesT To beTTer his Caxy graTT record oT lasT Term. Record cuT line. Revival oT SenaTe is advocaTed. I5-ResulTs oT STudenT Council elecTions announced. A new lecTure course has arisen, which includes movies and PeTe's sTeaks. I6-VarsiTy beaTs ST. Albans, 39-20. LighTs win I4-IZ. Charley reTuses To keep Time Tor gum-chewing baskeTball players. l-lockey is under way. I7-VarsiTy goes Through such a good pracTice ThaT They surprise Themselves. I8-VarsiTy beaT LaTin School 35-I l. lggie, are you Trying To rival McLaughlin as a graTTer? Mac- pherson's Tux is Tor sale. I9-LighTs beaT Todd I3-I2. BanTies lose. FirsT Tloor' EasT Teed. Ferry's FaculTy Dance claims The aTTenTion oT The boys. 20-Mr. Overdorf claims our aTTenTion in Vespers wifh a Talk on The law game. Mr. Flack is Thor- oughly amused. Whaf is The SenaTe? 2l--Lake ForesT Academy loses one of her very besT Triends wiTh The passing oT Mrs. Richards. 22-RemseniTes geT a new sTairway. 23-Mr. Tucker's Table is exclusively Gargoyle. Back To old TradiTion. 24-Services Tor Mrs. Richards held in Chapel. Dr. Pugh, Rev. DocTor Prince, and Dr. RoberTs oTTiciaTe. Many Tormer sTudenTs reTurn. 25-SBYH lsneibler, if you had any sense, would you go To bed early, or will we see you again Tomorrow nig T. 26-VarsiTy crushes Culver, 29-8. Culver boys enTerTain Doc Krueger in Remsen house. 27-SenaTe held aT 7:45. When are we going To have a holiday? To Top The day oTF, The lighTs go oTT. 28-BiggesT cuT line so Tar This year and believe you me iT was a honey. 29-PicTures oT The Glee Club Taken Tor The Caxy. LosTl One school orchesTra. 30-VarsiTy cleTeaTs Sullivan l-ligh School oT Chicago. l-lumpy l-laywood puTs on a Tumbling acT. 3l-Big Dale liusT call me Elmerl ShaTTer goes Harvard in Chapel. P February I-OTTO Vogl's TooThbrushes have undergone a TransTormaTion. Use in case oT Tire. 2-VarEiTIy Takes Bowen High 35-I I. Movie Big-l-learTed l-lerberT. Sullivan hears The sea Through a s e . 3-SenaTe goes To WilmeTTe To hear Dr.,VincenT. Crowe is leTT aT The church. 4-.lrlaikl Sullivan ouT oT baske+baII The resT oT The season wiTh a broken hand. Wowl WhaT a sTudy- a isT. 5--STudenTs voTe To have boTh Track and baseball in The spring Term. Gaidzik lays The boys low in Gargoyle pracTice. 6-ST. Albans deTeaTs The VarsiTy, 26-21. 7-Gargoyle Club begins To pracTice aT Ferry l-lall. Mr. and Mrs. T-lickman pay Mac a laTe evening visiT, 8-Mr. Richards reTurns To Take over his duTies once more. Surprise---a long FaculTy meeTing. Caxy Board goes To Milwaukee. Sned TorgeTs To come To class: TirsT Time in nigh on To TiTTy years. 9-Seymour geTs anoTher monTh on campus. Will he ever learn? Charlie inTorms RoberTs ThaT his place is ouTside The oTTice and noT inside. ReservaTions Tor Twelve aT The Palmer l-louse. K lO-JusT one OT Those Sundays. l I-Happy BirThday, Mr. Lincoln. Tell me whaT happened: l graTTed. I2-Thank you very much, George Young: we weren'T going any place anyway. ArT Sullivan geTs The measles, which makes everyThing iusT Too Tine. I3-Three more oT The boys come down wiTh The scourge. School is going To be run on banking hours. I4-PlenTy counTry club is This new schedule. l-lours To hold good Tomorrow, Too. VarsiTy under The coaching oT WebsTer and BenneTT beaT The FaculTy, 63-4l. I5-Ray sT,udenTs revolT againsT scarleT Tever germ and sTay home. ls Bokum on The VarsiTy or The Backs. I6--QuaranTine doesn'T sTop Jack Sullivan Trom going home on a week-end. l-landsome Jack LandreTh moves ouT oT TirsT Tloor EasT. I7-ChocolaTe parTy and a movie. I8-Welcome back, ArT. The zero hour is near, and we may geT OTT campus. I9 -Mid-WinTers To be Ivlarch IsT and 2nd, if There is no more scarIeT Tever. Rumors Tlying abouT concerning a holiday. Odds Tomorrow, 2-I: Thursday, 6-I7 and Friday, 4-I. Tommy sporTs a new Winnie The Pooh III. F-6 arrives wiTh an air oT an old ArgenTine. 20-- Sloppy Flack Tells The boys all abouT iT. VarsiTy gives us a real show, buT Ioses To Elgin, 25-24. Spring rears iTs head. 2l-Big Boy Takes up The baTh quesTion, aIThough he haTes To menTion iT. HuTT seTs some kind oT a new record on long disTance Telephone calls. 22-One week Trom Today, boys. The Gargoyle Club is sTiII undecided wheTher To give The play or noT. 23-FiTTy oT The scholars Take week-ends. 24-I.osT-Two columns oT The SpecTaTor, namely: The Do You Know and The Inquiring ReporTer columns. 25-Chapel, announcemenTs, and such. Looks like a long week Tor The Gargoyle Club. 26-Gargoylers pracTicing sTage TrighT, or is iT real? 27-The dance is Two days away and sTill no maTerial. Ivlr. RoberTs is wearing a Iong, sour pan These days. 4 28-'Twas The day before Mid-WinTers and everybody hard aT work, buT a IiTTIe uncerTain oT Their desTinaTion. ' March I-Hi, Gals. Tea in Mr. Richards' aparTmenT Tor The guesTs. Follies goes over wiTh a bang. Tom HiIdebrandT serves good music aT The inTormaI dance. 2-WebsTer's and BenneTT's Team Takes down The FaculTy, 33-32. Gargoyle play is huge success. CongraTuIaTions To you, The club, and a bravo To you, Mr. Tucker. Formal dance ends Mid-WinTers. 3-Mr. STiIes, never leave a Iady To walk home. IT is all over now. 4-- The Time is geTTing shorT- guess who? Two more weeks. 5--Brehm, Too much Mid-WinTers week-end: Nell, Too much Geneva. 6-Ash Wednesday? Mike Colangelo is in his glory explaining. 