Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA)

 - Class of 1951

Page 1 of 136

 

Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1951 Edition, Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1951 Edition, Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection
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Page 10, 1951 Edition, Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collectionPage 11, 1951 Edition, Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 136 of the 1951 volume:

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W Q' ,.f N. . 1 I- THE MIDDLESEX SCHCOL YEARBOOK 1951 CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS gmr W r. 1901 1901 LAVURENICE 'l ERRY Iletnlmullcr 0 Mzddfelex Salma! .Since 1958 As succtssor to Mr Wlnsor Mr lerrx has had a dlrect and frxendlx IH lluence on us all both as a class and aa lndlvlduals W'e are deeplx lndebted to hxm for the patnent guidance and lead shxp whxch has enabled Middlesex to grow physlcallx scholastxcally and mor ally 1951 FREDFRICK XVINSOR fulmder am! Flrrt 116501111 uler of fVlnl:lleJex School 11901 lf ln th1s the 511th vear of Mlddlesewt we of the class of 1951 feel we owe much to the memorx of the founder of the school whxch we are now ledvmg Al though most of us know Mr Wrnsor onls from hrs portralt m Ware Hall w are all aware of our dtbt to hrm .ml mspxrauon he provxded ln the xounger daxs of Mlddlesex whlch are stall so much .1 part of Mxddlesev llfe toddy 1 . 4 , 'U Z 0 O 9 rv 1 ' - 2381 u ' .I f, V 5 - it v ' A ' . f . w C gratefully acknowledge the service and , 1 f ' .' 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A111 1 ', . 1 1 1 11511 C. 1.111111,1'1111111.1x.'11' 1wlk51N1f5S 1S11,X1'lD 11.11111 1 .'XII1LJI'1 X111 1 15.11111 11, Y'1'11x 111111'l'11L1li.'X1H1f1 C,11.X11?,K1,XfN ,1.lYl1L'5 CQ, XXQ1111. ,111 .1-.C1 .'.1X1X11X,1B f- 1' r ' 11 11111111 1.. .11 -11 V1 11'LL1K'1Y1k1x A4 1JI'.lIl 511 11U1U'1L 111111111115 111 11 1D':11111'11D1-111111111 1 ..111L1L15.1111N.11, 3' A .1411 1 1N111N 111 11 W 1211111211-,C C,.1.11L' 5' 111111., C 15111v,1.. 41 Dedzcatzofz For has srudymi., nnfiuenu upon rhr school hrs frlendly 1nd srnrcre concern vuth our problems h1s 5,ent1cman1y 'md erudlte manner ind h s rnsplrmg qualxtles both as 1 rancher ind a min we the Cllss or 1931 r ltcfully dedlclre our ymrboolx to Rena N Bourquln 1 o .2 y -, , I -. - -, , 7 A c 2 1 7 2 c 2 1 n ' 2 U. , f A . hz c c BIEDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS 1' acuity front Rou Mr Dawson Mr Pratt Mr Bourqurn Mr Brrggs Mr Terry Mr Lamb Mr Kettell Mr Farnsworth Mr Alexander Second Rou Mr Sanford Mr Weld Mr Cutler Mr Larson Mr Archxbald Mr Taylor Mr Locke Mr Raymond TlJ1rdRou Mr I-lulburd Mr Coffin Mr Quark Mr Nolkmann Mr Erhard Mr Huckms Pa e Serv: 4 73 r - ,,-- . ' j t -1 f ' . , f A f f , 'f , ' 1, fn.. U nf, W '- - y - - ' - - - 1 - v - v - v - ' . . . . , . , . . . , . , , , . , . V. . , , . . . . . , . , . , . , . , . . fr ' -, rs Mmm 1 SI x Sr H001 xc uma 1X1xxsArl11sl Q Lfwclu Nfl Tl RRN A B 1HarXd1'a1J 1Appu1ntcd 19381 Hcaflmasfcr X NDI ll I RAW MOTNIJ Ph B 1Brfm n J 1Appo1nrcd 1911 1 I Uleflfllf A THI R N1 A rAppmmu1 1' C lflzcrl am! gill!!! ljfdlllllll fluff I 1 amwa 1111111 Bafcfmlf ffmffv HARI I s XX Loc -X IHAH ini rAppo1nred 11 S LIIH1 H mf I rz N S A B fH3fXdfk11 C H11 ll Han 1 wmntc 1 1 1 In Iluln 1 I L Y .. ' V 'x. 1 VIA' X ' ' Cf , .1 , , 5 Q C.. . . 'KF ' 1 .B. f 'Q 1 ' ?l.'f 1 ' . cf j1'L'll C311 R ' 1 . L. .11 ' I ' ' 2111 l'.l't'lIl'l7, Muiif. Gln' Lfnfz. RISNP.. K1kI1ll.l. AB. 1 'Ar 11 'Aly' -11 ILI, lfwf,'f.f1lf1 p1'fv 1 1. I1 ' !..1v11f,,' Nl. 41 151111, 'I 111 111.111, .'1v111!.HII Ilmlm' 1 I f , If gg111.m,' llfffu 1f.'.11f1f '.g1 l'1,'f1l Mmm 1 si x Sc HOOI CONCORD MASSAC HUSETIS R1 Nl BOLRQLIN 1 Fleurmerl lAppo1nted 197m Fremfa Br mn Pam? Hmzremafrer FREUFRIflx PRATT A B 4 Harvard r rAppomred 19752 111111 Head frmffzafl Cfldfh Iiocicx Coach fmerztur Robert mmf Ilnruemaxler C HARLI S VU FARNSVL ORTH Cprmcctonk rAppo1nred 19412 I 11,11 rh Dramalfrf A mrtant ffmlbaff Cnarlo U nndfhoppfrz Haffnuelf f'10llfB77Idff6Y IOHN DPQ Bmccs IR fAppo1nted 1937? Avrlrtafzl t Ike Heazfmarler lllglifh Ami! Yearbook Debal 1711, Sflllllfh foarfzv Le Baron BYILLF Houremarler XX II LIAIH I R TAY LOR A B lHarx ard I l Appointed If C wlngu Bmlopm SIIFHIE HIHLIHII Rifle Club Sl XMOLR ARCHIBA1 Il IR AB MA il-Iarvanlr 4Appmmed I9 7 H1 mm AHIAIJIII 'Ienun Kumi: Pu L Xue wi 0 Me .1-I PQ , , , , BC. ' X , , 7 f T 'IV' . . W , ,. -. 4 W Us f ' ' , . ' ',z. I, 1, j A 5 X , V. , , D 2 . 995. V . A V A.B, fHarvardJ . 1 n , . : V VA , , . W N ,, 4 I I , F... k .. ' ' ' nw ., A , J . I J -'N' uzf J, 1 'C ,, s- a ' VU, f Z' ' . . ,D . ' pi-: gl . 7.2 MIDDLI SI X SCHOOL Coxc ORD Mmsfxc HL sL In Avmuxx N1 Dfwcsorx FL nn 0 N rAppmnted I9-IZI P1 Ilf ffwnnrlr Czffe 6 c A A ffm Stm Pmbmfm Hnufmzavtcr XVILLIAM D ALHANIIIII SB A M KBmxdrmJ tlkppmnred 194-II fljfllldflll Dm Bmf Arluru football Lum Coafb RIIPFRI P HI I Bunn AB rprmcetonr 4Appmmed 1946! C Hman ffenrlv Latrofre frmflr Sxernmf Iran: llrzrlfea and Pub lnnllnll Cnmlv Peaborh Axim Im! Hnufemaftez AI Ill N A IARSON M Id rHarsa d rfkppolnrcnl I94 I llfwfnu frwrflv lllfiffldll 7 wwf I Iicffdll lr uu fren fum 1 BI mu! Pumf A Irfrlarzl Hun umlrlz r THOMAS I Ql IRL I A B ISI Anselm sn lApp0IIIILL1 19191 l lflll Hallu mums Baulvzt :aff Cum I1 4IIIIlm1l Hafnbull I muh IIILLIIIAIIII 'iflltldlll lfffllftllldlf I A B WHAYNAFLI lAppomIL 1 1' 9 I7 I ll f L NI 1 I IMI I I II Im.: LI lun ILII iff . I' Q . Q Q' I f W I . v Y HS., M. .i. KU . f . HJ - f lmf. , , 1. ,I 1 Afi- ' I'i.f'1', ll. . .. 17, 'e?, , . . 0 K - . lf ', -f L Q. .. . .. ' 1- A I, - ff 4 l ,iff ' MI: A I yn! , 4 ,, ., A ,I I V 1 sf AB.. .i . ' r 7 . . b : ' -I 'IL' J . .1 I' ' , 'l. , . 4 ', R. , .- , ' x - .I A. I ' . fl fx 4',' ,' 1 ,.- 1 'U' UIII-,c.rIIn' L, fQUl'lflN. FIR. b ' , ., , I I ' -I JI I L Ifuglnlv. 'I'lv 'If 1. 'an ffII.1IfI. F11 rl I 'I 'Il I-'IIIINJIH if nuff I Kfff I ll 1uIIII ,'lII Inu! ' ' ffl: I Il ' 1 Mmm 1 srx Sc HOOL Cow ORD Mmsfxc HL si 1 IS 5An1LFL E QLTLTR IR AB lDarrmourh, 4Appomred l949r In Info Hntorq Head Hath Comb A rlrtanl fnolball Cnarb Yemrzd 'Icam Bafebalf Charly Hallfmcfl Afflffdfll Hourcmavfc Lxuzrxfr H SANHCJRD JR A B 1Pr1metonJ tAppomrc-d 1949! I-fllllflllllfj Ualhemalfrf 1 I 1 Speefher Flrfl Team Bare I ll fmub Pup fonilmll Tlvzrl loam Barlwlbull Comb PHIIIP B WELIJ BI: 1Yale! Uzflvemalzff Claemfftrm Louev fuollvulf Hnfbem duff Bavebnll Crmrlv llrggmmn Afwrmnt Hnnfemuftef Hfawm E ERHARU A B fHarvardJ fADPOIl IfCd l95Uw Frm! fv Irmef fnntlznff llnrim ruff flfll fnarh Le Baron I rlfzf Afflffllflf llnufevnzrlcr pl- IABIFS H VOLKNIANN A B 1 Harvard I 4Appomzed 194 r Dlremlnr r Adi!!! from T1 mms R Humxs A B 4Bro'awnx rAfvnv1nred 1946: llllflfll Pnlelu F nlw Semnuf Team liumcfmlf fmulv Page Hel en f ,Q f . ' W. It .fi 1 ' if Af . A A I , . ' . . V K : ' . A 121,27 IIA7' R. 'b F . ,wg f ' . ' . fr 1Appoimed 1949! f 1 1 , -,. 4. . ' .V ' ' . ,- ' ' ff . I A . . '.' I, , ' B Q jluvvflxfclr. L A HH , fn ,m Q ' A A ,' , Yf , , ' . Mmm 1 Q1 X Sc H001 Com mm Mfxsmc HITS! TTS nf' x 'Y' I1 In 'Q' A ,g J L W , 4 1 0' 3 P M g -Q '1il,L .T ...K , ,, , , 45 K QW V M , 'fsi ,,. I M gm, - 71 Hg N Lfl. TNIIDDI 1 Sl x St H001 Cove emo MAssAt Hush ris Claws Hzvtmj When we eame rn 194 there were an abundance of downstalrs studxes numerous bachelor masters and a flagpole Basketball was plaxed upstaxrs rn the gxm the new rmk was not xet complete the ehapel and Elxor Hall towers were dark and ungnlded and the crew eourse was the scourge of the league lt was a tlme before the new eage roof floor and lnghts the modern phxsmes ehemnstrx md broloex labs the new lwoathouse and the Merrx Niess NVe lacked mayor blsleetball letters and lacrosse The fortx me mxnute elass dls appeared as we came and ns re born as we leave We g2ill'1LLl ' a new musxc rot m and a sue CSSIOD of blgger and bigger glee elub orchestras These haue lndeed been changeful xears to Middlesex and to us M X the trldltlont al boxs rfour of them came through the tradxtlonal gate to form the bas on whlch our class has been erected Tom Bzsbee started off hls long Do lrtxcal career bx berng elected preslelent after onlx two bal ots x mld xear the c ass swelled to hve the added one bexng Ronm Wlnte who later euned fame ts the box who was often seen projected head downward from a wlndow ln Room F amld laughter from our larger members As the class grew rn numbers and stature we encountered the need for outsxde dlverslon The solutlon to thus urge came for us rn the form of clubs whxch led to our own rndlvxdual buslresses These sterlmg eorporatxons lneluded a shoeshrne emporlum a Car wash servrce and several Hurd photo developlng concerns Out of all thxs furor not much developed smce IHOSI of our entrepreneurs lacked exther patlence or business lbxlltx We stlll were sub jected to doorwax dlscrlmlnltxon rn the dnnxng., hall md found ourselves hnmg to make the long detour through the eellar Athletlcally we contrlbuted llttle except for the eheerxng thlt xear The football season for us IS recalled mostlx be the xxctorx bonhre and the burnxng of the St George s efhgx l the wmter those who plax ed basketball shoveled snow lxke hoekex men for thex plaxeel v1r tuallx under the open skx ID the stlll unroofed eage L Af Pzge Tbnleeu l' . 2 ' Q . A r Q . ' Q .A T . ' Y V1 ' . . . - . A VL A VV V Q . . V .t f . f 1 . ', .- . f' kg-. . ,L L Mn , --AAV. ' , -. A. C ' ' . . ' , 4 , ,, - - . V h . . ' 'V V V. ' .. .. . 1. v.- Q 1,3 4 ' . , . 1 f , xl ' , K .. ' 'X ,QI - ln l9'D ' 4 al , - nd' A I 8 sm'l ' - J . ' f M V I ! 1 f ., , , , , , . , .,. V ,J f l I 4 A' ' A fa-J l A A ' he ' . ' A V . .V V V , A 1 Q B.. Q . 1, V. . A .v ., , , .' V ' ' .l V . VZ' - 4 .15 , - V V A v A 4, A2 4- 1. . . A A 4. A A A I A A . 1 4 4 ' . .A . 'A , A . 2 A A lv. 1 A Y. . , '. . V, - ' ' ' L' ' . ' ' , V 2 . -.L if f . I ,A Y' . A 1 I , . 'A . ' an A 2 -V4 . 4 V ,f , A Y ' . . V V , V' V ' , . A , I . I . rnf. n L WJ y eq I , A , xl . '- A4 A tl I A Nimm 1 st x St Hoot tnmt sthtdult d1d not allow for am such var'at1ons and xxholt ptnod rn full VILVK of tht mtrrx hlazt A nf tht artltnt sahotturs II'1Ckl to hlovt up BP ln tht sprmg a pmntcrlng group dcvelopttl a h1g,h lx sutctssful sport whost novtltx has not xet worn thm Btxng a prcsldentlal star tht fall of our third class xtar was ftaturtd hx dtllrlous tltttxon ralhts thc result of whxth was a vxctorx for a rathtr tonservatmvt canth tlatt consldtrxng the loud campalgns for more radical tnttlts and tht vote of the lunatic frmgc Thxrtttn of us matlt varsxtx squads that scar mam htmg tn mort than ont sport Foothall sufftrtd an thhrtvlattd sthttlule htcaust of a pollo scare and tht trtw tourst was stralghttntd lllI'lVLLl and thcd untltr hlatk marktt prltts we at last t,ot an organlztd and sotlalxstlt tonftctlonerx whxth was thrxsttntd Tht Mtrrx Mtss Another hlthllght that apptartd on tht campus was tht xllumxnatxon of tht non lt tamt to ont of tht most promlntnt ftaturts on 'WSW Q5 rl' -v--'O fflllifrt ll Co h vt only Xhssfxt Hl st TTS XX htn xxt mm td to Room D mt. mmx ntxxtomtrs wt t :mt f rt tlutt o nttd for mort phxsmtal txtm turrttular AQUYIIILS Two of madt xarsm posxtxons namtlx Boh Grttn 1n hask t hall and lohnnx Allts ln hotlx tx Somt of us forsook mort organlztd athlttxts and spent our tlmt hurldmg huts nn th xxools And thtn wt had thc RXW hrt Rtgardltss of tht fatt that hurmng tlormxtorrcs arc: untommon at Mxddltstx rt IS rtmcmhcrttl th tt Mr Lotkt s Latm class was htld almost tht s wasnt tnough somt of our mort tagt Naturallx mth all thns tonstruttton hung dont thtrt was found to ht a httlt dtstrut our tampus tht ilagpolt Dtspxtt tht fact that tht polt had httn taktn down tht hast havnng wstathtrtd tht mort stlcntxh mtthods fl'll9 sprxng hnallx sutcumhttl to tht hrutt fortt of a pntumatlc drlll Btfort tht sttond tlass our ont tontitt vxlth SLILHLL htl httn txptrxmtntttlon wrth Sllllfllt 1TldLlllHLS and .iquar ls IU t hft ant snttm t tssts and 1 lnttlt hxologx n tht thlrl Wfhtn ut rtturntd to hrtak 1n tht nut Chtmlstrt lah vtt tllSCONLl'Ltl our sltlll or nt 3 , Q , 1 , t 752 f .7 , ' . ' , v' Ll A U. , .Y D KA .4 sc A o uSJ u 'l ur us 'A ' j A ' . H' f J A ' A 2 . h 'll . - . , V I , A ' . . is , ' , , , , f . . ' ' '. 1 . . 1' .. S ' 'L Mx ' , Q A . , I I A I 4 I Y . Gttstronomically, after many smaller concerns had r- ' ' . . I' . A ' A U ' Y A xx hh 14 4 1 . 1 ' S ' N . . - I, 5 k I K . , t '- ll' ' L ' 'I 'I ' at I K iun ' th' ' h V l '. l 'lt.. -. ' t ' - ' I' i - A ' I K. ' ' ' l.ttk of it, with mort' dtl .tttf Plays' ' ' N 1111 1 Nl x 3411001 Coxr o1t1m Xifxssfxc H181 IIN wtrltus Somt c otr mot 1 tarthlx mtmhtrs stxll trumt stxtntt tnolt uw gto om ntwcomtr to tht currxtulum ltwtn of us tontrlhutttl to suptrh toorhall ttam that rolltd oxtr all oppontnts savt ont IS was followtd u x th1mp1onsh1p hotlttx tttm unttftattd 1n ltmut 11111 nt 1 ntar thtmpmn litrosst squad On a mort 1nttlltttu1l ltx tl tht dthttnng ttam tarrxlna two of our tlissmatts starttd on a unammous VICIOYX strmg.: that IS sr1ll xntatt and unrollmg as wt ltawt Thls ptrhaps was dut to tht atquxsltxon of 11 rapt rttordtr that lvtt lmt ltnow n to 1ll of us as tht sxmlwol of tht drtttl Mondax mormna, spttthts n tht SPFIIIL tlont, mth tht ust11l w tttr ll ts lwolo hountlng intl ltnlft throwlnu thtrt w is tht l Dtll Annxvtrsarx of tht start of tht Rtxoluuon at tht Con ord lifltlgt. Along w1th Gtntral Omar Bradltx and was talled to ofhtlatt wrth C A at tht telebratxon NI1ltstones that star w rt not tonhned to annxversarlts of the Concord m1nute mtn for Mxcldltsttc turntd out :ts 1000th graduatt among tht class of 1950 At tht dtparturt of thus monurntntal graduatt and hls tllss wt found ourstlvts at tht trtasurtd goll of tht nrst tltss Agaxn wt turntd out 1 mtmorxhlt Ljfltllflill squad ftaturtd hx tht sptttttular apptartntt of tht Dtnnx Exprtss whlch max or max not havt htlptd us ro w1n all our gamts tvctpt ont lI1ClUtl1flg St Gtorgt s Manx of us Jolned tht gltt club not httause of our lovt of musxt tlthoutgw untloubttdlx mam tnyoxtd If hut for tht attractxvt soual contacts If altordttl IU frtqutnt rthttrsals w1th tht Academx Our socxal lxft has hlossomtd adm1rahl1 whether h tust of tht Qltt cluh or our xntrtasttl fretdom 'lhlg mwbgm awdrt ness was 1llustrattd hx a rtcord xtttndanct at tht XV1nttr Dantt tht ct wt wtrt not as pottnt lb tht xtar htfort hut tht hasktthall ttam al though hx no mtans thampxons showtd a lot of 1mprovtmtnt ovtr tht tear befort In squash we turned out tht usual good team Want of us not xtt over tht noveltx of our pI'lVllLgC hlled tht downstaxrs of Ware Hall w1th strtams of hlut grax smoke Our class was horn on tht httls of tht tnd of World XVar ll and as wt leave thx. word agaxn armlng The hattlt Korta whlth IS stlll nn full swmg has dont much to sohtr us wnh tht prospttt of our Page fifteen llll .i ., . Q1 .1 i at 1 . . .. Q - mf 1 r ' ' 1 H , li 1 - A - al V U . , A I , K F1 . .1 in If I Th' 'V 1- p ly 11 ' - L ' ' Ag . t 1 A Q 1--'A 'I -1. 4 Ll l D- -' ' V A . ' 1 . ' ,. I t . ' Ji' I l 4 ' , l 1' 1 K' '4 ' , 1 'L ' 'gh Senator Leverett Saltonstall. the Middlesex glee clulv ' - f l 4'f4 . 4- v. ' . , . 'l . ' Un . 1 ,. ,. ,A . .b , 1. l is f ' ' . - of NUDDI 1 sr x St Hoot Loxc ortn Nhssfxc Hl sr Irs btrng rn unrform btfort lont As tht ttnsron rn tht xxorll III astd wt wttan to t t rt1.,u arlx Dmnt tnlrst voxs XVhatewtr tht rttrurtlng str 'tmt saxs lont btlrtxt rm Go to tht ltlI'DlI ll Fortunatt lx xxt xttrtd avxax from ht struct arms LllSC1pl1I'1L as far as wt could and mam of us rt turntd wxth a Florida tan or a Ntvt York grax All of us had tmptx pocktts and xst sptnt most of tht last Itfm trxlng to rttstabllsh ourstlvts llf1lI1Ll?lllX somt vtlth unrtlnablt and some with mort rtllablt mtthods But txt had a lot to talk about as ut stttltd xnto tht last strttch of our stax htrt About this txmt SIOIICS btgan to ltalt out conctrnlng the uglx appcaranct of contraband ttlt usron ID xarrous hrst Cass tlost-ts As the tlmt funneltd down to the last few weeks work stcmt-d to pnle up at an rn Crtdlblt rate xnclucllng pantls rtports ytarbook and athlctrc oblrgatrons Some of us yorntd M Farnsworths one nlght stand plaxtrs and thexr prestn tatron of Lrft Wrth Fathtr All of us ftlt our txmt grovtxng short In baseball wt barelx mnsstd a ltagut champronshxp Crtw afttr a poor start lumbltd to Pate ilvnu gtthtr a satlstattorx star tht maldtn stason for tht ntwx hoathoust Latrosst vtas stlll tht Clndtrtlla sport of last xtar as tht ttam had nrnt vrt torlts and onlx ont dtftat Ttnms came through vtrth .1 solndlx vslnnmg stason to tom plttt tht ithlttrt sutttss of our ttrm Ont of our list txtra ur rltular tflorts vxas tht sttond annual Hoolt Night whrth has bttn rcntucd afttr a long tb f HCL from Mlddltstx .ILUYIIILS llnxntrallx tht attompanxrnl . .iff Q . l fi '..',f.' f . . ' ' , , L ' - trc A . '- l -Q ht oll . 1 - 1. v v Az 1 , ' 4- rx , .u ,. to V, li J I . . . .1 .x, . if h V A ' I H A I I ,Lf ' I 4 7 ' ' . .4 A l . ! , s . . .. m , 13 , ' l .. A N 1' , ! . - - .WWF .,., ' 4 V A - I It 1 V ' . I . - :Q ' . k ..b 1 I . . r R L av ' . vf I . ' 1 rl , V . . . l . an - 1. '-c - auctxon was a boost to the tear book funds The perform ance of the famous duo Huck ms and Qurrk along wrth M C Dave Wells and th Mlddlesextet rouneled out the show After exams and panels were complete we found ourselves suddenlx on the threshold Wrth the added attractxon of the 50th Annrversary of the school graduatron exercxses drew a larger crowd than ex pected and we recervetl our ellplomas rn the cool breezr QM -, 4 'Tm Q 'af-4 5 ZIV v N -feis- when . ., gm-Q32 at gitxfe ur' ness of a tent erected on the front of Elrot Ha'l Our graduatlon address was superbly grven by Rev Vnvxan T Pomeroy who cautroned us that fame was not as rmportant as abnlnty Aroused wxth these sentrments we pmned our alumm cards on and went to lunch We real lzed that the long, trek was over and the end was upon us As we leave what has been a home to us for from three to seven sears we realrze that the last few davs made a great d1fference ln our sentrments to ward the school The sadness of departure has melloweel and softened our feelxngs and mam of us regret some of our past mrstakes But we are all grateful for what the school has gxven us and perhaps sor rx not to have contrlbuted more than we took As one member put tt We never reallzc what weve gotten unttl lts too late to repay rt. Page .S'e1'enteen MIDIJLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS 1 T f 1- O as O . , ,. 7 milf. -' 1 ' .. '. ' ., 5 ,'q1 y- eff 1 f , . . A . T 4 , it :L 4 fu Y ,-je-.ezgiiggg in , A t A-, . . r 574-,N 57' I L k ,Q xx I . A - mi, I It' 5,14 I . I, N I A I 71,1 ' , U 'T1z'5 is ' V: . . TA Wlfnfw .' 1 V . f . . . , ' O, 7.4 g3Lw4.,, , r 4 D ' ' ' ' ' ' hi?.71?-.:e'.ZZ'f 'Wf' feb . '- ' ' .' ,' V . .1 ,ffm- F' ww f E is fqussl JF' 'T Ai A-',-F.-fu J' .....--5 J'-mmf? vi' JA 5,13 fi NX mph ....--'xxx gpaevlg' 'A ,,,...-- hiked EIIH llll gs on -F'5 '-'F ,,,w...-...r....r-I--'Jr Pa L Fggfveen X ,:Ql,4+, A . ' ' 'xx 3 - A ew-fu' M ' 'U f,,1: T' 1 K 5 3, iff - ! V-:-g f x .- - '. ce- - 9,1:i'i..5q, ' -. gif Ng .- N . -1 ..,, 5q,. ,.,.. V ,. V AS,-.. i f I-.JV ww? a f- M1-.' ! ,- -- --f ff' ' . L f rpg. --,-' '-' ' V-70, 7 .- ,TH If grt ag? W-,gf 4 Awmgrv Y YV r Zi v if - ! ' 'M' W i1iff 'f-?5 f,: f'i'L - 4 4.m,,,,,...,V.,.--- .2-,XQLXX , FRA. , X A H ,f.:-- f - -W K , . 'W -1:53. . ff Ah- my M - M ' - t L A 'Y Z5---3-'M NM- in L' ' x K ! Q Q ms rf ggqmgy v W!! ?!!!!!!! .l. Hi!! . .! r g ,,. 7 ,-'r 2 4 gf: ' 't A 4 J.x 4 L w I :I i ' V , H X - ' - MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS F11 st C lass Fron1R0u Farnsworth Williams Butmck Shaw Shnver Presldent Dole Rosenthall Ward D Amory Semml Rau Lana Ellnot Breed Hammond Harrns Thomas Robmson Bxsbee Hamxlron Fourth Rau Percy Lnttle Brown ell Tomkms Sears.Osrhe1mer Browne Lee Wells Page Nineteen O Roux' Sprolmr, Perera, Lamb, R. Anderson,-,Buehle,r, A. Anderson, Chllds, Ivfansur, Gilmour, J, Amory, Green. Tbinl MIDIJLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS ln hrs four ycars here David has become one of the best liked members of our class The fact that he rs so genuinely nrce to everyone garned hrm the presrdency of our class tvyo years ago two years on the student councrl and the electron to represent the school rn thrs years Good Government Day program He has also worked hard as the charrman of the dance committee secretarv of thc M A A and proprietor of the Merry Mess at whrch task he was ably as srsted by hrs roommate who gathered rn all the Coke bottles from far and wrde ln athletics David has been a scrappy competitor rn football hockey and baseball In hrs first two years here hrs re markable speed made hrm the star of the C Team backfreld and he added rmmeasurably to team morale and rn baseball he employ ed his brain as well as hrs body coaching third base Hrs keen busrness abrlrty apparently hereditary was vycll rn cvrdence as he vyorked on thc Anvrl busrness board hrs thrrd and second class years and this year as he handled the hrgher level of the hook night arrangements We shall not soon forget Daves wrnnrng ways We have found rt a pleasant change to come rnto contact wrth a person whose. rntcrest lrcs wholly rn others and we are sure. wc are thc better for rt Page Tu mtg DAVID LOWNDES AMORY Old Farm Wenhanu, Massachusetts Age 18 College Princeton . I V V Y , V . , l . ' . Y , V i l , ' A . . W uf , - , . . . Y . . - . V . Y I - Y V ' . S won two subsequent letters on the varsity. In hockey, his spirit -f ,V A . I . I . . , I . V - I - I ,' it x ' ' 1 v ' y y. ' . ' y 'J , 1 . Y A . I A D V I I . , v , 4 4 I ' 7 A 4 4 A 1 A , V Q DIIDDLIESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS JOHN SINGLETON Arxroru JR Old Farm Wfenham Massaclmsetts Age lb College Harvard Denny has vson three football letters and three hockex letters rn hrs four sears at Mrddlesex and thrs tear was elected captarn of foot ball and presrdent of the M A A The Denny Express ran un checked thrs past year and hrs plat at end and at wrng have made the opposrtron tremble from Newport to Hebron But desprte hrs ohvrous ruggedness he strll retarns hrs valuable abrlrty to combrne an rnnccent I arnt done nuthm wrth a deeeptrvely angelrc look A real home box Denny at hrst preferred the rugged plow to the puzzled us but after several rndoctrrnatron courses we frnallr won hrm over to a more sophrstrcated way of lrfe Scholastrcallr the Wrt has lacked luster but has worked hard enough both to stay out of the cellar of the class and strll to have trme for other thrngs R centlx he swapped hrs sputterrng model A for a more streamlrned model and became a llourrshrng Don juan But no grrl has ret eornered hrm and he eontrnues to plat the held vtrth consprcuous success Out of a Frerce famrlx lox altx john has kept trxrng to con vrnce us that johnns Appleseed Co rs far superror to The Countrx Store Srnce all we have seen of Mr Seeds merchandrse are khakr pants and strrped tres however we are begrnnrng to wonder Page Tuerm one 7 , , 5 , . 