Lawrenceville School - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Lawrenceville, NJ)
- Class of 1951
Page 1 of 392
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 392 of the 1951 volume:
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.,-,, ,., . Y QQ., H.. WV- 'JAM ,, -,--f-- .,,.,....,,,......,.-- . ,,.YY - ..., . . V.. - v . , ,. - H 24 ,342-M 162427 WQQWJW Qi ,gJqW,w5' ffwxfwwmwm w3f'ff,Q,Qi Qyf3G? f?fZ Q5 '. 9mW Qi S' flwfamumww' '57 X55 ifrffqsx bjjiq 2 2 AFM ,4WM?ggfLff?fijf WQQJQQW XWXQW M W Wymihiifim ff NS giynw NEW MMMWIWEZQ Nvwasgffm WJWMWWSFO. ,Q Q w fi1f+fa ,ww W W My ffffL:4,fM'?MQlHmff,fw v . - -5-i -3 Y- ., A, . 1.0 . -' v , I J .r , LW xbjxxxqx WWW gggfigffw PM ww M Q W ajfowi W. 3 HWSW P.,,9w W W i'Q3QwfWfQ2WfQ' ,Wi AN Q5 WWWWQM Mk 5 ,W ff fm W ,,f0igfgj4jL7Mg1f,fzfRf f QZWP21 bw 9 'fy Zig CMJ . 9317 mv Q-Qi X lv fSfH5lj3.,2.A :rink X Cupyriglmt, 1951, by Thmnus Zicbold, 1flil'fUl'-1.11-Cfll-t THE LAWRENCEVILLE OLLA ODRIDA PUBLISHED BY THE CLASS OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FIFTY-ONE Q, SEHPEII WW Nl' .y +9 -, of I Q :.:: . E W ,ics ' Zigi' Q i F4Zu,,l,M,r,'5s? 'THOMAS ZIEBOLD, Editor-in-Chief - DOUGLAS CARPENTER. Mzzlifgifzg Editor - DAVID EVANS, RICHARD GAINES, HUBERT GELLERT, IOHN HOWARD, Associate Editors EDITORIAL BOARD PHILLIPS BRECKINRIDGE, Chairman IAMES BROWN - IAMES CAREY - GEORGE CONGER - ELLIS ESBENSHADE - LOUIS HAND - KURT REINHEIMER - LEE SCHUSTER - PHILIP SCHUYLER - EDWIN SEMANS SPORTS BOARD MONROE PRAY, Chairman ROBERT BARDWELL - BARTON BIGGS - MCCLUNG BLAIR - MERRILL-CALLEN - DONALD CRUSE - KIRK DAVIDSON - ROBERT ESSER - RICHARD KOENIGSBERGER - POWELL LINDSAY - ROBERT MCCULLOCH - ANTHONY O'CALLAGHAN - BENIAMIN PATT - IAMES RAINER - RICHARD SMITH - TAPPEN SOPER BUSINESS BOARD NEIL WALLACE, Chairman PETER DUBOW - CHARLES LANDEFELD - STEPHEN MURRAY - PENDENNIS REED - IOHN REYNOLDS - MICHAEL SCHIRMER - DAVID SJOSTROM - PETER UNDERWOOD - CLARENCE ZIMMERMAN - EDVVARD ZIMMERMANN PHOTOGRAPHY BOARD HUGH LOISIT, ANTHONY MONTAG, Co-Cfzufrmcn CORNELIUS BOND - GEORGE GETZ - DONALD KASTILAHN - IOHN SHANKLE Section dividers and Class Favorites drawn by VVILLIAM NOBLE. Inside back cover- drawn by KERCK KELSEY. FDIQEWCIQ D We, the editors of the 1951 OLLA PODRIDA, take the opportunity to publish our hope that this edition records accurately the events of 21 successful school year. TABLE DI: CUNTENTS THE SCHOOL .,...A... FACULTY ....A,. FIFTH FORM ..,.,.... THE CIRCLE ..O,.,, . ,.4. , ATHLETICS ...,,....T4T,.T.,.....,...T. ,...... CIRCLE HOUSE ATHLETICS .....,., ..I.... PUBLICATIONS .......I......,....... ..I..,. CLUBS 4..,,..,....,,... I..I... MUSICAL CLUBS ....,,. ....... LOWER SCHOOL I,I.,,... ,...... UNDEREORM ROSTER ...... ....... ADVERTISEMEN'FS ..,,. I I 25 59 179 199 265 283 291 309 317 339 352 DEDICATIDN The Class of 1951 dedicates this sixty-seventh edition of the OLLA PODRIDA to JOHN DAMoN HUMAsoN who during his six years at Lawrenceville has won the respect and companionship of the boys associated with him in the Woodhull House, his English classes, and numerous Periwig productions. In this, his first year as Housemaster of Upper, he has gained the same admiration from the Fifth Form through his regard for every student as an individual and his genuine interest in the achievements of the class. I-I EAD MASTEITS MESSAGE HE Class of 1951 has surprised me. With your laurels long since tucked securely behind your ears, it will not seem, I hope, ungracious of me to confess to you at last that you have exceeded my expectations. One of the occupational delusions under which teachers labor is the fancy that their ability to appraise the future prospects of a group of students approaches the infallible. My own observation of you as Fourth Formers, therefore, taken together with the findings of my more clairvoyant colleagues, persuaded me that as Lords of the School you would prove to be affable, bright, debonair, and playful Qperhaps frisky is the wordjg but that when it came to the weightier matters of the law we could expect little more from you than an attractive indifference. It was perfectly evident from the beginning, furthermore, that, in view of the uncertainties of your academic and military futures, you would pass your Hnal year here in a condition of chronic dementia, exhibiting panic, instability, palsy of the mind, and jerks of the morale. Well, I was wrong. While I was busy informing alumni and your parents that rebel- lion and anarchy, though not yet arrived, might well be just around the corner, you were more profitably employed in achieving at mid-year the highest academic average ever recorded by any Form since the invention of movable type. By one joint effort you threw all predictions out the window, and I am reliably informed that today you can't find a crystal ball within ten miles of the campus. You should be proud of your accomplish- ment. You had the distinction of leading the largest student body in the School's history, and your own numbers were sufficient to overtax the accommodations normally provided for you. At the beginning of the year, therefore, some of you were submitted to the scheme of life at the Maple House, whose facilities were generally considered a shade less elegant than the Schoolls usual offering. And through the generosity of Dr. and Mrs. Harwood, the last handful of you was tucked in at the Van Dyck House. By mid-year emergency housing had been discontinued, and you were back to normal. At Fifth Form tea, to which many of you have devoted yourselves with zeal and appetite, you have been briskly conversational, relaxed, casual, and comfortable to have around. Some of you have developed, further than all but a few of your predecessors, the difficult technique of working your way through a tray of cake or cookies with thoroughness and dispatch, while giving the appearance of ascetic self-denial. There has never been a year in which Mrs. Heely and I have enjoyed more the tea-time company of the elect. None of us can ever forget the shock and sorrow we all felt at the death of your class- mate Iim Finnegan when he had been with us only a few weeks. In a school community such a loss is especially keen. And the memories of World War II were quickened by the departure of Mr. David Wicks and of the few of your post-graduate companions Nine 51 Ulla Todrzkkz 51 who entered college during the first semester for reasons of academic and military ad- vantage. I have already remarked upon the extraordinary poise and stability you have shown during a period when politicians have been batting the man-power problem around, to the utter confusion of everybody. The year has produced unforgettable phenomena which it will always be pleasant to remember. During the month of Ianuary I discovered the truth about Texas and Cali- fornia weather, always grossly misrepresented by the natives. I remember lim Coker's superb leadership of the football team, and the last of Don Kastilahn's touchdowns, when he entered the end-zone carrying not only the ball, but most of the members of the Hill teamg and our distinguished cross-country team, and the Thanksgiving hurri- cane, which I was glad to have you miss. Dave Evans' remarkably fine Lawrence comes to mind among his other unusual achievements, and the discovery of new talent in Bart Biggs' Lit. Then there have been our excellent ambassador from England, Peter Broom- head, who, to everybody's surprise, pronounces his name Broomheadg the impossibility of distinguishing between the Brown twins, to whom, I suppose, the question of identity presents no problem, the Firm, sensible, responsible presidency of Iamie Carey and his colleagues, to whom I owe a .heavy debtg Hugh Lobit, who has photographed me more often than all his predecessors put together, Buddy Pray's outstanding swimming team and his unfortunate removal at the bitter endg the indispensable services of the Open Door and the Chapel Ushers, Bob Stovall's remarkable grasp of the dialect that passes for English in the deep South, these and many others. Your Fifth Form will have seen the completion of the magnificent Lavino Field House, though denied the privilege of com- peting in itg and the beginning of the Science Building, the gift of Iansen Noyes, '05. There has been progress here this year, and it has been both various and solid. And so we come to the end of our companionship. It has been a great satisfaction to Mrs. Heely and me to have lived and worked with you. You have served the School well, and you are the better and the stronger for it. I hope this place will remain in your hearts and minds always as something to be cherished and to be thankful for. Mrs. Heely and I bid you good-bye with our thanks, our affection, and our enduring interest. ALLAN V. HEELY Head Master Ten W vii W X fm 2' 0 Ti THE SCIIINIL 51 Uflzi adrzkfa 51 LAWIQ ENCEVI LLE SCHDDI. ON THE JOHN O. GREEN FOUNDATION MRs. IO1-IN C. GREEN CALEB S. GREEN CHARLES E. GREEN IOHN T. NIXON BOARD 0F TRUSTEES EDWIN M. LAVINO CLARENCE D. KERR, A.B., LLB. President President Emeritus Lawrenceville 'O5 Lawrenceville '97 Philadelphia, Pa. Englewood, N.I. SHELBY CULLOM IDAVIS, M.A., DOCTELIR IOIIN F. MCPHERSIJN, AB. ' EN SCIENCES POLITIQUE Lawrenceville '06 ' Lawrenceville '26 New York, N.Y. TaffYt0WUv N-Y- IANSEN NOYES, A.B. ROBERT DECHERT, A.B., LL.B. Lawrenceville '05 Lawrenceville 'I2 Montclair, N.I. Phmldelphla' Pa' THOMAS RYDER RUDEL, A.B. L. EBERSOLE GAINES, LITT.B. Lawrenceville '25 Lawrenceville ,I2 New York, N.Y. Fayetteville' W'V1 HON. FRANCIS B. sim, S.I.D., LL.D., LITT.D., L.H.D. Lawrenceville '04 Washington, D.C. ROBERT S. ciliRSTELL, LITT.B. Lawrenceville '13 Easton, Pa. HENRY G. CSRAY, LLB., M.A., Emeritus Lawrenceville '91 New York, N.Y. MARTIN T. TIERNAN, A.B. - Lawrenceville '35 Upper Montclair, N.I. ELMORE HARRIS HARBISf7N, PH.D. Lawrenceville '24 Princeton, N.I. RUPERT B. THOMAS, B.A., LL.B. Lawrenceville '09 k . . WILLIAAI BARTLES HAWKE, A.B. New YO' ' N Y Lawrenceville '17 Flemington, N.I. IOHN H. UHL, LITT.B. Lawrenceville '08 JAMES KliliNIiX', IR. W kes'Barrc' Pa' Lawrenreville '29 RAWLEIGH WARNER, LITT.B. Trenton, NJ, I z Lawrenceville '09 ALLAN P. Kim, L.H.D. F Chicago, IH- Lawrenceville '13 ALBERT R. EVANS, Secretary and Treasurer Morristown, N.I. Lawrenceville, N.I. ALLAN V. HEELH', M.A., LlTT.D., LL.D., L.H.D. Head Master Lawrenceville, N.I. Twelve 51 Ulla T0a'rza'a 51 GENERAL AWAIQ DS AWARDED AT COMMENCEMENT 1950 THE TRUSTEES' CUP A silver cup given by the Trustees of The Lawrenceville School. Awarded to that boy who in the opinion of the Head Master has in outstanding degree influenced the School for good. Awarded to: William Paul Krause '50. THE EDWARD SUTLIFF BRAINERD MEMORIAL PRIZE Awarded to the member of The Lawrenceville School, of at least two years' residence, who by high ideals, by faithfulness to duty, by sound character, and by earnest endeavor has made a record Worthy of especial praise. Awarded to: Benjamin Temple Brown, lr. ,5o. THE MARCUS D. FRENCH MEMORIAL CUP Awarded at Commencement of each year to that boy, who, in the opinion of the five Lower School Masters and the Head Master, shall, during a residence of at least one year in the Lower School, have best shown the manliness and integrity of high character, and the modesty, fairness, and courage of true sportsmanship. Award-ed to: Wolcott Gibbs, lr. '53. Honorable Mention: William Neve Trimble '54, THE AURELIAN HONOR SOCIETY AWARD Awarded annually to that member of the Graduating Class who is outstanding in sterling character, high scholarship, and forceful leadership--qualities upon which the Aurelian Honor Society was founded at Yale University in 1910. Awarded to: Benjamin Temple Brown, lr. '5o. THE IOHN I-I. THOMPSON, IR. PRIZE A medal awarded annually for the best scholar among the all-round athletes of the Fifth Form. Awarded to: joseph Lanlqtree Castle '50, THE GEORGE W. W. BERRIMAN PRIZE In memory of Lieutenant George W. W. Berriman, Class of 1916, is awarded annually to a boy of the School football squad for faithfulness, sportsmanship, and excellence in play. Awarded to: Homer Austin Smith '5o. Thirteen First Form Best Short Story SCHCLAIQSHID AWAIQDS THE MASTERS PRIZE AWARDED TO THE HEAD BOY OF THE SCHOOL Awarded to PHILIP HARDING IORDAN, IR. Cum Laude Society-Iunc 1950 Philip Harding Iordan, lr. Wade Carroll Stephens Douglas Clinton Wynn Fred Mustard Stewart Elias Nicholas Kulukundis Carlo Savini Fowler Robert Edwin Bauser Iames Morton Addiss Arthur Iohn Carlton Benjamin Vergon Smith, Ir. Claude Brower Wagoner, Ir. Iames Hugh Greenwald David Andre Coquillard Marshall Edwin Felenstein King Graham Price Robert Morris Dubow Peter Rowe Fisher Premkumar Sadanand First Scholar of the Fourth Form DAVID RANDOLPH EVANS '51 Honorable Mention IAMEs WARD BROWN '51 First Scholar of the Third Form SEYMOUR STOTLER PRESTON, 3D '52 First Scholar of the Second Form ROBERT RATI-IEONE BOTTOME, IR. '53 First Scholar of the First Form PETER GWIN PATTON WRIGHT '54 First Scholar of the Shell Form IJOUGLASS MAc:KINTOsH CARVER '55 The English Prizes Fifth Form Best Short Story DOKIGLAS CLINTON WYNN '5O Fifth Form Best Poem CHARLES FRANCIS COPPEY, IR. '50 Fifth Form Best Final Examination PHILIP HARDING IORDAN, IR. '5o Fourth Form Best Short Story ELLIS HENRY EsEENsHADE. IR. '51 Fourth Form Best Essay MITOHILL LEE SMITH '51 Third Form Best Short Story ANTHONY WAYNE SNYDER. 3D '52 Second Form Best Essay HARRY DONALD COWLBECK, IR. '53 Second Form Best Short Story PAUL ALBERT SNOOK '53 Second Form Best Poem WILLIAM PEARSON MCNULTY '53 First Form Spelling Contest First Prize RICHARD GORDON SKIPSEY, IR. '54 Reno William Odlin William Parker Wood, Ir. Daniel Byrnes Lewis Lionel Capriles Edwin Steedman Baldwin Peter Michael McGarry Frank Herbert Wells, 2d Peter Anthony Dow Iohn William Hunter, Ir. Peter Rhoades Mott Montgomery Browning Carrott, Ir. Benjamin Temple Brown, Ir. Homer Austin Smith Creswell Chapin Cole George Louis Pellettieri Peter Selmer Loft David Arthur Oestreich Noel Henry Coates de Iongh PETER GWIN PATTON WRIGHT '54 Shell Form General Excellence DOUGLASS MACKINTOSH CARVER '55 Shell Form Best Short Story DOUGLAss MACKINTOSH CARVER '55 Honorable Mention DUDLEY EDWARDS MORRIS '55 The Greek Prize WADE CARROLL STEPI-IENs '50 The Latin Prizes Filth Form: WADE CARROLL STEPHENS '5o Fourth Form: IAMES WARD BROWN '51 Third Form: DAVID RANDOLPH EVANS '51 Second Form: HARIILTON PUTNAM ScHRAuIfIf '55 II-Special: DONALD HENRY HARPER, 3D '52 First Form: THOMAS GRAHAM AIKENHEAD '54 Shell Form: ANGEL MANUEL FERRO '55 The French Prizes Advanced: FRED MU51'ARD S'l'hWAR'l' '5o Fourth Form: PHILIP HARDINII IORDAN, IR. '5o Third Form: DAVID ANDRE COQUILLARD '5o and DAVID RANDOLPH EvANs '51 Second Form: HARRY DONALD COWLBECK, IR. '53 First Form: PETER GWIN PA'l'l'0N WRIGHT '54 Special National Prizes FRED MUSTARD STEWART '50 LEWIS FLOYD FARGO '51 and DAVID RANDOLPH EVANS ,SI The German Prize RENO WILLIAM ODLIN '50 The Spanish Prizes Advanced: PETER ANTI-IONY Dow '50 Fourth Form: GUILLERMO I. Tous '51 Third FOFINCFREDERICK OLDSHUE ROBERTS!-IAW '51 II-Special: PHILLIPS BRECKINRIDGE '51 The Mathematics Prizes The William Marshall Bullitt Prizes in Fifth Form Mathematics First: CARLO SAVINI FOWLER '50 Second: ROBERT MITCHELL TANENBAUAI '50 Third: IAIVIES MORTON ADDISS '50 The William Marshall Bullitt Prize in First Form Mathematics EARL GARRETSON L. CILLEV '54 The Ernest E. Rich Prizes in Mathematics Fourth Form First: DAVID RANDOLPH EVANS '51 Second: IAMES CONNEI.L RAINER, 3D '51 Third Form First: KURT E. REINHEIMER '52 Second: ION HANNING OLSON '51 Second Form First: KENNETH AGUSTIN SUEGART '55 Second: D'AN'ID KERSEX' HYATT '55 Shell Form IAMES EDWARDS KNIGHT '55 The Mechanical Drawing Prize CURTIS WITBECIK ROWLEY '50 The Science Prizes The Bausch and Lomb Honorary Science Award ROBERT EDWIN BAUSER '50 Special Prize in Science PHILIP HARDING IORDAN, IR. '50 Physics Prize ION HANNING OLSON '51 Chemistry Prize LOUIS NEFF HAND '51 and ROBERT ALLEN SMAILS '50 Biology Prize NORMAN Fox '50 Third Form: IOHN SIGMUND WEL'I'Nk.R '51 and THOMAS OWENS ZIEBOLD '51 Second Form: PETER IJURYEA CALYER, IR. '55 First Form: FERDINAND LAMOTTE, 4'I'Il '54 Honorable Mention ROY WILT'UN MAURER '54 Shell Form: DOUGLASS MACKINTOSH CARVER '55 The History Prizes The Sterling Morton Prizes First: WADE CARROLL STEPHENS '50 Second: PHILIP HARDINO IORDAN, IR. '50 Third: IRAVID LEE WELTIIIAN '50 Herodotus Club Prizes First: ELIAS NICHOLAS KULUKUNDIS '50 Second: PHILIP HARDING IORDAN, IR. '50 Third: WADE CARROLL STEPHENS '50 English History DOUGLAS CLINTON WYNN '50 Fourth Form First: -WILLIAM BLAIR MOSSER '51 Second: DAVID RANDOLPH EVANS '51 Modern European History C4-IIOUID SEYMOUR STOTLER PRESTON, 3D '52 Latin American History ROBERT RATHBONE BOTTOME, IR. '55 Second Form HARRY DONALD COWLREOK, IR. '55 and KENNETH AGUSTIN SUEGART '55 ' First Form LOUIS ERNESTO METER '54 Shell Form 'DOUGLASS MACKINTOSH CARVER '55 Honorable Mention DUDLEY EDWARDS MORRIS '55 TIME Magazine Current Events Contest School Prize: WILLIAM THEODORE KANE '50 Fifth Form Prize: WILLIAM LEHMAN BERNHARD '50 Fourth Form Prize: IEROME ANDREWS IOHNSON '51 Third and Second Form Prize: RICHARD HUGH SOLOMON '52 Lower School Prize: EARL GARRETSON L. CILLEY '54 The Art Prizes Best Painting of the Year DAN MACPHAIL WRIGHT '50 Greatest Improvement of the Year KING GRAHAM PRICE '50 Best Picture of Second Form EDWIN ALFRED COWEN, IR. '55 Best Picture of First Form WILLIALI ELMER SHOEMAKER '54 Shell Form Art IOHN FRANCIS REYNOLDS, IR. '55 The Music Prizes Music A: DANIEL BYRNES LEWIS '50 Music II: PAUL ALBERT SNOOK '55 Music I: ROBERT EAKINS VAN VRANKEN. IR. '54 The Bishop's Prizes in Bible Study Fourth Form: DAVID RANDOLPH EVANS '51 Honorable Mention: LOUIS ANTHONY MONTAG 'SI Third Form: DONALD HENRY HARPER, 3D '52 Second Form: ROBERT RATHBONE BOTTOME, IR. '53 First Form: ROBERT FOWLER IOHNSTON '54 Shell Form: DUDLEY EDWARDS MORRIS '55 The Lawrence Township Scholarship IOHN IOHNSTON HARBIION Cum Laude Prize LORENZO WILSON MII.AM '51 Photography Prize QJRNELIUS COMES BOND, IR. '52 The Richard Henry Robinson Prize PETER ROWE FISHER '50 The George E. Schonheiter Trophy IOSEPH LANKTREE CASTLE '50 The Sudlow G. Simmonds Memorial Trophy Manager of the Year Award GEORGE AUSTIN SHUTI' '50 Periwig Club Prize ROGER PRATT ATWOOD '50 and CHARLES KNOX ROBINSON, 3D '50 The Foresman Trophy THE HAMILL HOUSE The Raymond Debate Prize THE GRISWOLD HOUSE 1 v' v ,3 W 1 21 ov T1-zz -cwrus '- .. H ' . 'f .', 'fr' ' 4 .' . ,- 'M W, -gig gn. '. L,,r- .f , 1 -ik, 'P . 1 , , , noi-Q snow ON 'nm cmcm 'Q V roPu.u.L wh Pl! iff? ig 5. S- 1 C ti! A L F:-K 1 ,M SY:- '-.. X ' ' - '.-fl -5 '. f 1 :1 rms '. 'J ,f ,. w-',-fl-f' .,, 4 '34 ' 5 .'v':iA,3q71gQj -'1. w , 3 - 1 ' L 1 -.fri ,E 1,1 A -i F , 'fi' xx, ':x,.X- .f'jN,, '-' qi? ,N ,QQIC-.V 51, , ' -Y nm 1 ug - I 21-:.-,w v, ff-,,W,- , ix FQ 'F' ' H.?'ffr:..1 ' vi - ' --PIN qvkflgi' f d ',Sf'f'f!-lg' , , 0. f if W gg ., b-il+:,,., .,a,,g-.N A - ' - wh. r . ,f V -, N.. 'J' t ' f iff tif' i ' ., X lin , ., v .ig , ' 'J 'A - mf' , , , A . .. . R v- , ,1 K- 1-xyx . ' .'... 1 --L su fi.. .xy-2:33,-., .d-7- 1-qv :m:r.:':b,wsr.:gg ...H 1 - W , ,Q U . . 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FACULTY 51 Uffaz odrzkkz 51 Al.llliRT RAYMOND EVANS Bzmfzvsr Illuzmgcr Business Manager since July, 1925, Secretary of Board of Trustees since 19295 Treasurer of Board of 'Trustees since l940Q Syracuse University, Assistant Secretary, 1908-I9I7Q Registrar, 1917-1923. Came to Lawrenceville August, 19118. lRl1Dl1RlC,lx JOHN VINLl'N'1 H XXLOX, M.A. Em critnf Williams College, ll,A., 1903, Valedictorinn, Phi Beta Kappa. Harvard Graduate School, 1908-IQOQQ Ilonorary M.A. Williams, 1919. Phi Beta Kappa, Head of Depart- ments of English and History at Wilbraham Academy, 1909-IQII. Master in English, Assistant Master of Wood- hull, IQII-IQI8Q Master of Lawrence Lodge, 1918-19211, Senior Master of Upper, 1910-19535 Supervisor of Fifth Form, 1920-19331 Dean of the Faculty, IQZI-IQ32Q Di- rector nf Culllg Former Supervisor of Lit and Pro- gram, Former member of Discipline and Advisory Committee, Former Chairman of All-Round Trophy Committee, Curriculum Committee. Came to Lawrence- ROBERT SCOVEL IHLNIJRICKSON, M.A. Lafin Princeton A.ll., 1915, M.A., 1026. Key and Seal Club, Varsity Football and Varsity Wrestling at Princeton. As- sistant Master of Fairfax, IQI8-IQIQQ Master of Cottage, 1919-1920, Master of Fairfax, 1920-1924. Taught at Mercersburg Academy, 1913-1917, Shady Side Academy, 1917-1918. Coach of Scrub Football, 1918-1938, Clerk of School Church, IQZI-1934: Manager School Book Store, 1919-1922. Came to Lawrenceville, 1918. Tufcnly-sczfcn I Olffz 0z1'rzZ1'51 51 .X1.'1' Yzilc AJS., 11118. riculum Cuiiiiiniltvv. .Xssistzint Maistcr Upper, 10111-19113 Mzistt-r I1:1111ill, 1911-1911. lllxtfllfltll' 11isto1'y, Yulc Uni- vcrsity, 1911-111151 Yale c1fllilllI11C Sclioul, 1013-1924. Rcturncil tu 1.11w1'c11cc1'il1e, 1924. Registrar, 1924-1925: Director 1.11wcr 1943-lfjlwlg Assistant 1711111111111 Cimcli, 19111-1936g Super- visor 01.1.11 POIJRIDN, 1911-1911. Camo to 1-flXVI'1'I1CL'V1l1C. 1910. 'l'11f4'11fy-z'1gl1r '1'H1iOlHORli 11.XZ.'XRlD 1i1f.1.l,IzR, 11.51. ,1l11.1'1'c' 11111110 In 1.a1w1't-11:1-villu lunc. 111111, ON RUFUS 11Y.'X'1 l', ILA. ,l.v.f1.1'I11ul Hulfl .1I11.fI1'r 1N1l'lll17Cl' Disciplint' Cumiiiittce nncl Cui'- SUI111111, 1915-1954: Director Athletics, S111Nl'iY MORGAN S111'i.'X, 11.11. Hfxtury Maislur i11 11islu1'y: 111NC1l7l1l1k'. Scliiilgursliip, .Xtlilcti - - .'. ,- - 1944-1946. 0.11116 to 1.:1xx'1'c11u'i1l1c, 11111. Muster ul 1,1C1i111hl1l1 Huusc: l7i1'cc1111' 111' Glu-c Club Llllll Cliuirz Instructur of Pi111111, Organ, 111111 Music. 14..-X. Yzilc. 1910. Stucliccl organ with Professor 11. B. Icpson, 1914- 191o. Artist pupil nl' 1.y111vor11l 1'1Lll'l1l1I11, 19.27-19111. i,111111111ttccs. 111111 l,1111cl1. .-X. 14, 1l'1I1L'L'IUl1. 111111 Lullilgc Clulw. ,Kssislalnl Muster 111 Griswulcl lluusv. 1911-1911 Muster nf l.11w11-mc Lmlgc, 1911-11114: Mqistvr 111' Dnwts llnusv. 1924-19541 Mzxslci' 111' Upper llnusc. 1954-10511 Fifth 1f11r111 Muster, 195.1-19.1111 Amlvisur 111 Pipe and Quill Club. 1911-1948: .-Xalvisui' 111 Thr' ,,lIll'l4l'II1'l', 1944-11,45 Advisor to Thr Lil. 1914-1918: 651111 Cmicli. 1011-1941 Soccer Cnncli. 111411-11145: .'xllY1S4!1' Ill Mgiiur I, C11111 I Olfu drzkfa 51 IMYIIJ I'li'l l'I'l' SMITH, IS..-X. .ll111f1w11i111i'.-' Master in Marlieuiaties. ILA. johns Hopkins University, 1918. Taught at Tome School, 1910-1911. Assistant Master of Kenneily House, IQZZ-1924, Master of Thomas House, 19.14-1917, Master of Iamiesoii House, 1917-19315 Master of Geurge Huiise, 1951-1959. Came to Lawrence- ville, 1911. LANSING WEMPLE TOSTFVIN, li..-X. Trinity College, IQIQ, ll..-X. Berkeley Divinity School, 1919-1910. Registrar, Cliairmaii of Committee an Ail- mission of Veterans. In husiness, 1920-1911. Taught at Litchfield School fur Buys, 1922-Ifjlj. Former activities at Lawrenceville: Taught Religion, Latin, 1913-19585 French, 1913-1918. Assistant Master of Cleve, 1911-191.15 Master of Perry Russ, 1914-19155 Master of Davis House, 1918-lggog Fifth Resident Alumni Secretary, 1928-19563 Director of Admissions, 1955-19443 Chairman Award of Financial Aiil Committee, 19.111-19.14. Other coiurnitteesz Calendar, Advisory, Sehularship, Curriculum, Summer School. Came to Lawrenceville, 1915. RONALD A. IIULIT B1I.ff'fY1lH Head Coach of Baseball, Manager of School Bookstore. Assistant Coach of Baseball, 1925-1935: Former Assistant Coach of Basketball. Came ti, Lawrenceville, 1915, Tzlfwzty-nfm' 51 Uffnz odrzkkz 51 HANS GERARD RAS'l'lLDli, M.A. Gffnmn Head of Gerinaii l5L'l7L1l'IIllL'Ill1 Master of Kinnan: Master in lf.11glisl1. 1926-lljifl, MA. Hiirvaril Uliivcrsity, 1919: Phi Beta Kappag Mohegan Lake School, 1919-IQZOQ Shat- tuck School for Boys, 19211-19213 Asheville School for Boys, 1921-1924. Assistant Master of Griswold, 1915- 19zl1g Assistant Master of Hamill llousc, IQ26-IQQIQ Assistant Master of Upper, 1943-1945. Came to l.awrc'nce- ville Scptcnilwer, 1915. VVll.l.lAM RHODES WYMAN, l'z.S. 1lIu1l1z'nmlic': Master in Matlicniziticsg Master of lltunill, Faculty Ad visor to the Open Door Cominittcc and Chapel Ushers. ILS. University of Vermont, 1915: University Cruise, IQZQ. Assistant Master of Wootlhull House, 1916-lljlli Assistant Master of Rayiiiiintl House and Lodge, IQZQ 195115 Master of Green House, 10311-Iljgl. Taught MJlllt'll1LlIlC5 at Proctor, Vcrniont. 19:2-1914. Came to I.11wrc11ct-ville SL'plL'lIllR'l', 1 915. Thirty ABRAHAM LUCIUS LINK Ol N, To D DiI'6'l'lUl' of flu' lJl'f7tll'lHIl'llf of Gzaizlilfzfc l3.A. Elon College, 19n7g M.A. Oolunihizi University, 19155 Ed.D. Rutgers University, 1941. Director of the Department of Guidance. Advisor to the OLLA Ponmivi, 1928-I937. Senior Thesis Medalg First Honor at Gradua- tiong M.A. in Education Columbia University, 1925g Phi Gamma Mug Phi Delta Kappa. Principal of High School, Charlotte Court House, Va., 1909-19135 Super- visor of State Dcpartnient of Education, Virginia, IQI3- 1918. Field Agent, Community Service, Incorporated, 1918-19221 Coadjutant Professor of Education, Rutgers University, 1925-1952g 1947-. Came to Lawrenceville, 1925. 51 Uffzz odrzda 51 TEL CLARENCE KIMBALL, M.A. Altzthenzrzticx B.Ph. Emory University, 19135 M.A. Princeton, 1925. Master in Mathematics. Phi Beta Kappa, Kappa Alpha Fraternity. Taught at Boys' High School and Tech High School, Atlanta, Ga., 1916-1923, Instructor in Mathe- matics Princcton University, 1923-1926. Assistant Master Griswold House, I926-I927Q Advisor to the OLLA Po- nitrtm, IQVQ7-lQ46. Came to Lawrenceville, I926. GEORGE RICE WOODS, M.A. French Master in Frenchg M.A. Columbia Universityg University of Paris, B.S. Tufts, Choir, Glee Club, and Mandolin Club. Master of French at the Ridgefield School and the Na- tional Cathedral School for Boys, Westminster Schoolg C.E.F.B. Reader, 1919-1945. Came to Lawrenceville Sep- tember, 1926. D1 IUUIIIA 111141 Illalhenuzms Chairman of Mechanical Drawing Department, B.S. Sus- quehanna Univcrsity, IQZZQ Varsity Football and Base- ball, Member of the Band and Orchestra. Taught at Troy Conference Academy, I922'IQ25Q Lake Placid School, 1926-1927. Master of Green House, 1927-19333 Master of Brook House, 1933-195.3 Master of the Lodge, 1936- 19591 Master of Kinnan House, IQQQ-IQ43. Came to Lawrenceville St-ptetiiber, 1927, Thirty-one W., 51 Offa odrzkfa 51 ARTHUR LOGAN GROFF, BA. Hixfory and Pzrlflic Spmkflzg History and Public Speaking, Cliairman of Public Speak- ing, Coach of Debating Team. B.A. Hamilton, 1927, Delta Kappa lipsilon. Assistant Master of Kennedy House, 1928: Master of Davidson, 1928-19505 Master of Perry Ross, 1952-1936. Came to Lawrenceville, 1927. l..'XURl .NCli HENRY 'l'IlHONlf.N, l5.A. English Ckzlurubia University, 1925, A.B. Director of'Athletics3 Football and Crew Coach, Master of Rayluognd House, Scliolarsliip Committee. At Columbia, Varsity Football Team, Varsity Crew, Captain Crew, IQZSQ Beta Theta Pi Fraternity, Senior Society. ln business, 1925-1928. As- sistant Master of Kennedy, IQ28Q Master of Thomas, IQZX-1929. Came to Lawrciiccvillc, 1928. IOHN WINTER GARTNER, B fl French and Sprmish Thirty-Iwo Chairman of French and Spanish Departments, Head Coach of Basketball. B.A. Princeton, 1917, Freshman Basketball Team, 1923-1914, Varsity Basketball Team, IQZ4-IQ27Q Fresliman Lacrosse Team, IQ24Q Varsity La- crosse Team, X925-1917. Class Day Committee, 1927. Taught at Princeton Country Day School, 1928. Studied :it the Princeton Graduate School, 1928. Assistant Master of Griswold House, 1928-1929, Master of Thomas House, 1929-1933. French Summer School, Middlebury College, 1939. Director of Summer Semester, 1943-1945. Univer- sity of Mexico, Escuela de Verano, 1948. Came to Law- renceville, 1928. nedy House, 1928-Igjl. Came to Lawrenceville, IQ28. 51 Olly odrzkffz 51 l.l'.Sl,ll'. lllOM.'XS l'.Xi1.'XN. M.A. 1-I.v.f1'.-'iulll HIl.1'ill!'.f.i' .llllllllgflf llroxvn UI1lX'CI'5lIj' l'l1.B.. IU261 Brown University M.A., 1928. Master in Mathematics, 1923-19.i9g Assistant Business Manager. Ph.B. Brown, 1926, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi. I11 business, 1920-1927. Grand Army Fellow, Brown' University. IQ27-IQ28. Assistant Master of Ken- - , . is HUGH KING VVRIGHT. M.A. English ARMAND DANIEL CODERRE, M.A., D0c.D'U. Fl't'I1Ch B.A. St. Bonaventure College, 19245 M.A. Graduate School of Columbia University, 1927: Doctorat d'Uni- versite of Montpellier, France, 1934. Master in French, Supervisor of Parlons Frangais and Catholic Club, Cur- riculum Committee. In business, IQ24-IQZS. Principal of Newton Falls School, N.Y., 1925-1926, Teacher of French, High School, Holyoke, Mass., 1927-1928. As- sistant Master Davidson House, 1928-1929. Came to Lawrenceville, 1928. Union College A.B., IQZSQ Columbia University M.A., 1947, Graduate work at Yale University, 1938-1939. Master of Woodhull House: Instructor in English, Coach of Varsity Tennis: Chairman, Circle House Masters: Chairman, Curriculum Committee, Discipline Commit- tee, Forum Lecture Committee. Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Beta Kappag Captain Varsity Tennis, President, Y.M.C.A. Assistant Master Cleve House, 1928-193115 Perry Ross House, IQQI-19343 Kennedy House, 1943-1944. Faculty Advisor The Lil, 1932-19375 Pipe and Quill Club, 1940- 1945. Came to Lawrenceville, 1928. Tlzirty-tl: rec 51 Uffaz odrzkfa 51 IORIDAN COMlll ,S lIllLlRCllll.l,. M..X. I I ll.1'fI1l'y New Yurk Lll1lY'.'l'Slll, lUl.l'IlJl'S1 Amlmt-1'st lljlfb-Iljlij. ll.A. A1nl1crsl. Ivan, M..-X.: l'1'i11cvtn11 Grxultxtxtc Wurk. IQQ7-Iljiv. 'l'llL'l.l llcltgl fjlll l'lIAlIlL'lAI1lly1 Varsity lfuullvalll. Wrestling: ,'XHSUL'l1llC lirlltnr ul' SIIIIIFIIIQ Assistgllmt llusi- ness M1lII1lgt'I' I.u1'1f fall. 'l'1111gl1t All Rugby St-Imul, lfllglillltl, 11157-11358. Arlvisul' lu l'rug1'11m. Iljgg-lQ.:'7: Atlvisnr In tht- 1.r1rrf1'rm'1'. 11,41-11143, Cum:l1 uf Wrt-sf Ilillg. 11141-10494: Assistant Muster. l7lcki11su11 lrluust-, lljkQU'llji4Z lllllltll' MLl5lL'I'. Upgwcr llnusc. llj'Q4'lUl71 gkllltlf M.1stc1', Llppcl' lluust-, tqgryrqsu. 11.11110 lu l.:1w- rL'l1ct'vlllt', 111441. Thirly-four UlfORfllf l7.llMUND SCllUNlllfl'l4lfR, lsl.l .F. 4-1IhlcIir'.f Springncltl Galle-gc, IU28, ll.P.lf,. Assistant Dircctor of Athlvticsg Assistant Cu11cl1 Fmmtlmnll nntl llnsclmzlllg llezul Coach of SNVlI1'lI11lI'lg'Q Director uf 'l'l1c l.11w1't-11ccv1llc School Camp. Wcimlcnsall Sucietyg Varsity S Club: Varsity Gy111n:1sticQ, 1926-10173 Cgtptnin, 1018. rlvllllglll Freshman nntl Suplmnmrc Pltysicaxl litlucntion Spri11gf'lt-lcl. lQ28Q Ex:1m111c1' An1criu:1n Rt-tl Cross: Stlpcrvisot' Salem, Ma1ssacl1usctts Plalygmtnlnl Systcm, Ikjlfl-lQ2.7Q Director of HL'Flllll-'l4fll1lll1C Fl'CNll Au' lfuml Czxmp. Cnmc to Lawrenceville, 1928. l,:XW'RliNClf XVliNl7l .l.l. l .S'l'lf.Y. .'X.l'1. I1'ngI1'.fl1 Al11l1c1'sL AJS., lljgll. Mnstcr 111 l:.l1gllSllQ Faculty Atlvlsur tu Pcriwlg Club. Chi l'l1i lf1':11c1'11ityg Varsity Sxvinxming. Lzxwrenccvillc SVVlllllllll1g Cug1ul1, 11141-11134. Came tm l.g1wrc11ccvillc, IQQU. 51 Ulla odrzkkz 51 IOSFPH A. GOFLLRR, RS. Azlilezifs- Assistant Ilircctor of Athlt-tics: Assistant Coach of Bas- ketball anfl Football: Coach of Spring Trackg ILS. Uni- versity of Illinois, IQVQIJQ Varsity Football and Baseball. Assistant Coach in Ifreslituan Sports, University of Illinois. M.lid. Temple University. 1954. Assistant Master of Cromwell. 1956-19571 Assistant Master of Thomas, 1957- iorgli. Lieutenant Coiiimantlei' U.S. Navy, 1942-llj4f1. llunc to I.LlNVl'L'FICCVIllC' September, Iljgtl. Returned, 10.16. '953'I955- ARTHUR BOMBIERGER LIGHT, M.D. Illedicrzl Director Pre-Medical work at Lebanon Valley College and Lehigh University. Graduated in medicine, University of Penn- sylvania Medical School, 1918g Instructor in Physiology and Medicine at University of Pennsylvania, 1920-1926. Physician in Chief for all students engaged in Intercol- legiate Athletics at the University of Pennsylvania, 1920- 1931. American Association for the Advancement of Science and Physiological Society of Philadelphia, Delta Upsilon Fraternity: Alpha Omega Alpha Honorary Fraternityg Sigma Xi. Came to Lawrenceville September, lqkgl. FRED A. ITICHIELBFRGIQR, IRS. Direrlor of I4dn1i.fxior1.c ,-l.f.fi.f11111f in Ihr' Haul .Vilxfrr B.S. Gettysburg College, 1950. Director of Aclmissionsg Scholarship c:Hll1II1IlIl'L'1 Phi lit-lta 'l'l1t-ta. Assistant Mastei of Cleve House. IQVQII-Ilygl1Mil5IL'I' of lialwcs House. llj4iQ- 1946. Taught at lipiscopal Acatlciiiy, Pliilatlulphia, log:- 1955. Graduate Study at University ol- l't-nnsylvania Caine to Lawrt-nccvillt-. Iijgfl. Th frt y- H uc' 51 Offaz drzkfa 51 O'l l'O liRlCll ROSNER, ll.S. S!'l.l'l1!4C' Princeton University 15.5. in EllglIlCCl'lI1g, 1951. Master in Science, Coach of Soccer, Secretary of Curriculum Committee. Research in Electronics, Sperry Gyroscope Corporation, Summer 19423 Instructor in Navy Pre- Raclar Program, Princeton Univerbity, Summer 1945: G. E. Fellowship, Union College, Summer 1945. Came AR'l'l'lUR JOHN PIZCK, M.A. 1 l'Cl1L'!I Master in French, Director of Work Program, B.A. Forcl- ham University, IQJQQ M.A. Columbia University, I930Q Diplomc cle la Sorbonneg University of Paris, 1930. Taught alt l:l'3lIlCiS Xavier Iligh School, New York City, 1928-193113 at Culver Military Academy, Culver, Indiana, 1930-19512 Fortllmm University, Summer IQSI. Came to Lawrenceville, 1951. In l.11xi'1't-iirwille Seplc-iiilwiy iogz. Tl1i1'ry-.fix CURTISS SUMMl,iRS IIITCIICOCK, PII.l,. I'hy.vir.f and Chniziffry B.A. Princeton, 19193 M.A. Princeton, IQ30Q PhD. Princeton, 1953. Master of Cleve House, Master in Sci- ence. Member of C.E.Ii.B. Examining Committee in Chemistry. Varsity Traclcg Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xig Assistant Master of Cleve, 1933-1940. Came to Lawrence- ville, 1933. 51 Offzz odrzkfa 51 FLOYD C. HARVVOOU, l,Il.L,. Lirifu and Greek Chairman of Latin and Greek Department, Master of Wootlhull House, I9j'.l-1944. BA. Yale. 1914, and doc- torate, 1917, Pl1i Beta Kappa in Junior Year, Elizabethan Club: Zeta Psi. Assistant Professor of Classics at Yale. 1917-1925, Professor of Classics at University of Nebraska, 1925-1927, Head of Latin DCl71lTfll1CI1f and Chairman of tl1e Committee on Admissions at the Taft School, 1927- 19g.1. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1034. HENRY NICWPHER BOVVMAN. M.A. Creek and Lllfl-I1 Franklin and Marshall BMX., 1914g Pl'lI'lL'Cf0ll M.A,, 1915. Master ill Greek and Latin: Master of The Lodge, Scholar. University Fellow and Page Fellow in Classics. Prince- ton, 1915-1918. Master in Latin, The llill School, 1920- 19253 American Academy in Rome, 1925-1026, Head of Latin and German Departments. Mohonk School, 1920-1930, Master in Frencl1, Hotchkiss School, IQ30- IQQIQ Master in Greek and Latin, Taft School, I93I- 1935. Came to Laxv1'enceville, 1935. P.DWARD L. HERRICK, HA. Freflrh and Spanish B.A. Brown University, 1929. Master of French and Spanishg Master of Belknap House, Assistant Swimming Coach. Sock and Buskin President. 1918-1929: Phi Gam- ma Delta. Instructor Spanish and English Pawling School, 1929-1935. Post-graduate work Middlebury College, Sum- mer 1931g Columbia, 1932, Tours, 19352 Institute de Phonetique de l'Universite cle Paris, 1936. Master Perry Ross House, 1936-1937g Master of Thomas House, T937- 1939g Assistant Master Upper House, 1939-IQ42Q Co- Director Periwig Club, 1940-1942. USNR, 1942-1946. Came to Lawrenceville, 19g5. Returned to Lawrenceville 1946. 1 Thirty-xezferz 51 Uffzz oalrzklaz 51 RHI! MRD M:XR'l'lN, MA. lz'11gli.-'11 l'1'i11u-11111 U11i1c1'si1y A.li.. IQQIQ MA., 1045. Master i11 liliglixli. li.IIlll' In l.a11rc11cc1illr. 1040. fill lgau uf ali NCIICC, l1jSll'I4I'il. Thirty-c'ight GILURUE Sli.-XRS l9lil ,l'.Nl ,, HA. Art Master ill Art, Assistant Tcnnix Ckmaclig Advisor 111 Easel Club. BA. Harvard, 10513 D.V. Club, Signcl Club, Ilasty PuLl4li11g Club. Pust-gramluatc wnrk at Trinity College, 1952-19535 Evans School, Tucson, Arizona, 1931-IQQZQ lriixrnalism, 1033-1034. Master of Cromwell House, IQQQS- IQQG. Phillips Exeter Acaclciny, 1056-IQE7. Assistant Mamtur uf Wmulhull House. I'J47fl'Hl'l- Cilmc U' l-HW' l'L'I1CCYlllL' SCPIL'IlllTCI'. 1045. On loam' ul absrncc, 102,11- 1051. DUIJI.liY HENRY MORRIS, AB. Ar! Yalc AB., IQVQVQQ Art Sluclcnfs League, 10g4. cil13llI'lHilH Art Deparuucnt. Chi Psig Yale Rrrorzfz Yalc Nru '.1' Car- tooniatz Crew Comp.: Art Emlitrir Class Yvar Book, Rugby Football Tcamg Cliairman Art CUIIIIIIHICC, sCCOIllllll'j' Education Board, 1940-1942. Licutcnant USNRQ Hcanl. Landfall Unit, Special Devices Divisiun, Ollicc of Rc- scarch and Invention, U.S. Navy, IQ.:-Q-1946. Came to l.LlX'VI'Cl1CCVillC', Iljqfl. 51 Offfz odrzdd 51 H. DONY l'1AS'l'liRl,lNlj, HS. lfngfiyh Lafayette College B.S., 1927. Master i11 English. Alpha Chi Rhog Newspaper Work, IQ2I, 1915-19249 Teaching Fel- lowship at University of Pennsylvania, IQZ7-IQZQQ Mars- ton School, Ruxton, Maryland, IQVQUQ Haverford School, Haverford, Pennsylvania, IQKQO-10561 University of Hei- delberg Summer School, 19373 Munich, 1958g Assistant House Master of Griswold. ltjgfl-IQ4gj Atlvigfyr to Tlzg l.nu'rn1rr, 1937-1958. Caine to Lawrenceville, I936. 1937- GERRISH 'lil IURHICR, M.A. l.ifv'11r1'11z1 Princeton AJS.. 1935: M..-X.. 19213: Ctllllllllilil University School of LilJI'1lI'iLlI'lSlli1l l5.S., 1957. Assistant Lib1't11'i:1n, 1937-19.183 Advisor to The Lit. 1938-1948. Cum Laude: Court Club. Graduate Study, Colunilwia University and Instructor, Horace Munn Sclioril, 1929-1951. Business and Editorial work, 1931-1946. Came to Lawrenceville, 1937- THOMAS HliRBliR'I' IOHNSON, l'11.D. E I1 g lish Cl1air111an of English Department. B.A. Williams, I9161 Delta Upsilong Gargoyleg M.A. Harvard, 19193 Ph.D., 1934. Taught at Rutgers University, IQ28-IQIQQ Williams College, 1929-I9-QI. Head of English Department, Hack- ley School, 1954-IQS7. Came to Lawrenceville September, Tl11'rty-nine 51 Oflaz odrzda 51 EDWIN C. l5I.lilClllLR, l5.S. Lilmlry Associate Librarian. Assistant Librarian. 1957-1948. As- sistant House Mastcr of Griswold, 1947-1948. B.S. St. Iohn's College, IQ30Q 15.5. Columbia U11ivt'rsity, School of Lihrary Scrvicc, I917Q gratluatc work, New York U11i- versity, 1032-IQQQQQ in business, IQQIW-IQQ41 Library As- sistant, Morristown QN.I.l Lihrary. 1915-IQFQGQ Air Corps, U.S. Army, 1942-1945. Came to l.L1XVl'CllCCYlllC Scptcin- hcr, 1957. GIIORGE .L llllflll., l71l.l7. Sl'il'lIt't' Mastcr in SLklCIlCt'Q Master of Perry Ross until 19415 B.A. University of Cincinnati, 1942: Taught at University of Cincinnati, 1942-1922: MA. Univcrsity of Cincinnati. 19335 Ph.IJ. Yale University, 19353 Sigma Xi: Gamma Alpha: Society of ,'XIl1Cl'lCI1I'l Foresters. Taught at thc Hotchkiss School, 19q6-19g7g Taught at Michigan State College, 1937-1938g Xi Sigma Pi. Came to Lawrenceville St-ptcr11lut'r, IQ38. Forty LIQWIS PICRRY. IR.. li..X.. MA.. OXON ling li.r!1 llarvartl KA.. 1946: Oxfortl. 1940-1948: MA. Oxon, 194g. Master in linglislig House Master uf Griswoltlg Forum Lccturc Chairman: Hasty Putltling: Sigiict So- cictyg Class Otlistz Freshman anal LV. Socccr Teams: Harvartl Cl'I'f715011Z Oxfortl Carlton Cluh: 1854 Cluh. U.S. Navy, 1945-1946. Caine to Lawrcnccvillc, IQQX. Rcturnctl to Lawrcticcvillc, 1940. 51 Offa drzkzkz 51 1OllN K. 19. CHIVERS, l3.S. Hixlory Director of Activiticsg Master of Kennedy Ilouseg Master in History. Princeton B.S., I9.Z81 Part time gratluate work at Princeton and Harvard, 1958-19.10. Business Advisor of The Lawrf-nrcg Member of Pipe and Quill. Cap and Gown Clubg Waiter Polo Captain, 19285 Business, I928- I9-QGQ Agriculture, I9-Q6-1938. Came to Lawrenceville, 1938. FRANK K. I-IEYNIGER, AB. I-Iiffary ALDEN D. GROFF, B.A. Direclol' of Public Rflalion: Executive Secretary, The Alumni Association of the Law- renceville Schoolg Resident Secretary, Lawrenceville School Fathers' Associatiorig in charge of Public Relations, Editor of the Lawrenzimzg Graduated from Lawrenceville, 1999: RA. Princeton University, I9I3j Public Relations Advisor, New York City, 1913-19385 Atlvisor to Press Club. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1938. Director of Lower Schoolg Muster in History: Assistant Varsity Soccer Coach, Assistant to Director of Admissions. Princeton AB., 1947g Graduated The Lawrenceville School, Vice-President of School, 1936: Ivy Club nt Princeton. In business until 1941. Varsity Golf Coach 1941-1942. Came to Lawrenceville IO4I. Forty-one 51 Uffaz odrzkfa 51 FRANK BIRCH, B.S. lllrmmrl Truinifig NORVAL FOS'1'1'lR BACON, IR., AB. History Harvard A.B., 1952. History Dcpartinentg Assistant Di- rector of Admissionsg Faculty Advisor of O1.1.A Ponrutm and Herodotus Cluh. Director of Self Help. House Master of Perry Ross, 1941-19411. 'l'ot11e School, illjjl-IQVQRQQ linierson School. lljjj-10,571 Arizona Desert School. 1957-1941, Pawling School, 1941-1941. Came to Law- renceville, 19.12. l5.S. Rutgers, 1936. lndustrial Arts Director at Lawrence- ville and Princeton High School. On Summer Faculty at Rutgers University. Came to Lawrenceville, 1942. F orty-two 'W QW me . lfvffl A FDMUND LEWIS PARK, M.A. Illaihcmatics Columbia B.A., 1934, M.A., 1935. Master in Matlicniaticsg Faculty Advisor of Concert Club, Faculty Advisor of Mathematics Club. Head of All-Round Trophy Commit- tee, Glee Club, Phi Delta Kappa. Taught at Allison- Iames School, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1935-19373 Kiski- minetas Springs School, Pennsylvania, 1937-1938, Adiron- dack-Florida School, 1938-19435 Head of Mathematics Department, 1940-1943. Assistant Housemaster of Dick- inson House, 1943-1947. Came to Lawrenceville, 1943. rv ff 1 51 01141 odrzkfaz 51 XVl'iNl.7lfl.l, Il. 'l'.'XYl.UR, lllI.lI. Chfnzfslry and f:t'l1f'l'LIl Sz'ic'l1r'c' Chairinan of Science Department: Advisor to Science Club. ILS. I,l'IllCCf0l'I. 1916. Chemist with the DuPont Co., Wilmington, Del., 1920-1919. Graduate Student at Princeton, IQIQ-Itjjj. A.M. 19541, Ph,D. 1935, Procter Fellow in Chemistry, IQXQI-1032. Instructor in Chemistry at Princeton, 19,55-Ifjj7Q Assistant Professor there, 1937- 1945. Came to Lawrenceville, 1945. ROBERT T. WALLACE, B.S. Illathcnmticr HORACE C. GOTTSHALK, M.A. Spanixh Ursinus College A.B., 1915, Middlebury College M.A., 1937. Master in Spanish. In business, 1915-1917. Served in France and Italy. Taught at Carson Long Institute, IQZO-IQZIQ Bethlehem Preparatory School, 1921-233 Prin- cipal Wm. M. Lanning School, Mercer County, New Ier- sey, 1923-1924, Athletic Director and later Head of Mod- ern Language Department, Pennington School, 1924- IQ44Q Member Sigma Delta Phi, Spanish Honorary So- ciety. Came to Lawrenceville, 1944. l l 15.5. Punccton University, 1929. Magna Cum Laude. Mas- ter i11 Mathematics, Coach of Varsity Cross Country and Winter Track Tcamg Assistant Coach of Spring Track, Assistant Master of Upper House, 1945-1947. 150-lb. Crew at Princeton, Dial Lodge. In business, 1929-19395 Taught and Coached at McDonogh School, 1939-1942, Hill School, 1942-1944. Graduate work at Iohns Hopkins University, 1940-1941 and at University of Pennsylvania, 1942. Came to Lawrenceville Iune, 1944. F arty-three 51 Offzz odrzkfa 51 liillgllifl Muster in Iiiiglixliz ll..X. VVc5luy:1n Uiiivcrsity, 1955: Alpha Chi Rhog with Nritirmnil limqiilcaisliiig Cmiipaiiiy, 1q58f1q4ug Harvey Sclirml, Ilnrwthurlic, New York, llj44l-IQ4.4Q xVCSlCy1ll1 University l'i'c-Fliglit, 11143-11344 cmllI1'IITlCl'PQ Assistant Master, XVumlh11ll House, 1944- Musical Show. Czmic ui I,11wrc11ccvillc, 1944. 'l'llOM.'XS MASON PAGE, ILA. Ifzzglixfz lI1ll'Y2'lI'll ILA., IQVQZ. English Dcpgirtiiicntg Fnnii-licrinl for Shell :ind First Forms. Hz1i'1'm'1l I.V. Crcwg Speakers Club. Pomfrct School, English Ibcpnrtmcnt and Crew Conch, 1952-10585 Arizona Dcscrt School, English Dc- partmcnt Ilcml, 1938-19405 Pziwling School, English Dc- pnrtmcnt, 1940-1941. Cnmc to l.nwrc11ccvillc, 1945. l3RlilPlfRlCK LUM l'lfliRlS. Ili., lS..X. S'1'ir'111'r Priiicutuii University ILA., 1941. Mzistrr in Science. Rc- SL'1ll'L'll Assistant in Gculugy. l'rincclw11 U11i1'c1'aity fsuin- nicrj, 1946. Crime tu l.:1wi'c11cc1'illv.', IKLIS. Forty-four rigging Senior Masta-r, Upper Huuxug Director nf Spring Yule University, 19.15. Master in Ilistoryg Director of The I.ilVVl'CI1Yi1ll!S. Phi lic-111 Ktxppgl. Came to Lzixvrcnce- 51 Olfaz odrzkfzl 51 IfXMl'i,S MlfRRl.'XM IIUVVARIJ. IR., BMX. Hli.1'Io1'y ville, 1945. ROBERT Science Master in Scienccg Assistant Couch in Assistant Coach in in Mathematics ut Came to Lawrenceville September, 1946. DAVID DOUGLAS VVICKS, M.F.A. Hiyiory Princeton A.B., 19405 M.F.A., 1942. Muster of Dawes House: Muster in History. On leave of absence logo- 1951. fiI'11Lill2lICli Lmvrencevillc, 1056: Captain Hockey Team. Taught ut Princeton, 19.15-1946: Graduate work Princeton, T945-lljelx. Came tu I.11w1'enccville. 1946. With thc U.S. Navy. 19511-1951. KINSLEY IACKSON, B.A. Director of Lower School Athleticsg Foothnllg Conch of Iunior Basketballg Track. B.A. Princeton, 1941. Master Governor Dummer Acziclemy, 1946, Forty-five 51 Offzz 04z'rzk1'4z 51 1 1 HOWARD R. EMERY, A.M. Hiflory EDMUND ROBERT MEGNA, B.A. French Manhattan College l3.A., IQ42Q Columbia University Matriculating fCanclidatej for M.A. Master in French. Basketball, Baseball, 1942-1943. U.S. Marine Corps. In business, 1943-1944. 1944-1947, taught at Eastern Mili- tary Academy, Stamford, Connecticut, Coached Varsity Baseball and Basketballg Assistant Coach Varsity Foot- ball. Came to Lawrenceville, 1947. A.B. Bowdoin, I9Z2Q A.M. Harvard, 1929. Master in History, Associate Master of Upper House. Chi Psi Fra- ternityg A.M. Harvard, 1929. Taught at Proctor Academy, IQ23-1924, Hebron Academy, 1924-1931, 1937-1942g Pcddie School, 1931-19373 Governor Dummer Academy, 1942-1947. Came to Lawrenceville, 1947. Forty-six LAWRIQNCIZ LOUIS IILAVACIQK. M.A. Hl'.fl0l'y Wesleyan University A.lS., 19443 Columbia University M.A.. 1946. History Department: Ass'l. House Master of Dawes, IQ47-IQSOQ House Master of Thomas. Psi Upsilon Fraternity: Manager College Radio Station: College liinly Officer. Taught at Trinity School, 1044-IQJS. Taught at Governor Dummer Academy, 1945-1947. Came to Law- renceville, 1047. 51 Oflaz drzkkz 51 M. AI.I.IiN KIMRLIQ, BA.. I'5.I5. Rvlig ion Wlicnlun Cnllegc BA., 19435 Princeton 'I'I1c-nIogicnI Seni- inury B.D., 1946. Master i11 Religion. Studied Law at University of Virginia in IQ42, Begun tn-ncliing' at Linw- rcncevillc wlicn he Iieuanic niinixtcr of the Igiwrcnci-ville Pifsbytcriaii Church in 1947. ROI5I ,R'I' I.liIi CI.ICQUI .NNUI, ILS. Sf-iczlre Iuw.i Slaitc Cuili-gc, 1049-104111 Univcrsity uf Ruclicstcr. 1940-1941: Cnrncll Uriivrrsity. 1944-1946, B.S. Signizi I'i FI'LllKjI'IlIIY. Cnrncll Octzigim Club. 'lliught Irving Scliunl fm' Buys. 'I'1ii'i'ytim'11. New Ynrk. Muster in Sci- cnccg Maixtcix lk-rri' Russ Ilcmusc. 1943-14140. Came to I.11wrcliccviII::, 1948. I ,- ' 0 ' V C.,-XRI. ' IRI IDI RICK IiUl'C'IINI'R .X.I4. l1'11gl1'.-W A.Ii. Priiiccloii Uiiivcrsiliy 1947: Cottage Club, Grail- llzltcml I.LlKVIACl'ICCYIIIL'. 11344. Nl.is1cr in Iinglisliz Assistiiin House Muster. Ilickimnii IIuim'. Ilj.IX-IUSIT. Clinic In I.QlXVl'L'IlCCYIIIC. 11143. On Ii-.iw uf llI1NL'IIKl', ltjgli-Itjil. X. -f4,,... .mwdj F Off y-seven 51 UM! offrzkffz 51 I'lf'l'l'iR IUHN KIIQRNXN. .X.NI. .V1l1hz'l211ll1'1',1' 11.15. C,11l11111bi11 U11i1'c1'5i1y. 1111113 .fX.M.. 11757. LIl111i1'111:111 111' M11thc111111ifs lJc11111'11111'11t. 5111111111111 MiliI11I'j' Ac:11lc111y, l'1l'lL-ILIIIC, 11338: Culwi' MiliIilI'y' ,XILl1lCI1lY, 11158-11141: Unitccl States Mililxiry .'Xc111l1-111y. 11341-111411: United SILIICS NllX'l1l Ac111lc1111', 111411-11148: 61111115 uf liIlgi1lL'l'l'S. .X.U.S., S1-111. 11141-Aligiisl, 11147. LT111111' 111 I.111v1'1'111'u1'ill1', 11348. IUIJXN FRANRIIS 'IHUMl'SKJN, 11.15. I I li.1'l11l'j' 11.14. l'1'i11c1'11111. 111411. Mzistci' ill llih1111'y: Muster uf Dawes Huuscq 115515111111 llullxc MkINlL'l', U1'isw11l1l Hollsc, 19.111- 1115111 Ci1'111il1:111'1l l.111vrc11c1-1iH1'. 11145, Czimc 141 I.11W- 1'cncc1'ill1'. 11145. 5 1 319 M, CII fS'I'l. xw liYlli. HA. N JM ll 1 5 It 1 11 1 11111 1111 11 , 1'111y 6-1,14 1 Us 111111 t P11111 I ' I 1 X1 R. . l Vyliick 1 Coll- , 1111 'I llllll IE lllnii' .Xca l'll 1155- ,14 S i1-1l '11'U1111'-'bily ,L'I1I.- '1 '41, ylwg 1111-11 911 . A111 . 1114 11 1 ct 1-1l 111 Iil.1ir Acad! , V 1 Ill 1 L, 1 1, L j 11' ' sy- Ov vzlnivg 1174 'I' ,hi If tcrnity. M1lSIL'f in French: ' :ich in cat : M115 111' 1J.1vi1lm1111 lI11us1-. Came tu 111v1'c 'vil ' c111l11-1' 11143. I r11'ty-vigil I 51 Ofla ROi5i'iRT S. WICKS. BMX. l:'ngl1'.vl1 l'rim'utin1. ISA., 19481 ciI'2lLiLl1lKCli I,1ixvi'ci1ccvillc, Ilj4I1 with U.S. Arini. 1948-iq49: Amisuiimt House Muster, Griswold Huuscg Assistant Varsity Succcr Cozichg Vur- sity Huckry Cuzich. Came to Luwrcnccvillc. 1948. Ref turned tu Lziwrcuccvillc, mio. IDU I I1lI'V1ll'Li1 in Marlin: LIQVVIS OAKLIQY liRi .VVS'I'F,R III. .'X.li. I.i11iu ima' Cirr'c'Aj Princcum, 113451 .Xssintaillt Hnusc Muster. Ihiwcs, 1949, 195mg Mast:-r in L.itin ginil Gruck: U.S,N,R.UIntclligcnCc, 1941-1946. Camo to Imwrcmcvillc, 1949. drzdd 51 NALD GREY HARNIIOUSIZ, IR., .-LB. lIi11f1z'n1i1f1'f..- 1944. Assistniit Ilniisc Master of Cluvcg MilhfL'l matics: Religion: Fziculty Advisor In Came-ran Club. Came nv i.4iwrciiccx'iIlc Svpu-1nluc1'. 1940. F orty-ni nc 51 Offa odrzkzkz 51 WALDITMAR DAIIROSKI, ILS. Music IIIENRY IJAVISON CLARK, SW. Srirmr' Penn State, 1956-1957: U.S. Naval Acailcinv, 1957- 19415 S.W.. Iilccrrical linginccring. Assistant House Master in Kcnncily, 1949-19593 Master in Scicnccg Assist- ant Coach of Soccer. Cummantlcr U.S. Navy, 1037-IQ47. ln liusincss, 1947-1949. Mcmhcr Civil Ilcfcnsc Council: G. li. lfcllnwslup, Union Cullcgc, SIIIIIIIICI' 19595 Coach nl Gulf: Curator uf Plivsics l,1Il14ll'lllUl'I'. filllllt' tu Law- rciiccvillt-, 1949. Tgmplc University, ILS. 19435 Curtis Institute of Music, 1941. Instructor 9E piano and music. U.S. Air Force, 1941-1946. In business, 1946-1949. Came tn Lawrence- ville Scptcmlmcr, IQ.1Kj. Fifty UUION CASIC MORGAN, A.B. English llI'lIICL'lUl1. 1949. Cjraaliiatctl Lawrenceville, 1945. Master in Iinglislig Assistant llousc Mastcr 9f Wooalhullg Assist- ant Faculty Ailvisor, Pipe and Quill Club. Princeton 'I'riz111glc Club. Came tu Lawrenceville, 1949, 51 Uffaz odrzkfa 51 MICHAFI. P. OLMSTFD, IRS. Scimre Yale. 1945. Master in Science. In business. Taught at Trinity-Pawling Scluml. Came to Lawrenceville, 1949. FREDERICK Wli.lGliI. NERC. ILA. Spanish Yale, B.A., 1950. Middlebury Summer Session, 1950. Freshlnan Football at Yale. Graduated Lawrenceville, 1944. Served in Army, 1943-1945. Master nf Perry Ross House: Assistant Basketball Coach. Came to Lawrence- ville, 1950. ROBERT IIOBART ANSWORTH Spanish Amherst, AB., 1950. Served in U.S. Navy. Assistant Master nf Hamill House. Came to Lawrenceville, 1959. Fifty-one 51 Offa adrzklzz 51 lIURNlaI.lUS llCJl.l..'XNIJ I4LIl,l. lll. AJR. Princcton. .X.Il., Iljill, Graullxzxtul Lgxwrcnccvillc, 19.14. Mustcr in Hixlory, M1lNlL'l' of Cromwcll House. Came to l.llYV!'Q'l1CL'YlllC. mio. 1 Fifty-11410 THOMAS Il,-XROIJD l4R.XlJl,liY. HS. fllfIfl'fIr'.f Club, l'.li. Majors Club. Asaislauu Muster of Rzxymonml Housc. KXHNC to l.zlwrcnccvillc, logo, H1'.vfw'y l DAVID CR.XWlfORlD. ILA.. li.lD. R!'lI-gllllll .'Xl11l1ul'sl College, ll.,-X.. 19443 Princclolx 'l'l1L-ologlcgll Sun- inury. IMD., 1947. Cnmlimlnltu for IJou1:u'11Lc at Princcton. 'lk-achcr of Hixtory anal lliblc. Soccer mul llxxslictballl Couch at Mount Hvrmon School, 11147-1948. Pastor of First l'rcsbylcri:1n Churclx of Planinslaoro, N.I. Came to I.z1wrunccvillc, 19511. Springfield College. ll..X.. 19511: Varsity Soccer, Vanity Wrestling. Varsity Truck. Scnior Club Sccrctzlry. Ulu- 51 Offrz odrzkkz 51 tililllilili ll. DAVIS. IR.. .X.Il. Slii!'lll't' Clark Uiiivcraily. .'X.Ii.. 111511. Master in Scicnccg Di- ruitur of Schuul Banil. Came tn Lawrenceville, 1950. ALliXANlJF,R SKSSUMS CLIQVELAND FULLER, B.A. English Harvard, I5.A., 1949: Universite rlc Grenoble. Served in U.S. Army and Merchant Marine. Assistant Master, Dawes House. Came to Lawrenceville, IQSO. DONALD COWING IJUNBAR. ILA. Jlinthcnzrlficx Amherst College, li.A., IQSO, Cum Laude, All-Amen ican Soccer, 1949: Basketball, Beta Theta Pi Fraternity. U.S. Army, 1946-19472 Taught at Phillips Academy Csummerj, 1950. Assistant Muster, Kennedy House, I.V. Soccer Coach. Came to Lawrenceville, IQSO. Fifty-three 51 Ofla PICRRY II. IQNOWIQION, A.li. Iilllglllih l'i'ineeton UlllX'L'l'5lllA. A.ll. 195og American Progrgini. Served in U.S. Army. Teaching English and religion. Assistant Muster of Dickinson House. Caine to Lziwrenceville Sepleinher. logo. Fzfty-four odrzkfrz 51 HARRY A. HIQAUY. M.A. .lllrlthcnnilifx Fresno Slate College, A.l'l., iqggq New York University, M.A., 1937. Taught at Central High School, liinghain- ton, New York, 1934-19445 Peddie School, 1944-IQSO1 Tennis Coach :it Binglminton :ind Pedclie Schools. Caine to Lawrenceville, 1950. Civilization HENRY BRUCE McCLlil.l,AN, ll.A. English Williams College, B.A. 1946, New College Oxford, B.A. IQ4QQ Varsity Squash, Phi Beta Kappa. Taught at Deer- Held Academy. Served with Air Force. Advisor to Pipe and Quill Club. Came to Lawrenceville, 1950. 