Phillips Academy - Pot Pourri Yearbook (Andover, MA)
- Class of 1944
Page 1 of 222
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 222 of the 1944 volume:
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W G 2 ' E 1 1 1 S L 5 1 1 . 1 1 g 1 ' Roll William Reed, Jr. '26 John Winston Graham '36 Robert Torrey Thompson '36 James Ross Gillie '31 Walter Charles Wicher, Jr. '39 Raymond Allen'Keeney '37 Edward Augustus Dunlap, Jr. '36 Robert lwacartney Flanders '36 David McGregor lwersereau '36 Joseph Edward Otis, 3d '41 John DeWitt '29 Philip Williams, Jr. '37 Frederick Randolph Grace '26 John Clifford Cobb '38 Alonzo Graham Hearne '38 Henry Francis Chaney, Jr. '36 Malcolm Gardner Main '37 Frederick Johnson Shepard, 3d '38 Frederick James Murphy, Jr. '35 Richard Parker Howard '37 William Connor Laird '32 George Henry Bartlett Green, 3d '36 Lucius Townshend Wing '31 Edward Pitkin Poynter '40 Thomas Cochran, 2d '41 f f r fi fx 'Q 2- x, x 1 Q-QE' f - x n Joan , of Honor Harold Knight Hughes, Jr. '30 Donald Francis Snell '40 Charles Orlando Jenkins, Jr. '31 Roger Coleman Kiley, Jr.. '40 ' Parker Crowell Snell '38 James Dudley Emerson '36 Albert Whitfield Hawkes, 1Nl.D. '25 John Creighton, Jr. '28 John Harold Richardson '32 Edward Salisbury Bentley, Jr. '39 Warner Bflarshall, Jr. '26 Raymond Barnard Miles, M.D. '17 Robert Keen Barron '41 Harry Edward Dow '10 Frank Thomson Leighton '06 Richard Gardner Eaton, M.D. '88 William Alexander Adams, Jr. '42 Hovey Seymour '38 Nathaniel Donald Gamage '40 Richard Traill Chapin '31 George William Papen, Jr. '39 Robin Scully '36 Alfred White Paine '20 Roger Dudley Brown '30 William David Rees '40 Seymour Chamberlain Hammond '24 . ww,wk,,.-Q, 'Q' + 'S H Q R mis ?1w,:,t.m: ::M,q,1,,, . , ,g. ,',,, , . . . . -. V - 1 - -f -- Y- - - ' ' ' , , , , .. . .-. - - y nz ggxzxarta. ::L:-'. . - X.: ' ,. .-.,-M.f,:-.:' z,:-'-.-'J-'----W 'HN' , 'git , 1 1 a '-'5'5',5 ',' '45 'Q'-' ' '- YF' -011-A' '75f1 ?:'i-23 '3f? P 5 ,-4pam:yy.X333g'-QiSIfF'15g:g?141g-54, - , -, ,.gJ.:g.g.,.y,.pf-pt-,-,g,5.g.1,g, -- , X f,n,l1.f.'.vJn.-!w-'I' ' ' ' ' ' ' Q, Q. v A .L 5,1 K2--4' ' ,wx 1. f. . ngg 1,','g-f- ,K- 1 , ' Jw .. 'L iz ' I -1' 5 13 '3'l'3 4 'M X ' -ix. H'-1.45'R.tE4 92-54 ' .swawvnwf an -1, f '45.ii,+.' gf. ,352-1iiLio3FQdEr:1.:E -qgnbzizgfzf m1:,?,',w,.m:-mmpg!,,5r!?,2.f:,?.w,y:::!.w115,. f ,, , . ...-4-.-1 , s, . A. .- 1 . . ,. 1 r . ,ff Memorial Tower lpn .. X. X N Y x 1 had THE POT PQURRI 1944 vfzgq-1:55 - Z.:-Qgfggmifufz---,zf 1 au - , - - 3.4.1-,..,......a-11-vru-.Ln Gisonou F1zANk1,1N l 1a1-:Nt:11 Mr. French was appoi11ted to the stall ol' the school in 19o7, and has been head of the French Department since 1934. He is himsell' a graduate ol' Phillips Acad- emy, having received his diploma in 1897, and has consequently been very active in Alumni circles as 'llI'C2lSUI'CI' ol' the Alumni Association. For many years he has been head ol' the Faculty Committee lor Grad- uation, and has arraiiged the Commence- ment exercises. During his years ol' teach- ing French his students have lound him to be pleasant and understanding, at the same time maintaining a high quality ol'instruc- tion. We should like to thank him now, on behalf ol' ourselves and all the students he has helped in former years. Retiring ROY EVERETT SPENCER Mr. Spencer was appointed to the lac- ulty in 1917, and has remained a member of the English department ever since that time. He has always taught the younger boys, mostly the Lowers and Juniors, Throughout his years at P. A., he has begn both a competent and a sympathetic teacher. He is retiring after a career of which he may well be proud. Our thanks to him for all he has contributed to Phillips Academy, Wai i Dedication DEAN LESTER E. LYNDE The oldest member ofthe faculty in point of service, Dean Lynde was appointed in the fall of IQOI. He was a mathematics teacher of some distinction, when under Dr. Stearns he changed to the adminis- trative side ofthe school as Headmaster's assistant. Dr. F uess appointed Mr. Lynde to his present position of dean when he became Headmaster in 1933. Since then he has had charge ofthe curriculum. As Dr. Fuess's second in commandn he has coordinated the various instructional fields. We should like to dedicate this Por POURRI to him at his retire- ment to express our gratitude to him for his many years of faithful service to Phillips Academy. School Spirit B ' 3 art of the student body of Phillips Academy is a great ein p rivile e it any time but it is especially so when a l1v1ng school spirit, 7 Enexpgcted and inexplicable, pervades the atmosphere and binds the 7oo students together by some mysterious t1e. This year, in spite of the imminence for most of us of entry into one of the services, in spite of the monumental forces which have struggled noisily around us for the past few years, there has appeared within the school this strange bond, which, petty differences notwithstanding, has made the Class of ,44 an outstanding one. One felt the force of this school spirit on the trip to Exeter last fall, with the band leading a mile-long line of raucous enthusiasts up into the enemyis citadel, and also on the dreary trip home, when despite our defeat there was little sign of bitterness or despondency. Again on the evening of our victory in the VV ar Bond Contest, the intangible, yet very real bond among us was felt. The chapel bell announcing our victory woke the whole campus, until the Royal Blue was echoing all the way from the Senior Quadrangle to Williams Hall. On many occasions throughout the year our spirit has manifested itself, although, caught in the mad whirlwind of events spiraling toward graduation and the consequent uncertainties, few of us have stopped to realize how much we take it for granted. For that is the essence of school spirit, confident dependence on your fellows with- out fear of being let down. No one can explain why this spirit has been given in such large measure to the Class of '44, but it has and we can be thankful for it. I ' . ts constructive force has kept us from degeneration under the pressure of events. It is typical of the student body that we do take such things fOr granted and shy away from discussing them, but here in THE Por - POURRI, our last accomplishment as an undergraduate class, is the PYOPCT P1366 to 1'1O'EC it in passing so that later in life we may look back and remember it. lfil f WEN 3 gl' Q f Awiifmx . 1 A nf T N I Q a s FACULTY up A i' V .,..,,,. E., .... in ,..b -E-fi,-.. ---.mf-nv.-r V' 4 .. ,,.4. f. .- 'rw . - .. . E - - :E-11'f?'i'f.':i3u 5 T 15 '1'37 !'5l'5Si ? :: ::' ' 'iivivo .?12'5iii5i'E'f'm5 1 -, ' A- ': ' wb- mari:'f'-.f1f-M--naw-A--A 2 1 Mus 'X l x 1, K X M T. V3ii3gQ3gk7,,k 1-e::5QEig55ijQEffi31 - - ' A' In Memoriam ALFRED LAWRENCE RIPLEY '73, AAI., l.l,.lJ. The passing of Mr. Alfred Lawrence Ripley on Oclohei' ii' io ll thi ol' Rl was .m. plii, 'Nw' ' -l- deeply mourned by all concerned with Phillips Academy. Mr. Ripley grzuliizi led lioni .Xmlogyer in 1873. He was elected to the Board ofTrustees in IQO221IlCl relirecl only ll li-xv iooiilhs helore his death. He was President ofthe Board prior to the election ol'fXl1'. lli-may l.. Slilllsoll to lhzll office. For over forty years he had served not only the school, hui his Vtllllllllllllll' exlreinelli well. Concerning Mr. Ripley, Dr. Fuess said: Nl-le had a prolooncl inlloeoee ow-i' the polieies el Phillips AcadefI1Y duriHg the Period in which hc served holh as ineinlmei' :mtl l'i'esitlen1 oil lllf' Board of Trustees? l8l is-a.,., 1 I H A-V W p K WMWYAK-gimp-Y ,fn-' ' ', Trustees HENRY LEWIS STIMSON, LL.D., President Elected 19O5 WASHINGTON, D. C. CLAUDE MOORE FUESS, PH.D., LITT.D., L.H.D., Clerk ANDOVER Elected 1933 JAMES COULD, A.B., Treasurer Elected 1939 FRED TOWSLEY MURPHY, M.D. Elected 19O2 PHILIP LORINC REED Elected 1933 LLOYD DE WITT BRACE, S.B. Elected 1933 FRANCIS ABBOT GOODHUE, A.B. Elected 1935 ABBOT STEVENS, A.B. Elected 1935 HENRY WISE HOBSON, D.D. Elected 1937 ROBERT ABBE GARDNER, A.B. Elected 1938 JAMES PHINNEY BAXTER, III, PH.D., LL.D. Elected 1942 WILLIAM EDWARD STEVENSON, A.B. Elected 1943 LINDSAY BRADFORD Elected 1943 E91 ANDOVER DETROIT, MICH. DEDHAM BOSTON HEWLETT, L. I., N. Y. NORTH ANDOVER CINCINNATI, OIIIO CHICAGO, ILL. WILLIAMSTOWN NEW YORK, N. Y. NEW YORK, N. Y. DR. CLAUDE M. FUESS I 101 Facult I Ofhcers of Administration CLAUDE MOORE FUESS, A.M., PH.D., LITT.D., L.H.D. JAc:K', HCLAUDIEH UB. DY, Headmaster on the Cecil F. P. Bancroft Founda- tion. Appointed 1908. ALFRED ERNEST STEARNS, A.M., LITT.D. L.H.D., LL.D. Headmaster Emeritus. LESTER ALFRED LYNDE, A.M. Dean on the Alfred Lawrence Ripley Founda- tion. Appointed 1901 . JAMES RUTHVEN ADRIANCE, A.B. SPIKE,' Director of Admissions and Assistant Dean. Appointed I935. GEORGE GRENVILLE BENEDICT, A.M. HBENNYH G. GF, Registrar and Instructor in English. Appointed 1930. Reappointed 1933. 'PHILIP KIRKHAM ALLEN, A.B. CEP. KIQ3 Assistant Registrar and Instructor in English. Appointed 1936. 3 RICHARD SAWYER PIETERS, A.M. HSALTYH Assistant Registrar and Instructor in Mathe- matics. Appointed 1938. ROBERT EDWARD MAYNARD, S.B. HUNCLE BOB HRAPID ROBERTH Excusing Officer and Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed 1931. ALAN ROGERS BLACKMER, A.M. HACID AIX, Instructor in English on the Jonathan French Foundation and Director of the Summer Session. Appointed 1925. JAMES GOULD, A.B. CCJIM93 Treasurer. Elected 1939. HENRY HOPPER Associate Treasurer and Comptroller. Appointed 1915. I ALICE THATCHER WHITNEY AI.IcEH Recorder. Appointed IQO2. Latin and Greek Departments LIONEL DENIS PETERKIN, A.M. '6GAIUs JULIUS Director of the Latin Department on the Eliza- beth Milbank Anderson Foundation. Appointed 1932. FRANK MAY BENTON, A.B. HPORKYH Instructor in Latin on the John Charles Phillips Foundation. Appointed 1918. 'KALSTON HURD CHASE, PI-1.D. Instructor in Greek. Appointed 1934. JOHN KINGSBURY COLBY, A.M. Instructor in Latin. Appointed 1940. HORACE MARTIN POYNTER, A.B. HCOLONELH Instructor in Latin on the Samuel Harvey Taylor Foundation. Appointed 1902. REGINALD ISAAC WILFRED WESTGATE, A.M., PH.D. GCDOC93 Instructor in Latin. Appointed 193 5. English Department EMORY SHELVY BASFORD, A.B. EMORY Acting Director of the English Department and Instructor in English. Appointed 1929. XWILLIAM HAYES BROWN, A.B. Instructor in English. Appointed 1938. ALLAN THOMPSON COOK, A.B. COOKIE Instructor in English. Appointed 1932. DUDLEY FITTS, A.B. HFUDLY DUDLEYM Instructor in English. Appointed 1941. 'On leave of absence in Military Service. f WALTER GIERASCH, A.B. CGGUSPJ CCWALT!3 Instructor in English and Religion. Appointed 1941 . 'INORWOOD PENROSE HALLOWELL, A.B. Instructor in English. Appointed 1934. ROGER WOLCOTT HIGGINS, A.M. HROGER THE CODGERN Instructor in English. Appointed 1933. HART DAY LEAVITT, A.B. GCTHE HEART,, Instructor in English. Appointed I 937. FRANCIS BERTRAND MQQARTHY. A.B- UBLAGK Mac - Instructor in English. Appomtlid 1941 ' RJOHN BROMHAM HAWES, 31111. A-H Instructor in English. Appointed 1933- Reap pointed 1939. ALEXANDER HAY LEHMANN, J R-1 AB- Instructor in English. Appointed 1943- EDWARD LESLIE MAYO, A.M. Instructor in English. Appointed 1943. SCOTT HURTT PARADISE, A.M. ScoTTY', I Instructor in English. Appointed 1924. Reap- pointed 1926. ROY EVERET'I' SPENCER, A.B. Instructor in English. Appointed 1917. FREDERIC WILLIAM HEATON S'1'O'I I', A.B. Tim GRIEA'l' WI-Il'l'I'1 FA'1'1-11-LR Instructor in English and Public Speaking. Appointed 1912. NORMAN ETIENNE VUILLEUMIER, A.B. Norm Instructor in English. Appointed 1938. GEORGE BRADFORD WEATHERBEE, A.M. ' 'G12oRc1111: Instructor in English. Appointed 1942. LAWRENCE EDWARD WILLARD, JR., A.B. L'W11.1.11-1 Instructor in English. Appointed 1942. History Department ARTHUR BURR DARLING, PH.D. CCDOCS? Director of the History Department and Instruc- tor in American History on the Ammi Wright Lancashire Foundation. Appointed IQI7. Reap- pointed 1933. 'FFREDERICK SCOULLER ALLIS, JR., A.M. FR1Tz', Instructor in English History. Appointed 1936. RWILBUR JOSEPH BENDER, A.M. :SBIG BILLH Instructor in American History. Appointed 1936. ROBERT HASKELL coRY, JR., A.M. I CBOB! 3 Instructor in Medieval History. Appointed 1943. NORMAN BROOKS FLOYD, PILIJ. HUNCLR NoRM Instructor in English History. Appointed 1943. LEONARD FRANK JAMES, A.M. HI..IiNNIE,. Instructor in English History. Appointed 1932. MILES STURDIVANT MALONE, P11.D. '6SM11.1as M11.1cs Instructor in .American History. Appointed 1937 KENNETH SMITH MINARD, A.M. Instructor in Ancient History. Appointed 1928 PHILIP POTTER, A.M. 'LP1111. Instructor in English History. Appointed .1942 Modern Language Department GEORGE FRANKLIN FRENCH, A.M. Director of the French Department. Appointed 1907. DIRK HUGO VAN DER STUCKEN U VAN', iiTHE STUKEH Director of the German Department and In- structor in History of Civilization and Comparative Religion. Appointed 1928. CHESTER ARCHIBALD COCHRAN, A.M. HCOCKYN CHEsTY', Instructor in French. Appointed 1936. JOHN LOXLEY FIRTH, PH.D. Igirgstructor in Modern Languages. Appointed GUY JOHNSON FORBUSH, A.B. iiTHE IRON DUKEH HTHE BUSI-In Instructor in French. Appointed 1917. Reap- pointed S 1 924. JAMES HOOPER GREW A.B. Instructor in French. Appointed 1625, 'On leave of absence in Military Service. 2 FLOYD THURSTON HUMPHRIES, A.B. SLTHE Hum, Instructor in French. Appointed 1937. HENRY PRESTON KELLY, A.M. Hint-wi Instructor in Spanish. Appointed 1918. Reap pointed 1935. LESTER CHARLES NENVTON, A.M. GCTHE Fm' Instructor in French. Appointed 1918. 'JOSEPH STAPLES, A.B. I HBIG Jo13,' Instructor in French. Appointed 1941 . ROBERT BATES TAYLOR, A.M. Instructor in French. Appointed 1943. STEPHEN NVHITNEY, A.M. h ' ' S'r13v1a Instructor in French. Appointed 1936. Mathematics Department WINFIELD MICHAEL SIDES, S.B. MIKE Director of Mathematics Martha Cochran Foundation. Appointed 191 9. ooBB, M.s. Department on the SUMNER CHASE ' ' COBBY' i 1 Instructor in Mathematics . DOUGLAS MANSOR Appointed 1 942. DUNBAR, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics and German. Appoint- ed 1942. 'IHERBERT LEIGH KINSOLVING, A.M. Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed 1936. EVAN ALBERT NASON, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed 1942. Science .1oHN SEDGWICK BARSS, A.M. I 4 1.IACK! 9 Instructor in Physics. Appointed 1923. FREDERICK MAY BOYCE, A.M. ' GFREDDY, ' Instructor in Physics. Appointed 1909. DOUGLAS SWAIN BYERS, A.M. ' 'DOUG' ' Director of the Department of Archaeology and Instructor in Anthropology. Appointed 1933. ROSCOE EDWIN DAKE, S.B. UROCKYH Instructor in Chemistry. Appointed 1921 . GEORGE LITTLE FOLLANSBEE, A.B. CCFLOP,7 Instructor in Biology. Appointed 1936. GEORGE KNIGHT SANBORN, S.B. Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed 1928. OTIS CHASE SEVERANCE, S.B. Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed 1936. ROBERT WHITTEMORE SIDES, A.B. CGBOB97 Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed 1938. OSWALD TOWER, A.B. ' ' Ozzm, ' Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed 1910. FREDERICK ELLSVVORTH WATT, S.B. UFREDDYM Instructor in Mathematics. Appointed 1932. Department XANTON KISHON, B.S. TONY Instructor in Physics and'Chemistry. Appointed 1942. JOHN PAYSON LANE, S.B. iiMOLDY,, Instructor in Physics and Chemistry. Appointed 1943- 'FM. LAWRENCE SHIELDS, A.B. LARRY Instructor in Biology. Appointed 1923. ELBERT COOK WEAVER, A.M. SCTHE BEAVERH ZEKE Instructor in Physics and Chemistry. Appointed 1943- Art and Music Departments CARL FRIEDRICH PFATTEICHER, A.M., T1-1.D.. PH.D. CGTHE Goon Docrotf' Director of The Music Department and Instruc- tor in Philosophy on the Martha Cochran Founda- tion. Appointed 1912. ALBERT JAMES FILLMORE, M.Mus., A.M. Instructor in Music. Appointed 1942. Medical, Religious, JAMES ROSWELL GALLAGHER, Mn C G 9 School Physician. Appointed 1934. THOMAS JOHN JOHNSON, B.S. 5 CJACK, 3 Associate in Physical Education in the Depart- ment of Health. Appointed IQ42. ALFRED GRAHAM BALDWIN, A.B., B.D. CCA. G. 55 GCGRAY33 SCBALDYS7 l l School Minister and Instructor in Religion. Appointed 1930. '1'On leave of absence in Military Service. BARTLETT HARDING HAYES, JR., A.B. ESBARTSQ Director of the Addison Gallery of American Art and Instructor in Art. Appointed 1943. PATRICK MORGAN, A.B. CGPAT99 Instructor in Studio Art. Appointed 1940. GEORGE ALBERT WINSLOW, A.B. Instructor in English and Fine Arts. Appointed 1943- and Athletic Departments tis RAY ARTHUR SHEPARD, S.B. HSHEPH Athletic Director. Appointed 1919. FRANK F. DI CLEMENTI, S.B. GGDEKEH Assistant in the Physical Department. Appointed 1935- MONTVILLE ELLSWORTH PECK M0NTY,' Physical Director. Appointed 1916. 1 K. w A M 1 ii 'XF 3512 li fi fi I1 , r gl V 1 r 1 qs 1, ,, f,N .. , ,11 V ,,, V W J ww 4 ii r w i J , 35 w V? Qi I, 1,1 , 1 l 1 i Q 1 I I we, I w w K I n I A 0 ,, 'Q , XE, Q SENIQRS Senior Class ICHCCYS ,I JOSEPH W. REISLER, President WILLIAM B. NEALE President J I T TNHEELOCK NVHITNEY, Secretary Februar Lower HACIJ Treasur Deputy Rifle Cl Business Februar Senior Varsity Varsity Rains,J. Hudner, W. Whitney, W. Su-vi-ns Brewster, Neale, J. Farrington, Reislvr Novemb Junior FALL TERNI Varsity A J. REYNOLDS F ARRINGTON, Vice-President NVHITNEY STEVENS, Secretary WINTER TERM ' BENJAMIN Y. BREWSTER, V2'ee-President Novemb Lower Woodwcl Science I PLAN A Art Boan J. REYNOLDS FARRINGTON, President JosEPH W. REISLER, President JAMES H. HUDNER, Vz'ee-President SPRING TERM WHITNEY STEVENS, Vice-President T161 JAMES B. 11.-XINS, Seeretazy WILLIAM B. NEALE, Secretary Junior Octobe AFX Interfr Deputy All-Clu .IULIAN BINGHAM ABBOTT GCJULIE3! CCBING97 GSJ. BR! 2531 North Park Blvd Cleveland Hei hts Ohio -, S 5 February 15, 1926 Army Lower Yale HACIJ Circulation Manager of the Phillipian Q1943-443 Treasurer of Circle A Business Board ofthe Mirror C1942-435 Deputy I-Iousemaster Q1942-433 Circle A Q1942-44j Rifle Club C1943-445 J. V. Football 41942-445 Business Board of the Phillipian fI94.2-435 Varsity Wrestling CI942-44, WILLIAM FRANKLIN ABBOTT, JR. :gABBEY,, 'QABAH 26 Hawthorne St., Salem, Mass. February 18, 1926 Army SCni0r Dartmouth Varsity Football fI94.3J Varsity Baseball M9445 Varsity Basketball f1944j 4 , RICHARD ABRONS CCABE97 GSABNER99 GCDICKQQ 117 Overlook Circle, New Rochelle, N. Y. November 22, 1926 Marines junior Yale Varsity Tennis Squad C1941-445 All-Club Wrestling 09445 'ecretazy FREDERICK WILDES ADAMS, JR. GGFRED3? 1271 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh 6, Pa. Plan B November 3, 1925 Naval Air Corps .ewlelaiy Lower M.I.T. Woodworking Club 09417 All-Club Soccer H9437 Science Club C 19435 Credit List Q1 termj Art Board of the POT POURRI CI94.4.D 'ecrelaw WILLIAM ADAMS, III B1L1.', icNAILS,, 4 , 710 Bay Point Drive, Sarasota, Fla. Qctober 15, 1926 Merchant Marine junior Yale , AFX All-Club Lacrosse Q1 yearj 5573151791 Interfraternity Council 0943-445 Varsity Swimming Squad Q1 yearj Deputy Housemaster QLower Yearj Senior Proctor C1943-44D All-Club Football C2 yearsj l I7l COREY ALLEN CoR12Y', Ken Cary Ranch, Littleton, Colo. k' . December 24, 1925 S I Trggrfg Lower KGA - Editorial Board of the PorHPoEJ411E Q1944j 0,,5:500,fz,iQ2:1:1 Circle A Q1943-441 HEATH LEDWARD ALLEN ' EAL, ' ' ' PERV, ' 2936 North Second St., Harrisburg, Pa- Navy 'QISSQ4' 1927 Princeton KOA Varsity Tennis Squad C1942-44D Philo 41942445 Winning Club Football fI942D Varsity Debating Q1942-445 DCPUW Housem-a5tCfuf1943'44l Treasurer of Philo f1943j Flfst HQU01' Ro . if tefml Vice-President of Philo Q1944j R0bmS0n PUZC 09435 Editorial Board of the POT POURRI 41943-4.4, ' Credit List C3 termsj Rifle Club 41942435 Runner-up Philo Tournament CIQ43D Circle A C1943-445 Cum Laude Radio Discussion Group 419445 Second Honor Roll C1 termj HUBERT ALFRED ALLENBY 4 C KAL, 3 The Fellsf' Falmouth, Mass. March 31 , 1926 Navy Junior Yale HACID Varsity Wrestling Squad f1943j Varsity Football Squad C1942-435 Varsity Wrestling Team Q 19445 All-Club Lacrosse Q1 943D HUGH ROBERTS ALLOTT CCBOBQD SEAL!! 296 Grand St., Newburgh, N. Y. Plan A September 20, 1925 Navy UPPCF e Cornell J- V- Football C1942-437 Rise Club 41943-445 All-Club Hookov 419435 Camera Club C1943-44? Tennis QI942-43D MASON G. ARNOLD scGUSea ccMASEa Q HBONECRUSHERH N 87 North St., Willimantic, Conn. ovember 3, 1926 ' Junior 12152 Chess Club 419435 Varsity Soccer Q1943-445 All-Club Soccer C1942-4,33 l 18l June QB. Uppl'f Choir IU Piram fd AugUSl I junior A FX Business Deputy I Glee Clu March lp Upper J. Y. Bas' J. V. Bzw Nliiy 24, Junior Camera 1 Varsity S APril 1 1 Senior QAA Calllera 4 Phllo Q lq Varsity IPS ale Hi 143 nsl LVY IOII H5 123 445 ml 135 nsl 13W ude ml ixfsf 'ale 131 449 nvy iell 14? ILA? SAMUEL PAUL ARNOLD, II CGMAD RUSSIANH 30 Wilson Drive, Ben Avon I-Ights., Pittsburgh, Pa. june 28, 1926 Navy Upper Yale Choir and Glee Club Q1942-445 Rifle Club C1942-433 Pirates qf Penzance Orchestra Q1942-442 JOHN BURCHENAL AULT BURoH Mille Roches, Redding, Conn. August II, 1926 U.S. Navy V-12 Junior Yale AFX Winning Club Football Q1941l Business Board of Phillipian C1941-445 J. V. Tennis Q1943l Deputy Housemaster 0941, Senior Proctor f1944j Glee Club 41941, PHILIP BENJAMIN AVERBACK CCPHILSQ CSAVE7, 68 Congress St., Lawrence, Mass. March 12, 1926 Undecided Upper Yale J. V. Basketball f1943Q Varsity Basketball 419443 J. V. Baseball Q1943j JOHN AVERY, JR. CCJOHNNYBT CCAVIE39 GCJACKQ? 36 Morton St., Andover, Mass. May 24, 1926 Navy Air Corps Junior M.I.T. Camera Club C1941-44D Cross Country fIQ4,2l Varsity Swimming Squad C1943-44, Varsity Track fIQ44l PETER BULKELEY BAKER PETE 623 Lincoln Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. April II, 1926 Navy Senior M.I.T. fIJAA First Honor Roll C2 termsj Camera Club C1941-42D Second Honor Roll Q2 termsj Philo C1942-435 Credit List Q2 termsy Varsity Swimming C1942-43D Spring Track Q 1944, lI9l ERNEST SCHWEFEL BALLARD, -IR- BUzz,' HBUZZARDM g'Sc11w13r 6 Kent Rd., Winnetka, Ill. Plan A N Julv 27, 1925 FX Junior v J. V. Track fI94,3J AUV President, P. A. Police C1 termj J. V. Football fI943J outing Club C1942-439 CHARLES BEACH BARLOW CHUcK,' 58 Bridge St., New Milford, Conn. May 5, 1926 Navy YQ-112 Senior a C Choir and Glee Club C1943-445 DAVID NELSON BEACH, III Bro BOYH Ti-113 TURTLE,, DAVE 59 Lincoln St., New Haven, Conn. July 22, 1926 AUUY Upper Yale P11110 41943-447 , J - V, Track C1943E Choir and Glee Club Q1942-445 Varsity Swimming C1944j Rifle Club Q1943-445 9 Varsity Track H9443 J. V. Football 09425 Head Pantryman 41943-441 MELVIN LEWIS BERGHEIDI CCMELQJ CCBERG73 GSBERGY95 GCBUG!! 32 Powell St., Brookline, Mass. 'August 3, 1926 Navy Junior Harvard Editor-in-Chief of the Phillipian C1943-44j Air Raid Warden Q1943f Editorial Board of the Phillipian Q1941-445 Orchestra Q194o-415 Editorial Board of the Po'r POURRI Q1942-443 Latin Players Q1941j Literary Board of the Mirror C1942-435 Rifle Club C1941-425 Press Club i1942'43l Class Day Committee DONALD IVIAYER BERLIN HBUDDYH 87 Mason Ter., Brookline, Mass. gctoilzaer 4, 1926 Undecided pp I Harvard B d . an 09445 Rzz'efer.t C1943-445 Orchestra 119445 1 20 1 SCI Junior April UPPU AFX Ed. . 8-in-1 C January Junior First Hr Second Credit l Novemk Upper Philo 4 I Februar Bfilld I N' afsity WILLIAM WADE BOESCHENSTEIN NBILLH W1LL,' HBOESCHH 4'ST131N Dixie Highway, Perrysburg, Ohio uvv 1 ali' ' Plan A . ' .?CpYCml3CI' 7, 1925 Army Air Corps H34 umor Yale H35 HAE J. V. Basketball 119435 Varsity Football Q19435 Open Door 09435 J. V. Football fI94I-42, Rifle Club f1943j CARLETON HUNTER BOLL ECCARLH C. B. 'gm 353 South Broadway, Nyack, N. Y. Yale April 30, 1926 Navy UPPCF Harvard AFX Choir and Glee Club CIQ42-445 Editorial Board ofthe Phillipian Q1943-445 Philo 119435 Editorial Board of the POT POURRI C1943-445 Draper Prize C1stj U9435 8-in-1 Octet C1943-445 JOHN WESSON BOLTON CCJAYSS SCJ. Wg, CCQJACKQS KFIHY 1 56 Chestnut St., North Andover, Mass. Yale - Plan A -4 january 12, 1926 Army Junior Yale 9-Hd First Honor Roll 1 term Fencin 1 I- 2 S 94 4 l'-Hl Second Honor Roll Q7 termsj All-Club Soccer M9425 Credit List Q2 termsj Cum Laude JOHN BOURNE Y ' U HJACKS, HJOHNNIE,, HQIUANITON 13124 Bourne Mansion, 8 Bourne St., Kennebunk, Me. Plan A 943' November 8 1 2 Undecided 1 9 4 1'-1' l Upper Cornell S 4' 9 . ,ivy Philo C1943-445 Dramatic Club C1943-445 ntlec JOHN FARNIAN BOWEN Ci-JACK!! FSBO!! l Oneida, N. Y. 'lfilug February 8, 1926 Navy A 'U Senior Williams S- H 1' Band 41943-445 A11-omb Basketball 519445 Varsity Soccer 119435 Second Honor Roll C1 termj l2Il WILLIAM YOUNG BOYD c cBH-'Las c cWILLIE9: c cPANAMA9 7 Panama City, Republic of Panama March 5, 1926 1251252 Lower Coach of-I. A. Football fI94.3D fIPAA ' Rifle oiu? C1943-445 313125615165 513133 C' 16 194-311-4 - - ' Clfgir and Glee Club fIQ4.2-4.3, Varsity Fencing Team fl943j Business Board of the Phillzjnan C1944j Winning Club Football M9435 WILLIS KELNER BRAMWELL iiWILL,, HE. D. 2209 Washington St., Eldora, Iowa A , 5 . i Undecided Ugigit 9 192 University of Chicago HAQ ul. V. Basketball f1942j J. v. Football 419423 All-Club Basketball 619433 Varsity Football 419435 .l- V- TCHHIS f1943l BENJAMIN YATES BREWSTER HBENNIEN HBENJYH 27 Concord St., Nashua, N. H. December 4, 1926 Navy Upper Yale CDBX Mikado Student Council, Treasurer 0943-44D Pirates rj Penzance Tea Dance Committee Q1944j 8-in-1 Octet C1943-445 Chairman Prom.Committee cIQ4.4D Varsity Swimming 11942-44D President of Musical Clubs Q1943-445 All-Club Soccer Q1942-44Q Choir and Glee Club f1942'44l Second Honor Roll Q1 termj Orchestra C1942-44, Class Day Committee Riveters H9437 WINSTANLEY CROWEN BRIGGS ECWINDYSQ SCWIN79 CGTHE BEAR5, IO Ahwahnee Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. August 4, 1926 Junior vig HM' . v. F b ll - giterfraternity Council 6194.3-44,3 Winning'JC1ub Iggikiy Pen Door fI9fl3'44l ' Varsity Lacrosse Squad H9443 Candy Concesslon Varsity Debating H9405 Manager of Lacrosse C1944j Philo 09405 Varsity Football Q1943j JOSEPH REAL BROWN V BRUUN', ARKANsAw B Sr S N b 6 405 May Ave., Fort Smith, Ark. ovem er 2 , , Senior 9 I92 Undecgiii Ph'l - , G1geoiS31g'3C f3'Li3-445 Winter Track Squad H9445 f22l O L. C C, C. Se Se Jak ju Al Ec BL .-X1 De Lo Al Bu: Cir 8-it Ch' Der ,I un Moi Ptitl Y ar RODERICK HANSON BROWNING V ccRODsa ccCOUNTaa 2626 Washington Blvd., Ogden, Utah ' 1 October 9, 1925 Undecided 9433 Upper Stanford 2-441 Camera Club C1943-44D Philo 41943-445 --H4 Choir 3I'1Cl Giee C1119 41943-445 outing oiub 41943-443 4 Circle A 41943-445 Editorial Board of the Por POURRI 419445 DAVID BRYANT gided ' 'DAVE' ' mcago 158 East 61st St., New York, N. Y. Q 1,4 September 1, 1926 Army 'H' Senior Harvard 943l i943l RICHARD SUTTON BULL, JR. CCR. SE, CSDICKQQ 43 Locust Rd., Winnetka, Ill. Navy Yale ' Plan A l january 21, 1926 Navy f1kUd0 junior Yale mance 3--Hy AUV Philo 41940-415 2,444 Editorial Board of the Phillipian 41942-44D Varsity Debating 41940-415 3,444 Business Board of the Phillipian QIQ43-4.4.3 J. V. Football 4194 lj Crm, Automobile Club 41941-425 J. V. Track 419422 mittee NEWTON ALBERT BURGESS, J R. 6 CAL!! C 3 239 Oakridge Ave., Summit, N. Plan A Navy December 12, 1925 Army Yale Lower - U.S.N.A. ,424 AUV Varsity Soccer 419435 ,, H, Business Board of the Phillipian C1944j Pinafore E444 Circle A 41941-442 Mikado IJ OJ 8-in-1 Octet CI944l All-Club Soccer 419425 310, choir and Glee Club 41941-445 Band 41941-435 ROBERT HENRY BURKE SSMOOSEQJ CCMOLE39 CCBOB39 IO4 Sanderson St., Greenfield, Mass. December 6, 1926 Navy ' i 1 junior 4 M.I.T. t Cf f Linh- Model Railroad Club 41940-415 Fire Warden 41941-427 Rifle Club 41941-435 Spring Track 41949 11,442 Varsity Football Squad 41942-441 E231 JAMES DALTON CAHILL C CJIM7 9 43 Bedford St., Bradford, M2155- Navy December 31, 1926 M LT Senior - ' ' QIJBX Clee Club f1943-44j Pirates ry' Penzance JOHN WALTER CALDWELL , TEx 32 5 Del Monte Drive, Houston, Texas I December 12, IQ26 Undecldfird Upper Texas University RMC Club C1942-443 Varsity Wrestling f1944j GEORGE ROMUALD CANTY, JR. SLEEPY 3606 Fulton St., N.W., Washington, D. C. june 9, 1927 Navy Lower 1 Yale Rifle Club C1943-441 Winter Track Squad C1943-44j All-Club Lacrosse H9425 Spring Track Squad C1943-445 Choir and Glee Club C1942-441 Means Finalist f1943 DANIEL THUERING CARROLL DAN', EGDANNYH UCARRELLIU 460 South Prospect St., Burlington, Vt. March 21, 1926 Marines JUHIOI' Harvard HA? All-Club Baseball C1942j President of Greeks Q 1943-441 V. Basgball 619433 Vafslty SOCCCI' fI942'43l J. V. Basketball C1942-43D Captain of Soccer 119433 Williams Hall Proctor 11942-445 Varsity Basketball C1 j ' 944 Improvement Prize C194 ID VINTON AIKINS CARTMELL :cVINT99 ccCART:9 Foothill Rd., Somerville, N. J. Pl B October II, 1925 an Army UPPH Yale Varsity Football KIQ 2- - Varsity Wrestling Q1g43Li,i-21,5 Rifle Club 09437 l24l 9 , MBV Scnil Philc Fcbri Lowe Scieni Rifle Philo V arsil july 1 junior KIJBX Winnii V arsitf Varsitf Varsitj March Junior AFX Smith l Circle 1 April Q7 Lower Edilori All-Clual Captain Cum Lau 1 FRANK JOHN CASTAGNET PANcHo h Edilicio Lopez Serrano, Vedado, Habana, Cuba ' ' May 13, 1926 Marine Corps .-H3 Senior Philo Q1943-445 Varsity Tennis FREDRICK BISHOP CHAMBERLIN, ,IR CCFREDSS 143 Arlington St., Winchester, Mass. February 10, 1926 J Army dvd Lower Harvard my Science Club C1943-445 Varsity Swimming Squad C19425 ,441 Rifle Club C1941-425 ul. V. Football 19425 Philo f1942-435 All-Club Soccer 119435 Varsity Swimming Team 0943-445 Williams Hall Proctor Q1942 445 - KENNETH KEE-HOI CHUN i6KEN,, KENNY EGCHUNNYH 398 Kiangse Rd., Shanghai, China july II, 1925 Nrmy HVY Junior 'ale CIJBX 14.45 Winning Club Soccer f19415 Varsity Wrestling Squad 19445 .Htl Varsity Tennis Squad C19435 Assistant Housemaster C1942 435 435 Varsity Soccer Squad Q19425 Varsity Tennis Team KIQ44 Varsity Soccer Team QI9435 EDWARD SHOVE COOK 66TED,, HCOOKIEH HSI-IOVEU . 