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Page 12 text:
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MIQLLCX - Qt and sympatheticallyg that the task of building life arightt at Lawrenceville was a common task in which we who administered it might work by cooperation rather than compulsion. I believe that all successful 'human relations must be based on mutual confidence, that is why we have sought to promote among you a sense of responsibility and a preference for sincerity, candor, fair dealing, and a single-minded honesty. In less direct ways we have surrounded you with in.Huences designed to touch your hearts, your imaginations, your spirits, and to stir them to fine and durable achieve- ment. Our task has been to train the whole man to grasp life's realities and to appre- ciate its opportunities. How well we have wrought, the next twenty years will tell. Penhaps you will one clay look back upon your time here with gratitude and satisfaction. For a century and a quarter, men have been made here. We hope you will co-unt yourselves fortunate to be numbered among them. You are leaving a beloved spot. There is more beauty here, more friendliness, more generosity, more gaiety than you are likely to find in later life. There is enshrined here the love of generations of Lawrenceville men. May you cherish in your hearts, and show forth in your lives, abiding love for Lawrence- ville! You can bestow no greater gift. 'l'hault you lor this line year together. l bid you goodbye with hope, with confi- dence, and with affection. ALLAN V. HEELY, Head Master Ten
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Page 11 text:
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MQLUXF D K H EAD MAST EITS MESSAGE OMETIMES I wonder how you stand it. Life in a beeh-ive is perhaps monotonous, but to some of you it must seem restful and commodious. As residents of Upper you perform I-Ierculean feats of adaptation and fortitude. To the blare of a jazz orchestra and the clamor of angry argument on the comparative merits of Eastern and Mid-West football-you fall peacefully asleep. For serious study you turn on the radio. bfusic soothes you, although your breasts are not uniformly savage, apparently it also releases the full sweep and vigor of your intellects. Noise merely relaxes you. The Club Kinnan and the Villa George, I am told, are not witlh-out their own special clamor, beloved of connoisseurs .... Yet wherever you -live, you seem to t'hrive on it. You gain in weight and strengtih. The food with which you occasionally find passing fault not only sustains you but enlarges you .... It is obvious that few bees could survive the life you lead. Bees and ants are frequently commended to your admiration and example. I consider your performance the more noteworthy. It has been diverting to live next door to you. You 'have been considerate and entertaining neighbors. Knowing Upper's reputation for spriglmtly behavior, I approached Bill Schell early in the year, on finding tlhat he and Bob Lewis were rooming next to Foundation, and urged upon ihiim a decent evening quiet. I hope you,ll do the same,', he replied, I like to go to bed pretty earlyf, I trust tlhe satisfac- tion has been mutual .... For me, our association has been marked by memorable episodes: I-Ieyniger and I-Ierring in action together-any action, the charming project hatched by Heyl and Bovie to revive the manufacture of mead, Barnet in I0urncy'5 End, followed closely by Micholls and Mathewson, Pipe and Quill, good talk at Sunday teas, Heynigerys impersonations of his betters, Bislhop Whiteis marimba, my first Fifth Form discussion groups, my adventure with an Irish setter of uncertain temper, Mac Raymond as President of tlre School-these are -but a few of the peaks that emerge as one reviews ithe landscape of the past few months. You are aware, of course, that we have had serious designs on you, and you have offered yourselves with patience and fortitude as a high speoies of educational guinea- pig. Now and then, as in every difficult endeavor, our experiments have failed, but we have tried to keep our purpose always clear, and discover more effective means for its expression. With your generous cooperation we have measurably approached our goal. Our most obvious effort has been to 'hold you to a 'high standard of intellectual accomplishment, for unless you can make your minds work hard whenever you want them to, you are small good to yours-elves or to anybody else. It has been more difficult, and more important, to equip you with the qualities of mind and heart which distinguish educated men and make them serviceable to their day. Feeling that self-reliance was the most 'potent weapon with which we could provide you, we have tried to riid your lives of small restrictions, giving your innate capacities room to forage and grow strong. W'e have substantially increased your freedom. In spite of superficial signs, the consequence has really made life harder for you, because it has placed a larger portion of your destiny within your own control. But, though harder, I am sure tlhat the process has been maturing and strengthening, that you are more your own men because of it. We have also hoped to make you feel that you were being dealt with reasonably Nine
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Page 13 text:
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MQLLKXP DQK ki X, TIQAIDITIDNS ROM 1813, when Lawrenceville School was a shack in the wilds, two hours' ride from Princeton and Trenton by stage coach, down to the present day of afternoon movie permits to those same places, tradition has played an important and distinctive role in Lawrenceville life. Even the most determined world-beaters from the rhinie ranks have had the awe of Lawrenceville instilled unforgetably in them. Promptly shorn of their pants cuffs, topped with quaint hats, and forced to keep off the Circle, they have learned through the decades that a Laurentian is just another rhinie until he has proved himself. Nor may the neophyte adorn his frame with the venerable Red and Black until after the Christmas holidays. Spring nights and full moons have ever led Laurentians to try their voices at harmonizing. Out on the Esplanadefi 'gOn Down the Fieldf, We,lil Whoop ,er Upi, fthe Class songj, as well as all the old stan-d-bys, are loosed to the stars from the Esplanade. On balmy nights many Laurentian Seniors from the Caleb Smith put those in the Circle :houses to sleep with the Go-to-Bed song. ik 'Xl :KY if Cars parked hub to hub, stands crowded, spirit and speculation high, the tenseness in the air explodes in deafening cheering as the two teams come on the field. From the opposing bleachers a shout starts and develops into a uniform roar. The Red and Black stands swell in answer. It is the annual Lawrenceville-Hill football game. Eleven
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