Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT)

 - Class of 1946

Page 1 of 110

 

Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection, 1946 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collectionPage 7, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collectionPage 11, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collectionPage 15, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collectionPage 9, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collectionPage 13, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collectionPage 17, 1946 Edition, Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 110 of the 1946 volume:

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V-VV V, -f ,.. ,AV -1 V 5 gh ' ' m ,1if.?a'f .lyx f'.'-.-L5:VQ.ff9'Eff', V Qi' 43322-5 V 391,21 ' I' i- .iff 5' If?- lf : - ' ' J ' F , ' ' ,' ? :' gr- 4-1 ,ag uni 1 M -ixfx-. 5 I i s 5 2 i YE SAR UM BOOKE Published three times a year in March, June, and December by the boys of Salisbury School, Salisbury, Connecticut ANNIVERSARY DAY lssua fune,1946 YE SAR UM BOOKE Vol. XLII June, 1946 No. 3 FUP1EWUPlD LAST YEAR the Anniversary Day issue of Ye Sarum Booke was pub- lished for the first time in the form of a year book. The venture was well received. The precedent thus established imposed upon this year's editorial staff the responsibility to produce a book which maintains or improves upon the work of last year's staff. We hope the reader will be pleased with our work. Much of the credit for the success of this book goes again to those members of the faculty who guided the staff in the work. In looking over our pages we see that most of the pictures are the work of Mr. Firuski, and the Camera Club, too, contributed many snapshots. For this help we here express our very sincere thanks. Every effort was made to have this issue bound in a padded stiff cover. Until May 23 we believed that our publishers would succeed in getting the necessary material for our cover, and our confidence in their success was the greater because we had fulfilled their time requirements in every detail. We had every assurance from them that we would have the book in time for Anniversary Day. On May 23 we learned that the binders could not produce the cover we had tried so hard to get. The fact that we must disappoint our readers in this respect is, believe us, no fault of ours. Your disappointment is certainly not greater than ours. TAIILE UF CONTENTS ' ' Dedication Faculty From the Headmaster's Desk CLASS OF 1946 Forms .Activities Athletics From the Log Book Literary The Seasons The Awhakeners Commuter Perhaps Tomorrow Sugar A Piece of Music Deadline Bedlam Poem The Diamond Horseshoe I Saw a Life Just Think, Darling Unknown Hero Fire! Home for Gran'pa Or Your Money Back Patent Medicine Peace Exchanges Advertisements Peter Mallet Louis D. Sage Frank B. Hall, III Peter Mallet John Dowling, Jr. Louis D. Sage Frank B. Hall, III Peter Mallet Millard H. C. Davis Millard H. C. Davis Michael Garvey, Jr. and Frederick G. Jarvis, III James H. Bates Olavo A. Ferraz James Ben Beaird, Jr. , Philip F. Evans Noel Chase Crowley Erwin H. Watts IJEUICATIUIN With sincere appreciation and with profound pride we dedicate this issue of Ye Sarum Books to these men who have been students at Salisbury School and have gone forth to make the supreme sacrifice in the service of their countrx Mas this dedication keep us ever mindful of their courage and devotion JOHN B. BENNETT HUGH N. BOADWEE RICHARD C. DUPONT BARRETT L. TYLER JAMES D. TEW PHELPS SPENCER BRUCE E. RYAN WARINC ROBERTS FRANK K. SLUTTER HENRY L. WARNER W. BIRKS ERSKINE ALEXIS POUTIATINE lvvinvvffw' ' Mr. Herrick, Mr. Thoinas, Mr. Yvalker, Mr. Corbin, Mr. Mclinery, and Mr. l iruski Mr. lappert, Mr. Myers, Mr. Langdon, Mr. Keur, and Mr. Mulligan. THE FACULTY Giioiuai-1 lJoiu.ANiJ l.ANc:DoN, B..-X., Headvzaytw' l,atin, Sacred Studies .louis Cnorr MYERS, B.S. Senior Master, Physical Director, Mathematics, Physics Wii.i.i-:M F.. Karin, Ph.B., M..-X. . . Music, French, Mathematics -IOHN Mosuizk lXll'I,l,lGAN, B..-X., S.'l'.B. Chaplain, Sacred Studies, Mathematics liowiu C. 'l'Ai-PHRT, BA., M..-X. . . . Latin, Greek, German HARoi.o HAR1,ow CORBIN, JR., B..-X. . English, Public Speaking lxlAl'RIL'l'1 lfikrski, B..-X. ...,.. History NVii.i.lAM B. lXlCl lNERY, jk., M.S. Chemistry, Biology, Mathematics j. CARI-:Y 'l'HOMAS, ll, B..-X. , Spanish, French YVAIJVER R. Hrikklck, JR., B..-X. . , Latin, linglish, History ji-irrkiey' Pouu XVALKER, B..-X. . French, lfnglish wi --.'. , ,LLAL1 3154544 FHUXVI THE HEAlHVl!lSTEH'S IJESH T0 ffm C!1zs.f qf lQ4,l6.' OL' H.ffvE 00021 fl g001! f!1z.v5 KZHIZI 111100 rfzrflwf f!1f t'077l7Ilt'71I2,flf!OIl am! fgffff'fz'i011 0f f!10.vr 0f11.v Z 71 fly: Nr!z00!. T0gf'f!zw' uw llllft, fawzllzwwi fha -war vmr.v, 0111! f0gf'f!1rr iw lzrzcw .ffriawz I0 014i!r! fl 5l7'07lgt'7' SIl!!5bIl71V. You !ezz:'f flllt, SffI00f in bmw' .f!10pr !!zrz11 -VOllAf0Zl7Z1i if, am! -v0ur C'0H!7'!bIlf!071,f ici!! 1101 br f07'g0fff'21. lfwzr fflllf -V011 ici!! !1Kli'F I0 ffwzd mzcerfailz 1m1!d!ffif11!z' pfz!!1.v,f01' pmn' flflf 1101' 1'f'11z0c'r1! flu' mzzuhv auf! bIl5!l' lD7'0b!67IZ5 if,'!1!C!z'v011 7lZZl.V!.f!lfK. Y01z ici!! min! lnzzzmfz! l'0ll7'Ilgt' Illllf u'i5f!0m mznf, pvrlzapx cowl 1110713 f!mf fc02'ki21g p!1i!0.f0p!1-v ichiflz ice XZIZUF l0!km' 015010 50 mllfll. Y0z4 wi!! 7't'7l'lt'7'7IbF7', !z0icf'zw', ilzfzf UC!!i'c'7I zz group 0f !lIfl7!2'!ffI!Il!.V t!z0r0ng!1!Vv !7lZbl'lt'If willy flze DESIRE I0 !1f!p 0718 1z110f!1f'r, flnf !l'll,l, I0 trrz11.v!1z!6 ff6'5Z'7'F !lIf0 001200, am! flzc l1'lSDO.W 10 mrzlcr 0617011 fjfffflizw, .ILXYTICE ici!! n'.f14!!. Jiffy Gm! in illvf iigfinilv g00a'm'.vJ 00111711110 I0 0!r.v.v yv01z mn! wake .VUII .m'kw'.v Kgfftyf' jn.vfin'. MN ,exam CLASS UF l94G HAROLD HENRY' BATES Redding Ridge, Connecticut .VI-inyy, Three years. Connecticut. Taconic, Prefect, Dance Committee C6D, Entertainment Committee C6j, Student Council C6D, Dramatics C5,6j, Glee Club C4,5,6j. YERBURY GOLDSBOROUGH BURNHAM Montclair, New Jersey Yerb Two years. Princeton. Taconic, Prefect, Varsity Football C6j L , Varsity Hockey CQ L , Captain C6j L , Cupola C5,6j, Athletic Committee C6j, Enter- tainment Committee CQ, Chairman C6j, Student Council C6j. RICHARD CROWLEY Rhinebeck, New York Noisy Dick Mike Four years. Yale. Berkshire, Furiosi Society, Honor Roll. Joi-iN Josspu DowL1NG, JR. New London, Connecticut mc-IID-xi ul-Aingn Three years. Yale. Berkshire, Head Prefect, Base- ball C4j L , CQ, Football C6j, Ye Serum Books C4,Q, Editor C6j, Cupola C4,5,6j, Furiosi Society, Upper School Forum, Robert Frost Society, Prose Club, Dance Committee, Chairman, Athletic Committee C6j, Student Council C6j, Form Representative CQ, Chess Club C6D, Dramatics C5,6j. Rlci-man Casvrzmxo GREGORY Chevy Chase, Maryland Greg Two years. Yale. Taconicg Prefectg Varsity Football 161 Lug Cupola C5,61g Upper School Forumg Student Council f61g llramatics l61g Glee Club K61. FRANK BRUEN H.Al.l. Ill Roslyn, Long Island Frankster Fronc Three years. Yale. Berkshireg Prefectg Varsity Foot- ball C61 L g Baseball 15,61 I. g Ye Snrum Booke C4,5,61g Cupola C4,51, Editor C61g Advocates I51, President C61g Furiosi Societyg Upper School Forumg Prose Clubg Dance Committee C61g Entertainment Committee 151g Dramatics C5,61. DoNA1.n READ HEATH, ja. Larchmont, New York Don Donster Two years. Hamilton. Taconicg Cupala C51, Pro- duction Manager C61g Advocates Cg,61g First Orator 65,613 Upper School Forumg Prose Clubg Library Com- mittee C51, Chairman C61g Dramatics C51, President 161g Glee Club f51. WEDGBUU' JAYES Rye, New York XYedge Udge Two years. Amherst. Taconicg Cupola C61, Business Managerg Chapel Committee C613 Upper School Forumg Entertainment Committee C61g Dramatics 161g Chapel Server. EDWIN KENTISH LANGDON, JR. Hempstead, Long Island IlEAd,, Two years. Hamilton. Taconicg Upper School Forum. HARRY BEDELL LEWIS Warren, Pennsylvania KKI-larry!! Three years. Kenyon. Berkshire, Prefectg Football C51 L , C61 Lug Ski Team C515 Crew Manager C5,61g Chapel Committee C51, Chairman C613 Upper School Forumg Library Committee C5,61g Dramatics C5,61g Glee Club C51, Chapel Server. HENRI-GERARD MALLET New York City lKPeter,1 Klprogl! Three years. Marines. Taconic, President C615 Foot- ball C51 L , Captain C61 L , Hockey C51 L , C61 L , Baseball C41, C51 L , C61, Ye Sarum Booke C4,5,61g Cupola C4,51g Furiosi Societyg Lower School Forumg Robert Frost Society, Prose Club, Dance Committee C61g Athletic Committee C61g Entertainment Com- mittee C61g Dramatics C51, Vice-president C615 Glee Club C41. ROGER STANLEY Pooua Stanford University, California KiHamp1l lKR0dgeYl One year. Harvard. Berkshireg Prefectg Football C61 L , BasketballiCaptain C61 Lug Cupola C61, Prose Club. BMA NT RACSAN East Point, Georgia Atlanta Colonel One year. limory. Taconicg Upper School Forumg llramatics C65g Glee Club C65. I.oi'ls DAv1nsoN SAGE New York City Lou Zug Two years. Hamilton. Herkshireg Football C65 Lug Hockey C55 L , C65 l. g Crew C5,65g Ye Sarum Books C5,65g Cupola C5,65g Chapel Committee C5,65g Robert Frost Societyg Prose Clubg Dramatics C5,65. WILLIAM HERRON XVOODWELL Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Woodie Bird Two years. Princeton. Berkshire, President C655 Prefectg Advocates C5,65g Dance Committee C65g Entertainment Committee C655 Student Council C65. iNlARSl-IALI. IKEA Wo1.r South Urange, New Jersey Marsh Pinochio Three years. Yale. Berkshireg Prefectg Crew Man- ager C5,65g Ye Sarum Hooke C55, Business Manager C655 Cupola C4,55g Student Council C653 Chess Club C65. 3 Nw QQlZiE!EEEQEQ l, B' Ailsw. 1' SE. IUR CLASS HISTORY Fourth Form. The history of the present graduating class is a brief one, and for most of us it began in the fourth form, although we find in quiet Dick Crowley a boy who had found his way on Honor Rolls at Salis- bury even earlier. Stocky Torp Lasher spent a year at Sarum and, along with crony Bill Boyd, made the varsity football team. Nick amuses us with his large store ofjokes and stories and his habitual expletive, Wickl Torp and Nick star at back and end for the first string gridders. Peter Mallet, with his red shock of hair tells us tales of Switzer- land and Manhattan at midnight, and on the third squad decides to swing wide on the end-run play and peels off a 45-yard touchdown romp, sending Mr. Tappert to the water bucket for a bracer. His acting ability during the reading, with Frank Hall, of a Platonic dialogue involving Socrates and Crato is revealed, and the audience is electrified when Peter loses his place and calmly hands his volume over to the flabbergasted Frank Hall for re- orientation. He learns to ski in the winter with roommate Marshall Wolf, the lad from South Orange, whose frontal cartilage resembles that of the famed Schnozzola , and whose many red herrings punctuate Mr. Firuski's Modern Furopean History classes with waves of hearty laughter. Pinochio's nasal hum can be heard by his drowsy companions as he shuffles down the hallway every morning, and he shares with us the many vicissitudes of Mr. Tappert's course in linguistic gymnastics, Caesar in Gallia. Marsh soon distinguishes himself with his math ability, how- ever, and his sky-scraping math marks are the envy of all but Dick Crowley, who is usually right up there with him. Peter Day, the pride and joy of the unfortunate Latin class, rooms with Dick Crowley on the third floor of Payson, where most of us are this year. Husky Graham Davis is one of our representatives on the varsity football squad, and also plays some ice hockey for Sarum. He is known for his throaty voice and somewhat unpredictable temper. The great wide-open farmlands appeal to Harold Bates, who likes square dancing and plenty of fresh air in the room, and, in emergencies, does not mind an occasional piglet in the closet. Tiny becomes the form handyman, and he is