242 Culver Rd., Rochester, N. Y. UCS March 2, 1927 Undecided ard Junior 425 AFX I Captain of Wrestling C19445 1,35 Smith Lewis Multer Memorial Scholarship C1943-445 Tennis Q1943 43 5 Circle A C1943-445 Varsity Wrestling Squad 1943 t4l U1 CARLETON STEVENS COON, ,I R. C C 3 v 41 Jordan Ave., Wakefield, Mass. April 27, 1927 Undecided Lower Harvard , Editorial Board of the POT POURRI Q1943-445 Varsity Wrestling 19445 All-Club Soccer C1942-435 Second Honor Roll 2 terms I ' Captain All-Club Soccer Q19435 Credit I 1st 5 terms .5 , Cum Laude 5, t25l I DAVID ROY CRAWFORD HOKLAHOMAH HOKEH DAvE,' 1 51 5 South Madison, Tulsa, Okla. Nav August 9, 1926 . Y Senior Rlce HAQ, Varsity Wrestling Team C1944j Rifle Club fIQ4.4,J J. V. Football Q1943j Art Board of the POT POURRI H9445 WILLARD CROMPTON . :LBH-'Ln ccWILLYs9 Chapaquoit, West Falmouth, Mass. M , 5 Navy Uggerio 192 Harvard French Play 419435 J- V- Tennis f1943l Orchestra fIQ4.2-4.35 ROBERT HAMILTON CUSHING, JR. 5CCUSH37 CCBOB9! I6O Lake Ave., Lancaster, N. Y. April 11, 1926 Army Lower West Point CIJBX LI. A. Football Coach C1944j Stage Crew Q 1942-445 Winning Club Basketball C1942-43D Rifle Club 0942-445 All-Club Lacrosse C1942j All-Club Football Q1941j Varsity Lacrosse 11943-445 LI. V. B Football 09425 JAMES WILLIAM DALRYMPLE, JR. HJIMM icDAL,, CGDALLYH HTHE RIMP,, 6 Beacon St., Andover, Mass. Plan A October 22, 1925 Army Jumof M.I.T. Model Railroad Club C1942-44j ANGUS DEMING GUsH GoosE GMM BIMH So. Mountain Rd., New York, N. Y.. March 13, IQ 6 . Upper 2 Naval Air cgi: QJBX . B- - Rifle Club C1943-445 C1g3i?Z2g1IeieE1E?uEJg9a243? D Varsity SocCC1' C9433 Circle A C1943-445 94 43 Wrestling Squad Q1943-441 E251 Ma' Jun KO Rifl All- Deo juni AU' Pres Cha Soci V ar: Var: Sept Juni! Assn Rifle Airp Raili Augt Junic H3111 Varsi Allgu QIJBX Circlq Deba. Glee 1 P- A. frwy Rice 31445 0435 HERBERT EVERETT DEMING CCI-IERB33 2 Marshall Rd., Hamden, Conn. May 29, 1926 ' Navy Junior Yale KOA J. V. Hockey 11942-435 Rifle Club 119425 Varsity Hockey 119445 All-Club Basketball 119425 JOHN STANLEY DICKEY HSTOSH,, HSPIDEPK' 240 De Mott Ave., Rockville Centre, N. Y. HWY December 10, 1925 Naval Air Corps Yard Junior Harvard 9435 AUV Vice-President of Glee Club 11943-445 President of Circle A 119445 Rifle Club 11942-445 Chairman of Student Deacons 11943-445 Circle A 11942-445 Society of Inquiry 11943-445 Clee Club and Choir 11943-445 Varsity Soccer 119445 Cheer Leader 11943-445 Varsity Wrestling 11943-445 JOHN DAVID DORSEY krlny c:DORSas 66.1. DDS! Pgint 1 102 Shore Rd., Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. September Io, 1926 Army 94-5 Junior ' Princeton 3'-l 9425 Assistant I-Iousemaster 11942-435 Philo 11943-445 3-445 Rifle Club 11942-435 All-Club Lacrosse 11941-425 Airplane Club 11940-415 Varsity Swimming Team 11943-445 Railroad Club 11940-435 Printing Club 11943 445 WOODFORD HECTOR DULANEY, ,I R. GCWOODYSS SGDUSS CCHACKS3 9 Hawthorne Hill, Louisville, Ky. Plan A August 22, 1925 Armv ' ' ' Junior Yale I-IAQ Credit List 13 terms5 Varsity Soccer 119435 J. V. Football 11941 425 JOHN MORTON DUNN MoRT 39,'Cumberland Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Iorps August 10, 1926 Navy Yale Upper Yale -445 QJBX Varsity Baseball Team 11943 445 9432 Circle'A 11943-445 Varsity Soccer Team 119445 5-445 Debating Club 119435 J. V. Basketball Squad 119435 Glee Club 1 - All-Club Basketball 119445 , C 943 445 P. A. Police 119445 l 27 DAVID ALEXANDER EAGLESON CFTHE EAGLEH 'CEEGH 152 N. Drexel Ave., Columbus, Ohio Plan A . November 30, 1925 Army Alf Cgflis Upper a C Choir and oiee Club 41942-445 Rifle Club C1942-445 CHRISTOPHER JOHN EATOUGH MCHRIS7, CCLIMEY53 30 Sutton Place, New York, N. Y. February 1, 1926 R0Yal Air Force Junior COI'nCll Latin Players C1942-43, Winning .Club Soccer f194.1j Rifle Club C1941-44D Varsity Soccer H942-43D CALEB DENNY ELLIOT HCALEBM ciDENNY,, Z, Hasco, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, W. Indies Plan A October 16, 1925 M.I.T. Juruor fxrnjy Rifle Club H9425 Outing Club 11940-415 Model Railroad Club Q1941-42j Birdbanding Club 11940-42j STEARNS RUSSELL ELLIS, II CCEL3! CCCHUBBYQS 9 Madison Ave., Winchester, Mass. Jun? 20' 1926 Air Corps Senior Harvard Dramatic Club f1943l choir and Glee Club 41943-445 DONALD WALLACE ERICSON Don A .1 6 628 North Second Ave., St. Charles, Ill. PU 24, I Senior 92 M'I'T' Army f28j Ma UP HA Edi Scif Rifl C011 Sect Lati Phy Vail Hor Ting Sepli juni' HAI Prtsi Presi Presi Presii Vice- Secrc Vice- Busin Busin Studs Tea l Leon: Depu Edito june 1 Uppei Prinlii Seconr Sfpren SCI1101' Sfcond March IJ Pper Pfilllllli SCCOnd 1-rps 1 :llc '-Hi Jrcc 'nell 1415 fm '43 l.'1'. rmy -41 5 -425 Jrps 'ard 445 , . l.l. my .IOHN CURTIS FARRAR CGCURT39 ICJ. Cu!! Linden Cir., Scarborough, N. Y. March 22, 1927 Navy Upper Yale HAE Editorial Board of the Phillipian 11943-445 Editor ofthe Por POURRI Choir and Glee Club 11942-445 Science Club 11943-445 Latin Players 11942-445 Rifle Club 11943-445 1 All-Club Soccer 119435 Convers Prize 119435 Second Honor Roll 12 terms5 Second Draper Prize 119435 First Honor Roll 13 terms5 Latin Recitation Tie 119435 Radio Discussion Group 119445 Physics Prize 119435 Student Council 119445 Valpey Prize 119435 Class Day Committee Honorable Mention, Nat'l Science Talent Search 119445 Cum Laude They Burned The Books julius Caesar JOHN REYNOLDS FARRINGTON RENNY FREEcE Q3 Holyrood Ave., Lowell, Mass. Plan A September 15, 1925 Army Junior Yale HAE Student Council 11941-445 President of the Student Council 11 term5 Society of Inquiry 11943-445 President of the Accelerated Senior Class Varsity Football 119435 President of the Lower Class 12 terms5 Varsity Baseball 11942-435 President of the Junior Class 11 term5 Varsity Hockey 11943-445 Vice-President of the Upper Class 11 term5 J. V. Football 119425 Secretary of the Upper Class 11 term5 V. Baseball 119415 Vice-President of the Senior Class 11 term5 J. V. Hockey 119425 Business Board of the Phillipian 11942-445 J. V. Track 119415 Business Board of the POT POURRI 11942-435 J. V. Baseball Cup 119415 Student Commons Committee 119435 Secretary of Gauls 11943-445 Tea Dance Committee 11943-445 Treasurer of Society of Inquiry Leonard Prize Essay Finalist 119425 Open Door 11942-445 Deputy Housemaster 11942-435 Rifle Club 11942-435 Editor of Andover-Exeter Football Program 119425 JOHN LAURENCE FINNERAN CCFIN33 CCJACK77 66 Railroad Ave., North Andover, Mass. Plan A ' June 14, 1925 Undecided Upper Harvard Printing Club 11943-445 Paul Revere Printing Prize 119435 Second Honor Roll 11 term5 German Reading Prize 119435 ISAAC CHILLINGSWORTH FOSTER CGIKE93 Brewster, Mass. September 20, 1925 Marine Air Corps Senior M.I.T. Second Honor Roll 11 term5 Varsity Wrestling Squad 11943-445 CLARENCE BYRDON FRANCISCO HC. Bf, f'BUzz t FRAN,' AN1MA1f' 2315 Wyncote Lane, Kansas City, Kan. March 29, 1928 Undecided Upper University of Kansas Printing Club 11943-445 Winning Club Fencing 11942-435 Second Honor Roll 11 term5 L 29 l JUSTIN EDGERTON GALE CC-JUD77 118 Main St., Andover, Mass. Nav January 8, 1927 Y Junior M.I.T. Dramatic Club 41943-445 Varsity Hockey C1 943'44l Stage Crew 0943-445 ul- V- Footbajll iI943l Outing Club 0940-424 julzus Caesar J. V. Hockey 0942-4.35 GRAHAM GORDON HGRAY,, HG. GY' 1715 Dundee Way, Louisville, Ky. Plan A November 17, 1925 NZWY Junior Yale WILLIAM ALFRED GRAHAM HBILLH 21 East 79th St., New York, N. Y. May 15, 1926 Navy junior Yale HACIJ Varsity Fencing 0941-425 Orchestra 0940-445 Winning Club Football 09415 Riveters 0942-445 Choir and Glee Club C1941-44.5 Band 0941-445 First Cutter Prize in Music 09415 Mikado Second Cutter Prize 09435 LESTER JOSEPH GRANT G6GENERAL,, GiUSELESS,, c6THE DEACONU LEs', 7 Phillips St., Boston, Mass. August 24, 1926 A1-my JUf1i0f M.I.T. Circle A All-Club Lacrosse fIQ4O-4.4.5 Winning Club Hockey 0941-425 Varsity Wrestling Squad 0943-445 All-Club Soccer 0942-445 Editorial Board of the Por POURRI C1943-4.4.5 FREDERICK DAVIS GREENE, II FR1TzY,' I 125 Bellevue Ave., Upper Montclair, N. LI. JUU'9:I927 Ilndedded Upper Amherst Science Club Credit List C2 termsl 24510253113 Band H9425 Second Honor Roll C2 terms5 V ' .tu VSCCCFI' C194-2'43l Biology Prize 0942-4.35 Cjizsizudefest mg 619445 ous Scholarship 41943-445 l30l 4 Fcbr UPP Mofl Choi Win' Octol UPPC QPBX Winn Advel F ebru. Junior Stage 1 Decem ,lunior Glee C Drama Radio I Second Credit Cum Lg August Upper Plziflllllg Rlflg 5' arsity :ivy l .'l' . 'Ml r.t3l !t',Yl1f Iavy Yale Cavy Yale 1-423 941 l 1-4.0 941 D 9439 -trmy . I .T. 1-443 4-+45 -449 'idcd hcrst rmfil rms! -439 1'-141 BLAIR HAMILTON HACKNEY iiHACK,, HAcK12R,' 901 North Fifth St., Atchison, Kan. February 4, 1926 Navy Upper M.I.T. Model Rilroad Club C1942-435 All-Club Wrestling Q1944j Choir and Glee Club C1942-44D Varsity Wrestling f1944j Winning Club Basketball Q1943j HARRY HALL HORSE iiCURLY,, Yorktown Heights, N. Y. October 6, 1926 Navy V-12 Upper Yale CIJBX Editor of the Andover-Exeter Track Program fSpring 1943j Winning Club Football 119422 Second Honor Roll C1 termj Advertising Manager of the POT POURRI 09445 ' RICHARD BUCK HARRINGTON CGFISH93 CCDICKD7 CCBUCKDS ' IO Ripley St., Worcester, Mass. February 9, 1926 Army Junior Harvard Stage Crew C1942j ALFRED GILBERT HARRIS CCAL77 CSBUD79 CCA. GI!! CCMICKEY73 25 Washington Ave., Andover, Mass. Plan A December 4, 1925 Navy Junior Yale Glee Club C1940-445 Boxing C1940-415 Dramatic Club f1944l All-Club Soccer C1943-443 Radio Discussion Group All-Club Baseball Second Honor Roll K3 termsj Manager of Swimming M9445 Credit List Q2 termsj Winning Club Soccer fIQ4,0-44.5 Cum Laude NORMAN EDDY HASCALL, II CCNORM59 CCSHORTY77 CGH177 431 East Second St., Perrysburg, Ohio August 10, 1926 2 Army Upper ' Yale Printing Club C1942-43, Winning Club Football Team fIQ42l Rifle Club QIQ43-44, Head Pantryman Q1943-44j Varsity Wrestling Squad C1942-44, I 31 J ROBERT PHILLIPS HATCH HBOBH 49o Old Post Rd., Fairfield, Conn. - Army Air Corps Fel 313104, 1926 Yale up 11943-441 vii, 15:21 51335333 Biz: Ad isory Boar 1943-44 . ' I ,. Opxen Door Committee QIQ43-441 CQ'C3Pl3a11'1 ?fTraC15 U94-3'441 1 IW Proctor-Rockwell House Q1943-441 V21ISf1t5iJFIf3I0tbE'l SFU? iI943'4-41 Sff Circle A fIQ4.I-421 -I0 HP '. OSP gn? Eze f'94 425 Deputy Housernaster M942-431 FOX V126 C 0 afs IP 0943441 RICHARD DAVIS HATTON g4DICK:9 scHAT9a c:LEFTY9a HI-IACKERH 109 Washington St., Fairhaven, Mass. .lanf U d .d d Sem january 3, 1926 H CCI C Junior Yale QA. Philo Varsity Tennis Varsity Track Squad QIQ431 All-4 EDMUND HAYES, JR. C 5 3 3 265 S.W. Military Rd., Portland, Ore. April 13, 1926 Naval Air Force Lower Undecided janu , Lowe cIrBX Varsity Track C1943-441 THEODORE GUSTAV HECKEL CCTEDQS GCHOCK,3 Lincoln Ave., Massapequa, L. I., N. Y. OCf0bCf 15, 192 5 Naval Air Corps junior 4 Yale April AUV Student Deacon C1943-441 Uppei President of the Society of Inquiry Q1943-441 All-Club Soccer 09401 Railn Advisory Board C1943-441 Varsity Lacrosse Team 11940-441 Band Athletic Council Q1943-441 Manager of Football QIQ441 Varsit Open Door C2 terrns1 All-Club Basketball Q19431 Cheerleader C 1 term1 CHARLES HENIING CHARL112,' HCHUCKU 592 North St., White Plains, N. Y. O March 1, 1926 Nravy Juiipb -Iumor I Harvard lor - . , . . Kox Managing Editor ofthe Phzllz f - Ch Cl b 7. - Editorial Board of the Phillzj2iilzIiLall1i'gitiL?44L14D P,-eggs C1313 IEICFTP Advertising Manager of the Mirror f1942-431 Radio Discussion Group f 1944.1 ygmdf Business Board of the Mirror Assistant Manager of Track C1942-431 S Cell Business Manager Elect of the Mirror Varsity Track Squad Xglqfin Editorial Board of the Por POURRI Q1942-441 Fall Tennis Squad QI 9431 C3323 J- Y. F I 32 J lurpg Xzilc I-pl -s Y- Hl Hl 4- 3-44l I-421 ii-44W vided Yale Tennis Force cided 32147 lor S P Yale 34-1 940' 1-441 944' 943' Yavy 'varcl C ll u ln 4 C.lub 9-W l'-lfll luzid 171,33 VICTOR HENRY HEXTER, II CGVIC37 5iTEX7! GKHEXJD 6712 Turtle Creek Blvd., Dallas, Texas February 13, 1927 Undecided Upper Undecided Band C1942-44D Orchestra Q1943-442 Philo C1942-445 Varsity Swimming Squad f1944j Winning Club Football C1942-43, Credit List C2 termsj Second Honor Roll Q1 termj WILLIAM STARK HICKEY USTARKU H1oK', 920 Trombly Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. january 1, 1927 Navy Senior University of Michigan CIJAA Glee Club Science Club Rifle Club Printing Club Dramatic Club All-Club Hockey Varsity Lacrosse Q1944j JOHN STEVENS HIPPARD I L 3 80 Kensington and Stockton Aves., Uniontown, Pa. January 17, 1926 Merchant Marine Lower Harvard THOMAS PARKER HOWARD ToM', UT. Pf' ciHOWIE,, 24 Andrews Rd., Milton, Mass. April 10, 1926 Undecided Upper Harvard Railroad Club KIQ43-4.4, Circle A Q1942-431 Band C1942-445 Orchestra C1942-445 Varsity Track Squad Q1943-445 ,I AMES HAY HUDN ER CCJIM77 CCHUDS 9 312 Florence St., Fall River, Mass. Plan A October 17, 192 5 Army Air Corps Junior Yale KOA Secretary Student Council fI944l Vice-President of the Accelerated Senior Class Advisory Board President of the Upper Class C2 termsj Interfraternity Council Vice-President of the Lower Class Q1 termj President of the Romans Student Council Q1942-445 Assistant Housemaster f1943j Varsity Football 0942-435 Co-Captain of Track C1944j Captain of Football C1943j Varsity Track Q1942-445 J. V. Football f1941j i331 DAVID BREWSTER HUGHES DAVE I2 Dewey St Edgewood Pittsburgh Pa N ugig?jrfY8 1925 Coriell Glee Club C1943 443 MI V Football IQ43D J V Baseball 1944 FLOYD THURSTON HUMPHRIES .IR BRO HUMPH 147 Main St Andover Mass Navy unior Rifle Club 41940 415 Glee Club C1942 44l Latin Players C1942 44 Credit List I term C 8 3 'Ll F irst ! . 1 I I Fel c 1 l S' . Cu- . . . 1 Phi I A Q l 1 ' ' 2 6 6 A l 3December 2 , 192 Amherst i AU ' - - l U . - D . . C D 4 P 1 'DA i St 1 l E ' cc as ECI as S i ., , . . . 1 1 J 5 J I1 I 1 - C -445 J ni -44N H l HEYWARD ISHAlVI HEY SH 1 16 East 53rd St New York N Y November 4 1926 Army unior Yale Deputy Housemaster C1943 4.42 Camera Club 1940 Editorial Board of the Por POURRI Q1944j French Players C1941 Philo Q1943-442 Choir and Glee Club 11943-441 Dramatic Club Q1943-445 Varsity Tennis Q1942-445 Circle A Q1943-445 BENJARIIN RIURLEY JOHNS, JR. JOHNNY GGTHE HEAD 407 West 9th St., wilmington, Del. November 1, 1926 Army Senior Princeton HAP Coach of the Roman Club Basketball All-Club Basketball CLAYTON ROTHSCHILD JONES, JR. U ccRED,, JoNEsY,' 1715 S.W. Montgomery Drive, Portland, Ore. November 2, 1926 Nav Senior . Peng, Rifle Club C1944j V. Track f1944l l34l Seco Nova SCl1i4 Choi J . V. Dece Juni. Busii Athll Wim Val-5 Cap, .xv 3- m-ll l-Hi :lx.?. 'CIWI -44W rml rmy Yale -HH -Jap -445 -1'-ll rmy :ton ball 'avy 'llll. i-H i ROBERT ALVIN JORDAN SHoRTY BOB HBIG STooP 44 Highland Rd., So. Portland, Me. FCbf'UaI'Y 14, 1925 Mountain Troops SCDIOI' Q Yale Philo C194-3-445 J. V. Football QIQ43-44p KARL HENRY KALBFLEISCH FLAsH,' FLEoEs,' 26 Cushing Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. Plan A August 31, 1925 Navy Upper M.I.T. 'PAA Varsity Track Squad QIQ42-435 Stage Crew Radio Club JOHN WILSON KELLETT 14 East Prospect St., Methuen, Mass. January 30, 1927 Undecided Junior M.I.T. First Honor Roll Q1 termj Credit List Q2 termsj Second Honor Roll Q4. terrnsj Cum Laude WILLIAM WALLACE KERR, III BILL ciMUSCLES,, . Box 126, Melbourne, Fla. November 8, 1926 Naval Air Corps Senior University of Michigan QMed.j Choir and Clee Club Q1943-445 J. V. Football QIQ4.3J J. V. Baseball Q1944Q VICTOR KERMIT KIAM CCVICQ9 CCOMAR33 CCKI77 Zaccheus Mead Lane, Greenwich, Conn. December 7, 1926 Navy Junior M.I.T. Business Board of the Phillipian Q1941-43D Attendance Prize Q1941j Athletic Council Editorial Board of the POT POURRI QIQ43-44D Q Winning Club Tennis QI942-435 Second Honor Roll Q2 termsj 1 Varsity Tennis Team QI942-443 Credit List Q4 termsj Captain of Tennis Q1943-44D E351 DWIGHT DELAVAN KILLAM Porter Rd Andover Mass Undecided Jgiicjrg 1926 New England Conservatory of Music Glee Club C194-I 44D Second Honor Roll 2 termsl Latm Player, CI94Q 44, Credit Imt 5 terms Sodalitaa Latina C1941 42 CHARLES WESLEY KITTLEWIAN, JR. CGKITS 9 903 Washington St , Greenville, Miss October 16, 1906 ANDY Yale Senior Winning Club Tennis H9435 Varsity Tennis Q1944j Zi Cf I C' jun Sen Xar Nar V ' fr- - - 2 , 4 ' . M J ' ' ' 1 S . A i L . . - E 'Q W II B U 1, - - 'f G1 - - 5 .xdi Second Honor Roll Q2 terms? CHESTERTON STEVENS KNIGHT, JR. CH1cK' GEROOSTYH 151 Moraine St., Brockton, lVIass. Plan A November 12, IQ25 Navy Upper Williams CDAA Varsity Swimming Team Q1943-445 Glee Club and Choir Q1943-441 Rifle Club Q1944j VICTOR KARL KOECHL C CVIC7 5 Main St., Farmington, Conn. March 3: 1926 Undecided Semof Harvard Philo C1943-445 Second Honor R011 qi ferr-dy Glee Club and Choir Q1943-445 Means Essay Prize ELIHU LAUTERPACHT CCELI39 6 Cranmer Rd., Cambridge, England FY 15, 1928 Undecided ower Cambridge Latin PlaYCf5 C1943 Editorial Board of the Por POURRI 0944, Erench Plalfefs f1942l Latin Department Prize Q1942-435 1 Gfamauc ClUbf1943l Robinson Prize Debater fI942l CC 1361 June Senii 'DBX Orcl Drag Yars Tlzqv Man juni' Glee Pinaj Mika Rifle Prin' Allgi UDP Dfpv 'vidcml Music' vrnisl vrmst .Xr my Yale 19445 Nan' illiams 4344' 5 '94-I-' lc-cideri arvard u-rm' .- Prim' l1'f'ld17d lllfidqc ' 111449 9. i 4 ,lf'4:l I9-W' ROBERT COLMAN LAWLOR CCBOB3! CCROBBY99 20 Lexington St., Dover, N. H. May 12, 1926 Marines Senior Yale YIPBXA Varsity Football Team 119432 Glee Club 119445 Varsity Track H9443 Advisory Board Q IQ44D Co-Captain of Varsity Track Q1944j HAROLD VENABLE LIDDLE iCHAL,7 420 Reilly Rd., Wyoming, Ohio june 18, 1926 ' Naval Air Corps Senior Williams Varsity Football CI943l Spring Track C1944j Varsity Basketball H9447 Rifle Club C1944l ROBERT DAVID LILIEN CCBOB33 CCLIL37 GCPADRE59 173 Riverside Dr., New York 24, N. Y. june 25, 1926 Army Senior Princeton IIJBX Literary Board of the Phillipian C1944j Orchestra KIQ43-44.7 Choir and Glee Club Q1943-447 Draper Prize 419435 Varsity Wrestling Squad f1944j Varsity Soccer Team Q1943j 4 Class Day Committee Thqy Burned the Books jalius Caesar JOHN FRANKLIN LORD A JACK, JOHNNY CCTHE CLAWH 67 Summer St., Andover, Mass. March 27, 1926 Army Air Corps junior Bowdoin Glee Club C1941-441 Dramatic Club C1943-445 Pinafore Varsity Swimming C1942-44.7 Mikado Spring Track Q1942j Rifle Club H942-435 julius Caesar Printing Club Q1942-435 MASON FAULCONER LORD CCMASE73 GCDOCQ7 CCM. FH! 4200 Greenway, Baltimore 18, Md. August 4, 1926 Navy Upper PI'i1'1CCtOI'1 Deputy Housemaster C1943-447 Choir and Glee Club C1942-44j il37l DANHHaJOSEPHQLYNE,JR. HDANH THE CLAM 130 Beacon St., Chestnut Hill, Mass. Field Service 'ig?LgI.2' 1925 Harvard Glee Club J. V. Football Squad 119435 Rifle Club I All-Club Hockey 119435 - Varsity Track Team 11943-445 Circle A Railroad Club NORMAN ESTES lVIcCULLOCI-I, JR. HSANDYH MAC Rumstick Point Rd., Barrington, R. I. uly 21, 1926 N-WY Senior Dartmouth KQA Business Board of the Plrillipian 11943-445 Glee Club 11943-445 Circle A 11943-445 Philo C1943-445 THONISON COOK lVIcGOWAN CGTOM73 CCMACDQ 2732 East Overlook Rd., Cleveland Hghts., Ohio July 8, 1926 Navy Lower Princeton Treasurer of Philo 11942-435 Business Board of the Phillipian 11942-445 President of Philo 11943-445 Circle A 11942-435 Glee Club 11941-435 Philo 11941-445 Choir 11941-435 Varsity Debating Team 11942-445 Janus Club 11941-425 Williams Hall Proctor 11942-445 Radio Club 11941-425 Radio Discussion Group 119445 Outing Club 11941-425 Pinafore First Honor Roll 13 terms5 Mikado Second Honor Roll 13 terms5 Second john R. Stephenson Prize 119435 Credit List 12 terms5 Secretary One Day Forum 119445 Varsity Track Team 119435 Work Crew 12 terms5 119445 J. V. Track Team 119435 Cum Laude ROBERT ,IADIES lNIcKIlVI, JR. Bonn CI-IAMPR CHAMPION Bo BoBoH MAC 141 East 72nd St., New York, N. Y. October 31: 1925 Undecided Upper Yale HMP J. v. Basketball 119435 J - V-, Football 119425 Varsity Basketball 119445 Vaf51tY Football 119435 J. v. Tennis 119435 RICHARD SMALLBROOK lVIcKINLEY, 3D ccSKIPaa MNIACQ9 Biddle Rd., Paoli, Pa. gctober 8, 1926 Army Air Corps pper Haverford BAA Varsit - , y Soccer 11942-435 Llterary Board of the Mzrror 11942-435 Varsity Wrestling 119443 Literary Editor of the Phillipian 119445 l33l ivrvice xrmrd 'SP435 1 '9435 43445 N avy mouth 43'-H5 43'-l-45 Navy nceton 42'-H5 42435 41-+15 42-445 542-445 1 194,45 'inafore Uikado f 19435 1 I9-H9 1 19445 ' Laude ecided Yale 119435 H9445 119435 Q IOFPS qgfffifd 12-435 'IU-H5 JAMES CLIFFORD MCIVIANAWAY, J R. HBULL,, ccMAC,, UTHE BULLM 529 West Main St., Clarksburg, iNest Va. February 27, 1926 Army Lower U,.S.M.A. HAQJ J. V. Football 119425 Student Council 1Summer Session5 119435 All-Club Basketball 11942-435 Business Board of the Phillipian Varsity Basketball 119445 Circle A 11941-445 Coach ofjunior Baseball 119435 Vice-President of Circle A 11943-445 Coach of Junior Football 119435 Rifle Club P. A. Police 119445 Stage Crew Deputy Housernaster 119435 1 LE ROY SELLS MclVIORRIS NMAC SCOOP Doubling Rd., Greenwich, Conn. ' Plan A December 18, 1925 Army junior Antioch Editorial Board of the Phillipian 119435 Philo 11939-435 Assistant Housemaster 11942-435 Means Essay Finalist 119435 Assistant Air Raid Warden 11942-435 JOSEPH N. MACK CG.IOE35 CCF, Ag! 1515 Manor Ave., McKeesport, Pa. March 7, 1926 Army Upper Princeton Glee Club and Choir 11942-445 Pirates cyf Penzance Philo 11942-445 Mikado FRANK lVIORTIlWER NIAGEE, JR. HPETEH New Bloomfield, Pa. Plan A July 10, 1925 Army Lower Y-2116 Choir and Glee Club 11941-445 Draper Prize Finalist 119435 Dramatic Club 11941-445 Mikado Principal Editorial Board of the Mirror 11942-435 Abbot Art Prize 119435 Means Essay Finalist 119435 Mirror Prize 119435 ERNEST CARROLL NIAGISON MAGGIE ciMAGOO,, ZEBRA-BOYH ccMAG,, 50 Pinevale Ave., Reading, Mass. October 15, 1926 Navy Senior M.I.T. Choir and Glee Club 11943-445 Second Honor Roll 11 terrn5 l39l FREDERICK CASTLE MEACHAM, JR. iiMEACH,, NFREESH 250 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. March 6, 1926 Merchant Marine Upper Yale ,DBX Circle A fI94.2-445 Stage Crew Q1942-445 CHARLES RICHARD NIELLOR CSDICKH '4Tw1TCH 6 Beverly Rd., Great Neck, N. Y. November 25, 1926 N-3VY V42 Lower Y-316 QAA Rifie Club Q1942-435 Camera Club 419425 Varsity Track f1944l Circle A 119445 Open Door Q2 termsj HENRY CODDINGTON BIEYER, III iiHANK,, 125 East 74th St., New York, N. Y. February 11, 1927 Navy Junior and Senior Princeton Varsity Golf fIQ42D 4 All-Club Football M9435 VVinning Club Football fIQ43D Butler-Thwing Prize 119412 PAUL RIICOU MACH 30 Kerby Rd., Grosse Pointe, Mich. March 19, 1927 Navy SCHi0f Cornell Science Club vars, k Rifle Club All-Cllilbl-Sbicirz Glee Club Winning Club Soccer fIQ4.3D Varsity Lacrosse SUMNER NORTON RCIILEN DER c cIJUCKY: a c cSUMy 5 1o1 Clark Rd., Brookline, Mass. January 1 7, 1 927 - i Undecided Senior Harvard gli gigs 5332343145 All-Club Soccer 119431 Business Board of the POT POURRI fI944,j Rifle Club C1943-44, 1401 Fcbl Seni Win .july Low' Hifi Edin Mod Photi Latii 8-in- Septe lfppf Choii Rifle J. Y. june 5 Senioi Orchc CCtob .l u11io1 KOA .llllllor SCI1iOr Sllldffl Pre-sid. Pfesid. S0CiQ-li Busim4 HARDWICK BIGELOW MOORE CCBIG59 111' l 18 Grantland Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. .xlv February 25, 1926 Army L IQ Senior M.l.T. VVinning Club Tennis Q1943j Wlinning Club Swimming Q1943-44D RICHARD SHERLEY RIORGAN SGCHOO-CHOON 145 Hodge Rd., Princeton, N. J. -ly, ,iuly 5, 1926 Nalyy V-12 nh' ower rinceton l V I A I v Choir Q1941-435 ll Editorial Board of the Phzllzpzan QI94.3D . Camera Club Q1941-42j 44' Model Railroad Club QIQ4I-447 nj. V. Football Q1942j im' Photographic Editor of the POT POURRI Q1944j Varsity Football Q1943l Latin Players QIQ4I-4.33 Dove Latin Prize Q.IQ21.3D 8-1I1-I Octet Q1944j Means Essay Finalist I THOMAS ROBESON NIORSE HTOMEN 136 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass. , , September 19, 1 2 Naval Air Force all Upper 9 7 Harvard -ton '43, Choir and Glee Club QIQ42-435 QI. V. Track QI942l -I 4 Rifle Club Q1943-44D All-Club Hockey QIQ42-43, '4 J. V. Football QIQ42-435 WILLIAB1 FREDRICK NIUNROE 6'B1LL W1LL1E,' 381 Lake View Park, Rochester, N. Y. avy june 9, 1927 Navy nf-ll Senior M.I.T. ,431 Orchestra Second Honor Roll Q1 termj 143 143' WILLIADQQI FORRESTER NEALE, JR. CCTEXQQ CCBILL9, 4225 Beverly Dr., Dallas, Texas October 5, 1926 4 Navy Junior Texas University KOA Student Deacon ,jf-fl Junior Prom Committee Rifle Team Q194.3l .argl Senior Prom Committee J. V. Football QI942D Student Council Q1943-443 H J- V- Baseball QI94-3l ,yy President Student Council Q1 termj Varsity Football Team QIQ4.3l - 3 g President of the Saxons Q1943-445 Manager of Basketball Q 1943-442 Society of Inquiry Q1943-44j ' President Senior Class Q1 termj Business Board of the Phillijzian Secretary Student Council Q1 terml S tm JOSEPH BRADSHAW NYE, 3D joan HMOULDY Joan 45 North Ash St., Brockton, Mass. December 2 7, 1926 Navy Senior ' M-I-T- Philo CHARLES AMBROSE O'BRIEN HO. BY, CHARLIE 3I Byron Ave., Lawrence, Mass. September 1, IQ25 Navy V-I2 Junior Yale Vice-President of Philo 119435 Ll. V. F0Otbal1 119435 Circle A C1942-43D JOHN LARKIN O'BRIEN, JR. GCJERRY,, SCO. By, Fiddler's Lane, Loudonville, N. Y. Plan A October 16, 1925 Navy Upper Yale KDBX Stage Manager QIQ43-44, J. V. Football C1942-435 ROBERT THOMAS 0'BRIEN o, BJ, 527 High St., West Medford, Mass. August 24, 1926 Navy V-12 JUHIOI' M.1.T. Rifle Club CIQ4.0-43D B d - Rifle Team 419.21 Z?.p1S.?321?.?1l Model Rallroad Club C1942-44,5 RICHARD MICHAEL QTKEEFFE A D1cK,' III Hammondswood Rd., Chestnut Hill, Mass. August 22, 1926 Navv Junior V Harvard fIJBX A - J. V. Football QI942, 445 x?lgIClili2C1?iaSCball fI942D Glee Varsi-t H ei CI942'43l - Second Honor Roll Q1 terrnl 1 Y OC Cy 99445 . Credit List Q3 termsj l42l Fe ju K4 GI J. V2 Oc Lo jul U1 KC Ril Glc P. , Del Low CDB Pre Rifl V al V al Vai Mal ,I un HA1 Birq Navy ' Q l.l.l. Y-141 Yale 19435 Navv Yale 43-445 x X'-12 NI.I.l. 40-445 1 Club Navy zurviifd 12- -H1 43'-H' Il'l'lflP U'l'IIl5l OTIS HUDSON PARKER, JR. AGED CCGATSH IIQ Russell Ave., Watertown, Mass. February 1, 1927 Navy l ,ll1I1iOI' Dartmouth KOA O J. V. Hockey 11942-435 Glee Club Varsity Lacrosse 119435 J. V. Football 119425 Student Deacon 1 Varsity Football 11943-445 Varsity Track 119445 RICHARD SALTONSTALL PATTEE 26 Atlantic Ave., Cohasset, Mass. October 30, 1926 Navy Lower Harvard EDWARD HALE PEARSON CITED!! 8 Ferncliff Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. june 28, 1926 Navy Air Corps Upper Princeton KOA Riveters 11942-435 Riile Club 11943-445 Varsity Football Squad 11942-435 Glee Club 119435 Varsity Lacrosse Team 11943-445 P. A. Police 11943-445 Deputy Housernaster IAN SEATON PEMBERTON PEM', Pi-:MBEH HSEATH - I5 East 84th St., New York, N. Y. December 30, 1926 Royal Air Force Lower Yale CIJBX Second Honor Roll 12 terms5 President of the Latin Players 119445 Credit List 12 terms5 Rifle Club 119445 Gordon Ferguson Allen Scholarship 11942-43-445 Varsity Soccer 11942-435 Frederick Holkins Taylor Prize 1French 19445 Varsity Soccer Team 11943-445 Piano Prize 119435 Varsity Track 119445 Means Essay Finalist ROBERT BOSWORTH PERCY Bonn PERU HB. POICEN II Reservoir Ave., Rumford, R. I. March 16, 1926 Army Air Corps Junior Yalff I-IAQ: . Stage Crew 119425 Bird-Banding Club 119415 Spring Track 119445 l43l VV 1 IAY CLEMFNS PETTER OTIS SCADWANGFR I 121 East 30th St Holland Mlch Army June 7 1926 MlChlg3H Sen1or TAA Varslty Basketball 1944 ARTHUR OSGOOD PHINNPY JR Apr1l QI IQ 6 ART IN Xrmy ASTP Lower Harvard Rockwell House Procto1 C1943 445 Varqlty Swmqrnmg Squad C1941 44l Glee Club Q1942 445 X ars1ty Tenms Squad KIQ43 44l Senlor Hall Headwalter 8 1n 1 Octet QIQ43 44 Orchestra C1941 44 November 7 1926 NOBLE KENDALL PIERCE KNOBBIE 29 Broadylew St Brlstol Conn Xrmv -Xxr Corps D C11 C OX 01 llll CU 21' , Sf! C: D as cc I Civ .IUT 4 ,, ' . Ljk Glf . ' ' u U Off , , 1111 l l fill M11 . Pin The I , . C5 33 CSF 73 69 Yale St., Wlinchcster, Mass. -Ian ' , 2 g l Se Ri N . - il. . . I' -. -' - . - 1 r - D X L if 77 C A n f S V ', 7 ' R. , 1- I' ' 1 . A . XS ' l. Y Senlor Ya F Glee C-lub and Choir DOUGLAS TOWNSEND PITMAN CCDOUG5, SEPITQ, 78 Salem St., Andover, Mass. February 8, 1926 Navy V-5 Junior Cornell Varsity Track f1941-4.4j All-Club Soccer fI943l RICHARD PORTER, II MDICKQQ MRICKN 39 Spring St., Shrewsbury, Mass. December 10, 1926 Navy Semor W'o1'cester Polytechnic 'DBX Radio Club Varsity Track 09445 l 441 ar Cro N01 jun AU Seo jun lmc Sem D91 Cre Oul Ma Low KC Stu Trf Intl All Prc J - ' Yu Y a Ya my :am H' TP ard -H ' 44' lll'l' irps 'ale Y-5 nell 43' ,ny mu' lub FREDERICK SANFORD PRATT, II HFREDU HFREDDYH ' I9 Pine Rd., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. September 18, 1926 Navy' Junior , Harvard Librarian of Musical Clubs 11942-445 Dramatic Club 11943-445 Glee Club and Choir 11940-445 Printing Club 11943-445 Orchestra 11940-445 Varsity Tennis Squad 11940-445 Philo 11942-445 J. V. Swimming Squad 11942-445 Pinafore Third Leonard Prize Essay 119425 Mikado Second Draper Declamation Prize 119435 Pirates of Penzance Deputy Housemaster 11943-445 They Burned the Books JOHN POST PRISLEY iCPRIS,3 CCJACK5, Porter Rd. , Andover, Mass . January 16, 1927 Naval Air Corps Senior M .I.T. Rifle Club C1943-445 ,Philo C1943-445 Science Club 11943-445 Pzrates cyf Penzance Glee Club 11943-445 HENRY DEAN QUINBY, III GSH. D-37 GGDEANJS 50 Hawthorn St., Rochester, N. Y. Plan A November '21, 192 5 Navy Lower V Yale Cum Laude Railroad Club 11941-445 Second Honor Roll 13 terms5 Deputy Housemaster 119435 R. C. Sullivan Prize 11941-425 Air Raid Warden 119435 Varsity Track Squad 11941-445 Secretary of Railroad Club 119435 Varsity Track Team 11941-425 Vice-President of Railroad Club 119435 Cross Country Team 11941-425 Choir and Glee Club 11941-425 ,IARIES BREER RAINS BLAcK1E,' ' 6-JAMIE BOY' l 439 Maple Lane, Sewickley, Pa. Plan A November 18, 1925 Navy Junior Princeton AUV Secretary of the Accelerated Senior Class 119435 Secretary of the Junior Class 11 term5 Varsity Football Squad 119425 Junior Prom Committee J. V. Football Team 119415 Interfraternity Council Varsity Soccer Squad 119435 Secretary of the Greeks 119435 Varsity Tennis Team 119435 Deputy Housemaster 11941-445 V. Track Squad 119425 Credit List 14 terms5 Winter Track Squad 119435 Outing Club JOSEPH WELLS REISLER HJOEH EKREDN iiREDBEAR,, CSTHE REESE,, 145 East 52Hd St., New York, N. Y. March 22, 1926 Naval Air Corps Lower Yale KOA President of the Senior Class 11 term5 Student Council 119435 War Bond Committee Treasurer of the Student Council 119435 Undergraduate Treasurer 119435 Interfraternity Council Secretary of the Romans 119435 Athletic Advisory Board 11943-445 Athletic Council 11943-445 Prom Committee 119445 Rifle Club 11943-445 J. V. Football 119415 Varsity Hockey Squad 119425 Varsity Football Squad 119425 Varsity Football Team 119435 Varsity Lacrosse Team 11943-445 Captain Lacrosse 119445 Varsity Basketball Squad 119445 J. V. Baseball Team 119425 E451 'V JOHN CHATFIELD ROBINSON ACK 27 Arleigh Rd Great Neck L I March 30 1926 Army Air Corps l Junior Ya C Rifle Club Q1944j OUU' AFX Glee Club 4194-I V tcgcle A iI944l I C Varsity Lacrosse C1942 43 All Cl :filly koccer 419437 V rg' All Club Lacrosse fI94ID U OC ev C1942 437 3 GERWIN KARL HEINRICH ROHRBACH Sunset Rock Rd , Andover, Mass October 2, 1926 H NaVY Junior arvard Aprll o hestra 41 1445 VarS1wS0CCCr 619435 S210 TC 94 Varsity Fencing Q1942 43D All Club Soccer iI942l V- F V - Z v .A,v,,. Av V . f f , 3 ! MJ. Cin MJ H ii 3 i i ' lulj i . ' l l 'Low1 R 4 ' , RH' . 5 - 5 ' A ,I.V.. l 1 I I l gr K 1 I 1 I F 1 1 l 1 i 1 l l l l l 4 PETER WILLEMSE RooME PETER ROOM 135 Park Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Plan A November 29, 1925 Army junior Yale Augus. HAE Varsity Track fI943D Upper Varsity Football C1941-4,35 J. V. Track C1941-427 Band C J. V. Football Q194oj Chairman Commons Committee Varsity Hockey C1943-445 Student Deacon J. V. Hockey 4194.25 JOHN RUSSELL SABIN SABE Y - 2349 S.W. Sherwood Dr., Portland, Ore. Eucgiif Jullf 9, 1927 Undecided Semor Undecided Choir Glee C Circle CHARLES PARKER SAGAR 1 CHARL1E NCHASH John St., Greenwich, Conn. November 29, 1926 Navy l Junior Yale Se A pten IIJBX J ' , j. V. Football C1942-433 Umor iii P01193 C1949 Second Honor Roll C2 termsj VO S1 1Ea1l,r0ad,Club C194-V425 Credit List Q3 termsj army Wlmmmg Squad l1942'43l Varsity Track Squad C1944D l E461 ps llc' -il ,rl 33 33 LVN' ll' d 13l 125 my 'ale l43l 427 LICC 3011 -ded ded avy 'ale 437 11151 11181 M42 PHILIP CORNELL SCHEIDE HPHILH HSHADOWN 'CTHE HEAIY' 33 Colony Rd., West Hartford, Conn. .IUIY 3, 1926 Marine Air Force Lower Yale Outing Club C1941-427 J. V. Hockey C1941-425 Rifle Club C1942-43D LI. V. Tennis C1941-425 J. V. Football Q1942-431 All-Club Hockey C1943-445 Varsity Football Squad Q1943-44D JOEL DAVID SCHINE 420 Brooklawn Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. April 21, 1927 ' D Army Senior Yale RICHARD SCHUSTER SCDICK33 30 West 70th St., New York, N. Y. August 31, 1927 Undecided Upper A Yale Band QIQ43-447 Bird-Banding Club M9445 GEORGE LORD SELDEN, II 42 School St., Andover, Mass. Plan A , November 28, 1925 Army Junior Harvard Choir C1942-445 Rifle Club C1942-435 Glee Club 1 2- Spring Track Squad 119432 , C 94 43l C1rcle A Q1943-44.5 WALTER ROBERT SELFRIDGE 127 Abbot St., Andover, Mass. September 22, 1 926 Navy Junior Yale T471 V ROGER SHEIIWOOD SEYMOUR Rom: ROGG Porchuck Rd Greenwich Conn Aprll 8 1926 Merchant M2532 Lower I V Hockey fI942l fDBX Student Councll QIQ43 44 All Slug tHI-RCFCY il943l Interfraternity Council QIQ43 44, TC 1 IS 2 termsj Society of Inqulry 41943 445 Assistant Housemaster 0 Door Varsity Track 1944j pen Varmy Soccer 0942 435 Commons Committee ,I OHN FIELD SHEPARD MSHFPQQ ggJACK11 Ballardvale, Mass 21 7, 192 7 Navy gigllorry Harvard CIJAA Property Manager of the Glee Club Productions C1942 44j Property Manager ofthe Dramatic Club f1941 44l Advisorv Board KIQ43 44,3 Ap L Bu I l , M: I . . UI 4 I I' I - ' ' 4 . , Q . U gl ' ' - ' ' . l A11 . . l . 