McBurney School - Lamp and Laurel Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1945
Page 1 of 60
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 60 of the 1945 volume:
“
gf- -,, , ,A -R nu- sg- V-'V V V., V--j.. A1 Y. a -L -V , -5 !',.g-I ' JW- ' E .L.5,- 1 'V .: ,TL ,5- 1 is V - . 5 . , . V -4 ' rf' . .,, Q , , J , .A ,W A, ,. . V .Ex V ' .4--2-.. -.V 'V - ,. .. . JV' ,N - . V 1 4 V. N + ' ' ' -' ' Y - V 1 Fr. ,1 VI t' V W if,-, V - 5-:L 6 X A in Inq.: 5 V ' V ' .J - .. V- .VV 'Ji E' .V 5-A A-N ' VV - f '3Q', 'xr' X f X V VV V . ' V - ' ,,,FiV' I g. ? 5 ,Q L ---, I 'V , Vg A., fx -V . 'VV iw. ., A 4 N SV., -7 , ll.. -f if ' 1-V,.Q:-: Fe' VV, ' V V --FQ .Vgl ,Lf Q, '54 4. ' V 'V 'Fin' V.: - ,V t 'LE . - i ,g'j.L11.. Z jx. n, .V '-:1-, is' . 1' V x. w V 'QS j. 'L - ij? ' ,TG V V , . , g, -1 1, -55 3- V . -V, ,- , -- 'ff 71' ' S1 - V113 I J . V LTV?-ff-'k'.V 5 ., 'L-V1 'Vx' f 3--5 . J' I ,.-I :JV Vg' ,V 3QfV.L+f 1 Iii- ' if PII, I -:UV-V 'T'gEs!av'Sfa.g3E ' xjzi ' . .V 1-21-V. Him! .' VV.V..7.- - ' FLEA. .A 7,225,151-.Vs il.. .J VJ, V.Tr.,,p'iV.5l,:,,Y5x., MFA. ,RQ .,- V jim? .1 5 V x ' X-' a :f':Q..'- 62511, -27559 1-gy ffrifii-,'2' 1rFV' QV: f,q,f: .,w .V ' .V---,.' -V V' V' 'V J: VJ.. T-1441, yr, 1 1 --,SP ...5z.'5-.-14-1-Q fi:-wi-1 .1,- 5.4-xi. ' ' ' -7 V V V- V V .ff-. -V VV, V-v,m?.d.VqVV wi M-V-.,gV.V - .1 Va' - .. 'V - nm,-, Q,,VfV 4, - mr, 'V .2' Q. - - ..fg,.g.iaysgg.2Q2'V1V31511.275,-WV,-..LgsV..,:VyV ,V ' . -1 fi , , V 2 Vx V J 'V . . V ,, V V V V ,VV .M V .ling V V VV .V 'M , V A s, ,L-V N, -4- V...--.:1 :. 1 . L:gL,.,5,'VmgV ,V , 4. fx- -- -41: . .V ' s.V'PV ' ff .VVS --lp ,s +V . -A V 1- f:f5ii '5M3i.t.':f' '1 'V. vim ?- X Q -.V VVLVVVL .V V V, Air' , V 3 V ' . , - , V, V. If-VV - ,.,:...V gg.. X V- ... .. . .3 .. Q. V+,.- ,331 -.V.V-f, .-, ,- .am--,., -V- , .., . - V 1'1'. ' QD, -s- -Val' V2 ' . .V-, -. 'VV' V - ' -. .- -- -iV, V 7 g'T ,' ',gV-. .A V iff., .n. :wig A V ,gg . .5 .Y - -4 ,V , : Lf. M., V 4 -,.4-4,3 . f G V' Y - ' il Qi- . VUVVE1- . V4 . pg .-uf, .911-f.f,.V T '-Q 'j V f X V A I I.-FF '-1. .-ff --I. - f1L'V ' - - ,Q ' - Z gg I W vii... V lk.. I V . ..-gi ' 4. ., I , ', ju, in --4 -fr ' 1 Q' K -,, V g VV... . V , ' . 'S -,' . . nf f ' ' . , -. . L V., I A . f ,. 7. , '- 4' -,Q V -. ' - '. I - , ,,. . F' T V .V VY' ' . N., V . 4 V 1- . J' V I 'V V X 'A- V. I xV..,Y ' 1 ' . I . , Y. , , 1. - .i iw - . , hi ' I - ' m , M , t . I N .,. . .' -'J,. V ' , rl V ' - J ., , V . , . 4 K .1 3 .. N ' I. ' ' x V.,V ix, . T -5 I V ' '. - . ...,, , , , A ' ' HV- ,':, , J - ' '- V' V '. N. X 7. N .V FVV-.. -:..- - Vfagf V - - VV' 'i - V ' 'V' 1 V' ' . V '- V- 7, ' . V I , -Z ' VV . - :,.Vj . W V , - 4 Q- -1 -, .V ' . , L ,' ' ' . ' . V, 5174: ' Y V ' ' Y , ., 2 'W -Eff VV gf. - W- 'V ' ft - 'iff' 1' . '- ',1 '5i,,V A 1'V , , .C V. . ,J VV Z , 1 .. Air.: Q, ,ix-V-.V iii.. .. .. . .. fix.:-n ., 4 M 1.3 5,1-57-V r ' 'V V - V -' 5 '.'5wi-VV VN- ' .. ,. .I -: 4 , V H V A '.. 'A -- ' 't :FV I'-'-K ' ' 'L , V ','-I ' ' , ,Y -Y ' - l,'. ' ' ,' - ' 2 e . N -L ' ., . :.f 'k:..: 71 I - VV lj, .4 , 1, 5 . . ,, V .,, ,Q A V g i m. 5 iiiuii Thomas Hemenway Hoodmoslor Thomas E. Purcell Roberl' L. Lifch Alfred M. Black Sfanley A. Parker Mf1lhfrmr1lir,s SUCWVC Social Siudics Phys. Ed. and Science Joseph V, Hanna, Ph.D. Francis H. lngoldsby J. James Ganders, M.D. Walfer S. LiggeH' Vmalirvnul Gnirlcznro Science Sfhool Docior Engliqh Miss Minnie Nasf Mrs. Isabel Ziclrenclrafh Miss Josephine Heil Aliimni Srarrnluiy Regislror Typing Mrs. Joyce FeHer Miss Jean DeWiH' Office Office Hllsll D. Hudson Bowman Assislonf l-leadmasler :arland D. Arnold Beniamin D. Chamberlin Bernard S. Guernsey Carl DeW. Funaro lalhomalics and Music English Molhemalics Language and Science John Weelcs Louis Shepherd .lohn Marlcay Charles H. Marfens Languages Lower School l-lead-Lower School Arls and Crails irs. Mary Malone Roberl' E. Mason William B. Cross Librarian English and Social Sludies Sludy Hall Lewis L. Vaughn Sydney Morris Physical Educczfion Physical Educalion SENIOR SEPTEMBER Der Tag has arrived. We are Seniors, and The billiard room beckons. There is a genTleman an The TourTh Tloor wiTh The Theme song, 'll Smolce Alone. Our headmasTer is in rare Torm, having lcepT him- self in shape during The summer by playing golT. Mr. LiTch is noT manuTacTuring perTume in his lab. Five new TaculTy members, all oT Them exTremes, Too much hair or Too liTTle, Too much weighT or Too IiTTIe, Too Tall or very shorT. OCTOBER The STudenT Council elecTion begins, and ends Three weelcs laTer . . . Anderson is elecTed. Field Day ...The rain holds oTT Till Tour . . . Senior A wins The cup . . . no compeTiTion Tram Special A. FooT- ball Team loses . . . soccer Team loses. The spelling conTesT inTroduces us To such words as chicanery and mnemonics. We would raTher learn how To ouT- wiT Mr. Parlcer aT billiards. NOVEMBER FirsT reporTs reach home . . . we promise To do beTTer . . . our parenTs believe us, buT The TaculTy is slcepTical. We hold our TirsT prom . . . we've always wondered why Nemlich and Korner were creaTed . . . now we lcnow . . . They dance divinely. Sophs beaT Frosh in annual TreefTor-all. FooTball Team wins . . . soccer Team sTill loses. Panorama promises us Tour issues . . . we greeT The news wiTh silenT laughTer. DECEMBER We suTTer Through The inTerim beTween vocaTions. Mr. Guernsey is mildly annoyed because The spiriT oT Peace on EarTh, good will Toward menm is inf TerTering wiTh our Trig . . . he is also annoyed by The sTars oT his baslceTball Team. The ChrisTmas play is presenTed . . . llKiss The STar . . . Neil DiGiacomo is The sTar . . . no Thanlcs on ThaT osculaTion. JANUARY ReTurn To school Tull aT parenT inspired resoluf Tions . . . TorgeT all abouT Them in Two hours . . . The resT aT The school hasn'T reTormed, why should we? RoThroclc and BooTh enTer The billiard room . . . They are eiecTed on charges oT being 'Turriners' '.,. We hear ThaT Mr. Cole is leaving . . . Baron goes inTo mourning. The Tinancial drive goes way over The Top. The baslceTball and swimming Teams win. Ray Reid brealcs a Tew more records. HISTCDRV FEBRUARY The horror OT mid-years having been meT and vanquished, we seTTle down To our lasT Terrn aT McBurney . . . Mr. Bowman insisTs ThaT iT is only The TirsT oT many lasT Terms. Alumni nighT is The usual Three-ring circus . . . Mr. Funaro's bugs pack Them in . . .The cagers delighT The crowd by winning Their game handily. MARCH McBurney's aThleTes come Through, buT always second . . . The baskeTball, swimming, and Tencing Teams are runners-up in The AAPS TournamenTs. Vol- leyball places TirsT . . . Volleyball? Does McBurney have a volleyball Team. Morrison becomes ediTor aT Panorama . . , he insisTs There will be Tour issues . . . so Tar we've seen one. Mr. Bowman reTuses To honor EbbiTT's bill Tor The aspirin he has consumed bring- ing ouT The McBurneian. Mr. LiggeTT selecTs a casT Tor The Senior play . . . WOITT will sTar, as usual. MarTin breaks all previous records and Talls asleep in every class. APNL Baron is elecTed presidenT aT sTudenT council . . . he discovers ThaT all ThaT gliTTers is noT gold. The TacuITy begins To apply The pressure ...we resisT . .. The TaculTy labors under The delusion ThaT we came To McBurney To work. Davis Talks his way inTo TirsTs in The OraTorical and ExTemporaneous conTesTs. Read is crowned king oT The billiard room . . . by Read. FirsT golT Team in years sTarTs pracTising . . . in The ping-pong room. MAY The draTT boards are breaThing down our necks. Field Day wiTh The wind doing TiTTy miles an hour. and Mr. Weeks siTTing in The sTahds wiTh his TeeT wrapped in a gunny sack. The TaculTy wins The ball game, Thanks To Mr. Bowman, who called STein ouT on sTrikes when The ball hiT The ground Ten TeeT in TronT oT The plaTe. The Senior play is presenTed , . . The house is noT exacTly packed. RecogniTion Day wiTh plenTy aT awards . . . The Clubs BanqueT wiTh more awards . . . was anyone overlooked? TesTs . . . ugh! JUNE More TesTs . . . graduaTion . . . regenTs . . . Tare- well McBurney. BYRON EDGAR ANDERSON ANDY M Clul3,3,4: M Club Pres,,4q Scroll Club,3,4g Silver Scroll: Gold Scroll, Baslcelball,3,41 Baseballji Sludanl Council Pres.: Academic Council,3,4g Red Cross Commillee Clwair- man,4g Junior Prom Commil- lee,3: Lamp and Laurel Soci- ely,3,4: Edilor, Yearlaoolcg Field Day Commi+lee,3,4g Panora- rna,3: Honorable Menlion, Sen- ior Loyally. HENRY BARON HANK Presidenl of Sludenl Council, Lamp and Laurel Socielyl Gold Scroll: M Club: Baslcel- ballg Soccer: Traclcq Red Cross Drive. WILLIAM BEHRENS WlLD BILL Dramalic Club, Scroll Club. lnlerclass Aclivilies, HOWARD BOOTH HOW lnlerclass Aclivilies: Key Club: Honorable Menfion, R.P.I. Medal. ' JAMES EDWARD COLANERI LANE M Club,43 Foolball,4g J.V.Bas- lcelloall,41 McBurneian,4p Pano- rama,43 Senior Play. HALSEY COOK HAL M Club,l-4, Scroll Club,3,4g Silver Scroll,3g Key Club,l-4: Lamp and Laurel Sociely,l-4: McBurneian,l-3: Panomara,l- 3, Sludenl Governmenl',2-4: Freslwman Loyallyp Junior Prom Cammilleei Academic Coun- cil,3,4: Swimming, I-4: Soccer, 3,41 Senior Play: Y Financial Drive,33 Allilelic Council,2,3. JAMES F. EBBITTS JIM Scroll Club,4gAcaclemic Coun- cil,4: Edilor, McBurneian3Class Secrelary,41 David Sloll Mc- Burneian Award. GEORGE V. FATT FATS M Clul3,4p Foolball,4: McBur- neian,4: lnlerclass Aclivilies,4. ALFRED HACK AL Scroll Club: Orclneslra: Senior Play. EDWIN HOWLINGS ED M Club: Manager, Raslcefball. 