1 l A , 1 - 1 . - f 1 4 ' . Y I Y' ,u . if, . V ' . . . . 4 champagne cocktail society of the North Shore. This naturally 4 a . . V . A . 17 - ., . ' ' ' I C, . 7 'A ' I' . ' Y Mronresex SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS l Andy was the largest of the orrgrnal four that entered Mrddlescx at the close of World War Il and has retarned thrs drstrnctron throughout hrs school career Bs no means a sober person hc rarsed hrs rnfectrous laughter to all four floors of Peabods at once and hrs cosmetrcs made rt a busx fourth floor between rahdro pro grams Although a confirmed land lubber Andx has a grrl rn evers port and spends much of hrs trme composrng lovc letters rn the con screntrous atmosphere of hrs fourth floor surte or else rnspectrng hrs large arsenal of prnk Brooks Brothers shrrts and Countrx Store tres whrch help to make hrm one of the better dressed boxs on the campus He trred hrs hand at everx sport from football to crew but hrs tcnnrs gamc an rmpressrvc collectron of approprrate comm nts Andx also hclpcd run the store vrrth an rron hand and was a mem bcr of both thc Rrflc and Glee Clubs l-lc plans to spend the sum mer workrng on hrs fathers Wxomrng ranch and vxatchrng wrth rntcrcst whrlc Uncle Sam and Babson lnstrrute battle for hrs scrvrcts for thc comrng fall lts gorng to be a close rats. Although Andx lrkc most of us has had to struggle walrantlx to get through Mrddl stx hrs jollrntss and rotundrtx have matlc our star a morc pleasant one Pure I 1161111 lu II ANnRrxx ANnr RSON III 71 Mahcr Avcnuc Greenwrch, Connectrcut Atgc 12 Coflegc Babson Instrtute , ,, I V , ,. c . V . , ' ' , . ' . Y - 7 . I ' ' V 4 . 1 .V finally concentrated on the racquet games, and developed, aside from . A . Av . , A . . 6 I .V A A V- I s ' A l 4 A I ' ' ' A Y ' Y ' Y I I pu . lXlIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS Rrtrxmerr DICIXON ANDrRsoN Crrafton, Massachusetts Age 19 College Colby 'T' Three rears ago Graftons gift to Middlesex Reg Anderson arrived eager to tell anyone who would lrsren hrs adventuresome tales of the big city Unfortunatelx Grafton rs not the only crtx rn the world and Regs enthusiasm has palled somewhat Called Granddad by hrs younger classmates rt appeared that Reg was destmed to become a great mathematician when Math 5A first as sembled However when we got into work he hadnt had before the bubble burst and he sank with slow dignity into the depths of the B sect on Reggres height made hrm a natural basketball plav er and as center he won two letters and was the teams thrrd hrghesr wlaere he snagged a goodlv number of passes and won two letters Reg trred pitching this spring and rt was onlx hrs occasional lack of contrcl lunderstatementj that prevented hrm from completely hand cufhng the opposrtron He also came through with several long hrts Reg rs a ladres man rn a nonchalarrt sort of wax and has spent mam entertaining hours rn Concord He enross lrfe best rn a slumprng positron talking about hot rods and the opposite sex H has alwaxs been a more or less steadxrng influence rn our class be cause of hrs maturrtv and sound judgment Reg plans to spend the summer rn srlent praxer rn the hope that college lrfe reaches hrm be fore the draft Pu e lueutr three i 1 r , ' 1 W L , ,. . , I U , . 'va y ' . V A A , 1 ' I 4 ' 4 y A V V . A I I f 1 A ' y V V' 4 'Y' I ' 'Y ' . ' 6 A y' . ' s . . .. .. V - V ' .f . y , . U , y ' ' .' I r . . Y ' I - - I 1 rr' 4' ' r ' 1 ' . scorer. His six feet two inches also came in handy on the gridiron i . a . ' r . . 0 , . . Y . i ' i I i r i ' .lv . v A 1 f . . A . A A . 7 ' A A l g . . . Y . L - h . h C ' , . f . . a 1' ' A . ' - , HM g g gm -f . ' ' ' 1 ' D , A .V V I 1. MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHIJSETTS Tom came to M1ddlesex SIX years ago not through the gate as trad1t1on would have it but across the campus from B P where his father was house master He was promptly elected pres1dent of our fledgling class by his three classmates The next year h1s fam1ly treated to Vermont leavmg h1m alone to defend h1s home state from the assaults of all other states IH general and New Hampsh1re 10 par trcular 1 So what 1f there are more cows maybe we like cows I In th1s fight he has been about as successful as anyone could have been BIS has been in SIX G and S productions and as a result of no apparent work he IS pres1dent of the dramat1c club H15 work in other flelds got hllll onto the Anv1l board and last year he was an av1d baseball fan and has defended the Braves as competently as he has Vermont He was elected capta1n of the successful 1950 second baseball team and played on the vars1ty th1s sprmg Tom also vyon his letter play mg center on thls year s VHFSIIX football team We have always considered B1s a successful student the receives good marks vy1th a mmimum of vyorkr and have often tr1ed to 1m1 tate h1s form of study but Wllh dUl7lOllS results He also served on the student counc1l this year but 1n spite of repeated th1rd deg,rees has never dwulged what goes on at student counc1l meetings Page 114 emi four THOMAS BISBEE Moretovy n, Vermont I7 7 6 Qoflegc Harvard Y A ex 1 ,. J ' ' 1 I 4 ' ya i K , . . . . l V . . 'Y re- , I 7 elected to the position of Editor-in-Chief of this Yearbook. Bis is 4 , 'YA ' .V I I U Y 4 Y. . v l V v A I ' . v I . Q A 1 I y MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS XVILLIAM BRADLEH BREED 27 RO111ng Lane Weston, Massachusetts Age 18 College Harvard Af 1 The tall lanky fellow known only as B111 Breed yomed us 1n the fourth class wearrng hlS Brooks Brothers su1t button down sh1rt and strrped t1e that were to become so fam111ar Smce then he has d1spe11ed any of our m1sg1v1ngs for he has proved hrmself a com petent though often unstud1ous student and has somehow developed 1nto one of our most pfOmlSlHg ladres men HIS heartthrobs 1n Concord are leg1on and he IS usually burdened by some deep dark problem concernmg them B111 IS also an excellent host many of us hav1ng been entertamed at hlS home but he IS not averse to be1ng entertarned for he spent a good part of h1s sen1or year 1n Concord as the guest of one of h1s numerous acqua1ntances B111 rowed on the erght the past year and by d1nt of hours of h1gh pressure p r best shell Last year B111 won h1s numerals 1n football but had to glVC II up th1s fall for fear that rt would sap the strength wh1ch 15 so necessary 1n carry1ng out h1s other extra currrcular act1v1t1es H also c1a1ms that he carrred the ent1re squash team on hlS back th1s past year but we cannot d1spute h1m on th1s count 1n VICW of the fact that he was stauoned 1n the depths of the squash ladder B111 also performed spasmodrcally as an angular cheerleader who waved h1s arms a COHSISICUI half beat behrnd the rhythm of whatever cheer he was leadmg Page Tuenla fire 1 Y 1 .v I 1 A I A ' , , 3 1 7 I . ' . Y 1 1 v 1 , . . . A J I - , , 1 bl l ' l I D . , - suasion has managed to convince one or two that this is by far the . I . . U , . 2 A , . A . . . . 1 'Vw h . . . , MIDDLESEX SCHQQL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS Gus took a post graduate course durrng our senror year and we were able to know hrm qurtc well once the aloof aura that sur rounds an upper classman had been removed Gus taught us that the staunch New England trends that are so much a part of Mrddle sex may not be so bad after all and rn fact contarn a certarn warmth beneath therr drgnrty Gus rs a mature and well lrked rndrvrdual whose metrculous dress has made us all blush wrth shame at one trme or another I-Ie has been a day boy thrs year and drrves rn to school each day much to the envy of all except other day boys Although Gus rs a New Englander through and through the hos prtalrty of the Browne estates rs strrctly Southern and has made many a rebel homesrck Srnce Mrddlesex dances are old hat to Gus the as a must for our dance commrttee He has also served two tedrous years on the Student Councrl where he has been a stabrlrzrng factor rn an unstable class Hrs skrll rn crew has won hrm two letters and the captarncy thrs season He also earned a hockey letter and rn hrs younger days played a good game of football Gus drsappornted us all when he cut down on hrs socral actrvrtres thrs year We had heard many tales of hrs past explorts and wrshcd to observe hrm rn actron but he explarned that he rs merely savrng up hrs energy for Yale next fall Page fu erm Jn Auousrus PAQL Bxoyx NE, J Barnes Hrll Road Concord, Massachusetts Age 19 Collcsc Yale t . , : ,, , . ll? r - l . . , 5 . . a , I I , , . . . . . V . . -. . . . E 7 . V , . . 7 . , . . . I . . V has been dutifully attending them for four yearsj we selected him .Y I Y . . ' ' Y Ya 1 A I . I , ' h V Y ' ' 1 V A .f K ' MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS NIORRIS RUCCLES BROWNELL III S010 Crefeld St Philadelphia 18 Pennsylvania Age 17 College Prrnceton Grfzrlimted u lib C redzt Rug has accomplished more through shcer hard work than anyone else rn the class Hrs applrcatron to hrs studres has earncd hrm a diploma wrth credit by a wrde margin even rf he had to stay up trll three getting hrs work done The piano rs hrs lrfetrmc accomplishment and hrs talent at the kcyboard earned hrm the musrc prize last year In addrtron he has won a Gallagher hrstory essay prrze Athletrcally Rugs drlrgent efforts raised hrm to the number one positron on the squash team and placed hrm on the tennis team trnctrorr The clarion call of Rugs tenor can be heard booming throughout the dormitory at any hour of the day or nrght 1Dont trv to shout hrm down rn an argument? He has employed hrm self well rn this capacity by holding up hrs scctron of the Glee Club for hrs three years here and highlighted hrs efforts by a superb pcr formance rn the leading role of Ruddrgorc Rug rs remarkable rn that he rs thc only person rn the class who stands up straight But hrs mrlrtary bearing rs far from rndrcatrve from hrs nature whrch rs genial and amrably persuasive He takes hrs dry wrt wrth hrm to Prrnceton where he says he wrll probably consider entering some profession although he has a great future as a nrght club bouncer Page Tuenl .Keren L 1 1 . T f - 7 I I' ' y A . Q Y A , . ...,............ . . . . - I ' 3 1 . , A in both of his last years. His vocal chords make him a man of dis- , , F I . . g V . . . . . 7 V . . I . . 5- , Mrnneesex SCHOOL CONCORD MASSAClilJ9FTTS X 'W George Buehler man of mystery has been a source of constant speculatron to the class ever srnce hrs arrrval four years ago From the very begrnnrng he aroused everybody s rnterest wrth the large strong boxes and varrous odd shaped packages whrch he recerved al most weekly rn the marl Thrs year whenever George returned frcm hrs Bedford huntrng grounds astrrde hrs rnfamous Mercury he alvyays brought back wrth hrm a lrttle green bag vyhrch bulg d mys terrously It was rnevrtable that hrs classmates would eventually eome to address George wrth the rntrrgurng rf unpoetrc trtle of crook Because of hrs srncerrty and understandrng the befod krd has always been popular rn our class and a consprcuous ligure rn countless bull sessrons He has also played a large part rn Mrddlesex athletrcs A converted outnelder George caught for the hrst baseball team the past two years and because of hrs fine sprrrt vyas elected captarn of thrs years nrne I-Ie vyon hrs letter rn foot ball as a tackle and played a brursrng hockey game addrng two more letters to hrs collectron Hrs best game was agarnst St Marks vyhen playrng yyrth an arm rnyury he scored the tyrng goal wrth seconds to go George yyas a colorful lrgure around the campus vyearrng a horrrble red srlk jacket yyrth yellow strrpes vyhrch vyas hrs prrde and joy In hrs rdle trme George brushed up on the latest yyrestlrng holds and practrced them on hrs smaller classmates yyrth rny arrable success Pu 1. luenly errlvr C11 ORCVE VAN BUSKIRK BUEHLER North Road Bedford, Massachusetts Age 17 College Harvard RM ' A gave' . A., V 1 W r v . 6 V 35? 55342 ' ' ' 4. ' 5 a , f V .. I f f , g, J . gg . Jr A A, If Qs -y. 'V , ef 132. 1' . . , . . . . V . V , . v y 1 D 1 A . A . I Y 1 A l y 4 A I 4 7 7' I A V 1 y A D . ' 1. l . . . V U V, , , , . I , , V, . 7 I . h l a 7 ' S I . - I , , .. .. . . . Y . .. . 1 , . Q . A . Y . - V l A 1 1 I 1 A A I I V A ' I A Y . . - 1 31 ,' ,V 1 . , . V . Q V 4 v- 7. I I v A 1- y . . , V , Y I Q 4 Y V - 4 . . . V r V R ' - 1 4 1 r v - V r , . ' -3 . A V . . . . I .V , . ' - H V , ' V ' . . ' . V' I Y h 4 1 . . ll 1 , I 1 , ll I .N , - MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS WILLIAM BUTTRICK Lrberty St Concord, Massachusetts Age 17 C olleg e Prrnceton G md zzaled u ztla C reall! Wrllre rs one of the hardest workrng boys that ever cracked a book at Mrddlesex Hrs determrned rndusrrrousness brought hrm avcrages rn the erghtres and rt rs greatly to hrs credrt that he re ccrved such good marks whrle hc was at Mrddlcsex But ll s Wrllres rclrosyncrasrcs that make hrm a dclrghtful personalrty to all those who know hrm Who can forget the short but spontaneous lectures he used to grve the class or thc way he used to race from hrs seat to open and close varrous wrndows7 HIS Hallowell house mates never ceased to be amused by hrs antrcs when drstracted from hrs work Once someone beat Wrll out the door at breakfast and he was rnconsolable for weeks But beneath hrs cntertarnrng cx terror hrs heart rs rn the rrght place and not a few of us havc ex perrenced Wrllres generosrty wrth hrs crgarettes and hrs swrmmrng pool Wrll gets hrs exercrse mostly by hopprng over snowdrrfts on the way to Trrnrty Church but he won hrs maror letter last year by dorng a wonderful yob as head baseball manager He leaves Mrddle sex for Prrnceton after whrch he plans to enter the mrnrstry ffour years ago Wrll saw a vrsron on the road to Damascusj We arc sure hc wrll be an asset to thrs sorely needrng professron rf he wrll rust keep hrs vorce down whrle srngrng hymns and we wrsh hrm every success Page Tu enty nine f I A . . . . . V . . - I I I I I - I I a I Y . . I I I ' ' ' . . , . A I I v . I Mrnnuzsrzx Scireroor- Cowciorzn. MAssAc Hl srTTs Montx rs another one of those defenders of New England who must bear the brunt of varrous sarcastrc remarks made bs outsrders about New England and all rt entarls However rf anvbodx rs go rng to be bearrng, am brunts rt mrght as well be Montx or Bush man as assorted mutrlated underelassmen affectronatelx call hrm And srnce he rs well traveled thavrng been as far west as Lake Placrd and as far south as Newport R I J he knows vshereof he speaks rn argurng for hrs natrve rerrrtory Montx has been one of the most actrve members of the class Hrs prrncrpal hobbx has been collectrng, mayor Ms of vnhrch he had seven br gracluatron I football he worked up from the pups Hes he was on the pups hon estl to the hrst team where as a glovserrng quarterback he recerved two letters He won three more as a hockex defenseman and an other two as an outhelder hrst baseman for the baseball team where oreanrzatrons and at one trme or another has been rn the Dramatrc Camera Rrfle Rarlroad and Glee Clubs and taken part rn srx Grlbert and Sullrvan produetrons As a result of hrs long, rf not arduous servrees he served durrng., hrs senror xear as vrce presrdent of both the Dramatrc and Glee Clubs He rs a profrcrent skeet shooter and made hrs panel on thrs subject But Monty wrll best bc remembered for hrs sm. hrs hood naturedness and hrs assorted nreknames lrke Mrghtx joe Houne and Wrllx the Grant Page Y bun MONTCOMLIKY ROLLIN5 CHILDS Trdewater farm Dover, New Hampshrre Age 18 Coflege Unrversrty of New Hampshrre 1 2 ' . 4 A 'l , . ' , ' I l ,f A I Y l f ' f ' ' , ' 1 if ' . ' A 1 ' y v A ' 4 A 47' U . , , ' . W A ' r ' D . Y 4 . - - - , ' . . ' ' ' 1 1 rg ' 1 ' ' y v ' .1 ' h n V hgh , I .V 3 , - if 1 4 O Y . . . , . ., y , he hit a record number of triples. Monty has a weakness for social 1 ' I I - - . ' . . .. ' ' . r - - ' - - . - ' y A - . ' r., f ' ., . ' . 4 ' I I ' . I. h , A ' V A t N ' ' ' ' ' ' -' I . I . . s ' . A ' f - K l ' - H 4 1 - - ' yyl' . ' r , '. . MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS jr:RLMY HASKELL DOLF l Sudbury Road Concord, Massachusetts Are 18 College Yale Gnrdmzted wth Ilzgb Credzt jerry arrived here from hallowed Concord rn the fourth class and durrng hrs stav has become a past master at the supcrcrlrous Dayboy srr as an excuse for chapel lateness and other mrnor lapses for which thc answer was completely and balilrngly rrrcle vant Besides being late for chapel he had other actrvrtres one of which he discussed tto hrs regretj rn the Anvil during hrs second class year Whether or not hrs Sunday mornings were fruitful he to Edrth Praf records and free themes Thrs year the smooth and professronal style of hrs many lrterary works became famrlrar as hrs themes served to pass the trme of mam a Saturday Englrsh class much to our enjoyment As an athlete Terry was a star on lower teams captarnrng the second basketball thrrd baseball and fourth football teams rn hrs younger days Hrs grrclrron skrll earned hrm a coaching rob thrs fall and he capturel a seat on the first basketball squad thrs wrnter Thrs sprrng he gave up a berth on the first baseball squad to have a fling at tennrs Scholastrcally he has al ways been rn the top three or four of the class by means of knowl edge gained we know not where Hrs sharp wrt whrle entertarrrrng many disturbed others as rt was meant to Physrcally he raised the question of whether he had smoked an excess of cigars when young or whether he was just trying to rrval Davrd Amory Page Thirty one 8 , . r 1: Y I s uv I ' , , . f . A A A V V I 4 - h I . . , A . . . , . . I . 1 - , never toldus. His great interest in his studies gave him an aversion . V . , , - , . , . l . , .- I 4 V . ni W 9 a ' V I is . . . . . Y , , MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS jacks first entree into school life came in his first year here four years ago when he was somehow enticed into becoming a love sick maiden in Patience That one year of music lasted him for quite a while but this year he again became inspired and began to take piano lessons However he decided that if he couldnt use more than two fingers after a weeks work it wasnt worth it and great was our relief when he returned to more secular pursuits Jack has always been one of our most consistent representatives at all nearby parties and few Saturday nights go by when he has no mates a -40 Ford convertible This car jacks first love carried him to Florrda this spring amid vuld speculation as to whether he would make it all the wax The money that he puts into buying cigarettes and keeping the Ford in top shape leaves jack rn almost constant debt but he Still dresses well and maintains the outward shows of prosperity in fact at one pomt he was using a gold plated cigarette holder Jack has always known how to make every one like him We shall not forget his loy alty or the way he has al ways been able to show us the bright side of life jack won his football letter this fall and rumor has it that he sometimes appears on the tennis courts Page Tbmy mo JOHN DALAND hLL1oT '72 Beckford St Salem, Massachusetts Age 18 College New Hampshire or Virginia I . . . - . . . 