4 l l l 5 il E, I l 1 l 3 l Business Manager ofthe .Mzrror Q1942 435 Manager ofVars1ty Track KIQ43 445 Assignment Editor ofthe Phzllzpzan QIQ43 44, Manager All Club Soccer fI94.ID Athletic Council HAROLD LEE SIMONS CCHAAXPQF 56 Arleigli Rd.. Great Neck, L. I. August 25, 1926 Army junior Princeton Editorial Board of the Plzilfipian 11941-44D Second Honor Roll Q1 terrnl Rifie Club C1941-44j Varsity Fencing Team fIQ42-43, Latin Players C1943-44D Credit List Q4 termsj WILLIAM KELLY SIRIPSON HKELLYI' UBILLH 109 East 91st St., New York, N. Y. January 3, 1928 Navy Junior Yale French Players Q1942-435 Choir and Glee Club H942-44l Janus Club fIQ4I-425 Mfinning Club Soccer 0942? Bird Banding C1943-44D Credit List Q2 termsj AUSTIN CHICHESTER SNIITH CGBUD79 SGA. CPS 718 Lake Rd., Oconornowoc, Wis. April 25, 1926 Army Upper , ,Yale Philo C1943-443 secretar f Pl '1 I X . , y 0 11 o Q1943-441 Vafsltv Debatms Team C1943-445 J. V. Baseball 419449 M81 Ra Ed Oc' L01 Cun Edi Edi Rifi Mo Scic Cai Cht Phi Aug jur AL Ch Ou Ap Sem Al Va l.11'i11Q X alt' I t'g4ll 'Y'-131 Vflllsl 11.1q,-,- 19441 Illlllvq' Navy ll'YIll'd 11-441 +11-4+ 13-441 194171 .X1'111y lN'l'lllll IFFIII 142'-V3 lt'I'lllSl Navy Yzilc' ell'-H H142 ' 11'r111s1 .X1'111y Yah' PTH lf,4.1,l CARTER SMITH CCDOC73 711 St. James St., Pittsburgh, Pa. March 15, 1926 Navy Upper Yale CIJAA Coach ofj. A. Soccer 119435 Open Door Varsity Track Squad Q1942-445 All-Club Soccer H9425 STANLEY WALTER SNIDER HSTANU 66 Priscilla Rd., Chestnut Hill, Mass. April I2, 1927 Undecided Upper Harvard Business Board of the Mirror fIQ4.2-435 All-Club Soccer C1943-442 Radio Club C1942-435 Varsity Swimming Squad C1942-435 Editorial Board of the Por POURRI C1942-44D JOHN BUTLER SNOOK SCJOHNNYUS SCJ. BIS! C5J'AcK75 132 Bellevue Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. October 26, 1927 Undecided Lower Undecided Cum Laude Second Honor Roll C3 terrnsl Editorial Board of the Phillipian Q1942-44j Credit List Q3 termsl Editorial Board of the POT POURRI H9443 Means Essay Finalist 09442 Riiie Club C1942-441 Society of Inquiry Scholarship Q1943-441 Model Railroad Club C1941-4.45 Mikado Science Club Q1943-44j J. V. Track C1944l Camera Club C1941-425 All-Club Lacrosse fI94.3D Choir and Glee Club Q1942-443 All-Club Soccer 119435 Philo C1942-435 LESTER G. SOBIN CCJOE7! CCLESQS CCSOBE33 285 Pond St.,Jamaica Plain, Mass. Plan A August 19, 1925 Army Air Corps junior ' Princeton AUV Circle A Cheerleader J. V. Football Squad 09411 Outing Club H940-41, Varsity Track Team C1942-445 ALLEN lVIcBRIER SPERRY KCALSS Middletuck Farm, Middlebury, Conn. Plan A April 12, 1926 Navy Senior Yale AUV Varsity Soccer f1943j Varsity Hockey H943-44l l 49 l ., , . . . . .... .,. . ,. .,..,. ..,: ..,. .., .,.,, :,..T7.,,. ,...,. .. V: I ,, A-A, ,A H, ,P ,.,i.,,,,3 .,,,.,, hr.,,353.1.:gggwg.:gqggqe:3:::1:.f::f5mu , . 9-:UAL-A. -P:-:W-,.,,,.-,.-...,-.. . . . . , YV' FRP DPRIC WAC NI li STARK II FRIFZ FRED Q0 Main St Nantucket Mftss Army Ftfiiiioiary 4 1926 Undecided lfrench Players 1942 AI X Art Board of the Por POURRI 11943 445 All C lub r1faCk 119415 IOHN CRAIG STAUFFFR 208 West Irvin Ave Hagerstown 9 Md December 3 1926 Afml' Senior Princeton A Radio Club Guide Day Dlabolo ciub Philo DONALD IUSTUS STERLING DON Lizos T1112 BANKDR U ELIIS 2478 S W Sherwood Dr Portland 1 Ore Undecided September 27 1927 Upper California Institute of Technology Editorial Board of the POT POURRI 11943 445 Rad1O DISCUSSIOH Group Philo 11942 445 Robinson Prize 19435 Secretary of Philo 11943 44 Clough Essay Prize 19445 T r of Philo 119445 C1071 laude reasure Var itv Debating Team 1194 44 F1rst Honor ROl1l14 tern1s5 R J V Track Team 119445 Second Honor O 11 term All Club Soccer 119435 Varsity Track 1Spr1ng 19445 Winning Club Basketball 119435 Hart ard Club Prize 119435 U l 21 l 31' Zif Cl UH 44 7 71 G6 4 JU! . ' ii , C H i :IIA , 1 - .' ' 1 SH' J A 4 T ' 3 1 5 fill: , , - 'I ' I 1 3-ir 4 An ' X 2 , , 1 . s ' 1 Bird-Banding Club ' Jun . Ca R'fl . J A X' cc so cc 1 an cc 4 l 99 H S4 1.517 1 , - . ft- . , .9 H .t . ' , ' D 1 . - 1 4 f ' s' 4 ' 2- ' -2 F b V - - 'l , , A J l 2 '- ' Y 1 ' ' A I Firs C. . J Assistant Property Manager of Pirates of Pengance JOHN PETERS STEVENS, III SCJ. Pl!! SGPETEB9 R.F.D. No. 1 Woodland Ave., S. Plainfield, N.LI. May 28, 1926 ' Navy Junior Yale AFX Rifle Club 11941-435 Editorial Board of the POT POURRI 11942-445 Open Door 119445 Editorial Board of the Plzillipian 119445 Manager of Soccer 119435 Managing Editor of the POT POURRI 119445 Varsity Swimming 11943-445 Choir and Glee Club 1I94l'44l Class Day Committee Credit List 11 term5 WHITNEY STEVENS GGWHIT93 SCDOG79 2012 South Arlington Ridge Rd., Arlington, Va. November 26, IQ26 Alxrnly :Kip C01'p5 Junior Yalo UAE All-Club Baseball 119425 Secretary ofthe Student Council 11 term5 -1. V. Baseball 119435 President of the Student Council 11 term5 Nlanager of Hockey 119445 Secretary of the Junior Class 11 term5 Rifle Club Pres1dent,of the Upper Class 11 term5 Student Deacon Vice-President of the Upper Class 11 term5 First Honor Roll 14 terms5 Secretary of the Senior Class 11 term5 George T, Eaton Prize Business Manager of the POT POURRI Second Honor Roll 16 terms5 Business Board of the Phillipian Chairman Ofjunior Prom Committee 119435 Secretary of the Soclety of Inquiry 9101111 P, Hopkins Prize Alkqlub Football 11940 Senior Prom Committee 119445 Vafsltl' Soccer 11942'435 President of I11terl'1'aternity Council Cum Laude 1501 .1rc Edit Phill Apr. Seni KO P. A Yar Oct ,lun Sllln Ram tiny tlcd up il qui rmy flllll llub Ilub .ded logs' oup H3' 944' mule 'msk FIU l 14+ f 43 ' 59 favy falc- .-443 v+4l 043 ' .441 lltff' nrpi ale' 142' p.43l 'Hi Zlul: fllll Hl5i rizf' ms? 437 rm' 'H' llfil SHERWOOD BEACH STOCKWELL WooD1E', SHERM RED-MoUsE 641 Main St., Hamilton, Mass. November 15, 1926 Navy junior M.l.T. CIDAA Varsity Swimming Squad C1941-445 Secretary of the Interfraternity Council C1943-445 Credit List Q1 term5 Secretary-Treasurer of the Glee Club Q1943-445 All-Club Lacrosse C1941-425 Chairman of the Open Door Q1943-445 Deputy Housemaster C1942-445 8-in-1 Octet Tennis Manager 119445 Art Editor of the Por POURRI Set Designer C1942-445 J. V. Football C1941-435 Choir and Glee Club C1941-445 CARLTON MATTHEW STRONG, ,I R. ciCARL,, 8 Stonehedge Rd., Andover, Mass. March 24, 1926 Naval Air Corps junior Amherst Camera Club C1940-425 All-Club Soccer 09415 Rifle Club KIQ43-445 All-Club Baseball Q 19415 Varsity Soccer Team C I 942-445 All-Club Hockey C1 9425 Varsity Track Team QI942-445 ROGER LEON STRONG CCROGDS 983 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. February 28, 1927 Navy Junior , Yale First Aid Class C1941-425 Typewriting C1941-425 Circle A QI943-445 Varsity Tennis Squad Q1941-445 Editorial Board of the Phillipian C1942-445 Credit List QI terml Philo KIQ445 Business Board of the Por POURRI CI9445 HERBERT WILLIAM TALBOT, JR. c'W1LL c6TALBO,, 214 King St., Englewood, N. LI. April 1 1, 1926 Army Air COrpS Senior Princeton KOA Varsity Football Squad 119435 P. A. Police Varsity Baseball Team 119445 Varsity Track C 1 9445 HOLMES WEBSTER TAYLOR 5 CLANK! 9 I4 East 8th St., New York, N. Y. Plan A N October 5, 1925 ZVY Junior M.I.T. Student Council QSummer Session IQ435 Varsity Track Squad Q19435 Radio Club Squad P. A. Police U94-3'4-41 l5Il I T' JOHN FOX THOMAS JR Fox 506 Southeast F11 st St Evansville Ind May 20 1926 U S Marine Corps unior Ya C Varsity Wrestling 1944 JOHN CINCINNATUS THo1v1PsoN HJOHNNYH HJ on HA FH Park Blvd , East Liverpool, Ohio HI I5 1 ' . .X .'3 l ' . S ' ' I - - - ' M J ' 1 1 i Upf ' ' c 5 Y Hit 1 , . 'I P 1 ra 1 3 5 9 i 1 1 r 1 1 June 22, 1926 NZWY Upper Yale mg Glee Club and Choir 11942-445 Second Honor Roll 13 terms5 LOW Rifle Club 11942-435 Pzrates zyf Penzance Chef Credit List 11 term5 Cum Llludf 1' GERALD SANIUEL TOMPKINS, JR. 5G.IERRY53 GCDOC37 Rock Ledge, Front Royal, Va. Plan A October 1, 1925 Navy Junior Yale Apri QBX Soccer Team 11942-435 Low' Rifle Club 119425 All-Club Baseball 119425 4,11 Model Airplane Club J. V. Baseball 119425 ' Swimming Team 11942-445 All-Club Soccer 119415 WALTER FRANCE TORRANCE, JR. WALT Bio WALT,, HKRUN15' Country Club Rd., Waterbury, Conn. July 12, 1927 Undecided Junior Yale AUV Treasurer of the Andover-Exeter War Bond Drive 119445 QPCH DO01' Varsity Track 119445 Omg Student Deacon J, V, Track 119435 Upp Business Manager of the Mikado and the Pirates ryf Penzance Stage Crew Business Board of the Phillipian Varsity Football 119425 Rifle R156 Club 119415 A J. V. Football 11941, 435 Model .Raulroad Club 119415 Second Honor Roll 15 terms5 Student COUHCU 119445 Second Sweppe Prize 119435 Deputy Housemaster 119445 ALVIN HOWARD TUCKER CCAL35 CCTUCKDQ 124 Summit Ave., Brookline, Mass. September 17, 1925 Navy Air Corps Lower I Yale Business Board ofthe Phfzzf ian Philo 1 - 1 July R.H If 1 943 44. J . 1 e,C'lUb, . Varsity Tennis Squad 11942-445 um' VafS1tY SWIYYIINUS Team 11942-435 Assistant Manager of Swimming APY Business Board of the POT POURRI 119445 P521 J-V. ll0l'p5 X ale Navy Yale crms5 nqmzce I .11 ude Navy Yale lf'-l3l I 5 949 l 942 .l 1940 -cided Yale 19445 1944? 1943i Crew 19495 I- 435' I-rms! 1943? C IUFPS Yale H' H7 1,2--145 rn ming ALBERT FARRANT TURNER ' 'BERT' ' UTWEEZIQR, , Honolulu, Hawaii March 18. 1926 Army Air Corps UPPCI' Wesleyan H5417 V. Football Manager 09435 J. V. Football Q 19425 Varsity Swimming Team QIQ43-44.5 JOHN DAVID TURNER CCLANA,, CCLIMEYQF CCJACK7, l ff, Caribbean Petroleum Co., Maracaibo, Venezuela August 21, 1926 Royal Navy Lower Cambridge Chess Club 09435 Varsity Soccer Team 0941-435 J. V. Track Team fIQ4.I-4.25 Varsity Lacrosse Squad CI9435 EDWIN STEWART UNDERHILL, III CSTHE WOPU WHoP HFROGH EDM Hammondsport, N. Y. April 15, 1926 Navy Lower Yale GJAA Circle A WILLIAM MACY WAGNER HBILLU WILLIE WAC HVAGNILRH 52 Wyman St., West Medford, Mass. October 28, 1926 Army Upper Yale A Rifle Club C 1942-435 Bird-Banding Club 0943-445 WILLARD BREWER WALKER WILL', WILLIE,' 35 Martin's Lane, Hingham, Mass. July 19, 1926 Field Service Junior Harvard AFX Model Railroad Club Q 19415 J. V. Football 09415 LI. V. Hockey 0941-425 l53l Y DOUGLAS HOWARD WAYMAN WAY QI Hillsboro Rd Rochester N Y Undecided Iuly 5 1926 Semor Undecided Football I944j CIJBX Editorial Board of the Phzllzjzzan Q1944D ARTHUR STEVENS WENSINGER JERRY WENs', WENN113 458 Washington Rd , Grosse Pointe, Mich i 1 u 1 .Il V. Q i ! l . 1 I l i ' i 1 March 9, 1926 Army Semor Dartmouth Choir and Glee Club Second Honor Roll ffl termsl Film Society Board Ph1l0 -I. V. Track WHEELOCK WHITNEY, JR. WH1T Wi-IEELSN HVVHEEH Wayzata, Minn . july 30, 1926 . Navy Lower Yale UAE Glee Club C1943-445 President of the Gauls Athletic Council Q1943-443 Press Club Q1941-421 UI. V. Football fIQ4I-425 Circulation Manager of the POT PouRR1 C1943-441 Varsity Football fIQ4.3J Business Board of the Por POURRI Q1942-435 All-Club Basketball H9425 Student Deacon QIQ43-4.45 , Varsity Basketball 0943-44D junior Prom Committee fIQ43D Captain of Basketball M9443 ROBERT BYRON WILLIANISON, JR. CCBOB3, CSXVILI-4,3 A 47 Green St., Augusta, Me. May 19, 1926 Navy Junior Harvard QJBX Publicity Manager of the Pirates rj Penzance M9445 Business Board of the Phillipian Varsity Fencing Team C1942-431 Automobile Club H9415 Publicity Manager of the Nfikado 119435 Manager of All-Club Soccer 09425 EDWARD PANCOAST WILlN'IER ccNED,, Tall Spruce Farm, Granville, N. Y. MaY 25: 1926 Navy Upper S Princeton Philo il942'43D Science Club QIQ43-44, t54l NORMAN HENRY WILSON W1LEY,' NoRM,' 1 I4 High St., Middletown, Conn. , july 1, 1926 N 'lied .luniof Weslegaiii .I Cd HACD Fire Warden Q1941-42D SLHN Student Deacon Q1943-441 J. V. Football Q1941-435 Ch1efof.P. A. Police Q2 termsj V. Baseball QIQ4.I-43, Headwaiter Q1943-445 Varsity Baseball Q1944j Deputy Housemaster Q1942-435 All-Club Hockey Q1944j EDWARD EVERETT WISE CCTERRYH 4 Elk St., Albany, N. Y. Xrmy March 1, 1926 Navy loulh Lower Harvard 'rmsl HACIJ All-Club Hockey Q1944j Philo Rlile Club Railroad Club Q194gj All-Club Baseball QIQ4.3D Winning Club Hockey J. V. Football QIQ4,3D Navy ROBERT ALLEN WOFSEY Yale '6WooF', 2 Van Rensselaer Ave., Stamford, Conn. 3-443 August 6, 1926 Undecided 3-.HF Senior M,I,T, I-427 , ' 1 Philo C1943-445 Choir C1943-445 9 Railroad Club Q1943-441 3'-H7 '94-1' WILLIAM TILLMAN WOODROW, JR. Q DEADBALL GCTHE AGATEU 2572 Grandin Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio Y , V August 5, 1926 Naval Air Corps Lower Yale AUV J. V. Football Squad Q1942j '944' Business Board of the Phillipian Manager of Varsity Baseball Q1944j 1 -43' Business Board of the POT POURRI Head 'Cheerleader Q2 termsj 'fl-13' Athletic Advisory Board Open Door Athletic Council Student Deacon RAYMOND HENRY YOUNG igRAY,, CSRAYZOOH 50 Green St., Needham, Mass. September 28, 1927 Navy junior Yale AFX Winning Club Football Q1941j Yam. P. A. Police Q1943-445 I I All-Club Lacrosse Q1941j Q I nh Science Club Q1943-445 Varsity Track Squad Q 1942-445 i it Glee Club Q194I-435 First Honor Roll Q1 termj ,5-AH, Band QI94O-43, Second Honor Roll Q4 termsj ' Varsity Wrestling QIQ4I-425 Credit List Q3 termsj Manager of Wrestling QI944.D t55l 'IAM IOHNSON YOUNG, II WILL . NBILLM ccWILLss. anWILl1Y?9 179 Lynn St., Peabody, Mass. Plan A December 16, 1925 ligliy Upper a C Varsity Track Squad 09433 I-IAQ, ' 1 ' winning Club Football 419425 R156 Club C1942-437 FRANK JOHN ZAGORSKI G 6 3 1 16 Veteran St., Meriden, Conn. December 21, 1925 AUTIY Air F0rCC Senior West POIIII KQA Varsity LacrosseAf1944j Varsity Football 419435 PFOCIOI' in G- W- H. Varsity Basketball CIQ4.4D RUSSELL FREDERICK ZIERICK '4RUss 120 Kingston Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Plan A july 5, 1925 Army LOWCF Undecided Varsity Lacrosse H9435 All-Club Football C1941j All-Club Lacrosse 119425 Winning Club Basketball f1943j J. V. Football fI94.2-435 Honoris Causa .The following members ofthe Class of 1944 were called into service before graduation and received their diplomas Honoris Causa: JOHN CURTIS BAILEY RALPH THOMPSON KEELER JAMES BALLENTYNE TAIT, JR. l56l 'I niti pa sch lYV alc- Bl llil FCC vllll 44,3 H. THF. ded 41? 133 nd 9565 Gum Laude Gamma Chapter-Gharter, Granted IQO7 This Society aims to bestow that recog- nition upon high scholarship in the Pre- paratory schools which the Phi Beta Kap- pa Society gives to it in the colleges. A scholastic average of 8196 is required lor election. These members of the Glass of 194.4 were elected to membership in the Cum Laude Society on the basis of their superior scholarship in all subjects for their Senior year? HEATH LEDWARD ALLEN JOHN WESSON BOLTON GARLETON STEVENS COON, JR. JOHN CURTIS FARRAR FREDERICK DAVIS GREENE, QD ALFRED GILBERT HARRIS JOHN WILSON KELLETT THOMSON COOK MOGOWAN HENRY DEAN QUINBY, 3D JOHN BUTLER SNOOK DONALD JUSTUS STERLING, JR. WHITNEY STEVENS JOHN CINCINNATUS THOMPSON 'Other members were elected at the completion of their Senior year, but too late for publication. 157 Non-Returning Uppers WALLACE HOUSTON BELL 'LBELLHOPH D1NG-DONGM Mon 413 North Main St., Andover, Mass. M I8 I 26 Army Air Corps HY Q 9 unior West Point Varsity Swimming Squad i1944l WARREN HARDING BELL BE1,LHoP', HBELLBOYH GCDINGH 413 North Main St., Andover, Mass. May 18, 1926 Army Air Force Junior . U.S. Naval Academy Varsity Swimming Team C1943-44D GARY ROBERTS DUNN DAP', HGUNGA,, Oak Rd., Champlain, N. Y. January 23, 1926 Army Air Force junior Yale AFX Skiing Team C1942-435 All-Club Hockey 119415 V. Football H9425 J. V. Track Q1941-435 Cheerleader H9435 Varsity Track C1944j RICHARD EMERY GRAY D1cK,' ccDIXIE,, 223 Brattle Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. May 10, 1926 ' Army Junior M.I.T. Varsity Wrestling Squad C1943-445 Winning Club Football 119421 CHESTER EARL HOMER, JR. CHET HLOBSTERH THE LOBU 29 Royce Rd., Newton Centre, Mass. May 12, 1926 Navy Junior Johnson -J' V' Hockel' iI941'43l Track C1943l J' V' Football C191-l2'43l Lacrosse H9443 E581 Jun' jun B US al Apr' juni jan' Lov Cha Det He: Jul ,lux CDE 8-if Bu Cii De All HENRY K. HYDER HANK'f 651 Prospect St., Methuen, Mass. 'lips Jun? 6: 1926 U. S. Maritime Academy um junior Amherst WILLIAlVI ROBERT LEVIN ccBILLa9 MVVILLQQ 5 Chelsea Parade, Norwich, Conn. 1 W Jun? 15, 1925 ' American Field Service DIES junlor A Yale i Business Board of the Phillifian f1942-44D Outing Club f1941-423 Camera Club C1941-421 Printing Club Q1943-445 Coastal Piloting C1941-4.25 Varsity Track Squad C1942-435 ROBERT WILLIAlYfI LOWE CCBOBQQ 126 Main St., Andover, Mass. 1 April 19, 1926 Army Air Corps -431 junior johns Hopkins University n42' 143' lVIALCOLlW L. NIACKENZIE CSMACW CCMAL39 Treichlers, Pa. January 19, 1926 Maritime Academy run, LOWQI LT' Choir and Glee Club 11942-445 J. V. Football C1942-432 , Q, Deputy Housemaster Varsity Football f1943j H Headwaiter, Upper Hall Q1943-445 Varsity Track C1942-445 WILLIAM KINGSLAND METTLER ECBILLDS CCBUBSQ7 33 South Munn Ave., East Orange, N. june 10, 1926 AFIUY Air COYPS Junior Princeton 'FU l QBX Glee Club and Choir Q1941-445 ' 8-in-1 Octet Band lI942'44l Business Board of The Plzillipian OfChf'?5tfa lI94I'42l 'Nfl' Circle A 419,171,445 Dramauc Club.C1941-425 7 H' Deputy Housemaster Q1942-43D F1fCW-Hfden All-Club Hockey Team f1944j E591 , JOHN WESIJEY NIOFFLY ,IAo1C' MoFF', BU11.D1z1z,' 16 West Bells Mill Rd., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. August 5, 1926 ANDY Pgf. COFPS Lower rinceton QDAA Fall Track cI942-435 Editorial Board of The Plzillijzian 094.45 Winter Track 419445 Glee Club 0943-445 Spring Track 09445 ARTHUR KEEFE MOI-IER ART', c5AR'fIE,, A. KW 20 Sawyer Rd., VVellesley Hills, Mass. December 30, 1925 Undecided junior Yale UAE Varsity Hockey 0942-445 President Junior Class 0 term5 Captain of Hockey 09445 President Lower Class C2 terms5 Varsity Baseball C1942-445 Vice-President Upper Class 0 term5 Captain of Baseball K 19445 Student Council fIQ4,I-445 Cheerleader CIQ435 Advisory Board 4194.45 Deputy Housemaster 0942-445 Lower Commons Room Committee C1942-435 Athletic Council 09445 NVILLIANI LAXVRENCE OLIVER HOLLIET 384 North Main St., Andover, Mass. January 5, 1926 Navy Lower Williams All-Club Basketball CIQ435 -I. V. Football CI9435 J. V. Baseball 419435 KI. V. Basketball 119445 AUSTIN CRAIG SHEALY ACH, GREAT RED BEARH Briar Brae Rd., R.F.D. 2, Stamford, Conn. May 10, 1927 U.s. Marines Jumof Undecided UAE Varsity Track H943-445 J' V- Football il942'43l Hockey Squad 41941-425 -l' V' Baseball C194-2435 Hockey Team 0942-445 NORMAN L. SPER, JR. :LGUINSQ ccSPERM:s ccNORM,, 1873 Cherokee St., Hollywood, Calif. Eielfforglber 22' 1925 Army Air Corps Annapolis Dramatic Club - J. V. Tennis Squad 094.35 Qafgifoggbjg ?lqg'aCl fl942'4-35 Captain of Varsity Swimming CIQ445 Y 0 a Cam il943'4fl-5 Varsity Swimming Team H942-445 1601 juni' janv Ma juni 5 J. X . Vars Yars May jumf KO! LI. X . Yarsi J. Y. ps x J vu RALPH JOSEPH WIRTZ ix CC 37 U jon 4 48 Lowell St., Andover, Mass. .19-nPafY 4: 1926 Army Air Corps JL111101' Undecided cl lf FREDERICK DAY zoN1No 44 cczoas 4. 173 Ward St., Naugatuck, Conn. -ll May 7, I926 Navy -ll Junior Yale 31 41 TIAE Deputy Housemaster Adams Hall Q1943-447 Q V. Football Team Q1941j Captain Soccer Team Q1944j ' Varsity Baseball Team Q1942-44D KI. V. Hockey Team 11942-431 Varsity Soccer Team fIQ42'43l Varsity Hockey Team M9441 JAMES DAY ZONING xrx- CCJIBI33 CCZO77 11.5 173 Ward St., Naugatuck, Conn. May 7, 1926 Navy 3 X junior Undecided -ll KOA All-Club Hockey H9425 J. V. Football Squad C1941-42D ul- V- B21SCb2.ll Squad fI94-Sl Varsity Football Team M9435 Varsity Baseball Team f1942j J. V. Hockey Squad Q1941, 43D Deputy Housemaster Draper Hall Q1943j cs cd 41 gr 4l IIS .hs 3' 41 'll I 61 1 In 5CL1ff'f 5c,c.,,,f inSi!I quite takf' ' with ' ggn 11 other fbund 0fOL1I' eonHr Rec sehedl our et Athlei amotm be est squad The playec won. I The X uewed SHOW Rockx- The I attack eroust is still class It Combi team. Severn Whi to Squadf Exeter tbOIbg1 lfwk I Don B T116 It lhiled Sffillg in bm unior Year In September 1940 we were not really scared, but everything about Andover Hill seemed very bigand very new, we felt insignificant and vulnerable, and were quite justified in that feeling. It did not take us long, however, to get acquainted with our classmates from Texas and Ore- gon and Colorado and practically every other one of the forty-eight states. We found comfort and security in the numbers of our new friends and shortly we were all confirmed 'cwise preps. Recovering from the initial rush of schedule making and Prepping, we turned our energies to Mr. Di Clementi's junior Athletics. It was soon apparent that among us were many who would shortly be establishing themselves on the varsity squads. The Will Hall-Rockwell Game was well played by both sides. The Rockwell boys won, but it was a closely contested battle. The Will Hall-Rockwell conflict was re- newed in the Winter Term with a gigantic snow ball fight, started by an assault on Rockwell by the Will Hall contingent. The battle raged for an entire day with attacks and counter-attacks causing num- erous casualties on both sides, the outcome is still debated. In the Spring Term intra- class hostilities ceased and the rival factions combined to field an excellent baseball team, which in the course of its season won several outside games. While our personal interests were turned to A. teams and sports, the varsity squads were compiling a rather medicore Exeter record. A game but outclassed football team, under the leadership of Jack Fisher took a 20-2 defeat, Captain Don Boynton's soccer team went down 1 -o. The basketball and wrestling teams also failed to beat the Red and Cray, but the string of losses was broken by good wins in both hockey and swimming. The base- 63 WHIT STEVENS Caution-Dog at work ball team was also unsuccessful, so the victory of the track team, captained by Fisher and Kelsey, turned out to be our only major win over Exeter. We .had waited long for the victory celebration that followed, but we enjoyed that celebration no less because of the wait. We recall other things from our Prep year: the flu epidemic, which caused the evacuation of Rockwell for use as a tem- porary infirmary, and the resulting three weeks of riotous living in Peabody House, the after-hours commando attack on the Lower Cottages by a Rockwell House expeditionary force, the Dramatic Club's Room Servicei' 3 the fellows who are gone now: Dave Dines, Andy Cushing, Mitch Fish. But we remember most of all how we planned to return the next fall not as Preps and chicks from the 'cincubatorf' but as old men, as real P. A. men. WHITNEY STEVENS 544 Lower Year Having successfully completed our first year, we, the Seniors of 1944, returned to the Hill as Lower Middlers, hoping to take a more active part in school life. Selflconsciously we strutted about the campus giving advice to the lowly Preps, when suddenly our dreams were shattered by a shout, Hey, Prep! Yes I mean you! and we were made to realize what a small part of the school we really were. Qn Alumni Day in October, we were all greatly impressed with the appearance at Assembly of Col. Stimson, Secretary of War. Later in the fall we all travelled to Exeter and saw our first Andover-Exeter football victory as the team, led by Ken Keuifel, completed an undefeated season. Jim Ryley, whom few of us knew then, -but many were to know well later on, coached his team to a well-deserved victory in soccer. In December we were shocked by the news of Pearl Harbor, but few of us WHEELS WHITNEY 'cNow, when I was a Lower. . . 64 then realized the full significance it was to have for us and our friends. Despite wonderful holidays at home, we were glad to get back and were eagerly anticipating the activities of the Winter Term. The Term sped by quickly, but not until the basketball team, with the help of our own Mort Bishop, had won a sensa- tional victory over a previously undefeated Red and Gray. Those few of us who were going to the Prom were disappointed when an epidemic of measles broke out, but all was forgiven when two days were added to our Spring vacation. Track and baseball held the most inter- est for us in the Spring Term. In June Exeter invaded the Hill with a powerful nine. After I4 innings of clean baseball, Doug Sturges, our contribution to the team, batted in the winning run, to give Andover a thrilling 2-1 victory. The fol- lowing Wednesday many of us journeyed to New Hampshire to see our track team get nipped out 64-62, with Exeter sweep- ing the last event, the broad-jump. Besides these exciting athletic events, the entire school witnessed a remarkable performance of Pinajbre by the combined Abbot and Andover musical clubs. Another treat was a talk by a man we had all heard so much about, the late William Lyon Phelps. The many of us who took part in the historic mud-iight on the old campus will never forget it. Some of us stayed after exams for the Spring Prom. Looking back on it all of us were very well satisfied with the results of our Lower Year when we left. We were looking forward ardently to becoming upper-classmen, with all the new privileges that involves, the next year. We felt that at last we would gain posi- tions of more importance in school life, and expected to accomplish big things in the following year. WHEELOCK WHITNEY, JR. ,44 In Hill- sibili Obsex that men vacai time sam? Dc in Sf Dick soccf' Andi event Exetf on tl Tl rigor the c WC V signii to W1 body of le This, secor of ul' made Tl dutif The and ered mum Exeu WC sl fiieul ball, 21 wi extra Came happ Ous ' Wi .ls tQ 5 NYC rerly .Hier IIOI help usa- ated were nted out, vere IICF- 'une frful Jall, the give lol- ryed sam :ep- ides :tire ince and was uch the will fter ack vith left. to the 22111 osi- lite, 5 in 344 Upper Year 4 In the Fall of 1942 we returned to the Hill conscious of the privileges and respon- sibilities of upper-classmen. We slyly observed prepping methods, for we knew that in a yearls time we were to be top men of the school. Aside from a few faculty vacancies and various other minor war- time adjustments, the old school was the same. Defeated and tied by the Red and Gray in soccer, our powerful eleven, led by Dick c'Do-it-again' Duden avenged the soccer stalemate I2-O. The day of the Andover-Exeter football game was an eventful one, the first in our history when Exeter had spent the whole day en masse on the Hill-and without a casualty! The entire school was required to take rigorous body building exercises, following the custom of the previous summer, and we were subjected at intervals to the all- significant step test. At Thanksgiving, due to wartime travel difficulties, the student body was kept on the Hill and given a day of leisure with movies the night before. This, together with the elimination of seconds in the beanery and the institution of HK. P. as punishment for unmade beds made us all more conscious of the war. Through the dreary winter months we dutifully hibernated in a burrow of books. The long hard winter took its toll in colds and for a short time the school was both- ered with a minor epidemic of measles and mumps. Although we were defeated by Exeter in track, wrestling, and fencing, we showed our strength by trouncing our friends from New Hampshire in basket- ball, hockey, and swimming. The plans for a winter Prom were discouraged as an extravagant expense in wartime. As March came in like a lion, we left for home, happily anticipating three weeks of glori- ous rest.' With the coming of Spring, life on the 3 65 is ,X BEN BREWSTER 'cOh, to be an Upper againfl' Hill was resumed. The body building program, discontinued during the Winter Term, was started up again. The greater part of the student body accompanied the baseball team to Exeter to witness our 7-o triumph, but later the Exonians reaped vengence in track, tennis and lacrosse. The Abbot-Andover production of The Mikado was given with much hilarious success. About this time, we saw the Seniors busy and 'worried about V-I2 and V- 5 papers and we realized that soon they would be off to camps, colleges, and fronts far from our reach. Before we could account for fleeing time, June was here with its final week of prize day, Prom, and Graduation. Many stayed long enough to go to the successful Prom and to say good- bye to Senior friends, many never to be seen again. BEN BREWSTER '44 Senior Year NEALE AND REISLER Like Morison and Commager When the 1943 Fall Term opened, the Senior Glass returned to a Phillips Acad- emy which for a year and a half had been geared for war. The boys who had been to Summer School were a full term ahead of the rest of us and were already in the swing of their Senior year. It was hard at first to get used to the fact that over thirty members of the class would leave in February to go into the various branches of the armed forces. The death of Mrs. F uess during the summer was felt deeply by all who knew her, and all old boys missed her presence at various school functions. Thus it was that the 167th year began at old P. A. The fall athletic season was hindered by the War in that many of the older ath- letes had left for the services. The football team experienced many ups and downs during the season. The team was younger and greener than in previous years, but 66 at times it rose to great heights, as in the Maine game, and the second Tufts game. On November 15, the whole school traveled to Exeter to see one of the most exciting games in years. However the favored Blue went down to defeat by a 12-6 margin. The soccer team was held to a 0-0 tie in a muddy game up at Exeter. But in a second meeting, the Red and Gray downed P. Afs booters 1-0. During the fall two very distinguished speakers addressed the school in morning assembly. They were former ambassador Dr. Joseph E. Grew and Captain Aber- crombie of the United States Navy. Formal entertainment for the fall was highlighted by the Trapp Family concert. The school returned from Christmas vacation for an eventful Winter Term. For the accelerating Seniors it was the last on the Hill. The athletic teams lost no time in opening their respective schedules. The basketball team was the most success- ful team of the winter months, winning all but three of its games and soundly defeating Exeter twice. The hockey team also beat the Red and Gray on New Hampshire ice. Swimming and wrestling had only mediocre seasons, both going down to defeat at the hands of Exeter. The trackmen split two meets with the Red and Gray, winning the second one here by a comfortable margin. One victory over Exeter gave the school a feeling of real pride, as the United States Government was the real winner to the tune of over forty thousand dollars. This was the Bond Drive conducted by the newspapers of the respective schools. We raised a total of 322,I IO to top Exeter by a scant 3800. For the first time in the history of the school there was a mid-winter graduation. And for the first time in our four years at Andover, there was a winter Prom, which Tl signf did The mor: had way ever that Br fina' buds open Clas: tone for n effor Tl CHIH4 the desig hom prow stud. ing othe Tl is i thot to hy with look Spor Tru. made the graduation as nearly like the normal one in June, as possible amid winter's blasts. The student body was virtually snowed under with top-notth entertainment for the Winter Term. Dorothy Thompson, Angna Enters, the American String Quar- tet, and Ruth Posselt headed the schedule of programs which filled George Washing- ton Hall to capacity Friday night after Friday night. Also the Student Council held a Tea Dance, which was highly suc- cessful both financially and otherwise, as those held during the Fall had been. The Navy V-12 and V-5 programs signed up many boys during the winter, as did the Army Air Corps Cadet Program. The examinations made us all feel once more that college life as our predecessors had known it was still something a long way off. We became more grateful than ever that life at Andover comes closer to that college life than most prep schools do. Bright, sunny days greeted us upon our final return to P. Afs campus and the buds were beginning to come into the open. The general attitude of the Senior Class changed to take on a more serious tone, for this last term was the final push, for many it was the climax of four years of effort. ' The first bit of news the school received came from Dr. Fuess when he announced the plans for a Student Union Building designed to take the place of the Fraternity houses and the Commons room and to provide offices and other facilities for many student activities, in addition to contain- ing the universally desired milk bar and other improvements. The athletic outlook for the Spring is indeed encouraging. Baseball, even though few letter men returned, appears to have a strong team. The Lacrosse team, with almost a complete squad returning, looks forward to the first victory in this sport over Exeter in more than a decade. Track seems headed for a successful sea- 57 son. The Prep School Meet with Gil Dodds running the milepromises to be a very important event. Tennis prospects also are good. The Pirates q'Pen5ance, a combined P. A. and Abbot production, ranks with the two former productions of Gilbert and Sullivan operettas as an outstanding suc- cess. The spring also brought a softball league among the Seniors and Uppers. Althoughthe Seniors are heavily favored to win, the outcome was still uncertain at the time of going to press. The sudden death of Mr. Schubert was a shock to us all, and most of the class attended his funeral to pay their last respects. Preparations for Graduation began al- most as soon as we returned to the Hill in April. Amid the bustle of preparations, the only definite thing we can say about our future is that we hope to carry on with the same spirit we have found here 'on Andover Hill. JOSEPH REISLER and WILLIAM NEALE '44 JUNE 9, 1944 Last Lap The 1944. Class Poll This poll is compiled with as much accuracy as pOSSilJlC iii Order to assure H fair represen- tation of the opinions of the Class of ,44- MOST RESPECTED MOST VERSATILE HANDSOMEST Hudner 61 Reisler 52 Rains W. Stevens 30 W. Stevens 25 W- SYCVSHS Neale 22 Brewster 24 NG21l6 Reisler 1 Farrington 3 Heckel MOST MATURE MOST INTELLIGENT MOST MODEST Roome 25 W. Stevens 51 Hudner W. Stevens 22 Farrar 48 Bfewsfef Rains 22 Sterling 36 Neale Hudner 18 McGowan 1 3 Crawford UNCONSCIOUS WITTIEST LEAST APPRECIATED , , Canty Briggs Q2 Bergheim 20 A Deming, Heckel IQ Pearson 20 Rljbinson O Bull 1 5 Wilson 16 Walker C. Smith I2 Rains I5 EXECUTIVE MOST GULLIBLE MOST FACULTY DRAG Seymour Parker 53 Farrington 43 Farrington Camy 25 W- SYCVCUS I9 W. Stevens M. Arnold IQ Farrar IB Bergheirn A- DCUUHQ I2 Beach 9 McGowan JIM FIUDNER D Doo SMITH FREESE FARRINGTON JIM RAINS l ofa 10718 Img fUfHUdd1e-Y UAW 50 MCFMU- - -7, C'Mike and I. . .N jail' show me Gable 5 i f SW RAY YOVSG Squaw ,fm df Klear Talbf A. Dr Gale Pa Beach Hatto Bull Bram' R. Yo Whin- SCYIU4 Brews Brews Crom llvilsol M- Lt Farrix Sfym. Shepg Mack I 5 l x lr I J 7 -l l U U fl xi RAINS V 'MIL' Ill? Gaby ,f . 