4: Larnp and Laurel Slafl: Scroll Club: Orcliesira. RICHARD LOUIS JAMES DICK M Club,3,4: Baseball,3,4: Fool- ball,3,4: Swimming,3,4: Vice Presidenl,3: M Club Cup, Besl Allilele. FREDERICK KARNER FRED Scroll Club: M Club: Lamp and Laurel Sociely: Sluclenl Council: Foofball: Baslcelboll: Baseball: Volleyball: Traclc: Y Drive: Red Cross Drive: Lamp and Laurel Sfafl. ROBERT W. LORICK BOB Yearboolc,3,PI1oTograpl1y Edi- lor,4: Panorama,3:TraclcTeam, 3: Glee Club,4. GUY E. LOUDON HAPPY Scroll CIub,4: M CIub,3,4: Class Vice Pres.,3: Freshman Day Commil'ree,4: Field Day Can1mi'r'ree,4: Yearbook,4: Dance CornmiHee,4: Junior Prom,3: Boseball,3,4: Swim- ming,3,4: FoofbalI,4: Lower School Swim Supervisor,4. EUGENE J. LUKAS LUKE Orcl1eslra,3,4: Junior Prom CarnmiHee,3: Class Vice Pres., 4: Sfage Crew,3,4. WILLIAM M. MARTIN BILL Manlwassel I-ligI1.I-3: Senior Play, Scroll CIub,4: Inlerclass Ac+ivilies,4. SETH R. MORRISON BOSS Scroll Club,3,4: Key Club.2-4: Sludenf Council,3: McBurnei- an,3,4: Edilor, Panorama: Ac- ademic Council,4: Presidenl, Scroll Club,4. IAN H. NEMLICH CHICK Baslce-'rball,3,4: Caplain, Fool- ball,4: Baseball.3: Traclc,4: Class Presiden+,3,4: Sludenf Council,4: Scroll Club,4: Silver Scroll: Gold Scroll: Business Manager, Yearboalc: Lamp and Laurel SocieTy,4: Dance Com- miHee,3,4: M Club,3,4: Volley- ball,3,4: Senior Loyally: Field Day Carnmillee. KENNETH PARSONS KEN M Club: Foofball: Baslcelball: Traclc. JOHN READ JOHNNY M Club: Manager, Tracl4,4. JOHN RICE JOHNNY M Club,4: Scroll Club,4: Glee Club,4: FaoIball,4: Traclc,4: Sfudenf Government PHILIP R. ROTHROCK PHIL Key Club,2-4: Scroll Club,3,4: McBurneian,3,4: I'IeadmasIer's Medal: Bausch and Lomb Sci- ence Award. LUCIEN A. SCHMIT, JR. TILDEN M Club,I-4: Key Club,2-4: Tennis,I-4: Sludenf Council,2: Class SecreIary,2: Class Treas- urer,3: Assembly Commi+Iee.3: Panorarna,4: R.P.l. Science and Mallw Medal. ALLEN SCHUTZ AL Treasurer.3: Inferclass Aclivi- Iies.3,4. WILLIAM F. SCHWEIZER BIG BILL McBurneian,4: M Club,3,4: Scroll Club,3,4: Key Club,3,4: Assembly CommiHee,2,3: Slue denf Council,2,3: Dance Com- mi'rIee,3: Manager, Baslcelball, 3: Manager, Tennis,3,4: Alh- lelic Council,3. PAU L LUTHER STEFFENS PARSONS lnlerclass Acfivilies, I -4. ARTHUR L. STEIN ART Manlwassetl-3: Soccer,4: Sen- ior Play: Scroll Club,4. RUDOLPH RUIBAL RUDY Edilor, McBurneian: Caplain Soccer,4: Capl. Fencing: Sec- relary, Sludenr Council: M Club, Scroll Club: Leadership Cup: Silver Scroll: L. 81 L. Sociely. ALEXANDER E. TREVES ALEX Fencing,I-4: CapIain,4: Soce cer,2-3: Tennis,2-4: Class Pres., 2: Assembly CommiHee,2: Mc- Burneian,4: Class Secre'Iary,4: Winner, A.A.P.S. Fencing Tour4 namenl: Yearboolc,4: M Club, l-4: Volleyball,I. EDWARD M. TREVES EDDY M Club,I-4: Fencing,I-4: Cap- +ain,4-: Soccer,4: McBurneian,I. RICHARD WANDERER DICK McBurneian,3,4: Panorama,4: Soccer,3,4: Manager,4: Class Secrelary,3: Assembly Commii- 'ree,4: I-Ii-Y,4: Glee Club,4: M Club,3,4: Scroll Club,4 Traclc,4. ALBERT WATKINS AL Scroll Club: M Club: Senior Play: Science lmprovemenlnl. CAMERA SHY HAROLD R. PRINCE HAL Swimrning,I-3: Class Pres.,4: Assembly CommiHee,3: Junior Prom Cornmiflee: Glee Club,3, 4: FooIball,2. RICHARD D. GRAHAM DlCK lnlerclass Ac+ivi+ies,4. DAVID B. DAVIS DAVE Scroll Club,3,4: Silver Scroll: M Club,4: Manager, Socce-r,4: Winner, Book Marf,3,0ra+ori- cal,4.ExIernporaneous.4: Origi- nal Wriling Award,3,4: Mc- Burneian,3,4: Swimming,3,4: Panorama,4: Vice President Senior Class: Roberf Ross Mc- Burney Medal: Honorable Menfion, A.A. Berle Courfesy Award. RUDOLF ERNEST HIRSCH RUDY Class Secre?ary,3: Dramafic Club,3,4: Scroll Club,3,4: Pan- orarna,4: Yeorboolc,4: VVinner, Time ConIesI,4. LAMP AND LAUREL 1945 Published by Ihe Senior Class of McBurney School Edilor-in-Chief Assisranl Ediror Business Manager Copy Edilor Sporls Pholography Edilor Norman Klein Roberr Baurle Sleven Jacobs Faculry Adviser Copy Wrifers Ernesr Cupo Charles Hughes Alexander Treves Byron E. Anderson Loren Seeley lan H. Nemlich Theodore Wolff Fred S. Korner . Roberlr Loriclc Roberr Barry William Sachs Arrhur Hawlcins Mr. Waller S. Liggell Pholography: Apeda Sludios Engravings: Scienlific Engraving Co. Prinring, Cover and Binding: Marlin Prinring Co. UHDEHGHHDS JUNIORS MIDDLE A FIRST TERM MIDDLE B ORTN SMALL PreSiCTenT BUDDY POMERANZ LOREN SEELEY Vice-PreSidenT EDWARD DUT!-TU J0l'lN LAWRENCE SecreTary BOB KARPAS SECOND TERM RAY REID PreSidenT BUDDY POMERANZ LOREN SEELEY Vice-PresidenT' EDWARD DUTHU WILLIAM SACT-TS SecreTary BOB KARPAS The highlighT oT The Junior year aT Mc- Burney is The well-known Junior Prom. The Junior Class sTrives To make This The big evenT oT The season. In every class There musT be someone To sTarT The ball a-rolling. This year The hero was Ray Reid, who, wiTh The aid oT his classmaTes, made This year's prom a huge success. The Juniors won The Red Cross Drive wiTh The aid aT Middle B's bombshell. No oTher secTion knew how much This class had, so They slackened in Their eTTorTs. When The day oT reckoning came, Middle B's bomb- shell wenT OTT, and The Juniors capped The drive. The Juniors beaT The Seniors in pushball and The Sophomores in soTTball on Field Day. They ran away wiTh The Academic Plaque. RoberT Baurle won The Spelling ConTesT and The Hobby Talks, ErnesT Cupo placed TirsT in The Book MarT, and second in The Hobby Talks and The OraTorical ConTesT, and Neil Di Giacomo Took second place in The OraTorical ConTesT. Many oT The Juniors made ouTsTanding conTribuTions To McBurney's aThleTics. Ray Reid, Jack EckhardT, Julian Luykx, and Ed- ward DuThu were on The swimming Team. Bob Karpas, Phil Brooks, and John Law- rence played baskeTball. The Juniors had men on The TooTball, baseball, Tennis, and Track Teams. Judging Tram Their showing This year, The Juniors should be one oT The besT Senior classes McBurney has ever seen. SOPHOMORES SOPH I FIRST TERM SOPH II LEON SPOLIANSKY PresidenT JOHN LANGE JAMES HOOPER Vice-Presidenf EUGENE RENNER KENNETH BRIDGES SecreTcry BRYANT HOPPER SECOND TERM JAMES HOOPER PresidenT EUGENE RENNER JAMES SCOTT Vice-Presideni' JOHN LANGE ALFRED FREY SecreTory LJWE THEDEN The Two Sophomore secTions which sprong Trom The single Freshmen closs oT losT yeor hove corriecl on The sTo1ndords seT during The previous semesTers in The ciThleTic, ocodemic ond scholosTic c1cTivi- Ties oT The school. John Longe wos The ouTsToncling oThIeTe becouse oT his porTicipoTion in Three oT McBurney's mosT populor sporTs, boseboll, boskeTboll, ond TooTboll. He olso oTToined individuel honor by conTribuTing his shore Towords The winning oT The A.A.P.S. Volley Bell TournomenT. Besides John Longe There were o number oT oTher Sophs who Tigurecl highly in A.A.P.S. conTesTs. The Sophomore boys noT only c1TToined oThleTic meriT os inclividuols buT olso proved Their obiliTy To work os o Teom when They vicToriously leTT The ring oTTer Thoroughly Trouncing The Freshmen during The TrodiTionol Freshmon Doy iniTioTion conTesTs. This wos Their second vicTory oT The lcincl Tor The Sophs, os Freshmen, beoT The Sophomores in lc1sT yeor's conTesT. Turning Trom The Tield OT oThleTics, one con Tind o lorge number oT Sophs on The rosTer oT The Scroll Club. A lorge percenT- oge oT These renderecl service To The school in Tive or more seporoTe orgonizoe Tions. AT The TerminoTion OT The I944-l945 school yeor The Sophomore Closs will be oble To Tolce iTs ploce wiTh The oTher greoT clcisses oT McBurney, righTTully knowing ThoT iT clid iTs porT To bring The seoson To o successTul close. FRESHMEN FROSH I FIRST TERM FROSH II ARTHUR HAWKINS PresidenT WILLIAM REPP MICHAEL DUERR Vice-PresicIenT ROBERT ANNIS SHELDON STILLMAN SecreTary PHILIP DENMAN SECOND TERM AL LEDERKRAMER PresidenT WILLIAM REPP MICHAEL DUERR Vice-PresidenT STEVEN