7 , . . , . , ' ' I I , .f ' l s I l . a . . A Q I V . v Y 7 U 7 date. As likely as not, he will be driving the envy of all his class- i ' U ' . Y Y Y l . Y V . V. 4 I - f v y - MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS RONALD CHARLES FARNSWOR FH Mrddlesex School Concord Massachusetts Age 18 College Cornell The Dudc yorncd us rn the fourth class wcarrng boots on hrs fcct and a bored exprc sron on hrs face Although the bored look has remarned Ronny has now donned more mancuverable loafers and has been on the go ever srnce both rn school and rn Concord He play ed two years of varsrty football and ran up agarnst a drscour agrng successron of rnyurres that would have made many others qurt But Ronny s stubborn streak pard off and he won hrs letter hrs sen ror year He also played hockey every year and made frrst strrng thrs year However Ronny s heart when rt wasnt rn Concord was on the lacrosse freld where he drstrngurshed hrmself by berng the best letrc contrrbutrons to Mrddlesex hc has been a leader rn the Dramatrc Club and thrs year gave a fine performance rn Lrfr. Wrth Father In hrs spare trmc rf he was not rn hrs room strummrng a gurtar hc was down rn Concord conferrrng wrth the Dudess Ronny spends hrs summers out west workrng on ranches and prckrng up colorful necdotcs to tell us rnnocent Eastcrncrs Many rbut not ally of these storres have found therr may rnto hrs ably wrrtten themes Ronnys skrll wrth the gurtar won hrm a hrst strrng posrtron on the Mrddlcsextct whrch strummed and hummed at Hook Nrght He rs gorng to Cornell to learn how to become zr wealthy rancher Page Thrm three r l v goalie of the New England Prep School League. -Besides his ath- MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS Grl became a member of our class rn the fourth class and has somehow led a quret and well ordered lrfe ever srnce punctuated however by such unfortunate eprsodes as the nrght he fled scream mg from hrs room havrng mrstaken a tennrs ball lyrng on hrs bed for a mouse Lrvrng up to hrs posrtron as a Natronal Scholar Grl lsomehow the name James got lost rn the shutlleh placed consrstently hrgh rn class standrngs although he had to survrve many rough mo ments rn Physrcs I Grllre has entered rnto sports wrth enthusrasm but whrle successful on the lower squads was severely handrcapped bv the strange recurrence of porson rvy on hrs left heel thrs year However he prtched on the hrst squad and was a member of the undefeated unscored upon and unplayed handball team He also served on the Anvrl for two years and made a brref appearance for the successful debatrng team In hrs spare trme Grl lrke the rest of us thrnks about women but more rmportant he plans to become a doctor and hrs large whrte smrle should go a long wav tovrartl establrshrng frrendlx relatrons wrth hrs patrents Page 'lbxrlr four JAMFS HAROLD GILMOUR 648 Shaler Boulevard Rrdgefield New Jersey Age 17 College Harvard G mdzmled with C redzt r 9 a ' r v a ' , n - S r ' v . n - 1 1 v . w Q v v - 1 ' s v v y , ' I v V . . MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS ROBERT CHASL GREPN JR 7751 Kingsbury Boulevard Clayton 5 Mrssourr A e 19 Colle ge Prrnceton 1.21 Bob rs one of the most gifted boys rn the class Perhaps our best athlete he rs also good looking and possesses 1 positive per sonalrty that has made hrm a leader rn our class During hrs stay here he has amassed a total of nine major Ms He played for two rears rn the backfreld of the football team as a spinning fulro k and three On the baseball team where he play ed one year as a eateher and then two as an rnhelder But basketball remained Bobs forte he play ed on the team every year during hrs four years here He was of play made hrm a cons stent high scorer rn a season marked by a ., odly number of moral vrctorres This year Bob served as a mem ber of the M A A and as a black face performer on Hook Night He was also introduced into Boston soeretv by Perera and found time to search out femrnrne pulchrrtude rn the surrounding hamlets Bobs sharp wrt rs an integral part of hrs makeup rlthough he rs frank even harsh rn hrs appraisal of those around him he rs also true to hrs friends This rear he roomed with Osthermer and the two spent long hours reviewing., the relative merits of Sarnt Lours .md New York society Bob is going to Princeton where he plans to study architecture Puge lbrrli H16 1 7 g ,' r K I. l I y. 4 V A 1 .4 , 1 D - I 1 2 U ' 1 , I ' ' . A .A I . A 1 A, . I .1 'l ,,,v I . 1 -ll v l an 4 A 1 A 1. Q V ef 1 sf , 'H E, . . I . . 2 . 'V V1 ' V . I V ' V - . elected captain of the squad his senior year and his aggressive style r UL: V . ' ' . ' ' V . . . - Q . . . I ' ' ' ' ' - 1 1 - ' 1 a 1 . V . . 9 I - , 4 I . V I y . A 1 4 4 V M1131DI-1iSEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MAssAt 1-1UshTTs B111 hrought tht sunshmt of C.f111forn11 to Multlltstx thrtt xttirs 13.,O xuth a vudt grm vshtch 11as hecomt h1s tr.1t1tmark Ht toltl us Of tht hcautxcs of smog., rrtltltn Los Angttlts w1th tl ftrvtnt zt.1l Wl11Ll1 although ht has not convmcttl mam of us to ltavt our 11.1tur.1l hahttats his If 1t1s1 ntxtr httn t11m1n1shtt1 ln spltt of our .1t1t111pts to vttalttn IK A N1t1or11l Stholtr 15111 has stixttl h1g,h 111 tht tlass from tht htg,1nn1ng., mtl 11Ot onlx gratluatttl xuth trttllt hut also got an 1mprOvtmt11t PFIZL tht list ttrm of this x r 111t.m ftat Athltt1c11lx B111 captalnttl tht L Ttam lfl foothall th1s xtar .mtl v1On h1s lttttr ts thltf hall pohshtr for tht haslttthall ttam ln tht sprmg, ht htlpttl out VJ.flOUS antl suntlrx managtrs antl worktd h1s vnu toxxartls j.,I'JklUdIl0f1 But h1s mam contr1hut1On to Anvll .mtl turntd 111 1 trtlrtihlt rttortl IH sprtt of A trtachtrous st,1l1 Thts xtar l1t h1s ttlx mtttl to tht LkllIOI'IAl hoirtl of tht Xtar hoo B111 IS also qu1tt 1 puhht spt 1lttr Ht tlthftttl 1L,11nst t Mark s .mtl appartntlx so xmprtssttl tht Poutrs 'Ihat Bt 11111 ht was thostn .ts sptalctr for tht tlumm tlmntr IUIIL 9111 I'tu Ol us htttrtl tht spttth B1l1s hrst tifftf l1nntr tfforr hut vat hut ll hrst hmtl 11rO111 131111 that If mrs txttlltnt B111 ns rtturmng, to Tht toast ntxt xtttr to Ifdlll .is 1 1111tlsh1p111t1n h 1v111t mon 1 Ntvx SLl1UllfSlllP to Sttnfortl untltr tht Holloxx 11 P1111 IJ t H111 IX XVIILIAM OLIVLR HAMILTON 17774 Dorothy St Los Angeles 49 Cahfornna A c 17 College Stanford Gmdlnzltd zz lib Cr edlt f 7 xt-' , 1 ,- ' y , V ' 1 '1 ' 'Q A A .1 .. 11.1 t , 1' 1' , ' 1 ' . 'Q . , V . . 1 ' ,- ' , y. . ' . . . ,, 1 ' - . , 1 1 ' . . 1 .1 . 1 1 1 I 1 ' an .25 . 7 1 1. ' A 'L - ' V N ' I , . X 1 . - . ' I 2 ' 2 - 2 1 ' b L 11 . ' 1 ' . . 1 1 . . ,' ' , L . , 1 . 1' N . ' Q ' ' - ' 4 - ' 1. ' ' -'ca -no . , . . , , , . . ,. , , - ,, . 1. ,, , ' A ' ,' - - Ss - school life has hccn literary. Last year hc was ctlitor-in-c111c1' of thc 4 1 . - 2 . 1- A , .- ' - . 1 .. . - 01 - 3 1 , V ' 1 .1 , 1 , 11 'A 1 . 7 If 1 , 7.1 'P I . . - . 1- 1 1 . t ' k. ' 'At - 1 ay' S. . . - . - , A 1 - ' 'f ' 1 ' . ' ' . 1 ' ' ' 1 1 Q' 1 Q 7 I 1 ,S' 7 .fl 1 1. MWDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS NORMAN DE MALIRIAC HABIAIOND Trout Creek Ranch Cody Wyomrng Ag 18 Colfcge Cornell V r An old cow poke erme rrdrn rn one elrrk and wrndx dar three xears a5,o and rdentrhed hrmself as Maurr Hammond fresh from the heart of the deep west Naturallx when hrs loxaltx tow ard srx shoot ers and long horn steers became known Maurx was dubbel he xx rangler Mr Alexander observrng, hrs rmpressrve phxsrque greeted hrm wrth a glad cry of Joy and rmmedratelx plaeed hrm on the football team as a hrst strrng tackle where Maurx plaxed untrl he was shrfted to center hrs Senror xear Although he had plaxed onlx one xear prevrouslx Maurx soon drseovered that football rn volwes much the same prrnerple rs throwrng, ealves and therefore he plared wrth a great and destruetrve enthusrasm He also Dlax ed basket team for three seasons Maury can probably take credrt for rntroducrng, the hrllbrllx touch at Mrddlesex Hrs xodelrnr., has been the rn sprratron for mam xounieer hopefuls but therr cro1krng.,s are 1 far erx from the throatx warblrnes of the mrster Desprte hrs bravxn Xlaury rs a gentle creature at heart and he lrkes to whrle .max the hours pluckrng out solemn old western tunes on hrs gurtar starrnz soulfullx rnto space or else brovxsrng, among eomrc books followrng the adventures of hrs hero Hopalong, ClSS1LlX Perhaps rt rs hrs modestx Coupled vnrth rugged good looks that has made hrm a so eral suceess rn Concord thrs rear and vson hrm a farthful grandstand followrng., Page lhutr rezen 7 Cf 1' h If Ql' i l , , , ' , ' ' , ' , , V 1 I V 1V 1 1 4 f a 1 . I' 1' V' ' - . . y, . . . . , . V 'V . .L I , Y y f 1 .H ' 1 V 1 , - y . l 1 . 1 -' . 1. 1 1 A . D f 7 1 v ' 1, f Q 1 I r 1 ' D B ball for two Years and his ower hittin' frcatlv bolstered the baseball . B fe . ,. ,, 1 . . r V V . , ' ' ' ' . . ' ' V , ' . , h ' V . ' y V , . A ' . ' V ' . V V , . Q .' ,L ' , V . L . - V ' , V V ' y . L - . I . ' . ' V r . L V - ' V y. . V .V , , .. ' . r ' - . - ' . V VV AV . ' ' 4 1 A. 1 1 7 I y 1 1 ' l . I 3 5- V . . . ' Q V y 'Q ' V. . V ' ' ' . V. V' y 1 ' V . . ' , - h A A V ' ., x , , ' , , ' , . , 4 I ,. MIDDLESEX SCHOOL Chrrs has been a day boy at Mrddlesex for frve years motorrng rn from one of hrs bases rn Acton or Carlrsle just rn trme for chapel each mornrng Desprte the obvrous temptatrons of such a srtuatron he has marntarned a good average and garned the drstrnctron of b rng the class artrst ln thrs capacrty he dutrfully devoted mam classes to the mass productron of small carrcatures much to the de lrght of hrs teachers who thought he was furrously takrng down notes He was also successful portrayrng more mature scenes lrke barns and asrde from several near mrsses won two Thoreau Medals In athletrcs Chrrs has been perseverrng rndustrrous and always ready to grve the other fellow a chance He was a member of the football basketball and baseball squads hrs senror year He also devoted frve years to the Glee Club wrth dubrous results Chrrs rs spends hrs Sundays matchrng hrs wrts wrth those of assorted fish Wrth the ard of the most romantrc reep rn town he was also actrve socrally rn Concord durrng the past few years Besrdes grrls and frsh Chrrs lrkes Walt Drsney comrc books ack Benny and sleeprng Thrs year he shared a study wrth Dole and the two passed many hours seerng whrch one could make the most rnsultrng remark about the Othcr Next year Chrrs rs gorng to Yale after whrch he expects to start hrs carecr as a rrsrng young busrness executrye Page Tbfrlr erght CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS CHRISTOPHER HARRIS Westford Road Concord, Massachusetts Age 18 College Yale l . 1 r 1 V 1 I 1 y ' . , , . . . . 7 . I V , . . . . I . , Y. . - , V ! ' . , , . r ' ' ' , . ' .V . 1. 4 f , ' ' . , M I 1' for some obscure reason known only' to frshermen, a fisherman, and 'fy-?'lzu I -, 4 ' 7 , , J . 3 I A ln' ' - I ' r ' 4 ' v . BIIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS LAyx TON STORRS LAMB Sunken Meadows Northport, New Yorlt A e I8 College Princeton Lawton Lamb made hrs hrst appearance on the Middlesex cam pus rn the fall of 47 At once taken abacle by this mighty educa tional machine he naturally found hrs first year here a quret one But because he happened to be roomed near old trmer joe Perera he quickly learned the ropes Lawt made hrs hrst dent on Mrddles x society when he earned hrs tennrs letter rn the fourth class Srncc that time he has drstrngurshed himself as one of the hnest players ever to come to Middlesex playing for four years on the frrst team wrnnrng the Bergland Cup iawarded to the school tennis champronl three trmes and captarnrng this years successful team where play rng at the number one posrtron against the cream of the opposrtron only trrumph On the grrdrron Lawt bullied hrs way to two major letters as an end and captarned the soccer team hrs senror year This year polrtrcal corruption was hnally suppressed and the Yearlrng was established on the varsrty hockey squad 4 I would have made rt before but 7 He more than yustrhed hrs extravagant clarms and earned hrs letter Although rt has never been confirmed vie have always suspected that he has a brt of Scotch blood flowing with rn hrs ve-rns for Lawt has consistently won the Smallest Laundry of the Week contest Lawt a social lion with a weakness for rn fatuatrons rs going to Princeton Page 'lblrty nine J Y g .' , 1 ' ' V ' I . , . l A A ' I . ' . . . 7 . , ' 'V- he compiled a very impressive record. Tennis, however, was not his nl 1 A A A 1 ' I ' 1 9 . A f l ' ', , . . H ' D - Q . ' I , . MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS One day at the beglnnmg of th thxrd class year we heard a nasal voxce complaxnlng about an acute back arlment The voice turned out to be that of Art Latta and although the back allm nt has drsappeared Art has remaxned wrth us for three years Art was very actrve rn athletxcs and besxdes wlnmng hrs football letter as a stalwart tackle he co captamed the second hockey team In th sprung txme Butch Ccolloqu1al New Yorkl spurned baseball for the rrgours of lacrosse where he won two letters H1s mam contrrbu tlons to Peabody House have been along the lmes of rheatrlcal en tertamment He also has a massxve collectron of theoretlcally en tertamlng Rye ldryj parlor jokes and has added to the class vocab ulary such expressrons as base on and bomb tiou may not understand these but then nexther do we J Although hrs lnmals are A M L Art IS not a Gllbert and Sullivan star but has how ever contrxbuted hxs consplcuous nasal bantone to the after dmner s ngs When Art wasnt grvmg our vyxth entertamment he recenved a seemmgly unendmg supply of rt from Chestnut Hxll vyhere accord :ng to all reyorts hes qunte a felloyy Hrs last year was spent rn the company of Anderson and Shriver on the top Hoor of Peabody Thls lndustrlous paxr drd hum more good than harm by malclng hlm a third partner rn the rahdlo After a sojourn at Penn State Art plans to groyy eltrus groves and orchlds rn sunny Flonda Pug 1. I url y ARTHUR MCIXLE LATTA Purchase St Rye New York A c b Nc c l7CflI1S7lV2ll1l21 State 1- - s f 3 3 ef' 1 K . fffy -qw . 1 y J 6 ' J . f ' ' Q ' ' 1 ' -. , v ' 1. y e . . . Y , . Y . A . . . . . . , e v - ' f Q w . ' V . Q ' ' f . . A . . . - x A . . M V . A . . K y V . .. A- .. .. , V a q . v -. .4 . I . A . I - I . - - -y y . j I ' . . . ly i t . - ' y' A r' . Y' , . . .' . .. ' 1 f , ' , V ' . ' 1 . . , , y 1 , - ' ' . f . , ' , ,,. , . ' . , . . . V , y f -' , . . ' ' , ' , 1. 7 Mmm Lsrix SCHOOL CONCORD MASSACHUSETTS NPI ow FORLAND L51 JR R I' D Wfoolstoek Vermont rr S Colle Sc Cornell xv' f I ya -.7 Vlfhen Nelson eame to Mrdellesex rn the fourth class Vermont lost rts most fanatrcal Republrcan and Mrddlesex garned rts most rab rd lrberal hater Srnce then Nels has spent hrs four years geallantly assarlrng all such defenders of the Democratic party as have dared to speak up 'Ihrs year he made the supreme sacrrhce and roomed wrth a confirmed Democrat rn the hope of savrng a lost soul The attempt ended rn mrserable farlure Nelson played frrst squad foot hall thrs year and rn the second class managed the first hockey team Thrs year he domrnateel the defensrve end of the second hockey rrnk and complet d hrs four years of rovyrng as number tvyo or three the never could remember whrchl on the hrst and second boats Nels also proved hrmself as able polrtrcran and an enemy to all evrl doers when he was eleeted to two student councrls and unanrmously ehosen Speaker of the House hrs last year l-le also served as a partral judge of varrous controversres arred on the second floor of Peabody although the wrnner of these debates was usually vyhoever managed to destroy the most furnrture Perhaps Nels vyrll be best remembered because of hrs habrt of srttrng patrently at hrs desk whrle the after breakfast group gathered norsrly rn hrs study and then when everyone was rn, leaprng from hrs seat and heavrng them all out rnto the hall After he graduates from Cornell, Nelson plans to retrre to the hrlls of V' rmont, run a farm and swear at the Demo cratrc .rdmrnrstratron all day long Page Forty one I , r ,--21,2 - .L f 9 .' Mara ,V ' ,, :L-aywrihfjy 11 a f 3,4152 V , 1 , , L egg ., N WW, ' f' - 9g.5,f,gyr if f. .V - ' 3 V 4---3 M 1 J K . Z. . K ,Q . , 5, 4 2 ' 7 -. -5 . I, A c' l9 I . I7 V' 1 V . . . - . V A . V V V - y . , V . . . . , V . . ' A , ' . ' . , ' ' ' . . V . . V V . , V , ' A 'y' 1 , C I ir 7. ' I Y 1 4 1 V V . . . . V V A . l 5 , A A 1 ' 4 . ' f I ' - . . . ' , .f . . . 4 r . 1 1 Y ' 7 A 1 ' 1 , V . ' .I . f' MIIJIJLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSAC HUSI 'ITS Rennx lorned us rn the hfrh class and establrshed hrmself as a srneer and an actor he was elected Presrdent of the Junror Glee Club and portraxed varrous mrnor prrncrpal roles rn the Grlbert and Sullrvans all hrs frve rears endrng, wrth hrs marestrc performance rn Ruddrgore as the ghost of the late Srr Roderrck Murgatrord He progressed up the ranks rn football and won hrs letter thrs xear he rs one of the three remarnrnb basketball men who remembers the dass when basketball was plased upstarrs rn the gym and practrces were rn a sub zero cage hlled mth snow He played lacrosse for three rears durrng whrch trme hrs long legs helped hrm Outrun hrs oprng., a musreal talent tsee Frpure 79 or wrrtrng letters to graduates rn conneetron wth the v.rrtrne, of the school hrstorx lstrll unhn rshedl vshrch was one of hrs brr5,ht rdeas Althoubh he lrkes to act toug.,h towards lower classers he rs genral to all and takes a real rn terest rn people as vsell as berng, generous to the core Harvard rs the next place to get rts hooks on Renm who hopes to prepare for busrness there rn vuhrch held he rs on hrs vsax to success berng al readx a mo car frmrlx all bx hrmself Page fortr mo WARRhN MASTL RS LITTLE 505 Warren St f Broolelrne 46 Massachusetts Age lb College Harvard . H , I T ,, ' y . - . 1 ' ' . ya . A I I . g A 4 ' 4 . y . , ' s ' r - , . . . . ' ' ' V - . ' . . . . . ' ' , , , v g A 7 V 1 I ' v . 4 V a A I , 1 . A Y- Y opponents and earn two letters. Renny can usually be found devel- -W ' , , ' -, r , . . ' , . - ' ' . . ' A I . 7' A D ' y I 1 y 1 V 4 ' ' 4 f. Y I' . . w A . A . . - L 1 I I 1 -V 1 I 4 f A' y ya a 4 4. I QNX . . . . y . ' V , . . ,v ' r ' ' . , ' ' f 1- , ' I , ' ' ' ' ' ' 2 I ' ' ' A ' . MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS WARREN MANSUR, JR 61 Clark Road Lowell Massachusetts Age 19 College Dartmouth Spud has been here for five years He came all the way from Lowell to show us the dubrous vrrtues of the Dalr parnted tre and thc rolled snare drum Although he realrzes the damage caused to our eyes and ears by these devrces he refuses to let up and merely smrles tolerantly whenever hrs taste rs questroned Because he lrved so nearby he has always been a provrder of blrnd dates for dances For a whrle we wondered why he was so free rn dolrng out hrs grrls but rt was soon apparent that he had an endless supply and could always spare enough to fill our needs Hockey has been Spuds forte ever smce he arrrved He has earned three mayor hockey let ters and one srlver puck and thrs year he was elected captarn of the team Hrs seemmgly effortless skatmg has been the envy of all of us especrally those of us whose more southerly background has made skatmg more ankle than blade In baseball Spud has been a steady performer on the mound Last year he prtched for the sec ond team and thrs year won hrs letter on the first team wrth depend able relref prtchrng Spuds accuracy wrth puck and prtched ball rs exceeded only by hrs marksmanshrp wrth a water prstol Although hrs PIHCIICC sessrons are frequently rnterrupted by G man Erhard he strll stays rn good enough form to keep Loores best Brooks Brothers shrrts constantly wet Page Forty three 7 , il ' ' ap' , Q' A9 ' +14 . I . , I V , . , . . . . Y. - , ' V MIIDIJLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. Mfxssfxt HUSITTS I'lVL years ag,o jlm Raemg., wlth the Moon Osrhelmer raced mto Mrddlesex s1n3.,1n5., sottlx to hlmself ln the years that fol lovted he ralsed hrs voxce shghtls and we suddenlx reallzed there was a genume crooner m our mtdst Called upon to entertam on varlous school occasxons 11m has also added to hrs record collectxon several of h1s own recordrnbs vvh1ch he lxstens to when he ts too txred to smg In the fall jlms hxpper dxpper runnlng form won three football letters and made hrm the star back on the team thus tear Durxng the sprmg he devoted hxmself to lacrosse for four sea sons Contrary to popular opxnxon -IIITI drd not h1bernate durmg, the vunter If one searched long enough Ope could be found en baged rn an mternauonal handball contest vslth the South American champrcn jose Perera JIITIS casual manner makes hrm a hxt wxth women but he shrugs lf all off vuth urbane nonchalance In hls xounger dats here he was regarded bx mam as a lrterarx eemus as a result of the bafhme poetrx he produced The Englxsh depart ment went mto eonsultatlon on this poxnt but reserved judgment cn hrs dnsconeertmg., eomposmons The spark lax dormant for two xears but thxs xear was fanned mto flames aealn once more bam bco7l1ng the Enelxsh department plus everxbodx else Nobodx has trned harder than hm to get mto eolleee At last reports he hal applied to slx md been accepted bx tall majorb md was serlouslx eensxdermg several more He belxeves the Arr Force ROTC mll provxde lust the means of IFJDSPOIIAIIOH for himself and h1s roelelne chalr feet Pa e lorll um A1 I Rl IJ JAMES OSTHYIMER IV w1l1lCfOfCl, Pennsylvanla Age IS Collette Yale , 1 1 l 7 ll' 1 ,. , , 1 -' , ' . 1 I -- . .v ' , , , ' . , v . Y 1 I 1 . . 1 V 7 1 4 1 1 ' 1 1 1 Y D 1 ' D 1 1 ' , . . ' ' y r ' 1 ' 1 F . V . I I b D . Y - , 1 Y' 1 1 1 y 1 1 , - , y 1 - 1 v' 1 , . Y A y . Y. . , . - 1 V . . 