frequently called on to see what the matter is when things stop running. Also among us is Frank Hall, who has a terrible time with his algebra and, like the rest of us, frequently runs afoul of Caesar's legions. He is rescued from the cliffs near Cabin I by Peter Mallet, but later, on the same day, is stung by bees while wrestling with Peter Day and contracts a case of hives which keeps him hopping for a few hours. Miss Carew's witch- hazel finally soothes both his skin and nerves. Frank is on the staff of the rejuvenated Cupola and soon developes into an enthusiastic sports writer, possibly because it gives him an occasional opportunity to cover varsity away games. john Dowling and Bill Osterhout join us at the beginning of the winter term. Bill is a quiet lad who studies like a beaver and rows on the first boat in the spring. His room is rarely without food, and as such proves a haven to his classmates. Little Johnny Dowling is agile and rarely misses a fly ball, and these attributes land him berths on both the varsity basket- ball and baseball teams. john is an insatiable reader and loves to listen to his collection ofjazz records. He is a fan of both literature and music. Our fourth form year was eventful, and we took the difficult transitional 13 period from lower to upper school in our stride. None of us stayed com- pletely out of trouble, and we were frequently billed as off dorm through- out the year. Mallet and Hall have an impasse with Mr. Young over pennant-hanging, and the Gallic Wars of Payson 3 leave their scars on Peter Day and Dick Crowley. Wolf puts raisins in his cider to see what will happen. Mallet crashes the varsity ball team at the close of the season. It's been a good year for most of us, we have had our first taste of Sarum, and like it, and now look forward to assuming positions of responsibility in the Upper School as fifth formers. FHM Form. After a summer, during which many of us accepted no small responsibilities, we return to school and attempt to assume the dignity of Upper Schoolers. Peter Day is no longer with us, but our members are swelled by the presence of Lou Sage, a long-haired New Yorker, Bill VVood- well, with the coal-dust of Pittsburgh still on himg Dick Gregory, who began studying the first night and never stopped until Anniversary Day. lm- pressing us with his shower arias and oratorical powers is Donald Heath. Wedge Jayes arrives in the robes of the clergy and preaches whenever anyone will listen to him. Yerbury Burnham, who is not conspicuous for his loquaciousness, also takes his place in the fold. We contribute members to the varsity football team-Leiva, Lewis, and Mallet. The last earns the captaincy for next year. Many of us are on the second squad, and Tiny Bates still drives the tractor. On the aesthetic side, several of us organize creative writing groups which are accepted among the school activities. The young bards prove their worth and turn out a number of creditable compositions. We leave for three weeks of long-awaited freedom, and when we return, we learn what dances Mallet and Sage attended, and also that several boys got their driver's license. We settle down to our winter sports. Mallet, Woodwell, Sage and Burnham play hockey. F. Hall and Dowling join the basketball squad, and Wolf loafs. We greet another member to our select group, Ed Langdon, who is said to be a relative of Thomas Edison. We dread the awful prospect of mid-examinations, but when they are safely, or otherwise, passed, we have the highest scholastic average in the school. R. Crowley is off dorm for the first time for a disturbance in the dormitory. Dowling and Hall carry a heavy extra- curricular burden, but they hold up well and earn the editorship of Ye Sarum Booke and the Cupola respectively. Donald Heath is proclaim- ed the First Orator of the School, but Jayes keeps preaching in the dormitory. Spring recess is much appreciated, for we fortunately have an early spring. The New York social life was not as exciting as Mallet and Sage expected, but they had a good time, nevertheless. Baseball and crew get off to an early start, and the man with the yellow slicker turns out a com- petent group of oarsmen. Mr. McEnery has a little trouble with a canoe and stop-watch, but otherwise he proved invaluable at the lake front. Sage tries his hand at rowing, but spends most of his time sleeping on the float. Mr. Myers has his most successful baseball season in years, and our form is represented on the varsity by Dowling, Hall, Leiva, and Mallet. In our frenzy to please the ladies on dance week end, we horribly bungle the South Kent game and lose by a fabulous score. Harry Lewis, a prefect, breaks his leg while skiing on vacation, and is forced to miss the spring term. Anniversary Day finally arrives, and we realize ever more the responsibility which the next year, the last and most important, imposes upon us. Sixilz Form. We return to the Hilltop determined to make this, our last year at Sarum, one of success and enjoyment. We start off with the resolve to be accepted at the colleges of our choice. For the first time since 14 our coming to Salisbury the world is at peace, and Salisbury emerges from the war years with plans for a new building. Leiva does not return, but two new boys, Roger Poole and Bryant Ragan, fill out our form. The football season leaves much to be desired, with four defeats and a tie. Mallet, Hall, Poole, Sage, Burnham, Gregory, and Dowling were all on the varsity squad. Bates still is driving the tractor. Harry Lewis starts to catalogue the books in the library, and everyone has trouble deciphering his figures. Head Prefect john Dowling heads the group of dormitory terrorists. Bird Woodwell does himself proud on Payson I, and Dick Gregory and Yerb Burnham do likewise on the second and third floors of Payson. Hall wields his sceptre in the North Dorm, and Harry Lewis is prefect in the Middle Dorm, Marshall Wolf has a South Dorm nursery, while King Dowling lords it over the terrified inmates of the Mountain Cottage. At the Thanksgiving Banquet we were much pleased when Mr. Mclilnery got up, ifonly to utter a threat at his tormentors. Poole almost collapsed the day he only got five letters. Christmas vaca- tion, a good time for all, and back to work. General Ragan has received ominous-looking cartons, and rumor has it that it's ammunition for his CSA revolt. Harry Lewis gets credit for the new ski tow, and there are more skiers than ever before. The students in the chemistry class are feverishly studying, for Mid-Year's are at hand. Who knows, one might even hit the limit with a 40. The exams come, and afterwards a chem student exclaims: Hot dog, a 41! Gosh, Mr. McEnery is a swell guy! With the climactic set of mid-year's examinations over, we all draw deep breaths and prepare once more for a return to normalcy. Roger Poole is made captain of the basketball team, and Yerb Burnham gets the nod to lead the hockey sextet through their most successful season in recent years. Lou Sage and Pete Mallet are also on the hockey squad. The rest of us elect to ski, but Frank Hall finds himself handicapped, possessing neither skis nor ski boots and flatly refusing to make a martyr of himself on barrel staves. Don Heath amuses us with his shower melodramas and with a strange little musical instrument which he calls a Humanotone. Heath also wins first prize in the dramatic performances during which Hall forgets his lines and is oblivious to the frantic stage-whisperings of prompter Bryant Ragan which are heard by everyone except Hall. The malapropisms of Wedge Jayes continue to divert us, and the pay-off comes when Jayes emphatically asserts in history class that 9o'Z, of the American people would vote for a resumption of negro slavery. John Dowling continues to disappear behind weighty volumes at every turn, and also acquires an in- teresting crew cut from Chet. College Boards come as a reminder of thejob at hand, and, having made the Uoldicollege try , we once more dig in and hope for the best. Mallet, Hall, and Poole are on the first ball squad, while Burnham, Sage, and Gregory go out for crew, and Langdon, Jayes, Dowling, and Heath take long and vigorous runs through the woods in preparation for the Anniversary Day track meet. Some of us are called away from time to time for army physicals. Mallet aspires to sun-bathe on the shores of Tripoli with the Marines. Don Heath's latest musical idiosyncrasy is a fife which he does not know how to play, but he is not to be daunted by so incidental a consideration. Lou Sage continues to gallop in the Elysian fields with his reams of verse and becomes the poet laureate of Sarum. As we look back over our history at Salisbury, and realize the moment- ous and trying times through which we all passed while at Sarum, the conviction grows in us that both we and our school have been strengthened by the work and sacrifice Chowever large or smallj that the past few years have brought us. VVe graduate knowing that we have not fully appreciated our training at Salisbury, and face the years ahead confident in the knowl- edge that this training will bear increasing fruits for us. ' 15 A lover of farm life and not one to be daunted by manual labor, Harold's nickname of Tiny belies his true stature Cboth physically and otherwisej as a mem- ber of this graduating class. Although he never cavort- ed in the athletic limelight, Tiny,s contributions to Sarum have nonetheless been real and important. Coming to Salisbury three years ago, Harold quickly exhibited his penchant for farm life, which became increasingly evident to his schoolmates with the found- ing of the Sarum Piggeryn, which provided hungry Sarumites with several tasty pork dinners. Tiny could always be seen performing numberless odd jobs around the school. He loved snow, and lots of it, because it made work and gave him an opportunity to run the school plow. He was also active on the Dance Committee and on the stage crew. He was deservedly '4 hi 'is ,Geri made a Prefect in his last year. l W5 . X N. il i iiiii 3 av' M561 -as: ----.-. Wat fn xl, M A F i -. K .V pt Wg, 1 X 'x , .' , K l' me 5 lk f?-. D' as N E 1 ,myd ! lllluwdl A'Yerb came to Salisbury two years ago with brother Beverley, who is now in the army. We hope he handles the Burnham Crosley with the aplomb that brought fame to his brother. Among other things, Yerb has rendered great service at school not only as one ofthe production chiefs ofThe Cupola, for which he worked hard and long in the print shop, but he also ran the motion picture projector and thus provided his fellow students with their Saturday night fare of enter- tainment. He was also a member of the Dance Com- mittee. Yerbury has a gentle, slow manner of speaking which can not be called a drawl, and yet is hardly crisp, giving expression to his good nature and mild dis- position. Last fall he played end on the varsity grid team, and his work on the hockey team earned him the captaincy, in which capacity he starred for the sextet. University Raucous Richard , alias Noisy Dick , is a quiet scholar of considerable merit. He was at Sarum longer than any other member of his class. His reticence in no way detracts from his extraordinary capabilities as a prop man for the Dramatic Club, however, and Dick guaranteed to produce anything from skyhooks to hexagonal yo-yos on short notice, and judging from the varied nature of the productions this year, this was just as well. Dick exasperates his classmates when, for instance, they consult him for assistance in a particular- ly knotty math problem, over which they have been struggling, by saying: You don't mean to tell me you couldn't get Ilzis one? lt's the easiest one in the whole lessonln Genius burns f and more power to it! 47 vs SVT f..X N 2 . . - We .7 I J s Yerb is a candidate for admission to Princeton be nl 3 f iaasf I A i 5 1 16 W3-952 Outside of all the things john did for the school as Head Prefect, Chairman of the Dance Committee, and President of the Student Council, he also was a scholar in the realm ofjazz. From his room in the Mountain Cottage floated the mellow notes of Goodman, Shaw, and Kostelanetz every extra minute john could spare from his work. These minutes were comparatively few for, in addition to all his extra-curricular activities, he was a first-honor student. A good-natured guy, one of his sore spots is modern literature, and if you ever want a fight on your hands, verbal or physical, just tell John that e. e. Cummings as a poet makes a good dish-washer. 