LUKAS SHELDON STILLMAN SecreTary PHILIP DENMAN The Freshman class This year was divided inTo Two secTions. Being onIy Freshmen, The upper cIasses kepT Them in Their place. STiII They Took Their parT in many oT The academic and aThIeTic aTiviTies oT The school. LasT TaII, aT Pelham Bay Park, The Freshmen came in Third, missing second pIace by only Two poinTs. They ToughT hard unTiI The IasT race. On Freshman Day, Thanks To The boxing oT Henry Haske and ErnesT TaroT, The Freshmen came very cIose To beaTing The Sophs in Their Tradi- Tional conTesTs. The Freshmen IecI The school in inferclass acTiviTies, compeTing, Frosh I againsT Frosh II, in many sporTs. Mickey Duerr led The class in academic acTiviTies, placing Third in The VocabuIary f. ConTesT and TiTTh ii? The Times CurrenT EvenTs TesT. Kolya Cadden and ArThur Haw- kins were in The TinaIs oT The Book MarT. ArThur Hawkins and Edwin ThoeT were in The Hobby TaIks Tinals. Mickey Duerr, Ed- win ThoeT, and David Knickerbocker were in The Tinals oT The DecIamaTion ConTesT. The Freshmen did well in The Red Cross and The Y Drives and Ied The school in The saIe oT War STamps. The Freshmen are now weII represenTed in The M Club, The Scroll Ciub, and The Key Club, and are Iooking Torward To nexT year when They will have a greaTer voice in The aTTairs aT McBurney. The Fresh- men can do iT, and They will. SUB-FRESHMEN FIRST TERM SECOND TERM RONALD ROGERS Presideni' STEWART O'NEILL STEWART O'NEILL Vice-PresidenT ELWARD BRESETT THOMAS l-IULBECK SecreTcry RONALD ROGERS This year's Sub-Treshman class has done more Than any oT iTs predecessors To make The upper classmen recognize ThaT iT is a valuable parT oT The Upper School. The big evenT oT The year was The win- ning oT The Y Drive. The Sub-Treshmen broughT in 3381, oT Their quoTa, and won easily, alThough Middle B conTesTed The drive wiTh Them up To The lasT minuTe. Every member oT The group conTribuTed. IT was The TirsT secTion To achieve The one hundred percenT conTribuTion goal. Because They won The drive, The group was Taken To Madison Square Garden To see a hockey game. The class was very acTive in academics, placing boys in The Tinals oT mosT oT Them. One boy enTered The Scroll Club, an unusual honor Tor a Sub- Treshman. ThaT boy was Edgar Allen. STewarT O'Neill and Elward BreseTT en- Tered The Key Club. No Sub-Treshman won an M This year, buT The class was very acTive in pony aTh- leTics. They are The McBurney aThleTes oT The coming years, AT The beginning oT The second Term, The group was increased by The addiTion oT ThirTeen new boys. Mr. Arnold replaced Mr. lngoldsby as The TaculTy adviser. NexT year The Sub-Treshmen expeci' To become The mosT acTive Freshman class The school has ever known. Look ouT, Sophs, Freshman Day is coming. x LOWER SCHOOL FIRST TERM SECOND TERM MICHAEL ARTIST Preside-nT GEORGE O'NEILL JERRY ADELSON Vice-PresicIen+ MICI-IAEL MILLER SPENCER BRUNO SecreTary ALBERT PREYSS This year The Lower School had a very large enrollmenT, 46 boys. Mr. Cole, who had been head oT The Lower School Tor The pasT Ten years, leTT aT midyear To Talce charge oT The Brookside School in New Jersey, I-le was succeeded by Mr. John C. Marlcay, who TaughT previously aT Blair Academy. The smaller McBurneyiTes proved Their worTh by winning The Singing ConTesT, They had one-hundred percenT conTribu- Tion in The Red Cross drive ond The Y.M. C.A, Financial Campaign. They exceeded Their guoTa in borh, and collecTed over Twofhundred dollars Tor The War Fund. They sTaged a vigorous drive Tor cloTh- ing Tor The poverry sTricl4en people In Europe. The boys puT on an exhibiTion Alumni NighT and received much praise Tor Their work. The baseball, bosl4eTball and soccer Teams had one oT Their mosT successTul seasons. They played Their old rivals- Riverdale, Adelphi and Brooklyn Friends. Many oT The boys in The Lower School received leTTers Tor playing on one or more Teams. The Lower School aThleTic supervisors were Guy Loudon, in charge oT swimming, Ray Reid, lan Nemlich, Byron Anderson, Warren, I-Iagberg, WalTer Jones, RoberT Woodhead, and Fred Korner. -l HCHDEHIIUS 1 1 STUDENT COUNCIL This yecir's STudenT Council proved To be one of The mosT ocfive McBurney hos yeT seen. The elecTions of The firsT Term elevofed Byron Anderson To The covefed presidency ofTer o long, hord boTTle. Dur- ing his odminisTroTion The STudenT Council firsT disTinguished iTself by presenTing o very successful donce. LoTer come The Y Drive, in which The school wenT over iTs unprecedenfed quoTo oT 51,200 by more Thon 5700. This conspicuous Triumph wos broughT obouf moinly Through compeTiTion omong The secfions. The highesT percenToge wos ThoT of The Sub-freshmen, who obTciined 338 percenT of Their quoTo, or 5287. Middle B wos second wiTh 284 percenT, followed by Senior A wiTh 200 percent Sophomore I, 148 percent Speciol A, 147 percent The Lower School, 130 percent Freshmen 1, 114 percent Middle A, 101 percent ond Freshmen ll, 88 percenT. Morch broughf The elecTions for The Spring Term, ond Henry Boron wos vicTor. Only Three bo11oTs were required for Boron To poll 138 voTes, The exocT number re- quired. AlThough Flonk Boron's reign wos unusuolly shorT due To The elecTion being posTponed so long, iT wos chorocTerized by much ocTiviTy. One of The firsT meos- ures considered ond puT Through under his direcTion wos o mofion creoTing o STudenT CourT, mode up of The heods of eoch of The school clubs ond orgonizoTions. Led by boTh presidenTs, This yeor's Red Cross Drive wos corried Through To o very successful close when The school wenT over iTs quoTo wiTh oi grand ToTol of 5423.60, divided omong The secfions os follows: Middle B, 5136.603 Lower School, 5107.111 Freshmen 1, 532.827 Senior A-B, 521.001 Sub-freshmen, 519.261 Middle A, 515.85: Sophomore 1, 515.353 Freshmen ll, 513.113 Sophomore II, 512.45. Oufside confribu- Tions omounTed To 55000. The finol drive of The yeor, The SevenTh Wor Loon, ended in onoTher Triumph. Under The direcTion of ErnesT Cupo, The school exceeded iTs quoTo of 510,000 by severol Thousond dollors. PANORAMA Sounds oT violenT commoTion ond greoT conTusion down The second Tloor holl ore o sure sign ThoT Ponoromo, McBurney's liTerory mogozine, is in The molcing. BUT somehow, clespiTe all The conTusion, Pono- romo's sToTT hos succeeded in puTTing ouT Two regulor issues ond o lqingsize one. The TirsT issue, WinTer I944, lediTor, Doniel GoodsTeinl come Through wiTh severol ouT- sTonding TeoTures, including Mrs, O'- l.eory's Cow, River's End, ond Rip Von Crusoe. The second issue, Spring l945, lediTor, SeTh Morrisonl wos excep- Tionol Tor iTs mony colorTul ond inTeresTing illusTrc1Tions bylulion Luyloc. Among The ouT- sTonding Te-oTures were Dovid Dovis's Deer l-lunTing, lwiTh excellenT illusTro- Tionsl, The Frigc1Te ConsTiTuTion by SeTh Morrison, WolTer Ellis' Drugs, Bob Bor- ry's poem, A l.omenT, ond The regulor TeoTure, STephen Jocobs' Ponoromo Puz- zlerf' There hove olwoys been o greoT mony more boys worlcing on Ponoromcs Thon on ony oTher McBurney publicoTion. FurTher- more, Ponoromcfs producTion sToTT corries The worlc TurTher Thon The sToTTs oT The oTher publicoTions. Unlilce oTher sToTTs, Their work is noT Tinished when The loyouT ond dummy hove been ossembled, The Pono- romo sToTT cuTs iTs own sTencils ond does iTs own Typing ond mimeogrophing. Visi- Tors on Alumni NighT were impressed by The demonsTroTion of The ocTuol work oT producing The mogozine. A wide vorieTy oT TeoTures disTinguishes Ponoromo: hobbies, longuoges, poems, sTories, puzzles, eTc. Ponorolmo is The school's chieT ouTleT Tor iTs orTisTic ond liTerory TcllenT. This posT yeor's issues oT Ponoromo hover employed phoTo-oTTseT picTures Tor Their covers. The Tinol issue corried o picTure oT Orin Smoll in boTTing procTise os o cover. IT olso conToined biographies oT The members oT The Lomp ond Lourel SocieTy. Chorles Hughes' poem, Ten poges in lengTh, oTTrocTed much oT- TenTiong The sTudenTs never guessed ThoT They had such on ouThor in Their midsT. IT wos o busy yeor Tor Pcnoromo buT o highly successTul one. McBURNEIAN The sTudenTs' newspaper aT McBurney is The monThly McBurneian. AT The begin- ning oT This year Rudolph Ruibal was The ediTor. ATTer his graduaTion in January, James EbbilTs Toolc over. The associaTe ediTors Tor The year were David Davis, SeTh Morrison, and Charles T-lughes. Dur- ing The Two presidenTial elecTions mimeo- graphed ediTions oT The paper were puT ouT under The direcTion oT Norman Klein. In The middle aT The year The newspaper changed prinTers. James EbbiTTs was re- sponsible Tor This change. Revenue