51 Olkz adrzkkz 51 PAUL GORDON SMART, M.A. Art Bard College, Columbia University, B.A. 1943g Teachers College, Columbia, M.A. 1950. Norma-Hoffman Bearing Corp., Stamford, Connecticut, Personnel Department. Taught at Fessenden School and Lake Forest Academy. Came to Lawrenceville, 1950. ROBERT RUSSELL WICKS Religion Hamilton College, Union Seminary, 1904-1908. Pastor, Second Congregational Church, Holyoke, Massachusetts, Acting Chaplain, Mt. Holyoke College. Dean of Prince- ton University Chapel 1928-1948. Since retirement, Act- ing Chaplain at Hamilton College. Came to Lawrence- ville, 1950. Fifty-five 51 Ulla Todrzda 51 OTHER OFFICERS AND ASSISTANTS EDMUND D. BLAKE-Appointed 1921 Bursar WILLIAM M. VAN SYcR1.E-Appointed 1925 Cashier ESTHER L. ERTE1.--Appointed 1931 Secretary to the Head Master ELIZABETH V. HODGKINS, R.N.-Appointed 1934 Head Nurse ETTA R. BRADFORD-Appointed 1935 HELEN DUNERAcco, R.N.-Appointed 1935 MRS. GRACE M. CARRQLL-Appointed 1937 MRS. ARTHUR S. HANCOCK-Appointed 1942 MARGERY MURRAY-Appointed 1943 CATHERINE M. HA1.1.oRAN-Appointed 1944 MRS. DORIS Hocl-QMAN-Appointed 1944 MRS. MARY S. CROUSE-Appointed 1945 G. KENNETH DYE-Appointed 1945 MRS. H. DONY EASTERLINE-Appointed 1945 ILSE FRANK-Appointed 1945 MRS. MARY HOLUB-Appointed 1946 PATRICIA HAMLETT-Appointed 1948 DUNALD R. WEST-A1JlJ0iDlCd 1948 MRS. CORA I. DYE-Appointed 1949 GEORGE REUNING-Appointed 1949 MRS. THOMAS M. PAGE-Appointed 1950 E11.EEN A. ENSL1N-Appointed 1951 Fifty-six Secretary to the Assistant Head Master Secretary to the Medical Director Assistant to the Bursar Secretary-Alumni Ofice Secretary--Registrar? Ofice Secretary to the Director of Admissions Assistant Registrar Secretary to Guidance Assistant Cashier Library Assistant Household Director S ecretary-A I um ni Ofice Secretary to Business Manager Proctor Secretary to Director of Lower School Assistant to the Bursar Library Assistant Secretary-Registrar's Ojice I 3 .... 4 .0 W1 M iff if r 5 If f N if-1 x :Hill N 421525 f W J 'PW' 4 E 'I K , , FIFTH F0nM 51 Olly odrzkkz 51 lfrrull Rnzr: liuncl. Mrmsscr. Coker. Rulwrtsllzlw, Cul1grlun. Smullrl Rnlwz ULlil'lL'N. R.. P1'.13'. CAlX'L'y, I.. R.lim-r, Imuim-11, O. Hawk lQnn': O'Cnll.1glm11, H.. c,lll1ll1ll, Smith. A., Wight. C., Smith. I.. SIllH1l1HL'l'. fTLlI'llL'Qll', Hmll. STUDENT COUNCIL PI'lZfl'IIt'l7I IA1x114,s IOIINSTUN C.xlu4,Y I 'ic'z'-1'1'vx1'dc'11l Sw'1'c'r111'y l.x1xl1.s CUNNI-.1.l. R.x1N14.k Mrmxmla PRAY. Ik. IJl'I't'f'f0l'S of Upper AIAN lfnwmm Comgnux Rxczlulm KI-QNNA CMN:-is, Uwmw P.XRDI:l'. l.xc:mssl.N, lu. XNIILLIAIXI Hlnxllz Mussm Flualmralurzx f,l.USlll'Ii Rmsl-.l4'l'sluw' l'1'c.v14zI1'11t of Kizzmlrz 1'1'c.vf1lc'11t of HC'!lQIItIfl .Xla'l'lll'u fiUll5l'fZll Hlu11,.1,, IR, IAM:-is I'Iow,xlum Cnkllk I'1'v.ffz1'cnt of The Lodgz' IQUHERT ST,xr:1aY XNARTII Cfrflf' I Ionic I'1'z'.f1'dw1t.f Conxl-,ul 3 llmm Boxxx, In. flhwcsj NIICIILXI-.L cTAli'l'l',lL SllII.L. XBlill Hicnnc: III-.NNY ctXR'l'l'.li ft.XRNl-,lilli filriswolmlj Imm M.xm:,xL'1.l-,Y SM1'1'lf1 Cllickinsonj ll.um1.n 1Xl'l,l'N'l'l'S O'C.u.1..xc:II.xN 1RaymomD Rov lxI.l.liN S:x11'1'u CII1nnillH c:.XIiI,US R XIfXl-I, OM.xN.x 1VVoodhullH CII nu.:-.s Ill-.NRY VVlc:xI'r ffflcvcj Sixty 51 Offaz L1'1'zZ1Q1 51 I'I FII-I FORM COUNCIL 1 l'fll1f Raw: IIIcObsuI'I, O., III'1I5'. Carey. I., RIIIIIcI', Galina, Il. Hurfq Rrzw: xvllflll. Mmacr, Cnkur, COI1gIIOII, IIIOII, ROlIcI'txII:Iw. OFFICERS OF THE FIFTH FORM PI'C'5lAdt'Ilf IAMI-,s IOIINSTON CAIIILY Iffcf-P1'cx1'dc'r1t Scc'1'c't:zry IAMLs KIONNELL RAINLII IVIONIIOE PRAY, III. Dfl't'l'IOI'X of U ppcr ALAN EDWAIID CZONGDON IQICHARD IQIZNNA GAINIas, III QIVVEN PAIIDIaIa lAc:OIssLN, III. WILLIAM BLAIR Mossuu FIILDIQIIICIQ f,,LDSHL'li ROBILRTSHAXV President of Klnfzun Pre.v1'a'er1l of Belknap AIITIIUII GOIIsI'c:II I3ROI.I,, III. IANIILS HOWARD CTOKEIL Prcxidcnz f3f'Thf Lodge ROIIILRT STM: ILY WAIITH Sixtyfonz 1951 DF C CLASS 51 Ulla ozfrzkkz 51 CLASS HISTUIDY HE fat man mopped his brow, got up, and walked over to a platform. He looked out over the crowd: the men in shirt sleeves, the women in yellow cotton suits. Folks, he said in a beefy southern voice, guess there ain't no sense in waitin' any longer for that soprana from Mudgap. Don't know what happened 'cepin maybe the heat got her. Well it sure had a lot to get. He laughed helplessly at his own joke while the crowd shifted impatiently. But to take her place there's a fellow from our hometown to talk to us on how he liked bein' away at school up No'th. The floor's all yours, boy. As the fat man sat down a tall boy wearing Brooks grey flannels, Brooks argyles, a Brooks buttondown with a rounded collar, a Brooks tattersall, a Brooks blue blazer and a pair of Brooks white bucks, handed down four generations, stepped to the microphone. He straight- ened his Brooks bow tie. It's certainly swell to be back with you-all, he said, and there's a lot I want to tell you about Lawrenceville. At this the fat man puffed and sighed and began fanning himself rapidly. When he began to roll his eyes the boy added, But I'll make it as short as I can. The fanning slowed down. The fall was pretty warm for the No'th and made me feel at home right away, even if I did have to dress up all the time like this. Seems there's some store all the boys buy party clothes at, so l just got these Hxin's. Guess it's the school uniform or somethin'. There was two old guys runnin' the buildin', and they were real helpful to all of us when we were gettin' settled. They kinda' reminded me of the horse over at Mr. Wharum's-the one that waits till you're tryin' to get by behind and then cuts loose with his back feet-whupl For the most part the house got to work pretty fast and when you weren't goin' to meetin's you were playin' football or watchin' it. They play up No'th too, only they wear big pads and helmets. Must help some 'cause not one man got killed the whole season. As for winnin' games. that team just couldn't seem to lose. They dropped one game to a bunch a fellas looked like wanted to rip away all those pads and get right down to bare skin. But that was only one lost and we won all the rest. There was a boy called Kastilahn, played in the backlield, who ran like Hal Rogers' red bull. Kinda' looked like him, too, 'cept for a little dinky black camera he always carried around his neck. After a few weeks l began to notice a paper that came out every week or there- Sixty-three 51 Olfa Udlflfllfl 51 abouls called the Luzwwzcc. Reminded me of the llludgtzp ,Ilonitor-wasn't quite so long though. and the guy who ran it wasn't quite so fat. Otherwise it made me feel right at home-misspellings and all. Une fella writin' for that sheet got all mixed up and called someone a squat little brick. IDon't know what he meant to say, but it stlre was funny. 'Bout then the marks came out and when I saw the list of boys on that honor list I was sure I'd never get into Shihclit Hollow Higher Educational Institute. I sure was glad when I heard that everybody was headin' for a place called Yale-that's up near the North Pole in a country called Connecticut. So I was sure I was in with a smart bunch until one day, iust before Christmas. I was walkin' back from class when all of a sudden some boy walks up to me and makes a funny noise and then works his fingers a few inches from my nose and walks off. I was right glad to get home. When I got back I could see right away that when the time came to do a job the funny stuff faded right quick. With mid-year's exams just around the bend, the house was quiet all day with the people moving around on tiptoe and shutting doors quietly. And you can bet it paid off. The Fifth Form average was really up there-highest since the School began, the Headmaster said, and everybody felt pretty good. Even the fella that fainted in the U.S. History exam perked up when he heard about it. But one poor guy read a little too much of Hick's and came out lookin' like one of those hoot- owls in judge Peters barn. After mid-years things loosened up a bit and athletics took the place of history exams for a while. The swimmin' team l'd heard so much about was a real thing to wonder at. They Won just about every race there was and took the name of best in the East besides. The one meet they did drop they swam without their captain and lost by one point. People felt right bad about that for a time, but it looked to me as though our boys were bein' nice and givin' the rest of 'em a chance. Anyhow, they won enough medals and lovin' cups to fill Mrs. Harner's kitchen, and you-all know how big that is. The basketball team was really fine too. and they got metal hoops up there and leather balls, instead of peach baskets and a blown-up pig bladder. They took on one bunch of fancy Dans called Carteret one Sixfy-four I Offrz odrzdzz 51 afternoon, and discountin, all sayin's as how they were sure to lose, they whupped 'em solid. Some little man in a glen plaid suit with a white carnation in his button hole was talkin' about carvin, Upset in big red and black letters in the floor of the gymnasium for days after the game. The wrasslin' team did a mighty fine job too, and there were a few people might have given old Hairless Iones a good fight. I 'spect Hairless woulda' won out, though. None of them fellas weighed near four hundred pounds. Then they got a game up there I never saw before played on a kind of slippery stuff called ice. They call it hockey and the way those boys tore up and down on one little blade, they must be right at ease with their Maker. They played real well, though, and won some games that took real spirit. I guess about then a few of us got tired of watchin' people play and did a little playin' ourselves. That fella Kastilahn and a curly haired friend of his took to tryin' to bury each other in vittles one night and some boys dressed up and put on Romeo and Iuliet-talkin' just like Mr. McGregor's two darkies. Across the street in the Lodge some patriotic bunch tried to make somethin' that would burn better than that Napalm stuff but they had a little trouble tryin' to light their house master's pipe with it. After all that homespun play actin,, there was a real play put on by the Schools dramatic club iust like The Church Pageant Club and The lohn Barrymore Club. The play was really funny and everybody said it was the finest job in years. I don't know about all that but I do know I haven't laughed so hard since the pig fell down the well last New Year's Even. Meantime the School was chuggin' right along. The bridge games went on every after- noon and every evening, just like in Mary Mulligaifs parlor. l never pai-rl much at- tention until one night I was comin' back from Shipley and a singin' concert when I saw some boy stridin' up and down the esplanade at two o'clock in the morning. I asked him what was the matter and he i mumbled something about not pulling trump and no damn breaks and went on Walkin'. Funny people, bridge players. And almost every afternoon when we weren't tryin' to win a Quickie Quiz and get a seventeen jewel wrist watch, we went over to the head master's house and had tea. They looked at me right funny Sixiy-jim' when I took six lumps ol sugar but I hard- ly ever took eight, so I reckon they didn't mind. The next day Iirank and I-Frank was our little dog with legs 'lwout as long as Mrs. NVorthington's ducks'-walked thru the great big new field house and gaped at all the fancy trimmin's. Now, if you-all think Iudge Peters harn is big. you oughta' see this thing. Heck, you could put judge Peter's harn inside it and throw in his house to hoot. Iiut I see hy the faster waggin' of our chairman's fan, that time is runnin' out so I'll Iinish up. With the spring movin' right on up behind us, the days really began to stretch out. And so did everyhodyg it was kinda' time to unfold after the winter term and we went home on spring vacation feeling the need to really relax. Alter we got hack things were a little different. Nobody seemed to care if there were no seconds on the meat and the Heelys started having tea out on the hack lawn. The wall halls started lloatin' hack and forth and I got the old itch to go lishin' in Hal Averill's mill pond. But work Went on just the same and 'before I knew it I was writin' otlt another history exam. There was work and lun both, folks, and I'm not sorry for a minute of it. But I'm sure glad to he home again. and il' youll excuse me I'd like to shuck these duds for a pair of dungarees. Thanks a lot. The lat man led the clapping and then waddled hack to the microphone. WI'hank you. son, lor your eontrihution to Dusty Bowl's Centennial and now I'm sure you'll all join me in a glass ol' lemonade to start the summer oft right. Sixlyfrfx 51 Ulla otlrikla 51 Address of Welcome ,........ ....A.., I AMES CONNELL RAINER Class Speech ,..,.AA....,...A. ..A.,... I OHN WINSHIP HOWARD Presentation Speech ,....... ..,.... I AMES HOWARD COKER Class Poet A,A......,e,.,..,. ,.....,... M ITOHILL LEE SMITH Class Historians .....,. ..,..,.... B ARTON MICIIAEL BIGCS IOHN WINSHIP HOWARD COMMENCEMENT DAY SPEAKERS Valedietorian ,.,,.,,......,..,...D ..4.......,.4...,.......,..,D.... ..,o...... D A VID RANDOLPH EVANS Fifth Form Mantle I.,I....I .,,..,,.. I AMES IOHNSTON CAREY Fourth Form Mantle . .,...... ,...,.. H ENRY CARTER CARNEGIE Sixty-seven 51 Offaz odrzkfzz 51 HDNUIQAIBLE ELECTIUNS Mowkma PRAY IAMHS I. Cfuuiv Bw: .Ill-. Iround Done Mort for L,LJll'l'l'l7l'C'l!l'l1L' D. R. EVANS H. Corian Dom' Moy! Ouzxfdc- .flthletics Bart .4ll1lc'te Sixty-right 51 Ulla odrtkla 51 HOUSE ELECTIDNS Best Legs . .... .. ................ DAVIDSON Biggest Smoothie .....,...,.... .,.,, D ,ALMEIDA Bfff V01'CC' --'-' -- - K 1-AU Most Likely to be Famous ,,.... KASTILAHN Parlor Athlete .... ....... H OWARD Fin! Ma1.,.ied 5... H Qlbb BARRETT B651 LOW '4 ' P RICE Most Dignified .... ...,.... STRONG Hardest Worlqer .. ..,.,.., HARPER Mon Energetic BRECKINRIDGE Laziest .........,.,,..,.......... ...e,.. M ONTAG Most Modest ...... .... , . FARGO Busiest Correspondent ..,,,.....,.., CHILDRDSS , Most Harzlbollea' ,,,,.. ,...,., I SAACS Hangriest CASIMIR-LAMBERT Quietest ...... F u n n iest ....,. Most Mature Win diest ,..,. N oisi est ....... NOBLE CQAINES SEINIANS LOBIT LYDON Gift to the Women ..,..,.e. .....,.. B ARDWELL Queen of the Showers .,,,... .,..... S TEMBEL Least Gullzble ....,..,..... ..,.. B IGGS Biggest S oeialite Class lolqer .,... . Class Politician . Stooges Most ..... Class Dwarf Class Giant .....,.. Class Gossip ...,.. Neatest Room .... SEELEY SUMMERS BURGER CAREY BROWN WANDALL FREDD HAND AND BRECKINRIDGE Sixty-nine 51 Uffaz Todrzkkz 51 CLASS IZAVUIQITES 363815 vita? v- yxfagvtfs BIRDLAND 1 - ww .- F ff of B135 gohegs ACTRE55 Q, ey 0 0 , NOVEL HAUNTJ x mem Q 3 was P555 X fyrv- PLAYS ' mmmac X 'Q 'Jonrl X' 80 G., MARSH keFAuveR, , -'ME mvesnenm WIS can x r li ff .f' xr sPo:aTizm wxrcu :L , 51 Offa Ygoclrzkfa 51 CLASS IZAVCIQITES 'z:.':s::f: . A ,, . nw' -Ei . lf, X- . 3- x -EKUS Scuaol-. ACTOQB 6' X 5 E 2. 55 Ac. Q SSD comm amp MAGAZINE fill S. age! grfgfj NF R ego Mgr X51 Km?-0L0M0N'5 ci DJ 2 l K CHES'rER.FlELD.f',':w MOVlE. u U 4 CIGARETTE FooT6ALL YALE I 'S E i s o 3 x BQYS go1.LaGE SPOETTQ 'PLAY S y 51 Offzz 0a'rzZz'4z 51 lfmzlf Row: Zinnm-rman, li., I.uvc, R., Muntag, livans, Ilavimlsun. Bartlett. llanlwcll Mgtu L llaml. .Skmfzzl Rona Lincnln. Olmn. I., lllmglas, D., Gcllcrt, VVallacc. Nivling. LCl'lIl1lllI1 lareu l'ruagcr, Sn-arm, Sawmn. Iilzrk Razr: Kay. Rin-gl-l. lim-ckil1u'i4lgc. Ziclmlml, Ralincr. Carey I Rcnu sllaw. liruwn, I.. RUSKIIIQIIII1, Ixaam, CUM LAIJDE SDCIETY liarclwcll Hanlon lircclcinrillge lirown. I. Carey. llavinlson Douglas. IJ. Evans Frcclnl Ucllcrl Sl'l'!'llf-YJ!! 'o Hand Isaacs Kay Lehman n Lincoln l,m'C Mcical lc Montag Nivling Olson. I. P raeger Rainer Riegel Rolvsrlshaw Rossm an n Sassoon Stearns Wallace Ziclwolcl Zimmerman. I 51 Olfzz odrzkzkz 51 CLASS DDEM The passing of time destroys our refuge, And now we are alone. Traditions are lost in gluttony, And lives are lost in competition, And we are lost in life. As we look with uneasy eyes to the turbid waters And are suddenly aware that this is reality, And it is inevitable that we be shoved into this turmoil, We joke and laugh and brag and wonder- And then we think, and our stomachs drop. Some will know greatness, others failure. Individually there is assured security And none, no not one, will disappear. Yes, there is a cool confidence within each one of us, A vanity easily pointed to by elder critics, A strength no one need tell us is there. We will not surrender to your pity, Your fatal nodding of regret, That we were born to crisis. Do not bemoan our fate, We will not Hounder, For we have more than straw to cling to. MITCliILL SMITH Seventy-three X A fwfiiii-Q -' ' ', Q' 14? is JO ahnlk A ,NR ::'f.:yf. WP' N Has :. , w wfffw, Ln .. .A - ,-,, ' i -Lg, , .2 51 .. , .. .Q . 5 ,rw . 'f f 3. 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' 'ff' -' 1 'f?5fgQ'PS,y.' .wge-, ai- 9' ' f 5 ' 4 - 'Fxff V U ' Hza3sww.,.f .. mum- 1. 51 Olfzz 0L1'rzZz'a1 51 LEOPOLDU ORTIZ AGUILERA Aggy Leo MEl'Fl'.V1hI'llg,.f rhruper where I mmf from. Calle Il cntrc I5 y 15, Rcparro Alturas de Miramar, Habana, Cuba. Born at Habana, Cuba, April 16, 1933. Rhinic Representative Raynioncl House '48-'491 Raymond House Chaimpionship Football '48-'49 KRD: Raymond House Chiimpionship Soccer '49-'So QRJ: I.V. Baseball '49-'go QNunieralsJ1 Spanish Club 'qo- '51: Program Committee 'go-'5i. Came to I.awrenceville September, 1948. Houses. Raymond, Upper. Preparing for li.S. at I.ouisi:in:1 State. WILLIAM BROWN ANDREWS Supa Will Early to bed, mlrly Io rife' . . . 327 Howard Avenue, Raclburn, Fair Lawn. New Icrsby. Horn nt New York City, New York, April 27, 1953. Honors Average '49-'gig Concert Club l4Q-SIQ Glec Club '50-'gig Choir '5o-'5r. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1949. Houses, Hamill, Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Yale. Seventy-eight 51 Ulla PETER IOSEPH AUGER Pete Augs 'Lucky Pierre Unk: ut I1llll'Il!H R. IJ. No. 1, Sziylorsburg, Pennsylvania. born at Paterson, New Iersey, September Io, 1932. Vice-President Cleve House '49-'5og I.V. Soccer '49- '5o: Varsity Soccer 'SU-'SI lNumeralsJg I.V. Baseball '49-'go lNumeralsjg Cleve House Championship Bas- ketball '47-'SO CCJg L4Ill'l't l1!'l' '48-'5lg Glee Club '50- '5rg Periwig Club '50-'5i: Davidson House Champion- ship Basketball '46-'47 CDD. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1946. Houses, Davidson, Cleve, The Lodge. Preparing for B.S. at Princeton. 0a'rzZ1'z1 51 ROBERT FOWLER BARDWELL Hard 1 mum, I mw, I was cof1quz're1z'. 1422 South 6th Street. Fargo. North Dakota. Born at Minneapolis, Minnesota, April 29, 1955 Honors Average '48-'gig Latin Prize QII-Specialj ,491 Kennczly House Championship Track '48-'49 CRD: I.V. Basketball '48-'49 CNumeralsJ, Manager '49-'50 QNumeralsJ: I.V. Baseball '49-,503 Varsity Football '50-'51 fMaior LJ: Field Band '48-'5og Swing Band 'go-'gig Major I. Club '50-'513 Olla P011 'go-'gig Lawrffncz' 'go-'gig Math Club .SO-'SIQ Science Club '50-'5i: Cum Laude Society '50-'51, Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Kennedy. Upper. Preparing for PMS. at Minnesota. Seventy-nine 51 Ulla WILLIAM HUGHES BARRETT Bill Willie Yee Iz'.v my lvlne eyes ibut gr-Ir 'em. 64 Third Street, Garden City, Long Island, New York. Born at Brooklyn, New York, September 8, 1932. Art Prize l47't48Q All-Circle Wrestling '47-'48 CD21 Camera Club '47-'481 All-Circle Baseball '48-'49 KDJQ Captain Dawes House Soccer '49-'5og Co-Captain Dawes House Track '49-'sog Press Club '49-'51: Spring Track '49-'go QNumeralsJ: Varsity Cross- Country '5o-'51 CMaior L19 Winter Track '50-'5tg Maior L Club '5o-'5t. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, Dawes, Upper. Preparing for ILA. at Dartmouth. Eighty drzkfa 51 MICHAEL ANDERSON BARNARD Mike U, wlmt men dare do! cfo Indian Knoll Farm, Harroun Road, Sylvania, Ohio. Born at Toledo, Ohio, August 4, 1933. Historian of Woodhull House '49-'5og VVoodl1ull House Championship Basketball '48-'49 QWjg All- Circle Basketball '48-'49 CWD: Woodhull House Championship Soccer 748-'49 KWH: I.V. Soccer :TQ-'Stl CNumeralsQg Varsity Soccer ,SO-SI fMin0r LD: I.V. Basketball '49-'50 CNumcralsD: Lawrenrc '49-'5tg Periwig Club '49-'5tg Cheer Leader '5o-'5t. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1948. Houses, Wooclhull, Upper. Preparing for B.S. at Michigan. 51 Oflaz odrzkkz 51 ROBERT WILLIAMS BARTLETT, II Roh Bouncing Bob Barts R1'r1Hy guys, my rnifz' 11115 r'fm11gz'11. ' II North Runison Avt-litre, Margate City, New Iersey. Born at Atlantic City. New jersey, September 8, 1935- Honors Average '49-'5og Varsity Wrestling Manager 'go-'gig Herotlotus Club '50-,Sli Periwig Club '49- '5i: 1.aw1'c1ifr 'go-'51: Library Associates V49-VSI. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Dawes, The Lodge. Preparing for ILS. at Yale. BARTON MICHAEL BIGGS Bart Higgsey Monk Let him be Rep! from paper, pm und ink. 4941 Glenbrook Road, N.W., Washington 16, D.C. Born at New York City, New York, November 26, I932. I.V. Soccer '48-'49 fNLlI11C1'1llSJQ Varsity Soccer '5o- '51g Varsity Tennis '48-'50 QNumeralsJ: Raymond House Championship Soccer '49-'50 CRI: I.l1Mfl'l'I1l'!' '48-'51, Assistant Managing Iitlitor '49-'5o. Sports Editor ,SO-,512 Ulla Puri '48-'51g The Lit '49-'51, Editor-in-Chief '50-'5ig Publications Committee '50- '51g Vice-President Pipe and Quill ,SO-'SIL Historian Thomas House '46-'47g Thomas House Chzunpionship Soccer '46-'47 ITM Managing Iimlitor. llcvurdrz' '46- ,473 Religion I Prize '46-'47: All-House Soccer V46-,47 CTM Dramatic Club '46-'47g School Church ,47-i48g Honors Average '48. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1945. Houses, Thomas, Raymond, Upper. Preparing for II.A. at Yale. Eighly-one 51 Ulla Dau' MCCLUNG RHODES BLAIR Mac NlY1ll'iC.'L'H Info Ihr' air jmziur 1'u'1'1ln1z'l1. 19600 Sliukcr lloL1lcv:11'zl, Sliaikcr Heights 21, Ohio. Born :it Clcvclzincl, Ohiu, Dcccmlicr 12, 1952. IV Form Mimtlc Spczikcrg Ilunors Average '49-'51g I.V. Fuutliull '49-'50 fNlll1ll'F2llSJZ Varsity Track '49- '5o lM21lKlf Ll. 'gm-'sin l.11wrn1fc ,SU-,SIQ Glcc Cluli '49-'Sig Open Duur Qz0lIlIlllIICC '50-'Sig Pipe :mul Quill 'gn-'sig Nuluru Club '49-'51, Prmiilcnt '50-'51. Came In Lgiwrcnccvillc September, 1949. Houses, Kcnnccly. llclknnp. Prcpgiring fur A.ll. :it Yule. Eighly-two odrzkffz 51 GEORGE TER RY BIRCH 'l'cr1'y ' HSNIUkl', xnmlqc, miukz' tlmf cigun-iff Quaker Rcnul, l'.O. llrix qufw, l,l'll'lCL'IUll. Ncw usu Burn at Trcntmi. New lr-rscy. Scptciiilivi' - 19, I.V. Soccer 'Stl-'SI fNlllIlCFLllSj. Cumc to l.LlWl'L'I1CCX'lllC Scptcmlzcr, 1945. Housu Cromwell. Griswulml. Upper. Pl'Clllll'lI1Q for li tmouth. 51 Olly odrzkfaz 51 WALTER SHAFFER BLOES Wally Shelf The p'rexerz'1liion of herllih if fl duty. 616 Main Street, Peckville. Pennsylvania. Born at Peckville, Pennsylvania. December 1, 1931. Chapel Usher '50-'51: Concert Club '49-'51, Came to Lawrenceville September, 1949. Houses, Hamill, Upper. Preparing for A.B. at Princeton. '51. Oldwick, New Icrsey. STEPHEN UNDERWOOD BOWES Steve Ruler are made to be broken. Born at Asheville, North Carolina, Iuly 15, 1933. Glee Club '50-'51g Varsity Cross-Country fMajor LD '50-'51g Varsity Track ,SO-,515 Major L Club '50- Came to Lawrenceville September, 1950. House, The Lodge. Preparing for A.B. at Princeton. Ei ghty-three 51 Offzz drzdaz 51 PHILLIPS BRECKINRIIXZE ulll'L'CliH Phil fl .fu'1'f't rli.fc1rr1:'1' in lzi,-' zl1'1',v.f. 3822 Suutll 'l'1'uust Street, Tulsa. Olkllllltllllll. Horn nt Tulsa, Okluhmnu, Nuvember go, lugg. Rhinie Representative lliekinsun House '48-2493 Hunurs Average '48-'Sig Spanish II-Special Prize '49- 'gug Cum Luucle '50-'gig Iliekixmnn House Clmmpicm- ship liuaclmll '49-'su CDD: l.41wr:'11ff' '49-'ilz Ulla Pod '50-'5r. lfmliturizll Clllllflllllll 'gn-'51g Sleepless Knights 'SU-lsl. Came to Lalwreneeville September. 11148. lluuses. Dickinson. Upper. Preparing fur A.l4. ut W'ns.l1inglux1 llllll Lee. ARTHUR GORSUCH BROLL, IR. Art AHB Armlul1 'l'!1r fluffy uf Irvs! if 11 ffllllflll' of uff1r.f. III Suulh Quincy Avenue, Margate, New jersey. liurn at linltinmre, Maryland. September 21, 1952. Presialenr nl' Kinnnn 'so-'irq Historian of Raymond llnuse '49-'inn Ruymoncl House Rhinic Prize '48-'49: Ruymuml lluuse Clmmpiumlnp Funtlmll '48-'49 QRDQ RllXlllUl'Hl lluuxe Clmalmpinnahip Sueecr '49-'50 CRD: Glce Club '48-'qlz Choir '49-'six Sclmnl Camp Coun- sellor '49-'gm Prom KTGIIIIIHIICC' 'su-'51, Caine to l.:uvreneex'ille September, 1048. Houses, Rilylllllllll, Kinnnn. l'rep4u'ing fur Ali. nt Yale. lfighly-four 51 Uffa drzda 51 IOHN PETER BROOMHEAD Pele This l11f'.v5f'rf frfof, Illif mirth, Mix rralm, lfzix Ellgllllldji Sliurtlanrls, Alclerley Edge, Cheshire, England. Born at Manchester. linglanil, Iune 21. 1952. Varsity Soccer 'SU-.SI fMinor LJ: Hermlutus Club '50-'gig Parlons Frangais '50-'gig The L4llUI'l'Il!'f' '50- '51g The Periwig Club '50-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1950. House, Upper. Preparing for Manchester University. AMES BROWN, IR. Luke L'Yark 'lFierion UyOll'I'l' nzfghiy .rlrr1ngr'. Burn at Geneva. Switzerland. Iuly 5. 1 Ei Longue Vue Farm, Crutun-un-Huclsrmn. New York. 951. Dickinson House Championship liaseluall '4g-'54, QDJ1 All-Circle l l2lhL'l7klll '49-'Su Clljg Varsity Hockey '49-'51 CNumeralsj '4935o: Chuii' ,49-,Sli Glee Clulr '49-'Sig School liarul '49-'gm Lawrentizins 'su-'51, Came to Laxvreneeville September, IQ,1lj, Houses, Dickinson, Kinnan. Preparing fur ILA. at VVilliams. ghty-15116 51 Uffzz 193 IAMES WARD BROWN llrmvnic lim 1'1l HIlfll'I' be right than fu'e.fi1fel1!. R. D. Nu. 5. Mercer Rmul, Princeton, New Ierbey. Burn nt Philzulelpliizi, Pennsylvziniai, January 15, H144- lluuurs Average '49, High Iluiirm '48-'soz Second Prize Maitli Ill '40-'sm Latin III Prize '49-'gog Latin IV Prize '49-'ing Semml lilly of Friurtli Form '49-'gug Top Scliulair Rziyiiiuiul House '49-'50, Cum Lziurle Society '50-'5i. Ilerurlutiis Club 'iii-'51, Math Club, Vice-l'i'esiclent '50-'iiz Science Club, SCCTCIRIFQ'-Tl'C2lS' urer 'su-'SIQ Library Awieiailes, Clixiirmun '5u-'gig l.uwrr'm'r '49-'sig Ulla l'nfl '49-'51, The Lil ,411-'SL Caine In lmwrerieeville September, iq4l'l. Houses, Rziymuml. Upper. Prepziring for BS. :it Harvard. Eigh fy-51.1 Ray odrzkkz 51 GEORGE HAROLD BROWN, IR. Brownie Wc rc' alike ax Izlw f'l'r1,i' in il pull. R. IJ. No. g. Mercer Roxul. Prineetoii, New Iersei Born at Pliilaulelpliiai. l7Cllll5XlYLlI1lll, Izimiiiry I5 4. Honors Average '43-'Sig Math Club 'SU-'Sli Seie Club '50-'Sig The LlIIl'I'l'lIL'l' '49-'qiz The Lil. Cireula tion Manager '50-'sig Library Axsueirites '50-'5i. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses munrl, Upper. l'i'ep1iring for l4.S. :it Princeton. 51 Offaz odrzkkz 51 ROBERT CHARLES BRUVVN Mliulf' 'Tiuorfffyr' fvromf u'w'frl.l IVHI gmng fmnirf' 4.14 lizist 'l'l1irrl Avenue, Rmcllu. New Icrscy. Ilurn :lt Rmcllc. New Icmcy. April 30, 1951. Clcvc Hmm- Histurigin '49-'ing Clcvc Home Chaim- piunship liaiskctlmll '49-lSO QCD. Came to Lawrenceville SL-ptcliilwcr. 11347. lluuscs, Clcvc, Uppvr. Preparing for ISA. nt Ilairnnoutli. LYNN KANAGA BRUGH, III Pinky Arm Iliff ,llizry lirnglz in fifly-Iwo! Saint luincm. Miirylziml. Born at Haigcrsmwn. Mgirylnml. Uctolwi' 11, 1933. Secretary-Trczmlmi' of llnmill Huusu '49-'ing Pro- gram Committee 'Sri-'f,I: Open Domi' Cummitlcc, Chairman 'Su-'gig Chess Cluli '49-'gig Bird Club ,49- '51g Choir 'gn-'5i: Glcc Club '5n-'gig Hamill House Championsliip Triick ,4Q-'SU CHJQ Varsity Cross- Country '49-'51 fMinni' L53 Wintci' Track ,4U'lS0. Came to Luwrunccvillc September. 1948, Ilnuscs. Hamill, Uppcr. Preparing fm' Yzilc. Eighty-5:-vez: 51 Offa odrzkkz 51 EDWARD IAMES BURGER, IR. KAUHCQIV lid There ix 11 frmfrfr Iffgllffjl lu lv- u!v.fn'z'c'rl in ilu' perfornmzzcr of cl'w'y avr of life. 915 Mildred Avenue, lAlI'LllIl, Ohio. Horn :it Clevelaind. Ohio. Fehruziry 15. lljjj. Honors Average '49-'5l: Parloiis l-'rnnenin 'gn-'giz Glec Club i4lj-'SIL Choir '40-'SIC Radio Club QW- YSI, Pre5ident '50-'51: Herodotus Club. President 'go-'515 Open lloor Committee 'io-'51: The 1.1110- rrlzcz' ,4Q-'Sli Iunior Swimniing '47-Q81 Tliomaia House Chnmpionsliip Soccer '47-'43 CTJ: Lower School Rccornlrw '47-1454. Came to Lawrenceville September, IQ47. lloilses. Thomas. Dawes. Upper. Preparing for A.li. ut Prince- KOH. 1o11N Ho1.M13s CALLEN, 111. qL'50p Ml1llCll'QyH Still going .fffwiy. Rlllllxllll and llairding Ronda, Little Silver, New lL'1'xL'y. Horn :it liiist Orniige, New Iersey. Iune 19, 1952. Treasurer of Ilnviilmn Home '46-147: President of W2lQlL'I1L'l' llouae '59-'sig Varsity Soccer ,47-'Sl fM11ior Lp, Co-Cnptnili '49-'gin All-State Soccer '49- '5og Varsity Hockey '47-'5r. '47-'48 QMinor LH, '48- '51 fMlllKDl' L51 Varsity linselmll '48-'51 CMajo1' LJ. l.V. linsebzill '47-'48 llxllllllfflllb-JZ Cleve House Clizunpiorisliip Swimming '48-'49 KCJ: Iunior Foot- lmll '46-'47 fNllIT1CI'lllSjC junior Buselvzill '46-'47 fNu1ner11lsJ: Iunior liiisketlmll '46-'47 fNlll11CI'2llSJ1 Glue Club '49-'iiz I.n1w'1'nu' '47-'50, Mziior L, Club '47-'itz Periwig Clulw '47-'5o, Publicity Chnirmzin '49 'gog School Cliureli Council 'go-'5I. Czinie to l.LlNVI'CIlCCYlllL' Septeniber, 1946. Houses, lluvidaon. Cleve. Upper, WLIQCIICF. Preparing for A.li. :at l7l'lIlCCI4lll. Post-Graultlzlte. Eighty-eight 51 Ulla rfrzklrz 51 LAWRENCE ALLAN CAPERTUN Cape Al Hui fir, if only gow' up Io 11ir1z'1y-f1inc'. VVoll: Pen Road. Prospect. Kentucky. llorn at Louisville, Kentucky, May 15, 1952. Q Historian Perry Ross House '47-'4X: Varsity Bas- ketball. Assistant Manager V49-'50, Manager '5o-'51 fMinor LJ: The Li! 'go-'51, Skeet Club '47-,495 School Church '48-1193 Lower School Model Shop '47-'4ll: Iunior Swimming '47-'48 CRD: Perry Ross Championship Swimming '47-'48 KRQ. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, Perry Ross, Griswold. Belknap. Preparing for B.A. at Yale. IAMES IOHNSTON CAREY jamie Hawk Thr king can do no w1'or1g. 127 East 54th Street. New York City, New York. Born at Briarcliff Manor, New York, March 5, 1935- President of the School 'SU-.Sli Crucifer 'go-'5ig President of Woodhull '49-'gog Woodhull Council- man '48-'49: President of Cromwell '46-.482 Presi- dent of Shell, First. Second. Third and Fourth Forms: Honors Average '45-'51: Varsity Soccer ,49- '5o CMaior LJ. Captain '5og Varsity Basketball .SO-'Sl CMaior Ljg Varsity Golf '50-'51: Periwig Club ,49- '51, Stage -Crew Representative '49-'5o, President 'SO-'Sli l,awrz'r1z'e '49-'Sig Ulla Pod '50-'5ig Editor of RCL'0l'd0l' '47-,483 Herodotus Club '50-'51g Science Club '5o-'51g Pipe and Quill '5o-'itz Maior L Club '49-'Sli Cum Laude Society V50-'Sli Chairman Prom Committee 'go-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1945. Houses, Cromwell. Woodhull, Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Yale. Eighty-nine 51 Ofla odrzkfa 51 DOUGLAS MORRISON CARPENTER ullilllgn HFULISH Afrika flllffl' .clun'ly. 6417 Icllewilml Circle, lllflllillgllillll, Alziluiiim. Burn at Szivunniili. Geurgiai. Mui' 11. 1955, Vice-President uf Wmmllliull lluuse '49-'gm Ilon- ors Average '48-'gig Wuuilluill lilmiiipiiimliip Wrestling rlltillll 'Mig CWD: Captain XVumlliull Punt- lxlll Team '49, All-Circle '49 QWJQ Varsity Wrestling '48-'50 fNumemlaJ Ing: Viiixity Traiek '49-'5u fNumcmlsDg Varsity lfwmtlmll 'qufgi CNuniergilsj: Periwig Club '49-'51, Acting Reprewnt.itix'e 'gn-'ilz Ulla I'o1ll'irI'11, Managing lillitur '5n35i: Progruin Committee '5u-'sig School Church. Deacon '49-'siz Open Door Culnmittee '50-'qlz Heanl Chapel Usher '56-'51g Wfimlhull House Clmrin 'Sm Crmniinence- ment Usher '5o. Came to il,L1YVl'Cl'lCCVillL' Septenilwr. 1048, Homes, Woodhull. Upper. Preparing for ll..-X. git Princetun. PIERRE DANIEL CASIMIR-LAMBERT Pete Mlm 111117101 l1'z'r fry lwrmzl lllllllflll Xiu llillcrext Ruiirl. Rinlgewmnl, New Iersey. llurn :it liriissels, Belgium, Izinugiry 25, 1953. Pnrlum Frzinguia QSI. Came In Lziwrenecville Iginuairy. IQSI. House, Upper. l,I'CI13lI'lllQ, fur M.l.'l', Ninety 51 Oflat odrzkkz 51 IOHN SAVAGE CHILDRESS Ill 'fmighry Mouse Iuhnny The lime I'zfc lox! in woa'ng. Magnolia Plantation, Albany, Georgia. Burn at St. Louis, Missouri, Nuvenibei' 11, 1951. I.V. Soccer '50-'51 QNLIIIXCFZIISJQ The Periwig Club ,511-'gig French Club '50-'51, Came to Lawrenceville September, IQSO. House, Upper. Preparing fur B.A. at Princeton. Bill Wild Bill '50 QGJQ The Gun Club '48-'49. WILLIAM CLAYTON, JR. All I ark is If ml! ship and iz :far to steer her by. Huntington Hotel, Pasadena IS, California. Born at Pasadena, California, Iune 29, 1933. Griswold House Championship Baseball ,48-'49 CGDQ Griswold House Championship Football '49- Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Griswold. Belknap. Preparing for B.S. at California. N incty-one I JK MES Hi JW .X R1 D CC Jlilill l'.O. liux 07. Allvziiiy, lcxgis. liurn LII Alliqiiiy. Tcxiis. August 15, Rhiuic llL'lll'C'L'lll1lflYC Ilguuill lluuw clcnt nf liclkiigip l'l41lINL' 'qu-'siz Fifth 'qu-'sig llunurs 1XYL'l'LlQl' '49-'513 Varsity Frintluill 49-51 rMllIflY LJ, Clljllillll .SU-.Sli Sling 219351 fMll1KlI' LJ 'qu fM1lliJf LJ lrxlgli gn-qi fMll1fPI' LJ: l,1'11g1'z1111 Cuiiiiiiittcc '59- qiz l,l'l'lX'VIQ Llulv, H11-incss liuairml su-'Sig Pipe Llflll Quill. LQII1111-1' '59-'sig Mniur I. Cluh lfluh. S:'1'r1'I:11'i'-'l'1'u1x11rL'1' 'io-'Sig Glue Club 1494 sl: f.lln1I' 49- 51. Liiuic In l.11w1'c11c1-ville Scptciulacr, 1949. lluim-5, llzuuill, lic-lluigip. N irwty-Iwo 51 Ufla odrzbkz 51 GERALD DILLON COFFEY Kip-1'c Curl Cul ulllllitu 1 rrgrrff that I !ILll'!' lm! Ill-Ill' liwx lo gin' for my mnn1ry. 2521 Selma Avciuic, Yuiiiigstmvii 4. Ohio. li91'11 :lt Youngstown, Ohio. Illllllllfy 7. 19gg. tling '49-'51: The Glue Cluh 'qu-'51: Tho Schein Church ,SU-QSI. Cauuc tu Lziwrunccvillc Scplciiiluur, 19.49. llUllNL'5 Dawes, Kiuimn. P1'c11.11'i11g for All, at ljilflllllllllll. C11l'iL's l'fl m'1'z'1' nil. 1931. .w-'Sm Prusi- Form Cmincil Varsity Wres- '51g Varsity '49-'51: Math l'1'cp:11'i11g for Wl'St Puint. The Eiiacl Club, 'llrcgmircr '59-'sig Varsity VV1'ca- 51 Ulla GEORGE WlLl.lAM COLE 'lliillu VVurms l'i1l'l'1'Iy'5 ilu' 1'z'ry spin' of l1'ja'. ,gui West Rouscvclt l+luiilcviircl. Pliilaulclpliizi 111, l,l'l1l'lSj'lV2ll'lll1. Burn ut Riclguwimil, New lci'sny, Niwcmlmi' zu. 195,5- Rhinic Ri-prcsciitzilivc ul' Ilguvcx Houxc '.ig-'gm Scurcrury-'licnsiircr of Kinnzin 'su-'six Club Hispiiim 541- sr lfiuuc ru l.:iwrcu:cx'illc Scpti-lulwi-r, 1949. l'lUll5L'S- Dawes. Kinnnn. Preparing fur ,-X.l1, ut Uiiiwrsily uf l lill'lLlil. 2 KM: lion Odlflkllbl 51 ALAN EIDWARD CUNGDON Al Iultcr Tl11'f'f' I 1z'z' rx fm' IAN? z111f'c'r5.' 9 Ruuml Hill Rogul, Rmlyu Hciglits. Nuw Ymk. Burn at Nc-W Yurk City. Nuw York, Suptcmbur 51 1953- lwlth lmrm Luuncil so-513 Nice-Prcwulcut ul Griswulil lluuw '4X-'gm Varsity l-'mitlmll '50-'51 lim' LJ: Varsity lizisclmiill '49-'qw fNlIll'L'l'Lll5QZ 7 Captain uf LV. liiisclmll '49-'gunz Xzirnity llaslicllwull '48-'5u fNLll1ICl'2ll5Q1 Griswulil lluuhc Cliiimpionsliip tbull '49-'50 fill. Cgiptiiiii '48-'gil lily, All- Housc '48-'Su CGJ: Griswold Hou c Cliziiupiunxliip Soccer '47-'48 fill: Griswulil Housc Cliumpiunsliigv Bnssbiill '48-'49 Mil: All-Huusc llziwbzill '48-'49 CGD: Glen Club '49-'51: Maxim' l. Club '-ju-'gig Griswulil All-Ruunil Prize ug-'5n. Camo to Liiwrcnccvillc SL'l1IL'lNl5L'l'. 1947. Iluiiscs. Griswold, Upper. Pri-piiring fur A.li. nt I74u'tmoutli. Nfncfly-three PISIJRO RC JHERTO COR DON l'iLi l't'lc ulxllllkflltiu Hlirmrl' f1l'I-gflllflf, ilmlfi' my pnlivyf' gil Czillc v 511, Ai' Szintzi Claim, Giizitciiizilu City. Guzitciiizilzi. Born :it Ciiaitciiixilu City, Ciiintciimln. October X, 1932. I.V. Sucrci' 'in-'51 lNuim'rtilsJ: Cllcu Club H494 'sig Thu Cliuii' 'gn-'Sli Cluh llixpiimm, 'l'i'c:is1l1'ci' v . 5:1-gi. Calm' lu Hamill, Uppr-i', l7l'L'j11ll'lIlQ for ILA. tit Ytilc. Ninety-fozu' l.:iivi'cnuci'illc St-ptciiilicr. 1949. lltlLlSCS, 51 Olly ocfrzkfa 51 GEORGE MAl.l,li'l l' CONCICR Ci ings I rrxigrz from Ihr' l.4llt'I'l'l1t't'.u Country Cluh Gmiinils. Dimgan Hills, Staten lslimcl, New York. Horn at New Yufk City, Ncw York, March 1. '95-l' Hnnors Avcrzigc 'gm Ulla I'o1friffn 'iii-'itz The l,auf1'n1z'r, litlituriail Cligiiiwiigin 'io-'sig The IJ! 'gn-'gig Pcriwig Clulw. Publicity Bourtl 'Stl-'SII Pnrlons Frtingaiis 'iii-'sig Choir Lihrarixlli '50-'5i: School Church 'gn-'iiz The Rrror1lz'r' '48-'4g. Came to l.ziwi't-tint-i'illu Scptcmlwcr, 1048. lliiiisos. Tliumas, Criswolcl. Kinnun. Prcpiiriiig for IEA. :it Yzll C. 51 Ulla odrzda 51 BARRY COXE Bad Barry Carry Boyce 'LFuZZy Great bodies more slowly. I2 Rock Dell Lane, Birmingham 5. Alabama. Born at Birmingham, Alabama, May 3, 1953. Varsity Soccer ,48-'SI QNumeralsj '48-'49 CMinor LD '49-'5og Varsity Golf l4Q-'SI CNumeralsj '49- '50g Griswold House Championship Soccer '47-'48 CGQQ Griswold House Championship Baseball '48- '449 CGDQ All-House Baseball '48-'49 CGM Griswold House Golf, Captain '49-'5o. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, Griswold, Belknap. Preparing for B.S. at Princeton. DONALD CRUSE, IR. Don D.D. Pleas1u'e is zlzc only thing zo live for 209 King Street. linglewootl, New Iersey Born at New York City, October 14, 1952 Secretary-Treasurer of Kennedy House l4Q-'SOQ Varsity Soccer ,48-,SI QNumera1sj '49-'50 QMajor LJ '50-'51g Captain Kennedy House Soccer '49-'5og All-House Soccer '49-'50 QKDQ Captain Kennedy House Baseball '49-'Sog All-House Baseball '49-'50 fKjg Kennedy House Championship Track '48-'49 Clijg Iunior Football '47-'.48g Iunior Track '47-'48g Major L Club '5o-'sig Program Committee '50-,Sli Ollzz Poffridfi .50-,511 Secretary-Treasurer of David- son House '47-118. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1945. Houses, Davidson. Kennedy. Upper. Preparing for B,A. at Williams. N incly-five 51 Offzz odrzkfaz 51 ffLINTf7N IAMES CURTIS, II A'Clint I haw u I'l'l'1l.fIIl'I -Al lzfrfrlrn rhfzft, fhrll lx. Sleepy Hullmv Mauiur, North 'l'iirr'ytmvn, New York. Burn ut Ossining. New York, August ing. 11151. Secretary-'l'rczisur'ur of Wmnlhull House '44,-'gug Varsity Tcnnis '48-'go QNumcrgilsJ: Wouclhull Housc Chaimpiwnsliip Tennis '49-'gn fWjg Wuml- hull Chzimpiomhip Hgiakctlmll '49 CWJ: VVmulliull Championship Soccer '48-'qu QWJQ All-Circle Suu- ccr '48-'50 QWJQ Varsity Socccr 'gu-'51 QMuiur LD: 1.tll4'l'!'lI!'!', Business lioiiril '49-'siz Pcriwig Cluh '49-'ilz Glcc Cluh 'Stl-'Sli Mziior L Cluh 'SU-'SIL Secrctzlry-Trcnsurcr Crumwcll lluuw '48-LW: luniur Football '47-248: Cmmwcll hluim' Cfturnpiumliip Basketball '48 CCD: Crumwull Clmmpizmsliip Trn- nis Y47 fCj: Crumwcll Chgimpiumhip Culf '4X QCJQ ,, Lower School Ilraiiiiaitic Cluh '47f'4?4. V Came to Laiwrunccvillc Scptcluhcr, 1946, Huuscs, Cromwell, VVumll1Llll, Upper. lJl'L'j1llI'iI1g for ILA. :it A Yailc. LOUIS FRANCIS D'ALMEIDA 'Almusc Lou Of: f'flIlIt'llNIIIIIl'll, HIlI1l4ll77III!It'1l oh. I Iizisl With Struct, Now York 18, NL-w York. Horn at Parris, lfrgmcc. March 16. 1952. Varsity Swimming 'qu-'Sig The Glcc Club 'go- 'SIC The Lziwrcntigins 'SU-'Sli The Choir 'io-'gig I'rL'aiilcm uf l'1irlum Fmiigaiis 'in-'sig The Spanish Cluh 'su!gr. Caimi- tn l,1lXVI'CllCL'VlllC Scptumhur, isygu. House, Van Dyck. I'rup1iring tm' Yule. N incly-.fix 51 Ulla PETER VVALGREEN DART Qljgoj Pete H74lIl'l'f 5 Il gum! finnf mnmzg, buys. .19 Fifth Avciitiu. Nriv York City, New York, Burn :it Chicago. Illinois, April 8, 1935. Varsity Fimtbtill '49-'Sl fNUmCf2llhJ '48-'49 fM2Il4lf Lp '49-'SIL I.V. liiiskcthzill '48-'49 QNLI- iiicrnlsjq I.V. liuscbzill '48-'49 fNLlIl1CF1llSl1 Varsity lliixclmiill '49-'59 lM11ic1r Ll: Hcrutlnttis Club ,49- 'gug Glcc Club '48-'59, Stutlt-nt Lcntlcr '49-'gug The Choir '43-'Snug The Laiwrcntiaim '49-'gm Mnior L Club '49-'Sm Cgimc In Lgiivruiiucvills Scptciiibcr. 11348, Houscs, Cleve. Upper. XVQIQCHCY. Prcpgiring fur AB. All Yule INN-tin-iitliiiirt-. 515 Press Club '49-'Sli Math Club 'SU-'Sli 01111 Pod 511-51 Ke odrzkfzz 51 DAVID KlRK DAVIDSON Him Thr gl'l'tlfl'I' par! mnzz' up f1z'himl. Spirit L11'l-gc, Iuwgi. Born ill' Siuux City. Iuwii, April 14, 19g4. High Honors Miil-yczirs '48-iwlljl Hunnrs Average '49-'gm Cum Liiuclu Sucicty, Sccrctziry 'su-'gig Hcrotlutiis Club '59-'sig Prugrzim Committee '49- YSU-'SIL Pcriwig Club '59-'gig Pipt- nml Quill Came tn l.411v1'c11cuvillc Scptt-mbc1'. 1948. Houses. rmcrly. Uppcr. lll'ClH11l'll1g for BA. :it Princeton. Ninety-seven 51 Ulla odrzkkz 51 ANTONIO HAUCK DIONISI urlqllllyu' I dream! I field fhirfrczz ,vpu1lf'x. Bortlcn Place, Little Silvcr, New lcrscy. E Burn ut West Orungc, New It-rscy, February I7 193-lf The Puriwig Club '41,-'q1. Came to l.1lXVI'Cl1CL'VillC SL'l7ICI1ll7CI'. 1948. Huuhcs, Pcrry Ross, Wtmtlliull, Upper. Prcpziring for HA. at Princeton, IUHN' FREDERICK DOEBELE. lJut'lia l 1l.flrr lflnlll Ihr 141111, or f1ir1l.r. 1425 Wt-mlcy Avcnuc, Occun City. New Iurscy. liurn All Pliilgitlclphial. Pciinxylvaiiiizi, luly 9. 1935. llistorigin Griswultl House '49-'img llcst Athlete Tlionipis Hume '47-'Mg Lmvci' School Dramatic Club '47-Q81 Rcauling Cmiimittcc 347-.481 Varsity Footlmnll '.4H-'51 fNLlII1Cl'2ll5J '48-'50 CMajor LQ '50-'sig Vairmily ,1.I'ilCl'i '48-'51 QNumcrulsj '48-'49 fMill41l' LJ '49-'quz All-House Wrestling '49-'50 Clip: All-Circle Titicli '48-'fin KGB. Captain '49-'50, Wintcr Trzick '48-vf,IZ Pcriwig Club '49-'img Science Club '41,-'gm Mgiiur l, Cluli ,SO-VSIQ Iunior Foot- ball. Cziptziin '47-'48 fNllI11Cfl1lSQ1 junior Wrestling '47-'48 CTJ: Iuniur Truck ,47-'48 QNumeralsjg 'l'l1u1i141-- llmiw Cliziiiipiurisliip Track '47-'48 CTD. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, 1 Tlicniigix, Griswold, Uppcr. Preparing for ILA. at , 1 Princcton. Ni nety-ci gh t s I 51 Ulla odrzkzh 51 IJAMUN GREFNl,lfAl7 DOUGLAS, IR. lining l3eiuon Hr fflllf ,f!rifqf'f my Jog wvzrlzl .virffgc mr. 75 Prospect Street, Ezut Orange, New Ierscy. Horn at Cailclwell, New Iersey, Iainunry II, 1934. Vice-Presiilent uf Dawes House '49-'gpg Honors Average '48-'51: Cuiu Laude Society V50-.512 l.a1w'rl1z'z', Proof litlitur '50-'51g 01111 Podrfnliz '49- , 1 - r 'Six Science Clulx 'Sn-'51: Heroilotus Club ,SO-151, Parlons Fmngzlis '50-'51g Periwig Club '48-'SIQ Stage Crew Representative .SU-ISI. Crime to Lawrenceville September. 19.43. Houses. Dawes. Upper. Preparing for Engineering ut Cornell. WILLIAM O. DOUGLAS, IR. Ki1luni USCI'l11IUl'u Tl1ix ,fcfzoal 13' Ll flllllffl of jnz'miIrf. 2029 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., VVashingtun, D.C. Born at New Haven, Connecticut, April 13, 1952. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1049, Houses, Dawes, Kinnun. Preparing for ILS, in Agriculture at VVhitm:in. N1'nc'ty-nine 51 01141 ELLIS HENRY ESBENSHADE Ellis ln .vilz'l1r'1' f!I!'I'l' un' nmny 1'ir1nz'.f. l'au':ulnsc. IIUIIIISIIHIIIIRI. Ilnrn ul Puraulixc, I'cr1nsyIv:1l1i:1, May ll, Iljjl. Prcsimlcnt ul' Urimvulcl lluuw '49-'gm Fourth Furm Slmrt Stury Prim- 'gm Grisxvulml Hnusc Chum- piumhip lfunlballl '40-'io IGI: l.u1w'z'11c'r '49-'51: Olin l'1ull'i1lI1 .SU-'Sli 'I'l1c 1.11 'gn-'gig Chapel USIIUI' 'qu-'irq Vlcc-I'rcxImlcl1t nl' 'I'lmnms Hnusc '47-'4H: Mlll1iI4QL'l' Illllllll' lfrmllmll '47-ull: IVILIIIQUVCI' Iuniur Ilgm-lmll '47-'4H: Luwcr Sclwul Drzunaltic Club '47-'4l4: 'I'l1c ICrmr1l1'r '47-'48, Cgunc lu I,nwl'L-lmcrvillu Scptcmlwr. 11347. Huuscs. 'I'Immnx Griswnlrl, Llppcr, l'1'vp:1l'il1g fur ILA. :lt Williams. Om' Hzmflrrd cz'f'zk1'zz 51 HAROLD BOYD IQLSASSIQR IIa1l If I nm mich him wmv' upon my ,Il-f' . . 118 Ilrnnulrm-url, I'rincctun, New lcrmcy. Burn all Mt. I'lc1m1nt, Nmv Ynrk, Nnwllxlm' 5 1935- Honors Avcrngu '49-'51: Varsity Soccer '49-'51 IMZIIKDF IJ: Varsity Huckcy '41,-'51 IMinur LI '49 '5u. Captain 'SU-'Sli Varsity 'I4I'IlCIi '49-'gn QNL1 mcmlsjg Ilnwcs Home Track, Cu-Cnptalixm '49-'su Scicncc Club 'SU-'Sli Raulin Club 'qu-Var: IR-rixvig, Club '49-'ill CII:-c Club 'su-'51, Came to Lalwrcnccvillc Scprcmlvcr, 1949. Iluu-cs Ilnwcx, Uppvr. I'rrp:u'ing fur ILS. nt I'rincrtun. r- 51 Uflaz afrzkfaz 51 IAMES DAVlD ESBENSHADE lCaho 'lStacker Dave Zimmerlick I 11111111 u Idle' 1111f0M. R.lJ. 5. Lancaster. Pennsylvania. Born at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, May 1. IQFQS. lunior Wrestling '46-'48 CNumeralsj. Captain '47-218: Cromwell House Championship Football '47-'48 QCJQ Cromwell Championship Baseball '47- '48 QCJ: Griswold House Championship Baseball '48-'49 CGD. All-Circle '48-'49 QGJ: Captain Gris- wold House Baseball ,4Q-'itll Griswold House Championship Football '49-'So CGD, All-House '49- '5o QGQQ I.V. Wrestling '49-'Stl QNumeralsJg Lower School Dramatic Club '47-'4X. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1946. Housei. Cromwell, Griswold, Belknap. Preparing for l3.A. at Franklin and Marshall. ROBERT WORTH ESSER l.olvot 'llii' Henry H11ppi11m'.v ix ll fmlviif' II Broadlawn Avenue, Great Neck. New York. liorn at Brooklyn. New York, May 29, IQQVS. The Ltltt'l'!'Il4'!' '49-'5l: The Ollrz Podrizln '49-'51g Chapel Usher 'go-'siz The lCcm1'1Irr '47-113. Dartmouth. One Hundred One Came to I.awrencei'ille September, 1947, Houses. Cromwell. Dawes. Upper. Preparing for ILS. at 51 01121 odrzkfa 51 DAVID RANDOLPH EVANS Dave Time an my f1a111lx. 115 Keiisingtun Avenue, ,lIl'L'l'IlllIl, New Iersey. Burn ut Pri11eetu11, New Iersey, May Il. IU,-QQ. High Honors Average '48-'S1: I.11tin II Prize 'Wg French II-Srveeiul Prize 2111: Science II Prize '4u: Religion III Prize 140: I.11tin II Prize 'sm Ifrencli III Prize '5w: Religiun IV Prize '5ug M11tl1 IV Prize 'qng Scenml Prize History IV 'gm First Sclmlar of Ifnrirth Form 'seg Cum I.a1111le Sneiety '50-'sig Wooclhull Charm 'ing The l.11zz're1u'r '40-'51, News Iimlitnr '49-'50, Iiilitur-in-Chief 'Sn-'51: Ulla 1'01fri1l11 '48-'51, Associate Fmlitur '49-ISI: Periwig Club '49- ISI, Publicity Clllliflllilli 'Sn-'sig Glee Club '48- '51: Maith Club '5u351: Pipe iuul Quill 'qu-':,1. Came tu IAIXVFCIICCYIIIL' SL'I7IL'llIl1CI', 19.18. Ilnuses, Wooclhull, Upper. Preparing fur AB. nt Yale. LEWIS FLOYD FARGO Lew HDI-Zlflilllu Ifluy1l .II1'r1'm', mirror on Mc' wall . . . :iq Ilolswncle Drive, Huntington, West Virginia. Burn :rt lJe11i'er, Ciiluimlri, April 19, 1935. Ilumirs Average '49-'gig Varsity Cross-Country '49-'50 fMinor LQ '49 IMLIICDF LD '5ng Major L Club 'gn-'51g Cleve Hnuse Awzircl 'gm All-House Iiasketlmll '49-'go CCD: Cleve House Chgunpionship liusketliiill '49-'50 ICJ: 'I'l1e I,11u'rz'nrc' '49-'sig Periwig Club '4lj-'Sli Ml'll'4DllillIIIlII French Prize '49-'sw Caunc to I.11wre11eeville September. 10.10. Houses, Cleve. The Lmlge. Prepririiig for B.S. at Princeton. One Ilundrezl Two 51 Olfnz adrzkkz 51 IAMES ALOYSIUS FINNEGAN nlinlv, Iim Finnegan came to Lawrenceville this year as Il postgraduate student from Andover Academy and while he was here made many friends among the faculty and students. His death in the fall term was a shock to the entire school and a great sorrow especially to those who knew him. WILLIAM HARRY FRANK Bill'y W0rfgw'.v of lflr uforfzff' Beechwood Drive, Shrewsbury, New Iersey. Born at West Orange, New Icrsey, Iuly 2, 1932. Music A Prize '48-'49, Captain Dawes House Baseball '49-'gog All-Circle ,413-'50 CD13 Glee Club '48-'51, Choir '49-'six Herodotus Club '50-'51, Concert Club '49-'Sig School Church '50-'51, Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Dawes, Upper. PI'C172lI'iIlg for AB. at Princeton. One Hzmdrcd Three 51 01141 MlCHAlil,. PIQTER FREED -imma' '1'lir' pli1y',-' fha' filing. Q10 limi 41ml Strcct. Nuw Ynrk City, New Yorli. lluru :lt New Yurk City. luly I. 1042. CQIIIICIII Cluli 'gufqiz Pipe :mtl Quill 'Su-gig Ilic l,t'I'lNVIH Lluli ill-SI. Czuiic lu l.ziwrclit't-x'illu St-ptciiilwr, IQSKI. Holm-, Llppcix l,l'L'l3.ll'll1.Lf fur IRA. :it Princctun. Une Ilullzllwf Four odrzkkz 51 STEPHEN BOVEH Flilfl-JD liuv6c Black .'Xt'L ' Thur is uf well mill :fx if I limi .mid Inf Ill-V.f!'lf.H 476 Chiu-les Struct. lizist VVillixtnn, Ncw York. liurn ut liruuklyn. New York, luly IH, IQRQQ. Hunorx AVCYZIQLC '47-'SIL High Honors 'qu-'giz Cuui Lziutlc Suciuty 'qu-'5i: Ifrcncli ll-Special Prim '48-'4qq Best Short Surry '48-qu: ltlmmrulwlc Men- tiun Music Prim' '47-'4?4: Glue Club '49-'six Choi: '50-'5i: Tlu- l.uzw'f'11r1' 'su-'51, Came tu l.LlNVIACI1CCYlllC Svptciiilicr, 1047. Huuscs. Ilnvitlsoii, llickiiwm. Uppcr. l'i'c1mring fur A.l'i. :it I'1'incutun. 51 Ulla! adrzkzkz 51 IOHN H. MANNING FROHLING uCll!Ul1L'l-V A-114' you guys Il Stncklnn Street. I'rincc'fm. Na-w In-racy. I I liurn all Irincctml, New lousy, Scptclnlwr I U3 Varsity llxlslwtlmll 'in-'5l. Cams to Luwrcnccvillc S:-ptcmhrr, mio. House, Um mer. Preparing for ILS. nt Princclun. Um linacballl. Manager 144,35 Cm RICHARD M'C4XUl,IiY FRYLING --1m-lv -Asmf' fl lflflr' lcmfrrzing ix tl rffzfzgrrorfx flung. 4116 Scmimmlc Ilrivu, Iiric, llL'HI1N5lYlll'lii!. Burn at Iiric. l'c11m5lvzl11i41, Iulx' S. lggz. Varsity Swimming '4X-'su fTqllTl1L'l'1lISJ1 1.V. my fNllIl!L'l'll15-Q. IC to l.2lVVl'L'llCL'YiHC S1-l1tcl11lm'1'. HHH. Ilnuscs. Dickinsxm. Upper. I,I'L'll1ll'il'1g for HA. at Washing- llflil Lcc. One Hundred Five 51 Ulfa odrzda 51 RICHARD KENNA GAINES, IR. IJick', R.K. plfI11x1'c hxlfh ffnrrnix . . QTRS L NAS Ford Island, cfu Fleet P.O. San Francisco, California. Born at Sun Diego, Ckllil-UI'1llLl, September 16, 1932. President of Dickinson House '49-'5ug Secretary- Treasurer IV Form '49-'gm Ilireetur uf Upper 'gu- '51g Varsity Football '48-'49 fNllIllCl'lllSJ2 Captain Dickinson House Football '49-'gng Dickinson Huuse Championship Baseball 349-'50 Qlljg Sleepless Knights '48-'51, Lezuler '40-'Sig School Band, Stu- dent Leader '49-'soy Prom Cummittee '50-fslg Chapel Usher '50-'51g Lnufn-rzrc '50-'51g Ollrz Pud- rizla '50-'irz Debating Club '50-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Dickinson, Upper. Preparing for ILS. at Annapolis. HUBILRT IULI US GELLERT IIubie Hubie-Iules Ilubes l?0zfily exrrr'i.rr profflefh l1'1flc. Mzlnllxituln Avenue, Rye. New York. Born at Prague, Czeclmslovakin, September 2, IQZQ. Honurs Average '43-'sig Cum Laude Society '50- 'grg l'i'ugl'4un kiUlHl1'llllUC Qu-'51, Sports liclitor '50- '5rg Press Club 'io-'5rg Parluns Frangais '50-'51g Science Club 'gn-'slr Hermlntus Club '50-'51. Came Io l,alwl'el1ci'ville September, 1948. Houses, Kennedy, Upper, Prepglring for KA. Ilt Hilrvilrtl. One 1'llHl!I7I'l'd Six 51 Olfa odrzda 51 BERNARD MAURICE GUGGENHEIM, IR. Guggy Guess Sl:-ep that lqnils up the raz'c'l'd sleeve of Care. Oaknoll, Edgewood Drive, Greenwich, Con- necticut. Born at Honolulu, Hawaii, October 22, 1933. Glee Club '50-'51, Parlons Frangais '50-'51, Lower School All-House Football '47-'48 fRjg Perry Ross Championship Soccer '47-'48 QRDQ lun- ior Wrestling '47-'48 QNumeralsjg lunior Baseball '47-'48 fRjg All-Circle House Wrestling '48-'50 CDD, Varsity Wrestling '48-'51 CNumeralsjg Lower School Dramatic Club ,47-7481 Rerorzler '47-'48, Iunior Honor Society '47-'48, Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, Perry Ross, Dawes, Upper. Preparing for A,B. at Princeton. ALFRED BERTRAM GUTHRIE, III HBCU., Men of few worrls me the be!! men. 246 Tahoma Roacl, Lexington 1, Kentucky. Born at Lexington, Kentucky, November 4, 1932. Glee Club '50-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1950. House, Wayside. Preparing for B.A. at Montana. One Hundred Seven 51 Offaz odrzbkz 51 WILLIAM GARVIE HALL Haw I'm jnxr I1 Vfgllltll' riff-iff. 1574 Wainucnuc Struct. Hilu Ilawaii, 'I'.Il Glcc Club 'gn-'giq Choir 'Su-'sig Ilunura Ax 'gn-'gig I.V. Swimming 'gn-'5l. Came to Lawrcnccvillc Scptciiilxcr, iggo. I Wayside, Preparing fur ISA. ui Stanfurcl. IAIVIES LYON HAMILL, III 'lIiiu 'Alinilmu I drink In thz' grfzrriil jay of flu' wbolz' Itlffllhn Springlwank Farm, R.I7. 