1 V . , , ' , . , 1 1 ' - A A ' 1 1 h y 1 1 ' I '1 y ' I I , 1 1 y f y .11 V 71- f 1 1 ' V 1 , yi ' 1 1 f - I 1 y 1 1 1 1 1 ' v 1 1 f f 1 1 1 I y1 ' ' 1115 f 4 1 Ik . . .. , . ' ' . . ' sr' ,- X' I -I MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS WILLIAM ARMSTRONG PERCY JR 525 Yates Road Memphrs, Tennessee Ag, e 17 College Prrnceton Graduated uztb Hzgb Credzl 'TIM E! np' Brll Percy paragon of Southern courtesy arrrved at Mrddlesex In the thrrd class as a Natronal Scholar Blessed wrth a remarkable set of vocal chords whrch he exercrsed wrth a great and unrnhrbrted yoy Brlls corn pone accents were soon heard evervwhere hotly denyrng all sly allusrons as to the orrgxn of hrs krnky harr Equally memorable are hrs nccturnal for whenever he rs sleeprngl screams of I-Iayulp' Srnce hrs athletrc progress started and ended wrth the perfectron of the rollrng nudge block on the 4th football team the usually ended the play ID hrs favorrte posrtron flat on hrs backl Brll has been exrled to the managerral ranks In whrch lIne of dutv he won hrs letter wrth the first baseball team Scholastrcally how ever Brll was In hrs element Somehow wanderrng vaguelv from class to class wrth nerther books nor pencrls he ranked a consrstent second In the class and won both the Hrstory and Trme prrzes rn hrs senror year It was only natural that Brll should eventually respond to the call of the debatrng team thrs drstrngurshed and undefeated organrzatron made good use of hrs flamrng Confederate oratory dur Ing the past year Hrs other accomplrshments Included berng the Schools undrsputed chess champron and havrng the messrest room on the campus Thrs year he emerged from the sprrng dance sport Ing a magnrfrcent black eye but hrs usually volatrle tongue has marn tamed a drscreet srlence on thrs pornt Brll plans to become a gentleman teacher In a quret but wealthy Southern college perhaps rarsrng a few magnolra trees on the srde Page Forty ire . . I I' I U v I S y U I - S . Y . 1 I U 7 . ' , 4 7 Y . 9 V. . . . . . Y . U V Y T R - ' - - ,fi , Y . . I . . . , K ,. 5 I 2 III? i ,. V . D . I . I I . if Q- fa- . .. . ,, 4' - S , . , , 7 'fa ' ' I 1 wil 1. ' f ' . ,Q 2 . M , . , , ' f f . . . Q 1 tl V ' v - ' v - ' v , . V' 1 . I . 7 . . . . , , . . , . I , . . Y - . - 4. N 90 1 - - . . g ,.-.f , , ' 3- 1 . . .A . Q .q - - - , . , Mrrmntrasrsx Stzrroor- ot Ptrtra tht olda tountrr s zgrft to Mrddltstx arrrvtd htrt srrr xtars ago rrdrng, rn on the vnakt of tht Valtntrno Era Srnct rhtn joe has taken matttrs rnto hrs own hands and has establrshed somtthrng, of a Pertra Era both at school and rn Boston socrctx Not tnlx rs thtrt a Ptrtra at Mrddltstx but also ont at Groton an rn ttrtstrng srtuatron vrhrch has brtd slurs and mrnor crvrl vrar vxrthrn tht Ptrtra farnrlx jot plottrng cartfullx dtcrded that guard on tht football ttam was tht posrtron at vrhrch ht could best bcsmrrch Groton drgnrrx ln thrs posrtron ht mon two Mrddlesex ltttcrs but Groton won mo Mrddltstx gamts and lot rttrrtd to hrs managtr puttrng up and takrng dovrn mort hocktx boards than ans one cvtr his btfort or wrll want to do algarn ht von hrs managers lctttr ln tht sprrng ht addtd tvso mort Ms to hrs tollectron bx rormrnt rlt outfrtld for tht bastball ttam lots tonrc tharrj ratk ontt tl t prrdt of South Boston has strvtd lot ablx durrng hrs star htrt lot rrmrntarns but mthout much hopt that tht tonrc has nothrng. to do vsrth hrs apptarantt 1Hontst ftllovss rts just vxattr l H ltnt rto dttrdtd that tht tart and prottttron of tht Ptrtr.r txts urs of ptrrtrmount rmportuntt and munthts ttrrrots rn hrs spirt trmt rs xt.1r ht roorntt xxrth Lrmw stttlrnt l mstlf for r trrttr .rt Harmrd PJ 4 frrly IX CoNCoRrm, MAssAt3Hrrsr2TTs PHrLLrPs PERERA 19 West Ctdar St Boston Massachusetts 11 c 17 College Harvard i 7 1 gi' J , A , V A , . 5 ,' ' . .fu f ' . . . ' 1., . ' 4 1 A r , . . ' . ' A . ' h 7 ' 1 h . 1 4' A ' ' ' ' '. '. ' . ' X . l - wi-ig s A l.. I ' I A Y Y- ' A I v, vv 1 r 1 ' , . , . . ' A I 1 . . ' ' 1.4 - shrp of thc hockey rrnks, mutterrng darkly under hrs breath. By ,jg f -- , , ' , I . 1 , ' ' - ' V r ' y K E . Q . . , . 2 ,, I .' ' ' f - w - , . y . ' , , s I 1 I ' , .1 r . Q r V y ' ' ' , ,. L, 4 , ' - r - 1 5 - f . ff . , ,- ' , . . . . V .- l . 'V . ' Q. Th' A -i f 1. , K, yin .. A lg- 51 -rl MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACIHUSETTS HAMILTON ROBINSON JR 2158 Wyomrng Avenue, N W Washrngton, D C A c 17 College Prrnceton 7'--1 fr Tony arrrved rn the fifth class and aehreved the clrmax of hrs scholastrc career at Mrddlesex when he led the class Although Tony s average has varied ever srnce Tony has been growrng upward and today stands a pre arrous srx foot one He has not however drmrnrshed his amount of work done but has merely found new subjects such as Cambrrdge Cchool or a pleasant evenrng rrde to occupy hrs masterly brarn It must be hrs altrtude coupled wrth the shock of yellow harr that protrudes srx rnches beyond hrs nos that has made hrm so many acquarntances wrth the opposrte tarn of the thrrd crew he won hrs mayor letter Although he was a star on the lower squads of baseball and hockey a concussron pre vented him from contrnurng hrs play rn both of these sports H also served as an Anvrl proofreader and an assocrate edrtor of the yearbook and made an appearance as a member of the debatrng team He has been a member of the rrfle photography rarlroad chess and glee clubs and won a Thoreau Medal hrs second class year Tony has been a confirmed rndrvrdual rn school lrfe and hrs light and rnformal manner has won hrm many friends After drawrng thousands of prctures durrng classes of pent and other houses he decided he was cut out to be an archrtect and plans to study accordrngly at Prrnceton Page Forty re: en eff L l 'Y .A ' Y .Y I 1 5' - ' , . , . v . . . .v 5 . ' . ' ' , .tv ' S ' f ' ' ' ' sex. Tcnyfs great athletic triumph came his senior year, when, as cap- a Y, . . l . . . . 'V' . ' 6 1 Y -'N 1 1 V . r . ' Y' ' ' . , . - , , , N., na. l ' - ' ' ' ' . , . , . ' . 7 f- , , . v . 4 ' . f 1 A ' MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS Loore yorned us rn the fourth class and rmmedrately won a place rn our hearts by selling bubble gum out of a small machrne rn Room D Srnce that modest start Lou has progressed to become the most sophrstrcated of all of us Hrs rs the best mrxed Grbson we have ever tasted and hrs knowledge of New York rs unexcelled as some of us drscovered thrs sprrng The Rosenthall leer fthe reader rs referred to the accompanying lughlb rllustratronb seems to frighten hrs female contemporaries but hrs attractron for college grrls seems boundless and the tales he tells of hrs adventures rn the Heshpots of Smith keep us perpetually on the edge of our seats In the tamer school actrvrtres Loore has been on the undefeated un years undefeated chess season has vyon hrs letter rn football and squash has been both a marnstay of the fading photography club and at one trme or another a member of the glee club Many are the rumors whrch surround the well decorated study on the top floor of L B It would seem that Loores skrll at drce rs exceeded only by hrs phenomenal luck and hrs lrbrary wardrobe and wallet have been enrrched by the contrrbutrons of some of hrs luckless fellows After a tour of Furopc whrch he consrders a vrtal part rn hrs role as Man of the World Loore plans to settle down at Yale to train for the Navy Page I'0rty erghl Lours PHILIP SAMUEL ROSENTHAIL P O Box 655 Westport Connecticut Age 18 College Yale 7 ,. . , ' r ' A 1 , y. . . . .. , . , - I AL judged-against debating team for two years, has participated in last Yi ', . I . ' y . 1 - ' V . I . 7 4 . , , , MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS il DAVID SEARS C 0 avter Prado San IsIdro LIma Peru Age 18 follege Harvard i 'L Dave came to us from LIma Peru In the thIrd class He Im medIately started to play football but hrs profIcIency was somewhat hampered for a whIle because he dId not realIze that he was no longer plattng soccer hrs nattve game He soon mastered the new techmque though and became a hrst strmg guard on the hnghly successful 1951 team ln the wInter he played squash but II was In the sprmg that he shone strokmg a crew that was alternately hrst and second boat and supplymg a lot of good spIrIt to the squad Dave found a faIrlx permanent berth on the work squad after hrs arrIval and the word has If that he fakes a mean leaf and shovels a potent load of snow We have been kept 10 awe by Daves many and varIed stones about Peru a country where poltcemen chase speedmg motortsts over rough country roads on btcycles Thts sItuatIon would seem to be Dave s meat but although hIs heavy foot on the accelerator works wonders ID Peru he has some dIffIcultv es tapmg the htgh powered brucles of AmerIcan polrcemen Hts tales of Peru and more reeentlx of l'lorIda arf. a class fixture Dave s plans for next tear Include a Harvard educatlon or a term as the leader of a band of hrs draft dodgmg classmates IH the yungles of Peru Pu ge Forty mrze 1 ,, I I - ' I . ,-,- I' ' ' . , - - 1 , . , . , , ' ' I - I, -S' I I - - I .,' I Y, -, N I A I I I . ' -,' . ' , I.. . .', ' ' 1 I' I ,I I' - MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS When Pat arrrved after the begmnrng of the fourth class year ll appeared that we had a prodIgy In our mIdst But II wasnt long before he turned out to be a human be1ng Instead In splte of what then seemed to be a scholarly appearance Smce then Pat has grown about a foot and exchanged hrs horn rrmmed frames for plastrc ones He has shown hrmself to be a fond lover of WIDE women and weed Kas to song he IS not to be heard outsxde of the Glee Clubj A though prImarIly a joy boy he has durmg hrs four years made spasmodrc stabs at football wood choppmg tennIs and even coxmg the crew As Percy s roommat ID that den of InIquIty In the top of Hallowell thxs year he has fallen In wIth B111 s vsavs and has learned on long playlng records Hrs rarson detre lIves downtown and al though the telephone company has been drlven nuts and we are sure would rather Install a drrect l1ne Mr Cutlers phone rs lust as handy Pat IS lrght hearted effervescent and charmmg H IS a pleasant and amusrng compamon at the table In the first class room and In the dormItory He takes hIs entertatnmg manner wrth hIm to Harvard where he hopes to prepare for busrness although he has a great future as a swmdler Page Frfty PATRICK PHILLIPS SHAXV 14 East Elm St Clucago IllInoIs Age l7 College Harvard 7 . . . I - , . . y , , . l- . . I . . . . Y . I , I 9 - Y ! Y. C . . . . V . the arts of bumming butts, cutting cards, and jumping up and down - . V. - . .L .A . 5 F V . ' - f x . ' 1 , s 1 ' V MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS RICHARD HANSON SHRIVER Monkton Maryland Age 17 College Cornell Graduated uztla Credit Followrng rn the footsteps of Drcks brother the legendary Sam rs a drfficult task any way you look at rt but Drck has done so admrrably becomrng the most successful member of the class and perhaps leavrng a few legends of hrs own for Mrddlesex posterrty Hrs four years at Mrddlesex have been so busy that rt rs drfhcult to know just where to begrn rn thrs wrrteup but takrng sports frrst here goes Drck won hrs letter as a backfreld man on the football hrs favorrte sport lacross of the leadrng prep school presrdent of our class and member of the student councrl the past two years a member of thc. M A A on the busrness board of the Anvrl for two years and busrness manager hrs senror year He was also a member at varrous trmes of the rrfle photo and glee clubs and has won the Kelton Bowl the Harvard Prrze and the Trustees Prrze for German Hr. also played the gurtar rn the Mrddlesextet on Hook Nrght Drcks record speaks for rtself rt rs unnecessary to sav that he rs popular not only wrth hrs classmates but wrth masters and other undergradu ates as well He rs gorng to Cornell and hrs genral Southern person alrty should take hrm far He was most successful however at where he was twrce captarn and one scorers rn New England Drck was Page Fxftj one 7 , V ,. A . 7 l I , . . V . Y . Y a 3 3.1. .- H H, . . , . , , , . , ' ' team his senior year, and copped three letters as basketball forward. , , ' ' , S, V, . . . , . I - - ., ' A , ' . - 9 1 1 ! Y ' l . , ' lYlIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHlJSE'FTb B111 Sprout llowcr of H1n5.,ham manhood and fa1thful follovs er of Bob and Rat 1o1ned us IU the th1rd class H1s hrst year was a relauvelx peaceful one and although he plated an adequate If shghtly surly M1r1amne when we enacted Wlnterset most of h1s t1me was spent qu1etlx stormg, up energx Next tear the new B111 Sprout appeared reads to pom IH all sorts of school act1v1t1es re plete w1th bow t1e sl1cked down ha1r and an Esqunre calendar clutched 1n h1s hand Athleucallx although he has had hIs ups and downs B111 proved 111s versat1l1tx bt vxInn1n1, letters In basketball and baseball In h1s second class year and ID football h1s semor year There however h1s progress came to a stanelst1ll whether II was be cause B111 fell In love or just couldnt stand the stram of a tobacco less ltfe IS debatable He also managed to ma1nta1n a fa1rlX 1ntell1 gent CXPFLSSIOH In classes and graduated comfortablx 'I'h1s sprmg he was bltten bt the cross word puzzle bug and would s1t long hours starmg moroselx Into space trymg, to remember a three letter vtord meamng Aztec potato bug., B111 hx hIs own 3k1I'1l1SSl0l'l IS xoung w1tt1 and personallx attract1ve to women and he squlred a vaned assortment of 5ll'l5 to school dances mth var1ed sueeess He IS also an able sa1lor and gave several talks at the nrst elass table on sa1lboats and the1r Importance IU thIs AIOFIIIL age Page I-111 1110 WILLIAM BRADFORD SPROUI 755 Roclelanel St Hmgham Massachusetts Ay 17 College Pruzcelon sg.. I . 1 - 4 g 1 I A' 'X . ' . ' y , I. w .1 . . . - A 'I I I .s - . ' I . 1 . , . .I , . . I . V y .. A a A i .. V .1 v ' 4 '.f ', 1 I . I . 4. . ' 1 4, , .v - ' . , ,' . ', , . - a ' ' ' ' 1 . ' ' ' ' 1 ,' , v ,' , 1 1 . . , I 4 g a I ,1 ' 'A I 1 ' . v v s .' 1 .' . I ' A 1 .I yr I ' ,' , . I' y . , - , I 7 . y . I . Y .. . - v , . - x I' I . ,.. I . . ,' I . ,' -. I ', ' . , . , . ,f, . , . . . . -. ' . 's.,, 3, LIIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS LLOHD THOMAS JR Nashavs tuc Road Concord Massachusetts Age 16 College Pflflfflfflfl Gnzdmzted uztfa Hzghert Crcdzt There rs no one else rn the elass who ean do so much preersc thrnkrng rn terms of dollars and cents x 5 and z just staring at a word problem for a few moments rs enough for Tom to produce thc as for mones hrs mrnd works lrkc profit and loss Who else would entrre schedule on a rounds card' card when turning, rn chapel late nesses J The class recognized hrs talents rn electing., hrm Business Manager of this Yearbook and although the prrce rs reduced and proper system of equations and the Mark lll when rt comes to drlute hrs rnk 50 or keep hrs ll-le rs a vrrtuoso on a rounds as big as ani before Athletrcally Tom has obvrated the problem of a srx foot one inch frame of onli 120 pounds by lrmrtrng himself to a lrttle tenms and squash but won hrs mayor letter bv doing a most creditable rob as football manager But rt rs hrs work where Tom cashes rn A long succession of averages rn the nrnetres has placed hrm at the top of the class by a wrde margin ever srnce hrs arrrval rn Class IV Hrs hobbs rs hrs vrolrn with whrch he won the Musrc Prrze hx plaxrng, rn the orchestra at the Beethoven Nlass being the nrst Middlesex student ro plax am rnstrument at the Glee Club con eert ln addrtron hrs effectrve rebuttals have been a large factor rn the debating team record of eight consecutive unrudged against de hares Page flflx three l , l 1 C. ' . . I 1 , - , l ' J l l , . 3 ,,' I . A . . ,ll . A . ' Z ' ' . ' ' . . ' , ' .- X a . f A 7 . I 4 I 4 I y ' . 1 ' . ' .V ' . , . ' . ' . . the book is bigger than ever, he still anticipates a surplus over twice . v ' ' . . . . ,. . , - ir nv' y i 1 1 14 A v ' 1 . . MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MAssAeHUsFTTs Dick has been one of the few members of the class with that intangible and invaluable ability to start an interest and continue it to ultimate success After serving many years of apprenticeship he this year became simultaneously a star in the A M L production bf Ruddigore secretary of the Glee Club a member of the elite but nebulous dramatic club president and captain of the rifle club team a distinguished rifleman and a major letter winner in crew These achievements represent Dicks mayor interests and further terested This year Dick broke into the ranks of the class yournalxs tic fringe with his realistic themes about such apparent trivia as long tired automobile trips crew races and pre dinner conversations His accurate analyses of character show clearly his ability to Judge ob yectively the people around him and many of us have relied on him for his dependable sense of values Dicks life in the senior class has been a long series of usually mcompleted plots involving things like trips to Alaska graveyard moving and lost week ends But we are sure that the increased freedom of collez life will make possible some of these dreams Page Fzflm four RIC HARD CHISHOI M TOMKINS Palisades, New York Age 19 College Harvard l ,, ,. , . ' Y 'V 1- ' . ' I ' H I ' ,U 1 ' , A 1 D 4 I 1 D y I ' g D A v - I I 1 I l 1 I ' show his uncanny' ability to do well at anything in which he is in- . Y Y ' I ' v I 1. - . A ' g . , Iv 1 . 1 . ' Y-. 1 2 ' I Y I I . MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS JAMES CRAVUFORD WARD Hardrng Place Nashvrlle Tennessee A L lb College Prrnceton jay Ward the pudgy man from Nashvrlle became a Mrddlesex ran rn the fourth class Lrght blond harr and a cherubrc face con cealed a mrnd teamrng wrth evrl rntentrons and he garned the drs trnctron of berng the only boy rn the class who could throw a sprtball behrnd hrs back wrth any degree of accuracy Srnce then jay has become one of the most actrve and popular members of our class In sports hrs qurck coordrnatron and natural trrckrness helped to overcome the handrcaps of srze and the slowness of foot whrch caused hrm to be thrown out at frrst base by the rrght frelder on more than one red faced occasron He won two letters as a basketball guard and spent two vears on the varsrtv baseball squad wrnnrng a letter hrs fo tball star but he won hrs football letter hrs last year as co manager and chref morale burlder of the first team jay also spent two years on the Anvrl composrng strrrrng athletrc reports and was photography edrtor of thrs Xearbook berng responsrble for any good photos such as may be rncluded herern lay has bloomed so crally hrs last year here especrally durrng the Great Florrda Excur sron of the sprrng vaeat on He was also a member of the movrc committee but modestly drsclarms all responsrbrlrty for what was shovyn here To top rt all OH Jay got consrstently good marks and mth hrs Mrdas touch wrll doubtless succeed at whatever he trres after he graduates from Prrnccton Page Fifty H1 e A , JR. , , ., K l 1' v Y ' Y . ' . - 1 D A I I 1 I I . ' I I - . . . Y Y , . A n V- I y 1 ' 4 Y I ' t - senior year. A leg injury' prevented Jay from becoming a possible ' D V - . 7 - r I , . V . o I . iv 4 v , I v . . - V I V I Y . . y ' . MIDDLESEX SCHOOL Cowcorzn. lhlASSACHlviTTTS Dave wandered rnto Mrddlesex four years ago earryrng wrth hrm a large and toothy smrle a plushy crew harrcut and a vast as sortment of questronable yokes All three have flourrshed through the years and made hrm a celebrated hgure rn our class He not only can successfully rmpersonate such characters as Polrsh hartend ers and ltalran frurt merchants but does and at all hours of the day and nrght Because of hrs talents Angre has always been a dr namrc leader rn class adventures Sometrme between the fourth and thrrd classes somethrng snapped rn hrs brarn and he suddenly real he has camped out many nrghts srrrce then rn the Elrot Hall phone booth tallerng the nrght and hrs money away Angre has reached hrs hrghest athletrc promrnence rn hockey where he was first strrng goalre for two years Desprte a chronrc knee arlment he vron two letters on the football team plarrng a rugged guard and thrs sprrng he earned hrs crew letter by flarlrng the vraters of Batemans Pond and the Charles Rrver Dave achreved the clrmax of hrs lrngurstrc career here durrng Hook Nrght thrs year when wrth bewrlderrng and devastatrng raprdrty he rmrtated among other thrngs Vaughn Monroe Peter Lorre and the most horrrble lookrng female classrcs lecturer that has ever lectured on classrcs The rumor that he copres dovyn the Bob Hope show ryord for word rs unfounded and vrrthout factual lmsrs lure I H1 Dfrym HARDIN WH LS 155 Marn Sr Southbrrdge Massachusetts Age 18 Cofleygc Harvard r ' ' 3 , T v I J- 2 7 n, 1 a I I 4 'V A' , 'I Y ' . Y 7 I A V I . , , , - - ., . ,' . , ' y ' . . Y f A 7 I - 1 - ' 1 . I . 3 1 V .V ized that there are girls as well as boys in the world. Consequently' . . . V V . I , . I . . . 