'M ig 1 Dick was nicknamed Siegfritz the Umlaut Kid , but what that means only his fellows at the German table know. He was a serious student, and a good one. He wasted time only on those rare occasions when he felt he could spare it, and then usually by appointment only. He regarded his academic job as his chief objective, and did it in grand style, winning the admira- tion of all. The same drive and stuff won him his S in varsity football. YVe used to think Dick Crowley was studious, but we've heard from good authority that when Dick C. met Dick G. he gave up his title of hardest worker and from that time on never spoke two words when one would do. Greg. is going on to Yale from here, and it is a sure bet that he will have the success in college that he did here. Fronc , in his three years at Salisbury, proved him- self a competent journalist as editor of The Cupola. He was a constant source of worry to most of the school, for his fellows had a difiicult time following the Frank- ster's ready and enormous vocabulary. To any advocate of communism, or monosyllabic sentences, he always retorted with a deadly barrage of 50-cent words. Frank also established himself as an outstanding contributor to our extra-curricular activities. He went in for dramatics, public speaking, and the various literary societies. Yet, in spite of all this, he managed to do honors work in his last two years, and to make our first squads in his senior year. His tastes run from baseball, the Dodgers in particular, to natty clothes combinations. 01 KA'- dd Q ' X, , ' M Two years ago, when Don came to Salisbury, every- one labeled him immediately as the quiet, serious and studious type of boy, but somewhere along the line friend Heath has dropped his mask and become the first wit and baritone of the class. His wit is always enjoyable, but the baritone part is a bit annoying to the inmates of the Mountain Cottage who have to start the day at seven o'clock in the morning with bursts of song from Pagliacci to Barrel House. Without Don's untiring efforts the printing department of the Cupola would not have met its publication schedules. Don excelled in public speaking and won for himself the coveted title of First Orator of the School for two successive YCHYS. Wedge is known for his good nature and ability to take a ribbing, his often erratic and somewhat sudden changes of mood notwithstanding. An irrepressible toe-dancer , Udge will burst into inspired flights of tow wizardry at exciting moments and so threaten the security of those standing nearby. Quick to burst into smile or chuckle, Wedge's ready and oftentimes blunt retorts have confused more than one of his jest- ing school chums. Active in the extra-curricular field, he was Business Manager of The Cupola, served on the Chapel Committee Cconsistent with his professed ambition to become a ministerj, and has taken part in the school dramatic productions. Z Ed is a member of the Middle Dorm and also owner of the treacherous water-pistol that wrought havoc to all, especially to Mike Crowley, during its short-lived reign of terror. Ed is a devoted Giant fan and is said to spend a good part of the summer wandering around the Polo Grounds. He's ready to defend the boys of Mel Ott at a moment's notice. Something of a track man, it was rumored that he was ready to forsake all for a full-time umpiring job for Mr. McEnery's third squad. An inveterate punster who managed to follow up his scandalous utterances with a poker face, Harry was graduated last lfebruary. A skiing accident whilevaca- tioning in Vermont kept him out of school for some time and prevented him from graduating last June. Harry's puns became a school legend and, although his jests were sometimes outlandish - and received as such H, his placidly sober countenance remained unrufiied. Harry also proved himself a cooperative and enthusi- astic worker. He has several accomplishments to his credit, the most notable, perhaps, is his work on and his supervision of the construction of our recently installed ski-tow. Then again, he came forth with his assistance as a stage man for our dramatic productions. Harry spent his three years at Salisbury well. His appoint- ment to the prefecture is one token of the recognition 'L e i r i Big! gif :fn f' lah J y i? at r ' w w i he gained. 4,41 -4 ,ati s K' 5 -.sf Eg A ii if New LAL Nicknamed The Frog because of his French lineage and name Cl-lenri-Gerard is the correct appellation, if you pleasej, Peter took an active part in school life since entering Salisbury in the fourth form. A two- year varsity letterman in three sports Cfootball, hockey, and baseballj, Red captained the first Eleven in his senior year and sparked the team from his backfield spot where his dashing shock of red hair could hardly have proved anything less than an inspiration to his teammates. Peter's activities, however, were not con- fined to the athletic field. He excelled in dramatics and public speaking, and worked with the Cupola, Ye Sarum Booke, and the Dance Committee. A steady and hard-working chap whose home is right on the campus of Stanford University in the land of sunshine, rain, and orange juice. I-lamp Cthis was once the nickname of a star footballer at Stanford and adopted for Roger by his friendsj made rapid strides since his arrival on the Hilltop last September. He played varsity football for the Crimson gridmen in fall, and his aggressive play on the court won him the basket- ball captaincy during the winter season. Hamp also won a berth on the Salisbury picket line and played well with Mr. Myers' baseball team. His athletic attain- ments deserve no less mention than his fine application to the academic side of school life. Recognized by all as a sound student and a sound fellow, he was appointed a Senior Prefect. Too bad he wasn't with us from the second form on. He managed, nevertheless, to win a coveted place in the Prose Club and on the Cupola staff. i ite' C N ii' 4 H1 il? --'fall' Y - al fill 's es? 14X r 3 L 1 1 ' fl - ,, 9 ft: Bryant, hailing from way down in Georgia, used to tell us great things about the deep, old South. A member of the fabulous Middle Dorm, Bryant proved himself to be the Socrates in every Platonic dialogue. Like Socrates, too, he had a delightful wit and a subtle way of confounding his adversary. He roomed with Roge Poole and vied with his mate for the throne at the Dorm bull-sessions. For some reason, Bryant always brought the argument to bear on the honor of the South, for on this subject he knew he had no peer. Quiet in manner and big of heart he won the friendship of all t 0 2 I - tg!-I 1 F I iw 11 llll j I When I.ou arrived at Sarum two years ago, he lost no time in establishing himself in the fields of letters and tall stories. To keep his prestige in the former, he developed a dreamy look and a long list of characters from Greek mythology and dazzled his not so aesthetic classmates. He managed to maintain his crown as Zug , king of the bull session, by constantly mumbling something about rockets and ether ships to the moon. He supported his theories by frantically waving all types of science fiction in the astonished faces of those who doubted him, for Lou was always seen walking around with a copy of the Mysto-VVeird Monthly or Tales of the Stratosphere in his hip pocket. All we can say, Buck Rogers, is don't wreck that cosmic by his ready smile and affable nature. D . f 1 4 F i. W , 1445 1, ffl I 4,416 hi' ill- ,, '? 1 NWN .if ' P' .fs- l K -xv ' W stratoliner you fly around in or Zeus will blow you down. mf 5 - e M if' d is h ' ars . ,turne out .ton e t e most prominent 1 mathematician and scientist in the class. He amazed f ...M K ,, us all, and this included the Masters, with his wizardry X- 2 ' ,M Q in physics and math. Pinoch spent much of his , :QQ-ks, gf ,ffyyft spare time working out mathematical puzzles, and he X A often baffled his Masters and his form-mates with his fs ' so-called scientific approach to everything. The i' gli! Z K. Prefect in the South Dorm this year, Marshall found lkfciygbi N, fnffy that the scientific approach mystified his charges into '-xi, A 4,52 obedience. Maybe it works after all, Pinoch . He B X Y .A ' '-I , was known, however, to resort to unscientific methods 'fig '-I E, 7 ,' when he tried to teach the boys on the dorm not to walk ke-ll, , '1' X 'jf' up and down the hall barefooted. Said he: I just X J - strewed the floor with thumb tacks. Boy, that did it! - V ei 511, Q0 Although definitely not for the birds, The Bird is' not the least ashamed of his nickname or of the eight- cylinder Buick Birdmobile he pilots, presumably in an expert and prudent fashion, in and about the streets ofhis hometown in Pittsburgh. Genial VVoody entered Sarum's spacious halls two years ago and quick- ly made Sarum glad of his decision to do so. His favorite expletive, although it assuredly is not his strongest, is Gollyl Woody likes a gray felt porkpie hat which covers his sandy hair and has developed the curious habit of breaking the most forbidding looking pencils in two and puffing on them a la Chesterfield, sometimes startling his friends by offering them one of these graphite smokes . Bill is a Senior Prefect and hopes to enter Princeton next fall. SUNG TITLES THAT FIT Farmer in the Dell and Hou' You Gonna Keep 'Em Down on the Farm? Harold Bates In my Nlerrv Oldsmobile and Plving Home Yerbury Burnham Alin't llflisbehaein' and Not so Quiet, Please Richard Crowley Melaneholi' Baby and Can't Get out of This Mood John Dowling Du Kannst nieht Treu Sein and Maigvland, Mdv Marrvland Richard Gregory I Can't Begin to Tell You and llfith a Song in my Heart Donald Heath Zoot Suit and There, I't'e Said it Again Frank 'Hall I Don't llfant to ll alk lli'ithout You and Oh, the Deaeon Went Down Wedge jayes I'm Beginning to See the Light and Shoo-flv Pie Edwin Langdon Strictly Instrumental and IV e Did It Before Harry Lewis Nobody Knows the Trouble I'z'e Seen and Comin' Through the Rye Peter Mallet .dir Mail Speeial and I'm Gonna Telegraph Mv Baby Roger Poole Atlanta, G.fI. and Candy Bryant Ragan As Time Goes By and I Know a Little Bit about a Lot of Things Louis Sage lt's Apple Blossom Time in East Orange, N. J. and Elmer's Tune Marshall Wolf Tuxedo .function and I'm just a Bird in a Gilded Cage William Woodwell 21 4, ww 'V' Fr if as Q M Q A M -Q 'WE 4 Q s , Q 1 sw Q s is , if , L W ,,, .. -'Q QP i Y g 43 si? A , y w i 'Q f w m his if 5522555 W 4 'GN SAF ii' 3? Q3 1 L ., ,:g,5ZX LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT Wbl, THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 1946, being in possession of sound mind and body, do make and declare this our last will and testament, annulling and making void any previous commitments. To Dave Sautter we leave Tiny Bates' Farmers' Almanac, and his local connections to the next in line. To Phil Evans we bestow Yerb Burnham's execution of the movie projector, and his initiative to Dick Gillespie. To Sid Bartlett we give Dick Gregory's complete mastery of the German language, and his suaveness to Clunk Taferner. To Angela Corbin we bequeath Frank Hall's vocabulary, and the Cupola to his associate editors. To Laurie Wunder we leave John Dowling's marks, and to Pete Nowakoski his complete jazz collection. To jo-jo Cook we grant Dick Crowley's directness, and his Boy Scout medals to Er Watts. To Ben Beaird we leave Don Heath's sense of humor, and his loud neckties to Mr. Langdon. To next year's biology class we grant Herb Jayes' body, and to Bill Davis his way with the girls. I To Don Deane we give Ed Langdon's vigor and vitality, and his sarcastic remarks to HS. George Kapff. To Bronc Sayles we bestow Harry Lewis' puns, and his carefully planned library index to the Federal Bureau of Codes and Translations. To Frank Clawson we leave Peter lVIallet's beard, and to Mart Chase his Park Avenue connections. To George Beavers we bequeath Rodge Poole's piano ability, and his address book to Tyler Townley. To George McKinney we give Bry Ragan's soft, sweet, succulent, southern drawl, and to Glen McFadin his presidency of the S. S. C. To the local post ofthe Salvation Army we leave Lou Sage's wardrobe, and his nose to the Canaan Airport to be used as a wind sock. To a nearby Day Nursery we bestow Marsh Wolf's entire dorm, and to Pudge Jarvis his loud, rasping voice. To Tommy Maker we leave Bill Woodwell's despotism as a ruler of his fellow men, and to Dick Hale his ability to loaf. And to all the would-be jokers of the Fifth Form, we humbly leave you all that is left of the Sixth Form room after we have finished our ah-er-ah ping-pong games. 