3, Coatesville, Pcnnxyl- vania. Horn at Pliilaclclpllia, Pennsylvania, lunc 28, 1052. Cross-Cuuntry '49-'Si fMinur LJ '49-'51, Calp- tain '50-'5i, O'IfalIun Mi-clal 'siz Wintcr Track '49- '5ig Spring 'lirack 'in-'Si 1Mainr LJ: lilac Club '50-'5ig Clicsn Club '4q-'gm Canicra Club '49-'51, Vice-I'rcsiclcnl 'gn-'gig Cliapcl Uslici' 'irfsiz Kun- ncdy Huusc Cliziinpiumliip Track '49-'gn CK7, Cap- tain '49-'gm All-Circle Track '49-'5o: Major I Clulm '49-'5l. Camo to I.zii'.'i'f:nccvilIc Scptcmlvcr, 19491 Houses, Km-nm-ily. Upper. Preparing fur A.Il. at Yale. One Hundred Eight Horn at Hilu. Hawaii, 'I'.I'I., luly zu. Iljrgl. 'crxlgg Iuusc 51 Ufla drzkkz 51 WARREN SMOCK HANCE Skip VV1u'1lul1 uSl'iL'L'l1Llu 'lSlaippipin+' 1 ufllif znmll ffm llmlgrrxv Mn- ymzrf' I Suuili XVim1ll:iml llrivu. Fgiii' llgivcii, New lcrscy. Iiurn ut Rcil Hunk. New Icrxcy, April 4. 1955. SCCTUIHff ,-l'l'L'1lNlll'CI' uf Riiynioml Iluusc '49-'5o1 Varsity Socccr 'Su-'qi KNi1i11ci'1ilsl: Glcc Club '50- 'gig All-Circle Soccer '49-'gn CRD: Captain Ray- nmml Housc Succci' '49-'im Ciinic to l,1iwrc11ccx'illc Scptcnibcr. 1948. Houses, Rgiyiuuml, Uppcr. Prcpziring for HA. at I51ll'U'l10LIll'l. LOUIS NEFF HAND Lim UG:1rz mill ro be 116111, .dill Ia lu' 1lrr5,frfI. 41 Plymouth Road, Summit, New Icrscy. Horn at Hollywood, California, October 16, IQ55. Rhinie Rcprcmcntutivc Dickinson Huusc '49-'gm High Honors '49-'Sig Chemistry Prize '49-'gpg Cum Laude Socicty '50-'51g Cross-Country '50-'51 CNumeralsl: Glas Club 'SU-'Sli Math Club 'SU-'Sli Science Club ,SU-VSIQ Hcromlntus Club '50-'51: Law- rrnfc' lifl-'SIL Ulla Porlrirla lSl7-QSI. i Caine to Lawrenceville Suptumbcr, 1040, Houses. Dickinson. Upper. Preparing for ILA. at Stiuifurcl. One Hundred Nine 51 Olfaz drzkfa 51 W ICJHN RUSSELL HAPGOOD Huw Entirely lou l111rc '11 f'lllf7fILl,flv,f is' plural on fiudyf' 2I Banbury Lane, Ben Avon Heights, Pittsburgh 1 Pennsylvania. Born at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvainia. February I7 V933- Vzirsity Basketball '48-'49 cNlllllCl'1llSl2 Varsity ship Basketball '49-'50 KCDQ The LdM'l'!'lIl'f' '50-'51 Came to Lawrenceville September. 1948. Houses Cleve, The Lodge. Preparing fur HS. at llzirtmouth. NELSON VANCE HARPER, IR. f-New Why xhoufzl life all labor bc? 6821 Edgerton Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Born at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, October 6, 1932. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1950. House, Upper. Preparing for A.B. at Princeton. One Hundred Ten a n Gulf '49-'50 QNumeralsjg Cleve House Champion- 51 Offer drzkfa 51 ROBERT HIGBY HEALY Higro Hig I-liggern 'AI feel like H Bull ,llo0.fc'. 589 Lincoln Road, Grosse Pointe 30, Michigan. Burn at Ruehester, New Yurk, Iuly 1, 1955. l.V. Wrestling '49-'50 fNLIll1Cl'2llSDQ The Glec Club, Manager '50-'51. Crime to I.411vrene1-ville September, 1948. Houses, Diekilmscm. lielkimp. Prepxiring fur ILA. nt Amherst. l IOHN HECHT lean This year of slavery Lv pan: ihc Belgian r'rjoicc'x ann' more. 4 North Cluver Drive, Great Neck, Long Island, New York. Born at Brussels. Belgium, March 26, 11333. Honors Average ,SU-lSIQ Parlzms Frangais ,SU-,SIQ The Math Cluh '50-'51. Came to l.LlXVI'CllCCYlllC September, IKJSO. House, Belknap. Preparing for B.A. :lt Yule. O ne I-Iundred Eleven 51 Uffaz odrzkzkz 51 FRANK MARTZ HENRY ul'lllI1liu llKl'l'f7 tl .ff0l'!' of .fLll'l'llXI!1.i' 111111 Quan' buzz' In lm' flIl'IIl.H IQ Fast 72ml Strcct. Nuw York 11, New Yurk. Burn at Plyiliuutli, Ilcimsylvairiizl, March 15, 1955 ming 'so-'51. Cllllll' to l.11wrcnc1-ville Scptcnilwr, 19:11. llnusc liclkmip. l'i'cp1iring for l4.A. :II Yulv. LAWRHNCIL BASIL HILFORD l,Lll'I'y Ul.LlI'l'-1lyCu l'hc Hair .I11rl rfzrn I rzz' Pugz' 511511 In me . . in West faith Sl l'n- cr. Nuw Ynrk, New York. Horn 111 New Yurk, NL-xv Yurk. Iunc 17, 1934. I.V. Soccer 'so-'gig Prcsillclit, Chess Club '50-'51g Thu Ulm-1' Cluli 'gli-'q1. CIIIIK' In l.llXVl'L'I'IL'L'YlllC S1-pIciiilwi', 1940. I-lnuscs, Kciiiiumly, Uppc-11 l,l'l'l51ll'lI1lQ fur li.A. :it Yule. Um' l1ZfH1lfl'l'!J Twelve Secretary nf liclknnp House '50-V511 Varsity Swim- 51 Ulla MICHAEL HOPKINS Mike Hoppy Tu law hm' :mls KI lilvwwl rffuz'uIion. 9554: Ccdarbrook Road, Beverly Hills. California. Born at Chicago. Illinois, March 29, 1951. I.V. Track '47-'48 QNumcrulsJ: Varsity Cross- Country '48-'go fNumcralsJ: Varsity Track '49-'51 1NumuralsJ: Varsity Wlrcstling '48-'51, Came to Lawrenceville Scptenibcr, 1947. Houses, Kc-nnctly, The Lodge. Prt-pairing for ILA. at Co lgatc. odrzkfa 51 STANLEY GRAY HORAN, II QL'5oj Stan Stan-thcfMan Torn HS!'l'l'lI ynirx' fum' luck. Great River, Long Island. New York. Born at New York, New York, August ll, 1952. Historian of Pcrry Ross House '46-'47: First Form Music Prize '45-'461 Manager. Cross-Country '49-'go fMinor LJ: Glue Club '48-'itz Choir '48-'5I: Herod- otus Club '5o351g Perry Ross Championship Foot- ball '46-L47 QRJQ Perry Ross Championship Soccer '46-'47 QRJ: Manager, Iunior Baseball '46-'47g Lower School Greenhouse '44-'47g Iunior Choir '44-,462 Lower School Reading Committee '44-'45: Dramatic Club '45-,471 Print Shop '45-'47g Field Hand '46-'4?l: Gun Club '46-149. Came to Lawrcnccvillc Scptenibcr, 1944. Houses. Perry Ross, Kennedy, The Lodge, Wagcncr. Prepar- ing for A.li. at Princeton, llost-gi'aLluatc. One Hundred Thirteen 51 Olfzz odrzklaz 51 IOHN WINSHIP HOWARD The Henk All tflz' w0rlzl'x il ,rI1lgr'. Illllflillflll Ivy, Virginia. Born all New York, New York, March 5. 1954. Class Historian 'So-'51: Second Form Best Short Story '47-H485 Seeontl Form Religion Prize '47-2181 Varsity Tennis '48-'511 fNlllIIC!'LllSJQ I.V. Soccer '5o- 'SI CNun1ernlsjg VVooclhull House Chzinipionmhip Tennis '49-'5o QWjg l.1lufrrm'c '49-'51, Associate Editor l50-QSIQ Periwig Club '48-'51, Pipe :incl Quill 'go-'51, Easel Club, Vice-Presidem '5o-'siq Skeet Club '46-'47: Iunior Swimming '46-'47: Cromwell House Chzuiipionsliip Tennix .47-'48 CCI: Cromwell House Championship Football '47-'48 fCJg Crom- well House Chzmipionsliip Iiumebull '47-'48 QCJL Cromwell House c:lIlllI1IIlllIlSl1III Swimming '47-'.iX CCD, Lower School I7rzu11aIie Club '46-'4X: Iunior Choir l47-,481 Print Shop '47-'48, Came to Lawrenceville September, 1946. Houxes, Cromwell, VVooclhull, Upper. Preparing for ILA. :it Yale. WILLIAM IOHN HURLEY Bullet Bill Mori great men mmf from l'rI11z'rlw1. Sl Maple Street, Princeton, New Iersey. Ilorn a1t'1'renton, New Ierscy. May 21, I932. Came to Lriwrcneeville September, 1950. House, Upper. l7I'CPlll'IIIg for ILA. :1t Princeton. One H zmdrcd Fourteen 51 Ollrz WILLIAM CLARENCE HYDE Bill Frog Oh :hal this loo too solid flesh Mf0Il1llr melt. 2084 South Parkway, East Memphis, Tennessee. Born at Memphis, Tennessee, October 3, IQLQ-Q Honors Average '49-'51g Science Club '50-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1949. Houses, Kennedy, Upper. Preparing for l-LS. at Vanderbilt. orfrzkfrz 51 ALEXANDER BORDEN ILER HAICX., I-Im' fIl1j'lY01Ijl got Ifll' 11r1f1z'rm'fl 1 Nut Swrmip Riuul, Mirlrlletmvn, New Jersey. Born at New York, New York, December 26, 1931. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1950. House, Van Dyck. Preparing for B.A. :rt Lafayette. One Hundred Fifteen 51 Ulla 0u'rzk1'41 51 If JHN LAWRENCE ISAACS Larry Fat Iohn Gl'rrrrrrr1'. Moon-gate Fqirin, Winchester Pike, Lexington, Ken tueky. Born at Lexington, Kentucky. Iuly 23. 1954. Honors Average '47-WSIS Music II Prize '47-'43 '47-,481 Iunior Wrestling '47-218: Lower Sehoo Dramatic Club '47-X481 Chess Club '48-139. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1947. Houses Cromwell. llickimon, Helknap. Preparing for All at Yale. OWEN PARDEE IACUBSEN, IR. lake loin ilu' mzry uml ,fre the 14'm'!1f. 161 Iiaxt Hqrzl Street, New York 18, New York. Horn at lirtenivieh. Connecticut. September zo, 1932- Presiclent of Dawes Ilouse '49-'qog Fifth Form Council 'go-'-31: Honors Average 'go-'51g Captain Dawes House Football '49-'gog Captain Dawes House Swimming '44,-'soz All-lloune Swimming '48-'go UU: LV. Swimming '48-'go fNUl11Cl'21lSJI Varsity Swimming 'So-'51 lMinor LJ: l.aufrrI1z'z' '49-'SIL Prem Club. Seeretary-Treasurer '49-'Sig Pcriwig '50- 'slg School Church 'go-'5l: Spanish Club 'go-'gig Cheerleatlsr 'so-'sig Open Door Committee 'SH-'Sli Prom Committee 'io-'qrz Glee Club '50-'51, Came to Laxvreneeville September, 1948. Houses, Dawes. Upper. Preparing for A.ll. at Princeton. One Hundred Sixteen Cum Laude Society 'So-'gig Iunior Honor Society 51 Oflaz odrzkfa 51 JEROME ANDREWS IOHNSON HlCl'l'j'n fill I kllfllfl' ix whiz! l rmzf in lfzz' f71lf7!'l'.l' 111311 Sun l,1l5LlLllll, liisaiclt-1111 S, Culiforiiiu. llurn :it Los Angclcs. California, February 15. 19.55- Hunnrs Average '413-'Sig Timz' Currcnt Iivcnts Contest: SL-cond Furiii Prize '.1Pl, 'l'l1irtl lfurin Prim' '40, lfoiirtli Furni Prize 'quz Varsity Succcr. Mqinngcr 'qu-A51 lMi1141r LJ, Assistant Miinaigcr .4121 I.dlUl'!'lll'l' 'iw-'ilz llcrmlutiis Club 'SH-'Sli llcbiiting Club '50- 'Sli Grisivultl Home Clmiiipiunsliip lkbziting 'll-:im '43-'Sm Bircl Club '49-'51: Luwci' Sclmul Assembly Cuiiiiiiitrcc '47-'4?l: Lmvcr Scliuul Rt-gitling l:Ol11l1llIA Ice '47-ull. Caimc tu Lziwrcnccvillu Scptcinbvr. 1947. Houxcs. Uiiviilaoii, Ciriswnlil, Upper. l,l'Cp2ll'll1Q fur ll.A. nt lll'll'lCL'lHll. ARTEMIS W. IUUKOVVSKY Qlfgol luke Art II All-Iii ffm lfigliifflllfrl I2 Oak lllull .XXk'l1llL', l.2lI'Il1l11I1HI. New Yurk. Burn All Slizuigligii. Cliinti. Ilcfuiiibcr 16. 19411. Prcsiclcnt nf llqiwvs lluuav '48-'49g Sulinul Cliurcli Cuunuil '48-'s1: Ihiixw Hmm- Cliziiiiiviumliip Finit- bQ1ll '47-'48 CIN: All-Circle lfuotliiill '47-'48 HU: Co-Caiptaiiii llgiwu. Huurc Szicccr '.1?l-.4911 Valrxity lfuutbiill 1194-'51 fllVllllllI' l.l: Muiur l. Club Lilifqug Pcriwig Club -Q11--Sli Sclinul Catnip '48-'-311: l7l'Ull1 Cimiiiiittvc '41,-'suz lfiftli lfuriii Gift Crm111111ittcc 'Sm Director uf Uppcr '411-'f,11: All-Cuuiiti' lfunilizill 'Sw- '51, Came to l.11w1'c11cu'illc SC1'lIL'I'l1l3Cl', 1947. llriu-cs. Dziwcs, Uppcr. xxlLlgL'l1L'l'. Prcpgiring fur HA. nit Lc- high. Post-gilitltiutc. One Hundred Seventeen l l 51 Offzz odrzkfzz 51 DONALD MERTON KASTILAHN Lian -'Raw ' But it aiu '1 in my !'0Hfl'!lCf.U 3842 North Hzmling Avenue, Chicago 18, Illinois. Born at Chicago, Illinois, Dcccmlucr 2. 1931. Varsity Football '5o-'51 fMaior L55 Varsity Track '50-'51g The Olla Poziridiz 'so-'51, Came to Lawrcnccvillc Scptcmlmcr, logo. Houses, Wagcncr, Upper. Preparing for BA. at Yale. ALAN COOKE KAY l'incapplcs Aww I lily me 1l,Ull'1l to deff. 1612 Alena Drive, Honolulu, Hawaii, T.H. Born at Honolulu, T.H., Iuly 5, 1952. Prcaiclcnt of Van Dyck Ilousc '5o-'51g Honors Avcragc 'So-'ill Cum Lautlc Society 'go-'51g Var- sity Ifootlmall 'SU-'SI QMaior LD: Varsity Track '50- 'qlg Debating Clulv 'io-'filz Pipe antl Quill '50-'51g llcroclotus Club 'go-'51g '1'lic 01111 I'011'ri11'a '50-'51g Maior L Club 'So-'SL Came to I.awrcnct-ville Scptcmhcr, 1950. House, Van Dyck. l7I'L'l711I'iIlg for IRA. at Stanford. Om' Hu l1Ll,I'l'lI7 l1'igf1tz'r'11 51 Ulla ROBERT KEHOE Keys Bob Better to be fnlpfry Mun wise. 50 Nassau Street, Princeton, New Iersey. Burn at New York City, New York, April 27, 1931. Varsity Football '49-'51 fMaj0r Ljg Varsity Basket- ball '49-'51 fMaior LD, Captain 'SO-l5Ij Varsity Baseball '49-'51 QMajor LJ, Captain '50-'gig Major L Club ,49-WSI. Came to Lawrenceville September, i949. Houses, Cleve, Upper. Preparing for BA, at Princeton. ocfrzkiez 51 ALBERT VAN BOSKERCK KELSEY uliifffkn Slcepy7 I'm fiend! 38 Wanipatuck Road, Dedham, Massachusetts. Born at Boston, Massachusetts, February 12, 1933. Varsity Wrestling '48-'49 CNumcralsDg The Peri- wig Club '49-'5Ig The Lawrence ,SO-YSIQ Chapel Usher '50-'5i. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Wootlhull, Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. One Hundred Nineteen 51 Offzz odrzkfa 51 MISRTON RICIIARIJ Kc11iN1css1sERc:ER 'ASI'iIp HKl'11I1Cs .ln', lt'1II'l' mf' 111111113 gli-y.f.H II111'1I .X1'1'11111. 5111: Nu. 511, Gl111tc111.1Ig1 i.1ty, C111 111a1I:1. CA. II1lI'II III 11111111-1111121 IIIIX. cIlI2lIl'IlIlIIlI, Iunc 7, 195, I1111fu1' II1111111' Srmcly' '47-118: IIu11111'a AYCI'1lp.lC '47 IAMES DAVID IQLAU HIIIIIQIL' IIIIIU lim .S'1'lr'm'z', f1f'11r1Il'f1rI 1'r:. r1'I gg: I 1 lI1 A1'c1111c, New York City, Nrw York. Horn :lt Ncxv Yurk City. Ncw York. IQOXKJIIIIVCI' 111. 19,53- IVIZIITLIQCF, I.V. I'I1I5L'I51lII '48-119: M:11111gc1'. V:11':-111 I'I11sL'I1:1II '49-'ing II:11111II Ilrnusc CI1:1111p11111sI11p XNIYCS' tling '49-'so CIIJ: I'1'11g1':1111 Cu1111111tTcc .411-ISI. l.I1:1i1'111:1n '511-'51: IIAIIL' Lil '41,-'51, Managing Ii1I1t111' SU-'Sli Chess Club '48-'51: 011111 IJI1111' C111111111t1c1' SU-ISI: I,ibrz1ry Asmci11tL-5 '50-'51s I5cI111t111g Club SH-ISI: PL-riwig CILII5 '49-'51. Cnmc to I,111v1'c11cc1'1IIc SL'1lIl'IlII1CI', 11348. II11uscs. II11111iII. Uppcr. PI'L'P5lI'II1tIl fur ILS. 111 Y:1Ic. 118: IX. Suuu-1' 178-'41, fN11111c1'11IsJ: Mnmtx Suuxcr 'SH-'iv fM:11411' IJ: R11111111111I Iluufc CI1:1111piu115I1ip hucca-1' ,1lj'SU IRI: M111111' I. CIuI1 'gn-'51: I'11rI1111 x If1':111ga1ix 'qu-'s1: CILIIT II1m1'111111 '511-'su 'I'I1c Law- I'!'l1t'l' '41,-'51, IIQIIIIC In I.11w1'1'11u'1'1II4' SL'IIIt'IIII7L'I'. 1 41.17. Huuxcw. I,l'I'I'I Rum, R:11111f1111I, K11111a111. I,I'l'Il1II'II'I4 hxr A I5 ll Cu1'11cII. . Onc Hzmdrcd Twenty , . 5 ..1 1 1 I , 51 Ulla odrzkfzz 51 CHARLES HENRY LANDEFELD, Ill Gator l.amls me no lllll'.Vff0l1,f . lllll South Lake Drive. Hollywood, Floricla. Horn at Hollywood, lfloritla, May 9. 11953. Vanity Track '43-'49 QNumeraIsjg Varsity Wres- tling '48-'51 QNumeralsD ,SU-'Sli Varsity Cross- Country V50-.SI CNumeralsj: The l.11zw'w1z'r ,441-'Sli The 01111 POII'l'fIltl 'io-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1946. Houses, Perry Ross, Kennerly, Upper. Preparing for ILA. at Yale. ROBERT EMMET LAZARUS Holi Una Major if enough. 1185 Park Avenue, New York City 18, New York. Born at New York City, New York, September 1, 1933- Varsity Wrestling '49-'go fMaior LDL Griswold House Champiousllip lfootlmll '49-'So QGJL Griswold House Championship liasehall x40-,SU CGJQ Gris- wolcl House Championship Baseball '49-'50 fill: Cromwell House Cliampionship Football '47-'48 CCJ. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1946. Houses. Cromwell, Griswoltl, Belknap. Preparing for B.A. at Rochester. 1 One Hundred Twenty-one 51 Ulfaz odrzkfrz 51 STC JCKTON LEHMANN Tick l.z't'.f go hum' il 1'1'gurz'Il1', RIl.i'S.H 75 Oak Strcct. Glcmlzllc, Ohio. Born at Cincinnalti. Ohio. Iunc 2, Iljgj. Rhinic Representative Ch-vc Hmm' '49-'guy Honors Average .40-.Sli Chapel Ushcr 'gn-'gig 1.uu'l'em'z'. Business Iionrd '49-'51, Circuhition Manager 'in-'51g Glcc Club 'SU-'51, Came tu I,zuvrcnccvilIc Scptcmbcr, 1949. Houses, Cleve, Upper. Prcp4u'ing for AJS. at Princeton. EUVVARD VVINSLUVV LINCOLN, IR. Aim VVin 'LLil1ks Ii'1fl1 HIIIIIIFI' Iowzlrd noun 4 In-nnyw l.a1nv, Hllffillglllll, Rhnclc Island. linrn aut l'mx'icluliu'. Rhmnln' Ishmnl, Oumhcl' 14, mil. limim-5 Am-zngu 'su-'gig Cum Lziuch- Snciciy 'sub 'Sli l,11n'rrmr', limlitnrizil liuzml 'Sir-'Sli Schuul Church 'Stl-VSI. C.nm- In I.nwi'unccvillc Sclwtcmhcr, iqqo, Hnusc, Wuguncr. i,l'L'171lFil'lQ for li..X. nt Princctun. Om- llmnlrcd Twwzty-two 51 01111 adrzda 51 HUGH CALKINS LOBIT Grande Tex Man Ilzc pumps, boys. 2204 Inwood Drive, Houston, Texas. Born at Houston, Texas, February 11, 1953. The Lawrence '49-'5Ig Ollu Podrida, Photographic Editor '50-'5rg The Lit, Assistant Managing Editor '50-'51g Program Committee '50-'5Ig Periwig Club '5o-'51g Camera Club '48-'51g Cleve House Charm '49-'50g Chapel Usher '50-'51, Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses. Cleve, Belknap. Preparing for B.A. at Yale. RICHARD IOY LOVE Dick Ricardo Speak softly and carry a golf stifle. 925 Downer Place, Aurora, Illinois. Born at Chicago, Illinois, December 3, 1933. Honors Average '48-'grg Dawes House Champion- ship Golf team '48-'49 CDM Varsity Golf '48-'SI fNumeralsQ QMajor LJ '49-'50, Press Club '50-'51g Ollu Podrida '50-'5I. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Dawes, Upper. Preparing for Engineering at Cornell. One Hundred Twenty-three 51 Olfzz JOHN GRIFFITH IVIARK Hlohnnyv' Sify, you know ll'hlII' happened to mc 1o11i1yf ' Nuiwiizimly lkirkivaiy, Murristown, New Icrscy. Iiurn in Murristmvn, Now Icrscy. Dcccnibcr 7. 1952. Suicncc II Prim- '47-,481 Varsity Wrestling 49- 'qu fNuiiicrailsJ: Tlic Pcriwig Club '49-'Sig The l.1llUI'l'l1l'!' '49-'5i. Caimc tu I.ziivrcncci'illc Scptciiibciq 1947. Houses, Thmiiais. Wnrulliull, Uppur. Preparing for l3.A. ill Hal rvuril. One lluna'rz'd Twenty-four i ,, , odrzkfa 51 WILLIAM ANTHONY LYIXJN Hill 1s'1'r1'iIy if lfll' mn! nf wil. 6811 Bunnctt Avcniic, Cliiuzigim 49, Illiiiuis. Born ut Chicago, Illinuis. April iw, 1941. Raiyiiinnil Hmm- Cliiiiiipiwmliip Fmiiluill '48-'41, 1R21 Varsity Track '49-'gin Came to Lnwrciiccvillc Scptvliilwr, 1048. Huiiscs Rgiynmml, Uppcr. l'i'i-ivqirilig for 15.5. git Cornell. 51 Offer THOMAS LUKE MATTHEWS Tin Porky Luke Hr live.: the life of low. cfo Department of Stale, Washington, D.C. Born at Baltimore, Maryland, February 2, 1935. Vice-President of Perry Ross '47-248: Varsity Soc- cer '48-'51 fNumeralsJ '49-'go QMaior LJ '50-'gig All-Circle Soccer '48-'50 QDJQ Dickinson House Championship Baseball '48-'50 QDJ: Parlons Fran- cais, Secretary '50-'5ig Lower School Dramatic Club '47-'48, Major L Club '5o-'5I. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947, Houses. Perry Ross. Dickinson, Kinnan. Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. adrzkzkz 51 ROBERT MANNING MCCULLOCH, IR. Bob Bongo Mac The apparel oft proclaim: the man. i160 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. Born at New York, New York, December 11, I9j-Q. Historian of Dickinson House 749-,SUQ Honors Average '50-'51, French I Prize '48-'49, Lower School Second Form Art Prize '47-'48g Cross-Country l4Q-'SO fNumeralsjg Winter Track '49-'51, Captain, Dickinson House Championship Baseball '49-'50 fDjg All-Circle Baseball 149-V50 CDD, Iunior Football ,47- '48: Iunior Baseball '47-'48 fNumeralsjg Perry Ross Championship Soccer '47-'48 QRJQ Luwv'c'm'e '50-'5ig Olla Podrida '50-'5rg Glee Club '49-'5t. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, Perry Ross, Dickinson, Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. One Hundred Twenty-five 51 Oflrz orirzkffz 51 If JSE A NTONIU MEIER lose The .mn .fhincx lt t!l'I1ll'V ul AONICZH Calle F No. 358, Veclaulu, l'lL1Y1lllH, Cuban. Born at New York, New York, November 1. 1955. Periwig Club '49-'5ug Davidson Huusc Historian '47-'48: The Lower School ljfilllllllltl Club '47-158. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1946. Houses. Davidson, Clcvc, Upper. BAXTER RAND METCALFE. Halas Rand He u'n1rx fha look of r,rprrff'11r'e. 9 Morris Strcct, Hnmrlcn 14, Cunnccticur. Burn :ll New Plain-n, Connecticut, October 27, 1032, Ilmmrs Average 'gn-'Sig Varsity Iinskctbxlll '50- 'SI CMuior LJ: Glue Club '50-'51g Purlons Frangais 'gn-'Sig Varsity Truck 'Srl-'SU Muiur L Club '50-'SL LZIIINC ln l,nwrcnccvillc Scptclnlzcr. 1950. House. Kinnzln. l rvp:u'ing for ISA. at VVilli11ms. One H undrcd Trucnty-:fx 51 Offal adrzdfz 51 IOHN CHARLES MIERLEY Mm-Icy To grow Ula' grm'f'f1rl!y. .Inq Sccuncl Strcct. Huntingdon, Pcmisylvaniu. Burn nt Huntingdon, Pcnmylvunin, January 26, Iljjl. Bird Club '49-'Sli Club Hispnnu '50-'51g Hamill House Championship Track T1-nm '49-'50 QI-U. Czimc to Lawrcnccvillc September 10. 1949. Houses. llumill, Kinnzm. Prcpziring fur BA. at Princeton. LORENZO WILSON MILAM lJunlvci ' ,l,f I milk:-11' !ffJH'l1 Ihr .f1r1'f't.v of I.u1'nl0. A 1894 liclguwuml Awnuc, lixclumivillc 5. Flurinln. Born at lgxckmnvillc. Fluriiln. August 1, 1955. Cum Laude Prize '49-'gm lficlil llamnl '49-'fgiz Camera Clulv '48-'sig Hamill House Clmmpinnsllip Truck Tcziin '49-'qui lllb. Czuuc tu L11XVl'Cl1CLlYlllC Scptcmlvur, 1948, lluumcs, Hamill, Upper. l,l'L'lWLlI'll1g for ILA. at Yule. Om' Hundrcal Tll'L'llly-5L'UCl1 51 Offzz l W lI,I.l A M FLEEK MILLER Fleck Hill Gully lfffzfllifgrw, jimfny !,'lz1'1S'l1r1115, ffm' you Jn' lu11o1l'1'f'z gnfw Ruutc 4. Ncwnrk. Ubin. liorn nt lluslmm, Mglwlclmlm-tts, lllllllilll' 51. xqngug. 'l'llu Ulcc Club '50-'51g The lk-rmlutun Club '50 '5l. Came lu Laxwrunccxillc' Suptcmlwr. min. llnuec. Uppcr. l,l'L'P1lTlIlg for .-X.l4. an Yule-. One Hundrcd Twc'nty-eight oafrzkfzz 51 MILO GEORGE MILLER ..Mi.. HSl'l!'l7!'!' ix nmrr 1'Iuq11z'f1r lflllll u'onl',c. mu South NL-xvpnrt Au-l1L1u, Vvntnnr, New lcncy linrn :lt Atlantic Citv, Ncw lcrscy. August 6, IQ-ll The llcbuting Club 'su-'SL Czunc lu Luwrcnccvillc Supln-u1lw1', IQSIJ. Iluuw Yun Dyck. l'1'cpnril1g fur HA. au Princctun. v 51 Ulla IAN CARL MOLTZAU Mul1x CuL111I I 1111151 fnwz' llf1f'l'ty. slr Nurr Mz1l111'xtr11ncl. St1+ckl1olm, Sweden. llnrn All llrmsels, Belgium, December 11. 11331, Var:-ity Soccer '50-'51 cM1llKlf Llg l.V. Soccer '49- Su lNu111er11laJ: Rllylllllllll Hou:-e Cl111111piu11sl1ip ueeer '40-'SH QRJL Mllllif L Club '50-'51, lkune to Lzlwrenceville September, 1949. Houses. Rllyllltblkl. Upper, l,l'Cl7llI'lI1g for li.A. nt l'e1111sylv4111i11. KL Mu odrzkzkz 51 DOUGLAS DURRELL MONROE, IR. 'AMuns Iluug '1' think ffm! I ,-'hull l1l'!'l'l' fu' 11 lluzlmf m11gh1'r Ihun Ll fl'!'C' . . . Mlm limtrul Pml Ruaul, l'ell111111 65. New Yurli. linrn ut Nur-llllk, vlI'g.1lHlll, August 18, 1952. Rhlnie RL'f1l'C3Cl1ILlflYL' nf Kennecly Huusc '4X349: lllIll'l1lI1 uf Kl'I1IlL'llX' House '49-'guz All-Circle Fum- lull Varsity Gull' 118351 fNUll1L'I'LllSJ '48-'ing Captain, '4?l34g Clijg l.V. liuskctlmll '4X35u fNl1lX1l'flllhl1 'nnemly Home CI111l11piuml11p Gulf '49-'50 QKJQ lur l. Club 'qu-'SL llune tu l.g1xv1'e11cevllle SCPfL'Illl1L'I'. 14143. Huusex, KL'llI1L'llj. Upper. l,l'L'151ll'll1g lm' IMS. 111 l'r111ec-11111. One Hundred Twenty-nine 51 Offfz odrzkfa 51 LOUIS ANTHONY IXIUINYIUXCI Moritz Mons ll-iii l:'ar'f1 DIUFIII-llg .ff'r'.r ,mnzv urn' lurk !It'glll1.H 5565 I-Iabersliain Roatl, N.W., Atlanta, Georgia. Born at Atlanta, Georgia. April 7. 1954. Honors Average '48-'5o. Iligli Honors 'go-'gig Cum Lautle Society 'go-'gig Religion IV, Ilonorable Mention I4Q-ISOQ All-Rotiml Iloy of Raymoml Ilouse '49-'5og Raymond House Clianipionsliip Football. Manager '48-'491 Varsity Football. Manager 'go-'gi fMinor LD: The l.lIlt'l'l'lIl'l'. Proof Iitlitor Qiolgo, Assistant Managing Iiilitor 'io-'sin Ulla Poll '4o-'qig Photography Iiclitor, ISU-'Sli The Lit '49-'gig Periwig Club '49-'giz Pliotograpliy Club '4X-'six Stamp Club '48-'4q: Math Club 'So-'siz Scienee Club 'qofqiz Herotlotus Club 'go-'51, Came to Lawrenceville September. 11748. Houses, Raymond, The Lotlge. Preparing for .vX.I5. at Yale. WILLIAM BLAIR MOSSER Blair f.'i1lifn1'z1ii1 here I muff. gog West I'inc Avenue. Kane, Peiiiisylvaniai. Born at Kane, I'ennsylvania. Ianuary iq, IQKQZ. Director ol' Upper 'so-'5l: Presiilent of Hamill Ilouse '49-'quiz History IV Prize '49-'gm Iinglish Iissay Prize '48-'.io: Varsity Football '48-'51 QNumeralsj '48-'4q CM.iior IJ 'iii-'Sli Varsity Iiasketball '48-'49 lMinor IJ: Varsity 'I'rael4 '48-'Si fMaior LD, Captain. 'io-'sig I'i'ograiii Conilliittec 'so-'Sig Chess Club '49- '5ig Ilcrotlutlls Club. Vice-Presitlent 'go-'gig Major L Club '4o-'51, SeeretaryfI'reasurei' 'so-'51, Caine to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Ilouses, Hamill. Upper. One 1111 ndrcd Thirly 51 Oflxz drzkkz 51 WALTER WILLIAM MUELKEN, IR. '-Many When in doubt, win the trick. I42 Alexander Street, Princeton. New Iersey. Bom at Princeton, New Iersey, june 22, 1952. Came to Lawrenceville September, IQSO. House, Upper. Preparing for Engineering at Princeton. STEPHEN ROBERT MURRAY Steve The Crap Hustler fl lilllr pull l1z'1'1'r' fmrt ullyborfyf' 609 Mixsell Street, Easton, Pennsylvania. Born at Rochester. Minnesota, December 11, 1955. Historian of Hamill House '49-'5og Vice-President of Kinnan '50-'irq Varsity Wrestling '48-'5og Hamill House Championship Wrestling ,411-'SU fHJg Hamill House Championship Track '49-will QI-UQ Captain, Hamill House Baseball '49-'gm Stump Club '48-'5o: Camera Club '48-'5og Prograni Committee '48-'51, Business Manager '50-'5I: Science Club '50-'51g Chapel Usher ASI!-QSIQ Open Door Committee '50-'SIQ Library Associates 'SU-YSIQ 01141 P011'r1'1l11 ,SO-V511 School Church '50-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Hamill, Kinnan. Preparing for AB. at Princeton. One Hundred Thirty-one 51 Uffrz odrzkkz 51 EDWARD PAUL NAIARIAN Eel Sinn S11111bu Ape .-1 hairy fmzfy um! arms izidimlfv 11 manly mul. Ijfll llulaiwurc Avenue, Wy'lJI1llShll1j.1, Pciinsylvailiixi. Born at Rczicling, Penmylvziniai, Nuvcmbcr 4, 1933. Raymoml Home Cliziiiipiuiiship Football '48-'49 QRJQ Raymoncl Huuse Champiomliip Soccer v4Kj SU KRJQ The Pcriwig Club, Stage Crew '49-'Sig Scliuul Church 'SU-'Sli The School Camp '48-'51, Came to Lawrenceville Scptclnber, 1948. Hllll5CS, Rziyinunrl, Kinnzm. Prepziring for BA. :it Yule. PHll.l.lP BARBOUR NEWMAN, Ill Phil Thu Kill l'NL'XVIl1h'i Thr way I figgrr . . lili1lIkCllllAlliCl' Lune, Louisville 7, Kentucky. Burn ill Luiiisvillc. Kentucky, May 51, 1951. Presiclvnt of R:1y111r1mI House '49-'im I.V. Swim- ming '47-'48 lNLIl11CF2llhlZ Varsity Swimming '48-,Sl fMinnr LJ '48-'49 Clviaiur LJ '49-'51: l.V. Truck 149351: All-Circle I-'oollxill '4Q-'SU 1R73 Ralymoncl lluusc Clllllllpirhlhlllp lfuntliqill '48-'49 QRJ: Chuir .49- '51g Glcc Club 249351: Rziclin Club '48-'511, Vice- Prusirlciit '49-'im Maiiui' l. Club '49-'Sli Cliccrleiulcr 'gn-'51g Science Club 'SU-'ill Pipe zincl Quill 'io-'gig Math Club 'Stl-lil: Lmvcr School Cumcru Club '46- '471 iA55CIl1l7ll' f:tlIIlIllilIL'C '46-'47: Iuniur Swimming '40-'47 fNlIll!l'flllh,2 l,t'I'l'y Rim lTl111111piunsl1ip Fum- balll '46-'47 QRJ. Came to Laiwrcnccvillc SCDICIl1l5Cl', 1946. Houses, Pr-1'1'y Rim, R41yl11u11cl, Upper. Prvgvxiriiig fur li.S. at Yule. Om' HLlHl1'I't'l1 Thirty-mfo 51 Ollzz RONALD ADAMS NIVLING l'Ron Ronnie Varsity Ron Bur sir, my t!l'l'l'tlgl'!H Buffalo Athletic Club. Buffalo, New York. liorn at New York. New York, Iuly 3, 1953. Honors Average '48-'51: Math II Prize, Secontl place '47-218: Religion II Prize '47-'48, Mechanical Drawing Prize '48-.4Q1 Heatl Scholar, Second Form '48-'49g Cum Laude Society ,SO-,511 Varsity Wrestling '49-'SI CMinor LJ '49-'5o: All-Circle Wrestling '49- 'go UD: Captain Dawes House Golf '49-'50, Press Club '50-'51: The I.aufVf'nn- '50-'51, Program Com- mittee 'SO-'Sli The Lit 'Stl-lil: Sehool Church 'go- 'i1: Herotlotus Club 'SU-'SI1 Open Door Committee will-'SIQ Iunior Wrestling '47-'48 CNumcralsj. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, Cromwell, Dawes, Upper. Preparing for Engineering at Cornell. I Fiel drzkfd 51 WILLIAM LEONARD NOBLE Nol1s Hill Willie Spare your Ivrrullz fu roof your porrizlgrf' 561 Madison Avenue, New York, New York. Born at Lake Twitchell, Big Moose, New York, August 22, 1052. Raymond House Championship Soccer '49-'50 KRD, Glee Club '48-'51: Choir '49-'51: Lawrentians ,SO-'51, tl Band '48-'gog Periwig Club '50-'51, Pipe and Quill, Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, President 'SU-'Sli The Lil, Art Fclitor ,SO-ISI. Raymontl, Upper. Preparing for ILA. at Wesleyan. One Hundred Thirty-three 51 Offaz odrzbkz 51 WILLIAM O'BRIEN, III UO. B. Wzzfcr, uullcr r1'rr'ywf1w'z'. SI West Front Street, Red Bank, New Ierscy. Born at Red Bank, New Icrsey. May 3, 1951. Swimming 'SU-'SI fM:1ior LD: Major L Club '50-'51 Came to Lawrenceville S-eptemlier, 1950. House Belknap. Preparing for B.A. nt Princeton. IC JN HKXNNI NG OLSON Olsen IIr' ll.l'l'.f fiy lfzz' golzlrn flfdr rule. 141.1 South llitli St1'eL't. Riclmmond, Incliunal. Born 111 Akron, Ohio. Jginuary 31, 1954. Ilunors Avennge '49-'sig Physics Prize '49-'gog Mull: lll Prize, Second Award '49-'5og Cum Laude Society 'SO-'Sli Radio Club '49-'5o, Vice-President '50- 'Sli Concert Club '49-'51g Math Club 'SU-'SIQ Herod- otuh Club ,547-,Sig Science Club, Prcsimlent '50-'51, Came to Lglwrenceville Scptemlwer, 1949. Houses, Ilnwex. The Lodge. Preparing for ILS. at Princeton Um- llzmzlrcd Tfzirty-fam' Vice-President of Belknap House '50-'SIQ Varsity 1 51 Olla RALPH EDWARD OTTEN, IR. litls-Baby The Urs Easy Htl Bi1rlqerful1l if rr game of cf111m'e. 4o.i West Main Street. Darlington, Intliana. liorn at Philatlclpliia, Pemisylvania, April 1, 1955. Co-Captain, Hamill House Basketball '49-'gog Birtl Club '49-'5o: Parlons Francais '49-'Sog Concert Club, Vice-Presitlent l50'lSI. Came to Laivrenceville September, 1949, Houses, Hamill, Kinnan. Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. Roeheste r. 0c1'rzZ1'az 51 DONALD EDWARD PAUL Don Quack l rou'n your fl'UIIflIl'i army. 534 Park Street. Upper Montclair, New Iersey. Born at Montclair, New Iersey, August 30, 1952. Rhinie Representative of Dickinson House '48-'493 I.V. Track '48-'5o: lunior Football '47-'48 CNu- meralsjg Iunior Track '47-'43 fNumeralsjg All-House Soccer V49-.50 UU: Lower School Dramatic Club, Stage Crew '47-'ally The Reforrlcr '47-V48, The Lawrence 'go-'5i. 'Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses. Perry Ross, Dickinson, Kinnan. Preparing for A,B. at One Hu 11 drcd T11 irly-five 51 Offzz CAR L RICHARD POPE Mupcy ul,Klll'LZlCu Grizzly ix rlaudy, lm! likkcr ix llll1'!'kl'I'.U 24111 Lawrence Runcl. LilXVl'L'I'lCCYlllC, New Ic1'scy. llnrn :lt N1-w Yurk, New Ynrla. May 17, I9j2. llumnrs AYCITIKLXC 'sm Cum-CuL111t1'y ,SU-'SI fNu- 7 uncrulslg xllfhlll' limkctlmll 'qu-'51 CM11jnr LJ: Malin' l, Club '511-'q1. f1ilI1lC In l.1lWI'L'l1L'CXlllL' SC'l3lCIIllJCl', 1950. Huusc, Upper. l7I'L'lV1ll'llljJ for ll..-X. :lt l'1'l11cctu11. Onc llundrcd Tl1irty-fix drzkfa 51 WALTER FRANKLIN PHASE, IR. Wally Wall ul,t'LlSCn I um in lmlillillgf' 12211 lvlllklllllllg Avenue, l'l41111l1cl1l, New lcrscy. Burn ut Plzlinflclrl, Ncw lcrscy. Iunc 6. lljjj. Varsity Fuutball '50-'Sl fNlllllCl'LllSJZ Varsity Hockey 'Su-'51 fMLlllhl' LJ: Clmir 'SO-'SIQ Glu Club 'SU-'SIQ Lalwrcntialm 'Su-'qlz Mnlur L Club 'gn 51. Calm' tu Lawrenceville SL'lJlL'Il1l'lCl', 19541. lluusc Upper. Preparing for A.H. :lt l7fll1CCl0I1. 51 Olfaz odrzkfzz 51 FRANK CHILES PRAEGER Pancho Ah, just in time for zz xnoozcf' 4415 Lancaster Avenue, Haverford, Pennsylvania. Born at Tulsa, Oklahoma, November 30, 1953. Honors Average '50-'51, Cleve House Champion- ship Basketball '49-'50 CCD, The Ltltvffllfl' '50-VSI. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1948. Houses, Cleve, Upper. Preparing for B.S. at Cornell. MONROE PRAY, IR. Buddy Hkfdlfllllg if my hobby. 808 South I Avenue, Highland Park, New Ierscy. Born at New Brunswick, New Iersey, February 27, 1933- Sccretary-Treasurer of the School '50-'51, Hon- ors Average '49-'SIQ Varsity Swimming '49-'51 CMajor LD, Captain '5o-'51, Varsity Baseball '49-'50 CNumeralsDg Maior L Club '49-'51, President '50-'51g Periwig Club '49-'51, Vice-President ,4Q-,502 Math Club, President '49-'gog Luwrcme '49-'51, 011.1 Pad ,4Q-WSI, Sports Editor '50-'51, Science Club '50-'51, Flag Bearer ,SO-,SIQ Prom Committee '49-'5o. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1949. Houses, Kennedy, Upper, Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. One Hundred Thirty-.vezfen 51 Oflaz IAMES CONNELL RAINER, III lim Snow Flake The Black God White ur the dl'il't'll snow. 415 Coodwyn Street, Memphis, Tennessee. Horn at Memphis, Tennessee, February 14, 1933. Vice-Presitlent of the School 'so-'51g Crucifcr '50- 0cz'rzk1'a 51 HOWARD BOHLIN PRICE Howie Silver and the world :1ir'w:s' with yon. Burnt Mills Hill, Silver Spring, Maryland. Born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, September 23. 1933- Vice-President of Kennedy House l4lj-'Sill Honors Average '5o: Captain, Kennedy House Football '49- '5og All-Circle Football '49-'go QKJQ All-Circle Bas- ketball '48-'Su CKBQ Cross-Country, Manager '5og Lawrenee '48-'ilz Herodotus Club, Secretary-'I'reas- urer '5o-'5I: Parlons Frangais. Secretary-Treasurer '50-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1949. Houses, Kennedy, Upper. Preparing for I3.A. at Princeton. gig Vice-President, I-'ourth Form '49-'5og President of Kennedy House '49-'gm Rbinie Representative, Kennedy House '47-'48, Math IV, Second Prize ,49- 'gog Cum Laude Society 'so-'sig Honors Average '48- 'sig Kennedy House Swimming, Captain '48-'49g All-Circle lfootball '48-'49 CKDQ I.V. Swimming ,47- '49 QNumeralsj '48-'493 Varsity Swimming '49-'51 CMinor IJ '49-'goz Kennedy House Championship Track '48-'49 CKJ: Kennedy House Baseball, Captain '48-149: Periwig Club 'go-'Sig Math Club '50-'5I: Science Club 'go-'sig Spanish Club 'so-'sig Camera Club '49-'Sli Radio Club Y47-'.1QQ School Church '50- '5lg School Church Council 'go-'gig Prom Committee 'go-'gig Ulla Pod '5o- ii. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses. Kennedy, Upper. Preparing for ILS. at University of Virginia. One Hundred Thirty-eight 51 Olfzz IOHN MICHAEL REYNOLDS, IR. lurk R.C. Blur1cly On wlvlfl Ihr' 11al1r'r,' lc! joy fu' r1m'o11fi11rf1. 538 Paulclnck, Wzltermwn, New York. Burn nt Waitertown, New Ynrk. August 50, IQQQ, The Glee Club '50-'Sig PI'UjII'1llll Oimmittee '4U' '51: School Church '50-'51, Came to Lawrenceville September, lQ4Q. Homes, Raymond, Kinnzln. Preparing for BA. at Curnell. I 1 P n drink! 51 THEODORE RIEGEL, IR. Rugs Reigel 1 know zz triclq uforlfz Iwo of thai. 25 Helena Avenue, Lzirchmont, New York. Horn ut New York, New York, September 1, 1934. Honors Average ,SO-'SIQ Cum Lrxurlc Society 'go- '51g Cross-Country '50-'gig Varsity Tennis '50-'51: Winter Truck '50-'51 QMinor LJ ,gog Glcc Club '50- ,Sli Choir '50-'51g School Church '50-'51, Came to Lawrenceville February, 1950. Houses. Cleve, Upper. Preparing for Engineering at Cornell. One Hundred Thirty-nine 51 Offaz odrzkfa 51 HUGH CINCAIIJE ROBERTS, IR. Robbie Rell The m1n1z .r Rul1r'rl.r.' 15 Kingsbury Pliice. Sl. Louis, Mismuri. Born ut St. Louis. Miswuri, December 11. 11141. Cleve Home Fuulbaill. All-Circle '41,-'50 QCD: Cleve House Soccer, All-Circle '4935p CCJQ Cleve lining Truck, All-Circle '49-,SO CCJg Vgirsity Truck -411-.Sl fMz1i111' Ll: Varsity Snecer Lrg-'51 fM11in1' IJ: VVinter Track '50-'Sli Spring Truck '511-'gig Mgiiur l, Club '49-'SL Came to Lziwreiieeville Sepreniber. 19411. Homes, Cleve. Upper. Prepairing for RA. at Cornell. FREDERICK ULDSHUE ROBERTSHAW Olilsl111e Fred .-lull u'lmf'.r wrong llvllh IllIfll'l'.1'l'Hl'llg, .firf ' 711 liaist l'iml111r1.:l1 Street, Greensburg, Pennsyl- Ylllllil. liurn LlIfil'1.'l'l15l1lll'g, l,Cl1I15f'lV2ll1l2l, lilllllilfy 14. 1954. Iiireemr ul Upper '511-'sig Secretary-'I'rez1aurer uf limxvrulrl '41,-'gm Vice-l'1'esi1lenI. 'l'l1ir1l Form '48-'41g: Sec1'el411'y-Treilsurer, Seeuncl lfurni '47-'4X: High Hon- nrs l47flSUI lligllesl Averzige i11 School '48-'49: llmiurx JXYl'I'ilj.1L' 'iw-'gig Cum Laiucle Sneiety 'SIP-'Sig Varsity lf11111bq1ll '41,-'Su fNlllllL'I'1ll5j .SU-'SI CMz1iur LJ:CleeCl11b'.p,-'sixCl111ir'511351:La1wrer11i11m'5o- 'qig lll'l'lNVlg1 Club 'gufsiz I.1lw1'rf1z'r '48-'5I: Mun- aiging liililm' 'gn-V511 Miiinr I, Cl11b 'gn-'Sig Pipe anal Quill QSHJSII Math Club 'qu-'sig Griswulcl Home Cliz1111piu11sl1ip llebgiting '49-'Soy Open Dom' Cum- rnittee 'in-'gig lJI'UIll Cu1111nittee. Music Chairinzin '50- '51. Came tu l,11w1'e11cei'ille September, 1947. Houses. 'l4llllll1LlS, Criswulnl, Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Yule. One Hundred Forty 51 Olfa drzkkz 51 EDWARD DAVID ROSSMANN, IR. lid lf11syli1l I'uc1q up your Ironfrlex in your old ki! hug. 7I Amherst Road, Albertson, Downes. Long Island, New York. llorn at New York. New York, April ll, 1955. Honors Average '47-,485 Iunior Track '47-'481 I.V. Truck '49-'SI fNlllllCl'i.llS, 'Stl-'Sli School Camp '49- 'gog School Church '50-.Sli Commencement Usher '49-'5og Chapel Usher 'go-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1947. Houses, Davidson, Kennedy. Upper. Preparing for A.H. at Yale. RICHARD LAURENCE SASSOON Dick Sass Sings I ance :lid hola' it LI lnrsvrrfxx la ufriir fair. Tryon, North Carolina. Born at Paris, France, june 6, IQFQ4. Honors Average '49-'SIL Cum Laude Society 'go- 'SIL lunior Honor Society '47-'48g Periwig Club '49- '5o, Head Electrician '5o-'51: Student Advisor, Lower School Dramatic Club 'SU-'SH Lizufrrmf '49-'Sli Purlons Francais 'go-'gig Lower School Dramatic Club '47-'48: Print Shop '47-148: Camera Club '46- 47- Came to Lawrenceville September, 1946. Houses, Cromwell, Cleve, The Lodge. Preparing for ILA. nt Yule. One Hundred Forty-one 51 Offaz adrzkfa 51 EDWARD MARKLEY SCHELLENGER. IR. Mark Thr Linly inn! Ihr T1gfr. Littlchrook Roaul, Hi-rwyn, IR-iimilxnliiiai. I Cluli '5o-'5l. Cumc to l-z1wl'cl1ccvillc SL'l1IL'lIll7L'l'. IKQSH. llousi The l.oil,x1c. l,l'L'1'l1ll'll1Q for .'X.li, :lt .'Xuiln'rst. BENIAMIN ROBERT SCI-ILUSSER lien Hiu11l mr' Ilia' sporlx pagan ISK-UI 14tl1 Avcnuc. Hccclihurst, Long Island, New York. Horn at New York, New York. Fcluruury 9, 1954. Sccrutury, Duviils.on Houma '47-1185 Honors Aver- age '49-'ioz l.V. Swimming '48-'49 1NumL-ralsjz Raymond House Championship Football '43-'49 CRJ: All-Circle I-'ootluill '49-'5o QRJ: Rziymonil House Championship Soccer '49-'So KRJQ Rllylllllllll House Clmmpionsllip Swimming IW-'so CRD: I.dw1'f'11cr, Business Boalrcl '49-'iiz Clam Day Umlicr ,QQ-'SIN Chapel Unlu-r 'go-'5i. Cnmc to l.2lXVI'L'l1CQ'YlllC Svptcmlwcr. 10.47. Houses, Davidson, Rnymonil. Uppcr. Pri-pairing for B.S. at X Pcnnsylvnnizi. l One Hundred Forty-two Horn :it I liiliulclpliin, l,CIlIISj'lY1lI1lil, March ii, msg: Varsity W'l'csIling .SU-'SI fMLlllll' LJ: Major l 51 Olfa GEORGE IOSEPH SCHMITT, III lossy Schmitz I gzlr.-'.v I'm not myrml zfnongfz ful' you guys. 517 Peck Roatl. Gt-ncva, Illinois, liorn at Chicago, Illinois. Novumbcr 14, IQ-QI. Varsity Football ,SU-'Sl CMaior Ll: Varsity Basket- ball '50-'Sli Varsity Track 'go-'Sig Maior L Club '5o- '51. Camc to Lawrunccvillc September, 1950. Housv. Wayside. Preparing for BA. at Dartmouth. drzkla 51 MARVIN H. SCHWARTZ Marv Eu.rl or wehff, home ix fwfr. 762 Red Burl Avenue, Cincinnati 29, Ohio. Born at Cincinnati, Ohio. October 2, 1951. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1949. Houses, Hamill, Uppcr. Preparing for Yale. One Hundred Forty-three 51 Offbl DAVID LEE SEELEY Dave 'tCecil Well l.if1lr link Harnrr :nf in fha mrnrr . . BS lirimmer Street, Huston S, Mussziclnlsetts. Burn ul Sunni llilI'lXlI'Ll, Culifnrnia, February 28, NIH- Cnme to Lanvrenceville Septemlier, 1950. House, Wayside. l'repm'ing fur AJS. :it lDurtmuutl'1. Om' Humlrcd Forly-four drzkfd 51 IKJHN PAUL SCOZZARI Still NLP. lKMlll1L'y' Bllgflu Who .ftcwlly my f7Ill'.ff' .rivals Nash. 1910 Greenwoml Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey. Born ut Trenton, New lersey, May 1, 1935. I.V. Football, Manager '48-'51 fMinnr IJ '50-'51g Varsity Swimming. Manager '50-'51 fMinor LD: Varsity Tennis, Mnnngei' '50-'51 CMinur Ljg Pcriwig Club '48-VSI. Came to Lawrenceville September. 1948. Houses, Woocllulll. Upper. Preparing for ILS. nt Pennsylvania. 51 Ofld EDWIN WALKER SEMANS, IR. Eddie Ed l.4llIgllf!'l' ix Mr lwrzvt I11!'llil4ilIt'.U 1221 Medford Road, Wynnewood. Pennsylvania. Born at Germantown, Pennsylvania, April 26, I9-Q2 Rhinie Representative, Dickinson House '48-'49g Vice-President, Dickinson House '49-'soq L:1tin-An1er- ican History Prize '48-'.i9g Honors Average l4Q-'SI Varsity Football '43-'5o fNLlIIlCl'1llh,Q Varsity Golf '48- '49: Captain, Dickinson House Basketball .49-'Stl Dickinson House Championship Baseball '49-'go QDJ Llll4'l'!'71!'t '49-'51g 01141 Foil 'io-'5I. cz'rzZz'zz 51 Caine to Lawrenceville September. 1943. Houses, Dickinson, Upper. Preparing for li.A. at Princeton. ROBERT MEIER SHOEMAKER Bob Shoe HCFLIIZ' to inqnirr wha! Ihr friinrr has in ,fI0l'f'.H Upper Ferry Road, R.D. 1, Trenton, New Icrscy. Born at Trenton, New Iersey, luly 21, 1953. Honors Average '46-'sog Latin I Prize '.ir'i-11,75 Math I Prize '46-'47g All-Circle Baseball '49-'go CWD: Woodhull Charm '49-'goz Imwrnzvf' '49-'Sig Press Club l4Q-'51, Co-President 'so-'SIL School Camp '5o- '51: Debating Club '5o-'gig Lower School Dramatic Club '47-133: Rn'm'1le1' '46-'4Xg Vice-President, Shell Forin '45-.461 Vice-President, First Form '46-'47: Best Scholar. Davidson House '47-X485 Iunior Baseball '47-'48 fNumeralsDg lunior Basketball '47-'43, Caine to Lawrenceville Septeniber, 1945. Houses. Davidson, VVoodl1ull. Upper. Preparing for A.ll. at Princeton. One Hundred Forty-five 51 Uffaz odrzda 51 FRANK RITTER SHUMWAY, IR. Shum Skimolick Sliumgigi I irtiou and jiirf from 1'-I'zlIIk'.f i1llm1l1m'. Horn at New Rochelle. New York, May 9, 19.55. The I.uufl'z'11z'z' 'go-'5i. moutli. DAVID GORDON SIOSTRONI Dave Sl1nsli' Hr :mix a mlm of fm rmlmrrmled s'frmmrh. zog Fairmont Avenue, Winchester. Virginia. Born at Lawrence. Massachusetts, May 29, lljjl. Iunior Football '47-'4H: lunior Swimming '47-218: Varsity Track, Manager 'go-'gig Camera Club X484 'gig Ulla l,0dl'l-fill '49-'Sig Periwig Club '48-'5i, Heacl Designer '49-'Sig Chapel Usher 'go-'gig Lower School Dramatic Club '47-'48, Came to Lawrenceville September. 1947. Houses. Davidson, Kennedy, Upper. Preparing for A.B. at Williams. One Hundred Forty-.rix 575 Ambassanlor Drive, Rochester lo, New York. Came to Lawrenceville Septrnilier. 19449. Houses, Woomlliull, The Lodge. Preparing for ILA. at Dart- 51 Ulla DENNETT CLINTON SLEMP Denny Tlu'rr is no Inrlcnr of flmrin'tr'r .ro SHIT il.-' Ihr 1'oic'r Big Stone Grip. Virginia. Born an NVushington, IJ.C.. March 7, lgjl. Honors Average '48-'Sig Griswold House Chum- pionship Soccer '47-'48 QGQQ Glcc Club '48-'irq Choir '49-'5l. Cumc to Laiwrcnccvillc September, 1946. I-Iouscs, 'I'liomiis, Griswolcl, Kinnaln. Preparing for ILA. .it Hzirviiril . odrzkfzz 51 MITCI-IILL LEE SMITH Mitch Sncz1ks Smith, L. OI lfi.ff70,i'iIIIUll .cwest mm' icmpcr nzilzlf' 355 Ridgewood Avcnuc, Glen Riclgc, New Icrscy. Horn at Glcn Riclgc. New Icrscy, May 3, 1932. Secretary-Treasurer, Dickinson House '49-'gon Fourth Form Essay Prize '49-'50g I.V. Baschaill '49-'50 CNumcralsjg I.V. Soccer '49-ISOQ I.V. Baskcrball '4Q' '50 fNUll1CfHlS,1 Varsity Basketball '50-'5ig All-House Basketball '49-'50 Qljjg All-House Baiscball '49-'50 fDjg The Lit '5o-'Sig Glec Club '49-'51g School Church '50-'5i. Came to Lawrenceville Scplcmbcr, 1948. Houses. Dickinson, Kinnan. Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. One Hundred Forty-seven 51 Olfaz ARTHUR MARSHALL SOLLITT Art .1 Thru' is no lure ,r1111'r1'r1' than the l01'r of fowl. 691 SIICFICILIII Ruud, Winnetka. Illinois. Burn :tl Iivzinmtun, Illinuis. lalnunry 4, 1935. Varsity Fuutlwgill '49-'51 fNLlI1lCTJISl '49-'511 CMinr1r I.j 'gn-'51: Varsity Wrcstling '49-'51 QNU- xncrulslg 'l'l1u Chuir '49-'sig The Luwrcntiuns '49-'51g lilac Club '49-.Sl, Stutlcnt I.c4nlcr 'Su-'51. Canic In Inixvruiiccvillc St-ptcrillncr. 1949, Iluuscs, Ilannill. Uppa-1'. l,l'CllLlI'IIIj.'I lim' ILA. :lt Ilnrtnioutli. One I'I14nd1'z'z1' Forty-e'1'gl1t odrzkkz 51 RICHARD MUISEIFI7 SMITH 'lllixitf' HSIIIIIIIH Dick HSIIYIUIII-fh f7l'!1l'!'J'i,H I4 Stonehcngc Ruud, limit Nt-ck, Lung Islam NCW York. Burn :lt Ncxv York. New York, I,L'tfL'lIll5l'I' 1:1 I953- Ilickinmn Iluusc Clmliipiulisliip Iigm-lmll '49-'gn QIUQ All-Cirtlc l'l1lht'l71lll '4qf5r1 flljg The l,4mfr1-mg '49-'5lg Prugrurn QZHIIIIIIIHCC .Stl-'SIS Thi- Ofln Pm rida '50-'51. Came to Lawrenceville St'pICllIl3L'T, 1948. Iluuscx Dickinson, Uppcr. I'1't'p11ri11g fur IIA. nl Iimxvn. 51 Ulla ETHAN BATES STANLEY, H Stan Frome In tl SITIOIQEI' room in Upper. Shawnee Run Roacl, Indian Hill, Cincinnati 27, Ohio. Horn at Cincinnati, Ohio, April 23. 1932. The Choir ' o-' 1' The Glce Club '50-'51 5 5 1 ' Came to Lawrenceville September, 1950. House, Upper. Preparing for A.B. at Yale. Cl odrzkfa 51 EDWIN RUSSELL STEARNS, III Russ Naturally I'm quid ull the time, I'm x1nn'ying. 335 Oliver Road, Wyoming. Cincinnati 15, Ohio. Born at Cincinnati, Ohio, November 1, 1932. Honors Average '49-'gig The Lclwrcncc, Buainehs Board '49-'51, The Spanish Club '50-'5x. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, eve, Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. One Hundred Forty-nine 51 Ulla ROBERT IAEWIS STOVALL Ilick Cnttun Pickt-r Survey filly S!1HIll!'l'll!'I' Ulll Iifk fin' YllllR!'!'.V.H Stovall, Misxiaxippi. Burn nt Memphis, il-Cl'lIlL'55Ul'. October 29, 1Qjl. Honorx Avcraigc '49-'sux Scicnct- I Prixc '46-'47g Varsity Wrestling '49-'qi fblumcrnlsj '50-'5i: All- Huusc llztscliglll '49-'Sim QVVJ: l.4lu'l'z'11w '4lj-'51, Business Mzmztgcr 'SU-'Sli Pcriwig Club '49-'51, Actor Representative 'ju-'sig Prugrami Cnmmittcc 'in-'Sig Publicnliuiis Cmnmittcc 'gn-'six Ht-rutlutus Club 'so- 'Sli Lower Sclicml Print Shop '46-'48, Hczlcl '47-ull: Lmvui' School Ilrziulzltic Club '47-1431 Cromwell llousu Clizlmpiunsbip Fmitlmll. Cn-Captain '47-'48 CCM All-Lowa-r lfnotlxill '47-'48 KCJQ Iuniur Wrcx- tling '47-'4X fNunicrnlsjg Cmmxvcll lluust: Chum- piunsbip lizist-luill '47-'48 KCD. Came In lgiwrcmcvillc Scptcmbur, lLj46, Housvs. Cmimvt-ll. Wvtlllllllllll. 'l'l1c Imtlgc. Pi'cp4i1'ilig for l5.A, :it Yxilu. One llundwd Fifty 0cz'rzZ1'f1 51 DAVID MAYNARD STEMBEL, IR. Mu:ithcnnl Rust-lvt1cl Dave I'n1 if I'l'tlIl hUf IIItlHl1l..' Box 177 B. R.lJ. Nu. I, Cilmmin, l't-iimylixiiiigl. Born ut Pittsburgli. l't'nnsyli4uiin1. Iunt- 43. lljjl. Varsity Football '49-'51 fNlllllt'I'lllhJ '41,-'Q fMinur LJ 'gn-'gig Viirsity llnsclmll '49-'si CNLI mcralsj '49-'gug Glen Club '48-'gig Chuir '43-'sl Math Club '50-'5tq Spzmisli Club 'Stl-VSI. Came to Lawrcnccvillc Scptcinlwcr, 1948. Ilntisca Dawes, Upper. 1'i't-piiriiig' fm' ILS. :it Prinuctun. 51 Oily Wll.l-lAM LORD STRUFIG, III Willy Hill I rim resist cz'r'1'ytlz1'f1g 1-xrrp! li'Illf7ftlfi0ll,H 977 Kensington Avenue, Plainfield. New Iersey. Horn at Plainfield, New Iersey, November 27, 1932. Lower School Council '47-'48, Vice-President. Ilavidson House '47-118: Best All-Round Boy, David- son House '47-'4?lg Varsity Football '49-'5og I.V. Swimming '48-'5o fNumeralsjg LtIlUl'l'77L'C, Business Board '48-'5o1 Iunior Swimming '46-'48, 1Nu- meralsj '47-'48Q junior Football '47-'48 CNumeralsj: Captain, Davidson House Championship Swimming '47-'43 CDD. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1946. Houses, Davidson, VVoodhull, The Lodge. Preparing for B.A. at Yale. odrzkia 51 DAVID SALA SUMMILRS D:1ve'l HIIICCN Look al Damon I Ilenhigh Hall, No. 1o4, 14th and Broom Streets Wilmington, Delaware. Born at Davenport, Iowa, November li, 1955. Varsity Track '48-'49 fMinor I.Dg Varsity Tennis '49-'go fMinor LJ: 1.Llll'l'l,l7!'f, Editorial Board '49- 'SIQ Pcriwig Club '49-'51, Head of Business Board ,SO-,513 Iunior llasketlmll '47-'48 QNumeralsjg Lower School Track '47-'48 fNumeralsJ. Came to Lawrenceville Septemher, 1947. Houses. Davidson, Griswold, Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. One Hundred Fifty-one 51 Oflzz drzkfnz 51 RICHARD WINSLOW TAYLOR Dick Dix Dixie Speech is great, bn! silence is grcuif-r. 43110 Southern Boulevard, Dayton 9, Ohio. Born at Springfield, Illinois, August II, 1951. Vice-President, Hamill House '48-'50, Varsity Ten- nis '47-'SI fMinor Ll '48-'49 CMajor LJ 'So-'5i Captain '50-'5tg I.V. Basketball '47-'50, Varsity Bas- ketball '50-'5Ig Captain, Hamill House Football '48- ,495 Captain, Hamill House Basketball '48-'49g Cap- tain, Hamill House Golf '49-'5og All-House Basket- ball '48-'49 CHD, Program Committee '5o-'51, Chapel Usher '50-'5tg Commencement Usher '49-'5og Spanish Club '50-'5ig Major L Club '49-'5tg Periwig Club '50-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1947. Houses, 1 l:RlflJlfRlC WATTS THUNIAS Fritz rl jokck iz very seriozrx thing. Main Street antl Maeatla Roatl, liethlehem, Pennsyl- vania. Horn at Allentown. Tennessee, November 4, 1935. The l,t1:w'er11'r' 'go-'giz Fielcl llantl '48-'49, As- sistant Manager. Varsity Football '49-'gog Dickinson House Cliampionsliip liast-ball '49-'go UU. Came to lalwreneeville September, 11148. Houses, Dickinson, Upper. Preparing for ILA. at Princeton. One Hundred Fifty-two Hamill, Upper. Preparing for A.l3. at Princeton. 51 Ulfaz odrzkfzz 51 IULIO LUIS TORRES Iulio For whom Ihr' trlrplzmzr rings. Apartatlo 2745, Caracas, Venezuela. Horn at Paris, France, November 18, 1951. I.V. Soccer '48-149: I.V. Golf '48-'49: Captain, Dawes House Championship Golf '48-'49 fDjg Var- sity Golf '49-'51 fMaior LJ '49-'5o, Captain '50-'5i: Program Committee '49-'5I: Major L Club '50-'5ig Secretary, Spanish Club 'go-'5i. Came to Lawrenceville September, io48. Houses, Dawes, Uppcr. Preparing for B.S. at M.I.'l'. GUILLERMO IAIME TOUS Hill Cubano Quill Spic Now uflzm I'm unzfm.-'sudor . . . P.O. Box 916, Habana, Cuba. Born at Habana, Cuba, july 24, 1955. Spanish IV Prize '49-'soy Chess Club. Runner-Up School Championship '48-1393 Varsity Track '48-'5o QNumcralsjg Dickinson House Golf, Co-Captain '49- '5og Spanish Club '5o-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Dickinson, Upper. Preparing for B.S. at M.I.'l'. One H undrcd Fifty-three l IV. Soccer '49-'io fNlllllL'f5ll5lQ Varsity Soccer '50- l 'Sl lM11ior LJ: Pcriwig Club '49-'51g Club Hispano l kutbzill. MlllI1l1IL'l' '47-'4H. 51 Uflzz odrzkzkz 51 JEFFREY WILLIAMS TRAENKLE Trunks Turk IcH ' I lu1f' I l'lIl'!'lIfl'1I lflzlf noir. 61 Ulcl Ox Roaul, Manlizmct, Long Islzuul, New York. Born at Malnliussct, New York, April 0. 11144. The Math Club '5o-V513 Honors Avcrzigc 'Stl-'ill l.V. Hockey '49-'io fNLlI1lL'l'Lll5lZ l.V. Socccr '4o-'go fNUI11Cf2llSl1 Varsity Hocksy 'so-'in Ficlcl llaiml '49- '51g Sleepless Knights '49-'irq Riulio Club '40-ISI, Vice-Prcsiclcnt will-.Sli Progrzuii QIUIIIIIIIHCC 'go-'51' Lawrence '50-'gig Pcriwig Club 'su-'51. Czimc to l,2lVVl'Cl1CL'VIllC Scptvmbcr, 11940. llousu Woodhull, Upper. Prcpziring for ll.S. :it M.I.'l'. l lf HHN LAIRD TREADWAY - 'l'rc11cly 'I'rc11ts U'-I'I'ClltlC5H I am zfrry fond nf flu' mmpuny of lurlir.f. 711 Noi-wooil Rorul. West Hartford 5. Connecticut. Horn 411 llzirtforil, Coniicclicut, April 13, 1953. Clow Ilousc Clizimpiombip Track '49-'5o fCjg 'qu-'gig Chapel Usher 'io-'gig Glcc Club '50-'51g Mxiior l. Club 'so-'Sig Print Shop '47-1485 Iunior Bas- Cxmic to I.2lVVl'L'IlCt'YlllC Scptcmlmcr, 19.17. Houses. llziviclaou, till-vc. 'l'l1c lmmlgc. l,I'C172lI'll1g for l4.A. :ir Yailc. One Ilzmdrcd Fifty-four 51 Oflzz odrzkfaz 51 NILS CHRISTER TRULSSGN 'lirula I.z'i.v1u'z' wiilz 1l1'gf11Iy. Yallhallavagcn 98, Stockholm. Swcclcn, Horn at Stockholm, Swcclcn, October Il, 19-gl. Varsity Soccer '49-'51 fMaior L53 Varsity Hockey 'So-'51 QMaior LD: Hamill House Championship Track 249-'5og Major L Club '49-'51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1949. Houses, Hamill, Upper. Preparing for BA, at Duke. ELMER FITZALEN TWYMAN, III Al Twinks Do not rcurl flirrory, for thu! I know mm! fic julie 515 Icricho Road, Abington, Pcnnsylvania. Born at Chicago. lllinoia, Ianuary 4, 1955. Griswold Home Basketball Coach '50-'51, T L Hcrodotus Cluh 'go-'5 1. Came to Lawrcncrvillc September, logo. Housp Belknap. Preparing for Engineering at Yalc. One Hundred Fifty-f 51 Offaz ozfrzkfzz 51 PETER FUNDREN UNDERWOOD l'etL ' UnLly Pimps l'i'1' got .rz'1'z'l1tf'rl1 yhrzlgllfzx 1hr'y'1':' ull for you. 2915 Del Munte Drive, llmmmi 6. Texas. Burn at Hnuntun. Texan. Octulwei' I, 1035. Kennedy Hume Clmmpiimship Triick '48-'40 KHP: Varsity Football '49-'SI lNumer4ilsJ 'gn-iii: Olliz l'of1'ri11'u '49-'Sli Prugrmn Cummittee '40-.Sli Vire- Presiclent. The bulge 'SU-.Sli Sclmul Cliurcli 'SO-lil. Came to l.1lXVI'CI'lCCVlllC Septemlver. 1943. Hixuaes, Kennedy, The Luclge. Preparing for li..-K. :it Princeton, WILLIAM HUDSON UNGER Hill Hull Ungry Ungs l'illn'm'r' um! Shlllfll' Ihr mrd.f, Penn-l,ee Hutel. Slmmukin. lJUl'1l'l5ylVllI1lSl. llorn nt Sliaunukin. l'ennsylva1niz1, April 17, ltjjl. Crim-Culliilry 'Su-'51 lNumcr11lsj: The Choir '50- 'SIC 'l'l1eGle4-Cluln ':,nf5l. Cllllll' to luiwreneeville Sepleiiilwr. 1950. Houses. Wqysiile. Van Dyck. Preparing fur ILA. at Princeton 1 l O ne H u I1 drrd Fifty-six 51 Offaz FREDERICK HENDRIK VAN DOORNINCK, IR. -nth,- I llil'l' fluff, 1111! I 1l'on'1 l'0f7II?1IIlF.U R. D. No. 1, Princeton-Kingston Road, Princeton, New jersey. Born at Allentown, Pennsylvania, March 3. 