7 . ' . V ' ' , . ' V . ' ' ' v . ' ' ' y . ' . I1 1 , A . A l A s ' 5 Y I 7 v - 1 V. J , , fi , ,ix MIDDLESISX SCHOOL CONCORD, MASSACHUSETTS MOSES WILLIAMS JR c o G L Haskrns R F D NO 1 West Chester, Pennsylvama Age 17 Follege Prmceton Moses matrIculated at MIddlescx In the fourth class armed mth an Impeccable Boston dIgnIty a fistful of jamarca cIgars and a fIrm resolve to lead us all Into the promrsed land of culture He was ImmedIately smgled out by hIs classmates as a conspIcuous hgure and durmg hIs HIS! few weeks here fog horn bellows of Mooooscs heralded hlS stately passage across the campus Moses however quIckly rose In stature and hIs formIdable vocabulary lor unpar alleled rhetorIc as he hImself modestly puts Itj soon awed every one he was often consulted In lreu of land In preference to? a dIc txonary Mo has a fine bass VOICE and aslde from starrmg In two school plays he was presrdent of the Glee Club where we drscovcrcd he had absolute prtch He also was a member of the debanng team In hIs hrst class year to the mrsfortune and humIlItv of several ad versarIes who found themselves clearly outgunned He played squash for sevcral seasons and thIs year won hIs letter as head manager of crew HIS taste In prpe tobacco and clgars was ac cepted mthout questIon untIl he passed out a box of crgars at the end of the football season wnth dIre consequences Thus far onls two weaknesses have been dIscovered ID Mos unerrmg aplomb h s bent for Illustrated non classIcal lrterature and hIs IrrItatIon when ever someone observes that hrs attrre IS not quIte flawless Mo strangely enough has a lIkIng for farm work and hopes to wIth draw to a farm In Pennsslvama after he retrres from a teachmg career Page F1111 ref en . . f I . I I . . 4 . Y. , , , . I ' 1 - , , , . , . w - ' - , 7 1 al . . - . .. Y - V . l r , 7. . . . I - . : I . , . - . Y .. . - . , . Mmmrjshx SQHOOI CONCORD IWAKSACHLQUITS s-'rg 'Nm- 0.31. S'lbDEN'I LOLNLII. fron! Rau Browne Blsbee bhrucr D Amon Lee S1 fI1fROXK XI X1gI.e.m De Gunzburg Rusch Holland IIINUI' UL I Ll U Sl Xl L Ll xrh us x rx N ru ll I I A t A ,ff 1 , lf. , V wwf, ' ' -' ' . - , i U' . . .'. . .'I1. 1g.A ' ' . - , er. 5 i A , CK K Q2 . 5' . x D . , '-. Q V x 8 v x E . I N 7 . B-1 ' ff , M. A. A, lfmu! Run: Nl. , li 'I I- , gl, Am ry. Pru. Jem. Llrcwm. lim nu. .MLw1.! Kun: NI. Nl Lan. I., Sm . A. Oxrhpmxm-r. Nlr, 13.1 .un Dur rlmd. AIIITHII. D .Mmm , .U '.lI'X. 1. QL 'lf 1-Lfxff MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS ANVIL from Rau Rusrh Pear Ingram Dunn Hamllron Hecksnher De Gunzburg Morris Second Rau Percy Dole Hollander Bourquln Kolachov M11 on Ward Third' Rau Mr Briggs Sprlggs G11 mour Blsbee Absent Shrxver D Amory Hr an QNX? D-KNLE COMXII ITEE fmut R111 BJSSLII Phmnex D Amon Pcrera Browne Semul Ron XI: Larson Dursthoti' Puge Filly nine 1 'I I V 1 w 1 4 Y 1 A v 1 A ' I r . . V . H 4 . . - , - . . - , . - . - - . , - Q , . , .' , . . - ,M . ,Q f' Y . , 0' Nm. , K' -1 V Q rm., . , , -Rn ., JW' ' ,- 'iq A C , J xf , , '3 ' i ,- ' ' A 'V ' if n. w fr , f , , , A 1 , .,, 0- H 5 , Q1 . r . , I -. , .. , Q ' -.a I -,' , ,v . I ' . A I, A - I x 'A Minnerstgx SCHOOL Debatzzzg DEBATING '1 EAM fron! R011 Petty Williams Thomas Rosenthall Second Rau Mr Briggs Gilmour Lynd l' Yarns worth Robinson Hamilton Heckscher Tlarrd Rou Meyer Bogert Ayer The first debate of the year was a triangular debate between Middlesex Milton and St Marks On the subiect Resolved that U N forces should be withdrawn from Korea im mediately two Middlesex teams simultaneouslt debated against Milton at Middlesex and against St Marks at St Marks After recetvrng the subiect Percy Rosenthal! Williams and Fred Farnsworth lined up as the affirmative against Milton and Robinson Gilmour Hamilton and Thomas took the negative to go to St Marks About two dais of preparation were allowed and the night before the debate the two Middlesex camps met in the library and thrashed out the weak points in each others arguments after a formal debate The next afternoon one quartet iourneyed to St Marks with arguments to combat the vert arguments that the other was about to throw in the face of its guests from Milton The affirmative team argued that the cost of stating in Korea was too high and that little vias being gained The negative mean while spoke of the loss of prestige and faith in the whole world that would be incurred bi vtithdrawal saitng that it was our Christian dutx to go to the aid of the underdog and that withdrawal would be appeasement Both teams won unanimous decisions from the yudgcs demonstrating that Middlesex School trains its bots to talk out of both sides of their mouths On February I6 the Nobles debate took place. The subject was Resolved, that the vsorld Ones me a living. Not much impressed with the subject the Middlesex team of Rosenthall Heckscher Percy and Thomas nevertheless applied themselves diligently to the task of preparing arguments for the negative side which were not to be had in large quan- tities and on arranging them in the finest rhetoric fashion. During the debate, the Nobles team maintained that everyone should be given a chance to earn a living with which we agreed. Hoviever with the help of Mr. Briggs' new Merritxm-Webster lnternational Un- abridged Dictionary which the Middlesex team hal lugged to the debate Middlesex proved that such fl contention was not within the scope of the debate, and that in order to prove Pug e Sixli COM ORD Massact-tUsrTTs the resolved the afhrmatne would have to prose that everyone should be provlded wrth suste nance whether he was wlllrng to work or not The judges awarded a unammous declslon to Nixddlesex on the basrs of the qualxty of our effectne speaklng On February 7 the thxrd class debatrng team composed of Ayer Nieyer Bogert and Lyncl had a debate wrth the Nobles thlrd class team on the subyect Resolved that caprtal pumshment should be abolrshed It provlded amusement for all and resulted rn a unanr mous declsron for Mlddlesex whreh you may count rnto the total record or not as you see ht The Groton debate took plaee on Aprrl ll on the subject Resolved that the defer ment of able college students ns a sound natnonal polncy Groton had the negatrve and the affirmative was represented by Percy Wllll3mS Rosenthall and Thomas The afhrmatrve to college IS determrned mostly by money and any plan would favor the rrch Rosenthall rn the third constructlve speech put our ace on the table by proposing a plan of federal schol arshrps whereby only the best students would be sent to college Apparently Groton was not prepared to gnve up the mainstay of thexr arguments wrthout a struggle as they contmued to denounee our snde of the argument as unfarr untrl well mto the dnscusslon perrod when they hnallx gave up thrs contentron and trred to prove our plan too costly All through the debate our pornt was that the better ofhcer materral ns to be found rn college graduates Fxnally they trned to prove that Mrddlesex was off the subyect Thomas rn has rebuttal dtscounted all these arguments and showed that Groton had falled to prove deferment unsound The 1udges awarded another unanrmous decxsron thus makrng the year a perfect record not only undefeated but unyudged agamst Thrs duphcates the record of last years team and puts Mrddlesex debaters at the top of the l1st Glee Club and Dmllmtzc Actzwizev 1951 marked a most sueeessful year for the Glee Club whxch wnth a large percentage of tts members experrenced sxngers and wrth Moses Wrllrams Monty Chrlds and Drck Tom krns as ofhcers soon became a smoothly functronmg organxzatlon and began work on the mayor enterprlse of the year Beethox en s Mass rn C mayor Opus 96 At the Chrxstmas Carol Service ln December Mlddlesex yorned forees with Concord Academy and presented three movements from the Miss as well as many tradltlonal carols Page Sixlx -one MlDI3LhSEX SeHoo1. CoNc:oRn. lVfASSACHUSI:TTS L . A A A , I I r 'V . A A . V A A n I started off by condemning any plan to defer college students as undemocratic, as ability' to go X mm 1 Sl x be H001 C oxc only X11,55fuHl51 IIN M155 Lormg of rhg Acadcmx and Mr Lamb nach dxd L15 u5ual .1 suyub lob ot dxrurmg Imnndmtglx afar rhg Chf1SImdS vacauon the task of Ruddxgon was taddgd Lmd fol lowng thy trxouts rghnarsals got undnr vsax 11'1 great stxlu Thg hnal pgrtormancgs Nidrdu 7 and v vmrg Lvnrxthlng, that a M1ddlcscx G11bLrt and Sulhwm shoull bn Thg mst um 5x5tLd of Dlck Tomkins and Rugglu Brow mll each puformmg on ,1 JIHLYLFII mght who had :hp lad rola of Slf Ruthvm Murgdtroxd Sandx Krumbhnr 15 Rlchlrl DlL1HI1L9S Pmgrrf. PFOJIS md Gnorgg Smklcr who 1l5o altunated m rhg part of Oli Adxm Sxr Ruthw.n5 good old mm Mo XY1ll11m5 xxhou porrrax 11 of thc 51m5ur mi dun rqformnd S1r DLS pard Niurgxrroxd xx 19 most mnunung, and Rmm Lmlg xx ho mu 1 m1yL5r1L pgrformmu A9 l'1 XIX! 11 i. , . ,. , .1 . i . 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Buthoun Niass xx ugh xx as pmsgntcxl on Ium ln thx Armorx hx 1 wrnhlmxl Qhorus from Qonwrd Acadumx Concord Hxgh ,xml Nixdxllwcx promxmncn vxxth xrx prnsqntatmn of Lxfg XXxrh Fdrhu hx C,larLmL Dlx Trxouts xxcn hgld urlx ID tha sprmg rum md umlgr the dxrxcuon of Mr and Hrs lnarnsvxorrh thy plax vxas prunntgd to thy Qclwfnl cm Mu 76 Mons xvllll IDIS V819 outitlnxhm, ln hli portraxal of nr lmi Guam, lXI'LllTl13hllI' xl wh 19 Xmmg fNIothLr Rrmmg I'1msvxort LL lui hlniglf as C L an x n 111 an TL I L Q ixgrous bomgri Q- IAFQ 'vw-www -'K -sJ Pu L Mx! I1 v ' I . - 'W V. 5 4 ,Y X s ' , -f A . Q, 114. . ' ' , , xi 1 , Y . A ,L ' ' , . , ' ' , , , , , V . ' ' . ' ' . ' . ' ' . . , .. 'L, . , 1 ' .K ..-- Fatl '. A ' jc ' LL ill .1 grvcxi ' 1. 7' 7 A ' J. 7 'L ' h ex ' 'l ' Ar . ' Y .' Ql.1r '11 1 jr.. .m.l I.lwx I Thomas srulc .ln u It - s'-I ' as hx 'Lula 'A Dr. ' A ,. WN 7 V f ,L A f ' ' fa? ' ' ' X n r ,lfgxg M , . J M , , ,I , x M gliuf , . . , , I .. , . f K 1 Z' . i - , f. f I ,. , ig- ,- ., dx A 5 ,gif 3 1 ' f. , Q1 . vi- luv ml X Hmm! Nrfmlv X 1 'VH' if QFMV' MIIJI7LhShX SQHUOL CONQORD MASSACHUShTTb mam as if f QAtblet1cv Ma. -'mi' ,p. .14 N 1 ffm' 4 ' bun INIANSUR Hogkes I IX E CAPTAINS Guam 11 BULuI.r,RfBuselm1l .l--.3 JOHN AMQRY-Fomhall Page Sixty-fre Gus BROWNE-Crew Boa GREEN-Basketball h1IDDI.liSliX Scguool. Coxcgomn. MAssACHL'sETTs Football I OOTBAI L mn Rau H mmoml it 7 iuchltr rr I 1rs r A 11 J Osrhum h b 1 lf., Q atta rr J rr cn 1 a Munn rm D XVC s gs 7 Lamw lL 1 Gootlnovs q h 1 Sprout l rner fr h b 1 Lrttle 1 R I h q l Ph 4 R Anl o 1 J Thml' Rau War nabcr Babson ll 1 L Slllllh tg. 1 Muer It 1 urham ffl o B1 e J E 1 lq b 7 Roscnthall 1 f h 1 Thomas Manager fuurtlv Rm: Mr larnsvmrrh Mr futler Mr Alexander Mr Pratt Head Coath Not tontcnt to rtmun IU tht lxmclrqht or 11st ytlrs hm tc 1m thc 1950 football team tstalwhshcd IIS owxn adm1ralvlL rccord W1tl1 1n avtragc of 71 pomts par gamt thty were tblt to roll ovcr sm ot thur swan oppontnts loslng only to an undcftatul Groton tluen A tgrtat dual of the team s success can be 1LcrLd1tLd to Iohn Amory 15 hm 1 taptun as you tould vs 1nt and also to thc utttllcnt touhmg ot Mr Pr1tt ll lLl Mr Altundtr thost mtsttrs ot strategy and smart pl 15 ITOLII muah rlkfklll SCFIIDITIILZL tht tc 1m rollul to 1 130 xxln ovcr Brovs nt Ifltl Nlchols on Stptunhtr all A P155 mttrctptnon hy and Reg., An dcrson L lfly ID tht hrst pcrxotl putd thc xx IX for our 1n1t11l t1lly USIULZ grcit tt 1H1VkOI'lx IIN OSIllLlI11Lf nut of? and for '96 1 mls Hola Crccn follovscd up mth 1 71 1 1rtl run 1nd Dmlt Shrrxtr hulltd hls vs 11 our from tht Llutn Art IIII5 QUDWLYSIOU NK is Qllllll V15 DOY Unfl flQ llfl ll ILl'lUkl tl'1lt GK fl Plc tif. A an ew Q 1. , Fr : a '. .l - - . , Sea . pr. Childs rqhl. -I. m ry lc. . . -' cr ll. . . . Per- ma ,' ,L 1 ,,Cc f.l.r. JR .- . ll. 41. , 1 l -., 'c ,.,. 1.h.b.1, Sh W , A , , ' r.h.hJ. . Tarnswort l . mr, inney cur, . ters n e. . : ' d, Ma - I g . , . Q ' 1. , . ,D ' 5.1, D. Am ry 1r.h.h.J, 'sbe tc. , ll'ot ' 1 A A 4 I A .g R 2 ral ' Q 4 az Q A , ., . , . , , , , ,- . 2 , , , , .- I A I g, g 74 ak A 1 ' r . 1. 1 A 1 , V 1 A Af 4 4 4 y 41 gn 4 gf v 4 1 1 -- A ' . - vi 2 N Q ,Z -f 2' . - W 12 1 . f . 'V' l . 1 1 . 'iz 3 ' z '. A 'Ar' 1 t ' ' 2 7. Wi l ' 1 ' ak 1 ' 'L ' 1 f- - .Q , ., . h . , . 2 N K . . , V ' 2 - . . , . , - -1 'S 7 2 -..i1'. 'L 1 'L ' '. ' ' ' I - 2 1 H L11 s , 11 tw '1 141 1 -C .gf .Xzxln-11.1 MIDDLESBX SCHOOL CoNcoRD MASSACHUSETTS added our other score mth a threeyard plunge which climaxed a 45 yard drive Maury Hammond Ronnie Farnsvs orth and Dick Babson were the dc fcnsive stars On the following week the team performed like a well oiled machine as they rolled easily over a ragged Boston Trade eleven The defense led by rugged Dave Wells was great as the visitors moved the ball into our territory only once and could pick up only 59 yards on the ground No time was wasted as Bob Green returned the opening kickoff 58 yards to the 21 yard line Five plays later jim Ostheimer went over from the four for the first of his three rallies In the fading mmutes of the quarter a forty yard drive was climaxed by Opes second score In the second quarter Ronnie Farnsworth thwarted any Boston Trade hopes with a fine pass interception whrch set up our third score Again rt was jim Ostheimer who trotted over from the three and again it was Art Latta who converted his third straight Eager to avenge last year s close defeat the big red headed into the Groton game with high spirits but Groton sparked by Ray Walker s four touchdowns proved too much for us in a wild wide open scormg game Despite excellent defensive play by Monty Childs the team was helpless agarnst the onslaught of Groton s fast running and accurate passlng backfield as Groton rolled up 252 yards rushmg and 134 yards passing jrm Ostheimer was the spark of our team picking up a total of 202 yards After Walker had raced 65 yards from the scrimmage on the first play Osthermer returned the kick off 33 yards and aided by a fifteen yard penalty scored eight plays later from the nine yard line It was not until the second quarter that blood was again drawn as Walker passed to XVh1te for a touch Page Ynlx tele . . f fi -' 7 ' ' i - Y ' ' v ' f .- . , , . 7 A . - . . 9 ' YY ' 7 1 - 1 a . . . y . - . - 1 . , . ' v a ' 1 , . . Y Y 1 . . . . , Y Y x 9 1 , - a Y a , . . 1 A . . , ... . . Y v ' -- 1 7 ' s 1 ' ' Y' 5 1 me Xlllhlbl r sl x Sc Hoot Coxe omu Mfxssfxc Hl su rs down coverlng 60 yards But one I lay later Monty Childs turned the tables on Groton by heaxlne 1 38 yard p rss to Captfun ohn Amory vsho raced the remammg flfteen yards for a seore Perhaps the turning pornt of the game lme held us on the three ylrd l1ne The half ended wrth Groton on top, 13 12 ln the thrrd quarter the game hrolxe vude open as Groton rolled 51 yards rn four plays for 1 TD and several minutes llter seoreel agfun IS Walker rn tereepted 1 plss and streaked 65 yards doxxn the sidelines to glVC Groton a Pd e SIX! el fl 1 4 gs 3 , , , . . . .. . . '. . , ' . l 5 1 H ' ' . . is I ' A. A A V - 1 came when, after Bob Green intercepted a pass and raced 18 yards, the Groton . 1 1 - 2 A A' A 1 A x - . A ' Q Q 4 I s ' A 7. 4 1 , C g 4 A I 2 K K sl f 1 - v . ' 1 I 1 - 4 ' ' W h A A -U I If Q, .i uf , . 1- :J MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD MASSACHUSETTS substantral lead of 26 12 Walker scored his thrrd touchdown nn the fourth period on a 38 yard off tackle run But with plenty of fight stxll left the big red came back fighting as Osthetmer zrpped around end for a 56 yard tally Groton S final score came of Walker S fourth TD dash a mere 55 yard Jaunt to grve Groton a 39 18 victory As if crazed by the previous week s unfortunate defeat the team romped unmercrfully Over St Marks 39 6 rn a touchdown parade which saw rm Os thexmer pull his second hat trick Of the year Nearly everyone played rn the wild fracas in which there was a great improvement rn our defensrve play Taylor Durham Ronnie Farnsworth and Monty Childs were the mam factors 1n holding the Southborough boys to one lone tally which the visitors man w9 W -it a 1 74, aged to push lcross rn the last two minutes of the game On the Opening kick off john Amory tackled the runner causing hum to fumble Childs recovered the loose ball and on the Hrst play Osthermer romped 15 yards for a score Bob Green scored the first Of hrs two touchdowns On a beautiful 74 yard run right up the mrddle of the field The tallres came around with monotonous regularity as Osthexmer scored two more on plays coverrng 16 and 22 yards The half ended w1th the brg red on top by a com fortable 35 0 margin Our final tally came rn the final perrod on a 15 yard pass from Tim Stew art to Lawton Lamb B111 Sprout played a fine game at safety picking up 36 yards On two pass rnterceptxons and a punt return After the St Mark S romp the varsity went into the Nobles game nn hrgh sprrrts perhaps even over Confident But Nobles had their own ideas about the game and they proceeded to Outgam us in yards rushing first downs and yards passing Page Sun 1111? 4 I A . ' ' - 1 1 . Y 1 , , - Q 1 1 1 - ' - r a a . . , - l a . , . . . - ' 9 a J ' . . . I 7 . . . , U . . . Q . 1 1 . Y . . . - 1 H ' . -- . sg I ' A' 'Lv - f . . . .4,4, 'f',,'vff.l . 'L '. Q v- , A ,- , Lp 4,1 A 2 7 . . , '. '- ' . . 7 ' x y a 1 ' ' ' - . , b rn . . . . ' x Q - Q 7 1 7 MIDDLESEX Scgnool- CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS Mldway through the second quarter Nobles Kenney cut off tackle for 44 yards and a TD But on the ktckoff followlng the touchdown Bob Green calmly took the ball on h1s own 31 headed up the middle of the field picked up h1s blockers and cut down the s1del1nes to put us back 1n the game But Latta S attempted converslon failed and Nobles held a sl1m 7 6 lead at the half The thlrd quarter was a see saw battle but early 1n the final per1od we be gan a 48 yard drxve whxch was sparked by two runs by jtm Osthelmer totallng 44 yards Desprte a 24 yard penalty we pushed close enough so that Ope could take lf over from the two Nobles came back strong makmg a bld for another touchdown but a brxllnant pass interception by Sprout thwarted any chance for the spmted Nobles team to take the game On a rainy November 4 the bxg red slipped and skldded over a lightmg Belmont H111 eleven 26 6 Surprlsxngly enough the oifense functioned well loslng only two fumbles to the opposition Wlth Green and Osthexmer Spark started us rolling with a 27 yard run and two plays later Osthenmer went over from the five Latta converted successfully It was not untll the third quarter that we agam exploded jim Osthelmer returned the openmg klck off 63 yards for his second TD FOFCIUQ Belmont Hlll to punt we took over on our own 77 and Started up the field After several short gains Bob Grecn carrled the plgskm across the mid held strtpe on a 73 yard sklp Drxvlng hard Dick Shrlver bulled his way over six plays ater In thc final pertod Grccn ended a D7 yard march wlth anothcr score on an IDEA plxy But Belmont Hill came back and toys ered through the thxrd Strmg clefensc to scorc lust IS thc gamc cndcd Pt Se ' 1 . A . x A - -S mi. . 7 Q y , n . ' 9 . , , , . , ' n - , - t - 7 . f ' , ' 7 7 ' Y 3 s ' 1 1 v ing the running, we were able to score early in the first period. Dick Shriver ' 1 9 7 ' 1 n . V- . - . a Y l . 4 t ' , . . , , ' - 1 - ' , 2 I 2 ' l in 1 Q ' 1 7 ' 7 ' . , . 2 .',, , , A . Al 'C Vfflf , MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS journeying to Newport, R. I., the team turned a close game into a rout as they whipped St. Georges 19-6. St. Georges won the toss and elected to re- ceive. Latta'S kick-off was returned from the I4 to the 31-yard line, where Maury Hammond brought down the runner. With effective defensive play, both teams forced their opponents to kick, and neither team could move the ball deeper than the 20 yard line But in the second quarter Bob Green fumbled on a line buck and St Georges recovered On the next play Wilson tucked the ball under his arm and buzzed off right tackle for -ll yards and a 6 O lead Despite Shriver s 16 yard run Ostheimcrs followup 19 yard gain and .1 15 yard pass from Childs to Anderson we could not penctrate past thcir 15 The outlook was grim as St Georges kicked off to open the second half But Ostheimer returned the ball 19 yards to the 34 And on the first play Bob Green spun through a big, hole and went 66 grueling, yards Latta converted to put us ahead 7 6 In two plays we forced St Geor5,,es to kick and got a touchback as thc ball soared ncirly 60 yards into our cnd zonc Aided by three long, rains totaling, 6-1 yards including ohn Amory s end around the big red set up Monty Childs three yard sneak through the line to paydirt In the final period a 43 yard pass from Green to Ostheimer put us with in striking., distance and Ope scored our final tally from the three Monty Childs played a devastating, defensive came HIEICHIDQ, the ball carrier ten times and was in on five other gang., tackles which played so colorful a part in our games The St George S victory of l9 6 cnded our Second consecutive season with a record of six wins and onc defeat A-snuavm cliff' Q 'feat lace Sere ll Mmnuastix St,HooI, Cowcromn. lN'lASSAl,llIlSl2'I l'S H ockey HOCKEX mul Rou D Wells lg 1 Buehler 4 l J Chxlds td J Mansur J 'X on in R Iarnswx Sprlggs tg! Serena' Ron Mr Cutler A Wells tvs J Bourquln te J lxennex ld 2 Phrnney tvs 2 Lamb fer Kussm ful Hollander tw! Hxnes Manager Roberts Manager Mr lxettell Wrth Mr Cutler talung over the coaehrng rerns from Mr Pratt the team racked up a record of five vsms agarnst frve losses and tvxo tres Mlddlesex started slovv ly but the last srx or seven games were excellently played and the roam wound up rn fourth place rn the Prrvate School League The openrng game was rn the Boston Arena after the Harvard Freshman game was cancelled beeause of lack of ree the telm edged a fast rough Mxlton team l 0 Our lone goal vsas seored by Spud Mansur on in assrst from ohn Amory The hrst l1ne of Amory Mtnsur Wells played 1 good gtme for us The follovslng Wednesday the te tm vtent to the Arena vs nth some hope of holdmg the Belmont Hnll povserhouse to .1 lovx seore but the less sud xbout the game the better The team from tl'e helghts yust htd too much ellss for the Bu, Red who vsere short on prtetree The seore vx is 9 ll The next 51IUl'Ll ly the term pltyed fllLlI' llrst .tune on the home rxnle plulng host to Groton md rn 1 poor L'xl'lll7lflOIl of hoelxex lost 7 l 'led l-lol I1 Sturm Il x F4 . ., e., ., me, , J. rm 1' 21, , ' 'orth twl, R -YY ' 4 Y - ' 7 v I ' V - . . . . , . , , ., I ., ., V ' Y , , ' ,7 . , r ' V -V -V 1 V V . . - ' 7' A V 1 u' V V Vs . , 1 L . , , , 1 , - , . ,, , y , I C 1 , V V V V V ' . 