Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY)

 - Class of 1932

Page 1 of 340

 

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1932 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection
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Page 10, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection
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Page 14, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection
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Page 8, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection
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Page 12, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1932 Edition, Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 340 of the 1932 volume:

. l, ng' 7 , I Mn XX XX.. Ill! lm X . ..'.,',,Yl. X E19-'x . ,i mfg Rx l , J Mfg, B fx MN-.I1 X O-I ily EX XX X 'Y N ,..-f 1' 4 1 1 1 E E I. p, , A r P 1 4 1, 9 E, i E 1 i 1 i - . I 1 1 I i i 5 . ? , i 5 5 3 41. v , . 5 Q F -1 t v I i . A W. . r 1 . x l I . i x V i E , i L X I I 5 ' R L .l' :Q : F H -E Q, 1 wynti- ...mu- x M COPYRIGHT E' A Q 3 Q Q ONNELL 155 50,7-M A I3-A-U-L FLAHERTY BUSINESS MANAGER GHT 3 l'E'5 NELL TUB 11.1 gP1TY V555 GER mf nal' . V 411' ,,,,4f' , ,.-1-ff' 1 ga . 1 A 12? 1- 1 T .ff- 'Flff .W-f 'fj,w 1939 1: QRE1.1c31oX :zz :1: X MORES X 5 1 ,CULTURA 1 , 1 1l11 ' .1,. f 4. HAWNN I T E 1 1 . 1 ,1 1 1 1 1 1 1 MOTIVATED AROUND Ai 1 1 1 , Q X ' 0 1M A N H ATTAN IN EW Y A1 1 51 4,T!1 A,4A FA O P1 NOTABLEAMEP1lCANl BY THE SENIOR CLASS 1 I CU'-LEG E l J FGREWGRD Anollwer golden linlc is forged- A bond of dearesl rnernoriesq Anollwer fire is kindled briglwl ln liearls for lliee allarnie. Abrealliing in lvlanl'iaJr+eni+es The soul ol Alma Maier lives: A pray'r Jrliel ours ol +l'1ir+y-+wo Adown The years lond llwouglils arouse And slrongesl loyally enslirine. l l XD ll D HOUSE X ...,.,.,.,,. WW. Y-V-...sw CONTENTS BOOK ONE . BOOK TWO BOOK THREE BOOK FOUR BOOK FIVE . BOOK SIX . . Eacullry . Classes AcJrIviJries EraJremi+ies A+hle+ics Eeefrures - -,-YNY.-, SX X -Qfv A .- f - - - F, hffff - mm! A, n n m . wr Jia my ,. , ff f H: rr ' Q --.ii QW'p1,fg'v l? JWVQ46 f l WEDICATICN ALFRED E. SMITH A Christion Brothers' Boy, Four Times Governor ot New York Stoite ond Presidentiol Condidote in Nineteen Hundred ond Twenty-Eight, the Mcinhotton Seniors ot the Closs of '32 oH:ectionoitely cleclicote THIS YEAR BOOK a . T Y-N T' A i is f X V I iii 4' I, I i I 1 N EMURIAM GEORGE J. KOPP ' I930 ' THOMAS J. KENNEDY I93O Requiescan+ In Pace Dill-I uf? H51- WH E32-fl is J Mfg? ?fm'i.! 'rs'-' S532 v Li H' Q N J,' 5 A ' LQ, . 253' 5.1 .4 N, if 55 V f f I .3 - 'E ' , . ,, N , SAW My Y YY. 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L M- ,riilrrfi gm 55163 y1'i'asQ5g Qaor!w'sno , , Yo +5rH :nlduq +ee1Q,1311qgQ:Q - A---ra nevow e1ew z-azfgaaisai a 'io noiiinpoaaw Qniifff 'hid-izsw epeuoffj ' .fadleini +5919 ' ' W, Q :Pair insmiaevni ei!-5 ,eonei1eq?W f J.. sTQg.A,, ' 4' ' , , Q v , 1 , ,, , .A gr evnhslaapel ?o a+qeQQi 3 ,gQf,g fi g? 11,X vgqk '?':- ' 5. Lx - ' a .. ,., , 7 vz- ,. .- 1 1.-.,, 1-- vd awe! 'fo 1o+::oClA--Wo 591 sb ' 's . IEBCDCDK CNE U LT BROTHER CORNELIUS, F.S.C., PHD. Presfdenf I 8 Y. ffl wifi A: 1 524.2 'ww J' H' BROTHER JASPER, FSC., Mfx. Vice-Presiderd Dean of The School of Arlrs and Sciences I 9 , ,f 'L I , -Zf , 33, 'f .Y BROTHER LEO, F.S.C., M.Sc. Dean of Engineering E w 20 JAMES A. FITZGERALD, M.A. Dean of Jrhe School of Commerce 2 I PN , -.. --V V TH .E , E .l. BE. ,.N .H -ff? 2? HA - gg fff:fjTTT Tl'1Tifl.fI -- 3 7- -- ' ' ' i l l L wi l l l 1 l l 5. if f,. l l 1 W' BROTHER ALPHONSUS, F.S.C., Ph.D. BROTHER SEBASTIAN, E.S.C., lv1.A. Philosophy German BROTHER CELESTINE, E.S.C., MBC. Biology BROTHER A. AMBROSE, E.S.C., Ph.D BROTHER A. GABRIEL, F.S.C., lv1.A. English English 22 if ' 5iOlHg -ix-..'tm,' n W . i, gf M-JOSEP Chernislllily GTHE MWILLIAM FS Spfifligh l I ,Fw l 'w.,. f.5q.,L ,,, vs.. -.v,Rx,, --fs' JP'-,. vi, '-' L' ' A J, BROTHER A. JOSEPH, E.S.C., RBD. BROTHER FELIX, E.S.C., M.A., M.Sc Chemisfry Malrlwemafics BROTHER AGATHO, E.S.C., M.A. Educafion BROTHER A. WILLIAM, E.S.C., M.A. BROTHER CHARLES, E.S.C., M.A. Spanish French 23 .O..,.... - . --Y..f,,,Q,,... -bln, A: . 2 REV. JAMES T. TORSNEY, B.A. BROTHER A.VlCTOR. F.S.C., Ph.D. English Philosophy BROTHER PAUL EDWARD, E.S.C., M.A. English BROTHER BASILIAN. F.S.C., B.A. BROTHER A. CASSlAN, E.S.C., lv1.A. Public Speaking Hislory 24 qi, '1L..xl,S?,l'-y lil . i ' ' J . ' . A ' -2 - Rag '1wt,ny3,4, .. ,gg ,kv 1 f 4 4 , ,F gif A , .Qgwgw ' ff A fi l ,E . ,ff ggi Bi . llllilqr ' ARD lzfench I 5 C., Ph.D. 5.c.. M-A' f 'C' i -1:-we ViiLf if7f'r xvmqaniww I BROTHER ALBERT, E.S.C., B.Sc. BROTHER BERNARD, F.S.C., M.Sc. Biology Engineering BROTHER AUBERT, F.S.C., C.E. Engineering BROTHER C. EDWARD, E.S.C., MA. BROTHER C. FRANClS.F.S.C.,lv1.A. French Accouniing 25 W -- .-... -.-...- ..........-J 1 ir 'IL J, Q W qgegrgg-g1QL.'1,ss:'+t'i.. z:si?5Cq 1f1-f.E,EW1EEE 1 f ,THE .. E, E E ? 1 Q , f ! I L, -'lf Q 5, T f If E K 'Q Y if ' . 4. A I 3 A L, JN vp, JV' .5 .1'a Y I Viz .- 4 'it .1 4 ,AWE WM ,R N2 . 'Q' , -:R REV. JAMES T. CRONIN, PHD. BROTHER DENYS, E.S.C., M.A. Educafion English JAMES T. CAREY. M.A., Ll..D. Liferafure JOHN P. SWEENEY, LLB., M.A. JOHN P. BARNES, M.A. His+ory Lafin and Greek 26 5 - I JAM ESG. ROBILOTTI Bc MOMQY T50 Conomfcs --N . , lf- Q-J-Sws' WP swf J, ,A xfvq X - fe. fb- , X . f I I 44 2 5 f . ,f .i,,?2.X,'? JAMES G. ROBILOTTI, BSC., MD IRA A. CARI, B.A. Biology German MARCEI. ONC5ENAE,ArcI1. B. ArcI'wi'recIure JOSEPH G. FEATHERSTONE, B.A LEON D. NICHOLS, M.Sc. Economics Business Law 27 ..- - - ... 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'G' gk? ,...f ' iii Bk I 5 'I l , . ! i T l THE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS 1 i DedicaTed To The BroThers of New York A i l l THOMAS D'ARCY McGEE l 1 l N The sTreeTs oT The ciTy where laughTer is loud, i Where lvlammon smiles down on his worshipping crowd, Zi? Where The TooTsTeps Tall TasT as The Talling rain- Who is iT ThaT moves on, oT greaT wealTh, in disdain? fi-. V T ln The schools oT The ciTy whaT Torm do we see, . WiTh long sable robe, To his TeeT, Talling Tree, li l ' l-lis high culTure impressing The TruTh on us all? pl A 'Tis our Teacher--a son oT The SainT, De La Salle! iii ii as I-le haTh leTT his dear home on a mission divine ' Yi, T .I j T ii s 4 , , 'eff in For The vineyard oT God-Tor The sons ThaT are Thine T-le haTh heard The dear voice which oT old calm'd The sea As iT whispered To him, Bring The children To me, For oT such is The Kingdom oT God, ere The soul l-laTh a speck oT The sin ThaT deTileTh The whole. ye 'Tis Tor This ThaT he liveTh-gainsay iT who shall 'Who walks in The way oT The SainT, De La Salle! O CiTy! ThaT looking TorTh seaward Torever ' To The TleeT on The bay, Through The TleeT on The river STI!! laving Thy limbs in The parallel Tides And proud oT The sTrengTh ThaT disasTer deridesg Would you win True renown-'Tis a duTiTul youTh, An heirloom oT honor, devoTion and TruTh: Would you have Them To pillar The l-lome, Church and STaTe ii' -Oh! Teach Them The love oT De La Salle, The GreaT. 4 l ,ig .- T 51 171, 32 X - Q , L . I . f W , M? 514: M 1.x' 1 L' , ' Q 3 'A , ' , ' ' i We 519 4f'-'s',liP- ,E 4531 ' .17 W - ,L --. -T -11' A-'vi '-::A -E',YS'35! , t!:iN'- A 2 T ' ' ' fX Tx T 5 4-e-ylieribfzhog T ,f ' , M ' ' J. CTDONNELL A. O'NElL E. KEARNEY E. MURPHY SecreTary PresidenT Vice-PresidenT Treasurer HISTORY UF CLASS UF '32 N The Tall oT nineTeen hundred and TwenTy-eighT There appeared aT The porTals oT ManhaTTan some Three hundred or more vigorous youThs, splendid examples oT young American manhood, imbued wiTh The spiriT oT accomplishmenT, Treading on The paTh ThaT led To The Throne oT a greaT lady. They had come To pay her homage. She graciously accepTed Them and held each one aTTecTionaTely To her loving bosom. She was Their Alma lvlaTer. And Thus was The preTace To a saga oT Tour years wriTTen. T-Tas iT ever been pronounced by morTal man ThaT a Treshman is shy? Yes, iT has, somewhere in The dim dark pasT and iT may again in The TuTure. BuT now we are dealing wiTh ThaT golden period oT Time which marked The second year oT The presidency oT BroTher Cornelius. T-Terein we Tind a Treshman, who, aTTer only one shorT week in The aTmosphere oT old lvlanhaTTan, had assumed The characTerisTics oT a lvlanhaTTan Man. T-le was TirsT Tor his Alma MaTer and Then Tor his class. T-Te had made a broTher oT each oT his classmaTes and Thereby creaTed a spiriT ThaT was To carry him Through his collegiaTe career. Shyness? NOT a Trace oT iT aTTer ThaT TirsT week. Day upon day, in SmiTh AudiTorium and on Chapel sTeps could be heard The praise oT Alma TvlaTer Trom lusTy ThroaTs in song and in cheer. Class acTiviTies were assumed wiTh a will. ln TruTh, They were To be a crediT To The College by The Sea. Tagged Through The ooze 1 h erhnls, nor The ling's h ,tory Up To I Cl .JO v Ti d GTS . earl The Once T, T mr 9 o MTThuToliiJiCh TT Th TTT Whig T Ty Trifllllllessial BUT Ti 50PT0mOreiTesm6 Tlrixers and STU C Tllwei Our Qffyfny rQi ' ' f I 6 areal socie lg weapc irrfzzfzz nie iipmruwere Torczo TTT' ' TTT To SUPPTT Clgarinin 5'-,ri Merell' To re ' ,Ming crediT ThaT iT T, , 'en Miyly QTV Then came The TU9 .rCTicago's and New Y he oiven To us TJT' hug Qlpinniless in The TGV imeiyrl However. They C' T32 was There T0 6 Thin and spiriT aqainsT 1 HowsweeT The cup o rin our TooThall classics calves, so oTT came our 'TGV TTT hesicle our Triendlj T Yields oT exTra-curricu .., T.TenhaTTan There had , rel.C.h.A,A Ah T -. i I ' l : im place 5 Team in ii:navecTouhTs, Tnqurm y M l A OUT Wes The lloge A-Q ' Tyololl TTT' Oiherl The H in The mieresf or drier .lin which TaTer becar Tc' . Tiiiimeles dffecrefr Nairn Trom bofh rg To 0 - I C TT: I Timm S0CfeTf 'hqlliersl T' llllc .cy We Til , llsloel B ' i Jllheirhl UT In T, ll T een Mor T S Gm Was me .gr T., .T ef J , T T ff Tgfv T16 ATN' - ca I gie, 34 Wreiil if .gn .iq 'W BuT whaT was ThaT discordanT noTe? Who was iT ThaT dared To disTurb The smooThness ThaT so TypiTied The even Tenor oT exisTence oT The class oT '322 lT was The Sophomore! BuT why should we complain? Cardinals, archbishops, docTors, lawyers, and sTaTesmen, Trom The class oT '63 upwards, had To go Through iT: why noT we? Our green caps and greener Ties were emblemaTic oT TuTure iniTiaTion inTo a greaT socieTy, The lVlanhaTTan College Alumni. l3urThermore, The Sophomore had unwarily given a weapon. ln numbers There is sTrengTh, and one green cap in Trouble called oTher green caps To his aid To Turn inglorious deTeaT inTo vicTory. We were made To Trudge our weary way in The guTTer. We were noT allowed To use The EasT Arch. We were Torced To carry a liTTle green book oT rules called The Koran. We had To supply cigareTTes and maTches To upper classmen. BuT why all This humilia- Tion2 Merely To remind us ThaT we were green. And leT iT here be said To our everlasTing crediT ThaT iT was Taken in The spiriT in which iT was given. Then came The Tug-o'-war. And whaT a day ThaT wasl The combined Torces oT Chicago's and New York's gangdom never Took any enemies Tor . rides equalling Those given To us by husky Sophomores. Fancy The indigniTy oT being leTT bareTooT and penniless in The Tar-oTT regions oT upper WesTchesTer and norTheasTern New Jersey. l-lowever, They could noT break our indomiTable spiriT. AT The crack oT The gun, '32 was There To a man and ready Tor combaT. BuT alas, oT whaT avail was brawn and spiriT againsT The power oT an auTomobile2 And so The class oT 32 was dragged Through The ooze ThaT was TibbeT's Creek. HY l A Tomobiles l-low sweeT The cup oT revenge when drunk even unTo The dregs. u I . l war-Tanks, nor The king's horses could have sTayed The v:cTorio.us march oT 32 ovcr '3l in our TooTball classics and again. in baskeTball. IT was high Time wg asaerTed ourselves, so oTT came our caps and Ties To be Treasured in The museum o a appy memory. Orfals Oi BuT beside our Triendly rivalry wiTh The.SophorEore we werefupq angl doirlglig nples O oTher ,Tields oT exTra-curricular acTiviTies. Prior To T e enTrance o e cass o ,ding on inTo lvlanhaTTan There hadhneiver beendahregular TreshmpnfTooTball+Tearn. lnaslnuch as The l. C. A. A. A. A. a impose T e one-year rue or vars: y payers. I was homage' up To us To place a Team in The Tield as poTenTial varsiTy maTer1al. We did lusT ThaT. J bosom' IT you have doubTs, inquire oT New York Fire Commissioner John. Dorman.. l-le senT iur years a Team up To play our lads buT iT so happened ThaT Tuhef only Thing The Tire. laddfges could play was The hose. Then again, dramaTics were in a sad sTaTe oT' aTTairs.h or some reason or oTher, The l-layes DramaTic SocieTy had ceased To TuncTi.on. W ere- Yeg, iT upon, in The inTeresT oT dramaTics aT lVlanhaTTan, .we decided To organize-.a socleTy W We oT our own which laTer became The l-layes DramaTic SocieTy. An enTerprising ggoup lno Of our gIa55maTes direcTed, acTed, and produced Three one-acT plays which rew ar of The large acclaim Trom boTh TaculTy and sTudenT body alike. -lT TurTher esTablished a only one Tradilrional dramaTic socieTy, The membership oT which is llmlTed solely To Treshmen: 3risTicS of The l:ooTlighTers. I-le . . 'laS5- ' T ' Ti ns saw some ' d. Th T Tand second semes er examina o .ThaT was fall k3Ag,niiifhlOI,i!5,Si!CT3Ir lgjfsiin leaviigliur ranks They Took someThing. wiTh Them, The Her lllall ' lvlaTer. The wenT TorTh inTo The world cloThed in The knowledge a legacy oTThe1r Alma Y . .Jr ,F H was nO+ 6 be hearcl ThaT They had once been lv1anhaTTan Men anglhwouI,lddreTaun I sliipggone quader of ' 'i leasanT Thing To waTch Them drop ouT ere ey 61 GCCOVWP ' . acflvlliles p D . ' Their ourney buT ours was The Task To carry on. ge 1 , ' ei. 5' ' 'ir .yi fl H L- N-' 35 71 -rn- , ,n 1 .. , ... . , in E T15 The summer had been pleasanT, buT Tanned Taces breaking inTo. sunny smiles gave suTTicienT TesTimony To The TacT ThaT iT was good To geT back again. And hnow imporTanT we TelT. Sophomoresl Our TirsT Tew days were .spenT rn recounTrng advenTures oT The summer recess and Then There were The Treshres.To be dealT wrTh. Well did we remember whaT we had gone Through and well drd we gloaT over whaT we were going To puT Them Through. Mercy? Did we look Tor any? NO. OUFS was The duTy To make oT The class oT '33 loyal sons oT ManhaTTan The same as our- selves: To Teach Them To love Their Alma lvlaTer as we had learned To love her and To insrill in Them The spiriT oT Tun and Tair play. The summer had seen a silenT change in Alma lVlaTer, a.change Tor The beTTer. ChrysosTom l-lall had been added To her group oT Colonial buildings and The resrdenT sTudenTs oT our class were The TirsT To enjoy iTs spacious rooms and regal comTorT. Things were soon well under way and our vigilance commiTTee ouTdrd rTselT. The Tug-o'-war saw us Through To vicTory as did The TooTball and baskeTball games. This year saw several members oT our class in The uniTorms oT varsrTy warriors, Turning in crediTable perTormances. lvlanhaTTan was making rapid sTrides, due To The sprrrT oT The class oT '32. 1 BeTore our year had gone iTs Tull lengTh a sTranger came inTo our midsT. We neiTher saw nor heard him because he came so quieTly. l-le had a message Trom his lvlasTer, a message which Tell on ears happy aT iTs recepTion. The sTranger delivered The message To BroTher Jerome and TogeTher They deparTed. You have leTT us, BroTher Jerome, and gone where The love you had Tor us here on earTh has increased a hundredfold. The weeks sped rapidly onward. Scarcely had The apaThy oT early spring leTT us when classes seemed magically To have been disconTinued and once again came The exodus To The Tour poinTs oT The compass. ek Pk Pk Pk Ik Pk Our reTurn in The Junior year was a sad one. We learned wiTh deep regreT oT The deaTh oT George Kopp oT our class during The summer vacaTion. To us This was a greaT personal blow. BuT on The enTire sTudenT body, and on The enTire scienTiTic world Tell The greaTesT blow in The deaTh oT BroTher Azarias Michael, Dean oT The School oT Engineering. The loss oT BroTher Azarias was a greaT one, buT one ThaT could be accepTed wiTh relaTive resignaTion. l-le was a man advanced in years, who had given his all To his God in The cause oT ChrisTian EducaTion, and had now been summoned by his l-leavenly FaTher To possess The Kingdom prepared Tor him. BuT liTTle did iT occur To us when we sTarTed ouT, ThaT one oT our own classmaTes would be snaTched Trom among us. BeTore our Junior year, anoTher oT our number, Thopmas Ilfennedy, closed his eyes in eTernal resT. l:iaT VolunTas Tua eT RequiescanT rn ace. Now we were upper classmen. No longer would The peTTy grievance, The Tradi- Tional rivalry beTween Freshmen and Sophomores boTher us. We TelT above all ThaT sorT oT Thing. We had graduaTion Tairly wiThin our grasp and iT became our loT To devoTe more Time Than ever To our sTudies. l-lowever, This did noT mean ThaT exTra- curricular acTiviTies were To be ThrusT aside enTirely. The more rugged oT us could be seen on The Green and WhiTe Teams, giving our all To enable Alma lvlaTer To Tind her place in The sun. ln The world oT TooTlighTs and grease-painT could be Tound The same men who had reincarnaTed dramaTics aT lvlanhaTTan, as well as oThers oT our number. The Torensic arT saw The brunT oT work being shouldered by The men oT '32, STudy we would, buT once again came The ThoughT ThaT had enTered our minds during our TirsT year as sTudenTs: l:irsT Tor Alma lvlaTer, Then Tor Class. , ,, W- .. --,-.-c- ... L-it --far-Q-we-fs-x-.,..,f-7-, ,..,-w:.,.f.,,.-..-, -.9 -,..,. , M, .. . -.. MJ.- ,1.-,, 4--. L., J.. -.M -.. . ' Y f ' 1 -l lf' VN 1 nv-M--n'-w-vf---,,f---.r5.---,.,--em., -f,f--.,.-..,-..L.,,.-- f ,F T f L, I , . A ...Mb ' .1-T ,H w . ,--e- , ,. .. N- .J -- ,,, . ,, ,M--,AN ., Jie J . , V . 36 M ' The ch e l oisumrlel' nhrfe lla malliiefo alnell now The nnnll rhaf Snnlersl lllosq am ,ire lnclUCl9fl 'nlo lrrlnrn where lllieofr' lhey lllfew Us Seniors Agdlll dannvefl- Sl nn Seniors! ThaT me has ll all mean? nolexlencl To us The lnrpily wencl our way hnhs which have becor The narrahon musT losing ol bonds, a Tee l Through leer-glazed eye Farewell To Our hearTs Thy name l To Treasure ls This The 9 hs paThs OF ls This Hddler We can'T Tor Rememb' ' llle lads Wllf-558 Words We lldle To f Welle men: rl hill 'll6ldSlllP. c T e le men? al hey ye P53565 illnlelll Come ll'Sa niladUaTior And mol? Tgoiru OOC Smiles WC! how Duniing lT wiTh. il over lO, Ours GS Our- l'l6r and l beTTer Fesidenl rTorT. id iTselT. l games. T. Turning rhe spiriT TST. We age Trom sTranger You have earTh has ,pring leTT gain came regrel' Oi T0 US The enTire hael, Dean e, buTOf19 d in years. d had HO!! gl Tor lllm- claSSm5lTe5 rut' number' Qequiescanl .. +h Tfadl' e 1 ThaT Q OUT' lol! To drier erffa' ToT us Could if To Tia This guna as olfllels Oi by The men ur enrefedho ,r ClasS- ove al , ,VV . lf. . ,-- -.- Again The chirping oT robins and The hum OT Tiny insecTs Told us ThaT spring had arrived. She cloThed The campus in all her verdanT Tinery Tor The coming pageanT oT summer. Days became longer and TooTsTeps Turned Towards beauTiTul FieldsTon where The maiesTic Hudson sTreTches iTs long blue ribbon To The sea. LiTTle Time remained now beTore Moving-up Day. The Thrill ThaT passed over us as we seT TooT on The sacred Senior Walk, oTTicially Seniors! Those among us who had been ouTsTanding in exTra-curricular acTiviTies were inducTed inTo The Pen and Sword SocieTy. And so we Tiled inTo SmiTh Audi- Torium where The ouTgoing class oT '3l bid us and The under classmen a Tond adieu. They Threw us The Torch wiTh The parTing iniuncTion To hold iT high. We were now Seniors. Pk Ik FF Pk FF lk r r Seniors! ThaT magic TiTle, The goal in sighT and hopes consummaTed. BUT whaT 2 does iT all mean? We are To leave you, Alma lvlaTer, To Tace a world which will r. R noT exTend To us The love and welcome we have Tound in you. No longer shall we happily wend our way beneaTh your sacred arches. No longer The inTimaTe associa- Tions which have become so much a parT oT us. ThaT is whaT iT means. Seniors! T wk :rr :if ak :if :rr VTY The narraTion musT end. We are abouT To wriTe Finis To our saga. There is a y T TN loosing oT bonds, a Teeling oT empTiness in The hearT, and Tulness in The ThroaT as, Through Tear-glazed eyes, we uTTer To ourselves:- SOLlLOQUY T T Farewell To Thee, O Alma lvlaTer dear! T Our hearTs are Tilled wiTh naughT save ThoughTs oT Thee: l Thy name To honor, love, uphold, revere, To Treasure as a golden memory. l T T i ls This The end, The 'Tall-There-is Tor us, As paThs ope' wide Their num'rous diTF'renT ways? r ls This adieu ? BUT no, iT can'T be Thus, We can'T TorgeT our golden college days. Rememb'ring all our comrades Tried and True, The lads wiTh whom we've lived and laughed and played, 5 Whose words consoled lThey shared our sorrows Tool: We haTe To Think oT Them as old and sTaid. We're men: The world, we shudder aT The ThoughT, OT hardship, coldness, biTTer sTorm and sTriTe. We're men: ah yes, The years were all Too shorT: They've passed: The richesT momenTs oT our liTe. BuT we'll come baclcg O lvloTheIr never' Tear ThaT graduaTion means a lasT adreu I lT's Au revoir O Alma lvlaTer dear ' And noT Good-bye. We leave our hearTs wiTh you. 6. O'K., '32. T r l I r Ti-6 ---.f 37 Joseph J. Acampora, Jr., l3.S. in Arch. Jay New Rochelle, N. Y. College Band I, 2: College OrchesTra I, 2: lTalian Club I, 2, 3: WesTchesTer Club l, 2, 3, 4-I ArchiTecTural SocieTy I, 2, 3, 4: Alpha Sigma BeTa. I-TEN This young man graduaTed Trom Salesian Prep in l928, ThaT insTiTuTion losT a banner sTudenT, buT whaT was Their loss was IVlanhaTTan's gain. Jay came here direcT Trom Mamaroneclc, N. Y., where he has spenT mosT oT his liTe. I-lis greaTesT ambiTion was To become an archiTecT, and Thus he enTered The DeparTmenT oT ArchiTecTure. lmmediaTely he seT down To serious worlc and he gradually climbed The ladder oT scholasTic success. I-le is oT ThaT physical makeup suiTable Tor gridiron work, buT Jay conTined his energy To his sTudies in ArchiTecTure which required mosT oT his Time. BUT he was very acTive in exTra-curricular acTiviTies as can be noTed above. Joe's abiliTy To rank wiTh The leaders in The archiTecTural class is undoubTedly due To some side coaching Trom his TaTher, himselT a noTed archiTecT. Then again we may be wrong, Tor on more Than one occasion we Tound Jay working alone. And now, aTTer being wiTh him Tor The pasT Tour winTers, we sTand by as he venTures TorTh inTo This greaT wide world oT ours To win more laurels in his chosen proTession. Good luck, Jay. i ,' 38 Illend scaling fh S To Spend 6 y GW he-hold The haTTan wiTh infer hlreshman year was behieen The rival classi nilure, isa remarlca ble will Thermodynamics. Il9'Heers. A flf The ill5II Ne .resulT, iTaimoSfiET s se englneering Tlish bb- lllin The 0 les are Vdrii Olin seenlwo Tel logell iam, ofpoofyaling mpg l I yei has bei lfle ladder T T owaile while solids e J if ig. VT nslilulion ITI. osl OI IWI5 lered IIIG 4 and he ,I m5ICGUP chileclure 5cliviliGS JIGCIIY due again We FIG. by 65 Ile his chosen Anlhony J. Accino, BS. in E. HTOUYI' A Providence, R. I. AIFPIWG PIWI Della: Newlon Ivlalhemalical Sociely I,2,3,4gK.D. C. I,2,3,4:A.S.C.E. l,2,3, 4: Rhode Island Club I, 2, 3, 4. OW behold Jrhe Lillie Caesar, a Rhode Island represenlalive. Came lo Man- hallan wilh inlenlions Io become huskier and Ialler. I-las nor as yer succeeded. In freshman year was overlooked by lhe Sophomores unril rhe grear loorball game belween Ihe rival classes. Then came inlo Ihe class spollighl. Aside from his alhlelic nalure, is a remarkable engineering sludenl-especially prolicienr in problems dealing wilrh Thermodynamics. Thus lhe small boy is considered a big shol among lhe engineers. Al' Jrhe engineering camp session aller close of school, enioyed nolhing more 'rhan gelling Negron's goal. Al one lime he pul a ralller in Tubal's bed. As a resull, il almosl caused an inlernalional war. I-Iis hobbies are varied. Chief one is playing pinochle wilh De Lucia his parlner. When Ihe Iwo gel logelher Jrhey can work lheir signals aloud-no one any lhe wiser. Ollen seen making lrips lo Yonkers and nol lo lhe lvlounl eilher. Plays a ragged game of pool, yel has been known lo conquer Chapman. Inlends Io spend a year aller gradualion Iouring lhe counlry. Will lhen lry scaling 'rhe ladder Toward engineering lame wilh his parlner l:locko. We shall have Io wail a while lor Ihe greal news bul we hope lor lhe besl. 32 I . I , . .f' ' - F ,ff f , i 'X , 1 ' i i 1 f f 'sol Mani, H N u l i l i l 'fl- Howard W. Ahern, B.S. in Arch. Bingh Brooklyn, N. Y. 1. FooTlighTers DramaTic SocieTy I, 2: ArchiTecTural SocieTy 2, 3, 4. A 7 F This were a ViTaphone producTion, ladies and genTlemen, you would be sooThed y by Bingh's melliTluous baryTone as he croons his Tamiliar Theme song, I Wanna A See Samoa, Though perhaps iT is iusT as well iT is noT, Tor mosT people wouldn'T wanT To endure The chesT-heaving, Tear-coursing spell ThaT usually resulTs Trom This A dirge. 'Ui Down To The Sea in Ships is his TavoriTe poem, since he has seT his hearT on X . sTroking The Senior crew To vicTory in The lnTra-mural regaTTa. So long as his shoes are wiTh him, Tloundering shells mean noThing To The crew oT which he is a member, unless The TaiThTul shoes also ship waTer or spring a leak. ln his odd momenTs, which many Think are TrequenT, he TriTles wiTh golT and pool. OTher and considerably odder momenTs are devoTed To work. Classwork and book-lore do noT seem To Taze Howard in This glorious sTruggle Tor knowledge. As one oT lVlanhaTTan's bud- ding archiTecTs, l-lowie hopes To bursr inTo bloom in The nebulous TuTure wiTh an impressive array oT commissions. Bingh is Thinking seriously oT TransTerring his archiTecTural abiliTies To a more Tavorable Tield, oT leading The ArchiTecTs' ExpediTion To The SouTh Seas, where Tree Trom care, he can build casTles in The air, and conTenT himselT wiTh innumerable cocoanuTs, bananas, swims and sleeps. A l? L l 'Q l TJ ' Vff l-3 T ir- ' C U L 5 lj' iii xlfx 40 re T Mic Mile M. l. C Socie HEN Mile came To l .pol This, liis True wofff -' llfS Wes True To l .W-.I v..u V liis insci on, Mile proved himself 5 GHS liesf Tradif if llanlaHan'S E . i,',,dtM nglneerin 'wil ' 5 W ills inllll ere rendered 4 M 'all won The unani .irsroay he em I :ifiibe ereo ll cause of his hone Jli, .,'. ,iinfhea Ulum f . WOT CiSGlISl5CHO OUI' C4 ncurllondesf bfi curiously E 0 illllll glass pe, bUi' if male ilziwe S Gnd 1.5: M llOpe Ethel ml wig ' We hav ' S R k A L lhed anna ildn'l lhis rl OU Shoes Tiber. which aralbly am lo bud- Jfh an mOl'9 5 lfee erable Michael A. Allarano, BS. in E. Mike Bronx, N. Y. M. I. C.: A. S. C. E.: Newlon Malhemalical Socielyg Transil Club: Alpha Phi Della. l-lEN Mike came lo Manhallan he was guiel and unassuming and, because ol lhis, his lrue worlh was lully apprecialed only by lhose who knew him well. This was lrue lo his inscrulable expression and his reliring nalure bul, as lime passed on, Mike proved himsell lo be a capable scholar and a genlleman represenla- live ol Manhallan's besl lradilions. Al Manhallan's Engineering camp al Schroon Lake social lile was promoled and lriendships were rendered enduring and il was in lhese congenial surroundings lhal Mike linally won lhe unanimous regard and respecl which were righllully his lrom lhe lirsl day he enlered Manhallan. Mike has always been a lavorile wilh lhe lacully because ol his honesl and persevering endeavors and his genllemanly deporlmenl. Now in lhe aulumn ol our college careers we look lorward lo gradualion wilh a leeling ol salislaclion curiously enriched wilh sorrow. Gradualion means lhe reali- zalion ol our londesl hope, bul il may also mean lhe regrellable lerminalion ol our lriendships wilh classmales and members ol lhe lacully. As lhe lime ol parling approaches we hope lhal we have enriched Mike's acquainlance as much as he has enriched ours. s--s - v...- ss fs-ff I i . , Q ...isis lfi IM. In ,A,l,,f. :y 1 v ,af 4I T J-1 E James lvl. Alvarez, B.S. in E. Jim Brooklyn, N. Y. BeTa Sigma: A. S. C. E. 2, 3, 4: TransiT Club 2, 3, 4: NewTon MaThemaTical SocieTy 2, 3, 41 Brooklyn-Long lsland Club l, 2, 3, 4: K. D. C: Freshman FooTball. CORPULENT young man Trom The soliTude oT Sayville, in The person OT James lvlcSherry Alvarez, has been a prominenT Tigure abouT The campus Tor The pasT Tour years-always iovial and Tranquil even in The Tace OT a crisis. Jim is an aThleTe and scholar oT rare abiliTy. No maTTer whaT The discussion may be, he is always ready To give a pracTical view oT The subiecT. Judging Trom The Type OT liTeraTure he enioys, which happens To be boaTing, and The inTeresT which he displays in discussing The Topic, we have Taken iT Tor granTed ThaT This is his TavoriTe pasTime. l-lowever, Jim also showed greaT possibiliTies as a TooTball player when he was a member oT The Treshman Team. Since The sporT did noT iibe wiTh his chosen proTes- sion, Engineering, he had To abandon The chance oT becoming a TooTball immorTal. One oT The many naTural giTTs Jim possesses is The rare abiliTy To Tell a good sTory. This he accomplishes in such a unique way as To capTivaTe his lisTeners Trom beginning To end. l-lis supply seems inexhausTible, and many a dull momenT has been brighTened by his lively wiT. As The Time Tor parTing has come we Teel sure ThaT success and happiness will be your alloTmenT. So wiTh These parTing words we bid you Adios. .. Q, 1 , 'X 42 XXX .W ROM ouT genT suk 'fliese fields. eleqanT phras Pelre The curricular acl, lecTure roomf sTudenTs Iagke masfl- lielped io Cla' Fefe Was need was now Possegges irhoc G . . +iici'perS'S+enc lm 'lor lea PeTer Amendola, BS. in B. Peie New York CiTy Glee Club 3, 4: Commerce Club 3, 4. ROM ouT oT The WesT came PeTe, The Philosopher, The STaTisTician. Two diver- genT subiecTs, philosophy and sTaTisTics, buT yeT, laurels did he obTain in boTh Son of These Tields. PeTe's copious vocabulary wiTh his choice oT exquisiTe words and The Bus for eleganT phrasing oT his senTences were The envy oT many sTudenTs. JF PeTe The STaTisTician as he was known To all OT us had liTTle Time Tor exTra- 5' 9 f curricular acTiviTies, buT his spiriT oT aggressiveness was Torever maniTesTed in The X99 O lecTure rooms. lvlany were The Times when problems perplexed us, when oTher lwlilays sTudenTs lacked The iniTiaTive To ask The professor quesTions, PeTe came To The rescue i55l'me' wiTh his masTerly choice oT words and somehow or oTher The quesTions he asked wa? 6 helped To clariTy The subiecT. ro es- jfal. PeTe was noT The back-slapping, Tair-weaTher kind OT Triend who in The Time OT need was nowhere To be seen. l-le was sincere To all wiTh whom he came in con- 6 9005 TacT, and a pleasing and inTelligenT conversaTionalisT aT all Times. , Trom i S gs been Success should noT be diTTiculT Tor PeTe To aTTain spiriTually or maTerially. l-le possesses Those necessary qualiTies, iniTiaTive, inTelligence, TorTiTude, perseverance, Il and persisTency, which Torce everyone wiTh whom he comes in conTacT To look up nGS5 Wll To him Tor leadership and supporT. ,fx 1 Q- l T 5 . . ln '., 'P' 43 LU E f, 9.-331 Xi? lf' -1 I, L 1' , 1 i . f I xx V N i i 1 i 1 T i l i 1 l l i l 'x Joseph W. Barry, AB. Joe New York CiTy Glee Club I, 2, 3: OrchesTra 3, 4. O inTroducTion OT Joe is necessary To any lvianhaTTaniTe, Tor his is a personaliTy and a characTer ThaT could noT be overlooked in any group. l-laving enTered lv1anhaTTan in The Tall oT '28 as a Freshman, he proceeded To Take The scholasTic Tield by sTorm. No subiecT was Too hard or Too lengThy Tor The wonderTul capaciTy oT his brain. l-lowever, his abiliTy was noT limiTed To The scholasTic Tield alone. l-le sure slings a wicked pair oT drumsTicks and when he sTarTs To wax warm on The cymbals, believe you me, rhyThm saTuraTes The air. For Two years he was The background oT The orchesTra. FurThermore, as a baseball piTcher he was oT The TirsT waTer, as his exhibiTions on The Freshman baseball squad prove. And now comes The hardesT parT oT This shorT accounT oT Joe's sTay in lvlan- haTTan-ThaT oT saying good-bye. Joe, you will be missed by more Triends and acquainTances Than mosT Tellows have Triends. IT is noT easy To say good-bye, Joe, buT delaying iT only makes iT harder. We know you will rise To greaT heighTs in your chosen Tield oT educaTion and all our besT wisies and genuine congraTulaTions go wiTh you. All ThaT can be added is please keep in Touch wiTh us, Joe. inLILifl TQTLJQUTF 'Y N' ' ' i' ' ' ' ' ' Hi ' 'li' Km '- T T wi- 1, Q g- g 5- T f.. fff- H A f ,N 1. ,V-5 K.. P- fg., 1 , ...4. .3 VJ '93 ' - ki s2s..1i5f..f1-:3iQ:,.:.sTixfffr...,Qfliivw.. ...' T' M5833 J W Q ff as - . 1 - - J . T ,-A :uif..f.....:+'f- f:2es's..v f'.',:f .2'J'. T 'Y lb C lrlfll Tour years of V would seek his h iorlnolli Tlie college an ogsomeone, who benea socenly and desire for lllds , always conspicuous Eeepssl To fhe Hghfesf . ililelplle his w .io rencli, Charles fo i 5SSIC5l vl, Ol' .,OUgh C I moc if i Off' Ol'lK in dor Um H GDC Ciiielammall oudiforiur S lel'l5O6rd. ls lo . iildssed lim Splrll' one llllllngs '. I les in T lfiilii ills! 'S Geri L' ls Slud air aliTy ered Tield T his lingS lieve T The 5 Man- and Joe. your Ts Q0 , 'Q si, wsfixi' Lbfjiiig Charles l-l. Beagan, A.B. Charlie New York CiTy College OrchesTra 43 German Club 3, 4. Fl-ER Tour years oT arduous labor aT IVlanhaTTan Prep, Charles decided ThaT he would seek his higher educaTion aT lVlanhaTTan. IT was a TorTunaTe decision Tor boTh The college and Tor his classmaTes, because They would have missed know- ing someone, who beneaTh his debonair and nonchalanT aTTiTude, hides an unTaThomed sinceriTy and desire Tor The welTare oT his classmaTes. On any gaThering Charles was always conspicuous by his abiliTy To speak inTeresTingly on any Topic Trom The deepesT To The lighTesT. DespiTe his work in school and The sTudy oT his TavoriTe subiecTs, Social Science and French, Charles Tound Time To become an accomplished pianisT. l-le is imparTial To eiTher classical or modern music. Any oT his classmaTes happening To be walking Through The corridor and hearing The reyerberaTing noTes oT The piano emanaTing Trom The small audiTorium would immediaTely know Charles was in his accusTomed place aT The keyboard. As To his spiriT, one needs only To remember The exemplary Tashion in which he passed his sTudies in his Third year aTTer a prolonged illness. Anyone wiTh such a Ti hTin s iriT is cerTainl well equipped To TighT The baTTle oT liTe. No one will Q Q F3 Y deny ThaT he has become a beTTer man Through knowing Charles. 45 W - T-' if A Q l iii-diesels, iiejiE?Qf'ifkg,5'J',r,'.7-EZZTXLTI K l Daniel l-l. Beary, B.S. in B. Dan Rye, Quadrangle I, 2, 3, 4: CirculaTion Manager 4, Commerce Club I, 2, 3, 4. ISTINGUAIST-IED, so Tar as we are concerned, only by The presence oT one oT our besT-liked classmaTes, The New York CenTral daily Trundles down Trom WesTchesTer. For ThaT we are eminenTly graTeTul To The execuTives, engineers, Tlag- men, eT al, who guide The desTinies oT ThaT excellenT enTerprise. WiThouT Their services we would be deprived oT The genial company oT Dan Beary. WiThouT Dan, school would have been considerably gloomier. Vigorous, robusT, zesTTul, Dan is The possessor oT a sparkling grin ThaT has revived our Tlagging spiriTs on more Than one occasion. l-lis cheerTulness is almosT irrepres- sible-surviving even The dark days ThaT precede and Tollow examinaTions. IT gives To all his acTiviTies The sublime wisdom oT proporTion, enabling him To accepT and enioy pleasures graTeTully, and yeT To view his sTudies wiTh a decenT respecT Tor Their necessiTy. As The demon circulaTion manager oT The Quadrangle, Dan had Tew equals, buT as a social lion he is unguesTionably one oT our very besT. ConducTing hirnselT wiTh poise and sophisTicaTion, Dan seldom misses any oT The social TuncTions con- necTed wiTh The college. Nor does he conTine his acTiviTies solely To lvlanhaTTan. Dan's ready smile and engaging personaliTy assure him oT success in anyThing ThaT he underTalces. ThaT we have had The good TorTune To enioy Them is someThing we will noT shorTly TorgeT. 46 OUR years ago y The archwayi bu 91 ooservallion many ren slime place buf ,hey me observers HW llinillssiiilung glani w, 1 on besllnown and I lillwrl - eide lllellllic i ol lilli h O SC 0l6STiQ 0 Wise' due QisT, He M Uiilorm gland i ng or The pe S l lllqllso m ' Oriel fn ig, any fair GO ll of in y ever be Tailureiou il US Wish .K ie of from flag- fheir Dan. :vived gpres- gives if and V Jflqeir equals. 1imS9li 5 con- ffan- ,ylhlnq ,eihifiq Julius l-l. Beckwifh, BS. HB9ClfH Bronx, N. Y. Mendelian Sociefy I, 2, 3, 4. QUR years ago rumor wenf around fhaf fhe college had purchased a door for fhe archway, buf fhis was falsified when fhe reason for fhe darkening of fhe enfrance was found fo be none ofher fhan a newly-arrived freshman. Upon closer observafion many remarked upon fhe facf fhaf fhey had seen fhis huge young man some place buf fhey could nof recall where. All of a sudden if dawned on one of fhe observers fhaf he was one of Broadway's admirals, or in ofher words, one of fhe besf known and mosf esfeemed barkers on fhe Whife Way. Upon approach- ing fhis young gianf we found an easy acquainfance, one who would make a greaf friend, sold on fhe idea of becoming a medical man. Nof only was fhis freshman very worldly wise, due of course, fo his daily confacfs, buf also a firsf class phofo- graphic biologisf. l-le worked hard in an enviable uniform and besides was a sfudenf wifh scholasfic sfanding above fhe average. We can'f say whefher if was fhe uniform or fhe personalify, buf we are inclined fo believe if was fhe laffer which broughf so many fair admirers fo fhe porfals of fhe Asfor Theafre. All of us wish you fhe besf of luck, Julius, for we know men of your characfer can never be failures. 47 -.M --T -'ig3::12,.:'s1:'s.,.. ' T T Harry A. Berger, AB. Harry New York CiTy BeTa Sigma: Freshman Track. ERE we have an excepTional youTh. Perhaps no oTher member OT The graduaT-- ing class Takes liTe halT so seriously as does our conscienTious Harry. Scrupu- lous, ingenious, good naTured To a TaulT, one Tinds The charm and personaliTy oT The young man irresisTible. His naTure is undoubTedly besT appreciaTed by Those who come in inTimaTe conTacT wiTh him, Tor he is Tound To be quieT and unassuming, buT endowed wiTh a sparkling sense oT humor which Tinds ouTleT only aT The proper Time and place. MaTriculaTing Trom The Prep, Harry enTered The college wiTh The repuTaTion of a versaTile aThleTe and a social lion. 'His abiliTy on The Track boards was quickly demonsTraTed in his Treshman year buT unTorTunaTely acTiviTy in This line was cur- Tailed The Tollowing year by heavy scholasTic and social schedules. He has been mosT consisTenT in aTTending The dances and sporTs evenTs and was always an ardenT boosTer oT everyThing perTaining To ManhaTTan.' Besidesbeing represenTed in Track and swimming, Harry has Turned To The manly arT oT selT-deTense, deeming This a necessary requisiTe in The compleTe developmenT oT a man. Harry's TuTure plans have noT been vouchsaTed To us, yeT we have no hesiTancy in predicTing a long and disTinguished career Tor him. And he goes TorTh Trom our porTals wiTh The mosT hearTTelT wishes oT his classmaTes Tor a successTul iourney along The broad paThway oT liTe. f -1 ' -Af ' f- - -gf 5 -sq, -Q,-,1--..--, X.. . f --.i..f,,,,---. 3 W T 7 -.... T -. --- Yz--- ' . 7 . -.. -.-, T E k i 1 ptr , ,...,.,,.,,.,-- ,,-,,i',,,,D,.., A- --1 f i . A .., ' ., -.. Q.. Ae.. ,.. f ' .mf ....-A ., '-.- - fy 48 graduaT- Scrupu- Ty OT The wose who ning, buT gpel' lime iTaTion Oi 55 quickly was CUV' has been an ardeni d in iV6Cl4 inq lllls 5 J hesilancll 1 ifOm our rney . 4--T 1- l l L Joseph BierwirTh, AB. Joe Yonkers, N. Y. VarsiTy FooTball 4. NCTT-TER son oT ThaT greaT IiTTIe ciTy iusT oTT The corner-Yonkers, N. Y. Lives on a wesTern avenue which one would have diTFiculTy in Tinding. were noT The sTreeT well-lighTed. NoTable because he wears a derby Three weeks longer Than any living man. l-Tas only missed Two school weeks since nineTeen-TwenTy. Owns a high- powered car buT never drives To school. Can be Tound on The Yonker's ThoroughTareS Friday evenings in The company oT one cerTain someone Tull oT charm. RaTes high in sTudies. lv1osT proTicienT in maThemaTics and philosophy. l-las memorized ThaT paragraph in Balmes. Can explain The QuanTum Theory and also The mysTery oT The conTinuum. Plays billiards occasionally. Never won Too many games, however. Smokes a pipe-never a cigareTTe or cigar. Was a member of The TooTball Team in his Senior year. Does Tairly well on The gridiron. ls an usher in his parish church. AT one Time sang in The choir. STill sings alThough noT many lisTen. lnTends To enTer The Tield oT radio. Likely To succeed: has personaliTyg makes good appearance: is popular wiTh all who come in conTacT wiTh him. Says he will scale The ladder To success upon graduaTion. We wish him all The TorTune necessary To do so. LeT us close wiTh The hope ThaT he will make The grade. KLk 4J3'.,fiii 'A, 'i.. f . ' ' ' K X I. ... V Y T l C l i l...J iw 'ii X' l3f'5FiliI'i.::i1igi1TfifF-' 'T T E.. I C53 iii ii Li inf: Q -. ' 49 Ting ie-v . fs... sfiovag T T E3 y 1 ' 1 ,-,-w---M ---- i 1 i i l 5 l 1 l l i x n l i i l I l 4 lf' fl 1 Eff if , lg? i l i v-1, i J l i l , . 3-14 .gy l , MN O X James J. Broderick, A.B. Jim New York Cify Alpha Sigma Befag Glee Club 2, 3, 4: Quadrangle 3, 4: German Club 3, 4: Hayes Dramafic Sociefy 2. EFORE us we have an ambifious youfh, a sincere friend, and a frue Manhaffan Man. Jim has always been eager fo do his ufmosf for his friends and un- selfishly asks nofhing in refurn. Jim graduafed from De La Salle and fhen proceeded fo win his way in The working world buf soon found fhrough keen iudgmenf fhaf ai college educafion was necessary. Since fhen he has been a loyal supporfer of all fhings lvlanhaffan, be if academic, social, or afhlefic. As a member of fhe Glee Club he has performed nobly for fhree years. Everyone wifh whom Jim has associafed will fesfify as fo his earnesf and willing spirif. Much of his leisure fime has been spenf in Tom's Emporium, proving his prowess on fhe billiard fable. We could always depend upon Jim for some humorous remark af fhe mosf unexpecfed fime. Buf few of us will forgef fhe Broderick inferprefafion of fhe procedure employed by fhe Roman Senafe-no, nof even John Paul himself! lf is now we see fhaf Jim in his four well-spenf years wifh us af lvlanhaffan has had his full share of college life. Wifh deep regref we say good-bye fo such a sferling characfer. Buf we may conclude by saying fhaf his success as a sfudenf forecasfs fhaf which will be his in fhe coming years. -n V F YM ,AA K i i .GQ I - l K M W i X. - .v..,.M ,.:, N -Nl.-.3--.. . V-fi-5' -4,41--iL'.uMj l l. K J l H, J i 4 C L .g N i, 1 I J ! k k J . .. -, . . -.., .. . ....,..-.....- - I C .' 1 a -3 , 2, i fa :rf ,,-fl-2' .1',f4'...3f ' .awC.- . .as .cv .1-15 ,-A+n-x,- , H4-Q 4.-v 50 M l-IEN l.oi lerred a around. Why? successful evenin Every morni Norlli larryfown liis lnirfliplace. J lair aloove 5 lea louis infend an Opllmisl, HE lflonliollan me ll l Oll lies llie Weud mo , rningg, Inclde E ccouolg for ,rh e ill N0 mallef i I always be ap Hail' and Fai Louis Vi. Brooks, 3.5. Looey NorTh TarryTown, N. Y. lTalian Club l, 2, 3,41 German Club 2, 3, 4. l-IEN Louis M. Brooks' TaTher decided To send his son To ManhaTTan, he con- Terred a Tavor upon noT only lvlanhaTTan, buT also all The girls' colleges aTTan X un- around. Why? Louis is The liTe oT every parTy: have him around and be sure oT a successTul evening. lh Every morning, TaiThTully, Tor Tour years, he has made The long iourney Trom ' ' 9 NorTh TarryTown, and has never been laTe. l-le honors T-lasTings-on-The-Hudson as was his birTh lace. You've seen him around The Quadran le. ShorT, wiTh curl brown H, F9 Q Y be lj hair above a lean Tace and blue eyes, he's The cause oT many cardiac TluTTerings. lmiis Louis inTends To Teach, and ThaT's anoTher oT his Tine gualiTies: he is essenTially VO ,S an opTimisT. l-le is never in a sorrowTul or a pessimisTic mood, Tor he is The only Om lv1anhaTTan man who never remembers yesTerday, and never worries abouT Tomorrow. OTT has The welkin rung wiTh his song and laughTer as he dissecTed caTs on SaTurday moglf mornings. lncidenTally, he knows all The laTesT iokes. lille Louis was The righT-Torward on The Senior Science baskeTball Team, which accounTs Tor The remarkably Tine showing oT The opposing IeTT-guards. n haS No maTTer wheTher Louis conTinues his educaTion in a Teacher's College, he Jch 5 will always be appreciaTed by his associaTes, and well liked by Them. udenl Hail, and Farewell! l'3f'f,3-ifi'.iL.1.Lrf 1g.Tz:fe?fi4Lfrrwig..ffl i.fr i r' T -? . - - V- , ii , , wikjljl if -2 f af 'af Lf -- T' ' 5 I E TJ T Kevin B. Burke, BS. 'lKeVVyII BU'l:'l'.6lO, N. Y. Swimming Team 3, 4. EFORE we begin Telling you abouT The good work Kevvy has done here aT lv1anhaTTan we musT TirsT leT iT be known ThaT his prowess as a sailor is The marvel oT inland sea mariners. Tl-le is unrivaled as a GreaT Lakes Skipper. Kevin, oTherwise known as Bugger, because oT ThaT clusTer oT curls adorning a greaT dome, will leave lv1anhaTTan wiTh a B.S. degree and wiTh hopes which we are sure will maTerialize. l-le can'T miss, because everyThing he Touches, noT by mere chance, buT purely Through his dominaTing will, is Transiormed as if by magic inTo genuine success. , Kevvy also possesses a disTincT qualiTy oT leadership. WheTher aT The helm in The role oT skipper or among any given group, Kevvy is always seen To Take command oT The siTuaTion and handle iT wiTh unerring precision. l-le is whaT one mighT Term The personaliTy oT lv1anhaTTan l-lall. One runs inTo him in one hundred places, one hundred Times a day. And he is always There wiTh ThaT genuine happy smile. Always ready To give a Triendly hand: wheTher iT be a TourTh Tor bridge, assisTance wiTh a Theme, or even, colloquially speaking, The shirT oTf his back. Kevvy is The Type ThaT adds so much To a place ThaT we haTe To see him leave. For aTTer Tour years ThaT were all Too shorT, an aTTachmenT has grown so much Tor him ThaT we're sure iT can'T be The same place wiThouT him. So we'll say s'long, Bugger, and we hope you'll do as much in The medical world as you have Tor us here aT lvianhaTTan. '-w - -'uv' V. sq.--,ws--pf -...,,. --vq .Y V . 1 ., r 'Ck T' f 'T if Le I z , , T- .- -f'--, . lc-. , .-ir-- Bw.. iw., ..,1..,.,j121- - . - ,..,-.V'.7,..--::,.., ,, .,. V 1 1 V 1 1 , . .V A, g. I, -- '- 4..- ., J. A . ..s.,.,.-: .-.J ,...4 ,.,n. ...i M HE roacl T eqvipaqe Boll, filler ManliaTTan dra llie lirsT To be , I HG lies gh mlroducing anc of CO' Genial gnc llil do for liin iliinqgihey dor I He develo ii F I yi Gflfl W arcliiieciure Vdllan We 6 me Ion Le SUFE 9 5 ler i no o all Possible lui 52 were aT ' is The dorning wich we yy rT19T6 gig lnlO '13 helm To Talie uns inTo efe ii be G The 5hirT yrown S0 1 -Q 4,1 iiflfffp RoberT T. Burns, BS. in Arch. UBGTH New Rochelle, N. Y. Phi Rho Pi: ArchiTecTural SocieTy: WesTchesTer Club? l:OOTlighTers I, 2: Manager oT 6olT Team. l-TE road Trom New Rochelle has been well-worn by The wheels oT The Burns' equipage which makes iTs daily round-Trip Trom There wiTh greaT regulariTy. Bob, aTTer his high school career, became one oT The ouTsTanding members oT The lvlanhaTTan draTTing room. Known Tor his abiliTy as a crew man, he was among The TirsT To be draTTed Tor The college inTra-mural crew. ' l-le has shown his managerial capabiliTies by pioneering in The Tield oT golT, inTroducing and managing The Jasper GolT Team. l-le has enrered lvlanhaTTan in This Tield OT compeTiTion, which brings lvlanhaTTan To The Tore in yeT anoTher sporT. Genial and even-Tempered, he is ever ready To do Tor his Triends more Than They do Tor him. lvluch oT his energy is spenT in persuading various people To do Things They do noT exacTly mean To do. l-le developed in his second year a peculiar Torm oT modernism which he deTends valianTly, and which we hope will be expanded some day inTo a successTul Torm oT archiTecTure. We are sure ThaT graduaTion will noT end The camaraderie which developed during The long aTTernoon draTTing periods. Though we say good-bye and wish you The besT oT all possible luck, we know ThaT we will see you anon. . T 9 53 -F i il E g:.'.:!gg.'1TCiZ:Ttj 3?:T6L?iT'ig VincenT J. Buscicchi, AB. Vinge Congers, N. Y. lTalian Club 2, 3, 4. INCE is a producT oT The high school aT Congers and is The TirsT CongeriTe To aTTend lv1anhaTTan. This was his TirsT experience wiTh CaTholic educaTion and The ChrisTian BroThers and he now has a high regard Tor boTh. For Tour years he has been a regular commuTer on The VVesT Shore Railroad, and oughT To own an inTeresT in iT by now, buT This is noT The case. Vince is a greaT sporT Tan and has oTTen been ouT cheering The Teams. l-le has played some baslceTball himselT, buT somehow could never gualiTy Tor ThaT cenTer posiTion. Vince sTarTed ouT as a science man, buT soon saw The error 'oT his way and aTTer Two years oT scienTiTic work, Tound his way To The classes oT The ArTsmen and was able To hold his own wiTh The besT. Bus has become very Tond oT his social science courses and gives Them The voTe as The greaTesT in The school, wiTh The educaTional subiecTs a close second. Vince holds The disTincTion oT never having played The piano in SmiTh Audi- Toriurn or having grubbed a cigareTTe Trom a classrnaTe during his Tour-year sTay aT lvlanhaTTan. ATTer obTaining his degree, Vince inTends To Teach and imparT some oT The greaT mass oT knowledge he has aTTained Trom The BroThers, and we cannoT see how he can make anyThing buT a success oT iT. Well, plenTy oT luclc Bus, old boy! 54 M OUR lvlai deliberal Tor him T gang, Did: and an c males or Thou social Tu, Charms. llaps This Diclc lllls is Ta Ol Wild n AiTe UnneCess. Your paT 0Ugh+. ..-K . ,?'T lkfgfsisdrfk 'T Q 'fx X.,-. XL N 1' N. ---.-. Ao QA'N34.7.f'N 4' x , a To and nad, is a Jme TTer was The udi- 5Tay reaT 1 he Richard J. Callahan, BS. in E. Dick NewporT, R. L. Rhode Island Club I, 2, 3, 47 S. I. E.: TransiT Club 3, 43 K. D. C.: Ring CommiTTee. OUR years ago, a Tall youTh wi+h curly raven locks saunTered inTo The porTals oT IVlanhaTTan, bringing wiTh him The leisurely cuITure oT New England. In his own deIiberaTe way he was immediaTeIy accepTed as one oT The boys. IT speaks well Tor him ThaT during The ensuing years he has always been considered as one oT The gang. Dick broughT wiTh him Trom lNIewporT a charming smile, an agreeable disposiTion and an odd appreciaTion oT wiT. The laTTer is accompanied by a dry chuckle which makes one uncerTain wheTher he is laughing aT The ioke or The ioker. Though noT a social lion, Dick's TasTe in Teminine puIchriTude is peerless. AT social TuncTions and whaTnoTs he is accompanied by The laTesT model in womanly charms. This is remarkable when one considers ThaT his TasTe runs To blondes, per- haps This TasTe has been moulded by lXIewporT sunshine. Dick's serious mien mighT easily lead one To believe ThaT he is dull. I-Towever, This is Tar Trom True, Tor many a nighT has been whiled away lisTening To his Tales oT wild nighTs in Rhode Island. ATTer Tour years' associaTion wiTh you, Dick, we know ThaT To wish you luck is unnecessary. I-Iowever, may success crown your eTTorTs, and True happiness lie along your paTh. We sincerely hope ThaT lXIewporT may recognize you as we know she oughT. 55 gfs.:s:.s:x1Qcs.. . Louis J. Capozi, BS. in E. HCGPPYH FreeporT, L. l. A. S. C. E. 2, 3, 4: NewTon MaThemaTical SocieTy 2, 3, 4: K. D. C. 4: TransiT Club I, 2, 3, 41 Alpha Phi DelTa. ' NE oT The happiesT memories oT our college days is ThaT we carry wiTh us Trom ManhaTTan our associaTion wiTh Cappy. l-le is one of The exemplars oT The lv1anhaTTan spiriT: a prince among his Tellow classmaTes as well as The chap who has earned quiTe a repuTaTion as a humorisT and a pracTical ioker-a repuTaTion ThaT is well deserved. Cappy is a prominenT example oT The kind oT chap who geTs Through on his own. l-le has uTilized many an evening pondering over his assignmenTs lbelieve iT or noTl, Thus making himselT cerTain oT his maTTer and Tearless oT The ouTcome. Cappy is noTed Tor being very precise abouT class records and invariably Transcribed upon The blackboard any quesTions or daTa given by The proTessor. l-le was one oT The besT social workers in The class and ThaT is clearly demonsTraTed by The numerous acTiviTies lisTed above. LesT we TorgeT, Cappy kepT The log oT The class during iTs hegira To Schroon Lake lasT year. We do noT know whaT liTTle Cappy inTends To Tollow in The TuTure, buT we advise him To sTay in The engineering Tield Tor we are sure ThaT There are many openings Tor men oT his Type. So long, Cappy, buT noT goodbye, Tor we know you will always be wiTh us To help in The advancemenT oT our dear Alma lvlaTer. l J i 56 RUTH, n souglrr. This boy, Ca, preciaTed by peculiariTies 4 '99Ular Tellov luesl from GH' 'H volumes. lllig young m YG-T We can lines or G de Carola. Hi le anim, ,, aid 5 Sympe b llle is hall S0 Hhnl U l ldles' of i?J s .mx 'om ol who ThaT his e iT ably He l by T The i we n6flY Th U5 J' Domeniclc J. CarOTa, BS. HDSCTCH Bronx, N. Y. Mendelian Club 3, 4: lTalian Club 3, 43 German Club 3. RUTH, nO maTTer where iT may be Tound, cannOT be shunned, buT is always sOughT. And This enTiTy can in cerTain insTances become parT OT a personaliTy. This boy, CarOTa, is such a person-a person whose sTraighTTOrwardness can be ap- preciaTed by Those who lcnow him and lcnow him well. NO subTleTies OT sTyle, Or peculiariTies OT cOnversaTiOn are necessary TO illusTraTe The excellence OT This sTudenT, regular Tellow, and sympaTheTic classrnaTe. As a member OT a school exacTing The besT Trom all, he s+ill can Tind Time TO parTicipaTe in acTiviTies OTher Than Those Tound in volumes. Club members and all assOciaTes can admire The pleasing simpliciTy OT This young man divorced Trom all pomp Or pseudo inTellecTualism and sophisTicaTion. YeT we can only hope ThaT such a pleasing personaliTy plans his TuTure along The lines OT a deTiniTe liTe Taslc. And OT course, a liTe OT service is The choice OT Mr. CaroTa. l-lis hopes are cenTered upon The noble prOTessiOn-medicine. Perhaps The calling may be Tilled speciTically Tor him, Tor an hOnesT, a compleTe, an exacT, and a sympaTheTic naTure hew OuT Their own success. ln ThaT case, Deck, your baTTle is halT wonl A wOrThy prOducT OT lv1anhaTTan, a servanT OT all, a perTecT son, we send you TOrTh wiTh unbounded cOnTidence in your abiliTy TO Talce all The hurdles OT liTe. 57 4 I I EQRJTQ' .,l..iEiff:E'E2E:i:f:::i 1 '1.sllIi'1. if7IT..1'df.'1lZZi1.f.Qii,f'TT..'TIT, fi f . .. Jas.. . - M ---V---f-W I I I I i I y , . I Edward R. Chapman, BS. in B. Chappie Newporf, R. I. Manhaffan Club of Rhode Island I, 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 3, 4: Hayes Dramafic Sociefy 3, 41 I5 Commerce Club 3, 4: Tug o' War I, 2: Boarder's F Minsfrelg Freshman Cross-Counfry. MONG De La Salle's lhlewporfl mosf nofable confribufions fo Manhaffan we gi I 2' find Ed Chapman. Coming fo us four years ago, from fhe playground of Q Q 1 . . . . . . fhe world, he broughf wifh him a congenial personalify and a deferminafion fo suc- cessfully complefe his firsf sfep fowards an illusfrious business career. Chappie, fhough rafher a quief chap lno pun infendedl has become a well- .. 