7-Dr. Todd oT CarIe+on College meeTs prospecTs in Mr. Richards' oTTice. 8--We are pleased To announce ThaT Chris Dresch is Taking a course in Nurse Maiding 5. Lab work includes care of STeve Arpee. 9--VarsiTy plows Through PIeasanT View, 37-2I, To capTure Ivlid-WesT Prep TiTIe. CongraTulaTions, gang. IO-Sus Takes off Tor The WesT Indies. Is everyone back Trom Ferry Hall? Paging Bill SchueTTe. II-Big FaculTy round up. Palmer, Seymour, and Kallis TeaTured in The big TenT. How can I geT ouT on SaTurday? I2-There sTill seems To be some doubT as To wheTher The Adonis will remain wiTh us, or noT. Give me JusT One More Chance. Mr. Noble pleases our Tancy, compIimenTs oT Mr. CoTy. I3-No more breakTasT cuTs. There oughT To be a revival oT ye olde Tashioned gym parTies. I4-Dave Ivlinney is geTTing correspondence Trom Elgin Junior College. Any down paymenT yeT, Dave? The orchesTra and Humpy Haywood enTerTain aT dinner. Dana has The pink-eye and reporTs ThaT everyThing is plenTy ignoranT. I5-Mac and Tommy OTF To The EasT, Sus To The WesT Indies, RoberTs To Panama, HuTT To CaIiTornia, and The resT oT us iusT sTick around. I6-Those who are lucky and Those who did noT parTicipaTe in The Mid-WinTers acTiviTies leave. Be'ieve iT or noT, IgIehearT geTs ouT oT exams. I7-H. H. Harmon Throws open house, and Wacker and Haywood suTTer Trom The psychological eTTecT. EasT House has moved en masse To The TirsT Tloor. Seymour makes a bid Tor King OT The Bull Club. Need iT be said ThaT iT was some bid? I8-Exams oTF To a Tlying sTarT. I9-Exams sTiII. 20-Again exams. 2I-WiTh a sigh Though a biT reIucTanT, I, keeper OT The calendar, Iock up The school Tor The Term las I have been doing Tor The IasT Tive yearsl. Maw .- -M 1 April 6-The ArTs deparTmenT enTry wins The highesT award in The Junior SecTion oT The Chicago Flower TI-IIRD TERM 7-From Florida, CaIiTornia, and parTs easT and souTh They Tlock back. IT you haven'T goT a good sunburn, you are iusT noT one oT The boys. Show. 8-A IoT oT IaTe risers This morning. Class-oTTicer elecTions are held, and The resuITs are surprising. On campus Tor The measles, Thank you, John Dana, or is iT sevenTy-Two oTher people in Lake ForesT? 9-By The looks oT The vesT, Dale is warming up Tor The racing season. Dave Minney gives The boys an idea oT how To slide. IO-The Tlower show is as good a graTT as any, leT's go. I I-A nice long FacuITy meeTing sTarTs The morning oTF righT. Did you naTure lovers really go To The Tlower show? Jack Sullivan gives Mr. Tucker a bouqueT oT Tlowers To prove iT. I2-Everybody sees The Tlower show. I I3-WebsTer is Trying vainly To develop The measles. Movie- GiTT oT Gab, wiTh Lee Tracy. I4-One-haIT holiday declared. WebsTer succeeds in caTching The measles. I5-Measles rears iTs ugly head again and caTches Two in one day. Who is The mysTerious TenTh mem- ber oT The council? I6-Mr. BenneTT oT The Caxy carnival announces ThaT There will be a dance in Two weeks. I-IeIIo, Cap- Tain I-luTchinson! Measles gaining, six sTudenTs succumb. I7--No chapel This morning. Did Vogl hurT his arm by brushing his TeeTh? Mr. Jensen displays his new air-Tlow Trousers. Dale ShaTTer's anchor-chain waTch-chain creaTes a panic among The Esquire readers. I8-Why can'T Minney be conTenT wiTh breaking dishes? VarsiTy plays DeerTieId in a pracTice game. I9-One oT Those EacuITy meeTings This morning. 20-Caxy carnival is called oTT. 2I--Sunday, so whaT? 22-Bill I-IuTchinson's beverage suiT causes greaT commenT. Is he Training Tor Cornell even in dress? 23-The Mandel TormenTers are hard aT work. Tuesday and Sned did noT give a TesT. 24-Senior Class oTTicers have Their picTures Taken. They could aT leasT have been quieT aTTer coming in so laTe. 25-Oranges and Blacks prepare Tor The Track meeT. Yeah! Wisconsin. RoberTs and Dresch conducT chapel exercises. Poor GerTie STein. 26-Oranges win Track meeT: buT being a loyal Black, I reTuse To puT down The score. Will some one Tell Greenebaum noT To run The mile again wiThouT a IiTTIe pracTice? 27-And more rain. 28-I-Iello, Peggy, where were you lasT nighT? 29--GarneTT has ioined The Three-man Caxy sTaTT, making iT Tour aT presenT. Whipple sails high on The bIankeT, while STiIes and Minney lose Their panTs Ishould we says Trousers?I. 30-Flack sways The sTudenT body wiTh a Tlaming biT oT oraTory on reTormaTion. May I-BlankeT Tossing and panTsing begin. Minney wakes up and Tinds his Trousers in The old elm Tree. Mr, Greenebaum, iT you were noT in sTudy hall, you would noT geT your breeches sToIen. 2-WashingTon! aTTenTionI Mr. I-IuTT's chapel speech demands an answer. 3-LandreTh has been To school Tor Two weeks sTraighT. EvansTon musT be losing iTs charm. 4-VarsiTy goes To Culver. Loses 4-O. Every one enioys The January in May we are having. Imagine having snow in May, and They call iT a moderaTe climaTe. 5-Mr. Richards gives a Talk on cars meeTing aT crossroads in Iowa. School enioys GoIddiggers oT I935 aT The DeerpaTh. 6-Now, Fleischman, maybe you will sTay in your room on SaTurday evenings. And, ThereTore, as The I935 Caxy goes To press, I bid you a biT oT a cheerio, so long, goodbye, and gwan To college, you Seniors. 4 Q Q-MQ 'W' E 5 ' . um k I , 1 ' .Lv I , 5, ff 'tl 1 .,. 5 V., rx., g , , i 5 4 'If ww , v I in . .1 ' 1 ' '55 v f 5 Z' , KY? Q a F' L, , ,A 'ww ,,,- we :Y rs 4 .JV Q 'isis 1 732 fr K. , 5, .M 13, I mfr ,V ,f .f kg gif ' ,,..,W 41 A w?2,,,z ' , ,, , . , STUDENT REGISTER Rober+ Alexander, '35 ........ Frederick Mil+on Allen, '38. . . Glen Richard Andersen, '40 ..... Rober+ Harry Andersen, '39 ....... Wal+er Woodward Andersen, '35. . . John Armour, '37 .....,....... Harry Leslie A+lass, Jr., '36 .... . James Thomas Aubrey, Jr., '36, . John Alden Beauiean, '35 .... Samuel Evans Benne++, '35 .... John S+ephen Berksonf '36 ..., Edwin William Bleier, '35 ...,. Charles Hascall Bliss, '38 ..... ...........622I Third S+., Kenosha, Wis. Richard Henry Bobbe, '37 ....,.,. . . Richard Drummond Bokum, 35 .... . Herber+ Rodney Bolin, '38 ...... Garre+son Dulin Brehm, '37 ,.... Gran+ Bryan, '37 .....,....,. Carl Alber+ Buehler, '38 ........ Ralph Morris Burch, Jr., '37 .... . Merle S+ephen Burdick, '36 ..,.. Milburn Bu+ler, '35 .......... Richard Major Casfle, '37 .,.. Wal+er Lorraine Cherry, '35 ..,,. Jack Benne++ Coale, '36 .,,., Marvin John Colangelo, '35 .... William Connon, Jr., '38 ..,. . Ward Sco++ Cook, '36 ...... William John Croker, '35 ...., Roger Allan Crowe, '35. . . John Henry Dana, '37 ....... Henry Adams Dangler, '38 ...., Jackson Brooks Derflinger, '35, , , Harry Dodges Dickson, '38 ....... ..... Herman William Diener, Jr., '36, Charles Kenne+h Dorwin, '35. . .'. Chris+ian Alloer+ Dresch, '35 ..,. Gordon Ball Duncan, '35 .... John Henry Eps+ein, '36 ....,, John Hu+chison Eus+ice, '36 .,... Frank Farwell Ferry, Jr., '40 ........ Herber+ Norman Flack, '35 ....,..... Alber+ Rober+ Fleischmann, Jr., '3 Paul Andre Florian, lll, '37 ........,.. Wal+er Sheldon Fox, '36 ......... George William Gaidzik, '35. . . James Barnes Garne++, '35 .....,. ' Charles Daniel Gela++, '35 ......,.... .. Mor+imer Ernes+ Greeneloaum, '35 .... .. . .34 Meridian Pl., lndianapolis, lnd. . . . . . . . . .Gardner Rd., Flossmoor, III. . . . . .6305 Third Ave., Kenosha, Wis. . . . . l27 Robsarl' Rd., Kenilwor+h, lll. ...I27 Robsarl' Rd., Kenilwor+h, lll. . . . . l27 Robsar+ Rd., Kenilwor+h, III. . . .. .. .308 N. Scovilla, Oak Park, III. . . . . .2440 Lake View Ave., Chicago, lll. . . ..... 234 Cen+ral Ave., Highland Park, III. .. . . . . . . . . . . .Melbourne Beach, Fla. . . . . l940 Sherman Ave., Evans+on, lll. ..........l76 Vine Ave., Highland Park, lll. 326 Wes+mins+er Rd., Lake Fores+, lll. . . .5200 Blacks+one Ave., Chicago, III. ..l430 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Ill. . . . . . I I I3 Hull Terrace, Evans+on, lll. .. . . . l450 Hillcres+ Ave., Pasadena, Calif. ....999 Sheridan Rd., Lake Fores+ lll. . . . l5I Abingden Ave., Kenilwor+h, lll. . . . .50l W. Marke+ S+., Taylorville, lll. ....2l3 Scran+on Ave., Lake Blu+F, lll. . . . . .40 Locus+ Rd., Winne+ka, lll. .......8l4 Ba+avia Ave., Geneva, III. .....5I2 Sheridan Rd., Kenilwor+h, Ill. .322 Kenilwor+h Ave., Kenilwor+h, lll. .. . l356 N. Mayfield S+., Chicago, III. .275 Washing+on Rd., Lake Fores+, lll. ..... . . .300 l2+h Ave., Clin+on, lowa . . .290 Eas+ View Ave., Lake Fores+, lll. .234 Raleigh Rd., Kenilwor+h, lll. ..........,........Kewaunee,Wis. . . .500 Wes+ern Ave., Lake Fores+, lil. . . ................... 846 7+h, Clin+on, lowa 4l5 N. Washing+on Rd., Lake Fores+, lll. ..,. . . . . . . . .722 Fair Oaks Ave., Oak Park, lll. . . ..... 425 Roosevel+ Ave., Pasadena, Cali+. .......................Cassopolis, Mich. ...............4I I .Hull Cour+, Waukegan, lll. . . . .28l Roger Williams Ave., Highland Park, lll. . . . . . , . . .732 S. Elm S+., Hinsdale, Ill. ....39I Sheridan Rd., Winne+ka, lll. . . .. .. . .. .Box l4I, Deerfield, lll. .. ...Georgian Ho+el, Evans+on, lll. . . . . . . . . . , .26 Sco++ S+., Chicago, Ill. . .905 Nor+h Eas+ S+., Blooming+on, lll. ....206 Bell Ave., Highland Park, lll. 622 S. Linden Ave., Highland Park, lll. ......I326 Cass S+., La Crosse, Wis. . . . .225 Maple Hill Rd., Glencoe, lll. Gus Mi+cheIl Gri+Iin, '35 ..... Gene Dixon Guy, '37 .......... Henry Holbrook Harmon, '35 ..... George Price Haywood, '35 .... Harris Bradle Haywood, '36 .... Eugene Ralph Head, '35 ....... Thomas Hen+ges, '37 ........... . ..... 406 Wes+mins+er Rd., Lake Fores+, III. Rober+ Alexander Heylmun, '36 .... . Hallock Brown Ho+Fman, '37 .... Richard Hobson, '37 ........ Richard Seaham Holden, '38 .... Bur+ Ellis Huey, '35 .......... Jean Richard Hu+F, '35 ....... . . . . .720 Frederica S+., Owensboro, Ky. . . . .3300 Beekman S+., Cincinna+i, Ohio .....3I5 Laurel Ave., Highland Park, III. . . . . . . .72I Brown S+., La+aye++e, Ind. . . . . . . .72I Brown S+., La+aye++e, Ind. . . . . . . . . . .6320 5+h Ave., Kenosha, Wis. . . . . . . . . .922 Logan S+., Wayne, Nebr. ....3I23 S. Miami Rd., Sou+h Bend, Ind. .. . . . . . . . . .7022 Benne++ Ave., Chicago, III. 235l Deere Park Drive, Highland Park, III. . . . .. . . . . .. . . .4304 3rd S+., CIin+on, Ia. . . . . . . . I902 Nebraska S+., Sioux Ci+y, Ia. Henry Webb Hun+, '35 .......... .......... 8 44 Lincoln Ave., Winne+ka, III. Richard Paul Hu+chinson, '36 ...., .... 8 944 Sou+h Hoyne Ave., Chicago, III. William Young Hu+chinson, '35 ..... Frank Emery Hu+chison, '36 ...... John GiI+ner IgIehar+, Jr., '35.. .. ..... I24O S. E. 2nd Ave., Evansville, Ind. Edwin Theodore Johnson, III, '37 .... Homer Johnson, '38 ........... Hor+on Johnson, '37 ......,.... Jack Allen Kallis, '36 ........ George Chris Keagy, '35 .... John William Keiler, II, '36 .,.., Sherman Ely Keller, '35 ....... Kenne+h Haskel Klee, '35 ..,.... Ar+hur Reed Kneibler, Jr., '35. .. Mar+in Edward Kupperman, '35 .... John Thompson Landre+h, '35 ..... Finley Bernard Leech, '36 ...... WaI+er Burch Leishman, '36 .... Charles William Lembcke, '36 .... . . .8944 Sou+h Hoyne Ave., Chicago, III. .. . . .709 Moun+ain Ave., Lake Bluff, III. . , . . I68 Cen+ral Ave., Highland Park, III. .. . . . I58 Melrose Ave., Kenilwor+h, III. . . . . . I58 Melrose Ave., Kenilwor+h, III. . . . .732 Van Buren S+., Chicago, III. ....,.............Hagers+own,Ind. . . . . . . . . . .2876 Broadway, Paducah, Ky. .. . . .340 Prospec+ Ave., Highland Park, III. ..525 N. Linden Ave., Highland Park, III. . . . . . . . . .6347 Fi++h Ave., Kenosha, Wis. . . . l452 Alexander Cour+, Waukegan, III. . . . . . . .2703 Sheridan Rd., Evans+on, III. . . . . .28I0 EIizabe+h S+., Zion Ci+y, III. . . . . . I5I5 Emerson S+., Beloi+, Wis. ...7I3 Downer Place, Aurora, lll. David Lipper+, '37 ...,.......... .... 4 0I 68+h S+., Kenosha, Wis. Ar+hur SyIver+ Li++IefieId, '36 ..... . ............ 546 Elm S+., Winne+ka, III. Richard Mayer Livings+on, '38 .... ........... I 60 N. LaSalle S+., Chicago, III. Theodore RooseveI+ Loeb, '37. . . Philip William Long, '35 ....... John Francis Macpherson, '35 .... .... Pe+er Malcolm, '38 .............. Eugene David Mandel, Jr., '38. .. James Bernard McCahey, Jr., '38 .... . Lynn Hess McCurdy, '36 .......... . .535 S. Sheridan Rd., Highland Park, III. I9+h and Washing+on S+., Columbus, Ind. I200 Sou+h Douglas Ave., Springfield, III. .............I32O Elm Rd., Lake Fores+, III. , . . .357 Moraine Rd., Highland Park, III. , . . .4850 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, III. ....I3I9 S. E. Firs+ S+., Evansville, Ind. Edwin Wall McLain, Jr., '36 ........ ........... 2 3I5 Eas+ 68+h S+., Chicago, III. James Raymond McLaughlin, '35 ..... ,........ I 400 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, III. John McWilliams, III, '35 ....,... .... I 207 Sou+h Pasadena Ave., Pasadena, Calif. WaI+er Bradford Me+caI+, '35 .... ............................. D eerfield, III. LeRoy MeriIIa+, '35 .........,... .... 2 802 Hoagland Ave., For+ Wayne, Ind. David Grover Minney, Jr., '35 ,..... ......... I 453 W. Macon S+., Deca+ur, III. Willard Langdon Morrison, Jr., '36 .... .... 6 50 Nor+hmoor Rd., Lake Fores+, III. Edward Peck Morse, Jr., '38 ...... ..... 5 85 Ingleside Place, Evans+on, III. Vic+or Henry Munnecke, Jr., '35 .... ...., 9 24l PIeasan+ Ave., Chicago, III. Donald Rober+ Murphy, '37 .... ....6I07 Kenmore Ave., Chicago, III. Benno Fredric Nell, lll, '37 ..... Charles Norman, '35 ..........,, John William O'Leary, Jr., '37. . ., Bradley Johnson Palmer, '35 ...., James Parliamenf Peabody, '38. .. Sanford Alden Peabody, '38 ,.... Ward Cummings Pearl, Jr., '38. .. Jacob Alberf Oba Preus, Jr., '38. . Bernard Arfhur Rause, Jr., '36, . .. Richard Taylor Raymond, '37 .... Edwin Coan Rendall, '35 ........ William Humphrey Rendall, '37. .. Charles Shephard Roberfs, '35 .... Ralph Kanouse Rockwood, Jr., '35 George Henry Roberfson Ross, '36 Hamilfon Sfickney Ross, '38 ...... Donald Clark Russell, '36 .....,... John Buckwalfer Rufledge, '36 ..., Paul Hunfley Ryckoff, '35 ..... . . William Warren Schueffe, '35 .,., Charles Rolfe Seaborne, '36 ..... John Howard Seymour, '35 ..,, Dale Shaffer, '35 .,..,...... Samuel James Sherer, '36 .... Fred Howard Six, '36 ...., . . . Chandler Crego Smifh, '36 .... Fred Smifh, '35 .......,..,... Edward Sonnenschein, '37 ..... John Lawrence Sfeele, '35 ..... Alfred Elkan Sfern, Jr., '36. . .. Gilberf William Sfiles, '38 ..... James Fuller Sfiles, '36 .... Sfuarf Lee Sfiles, '35 ......... Samford Phillips Sfoll, '35 ........ Arfhur Clifford Sullivan, Jr., '35, .. Jack Edward Sullivan, Jr., '35, . .. George Marfin Sus, '35 ,.... Frank Wyllie Taylor, '35 ..... James Fosfer Teevan, '37 ....,,. John Monfague Teevan, '35 ..,., Malcolm Dennison Vail, '36 .... Earle Brook Vickery, '35 ,..,.,,.. Charles Weiner Vogl, '36 ..,..... Frederick Glade Wacker, Jr., '36. . Roberf Finley Walker, Jr., '36. . . . Hulburd Wampler, '37 ...... David Morse Wead, '35 ..... William Earl Websfer, '35 .....,. Henry Rood Whipple, ll, '38 .... Charles William Wiggins, '36 ..... George Wallace Young, Jr., '38.. Echeverria 297 . . . . lO42 E. 48fh Sfreef, Chicago, lll. .... . . . . . . .24 Ogden Ave., Hinsdale, Ill. . . . . I7OO Waukegan Rd., Lake Foresf, lll. . . . . . . l306 Bafes Ave., Springfield, lll. . . . . .268 Moraine Rd., Highland Park, lll. .,....268 Moraine Rd., Highland Park, III. . . . . . . . . . . . .666 Elder Lane, Winnefka, Ill. 3l9 Norfh Sheridan Rd., Highland Park, lll. . . , l73O Vicforia Ave., Norfh Chicago, III. . . . . . . . I632 Chase Ave., Chicago, lll. . . . .638 Lincoln Way, Morrison, lll. ....638 Lincoln Way, Morrison, III. ........247 Chesfnuf Rd., Winnefka, Ill. . . . . . . . . .298 Lincoln Ave., Winnefka, lll. . . I4l3 Wildwood Lane, Highland Park, lll. ...........4!8 Easfon Ave., Geneva, lll. ........55IO Sheridan Rd., Chicago, lll. .........Homewood, Laurel, Miss. . . . . l608 Chase Ave., Chicago, Ill. . . . .706 Sf. Clair, Manifowoc, Wis. . . . . . .8l5 E. Alfon Sf., Applefon, Wis. . . . .99 Soufh Bafavia Ave., Bafavia, Ill. .. . . . . . I79 