5 RAY YOUNG WOODIE STOCKWELL Squeeze ,em dy: Cruzfches are the szgule LADIES, MAN BEST DRESSED MC-HCh21ID Stockwell 33 Talbot Rains I4 A. DC1T1iHg Torrance I4 G-H16 Ault I 1 PARLOR ATHLETE CLQWN BCEICD Briggs' 35 Hatton Dickey 2 5 Bull Lilien 20 Bramwell Hatton 7 SALESMAN HE-MAN R. Young Crawford 48 Whitney Reisler 31 Seymour Briggs IO Brewster Abbott 8 PUREST BIGGEST BLUFFER Brewster Whitney 37 Crompton McManaway I5 Wilson Lyne I5 M. Lord Beach 9 POLITICIAN MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED Farrington W. Stevens 55 Seymour Farrington I 6 Shepard Reisler I 5 Mack Brewster IO I 69 l BILL WOODROW Dapper Dead-Ball ROGK Woodrow Briggs Whitney Robinson DICK C. Smith Kiam Whitney Briggs Lyne GRIND Sterling Qiuinby McGowan M. Arnold WEEKENDER Meacham Farrington Robinson C-. Allen Sobin DONE THE MOST ANDOVER Reisler Hudner W. Stevens Farrington MEL BERGHEIM Smiles on Thursdays onbl 59 8 6 5 59 9 8 8 8 39 27 17 14 79 17 IO 8 8 FOR 30 23 21 16 H 3 Oliver Wendell Holmes Library y ACTIVITIES I--. ---ll:-uv'-1.--di tudent Council Dalley, Moher, Seymour, Farrar, Torrance, A. Gallagher, Fields J. Hudner, VV. Stevenshj. Farrington, Neale, Reisler, Brewster PRESIDENTS Fall Term R. FARRINGTON Winter Term Spring Term This has been a very active year on the part of the Student Council. More than average student interest was further stim- ulated by the Councilis having charge of the Saturday morning assemblies. School problems were thus brought to the attention ofthe entire student body by one of its members. The open meetings of the Council, held in the Winter and Spring Terms, had a similar effect. Anyone could attend and ask questions of Council members. Sub- jects brought up were investigated by the Council and a report was made in Assem- bly or at the next open meeting. Proctoring in the Lower Middle dining hall brought a considerable improvement in conditions there. Two Senior members 74 W. F. NEALE W. STEVENS of the Council helped maintain order at the Movies on Saturday night. The Council frequently met with Mr. Cook to help him choose movies that would be most enjoyed by the majority ofstudents. In supporting the War Bond Drive the Council sold thousands of dollars worth of stamps at the Commons and before the movies. The Tea dances were all suc- cessful and profits were used towards the two Proms held at the ends of' the Winter and Spring Terms. This year's Council set a standard of interest and effective activity which marks the beginning Of increased student participation in the aflaairs of the school. Next year's Council will come nearer to that goal by building on the work of this yearas. dfffl' mil to d comer fboilvl Und Cd lf? wcfff Tod l I-ludll nndj Nlolic Lnclf' Fclf varim vison lllilfll the P, Illllltw job ol I i A ' ' 5 : V 3 5 - - Q - ---f-A.. :'.1. -Q' 571 --s-? 2'LQ f :YE -g .fiiififf ! Advisory Board The general purpose of the Advisory Board is to improve cooperation and un- derstanding between students and the coaching staff, and to help and advise the Athletic Department in matters having to do with the student body. The Board consists of the captains and managers of football, track, and baseball, and the Undergraduate Treasurer, who is appoint- ed by the Board. This year, these positions were held in football by Jim Hudner and Ted Heckelg in track by Bob Hatch, Jim Hudner, and Bob Lawlor tco-captainsj, and John Shepard, and in baseball by Art Moher and Bill Woodrovxf. Joe Reisler was Undergraduate Treasurer. Following the recommendations of the various coaches and captains, the Ad- visory Board awards all athletic letters and insignia. The appointment of cheerleaders, the P. A. Police, and the Open Door com- mittee is another duty of the Board. The job of the P. A. Police is to maintain order at athletic contests and other school func- tions. The Open Door serves as a welcom- ing committee for visiting athletic teams and other guests of the school, acting as their guides on the campus and in the Commons, and assisting them in any way that may be necessary. Each of these organizations has done excellent work this year and deserves praise for its ac- complishments. Another function of the Advisory Board is the election of assistant managers for the varsity sports. A list of candidates for these positions is compiled by the Undergrad- uate Treasurer and then voted on by the Board. Meetings of the Board are held at the beginning and end of each term, and at any other time if athletic matters come up which must be considered. Mr. Shepard commends highly the members of the Board for the excellent way in which they have performed their duties. Woodrow, Heckel, Shepard Reisler, Moher, J. Hudner, Hatch Societ of Inquir PRESIDENT TED HEGKEL Woitingjiw Dorothy Tlzomloson? The aim of the Society of Inquiry is to approach religion in a broad and vital way. It is a student organization, relying for leadership not on a faculty group but on an undergraduate board. The S. of I. this year was led by Ted Heckel, President, Whitney Stevens, Vice-President, and Reynolds Farrington, Treasurer. Among the usual functions ofthe society, the annual Charities Drive, with IOO0fb student backing, this year raised 354300, for distribution among charitable organ- izations. Two scholarships were given, and a number of lecturers and notables were presented to the student body. The most significant innovation was the acceptance of volunteers, from the Upper Middle Class, to be elected to the board if their interest in the society merited it. On April 23 a convention of delegates from Exeter, Milton, Groton, St. Paul's, and Thayer met with Andover to discuss racial and postwar problems. For the complete success of the S. of Ifs year, credit is due to Mr. Baldwin, for his advice and cooperation, and to all the members of the retiring board. M i Neale, B. Bishop, M. Lazo, W D 11 Seymour, W. Stevens, Heckel, President,'a,iTiTi'l2irriZgiidln, Dickey Caps Abbot 1 and Ct year. C for cha inlbmi: fields 0 Und: and I'lll the YCI' store in lfllifll ga ill' LIS gm the till The LISUQI 1 Brown? bfwkell while 4 used 1-R allllllnl held, i Circle A L. Grant, H. Allen, Kerrigan, Meacham, Levitan, McCulloch, W. Boyd Rosenthal, Sussler, R. Strong, Mettler, Underhill, A. Cohen, Cherry Isham, E. Cook, J. Abbott, Dickey, President, McManaway, A. Deming, Burgess E. VVilliams, J. Dunn, C. Allen, QI. Robinson Capably led by Stan Dickey and c'Bing Abbot and spurred on by Messrs. Baldwin and Cory, Circle A enjoyed a vigorous year. Collecting magazines and old clothes for charities was followed by a series of informal addresses by speakers in various fields of social work. Undeterred by accumulated cobwebs and rubble, several members took part in the renovation of a long-disused grocery store in Ballardvale. The building has now taken an important place in the commun- ity as a much needed recreation center for the village youth. The Andover Guild also received its usual help from Circle A. Two members, Browning and Isham, supervised bowling, basketball, and boxing every Wednesday, while Coolidge, Baty, and others collected used records. During the Winter Term the annual party for the Guild children was held, including tricks by Magician Mayo, 77 movies, and refreshments. Master of Cere- monies Follansbee conducted the festivi- ties with customary high spirits, and the party was considered one of the high points of a successful year. PRESIDENT STAN DICKEY Tie sooge and shocks together -.gc was sa'-.-sa. 'i mbgdsbd -.1-.-. ,.,,,, . ga g.. . - ' -- ' -- fh fgfsw s--T - --2---. ---A V -,- - v - -- - ' ' -' ' ' -- -- - .sf an ' -.5-.-. ,. -..-..,.. .r V.. L - - - , ' '- Philo and Varsity Debating Kutscher, Works, Mohler, D. Beach, Koechl, F. Pratt, A. Tucker, Prisley Nixon, R. Strong, Constable, Corydon, Morison, O'Shea, Schine, Love, Rosenthal McCulloch, Boll, Sterling, McGowan, Pre.fia'ent,' H. Allen, A. Smith, Wlofsey, J. R. Brown The one hundred nineteenth year of the Philomathean Society has been out- standing for the great increase in member- ship and interest. Under the Fall Term oflicers, President Tom McGowan, Vice- President Charlie O'Brien, Secretary Don Sterling, and Treasurer Heath Allen, the PRESIDENT ToM MGGOWAN What do you do in your spare time? 78 meetings were devoted to debates on topics of current interest, such as foreign relations and the eighteen-year voting age. After each debate there was a discussion period in which any member could join, an experiment that proved very successful. During the term a six-man judging panel was chosen to make the weekly decisions, and the chairman usually gave a brief criticism of each debate to improve tech- nique. The term ended with a banquet at the Andover Inn which was attended by over fifty members of the Society. Mr. Basiord was the guest speaker, and several of the members gave amusing after-dinner speeches. This marked the last appearance of Vice-President O,Brien, who left to join the Navy. , The Winter Term saw a greater variety of topics, as a committee was established to arrange them on varied subjects and well in advance so debaters could have ample time to prepare their speeches. The l 1 Collxllili' arrnllf' dt'lJ11l - mm., Al was IW PfCSlCl l4 dgnl. Stalin!- 'I'ezm1 ll' dlcsrfi fx Duc- Ur butt-5 Cf' Term V- anothrf were 1' oliiccrf also SIN' , L seal. l-- well ow: ln Lli Bradtinrc The RH werenoi results. f late. Ho succestt committee also took charge of publicity, arranging an exhibit in the library for one debate, and putting up posters for many others. During the term another election was held, Tom McGowan was reelected President, Heath Allen chosen Vice-Presi- dent, Austin Smith, Secretary, and Don Sterling, Treasurer. The Varsity Debating Team had one encounter, defeating Mid- dlesex Academy by a unanimous decision. Due to wartime difhculties, no other de- bates could be arranged until the Spring Term when a debate with Exeter, and another with Bradford Junior College were tentatively scheduled, with the officers as the team. The Winter Term also saw the acceptance of a long needed seal. The term ended with membership well over sixty, the highest in several years. In the Spring Term P. A. won the Bradford debate by audience decision. The Robinson Prize and Exeter debates were not held in time for publication ofthe results. Next ycar's elections also came too late. However, the year has been the most successful in a long time. The officers have WEDNESDAY AT 1 'CN0w, constitutionalbf. . . done a good job of organization and have helped revive student interest. Debates such as Chittick versus Sterling on the question of a fourth term found very sizable audiences. Mr. McCarthy's help in improving debating technique was especially appreciated by the members of Philo. The success of this year's program makes the future look very bright. Even more advances are expected next year. VARSITY DEBATING H. Allen, A. Smith Sterling, McGowan 1 l 79 Huwwewwmawssrwy -e 3--wr Egg, 14-:,5..,,.1q.,f 9 -.-..- S 57 .r 'J' 1. 1. 'v 9 'v r.-r'g,g.v' sei-L, ff e x-'1-4:2 u . 1 - -1 f- Q -F4-.,.i,+.,.,.,., , ,. A, -. .- Y.: - f --1-: f s- ....,--. .-,..,.- --...a,,.. . .-- ...- , . ..,. , -. - . ...,..,,. . . - - ' 21-:.5.'.:.g.:.:-:-1-.-IfIf!-1.5-,.3.:.3.5.1f:.g,g.gfgfygfffg-, , ,., ,f, , ,.. . ,ffigv .- , rg ,. ., L2-1.-,i,g.-1 1 np, r,.,. f, 1 .r , , ...J 1, A - :..,,.---.ara-,A --A-W4--A--e -...-.1.f,-.-.f.f.1-1.- .-.-,-.1.f.-N.-.w '.f.f' f '.' f.- -.-.f V-'avr '. ' . .n f. nv .w -.f-vs' '-. .fav - 'Q' -.-.' - -.- - - I .- .V.,.,.g.,.,.-i .,.,.4.,.,.4.,.,.,.,, .1-...Q-,. ., I I ,.,f,, ,Q 1 ,-5- .,. e. 1. f vi- .un . . - - r.,.wl,',,,,...f1.,.f...,...,.......,., -. N... -- J. w.. ... - - 2 ? S, , ' ,.. K ,4A,, ,rN...,,,,,..........,.V. Brewster, Heckel, Dickey Mohcr, Woodrow, Headg G. Dunn Cheer Leaders P. A. Police Wise, P. Scheide, R. Young, McManaway Pearson,j. Dunn, N. WVilson, Sagar Woodrow, Heckel, Hatch, J. Stevens, C. Mellor, J. Farrington Torrance, Seymour, S. Stockwell, Clzairmang Carter Smith, Briggs i Upen Door - - - - . v- ...... . - , , V. ...LLMA QINQI :I:I. I .I :- .. Prom Committee Dalley, B. Bishop, fabsentj Warren, Fields' Student Deacons Barnum, Hatch, Wilson, P. Roome, Whitney Heckel, Torrance, Dickey, Neale, W. Stevens Class Day Committee Bergheim, J- P. Stevens, Farrer, Lilien, Cabsentj Brewster w Isle-fuel.-q,Q4.f.----v -iii-11 mni :'f.'-:-24-1-1'.1:v:-:cf1-ii5':+.-:':-.'.'.f:f:v:-:f:-:-:f. ,-5, , . . , , .-' -f- - 'f e r r' . . r A-N'if 2.w '-wr--H':f.p-g2,:d-3 . W - W - - - -'H ' - ' '4'7'fr' A , , .A,j.v.1g.1,'.'.w.5gf3.pg-jf:-QQ.--'q.'are 'qw' - va ' - -42' v-v v,vg:gv'v:-gn-'gt-1,-3 . -gf .51 r, , Hg, - .1 ,, - -'Ct :iv 3932:- -,-ga-:+2-:-sz-LQ'-.x.'.-1-.14.1.-4411:-.-:-:Qs-. - -r tb. , -em - - - -.. - 1 .-. -- 3 . l G ee Club Barnum, Milender, Tarbox, S. West, Stone, Koechl, Pollard, Thaw, Thurlow, Eastham, Marks I Stride, Hutchison, Spencer, Barss, Mackenzie, D. Beach, G. Schine, Kemper, Walter Pratt, R. Morgan,,I. Wilbur, Montgomery, W. S. Hickey, Barlow . t I. R. Brown, D. Killam, J. Stevens, Reid, Lilien, S. Stockwell, Treasurer, Brewster, Pre.vza'ent,' Dickey, Secretaglg ' F. Pratt, Librarian, Graham, Pierce, Boll, Phinney Mack, Prisley, May, Stark, R. Beach, Hunting, Cahill, Love, C. Qiuinby This year, with a nucleus of old men to support it, the Glee Club undertook a strenuous program, including three per- formances of Gabriel Faure's Requiem,H and the annual Gilbert and Sullivan, which was The Pirates zyf Penzance this year. Dr. Pfatteicher, for over thirty years Director of the Music Department, again produced an organization worthy of merit. Strength in the tenor sections, which is unusual for an age at which the voiceis changing, gave the chorus a well-rounded volume, which was not as predominantly bass as heretofore. The enrollment in the Glee Club speaks Well fbr its success. At the seasonis height, there were well over one hundred boys attending rehearsals regularly. The num- ber never dropped below eighty. This marked enthusiasm was so strongly felt that the system of giving out half-cuts for 82 absence was in large measure done away With. The Glee Club's repertoire was large and varied. Two full-scale works were performed in addition to the Faure Requiemf, S. Bach was represented by the cantata Sleepers Wakef' and Spring from the oratorio The Creationi' was chosen from the works of Haydn. Shorter works were Georg Friedrich Handel's 'cThen Round About Thy Starry Throne and Lift Up Your Heads, O Ye Gates, the latter from c'The Messiah? Lighter works included were Schubert's 4'Hark, Hark, The Lark at Heaven's Gate Sings, c'Once I Loved a Maiden Fair, and two choruses from the 4'Beggar's Operaf' The orchestra assumed its customary role, playing at all the Glee Club con- certs. This year, a great cooperative effort was reached when its strings and trumpets Mimi. 511111-ii ,I if mcml' Churcl Olhrl' ' they l Cludrtl Exim Ensrrr Rejoir rendtf enroll: Choir periiifi of lllt' Ol' ' nectc-cl 157 by conlidi Club it in orflf cess. F lbr his ist nm rehear appear hours Pll'tI.'c'f Comm' ing Ili men .1 accompanied the Clee Club in the Bach cantata Sleepers Wake. The Choir comprised of Clee Club members took a prominent part in every church service, singing an anthem every other week on the average. At Christmas, they provided special singing, which in- cluded a wide choice of carols. At the Easter service, they sang This Joyful Eastertidef' an Easter carol. Rejoice! Rejoice in the Lord all ye People was rendered as the anthem. Due to the large enrollment in the Clee Club, a seat in the Choir was much in demand. Sharp com- petition certainly improved the standard of the singing. Of the faculty members who are con- nected with the Clee Club, Dr. Pfatteicher is, by far, the most dominant. With confidence in its ability he gave the Glee Club much of his time and all of his energy in order that each concert might be a suc- cess. Mr. Fillmore deserves much credit for his continued faithfulness as accompan- ist and for holding his own Requiem rehearsals. Dr. Firth, although he never appeared with the Clee Club, spent many hours in laborious rehearsal for The Pirates. Mr. Cobb of the Social Functions Committee aided Ben Brewster in launch- ing the several dances. To both of these men a vote of thanks is due. FRIDAY EVENING REHEARSAL ' 'Hallelujahfn 33 PRESIDENT BEN BREWSTER . . .and daughters For the students, Ben Brewster proved himself an able leader and a skillful organizer. Playing the role of the Major- Ceneral in The Pirates, he nevertheless had time to manage the social functions of the Clee Club. Woodie Stockwell as Treasurer handled the difficult job of collecting money with good humor and tact. The 8-in-I Octet sang for the school and the Glee Club on numerous occasions. Solo work for Bass was divided between Frank Magee, who left in March, and Pete Stevens, who sang solos in the 'cRe- quiem,', Sleepers Wake, and Spring.7' Tenor parts in the latter two were taken by Fred Pratt. The greatest single Clee Club effort was the performance of Faure's Requiem with the Walnut Hill and Dana Hall schools. The work is over seventy pages long and takes thirty-five minutes to per- form. It is divided into the parts of the Ordinary of the Mass. Most of the music is for chorus, but there are three solos, one for Soprano, the other two for Baritone. About the concerts themselves, there is little to add except that all were very successful because everyone had a lot of fun. But in addition, the Glee Club was able to set a standard of excellence this year which will be difficult to surpass. Piratesf of PCHZHHCC Following the tradition set two years ago with H.M.S. Pinafore, and continued lastgyear with the Mikado, the Pirates ay? Penzance was presented on the G. W. H. stage on April QI and 22. Abbot and Andover again combined glee clubs and directors to produce a colorful and con- vincing production. Excerpts were broad- cast on the Phillips Academy Hour, as an added touch. Direction of the singing was handled by Dr. Piatteicher of Andover and Mr. Howe of Abbot, the staging was directed by Mr. Cochran and Dr. Grew of P. A. and Miss Rath of Abbot. Starring for the third suc- cessive year was Alva Houston, this year as Mabel, the daughter of Major-General Stanley, portrayed by Ben Brewster. Pamela Clark was Ruth, pirate maid, Fred Pratt played Frederick, apprentice to the Pirate King, Peter Stevens. Harry Reid was the Sergeant of Police, Dave 84 l Thaw played Samuel, lieutenant of the King, and Betty Colson, Janet Hitchcock, and Gretchen Fuller took small parts. The radio broadcast revealed several weaknesses which were quickly remedied. There was time in the alloted hour for only a selection of songs, interspersed with narrative. At the broadcast and in the stage performances Dr. Firth and Mr. Fillmore were the accompanists. The complete success of the production was partly due to the directors and to the polished and in some cases professional acting and singing of the principals and choruses. It was also due to the organiza- tion of ticket sales, publicity, and stage managership, all of which were capably handled by unsung students. The popu- larity of the shows predetermines the con- tinuation of Gilbert and Sullivan in years to come, following the tradition of 'Elle last few years. 2 as vflu- gir vf-r hul Ilu- Hhuuliv Mlinrlwl Hhuul Y 'zlinnl our wills. Papa 2 llis nursvry nlnid IH F- Q 'l'hv Voivv N pnlirf-main s lot I ynm thup lratv king, Orchestra Greenburg, R. Chapin, Dalen, Thurlow, Jewett, Starke Berlin, Rohrbach, Lilien, Brewster, Graham, Pratt, Phinney, Eastham, Carter This year, the second under Mr. Mac- Donaldis baton, the orchestra chose more difficult works and played them well. At Rogers Hall they performed the first move- ment of Haydn's C Major Symphony ORCHESTRA PERFORMING Hqy Bob, give us a smile! 86 No.7, the c'Salomon. At the Walnut Hill and Bradford concerts, Bill Munroe and Jack Eastham were soloists in Handelis Grand Concerto in B-flat Major for or- chestra. In their joint concert with Beaver Country Day School, they played the first movement of Mozart's Symphony No.41 in C Major, the Jupiter. Perhaps the greatest cooperative effort was achieved in the orchestra's accom- paniment to the Bach Cantata Sleepers Wake, performed in its entirety at the Beaver concert. The orchestra at full strength was com- prised of: four ist violins, six 2nd violins, viola, cello, bass, three flutes, three clari- nets, two horns, two trumpets, and piano. Credit for the orchestra's success in a year when music has been replaced by the sciences in importance should go entirely to Mr. MacDonald. He came to Andover three days a week to insure the success of the orchestra,s purpose. It pros- pered under his leadership. 1 1 Illii-2 milf' tiiculf' lllli' 4 all pr-rzz.. sch' 'Z to lf. bard . S., glllfg' - P. .PX liz.: llfxi' ' Rl Il. Nur , bali - 111.117 U btixii. kiihgi, Il I I --'--ff'ms:.n.ap.-'-ale.-zz1:i2vi.S .. ff ,If,I,.,:,.....3:f' f' Band For the first time in its history, P. A. has had a band of more than 45 pieces, This was brought about by student en- thusiasm, good leadership, and the great many changes in organization that have taken place in the band this year. A new bandmaster, Mr. Knuttunen, was the faculty conductor and coach. For the first time in its history the band has continued all year. There was more equipment, a permanent place to practice, and the school provided athletic excuses and fare to Exeter. But most important of all, the band was supported by the faculty and the student body so well that it is the best P. A. has ever had. During the school year the band played before the movies, at football games, and at rallies. Its outstanding job, however, was the performance at the Exeter foot- ball game. Mr. Peck, who organized the marching, deserves a lot of credit. Dave Schine, student conductor, did an excel- THE TOOTERS TOOTING Ph-h-h-h-h-h-ht lent job of leading and the 21 brasses, 20 Woodwinds, and five-man drum section gave out in wonderful style. Dave says that although this band is good, there is room for improvement. With good luck he hopes to lead a band of 65 men next year. M t omer , Green, Prest, Durwood, B. Stevens Chapin, MCD h, K. Simpson, Sanborn, McGinnis, J. OH g Y , Onoug Bassick, Mettler, Berlin, Schine, Gral'121IT1,. Stafki Geafmg: Petwld Brown, Crosby, Vincent, Heely, Blanding, ROSCDU1211, Wilder v+ywnw1qvne1fw+w Radio Activity Dr. Fuess, in discussing the purpose of the Phillips Academy Hour, said, It is intended to provide a community service of pleasure and education, through which the intellectual and cultural resources of the school, as represented chiefly by the members ofthe faculty, will be made avail- able to a broader publicf, The first six months of broadcasting have seen the pro- grams fulfill their purpose. At the same time, student participation in them has been by no means inconsiderable. On Thanksgiving Day, 1943, the Acad- emy vesper service was broadcast from the Cochran Chapel. On December 9 an all-student group gave Stephen Vincent Benet's Thy Burned the Books, Farrar and Lilien were supported by Pratt, Koechl, Phinney, Boll, Isitt, Coolidge, Kemper, and Blackmer. The topic UShall the Soldier Vote? was debated on January 20 by Sterling, McGowan, Heath Allen, and Dave Beach. A week later 'gThe Reorganization ofthe Cabinet Systemn was discussed, Farrar, Coon, Heming, and Al Harris participat- ing. A piano recital by Darling and Collier was followed on February IO with a program of book reviews, by Donovan, Hardy, Kellett, and Wyman. On Feb- ruary 17, Allen, Sterling, McGowan, and Baty talked on the National Service Act. In a broadcast of excerpts from The Pirates fyf Penzance on April 6 solos were sung by Brewster, Pete Stevens, Pratt, Reid and Thaw, with the combined choruses of Abbot and P. A. accompanying. The last major student show, a condensed version of julius Caesar, included Farrar, Lilien, Gale, Lord, Lauterpacht, Snook, Boll, and Love. The production of this play wound up a thoroughly satisfactory group of student broadcasts, the popular- ity of the activity assures its continuation. DRAMATIC CLUB Torrance, McMorris, C. Quimby, Meacham K C, 1-1' Darling, Bourne, Pratt, Isham, Galie, Fliltlzkgyi, Eitlslesrdii Lord As th the Lati scenes li latiaf' B ttin Beat audience Latin. X C0ming latter hg Il01l ant CIS. Bt-it himst-lfg Dick W9lC0mt tort- Sp, Plan-d H1319 W the app Philolaq Paliied Phil A Slat-Q tm 12 .... , ---M-.-.1--- F FF?FE?4. ?:EI ?Fi1r'r'T'f: 1r':':-:- Latin Players I Volk, McGill, F. Thompson, Nlay, Meeks, Hull, Wyman Simons, R. Morgan, M. Thompson, Pemberton, Humphries, Farrar, D. Killam As their seventh annual production, the Latin Players presented a selection of scenes from Plautus, comedy, c'Mostel- lariaf, Before the performance, Mr. Good- win Beach, a classicist of note, spoke to the audience, delivering half his speech in Latin. Mr. Peterkin announced the forth- coming resignation of Dr. Westgate. The latter has been responsible for the origina- tion and continuation of the Latin Play- ers. Before the curtain rose, Dr. Westgate himself gave a short description of the plot. Dick Morgan, as the god Hercules, welcomed the gathering with an introduc- tory speech. A vengeful slave, Grumio, played by Simons, appeared, his comic tussle with Humphries, as Tranio, led to the appearance of Farrar in the part of Philolaches, a prodigal. He was accom- panied by his wife, glamorous ex-slave Philematium QKillamj, and a maid CMayj. A slave rushed up to announce the arrival 89 from Egypt of the father, Theopropides who, played by Thompson, strode on the scene. Tranio Qnow Ian Pembertonj con- vinced him that his house was haunted, and the disconcerted old man lied in des- pair, to the delight of the wicked Tranio. So ended the comedy. Minor characters included slaves Wy- man, Anderson, F. Thompson, Volk, Kohlberg, and McGill. Quinby and Meeks played the parts of revellers, and caroused amusingly. The scenery was built by Kim- ball, Ryan, and Daland, under the direc- tion of Mr. Heintzelman and Mr. Winslow. Mr. Morgan, Harrington, and Moflily of the Art Department made posters. Mr. Leavitt provided music. The Latin Players extend their appre- ciation to Ian Pemberton, president, and Dr. Westgate, director. It is hoped that in spite of Dr. Westgate's absence, plays will continue to be given in years to come. Pot Pourri EDITOR CURT FARRAR This Pot Pourri keeps my average down Glancing through past POT POURRI,S, one gets the impression that thcy were little more than souvenirs of the Senior Class, of minor interest to other members of the student body. The Editors of the 1944 POT POURR1 feel that it is a miscon- ception of the function of a yearbook to limit it to the activities of the graduating class. They have endeavored to make their book a pictorial and verbal narrative that will be representative of and interesting to the whole school. There is a section devoted entirely to the lower school, with stories of the year from each class's point of view, and pictures of-undergraduates. The feature, based on a typical but fictitious senior, is written in amusing style. There are pages and pages of photographs, recalling scenes and in- cidents that highlighted the year. Production difficulties in wartime have successfully been combatted by the co- Q0 operation of the boards with Sargent Studios and the Andover Press. The POT POURRI statin is indebted to Mr. Johnson for the time and thought he has given the book. Limited editions like the POT POURRI reaching a small public, are among the first to feel wartime restrictions in adver- tising. In the face of this, and with the diliiculty in obtaining student subscrip- tions, Business Manager Whit Stevens has done splendid work with his board. The policy of including Art in the POT POURRI was continued with success. This rival of Photography, under Woodic Stockwell, conjured up several dividers and organized the map inside the cover. Pictures still hold their own, nevertheless, and Dick Morgan and his associates pro- duced a select group of snapshots of all phases of school life. Our thanks go to Editor-in-Chief Curt Farrar, and faculty advisor Mr. Cook, lor their large part in making possible the yearbook as you see it. To them and their staff goes the credit for this, the yearbook ofthe Class of 1944. E. L. BUSINESS MANAGER WHIT STEVENS Did we make money! C, All C. H. 5 R, H. B C, Cf LJ, Gr Cirfulali' W, Wm E, W. l C. M. C j, G. H1 SHERwc Fred W D. R. C Wf Editor-in-Chief CURTIS FARRAR EDITORIAL BOARD Managing Editor J. P. STEVENS, III C. Allen '44 C. E. Herning '44 H. L. Allen '44 H. Isharn '44 M. L. Bergheim '44 V. K. Kiam '44 C. H. Boll '44 E. Lauterpacht '44 R. H. Browning '44 C. C. McCracken '45 C. S. Coon '44 T. C. McGowan '44 L. Grant '44 BUSINESS BOARD Business Manager WHITNEY STEVENS Circulation Manager W. WHITNEY, JR. E. W. Bassick, 3rd '45 N. K. Pierce '44 C. M. Gearing '45 H. S. Reed '45 J. G. Holbrook '45 G. D. Schine '45 ART AND PHOTOGRAPHIC BOARD Art Editor SHERwooD B. STOCKVVELL Fred W. Adams '44 D. R. Crawford '44 R. B. Harrington '44 E. H. Pearson, Jr. '44 R. S. Pratt, 2d '44 S. G. SchiH'er '46 S. W. Snider '44 J. B. Snook '44 . D. J. Sterling, Jr. '44 G. H. Stern,Jr. '45 Advertising Manager H., HALL, 2d R. L. Strong '44 A. H. Tucker '44 W. T. Woodrow, Jr. '44 Photographic Editor RICHARD S. MORGAN J. A. Lebenthal '45 H. B. Reid, Jr. '45 L. Grant, Milender, Boll, H. Reed, Reid, SHIQCT, HCITHUS, Kiam Lebenthal, C. Allen, Crawford, Golf, Browning, Isham, Basslck, H- Allen, F- 15623, R- iiffigg k Woodrow, S. Stockwell, H. Hall, W. Stevens, Farrar, J. Stevens, R. Morgan, W- UUCY: 0 T00 I Lauterpacht, Pearson, Sterling, Snook, A. Tucker, C0011 I 91 I l I I I I I I I I I I I I I l 5 gf Phillipian . .. ' .1 ...If ' EDITOR MEL BERGHEIM OfHem and Heim, Inc. In addition to the normal problems of issuing an enterprising school newspaper, this year's Phillipian staff was faced With more ,technical difliculties than other boards had had to face in preceding years. Advertising again was the chief concern, as a shortage of it had caused the staff of the year before to cut The Phillipian from a semi-weekly paper to a weekly. Business Manager Woodrow, however, this year provided enough advertising, and stimu- lated sufficient student interest in the paper to bring financial success. lUnder Editor-in-Chief Melvin Bergheim The Phillipian has maintained a high standard of integrity. Some changes have been made in the format which have improved the paper's quality. In the first place news and sports have been com- pletely divorced. This involved a change in the makeup of the front page. During the Fall Term one-third of the editorial page was set aside each week for a Literary Q2 Section, designed to replace the discon- tinued Mirror as an outlet for student literary effort. The greatest event of the school year, as far as The Phillipian is concerned, was the joint Andover-Exeter War Bond Drive. It was Editor Bergheim who was almost wholly responsible for the drive's organization here, even down to his personal sale of bonds and stamps. The drive was held concurrent with the nation- al Fourth War Loan, and the competitive feeling between the two schools was well used to Uncle Sam's advantage. Together they raised S4.3,743.95, Andover winning the competition by some 35800. As a fitting climax for its staff 's year of hard work The Phillipiah was awarded first place in the Columbia Scholastic Press Associationis prep school newspaper competition. There are some higher awards, but The Phillipian is certainly among the first five. All in all the new board, headed by Fred Sanborn, has much to live up to in continuing The Phillipianis progress forward. BUSINESS MANAGER BILL WOODROW He kept the dead ball rolling l I Ph' JAMES 1 C,H.i john C Dozier P. Heli L, F. li B. Auh J. B. A j. W. I R. S. li J. R. F C. M. 1 Photographic Editor JAMES A. LEBENTHAL G. H. Boll '44 John G. Farrar '44 Dozier N. Fields '45 P. Hetzler '45 L. F. Kutseher, Jr. '45 B. Ault, Jr. '45 J. B. Ault '44 J. W. Blake '45 R. S. Bull, Jr. '44 J. R. Farrington '44 G. M. Gearing, 2d '45 Phillipian Board EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT Editor-in-Chiqf MELVIN L. BERGHEIM Managing Editor CHARLES E. HEMING Literagf Editor RICHARD S. MGKINLEY, 3D G. G. McCracken '45 R. E. Quaintance '46 F. R. Sanborn '45 S. S. Schiffer '46 BUSINESS DEPARTMENT Business Manager WILLIAM T. WooDRow, JR. Circulation Manager JULIAN B. ABBOTT F. H. Goff 345 J. G. Holbrook '45 W. R. Levin .'45 T. G. McGowan '44 J. G. MeManaway '44 W. K. Mettler '45 R. G. Moses '46 Assignment Editor JOHN F. SHEPARD H. L. Simons ,44 J. B. Snook '44 J. P. Stevens, III '44 R. L. Strong '44 D. H. Wayman '44 W. F. Neale, Jr. '44 H. L. Page '45 H. B. Reid, Jr. '45 W. Stevens '44 W. F. Torrance '44 R. B. Williamson ,44 . - ' Ault Prior Farrar, Hetzler, Begein Quaxntanee, Goff, Gearing, Levin, J. P. St6VCHS, 1 r , Simons, Williamson, Mettler, Boll, Bassick, F..Th0rr121S, Pug1h1fsHlYll Shepard, Snook, Herning, Sanborn, Berghf-Tim, Woodrow, OP mo gt r Moses, Algrant, Wilder, Jordan, Lebenthal, MCC1'aCkef1: age, C H T93l I 3 vw 13.