1953. The Glee Club '5o-'Sig The Choir '50-'5I. Came to Lawrenceville September, 19511. House, Belknap. Preparing for HS. :it Princeton. drzkkz 51 NEIL WlNTHROP WALLACE Neil Crusher Nz'1'rr lwerz kliffflf, l1f'l'l'l' frenz f7fl7lI!'I17.H 6 Avon Road, Lzirchmont, New York. Born at New York, New York. February zo, I952. Secretalry-Treasurer, Thomas House '47-118: Secre- tziry-Treasurer. Dawes House '49-'gog Honors Average 'go-'51: 01141 Por! '49-'51, Business Manager '50-'5I: Lawl'rm'e '48-'Sig Periwig Club 'io-'Sig Program Committee 'SU-'Sli Publications lkrmmittee '5o-'5l: Science Club '50-'Sig Herotlotus Club 'so-'511 Mgtior L Club, 'So-'51: Cum Laude Society, 'go-'5l1 Var- sity Wrestling '48-'51 fMinor Ll '48-'49 fMuior LJ '49-'51, Captain '5o-'itz lunior Wrestling '45-'48 QNumeralsj '47.'4S: Thomas House Championship Soccer '45-'48 CTJ. Co-Captain '47-148: Lower School Dramatic Club '45-H481 Reading Committee '46-'43, President '47-'4X: Rr'vordc'r '46-'48, Business Manager '47-'48Q IuniorlCboir '45-'4t'i. Came to Lawrenceville September. llj4S. Houses, Thomas, Dawes, Upper. Preparing for li.A. at Prince- Ion. One Hundred Fifty-.raven 51 Oflaz ROBERT STACY WARTH Wl1iil ' Wl1iiTc1 ' Holm Tf1ry ffm! gurrrn Mr' nm,-'I nmkr llzr 1111.17 110i.fr'. . Y 111 lizm ffI'lQCI1XVlCll Rmuul. I.o11g111c1ulmv fr. Maman- clmscm. llurn all Ryv. Nuw York, Oclnlucr 1. IQQI. l7l'L'Sllll'lll, klllll' lmllgc 2,11-'slz Stuclunt Council '50- '51: Varsity lflmtlmll '49-'gn fNL1111u1'g1lsJ: Varsity Gull' '49-'Su lNlIIllL'I'1ll5f1 'l'l1c l.111c'1'r'I14'r', llusincss llullfll 'SIYJSL Cumc ln l.a1wrl-nucvillc SClYlt'l1ll3L'l', 111411. llouwcs, Wu-ullmllll, llllll' I.mlgr. l,I'L'l1LII'lIlg fm' ILA. nt Yallc. Um' llmlzlrcd Fifty-eight VV odrzkffz 51 VVlLLlANl MliAD VVANlJAl.l. Bill W'1lml Will WilIy HTIM' grllflz' mfmf ff-1' gwlflz' zfz'f'rI'.f f.-' Rimini. 901 Suuth lll'ULlllXVLly, llllllhlll, Now In-muy. Born at Culmlcn, Ncw IL-rscy, May Q, 1955. Woomlhull House Ch11111p11msl11p Succur '48-'49 CWJ Womlllull Home Cl1a111111iu11sl1ip lizlskcllmll '48-'413 fWj: Iuniur Varsity linskctlvglll. Manager 'in-'51 lNumcr41lsD: c:KIl1Ck'I'l Clulm '48-'51, Scurctglry-'l'1'ca1s111'c1 ..lQ-'Sli 'l'hc 1.11 118351, Business M1lI1LlQl'l' 'su-'31 l'1'ugra111 011111111111-4' 'su-'S1: 'l'l1c Sulmul Clllllfll '48 51. Came tu L1lXVl4CIlCL'YlllL' SL'l7I4'Il1l7L'I'. 1948. Iluuscs umllmull, Uppvr. l,1'cp:11'111g for ILS. ut llllflilltll. 51 Ulla ROBERT BELL WEST Westy Boll Roll, mlz, Uf1:ulul 255 North Arlington Avenue, East Orange, New Icrsey. Born at East Orange, New Iersey, Iune 22, I955. Secretary-Treasurer, Third Form '48-.4QQ Vice- President, Second Form F47-,482 Secretary-Treasurer, First Form '46-'47g Secretary-Treasurer, Shell Form '45-'46g Vice-President, Raymond House '49-'5o: Math I Prize. Second Award '46-H473 Varsity Foot- ball '49-'51 CNumeralsJ '49-'50 CMajor LJ '50-'5I: Major L Club 'go-'gig I.V. Baseball '48-'5o CNu- meralsjg All-House Football '48-'49 CRD: All-House Soccer '48-'50 QRJQ All-House Basketball '49-'50 QRjg President, Davidson House '47-'42'l: Lower School Dramatic Club '46-H183 Iunior Football '47-'48 CNU- meralsjg Junior Baseball '46-'48 QNurneralsJ '47-48: Iunior Swimming '45-H175 All-House Football '46--47 QDQQ All-House Baseball '45-'46 UU. Canic to Lawrenceville September, 1945. Houses, Davidson, Raymond. Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Lehigh. drzkkz 51 GEORGE MCCLELLAN WHITNEY Mac Gaim .vf111lyfl Palisades, Rockland County, New York. Born at New York, New York, Iune 28. 1932. Varsity Wrestling '49-'511 I.V. Track '49-'50 CNu- meralsjg Chapel Ushers '5o-'5ig The Easel Club '50- 51. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Dawes, Kinnan. Preparing for l3.A. at Yale. Om' Hurza'red Fifty-nine 51 Offa odrzkfa 51 STANLEY NEAL WILKS 'LSt:1n .S'ilz'11z'f' ix the rlcnlrlzf in which grmr tl11'z1g.r fxlihfull lhrn1.f1'1z'1'.f. I Caxmplmulton Circlv. Princctun. New lcrscy. Burn at Lumlnn, lingluncl, Ocmlmcr 15, 1951. Kcnncaly Home Clulmpinmlmip Track '48-'40 HO Came Lu I.uxvr'cr1cu'illr Scpru111lwr, 1947. Ilouscs Kcnnccly, Upper. l3I'L'I11lfllljI fur ll.A. :lt Swalrtlmmurc. Al.HlfR'l' DlCKliNS WILLIAMS, IR. Dick Willy Ali, Luke IGM lllmr fha! ,fly may figlll again. qw C1'.ulm'u- l.alm', l.LIliL' lfmvst, lllinuis. llurn at lixzumlmm. Illinnis, Srprclnlucr 11. I'-152. Vuxity lluclwy 'Surfing The Ulu- Club '50-'5lg ,l'llL' fllltlll' 'gn-'5l. Canm- to l.lIW'l'L'llL'CYlllC Scplcmlwr, 19511. House, Klnnzm. l'l'vpg1r'i11g fur .X.l5. :lt Ygllv. Om' Hmzdrcd Sixty 51 Offzz IOSEPH MlLLER WOOD, IR. UIUC.. ..W,UUdy,. Silw1c'e if golden. 8 Grccnliolm, Princeton. New Ierscy. Born at Buffalo. New York. September 27, IQ3k2,. Varsity Hodkey 'io-'51. Came to Lawrenceville Scptenibcr, iqgo. House. Upper, Preparing for ILA. at Cornell. drzkzkz 51 VVOODSON KIDDER WOODS, lll Woolly Thu Kid Zin1n1erlich 'Tix nn! lflt' lI'l'l.IIkl'l1g fhtll ir to lv' fvlunzni, fill! Ifzc' rxz'f',v.f. 2l0S South Warson Road, St. Louis 17, Missouri. Born at St. Louis, Missouri, Ianuary 14, 1932. All-Circle Football '48-'49 QGJ: Varsity Track '48- '5o fNumcralsj: Varsity Soccer '49-'SI QNumcralsj '49-'go fMaior LJ 'SU-'Sli Major L Club 'go-'51, Came to Lawrenceville Scptcmlvcr, 1948. Houses, Griswold, Belknap. Preparing for l5.S. at Corm-ll. One Hundred Sixty-one 51 Oily ozfrzkfa 51 HUGH KING WRIGHT, IR. hlllllllllu Like f1Ilh!'l', like full. VVoorlhull House, I,awreneeville, New Ierxey. Born at Scheliectacly, New York. Ianuary 18, IQVQ Honors Average 'so-'51: Shell Art Prize '4i34o: Shell Religion Prize '45-'46: Sl1ell Ilislori' Prize '45- '46: Religion I Prize '46-'47: First Form llest Prose Prize '46-'47, Iunior Honor Society '47-'4?l: Honor- able Mention, Thiril Forni Short Story Awaril '48- '4og Manager. Iunior Track '46-'47g Iunior Swim- ming '47-'4Pl: Manager, lunior Track '46-'47: Roms House Championship Swininiing '47-'48 CRJ: Ross House Championsliip Soccer '46-'47 IRB: School llannl '48-QSO: Press Club '40-'51, The IJ! '49-'51: Open Door Committee 'SUf'SI1 Chapel Usher 'io-'ilz Herotl- otus Club 'go- il: Rez'01'df'r '4l134?l: Reading Coni- niitlee '46-'4?l: Asrembly Coniiiiittee '47-'48, Came to Lawrenceville Septeiiiher, 11143. Ilousex. Ross, Wooclhull. Upper. Preparing lor IIA. at Yale. THUIVIAS CJWENS ZIEBOLID H'l.UIlIu 'AZielis lf I frrf Ihr nrgz' lu f'.r:'1'c'1',vr', I ffl' lllllfll llllfllf II pil.rff'.1' 0l'l'l'.H 1541 'l.llUlIl1IS Circle Roail, Charleston 4. West Virginia. liorn at Charleston, West Virginia, Iuly 1. IQVQKQ. 'I'reas.urer, ,lllllllllllh Home '47-.48Q Wooclhull House Gouneil '.4Kj-'SUI Guin I,aucle Society 'go-V511 Science Ill Prize I4fj'iSlJQ High Honors Average '47-.SUI Honorx Average 'SU-.Sli First Scholar, Seeoncl Form '47-'4H: Marcus ID. Frencli Cup '47-'4?l: Iunior Honor Society '47-'4X: I.V. Soeeer 'golgi fNun1e-ralsl: Wooilliull House Glianipionahip Soccer '49-'io KWJ: Iunior Football '47-'48 INllIllL'I'lllSJZ Ulliz l'u1l1'1'11'u '48- '51, Managing Iirlitor '4of'5o, liclilor-in-Chief 'io-'51g l.11uf1'1'm'1' '43-'f,i: Periwig Gluh 'so-'gig Science Cluh 'go-'slz Glee Glulw 'io-'glz Pipe anil Quill 'so- ,Sli Open Door Coniiniuee 'go-'51, Caine to Lawrenceville Septenilier, 1947, Houses, Tliomas, Wooclhull. Upper. Preparing for ILS. ai Yale. O ne Hun dred Sixty-lu '0 4. 51 Ulla odrzda 51 EDWARD WEAVER ZIMMERMAN Zim Zim-bo Ari for i1rl',r sake. IZS Wilson Drive, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Born at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, May 26, 1954. Historian, Dawes House '49-'Sog Honors Average '49-'50, High Honors '50-'5ig Cum Laude Society '50-'51, Pipe and Quill '50-'51, Lawrem'e, Art Editor '49-'51, Press Club '49-'51, Secretary-Treas- urcr '49-'50, Co-President '50-'51g 01111 Podrida, Business Board '50-'51g Easel Club ,49-ASIQ Radio Club '50-'51, Program Committee ,SO-'51, The Lit '50-'51g Glee Club '50-'51g Periwig Club '49-'51, Concert Club 'SO-VSI. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Dawes, Upper. Preparing for B.S. at Yale. l IAMES BRAXTON ZIMMERMANN lim Zim Many that are first :hull be lan, and ihr last jimi. 6227 Lakehurst Avenue, Dallas, Texas. Born at Kansas City, Missouri, Ianuary 13, 1932. Raymond House Championship Football '48-'49 KRD: All-Circle Basketball '49-'50 KRJQ All-Circle Baseball '49-'50 CRJ. Came to Lawrenceville September, 1948. Houses, Raymond, Upper. Preparing for B.A. at Princeton. NOTE: Due to lack of space the records of tlie following V Formers :irc incomplete: Callen, Carey, Robertshaw, Zicbold. One Hundred Sixty-three I i 2 4 1 1 AFTQ EQNOON TEA WSPEAKING DF sPow:rs IT4.+2. ZDuH! ' THE. WONDEIEFNUL WIZARD Ma. Pgfax1v'.: Seazonzzf wk? 'me TRAGEDY OF TYQHGEEWES THE. HILL R THE. HAPPY YEARS Q 1 51 Oflzz ocfrzkfaz 51 PROM COMMl'l I'Iil3Q Iwfnf lt'nn': Iacolvscn. O., Pray, Carey. I.. Rainer, Haines. R. llilrk lCfm': Warth. Mosser. tkikcr. Ctuigclwut. llroll, liol1ei'tsli.1u'. DID UMENADE, I Q50 Nlllfll the ahle direction ol the Prom Committee. headed hy Mr. Wagner, the Spring Prom provided a line weekend lor those concern-ed. The dates arrived at one o'clock on Friday, May grd. and later that aliternoon all couples went to the Cir- cle House Tea Dances which liegan at three o'clock and ended at live. That evening. alter a formal dinner at the Circle Houses. the lioys escorted their dates to the Spring show. Caviare to the General. which was produced at the Mc- Carter Theatre in Princeton. Later, return- ing to the School. they danced to the music Um' lllHIlIl'!'lf S1'xtyff'1iqf1f of Cene Willizlliis at the gym lirom ten until two. Saturday afternoon there was a track meet with Blair Academy. alter which the couples returned again to the Circle Houses lor Tea Dances. Hal Mclntyre played lor the main dance that night which lasted from nine until one. Sunday morning in the Alumni Study. Coffee Hour was held. Copies ol' the Spring show songs were there for everybody to join in a grand linale ol' singing. At noon the girls left lor home. V 51 Offaz arfrzkfaz 51 I-H1111 lt'un': SCllL'llt'llQLxI'. Seanians, Nct'tf'tn.tn. lftlrk lt'uu': lfapt't'tott, l,ol1it. 'I4wtnian, VYootls. XX ., l5.u't't'tt, XY. U.S. NAVAL I2 ESEIQVE l.'l'l IUUCSII tht- inetnhers ol the Naval Reserve are not, strictly speak- ing. taking part in a School activity, the etlitors thought it well to recognize the group heeattse ol' the interest shown in the Service this year. The hoys are tnetnhers ol' Organized Sttrliace Battalion 4-D, with its hase in Trenton. They attentl tlrills on either Nlontlay, Tuestlay or VVetlnestlay nights each wet-lt. By joining the Reserve, they art- entitletl to wear the Naval uni' lorni on active tluty. antl are paitl a reguf lar tlay's pay lor their two hours' work in the eveiiiiig, antl tnust attentl weekly clrill plus a two week cruise tluring the sunt, mer nionths. Since they are Recruits with Om' flznzzlrvzz' Seventy no previous service. this suinineris work will hc in tht- liortn ol' hoot eainlf' either in Philatlelphia or the Naval Training Station at Great Lakes. tfhieago. Last year interest in tht- Reserve program was lini- itctl to a Iiew who intencletl to inalie the Navy their earccr hy going on to .Xnnap0A lis, or he eonneetetl in some way with the inaritiint- profession. This year, with the worltl situation making inilitary service ol some kintl almost a certainty, the inter' est in the Reserve has picltetl up, since the tnetnhers ol the Reserve are ahle to choose which hraneh ol' tht- artnetl forces they want to serve in. .f 1, 2? X ix 3 T f fi X X xgfkkx , U-. XQNXK XXX f C -- ?gf fi ' . Q X+isqQXN X 9 wg ' x xfgffw f 'I J Xxx XR w L 2 I 5, -L ? -U . Xav--.-.. ,.... ---- , 1. ' QX X IIIINIIRARY IIBGANIZATIUNS 51 Olly oefrzkfaz 51 l'll'Ul1l Row: Coker, Carey. l.. Noble. W., Biggs, lilair. Davidson. Huck Row: Price, Ziebold, Zimmerman. li., Kay, Howard. Newman, Cellert, Iivans. THE DIDE AND QUILL CLUB HIS year the Pipe and Quill enjoyed a pleasant and successliul year under the direction of Mr. McClellan. Early in the year the members who were elected last year met and completed their mem- bership. The Club then chose for its of- lieers liill Noble, President, Barton Higgs, Secretary, lainie Carey, Treasurer, Fred Robertshavv. Sergeant-at-Arms and jim Coker, Cellarer. According to its custom. the Club meets regularly every other week. At these meet- ings they hear, Hot only prominent out- siders, but also several Lawrenceville mas- ters who lead the group discussion. This year the group heard Mr. Peter Putnam One H zmdred Seventy-Iwo speak on Russian history and culture. Dr. johnson spoke to the Club and led the dis- cussion afterward, as did Mr. Perry. At one meeting Mr. Humason came and played anything they wanted to hear on the piano. The striking feature ol' these meetings is the lack of formality. lt is the discussion and lack of formality that removes the meetings from the lecture category. liar- nest, but congenial, arguments add to the interest. The purpose of the Club is to bring to- gether a group who will enjoy and benefit the Club. This year it achieved its pur- pose. 51 Ulla orfrzkfa 51 lfronf Row: Nivling, Tivyinan, Hroomlieatl, NVrigl1t, H.. Carey, I., Iohnson, I. SI't'0lItf Kruv: 7 Montag, Douglas. IJ., Mosser. Price, Wallace. Burk Rauf: Davidson, Ottcn. lfrank. Horan, brown, I.. Kay, Olson, j., Stovall. Miller, W., lland, Gellert. THE HEIQUDUTUS CLUB HE Herodotus Club includes those members of the Filth Form who are chosen by the History Department be- cause of their interest in the subject. The aim of the Club is to broaden the members' outlook on history by delving further than usual into events of the present and to correlate them in terms of the past to show trends in history. liarly in the fall the olflicers were chosen, mal-:ing Ed Burger President and Blair Mosser and Howie Price Vice-President and SecretarykTreasurer. respectively. The year's activities included Documen- tary iilms on VVorltl VVar ll and the recent past and numerous lectures. One of the best was given by Mr. Robert McManus, who talked on the Hiss-Chambers case. The most interesting aspect of this talk was the fact that Mr. McManus had been a very good friend of Hiss, and so he could present some new sides of the case. The year was climaxed by its two trips: one to see the United Nations in New York, and the other, its annual trip to Washington, D.C. in the spring to ob- serve the mechanics of the government first-hand. The Club is greatly indebted to Mr. Norval Bacon for his light but guid- ing hand as Faculty Advisor. One PIlU7!11l'f'd Sc'z'z'nty-three 51 Olly odrzkfa 51 lfrunl Row: Rainer. Brown, I.. Pray. Coker, Robertsliaxv H Olson, I., Traenkle. Brown, G.. Montag. . ilffq lx'nu': lleclit. I.. Newlnan. Bartlwcll. THE MATH CLUI3 Hli Math Club has enjoyed a very successful year under the able guid- ance of Mr. Park. Early in the year the Club elected Buddy Pray as its President, Iames Brown Vice-President. and Iim Coker Secretary-Treasurer. The Club met every other VVednesday night in Mr. Park's room. There. either a member gave a talk, or a master explained a specific branch of mathematics. Among the various speakers were: Mr. Hoyler of RCA Laboratories in Princeton, Iames Brown and Ion Olson. Iames Brown dem- onstrated the theory and proof of the Nine Point Circle. and Ion Olson gave a lesson in the theory and proof of the slide rule. One Hundred Seventy-four Mr. Hoyler demonstrated the RCA elec- tronic computer which can count to a mil- lion in an instant. lt is used to measure the speeds of projecriles. Mr. Hoyler also had a machine which can solve simultaneous equations containing as many as ten un- knowns. This honorary society has had to raise its membership in fairness to the many budding mathematicians who are so pro, fuse in the present Fifth Form. The Club would like to thank Mr. Park for his untiring interest and also its off licers for their continuous eflfort to keep the Club running smoothly. I Olfaz oafrzkiaz 51 limlzl Kuff: lilsasser, Vliallacc. lland. Montag. Sf't'Ul1If Row: liardwell. llocbele. Olson. I., Hyde. llouglas, IJ. Iiucfg Knut Mosser. Newman, Carey, I.. Xiebnld. Rainer. llrown, Ci.. lirown, I. Tl-1E SCIENCE ClUl3 l-Ili Science Club during 1LjiOf5I be- gan its year with the election of Ion Olson as President and lim Brown as Sec- retary-Treasurer. Both they and the nu- cleus of seven who were elected last Spring provided a year complete with many varied activities. Throughout the year the number of boys in the Club rose until twenty Qthe maximum allowedj were Finally inducted. Regular meetings were held every two weeks at which time a special speaker pre- sented a lecture. Dr. Taylor, our Faculty Advisor, gave two talks. the first concern- ing hydrides, and the second, chemical analysis, both of which were very humor- ous as well as instructive. Several meet- ings were conducted by members of the Club, while a few outside speakers also liurnished entertainment for variety. Some trips to nearby laboratories in the Spring and late Winter terms were the chief activity of the Club towards the end of the year. Especially intgresting was the trip to Philadelphia to see the Franklin Institute. The hnal meeting of the year was taken up by the election of next year's charter members. The Club hopes that the new members hnd as much enjoyment in the bi-weekly meetings and occasional trips as we have had this year. Ont' Hundred S:'zfc'nty-five 51 Ulla afrzkfa 51 4 I 1 CHAPEL USHERS I-'mul ISHN: Sclmlmscr, Lulwit. Wright. Il., fi1liIIC5. R.. Iislun ulxvu l - sllxlmlc. ff. Srrrzml Rum: Trcg A ' Mlll'l'llj. f31II'lVL'I1Ii'I'. Simtmln, Ihllxill, lfffrk IC0n': Illucs, l,l'llIl1llI1l1, l.uvL'. R.. ,ll.lflHI', R.. Ifssc kulwy, Rmmmnn. Whitm-y. lfmnl lX,Ull'I Incnlm-11, O., Murray, Hru Noble, W., lfldif, Xvlllllglll, II. Om' 111111111111 Sz'zfz'11ty-.fix OPEN DOOR COMMl'I'IAIiIf gh, Nivling, KILIU. lfurlg Rauf: Ziulmlxl, Cgnrpcntcr V w QQ keg 'n 0 X- N1 XNIX Q Q 1 N., Mmm: -Q ll Q I iflf' 4 1 F-- I x X mi? -.. 9 e -L THE CIRCLE 51 Uffa odrzkfa 51 IJNDEIQ FOIQM OFFICERS FOURTH FORM President-CARLOS RAFAEL OMANA VTCC-P765l'dC72l1ROY ALLEN SMITH Secretary-Treasurer-MICHAEL CARTER SHILLABER THIRD FORM P7'C'5id67ZZ-STEPHEN HARRY ACKERMAN Vice-President-CHARLES INGRAM SKIPSEY, IR. Secretary-Treasurer-WOLCOTT GIBBS, IR. SECOND FORM Pffffdfill-WILLIAM NEVE TRIMBLE Vlnff-Pffflldfflf'-SAMUEL EDWARD MONROE, 2D Secretary-Treasurer-LLOYD BANKS THOMAS, IR. FIRST FORM Prczddenl-TIMOTHY EDWARDS NOBLE Vice-President-ANOEL MANUEL F ERRO Secretary-Treasurer-W1LLIAM MEAOHER VAUGHE SHELL FORM President-RICHARD LAWRENCE SNIDEMAN, 2D Vice-President-PETER HOBART BROWN Secretary-Treasurer-IAOOBO DARIO SALAS One Hundrcd Eighty Ya 51 Olly odrzklzz 51 CIRCLE HOUSE PRFSII JETNITS lfrnnr Rum: Cnruugic. flhuglllllgllllll, ll., lioml. flllhlllll. Slhllzxlucr. Iiuvk IQr1u': Smith, I., Wight. ll.. Smith. A. CIDCLE I-IUUSE CHAMDIUNSHIDS AllfRouml Trophy VVon in 1950 by Bll.Yl'l7tl!! ,. . Truffq . . , Football Cx. uv 11, Guia Buxlqctlmll A SPRING-1950 IJHIKINSUN 'Tf'I7l1I',x' 1'lAIXlll.L Goff , IIALI.-19511 wow .NND XVuum11'1.1. VVlN'I'lLRf-1951 R,u'1x1uNU Swmznzizzg VVoodhu1l .. NVoouuL'LL , limlwlim' SUl'l'l'l' fiRISXVULD . . Ihwas One Hmzdmfd lffghzy-ofzc HOUSE CLEVE :Z E - N Q CC E S G va .ll if L75 'C H -v-1 -A-4 LI A s-. fl. .CI Z Lf 1. :E V 'J +4 Z LI x.. Ll LA .1 f : T ll? N4 A.: 'EL ,P , -Q-3 A i Q , x Q J Q m.. L. 51 Un Z 13 5 L : 'E 1.. rs Q E S. Ae -1 E 5 R 1 umarkin, XVallia, B. T nfllik. Irv? 01:4 V417 -1-'v J -W Q: ali :LI fr: rm. -Q J? 1 tw A., ,rg 'ff f'5 -fx 451.1 3-5 L 'CII Ulf ?S .UC 12.5 SE 3.1 '43 E.: .21 Q. HL' 12 345 5:3-N -V .3. 2: :Z 'ZZ Q4 2.1 1. 1: AD ES. 53.0 :4 'Q ': JN 3. cg L:.l:l P CP? EE Ez ii :Q F, :Q :J -:us any, Jr- ,liwr rr: 5C QE IE 53 E. M. 'LJ .EF 25 ,w kv, 'Et as 1..: , S 51 Olfa odrzkkz 51 CLEVE HUUSE HISTDIQY HE boys of Cleve House, under the leadership of President Harry Wight and council members Merrill Cal- len, Lee Schuster, Dave Harrah, and Louis Focht, have had a very good year. The new aggregation of Rhinies has fitted in successfully with the old boys in Cleve's Hght for Circle leader- ship. The Cleve football team this year was one of the best teams in the history of the House. The Green Wave finished in a three-way tie for the House Championship. The gridmen showed amazing versatility, considering the lack of experience, through- out the gigantic squad of twenty-six. The strength of the team was felt by all- comers, as Cleve conquered all opposition save the Griswold House, to whom we lost 13-6. George Fontanals and Skip Ham- mond were elected to the All-Circle line, while Bob O,Grady and Captain Dave Harrah were chosen to the, All-Circle back- field. The fortunes of the soccer team, led by Captain Merrill Callen, were not as stun- ning. The team, studded with new mate- rial, had its difficulties winning games. They did win a couple, however, and those which w-ere lost were close, hard- fought contests. The aggressiveness and spirit of the team was commendable. Cleve's contributions to the various School squads has been pretty good so far this year. Ion Barrett has won a Major L in soccer, while Lee Schuster, Harry Mon- tague, and Merrill Callen won their nu- merals. Harry Wight, Co-Captain of the Cross-Country team, also won a Major L. Dick Skewes and Iohn Orrell won Nu- merals in I.V. football, and Dick also, along with Bob O'Grady, is playing I.V. basket- ball. Lee Schuster, Louis Focht, and George Fontanals are now wrestling, and Dave Harrah is on the starting line-up for the Varsity hockey team. Roger Nixon and Dick Newberry are among the start- ers on the swimming team, while Skip Hammond, Paul Elvidge and Don Heim- lich are fine prospects on the I.V. Harry Wight is now running on the winter track team. All in all we are not at all poorly represented. We aren't yet in the high brackets scho- lastically, but Ed Cote, Bob Rosefsky, Pete Tumarkin and Paul Snook have honors averages. We realize through the'success of the House, not only in the Held of extra-cur- ricular activities, but also athletics and, to some extent, studies, the gratitude which is due to Dr. and Mrs. Hitchcock and our Assistant House Master, Mr. Barnhouse. To all three, without whose help we could not have achieved this good record for the school year 1950-51, we, of the Cleve, wish to express our sincerest thanks. DAVID HARRAH, Hl'Sf07'id7l One Hundred Eighty-three DAWES HOUSE -Q He-nriksun. Wallace, XV cl Halbuch. Smckhmn, Ist d Razz mtl. Sfvu N1 dftrrng. Strilur. 'l'ruvicm. Wcdg H nay Smut L., Rau' Harkrudur. Hel lfrwlf ci m P5 : E E-1 rf ra ,- E H :I CC 5 E 2-4 LL. .3 3 E Ls. .4 K- A I. .1 .3 5 1 . 2 Q , ,, F : C rf: r' xl E E J .- W f fi C TE ,- 'i IJ ': .A ... J - Q Q D -C 73 5 -i 5 2 . E I1 E 'F di I EL f: .-. ,- : Z5 J: L: f. L: :C E .C z: u Q QE 'SL CI E -E :E A 3 .. U cc 5 L: E 5 .: cf C. S .. C1 V. L1 A - .J f. 11 E-1 :x A ... X 2 x. 1. .1 : C ci 23 .1 : 53' I E 5 T1 IJ E T1 If 1 S. e -'Z Q r- : Ve -A I. I. Schucl-ict. VVrigh 51 Offzz odrzda 51 DAWES HDUSE HISTDIDY the direction of Mr. Thompson and an efficient council com- posed of Neil Bond, President, Reeder Fox, Vice-President, Steve Thomas, Secretary-Treasurer, Dick Plaut, Historian, Ben Patt, Councilman, and Larry Bell, Rhinie Representative, Dawes has had a successful term. This year our House teams have shown good spirit and our scholastic standing has been excellent. Last spring the House contributed Iulio Torres, this year's captain, Dick Love and Ronald Nivling to the golf team, while Dave Stembel and Dick Hepner repre- sented the House on the baseball team. This fall our House football team, which was ridden with injuries and sickness from the beginning of the season, placed sixth. Our soccer team was more successful and ended in fourth place after a hard and well-fought season. Dawes contributed its share again to Var- sity sports. To football went Steve Thomas and Dick Hepner, who got their Minor Lls, Rudy Smutny, Rod Correll, lack Wright and Tom Gries, who got their Numerals. To soccer we contributed Bill Wallace, Don Rohlhng and Dick Plaut. On the swimming squad Dawes was repre- sented by Neil Bond, Dick Plaut, Rudy Smutny and Bob Thomas. We were well- represented on the basketball team by Reader Fox, Harry Conkey, Larry Bell, Iay Schocket, Colin Thompson, lack Wright and lay Inglis, who was assistant manager. On the hockey team we had Ben Patt, who is the manager, Clay Ward, who is an assistant manager, and Bill Sharron. In extra-curricular activities Dawes has done moderately well this year. Ben Patt is on the Lawrence and in the Press Club, Neil Bond is in the Camera Club and on the Lawrence, and Dick Plaut is in the Periwig Club. Alex Butman, Rod Correll, and Steve Pirovano are in the Glee Club and Alex Butman is also in the Choir. Scholastically Dawes had the very re- spectable average of 73.4 at the Hrst quar- terly, with seventeen boys in the honors bracket. In conclusion, we of the Dawes House would like to thank Mrs. Wicks, who, in Mr. Wicks' absence, has continued to make Dawes a better place to live in. We would also like to thank Mr. Thompson and Mr. Fuller for their guidance and support throughout the whole year. RICHARD L. PLAUT, IR., Historian One Hundred Eighty-five CKINSON HOUSE D :E LIZLI FUN. I. Oli' R ml 9 ,S A Lf Q 'T' LC nl E 5 cz I I L: C V Z cf 1.1 4 'F V - 5 JZ L' 1 LI 'J .. x. -V- .. Z U -'E E an J I. Q LI- J R cf 2 E LC :..f z E: 2 2 N. Q 5-Q LC S f U .: .. i A .-1 11 Q 'K ,-4 -L f- LC It Q 4 it E 5. Q C F J Ld 5 . ': Z 1 Q f I2 rn 2 J T3 -.1 I Q Q ,: .1 A :J ff D L Z I LJ L. M f 5 I. 1. 3' D1 LI U Z E JZ u U7 xl. wi ,. c -C 5 -. S Q S LL. 4 Z C -E 11 44 1. T v 5 1. Q 'W ff V li L. I-I-4 5' 5 la .. no 4 Z ff. ri C , Ve: .:: 3 E .E 2'- '21 V E fi 2 ': : I, x. 1.. E 'C 1: LJ E, LIZ fi c is :Q 2 J C 'U C .- - 51 Ofla odrzkfzz 51 DICKINSON HOUSE HISTUIQY which have made such an important campus. NANIMOUS thanks from the Dickinson House to Mr. and Mrs. Keller and Mr. Knowl- ton for their kindness and understanding, our life in the house part of our life on the Twice last year, at mid-years and again at finals, Dickinson placed at the top of the circle scholarship list. Last year's lead- ers were two high honors students, Steve Fredd and Lou Hand, both seniors now, while Charles Fried leads the house this year. ln the Held of extra-curricular activities we have set a good record, with Charles Fried the leader in this. He writes a weekly column for the Lawrence, is a member of the Liz, a library associate, and a member of the School Church. In athletics the house was outstanding in baseball, Winning the championship last spring for the second time in three years. The team, captained by Bob McCulloch, ended the season undefeated, and placed Bob, Mitch Smith, Ames Brown, and Dick Smith on the all-house squad. In the winter Iim Harris won his house letter by taking the first place in the Fifty yard breast stroke in the house swimming meet. Mac Smith won his house letter in the house track meet by winning the half mile, ! he then went on to win his major in spring track, running the mile. And in the fall, Mac won his second letter in cross- countryg in addition to winning the New Iersey state meet, he was elected co-captain for the next season. Norm Olsen won his minor in the same sport. The house was represented on the school football team by Iohn Orelup, while Tom Clarke cap- tained the house team. On the school soc- cer team we had Ric Ferre and Ed Iohn- son, who won his second major and was elected captain of the sport for next year. The house council was composed of Mac Smith, President, Fred Prichard, Vice- President, Norm Olsen, Secretary-Treas- urer, and Horace Stephens, Historian. The Rhinie Representatives for the first term were Stan Gaines and Ric Ferre, for the second term, Herm Lazarus and Dave Whorf. We were fortunate to have with us as assistant house master this year Mr. Perry H. Knowlton, a newcomer to this campus. The debating team won its first debate of the year by a unanimous decision against the Hamill House in the fall. Members of the team were Charles Fried, Norm Olsen, and Neale Watson. We all wish to express our gratitude to the Kellers and Mr. Knowlton for all they have done for us during this year in the Dickinson. ' Hormcu STEPHENS, Historian One Hundred Eighty-:even 51 Oflaz odrzkzkz 51 GDISWDLD HOUSE HISTDIQY DER the capable leadership of Mr. Perry and Mr. Wicks, as well as that of the council consisting of Henry Carnegie, Presi- dent, jim McCarthy, Vice-President, Ierry Donohue, Secretary-Treasurer, Mike Penta, Historian, and Chris Macllvaine, Rhinie Representative, the House has enjoyed a very successful and prosperous year. Scholastically the House has done only fairly well, with Henry Carnegie and Pey- ton Conger having honors consistently in all subjects throughout the year. In Fall athletics the House had Chris Macllvaine on the varsity soccer team, win- ning a Major HL. Peyton Conger was on the I.V. soccer squad, and Fred Seving and Sam Hunter were on the I.V. football team. In winter sports, George Getz was on the varsity swimming team, winning a Major Lf while Hep Ingham and Larry Heilman were both on the I.V. swim- ming team. Ierry Weiss and Iohn Benisch represented the House on the I.V. basket- ball squad, and Noel Maurer, a Major L winner in track last spring, Bill Kustrup, Iack Kustrup, Buddy Updike, and Ben Cooper were on the winter track team. ln the extra-curricular activity field, Henry Carnegie and George Getz were on the School Church Council. Harry Kuhner was drummer for The Sleepless Knights, and Phil Schuyler was a mem- ber of the Library Associates. Henry Car- negie, as well as being a member of the House debating team, was President of the School Debating Club. He has also been writing a column called Viewpointsl' for the Lawrence. Last fall the House football team ended the season in a three-way tie for first place. Captained by lim McCarthy and Ierry Donohue the team went through the sea- son with only one defeat. Bill Kustrup, Ierry Donohue, Mike Penta, and Dick Tompkins all received places on the All- House team. Henry Carnegie and Dave Esbenshade are to be congratulated for their fine coaching job. The House soccer team, which was lead by co-captains Ierry Donohue and Dick Tompkins, followed the football team's ex- ample and took the championship, losing but one game. In this case, however, there was no tie. The All-House members of the team were Dick Tompkins, lim McCarthy, Iim Maurer, and Ierry Donohue. In closing, we of the House would like to thank Mr. and Mrs. Perry and Mr. Wicks for their help and guidance which has made this year such a memorable one. MICHAEL I. PENTA, Historian One Hundred Eighty-nine HAMILL HOUSE IE V. Z .E 5 r r. Q Z NT. 5 C VJ ci r: ff. if .1 sl 2 A-7 1-. vu EL U If lf? 5 E ED fu -E f 5 .rf .. Q , -.. II f-L fi 'E 'E G F :fx Lf 2 rf .J W A.: -1'-4 Q. 7, :, , ri 1 .-. .ri 'E 5 , , C2 'I xl Z E. -Y. -N 5 is xl. :J ... 4 Q ' : I P 'J r: L. S Q '-C Q SE E E X: Z 'J f .2 H C5 1 1 ff - ri L1 LII x., U Q v f-4 12 5 7 . E :Z J If f ill C x. .1 I L. :J .J If .1 Q -V- 1 U 3 -- -.. 3 1 C Ld L1 .L d L 5 :J : CL il VD if '-I F' Q 'T' .ld E ,J III 'T in 1.1 11 LJ V ..-.. 5 E' D c: L. Q 5 JJ 1: Q ff S' Q v-1 -, .., JZ I U 5 ,C Z I 'J Ld J ' L. 51 Ulla Tadrzda 51 HAMILL HUUSE HISTUDY AMILL House has com- pleted a comparatively successful year and we feel that what success K we have had is by all means derived from Mr. and Mrs. Wyman, along with our assistant House Master, Mr. Answorth, and the House Council. The Council is composed of President Roy Smith, Vice-President lim Hurwith, Treasurer Ken Suegart, Historian Tom Brady, and Rhinie Representative Tim Orvald. Willingness and co-operation are typical of the attitudes of the House mem- bers. The House can not boast of a wealth of grey matter, but points out proudly its members receiving honors grades. They are: Ken Suegart, Herb Corban, Iim Hughes and Henry Urbaniak. The House average is higher than that of last year. Our football team started out rather poorly but gradually improved. Hal Belf, Iim Hurwith, Ken Suegart and Dren Greer gave the team what bright spots there were. The soccer team, under the leadership of Harry Theodoracopulos, had a disas- trous season, mainly due to the fact that a large number of boys went out for Var- sity sports. The basketball team seemed to be the one team in which some hope could be held. Captain lim Hurwith boasted a team composed of small boys but it was full of spirit. On Varsity sports during the fall months We had Roy Smith, Tim Orvald, Ed Law- son and Tom Brady participating in foot- ball. Harry Theodoracopulos played I.V. soccer. During the winter months Pete Dubow and Ed Lawson wrestled Varsity and Herb Corban, Ken Suegart, and Larry Leighton wrestled I.V. Roy Smith was on the Winter track squad and both Tom and Bruce Brady are on I.V. Don Rhoades, Hal Belf and Dren Greer swam Varsity and Bill Henrichs made Iunior Varsity. Basketball was represented by Tim Orvald. Hamill is well represented in extra-curric- ular activities. The familiar cry of House Points spurred many a boy on. Pete Dubow, as President of the Concert Club, attracted many Hamill boys. Larry Leigh- ton. our mathematical brain, is a member of the Math Club. Tim Orvald was in the Choir and Glee Club and he was joined later by Bill Oleo Goodlett. Pete Dubow, Bill Goodlett and Tim Urvald composed our ill-fated debating team. Hamill points proudly to the fact that lim Coker, Blair Mosser and Dixie Taylor, three alumni of last year's Council mem- bers, were captains of football, track and tennis this year. Blair and lim are also on the Fifth Form Council. In closing we of Hamill House would like to express our sincere appreciation to Mr. and Mrs. Wyman and to Mr. An- sworth for their guidance. We think of Hamill as another home and hope that its old walls will remain as fond memories in future years. TOM BRADY TIM ORVALD, Historians Om: Hundred Ninety-one K ENNEDY HOUSE E sf vu .Q 2 LE LII J' :u c: A 11 ,c U if E ac M E' 9 , 7: J E: no --C N: S L ia w L Z 5 X l. 2 ID S ni 2 :E If z 2- .J 4.4 5 f 'ff fi 7 C 'E .:. fi .: CL c: 5 3 l-I TJ L 55 r: e -1 -.. 2 9 F-L. 57 5 L5 .2 Q rv Q ff E Z n: 'E' C4 :J l. . : LI- ll LJ +4 .J 7 .J L: an I 3 'J L. 51 cd Q xl E -.2 Z .. - e -C N E H xl C1 .r: I: :w A l.. E 1 x Q fl in L '- :E LII .4 fi Z L. 2 E 'C Q E' , k -C1 LJ ,t . 2 J x. 92 f .-C U Nauen, rnlncr, Super, Ga Y, ITC Culcrlmn. McMu L: ,wc , Stark. Mccnan. M S. Bfllfq Rout Nagle, Stcxcn ni5 DUB Mueller Dewey. Hcrw nd, CI' mui J O'Callaghan, A., Rubcr 51 Ulla odrzkfa 51 KENNEDY HDUSE HISTDIQY year the Kennedy House, under the lead- ership of President Mike Shillaber, Vice- President Bill Ches- nut, Secretary-Treas- urer john Anderson, Rhinie Representative Charley Skipsey, and Historian Burt Kel- logg, has enjoyed a successful year because of fine spirit in the House. During the fall football season the House football team was again coached by Mr. Chivers. Captained by 'Emery Ber- wind, it showed spirit throughout the sea- son and came in the next place after the three-way tie for the championship with Sam Monroe winning a place on the All- Circle team. The soccer team, under the leadership of Co-Captains Lou Li and Rick Fiore, did not do quite as well as the foot- ball team, as it ended up in a tie for fifth place. This fall the Kennedy House also had many of its members on the Varsity soccer and football squads. john Chivers, Burt Kellogg, Drew Robinson, Mike Shillaber, and Ken Snedeker were on the soccer squad. john Anderson, Bill Chesnut, Clarke Coleman, and Doc Wellmeier represented Kennedy on the football squad. Iohn won a Major letter in football while Mike and Hurt did the same in soccer. At the Hrst quarterly report, Kennedy House stood fourth among the Circle Houses in scholarship. Iohn Anderson, Toby Bottome, Cullom Davis, Allen Mc- Murrey, Drew Robinson, Ken Snedeker, and Steve Stark attained honors averages. This winter the House was represented on the swimming, track, basketball, and hockey squads. john Anderson, Toby Bot- tome, Led Gardner, and Gene Meenan were on the swimming squad, Clarke Cole- man, Tappen Soper, and Marshall Stevens were on the track squad, john Chivers and Ken Dewey were on the hockey squad. This year Kennedy has quite a number of boys in extra-curricular activities: Iohn Anderson and Tappen Soper were elected to the Periwig Club, while Ernie Nauen held a role in the Club's fall productiong as members of the Choir we had john Anderson, Led Gardner, Lou Li, and Doc Wellmeier. They, as well as Tom Roberts, were members of the Glee Club. We are very proud of the honors achieved by our former President, jim Rainer, and Buddy Pray. jim was elected Vice-Presi- dent of the School, Buddy was elected Secretary-Treasurer of the School and, also, he was elected Captain of the Varsity swimming team. In behalf of the Kennedy House, I would like to express our sincere thanks to Mr. and Mrs. Chivers and Mr. Dunbar for all they have done to make this year an enjoyable and successful one. BURTON KELLocc, Historian One Hundred Ninety-three RAYMOND HOUSE T1 .2 LC J T1 L E I f-Z v , :J L. ra U A an 1 ra x. 22 E 2 D zz Y: 5 - VN -'J i CJ L1 ,Q ., 3 .41 C2 3 L6 2 P. L.: Q 'fi - C 2 .E .E 2 J 5 :Z .Q . E E T1 CI ,rd J .L nl 11 :: :. U I S. O it .. 'Q 9 L L7 2 .E 5 I 3 T5 L.I.Z cf C :1 A -4 f s f -I 2 rf E 5 2 c: an S he -C 'Fi S IN ci Q C O rE 13 E v-. la C 1. --'I :L E T3 n-Y -J LJ 5 7' 5 u. i : T. FI m :L 1. Z7 .1 I rf T1 .:: UL .E T: Q O E. 1 .2 E rd -. 5 xi :: A NJ U, : 9 .J 1.. V 4.5 .: 'JL 5 J. U .., 5 L. 1J ':: 'U 5 -1- S me -C Sf Ei CQ 6 ll U s. an :J 'I' U .., ... 11 C ra IL. .-. Sf El 21' C .i 2 F .XC J. 5-1 A :1 -J I J. U fi :E V7 LI n U :J .C E .E u Ill I .C C Q ra ,- xl U -C L 3 'I ankle. Maxx IJ ckinmn, Stnctzur. Alwxczzlz Gacldb, Krugness, Sh Brcig, comp, Dubmff. yutt. VVcbb. Gicl H cks Luu 51 Olin odrzkfn 51 IQAYMDND HDUSE I-IISTDIQY year the Raymond House, under the lead- ership of Hal O'Cal- laghan, president, Stan Burg, vice-president, and Tom Iamieson, Iohn Kimball, and Bill Webb -who were elected to the council a few weeks after school had begun, has enjoyed a wonder- ful year. The house as a whole has done well in scholarship and has excelled in athletics and activities. So many boys in our house have received so many honors, that it is possible in the space allotted to list only the highlights. Last year's house ended a fine season by coming in third in the Foresman Cup race. We won the house swimming meet in a whirlwind fashion. In spring sports we had two major Ln winners, Art Schonheiter in baseball, and Hal O'Cal- laghan on the tennis team. Our house baseball took second in the Circle league. This year in fall sports we did very well. Bill Webb won his major Lv in football and was elected captain of next year's team. George Krogness, Buzz May, Art Schonheiter, George Carey, and Vern Loucks also won their varsity letters. Iohn- ny Eades received a minor Lf, The house soccer team, captained by Ioel Mon- tague, who was later chosen All-Circle, came in a close second. In Winter sports we did equally well. Art Schonheiter, Sandy Gideonse, Henry Hulshizer, and George Krogness got major letters in swimming, while Vern Loucks was hon- ored with a minor. Scotty Nicholls and Phil Hepner received majors in wrestling and George Carey attained one in basket- ball. Hal O'Callaghan got his L in hockey and was elected captain of that team for next year. Buddy Canaday is the manager-elect of the varsity swimming squad. In activities Eddie Barlow was elected Managing Editor of the Lawrence for 1951. Powell Lindsay was chosen Sports Editor and Tom Iamieson Circulation Manager of the same organization. Iohn Shankle was voted to the post of Photog- raphy Editor of the Lawrence and is also president of the Camera Club. In scholarship We didn't measure up to our standards in the other branches of school life. Some excelled, how-ever, namely Iack Weltner who at midyears had a high honors average. There were five boys in the house who had honors at that report. These were Iack Kyle, Tom Iamieson, George Lasry, George White, and Don Laws. The rest of the house didnlt do as well at midyears, but we have plenty of time in which to change that. As I stated before it is unfortunate that space doesn't permit me to put in the names of the other boys who contributed so much to our house's success. I would like to speak for the house in sincerely thanking the Tiihonens and our Rhinie assistant h-ouse master, Mr. Bradley, who made our year here both enjoyable and profitable. IOHN KIMBALL, Historian One Hundred Ninety-fue H OUSE O DHULL XVO E I5 1: QQ Ax. r-1 -CE. 'J 3 .SY -E' E LC he -C 'Q S ka L 50 ri '- .ri 'J ru x. x. Z! Q S D1 E, 7 1- .E CI 'C J CI 1- C -F -li CI ra ,-I vf P Z V 'I L1 ,J 3 su m r: U if CI :x 'S J, :s .2 DQ +5 U 2 3 ,C J R, 3' 5 :u L1-I S: o CC N 'Q 9 F-L. S Q1 is L-nl: PE , f-Q3 QL! -fl: T12 FC.. .30 Eg' HFS 55 ,PU mf E, f , ES L-ca 553 -.ca S5 33 '-4: yu. Q! Hi eq FV, .Ex vi JI Ch. .sf mil JE 'Q 42 :i Jax f .GU L'-1 , LEQE Ee E555 rch! 652 ,OE E 3 HEI 035: 5311 .. - . E S232 ..,J -gil .gn-ge .- 5.11: E .551- .15 Ev n 55 245-fr 'QL U .EBI 5-T-Ai, L -:ff .gage :gif E.....' .F x 5.10 gpg.. .-fs 'NJ E-4-3 54,12 ul: 21-. cn,,3.? -'lr 2 51 Oflzz odrzda 51 WDDDHULL I-IDUSE HISTDIQY NDER the direction of this year's School Pres- ident, Iamie Carey, last year's House retired the , All-Round Trophy. Every boy in the House had a share in this, inasmuch as each was a point earner. Dave Evans led the list with sixty-four House points to his credit, a record which will probably not be equalled this year. As a result of their efforts, many ex- Woodhull boys are now heading activi- ties. Dave Evans is Editor-in-Chief of the Lawrence, and Bob Stovall is its Business Manager. Bill Wandall is Business Man- ager of the Lit, and Tom Ziebold is Editor- in-Chief of the Olla Pod. Doug Carpenter is Head of the Chapel Ushers, while Bob Warth was elected President of The Lodge. Last year the House tennis team, com- posed of Clint Curtis, Iohn Howard, and Iim McCurrach, took the Circle Champion- ship. This year's House, led by the council consisting of Cha Omana, President, Tony Benjamin, Vice-President, Seymour Pres- ton, Secretary-Treasurer, lim Stockton, House Administrator, and Tony Gibbs, Historian, is following in the path of the House last year. Captained by Tony Benjamin, and as- sisted by the Hne playing of Ned Lang- horne and Tom Cowen, all three of whom were All-Circle, the football team finished in a triple tie for Hrst place, our first championship in this sport since 1937. The soccer team, led by Al Clark and aided by All-Circle Francisco Casalduc, finished a tight race, tied for second place, with a very creditable record of Five wins, one tie and one loss. ln School athletics, Cha Omana won a Major L and Bill Williams a Minor in soccer. Steve Ackerman and Dave Carver are regulars on the basket- ball and hockey teams, respectively. In scholarship, we are not equal to last year's House. At the mid-years, there were eight boys with honors, topped by Ieff Al- bert's 89 average. However, the House is doing excellently in activities. The Periwig stage crew is dominated by Woodhull, with a couple of boys acting. Cha Omana was production director for the fall show, and is head of props for the winter one. Also in the fall production, Tony Benjamin was head of the carpenters and Seymour Preston head of props. Don Cowlbeck had a part in the fall show, and he and Garry Heher both have roles in the winter one. Wood- hull has candidates and members on the Program Committee, the Lit, and Law- rence, and the Press Club. The House debating team has won one debate so far, and has hopes of winning more. In the First debate, Kurt Reinheimer, Garry Heher and Don Cowlbeck spoke. In conclusion, I would like to thank Mr. and Mrs. Wright and Mr. Morgan on be- half of the Council and the House for their guidance and help without which this year could not have been as successful. TONY GIBBS, Historian One Hundred Ninety-seven ,Zigi iz ffgjgv 'SVA Sw X ' 45' U if R 1 .......... L-za Billm- ATHLETICS 51 Olfaz oclrzkfrz 51 i 4 , iv.. CHIQIZR LEADERS 1'I'UlIf II'un': Criisu. Higgs. Getz. Noble, W., lzxuohscn, O, lfilrk Rum: cfC3lll1lQll.lI1. A.. Maurer, N.. Wi-sl, Nuxvnmn, llLlI'IlVVCll. ATH LE-IIC AWAD DS 'IIII1 sUnI.oW cs. sIMIvIoNns TENNIS TIzoPIIY The cup presented to the School our of the savings of the late Sudlow G. Simmonds of the Class of 1923 to he inscribed with the name of the VVllll1CI' of thc School Tennis Championship. Awarded in IQSO to RICHARD livI5II'I's RoIsINsoN. Tllli O'lfAl.LON CROSS-COUNTRY AWARDS FOR IQSU First lJl2lCC?10HN MALICALILEX' SMITII Second Pl1lCC-f:lIARLES HENIKX' WIGIIT Third Place-IAMI1.s Lvow HAMILI, Two lllHIllI'l'l! -sm L, N ' 1 ' m 5 4 fl,.L'5.iI 4 , -Mzew K, A-f:'i:'-.A fl N- ..-.4,, . f ,f 51 01141 adrzkkz 51 MAJUD 66 lf' FOOTBALL CROSS-COUNTRY Anderson, I. Loucks Barrett, W. Hamill fCo-Capt.I Bardwell May Howes Smith, I. Carey, G. Monroe, D. Fargo Wight, C. QCO-Capt.I Coker fCapt.I Mosser I N Congdon Robertshaw SWIMNIINC' Dart Schmitt Belf Newman Doebele Schonheiter Cowen Nixon Ioukowsky Smith, A. Getz O,Bfien Kastilahn Webb Gideonse Pfal' CCHPLI Kay West Gough Rhodes Ktogttess Henry Schonheiter Hulshizer Whorf SOCCER Krogness Barrett, I. Matthews Callen, I. Mcllvane WRESTLING Carey, I. CCapt.j Moltzau Carpenter Nicholls Cruge Qmgna COKCI' Curtis Rohm-rg Dubow Sehellenger Elsasser Shillaber HCPIICF, P-. Stovall Kellogg Treadway Hopkins Wallace fCapt.I Koenigsberger Trulsson LHWSOII Iohnson, E. Woods, K. HOCKEY BASKETBALL Brown, A. Iohnson Ackerman Metcalfe Callen, I. O'Callaghan, H. A Carey, G. Orvald Carver, R. Pease Carey, I. Pope Elsasser CCapt.I Traenkle Fox Smith, L. Gooderham Williams, D. Kehoe CCapt.j Harrah MAIOR IIS FOR SPRING SPORTS 1950 BASEBALL GOLF Anderson Groper Arend Torres Baldwin Kehoe Gratton VVinters Cullen, I. Plamondon Lawson Wislar fCapt.j Castle fCapt.j Sehonheiter Love Dart Seralles Gillespie Two Hundred Two 51 01141 ozfrzkfd 51 TENNIS Hamill Seymour Duys fCapt.j Robinson, R. HOYTOU Sm?-i1S O'Callaghan, A. Presinger Huuflsh Smith, H- O'Callaghan, H. Taylor, R. Maurer, N- Smlfh, I' Morrison Smith, R. TRACK Mosser Todd Brown, T. QCO-Captj Candy fCo-Captj Mott Wittreich Blair Doebele Roberts Ml N UD 66 lf' FOOTBALL SWIMMING Eades Thomas, S. Childress Loucks I Hepner, R. Montag fMgr.j Geer Rainer Sollitt Scozzari QMgr.j Harris Scozzari fMgr.j Stembel Iacobsen, O. SOCCER WRESTLING Barnard IOBHFOH, I' lMgr'J Bartlett CMgr.j Tatterslield Broomhead Williams Scum CROSS-COUNTRY H CK Y Brugh Price, H. QMgr.j O E, Olsen, N. Riegel Mestres Schirmer Patt QMgr.j Wood, BASKETBALL Caperton CMgr.j Conrow MINOR L'S FOR SPRING SPORTS 1950 BASEBALL TENNIS Brown, I-I. Klau QMgr.j Kommissaroff Summers GOLF lMg 7 Brown, S. fMgr.j Tomb TRACK Coker Stevens, W. Schenecker fMgr.Q Woods, Two Hundred Three . 52 H ka-,van 3.52, w Q f A. 1. Mx R 51 Offrz odrzkfaz 51 VAIQSITY FUUTI-BALL SEASIDN, 1950 AWRENCEVILLES 1950 football team showed great spirit and a will- to-win as it compiled a fine season's record of five wins, one loss, and one tie. The two factors which contributed most to the successful season were the fine coaching of Mr. Tiihonen, and the inspirational leadership of Captain Iim Coker. The season opened against a favored Trenton High School team and resulted in a hard-fought 7-7 tie. Considering that they had had only ten days of practice, the Lawrentians played very well. Pete Dart's passing was the highlight of the game, as he completed 8 out of I5 and set up the s-econd half tally which tied the game. Blair Mosser scored the lone touchdown on an end run after which Dart converted. Two weeks later, the Red and Black thoroughly trounced a weak Haverford team, 39-o. Four scores in the first half put the game out of Haverford's reach, and the entire Lawrenceville bench saw action. Don Kastilahn scored three times, once on a 70-yard run, and Art Schonheiter added a 65-yard run for the sixth score. Further proof of the new-found strength was the overwhelming 46-7 victory over highly-touted Blair Academy. Kastilahn drew Hrst blood and Iohn Doebele's scor- ing end run followed. After Blair scored, Kastilahn took the kick-off and raced IO2 yards for a touchdown. Outstanding for Lawrenceville was the defensive work of Captain Coker as he intercepted three passes. The following week saw the Lawren- tians victorious, beating Newark Academy 38-7. After a somewhat uneventful Hrst half which exhibited only one touchdown by Kastilahn, Roy Smith broke loose on scoring runs of 60 and 25 yards, and a Dart-Monroe pass clicked for another. A pass interception by Bob West set up Doe- bele's 20-yd. touchdown run, and Richie Hepner completed the scoring with an 83 yd. jaunt, the season's longest scoring run from scrimmage. Although leading 21-o at halftime, Law- renceville could not continue to smother Peddie's power through the second half and lost 26-21. Kastilahn again returned the opening kick-off for a touchdown and Smith added two more on well-run plays, to complete the first half scoring. Peddie came back into the second half a new team. and showed its strength with four scores, the last within a few minutes of the Final gun. The team bounced back in the next game to trample oncexlefeated Choate 34- CAPTAIN COKER ' ' Two Hundred Five pattern for the whole season with Kasti- 51 Offs! COACH TIIHQNEN I2 before a large Fathers, Day crowd. Kastilahn ran back the kick-off for a touch- down, his third such feat of the season. Passes from Dart to Monroe and Kay set up two more scores by Kastilahn before the end of the First period. Doebele sprint- ed for another six points before the half was over and Kastilahn's fourth touch- Two Hundred Six odrzkfa 51 down came in the third quarter after George Krogness' recovery of a Choate fumble. The Hnal game saw the entire student body travel to Pottstown where the Law- rentians played exceptional football to down the Hill I4-0. Kastilahn scored both touchdowns on sparkling runs of 73 and 25 yards, the latter being set up by Coker's beautiful pass interception and S3 yard run-back, ln the closing minutes of play, George Schmitt intercepted a Hill pass, enabling the Lawrentians to hold the ball until time ran out. This day marked the lahn's superb round play of running and the great all- Captain Coker. SUMMARY Lawrenceville 7 Trenton High 7 Lawrenceville 3Q Haverford o Lawrenceville 46 Blair Academy 7 Lawrenceville 38 Newark Academy 7 Lawrenceville 2I Peddie 26 Lawrenceville 34 Choate I3 Lawrenceville I4 Hill o .-I ..1 +C 5 O O u.. tw I-1 .-4 an Di 'fl P Lx' Q U .ny ,UC 55 -C p.,g GU Em ,Q 32 3:2 Q53 1-E Us .: LI11' JJ: LIC 'z .iss .E C90 91. .EE G6 42 fini EE is 'nm S.: ADT 42 Ei pw .