3,-Q gay known figure on fhe campus. I-lis reserve is rafher hard fo overcome, buf he is recognized as a really fine fellow by fhose lucky enough fo gain his confidence. Looking over his four years af lvlanhaffan we find fhaf Chubbie cerfainly had his share of life's ups and downs. Being a real lvlanhaffanife in fhe frue sense of fhe word, he fook fhe bumps wifh a smile and came back for more unfil no fields were leff unconquered. Once away from fhe classroom, however, we find fhe lighfer side of his nafure coming fo fhe foreground. I-lis iollify and his amiabilify, his wif and his safire soon make his presence felf. The presence of fhese fwo characferisfics-a pleasing personalify and an uncon- querable spirif-assure for him a permanenf place in fhe hearfs of all Manhaffan men. We feel also fhaf fhese fraifs of characfer augur well for his fufure success in his chosen field of endeavor. Au revoir, old friend, and fhe besf of luck. 58 . .if ,,, 6 MONG his fe archifecf. I Wlien he sa himself, 50 I member. H nof so good Ed is 5 and fails, H OI eccessorie BUI' he if eye and alwe HW expet al Usual CC Ed Ile blqqe C S0 'Ons . hx gf. W Ay., Ae- Yqs.?f'1..1ff..er3 ' v. . 'F-IJ'-k.,1 ' '--. fghfsir we oi ,uc- fell- a is wacl i ol alds lure oon ION' Han ness 'Q we 'l5.,,:q f-- 'yi . ,fn JT Edwin M. Cisler, l3.S. in Arcw. Ed New Yorlc Cily Eoollighfers I, 21 l-layes Dramalic Club 3: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 43 Archileclrural Sociely l, 2, 3, 4. MON6 lhe group from De La Salle is Ed, who came here wilh Jrhe urge lo follow his favorile benl, archileclure. Forever slcelching, as should a prospeclive archilecl. l-le spends his lime, during and belween classes, wielding his pencil. When he saw his fellow-sludenls he realized whal lillle chance he had of expressing himself, so he lorlhwilh joined lhe Glee Club, of which he had been a devoled member. l-le is aicilicled wilh Jrhe desire lo lell humorous slories, some good, some nol so good. Ed is a familiar figure al all lvlanhallan social aclivilies, resplendenl in Jropper and lails. l-le is a bil parlicular in his dress, inasmuch as he has a complele seleclion of accessories for every suil. Bur he is Jrruly in all respecls a lypical lvlanhallan man, a nimble mind, llirlalious eye and always ready wilh a quip of lhe Tongue. Ed expecls lo lulure his educalion in arl. ln olher words he is going lo forsalce lhal usual college sludenl aim, lhal of being a praclical dollar chaser. We wish Ed lhe biggesl of all handshalces, lulure success in all his endeavors, parlicularly his arlislic inclinalions. So long , Ed, lhe land of millc and honey is awailing you. 59 fix, I x fr- f -F N.. .X fri... - 'i ll SL... Frederick A. Clear, B.S. in F. Fred New York CiTy BeTa Sigma: TransiT Club 2, Vice-PresidenT 3, PresidenT 4: K. D. C., Vice-PresidenT 4: A. S. C. E. 3, 4: NewTon MaThemaTical SocieTy, SecreTary 3, PresidenT 4. AILY aTTacking The heighTs oT Riverdale, Fred has come To our Engineering School Trom The sunny slopes oT BoTanical Park. For ThaT doomed Teeling when diTTiculT problems become so conTusing, This blonde young man is usually The remedy. This evolves Trom The elemen+s oT a TorceTul and keen iudgmenT, Timed wiTh a gen- erous and posiTive naTure. GiTTed wiTh a pracTical genius Tor maThemaTics, he has had liTTle diTliculTy in gaining and mainTaining an auspicious pedesTal in The TirsT order oT our inTelligensia. Fred has parTicipaTed in many oT our exTra-curricular acTiviTies and has always been a sTaunch supporTer oT everyThing lvlanhaTTan. One could always see him in The cheering secTion, alThough his puncTualiTy was Walkeresque, cheering his col- leagues land himselTl ouT There TighTing Tor his Alma MaTer. As an acTive member oT The NewTon lvlaTh SocieTy, and as presidenT OT This organizaTion in his senior year, his energeTic eTTorTs will long be remembered. Fred will be back wiTh us nexT year To acquire his CF.: and alThough we do noT know his ulTimaTe inTenTions, a man wiTh such an enviable disposiTion, an honor sTudenT, and an all-around good Tellow, deserves The success which we wholehearTedly wish and Teel sure he will aTTain. i 1 60 W UST a quieT enough in c flo admire Those Bill has gone 6 unknowingly, and The merifs of Tho JOB Shows h lnoen an ardenf discussion Upon H or real hard Wm: f. Fylllglong PGSsai has declensioi evenldudglng bl' l lm mano ll' sh lend llle l Ollllnq some da any of Us ,ro S l Tleevening Sys? l EER l T LW , Joseph F. Cody, A.B. Wild Bill STapleTon, N. Y. Arnold Classical SocieTy 43 Glee Club 3, 4. UST a quieT young Tellow going abouT his own business, buT ThaT is phenomenal enough in college. College sTudenTs haven'T much respecT Tor silence, buT They do admire Those oT Their Tellows who are given To pracTicing The golden virTue. So Bill has gone abouT his Tour years of work wiThouT noise or busTle, collecTing Triends, unknowingly, and holding Them as well, wiThouT any conscious eTTorT, buT solely on The meriTs oT Those qualiTies which his reTicence almosT conceals. Joe shows himselT mosT prominenTly in The LaTin class. For Tour years he has been an ardenT Tollower oT The LaTin classics and is happiesT when evolved in a discussion upon The immorTals oT Rome. WheTher iT be his greaT powers oT memory or real hard work, we musT admiT he cerTainly is a wizard when iT comes To Trans- laTing long passages Trom eiTher l-lorace or TaciTus. You should lisTen To him reel oTF his declensions and coniugaTions. Judging by The endeavor and inclusTry displayed by Bill in class, and his guieT, even demeanor, he is going To work his way To The Top, sans The TumulT and shouTing ThaT aTTend The progress oT some collegians. Who knows buT Joe will be heard shouTing some day, sTranger Things have been known To happen. lT will noT surprise any oT us To see him reach The Top quieTly and, when There, his lighT shall shine like The evening sTa r. T L i i T l l l bl T T T p l T .Im 1. A A' l yy . AAAA,, -- l i l ll l l al, Denis CTL. Cohalan, A.B. rw Denny New York CiTy l Phi Rho Pi, PresidenT 3, 4: PresidenT oT AThleTic l AssociaTiong Glee Club 4: Chairman lnTra-mural l SporTs CommiTTee. l y H EREisacla. O record all oT The achievemenTs oT The GreaT Jasper would be a garganTuan unassuming Task. Conclusive prooT oT This broad sTaTemenT may be deduced Trom The TacT me Sincere 1 ThaT he was unanimously chosen as mosT Typical lvlanhaTTan man. medicine and Since his Treshman year, Denny losT no Time in showing us whaT he could do. TllT9IPOSSessel Z One of The very TirsT baTTles beTween The class oT '32 and ThaT oT '3I was led by him. PYIHQ wITl1 our r T l-lis crowning digniTy was his TiTle oT A. A. PresidenT. Always an enThusiasTic sup- illlaccomplishm f porTer oT lvlanhaTTan, he showed greaT inTeresT in everyThing concerning her, and his ll0mISinglecTure l naTural capaciTy Tor leadership undoubTedly earned him his honors. Oliwriiehome at T There are Two unadorned niches in The Tacade oT The college buildings: many Bill is also C and varied are The coniecTures as To whose sTaTues shall be placed Therein. BuT The lierd Twin 1 class oT T932 need scarcely speculaTe on ThaT evenT. We are Tirm in The convicTion lllungman Egg T ThaT The meandering sweep oT SpuyTen Duyvil Parkway shall one day Tall under The Wxlqasiorm Svol Q surveillance oT The graniTe eye oT The sculpTured likeness oT ThaT irrepressible wag. e 6 l ThaT indeTaTigable doer oT deeds, The very pracTical Denis. Our Tour years oT The Same y inTimaTe associaTion are approaching a limiT. As we sTand ready To parT leT us wish lfeshman ay G' you happy landings. leegc , Mar md' Olllldenl- rel cel professio 2 L T :H Q W T 44 - il u T' ig ' T . T9 62 .Q x T T William N. ComerTord, B.S. Bill Bronx, N. Y. Mendelian SocieTy 2, 3, 4: German Club 3. f ix ff , Aff! ,J-ia.. .44 , Q l l .l -'S ,sd sl ERE is a classmaTe who has endeared himselT To his Tellow-sTudenTs Tor his guieT, , UGVW unassuming manner. BuT beneaTh This modesT and unpreTenTious bearing is 1 U' :acl a True. sincere, and undersTanding Triend. Bill is much inTeresTed in The Tield oT ii medicine and his endeavors as a member oT The Mendelian SocieTy show clearly T ThaT he possesses remarkable capabiliTies in ThaT direcTion. Ever since Bill, com- CTO- plying wiTh our reguesTs, delivered an inTeresTing and enlighTening Talk on The liTe lim. and accomplishmenTs oT Louis PasTeur, The Science class has looked upon him as a up- promising lecTurer. For This reason we should noT be surprised if our own sons, laler his On, wriTe home and menTion Their learned anaTomy Teacher as DocTor ComerTord. Bill is also giTTed wiTh musical TalenT To no small degree and could oTTen be any heard Tickling The keys To The accompanimenT oT delighTTul male voices. This fhe young man is wonT To spend his week-ends in Poughkeepsie where, no doubT, The Tair ion sex has Tormed a Tavorable impression OT lvlanhaTTan men. llle The same admirable characTer which Bill possessed when he regisTered as a ag' Treshman aT lVlanhaTTan Prep has conTinued ThroughouT his college career and we ,Oi Teel conTidenT ThaT iT will guide him To ulTimaTe success in his chosen Tield-The Sh medical proTession. 63 K T ti E l 9 3 1 l i 1 fl l Ts Joseph M. Conlon, AB. ,105 New Yorlc Foo?ligh?ers Drarna?ic Socie-?y l, 2: Quadrangle 3, 43 Hayes Drama?ic Socie?y 3, 4. OT many weeks o? our Freshman year had passed be?ore i? became eviden? ?ha? Joe would ?ind a place in ?he hearls o? all his classma?es. Wi?h ius? ?he proper combina?ion o? humor and seriousness, he proceeded ?o his s?udies. Bu? he did no? con?ine his ?alen?s ?o scholas?ic achievemen?s alone. He embraced all ?he oppor?uni?ies ?ha? ex?ra-curricular ac?ivi?ies o??ered him. We will never ?orge? him as ?he usher in our ?irs? his?rionic endeavor, Give ?he Audience a Chance. His classical coun?enance graced many a collegia?e ?unc?ion ?herea??er. Nor can any ?ac?, shor? o? a calami?y, wipe ou? ?he memory o? ?he par? he played in ?he ?orma?ion o? ?he Freshman Drama?ic Socie?y, ?o which ?he curren? Hayes Drama?ic Socie?y is indeb?ed ?or i?s exis?ence. Then Joe blossomed ?or?h in a new role as a iournalis? o? no mean abili?y. The prominen? place he held on ?he s?a?? o? ?he college publica?ion a??es?s ?o his marked pro?iciency along ?hese lines. We ?hough? we had wi?nessed all o? his accomplishmen?s, bu? ?he Vergil bi- cen?ennial celebraion revealed him as a public speaker o? excellen? quali?xi and presence. So he leaves Manha??an, wi?h ?he bes? wishes o? us all, ringing in his ears: ?o ?acl:le ?he world wi?h ?he? same semi-humorous. semi-serious a??i?ude ?ha? charac?er7' ' . :,,SS his s?uden? days. . - ,T ,Mk ,tg -yn ,gg A , -' - f--. 4 - -- V f-.. f-. ' r., 5. f za.. QTL. -. , - r, 1 A .. V, ,.. V, 'QU Y K , M' A ' ' ' ' ' 4 c' '-' JJ ----' QI- -1 .-' ..f..'i,APT..f': 64 .sit 5 OW o??en is ?ru?h in Coming from Let clown dmongsf- H During his f ol each Sen lonor hrazingly 5 began lo sludy hi lie lound fwo Whi :san individual M lnlossom lorlh S+ males willy me ag enil H. lusl around H1 suctesginfhe 6 men J .4 denT T The IT he The him His any aTion Ty is The Wked l bi- and si io rized :DQ WH i George F. Connor, BS. G6WClQ9 LeominsTer, Mass. Mendelian SocieTy 2, 3, 43 Cercle Francais 3, lv1anhaTTaniTe. OW oTTen has iT been said ThaT greaT men had humble beginnings? IT There is TruTh in ThaT sTaTemenT, George is cerTainly Traveling The paThway To Tame. Coming Trom LeominsTer, Mass., one oT Those cracker-barrel Towns, Gawdge seTTled down amongsT The science men aT lvlanhaTTan. During his TirsT Two years he demonsTraTed how he could Take iT and aT The end oT each semesTer we Tound him carrying abouT a reporT card wiTh The word honor brazingly sTamped Thereon. Now ThaT we had lcnown him as The scholar we began To sTudy him as The man. ResulTs were indeed saTisTacTory. OT all his gualiTies we Tound Two which were ouTsTanding--Triendliness and good-hearTedness. Gawdge is an individual in whom all Traces oT conceiT are ToTally lacking and in Their sTead blossom TorTh sTrongly The seeds oT philanThropy. As he loolcs upon all his class- maTes wiTh The aTTiTude oT Triend so do we consider him, our Triend. And now comes our lasT monTh oT associaTion. As The day oT separaTion is iusT around The corner we hurry To say good luck, George, wiTh conTidence ThaT success in The medical world will soon be TorThcoming. 65 Ni Henry J. Connors, B.S. in B. Hank Brooklyn, N. Y. Cercle Francais 2, 3: Brooklyn-Long Island Club I, 2, 3, 4: Commerce Club 2, 3, 4. ND now, may we presenT l-Tank Trom Brooklyn. This many-sided youTh is The pride oT The Commerce class, iournalisTically speaking. Being a demon re- porTer wiTh one oT our larger New York dailies, he is To be regarded as an auThoriTy on anyThing connecTed wiTh The newspaper business. OT course, This employmenT was a mere sidelighT while he aTTended lvlanhaTTan buT iT goes To prove The capabiliTy he possesses. We could wriTe volumes on a characTer such as I-lank's. The haT he wore during his Tour-year sTay aT lv1anhaTTan was considered by many as The sTrangesT sighT They ever wiTnessed. There were also rumors consTanTly circulaTed To The eTTecT ThaT his eyes, like The owl's, opened only aT nighT. l-lank always Tried his besT To sTiTle These rumors buT we sTill had our doubTs. To be a good sTudenT and a good Tellow aT one and The same Time is con- sidered quiTe an accomplishment yeT l-Tank did all This and more. l-Tis cheery counTenance was an asseT To any gaThering and ThaT cerTain drollery he possessed gained him many Triends. We all expecT, some day, To see The name oT our Triend Trom Brooklyn adorning The ediTorial page oT some Tine newspaper. Henry J. Connors, EdiTor, would look very well .... May iT, or someThing beTTer, be his luck! 66 5 BOVE aTTi The TorTunaTe lin. genTlemar To re We learns SisTer5, G While grOTeSqUe- T0 6TTend Only acqui Well-liked E wish him ay IS lndica-HN good Wish. f l.4f3 1y- .N liffiqfri 'szq Joseph J. Coughlin, BS. Joe Hobolcen, N. J. Mendelian SocieTy 3, 4: lTalian Club 3. BOVE we have Joe Coughlin, The man who joined us in our Sophomore year aTTer having passed his iniTial sTudies aT SeTon Hall. The auThor oT This arTicle made The acquainTance oT a genTleman who was TorTunaTe enough To be presenT aT numerous social gaTherings wiTh Joseph J. Cough- lin. His revelaTions oT our good Triend Joe are asToundingl l can vouch Tor This genTlernan's veraciTy and The auThenTiciTy oT his inTormaTion. To relaTe all ThaT was Told me is impossible. I hope The high lighTs will suTTice. We learned +ha+ our good Triend Joe is The auThor oT ThaT Tamous DisserTaTion on SisTers, and is a sTaunch supporTer oT +ha+ popular indoor sporT called Bridge. While reading The TirsT paragraph The reader wenT Trom The ridiculous To The groTesque--now he goes Trom The groTesque To The sublime. We lcnow Joe expecTs To aTTend an ouT-oT-Town medical school. No maTTer where he goes he will noT only acquire a new hosT oT Triends, buT will remain TaiThTul To The old. A more well-liked and respecTed young man would be hard To Tind in The enTire college. l wish him all The luck +ha+ a pal could wish To anoTher. However, if his college record is indicaTive oT whaT he is going To do aT medical school, he scarcely needs our good wishes. I 67 HQCEQL Q lxfl JA N H A T l Dy l l l l . Q, f, RX I x s T l . ' Frank W. Creamer, B.S. in B. Honey Sea Gafe, N. Y. Alpha Sigma BeTa: Managers Club 3, 4: Manager Freshman Baseball 4: Brooklyn-Long lsland Club. IMPLY a glance aT The grayish locks above is a sufficienT physiological inCllCGllOFl of prominence. BuT To know Their proud possessonis To know royalTy. For D Frank is none oTher Than The far-heralded Overlord of Sea-GaTe-Down-The-Bay. lT is i surprising Then To find one of such peerage responding To The sobriqueT of l-loney. S gl The machinaTions of a female are suspecTed. l W f 1 Frank has a hosT of friends, being known as a week-end enTerTainer-exTraordinary. lT has been inTimaTed ThaT The proximiTy of his ancesTral home To a cerTain limiT - from The shore abouT Three miles disTanT-has fosTered such success. BUT This is rumor. lT musT be said, however, ThaT The words Four Aces exciTe Frank's gray' s , maTTer To a concepTion oTher Than a hand of pinochle. ln class Frank has conducTed himself commendably, being one who does nO+ snore. On The oTher hand he is given To Talking in his sleep. Suffice iT To say ThaT no resulTanT scandal has reached The press alThough The Quadrangle has aT various Times approached insinuaTion. Frank's favoriTe diversion is noT cerTain. lT can be sTaTed only negaTively. IT is noT The acquisiTion of The culTure of The ancienT CasTillians via El Eco. l-loney says so himself. -,. . -W -Quay-q , -'-' ,T 1-fJ ',. 't'4 N . ,Jw -' M- ' , T W- '-- l-lE col. His compa maTTer wha cherished h ManhaTTan ln his 5 Pace raTher msTead of E and pllilogo Sees or visuf ll1isTraiT To , There 5 as r Elle School, 6 ig 5 M me dll buslness Good ll 5' fr- ' 455' P. , 7 :YZ V: 1 KW-if? -.21 l sa l MS l lion For ll is ey. iary. lil- i5 is gray nol il U0 rious I+ is neyll i I L vlaurice P. Crowley, X-MB. Mo S+. George, N. Y. HEREVER Maurice is, il is bound To be cheerful. Never a noonrime ol a college day passed bur we saw his smile brighlen a conversalrion al lable. His companionship rhrough four fleelring years was ever genial. His Jremper, no mailer whar lhe slrain was ever eguable. His manners springing from a hearl Jrhal cherished high principles, marlced him a Calholic genlleman of rhe mellle of which Manharlan can feel unreservedly proud. In his sludies, Mo was moderale and consislenr, going along ar a sleady, even pace rarher Than in lils of cramming and lelr-ups of ease. He soughr a wide cullure inslread of a drill upon a few subiecls. To an inguisilive crirical arrirude in science and philosophy Mo adds a sprighlrly imaginarion ringed wilh humor. He rarely sees or visualizes a siruarion wilhoul exrracling some Jrhing incongruous. He possesses lhis Jrrair ro a high degree: il springs sponraneously-for he never labors ro produce ir. There are many ol us who wonder why a man wilh such an oursranding per- sonaliry as Maurice has nor been more inlreresled in The exlra-curricular aclivilies of Jrhe school. This is in all probabiliry due ro his dual personaliry. During Jrhe day he is a lvlanhallan man, while during rhe nighl he is induslriously making his way in rhe business world. However, he has always been willing To baclc Jrhe Senior Class movemenlrs. Good luclc, Mo, 69 I ti 5 1 Q ,Bagwe ll ' , , -.,,- i F i ,.!T-,,,.,,.. -,-- - v - i l I I i l l l l i i l l A X N fi l l ij. T Lg AnThony F. DacunTo, BS. A -A Hifi New Yorlc CiTy ,., Boxing I, 2: VarsiTy M Club: Mendelian SocieTy ' 3, 4: lTalian Club: Freshman FooTball. ERE is The answer To The many queries, Who is ThaT 'huslcy' under The wide- T L brimmed haT'? A TooTball hero senT by DeWiTT ClinTon l-T. S.'s successTul S squad To TurTher his aThleTic Training aT ManhaTTan. l-lis comical anTics were ex- plained by many as The eTTecT oT his memorable bouT wiTh PoTsville Jones lBuclc- T y nell's lnTercollegiaTe l-leavyweighT Championl. T is iigfiii A romanTic characTer is his pracTicing The anTics depicTed by The mediaeval auThors whom he reads wiTh delighT. l-le was once guilTy oT reporTing on The wOrliS oT several Russian auThors, presumably an eTTecT oT The Bohemian environmenT oT his naTive Greenwich Village! A cauliTlowered exponenT oT lv1anhaTTan's pugilisTic endeavors, he serves hiS Alma MaTer wiTh his marvelous endowmenT oT sTrengTh and is The colorTul heavyf. A weighT oT The Boxing Team. FriT2's physical prowess was noT limiTed To This special- ized Tield buT disTribuTed To pigslcin compeTiTion and The ancienT Greco-Roman amusemenTs. All ManhaTTaniTes recognize This replica oT Johnson Through his bois- Terous hilariTy and good naTure. These TraiTs will evenTually qualiTy him as an aTTer- dinner speaker aT Alumni banqueTs. This TuTure member oT The denTal proTession will be remembered as a good sporT in The social sense and as an aThleTe who won a VarsiTy M, 70 ' 6 US whal' av commer Jol caTion, sTanTly The swo For TincTioni is 'l'l'l8 1 lndeed Wi The sun. il-l'l6SS 5 one so 1 Ju: GHG ne The fruir bow gre vide- essiul a ex- Buck- aeval i.forliS TT ol 5 Hs gavyz acial- gmdn hoiS- 3iTer- n will ron 5 John J. Daley, BS. in B, Jack New York CiTy Commerce Club 2, 3, 4. ll SK The man who owns one. No, noT a Packard--a noTe book. John Daley is in This respecT prolific. l-le has produced noTebooks by The volume. To whaT avail? None aT all buT To his recogniTion as The besT sTuden+ in The graduaTing commerce class-a lasTing TribuTe, well-earned, deserved! John has been since Freshman year a model sTudenT, oTTen chided Tor his appli- caTion, buT really envied Tor his power of perseverance. l-lis marks have been con- sTanTly above average, and his is a Tine example oT The pen being mighTier Than The sword. For John has noT parTicipaTed acTually in aThleTics, buT he needs no oTher dis- TincTions Than Those which he has already aTTained. Besides, iT is said ThaT John is The only one aT ManhaTTan who undersTands The Tiling sysTem in The Library. Indeed an accomplishmenT. Wi+h all These qualiTies of scholar go a disposiTion as pleasani' as The warmTh oT The sun. Never a word of complainT or criTicism, always a Triendly greeTing, a smile. These are The qualiTies of genTlemen, and his associaTes are proud To have known one so exemplary as John Daley. Judging by his endeavor, indusTry and capabiliTy, no goal appears Too high. One need noT be a clairvoyanT To Toresee accomplishmenT Tor John. He will realize The TruiTs oT his perseverance and will Tulfill The expecTaTions oT his Triends who now bow graciously and parT--remembering. 7I bun ..11i....L.i .... . .. .. . I ' Q . I I I I 5 LL y , A Frank J. D'Amico, I3.S. in Arch. Frank, RabbiT New York CiTy I AIpha Phi DeITag FooTIighTers I, 23 Hayes DramaTic 5 . SocieTy 3, 4: ArchiTecTuraI Socie-Ty I, 2, 3, 4: I M. I. C. I, 2, 3, 4: Managers CIub 3, 4: Pen and I Sword SocieTyg Manager oT FooTbaII 4: VarsiTy M CIub I LANCING inTo The CoIIege barber shop aT any Time during The day you are I sure To see Frank. This is his TavoriTe hangouT. Frank may be adequaTeIy described in Three words: smaII, energeTic and pessimisTic. I-Ie enjoys noThing more Than To sing his TaIe oT woe. I-Iowever, he has a cheery smiIe and a good word Tor everyone. 'I Frank is an archiTecT and wiII probably' design many oT New York's TuTure sky- scrapers. As a resuIT oT his many acTiviTies Frank has been eIecTed To membership oT The senior honorary socieTy, Pen and Sword. The ITaIian CIub oT ManhaTTan musT recognize Frank as one oT iTs greaTesT mem- bers. During This year, when The cIub had aImosT disbanded, iT was RabbiT who sensed a possibiIiTy oT iTs passing ouT oT exisTence and Then aided immenseIy in buiIding iT up once more To become a sTabIe organizaTion. And now, as 'Frank was oTTen wonT To say, Tempus TugiT. For Tour years we have been chumming wiTh RabbiT and waTching him ToIIowing The TooTbaII Team, game aTTer game. LeT us hope you ToIIow your profession wiTh The same inTeresT, Then you shall be rewarded and ' we, your cIassmaTes, Too, wiII be deIighTed. Y W Y 5 K - , N...-..-w...,,-1..c,V ...mp ,. ,. .,,, ..,.,... ...F i . U ' 'qi I Y i . -, v a... - ..,,, f Q., -,N- I x I g X ., -L. . 4. -.:, .... vtzmglhhi 1 N 1.3 I.- I LJ :fu fl-. 1 xf Q:f.: 'e4.M-1-f-. ff , .. ..... ...U ,AE .KU . ...e..,...:.......-.l......cn.,....e I is un ThaT, x saving The been in c by his cl, exTra-curi Among +I cheering musT Tala ecTiviTies, abouT Tiv I Fred 'S NO Iaw George dSTerrnin, 7 2 1 are aTely more :l Tor sky- ip oT nern- who ly in 5 we GGVTW. eresT. lm- ,, George F. Davis, A.B. Iisalclqeljl New York CiTy Alpha Sigma BeTag Baseball Manager 43 Managers' Club 3. 4: Pen and Sword: VarsiTy lvl Club. T is unTorTunaTe ThaT This genTleman's name commences wiTh a D, Because oT ThaT, we musT place him in The TronT oT our book whereas we should hearTily enioy saving The good Things unTil laTer. George came To us Trom De la Salle and had noT been in our midsT more Than a week beTore he was well known and equally well liked by his classmaTes as well as by everybody on The campus. There have been Tew exTra-curricular acTiviTies which have noT known George's whole-hearTed supporT. Among The more prominenT may be menTioned his aid in building up a much-needed cheering squad and his dual managerships: baskeTball and baseball. Then, Too, we musT Take inTo consideraTion The diTTiculTies experienced in devoTing Time To These acTiviTies. Perhaps l should have said diTTiculTyg in TacT, a very sweeT liTTle diTTiculTy abouT Tive TeeT Two. PredicTion oT The TuTure is basically beyond The laws oT reason. l-lowever, There is no law againsT making a Tair guess. Our guess is ThaT in The noT Tar disTanT TuTure George will be well up The ladder oT achievemenT wiTh a sTouT hearT and grim deTerminaTion noT To sTop unTil he has reached The uppermosT rung. 'H' Q- .. f. .. , ,,. 4 in., l I y I ' 'J y 73 l l l T l ,. . 9 . . , ' jj' E- , ,,-,. ii 1,2133 - ' 1735.17i::g':. 11'1'1',-S!.LL' -fiifli' 'A ' ' ' - Wm ' l l l l il l l if A if i Joseph E. Deegan, B.S. in E. li . Joe New York CiTy lc Glee Club I, 2, 3: K. D. C. 4: S. l. E. 3, Treasurer 4: Track 2, 3: Transif Club: Newfon MaThemaTical Sociefy 4: Befa Sigma. li . . . . OE is Typical of engineers. He is The possessor of an inqulslfive naTure and would lead his learned professors To believe he was from Missouri, by quesfion- ll ing The why and wherefore of The many inTricaTe problems confronfing and perplex- lx Li ig ing The rnosf advanced sfudenfs of science. ln The classroom Joe was a shining lighT, V' zu ii' especially in The line of lndusTrial Engineering and Managemenf. l-le began To malce himself conspicuous aT lvlanhaffan aT his firsT appearance. ln his freshman and sophomore years he showed ambiTion To disTinguish himself in aThleTics as far as broad iumping was concerned. BUT he soon gave up The sporT To devoTe more Time To The primary obiecf of his being in our midsT, and sacrificed his bid for aThleTic prominence in favor of scholasTic achievemenf. Joe is an apT conversafionalisf and a good mixer. l-lis radianT counfenance has an appealing effecT on all who behold him, and has helped him in securing The many friends he has aT lvlanhaTTan, To say noThing of Those acquired in his ouTside conTacTs. Joe will be a big disappoinTmenT To his college if he is noT heard of ofTen afTer he has received his sheep-slcin. For a man possessing his characferisfics and qualifi- cafions, success is inevifable. IT is wiTh no small regreT ThaT we bid him adieu, sending him away To fulfill our augury. 74 gf U EEP Cros liere his infer sfuclying Kan lnowledge he Pllilosophicallj Our idea i0 and a frien llie lieen infer Cllalmlml pers floor he ms E long effer gre , The mm. ess mfellecfue ol Siudyr in an ion- lex ghf. ice. 7 in orf :ed ice Lhe de Ter ifi eu, William E. Delaney, A.B. Beep New York Cify German Club 3, 4: l-layes Dramafic Sociefy 3, 4. ll EEF DELANEY. The pride of fhe Senior class. l-le came fo us from Tl-loly Cross. Before coming fo Manhaffan he was a frack sfar. Since he has been here his inferesfs have been mainly philosophical. l-le spends fwelve hours a week sfudying Kanf, Aquinas, ef al. Buf he defesfs Spencer. Wifh all his philosophic knowledge he is a regular fellow. I-le can undersfand a ioke if if is explained philosophically. Our idea of a man's man is Mrs. Delaney's liffle son, William. l-le is ever willing fo aid a friend. This sferling youfh is nofed for his sporfsmanship, as is evinced by fhe keen inferesf he shows in all branches of afhlefics. Wifh members of fhe opposife sex no one is so popular. This is due fo his charming personalify and fhe waves in his brown, silky, windblown hair. On fhe dance floor he cufs a very dashing figure. Rumor has if fhaf he will nof be a bachelor very long affer graduafion, buf Rumor is a foolish dame. The parfing of our days wifh Beep will be sad. l-le was ever willing fo cheer fhe less infellecfual members of fhe class. Always helpful wifh suggesfions abouf plans of sfudyy in fhis respecf, he showed fhe well-defined marks of a genius. 75 f l John J. Del Negro, A.B. Johnny Norfh Adams, Mass. Alpha Sigma Befa: Vice-Presidenf of A. A. 3: Baseball lg Foofball l, 2, 3, Capfain 4: Varsify M Club. T lvlanhaffan College Johnny and foofball are binomial. One cannof be separafed from fhe ofher. No duel wifh fhe pigskin ball can be sfaged wifhouf Johnny's parficipaflon. l-lis aspecf is suggesfive of vigor, fenacify, boldness. ln his eyes flash fhe flame of fhe Lafin blood full of passion and infelligence. On fhe field, when fhe baffle is mosf fhrilling, he reveals his fine qualifies of ' d min and body. When he crashes fhrough fhe opposife line wifh fhe ball in vice- like grasp of mighfy muscles and his eyes infensely fixed on fhe chalk-line, he awakens . H1 . . in e imaginafion of fhose looking on breafhless and sfarfled a vision of Greek afhlefes of old running in fhe Olympic sfadium fo win fhe la-urels of vicfory. Buf if is nof in foofball alone fhaf Del is b' hf l' h f a rig ig f, or in Academic rafing Johnny is righf up fhere wifh fhe nexf fellow. lf is seldom you find a good afhlefe and a good scholar af one and fhe same fime. Buf here is a man highly proficienf in bofh fields. ' Socially, Del is fhe ideal companion. There is hardly one member of fhe Senior class who has nof, in some way, associafed wifh him, and iudgmenf of his characfer was af all fimes of fhe highesf mefal. e . A ,i.' A . , , i J i . . 1 2 'cs i M-:.-,Q,,? .g, f if r f is . . x . ' ' ' fA,...fxf,,.i -.x1- -, ..:-..-f-A .,4. ,A .- ...H .11-.ii . ...Af 76 gg S i Posses: of fhe his ini' N noncha fllaf is period A COmp5 ll'lS fg complf Fr if. W Oi Succ Pk . tb 'sais m ' ralecl inny'S flame as ol vice- ilcens reel ling lele ienl nior 'ler f Francis J. De Luca Fliffnk D New Yorlc Cily Phi Rho Pl: Glee Club l, 2, 3, 43 Presidenl 4: l-layes Dramalic Sociely 3, 4. S ollen as lhe slrains ol lhe lamiliar song, Asleep in lhe Deep, reach our ears, we will be reminded ol lhe deep voice and smiling lace ol Frank De Luca. Possessed wilh a bass voice ol lhe linesl gualily, Frank was lor lour years a mainslay ol lhe Glee Club, and when chosen Presidenl ol lhal organizalion in his Senior year, his inilialive placed il among lhe leading college clubs. Noled lor his ready wil, his hearly supporl ol all lhings lvlanhallan, and his nonchalanl and debonair allilude, he has won a place in lhe hearls ol his classmales lhal is rivaled by lew. Wilh lhese gualilies he has made his years al lvlanhallan a period ol joy lo himsell and lo his lriends. Al any lime his hearly laugh may be lraced lo lhe Drugslore, where in lhe company ol Dan Kelleher, he holds sway over all. ln addilion, however, lo being lhe lorlunale possessor ol such a personalily, he has demonslraled his abilily lo complele a college career. Franlcs dearesl possession is his derby hal and he is seldom seen in public wilhoul il. We are sure lhal il will prove lo be as much lhe pleasanl reminder, lhe loken ol success, as in lhe lile ol him lo whom lhis boolc is dedicaled. 77 b' l T T T n i T 1 Q I 1 T fs xy by l ill can s. De Lucia, Bs. STeve TVOY- N- Y- ugi Troy Club I, 2, 3, 4: lTalian Club I, 2, 3, 4: -- Mendelian SocieTy 2, 3, 41 German Club I, 2, 3, 4: Boxing Team 2, 3, 4. T is wiTh pleasure ThaT we presenT one OT The ouTsTanding members OT The Science Q Class. Coming To us in '28 Trom The well-known ciTy OT Troy, N. Y., Carl proved , himselT, Trom The beginning, a worThy represenTaTive OT The Troian quinTeT. ln The T shorT space OT a monTh he had acquired a hosT OT Triends and Trom ThaT day Till This he has made considerable addiTions along This line. As a sTudenT every man knowing him will TesTiTy, he is ranked prOminenTly, due Wy noT so much To naTural Or inborn genius, as To cOnsisTency OT sTudy and abiliTy To sacriTice pleasure Tor work when needs be. WiTh such endOwmenT he should approach Towering heighTs in The medical world. There are noT many amOngsT us, nor many who have gone beTore us, who will Tor eThised ' ' ' ' g n eavors in pugil1sTic encounTers. ln his Sophomore and Junior years he was One OT The boxing coaches' besT beTs when The Time had come Tor The Jas er P SelT DeTense Team To maTch brawn and brain wiTh anOTher college Or universiTy. Among social circles, Carl is equally noTable. WheTher iT be a quesTion OT Jr. suppor ing a dance, or some acTiviTy OT The Troy, German or Mendelian Clubs, STeve can be relied upon as a mosT ardenT adherenT. Though we expecT To hear Trom him laTer on Tor The presenT we w' h Th b . is e esT OT luck To a scholar, Triend, TighTer and genTleman. , . , i,. 78 K U UM non: We all l'll argue iT, ishing oT The Triumph! uSllm'5 ThaT his secn :if ralmlly. Term Sllall never E Wins siiuais around Hue d have We See How Qflinl 1, Euflain Good luc ix sssw ,G is 2 , f-, rp., 14- ance ivecl The This clue T To acli will he ner of bs, asf ..- 1 4 . ,. .-is ,js ,..l Edward W. Dence, BS. in B. Hsllmu NewporT, R. I. Rhode Island Club I, 2, 3, 43 Hayes Dramafic SocieTy 3. 4: Commerce Club 3, 4: Freshman Cross-CounTry. ll l.llvl broughT wiTh him To lvlanhaTTan Those TraiTs oT a real NewporTer, a nonchalanT deTerminaTion, a Triendly spiriT and a humorous conTrariness. We all have some peT hobby and Slim's is ArgumenTaTion. Name iT and l'll argue iT, says he. However, his original argumenTs and his subsequenT brand- ishing oT The Tire nozzle in The dress rehearsal oT Molly were scarcely a debaTer's Triumphl Slim's sTellar accomplishmenTs were in STaTisTics and Law, buT rumor has iT ThaT his secreT craving is PoliTics. WiTh Slim as companion The Tour years OT our college career have sped rapidly, TerminaTing all Too soon Those pleasanT associaTions ThaT a work-a-day world shall never again be able To yield. l-low oTTen have we been wiTh Ed, Tacing a Trying siTuaTion and seeing him meeT and overcome iT wiTh a grin. I-low oTTen around The dinner Table has he seT us inTo laughTer wiTh a Tunny sTory. l-low oTTen have we seen him overcome any obsTacle or worry ThaT sTood in his or our way. l-low oTTEn, Too, has he inspired us by his valianT eTTorT in sTudies. To Think oT The curTain Talling upon our college days wiTh Ed is To Tlood The mind wiTh a Thousand happy memories ThaT we pray shall always remain wiTh us. Good luck, old pal, and loTs oT happiness. 79 l ii W i l l AlTred J. Dehlisco, B.S. Al Denny Yonkers, N. Y. Glee Club 3, 4, Vigilance CommiTTee 2: FooT- ball I: WesTchesTer Club I, 2, 3, 47 DramaTics l, 2, 3. l-TEN The Freshmen class oT I932 gaThered Tor The TirsT Time, There walked inTo iTs midsT a cheerTul chap Trom GorTon l-ligh School oT Yonkers. Then Olvl i The Science DeparTmenT was given an opporTuniTy oT making The acguainTance oT produy one oT The greaT Dehlisco Tamily, oT The Yonkers DeNiscos. The beaming, crooning -I-Om ,mah Ahfred was enTrusTed wiTh The duTy oT upholding The Tamily name, honor and Tosay HR TradiTion. meaning. And verily, iT was wiTh welcome arms ThaT we received our Al. Wi+h his sparkling wraTh-Turning humor and wiT, he coaxed laughs Trom all oT us, noT excepTing Tom even The Teacher. Denny's personaliTy is one oT his asseTs. l-lis cool, observanT messed il and collecTed menTal sTaTe is perceived on all occasions, wheTher The Chem. ProTessor 9'adUailOF is complicaTing maTTers by a disserTaTion or The WesTchesTer Club's soiree is BM Tloundering abouT on an apparenTly heavy Tinancial sea. This personaliTy will carry of me Cw him even TarTher Than iT has aT presenT. ln addiTion he possesses a really Tine voice. .the f. S IT was said ThaT he developed This abiliTy by leading The Soph Science singing howl? S+ pracTices beTore The Religion classes. T-lowever, ThaT is only a rumor. meefe CC ln concluding, leT us remark ThaT Denny has rose-TinTed TuTures and, Though ings' sorry To lose daily conTacT wiTh him, we wish him adieu and The besT oT luck. We We c. sincerely hope ThaT one day, he may become The Lord Mayor oT Yonkers. GSSUVSS us To YOUPSTU 1.. i- - Elf iiilfif 3. 4 P-. .f ' - 80 ., wg .,,-,hm X , m ' - LXR, A. . X41 Thomas G. De Servio, B.S. Tom New York Cify M. l. C. I, 2, 3, Vice-Presidenf 4: Cercle Francais 2, 3: Glee Club 2, 3, 4: Track Team lg Mendelian Sociefy I, 2, 3, 4. T walked 4. Then OM is fhaf fype of fellow who can acfually blend seriousness wifh gaiefy and ance Ol produce from fhis combinafion a pleasanf and likeable personalify. We find in rooning Tom fhaf unassuming frankness which is valued so highly, on accounf of ifs rareness. or and To say fhaf a man is sincere sounds colorless, yef how rich is fhe word in ifs frue meaning. Tom has wide inferesfs, alfruisfic in nafure and an ideal ouflook. fifh l1l5 Tom has possessed fhe abilify fo do well in his sfudies. l-le has especially :epfinq sfressed fhe sciences, in which he has always displayed an eager inferesf. Affer servani graduafion, Tom is looking forward fo medical work. Oiessi Buf we musf nof dwell foo much on his proficiency in medical sfudies. Members Veer of fhe Cercle Francais musf admif fhaf Tom was a mosf capable secrefary during Cary fhe firsf sfages of fhaf organizafion's exisfence. lf was, beyond a doubf, asfounding Vollcg' how he could fake fhe proceedings in French and fhen reporf fhem af successive lnqm meefings. I h We cannof buf pledge fo your success in your medical career. Your preparafion H0336 assures us fhaf no obsfacle will defer you from your goal. Though your affachmenf fo your sfudies has been infense, you have always mainfained a golden rnlen- 1: izfz ,rif fitsv T , H as 1' - W if V 'T iiffiQff'iI, f1EQf7,Qlff'5a ill' lk l l..,11 ' 'W L' Ml L' 8 I , E ,E W4 3 I I I l I l I 5 l ll f I I I .K ff I l l , l ll . Lf., Andrew I.. De Slelano, BS. in E. , Dulce Slalen Island -, , K. D. C.: A. S. C. E. 3, 4: Newlon Ivlalhemalical I i Sociely 3, 4: Quadrangle I, 2: Glee Club 2: Track I, 2: Transil Club 2, 3, 4: Manhallanile: I Alpha Phi Della. n II II h I ANI-IATTAN has ils mighly alom in lhe person ol Dulce, who came lrom La 5 Salle lvlililary Academy lo spend lour happy years as a member ol lhe The , Engineering class ol '32. liglilen' 3 Righl lrom lhe slarl Dulce's pep and vilalily won him a hosl ol admiring llled Ol K, yy lriends. Well mighl il be said lhal he was known and cherished by all. HO, YV , X I-lis sunny disposilion and democralic spiril are wilhoul doubl his mosl evidenl allle- l' I characlerislic. Dulce's presence al any galhering gives il dislinclion and liveliness. SPIVII. pl Always buoyanl in spiril and ever al ease in any silualion, his democracy is lhe Wh .'Qpen sesame inlo any organizalion or any enlerprise presenling dillicully. Hneb as Dulce never leared any exam: no wonder, he could pass any subiecl wilh lillle SUCCes5 ' dillicully. I-le has made a name as quile a scholar during his slay al lvlanhallan. brilliami Dusly has selecled civil engineering as his prolession, and il his worlc during lvlelropo his lour years al college is any indicalion ol his lulure success, he has no need lo We give il much lhoughl. I-lis marlc al lhe college has been made, and June will see Several C him graduale and soon allerwards we shall hear ol greal conslruclion enlerprises under lhe supervision ol De Slelano. g f Will O' Wall lx C1 Q3 oils Q3 lvl lo lf. 5 - ci U l, J 3-2, Vx M, g C 'X 4: 82 DQR im La l lhe wiring idenl iness. 5 lhe lillle nn. urinq d lo gee m!'lS95 '51 wm!0 Waller E. Devaney, BS. Wall Orange, N. J. Baseball I, 2, 3, 41 Varsily M Club: German Club. CARCELY ever is a man endowed wilh lhe personalily and abilily ol Wall. l-le has inlerwoven in his characler lhose qualilies we all desire lo possess. The lacilily wilh which Wall is able lo see lhe cheery side ol dillicullies and lo lighlen lhe burden ol olhers in lime ol gloom is oulslanding. Many ol us were ollen lilled oul ol a dreary mood lo one ol sunshine by lhe smiles Wall broughl us. l-lowever, in his academic aclivilies we lind anolher side ol Wall, equally laud- able. l-le pursued knowledge wilh an eagerness which, lorlilied wilh a never-give-up spiril, placed him among lhe leaders ol his class. When we examine lhe alhlelic aclivilies ol Manhallan we cannol overlook lhe line baseball leams ol '3I and '32. Concerning lhe many reasons lor lhe leam's success Wall is one ol lhe biggesl. l-lis abilily lo cover cenler-lield in a llawless, brillianl manner combined wilh his limely hilling has won lor him a place on lhe All- lvlelropolilan Baseball Team lor lwo successive seasons. We also lind Wall inleresled in exlra-curricular aclivilies, being a member of several clubs and scholarly organizalions. Wilh such a background and enviable record we can loresee nolhing bul success lor Wall. Besl ol luck, Wall. : . 1. . i' ,wf . V ,.-,. I , , Q ' ' '- va'-z. -v-1'-1 1?-, -- V l 3 l l l.,,.,. ew, .-A 'X H .- .. , , ,K , Q .. -- up.. .u-.fs ., .1-.. .5-ace-.. ,Nu -f 83 ArThur D. Devlin, B.S. HDocH Newark N.,L Mendelian SocieTy 2, 3, 43 Quadrangle 2, 3, 4. T The Time of our enTrance inTo The Sophomore class we noTiced many new Taces. Among Them was one who enTered righT inTo The spiriT oT a ManhaTTan residenT and came To his TirsT class aTTired in True boarder fashion, slippers, khaki shirT, sweaTer, eTc. DespiTe The quieT disposiTion oT our new classmaTe his presence was Tell' by all. We immediaTely realized The TacT ThaT This young man was here Tor serious business and ThaT during school hours could noT be drawn inTo play or dis- cussions immaTerial To The work aT hand. So ardenT were Doc's endeavors ThaT he was oTTen a Trial To preTecTs when The call came Tor lighTs ouT. WiTh such earnesT eTForTs Tor a background we can'T help buT Teel Thaf This young man will some day be hailed as one oT America's leading physicians. Our eTTorTs To Tind his inspiraTion were unsuccessiful alThough we did locaTe a Tew coy smiles coming Trom one oT his home sTaTe debuTanTes. We are glad you chose ManhaTTan and as The years roll by we are sure Man- haTTan will be able To look across The river and say, There is anoTher Jersey Alumnus oT whom I can iusTly be proud. 84 ff' Tiff if ' r. I' 4, 'iyih' : by sv maTricul The deci This hroughf OT his CI inT0 The Training llTaT wlqj, ll1aT will AITT The your Tledl WIN WIT CM Only no-l .F laces. esideni shiri. ge was ire for Jr cliS- dal he younq urls lo Smiles Man' .iff li -'J f gy q Slrephen De Voe, BS. in E. Sieve Elmhurslr, L. l. A. S. C. E.: K. D. C.q Transil Club. HEN we relurned io lhe halls of Manhallran for our lasr undergradualre year, lhere came inlo 'lhe Senior class a iovial, inlelligenlr young man. Sieve had malrriculaied al Calholic Universily for a period of lhree years before he came To rhe decision Jrhal he desired a degree from lvlanhailran. This caplivaling young man who hails from rhe shores of Long Island, has broughl wilrh him a slerling characler. Sieve has been one of Jrhe brighler lighls oi his classy unslinlingly giving Jrhai which we, ai Jrhis lime, mosl' needed-a glimpse inio rhe realm ol: gaiely. l-lis is a sirong and unbending disposiiion. l-lis early lraining ar one of The ioremosl mililary academies has perhaps broughl our in him Jrhar which is ordinarily beslowed by bounleous naiure--a deep-rooled unseliishness rhar will long remain in our memory. Allhough we have lcnown him for a few ileeling monlhs, we will never iorgel The young man who made Those hours more enjoyable: and, quiclcly as lhey have fled, who among us cannolr bul wish Jrhal lhey had been held baclc if only Sieve had been presenl lo help us while rhem away. Wilh such a characler urging him onward he needs no wishes for success. We can only hope lhar his success will nor allrer his disposilion one mile, and Jrhal he will nor fail lo remember us. 'Ili f lily lj 1 l 85 . , ' ' , l Thomas J. Dodd, 3.5. in B. Tom, Tommy New Yorlc Cify Commerce Club 3, 4: Glee Club 2, 3, Class Foofball lg Freshman Cross-Counfrv. N examining info fhe lives of all greaf geniuses, we find fhaf fhey possessed some characferisfic fhaf made fhem peculiar in fhe public eye. Our Tom is no excep- fion fo fhis rule of geniuses. l-lis oufsfanding peculiarify can be found in a small, cardboard porffolio. Any morning during fhe school year, Tom can be seen sfriding rapidly along fhe roadway fo his classes wifh his porffolio held snugly fo his manly chesf. The confenfs of fhis folder are mysferious in nafure and have been a greaf source of curiosify fo his fellow lvlanhaffanifes. Rumor has if fhaf fhe porffolio con- fains valuable papers fhaf will cause a greaf upheaval and reform in bofh fhe field of accounfing and sfafisfics as soon as fhey are published. Despife many fempfing offers fo give fhem up, our modesf Tom h b in fhe ufmosf secrecy. as een confenf fo do his research work Tom was always ready wifh a helping hand fo aid fellow sfudenfs in disfress He is a very sincere and earnesf worker, nof only in his sfudies, buf also in his exfra- curricular acfivifies af Manhaffan, as can be seen from fhe numerous associafions wif which he is connecfed. Wifh his qualifies in view, we can see nofhi b f ng u success in sfore for Tommy in his fufure life. To aid him in his climb fo success, his fellow lvlanhaffanifes wish him-Good Lucld 86 5 R-..., FQ- 5 l-IE oi good fe many o remarks genuine of appr Fra acfivifie years. flames w A i reads he lunify ,T and can Go, shine gk 4-.. 55-NN, lffffl 'T 1-12'Q,'.Q.,4fa fslfiw - ' '-. - f 'sf -, -..xg x-ss some iXCGp- small, 'idinq nanly greaT con- field 9Tinq work Tess. xTra- TionS buT ' his Francis P. Dolan, BS. in E. Cosy BedTord l-lills, N. Y. K. D. C. 43 A. S. C. E. 3, 41 TransiT Club 2, 3, 43 NewTon lvlaThemaTical SocieTy 3, 4. HE sleepy liTTle hamleT oT BedTord l-lills, where The new York CenTral Trains sTop on signal, is represenTed aT lVlanhaTTan by Frank. l-lis pleasing personaliTy and good Tellowship seemed To be broughT inTo all his underTakings. Cosy has enlivenecl many oT our classes by his quainT wiT and his habiT oT accompanying The professional remarks by humorously irrelevanT soTTo Voce commenTs. As a Triend Frank is genuine. l-le is always ready To sTep in when needed. l-le has The happy TaculTy oT appreciaTing Tully The abiliTies oT his Triends and oT ignoring Their idiosyncrasies. Frank was one oT The greaTesT aThleTes oT The class. l-lis baskeTball and baseball acTiviTies broughT no liTTle share oT honors To The Engineers oT '32 during his Tour years. l-lis repuTaTion as The besT shorTsTop and slugger in The many inTer-class games was assuredly well deserved. A naTural apTiTude Tor grasping and remembering all ThaT he hears, sees and reads has carried him Through his Tour years wiTh higher Than average marks. Oppor- TuniTy may knock buT once, and ThaT's all Frank needs, Tor he is always on The alerT and cannoT miss iT when iT calls. Good luck Cosy and may The greaTness oT your success in The years To come shine gloriously on The sleepy hamleT. 87 K Jew ,INN ers ki an I I I.:-if ii I +.. I George R. Donahue ligawgen B roo yn, N. Y. Quadrangle I, 2, 3, 4: EdiTor 4: Hayes DramaTic SocieTy 3, 4: AThleTic AssociaTion 3: FooTIighTers DramaTic SocieTy I, 2: STudenT Council 4. RAIVIED above is The sTern counTenance oT George Raymond Donahue Man haTTan's premier parIiamenTarian. Across The river, in his naTive CiTy oT Churches and uncaTaIogued sTreeTs-Brooklyn, To you-Triend George is acclaimed as an up- d an -coming poIiTician. Never one Tor hiding his TaIenTs under a bushel his aTenT 1 F7 abiliry has already won recogniTion in his parTicuIar ward Pre-eminenT locally Tor his exTensive scope oT inTormaTion and his keenly analyrical mind Geor I , ge coup es These compeTencies wiTh a TaciIiTy oT expression unrivalled by oTher campus celeb- riTies. I-Ie has Tew peers in argumenT, Tor like The school-masTer in GoIdsmiTh's De T d V'II ' ' ser e I age, Even Though vanquished, he can argue sTiII. A Tune vehicle Tor George's enIighTening commenTs and philosophical dicTa was 1-+1 IIQ d 'I 1 n n 4 e ua rangle, oT which he was The ediTor-in-chieT. Unlike many oTher greaT geniuses, George is Thoroughly human. Very oTTen he is d T T d ' ' ' e ec e pacing The campus wiTh an absTracTed air ThaT may mean someThing or noThing aT all. In and y e com- pany oT Ed IvIarTin, Ed DuITy, and Dennis Kelleher, Tellow alumni oT Loughlin. This inseparable guarTeT has been aprly ycIepT The Four IvIuskeTeers who, when noT siTTing in aT all nighT poker ames, w T' ' ' ' oT Their Tellow BrookIyniTes. ouT oT The rosTrum, as iT were, George is Tound consTanTl in Th g ere con raving To promoTe some social reunion ' - ' if-57 I,-..,.L.,.z: -..rv-.,.,,.N.,7,,Y -., .. c,.,,. .. , , ,. tt N 'X V 1 R . .-.Nc-,-Q .4 IN L.. T I I , , , .4 4. Us X ne.- ..... I .... .. M ,.-E ,.,-.,..ex.,,s--,.. J... .f:.-.JJ.r...- I . I ,...o. I J I .,l I N114 5 J .E F x U, A--l :.,..-1-w..f,.Evf.:x,-- A .,,,,. wh, ,W ,ffp-.1 -,.ff.'.-....c.,.:.....Q A .,..QJ'...J: -.s: ....-il- 88 .- Af , ,rr W I 56 H To ambi Possessi become An his Colle feceivec for 5 C having - Nu: r' I 1. IIIIG mm in hic In V Cclmselii xi ' 'I J 'Cfifil F: Cifjaf-'L .., F Ni? :- - lan- :hes up- 'enf for ales eh- fh's V65 'en HQ m. his of on if-'if yfjffi James R. Donaldson, B.S. Jim, Don New York Cify Mendelian Sociefy 2, Treasurer 3, Presidenf 4: Track I, 2, 3, Glee Club 2, 3: Quadrangle 31 Spike Shoe Club 4: Varsify M Club 2, 3, 4. ll FELLOW of amiable disposifion, keen infelligence and loffy ideals. So mighf we characferize Jim, our science pal for fhe pasf four years. Success, due fo ambifion and efforf, has followed him in bofh sfudies and exfra-curricular acfivifies. Possessing fhe qualifies of bofh an inferesfing falker and an affenfive lisfener, he becomes all fhe more likeable. l-lis capacify for making friends is oufsfanding. An inferesf in fhe school and ifs doings has been manifesf in him fhroughouf his college career. ln bofh cross-counfry and frack he fook an acfive parf and received bofh his numerals and his leffer. l-le has served on fhe newspaper board for a couple of years. ln fhe Mendelian Sociefy he is an oufsfanding member, having filled fhe offices of freasurer and presidenf in furn. Numerous diversions serve fo occupy his spare fime. ln fhe mornings, one can find him eifher fearing up fhe hill as fhe lasf bell rings or else burning up fhe drive in his Chevvy wifh five minufes fo go. During fhe summer he busies himself counselling fhe children af camp and many a brief vacafion will find him in 'ihe vicinify of Rhinebeck. l-lis ambifion is fo become a docfor of medicine, and fhrough a remarkable capacify for knowledge and a frue inferesf in fhis field, we may some day behold Jim as fhe counfry's leading pracfifioner. sr'--f.....s-5.4 ..,,.. .iv --. -,-4g.. , , , ii-gn ,,, 'hy J ' 89 Timofhy J. Donoghue, BS. Tim Yonkers, N. Y. Fooflighfers Dramafic Sociefy I: Freshman Cross- Counfryg Golf Team: German Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mendelian Sociefy I. TALL, slim sfudenf wifh an irrepressible smile and sfar-like fwinking eyes, a counfry genfleman from Yonkers wifh cosmopolifan polish-fhis is Mr. Timofhy Donoghue beHerknown as'Unm He E a man ofvdde and vaded expedence. ,R high-powered salesman wifh a J. P. Morgan complex. Once sold shoe laces fo old maids wearing buffoned shoes. Came fo lvlanhaffan four years ago in an ancienf Ford. Now drives a new Chevrolef. Plays golf in his leisure momenfs. Uses one golf sfick, a golf ball, and a good pencil. Considered fhe greafesf golf-ball-and-fee collecfor lvlanhaffan ever had. Tim has an I-I. L. lvlenchen affifude foward fhe fairer sex buf sfill wears her vvrisf wafch. Never smokes: sleeps Iafe and likes fruif. I-Iis rnam ankihon hihfeislo become a pedagogue evenlhough hh name and fame rnay evenfuaHy afhacf hun fo pohhcs. l4isinfenf,fhoughffM afhfude nevercikfurbs professors while Tim is enjoying his daily forly winks. If is wifh a sense of irreparable loss fhaf we shall lose confacf wifh Tim, our old reliable escorf affer class banguefs. Whefher you become a feacher, a polifician or an aulomobile salesman, we all wish you success. Yours lill Gandhi becomes The world's besf-dressed man. 90 four his c brini cape Arrr com fhe mon well in il clogl fo I ifes. IDeir . Y T . .