-533,- 'f1 111- -l,l,,1.x:,.-.,.,.,.,.,.,.,, ,5,.,.,. ',z,:5.,.g.gf'v'-' r 4 f r 'I - 1 - , , 5 I, -.-......-' ------.zfew-.re -:rue--::'... . .. , r H Q Yi . - - .1 ' v . -' L , .- L. ' uma .. -mn .. .--.. .... .... . w- - - :. :.:z.v.:.g.:.'f' ' --.gym vw- , 'ggi -'--l '1i1i2:3:'3iS E1?1'i'Q35:'1'5:35zi5 i'ig:?:'U 315' '31- - ' i'- 'W' - 4-1 ,-5- L, -- - I -' . '- V w Camera Club lNIcLean, Creelman, Cherry Isham, Lebenthal, President, Avery This year the Camera Clubas chief prob- the club has accomplished nothing the lem was a lack of interest, although a more extensive program than ever before was offered. Nevertheless it cannot be said that I 1 l 2 l PRESIDENT JIMMY LEBENTHAL Ifs ez profitable business 94 last three terms. During the Winter and Spring Terms a series of lectures was presented by the club. These lectures, secured by Mr. Minard and James Lebenthal, president of the club, are circulated by Eastman Kodak. They cover almost every phase of amateur photography. They are accom- panied by black-and-white and color slides. They were given in the Addison Gallery by Mr. Minard. A Nor was this the only activity of this year,s Camera Club. As before the club used the Peabody House darkroom facil- ities, to which some new equipment was added, making the room even more useful. The greatest contribution, however, was made by those members who took pictures for the various school publications. This includes all the sports and informal pic- tures in this book. This activity alone insures success for this year's club, and justifies its continuance. ln' OFQZUN adywl' Studi timtl Illflll' schffd 515 mi, like 5h0I'I:: realiff fhmili. been C YCI Reverf addirif service primii The p. the pu Petit club l primizp der St .. -- . ,., . . , .. - H U- N ' Printing lub The Printing Club, like so many other Organizations, has been operating under adverse conditions this year. M1'. Van der Stucken has been too busy to devote his time to the club, and many ofthe members themselves have found that wartime schedules have kept them lrom spending as much time on the press as they would like. Besides, there is an acute paper shortage. The student body probably first realized this when they found that the familiar four-page church programs had been cut to two pages. Yet in spite of these changes, the Paul Revere Press has continued to roll. In addition to the programs lor the Sunday services, the club also does some private printing for various masters and students. The pay for these extra items goes toward the purchase of new supplies. Perhaps the largest single jobs that the club has undertaken this year are the printing of a book of sonnets by Mr. Van der Stucken and the programs for The AT THE PRESS Who tlztole the zflfzfh? Pirates qfPen.zance. The following have done especially good work at the press this year: R. E. Carter, Dorsey, C. B. Francisco, H. P. Hayden, E. F. Ingraham, R. W. Morrison and F. S. Pratt. lngraham, W. S. Hickey, P1'iSlCY F. Pratt, Dorsey, Hayden 'f ' - gs3fFn'u -:ra f .... .-. .-.. ., 'Shit-!::3rArllf.:.f:5:-'.aa:-:-:felfifilsfI:5F5'5351-.'F5-.f :.13 .1.: .. ' . - ' - 'eww-1-H-wr-mmm 1 vm- -- 'H - ' ' - - - V ---- ws. .af - . .. ' - L--A--v:-1.-.'.-.-.-4-.f,f..f P -21.-7 .'.-.'.,.f.f -.-.f.'.'.-.'.1,f f.- -.- 1 - -W a s - -V - I 3 1, N?-ia- Railroad Club PRESIDENT DICK MORGAN Choo-Choo Baby Andoveris Model Railroad Club con- tinues its slow, steady growth. The enjoy- ment of this student organization lies in planning new ways of achieving realism in miniature, and then building on those ideas. Under the leadership of Choo Morgan, President, and Tom Howard, Chief Electrical Engineer, the emphasis has been on the electrical aspect. Tap switches for independent train con- trol have been installed in the newly constructed control panel. Light diagrams indicate train routes to the operator. Piece de resistance is the turntable, oper- ated by remote control, and designed and constructed by Howard. A gilt from the school of a 100-volt direct current generator gives the club its much-needed power supply. The live engines, guided by Assistant Electrician Reeves Hart and his co-electricians, have made good use of it. The scenery, still in its embryonic, un- painted state, has marched around the Pearson basement under the plastered hand of Chief Scenarian Dick Kimball. Since its beginning three years ago, the Railroad Club has made achievement synonymous with progress. It is still going, and growing. B. Stevens Begien Howard Carver Hart Wofse . 7 .7 9 7 3 Y Kimball, Burke, H. Qumby, Torrance, R. O,Brien, Dalrymple A hz time Small with i prelim aged sl howc-in ities. r Even' and SP bt' hen The Which Cd m meets mfllllbt Pfxlilio The Sllidam Uventy and lil both J C5531-X.- Rifle Club PFCSY, P- FISTICY, Caftmell, Morse, Walter Pratt, Farrar, W. Stevens, Brydon C. jones, MacDonough, Coon, M1COU,.I. Hudner, Hickey, Works, Talbot Prisley, C. Strong, A. Tucker, P. Roome, Robinson, A. Deming, C. Allen Volk, Shaw, R. Paradise, Hord, C. Wilder, Bloom, Pearson A highlight of the second year of war- time activity of the Rifle Club was the Small Arms Firing School, conducted with the express purpose of providing preliminary gunnery training for service- aged students. Most of the club members, however, were engaged in the usual activ- ities, which were continued as before. Every weekday evening during the Winter and Spring Terms the crack of rifles could be heard in the cage. The National Riiie Association, of which the Rifle Club is a member, award- ed marksmanship medals. Intramural meets were held, as well as the annual members match. No interscholastic com- petition was undertaken. The Small Arms Class was under the guidance of Mr. Peck, who instructed twenty students in the construction, care, and firing of target riHes. The passing of both a written and a Bring exam was nec- essary, in order to receive credit. 97 The large club enrollment of 102, while a burden on the facilities of the club and the nerves of Mr. Peck, attests to the in- creased interest in this activity. Wartime shortages of ammunition and outside com- petition could not dampen the war-stimu- lated popularity of the club. SERGEANT PECK IN CHARGE Imagine the Skull the largezf x K 1 l if - in i E 5 2 E 5 c 1 Q x v E: 1. 1 w , 'r 3. E1 i. K: Qi E s r xi : 1 L 1 E E r : l L 1 -Q ui' Q f S .r -1 'VSN-'WFIWGHS -L -.fr -..-'Q -J -H ' W '-1 I - R: ----- W:-- .f,:.-1:-:.:: e ..,, ,.,, - , W . f ..-.,. :-l1.:m ,, ..- 1 - -- .--- - --- - '- ' ' ' ' ' ' ' H ' ' ' 'H ' Science Club Prisley, 'Wilmer, F. Adams, Boll F. D. Greene, Farrar, Chamberlin, B. Stevens Newly organized by Mr. Weaver, the Science Club is an informal group which meets in the Chemistry Laboratory. Its membership consists of those who have a particular interest in Physics or Chem- istryg experiments and tests which class hours cannot include are conducted under the supervision of Mr. Weaver. M1coU, PETZOLD AND FARRAR Dull Roan and Blue Flames' 98 Projects were undertaken by several ambitious students in this first year of the group. Fred Adams built an electroscope for demonstrating electrical principles. Curt Farrar made several crystals of chrome alum. An optical mirror was con- structed by Dick Petzold, and Edward Creighton specialized in glass blowing. As a part of the Science Club, two gasoline engines were mounted on blocks, to be dissasembled and rebuilt. A large supply of mineral ores was obtained, projects were started in the Spring Term to extract metals. Also conducted in the spring term were experiments with ion- exchange resins used to purity water and with the making of pigments. The interest in the organization, al- though not widespread, has made the activity a success. Plans lor expansion of membership and increase in number of Helds of endeavor foretell an interesting future for this educational diversion. - - - Y ----M -,.Q. N D- - .-.f1 + : t 1.3,- '--,Jay 9. 1.-mi,-S , ...-5, Inter-fraternit Council Rains, Heckel, WV. Adams, Reisler Seymour, VV. Stevens, Stockwell, Briggs 8-in- 1 Octet Starke Burgess, Phinney, Stockwell, Boll, Mettler, BFCWSKCF l199l IN MEMGRIA The death of Mr. Edmund Schubert on April 2 1 came as a great and saddening shock to the school. Many of us encountered him in his work with the body-building classes. Others ,met him as he assisted in coaching the hockey and swimming teams, in the functional swimming course, or as he aided the work of the Department of Health. We soon came to know him for his quiet, friendly smile, his cheerfulness, and his untiring interest in what we were doing. Though we may not realize it, we Seniors particularly owe him a debt for the part he played in helping us prepare for military service. The best monument to a man is the accomplishments he leaves behind. Mr. Schubert's work was devoted to the athletic life of Andoverg we respectfully dedicate this Athletics section to his memory. l l l 4 2 I I ATHLETIC Lmffu- Q- - ... Dalley. Allenby. B. Bishop, XY. Abbott. Mackenzie, H. S. Reed. XY. Xthitney. Boesehenstein, Lawlor. Briggs Henkel llanfzvfz CI. XY. SIHTITI.-I.ZOI1lI10. Pearson. Hatch. Collier, hfaelmllan. .X. Anderson. R. Beach. R. Blorgan, Parrlngton. P Schelde Neale fippett. P. Roome, MeKim. Zagorski, Meadgl. Hudner. CHfIfHl.II.' Reisler, Mauran, Sper. Parker, Bomeisler. Griffith arsity Football i' Captain Jim Hudner and six other lettermen returned for early practice along with several others from last year's squad. Although a large group from the V. raised our hopes considerably, the early season outlook was not too good. Several preps showed up well, however, and con- tributed to what turned out to be a far better than average team. Coach Steve Sorota deserves much credit for moulding the fine team he put on the field against lixeter, and for a splendid record of five wins against two losses. Andover faced a weak Harvard V. in the first encounter, and showed a brilliant offense in rolling up a 32-0 score. lyfauran started the season ofii by scoring on the first play ol' the game. Hudner and Zagor- ski added two touchdowns apiece before the final whistle. The following week the Andover team journeyed to Revere High to take on a scrappy eleven in its first High School game in many years. hiauran scored twice, Hudner once, against a hard fight- ing, but smaller team, which managed to score only once. The final score was 18-6. The Tufts V. game the next Saturday was also played away. On a rain-drenched field Andover lost its First shutout in three years, I8-o, in what was actually a closer game than the score indicates. In scoring position three times, the team lacked the final punch to put the ball over. This broke Andoyer's eight-game winning streak. Playing away for the third week in a row, Andover defeated the University of Maine Qo-6. At the end ol' the third period the team was trailing 6-o, but a hne dis- MANAGER TED HECKEL Working lzard? fumbles on punt returns gave Exeter the advantage, but the line successfully stalled their attempts to score after these two bad breaks. Early in the second period, Exeter missed a field goal after their running running attack failed to gain them a score. Following an exchange of punts, the Andover offensive began to move, as the team rolled from their own 32 down to the .Exeter two-foot line in eight plays. Captain Jim Hudner gained a lot of this ground on wide end sweeps and Dunc Mauran,s fast breaking line plunges ac- counted for 'more yardage, as the team drove to what seemed an almost certain score. However, a fourth down fumble within a yard of the Exeter end zone proved the most costly error of the day for the Blue. The half ended without score by either side. Exeter kicked off to a determined team in the second half. Following two punt exchanges, a Blue attack was halted on the midfield stripe. Exeter then drove to the 23-yard line as the third period ended. In the last period, the Red and Gray con- tinued its drive to within range of the goal, and Ransome went over for the first tally. The extra point was missed. Later in the period, after kicking out of bounds on our eight-yard line, Captain Jackson of Exeter intercepted a flat pass on our four. The line held for three downs, but a fourth down pass by Jackson was completed in the end zone for a second touchdown. The kick for extra point again failed. Rallying in the last few minutes of play, Andover completed three passes in a drive which resulted in a score, Tippett catching a touchdown pass from Hudner. The at- tempt for the extra point failed. A desper- ate passing attack in the last two minutes failed to produce further scoring. The final score was I2-6 in favor of Exeter. A slight advantage in statistics for the Blue was nullified by bad breaks and failure to make the most of scoring opportunities. Our outstanding defensive play, especially in the line, reflects much credit on Line Coaches Ed Flanagan and Jack Meany. The entire backiield per- formed well against tough opposition. At the banquet following the Exeter game, Ed Mead, a regular at left end this year, was elected Captain and Fred Alford was chosen manager for next year. A ' CAPTAIN JIM' HUDNER Now runningfor the USAAF D041 J, H. T. G. w. F. H. A O. J- R. s. B. H. W. B4 D. M w. c v. A R. B. L. c. Alt its H1 team a reo Playi the P Squat bee, i andt In 21 Spil High Metk 13-0. thi! 1 In rl Blue Score S6601 O1 Coac to ta SEASON 1 94.3 6 I Andover 32 Harvard V. o Andover 45 New Hampton Andover 18 Revere High 6 Andover I2 Tufts J. V. 6 Andover 0 Tufts V. I8 Andover 6 Exeter 1 Q Andover 20 University of Maine 6 . LETTERMEN J. H. Hudner, Capt. Back R. Farrington Back N. C. Nourse Back T. G. Heckel, Manager' C. P. Griffith Center Q, H, parker End W. F . Abbott . Back R. P. Hatch Back E, H, Pearson Back H. A. Allenby Guard R. C. Lawlor Back H, S, Reed Tackle O. Anderson Tackle M. L. Mackenzie End J. W. Reisler Guam! R. S. Beach Back G. E. MacLellan End P, W, Rggme Tackle B. H. Bishop Guard D. H. Mauran Back P, C, Sgheide Guam! W. Boeschenstein End R. McKim Tackle C. W. Smith Back D. M. Bomeisler Tackle E. M. Mead End N. L. Sper Back W. C. Briggs Guard W. Moore Guard R. T. Tippett Back V. A. Cartmell Center R. S. Morgan Tackle W. Whitney Center R. B. Collier End W. F . Neale Guard F. Zagorski Back L. Dalley Bllfik Zgnino Bagk unior Varsity Football Although defeated by Exeter 13-7 in its iinal contest, Coach Shepard's V. team concluded a successful season with a record of three wins against two losses. Playing its own schedule before joining the A squad for the Exeter game, the B squad under the tutelage of Mr. Follans- bee, defeated the Punchard seconds once and tied them in another game. In the first A squad game of the season, a spirited Andover team beat Wilmington High 33-o. In the next encounter, with Methuen, the V. went down to defeat 18-o. Against Punchard, three days later, the A squad again won, this time I9-0. In the final pre-Exeter game, the Royal Blue showed power in running up a 31-0 score against the Lawrence High School seconds. On a cold, wet Wednesday afternoon Coach Shepard fielded a fast, light squad to take on the Exeter All-Club. The game D051 followed very closely the Varsity game of the previous Saturday. Exeter, outplayed throughout, put across two lightning thrusts to go ahead I3-O. Late in the fourth quarter Andover drove to her only score on a pass from Jack Lynch to Jack Eastham. Moreland kicked the extra point. The strength of the team was due in great measure to its strong line. Coaches Kishon, Leete, and Potter took compar- atively green men and developed a hard- charging forward wall. Dave Ohler and Myrt Gaines at the ends were particular standouts along with Captain Jack Tait at center. Larry Ward at tackle also promises to be varsity material. A host of good backs was a blessing to the Blue. Jack Lynch, Miles Chute, and Pete Reiner are only Lowers with two more years of football ahead of them. Jack Eastham at quarter and Jack Lee at full also were outstanding during the year. r I iam, ..... . . ..V . .,,... .,. ...,. . i.. ,,,,i,:.,Nv OCCCI' J. P. Stevens, Manager, II. Hanke, Prideaux, M. Arnold, Lilien, McKinley, Wogan, Pemberton, Isitt, Dickey, Bowen, Eatough Estin, C. Strong, Chun, Burgess, Tompkins, F. Zonino, Carroll, Captain, Seymour, J. Dunn, Rains, II. Turner, W. Stevens Eleven returning lettermen, led by Captain Carroll, formed a nucleus around which Coach Jim Ryley built the 1943 Soccer team. The opening victory, over Harvard, was followed by wins against Governor -Dummer and New Hampton, a tie with Exeter, and defeats at the hands lX4ANAGERv'PETE STEVENS Heir got a little list H061 of Deerfield, a British sailor team, and Exeter, fbr a record of three wins, one tie, and three losses. Harvard's B squad was easily defeated, 2-O, following which the team travelled to Deerfield. A closely contested game re- mained scoreless until the last few minutes, when Deerfield managed to put in the only goal. Governor Dummer proved an easy victim, but a team of British sailors from Boston gave a brilliant exhibition of ball- handling and thoroughly outclassed the home team. Andover went on a scoring spree to overwhelm New Hampton, 7-0, scoring in every period. In the first Exeter game, played on a rain-swept, slippery field at Exeter, neither team was able to score. Offensives could not get started in the mud, and both teams produced strong defenses. The second game, at Andover, was similarly scoreless in the first half. In the early minutes ofthe third period Exeter tallied, after a nerve- wracking mix-up in front of the Andover goal. The visitors held their lead the rest of the game, despite every effort of the home team to tie the count. The defense was outstanding all season. Jerry Tompkins, Al Burgess, and Whit Stevens in the halfback line, Woodie Dulaney and Rog Seymour at iullback, and Captain Carroll in the goal, formed an impassable combination, playing every game and allowing only three goals all season. In the forward line there were many changes and combinations. Several men contested for each berth, and Coach Ryley had a wealth of material to choose from. Fred Zonino, Chris Eatough, Ken Chun, Mort Dunn, Jim Rains, and Carl Strong all saw action in starting positions. Special credit is due Jim Ryley, who, in his thirty-second year of coaching, still produces winning ball clubs. The team was capably led by an iron-lunged captain who yelled unceasing encouragement from his goal position, and a flag-waving man- ager, who proved a constant source of gum. At the annual banquet Fred Zonino was elected to lead next year's team, with Johnny Blake as manager. CAPTAIN DAN CARROLL Stop that guy! 107 COACH JIM RYLEY Mr. Friendbf SEASON Andover 2 Harvard O Andover o Deerfield 1 Andover 2 Governor Dummer o Andover o Exeter o Andover o British Sailors 1 Andover 7 New Hampton 0 Andover O Exeter I LETTERMEN D. T. Carroll, Captain Goal M. G. Arnold Goal J. F. Bowen Hatfbaek N. A. Burgess, Jr. Hayfbaek K. K. Chun ' Outside J. S. Dickey Fullbaek W. H. Dulaney, Jr. Fullbaek J. M. Dunn C. Eatough H. H. Estin J. G. Hanke C. F. Isitt R. D. Lilien R. S. McKinley I. S. Pemberton J. B. Rains C. D. Prideaux- R. S. Seymour W. Stevens C. M. Strong C. S. Tompkins J. D. Turner J. M. Wogan F. D. Zonino J. P. Stevens l Center Forward Center Forward Center Forward F ullbaek Inside Center Forward F utlback Inside Inside Outside F ullbaek Hay' back Inside Habfback Outside F utlback Inside Manager Basketball Neale, Manager,' Carroll, McKim, Mead, Liddle, Petter, Averback, McManaway Zagorski, W. Abbott, B. Bishop, W. Whitney, Cajztaing Lansill, Raleigh, Reisler This year's basketball team, ably cap- tained by Wheels Whitney, went through a gruelling schedule losing only three games and defeating Exeter twice, by scores of 54-47 and 61-28. In their initial encounter, Coach Di Clementiis charges romped over a very W MANAGER BILL NEALE The Vfs hog the court f1o8j weak Lowell Textile team 75-31. It was in this game that Prep Tom Raleigh stunned the crowd by breaking Dick Duden's record of 31 points in a single game. His 16 field goals and one foul shot totaled 33 points. Camp Langdon, the Blue's second op- ponent, was swamped in a similar manner 73-45. Tom Raleigh was again top scorer, with 31 points to his credit. The third game saw the tide change as P. A. was defeated 53-39 by a Harvard Medical team paced by a 6 foot 7 inch center. Andoveris next victory was a pleasant one, for the Red and Gray fell to Captain Whitney's squad 54-47. Exeter was leading at the half 2o-19, but although the team was nervous, they managed to eke out the victory. Andover's sterling defense stopped many Red threats. On the following Sat- urday, Andover easily defeated Salem Company F 54-35. Tom Raleigh again starred, scoring 26 points. l Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover SEASON Lowell Textile Camp Langdon Harvard Medical Exeter Salem Co. F M.I.T. Seconds Harvard B. Worcester Acad. Salem Coast Guard B. U. Theological Squantum Air Base 75 31 73 O 45 39 53 54 47 54- . 3 Andover 37 4? 26 34 53 37 37 33 57 24 37 32 61 28 BILL ABBOTT YUMPS Seeondfloor-basketballs, ,oeanut galleries, score- boards In the next two games P. A. met defeat both times. M.I.T. took the first encounter 41-37. This was a hard-fought contest and the outcome hung in the balance up to the final gun. The Harvard B team won a fairly easy victory over the Blue, 34-26. Jack Lansill went on a scoring spree in the next two contests, scoring 33 points, as the Blue beat Worcester Academy 53-37 and nosed out Salem Coast Guard 37-33. Two more victories followed as Boston University Theological School and Squan- tum Air Base bowed 57-24 and 37-32. Again Lansill excelled with 26 points in the two games. In the final game of the season, Andover faced its rival, Exeter, tor the second time. Captain Whitney played his best game ol' the season, running up a total of 18 points to be high scorer for the game. uDeke', sent in all members of the squad, but even so the final score stood at 61-28. Brought Bishop was elected to succeed Wheels Whitney as Captain, while Doze Fields will replace Tex Neale as manager. lf 109 Andover Exeter LETTERMEN W. Whitney, Jr., Captain W. Neale, Jr., Manager W. Abbot, Jr. P. Averback B. Bishop D. Carroll J. Lansill, Jr. H. Liddle R. McKim, Jr. J. McManaway, Jr. E. Mead J. Petter T. Raleigh, Jr. J. Reisler F. Zagorski Guard Center Guard Guard Forward Forward Forward Forward Guard 'Center Forward Forward Guard Forward CAPTAIN WHEELS WHITNEY Double oietory over Exeter Hockey if CAPTAIN ART MOHER .Melroselv GQTTZQI is bewildered Near the end of Christmas vacation, Captain Art Moher led the Blue hockey team in the Boston Round-Robin Tourna- ment. The team showed a need of prac- tice as they defeated Pomfret 5-1 but lost to Choate 2-1 and Exeter 3-2. How- ever, the experience they gained helped prepare them for the regular season. Back at school, the team fbund poor ice, and experienced more bad luck in the loss of Charlie Smith and Dunc Mauran. After only one day of practice, they lost to Melrose High School, 5-2. In two other pre-Exeter game contests, Andover beat Malden 8-1 and was defeated by Harvard V-12, 5-3. At Exeter the team was vic- torious 4-1 in a one-sided encounter. Larry Dalley netted Moheras pass for the first score. This was followed by Moher's unassisted goal and Larry Ward's tally on a close-in shot. Dick Welch completed the scoring on a pass from Moher late in the third period after Exeter had made her KIIO lone goal. A strong St. Paul's squad de- feated Andover 5-2, but Moher's two goals prevented a shutout. Dick Welch tallied three times to lead the team in beating Stoneham High 6-4. The season ended with two losses to Medford High, 6-5 and 2-o. The first of these games was the best of the season, featured by Moher's pulling ofthe Nhat trick. Captain Art Moher deserves a great deal of credit, not only for being high scorer, but for his spirit and determina- tion, and for his success in welding the team into a well-coordinated unit. At the banquet, Larry Dalley was elected captain for next year, and Irving Bonbright was chosen to succeed Whit Stevens as manager. Dick Welch received the award presented to the player other than the captain or manager who con- tributed most to hockey and to Andover through his sportsmanship, endeavor, and ability. H- Q .rzmxxf QM? wiki? MJ X L . w w? s ka...-Ai +1'v3.:.1'e. i ' , -5 F iss is rf . A... . QXQ Mgt.. 1 - . Q sim- N.. NN it . 4115 rg scsi' , it ESX? N .f 1.21233 5 A 2 fi .2 . 'E A Sv? 3: X - it s.--tix? 552:55 . , , . Q. Q if f wrist. I. Vo XM ww xv . 3 tis wtifix is 1 lf' xi X I ... 1 3 grande' J . aff' . fm 4- ' ZZ.. . f in ' ' 3 M , ,W 4,1 ww , AW 1 1, :w'9f'4Z Wm , iywzf .' af MANAGER WHIT STEVENS Evegfone 7'61lJ07'ff07' shoveling , I ,:. : I .... 'a'L -L' , ,Ang U. L ,,l X1-f LETTERMEN A. K. Moher, Captain W. Stevens, ,Manager P. W. Roome F. D. Zonino L. C. Dalley R. L. Welch C. C. McCracken L. W. Ward J. R. Farrington A. Sperry F. T. Ednian J. E. Gale H. P. VVarren, 3d A. C. Shealy H. E. Deming G. S. Baldwin, Jr. P. Micou R. M. O,Keeffe J. D. Lynch SEASON Andover 5 Pomfret Andover 1 Choate Center Dwnse Deybzse R. Wing L. Wing R. Wing Cenier L. Wing Center R. Wing Dwnse Dfyense Goal Center L. Wing Coal R. l47ing L. Wing 1 2 Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover SPILL lfVlze1'e,s your goal, Craig? Exeter Melrose Malden Harvard V-1 2 Exeter St. Paul's Stoneharn Medford Medford VV' SYCVCHS, ManHge1',' O'Keele, Edman, MiC0U, G3l'5', Wfafdy Wfarrenf H'.Deming3 A' Sperry, Nlccmckeu Shealy, Welch, Dalley, Moher, Cajzlaing P. Roome, J. Farrington, 11. Zonmo I x E f v l -----u11 ? ' I . . . -. . v - A -- .MX ff f--2: 1- -' f 1' PL-'QETP-i?E?E?'-1-f:Z':f':ZE-EEESTS'-T-F?-FFT:-71-1'TfE1'?:' .ri i Z 3'I 1'i'1- j'.:Jg:C1::..'.:-..-L.......-,... I . A... , . . A 1 - ff ' ,.,. - 1 L 59 :?'!.- . ,' ' ' t h iwzwfgi-srvva-w'b?' :ig ':-,-:2:4f5:-':f.'?:'-.f-:e-.'- 155'5'rl1'f'v! r'f'-51-'v'-'H 'J -1 1 Swimming y A. Turner, Griffith, Herman, Kingery,J. Lord A. Harris, Manager, F lues, Hexter, Dorsey, D. Lazo, Kohler, Garner I Phinney, Knight, Tompkins, Sper, Captain, M. Lazo, Brewster, Chamberlin The first meet of the year seemed to prophesy a successful season for the An- dover swimmers. Captain Norm Sper broke his own record in the dive when he amassed a total of 1 13.62, then, swimming the backstroke himself, he joined with Jerry Tompkins, two-year letterman in the EXETER MEET jam: triesfor the record l 112 breaststroke, and Don Lazo, to tie the record for the 150-yafd medley relay. Against the M.I.T. Junior Varsity the following Week, the team won first place in every event but the 2oo-yard freestyle. Confident and determined the team played host to the Exonians the following Saturday. Ch-ips Lazo won the 50-yard freestyle event to start the meet. Jerry Tompkins missed first place in the breast- stroke by inches, then Exeter took first and second places in the backstroke. The score stood at this time: Exeter 18, Andover 9. Exeter took first place in both the IOO and 2oo-yard freestyle 5 Andover taking second and third in both these events. As usual Norm Sper won the dive making the score 32 to 22 in favor of Exeter. Tompkins, Sper, and Herman teamed up to win the medley in almost record breaking time. The score now stood: Exeter 32, Andover 27. An Andover win in the final event, the 2oo-yard freestyle relay, would have made CAPTAIN NORM SPER Speed, Dive, and. . . the score 34 to 32 in our favor, but an initial lead of several feet was one foot too much for Chips Lazo to overcome. The final score ofthe meet: Exeter 39, Andover 27. The next three meets with Brookline High, Gardner High, and Worcester, all ended in Andover victories. In the Brook- line meet Captain Sper broke his second individual record of the season when he swam the Ioo-yard backstroke in 1:o4.4. Also in this meet Sper, Jerry Tompkins, and Chips Lazo teamed up to finally break the medley relay record in 1 :22. 3. The Blue travelled to New Hampshire for the second encounter with Exeter which resulted in an inglorious defeat. The 1'inal score: Exeter 50, Andover 16. Norm Sper personally accounted tor ten of these sixteen points, winning the back- stroke and diving events. At the annual banquet held after the Exeter meet, Chips Lazo was elected to Succeed Norm Sper as captain ofthe team for next season. Al Harris, retiring man- ager, is succeeded by Howard Hayden. I 113 SWIMMING SEASON Andover 4.8 Charlestown Boy's Club 18 Andover 42 M.I.T.J.V. Q4 Andover 2 7 Exeter 3 9 Andover 49 Brookline H. S. I7 Andover 53 Worcester 1 3 Andover 52 Gardner H.S. I4 Andover 16 Exeter 50 LETTERMEN N- Sper, Jr. lCapt.j Dive, Backstroke, Medlgf M. Lazo, Jr. 50g1ara' Freestyle, Medlgf, Relay G. Tomkins, Jr. Breaststroke, .Medley C. Knight, Jr. R. Garner F. Chamberlain, Jr. A. Flues B. Brewster, Jr J. Lord D. Lazo J. Dorsey A. Phinney, Jr J. Herman V. Hexter, Qd C. Kohler, Jr. A. Turner A. Marvin, Jr. 50yard F reestyle, Relay Breastsroke 2o0yard Freestyle 2o0yaro' Freestyle . 200j1Cl7d Freesgfle Backstroke Backstroke, Relay Backstroke . Iooyara' Freesgfle, Relay Iooiyard Freestyle, Relay Dive Dive ' Relay Breaststroke A. Harris, Manager MANAGER AL HARRIS I oan't swim! . ...- me - -- -.- . ,.. .,.2.... ... ..., . ..i ?,3,3,2,E-243523,-A Wrestling CAPTAIN ED COOK ' Gosh! With only three veteran matmen as a nucleus, Coach Salty Pieters was for- tunate in having several capable new wrestlers with whom to complete his team. To back up the seasoned trio of Captain Ed Cook, Al Allenby, and Bing Abbott were 'cOkie Crawford, Skip Mc- Kinley, Bill Anderson, John Caldwell, Vint Cartmell, Fred Greene, Fox Thomas, and Steve Hord. Against the three-year-undefeated Mil- ton Academy squad our men went down lighting, to the score of 20-8. The most dramatic moment of this contest came when Dave 'cOklahoma Crawford pinned his surprised opponent with a double arm lock in just 3Q seconds of the first period. To avenge their first defeat, the P. A. wrestlers trampled Weymouth High 27-5, defeating that institution for the third suc- cessive year. The first of a pair of Exeter meets was stubbornly battled to a I2-I2 stalemate, with every match hotly con- tested. Scoring for Andover were Ander- son, Captain Cook, Crawford, and Abbott. 