23 Seniors, like Old Boys, reininisee ahoul experiences in lheir younger days at school. Do you remember lhe time when ...... are words which ineeitahlv pre- face a jlooa' of recollectionx. A mere reference to a pas! even! conjures up names and rnental pictures which will always he a delight to recall. lla You Remember The Time ..... 9 VVHEN Don Heath, in his first days at Sarum, naively asked Mr. Myers about the possession of crystal sets. Next day one good crystal set was seen in the Payson Dorm refuse container. VVHEN Marshall VVolf went on a nocturnal bond campaign, urging his roommate to Buy Bonds, Buy Bondsln This astonished lad was amazed, upon turning on the light, to learn that the bond salesman was obviously in the arms of Morpheus. WHEN Mr. Corbin, while vociferously explaining a point in English class, climaxed an awe-inspiring crescendo by waving his fist and shattering a desk slat with a powerful kick. WHEN Harry Lewis connected his Bunsen burner to the water jet in chem lab. A certain punster was saturated with HZO. VVHEN Bird Woodwell was practicing bowling in the hallway of Payson. The Bird', was using a tennis ball, and an upright cigarette lighter for a tenpin. VVHEN catastrophe struck Bud Hotchkiss one evening while he was waiting on table. He lost his false tooth on the way to the pantry and didn't discover his loss until he sat down. VVHEN Mr. Mulligan, just after the morning chapel service, ran across the tennis courts trying, though handicapped by his flowing ecclesiastical robe, to corral the elusive runaway pigs. WHEN George Durham announced that he had a gastric disturb- ance , as Miss Carew would genteely put it, and won the sympathy of his fellows. But a few minutes later, when Knox Sayles offered the gallant Texan a creamy, delicious brownie, George's big blue eyes lit up like search- lights. You know, I feel much better now, said George, very seriously, as he bit into his third brownie. That same night there was a surprise fire drill. VVe tried frantically toeget George out of bed, but he said he was too tired to go to any old fire drill. NVHEN the inmates of the Sarum Piggery used to pay daily visits to the athletic field in search of excitement despite all the efforts of the owners of the now defunct corporation. , WHEN Herb flayes offered to sing La lylarseillaisen in a school meeting if Mr. Pickard would give him a bonus. WHEN Miss Harris started a fire which quickly threatened Mr. Corbin's garden plot and the trees behind Payson. WHEN Mr. Herrick chuckled longer and louder than Chub Tuttle. WHEN The Advocates put on their mock performance and Jayes pontificated from a back seat. - - And the shooting that cost the nine lives of Don Heath and the dignity of Mr. McEnery. 24 FORMS ...MQ A. an THE FIFTH FORM lVIurray, T. Knox, Davenport, Poel, Steinmuller, Smith, Nowakoski. L. Hall, Kronholm, Kapff, Durham, Littwitz, Everitt, Sautter. Jolkovski, Bucknall, YV. Miller, Breckinridge, Nordlinger, Holt, Ebbets, Singer. Harvey, Maker, White, W. Maker, Hale, E. Frost, Sayles, Cfibsenl, Chaseb THE FOURTH FUHM Hoeck, Cook, Bartlett, Young, Brickerhoff, VVunder, Jarvis. Overfield, Burt, Bradford, Davis, Beavers, Holden, Taferner. Gillespie, Schiffenhaus, Garvey, Berringer, Bates, H. Frost, Raizen ex ver , I ?.-.W , L THE THlIllJ FUHM Ausnit, XV. Knox, R. Dean, Tuttle, lrlvans, f, 'IIb.ft'7lf, Kenneyl. Wilson, 'I'. Maker, Woods, Beuird, Monusterio, lXlCl'l2lLllI1. Van Deusen, Ferraz, lfverett, Thomas, N. Crowley, Mcliinney, Priest SEUIINIJ FIIHM Cluwson, lfax, Peacock. Xv2lffS, lf. Miller, Townley, Keller, ldbrrlzt, jacksonj. Q 2 11 ur-1 sf iv, ' Q Aa . , ., I fi V ,gf , , , ,fix I' W' K ww 1- K ' ff-K ' an n- - - -'U' ...sv fi I Tfjgnw x L ,,.., ., ,b T. ' fini? 51 -. 'l -f'm' 1 f'f:5 i W ,. QHF ' -Q . ., , 3' ' , - e. m , Y, A7 E If' Q A, n H ww H K 1 ' bi ':,,l 5 5 1 ,,,,......--- .wwf-ff' , 'ms' .,.Q-5.sr I - . -' - .- - .,w.J5-:...n.,,,:..,,p- , Q - , t k ' X Lv I ACTIVITIES 4 PHEFEUTS Wlolf, Poole, F. Hall. Gregory, H. Bates, Dowling, Burnham, VVoodwell. STUDENT CUUNCU VVolf, F. Frost, Poole, Sayles, F. Hall, T. Maker, Davis Gregory, H. Bates, Dowling, Burnham, Wloodwell. CSMIM' onfloor, F. Millerj. Garvey, -Iarvis, Davenport, Davis, Chase, F. Hall, Nr. Tappert XYolf, Mallet, Dowling, Nowakoski, Sage. 1011417003 Fbbets, H. Frost.J YE SAHLIM ISUUHE Edilor john Dowling, -lr. .ixfociale Editor-.v Frank B. Hall, Ill Peter A. Nowakoski Peter Mallet Martin S. Chase Louis D. Sage Frederick G. jarvis, Ill x1'.v.vi.vt1z11t Ezfifofxv Anthony A. Davenport Michzlel Garvey, -Ir. Nlillartl H. C. Davis Noel C. Crowley B11.vim'.v.t .llafuzgvr Marshall l.. XVolf ,1.v.f1'.tf1z11f BIl.Vfllt'.Y.Y illfzlzzzgrm NYilliam ll. Flvlmets Huntington Frost JI Dowling, Gregory, Bartlett, Evans, Chase, Nowakoski, Sage, Poole. Mr. Corbin, Heath, F. Hall , Burnham, Jayes. KOH floorl, Holt, Fbbets, Priest. THE IILIPULA John Dowling, Edifor Frank B. Hall, III Sporfs Edilor .ismciafe Ezfilow Martin S. Chase Roger S. Poole Louis D. Sage Donald R. Heath, Jr. Yerbury G. Burnham Richard C. Gregory 32 Reporters P7 06iMflZA077 Sfqfjf Bluifzesy Manager' Wledgbury Jayes Jr. Peter .-X. Nowakoski VVilliam H. Iibbets Jerome Priest Richard Holt Philip F. Evans Raymond C. Bartlett , , 5 V i 1 'V gn . A Tv . if aw C is f 47 'W 3117751 K slid! ,' : : 3 kkkg W .M 'X fav' A A fgxwi ' E Rifzsiwfgjg ' 1 ff isa V '? ,M 5 . . ' X 2 I HN 'X 13 M11 ' Q , wwpuv- .7 lNff111ffi21gJ: Nlr. Herrick, Ularvis, Ragan, H. Bates, lYoodwell, Sayles, Nowakosl l,. Hall, Sage, Gillespie, Chase, R. Crowley, hlr. Thomas. lf. llall, Mallet lIi1'l't'vl,1'z'.Vf1ft'7lfl, Heath ll'1'r.vi1fr11fl, Dowling I.N'f't Yy'fl'1'i'11.v.H, .Iayes Davenport, lribbets, XYatts, Xordlinger, lfax, .'Xusnit. lfvans, Bates, Yan Beever, Bartlett, Priest. llllf-XMATIII SIIUIHY lllS past year the Dramatic Society adopted a more ambitious program and produced something each term. ln the fall term three one-act plays were produced under the direction of Mr. Thomas. Une was a Sherlock Holmes thriller starring lfrank Hall in the title role and with Don Heath as Ur. Watson and Marty Nordlinger as Mary Morstan. Nlarty Chase and l,ou Sage supported this cast. The lnn of Return was a supernatural murder mystery. Don Heath played the part of Dr. Darby and Herb -layes portrayed Travers, a novelist. .Iohn Dowling played the surly villain, Charlie Cook. The third play was a short comedy on the food situation a hundred years from now. lr was appropriately entitled l9ood . lfred -larvis played the role of lrene, a desperate woman. Tony Davenport was Basil, her frantic husband, and Peter Nowakoski was Harold, a lfood Trust oHicer. On Parents' Weekend a musical revue was presented under the direc- tion ol' Mr. Herrick and Mr. Thomas. Prank Hall as master of ceremonies introduced several chorus line numbers. The Glee Club sang three selec- tions, and several skits were included in the show, the most notable being Harvard, Princeton, Dartmouth, Yale and Roommates . The spring production held on Old Boys' Weekend was a three act musical extravaganza called Naughty Naughtu. Prank Hall had the lead as lfrank Plover. Peter Mallet portrayed P. DeQuincey Devereux, and john Dowling was -lack Granville. lfred .larvis was Cathleen, a wayward, but nice, girl, and Dick Gillespie was the ravishing Claire Gran- ville, aek's sister. The comedy is the story ofilife at Yale at the turn of the century. The whole thing is very amusing and boasts some excellent musical numbers to fortify its plot. THEFUHUMS NYU of the School's most worthwhile extra-curricular activities are the forums, the Upper School Forum and the Lower School Forum. They furnish an opportunity for the boys to meet and discuss various phases of current events. The forums meet at the home of the Headmaster one evening each week. The Lower School Forum has a Steering Committee which picks out the topics for discussion and notifies the members of these topics in advance so that they may acquaint themselves with the subjects to be treated. Sometimes one or two boys volunteer to prepare a special topic for presen- tation to the group, and after they have made their exposition, the others contribute their points of view. ln this way the boys become familiar with the important issues of the day. Attendance at this Forum is optional. The faculty adviser is Mr. Herrick. The Upper School Forum, composed of boys in the Fifth and Sixth Forms, meets every week. The purpose of this group is the same as that of the Lower School Forum. Time Magazine , the news reviews in the New York Times Sunday edition, and other news publications are read in preparation for the sessions. Mr. Firuski is in charge of the Upper School Forum. 'THE GLEE CLUB Mr lxeur I. Knox, Poel, Davenport, Sautter, Bates, Mr. Mulligan. Gregory, H. Bates, Jarvis, Fbbets, Kapff. lm! W. -A 2+ M ' Qs -I ,Emma-nv! W . A Sf W W , A K?y xf' gf f Q V W ' s ,Q I ' .v R W .o,, THEN 'f 51, U f I Q i 1- ,I X r' CAMERA ULUIS Mr. Firuski, Ebbets, Ferraz, Van Beever, Bartlett, Monasterio, Bates, J. Nlaker. l.ittwitz,Ho1t,l+'rost, Clawson, Jackson Townley, Fax, Kenney. Nllllllfl Allll'l.ANE lflllll CSf1z11f!z'11gl. Beaird. Bucknall, YY. Miller, Clawson RIFLE CLUB Priest, Van Beever, Bucknall, Nlr. lVlCEnery. McKinney, Holt, Clawson, Keller. CHESS IILLIIS Nlr. 'l'l1on1z1s, Wolf, Young, Bartlett, Crowley, Dowling. Cook, Holt, H. lfrosr, Cluwson. Mc Kinney, l ,ittwirz, Nlonasrerio, Norcllinger. PNTEIRTAINMENT IIIIMMITTEE ll. Hzltcs, l'lV21l'lS. liurnhznn, Mr. Corbin, XYooclwell. DANCE CIJMMITFEE M r. Herrick, NVoodwell. Burnham, H. Bz1tes,lDowling,l . Hull Maller. ,p-I , ,-Nw HSE 4,6 Q P aff' 49' ex. ATHLETICS Hale, H. Frost, Dowling, Nowakoski, Chase, Bradford, Poel lzveritt Breckinridge, Gregory, E. Frost, Broclerson, Berringer Burnham, Schiffenhaus, T. Knox, Smith, Durham, Sayles, Mallet Daven port, F. Hall, WVhite, Poole, Sage. Mr. McEnery, Mr. Myers. VAPiSlTY FOOTBALL TEAM T945 RECORD Salisbury o Salisbury o Salisbury 6 Salisbury o Salisbury o 6 I .HT'I'1iR MEN Burnham, Gregory, Smith, Sage. F. Hall, Davenport, Sayles, W'hite, Durham. F. Frost, Schiffenhaus, Mallet, Poole, T. Knox. Lenox Canterbury South Kent Gunnery Millbrook Q... vu Adv ww.-1' Q... fh I'- -F44 Q W f.' , ,Q 44+ nn, 3 ,.G?' Wu 'ii' 'uf is 3- -0, 2 1 . 'V l Q y 1. b W A ' ' v Q- - S 5' ' 'Q ' f Mb .. p V , 5 V . ' U I - i . i I , A Q , 1 ' t 4 j. . , . F, Y is . vw. J1-.A I ., , ill. - . Aw L.:::f',A. ,A '. . -X. L- - 'ff -, 1 . 