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, lll. . . . . . . . .349 Lake Ave., Highland Park, III. 2, Buenos Aires, Argenfina, Soufh America ...........IO7 Blunf Sf., Charles Cify, la. .. . . . . . .92l S. Courf Sf., Circleville, Ohio ....327 Egandale Rd., Highland Park, lll. . . . .5029 Woodlawn Ave., Chicago, III. .. . . .950 Lincoln Ave., Highland Park, III. . . . . . .Wifchwood Lane, Lake Bluff, III. .. . . . . . .Wifchwood Lane, Lake Bluff, lll. . . . ,832 Soufh Madison, Green Bay, Wis. . . . . . . I763 E. 55fh S+., Chicago, III. . . . . . . . . . . .830 Hill Rd., Winnefka, III. . . , .4406 Washingfon Blvd., Chicago, lll. . . . .3500 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, lll. . . . . . . .5346 Cornell Ave., Chicago, lll. . . . . . . . .2837 Harfzell Sf., Evansfon, lll. . . . . . . . . .2837 l-larfzell Sf., Evansfon, lll. . . . I9O Lakewood Place, Highland Park, lll. . . . . l3O Norfh Grave Sfreef, Hinsdale, lll. . . . . . .5356 Glenwood Ave., Chicago, lll. . . . . .490 E. College Rd., Lake Foresf, Ill. . . . . . . . . . .234 Cary Ave., Ravinia, III. ......23O Cary Ave., Ravinia, lll. . . . . . . IO9 Callendar Ave., Peoria, III. . . . .625 Easf Lincoln Sf., Hoopsfon, lll. . . . . .5744 Kenwood Ave., Chicago, lll. . . . . . . . . .8OI Virginia Park, Defroif, Mich. . . . . IO45l Soufh Seelev Ave., Chicago, Ill. AUTOGRAPHS ADVERTISING N D E E R P A T H I N N LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS F' d lly Irwiies the Parent: and Friends of the Academy to Spend Tl W d I I Wh 0 yy ll I mir ack-an .r at t1e nn ere ne May En' a lze Comfort: of Home at Moderate Rat F R ERV NS T JONE L F 2280 JAMES P. DIXON 7 Jensen S GENTS FURNISHING STORE B O O T Telephone 64-4- S H O P 654 Western Avenue LAKE FOREST ILLINOIS O O Compliments of . . . The Deerpath Theatre FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAKE FOREST DEER PATH AND BANK LANE A Federal Reserve Member Bank 4 C Y' 'es For All Good Foods Shop At COMMUNITY SERVICE GROCERY i-and-- MEATMARKET Where Quality Rules o LAKE FOREST HUBBARD VVOOD5 Ph IF 1500 Ph VV k 3800 HIFHLAIND PARK Ph H P 4040 Qvoag Bakefr as Gagds LAKE FOREST JEVVELRY STORE Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Eye Glasses Carefully Repaired GARRIT M. BAX, Manager Tel. Lake Forest 1034 The Lake Forester The UDELL PRINTING COMPANY Publishers PRINTERS - PUBLISHERS BINDERS - ENGRAVERS Lake Forest, Illinois Telephone 1800 COAL COKE BUILDING MATERIALS M. H. HUSSEY 81 CQ. Telephones: 888-889 LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS VVOOD FEED Come Over and See Us Sometime WE CAN TINT PAINT TO ANY SHADE Try us and he convinced GLIDDEN PAI Phone 55 ake Forest Lumber Co. Barker Grocery and Market Phones: Lake Forest 341 342 343 0 718 N. Western Ave 0 Lake Forest, Ill. LAKE FOREST RADIO SHOP Hglllllfiflll Hf'z1a'quarters 0 T l ph 2 -I 648 N. XY Avenue Dr. Charles W. Young Dr. Noel S. Y oung . 265 Deerpath Avenue LAKE FOREST ILLINOIS LAKE FOREST ILLINOIS O'Neill Hardware CO. PAINTS .. . HARDWARE SPORTING GOODS Phones: 500 and 501 Lake Forest, Illinois VVILIVIETTE VVINNETKLX GLLNLOE HIGHLAND PARK RUGS . . . Cleaned and Sized The F URS . . . Cleaned and Stored We Call and Deliver North Shovels Largest and Most Populcw Cleamefs O Phone Lake Forest 8 CLEAN ERS E5 DYE RS LAKE FOREST VVAUKEGAN KENOSHA RLXCINE MELLQDY FARMS DAIRY M. C. Tilvbetts, L. F. C. ex '15 Pasteurized GRADE WA MILK We Serve All North Shore Towns Will Academy Folks Please Give Us a Try? Telephone: 407-408 Lake Forest Telephone 823 Lake Bluff Reliable Service Because of its Purity a d LIE IA amy Pt th H B 0763: Cd E' G. L.- Blanchard Co. f 'm Qlnc. 19231 FUEL - HAY - GRAIN - FEED BUILDING MATERIAL IJEPEN DABLE ICE SERVICE LOUIS PERSCHKE, Pr p QUALITY AND SERVICE PHONE 1100 58 VVASHING LAKE FOREST, ILL. LAKE FOREST Compliments of Wells 81 Copithorne Co. LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATORS GAR-WOOD OIL BURNERS HARDINGE OIL BURNERS WILLIAM N. FRYE, ING Telephone 425 598 No. WESTERN AVE. LAKE FOREST, ILL J. B. Garnett Co Highland Park Lake Forest Glencoe Final Quiz for the Class of '35 How Cool is a Cucumber? ..,.gj:55f: gg , ' Maybe the dim-Wit who in- V EIVI E ff- U vented the phrase knows the H : ,.V'f 352.535- answer. Being clothiers and not horticulturists, We'll take Q, a Hunk on it. But just ask us igmsa something sensible like 'iHovv ., . ' g :ip ,,v-:EEE ei can I keep cool and Well dressed through commencement and vacation? -and Watch qggu 'A:i i i Q us knock it for an A-double-plus. Welve A,.Ai SE filled this Store full of the finest tropical- zz weight clothing and furnishings We could A -- - - '-'- 1 QE obtain. VVelve ransacked the market for iiii B fabrics that will stay Smart, without Wilting 25355. E 'ff1' i and Wrinkling, on a sizzling hot day. Bring :i555sg5:. I i your hot Weather comfort problems to the -1,, :Eg specialists-George and Bud. In sr ae'- ' I I Palm Beach Clothing ..i.,. I 4 ' 'i ' Q and rteet' Dixie Worsted Suits iri' iff allfwoolffeatherweight .U f ii : PANAMA HATS STRAW HATS . FOULARD TIES IN PASTEL SHADES PoRoUS-WEAVE SHIRTS ALL-SILK HOSIERY OBERTSON'S N'S SHGP Compliments Of Dr. C. P. McCullough IW. D. Compliments of Theodore S. Proxmire M. D. F. A. C. S. Oflice Hours: 4-6 P. M. 570 Deerpath LAKE FOREST ILLINOIS HENTGES MARKET Quality and Service Phones 130, 131 740 Western Avenue LAKE FOREST Compliments of Kohout Flower Shop Telephone 220 266 E. DEERPATH Deerpath Auto Sales CHEUROLET ACCESSORIES, PARTS AND SERVICE PUBLIC GARAGE IN CONNECTION 'fSerfoice that Serves Telephone 80 191 Deerpath East LAKE FOREST ILLINOIS LAKE FOREST AUTO SALES Authorized Fofrd Dealer O 6o2f6o8 N. Western Ave. Telephone 369 Lake Forest, Illinois Because of its Quality Workmanship Courteous Service Reasonable Prices Lake Forest Academy Chooses The . To Do Its Laundry Work Phone . 