114 Each side scored four decisions, but no one was pinned. A superior Tufts Varsity took the measure of the Blue grapplers, 25-5. The following week, Perkins Institute for the Blind was tackled. Although wrestling solely by sense of touch, the visitors were able to show the home team up, winning I4-II. An outclassed Governor Dummer contingent was overcome by the Blue with a 28-O sweep. A determined P. A. team journeyed up to Exeter for the final clash of the season, only to be frustrated, 9-15, in a bitterly contested encounter. Our three decisions were gained by Anderson, Cook, and Abbott, while McKinley, Allenby, and Crawford were edged out by the slimmest of margins. That the season's record was not more successful must be attributed to lack of experience rather than want of spirit, for every man contributed his utmost effort throughout the winter. Manager Ray Young and Captain Ed Cook sethigh standards of sportsmanship for their suc- cessors. Bill Anderson was elected captain at the banquet. Next year's manager has not yet been chosen. pu--' . . .wwf CALDWELL ON TOP Embraceable youu l Aw AU' AH' An' An' Ann E. f R.1 1. 1 w. J. 1 V. , Dj F.l Sl '--A ' 1. .. , '-----' --- f ' ....-- -'f- - -f-- -v f--4 -f-.-nf' . .- . ... . -. -. . f f : f,.:111Lf.f -.g g - .4 .n .., . -.. .' .2 ,- u n , , :,:,:5.,1,:.,g.gq5A.,Vggg31 1.71-1:11-g -A . .,.,l, SEASCN -4 Andover 8 Milton Academy 20 Andover A 27 Weymoutli High 5 Andover 1 2 Exeter I 2 Andgver 5 Tufts 2 5 Andover II Perkins Institute 141, Andover 9 EXCYCI' I 5 LETTERMEN E. S. Cook, Caibiaizz 135-Ib, R. H. Young, Alanager J. B. Abbott unlimited W. S. Anderson 128-Ib. J. W. Caldwell 1,5-fb. MANAGER RAY YOUNG V. A. Cartmeu 175-lb' The Malek goes Z0 Andover! D. R. Crawford 175-lb. F. D. Greene 121-lb. R. S. McKinley 155-lb. S. Y. Hord 155-lb. F. Thomas 121-lb. McKinley, Hord R. Young, Marzager,' AHCHIJY, Caftffleu, Abbott? D Crawford, W. Anderson, F' D- GFCCUC, E- Cook, Captain' Caldweuhl' Thomas H1151 2 i 1 i ' 1 . - . k ,,, , HJAT.-:i?5?r551?5.6Tii 17?iF ,R ':-L-1'-TP .. -11-:.-xg.-as-.-. .:-..-1. -.r -:.-ga-r Track Co-CAPTAIN JIM HUDNER They missed him in the springtime With only a handful of last year's track squad returning, coaches Shepard, Flan- agan, Sorota, and Watt had to work with many new and inexperienced men at the beginning of the Winter Term. Their success in building a team from this material is indicated by the crushing 52M-QSVZ defeat of Exeter which climaxed the Winter season. Bomeisler, Nourse, and Griffith swept the shot-put. Firsts were scored in the 40-yard high hurdles by Co-captain Bob Lawlor, in the 300- yard dash by Paradise, the 600 by Dixon, and the 1000-yard run by Chittick. Other place winners included Bob Beach in the 40-yard dash, Hunting in the 600, Strong in the hurdles, and Tom Howard and Co- captain Bob Hatch in the pole vault. Previous to this victory the Blue had lost two one-sided meets to Tufts, a meet to Harvard, and one to Exeter at Exeter, 41-40, in the closest meet of the season. For Andover, Chittick's double victories 1 in the 600- and 1000-yard runs, and the triumph of Lawlor and C0-captain jim Hudner in the hurdles were the high points of the meet. After this meet, Lawlor was elected co-captain to succeed Hudner, who graduated in February as a Plan A Senior. In the last meet before the aveng- ing Exeter contest, the Blue routed a weak Worcester Academy team by the score of 61-2. In addition to the regular Winter meets, a mile relay squad of Dixon, Chute, Par- adise, and Chittick represented the school in the Boston B.A.A. Games, winning a decisive victory in a special race against Exeter. Andover began the Spring season with much the same line-up in the track events as that which ran in the Winter meets. Bob Beach, Bill Moore, and Skip Paradise in the 100 and 220, and Jack Dixon and lVIiles Chute in the 440 all showed great promise as the season opened. Of the large number of candidates for the half-mile, C0-CAPTAIN B0B HATCH Cornelius VV. D161 Ross Hoy, Dick Porter, and Hunting stand out. They all ran the 600 in the Winter season. Cy Chittick is all alone in the mile, with Johnny Ryan possibly placing in the later meets. Hatch and Howard in the pole-vault, Neuhoff and Thorndike in the hammer and Mac- kenzie in the high jump are the best men in a fairly weak field events squad. As this article is written, only two Spring meets have been held. The first meet with Tufts was lost by the substantial margin of 33M to 835. But the Harvard meet showed great improvement and promises well for the following contests. Victories in most of the running events turned the tide, and the Blue won 41-40. Paradise and Bob Beach Hnished one-two in both the 100- and 220-yard dashes. Thorndike won the hammer-throw, with Howie Reed second. All sights are set for the New England Prep School meet to be held at Andover on May 20th, and for the Exeter meet at Exeter on the following weekend. As an added highlight of the Prep School meet, Gil Dodds, world's indoor mile champion, will run a special invitational mile against top-flight college competition. The team looks forward to defeating the Red again, and to regaining the Prep School cham- pionship lost last year. C0-CAPTAIN B0B LAWLOR Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Andover Ifs ea.ty-likejlying WINTER SEASON 2 2 Tufts 59 1 9 Harvard 29 40 Exeter 4 1 2 7 Tufts ' 54 6 1 Worcester 2 52 M Exeter 28yZ SPRING SEASCN 3 3 ya Tufts 83 M 4 1 Harvard 40 53 M. I .T. 7 3 78 M Worcester 1 1 M INTERSCHOLASTIC MEET 88 Exeter 38 WINTER LETTERMEN James Hudner, C0-Captain Robert Hatch, C0-Captain Robert Lawlor, C0-Captain john Shepard, Manager Robert Beach Douglas Bomeisler Charles Chittick Miles Chute John Dixon Huston Hunting Malcolm Mackenzie Norman Nourse Scott Paradise Richard Porter Perry Griffith John Ryan MANAGER JOHN SHEPARD Thomas Howard Carlton Strong I sharft lyfl one hurdle! Walter Torrance 7 I 117 ... - ..J..,g.,A3-1-g.,-,-2-3 '5W -'35 'FL'- 'L'? PWR . . . ,fn . 'fr' . . . ., , ,., -,.,. ,4,p,,g. 5fi1vFrmegvfz5gs5gagg-gg , , , , gr' ' ,J , ,.,. , ,ll -. ' - ' W ' ' ' ' me ---nm , V4-4.-v4-Q-4':s:-:-:-:-.-:':-1-:-:-CQ:-:-1'.-zfzgzwzfzvsmg-.-.-...:.:.-,Q-.-.-.:.-.f . .-.'1:v.ga.-.,f,f.,,:.-. '.-,..- '-.- -'-,.-- - -' - -- ' -- . 1.-,-.w-.-.1.ga-' ws.-.'.-.uf-.'.-vw' w: 1 Iv ch Q '-'v' - ' -1 ' ' ' '- ' ' ' ' inter Track Nourse, Bomeisler, Howard, W. Moore, Hutchison, Griffith l Shepard, Manager,' Hoy, Talbot, Chute, Scott, Hunting, S. Paradise . Porter, Dixon, Chittick, Hatch, C0-captain, Hudner, C0-caj1tazn,' Lawlor, Ryan, Mackenzle pring Track R. Young, Bouton, W. Morrison, Pemberton, W. Moore, C. Schine, D. Beach, Wheeler, H. Reed, Thorndike, Neuhoff, Hutcheson, Scott, Siegel Shepard, Manager, E. Hayes, Sagar, R. Collier, Lyne, W. jackson, Nourse, Hunting, H. Hall, B. Bishop, Salton- stall, MacLellan, LI. Lee, Hoy S. Paradise, Chittick, Chute, Porter, Torrance, Hatch, C0-captain, Lawlor, Co-captain, C. Strong, R. Beach: Mackenzie, Howard, Dixon Parker, Percy, Kutscher, Sterling, Miller, Lampe, Pitman Kllgil 1 ' I 50 IO' 20' IO' IO' 15. 20' 301 Di 1 .n-::.1..u.-.4 ,-1 x K ..,.,. B. A. A. Championship Relay Team 50-yard Freestyle 1oo-yard Freestyle 200-yard Freestyle IOO-Yard Breaststroke Ioo-yard Backstroke 150-yard Medley Relay Qoo-yard Freestyle Relay 300-yard Medley Relay Dive Porter, Paradise, Chittick, Chute, Dixon Swimming Records J. W. Pulleyn, Jr. J. W. Pulleyn,Jr. J. H. Carrington P. B. Metcalf, Jr. N. L. Sper, Jr. N. L. Sper, Jr. G. S. Tompkins, Jr. M. Lazo, Jr. J. D. Corse W. B. Case J. H. Carrington F. G. Crane, 3d J. L. Burns, Jr. P. B. Metcalf, Jr. C. W. Howard, J N. L. Sper, Jr. l 119 l 1939 1939 1941 1937 1944 1944 1941 1935 1944 24 sec. 55 3X5 2 min. 1 min. 1 min 1 min. 1 min. 3 min. 113.62 sec. 9 2j5 sec. 7 415 sec. 4 1f5 sec. 22, 3 sec. 38 315 sec 1 o 115 sec points Baseball Woodrow, Manager,' Welch, DeWitt, Wilson, Phelan, Talbot Killam, Dunn, J. Zonino, Abbott, Moher, Captain, F. Zonino, Tippett, Neale, C. VV. Smith About forty men reported for the first baseball practice this winter, and before the end of the term Coach Follansbee had cut the squad to about twenty-five men, including only three returning lettermen: CAPTAIN ART MOHER Sparkplug second baseman P120 Captain Artie Moher, outfielder Fred Zonino, and third baseman Mort Dunn. Dick Welch, Dick DeWitt, Herk Warren, Fred Killam, Charlie Smith, Jim Zonino, and Norm Wilson, all up from last year's J. V., along with newcomers Bill Abbott, Ray Tippett, Bill Talbot, Buck Ihde, O. Anderson, and Bill Phelan were outstand- ing in the first practices. Again this year the team was hindered by bad weather, and could only have a few days of outdoor practice before taking on Dorchester High. But the day of the game was fair and warm, and the Blue wasted no time in grabbing an 8-o lead by the fourth inning. Dorchester was held powerless throughout the game by the excellent pitching of Charlie Smith and Bill Phelan. Aided by strong hitting, the Blue breezed to a 12-2 victory. Outstand- ing batters were Bill Abbott, who gath- ered four of Andover's fifteen hits, and Dick Welch, who made two hits and drove in three runs. .r3..iF2:esg - -C --ss. ll-1 zvz Sill gl! thi thf thi mc in yic lac ha thr ext ba co sea fire bo hir sec wh Zo thi Mc 'wr fi gl, 1 , 2 Q, . In their next game. tlu' llliu- were tle- i ibuutd 5-3 lay an iiiulerratetl lliiulge lech team in at colorless contest. ltlrecl liillain Started on the mound lor tlu' Blue. luit he got into troulnle and was relieved in the ihird inning hy Phelan, who linishecl ont the game. Rindgc scored one run in the third inning oll' liillani. and added lout' more oil' Phelan, two in the eighth and two in the ninth. .-Xndovcrls pitchers only vielded seven hits lvetween them. luit they lacked the lull support ol' the team, which had not yet rounded into shape. As it was. the Blue scratched out only six hits olli the excellent Rindge pitcher. XYelch led the batters with two singles, while Mort Dunn collected his second extra hase hlow ol' the season, a douhle in the iilth inning. 'I'he first Andover run was scored lay Bill 'l'al- bot, who came home on lfred Zonino's hit to Center held in the lourth inning. 'lihe second one came in the ninth inning. when Danny Carroll. running lor .lim Zonino, went to second on a lmalk and took third on Smitlrs inlielcl grounder. Art Moher hit a sharp single to center to score ' 'VX . , , f arse s ss we f' f , fm, X .:. 3 itz 5 . x, , f X X M fi-sf? Q I W 1 N-I , f 15 Man QC, W, Was, -as : W ' X is fee! :zf .s S K c. v f N Vos 'QW ' X -e e fwmy AW f S FQ QW1 7 W I 4 ,.ss-as-qw Q f f ,A vw 1 ii aw V V. , ., to 'Q X Q A as , 1 -1 t 1 Q S f' , 7 M W W f f -2 ff, Q t to ,. W - Nh. x . ffrszg.-f x 'Q t c is wget.. i W ,W -Q lxfl.-XNAGER BILL Woooizow Is fha! three strilfes orfour? Carroll, hut the team was unable to sus- tain the rally and ended the game without liurther scoring. At the time that this is written, the team has had little chance to really work together and polish the ragged edges. However, with the excellent schedule Coach Follanshee has arranged, they should have enough practice and experi- ence to heat Exeter in Rflayf. WM ag , a Z 4 Ma ffw ah? 'A bfi' . SEASON Andover Dorchester High Andover Rindge Tech Andover Deerfield Andover Watertown High Andover Lynn English Andover Worcester Tech Andover Harvard Varsity Andover Woburn High Andover Camp Langdon Andover Wakefield Andover Hyde Park High Andover Andover Town Team Andover Exeter SQUAD A. K. Moher, Captain W. T. Woodrow, Manager Second Base W. F. Abbott First Base O. Anderson Pitcher R. H. DeWitt, Jr. Second Base- J. M. Dunn Third Base S. W. Ihde Pitcher R. E. Phelan Pitcher C. W. Smith Pitcher H. W. Talbot, Jr. Ougield R. Tippett Shortstop H. P. Warren, 3d Pitcher R. L. Welch Ouyield N. H. Wilson Catcher W. C. Wood Ouyield F. D. Zonino Ouyield J. D. Zonino Catcher . V. Baseball Under the guidance of Coaches Dunbar and Leete, the Junior Varsity enjoyed a satisfactory if not completely successful season. The entire group was divided into An and Bn squads, each with its own schedule. In this manner a larger group of potential varsity players could be given instruction, practice, and experience. The A squad, after the final cut, was a small but eHiicient aggregation. The J. V.'s IN ACTION Dunbar 6? Co. IIIQQJ pitching staff consisted of Horne, Dunbar, and A. C. Smith. In the infield were Jones at first, Carter at second, Lackey at short, Ross at third, and McCracken as a utility man. Cliff Crosby worked behind the plate, and Caulkins, Reiner, and Thomes completed the team in the outfield. The first NA squad game was dropped to Lawrence High's Second team, 7-4. Don Dunbar pitched well, but he did not get the necessary support from his team- mates. The second encounter was a IO-5 victory over Central High School. Walt Horne pitched, and Carter and Jones both collected 2 hits. The B squad had not played its Hrst game when this article went to press. The turnout for the Junior Varsity, and the enthusiasm and ability of its teams, indicates that the Varsity team of next year and the year after will be good. Under the ufarmi' system, which begins with the clubs and works players up into the Junior Varsity and from there to the Varsity, better ballteams are representing Andover on Brothers Field. I I Major HAH Men FALL AND WINTER TERMS Abbott, W. Anderson, 0. Allenby, H. Beach, R. Q25 Bishop, B. Boeschen stein, W. Bomeisler, D. C25 Briggs, W. Cartmell, V. Chittick, C. Chute, M. Collier, R. Dalley, L. Dixon, Farrington, R. Griffith, P. CQQ Hatch, R. Q25 Heckel, T. Howard, T. Hudner,J. Q21 Hunting, H. Lawlor, R. C25 Mackenzie, M. C21 MacLellan, G. Mauran, D. f123i McKim, R. Mead, E. Moore, W. Morgan, R. Neale, W. Nourse, N. Paradise, S. Parker, O. Pearson, E. Porter, R. Reed, H. Reisler, Roome, P. Ryan, Scheide, P. Shepard, Smith, C. Sper, N. Strong, C. Tippett, R. Torrance, W Whitney, W. Zagorski, F. Zonino, ww-qfean,-q Sqn, ,. ,1'f 'iP 'ra-:aff-Q-1:5- -4-I -' Q - W-----A . - . .. -.is:a.f.--.sw M- . - - - -- Lacrosse Zagorski, Homer, Allenby, Macomber, Herman, VV. lVIorris, Hardwick, VV. Adams, Tait, Griffith, C. Allen, Fields, Briggs, Manager Dalley, R. Hudner, Gaines, Robinson, Hanke, Reisler, Captain, Pearson, Heckel, Bomeisler, Horner, H. B. Reid With a large number of men returning from last yearis squad, the lacrosse team was better than ever this season. Friday afternoon practices in the Cage during the winter gave newcomers a chance to de- velop, in the spring Coaches James and TUFTS GAME Closing in 012 the visitor I Littleton rapidly shaped the squad into a smoothly-functioning unit. Captain Joe Reisler led the team from the center midfield position. In the attack Heckel sparked the scoring, and Gaines was outstanding in setting up plays. Robinson and Zagorski alternated in the third position. Dalley and Hudner started in midfield with Reisler, constituting a rugged defensive, which also was respon- sible for a good deal of scoring. The de- fense soon gained needed experience and became an efficient group, under Reid, Herman, Hardwick, and Bomeisler. Hanke did the goal tending. Ted Heckel paced the attack with ten goals in the first game of the season in which the Blue defeated Tufts, 16-11. Gaines was credited with two scores and several assists, and Reisler tallied. The defense showed room for improvement at this early time, but managed to hold Tufts to I score 7. ln as m seaso TF a roi the l whit only Exe-11 goes up If fact, may lbfgil Excl dove C: IHOIC SUCU his 1. Hger Pros flllll iOllQ1 bitllc CAPTAIN JoE REISLER Show me an Exeter player to II goals. At M.I.T. the team again scored I6 times, holding the Tech force to 7. In these first two games Andover scored as many goals as it did in the entire 1943 season. The Governor Dummer encounter was a rout. It was the third 16-goal game for the Blue, and a shutout for the defense, which showed marked improvement after only three games. With the Deerheld and Exeter teams still to beat, as this article goes to press, the lacrossemen have shown up remarkably well, so encouragingly in fact, that Exeter's undefeated contingent may have its streak snapped. Since the beginning of A-E Lacrosse competition Exeter has never lost a match to an An- dover group. Captain Reisler did a great deal to pro- mote interest in lacrosse at Andover-the success of his team is due in large part to his leadership. Credit is also due to Man- ager Windy Briggs and both coaches. Prospects for next year are bright-the Cnthusiasm and increasingly widespread following of lacrosse indicates bigger and better squads in years to come. 125 SEASON Andover 16 Tufts I I Andover 16 M.I.T. 7 Andover I6 Governor Dummer 0 Andover 29 Lawrence Academy 1 Andover I9 Deerfield II Andover I2 Tufts 4 Andover 23 Governor Dummer Q Andover 1 1 Boston I Andover IO Exeter II SQUAD J. W. Reisler, Captain Migfgld W. G. Briggs, Manager - 7 D. M. Bomeisler, Jr. Defense L. G. Dalley Midjield D. N. Fields, Jr. ' Migzyield L. M. Gaines, Jr. Attack J. G. Hanke Goal C. A. Hardwick Dqiense T. G. Heckel Attack J. S. Herman Dwnse G. E. Homer, Jr. . Midfield R. R. Hudner Miajield W. S. Hickey Defense J. D. Lynch Mickield J. D. Macomber Attack W. H. Morris Dzgfense E. H. Pearson Miajield H. B. Reid Dfyfenfe J. G. Robinson Attack W. Stevens Midbield K. Sutherland .Midfffld J. D. Tait Mifljigld J. D. Turner GU!!! S. K. West Afflwk R. Zagorski Afffwk MANAGER WINDY BRIGGS Where are those Ass. Illanagers? l 'ew-f-1-r-1-qu-1-11-1-1-1-1 K.-1v:f.vf-ff!f:5 +f gf :f E ' ,. 1 1 We-iFff:i Q.fi '.-g'gie.ienj1'- , ,, - - , . -.Y , . - . -- -- A ,,,-,.,.,,, sh ,- ,, is . - f , , , ,, - , ,.-.1 . , , :g:ggg:51:wk:f:2:':-:-:E -J?-,f:.-.gE.: 4, fr-'f:-:f:f!-7::f.15:-za--z.1.1af'r -mr .- f - -. 1 - --z-:M - ' - f ' - ' 3,3,',,,,.:'--l-' Tennis Estin, Phinney, Sper, Raleigh, Gruner ' Chun, Castagnet, Kiam, Captain, Kittleman, Chapin Tennis got a head start on the weather, with practice on Sundays in the cage all winter. By the beginning of the regular season, in April, the team was shaping up. Potential first team players, who had shown their ability in the fall season and winter tryouts, formed a nucleus around which Coaches Kelley and McCarthy .MANAGER WOODIE STooKwELL I 'll manage F1261 built the team. There was an abundance of material to work with, including several lower-classmen. Captain Vic- Kiam led an unwieldy group of 140 hopefuls after spring vaca- tion, an extensive cut was immediately made, particularly of indulgent, leisure- loving seniors who would never make the team. The courts were in condition in time for several weeks of workout before the first match. By May 1 there was a small, select group on Brothers field, with Kiam, Raleigh, Castagnet, Gruner, Kittleman, Sper, Phinney, and Chapin competing for first team berths. There was so much ability and en- thusiasm in the tennis group that a second team was organized, which played several matches. Pratt, Lansill, Hatton, Madiera, and Estin besides several lowerclassmen, played on this team. The part ofthe squad that was not on either team played a tournament in May. Coach Kelley in this way was able to pick out those younger plifl' XAIN1 'I lm X-iflllf L Kiulf Clilllf' Cllilll was ' Emil the 'I meet chest' Cn llllfl' Thel Killlt the fi lorm On tl overp 9-0 ' with 1 For due L- KICCAL1 been years. mana Victor intere nis pi lbw iw 77. 1 X... N players who would probably make up the Varsity next year or the year after. The season began with a crushing 9-o victory over Brookline. In this match, Kittleman, playing number two singles, Came from behind to win and make a clean sweep for the Blue. The next match was with the M.I.T. varsity. Up to the final point the decision was in doubt, but the Tech doubles teams won to Clinch the meet 6-3. Next came a victory over Win- chester 8-I. On May I2 and I3 the New England Inter-Scholastics were held at Andover. The P.A. entry consisted of Raleigh, Kiam, Kittleman, and Cruner. Raleigh reached the finals, but was too tired to be in good form and lost to Exeter's Glenn Shively. On the same Saturday the second team overpowered a very weak Milton team 9-0. The team should Hnish the season with an excellent record. For the success of the season credit is due to the Coaches, Mr. Kelley and Mr. McCarthy, and to Captain Kiam, who has been playing first-rate tennis for three years. Woodie Stockwell and his assistant managers kept the team well supplied with victory balls. The large and increasing interest among the undergraduates in ten- nis promises excellent teams in the next few years. ACTION ON CoUR'r 1 K'ellqy's Kloulers al work I27l 7 CAPTAIN VIC KIAM Thifll makayou whistle SEASON Andover Brookline 0 Andover M.I .T. 6 Andover Winchester 1 Andover Milton 0 Andover Harvard Graduates 8 Andover St. Paul 3 Andover Harvard 7 Andover EXCfCI' TEAM V. K. Kiam, Captain S. B. Stockwell, Manager F, Castagnet N. Chapin, Jr. O. H. Gruner, gd C. W. Kittleman,Jr. R. M. Lincoln A. O. Phinney,JI'. N. L. Sper, jf- FEATURE SECTIGN E I P I ix E -- fb TRACK 721169216 1 Y v I H x C9Qr ?J3'EJ U1'33'1l!R'fSll U 0032? 1386545 LNCS EVDCWILE' 3110 M 'i'U21fMCflllUlVll umvfi 831511-FHIIHULRJVHIL-H! IBTl2,bYl2Jl5h I1fll'2, WN! l?U1lUl1l?l!UB'tE 5'n!f'fr!.'W1l'i'a!xR1E.'.'I5 NINYWTZ C N IM Wl1!W!fliU'H.35W U!! VA iiQ0 Mlm u 1 1 S J -.....L... lflbkkvf Eve. lglpjzg '- INTRODUCTIGN mm' DEDICATIGN This feature section carries no message of great importance, it is, rather, an attempt to capitalize on the events of our Senior year, intended to amuse, and to remind us that P.A. was not all work and drudgery. For those devotees of subtle humor we have tried to avoid the obvious in some stories, but there is plenty of corn too, for we think corn is healthy. Our coverage of school life is of necessity in- complete, but we have tried to-touch on as many of its phases as we could, at the same time avoiding controversial and embarrassing matters. In short these stories, which tell only a few of the episodes of Joe Phillips' life at Andover, are meant to be taken in a good spirit. We feel that anyone who feels hard used by us in our attempts to be amusing should be able to laugh along with us. ik wk Pk Mrs. Elizabeth Cushing Goodhue Fuess was a symbol to us of just such a spirit of good natured fun on the Hill. To her memory we respectfully dedicate this section of the 1944 PoT POURRI. JOSEPH PHILLIPS ' C CJOE3 9 21 Maple Place, Anytown, U.S.A, june 9, 1926 Navy Junior Yale KDKA Model Railroad Club - Rifle Club C1941-449 P11110 Winning Club Football f1941j Spring Track 0944, J' V- Football iI942l Cpen Door C1943-443 Varsity Football 119431 1 Senior joseph Phillips had a queer feeling in the pit of his stomach. He was riding the Boston and Maine Railroad in the direc- tion of Andover, but he wasnit train sick, just all prickly inside. Around him were all his friends, gabbling about summer experiences and exchanging new jokes. They were generally enjoying themselves in the spirit of catching the last few free breaths they could until Christmas, for the train had just pulled out of Ballardvale. The train jerked along for a few feet, lurched a couple of times, halted, and then finally got under way. After the usual cracks about the B. and M. equipment, someone in the rear of the car shouted out, It's great to be a Senior!', Wait till I get my hands on those Preps, somebody near joe said in a voice overburdened with vengence. The Prep sitting next to joe straightened up and looked around. c'Wha.t's Preps? he asked timidly. Preps is new guys, said joe, busy with his thoughts. He was going to have plenty of fun with the Preps too, so why was he feeling like one himself at the moment? He was a Senior. Suddenly he realized that that was what was wrong with him: he was just finding out what it meant to be a Senior. A quotation flashed across his memory from somewhere out of the past. c'With leadership go not only fame 131 and praise, but also responsibility. Sen- iors are leaders, he thought. His new-found responsibility made him feel quite good and he was annoyed when the Prep at his elbow interrupted his reverie. How far is it to the school from the sta- tion, pal? Seniors must be dignified and Preps put in their places. I am a Senior, he said in austere tones. And you are a Prep. When Preps address Seniors they are expected to show respect worthy of their superiors. Let that be a lesson to youf' The Prep seemed properly impressed and lapsed into silence. joe was so completely taken up with his position as a Senior, and especially with his dignity, that he failed to notice that the train had arrived at Andover. Mickey Klotz, a friend from the year before, saw him staring into space and making no move to get up. Hey, Phillipsli' he shouted, 'cgoing to Lawrence so early in the year?,' joe woke up, blushed, and struggled to his feet, still trying to look dignified, in spite of the heavy bag he was carrying. He made his way down the aisle and stepped gingerly onto the station platform. Whether it was the Andover climate, the mob around him, or what, we shall never know, but in the rush for seats in the taxi joe lost his hat and all his dignity. And up to now he hasn't found either of them. WSWS M Xxx xr? 1 X XXSVX x X S x Nxxx X Tfrgxxzy--N xy 5 .ew V f N '7 Fm W YN 74, SQ X gy Kg Dear Mother Joe Phillips was sitting in his room making believe he was studying when his roommate, Hank Grope, came in and asked, Say, Joe, got a piece of theme paper?', Yeah, said Joe, right here in my drawer. Whereupon Joe gave the drawer an experimental tug, but it wouldn't open. He pulled harder, still it wouldn't open. Gimme a hand here, will ya, Hank?,' Joe grunted. Together they gave the drawer a yank strong enough to stretch a synthetic elastic band. Suddenly, Joe found himself sprawled on the other side of the room and Hank discovered he was taking inventory of Joe's dirty laundry. The contents of the drawer were strewn all over the room. Joe, picking himself up, began to paw through 'the pile of papers on the floor. No theme paper, he an- nounced sadlyg old letters, exams, crib sheets, Ancient History notes, college application blanks, maps,-but no theme paper. c'Never mind, sighed his roommate removing a pair of athletic socks that were draped artistically around his ears, I'll get some downstairs. , Hey! Help me pick up this mess, Joe AHEM! With the Bush in the close! 133 yelled after the departing Hank. Too late, he had gone. Joe began to scoop up the papers on the floor. An old math exam paper caught his eye. Thirty-two,', Joe shuddered, reading the red-penciled mark in the top left-hand corner. Get thee out Of my sight,'l he muttered as he tossed the paper out the window. The exam paper having been disposed of, an old letter was now on top ofthe pile. 'cHm-mf' he mur- mured, Uwondered why I never mailed this. He began to read the letter, squint- ing occasionally as he tried to decipher his own handwriting .... Williams Hall Dear Mother, Sept' 23, 1940 Gee! I'm lonsome. Of course, Andover is a swell place and I like it very much and I like my housemaster and I think the food is O.K. and I like my room, but I'm still lonsome. Gee! We have to spend a lot of money here. Today I had to buy a Poeperee Qwhatever that isjg a Philipeun, two pressing contracks, one from Burns, and another from Lanrock'sg a room key, a mirror CI don't know why because I al- ready have one in my roomj 5 a Blue Book Qthey tossed in a map of the school freej g and a Prep cap. I also had to pay 552 dol- lars so I can use my radiator. I still have to buy my books and I am broke so please send me some more money quick as they tell me that the teachers get very mad if you come to class without any books. Gee! They have an awful thing up here called prepping. Every time a Senior has something he wants carried, a prep has to carry it. Today I had to carry a box of books over to Paul Revere Hall but I couldnlt End Paul Revere Hall so Ileft the books at a place they told me was the library. A nice lady standing behind a desk said thank you. So I guess everything WE ,, 1, wmv fr-Z' x X X alley, li0ll1ClSlCl'l,7 The Lhin blue linc 0pvn llu0r ' ul Exvlfl' Hail lo lhc Royal Blum' Schine's Toolcrs Flags and follows --W., will be alright. After I had gone down- town to get my prep cap a big guy said a prep can't walk down Mane Street so I don't know how to get downtown any more. The map of the school is too small. Gee! I like my room. Part of the ceiling slants down so it looks just like a cave. The wallpaper sort of reminds flower garden around October a little hole in the wall where leeks out but I covered that piece of adhesive tape from my hockey stick. I've got a nice window only the curtains you sent me don't Ht-they drag on the floor but I pinned them up sose their ok. My bed is not very comfortable because one side sags down too much. I fell out of bed three times on that side last night. But I like my room very much. I guess I won't put that geranium plant you gave me in the window, nobody else seems me of your and there's the plaster up with a to have a plant in there window. Gpus to a Eek! To the accompaniment of numerous falsetto feminine shrieks and a roar of laughter, a group of lower class movie- goers, their clothes in various stages of disarray, climbed to precarious perches on the backs of their seats in G.W.H. For the moment the girls in the balcony were forgotten as the heads of the audience turned toward the disturbance. Hedy Lamarr in all her ecstatic beauty could have diverted only the finicky five per cent at such a time. Those who happened to be sitting on the aisle saw a small mouse, not knowing that he was the cause of the uproar, run up the aisle and out the door, kindly opened for him by Mr. Barnyard. Joe Phillips pulled a small cardboard box out of his pocket and turned to the lad on his right. With a knowing leer he Showed him the words on the box: Marvo, the U Amazingly Lifelike Mechaniflal H1351 Gee! I had to make out my schedule this morning and was that a lot of work! I don't like it very much though because I don't have any classes on Saturday morning and in grammer school we never had to go to school on Saturday and I think it would be sort of fun to go to school on Saturday and everybody else has classes on Saturday. Maybe I can get it changed. Gee! I guess I have to stop writing now because its time to go to supper. Gee! I'm lonsome. , your lovin g son, JOSEPH P.S. Donit forget to send me some more money!!! ' XXXXXXXXXXXXXXqKisSeSp I guess I was kind of a dope in those days,i' said Joe, tossing the letter back into his drawer. Mouse Mousei' was written in small, mouse col- ored letters. Shortly afterward, the tumult and the shouting died down, and the picture started. The audience collectively settled down to watching for 'scenes where the Hays Cflice had slipped up. SATURDAY EVENING Save me a seat, hfiy XX ',,..v ' J fwwfg ' B S , ThezAn1erican String Quartet Exchange Student Thonlpson Ovvr in Taylor accordingllo the Constitution. . . Cun't you Slllillf . .and I want lo llunlk- - - Partqol' Lhc 22Egrand Uur succcss l fccl sure is due S0 I bet him he couldn't Art F 1 3 , J 'X E' - A ' Y , . Moods On an English examination at the end of the Fall Term, Joe was asked to write a short paragraph on Ha change of mood of a number of people that you have ob- served recentlyf' The following is what he wrote, after biting his pencil for several minutes and hoping fervently that Mr. Blackford was in a good mood when he read it. All last weekend, the mood of the Seniors was one of despondency, despera- tion, and feverish work. Whispered con- ferences were going on all over the school, in dorms, on the campus, in the commons room. In the library, an unfortunate few were striving against all hope to beat the hands of the clock racing inevitably towards the hour of doom. Crib notes, class notes, notes of every possible descrip- tion were being copied as fast as the palsied fingers of sleep-starved Seniors could copy them. People were seen study- ing everywhere, from tables in the Com- mons to the lavatories. Doc's was cluttered with worried students speeding avidly through hosts of material on some damn tariff or other. The atmosphere dripped with the sweat of burning brows, and cases of eyestrain were almost as common as the ants. Events sped faster and faster toward the climax, which was finally Physical H... L through Q, at 3:15, S through Z at 3245? The words of the registrar drifted dimly into joe's consciousness, disturbing his IO A.M. rest period. 