was increased by an excepTional number oT ads, secured Through The Tireless eTTorTs aT The business manager, Byron Anderson. The Two Rogers PeeT conTesTs, The TirsT won by William Sachs and The second by Fred Schneider, highlighTed The adverTising. A new TeaTure in The paper was an in- Terview column on Timely subiecTs enTiTled, Now l Think .... T' The McBurneian STaTT was highly elaTed when iT was noTiTied ThaT iT had been awarded second class honors in naTional compeTiTion by The NaTional ScholasTic Press AssociaTion. ln April Charles Hughes was elecTed The new ediTor-in-chieT, and Norman Klein and RoberT Baurle were named as assoe ciaTe ediTors. The newly enlarged sTaTT includes George O'Neill, ErnesT Cupc, William Sachs, Daniel Finn, Fred Weidner, Donald T-lengeveld, and Dean AlTange. These are The sTudenTs whom Mr. Bowman hopes To malce inTo crack iournalislrs. DRAMATIC CLUB The DramaTic Club has been more ac- Tive This year Than in many years pasT. The direcTion oT drarnaTics was Talcen over by Mr. LiggeTT aTTer Mr. l-lall leTT. The club was very successTul as shown by iTs Tour hiTs: Yes Means No, Kiss The STar, Banquo's Chair, and The Name is John- sTon. The club increased iTs membership This year To a Tull TwenTy-Tive sTudenTs. William Behrens was presidenT The TirsT Term, and RoberT Baurle, The second. Yes Means No was a Tarce given Tor The sTudenTs in assembly, lTs casT included: Ted VVolTT, Cverry McCoy, Charles Foley, Buddy Pomeranz, and Guy STrauss. For The ChrisTmas Play The club pro- duced Kiss The STor. William RuclcsTuhl, RoberT Baurle, Neil DiGiacomo, Ted WolTT, Guy STrauss and Leon Spoliansky made up The casT. Musical numbers were provided by The Upper School Glee Club, The or- chesTra, and The Lower School carolers. A dance Tollowed The play. The annual Senior Play was a mysTery enTiTled, Bcnquo's Chair. lT was presenTed Tor The parenTs on Two evenings: and was Tollowed by The Junior Play, The Name is JohnsTon. Dances were held on boTh eve- nings. Those Talcing parT in The Senior Play were: William MarTin, ArThur STein, Ted WolTT, l-lalsey Cook, James Colaneri, Rob- erT Loriclc AI WaTl4ins, and Leon Spolian- sky. Members oT The Junior Play's casT were: AlTred T'laclc, Donald Hengeveld, RoberT Baurle, Neil DiGiacomo, William Peniche, and Norman Klein. THE ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE To The Assembly CommiTTee Tolls The imporTanT iob aT planning and managing The school's assemblies in The LiTTle TheaTer. AT The TirsT weelcly meeTing aT The year The secTion represenToTives selecTed Fred Weidner, presidenTg Norman Klein, vice president and Ray Reid, secreTory. Mr. lngoldsby again served as TaculTy advisor. When The Spring Term elecTions were held, PresidenT Fred Weidner was elecTed Tor a Third Term, Vice-PresidenT Norman Klein, Tor o second Term: and an addiTional VicevPresidenT, Darel l-liclcs, and a new sec- reTary, Jack STewarT, were named. Some oT The assemblies arranged by The Assembly CommiTTee were: Tallcs by Mr. Funara on Gypsies, Dr. CrampTon on our healTh, Mr. l-losTeTTer OT PraTT lnsTiTuTe on Triclc maTh, a lecTure by ex-guerilla Bill AalTo, on The worlc aT guerillas in This war, an illusTraTed discussion aT The TempesT by Mr. Sam Pearce, and a speech on The Red Cross by Mr. ArThur KosTer. Some OT The many inTeresTing, Timely and inTormaTive moving picTures shown in The Assembly were: Mexican Moods, ForTress oT The Sky, l'STory aT Glass, The Amazon Awalcensf' ComboT Amer- ica and many March oT Time picTures. The commiTTee also managed The pre- senTaTion of a French play, o ChrisTmas ploy, all The dances, a Spelling ConTesT and The ExTemporaneous Speaking Con- TesT. This is iusT a sample oT The TeaThers PresidenT Weidner and his Assembly Com- miTTee have in Their haT. Each TeaTher rep- resenTs a loT oT hard worlc and worry, espe- cially Tor Fred Weidner, who is well lcnown Tor his Theme song, The Troubles llve Seen. During The pasT year The Assembly Com- miTTee has provided McBurney sTudenTs wiTh a diversiTied program in iTs endeavor To give The boys a wider ouTlool4 on world aTTairs . ORCHESTRA When Mr. Arnold puT his golden Trump- eT To his lips ond senT ouT The clorion col? Tor orchesTro members, nine oT The Tolenr- ed sTudenTs OT McBurney onswered. The orchesTro procTised every Tuesdoy ond Fridoy oTTernoon in The lnTernoTionof Room. When The sounds produced were especiolly sweeT, The orchesTro enriched The ossembly progrom wiTh iTs hormony. The moin oppeorcinces oT The orchesTro coincided wiTh The producTions oT The Drc1moTic Club. EovoriTe numbers in The reperToire were: Our DirecTor, Officer of The Day, Wash- ingfon and Lee Swing, Army Air Corps, Anchors Aweigh, and Summi+. The members were: TrumpeT Trombone ClorineT Violin Piono , fEd McClusl4y Fred SchmidT Al BlunT AI l-loclc S Wm. Proger Z Ed l-lowlings S Chorles Hughes 2 Eugene Lukas Eugene PrimoTT GLEE CLUB McBurney's Glee Club boosTs o member- ship oT more Thon TiTTy boys. Reheorsols ore held during sTudy periods oT sTc1Ted Times during The weelc. AT These Times The lnTernc1Tiono1l Room is Tilled wiTh hormony, melody, ond iusT ploin song. The Glee Club oided The DromoTic Club in iTs ChrisTmos progrom, There They song ThoT Tomous number, STouT l'leorTed Men, which will live in The memory oT Those who song iT Torever. The Lower School Glee Club enriched The some pro- grom wiTh cz splendid rendiTion oT mony oT The populor ChrisTmos Corols. NexT yeor The Glee Club hopes To pro- duce some oT The more complex mole chorus numbers. KEY CLUB There are Two qualiTicaTions Tor member- ship in The Key Club. The TirsT is inTelli' genceg The second, applicaTion To sTudies. All McBurneyiTes possess The TirsT qualiTica- Tion, buT only a score can claim The sec- ond. Thus is iT ThaT less Than Ten percenT oT The enrollmenT Tinds iTs way onTo The Honor Roll and Trom There inTo The Key Club. These are The boys who ranked high in all OT Their sTudies, They deserve crediT, Tor mosT oT Them worked harder Than even The boys on The basl4eTball squad To aTTain This honor. LAMP AND LAUREL sociETY The Lamp and Laurel SocieTy, The meme bership oT which comprises The cream oT The McBurneyiTes, Tinished The year wiTh iTs regular quoTa oT Twelve members, who were voTed in by The FaculTy and insTalled aT The Annual Clubs BanqueT on May 25. ACADEMIC The TighT Tor The Academic Plaque, awarded To The class scoring The greaTesT number oT poinTs in The academic con- TesTs, opened This year in OcTober wiTh The Spelling ConTesT. The columns oT The Times and The Herald Tribune were searched Tor words To down McBurney's spellers, louT The Times and The Herald Tribune Tailed. Mr. Hemenway provided such words as misogynisT and Tacilely. When The clouds oT The baTTle had cleared, RoberT Baurle was TirsTg Daniel Finn, sec- ond: and Rudolph Hirsch ,Third. The nexT round in The baTTle oT The secTions was The vocabulary TesT. The Juniors were quiclcly cuT down in This baTTle: The winners being Ted WolTT, TirsTg Richard Graham, second: and Miclcey Duerr, a Freshman, Third. The nexT baTTle Tor The plaque was a vocal one. ln a harmonious ending The Lower School yodeled iTs way inTo TirsT place, Middle B Took second, and The Freshmen came in Third. NexT came The baTTle of The salesmen. wiTh each super-salesman Trying To con- vince The school ThaT Tor pure, unadulTer- aTed reading enioymenT, The book ThaT he was plugging was The besT. Norman Klein resorTed To pulling a lcniTe and a baTTle oT poison Trom his poclceT To empha- size his poinTs. He didn'T TrighTen The CONTESTS judges, alThough he did place second. lErnesT Cupo won The conTesT, and Ted WolTT placed Third. The greaT explorers nexT Tool: The sTage, To enlighTen The school on The mysTeries oT The EasT. David Davis, The basso Tram CaliTornia, gave an inTeresTing and learn- ed discourse on The Chinese language, in TacT, David delivered much oT his Tallc in Chinese. He won The baTTlep ErnesT Cupo and Neil DiGiacomo placed sec- ond, and Leon Spolianslqy came in Third. The Hobby Tallcs were noTable because The TirsT speller oT The school repeaTed his Triumph. RoberT Baurle held TorTh aT greaT lengTh on The pleasures oT Tresh waTer Tishing. ErnesT Cupo was second wiTh a Tallc on roclcs, and a Sub-Treshman, Layson, won Third wiTh a demonsTraTion oT magic. The baTTle Tor The plaque came To an end wiTh The ExTemporaneous Speaking ConTesT. ln This conTesT The spealcers are given a Topic Talcen Trom The morning paper and are Told To Tallc Tor Two min- uTes on iT. David Davis repeaTed his Tri- umph oT lasT year. Loren Seeley placed second and SeTh