Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ)

 - Class of 1945

Page 15 of 100

 

Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 15 of 100
Page 15 of 100



Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 14
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Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

Seniom

Page 14 text:

um aude The Cum Laude Society was founded at the Jacob Tome Institution in 1906. Its purpose is to honor scholarship among secondary schools in much the same Way as Phi Beta Kappa does among colleges and universities. In accordance with the constitution of the society, each chapter is permitted to elect to membership one-fifth of the highest ranking scholars of the senior class in the school which the chapter represents. It has become the custom of the Pingry chapter to elect members at the end of the first semester of Senior year. Others are elected just before graduation. PINGRY MEMBERS Elected in course 1943-1944 Charles H. Lee, Jr. M. Byrd Hopkins, Jr. Paul C. Fletcher David D. McKenney Charles D. Losee II Henry G. Kreh 1944-1945 Francis Orr Clark Robert Jacquelin Smith, Jr. gill gliqemnriam ARTHUR W. CLOTHIER '37 JAMES CARRINGER '35 GEORGE J. MORGAN, JR. '32 WALLACE P. TRAPNELL '21 RICHARD S. TUCKER '34 J. DONALD FINDLAY '39 SCHUYLER CRANE '32 R. STUART WARD '38 FREDERICK C. HOHNBAUM '37 WILLIAM G. CAMERON, JR. '42 10 THOMAS F. LOWERY '37 E. CRANE WOODRUFF '37 GEORGE L. KINSEY '27 DAVID E. WILLIAMS, JR. '43 JOHN O. STODDARD '41 A. COMPTON VAIL '32 DONALD C. WHITE '44 PRENTICE C. WEATHERS '36 WM. G. CRITCHLOW, JR. '41 DONALD B. SCHNABEL '39



Page 16 text:

Class Histor When the class of 1945 set out on the long road to graduation twelve years ago, in 1933, its ranks contained only two members destined to survive the trip and graduate from the class. They were Mahlon Scott and Dick McManus, each a three-letter man and class oflicer today. ln the second grade Don 0,Brien entered the school, and Dick McManus left to return the follow- ing year, along with .lack Lehman, another athlete. Soon the school began to realize the caliber of the class of '45, an.d upon entering the fifth grade we found a new Lower School Building ready and waiting. Be- cause of this shift in plans we became the last class of the Lower School to have the regular two-hour gym period. So it was that on a bleak morning in 1938 some very worried lads tip-toed into the awe-inspiring and much talked-of sanctum sanctorum of Mr. Vars. lt wasn,t long before we found all the rumo1's false and things were not so bad after all. Also there were on hand two newcomers to back us up, Willie Syms, the guy with the perpetual grin, who later left to re-enter in the Third Form, and Bob Nutt, jazz expert from Staten lsland. ln the next year we had two entries, happy-go-lucky Harry Hoyt, speedy outfielder on the diamond, and Dave Miller, bulky center of the varsity football team this year. The eighth grade found Dave Cudlipp, annual Student Council member and honor student, and Al Bauer, class clown. On coming into the Upper School our personnel was enhanced by the arrival of Al Alley, the good looking guy from the mountains of Jersey, who wisely kept his male friends by confining his social activities to that region, Ted Janeway, one of the most obliging fellows in the school, who was, at last report, an ambulance driver overseas, Bob Jones, golf enthusiast and tackle on the gridiron, Red,' McClain, captain of the football and baseball teams, member of the basketball team, class officer and so on, ad infinitum, Harvey Petty, who has been operating a taxi service to all the athletic contests and manages to find space for his friends from Vail-Deane each time, Bob Smith., perpetually on the honor roll and our BLUE BOOK editor, Dick Tracy, a quiet fellow who never fails to get things done, and Kent Traslozc, con- stantly the butt of the fellows' gags and always the guy to grin at them first. 12 To augment this group, the sophomore year added Ed Haime, sketch artist for the year book: Torn Cashmore, track captain and unchanged optimist, Francis Clark, another mental giant from up Hillside way, Ray Comp- ton, president of the Senior class and member of half the other organizations around school, Bud Hildeburn, Sum- mit man, with women galore, Larry Oxley, end on the football team and otherwise active around school, George Perselay, business manager of the school publications, cheer leader, football manager and tennis star, Art Prangley, member of the BLUE BOOK Board, Al Pfeil, player on the valiant soccer squad, Fred Rapell, photog- rapher for the school paper and year book, and Ned Sampson, a quiet and industrious worker. ln the ,lunior year our class acquired Alex Bibby, our Veronica Lake, and history student, Bob Boise, Plainfield boy, who is in the Dramatic Club, Elby Ericson, teller of tall tales and happy extrovert, fohn Foord, literary light in a pretty dark class, .lim Koopntan, another lit- erary student and dramatist in good standing, Bud Pat- ten, perpetual teller of exaggerated and wonderful stories involving the superlative exclusively, and, at mid-year, Dick McClelland, a very quiet and good-natured student. And so, this year, after we had almost reached our goal, we were joined by such notables as Harold Brasher, another red head in an already over-abundant group, Charlie D'Honau, one of the hardest workers ever seen and a member of the Dramatic Club, Gene Haring, a good-natured fellow who was immediately made Vice- President of the Literary Club, Len Hayes, always ready for a laugh, Leo Keefe, the boy who scored a touchdown against Newark, Dick Nelson, another basketball lumi- nary, and Ted Smith, honor student from Westfield. As the records show, the class of 1945 is not prepon- derantly intellectual, and besides the Smith boys, Charles D,Honau, and Francis Clark, not many have earned dis- tinction in studies. It is, however, in activities and par- ticularly on the athletic field that the boys have been outstanding. Five members of our class were on the baseball team in their sophomore year, and such mem- bers as Red', McClain, Scotty, Scott, ,lack Lehman, Dick McManus and Al Alley have helped uphold the honor of the school on the athletic field. The members of the class of 1945 will surely give good account of themselves in this war and life thereafter.

Suggestions in the Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) collection:

Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Pingry School - Blue Book Yearbook (Elizabeth, NJ) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952


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