'VE'1f':f?i'.SY?:,.. .. , - x . - 'ff - ,- . .-, , 3- Nev: ' .-: '.f'f gf-an ' 4-9 H' '-.1 Q .i 1- '4 - ' ' '. -1-1.44-' 1 Sv' if M 3 e'.:f.1. Q-1114 --..'-'.f'-nv-j'f:.'.A 'J' ii ' ' .. ., Lp' - ' 'Plz'-' -r ' vga 3' '5 ' . ., -vf1Q.g,6, .!. M , Q .' ' . , v. -V.-1 - hw.: .. 1' r-- ' -x - ,.1 , . . , .. gr' du '31, -n.,-,g.s.5 , v -n .., ., ff if , nf- - - 1--' ---, 5 r - ' u N I - 1 'V I . . n, ' 1- , 5, Q I , Y' ' ' ' M ' o - Cf . . , my ' ' - - ' f -- , ' v ' ' v - .A H .. 4 V 4 5 . .0- .l' - n . .- .- - 3 ' I, Mr. Corbin, Bucknall, Garvey, R. Crowley, Brinckerhotf, l.. Hall, Maker CCaptainD, Everett, Murray, Wunder, Jarvis, Sautter, Evans, Harry Lewis. l.ittWitz, Berringer, Nvoodwell, Harvey, Davis, Gillespie, Overfield, Kapff, XV. Miller, jayes, VVolf, Keller, Thomas, Young. Singer, Jolkovski, W'ilson, Cook, Hoeck, Monasterio, Ferraz, Langdon, Steinmuller, Dowling, T. Maker. SECOND SQUAD 1945 RECORD Salisbury 34 Salisbury 25 Salisbury I9 Salisbury 25 Salisbury o IO3 THIHIJ SUUAD .-Xusnit, Fax, McKinney, Nordlinger, Priest, Bartlett, Peacock, Townley, YV. Knox, Kenney. Watts, Dean, jackson, F. Miller, Raizen Clawson, Tuttle, Van Deusen. J. Bates, libbets, Kronholm tCrzpmi11D Hurt, Van Beever. 7 3 Millbrook O South Kent o Gunnery 26 Hotchkiss Club Team 7 Canterbury 13 46 Salisbury 13 Salisbury 6 Salisbury I3 Salisbury o 33 T945 R11coRD Millbrook 1 South Kent South Kent 11 Canterbury 2. 44 5 Sautter, Bradford, Mr. Mclinery QCOIZCIID l'ver1tt BI'CClxl!1I'lLl5C Smith, Poole lCfzptainl, Nowakoski Sules Holden, Harvey, jolkovski, Berringer l err ll VARSITY IHASHETBALL V.-X RS ITY BAS KE'I'B.-XI ,l, R HCOR D Salisbury 35 Salisbury 37 Salisbury 34 Salisbury IO Salisbury 26 Salisbury 38 Salisbury 32 Salisbury 29 251 I ,r1'l l'Ii RM RN Mr. Mclafnery lforzrlzj Braclforcl, Smith, Poole, Nowakoski, Sayles Schiffenhaus, Holden Millbrook Greer Lenox Gunnery VVooster Berkshire Westminster Kent BASKETBALL The varsity basketball team this year once more started almost from scratch. It was handicapped by the loss of three men out of last year's first five. Mr. McEnery, however, worked hard to produce a winning quintet. He achieved his goal although the team could not score victories against the strong opposition in the latter half of the season. Captain Roger Poole led the team through a season which saw Salis- bury win three out of its eight engagements. The record belies the team's calibre, however, for slight injuries kept key players out of some of the games. VVard Smith and Pete Nowakoski held down the guard positions very capably during the season. Knox Sayles turned in a good job at center. He frequently led in the scoring column and also played a fine defensive game. Anton Schiffenhaus filled in at the forward spot with Rodge Poole. Bill Holden and VValter Bradford made up our reserve strength, and both did very well, Holden beginning some of the games at the end of the season. All seven boys won their letters. Poole will be the only loss by graduation, so the prospects for next year look very good. In the light of the record made by the Midget squad the prospects for coming years are bright. The Midgets won five games and suffered no defeats. The team was composed of boys in the Lower School and some of them may move up to the varsity next year or the year after. Bob Burt led this team as captain. Frank Clawson, Norman Keller, Frank Miller, and Ralph Overfield made up the rest of this powerful little team. The Midgets, on a percentage basis, made the best athletic record of the year of any team on the Hill. MIDGET BASKETBALI. RECORD Salisbury I9 Hotchkiss I7 Salisbury 40 Salisbury Central io Salisbury :zo Hotchkiss I9 Salisbury 24 Berkshire 22 Salisbury Z2 Kent I5 I 5 N 33 2 minimis Watts, Dean, Evans, W. Miller, Raizen Keller, F. Miller, Burt CC'apminD, Clawson, Overfield l,l+l'I I'l'1RlN1l-ZN Sage, Beavers, Kapff Maker, Burnham, H ale. VVhite, Davis, Mallet. Cook, Thomas, l,. Hall, Brinckerhorli, Taferner, XY. Maker T. Knox, Mallet, XYhite, Burnham fcflpfllflll, Sage, Maker H. Frost. T. Maker, Kapff, Davis, Hale, Beavers, Qlibfmlfz Mr. Mulligan, Crmclzj. H ll U I4 E Y HOCKEY NAM iuaeolm Salisbury 2 Berkshire Salisbury 4 Gunnery Salisbury I South Kent Salisbury O Canterbury Salisbury 4 l.enox Salisbury 3 XVestrninster Salisbury 2 Kent 16 Poole, F. Hall, Kapff, Bradford, Mr. Myers. VV. Maker, Maker, T. Knox, E. Frost, Nowakoski. T. Maker, Breckinridge, White, Schiffenhaus. Sahsbury Sahsbury Sahsbury Sahsbury Sahsbury Sahsbury Sahsbury Sahsbury Sahsbury Sahsbury VARSITY BASEBALL 3 Lenox 2 o Canterbury 1 5 Westminster I5 Wooster Ccancelledj 4 Berkshire 0 6 Pomfret 4 8 Gunnery 2 7 Berkshire I 1 8 Millbrook 3 2 South Kent I jolkovski, Harvey, Jarvis, l.. Hall, Brinckerhoff Bradford, Sautter, Mr. Corbin. W. Miller, F. Miller, liveritt, Clawson, Overfield I-Ioeck, Burt, Raizen, Kronholm, Keller. SEUUNU SUUAD BASEBALL Sabsbury Sabsbury Sabsbury SaBsbury SaBsbury Sabsbury Sabsbury Sabsbury Sabsbury THIBIJ SUUAIJ BASEBALL Salisbury I2 Salisbury IO Salisbury 6 Salisbury Salisbury 9 Salisbury Central 20 lN'lCTernan 5 Salisbury Central IO Canterbury Crainj Millbrook 7 Nlr. Mclinery, XV. Knox, XVoods, Everett, Holt, Peacock Monasterio, Beaird, Dean, Watts, l-l. Frost. Van Beever, l,ittwitZ, Thomas, Wlilson. 'Q' 2 South Kent 7 Gunnery 5 Kent 20 Millbrook 6 Canterbury 6 South Kent 8 Gunnery 7 Kent 4 Canterbury Chase, Sayles, Poel, Beavers. Hale, Davenport, Davis Garvey McKinney CCOxsWainD. Ebbets CCOXswainj Cdbsenlz Mr. VValker, Coaflz, and Mr. Herrick, zlssismnf to Coazfhj. CREW FIRST BOAT SECOND BOAT Salisbury South Kent Salisbury South Kent Time.-3' 12 Time.-3' 26 Time:3'31 Time:3' 22 Salisbury South Kent Salisbury SOuth Kent Time.-3' 09 Time.-3' 13 Time.-3' 15 Time.-3' 16 Salisbury A Yale Four Time: Salisbury 2' 55 tam' heafj Pomfret Salisbury Pomfret Winning Timcwj' 08 lVinning Time.-3' I0 THIRD BOAT Salisbury Pomfret Winning Time.-3' 25' TENNIS GROUP Ausnit, Wlunder, lVIurray, R. Crowley, Nordlinger, Mr. Tappert. Townley, Singer, Jackson, Mclfadin, Young, Bartlett. I 5.1 S. f 5 if ,lf .4 gh if 4 1 '. qw'4Uigff:x Hx w git 5 X wi QQ A x K f' X , M .s J M 2 f . I' 1 ' .,4 Q .5 FQ.. , 2 ,I I L A R 9. ll pw ,f 1-'Ns , an 48 .fi FPJJM THE LUG BUUH Feb. Q. The Parents arrived today to begin our annual Parents' Week- end celebration. For two days our halls and corridors bulged with the presence of the visitors. XVe kept them busy with a variety of athletic con- tests, a musical revue in the study hall Saturday night, and a public speaking program Sunday evening. Monday morning most of our guests departed, and by dinner time the school returned to normal once more. Everyone had a touch of homesickness, and we were all counting the days until vaca- tion. Feb. 12. Dick Gillespie started OH' on the wrong foot today. Mr. Tappert, seeing him sleeping on the library couch, remarked, Gillespie, you've been taking too many liberties! l didn't know we subscribed to that magazine, mumbled Richard. Feb. 14. Parting is such sweet sorrownef Bill Murray, trying to comb his hair. Feb. 17. Bill laibbets came back from a week-end today proudly display- ing a patch of yellow hair contrasting scmewhat noticeably with his usual black mop. lt looks to us as if he decided to dye his hair, and then changed his mind after seeing the first results. Bill claimed it will come out. lYe're waiting. Feb. 21. The ski-tow under the direction of l-larry Lewis and Tiny 53 Bates made its debut today. After a few false starts it began to run with amazing speed. The ride up was so fast that the skiers went downhill only for relaxation. Feb. 23. The following gem was heard in Mr. Mclineryls math III class. Mr. McEnery: Van Beever, what's a speculator? Van Beever: Qwith innocent expressionb A bystander, sir. Feb. 25. It looks as if the lightbulb king finally came into his own when Noisy Dicku Crowley suggested he wear a shade to keep in the brilliance of his remarks. Feb. 28. George Durham has introduced a new game to the Middle Dorm inmates. It's called Son of a Gun , and it takes only one hand to find out why. Tell us, George, where do you learn thesefarcimzling games? Marfh 2. The Middle Dorm is startled bylong shouts of C-R-O-W- L-E-YI Could it be there are wolves on that floor? March 3. VVith vacation on the near horizon Stareling,' Thomas re- fuses to have his shaggy locks shorn by Chet, and he was heard to say, as he pushed the hair out of his eyes and mouth, that he may let it go over vacation. All we can say is, Don't stick your head out the window, Sterling, or you'll be shot for a bear. March 5. Rumors have it that Zug Sage plans to return to Mars by way of the moon this vacation. We won't be surprised if King Zug and his rocket-ship dissolves in the stratosphere, and Sage fails to return with us on the 26th of March. March 9. Vacation is here, and we all push off for a long-awaited and extended two weeks of freedom. March 26. Holidays are over, and Mr. Tappert and Mr. Thomas are singing the praises of New Orleans. Many cynics are wondering if the two traveled in Mr. Thomas' car, and, if so, who pushed. It's a long way from Salisbury to New Orleans, isn't it, Mr. Tappert? Marflz 27. It was fashionable to go south this vacation, and from the coffee and cream complexions of Steinmuller and Littwitz one would gather that Florida has a couple of extra suns working overtime, or do you get that tan from a bottle? Marcb30. Er VVatts set a new record for waiting Cthe table varietyj today. Tuesday evening at Mr. Mulligan's table he was appointed to do the honors. The next day, despite loud but unsuccessful arguing, he waited again at Mr. Thomas' table. On the following day a sad and dejected Erwin was seen carrying a tray from Mr. Walker's table. We agree, Erwin, there's no justice. March 29. Today, at the German table, Bill Ebbets decided that Latin should be spoken as a diversion. During a lull in the dining-room con- versation Ebbets' voice was heard to boom, Numquid tibi molestum erit dare mihi plus casei, O Tappert, beate magister? Marrb 31. Crew got off to a good start this year. When the first group took out one of the new shells, someone was heard to exclaim, Look, fellows, no leaks! 54 xlpri! 1. Play rehearsals for the Spring Term have begun. Mr. Herrick and Mr. Thomas have been trying desperately to find people who can sing for the new play, which contains a great many new songs. The situation seemed solved, however, for it appeared that Jarvis consented to sing all the parts. Come on, fellows, what's the matter? A'pri!j. Mr. Herrick must know a new and highly entertaining method of teaching the rudiments of l,ating at any rate his prize scholar, Chub Tuttle, found today's class so enjoyable that he burst into hearty laughter. ln a few moments the whole classroom was in hysteria. Chub was sent out to cool off, and Mr. Herrick tried to resume conjugations and declen- sions. A smile broadened on his face, then it grew to a chuckle, and finally Mr. Herrick led his class into another round of laughter, and pandemonium reigned for the next seven minutes. Mr. Herrick finally regained his equilibrium and order, and Chub was reinstated. April 4. It seemed that spring was finally here and, to be sure, signs of spring fever were already in evidence around the campus. Sarum mem- bers, all but one, were heard to mutter dire threats when they woke up to- day and found about an inch and a half of snow on the ground. The ex- ception, it seems, was jack Maker, who was heard to mumble, We'll get that hockey game with Millbrook yet. April 5. We're still waiting for Ebbets' hair to grow out black again. ,iprif 6. Evans explained today that he made a slight error when he put the jeep together. He admitted that the oil cooled the engine and that the car was being lubricated with water. He said that the self-starter functioned well, and that he considered this a less important gadget anyway, since there was a crank at the wheel. xlpri! 