175 Telephone Lake Forest 710 DAY and NIGHT SERVICE STORAGE and WASHING BANK LANE GARAGE Texaco Gai and Oil Will Call for and Drlifver Cars Thi: SN-virc Free H. E. JOHNSON 588 NORTH BANK LANE LAKE FOREST, ILL. Pure Ice E99 Fuel CO. ICE, FUEL AND MINERAL WATER SAM VOLPE, Prop. LAKE FOREST, ILL. MCMENEMY, INCORPORATED LaSalle-VVacker Building Dearborn 0100 CHICAGO Northwestern llniversitu Evanston- Chicaqo O SCHOOLS College of Liberal Arts, Schools of Commerce, Education, Engineering, Law, lVIusic, Dentistry, Speech, lVIedicine, Journalism, and Graduate. Krafft's Drug Store The best in DRUG STORE MERCHANDISE The best in DRUG STORE SERVICE 'Tn X ..?:-f-S . :rc-.. V W N ' , Y -15 1. Ii - 'ul mf. aw E- - ,M esa ,p en f fimirl fm lssfl 1 EW -' IM4- l ':1. 'f541qf6 . '1E1E,1.'7i f'1.ll , 2 mr 1 Eli' ,lv H121 F 111 iwilt' E 41 us ' r X33 x ! NFS ff-21 1 1 I 3389 , IE l , ur ,Qu .El 1 ' ' 'JTXEIQQ Sri' J wage Q6WJ.ca6m,aowzduf1M,c1wwr1t 119415 V ' mad! gg: F' gdindmwahowfe 66 I ,dxlfdlh ZMJ rn' B 5 76 T , . THE X FP 1. EET '- JR ,V , QA I - ,E .J.n,Y HERMAN R. .IAHNKE Floofist Telephone 1182 179 E. DEERPATH LAKE FOREST ILLINOIS inocchio Brothers WHOLESALE PRODUCE 101 SOUTH VVATER MARKET CHICAGO OHANDLERIS NONE-SUCH 9 R A N Q S p me Quali Qyjjsl ESHIELDOF 009 THE FOOD PRODUCTS Are used in the preparation of many of the delicious dishes served at thxs Academy. Distributed by Durand-McNeil-Horner Company CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 0 Evanston Imporlcrs, Manufacturfrs, a d WI l G . Park zolrsae racers S. C. Johnson E5 Son, Inc. Racine, Wisconsin U The Makevs of JoHNsONIs WAX ED QZUG FRESH EGGS Tracked from Farm to You ofuer night Phone Chicago Sales: Fairfax 1238 Christianson Produce Co. HUTCI-IINsoN, INIINNESOTA SAVOY FOODS Whether Fruits, Vegetables, Fish or Con- diments, the Savoy Label proclaims the highest accomplishment of Mother Nature, Human Brains and Skill. Order Savoy from your grocfr 0 Steele -Wedeles Company Founded in 1862 CHICAGO, ILL. COTTAGE-MAID ICE CREAM Co. EVANSTON O We Feature Cottage - lllaia' Ice Cream at the Gym Store Compliments Of J. Meyer E5 Bro. JOHN GRIFFITH, INC. REA L E STATE Prnprrty Marmgrmfnt Renting - Loans - lnsurnnct' Steamship Tirkfts 0 Phone L. F. -ISS 678 N. NVestern Avenue BEICH CANDIES Compliments of H. S. Brown, Inc. CHICAGO Distributors of MOTION PICTURE FILMS AND SOUND EQUIPMENT II ELLIS PRINTING COMPANY TELEPHONE: WEBSTER 7505 492 so. DEARBORN STREET LOWELL BLDC., CHICAGO 2. . ,, 513. S O C I a I F' Commercial bl :'.:.EEE.:.:IkJ I ':'- W .fills HERE IS NEWS! Peanut Butter that won't stick to the root ot your mouth 1 Qs ,t,, A swsfm 1 Y V ii, V Pete r T T Pd ,, ' if 2' it QT ,gy . ' PETER PAN PEANUT BUTTER An Exclusive Process Prevents Oil Separation FINELY GROUND Smooth ' Rich 0 Creamy Ask for it ot your grocerfs Made by DERBY FOODS INC. cH1cAc.o DUKE HILL 81 SONS INC. WHOLESALE Offer' Supplies, School Supplies, Text Books, etc. OAK PARK . ILLINOIS Est. 1908 COR OF PAST Aux AND I Bn VH- 5845 I . 4 I . Iv W. . I. Complimenis of Clayton Mark 81 Company WROUGHT STEEL PIPE IVIANUFACTURERS CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Compliments of . . A Friend -? in , ' ' L J- f'l W Pig: --- ' V :-' -epe fiess 5411... 4-'-' AIIFTHIE E ! .fc-I oemig AIR and I 5 1 an-2-1' l I mea, I 7 ' l 'I' 'f Cxzfxu, I PM-h 'i 5 'S I Rig 83:1 Povwf HLUEBAB E. R C 0 wggvvgv own ll f gllll 4 Huiwimn m m u 2'.f,.I '2'4wY'f':,2nhrix -4 .4 . ... ' - - ' : ' . T ' 'T ce.-.-il ,- -ll' ., ., ,, 5 1 7 'e Fi' T D f.f15 f' ':-'t 19 if ' . ' 7 1' A . - 'iff .'-' P, H' ', :-vv 1 - f ::...fmf f :a 4T.r-i'q! ?V-'-- G - M..-gif-r-L-... , .. 51:4-:':,,.1f HL- 1:-rr ' .. -Au -' f--gi - -. N- - ' ' ,- ' - -3:11 - I- H ...ggi can 3: 5,11 1 fi: 4:::w ':1 7 ggi, -:J I- Z :gf AU? n f' I I 'S'-NN --f -f'.7 ' 1 7 '::: -:: F 3 E' I -1- I PE '- 'ff E. ':' .::: .. .JE : '.'::. L lf- ' o age 0 :if .111 ':: 9 551: ff! f f-' -' I Ii. :air 5- 5' fr 'ff . - '. - H+ 1 '- ' - ' . - :. . ', - A. I :II I-1 f : 1 , EE '1 ::. .. g. I 1 A-Zig . .gi ,Q E. .Q 1- ga. Ash 1' v , 1 EEEQ If fa' .Q 1j'lfA73'3'-..::5'----.: -zz Tr--'24 - 3 jj, L15 'M u N I I 35-1 S Ugg' tif?-ni.:f-- i'--'-X-1,:'..-it- . 1-L - . 1.1.1 z?...ig::,. ,V H33 E.. S ' 'T ' ' . .UA a T'-' ,.4..'..'.a -I -1-A .A , -.Z. . 