- lan wx .E 35 rg,-I gf Q, 'EL 92 ,ghd E,- CLS o-:J 25 Ld QE 95 U.: ,E-' .. ZS QE -DC : . -'T SE D . L-4 .AU 2.2 02 3: 3.2 Du CUB .. gi xi C '-In .. P43 lied r. Gocllcr. Mr. Tiihonen, Mr. IaCkSOD, M I P 51 Olfaz odrzkkz 51 VARSITY SUCCEID SEASDNQ 1950 LTHOUGH they did not equal the brilliant record of last year's State Prep-school Champions, Lawrenceville's soccer team finished the season with a re- spectable record of hve wins, Hve losses, and one tie, for a .500 average. The season ended on a high note with a 2-I victory over the traditional rivals from The Hill. Coaches Otto Rosner and Robert Wicks turned in a very fine job in handling the team, which was composed mainly of last year's Iayvee team and a few returning lettermen. Captain Iamie Carey, in the goal, and Neils Trulsson, who played both forward and halfback, played leading roles in carrying the team through the season. In their opener at Bordentown Military Institute, the Red and Black got 05 to a successful start by subduing the Cadets 3-0. After a scoreless first half, the Rosner- men broke through in the third quarter with two goals, one by Lucky Callen and the other on a penalty kick by Trulsson. Ian Moltzau chipped in at the beginning of the fourth quarter with a nice goal from outside. A vengeance-bent Hamilton High outfit avenged the previous year's 7-o plastering by shutting out the Lawrentians to the tune of 5-o. lt was the team's Worst exhibi- tion of the season. Ed Iohnson, at fullback, was the lone bright spot in an otherwise forlorn afternoon for the home team. Lawrenceville bounced back in amazing fashion to hand a highly-favored Trenton Catholic squad a 2-I beating. Moltzau took care of all of the scoring for the Lawrentians. His first goal came on a head- in of a side kick by Hugh Roberts, and the second on a hard shot just beyond the goalie's reach. Hal Elsasser and Truls- son played major roles in the Well-deserved victory. Hightstown High, probably the best team Lawrenceville met all year, handed the booters a 5-2 setback. Although three goals separated the teams at the end, the game was much closer than this margin indicates. The Red and Black simply failed to cash in on their scoring opportunities, although Callen and Moltzau did manage to drive the ball into the nets. George Schooljs Iohn Packard was just too much for the Lawrentians to cope with as they fell before the visiting Pennsyl- vanians by the score of 3-2. Packard scored two of his team's three goals while Carlos Omana and I-ohn Treadway kept the home team in the game with beautiful shots from outside. Big Trulsson played his usual superb game, as did Roberts, Captain Carey and Callen. CAPTAIN CAREY Two Hundred Nine hold the once-defeated Blue and Grey to 51 Offaz Crmcu ROSNER For the first time in several seasons the booters managed to defeat the powerful kickers from Trenton High. Showing great spirit, the Lawrentians roared back from a 1-o deficit in the first quarter, to a well-earned 3-1 triumph. Carlos Omana started the ball rolling with a second period goal from close in. Trulsson put the Law- rentians ahead in the early stages of the last quarter with a brilliant head, and Treadway finished the scoring when he pounded in a pass from Skip Koenigs- berger. Although they out-played Peddie for most of the game, the Rosnermen had to settle for a I-1 deadlock. A powerful Princeton Freshman eleven handed the Red and Black their fourth defeat of the season by the close margin of 3-2. The Baby Tigers scored twice in quick succession in the opening period, in a game that started out to be a rout. How- ever, in the second quarter Trulsson put through a penalty kick which narrowed the margin to one goal. A goal in the Two Hundred Ten odrzda 51 fourth period by the Freshmen was quickly countered by the home team as Callen pushed through a head after a brilliant individual play. The second team started the game at Blair, but needed the assistance of the First string to pull a I-o squeaker out of the fire. Before a Fathers Day crowd and play- ing on a muddy field, the Lawrenceville booters succumbed in the last two minutes to a very aggressive Choate aggregation. The final score was 2-1. The Lawrentians, in their finale. brought home the bacon for the third straight year, as they defeated their arch rivals from The Hill 2-I. The Red and Black played by far their best game of the year and showed great spirit before a very partisan Hill crowd. Trulsson put the visitors in front in the Hrst period with a penalty kick, however, Hill came back to score a few minutes later. lt was not until the dying minutes of the fourth quarter that Callen converted a pass by Treadway into the goal that won the game. Woody Woods and Ion Barrett played well on defense to one goal. SUMMARY Lawrenceville Bordentown MI Lawrenceville Hamilton H.S Lawrenceville Trenton Catholic Lawrenceville Hightstown H S Lawrenceville George School Lawrenceville Trenton H.S. Lawrenceville Peddie Lawrenceville Princeton Frosh Lawrenceville Blair Lawrenceville Choate Lawrenceville Hill , fluffy:-2. f-ex H, Q 1 f ' vgiffl f Iam. Q FQ? sf., Z W' M gli 1-...X Sf' ff X. 4 V A r KM' ff fag ' 7 -F, , fx' fi, . Fw ,LMA be .s 1' L- 1 M, .,gQgXzi:k ' 5 1 5, , .. 3 if X W i r n 1 I 51 Uffrz odrzkkz 51 VAIQ SITY CD USS-CDU NTIQY SEASDN, 1950 HIS year Lawrenceville came up with probably the best Crosscountry team the School has ever known. Not only was it undefeated in all six of its dual meets, but also managed to win the New Iersey State Championship over favored St. Bene- dict's. Lawrenceville has had only one other undefeated team and has never be- fore won the State Championship. The team had its individual stars, but its great strength lay in the depth which enabled it to win several meets by nearly perfect scores. Co-captains Harry Wight and lim Ham- ill showed remarkable leadership at all times, and helped create the excellent team spirit which prevailed during the season. Most credit is due, however, to Mr. Wallace, without whose effective and conscientious coaching such a successful season could never have been achieved. ln the First meet, the Red and Black crushed a weak Bordentown team by the score of I7-45 flow scores winsj. The losers were able to place only one man among the first seven, even though the race was run on their home course. Iim Hamill, showing the excellent form which won him many meets last year, took first place, with Harry Wight, running a good race, coming in second. Mac Smith, also a letterman of last year, was third, while Steve Bowes, a Rhinie, and Lew Fargo of last fall's team, followed. Bill Barrett, Ted Riegel and Norm Olsen rounded out the Red and Black places. The next week Blair came to Lawrence- ville for the first home meet and left badly beaten 19-39. Hamill won again in good time and Mac Smith moved up from his previous meet's third to capture second. Wight was fourth and Bowes, Riegel, Lynn Brugh and Barrett completed the team for an easy win. Poly Prep was the next to fall as the Red and Black triumphed by a 20-43 count. Geller of Poly set a new record of 10:39 as he ran the best race of the season on Lawrenceville's course. However, the next seven places went to Lawrenceville, showing the team's great depth. Hamill ran a line race, taking second, thirty yards behind the winner. Smith and Wight tied for third, with Bowes and Riegel follow- ing. Princeton High proved to be one of the toughest opponents but even so, Lawrence- ville was able to take them without too much trouble. Dick Hogarty of Princeton I . mix... C0-CAPTAINS HAMILL AND WIGHT Two Hundred Thirteen 51 Ulfaz CoAeH WALLACE turned in an excellent ti1ne in winning the meet. He was closely followed by Hamill, second, Smith and Wight, third and Bowes, fifth. Another Princeton runner pushed ahead of Fargo to capture sixth. The next week Lawrenceville faced a strong Peddie team which boasted four good runners and stood as the only real threat to an undefeated dual meet season. The meet was run on the hilly course at Princeton to which neither team was very accustomed. Lawrenceville, although weak- ened hy Ted Riegel's illness which side- lined him for the rest of the season, took the meet in good style as Hamill, back to his winning ways, placed first with Smith a few yards behind in second. Taylor, the first of Peddie's top four, took a third with Harry Wight following in fourth. A 19-42 swamping of Hill between the halves of the football game at Pottstown gave the Red and Black its long-awaited unbeaten season. Hamill took the lead early and ran a beautiful race to garner Two Hundred Fourteen odrzkkz 51 top honors in good time. Smith and Wight crossed the finish line together for a second place tie, with Thorgersen, Hill's first man, taking fourth. Matthews, also of the losers, was fifth, but Bowes, Fargo, Barrett and Brugh all finished before the next Blue and Gray harrier. This was Lawrence- villeis first Cross-Country encounter with The Hill. The unexpected triumph in the New Iersey Private Schools Meet represented the first time that St. Benedict's had not won the trophy. The meet was run on the Princeton course, and Mac Smith, running the best race of his career, finished in first place 'by twenty yards. Harry Wight and Iim Hamill tied for second, both with beautiful races, thus giving Lawrenceville a remarkable sweep of the first three posi- tions. Running excellent races, Bowes cap- tured thirteenth, Fargo Hfteenth and Bar- rett nineteenth. Olsen and Brugh were thirtieth and thirty-first. When the results were announced they showed Lawrence- ville ahead of St. Benedict's 34-3Q, with Peddie third, having 64 points. After the meet Mac Smith and Harry Wight were elected co-captains for next yearis team. Under their leadership, Law- renceville can look forward to another very successful season. SUMMARY Lawrenceville I7 Bordentown M.I. 45 Lawrenceville I9 Blair 3Q : Lawrenceville 20 Poly Prep 43 Lawrenceville 26 Princeton HS. 34 Lawrenceville zo Peddie 36 Lawrenceville IQ Hill 42 State Meet-Lawrenceville 34: St. Bene- dict's 3QQ Peddie 64. If Denotes home meets Clow score winsi CROSS -CUU NTRY VARSITY :J 'J if xi 2 4. we ': L' U1 2 E -s 'Q E gf :J 5 :E En .. I-L4 af . Z ,. eq 5: Q '74 w 5 if vi .: 'L E: L. : Z fi :J A 'Z' w 2: Q CC 2 5 PL. 51 Offzz odrzkfaz 51 JIJNIDIQ VADSITY FUDTBALL, 1950 HE Iunior Varsity team, made up of third and fourth stringers of the Var- sity, had a perfect season. They won four regulation games, plus some scrimmages, without a loss. They often played the Varsity of these other schools. The team was ably coached by Mr. Ioe Mr. Robert Iackson. The was: Lawson and Hunter, Goeller and usual line-up ends, Stembel and Loucks, tackles, Orelup and Bardwell, guardsg and Sollitt, center. The backfield consisted of Chesnut, Ack- erman, Hepner and Thomas. The first game with Trenton High saw Captainelect Chesnut lead his team to a 12-6 victory. The Red and Black ad- vanced behind the high stepping of Or- vald and the tricky running of Thomas, Orvald scoring on a pitch-out while Thomas went over tackle for his touch- down. Trenton managed to score only in the last moments of the game. In the Pennington game, held on a muddy field, the team scored another I2-6 Two H undrcd Sixlccn victory under Captain-elect Bardwell. Due to an injury on the first play, the Red and Black lost its star halfback, Orvald, for the rest of the season. Lawrenceville first scored when Hunter fell on a slippery ball in the end zone. Then Pennington pulled the same stunt, tieing the score at 6-all. Lawrenceville came back with Thomas running off tackle for the winning tally. Another muddy Monday saw the Red and Black swamp Trenton Catholic, 45-6. The Iayvee first string was taken out after the ISt quarter. Ex-quarterback Smutney turned halfback and ran wild, while Steve Ackerman also starred in the backfield. In the last game of the season the Law- rentians partially repaid Peddie for its win over the Varsity, turning back the Peddie Iayvees 33-6. These last two games are evidence of the great improvement made by the whole team throughout the season. Players like Bardwell, Thomas, Louehs, and Hepner also saw action in Varsity games. FOOTBALL JUNIOR VARSI 1 ,':jC 99 fe ,EU X.,- 2. Cx. E2 qi -FJ 32 -c f:'-2 5-JU? if 'JS Fai: QQ O: 5-413 .JZ E45 'S Us.: Wm Qi- EQ U, EE D D. L13-4 Ez! 0.20 53 1-.ff :P 0? 41 -tu: :M or: EE 'AE .CJ 2-+4 JJ Ed: is V12 -CI di' If gf: LAO :jiri 4:91 A-'P 3, ,EE 2,-3 U1 EE L. 5,12 iv ,E CMO :aft Si: O-2 'Q ggi-1 2.4 U me LEC .22 '-ill O -Dx 5:52 3:1 2.1 -.J 2.2 944 V - 'AC Mr. Gocller, Simpson. 51 Olly odrzkfa 51 JIJNIOIQ VARSITY SUCCEIQ SEASDN, 1950 NDER the able coaching of Mr. Donald Dunbar, who was new to Lawrenceville this year, and Mr. Henry Clark, the Iayvee soccer team finished the season with only a fair record of two wins, three losses, and four ties. The First game saw a very spirited and aggressive Red and Black team shut out the New Iersey State Home for Boys by a count of 1-o. A goal late in the fourth quarter by Skip Koenigsberger proved the margin of victory. The following week the Iayvees traveled to Hamilton High School, where they were promptly handed their first defeat by the more experienced Hamilton team. The game was even closer than the 2-0 score would seem to indicate, with the home team not scoring its second goal until the last minute of play. The Lawrentians bounced back from this defeat to edge a fighting Trenton High Iayvee team, 1-o. The game was marked by fine all-round play, especially by Iohnny Childress in the goal. Halfbacks Callen and Plaut kept the ball out of Lawrence- ville territory throughout most of the game and set up the only tally, which was drilled into the nets by Koenigsberger on a pass from Iose Meier. The fourth contest proved to be an out- standingly well-played defensive game, as the Red and Black held the Princeton High Iayvees to a 0-0 tie. Terry Birch and Iohn Chivers, at fullback positions, played extremely well, as did Pedro Cordon and Lee Schuster in the line. A powerful Trenton High team handed Two Hundred Eighteen the Iayvees their second defeat by a 2-1 score. Although behind aft-er the first period, the Iayvees played their best game of the season, exhibiting excellent team- work throughout. Skip Koenigsberger again furnished the scoring punch as he drilled through the only tally, in the fourth quarter. Iohn Barrett excelled at halfback while Childress played his usual line game in the nets. Meeting Hamilton High for the second time, the much-improved Lawrenceville team battled to a I-I tie. Dick Skipsey scored on a hard shot in the third period to tie up the game. Al Clark, Don Rohl- fing and Ed Barlow played exceptional games for the Red and Black booters. The next encounter was with Peddie and resulted in another I-I tie. Pedro Cordon scored the only Red and Black goal mid-way in the second period. Lack of scoring punch produced another tie with Peddie, o-o, on the following Sat- urday. Lawrenceville's inability to score handed Trenton a 2-0 victory in the final game of the season. SUMMARY Lawrenceville I State Home for Boys 0 Lawrenceville 0 Hamilton High School 2 Lawrenceville 1 Trenton Catholic 0 Lawrenceville 0 Princeton High School o Lawrenceville I Trenton High School 2 Lawrenceville I Hamilton High School I Lawrenceville I Peddie I Lawrenceville o Peddie 0 Lawrenceville o Trenton High School 2 IUNIOR VARSITY SOCCER ncrlckcr. Sffoml Rauf: Skipmcy, H.. Mcjcr, Theodoracopulos, H., Robin- llcn. M., S Ca Children. Clark, A.. alduc Frou! Row: Cordon. Windsor. Cas Mr. Clark. Plaut rs Trnenklc, ur. Ch vc Schusr k Row: Watson, Barlow, oward, Skipscy. R., Ziebold. Bac H son, A.. 51 Ulla 0a'rzkz'zz 51 VARSITY WINTEIQ TIQACK SEASDN, 1950-1951 Nli oi' the best winter track teams in many years at Lawrenceville Finish-ed a very successful season with the enviable record of no losses in dual meets and a second place in the National lnterscholas- tics. These results may be credited to the able coaching of Mr. Robert Wallace and his assistant Mr. Davis. and to the leader- ship of Captain Blair Mosser. Iust two weeks after the Christmas re- cess, there was a meet with Lawrencevilleis old rival, St. Benedict's. This winter the Red and Black, which showed great depth, again halted the St. B-enedict's efforts by a score of 46-25. Un Ianuary 27. a relay team went to the Millrose Track and Field Meet in New York City and placed a close second in the one-mile interscholastic relay. The meet with the cadets from Borden- town Military Institute was on the Iayvee schedule this year. Even without the aid of many regular starters, the boys of the second squad easily overwhelmed them 46-25, taking lirst in every event. The National Prep School Track Cham- pionships on February 17th was the crown- ing proof of Lawrenceville's track poten- tial. ln a Field of twenty-one preparatory schools from as liar north as Canada and as liar south as Washington, lJ.C., Law- renceville placed second. Mac Smith scored a thrilling victory in the half-mile run, a feat which was even more amazing since it was only the second time he had run this particular race. lim Hamill turned in his finest performance ever, placing second Two Hundred Twcrzty with a 4:37 mile, just two secon-ds behind the winner. Coach Wallace and the team journeyed to Blairstown the following Saturday for a dual meet. The game bunch of board- men once again showed their depth to a decisive 45 to 23 count. There were two clean sweeps. Captain Blair Mosser, Don Kastilahn, and Iohn Doebele crossed the finish line in the 50-yd. dash in that order. ln the 880-yd. run, Captain Mosser came back strong to win, followed by Steve Bowes and Mac Smith, respectively. Allan Kay, who had proven valuable as a shot- putter all season, pushed 46' 3 to win. Winding up the schedule were the Knights of Columbus Track and Field Games in New York. In the one-mile scholastic relay, our team with Mosser, Maurer, Bowes and Mac Smith took sec- ond behind their old opponent of the Mill- rose Games, Pelham High School. Mr. Wallacels ceaseless efforts to im- prove the team, the help of Mr. Davis, and the excellent leadership by example and advice of Captain Blair Mosser, and the group of great competitors are the reasons for the superb record. SUMMARY Lawrenceville 46 St. Benedict's 25 Lawrenceville 46 Bordentown 25 Lawrenceville 45 Blair 23 Millrose Track and Field Meet 2nd place National Prep School Track Championships 2nd place Knights of Columbus Meet :nd place L4 LJ 4 F :-' at FJ V Z 5 W 1- m Z 'I if f- E rl v-v-1 -1 J: if :S L, 'J 2 Q E 5 U1 22 We N1 ': 9 C V3 Z lJ A fi v 1: SJ P .1 5 1 3 Ld Q 5 p-. 5 2 , :- LC E E 5 Z : U L 11 4.4 I f. .. 5 lc It 5 5. 'Y CE LI Q 5 Ll E LJ .J 5 ,-. ,i .. m P. 5 , J .., :J X. x. 41 -F ,-. VT J .1 1 -Y- 4 E' 2 Z 1, LIU L N Q 4. 2- S 5- -H ,.... I ... 3. U 2 ri E '1 G pc Q 1 .D Q R v-4 L. :J f Q G Z Q :J ,- Ji 1- 4 r, CI Lf , gf .J LD Z EJ fi if A : E U - .1 Cl C 'Z A 3 ii x4 U fx -N 7-1 U It s E. 51 Ulla odrzkkz 51 VAIQSITY BASKETBALL SEASIDN. 1950 -1951 TARTING the season with a rush, and highlighting it with a preexam victory over powerful Carteret, the 1950-SI version of the Lawrenceville basketball team faded badly at the end to Finish with a record of nine victories and eight defeats. Captain Bob Kehoe and Carl Pope were the lead- ing scorers on a team which was just caught and passed by the ruggedness of the schedule. The Lawrentians got off on the right foot with an easy 48-34 victory over Hamil- ton High. Led by Carl Pope, who collected Hfteen points, and Iamie Carey, who got ten, the home team had a 24-12 lead at half- time. On their home court, Poly Prep of Brooklyn gave the hoopsters their Hrst taste of defeat by the narrowest of margins. The final score was 55-52. Again it was Pope and Carey, aided by Rand Metcalfe, who led the team. Led by lohn Easton, Trenton High School handed the Red and Black its sec- ond defeat of the season by a score of 58- 53. Kehoe came into his own in this game with a total of IQ points. Their morale apparently bolstered by the Christmas holidays, the Lawrentians com- pletely overpowered Trenton State Teach- er's College 61-28, in their First game of the Winter term. Kehoe and Pope led the onslaught with 16 and I5 points, respec- tively. Boosting their season's average over .500 in the next game, the Gartnermen avenged a 55-41 licking of the previous year at the hands of Haverford by edging them 40- 37. There were no big guns i11 this game as everybody 011 the first team hit for eight pO111tS. Following their winning ways, the Red and Black gained their fourth success of the season with a 57-51 home victory over Newark Academy. Carl Pope and Iamie Carey paced the home forces with zo and I5 points. Playing its best game of the season, Lawrenceville took a Carteret team that had been averaging over a hundred points a game into camp by a 68-65 margin. Rebounding from a I4-point half-time defi- cit, the Red and Black, sparked by the brilliant shooting of Captain Kehoe, drew within a point of the Cavaliers with less than a minute left. Lay-ups by Kehoe and Carey then clinched the contest. An inevitable letdown usually follows a i CAPTAIN KEHOE Two Hundred Twenty-three 51 01151 Comzu CSARTNER great triumph, and the Lawrentians were no exception to the rule as they took a 61-45 drubbing at the hands of Rutgers Prep on the winner's floor. Kehoe's 18 points were the only bright spot in an other- wise desolate afternoon. On the upswing again, the Gartnermen, despite the low ceiling of the B.M.I. court, defeated the Little Army men 47-44. The highlight of the encounter was Bob Kehoe's 22 points. Gaining their seventh victory in ten starts the quintet swept to an easy 49-36 triumph over George, despite the fact that the Blue and Yellow's Bill Loucks was high scorer with I7 points. Carl Pope led the visitors with 15. Traveling to Wallingford to meet the arch-rival Choate, Lawrenceville, paced by Metcalfe's I3 points, whipped the New Englanders to the tune of 43-35. Steve Ackerman and Carey got II and IO points, respectively. At Peddie, unfamiliarity with the glass Two Hundred Twenty-four odrzkztz 51 back boards and an airtight Peddie defense, combined to give the Lawrentians their fourth setback of the season. This game, in which Carl Pope tallied ten points, was the worst showing of the season for the visitors. The Gartnermen won their last game of the season in the next game, defeating Girard College by a 57-44 margin. Pope got his highest total of the season, pouring 24 points through the nets. Playing Peddie on their home court, the Red and Black made a contest of it, but in the end, succumbed 52-49. Leading 4947 with but a minute to play, they were unable to stop the Peddie rally which pulled the game out of the fire, despite the brilliant play of Kehoe, who garnered twenty points. A very fast and aggressive Blair team defeated the hoopsters on their home court with a Final score of 57-45. The issue was never in doubt. Kehoe was high man for the losers with 15, while Mike Conrow followed with 12. Princeton High made it three straight losses for Lawrenceville as it eased to a 57-47 victory. The best effort of the day was Kehoe's Fifteen points against his old teammates. The season's Finale with traditional rival Hill was a big disappointment to the large crowd gathered in the old gym, being used for the last time as the home court. Hill, on the wings of the villain's I7 points, Won 57-51. Captain Kehoe, also in his last game, collected I5 points. In conclusion, Coaches Gartner and Goeller are to be congratulated for their Hne efforts to put together an eflicient ag- gregation. I. VARSITY Ii ASKETHA L 'i :J v -i 'E LZ Z LZ U :J J Q :J 2 v N Q '11 'Z m 'ti 3 Q 5. Q i Q Ld f-7 E A-4 'J 4 ,Q Q. P LJ 5: Q L1 2' is 51 Olly A odrzkfrz 51 VAIQSITY SWIMMING SEASIDN, 1950 -1951 EGAINING the crown lost the pre- vious year to Mercersburg, Lawrence- ville again found itself king of eastern swimming. Led by Captain Buddy Pray and junior Sandy Gideonse, the Red and Black was undefeated in interscholastic dual competition. The team swam four col- lege freshman squads, losing only to the fabulous Yale Freshmen. Some lustre was taken from the record when, minus Cap- tain Pray, who was out with the Hu, the team dropped the State Championship to an inspired Peddie team. Coach George Schonheiter deserves great praise for his wonderful job with a young and inexperi- enced squad. The season opened when a nervous Law- renceville swimming team went to Bethle- hem, Pa., to engage the Lehigh Freshmen. Nip and tuck all the way, the meet came down to the medley relay when Pray, Newman and Gideonse clinched it for the Red and Black in a 38-37 victory. Two days before Christmas vacation, the already seasoned Lawrentians swamped the Rutgers Freshmen at New Brunswick, 5o- 25, where, completely outclassing the Scar- let, they amassed five Hrsts and captured both relays. Lawrenceville sank its third straight col- lege freshman team as it squashed the Princeton yearlings 54-21. The Tiger frosh were no match for the classy Lawrentians, capturing but one event in nine. Gideonse tied the National Interscholastic record for the 50-yd. freestyle with a 23.6 clocking, and Captain Pray did 1:41.1 to break his own School record for the individual med- ley. The high-Hying Yale Freshmen handed Lawrenceville its first loss of the season. Pray again lowered his own medley record to 1:4o.8, and Gideonse tied the loo-yd. freestyle mark of 54.7, as the Red and Black came out on the short end of a 43-32 count. The reserves saw extensive action in a 54-21 rout of Girard College. Even the subs proved vastly superior to their op- ponents, sweeping the First six events. Gideonse finally cracked the loo-yd. free- style record with a dazzling 53.6, as his mates whipped Haverford 54-21. Taking four firsts and both relays with ease, the Lawrentians had no trouble in annexing their fifth win of the season. In Blair's twenty yard pool, the Red and Black swam rings around the Buccaneers CAPTAIN PRAY Two Hundred Twenty-seven 51 Offs! CoAc11 Sci-1oNHu1TnR as they took eight of the nine events, and next Trenton High, defending State Cham- pions, fell as easily as the rest. With Gid- eonse taking two events, Trenton could obtain but one second place in the first six events, but it took both relays from the Lawrenceville reserves. And then came Hill. The Pennsyl- vanians. intent on knocking Lawrenceville from its pinnacle, were haliled at every turn. Gideonse lowered his IOO-yd. free- style record to a blistering 53.1 and Pray broke his own medley record, flashing home in 1:39.1. Carver Nixon swam the finest race of his career in downing Hill's Bill Grohe in the 50-yd. freestyle. Dave Whorf, George Getz, who knocked Grohe off in the zoo-yd. freestyle, Phil Gough, Don Rhoades, Bill O'Brien and Phil New- man all turned in their best performances of the season. The Blue and Gold of Peddie shocked the Lawrentians hy throwing their meet into a deadlock at the end of the medley Two Hundred Twenty-eight odrzkfa 51 relay. A letdown after its inspired perform- ance against Hill was understandable. But an enraged freestyle relay squad of Hal Belf, George Krogness, Hank Hulshizer and Nixon left the Peddie entry in its wake as Nixon Finished lifteen yards ahead of the Blue and Gold anchor man, giving the Lawrentians a hard-earned 41-34 victory. Gideonse smashed another record as he turned in an amazing 1:37.4 for the i11- dividual medley. Knocking Mercerslvurg, the defending champion, from contention in the qualify- ing heats, Lawrenceville mopped up the Easterns with 68M points. Hill edged Peddie for second with a score of 44W-41. Gideonse, O'Brien and Pray notched in- dividual wins, and Nixon, Krogness. New- man, Getz, Tommy Cowen, Hulshizer and Gough copped place points. Peddie, led by little Danny McNamee, finally whipped the Red and Black, 85-84 in the State Championships. Gideonse took two events, shattering two State records. SUMMARY Lawrenceville 38 Lehigh Frosh Lawrenceville 50 Rutgers Frosh Lawrenceville S4 Princeton Frosh Lawrenceville 32 Yale Frosh Lawrenceville S4 Girard College Lawrenceville 54 Haverford Lawrenceville SQ Blair Lawrenceville 47 Trenton H. S. Lawrenceville 57 Hill Lawrenceville 41 Peddie First in the E astern Interscholastics Second in the New Iersey State Champion ships Winning Freestyle and Medley Rel iys in Timer A.A.U. Meet VARSITY SXVIMMING Half. hoclcs, R ICT. ah Hul ru y. mc. P C0 iid nan. C CWI ow: Schonhcier, N dR I1 I KO ati. Se Scozz erz, ss, G horf Childre W O.. Cowen, Iacobscn. WZ Ro Front Mr. Schunheiter Loucks, Gcer, Kmgness, O'Bri6n, Gough, y N xnn, I' Hen HCI' Ra 5' 1' ar i H Back Row: Mr. Herrick, 1 v 0 1 w I 01141 odrzkfaz 51 VARSITY WIQESTLING SEASUNQ 1950-1951 NDER the excellent supervision of Coach Chet Wagner and the valuable assistance of Mr. Iordan Churchill and Coach Iimmy Reed of Princeton, the Red and Black wrestlers experienced a highly successful season. Out of a very tough schedule of seven official matches and one unofficial match. the grapplers won live and lost only three. After a disappointing start. the Lawrentians shone as they hit a rapid mid-season pace by garnering Hve straight victories-three of them by two slim points. Ably led by Captain Neil Wal- lace and such stalwart performers as Scotty Nicholls, Pete Dubow, Mark Schellenger, lim Coker, and Ed Lawson, the matmen ended their season with the finest record to date in the Eastern lnterscholastics by gaining a valuable third. ln their opening meet of the season, the Lawrentians were outclassed by a power- ful Princeton Freshmen aggregation. 24- 11. Although the grapplers won only three matches, every bout was well fought and there resulted few decisive victories. Mike Hopkins led the Lawrenceville scoring by obtaining a fall while new-com-er Mark Schcllenger showed promise of things to come with a unanimous decision and Fd Lawson outpointed his opponent. Against a very powerful Gilman School team, the Red and Black suffered their second consecutive defeat 27-8. Neverthe- less, every bout was well fought and rela- tively close. Mark Schellenger and lim Coker were victorious in obtaining deci- sions while Scotty Nicholls rounded out the Lawrentians' scoring with a tie. Bouncing back from their previous de- feats with plenty of light, the wrestlers initiated a streak of five consecutive wins by overpowering a lighting Blair team, 21-IQ. Instrumental in this close victory were Captain Wallace, Pete Dubow, and lim Coker who gained valuable falls while Doug Carpenter and Mark Schellenger won decisions, the latter by a stunning lo-o verdict. In their first home match, the matmen again emerged victorious as they came from behind to topple George, 20-18, in a very close and exciting meet. Ed LaWson's timely heavyweight victory with the chips down proved to be the deciding factor. Scotty Nicholls registered the only pin while Captain Wallace, Pete Dubow, Ron- nie Nivling, Coker, and Lawson all won decisions. Number three in their winning streak CAPTMN WALLACE Two Hundred Thirty-one 51 Offrz CoAc:H WAGNER was won by the Red and Black delegation at the expense of Peddie as they conquered the Blue and Gold, 18-16. Neil Wallace wrestled the best match of his career as he stopped Peddie's Captain Phil Lyons' undefeated streak at fourteen straight with a 4-2 victory. Other victorious Lawrentians were Iim Tattersheld, Dubow, Schellenger, Hepner, Stovall, and Carpenter via the decision route. In their second home meet, the Law- renceville matmen completely overwhelmed the Choate School wrestlers, 27-8. Losing only two bouts, the Lawrentians catapulted to their fourth straight victory on pins by Scotty Nicholls and Mark Schellenger while Captain Wallace, Tattcrsiield. Du- bow, Hepner, and Coker all outpointed their opponents and Ed Lawson gained a tie. The grapplers hit their peak of the sea- son as they swamped St. Andrews by the impressive score of 25-9 to win their fifth consecutive victory. Neil Wallace led the Two Hundred Thirty-two odrzkfa 51 Red and Black scoring as he gained the only fall of the meet while Iim Tattersheld, Scotty Nicholls, Pete Dubow, Mark Schel- lenger, Bob Stovall, and Ed Lawson were all victorious. In their last meet of the year, the greatly improved wrestlers put up a stiff fight against superior Hill opposition, but were forced to succumb, 26-6. Despite the indi- cation of the score towards an easy con- quest, the bouts were well contested. Hill's know-how was not enough to stop Mark Schellenger and lim Coker who won two great decisions 4-2 and 7-6 respectively. The team climaxed its season by journey- ing to Lehigh to participate in the Eastern interscholastic Championships where the rejuvenated wrestlers bounced back from their stinging defeat at the hands of Hill to gain a valuable third. Their commend- able performance in a large field of twenty- two eastern prep schools surpassed all expectations, and Ed Lawson was the hero of the day as he brought home a well- earned Prep School Crown in the 167 lb. division. lim Coker gained a very valu- able second while Captain Wallace and Mark Schellenger were barely edged in the semi-Finals but were not to be denied as they both earned a third place. SUMMARY Lawrenceville Princeton Fresh Lawrenceville Gilman Lawrenceville Blair Lawrenceville George School Lawrenceville Peddie Lawrenceville Choate Lawrenceville St. Andrews Lawrenceville Hill Third place in Eastern lnterscholastics. U 1 ' 1 l .4 f .., U :Qi -C Q Q J , :Z ,- T Z Q 'J 5 u C' u 'E .C 'J CII 1 :J 'JI 1 Q H Q-1 -I. N: Q Q., W L Q : L, ..- ., L f : I2 I 2 : 5 5-Q J. J. 51 Ulla odrzkfa 51 VARSITY HUCKEY SEASUNQ 1950-1951 HE 1950-51 hockey team skated to an impressive record of eight wins and seven losses. Under the able coaching of Princeton's Richard Vaughan assisted by Robert Wicks, and captained by Hal El- sasser, the squad bounced back after los- ing the first live to win eight out of the ten remaining games. The schedule included five college freshman squads. Lawr-enceville's biggest offensive threat lay in center Callen who scored twenty- eight goals during the season. He was backed up by mainstays Captain Elsasser, Dave Harrah and Dave Carver. Defensive power starred hard-checking Wally Pease, while Ieff Traenkle sparkled in the nets. The Third Annual Lawrenceville Invi- tational Tournament. held at Baker Rink, was won by Northwood, Lawrenceville finishing a disappointing last. Against a weak Exeter squad, fatigue hit the Red and Black in the third period, and Exeter won 3-2. Callen and Harrah scored the loser's two goals. A 3-2 score plagued Law- renceville in both the remaining games as the team lost a closely contested game to Andover, Harrah and Callen marking the tallies, and then dropped to last place as it lost to Berkshire. ' Entering the regular schedule, the puck- sters lost a close game 4-3 to the Colgate Frosh. Trailing 2-o after a slow start, the team rallied to a tie at the end of the third period. A quick goal in the sudden death overtime gave Colgate the win. The Princeton Freshmen set Lawrence- ville back for its Fifth straight loss. Goals by Callen and Harrah in the second period tied the score at 2-2 after Princeton had taken an early lead. However the Tiger Cubs settled down in the third period to take the game 5-2. Hockey Team Wins First of Season With 3-2 Triumph over Rutgersi' was the next week's Lawrence headline. After Cal- len's and O'Callaghan's scores had tied the game with two goals apiece, Harrah con- nected with a shot in the third period for the winning point. Choate went down easily before the Red and Black as the team netted six goals to the Blue and Gold's two. Callen scored three while O'Callag- han, Carver, and Williams tallied one each. Lawrenceville was on the move and made it four in a row by virtue of a 7-2 rout of Peddie. This time Callen and Pease made two apiece while Brown, Carver, and Gooderham accounted for the rest. The Zip ...',, . -f-. g.. rr y a t i CAPTAIN ELSASSER Two Hundred Thirty-five 51 Offrz COACH R. S. WICKS score was kept down by Peddie's playing a strictly defensive game. The Red and Black streak came to an end when they played the Hobey Baker Hockey Club from Princeton. The teams were evenly matched but the college boys' greater experience showed up in the final frame when, with the score tied at 2-all, they pushed across the winning goal. Playing perhaps their greatest game of the season, the Lawrenceville team turned the tables on a much-improved Rutgers when the teams clashed for a second time. Lawrenceville's Harrah, Brown and Wil- liams overcame a 3-I deficit to tie 3-3 at the end of the third period. Going into overtime play the stands went wild when Callen skated the length of the ice for the game-winning rally. The only high scoring defeat came at the hands of Hamden, the Connecticut cham- pions, when they poured eight goals across Two Hundred Thirty-.fix orfrzkfrz 51 to Lawrenceville's two. Captain Elsasser and Carver accounted for both goals. New Rochelle fell easily before the Red and Black 6-I with Carver placing two goals, Callen two, and Elsasser one. Cranford was next to go to defeat before the powerful Vaughanmen. Traenkle carried his only shutout as he paced the defensive work in the nets, while teammates Callen and Carver supplied the scoring power. The squad ended their fifteen game schedule when Trinity Pawling bowed before the Lawrentians 6-3. Callen played an out- standing game, making good four shots at the goal and getting an assist, while Elsasser and Gooderham notched the other two scores. Next yearis prospective first line of Co- Captains Carver and O'Callaghan an-d also Harrah may well prove the most potent scoring combination in many years. SUMMARY Lawrenceville Exeter Lawrenceville Andover Lawrenceville Berkshire Lawrenceville Colgate Lawrenceville Princeton Lawrenceville Rutgers Lawrenceville Choate Lawrenceville Hill Lawrenceville Peddie Lawrenceville Hobey Baker Lawrenceville Rutgers Lawrenceville Hamden Lawrenceville New Rochelle Lawrenceville Cranford Lawrenceville Trinity Pawling 3. Q . K v sf Q 4, K 7 55? Fff' Ft 5 .if . Yrik W.. Xfxff' ,1 im we 5 -2 X J 1 Q, Q W , I V if 'W 5' 51 Offa odrzkkz 51 lfront Row: Thompson, Iacobs, Lowe. Ludington, Hell, L., lit-nisch. Huck Razr: O'Gramly, Skewes, Conkey, Schocket, O'Callaghan, T., Wzmdall. . JUNIUID VAIQSITY BASKETBALL SEASDN, 1950-1951 URING the recent winter session the Iunior Varsity basketball team ended their season with the record of eight wins and seven losses. Under the able coaching of Mr. Fred Berg, the team reached a peak in its win over the strong Carteret quintet by the score of 55-32. The first two games were lost by the Red and Black to Hamilton High School and Trenton High School, by scores of 46-34 and 48-34, respectively. The team came back to win the next six out of seven by beating Haverford, Newark Academy, Carteret, Rutgers Prep, Borden- town Military Institute, and finally the George School. The only defeat came at the Two Hun drcd Th irty-eight hands of Pennington School. Peddie seemed invincible as they won over the Red and Black team by the score of 60-27 and a week later the home court didn't help the Lawrentians as they ehalked up another victory 43-41. Meanwhile, the team beat Girard Col- lege and Princeton High by decisive scores, but lost the hnal game olf the year to the Hill School 38-36. The season was high- lighted by Mike Conrow's 36 points in the B.M.l. game, and by the fine all-round play of Colin Thompson and Iohn Benisch. Since the entire team consisted of Third Formers, the prospects for an excellent team in two years are very bright. 51 Uflrz odrzkfrz 51 Front Raw: Hecht, M., llutman, Smutny. Harvey, Heimlich. Semin! Row: Thomas, R., Love, D., Lindsay, Hammond, Met-nan, Ingham. Bizffq Row: Canaday, Anderson, I., Cowlbeck, Hinrichs, Gartner, Elvidgc, Heilman, Mr, Herrick. JIJNIUIQ VARSITY SWIMMING SEASDN, 1950-1951 HE swimmers opened the season with an impressive 48-27 victory over George School. Rudy Smutny, Doug Love, Dick Plaut, Don Heimlich, George White and Art Decordova all notched individual wins. Next the Iayvees downed the Trenton High Iunior Varsity by the same score. 48-27. The Lawrentians built up a large lead and coasted home with an easy vic- tory. The Iayvees journeyed to Trenton for a return engagement and whipped their neighbors once again 44-31, even while dropping both relays. The team next swamped the Hill School Iayvees 56419, in the Lawrenceville pool. The Red and Black swept every event with the exception of the medley relay. Lawrenceville convincingly crushed Ped- die in their new pool four days later. Smutny, Geer, Bond, Hammond, Elvidge and Decordova all won their events and Hinrichs, Lindsay, Heimlich and Smutny ran away with the freestyle relay. The Montclair Y.M.C.A. meet was the last and the best of the season. See-sawing all the way, the meet was finally decided in the medley relay by Cowen, Harris and Smutny of Lawrenceville, who gave the Red and Black a 39-36 victory. Two Hundred Thirty-nine I Uffa ozfrzkfzz 51 Ifmzzl lt'uu': Kiuihall. llaxs, Hotline, llepner. Iiennett, l.asi'5. Sr'un1flllr111': Ziniiutrnian. Ci. Winsl- sor. Wight. P.. Ntwholtl, Mr. Wagner. JUNIDIQ VARSITY WIQESTLING SEASUN, 1950-1951 Hli l.a xx' re n c e x' i l l e Iunior Varsity Wrestling team entletl its season with a respectahle three :intl two record. ln the lirst meet the Lawrentians tri- umphed over Hlair hy a slim 1.1,-I3 mar- gin. Lantleleltl pinnecl his man while Marla. Gihhs antl Hays won their matches hy tlecisions. The next meet saw the Real antl lllacli overcome their olcl rival, Petltlie 25-5. lioth Nichols antl llays pinnetl their respective opponents to lcacl the team to a well-earnetl victory. I,awrencex'ille then lost its first meet of the year to Choate I4-IQ, even though they took live ol' the nine events. Two I In ll fired lforfy In their next encounter the Iayvees were routed hy the Hill Iunior Varsity 45-3. The only competitor on the Lawreiiceville team to win a clecision was Bennett. Loacletl with Varsity wrestlers at the insistence ol' the Hun School, the Iunior Varsity proceetletl to slaughter the Hun hy a 23-gg count to entl a successful season. George Lasry, a regular Iayvee man, letl the teatn to victory hy pinning his oppo- nent. The School also wants to announce its appreciation to Coaches Wagner, Church- ill and Bull lor their hard work in develop- ing the team. 51 Ollaz odrzkfa 51 lfrunr Row: Van Vranken. R.. Steinhrunn. Sf'L'UIIz!' Rauf: Ferro. Axelrod. Monroe, S.. Nagle, L., lltddings. Hawk Ifuw: Mr. Tliolupsun, Smith. R., Ciartm-r. I.. Cllllilllllll, C.. licrger. L. JUN IDD BASKETBALL, 1950 -1951 ED lmy Sam Monroe, the Iunior has- keteers, alter dropping their lirst six out of seven hall games, finally hit their stride and closed the season with a rush, capturing their last three encounters. ln the opening game, an inexperienced Iunior squad howed to the Hun School, 24-20. The Lower Schoolers rebounded to a smashing victory over the Kuser School, 46-26. The next live games meant only troulule for the Iuniors, as they lost con- secutive games to Princeton High School. S4-25, Trenton Iunior No. 3. 45-30, Ped- die School, 69-44 and again 55'-21, and finally to the Camden Boys Club. 35-25. Then, having gained the experience ah- solutely necessary to a winning team, the juniors began to roll. In a return match with Princeton High, a sharp-shooting Iunior squad, paced hy diminutive for- ward Don Headings, swamped the Blue and White 56-26. Two days later, Captain Monroe, scoring over half his team's points, led the Iuniors to a 38-28 victory over Ewingville. ln the Final encounter of the season, Lawrenceville evened the score with the Hun School hy licking them 35-27. Captain Monroe led the scoring with I04 points for nine games while Bob Axel- rod had 90 in ten encounters. Two Hundred Forty-one 51 Olfaz zfrzkfaz 51 1-'mul Knut l.:t Motttx Cgtrvcr, IU.. Iortltttt, Sylvvstrr. .S'1'1'n11zl Nnzwz 'I't'c':ttlw:tt'. A.. ll.tlstt':ttl. lion- mttt, llowtt, St-Itot-tilt-. Rtltt-t'. .Xlllt'I1llCt'i. 'I'f1.'r'1f lt'u1t': Mr. lkttll. 'I'ltottt.ts, ll.. Skiltsrv. R.. Ittltttstott. R,. Moore. XV., Skinm'r. KIlL'I1lllCI'. JIJNIUIQ WIQESTLINIE, 1950-1951 liSl'lTl'i the l:tct th:tt the Ittttior wres- tlcrs tlitl not h:tx'c :t sttcccsslttl sc:tson this yc:tr. tht- tc:titt worltctl hstrtl :tml ttt:ttty ol' tht- ltoys showctl :t grunt tlcatl ol' protttisc lor tht- lilllllff. ln the first tttcct ol' tht' scnsott, the Rt-tl :tml Black sttilcrctl :t I4-Ill! tlel'c:tt :tt thc hztmls ol Ucorgc School. l'i:tch tc:tttt wott liour lttntcltcs, ltttt George collcctctl two l:tlls to I.:twrcm'ct'illc's om-. Atttcttttcci, Scltocttlt' :tml 'l're:ttlw:ty tlccisiottctl thcir tttctt, whiltt licltttctt gttim-tl the l':tll. VVttsltittgtott lttttior High School, thu IICXI oppom-nt, tlowltctl tht- Rt-ti :tml lilnt-k lty :t g4-to score. 'lstttcrslicltl wrcstlctl to :t tlrttw in his ttttttch in thc too-pottml t'l:tss, Two Hu rzzfrwl FOI'f'V-IIl'0 :tml Sltiltttcr :tml Moore wott hy l':tlls in tht- ISS- :tml loo-pottml class. respectively. Tltt- tc-:tm lost its thirtl tttcct in :t rctttrtt match with VV:tshittgtott High by :t 21-I4 score. 'lltttcrslicltl :tlso wrcstlctl lor the Varsity :tml reccivctl :t Minor L. whilc :Xtttcttttcci :tml Iicnttctt wrestle-tl in thc lnyvcc mcct with Hill. licttttctt catptttrcti om' of the two victories in this m:ttt'h. Skittm-r :tml Moore littishetl the sC:tsott with ttmlclicntctl rcc- ortls. Much crctlit sltoultl hc givctt to Howie :tml Schoettle, the co-c:tpt:titts ol' the team, :tml atlso to Mr. Bull. who tlitl :tit t-xt-ellcnt iolm ol' cottcltittg. 51 Oflrz odfzkfa 51 Ifwnz Raw: Dillcnberg, Sincere, Roach. 54101111 Row: Rose, Gilbert, Chapman. Mischner, Brandt, Miller, L. Huck Row: Cannon. Schrade, Hecly, T.. Thuss, Havey, Steinmuller, Mr. Sehonheiter. JUNIOIQ SWIMMING, 1950 -1951 GAIN this year the Iunior Swimming squad of Lawrenceville swept through their season undefeated and never allowed their opponents more than 2I points. Em- bracing a schedule of four meets, the Iuniors piled up amazing scores of 53-21, SQ-16, 56-19 and 63-12. Steinmuller, Dillenberg, Havey and Gil- bert led the Iuniors to a 53-21 triumph over Trenton Iunior 4 on February Sth. Taking four firsts and both relays, the Lower Sehoolers were in command all the way. Thomas, Steinmuller, Gilbert, and Chap- man notched individual wins as Thomas and Steinmuller finished in a dead heat in the 25-yd. freestyle in the Lawrentians' 59-16 rout of Trenton Iunior High No. 3. The George School meet came very close to being the perfect meet with George able to take but one first place and no seconds. Thomas, Gilbert, Havey, Chap- man, Roach, Brandt, Sincere, Steinmuller, Schrade and Mischner all shared in this 63-12 slaughter. The final meet, a return contest with Trenton Iunior 4, was highlighted by Charlie Gilbert's blistering 33.9 in the lifty yd. breaststroke, a new Lower School rec- ord. Gilbert shattered the Iunior record for the 75 yd. individual medley with a Fine 52.1 as his mates racked up a 56-19 victory. Two Hundred Forty-threw 51 Olffz Todrzbkz 51 IQCII SDIQING SDUIQTS CADTAINS CAPTAIN KIQIIIII-1 CAPTAIN Mossuk CAPTAIN Tomzus CAPTAIN TAYLIJIK T HddFyf 51 Ollzz odrzkkz 51 1951 SDIQING SDDIQTS SCHEDULE Sat. Wed. Sat. Wed Sat. Wed Sat. Wed. Sat. Wed Sat. Wed Sat. Sat. Wed Sat. Wed Sat. Wed Sat. Wed. Sat. April April April April April May May May May May May May May April May May May May May May May May Baseball I4-Princeton Freshmen 18-Trenton High School 21-'Haverford School 25-Peddie School 28-'Episcopal Academy 2-Pending 5-Blair Academy -Hamilton High School I2-xThC Hill School 16-Princeton High School 19-The Hill School 231xThC Choate School 26- 'Peddie School Golf 28-Princeton Freshmen 2-'Peddie School 5-'Blair Academy 9--'Princeton Freshmen I2-'The Hill School 1 6-Pending I9-ThE Hill School 23-The Choate School 26-Peddie School Ten nfs Sat. April 28-'George School Wed May 2-'Peddie School Sat. May 5- 'Blair Academy Mon. May 7-Trenton High School Wed May 9-Princeton Freshmen Sat. May 12-'The Hill School Wed. May I6-Pending Sat. May 19-The Hill School Wed May 23-Pending Sat. May 26-'The Choate School Track Wed April 25- 'Peddie School Fri. April 27-'Penn Relays Sat. April 28-'Penn Relays Sat. May 5-'Blair Academy Sat. May 12-St. Benedicfs Prep. School Sat. May 19-The Hill School Sat. May 29-'N.I. Private Schools Meet ' Denotes away game or meet. Two Hundred Forty-five 51 0110 odrzda 51 VAIQSITY BASEBALL SEASUNQ 1950 ' PAIR of victories over The Hill brightened an otherwise mediocre season for the Lawrenceville baseball team as it finished the year with a record of six wins against six losses. The season opened against a very strong Princeton Freshman nine. Excellent Tiger pitching and costly fielding mistakes by the Lawrentians combined to give the Orange and Black a decisive 7-1 victory. Charlie Anderson scored the Lawrenceville run in the fifth inning on a walk, sacri- fice, and ringing double by Pete Plamon- don. Art Schonheiter also collected a dou- ble. ln the first home game Haverford was trounced 4-o behind the fine pitching and batting of Pat Groper. The Red and Black collected all its runs in the second inning while a triple play in the ninth was the highlight of the gamels action. Groper duplicated his performance on the following Wednesday blanking Epis- copal Academy on only two hits while striking out eight. The fifth inning saw the Lawrentians collect three hits including a double by Pete Dart and a triple by Bob Kehoe, to score all four runs. On prom weekend the Hulitmen ven- tured to Blairstown and lost a heart-break- ing ball game 9-8. Blair took advantage of Red and Black errors to overcome a third inning 5-3 Lawrenceville lead. Captain Castle and Dennie Gillespie hit doubles while Kehoe smashed out a triple in the losing cause. May Ioth saw the Lawrentians lose an- other by only one run, 3-2, to Hamilton High School. Behind Kehoe's hitting Law- renceville got both runs in the bottom of the fourth to tie up the game. Before an Alumni Day crowd at Hill, the Red and Black pounded out an over- whelming 15-6 victory. Groper notched his third win, easily going the distance. The Lawrenceville hitters blasted four Hill pitchers for fifteen hits as Kehoe and An- derson collected three apiece. Three runs in the third inning and four in the fourth iced the game for the Red and Black. On May 17th. with Captain Castle hurl- ing fine ball, the Hulitmen edged Prince- ton High 2-1. Serralles collected two hits to pace the victors, while the winning run was scored by Pete Plamondon in the fifth inning. One week after their hrst defeat, Hill invaded Lawrenceville to play before an- other Alumni crowd and was downed once more, 4-3. Groper again went all the way, pitching superb ball, except in the third inning when Hill collected all its runs on three hits. Anderson scored from second CAPTAIN CAs'rLE Two Hundrea' Forty-seven 51 Offa Comxu HI'LlT in the eighth inning on a sharply hit single by Bob Kehoe for the winning run. Seven Red and Black errors paved the way to a 6-o defeat at the hands of Peddie. Kehoe again hit well for the losers. Peddie tallied its only earned run in the third in- ning on a triple and single. Against an experienced and powerful Choate nine. the Lawrentians put up a stiff battle only to lose 6-4. ln the seventh inning, despite four singles, the team failed by just one run to tie up the ball game. Peddie defeated Lawrenceville for the second time, o-1, as Melville of the Blue and Cold smashed out four hits. including a home run and triple. Serralles and Ted TIl'0 IIIl!7!I7I'!'I1 Forty-aight adrzkfaz 51 Baldwin of the Red and Hlack collected seven hits between them. Groper gained his fifth win of the sea- son as he blanked George School 1-o. Kehoe tallied the lone run in the Fifth in- ning when he reached first on an error, advanced to second and third on infield outs, and was driven home by Groper's single. Pitching honors for the season went to Pat Groper with his line live and one record. Kehoe, Serralles. and Anderson took batting laurels with 364, .,g5o, .goo averages, respectively. Coach Hulit deserves a great deal of credit for his tremendous efforts to im- prove the team. The line leadership of Captain Castle also stood out during the SCHSOU. SUMMARY Lawrenceville I Princeton Fresh Lawrenceville 4 Haverford H.S Lawrenceville 4 Fpiscopal Acad Lawrenceville 8 Blair Academy Lawrenceville 2 Hamilton H.S. Lawrenceville IS Hill School Lawrenceville 2 Princeton H.S. Lawrenceville 4 Hill School Lawrenceville o Peddie School Lawrenceville 4 Choate School Lawrenceville I Peddie School Lawrenceville I George School u 'Q X, , N gf x u , 4 ?41V. ':' : , LL Q, ,I AL,.. 711122-Mg Elf, ff k ,. r . gf' fbi. Y iz., K MM 5' 'ff Ai mf My 52 ,. ,. 735 4 .. .. .Ev , fi? ff L i22aa +f ix f K -: ---. .i , i' Q , , :X k.k. .J :V if - 4g,f.,11f:jsm - ' :,, X ?TQ5.Q 1 1 ---, ' : 'wlPi.?' f,:-. E K ' V ' Vggh , .-.,, K 1 -ws: fy: QE' K ,- ' ': : f,,' , . kf' 5 f 5 S4 w i W ff' Q gif 2 Q .aff 9:21 'wt .ff- ' Qian 51 01141 odrzkkz 51 VADSITY TIQACIK SEASON, 1950 FTER an unbeaten winter season, Lawrenceville's strong 1950 track squad continued with a series of smashing successes in the spring campaign. The team's record was blemished by only one defeat which was a close meet with The Hill. There was a great deal of depth, which was too much for the opponents, and accounted for the large Scores which our cindermen compiled. Peddie was the first on the list of sweep- ing victories, losing 79-38. The 440 yard run was a clean sweep for the Red and Black as Temple Brown finished first with Maurer and Candy taking the 2nd and 3rd spots. The 220 yard low hurdles saw Homer Smith cross the finish line first with younger brother Roy placing second. Pete Mott was the only double winner with a ISI in the high hurdles and a tie with Paul Wittreich in the high jump. Stew Morrison and Doug Seymour came in side by side for first in the half mile. The following weekend were the Penn Relays which saw our team, handicapped by several injuries, still finish near the top. In the 440 yard relay Doebele, Smith, H., I-Iullfish and Brown placed 3rd behind Hill and Mercersburg. In the class mile relay, Wittreich, Smith, I., Maurer and Seymour finished 2nd just behind the Blair team. In the championship mile relay, though finishing fourth, our team of Brown, Maurer, Seymour and Morrison broke the School record again with a good time of 3:31.3. Before a Prom day crowd the spiked- shoe men, probably aided by that extra bit of inspiration, easily swamped Blair, 70V events. In the mile it was Hamill, Smith and Wight. The sweep in the 220 yard dash was a very fast one with Brown breaking the tape in 22.2, as he ran the race for the first time in three years at Lawrenceville. He was followed closely by Hullfish and Doebele, both under 22.5. In the broad jump Homer Smith won, with Horton and Roy Smith taking 2nd and 3rd, respectively. Also a 2nd and 3rd in the high hurdles, 100 yard dash and half mile added to the large score. In the St. Benedict's meet, Roy Smith was the high scorer, compiling I4 points in four events. Temple Brown, pushed very hard by Fuchs of St. Benedict'S, ran a 51.6-440 yard run. Charlie Hullfish cov- ered loo yards in 10.2, and Homer Smith did the low hurdles in a very fast 24.9 for his best time ever. With three clean sweeps in the 200 yard dash, high jump and broad jump, it was the same story as Lawrence- ville finished 'way ahead by 78-39. 