7. Pictures were taken for Ye Sarum Books today. Wle had a little trouble with Bill VVoodwell because he giggled so much. flprilof The jeep, Salisbury's greatest joy and anxiety, set forth today for the first time this year. Mr. Walker and Mr. Herrick drove, Woodwell hung on for dear life. Suddenly Mr. Herrick slowed down to a timid 60 or so fthe speedometer registers 60 even when the car is standingb, but he had seen the mud-hole too late. The jeep ploughed, and mud splattered generously over the occupants, and our amazing little car gurgled to a stop. Finally, after enlisting the aid of several bystanders, the group were able to extricate the venerable machine and proceed to the lake. April 9. Someone recently asked Chub Tuttle how much he wanted for the outboard motor he was working on down at the lake. Oh, fifty dollars, Chub replied. You only wanted twenty yesterdayf' Yes, said Chub innocently, but this one's my engine. April 10. Mr. Myers had visions of a great Salisbury double play this afternoon on the diamond: Maker to Maker to Maker. . April 11. Roge Poole got a big mail today. Roger! April 12. Numerous questions are being asked about the activities of the track squad. Every afternoon they disappear into the woods. We are still anxiously waiting for their first public appearance. April 13. Jack Cof all tradesj Priestman was kept busy recently by an erratic victrola. Gillespie and Jarvis had borrowed Lew Hall's Vic , but it wouldn't work because of a faulty plug. Gillespie determinedly took matters into his own hands and repaired the plug. As soon as the vic was turned on, sparks flew from the general vicinity of the socket, and the turn- table remained immobile. Dick tried the lights-not a glimmer. Jack Priestman was immediately summoned, and in a few moments the lights were working again. Late the next afternoon the unsuspecting Mr. Jarvis plugged in the guilty plug with similar results. Jack once more saved the third floor from an evening of darkness. On the next day Lew Hall was seen carrying his vic in the direction of Jack's workshop for a badly-needed overhauling. April 14. Bear Thomas is at it again. April 15. Everyone down at the lake is wondering if Captain McEnery is going to take charge of one of the shells. Remembering last year's experience the Sarum volunteers have threatened revolt if Mr. Mac proposes any more short cruises on the lake. Could it be that they don't think he can swim? April 16. When the bells rang at Io:3o this evening for fire drill, Noel Crowley got up and dressed leisurely, the while studying his Latin assignment. He noticed the hurry and bustle about him, and thought he had overslept. Wally Fax thought the drill was almost as much fun as a school meeting. Olaf Ferraz now knows how boys look when they walk in their sleep. April 17. Ralph Overfield made a little more progress in his modern version of Caesar's 'lincidentn in Gaul. Rumor has it that Esquire will publish his work. Hunt Frost is collaborating with him. Ralph has more Gaul than Caesar. April 18. Mr. Herrick has become quite famous for his driving skill. Bets are still going around school on how many trips the jeep's going to make to the lake. It is getting so bad that even Knox Sayles refuses to run down to the lake, for at the slightest sound of a car everyone quickly 3 and we mean quickly - takes to the woods. It would probably help a lot if Evans would put a muffler on the old thing, for at the moment it sounds like a dive bomber, and we don't think anyone would be too surprised if it took off. 56 April 19. Wally Fax looked into a geometry book and dreaded the day when he would get involved in hexagoganal figures. April 21. Bartlett and Young returned to school on schedule. To do so, they admitted, they were forced to use the New York Central. They hate to give out good money to a rival company. April 21. Some fellows were getting ready for the Anniversary Day track events this afternoon. The high jumpers and the pole vaulters were striving to clear the same bar. Either the high jumpers were awfully good, OI' ,....... April 22. Frank Clawson went out this evening to catch some night crawlers for tomorrow's fishing expedition. The worms resisted his efforts with the aid of a certain Chinaman who, Frank claimed, tenaciously held on to the far end of the worms. April 23. Don Heath's famous demonstration of the best technique in shower singing has at last been written down for the general public. He intends to name it The Secret Life of Donald Heath , and he expects to publish soon. April 23. Herb jayes in a recent history class ventured to ask what a person who handles a rifle was called. Before the baflled Mr. Firuski could answer, Herb twinkled brightly and said, Oh, l guess l mean a rifler. l guess you do, Herb. You know this American language is a great thing. April 25. The airplane Club has a first-rate workshop and has been busy with large gasoline-powered motors. Their airplanes make more din than a bomber. We expect to find a wind-sock near the Myers hangar any day now. So far only one crash has been reported. There is stillfa divot on the athletic field, Bill Miller. April 26. Hr VVatts, the third squad's chatter-box at the keystone sack was observed and timed this afternoon. For two hours he lent en- couragement to his teammates without a stope and without repeating him- self once. Great ex tempore oratory, we call it. 1. A H . 4. fr N . 1 f fw,,,w 1 J X. gg x, f I ,f x X . 'v - Q K , 4 U 8 Nfl, 'F 1431. ' ...nl LITERARY The Seasons Peter Mallet, Form VI ' FALL :FALL to some means many things. To me The dying leaves are symbols of forgotten days, Of things gone past and ne'er again to be, Of summer storms and early morning haze That films the dawn and drips from all the eaves. But now the green has turned to brown and red, And sighing in the autumn sky the breeze Is reaping death. The leaves, once live, are dead. As if an angry God had spattered blobs Of paint in reckless haste and hurried from The scene, the leaves float down, the garish daubs L Of yellow, red, and ocher mix. Then come The cold winds from the north, and at the last No leaf is left. The night is falling fast. WINTER Have you heard the rustle of the leaves, That skid and scrape upon the crusty snow, Or seen them drifting slowly from the trees Like aimless men who know not where to go, Blown to any place the winds may choose To send the ghosts of leaves - or aimless men? I have. Or have you seen the trees that lose Their leaves and naked stand when once again The wind sweeps ice and snow, and Death comes flitting O'er the drifts? I have. The barren trees Point crooked fingers of reproach, but lifting Hoary arms of wood can not appease An angry sky that, filled with sullen hate, Can laugh at leaf, and man, and even Fate. SPRING Spring brings forth so many things ofjoy Q That even God must stop to count His gifts And pause to gaze like some small boy As honeyed treasure in his hand he lifts. But if God chose the gift that He likes best, I know He'd pick the tiny leaves of spring, The messengers that herald all the rest Of life the womb of Mother Nature brings. The little buds in long drab months between The barren wastes and days of sun and heat Are royal princes dressed in suits of green Who wait to mount the throne of life, the seat Where prostrate man is Nature's lowly slave To carry bondage with him to the grave. SUMMER A thick, lush roof of dancing summer green Cuts off the sky above my head and I, While walking down this forest lane, have seen The hand of God at work and wondered why So small a thing as man should rule supreme Upon this world. For here, on every side, Are miracles beyond the wildest dream Of mortal soul, like bright green leaves that hide The ugly naked limbs of trees and cloak Them in their caps of summer hue. Yet though The world and all its leaves are ours, the joke Of life, the jest of time, where'er men go, Will take its toll of deathg for men may come, And men may go, but God has just begun. The Awakeners Louis D. Sage, Form VI THERE was thunder in the night sky, and the wind was crashing through the black trees. It howled and wept and plucked with its fingers at the shingled roof. The windows shook in their easements. It was black outside, and the black absorbed the white painted houses on the hillsides, leaving no mark, they had simply ceased to exist for my eyes. I was sitting before the large window of my study watching the night. The lights in the room were off and there was only a dull red radiance near the fireplace, and even that was slowly melting away. I must admit quite honestly that I was fascinated by such nights. The howling wind, the black, shaking trees, a faint suggestion of rain - all seemed to draw 60 out some hidden part of myself that lay dormant under ordinary conditions. To attempt to record my impression is impossible. It is like trying to paint a masterpiece with a large two-inch brush, words are inadequate and limited. Music might do it, but then I'm no musician, and I rather suspect I would find limits there, too. It is impossible. I remember I had been sitting like this for anindefinite period of time when my wife, Helen, came in and sat noiselessly beside me. I think Helen really understood meg but she was the only one. None of the others did, they were blind to everything, intent only on living from day to day. The only time that they ever did think ahead was when they were consider- ing how to keep money in the bank for their old age, and even this didn't trouble them too much. I don't mean to say that I hated them with any malice, I rather pitied them in their blindness, but at times their very pres- ence revolted and disgusted me. I think Helen recognized my revulsion and shared in some way the feelings that swept through me as I watched them talk about money, the new plays on Broadway, the last party, a thousand things that signified life to them. I used to be amused in thinking that by their fellow beings these people-Fred, Albert, Alice, and Frank, all of them- were considered to be the top stratum of modern society. I suppose they were good, at least, and quite harmless, but their worldliness was to me disgusting and insane. Helen sat for some time in silence. I could hear her quiet breathing beside me. At last she spoke in a soft voice, half to herself, half to me. Sometimes I wonder if this is really the right thing we're doing. John, could he be wrong? I knew that she had been reading Tagore again. She seemed fascinated by the spiritual qualities of the man, and perhaps she even recognized some of her own spiritual growth through his writing. John P , her voice was still quiet. Do you remember what was said in The Disciple ? Remember when the vision came upon him and he saw the high and the low with blackness in between, and the blackness was filled with frightened and confused people seeking blindly for some way out of their failure? I nodded. She shuddered and pointed to the window. I grasped her meaning and tried to comfort her. Helen, you and I are extremely sensitive people. We see and are conscious of more than the average of the human race, and it is this con- sciousness and active awareness that is in itself the blessing and curse of our existence. We must use this gift wisely, homo .sapiens is suspicious and resentfulof any break with convention, and only through guarded behavior may we attempt to live in his world. I think so far we have done quite well, no one suspects us yet. But, john, we must help them, I can't see them blunder and burn themselves when there is no reason or purpose to. Can't we do anything at all right now? I shook my head. She put her head on my shoulder and didn't speak for some time. The wind was sinking, and I dared open the window. It was