- wu- - .,, -L-sei. yes, a rruofluy 9, A lo old ncieruf 35 OHS 'ud-'lee fairer I I-lis fame isfurbS arable ,qUel'S. H wislu .47 P Ecwin J. Duffy Ed Brooklyn, N. Y. Quadrangle I, 2, 3: News Edifor 45 Manager, Cross Counfry 4: Pen and Sword 41 Manluaffanife. l-IE offen used and muclu abused adage, All good fluings come in small pack- ages, is admirably personified iru Edwin J. Duffy. For Ed's presence luere for four years luas undoubfedly been a good fluing for lvlanluaffaru, and fluere is no denying luis diminufive sfafure. Buf you don'f measure luis worflu in ferms of feef and poundsg bringing in a pluysical analogy, luowever, lue rafes as an all-American in menfal capacify. Ed's mosf valuable possessions are keen wif arud a delicious sense of luumor. Armed wiflu fluese formidable implemenfs of warfare he won campus noforiefy commensurafe wiflu flue nafion-wide fame of Walfer Wincluell lfor as flue aufluor of flue popular Quadrangle Quacksn Ed's luumorous commenfs and genfle scandal- monging were greafly appreciafedl. Duffy was News Edifor of flue Quadrangle as well as a columnisf, and luis indusfrious affenfion fo defail work was a pofenf facfor in ifs welfare. Anofluer of Ed's many acluievemenfs was luis posifion as frack manager. Many close observers affribufe a goodly sluare of flue success affained by flue Jasper runners fo luis affenfive services. Born and bred a Brooklynife, Ed was a cluarfer member of fluaf clan of Louglulin- ifes-George Donahue, Ed lvlarfin, Dennis Kelleluer, ef al. We can'f imagine Ed being anyfluing buf a success in wluafever lue pufs luis luand fo. if u if Milf? 'V Q I I l i i 1 K l lf Ll, Louis J. Dukas, A.B. if 'Q Uncle Louie New York CiTy l ' Class FooTball 2: Class BaskeTloall 3, 4. l HE radio has iTs Uncle Don and The Class oT '32 has iTs Uncle Louie. The 'My Duke joined us in The Tall oT '28, Though very many oT us were unaware oT his of presence unTil our Sophomore year. Yes, Louie never spenT much Time abouT The Hcswm I campus aTTer school hours during The TirsT year, buT having become inTeresTed in ProT. lvleek's lecTures on The spherical ivories, a greaT change came inTo his liTe. H- l Now everyone knows where To Tind Louie on any aTTernoon. Well, we mighT say parficgp Lou wenT The way oT all Seniors and-well, leT iT go. Such Wi i Always a TriTle above The average sTudenT, Louie can be looked upon as a man Welglll who works hard and comes TorTh The winner. ArTsmen who have been in class wiTh Perhaps him will aTTirm This. ln our Sophomore year Louie was The TavoriTe geographic PGf1yi+. designer Tor his classmaTes in Social Science. Then we musT noT TorgeT how many J. Times he responded wiTh exacT answers To J. P.'s very inTriguing quesTions. 6+ G lm OS Aside Trom college liTe, Louie is considered one oT The TinesT enTerTainers. lSdeep A bag oT card Tricks, a Tair voice and naTural graceTulness when dancing, make him OT ln'l'9l The liTe oT a parTy. bound, As we, your Triends, are abouT To separaTe To work in our chosen Tields, iT is H wiTh regreT ThaT we bid you Adieu and wish you good luck. Ieaifher UlllOrll'c I, LM, , In ' , , 0 if, U L -pews x l. l n IRVT fx L1 if ' L., - 'S Xi-X EZSC -4 92 l I James J. Eardley, B.S. in E. Jim Bronx, N. Y. Transir Club 2, 3, 4: K. D. C. 4: A. S. C. E. 3, 41 Newfon Ivlafhemafical Sociery 4. The IM is noi a very easy man +o wrile about This is caused noi by Ihe obscuriiy Oi IIIS of Jim's career a+ Manhallran, buf by 'rhe mullilude of qualifies and characleris- li III9 Jrics wilh which we can readly credir This new Ivlanhailan alumnus. iiiiygl I+ won'+ do me any harm Io praclice a few shois of 'Ihree cushions' or Io may parlicipale in Ihree or four rubbers al bridge Iable, I'm gellring loo heavy. In such wise Jim made himself known Io us early in his college days. Allhough his weighl has nor been lessened, his smile and laugh have improved wi+h consfanl use. man Perhaps ii is besl Ihajr he does noi lake off any weighl-Ihal smile mighl accom- Wifh pany I+. aplllc Jim is wilrhoul doubl Ihe mosl self-possessed individual in The class: he is never Tlanll al a loss for a Thorough reply Io any queslion. 'I-Iis knowledge of scienrific mallers is deep and is always al Ihe disposal of Ihe seeker of knowledge. Jim is possessed new of in+eIIecIuaI abilily, sound iudgmenlr, and convincing genilemanly manner Ihal are him bound To achieve for him his highesi ambilions. I+ is our ferveni hope Ihal Dame Forlune Ireals Jim kindlier Ihan she used his t , Iealher iackei. Your happy visage will ever be in our hearls, Jim, and regards Io li IS Unionlown. 1 I QW I :fi i 1 '4 5 Uluj I... I - x 'iffy 93 I I I 3 K. -I s 1 , i I I E E -Av. ' ,,.,..-f-.TT:...,...,,..A mm - sf i I I I I I ,M li Douglas I.. Fairweafher, A.l3. I Doug New Rochelle, N. Y. I f' Phi Rho Pi: Varsify Foofball 2, 3, 4: Wesfchesfer ' Club. I ' OUGLAS LINDSAY FAIRWEATHER, or Doug, as everyone lcnows him, hails E I from New Rochelle, where he spenT four years in New Rochelle I-ligh School I sTarring in foofball and Track as well as being a class A scholar. AT lvlanhaffan I I Doug has esfablished himself as an exTremely capable young man. This has been l verified by The class ballof of The seniors, on which he has polled The highesf voTe i as The mosT capable senior. Qnlfhe fooTball field where he has sTarred af quarfer- back for four years, he has also shown his abiliTy To size siTuaTions correcTIy. l-le if has led The Team ouT of many dangerous siTuaTions and Turned defeaT inTo vicTory. I Again in The classroom his abilify To masfer problems is verified by his high scholasfic I sTanding. I . . . . 3 Among his fellow sfudenfs Doug is an ever welcome companion, always pleasing l and noT Too much sophisTicaTed. I-le can adiusf himself To any evenT or siTuaTion, Q Take parT in a friendly pranlc, be The receiver of The iesT and never leT himself I become disgrunfled. ln years To come Douglas will be a prosperous business man connecfed wiTh adverTising. I-Tis ingenious capabilifies will bring him To The fronf E in The business world. l ln parfing, Doug, we hope ThaT you will go far in your chosen field and as a lasT word-remember your classmaTes. 94 I I llvl T sfo: precede. Today m ideal STG In 5- is infiniff 6IlCl man .Iim'g Ca, l'lis have mai IT is lieSSlOn VN and G and mek. +I, Q6 Illlur PQ? is 1 hails :hool aTTan been voTe irTer- I-le Tory. aslic iSif1Q lion. Tseil man ronf 5 5 ltfffg' James J. Falihee, BS. HJOSYH New York CiTy Mendelian SocieTy 2, 3, 4, German Club 3. llvl has been aT ManhaTTan so long iT is rumored ThaT he helped To lay The corner- sTone The morning he arrived To maTriculaTe. Four years in The-College were preceded by Tour in The Prep. There Jim TirsT really sTarTed To gain cu,lTure which Today marks him as a perTecT example oT whaT higher educ-,a,TionAis,-,supposed, in The ideal sTaTe, To make oT a man. 3 I - In sTudies Jim has always believed ThaT a passing grade wirh an unTroubled brow is inTiniTely preTerable To an honor gained aT The expense OT many an hour oT boning and many a discouraging headache. l-lis sysTem has iTs meriTs when iT works, and in Jim's case iT did wiTh agreeable consisTency. l-lis ever presenT good naTure and willingness To lend a hand, aT any enTerprise, have made him one oT The mosT popular members of The class OT '32, IT is Jim's inTenTion To sTudy medicine, and iT is our predicTion ThaT The pro- Tession will gain ThaT which lvlanhaTTan is relucTanT To relinquish-a capable scholar and a genuine genTleman. These gualiTies we Teel sure will animaTe his enTire liTe, and make every acTion reTlecT glory on his Alma lvlaTer. So good-bye, Jim, and in The TuTure, Try To make success yours as you have while here aT lvlanhaTTan. 1?,..,.f.,l..3... lm -- -a 'f- 4 - -e 6 - 2 ' X .v 'rf 7' . . i i . M s .- 1 , 'i,T's...'fv...?.fa.s,f.s.':qs - T ii lx L1 L 5 f -.fl l L ke LJ 95 X x 4 . ll f! l l John T. Fellows, B.S. in B. E i Jack Bronx, N. Y. f Phi Rho Pi: Swimming Team 3, CapTain 4: Com- merce Club 2, 3, 4. EFORE The Time oT Marconi There was no wireless: and prior To The Edison era U l , we had no arc lighT. By The same Token we can say ThaT beTore The advenT oT Jack Fellows inTo lv1anhaTTan's halls There was no swimming Team. For years.The TicienTT , green waTer oT The pool had remained Too pacific: There was a decided laclc'oT menT5, hgh naTaTorial spiriT prevalenT on The campus. BuT as we said beTore, ThaT was B. F. lBeTore Than Tal Fellowsl. The Jaspers are now represenTed wiTh a Tanlc Team which is a crediT To fi The school and To Jack, who was chieT organizer and CapTain. G+ HP35 ' 6 ir Organizing and supervising The operaTion oT The swimming Team was iusT one i0SGy,l oT The many and varied acTiviTies oT This enThusiasTic young man. Social aTFairs were, as he once expressed iT, righT down his alley. And when iT came Time To .Wi geT musical and Torm a quarTeT one could always Tind him in The midsT oT The U,nTa'lln9 TesTiviTies. A ready wiT and a conTagious laugh are his happy endowmenTs. i'?nhHOT O is a Bearing his achievemenTs in mind wheTher They be social, scholasTic or aThleTic, deeplyr iT is easy To see why Jack is one oT The mosT popular oT lv1anhaTTan men. BrieTly, he has Tound success while aT college and iT is our belieT ThaT his eTliorTs in laTer Jr ln f' liTe will be crowned likewise. Good luclc To you, Jack, in all your endeavors. Silenii l Q0 Tc iq 1 i if -s T iirri T . s pa - ii is fr' on figs? E 96 'son era lvenl ol ars ilre lack Oi lBelore edir io Isl one affairs ime fo gl rhe hlellcl rielly. lalef .,.- 5- tg 'A 'ff' .K 19 , ,sf , Wy ., ' Vincenl J. Ferreri, BS. Jim New York Cily lralian Club 3, 43 Cercle Francais 2, 33 Fool'- lighlers 2. ll llVl is nor an easy man lo wrile aboul. ll is nor because his collegiale career has been of a dormanl naiure, bur because one page of Jrhis book is insul- licienl lor a mere synoplic oulline of his many qualifies, characlerislics and achieve- menls. l-le belongs lo 'ihal silenr group of men who believe in doing rhings ralher Jrhan lalking aboul Jrhem. Possessed of a keen sense ol humor, he has made his presence mosl desirable ar all limes bolh lo his classmales and lo his friends oulside of lvlanhalran. Needless To say, he has spenl lhe maior porlion ol his four years here in Jrhe realms of science. While he was nor aclive in Jrhe field of alhlelics, Jim neverlheless has been unlailing in his moral supporr ol Jrhose aclivilies Jrhalr involve lvlanhallan. An inclina- lion nor lo be dislurbed by an overdose of work has mosl probably kepr a good deal oi his abilily lalenr. Things look lhalr way al leasl in scholaslic mallers bul when deeply moved, he can rise Jro remarkable heighls. ln expressing our prediclion for his lulure, we are coniidenlr in evaluaring his lalenls, Jrhal Jim will succeed in accomplishing whalever he sels his mind lo do. So go lo il, old boy, and show whal lvlanhalrlan has done for you. 97 .. - .vs-gps..--,ffrwz-,.,... --- -- W ' M-ln,---.W-AA-f---,.,si,m.1gs., .A 2-4 .4-'-L-'--'H P - ' J ' ' T ' . - A' a 3' 1,,,f l r T i T l WalTer W. FiTzpaTriclc, A.B. Wally Brooklyn, N. Y. Alpha Sigma BeTag Brooklyn-Long lsland Club 3, 4. N THE naTural course of evenTs during The life of every man, cerTain misTorTunes overTake him. These misTorTunes are overcome wiTh Time. We oT The class oT l932 have also suTiered a misTorTune in The TacT ThaT Wally FiTzpaTrick did noT loin our ranks unTil our ship oT sTaTe had already compleTed Two laps of iTs evenTTul jour- ney. ln our Junior year, we noTiced an added brighTness in The classroom. A personaliTy bubbling over wiTh enThusiasm. A characTer whose wiT brighTened even our dullesT momenTs. Who was iT buT FiTz! SpoTTing us Two years in The TormaTion oT acquainTanceships meanT liTTle or noThing To This lad. l-le was righT in The Thick oT iT all in no Time, wiTh every one oT us more Than proud To call him Triend. OT course, There were some Things abouT Wally ThaT we were noT so Tond OT. For insTance, The manner in which he capTivaTed all comers Trom The lv1ounT was bad news To us. ATTer all, we had a Two year sTarT on him and ThoughT ThaT we were preTTy well esconced. BuT life is ThaT way and l guess we live To learn. WiTh his winning personaliTy and conTagious smile, coupled wiTh a naTural abiliTy Tor leadership, There is no earThly reason why l:iTz should noT go a long way in This world oT ours. We wish you luclc, Wally, and lcnow ThaT some day we shall be even more proud Than we are now To call you classmaTe. 98 gg EFT Q ST Ol his C illusTrion Du his sTud lille Toll WGS will MdTer. S0CleTy, lJOClyI ni Pri held G S. low fha 1 Hpre him fare, lorfunes :lass Oi iof iOiH iul iour- nm. A id even rmafion 19 and Ol- ifu WGS 'haf we l abilifi' in llils De even Paul T. Flaherfy, AB. Prexy Wafervlief, N. Y. Alpha Sigma Befaq Sfudenf Council Secrefary 3, Presidenf 4: Quadrangle 2, 3, Business Manager 41 Troy Club I, 2, 3, 45 Le Cercle Francais 2, Librarian 3: Hayes Dramafic Sociefy 2, 3, 4: Infra- Mural Sporfs Commiffee 4, Manhaffanife. EFORE coming fo lvlanhaffan, Prexy covered himself wifh glory as an honor I sfudenf af La Salle lnsfifufe, Troy, N. Y. This was due, in fhe general opinion of his classmafes, fo fhe facf fhaf he was a nafive of Vermonf, whence came anofher illusfrious man, namely, Calvin Coolidge. During fhe firsf fwo years of college life, Prexy devofed himself enfirely fo his sfudies and firmly esfablished himself among fhe infellecfual leaders of his class. The following year, however, he realized fhaf a real lvlanhaffan man was one who was willing fo devofe some of his fime fo fhe promofion of fhe name of Alma Mafer. Consequenfly, he joined fhe Quadrangle Board and fhe Hayes Dramafic Sociefy, and as a coup-de-grace, he was awarded fhe highesf posifion in fhe sfudenf body, namely, Presidenf of fhe Sfudenf Council. Prexy is perhaps fhe mosf collegiafe man in fhe class. Quief and dignified, he held a sfrong claim on fhe respecf and friendship of his classmafes. l-lis opinions on how fhings should be done were always heeded by us fo our benefif. Prexy will confinue his pursuif of knowledge af law school. lvlanhaffan bids him farewell and we hope success affends his fufure. 99 , Francis J. Flannigan, A.B. Franny l.Of1Q lsland Brooklyn-Long Island Club I, 2, 3: K. D. C. I, 2, 31 De La Salle Club l, 2: lnTernaTional RelaTions Club 2, 3. UR classmaTe, originally a member OT The class OT I93O, began his collegiaTe career in The Tall OT '26, buT leTT ManhaTTan aT The end OT his Junior Year To mix wiTh The Toilers OT The greaT lvleTropoliTan ciTy. l-lowever, The lure OT collegiaTe liTe was Too greaT Tor him, Tor he was back in The halls OT ivlanhaTTan in The Tall OT '3I aTTer a Two-year absence To ioin The class OT '32. Frank claims The honor OT being The long disTance commuTer OT The class and when we Tound ouT ThaT he came Trom The Tar reaches OT Belle l-larbor, Long Island, nobody could be Tound who was willing and able To dispuTe his claim. Also he proved how good his experiences were on ThaT Trip up To ColgaTe lasT Tall, especially so on The deTours Through Rhinebeclc and Childs in Albany. We wish Fran plenTy OT good luck and we lcnow +ha+ aT The Alumni Reunions iT will noT be diTTiculT Tor him To choose his seaT among his old Triends in '30 or among The many new ones he acquired in The class OT '32, V W i ' L ' ' . Y 'T'T,i'i 'T.i .T11,L 1 j, g z'. Q-g1 1 , . ..., H , 1 ' - - - -- -V--V - ip '-5 W - MS 'xi 1 ' S Q Q i I T T F N 1 . ff - i r 'rf ij fir' l2il34s.?I-Tflmiifiil-Z ' - L- kc A L X-I .J L. I .. l 3 .f--R mr... .TA IOO L i Tion v. Tavor by so I- anoThe his nas Heclcwf Spdrlcli and d, ET Small 5 l'lOWey We WO N me if'9gf-.F ., i i3'115Qi1:fW:gfji, , l-lugh lv. Fallery, B.S. in E. l-lughie New York Cily K. D. C. 4: Transil Club 2, 3, 4, Newlon Malh Sociely 3, 4: A. S. C. E. 3, 4. URING his lour years slay al lvlanhallan, l-lughie has been a lypical lvlanhallan man. This was proved by his innumerable characlerislics. l-lis happy disposi- lion won lor him lhe alleclion ol all al lhe oulsel. Going oul ol his way lo do a H me lavor or lo cooperale, broughl no obieclion lrom him lor he received much pleasure Corgi lo by so acling. nr Colleggale l-lughie possesses an enormous circle ol lriends and il is doubllul if lhere is lhe lallol anolher man in lhe class who has achieved so much popularily on lhe slrenglh ol his nalural and magnelic charm. l-le is guiel and unassuming in everylhing bul his neckwear-being noled lor his shoe-slring bow-lies. I-le is a lrue, loyal lriend, nd sparkling wilh good humor, and al all limes ready lo banish your blues wilh his song Claiad and dance perlormances. n i WJAISO he Elliciency plus-lhal's l-lughie-yel il is accomplished wilh such an amazingly es emily small amounl ol lhe proverbial ego lhal we ollen wonder whal manner ol man he is. p l-lowever, il we were lo look back over lhe liles which conlain lhose psychology lesls, we would see a high per cenl resling complacenlly beside l-lughie's name. i Reuniorw Now lhal he has gradualed and lell Manhallan we are sure lhal his personalily Oramong will make lhe lask ol climbing lile's ladder an easy one. 14 if. 1- is iss 1:1 s e 1- cfs cf ig J .1 9? if IOI i l i 1 i i l 4 l ,N -N A -.,- 0 , -r' W' K, ' Q by l lil gi A:-F-7-.-Y----f-f - - - 5-1--:::::i::17' AMW- -W -- --- ---- V ' 'Y l l l l l ,fi ffijx - If I F I i K! l ff-Y is .g ,J , 1 f ' I 5 1 f L1 , ,g 1 .5 1 Q f e'-,-' k John F. Flynn, BS. in E. Johnny New YOI'lC Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy 3, 4: Transif Club g.D.C.4I 2,3,4:A.S.C.E.3,4:A.S.l.E.3 K Glee Club I, 2. HE absence of an infroducfion fo John is in ifself an indicafion of his abilify fo make friends. Four years in fhe Prep, a generous sense of humor, his abilify as a mechanic, and a residence in fhe Bronx have combined fo make any infroducfion superfluous. Alfhough as a bridge player he will undoubfedly become a good bridge builder, John will, wifhouf a doubf, sfill remain fhe mosf popular member of fhe engineering class. l-lis ready wif and humor endeared him fo all, never failing fo elicif a laugh from fhose gafhered around him. One of fhe few weaknesses which Johnny possessed made him fhe bane of pedesfrians of fhe fair sex, cops, and cab drivers. This failing was probably enfirely menfal, as we are convinced he firmly believed fhaf some day he would succeed in flying in a car. Johnny, af hearf, is an ardenf fraveler and his aufomofive gymnasfics will nof soon be forgoffen. Those of us who have come info close confacf wifh Johnny cannof help buf feel fhaf we have been enriched by fhe friendship of one whose sfrengfh of characfer, business abilify, sense of humor, and generosify will go far indeed fo help him fo fhe fop in fhe engineering profession. IO2 5,3-' lv 1 of ass elusive friend F Ever 5 l'l6S Wm E of fhe Would Ti fion. bO'l'l'l E C making FG.- . ' k-... , :,- ,n ,. - eg W. f .. Q .-1 k mu ' 1 R -' 5-- w wx-. - , -Y. 1, rv-1-, ' A .xx -. 3 w. --X his abiIiTy his aI7iIiTy Trodudior igineerinq T a IaU9Il bane OT Y enTireIy icceefl 'll buf feel har6CIe , him I0 Emil E. Eorcino, B.S. in E. Emil New York CiTy A. S. C. E.: TransiT Club: M. I. C.: NewTon MaThemaTicaI SocieTyg K. D. C. MIL is The Type OT person To whom one becomes aImosT immediaTeIy aTTached on accounT OT his sTraighTTorward manner and Triendly disposiTion. As a resuIT OT associaTion bordering on comradery, we Tound him To be The possessor OT many elusive Though disTincTive quaIiTies ThaT win and Tend To sTrengThen and warm enduring Triendship. Eew showed such diIigenT and persevering aTTenTion To Their sTudies as did Emil. Ever since Ereshman days he aTTended To his work TaiThTuIIy, wiTh The resulT ThaT he has won a high class sTanding and his record is one oT which To be proud. Emil was a Tamiliar Tigure aT all aThleTic and social evenTsq in TacT he was one OT The sTaunchesT paTrons oT IvIanhaTTan aTTairs. IT dancing were a maior sporT, Emil would have many Ivl's To exhibiT abouT Town. To all ouTward appearances, he seems To Tind his greaTesT deIighT in argumenTa- Tion. No maTTer whaT The subiecT, The Time or The place, a Tew words Trom Emil are boTh enIighTening To his audience, and an apparenT necessiTy To himseIT. OT EmiI's TuTure we have no doubT, Tor we know ThaT he is capable oT successTuIIy making his way in his chosen proTession. Keep up The good work, Emil. IO3 T l r l l T l l T l i 1 l 1 I T I il 1 l. li i A l ml y T i . T 1 ' mi li K ,l iii 'fl li f l: l 1 ii ' ' K A ,pi ll' ii il Thomas l-l. ForresT, A.B. , Tom Marlborough, Mass. ir: DramaTic SocieTy 3, 4. i OUR years ago This young man oT The Bay STaTe graduaTed wiTh The largesT class ever To receive Their diplomas aT Marlborough l-ligh. ln The Tollowing T Tall he migraTed Towards The sunny SouTh, Tinally seTTling in The capiTal oT Arkansas. i l-le aTTended LiTTle Rock College and Tor The ensuing Two years s+udied under The direcTion oT a Secular Order oT PriesTs. l During These Two years he was quiTe acTive in exTra-curricular acTiviTies. l-le played on The baseball nine: was a member oT The Glee Club: Took parT in boTh T A3553 MinsTrel shows, and Through The medium oT The PreTecT oT Discipline played Tor K Two weeks wiTh a sTock company aT one oT The local TheaTres. AT The end oT The Two years The Bishop oT The Diocese decided To change 5 1 LiTTle Rock College inTo LiTTle Rock Seminary. As a consequence Tom applied Tor is X f I l l 2 admission To ManhaTTan College: his marks were accepTed and he enTered The Tollowing Tall as a Junior. i Tom Takes a shorT walk every day, and every aTTernoon one may Tind him in some place beTween Van CorTlandT Park and Peekskill. l-lowever, in The Tew spare hours oT his Time which he someTimes Takes Trom his walking, he can readily be Tound siTTing in TronT oT The radio in The Rec room. Tom is raTher secreTive concerning his plans Tor The TuTure, buT we are conTidenT ThaT he will succeed in whaTever walk oT liTe he ulTimaTely decides upon. T l 9 A :F-is A ff'-4 1 - X- - T -- '-W. ' . ,ii. C A C . T i T l W li L l Q1 l LJ Wi LJ idx :L fa ' L, l,.l i.. i Ll l-Q ,-1.5, 'gf' 2 IO4 Q C The s mode ergo, has, - and 5 Why I- Torm PSQSI mighi I a pro and v llaflal of yo T RoberT A. l:orsyThe, A.B. Bibb New York CiTy FooTlighTers DramaTic SocieTy 23 l-layes Dramafric SocieTy 3. T 3 . . A CME-lllVlE in The disTanT TuTure The name oT RoberT A. will be heralded Through- r ouT The land buT noT if Bob knows iT, Tor he is The Type who could never sTand The sighT oT his own name glaring in The brillianT mazdas. All This is To prove ThaT modesTy is a virTue, and Bob is virTue personiTied as Tar as modesTy is concerned, 9 ergo, as we say iT in psych, Bob is modesT. 1 r RoberT A. is universally hailed as a man's man and his ruddy cherubic counTenance has, Tor Tour happy years, been a byword on The Quadrangle. l-le is a genTleman 3 and scholar lvery much sol and all ThaT goes wiTh iT, which, oT course, is The reason r why he is so popular wiTh everybody. l-le and his Two buddies, lvlulvey and Delaney, 3 Torm an inseparable Trio oTTen reTerred To as The PalpiTaTing Pals. We could wriTe pages abouT Bob, buT as we said he is modesTy personiTied and inTensive blushing n mighT aTTecT his blood pressure. e ATTable, yeT serious, seemingly indiTTerenT To work, yeT scaling The peaks, sTriking T a proper balance TwixT TideliTy To rouTine and pleasure, always smiling, always Triendly and well-grounded in The lore oT sophisTicaTiong such is The spiriT oT a Typical Man- if haTTan man, and such is The spiriT oT Bob. Go To iT, old boy, we expecT greaT Things oT you. s A- 1 s T. T. , J 5 - . f4?'i 1-i.. '.3l1re..i1'A...f9.Qig: ..i, f 5 1 l CQ? M I-sf Vi if s i ' ' IOS xi l V i l T 1 T ' l ii ll- l ir E i i B- ii I l l l jl ll ll gl if i i , ll ill l 1 V li T fl . -1 ll 1 ,T ,, PAA. tp- I ll il T yr TW! rj ,, ,il :ll 'T l li-f 'l ,T fl fl T r l iii X, l, I i 7, l i I., , l ff T 9, V s.:x:'s.s'1Q1f v2JsLS'3xs '-fn Fl T: l f-fi fy, wi 1-,Q ll T O fi H 'ff VincenT E. Gackenheimer, BS. in B. Vinnie New York CiTy Presideni' Foreign Mission League 4: COmmerC6 Club 3, 4. ONE OTher Than Vinnie himselT, always ready TO give a helping hand and accom- mOdaTe anyone. His abiliTy as a leader was shown by The manner in which he presided Over The Foreign Mission League during The Senior year. LesT we TOrgeT, Vinnie is one OT The New York Edison execuTives. AT one Time he was accused OT being The head sTaTisTician, buT This was denied. When in CTOI-'bi as TO The OuTcOme OT some spOrT evenT, cOnsulT Sack T-le has On The Tip OT his Tingers The resulT OT world series games, TOOTball games, hockey maTches and baskeT- ball conTesTs. l-le is a man who knows his baseball and is willing TO discuss iT aT any Time wiTh any person. Vinnie, whie inTeresTed in ouTside acTiviTies, has always Tollowed The aThleTic evenTs OT lvlanhaTTan. Gack's TavOriTe indoor sporT was TO approach individuals and in a cOnTidenTial manner Tell Them They were overcuT in Mr. NichOl's class and ThaT he wanTed TO see such individuals. When The success OT lv1anhaTTan men OT '32 is measured, do nOT be surprised TO see Sack among The leaders. As Our Tour years OT comradeship draws nigh To 6. close, leT us wish you The besT OT success. , .QL -Q. - ., -fri?-:I ,L . ,-.. . .. e--V ' - Ji- ffl-ffl! IO6 C T broac him i, Them Tional descr To be T l.iTera missec Vie f QSHHE F is To 'F . QITTICU F'-7 e. .,,, Q' hw -.sing fi? ' 'f Y. Thomas C. Garrison, AB. Tommy NuTley, N. J. VarsiTy Baseball 2, 3, 43 Freshman Baseball. OM is iusT anoTher of Those renowned aThleTes who come Trom New Jersey. From The Time he TirsT seT TooT on The Jasper soil as a Freshman, his name was broadcasT Tar and wide and all awaiTed The opening oT The baseball season To wiTness him in acTion. The Time Tinally came and everyone was on hand To see Tom piTch Them up To open The Frosh season. We were Thereupon convinced ThaT an excep- Tional piTcher was abouT To help malce The Jasper nine Tamous. We could go on describing his varieTy oT curves, drops and TasT ones, buT aTTer all This is noT meanT To be a -sporT wriTeup. Tom's TavoriTe courses ThroughouT his collegiaTe career seemed To be French, LiTeraTure and Philosophy. IT is sTrange, yeT a TacT, ThaT in Tour years he has never missed a French lecTure. For This reason and Tor his high sTanding in ThaT deparTmenT we conclude ThaT some day we shall hear oT him Teaching ThaT subiecT. AbouT The campus Tom was regarded by all The sTudenTs as a True ManhaTTan genTleman. We dare say almosT every Senior sTudenT menTioned him as his Triend. For Tour years now we have waTched you abouT The campus and on The diamond. As you are abouT To sTep ouT inTo The world we should like To give This advice-iT diTTiculTy Taces you, sTrike iT ouT. T IO7 I I I I I fir! :VN 1 II. faq, I. I I I I 1 I i I John I-I. Geideman, B.S. in E. Gus New York Cify Newfon Ivlafhemafical Sociefy 3, 4, Transif Club I, 2, 3, 4: S. I. E. 3, 4, Secrefary 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3: K. D. C. 4: A. S. C. E. 3, 4. HERE are many qualifies fhaf go fo make up Gus fhaf will assure success for him, buf fhere is one which predominafes-his abilify fo concenfrafe. Many 5 are fhe nighfs when Gus and his bevy of I. E.'s would gef fogefher and furn our U voluminous reporfs and layoufs of collar-buffon facfories, merely fo amaze fheir fellow- sfudenfs. Pound for pound, fhe Gus ouffif furned ouf more work fhan any ofher fine QI fhree deparfmenfs. eifher A generous sense of humor, a pleasing personalify, and fhe abilify fo mix, has C I given John an enfree fo fhe besf places. Proficiency in sfudies, afhlefics and sociefy Ilie GH I Ieave nofhing fo be desired in Gus Same I I-Ie is well-grounded in fhe arf of genflemanly conducf. I-Iis calm dignify H .TE gives him an air of comprehensive learning, yef, he manages fo reserve a sfore of PlI'l I fun for his friends. There is a spark of convivialify which can only be aroused by an 'nd I being sincere wifh him. No maffer whaf fhe cause was, if if was fosfered by Man- llle SCI I haffan and for Ivlanhaflan, Gus was righf fhere in back of if. I-le is dependable, Service I frusfworfhy and frue, a good friend and nof an imaginary one. Illal pl I John is concenfrafing on business' managemenf and has implicif faifh in his W I fheories. I-Iis sincere and earnesf efforfs, which have unceasingly marked his en- Comildf deavors af Ivlanhaffan will undoubfedly soon be recognized. our PGI I I l I .. . . . iii.. ' is ' 1i'-aTi--.Q7fQi'.fif'.N5'if-C7ilffiifjfifiiifffsffi In L 1- K rvi LJ I-I. a'a- . .us L, z IJ fel IO8 'N V. if Lxcifxlisffi X or 'Y JT V. er BS 'Y 'Y nT TY 1. is I- EM Felix M. GenTile, BS. Hplqllu I New York CiTy Alpha Phi DelTag Mendelian SocieTy 3, 4, Vice- PresidenT 4: FooTlighTers and Hayes DramaTics l, 2, 3, 4: M. I. C.: Glee Club I, 2: Band 3, 4: Treasurer 3. ll l-lE Torce OT his own meriT makes his way. This simple classical expression Truly sums up The mosT commendable TraiTs in Phil. l-lis innaTe abiliTy, Tine characTer, and unselTish service, are reasons why many are proud To know him eiTher as classmaTe or Triend. ConsTanT acTiviTy has marked his Tour years as a ManhaTTan man. l-le TypiTies The energeTic college sTudenT oT Today who earns his way Through school and aT The same Time aTTains success as an aThleTe, sTudenT, leader, and social luminary. Tennis apparenTly was his maior sporT, buT under The Meehan inTramural sysTem Phil immediaTely displayed his aloiliTy in baskeTball, swimming, and Track. l-le was an indiTTerenT raTher Than a conscienTious sTudenT. NeverTheless The diTTiculTies oT The science course were overcome by a mind boTh analyTical and sysTemaTic. l-lis services as an acTor, bass drummer, and Tearless masTer oT ceremonies recall To us ThaT pleasanT and happy disposiTion which he maniTesTed in all his acTiviTies. WiTh your versaTiliTy and abiliTy To Torm genuine Triendships, we have The uTmosT conTidence ThaT you will be successTul in The career you choose. May we oTTen meeT our pal OT ManhaTTan days and as oTTen enioy his Tamiliar and mosT sincere greeTing - my Triendl flu: F ff my y! l A I tglil l A IOC? A , -- 1- NW YI ,Asarafxrsczczszgzsczizszscx lllfifgaggg1ifE5Q253f251s5eQ5fi?5EQi2fi2f?aiggfeigiiffffaffeffaggzsffs Lzzscsczzzzzzcizsgz q.ii::::r...-- .- -U--- --- F-HM- s l l u I I i 1 l l l l . 1 l ' I i 4 l ' 1 ,c l . I l 5 . i fl, l il 'll ffl li li l lf Ia, 5 William J. Glasheen, B.S. in E. l Bill New Rochelle, N. Y. lf A. S. C. E. 3, 47 Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy l 34KDC4TransifClub34Band234 , , . . . . I 1 I 1 I ll Y- Orchesfra 2, 3. 4. tl 5 ,1 fig ODEST and unassuming, Bill passed four years in our midsf and now fhaf he ,i, is abouf fo separafe from us, fhe memory of him will linger like fhe melody of one of fhe songs he helped render as a member of fhe orchesfra. Friendly. , V soff-spoken and easy-going by nafure, Bill quickly won fhe affecfion of all. Deeper l , , , affribufes, such as sincerify, earnesfness and deferminafion, also merifed for him a l 'il , -- i ii ii , l ii 'l lily ,W high place in our esfeem. T I To really appreciafe Bill, one musf meef him, and af once fhe foregoing charac- ferisfics can be vouched for. While af camp, Bill was nofed for being firsf up in fhe morning and chief of a very successful parfy. Following fhe Chrisfmas vacafion, when Chick Meehan made fhe call for young ,iw men fo parficipafe in infermural sporfs, Bill was one of fhe mosf enfhusiasfic. lmme- yvi P diafely he filled ouf applicafions for fhe baskefball and baseball feams. ln bofh fhese fields he has given a good accounf of himself and is responsible fo a greaf lil exfenf for keeping fhe Engineering feams up wifh fhe leaders. l lwl' We feel assured fhaf fhe years which lie ahead will hold nofhing buf fhe besf lf for you, Bill. l i IIO .34 Ui Of a col confacf of losing To diflerenf born phi, HO afferr mafes, ye nafure, P Slrangely COllegeI if sucli, I Compendil Qenfleman lf We dems made him 6Ve n ,GS I ssszii sass 'Xqgbxlixlt wife, The ody idly. aper wi a VGC' gin iunq ime' noTl1 real besT John J. Gordon, AB. HSCOHY New York CiTy Class BaskeTball 3, 4. UR college careers have drawn To a happy close. Four years oT college acTiviTy -oT sTudy and play-will shorTly become a mere memory. WiTh The receiving oT a college degree oTher hopes and aspiraTions Take Torm. The possibiliTy oT losing conTacT wiTh our college chums sTrikes a poignanT noTe, parTicularly when we Think of losing The enjoyable companionship oT ScoTTy. To The ouTsider, ScoTTy may appear disTanT and alooT, and seemingly in- diTierenT To The Teverish acTiviTy going on abouT him. SophisTicaTed 'Tis True, huT a born philosopher who Takes liTe as iT comes and makes The besT oT iT. l-le has made no aTTempT Tor populariTy, never soughT The limelighT or The aTTenTion oT his class- maTes, yeT, he has leTT a deeply rooTed impression upon our minds oT his calm, good naTure, his unselTish manner, his pleasing personaliTy and his proTound sinceriTy. STrangely enough, Though a loyal supporTer oT The social and aThleTic evenTs oT The college, ScoTTy never parTicipaTed in These aTiairs. DespiTe This TaulT, if we may call iT such, he had a hosT oT Triends who recognized in his singular characTer The compendium oT all Those qualiTies ThaT enTer inTo The making oT a True scholar, genTleman and philosopher. IT we mighT make so bold as To prophesy, we should say, iudging Trom his guieT, even demeanor, ThaT he will work his way To The Top in The same sTaid manner ThaT made him a Tamiliar Tigure on The campus. iii l Xie. i' E 3 NVTM W Jw ,gggg .gig -, 1 1 '- 'ff' A -H' zfe-f-'H : riff- J., cf, ff' -f - f i ll i l l l I fi 'x .,' s .sk x Alexander F. Gorslcy, B.S. AI Troy, N. Y. v German Club 2, 3, 47 Troy Club I, 2, 3, 4: Mendelian Sociefy 43 Manhaffanife. L sfarfed his collegiafe career under a handicap, having fo overcome fhe dis- advanfage of coming from Tro , N. Y. l-l y owever, a winning personalify a fol- eranf feeling fowards his fellow-collegians and a happy-go-lucky spirif have served fo elevafe him in fhe esfimafion of his classmafes. Al is anofher of our pre-med sfudenfs. Having pracficed cuffing-up on every- fhing from frogs fo cafs, he hopes some day fo pracfice on suffering humanify H. . . is four years af lvlanhaffan have developed in him remarkable will-power and deferminafion fo learn anyfhing which mighf be useful fo him in his life's worlc. Buf do nof for a momenf believe fhaf Al's inferesf and abilify are confined fo any one field, for few are The pasfimes-from playing bridge, fo sfarring on fhe +. . cour in infra-mural compefifion-which he cannof enioy. Al is a man of his own convicfions, and he pufs his all info ever fh' fh f h y ing a e underfalces. For four years we have had fhe pleasure and benefif of his company, and now as The desire fo be of greafer service fo manlcind calls him f away o greafer fhings, our sincere wishes for a successful career go wifh him. .L,,c-LN .Vu I' gc ..,., gin- . Q ji, M,, 'f,1g -' ---' -- i-ff ' i' Www i' ' ..,.c.,., , ,, v -', 9 4 'C-, 5 'uf' ', -f' 'if '-f , , .Q --- f-.. ,V , 1-- - ...,,...., , ,. ,,. , 1, -.. :.-K---c.,.a..Q.i.,,, ...--, -Tim .111 - A 1 GL., X ., , , x , E J , I .., 7 H D . -. . -, ... ,A ..,, L -. b . ,V la , , - , W L 1 I .L 4 .., g.,,-,,,,,...,,,.-,,.a...,--. .., .,... . x- i Q., . , - . i LJ x . ,A L.. XJ L. l J x I-ax c-.-a1.-.4.L..,-15.4-5' -.4.'i..fgi-az..,4ff.i.vi..ffP:.-A745 Il2 6 OME fc a com sfafe of ob! accompanie lllm, during Seen Jim W, His cleanfu and have WC fren info f, Calibre, Nfl engaged .L I polfll To be 6 numerous Club Pelhaps i CVS of-fl else fo Say EXC years fo CO me. n0fes h 1 The CliS' yl 5 arvecl i0 pn Well' iurflafllll' ,wer and ark. unlined To iq on The Q Thai le cOmPanl' To Qfealei 1 c e 1553 2r'??7ff'p l l James P. l-lalleron, AB. Jim, Pancho New York Cify Alpha Sigma Befag Glee Club l, 2, 3, 43 Track lg Hayes Dramafic Sociefy 3, 4. CME four years ago There saunfered inTo our midsT one of Those rare personages, a combinafion of unusual TalenT and humorous personalify, who when noT in a sTaTe of oblivion, readily answered To The name of Jim l-lalleron. An infecTious smile accompanied wiTh scinTillaTing wiTTicisms and a happy-go-lucky aTTiTude garnered for him, during his sTay aT lv1anhaTTan, a hosT of friends and associafes, Never have we seen Jim wasfe Time, for in his serious complex, There are many worThy ambifions. His clean-cuT manners and sTeady pace have maniTesTed Themselves in his characfer and have won for him many sincere friendships in college which in years To come will ripen info fond memories. The fufure looks promising for a young man of such calibre. Aside from The passive TraiTs ThaT make up his sTerling characfer we offen found him engaged in oTher acTiviTies, boTh aThleTic and social. I-le has always made a poinT To be a represenfafive on his class Teams and has been an acfive member of numerous clubs and sociefies. Perhaps The mosT nofable of his qualifies is The gifT of a sofT Tenor voice whose noTes have ofTen lenT enchanTmenT To many a locker-room guarTeT. We have noThing else To say excepf ThaT we exfend To Pancho The besT of luck and happiness in The years To come. , 15 iizielsf- ii-Tl II3 VA 1143 1 i N , x X 15 ,E l 9 .3 9. MANMAT TALL IT E. ill W :Q-ff' - --, ,. mic f iii:---.Q,,,f.1gg:' 1,,.fg:f:g.:f:' 'l - WT?-TL' Q'l1f:j1:Q,gc :fl 1 - if lf - ,,!,W,-N,-w-Wn-W,b,-vWh,,-wwh ,,,,,wY-W, ,Y MF 1,.,,,,,,..,c-... 7- - i i i i I l x 5 l l f Lg George M. l-lanrahan, Jr., AB. 5 George Bronx, N. Y. German Club: Baseball Team: Dramafic Club. T ERE is a young man of diversified falenfs. The foremosf, l believe, is his seem- ingly unconscious abilify fo brighfen fhe afmosphere and spread cheer wherever he goes, hence his greaf popularify. l suppose fhis melodious disposifion accounfs for his splendid abilify fo play fhe violin and banjo. One of George's secref ambifions, you know, is fo become a well-known orchesfra leader as a side-line fo his law profession. Buf, everyfhing in his life is nof music, rafher, if is only an accompanimenf. X, Alfhough many of us have forgoffen, fhe facf remains fhaf George, in his freshman , year, was fhe sfar fhird baseman on fhe baseball feam, and since fhen we have lamenfed his nof going ouf for if in subsequenf years. Buf as recompense for fhis, he has given lvlanhaffan fhe benefif of his musical abilify by playing fhe violin in fhe College orchesfra during his senior year. l Those acquainfed wifh George find him a founfain of generosify, a goodly amounf of humor, and a friend, sincere and frusfworfhy, one fo be cherished among our fondesf freasures. We fervenfly hope fhaf your life's work in fhe law profession will be highly successful. You may be sure fhaf many lvlanhaffan men will be seeking your advice and professional services fo iron ouf fheir difficulfies in fhe fufure. , , ' fi Wh 4'.,f ?, '2 '-1-'sf-f' Emir, faq 'Q,:'-rf T'-1:I 3ligT li ' 'T ' 4 1. PTH rw rj r an .--fag 'V 'W' z' ' -G A , si? 'fr '?'r51'f +r':c ':i 1 ll - il Ll l kj lr l Lf law L. ,w M, cl - i IJ l l l 'll:ffii.fi'l.fi f....f:,ij',...'fTIf..f?1'l.ri'T1..1?llaf.fTl'f1i i g UCH fhis ' wards of fifl HOW offer hir Arfie, C lransferred J, years ag an 1 Aflle ig leafs- Ne l:f9SlTman yea lie was high meef alone' V8 full Of W foo solemn OC mollll While +C enlmaffan is S m. 'GF he a nh GD ive us. 'he dly :HQ lily ice . Tiff? Arlhur G. l-lei, BS. Arlie, Heel New York Cily Track I, 2, 3, 4, Mendelian Sociely 4, German Club: Spike Shoe Club, Cross-Counlry Team. UCl-l isn'Jr known of Arlie, nor Jrhal he is a man of myslery, bul because This young man does nor adverlise himself. Know you lhal he has won up-- wards of Tifly medals? Arlie has gone lo lhe Penn Relays so ollen lhal lhe Quakers now olller him a seven-year lease. Arlie, or Heel, as he is aicleclionalely called, slarled ohf as an Arlsman, bul Transferred lo science in his Sophomore year. l-le aspires lo spend a delighhcul Tour years as an inlerne. Arlie is a sprinler, and a good one, being Coach Waler's mainslay for Tour years. Neverlheless, he runs a sweel 44O, having run on Jrhe relay reams. ln his Freshman year he made lhe cross-counlry Jream on lhe Tirsl day oul. Thar Tirsl year he was high scorer for lhe lrack Team, rallying lhirleen poinls in lhe Cily College meer alone. Full of wil, ever jovial, seldom aggravaled, and an excellenl mimic, lurning a loo solemn occasion inlo good cheer: is very considerale of The feelings of olhers, and gives credil whore il is due. Though few know him as he really is, il has been worlh while lo know him lhese four years and, we hope for many more lo come. lvlanhallan is sure lhal l-leel'll gel by. . , 1 di 1 Il5 E 'I7l:1,E-. i 42.3 O. rsafcrsi. 1 l 5 l 1 . i I l I 5 i . i John l-l. l-lell, AB. John New-' Yer? Ciff Debafing Socieiy 3. 4: Quadrsngie 41 Tennis 3. 4. N E have all probably had lhe experience of iallcing +o John and suddenly exclaiming +o ourselves, Good Lord, lhe man lcnows everyrhingf' There is no doubl aboul if, John's fund of informalion is large. l-le can discuss wiih equal faciliiy Brahmin symbolism and a symphony of Brahms, l'he Nichomachean Elhics and ihe nebular hypolhesis. Sirange as il' may seem in a college man, his opinions are based on facls lnol' fheories as real scienlisls call fhemll l-le lcnows wha? he is ialking abou? or he does nor lallcl John is much more Jrhan a mere absorber of informalion, however. l-le has learned how To correla+e his knowledge and lil' il info a delinile paflern, alfrhough lhal' paH'ern may nor always be lhe commonly accepfed one. ln The middle of his college course John crealed conslernalion among fhe Lalrin and Greek professors by dropping lhese subiecls. l-le lhen proceeded To gel info as many science classes as he could. l-le receives an AB. bu+ his life's worlc will be in science. We feel lhal John will become Thai rara avis in ierra nos'lra, a scienlislr wilh a lcnowledge of lhe humanilies. Lei Jeans and Eddingion loolc lo lheir laurelsl 4.i'3s.e iiia Q ...i ' fill y .gil f,l ' , J 'J' J 5 4, ' if ll S 11 LJ 1- 2 LJ -if Ejiifi2-f fif.3ffajfi?1iL+vrs..T2?Z.?S2 l I6 5 ll.l. is ceplic lrard lo furl found 5 a lime whe playing. Tl lf WGS lor Jr man in 'rheii Blll now Sider him as anlllllng bul friend, alway reserved and llfllian m are losing mi GH'- WN llie lu-fu rel W' we ldenly ere is equal is and is are allcinq 9 has houqll Lalin il inl0 vill be 5 a ,Ok lo A13 ' ,h . i- -1' ,-' f xi Y f ' A' ,s , . William lvl. l-liggins, A.B. Bill Wallham, Mass. Foolball I, 2, 3, 47 Alpha Sigma Bela: Varsily lvl Club. ll.L is an oulslanding example ol lhe lype ol man lhal can do lwo lhings ex- ceplionally well-play loolball and sludy. For lour years he has been worlcing hard lo lurlher lhe Jasper's name lo gridiron brilliancy and al lhe same lime we have lound him a scholarly classmale. lvlighl we lurlher slale lhal never had lhere come a lime when Bill had lo be removed lrom any game because ol iniury or laully playing. Though hil many limes while holding lhe line, Bill iusl wouldn'l slay down. ll was lor lhis reason, wilhoul doubl, lhal lhe Seniors voled him lhe mosl rugged man in lheir class. Bul now lel us leave lhe alhlelic and lhe scholarly side ol Bill's nalure and con- sider him as anolher ol lvlanhallan's sons. Al no lime has Bill been regarded in anylhing bul high esleem. ln lour shorl years he has appeared as iusl an amiable lriend, always ready lo lend a hand in anylhing3 never looking lor lrouble-a quiel, reserved and relined genlleman. ls il so hard lhen lo undersland why every lvlan- hallan man respecls and admires Bill? Or are we wrong in slaling lhal lhe Jaspers are losing more lhan a loolball slar? While we do nol expecl lo hear ol your sensalional playing on lhe gridiron in lhe lulure, we do expecl your successlul arrival al your goal in lhe greal game, Lile. -3,-14.9 ,mv ,R . ,,,-, ,----s,,.-3.-.M rv- ..f, Q - 4 g ' 'J ' ' -5-,fi K ,,..- ,,-ia.,.-,...,,..... , V .Y - - N- , 1 I i i .V s . f -. ' i i g:'xg r:'o'f:g -4 'ri''N-'g::.: --5-A-I--V-ii:-if i I- L l L-. l 1, If .1 . f ',,,i., L i I 'X . --- vL..,, 'w...., i.vu...,.2z.-, v 95, ,xg .W-., . ,-1 V ,A N., - II7 i i i ln The classroom, all signs oT mirTh disappeared and he buckled down in a serious sasa .M l if fx l 1 M-..- ,-mg Bernard C. l-lills, B.S. in B. Barney New York CiTy Commerce Club 2, 3, 4. CCORDING To an old adage- Time brings changes. When we TirsT assem- bled as The Class oT '32, Barney, wifh his perpeTual grin and easy-going manner, was iusT anoTher Frosh. BuT The serious side oT college liTe has had iTs eTTecT and gf we have come To know Barney in a diTTerenT lighT-as jovial, yeT noT lacking in - sTudiousness. , manner To The subiecT aT hand. We have oTTen wondered how a Tace, so serious l in class, could yeT produce The ruddy grin by which Barney is known To us all. l Though slow in comprehending, yeT he is always There aT The Tinish. I l I On The campus-iT he wasn'T Talking abouT The opera he had seen The nighT l Toward The sTudenTs or making known his ideas on how a course should be presenTed in order ThaT a sTudenT mighT geT The Tull beneTiT. . beTore-his sharp voice would be heard discoursing on The aTTiTude oT insTrucTors And so, as we come To The parTing oT The ways, we bid you good luck, Barney, wiTh The Teeling ThaT your never-Tailing humor, our ' 'T d carry you Tar on The road To success. y sinceri y an your ToresighT will :lg ROO Eclw. ambassadc has only - friend DOC To ST: iTs sTars 0, Chuck h, Junior alley reciTal5 On i Oilered G C ln M lbilllardsl T llle Seniors lNlOplllllS Vs, Poland. , Chun will b Be 90Od. QQ lI8 'Q ki S aT T, assem- manner acl and ,king in Serious Serious US all. e nlqll lruclOV5 eserlled Baffleyr hi, will TQ r - Y... ., i Char es R. l-lop4ins, BS. l-lop, Chuck Brooklyn, N. Y. Brooklyn-Long Island Club I, 2, 3, 4, Vice-Presidenl 3, German Club 3, 43 Mendelian Sociely 3, 4. ROOKLYN, New York, has lhe dislinclion ol being lhe birlhplace ol Charles Edward Raymond Q'Brien l-lopkins. l-le came lo lvlanhallan as Brooklyn's ambassador ol wil and humor. To learn how well he has lullilled his mission one has only lo consull his friends-and lhey are legions-or bellrer yer ask our old friend Doclor Carey. To slrike l-lop's fancy iusl menlion lhe rnolion piclure induslry, or any of ils slars or producls. l-le can lell you who slarred in any piclure ol imporlance. Chuck has an unlimiled slore of knowledge on lhis subiecl. The residenls ol Jrhe Junior alley can well leslily lo lhe inreresl wilh which lhey have lislened lo l-lop's recilals on lhis subiecl. ln lacl il was once rumored lhal Hopkins and l-lackell were orlered a conlracl wilh one corporalion. In his Junior year Chuck became a devolee ol lhe royal and ancienl game of billiards. Therealler he was in conslanl allendance al lVleek's Pool Emporium. All lhe seniors are asked lo be on hand when lhe conlesl' ol conleslrs lakes place, viz.: l-lopkins vs. lvlcG-oldrick. The referee lor lhe march will be none olher lhan Yokkie Poland. Chuck's ambilion is lo become a medico. l-lis lurlrher lraining lor Jrhis field will be al Tullrs. ll is Tull luck Jrhal we are losing close conlacl wilh you Charlie. Be good. ll9 bfi 9 E? e TA - l E Eugene T. l-lorgan, B.S. in E. Gene New Yorlc Cify Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy 3, 4: K. D. C. 4: S. I. E. 3, 4: Transif Club 3, 4. ENE, an aufhorify on all fhe evenfs fhaf ever occurred af Manhaffan, came fo us from fhe Prep, where his beaming counfenance won him admirafion and friends. l-lis congenial and friendly smile also fouched fhe hearfs of all sophisficafed newcomers who were fo become engineers. Gene possessed, however, more fhan his cheerfulnessg his confribufions fo fhe scholasfic requiremenfs of his classmafes could always be relied upon. Gene, alfhough everlasfing cheerful, was a clear, deep fhinlcer which was mosf pronounced when infricafe problems requiring unusual penefrafion and ingenuify came up for solufion. Of course, his class will always remember fhis admirable characfer in connecfion wifh class acfivifies. Gene, alfhough no greaf parficipafor, buf rafher an onloolcer in varsify sporf, disfinguishes himself as fhe fasfesf player in class foofball, always gaining considerable ground by his alerfness and speed fo gef under long forward passes which demoralized even fhe mosf rugged and sfurdy opposifion. So, wifh heavy hearfs his classmafes say Adieu fo one of fheir oufsfandin Q associafes. l-le is sure fo become an aufhorify in his profession, because of his abilify in applying fundamenfal laws. So long, Gene, hold high Manhaffan fradifions and may fhe proverbial luck of fhe lrish always be wifh you. 7 9,17 ffffi ' .ff f.f'f7ifji if l Hi E I.. 1 LJ l so -- nf: LJ if-i il 5 - L., LJ s.. i LJ if-x A-X l2O 6 ART c scliola This dc found fime allilefic fum Ban' is In fliis hrani make 6 Ban we gomg Ghouf Cliaracferisfic Collecfi buf solel H9 frie Y On l ls appafenf be .h Er his Oufsla Gnhaiienn lion N H -fs. 2,4 . ,f ,4 L, . ,. ,Li 1., if fo ind 'ed fhe igh ien an. ion cer ays ird HQ his ins gil 3' A 3 i i l i Barfholomew I. l-lurley, AB. BGFJY New Yorlc Cify Class Baslcefball 4, Class Baseball I. ART came fo us from Sfuyvesanf and immediafely proceeded fo add fresh scholasfic laurels fo fhose which he had already garnered af high school. This does nof mean fo say fhaf Barf devofed himself enfirely fo sfudy, for he found fime during his college career fo inferesf himself acfively in many social and afhlefic funcfions. Barf is parficularly inferesfed in mafhemafics, and has been unusually successful in fhis branch of sfudy, leaving no doubf in fhe minds of his schoolmafes fhaf he will malce a successful feacher in fhis subiecf. Barf was one of fhose quief young fellows, fhaf you read of buf seldom see, going abouf his own business in fhaf easy, silenf, behaving manner fhaf was so characferisfic of him. For four years he frod among us wifhouf noise or busfle, collecfing friends unknowingly, and holding fhem as well, wifhouf any conscious efforf, buf solely on fhe merifs of fhose qualifies which his reficence almosf concealed. Judging by fhe endeavor and indusfry displayed by Barf in his soiourn wifh us, if is apparenf fhaf fhe new life and obligafions which presenf fhemselves affer gradua- fion will be faclcled in fhe same serious-minded affifude fhaf was highly responsible for his oufsfanding success and brillianf achievemenfs in fhe line of sfudy here af lvlanhaffan. f' vm nf' 41-726, A 'ii ,,.fs,gs'1':g.f':.eT131,a ,s,- ,ggi'2i2xfQiggQ5s.QEiQi sssss if 5,1 , , In ig L 1 1,3 i U - fi ay i--s, c Q -Leu in i J , .K W I2I I E cc 9.45 .Q::-M.4QcN.ii.45.T.I,fT letllleli ,-,grgicr Y,,,,,,,g,g,,,, ,. -:.-.