'fWhat did he say? he whispered to Harry Phlubb, his neighbor. P.I. tests this afternoon at 3:15, Harry hissed. Promptly at 3:25, Joe arrived at the Gym, only to find that a large crowd was K F1371 HISTORY NOTES 'caccording to the Anti- Trust Law reached at eight oiclock Monday morning. An hour and a half later the campus was dotted with small groups, making their 'way slowly toward George Washington Hall for Assembly. In each group someone said, 'Let's not talk about it,' and every one agreed. People were relaxing and taking an interest in the little things of life again. Somebody told a joke, and a few of his friends found they could laugh again. Life was gradually coming back to normal. The American History Exam was over. Mr. Blackford gave him a 95 on the answer, with no comment. Index ahead of him. Apparently the thing to do was to undress, so Joe soon stood forth in tasty green and red shorts and his roommate's best purple socks, feeling athletic but slightly foolish. A whistle blew. 'fAttention! Form a single line along the wall and be quiet! With a skill born of long practice, Joe made his way to the head of the line, elbowing in behind his friend, Harry. He snarled fiercely at a J I, 1. ,N ' 1 U I1 If ix LE i! Cl jf il 11' A LY' sg Ny 2-X junior who tried to do the same. The whistle blew again, and the line moved slowly past the table where the Major presided over a record file. By this time joe's feet were getting cold. Looking over the line, he found what he had taken at first glance for a pillar was really the wrestling captain's leg. Joe had planned to go out for wrestling in winter, but now little prickles of doubt assailed him. There's this about general ex,M Harry was saying. It only lasts twenty minutes, four times a week. 'Tm going to try wrestling, joe said in a rather superior tone. C At least,', he thought, I don't look as silly as that kid in the long underwearfij The wrestling captain chinned himself with one hand. H-m-m, twenty minutes a day,,' mused joe. Next! snapped a voice, and Joe found himself before the Major. Name?', Uh - -Phillips, jf' said joe, slightly irritated at the Major for not knowing it. After all, he'd played in three football games this Fall. Step on the scales. Weight?'i One fifty-eightf' .joe blurted, misread- ing the scales. 'f0h no, I mean-un-one fifty-y-y-four. . The Major set his jaw and erased some- thing on the card. What winter sport are you planning to take? he asked, looking at JOC sceptically. joe's determination melted. Why, uh-general ex, I guess. As he struggled up to a B in the pole climb, aided by some sarcastic comments from the crowd below, he mentally cursed whoever it was that invented these damn tests. Still thinking explosive thoughts, Joe launched himself in the standing broad jump, coming down very hard with another B. He progressed to the bar vault, and after some concentration heaved himself over on the second try. That was more like it! His conidence was nearly restored. And he jumped 21 inches at the blackboard, whatever that proved. Another A, joe was triumphant. As he left for the swimming pool, he turned to see the wrestling captain fall on his face in the broad jump. The triumph was complete. After all, what the heck was wrong with general ex? And it only comes four times a week. The Infirm UNCH? ad adledig esgusefi f'Qh-h-h-h-h-h, You may have a feverf, Name?H Impossible, I feel great. Uphillubsj Dgayj' Then you don't need an athletic ex- 'fWhat's the trouble? C1156-N Oh-h-h-h-h-h-h-h-h-h. Pain somewhereiw Canid breedf, Here, I'll give you some dropsf' Erp-snop-glurpf, C'Shall I paint your throat?7' 'fDon't you dare. There is nothing whatsoever wrong with my throat? But your nose . . .N Oh-h-h-h-h-h-h-h-h. What's wrong?,' Bore drobs, quigf' I Here Erp- snop-glurpf' Anything else? 'jeds gibbe dad esgusef' All right-you're on the list. Now get along with youf, j c'0h - ef -jez slidely stobbed ubf, HTha1lgf- BYO I'd better take your temperature. UNCXI- , 'Tm all right. Just gimme - er - gib be ' Oh-h-h-h-h-h-h-h-11-hm - - f139l w I X I I X xxi 'ii A., N X qw S 4 ' f,,,,Mi xx- X we . y W .S xv Q xxx A AN A . Q . ' NW? S I xg! Si X ,mwmsgwx w SWAN- u , N 411 I gr' Fillm0re and Femmes Y0u're wasting your filrn T00 lnuch for Herb ,t vnu? Think you're Dfetty good, don ' McKim, you weigh u ton Maggie lishls UP February I gotto go Plan A-sters Slop kicking me Ruilrondors Why donit you take Barbara? Sheis swell. Marge or nuttinif' said Hank, and joe heaved a sigh and gave in. They retired to their room to think of someone for Barbara, Joe having decided on Jane as second choice. Next door to them lived Jim Strong, a husky football player who came from Bermuda and didn't know any girls in the States. Hjimis our manf' they thought, and rushed next door to get him. 'Td like to take Jane, if I hadn't already told my roommate I would take his sister, he said after seeing the girls' pictures. joe wasn't too anxious to give up Jane, but Hank persuaded him to compromise for Barbara, who was really a nice girl, and they both worked on Jim until he promised to Hnd his roommate, break the date and return as soon as possible. He had not returned two hours later, when Mickey Klotz wandered in looking for food. 'CI need a date for the Prom, he said. Either of you fellows know a girl I could ask? joe and Hank were convinced that Jim would not return, so they settled the thing right there. Mickey was to take Barbara, Hank, Marge, and oe ane. The wrote the necessar 1 Y Y letters, Joe explaining to the girls, as best he could, his predicament, and gently Fizsrivirnas AT ABBOT The 'cbo sn are ref resented J' Hu I D451 COMMONS CALAMITY I A boner by Bob shoving them off on the other boys, Just as they returned from mailing the letters they found Jim entering the room. Sorry I took so long, fellowsf' he said. I had to help my roommate find a date for his girl. Sheas darn goodlooking, so this Jane better be pretty hotf, Joe was about to explain that he was sorry, but the girls were all dated up, when he remembered what the rumor factory had reported of people that Jim didn't like. I was going to take her myself? he said, but I've decided I don't want to go. 6'Tcll me anotherf' said Jim, grinning knowingly. Joe was very disgusted with life that night. Starting out with three dates and ending up with none was quite a blow. For the next three weeks he tried desper- ately to get a date, but it seemed that all the girls he knew were busy for that day. He finally 'came with a blind date from Lowell, and after he saw her he began to wish he were blind. The evening wasn't reallv a failure, though, because he man- aged' to get a dance with Marge from his roommate, and he took her into a corner and explained the whole thing to her in detail. After much persuasion she forgave him and consented to several dates during the Spring vacation. At least Joe had something to look forward to. 1 1 K i 1 s 1 G m v 1 I i 1 1 V C I c J 1 N X x L, XX K 4 i V. A C L 1 X 1 1 E 1. 1 n I - lf 1, Q C C I I U S X 1. .1 'ix l 3 X I i x V H N 1 Phillips ,X x E l N DA? ? N ' If x fi-315 'X 1, 9 'E I J, ' ! X : , W4 X X' 023 M f MQ X 5 x 7 SQCIETIES Ui. f tw. . , flf.,igi5?xl1li ls i.'?5k?xi.:fiff 5. , Ht-zz, 2 as , T Hi A 4- , . y A..-...iffy i .M sldiif . Q 5 ij. W, -X Af fm z a , f ' in 'N r lg ANL-x' K 4 9 t W X -'V BN Nba . . . V fa f' . QF' Q. XA 3 QQ-r Q SEQ Q ,gm Q 'Q N.. ,., X-1. - Vrxy ..g.. s, ?g9JgE .Al D, ,wk ,,5 -. ,:Qx2., Qj1F,G,Q . ,. g , Q- . .. fqfgxgx AXQNW yes 'Wi -. s . Corey Allen Heath L. Allen John W. Blake John F. Bowen Herbert E. Deming Leonard M. Horner James H. Hudner Frederick H. Levis YN' wk' :sf . s ' i it is . ,. X- ...X KO ,J 1' Norman E. McCulloch, Jr. William F. Neale, jr. David Oh ler Otis H. Parker Edward H. Pearson Howard S. Reed Joseph W. Reisler William L. Saltonstall H. William Talbot, Jr john L. Thorndike Raymond Tippett Frank Zagorski James D. Zonino D561 -4 i5-i-'fait ik is rs me 1? QA. NSQ L .5 355. , -. A X . . ,-of ff .,' 3, ,A- W.: VA' . K f sf if ' .. t ' x -N -A ., R . Q, fvrvh' we 5 MSS Eg, .M s it it xy R' ' N . N' . Nfl Wifi ni ir ,. ge' 1 F NLMQ., X E so f 1+ H is 9. r 1 1- QT K:'M.-,ZA I 'N ' Sass . 2. . . ., 3 12.52 K s 5 xi. . .. Ernest S. Ballard, Jr Robert S. Beach, 2d Richard S. Bull, Jr. N. Albert Burgess, VI J. Stanley Dickey Frank T. Edman Dozier N. Fields, Jr. Theodore G. Heckel Ross K. Hoy .lohn L. Koch, Jr. 5 -7735.53 N sgfglf-3 UV I'. Harold A. B. Mclnnes Roger A. Neuhoff James B. Rains Lester B. Sobin Allen M. Sperry Robert W. Terry Ellsworth L. Tirnbcrman Walter F. Torrance, Jr. Henry P. Warren, gd William T. Woodrow, Jr. lI57l J.-X -. ,,?..f,f...-.1 ., . . Q 11- .. sf- x' -s f 5,5,y,yq. -. f. A szqwtffff f' . 1. M .. .Kirk-Y 5 ,X ff .,, . gif OAQX 0 WGS Q EMM! TQ . aaa. W ,Q J- -,-M 5 ss- X 5 -, g. . vi, .I K vii gl 4 v' .Q f5if.t fefffaLf,. e m' fo. A' . 'f fs: qui X' -2 .wa-.N ,XV - ' ' W ...Q-jjf'f,, .iv : ,,:5:xjj- jigrpf-' , esli ITIL.. AX l f ffiffffll T ' if -V tif go- -em: X H W ., .... ,.,,, N.. . 45' X K -ia af eel M it 4 - Y. ss Lew X,,, , .,AA 66 , 3 . X . ,,-1' MV- 4 ' f?QJx. if ' :X 13' .UU William M. Barnum Broughton H. Bishop William W. Boeschenstein Reginald B. Collier F Albert H. Crosby, Jr. Lawrence C. Dalley John C. Farrar J. Reynolds Farrington Mario Lazo, Jr. Edward M. Mead PAE Arthur Moher Thomas L. Raleigh, Harold B. Reid, Peter W. Roome A. Craig Shealy Whitney Stevens Kenneth Sutherland Richard L. Welch Wheelock Whitney, J Frederick D. Zonino Jr. J I' I'. D581 William S. Anderson John W. Bishop Wendell P. Bradley Benjamin Y. Brewster James D. Cahill, Jr. Frederick S. Chase, 2d Kenneth K. Chun Robert H. Cushing, Jr Angus Deming Charles M. Gearing, 2d John I. Dixon . ,g.Wt 'l y 1- K kk RA V 1 . K-,Ux,,l: 5' xg., 5 Lip, ix .A ' Wilt 5 1' Q , Q ' is 5 ff Si mn- . I a ' ,Q fi .r x W. .R g ' ' mg wg: A - A 5 ' .xiiwgy my .H . . .Q X . X' ' - i 3 ' , ' , t, U wawvf-sv, ll ' I X -ri. he Y 1 tl V - , . i ' . 'H-jf.-'A :Ji ' ' ' . ' K Y f- ji ' . ' .gf-. 1 Q if .' x 5535: . . , it . A ' .sr -. ,,,.,, - Q.. .. ., itil.-L ' '- ' P ' .el 4-,.af?', Q ,1 Q1 Y jeg,-X 1 ' nf gg-x 1.32, 1. wxl't'H,:v' - ..:r'.vaw-x- 1 .f it-eg 155 -vw, . 4.1 ' .J .'-.- HK f . A vw. 'K N. wrt. :sm . M. .X it A M A- X .V qw. 55. ,Qin g ,ffm . ,Ag w s.. S, ,L A--. Q Xgqwq. of xv. ' J 352112: X ,. .Ki F v,ffkW...kz. V PBX J. Morton Dunn Harry Hall, 2d Edmund Hayes, Jr. Frederick Kingery John S. Lampe Robert C. Lawlor Robert D. Lilien ' H1, J Frederick C. Meacha William K. Mettler Jerry L. C,Brien I'. Richard M. O'KeeH'e Ian S. Pemberton Richard Porter, 2d John Ryan, 3d Charles P. Sagar Roger S. Seymour Anthony W. Steere Gerald S. Tompkins Douglas H. Wayman Edwin M. Williams Robert B. Williamson Hit W fm' D591 Peter B. Baker Lee B. Bergstrom William Y. Boyd Charles Y. Chittick, Jr. Hans H. Estin Alexander S. C. Fuller Jonathan C. Hanke James S. Herman William S. Hickey Q1 1. Q 4. df- 3 F . S9 Y' W x 'R ig' , ' 5 gf?s,x M- 4. wr., , . ' . er Ei wg -' , 7fGJc'n.3'- '4.,,i,mz'9'., -X V 7 059 C X IJ' r:'e:. ', f. f .th N. Q'fs1f4--Wi? 5 - tg., x. ,xlggglq ,5.f,.1f ,fn I w, mg.. ,, 1 ...I Y, W . 'Q 'v:,5',gQ'Qyyf. . ' l ii -tiillfxsf'-Ilfffi :Ei 3? i ,,p - X Q 12' A ff? ' ' Qi f Qgsz tg za .. ,, . Q 2,51 t fill' X f 92:-5 f 'w w .-z..-iffy. FLD Huston S. Hunting Karl H. Kalbfleisch, jr. Frederick M. Killarn Charles A. King Chesterton S. Knight, Jr. Peter Lagemann Charles H. McDuHie George E. MacLellan, 3d Richard S. McKinley, 3 Charles R. Mellor john,W. Moffly, 4th jay C. Petter John F. Shepard Carter Smith Richard Starke Sherwood B. Stockwell Edwin S. Underhill Q D601 d William Adams, 3d Bromwell Ault, Jr. LI. Burehenal Ault George S. Baldwin, Jr. Carleton H. Boll James F. Burns, 3d Edward S. Cook Gary R. Dunn Leonard M. Gaines, AGC Peter Hetzler Charles B. Lenahan Cummings C. McCracken Hazen L. Page John C. Robinson Fritz Stark J. Peters Stevens, gd Willard B. Walker Raymond H. Young 5531. F1611 l I qqlP5':,,.-,-,B ,!,, xx -Qwlllil,l1,,I, ivy.. XRXXX -.fp v is GGWQSO9 julian B. Abbott H. Alfred Allenby Winstanley C. Briggs Willis K. Bramwell, Jr. Daniel T. Carroll David R. Crawford Richard E. Dake George D. Dulaney Woodford H. Dulaney, John P. Eastham Sherman Fitzsimons William A. Graham Peter C. Holmes ,,,5g,i9, K ...ig-.R - 21' .nw . 52 l ,s 1 n,, . . it-Q. 'iir'l7 '! sl li X E 5 ' www 1 f. I X., :YDQN 3 . X ,, 5 'I 511 WSF- .lkttligzz-1 5, 1 5 ' i .1?E2i:Z':s,i.l1'- Hifi?-3' ESQ - - .,. : 12231: V Z7-?f' . ,'l r ilk .ff 2 ab 3 SSE jf 5 H' 5 xiblxxx 1 if NX , I X X x .1 fl: .4 Hs... EDP Jr. Benjamin M. Johns, J John S. Lansill, Jr. Robert McKim, Jr. a James C. McManaw William C. Moreland Richard S. Morgan Robert B. Percy Lee S. Pyles Horace H. Smith, Jr. Albert F. Turner Norman H. Wilson Edward E. Wise William Young, 2d I'. Y, , 2d f162l Jr , QMNJEDQWEIR 5 Hia W Iii! I :ggi - - ' NN X X N46 , X T55 X 4 .J 5:1 ,E- 'Wi -gm V- U DERCLASSME V----r--r--i:ff -- f-'J' ! 3.-sa-.:.r-.1.:,,:5u-ra.:.::'.'.. 5 Q-,.' fs :pa :.l...F.I.f - S Lower Middle Class COUNCIL MEMBERS AND OFFICERS C. VV. Smith, D. Lazo l A. Gallagher, R. Hudner, O. Anderson, Tait Returning to the hill last Fall, we, the Class of 1946, fully realized that we had graduated from the ranks of 'clowlyw Juniors to a position of some importance on the campus. The Preps suffered the tormenting of our class, especially, since we retained fresh in our -memories the treatment which we had received last year. Little did we realize at that time that out of this number of Preps in our class, several would soon become prominent members of the school, as well as of the Lower Class. For the first day most of us toiled almost as hard as the Preps, transporting our own furniture from Rockwell or Will Hall to our widely scattered Lower houses. Vic- trolas, newly allowed us, were used at first to the fullest extent, and consequently dick sessions appeared at the most peculiar times. During these conferences almost everything was discussed, includ- ing, to be sure, the success of our class- H661 mates, O. Anderson, and C. Smith, who were earning their Varsity Football letters. This freedom we enjoyed, was too much for some of us, and the faculty soon had the Class of '46 labeled as rather mis- chievous. We were sure, however, that we had the finest group of boys on the Hill. During the winter a rivalry that had broken out between the cottages and Main street was accentuated by a hockey game which the cottages won. However, Main Street took a baseball game from the men of the cottages to even up the competition. The Spring Term is sure to be full of excitement, with many members of thC class on Varsity Teams and many otherS due to make scholastic records with the prize exams and essays coming up. We aff? looking forward to becoming upper-class- men next year, a step which will put us El long way from our entry as Juniors, only last year. RICK HUDNER ,45 unior Class F 'A ''TF7T ': f?'ff2:2' -? fi6e - ' - e - .m f-.2.14.,:i1'?1ff11?w-fasfzfsg: :xm.-.....-.,....., ''-'- --'-'-1:215121411fzr11a::ziz?:Zg31Q5ij25:51-2-'41,-SFP' 0 COUNCIL MEMBERS AND OFFICERS Ross, Farrington, Pugh, G. Thompson The Junior Class started off the Fall Term in somewhat of a daze. We didn't quite realize what was expected of us, but we soon found out. Although we didn't benefit much by carrying chairs and tables around the campus, we did get acquainted with the top floors of Senior Dorms. The Junior Athletics in the Fall were football and soccer. Mr. Di Clementi supervised these athletics well-especially the body building exercises. The Saxons, paced by Captain Dan Lackey, were the undefeated champions in football. In soc- cer Thomas's Tigers came out on top. Thomas, F. C. Thompson, and Arnold were outstanding. The Rockwell House- Will Hall football game, played on a cold Thanksgiving Day, was won by Rockwell House. Lackey, Suisman, Wood, and Chapin starred for Rockwell, while For- rest, MacWilliams, Barnes, and Wyman held up the Will Hall team. l157l The Andover-Exeter football game turned out to be an exciting event. Most Juniors didn't know the true meaning of school spirit until after the game. The vacation which ended the Fall Term was along awaited occasion for the Juniors. The Winter Term was by far the most unpleasant one. The work was hard and the weather was bad. Although there wasn't a great deal of snow, it was readily made use of when it did come. Will Hall experienced quite a few snowball tights, several of them with Rockwell. For some unknown reason the Junior class attracted a lot of attention from the rest of the school when there was snow on the ground. We found out that some of the upper-classmen have pretty good arms. We are all looking forward to a success- ful Spring Term to finish the year. We also hope that the 'cOpen Door policy will be in effect for everyone on the H111 next Fall. BILL PUGH '47 ... ,. .,- L- mfnfwv -f 11-2-4s- 57 -593i-f'5'7'9.T- . 'xii 4 I N u William C. Mohler William F. O'Shea William A. Prior Walter N. Morrison Archibald C. Coolidge, J John P. Eastham Irving W. Bonbright, 3d Frederic R. G. Sanborn Peter M. Grosz Alexander S. C. Fuller James F. Burns, 3d Robert C., Dean, Jr. Frank L. Greene Richard W. Kimball William A. Christison Donald M. Lazo Irenee duP. May Loring E. Batchelder Richard C. Moses Walter L. Landergan, Jr Gilman F. Collier Benjamin I-I. Stevens Roger B. Salomon I'. Upper Middlers Lower M iddlers WINTER TERM South Euclid, Ohio Belmont Troy, Pa. West Hartford, Conn. Cambridge Andover Englewood, N. Brooklyn, N. Y. Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. Greenwich, Conn. New York, N. Y. Wellesley Lebanon, Tenn. Andover Andover Havana, Cuba Granogue, Del. Andover Pittsburgh, Pa. Lawrence New York, N. Y. South Plainield, N. Little Compton, R. I. SCHOLARSHIP OF THE FIRST GRADE Donald Sterling, Jr. John C. Farrar Thomson C. McGowan John W. Kellett Carleton S. Coon, Jr. William S. Anderson John D. C. Little Robert S. Boyd Paul E. Thurlow John P. Eastham Richard P. Leavitt Geoffrey D. Bush William A. Christison Peter S. Hanke Loring E. Batchelder Jeff Corydon, gd Seniors Upper Middlers Lower Middlers I170I Portland, Ore. Scarborough, N. Y. Cleveland Heights, Chio Methuen Wakefield Watertown Andover Scarsdale, N. Y. Mars Hill, N. C. Andover Durham, N. H. Cambridge Andover y Garrett Park, Md. Andover Cranston, R. I . g A HI A Evcll war'S Brolli Floor Uppf and z Ou prim mode , Q23 A ,gxxcc X1 ,E . T9 1 dk A - , Ga? E E El S5115 Eats Y riulshznga Haig af des 346 MADISON AVENUE COR FORTY- FOURTH ST - NEW YORK 17, N Y X HEADQUARTERS FOR UPPER FORMERS AND COLLEGE UNDERGRADUATES Even with colleges so largely militarized and the wars inroads into preparatory schools-Brooks Brothers are prepared, as always, in the Sixth Floor Shop to outfit College Undergraduates and U per-Formers in good-looking civilian clothes Q' 1'2ix I- M, W7 few ,5 - Z ff rdf' fflf 'R ' ,.., 'iwiii' I' ' W1 Eff I rys, I yyy , 4 5, yss .T .Eu S., 5 tl,v ' 71 1 ,t'se 5 .1 s 143.f,, l' f I ,.. I alt 3 , s yff t Qi ,-,' Q,-152' , 1 if if A I s if - A l --t1 ' f ,-L , 1,-,J 'f Gfh',,' - 1 ,.- -'z ' , A N X ' I 'N X I QAVI ,....,.... li , 1 f ff-X U :rx W W3 ' r . S R 1 x v- i 3 Q If G , ,A 2- ' H E 'X 5 W , , , 4 fiiff 1 . ' f . f X ff fx ,, fi? Q 05- I ff,3 A- ,A Afv hp 'I A f r f , J Aw: ffpxf 1 Ri yt, , fx ggi, 6,1 1 1 ,MA f , 1 f ff ff f , s fab 53, 2 f -M. - , f lg f, f f , f , Way? 3 A , , . . ,' ,ff 1? i'35a .iZ'f'V'ff All 15 :iff ' 1 If ' If gi' ,AQ 5 1 f A 3 f ji 1 -W If N I ik 1 ' X WA is Mg T 'ff If -f 4-' W 4 ' M I f 5 J if f , 'if5'tI lr- L L W F fjf ll f gf Kin fg1??f x I, IL 9 7515 he X G WN' iff 1 'fi lg 72, :iff ella I1 ff X ,ff , 1 , 1 E f w 1 W I ' ' fr Rfb 'fx --'Avi ffl' '4fXff '1 K U 1 A 4 4 , K sf ,gs IX ' 1' Q 252 7' 1 X!! XI ,f i ji? f 1 4jj13, :IW1 li 1 ' 1 I 2 N ff fx X21 2' HJ .7 X 1' ff X 'I f, yi 'i ff, NK 'gf' f f ,,!1 I , , , , ,hy .R 15, ,Q ' ff P, f I 1 , , 1 , 1.'l1'l: J Q f f, , ' fy A f' 1 2 ws' 55. I' f if g fw, 11' I lift f yfisflg If ff, ,df 'f sf E X f 1 I ' ' rw. . 1 7 I ' X 9 'f X M J f if sg . wfg gfff ' ' I M ff' 'ff Q ' .' X 1 if X X my fig ff M139 X 1 f Q 'I rj! f , Q ff s Y 1 f ,f ,jx , + 4 X , g g if f ,f M , 1 I P 1, ,1 f A f ,f ' I , 4- gf ,V f Qw 1 I and accessories. Our standards are maintained throughout-and prices, covering a sensible wartime range, begin at moderate figures. BRANCHES NEW YORK: our wnu. s'rn::'r BOSTON: Nzwauav con. sznxnsv stun? 1' .- 7' I sg' f ., ff' if 'F f -I f if GBIDOKI Bro!-lien f L A FU...-.-4 f3Hr'- v-- 'W Now IN THE SECOND QUARTER OF OUR SECOND CENTURY 1818-1944 AS MAKERS OF MILITARY 8L NAVAL UNIFORMS . Z fa L 1 fi 'VZ-ww I w+1+I1.I l .- 1' -7 lv 'I wgl l uh, ax -qv' +I --II., G fe f- l , I., 1 ,- l x I.. til,-I mf.: - - 'f 1: I u .aI.Zs'5115.- -M .1 ' Sc 1 v5X1fw' : L, 'gb' lx :il '5 1. 'Ml' . ' 1.4 ...LLQXQJY---' araxdaftzdzffz www who M lI71l . NW1a,mm ff:M,, ,,., MW SCHOLARSHIP OF THE SECOND GRADE Dwight D. Killam John B. Snook Charles W. Kittleman, Jr. Ernest C. Magison Whitney Stevens Victor K. Koechl Robert A. Wofsey Isaac C. Foster John F. Bowen Arthur S. Wensinger .Iohn C. Thompson Frederick D. Greene, 2d Heath L. Allen Victor H. Hexter, 2d Walter F. Torrance, Jr. William A. Prior Broughton H. Bishop Roger Newhall, Jr. Lee S. Pyles Robert C. Dean, Jr. Walter N. Morrison Leonard W. Volk, 2d Laurence Kohlberg Howard S. Reed Archibald C. Coolidge, Jr. George E. MacLellan, 3d Roger C. Wilde, Jr. William F. O'Shea Frank L. Greene William C. Mohler John I. Dixon Robert W. Terry Frank S. Jones F Donald L. M. Blackmer William G. Blanding James W. Brydon Richard W. Kimball Richard C. Moses Giles Constable Arthur G. Tebbens David F. McLain Henry R. Arnold, Jr. Edward Ottenheimer, jr. Joel P. M. Nixon Seniors U pper Middlers Lower M iddlers juniors l172l Andover Upper Montclair, N. J Greenville, Miss. Reading Arlington, Va. Farmington, Conn. Stamford, Conn. Brewster Oneida, N. Y. Grosse Pointe, Mich. East Liverpool, Ohio Upper Montclair, N. J Harrisburg, Pa. Dallas, Tex. Waterbury, Conn. Troy, Pa. Portland, Ore. Portland, Ore. Fairmont, W. Va. Wellesley West Hartford, Conn. Dallas, Texas Bronxville, N. Y. Dedham Cambridge New Rochelle, N. Y. Winnetka, Ill. Belmont Franklin, Ind. South Euclid, Ohio Indianapolis, Ind. New York, N. Y. Greensboro, N. C. Andover West Barrington, R. I. Mexico City, Mexico, D F Andover Pittsburgh, Pa. Cambridge Rockville Center, N. Y. Warren, Ohio Newton Centre Windham, Conn. New York, N. Y. hrec: Great Document gf merlczm 1bc:rt 101103 e n 7 ffieczww' Wt '51 'LM J IP I 75 RESS Mx CON G 'Emmf vim' C JULY 4 W 64- 4-42' 6101115 JJ,,z',JJ A 53 MW ,vw-5-g.':j5i,'j35'f www .f-,f w L ,2 , fww- Mew k,,,5,'33ff5' ,-QM vigil-' -ff' vm9J! 'Z 'J J,.z'f af- 'p J ,Av 1- J 1 j '15- J 424 , A- 1- '1' f7 L -4'5?ffJ:-5,,ff','2'f3-if pp? 5i'S'J3??f2',1J'3,1'gfg1,,.f11.f fwgwpff 2aM?f??f32? 5QhT?2 ff 'p1p'lfr 1sJT'JW7fv-A ha 544- 14- ,fl 52-+7aJ' M59 Za.WfL?2'1f'i1'f aeffaffai 'iii 'f.,.wQ91.61:.,,:1'fg,',q,g,,i.w -1-'fsgfg-,,' pfgfl- 15. qgwffffy .f 425' - Win ,'6'24Lf-1521.25 'J ,GP f-Jw l if 555,59-Jf..'15'fV',,1 5, ' 1234? 1:4-4f'5 f f57f?L'f: -1 ' J 4. f'.1'If'f4?.-jdjwlf Aff ,-.ff 'f'5,Jff'Z'-7:f- P' 4--1' -11. 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W '29 awfpy 55 f-fig, ' LFA74' 1115, ' 'N-. jak!! f f H' ffdy 41,11 X fn Wlfffmmfl Arr W?-4 gnu g E J Vx WAR SAVINGS ' ' HL I IJ q'lA,l,flv 3 fyhmmlucix UB I' H lI,VD.l'U' Il I IQQAKX RS UNIT - sz-a1'i?7':f?iu was soNo semis W QE: 040 O60 021 E 79.34.1- EM4 wsuwwww Boo SIMON AND SCHUSTER K pUB1,1sHERS i.9W5ii i'i'i lF 7 ' WW WZ N fgxv VVYWQS ROCKEFELLER CENTER NEW YORK 1 '. 1 I 4 , . 1 ' nf . , X N N f .ur J' 0 . -- ,lg L 6 , , . '1-- . ' . , J- 0, f ,Q , . K .J'J,:slf :Y ' - P 'i4 !. ' ' I ' ' ' , ' ' 'f f'. ' - f wr, ,. I , - 1 . t --4 . f 0,0 4, A , ..., 4 ...,, N ,M t N ,P .l', , J .- 4, I 57'---...Nw ' H-. g fffnff, H V -'. 573 Pri .. -N E . WW' f fwf.... E f ' ,,wJ'u- . ' 1. '7 f '7m 7 'VHA-1.4 f M -1 17.-.. '7'5'N-A ...' H: ' . . ...H , ,1 WML, M ff - W-- N f , H' M f . , 1-ff... 1 -fu-, W! A-V' ---. . . , . . .Mm I . ...L-, .x.,- 1 1,47 , ., . I ' E Y '--.-.441 ..1,, 1-,L--.-,, I 'L--f-4,45 ' Mm,.,. - f-, in 1. ' f-1. .. 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Y - E E E l l l 1 i 5 E l I 3 li F 1 I Il l i 1 I. ei ! 1 I qs 1 5 il I Alford, Frederick Hascy Pouch Anderson, Thomas Hart, 3d Anderson, William Scovil Andrews, Robert Underwood Arey, Florian George, Jr. Ault, Bromwell, Jr. Baker, Seth Harry Baldwin, George Storer, Jr. Barnum, William Milo Bassick, Edgar Webb, 3d Baty, David Rust Beach, Robert Sheldon, 2d Beckwith, Andrew Madds Bell, Wallace'Houston Bell, Warren Harding Bergstrom, Lee Barnard Bishop, Broughton Hayward Bishop, john Wesley Blake, John Wright Bomeisler, Douglass Mortimer, Jr. Bonbright, Irving Wayland, 3d Bouton, Irving Gladwin Boyd, Robert Skinner Bradley, Wendell Phillips Burbank, Reginald, Jr. Burns, James Ferguson, gd Bushnell, Frederic Folsom Carter, Alan Peter Caulkins, David Smallwood Chapin, Richard Morse Chase, Frederick Starkweather, 2d Chittick, Charles Yardley, Jr. Cohen, Maurice Uran Collier, Reginald Bruce Conant, Brewster Cook, James Arthur, Jr. Coolidge, Archibald Cary, Jr. Couch, Richard Monro Crosby, Albert Hastings, Jr. Daetsch, Richard Chester Dake, Richard Edwin Dalley, Lawrence Cutting Dean, Robert Charles, Jr. DeWitt, Richard Herbert, Jr. Dixon, John Iversen Class of 1 945 fi Shagbark Farm, Orange, Conn. A Snowden Lane, Princeton, N. IQ Russell Ave., Watertown Edgewood Dr., Greenwich, Conn. 276 Tremont St., Boston R.F.D. No. 1, Bethel, Conn. 525 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. jf , 3 Spooner Rd., Chestnut Hill, Brookline in Lake Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Brooklawn Park Hills, Bridgeport, Conn. 1301 Dartmouth Rd., Flossmoor, Ill. 1606 Howard St., Saginaw, Mich. 2.3, 60 View St., Fitchburg F 413 North Main St., Andover 413 North Main St., Andover 2908 Huntington Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio 2682 N. W. Cornell Rd., Portland, Ore. h II Jefferson Ave., Kingston, N. Y. 20 Albion Rd., Wellesley Hills 34 Strickland Rd., Greenwich, Conn. 161 Hugenot Ave., Englewood, N. I9 Engle St., Tenafly, N. 54 Walbrooke Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 40-02 221 St., Bayside, L. I., N. Y. 1 1 1 East 80th St., New York, N. Y. 29 East 64th St., New York, N. Y. 193 Fuller St., West Newton 3 Woodstock, Vt. 49 Walbrooke Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. 89 Alfred Stone Rd., Providence, R. I. Breakneck Hill, Middlebury, Conn. 130 Upland Rd., Waban 5 Oak St., Woodmere, L. I., N. Y. Bradford 1 120 Beacon St., Brookline 8 Trinity Rd., Marblehead 27 Fayerweather St., Cambridge 260 Elmira St., Troy, Pa. Wayzata, Minn. 205 Pierce Ave., Hamburg, N. Y. Hidden Field, Andover 26 East 63d St., New York, N. Y. 1 1 Fuller Brook Rd., Wellesley 3427 Bradford Rd., Shaker Heights, Cleveland, Ohio Indianapolis Athletic Club, Indianapolis, Ind. D741 t' . 3 l , T 'Lt.1. - D ' p . ,f ll' ffm it . 'i'i X i yn . i ., -- wtf' if a- X , 1 . , R twwltlllulai ae?-2 .1 mvumumu ' -... aa. R - R 1 W W i --v-gg ., v The Rivers have been here since before man red or white arrived and they will be here after he IS gone Men follow them work them and live on with and by means of them The Rivers tell our story always in the PIICSCIIII tense IDCCSLISC UIUC ITlC3.I'1S I'lOtl'11I1g to 3 1'1VCl' The Rivers Merely to call their names 1S music and achievement and power to an American The Red The Powder The Tennessee , .5 0 ' ' ' Lb . 6, f 'I ' K x I j K 1' lc' 2 1, ,- N 4 d inc Ya st '. xr- M . 0 V -v ' ' L X I. fp - cn' 9 K ' I', M' 'Q xl K .' 1 w , Q 45 xl ' In 14,0 7, U X-XT, 'rs ' . fc i'x'4r5 4' X ' 'IN' VXI - f L ,np I., , , . A rx -.QW . . , . , . A X yr 1 .1 1 fl it H I K g.f KX 1 XA Q 7 , . ' 'S 1 . X' f is - 67' 'IU 1. 7 ' i' ' bf R 5' 'VN lm! v' CK. thi' ' 9 'l'r'Qp 'J ' 'f ri Wixll' 0 ' ' K ah , L 3 f 1 '11, f 1I'z3 Y L, 4 1 I 1. 1' J A' 1 4, l Q l ' I 7 W' .4 if .U ,,'44ff I A ' 9 'Z I pri. s . w' 'f-.f f ' 4 ,'-' .- r gy ,VA pr l.,ILl, I gh? U, , I A thc.. Q . . I f 1 J! Q M, .vi i-:'15::J.. .4 ,ZX IH. L . 7 ' . f , I '-qi g 1. J Q . lr'-T ,, ,y , x, R , it.. 1 it 1 ff - ,i K . . . f , .. ll, Z' my ,, I . ffl ,f,. A w is .L Nl ' ui , i 1- ' nn 'ix N ' ,L 1 A - T . 1 : ,' , ,.,-,.- 2 we 2' ' 'Z' 1-41 ,X . .., x l iff 4-,.. .5 I I 3 , NJ' 1 f,i V -.-v'-' , J '1 5 2 ' 1-:Z - fir' qi- 1 hkwjgxh -- E ff: X: Mya W X ,, ,..,-- I - -A 1 5 l Time means nothing to the Rivers . . . from them comes fact, folklore and the future HE history of this nation, of this living, changing whole has been told in many ways. But never before has it been told in terms of the rivers that led the first white man in from the sea, opened up the great plains, gave transportation, spawned cities, floated lumber, provided power, raised crops and govern still the life of the country. The Allegheny The M ohawk The Missouri The Ohio, The Illinois, The Kaw, The Suwannee The fames, The Brandywine, The Colorado The Kennehec, The Connecticut, The Sacramento The Arkansas, The Wahash, The Kentucky, The Hudson, The Charles The St. Lawrence, The Housatonic, The Grand The Green, The Yellow and the greatest of all- The Mississippi In them is fact, folklore, legend-that past that is part of us and always with us--the past that made us what we are-three dimen- sional, to be felt and known and heard and seen and put together. Poets, historians, writers - such men as Robert P. Tristram Coffin, Carl Carmer, Henry Seidel Canby, and many others-have found their inspiration in these Rivers, made them their specialties. In the growing series, Rivers of America, these men have recorded for us the living history of America, what we are now, and what we will be. SEND FoR T1-IE FREE, ILLUSTRATED BROCHURE describing the panorama of American history to he found in the Rivers of Americanseries. A T FARRAR sr RINEHAR H751 T,iInc., 252 Madison Ave., New York 16 , M ,, - - - -ggzgznsgsgauggi'l3-5'E'I:E:Zf?.Z-':.1I- 4: Duggan, John Russell Dulaney, George Du Relle Dunbar, Donald Cowing Dunn, Gary Roberts Eacker, Edward Wilcox Easley, Ronald Merl, Jr. Eastham, John Perry Eddy, Thomas Phillips Edman, Frank Talmage Ellis, William Morgan Estin, Hans Howard Ettleson, John Sommer Everett, Willard Fields, Dozier Nelson, Jr. Fitzsimons, Sherman Joseph Fuller, Alexander Sessums Cleveland Furbish, Roger Franklin Gaige, Jeremy Gaines, Leonard Myrton, Jr. Gallagher, John Francis Gearing, Charles Morris, 2d Golf, Frederick Harris Grant, Dana Wentworth Gray, Richard Emery Greene, Frank Lester Griffith, Charles Perry Grosz, Peter Michael Hand, James Dennis Hanke, Jonathan Gilbert Hardy, Anton Gysberti, Jr. Harig, Bernhardt Gold Hayden, Howard Penberthy Herman, James Stackpole Hetzler, Peter Hilbert, Webb, Jr. Hogg, Alexander McClurg Holbrook, John Ginn Holmes, Peter Carl Homer, Chester Earl, Jr. Horner, Leonard Mansfield Hoy, Ross Kitchener Hunting, Huston Stanley Hutchison, James Elder Hyder, Henry Kalil, Jr. Ihde, Stanley Walker Ingraham, Edward Forster Isitt, Charles Frederick Camac Jewett, George Frederick, Jr. 3 Hawthorne St., Malden 9 Hawthorne Hill, Louisville, Ky, Rockwell House, Andover 85 Oak St., Champlain, N. Y, 22 Conant Rd., Weston IO Walnut St., Marblehead 64 Bartlet St., Andover 1235 Squirrel Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa, 142 Pomeroy Ave., Pittsfield 357 Ridge St., Newark, N, J, Longwood Towers, Brookline 46 2176 S. W. Main St., Portland 5, Ore, 81 1 Main St., Walpole 98 Grant Ave., Islip, L. I., N. Y. 66 Stephens Rd., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. Knob Hill Farm, Portchester, N. Y. Princeton, Maine Watch Hill Farm, Peekskill, N. Y. Ruxton Rd., Ruxton, Md. 2 East Columbia St., Colorado Springs, Colo. go Hillcrest Terr., Meriden, Conn. 1oo24 Lake Shore Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio 218 Cliff Ave., Pelham, N. Y. 223 Brattle Rd., Syracuse, N. Y. 52 North Houghman St., Franklin, Ind. 3145 North Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. 202 Shore Rd., Douglaston, L. I., N. Y. 85 Ascan Ave., Forest Hills, L. I., N. Y. 56 Montrose Ave., Garrett Park, Md. Manchester, Vt. 3 59 North Main St., Andover Casilla 2424, Santiago, Chile Greenwood,,' Dauphin, Pa. 4 East 95th St., New York, N. Y. Cherry St., Katonah, N. Y. 1307 Whitehead St., Key West, Fla. 672 Main St., Haverhill 5o5o Middledale Rd., South Euclid, Cleveland 21, Ohio 29 Royce Rd., Newton Centre I 5 Norwood Rd., West Hartford, Conn. 43 Kenilworth Ave., Kenilworth, Ill. 1237 Clover Rd., Rochester, N. Y. Sunset Farm, West Hartford, Conn. 651 Prospect St., Methuen 14o North 7th St., Paterson, N. 81 West Shore Dr., Marblehead 13151 Magnolia Blvd., Van Nuys, Calif. 