Morrison Third. ATTer The'shouTing and The TumulT had died, iT was discovered ThaT The Juniors had won The plaque by a wide margin. The Seniors were The runnersup, and The Soph- omores came in Third. SCROLL CLUB The Scroll Club now boasTs The largesT membership in iTs hisTory, sevenTy-Three members, sevenTeen oT whom possess Sil- ver Scrolls Tor excepTional service. Three Gold Scrolls were awarded dT The Clubs BanqueT, To Byron Anderson, Henry Baron, and lan Nemlich. The awarding oT Three Gold Scrolls in one year is worThy oT noTe, Tor The Gold Scroll in iTs sphere is as ex- cepTional as The Congressional Medal oT Honor in iTs. ACADEMIC COUNCIL The Academic Council, made up oT The presidenTs OT The various academic clubs and organizaTions, had iTs usual business To TransacT during The year. ThirTy-Tour new members were elecTed To The Scroll Club. The eighT academic conTesTs ThaT were held absorbed The inTeresT oT The sTudenT body during much OT The school year. -if 451 PINGPONG This year There was no oTTicial pingpong Team aT McBurney. ThaT does noT mean, however, ThaT The game was neglecTed. Day aTTer day, during lunch hour and Tram Three unTil Tive, The Tables in The Pingpong Room resounded To The ping oT The balls. Since no compeTiTion was ar- ranged, iT is impossible To name The besT players. CHESS The chess Team, Thanks To The able TuTor- ing aT Mr. Weeks, ended The season wiTh a record aT Tour maTches won and Three losT. The chessplayers opened The season auspiciously by deTeaTing Columbia Grame mar 3-l, Jacobs, RucksTuhl, and Kennedy winning Their games, They pulled Through againsT Regis, 2lf2fllf2, Jacobs and Ruckf sTuhl winning and Kennedy Tying. DisasTer overTook Them in The TriniTy maTch. Cnly Barry, who had suTTered deTeaT in The pre' vious maTches, won, and The Team losT, 3fl. The nexT maTch was a disappainTmenT when Riverdale TorTeiTed. FieldsTon, The nexT op- ponenT, was deTeaTed 3fl, Jacobs, Ruck- sTuhl, and Kennedy again winning. This was one oT The hardesT ToughT maTches in McBurney's hisTory. The maTch againsT l-Torace Mann ended in a 3lf2-V2 deTeaT3 RucksTuhl managed To Tie his game buT The oTher players losT. The Tinal maTch, againsT Franklin, was a disappoinTmenT also. Jacobs won and Barry Tied, buT RucksTuhl and Kennedy losT, giving The maTch To Franklin, ZVQATVQ. In The individuals, sponsored by The Chess AssociaTion aT PrivaTe Schools, Bob Barry held his own unTil The semi-Tinals, where he was deTeaTed by Kurchmeyer, l-lorace Mann's sTar. HTHLETICS FOOTBALL The Theme song oT The TooTball Team was, Man The boaTs, we have a game This aTTernoon. ln everyone oT The Tive games, The boys had To puT up o TighT noT only againsT The opposing Team, buT againsT The wind, rain, and mud. AT The MonTclair game The Tog was so low ThaT you couldn'T see one end oT The Tield from The oTher. AT one Time James Threw a ThirTy yard pass To no one in porTicular. Korner came running ouT oT nowhere: by a sTrolce oT luclc, puT up his hands: and The ball Tell in. The MonTclo1ir players accused McBurney oT using radar. The sTarTing Team consisTed oT: SchmidT, L. E.: lan Nemlich, C.: Karner, R. E.: Alan Nemlich, L. H, B.: James, Q. B.: I-Tagberg, R. I-T. B. WiTh The able guidance aT Coach Parker, The Team rounded inTo Tine shape Auxfbfy early. The Coach had James passing and running The ends, lan Nemlich plunging Through cenTer and blocking, Woodheod running The ends, and The Torward wall aT SchmidT, Alan Nemlich, and Karner knock- ing Them down and receiving posses. Be- hind The TirsT six came a group oT sTurdy subsTiTuTes: Loudon, FGTT, Woodhead, John Lange, PeTe Lanino, and Rice, who goT ouT on The Tield and did iusT as good o iob as The oThers. OpponenTs i McBurney 20 LocusT Valley 12 27 Adelphi 6 25 MonTclair Teachers I9 7 LocusT Valley 26 2 BuxTon 20 81 83 BASEBALL Allhough lhe baseball leam slarled lhe season slowly, il ended in a blaze ol glory. Thirleen boys lound lime, despile lheir sludies and lhe Senior Play, lo praclice and play. Prospecls were good. Dick James was lhere lo pilch, and Loudon and Small could provide lhe punch. Bul lhings hap- pened. Pirsl and loremosl was lhe wealher. ll rained and rained and rained, Praclice was called all and Mr. Purcell bil his nails. The lirsl game arrived long belore lhe leam had rounded inlo shape, and Barnard won 4-2. The Manhallan Prep game, which lollowed, ended in anolher deleal lor Mc- Burney, lhis lime by an 8-4 score. Mr. Purcell had nol lound lhe righl ballery combinalion. For lhe nexl game he de- cided lo apply desperale remedies: Field- slon, lhal arch-rival, musl be delealed al any cosl. Diclc James, lhe slar pilcher, was moved lrom lhe hill lo lhe calcher's box, and John Lange pilched. The gamble worked. Lange pilched a one-hil game, was never in lrouble, and McBurney won 4-O. Too bad lhal IvlcBurney's sporls are concluded in mid-lvlay lo malce way lor lhe lesls. The leam was sel lor a slring ol viclories. Diclc James is leaving lhis year, bul John Lange, Alan Nemlich, James Lange, James Scoll, l-lerberl Karpas, Orin Small, and William lvlilchell remain. Mr. Purcell should have a line leam nexl year. Opponenls McBurney 4 Barnard 2 8 Manhallan 4 O Fieldslon 4 fx n1ixs w BASKETBALL lVlcI3iirnr:yIw highly iinderraled Varsily Baslcelball Team gained second place in The inilial N.Y.A.C.Is Privare 5chooIs Tournamenl. Cer iIGaIIoping Camels slarled all by bealing Ihe lavared Poly Prep loam by a 54-40 score. They wenl on Ia beal Trinily in Ihe semi-linal round and in Ihe Iinals Iosl Io a hard playing Tie La Salle leam by seven poinls. AI the beginning ol The season The Ieam was made up ol Ihree regulars Irom Iasl year, some ol Iasl yearls Iravoling Ieam, and a launch ol likely Ioolcing newcomers. The slarling lineup consisled of: Lawrence, Rf., Karner, C., and Baron, LG, The re- maining Iwo posilions were divided among Finn, Parsons, Anderson, Ian Nemlich, Woodhczad, and John Lange. Among The reserves were Broolcs, Karpas, and Ryall. The season ended wilh The reams record reading I5 games won and 5 Iosl, The Ieam's leading scorers were Kar-ner wilh 348 poinls and Baron wilh I68 poinls. The individual record lor poinls scored in a single game was made by Korner when he scored 39 poinls againsl Adelphi. Gpponenl McBurney I8 Walden 37 24 I3'IcIyn Fr, 50 39 De La Salle 22 I9 Wesl Islip 50 38 Vlfoodrnere 55 32 Adelphi 6I 39 Lincoln 30 I8 SI. Augusl 50 I2 Lalce Grove 34 35 Ivlanhallan 40 22 Barnard 43 27 I-lorace Mann 25 43 Franlelin 49 29 Dwighl 49 30 Eliz. Erwin 42 31 Buxlon 46 37 De La 5aIle 34 40 Poly Prep 54 36 Trinily 57 40 De La 5aIle 33 609 86I SWIMMING The swimming Team goT oTT To an early sTarT This year. When The call was TirsT senT ouT by William IvliTchell, The manager, Tor all swimmers To reporT Tor pracTise, a score oT mermen responded. From lasT year's Team came Richard James, who placed second in A.A.P.S. diving: Halsey Cook, our chieT backsTroker7 Raymond Reid, This year's undeTeaTed capTain spe- cializing in The l00 yard and 50 yard Tree' sTyleg Guy Loudon and Julian Luykx, who swam The breasTsTroke. 5Tan Erickson and Edmund TrosT helped Dick James in The diving, The Team Tinished The season wiTh a clean record: six vicTories-no deTeaTs. The closesT meeT was wiTh Lincoln School, which led unTil The lasT evenT, The TreesTyle relay. ThaT was some race. Lincoln School led aTTer The TirsT lap buT McBurney came Through in The end. The 50 yard TreesTyle sprinT was swum by Edward DuThu, Jack EckhardT and ErnesT TaroTT. Barrie Trebor swam The long 220 TreesTyle wiTh David Davis and ErnesT TaroTT alTernaTing as sec- onds. The medley Team consisTed oT l-Tale sey Cook lbackl, Guy Loudon lbreasTl and Barrie Trebor lTree sTylel. The Team ended The year by placing Third in The annual A.A.P.S. meeT held in The McBurney pool. CapTain Ray Reid placed TirsT in The T00 yard and 50 yard TreesTyle, seTTing a new record in The T00 yard. Guy Loudon and l-lalsey Cook placed Third in The breasTsTroke and backe sTroke respecTively. Dick James running neck and neck in The diving, Tailed To Tal-,e TirsT by less Than Two poinTs. The medley Team placed TourTh. AlTogeTher, IvlcBurney's swimming Team had a very successTul year. 0pponenTs McBurney 22 ManhaTTan Prep 37 25 Adelphi 36 3l Lincoln 35 7 ST. Johns 27 24 Poly Prep 33 28 FieldsTon 38 T37 206 n-. .lf Ai 31nafaa SOCCER The soccer Team, spurred on by The coaching oT Mr. Funaro, who filled us wiTh inside dope on how To Take care aT The opponenTs in Three easy lessons, sTarTed The season on OcTober l7Th by playing Columbia Grammar and losing To Them, 2-O. The sTraTegy aT