7 1 J . . V . . V . V . , . , 4 , 4 Q c . , V . , . .2 V. , .2 V . . . . ,, , , V - , . , V . , s 1 1 A A A A v Q 4 1- . 1 'f 4 1 l I I .V - VV . - 1 r , . , V -1 . - . V. - ky g I I 1 1 T 1 . .V 2 2 . .2 QV. . 1 ti . . . 'Q e , V . ' . .V ' ' ' --.V - 4. - 1' K ,t 1 . ..- . I .Qt VL' -I H MIIJIDIISLX Sc HOOL CONQORD MASSACHUSETTS 'Wk 'V lander regrstered our lone goal There rs lrttle to be sard for the team as the game was slopprly played by both sldes The next Wednesday the team reshuffled after Saturday s loss agarn traveled to the Arena and seemmgly unable to snap out of therr scormg slump could only gam 1 t1e mth Brooks l l Frrtz Kussm regrstermg our lone goal assisted by Lavx ton Lamb Kramer played an exceptronal game ln the Brooks net as he turned asxde twenty five out of twenty srx shots The followxng Saturday the team played host to St George s and before rn apprecratxve Dance Week end audience crushed the ineffectual vrsrtors from Rhode Island 4 7 The team showed a great deal of rmprovement 1n rackmg up therr second wm The goals were scored by Chrlds Bourquxn and Amory 2 wrth asslsts gorng to Mansur Farnsworth and Hollander In undoubtedly the best game to date the Mrddlesex team lost 3 7 to a hlghly touted Noble and Greenough sextet at the Arena Although the game was hard fought all the way and with a break ln our dlrectxon mlght have been pulled out only Mansur and Wells were able to dent the nets but rn spnte of the loss the team showed tremendous rmprovement wlth Angle Wells play mg a mce game rn the goal for us The Blg Red picked up their vunnmg vsays by beatlng an undermanned St Sebastran s team the following Saturday 4 0 The team scored three quxck goals IH the first perxod and hung on for the rest of the game wxhnch finally lapsed rnto a shlnny match Angle agarn played a good game nn the nets for us Our goals were stored by Amory C77 Well and Buehler vuth asslsts by Mansur C79 and Bourquln Pate Serenlm lbree .W Y a,,,5,: ' ., - g 537725 2 ' Q' I0 I H A , K. L , l Y . . 7 , . s 3 7 7 a ' 2 ' ' , 7 v C 7 . - , , . 2 ' e 7 ' 9 1 9 7 v ' V Y . . . . . l 1 V . ' ' s 4 y - - .. - H .. - ,, . . . . . 1 ' 1 7 1 7 A - , . . I v, ' ' f ' r 1 9 4 ' I 7 1 r 7 Y ' C 7. G ' 1 - w J v c - , MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD MASSACHUSETTS The followrng Wednes day we made the long trrp to the Arena and trounced Gov rnor Dummer fl 0 vs th Chnlds bullet lxke shot ac countmg for tvuo of our goals and john Amory for the oth er two wrth assxsts gonng to Chnlds Mansur and Wells Two days later the team if' ' made the long avuarted tr1p to Hebron Marne and lost xn a hard fought game 6 5 to 1 Hebron School It was the fastest game of the year and also the coldest wnth the mercury hovermg around ze o The game was played nn a real but covered r1nL was so well played that no one mmded too much It was a lot of fun maknng the trnp and 1ts to be hoped that xt can be done agarn next year After a layoff of over a week wnth no sltatxng the team rnvaded Phxlllps Andover and recelved a 7 3 beatlng The game was well played on the new Andover rxnlt but the lack of practlce plus the greater experrence of the An dover team vxas too much for the Mxddlesex sextet It rs to be noted that Pat Pratt a Mrddlesex graduate now takxng a Post Graduate course at Andover was play mg a much nmproved game on the home teams second me Four days later the team traveled to the Arena and walloped a completely out classed Browne and Nlchols tcam 60 Ronnre Farns worth vsas hlgh scorer vuth five polnts mcludlng a goal and four assists John Amory and Prerre Bourqurn each tallned once vxhlle Spud Man Sur pulled the hat truck As slsts also vscnt to Albxe Wells and ohn Amory I S I e - fi ' ' . Y V U V y . . . V, ,i 1 , ' . 5 V' , . A , N Lv K , L V ' ' . - 1- R , A I . f as , , - I 'f ' - 7 - 4 Y . 7 ' ' I Y - h r . Y , . W . Z shy by twenty feet of the regulatnon Srze. Even though we lost the game it V 1 . A . . . , . Y . l . -4 , 7- V I V . . 7 I Y 7 . . . 7 l' . Y ' - r r ' 7 1 1' X . y . . 7 Y . . ,X . Y . X 5 4 - - . , 1 0 'age .Keren -'l'flIlH' MIDIJLhSl x ScHo0L CONQORD MASSACHUSETTS The follow mg Wednesday the team vxsxted the Arena for the last trme and playrng vuthout two of thexr first lme members txed St Mark s 7 2 The Splflf of the team was vsonderful m overcommg the hrghly favored St Mark s team that had held Belmont Hlll to only four goals and everyone on the team rates a good hand specral mentron should go to George Buehler who played an ex cellent game rn splte of a badly brursed hrp and also to Ang1e Wells who made several sclntlllatmg saves rn our net Our goals were scored by Buehler on a nxfty backhand and by Pxerre Bourqurn after a dazzlmg dlsplay of strck handlmg rn whrch he solrt the defense and scored from about hfteen feet out '-- -:zz go Thrs game was a pleasant note to end the season on and the record of 5 5 2 whrle not one of the best tn the hrstory of the school certalnly IS not the worst It was hard for the team to equal the drsplay of povs er put on by last year s team but the spxrtt throughout was good more espeually over the last five or sux games It ns to be hoped that the definrte rmprovement shown over the last few games bodes well for next year s sextet Mr Cutler deserves a great deal of crednt for hrs yob of coachmg hrs hrst Mrddlesex team the members of which wrsh hnm the best of luck rn the comxng years At a meetmg of the M A A the following were awarded letters Captam Spud Mansur George Buehler Monty Chrlds Rxck Kcnney Captain elect Al ble Wells Prerre Bourquln Ted Hollander John Amory Fritz Kussxn Lawton Lamb and Morrre Phmney Page Ser e 111 hte 'NllDI7LlESliX St3Hoo1. CoNt1oRn. hlASSAfQHlTSlE'l'T5 Basketball BAbKE'1 BALL full! R111 D rstllofl Qt 1 bprout kg Warl lik, cn g IX J boot ou 5, 1 fm 0111! R011 Nr Hutkms Hamilton Manager Hammond H Q Nl M L n ct J H if I Mal' 1 R Anderson it l J Little if P A lxrumbhaar Manager Mr ulrk The 1931 basketball team started tts season mth an rmpresswt rosttr of rtturnrng lettermen and a large group of newtomtrs vtho looked 11kt promlsxng support for the team The lettermen were Captarn Bob Green, Regglt Andtr son, Dltk Shrlver ay Wfard B111 Sprout and Ltnme Dursthoff The squad was completed mth ohn Martm Maury Hammond erry Dole Chrls Harrxs Warren Llttle B111 Goodnoyy Marshall McLean The ttam lost IIS hrst game to St Sebasnans by a store of v7 43 but shovx td fine potennal sxntt tht game took plttt only 1 vytek atttr Chrrstmas xatatlon Two days lattr Mlddlesert took anothtr drubbmg it tht hands of tht Mxlton qulntet Tht stort vyas '74 37 mth Grten and Anderson pourlnsz ln tlghtttn of tht ttam s points We tontxnutd our lostng strtak by gtllflg, dovsn btfort Ltagut Cl1dI'I1PlOI1S St Mark s 'Iht tt tm touldn t qultt ty tr gtt starttd Ind found ltstlf untblt to stop tht rtm trktbly ttturttt bt M trks stt shots Tht stort xx ts 77 lb Tht tt lm got ts hrst short ttstt ot ylttory In mt Brooks .gtmt vxhlth xyt xxon IS 7 Tht outstlnt mg p lytr of thls utmt l'1 Stltllx .1 ,. 1 , 1 , K .I K , ef y W N , f : u g . , ' KHP. - t 22, Gre KRD, 5hrVer mf. , ' in l 1. , Dole 1g.J. . 3 ' ' , ' ' ' 3 ' . , r . t' ea . , arris . , tn tt.2. '. . ' '. 3 . ' . ' 1 3 , Q ' '. - P . 1 v. 1 . ' 3 A s ' 1 - 1 y rs ' ,A Q ' 1 1 V .l .1 J - .'r . 1 I r .1 l Y ,J , T - ' J , ' , J . . . I y 1 1 1 . - .L ' . 1 1 '. ' , , - . 7 -X - . ., Vg .1 . ', A 1 f 1 t, v 1 vl r A , - . t 71 '1 . l r 1 A . Ar P 1 1 . g 2 , 1 s ' ' . - , N jf, 1' , . 1 . ' ' ' L ' .A as , ,I ' ' . f ' . l H 1 v y ' y . . . . . , . , , , . , . . .2 - , H. . ' ' 2 ' 1 ' ' ' ' 1 'Q ' 1 N 2 ' . 2 ' . ' N D . V . va - ---'y'. . .L 5 !k- W - R- . f ' 1 I- v 1 ' - ' A . 1 v. - 4 1 . I' mm -,' - .-Za. ' .. I f l. . . t t t .gt f 1 -ll'-. MIDDLESFX Sc HooL Covc ORD MAssAcHUsETTs was Dick Shriver vnho put in tvscnty points for the Middlesex team all the time playing a hne defensive game Shriver put in ten of these twenty points in the first period but the team as fi whole looked its best in the fourth period when it compiled twelve points to its opponents four Belmont H111 offset the Brooks game by racking up the biggest score yet against Middlesex The score in spite of the determined efTorts of the whole team was 37 51 The team began a winning streak with the Nobles game which we won by 1 one point margin 46 45 Captain Green scored eighteen points and lanky ohn Martin a newcomer to the starting lineup was second with eight Shriver played a very aggressive brand of play this game and contributed largely to the team s victory The second Brooks game fed another victory into the Middle sex machine Green and Anderson together racked up more than half of the team s total of 36 points compared to 30 for Brooks by together scoring 28 points Boston Garden was the site of the next Middlesex victory Cam by coaches Huckins and Quirk and the score was fairly evenly divided among 111 those who played Green was high scorer with 13 closely followed by Shriver with 10 and Martin with 9 This game showed that the team could score once it got started and was a good morale booster for following games The last game of the four game winning streak took place at St Paul s in Con cord N H On the whole the team looked good a few weak spots were shown and they were quickly fixed The final score was 50 31 with the top scorers being Green with 13 Shriver with 11 and Martin in the double figures for the first time with 10 The Belmont Hill club and Belmonts midget court served out 1 35 415 Page S rein 18161 Q 1 3 1 1 , ' ' 1 1 1 y 1 fs 1 1 1 1 1 4 7 3 . 7 . ,C 1. . . . . A 1 1 1 4 1 1 1 1 Y 1 7 1 Y 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 - ' ' . . 7 . , 7 . J . , I . Y . 7 . .7 g . 7 . . ' Y 4 ' 1 1 1 1 ' v 7 - 1 bridge School lost this game by a score of 56-25. The benches were emptied r, 1 1 . , , 1 1 1 1 1 1, ' 1 -1 1 1 1 I ' 1 - , . A . , . 1 I , t D - 1 1 1 ' 1 .,, . ' 's tix 'af,c5,,1k,..,,, , 1 1. , V. 1, Xlinni 1 si X bt Hoot Coxc oRn Mfxssfxt Hl si TTS yictory The third and fourth periods were the winning ones for Belmont fo in 1 a them they scored 37 of their points com pared with 70 for Middlesex in the same length of time Shriy er and Martin shone in this game by their tggressive playing which netted 17 and 10 points respective ly A brief respite oeeurred when the team again met Cambridge and won by 1 score of 41 30 Green was high scorer with 16 and the rest of the score was evenly distributed among the remaining players Another league loss was suf fered at the hands of the Milton team in the return match The score was 39 45 with Green Shriyer Martin and Ander son being the big scorers jay Ward played his usual game of smart basketball Adding another loss to the teams long ehain was St Marks in the delayed game at Middlesex Again the set shots were almost unstoppable and it was only due to Shriver s Martin s and Sprout s determined playing that the team fared as well as it did the score being 40 55 Bill Sprout put on a wonderful show in the last period by adding eight points to the team score The Groton game was quite discouraging in that we lost to el team that is organized strictly informally The score was 43 55 with our Y now was high man with nine points followed by Anderson with eight The list game of the season ended with the ,M-4.3, mf seore 44 60 in favor of Nobles Nobles ,Qu outseored us in every period particu ltrly since Middlesex couldn t seem to get started If 1 rally was beginning to shape up it would be destroyed by an unnecessary penalty On the whole however the season w is good A few too many penalties were drawn but when the team played together it pl iy ed very well and looleed is food IS my of its opponents A iood te lm is promised next year under the le idership of Iohn Martin Mayor letters were iw irded to Captain Green Ciptiin eleet ohn Mirtin Reggie An derson Diele Shriyer Ity Warel Len nie Dursthoff Miury Himmond ind Xlinlger Bill Hlmilton Pu Sz i 3: - 'ui . 1 ri t 7' yi A i 2 . ' vs . V 4 A A A , . , H A . . V .ZH .J ,,, a 1. 3 ' A 4 A l ' IW, , ' ' . , D Q52 5 f - ' A ,, -Y 3 , . . 4 . 7 4 Y .- . - ' , - 1 3 7 1 - C. . 5 I - Q rl . I . 3 , , , . . I . , . - g . Y . . . U V y,' - 7 V. points being well distributed among most of those who played. Bill Good- V V .Y . . . y . I 7. ll . , . ' 'pg' L. ff - Z '-'ti ' s ::W'PV'1 f, - 1 ' it 5-air 3 , . ,7 - 3 i li 1 1 7 . L r ' ' V i Y 7 7 C . V 7 V 7 ' 'z Y . ' H L Y Y 5 2 V V ' I 1' g 2 2 A ' . P rl 1 ' ' ' A 1 ' . ' . tl 4 4 'A .2 V2 1 I . 1 2' - J z ' , 1' - . - x ' - P ' r A Q 2 y I Q - 7 ' , z ' 2 , 1 i a tg ' 1 I . ge ,e rulj-eiglv! MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD MASSACHUSETTS INDIVIDUAL SCORING A G FTA FTM o I' Anderson f Dole Dursrhoff Goodnow Green 2 HHIIIS Ward Shrnver Sprout Lnrrle Marnn McLean 3 Page Seventy mne GP FG FT F TP 'I ff 14 30 20 53 80 5.7 47 20 43 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 15 13 14 39 40 ' 2.7 26 14 54 16 14 8 17 36 2.4 10 8 80 16 88 30 54 206 1 .9 53 30 57 Hammond 14 6 1 16 13 .9 5 1 20 ' 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 00 16 I8 9 35 45 2.8 17 9 53 ' 15 47 17 43 111 7.4 25 17 68 I0 8 2 4 I8 1.8 5 2 40 ' 3 2 1 0 5 1.7 3 1 33 ' 15 34 15 24 83 5.5 32 15 A 47 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 100 lNllIJlJ1,1iSliX ScHool. Com 01217. Mmsm Hl'N1i'l 1N Squash wr SQL ASH 11111 1111 18 o JP sent a 1 o 7? owne 0 J ton No 1 T onus o I1 Prot IS 11 11 51 .Semm an ut 1 o 1 Hec sc er 1 0 S1 Mr 1'1f.,Q.,S reccl 1 o L 1 5 urs 1No IU Though thc prospects for the 1950 1951 scason scemecl clrc 111 II thc out sct wth but one member of the prcv1ous year s team rcturnmg thc comp.1r1 tncly 1nexper1cnced squad turned 1n the crednablc record ot n1nc and scvcn Thc pre Chrlstmas opcner vuth St Pauls resulted 1n .1 O D loss for thc thc un1am1l1ar Engllsh style courts at St Pauls Thc hnal match beforc the Chnstmas recess mth thc H.1rx1rd bcconcl lrcshmcn produccd 1 d1s.1ppo1nt1ng 7 3 defcat lor the tcam Thc rcsults how cxcr xlrcady mdxcated 1 marlccd 1I'I1pI'OX ement ox er thc hrst match IYISIWIFCL1 hy the Chr1stm'1s hol1d 5 the Nhddlescx qumtct succccdcd IU LfL15l1lI1g whitcxcr M 1 T could offer 10 the hrst two n11tchcs of thc DI sc1 son 'lhc I V swcrc dow ncd 3 7 1nd tl1c Frcshmcn 1 1 M1lton Roscnthlll lhom is tncl M 11 111 xunnmg CD11 11111 xry 70 thc tc 1111 opposccl 1 5L11WLI'lOf Lxctcr sclu 1d 111 t11c 11o111c 1rts 1nd 1115 1c1tcn 111 1 1 sc 1crrc Jroc1s 111111 1'1111cc thc No P.lzr 1111 I 1 it 1, ' Q. .1 Q -ll All I U .. N 1 51 . I , 1 'fl r' 1 'Y f I 1 Ifr R .'M1j1N.f ,Ro. h'1l N,..,Br ' ll1N.5.M1l 1'N.1, 11 'q1N.v', ll W. .1 lR:Pl1 N.'. 'k'h N.1'. .B ',B' N.2,'c': . 1. team. However, it was not a surprising defeat, for the match was played 111 C111 'L 1111-1 ' 1 I-l 01'c. PV 'l 1 .l1'g,11A1 ' .5 , 4, MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD MASSACHUSETTS posrtron after lrttle more than three weeks experrence smrrched a possrble hxeter clean sweep by clrnchrng a one pornt vrctory from hrs opponent Mrddlesex quelled a reduced three man team from the Babson Instrtute 3 0 on the 24th A week later the score was repeated Dance Week end spectators of january 28 spurred the team on to a 6 3 vrctory over the Concord State Guard Brownell Mrlton Prodrs Platt Sears and Heckscher were vrctorrous rn the nrne man match A long trek to Deerfield ended wrth a severe 8 l defeat for the team Prerre Prodrs agarn prevented a shut out by wrnnrnir, a one pornt decrsron rn a Hve game match wrth hrs opponent In the return bouts wrth the M I T J V s and Freshmen the Mrddlesek hve agarn overwhelmed the oppos1t1on by scores of 4 l and 3 2 respectrvely Recovermg from the after effects of the mrd wrnter recess the team lost for the second trme to the Harvard Second Freshmen 4 l Lack of female support reversed the decrsron rn the Concord State Guard s favor rn the return match In addrtron to the regular team May Platt Heck scher Breed Alexander and Sears filled rn the remarnder of the eleven man team After hours the Guardsmen won 6 5 The team scored another rmportant vrctory by defeatrng the Mrlton Club 3 2 rn the club courts Mrlton havrng recaptured the No l posrtron lost to a top rankrng C league player and Rosenthall was defeated rn a trght 3 2 encounter On February 26 an rnexperrenced Brooks team was drsposed of by the Mrddlesex combrne by a score of 4 l Though the St Pauls 4 l vrctory over Mrddlesex rn the return match ended the season wrth a drssonant chord, the match was extremely close and were rt not for Fortune, Mrddlesex mrght have won a much desrred trrumph Page Ezgbly one A 1 .. . y - - - 1 ,' - 7 ' - s a 1 7 v ' ' - r - 7 . , . Y - - . ' ' 1 7 -u .. . , ' 7 7 9 ' 7 9 9 ' . , , '. . - , . , - un . . , V- , . . . M nnuaspx ScHooL CoNcoRn MAssAcHUshTTs Baseball BASEBALL Front Roux' Perera Cc.f.J, Milton C3b.J, Childs flb.J, Green Cs.s.J, Buehler fc.7, L, Smith fp., l.f.J, W d f2b J, Hammond Cl,f.J, R. Anderson Cp., r.f.7. Second Roux' Mr. Sanfordg Percy, Managerg Burger Qpj Thomas Qc., r.f.l, D, Amory f2b.9, Harris Cc,f.l, Gilmour Cp.J, Mansur 4p.J, Bisbee fc.f.J, J. Am y Qlfj Mr. Quirk. A . . C , , . . , , , . . c c Q ', 7 7 , c . , . 1 1 R V . . . , , I I . . . . I , . . U , i . A new pitching machine the gift of Pete Huldekoper 46 and a pair of new coaches in Messrs Sanford and uirk gave the baseball team this year an entirely new look The second of these changes resulted from the retire ment of Mr Raymond after some 39 years of devoted service in behalf of Middlesex baseball There can be little doubt that this years squad was a definite improvement over the past seasons It came within an eyelash of winning the Private Schools League and compiled an impresslve record after losing its opening games which included victories over Belmont Hill, Noble and Greenough and St Mark s On Wednesday April 11 the Middlesex varsity nine opened its season by meeting Waltham High in a tight contest Despite the fact that Reggie An derson and Linc Smith p1tched good ball five errors marred the team s effort to make a good showing in its first outing In fact it was due to two of these mis cues that Waltham scored its second run which proved to be the w1nn1ng one Pa e Ezghtg mo MIDDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS Middlesex's only marker came in the first of the seventh as a result of the second of Captain George Buehler's two doubles and a bunt single by shortstop Alan Nelson. Three days later, six errors contributed heavily to another defeat, as Middlesex lost to a mediocre Roxbury Latin team, 9-1. Monty Childs drove in our only run with a triple in the last of the eighth, as Reggie Anderson, Linc Smith, Spud Mansur, and Fritz Kussin tried in vain to stem the Roxbury tide. The following Wednesday found St. Sebastian's as our guest. Our field- ing continued to be poor as five errors helped to hand the St. Sebastian's team a 5-0 decision. Despite the fact that over an eight-inning stretch Linc Smith struck out eight and walked only four, poor support constantly plagued him and frustrated his superb efforts The next game scheduled was with Boston Trade Reggie Anderson was the starting pitcher but wildness on his part and misplays by his teammates caused him to be held responsible for four runs in the top of the third inning Whereupon Linc Smith sauntered in from his right field position to assume the pitching chores Linc yielded three runs and six hits for the rest of a ball game marked by eight errors between the two teams Thursday April 26 was a happy day at Middlesex as the first team at last achieved its initial win of the young season by the narrowest of margins 1 0 The lone run crossed the plate in this fashion in the last of the sixth inning Monty Childs led off by drawing a walk George Buehler followed with a solid single to center field Childs stopping at second joe Perera walked but was quickly picked off first however Reggie Anderson also drew a free pass to first an the bases were loaded with one out as Maury Hammond stepped in the first base coach accidentally gave the sign for the squeeze play Hammond Page Efghlg lhree . r 7 I 1 1 9 - 1 , - n 7 1 7 1 7 ' 9 9 Cl , 9 I U . W... Vx.: i, g,'.,,,T1, ,. U , 1 '13- '1,-,,r , 15 Ltzekf gf-fit' ,- .Z '-,, 1 'V 'ffl ,,n.j,, f -1 ' Asgqf ' sw.. - Q, - : . In tr MIDIJLIESEX SCHOOL Cowcioizn. MASSACIHUSETTS caught the sign, but Childs missed it, Hammond bunted beautifully down the third-base line, and Childs streaked for the plate, the throw from the pitcher had him out at the plate, but the catcher failed to touch the plate, although he had blocked it sufficiently so that Childs missed it also, a mad scramble ensued and Childs was ruled safe. Paul Burger was assigned the role of starting pitcher against Groton the following Saturday. Burger held the opposition pretty much at bay during the first five innings of play, giving up three runs on two hits. Nevertheless, the Groton nine had been hitting him hard. Bill Chauncey of Groton had pommeled the horsehide for a home run ride in the second inning, and in the last of the sixth the roof caved in The hrst two batters up hit consecutive home runs Burger was lifted for Spud Mansur Mansur was immediately tagged for three hits and two runs Linc Smith thereupon made his sixth ap pearance of the Season and put out the fire But the damage had been done In spite of the fact that Middlesex rallied for live runs in the last two innings we lost 8 5 Noble and Greenough proved to b a tough opponent on Wednesday May 2 But Lmc Smith was in excellent form as he pitched and batted his team to a 4 1 triumph Linc went the distance giving up only seven hits and striking out five Furthermore he collected two base hits drove in a run and scored once George Buehler shared the limelight with Linc as he came up with a double and a single and scored two runs The visit of the St Marks baseball varsity on the following Saturday turned out to be a nerve wracking one although the final score of the game may seem to point on the opposite direction In order to win by a score of 10 4 Middlesex had to rally for a run in the fifth inning two in the sixth and five in the seventh after St Mark s had taken a 4 2 lead in the fourth inning is. P hglali u : s ' - Q 7 8 , - 1 ' 1 - 1 s a , . . . , . , ' 7 ' v 7 a ' l . . o 9 - ' . .1 . , ,-. Nt Y -4. ' 5.4 ' V' S, , . t . --use i I X , ..' ,V , A ., . 