4'- Vwfff ' M-lf' ry . I I V' f -.I 77- U- I -Li Att-J: f' - D -41 S. . .., ' 1 1 v-gf y - i.. - ' , 7? n f'Hie4 . E' - 7.1 .. ' T , X W' . Hi-. ' , Qi, ' ' oeline Stuclio 17 North State Street CHICAGO Official Photographer for Caxy To tlie Graduating Class of 1935 ln leaving your LPA please remember that the Koelmne Stuclio is always anxious to serve you with tlie very laest ancl latest in Photography. Good Luclt to You! OYSQRO HAVE LUNCHEON f s- AT TI-IE 'QI 5' GEORGIAN QYEQ V TODAY The Monarch Lion , Head Label on Foods is your assurance of dependable high quality always. HINMINN AT DAVIS EVANSTON 0 Eoihlgervatiorrs Greenleaf 41QQ FUR 82 YEARS Zllonarrh Foods have been the F. A. HERTWIG choiee of discriminating buyers. Ma,mge',- For the Smartest Fashions A M E R W M I N E R A L Sportswear 0 Dresses Gowns Suits ' Coats PETROLEUM S S O LV E N T S Visit sally K. Greenebaum ' Inc. Telepho ne Superior 3793 530 N. MICHIGAN AVE. Chicago New York liments of . . . Chieagds Smartest Restaurant cmd Supper Club 0 CHEZ PAREE 0 611 Fairbanks Court Mike F 'ritzel joe Jacobson Value - - - Stylecraft Suits GOLDSTEIN'S Mens Quality Clothes 211 Washington Waukegan B. E. Christensen Optometrist and Optician 391 Central Ave. HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. MARTHA Gown Shop TheDrake Where the B WEATHERED oule Misses Shop 950 N. Michigan vard Begins SMERALDA MINING DMPANY i- H STHRR BEST AT ANNED mm ESTABLISHED neo: CIRCLEXVILLE, OHIO Vlqnb Established 1904 A VV '4 Packers Of High Grade Corn Exclusively FAMOUS Country Gentleman ' 5, ffmiiggmm ' OUR COUNTRY Not a Refined Farmer, But --4 M Z.. ,.., I . .,3:,,:, -I 'Z CIRCLE CITY A Quality Corn F I T H E S FAMOUS Golden Bantam N E C L O ROUNDTOVVN Not u Chicken, But lifven GOLDEN Better to Eat I M E N and B O Y s NEOA Narrow Grain HAVACAN RmIly ll Tolerant Corn. TARR BE srr I QUALITY - SERVICE - VALUE 11 to 15 North Wabash Avenue, Chicago just North of Madimn Street I V 1 PAT FLANAGAN Broadcasts 'LHome Baseball Games of the Cubs and White Sox Clubs WBBM Western Key Station OF THE Columbia Broadcasting System 770 Kilocycles Fifty Kilowatts I CHICAGO, ILLINOIS M. Kallis E5 Company -SK IIJLED P R A B PY I SE ROY If Telephone MONROE 1605 732 XVEST XIAN BUREN STREET CHICAGO ..,..- ' Buns --T.. Qyuwi xo? The Pure Seal Sign is a Symbol of ,Quality in Product and Service - Q Buy Purol Pep Gasoline and Tiolene Motor Oil at Pure Oil Stations all along The North Shore Q In Lake Forest at 778 N.Western Ave. Perfect Circle Piston Rings and Piston Expanders The Finest Motor Reconditioning Money Can Buy O The Perfect Circle Oo. General Offices: Who's Who on Campus Know What's What in Chicago . . . invariably they choose THE CONGRESS A Glamorous Selling for Gala Nz'ghts FOUR FAMOUS ROOMS I Gold Ball Room I Florentine Room O Pompeian Room O Joseph Urban Room Quxually afvailablej Accommodating parties as large as 1,000 or less RATES ADJUSTED TO SCHOOL BUDGETS HAGERSTOWN, INDIANA THE CONGRESS HAGERSTOVVN, New CASTLE, TIPTON, INDIANA U. S. A., TORONTO, CANADA Skyway Style ff f Speedway Stamina 4 Stlld8bak8Y ... Builder of Champions THIS year, more than ever before, you can buy a Studebaker for an astonishingly y l low price. The new Studebakers, you know, em- T 1 body the Miracle Ride Planar-Suspension and powerful compoumi hydraulic brakes - pioneer- y ed by Studebaker. Precision steering keeps the T car on the course you set - it always goes exactly l where you point it. The new dictator can be had V 1 y for as little as 515695 at the factory. Go to your l nearest dealer and ask him for a demonstration. l This is a Studebaker Year. l l I Listen Brother ! Listen, brother, and get me straight, My words to you may possibly grate And rankle within your gloomy pate. VVhy do you act so sour and blue? Do you possibly think that Luck is a shrew And the slogan of life is no can do. Hell's bells, brother, I also know That success at times is very slow And that all you hear is Uno, no, no. Days and weeks can be bitter as gall But it hurts only you to fret and to stall. It's a bgiby's trick to cry when you fall. So blast yourself out of deep-grown ruts, Live life in mansions instead of in huts, You can do it, brother-with guts! ADAM BURKE. To The Success of the CLASS OF 35 4-O -1- Models 1580 Adds and up Y- Electric Subtracts M2238 X Multiplies Divides VICTO I2 ADDING MACHINE COMPANY CHICAGO NEW YORK INDIANAPOLIS RICHMOND MINNEAPOLIS LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO TULSA VANCOUVER ST. LOUIS MARSH 85 MCLENNAN IN S U R A N O E Fire Life Murine Jewelry Automobile Burglary Tourist Floater 164 WEST JACKSON BOULEVARD CHICAGO LONDON PITTSBURGH BUFFALO PHOENIX WINNIPEG SEATTLE COLUMBUS INDIANAPOLIS CLEVELAND DETROIT DULUTH MONTREAL The National Trade Mark of Better Milk Tampan Prumf You are the first to break this Welded Wire Seal. It is Sanitary! The Hood comes well down over the bottle neck. At home this means pouring milk over glass surfaces that were sterilized at the dairy and have been kept clean en route to you by this Hood. Pure milk is kept pure. No matter how near or far your home may be from the milk depot, the milk protected by this cap is kept pure - and the bottle top sanitary. Itgs Tamper-Proof Your milk bottle is tamper-proof. The Welded Wire Hood Seal is a positive guarantee against the dilution or contamination of your milk. You know you are the first to break the Welded Wire Hood Seal -it cannot be broken without detection! The S T A N D A R D Welded Wire Hood Seal is the only milk bottle seal which affords such complete protection. Standard Cap and Seal Corporation C H I C A G O Compliments of . . . AUTUMIATIE 5 QRIN ua EUIILIN E. E . MANUFACTURERS DF SPRINEEYSFECIAL BENT WIRES, E SHAFE5 A ' ,' ,' ,' ,' ,' ,' ,' ,' ,' ,' , ' ,' , CHICAGO, l--. y ILLINOIS atch them go lor ilk, Sugar and Fruit With this confection-like cereal! . 