Mr. Funaro, alas, did noT worlc as iT was planned. The second game aT The season was againsT LaTayeTTe and There again The Green and WhiTe received a crushing blow Tram a superior Team, losing by a score OT 5-O, The Third game was a ToTal vicTary Tor The Green and WhiTe. ln The TirsT halT T-lanlc Baron, The all around aThleTe, scored The TirsT poinT aT The season Tor The Green and WhiTe. BUT Birch WaThen came baclc in The second halT and Tied The score. McBurney scored The Tinal poinT in The TourTh quarTer and The game was ours. By The way, I-lanlc scored The second painT. The TourTh game oT The season was againsT Horace Mann. IT seemed ThaT whenever a soccer game was schedulf'-d The wind swung around To The norTh and The ThermomeTer Tell below Treezing, BUT during This game iT was especially cold. ATTer The TirsT guarTer when The ball hiT a player he didn'T even Teel iT. Horace Mann's Team proved To be beTTer Eslcimos Than McBurney and won 2fO. The TiTTh game againsT FieldsTon was by Tar The besT played even Though iT ended in a O-O Tie. Luclc wasn'T wiTh lVlcBurney, Tar we missed Tive goals which really should have gone in. The Iasf game of fhe season was againsf fhaf well-known school, Poly Prep. There again fhe Green and Whife was crushed by an oversized feam by fhe score of 6-O. Maybe if wasn'f a vicforious season buf we had a lof of fun playing. TRACK The frack feam had plenfy of compefi- fion from ofher sporfs and acfivifies lnof fhe leasf of which was provided by fhe approaching final examinafionsl. Despife fhis McBurney had a sincere, hard-working feam. Af Riverdale, McBurney did well in fhe field evenfs: Ian Nemlich faking firsf in fhe shofpuf and second in fhe broad iump, John Lawrence and Eugene Renner fying for firsf in The high iump, and Uwe Theden coming in Third in fhe broad iump. In 'rhe races, however, fhe feam failed fo come Through and McBurney was defeafed. Af Fieldsfon, McBurney again failed fo fop fhe campefifion. Ian Nemlich, Fred Korner and Uwe Theden placed in The field evenfs, and Capfain George Faff and Phil Brooks won places on fhe frack. FENCING This year fhe fencing feam gof off fo a beaufiful sfarf by badly beafing Horace Mann 8-I. Vicfory affer vicfory followed: feam affer feam fell in fronf of our cap- able foilsmen: Alex and Edi Treves, bofh capfains, Jimmy Hooper and Barrie Tre- bor, fhe fwo new members of fhe feam. Columbia Grammar, Brooklyn Friends, and Riverdale were fhe unlucky vicfims. By fhe fime fhe annual A.A.P.S. fourna- menf opened, fhe feam was ready and anxious for vicforyg however, fheir success had gone fo fheir heads: fhey wenf on fo fhe sfrips a Iiffle overconfidenf. They once more defeafed Columbia-Grammar and Horace Mann. Then came fhe finals, and McBurney was opposed by a sfrong River- dale feam. Alfhough we had won over fhem af fhe beginning of fhe season, fhey proved fo be slighfly beffer fhan our men, defeafing fhem 6-3. In fhe individ- ual A.A.P.S. rafings, James Hooper placed fiffh, Edward Treves placed fourfh, while his brofher and feammafe, Alex, placed second, one vicfory behind fhe firsf place honors! ' The success of nexf year's feam, offer fhe fifvo Treveses graduafe, will be com- plefely in fhe hands of James Hooper and Barrie Trebor. They should be able fo confinue fhe excellenf showing made by fhe McBurney fencing feam in fhe pasf. BOX SCORE ' Opponenfs McBurney I Horace Mann 8 I Columbia 'GL 8 4 Riverdale 5 O Brooklyn Fr. I 9 2 Horace Mann 7 O Horace Mann 9 I Columbia Gr. 8 6 Riverdale ' 3 INDIVIDUAL SCORING , Won Losf J. Hooper ,s I2 8 B. Trebor , 8 3 E. Treves , B 20 4 A. Treves 20 E 3 We GOLF When The call Tor golTers was senT ouT This Spring, Mr. Purcell discovered ThaT noT one golTer Tram previous years was in The school. l-lowever, six poTenTial gollers an- swered The call. Many diTTiculTies were ex- perienced by The boys when They began To organize The Team. Finally They had Time To play only Three maTches, Two wiTh Poly Prep and one wiTh Brooklyn. The Team losT all Three maTches. The Teams home course, Clearview, is locaTed in Flushing. The sTarTing Tive were noT seasoned veT- erans, buT They did provide some compe- TiTion Tor The opposiTion. The prospecTs Tor nexT year are good. Byron Anderson grad- uaTed in June, buT Warren Hagberg, Fred SchmidT, Eugene Renner, RoberT Wood- head, and George Edbon will sTill be in The school. TENNIS The Tennis Team by winning all oT iTs maTches placed iTselT high in The running Tor The BesT Team Cup. The phrase, 'Twin- ning all oT iTs maTches, gives a very poor picTure oT whaT The Team did To iTs op- ponenTs. OT The Tive maTches played only one was a baTTle, The one againsT Lincoln, which was Tinally won by McBurney in The lasT seT, 3-2. The oTher maTches were walk- aways, IvlcBurney winning every seT in each maTch. The Team, composed OT Baron, Jacobs, Lawrence, SchmiT, Alex Treves, and Weis glass, Took To The courTs early and oTTen. The players were scarcely ever seen wiTh- ouT Their racgueTs under Their arms. ln Their TirsT maTch, abbreviaTed To Two sin- gles and a double, They deTeaTed Brooklyn Friends 3-O. There was no guesTion oT The ouTcome aT The maTch aTTer The TirsT seT. Columbia Grammar was The nexT vicTim, The score 5-O. Then came The Lincoln game. The maTch was hard ToughT ThroughouT, buT McBurney ouTlasTed Their opponenTs and won 3-2. The Tinal maTches oT The season were well played, buT The McBurney Team was Too sTrong. BoTh CollegiaTe and Adelphi were noT only deTeaTed buT lolanlced. MosT oT The Tennis players are leaving This June. NexT year Mr. Guernsey will have To sTarT pracTically Trom scraTch. BuT Mc- Burney has always had good Tennis Teams: we are sure ThaT TuTure Teams will be egualf ly capable. OpponenTs McBurney O Brooklyn 3 O Col. Gr. 5 2 Lincoln 3 O CollegiaTe 5 O Adelphi 5 2 21 VOLLEYBALL The VarsiTy Volleyball sguad won The AAPS TournamenT aTTer a Tough sTruggle wiTh TriniTy, In The TirsT round They elim- inaTed Adelphi in Two games, winning I5-IO and T5-I3. Regis proved no compe- TiTion aT all in The semi-Tinals, McBurney Trouncing Them T5-4, T5-9. The Tinals, howf ever, developed inTo a long hard sTruggle. ln The TirsT game McBurney came Trom be- hind To deuce The game aT I4 and wenT on To win aTTer The serve had changed sides a dozen Times. The leTdown ThaT Tolf lowed was severe and TriniTy capped The second game easily, I5-5. IT loolced as iT McBurney was Through. Then TriniTy, which had been playing TighT ball Tor Two games, relaxed. BeTore They could recover, Mc- Burney had won The deciding game, T5-6. The J. V.'s were eliminaTed in The TirsT round by ST. AugusTine. The Freshmen losT To ST. Francis in The semi-Tinals by T5-8, l5-8. ATHLETIC COUNCIL The AThleTic Council had iTs usual busy season. There were seven maior spar-Ts and a holT dozen minor ones To supervise, Over one-TiTTh OT The schools enrollmenT received leTTers. WTTTT The yeorls sporTs cempleTed, The council can say deTiniTely ThaT This was a very successTul sporTs season. The swimming and The Tencing Team were Un deTeaTed: The volleyball Team wen iTs A,A.P.S. ToernamenT, while The Tencing Team and The basl4eTball Team placed second in Theirs. PONY SPORTS The pony basl4eTball Team, wiTh Mr. Parker coaching, had an excellenT season This year, AgainsT ,l. V. comeeTiTion, They won six oT The eleven games played. The Team losT The TirsT game ol The season To Friends Seminary, 38-QT, be? came baclc Two days laTer To Troiince The ST, Thomas squad, 3l l7. The second Team played The nexT game, losing To DalTon, 26-T3, buT The regulars rehirned To The vicTory column by repealing Their win over ST, Thomas, This Time by 39728. The mosT inTeresTing game ol The sea son was played wiTh fXugesTinian Seminary. The score aT The end aT The Tirsl auarTer was T7-T77 aT The end oT The halT, 23-23. When The linal whisTle blew Mr, Parlierls scoreboolq said ThaT McBiirney had won. 34-32. ST, fXugusTinian claimed a Tie game and ouTargeed The McT3erney claim. AT The end ol The exTra period The score read, ST. f'XugusTinion, 42 -- McBerney, 40, The Team Then wenT on To beaT The Bar, nord Brownies by a score oT 36-Zl and Trample TriniTy's highly raTed squad, 42-TZ. ln a nighT game McT3erney deTeaTed The Y.M.C.A, iayvee Team, 2321. ThaT was The hardesT Tei1ghT game oi The winTer. lVlcBiirney brolce even in The lasT Tour games, losing To Friends Seminary and Poly Prep, and winning Trom T'lorace Mann and TriniTy. Varsiiy Swimming Raymond Reid, Capi. Halsey Cook David Davis Edward Duihu Jaclc Eclcharf Slanley Ericlcsen Richard James Guy Loudon Julian Luylcx Roberi Oiierbourg