-- fmt f'1 :r- --N--Y'-i---w -V '----' M ' l l 1 i x F. E . l l l l l l ii 1 Francis J. l-lurley, AB. i Frank New Rochelle, N. Y. ,j FooTlighTers DramaTic SocieTy I, 2. l'-lE brieTesT way To menTion some oT The numerous qualiTies oT This young man If is To say ThaT he is TirsT a genTleman, sarTorially inclined wiTh sleek haircomb and careTully adiusTed cravaT, and Then a scholar. A visiT To our classroom any day would disclose This indusTrious lad deeply engaged in his work. Francis evidenTly knows The golden rule Tor iT has been his J mainsTay during The pasT Tour years. The besT parT oT iT all is ThaT Francis is silenT aT The righT Time and in The righT place. l-lis lucid reciTaTions in lVleTaphysics showed us ThaT when necessiTy demanded iT Francis could Talk-and well. l-le has Taced The biTTer sTorm oT knowledge and Though in diTTiculTies oTTen he has conquered by dinT oT diligenT applicaTion. During his soiourn wiTh us in The h II TTh 6 ' ' ' ' a s o e reen and WhiTe, Francis has shown oTher dominaTmg characTerisTics- a modesT naTure and inTellecTual abiliTy. The combined Torces oT The Social Sciences d Ed ' an ucaT1on 3Ol and 4Ol, aided by a Tew proTessors, Tound easy access To his inTellecTual sTronghold. When Francis leaves in June, he carries noT only a diploma wiTh him buT also The besT wishes oT a hosT oT Triends. ag HE yea springir endeavors n HBVGF permi menT OT The remained lo, VicTor if l0 culTiva+e Vl'lUeS OT Vi. mpls alw. aTTe lvalange . and modems. HE Th B 9 dren Olanl Publ' IC memories on ,gg N. V -. ., we. ---. fir. 1 22 K .Aj ,N V., :'e3e..,, Ni I ' sig xl Viclor lncorvia, BS. in B. VIC New Yorlc Cily Alpha Phi Della: Koran Edilor 23 Quadrangle I, 2, 3, Copy Edilor 43 Sludenl Counsel 33 Fool- Iighlers Dramalic Sociely I, Secrelary 2, I-layes Dramalic Sociely 3, Treasurer 43 Glee Club I, 27 Cross Counly lg Pen and Sword Socielyg lvlanf hallanile. l-IE year '28 lound lvlanhallan undergoing a lranslormalion, new organizalions springing up, old inleresls reviving and new Tires lcindling. Al lhe helm ol lhese endeavors we lind Viclor carrying on lhe spiril ol lhe reformers. A leader who was never permilled lo gel big, he was, however, an imporlanl laclor in The develop- menl ol lhe exlra-curricular aclivilies ol lhe school. Undaunled by his subieclion, he remained loyal lo his endeavors. Viclor is an unusual lype. I-le doesn'l go in lor popularily. I-le ralher chooses lo cullivale a circle ol lriends lo whom he can devole his all. To lhis group lhe virlues ol Viclor are manilesl. Inlelleclually, he mighl be described as avid. I-le allempls always lo exlracl' as much as he possibly can from each course. I-le seeks balance, and lhis is shown in his lilerary inleresls which embrace lhe classics and lhe moderns. I-le is lerribly serious aboul lhese mallers. The drama is his vilal inleresl. ln lhis lield, Viclor experienced his one llam- boyanl public appearance while he was al Ivlanhallan College. The memory ol his performance, so lhorough, so exacl, so inlelligenl is one ol lhe mosl delighllul memories ol lhose who cherish arlislic ralher lhan malerial success. l23 T ii E Q 3 5.Jll3.rv-we i T. l-lerberf Johnsfon, B.S. in Arch. l-lerb l-lorfon, N. Y. Archifecfural Sociefy I, 2, 3, 47 Befa Sigma. NE who falks nof offen buf wisely, one who in four years acquired numerous friends-and kepf fhemq one who submerged his desire for afhlefic compefifion beneafh his ambifion fo learn fhe infricacies of archifecfural pracficeg one who never- fheless supporfed his feams fo fhe ufmosf, offen fraveling hundreds of miles fo do so, a man loyal fo his college in every sense .... Such are few of fhe oufsfanding characferisfics of him who came fo Manhaffan unknown and unheralded, buf who leaves endeared fo many and known fo all. Q66 Ol-IN he cliaracfe Some mi qualifies whiq direcfion fo F balanced, Hia When nof bending over a draffing-fable in order fo mainfain his high scholasfic Heigrof sfanding, we find l-lerb willing and eager fo fell us all abouf fhe lafesf model Pl0C6cl himjn Chevrolef. And, 'iudging by fhe variefy of models we have seen him bring back lleliatl his e, fo college wifh him, we have come fo fhe conclusion fhaf he has an unlimifed supply. pedagogfcai k lf speaks well for l-lerb's personalify fhaf early in his freshman year he made John is quife a hi+ af New Rochelle. l-le was submerged wifh invifafions fo innumerable lliafare bo F social affairs. l-lowever, his success in fhaf line never ruffled his composure, and he 5lSlen+ 905 um fook his work and his play wifh equal seriousness. inihoughfngja . . . . - ' l l-lerbs fufure will be closely connecfed wifh several verifable mounfains of Sflencehowl Bluesfone in Delaware Counfy which are fhe source of fhe ancesfral forfune. We Th see a brighf and hifherfo undiscovered sfar rising above fhe horizon of fhe business which Ie hesfo world, and we feel sure fhaf if augurs well for l-lerberf's success. andr mcreasin. esullmfhe P tg L in I LJ -MUI2.Eb-LUL I U 124 N us on ir- lo iq io 'ic el ck y. le ,le we Oi fe :SS . 1 mfs? riff' John P. Jorolon, AB. Johnny Mamaroneck, N. Y. Wesichesfer Club 3, 4: l-layes Dramaiic Socielry I, 2, 3, 47 Mendelian Socieiy I, 2. Cl-iN hails from lvlamaroneck and a worlhy represenialive is he. Of his many characierislics conservaiism and hard work siand our conspicuously. Some men are ralher easy io describe, lor lhey possess one or lwo predominanl qualifies which so wholly absorb alleniion, Thai one knows immedialely in iusl whai direclion io proceed. Noi so wiih Johnf l-lere is a man oi so many sides, all equally balanced, Jrhal one is losl on which lo dwell mosi. l-le is roiund and grows ilorid wilh a smile. His iovial and likeable manner has placed him in a class by himself. l-lis companionship was ever genial. Many a lime he had his educaiion professor, as well as his classmales agog over his limiiless pedagogical knowledge. , John is possessed of inielleciual abilily, sound iudgmenl and genilemanliness Thai are bound lo achieve desired resulls. ln his siudies John was even and con- sislenl, going along al a s+eady and consianl pace. l-le has always been independenlr in Jrhoughr, bu+ neverrheless was always open io conviciion. Ask any man in Senior Science how many laborious hours Johnnie spenl on his chemisiry experimenis. The besl of wishes To you John, and may rhal sincere, honesl and earnesl eiiori which increasingly marked your endeavors a+ lvlanhalian, guide you io your goal and resulr in Jrhe crowning glory of success. l A 1 l 125 , - - T A' ' T p3 1 X . Thomas J. Kane, BS. in B. Tom Brooklyn, N. Y. Commerce Club 3, 4, PresidenT 41 Phi Rho Pi: Swimming Team Manager. l-TE curTain rises on Tom, The mosT selT-composed oT individuals. lT would Talce a volume To menTion The maniTold qualiTies ThaT Tom has paraded beTore us. ln The classroom, he is The essence oT cheerTulness. Nor does This good naTure dis- appear aT any Time: he is a charTer member oT The iovial circle. l-lis greaT populariTy was evinced by his unanimous elecTion To The presidency oT The renowned Commerce Club. Tom's scholasTic record is seldom maTched and rarely surpassed. l-le has won The admiraTion oT boTh proTessors and sTudenTs. An invaluable Triend is Tom, always encouraging, never given To pessimism, ready To inconvenience himselT Tor The salce oT oThers. l-lis inTeresT in social and aThleTic acTiviTies is always maniTesT. Through his well-proven business abiliTy, Tom was chosen manager oT The swimming Team in his senior year. AcTiviTy is Tom's middle name, noT only in class buT in exTra-curricular acTiviTies as well. l-le is an ouTsTanding Tigure, his sTrilcing personaliTy lending color To all social evenTs. Tom is a sTruggler, and is bound To win. IT seems wrong ThaT all good Triends musT parT, buT iT is so. Thus Tom, as we are abouT To go our own way, iT is au revoir and good luck, and when you are a success in laTer liTe, remember each one oT us. K V , . . 1.. , 3 5. ,qi Qvwfvg ,TV U.. -N57--an-gg -I -qw ye- - ,.-.3 2 1 . 1, . I .. Q,.,, , , ..,,.',L W ,. ,... ,, f 1 Nw.. .:...,:.m-g w...-!:,,,,,'f...,,i-,,,, ff:,..:?h.-..FTLs.. K L T TQ l Lf ' rr-T1 LJ T T T L, LJ : To lf! A C41 ' MA loya impression which he gr leami l'l6 S4 llClpanT in C0mpany, Ever gy and ambiiic Tis code of Shangf leGmXllTaT BUT lo Man Yafda TOFTUna+e. 99 qai uBudH V as They know if is Af Edward A. Kearney, BS. BUF-lu Bronx, N. Y. Phi Rho Pig Varsify Foofball 2, 3, 4: Class Vice- Presidenf 43 Varsify M Club: Mendelian Sociefy 2, 3, 4. MANS fruesf biography is his friends, and for Bud fhese are many and loyal. Bud came info our midsf, made himself af home, and leff a lasfing impression on us. l-le is a very defermined individual, and usually affains fhaf for which he sfrives. l-le loves fo play foofball, and played firsf-sfring faclcle on fhe feamg he soughf an educafion and was graduafed as an honor many he is a par- ficipanf in many exfra-curricular acfivifies, and is never ill af ease in anyone's company. Ever sympafhefic, he is ever on fhe side of righfeousness, wifh fhe deferminafion and ambifion fo malce his fellow sfudenfs respecf him. l-le believes in and pracfices his code of righf living, a sound mind in a sound body. Sfrange as if seems, Ed was nof one of fhe shining sfars of fhe Jasper foofball feam-fhaf is fo say, his picfure did nof appear in fhe newspapers, weelc affor weelc. Buf fo Manhaffan men he will be remembered for many fine faclcles and preffy yardage gains, and fo Senior Science, for his fimely aid fo fhose infellecfually less forfunafe. Bud wishes fo become a denfisf, and fhe class is confidenf of his fufure success, as fhey know Ed. We shall miss fhe warm feeling Bud has creafed in our hearfs, and if is poor consolafion fo realize fhaf our loss is someone else's gain. 1,53 I9 l27 j o 53 T T5 .'!,-ioT, ,E all l l l l I l i i 1 l T l Coewf lf l John l-l. Kearney, AB. 5 John Brooklyn, N. Y. ,I Hayes Dromoiio Sociefy 2, 3, 4, Fooflighfers I, , Debafing Sociefy 2, 3, 4: Pen and Sword 4: Quad- ' rooglo I, 2, 3, 4, Manhaffanife. l Ol-lN KEARNEY is nof a specfacular person. Therefore, many of his good quali- l fies are nof known fo many of his classmafes. A few of his accomplishmenfs. T however, received aclcnowledgmenf in fhe Poll of fhe Senior Class. l-le was given a fifle secrefly covefed by all fhose wifh forensic ambifions- ff Class Debafer. This was no mean accomplishmenf when one considers fhe high qualify of debafing in Manhaffan College and fhe large number of men faking parf l in fhis acfivify. T l-lis infellecfual abilifies are affesfed by his being named Besf Sfudenf in Educa- l fion. The sfudies included cover a very wide field, going parficularly deep info l liferafure, psychology, mefhodology and hisfory. Excepfional excellence in all fhese l broughf him fhe covefed honor. i l-le is diversified in his inferesfs, buf he does nof vifiafe his energies by going info foo many acfivifies. l-lis quief manner in acfivifies which inferesfed him, com- bined wifh composure in defeaf or vicfory formed fhe background of his career af y lvlanhaffan. l 1 l ai ,cgi,.ff,fi ,,i- fffigjf gi a'r, g o, gf, osr- i fo- i i-.fi cwi ro. L gi - L LJ L s LJ li, ,co r 6 AL ' mos bered. In Wliafever , being 5 H I-lal Wag 5 lfelbdll CQL The Slar Q5 of SUCC and Sword eClUCafion, men for he During good Sfud lop-noiohers of I H5l3 silo Year, WSH' 6 Harold J. Keegan, AB. Hal Wes? New Yorlc, N. J. Foolball I, 2, 3, 4, Baseball l, 2, 3, 4: Baslcefball I, 2, 3: Phi Rho Pi Frarernilyg Pen and Sword Sociely. ialli Al. wears a perpelual grin. He is happy-go-lucky by naiure and one of lhe mls' mosl willy men al Manhallan. For his clever reparlee he will long be remem- bered. In spilre of Jrhis free and easy manner, Hal is a good sludenl, doing credirably S-4 whalever he Jrurns his hands lo. He is likewise well-known for his alhlelic prowess, A being a Jrhree-lejrler man. He has won awards in loolball, baslcelball and baseball. 'gll Hal was a prominenl member of Manha++an's now famous pony Jream on Jrhe bas- i6fl lcelball courr. Hal's greaiesl achievement however, is in baseball. He has been Jrhe slar calcher ol Jrhe varsily baseball leam for The pasr rhree years. As a resulr of his success in exlra-curricular aclivilies Hal has been elecled lo Jrhe senior Pen Ca' and Sword honorary sociely. Aller graduarion he is going lo lake up physical W0 educalion. Some day no doubl he will be one of lhe coun+ry's leading business 359 men for he has all Jrhe prereguisiles for success. During our four years wilh him we have recognized nor only a slellar sporr buf mg a good sludenjr as well. For some reason or orher Hal seemed lo rank amongsl The 'm, lop-nolchers in all of Professor Sweeney's courses. We wonder if Jrhis was Jrhe resull 6+ of Hal's silenl presenlarion of lhe apple and candy way back in our Sophomore year. Well, we'll lorger aboui Jrhal and say, good luck, Hal. ff. 'flS7'if5ff.f7ff.'pi 'ff A H' - - 95 LST-+g.1TS,l1'fT ':.. . is sr1-- H - A f l- ' ' 1 l I29 - ---f-- gi. T S ,,i,,M .. . I 1 I I 4 I I I 1 I I I A , J .jf x I ii A-an , xx fr T I Daniel J. Kelleher Donk Bronx, N. Y. BaskeTbaII I, 2, 3, 4: CapTain 4: Phi Rho Pi. BOVE is Donk. No one would imagine ThaT he hails Trom The wilds oT The Bronx, yeT he was born There in I9I I. Several years IaTer he enTered IvIanhaTTan Prep and was soon recognized as a sTudenT and a mosT promising baskeTeer. On enTering The College his name was already on every Tongue. Somebody has said oT him ThaT he gave his all To books and baskeTbaII. Regarding The TirsT iT is reporTed ThaT he Teels doubTTuI wheTher cum Iaude honors are wiThin his grasp: on The oTher hand everybody knows ThaT he has been wearing maior varsiTy IeTTers Tor years. Donk can Iook back on his record and be iusTIy proud. I-Ie has done himseIT iusTice and has done much Tor IvIanhaTTan. IT may be saTeIy said ThaT he has con- TribuTed immensely Towards placing his Alma MaTer in The posiTion she now occupies in The baskeTbaII world. I-Iis Tloor work, uncanny eye, and cool direcTion of play broughT him The honor oT being seIecTed as capTain in his Senior year. I-Ie has made a hosT oT Triends everywhere and iT is our Tond wish ThaT he may be as successTuI in IiTe as he has been aT IVIanhaTTan. I3O 6 S Tar z Tevi sive sTudy I consisTenTI5 TIiaT prog ri IGST c readers To Tall building AS essociai CorrecTIy I usually mee I We si malof Ielie This gpm.. deiliiiiionl Deiinis acquired JR eiidin. ss, .:- ' L 'Ra,..f'1'ws 'xx if W- F MXL! I, 7 llie as a was looks allier llial nsell Con- ,pies play may Dennis A. Kelleher Denny Brooklyn, N. Y. Quadrangle l, 2, 3, 43 Associale Edilor l4lg Mendelian Sociely 4: Qrcheslra 2, 3. S lar as mosl ol us are concerned, we can sum up D. K.'s college career in a lew words: leur years' sleady applicalion lo science, and lhree years' inlen- sive sludy ol lhe molion ol Meek's spheres. l-le musl be given credil lor upholding consislenlly lhe doclrine ol lhe lransler value ol lraining, which means in lhis case lhal progress al billiards lacililales Esculapian and Mendelian research. l.esl our lirsl paragraph be laken as uncomplimenlary, we shall now lake our readers lo anolher ol D. K.'s lields ol endeavor. ll is on lhe lenlh lloor ol a lall building in Duane Slreel, New York Cily. This is where his lilerary abilily shone. As associale edilor ol lhe Quadrangle, edilorials and olher arlicles came quickly and correclly lrom his pen, while his absence lrom proolreading and selling up work usually meanl a mediocre Quadrangle. We sincerly regrel lhal Denny's proliciency al pool did nol enlille him lo a major leller. Many had hoped lhal lhe inlramural program would have recognized lhis sporlg bul, evidenlly, no sublerranean smoke-screened conlesls came wilhin lhe delinilion. Dennis is going lo sludy medicine. We are sure lhal his nalural as well as his acquired lalenls will prove invaluable lo lhe success which we are conlidenl he will allain. I3l ILT E cccc ,ic Q ,3 Cl Edward L. Kennedy, BS. Luke l-lolyoke, Mass. Phi Rho Pig Band l, 2, 3: OrchesTra I, 2. 11 UKE, as he is Tamiliarly known To ManhaTTan men, TirsT saw The lighT oT day in ThaT busTling liTTle paper Town oT l-lolyoke, Mass. Feeling ThaT l-lolyoke was raTher small Tor him, Luke emigraTed across The lVlassachuseTTs borders inTo ConnecTicuT and Tinally landed aT New l-laven, a ciTy known as a greaT educaTional cenTer. AT BooTh Prep in New I-laven, l.uke's abiliTy, boTh menTally and physically, was recognized, and upon graduaTing in '28 he decided To TurTher his sTudies by maTriculaTing aT lvlanhaTTan. In biology, l.uke's progress has been rapid. ln The laboraTory The concise manner wiTh which he manipulaTed insTrumenTs showed ThaT he was The possessor oT a sTeady hand which indicaTed The making oT a greaT medical man. Luke himselT is The possessor oT a happy and clean-cuT personaliTy. WheTher he is seen in The classroom, poolroom or dorm, one invariably receives The cheerTul greeTi.ng, l-li, There, or oTher words To ThaT eTTecT. OriginaliTy in wiT makes him welcome everywhere. All in all, Luke is a regular Tellow in The True sense oT The word. We make Triends and Then we lose Them buT aT The parTing oT The ways, Luke, we wanT you To remember ThaT we hope you will aTTain ThaT which you are sTriving Tor and wish you luck and happiness in The years To come. V V v V .Ms ....,, ,,, ,,,.,.,-,s, ,yb -w!'1q 1 wgrfv-' wngfi, . NQPT' 1 ww-ff . f- --W -- N... -M. ff --, 1 . V-L.-..i ii L1,,.'L4f.T 'Tail mm.. Tal.c.'1'h-..z'ra..T.bb..T,m...:E:.,,',:T1.,,E.2s-Nfl'-.Kite af' F any one This und: W0HCler To T work. YQTI- and Clmeerfu I To Kem In our assoc buT Jim soo man in me Clealll' S'faTe: ln l1lS sl The lJesT. , T0 Jim Ernirif +0 WCC um To freed 1 1 LJ ia- T L, LJ L I U iff. A li fi1c:4'3:4f2 132 N James P. Kenny, BS. in E. Jim Bronx, N. Y. Boxing 2: K. D. C.: A. S. C. E. l3, 4l3 TransiT Club 2, 3, 4: NewTon MaThemaTical SocieTy. T clay nlyolce S lnlo F any one oT our classmaTes has earned his degree iT is Jim. The hardships ThaT llonal This undaunTed son oT lv1anhaTTan has overcome wiTh such ease has ever been a lcallyl wonder To his classmaTes. l-lis Time has been divided beTween class worlc and nighT es by work. YeT, Tiring as This double occupaTion musT seem, Jim has always shown aTTabiliTy and cheerTulness. mclse To Kenny we owe many oT The mosT memorable days spenT aT ManhaTTan. Early Sessol in our associaTion wiTh him we ThoughT ThaT This young man was noT a good mixer, buT Jim soon dispelled ThaT noTion and has since proved To be The mosT reliable man in The school. AlThough he is modesT and condescending, Jim logically and lefller clearly sTaTes his views and invariably wins his poinT. eeliul ln his sTudies, albeiT his Time is diminished by his nighT worlc, Kenny ranks wiTh Slum The besT. AlThough The Times ThaT he could possibly wiTness lv1anhaTTan men in 'li ille acTion on The sporT Tield were Tew, he has shown a deep inTeresT in Them. ulce.. To Jim no one need wish luck Tor success: Tor, endowed wiTh ThaT deTermined 'l ,' spiriT To succeed, and being giTTed wiTh a TruiTTul mind, There is no oTher paTh Tor llvlnq him To Tread buT ThaT oT success. We do, Though, wish you happiness in +ha+ success. 1 .. , lfl 1 I AJ lii -T lu! in 1.155 - ,,b.. I-f.,.,,.1-,,, . N , T I33 FW .. ., ..,, ,,,. . L . Aa .---f- --------fff-e-w- -A -'H--'-T-i ' ' ' if i ' i ! ,ie-A Ambrose E. KieTT, BS. in Arch. 3 , Amby WaTerTown. N. Y. :T ArchiTecTural SocieTy 2, 3, Vice-PresidenT 4: Man- ager oT Cross CounTry: OrchesTra 2, 3, 4: Spike Shoe Club, VarsiTy M Club: Managers Club. ERE, sTraining every nerve and muscle in an aTTempT To emulaTe The vacuous- ness oT our more popular cinema sTars, is Ambrose KieTF, someTime WaTerTown Flash. Don'T be misled Though, normally he is a somewhaT serious-looking young man, indusTrious and very sympaTheTic, given To cracking nuTs and making unexpecTed sTaTemenTs. l-le is quiTe Tond oT good mysTery sTories, can'T remember The names oT plays and movies he has seen, which is an expensive Tailing, and invariably laughs l l 4 T . 1 . L . , , T 1 I: L. 1 . 3. . A : , :. , .1 jr Fi n fi i Ai' X ' , 'f xx f aT The mosT poinTless iokes. Soon aTTer he had arrived aT lvlanhaTTan, he spenT The greaTer parT oT a year sweeping snow OTT The board Track, Then he resigned, To be called back in his senior year as manager oT The cross-counTry Team. l-le had meanwhile direcTed his aTTenTion To The poolroom, which he haunTed Tor a while, achieving some success aT The game. LaTely his inTeresT has waned wiTh a resulTanT loss oT skill, and he is direcTing his energy To oTher Tields. i I-Tis periods oT applicaTion To The pursuiT oT archiTecTure alTernaTe wiTh prolonged T sTays in WaTerTown. IT is There, in all probabiliTy, ThaT he will sp-end TruiTTul years, T conTinuing The splendid work he has done here in The pracTice OT archiTecTure and The allied arTs. , . . T I34 M O Thc ArTie A gre and grami lie was gi OT a degi young ma Wllll 5 gpg l1isTory in l lis r WGS Chose CSN be af l-low Whole-hee WOrker, 5 iflendsu Whe, lfom me dw DaT llohes-I-Y? 52E'gf-at - UOU9 Town man. ded ames uglis yedf cnlOF Tor Th 6 qea fars. The i l l ArThur M. Kling, BS. in E. ArTie Bronx, N. Y. TransiT Club: A. S. C. E.: NewTon MaThemaTical SocieTy: K. D. C. O Those who declare ThaT Good Things come in small packages, leT us name ArTie Kling as a very large repudiaTion oT This saying. A graduaTe oT STuyvesanT l-ligh School when mosT oT us were sTill in knee panTs and grammar school, ArTie decided To go To The UniversiTy oT l-lard Knocks. When he was graduaTed aTTer Taking a Tive-year course, he became The proud possessor oT a degree in lvlasTer Bricklaying and Foremanship. UnmindTul oT his Iaurels, This young man Turned aside and deTermined To combine academic Technical knowledge wiTh a greaT Tund oT experience. l-low well ArTie succeeded in doing This has made hisTory in The Engineering School. l-lis meThod oT success was so disTincTive, so reTreshingly unconvenTional, Thaf he was chosen as The mosT original oT The class. l-low well ArTie deserves This honor can be aTTesTed by anyone and everyone oT his Teachers. l-lowever, These same Teachers, TogeTher wiTh everyone oT his classmaTes will whole-hearTedly endorse ArTie Tor whaT he isp a deep, inTelligenT sTudenT, a prodigious worker, a humorous and congenial companion, and The kindesT and mosT helpTul oT Triends. WhaT persons, evenTs or circumsTances, exisTenT or imaginary, can ever keep Trom The road To success such a characTer-a characTer who combines wiTh his abun- danT naTural TalenTs and experience, The highesT sense oT courage, TruThTulness and honesTyf7 I35 sl fl, I I I I A if if I A'-Q, ,es x T552 .Ji f sf! ,435 George P. Koeck, BS. G. PenningTon Orange. N- J- BeTa Sigma: FooTbaII I, 2, 3, 4: BasIceTbaII I, 2, 3: GOIT 2, 3, 4: Baseball I: German Club I, 2, 3, 4: VarsiTy M Club 2, 3, 4: Pen and Sword: A. A. RepresenTaTive 3. NDOWED wiTh a pIeniTude oT +aIen+s, George has used Them all well. I-Iis Iceen mind coupled wi+h his sTricT aTTenTion To duTy broughT schoIasTic honors To him wiTh remarkable TaciIiTy, which he has borne graceTuIIy and modesTIy. I'-Iis aThIeTic abiIiTy demonsTraTes his unique versaTiIiTy. Four years oT exceIIence on The gridiron and basIceTbaII courT, besides his prowess on The IoasebaII diamond and goIT course sTamp him wiTh The seal oT universal approval. NOT alone Tor These quaIiTies is George so high in The esTeem oT The TacuITy and sTudenT body' buT mainly Tor ThaT innaTe manIiness and reTinemenT oT characTer so characTerisTic oT a real genTIeman. A good-naTured disposiTion and a willingness To heIp oThers won him many Triends and made his Triendship someThing To be desired and always preserved. YeT how empTy and unfinished would This characTerizaTion be To Those who Icnow him as he TruIy is, if we should TaiI To noTe ThaT he above all eIse had The proper sense oT values and how his acTions demonsTraTed ThaT he TruIy recognizes The sublime wisdom in The words, I have Ioved, O Lord, The beauTy oT Thy house and The pIace where Thy Glory dweIIeTh. I-Iis IiIce is noT The ruIe, buT The excepTion, and we acclaim iT. r l g Q f - i , . V , , ,, A ,, , ,kfuiu nf? vpn ws. 4 1:Qgi'w , if fri gf- -' 5 f N f V...--.ff ,My .1 3- ,. A ,W ,.- ,. ,. , . -..... - . .. ,...,L 1, sine. F621-.W-..,,' i'w.,,,1s,11se., 2'f., lik.. Ii f I- I T-.11 I LJ - rf: LJ ia H 5 - L, U L, I LJ I4 ,f-is if I36 M ONSID Vin'sI drawn sense And ag AT The 0 cIean coII cars and be This Iiadcney ' RdTIier in waii like 'S The kind V Who doesniq, SIG may ha, . is V besides him' un' ' 'que in H ?l3Q . ,f in-V g, L. QQ.- lm... JA' ll N ' ViTo R. LabbaTe, AB. Vin STaTen Island, N. Y. lTalian Club 2, 3, 4. ONSIDERATION. This single word sums up The qualiTies which go To make Vin's characTer. I-le is possessed oT a keen analyTical mind and a Tinely drawn sense OT humor. Coupled wiTh These qualiTies The neT resulT is a genTleman. And by a genTleman we mean one in The classical signiTicance oT The Term. AT The presenT Time There is a sTrong Tendency To call everybody who wears a clean collar a genTleman. GenTlemen, sTep on your new shine in The subway cars and beaT old women To vacanT seaTs. We do noT apply The Term To Vin in This hackneyed sense. RaTher he is The Type oT genTleman who, when you have done him a Tavor, lies in waiT like a caT unTil he can pay you back. NOT osTenTaTiously, buT surely. l-le is The kind who doesn'T keep one waiTing on windy sTreeT corners Tor a TheaTre daTeg who doesn'T look aT a picTure oT your besT girl and say, Now l'll be Trank wiTh you. She may have a nice personaliTy, buT-Z. He is willing To concede ThaT a Tew people in This world have worThwhile ideas besides himselT, and is willing To lisTen To Them-a TraiT which sTamps him as almosT unique in The presenT day world oT horn-blowers. ww--4 I-,-.Y-ew-, ,, . I' - .fr Q1 l l QW,,:vr,'---Q--if--, ,'.., ,, , , xg -,N its ,0 1 I37 John J. Ladden, AB. Mike WaTerbury, Conn. Phi Rho Pig Band I. 2. 3: Orcheffra I. 2. 3, 4: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4: ConnecTicuT Club I, 2. ARELY do we meeT up wiTh a young man who possesses The qualiTies oT Mike, ATTer spending Tour highly successTul years aT a WaTerbury High School, John J. packed up To come To ManhaTTan. Enioying The repuTaTion oT an ouTsTanding TooTball player, Mike wenT ouT Tor ThaT sporT, buT Tor reasons oT his own disconTinued The pracTice. ThereaTTer, Johnnie subsTiTuTed The repuTaTion oT a sTar in The scholasTic Tield Tor ThaT oT The gridiron. Then came his bid Tor The Band, OrchesTra and Glee Club. Concerning The TirsT Two noThing need be said, Tor we all recognize Mike's abiliTy aT The violin: concerning his TalenT in vocal circles less need be wriTTen. Mike's ambiTion seems To incline Toward The Teaching proTession, parTicularly Spanish. For Those oT us who know him we can only say he has The qualiTies ThaT make Tor success in ThaT Tield. This we base upon his ever reliable and deTermined naTure To do work when iT is To be done. This disposiTion would carry him Tar in any endeavor. ' As Tar as The social side oT college liTe is concerned, Mike is righT up wiTh The resT. Was ThaT number Yonkers 632i-M puzzling Tor a while? Oh yesl Very oTTen, Time is a reliever OT our Troubles, Then again iT can be a cause oT sorrow, which is evinced now. LeT us wish you luck, Mike, unTil we meeT again. A ' -as -.,f- --,f.-'Q-eq? Q. ,V E, lm, l ' '-fn A ...- ,...: ...f' .-Af l38 M EHOLD WesT l Hall penThox Building, From Th I DY 5VSP,fo:e The Tail. he 1 leen inTelleg gOOd'li95 Fieg A Qreai Disriqi, It Sutcegjuli hz U . ' T 'ne moh+ J.e J Us Smlffiches? I Well, J: O' GSCM-' ll WTTSLTOT IQ, x 'man ang . l 50 N lk N sas! John J. Lally, AB. Johnnie, Bing WesT NewTon, Mass. Alpha Sigma BeTa: Track I, 2, 3: Cercle Francais 2, 3, STudenT Council, Senior RepresenTaTive. El-TCLD our own Johnnie, nearesT rival To Bing Crosby. Coming To us Trom WesT NewTon, Mass., John seTTled down in The spacious quarTers of ManhaTTan l-lall penThouse and now is one oT The chosen Tew quarTered in The AdnninisTraTion Building. From The day he TirsT seT TooT upon lvlanhaTTan's campus, Johnnie was well liked by everyone who came in conTacT wiTh him. Now, Though he may be unaware oT The TacT, he is one oT The mosT popular men aT ManhaTTan. We can ascribe This To a keen inTellecT, an ever-ready disposiTion To lend The helping hand, and a Typical good-hearTedness. A greaT deal oT Johnnie's Time was spenT abouT The environs oT The CapiTol DisTricT. ls iT liTTle wonder Then ThaT The Troy and Albany Club dances were so successTul, having been honored by Johnnie's presence? T-low many oT us remember The nighT Johnnie and Two oTher lvlanhaTTan men drove l5O miles Tor one oT Poland's sandwiches? Well, John, we are approaching The parTing oT ways aTTer Tour splendid years oT associaTion in and ouTside oT class wiTh you, whom we righTly call a scholar, gen- Tleman and pal. AccepT our hearTiesT wishes Tor a successTul and happy TuTure. l39 ,, 4, , A , X V -1 Y X, ,LI ,--,,,c-,-.-,,,,,, 7,,,,,,, ,, ,,,,. .. ,... , -, , . V - . -Y ,- . U ,. -, , 1' -i U fax '7 iv. X '. i i Emanual S. Lamanno, B.S. in E. Manny New YOI'lC Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefyg Transif Club: A. S. C. E. E learn fhaf fhe purpose of a college educafion is fo develop a sfudenf men- W fally, morally, and physically, so fhaf he may live well. Manhaffan College, by graduafing Manny Lamanno, will accomplish fhis purpose. Those who knew Manny as a freshman, knew him as a quief, sfudious and unassuming lad: foday he leaves his Alma Mafer fhe epifome of whaf a college man should be. Four years of college life and work have developed lafenf characferisfics evinced by his analyfical power, his precise and correcf expression, and his refined manner. This developmenf has been confinuous fhroughouf his four years af college. All of us are lovers of sporf: mosf are specfafors, while a few are afhlefes. Manny is bofh specfafor and afhlefe, for he plays a sfellar game of foofball and baseball and is an ardenf follower of pugilism, fhough his quief nafure does nof proclaim him fo be such. Due fo fhe excessive amounf of work required by our engineering deparfmenf, Manny did nof have much fime fo devofe fo varsify sporfs. l-le did, however, make a splendid showing in infra-mural evenfs. .-f-- mmf - V -.V A , lei PM L 5 TEVE is spicuouf Music versus i0 be a virfi many high gd service work ambifion is lf, Sfeve ig of WlilCl'1, inc he is and GH inliere his Claggmafes on Occag Henfs, buf we sroused in his lf is nof in our power fo predicf fhe fufure, buf if is our wish and feeling fhaf '5SSld0m hed fhis member of fhe class of '32 may become, in fime, one of fhe foremosf of fhe many successful engineers fhaf Manhaffan College has developed. HW Well. Sfe r Ougll lewdri I imimi-iiiiifg'iifoil?i-,fff5'7if5 'iii ?7iifii7'igfQf7 ,T fs if 1 o +QQ.1 iiiii .'i'i,fi'f y I LJ l Q - M LJ lik 31 is -LU L I LJ is-A A ':fr:siLsi':s2:e'g3ff::ffLer:2fr:.a?:L'A W -Z I4O . If V- Sfephen F. -a Porfa, AB. Sfeve Paferson, N. J. lvlanhaffan lfalian Club I, 2, 3, 4, Secrefary 2. TEVE is a fypical Lafin. l-lis fiery and fempesfuous nafure malces ifself con- spicuous, especially when engaged in an argumenf wifh Redmond over Classic Music versus Jazz. Music he sfudies fo culfivafe beaufy of fhe soul, and he expecfs fo be a virfuoso pianisf. There is also a very dreamy side fo his nafure. l-le has many high ideals and will realize fhem fhrough his educafion. l-le wanfs fo do social service worlc wifh his already successful personal confacf mefhodf' l-lis greafesf ambifion is fo be a greaf feacher. Sfeve is possessed of a winning personalify and fhe courage of his convicfions, of which, incidenfally, he has a goodly number. Buf being an orafor of no mean abilify, he is seldom embarrassed in fheir defense. An inexhausfible fund of advice and an inherenf good nafure have combined fo gain for him fhe lasfing esfeem of his classmafes. On occasion, Sfeve can open fire wifh fhe sarcasm fhaf liferally wilfs his oppo- nenfs, buf fhe disarming smile fhaf follows invariably serves fo quench any anfagonism aroused in his vicfim. l-le is always ready fo ioin in or appreciafe a good Iolie. bl-Il is seldom heard felling one. Well, Sfeve, a word in parfing-lucl4 in your fufure underfakings and happiness fhrough rewards fhereof. f 'H 4. 4 H W I . V , ..... IF-f'ff1+ , c 1 i A .1 L.. l i s,: asi.fwgg2'f. ri 1 f A l4I T ! l l G x I i i 1 l l l 55 George E. Lee, B.S. in B. l , Chin New York CiTy .1 Commerce Club 3, 4. . 11 END up a cheer, STrike up The band, Tor George E. Lee, The young man ,- who neiTher chews, smokes, nor drinks inToxicaTing liquors. The girl oT his Q dreams musT have The beauTy oT Venus along wiTh The above characTerisTics, con- , sequenTly women are conspicuous by Their absence in his liTe. T Some enTer college wiTh The inTenTion oT plugging, and some wiTh no inTenTion V X' aT all. Chin was one oT The laTTer class buT in The lasT Tew years There has been a percepTible change caused, no doubT, aTTer receiving an encouraging missive and his 6 OE hails Mililrary pr0minenT Ti. He is pf Wllll an inTe liis willingneg Sludenls and VarsiTy l.eTTer in Academic Work Trom The Dean in his Sophomore year. awhkloe' 5 5 G va ' George E. has always been an ardenT Tollower oT AThleTic evenTs buT has elsewhererioy never compeTed Tor a varsiTy berTh on any oT The Teams. WiTh his general knowledge S T oT SPOrTs and naTural aThleTic abiliTy, we Teel sure ThaT if he had Tried Tor some Team inf H Cl1olasTi he would have been recognized in a shorT Time as an accomplished aThleTe. T-le com- 1, e ecl- l'li pensaTed Tor his inacTiviTy in AThleTics by spreading The dope. l-lis inTimaTes were fir Treasurer well inTormed on The currenT aThleTic and scholasTic evenTs oT ManhaTTan. HF gleGlesT 'ng Th We are cerTain ThaT if he applies himselT as diligenTly To his business acTiviTies porials ag he as he has in acquiring iTs Principles. There is liTTle doubT buT ThaT he will succeed. L O lea 0iS of Il Zrvk l-42 'N '4X'C'wQ xi-i 53,5 Joseph C. Leonard, BS. in E. Joe SouTh Fork, Pa. Class Treasurer 2. 3, N. M. s. 3, 4, A. s. c. E. 3. K. D.'C. 4: AdverTising Manager ManhaT- Jfamlei TransiT Club 2, 3, 4: Financial CommiTTee 4. Olfihails from SouTh Fork, Pa., and came To us fresh from The porTals of La Salle lNAiliTary Academy. Due To his sysTemaTic Training, he immediaTely became a prominenT figure on The campus. 0 l-le is personaliTy personified and, alfhough quieT and reTicenT, he is always ready wiTh an inTelligenT answer, backing iT up wiTh sound iudgmenT. This, coupled wiTh his willingness To help ouT, when possible, endeared him To The hear+s of his fellow sTudenTs and made Them seek him ouT for company. Joe. a sTaunch supporTer of aThleTics and social funcTions, was always on hand aT The various acTiviTies, excepT when a pressing engagemenT required his presence elsewhere. l-lis weekly visiTs To WhiTe Plains is sTill an unsolved mysTery. ScholasTically, he is righT up in The running, being The possessor of an alerT inTellecT. l-lis abiliTy To handle figures and Technical reporTs made him The choice for Treasurer for Two consecuTive years. We can place our beTs on Joe, for we have file greaTesT confidence in him, knowing ThaT he has The abiliTy To succeed in any- Thing ThaT he underTakes. We predicT a greaT fuTure for him when he leaves These POVJfGlS Of learning To supervise and mainTain The mines of The smoky ciTy. l.oTs of luck To you, Joe, and don'T forgeT us for we cerTainly cannoT forgeT you. I43 RoberT Leonard, B.S. in B. Bob Newark, N. J. Pen and Sword: VarsiTy M Club 2, 3, 4: VarsiTy BaskeTball 2, 3, 43 Baseball 2, 3, 4. ITT-T mosT oT us sTruTTing abouT The campus, giddy in The conTemplaTion oT our own imporTance, Bob Leonard sTands ouT as a reTreshing excepTion. l-le has ThaT very rare virTue oT modesTy. YeT There is no one who has a beTTer righT To selT-saTisTacTion Than This sTalwarT denizen oT Jersey's jungles. Bob is big, sTrong and handsome, while physically, menTally and morally he Towers. l-le ensnares The hoT ones around Third base wiTh The same suave grace wiTh which he glides abouT a dance Tloor. T-le has played a guard posiTion on The VarsiTy baskeTball Team Tor The pasT Three years wiTh The same sTeadiness and success ThaT has marked his scholasTic work. AlThough Bob has been a dependable and versaTile aThleTe-and is iusTly Tamous Tor ThaT reason-his populariTy resTs on Tiner gualiTies. l-lis sinceriTy and sTrengTh oT characTer have won Tor him a hosT oT sTeadTasT Triends among Teachers and classmaTes. l-le is a genTleman in The TruesT and nicesT meaning oT ThaT much abused Term-honorable, consideraTe, kind. We shan'T meeT many like him. BuT now The Time has come when The world calls him and he is abouT To answer wiTh lvlanhaTTan's sTamp oT approval. Well, good luck, Bob. To use The expression we've all used beTore, LeT's see you go. .:1.1r1 -.: , :,. .,, -ra: ' 1 - q gz- -1 ':'g5-:. 3 :ff TffTEf.QEE1iTTif2ffff'f5i7fEf ,, s aft' Ts 'L s' s ' -'a- -f--We aaa- Y-f-wwf: .L..'2Qi'.,I4....nT5i. '..1'm ' :T ' 'B .- l L ' l Lf 1 'l LJ llv Ln 5 L- lJ l.. 5 L-l l i K'-'N z...:.s1..g1fg..::i'If',..:g.....f ?'T .,..?f'j1ff'A fff1 'ii el' fr' i .W 5 HEN iT is 1 abouT The ma Tion Tor him- LOU Tepri Pf0ve H. W, discus To 59+ fi. sensaTional WY- ln spi slslrency on H hard-TighTing 9 TaShion of me , O Asa 1, hard +hings+ud. cherish as 6 li , Qenflemanly JI I, 'Q I44 .fly X ' 2, ssflr 'f 'ffffl Louis A. Lepis, AB. l-OU Jersey CiTy, N. J. Phi Rho Pi: Foofball I, 2, 3, 4: Track I, 2, 3, 4: Class Presidenf 23 Glee Club: Pen and Sword: Varsify M Club. i of He l-TENEVER Lou appears on The campus he casfs an immense shadow! Buf gh, iT is noT only his maiesfic proporfions which impress us. There is somefhing abouf The man himself which pervades The afmosphere and makes us express admira- Tion for him-iT is his dynamic personaliTy. if Lou represenfs The modern Apollo. I-lis disTincTive feafures and wonderful build he provei if. We srill marvel aT The way in which he skilfully and gracefully whirled The 1d discus To seT new meeT records. On The lvlanhaffan eleven he was a True sTalwarT. A sensafional Tackle in his firsT Two years, Lou became handicapped Through an iniury. ln spiTe of This he confinued Throughouf his college career To display con- ly sisfency on The gridiron and To inspire his Teammafes wiTh his own characTerisTic d hard-fighfing spiriT. '5 IT was as a Sophomore Thaf Lou led The desfinies of his class. l-le led in The ll fashion of The real leader, by his genfle buf firm encouragemenf. As a sTudenT his abilify was especially recognized in educafional courses. lT's a hard Thing To parT wiTh college-made friends. Buf here is one whom we shall ever , cherish as a living presence, so vivid is The impression made on us by his greaT sTaTure, genflemanly disposifion and sTerling characfer. if if iili iiiii il C iiiii ilji i'i'-121' Q5 il if C if Ui 7-M i 1 l I T4-5 I LQ .... Ee s Q3 43. 'ls A .-fn i i l l 1 Li Francis X. Lepre, B.S. , Frank New York Cify f Dramalic Sociefy I: Mendelian Socie'ry I, 2, 3, 4. RANK is one of rhose individuals who presenr a calm and unhurried ex+erior, who seem never Jro be in a hurry, and who never give any indicalion of vaulJring ambi+ion. This is, however, merely a mask Jro hide a vasi srore of love of good heallhy fun which he makes evidenl on cerlain inlimale occasions. l-le hopes some day lo slarlrle The medical world when he hangs up Jrhe sheep- skin and begins To sharpen lhe saws and bone crushers. We are sure he will Jrurn gray 'rhe hair of his compelrilors. N-Y! Mr. Lepre has evidenced his devolion To lhe Greek classics by a marked inleresl in Venus, Morpheus and Bacchus. l-le is also a sraunch supporler of Jrhalr ancienl and honorable lradilion, All men are endowed wilh ihe righl Jro live, love, and pursue rainbows. Who said Jrhal? For one greai reason all his classmares kepr Jrabs on Lep during lhe foolball season. This needs no explanalion because everyone of us is glad lo admil beauly, even on Frank's arm. Bul seriously, lei us say, Frank, +ha+ allhough our days here a+ Manhailan are over, The conclusion here is bul' a commencemenl of a prosperous, successful medical career for you. s - A .-. 'dl li L' l L3 I X---3 in l l I - l---f i- l lvl l'X X, QIIJ' V-rffQ4fff.:5ff.Q?f'ff.'13fi:lf':3 I46 IEW lhe p yOu can iuc wriler, social lior salile young man diil noi prevenl 5 QO0Cl apple. lliough his doing ga Vic Spencls mei and ' -I liis NSW pl 'l Proclivilieg, CIE .AS 5 5lUClen1 sociely of me ef19ineering wma We MH Close' asia la vis fall: Viclor J. Lo Pinlo, I3.S. in E. VIC New York Cily Quadrangle I, 2, 3, Exchange Edilor 43 Boxing 2, Manager 3: Pen and Sword 4: Glee Club I, 2: Transil Club 2, 3, 4: K. D. C. 4: A. S. C. E. 3, Secrelary 4: Newlon Ivlalhemalical Sociely 3, 4. IEW Ihe piclure, Ihen run your eyes over Ihe lisl ol aclivilies below il, and you can iudge lor yourself inlo whal calegory Vic would fall. I-le is a sludenl, wriler, social lion, and poel Iaureale ol Ihe engineering school. An aclive and ver- salile young man giving his all lor Ihe bellermenl ol his Alma Ivlaler. This, however, did nol prevenl him from being one ol Ihe boys, lor Io use Ihe vernacular, he is a good apple, always ready lor humor and anxious Io lend a helping hand, even Ihough his doing so ollen meanl hardships lor himself. Vic spends his spare lime playing bridge, viewing shows, rooling al school games, and in picking oul desirable sires lor a home. I-Iis unique melhod ol seeking his new domicile keeps him on Ihe alerl, and has developed in him deleclive proclivilies. As a sludenl he is among Ihe loremosl, Iaking his righllul place in Ihe honorary sociely of Ihe college. The Iype Ihal has crealive abilily, he will go liar in Ihe engineering world, and leave no slone unlurned Io benelil The human race. We close, wishing you much luck and success, which you cannol help bul allain. I-Iasla la visIa, Vic, we cannol say goodbye. 1 I I I I47 TUE 19.43 M.A.lBll:lJXTTANLTElll .Zi A i -WN X x-Q. 7 l 1 i i l l I l l l i A i i .1 i i l l Iwi Edward J. Mack, A.B. Ed Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Sabre Club I, 2, 35 ManhaTTaniTe. l-lAT earnesT, open counTenance is merely The reTlecTion oT The cheerful and sunny disposiTion ThaT seems To have such a magneTic eTTecT upon all Those wiTh whom he comes in conTacT. ln him we have lv'lanhaTTan's chief exponenT oT The rod and gun, and may we also add, a True sporTsman, wheTher in pursuiT oT wild game or in The varied conTesTs meT in daily liTe. Academically, we may say, he is one well-acquainTed wiTh The numerous laws and principles and oTher bool:-lore necessary To receive ThaT mosT impressive A.B. ' l-lis liTe is concerned noT wholly wiTh The presenT, alThough never Tailing To exacT Trom iT Those priceless Treasures oT experience necessary in The preparaTion Tor ThaT which sTill lies beTore him. As To The TuTure, he is inTenT upon Tollowing in The well- molded TooTsTeps oT his illusTrious dad. And ThaT, my readers, is Ed, as we lcnow him. l-lis Triendly personaliTy, his honesT, candid and Tranlc expression are as exhilaraTing as The refreshing summer breeze. Uponparling we Talce leave oT you, Ed, having only To say, success and au revoir buT never good-bye. - - --N.. ..,--, --. ,,,, . - .., vc A.. .H f.,,- ,...-:-..-,..,1.,---i-.... I . I . , I L- 1,5 , .---57w-y:v:'jyf1- Ls'-lm-ig,-r j411'1yr:Q h -' -up f 1 1 ...:,i...-rf' ...,:,' ,,.-12 ,.....,...n.12.,.f:vi ,,-v.. Y I48 N a lmriqhT Se peace and q June he will solve H .llullng The inTe acliviTies lrom WMC lhalwe do il: . ni is overshadow e llhich was proven m Sllellel' in Th ffl lcnow 6 FOOT 'hs glTireyaTde5, Oki L lleii, do lol dress C l yol 65 ' llcivei Vlng ille halls 0 -L . ill pull WIT Ill lllf same s ll M UCCSS: ind 'illi we sls WS :Cl ial all- sl. air vi '--1. l A 1 l l ,. or l ,mill John J. lvlacukas, B.S. in Arch. Mac New York Cily Archileclural Sociely I, 2, 3, 41 Track I, 2, 3, 4: -- Band 2, 3, 4, Quadrangle 3, 4: Dramalic Sociely 2, 3: Orcheslra 4. y ki gi N a brighl Seplember morn, nol so many years back, a greal rackel broke lhe peace and guiel ol our beaulilul Quadrangle. Agenl B-l2 had arrived lo solve a myslery. 'l-le has been working on lhe case lor lhe pasl lour years and in if June he will solve il wilh a B.S. in Archileclure. iii During lhe inlerim Mac has lound lime lo lake parl in many exlra-curricular aclivilies lrom which he gained no mean lame. l-le is such a jack-ol-all-lrades i' lhal we don'l know whal lo predicl lor his lulure. As an arlisl he has no peer, bul Q lhis is overshadowed by his superb abilily lo enlerlain. lvlac is a born aclor, l which was proven many limes during his slay al lvlanhallan. I-lis porlrayal ol lhe I Swede in lhe Foollighlers play broughl down lhe house, and no one was hurl. As lor dress, you can pick him oul ol a million. l-le is lhe leader ol sarlorial allire al dear old lvlanhallan. No one is sure bul we lhink il all comes lrom Bond Slreel. Whal do you say Mac? Leaving lhe halls ol our Alma lvlaler is sad, bul il is doubly sad lor us as we have lo parl wilh Mac. Yel we know lhal Agenl B-IZ will solve lile's myslery wilh lhe same success as he solved his college problems. y l l igisi131ffffffi:11?i,'i-1iT5f2 - 1 5 s ss',, ,,,, assy 6 u , 'Q 1 J ,Q P 3Ef'-Z'a-s'Lffi,. fse'1ifs.w.3iQmZ'52Q.'25L,'iif5,4Z?sL2,i1lIii I-R li l, 1 La i as-A -- I49 Joseph E. lvlalone, A.B. GO+Ch Troy, N. Y. Arnold Classical SocieTy 4: Troy Club I, 2, 3. PresidenT 4: STudenT Council Vice-PresidenT 41 lnTra-mural SporTs CommiTTee 4: Quadrangle 3, 4: ManhaTTaniTe. UCCESS wiThouT eTForT is excellenT, buT consTanT sTriving Tor success makes The aTTainmenT mean so much more. OT The Three acTiviTies oT our liTe, aThleTic, social and academic, Joe Tound all equally inTeresTing. A place Tor everyThing and everyThing in iTs place seems To have been his moTTo These pasT Tour years. lv1eThod- ical ThoughT and acTion are his ouTsTanding characTerisTics. Since The TirsT year one could realize ThaT Joe would end up a leader because oT his high-power concenTraTion and scholarly consisTency. ln recogniTion oT an unblemished scholasTic record and a developed capaciTy Tor execuTive abiliTy, Joe was elecTed Vice-presidenT oT The STudenT Council Towards The close oT our Junior year. Again, Tor The same reasons he was appoinTed Copy EdiTor of The lvlanhaTTaniTe and Thus responsible in a large measure Tor The success oT This book. College men aT all Times have been wonT To admiT ThaT aside Trom higher educa- Tional Training They acquired a someThing in Their Tour years' sojourn which was more lasTing Than books, which neiTher Time nor disTance could ever break or desTroy. I reTer To The Triends we have made. And so iT is my hope ThaT here will be no excep- Tion. To conclude, in The language wiTh which you are so Tamiliar- FaveanT superi Tuis conaTibus. T50 l. M FcleTerminaTion in maniTesTed in The The l1arcTesT oT subie. and oTlier sTudenTs. down, He erolnlem wiTlT The 55 uemallyi being amor, Elly, e is I need if, awalls I is hounc A Tien ss an allTleTe Ji: , ob , Team usl w'llTScl ' - Taskelbelj eilc 6 Pldyer and T 0ne.h lie one Thing J Orge 1, Se I u 0Wn el us wish OT You The 'ifwzs Q .ames T. lvlarinaro, B.S. in E. Jim WhiTe Plains, N. Y. A. S. C. E.: NewTon lvlaThemaTical SocieTy: TransiT Club: K. D. C. F deTerminaTion in liTe means success, Jim's TuTure is assured. This qualiTy was maniTesTed in The manner in which he Tackled The courses and The resulTs obTained. The hardesT oT subiecTs did noT phase him. l-le gaThered daTa Trom books, Teachers and oTher sTudenTs. IT is obvious, ThereTore, ThaT you can'T keep ThaT kind oT man down. l-le is bound To surge Torward and Take The lead. l-le underTakes every problem wiTh The same aTTiTude, wheTher iT be social, aThleTic or scholasTic. lnci- denTally, being among The inTelligencia oT The class does noT dampen his disposiTion any. l-le is always ready To share a ioke wiTh you or Try To cheer you up if you need iT. As an aThleTe Jim is second To none. IT is a well-known TacT ThaT if he had noT been so busy wiTh school work he would have been a regular on The varsiTy baseball Team. l-lis aThleTic abiliTy, however, is noT limiTed To baseball. l-le is an excellenT baskeTball player and a clever boxer. The one Thing Jim will Tind hard To live down is his mania oT Talking abouT ThaT one-horse Town oT his called WhiTe Plains. The Time has come now Tor separaTion so leT us wish you The besT oT luck and happy landings. l5I - IV A ' T il T 11 E MJUil2.L.A.72l45-5si-3e.5.gLL Daniel P. Marshall, BS. in E. Dan Broolclyn, N. Y. Varsily Cross-Counlry 2, 3, 4: Varsily Track 2, 3, 4: Glee Club 2, 3, 4: Newlon Malhemalical Sociely 2, 3, 4, Treasurer 4: A. S. C. E. 3, 4: Transil Club 2, 3, 4: Brooklyn-Long Island Club 3, 4: Spilce Shoe Club 3, 4: K. D. C. 4. T has ollen been proclaimed aboul lhe Quadrangle Jrhal lhe lypical engineer is an uncoulh, uncullured crealure whose chief accomplishmenls are smoking a pipe. playing bridge and playing Green and While on a slide rule. ln relulalion we offer our Dan who won a major leller, was prominenl and aclive in hall a dozen clubs, explained problems when everyone else had given up, and could pul an end lo long ballles on parliamenlary procedure by his clear-cul reasoning. None bul Daniel Palriclc could do il. Bul more can be said abour him. Among our mosl cherished memories will be lhal shower-room quarlel, wilh Dan hilling lhe low noles wilh power and feeling. We have nor begun yel, space does noi permilr us lo give you a complele piclure of our mosl dislinguished engineer. If in addilion lo whal has been said, you hear him playing a piano solo, or appearing perleclly self-pos- sessed in a Tux, or calch him flashing a mosl conlagious smile, lhen you will undersland why we are proud lo call him our friend and classmale. ll requires no slrelch ol imaginalion lo see him coolly sludying lhrough life, spreading good lellow- ship and cheer, and leaving behind him counlless friends in addilion Jro well-buill bridges, dams and lunnels. , . -. .4 l52 -W l X E S .V ya yn y 1 , ,., ,.Z,,..,..:!..-.,...L: f.. .....-.4 -25--' ' f - -: 471- l l l v l l i l l I l l l i l i l li gi ll l ll ll l gl lil HE counlenai One ol llie nl Since llie unlorlun lefifs haclc, lhey , lll'l9 Connecled W 5590 llas been, lo osee llial in lhis wmmm I Essenlially, our llllilallllfilrion will ll llill Van Corllani ll eliabil of Shir, concluding ,fha i m ldll . lills dc - lim wilh ihlollgihi elleclionwhichwe , M , '7 K -V ,.- . ., ,,,. J Ag. gf.. M A 3, ly... U .,f s.. Edgar A. lVlarTin, A.B. Ed Brooklyn, N. Y. Phi Rho Pi, SecreTary 3: Quadrangle l, 2, 3, SporTs EdiTor 4: Cross CounTry I, 3, CapTain 4: Manager Freshman Track 2: l-Tayes DramaTic SocieTy 3: FooTlighTers DramaTic SocieTy I, 2: Pen and Sword SocieTy. l-TE counTenance, my dear readers, upon which you are now gazing, is ThaT OT one oT The noTorious Three TvluskeTeers, namely, Donahue, DuTTy and lvlarTin. Since The unTorTunaTe occurrence oT Their invasion oT This noble insTiTuTion some Tour years back, They have invesTigaTed, disorganized, and compleTely muTilaTed every- Thing connecTed wiTh The school. The genTleman whose counTenance disTigures This page has been, To our minds, The leading spiriT oT The group and so we make hasTe TO see ThaT in This small biographical skeTch, a small amounT oT reTribuTion be meTed ouT To him. EssenTially, our Triend was inTeresTed in Track, or more speciTically, cross counTry. His graduaTion will ThereTore remove one oT The nighTly Trespassers upon The beauTy oT Tair Van CorTlandT 'l-lills, Tor Edgar, or as we more Tamiliarly call him, Axel, was in The habiT oT sTarTing a Training iaunT during The sunliT hours oT The aTTernoon and concluding Them laTe in The evening. l-lis accomplishmenTs in aThleTics, exTra-curricular acTiviTies, and pursuiTs sTamp d . him wiTh The label oT success in college liTe. We hope The success an genuine aTTecTion which was his loT aT ManhaTTan will Tollow him as a Tv1anhaTTan graduaTe. egg T.- 1 ani I I53 L 1 J l T H T7 l 9 T T A 1 1 evwm-o,,-.. . l 1 l y l l i l l l 4 l I 1 l John J. lvlaslropolo, B.S. Coochie New Yorlc Cily Mendelian Sociely 3. 4: German Club 3: Man- hallen llalian Club I, 2, 3, Secrelary 4. N sludying our specimen under The high-powered microscope of crilicism, il is herd 'lo discover flaws in The finely woven lhreads of loyally, inlelligence and genllemenliness 'lhal' go 'lo make up lhe excellenl pallern of John's characler. There is in John's hoarl' a soil spol lor biology and all lhe allied sciences, and il is also undorslood 'lhal' ho has sl-rong leanings Toward The hard game of medicine. Truly, 'lhoro is no beollor gnmo 'Tor John because he is a prominenl example of The kind ol' chap who gels 'lhrough on his own. l-le has ulilized many an evening pondering over his nssignmenls, lhus making cerlain of his mailer and fearless of lhe oulcome. l-le is one ol lhose lwrnve yeulhs who, regardless of lhe dilnriculr work and lhe lenglh of 'lime involved. snves dilieenlly unlil all hours frying lo locare rhe arylenoe- piglollideus inferior or superior muscles er perhaps The :ygomalicolemporalis nerve. There hnsnll been ci single nlhlelie cenlesl el hlenherlran Thar John has missed. The nwosl improbable piclure is le see some sperl genres? xiilh Joh:-im ebseniz Such combinalion el business wilh pleasure leeds le lhelr happy medium which conjures Sunshine 'lrorn lhe derkesl slindexws. Xslml belier qneliriqahions could an l l . .. CFTTUVX O ITTSGICO POSAOBN i l i l is-S T i ND now we lhe porla and sunniesl pei Having beg 'ng TH llie Prep, ldled al Manhal Rallier well was lWlCe winnel llie Privale Schf llacl- His Freg Junior il llllee Years c is leadership IE leam lo 0 years me ne of 'H Pdrling W md T337- 55m VincenT J. Mcfxrdle, AB. Vine . New York CiTy AlPl1aRS1Qma BGTGI Tfaflli l. 2. 3. 4: Cross-CounTry l. 2- 5. 4: Brooklyn-Long Island Club: Spike Shoe Club. ND now we presenT one oT The mosT likeable oT characTers ThaT has ever graded The porTals OT lvlanhaTTan-Vinnie McArdle, exclusive possessor OT The richesT and sunniesT personaliTy on The campus. D .l-laving been successTul in weaThering The sTress oT The ChrisTian BroTher's Train- 'NQ 'VY The Prep. he iudiciously, Though noT wiThouT some degree oT opTimism, maTricu- laTed aT ManhaTTan College. RaTher well known because oT his soiourn in The Prep, during which Time he Was Twice winner oT The PrivaTe Schools Cross-CounTry Championships and holder oT The PrivaTe Schools mile run record, he was easily induced To Turn his aTTenTion To Track. l-lis Freshman year proved To be mosT successTul while The Sophomore and Junior years merely served To add lusTre To his achievemenTs. The denoumenT Tor his Three years oT brillianl work came in his Senior year. ElecTed CapTain oT Track, his leadership lenT ThaT assurance and inspiraTion which so successTully guided The Team To one oT The mosT TruiTTul seasons in The annals oT Green conquesTs. ln parTing we wish him success and we hope ThaT The speed wiTh which iT Comes may be even greaTer Than ThaT which he displayed on The Track! ISS QC. i Joseph F. McCaffrey, B.S. Mag Brooklyn, N. Y. Mendelian Sociefy 2: Dramafics l, 2, 3, 41 Tennis Club I, 2, 3. QUIET, unassuming fellow, Joe soon impresses one by his vasf amounf of knowledge and his keen sense of humor. l-le has always been an excellenf sfudenf, bringing fo his scholarly pursuifs a pracfical frufh-loving mind capable of a greaf deal of comprehension and refenfion. The inferesfs fhaf have claimed him are many and diversified. To fhe sfudy of wild animal life he has given much fhoughf and may be con- sidered a bil of an aufhorify on fhis subiecf. For recreafion he prefers a game of ball, or, weafher permiffing, a round of golf. Af fhe laffer game, he has broken a hundred, and affer all, who are we fo make lighf of such an achievemenf? Realizing fhaf a forfune may be found in such a place as fhe moufh, Joe is seeking fo become a member of fhe profession of denfisfry. Wifh fhe disclosure of fhis infenfion comes fhe knowledge fhaf fhe field of experimenfal chemisfry is losing a sfudenf of promise and abilify. Buf whafever Joe plans fo do, we know fhaf he will meef wifh unqualified success. l-le has buf fo fackle fhe problem of life wifh fhe same spirif of deferminafion and perseverance so well evinced in fhe shorf combafs wifh his sfudies. The possession of a fine sense of values augurs well for his fufure. f Q' a s,,, ga fn. ,s pg, M, fi ,xi S V l Lu I U -- wi U P. 1.1 5- - LU L I U lil A ri:es:.z'.2r'.:z3,',f':vf.2m:f5.r,f':.?32r31 ry ROM across whose genial dscale of populay exlerior demeanor variely fhdf did nc Tliere are few lil? of llie 'e' Plalinq abil ng eliiOrf5 le unliri was luslll Clios en Cf l on lliil regard lo lhe WM ucourfgl Jim S lliri9 iliecllon if Shi ou al has mad 'Qual e World will I James William lVlcCarThy, AB. MGC. STaTen Island, N. Y. FooTl1ghTers DramaTic SocieTy Ig Cercle Francais 3, TGWTS 2. 