cool outside, and fresh. The clouds scurried toward the distant hills leaving the stars behind them in their wake. I remember speaking then. 61 Someday man may come to realize his own selfishness and greed, Helen. We are alive for that purpose. We are the Awakeners, the thinkers, who must prepare for that coming awareness. We must lay a solid foundation for them to build on for a new and, I hope, saner world. We must point out the signs along the way and secretly prepare for man's inheritance. We can not fail, Helen, for if we do, there is nothing left. Meanwhile we can only point out the way, but cannot interferef' She sighed audibly. John, John, it seems so useless. Won't they ever understand we're trying to help them? They laugh at us and call us crazy, and sometimes I wonder if we are. How do we know that the brain alone transcends all problems? Helen, come out in the garden. We arose and stepped through the French window into the night. The air was fresh and cool, and the smell of the washed forest lingered on. The jewels of stars strung through the sky glowed with a soft fire. Helen gazed silently at the sky, and then took a deep breath. I understand, was all she said. Commuter Frank B. Hall III, Form VI I PAUSED in the whirlpool of humanity to buy an evening paper. Behind me the rasping whump of the subway turnstiles registered the night rush hour. All sorts and conditions of men and women jostled and blustered past me - short, florid men importantly chewing unlit cigars, and tired stenographers with their French heels clicking pertly on the floor. I glanced at the headlines and made my way toward the train gate-the bottle-neck of an hour glass filled with people. The public address bleated: Next train on track I9 - 5:49 train for East Williston. First stop, Bellerose. Close Your doors on track I9 - close your doors. The next train on track I9 ........ I was strained through the gate. No, madam, you want Grand Central Station. The 2oth Century leaves from Grand Central. No, ma'am, this is Penn Depot, ma'am. A sailor asked me if this train would take him to Great Neck, and I told him it wouldn't as I made my way down the stairs. He'd have to see the usher. There was already a long line for the 5:49 because the smart commuters are on hand in advance and pay no attention to the signs at the gate. The 5:49 electric squeaked by the choked platform and the doors slammed open. Train now on track I9 - 5:49 train for East Williston. First stop, Bellerose. All aboard on track 19! Train on track I7 - 5:45 for Far Rockaway .... 62 I was lucky to find a seat, and sat down next to a fireman in uni- form. At last the train got under way, setting up a cooling draft through the train. I sighed and loosened my collar, noticing with some dismay that Universal Cordage had dropped half a point. The corridors and plat- forms were crowded with swaying people, and as the metallic sound of the conductor's punch became louder, I groped for my commutation ticket. Four men who looked like tire salesmen were having a pinochle game across the aisle. They wore striped shirts, and one of them had a synthetic pearl tie stickpin. Your deal, Sammy .... Jimmie was telling me only the other day that Mabel has ulcer trouble again .... Yeh, I guess the Giants will have a pretty good club this year if Ott holds up in the hot weather. He's no chicken, y'know .,.. I yawned, and shoved a cigarette between my lips. At Floral Park there seemed to be a mass exodus, and you could breathe again. The train jolted ahead once more over the protests of the aged couplings. I was slammed back on my straw seat, and the fireman swayed in a drowsy fashion. He got out at New Hyde Park, and the shiny seat of his blue uniform looked like a zinc washboard. The electric screeched to a halt at East Williston. It had begun to rain, and I used my paper as an umbrella and ran for my parked car. On the way home I wondered if Thomas Jefferson had really had something after all. Perhaps Tomorrow Peter Mallet, Form VI THE MAN in the light gray suit crossed the street and placed his right foot on the shine box, watching the ragged boy deftly pour the brown, liquid polish on a round brush. A dime wasn't much to spend, but a good shine does more for a man's morale than a dozen shots of rye, and, besides, it was pleasant to lean against the First National Bank and watch the world go by. Lounging there with his hands in his pockets, his mind began to wander back, back over the last four years, the happiest years of his life. Four years ago he had been a freshman at Columbia and after that he had gotten high honors and been one of the most popular men in his class. The final two years he was top man in his studies, someone looked up to by the freshmen, important, sought after for parties and dances. Now he was on his own, looking for a job in the field of journalism, a college degree in his pocket and a glowing determination to take the world by the heels and make the same success inilife that he had had in college. After the shine he went to the office of one of the city's leading news- papers to ask for a job, and as he gave his name to the girl at the desk he pictured himself as the editor, and was so lost in pleasant reverie that the 63 receptionist had to repeat twice that Mr. Curtis would see him now. With a firm step he walked through the door marked Private and faced a man sitting at a huge desk covered with papers, ash trays, and a gold-plated ink set. The young man smiled, put out his hand and explained that he was applying for a job. The man at the desk sat motionless for thirty seconds ignoring the out-stretched hand, then said, I'm sorry, but we don't hire niggersf' All that day the story never changed. Some said, I'm sorry, we don't hire niggersf' Others said, If you'll come back later, and some, Per- haps tomorrow ...... Sugar A John Dowling, Jr., Form VI ROD sat in the little straight-backed chair, his clarinet across his knees. He was on a small bandstand, and at the moment he was alone. The other boys were still talking, over on the side. He wished that they'd hurry up, he felt conspicuous out here, by himself, looking through the blue smoke at the customers in front. Through the smoke the dull murmuring of the crowd came to him, and in the background he heard the sharp click of glasses at the bar. Damn, I wish those guys would hurry up, he thought to himself. He wondered if any of the people recognized him, after all, four years is a long time, especially in this game. A heavy hand on his shoulder startled him. Let's show 'em tonight, what da ya say, huh, fella? Tony Lucioni's rasp grated in his ear. He watched Tony gently fingering his battered trumpet, then he turned around. The rest of the boys had filed on the stand. Everyone was fingering his instrument. Steve Allison was lightly touching some chords at the piano. Suddenly he stopped and said, How about The World Is Waifingfor the Sunrise, boys? Mumbles of assent came from the other men. VVanna take the first solo, Rod? A couple of choruses, at least - you gotta get warmed up, you know. Rod licked his lips. Okay, Steve, I'll try, but you guys promise to pick me up on the weak spots? Of course, Rod, but you show 'emf' Steve gave the nod and the combo began to play. They brought the tempo up quickly as they swung into the theme. The first chorus seemed to vanish, and before he was prepared Rod knew the test had come. He moistened his reed and stood up. His first chorus went quickly, for it felt good, but he stuck close to the theme. Then, before he knew it, he was taking another. His eyes were shut, and he began to give out with all he had. The torrid improvisation rolled forth, and he Went right into another chorus. He could begin to feel 64 thc sweat under his collar, that hot prickly feeling. He shuddered invol- untarily,only to burst forth with renewed energy. He strayed more and more from the theme, but it was spontaneous, and he thought it was good. Then he was sure it was good, for suddenly he realized that it was quiet out front. He kept going, harder and harder, faster and faster. The notes poured forth, it seemed he felt stronger and stronger. He heard his music, shrill, clear. He felt the sweat around his eyelids and he thought, Once more, that's all, and with this he realized a final crescendo of ecstasy. A few seconds later he plopped back into his little chair. The place was silent for some seconds, and then the applause came. lt seemed to last forever. Tony leaned over. My God, kid, you played six of the most beautiful choruses l've ever heard. jesus, man, you were wonderfull Rod looked around, and all the boys were smiling at him. He felt good. I ,et's go on Tin Rozy' Blum. Once more they swung into the theme, and once more Rod got up to solo. This time he took only two choruses. They were good, but nowhere near the first. But then, he hadn't recovered yet. Tony went to town on this one, though, and when he had finished, the people let him know that they liked it in a big way. They went through the Bugle Ca!! Rag and 1,2'6'f 0ll7ldll New Baby, and, finally, intermission came. Come on, boy, lemme buy you a drink. Tony was pulling him by the arm. Ah - ah. l can't, really, Tony. Can't really? What am l talking about. The doc had said to lay off completely or he would be through. But, damn, l feel swell. Aw, what the hell, a little can't hurt me. Hey, Tony! l've changed my mind: does it still go? You bet, Rod, come on.', Straight bourbon, Al. You bet, Mis' jaxsonf' Oh, did it feel good! l gotta have another. Make it a double one this time, Al. It went in no time, but they tasted so good. He got that old throbbing in his temples and veins. just a few more. How much do l owe you, Al? 33.8o. Mis' jaxsonf' What! Yessir, four double shots and a single. He reached in his pocket and peeled off four ones and a halfdollar. So far so good, he thought. Back on the bandstand he smoked a cigarette while the other boys ambled in. Then when they were all ready to go, he balanced a freshly lit lfatima on the little railing in front of him. Feel like tryin' Sugar, Rod? You know the answer to that one, Steve. All right, give Rod the first solo on this one. The time came quickly, Rod took a last drag on his Fatima and began. After the first few bars he knew it was going to be like the first time. He went rapidly into his second chorus and really opened up, his beat increased. He changed key four times in a chorus and a half. His playing grew in- U u 65 describably feverish, inspired, exultant. Once more the sweat began to pour from him. He lost count after six choruses. He could feel that throbbing in his head. lt grew, and soon it was keeping pace with the superhuman tempo of his music. The lights began to blind him, but he couldn't shut his eyes. He felt himself growing dizzy, but he refused to stop. His exhilaration mounted as he heard his singing clarinet. The lights grew brighter and brighter until suddenly they went out -e blackness. He felt the clarinet slip from his fingers. He listened dumbly for the awful clatter, but it didn't come, just two bright flashes and a tiny shiver. ik ik Pk Pk Pk Ulf Hey, Herm, slap on Sugar. l want to hear that Rod ,Iaxson boy go to town. Look here, you guys! lt says that Rod ,laxson died last night while playing at Freddie's Place! What! Yeah, lissen, it says: njaxson collapsed while playing, and a few minutes later he died without regaining consciousness. The death was caused by a Cer- cer-cerebral hemorrhage. Jaxson had just been dismissed from the hospital that afternoon, after four years of confinement for a heart ailment. Start it, will ya, Hemi? A I'im'0 ul' Musilf Louis D. Sage, Form lf! li ST.