Barrie Trebor Edward ilirosi William Miichell, Mgr. Varsify Tennis- Henry Baron, Capi. Sleven Jacobs John Lawrence Lucien Schmii Alexander Treves Sieven Weisglass William Schweizer, Mgr. Varsiiy Fencing ' Alexander Treves, Capi. Edward Treves, Mgr. Co4Cap+ains James Hooper Barrie Treloor Richard James Ian Nemlich Co-Capiains Cveorge Fail Warren Hagberg TEAMS Varsiiy Soccer Rudolph Ruibal, Cap. Henry Baron Halsey Coolc Daniel Finn Alberi Frey Horion Kennedy John Lawrence Roberf Lennan Raymond Reid James Scofi Orin Small Barrie Trebor Richard Wanderer David Davis, Mgr. Varsiiy BCISRGHDQII Henry Baron, Capi. Byron Anderson Daniel Finn Fred Korner John Lawrence lan Nemlich Ken Parsons Edwin Howlings, Mgr. Varsi+y Foo'rball Fred Karner John Lange Refer Lanino Guy Loudon Alan Nemlich Varsiiy Baseball Richard James, Capt Daniel Finn Fred Korner Herberi Karpas James Lange John Lange Guy Loudon William Mirchell Alan Nemlich James Scoii Orin Small Alberi' Wa+lcins Richard Wanderer, Mgr Varsify Track George Fall, Capf. John Lawrence lan Nemlich Eugene Renner Uwe Theden John Read, Mgr. Varsify Golf Byron Anderson Mgr. and Capi. Warren Hagberg Eugene Renner Roberl Woodhead John Rice Lucien Schmif Alberi Warkins Roberf Woodhead Barrie Beere, Mgr. OMEGA HI-Y FRATERNITIES SIGMA Byron Anderson Henry Baron Halsey Cook Dean Alfange Roberl Barry Roberl Baurle Barrie Beere Howard Booih Elward Bresell Byron Anderson Henry Baron Barrie Beere Halsey Cook David Davis Edward Dulhu John Eckhardi Slanley Ericksen George Fail Daniel Finn Alberl Frey Dean Alfange Edgar Allen Byron Anderson Henry Baron Ro-berl' Barry Roberi Baurle Barrie Beere Kolya Cadden James Coloneri Halsey Cook' Arnold Cooper' Ernesl Cupo David Davis' Neil DiGiacomo Michael Duerr James Ebbifls Waller Ellis HONORARY SOCIETIES LAMP AND LAUREL David Davis Charles Hughes Fred Korner lan Nemlich Raymond Reid Loren Seeley Orin Small Y KEY CLUB Halsey Cook David Davis Michael Duerr Giulius Ghiron James Hooper Roberl Kunkel Edward McCluskey Selh Morrison Sleworf O'Neill William Repp Philip Rolhrock Lucien Schmil M CLUB Warren Hagberg James Hooper Edwin Howlings Richard James Herberl' Karpos Fred Korner Horlon Kennedy James Lange John Lange Peler Lanino John Lawrence Guy Loudon Julian Luykx William Milchell Alan Nemlich lan Nemlich Roberl' Oflerbourg Kennelh 'Parsons John Read Raymond Reid Eugene Renner John Rice Fred Schmidl Lucien Schmil SCROLL CLUB Slanley Ericksen Michael Feigin Richard Field Charles Foley Alfred Hack Warren Hagberg Arlhur Hawkins Donald Hengeveld Darel Hicks Rudolph Hirsch James Hooper Edwin Howlings Charles Hughes Siephen Jacobs Roberf Jeliiers Herberl' Karpos Fred Korner' Norman Klein ik lk Bold lype indicales Gold Scrolls. lndicoles Silver Scrolls. John Lawrence Roberl Lorick Guy Loudon ' Julian Luykx William Marlin Edwo rd McCluskey Gerald McCoy Selrh Morrison' Alan Nemlich lan Nemlich Roberl' Olierbourg Francis Pardo Buddy Pomeranz Eugene Primo'Fl Raymond Reid William Repp John Rice Philip Rolhrock Ik Leon Spoliansky Fred Weidner Rudolph Ruibal James Scoll A Loren Seeley William Schweizer Leon Spolianslcy Fred Weidner Theodore Wolff James Scolf William Schweizer Orin Small Uwe Theden Barrie Trebor Alex Treves Edward Treves Edmund Trosl Richard Wanderer Alber+ Walkins Theodore Wolff Roberl Woodhead William Rucksluhl William Sachs Loren Seeley William Schweizer Orin Small Leon Spoliansky' Arlhur Slein E Guy Slrauss Barrie Treloor ' Charles Troiahn' Edmund 'Trosl' Myles Walburn Richard Wanderer Alberl Wolkins Fred Weidner' Henry Wolff. t Theodore Wolff Roberl Woodhead 1945 AWARDS Roberf Ross McBurney V V , DD David Davis, Ian Nemlich Headmasfer's Scholarship D ..,i DD iiiiiii iii.i ..,i,. P h ilip Rofhroclc Leadership Cup.. D DD D D DD sssss D D D DDDD DDDDDDDDD F red Weidner M Club CupDD DD D Boofh Mafhemafics D A. A. Berlel Courfesy D Original Wri'I'inglDD DD Sheffield Memorial Service Rings D DD Dramafics ..DD D Gold Scrolls D SPELLING CONTEST Roberf Baurle Daniel Finn Rudolph Hirsch MUSIC RECOGNITION CONTEST Henry Wolff Jere Green Theodore Wolff English D .D.D..D. D. Language ........ ....D Science DDDDD DDDD.DD.DD. DD., ...D ,.,......, DD DDDD D DDD.. Richard James, Ray Reid D DD DD Loren Seeley, Edward McCluslcey DD DDDDDD.,D D D DDDDDDDDD Ray Reid, David Davis DD DD DDDD. DD DD D DDDD D DD David Davis, Charles Hughes D D D DD .DDD ...DDDDD ...,D. D D .Henry Baron, Ian Nemlich, Fred Korner D Darel Hicks, A. Cooper, R. Hawlcinson, Charles Troiahn D DDDDD D DDDDD DDDD D DDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDD D D DTheodore Wolff, Arnold Cooper DD Byron Anderson, Henry Baron, Ian Nemlich BOOK MART Ernesf Cupo Norman Klein Theodore Wolff VOCABULARY CONTEST Theodore Wolff Richard Graham Michael Duerr HOBBY TALKS Roberf Baurle Ernesf Cupo Conrad Layson ORATORICAL David Davis Neil DiGiacomo Ernesf Cupo EXTEM PORANEOUS SPEAKING CONTEST David Davis Loren Seeiey Sefh Morrison IMPROVEMENT AWARDS IMPROVEMENT AWARDS DD DDDDDD D DDDDDDDD DDDDDDD DDDDDDD DDDDDDD D D DDDDDDDDD N orman Klein, William Abeie ...William Ruclcsiuhl, Herberf Karpas, L. Spolianslcy Alberf Waflrins, Fred Leger Social S+udie5D DD DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD D DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDD D DD D D D DDDDDD DDDDDD D DDWal+er Jones, Alfred Hack Time Currenf Affairs DDDD Rudolph Hirsch, Ernesf Cupo, Norman Klein, Michael Duerr McBurneian Award DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDD D D D DDDD D D DDDDDDDD James Ebbiffs, Sefh Morrison Freshman Loyalfy DDDD DDDDDDD DDDDDD DDDDDDD,DDDDDD DDDDDDD. DDDDDDD DDDDDDD DDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDD D D D W i I I i om Repp, AI Lederltrcmel' Senior Loyalfy DDDD DDDDDDDDDDD DDDD D DDDDDDDDD D D DD .Dlan Nemlich, Byron Anderson Scroll Club Scholarship. DDDDDDD DDDDDDDD.DDDDDDDDDDDD.DDDDDDD ...D...D...DDDDDDD..D R 0 berl' Bourle Key Club SchoIarshipDD D DD DDDDDDDD DD DDDDDD DDDDDDD D .DDDD Edward MCCIUSIKGY M Club Scholarship.. .D D. DDDDD DD.D.D....D...DD..DDDDD D DD D D...D..DD ...DDDD.DD.....DDD..............D. . James SCOH R.P.l. Science and Mafhemafics Award DDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD L ucien Schmif, Howard Boofh Bausch and Lomb Award Field Day Cup DDDDDDD DDDDD DDDDDDD .DDDD D D DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD DDDDDD D D . .D Academic Plaque .D..DDDD D Class Scholarship DDDDDDDDD DDDD Philip Rofhroclz, Fred Weidner my DD DD D DDDDDDSophomores D DDDD.DDDDDD Elward Breseff, Sfewarf O'Neill Byron Anderson. Pres. Henry Ba ron, Pres. Charles Hughes, Sec. William Abele Dean Allange Roberl Annis Roloerl Baurle Arnold Clark Halsey Cook William Behrens, Pres. Roberl Baurle. Pres. Halsey Cook Arnold Cooper Neil DiGiacomo Charles Foley Fred Weidner, Pres. Norman Klein, Vice- Jack Slewarl, Sec, Kolya Cadden Byron Anderson FSS. CLUBS STUDENT GOVERNMENT Ernesl Cupo Neil DiGiacomo Edward Dulhu Slanley Ericksen Roberl Fernlund Waller Golilarl Jere Greene Roberl Kahn Fred Karner Herberl Karpas Tony Kelly Norman Klein David Knickerbocker Spiros Lanlzounis Guy Loudon Julian Luykx William Milchell Alan Nemlich DRAMATIC Alfred Hack Donald Hengeveld Darel Hicks Norman Klein Roberl Lorrick William Marlin Edward McCluskey Gerry McCoy William Peniche Buddy Pomeranz William Rucksluhl Leon Spoliansky Arlhur Slein Jack Slewarl ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE Arnold Cooper Charles Foley Richard Field Darel Hicks James Hooper John Lawrence Rufus Palmer Ray Reid ATHLETIC COUNCIL George Fall Ian Nemlich Ian Nemlich Fred Schneider Arlhur Snyder Barrie Trebor Peler Trenl Roberl Trolla Bruce Wald Slephen Weisglass Roberl Woodhead f Guy Slrauss Charles Troiahn Edmond Trosl' Alberl' Walkins Fred Weidner Ted Wolff Loren Seeley Orin Small Edmund Trosl Charles Troiahn William Schweizer Henry Baron Edwin Howlings John Read Alexander Treves Barry Beere Richard James Ray Reid Edward TreveS David Davis William Milchell Rudolph Ruiloal Richard Wanderer Besl of Luck, Seniors! from Ihe McBURNEY HI-Y CLUB Officers '44-'45 Selh Morrison' ........................... Presidenl Charles Hughes ......... ...,..,...... S ecrefary NOrmC1r1 Klein II ............... Vice-Presidenl Myles Walburn ,,,,..,,,.,.,,,,,,,.,,.,,,, Treasurer Dean Alfange Daniel Finn AI Lederkramer Jack Slewarl Edgar Allen Daniel Goodslein' Leonard Miller Guy Slrauss Roberf Baurle Allred Hack Edward McCluskey Alex Treves' Ken Bridges Arlhur Hawkins Slewarl O'NeilI Charles Troiahn Arnold Cooper Herberl Karpas William Ruclcsfuhl Richard Wanderer' James Ebbills' John Lawrence Leon Spoliansky Fred Weidner Senlofs' Mr. B. Gosling .................................... Advisor WVZMM, Qmhill Q9 . CD WW W . gfniiig iN ' ,wf',, K N 43 , Q60 ,. , YD sew mv' 1 4355 wiffrfiq NM? W-w52pUff-alle' 'paiiwwgks qSjqvWgQQe ,- 3?'CrR'? l ' , J - M 'wffef 1 Th . ,X SW 5,wo1,J-Q -, A Q 9' ,4f1fff W 1? A M HE aw magaxg' Q14-'Z w zuwx . 