3. CapTain 4: Class BaslceTball 3, 4. ROM across The Narrows where The ships go down To The sea comes a man whose genialiTy, ready wiT and consTanT good humor have ranked him high on a scale oT populariTy among his Tellows. ThaT man is our own Jim McCarThy. An exTerior demeanor ThaT somewhaT suggesTed reTicence was very misleading, because There was never a conTesT oT any sorT wheTher oT The inTellecTual, aThleTic or parlor varieTy ThaT did noT Tind Mac righT in There and holding his own crediTably. There are Tew who can TorgeT Jim's inTeresT in a slowly waning Tennis Team. T-le was one oT The pioneers in ThaT parTicular Tield oT endeavor and, aside Trom his Superb playing abiliTy, The Team iTselT mighT noT have exisTed had iT noT been Tor The unTiring eTTorTs oT his TorceTul personaliTy in iTs behalT. In his senior year he Was iusTly chosen capTain oT This Team on which he played number one. ln regard To The TuTure, we Teel ThaT having Thus Tar meT wiTh such greaT success On The courTs, Jim should mosT cerTainly become a lawyer. However, no maTTer in WhaT direcTion iT shall be decreed ThaT he shall Turn his TooTsTeps, ThaT same some- Thing ThaT has made oT him The man ThaT he is To us, shall make him a man whom our greaT world will be proud To call CiTizen. L'5,lN,ifyi:l-az-s..,l.i'.,V -Q I 2 , 5,3 fri 1-.1 ig A L,,.l.dl ,M 1 ' T '- wer- ' .1 f 1 .. ' ' I57 Lid i 1 r la! T John P. McCormick, A.B. . T Johnnie Yonkers, N. Y. , Phi Rho Ph Baseballl, 2.3, 4: BaskeTballI, 2,3, 4: Pen and Sword. , Ol-INNY came down Trom The wilds oT Yonkers, laid siege To lv'lanhaTTan Col- T lege, and became one oT iTs principal exponenTs in The aThleTic world. Jack is big league maTerial and winds up a successTul aThleTic career wiTh The capTaincy oT The baseball Team. Jack has many ouTsTanding aTTribuTes, sinceriTy, perseverance, ambiTion and a 1, 4 sTrong sense oT Tair play. Mac always gives The underdog The break, and makes The oTher Tellow like iT. Whenever lv1anhaTTan places a Team eiTher on The baskeTball floor or on The diamond, one has The TullesT conTidence and pride in The TacT ThaT l Johnny is in There represenTing his Alma, lvlaTer and doing a good iob oT iT. E A sunny disposiTion, quick smile, ruddy complexion, and Truly lrish eyes charac- I Terize Mac. l-lis personaliTy is reTlecTed in numberless Triends and Teminine ad- l mirers. BuT unless you geT a misTaken idea, Johnny's collegiaTe career is noT un- , balanced, Tor neiTher his sTudies nor his social acTiviTies have been neglecTed. i l A good sTudenT, a Tine Triend, and ever The genTleman will be our recollecTions l oT Jack. Johnny, boy, we'll be There cheering wiTh you Through liTe, and applaud- ing your success as we used To when we were college maTes. Now, as our associaTions T are To lasT buT a while longer, leT us wish you happiness. -A T 9 'iia T J A T' T T .Ti1i'Tf1gii'iii5igif'g:ifIfif1?w 1 ik L I CST I Cf: 4 IJ P5 - il LJ L 'Ti U 5:g3i.:5f1,:.5g:3i.gf:.,2:pff.g.fi:gf T 'f , l58 HATS Ed laugl Tound him To be ascholar, TOO, Ed i areThe Tinal marks, S0lJflqU9f of Lime 4 EL ease, friends, IFS agon.' This old ly lhrough rain or Snow lligbein . 9 h ol.laTe in .fhe irgvmisg quisilivel Ed bw Z I W a ls 50 H105 h AS Ed e wessarned The friend! ' 0rgeT, Ed h ' llieguard WO as be fellow 'HW of T an Edward J. McDonough, A.B. Ed Bronx, N. Y. Cercle Francais 2, 3: Class BaslceTball 4. l-lAT'S Ed laughing as usual and iusT overTlowing wiTh good humor. We have Tound him TO be a sTaunch Triend, a good pal and an excellenT sporT, and quiTe a scholar, TOO. Ed is one OT Those sTeady dependable workers whose lighTesT cares are The Tinal marks. Ed has been so prOTicienT in his LaTin ThaT he has earned The sObriqueT OT LiTTle Caesar. Who is ThaT careening madly down The avenue? Be aT ease, Triends, iT's only Ed Tearing TO our scholasTic domain in The Uncovered Wagon. This old lvlodel T has acTually endeared iTselT in The hearTs OT Ed's Triends. Through rain or snow or sleeT or Tog, The lron Horse is always a TaiThTul servanT. IT is being whispered around The Quadrangle ThaT Ed has been seen very oTTen OT laTe in The immediaTe viciniTy OT lvlounT Vernon. Well, we dOn'T wanT TO be in- quisiTive, Ed, buT whaT's iT all abOuT? As Ed is so mOdesT, we wanT TO Talce This OpporTuniTy OT Telling him ThaT he has earned The Triendship and sincere admiraTiOn OT every member OT his class. LesT we TOrgeT, Ed has been seen cavOrTing around one OT New Yorlc's besT pools as a liTeguard worThy OT The name. All in all. Ed has proven himselT To be a regular Tellow and has won our lasTing esTeem. A I59 TU E C9 s. M-A-fieeH-ATTA Nic-l25JielllZ7 'N '1 - .. :T-A Yglwi-Y'B',,Q,,f.,Q.. .. ,, -,,,, 7 1' ' i- iv- 7 ' I 1 fi 'lx fl XB - '1 be ,, X ff' 1 i l i 1 1 1 l l 1 4 i 1 1 4 2 fix fi Francis J. lv1cGinnily, B.S. in B. Frank, Mac New York Cily Commerce Club 3, 4. T musl have been a lalse impression we used lo have ol Greenwich Village, or limes have changed. For we were complelely and devaslalingly disillusioned lour years ago when inlo our midsl came a real Villager. To our dismay he arrived sans lhe black lie and llowing locks. We were slunned. Our hero lurned oul lo be nol even a dislanl cousin ol a Bohemian poel, in lacl, lhe larlhesl deparlure imaginable-anolher Irishman. Mac has lhe lypical Irish demeanor, loo, he laughs well. Heaven knows one musl be able lo laugh when laking accounling. Bul lhis. however enlighlening, is beside lhe poinl. Frank's philosophy ol lile seems lo consisl in wailing lor lhings lo happen, and lhen lelling lhem happen. Being a conlirmed oplimisl, he makes lhe besl ol everylhing. ll may be said here, lhough, lhal only recenlly were some ol his moral dillicullies explained by prolicienl bul non-prolessional advisors. Socially, Mac seems lo have had quile a lime during his slay al lvlanhallan. l-le is ever on hand lo help a lriend consume lhe evidence, and whal is more, he enioys lhe perlormance ol lhis brolherly lask. All in all, lhe complex slale ol allairs known generally as Lile seems lo be well under conlrol wilh Lillie l-larry. The lamous and lond adieu linds us happy lo have been disillusioned in our conceplion ol a Villager. it as i. .BB . BTL B B B . f . . .B B e 'if 'i'1f1e+ff, gfea.,'e.f-rss. TV' fill- f -as 1 sf- 'ff - s, ' -- . e 1 is L L 1 me S Q Vw 2.3 Vw 1. :Q if LJ l. I U les f-ss e.....Qi-g.s4cf:.1f--.se .,...r,.- 5.f:?'..4 l6O NCE more we leaded slraigl sesses, namely, law possessed by a high lnuncl in llse fall ol 'l Possesslng 6 lirn divert Ed soon gains sea, llsllliiwas one of a lies an an Organ Om bd 66 gregl -forc Ol- W e relef lo llis h llnlsoon xjglilm, w Cont ' ' 6 nf in ernmQ sulslemss C F95 down Qn I o e llanhellan Alumis ll Mr' r M- ., ., I. . -U '. . iiffr ygiigef ' ' ' ' Wi... :.,.- M..- - Edward V. lvlcgoldriclr, 5.5. Ed . D Brooklyn, N. Y. STuclenT Mission l-eague I, 3, 43 Long lsland Club l. 2. 3, Presidenlr 41 German Club 3, 4, Mendelian SocieTy l, NCE more we presenT one oT Brool4lyn's sons, who even aT This early daTe is headed sTraighT Toward ThaT classiTicaTion every secTion oT The counTry pos- SGSSGS, namely, TavoriTe sons. ln order To Till up The gap beTween The knowledge possessed by a high school sTudenT, and Thal necessary Tor a medical sTudenT, he was Tound in The Tall oT '28 among The science men. lol Possessing a Tirmness and perseverance which noThing buT impossibilijries cou dllfefi. Ed SOOn gained The respecT and admiraTion oT his classmaTes. ln his Junior year he was one oT The leading TacTors behind The successTul endeavor To give To lVlanhaTTan an organizaTion, which has since, under his guidance, Tlourished and become a greaT Torce in developing social relaTionship amongsT The undergraduaTe body. We reTer To The Brooklyn-Long lsland Club. lT is, however, wiTh a noTe OT sadness ThaT The grim realizaTion dawns upon us ThaT soon we shall no longer enjoy, nor be Tree To call upon Ed Tor his ThoughTs concerning subiecTs OT scholasTic and general imporTance. And so as The curTain flnqs down on The lasT acT oT our college lives, and we march on To ioin The ranlcs Ol lVlanhaTTan Alumni, we say To Ed: Good-bye, and good lUCl4. F7-i 'JfTfE3jLfif.f-1. W we We we 1 T A ii 'i Ly sd S l 1. U ,3 ,i lol l l l l i , , l l i I i a l l l l l l Y 1 I ,i i l .4 ,i i l i X. i. -...T me Tfilil 'm: Daniel F. McKenna, A.B. 'Dan Far Rockaway, N. Y. GolT Team 2, 3, 4: Manager Senior Class lnTra- Mural BaskeTball. AN came well prepared To lv1anhaTTan, his TaTher having paved The way back in l885. As a resulT, he is well versed in lVlanhaTTan TradiTions. Mac Thinks ThaT The college song enTiTled College By The Sea is very appropriaTe as he has lived aT Far Rockaway on The seashore all his liTe. l-le should be classed as a com- muTer, buT reioices ThaT during his Tour years oT college liTe he hasn'T missed a Trick on or oTT The campus. Since his Sophomore year, during which he helped To inTroduce golT To Man- haTTan by decisively beaTing a Team composed oT Juniors, he has been a member OT The VarsiTy GolT Team. l-le played as number Three man and won The maioriTy oT his maTches. Wherever you see Dan you also see Mike Smolak and ArTie l-leil, which TacT may be proven by The TooTball players who saw Them on pracTically every Trip. ATTer spending Three years aT PlaTTsburg as a C. lvl. T. C. recruiT, he gave iT up in order To pursue his sTudies in his Senior year. Some OT his classmaTes may have ThoughT him apprehensive in his sTudies buT he divided his Time beTween Tollowing The Teams and his sTudies. We are sure ThaT Dan will seTTle down and do well in Far Rockaway. LL ' rn T--.v f . T537 He ce lyn wiTh an T0 Tliose wr more The: Kev ng chosen VC. His ef- llls lefldiiicf' bl' hi: ' ' WST: Besij miqlf also A Vw also MNA Slowly TREK: -- Gnd gn-7,1 T Y 'N--ci me GRS? i ,MN , - I 62 ,ff wk. . - -K.. SS Kevin J. lvlcLoughlin, B.S. in E. KQV Broolclyn, N. Y. NewTon lvlaThemaTical SocieTy: K. D. C.: A. S. C. E.: Glee Club: Quadrangle STaTTg TransiT Club. LL Through our sTay aT ManhaTTan, Kev's Tall, angular Torm has ever been a Tamiliar Tigure on The campus. l-le came up To Riverdale Trom Bishop Loughlin Memorial l-ligh School in Brook- lyn wiTh an enviable record aT ThaT insTiTuTion. ln a shorT Time he Tully demonsTraTed TO Those who lcnow him aT college ThaT his preliminary school record was sure To be more Than duplicaTed in lvlanhaTTan. Kev has shown, in addiTion To an apTiTude Tor Those subiecTs relaTing To his Chosen vocaTion, proTiciency bordering on brilliancy in oTher Things. l-lis arTicles in The college newspaper are always read wiTh avid inTeresT and his rendiTion oT musical composiTions on The piano are aTTended wiTh uTmosT pleasure by his Triends. Besides being The TavoriTe ivory Ticlfler oT The Engineering deparTmenT, Kev mlQhT also be called Their TavoriTe songsTer. OT course we do aTTribuTe some praise TO The Glee Club Tor developing his voice, buT noT all. Summer sessions aT Camp GlSO helped To accounT Tor This. There Kev could be heard day aTTer day. while slowly driTTing over calm waTers in ThaT yellow rowlooaT, crooning Tunes To The Tishes. These sTerling qualiTies in Kev are sure To bring success To him in his business Gifid social liTe. We who know him will Tollow his progress wiTh inTeresT Tor a long lime aTTer This pleasanT associaTion aT college has ended. 163 E 1932 MAME i I l jk 4:3 -A fr X I 1 s ,f-gi X X 4 l l : l l l i 4 l 1 l i i H l N Eugene F. Melaville, B.S. Gene Norfh Tarryfown, N. Y. Mendelian Sociefy 47 Sabre Club l, 2, 3. ROM fhe hisforic guiefude of Norfh Tarryfown comes fhaf daring, young gallanf wifh fhe charming smile and fhe soff musical voice, Eugene F. Melaville. The lceynofe fo C5ene's popularify among his classmafes is his exfreme good nafure. l-le sfrives indefafigably fo prove worfhy of any frusf placed in him, and he will go fo fhe limif fo aid a friend. l-lis inferesfs cover a variefy of fields, ranging from fhe more serious maffers mef wifh in fhe daily pursual of his science courses fo fhe relaxing enioymenf of a good, fasf game of fadeouf rummy. Affer a sfrenuous session wifh fhe Mike he may be found following fhe course of fhe ivory balls rebounding off fhe cushions in lvlanhaffan's Amusemenf Palace. C5ene's more serious nafure enhances fhe facf fhaf upon graduafion he infends fo place himself under fhe guidance of fhe greaf god, Esculapius. Some day we will have fhe pleasure of hearing of his services in fhe behalf of humanify. Now fhaf fhese four shorf buf memorable years have drawn fo a close, we falce our leave of you, Gene, buf only for a fime, since good-bye is foo final, and so- l-lasfa Luego. Y , YY ,, , , , . , , . ,, , . , , , ...,.., , fr '41 'fr: 'u S-11 -f's -'v'f?fYT'T if . 1. . M W, , , .4 4. ' 5 ,K ,, , .,., . ,, ,,-.,, , ..-,, ,lc .. . .. . sk .M ,g . ., , , , WNV, ,,,,, . .,,- V . ,,, ,V , 5 W , . V, ...-H.--, N i - .-. -M. ,:.., - -.,...1,.,, ,-.,..-1.,,1,..,.,-Q-V . , , -' i if N--' y - .. I, ,.. h .. 1 1 I l 1 1 J x -1--' i- -'-f'--.s--1w-- F-7 -,-- 4.0-f ':..,---'A f i s.,.- '.. .J N-A '.,,f l.- - L.-' l'Ax f k 'M L.,f1,L..-rf.p-..f...1'. ..c.1.,24..,....1...4i,..5f,A .f- I64 , ,, ,, , A 4, T -welll FI l 1 l i ,Q l lil iii l 45.4 C5 H: I-S C 'S 531- - 'W - a Qrcl 4 l vhs , - GUNS. 1 , . ff r' .f . ref. Jr,----W . , '47 eiM,,g,,.1..., J .. . . ...fe - -I LN E -- .-.r , i Anlhony R. lvlerola, B.S. Buddy New York cary llalian Club 3, 43 German Club 4. Nil-IONY MEROLA, an excilable youlh, has been nicknamed Buddy by his lellow-classmales. Our Buddy. To slress any predominanl characlerislics oil his would be lulile, unless il be his sparkling wil. All ol Cardinal Newman's requi- siles ol a genlleman are his lo lhe lasl leller. l-lis unassuming air, happy-go-lucky allilude, and oplimism have endeared him lo lhe hearls ol all his classmales and associales. Seriousness has never been allribuled lo him, lor he has a remarkable sense ol humor. This was ollen shown in class. Al limes he would lhrow il inlo convulsions Ol laughler by his anlics. l-lis hobby is dancing and lollowing lhe news and evenls occurring on Broadway. The lirsl year ice having melled, he mellowed and lor lhree and a hall years never lel a day go by wilhoul speaking al leasl six words. Bul limes have changed Gnd so has Buddy. l-lis presenl solemnily is aslounding. Whal broughl aboul such a change in Buddy, we do nol know: we cannol even guess. l-lis is lhe secrelg we shall nol probe, l-lowever, Buddy will always be remembered lor his pleasanl ways on sunny daY5- Thou goesl lorlh a lrue lvlanhallan man. Good luck and happiness be lhine. TV' Hr-1 -.W. - f F gr-T-rv' Q-.--.',V,,. ,my Mg. vm , 4 - ..,. ,W-Vw H W . . if-X1....rs,3a::..g1gg'r2Q.- r i 1 .Qi 1 I65 James lvlorris, BS. Jim New York Cify Track I. ERE'S a fellow who seems fo have fhe faculfy of making friends wifh liffle or no efforf on his parf. Jim is of a quief, refiring, and unassuming nafure: has a pleasanf disposifion and has proved himself fo be a kind and undersfanding friend. These qualifies go a long way fo explain fhe many friends Jim has made among his fellow sfudenfs. Jim's frack career was broughf fo an abrupf end when he ioined fhe vasf army of college men who help Uncle Sam sorf his mail. l-lowever, Jim, during his brief career as a runner, showed unquesfionable abilify in fhaf sporf. Jim believes in keeping abreasf wifh fhe fimes, or even a liffle ahead of if, if fhaf is possible, and devofes a greaf deal of his leisure fo fhe reading of many of fhe up-fo-dafe periodicals found in fhe library. As a nafural resulf Jim is ever ready fo give an inferesfing and enlighfening falk on various currenf fopics. Jim has shown a nafural fendency fowards scienfific work, and is especially inferesfed in chemisfry, in which field he plans fo specialize. Looking back over fhe pasf four years of his college career, we feel fhaf a successful fufure is indeed assured. So long, Jim, and fhe besf of luckl I66 RANK cal College 5 willi his ever also an ambifi sense of regpo Ward from his llP5i frank is i ln an Obscure We all be we earnesfly h lesied when HC Doglish, Wm G0 d will fheosalrljclfy lhen be I U Frank J. Morrone, B.S. Frank Yonkers, N. Y. M- l- C- 2. 3. 4: WesTchesTer Club 3, 4. l RANK came To us Trom The old Prep and The ideals and cusToms oT lv1anhaTTan College are deeply moulded in his characTer. The sereniTy oT his naTure, coupled wiTh his ever persisTenT smile cannoT help buT make him a greaT TavoriTe. Frank is also an ambiTious young man. l-le is sTudious and persevering and possesses a greaT sense oT responsibiliTy. Always meTiculously dressed, his curly dark hair Tlowing back- ward Trom his manly brow, his pearly whiTe TeeTh shining Through his ever smiling lips, Frank is indeed To be envied by all oT us. l-le is a greaT lover oT books and when he is noT occupied in a Teverish game OT pinochle we will Tind him crouched In an obscure corner reading Shakespeare or GoeThe. We all believe ThaT Frank will be successTul in his TuTure medical pursuiTs and we earnesTly hope ThaT he has ouTgrown The chicken-hearTedness he so greaTly mani- TesTed when iT came his Turn To perTorm a Tew minor operaTions on ThaT individual, EO viell known To all The members of The Senior Science class, The honorable Mr. Og ish. g Good luck and Godspeed To you, Frank, and may you conTinue in The TuTure Wlfh The same invincible aggressiveness ThaT you have shown in The pasT. Success Wlll Then be YOU'-S. I67 i l I.l:LE.,.l.9. 3.11 MANHATIAJMJQLEQI 699 I W l .yy e Francis X. Mulvey, AB. Frank New York Cily Freshman Dramalics: Foollighlers Dramalic Sociely 2, 3: German Club I, 3, 4: Debaling Team I, 2. T lhe ollsel, lel me slale lhal lhere is lillle space alloled lo each senior, lhal so greal a personalily cannol be adequalely Jrrealed. E1Flecls lvlulvey is a scholar, aclor, alhlele, debalor, and general iack-ol-alI- lrades, besides being a connoisseur ol clolhes and an aulhorily in lhe arls. Such a ligure is a rarily in any college, yel Frank is nol a superman, he really does exisl. Il has been lrulhfully said lhal Ellecls has never missed a dance sponsored by any of lhe college socielies. Dancing lakes up many of his evenings. I-Ie is a skilled performer. lvlany showmen have vied lor his services, bul Frank wishes lo remain an amaleur. This soll-spoken dreamer gives venl lo his emolion in song. One ollen hears him singing melodies ol his own composilion. The besl liked of lhese is She's My I-Iypochondriac Baby, a lunelul lillle number when you hear il crooned in lhe lvlulvian fashion. Yel wilh all lhese accomplishmenls Frank is slill a diligenl sludenl. Being ol a sound philosophical mind, he ponders over lhe greal crises ol lhe day. Al presenl he is devising a scheme lor sellling lhe UnempIoymenl Queslionf' We all look forward lo lhe publicalion ol lhis paper, lor undoubledly il' will be beneficial lo all seniors in June. ' 5 1 5 , Y, W ' ' ,Arm-g 'i' 'gi - ---A--Y'---'Hgh ----- --ff-4-er, -- , --... V - .-, , --1 ... , .-, ,f x B-eq Y-vb -iq '-' we --iw 1-Q, Q .,. .,..., .M -f .,.., V, , , . ....- ., f .,. ' T' T - -A - ff ' '- --4 , , A . . , I . , ,. .I ., --.. Tl. - -nov un,:s-,f.r..,,- , ..:' 1- 1.41 ,aa-555: fx I 1 I L-J I Q wi fc? all ig 5 - L, IJ I- T LJ IJ, M in mf:ef33.i1+rt'2f'..e's?5ii1ff3f:,,ff:f:.4 LTI-IOUI limile llial human galliering M presence wo OI Ile inner US llll'OUgl1OU As mana 5CI1edule SOcial line, y slarl Ou-I now, willi . Qld SOI. Ol COur ever foo GHG Se, on 5PGei Good Fuel lee K Y-,ff ,gf ' - ' w' v'5fff.u,,1 L ,,gg,.-M-. r-Qa 'i f 'H -A ii L, ..., , . X sf .. Edward F. Murphy, AB. ITBUTQH' Newport R. I. FooTlighTers lllg l-layes DramaTic SocieTy 25 Man- agers' Club: Manager OT BaskeTballg Alpha Sigma BeTa. Lll-TCUGT-l our speaking acquainTance wiTh The Four l-lundred is somewhaT limiTed, we are ThankTul To Them Tor one Thing: They senT us Trom Newporr ThaT human dynamo and social phenomenon, Eddie Murphy. Perhaps in a large gaThering Murph mighT noT have been seen above The heads OT his Tellows buT his presence would mOsT surely be TelT. The sunshine which radiaTed Trom The depThs OT The inner man is iusT one OT The many Things which have endeared him To all oi us ThroughouT our all Too brieT sTay aT ManhaTTan. As manager OT BaskeTball, his execuTive abiliTy has been proven by The l932 schedule arranged by him, which speaks Tor iTselT. l-lowever, ThaT same execuTive abiliTy musT also be spoken OT in Terms OT Things admirably accomplished in The social line. Words Tail meg suTTice iT TO say ThaT if iT ever beTalls your happy loT To sTarT ouT nowhere in parTicular wiTh Murph, beTore The evening has come To a close wiTh Old Sol announcing The dawn OT anOTher day, you will have had a perTecT Time. OT course. on arising The morning aTTer, There may be some regreTs +ha+ Time was ever Too speedy-oh well, ask me, I know. Good luck, Murphy, and Three cheers Tor anoTher illusTriOus alumnus. 37v-lf'fs2H1'II'3i-QT , L., i i T 4 Io? 1 :lf ' ' Edward J. Murphy, l3.S. in E. Ed New York CiTy Alpha Sigma BeTag Treasurer oT Senior Class: NewTon MaThemaTical SocieTy 3, 4: A. S. C. E. 3, 4: K. D. C.: TransiT Club 2, 3, 4, lv1anhaTTaniTe. ll URPT-l, as he is also called on rare occasions, is by and large, a poliTician. As chairman OT The Board oT ElecTions in his disTricT, he saw To iT ThaT his TavoriTes received The mosT voTes. lvlenTion OT elecTion reminds one ThaT he was unanimously elecTed Treasurer oT The Senior Class, Thus demonsTraTing The impliciT TaiTh his colleagues had in his unimpeachable characTer-ThaT is, unTil he read ThaT Tamous Treasurer's reporT aT The TirsT meeTing. To vindicaTe Alma lvlaTer's lvlanhaTTan Maker oT Men we need only make Ed's acquainTance. Always dapperly dressed and bedecked in laughTerg ever willing To lend a helping hand: sensiTive, yeT quick To Torgive: everyone's Triend: a scholar and a genTleman To The TinesT degree, his pleasanT company is Torever soughT. Need we say ThaT, wi+h whaTever piTTalls oT life Ed is conTronTed, he will be cerTain To emerge smooThly and vicToriously, creaTing no ill-Teeling among his Tellow- men: Then placidly awaiTing The nexT barrier, he is prepared To demolish iT as he has oThers in The pasT? By his associaTes only one TorecasT can be made: Ed's name will RILLIANT Three our wiTh Jerry we When iT he has masTer as H19 Hmidnii Thinking and g Their anTagoniz D0 noT gf Spare he C 6 l16slceThall he social fundion :jerry b9Came -T lmmecliafely ap And be among The ToremosT in The engineering ranks in years To come. yourpafhngnwl T011 Ed is leaving The campus, buT he can never leave our hearTs or our memories. lhel 0Ther5 will Whhyou Nl l- hlsifffgq- 170 'T Nix Gerard J. Murphy, BS. in E. JSVVY. Bronx, N. Y. TransiT Club 3, 41 S. I. E. 3, 4: NewTon MaThe- maTicaI SocieTy 3, 41 K. D. C. RILLIANT, energeTic, and giTTed wiTh a Tine sense OT humor-These are The Three ouTsTanding quaIiTies possessed by This lad. ATTer Tour years' associaTion wiTh Jerry we Teel as Though we have Icnown him all our IiTe. When iT comes To books, he is in his glory. I-Iis abiIiTy To sTicIc To Them unTiI he has masTered The maTTer is amazing. Time means noThing To This young man as The midnighT oil has been burning many a nighT beside his deslc. I-Iis clear Thinking and good iudgmenT have helped many oT his sTruggling cIassmaTes To solve Their anTagonizing problems. Do noT geT The idea, however, ThaT Jerry is a boolcworm. During mosT oT his Spare Time he can be Tound on The campus or in The gym. I-Iis Technique in handling G basIceTbaII has made him a valuable asseT To The class Team. And oT course, no Social TuncTion would be compIeTe wiThouT his presence. IT was aT These aTTairs ThaT h d 'T w re Jerry became The cynosure OT all eyes. His consTanT smile and is rea y wi e irnmediaTeIy appreciaTed by all around him. And now ThaT The Time has come Tor you To leave us, Jerry, we Teel sure ThaT ' I h your paTh Throu h liTe will be one OT happiness and success, and we slncerey ope Q ThaT oThers will be blessed by your wisdom, as we have been IH our associaTion wiTh you, l7I E i C2 3 Q 1y1.Acu.uge.TjA N,!7lQE,llI Tubalcain Negron, BS. in E. Tubal Venezuela, S. A. K. D. C.: A. S. C. E. 3, 43 Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy 2, 3, 4: Transif Club 2, 3, 4, lnfernafional Relafions Club 2: lnferclass Track 2. URING fhe fall of l928, Tubal came fo us from fhe wilderness of Soufh America, wifh a slighf knowledge of English, a greaf amounf of will power, and an eager desire fo learn. l-le foiled for a year under greal' handicap, buf affer having acquired a greafer knowledge of fhe language, became acquainfed wifh fhe American mefhods of schooling. l-le succeeded in his sfudies and became a leader in his class. Now he has finished his college career successfully. In his sophomore and iunior years, he proved himself quife a surveyor, and became so familiar wifh fhe nafives living in fhe vicinify of lvlanhaffan's Engineering Camp, fhaf during one chilly spring nighf a snake came fo share his bed for fhe evening. We expecf Tubal fo go back fo his counfry and in years fo come, if ever any one of us should visif Venezuela, he will find Tubalcain a 'successful engineer, spending his days af fhe head of some greaf enferprise, and his evenings charming his many friends by fhe recifafion of his innumerable advenfures in fhe fabled caverns of Liffle Old New York. V mu V V H V W- V, My A. ,H ,,, , ,,,., . . .. ....., . . . M - .f... . V , --.,.---,-,.,.,.,K..-,W ...,.., .,,.---.,.,,,..- ,.,, - . -- - -- - - - --- -f-j V j ' ' 'jnm lg , I ' - Q . Hy, , .,., -31, 'W -- f r -N we- Q' i Q pr f.':..Q1fgi.'4Tg '1L'j'lfg'fiT.':'ZZQQ.2T'iL'.ii2T'.i 'i L L l Ln i CD ' M O 33. if is - L, U L I U 1-f. f.-2. ilc1.a:l.:2Qf.:L.:f'f....fl1...fL1..':...f'?L,. ,.Jf.Id l72 iw OHNNY-fl abouf fhe , for flue kindness, is being 5 plug, wilh a sandwich lleleared Profesf Whai Sm manner in which lie cerfainly knev liour in fha, Suk explaining ,he Biolo ri . gy everl' eve sulileclsl Jack n ine ol lns leisure worfliy one buf SONY +0 Sa y in llanneiianl al V lifbfoc X gr L... lin... -Qs John J. G'Brien, B.S. HCOWbOYH Flushing, N. Y. Mendelian Sociefy 3, 47 German Club, GHNNY-fhe wonder boy from Brooklyn has been guife a famous characfer abouf fhe college campus. l-le has been liked a greaf deal by fhe sfudenfs for fhe kindness, simplicify and obliging manner he possesses. G'Brien's greaf habif is being a plugger. You should see him siffing abouf fhe campus af lunch hour wifh a sandwich in one hand and working ouf a chemisfry problem wifh fhe ofher- he feared Professor Kenny and was nof faking any chances. Whaf Sfeam-boaf Bill G'Brien really enioyed was dissecfing fhe cafg fhe manner in which he would cuf and observe fhe caf was a fine piece of work. Yes, he cerfainly knew his biology. More fhan once we noficed him during fhe lecfure hour in fhaf subiecf, way in back of fhe room franslafing German classics. In explaining fhe reason for fhis he would smile and bashfully exclaim: l sfudy Biology every evening. Well, neverfheless, he acquired a credifable rafing in bofh Subiecfs. Jack now admifs he can converse smoofhly in fhe German fongue. In one of his leisure momenfs he composed a German poem. To our minds if appeared 6 worfhy one buf Jack is sfill waifing ifs publicafion in our college paper. We are Cowbo , will be a greaf loss fo sorry fo say fhaf our friend, beffer known as y lvlanhaffan. , ,,.,, , . ' Q 4 :J in i-- i i ---W i., , z ,im -,L ', i i V s, ,. - u , I73 , - ..,, ,.. - - - V! ' 'N V '- RoberT J. 0'Byrne, B.S. in E. Bob New Jersey BeTa Sigma: A. S. C. E.: NewTon MaTh SocieTy: TransiT Club: K. D. C. OMING Trom mosquiTo-inTesTed New Jersey To prepare himselT aT lvlanhaTTan Tor The Taslc oT making a livelihood in The world, Bob immediaTely seTTled down To The hard grind oT Tour years. l-lowever, he had noT Taken inTo consideraTion Two Things: ThaT Trom Monday To Friday is a long, long Time To sTay away Trom The End oT The Rainbow, and ThaT young men will noT allow a pleasanT personaliTy and a sense oT humor To lie dormanT. So our days oT pleasanT comradeship were soon greaTly enriched by his irresisTible and delighTTul company. Bob is quiTe an a+hIe+e and broughT an enviable repuTaTion wiTh him Trom Prep, buT being an engineer, sporT had To be sacriTiced Tor sTudy. l-lowever, in inTra- mural sporT he proved a very capable man on his class relay swimming Team. We wish you The very besT oT luck, Bob, and we hope ThaT your advancemenT in liTe will be as assured as your collegiaTe career was successTul. i OW conl friend. Sl Shea Years his re il-liefl Came inTo class f wide and ii Tenerife du, 6 SmarT oi feierrgd +0 Taul and refusi W ll ' Those ioctl lseems HQ l r ' if ,- l 74 GQ' James M. Q'Donnell, AB. Sheamus Troy, N. Y, EdiTor-in-ChieT, iv1anhaTTaniTe: Troy Club I, 2, 3, 4: SecreTary 2: Vice-PresidenT 3: Cercle Francais 2, 3, 4: Librarian 4: Class SecreTary 3, 41 Chairman Ring CommiTTee. OW oTTen do we Think oT our college liTe vecause Through iT we have come in . conTacT wiTh an excepTional sTudenT, an ouTsTanding genTleman and a reliable Triend. Such are Three dominaTing qualiTies oT our EdiTor-in-ChieT. Sheamus came down To our midsT Trom The Tair ciTy oT Troy, N. Y. For Two years his raTher quiescenT disposiTion made him known To only a minoriTy oT The class. Then came The change. Toward The close oT The Sophomore year Sheamus sTepped INTO class poliTics and carried oTT a maioriTy oT auThoriTaTive posiTions. Hence his Wide and well deserved populariTy amongsT The Seniors and underclassmen. IT anyone is unable, as yeT, To undersrand his abiliTy To mainTain a smiling coun- lenamie during or aTTer The heaT oT an argumenT remember aTTer all The deTiniTion Oi a smarT poliTician. This was Jim's aTTiTude aT all Times so ThaT oTTen he was referred To as The man wiTh The ever ready smile and million dollar blush. l-Tis only iGLllT seems To be Taking his parTner Sullivan on TreguenT Trolley car rides To Yonkers, and eiUSif1g To give Moon a cerTain address. Well Jim. as The arTing hour nears, we recall Shalcespearian advice concerning T9 Those l1Oops oT sTeel. lvlay your TuTure be blessed wiTh TorTune and happiness. I75 .I 9 .3 -:A .. . M HI T--QT, wg gg Q . o s W ..i W W c . B I C' ,L George J. O'KeeTe, Jr., A.B. George Brooklyn, N. Y. I, AIpha Sigma BeTa: I-Iayes DramaTic SocieTy I, 2, 3, Q PresidenT 4: Quadrangle I, 2, Track I, 2: Cheer y Leader I, 2, 3, 43 Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4, Brooklyn- I Long Island Club I, 2, 3, 4: Pen and Sword A SocieTy: ManhaTTaniTe: STudenT Council I. O one would deny ThaT George is The mosT widely known sTudenT in The whole A school. Those who observe Things could have aTTesTed To This sTaTemenT even I beTore The Senior Class Poll proved iT: he received The mosT voTes Tor Tive oT The 'Qu TradiTionaI class honors. A mere IisTing oT These honors Tully explains The reasons Tor his popuIariTyq BesT X37 Mixer, BesT EnTerTainer, Class OraTor, Class PoeT, BesT AcTor. The accompIishmenTs - oT no oTher Senior received so much acknowIedgmenT. These TiTIes indicaTe ThaT George is noT a one-sided individual. In TacT, Too L avid an inTeresT in Things mighT be considered one oT his TauITs. I IT social success depends upon being a good mixer Then George has already made greaT conguesTs-IvIanhaTTan, WesTchesTer, The Bronx, Brooklyn and all France 1 being aT his TeeT. The roles he played on The sTage oT SmiTh AudiTorium were varied. In some oT These he excelled, while in oThers he was The sTar perTormer. I-Iis posT-graduaTion career will be careTuIIy waTched by IvIanhaTTan men. IT will be oT inTeresT To Them To Tind ouT To whaT heighTs one wiII go wiTh quaIiTies such as Those possessed by George. Hi LQ' 7' I f'ififfiTiiQT f iff :iw T1 I- fe: I I-fi IJ :fa il 5 'fo LI L. I UT? A - . I76 I g II II I II I I I II I II I I I I ME I I ' been Q his qug never I Oi The associai Scl UFJOD TC 5UCCess ITIVT1 ouT I-Ie Teachers I We will gain few Weel We midgf We I I -4: I I I I . I Ambrose P. Q'lNleil, BS. in Arch. Amby New York CiTy Class PresidenT 43 ArchiTecTural SocieTy, PresidenT 4: AdverTising Manager. Quadrangle 4: Pen and Sword: DebaTing SocieTy: DramaTic SocieTy: lv1anhaTTaniTe. MBROSE O'NEll., perhaps beTTer known as Amby, is a sTudenT in The deparT- menT oT ArchiTecTure. BuT his many and varied acTiviTies have by no means been conTined To ThaT branch oT sTudies. VoTed class poliTician, he demonsTraTed his qualiTicaTion by geTTing himselT elecTed presidenT oT The Senior Class, a TeaT never beTore accomplished by an ArchiTecT. l-le was prominenT in The organizaTion oT The ArchiTecTural SocieTy and was subsequenTly elecTed presidenT oT ThaT associaTion. ScholasTically, Amby is up wiTh The besT oT Them, and can always be relied upon To give an answer or dispuTe af poinT. l-lis abiliTy as a speaker will insure his success should he decide To Tollow The TooTsTeps oT so many who have gone beTore him ouT oT The porTals oT lvlanhaTTan. l-le is, above all, Trank and honesT in his dealings wiTh his classmaTes and his Teachers: and his very Trankness adds To The esTeem in which his class holds him. We have our doubTs wheTher iT shall be in The Tield oT ArchiTecTure Amby will gain Tame, Tor he has a sTrong inclinaTion To poliTics, as we all know Trom The lasT Tew weeks oT our Junior year and again ThroughouT This year. We are conTidenT in predicTing success Tor Amby and as he goes Trom our midsT we wish him many happy reTurns. i . 5 . ' E H I77 l T 1 l . l T l T . T f 4 i Q5 l l l .i f, ,f if l . lgg John J. O'Neill, AB. l Tip Nufley, N. J. i VarsiTy Baseball I, 2, 3, 4: VarsiTy lvl Club 3 A 2, 3, 4, Track 3, 4. E believe ThaT John is one of The mosT sincere sTudenTs in The college. How- REF T ever, his greaT deTerminaTion in no way defracfs from his personaliTy, for can l 7 he is one of The lcindesf, and mosT genial souls we have ever had occasion To meeT. Smiiafe l T John is a very good sTudenT and achieves greaT success in The classroom. l-lis schol- or an int l - asTic record aTTesTs To The Thoroughness wiTh which he applies himself To his various he can l i sfudies. Cozy IOC BoTh on and off The campus John is one of The mosT agreeable companions one he mefl XT would wish To have. l-le is always ready wiTh a smile or a biT of wif, To The exTenT J I , ThaT one always favors his company. Besides being a good sTudenT and a fine com- def dow panion John is also nofed as a compeTenT aThleTe and a True genfleman. IT is need- Se,e W ' less To say To Those of us who follow lvlanhaTTan's aThleTic acTiviTies ThaT we consider G Tug I him one of The mainsTays whose loss by graduafion will be lceenly felT by The base- n .Gym ball Team. penswe C lie Qapab Endowed wiTh such virTues as These, iT is felT by Those of us who know John inTimaTely ThaT upon enTering his chosen profession, afTer leaving The immediafe in- How. fluence of Manhaffan, he will be more Than successful. And furfhermore he will room Gcfi make The world aT large beffer acguainfed wiTh The facT ThaT lvlanhaffan is Truly allmnmen The lvlalcer of Men. QUIT and C all Qbsfacl sniff I78 I '- l l l -6 W Michael R. Qrlandi, BS. Knockoul New York Cily Varsily Boxing Team I, 23 Dramalic Sociely li Mendelian Sociely 3, 4: French Club 2, 3: Varsily M Club. REPARED al De Will Clinlon l-l. S. and aller a briel bul successlul banking career-and noclurnal slumbers al Cily College he enlered Manhallan lo lurlher saliale his primilive inguisiliveness. I-le proved lo be a musical genius as a resull ol an inspired violin obligalo al one ol lhe class banquels. During vacalion periods he can be lound roaming aboul lhe Greal While Way, evidenlly searching lor a cozy localily lor lhe nexl science galhering. l-le is lorever relerring lo lhe lime he mel Douglas Crosby llnlercollegiale Lighlweighl Championl. Jovialily and good-will manilesled by boislerous laughler shall always be asso- cialed wilh Mike by his classmales. Being very sensilive he ellen gives venl lo his serious nalure, an ellecl ol his varied experiences. which underlies his sophislicalion and cynicism. Mike has unexplainably acquired an eccenlric obsession lor inex- pensive cigars and a phenomenal proliciency in lhe arl ol sell-delence-in lhis respecl he capably served his Alma Maler and was rewarded wilh lhe varsily M. I-lowever, his capabililies are nol only conlined lo boxing bul enler inlo his class- room aclivilies. Il his college record is an ample indicalion ol his lulure medical allainmenls, we predicl unlimiled accomplishmenl. l-le will surmounl lhe mosl dilli- cull and discouraging sludies wilh lhe same lacilily and proliciency lhal he has mel all obslacles. -, -'x, '-f-VK'--Z . -. an L., .u.....'1.N,,4Yd --' ' l79 usp 9. .J C2 .3 9- . Lx4,A41.ieigqjQA.isi 1.1.5--lll . ,Z I, 1 l l Leonard L. Palumbo, BS. in Arch. Len Tuclcahoe, N. Y. 3 Phi Rho Pi: Archifecfural Sociefy: Wesfchesfer Club 2, 3, 4: Fooflighfers Dramafic Sociefy I, 2: ' Golf Team 2, 3, Capfain 4. U WAY back in fhe fall of '28, as fhe class of '32 firsf assembled in lvlanhaffan, ' ' we had fhe privilege of having wifhin our ranks none ofher fhan Len. This friendly young fellow came down fo us fresh from fhe hills of Wesfchesfer, fhe I ' sfarfing place of mosf of fhe golf champions. lf was fhere fhaf he learned fhe I fundamenfals of fhe royal and ancienf game. And as a resulf he was influenfial in fhe incorporafion of fhe firsf Jasper Golf Team. As fhe years rolled on and fhe l sporf was finally recognized as a varsify sporf, Leonard was elecfed Capfain and led l fhe Green-clad mashie wielders fo a very successful record. l Aside from his abilif fo rnafch uffs wifh Bobb Jones, Len has esfablished l Y IO Y 1 his name as one of fhe besf archifecfs of fhe college. l-le is a leading aufhorify on classical desi n, and is ea erl awaifin fhe classical revival fhaf he has so offen Q Q Y Q ' prophesied. No maffer whaf profession calls him in affer life, we are quife sure fhaf he will 3 be a success because in him are embodied fhe qualifies of perseverance, foresighf, 5 dependabilify and courage. l As fhe parfing ways draw nigh we are forced fo bid you a fond farewell. i l l l 11:7 Q A .- T aia'i 1 ', 2. 1 - . lr - .f f. he .AM f- 1 -' '- -.. 1 ..-. We J-- - .........,,...f-- ......Y. ,- , .4- K Q N Jc favc scholasf TO cone. Oi us ur Alll elfpense GS yel- b mosf pa BY G cor Giiendfm LJSCOI-nes Oi plannj U Will in H19 on leaves Me Joseoh F. Papp, BS. in E. Joe Yonkers, N. Y. NewTon lvlaThemaTical SocieTy 3, 43 TransiT Club 3, 47 K. D. C. 2, 3, 41 A. S. C. E. 3, 41 ArchiTec- Tural SocieTy. N Joe we have The archiTecTural engineers en masse. l-le is one oT Yonkers' TavoriTe sons in a class by himselT and This is True in more ways Than merely scholasTically. A keen inTelligence, a never ceasing Tlow oT wiTTicisms, and The abiliTy To concenTraTe, makes Joe one whom we admire Tor possessing The virTues ThaT many oT us unTorTunaTely never have. AlThough apparenTly Joe is noT oT ScoTch ancesTry, he is very economical aT The expense oT The Third Avenue R. R. Company, and several bus lines ThaT have noT as yeT been hiT by The depression. Considering ThaT he has To come Trom The upper- mosT parT oT SouTh Albany, he has reduced his Traveling expenses To a minimum. By a complicaTed sysTem oT rides, changes, TransTers, and The assisTance oT a Triend aTTending a nearby college, he manages To cuT his Tare down To a poinT where iT becomes negligible. IT mighT be said in passing ThaT This is The resulT oT many years oT planning. WiTh plenTy oT ideals Tor a basis, success is assured in any Tield, buT parTicularly in The one oT his choice. So wiTh The besT wishes oT his Triends and classmaTes Joe leaves lv1anhaTTan To combaT The world, The Tlesh and The devil. -P-'-'fr-'Vx -Y M... . . N... . . ,, . I ,J I... ae 'tj 5' ,: l'f 'giii171' . T, ' :T . . . pg stfwws-Iarfrff.. ui i-'R f- i i Q A 1 LJ L i 1 1-Cb. .,- ., s.. sh., .h.....a..., '-us. . 1 -LT ' ' I I I I I , I I I 1 I I I I I ff ri I Tag' I If I I VincenT J. I3eIIegrini, BS. R I Vinny E New York CiTy Ei' German Club I, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club I, 2. I-IIS serious-minded chap, gazing aT you Trom This page, is considered by all his I TeIIow-sTudenTs a very IikeabIe person. WiTh his wiT and good humor he aIways has a smile and kind word Tor his TeIIow-sTudenT. I-Ie is a very exceIIenT sTudenT, one who will cerTainIy honor The proTession he will ToIIow. SI fi, YeT we are noT To be deceived in ThaT he is all seriousness. For in The Three pre- las.. 4,1 Wat vious years, he was one oT The greaTesT singers OT a quarTeT ThaT held Their daily sessions in The Iocker room. This singing was done chieTIy Tor The enioymenT oT his TeIIow-sTudenTs. Though we believe The medicaI proTession wiII posiTiveIy beneTiT by The enTrance I oT our eminenT co-sTudenT, we personaIIy believe he has missed his vocaTion. I-Ie cerTainIy would make a greaT radio personaIiTy, as he knows all The Technique on how a greaT guarTeT should regisTer harmony. LeT us noT be surprised if in The TuTure we Tune in on one oT Those many noTed sTaTions here in The ciTy and IisTen To The announcemenT we have been waiTing Tor- DocTor Pellegrini wiII direcT his own program. We, your TeIIow-sTudenTs, sincerely wish you a IorighT TuTure, as we know ThaT you shaII aTTain iT by hard work, persevering naTure and cheerTuIness. I82 ny w s oT mi IoyaII I s Ray 1 a Te-III his su year, Trom SubsTe E coIIeg I0 The 0ITice SCI1oIa: IT This he G A. Raymond Pennoffi, l3.S. in E. Ray New Yorlc Cify A. S. C. E. 3, 4, Transif Club 2, 3, 4, Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy 3, 47 K. D. C. 4. ROBABLY fhe mosf appreciafed benefifs of a college educafion are fhe friend- ships formed during fhe undergraduafe years. Manhaffan's repufafion as a malcer of men has no beffer exponenf fhan fhe man whose infegrify is faulfless and whose loyalfy, fried and fried again, has never falfered. Such a man has Ray proven himself. During fhe four years of associafion wifh Ray fhere was never a fime when he was foo rushed wifh worlc fo lend a hand fo a fellow in difficulfy, nor was fhere ever a sporfing or social evenf which wenf wifhouf his supporf. Due fo his inifiafive fhe Transif Club was organized in our Sophomore year, and due fo his promofion and execufive abilify if has developed in fhree years from fen members and banlcrupfcy fo an organizafion of eighfy members and a subsfanfial freasury. During fhe Senior year, when infer-class sporfs were organized fhroughouf fhe college, Ray's parficipafion in fraclc, swimming and baslcefball broughf no liffle fame fo fhe Engineers. A furfher indicafion of his abilify is evinced in fhe Regisfrar's office where he has proven fhaf exfra-curricular acfivify need casf no shadow on scholasfic sfanding. lf is wifh fhe ufmosf sincerify fhaf we wish Ray fhe success due him, and when fhis has been affained fhere are few indeed who will have surpassed him. Good luclc, Ray, and remember your classmafes in your success. l83 tn' rs I i l T .L Louis J. Persbacker, B.S. in E. Lou New York CiTy Alpha Sigma BeTa: Glee Club I, 2: TransiT Club 2, PresidenT 3, 4: A. S. C. E. 3, PresidenT 4: N. M. S. 4: K. D. C., PresidenT 4. N Louis we Tind an ouTsTanding example oT Those qualiTies ThaT lvlanhaTTan, The Maker oT Men gives To Those who come under her wings. By Tar The mosT energeTic and enThusiasTic young man oT The school, Lou's Tour years aT The college have made him a leader and sponsor oT mosT oT The engineering exTra-curricular acTiviTies. As presidenT oT The engineering class and as presidenT oT The A. S. C. E. his abiliTy has been due cause Tor us To paT ourselves on The back as having a closely unired class and an engineering socieTy which has become The sTrongesT and mosT inTeresTing oT any in The school. One mighT Think ThaT wiTh all These posiTions To Till, Lou's scholasTic endeavors T mighT be handicapped. This is Tar Trom True, Tor iT was Through his high sTanding in his sTudies ThaT he was selecTed To These honor posTs. l Socially Lou was, if noT a lion, aT leasT The closesT approximaTion To iT in school. T l-lis Tall, handsome Tigure could invariably be seen aT The more imporTanT college Q aTFairs. l WiTh such an imposing lisT oT accomplishmenTs, such a personaliTy and so much I energy and inTelligence, Lou will undoubTedly be known in The near TuTure as one T oT The leaders in his chosen proTession. We say good luck, Lou, buT will noT say A good-bye. l l -T 'lqgitijf 77 1 ifi iifffff V K TSI QE, 7712, ff if Pi it T 5 L: I LJ -f we cz M L .5 -CU 1, I U Mil I84 .f D' Dh. as ignoranT noThing ln 5 he has l During h ever pre QFEGT me upon iT ii Ed oTa ln cl 9Xcep+3On Cerlalfl le and Yield Wh behind ae . Q Edward A. Planky, B.S. in E. Ed Wheeling, W. Va. Befa Sigma: Freshman Foofballq A. A. Represenfa- five 2, S. l. E. 3, Presidenf 43 Transif Club 2, 3, 4, K. D. C. 4, N. M. S. 3, 4. D hails from fhaf liffle fown fo fhe soufh known as Wheeling, Wesf Virginia, and as ifs unofficial publicify agenf, he has done much foward fhe educafion of fhe ignoranf. Affer lisfening fo him for four years, we are convinced fhaf fhere is nofhing in New York fhaf is nof af leasf egualed by Wheeling. ln spife of his good work, Ed has fallen down in one parficular merely because he has been foo modesf fo sef himself up as one of fhaf fown's home producfs. During his sfay af lvlanhaffan, he has become one of fhe mosf-liked sfudenfs. l-lis ever presenf smile and sincere friendliness has made him a welcome addifion fo a greaf many gafherings. l-lis abilify fo creafe a favorable impression and fo improve upon if wifh fime, coupled wifh fhe capacify for quick and accurafe fhinking, assures Ed of a successful career as an engineer. ln class Ed has proved himself an alerf sfudenf wifh buf one excepfion. This excepfion occurred during his Junior year when fhe room during fhe course of a cerfain lecfure proved fo be so warm fhaf Ed was reminded of his own sunny soufh and yielding fo Morpheus had his firsf norfhern siesfa. When Ed goes back fo Wheeling, he goes wifh fhe knowledge fhaf he is leaving behind a hosf of friends who will miss fhe charms which have made him so popular. A i'e.i f VR E L I G I U - ?vlUflxES -LU L l 11 ii ' 185 i i i ri' B 1 U V . J. i l l il Edward C. Podvin, Jr., A.B. .T Ben New Yorlc CiTy Alpha Sigma BeTa: FooTlighTers DramaTic SocieTy g I: Foreign Missions 3, 4. 1 if T DWARD CHARLES PODVIN, JR., is indeed a large assignmenT Tor any one i To handle. Big Ben has been The mosT ouTsTanding Tigure on The lVlanhaTTan campus Tor if 15? eighT years. Having prepped aT lvlanhaTTan he received a cordial inviTaTion Trom The RegisTrar's oTlice in The summer of i928 and so became a member oT The wel- coming commiTTee Tor The baby class oT ThaT year. AJ Q A sTudenT oT even habiTs, his exTra-curricular acTiviTies perTain To Foreign lvlis- sions, The SainT VincenT de Paul SocieTy, and in his senior year he sponsored The CaTholic AcTion League. Ben is a sober and sedaTe individual, acclaimed by many as The mosT digniTied member oT his class. ThroughouT his collegiaTe liTe he has overawed numerous Man- haTTaniTes wiTh his proTessorial demeanor. A chemisT by inclinaTion, he devoTes many oT his spare hours puTTering abouT among his liTer boTTles and rubber hose, compounding soluTions and showing The eTTecTs oT complex concocTions To doubTing Thomases. Generous by naTure, and always a genTleman, he makes hosTs oT Triends wherever he goes. The luclc oT The good be yours! l86 Q5 Ul F won Toi hearT-Te Hi: his m0C The enTi of The C Ani Clearly .3 Oni p9VSOnal minded 'H order . We mio YOu: endeavor Angelo Ragone, BS. in B. AV1QGlO i New York CiTy Track l, 2: Commerce Club I, 2, 3, 43 lvlanhaTTan lTalian Club. UR good Triend Angelo's success aT college may be aTTribuTed Tor The rnosr parT To The TacT ThaT he is a selT-made man. Working his way Through college won Tor him This remarkable disTincTion, and we are cerTain ThaT by oTFering him our hearT-TelT congraTulaTions, we are expressing The senTimenTs oT The Class oT l932. l-Tis indeTaTigable spiriT, boTh in and ouT oT school, his unassuming manner and his modesTy were insTrumenTal in winning Tor him The Triendship and admiraTion oT The enTire class. Always sincere and ready To help in maTTers concerning The welTare oT The group, he has meriTed The esTeem and good-will oT all iTs members. Angelo was Truly an ideal sTudenT, whose abiliTy To masTer diTTiculT subiecTs is clearly evinced by his scholasTic sTanding. One does noT have To know Angelo inTimaTely To appreciaTe The charm oT his personaliTy. l-lis very appearance and mannerisms irnmediaTely suggesT a serious- minded young man whose philosophy oT liTe is To seek inTellecTual accomplishmenTs in order To become a beTTer man and a beTTer ChrisTian. We are indeed happy To know ThaT you are going To carry These high ideals inTo your chosen proTession. Since They are The basis Tor success in every Tield oT endeavor, all we can possibly ask oT you is To conTinue your splendid work. I87 ,l:L.E L 9 3 9. l3AikI3l.l-LBQIFIAJBI llljllx D7 I I I ., I I I I I I Waller J. Rako, B.S. in B. Wall New York CiI'y Alpha Sigma Bela: Ring Commillee: Manha'Hani+e: Commerce Club 2, 3, Treasurer 4: Glee Club 2, 3. ERE is a sludenl ol Ihe Iirsl rank, a gallanl young blade: a Irue and loyal friend. Wall excels in Ihal pursuil which is mosl indigenous lo collegiale surroundings. I-Ie is a sludenl par excellence -Ihal rare individual who Ihinks, nol only deeply and keenly, loul quickly and easily as well. l-Iis clear inlellecl assirnilales malhe- malics, language or philosophy wilh equal lacilily. A mosl acule brain, The abilily and will Io concenlrale, and an allilude of respecl have eslalolished him as one ol Ihe leaders ol his class. There are olher uses lor Ihe midnighl oil Ihan lor sludy, however. A goodly porlion ol il is used Io illuminale our noclurnal revelries. Wall is seldom missing from any of Ihese soirees. I-Ie is, moreover, Ihe dean of Jrhe diplomalic corps who iourney Io New Rochelle several limes weekly. Merely as an indicalion ol his versalilily, Wall does irnilalions. Emulaling four I-lawaiians is as nolhing lor him. Throw in a Swedish ski-iumper, a Tailored lap- dancer, and Ihe blue of The nighl meeling Ihe gold of The dawn and you have a dim piclure ol Wall in his more inane hislrionic momenls. I-lis quiel nobilily of characler, his slricl inlelleclual reclilude, his abhorrence of all Ihal is unclean and dishonesl, and his unswerving loyally, have won for him Ihe sincere respecl and admiralion of us all. c c I- k- - .-.,- ,, in fflfs-1.f7'.Q7lECff3iI.7af?i32 I I I I U I U -- wi LJ IA L 5. - L, U L I IJ IJ. ffl--. fiiiaigx:l'.'::g1fiaf:gsr,Qr:2:'L2eC2fJl I88 ICK fail means oi blaze of Posse OH llle lo Durir GH enviab ness fo le 9VOucl1y d for llimsel l1ello, Nick Voclliefous Nick l6SSIon5l d Wlldlever F easy going Nicho as A. Rambone, B.S. in E. Nick New Yorlc Cify A. S. C. E. 3, 4: Transif Club 2, 3, 4: K. D. C. 47 Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy 3, 4. ICK was lafe in regisfering af lvlanhaffan and has been lafe ever since, never failing fo reach his full guofa of cufs early in fhe semesfer. l-lowever, by some means or ofher he has been able fo hold on fo fhe end and usually finishes in a blaze of glory. Possessed wifh nafural abilify, Niclc's scholasfic endeavors have placed his name on fhe fop of fhe lisf wifh a minimum of efforf on his parf. During his four years af lvlanhaffan, fhis modesf son of Williamsbridge has made an enviable name for himself. l-lis good nafure and ready wif, coupled wifh a willing- ness fo laugh af himself as well as af ofhers, have made Nick fhe sure cure for grouchy disposifions. Endowed wifh a personal charm and an alerf mind he has won for himself a hosf of friends for whom he always has a ready smile and cheery hello. Niclc lays claim fo fhe mosf ardenf roofer fifle, having affended and lenf his vociferous supporf fo almosf every game during fhe pasf four years. Niclc is sfill undecided as fo whefher he will refurn fo lvlanhaffan for his pro- fessional degree nexf fall or begin fhe pracfice of his profession immediafelyg buf whafever he decides fo do we know fhaf he will confinue af fhe fop in his own easy going fashion. I89 1 l l My Edward E. RaTenni, BS. ,Fi Eddie New York caiy 1 VarsiTy Baseball 2, 3: lvl. I. C. PRODUCT oT The Prep, Eddie came inTo The Tield an ambiTious young lad, prepared To show The world The way To Tame and TorTune. Eddie is ThaT Type oT Tellow who appeals To everyone. l-le shares your ioys and sorrows in a manner beTiTTing a TaTher or moTher. Always willing To go Through greaT Trouble To do one good, no maTTer how small iT is. Eddie is no bookworm. l-le does The required work wiThouT much ado, and does iT well. T-le is noT like The one who worries over , his sTudies and uses Them Tor conversaTional maTerial. T ' V OuTside oT school, work is purely recreaTional, consisTing oT a biT oT every sporT aTTainable. To Eddie, his Tamily and home sTand TirsT. l-le believes in The saying, There is no place like home, and soon proves iT by spending mosT oT his Time There. l-le has several hobbies. Enjoys reading books. l-le will sTarT reading any book and sTop aTTer The second chapTer iT iT doesn'T appeal To him. Likes company, and loves To play hosT To his Triends aT his home, and he sure makes a perTecT iob oT iT. Does noT care To dress spoTlessly unless iT is necessary. ls Tamous Tor his , smile. When someone is Teeling blue, Eddie is The one whom They seek To rid Them- T i 3 selves oT This melancholy Teeling. P 1 S Eddie inTends To sTudy medicine. We hope you succeed, Eddie, and may you achieve unending Tame. ,V , -.,. . ..