46Z. The boys placed I, 2 and 3 in three Co-cAP'rA1Ns BROWN AND CANDY Two H undrcd Fifty-one I 51 Ulla Todrzkkz 51 CoAcH GOELLE1: A week later the Lawrentians made an unsuccessful bid to be the first team from our School to beat Hill two years in a row. A very slow track was discouraging to both teams, but the opponents came through with a few unexpected victories to take the Red and Black, 622-54Z. Despite disappointments in the low hur- dles and the sprints, several very fine per- formances were turned in. Iim Hamill ran his fastest time ever with a 4:39.9 mile, and Mac Smith came in second a short distance behind him. Captain Brown really made Hill's fabulous Meader work for his victory. He pushed him all the way, and if it hadn't been for the track, he probably would have broken the School record. Hugh Roberts registered his best jump of the year by taking first in the pole vault, clearing the bar at 1o'6 . Pete Mott was the only double winner for Lawrenceville. He ran the high hurdles in a fast time of 16.4, and also tied Yonge in the high jump at 5' S . Two Hundred Fifty-two The team ended a very successful sea- son by scoring a brilliant victory in the State Meet, and taking permanent posses- sion of the Dunne- W. Kirby trophy. The squad, taking top laurels for the fourth straight year, amassed 67M points to easily beat the nearest rival, St. Benedict's, by 22 points. The Lawr-entians completely controlled the field and showed their depth by placing at least one man among the first three in every event except the javelin and the pole vault. Homer Smith, the outstanding performer for Lawrenceville, set a record in the broad jump of 2I feet 924 inches. He also added a first in the low hurdles to his achievements. Other stars for our team were Roy Smith, who broke the tape in the 220 yard dash, and Pete Mott, who took 2nd in the high hurdles and the high jump. Brown took his usual first in the 440 yard run and the other co- captain, Walt Candy, finished a close sec- ond in the low hurdles. Mac Smith ran his fastest race of the year. He finished 2nd in the mile with Hamill just behind him. The track team will lose some good weight men in Iim Todd, who could al- ways be counted on for a first in the dis- cus, and Pete Smails, who took a first or second in the shot-put at every meet. Also Brown, Candy, Homer Smith, Mott, Hull- fish, Morrison and Seymour will be grad- uating, greatly depleting the running strength. However, there are enough re- turning lettermen to make the prospects for the IQSI track season very bright. Credit for the team's fine season goes to the coaches, Messrs. Wallace, Goeller, lack- son, and Hitchcock. Also, much praise is due co-captains Brown and Candy for their inspiring leadership. VARSITY TRACK I Horton, Maurer, N., Docbele, 1ith, Sn osmer, h, Todd. Second Row M VVittreic y Mon, T., Cami Morrison, Hullfhh, Brown, ils Front Row: Sma r. VVallacc. M nccker C Seymour, Sch I., S7 Wood Blair kcr, W., Co Stephcns, s r. Goellcr M LL' 1. Bzvlq R0 1il 3Il Roberts, H mith, A. S 51 01141 odrzkfzz 51 VAIQSITY GOLF SEASON, 1950 - HE golf team this year had only a fair season winning three and losing six. The team's top performer was Pete Arend, a returning letterman of 1948, who won 4, lost 3 and tied 1. Closely following was George Wislar, this year's Captain, in the second place slot. The third and fourth slots were held by Otis Winters and Ioe Gratton in that order with Ed Lawson and Iulio Torres, Fifth and sixth. Dick Love was a close contender. This year's coaches, Iohn Stout, Sidney Shea, and Frank Hey- niger, did an excellent job with the team. The initial battle was lost by falling to the strokes of the Princeton Freshmen 5-2, with Arend and Gratton the Red and Black's only victors. However, four days later the home team trounced the Haver- ford School 9-0. Arend won three up and two to go, Wislar seven up and six to go, Winters eight up and seven to go. Grat- ton, Lawson and Torres all won their matches with the greatest of ease. The following week the team suffered its second setback, losing to Peddie 5-4 in a hard-fought battle. Arendls tie and Grat- ton's and Winters' victories accounted for the Red and Black's points. The team scored another smashing triumph by steamrolling Blair 9-o. Wislar, Arend, Grat- ton, Winters, Lawson and Love all turned in victories. We were stopped short in our next match, losing again to the Princeton Fresh- men 5-2. Wislar and 'Love scored our only points. We were trounced again in the next match, losing to the Hill School 9-0. The following week our team bounced back from its stinging defeats and flat- tened Hill 7-2. However, the score gives no indication of the actual battle that took place. Arend won three up and two to go and likewise for Captain Wislar. Gratton, Lawson and Torres all turned in hard- fought victories. Four days later the team travelled to Choate on an overnight trip, only to lose 62-2M. Wislar and Torres were the only winners, with Wislar easily beating his opponent eight up and seven to go. Otis Winters tied to account for the rest of the points. The following Saturday, the team suffered its final setback at the hands of Peddie again, 5-4. Winters tied again and Love and Iulio Torres, a much improved golfer and next year's Captain-elect, turned in victories. The greatest triumph of last year's club came after graduation. On Iune 13, Pete Arend, George Wislar, Otis Winters, and Ioe Gratton carred the Red and Black into the Eastern Interscholastics held at CAPTAIN WISLAR Two Hundred Fifty-five 51 Olly Greenwich, Connecticut. A crack Hotch- kiss aggregation was highly favored to take the crown, with the Lawrentians being rated at best a threatening darkhorse. Law- renceville has had a decided hold on this tournament ever since it originated. Out of the three cups that have been fought over, Lawrenceville has retired two. This was the second year the third cup had been in play. Up to this point, excepting the second Hill match, the team had never realized its own potentialities. When one member was on the others were not. But in Greenwich the club was far and away the best in the Held. From the very start the Lawrentians played their best matches. Travelling in different parties, they built a whopping twelve stroke lead at the halfway mark. In Tuesday's 18 hole round, Wislar fired a brilliant 76 to shade Arend's 77 for team honors. Winters turned in an 82 and Grat- ton a 78. Wednesday, under the pressure a front runner always is, the team played beautifully. Arend shot a blistering 74 for the course while Wislar and Winters each carded 78's. Gratton turned in an 82. This increased the lead of the Lawrentians from Two Hundred Fifty-six odrzkfzz 51 twelve strokes to twenty-two and gave them the tournament. This triumph vindicated the coaches confidence in the club throughout the sea- son. With the quite lack-lustre record of three wins and six defeats during the spring, it might seem that this performance was a Hash in the pan. Mr. Shea strongly disagrees. They were not luckyf' he said, they were always that good. They just couldn't seem to click except in that second match with Hillf' Otis Winters Finished the season with the best record of the club, a 4-2-2 slate. Ioe Gratton ended with a 5-3 record' while the reserves, Torres, Lawson, and Love, turned in very creditable performances. SUMMARY Lawrenceville 2 Princeton Fresh. 5 Lawrenceville 9 Haverford o Lawrenceville 4 Peddi-e 5 Lawrenceville 9 Blair 0 Lawrenceville 2 Princeton Fresh. 5 Lawrenceville 0 Hill 9 Lawrenceville 7 Hill 2 Lawrenceville 22 Choate 62 Lawrenceville 4 Peddie 5 N if 4 512125 JF MAK vt Qgfffif 4 A T' ,Sr 6 if Vg, 4' A4 ' 4 l4 ff' 3 'fi X -,,,,.,...........4..---------' 'six W. '--H'-,,,,,,,,,,.,4....Q-Q-4 WN: Y 'fffibkivhnn 51 Olly odrzkfa 51 VAIQSITY TENNIS SEASIDNQ 1950 ED by Captain Ioe Duys and top- seeded Dick Robinson, the IQSO ten- nis team finished a fairly successful sea- son with a record of six wins and five losses. The First six positions were held by Dick Robinson, Ioe Duys, Dick Taylor, Pete Pressinger, Harold and Tony O'Callag- han, in that order. These six were closely followed by Dave Summers, Chit Curtis and Bart Biggs. In the first match of the season the Wrightmen were defeated by a strong Princeton Freshman team. The Tigers won all but one doubles match in which Robinson and Duys displayed winning form. In the next meet Lawrenceville annexed its first victory by swamping Trenton Catholic 8-1. Going for their second victory, the team handed George School an overwhelming 8-I loss. Dick Robinson sparked the team exhibiting his usual fine brand of tennis. The netmen made it three straight as they beat Peddie 6-3. Coach Wright gave the first stringers a rest, using his subs in the doubles. The team's next opponent was Landon from Washington, with the final result a 62 to 2M victory for Landon. The win- ners for Lawrenceville were Dick Taylor and Dave Summers, while the third dou- bles team split a point with Landon on account of darkness. The next two matches against Blair and Trenton resulted in easy victories for the Red and Black by scores of 8-1 and 7-o, respectively. The team next engaged a return match with Ped-die winning 7-2. Captain Duys and Robinson again put on masterful ex- hibitions. Lawrenceville then travelled to Potts- town, Pennsylvania, to meet the Hill team. The Hill, probably the strongest tennis team in the country, won easily Q-0. Worthy of mention, however, was Dick Robinson's inspired play as he forced Ath- erton, a nationally ranked player, to three sets but finally succumbed 4-6, 6-0, 6-3. Dick and the O'Callaghan brothers in the doubles were the only ones to take a set from this powerhouse. A week later Hill returned the visit before an Alumni Day crowd and again emerged with a 9-0 victory. Choate, the last opponent, proved by a 6-3 score to be too much for the team. The three winners for the Red and Black were Captain Duys, finishing the season in CAPTAIN DUYs Two Hundred Fifty-nine 51 Offaz CIOACH WIKICHT great form Pressinger, and the O'Callag- hans in the doubles. Mr Wright, confronted by the usual weather hazards, deserves a great deal of credit for the way in which he molded to- Two Hundred Sixty O odrzda 51 gether his line team in so short a time Thanks should also be given to Effie Kom- missaroff, who managed the team. Look- ing toward next year prospects are bright indeed, with the entire squad except Rob- inson and Duys returning, and other prom- ising material in the olling. SUMMARY Lawrenceville 1 Princeton Fresh. 8 Lawrenceville 8 Trenton Catholic 1 Lawrenceville 8 George School Lawrenceville 6 Peddie Lawrenceville 22 Lan-don V Lawrenceville 8 Blair Lawrenceville 7 Trenton Lawrenceville 7 Peddie Lawrenceville 0 Hill Lawrenceville o Hill Lawrenceville 3 Choate VARSITY TENNIS A., Kom nissaroff. ngcr, O'Callagh:1n, SS R., Pre , Robinson, Duys aylor, R., H., T Mr. Wright, O'CalIaghan, 51 Offaz odrzda 51 Ifrwzl Row: West, Barlow, Clarke, A., Congclon. McCarthy. Seving. Langhorne. li. Buck Row: Bardwcll, Harrah, McCulloch, Mr. Thompson, Stemhel, O'Gracly, Carver, R. JUNIDIQ VAIQSITY BASEBALL SEASDN, 1950 HE Iunior Varsity Baseball team, very ably coached by Mr. Thompson, had a rather poor season. Mr. Thompson did extremely well with the material he had to work with. A few boys came up from the Iunior team of the year before, but other than that, the team lacked players of any experience. To begin the season, the team lost to Peddie 3-2. The Red and Black got off to a good start, scoring both wins in the first inning. They outhit Peddie 6-3, with Al Congdon and Bob West both hitting dou- bles for the losing cause. The following week a superior Hamil- ton team overpowered the Lawrenceville Two H undrcd Sixty-two nine, 4-1. Bob West scored the single tally from third on Al Clarl4's single in the First inning. The first win of the season came next against Pennington. Lawrenceville rolled over 'them I I-0 behind Mike Shillaber's excellent, four-hit pitching. Al Congdon's triple highlighted the game's action. A 6-6 tie was some improvement as the Red and Black nine played Trenton High. Both teams hit well. Richie Hepner hit the First home run of the year for Lawrence- ville in the Hfth inning. Dave Harrah also had a big day as he went two for two. Lawrenceville ended the season with a win over Peddie, 5-I. 51 Offzz odrzda 51 Front Row: Van Vrankcn, R., Otis, Steinbrunn, Dull, Casalcluc, Ferro, Cooper, Armstrong, Ackerman. Back Row: Barclay, Henriksen, Thomson, C., Orrell, Mr. Hlavacek, Taylor, D., Ringkamp. Hepner, P., I-Iyatt, Knight. J UNIUIQ BASEBALL, I 950 HIS year's Iunior Baseball team, well- coached by Mr. I-Ilavacek, finished the season with a fairly good record of four wins and three losses. The team was slow in starting but after its first two games, had little trouble with their opponents. The Lawrentians were able to score only one run in the first game, losing 8-I to a superior Iunior :liz nine. The second game was lost to the I rince- 3 ton High Freshman team by an 8-3 score. Bad breaks and poor fielding accounted for the defeat. The Iuniors edged Kuser School 6-4 in its next contest. Following this victory, they overwhelmed Hun School I4-5. Tony Otis pitched a no hitter until its fourth in- ning when the Hun garnered all its runs. In its next game the Iuniors suffered their third defeat at the hands of the Princeton High Frosh, yielding by a 7-3 score. Against an improved Hun team, the Iuniors eked out a hard-fought victory of 3-2 in ten innings. Hunis weakness in Held- ing bunts proved its downfall. In the last game, against Peddie, 3-hit pitching by Ringkamp and poor fielding by Pedclie accounted for a 7-o victory for the Red and Black. Two Hundred Sixty-three ,, , Y I X il Er S 1 iff 1-'P QW f jig f f ' W CIRCLE hw HCUSE ATHLETICS i l 5 J 51 Ulla odrzkhz 51 THE EORESMAN TROPHY FOR ALL AROUND ATHLETIC EXCELLENCE AWARDED EACH YEAR TO THAT CIRCLE HOUSE WHICH HAS EARNED THE HIGHEST NUMBER OF POINTS IN CIRCLE INTER-HOUSE ATHLETIC COMPETITION AWARDED FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 1949-1950 TO THE HAMILL HOUSE Two Hundred Sixty-seven 51 Olfa odrzkkz 51 CIRCLE FOOTBALL QCLEVIU Frou! Runf: Tuttle, Ilgnmmuml, Ilurmlm, Mclfurralll, Io, I-'m1t:11mla. Smwfnl' Ifrur: I'nrkus. Uiirnnly X Fuullt, Sulunmu, Burl, Twuhy. Ifurk Row: Mr. l54lr11l1rmL15u. Snyder, C.. Nixnn. Cmnprcs. IILIVIVCI' R., Ncwlwrrry. liurlon, Dr. Hitchcock. CIRCI.li FOO'l'liAI.L KGRISWOLDJ 1 l'Ullf Raw: Punta, KllSll'lll1. I., McCarthy, Ilmmhuc. Kusnrup. W.. Tlwmpkim. S1-4-01111 Ryu' IAIZAITLIS, I., Cooper. Muurcr, N., Truscutt, IAICHIIILIH. W'ouLl, 'l'. Burk Rauf: C2lI'llL'giK', Schuyler Mcrccr, Ucnisch, Peck, Kerr. Mnurcr, I., lishcnxhaulc, IJ. Two Hundred S1'xty-eight 51 01141 odrzkfa 51 CIRCLE FUOTBALL QWOODHULLQ Fran! Row: Bergan, Cowlbeck. Benjamin, Langhorne, E., Stockton. Second Row: Newbold. Otter, Robinson, W., Gibbs, Burke, Lawrence. Huck Row: Stovall, Mitchell, Anderson, D., Recd, Hcppenstall, McCurrach, Ia. CIIQCLE HCUSE FUDTIBALLQ 1950 ARKING the end of a highly com- petitive season, Cleve, Griswold and Woodhull emerged the winners in a three- way tie for first place in Circle House football. Cleve was coached by Dr. Hitch- cock and captained by Dave Harrah. Gris- wold was coached by Dave Esbenshade and Bob Lazarus and captained by Ierry Donahue and lim McCarthy. Woodhull had as their coach Bob Warth and Bob Stovall and were led by Captain Tony Benjamin. Each of the top three won six and lost one, being whipped by one an- other. Cleve trounced Dickinson 26-o in the Hrst round while Griswold walked over Hamill 46-0. Woodhull fought to an 8-6 victory over Kennedy, and Raymond beat Dawes 7-6 in a close game. Again, in the second round, the top three defeated their opponents: Cleve whipping Raymond 33-0, Griswold scoring five times against Kennedy and Woodhull trampling Hamill 32-7. Dickinson lost to Dawes, 19-o. In the third round Griswold dropped from the top, losing to Woodhull 13-6. Langhorne and a Cowlbeck-to-Heppen- stall pass supplied the scoring punch for the victors. Cleve again won, routing Dawes 28-7, and Kennedy topped Hamill 25-6. Dickinson lost to Raymond I5-6, after beating Dawes the week before. Cleve and Woodhull remained uncle- Tfuo Hundred Sixty-nine 51 01151 feared in the fourth round, beating Hamill and Raymond, respectively, by scores of 33-0 and 19-0. Griswold's 48-0 comeback over Dickinson kept them in the running, while Kennedy and Dawes fought to a 0-0 deadlock. Griswold upset Cleve 13-7 the follow- ing week, in perhaps its most important game. Maurer and McCarthy supplied the needed running power for Griswold. Woodhull alone remained undefeated and retained first place by a 15-7 victory over Dawes. The last place Hamill and Dick- inson teams battled it out, Hamill win- ning 19-6. Kennedy came out on the long end of a 7-6 score, beating Raymond in a hard-fought game. The sixth round was climaxed by Cleve's 12-7 upset over Woodhull, Harper, O'- Grady and Harrah supplying the winning combination. Meanwhile, Griswold de- feated Dawes 7-0, throwing the league into a triple tie. Raymond beat Hamill 12-0 and Dickinson remained in last place, losing to Kennedy, 19-6. The three top teams emerged from the last round deadlocked for first place as a Two Hundred Seventy odrzkzkz 51 result of each winning its game. Cleve battled to a I3-0 triumph over a power- ful Kennedy team, and Griswold routed Raymond 27-O. Woodhull rolled over Dick- inson in a 38-o massacre. Dawes ended the season by whipping Hamill, 28-6. The teams exhibited a f-ine, sportsman- like spirit throughout the season, and the top three, Cleve, Griswold and Woodhull, should be congratulated for their fine records. ALL-CIRCLE TEAM Ends- Benjamin, Woodhull Donohue, Griswold Tackles- Hammond, Cleve Monroe, S., Kennedy Guards- Penta, Griswold Fontanals, Cleve Center- Cowen, Woodhull Backs- Speed, Raymond Harrah, Cleve Kustrup W., Griswold O'Grady, Cleve Sub-Lineman-Tompkins, Griswold Sub-Back- Langhorne, E., Woodhull I 51 Ulla drzkfzz 51 l l'l'!ll1I' Row: Kustrup. W., Hunter. Donohue, Thoinpkins. St-ving. Cheston. SITOIIIX Row: Kuhner. Maurer, I.. Kustrup, I., Ilannnan, Mt-rct-r, 'I'rnstw1it. Lliriicgii-. Congt-1, P. Iiinlq Row: l'i'essler, Macllvaine, Wimtls, VV.. Mr. Perrv. Crm.. l'i ck. Rl.lllI'L'l'. X. CIDCLE HUUSE SDCCEIQ, 1950-1951 RISWOLD, with an almost perfect record of six wins and one loss, cap- tured the Circle House Soccer Champion- ship. Une point behind in a tie for second place with live wins, one loss. and a tie were Raymond and Woodhull. Dawes took fourth place while Cleve, Kennedy. Dick- inson and Hamill followed in that order. ln the opening round Griswold eked out a 2-1 victory over a strong Woodhull while Raymond took Cleve hy the score. Dickinson won over Hamill team same 3-1, and Dawes shut out Kennedy by the score of 2-0. Round two saw Raymond move into Hrst place with a hard 2-o victory over Gris- wold. Woodhull took their hrst win of the season hy overwhelming Cleve 3-1, while Dawes topped Hamill 1-o, and Kennedy shut out a weak Dickinson team 2-o. Woodhull, Raymond, and Griswold found themselves in a three-way tie for first place after three rounds when Wood- hull knocked off Raymond in a close 1-o game. Griswold and Kennedy shut out Cleve and Hamill by respectable 2-o scores. and Dawes suhdued Dickinson 2-1. The fourth round saw the three teams still deadlocked for first place as Griswold turned in its second straight vvhite-wash- ing hy heating Dawes I-O. Raymond took Dickinson easily by a 2-o count, and Wood- Two Hundred Seventy-one 51 Offa Yjodrzkfrz 51 hull made it three straight by turning in a hard-fought 2-I victory over Kennedy. Cleve won its first by topping Hamill 2-0. In the fifth round, Raymond and Gris- wold turned in 3-0, and 2-o shutouts over Dickinson and Kennedy, respectively, to remain on top as Woodhull fell to second by tying a very aggressive Dawes team 2-2. Cleve made it two straight by hand- ing Hamill its fifth loss in a row, I-0. Dawes held Raymond to a 0-0 score by virtue of a hard-fought, well-played game as Griswold moved into sole possession of Hrst place by slaughtering Hamill 5-0. Woodhull moved into a second place tie with Raymond by completely overpower- ing a hapless Dickinson team in the mud and rain by a 6-I score. Cleve and Ken- nedy battled to a scoreless tie in a fine defensive game. In the final round, Griswold clinched the Circle House Championship by beating Two H undrcd Seventy-two Dickinson I-0. Raymond and Woodhull tied for second by winning over Kennedy and Hamill by 3-2, and 5-0 scores. Cleve wound up in a tie for Fifth with Kennedy by losing to a good Dawes team I-0, while Dickinson and Hamill finished out the season in the seventh and eighth spots, re- spectively. ALL-HOUSE SELECTIONS Wings-Maurer, I. fGriswoldj, Travieso QDawesj Insides-Caselduc fWo0dhullj, Barlow fRaym0ndj, Berwind fKennedyJ Halfbacks-Clark, A. fWoodhullj, Mon- tague, I. fRaymondj, Wallace, W. fDawesj Fullbacks-Donahue QGriswo1dj, Li, S. fKennedyQ Goalie-McCarthy CGriswoldj Sub-Lineman-Tompkins CGrisw0ldj Sub-Back-Speed QRaymondQ 51 Ulla oafrzklrz 51 FFUIZI Rauf: Dann. Stoctzer. Dubrnff. Speed, Hades. Hawk Ruzvz Coates. Iamicson. Weltncr, Laws, Barlow, lf., Carey. C. CIIQCLE HDUSE BASKETBALL, 1951 LASHING a defense such as has sel- dom been seen in Circle Basketball. and an offense built around center Mike Dubroff, this year Raymond became the first House to go undefeated in Circlc competition. Griswold, featuring a driving finish, ended up by tying the Maroon and Gold of Dawes for second, each sporting 5-2 records. There was another tie for third, Kennedy taking a thrilling Hnal game While a fast-fading Woodhull squad dropped a one-pointer to Griswold. Each club had a 4-3 slate. Cleve, able to whip only Hamill and Dickinson, was sixth and Dickinson could gain but one victory, that over Hamill in the opening game. In the cellar was found the Blue and White of Hamill. In the opening round, Raymond sub- dued an unexpectedly slow Dawes out- fit ZQ-14. Dickinson took a thriller from Hamill in the last few seconds, 23-22. Woodhull whipped Kennedy 38-24, in what was touted to be a closer game than was the case, and Griswold had unexpected trouble in downing Cleve. The ranks of the undefeated were sliced in half in the second round as Griswold fell to Raymond 39-20 and Dickinson suc- cumbed easily to Kennedy 34-21. Wood- hull kept its slate clean with a 37-26 con- quest of Hamill, and Dawes thumped Cleve 35-20. Dawes pulled the first upset of the year as it whipped Griswold 24-18. Raymond smashed Cleve by a resounding 39-Io Two Hundred Seventy-three 51 Ofkz count, and Kennedy trampled Hamill 41- 14. Woodhull had a scare thrown into it by a resurgent Dickinson club before squeaking one out, 20-19. Raymond was left alone in the unde- feated class as Woodhull took it on the chin from Dawes, 24-15. Raymond took Kennedy's measure 34-20, and Griswold slaughtered Dickinson, 43-19. Cleve won its First game, defeating Hamill, 35-13. Raymond chewed an injury-riddled Woodhull squad to bits 45-18, while Ken- nedy knocked off the high-flying Dawes men 25-21. Griswold was surprised by Hamill but took command in the late stages to win, 34-25. Cleve .put together its only two wins of the season by defeat- ing Dickinson, 36-26. At this point Dawes, Griswold. Woodhull and Kennedy were Two I'IlfH1dl't'd Seventy-foul' 0a'rzZ1'f1 51 all tied for the runner-up spot, each ex- hibiting a 3-2 record. Griswold knocked Kennedy out of the battle by virtue of a 32-18 victory. Wood- hull had trouble taking Cleve, 27-20 and Dawes smeared the Blue and White of Hamill, 37-17. Raymond clinched the championship by squashing Dickinson, 45- 18. Griswold, closing the season with a rush, edged out the Brown and White of Wood- hull, 26-25. Kennedy vaulted itself into a tie for third place by closing a six point gap in the last ninety seconds to edge Cleve in a hair-raiser, 29-28. Dawes remained tied for second by virtue of a 30-18 victory over Dickinson. Raymond, hard pressed for a half, opened the breach in the third quarter to take an inconsequential game from Hamill, 31-19. 51 Ulfzz odrzkfa 51 l l Harper, Langhorne, I., O'Callaghan, H., Reynolds, Lindsay, Schlosscr, Newman. CIIQCLE HUUSE SWIMMING, 1950 AYMOND'S depth overcame star- studded arrays from Woodhull and Dawes to capture the Circle Swimming Trophy for IQ50. Taking the hnal event, the 200-yd. freestyle relay, the Maroon and Gray went into the lead for the hrst time in the meet. Behind Raymond's 34 points came Woodhull with 32 and Dawes with 30. Dickinson edged out Kennedy for fourth with 20 to the Blue and Gray's 10. Further back was Hamill, having IS points. and Cleve with I9 while Griswold brought up the rear with 4 points. SUMMARY 75 yd. Medley Relay: Dawes QBond, Plaut, Iacobsenjg Dickinson: Raymond. Time: 42-4 Iunior 25 yd. Freestyle: Cowen QWood- hulljg Lindsay Qllaymondjg Shillaber Cliennedyj. Time: 12.0 100 yd. Freestyle: Geer fHamillj: laeobsen fDawesjg Strong QWo0dhullj. Time: 60.3 Dive: de Cordova QWoodhullj: Newberry QClevej: Utter QHamillj. 50 yd. Freestyle: Ceer fl-Iainilljg Doebele Cfiriswoldjg Carey, I. QWoodhullj. Time: 27.2 50 yd. Backstroke: Cowen QWoodhulljg Bond QDawesjg Langhorne Qliaymondl. Time: 31.9 50 yd. Breaststroke: Harris fDiekinsonjg Plaur QDawesj: Harper QRayrn0ndj. Time: 32.3 200 yd. Freestyle Relay: Raymond CCarey, Harper, O'Callaghan, Lindsayjg Ken- nedy: Woodhull. Time: 1:53.4 Two Hundred Seventy-fue 51 Offzz ozfrzkfaz 51 I'ml1r ICun': KlllllllL'I'IY1,ll1, C., Iilectwood. Bond, Sinutney. Xfvllllilif. NV, Huck Role: l'llll'lil'LlllCl'. Plaul. llartong, lic-ll, L. CIIQCLE HDUSE SWIMMING, 1951 Hli Dawes team lmarely touched out Cleve's entry for second place in the final relay to capture the Circle House Swimming Championship, 37-55. Ray- mond took third with -go points. Rudy Smutny in the io-yd. freestyle and the 75-yd. medley relay team, accounted for the victor's two first places. Szmzmury 75-yd. Medley Relay: Dawes Qllond, Plaut, Harkraderl, Raymond, Kennedy-41.4 Iunior 25-yd. Freestyle: lngham Qflris- woldj, l.ox'e fllickinsonj, Ackerman fwllillllllllll--12.11 loo-yd. Freestyle: Heimlich fClevej, Botf tome fliennedyj, Love CDickinsonj- i:oo.o Two I llllIlf1'!'d S1'z'r'11fy'.f1'x Dive: Newlverry QClevej, de Cordova QWoodhullj, Maurer, I. QCriswoldj- Winners points: 77.8 go-yd. Freestyle: Smutny QDawesj. Hain- mond QClevel, Ingham QGriswoldj- 26.2 50-yd. Backstroke: May QRz1ymondl. Bond QDawesj, Gardner Qliennedyl-32.0 go-yd. Breaststroke: lilvidge QClevej, Plaut QDawesj, Cowllveck fVVoodhullj-53.2 zoo-yd. Freestyle Relay: Raymond lCarey, VVhite, O'Callaghan. Lindsayj, Dawes, c:lCVC-1251.4 Team Scores: Dawes 37. Cleve 3, Raymond go, Kennedy 19, VVoodhull 16, Gris- wold 14. Dickinson Il. Hamill 3. 51 Offzz odrzbkz 51 Front Row: Matthews, Dole, McCulloch, Thomas, F., Smith, R. Sccorul Row: Gaines, R., Breckinridgc, Brown, A., Semnns, Smith, L., Fredd. Rtzclq Row: Bodine, Fryling, Watson, Hand. CIIQCLE HOUSE BASEBALL, 1950 FINE Dickinson team won the House Baseball Trophy by completing a per- fect seven win-no loss season. Bob Mc- Culloch pitched excellent ball for them all season. Raymond took second place, while Woodhull dropped two out of their last three games to place third. Griswold was fourth, followed by Kennedy and Dawes, tied for Fifth. Cleve and Hamill finished seventh and eighth, respectively. In the first round, Dickinson beat Dawes I2-27 behind the fine pitching' of McCul- loch. Raymond ran over Kennedy 12-3, while Cleve outslugged Hamill, I8-12. Woodhull and Griswold played a tight game with Woodhull winning 5-4 behind pitcher Omana. Round two saw Griswold batter Cleve 12-3, while Woodhull did the same to Hamill, 14-3. Dickinson squeezed past Raymond 8-6, and Dawes downed Ken- nedy 4-3. Woodhull and Dickinson remained un- defeated at the end of round three. Wood- hull had little difliculty beating Cleve rr-5, while Dickinson had a harder time but managed to take Kennedy 4-3. Griswold overcame Hamill 6-1, and Raymond took Dawes 8-4. In round four, Omana and McCulloch again pitched their Houses to victories. Woodhull beat Dawes 8-6, and Dickinson, behind McCulloch, who struck out thir- teen, pummeled Griswold 9-2. Raymond Two Hundred Seventy-seven 51 Ulla hammered out twelve hits as they romped to a 12-2 win over Cleve, and Kennedy swamped Hamill II-2. In round five, the big one of the season, Dickinson routed Woodhull 14-2, as Mc- Culloch fanned fourteen. Also in this round, Chivers and Roberts of Kennedy teamed up and pitched the Hrst no-hit, nqrun game in Circle ball. Cleve was the victim by a I3-O count. Griswold beat Dawes 9-2, while Raymond took Hamill 12-2. In round six, Dickinson swamped Cleve 12-2, while Dawes rolled over Hamill by the same score. Raymond and Griswold tied at 6-all, because of the 5:45 curfew, and Woodhull beat Kennedy 6-3. In the last round Dickinson ended a per- Two H undrcd Seventy-eight odrzkkz 51 fect season, swamping Hamill 8-3. Ray- mond took over second by downing Wood- hull 4-I. Kennedy defeated Griswold 6-5, and Fox of Dawes shut out Cleve, 5-0. ALL-CIRCLE 1950 Pitcher: McCulloch QDickinsonj Catcher: Brown, A. fDickinsonQ First Base: Zimmermann fRaymondl Second Base: Smith, M. fDickinsonj Third Base: Cruse CKennedyl Short Stop: Smith, R. fDickinsonj Outfield: Carey, G. fRaymondj Outfield: Frank fDawesj Outfield: Stovall fWoodhullj Substitute Infielder: Shoemaker fWoodhullj Substitute Outfielderz Chivers fKennedyj 51 Ofla odrzkffz 51 Fran! Row: Otten, Utter, B., Smith. A., Utter, C., Thcodtnraeopulus, H., Brugh. Huflq Row: Mierlcy, Hurwith, Andrews, Brady, T., Cordon, Klan. 1 CIIQCLE HDUSE TDACK, 1950 Hamill 67: Griswold pw: Kennedy yn, Dickinson 30M Statistics of Meet 120 high hurdles: Blair CKen.j, Carrington CDick.j. Dole CDick.j-17.8 100 yard dash: Doebele QGris.j, Brady fHam.D, Updike Qfirisj-10.9 Iunior loo yard dash: Maurer QGris.j, Kustrup, W. QGris.j, Prichard fDick.j-II 13 440 yard run: Coker fHam.j, Barrett QDawesj, Harper fRay.j-59.1 880 yard run: Smith, fDick.j, Fargo QClevej, Andrews fHlll11.j-2212.7 220 low hurdles: Smith, R. CHam.H, Blair CKen.j, Kustrup fclI'iS.D-28.4 220 yard dash: Doebele QGris.j, Brady CHam.j, Updike fcil'lS.5-24.8 Mile run: Hamill QKen.j, Wight QClevej, Brugh fH2llI1.5-4250.0 Shot put: Trulsson CHam.j, Smith, R. CHam.j, Lydon CRAIYJ-40, UIQ Iavelin: Coker QHam.j, Woods, K. CGris.j, Tous CDick.j-135' 9' Discus: Trulsson QHam.j, Tous fDick.j, Moltzau fRay.D-98' 4M Pole vault: Roberts CCleveH and Elsasser Qflawesj tied, Utter, C. fHHlll.5-'Q' Q Broad jump: Smith, R. fHam.j. Ionson CDiekQ and Maurer f'Gris.j tied, Stephens fKen.j and Hopkins fKen.j IlCLl-IQIOH High jump: Blair fKen.Q, Maurer CGris.j and Woods, K. CGris.j and Roberts CClevej and Carpenter CWood.H tied-5' 0 Relay: Griswold, Hamill, Kennedy-1:4I.2 I A new record was made in the trials. Two Hundred Seventy-nine 51 Olly odrzda 51 Kellogg. Monroe, IJ., Shillzlbcr. CIIQCLE House Golf, 1950 ENNEDY House captured the 1950 Circle House Golf Championship by defeating Woodhull 2M-Z in the finals on Iune ISI. The Kennedy team, com- posed of Captain Doug Monroe, Mike Shillaber and Burt Kellogg, each turned in fine performances throughout the tourna- ment. ln the first round, which was started a day late on account of rain, Hamill trounced the Raymond team with a 3-0 sweep. Woodhull began by defeating Dick- inson 2-I and Kennedy rolled over Dawes in an easy match by a score of 2-I, al- ready showing the power which led it to the championship. Griswold defeated Cleve 2-I. The semi-Finals began with Wo0dhull's team of Worth, Carey and Barnard over- Two Hundred Eighty whelming Hamill 3-0. Kennedy beat Gris- wold by a score of 2M-H, but the match was much closer than the score would seem to indicate. Kennedyys Monroe de- feated Barry Coxe of Griswold in a close game, two up and one to go and Shillaber beat Henry Carnegie three up and one to go. Kellogg of Kennedy tied Fred Robert- shaw to account for the split point. Woodhull and Kennedy clashed for the title, with Kennedy emerging as the victor 22-Z. Captain Monroe played a tight game with Worth managing to stay on top all the way around to win four up and two to go. Burt Kellogg and Iamie Carey played another evenly matched game which ended in a tie while Mike Shillaber played well to take Mike Barnard two up and to clinch the cup for Kennedy. 51 Oflfz adrzkkz 51 Curtis, Howard CIIQCLE HDUSE TENNIS, 1950 OODHULL annexed the Circle House Tennis Championship by de- feating Cleve 2-o as Clint Curtis downed Ted Riegel 6-4, 6-2 and Iohn Howard won over Iohn McCurrach 7-5 and 6-0. Gris- wold and Dickinson were third and fourth, respectively. In the first round Woodhull downed Kennedy, 2-0. Clint Curtis nosed out Emery Berwind in a very close match and Iohn Howard defeated Larry Hilford for the second victory. Cleve won out over Raymond as Barton Biggs of the Maroon and Grey edged out Ted Riegel but Mc- Currach retaliated to defeat George Carey. The doubles team of Riegel and McCur- rach proved too strong for Biggs and Carey giving the victory to Cleve. Dickinson downed Dawes by the score 2-0, as Ed Iohnson defeated Dick Love and Ames Brown edged Bob Esser. The Griswold squad won their seat in the second round by overcoming Hamill 2-O. Al Congdon won over Schwartz and Iim McCarthy downed Neils Trulsson. The second round found Woodhull win- ning an easy victory over Dickinson 2-o. Clint Curtis smashed Ed Iohnson and Iohn Howard was victorious over Lou Hand. Cleve won a close match with Griswold 2-o as Riegel defeated Congdon and Mc- Currach edged out Conger. Griswold captured the third place title, winning by default from Dickinson in the consolation match. Two Hundred Eighty-om' K 5 .-- , 6QfQlX nsysxss Sff-YY5. .- -2:15 ar- '-:-,.-ra tri: ,. , ,, ..: N 65 -xi'-4 - 2-. 9 . 2 - 2 CJ 25355 1nq',EfzAf ' '?gjigw51Q 'IIV 21 A '55 ifisifz ' H2'1l1mUI llf f : 'f'l,'-i -.... xlf W emi3iit my ' I PUBLICATl0NS 51 Offzz odrzkkz 51 lfrrml lv'nu': Gaines, R.. Getz. larmlefelrl. Carpenter, Breckinridge, Ziebolcl, VVallaCe, Loluir, Hard- well, livans. Montag. Sffllllll lcflllf de Vicuna. Semans, McCulloch. Stovall, Murray, Douglas, IJ., Rainer, Higgs, llruse, Iland. iiaddis. Tflliflli Row: Callen. M., Smith. R.. Bond, Conger, G., Siostrom, Underwood, Carey, liroxvn, I.. Rt-inheimer, Fsbenshacle. li., Love, R. Brick Row: sermmr-1-, Shankle, lilair. Iisser, Zimmerman, li., VVrigl1t, W., Kay, Strong, lleniamin, Ilowarsl, de Cordova. THE 0I.I.A DUDIQIDA E of the Ulla Padrida would like to say that we hope the book for 1951:- IQSI has recorded the numerous and varied happenings of the year as faithfully and completely as possible. This has been our goal and We have tried to achieve it suc- cessfully. There have been only a few revisions in the text this year, for example, the l'Will You Ever Forgetn pages are done mostly with pictures, and the really important change in the cover. For the past two years the Olin Podrfda boards have felt it expedient to use a cloth cover, largely for financial reasons, but we discovered this Two Hmzdred lffghly-four year that a leather, that is to say an imita- tion leather, cover could be had for a very reasonable price. Since the majority of stu- dents seemed to prefer a binding of this type, we decided to return to the old form. Other than these and a few very minor considerations, the book is of about the same design as the one last year. The success of this book is of course due to the very hard work of the executive board led by Tom Ziebold, the Editor-in- Chief. Tom has labored a great deal at the job of gathering together all the neces- sary material from those under him on the board, and forming it into the volume 51 Olfa EDITOR-IH-CHIEF Znasotn which you are reading. Helping him was Doug Carpenter who in his capacity as Managing Editor held the responsibility for all the formal photographs herein. He worked with Mr. Orren lack Turner in taking these pictures which include House and athletic team groups, Fifth Form formals, club pictures, and so on, and has done admirably the job of assembling this part of the book. The other pictures in the Ollcz Podrida are the product of many hours of Work spent in the taking and developing of shots by the Photography Board under the direc- tion of Hugh Lobit and Tony Montag. The written part of this edition was split between two boards. Buddy Pray, Sports Editor, has taken care of collecting and editing all the athletic histories of the 1950- SI year and has handled this task in a capable fashion. The rest of the articles came under the auspices of the Editorial Board, the chairman of which was Phil Breckinridge. He worked hard with his odrzkkz 51 board in writing up the clubs and other activities and collecting and editing the House Histories. The monetary end of the organization was held down by Neil Wallace, the Bus- iness Manager. He had the job of paying for the book and has worked well at a difficult task and eventually obtained the necessary funds for the publication of this edition of the yearbook. This year there was no Art Board, so to speak. The artistic work was done by in- dividuals and Well done at that. Responsi- ble for the section dividers is Bill Noble, While the back inside cover came from the pen of Kerck Kelsey. NVe would like to thank at this time four people without Whose advice and guidance the Olla Podrida would have been next to impossible to produce: Mr. Bacon, our faculty advisor, Mr. Samuels, the printer, Mr. Turner, photographer, and Mrs. Mott, our typist. We also extend our best wishes for a successful book to next year's board. MANAGING EDITOR CARPENTER Two Hundred Eighty-five 51 Ofkz odrzkfzz 51 lfrullt lfruvz Shumxvav, Strong. Stovall. llartlett, Douglas, IJ., Higgs, livans, Rohertshaw, Moulag, Zimmerman. li., Shoemaker. R., Lindsay. Conger. G.. Nivling. SKTUIIII Rout Iohnson, I., Lande- ield, Seluans. McCulloch, lireckinritlge, lacolwsen. O., VVallace, Ziebolil. liardxvell, Lobit, lland, Auger, Sassoon. llowaril. Tliirzl Nunn Getz, Gaines, R., l'i'aeger, Stearns, Smith, R., llond, Wight, C., Underwood, dc Cortloxa. Curtis. Kimball, llrown, I.. Rcinheiiuer, Iisbenshatle, li., Thomas. lf., Suiuniers, Lehmann. lfonrrh It'on': 'l'rat'nkle. Scliirint-r, Barlow. l i'edd, lisscr, llrooinliead, Shankle, lllair, Carey. I., xvlllllbtlll Cowen, Zimmerman. C.. Preston. Carnegie. Burk Row: Lincoln, Koenigslnerger, lfargo. Kelsey. Cullen, M.. Wright, VV., Paul, Stockton. de Vicuna, lirown. G.. Price, O'l1allaghan, ll. THE LAWRENCE EVERAI. innovations, compiled with repeatedly sound reporting. marked IQSOASI as an outstanding year for the La1w'c'nl't'. Weekly columns. although not a new feature in themselves, have seldom been done so well. week after week. Char- lie Fried, whose Literary Lights ap- peared in each issue, wrote one of these articles commenting on new books. and in doing so, showed keen insight in his criticisms. Viewpoint, hy Henry Car- negie, was a well-written piece on World Two Iluridwd lfighty-six Affairs. lt has been interesting to read each week the views of a Lawrentian concern- ing the problems of today. These two arti- cles in particular demonstrate how the paper has, in part, gone beyond the realm of merely being a school-boy publication. Other articles also including several edi- torials have emphatically expressed ideas outside of school life. This trend has en' larged the scope of the paper and has imA proved it over those of previous years. Although the fact remains that some 51 Ulla EDITOR-IN-CHIEF EVANS interest has been shown in broadening its coverage, the Lawrence has appropriately remained a school paper. Bob Shoemaker's weekly column With Fingers Crossed, has probably been the most widely read of the articles. It has been an appraisal of opposing athletic teams, both ours and the other schools', and a prediction of the out- come. Speaking of Sportsf' by Bart Biggs. although not new, has lived up to previous years. Barr has had some able assistance from Tex Lobit and Powell Lindsay. A marked improvement in the editorial writing stands out as a prominent achieve- ment during the past year. Perhaps the fact that several suggestions put forth by the writers have been acted upon will help prove their merit. George Conger, as Edi- torial Chairman, should be complimented for his job as well as his assistants, Ellis Esbenshade, Ierry Iohnson, and Ted Wood. The unsung heroes of the Lawrence, strangely enough, include Dave Evans, Editor-in-Chief and his second-in-com- mand, Fred Robertshaw. Both have spent odrzdn 51 more hours over setting up the dummy, collecting articles, and, in some cases, re- writing than the average Lawrentian would ever realize. Others who indulged in the dirty work who have not already been mentioned were Tony Montag and Damon Douglas, the proofreaders. The Photography Board, headed by Iohn Shankle, continued to supply the Lawrence with interesting shots, sportswise and other- wise. The Art Department, under Ned Zimmerman, did the same. Noteworthy were the cartoonists: Hugh Lobit, Iose de Vicuna, Kerck Kelsey and, of course, Ned Zimmerman. Lastly, the Business Board, directed by Bob Stovall, although nip and tuck in some cases, managed to keep the paper out of the red. He was aided by Circulation Man- ager, Stockton Lehmann. To Charlie Fried, chosen as next year's Editor, go the best wishes for a successful year and to Mr. Perry, Faculty Advisor, many thanks for his great help during 1950-51. MANAGING EDITOR ROBERTSHAW Two Hundred Eighty-:even 51 Ulla odrzkkz 51 l lfronl lime: Caperton, Wallace, Wright, H.. Montag. Brown, I., Burke. Semlnl' Row: Wandall, Lobit, Biggs, Klau, Noble, W. Huck Row: Coker, Stovall, Conger, ti., Brown, G., Smith. I... le I' Zinimcrnian, Ii., Nivling, Carver, R., Iisbensham THE LIT HB Lit was faced this year with the loss of most of its chief contributors by graduation in Iune of IQ'-30. lt was able to rind a source of new material in the contributions of Editor Barton Biggs and Mitch Smith, Hugh Lobit and Iohn How- ard. ln the Art Department, Bill Noble, Ned Zimmerman and Hugh Lobit pro- vided the Lit with some excellent drawings. The outstanding issue of the year was the Prom Issue. An extensive search was made throughout the whole School to ob- tain the best material. The general quality of the stories was up to the high standards set in previous years. The material cov- ered a wide range of styles and indicated Two Hundred Eighiy-r1'gl1z some real thought with regard to writing techniques. This year the Lil was headed by Barton Biggs. lim Klau was Managing Editor, with Hugh Lobit as his assistant. The Art Editor was Bill Noble. Bill Wandall was Business Manager, and lim Brown, Cir- culation Manager. As opposed to normal quota of issues, this year's Board produced live by taking over earlier in the Spring of last year. ln conclusion, it can be said that the gen- eral outlook for next year is good, but it is hoped that contributions from the un- derformers will increase. 51 Olly odrzkfaz 51 Front Row: Lobit. Crusc, Smith. R., Michaels. SKTOIIII Rauf: Tracnkle, TJIHLIITZI. Murray. Klau, Gellert, Lawson, Stovall. Back Now: Wandall, Wallace, Coker, Torres, Underwood, Nivling, Carpenter, Zimmerman, E., Taylor, R., Solomon, Davidson, O'Callaghan, H., Dubow. THE DDCGDAM CCMMITTEE HIS year the Program Committee had as its Chairman Iames Klau. Also elected last spring were Steve Murray as Business Manager, Hubert Gellert as Sports Editor and Charlie Omana as the Commit- tee's Art Editor. Mr. Bleicher served as Faculty Advisor. The Program Committee has put in a very good year since the new Board took over, and started by putting out a program for Alumni Day. They continued their work with programs for all the home foot- ball games which was the first time this has been done. This feature was generally considered to be the Committeels biggest improvement during the past year. The Program Committeels most useful and indispensable service to the School, however, is undoubtedly the traditional A'Rhinie Biblef, which comes out at the beginning of each school year. All new boys find this guide very helpful in getting around the School during their first few days at Lawrenceville. This year the Program Committee also printed term sports schedules which were particularly convenient for the members of the School. In addition to all this, some ex- cellent programs for Fathers, Day were provided. Last year's project of selling colored post- cards of the campus, undertaken by the Committee, was also continued by the Board this year. Two Hundred Eighty-nine 51 Offa aefrzkfrz 51 lfmlll Razr: Nixling. Slioeiii.1'ltei'. R.. Mr, Ct'oil'. Zimincrman. lf., lacobsen. O. lfmlg Rule: Vlfiiglit. ll., Umana. Prestott, lane. R., fiellcrt. l!.u'i'ett, XV.. llavidson. TI-IE DD ESS CLUI3 Hli Press Club this year was under the competent leadership of Co-Presi- dents liob Shoemaker and Ed Zimmer- man. with Owen Iacobsen as Secretary- Treasurer. Mr. Alden Grolf was of great help to the Club as its Faculty Advisor. The purpose ol' this Club is to provide large liastern newspapers in cities such as New York, Trenton, Philadelphia and Newark. with information concerning l,awrenceville's athletic contests. both at home and away. Boys who are interested and have ability in the field of iournalism are elected to the Board ol' this Club, de- pending on the effort and conscientious- ness each one shows in his work. Two llHlI!fl'l'lf Nfzirly Another lunction of the Press Club is to mail to the local home papers the names of boys receiving their Major lfs and also stories about the boy's athletic achieve- ments. As usual, the Princeton Press Club gen- erously invited several members of the Press Club to Watch games from the Princeton Stadium Press Box. This year has liound the Club's member- ship increasing in size which reflects a growing enthusiasm by Lawrenceville stu- dents toward the art of iournalism. More- over, the year has been a prohtable one in which the Club has served its purposes well. M 2 lo ' 4444, - K M D K, Q CLUBS 51 Offrz odrzkkz 51 Ifronl Rrur: llowaril. Carpenter, Summers, Douglas, ID., Stovall, Carey. I., Oniana, livans. Zim- merman. li., Lindsay. Sassoon. Mctiurrach. Second Row: Siostrom, Getz. Robertshaw, lacobsen, O.. Wallace, N., Ziebold, Montag. I,obit, Windsor, Reinheimer, Nicholls, de Cordova. Thin! Row: Stark, Soper, dltlmeida, Traenkle, Kelsey, Callen M., l'laut, Curtis, Kimball. licniamin, , de Vicuna. Langhorne. I., Kellogg. Fonrrh Row: Treadwav, I.. fargo, Scozarri, Docbele. Rainer. liartlett, lierwind, llrooniliead, Nalarian, Anderson. I.. Freed, M., Barrett. l. Huck Rrur: llavis, C., Cliildrt-ss. Str-vt-rms, M,, Noble, W.. Coker, Wright, VV., Preston, llionisi, lilau. THE DEIQIWIIE CLUB AST Spring, during the Prom week- end. the Periwig Club presented its annual Spring musical, one ol' the best yet produced. This show, 'lCaviare to the General, was just as popular-it not more so-than the previous ones. It was espe- cially notable in that it contained a large amount ol' material written by students. Among the contributors of skits, music and lyrics were Brower Wagner, Arthur Birsh, Reno Odlin, Doug Wynn, Fred Stewart, and Bill Wood. Some of the out- standing songs which have now taken their places in the Coffee Hour books are: Two 1IlH1lll'l'd Nizzery-tivo The Good Old Days, Census Time, First Come, First Servedf' The Roaring Twentiesf' Who Knows? and Oh, So Luclcyln The show this year moved from its usual topics concerning the School and dealt with the writing of a modern magazine. 'lCaviare, and its attempt to be different. In the past several years the directors have de-emphasized the individual performance and placed the acting responsibility on a group of boys. There were no stars in any particular skit which stood Olll through the whole show. 51 Ulla PRESIDENT CAREY The show owes much of its success to Mr. Iohn Humason, its Director. He did a perfect job in pulling :together the many parts of the show into one great perform- ance. The acting was directed by Mr. Morgan, the choreography by Mr. and Mrs. Esteyg the chorus and Lawrentians by Mr. Howard, and the stage crew by Mr. Page. Mrs. Heyniger and Mrs. Hitch- cock were in charge of costumes, and Mr. Peck and Mrs. Groff, in charge of make- up. The production manager was Iamie Carey, the stage manager, Paul Grubb, business manager, Ioe Castle, and the pub- licity manager, Pete Fisher, not to men- tion the large number of faculty members and boys who contributed to the success of the show. Last Fall on Fathers Day the Club pre- sented Thurber and Nugent's, f'The Male Animalf' The acting was good. Michael Freed, in the leading role, was convincing in his characterization and can be ac- claimed an excellent performer. Other lead- ing roles were done by Mrs. Leming, odrzda 51 Powell Lindsay, Donald Cowlbeck and Morton Goolde. Mrs. Groff, Mrs. Perry and Miss Barbara Gartner played the other female parts. The acting was under the direction of Mr. Estey and Mr. Morgan, and the stage crew was supervised by Mr. Clicquennoi. Carlos Omana was the pro- duction manager and Dave Harrah, stage manager. The Winter production was a satire on Elizabethan plays of blood and revenge. lt was The Tragical Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Greatf, Iim McCarthy played the title role. Other leading actors were: Michael Freed and Morton Goolde. This show was under the direction of Mr. Humason and was produced in the gym with the audience sitting on three sides of the stage. A curtain was hung on the fourth side, against which a platform was placed, thus permitting the play to be given on different levels and so giving the illusion of different settings. The Club takes this opportunity to thank all those who have aided. FACULTY DIRECTOR ESTEY Two Hundred Ninety-three 51 Uffa adrzkkz 51 lfrrznl Razr: f1LlI'l7L'l1lCI'. Kclioe, Carey. I.. liarclwell. Mosscr, Pray, Smith. A.. Vl'l1orf. Kocnigs- lmergcr. Sliillabcr, XVootls. K., Anclcrson. Slfrillrf Rauf: Cstandingj May fscatcilj Onrigdon, Harrali, kay. Love. R.. Rohcrtshaw. Lawson. Nivling, Wallace, N., Stovall. Scbellcnrcr. Coker, Iil- is saver. Kellogg Cstandingj Hamill. Thin! Row: lluhow, Pease, Brown, A.. Kastilahn. Curtis, VVest, Fargo, Barrett. VV.. Bowes, Blair, Monroe, IJ. Ifonrlfi Roni: Loucks. O'Callaghan, ll.. Met- lf 9 'tl l Tri kl Nc ' ca e, .mi 1, .en'c. 