'w ,: ' +4 131' ,,,A-h - .J Q.- ,- Q B ' . - .f.- , .' Y Q h Jw, age 'i Blu r MIDDLILSEX SCHOOL CONCORD MAssAcHUsrTTs Pract1cally everyone on the team contrlbuted to rhns the teams thxrd vlctory ln enght games ay Ward walked four tlmes and scored each rnme Lmc Smnth rapped out two hxts as dld George Buehler Monty Chllds and Pete M1lton Reggle Anderson pounded out a resoundmg double to deep left center held and Maury Ham mond busted the game wlde open ln the seventh xnnmg when as a punch hitter hc connected for a lxnc drxve trnple wnth the bases loaded The 10 5 wm over Brooks should have been a clneh How ever loose pxtehlng and sloppy heldlng made the task more dlffl cult Paul Burger started the game on the mound but was hut hard ID the last of the thlrd mnlng when the Brooks players tallled three runs on two walks and two hnts Spud Mansur relneved Burger durxng th1s onslaught and pntched effecuvely unnl he was llfted for a pmch hntter m the seventh Thereafter Lmc Smnth toxled on the rubber hnlshnng the game after weatherxng Mllton each collected two hxts Saturday May 12 found the Graduates back for ln offlcnl baseball con test wxth the young whrpper snappers The youngsters won handlly 8 3 Lxnc Smith and Spud Mansur allowed only seven h1ts over the nlne lnnmgs as George Buehler s blg bat boomed out a triple and a slngle as dld that of Reg gle Anderson Pete Mllton also gar nered two hxts out of a total of eleven for Mlddlcsex It seemed certun we had the Way land Hlgh game all safely tucked away after vue had scored s1x blg runs ln the last of the second lnnmg But the plc ture quickly changed after Wayland scored four tnmes nn the thxrd mnung and followed wnth one ln the fourth and five rn the seventh They won by a final score of 10 6 Lmc Smxth was ala . . . .Y Y Z J Y 7, r V , fl . 3 . . ' 1 K' ag Y a 9 Q - , - - 5 . - , A 7 4. . Y Q ' 7 C 1 ' - l ' 7 1 , c ' ' . . . 7, C . . A I . . Y . , . . . , . . 7 Y . a mrld upnsmg nn the nmth. Smith, Monty Chxlds, Reggle Anderson, and Pete , , ' 1 1 - 7 . - . 7 . ' K , . . . . 7 3 I 1 - Y Y ' A Y. l . H - y ' ' 2' . - 6 7 ' 1 4 , 1 I . . 7 . y K . . Y. . - . V Y I C . . . . . 7. I K . . 7 f K ' f -ls ,' Pave fijblx-life Nilmwl I Sf 71 Sc Hom xc wmv mc H rl L srartxng and loslmg pmhcr but mended hdp tmm bpud M msur who hurled thc 11st mo mmngs The nur Sarurdax fhlS purcm xx IS rcxnrscd IS xxc nllmd from 1 sxxth mmmg 4 I dtflilf to dcfmr Brmsm .md Wlihllli S D Mlddlcsu scorcd thru runs ID thc sucmh mnmg on m Lrror thru hm md lblii on lulls md ID thx ughrh RLQQIL Andcrson s double md IoLPLrLr1S mngln SIIFILCI mothcr Muldlc su F115 xx mm wrcxuud four morn I11lI'kLI'S lm Smnm xx as thc xxmn L I mlur zlthough Plul Burqcr xx lS flu Srutu md Spud Mmsur pluhcd com ITILI1dll7l3 m I'LIlLf SfI'llxlf'1QOL1I Lwhr mth his in L13 fxst lull md rrncky Q nu On Wfcdncsnl 15 Mix Vu IIIL f1rstb1sdu1I1squ.1d played to IEXKCIXL mmnf' UL xxlth Mayn 1rd I-Ilgh Thcrn vscrg txxo notablg mms ilmut tlns LIIITIL Monty Qhllds sucnth mph of the ynar and Lim bmxth 5 tlrsr rgllcf from pltch msg xfrcr am carxmg m fhlS CJPQILIIY durxmg each of the hrst rlurtccn contcits Tha team looked tcrrlhc Kugfunst Mllron Academy In sprtn of tha fact rlnr IVIIIIOH 5 fabulous pmhcr beat us D 4 '111 of the 7VIlddlLSLk mam xx as con fldcnt that vsc could haw mm yust IS eas11y IS lost Lmg Smxrh plfChCd for 111 In xx as vsorth and lost A rcal hcartbrealxer Tha ganna vs 15 11151 113 Mnldlcsm m thc last of the mmh mnmg when mo walks an error .md .1 base hlt pm cluccd the mo ralllcs necessary to vxm In fhlS qamg George Buchlcr slammed 1115 sxxth doubk of the year Saturday um 7 111111155111 a sad spumnlc on thc MldCl1CSLX hrst tcam dnmond St Gcorges vxon the last ganuc. of thc schcdulcd smson w though MlC1CilLSCk vsas lcadmg 7 0 through thc S1XIh mnlnsg In fact Lmc Smlrh had allovxcd but a smglc sifaty umll ha lost 1115 swf? ln the seventh and thu lmll club complcrcly fall apart On thc bruglu sxdc though Rcgglg Andcr son collutcd mo of MlL1CllQSCXS thru hm xmludmq hzs hfrh doulnlc of thc SL ISOH At the end of thc SC1SOI1 lcrrars xxcm xxx lrdnd IOC,,1PI1I1l I unhlcr CIIWIIIIT dur Lmdon Thomas R Andcrson Guan Mmsur ICILF1 XV1rd Mllron md Lincoln Smith XX xlrlum Hxgh Roxlwurx Larm gf Sdwmani Hmmm Trzic I mum H111 Crrrmm HIL m Cwrnummlm N Nhrlxs THE SLASONS Rl CORD Hrurml-12 Th Ulf S X IX I mri Xillmn xn ar I 1 mm 11 'N 1101 Nr hmmm l'1l l1f 1 . 1 , U15 1 . MM I'SliT'I8 1, , K ,A V L 1 .i .. , . Q x- Q . . . K , A r A 1r 1 fav V 2 1 'Z .1 -1 C1 Q 11 I .1 - 2 A'A' , A I .g -' 1A,, V 1 . 4- ' 1 .- - , 1. 1 ,- u 1 . I' . 1 1 . ' ' A k 2 ' . A11 a 1. ' A .1 h X iv 1 '. . 1 ' .V . 1 . - ' -' 1 - I . , . ' -- K M . A . 5 .. K .. . 5 A 1' 'l 'l 3 1 ' L 'A 1. ' . I 'L 5 ' ' ml' 'H ' '12 1 ' 'Q A24 ' 1 2 5 ' ' ' ' - ' 2 ' ' -, ' L 'b ' 'A f 2 1 1 Ml 1' . A A ZYQ ZIV -ii, 1 1 1 2 1 1 '1 2 v1 V1 b fi . r , R ',A 1, . , Qi ' l .1 k - . , . , - . A . 1 , - 2 1 T11 l A A ff 1 'I - ,I ' A 1 N 4 11 1A A. L k .N 4 K. . 1 f --1 1, -Q. 1 , L 1 1, 1, . N 1 - 1 V1 ' '1 v I 2 4 2 l . ' 4 - A 2 1 v ' 1 1 1 pf 1 ' . 1 1 Yi ' ' ' 1 1' 1 1 I ' A Y 1 Y ff 7 y , 1 5 . , ' - 1 , , -, 1 , , . Q 1 1 K , 1 1 , 'l A A , L ' , , , , . ' . 1 , ,C Q 7,11 al, ' 1 17 v 1f - X 1 - 4 V A ' 4 ' 1 - - 1, L' ' . , - W 1 1 V 1 , , . . 'K ' 1, lx H 1k .1 - , 1' ., 1 L . ' i 'L . . . . . . . , , . . . .- , , 1 N .1 , J,.. f 7, V 1 1. - . . s - . 1- 1 1 - 2 . ' I . NI O NI U . A I 2 ' I0 3 ' I' A I 9 G if 2 fx H 3 ..1'..' ' 0 3 V40 6 I0 gc ' 1 G , I 1 1 3:1 , l 0 NIA . mf 11211 Y' V' ' 3 H Hr: ' 1 .ui Ill I S Q Nil - J FM gl 4 1 1 4 ' fr, 1 . IH 1 Nixmmu shx bc HOOL Loxc ORD Mfxssfxc HLSI NX ,ar -'W .ir P4411 c L 'L .'Q , Q .1 . ' ,-ii Q ., . 1' f ,A V V' A' of My W .Ll , A V V :W ' . J r .QP ' ' 3' + -.... ' Q- ' ' I -- . V . , M 1 5- I ! Q .a -V ,. .- - in, .fu N., ' L- Anfff' , .A ...f 0 , 'M mg J... Y J . ,. . Y I ' X . V' 1 . , f . ,fy fl - ' . v ' ' - -on , v sv , A .- . , 5 gy, G , . . V X ' vx ' ' '4'fl . E Q Q , : 1' :I fglvli-,xLfI 'rl C1eu :Bula 8255 Q1 55.4 .P itt CREW from Rim Walsh lcon Lane lcoxr Kraetzer icoxl Semml Rim D W'ells lNo wi Roberts I ow 1 Meyer lNo al A Brow ne lstrokel Alvarez tstrokel A Ostheimer tNo 71 Robinson 4No nz Tlurn' Ron illiams Manager Sears tstrokel Tomkins lbowl N Lee lNo 71 Marden lstrokel Senkler ihowl Sachs No U Mr Iocke Following the pre-season practice in the rowing room which started officially on February 25 this ycars first squad began rowing from the new boathouse on April lst. All of thc shells and oars had been stored in the remains of the swimming pool during thc winter while the boathouse was being constructed, but thc first day of thc spring tcrm saw' the threc crews once again on Batemans Pond. The usual heated struggle bctwecn the crews was vcry much in cxidence 'md competition was extremely high. Gus Brow ne was elected captain early in the season, with Moses Williziiiis as manager. The first race was away at Groton on Saturday. May Sth. The third crew, composed of Marden, Robinson, Sachs, and Tomkins with Kraetzer coxing, was unfortunately defeated, by the Groton C boat, which com- pleted the three-quarter mile course in 4:30. Hopes were high for the second crew, with Browne, Senkler. Alvarez, Roberts, and coxswain Wfalsh, but they were also defeated by a powerful Groton B boat. which rowed a fast Pilge 15121711-fl 'lil fl- Minouzsax SCHOOL CoNc3o1zo. NIASSACIHUSIETTS 4 I ii 41 ' - 4 l' sl'- NNN. I I . A V ,gy 1. A.-', 1 ' ,A I ...1. - , L M , ' ' Q, .jr 4.41, ' ' 1 ' A 5' 51, G ' ' , ' 1-.u A ii M , f 5' 9' 1 t Q' M M K sl M rg .A J ' Q Q55 MIIJDLESEX SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSETTS -4: 19. It remained for the first crew composed of Sears Meyer Wells Lee and Lane as coxsvsarn to save the day but the Groton A boat proved too much for them and vson rn 4 18 After much practice and shxftrng of personnel Saturday May 12 the crews showed tremendous nmprovement as they rovsed agafnst Nobles on Bateman s Pond The third crevs unchanged managed to defeat the Nobles thlrd crevu by three lengths fn 2 49 The second crew also handed the Nobles seconds a defeat fn a tlme of 2 16 Unfortunately however the first crew struck the buoy opposnte the float and lost by three lengths to the Nobles first crevx whose trme vsas 2 42 W There was a marked nmprove ment ln all the crews however On May 19th the three crews traveled to rovx the Brow ne and Nlchols erevss on the Charles The thlrd crew whose lfneup remalned unchanged throughout the season anmhrlated the Browne and Nxchols thrrd boat by two lengths on the three quarter mnle course The second crevs wtth Browne Wells D Lee Roberts and coxswaln Walsh won a one and one half length vrctory from therr Browne and Nrehols opponents whrle the first crew with Alvarez Meyer Sears Senkler and Lane won by a photo finrsh of four feet from the B 8: N top men thus round1ng out an entrrely successful encounter May 26 the crews went to Brooks The thrrd crew lost to the Brooks third crew by one and one half lengths The second crevs however com posed of Sears Wells Lee Roberts and Walsh won from a very smooth Brooks crew by two lengths It remarned for the first crew made up of Browne Meyer Tony Osthefmer Senkler and Lane to glve us the day but a strong Brooks first crew pulled ahead early ID the race to w1n by two lengths Our defeats were due rn part to the fact that we were not tho roughly accustomed to the three quarter mrle course 'I 4 -aging Q. 1-- ' - K, Pa e fl btw NIII6' NIIDDLESLX SCHOO1 QONCORD MAssAc HUSFTTS The second of June marked the b1g race wrth Exeter on Bateman s Pond Our thrrd crew, wrth Marden, Robrnson Sachs, Tomklns and coxswarn Kraetzer matched Exeters thrrd crew stroke for stroke untxl the fimsh lrne, w here our crew won by the fact that rt managed to start a new stroke just as Exeter was f1n1sh1ng one Thls fortunate break gave us a two foot lead at the f1n1sh lrne, and the first race of the afternoon The second crew com posed of Sears, Wells, Lee, Senkler, and coxswam Walsh dld not fare so well After an extremely close race Exeter managed to pull ahead sllghtly and wrn the race by a scant half length It must be noted, how ever that Exeter s lf' second crew outwenghed us man for man, and that therr success was largely due to thrs fact The same fate was rn store for the first crew who, IU thelr attempt to regarn the Columbra Cup were defeated by the Exeter oarsmen The race was very close up to the buoy m the mlddle of the pond at whxch polnt Exeter managed to overwhelm us wlth sheer power plus some very smooth strokxng and consequently stepped out rnto the lead The fmal mar gm of defeat for our hrst crew, Alvarez Meyer, Tony Osthermer Roberts and Lane cox was two lengths The one race whlch the elght had was w1th Browne and Nlehols on May 73rd Stroked by Curtxss and xddrtronally manned by A Krumbhaar Gruen er Ayer F Farnsworth Purdy G Krumbhaar Wflnchester and coxswam Dmsmore the Exght owmg to the drmng ram the unfamrlnar Charles and therr lack of expernenct lost to Browne and Nrchols by three quarters of 1 length Saturday une 9 the afternoon of grlduatlon w IS mlrked by the dedr tatlon of the new bo tthouse the funds for w hnch were gn en by Mrs Russell Pa t Nzmf, Mmou SI X ScHooL Cove oim MAssAt HL srrrs Nw Robb Sr of Concord In a simple ceremony the boathouse was dedicated ro Mr Loclee whose excellence as crew coach has benefited more than three decades of Middlesex oarsmen Major letters were awarded to Alvarez Browne A Lane Lee N Meyer Roberts Robinson Sears Senleler Tomlefns Walsh Wells D and Manager Wrlliams Lloyd Roberts was elected captain for the 1952 season by the members of the first three crews Though not successful on a won and lost 171515 1931 looked lllee a good building year and hopes are high as the entire first crevx returned for the 1951 1957 season Pugt Amen iqi , - '.g . 3 L1 3 ' . s - ,Y ,- v W-if , A , xTuw.4v ' I F' X .O , Q -Y '. 1 v 1 - E ' . VX , up f Jw 1' ' ,-, fiuflifm, 1 S219-55' 7 '7 ' 7 , , , , , . . ' a A . C . - 7 1 3 A y A 7 7 '7 7 7 '7 U r 3 f- 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 '7 , A , , , , , - 2 , . , , ' 7 , J L ' , 1 , ' , - f - . y , ?,- we ...- ' V A- N. Q 'i A L ' .,, -'M-f -' .v F J . . I, lXllDDIISlZX SCHOOL Kjoweoizn. MAssAc1H1 s11Ts Tennis TENNIb fum! leon Xlax KNO J Durham KNO 51 Heekscher KNO J Lamh KNO ll Prodis KNO ar Weaxcr KNO 91 Mr Nashe Mr Archibald The 1951 season vias notable for the number of people that toole part in bringing about a sum total of eight wxins against three losses Lavx ton Lamb vxho captained the te 1m in grand style and Rugg Bron nell were the only sen iors participating but the glories and toils of the season were shared by May Durham We1ver Pebo Brom ne Taylor Proelis and M1rtin Heeleseher next ve If s captain ot xxorle H1xingh1el 1 ehinee to feel its ground the te IIT! xx IS vsell prep1reel to meet St Seb1sti1ns on April IS in the opening m 1teh ot the season mel seored 1 xsin in e 1eh of so. m itehes The Governor Dummer te 1m hoxxexer but the Mielellesex te IIN 6 I on April 77 Limb V815 the winner tor Middlesex mel it is xxorthvxhile to note tl11t his opponent hlel vson 1 Nexx Envl 1nd Iunior Chunpionship The fol lovxinsl NWeelnesel1y the Belmont Hill m 1teh xx is elrixen into the edge hy in LlI11LL0IUI'UOLllIlI1K2, elriule but xx hen it lllilllb let ui Heeleseher 1nel IDL1!'l1lI11 IM XIII I 7 ,V , 7 , V ' ' KNO U, Taylor KNO: Sy.. SLTVOIIIJ Roux: Thomas. Managerg Mr? lkettell. R. Brownell KNO. 61, 'Pi B.. Brovx nc V VV V ' . ' l , - I ' . . pg I. . I A l . V K y V ' 1 .2 ' , , V 1 V , , . , . . . . , A .A 1 . A I I H K I V , , Az , A 1 1, . , ' , ' z ' ' ' 2 , ' The courts got into eonelition quite early this spring, with a minimum 1 ' '. 2 2 z 'z 't i , ' '1 'z 'A ez ' .A . . 2 '2 ' - ' I' ' , . ' L, 2 - ' . TV ' 2 . ' ' 1 'i A ez ' A ' ' 1 ' ' . l VA . .1 ' V , V 1 V .1 -.', . V ,Z 7, . hm 2 72 A V, A . . A NJ . . Y V . l i 1 i l 1 ' 1 ' ' at F ' 1 ' ' . - - V' 1 , .V 2 V, . i ' 2 V V: 1 ' . . ' , -. y , V 2 1 ' ' 2 ' f -, ' A ' i 1 ' ' x ' ' ' ' A 1 1 qt' . ' ef W-Ili 11 MIIJIDI tsrx St Hoof Cox: om: Mfxssfxt Host ras toole 1 patr of opponents outslde and m1de 1 two all tle 1 3 7 xlctory by .1 m1tel1 whxch at 6 O0 p m had to be e1lled at 6 0 l 7 On Aprtl 76 Wrnehester Hlgh w as swamped l l O but the number one matches were won wtth d1ff1eulty Lamb rallied from 7 5 love forty tn hls flrst set to wtn the match S 6 6 7 and the hrst doubles Lamb 1nd Weaver won 6 7 46 6 3 On Wednesday May 7 stnll If Concord txt seemed that few other sehools had any eourtsl we played Brow ne and Ntehols 1nd defeated them 6 0 Mtddlesex suffered 1ts seeond ele feat at the hands of St Marle s We tv er playmg fourth man won hrs singles match and Heclescher and Prodrs won the second doubles hxe losses agalnst four wlns for us On May l l and l7 the te 1m went to Exeter for the mterseholastxcs whleh had to be held lndoors on aecourt of ram Llmb Heckseher and Weaver won thelr first round matches and were then put out and the doubles teams of Lamb Weaver and Heckscher Prodxs had to default after wrnnlng through thelr hrst rounds On May 16 the New Prep te tm was beaten 6 l The follow mg Saturday the Cushmg tetm was beaten 9 0 On May 76 the team played 1ts only away match Mllton had some tenn1s courts and talelng advan tage of the opportunxty Mnddlesex played the Milton team on them -' 1nd won a D 4 vrctory The season tame to a successful conclusron on lune 7 when the tenn1s team de feated St Georges lgam ID IH excxtxng 54 m1teh -Q The record of elght wins 1nd three losses was better than the 7 4 record of the prevlous year 1nd lf was generally agreed that lf w1s 1 successful season for the w hole tenn1s squ 1d Page N meta three 2 1 2 Y , -12 . -1 7. y 1 2 7 7 . , ' Z . ., L A -1 , ' V 1 ' . '-. - 1 ' - I 7 r 1 - 7 1 1' h 1 9 C h ...T 7 ' 7 . ' A 1' . tl- - A 1 2 1 '-1 X 1 r I ' 1 '- ' 1 -1 2 N . y , 1 .' 2 F41 A c . 'Y . 1 ' 7 . 7 I , ' D. l . The third defeat was at the hands of Newton High on May 9. It was .., 'z ' . ' ' ' ' ' , Y 7 1 7 7 TV 1 7 , . L 2 .. , c . c le . l ' ' ' 5 - ' W ' 4 1 1 . t l Q ,gy tw c , ' ' 1 4 ' 1 A 1 ' '- ' . , .. z 7 at n A .- I C A- . 3. . ' , 2 ' ' 2 ' - - 1 V al .,-, ' 7 - 2 . l .A y rl 2 b ' 1 . ' ' e - I 'Z 2 c ' A - ' 1 . Lam Owe LACROSSF lmnl Rau Bourqum 1aJ Shannon laJ Semnd Rau Carney la g, L tta lm d J Van Me er 1 lJ bhrixer KaJ Ostheimer lm J De Gunzburg tdJ R Farnsworth l3,J Tbmi R011 Calder Manager W nsmore lm J A Wells lm J Byork lm J Babson ld J Agen la J Little I Pper im J Hin s ld J Mr Hulburd. This year s lacrosse team's chances for anything better than just a barely winning season appeared to be slim. The team of '50 that was ranked third among New England prep schools los: thirteen of its twenty-four members through graduation and didn't promise to leave much for the next yearis team. But on April 21st the red jerseys of Middlesex came through in the last two minutes of their opener against Boston Lacrosse Club 5-4. Ostheimer knotted the score in the last minutes and sent the game into a ten-minute over- time which we won. Shriver and Latta also got two goals. Traveling to Cambridge on April 25th we met and conquered a highly regarded Harvard Freshman team 10-6. At the half, Middlesex held a 5-2 lead over its Over-confident opponents, but when Harvard scored two quick goals in the third period to make the count 5--4, it seemed as if the spell had worn oil. But we bounced back to win handily. The scorers were Agen Us J, Shriver ll J, Ustheimer CZJ, Wells. Carney. and Little one each. lime Nirieri- our M1nnLhsEx SCHOOL CONCORD. MASSACHUSFTTS '. , .. ' ., '.J,-a ., . , I , 7 Y X 7 J M1oDLEsEx ScHOOL CONCORD. MAssAcH USETTS On Aprrl 28th vue met an rnevperreneed M I T Freshman team and easrly worked our may to a 16 5 vrctory All twenty three members of the squad played as we took an early ll 7 halftrme lead Captarn Shrrxer set the pace w1th srx goals along wrth Osthermer Kal Agen 471 and Prper L1ttle Bjork Latta and Shannon vuth one aprece On May 2nd vue met Lavsrence our standrng rrval vshom vue also van qurshed 20 7 The oifensrve machrne rolled rn hrgh gear and at no tlme was thus game a contest Shrrver flrpped srx shots rnto the net and Osthermer scored 4 Latta 7 Shannon 2 Carney 2 and Amos and Lrttle one each On May 9th the team pushed on rts wrnnrng streak as rt crushed Tufts Freshmen 6 O Thrs game was slopp1ly played except for Farnsworth s efforts rn the nets Our scorers were Osthermer Latta Prper Carney Shannon and Agen On May 17th before a dance week end crowd the lacrosse team showed off tts best as rt ran over Governor Dummer 17 4 Before the spectators were settled rn therr places rm Osthermer won the face off prcked up the ball and scored Thrs led the parade of scorers as Osthermer scored three more trmes along wrth Shrrver C59 Agen C29 Irttle f7J and Bjork Latta Prper Shan non and Saxe one each The game of the season was on Mly 16th as we faced a strong Andover team Captarn Shrrver opened the scorrng halfvs ay through the first perrod and soon afterwards Carney tallred puttrng us ahead 2 0 But gorng rnto the sec ond half Andover rallred and put the game on even terms as they knotted the score 2 7 Two mrnutes rnto the fourth perrod Prper put us ahead 3 2 but shortly thereafter Andover agarn tred the game Wrth srx mrnutes to play Shrrver came through once more and put rn the wmnrng goal whrch was later supplemented by Prpers second It was then only a matter of a few mmutes of defensrve play by Mrddlesex before a lubrlant Red Team trooped rnto the gym wrth a 5 3 Wm P ge lxqll 11151 . , v I .A ' ' 4 A t . . . . ,L ' y 7 - I G r , A c ' c '... c ' ' . ' . . . . , . . 7 Y Q v 7 ' 7 7 5 . V. . 3 7 ' Y I I D V Y . 