--.-. ...vf-.,. ... , Y , . , Q ,, ., ,V ,M ., ,M .fn M-.. V..-. 2 Xl, ,, ,, , l 'ii T T 2 Q! ,f i J .-- - Y il Q... Q,Q.,:7Q... f'...3 l9O DV GC Th a knee ii before Th on The I Ol dangei was oTTen school ga Tarryfown While 5Cl1olasTiQ and masTe defending l:OUf' i Chap Quick Fellow, nc amicable ,U GOOd .J I l l-larold F. Reagan, AB. Harry Yonkers, N. Y. Phi Rho Pi, Varsify Baskefball 2, 3: Varsify lvl Club. GCOD-NATURED, smiling friend, fhaf's l-larry. The beffer one knows him fhe beffer one likes him. l-larry was one of our mosf promising afhlefes unfil a knee injury ended his furfher parficipafion in varsify sporfs. Those of us who before fhis calamify remember fhe hecfic season of l929-30 will recall his acfive work on fhe Pony feam, fhaf famous combinafion fhaf so offen pulled fhe varsify ouf of danger and won many nofable vicfories. Nor was his social life neglecfed as he was offen nofed af fhe gafherings of Phi Rho Pi and ofher social unifs, including fhe school games. l-larry's social acfivifies also have a neighboring finishing school up Tarryfown way as an affracfion. While affending all dances and games he, neverfheless, manages fo keep his scholasfic sfandard well above average. l-le is fo be congrafulafed on having mef and masfered fhe infricacies of Virgil. One of l-larry's favorife pasfimes was in defending his supremacy in fhaf old Russian game of Ghosf againsf all comers. Pour years ago he came from Yonkers and fhis smiling, genial, companionable chap quickly won a lasfing place in our hearfs. l-lis fraifs vividly bespeak fhe Good Fellow, nof of fhe back slapping variefy, buf rafher of fhaf all foo rare solidly amicable fype. Good luck, l-larry-fo an afhlefe, a scholar and a fine fellow. J. 1 .nf . '- . rf' 1 iL17i.QE,j'5 s' 1'i-. ' 1 l l lql l 1,, 4 9 T-4? 1543! lllgzry as so .. T I . I i I i A X .ss I X i 1 I fi l William P. Redmond, AB. l Bill New Yorlc CiTy l 1 Band l, 2, 3, 4: OrchesTra I, 2, 3, 4. ILL enioys The disTincTion oT being The busiesT man oT The class, on or oTT The l campus. Though his energies were diversiTied over a considerable number oT exTra-curricular acTiviTies, he acquiTTed himselT crediTably in everyThing. l-lis lceenesT inTeresTs were associaTed wiTh The acTiviTies oT The orchesTra and his inspiraTion and i model, Eddie Doyle, The moderaTor oT ThaT organizaTion. OTP The campus Bill was engrossed in a mirage oT acTiviTies-commercial, social and arTisTic. l ,f In inTellecTual and scholasTic circles Bill gained considerable prominence as an 5, filf 3 554' independenT Thinker. The anTiquiTy or populariTy oT any exisTing Theories or hy- l poTheses never phased his inTerrogaTions nor consTiTuTed a barrier To TurTher pioneer- ing. l-lis serious, generous, naTive endowmenTs and habiTs oT indusTry have designaTed him as an ideal sTudenT. l-le is one oT The rare excepTions To BroTher Jasper's Theory oT sleeping wiTnesses since an occasional winlc The morning aTTer a parTicularly i sTrenuous evening never seemed To impair his grasp oT The siTuaTion. ! Bill was blessed wiTh an inTiniTe amounT oT ambiTion, buT above everyThing he aspires To become a successTul and, conTradicTory as iT may seem, an honesT lawyer i and poliTician. We expecT phenomenal resulTs Trom so versaTile, giTTed, and indusTrious a l represenTaTive oT The class oT '32, l i i - 'i H ..,., ,,,, , ' TT Ta-J M l'l -ef J lm- -J T-1 LJ l- lj l 1 fps T I92 QQ 5 ll C and Trying business re Taking The ol Tlie Cd lVl6uric f9PUTaTion impressed 5 along as on Off ih and O'Neil, subw Class be Remember? GY GnTr Carr some Fge Maurice V. Reidy, AB. Mote New York CiTy VarsiTy Baseball 2, 3, 4: Frosh Baseball Ig Class BaskeTball 2, 3, 4. ll OE is a business Type kind oT genTleman. For The pasT Tour years he has been going abouT The campus, sTudying The acTiviTies OT every organizaTion and Trying To eliciT a plan whereby he may sTep inTo each club and Take over The business reins. Our greaT wonder seems To be answering The quesTion, Why is Moe Taking The ArTs course? We shall be compelled To lisT This problem as anoTher oT The Campus mysTeries. Maurice broke ouT inTo The aThleTic spoTlighT in his Treshman year. WiTh a Tine repuTaTion as a baseball caTcher, he wenT behind The baT, donned The mask and impressed all The onlookers wiTh his sTyle oT play. Since ThaT Time he has been carried along as one oT our TirsT sTring varsiTy caTchers. GTF The diamond, Moe is Tound mosT TrequenTly in The company oT Mulvey and 0'Neil. A greaT many OT his idle aTTernoons are spenT abouT The 242nd STreeT subway enTrance, admiring Tair Taces as They make Their way To Yonkers. The Senior Class became aware oT many oT lVloe's qualiTies aT a class meeTing laTe in February. Remember? We expecT To hear Trom Maurice abouT TwenTy years hence, as The leader of some large business organizaTion. Surely he is qualiTied Tor leadership. We are conTidenT ThaT your ulTimaTe success is assured. Good Luck! K . r 'fr We .Q y.. I '.'x X I E MW l 25 L L, 1 ef il L 5 M. T l T I I I93 HF i933 ivwisiiieiwxisiTr'il 5Kimm2 John J. Reilly, A.B. Jawn New Yorlc CiTy Hayes DramaTic Club: DebaTing SocieTy: Arnold LaTin Club 4: Glee Club l. Ol-iN is a quieT and unassuming young genTleman. l-le mighT be described as a genuine scholar because he goes abouT The College in search of knowledge and remains ouT oT affairs wiTh which he is noT personally concerned. A man who has worked diligenTly aT all Things he underTool4 and has succeeded in bringing Them To a noTable compleTion. During his Tour years aT lv1anhaTTan he has made no over- Tures Tor populariTy, never soughT The limelighT To display his TalenTs-yeT he has leTT an impress on our minds because oT his calm good naTure and pleasing personaliTy. AlThough noT aThleTically inclined, he has compromised This deTiciency by being a mosT enThusiasTic specTaTor and supporTer oT all Those acTiviTies ThaT involved Man- haTTan. l-le Toolc parTicular delighT in The vicTories achieved by The TooTball and baslceTball Teams. We all believe ThaT John will succeed in life because he knows how. l-lis abiliTy To reason clearly, his TamiliariTy wiTh Timely business meThods and, mosT oT all, his impressive manner and Tinished ways will, we Teel cerTain, bring him To The TullesT realizaTion oT his mosT cherished ambiTions. Among our TuTure successes, we predicT much Tor him. 'T I94 uf QUIE oi Tl A gen' cleligl1T in 4 dlklllude of I A qenTl W fl1 his grai and lend Qenlleman G 'lo See fhe M ailed as LGF 5 Well 0 ' la UI' fl6SlinaHt lleqdrdle SS oi Lawrence F. Reilly, BS. in E. l-GUY Bronx, N. Y. Cvlee Club: Transif Club: A, S. C. E.: K. D. C.: Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy. QUIET reserve and a placidify of movemenf combine fo conceal fhe abilifies of fhis frue son of lvlanhaffan. A genfleman and a scholar is our meagre fribufe fo one whose friendship we delighf in claiming, whose profundify of fhoughf we genuinely admire, and whose affifude of prepossession we franlcly envy. A genfleman fo fhe manner born, he has given fone fo various social occasions wifh his graceful presence. A scholar himself, he has always been willing fo pause and lend a hand fo some less erudife brofher. Combining all fhe virfues of fhe genfleman and fhe scholar wifh a superbly franguil good humor and a disposifion fo see fhe world in a roseafe hue, we arrive af fhaf pleasanf personalify we have hailed as Larry fhrough all fhese years. Well, Larry, our ship has crossed fhe wafers. We have all foo soon arrived af our desfinafion. This may be fhe end of our mufual confacf, buf we hope nof. Regardless of where your fufure carries you, remember us as we shall remember you. I95 lj E l so igzzigiifill' Tri--eric? ----- cf W l-l. Jack RickerT, AB. Jack Bronx, N. Y. FooTlighTers DramaTic SocieTy I, PresidenT: Quad- rangle STaTT 3, 4: lv1anhaTTaniTe. l-TE gridiron, The diamond and The cinder Track know him noT. These are Tor men oT acTion alone, buT Jack is disTincTly noT a man OT mere acTion. l-le is a Thinker and dreamer. And, like all Thinkers and dreamers, he is honesT and sincere. And like all Thinkers and dreamers, his name will go down in hisTory associaTed wiTh a vivid picTure OT some supreme accomplishmenlr, long aTTer heavyweighT champions and TooTball heroes are Trodden under The dusT OT cenTuries. Jack is independenT in ThoughT and will Try To discover Tor himselT raTher Than accepT The dicTaTes oT someone else. l-le is Trank in The expression oT his mind. Coupled wiTh These is his uncanny TaculTy Tor evaluaTion, in liTeraTure, philosophy or The TheaTre. lT was This gualiTy ThaT made him dramaTic criTic on Thie Quadrangle, and The TirsT presidenT oT The TirsT disTincTly Treshman dramaTic socieTy in The hisTory oT lVlanhaTTan. . SomeTime we expecT To see Jack, as ever, TaulTlessly aTTired, discussing some world problem Trom The plaTTorm oT a disTinguished inTellecTual Torum. And when U UDY' boar slcin. Fellow session 5+ Ca Under liis arm cerTain Somek radio T0 Hdlural leader Has been slealing lime 1, membem of Be dlidlrs. The meeTing has adiourned we, who have gained access merely because OT our col- When nf legiaTe associaTion wiTh him, will approach To discover wheTher or noT he remembers Perlwiihhrso, The old days aT ManhaTTan. And we Teel sure ThaT The same Jack we always knew lSin5eaSOnl Sll will smile and clasp our hands in sinceresT cordialiTy. ' lil Plans fo re, , PLDM VN i .3 l lc,-' ' l-.J 3 '1 Q ' .fkj l, I lvl fi-xx F 196 T NN Edward P. Ruddy, l3.S. in E. Rl-ICly Richmond I-Iill, N. Y. Bela Sigma: Newlon Maihemalical Socielyg K. D. C., Transii Club: Band I, 2, 3: Orcheslra 2, 3, 4. ll UDYH carries his name in his complexion. Noled ever since he ioined lhe boarders' ranks in '28 for using lhal soap which helps one keep Jrhal youlhlul skin. Fellow engineering classmaies gave him Jrhe name Rudy during summer session al Camp in Sophomore year when he appeared one day wilh a saxaphone under his arm. Began Jraking lessons seven years ago, slill Jraking Them. Col on a cerlain somebody's nerve because of conslanl praclice and Jrhal parly donaled a radio lo him. Though a Senior, shaves only once each week. Looked upon as a nalural leader by his classmalesp never had any difiicully passing any exam. l-las been raled one ol Jrhe besl billiard players in Jrhe Senior Class. Enjoys slealing lime from engineering lab lo run oil a few racks. One of lhe mosl aclive members ol Bela Sigma lralernilryg has never absenled himself from any of ils social affairs. When noi around lhe campus may be found slrolling lhrough Van Corllandl Park wilh his side-kick Q'Byrne, or else on our Jrennis courls praclicing whalever sporl is in season. Never a prominenl alhlele bul indulges in all branches of alhlelics. Plans lo relurn here again for his advanced degree. Good luck, Eddie! I97 l. . - , LP' fs' ' QA- as fN- a ,, l- 1 --of-f::.1 I VicTor A. Rush, B.S. in E. Vic Bronx, N. Y. BeTa Sigma: A. S. C. E. 3, 47 TransiT Club 2, 3, 4: NewTon MaThemaTical SocieTy 3, 4, K. D. C. 4: Swimming Team 3. AVING assimilaTed everyThing available aT lvianhaTTan Prep, he scaled The heighTs OT Jasperville in search oT TurTher enlighTenmenT, and Trom The day he TirsT Trod The Quadrangle, Vic has been a True lvlanhaTTan man in every sense OT The word. Our Tour years' associaTion wiTh Vic has been a pleasanT one, To say The leasT. We Tound him an amiable, alTruisTic, and energeTic young man, wiTh a smiling greeT- ing Tor all. The RegisTrar's oTTice will aTTesT To The TacT ThaT his scholasTic sTanding during his college career has been excepTionally high. In spiTe oT This, however, Vic has been very acTive in social and exTra-curricular acTiviTies. l-le has ever been a popular Tigure aT all oT lvianhaTTan's social evenTs, and besides having won a berTh on The swimming Team, he has been very acTive in inTer-class acTiviTies. Vic has surely aTTained ThaT ideal ThaT so many men sTrive Tor in vain: populariTy combined wiTh excellence in boTh scholarship and aThleTics. We know ThaT anybody who has been able To accomplish so much aT college will mosT assuredly reach The pinnacle oT success in TuTure liTe. So iT is and now we say goodbye and good luck, Vic, and as Time goes on we shall be waiTing To hear Trom you and also To see your name TrequenTly appearing in all noTed engineering periodicals ThroughouT The counTry. I98 ER P The Coll wiTh all fellow Cl The swirr Science, IIDO lliese fou HCYH hai Popularifi ins- Wg and fhair game hui Vepori Ca, lliose Who have .sc l iii? Ag: U, i Q, 44,511 ,W Wg, nk., -5-1' , ' 4ffff-'C 1 '3 fl: Cero L. Sambuco, BS. HCYH New York CiTy lTalian Club 2, 3, 4. ERE we have a Tinished ManhaTTan genTleman. Cy was graduaTed Trom our Prep school in The summer OT '28 and in The Tall OT The same year enrolled in The College. Having been around The place long beTore he became acquainTed wiTh all The secreTs oT college liTe, he acTed in a raTher superior manner Toward his Tellow classmaTes. However, aT The close oT The Freshman year he gradually goT in ghe swim wiTh The resT oT us and ThenceTorTh became a popular member oT Senior cience. Do your besT and never worry seems To have been his moTTo ThroughouT These Tour years. Ever smiling and ever ready To help a Tellow scienTisT in ChemisTry, Cy has won a place in our hearTs. Perhaps The one greaT reason Tor his wide pOpulariTy is his never Tailing To bring aT leasT Two newspapers To college every morn- ing. We mighT sTaTe here ThaT There is only one Thing he does wrong consisTenTIy and ThaT is billiards. ATTer eighT years oT pracTice one should be Tairly good aT The game buT Cy is an excepTion. BUT he malces up Tor This by receiving a Tlawless reporT card each semesTer. Those oT us who have associaTed wiTh you Tor eighT years TogeTher wiTh Those Who have known you These Tour, send you oTT inTo The world wiTh hearTiesT wishes. I99 I I I j . ref , I I I I I I I I II I I I II. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I , ,I II II I II II I I I 'I I Il I I I I I ,I I I I I I I I ly' I ij FL3 Q, fljejslgj TIE ,UI A .ohn R. Schmidf., B.S. in B. I Johnny New Yorlc Cify Baslcefball I, 2: Commerce Club 3, 4: Sophomore Vigilance Cornmiffee. UST an easy-going person is Johnny. Alfhough af fimes he becomes pessimisfic, fhis affifude is nof usually long-lived: for in fhe Commerce Course, one can always fear away from one's inner self by indulging fiendishly in a balance sheef escapade. I-leaven knows John has indulged. In facf he is fhe perfecf example of 's fhe survival of fhe fiffesf. QI Smiffy has a soofhing influence on his friends. One is always posifive fhaf John won'f perplex fhem wifh profound speculafionsg his conversafion acfs as a balm, a summer breeze. Buf for all fhis quiefing influence, John has one oufsfanding dis- figuremenf-his musfache. I-Ie insisfs fhaf since childhood fhaf parf of his lip has been subiecf fo severe sunburn in summer, and frighfful frosf-bife in winfer. And so, his ferfile brain and his equally ferfile lip produced fhe parasol. During parf of his sfay af lvlanhaffan, Johnny has combined business fheory wifh pracfical applicafions, his serene demeanor fhus belieing a frue indusfry wifhin him. And if is fhis indusfry and perseverance which malce us anficipafe accomplish- menf for Johnny. This success we mosf hearfily wish you. .- . ,.-- .... ,... .. , , Y -f--- -A-.-. -.H--I .w..... -.,. -..,-, -.,, -.Q -Y.. g . , . ,. . , f--'-3' ' r' fv-'-'H' I ' - - .. I .... I - '- -A.. I... f ,,',.,. .-.,,.,., , :.,-, .. . f .I I . .. I P' I' I . LJ I LJ - I -- - .N I I I I I I I 200 ILL is one I-Ie has e Iemporari a freshman, by Iurned his eng denf, now no pleasanf memo All of BIII' his pride' devoi usly man, dexfro acfivifies are H h . UIIIQ have be cl To avoid aI a - - . ss acfIvIIIe5 , I C' fo lc is aready sped fied' i' A' ' ' 'N' -- ' - 1 '--V ' x.f I b ..-W...-. .,,..-'FL ,..-.ALJ .wtf ,,.-fiL....4d......kL,,...nt.. ,aL ...div A , I imislic, 19 Cdll sliee? iple Oi Jolfl balm. - l f ip lla: xml 50' lheflfl willllll 110llSll' KJ f-va 'K' Qi Effifgfl P' . .. - ,,,,,,, rf-, .0 V... ., . l William S. Shary, 3.5. in Arch. Bill Bronx, N. Y. Archileclural Sociely l, 2, 3, 4. ILL is one ol lhe youngesl members ol lhe gradualing class. l-le has always been lhe ideal sludenl-guiel, modesl, capable and induslrious. Temporarily deserling his characler, Bill allained considerable noloriely, when a lreshman, by praclicing on his lrumpel in lhe old locker room. Bul evenlually he lurned his energies lo more worlhwhile and charilable endeavors. The whole inci- denl, now no longer a painlul realily, is lenderly relegaled lo lhe calegory ol pleasanl memories. All ol BiII's weaknesses are marilime. l-lis sailboal is lhe obiecl ol mosl ol his pride, devolion and energy. Almosl any week-end he can be seen proudly and dexlrously manipulaling her iusl oll Long lsland Sound. Ol course, all associaled aclivilies are likewise indulged in promiscuously. Swimming, rowing, lishing and hunling have become as inlegrally a parl ol him as his innale love ol lhe sea. To avoid any erroneous impressions il musl be emphalically slaled lhal Bill's class aclivilies were nol enlirely divorced lrom lhe more genleel occupalionsg lerpsichorean, arlislic, elc. Bill's lield is archileclure. And il we are lo lake lhe word ol lhose who oughl lo know, his nalural gills in lhal direclion, coupled wilh his general characlerislics already specilied, desline him lo go a long way in his chosen lield. 2Ol i fl 'I 'ITF ILIQIWE I M 'I I-I. Dardis Simmons, BS. in Arch. Tige New York Cify Class Foofball I, 2: Rhode Island Club I, 2: Archifecfural Sociefy I, 2, 3, 4. AVIN6 spenf four evenfful years af lvlanhaffan, I-luberf has acquired an exfraor- dinary grasp of fhe principles of archifecfure. To really appreciafe his abilify one musf know him infimafely and be associafed wifh him as only his own classmafes have. Looking af fhe ofher side of 'I-lu's life we find he does nof spend all his fime bending over a draffing-board. On Friday affernoons, af fhe complefion of fhe week's work, we see him hasfily preparing for a week-end frip, usually several hundred miles from Jasperville. We never found ouf exacfly whaf fhe week-end affracfion mighf be, buf mosf of us have now reached a conclusion fhaf is nof hard for anyone fo arrive af. Alfhough finding liffle fime fo parficipafe in afhlefics, I-lu has always given whole-hearfed supporf fo fhe Jasper feams. I-lis is a well-known figure af all fhe games, no maffer how far afield. I-lis hobby is fasf driving and as a consequence he holds all speed records befween Providence and Manhaffan. I-laving been vofed fhe Besf Archifecfn in his class we feel confidenf fhaf I-lu will rise fo similar fame af Sf. l.uke's in Ghenf where he infends fo confinue his sfudies. 202 0 7 wer fhe cam nof even Gel him We which on Qllddran Hllesf All Gen. One of H dlemafic 5 dfibgl-e Ihe exprej for me X ful me my l mljg ASQ .,.' , , ' .HA Q Eugene J. Simons, A.l3. Gene New York Cify Fooflighfers Dramafic Sociefy I, 2: Hayes Dramafic Sociefy 3, 4, Debafing Sociefy 2, 3, 4. G you, dear reader, fhe above phofo is nof fhaf of Paul Whifeman. We, foo, were deceived when we firsf feasfed our eyes upon Gene as he saunfered abouf fhe campus on regisfrafion day four years ago. As he himself offen declared, he is nof even a relafive of fhe music maesfro. Gene came fo us direcf from Manhaffan Prep. In fhe four years we have known him we have found him a polished genfleman possessing all fhe higher qualifies which one would expecf fo find in a fypical Brofhers' boy. We musf recall fhe Quadrangle selecfions for fhe various posifions in fhe Senior Poll. lf chose Gene as Besf All-around Man and we righfly believe he deserved if. Gene's favorife diversions are in fhe fields of dramafics and debafe. l-le was one of fhe young men responsible fo a greaf exfenf for organizing fhe Freshman dramafic sociefy-fhe Fooflighfers. ln forensic circles he is equally prominenf. ln a debafe wifh a neighboring college fhis year, Gene was uniusfly accused of using fhe expression, God save fhe working girl. Since fhaf fime he has been fhe buff for many supposedly humorous remarks from his classmafes. l-lowever, being a faifh- ful member of fhe B. S. O. A. lifroop Bl, he fakes fhem in fhe righf way. As a lasf word, Gene, lef us wish you happy days. 203 J. Read Smifh, AB. Read Brooklyn, N. Y. Tennis 3, 4: Track I, 2, 3, 4: Fooflighfers I, 2: Hayes Dramafic Sociefy 3, 4, Vice-Presidenf 3. HIS suave young man sfarfed his very popular career by dancing his way info fhe hearfs of all Manhaffanifes, four years ago, in fhe Boarders' Minsfrels. Since ifhen, Read's popularify has grown fo such an exfenf fhaf lvianhaffan will be e'er K long minus one of her brighfesf lighfs. In afhlefics, J. Read has acguiffed himself admirably, having been one of fhe sfars of fhe frack feam for four years: a member of fhe fennis feam for fhe lasf fwo years: and a member of various ofher afhlefic feams. ln dramafics he has made a name for himself as an acfor and fheafrical manager. T We undersfand fhaf Read has chosen law as his profession. Wifh his charming personalify, ready smile, and his inexhausfible wif, he is bound fo rockef fo fhe fop of fhis vocafion. Alfhough we are glad fo know fhaf Read is really sfarfing on his walk of life, we hafe fo have him leave our midsf. We hope fhaf his graduafion won'f mean fhe end of a friendship fhaf has grown so sfrong in fhe pasf four years. So we say fo Read: Farewell, and we wish you all fhe happiness and luck in fhe world. To ourselves we say: There goes a real friend and a frue lvlanhaffan man. 204 l made N he we fhe ru me-nfs II SXplor of fhe PUShec Gffracl Vi him, Silidund and sir life, mfg Waller J. Smilh, A.B. Wall New Yorlc Cily Albany Club l, 2, 3, Presidenl 4. ES, lhis is Wall. The possessor ol lhal sparkling personalily which has endeared him lo his hosl ol lriends al lvlanhallan. l-lis good cheer and hearly wil always made him a welcome addilion lo any galhering. Wall came lo us lrom lhal already lamous seclion, lhe Albany Dislricl, where he was known as a genlleman, lriend and scholar. Al lvlanhallan he polished up lhe rural roughness lhal is lhe nalural resull which comes by living in secluded sellle- menls and loday can lay claim lo being lhe example ol a lrue cosmopolile. GZ, as he is called by some, may be counled upon lo lake lhe place ol lhe explorers ol yesler-year. Many limes has he led his band on lorays along lhe shores ol lhe l-ludson as lar norlh as Albany, bul here, deserled by his associales, he ollen pushed on alone lo lhal wilderness called Scheneclady. l-le has never divulged lhe allraclion, bul we have our suspicions. lWhal lime is il, Wallffl Wall leaves us wilh lhal same inherenl good nalure wilh which we lirsl mel him. Moreover, lhe parling ol lhe ways lends a louch ol sadness al losing such a slaunch lriend. Goodbye sounds a lillle harsh so we will iusl say au revoir, Wall, and sincerely wish lhal nolhing bul success and happiness be yours in lhe game ol lile. 205 . . . -1-- -M if W V' Y Izliizzic- 1 Lili,--5:1111 :L-3:53 lfffrr. --rr g:::::1:.:-.::::.:-::z: 'f.: A--W-we-W--V he H-ff ' ' f - l l i l l i l l l E l if -. l T i If f al l i i , l f . f i li l ,I Michael J. Smolak, AB. Mike Yonkers, N. Y. Cross-CounTry I, 2, 3, 4: Track I, 2, 3, 4: WesT- chesTer Club. F according To a cerTain legend, all evenTs in liTe are TabulaTed in a large heavenly volume, The auThor musT have a severe aTTack oT wriTer's cramp Trom Tollowing Mike during his Tour years aT ManhaTTan. And we refer only To his good deeds. When Mike enTered our ranks we aT once considered him as a young man who would spend Tour years sTudying and doing noThing else. BUT we were wrong. As soon as The Sophomores began To haze our classmaTes Mike broke loose. More Than one member oT The preceding graduaTing class will remember how Mike helped To keep The '32 banner umcurled. Our asTonishmenT was increased when we saw Mike answer The call Tor cross- counTry. LiTTle did any of us realize ThaT This acTiviTy was his TavoriTe hobby and now we congraTulaTe him, Tor he rode iT well. In The line of scholasTic endeavor Mike always mainTained a high rank. l-low- ever, The pomp and heraldry of noTorieTy Tinds no lure Tor him. l-lis quieT and unas- suming person wends iTs way wiTh unpreTenTious sTeps. ModesTy makes him a lime- lighT dodger. To a genTleman in every sense we bid adieu. And as we look beyond The haze of promised years we can readily visualize him Supremum apud homines, Tor he will prove as able and repuTable a leader as he has proved an earnesT and TaiThTul Triend. S' HET sTalw Junior ye many oThi palafial h len poinTs We n Hudson Ca lion 1-O H16 l H The admirably, Subiecf unl lle fffsi ihi There gladudlion, Owifdg U51 'spinlu l far ,L gp, TKKQ3-f'i:5f'a A , 206 -.X L Dominick F. Spina, B.S. Hsplnu New York CiTy M. l. C. 2, 3, 4. HE TirsT Two years oT our college liTe were spenT wiThouT associaTing wiTh This sTalwarT son oT moTher science. Spin ioined our group as we began The Junior year and losT no Time gaThering Tor himselT a hosT oT Triends. Like very many oTher college sTudenTs, Spin began spending his leisure momenTs in Meek's palaTial hangouT and aTTer a year's pracTice was able To spoT his buddy, lvlerola, Ten poinTs in a game oT billiards and win ouT, wiTh ease. We musT here and now give Thanks ThaT Dominick was The owner oT a splendid l-ludson car which aTTorded more Than one member oT The lvl. l. C. wiTh TransporTa- Tion To The college each morning and To The spring picnics oT The organizaTion. In The classroom, Dominick's quieT and reserved characTerisTics are displayed admirably. Possessed oT an unyielding spiriT, he is one oT Tew who can work aT a subiecT unTil iT is successTully compleTed. l-lence his name will be Tound amongsT The TirsT Third oT his class. There is no Telling how long we shall waiT beTore hearing Trom Spin aTTer graduaTion. l-le aspires To a noble proTession and his noble characTerisTics will go Tar Towards enabling him To realize his ambiTion. Now ThaT you are abouT To leave us, Spin, The class oT '32 Takes opporTuniTy To send you oTT wiTh a cheer. 207 as - A. NFB. ,. f ZS., , Z fs? is rr ff., Edward R. Sullivan, AB. Ed New Yorlc Cify Class Baslcefball I, 2. NE of fhe happiesf memories of our college days will be fhaf we shall carry wifh us from lvlanhaffan memory of associafion wifh Ed. l-le is one of +he exemplars of fhe Manhaffan spirif, a prince among his fellow classmafes as well as fhe chap who never failed fo offer you assisfance when you needed if. Ed is a fel- low who will always be a sincere friend fo fhose who lcnow him well. l-lis oufsfanding qualify is sincerify. Underlying fhis is a sparlc of convivialify which can only be aroused by being sincere wifh him. I-lis chief fraif was reliabilify in his supporf of everyfhing fhaf concerned lvlanhaffan. Ed was righf fhere in baclc of if. l-le was dependable, frusfworfhy and frue, a real good friend and nof an imaginary one. l 1 W do of his sfe ning we share his We i fwo y , elfaincp, l . fo If success af college is any criferion for success afferwards, we have no doubf ' lsucces buf fhaf we shall be faking our molardifficulfies fo Edward R. Sullivan, D.D.S. How- Thouc ever, if would nof surprise us fo see Ed waving a bafon in fronf of a firsf-rafe foe Shar' orchesfra. greair qui Now fhaf fhe fime has come for all good friends fo parf, we are sure fhaf fhe menfioning college days have leff a lasfing impression wifh you. l-lere's fo your good forfune Ami and success, Ed! Don? forgef usp we cannof forgef you. assuri OL ng yr happiness. rsss 1 i 208 HIS' E N951 5- wf-ld 'X,4.?nF: 'L- i plb-Q Leo lvl. Sullivan, A.B. Moon Newporl, R. I. Alpha Sigma Bela: Pholo Edilor Manhallanilep I-Iayes Dramalic Sociely 3, 4, Rhode Island Club I, 2, 3, 45 Class Presidenl 3. f WAS iusl Iour years ago when Moon came over lhe mounlains and sellled down amongsl us. Since Ihal lime we have come Io a lhorough realizalion ol his slerling gualilies. The name Leo Iypilies him Io perleclion. From The begin- ning we have Iound him Ihe possessor ol a lion's hearl and al all limes ready lo share his possessions wilh his Iriends. We were ralher slow in recognizing his capacily lor leadership, having wailed Iwo lull years before elecling him lo one ol lhe highesl posilions a sludenl could allain-Presidenl ol Ihe Junior Class. Now we lake opporlunily lo congralulale him lor successful and splendid rnanagemenl. Though some may be unaware ol il, Moon has a high scholaslic slanding due To a sharp inlellecl and a prodigious memory. In addilion lo These, he holds lhal greal gualily of consislency, inlelleclual and malrerial. Then we musl noi Iorgel menlioning he is a mighly line baskelball player and an exceplional lracls slar. Allrhough enough has nol been said we musl conclude lhis lribule by sincerely assuring you Jrhal lhe whole class wishes you deserving rewards-success and happiness. 209 i fi Li i ig if Qi fi 1 if fi c' lx fl . l 4 l , . i l ix L l I 1 i William P. Swiff, B.S. in E. ,...,,M fax , Newf Bronx, N. Y. 2, Glee Club: Transif Club: A. S. C. E.: K. D. C.: A Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy. E5 CR four years Bill's abilify fo grasp a difficulf subiecf has held fhe admirafion l' and envy of all his classmafes. Bill has fooled many a professor wifh his seeming S absfracfion, his deceiving show of inaffenfion. l-le has ever been able fo enfer info when diversion during a lecfure, and fhen answer sagely any quesfion whafever fhe accon professor chose fo puf fo him, much fo fhe professor's asfonishmenf. For a whole f may U year he seems fo pay liffle affenfion fo a course of sfudy, buf when fhe marks are of H1 ifjfff posfed, we never find fhaf Bill has failed. Nobody seems fo have been able fo ,E . fafhom Bill's secref. liiilgiililnl 9 This menfal agilify, however, is by no means fhe mosf sfrilcing nor fhe greafesf By of Bill's qualifies. No, indeed. When his picfure arises in our minds years lafer, we par shall see him wifh pipe in his feefh, a humorous fwinlcle in his eyes, circulafing among for Jr draffing fables, commenfing wiffily, observing philosophically, laughing hearfily. hi ' l-lis humor helps him and his associafes fo enioy life in ifs fullness. m m Whafever may be his lof as years go by, Bill will always be happy. Perhaps if is me Sc fhis. more fhan any ofher characferisfic, which marlcs him for success in every deparf- Se' pu menf of life. We all owe Bill much for feaching us fhe fufilify of fhe blues. The heecie man wifh fhe smile wins, sGYs Bill. And Bill does. yeasios' 5 E ly V M. .J .M ...MQ 2lO Q ll I 'alion iminq A inlo - The vliole 5 are le io aiesi -I we nON9 ifilly- H is nail' lrrhe ,-1 1 f 4, Joseph M. Thesz, BS. in E. Joe New York CiTy TransiT Club: OrchesTra l, 2: Band 3: K. D. C. 4: S. I. E. 3, 43 NewTon lv1aThemaTical SocieTy 3, 4. l-lE adage ThaT small men make noise in an inverse proporTion To Their size, is exempliTied very emphaTically by our good Triend Joe. This is parTicularly True when playing bridge. Joe Talks a marvelous game. Aside Trom This TaulT Joe's accomplishmenTs are many and varied. As a sTudenT Joe musT be commended. l-le was always righT up aT The head oT The class, and he guarded his posiTion wiTh iealous pride. l-le had a pracTice oT making beTs wiTh his Triends ThaT he would secure so many A grades and so many B grades each semesTer. lncidenTally, Joe was never known To lose a beT. By no means are Joe's TalenTs resTricTed To The classroom. l-le is a musician. par excellence, having played The violin in The college orchesTra, and The cymbals Tor The band. l-le owns a saxophone, and alThough he cannoT play iT, iT aTTords him much amusemenT, inasmuch as iT is a marvelous noise-producing insTrumenT. So goes TorTh inTo The world This noble characTer, well equipped To engage in The pursuiT oT liTe, liberTy, and happiness, and To demand oT his Tellowmen, in The selecTed Tield oT his endeavor, The recogniTion warranTed by The qualiTicaTions which he possesses, and which disTinguished him as a sTudenT and as a man during his Tour years aT ManhaTTan. Good luck To you, Joe. Ikrjfiy Ffnj. 'F Zll .f 1 9,43 0. Qguggljggggm 1 Tail!! John E. 'I'oIniTch, BS. Jack Rome, N. Y. 3 Mendelian SocieTy I, 2, 35 Quadrangle I, 2, 3, 4. GENEROUS hearT, a cheerTuI counTenance, a likeable personaIiTy, TogeTher wiTh his non-sophisTicaTed ardor and general easiness oT aTTiTude Toward a scienTiTic curriculum, besT depicTs This lad Trom The TooT-hills oT The Adirondacks. As lab. assisTanT, Johnnie prevenTed many serious caTasTrophes and Thoroughly impressed upon TuTure chemisTs The poTency oT concenTraTed acids.. Much crediT musT go To John Tor his abiIiTy To keep up in his sTudies while holding several posi- Tions in various secTions oT The ciTy ThroughouT his college career. V I-Iis college IiTe aTTorded him many expIoiTs and Tours and his knowledge oT The IvIeTropoIiTan area is asTounding. We doubT ThaT he ever read I:ausT, neverTheIess, excerpTs Trom his diary would do iusTice To Pepys himselT, and his Iachrymose anec- doTes, coupled wiTh his daily readings oT Winchell and I-Iellinger, make up Tor such omissions. We mighT menTion also ThaT The Glee Club is To be consoled in Their loss- They mighT have had a very promising Tenor, had They noT decided To abandon reciTaI Tours oT The sTaTe. Our recollecTion oT him will never grow dim, and his mosT cordial greeTings which were a sooThing balm Tor our woes, will leave us wiTh mosT pleasanT memories oT a remarkably Tine Tellow. Good luck, Johnnie. .Y 'gi ., I I .- . . -f?I2 argum GVTS cc TI Joe. him Io' which IT Sweene beneTiT if hg W ' w 'S 5 pal We know SCIIOQI I Irlend 1 luck, JO S ri l sax, l i l Joseph J. Toner, AB. Joe New York Cify Alpha Sigma Befa, Quadrangle 3, 4. ERE we have fhe brighf-faced, red-headed boy mosf people call Joe. Nof very opfimisfic, buf we can be guife cerfain he never admifs defeaf in an argumenf. Sfarfing as a sfudenf in fhe school of engineering he soon decided fhe arfs course fo be fhe besf guide for his vocafion. There can be nofhing buf success for one endowed wifh fhe characferisfics of Joe. For four years fhe never-ceasing effervescence of his wif and humor has made him loved by all. l-le was conspicuous by his wif during Professor Meelcs lecfures, which Joe never missed regardless of circumsfances. lf is guife hard for us fo forgef fhe greaf argumenf befween Joe and Professor Sweeney in Sophomore Social Science. Joe did remarkably well in explaining fhe benefifs of fhe war elephanfs used by l-lannibal. Yef even fo fhis day we all wonder if he were given credif for fhaf lengfhy recifafion. Well, fun is fun, and Joe abounds wifh if. Buf he also has a serious side. l-le is a pal fo all of us and a frue man. Loved by us all we feel a rush of sadness when we lcnow fhaf our daily confacf wifh him has ended. Some of us hope fo be in law school wifh you. We shall always remember you in your happy, smiling manner, a friend fo all, an enemy fo none. Whaf beffer could be said of any man? Good luck, Joe. ' rj iP 'Qg? 'fJ-f 19ff 5f,fi3?'ZF J.-'21-' as-1 :x'1 ': 1 .- Y - -5-7' fr ff ii fiiifii 119 i i'ii. 1ffi7iS... -. inf-li Egg- 5 jj-ml LY., wwf, - vlgg ,-,IHA -fm,,,-51.1, - . va,y,Y-M,'vA Wg, I mb. W- r KW rig., Y ,,,,, ., Y ,..., . z .-'Y - ---- Hi- -3 Q '11, , U xi' W - A ' , Q I y l-'-. ig 1. I in 1 HJ f X L- J sf '--5 l- l A 2 l 3 'Y' . Ji ii AugusT S. TorTorelli, B.S. Gus WakeTield, N. Y. lTalian Club I, 3. 4. PresidenT 4: Mendelian SocieTy I, 2, 3, 4: German Club 3. HE pleasing personaliTy and winsome ways oT Mr. TorTorelli have been maniTesTing Themselves on The campus since his enTrance To lvlanhaTTan Tour years ago. AlThough independenT in many respecTs, iT is evidenT ThaT Three Things have domi- naTed Gus ThroughouT his sTay aT lvlanhaTTan. l:irsT oT all, an old ChevroleT abouT which he was opTimisTic enough To Try consisTenTly To make The SpuyTen Duyvil Parkway hill in Third speed. Secondly, his mania Tor skulls oT which he is The proud possessor oT approximaTely Ten, ranging Trom ThaT oT a cow which once Trod The Tor- Torelli pasTures in WakeTield, To ThaT oT a canary which used To bring liTe and gaieTy To The TorTorelli household. Finally a cerTain Radio girl who has noT as yeT promised, buT who mosT cerTainly will in I942. Gus aspires To The noble proTession oT medicine To which he seems To be well adapTed in every deTail. l-le has a wonderTul knack OT delving inTo inTricaTe deTails and arriving aT general conclusions in all The courses ThaT are required Tor The medical proTession. Being so well adapTed and having in his possession such a pleasing personaliTy, There is no doubT ThaT he will in due Time Take his place among Those sons oT lvlanhaTTan who have Tollowed The medical proTession as a career and who are leaders in Their parTicular' Tield. - -A -...fx -..W -.,.. -.,..- N., ., ' f Q 'J 2--'. rl 1 ZI4 5 rega ouT. Toug lisTer The i a cle OT a when his Ti Y On V lUTurf Perhe FGTQ T ranifesling ears ago. ve domi- el alnoul 1 Duyvll 9 proud he Ior- gaiely misecl. 0 be icalf? ' for gucli GCG 5 6 Cf J. Richard Vander Puffen, B.S. in E. Dick Brooklyn, N. Y. Cross Counfry I, 2, 3, 4: Track I, 2: A. S. C. E.: Newfon Mafhemafical Sociefy: Transif Club: Spike Shoe Club: K. D. C.: Brooklyn-Long Island Club. BOVE all fhings, Manhaffan fhe Maker of Men develops in her producfs a spirif of Ioyalfy and cooperafion rarely encounfered in fhis cynical age. In fhis regard, she received a head sfarf wifh Dick and fhe resulfs could nof help buf sfand ouf. In fhe Iaborafory or Iecfure room, while performing experimenfs or affer a fough sfruggle wifh daf ole debbilf' Sfrucfures, many a beleaguered classmafe has Iisfened grafefully as wifh characferisfic direcfness, he cleared up some poinf which fhe insfrucfor's more fechnical language Ieff obscure. Nor wifh fhis same need for a clear explanafion in view, would he hesifafe fo requesf of fhe professor explanafion of a sfafemenf beyond his own grasp. This spirif of Ioyalfy colored his four years of cross-counfry. From his firsf race, when as a Freshman he broughf in fhe winning score againsf fhe Fordham Frosh, fo his final bow as a Senior, he was wholehearfedly a feam man. We have no beffer way of iudging fhe fufure, says fhe proverb, fhan fhe pasf. On whaf has gone before, we expecf fo see Dick promofing somefhing new in fhe fufure. Perhaps if will be a radical deparfure from previous engineering pracfice: perhaps if will be nofhing more unusual fhan a new confracfing company. Af any rafe we're beffing on if already. . 1 215 3 9-D i I, I 1 2 i I i I iii? if , Richard J. viiiamii, AB. I I Dick Florida, N. Y. Beia Sigma: Dramaiic Sociery I, 2: Glee CIub I I, 2, Orchesira I, 2, 3, 4: Band I, 2, 3, 4: Baseball Team I. 'YA, boy! is The +ypicaI greeiing Io expeci from Ihis srurdy naiive of Ihe 1 prospering Iown of Florida, N. Y. Inciden+aIIy, Dick is exiremely proud of his home Iown. I-Ie is one of Ihe I,5OO in ir ar preseni-or maybe one or Iwo more have moved Ihere recen+Iy. In his freshman year he wenr oui for Ihe baseball Ieam and was good enough 1.3 is', Io earn his numeraIs. Along wiIh Ihis, Io Ihose who know him, Dick Ieaves IiIIIe Io X be desired in The fields of baskeIbaII and swimming. OnIy because Dick found ir necessary Io work ai nighlr in order Io pay expenses, was Ivianhaiian deprived of 'rhe services of a versarile arhlere. His Ialenrs, however, are noi resrricied Io arhlerics, as has found suicficienr spare Iime Io be a member of The band, orchesrra and gIee cIub. In fact Dick is IikeIy Io insisi' upon singing a song for you ar any Iime wiIh Ihe sIigh'res+ provocarion. HnaHy,as we knew hhn,IDkk was one ofrhe besIIWed and numr popuhr men in his class. I-Iis smile, cheery conversaiion, and aIIruisIic aIIi+ude Ioward his cIass- mares made his presence desirable everywhere. We wiII remember him as a founrain of generosiry, a model of Irusiworihiness, and a Irue friend-one deserving of Ihe +iIIe-Manharian man. fJffQiwDi4i i TDD fffDifD:fiiifQDM DUiEf77f7iffiifiiflfiffff?f2fTfflSEQT5QgQfi3 I ii 1 i 1 wwQiag5HpULi UvwAn3UQQQQmQQuH 3 . ZI6 O golde I excire oiher I. fT1OI'IVi perieq Io Wa abiliiii T Iion, G OH suc IIGI'Ura Ti his SCI' Won Ol CIO wig Q lle ,500 iuqli 3 lo gl il l ol pare lcely Tien ass' lair' lhe XC! Thomas D. Virgilio, B.S. in E. TOFFI Bronx, N. Y. A. S. C. E.: K. D. C.: Newlon lvlalhemalical Socielyg Transil Club: M. I. C. OUR years al Manhallan, and yel only lhose who aclually came in conlacl wilh Tom knew lhal back ol his apparenl lacilurnily and humble modesly lay a golden lreasure ol knowledge and a winsome personalily. Tom is one ol lhose enviable persons lo whom worry is a slranger, and who exciles our ungualilied admiralion by lhe unconcern wilh which he laces exams and olher nighlmares ol college lile. Il Tom had spared himsell al any lime lrom sludies, nine oul ol len limes lhe molive was alhlelics. Tom has displayed surprisingly ellicienl alhlelic abilily. The perlecl ease and skill wilh which he manoeuvred in all lields ol alhlelics was suliicienl lo warranl a lry al any varsily sporl, bul Tom remained salislied in limiling his abililies lo inlerclass aclivilies. There is one obslacle lhal prevenls Tom lrom becoming whal is lermed a social lion, and lhal is his complele avoidance ol lhe lair sex. I-le claims lo be indillerenl on such mallers, bul lhal air ol indillerence has been assumed merely lo cover up a nalural shyness. Tom will be remembered lor many lhings bul moslly lor his ardenl loyally lo his school, lo his class, and lo his lriends. l-lis unassuming, placid, sincere manner won our lasling respecl and admiralion. We hope lhis is nol good-bye, Tom, bul we do wish you good luck. v-154.--...V -W,-.---, .,..-Y ,,...., ....,.-.-- ,.,.., . . -. . Q i-L-gqiv:----,fs---. c.,,. ,.f. ..,...7..,., .,u X 1 3 I i 5 I f i i i is pi i ZI7 , . l i l l f,i 1 O L fs ,-5. ,..,R V K4 v l Eugene P. Walsh, 5.5. in B. Gene Bronx, N. Y. Alpha Sigma Befa: Commerce Club 2, 3, 4: Glee Club 2, 3: Freshman Baslcefball: Manhaffanife. ERE fhere picfured above, insfead of fhe genfleman of fhe blond hair and high forehead, fhe famed Thinker, even fhen we would recognize Gene Walsh-medifafor, lifferafeur, leader infellecfual. From fhose expecfanf days of Freshman sfrife when we firsf came fo lcnow him -ludicrously garbed, and on fhe Chapel sfeps, declaiming a sifuafion equally ludicrous-unfil now, he has remained fhe foremosf exponenf of fhe medifafive arf in his class. Gene is well-read, an admirer of classical liferafure, buf moreover, one who appreciafes. l-le has a frue sense of values which so few of us possess, and if is probably because of fhis fhaf his opinions have been soughf confinually. lnfellecfual developmenf, however, is by no means Gene's only claim fo promi- nence. l-lis afhlefic endeavors have cenfered around baslcefball and baseball, having previously been a member of fhe famous Prep combinafion a few years baclc. ln fhe social whirl, Gene is found occupying a posifion no less commanding. Resorfing humbly fo French for a momenf, we mighf well sum up our characferizafion by saying, savoir vivre ef savoir faire. Success may be viewed spirifually and maferially. Gene has achieved fhe all- imporfanf kind: fhe ofher will follow. Our wish on parfing is from friend fo friend wifhouf flourish-Godspeed! Flfl. ..'IT'f ' f ' ffm , ' ' TW f7T 'ff'f1'f.f','f1fi - ' ' ' 4' ' 'VQT' '1' ' ' 1' Y 'f' ' ' Y ., . .. ,, , ,. . , WM, ,. Q., 'fi V-. '5., in Q'-Q,-. '55 'Q ,, .H ..... ,, , . ,, f .. , ., ,,,..,, , ,mgl .,,,,. ' 2 M-....,-,..1'-:V-,,!''.-.12-,W . m,....w,,1.S:i..,s4:,,g.L2f..,is'-J., . . Y - s. ,.. ,- ' ' J 1 11-Q-H 514- Wy-fl' f r'-,aye we w--u-f- - I--' -.-1 ik-. i '. l i U1 IL-. .3 1--f ,Ji L- l 'I ,L -gif .agf.4J' ZI8 LV' L friend when i S liimsel' ranlc a A College Sporfx W beC5l.IS Can'1- F Sig F-1 Joseph P. Wiegers, BS. in B. Joe New York Cily Commerce Club 2, 3, 4, Secreiary 2: Class Baslcei- ball 4. UR college careers have drawn To a close and our class as a group is ceasing +o exisl. The possibiliiy of losing coniacl wilh Jrhe resl of our comrades and friends sirilces a poignanr and discordanlr nojre in our happy frame of mind, especially when we Jrhink of Joe. Sincerily is his greaiesi assel. l-le is sincere wilh his friends and sincere wilh himself. l-le embodies a conscienliousness lo a degree nor found among Jrhe ordinary rank and file. As a loyal son of Manhallan, Joe has graced all Jrhe evenis sponsored by lhe college and could always be counled upon for ready wir and a poker face. A good sporr-ready for anylhing-and wilhal, having a head on his shoulders. Well, Joe, +ha+'s aboul all. There's no use wishing lhar you gel The brealcs because we are cerrain Jrhar if you don'+, you'll go our and gel Jrhem. Bur you can'Jr prevenl us from wishing you Jrhe bes+ o' luck. 2l9 lf f1fE.:s-L 9 3 B1 as XX. afffia l U f -Q 1 l i I . ! x. ,5 571 Q4 Rf l I i I . i i l i VR 'ill 'T Domingo N. Ysasi, B.S. in E. Sandino l-lavana, Cuba A. S. C. E. 2, 3, 4: NewTon MaThemaTical SocieTy 3, 4: lnTernaTional RelaTions Club I, 2, TransiT Club 2, 3, 4: K. D. C. ERE we meeT a pleasanT, vivacious, wiTTy individual who aTTracTs everybody's aTTenTion. When Sandino is menTioned, anybody who knows him will iusT Think oT him and have happy remembrances. Full oT ready humor and snappy wiT- Ticism, Sandino is liked by everyone, boTh on and oTT The campus. A boisTerous Beau Brummell seems raTher a paradox: buT here we have The excepTion ThaT proves The rule, Tor Sandino wiTh his naive mannerism has repeaTedly melTed The hardened shell oT sophisTicaTed alooTness ThaT is usually associaTed wiTh The young ladies. T These same comely charac:TerisTics perhaps less c:onvenTionalized, have oTTen caused near rioTs among The Senior engineers. One oT Sandino's casual buT raTher TorceTul expressions, Time and again, has inTerrupTed a lecTure Tor Ten or TiTTeen minuTes because oT The din creaTed by The appreciaTion oT his clear and well-ThoughT- ouT answers-clear To no one excepT himselT. To an ouTsider, Sandino mighT seem sTern and disTanT, buT To us, who have oTTen spliT our sides enjoying his seemingly inexhausTible supply oT puns, he is quiTe a humorous young man. UndoubTedly he is mediTaTing on The day when he will reTurn To his land oT murmuring music and ancienT charms To pracTice The profession oT his choice. . . 'T e of V, , Q 5,5 , l m,1? ,Q,,fi ggji' iff32422:I3iIF??afQ.'ff:1f'12:.Q'g'fzQ.EhTfhfl'El'1 tl l 4,5 - M U In rg 5. '- L, Ll 1. I LJ Pi M. 220 1 5 N Tc . WhaT carrie so re inTiniT visTae. C iwiddl Ufldpp QOod The mi 0CCupi lllal hi Vw lulllfe. MSWSMW Emil J. ZambeTTi, AB. Sam New York CiTy BeTa Sigma: M. l. C. I, 2, 3, 4. N The Tour years Emil has been wirh us There are Tew who would accepT The Task To wriTe abouT him. l-lis desire To shun campus publiciTy accounTs Tor This. Sam is a digniTied sorT oT Tellow, excepT on special occasions, buT Then, whaT can one expecT? Even a good Tellow musT have his Tling someTimesl l-le carries wirh him The curious air oT old New York, so peculiarly inTimaTe and yeT so remoTe ThaT he has made us Teel he was one oT us and aT The same Time so inTiniTely removed. We always had a slighT suspicion ThaT Sam lived in The visTaed beauTy oT some Tomorrow. Qur companion does noT Talk much himselT, Tor he would raTher, as iT were, Twiddle his ThoughTs around in his own mind Than Toss Them ouT vocally upon an unappreciaTive world. No wonder he cherishes Them, considering how brighT and good They are! l-lowever, if he is Trugal wiTh words, he is by no means sparing in The more weighTy maTTer oT works. As a sTudenT he has proved his meTTle and has occupied an enviable place among The ArTsmen. Erom his closer Triends we learn ThaT his greaTesT enioymenT comes Trom his sTudies in The Senior Social Science Class. Well Emil, along wiTh your diploma, you carry Trom here our besT wishes Tor The TuTure. U l 221 , 'I -si A If Ii E Dominick J. Zema, AB. Dee Ossining, N. Y. Alpha Phi DeI'ra, Foo+IighIers Drama'Iic Sociefy I, 27 Hayes Dramafic Sociefy 3, 4: Band 3, 4: M. I. C. I, 2, 3, 4: Tennis 3, 4, Orchesfra I, 2, 3: Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4. Q ll EE is known Io all of us as Ihe Why Man -Ihe walking quesIion mark. YeI' Ihere are few inquiries he cannoI answer. In cIass we find him The professor's ideal sIuden+, aIways on Ihe aIerI Io answer quesiions, and never afraid To ask queslrions when unceriain. The dejrerminalrion he has carried Ihroughoulr his every underiaking has been a Iac+or in his success. Dee has come Io Manhaiian on a schoIarship. We are noI surprised, for he has made good his boasi by mainiaining an I-Ionor average Ihroughoui' his four years. Throughoui his work we find a reguIaIed, sys+emaIic pIan, perfecily corre- Iafing The mosI saIienJr Iacis. We can readily appreciaie Ihis pIan when we realize Ihalr he has worked nighIs, par+aking IiberaIIy in Ihe exIra-curricuIar acIiviIies, and mainfaining a high schoIasIic sianding a+ aII Iimes. I-Iis congeniaI aHiIude, aIIruisI'ic nafure and ever-smiling coun+enance mark him a Jrrue Ivianhailran man. When Dee Ieaves IvIanhaIIan he is going Io Columbia Io s'rudy eIecIricaI engineering. We feel Ihai Ihere is no one more Iiilred and so weII adapIed for eIecIricaI engineering Ihan Dee, We are sure, wiIh Ihe cuI+uraI background he has received and wiih his foundaIion in borh Ma+hema'rics and Physics, +ha+ he will con- Iinue his presen+ achievemenfs. Columbia profiis by our Ioss. .. . ---,, -F Hs- 'f'-.L'q,! V . ,L I I I . , ,,. ,Y . 4, .-, n.. 7 . .,, .- .. ..... m-.. .J..,.. ,J N, II I f ' v' I 222 -1 1 I1 1 .w-. ,..f,..-- .-..-T1 1-Jr x XX '35, XV XX '- czitbi ' , , , SYXSQESEEXX -- . .w-W.-M. XM. , . -I -, . ,, .MW . , , ,, , . ., , I . A A AN-xv- Qi YN? IN? -P 1 JUNIOR CLASS ,Q ., , .r'r-:::g -ff ' - - PN- .L . I Y ivovf' J. COMMETTE J. A. HASSETT Presidenf Vice-Presidenl J. M. CUNMNCSHAM J. pi. pi.iEL,A,N SQCVGJVGVY Treasurer CLASS OF '33 l-lEN fhe class ol '33 made ils lirsl appearance wilhin The walls ol lvlan- hallan il was composed ol a ralher slarlled group ol youngslers. As Jrhe lirsl few days passed everylhing seemed lo be breaking Jrheir way. l-lowever, Jrhe class as a whole, received ils lirsl Jrasle ol college lile when lhe lug-o'-war leam was decisively delealed by lhe Sophomores. Nol having fully recovered from a severe lhrashing lhe loolball Jream was an easy prey for lhe Sophs. ln shorl, we were forced lo recognize lhe superiorily ol our rival class ol '32 in every evenl Jrhroughoul lhe year. Gur second year was a glorious one. Relurning from a splendid summer vaca- lion, we were happy Jro learn lhal Jrwo ol our members, John W. Nugenlr and Alfred lvlorell, had enlered Jrhe Noviliale lo prepare lo become Chrislian Brolrhers. The presenl year found us making slill grealer slrides. Led by our presidenl, Joseph Commelle, we have realized lhe benelils Jrhal come lo a cooperalive group. Toward lhe close of The lirsl hall of Jrhe year, Joseph Sheehan was chosen lhe edilor of our weekly publicalion, lhe Quadrangle, succeeding George Donahue, '32. There- upon Jrhe paper showed new life. We conlidenlially prediclr Jrhal Jrhe Sheehan reign shall be looked upon as lhe grealesl in The hislory of lhe weekly organ. 225 Il:LEw ifL,3.SL .MQALBLMATTALLJT E AUTOGRAPHS Z-,f::7i'-.1 1:fi25e21f Ei jiigp 'fl' ..11 fx, :lZ53 i32efe32gf.1,4132245-if 1 X A., ffm .I Q ,1 C f s I ,NN 1- 'Xn. f 9 airy! X 226 . 333533 1' qgsxxg -'I N ii 1 T NN f! f 1 . xg LJ A .....- 2 x Q 53 5 -Y Q L L, -lL,1'. . - 1 1,9 ' ' v 1 x x x ., x Low, 'g ian 1. ,Q :vs : f- lf 1 5 .tw -gmaa f-QQ 5... k Ji A 9:1 7455 K' 1 .,A. if - 32 vfcq :E fl .,,. .s,, 'ir - 2 f . an FA- - g my 'jf' f fd Q 111fi.Fl,aii9 x ! K ff 4 4, A.. fn. A M. ,,.x.-1..f.,4 I 5 'D 1 , T1l.LTQfL QITTIilfLT.TQffff1fl7QfQ. ' 4 MAN ' '- ' W Vmum-'AA- wv'W ' P ..-.--k--..,.-f,.-... . ,W -- , , SOP!