'wnian. Smith. l.. VVight. C., llocbclc. Matthews. Fiffh Row: fseatcdj Ciidconse, Gough, lit-lf fstandingl Carver, R.. Ho vkins i , O'Callaghan. A.. Ackerman. Ckmwen. Orvaltl. Carey, G.. llcnry, Schmidt, VVcbb. Roberts, Cruse Cseatc-ill Omana, Iohnson. li. liiirk Rauf: Mcllvain. Arinstrong. Taylor, R. THE nl CLUB UIDHD by President Buddy Pray. Vice-President Roy Smith. and Secre- tary Blair Mosser. the I, Club has had one ol the most successful years in some time. Though the Club's meetings were I1Ot as numerous as in past years. much was done to better both the Financial status and the regular iobs that the Club undertakes each year. At the meetings the members discussed problems which arose concerning athletics, and the best ways in which to deal with them. Probably the INOSI outstanding feat of the organization was the handling of the Hill Rally. They did a very commendable Two Ilznzdrcd Ninety-four job in not only keying up the spirit of the students. but also in preparing the rally. The following day the members took charge of the trip to Hill. and this, too, was carried out perfectly. At one of the meetings of the Club in the Fall, it was decided that the Club should have new pins. The pins were ordered shortly after and were in the members' possession at the conclusion of the year. The Club should be congratulated for its supervision of the athletic events and for helping to maintain a high caliber of sports at Lawrenceville. I Olly 0L1'rzk1'zz 51 lfmllr Ixlflllf Mainardi. Howard, l..tsri, Srrmzzf Iv'on': Montag. llamill. Shanlile. Bond. Steplieiis, ll. Huck Razr: johnson. lf.. lallcc, Katlin, Getz. l.obit. THE CAMERA CLUB H12 Camera Club, as the name sug- gests. is a club for the boys who are unusually interested in photography. The aim of the Club is to give these boys a chalice to work with photography and dis- play their talents in that Held. The early fall saw the elections of the Clubs oliicers. lohn Shankle was elected President, lim Hamill. Vice-President. Horace Stephens, Treasurer and Neil Bond. Secretary. Mr. Barnhouse once again lent his services in the capacity of Faculty Advisor to the Club. The Club has been very active this year. lts weekly meetings to discuss various fields of photography and also many tech- nical problems and their solutions pertain- ing to the subject, were highlighted by slide shows given by the members showing their various efforts in slides. The Club's outside activities for the year included numerous exhibitions of photography in Mem Hall and a special showing of slides in the auditorium for the whole School during the mid-year exams. A carry-over from last year was the hn- ishing ol' the remodeling ol' the Club's darkroom. The darl-crooin, which is open only to the Clubis members, was com- pletely remodeled with new stalls lior equip- ment being installed. Tzzfo Hun11'n'd Nfrzcty-five 51 Uffrz OLIITZHILZ 51 llmul lwzr: VVcrlgwootl. llauiill. llilliortl. Otllin. Klau, link Rlllfl lstrl. Mosscr. llowartl THE CHESS CLUB HIS vcai' with thc .titl ol' Mr. Ros: oi tlu' Scicncc Ilcpartnicnt as Faculty . Xclx'isor, tlu' Chcss Cluh once again ioyctl an activc :uul plcasurahlc ycar. CH 'l'hc clcctions. which wcrc hcltl carly in tlu' lall. lotuul l,arrv llilliortl as tlu' Prcsl tlcut, alul lllair Nlosscr as tlu' Sccrctary- 'l'rcasurcr, :X tournauu-nt was hcltl carly in tlu' ycar. among thc inclnhcrs, to tlccitlc who woultl lu' tht- ncw champion, .Xltcr a scrics ol wcll-playa-tl inatchcs. Dick Utllin ol' Dawes llousc finally t'IIlL'l'gL'Ll as thc champion ol' tlu' Cluh lor IQQU atul It 'l'u'o llumlful .YlilIl'f'l'-.ill An cvcntlul ycar was haul hy thc Chcss players as lar as n1atclu's with other schools were conccrnctl. Thrcc uiatchcs wcrc hcltl with Blair. Gcorgc aiul Princcton High School. All in all thcn. ilu- Chcss Cluh haul a vcry succcssliul year uiulcr thc lcatlcrship ol' its otliccrs: a year highlightctl hy its thrcc outsitlc lnatchcs. lfvcryoiu' who par- ticipatctl in its affairs wants to thank Mr. Rosncr lor his activc iutcrcst in tht- Cluh anal thc time hc has givcn as Faculty .Ml- visor, without which its continuctl success this ycar would havc lu-cn impossihlc. 51 Ulla odrzda 51 IIVUIII Row: Mainardi, Rolilling, Hurwith. Sl't'UI1If Row: Iacohson, L., Ottcn, Dubow, XVanclall, Pirovano. litzflq Row: Corban, Olson, I., Frank, Schuster, Leighton, Waters. THE CCNCEIQT CLUB NDER the able guidance of Mr. Park, the Concert Club has completed its twelfth successful year in existence. The main purpose of the Club is to give weekly recorded concerts, in the Library after Sunday Chapel, for the benefit of the School and to increase the appreciation of classical music. However, the scope of thc Club is not limited to activities on the campus. Members are encouraged to at- tend all of the concerts given by the Tren- ton Community Concert group every month. As has been the custom for many of the past years, the Concert Club has had its meetings on Wednesday evenings. During these meetings they give recorded concerts and hear short talks given by Mr. Park. During the course of the year the Club bought many new records with the money raised by dues and that given by the Fathers Association. At the beginning of the year Peter Dubow was elected President, Edward Ot- ten, Vice-President and William Wandall, Secretary-Treasurer. The Club is grateful to Mr. Park for leading it through a very successful year and would also like to extend its thanks to the Staff of the Iohn Dixon Library for their interest and co-operation at all times. Two Hundred Ninety-.raven 51 Offzz Odlflklld 51 I'il'IIlIf Rom: lstel. Rt-inheimer. llirnegic. Miller. M., Klau. liilrk Ruff: lohnson. I., Slioeniaker. R.. Kay. llvlicr. llowartl. l l.tntlei's. DEIEATING CLUB Nlllili the capable guidance ol- the Clulfs liaculty Atlvisor. Mr. Ciroff. antl its officers Ilenry Carnegie antl Kurt Reinheiiner as Presitlent and Treasurer, respectively. the Clulf hatl a very success- lul year. The Cluh was liormeal in the latter hall ol' the year and had two tlehates. The lirst was with the Rutgers Freshmen anal the secontl with the Princeton Fresh- men. ln the tlehates, one Lawreiiceville team woultl tlehate here. while another woultl go to the opposing school. The two teams are matle up ol' three men apiece: two speakers anal an alternate. The team that is tlehating at the opposing school al- 7.11 fo ll1n11f1'c'1f i'Vl'Ill'f-V-l'l.ghf ways takes the negative. while the one at home takes the allirmative sitle. During the year all of the tlehates were non-decision ones. Hy having this rule, there is no competition involved in the tlehates, :intl hence it is helievetl that a het- ter clehate results, for there is less strain on the speakers. The topic for tlehate this year was. Resolve-tl: That the American people shoultl reieet the welfare state. As in previous years the suhiect taken for the tlehates was the National Debating Topic. The Cluh woultl like to extentl its thanks to Mr. Croll for his inuch-appreciatetl help anal instruction throughout the year. 51 Olfrz odrzkfrz 51 Front Row: de Vieunu, Coffey. Zimmerman. E.. Howard, Casalduc. Buck Row: Foeht, Bodine, Mr. Smart. VVliitney. Butman. THE EASEL CLUB NDER the new guidance of Mr. Smart the Easel Club has had another successful and productive year. Mr. Smart's interest and devotion to the organization has helped to make it a very prominent club. Thanks to the able leadership of Ed Zimmerman as President. much interest and time have been put in on the various projects the Club members have been working on over the past year. Other ac- tive members of the Club are: Iohn How- ard, Alex Butman, Ierry Coffey, Lew Focht. Ioe de Vicuna and Tony Bodine. The Club usually holds a meeting every other week in which members exhibit their Work for the criticism of the Club. Each member of the Club completes, in the space of a year, approximately three projects which normally are displayed on the bulletin boards of Mem Hall. The Club has not taken any trips as yet, but several to New York, for the purpose of visiting various art museums, are being planned for the near future. The Club wishes to express gratitude to Mr. Smart for his interesting and informative talks and demonstrations with water color. His interest in the Club has made the meetings of true value to the its sincere School. Two Hundred Ninety-nine 51 Offaz ozfrzkfa 51 lfrnur lv'nu': Klau. Murray. S., Brown. I., Mr. 'lHlllll'l1l'l'. llartlett, lftzrfq Rolf: SIlj'llk'l', .X.. lirovvn, ti., lfried, McKenzie, Albert, Schuyler. THE LIBIQAIQY ASSDCIATES lllS year marked the second year of the Library Associates. The Club has proven that it decidedly enhances the Iohn Dixon Library in its work. The duties of each member of the group were, first, to learn the Dewey Decimal System of classi- fication. After they had learned this, they passed a test set up by Mr. Thurber. Then each member of the Club had to learn his section, find out the books which were necessary and were missing. Occasionally they recommended that useless or outdated books be retnoved. VVith lames Brown as their Chairman, the Library Associates chose different types of work which interested them. Charles Three Hu I1 :fred Fried did an outstanding job of reporting on new additions to the Library in the Lt11zf1'4'm'e. A high spot of the year was the Christmas Book Sale, sponsored by Za- velle's Book Store of Princeton. The group is essentially a Filth lform organization. although several underform- ers were included in order to form a nu- cleus for next year. This informal Club has met every three weeks for orientation purposes. The tnembers of the Club would like to express their gratitude to Mr. Thurber for his interest in and co-operation with the Club. 51 Oily odrzkfaz 51 lfmrzl Razr: Iohnson, I., Mierley, Blair, Barnard, Otten. Btzcfq Raw: Brugb, Kay, Howard, Bartlett. CIQNITHDLUIEY CLUB llli Lawrenceville School Ornithology Club is one ot the most educational of the School's many clubs. The President, Mac Blair and Mr. Cliquennoi. the Faculty Advisor. are responsible for its program. Mr. Cliquennoi arranged several lec- tures, movies, Held trips and museum trips for the members, in addition to the various discussion groups and talks. The Trenton Ornithological Society makes its facilities available to the Club, as well as lecturers. movies, magazines, books and pamphlets. During the Fall and Winter the boys go to New York, Trenton and Philadel, phia to study specimens and attend lec- tures given by museums and clubs in those cities. In the Spring they also take Held trips around this area to observe resident and migratory birds found during the Spring months. Meetings are held once a month at which time talks have been given by Mr. Cliquennoi and Mac Blair. as well as other members of the Club. Discussion groups were also held. This year they were espe- cially interesting, presenting many high- lights of the life and history of various species of birds. A great deal of credit should go to all the members who gave talks for their line preparation and delivery. The Club would like especially to thank Mr. Cliquennoi tor his help and interest in its activities. Three Hundred One 51 Oflaz Odlflklldl 51 l'iI'IIllI lcon: l'ii'oxano. lstel. Skipsey. Il. .N'n'n111l Kale: lirooinlieasl, Sassoon. tl'.Xlmeisla, llouglas. l IJ., iiellerl. liinlg lv'un': l..isr5. Isaacs, Otten, Koenigsherger, Conger. ii. IDAIQLUNS FIQANIQAIS ARLONS Francais, the Schoolls hon- orary organization Iior the liurthering of the stutly oi' French, has hatl one ol its most successful years under the guitlance of Dr. Cotlerre. The enrollment ol the Cluh has heen its largest clue to the lessen- ing ol' the requirements lor atlmission. Untlerliormers were this year, for the first time, atlmittetl to the Cluh causing the exf pansion antl interest in what was before a hit too exclusive an organization for the average student ol' French. The Clulfs various trips to New York and Frinceton for the purpose ol viewing French movies have greatly aided the members in their understanding of the French language and the French people, Three H undrcd Two themselves. Untler the leaclership ol' l.ou tl'Almeitla, the Clulfs President, antl with the assistance ol' Tim Matthews, Secretary, antl Howie Price, Treasurer, the hi-weekly Fritlay evening meetings ol' the Cluh have heen extremely successful. At these meet- ings the memhers interestetl themselves hy discussing the lille antl times of the French people, preparing anal clelivering short speeches in French, listening to French records, and having an occasional feed. The Cluh wishes. in completing a very interesting year, to thank Ur. Cotlerre lor his interest in the Cluh anal his untiring eliiorts to make the organization the suc- cess that it vvas. 51 Uffa ocfrzklaz 51 Ifrunl Row: Naiarian. Slioeiiial-ter. R.. Mr. Sclionlicitcr, liroll. Burk Row: Sncdckcr, Monroe. ll. THE SCHDDI. CAMD HE School supports one charitable organization entirely, and that is The Lawrenceville School Camp. This camp, located in northwestern New Iersey, is en- tirely dependent for support on the Sunf day Chapel collections and the Annual Camp Drive here at School. Its purpose is to give underprivileged boys from the slums and tenements of New York City a two week vacation of camp lile in the country. The boys are selected and sent by the New York Mission Society, in four groups of thirty-two boys each. They remain for two weeks. Not only does Lawrenceville support the Camp linancially, but the staff of counsellors is made up of volunteers from the student body. The Camp facilities include a central dining hall, cabins for the boys, a large swimming pond, a soccer field, a baseball diamond, a playground, and woods which offer many opportunities. The Camp is immeasurably indebted to Mr. Schonheiter, who has, through the years, helped the Camp in its growth, and who continues through the Whole year to devote a great deal of time and effort to make the Camp better each summer. Thrrz' Hundrvd Three 51 Uffrz ozfrzkfaz 51 l'mnl lv'ffu': Rainer. loulcovvskx. Carpenter. Iiilrk lvow: Getz, liititlv. 'I'.. C.irui-eie. THE SCHUDL CHUDCH llli purpose of the School Church, a non-sectarian organization, is to ful- lill to a liuller extent thc religious life of the School. This year the organization was led by the Reverend M. Allen Kimble and the School Church Council, consisting ol' Art Ioukowsky, Iohn Callen, Charles Fried, llenry Carnegie, lim Rainer and Don liastilahn. The School Church has had tremendous success in all of the proiects it has under- taken, notable among which were the Salvation Army old clothes drive, and the Charity Drive lor the School Camp. 'l'f11'c'r llfzzzzfrerl Fam ln january the School Church was well represented at the annual Huck Hill Falls Conference where general topics of solid and religious interest were discussed. The School Church has admirably pre- sented the special services held during the year. These include the Sunday Commun- ion services. Once each week a student has conducted a daily chapel. VVhile this organization has done an ex- cellent iob, Mr. Kimble feels that more boys should play a part in the School's religious lilie, and participate in the other activities ol' tht- organization. 51 Ulla odrzkfaz 51 1'-H1111 Rauf: Mr. Answortli, Rot-iiigsbcrger, llottonie, Torres, Omana, Smith, A., Casalduc, Zimmerman. li., Treadxvay, I. SFKYJIIII Row: Ferre, de Vicuna, Travicso. Leighton, Stearns, Iaeobscii. O.. SIClllllL'l, ikwle. Hulk lQmt': Rainer, Skipsey, C., Pirovano, Rohlling, Lawson, Stanley, Mierley, Taylor, R. THE SDANISH CLUB AST fall, for the benefit of the Spanish speaking boys, as well as those who wish to learn this language, a Spanish Club was organized. This group met once a week, and the program usually consisted of short speeches in Spanish by three mem- bers, followed by a feed and Latin Ameri- can music on records. Once in awhile the Club went to Princeton to see a Spanish movie. The organization is ably led by Carlos Omana, its President and Roy Smith, its Treasurer. Iulio Torres, who it may be said does most of the work for the Club, is Secretary. As Faculty Advisor, the or- ganization was fortunate to have Mr. Ans- worth, a Rhinie Spanish teacher. The thirty-one members who make up the Club have heard lectures ranging in variety from Bull Fighting -Lou d'Al- meida, to Communist Sabotage -Bob Bottome. The members of this year's organization wish to thank Mr. Answorth for his efforts in its behalf, and hope that the Club will be continued in the following years so that other boys who have a special interest in Spanish may gain the enjoyment and knowledge from it that this year's mem- bers have. Three Hundred Five 51 UM! z1'1'z21'z1 51 Ixtlly. xxllltlsirll l.uwlxw1i. I... Utllm. t.urlu.m, THE STAMD CLUI3 lllh years Stamp Lluh again tlluler llu' gtiulaiue ol' Nlr. cll1lll'Cl1ill, with the ahle assistaiue ul' Mr. llowman. has hatl aiu1llu'r very sticcesslul year. The Cluh startecl the year hy seiuling t-ight ol its memhers to tht- Stamp Dealers ,-Xssoeiatitm lfxhihit in New York Citv. A lew weeks later the group also heltl its gm- ntlal aticticm, which provetl very worth- while. 'l'etl Vllmul, the Cflulfs Presitleiit this year, was one ul' tlu' main factors in male ing the Clulw a success with his interesting aiul inl'c1rmatix'e talks at several Cluh nu-etiugs. Cfretlit is also to he given to Iohn llarelay for his service as Secretary- Treasurer. Utlu-rs Lllllllllg thc active mem- ,Il!Il'I'l' Ilzrnrlrzfzf Sfx hers ol' tlu' lfluh were: lliehartl Otllin Robert lielly. Riehartl Solmium aiul Larry laeohson. During tlu' spring the Cfluh went to the Southern lersey lixhihitiun in Canulen. at which they tlisplayetl a collection nl their stamps. .'Xiumtlu'r atu'tiun was heltl in which Mr. clllLlI'L'l1llllS stamps were the highlight. :Xs usual, most oi' the memhers eolleetetl Aiiu-rican stamps, althougli liritish Co- lonials aiul Sweclish stamps were also well- representetl. The Cluh wishes tn express its gratiltule to Mr. Churchill, wluwse tmtiring ellorts have COIlll'll1lllCtl so largely to hetterment of the Cluh in the past year. I Ulla odrzkfa 51 Ziinmerinan. F.. Olson, I.. Douglas, U. THE IQADID CLUB NDER the leadership of President Ed Burger, Vice-President IeH Traenkle, and Secretary Ion Olson, the Radio Club has completed a very successful year. Throughout the year the officers of the Club have presented a series of informal lectures to the members of the Club on the subject of radio. Many of the boys had a very limited knowledge of the radio, and even though these lectures did not give them extensive technical training, it did familiarize them with the basic aspects of the radio. With the aid of the equipment that was built by last year's members. tnuch experimentation has been carried out. Aside from the lectures and the experi- ments, most of the work that has been done this year has been along individual lines. Ierf Traenlale is nearing completion of a television set that was started last year. Ed Burger has devoted most of his time to trying to devise a method of power sup- ply for a japanese army surplus radio transmitter which was purchased in To- kyo. Along with all of these activities, there has been a good deal of repairing done on the radios and phonographs of the Faculty. Three H1mn'rr'd Sfzffvz F I . QU K, I I X MUSICAL CLUBS N ,, , 51 Olly ocfrzkfaz 51 MUSICAL CLUBS HRUUGHUUT the year there are many opportunities for a musically- inclined or musically-minded student. Every boy receives try-outs in the early Fall for the Glee Club, which is eventu- ally narrowed down to about seventy. This selective group then begins rehearsals un- der the able direction of Mr. Theodore H. Keller. The School gets only a few chances to hear the Glee Club because all but three of its concerts are away at various girls' schools in the surrounding area. Because it is only heard a few times by the School, we tend to forget about it until the concert just before Spring vacation. This year's Glee Club has given joint concerts with seven girls' schools. The con- certs were followed by a dance. Much of the success of these concerts depended, not only on the hard work of the Glee Club in general, but also on the patience of Mr. Keller and the leadership of Arthur Sollitt who was elected Student Leader last Iune. Accompaniment on the piano for the Club was done by Fstaban Pirovano, and Bob Healy filled the executive position of Manager. A smaller and more select group is the Choir. This group is composed of members of the Glee Club and it is also directed by Mr. Keller, Besides bolstering the singing in both Sunday and daily Chapel services, the Choir spent many hours in extra prac- tice in order to perfect anthems for Sunday Tfzrcf' Hundred ffleucn 51 Ulla Diiuacrou KELLER Chapel. Worthy of special mention here is the annual Christmas Candlelight Service. Held each year on the eve of Christmas vacation, it was one of the most impressive performances this year. For both good harmony and humor, we had the Lawrentians, directed by Mr. Howard. Although the number varied from time to time during the year, they always managed to give us good quality. For the second year since its founding the swing band, known as the Sleepless Knights and led hy Dick Gaines remained one of the most popular musical clubs. They were a needed contrast to the vocal music at concerts and at times played with almost professional quality. Special men- tion should be given to Dick Gaines, whose arrangements greatly enhanced their ef- forts. Three Hundred Twelve odrzkfa 51 ln the Fall, the Field Band played at the football games. lt was directed by Mr. Davis. Dick Gaines was the Student Leader. The Band had potentialities. but it suffered, as it has in the past few years. from the lack of numbers and interest. A much-needed innovation succeeded this year. A second Glee Club group was formed solely from the ranks of those who had an interest in music and wanted to learn group singing, but who were not in the Glee Club. This has been tried several times in the past, but it has never received enough support to make it practicable be- fore. This organization is directed by Mr. Barnhouse. All together the musical year was a good one, measuring up to the ever-high Law- renceville standard. STUDENT LEADER SOLLITT 51 Ulfa odffzkzh 51 Ifronr Row: Penne. ll'Alll1CltlLl, Barmlwcll, Noble, W., Sollitt, Brown, A., Robcrlshaw, Garclner, L.. Slcmp. Sz'ro11fflCu1z': Horan. Anrlcrmon. I.. Stembel, Langhorne, I.. May, Hall, WClllllClCf, Li, S. Third Rorv: Broll, Unger, Anrlrcws. Frank. Frerlrl, Stanley, Orvalrl, Coker, Newman, Congcr, G. Huck Row: XVllllLlIIlS, D., Butman. TH If C I'l 0 ID Firxt Tenor.: Anderson. I. liroll liutman Langhorne, I. Pease liarrlwell liruglu Horan Urvalrl May Second Twzorx nl'Almeirla Newman Stanley Hall llolwerlsluaw VVillia1ns, ll. HlIl'ffUI1t',x' Coker Gardner, L. Riegel Slemlnel Freclrl Nobel Slcmp Unger Svfond Bczxxzxf Andrews llurger Li, S. VVellmeier Brown, A. Cforrell Van Doornieli George Conger: LI'!7l'LIl'l'tIl1 Tlreoclore Hazard Keller: 01'gurz1'.vt and Choir Dirwtor' Thrvc I I MIZIIIITIZ Thirtccn 51 Offaz odrzkfa 51 I'.P'IIlIf lx'nu': Miller, XV.. IIIITLIKIXVLII. I.. 4.I-JXIIIICIKIU.. IILIITIVVCII, Nulrlc, VV.. Sullilt. llrmvn, A. RKIIVJYINIILIXV. l'c11w, Wulllm-iur, fyC.lIILl31I11lIl, ll. Srmmf Row: I.m'u, R.. Shnnklv, 1911-mlml. Lung lmrnc. I.. Coker. livzlm, I.l'I1l1IilI'lI'l. Zilllrm-1'1111ll1. Ii., Rcigcl. Hamel, I,i. 5. Tfllrzf lx'u14': Mcllulluclm Iilxur, NL'XX'Ill1lll. Ilgmuc, Curtis, Ziclmlml, Cmmgalun, Hnmnmml, Slcmp, l'irm'1u1o, Gardner l nrn'fh Razr: lilsusscr, lfuffcv, I.lculwsn-11. O.. Ilcxlly. R., VVL-lvlv. lluraln. lfrgmk, SILIIIICY. Currcll Al1clc'rsuIl, I., iiutlmrmc. link 1x'1114': XVIIIIAIIH5, U., Rcynulmls, Ungvr. .XlllII't'XV5, iimmnlktt, Orvnlml Alnlrrmn. I. IILIFKIXVCII Iiroll lllllcn. I lfulfcfy f:0llgmIuxI1 ml'.'XIlm-UI .'Xllgt'l' lilnir Iinwcs Cukrr .XIIQIITXYS lirmvu. . IIIITQQLXII Cm ul'l'L'II Stcmlwl, Iulnnwn. Ii., M.1y, Ilull, Iiroll, 1l.1mill. THE Glflf CL liruglm I'IllIIIl.lIl fIlll'K'I, ti. lfx gun fnuu1IIt'II fIll4L1g1'l1IlC'IIll .1 Ciullxric Cu1'rIuIl I7l'c'4I1I Gzmlm-r I 1.11141 Curtis X. Itlsalswl' I.. IIiIful'LI I:lL'uI1wl!. U. Ik lffllvf 'l'r'11nr,v Clark. .-X. UB l..1l1gIml'm'. I. Ilgmmm-unl. T. c,I'Y.lIlI IItlI'1ll1 I'c.lsc SITIIIIII Trlmrxf Hull MCCUIIULI1 llqumll Mvrritl l ILlI1k'l' Ncwm.1n I..l!LI!'lI5. R, Rulu-rlsl1.lw Bdl'l-lflllllf Nubfl O'Cnll.1gl1:m. ll. . l,, Ricgcl Shnmklc 1'Itl5.1'!'.Y 1.1-Immun Iiuhcru. 'lf IA, S. Vain I5uuI'llICR Lure, R. YVulmlv Miller, VV. VVclIlncic1' ICIYLIII Pmmlnnz .'lffran1jm11i.fI Rnlmrt Ilcnlyz .'IIanugcr RCI I1uI4Ix M.1y Nmlh. l. Stanley Willimns. ZiL'ImImI Slunp Slrlnlwcl 'I'rc.uIw.1y Ungvr IHHCIIILIII 51 Ulla odrzklzz 51 liardwell, d'AlmciLla, Sullitt, Nublc, W.. limwn, A., Rulmcrtshaw, Pease. TH If LAWIQ ENTIANS Bardwell d'Almeida Noble, W. Robertshaw Brown, A. Dart Pease Sollitt Coaches: james M. Howard, Ir., G. Case Morgan Three Hundred Fifteen 51 Ulla odrzkfaz 51 THE SLEEPLESS KNIGHTS flffl lo righlj: I'1'itcl1au'd, Kuhncr, Gaines, R., Brcckinrimlgc, 'I4l'LllQI'lkIC, Snynlcr, C. FIIQLID BAND lfmfzf lwzrz cQ.liIk'N. Sf-fu111l1Qr1z1': Berger. Smwlckcr, Schcnck. Ggulnlis. Thin! Razr: Kulmu Hill'I1L'N, ll4'llIlI.ll1. .I4I'iIlll1lL', liulmis. lfllllfffl Row: XNVUKIQXVINIKI, Slump. Skipwy, C.. lk-xxwx Iimfg lQv.1w: 'l'r.unkIu, Lxlws, fillfllllllllll, Mr. Davis, Flood, Knlluuh, S11yclu1', C., Wnlscr. 'l'l11'z'c' I Iznnlrf-11 SIAIILTII X7 cvqjjlfze LIIWEIR SCll00L 51 Ulla oclrzkfa 51 Ifrunt Noir: Stcinmllllur, Trimluh-, Hulxtuld. Pzlltcrson. T.. liurk ldrurz Miller, L.. Huwmc. LDWEIQ SCHDDI. HDUSE CHAMDIDNSHIDS All-Round Trophy Won in IQSO by Thomas SPRUQCT-IQSO .. . .,,. THOMAS Baxebull , . Q:R01N1VV1iLL Goff , TI'LlL'k. .. A .. TQHUYVIJXS Tcrznix . Tnolxms FA LL-1 QS o Football , ,. Tnmxms So4'z'w', lir+ss.'xNuTno1x1As NVINTER-1951 Buslgctbull . .. , TIICJINI.-XS Szzfjnznzirzg A , CROMWELI. Thru- I I 11na'rz'1I 1V1'11clf'w1 5 Ulla odrzkfd 51 CID DMWELL HOUSE HISTORY HIS year saw seven old boys return along with fourteen Rhinies and a new House Master, Mr. Bull, L,44, to Cromwell. The new Council was elected in October, and the results were as follows: Linton Patterson, President, Lloyd Thomas, Vice-President, Manuel Ferro, Secretary, Lee Havey, Treasurer, and Douglass Car- ver, Historian. Cromwell had a poor football season and didn't win a game. Lloyd Thomas and Lee Havey were elected co-captains and along with Dick Lambert they were the outstand- ing players on the team. Cromwell did better in soccer, winning two, and tieing one, of the six games. Manuel Ferro was appointed captain and along with Charlie Coffman and Iim Healy, he was chosen for the All-House soccer team. Swimming has been one of the bright spots in the year for Cromwell. We placed first in all of the events except one. Lee Havey and Lloyd Thomas did an excep- tionally good job. Last year Cromwell had a championship baseball team. Linton Patterson was elected as the captain. Bill Ludington could always be relied upon to pitch a good game and Charlie Skipsey did a good job at third base. By Brandt, Lee Havey, Alden Roach, and Lloyd Thomas were on the Iayvee swimming squad, while they, plus Tim Healy and Dick Schrade represented Cromwell on Iunior swimming. In wrestling, Nel Hays is on Iayvee while seven other boys, namely, Robert Iohnston, Bruce Thomas, Alan Skinner, Dick Lambert, Bill Moore, Andrew Tread- way, and Douglass Carver were on Iunior wrestling. Two Cromwellites are on Iunior bas- ketball. They are Manuel Ferro and Char- lie Coffman. Last year Manuel Ferro, Francisco Casal- duc, and Iohn Orrell were on Iunior base- ball. In extra-curricular activities Cromwell was well-represented. Linton Patterson was editor of the Recorder, Anthony Reiger, Associate Editor, and By Brandt was Pho- tography Editor. Also working with them were Peter Brown, Douglass Carver, Lloyd Thomas, Bruce Thomas, and Alan Skin- ner, reporters. Bill Cannon, Dick Schrade, Larry Glass and Dick Cohen were typists. Dick Schrade, Bill Moore and Frank Stamato were the only members of Crom- well on Stage Crew, while Lee Havey, Lloyd Thomas, Alden Roach, Manuel Ferro, and Linton Patterson were in the Dramatic Club. Andrew Treadway was the lone Crom- wellite in the Print Shop. Larry Snideman was in the Greenhouse Club and By Brandt, Peter Bottome, and Douglass Carver were in the Photography Club. Scholasticly Cromwell had the leading average at the Hrst quarter with a seventy- three. The leading scholars Were: Douglass Carver, Larry Snideman, Charlie Coffman, Dick Schrade and Peter Brown. The whole House joins me in thanking Mr. Bull for all that he has done for us in the past year. DOUGLASS CARVER, Historian Three Hundred Twenty-one DAVIDSON HOUSE lvnslcr, Van Vrzmkcn. I.. Sy H., aux. C. Srrofzrl' Row: Bull. ttc. Bennett. M U La M ulslcrul. H i. lc, Mr. Clicqucnno Clarke. I.. H4 w nbcrg, C D Ron lfrwzt 1-I Q C 2 52 if .1 nl :J if 2 .E an E .S LIZ J E v' xi 11 vt 4' Z P C xl 1-. rx SC :J 1. U 'J C V7 :il E 22 Ao -C 'QC E LJ E C H L ,id 'J 3 .IC rf U: 5 -N E u .E '73 'T' -- 2 -U L Q5 'S . 9.1 sd C 2 LE LJ ': C o 'J , Ik .4 i TJ U1 f ' :- LI 2 -C. '7- Ni H. A T., W F5 U 51 Oflzz odrzkfzz 51 DAVIDSDN HUIJSE I-IISTDIQY HE Davidson House started off a good year in 1950 under Mr. Ch-ester Wagner, the House Master. Elected to the Council Were: Richard Halstead, Presi- dent, Gerald Howie, Vice-President, Ferdi- nand LaMotte, Secretary, Iames Clarke, Treasurer, and Edward Bennett, Historian. The House football team, after losing two of its First three games, rallied back to take second place, defeating in its return game the long undefeated Thomas team. The House placed Five men on the All- House team, including Bob Axelrod, Bill Shoemaker, Benny Casella, Roger Snape and Dave Sincere. Bob Axelrod, co-cap- tain with Rich Halstead, was particularly outstanding, scoring eighty-five points over the six game season, of which we won four. The team was coached by Robert Shoe- maker, a Fifth Former and an old David- sonite. His excellent coaching was a big factor in the teamls line showing. In House soccer, Davidson was not so impressive, tying only one game and losing Five. The spirit, however, was good and all the games were close, so the season wasn't a complete loss. Bill Shoemaker was cap- tain and high scorer, and Rich Halstead was our lone representative on the All- House team. Davidson House, in the Lower School swimming meet, took last place. The meet, however, was close and the competition keen. Tom Dillenberg swam well, taking a second in the fifty-yard freestyle and he also swam in the relay. House basketball, not completed at the time this was written, is captained by Roger Snape. ln the Iunior sports, Davidson is well- represented. Iunior basketball has Axelrod, Smith, and Shoemaker from Davidson, while swimming has both Dillenberg and Sincere. Iunior wrestling, however, seems to be the IHOSI popular sport in the House. On the squad are Rich Halstead, the Cap- tain of the team, and Gerald Howie, lim Van Branken, Ferdinand LaMotte, Ed Bennett, Dick Iordan, Le Roy Sylvester, and Bill Chilton, all from Davidson. During the year Gerald Howie, Dick Iordan, and lim Clarke have had honors averages consistently, while Iohn Kriend- ler, Bill Shoemaker, Dick Haines, and Dick Blackstone have had them at various intervals. Boys who have had privileges include, LaMotte, Morris, Barrows, and Bennett. We Hnd many boys from Davidson in the activities of Lower School. The Green- house members include Marx, Clarke, Hal- stead, Kriendler, Iordan, Sylvester, Howie, Snape, Bell, and Chilton. Boys who worked on the Stage Crew during the Christmas plays were: Howie, Halstead, Clarke, Bell, McFalls, LaMotte, and Smith. Ed Bennett was in one of the plays. Tom Dillenberg was on the staff of the Recorder. In the early part of the year, Mr. Wag- ner had an unfortunate automobile ac- cident. During his absence, Mr. Clic- quennoi Filled in as temporary House Master. The House would like to thank him and Mr. Wagner for the wonderful job they have done this year with the House. ED BENNETT, Historian Thr:-c Hundred Twenty-three 51 Ulla ocfrzkfrz 51 IDEIQIQY D055 HUIJSE HISTDIQY ERRY Ross got off to a good start this year with an old Lawrenceville graduate for its Housemaster, Mr. Fred W. Berg. This is his first year as a House- master, and we wish to thank him for the fine job he has done. During the fall term we elected the House Council, which is: George Stein- muller, President, Sherey Snyder, Vice- President, Ronnie Mischner, a Rhinie, Treasurer, Garry Cilley, Secretary-His torian, and Iake Barlow, Rhinie Repre- sentative. Ross has had a pretty good year ath- letically speaking, with the House football team co-captained by Bob Van Vranken and George Steinmuller, taking second place, with the soccer team tying Thomas for the Championship, with Sherey Snyder captaining the team, and Skip Hoenigs- burger as head coach, in swimming, we took second place winning the relay, and placing in almost all the other events, with House basketball just starting as this is written, Tim Noble and Pete Wright are co-captaining the squad, and Mr. Berg coaching the team, we seem a good bet to win the House Championship. All in all a good year in House sports. Ross has placed many men on the Iunior teams in various sports, a few of which follow: in Ir. Swimming, Steinmuller, Chipman, Mischner and Thuss, in Ir. Wrestling, Riker, and in Ir. Basketball, Van Vranken and Snyder. Paul Ionack, Ronnie Mischner and Bob Van Vranken made center, guard and back, respectively, on the Lower School All-House Football team, to list another Ross achievement. As regards activities, Ross has done pretty well, placing Steinmuller, Van Vran- ken, Chapman, Snyder, and Rounds on the Print Shop staff, Tim Noble on thc Stage Crew, Van Vranken, Cilly, and Thuss in the plays themselves. On the Recorder, Van Vranken and Cilley wrote some stories to help earn House points towards the coveted trophy. , Scholastically Ross has done very well. On the fall quarterly Wright, Cilley,AMe- jer, Noble, Reiger and Vaughey made honors averages, and on the Mid-years report, Tim Noble did especially well with a High Honors average. At the Christmas Interim, Wright, Meier, Reiger and Vaughey gOt Honors averages while Chapman, Snyder and Colwell attained Privileges. At this writing the rest of the Mid-years' marks were not available. In the All-Around Trophy competition, at Christmastime Ross was, regrettably, last in the race, a fault we hope to rectify by Iune. As regards the members of the House, we have lost two fine boys, Iimmy Harris, a Rhinie, due to ill health, and Luis Mejer, a Council member, who remained home this Christmastime. We miss them a great deal, and hope to see them back at Law- renceville soon. All of which adds up to a fine year for Ross. E. G. L. CILLEY, Historian Three Hundred Twenty-five 51 Ufla odrzkkz 51 THDMAS HDUSE HISTDIQY N the early days of October, the Thomas House elected a permanent Council which consisted of Bill Trimble, Ludlow Miller, Iim Tattersfield, and Dick Rose as President, Vice-President, Secretary-Treas- urer and Rhinie Representative, respec- tively. The House started a very good year when our football team won the Cham- pionship of Lower School. This was due mainly to the good coaching of our House Master, who drilled us throughout the season. Dave Summers and Ed Seamans helped with the coaching. Captain Bill Trimble, Charlie Gilbert, Ludlow Miller and Mike ,Schoettle won places on the Lower School All-House team. After getting off for a good start with our football season, we welcomed Peter Broomhead as our soccer coach. He led us to another first place. Pete organized our team rapidly so that we knew the funda- mentals of the game. There, again, Trimble and our coach Broomhead helped much in our winning first place. Iohnny Gartner and Bill Trimble were tops in the back- Held, while lim Tattersfield and Pete Miller, who made All-House, also turned in creditable performances. Although our swimming team came in third, we have won our lirst game in basketball, and hope to continue our win- ning ways. The team is coached by Mr. I-Ilavacek and has shown fine spirit. The House this year has not done too well scholastically and we have had only Bill Trimble, Iohn Bellew, Leland Berger and Dick Ries with honors. Earning points for the House in ac- tivities, there are many Thomasites. We also have Leland Berger and Bill Trimble in the School Band. The Stage Crew of the Dramatic Club had Iohn Gartner, Bill Trimble, Iohn Steinbrunn, Al Stender and Roy Maurer as Heads of their respective departments. Acting parts in the Club were held by Ben Sonnenberg, Tom Aikenhead, Peter Kauff- mann, Dick Ries, Iim Tattersfield and Ludlow Miller. As the winter season of sports is on its way, we find that we have lim Tatters- field as a member of the Varsity wrestling team. So far he has won two out of his three bouts. The Iunior wrestling team has Mike Schoettle and Arthur Antenucci, both of whom have won their past matches and are likely to see more action. On the I.V. swimming squad we have Charlie Gilbert, who has done a very good job throughout the year. Ludlow Miller and Dick Rose are members of the Iunior swimming team, while Don Headings, Iohn Steinbrunn and Iohnny Gartner are members of the Iunior basketball team. Thomas House has been doing very well, and our hopes are that we can repeat last year's performance which resulted in our winning the All-Round Trophy. IIM TATTERSFIELD, Historian Three Hundred Twenty-seven 51 Olin odrzkzkz 51 I Front Row: Schoettle, Theodoracopulos, T., Gartner, I., Trimble, Miller, L., Ries, Steinbrtmn. Sccoml Row: Rellew, Aikcnhead. Buckley, Antenueci, Kauffmann, P., Anderson, 'I'attt-rsheld, Casella, T. Hizrk Row: Stendcr, Maurer, R.. Salas, H., Berger, I... Carnwath, Sonnenberg. LDWEIQ SCHDOL FDCTBALI., 1950 HE Thomas House, by virtue of a hve and one record, won the Lower School Football Championship this year. Davidson placed second with a record of four wins and two defeats, and Ross hn- ished third. Thomas started out by rolling over Cromwell in the first round 26-o. At the same time, Ross defeated Davidson by a 14-7 score. In the next round both Thomas and Davidson won. In the first game played between Thom- as and Davidson, the Thomasites won hy a score of 38-27. In the same round, Ross defeated Cromwell, 21-6. The fourth round saw Davidson turn Three IIur1drcd Twenty-eight the tables on Ross, defeating them by a I3-7 score. while Thomas handed Crom- well a 29-zo defeat. In the Hfth round. Davidson and Thom- as both won their games, einching the championship for the Thomasites. Davidson won its last game with Thom- as and thus kept Thomas from an unde- feated season. Both teams played extremely well, but Thomas was unable to stop Davidson's Axelrod. Ross won its last game from Cromwell, I4-6. Thomas' fine team placed three of her backs, Miller, Gilbert and Trimble, in the All-House backheld. Axelrod filled the fourth position. 51 Offd odrzkzkz 51 LOVVER SCHOOL SOCCER KROSSJ Ifrunt Row: Barlow, I.. Chapman. Ionack, Van Vrzmkcn, R.. Mischncr. Noble, T, Burk row: Rcigcr, G., Purclcy, Thuss, R., Ron. Wright, CS. LOVVFR SCHOOL SOCCER QTHOMASJ Ifront Rauf: Millur. L., Stcinlwulm. Trimblc, 'l'.1ttcrsHL-lrl. Gurtncr. I. liufk lima: C4151-lla. HL-How, licrgcr, lillfklcy, Russ. Iinmmlmczul, Stundcr. Rica. K11LlfTl11kllE, P.. .-Xil4cnl1Luul, Salas, Il. Three Hundred Twenty-nine I Offa odrzkfa 51 I'-Vllllf lCnu': Casella. T.. .'XTkCl1llL'Llll. Ries. Trimhle, liellew, Buckley. I?uc'fq Row: Salas, ii., Katiifinaim. Stender. Harmon. Carnwath. LUWEIQ SCHDUL BASKETBALL, 1951 lllf Lower School liaskethall Trophy went to the Thomas House this year hy virtue ol' an undefeated record. Ross came in second with a record of four vic- tories and two defeats, and Davidson placed third. Very weak Davidson and Cromwell teams made the league a two team race. In the lirst round Thomas and Ross hoth won their games hy oneksided scores. de- feating Davidson and Cromwell hy IIS-I2 and gohg scores. respectively. The next round saw Ross and Thomas win onee again hy larger margins. In the third round Three I'1lfHld7'Cd Thirty Thomas heat Ross by a 2.5-2.0 score while Cromwell lost to Davidson. The second part ol the championship saw the next two rounds duplicating the lirst as Thomas and Ross won hoth their games hy eomlortahle margins. In the final round Ross and Thomas met in the most important game ol' the season. Ross eked out a IQ-I6 decision in prohahly the year's hest game. Thomas had an excellent team, led hy Ries, who was the leagues high scorer. Trimhle. Bellew, Ailaenhead and Buckley filled the remaining positions for the Blue and Grey. I 01151 oalrzkfzz 51 Healy. T., lfcrro. llzrvey LIDWEIQ SCHDDI. HIS ycnr Cromwell tool-Q the Lower School swimming crown. closely fol- lowed hy Ross. Thomas :mtl Dnviclson in that orcler. Cromwell garnered 26 points. Ross 15. Thomas 14, and Dnviclsou 11. Noteworthy are rhe two recorcl-hrealking performances of Harvey :mal Thomas. 25-ycl. Freestyle: Harvey CCromwclll. Stein, muller Qliossj, Hezulings fThomusiJ- I2.IT 25-ycl. Backstroke: Huvey l'CromwellJ. Chapman fRossj. Rose lTl1iJl1111SJ-IS.fJ , liiximll, Roach, Cimnon. SWIMMING, 1951 15-ycl. Breaststroke: Gilhert f'Th0IN2lSD, Thuss QRossl, Smith flJl1YiLlSOI1l-IS.0 go-ycl. Freestyle: Thomas, L QCromwellj, Dilleuherg fllnviclsonl, Mischner fliossl -2fJ.7T Dive: Roach lCromwellil, Miller. L f'I1l1OlHllSJ. Sincere QD:1viclsonj ioohycl. Freestyle Relay: Cromwell lHenly, Ferro. Thomas, LJ Lower School recorcl Tfzrcc H14 zzdrcd Thirty-one 51 Oily odrzda 51 Ifmnt Row: 'Iheodoracopulos. T., lilvirlge, Smutncy, Miller, l... Anderson. Burk Row: lkmrrell. Trimble, Skipsey. Il., Cooper, Thomj vscx n, Schoettle. LOWEIQ SCHUUI. TDACK, 1950 INNING seven out ofthe ten events, , Thomas had little trouble capturing The Lower School Track Championship for the fourth straight year. Ross, placing second. garnered 23 points as compared to 47 for the Thomasites. Davidson and Cromwell followed in that order. Thompson ol' Thomas started things off by winning the 70-yard low hurdles. He was followed by Cowlbeck of Ross and Miller of Thomas. The junior go was won by Halstead of Davidson while Theodoracopulos of Thom- as copped second. ln the loo-yard dash, Thomas captured both hrst and second places as Cooper and Smutney outran their opponents. The shot-put went to Ferre of Ross. Three H undrcd Thirty-two Davidson's Bergan and Correll of Thomas took second and third. respectively. The 220 was taken by the victor's Trim- ble in the excellent time of 24.6. Ackerman of Davidson took second. Trimble also won the broad jump. fol- lowed by Crabtree and Snook of Ross and Thomas. Gaines of Davidson won the high jump, while the pole vault went to Elvidge of Thomasg Marxuach of Ross took second. Elvidge took another first in the discusg he was followed by teammate Schoettle and Skipsey of Davidson. Thomas finished the meet by winning the relay with Ross and Davidson follow- ing in that order. 51 Olin! adrzkffz 51 l x Front Row: Roach. Skipsey, C., Sincere. Patterson, Carver, D., Cannon, Rciger, T, Srcoml Row: Lambert, Mueller, Ludington, Robinson. A.. Kalloch, Bottolnc, T. Burk Row: Kerr, Mecnan, Mercer, Mr. Fitzgerald. LDWEIQ SCI-IDDL BASEBALL, 1950 ROMWELL House won the IQSO Lower School Baseball Championship with a record of five wins and one tie. They were closely pressed by Davidson which finished with four wins, one tie and one loss. Thomas placed third with a three- three record. The champions won their first game, overwhelming Perry Ross 20-8, as Thomas defeated Davidson. In the second round Cromwell rallied under an eight run deficit to gain a tie with Davidson. At the same time Thomas defeated Ross 12-7. Cromwell earned their second victory as they conquered Thomas 8-6, while Da- vidson hlasted the Red and Gr-een of Ross 19-3. Perry Ross, after winning, was forced to default to Cromwell in the fourth round because of the use of an illegal player. In the same round Davidson toppled Thomas. ln a crucial game Cromwell defeated Davidson 5-2 as Thomas edged Ross. Cromwell cinched the championship in the final round turning back Thomas, while Davidson overpowered Ross. Three Hundred Thirty-three 51 Offaz Snyder. S., Wright, G., Steinmullcr. LOWER SCHOOL TENNIS, 1950 ERRY Ross captured the 1950 Cham- pionship by defeating runner-up Crom- well in the final round of the competition after both had won their first-round matches. Thomas and Davidson tied for third. Ross was represented by Steinmuller and Wright in the singles, while Steinmuller teamed with Snyder to comprise the dou- bles team. In the finals Steinmuller turned back Gardner of Cromwell 6-2, 6-2, and Ferro defeated Wright 7-5, 6-4, to deadlock the match. Steinmuller and Snyder came back to take the doubles and the crown in three long sets 6-4, 5-7, 6-4. Thomas and David- son did not play to decide the third and fourth positions. Three Hundred Thirty-four odrzkfa 51 Smutney, Schoettle, El vidge. LOWER SCHOOL GOLF, 1950 HOMAS House won the 1950 Lower School House Golf Championship. In its first match with Cromwell, Smutney, Elvidge and Schoettle all garnered vic- tories for the Blue and Grey. Meanwhile Maurer, Hyatt and Nagle of Ross all Won their matches to hand Davidson a 3-o defeat. In the finals Smutney of Thomas started the match by defeating Maurer one up. Elvidge gave Thomas the victory as he defeated Hyatt. However, Nagle saved the Red and Green from being shut out by defeating Schoettle two up. Cromwell and Davidson were not able to play their match because there was too little time before the exam period. 51 Offer odrzdcz 51 l Fran! Row: Triinhlc. Carver. D.. Cilley, Brown. P. Second Row: Ries. Van Vranken. R., Pat- terson, L.. '1'attc1'sl'iclcl. Scllratlc. Huck Row: Tllomas, B., Skinner, Rcigcr, A., Sonncnberg. l'lrandt, Stcinhrunn. Cohen. THE IQECDIQ DEI? HE Recorder is the Lower School newspaper. This year it has as its Editor-in-Chief, Linton Patterson. Assist- ing him is Tony Reiger. Both of them are in the Cromwell House. As their Faculty Advisor, the Recorder staff again has Mr. Hlavacek, Master of Thomas House. The Recorder got off to a slow start, but they are picking up. One reason for this is that the Lower School Print Shop is not doing their headlines for them this year and they have to be done by hand. This year's staff comprises about twenty-two members from all four Houses. They hope to put out about eight issues this year. The purpose of the Recorder is to pub- lish general facts about the School where Lower is concerned such as, Mothers' Day, Fathers' Day, and Alumni Day. Also they write up any Lower School news, such as their Club news, all Iunior sports events, House banquets, and all House sports. All members of the Recorder are awarded House points according to how hard they work. These points are awarded at every issue of the Recorder, and go towards the All-Round Trophy points for the House at the end of the year. Three Hundred Thirty-five 51 Uffa ocfrzkfaz 51 1 ru11r Rum: Van Vrankcn, R.. Patterson, L.. Triinble. Bennett. Kattfl'mann, P. Buck lv'nn': Miller, L., LaMotte. Mclfalls. Schoettle, Sonnenberg, Steinbrunn, Gartner, I. LDWEIQ SCI-l00l. DIQAMATIC CLUB Hli Lower School Dramatic Club pro- duced two one-act plays this year, both of which showed considerable improve- ment in acting and especially in staging over those given in IQ49-SU. This was due to the renovation of the A'Little Theatre which was completed last fall. Both the plays, Never No Third De- gree, and For Cod and Texas were put on just before Christmas vacation. In the former lien Sonnenberg acted very well, playing the leading character. He was sup- ported by a cast consisting ol' Tommy Aik- enhead, Iiddy Bennett. Peter Kauffmann, Lloyd Thomas. and Gary Cilley. Mr. Hey- Thrra' llumln-11 Thirty-.c1'x niger and Bill Noble, a Fifth Former, did the directing. Lin Patterson took the lead part in For Cod and Texas, a short skit directed by Mr. Bull and centering around the Mexi- can war. Others in the cast were Lee Havey, lim Tatterslield. Bob Thuss, By Brandt and Alden Roach. The Stage Crew for the plays was again large in number. Headed by Bill Trimble who was aided by Dick Halstead and Rae Smith, the group did an excellent job. Although the Club usually puts on a play in the VVinter term. tradition was broken in favor of a tea dance. I Uffrz orfrzkfaz 51 Ifrwzt Rolf: Schot-ttle. liautl'm.inn. l'.. 'l'rimblt-, Antcnticci. lftrrk Kozw: Str-inbrunn. Van Yranlccn, R., Millcr, L. THE LDWEIQ SCHUOI. DIQINT SHUI? Hli Lower School print shop, The Penrod Press, consisting ol' a staff of twenty and led by its liditor-in-Chief, Lynn Patterson. has had another interesting year ol' work and lun. The shop gives any boy in Lower who is interested in printing a chance to begin his development along this line. lt is also valuable training for work on the school paper when the student moves into the Circle. since all articles and editorials are done by the members of the group. The shop is completely equipped with all the necessary types. cases. presses, composing sticks, and tables, and the boys are alf lowetl to work there Wednesday alter- noons, during the weekends. and in the evenings belore study hall begins. All the material that is printed here concerns Lower School activities with which the boys are familiar and interested. The Print Shop printed the programs lor the fall term Lower School plays and the spring performances. lt also printed the invitations and dance cards for the Tea Dance in Lower and stationery for any- one wishing it. lt was responsible for both the lunior and Varsity team sport sched- ules, besides doing valuable work lor the Rl'L'07'l1C'l', the Lower School newspaper. Tlzrec I'IIH7l27l'l'd Thirty-,vc'zff'1z 51 Ulla ollrzkllz 51 Ifrout Row: liottonie, P., Mclfalls, llrown, P., Krientller. Sffllllll Row: Reiger. C.. llerger. l,.. Chilton, Carnwatli, Salas, I., Salas. ll. Ililrk Row: Snitlt-man. Sylvester. Van Vrankcn, I. THE JUNIDIQ CHDIIQ lrlli Lower School Iunior Choir, di- rected hy Mr. Keller, and composed ol twenty sopranos and trehles from the Shell and First forms, is an integral part ol the School musical program. The Choir meets twice weekly and the boys receive both grades and House points for their participation. This year the Choir sang at the Christ- mas Carol and Vespers services, Baccalau- reate Sunday, Fathers' Weekend. Alumni Weekend and numerous other Chapel and Vespcrs services. This year the Carol Serv- ice was especially line: Holi McFalls and Peter lirown sang solos, and the entire Iunior Choir sang Canlfquc de Noel by Adams. Mr. Keller deserves line praise Three H umlrcd Tl11'rly-elglzl for his splendid leadership for which the School is very appreciative. The entire School has enioyed the consistently good singing done by the Iunior Choir. whose line work has done much to enrich the Chapel services. The trehle voices of the Choir have made possible the addition of many new and beautiful anthems to the repertoire ol' Chapel music. Because Easter came during Spring vaca- tion this year, We unfortunately missed the Crz4cifixf0n and the Hallelujah Clzomx. which were so beautifully done last year. Among the boys of the Choir, Bob Mc- Falls, Peter Brown and Tom Dillenberg were especially outstanding. N x66 Af gi , X 9 2 Q-,li-. N I ff!! .-.- L... ,,.,-2 ,,....- .,.-in 4-,,.-,W --.-v m-W .... ,-....i.,., UNDERFIIRM IHISTER 2 f K PO Q 51 Uffzz odrzkfaz 51 Stephen Harry Ackerman .... Thomas Graham Aikenhead Ieffrey Marshall Albert . ,.....,..., David Kellogg Anderson ,..,.,. lohn Whiting Anderson ..., Paul Edwin Anderson . , Arthur Ioseph Antenucci, lr. Truman Frank Appel ...............,. . Robert Elliott Armstrong, 3d Robert lay Axelrod ,.....,..... Asa Iames Baber ,..,.. , ..., , Kamran Baher .............. .. Iohn Gordon Lanier Barclay Edward Lee Barlow ...,.,... ,....,,.... ..., Iacob Barlow, 2d ,.....,... Iohn Arbuckle Barnes ,... UNDER FORM ROSTER . ,. .. 2 Eglantine Avenue, Pennington, New Iersey .....,....,...............,.......... Greens Farms, Connecticut . ......... 97 Abernethy Drive, Trenton, New Iersey . ..... .. 36 Sutton Place South, New York, New York 208 Lincoln Avenue, Highland Park, New Iersey 1320 Ocean Avenue, Point Pleasant Beach, New Iersey ,. ...,.......... 993 Park Avenue, New York, New York 445 Ohio Avenue, Corpus Christi, Texas 315 East Street, New Castle, Pennsylvania 18A Bonnell Street, Flemington, New Iersey 4747 Kenwood Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 420 West End Avenue, New York, New York Ward Avenue, Rumson, New Iersey Peter Albert Balbach ......, , 6303 Florida Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland 8224 Austin Street, Kew Gardens, New York 3414 Pinewood Terrace La, Chattanooga, Tennessee 2I Norwood Road, Charleston, West Virginia Ion Sherwood Barrett ...... .,.,.... 6 4 Third Street, Garden City, Long Island, New York Thomas Scott Barrows , ,........,. ..,.....,.......,.,,.,.... .... L a nes End, Edgemont, Pennsylvania Fulgencio Ruben Batista .,,. 'cfo Roberto Hernandez, 1841 Broadway, New York, N.Y. Harold Charles Belf ,......... ...,..,,....,..,,.... 1 7350 Pontchartrain Drive, Detroit, Michigan Hugh Langedon Bell, Ir. ,............... .......,......,.... B elden Hill Lane, Wilton, Connecticut Lawrence Gibson Bell ........,, Lehigh Parkway North, Route 2, Allentown, Pennsylvania Iohn Ieremy Bellew ..,.. ...,..... ,.,.......1.....1.,.....,. 9 3 5 Park Avenue, New York, New York Hiram Morrison Benedict, Ir. ..., ,..,... 9 I3 West State Street, Trenton, New Iersey Iohn Henry Benisch .,..,.,........ ...,, ,,... . . , 32 Heights Road, Plandome, New York Emanuel Victor Benjamin, 3d .,...,,.... .. 