7 7 . - . . . . . Y , , . 7 ' , 7 5 3 7 ' . I. . 7 . - . 1 , ' - 7 ' 7 7 7 5 3 7 . - . A 3 3 3 ,, . a J ' 7 1 Y . . Y . . . - ' 9 1 4 - 1 9 3 1 , . ' 7 c 2 4 ' ' 7 ' e 4 V 7 . ' 4 7 - Y I - , . Y . Y A . . . , . 7 - 7 7 ' , C - 7 . C 7 , -5 ,Wr:,35?frf25S'T 't7T 7 f'S z.'vf 'f+f' , 5,1 -H -A Y V ' M, ' A ' 'fl 7 7 ' , . 4.1. 1 .- at 1 e g - ef Nflllllil ur x it HOOI C om okn BAASSAC H wr IIS 'M The team next traveled to Franklrn to meet a weak Dean ten An abrrdged vers1on of the usual startnng lrne up took the field on account of rnyurres but the substltutes gave a convmcrng show of the1r talents as Mnddlesex won 12 I For Mrddlesex Shrnver scored three Osthermer two Agen Lrttle P1per Shan non Bourqum Freeman, and Saxe, one each On May 25rd the team travelled to Exeter to play the second brg gamc But here our wrnmng skem of elght games was broken by a slcxlled Exeter telm lj is All durrng the Hrst half goalre Farnsworth was bombarded and newer had a chance as hms defense bogged dovsn At halftlme we trarled 12 3 I the second half we played Exeter almost evenly and rf lf hadn t been for those c lrly moments the game might have been a lxttle closer though vsc vu ere com pletely outclassed by thus team Our scorers vsere Osthcrmer C59 Shrrver Agen and Blork For the final game of the season Mlddlesex met Tabor But although Tabor was rough and aggresslve they couldn t stop Ilm Osthelmcr who scorcd fnve tnmes to lcxcl us to 1 14 7 trxumph along mth C xrney who scored tvucc 1nd Agen Prpcr Dmsmorc Wells Freeman wrth one lprccc vthnle gO1llL Farnsworth always seemed 1n the rrght place Thns was the best lacrosse team rn Mrdcllescx hlstory havmg a 9 l rccord Wt outscored our opponents l lv 56 Captun Shrwcr led the scorers mth 77 go 1ls and 7a assnsts followed by Osthermer who h ad 77 gorls md D lssxsts thc mo of them comblnxng to account for 41 per ccnt of thc tc 1m s gotls Gorlnc Flrnsxxorth mldc 95 sn cs out of 149 chances All ID Ill thc tclm dnd much Page Xiilfll an l - .. 1 c . . , . . ' .. , l . 1 . l , 1.44.41 Q' 7 - . .- I , U X 0 J . X A 5,57 an A ,A - f . ,lg R ' F , K W f . V 4 x f L,. 5 ' ' Aa A mfg , VI, , lee Q 1 4. r W L , Y ' x ' av Y V -. . ,. -' ' V a . ---4 . - u 7 -' x ' ,' A' , .s -V . K'-..' . ,fr , ' - -... Q. 3 1-'M' H 1 ' T- '- f .gfl .',' '. ' ,.. . I, - 'LE ' 1 1 1 a v a 1 ' 1 9 ' 1 ' ' A. ' 2 L ,l ' f I - ' ' r ' A ' , n . . , Y .1 Q 1, r ' . c c , , v , a ' a a , . . , . . v y . - . 9 K v .sz 2 , r 12 r ' r ' . , A . f . ,-, y ' . '. t Y Y 7 7 I L l L F, y 1 I ' ' 7 .A A , 4 ' A . A 5 I . . 4 ' V. ' . 1 - , . - . , . , , . V , . , , , . k c -, , c .. L 1. , 4 , . . . , . , . f v . v - -. . ,. , 1 . ' K. L 1 n L - f . . 1, - V . . f , - . -, . , ., - L K L V . L C Mlimmizsizx Scuooi. CoNcoRD. MASSACHUSETTS better than expected and this certainly was a very successful season. The bulk of the credit should go to Mr. Hulburdls hne tutelage, which has made Middle- sex a ranking power in New England lacrosse. Those awarded minor letters and silver lacrosse sticks were Captain Shriv- er, Captain-elect Van Meter, R. Farnsworth, Latta, Little, Bjork, Carney, De Gunzburg, W. Dinsmore, Hines, A. Wells, Babson, Bourquin, Shannon, and Agen. Page Nineti-Jez'er1 Nimm 1 st X St HOOI C oxc orm Mfxssfxc Hl stern Valedzctm y' Arlrh ess Lfxmhs AND Gi xreuib x A sehool is like a person with charteter and essence all its own lt em bodies the person ilities of the men w ho h rye tiught ind the boys who haye studied there eleh addition bringing something new eleh finished produet leaying something of his own behind The personality that is Middlesex h is eyolved from four essentials The first the recognition of the principle of religious freedom In this land where there are many churches Middlesex represents no one sect I stead it stimulates its students with a roster of brilliant chureh men whose sermons illuminate the basic concepts on which almost all agree The second the acknowledgment of 1 boys growing maturity By in creasing his liberties and responsibilities as he rises from one elass into an other this school gives a boy the experience necessary to handle college freedom wisely The third the relationship between students and faculty The masters make a boy feel free to come to discuss his problems or just to visit with And by the time he graduates he knows the lasting quality of these friend ships he has made Starting when the school was new and the masters were 1ll young and reeent college graduates this friendly feeling has eontinued to delight all those who haye come here The fourth the Middlesex Nltionll Sehollrship Plxn This pl tn has brought to school boys from mlny states w hose ideas reflect the varied back grounds of the sections of our country Through the friendships which are formed we learn that people everywhere are very mueh alike And after fifty years of being Middlesex continues striying toward its goal, to turn us out broadminded in religious matters yet certain of our basie beliefs, mature in using our privileges yet unsophisticated possessed of older friends on whom we shall rely aw akened to our own eommumty with others Today we leaye 1 sheltered campus and 1 life weye known and loved We go as we know we must into a world of ehanee and change and ehll lenge We elose 1 chapter of our liyes with listing memory to remind us what happiness has been ours Wr11Ax1A PIRCY P21 X nr tiff , A 5 3 , Q i . 1 I . 'X ' 1 3.': N ' ' r , Q ,' 1 2 - t , A i - . . ' - 2 'A A - l ' 2 2 2 ' ' ' 1 ' 1 ' I A 1' 2 1 .' ' , 7 1 , k V' Q C . Q . - 5 V. , . them. They take an interest in what he is doing and what he is thinking of. , . - I . V A 7 A g 2 a'A A 1 Q . -A 4 I 1 ' ' . Y l Y ' 71 0 , ' ' A -' 2 ' 2 ' 2 ' 2 . ' 2 2 2 ' , f a ' H - A 2 ' 2 '- VA A A A 2 J Y A 1 ' . f . cv ,Y , , k ,, ' . . , . Q I v rg f r ' ' 1' ' f Y ' r 2 . -I 2 2 I-A Y ' , , , 2 4 q v ' ' ' ' , i ' l T ' ' 2 A ' 1 - 7 ' ' A 1 - 'f. V' 1 ' , ' . I ,. 2 . 2 J, ,ze .111 - 45 Bf!DDl.1iSIEX Sc.Hoo1. CONCORD. B1ASSACQHLfSli'I I'S S. P1 Xzurl mm ff ,V ' I l ' 7 N f . X X NX N I 'A Q s ---1 Q . ,- X , . 5' -J. . - 'I A I, L ,gf . if ' f XIII i1i1,1-isiix Sciificii, Cloxcomi. MfxssAc,Hl's1iTTs THE HAYDN SOCIETY congratulates the l9Sl graduates ot Middlesex School upon their com- pletion ot a milestone in their lite-long education. With its publication of scores and phonograph records of the music of joseph Haydn and other masters ot the eighteenth century, The Haydn Society believes it is making an important contribution to the intellectual store-house from which such education is derived. The Haydn Society welcomes inquiries with regard to its proiects THE HAYDN SOCIETY 30 l-I unti ngton Avenue Compliments of A Friend Laffln s Express LEXINCTON BEDEORD BILLERICA CONCORD MA NARD THE ACTONS Tl-IE SUDBCRYS l LINCOLN lC9 Concord Road Bedford Mas I3 U Boston l5 Massachusetts ALMY 6- CO Insurance Agenlss for Every Type of ProI:ecI:lon 280 UNION STREET NEXN BEDFORD MASS i i O . Q ' v v ' ani V 5 . . S, Tclcphffe LE Si 'STY- '.x f nc H.'4ri.lr:.' Xlmm I SI x Sf HOOI xc om XI us xc HI s UNITED INVESTMENT COUNSEL oo ated ZIO NEWBURY STREET BOSTON MASS Alflllated vvnflw UNITED BUSINESS SERVICE Together Iurmslrwmg sound advice to Investors Throughout the naruon smce IQZO Address all mquurues to C LLOYD THOMAS Vnce Preslderwf Moab IS my vvaslw por over Psa ms IDB 9 C mplsmems of A Grandfather CONGRATULATIONS TO THE SENIOR CLASS THE OFFICIAL SCHOOL RINGS EOR MIDDLESEX SCHOOL ARE FURNISHED BY THIS ESTABLISHMENT Barley Banks Cr Bnddle ee S To os IZIS CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA 3 PA I U ll I I X01 , , Coi MIITS lrlfjr r Y I li. Edom will I cast out my shoe. I . I f Y jew I rs, Sulversrwrlvs, tal rw r lg V , Esfalvluslweul 'S32 'Jax In ,wflwfl .ml 1: hlllllil 1 wx Sc Hom, Cjruw umm Nlass,-xrr11's1f'1'1 Crwmpllmcntz of los. F. MEYER co. CEO. B, MEYER President I lou ton Tom Compliments ot T e Glendale Coal Co The Massachusetts Archaeological Society lnc COMPLIMENTS PROUVOST LEFEBVRE Er CO 11 I A- f 1' r- .: , ca . v . . . , . fE'NjfUAI'-. L 3.N'lTH gr- WMV' NlIIJI7I.lQSIiX Sr.Hoo1- Coxctomu, MAssAc1Hl'sI2TTs Compllments of A Friend COmp mm of NETTU 8m WHEATUN Inc Eastern Refractorles, Inc S S Plerce Co BOSTON Stores IU Boston Belmont Brookline and Newton MAIL AND TEL PHONE ORDERS Establ shed l929 Wholesale BEEF LAMB PORK VEAL and POULTRY LA 3 3770 lB North Street Boston Ma I U H 'I flf . . . I . l ERR, ,Nr .I . X., ,ii WE? Q5 . . . . X C 7 'JJ mf lrmlru. 411, ' 'us 'X1IIbIuI,l'xI x Sc :mm Cnxr :mlm NI,umcI11's1f1 1x mp! r G THE Compluments of A Friend emmf Each sw vmpl O w The Music Shop J TVEET CONLOPD H MACUNE BROS INLOPPOQATED CHI YJLER PLYPWGUTH ournal Press JQHNSON QUTPQAI D 5 HFADOLJAI TH S POI h QIAT O mu rwcfmri Q 1 xww mfs W 1 ,lr V 1 3 , Cf -m rts mf I AXXIN S 4 ', K x I l Pm ramgnww, Hg,-1 -- :hu 'Amin N i I 'XMUQJN l ,'r,.'vur:fx I I 4 x , Ffcdrxis AH Kpl-mix .H11 1' A S wx r , ' W x -- .' I . U ,uf 1 J X Q' Q Q ' , , V In lf' ffm M JF , 1 aww L' H f 1 V.a'f7C-P STVWTT T r. ,1. Vivx INIIDDLI Sl x Sc H001 Cow only Nifsssfxc HUSI Tis f? STAINLESS STEEL WATER RESISTANT CASE ' ' vig., speclolly Imported fig: sf T7 lewel movement '7 0-' sweep second hand rum U ll rodlum dlol P, I On 540 0 ' ' x 0,52 S 2 Sl , 9, TTCVC Yer CRUVP at Low QOWANY I 'gf' 'rfb' .H .r 41 74 qi STORE HOURS 9 30 AM ro SOO P NA llncludlnq SJlurdcf5l Q W Telephone COmmonweollh 6 2970 3' Daly Poultry Farm CONCORD MASS Fresh Eggs an Dressed Poultry Best Wnshes to the Members of the M A A Peter Rutherford Marden EXPLORER ADVENTURER LECTURER I'.1,l Un Ilnmful nfl I-llc iff' , . .L Q fi '. -1:55-1-11.. A . -21F1?gf-1:4- 5' .f.7,:..11if., .'-- 4. i- , -nudes.-- .if:1i:52::iQ 1, -app 01, -gf, --- ,.:::f4:i1siQ'ifQ 41?-Zi. ?:ga,:g::,2'g5A - 1,504.25 152453. .7- - - - .:,'4:1w::a.-eww' ., ,L:.,,ga. ,on .,'.i . . ,ggiiiii ,. 225' ny' 'l.1 0oZ' vo? 907' ' fif O 3 Q D 1 .7 -.40 . y- .z- af .55,2Z?2g.:i' se7' I 00 'Op A IO? 4'1 f. as---.gg-f.. I - . . . gs, -I-wp... l.v,- 0: .. 1 n'Q . . . . . 059221: to r4'IANlL'l' man 4PI'1'I lmn, , 0.111651 , li s t lu lung. ruggrzll , , oag'u'ff'e . . . . ' -.22gQ null,-lm ul Illlllllllbliil ' Rl - , I A K . ll'l'Xl,' lllldllly um .u'1'l1- ' X , X Y ,Q ' . . .' ff X MI K SiT.ig In-'v. 1 lnlx ut, lll't'XI' N. 5 10. 1 - f ff' -3' ' ' lr 1 l-ll I .X -41. , .rt nl. rr. .r f N' , 4. X '.2g. DY Qi l' ks., fi ll 1' Shun n ur mul sue l r ' XX '. ' r l l 1 ll ,- N -T r I ' rf. A Nj ll l ., N E , f 1 94 ff . I lv X f G' r 4! -fir' '7 l 4,1 .- X Q . 4'Q1 ' ,',.,,H,,,,l9 ..7,. ., :,, - '- fi53QQ 31 : Z S .:9y2:::.-knife! f , , . .gf .1111 , y,f .,2' Ifmrmwl lIl.1lllVl lnll S.'rr'rl,Imllfrf1 I' 'di' rr-Z?'J:.s u r 4' , .,,, .i.,,,.,, .,4. 145725522 pf -7 QS' Effgg. 77' z . . 1 ,, . ' f l , ,- - :?? 7SZ7 17' ' H4 2 .. Q- ,, -. M 1 l l l I n r l I I I r l l l l muisxix 5cHoo1, Cxmcsosm. Mfxssfxc IIIWI- II Tl-IE A8307 WORSTED COMPANY Compl uments of the General Baking Co f2 Bunker I-IIII Street Boston BEST WISHES FROM PEABODY a d 2 an ICE CREAM he to CI W the Nations tavorlte dessert Be Sure ITS HOODS For Quality N eo v O Is a alth o as eII as J . 9 Y I n d 3 Mmnuzstax SCHOOL Coxcoun. MAssAcgHusr2TTs THE ROAD TO SUCCESS At commencement tsme your thoughts are naturally of success In your past accomplnshments and the future As you have dvscovered the road to success as traveled slowly and on toot Each mule therefore stgnnfncant for at brxngs you that much closer to your destnnatuon You have now completed an nm portant part of your yourney and the reyvardnng years Ile ahead of you At thus happy tame Amerlcan Optical Company extends to each of you con gratulatuons and best vvlshes There are many degrees of success and many yardstncks of measurement Your own defunttuon we belneve ns the one you must llve by Now and for the future w wush you the best of all thungs Amerlcan ptlcal Pu Om lllzmfref dll! Seuu l X l l Y Qsx ' ' in - , A, ,is ' , . U- , 'e O 0 rN1lDDI-liSIiX Sc1Hoo1- CONCORD. hiASSACQHlf9IiTTS THE DAIRY DeNORMANDlE and VERRILL Mu k Cream Ice Cream Telephone Concord 104 Concord Massachusetts Rbbeff ROIIIHS Crmzfvlzzzzuzlt fl SPECIALISTS IN BLAZERS BRAND IOO West End Avenue New York 23 N Y C!-XNNED FRUITS Stacey and Vassallo OWNED VEGETABLES FRESH FRUIT5 AND VECETABLES BOSTON MASS 6 South Market Street Boston Mass Q5 ch I U H I .I - - - n . N . A Q f V i 5 ' S I a ' Y l Cos, SC, CCSCCCCC ce, 1 i t Ffllif C0-v INC- r rms corFEEs REL1sHEs , P ey. s tc Mnifil ex S oot M11m1,11s1-,x 5qsHUU14 Cxmrcmlm. NIASS.-XC.liL'NI:'I I'N Compliments of a Friend in Lima, Peru Compluments of HOIIIS S Howe Cfffzplzllzefzu of WATCHMAKER and IEWELER I9 Mann Street Concord Massachusetts Nellle M Cralg FLOWERS CIFTS and CREETINC CARDS -H Mann Street Concord LUMBER COMPANY Opposnte B G M Sfatnon CONCORD MASS . f 4 K 0 Pug: Um' llumfrnf .wJ Nm: X1IIII.i 1x 511 1 C, , 1411 NIA .1 111 I-Il Spaagae gfeobzic eonqzany NORTH ADAMS MASSACHUSETTS XIIIIIJLI Sl x Sc HOOI Low oRIa Nixssac HL Sl Il VISIT II-IE WHITE CIIPBOARD INN BREWERS OF Mmuteman Chevrolet Croft Cream Ale an Concord Massachusetts Ca mecock A!e Number Thlrty Meef-ng Sfreef The CROFT BREWING co CHARLESTON 5 C 165 TERRACE STREET A QIJEST HOUSE UOSTON 20 MAS r and Mrs john WaIIIs Dunn I Il II I II I , I X Compliments of I v Q J IV1 . I 'JE I nr zIfI.II IMI .IIII rr En 'Xlllmlul I xl N' Nc IIUUI. ., .x, Cloxcrmrw. Klux-xr mv '1 are Call 894 It's BILL'S TAXI At Your Door ALWAYS DEPENDABLE Operated by Wrllram H Towler Congratulations to The Class of l95l OSTHEIMER AND COMPANY Insurance Phrladelphua Compl :ments of Mnddlesex Mutual Fure Insurance Company C Appleby Insurance Agency W AL lllgl l AP Vxfaldeh Slreel C pc rd lX 1 S I I BAR A RANCH Encampment, Wyoming Spend an :deal famrly summer rm Wvomrng s cool mountams on our 20 OOO acre Irvesfock ranch Arrdruw Arwde. rum Myth Lar Establish cl l903 I lr lvrlcrwgllgrr nr tr' 1 f x ' I lllll.'lVTY T x,Vxrvw,xrw CLlJFIi N L ii JCE L' rl rn flr S A V I T lvprwrrrw ' l mmzwix Sf Hum, Com cum. AI.mmcO11L's1:1A1 Compliments of GEORGE C MOORE WOOL SCOURING MILLS I l'.z,f Um flllfllflrhf .m.f 'I furlwu Xlllrlmllxlx Xtllmwl fnxrwll Ix Compllments of A Friend KWSQYM W Ll UNOD Richardson Drug Company I . . f fi,b,, 9 f z V 1, , pw' , . -f-Q, ' - .lo H1131 rr ,1 3 r ur w I x ZEX LR' Q' K ,-- L ADL ,Nt N . Hx! ,fem M-.uit F1 :X - Q' Nllmm NI X wr HUHI. f,fJNffJliI1. Nine.-xr Hl NI lla Compliments of A Father Qcmppmemg mf Compluments of Ferrara Shoe Repalr The Macrae Co Inc HNF VATUZVXLS C NVWUUH STVQQT ocfv Nrrro xowwwswwp CU CQ'd M Ssmhugettg I9 Walden Street Concord COmDf1mGf1fS Of Wllham C Kurk IEWELER Up To Date Barber Shop 5 Minn Strccf Vva dcn Street Concord Concord I U ll l . . o, o T PSY W .- n ' 1 xfxt' ,Q Rf , r r l Q c Y 1 . . . ' o ' k xy - Q r Maw 'J 1 HL r'l'..x'L, ,I'.,f f'.'1L', M11m1-1i5l5x Sc ,HOOL Cox: on lm. MAssAcgH L'SIi'l l'S I-IAND IVIADE GIFTS and Over SI O3 and OO nder SPINDLE CITY CRAFT CENTER 3IZ Hnldrefh Bldg -'IS Merrnmack St Lowell Mass Tel Lowell 452II UNUSUAL AND INTERESTINC The Gift with a Flarr Made with Great Care JEWELRY TOYS RUCS NOVELTIES KNITTED ARTICLES yn Consngnors Vnsntors Welcome Compliments of the The Mlddlesex Concord Co operative Bank Inglggkuhgn fgf Saymgs l co porated Ma ch -I I83S CONCORD MASSACHUSETTS SVT O80 3 C For a I laIrCLJT sde ts f L, coc an Sur The way your l'1a1r Should be Cul' 5 M SL T e Mull Dam Barber Shop ISETE INCENERE Age cy to Sa ngs Bank Lie insurance 4, L I I2 II I X811 H . . . . ' o k- . 0 o . n r r , Savmgs Services cl Home L Em rm I ' for Rei rm o Aon rl d round: 9 . - Towns Th: is 3 urual Savmgs Bank, II profits aCCumulTA lor the ber1eIlT J Il Depnsrtors h . n r vi I Rlgm next . rl, rh' Crfncrlml Blwtslwop 'JJ nt nu. 11.11 .lm x un Mmmr SI x Sc Hoor C oxromn EIASSACHI sr TTC YOUTII O H rs not mncssmlx 1 trmt ol llc IS 1 stitc mlm It ns not 1 m 1ttLr of rua chu S ru rps IDL wc mas II 1 ol lIDlQII1iIlOfl 1 xrgor of tht tmotrons rt IS 1 trtshmss ol L dup sprmgs or lrln S1111 thqt tclls rn word md putturc ol 1ll tht hwpps memornte ol hy gona yL1rS A l-.LQps1lxt rn vxhrth vw thoroughly Lnjoy our wrt tu LLSIQUIUQ 1m wrmtms, o your puwm 1t1on t 1t rt m1y 1ttr1ct1xtl3 portrq md long prascrxt thtst UICIUOFILS THE H COCK PRESS bolzoox Romwsox Prmmz fwnnefm LEXINGTON MASSACHUSETTS rm Cr 1 l? I Nom' loo lltt Um H1111 11 1 1 L f 55 UT '. 1 1 'in ' ' All--it'1 1-of Al. ' 1 1- AH-'-'li. All' 1 l sulfl- l-Q ' is ll tcmrcr of thc will, il quality A the 'akuzh .1 'V 4 Ti 1' 'th' Anal. Zlfl expression of youth is the School Anm111l-11 kccp- . ' ' ' 1 ' ' -1 1 1 J' A vi .,.2x. -J. 2-.' 1 -1 y. L y,' fl-l'l'-k.k'2 l1 L' fr ll 14 -hz ' 1'1 1'1 L -A - Y T v ' -A I rr l ' ' 7 I' r 5 ut thc M11l1llc2cx Sul ool I 5 ' 5 k l. f 'Jfr gl ,Ulf S 'IUllI'L'I, ,Ximmursrix Sr rump Cnxf mm, Aifxsxrxf IIINI 'I'I Newmk Plain Qanwpamf 50 CHURCH STREET NEW YORK CITY Manufacturers ot Gypsum Products Smce IRIS Battle Ground we cor-:Conn NATIONAL BANK CONCORD MASSACHUSETTS COVIRLETE BANKINC SERVICE Comphments of Holder Coal Co CONCORD IVIASS Complomcnts of A Frncnd 1 H BS Maw Street F Alu . I '.L ,f .,: . ,I .I . .I E f Xlllvllll wx Sf IIUUI, Cow nun, Nllvxwxr lll'Sli'l l N MOTOR SUPPLY INC Automotlve Parts and Equipment COMPLETE MACHINE SHOP SERVICE ZS MASSACHUSETTS AVE CAMBRIDGE 39 MASS Klrlcland 2224 Lawton Applmnce Co Healys Package Store ELECTRIC RAIN ES REERICERATORS VACUUM CLEANERS TAELE APPLIANCES We Servuce What We Sell Teleplwo 3-I6 W 7 Walden Street Concord Mas Thrift Cleaners Cleansung ot All Descrnptxons Vxfalden Street Concord Mass phd Q o oce D oo WINES LIOUORS BEER Zl Walden Street Concord Mass Hals und Bembruc T e Class ot l I I2 ll 1 l X Q O , v S lun V l Clrw I ornesnc and lm trterl I Tel 279 l 1 VTU ' . . 3. g ' ' I l ! , A, L L L , 1 - ' h Y . to A . . n 'S Tele gnb C ncfprd lli 'Jet fit 1,ff.fft.' ,.'f1. lllwlllff' Xfll f1fxS 11 Cf' 1X1 W 1 7!f43if1,in.7 you Jucceid an qawz. along use fsigfnwazf of life 7fae fbaapen Ga can Jlapecfale, lf'fa44acfzw1eZZ4 AIIIJIJLIZSISX SIHOOI. Coxrorzo. M,xssACHI5s12'r'rs Complmwents of Complnmcrwf I Concord Lumber Corp THE COUNTRY STORE LoweII Road CONCORD IVIASSACH USETTS C compamenfs of A Frnend Macone Sporhng Goods BICYCLES HOBBY KITS FISHING TACKLE I P NOURSE NC IODDOS re Post Off ce CONCORD MASSACHUSETTS Comphments of A Frnend Muffy Cr Tlrrell Inc BUICKS THE VILLAGE STORE IO Walden Street woooSToCI4 VERMONT Concord Mass 1 o Il If fl I ' 3 o I T I If-IO I I I I I 'Y H' 'i1 7 I C -Y W --YYY - 4 I I I I . . . I . RIB Maw Srfeer Concord, Mass. I 5 , I . I I , . 'Jew III IHIITLI .IIII YIIIIIT- . Klum! I Nl X wr llflfll LITTLE BY LITTLE To the Future of 51 Compliment I C L Perera Llese 84 Smethurst,I c naw We bac uve DODGE PLYMOUTH 1 I Cram www, X1 XNNXI mv Il The Woodstock Inn XIVOGDSTOCK, VERNAOFN-lT Blemed IS The man who sgomg Thr ugh the xale of mxsery use a Well and the poos are filled wlth wafer DRUGS Clough and Shackley APOTHELARIES El: abetlw Arden T ulctrc IALJN 5TRE T I VHAH v Q k ' . if for . I l S O . Q fs ' , I1 , I z o 0 v 3 Znfefcr D Snw rL.f:Y Trimuu-1' 1 Xlikw. L3i,3.i ' 'll I L' l '- ' , , ,- - f ,1 C3 do 'LJ lj llb fig 'K LQ, -,QTVITC - ' 1 l Lz'X4n,CY ' ' lf 1517 mm: X S1111 xcomm Nlunc VANDERHOOF HARDWARE Vlano Motor Company HARDXNARE and K ITCHENWARE PAINTS VARNISHES BRUSHES Ma an Street CONCORD MASS Compliments of ARDWA MPA 1035 Anderson s Phone Concord for Food O Compliments of The Powder Horn I-lnstonc Colonial Inns Colomal Inn Plymouth Rock Hotel Concord Plymouth Mass Mass LORINC CRIMES IR xl Ma 1 I U llllll ffl XIII ,islet Q mol. Co ' . L , A Hl'Nlfl I'N Call Concord lg Call Plvmouth 530 RVVE 4 c o ' rl Y L ' ' I Walden stu.-et, lnncord, ma l. V phone con. i ' , . l OO Clcncrf n. gcr 'LISA In nm 11. .llll ' 114 Il Hu nluuixgix Sc fmmq Umm mmm. FXI.xw,xcr11'NIJ11w Compliments of A Friend ALUMNI PARENTS FRIENDS OF Compliments of THE SCHQOL A Fflefld read the bugger and better A N V I L N1IIJlJLESIiX Sc,Hoo1. Cloxcoalsa. NI,'XSSAfQHl,'NIi'I l'5 Lowell, Mass MAKERS OF DlSTINCT1VE MODERN AND MAPLE BEDROOM FURNITURE Cornplumenfs of First In Marine Navngatlon First an Advanced Photo Radar Techniques Fnrst In New Anrcraft Devices Y I'.1g1 Um' Illfmlu-rl rzmf 'I 11 wllvfzn 97? KEITH MARTIN STUDIO 6 MAIN STREET CONCORD, MASS. PHOTOGRAPHER FOR THE YEARBOOK and CLASS OE 1951 1111 X 51 Hi Nl ORIJ ... -- 2 xi Iii .ifiivg NS 5514 25 fig 91N Cflfff, ix 42-lx 1876 7.-elf-s.. .Ziff-f-'-,S-2-,.'N' - .f-R57- JOHN C PAIGE G COMPANY BOSTON NEW man Pomuno Los Annum! U ll I ll 1 NS-N H1 Nl! .lixlzf , 101. Cui . Me, . , 24,- -,.v,.,..... -Y Y i. 7 Q, T,..:i,., ' 7,-.3 -.... ,....-Q., ,..,-.. 9 ,if A z - 'N - U 5 .4 'p F4 5 1 -.- 4 Z E 5 R K ': - : -. 3 -4 -' I ' Z -l X WL' -1 : E Q Z E T' fy -gc: 1 : . ' :JJ :QN f --..... , 3 5 3 ' ....- -Q .... . : . -.. 5- ,-1. -1 , l a ..-. - . - -Li voq , :TL - -r- W... Vi:'f': pls ,R--,: TT. .,,o ' , ' l M ,ff is -, f -ZTZPQQ tv 1 - i f .....N,. f:, ...I' ,,- . NEPBKRTA.KNEKLAND GERKLD HENDERSON JOHN F. WITSUN HENRY W. KNEELIND KENNKTPLW FIUNCE l'.1,w 1,4 lrmfff. .IHA ' urn 1 w L I . ',Il DEDICATED WITH REVERENCE TO CIGARETTES AND THE BUTT BOYS IN TIIE CLASS OF 51 4 A 7 4 L 4 x 3 H ,K , uf. ' 1 ., . !' i 4 'C , Pi. 1 1 l


Suggestions in the Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) collection:

Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 57

1951, pg 57

Middlesex School - Yearbook (Concord, MA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 75

1951, pg 75


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