1 2 f -is -: iiil l i w ,A.... -L......M---a HERE'S a gay, exciting breakfast that does more to tempt appetites than a thou- sand words! Grains of wheat or rice puffed to 8 times their normal size. Luscious, dainty, full of nut-like flavor. Yet packed with nourishment that turns into energy like magic. Get Puffed Wheat or Pufled Rice from your grocer today. Your youngsters will be delighted with this amazing new series of package cut-outs. Twelve American Frontier sets. 92 beautiful full-color studies of heroes, animal life, and landscapes of twelve American episodes from Columbus to Kit Carson. Order today. THE QUAKER OATS COMPANY - CHICAGO Since 1877 QUALITY COAL FOR EVERY PURPOSE DELIVERIES TO ALL PARTS OF THE CITY John J. Dunn Coal Co. JANIES B. TWCCAHEY, IJl'F.S'iIlFHl' MAIN OFFICE - 5100 FEDERAL STREET RAILYARDS North Side South Side 1301 FULLERTON AVE. 5100 FEDERAL STREET Diversey 6210 Oakland 1550 Y ,,k,f F 'np b THE PURE OIL STZTIIQ 'a4,dTE'1'il'fZZ SERVICE STATION EST' zo IN RAVINIA B' J' KESL Co' GENERAL ,IIIRES JEWELRY GENERAL BATTERIES Jlnnufacturcrx of HIGH GRADE CLASS RINGS, ' M A F A C P RATERNITY ND LUB I BUD STACY 159 North St t Street Ph C t I-16 Ch g Ill Highland Park 5550- 1066 Phones Compliments of NELSON'S GARAGE AND SALES 543 Elm Place OLDSMOBILE HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS SIX AND EIGHT 0 The Car That fIa.vEfUerything Chg, QQQQQI6 99 MILLION FOOT POUNDS PER GALLON Compliments of . . . Automotive Maintenance Machinery C 2100 Commonwealth Avenue NORTH CHICAGO, ILL. GLENN E. HOLMES, Inc. Authorized FORD Dealers O Lake Street at Dearborn CHICAGO SPIES BROS., Inc Reliable Since 1878, 27 E. Monroe St. f CHICAGO O OFFICIAL JEWELERS TO L. F. A. EA TYREST MATTRESS Simmons Company Compliments of the . . Chicago Printed String Co. 2320 Logan Boulevard CHICAGO, ILL. THE ABBOTT LABORATORIES NORTH CHICAGO, ILL. O Manufacturers of fine medical preparations, prescribed by leading physicians and carried in stock by all good pharmacists throughout the United States and Canada. Ask your doctor about them. Do you too want to learn how to play billiards? Of course you do! So does everyonei-1 EEZEUEEVZZK'EA'LT4EfcEJ1SqEER-5-,T''mul Here 's How! 623 So. Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill., Dept. L, F. A. C. , . Please send me, without obligation, your S6 page book How It 5 easy HS falhng Off a log to Play Billiards, as taught by the world's greatest billiard experts. l I I with this big 56 page book, I . . . Miss, Mrs. or Mr, ..........................i.....,i...,..,............................... ................,............,......................... , . I crammed vvlth Illustrations Street ...........,.................................. ......,.......................................... ..... ............ . . I and lessons the Worldys City ...... ......,......................... ................ .............. ...... ............ S t a t e ........................................ .......................... I g reatest experts' Do You Play Billiards Now? Yes ............. ........ . ..No ...... ......,.....,,.. . . ' l ' Billiard tables for home use, also described and illustrated in I FIU In coupon and this Free Book, are on sale at leading department, hardware, mail fodqy snorting and furniture stores. Prices 85.50 to S70.00, higher in l , the West and Southwest. I DOI! I Wait . . . Mill Tddiy HIGHLAND PARK 23 LAKE Fomssr C mpliments of Residence 430-127 Kiclclle Cycle Service A F 1- i 6 H d NEW BICYCL1-is POR RENT HOUR, DAY and WEEK RATES 1 Pleasant Ave. 258 Market Squa Northern Engraving 81 Manufacturing Co. La Crosse, Wisconsin Gartlancl Steamship Company Daily Passenger Service CHICAGO to MUSKEGON AND POINTS NORTH Beginning June 25th 208 South La Salle St. CHICAGO faxcknovvledgment . We bring to a close the last dummy ot another successtul edition ot the CAXV. We have vvorked hard and have had great disappoint- ments and minor calamities vvhile the book vvas in the making. We, the Statt, look back upon our struggles vvith pleasure and amusement. While the vvork ot the Statt deserves much credit tor the success ot the book, it must be remembered that only through the co-operation ot the student body, the taculty, and triends ot the school was this book made possible. Certain persons have been indispensable in aiding the Statt in com- pleting their project. Therefore, the CAXY Board vvishes to devote this space to these persons: Mr. John W. Richards Mr. Leland M. Atwood Mr. Roland C. Barntather Mr. Lloyd M. Bergen Mrs. William Connon Mr. James 6. Ehrlicher John McWilliams, Ill Mr. Dana W. Niswender Miss Agnes M. Oberg Mr. J. Hobart Tucker Miss Dorothy Wilkins I gmxsfv.aw.m.Wq.1y.L,,: L - - Y L HAMMEDJMITH gr Kommmrz co R T I f Tf ENC-IQAVERJ' PR l NTERJI M I LWA U KEE' W I f Ly t 1 A . H EJ f 31 . -f ff 51 F ' - -47? 1 - '. W ' - . -W ff ,,-QAlQ.2g,:.a5g3.:.:.: :va.Lr.a ' ' AD Y ' ! C Q 84 11 1 A' YA Q 2 QA . . . 'f1QgY' Y'ii l 524 1 G04 fwffggrfifif 58? IEEE? 1,5555 gf CD E25 A A


Suggestions in the Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) collection:

Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Lake Forest Academy - Caxy Yearbook (Lake Forest, IL) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947


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