4636 Perrier Street, New Orleans, Louisiana Edward Blair Bennett, Ir. ....,....,.......,....,..........,.,,... Vinegar Hill, Indiana, Pennsylvania Iohn Philip Bergan, lr. .,....,, . P.O. Box 252, Monmouth Hills, Highlands, New Iersey Leland Sylvan Berger .. 25 Bloomingdale Rd., Pleasant Plains, Staten Island, New York Charles Alexander Bernheim 930 Park Avenue, New York, New York Arthur Richard Bernstein ....... .............. 2 9 Mitchell Avenue, Binghamton, New York Emery Harland Berwind ......,..,...,......,......,..,.....,......,...,.......,......,....,.. Paoli, Pennsylvania Richard Nelson Blackstone The Madison Hotel, Madison at 58th St., New York, N.Y. Iay Blaugrund ...,..,....,..... .......,.....,....,..,.....,., 8 33 West State Street, Trenton, New Iersey Henry Higgins Blundin ,.,.,,.. ......... 2 5 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Maryland Samuel Tony Bodine .,....,.....,,,,.,......,....,..... .,,.,,... ..... ..............., F l e mington, New Iersey Cornelius Combs Bond, Ir. .,..,,..........,.,.,,... ...........,,,.....,.... R oute 1, Concord, Tennessee Peter Sterling Bottome ,... Quinta Yavi Avenue, Los Chagnaramos, Caracas, Venezuela Three Hundred Forty 51 Ulla adrzkfa 51 Robert Rathbone Bottome, Ir. ,......... Quinta Yavi Avenue, Los Chagnaramos, Caracas, Venezuela Bruce Holmes Brady .,...... .....,.....,... 7 22 South Church Street, Brookhaven, Mississippi Thomas Pickens Brady, Ir. ,...,.,.... .... 7 22 South Church Street, Brookhaven, Mississippi Bayard Lee Brandt .,,..,..........,,., ..,...,.,. ..,. 1 8 o East 79th Street, New York, New York Frederick Warren Breig, Ir. ........... 419 Arthur Avenue, Scranton, Pennsylvania Iames Lanier Britton, 3d ........., ...,....,...... 3 606 Knollwood Drive, Houston, Texas Peter Hobart Brown ...........,.., .... . .... 5 22 West 112th Street, New York, New York Edward Francis Buckley, Ir. .,.... ...,.... 3 55 Godwin Avenue, Ridgewood, New Iersey Stanley Leroy Burg ..,..,............. ...,,....,.. B eachcliffe Boulevard, Rocky River, Ohio Robert Iames Burke .......,.,,....,............... ....,..... 9 6 Boulder Trail, Bronxville, New York Wellington Richardson Burt, Ir. ....,.., White Gatesf, Route 3, Box 503, Battle Creek, Michigan William Frederic Burton, Ir. .,,..r,...........,..........,.,..........,...........,,..........., Seaford, Delaware Alexander Mark Butman ,. ,,.,.........,.,,...... .. 90 Schenk Avenue, Great Neck, New York Merrill Burd Callen ......,..,. ...... R umson and Harding Roads, Little Silver, New Iersey Peter Duryea Calyer, Ir. .................. .,..,,.,..,..,......... Q uarters 47, West Point, New York Siesel Edmonson Canaday, lr. .... ...,,...,.,...... A tlantic Way, Miami Beach, Florida William Dunn Cannon ...,........ . 1210 Evergreen Avenue, Plainfield, New Iersey David Caldwell Carey ,..........,, ,.,....., 4 7 Oak Street, Beverly Farms, Massachusetts George Burgess Carey, 3d ..,..,. ....,.. 1 20 East Fairway Drive, Lexington, Kentucky Henry Carter Carnegie ....,...,,,......,..,........, 1260 North Lake Way, Palm Beach, Florida Andrew Wilkins Carnwath ,...,..... ......... H ickory Dell Farm, Newtown, Pennsylvania Douglass Mackintosh Carver, 116 Thomas Drive, Monroe Park, Wilmington, Delaware Richard David Carver ....,..... II6 Thomas Drive, Monroe Park, Wilmington, Delaware Francisco lose Casalduc ,..,.... ...........,...,,......,.,......,.. L as Mesas, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico Benny Mario Casella ..,...,.. ...,.. c fo Mario Nucifora, Swedesboro, New Iersey Salvatore Robert Casella ....,. .,.....,........,.,.................. H igh Bridge, New Iersey Iohn Mannington Casey ,.,........... . ....,............,.. 5555 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois Pierre Daniel Casimir-Lambert .......,.......... 851 Hillcrest Road, Ridgewood, New Iersey Alfred McCrea Chapman .,......,..,,, Washington Crossing, Bucks County, Pennsylvania William Warner Chesnut ,....... ..........., 3 755 Iackson Street, San Francisco, California Eugene Morris Cheston, Ir. ...,...,........,......... Skippack Pike, Whitemarsh, Pennsylvania William Ruffner Chilton .,.,........ 1266 Loudon Heights Road, Charleston, West Virginia Arthur Iohn Patten Chivers ..,..,.............,,.,. Kennedy House, Lawrenceville, New Iersey Earl Garretson Lawrence Cilley ........ 453 Seventeenth Street, Bellingham, Washington Matthew Allan Clark ................,.. ..,..,.....,.. 7 45 Cherry Tree Lane, Trenton, New Iersey Iames Stephen Clarke .......,...... ....... N avesink River Road, Locust, New Iersey Thomas Buchanan Clarke .,,.... ....,,., N avesink River Road, Locust, New Iersey Lloyd Morris Coates, Ir. ...... ......... G olf House Road, Haverford, Pennsylvania Charles Taylor Coffman ....... ....,...,, 1 93 Moore Street, Princeton, New Iersey Three Hundred Forty-one 51 Olly odrzkkz 51 Richard Martin Cohen ,..... Iesse Clark Coleman ...... Peter Colwell . ,......,.,........,...... Rafael Leonardo Compres ...,. . ...,.... ,4,..,... . I0 Shore Drive, Great Neck, New York 238 Old Short Hills Road, Short Hills, New Iersey ..,.,.,...,,.,.... Hackley School, Tarrytown, New York 90 Riverside Drive, New York, New York Alan Edward Congdon , ,.... .. , 2Q Round Hill Road, Roslyn Heights, New York Iohn Peyton Conger ,... Country Club Grounds, Dongan Hills, Staten Island, New York Harry Dunrieth Conkey, 2d 4 Leon Whitney Conrow ,........,...........,.....,..,.,,...... Benjamin Evans Cooper ..,.,.,.. Herbert Maurice Corban, lr. ., Roderick Wessel Correll Edward Troutman Cote Edwin Alfred Cowen, Ir. .,.... , Harry Donald Cowlbeck, Ir. Asher Bruce Dann .,....,...,..,.... George Cullom Davis, Ir. ,,.. . Noel Norman Davis ..,,.. David Iohn Decker .....,,..... .. Arthur Erroll de Cordova .,.,...... ........,........,...,,.. George Hubert Deluse, Ir. lose A. S. de Vicuna .,.... Villa Kenneth Dewey .........,.,..,........ David Hastings Dickinson .,..l,............ Thomas Coleman Dillenberg Charles Minot Dole, Ir. ...,.... , Gerald Donohue ......, ,,.,.,... Donn Faber Downing ...... Peter Cornelius DuBois .,....... Deer Park, Utica, Illinois 63 Fisher Place, Red Bank, New lersey 3 Van Dyke Avenue, Amsterdam, New York IQ Ramapo Terrace, Radburn, Fairlawn, New Iersey Harbour Road, Great Neck, New York , . 350 North Main Street, Greensburg, Pennsylvania Westwood Avenue, West End, New Iersey , ,..... 110 Morningside Drive, Trenton, New Iersey I9 Clover Drive, Great Neck, New York 660 Miller Road, Peoria Heights, Illinois 44 La Goree Circle, Miami Beach, Florida Edgewood Road, Yardley, Pennsylvania Norfield Road, Westport, Connecticut 208 Chewalla Drive, Trenton, New Iersey Ainhera, Rue dt-Bayonne, Saint lean deLuz, B.P., France High Time, Far Hills, New Iersey 580 Watchung Road, Bound Brook, New Iersey 45 East 66th Street, New York, New York 113 Patterson Avenue, Greenwich, Connecticut II Magnolia Drive, Great Neck, New York Box 220, Lltchfield, Connecticut I7 East 84th Street, New York, New York Peter Shepard Dubow ......,. ,...,.... 1 382 Noel Avenue, Hewlett, Long Island, New York Michael Henry Dubroff .......,..................,.,..... 567 Liberty Street, Newburgh, New York Oscar Maurice Dull, 3d ........., Robert Harris Durham, Ir. Iohn Frederick Eades ............. Paul Elvidge ,............,....,.... Paul Euwer, Ir. ....,...,.,,......... . Maurice Antonio Ferre .,......, Angel Manuel Ferro ............... David McKnew Flanders .,..r. William Ogden Fleetwood, Ir. ............ , Bruce Pepper Flood, Ir. ..,,..,..,..,.,. .... . Louis Rex Focht ......,........... Three H undrcd F oriy-two Lake Boulevard, Hillwood Lakes, Trenton, New Iersey 19512 Canterbury Road, Detroit, Michigan R.D. 3, Lawrenceville Road, Princeton, New Iersey . 659 Euclid Avenue West, Detroit, Michigan Woodlawn, Ieannette,'Pennsylvania La Alhambra, Ponce, Puerto Rico Lonja del Comercio 526, Havana, Cuba Manor Farm, R.F.D., Iamesburg, New Iersey 272 West Bellevue Drive, Pasadena, California 1480 LeRoy Avenue, Berkeley, California 525 Third Street, Belvidere, New Iersey 51 Ulla oafrzkfaz 51 George Fontanals .....,..., Reeder Rodman Fox ,.......... Charles Anthony Fried ............ Iohn B. Manning Frohling ..... Iohn Marshall Gaddis ...........,.. Stanley Noyes Gaines .............,,.. .... Adolfo Luis Garcia ,,..........,.........,....,.. . Ledyard Dickinson Gardner, Ir. ....., .,..., .... . Russell Iohn Gartmann .........,......,.. ...... Iohn Winter Gartner, Ir. ...,... , William Drennan Geer, Ir. George Fulmer Getz, 3d ...., . Wolcott Gibbs, Ir. .......... .,.,...... . Hendrik Alexander Gideonse ...... . . Charles Burton Gilbert, Ir. .....,............. . Laurence Alan Glass .................,...........,. Edward Douglas Gooderham ...... William Campbell Goodlett, Ir. Morton Louis Goolde ...........,...,..,. 1845 60th Street, Brooklyn, New York 336 Reeder Street, Easton, Pennsylvania 25 East 86th Street, New York, New York I2 Stockton Street, Princeton, New Iersey .. 140 East Rosewood Avenue, San Antonio, Texas Fayetteville, West Virginia Cerro de las Mesas, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico Little House, Pinehurst, North Carolina 119 Kensington Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Manning Lane, Lawrenceville, New Iersey 151 East 79th Street, New York, New York 365 Sheridan Road, Winnetka, Illinois 317 East 51st Street, New York, New York 1 Cliff Court, Highland Park, 5 Cadwalader Drive, Trenton, 45 East 82nd Street, New York, The Chatham, Vanderbilt at 48th Street, 225 North Second Street, Olean, 700 Ft. Washington Avenue, New York, New Iersey New Iersey New York New York, New York New York New York Philip George Gough, Ir. ,..............,, . ,..... 699 Monterey Road, South Pasadena, California Kenneth Lawrence Greene , ............ Clapboard Hill Road, New Canaan, Connecticut Torn Hays Gries ...................,.. Peter Lawrence Groves , ...,.,.... Richard Alan Haines , ...........,...., . Richard Thomas Halstead ,.... Iohn Hamman, 3d ....,,...,......... Tad Daley Hammond ................. Iohn Pengelly Harkrader, Ir. .... A Iohn Iohnston Harmon ....... Richard Row Harper ..,,.,....,... David Ellsworth Harrah .,..,.... Iames Alexander Harris .,........ Iames Iackson Harris, Ir. ....., . Iohn Gordon Hartong ...,..... Charles Lee Havey, Ir. .,,.,. . Paul Neil Hays ......,...,.. ,....... Peter Cole Haywood ..................,.,,, Donald Moore Headings, Ir. ....... . 3021 Attleboro Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio 77 Prospect Hill Avenue, Summit, New Iersey 175 Elm Road, Princeton, New Iersey Country Club Road, Somerville, New Iersey 3379 Inwood Drive, Houston, Texas Park Road Acres, Nebraska City, Nebraska 840 East Avenue, Bay Head, New Iersey Princeton Pike R.D. 4, Trenton, New Iersey 6821 Edgerton Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania P.O. Box 200, Essex, Connecticut 969 Park Avenue, New York, New York 1830 Queens Road, Charlotte, North Carolina 644 Dalewood Lane, Hinsdale, Illinois Carbondale Road, Waverly, Pennsylvania 232 East Beverley Street, Staunton, Virginia 237 East Delaware Place, Chicago, Illinois 1407 Plymouth Boulevard, Norristown, Pennsylvania Timothy Iefferson Hilbert Healy ..,,,........... 1200 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York Martin Hecht ..........,.........,.,..,.....................,....., 31 Montrose Road, Scarsdale, New York Three Hundred Forty-three 51 Ofla odrzda 51 Garrett Martin Heher .. ....., ,, Lawrence Charles Heilman ......... Robert Bruce Henriksen Philip Haynes Hepner .,.... ..,. Richard Redfearn Hepner ....... Charles Talbot Heppenstall . William Hinrichs ,..,.,...,..,...,. Iohn Franklin Hitchcock .. Kenneth Gerard Howie ..... Iames Dick Hughes ..,.r....,t Henry Mueller Hulshizcr ,,........ ., Samuel Eugene Hunter, 3d ,.,...,.. 42 Perdicaris Place, Trenton, New Iersey 1333 Maryland Drive, Anderson, Indiana Donald Lee Bruce Heimlich ,, ,.... 115 West 86th Street, New York, New York .. ...... 420 River Avenue, Point Pleasant, New Iersey 119 Hollywood Drive, Trenton, New Iersey 119 Hollywood Drive, Trenton, New Iersey 6815 Edgerton Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 110 Oakland Road, Chevy Chase, Maryland 58 Haddon Park, Red Bank, New Iersey Conover Land, Red Bank, New Iersey 281 North Sprague Avenue, Kingston, Pennsylvania ,. .....,,,.,, 120 East 79th Street, New York, New York 447 Hillside Place, South Orange, New Iersey Iames Milton Hurwith ...,. .........,. ,..,.,,..,............,....,,.,... 4 2 5 Grove, Evanston, Illinois Charles Percy Hutchinson, Ir. ..,, .,...... 8 46 Parkside Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey David Kersey Hyatt ,....,... ....... ........... W a yside House, Lawrenceville, New Iersey Hepburn Ingham ........ ..................... 4 141 Greenwood Drive, Des Moines, Iowa lay Robert Inglis ...., ........ Osborn Lane, Greenvale, Long Island, New York Yves Andre Istal . ..... .. ....,....,.1,.............,.. I5 East 91st Street, New York, New York Arthur Paul Iacobs ..1..,.,,.,... II Wedgewood Lane, Lawrence, Long Island, New York Lawrence Iacobson, Ir .,.. .,.1,..,,,..,.... C orner Penn Valley Terrace and Evergreen Road, Morrisville, Pennsylvania Thomas Crawford Iamieson, Ir. .....,.............,....,...,...,, 3 Ivy Court, Trenton, New Iersey Allen Acree Iohnson, Ir. ,.,.,... Edward Esrey Iohnson Robert Fowler Iohnston ...,,. . Paul Curt Ionack, Ir. ......,.... . Richard Hanford Iordan, Ir. Anthony Lobach Kalloch .... . Dicker Katzm ............,..........,,.... Peter Christopher Kauffmann Robert Ernest Keiter .... ,.....,.. Chester Burton Kellogg, 2d .,,,,,.., . ....... . Robert E. Kelly .......... ,.....,,.,.. Dennis Mathews Kenny ,.,... . Richard Gervas Kerr ...,, ..1, Iohn McDonald Kimball .....,. Iames Kimball King ....,.....,... Karl Richard Knoblauch .. Iohn Peter Robert Kriendler . George Deere Krogness . ,. Three Hundred Forty-four Cherokee Road, Mountain Brook, Birmingham, Alabama 113 Cadwalader Drive, Trenton, New Iersey West Long Drive, Lawrenceville, New Iersey 225 Oak Street, Ridgewood, New Iersey 146 East 38th Street, New York, New York . ...,.. 40 East 1oth Street, New York, New York . ...... -81 Parker Avenue, Maplewood, New Iersey 135 El Vedado Way, Palm Beach, Florida 24 Woodland Road, Maplewood . .. 27 East Welling Avenue, Pennington 7 Park Avenue, Greenwich, . ...,... 804 Harrison Street, Frenchtown, 615 Tremont Avenue, Westfield, New Iersey New Iersey New Iersey Connecticut New Iersey 435 East 52nd Street, New York, New York 35 William Street, Princeton, New Iersey ,. 501 Parkway Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey 114 East 73rd Street, New York, New York Edgewood Hill, Wayzata, Minnesota 51 Ulla odrzkkz 51 Herbert F. R. Kuhner ....... .,.4,4.,.... 2 7 Marion Street, Trenton, New Iersey Iohn Richard Kunkel ,..,..,. .......,..... 7 25 West Main Street, Norman, Oklahoma Iohn Francis Kustrup ......,. ......, 1 418 South Broad Street, Trenton, New Iersey William Iames Kustrup ........ ...... 1 418 South Broad Street, Trenton, New Iersey Iohn Dean Kyle .,..,..,,.,,....,. ...,..... 5 0 Claremont Avenue, Maplewood, New Iersey Ronald Edward Lake ............,..... .....,. 6 08 Westminster Avenue, Elizabeth, New Iersey Richard Iohn Lambert, Ir. .................................... 1 Barnt Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Ferdinand LaMotte, 4th ,,.. 1101 Barton Circle, Westover Hills, Wilmington, Delaware Edmund Gay Langhorne, 2nd ,... Peter Cooper Hotel, I3O East 39th Street, New York, New York Iohn Langhorne, Ir. .,.. Peter Cooper Hotel, 130 East 39th Street, New York, New York George Lasry ........,...............,..,..,........,..,,.. 65 Central Park West, New York, New York Robert Appleton Lawrence ....,..........,...,,..........,.. 109 Maple Street, Summit, New Iersey Donald Moffat Laws .,.., .,..,.....,........ ...,,... 2 5 Walbrook Road, Scarsdale, New York Edward Campbell Lawson, Ir. ..,..,,. .,,.,,.,,.,. 2 ozo East 41st Street, Tulsa, Oklahoma Herman Lazarus, 3d ....,. ,,.,...,.,,..,. .,.....,, M i lky Way Farm, Pittstown, New Iersey Richard Ivan Lazarus ..,.,..., .,.,....... 1 185 Park Avenue, New York, New York George Terry Lee ...,.....,..... ..,.....,.....,... 1 20 East 79th Street, New York, New York Alan Ward Leeds ,...........,... ...........,......,.,..,,. Lawrence Ward Leighton ....,... Sueloo Li .,...................,...,..,............,..,.,....,,..,,... Powell Smith Lindsay ........... Vernon Reece Loucks, Ir. ....... , Douglas Ashley Love .,.....,,.... Robert Linder Love ..,,...,.,.. Rupert Bidwell Lowe, Ir. ......... . I5 Poplar Avenue, Deal, New Iersey 1175 East Broadway, Hewlett, Long Island, New York 87 Beechtree Drive, Larchmont, New York 4123 Lyon's View Road, Knoxville, Tennessee . .,.....,........ 234 Sheridan Road, Kenilworth, Illinois 199 West End Avenue, Ridgewood, New Iersey 243 Bard Avenue, Staten Island, New York 411 Tuttle Parkway, Westfield, New Iersey William Fletcher Ludington ......., .,... 1 Hillcrest Drive, Pelham Manor, New York Daniel Ioseph Lyons, Ir. ,.....,.... ...,., 2 07 Renfrew Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Christopher Macllvaine ......... .... 2 64 Oak Ridge Avenue, Summit, New Iersey Edward Guala Mainardi ,...,.. ...... 3 SI East 40th Street, Paterson, New Iersey Arthur Harold Marcus ...... ....,.. 3 56 East 4ISI Street, Paterson, New Iersey Raymond A. Marks ...,.,...,.. .,,..,.. 6 20 Chestnut Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Charles David Marx .,......,. ....... Sycamore Avenue, Shrewsbury, New Iersey Aciscio Cuetara Marxuach ..,.... . ..,,................ Box 3442, San Iuan, Puerto Rico Peter Noel Matisse .,.........., .......,..,.,...,......,.,,.....,..,..,.., R .D. Lebanon, New Iersey Iames Wilton Maurer ,,.,.... .....,... 3 25 Linwood Avenue, Ridgewood, New Iersey Noel Wilton Maurer ..,,.. ....... 3 25 Linwood Avenue, Ridgewood, New Iersey Roy Wilton Maurer ................... ....... 3 25 Linwood Avenue, Ridgewood, New Iersey Mitchell May, 3d ....... . .................... .....,... 4 Midland Gardens, Bronxville, New York Cal Iames Peter McCarthy, 3d .....,.. ...,..,. 1 25 East 84th Street, New York, New York Iames Crampton McCurrach, Ir. ,.....,.....,... 294 Pondfield Road, Bronxville, New York Three H undrcd Forty-five 51 Ulla ocfrzkfzl 51 Robert Burdell McFalls ..,,.. ....,. S9 Hampshire Road, Bronxville, New York Iohn Clark McCurrach ....... ..4........,......,... 213 River Road, Grand View-on-Hudson, New York Harry Payne McKenzie .,..,..,. ,... , ..,.. Lafayette Road West, Princeton, New Iersey Allen Lamar McMurrey, Ir. ..,.., William Pearson McNulty Eugene Walter Meenan, Ir. .,.,.. . 22 Briar Hollow, Houston, Texas 4o5 Sutherland Road, Trenton, New Iersey 815 Park Avenue, New York, New York Louis Ernesto Meier ....... .,...... ......,..........,...... ,... C a l le 2 No. 258 Vedado, Havana, Cuba Georges Daniel Mercadal .,..... .,..... Douglas Demarest Mercer ,....,....,....... Bobby Shafter Merritt ,,....... Lee Gwynne Mestres ....,. ,..,.....,.......... ....... Ludlow Miller ...,.....,,....,...,..,. Ralph Alexander Miller Ronald Philip Mischner Dartmouth Road, Douglaston, Queens, New York Willowbrook, Rumson Road, Rumson, New Iersey 300 Crescent Avenue, Greenville, South Carolina Edgerstoune Road, Princeton, New Iersey 21 South Westfield Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Stuart Iesse Michaels .....,..,..,.,...,..,..... ' West Neck Road, Lloyd Harbor, Huntington, New York Yule Farm, Charlottesville, Virginia M 'i i2i,5iQiQLi5 QiQLQ0 95,Ca1i, Colombia, south America George Evans Mitchell .,.......... 528 West Sherwood Circle, Spartanburg, South Carolina Samuel Edward Monroe, 2d .,.,,,.,,,........ 4810 Boston Post Road, Pelham 65, New York Louis Anthony Montag Harry Drogo Montague ...,.... 1 ...,..,. Ioel Gedney Montague ..............,....,................ Kenneth Willoughby Moore, Ir. .. Richard Evans Moore .................... William Talman Moore, Ir. ..... . Dudley Edwards Morris .,...... Rodney Patterson Morrison ...... . Adolph Henry Mueller ..,.,..,.. ,... Ezra Rust Muirhead ................,.,.,.,, Marshall Anton Mundheim ....., .,.. Laurence Mallery Nagle, Ir. ....... . Carl Ernest Nauen ........,.,.....,. Robert Nesbitt, 3d .......,........,..,......,... Iules Salem Neviaser ..,,,.,,....,.....,....... 3365 Habersham Road, North West, Atlanta, Georgia II3 Waverly Place, New York, New York 113 Waverly Place, New York, New York 18 Richey Place, Trenton, New Iersey 3240 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 405 Park Avenue, New York, New York 23 Armour Road, Princeton, New Iersey 830 Muirlield Road, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania .. 8 Southmoreland Place, R.R. 7, Decatur, Illinois 63 Kenwood Road, Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan 245 East 61st Street, New York, New York 545 Arlington Road, Erie, Pennsylvania 201 Lincoln Street, Englewood, New Iersey 300-23rd Street, Brigantine, New Iersey 1918 K Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C. Andrew Dickson White Newberry ......,..... 48 Poplar Avenue, Wheeling, West Virginia Clement Buckley Newbold, Ir. S. Scott Nicholls, Ir. ...,......,,............. . F. R. Carver Nixon ..,....,........,... Timothy Edwards Noble .,............ Harold Augustus O'Callaghan ...... Robert Anthony O'Callaghan ........ Gate Farm, Ienkintown, Pennsylvania I4 Cambridge Road, Glen Ridge, New Iersey 1550 North State Parkway, Chicago, Illinois 1361 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 1251 Raleigh Road, Mamaroneck, New York I25I Raleigh Road, Mamaroneck, New York Richard Bingham Odlin .......,..,..,.... 610 North Yakima Avenue, Tacoma, Washington Robert Henry O'Grady ,......,.. ..,,..............,. 7 Gracie Square, New York, New York Three Hundred F orty-six 51 Ulla odrzkkz 51 Norman la Cour Olsen ,.,,..... Carlos Rafael Omana ........ Iohn Spencer Orelup ,.....,.. Iohn Irving Orrell ...,...... Thomas Owen Orvald ...... Anthony Lionel Otis ,...,..... Richard Chapman Otter ....... 102 South 18th Street, Richmond, Indiana Apartado 253, Caracas, Venezuela 1 Cross Gates, Short Hills, New Iersey Great Ring Farm, Sandy Hook, Connecticut 406 Greenwood Avenue, Wyncote, Pennsylvania 1165 Park Avenue, New York, New York 124 Township Line, Ienkintown, Pennsylvania 114 White Horse Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Robert Charles Padderatz ..... ............ Wallace Crawford Palmer, Ir. .......,,., . Charles Vincent Panettiere ...... ..... Iames Creighton Parkes, 2d ,..,.,..s..,.s,..., ...,.,..,..........,.., R idge Road, Rumson, New Iersey Benjamin Charles Patt, Ir. ...............s..............,.., Valley Road, New Canaan, Connecticut Frank Linton Patterson, 3d .... Worthington Road, Shawnee-on-Delaware, Pennsylvania Iohn Michael Pattison ,............,...........,.....,...... 120 Hobart Avenue, Summit, New Iersey Thayer Arthur Peck ...,...,..,.., 1112 Coldwater Canyon Drive, Beverly Hills, California 312 North 5th Street, Reading, Pennsylvania Michael I. Penta, Ir. ...,.. .... . Stuart Lee Phelps .....,.....,...,... Esteban de la Rama Pirovano Richard Laurance Plaut, Ir. .....,, . Townes Garrett Pressler .,......,..... Seymour Stotler Preston, 3d Frederick Walker Prichard, I William Alexander Purdey .. Pendennis White Reed, Ir. ,... . Anthony Elton Reiger .......11. George Wesley Reiger ..,..., Kurt E. Reinheimer ........... Donald Everett Rhoades ,..... Homer Hervey Richards ,...... Pierre Evertson Richards ...... Richard Ferdinand Ries ....... Stephen Riker ..................,...... William Iames Ringkamp ..... Alden Gallup Roach ...,......,... Princeton-Kingston Road, Princeton, New Iersey 1254 West Avenue, Miami Beach, Florida 3020 San Felipe Road, Houston, Texas 1211 Weaver Street, New Rochelle, New York 975 Park Avenue, New York, New York 2133 Pine Valley Drive, Houston, Texas Farnum Road, Media, Pennsylvania r. ......,..,.. 917 Ridgeway Road, Charleston, West Virginia Greenfields, Holmdel, New Iersey 43 Cold Road, Summit, New Iersey 135 Puritan Avenue, Forest Hills, New York 135 Puritan Avenue, Forest Hills, New York 983 Park Avenue, New York, New York 441 Washington Avenue, Palo Alto, California 53 Hemlock Road, Short Hills, New Iersey 53 Hemlock Road, Short Hills, New Iersey 1111 Park Avenue, New York, New York 62 Trenor Drive, New Rochelle, New York Lake Boulevard and Clement Avenue, Hillwood Lakes, Trenton, New Iersey . ,.... ..t,....,....... 2 975 Lombardy Road, Pasadena, California Thomas Tenbrook Roberts, Ir. 1016 Berkshire Road, Grosse Pointe Park IO, Michigan Bruce Mitton Robinson .,,......... .,........................................ R .D. 1, Stockton, New Iersey William Andrew Robinson .,.....,. . ..,.. 9 Denton Road West, Wellesley, Massachusetts William Wilson Robinson ,.,.... ............ C heswold Lane, Haverford, Pennsylvania Iohn David Rogers, Ir. .... Andrew Donald Rohll-ing .,,.... . .... ..... R .F.D. 1, Line Road, Matawan, New Iersey Rua Utinga, 151 Chacara Flora, Sao Paulo, Brazil Three Hundred Forty-seven 51 01141 odrzkfa 51 Richard Loomis Rose .... ,.,, Robert Stephen Rosefsky ....... ,. Axel Eberhard Rosenblad ......,. Donald Garrett Ross, 3d .....,.. . . Iames Herman Rothschild .. Peter Ioseph Rounds ........,.... Henrique Salas ..,......... Iacobo Dario Salas .,........ 103 Lincoln Drive, Asbury Park, New Iersey 9 Vincent Court, Binghamton, New York 118 Library Place, Princeton, New Iersey Lawrence Farms South, Chappaqua, New York 149 Livingston Avenue, New Brunswick, New Iersey Lafayette Avenue, West Trenton, New Iersey La Noria, Puerto Cabello, Venezuela La Noria, Puerto Cabello, Venezuela Ioel Mattson Samuel .,...,.... ..,..,..,., 9 002 North East Second Avenue, Miami, Florida Peter I-Iaward Schenck .,........,,,..,..,..,.....,.,,..,.. 415 South Park Avenue, Hinsdale, Illinois Michael Wheeler Schirmer ...,.... 98 Putnam Park Apartments, Greenwich, Connecticut George Ioseph Schmitt, 3d .....,.........,.,.,........,.......,....,. ,.,. 5 I7 Peck Road, Geneva, Illinois Iay Martin Schocket ..,,........ , I9 South Westfield Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Michael Schoettle ,,....,1..........,., ,.,....,.. 4 7 South Stanworth Drive, Princeton, New Iersey Arthur Rudolph Schonheiter . ....,...,.,..,...,.......... Carter Road, Lawrenceville, New Iersey Richard Dow Clemson Schrade ............,..,.......... Clemson Park, Middletown, New York Hamilton Putnam Schrauff . 33 Rockwood Road, Plandome, Long Island, New York Lee Robert Schuster ...,....,....,..., Philip Van Rensselaer Schuyler, Marvin Schwartz .,..,,.,....,.......... Frederick Tracy Seving, Ir. ..,. . Iohn Dyer Shankle , ,..,..,....... . William Gerald Sharron .,.... Paul David Shein ,..,,...,... ...,.. Richard Hawkins Sheldon ...,.. Michael Carter Shillaber ,..... William Elmer Shoemaker ....,.. Leon Edward Simcoe ....,.. Herman Ewers Simpson ...... David Benjamin Sincere ...... Richard Stevenson Skewes ...... Alan Kingsbury Skinner ....,..... Charles Ingram Skipsey, Ir. Harry Skipsey, 2d .....,.,..,,...., Richard Gordon Skipsey, Ir. Frederic Updike Smith ............. Rea Martin Smith ,..... ......, Roy Allen Smith ...,......i.,... Three Hundred Forty-c'1'ght 325 Beechwood Road, Ridgewood, New Iersey 3d ...... ..... 1 46 East 38th Street, New York, New York 762 Red Bud Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 4 North Cornwall Avenue, Ventnor, New Iersey 281 South Spalding Drive, Beverly Hills, California 107 Court Street, Plattsburg, New York 201 Buckingham Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Queensbury Hotel, Glens Falls, New York ..,.,.....,....,,....,..,..,..,. R.D. 2, Princeton, New Iersey Upper Ferry Road, R.D. I, Trenton, New Iersey 1150 Park Avenue, New York, New York 330 North Belmont, Wichita, Kansas ,, ......, .,..,......... 1 210 Aster Street, Chicago, Illinois 677B Shaler Boulevard, Ridgefield, New Iersey Briscoe Road, New Canaan, Connecticut Av. Aconcagua, No. 210 Lomas Chapultepec, Mexico City, D.F. Sierra Madre, No. 710, Mexico Lomas, D.F. Sierra Madre, No. 710, Mexico Lomas, D.F. 3607 Knollwood, Houston, Texas Alfred Bramlett Smith ,.....,,.,.....,....,,...... .... , ..,............. . 1028 Lawrence Road, Trenton, New Iersey Tucker Station Road, Ieffersontown, Kentucky Iohn Macauley Smith ,,,,.... Blackacre,', 875 La Loma Road, Pasadena, California 5208 Western Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska 51 Ollrz odrzkkz 51 Rudolf Roger Smutny ..,.,.... Roger Lang Snape .....,....,....... , 22 Nassau Boulevard, Garden City, New York 1617 Hillcrest Road, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Earl Kenneth Snedeker, Ir. ,........,. .,.,.... 4 6 Green Avenue, Lawrenceville, New Iersey Michael Lawrence Snideman ........,.. , Richard Lawrence Snideman, 2d 1260 Astor Street, Chicago, Illinois 1260 Astor Street, Chicago, Illinois Paul Albert Snook .....,.,................,.,... .....,.,.... 5 Devon Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Anthony Wayne Snyder ..,......,.. ......, 8 4 Glenlawn Avenue, Sea CliH, New York Sheridan Gray Snyder ..,,..,,...,.... ....,..,. 8 4 Glenlawn Avenue, Sea Cliff, New York William Cordes Snyder, 3d ....... Richard Hugh Solomon , ......... Benjamin Sonnenberg, 2d , ....... . Arthur Tappen Soper .......... .. Pine Road, Sewickley, Pennsylvania 1095 Park Avenue, New York, New York I9 Gramercy Park, New York, New York 141 East 88th Street, New York, New York Iames Breckinridge Speed ,........... .....,..... 2 544 Glenmary Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky Frank George Stamato ..,..1..,......, Iohn Alfred Steinbrunn .,..,...,.,. 306 Pearl Brook Drive, Upper Montclair, New Iersey 25 East 77th Street, New York, New York Henry Stephen Stark .....,.,,.....,,.1........... 215 East Tammany Street, Orwigsburg, Pennsylvania George Andrew Steinmuller, Ir. ,.........,......... 117 Battin Road, Fair Haven, New Iersey Albert William Stender, Ir. .........,........ 1112 Watchung Avenue, Plainfield, New Iersey Horace Donaldson Stephens , ....,.. Iuniper Rock, Frazier Pasture Road, Ogunquit, Maine Iames Reginald Bliss Stockham Iames Roosevelt Stockton, Ir. .. Iohn Iames Brown Stoetzer, Ir. 76 Woodland Road, Short Hills, New Iersey 909 Arbor Lane, Iacksonville, Florida 909 Coleman Avenue, Fairmont, West Virginia Richard Came Striker ....1.....,..,,..... .. .........., I5 Amherst Road, Great Neck, New York Lloyd Charles Strite ,......,,.,,...... Kenneth Agustin Suegart ........ Walter Heidweiler Swayze, Ir. LeRoy Mitchell Sylvester ..,......, Iames Peyton Tattersfield, Ir. David Lawrence Taylor .....,...... Harry Iohn Theodoracopulos Takis Iohn Theodoracopulos ......., Francis Bruce Thomas .............. Lloyd Banks Thomas, Ir. ..,.., . Robert Capron Thomas ..,,.... Stephen Larned Thomas .....,.. Colin Richard Thompson ,...,., Robert Wilkey Thuss .......,.,...... 2321 South West 31st Avenue, Miami, Florida Qta El Alcazar Ave., Los Manolos La Florida, Caracas, Venezuela .. 415 Greenwood Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Lawrenceville, New Iersey Altavista 131, Villa Obregon, Mexico, D.F. Green Avenue, Lawrenceville, New Iersey 101 West 57th Street, New York, New York 101 West 57th Street, New York, New York .. 317 Iohnson Avenue, Englewood, New Iersey Locust Point Road, Locust, New Iersey Pen-Y-Bryn, Hagerstown, Indiana 80 Kalorama Circle, Washington, D.C. 2 Lancia Lane, Larchmont, New York 2837 Southwood Road, Birmingham, Alabama Richard Weller Tompkins, Ir. ...,,...........,......,..,......,,.,. Balmville, Newburgh, New York Robert Kimball Torrey ...,,........ Fernando Travieso ..,.,...... ......, Peaceable Street, Ridgefield, Connecticut Av. Las Acacias, 42 La Florida, Caracas, Venezuela Three Hundred Forty-nine 51 Uffa ocfrzkfzz 51 Andrew Terry Treadway ...,.,. ,....... 7 0 Norwood Road, West Hartford, Connecticut William Neve Trimble ....... .. .,,...,..,.. Park View Apartments, White Horse Pike, Collingswood, New Iersey Barry Truscott, Ir. ,..,,....., ....... ' Parkview, 802 Brigadier, Collingswood, New Iersey Peter Sol Tumarkin ..,..,... .......,....,.........,, 3 5 East 84th Street, New York, New York Iohn Fordyce Tuttle .,......... ...,,.,...,,....,.................,..,..,., R oute 2, Fairport, New York Edward Merrick Twohy .,...... ....,.,....,.........,.. 4 42 Mowbray Arch, Norfolk, Virginia Dean Pierson Updike ,..,..... ....... 1 4 Hendrickson Road, Lawrenceville, New Iersey Furman Titus Updike, Ir. ...,.. ,.,.,.,.. 1 4 Hendrickson Road, Lawrenceville, New Iersey Henry S. Urbaniak, Ir. ......,.....,......,..,....... 883 Brunswick Avenue, Trenton, New Iersey Frederick Iames Van Vranken, 2d ,....,....,..,,.......,... 4 Greenholm, Princeton, New Iersey Robert Eakins Van Vranken, Ir. .... ......,,.,,.,....,...,.,, 4 Greenholm, Princeton, New Iersey William Meagher Vaughey, Ir. ..,......... Old Canton Road, Route 3, Iackson, Mississippi Ioseph Albert Visconti, Ir. ............t..... 7519 Boulevard East, North Bergen, New Iersey William Cook Wallace ........,,....,...........,......,.............. North Road, Princeton, New Iersey Peter Bent Brigham Northrop Wallis ..,..,.......... 115 Broadmead, Princeton, New Iersey Theodore Walser ..............,........,.....,,..,,.....,........,..,.......,..,..,,.,,.,. New Canaan, Connecticut Henry Clay Ward, 3d ......................... .......,.. 3 7 Wensley Drive, Great Neck, New York Dean Allison Waters ,.,,......, ........ Neale Wheeler Watson .............. William Graham Webb, 3d ..,....., .. Stephen Hensleigh Wedgwood ...,.... Harold Weicker ............................,. Gerald Elliot Weiss ................,... Frazier Wellmeier , ..,....,.. . Iohn Sigmund Weltner ...... George White, 3d . .,.,...,.......,.. A David Michael Whorf ...,.,,......,,. Charles Henry Conley Wight .,.....,... Peter Wight .,.....,.....................,. George Belmore Wiley ...,........... Iohn Hamilton Wilkerson ..... ...,.. Henry Alexander Williams, 3d William Edwin Williams, Ir. Grover Hubbell Windsor .........,. Theodore Voorhees Wood, Ir. ...,...., . Iohn Davis Wright .............,.,. Peter Gwin Patton Wright ...,.....,. ...,. William Fiske Wright, Ir. ....,..,. Clarence Edgar Zimmerman, 2d Iacob Manus Zoble ,, ..,.............. ..,. . Three Hundred Fifty Little Silver Point Road, Little Silver, New Iersey 200 Overlook Avenue, Great Neck, New York 701 North 3rd Street, Albany, Texas 400 Quaker Street, Chappaqua, New York ,. ,...... 895 Park Avenue, New York, New York I2 Melbourne Road, Great Neck, New York 410 North Wayne Street, Piqua, Ohio 975 Greenfield Road, Woodmere, New York 307 Forrest Drive, Short Hills, New Iersey 601 North Canon Drive, Beverly Hills, California ,. ..,.,.,..,...........,.....,.., Route 2, Frederick, Maryland Route 2, Frederick, Maryland 644 Tulsa Street, Norman, Oklahoma I2 Chelsea Place, Houston, Texas 300 East 35th Street, Paterson, New Iersey 900 Charlotte Road, Plainfield, New Iersey 315 37th Street, Des Moines, Iowa Ioshua Road, Whitemarsh, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania 540 Broadway, Pitman, New Iersey Woodhull House, Lawrenceville, New Iersey 220 Mercer Street, Princeton, New Iersey 125 Wilson Drive, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 1922 Riverside Drive, Trenton, New Iersey ACKNDWLEDGMENTS LTHOUGH the GLLA PODRIDA is essentially a student publication, it must be remembered that without the aid of certain people not of the student body this yearbook would not appear. W'e feel that it is necessary to show our gratitude to those who have given so much time in helping us put this edition together. Especially we wish to thank- MR. NORVAL F. BAOON, IR., our faculty advisor, who has given generously of his aid and kept the ball rolling and has ex- pertly guided those of us who found the job at hand new and puzzling. MR. NORVELL B. SAMUELS, who has de- voted much of his time and effort in pro- ducing a book from the material we sup- plied him and has accounted immeasurably toward the book's success. MRS. PAUL B. MOTT, who, by her great skill with a typewriter, has translated huge quantities of hieroglyphic articles into beautifully legible manuscripts, and has also aided by answering the thousands of questions which were asked of her. MESSRS, ORREN IACK TURNER, SR. AND IR., who have done the formal photography for the book in such a fashion as to im- prove it vastly. MR. WILLIAM VAN SYCKLE, who has kept account of the financial end of the book, a necessary part indeed. And we profess our sincerest gratitude also to our printers, advertisers, and all those who have endured our tiresome Ways and donated their help to the publication of this book. THE Enrrons INDEX OF ADVERTISERS Albert. L. and Son ,........, ...,.. Applegate Floral Shop Bell, Charles L., Co. ,. Bernstein, Moe ..,.... , Bishop Mfg. Corp. Brown Electric Co. Burton lflrothers .... Caldwell, I. E. 8: Co. . Canaday Cooler Co. .. Class of ,SI ,..,,..... Devlin, Roy ., .. Farr Hardware Co., The .,...,.,.... ......,. First National Bank of Princeton ....... George 8: I-Iarry's Rest Inc. ., Gerber Chevrolet ....,,..,..,.., ,..,.. Gough Industries Inc. ,... ...., . Hartman Pontiac Inc. Heroy Tea Store ..,..,..,...,.. Horton Bristol Mfg. Co. Hulit's Shoes Inc. ,,..,.. . .... .. Iiizger Shop ....... ...,. ....,,,.. ...... Karcher, Walter T. and Livingston Smith ...,..,.,,..,.....,..,...... ......,..........., Kenny Co., The William F. ....... ,..,. . Langhorne, Iohn ...,........ ...... Lawrence 81 Groves Co. Lawrence Pharmacy ...... ,.........,.... . . Lawrenceville School Book Store ,....... Leeds Ltd. ......,.... ..,...,................ .4,,. . Meenan Oil Co., Inc. ,, McGrory Co., R. F. ...... ,.... . 362 370 355 362 380 373 366 360 360 371 377 354 354 370 370 357 370 362 375 354 355 368 372 355 376 379 371 37-I 372 366 Nassau Delicatessen .,..... Nelson Corp., Iulius ..... New River Co. ...,...,...........,......... ,....... . Olla Podrida Business Board Outdoor Traders ..........,.,...,..,.,,. ......, Pearl, R. D. ..........,.... . Pequanoc Rubber Co. Petrone, P. A. ........... . Princeton Inn ,...... .,............... Princeton University Store ..... Radio Corporation of America Reed 's, Iacob, Sons ,.........,,....... Rogers Peet Company .... ,..,..... Roofs of Summit .... ............,.. Rosenberg Co., The Arthur M. ...,..... . Ryan Inc., W. E. .................... . Saks Fifth Avenue .........,..,,,.... Sharron's Department Store .... Shein's Express ..,.....,..,......,.... , Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., Inc. .. Spartan Gas Co. . .,............. ,. Spartan Petroleum Co. Spatola, Felix 8: Sons ....... Stacy-Trent Hotel Co. .... . Stamato, Frank 8: Co. ..... . Stout, Iohn L. .........,...........,.. . Suburban Propane Gas Corp. .. Trahan, G. A. ........ . Turner, Orren I. ............,.... . Underwood, Neuhaus Bc Co. ...... ...... . Virginia Woolen Co., Inc., The Wagner Stott 81 Co. Wasko, A. I. .........,,.,.......... . Wells Co., Richard W. .......... . White Construction Co.. Inc. .... .... , . Woolsey and Cad wallader ..... 370 374 363 376 370 362 356 362 370 354 358 366 355 380 370 355 353 368 365 378 367 373 377 373 379 377 366 379 369 359 381 358 362 380 361 379 Three Hundred Fifty-two yi UNIVERSITY f NEW YORK - NEW HAVEN ' PRINCETON Three Hundred Fifty-th 'I'IlI'1l'liINCI+1'I'ON ITNlVI+1ltSl'I'Y S'l'Uli14l'S MUSIC SHOP ' 3 HS Nassau Street Phoue 80 'l'IIl+I BHISIC SIIUP has 1,l'IIlC6T0lIIS most com- plete assortment ot' Records and Record Players. Sheet Music. and VVi1'e and Tape Reeorciers . . . as well as a complete Radio and Television Sales and Repair llepartmeut. No excuse, then, for being flat . . . wheu a harmonious life is yours for the asking at 'I'IIE MUSIC SHOP. The Farr Hardware Co. f,I07II1lli7lIlflIfS of -I-HE 138 NASSAU STREET I'RINCl'l'1'0N, NEXT' JERSEY FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PRINCETON l'ltlNCI'1'l'0N, NEW JERSEY II UIq1'l S SHOES INC. Thv hunk of frimzzlly servzc If'lol'.vhc'1n1 S11 rms PI KI 1 io r IWSURKNL 'I-1:0 BYIISSQIII c n1c1u'r1ov 1,1'I1lCCTOIl. NJ. Three I'1l4l7dl'C'd Fifty-four RlrlCOGNIZl'llJ AUTHORITY AT SCHOOL AND COLLEGE Correct Styling in the right Materials, Dependable lfVork1nanship, and Sensible Prices have established Rogers Peet Uni- versity Shop and our Boys' Department as recognized authorities in School and Col- lege Outfitting. NS Rngrrx PN! Cfofhwx Gi f1rcf'.c.rr11'frJ are fn!- F furml by fha famuux Duugliu M41fD11izl NS' - Shops in Nea' Hui-an ana' Princeton. ,i Tia ' 5 ' TTT V fr ' l V .,.,' :: i W L 152' ::' X X M ,.ff- fi :J ': ' A zzzz.. is ' in SHOP In New York' And in I?oslon.' Fifth Avenue' Thirteenth St. Warren Street Tremont St. at 4-lst Street at Broadway at Broadway at Bromfleld St. Sentinel CHAS. L. B ELL CO. View Products Universal Appliances Ufholesalc Disfribufor Quaker Oil Burners Sunbeam Appliances Geneva Modern Kitchens Fourteenth and Gordon Streets - Allentrrwn, Pennsylz'a'nia - Phone 3-5101 GENERAL INSURANCE JOHN LANGHORNE 99 JOHN STREET NEW YORK 7, N.Y. Three Hundred Fifty-fi Compliments ef A FRIEN D PEQUANOC RUBBER CO 11IIl'7I'llfILl'tIl rers of ,RL't'IIli'IIl ed Rubber Since 11101 BUTLER. Bell, YVAlnut 2-111168-69 W. E. RYAN, INC. DOPVN HUME FARZVIS Down Ilmne 1f'1l'ff6l'V, Eggs Sg Poultry I Reading 'I1t'I'II1illILl Market Pllilndclphia Mary Rogan Compliments of A FRIEND u The Pfaee fo Remember THE JIGGER SHOP Famous for good food Courtesy-Service: Three Hundred Fifty-six Complimemiv Of GOUGH INDUSTRIES, INC. LOS ANGELES, CALIFCRNIA PHILCO DISTRIBUTORS Th Hundred Fifty Compliments of Radio Corporation of America RCA Laboratories Division Princeton, New Jersey Compliments of WAGNER STGTT AND CO. 11 Wzlll Street New York City, N.Y. cc Hundred Fifty-eight Government and Municipal Bonds Corporate Stocks and Bonds Oil Properties Oil Loans UNDERWOOD, NEUHAUS AND CO. MEMBERS MIDWEST STOCK EXCHANGE CITY NATIONAL BANK BUILDING HOUSTON 2, TEXAS 'FELEI-1mNn C1'lNTHAL 88L1 T :TYPE HO 321 A JDJ Three Hundred Fifty ,QJUAVLITY FOR OVER A CENTUR Y I VVe are privileged to supply the Official Rings Lawrenceville School Ilonor Awards Charms, pins and keys for all societies, clubs and other organizations ZlIaili11,quiries given prompt affevrfiofrz, The faculty and students are cordially invited to call when in Philzidelphizm J. E. CALDWELL 81 CO Jewelers-SilversniithshStntioners Chestnut and Juniper Streets, Philadelphia 7, Pu. Compliments 0 f Canaday Cooler Co., Inc. 1541 VVest 144th St., New York, N.Y. Thru' H zmdrcd Sixty White Construction Co., Inc. Buildery SINCE 1895 INDUSTRIAL - COMMERCIAL - INSTITUTIONAL - EDUCATIONAL For Lawrenceville 1951 The Field House Gifi' of the Edward J. Lavino Foundation Edward M. Lavino, '05 Founder The Science Building Gift of Jansen Noyes '05 NEW YORK, N.Y. Three Hundred S I A. A1,BER'l' AND SUN Com pIimf'r1 fs of MOE BERNSTEIN to the class of '51 You Will Always Bc XVCICOIIIC Pete Pefrone Heroy Tea Store f'0l0 1'f' lf0a.vIf'r.v 155 N. BROAD ST.. 'l'REN'I'0N. NJ. ANDREVV J. XVASKO Tailor R. D. PEARL SPORT COATS. SLACKS MANIIATTAN SHIRTS and Conlplctc Line of Hubcrdasllery For fhosf' who prefer fha' best . . + CLEANING I IIFSSIYG TAILURINK flzrcc Hundred Sixty-two THE NEW RIVER CO MT. HOPE WEST VIRGINIA Producers 0 f Whz'te Oak Smokeless Coal SHEI Express ESTABLISHED I899 IF YOU WANT SERVICE INSURANCE: CARGO: +75.000.00 IH-r 'Frm-kg :F75.000.00 pm-r Trails-r. YI?-I4lII.IIIIO.INI pn-r singjlc' catastro- phv. ?I4I.:'S00.000.00 Aggrl-gatv 'IIt'I'lllIIlIlI i'ovn-rag:-. I'l'ISI.IC' I,IABII,I'I'Y: rI4l00.0OO.00 to r+2ZI00.000.00 Limits por unit. PROI'I'1Ii'I'Y IJAMAGIC: 510000.00 I'n'r Enit. I IIII'I. 'I'III'II 'I' N C'0I,I,ISION: Amplv l'm'a-rzngv. IVOIIK3II'1N'H C'OMl'I'1NSA'I'ION: C'm'e-x':1g1' IIICVIS I't'flllII't'Illl'IltH of all IIIQ' statvs an-rx'i1'1'1I. SERVICE T0 points in Nm-w York and tln- N4-w ISIIQIIJIIIKI stats-s from or to points se'l'viI'4'4I Ivy our Trf-nton. I'IliIa- 1I1'IpIlia :HMI IViImington te-rminaIs. In- h'l'1'Il:nl1gvmI with our vollllm-tillgg vznrricrre at 1-ltllvr Na-w Xork City or pomts lll Nortln-rn Nvw .Ia-mm-y. Thru' llzulzlzwf S1'x1AvAfr11rl' SERVICE T0 points in tlln' I'I:1ste'rn- C'vntraI and SoutIn-rn Statcs from or to points svrvicvri Ivy our Ncw York. Nvw- ark and 'I'rvnton tvrminals. Intvr- clmngcci to i'0IIlI1'l'tIIlg carrivrs at Phila- rIc'IpI1i:1. LIQUOR PERMITS: I,Ii'k'lIHK'lI to 1-arry liquor in tha- Statm-x of IJ1f:1,.xw.x1uH: 1 NEW .I I-:lzsl-:YY Nl-iw Yomi 7 PENN- sYLvAN1A. QIOIIIIFCEIIIQI carriers arc also Iic'x'l1m'1I to carry IIIIIIUI' in Statvs in whim-Il tln-y opvratv. Also Iic'cI1sm'1I to transport tax-I'rm- and lIl'IlJlIIllI'1'tI alco- I1oI. BONDED SHIPMENTS: I,i4-I-msn-II Imy tlu- UIIIINI Stzltvs CIIISIOIIIS Housm' to I1amIIu I50mIv4I I rm-igllt umlvr Iwoml of ?I'425.000.00 HINI with tIlm' I'l1it1'1I Statvs cIOX'I'I'IlIlll'llt. C'oIIe'c't0r of Customs. C. O. D. SHIPMENTS: Collection and remittance of C. O. D. shipments are handled with care and dispatch. Sepa- rate C. O. IJ. bank accounts are main- tained to insure safe and prompt han- dling of C. O. Dfs. Remittances are made daily. TELEPHONE SERVICE: Twenty- four hour direct leased telephone service is maintained hetwecn all terminals, en- abling our customers to secure prompt. accurate information, in tracing. deliv- eries, C. O. Dfs. pick-ups and expedit- ing movements. TARIFFS PARTICIPATED IN: Eastern-Central Motor Carriers Ass'n. Middle Atlantic States Motor Car. Conf. Southern Motor Carriers Hate Conf. CLASSIFICATION: National Motor Freigllt. nu-is TERMINALS New York 2, N.Y. 269 SOUTH STREET T1-ln-pllune: Gllnlnn-rcy 5-5100 O Office: 80 JEFFERSON ST. 'I'n-lvplunu-: Gkann-n-y 5-5 100 O Newark 5, NJ. JOHNSON 81 DAWSON STREETS Tn-lm-plume: V1Arkc-t 3-3636 I Philadelphia 34, Pa. 2854 E. ALLEGHENY AVENUE Tn-11-pllunm-: REg1-nt 9-31-45 O Wilmington 19, Del. 26th ST. 81 GOV. PRINZ BLVD. T1-ln-plxolw: V'i1niinglon 51--2059 O Main Office Sz Terminal Trenton 3, N.,l. CALHOUN SI BEAKES STREETS T4-lvpllolln-: Tn-nton 3--1-1 14 i 0n or about S1-plc-lnlzcr 1, 1951, opera- d t N 1 ls 1 lions now lialulln- an our ow 'ur :nu Nc-mark ll-rminals will ln' pm-rfornn-xl at our new icrxuinal locals-11 at 1079 NVEST SIDE AVENUE. JERSEY CITY A rm-4-ixing station will bv muinmim-ll na our prcscnl location nt 269 South Slrccl, New York. NJ. Three Hundred Sixty-five Bcst XxviSlll'S to . Ulla Podriduu Um-r 20 ye-urs' expm-1'ic-llcc sm-rvin a I lmnws QQ inclllstry-lwyoml X ga.. lllilillx I SL'l5L'RBAX PROPANH UAS CORPORATION U'llIl'l'.XNY . mwxn mmmq . u.xs1u-11.1 m:r.vm1-:m-: . 1-'l.1m1xu'1'ux r xn ux 1 un QUALITY APPAREL For Men and Boys . . . Since 1824 1424 CHESTNUT ST., PHILA. 2 Plmna' 9008 R. F. McGRORY CO. Jilllitfll' and Silllitiltiflll Supplies Clwlllilfflls 10051 N. OLIJICN AVHNUIC Trcntml 8. N.J. Zgurtnn Zgrntbzts GENERAL ELECTRIC Mplbliafzces Since 1927 SCElf0I'll. Delaware T11 fn' llzmdrvd Sixty-six SPARTAN GAS CC. Charleston, Wesf Virginia Three Hu ndrcd VVALTER T. KARCHER and LIVINGSTON SMITH 1fIu'GISTI2'RED ARCHITECTS 1520 l4Ol'l'S'I' S'1'lil'l1'l'I' l'11l1..xn' 'HIA 2. PA. Complimenfs of Sharron's Department Store Plaffsburg, N.Y. Il 11 ads gh Compliments of ORREN JACK TURNER Photographer for the 1951 Olla Poclrida Three Hundred The Gerber Chevrolet l,l'lllC6t0H. NJ. ylltllll' -1450-1272 354-3152 Nassau St. V I I lmcv'r.v for all occ11.s'ior1.s' Applegate Floral Shop 117 Palmer Square VVest Princeton, N..l. Phone 121-221111 The iBrincetnn ilnn Compliments of HARTMAN PONTIAC 1,ANcAs'rE1z, PA. Om' of C0r1r1er'fir'ut's First Sporting Gnarls Stores OUTDOUH TRADERS Greenwich, Conn. The Origimrl GEORGE Sz HARRY'S REST INC. New Haven, Conn. Nassau Delicatessen 415 PALMER SQUARE COIl1PlllI16I1tS of The Arthur M. Rosenberg Co. M1'11zcHAN'1' VPAILURS 1014- Chapel Street New Haven, Conn. Three Hunrlred Seventy Compliments of I I I HE CLASS GF I I I JAMIE CARRY, President JIM RIXINER, V ice-President BUDDY PRAY, Sec.-Treas. I Three Hundred Seventy-one Compliments of Meenan Gil Co Complimelzfs of Kenny Co. d Brown Electric Company 401 Berf Avenue I Trenfon, NJ. Spartan Petroleum Company lncorporatrd Spartanburg, South Carolina Distributors of A flaniic' Refining Company P?fFlIIf'IlIll Products in S. Carolina WHITE FLASH Hl ARC CASOLINE ATLANTIC MOTOR OILS lgffigdx 'LAL-'tw f?,. Q -, V we-3,31 , I . .ry X ,mn WT: f ,M shi Q 'n' B ' gi! , , H .. f. N . 'Q I: F EE 153. w f' -1.3 - i lh, E1 , is ! , ul -v in' 9 Make reservations for Mother and Dad W'hf-th:-r for dinner in our DELAW' ARE RUUNL ur for an uvvrniglll slay, Lawrencr- wills' parm-nl ll njoy thc- nvarhy STACY- TRI-INT! Tru-num 2 3131 A Kuo!! Hotel Hotel Stacy-Trent Alhc-rl W1 Sn-nd!-r, Pros. Three Hundred Seventy-three Compliments of JUDY NELL 2-1-7 WEST 38th STREE1 N.Y.C. Comlblimenfx of LEEDS LTD. 500 7th AVE. N. Y. C. ffl H i 1' S uwzty-fam' For Lawrenceville Golfers .ax N! lo jzfisfoil CHAMPION SET Want to play better golf? Have the per- fectly balanced, just-right clubs that help so much to better scoring? Then, this year, start playing with these BRISTOL CHAMPION Clubs, designed especially to help the game of fellows like you. Every club in this handsome set is precision- matched and precision-balanced as ac- curately as the fine clubs played by lead- ing Pros. Yet they're just the right length and Weight to help you get the most from your swing. Why not suggest to Dad he get you a set of these dandy BRISTOL CHAMPION Clubs? They're clubs to make any young golfer happy. The Horton Bristol Manufacturing Co. . . . Originators of the steel golf shaft Bristol, Connecticut ompliments 0 A FRIEND Three Hundred Seventy-five Good Lucie fo the 1952 HOLLA PODRlDA BOARD I FROINI THE BOARD OF 1951 I Complimelzfs of I Lawrence and Groves C0 WOOLENS N.Y.C. Tl H1145 y I Cl0'lIllIIi7Il6lIfS ' Comp lim efz is of the 0 IJAWVRENCEVILLB SCHOOL LX F RI E N D BOOK S'1'OR1f: - 1 - - 1 - ' Coinpliments of Ffux sPAroLA a. sons IICDSTDEQXYLIN Established 1880 Your Sehool Barber Fresh and Frosted Fruits and Vegetables l y I 1 w llell - XValnut 2-5600 JOHN L. STOUT READING TERMINAL Attlttttt Outfitter PHILADELPHIA, PA. ' A. G. Spaulding's Athletic Goods, Footballs, Shoes, Pants, Stockings, Jerseys and Shoulder Pads, Basket- ball Supplies, Tennis Rackets Re- strung, Hand Made Golf Clubs. Skates and Shoes Baseball Goods Tennis Rackets - I 1 Three Hundred Seventy-seven 5 i. mi W Mobllgas SOCONY'VACUUM V, The Sign The Nation Knows. Builds as The Nation Grows! Since 1866, SOCOIIY-xYilCllll1Il has C0llSiIill1tly built toward on-e enden big 1110116538 worth for the public! This. in turn. bus greatly benefited the thousands ot' small business men who sell Flying' Red Horse products Coast to Coast. Today, 1-L00 independent jobbers-45.000 independent dealers-rely on the Flying Red Horse for what the public' wants . . . for the products and services 1116.11 need to grow and prosper. I SOCONY-VACUUM OIL CO., INC. Three H und red SC'L't'l7fvV-Ulighf Compliments of Frank Stamato and Co. General Contractors 284 MAIN ST. LODI, NJ. 1 Call Pennington 57 Woolsey 8m Cadwallader PENNINGTON. N.J. for LVMBER. COAL, AND BUILDING IVIATERIALS The G. A. Trahan Co. Inc. Incorporated 1909 DECORATING SPECIA LISTS 274-280 CENTRAL AVENUE COHOES, NEVV YORK ywlilllllllfllll' : fflfrlar 7-1601 Lawrence Pharmacy 2661 MAIN STREET LAVVRENCEVILLE, N.J. PVP :lor in the reffection 0 .I .V . your success. C 0ll1f2!i77IElIf.f of A FRIEND Three Hundred Seventy-nine Congratulations TO TH E 1951 GRADUATION CLASS RICHARD XY. XYELL5 CO. lm . Roo'r's Men's Shop Summit, N.J. Outfittvrs to tlu- young man of N0l'tlllfl'll Ne-w Jcfrsvv SlIll'l'f 1917. BI-SEAL Self Fusing Tape for Elcctlwmllics :xIZlllllfIlCtlll'6l'S BISHOP MFG. CORP. Cedar Grove. NJ. rn' Hu ndrrd Eighty The Wrginiez Woolen Co. Ine. Manufacturers of Fine Woolen Fabrics WINCHESTER, VIRGINIA Three Hundred Eighzy Www-5 AUTOGRAPHS ' MVWMM Q QW ww , - - ,gt .Q . , 1 . dx 0 ' gf H QP 07 Q y ' f Q 'WY-fr WE P G -xx K ' T' N Cvfowfwf gaQ 'O'X ' 'MII in, wwf: Qwwo b Q C59 AUTOGRA PHS JQWMDWT7 M70 Wyddpmf J 56 4 S P: gif if 4 1 U TCG' RAfF H S Nfl, 1 - A: ,r -f L . .. W .XL L .,'.', J-fe. ,xt iw ', K a r 1 K ..,. ' ex V x,, w A 1 . I Q 1 .. .- '.A,-,.q.+ ,, I - 7 7 --v . f fbfff X ff! 1216 V513 av X q - Vx X 0 6 ., eva' gk 566 LL? fi cr- -5q:.--- JAN Ugxgy Q o o , lx O BX Y VEQQOPXQ 4,9- 90 6 sm O46 I 6 Q fx...-'vb. l .... ,, I 02 i I P' '-'f...-i CfL5 Km OCTOGGQ b DEC EMBEQ E - x ,Q ' L.: 09 U5 v K X, 'SU N W SML.: P893 T-U E ' J sf C D 1 AVIRCH X EDJ X..4:X Q if -I
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