-IOMORE CLASS I Q M vrgkfks i ,yaw 22 A. W. GLYNN J. J. SEAMAN 4 Presidenf Vice-Presidenf 5 J. J. cAREY B. E. Awor LU Secrefary Treasurer 5 Q CLASS or '34 9 E, fhe Class of '34, broke info prinf in fhe firsf issue of fhe Quadrangle by a record enrollmenf of close fo fhree hundred sfudenfs. Affer a week of absolufe freedom from pesfy sophomores, we organized our class and elecfed fhe following officers: Arfhur Glynn, Presidenfg Chris Murphy, Vice-presidenfg Jack Sea- man Treasurer, and Tom Varden, Secrefary. So, under fhe leadership of fhese men began our guesf for honor and glory. Following fhe Jasper fradifions we baffled fhe Sophomores firsf in fhe fug-o'-war and fhen in foofball. Though unsuccessful in fhe former encounfer we showed our supremacy on fhe gridiron. As fhe monfhs passed we confinued fo grow in fhe confidence and esfeem of Manhaffan. lvlalcing our debuf as upperclassmen fhis year we came fhrough wifh flying colors in regard fo our belligerenf affairs wifh fhe Frosh. Because of a flawless record of leadership we again honored Arf Glynn by elecfing him presidenf of our class. Many of our mafes direcfed fheir efforfs fo Journalism and fhe resulf is evidenced by a glance af fhe sfaff of fha Quadrangle. There appear such names as Bill Burns, poef and wrifer exfraordinaryq Cyril lvlolineaux, associafe edifor and Bruno Amyof, circula- fion manager. Before long we foo hope fhaf we shall achieve fhe name and fame of a greaf class, lilce fhe one abouf fo ioin fhe Alumni-fhe class of '32. We, fhe class of '34, salufe you! l .. .,,. ...... -,,.,...,,. ,,,,,, ,,,, , ,, ,, , , , W - 1 , Lili rj my i cg 1 1 T 5 J L 1 H 229 UI f n AUTUGRAPHS 1 tl M w Li ,xxx I I 1 Q. 'x X. I I w, J Pg L i i5J T ' C3 - M CD Lk Y.: 5 -CU L V U T1 ,Ei 230 r 1 3 I , x. 1 1 ' I X ' r I XX W , X. K A N . I Ju! NX ' I: xxxlv Xt 0 xx X Y , X X ' x V ,- 'X -uf 4 4 ' 'Elf - A i2222E f55555f,f' H5252 f 11: EL-EEE Q ,-'i ' ii . W wx 4 Y - i H A I v Wi L, Y -, 'Z i ,,. s,, .A,-- a FRESH E B I 1 ,I --F-' - - H- 5 M: 31. fs -' s ,xy -., k Q y,, -- jf X , Vx, yu N FRESHMAN CLASS 1 - f W , rg, 4 if - g s , L ' YKTf1iLT'QI'fIff:QQLf...Lfl.if lf'x 'rl l LL-1 T 9-4' lvl '- W T' ff -A' ga- -e f ha-..-..,, M... .,,..--.. H.. l-l. A. BARRY W. J. KIRBY PresidenT Vice-PresiclenT A. K. DeSlENNA J. Q. QHAQAN SSCVQTGVY Treasurer CLASS OF '35 RRIVING in groups oT Three To TiTTy, Three hundred more or less average chaps roamed in The EasT Archway during The laTe summer oT The pasT year, each bearing a slighTly diTTerenT marlc oT environmenT Trom The nexT, To be Tormed here Trom a heTerogeneous mass oT maTerial, inTo a body which would be molded inTo a group oT ChrisTian genTlemen, all oT whom were eager and ready To promoTe The sTandards oT The Green and WhiTe. New Triendships, new experiences, new lives were sTarTed by everyone. lnnocence and ignorance oT The Sophomore's sTrengTh were The principal causes Tor our deTeaT in The Tug-o'-war melee. We gave whaT we had even To shirTs and Trousers, buT To liTTle avail. l-lumiliaTed by The conquerors we seTTled down To organize our class. AT an iniTial meeTing we held nominaTions Tor The oTTicers. A week laTer, under The supervision oT The STudenT Council, our balloTs were collecTed and counTed. The resulTs oT The elecTion were dissaTisTacTory To none. The Taslc oT leading The class Tell upon a worThy maTe, l-lenry A. Barry: The oTTice oT vice-presidenT wenT To Bill Kirby and The secreTarial and Treasurer posiTions were capably Tilled by Alvin De Sienna and Jack 0'l-lagen, respecTively. ln oxTra-curricular acTiviTies we have represenTaTives in all acTive clubs besides having a dramaTic socieTy oT our own-The l:ooTlighTers, a worThy organizaTion Tounded by a worThy class-ThaT which now is abouT To bocome parT OT The Jasper Alumni. 233 l'1'Tx ' 9 4 V ' 1 :RQ 3513 ff .4 f .il , 4- 45: '-: --ll V4 'ff 5 R VIETSIK 1? C 4 :IIE-L . -'. .fn . 41' 4 . . ' . a . , 4 f-1 -.1-H-V'--V '21--.J-..vJ..L.- -- 'Lfz-14.42 lb . 44 1 ' . . ,Hi 4 'I ' I . , 4 'I 1 :VI ' 4 . L 'I Q ' 14154-W. VS! 1 ' . xx 5 fig: 4 . .1 ln... view f' . 4 -eq-4 3 s f ' f V- M s' 5 ' : I , ju'-,, H X 4 V- W . 'K 7 I M ' . f ' nf ' s V Q ' 2 ff f 1 7.1 1 0 I Mt 1 Vs 3 ' r' ' 1 ' Lf. ' 2 V .zVf4.44 M 'r 4531: 1 1 VV 'V - '- 7 ', ':f4- v- 1 ,. 'M .im V . '42 gf?-V .V 'lf L'Y if Q V ' 4 '4 ' TEH , ' tg ' 5 .v li 5' 5' -. .. .. 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Q' is ps Y 1' I ' ,gg gf -V ZEIITI :Tim bo-fl 10 in5v19Z .rljimll n5M bns aid 0+ nciioveb airl ni ensupa 1uo'r gnibns+2 be1oanoqa srl ,yaneuiihnoa zirl o+ bns bo9 be+o9He1 +srH zm1o're1 lsiaoz bns evihslzipel rlaum irlgumd bns zelqionhq be+Iisxe zirl evsrl uoY .aebufiilum lu're+s1Q o+ boop nsiiai1rlO 'IUOY yd em oi noi+s1iqani ns need -benniq srl as ,aey5H lsr1ib1eO bisa ,elqm5xe leqsl z'rH'im2 no lsbsM 2115+951 befsvoo edf .QSPI ni f 5.151 '33nar ,.,x 'f'f,s' f' if. . . Q1 Q 'Qi .. Z, 9-' '9!.i'f1-if . IFQQ5: .. ....... X, llllllllll llllllull llllllllll lllllllll lllllllll ullullll lllllllll lllllllll llllllll' llllllll llllllu llllllll llllllll nullu nnullu nullu lllllll luunu ulull :nun null! lunn nun lull: nuns nun null null nun: nun llll nun lllll lun lllll lllll lull lllll llll llll llll ull ull Ill' Ill nl in lll In nf u u u ll u n ll l I : uullll f nu Ill Ill ll ll ll ll ll ll I I I l I 1 BCDCDK THREE QTIVITIES hi '?f MANHATTANITE STAFF EcIiJror-in-cIwIeI JAMES M. O'DONNELL AssocIaIe Edilror PI1oIo EoIiIor GEORGE J. O'KEEFE, JR. LEO M. SULLIVAN Copy EcIiIor AssociaIe Copy EdI'ror JOSEPH E. MALONE GEORGE F. CONNOR EoIProriaI Board EUGENE WALSH AMBROSE P. O'NEIL H. JACK RICKERT ALEXANDER F. GORSKY JOHN KEARNEY VICTOR INCORVIA Business Manager PAUL T. FLAHERTY AssociaIe SporIs EcII+or AssociaIe Business Manager EDWIN J. DUFFY FRANCIS DE LUCA AcIverIIsing Manager JOSEPH C. LEONARD Business Board WALTER RAKO EDWARD MACK EDWARD J. MURPHY ANDREW DeSTEPHANO Diredror of SIuoIenI PubIIcaIions BROTHER PAUL EDWARD S 236 1 1 , I , H ' ' ' .1 1 1 ' I 1 1? I I 1 2 .N ff Q, 'S I 1 5 7 IN. ,. T1 I 1 III THE QUADRANGLE BOARD OF MANAGEMENT 1 Edifor . . . ........... GEORGE R. DONAHUE .Z Associa+e Edi+or . . DENNIS A. KELLEHER News EcIIIor . . . EDWIN J. DUFFY Sporlrs Edifor . . . EDGAR A. MARTIN f. I Business Manager . . PAUL T. ELAHERTY Advedising Manager . . . AMBROSE P. O'NEIL Copy EcIi+or . . . . . VICTOR O. INCORVIA Q 1 5- CircuIa+ion Manager . . . DANIEL H. BEARY Exchange Edilror . . ....... . VICTOR J. LOPINTO NEWS BOARD 5 AssisIanI News EcIiIor .......... JOSEPH M. SHEEHAN I AssIsIan+ Copy ECIIIO1' ........... JOSEPH E. MALONE 1 JOHN KEARNEY JAMES BRODERICK HOWARD ENGLISH I H. JACK RICKERT JOSEPH M. CONLON I 1 I BUSINESS BOARD I I I AssIs+anJr AoIverIising Manager ........ JOHN TOLNITCH AssIs+anI Business Manager . . ..... ARTHUR DEVLIN . Direcfor of S+ucIen'I PubIicaJrions . . BROTHER PAUL EDWARD I I I 1 I QQ '1 ' ' 1 f' qw ,-1'.2 i s-s A f seeiiv f ,i'A. A EL.-g.j.11gfgg .E1- i 5-115' 5 ga Pk TE 'SEE 1.511 155 1 C3 -A N1 Q 11. E 5 -CU LMI 1.1 RA 237 STUDENT CUUNCIL UF MANHATTAN CCORDING To iTs consTiTuTion, The STudenT Council is designaTed as a repre- senTaTive group oT sTudenTs which acTs as The courT oT appeals on all sTudenT maTTers. Moreover, iT is The sole inTermediary agenT beTween The sTudenTs and The TaculTy. Membership in This body is considered one oT The highesT honors in lvlanhaTTan. During The pasT year special eTTorTs have been made by The Council To revive several oT The sacred TradiTions oT lvlanhaTTan which Tor a lapse oT a year were un- observed-namely, The Tug-o'-war and The inTer-class games beTween The Sophomores and The Freshmen. Also more vigilanT care was exercised To see ThaT There were no violaTions oT The Freshman rules. ln This connecTion prinTed summonses were issued To The Sophomore Vigilance CommiTTee, To be served on Those Freshmen whom They required To appear beTore The Council. Several new measures were sponsored and successTully inauguraTed. Among These was The TirsT change in years in The rules oT discipline perTaining To The boarders. Due To The persisTenT eTTorTs oT The STudenT Council and The ready cooperaTion oT The Dean oT Discipline, BroTher William, permission was granTed To The Seniors To leave The campus on Tuesday evenings. STeps were Taken To conducT dances on The campus, buT due To insuTTicienT TaciliTies and several resTricTions imposed by The TaculTy and The diocesan auThoriTies The plan was abandoned. 238 THE PEN AND SWORD SOCIETY I-IE Pen and Sword Sociely is now firmly esiablished as one of Ihe Iradilrions of Ivlanhalian. Formulared in I929, ir is inlended as a reward for Ihose who devoie Iheir Iime and energy Io Ihe propagalion of exira-curricular aclrivilies. Twice i'rs consIiIuIion has been revised, unIiI now iI siands as Ihe obiecI of aII inIeresIed in The welfare of Manhailan in Ihose numerous fields IhaI' exisI oulside of The class- rooms. IIs rosIer conIains The names of Ihose who have aI'rained prominence on The TooIbaII gridiron, baseball diamond, baskejrball courl, behind Ihe foollighlrs, on Ihe debaIer's pIaIIorm and behind Ihe ediIoriaI desks. They represenI The group which has worked Io keep IvIanhaIIan up wiIh The besI of Ihem. The members for I93I-32 are: ' FRANK J. D'AIvIICO LOUIS A. LEPIS GEORGE E. DAVIS VICTOR J. LO PIIXITO EDWARD J. DUFFY EDGAR A. MARTIN VICTOR O. INCORVIA JOI-IN P. IvIcCORIvIICK I-IAROLD J. KEEGAN GEORGE J. O'KEEFE GEQRGE P, KQECK AIVIBROSE P. O'IXIEIL ROBERT J. LEONARD LEO M- SULLIVAN DOIVIINICK J. ZEIVIA 239 Q i GLEE CLUB URING The pasT Tour years The Glee Club aT lV1anhaTTan has made iTs greaTesT sTrides. ln our Freshman year a very large number Took inTeresT in The organi- zaTion To The ioy oT iTs direcTors, BroTher Leo, Edward Doyle and Frank Maloney. Such inTeresT could resulT in noThing buT reward. Twice each week iT was surprising To see The represenTaTives reporT To pracTice laTe in The aTTernoons. Then and There iT was Toreseen ThaT lvlanhaTTan in a shorT Time would have a glee club second To no oTher college. A So Time passed. lnsTead oT waning The membership, on The conTrary, increased. The yearly reciTals oT The soloisTs aTTracTed a large and enThusiasTic audience. Besides This TacT, The club was in greaT demand aT social TuncTions in and abouT The ciTy. lvluch meriT is due Franlc Del.uca, The presidenT oT The group, who is admired by all lv1anhaTTan men Tor his rich bass voice and who Tor Tour years has labored Tirelessly To bring The club up To iTs presenT sTanding. We cannoT say Too much in praise oT lvlr. Edward Doyle, our own VincenT Lopez, and BroTher Leo. To These Two musT go The highesT menTion Tor raising The socieTy To an unparalleled sTaTus. lvlay The eTTorTs oT These men be rewarded wiTh a conTinuaTion oT The success which The Glee Club has garnered These pasT Tour years. 240 . ...--. -.-,... . .. 4... rw- 1 I Q77 -sr. wh ,., !f-y1!'vv 'F.. ! A- inf? rf? 'U 5 5, is I .x im! 5 Q. Rl i I y- l T i ' Q.-. .:.f:25Tg'.3...,lix:,g..Jsas.. l S.s.'5 . I , 5 I .. A , T .U l 4 ' , dl, YA.V .,., . .K .,.,.,--. ... ,.. I KY,-5,-1 V. ' 511' f 'K , : gi' 5 2 ' -Q W i -l V , ' ljjl, gg,,QjjQflgi 1 . :Q .:.aQ'.,.-'.:L ,J Y,,,fL,,f, ,.,, f 7 T4If T Vf Q ,l TH E ORCH ESTRA Condudor . . . , . . EDWARD DOYLE, '25 PIANO JUSTIN RUSSELL, '34 VIOLIN JAMES MEAGHER, '33 CHARLES MURRAY, '34 DOMINICK CUNDARI, '34 TRUMPET KENNETH MURRAY, '34 RICHARD VILLAMIL, '32 DRUMS JOSEPH BARRY, '32 CLARINET WILLIAM GLASHEEN, '34 SAXOPHONE WILLIAM REDMOND, '32 EDWARD RUDDY, '32 FLUTE CYRIL MOLINEAUX. '34 'AC' ,r-A '., 'A HT2SZ's':31Q.:f- I f - I 24I THE HAYES DRAMA-I- C SOCIETY PresidenT ............. GEORGE J. O'KEEFE, '32 Vice-PresidenT . . . JOSEPH H. GARAHAN, '33 SecreTary . . .... LEO J. LEAIVIY, '33 Treasurer . . . VICTOR INCORVIA, '32 HisTorian . . . . FRANCIS GRADY, '34 IVIoderaTor . . . . . BROTHER BASILIAN HIS year TirmIy esTabIished The Hayes DramaTic SocieTy as The VarsiTy dramaTic organizaTion. IT aIso wiTnessed The TormaTion, under The sponsorship oT This associaTion, oT a dramaTic socieTy Tor Freshmen, caIIed The FooTIighTers. The year reached iTs dramaTic heighT in The producTion oT a comedy oT college IiTe in Three acTs, enTiTIed, The Goose Hangs High. The play was under The direc- Tion oT a prominenT BroadwayiTe, Charles O. Kennedy. On The nighT oT February I7, This piece was presenTed IoeTore a large and enThusiasTic audience and was received wiTh greaT approval. ProminenT in iTs casT were George O'KeeTe, Leo Leamy and RoberT SmiTh. Their sTerIing characTerizaTions, as weII as Those oT The resT oT The pIayers, wiII Iinger Iong in The memories oT Those who wiTnessed The producTion. 242 if DI PE Yc siT Cc mi ST5 The THE DEBA-I-ING SOCIETY Presidenr ............. Jonn H. KEARNEY, '32 Vice-Presidenl . . . . ROBERT MALONEY, '33 Secrelary . . . . JOSEPH H. GARAHAN, '33 Manager . . . JAMES STAVRACOS, '33 Moderalor . .... JOHN WHALEN, A.B. Coach ............ NICHOLAS 6. WESTHOF, A.B. ETER five years of oblivion, Manhallan leaped inlo Jrhe forensic limelighr a year ago, when The arf was resurrec+ed by 'rhe Tormaiion of lhe Debaling Sociely. During +he pasl' year, enlhusiasm and Jralenl have been so grealr as +o meril com- parison wilh lhe mos'r glorious lradilions of Jasper debaling Jreams. Their opponenls during Jrhe pasr year have included: Columbia Universily, New Yorlc Universily l2l, Georgelown Universily, Fordham Universily l2l, Fordham Univer- sily Law Deparlmenr, S+. John's College, Villanova College, Providence College, Cily College, and Jrhe College of New Rochelle. The Debaling Sociely has made hislory a+ ManhaHan by conducling a good many of Their conlesls over Jrhe radio, lhrough lhe courlesy of local broadcasling s+a'rions. Their record has been an enviable one, and 'rhey have accomplished much +ha'r will add To The grealer glory of Alma Maier. l T V 4 243 .....,..,.,...,... ,.,.,,., . 1 4 - - -,ln .,-,A :X . U. ..,, . rc l THE NEWTON MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY PresidenT ..... .... E RED A. CLEAR Vice-PresidenT . . . MAURICE DONOVAN Secrelfary , , . CHARLES CAPUTO Treasurer . . DANIEL MARSHALL URING The second cenTury aTTer The dea+h oT The Tamed maThemaTician and physicisT, Sir Isaac NewTon, Reverend BroTher Eelix organized The maThemaTical socieTy bearing The name oT NewTon. The socieTy has progressed maTerially since Those TirsT sTruggling days. urllil HOW iT is one oT The mosT imporTanT socieTies on The campus. lTs purpose is To show The human relaTionship beTween maThemaTics and socieTy in general. The main lecTurer aT each meeTing has been The Reverend ModeraTor, whose unTiring eTTorTs broughT new and inTeresTing discussions To each gaThering. Much inTeresT was also shown by The members and The oTTicers. There are Three grades in The socieTy: Junior, Senior and Honorary memb6'FS- These Terms are indicaTive oT The degree oT The member and noT oT The class. GS ETS b mem ership is limiTed To Juniors and Seniors oT The engineering school only. 244 we M 1 , brim sTa his will ma ere sTuc des elig Soci -Qi-E.. , ', ag ,f... -L.g,-,,....M A my I I ix Q . 'Ii , I1 AMERICAN 50cIETY UF CIVIL ENGINEERS PresidenT .............. LOUIS J. PERSBACKER SecreTary . . . . VICTOR J. LO PINTO Treasurer . . . EDWARD J. RUDDY I-IE sTudenT chapTer OT The American SocieTy oT Civil Engineers is one oT The mosT prominenT and heIpTuI organizaTions in The school. ITs main purpose is To bring The sTudenTs oT engineering inTo closer conTacT wiTh The acTiviTies oT The ouT- sTanding men in The proTession. IT likewise aTTords The sTudenT an opporTuniTy, during W! his undergraduaTe days, To view imporTanT deveIopmenTs in ThaT Tield in which he i will Ia+er be an acTive member. . V- In as acTive a year as The socieTy has had, iT wiTnessed, among oTher Things, I many such imporTanT consTrucTions as The building oT The Holland Tunnel, and The I erecTion oT The Florianapolis Bridge, Through The medium oT slides aided by careTuIIy sTudied IecTures given by one oT iTs sTudenT members. Membership in This socieTy is a marlced asseT To The undergraduaTe engineer desirous oT prominence in his Tield oT endeavor. Upon graduaTion he becomes eligible To membership in The ouTside socieTy OT proTessionaI engineers. This ouTside socieTy is The largesT and mosT noTed in The proTession ThroughouT The counTry. I - - - ,- -. ee- - f-hf ,Y A, ',,1fQ, :':1i.1f'-,i1fL1..1?.'-L H l-TT'-K-'71-'fvifili'-Y: i-'fiifffiiffif ffiiii15fiEfi??:.iifffffggbilf .... UA-I---VA 245 THE CUMMERCE CLUB l-TE School oT Business oT lv1anhaTTan College is only OT recenT origin: daTing baclc a mere Tour years. IT has grown rapidly, iT we compare iTs TirsT Treshman class which numbered TwenTy and Today's Treshman class which approaches eighTy and bids Tair To go over The hundred marlc in The very near TuTure. CrediT should be given iTs Dean, James L. FiTzgerald who, almosT ouT oT noThing, creaTed a deparT- menT ThaT aT The presenT Time TulTills noT only The sTandard demanded by The College. buT compares more Tavorably wiTh The commerce deparTmenTs oT oTher colleges. The Commerce Club, in order To creaTe a compeTiTive aTmosphere in The com- merce deparTmenT, conceived The idea oT having some organizaTion donaTe a medal To The sTudenT mosT proTicienT in business subiecTs aT The end oT his senior year. The BeTa Sigma FraTerniTy generously oTTered To give This medal annually, and Their oTTer was accepTed by The Commerce Club. ln general, The TuTure oT The club is very brighT. The senior members oT The club desire To exTend Their sinceresT wishes Tor The club's TuTure well-being and To exTend Their graTeTul appreciaTion Tor The worl4 done by The TaculTy oT The commerce deparTmenT, especially ThaT oT Dean James L. l:iTzgerald. 246 TH E ARCHITECTURAL SOCIETY PresidenT ............. AMBROSE P. O'NEIL, '32 Vice-PresidenT . . AMBROSE E. KIEFF, '32 Treasurer . . . CHARLES MURRAY, '33 SecreTary . . ....... GEORGE MORENG, '34 EDICATED To The memory oT The laTe BroTher Noel, The ArchiTecTural SocieTy TosTers The inTeresT oT The school oT archiTecTure. The growTh oT The organi- zaTion is commensuraTe wiTh The developmenT oT iTs spiriT and sTimulus To archiTecTure. The consTiTuTion oT The socieTy, adopTed in l928, provides Tor Three grades oT membership: probaTionary, Tor Treshmeng acTive, Tor upperclassmen, and honorary, Tor graduaTes oT The school oT archiTecTure. An execuTive board oT Tour members adminisTers The aTTairs oT The socieTy. Several new noTes oT developmenT were evinced in The socieTy, namely, The dis- TribuTions oT handbooks conTaining maTTer and daTa relaTive To The organizaTion, and a series oT Tour medals, donaTed by The socieTy, To be awarded To The sTudenTs who excel in Their course in design oT consTrucTion in Their respecTive classes during The year. Seven inTeresTing lecTures were held in which The sTudenTs Took greaT inTeresT. The visiTing lecTurers, ouTsTanding in The Tield oT archiTecTure, considered Their eTTorTs well repaid by The amounT oT enThusiasm displayed. 247 THE MENDELIAN SOCIETY ModeraTor ............. REV. BROTHER CELESTINE PresidenT . . . . JAMES R. DONALDSON, JR., '32 Vice-PresidenT . . ' ..... FELIX eENTiLE, '32 SecreTary ...... . . JOHN ALIBERTO, '33 Treasurer ....... . . BERTRAM MOORE, '33 Sophomore RepresenTaTive ........ MORGAN WEBER, '34 HE Mendelian SocieTy, one oT The mosT acTively TuncTioning clubs on The campus. was Tounded in The early parT oT l929, when The Reverend BroTher CelesTine rallied around him sTudenTs inTeresTed enough in science To meeT regularly aTTer class in order To discuss The problems encounTered in- The pursuiT oT scienTiTic knowledge. Gregor Mendel, To whom we owe much oT our presenT knowledge on herediTy, was chosen as a model To inspire The members in Their work. AT presenT The socieTy is a member oT The AssociaTed Biology Clubs oT CaTholic Colleges, a naTional organizaTion which holds a convenTion every year. l.asT year The meeTing was held aT Fordham UniversiTy. ManhaTTan delegaTes won excepTional praise Tor Their well delivered papers on The work oT The French naTuralisT, Jean BapTisTe Lamarch. WiTh a Tirm ToundaTion and an acTive membership The TuTure success oT The socieTy is well assured. 248 l S li l T his he The hi, play v as wel Tl 17 I I I ARNGLD CLASSICAL SOCIETY I PresidenT . . . ..... LEO M. SULLIVAN Vice-PresidenT . . EDWARD F. MURPHY SecreTary . . . WILLIAM DEMPSEY MOderGTOr - . JOHN' P. BARNES HE ArnoId CIassicaI SocieTy was organized in '29 Through The eTTorTs oT Pro- Tessor John P. Barnes in memory oT The IaTe BroTher Arnold, who was caIIed To his heavenly home IaTe in '28. The group is composed oT The sTudenTs who ToIIow I The higher courses in The cIassic Ianguages. Each year The socieTy promoTes a LaTin pIay which is supporTed by a good represenTaTion oT The sTudenTs who sTudy LaTin as weII as many oThers who Take an inTeresT in The ciassics. I The members oT The socieTy This year are: I LEO M. SULLIVAN JOSEPH E. MALONE EDWARD E. MURPHY WILLIAM DEMPSEY I JOHN J, DUNNE JOSEPH COMMETTE JAMES MORRIS JOSEPH CODY H. A. 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V E- ' ' .F -Y Vw-' ' '--fZ'21f?V?'-'- O., 2' 2 ' ,. -, . -' , .:' .. - .1-11.14, - -f. .fed fi . .w5'f1'7Y -,H--V GV, VVF'F2fV'tW1a:..-'S-- -M ffm- ' ' -. v.1:.-f 1f'V- ---x-f 11--1-K-E? fi-gf'- . V V ' eikglgfi 9 - ...A -.V . ' ::- -,f . '- --' 5 .V, .' .-. W? --f- L+. Vzf- 'VD M'fvQg' VJ' '-- .,m3..- .: 'VIV,lL? - W 'V 1-' . ' ,l. - , . . . V..-1 -V. --'1 A-vffial! .V b ..n,.,,, I-. '--V-1 4.,. - bm-s,121!.s-V,, 33.1,--...L . -,- - . 'B L. V- .VVf:i V -1-.zfmf---sdqjgf-44 , Q. . - 'pf- X. X1 .,.. - - , , -' ---- 'v--gd gum 1--an -1-4 .,.g?1X,'.Vf4-... -'Lf ' H1 '.' '11 s'-V' 515:51 ' f' ::.f7'4 ..- . ' ,Q ? V '--- Q' 7-1.-' ,N',. I ik.. ' HSQEX. X ,g QD.. .,, .X V .a3bf19l1? fo. slow: +5919 earl ,ro 47. g . n 1 Zi I Y ,. F I 0 1'1 V V I 1 V I ! 1 I P. x 1 -Q , 4 r X , - RATERNITIES ' N 1 u j ' 4 I y 1 N 1 p w ALPHA SIGMA BETA N January 24, IQO6, seven members oT The sTudenT body oT lvlanhaTTan College meT in The CasTle, on The grounds oT The old college. Their purpose was To Torm an organizaTion which should uniTe in a close bond oT sympaThy The mosT loyal sons oT lvlanhaTTan, To sTimulaTe in iTs members love Tor Alma lvlaTer and pride in her achievemenTs. ThaT organizaTion was Alpha Sigma BeTa. In I907 The TraTerniTy was sancTioned by The college auThoriTies and rooms were obTained in The viciniTy oT The school. lngenious plans Tor deTraying expenses oT The esTablishmenT were conceived, one oT which was The TormaTion oT an eaTing club. On December 22, I908, Alpha Sigma BeTa was incorporaTed. lTs period oT sTruggle was over. The TraTerniTy was now an inTegral parT of The college. The Alpha Sigma BeTa TraTerniTy is The only organizaTion oT iTs kind ThaT bridges The gap beTween The Old lvlanhaTTan and The New School. lT was The ouTgrowTl'1 OT The Big Five BroTherhood oT Old De La Salle and is Today The only TraTerniTy aT lvlanhaTTan ThaT can be placed in The TaTher and son class. The spiriT oT iTs mem- bers, boTh undergraduaTe and alumni, is a by-word aT lvlanhaTTan. A yearly presenTa- Tion oT medals To The Track meeT, The donaTion oT The STaTions oT The Cross in The college chapel, The esTablishmenT oT The college iournal, The Quadrangle, and The RadTord Medal Tor Science are a Tew oT The many maTerial conTribuTions ThaT Alpha Sigma BeTa has made To lvlanhaTTan. 252 f F s 11 '4 3 , 55 3 l-ll esT enTl1usie associaT ioinT ag- lTs Gil-lllaTeg aThleTiCS scholars Mdnhan Asl Cliapfer , Bece embraces Wh G cl glofl' OT I 2.'4-Q4 ...,'f.Tx' - . ., 3 PHI RHO PI l-ll Rl-TO PI TraTerniTy is one oT The mosT selecT socieTies aT lvlanhaTTan. IT was esTablished in The spring oT I9l7 Through The concerTed eTTorTs oT a Tew hardy enThusiasTs oT The Class oT IQI9, whose aim was To creaTe a closer and more deTiniTe associaTion among The sTudenTs inTeresTed, and To conTinue This relaTionship in Their ioinT acTiviTies in college liTe, and in The broader Tield oT posT-graduaTe liTe. lTs membership, The growTh oT ThirTeen years, includes sTudenTs and alumni, aTFiliaTed wi+h every acTiviTy indicaTive oT The welTare oT lvlanhaTTan College, viz.: aThleTics and oraTors, Thespians and debaTers, iournalisTs and minsTrels, genTlemen and scholars all, and all worThy exemplars oT The praiseworThy aTTribuTes oT The real lvlanhaTTan man. As lvlanhaTTan developed, so Too did Phi Rho Pi, and because oT iTs inTluence a Cl'1apTer was Tounded aT ST. Francis College, Brooklyn. I Because oT iTs remarkable members and The exalTed ideals ThaT The TraTerniTy embraces The men of The TraTerniTy go ouT inTo Their various proTessions and callings wiTh a characTer and Training which augurs well Tor Their own success, and Tor The glory of Phi Rho Pi. , y T 253 BETA SIGMA l-TE ideals oT love and Triendship, ever paramounT in The minds oT The incorpora- Tors oT The BeTa Sigma EraTerniTy, are The basic principles upon which The TraTerniTy was Tounded. From This organizaTion oT naTional scope came a delegaTion To ManhaTTan College, wiTh The purpose oT propagaTing iTs ideals and accomplish- menTs wiThin The porTals oT our Alma MaTer. Thus on SepTember I5, I927, DelTa ChapTer received iTs charTer Trom The naTional body. Since Then iT has TuncTioned mosT acTively and energeTically wiTh Two ideals in mind: one, The TurTherance oT The glory oT ManhaTTan College, and The oTher The spread oT principles oT TraTernalism among iTs members. Probably The Two ouTsTanding conTribuTions To The College Trom DelTa ChapTer during iTs shorT buT eTFecTive exisTence have been The Tamous Jasper Three QuarTer Trophy, and The Edward DougherTy Memorial Medal. The Tormer is a beauTiTul bronze sTaTue which has been in compeTiTion annually aT The ManhaTTan Diamond Track MeeT. The Edward DougherTy Medal is donaTed in memory oT a member oT DelTa ChapTer, who died during his iunior year aT ManhaTTan College. A living TribuTe To a True broTher and a loyal ManhaTTan man Thus sTands as a source oT Tond remembrance Tor all who lcnew him. 254 1 Manha iTs exis- care-Tul Gxpansi Tunily ve-nTion 9V6nTini All ChapTer of The I . , .,.....-,.- . .vm , , ,. .' ' Qwgrifslinsrsg -- jg, A. - ALPHA PHI DELTA Befa Befa Cha pfer lTl-l fhe supreme desire of becoming nafional in scope and influence, and of a frafernal nafure honorable fo Alma lvlafer, a group of sfudenfs of Manhaffan College organized in I928, as a local frafernify. During fhe period of ifs exisfence as such if was recognized by fhe college and was confinually under fhe careful supervision of Alpha Phi Delfa. Inspired by fhe ideals of scholarship and expansion of fhis nafional organizafion, if looked forward fo fhe one golden oppor- funify, fhaf of funcfioning as a lvlanhaffan chapfer. The vofe af fhe nafional con- venfion in I929 was a favorable one and following fhe formal insfallafion and fhe granfing of a charfer, Befa' Befa began ifs progressive career on fhe campus. Alpha Phi Delfa frafernify was founded af Syracuse Universify and now 'has Chapfers af fwenfy-six of America's leading colleges and universifies. lf is a member of fhe lnferfrafernify Conference of America. n 255 1 ' ,pf .1., fn Y rl'Ku ' , M' A . 1 ' my -1. rr '11 3-APL 9111 1 d, , 11' 4? I 1 1 1 tl ' if ' 0 !, 14, 1' .. .8111 1 agp:-iff.. Z A ' x , . '. 4 . Yam? E QI' fc' if I 1-4' 5 LU. 1 r NV 1 -'Ami' r 31111 1... f'f5'i12421:1i-ft4131,Ef1 'LQ'1'?f'.5f4. 1' :jail- .1. it . 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'L i75?7'A5k'il' 1-, I 'N I V- 5 .ULF 71 I ? 3f-1' gan-Q,-2, - s Q- 1 M f 1--1 C . Nqr 11 ,l,.xr,,. 1, ,.,5.,: I VA. -1, ,,....'1 , . iff! 'fav'a'21,5 I , 5'Lc:i fT'f!f' 9 F' p .X l ' A f ., L 1 ' 'fr ' ' - Z 11 H A Wi 'UZ . -I , Sm 1'o,zb.egg1 :gHjg..gal, 51592: Aiiw ' . . FE -. ,, ,hy 2,3 ..f.!'Hg:f-- luH1'lss-ir! 'benidemdoflLrHim2 mem lsoiayriq ysbnu2 rlosi ' .+::eqze1 ieilf? Aril: ggimsxe mo1'r il5w,' QB'lQ9fwf'55fTA,enirla 10 nis1 ,pninwom . 1' .v ,.-'1?x of 99513 H?QfSfb6i3 22oi:is n5HsHn5M 'iewoi fiaiv erH' ,bns ,nyHoo18 ni 1eH+dm 2ifl.f+iaiv i4.f1i?5QTBjif?'5d Sllbw bluow ,weve -'ww , - -- A---X-1 ... . . -7 BUCK gl ' i TH LETICS f, K 44 141' g . J 1 1.6 ,,, ' f 'ffl' X ff' jf, M2 4' ,fj 1.-PT' my-' X ! 'ci P 4 6 f L fi if 01 X -I TH E ATHLETIC ASSUCIATIUN PresidenT . . . DENIS O'l.. COT-TALAN Vice-PresidenT . - JOSEPH OICONNOR Segrefary , , . . JOHN J. CAREY Treasurer . . - LOUIS LEPIS ERETOFORE The AThleTic AssociaTion was an organizaTion which acTed as The inTermediary beTween The STudenT Body and The ExecuTive AThleTic Board oT ConTrol. Though iT has always been an organizaTion wiTh much responsiloiliTy, iT has had several aTTacl4s oT sleeping sickness. This year, however, The associaTion has undergone a compleTe change. WiTlI The inTroducTion oT The Meehan sporTs-Tor-all program The AThleTic AssociaTion became a very acTive socieTy. A new Torce has awakened This represenTaTive group and iT will, no doubT, in The years To come, loe more serviceable To The ExecuTive Board. 258 .......Y-. ...,....-- ., , ,....,..A..v -L,.,,- . . - - -- : r A ' ' ' np, .I.v I 75 K I i . I ' . f . I 1 E n I S O 2 5 v 4 E Q B I 1 r 1 55 F i I 1 3 I 1 1 4 W 4- 1-Tw ZSUJ-x , 1'Q X 7 X .I 1 a . I '1 x, i FOOTBALL TEAM. 193: Us-.fn 1 W if ?'D!I. -7f1i: I :'1'O:'-I0-12:01 I 5 T I 5-I fix T T ri T: T Q .J -1- -T- , . --.-Lyn. ,L...u:3..,w wx:-El 1 1 ' i - I .., 1 flu ,ff Q ,f , 73 qu Wai . ,Q Q ,Zf,s,, ,4- V- Tis 5M-T T Tmfx .V 311. ,, , I X I ' A ' , rv I 42542: :E I , . ,.,, t , T 0 1 X ,1 f f' f-Q' i M ' v X W igr '-,mv 5 f- Log' ' A ,,,,. I ,L :--' ,Q ez fw 1 f T 4' Kfiil T ' - , 2 1 W,-gf WEN' if T KW? WM, If, ,, ,Q wr W 4:-3,7 QM 4 gin VQ 41,5 n f f-Wg X ' s ' ' X 1 ff f , 1, f' T u 51' , N721 '. C 'uf ,v fsff-,,:+gf:Mw'j3 f awp- , W ,X , M- if . f ,ff f, s qw ,A 2 I V4 '1,,Wi vy, fav. ,WA 5, ,QU f .gi afasm df- ?-:,g 'ga' s gzasfy ,, Mugs: ,A-f,m'w14v,,! - 4.53-24-'ffdf , Z f f ' -.1, YL,, 2 1 A ' N, IE ,, W. .4 f I La., Wuffxi 2 COACH JOHN LAW MANAGER FRANK D'AMlCO CAPT. JOHN DEL NEGRO Z T' 3 1 T SI IN FUOTBALL HE Class oT '32 enTered lvlanhaTTan in The midsT oT a TransiTion. The change Trom The old college To The new buildings was more Than iusT a change oT loca- Tion. JusT as soon as The TaculTy and sTudenT body seTTled down in Their new sur- roundings, ManhaTTan began To grow in all deparTmenTs. This spiriT oT growTh had already produced greaT resulTs in The curriculum and in The developmenT oT The diT- TerenT deparTmenTs beTore The Class oT '32 enTered ManhaTTan. WiTh The growTh oT The scholasTic acTiviTies iT was a naTural sTep To carry The expansion over inTo The Tield oT aThleTics. The l:aculTy, Alumni, and STudenT Body were ready Tor This sTep. Any lcind oT expansion in aThleTics usually demands a successTul TooTball Team. lT seems To be The very basis upon which college aThleTics are made. lvlanhaTTan Turned iTs aTTenTion TirsT To improvemenT in This sporT. IT demanded greaT organiza- Tion and a sTrong leader. The Green and Whi+e, on The eve oT The enTry oT The Class oT T932 inTo lvlanhaTTan, was TorTunaTe enough To obTain The use oT La Salle MiliTary Academy Tor a Training camp Tor The TooTball Team. Here candidaTes Tor The Team reporTed To Coach Joe SchwarTzer, who was Taking The reigns oT This sporT aT lv1anhaTTTan. SchwarTzer gaThered one oT The sTrongesT groups oT players which have ever been seen aT lv1anhaTTan. While he was Torced To relinquish The coaching u:-- i---- A Y - 5 lE3Zl5LTL4EQEl E-A 1: L E .J 2 LJ T -J - -1 T Tv U L ' A 26I oT The Jaspers aTTer Two years, The squad which he inTroduced has Tormed The basis Tor many lvlanhaTTan successes since. ATTer SchwarTzer had organized The squad Tor Two years, he Turned over conTrol To Coach John Law, who had jusT compleTed a Tine career as capTain oT NoTre Dame. Law also spenT Two years aT ManhaTTan. l-lis Teams were well Trained. Using The NoTre Dame sTyle oT play, he was Torced, in a way, To reorganize The Team. Now ManhaTTan has once more changed coaches and will resume The old sTyle OT play inTroduced by SchwarTzer Tour years ago. The enThusiasm ThaT inTesTed lvlanhaTTan aT The beginning oT The l93I TooTball season lenT an air oT Tense expecTancy oT greaT Things during The coming schedule. gfw ,Q 4, , fa 4, 15 4,2 f V f :5 g , f , ' - JoHNNiE DEL NEeRo BILL Hieeins Lou LEPIS A762 L silly .1-1 Coach John Law was serving as head coach Tor his second year. The Team was Tairly well acquainTed wiTh The NoTre Dame sysTem. There was a good supply of players. For The TirsT Time in years ManhaTTan seemed capable oT moving inTo TirsT class compeTiTion. lV1anhaTTan was in need oT This enThusiasm, Tor The schedule arranged Tor The Jaspers was iusT abouT Twice as hard as any lisT oT Teams ThaT They had ever Taced. OgleThorpe, which had deTeaTed The Jaspers I9-O The year beTore, was slaTed To come norTh once again wiTh almosT The same Team. CaTholic UniversiTy, which was a comparaTively weak Team in l93O, developed inTo a Top-noTch Team as The season progressed and became The second sTrongesT eleven on The schedule. ST. John, T' A 1 263 T r.:L45c,-.1...9 3 Q HATTA N VV E lll which had also deTeaTed The Jaspers The year previous, was loolcing To repeaT. The Redmen had as an added incenTive The ThoughT ThaT upon The success oT Their l93l season depended The conTinuance oT The sporT aT ST. John's. All These consideraTions shrunk inTo easy work in comparison wiTh The baTTle scheduled wiTh ColgaTe. Even The mosT enThusiasTic Jasper rooTer did noT hope Tor a vicTory. YeT The crowd ThaT iournied upsTaTe To waTch The conTesT was one oT The largesT delegaTions ever To Travel ThaT disTance Trom Man'haTTan. The spiriT which pervaded lvlanhaTTan made The Jaspers ready To Tace any opposiTion. The season began wiTh one oT The biggesT vicTories ever achieved by lvlanhaT- Tan. The BalTimore UniversiTy game neTTed an 87-O vicTory Tor The Jaspers. CapTain Johnny Del Negro showed Tine leadership. The subsTiTuTes Tried ouT in The course oT The game gave promise oT being able To susTain The work oT The TirsT Team in The harder conTesTs ThaT were To come. The vicTory was noT wiThouT iTs Toll, however, Tor George Koeck, one oT The TinesT aThleTes ThaT ever came To ManhaTTan was car- ried oTT The Tield wiTh a splinTered arm. Koeclc was a good, reliable end on The eleven, and one oT The mosT reliable baslceTball players on The Jasper squad. The second game was a real TesT oT The progress made by The Jasper eleven. ManhaTTan meT pracTically The same Team which had represenTed OgleThorpe The year beTore. ln one oT The hardesT ToughT games lvlanhaTTan succeeded in deTeaTing The SouTherners I3-O. The game had abouT iT The same air oT grandeur ThaT marlced The iniTial nighT game which The Two Teams played. The baTTle was a liTTle more closely conTesTed-The Georgians lceeping up a sTiTT opposiTion unTil The Tinal whisTle and ThreaTening To score several Times in The closing period. The success oT The TirsT Two games senT Jasper hopes soaring. NOT only lvlan- haTTan Tans buT even cold-blooded sporTs wriTers were expressing expecTaTions ThaT The Jaspers would give ColgaTe a Tough game. The Green and WhiTe Traveled I . - 1 M. ,,- ,uf , ,A l il I E. fx a , al li 1 l i T i l T li .3 lf l 1 I T T l. -1 S i 4 ii 'I T i T ll ll '. I i i pl T l l 1 T i J f ' 'T i 'lfrj . -..L ,.x,.,a.. 264 ll I 1 I '23 ?2jg+?ZJ T pi Z T if 1 M, -s --- 1lL ff' Ti: Tl' 'fin' 5 1S'L.il'1 ' I f '-'L -5 id- 13' X l : 1--1, - Q 1. Lwilf 'fs' 1 iff Y A V. s fav -1 2 . ' r f f ' f f , ' f y ra. rx x upsfafe wifh a large following, one of fhe largesf ever fo represenf Manhaffan. Despife a sfiff baffle fhe Jaspers refurned from fheir firsf venfure info fhe camp of fhe gianfs on fhe fail end of a 33-O score. The game was played in fhe worsf pos- sible weafher-a cold, muddy field, for fhe Nofre Dame sfyle of play. The Varsify resfed a liffle foo long affer fheir disappoinfmenf in losing fo Col- gafe and as a resulf only succeeded in holding Cify College fo a O-O fie. The Lavender Coach, Parker, musfered all fhe sfrengfh of fhe rafher limifed maferial fhaf was available and succeeded in making one grand gesfure by holding a sfrong lvlanhaffan feam, wifh one of fhe weakesf feams fhaf Cify College produced in years. To do fhis he employed a novel defense which seemed fo complefely fool fhe Jaspers unfil if was foo lafe fo score. The Lavender feam lined up wifh an eighf-man line on fhe defense, relying upon fheir punfs fo keep fhe ball as far from fheir goal as possible. Cafholic Universify, which was a rafher mediocre feam a year ago, rapidly de- veloped info a sfrong fhreaf. Affer fhe discouraging fie wifh Cify College, Man- haffan fans hardly expecfed fhe fine game fhaf fhe Jaspers puf up againsf fhe Washingfon feam. Againsf unforeseen sfrengfh Manhaffan played one of ifs besf games of fhe season and should have come off vicforious buf for a few breaks. The Jaspers came fhrough fhe following week fo down Bosfon Universify Il-O in Bosfon. The spirif displayed by fhe Green and Whife roofers in fhe supporf which fhey gave fhe feam on fheir frips was a fine demonsfrafion of fhe loyalfy fhaf is always characferisfic of Manhaffan men. Wifh fhree vicfories, fwo defeafs and a fie fhe Jaspers prepared fo beffer fheir average and incidenfally even an old score wifh Sf. John's. The Brooklyn feam came fo Jasper field wifh a grim deferminafion fo make fhis, fheir lasf baffle on fhe gridiron, a memorable one. The game was one of fhe mosf ' yillf Iii Ill ffl, .11 Q .TQ1lii'. 'lf . ,'l.f.1f1f'Lii? iifgvi ijii Sjllav S .Tj V -,,-. CE U 'V U 265 X I -7 A . 2 Thrilling conTesTs ThaT has ever been played on Jasper Field. ATTer almosT sixTy minuTes oT hearTbrealcIng play. The Jaspers were on The Tail end oT a 6-7 score. AlThough The VarsiTy Time and again placed The ball in scoring posiTion some Triclc oT TaTe seemed To carry The ball baclc inTo Their own TerriTory. The ball sped Trom one end oT The Tield To The oTher wiTh exciTing rapidiTy. l-lowever, on one oT Those Trealc plays ThaT so oTTen decide The TaTe oT such conTesTs, Two huslcy ManhaT'Tan line- men swooped down on The ST. John's baclc as he was recovering a bad pass Trom cenTer and swepT him across The line Tor a saTeTy. Even Then The play did noT cease To have iTs Thrill. Twice again did The Redmen march wiTh deTermined vigor To wiThin scoring posiTion buT The lv1anhaTTan line held and The Jaspers won 8-7. , ill, 266 .M f..ef41-A-14,4-3,1 ,Q-fififii T an fi i I I 1 ' Wg l 1 l is Four vicTories, Two deTeaTs and one Tie-ThaT comprised The record oT The season. T ExcepT Tor The Tie wiTh CiTy College, The lv1anhaTTan TooTball Team Tor The year oT l ,..--Qc l93l did all ThaT could be expecTed of iT. ln The number oT games won, losT and Tied, '51 iT ouTraTes any Team in recenT years. AlThough Coach Johnny Law will noT be wi+h A 4 us nexT year, we can loolc back upon The record ThaT he leTT Tor his Two-year sTay aT lvlanhaTTan wiTh a Teeling oT graTiTude Tor a iolo well done. i i l l - i i I l I l l l Q . T . y T Xfgi 'x xx 1 i l i T 267 ' ij E 1 9 3 Q HA,TTAl1-UE: 'll ' V' l AX lr U T T JUHN LAW . Ol-lN LAW, capTain and all-American guard oT The Tamous l929 NoTre Dame eleven, enTered upon his duTies as head coach aT lv1anhaTTan in The spring oT l93O. AlThough he had iusT concluded a brillianT TooTball career, The.Taslc beTore him was noT an easy one. The Jasper Team had been Trained in The Warner sTyle oT play, which is radically VdiTferenT Trom The Roclcne sysTem. Also Law was beginning his TirsT coaching assignmenT amid sTrange surroundings. BUT perhaps his greaTesT handicap was The Tendency To expecT magical resulTs Trom The NoTre Dame sysTem. In his Two seasons as direcTor oT lvlanhaTTan's TooTball desTinies, The Jasper 5,14 eleven came close To emerging Trom The ranlcs oT ordinary TooTball Teams. The Ogle- Thorpe game lasT Tall marlced The high spoT oT his career aT lvlanhaTTan. On ThaT E evening The squad Toolc compleTe possession of The Tield. Capable and conTidenT, , They showed ThaT They had acquired The Timing and precision oT The NoTre Dame l sTyle. They cliclced. ii l When Law resigned, The school auThoriTies decided To inTroduce a general aThleTic I program Tor all sTudenTs, and Chick Meehan was engaged as direcTor oT physical l educaTion. WhaT The TuTure holds Tor ManhaTTan in TooTball, The class oT '32 need noT predicT. lT does, however, expecT ThaT The upward climb which began wiTh I Law will conTinue under his successor. WhaT The new Team does will naTurally be oT inTeresT To all lVlanhaTTan men. BUT The TooTball memories oT The class oi '32 will always be associaTed wiTh The rhyThmic shiTT, The one-Two-Three-l-like! which John l Law broughT To lvlanhaTTan. l gg if if , , 268 wc Th, pr gr gli wi aT pil Th cc Be li sh ex rn, gr miie: JUHN F. MEEHAN F The year l932 was noT conspicuous in ManhaTTan's hisTory Tor any oTher reason, The achievemenTs oT John F. Meehan as DirecTor oT Physical EducaTion alone would make iT exTraordinary. LaTe in December, l93I, BroTher Cornelius announced ThaT Mr. Meehan had been appoinTed TooTball coach, and also commissioned To provide aThleTic TaciliTies Tor every sTudenT. Members oT The sTudenT body whose greaT Tailing is ThaT They know so many Things ThaT aren'T so, exchanged knowing glances. Scarcely a week wenT by aTTer Meehan Took oTTice when Things began To happen wiTh bewildering rapidiTy. The newspapers suddenly blazoned daily TeaTure arTicles abouT ManhaTTan's new inTra-mural sporTs. The campus was dazed by a sTory lwiTh picTuresl oT an inTer-class crew. NOT a varsiTy, buT an inTra-mural crewl PresenTly The exciTemenT died down somewhaT and Mr. Meehan conTinued 'wiTh The Tull organizaTion oT The sporTs Tor all program. He called TogeTher an experT coaching sTaTT Tor every sporTg class Teams were Tormedg schedules were planned. BeTore long The skepTics received anoTher shock. The new sporTs plan, which Meehan had produced ouT oT Thin air, bore iTs organizer's sTamp and would endure. ii As more and more sTudenTs came To know Mr. Meehan, They began To under- sTand The Torce oT personaliTy and execuTive abiliTy which were eTTecTing These ' T Th exTensive plans. The lasT vesTiges oT doubT soon gave way To enThusiasm or e man and his program. We have Tound him Truly worThy oT ManhaTTan and oT The greaT conTidence placed in him. 269 1 '2 F nf? T'2arfgT.E ,fv If TIP- T T ' Q if Af KW, X X I in , f,,y,f!f!f!f if 72, X 4 2 2 if ,QWW i .nwfiingy W1 ,z , , f , V f ' V z, X- J. MILLER C. PORTER J. CGNNORS BROTHER ANSELM Diredor S. GIANGRECO 270 X F. SMITH G. MAUCI-I Q V A , x... i... , I I I I V X 3 1 1 J l 1 W s V el N1 - ,aux x I , .' Zu! , 1 l1'1 IN iT! - 31 ., ,. x A' ,, , , s- 1 ' jfs? A 1' , , V W L mi if 1'--1 . X.: 1. ,l I Aiilfi 9 NNE . A 'NBII 1, VIH ,Vis - 1 'ESI' L : i Jimi -' A 2 ! wif' Qiiw 5 4 T ' -'NIU 1 N 1 - f:!S?' V f ' 114 4, V, ff lgiq 9 V I 1,' ,f U W I 1,12 fiiff' l J ,, ' tgcgw , ' 1 I +V- f . frwpff 1 2 lf 'f-X M14 L ff X ,,-,R-i -' 5' 11 1 I ' ' 1: -- H' Hx f-wil 1 ' '11'f11l'l1-?1- Wiilflg x 1.- H 4' Klux ith-V-Y-X :Y ' ,l i V-ev., L 4 i' ,muy V W I 7 1 i fi S BASKETBALL TEAM I932 UU l932 BASKETBALL TEAM HU --cv--f ..,- Y, ,f .-4f'l.. ' 'A f q'7 ..,:Q. , 1- Q ' ,. s , i i l CAPT. DAN KELLEHER COACH NEIL COHALAN MANAGER ED. MURPHY BASKETBALL I93I-32 HE convicfion fhaf Manhaffan is now firmly esfablished in an era of superlafive baskefball feams, widespread among afhlefically-minded Manhaffanifes, received furfher confirmafion by fhe splendid showing of fhe Green courf feam of I93 I-32. Neil Cohalan, whose feafs on courf, gridiron, diamond and frack are so much of a Manhaffan fradifion fhaf fhey are virfually inferwoven info Alma lVlafer's coaf of arms, guided fhe feam for his fhird successive season. The performance of his charges fully upheld fhe paramounf of excellence inaugurafed by fhelr predecessors of fhe lasf fwo years. The sfafisfics of fhe season, which, affer all, are of liffle imporfance, for whaf counfs is fhaf fhe feam waged a successful campaign, reveal fhaf fhe Jasper courfmen ' ' ' ' fdffffereihf fasfed fhe sweefs of vicfory fhlrfeen fumes and felf fhe sfing o e ea a g engagemenfs. To plunge furfher info fhe sea of compufafion and fo quofe more of fhe variefy of lies lcnown as sfafisfics, baslcefballs fossed by lvlanhaffan hands whisked fhrough fhe hoop for a season's fofal of 620 poinfs, while fhe opponenfs were forced fo con- fenf fhemselves wifh a measly 5l6. And lasf season's record brings Neil Cohalan's 273 . ,ii a I' T 1:1 E I 9 3. Q fffg ff Q if ,, fl , , 711, y . f ,ff f ff, -W-ff fy ff fax f f f . if I 1 , 'ifflfiff T-'G' , , 'TZ ' , I ,V ,,,,. JACK MCCORMICK DONK KELLEI-IER DON SMITH Three year baTTing average To .742 I43 vicTories and I5 deTeaTsI-a very personable Tigure. Though To alibi a season oT such preeminenTIy TavorabIe resuITs is superTIuous, neverTheIess The TempTaTion To assuage, or raTher To deride, The seIT-appoinTed side- Iine experTs who proTessed To be disappoinTed aT The miserabIe showing oT The Team is Too sTrong To resisT. Several eIemenTs conspired To prevenT The Green Tive Trom equaIIing iTs phenomenaI record oT The previous year, noT IeasT oT which was The inexorable Law oT Averages. ThaT briIIianT achievemenT oT going Through a nineTeen game schedule wiTh Two soIiTary deTeaTs included no inconsiderabIe number, six or seven aT IeasT, of uncom- TorTabIy cIose games. IT invariably happened ThaT I:aTe wouId incIine Towards The Jaspers when They had Their backs againsT The TiguraTive waII. So iT mighT be said ThaT in The pasT season The IiTTIe ball oT chance became so eccenTric as To bounce in -and Then ouT oT-ManhaTTan's hole, insTead oT in-To sTay. The absence oT pasT masTers oT The game made no IiTTIe gap buT. HGVGVIIWG' Iess, The squad ThaT winTer day embraced a Tew men possessing courT savoir Taire. There were avaiIabIe CapTain Dan KeIIeher-Donk, To you-The pivoT-shoT specidIiSJf. Johnnie McCormick, The deadIy siege gun Trom The ouTer ranges, and Bob Leonard. The deTensive Ieech-a sTrong enough nucleus Tor any Team To buiId around. Incl- denTaIIy, These men have since made Their adieux To Alumni I-IaII, aII Three winding up Their careers as members oT The Green quinTeT in Three disTincT, yeT concerTed. blazes oT gIory. I I I- - I s T of f I 'J - Lf T I'-1 1- ig IJ L 'I L, I- f'Lf9:is.iiggfiaf4g1T.11ff',:. 1-'wk 274 ,A si iz. 'W My cffiwrw 2 ,, Q f ,, f f X , 5 as-. - 1 I , ,,- Af. , ff ws V, X .f . 1,7 , -' g 0. , ' I 1,-'A 4 , ,, X' X f. ,JK of . 1 LV W 150 f 2 7' A f f' 1 2, ss ' 7 , X 6 ' WS X 4 ww 2 f- Q M f ffl gi f fr T .ww y f 2 sw S Q4-wpMc,wf's-Z-V 2 P, ' f f W f 57574 sf W , gigs S4 QD sf, ,f W QQ! ' f Q ' f f W ff Q , f - K f Y Q' A-'Y ,, X ,V 'X ff Q V, X 1,2 S 's Q Y Af ' z s if F, ug? f f s 7 Q as X XX fff s, f , , ' If ' fm 5,4 , , f BUDDY T-TASSETT BOB LEONARD RED BUCT-TLER The services oT Bud l-lasseTT, aggressive souThpaw Tosser, and Don SmiTh, high oach Cohalan, noT aT all To his dis- IO pleasure. WiTh These Tive men as The dependables oT dependables and a sTrong conTingenT oT accessories-Tom l-logan, John Rowan, Jack lVlcAlevy, STeve Buchler, . . h Bill lvlclvlanus, Bill Blalce and Jack Grimberg-a Team measuring in every way To T e lvlanhaTTan sTandard evolved. s ringing cenTre, were also aT The disposal oT C The .laspers could hardly Tile a claim ThaT Their eTTorTs on The courT wenT unap- preciaTed lasT winTer, Tor The aTTendance aT games was more consisTenTly high This year Than any oTher season wiThin our recollecTion. The average TurnouTs Tor home games aT Alumni l-lall-The gymnasium, To you-was in The neighborhood oT 800 specTaTors per conTesT, while aT The imporTanT games played in The Tamiliar armory OT The l02nd Engineers, 2,000 was noT an excepTional aTTendance. A conservaTive esTimaTe would sTaTe ThaT The Green guinTeT perTormed beTore a ToTal crowd oT ' ' T Th Unem- 35,000 lThe l7,000 specTaTors who I ploymenT BeneTiT Carnival was The ma ammed Madison Square Garden or e in conTribuTorl. The Green quinTeT inauguraTed iTs l93l-32 campaign wiTh an overwhelming Triumph over an Alumni Tive, 38-I4. AT no Time were The graduaTes, all greaTs oT The noT Too dim and disTanT pasT, able To avail againsT The rapid-Tire passing, accuraTe shooTing and closely-lcniT deTense oT The VarsiTy. Even Neil Cohalan, who donned o Tal4e The courT againsT his charges, scored buT a soliTary poinT, d nTedl unsuccessTul evening. a uniTorm himselT T experiencing an unprece e y CT was The nexT vicTim oT The TasT moving claspers, ST. PeTer's College oT Jersey i y bowing under a veriTable Tusilade i MeTrO Oluan oT basl4eTs, 40-l5. AnoTher minor p T 275 I i i l il l fl l l l l l 1 i I i 1 l i A ff- N X125 if D ,xx Q... .Q X 'T' T -f-: ..f5':..-. Tll4',2, T 3 .flea-.fail .TQ - A . T rival S+, Francis' College oT Brooklyn, Turnished The Green wiTh liTTle more Than a mild workouT, The Green emerging TriumphanT To The Tune oT 38-I8. Villanova, always a powerTul rival, and The TirsT opponenT oT maior ranking, exTended Neil Cohalan's charges in The early sTages oT The game buT Tell under an irresisTible second-halT drive, 23-l l. WiTh a sTring oT Tour vicTories on iTs record, The Green quinTeT launched upon The diTTiculT parT oT iTs schedule. The ChrisTmas holidays broughT liTTle ioy To The baskeTballers, or perhaps Too much ioy during The Noel-Tide vacaTions worked Tor The requ undoing oT The Tive. Odd, Columbus Council, KnighTs oT Columbus, The TirsT holiday opponenT, eked ouT ,iheq a 30-25 vicTory over The Jaspers-Their TirsT deTeaT oT The season-in a hecTic game had aT The BrooklyniTes' club house. The game was played Tor The beneTiT oT The New hasii York American ChrisTmas Fund and This worThy chariTy was amply beneTiTed by The Simpy, proceeds oT The conTesT. mar? ln The TeaTure evenT oT GoTham's college baskeTball calendar-The Carnival Tor The BeneTiT oT The New York CiTy Unemployed-lvlanhaTTan played a raTher ignomi- h , nious role. The Jaspers were rudely humbled by an experienced group oT players Telr wearing The Red and WhiTe uniTorms oT ST. John's College oT Brooklyn, The suc- row' cessors oT The noTorious wonder Team oT The VincenTians. Every conceivable Thing OTHT wenT wrong wiTh The play oT The Green. The Tinal score was I6-6, and lvlanhaTTan rooTers could noT even cherish The doubTTul consolaTion oT a single Tield goal. IT was prove a decisive and appalling deTeaT. Oflh. The sTreak oT adverse TorTune ThaT had been hounding The Jaspers persisTed in an el The nexT game, which presenTed as an opponenT The DarTmouTh quinTeT, a TasT com- - binaTion wiTh exTraordinarily sTrong reserves. Showing very liTTle evidence oT iTs prow splendid early season Torm, The Green Tive was downed conclusively, 39-24. Hmm AgainsT Niagara UniversiTy's highly TouTed quinTeT, lvlanhaTTan snapped suddenly Wpfh I back inTo Torm and gave an excepTionally Tine perTormance in repelling The invasion esiim oT The upsTaTers, 31-I8. Domi Vengeance was sweeT when, in The nexT game, The Jaspers scored a Thrilling There 23-20 Triumph over The New York AThleTic Club Tive. The Winged FooTers had been unTor' hailed as a nemesis oT The Green by virTue OT, The upseT They had scored in The pre- more vious season, a win which broughT a lvlanhaTTan winning sTreak oT sevenTeen consecu- baske Tive vicTories To an end. DT5COU'a9ememL 6Qain haunTed The lv1anhaTTan baskeTball camp when CiTy Col- Iandl lege, The arch rivals oT The Green, TreaTed The Team To a smarTing 3I-20 seTback. Jas There was no denying The superioriTy oT The Lavender ThaT nighT, Tor ThaT Tive played pe superbly. lTs excellence was well aTTesTed by iTs general accepTance as The winner I oT The EasTern TiTle. York CaThedral College, The downTown seminary, provided a braarhar Tor The Jaspers Their' and The Cohalan men overwhelmed The embryonic priesTs by a TiTTeen-poinT margin, TTY Th 39-24. presg 3 r 276 ..-- , GD5 ikingl SV an Upon O The Jr The rd ouT game 2 New by The val Tor gnomi- players ne suc- e Thing nhaTTan lT was aisTed in rsT com- a oT iTs suddenly invasion Thrilling rad been The pre- Consecu- SiTy Col' r seTbaCl4- we Pl5Yed 19 winner ie -l55PSrs ln ii mars - . ...e..-..-,.. ..-- A L, - ,,.E'Y.ff9V 7'Ti W7 7 'i i T ' ' A . ,ri i--1 P 1 fg i l 9:?Eif5:2E55213i-is'f-.4. The regularly scheduled conTesT wiTh ST. John's aT The lO2ncl Engineers Armory provided The climax oT The season. ln a Tremendously Tense srruggle, lvlanhaTTan disTincTly surprised The baskeTball experTs by upseTTing The Redmen, 29-27. lT was an epic baTTle, beyond all measure oT doubT The mosT Thrilling aThleTic conTesT in which The Green has ever sTriven. The game opened in desulTory Tashion, wiTh ST. John's maniTesTing The same degree oT superioriTy as iT had in The previous conTesT. AT halT-Time The score-board revealed a l9-4 margin in Tavor oT The VincenTians. So conTidenT oT vicTory was Buck Freeman, menTor oT The lndians, ThaT he replaced his regular linemen wiTh a Team oT subsTiTuTes. UndaunTed by The almosT insurmounTable oclds againsT Them The Jaspers sTarTed To play wiTh a cold Tury ThaT virTually swepT The cocky Redmen OTT The courT. ln less Than nine minuTes The TiTTeen-poinT deTiciency had been alrered by eleven poinTs, and Freeman, sTill conTrclenT oT easy vicTory, hasTily reinserTed his regulars inTo The game. AT This poinT, however, There was no sTopping The Jaspers, who conTinued Their spurT unTrl They had gained a Two-poinT margin, To which They grimly held unTil The reTeree's whisTle senT The game inTo hisTory. Rensselaer PolyTechnic lnsTiTuTe oT Troy came To Town To meeT The Jaspers in Their nexT engagemenT buT The Engineers made Their liTTle Trip To no avail. ATTer :Ts ' ' b T rousing Triumph over ST. John, lvlanhaTTan was noT going To be sTopped y a eam oT This calibre. They weren'T. The score was 32-l7. Duquesne presenTed a more diTTiculT problem Tor The Green. The PiTTsburghers roved Tough nuTs To crack buT evenTually bowed beTore The more eTTecTive shooTing P oT The lvlanhaTTan Tive. The Jaspers Tinished on The long end oT a 29-23 score aTTer an excepTionally exciTing sTruggle. The inTer olaTion oT anoTher upseT made TurTher ravages inTo The Green's record. 