612 West Summer Ave., Spokane, Wash. l175l l S .T OWWG odd oday, we at RCA are C0l1C611t1'ilting all of our resources on the task of producing vital radio and electronic equip- ment for our armed forces. When the War is Won, RCA men and women, working in laboratories, factories, and oflices will once again devote themselves to the task of making new and improved products for the home, the theatre, the school, and the in- dustry of tomorrow. 1 RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA RcA VICTOR mvlsloN - CAMDEN, N. J. LEADS THE WAY I n Radio . . . Television . . . Tubes . . . Phonographs . . . RGCOYJS . - - Elcdfoflff D771 ., .. ,a.1.1.,.:4:,.p.:.::4.::.4..:,L:V.':j.g 512:51 S Jones, Robert Leroy, Jr. 46 Bartlett St., Chelmsford Kaiser, Charles Andrew 1596 Asylum Ave., West Hartford, Conn. Kelley, James Denvir 1050 Park Ave., East 87th St., New York, N. Y. Kemper, Rufus Crosby, Jr. '4The Walnutsf' Kansas City, Mo. Kerr, Geoffrey 2 Beekman Pl., New York, N. Y. Killam, Frederick Meacham 27 Spring Glen Terr., Hamden, Conn. King, Charles Arthur 930 Central Ave., Plainfield, N. Kingery, Frederick Jacobs 11641 S. W. Military Rd., Portland, Ore. Kingsberg, Harold Joseph 930 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Koch, John Lester, Jr. 241 Thorn St., Sewickley, Pa. Kohlberg, Laurence 84 Dellwood Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. Kohler, Carl James, Jr. Elmwood, Kohler, Wis. Kutscher, Louis Frederic, Jr. 88 West Main St., Milford, Conn. Lagemanrr, Peter Jay 180 South Woodland St., Englewood, N. Lampe, John Scarborough 143 Waiku Rd., Ridgewood, N.j. Lansill, John Scott, Jr. Scarlet Gate Farm, Lane Allen Rd., Lexington, Ky. Lazo, Mario, Jr. Oficios 1 IO, Apartado 609, Havana, Cuba Leavitt, Richard Pease jenkins Ct., Durham, N. H. Lebenthal, James Avram 815 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. Lee, John Maxim Old Mountain Rd., Farmington, Conn. Lenahan, Charles Bernard, 2d 72 Yeager Ave., Forty Fort, Pa. Lennan, John Ross 20 Park St., Tenafly, N. Levin, William Robert 5 Chelsea Parade South, Norwich, Conn. Levine, Morey 202 Gibson St., Lowell Levis, Frederick Hemsley, Jr. IO Waterman Ave., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Lewis, Morton Leonard 21 Hammond St., Chestnut Hill, Newton Little, John Dutton Conant 197 Shawsheen Rd., Andover Love, Donald Charles 741 Euclid Ave., Syracuse io, N. Y. Lowe, Robert William 126 Main SL, Andover Loye, JOl'1I'1 FI'2l1'1ClS, JT. Maple Ave., Andovgr McCracken, Cummings Chesney 127 Wendell Ave., Pittsfield McDufHe, Charles Howard 260 North Main St., Andover Mclnnes, Harold Addison Burbank 53 Pearl Sp, Bath, Maine MacLellan, George Edward, 3d 35 Rose Hill Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Madeira, Edward Walter, Jr. 3101 W. School House Lane, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Marks, Peter 232 East Walton Pl., Chicago, Ill. Masenp Leland Benjamin 541 Haverhill St., Lawrence Masters, Richard Hosking Pembroke, Bermuda Maulana Duncan Hunter 137 Grotto Ave., Providence, R. I . Mead, Edward Matthew 912 Liberty St., Erie, Pa. Mettler, Wllllatn Kingsland 33 South Munn Ave., East Orange, N. Milam, Arthur Wilson 1894 Edgewood Ave., Jacksonville, Fla. Miller, William Henry 16 Canterbury St., Andover MdltlY, John We5leY, 4th 16 W. Bells Mill Rd., Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Moher, Arthur Keefe Mohler, William Corson Moore, William, Jr. Moreland, William Crawfor 20 Sawyer Rd., Wellesley Hills 4026 Princeton Blvd., South Euclid, Ohio 27 Commonwealth Ave., Gloucester d, 2d 2927 44th St., N.W., Wesley Heights, Washington, D. C. lI73l i 1 I I I l- I l i Use HCDODCHLCDR Calcium Hypochlorite for Water Purification and Swimming Pool Sanitation HGODCHLQR is lcnown as the HGunga Din!! oi the U. S. A. We are furnishing large tonnages to Army and Navy engineers For mobile water purification units. HQQDCHLQR isused exten- sively lor municipal and private water worl4s, sewage disposal plants, swimming pool and hospital sanita- tion, and for disaster relief. I HOOD CHEMICAL CO., INC. Executive Qiiicesz 450 West 31 st Street, New Yorlc, N. Y. Factory: Pxlcron, Ohio HOODHCLOR HIGH TEST CALCIUM HYPOCHLORITE ' CAUSTIC SODA ' BICARBONATE OF SODA ' SODA ASH CHLORIDE OF LIME D791 , 3 1' 3 ,.i....,..:.g Morgan, Harry Casswallon Morris, Nelson, 2d Morrison, Walter Nordhoif Munro, Robert Donald Malcolm Munroe, Allan Ray Naughton, Frank Ussher, 3d Neuholf, Roger Alan Newhall, Roger, Jr. Nicholson, Ronald Allen Ohler, David Oliver, William Lawrence O,Shea, William Francis Oudin, Charles Folger, jr. Pabst, Gustave, 3d Page, Hazen Laburton Payne, Frederick Roberts Pratt, Walter Eggleston Prideaux, George Donohue Prior, William Allen Pyles, Lee Stuart Raleigh, Thomas Leicester, jr. Reed, Howard Shattuck Reid, Harold Bishop, Jr. Reynolds, Philip Reeves Robbins, Hollis Lawrence Ryan, John Joseph, 3d Saltonstall, William Lawrence Sanborn, Frederic Rockwell Gladstone Scanlan, James White Schine, Gerard David Scobell, Richard Hayes Shealy, Austin Craig Siegel, Jay Samuel Smith, H. Hanford, Jr. Smith, Joseph Lincoln, Jr. Spencer, Earle Franklin, Jr. Sper, Norman Leopold, Jr. Starke, Richard Prescott Steere, Anthony Wayne Stern, Gardner Henry, Jr. Stride, Richard Joseph Sutherland, Kenneth Terry, Robert William Thompson, Edward Niles Thompson, Michael Sewall Thorndike, John Lowell Thurlow, Paul Edward Timberman, Ellsworth Lozier, Jr. 719 North Main Ave., Scranton, Pa. 209 Lake Shore Dr., Chicago 1 1, Ill. QI Ten Acre Lane, West Hartford, Conn. 1028 Walnut St., Newton Highlands Lowell St., Andover 983 Pleasant St., Worcester 2 QQ Pond Rd., King's Point, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. 2612 S. W. Talbot Rd., Portland, Ore. 5 Summit Ave., Lawrence 57 Crchard St., Jamaica Plain 384 North Main St., Andover 48 Benton Rd., Belmont 4 Prospect Pl., Cooperstown, N. Y. 2549 North Terrace Ave., Milwaukee 1 1, Wis. 1 Page Rd., Marblehead 160 Newbury St., Boston 1969 Queen Ave., S., Minneapolis, Minn. Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, B. W. I. Davison Apts., Troy, Pa. 129 Cochran St., Fairmont, W. Va. 514 Sedgwick Dr., Syracuse, N. Y. 570 Bridge St., Dedham 225 Grove St., Bristol, Conn. 35 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn 2, N. Y. 37 Stanley Rd., Swampscott 100 Everit Ave., Hewlett, L. I., N. Y. 240 Chestnut Hill Rd., Chestnut Hill 1 5 Garden Pl., Brooklyn, N. Y. 222 Clifton St., Belmont 43 East Blvd., Gloversville, N. Y. 504 North Main St., Herkimer, N. Y. Briar Brae Rd., R.F.D. 2, Stamford, Conn. 146 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. Blankenbaker Lane, Louisville, Ky. 567 Passaic Ave., Passaic, N. 8 Yale St., Winchester 1843 No. Cherokee St., Hollywood, Cal. 71 Madbury Rd., Durham, N. H. Schade Rd., R.F.D. No. 2, Everett, Ohio 41 East Burton Pl., Chicago, Ill. 102 Graham St., Biddeford, Me. 172 Forest Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 1220 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 300 Woodlawn St., Fall River Brushw00d, Warrenton, Va. 509 Hammond St., Chestnut Hill Mars Hill College, Mars Hill, N. C. 41 Sturgis Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. f180j S R COMPLIMENTS CDF THE AQUA-SEC 6 Zf0M 1450 BRCDADWAY L81 Tippett, Raymond Towne, Anthony Volk, Leonard William, 2d Ward, Lawrence William Warner, Sam Bass, Jr. Warren, Henry Pitt, 3d Weix, Joseph Branick, Jr. Welch, Richard Lawrence Wheeler, Edward Lockwood Wigren, Arthur Adolph Wilbur, William Hale, Jr. Wilde, Roger Conant, Jr. Wilder, Stephen Fosdick Williams, Edwin McBrier Wilson, Edward Converse, Jr. Wirtz, Ralph Joseph Wogan, Joseph Mansiield Ziegler, Warren Leigh Zonino, Frederick Day Zonino, James Day Abruzzo, Matthew Thomas, Jr. Aikman, Walter Monteith Algrant, Roland Ralph Alling, John Wesley, Jr. Anderson, Arvid Julius, Jr. Anderson, Daniel Ogren Anderson, Oliver John Ardouin, Graham John Leslie Asbury, Arthur Knight Atwood, Joseph Rowen Baddeley, William Grosvenor Ballou, Donald Kent Bancroft, Lewis Clinton Barber, David St. George Barss, Lawrence Whitcomb Barton, Bernard Douglas Batchelder, Loring Eugene Becker, Max, Jr. Begien, Martin Bell, John Gordon, Jr. Bennett, Meridan Hunt 301 Riverview Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. 62 Commonwealth Ave., Haverhill 7000 Vassar Dr., Dallas, Texas 4 Channing Rd., Brookline 4440 Garfield St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Lake Ave., Greenwich, Conn. Woodland Lane, Oconomowoc, Wis. 1 18 Hundreds Rd., Wellesley Hills 4 West Mystic Ave., Mystic, Conn. 536 Ridgewood Ave., Glen Ridge, N. 1540 Judson Ave., Highland Park, Ill. 1 IQ West Grant St., Pueblo, Colo. IO Winsor Rd., Weston 203 S. Mountain Ave., Montclair, N. 87 Richardson Rd., Belmont 48 Lowell St., Andover 394 Kenrick St., Newton 61 East 64th St., New York, N. Y. 173 Ward St., Naugatuck, Conn. 173 Ward St., Naugatuck, Conn. Class of 1 946 101 Lincoln Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. I5 Hurd St., Cazenovia, N. Y. Cornwall, Conn. Indian Hill Rd., Grange, Conn. 137 New St., Naugatuck, Conn. 338 East 5th St., Jamestown, N. Y. '4Treetops, Sewickley, Pa. IO Fuller Terr., Swampscott 3549 Holly Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio 36 Pine St., Concord, N. H. 55 East 72d St., New York, N. Y. 46 Morton Rd., Newton Centre Baycliff Farm, Samoset Rd., Boothbay, Me. 185 East Palisade Ave., Englewood, N. Hidden Field, Andover 74 Granite St., Foxboro Argilla Rd., West Andover 36 Hallam Rd., Buffalo, N. Y. , 47 Coolidge Hill Rd., Cambridge 1 1 Pine Lane, Rye, N. Y. 2217 East Lake of Isles Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. Black, Charles Frederick, Jr- 62 Overlake Park, Burlington, Vt. Blackmer, Donald Laurence Morton Blanding, William Gardner . 80 Bartlet St., Andover 129 Nayatt Rd., West Barrington, R. I. f182J slzla-FIXT u T0 FIT You perfectly.. X i l SHIRTS Size-fixt to stay fit, Hand-measured collars, Man-formed Shape . . . 83 years of experience, Worldis finest tailoring . . . That explains the marvelous Manhattan shirt quality. The war has reduced the quantity available, but that famous Manhattan quality has not been lessened by a thread. And Manhattan styling is as tasteful and smart as ever. M lI83l DWIS 1-...p.... .,.... 1--1-r 7- - ' -NN 5ZmZWw MILLS ROCKVILLE, CONN. ' FOUNDED 1809 N. Y.. SELLING AGENTS IIOCKANUM , EMPIRE STATE BUILDING- xoN 0 VER, MASSACHUSETTS ' j. P M. 1' . STEVENS an SONS CO.. NORTH ANDO P. STEVENS dc CO., INC., I 185 I -,.... ..... Z, an Lfg.v r . ' V A -M - -, N:-'IT11f'--f .- -..,,...,.. ' YM-A -'W Grifliths, Kenneth Frank Gruner, Otto Harry, 3d Hanke, Peter Stevenson Hardwick, Charles Arthur Harrison, Peter John Haskell, Owen Hayes, Frederick Wheeler Heard, Cyrus Ramsey Heely, Leroy Patterson Higbie, Laurence B. Hopkinson, Thomas Macy Hord, Stephen Young, Jr. Hornor, Townsend Hudner, Richard Reilly Hull, Charles Cornelius, gd Hutcheson, Aubrey DeNyse, Jr. Jackson, Alexander Jackson, Winslow Loring Jones, Frank Sidney Jordan, Edwin Churchill Kerrigan, Anthony Gunning Kimball, Richard Ward' Lacy, Gordon Heisler Landergan, Walter Lawrence, Jr Lanes, Alfred Sheldon I Lazo, Donald Mishall Levitan, Harold Lee Lincoln, Richard Mather Lynch, John Dee McCormick, Thomas Francis McKee, Jasper McLanahan, Duer, Jr. Mackenzie, Malcolm Lewis Macomber, John DeWitt Marier, Paul Alexander Mastrangelo, Edward Ferdinand Mastrangelo, Ferdinand Ralph Maxwell, Dennis Gray, 3d May, Irenee du Pont Meeks, George Nelson Mellor, James Norman Merchant, Robert Conway Miller, John George, Jr. Montgomery, James Dallas Morris, William Horace Morrison, Richard Winton Moses, Richard Cantrell Nourse, Norman Crawford, Jr. 42 N. Chatsworth Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 234 Combs Ave., Hewlett, L. I., N. Y. 56 Montrose Ave., Garrett Park, Md. Grenloe Farm, Gwynedd Valley, Pa. North St., Greenwich, Conn. R.F.D. No. 1, Yarmouth, Me. 256 S. W. Military Rd., Portland, Ore. 426 Woodland Rd., Sewickley, Pa. 722 Irving Pl., Plainfield, N. 246 Lakeland Ave., Grosse Pointe, Mich. 1 1 1 Hawthorn St., New Bedford 450 West Deerpath Rd., Lake Forest, Ill. Ostervillc 312 Florence St., Fall River 474 East 23d St., Brooklyn 26, N. Y. Antimore Farm, Old Chatham, N. Y. 169 Chestnut Hill Rd., Chestnut Hill 67 5535 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Ill. Bennett College, Greensboro, N. C. 171 Woodland St., Worcester 3 Katonah, N. Y. 50 School St., Andover 423 Elizabeth St., Ogdensburg, N. Y. 14 Buswell St., Lawrence 25 Larch Rd., Waban 68 Oficios 1 IO, Apartado 609, Havana, Cuba 82 Stuart Rd., Newton Centre 1oo5 Berkshire Rd., Ann Arbor, Mich. 6 Thoreau St., Concord 122 Franklin St., Lawrence 496 Hudson St., New York, N. Y. 65oo Allison Rd., Miami Beach, Fla. Treichlers, Pa. 5 Buckingham St., Rochester, N. Y. 3 Walker Ave., Andover QI 1 Heywood St., Fitchburg Prospect St., Lunenburg 160 Myrtle Ave., Westport, Conn. Granogue, Dela. 5375 Marguerite Ave., Vancouver, B. C., Canada 6 Beverly Rd., Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. I4 Canterbury St., Andover 78 East Haverhill St., Lawrence 35 Billings St., Sharon Mead Point, Greenwich, Conn. 201 Lingrove Pl., Pittsburgh, Pa. 166 North Dithridge St., Pittsburgh, Pa. I805 East Bay Front, Balboa, Calif Q .L N X 'fs Q- L-0, K - 3, l W X s 1 X X in 'xx V an Nita ' W q xx I draw tx K C F 1 X T5 L fn , X X s ba s it I is Well, Int fl lfzbber. oere 12 , M ft A Z' a N 1 A J i' QEAN X .Q '.2. ' 't f Tl 'tst ain't no substitute 1 for fl New Departure Coaster Brake. l 1 K L1371 O'Connor, Jay Paul Papen, Francis Crandon Paradise, Robert Campbell, Jr. Paradise, Scott Ilsley Pelham, George Frederic, 3d Petzold, Herbert Richard Phelan, Robert Emmett Pollard, William Appleby Pomeroy, Walter Saunders, Jr. Pratt, Waldo Elliott, 3d Prentiss, Richard Joseph, Jr. Prest, Alan Patrick Llewellyn, Jr. Pugh, Roger Vaughan, Jr. Quaintance, Richard Edgecombe, Jr. Quinby, Congreve Hamilton Reed, Robert George, 3d Reiner, Peter Christian Richardson, Peter Bowen Roome, William Journeay, 2d Rosenthal, Robert Averal Salomon, Roger Blaine Sanford, Thomas Michael Shiffer, Stephen George Schmidt, Arnold Philip Sharpe, John McDowell, Jr. Shaw, Douglas Graeme Sherrill, Richard Rodman Simpson, Russell Gordon Smith, Charles Waldo Space, David Jewell Sperry, Corydon Stillman Stevens, Benjamin Hazard Stone, Paul Goadby Sullivan, Daniel Edward, Jr. Sussler, Robert Morris Sutherland, Rufus Righter, Jr. Tait, John Douglas Tarbox, Ronald Loring, Jr. Tavares, Gustavo Arturo 45 Bartlet St., Andover QQ Colbourne Crescent, Brookline Buttonwood Lane, Darien, Conn. Hidden Field, Andover 3oo2 Northwest 5th St., Miami, Fla. 20 Boehm St., Lawrence 1246 Highland Ave., Fall River 63 Sagamore Rd., Wellesley Hills V 4 Germain St., Worcester 51 Abbott Rd., Wellesley Hills 200 E. Rockaway Rd., Hewlett, L. I., N. Y. Scots Cove, Darien, Conn. io .Westland St., Worcester R.F.D., Katonah, N. Y. 50 Hawthorn St., Rochester, N. Y. 309 Edgell Rd., Framingham Loudonville, N. Y. 64 St. Clair Ave., West, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 135 Park Ave., Greenwich, Conn. 2 1 Roosevelt Ave., Waterville,- Me. Little Compton, R. I. 2780 S. W. Summit Dr., Portland, Ore. 1 17-14 Union Turnpike, Kew Gardens, L. I., N. Y. 4 Virginia Rd., Andover 312 Lincoln Way East, Chambersburg, Pa. 31 Oakland Ave., Huntington, L. I., N. Y. R.F.D. No. 1, 277 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 5 Llewellyn Pl., Longmeadow Sandy Pond Rd., Lincoln 570 Ackerman Ave., Glen Rock, N. Middletuck Farm, Middlebury, Conn. Woodland Ave., South Plainfield, N. 35 Bellevue Pl., New London, Conn. 122 Russell Ave., Watertown 34 Rockwell St., Norwich, Conn. 29 Edgewood Ave., Albany, N. Y. 436 Bostwick Ave., Janesville, Wis. 38 Murdock Ave., Quincy Calle Rosa Duarte No. 2, Ciudad Trujillo, Dominican Republic, West Indies Taylor, Ian Guy 58 Lemsford Lane, Welwyn Garden City, Herts, England Thaw, David Martin 435 East 52d St., New York, N. Y. Thomas, Frederic Chichester, Jr. Woodbury Ave., Cold Spring Harbor, L. I., N. Y. Thomas, Russell Franklin, Jr. Ridge Acres Rd., Darien, Conn. Vail, Charles Brush R.F.D., East Falmouth Vincent, George Kenneth 15o West 1o6th St., New York, N. Y. V0HmaYC1', John William 65 Fern Circle, Waterbury, Conn. Vroman, Barent Sloane, Jr. 25 West St., Portland, MC, l188J ?' X V' - L IA I-I.. 'r a-.tn-f ' ' , .r r 1-fe' ' ' ' 2 'Qi . ' gi 1 yy- ' , ,..- -' H-I-I -1.m.1'Qrf-.f:1:-.-1-:-Pi'.:1:h'L313:S-ZfJj1-1-1-1-' W' :qu awk, 189 ..- ..,....w.-..gq-z-2:-:aaa-5-'zfhjgifi YI?-Q-fi-'ii -i-'g zaeg-Elf:--1'Pf-it-ff-Lf . . 5:55:31-:1::::1::::...,-,. ..,..A... Weis, Robert Pomeroy West, Stephen Kingsbury White, James Mattocks, Jr. Whitney, John Kimball Wilbur, John Benson, Jr. Wilder, Charles Willoughby Williams, Wayne Paul Winton, David Michael Young, James Covert Adams, David Paul Aikens, Charles Thomas Alter, Samuel Ashe, Jr. Arnold, Henry Rogers, Jr. Baldwin, Robert Ashworth Barnes, Samuel Elder Biondo, Francesco Giovanni Bissell, Sumner Fuller Blood, Charles Arthur Bloom, John Carlton Boyce, James Edward Bradley, Charles Edward, 3d Bramwell, Clark Dana Briggin, Herbert Stanley Brinsmade, Richard Sutphin Brown, John Freeman, Jr. Budge, Hamilton Whithed Calvet, Carlos Manuel, Jr. Caplan, Carl Gerald Carter, Edward Carlos, 2d Chapin, Neil, Jr. Chase, Martin Starkweather Christie, Philip Clark, Byron John Collins, John Joseph, Jr. Davis, William Evans Deacon, Robert Fraser Dewart, Gordon Dickerman Duke, William Hincks Durwood, Richard Mark Edge, Loyall Howard Farrington, Brendan John Fay, David Ward Forrest, Augustus Kane, Jr. Fortmiller, Frederick Vincent g Main St., Lancaster 1250 West St., Pittsfield 788 Hill St., Beverly F arms Wayzata, Minn. loo Simonds Rd., Lexington 27 McKeen St., Brunswick, Me. 1034 Electric St., Scranton, Pa. Wayzata, Minn. 830 East 9th St., Flint, Mich. Class of 1947 Welsh Rd., Essex Fells, N. Willowbrook Farms, State College, Pa. 532 20th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. 24 Bowen St., Newton Centre Hidden Field, Andover 79 Rumford Ave., Mansfield 3750 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Ill. South lNIain St., Suffield, Conn. 33 Rockland St., Swampscott Orchard Ave., Weston 154. Main St., Andover 71 Saunders St., Lawrence 1202 Ninth Ave., Eldora, Iowa 36 Beechtree Dr., Larchmont, N. Y. 362 Fountain St., New Haven, Conn. 28 Harrison St., Lakeport, N. H. 53 Elm St., Worcester Calle 32 No. 30, Miramar, Havana, Cuba 21 Quincy St., Methuen 80 Douglas Rd., Rochester, N. Y. 69 Colony Rd., Longmeadow Watertown, Conn. I9 Brechin Terr., Andover Stratford and Haviland Rds., Harrison, N. Y. 76 Old Colony Rd., Wellesley Hills 2945 East 7th Ave., Denver, Colo. 181 Buckingham St., Waterbury 38, Conn. 48 Salem St., Andover Morning Side Dr., Greens Farms, Conn. 801 West 60th Terr., Kansas City 2, Mo. 1 1 5 South Oxford Ave., Ventnor, N. Q3 Holyrood Ave., Lowell 326 Fall Creek Dr., Ithaca, N. Y. 41.35 North Main St., Randolph 68 Day St., Auburndale D901 1 . - 1 1 Q X w i N 1 Nm f Wm I cn mms THE WHITNEY CHAIN AND MANUFACTURING CO. Hartford 2, Connecticut I1911 Gardner, Richmond 27 East 95th St., New York, N. Y. Glazer, Norman Marshel 233 River Rd., Winthrop Goodhue, Stephen Van Rensselaer 49 Piermont Ave., Hewlett, L. I., N. Y. Goriansky, Michael Eliot Graves, Eugene Chadbourne 148 Main St., Andover 57 Salem St., Andover Greenburg, Carl Victor 488 Passaic Ave., Passaic, N. Hall, Gregory Robert Graham 1 1 5 Hastings St., Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn, N. Y. Harris, John Wakefield 70 East 96th St., New York, N. Y. Harshman, Donald Cory 603 West Marion St., South Bend, Ind. Hart, Reeves Welch, Jr. 169 Ocean Drive West, Stamford, Conn. Heffernan, Raymond William Hickey, William Andrew, Jr. 1 5 Beechmont St., Worcester 125 Chestnut St., Wakefield Horne, Walter Sidney, Jr. Meritoria Drive, East Williston, N. Y. Howell, Kimbark Warren Wentworth Great Neck Rd., Waterford, Conn. Hughes, William Gordon, Jr. Johnstone, Jeremy Thurston Kaplan, Herbert Eliot Kelly, William Tolson, 3d Kendall, Messmore, Jr. Kiefer, Warren David Kirschbaum, Edward Harry, Jr. Lackey, Frank Danby, 3d Laidlaw, Angus McPherson Latour, Leroy Tether Lee, Harry Frederick Levitan, Harold Lee Lovekin, Arthur Adams Lovekin, William Stevens McCagg, Peter King McCurdy, Bruce David McDonough, Donald Eugene McGill, Douglas Gould Brown McLain, David Francis McLean, Albert Forbes, Jr. MacWillia1ns, John Joseph, Jr. Margolis, James Marsh Marshall, St. Julien Ravenel, Jr. Marvin, Alfred Eugene, Jr. Mulligan, Edward Bowman, 3d Nixon, Joel Peter Martin Northup, Walter Samuel Nutt, Charles Lee, 3d Osborn, Charles Milton Shove Ottenheirner, Edward Joseph, Jr. 39 Elm St., South Dartmouth 180 Picacho Lane, Montecito, Santa Barbara, Cal. 1032 Beacon St., Newton Centre Wakeman Rd., Darien, Conn. Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. 43 Salem St., Andover 55 Eastfield Rd., Waterbury, Conn. 620 Ely Ave., Pelham Manor, N . Y. Main St., Harwich IO Meadway, Bronxville, N. Y. San Mateo, N. M. 82 Stuart Rd., Newton Centre Apt. 6B, 70 Haven Ave., New York, N. Y. Apt. 6B, 70 Haven Ave., New York, N. Y. Sarles St., Mt. Kisco, N. Y. R.F.D. No. 1, Oakland, Me. Chancellor Hall, 206 South 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa. 325 West 86th St., New York, N. Y. 525 Fairway Drive N.E., Warren, Ohio IQ Maryis Lane, Egypt 305 Sedgwick Drive, Syracuse, N . Y. 816 Commonwealth Ave., Newton 1419 36th St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Apt. Aereo 472, Barranquilla, Colombia, S. A. Lehman Rd., Dallas, Pa. 40 Central Park South, New York, N. Y. 1 16 Sagamore St., North Quincy I7 Roxbury Rd., Garden City, L. I., N . Y. 274 Beacon St., Boston Windham, Conn. Owsley, David Thomas 605 Riverside Ave., Muncie, Ind. Platka, Robert Thompson, Jr. 231 So. Prospect St., Burlington, Vt. Pugh, William Robert 221 Overhill Rd., Youngstown, Ohio Rentschler, James Peter 643 Dayton St., Hamilton, Ohio l192l U-fiifiul U. S. Rl. C. P11010-Pf6. J. J. Balls LIFE SAVE!! . . . Once again blood plasnla is used to save the life of a ion where a difficult oper- I smen. Loss of blood nc- 00SSllulccl thc use of plasma. This occurred during the fighting on Wounded Nlarim-. Sm-nc is an advanced aid stat ation was pcrformccl hy Naval doctors am corp Bougaillvillc in lhc South Pacific. I Ural -' . , :- 5 'f Ritter, Anthony Bennett Robinson, Frederick James Rosenau, William Walter Ross, Henry Lawrence, Jr. Scheide, Richard Bilson Schenker, Andre, Jr. Scott, Henry Clarkson Senese, John Gerard, Jr. Sherrill, Leicester Haydon, Jr. Smith, Timothy Dean Sokol, John Herbert Steinbach, Bernard Alan Steinberg, Robert Samuel Stockwell, James Irving Stowell, Samuel Curtis Suisman, Michael Taylor, Howard Canning, 3d Tebbens, Arthur Gerard Templeton, Mansfield Thomas, Charles Louis, Jr. Thompson, Charles Glover Thompson, Frederick Gregg, 3d Thompson, Norman Franklin, Jr. Thompson, Richard Potter Trowbridge, Alexander Buel, 3d Tucker, Robert Newbold Varney, Bernard Louis Webster, Dean Kingman, 3d Weeghman, Richard Baehler West, Paul, Jr. Whittington, Eugene, jr. Wight, Ira Edward, 3d Winter, Thomas Wheatley Wood, William Clark Works, John Wolcott Wyman, Thomas Hunt Young, William Boyd D941 70 East 71st St., New York, N. Y. 138 Kenwood Rd., Grosse Pointe 30, Mich. 21 East 87th St., New York, N. Y. 82 Blake Rd., Hamden, Conn. 33 Colony Rd., West Hartford, Conn. R.D. No. 2, Storrs, Conn. 1265 Colonial Rd., Hewlett, L. I., N. Y. 266 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn 5, N. Y. I7 Bonnie Briar Lane, Larchmont, N. Y. 109 Congress St., St. Albans, Vt. 258 Soundview Ave., White Plains, N. Y. 76 Blake Rd., Hamden, Conn. 26 Hillside Ave., Lawrence 641 Main St., Hamilton 23 Bonnie Briar Lane, Larchmont, N. Y. 4 Ledyard Rd., West Hartford 5, Conn. 30 East 71st St., New York, N. Y. 32 Crocker St., Rockville Centre, N. Y. 1 185 Laurel Ave., Winnetka, Ill. 3 Annwood Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio 6 Stevens Lane, Cohasset 825 Charles St., St. Joseph, Mo. 1281 New Boston Rd., Fall River QQ Park Ave., Greenwich, Conn. 60 Gramercy Park, New York, N. Y. The Lag00n,', Paget East, Bermuda 509 West 1 10th St., New York, N. Y. Sunset Rock Rd., Andover Andrews Drive, Darien, Conn. 303 Lee St., Clarksburg, W. Va. 529 N. W. 18th St., Oklahoma City, Okla. 1 High Downs, Clayton 5, Mo. 137 Higby Rd., Utica, N. Y. Round Hill Rd., Greenwich, Conn. 1099 South Lincoln Ave., Salem, Ohio 7160 Washington Ave., St. Louis, Mo. R.F.D. No. 1, Derry, N. H. f 3 - 4fumfaafzfAePaz'l9awm4,,7,,,,z,,, FOR VICTCDRY 5144 WAR BONDS ancf STAMPS L 1 ur liuler-grants THE UNDER-GRADS OF NEW ENGLAND KNOW US There is a loond oi good will that exists between Kennedys and the smart young men oi New Eng- land. Our manv years oi experience in satisiying their demands lor their special kind oi clothes . . . the right styles at the right time . . . have given us a place in their Wardrobe planning that We are indeed proud to have. And parents are iust as thusiastic in their approval ot prices which are en geared to the times. D S H Q P --FAMOUS UNDER-GRA 1164! 4 CQ Ze W Aa 041 M A .. Ckfi!d1fe1z'r mmf WOW67Z,f T Awklezy gf h . e H z Cgherr Qzmlizy HUB HOSIER Y MILLS - LOWELL, MASSACHUSETTS l196j When a fellow needs a really good wool shirt there's one famous Western name he should have on the tip of his tongue-Pendleton. PENDLETON WOOLEN MILLS Portland, Oregon Ge! your clothes in a man 'a store - Rogers Peet! , The modem Rogers Pee! rates tops at many of the country's leading schools. 've Rogers Peet s fine all-Wool qi ' ' f 542 2 Quallty remams unchanged! H .,.-v. E never use Style as a sugar coat for poor quality. Anybody c-an sell a man once. But it takes qual1ty A, ' to keep him coming - an through W ooo, school -and for the rest of hls hfe! z dj 4 Q'fQfcfl1Z' WMHGM ' An'?1inB?505- 1 New York- e femold sr FifthA ' WarrenStree atBromfi6, , Qfilstggggs .,1r3fll'..5'l.5fr'5,'ify tB'0adway l197l ez l ENGINEERED PEPAND POWER o Springs for every mecbanical application . . . Wallace Barnes Company - Bristol, C0m1CCfiCuf DIVISION OF ASSOCIATED SPRING CORPORATION ' .I SPECIALISTS IN LUBRICATION G SINCE 1869 f C 'P e 'IA a ' ' f ff e aaaz PRIME MOVERS COMPANY Cylinder, Valve, Engine ana' Turbine Lubricants to Fit Requirements of fighting Americans In this fast-moving war Hgittin' thar fustest with the mostest depends upon thousands of motor-driven units of transportation- such as the prime mover truck, the landing barge and the transport plane. On the critical home front Greyhound buses are prime movers of lighting Americans, too -carrying millions of passengers in uniform, in working slacks and jumpers, and in plain civilian clothes. And with victory, Greyhound . will serve increasingly as prime movers for Americans at peace. 45 Purchase Street, Boston, Mass. G R E Y H U N D M ,-1-11:-ns .--l-1-n X Majestic Pa er Corpomtion New York, N. Y. CRANE'S FINE PAPERS 'T U :L- CRANE 84 CO., Inc. DALTON, MASSACHUSETTS Industrial linishes for shells, bombs, gas masks, expeditionary containers, machine tools, aircraft wiring systems, aircraft plywood, pigmented i textile colors for camouflage nets, camouflage cloth and other fabrics, printing inks, lithographing and roto- gravure inks, coated water-proof fabrics for the armed forces, oilcloth, pigments, titanium dioxide, carbon paper and type- writer ribbons. lnterohomioal C O R P Q R A T l Q N 350 Fifth Avenue, New York 1, N. Y. There are twezlzjy-nirze fzzctarief aiu! .revefag-eight br4znc59if.ff05 lntercbemiml Corparafzozz and ztf Jrzbxzdmry and ajji Hide d I I at the Umted Slater and Cana cl. compfnzief locate t Jroug aa l199l 4 4 4 Y 1 TEMPLE'S MUSIC SHUI' 14-1 1 1 1 Phonographs VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS Instruments Radios Records HAROLD PHINNEY, Proprietor ' -.. . q .5 - I AND COMPANY, INC. Jewelers To The Discriminating F 15 ARLINGTON STREET BOSTON, MASS, N 91 , f IQOO1 N r ,.f.... -WV., - l 4 l I 5 FINE CLOTHES fr Lu c iwmvmvf Once again a senior class has played out its part in the history of Andover. The Andover Shop expresses appreciation for the part it has been privileged to play in the success of the Class of 1944 through providing correct dress in keeping with their high standards. We sincerely hope that we may have the opportunity for continued service through LANGROCK shops at Yale, Brown, Penn., Williams, Princeton, or New York City. THE DO ERIHCP JPONJORED BY bANc-ROCK 127 Main Street Andover, MBSS- 'Stores at-Y ale, Brown, Penn., Princeton, Williams i Q99 Madison Avenue, New York. Saltz Bros., Inc., 13411 F Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. For VICTORY . . . BUY BONDS For HEALTH . . . DRINK MILK EHU55 DUAL GU. and EAT ICE CREAM or MILK sl-IERBET UALITY . For Q BE SURE i1f's HO0D'S fzorj .. .. - .,,... ....::+-ze:-rw:-ft-V , Greetings from the Deep South, Charles W. Kittleman 81 Co. E f!3rol4ers Greenville Mississippi JWxiiig -Pnggs DESIGNER CONTRACTOR DECORATOR BUILDER THE INSUHANIZE UFFIEES Dependable Insurance of Every Kind Sin I 828 v SNIAHT fl FLAISIS INIJ. Bank Building - Andover, Mass. Q , f 1, . ,A v 'Q . ,, H ' ' ' B I. S. KIBRICK H, V. KIBRICK - ':', 1- V CNow with U.S.Ax-myj r- --Q,- L1BERTlf. MifTUAL V,,., ,,...,. -Qjfggnts, New York Life Offices in principal cities Insurance CO. 'iff All kinds of liability insurance , I d, 75 FEDERAL ST. HUBBARD 4900 Inc u ing Compensation and Automobile BOSTON Compliments of municipal iBonds 135 Broadway - New York 6, N. Y. , f 2031 wc . ANDOVER INN A Treadway Inn Where all the year you CQWWJQYZWZMV M may be assured a cordial . C , fb, welcome awaits you. gwfgwl Comfortable rooms and tasty New England food at moderate prices. GEORGE M. BRAKEY Resident Manager Suppliers of ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT To all P. Teams W. R. H I L L Successor to William poland 45 MAIN sr. Tel. 102 l2O4l i Winter Season-November 1st to May 15f THE RoNEY PLAZA HoTEL MIAMI BEACH, FLORIDA Summer Season-june to September 'Reservations LAcceptea' THE BREAKWATER coURT KENNEBUNKPORT, MAINE M Compliments H RALEIGH CIGARETTES D L rrs Awo n s An 10011 Jllamjactured by Jo Brown 8: Williamson Tobacco by Corporation Louisville, Kentucky I A IQOSJ COAL IS ESSENTIAL! More and more of the eountry's coal production is going into the War program. Conserve what is available for civilian use. And for best results, ask your dealer for BEACON COAL NEW ENGLAND COAL 8: COKE CO. 250 STUART ST. BOSTON 16, MASS. 404 G ScHooL JEWELRY WE HAVE SERVED WATCHES P. A. MEN JUHN Il. GIIECIIE ,qi 7 . Qjbhlczian 2 gweler CLOTHING FURNISHINGS Certiied Watch Repairing PRESSING Complete Optical Service REPAIRING CLEANING 48 MAIN STREET, ANDOVER The B U R N S ' Inc. The Biggest Little Jewelry Store in the State MAIN STREET ANDOVER, MASS. f2o6j Compliments of THE ANDOVER NAHUNAL BANK Compliments TYER RUBBER COMPANY l2071 WINELUW BHIJ5. Ei SMITH EU. Manufacfurers of Sheepskins Woolskins Pulled Wool NCRWOOD, MASS. f2o8j M. T. STEVENS AND SONS WOOLENS MANUFACTURERS NORTH ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS I J ACTUARIAL CGNSULTANTS All Forms of Lzj? Insurunce, Annuities unc! Accident I nsumnce xfsfv Employer-Employee Insurance Plans Group-Group Annuities-Pension Trusts xfxfsfN MARSH 81 MCLENNAN NEW YORK CHICAGO MONTREAL BUFFALO PITTSBURG CLEV AN COLU Us DETROIT INDIANAPOLIS LONDON MILWAUKEE A Inc. Insurance Brokers cmd Average Adjusters 10 POST OFFICE SQUARE BOSTON 9, MASS. fzloj SAN FRANCISCO Los ANG S PORT AN SEATT VANCOUVE PHOENIX TULSA WINNIPEG DULUTH MINNEAPOLIS ST. LOUIS EF-SEATING? AINQI LQJUM ING MATERIALS INCLUDING BATHROOM CABINETS, MIRRORS AND OTHER ACCESSORIES --+i- STEEL, WROUGHT IRON AND BRASS PIPE WATER WORKS MATERIALS ,T,...+TT-. DISTRIBUTORS OF HOFFMAN VALVES AND CONTROLLED HEAT EOUIPMENTHTHE LAST WORD IN HEATING SYSTEMS 1,l-l4,i.l- 236 CONGRESS STREET, BOSTON CORNER PURCHASE STREET F2111 1 omlbliments 0 mftwell G Son, Inc. f212j S Another Pzzblzmtzon SHOWING SARGENT SUPERIGRITY COMPLETE PHOTOGRAPHIC SERVICE TO THE POT POURRI 1 9 4 4 SARGENT STUDIO, INC. - - BOSTGNQ MASS T2131 H141 2, 4 X1 S x' - congratulations and best Wishes to the Class of 1944 at Phillips Academy, Andover. We are grateful for the opportunity to have had a part in producing this volume of the PoT Pouiuu. QD? ANDOVER PRESS H151 '5 !: ,!' wi: 1 i I 1 x x V 3 r w El 1 12 P! H sg Q! it E1 i' QU 11: x IN 1 Nfl ii 45 11' 1U QE? in iv W N, !i -H H E1 H Qu Z M , E FI 1 1 W ., ff, 1 is 2 W' F il i M1 WEN ,M peg in x 4 , Sl u x 1 nn vs 1 4 1 r x f-f 1 B rib 11' , ,,--.,..,,,, g ,-'1 r -A.'Zifffff'1ff :fg-7:--174. -..IT .,. 2 . .51 , , ,AA , yllr -H l V - Q H-W I mm' 7 flags ' . ,Y I ' ' 'vv' u'7'A ' 2 f- -if E? 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