12559 vvxw 3 M . 'l wjgjywcii Q E - ZWi6Q2Jff.Qn2 Wifi' W WMMAX W 5 R MZL6 4- 1 - :,,, G ' Wgmfww , - f F' . , 15 . 3 3 - w. Mfp , mf ' QWKQ, f , Q 0 91 'im - ,gi K .-WI, 15, 1 Q? WQVQ +3 ,C fam- time iw 0 5 X Nfiwuf H 'Y feffb' W5 fl EZ' 93? vi 'f ' W im wfwsz, mx., 'fx Q- ,. gi- INK' 'V ggi 'Z H 3' QM M ifwff' W Q -so ' . +P wx A H ff? 4- Ei ff +5 V W C? 5, Q?-W,-V may . AX ywbl 3-10271 in DQVWYPB 'bm gs.,-off: 4' f, . M Rf- MW 'Q 'iffy me-Q, M Qzzziffwmj Q omfort ' ' of 0 mffl0llilIll3gB0VBI'ly 0 This charming holel in The oflrocfive Eosl Fiflies poinls The woy To your i945 Tronsienl or resiclenficnl mode ol living. Large closefs . . . serving ponlries . . . Complele holel service. Tronsienf roles- A A Single from S5, Double ii-ln W from S7, Smiles from SIO. .- .Leg R I Wallace K. Seele , General M r. fi? -1 Y Q gil' ZW u- is U U5 EAST 50TH ST.- NEW YORK DELMONlCO'S Thi! if the fzuinnirlg ad-'L'erti.femfnl in Roger: Peel? 14.!fz'rrri.f- ing L'oulr'Jl in Me' 1WtBur'nqy Srhool Lamp um! Laurel. -fix? fl pf 'D F4 I'-'l Submitted by FRED SCHNEIDER Do you have an inferiority complex? Does everything you do go wrong? The right clothes often help. You'1l look right, feel right-and do a better job in Rogers Peet Clothes. The modern Rogers Peet rates tops x V fi' 5 vw W o' 2' Z at many of the country's leading schools. wie? In New York: And in Boston Fifth Avenue 13th Street Warren Street TrBm0nt Sf at 41st Street at Broadway at Broadway at Bromneld St THE AVERY F. PAYNE CO. 82 WALL ST., NEW YORK 5, N. Y. Y.M.C.A. SCHOOLS S ices - Seeds -- Chemicals Booic sroize p CABLE ADDRESS TELEPHONE APAYN, NEW YORK HA 2 - 21 I2 THE HUGUENOT CAMPS CAMP TALCOTT CAMP GREENKILL Boys 8-I0 Boys ll-I5 Camp Fee: 8 Weeks S180-4 Weeks S90.00 July 4 'lo Augusl 29 Full Season July 5 to Augusf 30 July 4 To Augusl l Period I July 5 lo Augusf 3 August l fo Augusl' 29 Period ll Augusl 2 lo Augusf 30 The Huguenof Camps. owned and operated by fhe YMCA of 'rhe Cily of New York, have been serving boys for the pas? 39 conseculive seasons, offering a complefe program in all sporfs and craffs, The camps are localed 6 miles from Port Jervis on 800 acres of beauliful hills and forests, each cornp having nfs own privafe lake. Wrife or Telephone for lllusfrafed Cafalog fo RALPH D. ROEHM, CAMP AND OUTING BRANCH OF THE YMCA 420 Lexingion Avenue, New York 17, N. Y. MOhawk 4-6560 Alfred Blunf Paul Bohack Carlo Corsuli Eldred Fagan Roberl Howkinson Charles Helms Frederich Holslein Bryanl Hopper SOPHOMORE ll Tony Kelly Roberl' Kunkel John Lange Spiros Lanlzounis William Luiz Warren Lufzen Roberl McCarl'hy Ray Meissner William Peniche Facully Adviser-Mr. Slanley A. Parker Eugene Renner Jack Slewarl' Uwe Theden Barrie Trebor Theodore Treppin Charles Troiahn Henry WolFF Paul Peers BOYS NINE TO EIGHTEEN YEARS FIND FRIENDS FUN FELLOWSHIP AT THE BOYS' DIVISION-WEST SIDE BRANCH Y.M.C.A. s wesT sara STReeT NEW YORK CITY Annual Membership, 58.00-Summer Membership, 53.50 TRAIN BOYS TODAY FOR LEADERSHIP TOMORROW CHRISTIAN CHARACTER RESPONSIBLE CITIZENSHIP LEADERS FOR DEMONCRACY OMEGA GAMMA DELTA FRAT Chapfer Alpha Xi I944-45 Presiclenf - Byron Anderson Vice Presidenl -- Orin Smoll Secrefory - Ted Wolff Rudolph Ruibcl Roberi Woodheod Kolyo Codden Jcclc Ryoll 2nd Vice Presidenf-Jomes Hooper Sfcnley Ericlcsen William Abele Fred I-Iolsiein Jere Green Cho rles Schwefel Treosurer - Phil Brooks Rober+ Lennon Roberl' TroHo Jock Sullivcn William Behrens DE LUXE HOSIERY DYE WORKS, INC. 422 EAST 53rd STREET NEW YORK CITY REGAN CARPET CO., INC. Rugs ' Carpefs Linoleum ' AsphcII'I'TiIe 270 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK CITY Phone Ashlond 4-8990-I-2-3 ESTABLISN ID llll rf. Ciffjl-5 X33 Y 'Sl-a5E5E Rims V niiahingagciafehvvs 340 MADISON AVENUE CON. FOKTY-FOURTH ST. NEW YORK 17, N.Y. f' A - wx mi' it I i , - S wb . if' , N - i , J ff Wi-gs--5. , ,s 4 . M ' 4 ' ' -o 1 V f Ei , f- - 4 V A S i H i' ... . iii ffvktgi 'Y A iiilerifhl, L L... K The reason for our reputation for long-term relationships with customers is the reputation we have earned for last- ing satisfaction in styles, materials and workmanship that stand up and stand out. f,vll.fflIlllt'f.I lfrwp rolniny bark. I RAN C ll IS ONE WALL STREET. NEW YORK 5, N. Y- 4O NEWBURY, COR. BERNELEV ST., BOSTON 16, MASS. n a avored eighhorhood Many families prefer The Westbury Hotel because it is near the Park, in the smart and convenient Lenox Hill section, where many of their friends reside. THE e t b ll r y MADISON AVENUE AT 69th STREET NEW YORK Curtis Sawyer, Managing Director FRESHMAN I Arthur Hawkins Secretary Altred Lederkramer Mickey Duerr Vice-President Mickey Duerr Sheldon Stillman President Sheldon Stillman Student Government Representatives . . David Knickerbocker and Richard Fernlund Assembly Committee Members . . .... Kolya Cadden and Darel Hicks Athletic Managers .... Clark Ford Guy Strauss Dudley Kabnick Robert ldlet Jack Fullam l-lenry Haske Edwin Thoet Altred Lederkramer and Arthur Hawkins Richard Brown Frances Pardo Allan Florence Jacques Protay MIDDLE B FRESHMAN II Y M C A Vcllei' and Club Services EVERY MCBURNEY ALUMNUS IS A SATISFIED CUSTOMER REGAN OFFICE FURNITURE CORPORATION OFFICES COMPLETELY FURNISHED 270 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY AShIand 4-8990-I-2-3 lautel Igirrahillg NEW YORK A Disfincfive I'Io'reI in Times Square 700 ROOMS ALL WITH BATH, SHOWER, RADIO Rofesz Single 53.50 DoubIe 56.00 ROY MOU LTON, Manager x ,Q I' xf-1'-3 xrl m nec- us un on li Besl ol Luclc lo 'rhe Seniors from THE CLASS OF '49 Dean Allange Roberl Baurle Barrie Beere Joseph Beyer John Eclchcrdl Michael Feigin Alfred Hack MIDDLE A Donald Hengeveld Charles Hughes Pe+er Lanino John Neale Raymond Reid William Sachs Loren Seeley Orin Small MORRISON STORES CORPORATION EPPINGER AND RUSSELL CC. Wood Preservers Since I878 PRESSURE TREATED FOREST PRODUCTS CREOSOTE-CHROMATED ZINC CHLORIDE 80 EIGHTH AVENUE NEW YORK Il, N. Y. Trea+ing Planfs Jacksonville 6, Fla. Long Island Cify I, N. Y. Norfolk I, Va SAW SHARPENING U. S. FENCING EQUIPMENT CO. bY T69 SPRING STREET NEW YORK CITY WONDERSAW I92 SEVENTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY WAfIrins 9 - 87I8 OO f WWI! OMEGA GAMMA DELTA 'gg-,Cg'.w. FRAT F NOW-llll ILDMA Ann als onculsflu TIIE ll0N0l.lll.ll HAIDS Qfgifirf vu ounus I. nocnnsrn, vi.. rm. ml Mug. mf. LEXIIIGTIIII IVE. IT ll' ST.. I. Y. C. 11 Our Besf Wishes fo +he Seniors from fheir 'Friends Jerry Adeison Michael Ariisf I-Ienry Biiem Spencer Bruno Francesco Can+areIIa Charles Crump+on Theodore Dobbs David Flackman James I-Ieineman James Jenfzen Biorn Axelsen Roberi Avery WiIIiam Breeze Phiiip Cambridge Sfephan Cronan The Lower Schooi Boys Edwin Dickinson Barry Downes Walier Gofiarf Joseph Bianco Richard Boener Ross Giese John Heineman Clifford Iicerd George Kimber Karl-I-Ieinz Leuffen Peier Jones George O'NeiII Carl Rao Grover Repp Roberi' Sanford Roberf Shea Pefer Treni Bruce Wold Andrew Wing Thomas Hearon Donald Kiiparrick Michael MiIIer Don Smiihers George Wafkins Donald Wifienberg Roy Peck Alberi Preyss Karl Schenzer Jack Schwaner Leszek Wach+eI Andrew WiH'enborn German Morning Service . . Young PeopIe's Meeting BETHLEHEM CHURCH A Ploce Where Chris? Is Found I09 MARION STREET BROOKLY REV. KARL P. STEFFENS, Pcsfor Services Sundoy School ...... . . English Evening Service . . . . . Wednesday-Prayer Meefing . . . N N. Y. HOTEL GRAMERCY PARK 215+ ST. a+ LEXINGTON AVE. NEW YORK CITY 9:30 A.M. I0:45 A.M. 6:45 P.M. - P M 8.00 . . 8:00 P.M. Purchase Your AIhIe'ric SuppIi OI Ihe GYM STORE 3rd Floor- Locker Room MICHAEL J. JAQUES, Mgr. GS WHITE AND WHITE Mens Wear 555 LEXINGTON AVE. NEW YORK CITY SOPHOMORE I lgatrnna Nemlirh Mr. anh Mrs. Semnn E. Mr. Eernurh H. Nemlirh mr. anh illllrn. Samuel Berlin Mr. Ellark Ruth mr. :mil Mrs. William Qleril Mr. aah Mira. Murrag Qlnhen mr. :wh Mira. H. Baum mr. anh Mrs. E. lilann illllr. Genrge llirag Mr. Milfs. Jnhn IE. Enmlinga illllres. william IK. iligher illllru. 3. Zifurner l5rieue anh iillrn. Sf. Nemlirh William mill! Armatrnng mr. illewia ZF. Meister mr. Marr lirntag Weiner Fharmarg iligrnn Ehgnr Anhernnn Mr. anh Mrs. william 31. Behrens Munn P1uN'r1Nc Co., lNc. 413' 3 K 4 I E v 5 n I S E n n 1 i S 2 I E S -1.. .-...i
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.