2 All i ,fx ,,.ff.,., T P Providence College was The perpeTraTor oT The oTTense, wiTh The Jaspers being vic- Timized To The exTenT oT 23-22. lT was a nip-and-Tuck baTTle ThroughouT The disTance, wiTh Providence having The sTronger Tinishing drive. This was one oT The mosT inTer- - esTing conTesTs oT The season. The aggressive TacTics oT The huge coach oT The Dominicans who inTerrupTed The game several Times To walk ouT on The Tloor To give , The reTeree a Tongue lashing, gave The crowd ample opporTuniTy Tor vocal eTTorT. An If unTorTunaTe incidenT in This game was The injury oT Tom l-logan, The promising sopho- more cenTre, who TracTureol his leTT ankle in a severe scrimmage under The Providence baskeT. T MT. ST. lvlary's College, The Green's old rival Trom EmmiTsburg, in The Mary- y land lvlounTains, served as a Till-in opponenT and served ThaT purpose admirably. The .laspers Tinishecl on The besr end OT a 26-I6 score. ln anoTher one oT Those Thrilling inTra-meTropoliTan conTesTs lvlanhaTTan and New York UniversiTy locked horns Tor a sTrenuous Tussle. The Jaspers once more revealed Their capabiliTies as a TighTing Team and wiped a huge halT-Time deTiciency To Triumph by The saTe margin oT 24-19. The VioleT Tive, which had been insralled as a heavy pre-game TavoriTe, gained an aclvanTage OT eighT poinTs by inTermission Time. ln We 277 ..v.--,.,-,..- . .1-.-W.:-, -...m .-nv-fn l Q i T i I 1 3 I 2 Il I lv I u I Il' 5 i . I I + I I I TH g is .Q in N is A-.TTA is ThaT unrelenTing Tashion, The Jaspers commenced To biTe deep inTo ThaT margin ag The second halT OT The game Opened and soon They had consumed iT. The spiriTed rally OT The Green did nOT halT There. l OWeVer' buf COUTTHUSC Unwaveringly unTil ManhaTTan had a secure margin on iTs own parT. Tne courwer rally sTaged by The u gi P v g n ViOleT in The closing sTages OT The game was inTeresTing and earnesf, buf TuTule by iusT Tive poinTs. BalTimOre UniversiTy's cOurT represenTaTives showed liTTle more TalenT Than did Their much-abused warriors OT The gridiron, and They cOnsequenTly did nOT presenT much OT a problem TO The Green. The Jaspers Toyed wiTh Their SOuThern rivals, scoring Treely and winning as They pleased, 32-I9. CaThOlic UniversiTy OT WashingTOn, D. C., was cOnsTanTly ThreaTening TO give lv1anhaTTan a good deal OT Trouble in iTs game wiTh The Green, buT The Cardinals could never manoeuver The shrinkage OT The Ten pOinT lead The Jaspers esTablished in The opening minuTes OT The Tray. Bud Sheary, shOoTing phenomenally Trom every conceivable pOsiTiOn on The courT, scored TiTTeen pOinTs -Tor The WashingTOnians, and alThOugh he was Tar and away The besT man On The cOurT-ThaT nighT-The well divided aTTack OT The Green was more eTTecTive Than The cOnsTanT bombardmenT OT shOTs by The C. U. ace. The score was 40-20. The season came To a raTher inglorious close. lv1eeTing La Salle College in The TirsT Two games in Philadelphia, The Jaspers dropped a close decision, 34-32. They Tound Themselves considerably harassed by novel inTerpreTaTiOns read inTO The rules by The Philadelphia reTerees. Temple UniversiTy, probably The mOsT pOwerTul Team in The cOunTry On iTs home courT, virTually overwhelmed The Green in a game On iTs dancehall Tloor. WiThouT aTTempTing To alibi away The deTeaT, Tor The Owls Triumphed decisively, 46-2I, iT musT be said ThaT lv1anhaTTan was very much handicapped by The sTricT imposTs OT The OTTicials and The unaccusTomed slipperiness OT The TlOOr. FOrdham's banner OT dull maroon was hOisTed above The Green bangle in The concluding baskeTball OT ManhaTTan's season. The represenTaTives OT The neighboring insTiTuTion did nOT perTOrm any more capably Than The emissaries OT The Jaspers, buT Dame FOrTune sprinkled more liberally upon Them The deciding breaks. The Rams' margin OT vicTOry was unimpressive, being 28-26 and, in a game marked by rough TGCTICS and Sloppy play. The Green cOmmiTTed iTselT more eTTecTively in all deparT- menTs save making poinTs. h -SharTly aTTer The close OT The season Johnnie McCormick, sharpshooTing ace, ad The honor OT being The unanimous choice OT coaches, OTTicials and spOrTs wriTers GS an all-lVieTrOpOliTan Team member. CapTain Dan Kelleher and Bud l-lasseTT were also placed prOminenTly On honor Teams picked by experTs. And SO' Wiih JYIWGT. The lvianhaTTan baskeTball season OT l93I-32 slipped away TMO The limbo OT The Past Timm WI'1lCl1. l1OWever, The cerTainTy seems, iT will OTTGH be VGSUFVGCTGCI Tor pleasanT ruminaTiOn by members OT This graduaTing class OT l932. f ' 'T ' .y,po'f M- -.f--fa ' I V 5,491.3 2 F-,,fq,,.f 3' ..-KL 278 I 5 2 J T 'I' nc 9 Q 1+ Sl gh .+- 6, BFS F9 GY en 32. QE ,-f 11!5-.x fx., gk ., ,. --f- , 44:K 'rf'7n.5 '1f rf ,Agfa '- rd.,- BASEBALL TEAM 1932 Lum... , 43 'si T. J, F211 ff We '-1 1 5--T , R' i. l Y ' ,Li:sL. T LEE ff f-Ziff l , l l l , . xxx XX T X N 05 OT i E si LLI l- ' CAPT. JOT-lN McCORMlCK COACH BERT DANIELS MANAGER GEORGE DAVIS A 1 if SS BASEBALL i952 LD ff l-lEN TaTe casT BerT Daniels in The direcTion oT lvlanhaTTan lasT year, The T' T Te was Taken Toward reesTablishing The baseball pr'esTige which once f mrs s p was The leading aThleTic disTincTion oT The college, Tor under The TalenTed guidance . . . . d T oT The colorTul ex-big league sTar, The Jasper nine is developing in Tull accor ance A wiTh The oTher branches oT varsiTy sporTs. i Old lvlanhaTTaniTes delighT in hearkening back To ThaT Time when The Jaspers l L sTood supreme in collegiaTe baseball circles-in a class by Themselves-wiTh serious ,ggj compeTiTion Tor Their loTTy honors noT TorThcoming even Trom The leading universiTies if y oT The counTry. Modern ManhaTTaniTes are beginning To delighT in spinning yarns I' abouT The sTrengTh oT The currenT nines wiTh as much relish as did The old grads when ,' making Their boasTs. T l I ATTer a long series oT dismal seasons, baseball came really back inTo iTs own lasT it spring when The TirsT Daniels-coached Green nine rolled up a record oT ThirTeen T vicTories and eighT deTeaTs, upseTTing among oThers such Tormidable rivals as Colum- bia, CiTy College, Providence, SeTon l-lall and Villanova. E From all indicaTions The splendid record oT The l93l Jasper nine is due To be l surpassed in achievemenT by iTs successor. The currenT ball Tossers auspiciously in- A auguraTed Their season wiTh decisive vicTories over VermonT UniversiTy and Lehigh. sl -i f ,Nan ,mf -,,,,,, ,,,,, ,.,,--,J..,,.,,,,w.,,- ' ,J T'F31?l2i'ilfjT5ff5fff'T77Q5i-fill:-5Exgigiczxiifz.LgE:p::E.: :.:Li..7,...l. -S1 'filifLlI 1TEI1-'-iii Qi T 'llllllbfilglQf'WlUl1ES'CUElUl2A 28l 1 Z, I' ... If nf. ls .K There was no doubT as To The superioriTy oT The Jaspers over The VermonT Team. The Green baTTers pounded The piTc:her oT The Green MounTain boys To The Tigura- Tive pulp, driving ouT sevenTeen saTe hi+s oT assorTed varieTies, and chasing an equal number oT runs across The rubber. The lions oT The Lehigh piTching sTaTT were similarly TooThless beTore The merciless slugging oT The hiT-crazy Jaspers. The Pennsylvanians were also bombarded by an assaulT +ha+ neTTed a ToTal oT sevenTeen hiTs and TourTeen runs. WALT DEVANEY TOM GARRISON MORSE REIDY T 282 91,2 5 , if l 1 ' i 3 -1 l l l 1 1 P1 395 5: , Ma., as Bla whi inni are piTc 'Q sf' , . MQ T i nj ,4x yy ,, :Tw ZW The superlaTive baTTing Torm oT The Green in iTs Two TesTs Thus Tar is so brillianT ' ' B'll as To overshadow commendable piTching performances by Tom Garrison and I ' h'T over The Tull rouTe, Bl ke. Garrison deTeaTed VermonT, I7-l, allowing only seven I s a while Blalce helped earn The I3-3 rouTe oT Lehigh wiTh a Three-hiT game Tor The seven innings oT play. WiTh a baTTing order ThaT is packed wiTh punch Trom sTarT To inns are sure To malce Trouble Tor every Team They come againsT This year. Even The piTchers like Their hiTs. T' ' h, The Jaspers i l TlP O'NElLL BOB LEONARD HAL KEEGAN 283 - i Cf 3 fl in fr. ri ii r are N ITE- l l I i l i i , -, l T i . frm.. X-v M.- 4- r r g- 3. ,, ff, ,,. I 1 - 'Z 'jf' e--,.,-.- -M 1, '- x L, Alwnygnwlwf yywrlffiffv 'iff 'Cy'HwffWfW,fiW M' f,,, 't L fi 4 fs 'figyf T 'H . 1'-4.:1'f:..f'l f T I f , .r , ' fir The dark problem oT developing a mound Siaiq oT college calibre, made oiTTEculT I ' I , T ,L ,,, .., T L .TI by The resignaTion Trom college oT Frank Ace' Corrigan, sTar oi lasi years sian, ' I ,, ' 'L ,. I L' and Alan Colville, sTellar Treshman hurler, appears now TO have roufic 1.5 :OIUTIOYL Q In Tom Garrison and Bill Blake, Daniels has Two sTarTers, wiTh Bud T-lasseTT, regular i TirsT baseman, Dick Ciccolella and Joe King, all oT whom have had previous piTching experience. For relieT duTies Al Donahue, Charlie lvlcCarThy, and Tony Cuocue, all encouraging prospecTs are available. Beyond oT The mound There is no really radical weakness in The nine. The re- ceiving end oT The baTTery is well TorTiTied wiTh l-lal Keegan, Bill EgloTT and Maurice Reidy. The veTeran inTield oT The l93l season including Bud l-lasseTT, TirsT base, Joe Sisko, second base, Tip O'Neil, shorTsTop, and Bob Leonard, Third base, has been reinTorced by sTrong sophomore maTerial. Mal Thomas, TooTball sTar, has won The , shorTsTop berTh over The veTeran O'Neil by his heavier hiTTing. George Bulger, TirsT, ff if and Tony Galgano, Third, boTh sophomores, are being reserved Tor uTiliTy duTy. The sTrongesT link in The lvlanhaTTan diamond chain is The ouTTield. CapTain Jack McCormick, leTT, WalT Devaney, cenTre, and Nick Tremark, righT, comprise whaT is undoubTedly as good an ouTTield as There is in college baseball. All oT These men are Tar-ranging Tielders, hard hiTTers and clever base runners. Devaney was an All- lvleTropoliTan choice lasT spring. McCormick's abiliTy as a baTsman is revealed by The premaTure records oT The presenT season, which have him lisTed Tor eighT saTeTies in eleven aTTempTs. WiTh The knowledge oT The maTerial on hand, wiTh The conTidence developed by The TirsT Two vicTories and wiTh The unavoidable convicTion ThaT BerT Daniels is a base- ball coach in a Thousand, all lv1anhaTTan is anTicipaTing a very successTul season. 'T - 'J l --J -fl U H il J ' 1--M -J 1..- l Ll iff. .+-Sl. T 284 443 f 13 Q : P9 g u i C4 , ' -A 1 ullr 1151, mn. ar ng all .e- CG oe en he S+. iin 1a+ en 1lI- he es by 1 9 3519 1 '1 Ewa, M ,l M, ,X ' .1-R' . ay 1 11 1 ilif K1 1 1 .hfsrxgs - ' 1' f-'-My . 0 ,.j , fQ.f.l1.1 3 1 1 - ,111 - E,-1 . 1 my L ,gg,,.,.f,m,..E,, QAM ,. if M 1 .. ,,,I,i.'I'51'1:vii ,v , .,.',,1-11 HL 11 1 ' x 1 KQV' X 1 5 X 1 A X, .- N 1 :i -1- FJK i' 1- K ,'j'w j' ,,, L, .,1.g,a.. Fflcvyk' 'Q - al .,.......,,- -.,.. ......,,.- -f 'j ,-..Q.L,.-n ............,..-.-..f--- .,. .,..-.... syn, - 'f , 1 f 1..-f .wp-'1 , .1 .,.. ,.. ,fn 53-3: Wx 1-ia 1' f 571333 P51 ,f,ia'1-F.. F 1M K .31 .4 YH! -Q., ,ew: - '.: j '1'f 1 F 1 ff- Y 1 1 1 Q. , f ! . 1 , 5 1 . A St 1 - 1 X I .Q E 1 ' if 1 ,. gli 1 11 .K I , ft 1 'll 121 .fi 11 Wm. WNW 1 11 -15-1 7 1 .audi . 1 , -1 'W ' ' 1 - Aj 'J 1 ' EI, 1 - fTf'f S 1. 1..3,1g ' -- -f . - 1.. . .1 1 - - 1-, ,. - .:. 1 in , .41 -1 ' I ' 1-1 . . xii., I-. , 'Q .- -Wir' 'ZF ,Q I .5 ,L 1.L.l..,j . 'w -,,..L1,'4kr-jf, .ly h -kk 1-4, limi K q....rv-1 V I 1-.-.4-51.1 14111 ng. 1 1' 2911 X 1115+ ' 1 1 , . 5 13' 'fi , .E L5 1 1 ' ' 4 , V Q . 1 1 1 1.5 .mai f 1' r'23l'x.1.:L1f'15i4'55iglfflffiifig-y-' A ' 1Tl1Z7'fj2j1 g::'1.:1T1..,. N ' Y-ff'-1-r-.-:i:ii::. 1-'2 ' --,,...,,.,.. ..,.,. .....-..,,----- ...,....f- --4',4,,,,,. .... ,.,,.,...-v- ,......- Yfr m., ,,-.,. ....,.-..Y------- ,,,......-f '- ' D51- c A V I , cgi X fi MANAGER JOE SHEET-TAN COACH PETER WATERS CAPT. VIN MCARDT-E TRACK HTLE The chilly blasTs oT a TrosTy December monTh were once again howling abouT The Tamiliar haunTs oT Jasper Oval, some TorTy odd or more cour- ageous warriors dared To buTTeT The icy winds sweeping down Trom Van CorTlandT in order To respond To Coach PeTer WaTer's call Tor Track candidaTes. Scarcely had The old year rung ouT when The new one was echoed in by The shouTs and cheers oT lvlanhaTTan Track enThusiasTs as They acclaimed The brillianT eTTorTs oT The Jasper one-mile relay Team in The Columbus Council MeeT on January 2. Running Tor The TirsT Time, The relay inauguraTed The new l932 season by rompirig home To win The CaTholic Club and College Mile Relay. The Time regisTered WGS 3:32, Tair enough Tor a beginning buT which could have been beTTered had noT The opposiTion sTalked in The Jasper's wake. Fresh Trom Their recen merely Tor personal saTisTacTion The same Team was piTTed againsT DarTmouTh, repuTed + b f a 1 9 o e one o The sTrongesT on The pine boards This year, in The BosTon K. oT C. Games. This Time compeTiTion was keener and The T vicTory and keenly desirous oT displaying Their proweSS Green and WhiTe warriors were pressed closer Than on The Tormer occasion. l-lowever, Their supremacy SOON 286 Told and lTaTTan. aTTempT. individue Third ple Am eleven n one Tour The Mar The lvlar UP 5 lol runner, , Of secoi breaking 59HSaTioi 9ilOrTs T AT Mceeoi awling cour- 'landT y The illianT wuary iping l was T The awess iuTed TT C. 'riors soon l i 9-5-m-I,-----, TRACK TEAM T932 Told and DarTmouTh was Torced To bend 'neaTh The yoke, anoTher vicTim oT Man- haTTan. The disTance was negoTiaTed in 3:28, Tour seconds be++er Than Their previous ' ' ' T +'ll reaTer achievemenTs oTher aTTempT. While The relay was Thus priming iTselT or s i g i ' i ' d d 'nTo shape and were Taking TirsT, second and individual sTars had quickly roun e i Third place honors among huge Tields oT compeTiTion. Among These was Jack Ryan oT cross-counTry Tame, who placed in Ten oT The eleven meeTs he parTicipaTed in, garnering one TirsT place, six seconds, Two Third and one TourTh. Joe lvlcCluskey oT Fordham was Ryan's nemesis ThroughouT and alThough The lvlanhaTTan boy ran some very splendid races in highly commendable Time, sTill The Maroon sTar was always iusT a Tew seconds beTTer. Frank McKenna also sTrung up a long lisT oT vicTories alongside his name while Frank Crowley, now a varsiTy runner, compeTed againsT The world's besT runners and was always good Tor a TirsT or second place. Gene Venzke, who asTounded The Track world wiTh his record- breaking TeaTs every week and who scored The world's record Tor The mile wiTh his sensaTional 4:lO 2-5, was The Thorn in Crowley's side all year round and Frank's greaT eTTorTs were wasTed beside him. ' d oT Bill AT The Millrose Games on February 6, The mile relay Team compose ' V' lvlcArdle, esTablished a new lvlcGeough, Joe Burns, Jack Carey and CapTain inny 287 I tj E 2 ,V V!! , , . wif, f A N 0. ,' 5 ,f ' f 4 ',,, I-QU LEPIS ED MARTIN VIN McARDLE record unprecedenTed in lvlanhaTTan hisTory. Running againsT T-loly Cross and GeorgeTown The Team Tinished TirsT in The splendid Time oT 3:24 4-5g The TasTesT mile relay record ever Turned in by a Jasper guarTeT, indoors or ouTdoors. ln The special half-mile race Tom Campbell placed second. I Two Trophies'in all became The properTy oT The Green sTars in The Newark K. oT C. Games. Toeing The mark againsT Holy Cross and Fordham in The CaTholic College Relay, Bill McGeough, Jack Seaman, John Boreman and Jack Carey ouT- disTanced The Tield by a good margin, breasTing The Tape aT leasT eighT yards in The van and clocking in aT 3:26 4-I0, a new record Tor The Track. Coming back again in The second race in The mile club and college relay handicap, lvlcArdle, Burns, lvlcGeough and Carey scored again Tor ManhaTTan, beaTing a large Tield and over- Taking N. Y. U. aT The Tape. This quarTeT Tlashed across The mark in 3:25 3-5, having had a TwenTy-Three yard handicap. AlThough iT Tailed To Take TirsT place in any evenT, The lvlanhaTTan Track Team rolled up Ten poinTs To Take TourTh place in The lv1eTropoliTan A. A. U. Championships. The Jaspers capTured Three seconds and a TourTh. Frank McKenna Took second in The I,500 meTers and Jack Ryan second in The 3,000 meTers. The only oTher evenT in which The Green and WhiTe succeeded in scoring was The Medley Relay Race. The varsiTy Team, comprised oT Frank Crowley, Jack Carey, Bill lvlcGeough and AI Morris, led mosT oT The way buT was unTorTunaTely nosed ouT on The home sTreTch by N. Y. U. The Freshman Relay, consisTing oT Adrian Andrews, Bill l-lamilTon, John Thompson and Bill Averill also compeTed in This evenT, placing TourTh. nafure perleifrf prise h5T'i6n SUTTGVST was' ini I155 Tur sTr0f19f 5 highf Smoky l horde 1 rolled uf' order OT Jim WG The line The Union hi and WT groundle Schenec pack ovi low scoi The wiTh Tee place w hy Wall ln Or more heaT H, runner, The TOF TirsT Qdve lv BUT unTi mdfi TQ, 33 To 3 Seasons -V H V H ,AMN -,.---...Q Q.whgWLwQ i i T L T i I T ' T... .. ii i.. if T Wg , 288 , T fgT fi3YT3Qa 5 aixfihq, iw' . , S ,f ,. ...J and Tile :ial lark olic 9uT- The n in irns. iver- ving 'earn hips. id in ivenT The orris. Y. U. rpson S353 ll'4iYll,,.li 1 CRUSS-COUNTRY lTl-l undoubTedly one oT The besr cross-counTry Teams in The making, Coach PeTer WaTers nursed secreT ambiTions Tor his l93l program. JusT whaT The naTure oT Those ambiTions were, would be hard To say, buT iT one were able To peneTraTe inTo The inner researches oT his mind he mighT noT have been aT all sur- prised To see a plan unTolding iTselT which Tended To place cross-counTry aT Man- haTTan on a plane equal To The TinesT in The EasT. NoT ThaT lVlanhaTTan has ever suTTered Trom loss oT presTige in This sporT. On The conTrary, ever since The sporT was'inTroduced some seven years back by iTs Tamous coach, The Green and WhiTe has Turned ouT some wonderTul Teams and Tor The pasT Tew years has been growing sTronger and sTronger. BuT whaT PeTe WaTers did inTend To do was To secure even h d T h'l nio ed. a higher noTch in The hall oT Tame Than a Jasper Team a ers w ie e T y CapTained by The sTalwarT Edgar lvlarTin, The Green conTingenT invaded The mok liTTle Town oT BeThlehem Pa and scored a mosT decisive vicTory over a surprised s y , ., horde oT Lehigh runners. Taking The TirsT Tive places, The lvlanhaTTan speedsTers Thus . . . . Th rolled up The perTecT score oT I5-40. An auspicious beginning Tor The season. e order oT Tinish Tor The Tour and Tour-TenThs miles was Jack Ryan, Frank McKenna, ' ' ' ' ' ' D lvl hall crossed Jim Walsh, Al lvlorris and Bill Sim. All were Timed in .'Z6.l2. an ars The line in sevenTh posiTion wiTh Joe Burns Tollowing. The Tollowing week The Jaspers lined up againsT a sTrong, deTermined band oT Union harriers who had sTill To TasTe deTeaT Trom a lvlanhaTTan Team. BuT The Green ' d T b and WhiTe squad was in a revenging mood ThaT day and TorecasTs prove o e groundless as The game and inspired' Team Trom Van CorTlandT smoThered The SchenecTad lads whom They Trounced easily. Ryan and lvlclienna again led The Y pack over The hills while Walsh, lvlorris, Campbell and lvlarTin helped To compile The low score oT 20-35. The lVleTropoliTan Championship Tound lvlanhaTTan The runner-up To N. Y. U. d dT Th wiTh Teams compeTing Trom Columbia, Fordham and C. C. N. Y. Thir an our place wenT To Ryan and McKenna, respecTively, while sixTh posiTion was garnered by Walsh. ln The l. C.-Four-A Championships lvlanhaTTan p ace s or more universiTies by a good margin. The splendid showing oT Jackie Ryan, who beaT l-lallowell oT l-larvard Tor sixTh posiTion, The highesT ever aTTained by a Jasper runner, was success enough as Tar as The lVlanhaTTan runners were concerned. ' T ' l T'e The Tinal meeTing oT The season, The lvl. A. S. C. A. A., resulTed in a ripe I Tor TirsT place beTween Jack Ryan, Frank McKenna, and Jim Walsh. This dead heaT gave lvlanhaTTan The individual Middle ATlanTic TiTle Tor The Third consecuTive year. BUT unTorTunaTely The Team TiTle wenT To AlTred College, who Torced over a Tull Tive- ' ' ' b Th arrow margin oT one poinT man Team in The TirsT Ten To reTain The Team TiTle y S V1 - ' A d o was concluded one oT The mosT successTul 33 To 34 Tor The Green harriers. n S seasons in The annals oT The Green hisTory. l d ixTh, leading aT leasT Ten xx, xy f fax -41 1 T , i Q .i , if , T 1. sxvfff 1 l l l i 3 1 l l i --mem, , 289 .23 SPIKE SHOE CLUB ll HE Spike Shoe Club oT lvlanhaTTan College has Tor iTs purpose The encour- aging oT love and respecT Tor The sporT ThaT iT represenTs. lT Tends To TosTer inTerclass compeTiTion in Track, Tield, and cross-counTry in order ThaT iT may develop inTeresT and encourage new men To parTicipaTe in These sporTs. Finally, To give reliable inTormaTion as To college liTe and college ideals To Those inTenT upon enTering college and whose chieT exTra-curricular inTeresT is Track. This organizaTion has now been in exisTence aT lv1anhaTTan College Tully one year. On May I2, l93I, under The guidance oT Mr. Philip J. ShackleTTe, aT ThaT Time CapTain oT The Track Team oT This insTiTuTion, The club's iniTial meeTing was held. Mr. ShackleTTe and all members oT The Track Team aTTending. A consTiTuTion was duly drawn and The acTiviTies oT The club commenced. The charTer members number eighTeen, wiTh BroTher Charles and Mr. PeTer WaTers, moderaTor and coach, respec- Tively, aT lv1anhaTTan College, unanimously elecTed honorary members. Today The acTive membership oT The Spike Shoe Club numbers over TwenTy-Tive. The presenT oTl7icers are: PresidenT, VincenT lvlcArdle: Vice-presidenT, Read SmiTh, and SecreTary-Treasurer, ArThur l-leil. The amazing progress which The members oT The Spike Shoe Club have mani- TesTed wiThin The TirsT year oT The exi T T h The organizaTion. s ence o T e club, proves very promising Tor 290 ,5w y ay. X fe' Y e , cy, MW M DQ A 'Nha Q ll , , gf.. A T .. I Q ,1- T .-L 12. , ncour- TosTer avelop i give Tering y one T +ha+ 5 held. in was umber espefl- my-Tive. SmiTh. mani- qg Tor I , ..., fiq 9 i l SWIMMING TEAM . . . .JOHN FELLOWS CapTain . Coach . . . eus MAUOH Manager I. . THOMAS KANE AST year was The TirsT Time in The hisTory OT lvlanhaTTa.n a VarsiTy Swimming Team engaged in inTerscholasTic compeTiTion. Building The Team around The Freshman group and Tilling iT ouT wiTh Tive men OT The class OT '34, The mermen reached Their peak in The EasTern CollegiaTe Championships by Taking Third place in The VarsiTy Relay. This year Tound The Team compeTing againsT some OT The TinesT collegiaTe naTa- Tors in and abouT The lvleTropoliTan disTricT. Due To The splendid coaching OT Gus Mauch and The deTermining spiriT OT The Jasper mermen, The Team made a com- mendable showing againsT all iTs experienced opponenTs. Some OT The men who nOT Only Tormed The nucleus OT lasT year's Team, buT who ' ' B w will be on deck Tor The big Things promised nexT season are, OConnor, urro s, ColberT, Quinlan, Cuny and Purcell. 5,dl ,gr--3-f,+-ffk,,1 -lv, V . g V .-crf,.af-.,. ew Q -f ' - -F--. N,-.,.,-,. 1 M ,is K, ..s. 29 l l i i i 1 i l 4 5' 4 fi ir i rl W. ,. l T ,T 2 THE GOLF TEAM T T' CapTain . . LEONARD PALUMBO, '32 T Manage, . . . ROBERT BURNS, '32 g- i 5 fi Mg ' Schedule lVlanhaTTan-RuTgers lVlanhaTTan Fordham ManhaTTan Villanova lVlanhaTTan Fordham lvlanhaTTan-ST. Thomas IKE The Tennis and Swimming Teams The GolT Team is only in exisTence a shorT Time. YeT in ThaT shorT period iT has shown iTs abiliTy To maTc:h puTTs wiTh The besT Teams in The lVleTropoliTan secTion. lTs memloers aT presenT are: Leonard Palumbo, CapTaing George Koeclr, Dan McKenna, Tim Donahue, George ToTTen and John Sullivan. 9 W CapTain . . Manager , April 9 April I3 April I6 April 22 April 25 April 30 , Mir 6 May I4 Flldld W Should be 5 Tourndmemr ll? fu Jolin Sullivan aillilully in indoo roms. A I includes S llle l Ollf. lr Some of g a MM- eds . 'Q 7 ,.A,iF is ..,. 43 .ew ,F '32 '32 T 5 shorT JTTS wilfli Leonard Hen and 3-'se-'AF 1 J 1' CapTain . Manager . April 9 April i3 April I6 April 22 April 25 April 30 May 6 May I4 TENNIS Schedule . . . - - Q Q - . . - JAMES lv1cCARTI-TY, '33 . . JOHN FREDELL, '33 ..L.I.U. . Fordham . . Brooklyn . . . . Temple . Johns Hopkins . . Villanova . N. Y. U. ........STevens F hard work, inTeresT and enThusiasm can spell success, The l932 Tennis season should loe a parTicularly happy one. ThirTy-Tive enTranTs were lisTed in The annual Tall TournamenT Tor The college championship. CapTain lVlcCarThy was The winner, and John Sullivan runner-up. WiTh The coming oT cold weaTher, The squad engaged TaiThTully in indoor pracTice unTil The middle oT March, when play was resumed on clay courTs. As The lvlanhaTTaniTe goes To press, The Team begins a schedule which includes some oT The leading Teams in The EasT. 293 THE MANAGERS CLUB PresidenT . . . . EDWARD E. MURPHY Vice-PresidenT . . . FRANK J. CRAMER Treasurer . . EDWARD J. MYERS SeCre'I'5ry , . HE Managers Club is composed oT The managers and assisTanT managers oT The various sporTs carriecl on aT ManhaTTan. The purpose oT This club is To promoTe Tellowship, Torming a boncl oT Trienclship and sympaThy among iTs members. The group represenTs some oT The mosT loyal ancl harcl-worlcing ManhaTTaniTes. These men bear The brunT oT unTolcl labor on Their shoulders. Always working, never coming To The TronT To claim The honors, Th ' h eTTicienT organizaTion. ey are, in TruT , The inner machine oT an Their greaTness lies in The TacT ThaT being unsung They give Their besT Tor The success oT oThers. A crecliT To Their Teams, To Their school and To Themselves. 294 'Q .i VF , . V i? ' ' V ,. 1 ' .' 5 P- ., lr' -.,a V! ,W ,, 3, A ,ffl xi ' ,N f ,T Mig :ual .3511 .riff J b ui 'Tv wa 'Mr lr 8, 5 ,PA xl- i K ff f x '- 'Y ' , .9 . ? ??i f1.w.ss4..J,,.,.. 4 fwqwhfmw 4 -,gffnf A... awp .1 49915 hm .QQ . V, :ff f X I xi , . 9 X' x lfx , .47 W f 9 M, , f ,Q , , 95, QZKQQ- V .H-2' IY ER QS DT gers of gndship -+ani+es. 9 of an for The 1 . Ni I' gi., .J At.. f' ff ' '.-, - .F .: f r I Q'-'sp - , 4. 1 ., .ai . ,gi .12 -, ,. 1 L' , .I V. - 1. x ma.. V I, G., 1 3 5. 3'f3bHf'-.. .- 1 . ' 'L' 9 'E 'C :Y ' AL. ' !l!2??'f L1l:..ff ' 'f.g,xi'f.J'151 a' X ... .Ah .1 , -Wi-1 I ' ,f!ff'z,s.2Q - - -..g,.--- -- J,.5-,..-,I L. Q ' 85.1. .. . .Q -, hm 1 : ' . f f .. . 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' -.gr qw., , vp-.4 .'.': ..1 , - N w s' 1, A., A53 -5 4- '-4 1 f '.'f5iFiif:5 '. 7 fm! 1-1 ?l'1ti1 nf' ' gmg, .. L- . :'. 1, ii,-,' ,- fi-NE-. M m ,rf - , 'S ' :ff 'ffm -N' 1y4,'fr'H' A M ER. AY ER1 M 5 CIT f Qarzagers Of f 1 ' ' AJ-3.-' 4 7-fiQfIC,:x!1y J- c rdwafiaffz :G rizing. new ,CHV15 O? el -wi? for 75 h u 1 l u ll l lll lllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllll ,null llll lllu I BUCK SIX EATU RES 511- 'er r r 5 C? B fu 'r X I 3 r 1 rpx 'T NT- X I Awvxnu '43 L E p HE 1 Schwabs' I SirrC 5 rUrUre6F' TueSd5Y4 r rho PM r Follc Q fo office 2 rhe lciuq r emphf d Bur of '32 Sf rhe surre , Commrrr r Parou, C descendi long rhr However inrramurf Nor has proc popular F perform? raolishmr ' Corrigar Nor conrinue In disap spired rr senior Q rue Of facrion r In Jr , eveninqf drcfdrrs v r indudeg invariab Supreme The 1 Campus ro COm1: esrarei Could h meme K Business, Oqnlleg prepare u r W 'fsrv-vw ff iff , ,. L,ml, ,, ', ff :ESQ 4 I 'MS V2 . gf ff' T 1' fs fda 1160512 ffi1.ff'T'Z'WS ci A, f- fybsyosv X: V 230224 -T Q fav fs, , yoj . I sv, 5 51'-35 T 'T ' .,,..Hiii 'T L- T,. T -s if , , . . , ,..., , WALL STREET REFURMS l-lE,year l928 wiTnessed Two ouTsTanding evenTs: The largesT DemocraTic presi- denTial poll in hisTory, and The arrival oT The Commerce Class oT '32-poTenTial Schwabs, embryonic lvliTchells-TuTure gianTs oT indusTry. Since T928 TTlunnpTy-DumpTy ProsperiTy had Tallen Trom his TariTT wall, The TuTure appeared brighT Tor our disciples oT The Tiery Jackson. Even now we can see lsh bein unceremoniousl aroused Trom his slumber aT Tour a m on a rainy Gene Wa g y . I 'Tuesday in l96O. lT is The climax oT his meTeoric rise Trom councilman oT Cohoes To The presidenTial chair. Following his inauguraTion, PresidenT Walsh appoinTed The Schwabs and MiTchells To oTTice, and The Commerce Class oT '32, reassembled once again, prompTly puT The king's men and Their sTeeds To shame by rehaTching l-lumpTy-DumpTy in The long empTy dinner pail. BuT however brighT The TuTure may appear, iT is cerTain ThaT when The Class T '32 T red our hallowed precincTs iT evinced a decided lack oT business acumen: o en e The surrender, wiTh nary an obiecTion oT Tour good dollars To The Sophomore Vigilance . . . . f CommiTTee in reTurn Tor an unbecoming skull cap, posiTively noT The creaTion o a PaTou, conclusively proving The charge. Cn realizing The coup eTTecTed by The con- descending Sophomores, unleashed Trosh proTesTed, and were prompTly hauled head- ' ' k ' Th T diTional Tug-o'-War long Through The murky waTers oT TibbeTTs Cree in e ra . l-lowever, aTTer This encounTer The baseball Team emerged vicTorious Trom The TirsT inTramural TournamenT. . . . . g uh I Nor was This early indicaTion oT aThleTic prowess an empTy one, Tor T e cass b ll 'T h 'ven The colorTul and has produced excepTional varsiTy maTerial. To TooT a i as gi popular John Del Negro, capTain7 To baskeTball, Bob Leonard, mosT consisTenT oT all lvl haTTan's greaTesT Team: To swimming The prime mover in The es- perTormers on an . TablishmenT oT This sporT aT ManhaTTan, Jack Fellows, capTainq and To baseball, Frank Corrigan, ace oT The Green hurlers. NoTwiThsTanding These conTribuTions To Jasper Tame, preTenTious arTsmen have conTinued To gibe The adolescenT business man wiTh TaunTs oT OTTice-boy! Clerkl ln disapproval oT This unbecoming aTTiTude, The TaTes and BroTher SebasTian con- spired To produce a charT indicaTing The comparaTive academic sTanding oT The Tive ' ' ' Th l dder, while senior classes. l.o and behold, IT The arTsmen werenT supporTing e a h nd To mosT rung, surveyed wiTh no liTTle saTis- The OTTice-boys occupying T e seco p TacTion The liTTeraTeurs below. i ' ln The maTTer oT social TuncTions, The Commerce Club provided several enloyable 'd' ' d aT These evenings oT enTerTainmenT and reTreshmenT. BUT The placi iTy evince u i ' ' ' T The l.eTT Wing, whose diabolical machinaTions aTTairs was belied by The acTions o ' ' ' ' h T'on, and kidnapping PresidenT Kane, who included hiding The gavel, Tabling T e mo 1 invariably awoke in The environs oT New Rochelle, where commerce men reign supreme. . The Class oT '32 has lingered and labored Tor Tour shorT years in class andion campus aT lvlanhaTTan. BuT There was ample Time To conTribuTe decenTly To aThleTicsg ' - ' The social round which is youTh's To compile a Tavorable academic record, To enloy I n esTaTe1 and To esTimaTe aT Their True value The proTessors wiThouT whose and There ' nTs. ForemosT in The esTeem .OT The Com- could have been none oT These aTTainme. H i h I F merce Class oT '32 sTands Dean James FiTzgerald, unTiring direcTor oT The Sc oo o T r oTTen. We have always rec- Business. Nor are The BroThers or oTher proTessors o i gl T' will surely Tell aTTirmaTively how well They have ognized Their proTiciency, an lrne prepared us Tor liTe's work. ofrrii .:.,3m 297 We f . Q T QE weak! 'sux K, 5 7 er Us how To we lee Four shelf lirsl molessor. Them Toot' The C lufal SOCTG of 5rCllll9 such GH 93 The C an erlvldb En all depi Their lD6Cll Since perspecliv al Hs hear school acl ln The reslaurenl were prese Keys r hers. The suilahle er reverse. Sched men, aulhc hahah Col hla and pr Eccles deg clale ol J, and Raymq The m lorce of rl lldncls. A, 'mPOrlanl llalian QM BUVWS mam in Tlldmdllr I6Hll'e eme ln con Oalllqjsl lllngd as f m l 1 glooy GTM fhng 1 Ts C' 7 X ,f,,, :yung fa 5 THE PLAN IS THE THING ET us dream oT skyscrapers and double-decker ciTies, Tor The road To greaTness and accomplishmenTs resTs ahead. Cnly a shorT while ago we were being TaughT how To manipulaTe correcTly our draTTing insTrumenTs, and use a scale rule. Today we Teel Tull conTidenT oT being able To Take our places among The celebraTed V archiTecTs oT The TuTure. Four years ago a group oT Twelve earnesT, Tar-sighTed young men eagerly awaiTed Their TirsT insTrucTion in archiTecTure. They were noT disappoinTed, Tor Their young proTessor, Marcel Qngenae, Tresh Trom The produchve Tields oT Europe, had given Them Tood Tor ThoughT, and awakened Their inTeresT. The class acTiviTies, social and poliTical, were closely bound up wiTh The ArchiTec- Tural SocieTy. This organizaTion was TirsT esTablished by The presenT graduaTing class d l d d Tured To oT archiTecTs, and daTes back To The Tall oT l928. lT has eve ope an ma such an exTenT ThaT iTs records are The records oT The school oT archiTecTure. The class scholasTically, has an average raTing oT over eighTy per cenT. Truly T ' T'ceable an enviable sTandard Tor TuTure classes To aim aT. A marked pro iciency is no i in all deparTmenTs. As a disTincTion, The TirsT group oT embryo archiTecTs will receive Their bachelor degrees in June. Since one looks To acTual deeds when iudging The meriTs oT a group in a close perspecTive oT Time, we musT necessarily sTaTe iTs mosT ouTsTanding TeaTure. lT has aT iTs head Ambrose P. G'Neil, an eTTicienT organizer and a man well-known in all school acTiviTies. ln The TirsT place, The annual bangueT oT The SocieTy was held This year aT Rock's resTauranT immediaTely aTTer The ChrisTmas recess. ProminenT members oT The TaculTy were presenT and The l-lonorable John Devaney was The guesT speaker. Keys were procured Tor The enTire socieTy as a disTinguishing mark Tor iTs mem- bers. These keys are oT gold, wiTh The seal oT The college on The obverse, and a ' ' ' d l ' column on The suiTable emblem consisTing oT a T square, Triangle an an onic reverse. Scheduled lecTures were given by many prominenT meTropoliTan archiTecTs. These men, auThoriTies in Their chosen proTession, were James O'Connor, designer oT lvlan- T B ArTs: Clarence lvlerriTT, a graduaTe oT Colum- haTTan College and secreTary o eaux ' ' T' ' William Knowles, a graduaTe oT The bla and presidenT oT The lvlerard Corpora ion, ' ' ' ' A T ' William Delaney, an asso- Ecoles des Beaux ArTs in Paris and a criTic Tor Beaux r s, d reci ienT oT a lvlasTer's Degree Trom ManhaTTan1 ciaTe oT James O'Connor an a p 'd l k wn exponenT oT modern archiTecTure. and Raymond l-lood, The mosT wi ey no ' ' ' b r neverTheless, by The members oT The class, alThough admiTTedly Tew in num e , I 'l held The poliTics oT The senior class in Their Torce oT Their personaliTies, have easi y u ' ' ' T Th nior class and holds besides, oTher hands. Ambrose ONeil is presidenT o e se . . ' ' ' ' ' F k D'Amico is presidenT oT The imporTanT posiTions in exTra-curricular acTiviTies. ran i ' TTooTball. Leonard Palumbo is capTain, and RoberT lTalian Club as well as manager o n . l l TT rTs have exTended To acTive parTicipTion Burns manager oT The golT Team. Ts e o in dramaTics, debaTing, Glee Club rehearsals as well as To Quadrangle and lvlanhaT- TaniTe enTerprises. ln conclusion iT may be Truly said ThaT many TacTors: ioyand sorrow, humor and Th T 'lure and Tinal success Tellowship and enduring Triendship were so com- uls wiTh sweeTesT pa os, ai . I , I bined as To make our career aT college a delighT, Tilling our so f melody and richesT harmony Thar shall compel us To reTurn oTTen To The source o This scholasTic symphony-lvlanhaTTan. V ' on gui, i UMM - ff7fi'i?2: , . air. iiiif - J ,.. - .,,'5n.... 9'as...,.of4., .T -.A ,,, 1...,, . 299 ' u?JT'li 5 our CO lrhe SL rrarnlflf' degree V iyieorerical P' nor afford i0 me fuiure Cl ion should 0 sional s rriumpll- 1 Our soci in ihe Amlerr Divine Child ManhaHan'S rirnidiry dise oul our slay While 1 order. Whi shaved ohi i ceriain conc luniorsi ihe ihem The vi Vanclerpuile Juang ihe in Eclclie Murri iwo-hunclrec and Forcinc Flynn qanq We ar neers have On he iniri Pafiy mach ll has body. hui hahii. W, pepafimer miie io deep leerr lmpfessed illrouqh ilone WGU mil' Gnd emllflieri AS sr err A5 i.. C, Ox A: uve iali. ' X, pn, ni- , Z r I1 l ' J, V, A' Y I I V E27-g A A 1 A Q -...: f' - sl.. .--.IwfH r5,g gi 5 3 'Qg.r LOG UF THE ENGINEERS S our college days draw fo a close seniors of fhe School of Engineering recali fhe successes achieved and fhe benefifs derived from four years of rofes- sional fraining. Self-reliance, inifiafive and confidence have developed fo Such a degree fhaf we feel sure fhe maior problems of life can be no more difficulf fhan fhe fheorefical problems solved in class and camp. We have won firsf vicfories buf can- nof afford fo resf on our laurelsq more sfudy and experience are necessary for when fhe fufure challenges our resourcefulness and courage, fhe fradifions of dur profes- sion should compel us fo accepf fhe challenge and fo find a way fo success and friumph. Our social life has been neifher over-emphasized nor disregarded. Memberships in fhe American Sociefy of Civil Engineers, fhe Transif Club, and fhe Knighfs of fhe D' ine Child were in parf fhe insfrumenfs fhaf wroughf a change. l-lowever, if was af iv Manhaffan's Engineering Camp fhaf fhe lasf arfificial barriers fo friendship vanished, d h h- fimidify disappeared, differences in manners and dress were forgoffen an f roug ouf our sfay fhe wholesomesf comradeship prevailed. While on fhe subiecf of fhe Manhaffan Engineering Camp, reminiscing is in h Y d order. Which of us shall ever forgef l-l. Elaffery's lopsided appearance w en u a haved off half his mousfache' Jim Marinaro's hand-shalcing propensify when in a 5 1 ' dif' ' fh dafe made by Dolan and Glasheen, buf lcepf by seven obliging cerfain con 1 ion, e Juniors: fhe Safurday nighfers and fheir need of fhe orienfafion course fo show ' d lhbdCrane fhem fhe way home, Domingo Ysasis exhibif of ballef ancing, c a o Vanderpuffen's paean fo Broolclyn's home-cooking: Eardely's impersonafions of Don Juan, fhe felegrams: Send me fwenfy--urgenf 1 Ered Clear's lecfure fo mechanic Eddie Murphy on l-low fo fix if. Gerry Murphy's record-brealcing heave of fhe fwo-hundred pounderg Bill Swiff's drinlc-vinegar Scofch: fhe debafe befween Reilly d E ' fhe relafive merifs of lfalian and American coolcing, and finally, fhe an orcino on Elynn gang warfare on fheir rivals?- Don'f Eorgef fo Remember. ' ' ' ' d' fhaf fhe Engi- We are nof in possession of sufficienf facfs fo prove or isprove u neers have dabbled in college polifics, buf we feel cerfain fhaf some of fhem will lafer on be inifiafed, play fhe game, and fhus secure lflooveresgue elevafion fhrough a parfy machine. lf has never been fhe cusfom wifh engineers fo be vociferous in praise of any- body, buf fhe saddesf evenf of our college' career forces us fo abandon fhis sane habif. We have in mind fhe lafe Brofher Azarias Michael, dean of fhe Engineering ' ' ' W were indeed mosf for- Deparfmenf, who was falcen from us in our lunior year. en ' 'le e of following courses given by a man of such funafe fo have had fhe rare privi g U I deep learning and wide experience. Yef, if was nof fhese qualifies alone fhaf mosf ' ' ' ' ' d nf as guide fo young men going lm ressed us, buf rafher hssinsighf and IU gme Jr anhood. Thls ablmy lg fhrough fhe dangerous fransifional period from adolescence o m ' ' l among fhe greafesf educafors of fhe coun- alone would have enfifled him fo a p ace fry, and if is fhrough fhis qualify fhaf he shall be besf remembered by Manhaffan engineers. . i As successor fo fhe illusfrious Azarias comes Brofher Leo, whose abilyfybland mas- fery of defail are facfors fhaf have confribufed largely foward his remar a G SUCCGSS Jr' ' , and devofed feacher, Brofher as dean. And lef us nof forgef fhe mafherna :clan . I f + Eelix, nor Mr. Cosfa, whose wide engineering experience places him oremos .ln ' ' d of ofhers whom we do no need fo menflon his profession. Of fhese feachers an I ld H Jr . +G We can frul sa fhaf fhey have forged fhe bonds fhaf will ever ho us in a ec Iona Y Y loyalfy fo our Alma Mafer. 3 O I UVA ,.v f S A ,4 I K i Y ' u 7 2 1, fi, A 1 l r 'V fa Af . 4 r' ', .gl ijvq-.. ' 'g11s 'Ii,, ' ,Q xxx ., , wfit . .NJ My My 1 F 4 I i F lfw V 3fqQb:-5 V il E R EJ I A 1 THE J 9 3 'Q MA N H!-XTTA N.1T F 552:5'3'H - 4 ' fa?-1-fiziiiffifif-.1-2?E3:f 5512 ff 1,' MS'-if 1 ff? 1 ' f '-4 'T-fTf 7?'QQ3T!J f1.,.., w . , ,.-,-, ., ., : 1 X V E WV, , . A 1 Y 1 W A 2 ...Q- ' In iii sa 4 '1 .. 1., ' w , , ,251 'i '1 W3 ff X ,, f X Q' N 2 'S X L Xkk' Xisslf . 4 T ,mu 21 SXN Q g Q 5 x N Q' M X N 304 . X f f , X X f W7 1 r -5 , fi . H , vez 2 sf X 12. A ki i ' f., ,, nf ii gig' f .2 1 - si. gf if 'fi , gg if g QW -.Y - . ,, ---P-.--vi iM?' .,.L :Lfgcllli 'T O '72 KH , . . , - T T l 53 SENIOR PULL Highesi undergraduaie office Mosi 'rypical Manhaiian man Besi Alhleie Beslr all-round man ouiside of aihleiics Presideni of Sludenl' Denis O'L. Cohalan John P. McCormick Paul T. Flaherfy Council , . if . 'NWT' x 4 J BPST mixer George J. O'Kee'fe l Did mosi for class Paul T. Flaheriy ' Biggesl' drag wifh The 'faculiy I John J. Lally l Class oralor George J. O'Kee'le Class liHera'reur Howard J. Rickerif Handsomesl Edward J. Kearney Besl' dressed J, Read Smifh BTQQGST Opilmlsl' Hugh M. Flaiiery i Biggesi pessimisi Emanuel S. Lamanno l Cuiesi Ambrose E. Kiei MOST rugged William M. Higgins MOST Willy John J. Maculcas Sly Mosi appreciaied Denis O'L. Cohalan Leasfappreciaied Howard W. Ahearn g Mosl' sophoslicaied Howard J. Riclcerf i A Grea+es+ execuiive abiliiy James M. O'Donnell Mosiariisiic Joseph F. Papp A T Mos? ecceniric Anfhony R. Merolla Moslr energefic George R. Donahue ,ix Mosi original Arihur M. Kling ' Besl' poei George J. O'KeeTe Besl' debaier John H. Kearney Besi ac+or George J. O'Keefe Mosi scholarly John H. Heil' Favoriie course in archiieciure Design 1 Favoriie course in aris Philosophy 5 Favoriie course in commerce Banking y Favoriie course in educaiion Psychology . y Favoriie course in engineering Philosophy 3' F-avoriie course in science Biology . Favoriie hangoui Doc Bar'rner's el Favoriie morning paper New York Times Favoriie evening paper World Telegram Favoriie magazine COllleV'S Favoriie novelisi G. K. Chesierlon Favoriie women's college New Rochelle Besr book of The year Shadows on The Rock Besf play of lhe year Barreils of Wimpole Slreei i Favorijre sporlrs coach Cl1lCl4 Meehan Favoriie Caiholic magazine T Columbia Mosi colorful Caiholic radio speaker Falrher Coughlin Favorile poliiical parly DGVUOCVGTTC Favoriie presideniial candidafe Alfred E. Smiih i Greaiesi living man Pope Pius Xl Greaiesr living American Alfred E. Smilh Mos'r represeniaiive American Charles E. Dawes .z l ' F11 ETPZCU L T UR A 305 1 i 1 I .43 PATRONS AND PATRONESSES His Eminence George Cardinal Mundelein Righr Rev. Monsignor John P. Chidwiclc, DD. R+. Rev. Monsignor Joseph H. McMahon, DD. Very Rev. Msgr. Slrephen E. Donahue, DD. Rev. Brolher Cornelius, F.s.c., PRD. Presidenr er Manharran College g Rev. Brolher Alben, R.s.c. Hon. Joseph F. Cepenigri Hon. Daniel F. ceiielee Hee. John R. Cohalan Hon. John J. Curlin ,VmaLM,w,W,m,,MW+,H,,-,,,,,-.,..,.,Wo. ,,.-.,-e... e-.- .-. e- l l His Eminence Palriclc Cardinal Hayes l Righr Reverend John J. Milly, DD. l l Rev. James T. Cronin, Ph.D. fs, 1. ' . yi jig, -f i Q . l 4 l . 1 - l il K .R X 4 T l l l Rev. Chrislopher B. McCann Rev. Bryan J. McEn'regar+ Rev. James R. Barrley Rev. James E. Goggin Rev. William F. Wilkins Rev. William A. Gardiner, LL.D. Rev. Brolher Parriclc, F.S.C., Buffalo Dr. Roloerr J. Shea Dr. Bernard T. O'Neil Dr. M. Zimmer Frank A. 0'Hare Miss Kale Smilhn James J. Riordan Thomas H. Casey Miss Margarer E. Mack Miss Anna M. Blalzheim Mrs. Mary Leonard James J. Tierney Hon. John J. Dielz Hon. William A. Farrell Hon, William J. Flynn Hon. John J. Fogarly Hon. John E. Kiffin Hon. John E. Mack Hon. Charles B. McLoughlin Hon. George J. O'KeeTe Hon. William A. Todd Rev. Brorher A. Thomas, F.S.C., Newburgh Dr. Parriclc R. Kinney Professor Edward F. Weinberg Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ahern Denis O'Leary Cohalan William F. Kenny Daniel F. Meenan , Marlin J. Moore 5 Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Murphy 1 L. P. Maher Joseph M. McCloskey T Raymond Sexron i gl le.-- e . A F 31 ,en . T FQLQ iTf i5'i5e,55 ll' 5 l ' U ' Ke-J J ' Le LJ L. I LJ M ,ff-li. 306 2 ...I F M,-K ES S. F.S,C 1--gm , .- He- X,,,Q . Sarge ' , X wg r A W N i ffgzrcf ,, , N--ng,-al .2 - 'Mf,jLwi, ,.l..,,k -. PHD. GH-an COHSQQ .S.C. igri nn ell nughlin efe i as, F.S.C.. 'einberg -I. Ahern 1 MurPhY Newburgh B I y -A-'. nv, Eve. , , ,T . l VERTI SEMENTS The Manhorranire Sraff exrenols Irs oleep appreciarion and sincere grarirude +o aolverrisers as well as ro loarrons and parronesses who have so generously con- Jrribureol Towards our book 307 I Tele L COUNTY TRUST COMPANY of NEW YORK COUNTY TRUST BUILDING EMPIRE STATE BUILDING Eigh+Iw Avenue aI I4IIn SIree+ FiTII1 Avenue aI 34II1 SIreeI Equipped Io Render a CompIeIe Banking and TrusI Service TI1rifI DeparImenI-Safe DeposiI VauIIs ORIE R. KELLY, PresidenI STUART B. PLANTE, Vice-Presiden'I' RALPH W. LONG, Vice-Presidenf JOHN J. SPILLANE, Assf. Sec'y and Assr. Treas. WALTER E. ROBEDEE, Assr. Trusf Officer and ASSI. Sec'y ROBERT S. KRAHAM, AssI. Sec'y VINCENT ASTOR JOHN J. BRODERICK PETER J. CAREY JOHN J. CAVANAGH HOWARD S. CULLMAN WILLIAM H. ENGLISH WILLIAM J. FITZGERALD OFFICERS ALFRED E. SMITH, Chairman JOHN J. BRODERICK, Vice-Pres. and Treas. CLINTON E. FOWLER, Vice-Pres. and Sec'y WALTER MacNAUGHTEN, Trus+ Officer JAMES J. RIORDAN, Assis'ranI Secrefary WILLIAM P. MURDY, Assisfanf Treasurer RAYMOND M. FROST, Assisianf Secrefary HAROLD S. SEAL, Assisfanjr Treasurer DIRECTORS EDWARD J. KELLY ORIE R. KELLY WILLIAM F. KENNY RALPH W. LONG M. J. MEEHAN DANIEL J. MOONEY KENNETH O'BRIEN JOHN J. PULLEYN AARON RABINOWITZ JOHN J. RASKOB DANIEL L. REARDON LOUIS F. ROTHSCHILD PARRY D. SAYLOR ALFRED E. SMITH B TeIep 308 X ANY JILDING h Srreel pr Service :e-Pres. and Treas. ge-Pres. and Sec'y , Trusr Officer islanf Secre'r6fY islanf Treasurer sisfanf Secrefary I Treasurer L, PULLEYN RABLNOWIV l RASKOB L. REARDON , ROTHSCI-IILD I, SAYLOR E. SMITH Telephone LUdlow 4-0879 LOWENTHAL 81 SCHLOSS lncorporafed Disfribufors Page 84 Shaw Chocolares Brandle 34 Smilh Co. Sarin Finish Hard Candies 572 WESTCHESTER AVENUE NEW YORK CITY H. BRUNING The College Confecfionery BROADWAY and 2-43rd STREET We Carer ro College Boys All Sandwiches Ten Cenrs LEY' IEQHVIEZSTPI Du BN Jewe winners th One Hundred Years I832 Conrinuously on Chesrnur Srreer I932 IZI8-22 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA School Rings, Emblems, Charms and Trophies Of 'the Berler Kind The C-Biff Suggesfion Book mailed upon requesr illuslfraies and prices Jewels, Warches, Cloclcs, Silver, China, Glass, Lealher and Novelries from which may be selecred dislincrive Wedding, Birfhday, Graduarion and oI'her Gills Telephone KI ngsbridge 6-9800 Telephone VAnderbil+ 3-2675 L. P. MAHER, Inc. Uniforms I49 EAST 42nd STREET Near Grand Cenfral Srarion MANNING-HIGBIE NEW YORK cirY MOTORS, Inc. Telephone Klngsbridge 6-9552-6-7I3l 5490 BROADWAY . WILLIAM HACKENDORFF af 230'rh Srreer NEW YORK CITY Billards Ice Cream, Soda, Candy, Tobaccos. Magazines Complimenls FRAZERS, INC. Complimenis r' OT Hon. CHARLES A. BUCKLEY D :fe MElrcse 5-OZIO-OZI I-OZIZ-CZQE Cekle Address: Fleiscssc' New N: Eemfleys Cece Esfelnlislwed ISS-4 EMIL FLEISCHL 8: SON Receivers end Disfribmew :F Bu'H'er, Cheese and Eggs 514 WESTCT-TESTER AVENUE New YORK Cm Complimenls ol DAVIES AND SULLIVAN CO Coffee Roas+ers and Tea lmpor+ers T49 FRONT STREET NEVV YORK ClTY X -.,ssNN .I2-OZI3 81 SON I Eggs AVENUE -i'l,,.- VANCO 3 I mporfers Z f Swim 520 FIHI1 Avenue New York OTIICIGI PI'1oIograpI'1er Io Ihe I932 IvIanI1a+IanlIe COMPLETELY EOUIPPED TO RENDER THE HIGHEST OUALITY CRAFTSIVIANSHIP AND AN EXPEDITED SERVICE ON BOTH PERSONAL PORTRAITURE AND PHOTOGRAPHY FOR COLLEGE ANNUALS. 3II Complimerfrs of S.8LA. Complimenjrs of 81 J. RCDCKE 3I2 sem w M H, E' PQeSide w. ARwcliRPfe5id S? 9 A I I I E W MEENAN AI-r:RED E S Pres1denI' Clwalrman of Inglggrd TIMNTTQQ-II? JZCIMPIRA - resl en ARTHUR W SMITH Q C1 + JOHN J. MARA Secrelrary I MEENAN com co., unc. I ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS Yards: I4-3rd SI'reeI'. Harlem River 35+h Srreer and Norrln River S+anI'on Srreer, Eas'r River 43-54 Vernon Avenue, I. I. C. Third SIreeI', GowanuS Canal Brooklyn, N. Y. Complimenls of UDOCH BARTNER l 1 . W Where Manhallan Men Meer al' Noonlimeu Complimenls RESTAURANT of Fresh Vegelables-Delicious Coffee THE BOOK STORE All Slealcs and Chops Broiled 5995 BROADWAY al 242nd STREET New YORK CITY Complimenls of Jfhe College Tailor OUADRANGLE STAFF Braebm Young Men's Suils and Overcoels Especially Priced for Sludenls 3l4 Q l 3 l l l i l l DELI. l 3 wo saw w YONKE Nepper l Marble 1 - T KOI- I Te Te l X l Telephone Uneec l P 1 I8 Y LTORE -iff,- ARIO OverCO6T5 fI,Iden'IS 2? X Qr' YOUR DRUOSTORE B A R T N E R S VAN CORTLANDT PHARMACY I I Prescripfion Specialisf 5983 BROADWAY aT 242nd STREET Telephone Klngsbridge 6-I940 1 1 Y We are n'IainTaining a policy of using The puresT produCTs available aT our TounTain and IunCheoneTTe. The Tollowing Companies supply us WiTh Their highesT grade Toods: DELLWOOD DAIRY CO. INCORPORATED I70 Saw Mill River Rd. 464 So. TenTh Ave. YONKERS, N. Y. MT. VERNON, N. Y. Nepperhan 4200 Oalcwood 8600 Marble 7-I400 KOH LH EPP'S MARKETS Wholesale Mea'I's 5567 BROADWAY Telephone Klngsbridge 6-39I3 598I BROADWAY Telephone Klngsbridge 6-4365 NEW YORK CITY Telephone BI ngham 6-7592 Uneeda Food ProducI's Co. Incorporafed Pure, Tasfy Mayonnaise I88 WEST I68Th STREET NEW YORK CITY Telephone Blllings 5-84-7I J. R. CONROY ICE bb! WEST I79Th STREET NEW YORK CITY Telephone Klngsbridge 6-5I69 CELENTANO and CAFIERO Fancy Frui+ and Vegeiable Markei' Wholesale and ReTaiI Imporfed Groceries, Olive Oil and Spagheffi 'f f f 5985 BROADWAY af 242nd STreeT NEW YORK CITY mf 5,0 ' s L' I A I IW DE LA SALLE INSTITUTE Founded I848 SeIecI' School for Boys and Young Men Conducfed by Ihe BROTHERS OE THE CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS under II'1e PaIronage of HIS EMINENCE, PATRICK CARDINAI. HAYES Q I6O-I62 WEST 74+I1 STREET NEW YORK CITY 3I6 G I f TE J 7,7 6 'xii 5' .ll 31111113 dt Qlllrer gain QUE are America's largest school annual designers and engravers because We render satisfaction on more than 400 books each year. Intelligent co-operation, highest quality workmanship and on-time deliveries created our reputation for dependability. JAHN sz OLLIER ENGRAVING co. '?l9otogmplJers, Artists and Makers of Fine Printing Plateshr Black or Colors. 817 W. Washington Boulevard - Chicago Telephone MONROE 7080 6'-'X e onotsu - etan 3l7 I l l MANHATTAN CAMP OperaTed by ADIRONDACK CATHOLIC CLUB. lnc. TwenTy-TirsT season opens June, l932 Two hundred and TiTTy acres oT rolling counTry. Mile shore TronT on lalce. BaThing, BoaTing, Fishing, l-lilcingg all land sporTs. A Pure spring WATER. Fresh vegeTables. SaniTary conveniences. fi Bungalows Tor BOYS and ADULTS. I l i Fees Tor Those elecTed To membership are: Il, Boys Trom 7 To I5-5250.00 Tor The season. 1 AdulTs-July-520.00 per weelc each. AugusT-325.00 per weelc. For Those wishing To remain The Tull season-9522.00 per weelc. II The Bungalows are Tully Turnished and accommodaTe Trom Two To eighT ll li . 5 persons. 5 l Il I The main dining hall accommodaTes l25 and is Tully equipped. Those I I , who wish can purchase a bungalow ploT Trom SlO0.00 up. They can mi erecT TheIr own bungalows and Talce meals aT The main DINING HALL. l 9 For TurTher parTiculars address: TIQI li iff l l ADIIaoNDAcI4 CATHOLIC CLUB , . l iii ADII2oNoAcI4, N. Y. of 502 FIFTH STREET, BI2ooI4LYN, N. Y. I 1 f 1 l I THIS IS WHERE THE MANHATTAN COLLEGE ENGINEERS DO THEIR SUMME l l I 1 l I I I I I 3l8 l R WORK X .p an 4 If rust 1 F, , k II IPIII' wi -. .Tr I 1-I-Li-ug Kiln, I ' ' I I I llliWfli2'lf,lN ggx Q 1 1y'l'lliIi lLilili-W ,ll ll, 5 T 5 fl - lift' N M P Q mlvlp lllhl g i x l 1 gp i n ' maiwlrtfq g l . all lllllfli lvl i 'l J Jil 41lMT'Y'l 'L E ' Inc. front on lake. E ' H WW Year More Edzfors are Onveniences. ' - wfnmg fo Cfozsfer - Beware. . . I . . . our year book division consists of college men and . Week. For women directed by Robert W. Kelly, an experienced editor tl and year book producer. WO IO eighl p, . . . their knowledge of producing year book publications is invaluable to you, and their advice will help you solve Jefirk Those many difficult problems such as how to sell more advertis- N6 E3lATLn ing space and how to secure maximum circulation. . . . their service also includes suggestions for appropriate art themes, layout and typography. . . . We specialize in printing of the highest quality and have a plant well equipped to answer the wants and needs of all academic institutions. . . . we offer this complete service, Whether your book is large or small. CLOISTER PRINTING CORPORATION SUMMER woRK 309 LAFAYETTE STREET, NEW YORK CITY 3l9 ll if ACKNUWLEDGEMENTS E are grealrly indebled +o Brolrher Paul Edward for invaluable aid and advice ai all limes. ' To Roberl W. Kelly of The Cloisler Prinling Corporalion 'lor The unliring assislance given lo me Jrhroughoui The year. To Mr. Charles Johnson and Miss Bessie Ellinson of Jrhe While Slrudios for experl phoiographic arrangemenls. help. To Jrhe Blank and Sloller Sludios for an excellenl porlrail of Alfred E. Smilh. To Peler S. Gurwil of Jahn and Ollier Engraving Company for his compelenl To Joseph M. Sheehan, Joseph Commeil and John Eredell for excellenl sporls copy. JAMES M. O'DONNELl. Edilor-in-Chief I932 Manhallanile EETS Ea.-:arg 'cr invaluable aid andadvice 'Q Corporaiion for ihe unfiring 3' of fhe Whife Sfudios for experi corfraif of Alfred E. Smiih. 'Inc Company for his compeieni John Fredefl for excellen? 553055 JAMES M. GDONNEU Edifor-in-Chief I 1932 Manhaifanlfe L, F s -.4,,.,..k.-- . V... ,- if 1 : 1, - . l i gn. Q XXXXX - Ill!! X Y x 13 . -,N 'F+'x 1 9, Q-I iQ?'T?Kgs e 511' E 3' l i f Mm l I-I il ,. xN


Suggestions in the Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) collection:

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 17

1932, pg 17


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