-XRED out the window at the falling snow, watching it cover the pine boughs and hide the brown stubble of the fields. It was the first breath of the coming winter. Allan turned from the window and walked to the fireplace. He stood warming his back, his eyes watching the dancing shadows on the walls and ceiling. He glanced at his mother as she darned by the fire. Snow's early this year. The statement brought no comment and he resumed watching his shadows. The door on the side of the cluttered room facing him opened and Mary, his wife, came in. Where you been, Alg l've been tryin' to find you all over the house. Sam's gone down to the village and you'd better pick him up. l don't want him runnin' around in this snow and all. Remember what happened last year this time. Allan smiled at his wife. Always worryin' yourself about Sam, Mary. He's all right. Practic- ally a man now. He's seventeen, don't forget. ,Course you can't reallyg he won't let you. Mary smiled at her husband and then turned to the woman by the fire. Mother, you tell him to gog he's laughin' at me again. I can't do nothin' to him when he's like thatf' The old woman put down her darning and glanced at the couple. 66 Now, Allan, ain't you ashamed of yourself? But a mischievous twinkle played in her eyes. Mary took Allan's arm and started to pull him toward the door. , All right, all right, Mary, I'm goinlf' You can get me some things in the village long as you're goin' to be there. Now here's the list, and don't you lose it like Sam does all the time. l'm goin' to have to do somethin' with that boy, 'tain't natural the way he loses things. Ah now, Mary, he can't help it. Never mind, Al. You'd better hurry or he'll start back before you. Allan kissed his wife goodbye, climbed into the Ford, and started noisily for town. lt was about four by the kitchen clock when he left, and a little after five he arrived in the town of Danby with a car sweating from the snow. The bell in l risby's store jangled as Allan came in stamping his feet on the floor. , Hello there, Al: whatlll it be today? 'l.o jack. Here's the list, I think that's all. Mary didn't call, did she? No, I guess she didn't. Allan slid the list across the table to Frisby, who turned to fill the order as he hummed to himself. Seen Sam around? Nope, not since about three, that is. l-le was in here for a spell to get some soap for Mary, but I ain't seen him since. Uh. Any idea where l can find him, Jack? lfrisby turned slowly and stared thoughtfully out the store front at the falling snow. Well, you might try the Hathers' place. Sam's been seein' a lot of Carolyne lately. His eyes smiled at the thought. Mighty pretty girl, too. Alan laughed, and swore lightly under his breath. So that's where he's been goin'. l always wondered why he stayed in town so long. Mary's been worried about him, says she's feared Sam daydreams too much. Frisby checked the list again and shoved the basket across to Allan, who picked it up and carried it out to the car. lt had stopped snowing, and the sun was beginning to show. jack lfrisby stood in the doorway of his general store and called: Say, Allan, you'd better not tell Sam l told you. You know l think ..... All right, jack, l won't say nothin'. The car engine sputtered and caught, and Allan eased the car into the street. , So long, Jack! The Hathers' farm lay about a half mile out of the other end of town, just off Ridge Road. There were three daughters: Sally, Carolyne, and joan, and one older brother, Ned, who had just gotten married and settled 67 down on the farm to help his father. Mrs. llather was typical of the sec- tion. A brown-haired, lively woman who watched over her children with a strict eye and an even stricter tongue. It was she who opened the door as Allan drove up, the Ford bouncing on the frozen road. Well Allan Peterson, thought it was you by the engine. Come in! 'l'om's not in from the fields yet, but he will be shortly, l reckon. Thanks, Alice, l came for Sam. Mary's been worried about him, so I thought l'd pick him up and give him a ride home. Snow's pretty thick on the low road. I-le's in the kitchen with Carolyne. She's makin' somethin' for him, but 1 ain't disturbed them all afternoon. Been here since a little after three, I guess. A Alice led him into the house, closing the door quickly after him. Come into the parlor, Allan. l'll call Sam for you. She started for the kitchen while Allan took off his coat. Come in here, you two! Alice appeared with Sam and Carolyne both in tow. Carolyne acted a little shy, and Sam a little angry. 'I,o, Pop , he said unenthusiastically. Hello, Song hello, Carol. Haven't seen you for a long time -it almost since last August. I've been very busy. She sounded a little embarrassed, and glanced at the floor. You ought to come up and see us more often. l know Mary'd love to meet you. l've told her a lot about you. Carol blushed and Alice laughed. Now, Allan, let the children alone. You just make them uncomfort- able. WVhy donlt you stay a while till Tom comes and let Carolyne and Sam finish whatever they're doin' in the kitchen? I know Tom wants to see you about the new fence, and it won't be long. He should be here now. Allan hesitated and then agreed, and Sam and Carol went back to the kitchen. It was about half an hour later when father and son said goodbye to the Hathers. Don't forget, Al, come over tomorrow if you get time. 1 could use a little help on that fence. All right, Tom, l'll try to. Goodbye, Alice, and thanks again for the coffee. . Goodbye, Allan. Give Mary my regards, and tell her she can have some of that cloth she wanted now. Goodbye, Sam. Goodbye, Mrs. Hather, and thanks a lot. Goodbye, Carolyneg see you tomorrow. Goodbye, Sam. As they drove through Danby and then out on the main road again, Sam began to whistle softly to himself. Allan glanced at him out of the corner of his eye, and then said casually: V Carolyne's a nice girl. .Always did like blondes anyway. She's a 68 lot prettier than that Stevens girl. She sure is. I,ike her? He tried to sound disinterested. Who, Carolyne? Sam hesitated. Yes, he finally said. Allan nodded to himself, his eyes fixed on the road. Some day you're goin' to own the farm, Son, you've got to consider that. I ain't goin' to last forever, and you'll have to settle down and run things. I suppose you aim on gettin' married? Sam looked at him quickly. How'd you know. Did Carolyne tell you? No, she didn'tq you just did, though. I was only guessin', but I reckon it was a good guess. When are you plannin' to get hitched? Not till spring. She kinda wants to have it in May. You won't tell lVIa, will you? She doesn't know about it yet and I want Carol to tell her when we're all together. - I won't tell on you, Sam. I guess I can hold a secret. Thanks, Dad. A moment of silence. You see, lVIa doesn't even know I'm goin' with Carolyne, and I want her to get to know her before I tell her our plans. I3on't you think that's right? It ain't silly? No, not at all. I think that's very smart. You're goin' to have to break your mother in casual. The Ford swung into the Peterson drive and stopped by the side door. Allan picked up the basket and went inside followed by Sam, who carefully shut the door after them. Well, where have you two been, anyway? Supper's all cold and lVlother's about set to call the police. Hello, Allan. Sam, go and clean up now. Sam left them and climbed the stairs to his room. lVlary looked at Allan a moment. Where'd you find Sam, at Carolyne's? Why, uh, no. He was at l risby's getting the soap, he lied. Allan Peterson, you're a poor liar. It didn't take Sam three hours to get a couple bars of soap. Allan was defeated and he acknowledged it. You win, lVIary. Yes, hc was at Carolyne's. I sent him over to get some wire for the chicken runs. IfSam was at Carolyne's, it wasn't because of chicken fencin'. Now, Al, really, I know all about him and Carolyne. Alice and I had a long talk together t'other day. I think it would be good if Sam did marry Carol. She's a good girl and she'd make Sam a good wife. They plan to get married in lVIay. Carolyne wants it that way, I think. lVIary sighed and stared out the window. I always thought of Sam as my baby, and now I guess he isn't any 69 more. It seems sort of funny, his growing up so soon. It's sort of like a piece of music that ends before you think it's hardly started. l'm goin' to give them half the farm to work. He doesn't know it yet, but I reckon it would be kinda nice. They could stay in the other house if they want - the one on the knoll back of the orchard. Illl work on it this winter, and, Mary, don't you say a word. He doesn't know you know about him and Carolyne, so you'd better keep quiet. All right, Al, but it does seem so funny to think of Sam as practically a married man. She stopped and turned to get supper ready. Put the basket in the closet, Al, and call Sam and Mother. Supper will be ready in a minute. She started humming to herself, and Allan called the rest of the family. Deadline liUIllElIIl Frank B. Hall IH, Form VI O ONE who has never worked on a newspaper can fully appreciate the sheer, unadulterated bedlam that breaks loose in a newspaper office a few short and hectic hours before press time. This applies not only to the big metropolitan dailies, but wherever a group of people are trying to publish a newspaper on a given schedule, whether it be the New York Times or the local high school periodical. This stems from the fact that there is a great desire on the part of all editors to get the latest possible news, which transforms newspapermen into last-minute men. Let us take the case ofthe big metropolitan dailies, where this bedlam paradoxically follows a more logical pattern and is easier to trace and ex- plain. The periods of activity in a newspaper oHice follow such a regular pattern, in fact, that it would be almost possible to make an accurate graph of them. Such a graph would be thrown out ofjoint, however, whenever anything big broke , such as the Empire State crash in New York last summer. These feverish periods in the newspaper day occur at two different times, depending upon whether or not the journal is a morning or evening paper. In the case of a morning paper, the activity shows a marked in- crease as the afternoon wears on, and at about eight in the evening things are boiling right along, when the edition is to come out in the evening the busy period, conversely, is in the morning. Let us examine a typical day at the office of a big morning daily such as the New York Herald-Tribunen, where I worked as a copy boy last summer and consequently had the opportunity of observing a big newspaper operate during an extremely eventful period. The editorial ofiices during the morning hours, particularly when one first arrives, are the picture of drowziness. The edition has hit the streetsu, and the ofifice resembles in its quiet a battlefield after all the cannonading has suddenly halted. The dozens of typewriters are strangely muted, and the office throne, the city 70 desk, with its battery of phones silent, sprawls in the center of the floor like a sleeping dynamo. The office is dark and a little warm, so you switch on some lights and a fan or two as you head for the desk. During the course of the morning the clerical staff is busily on the job, with the copy boys and girls performing a few routine jobs. The reporters do not begin arriving as a rule until about one o'clockg then they receive their assignments, if they do not already have them, and spend the rest of the afternoon on them. The city desk is now filled, and it will be a busy place for the rest of the day as it becomes increasingly choked with copy, incoming calls, and the myriad minor situations which arise during the course of the day at the office. If one watches the city desk during the course of a typical day, it is not hard to appreciate the few gray hairs on the city editor's head. The harassed city editor must cope with reporters, organizations, complaints, queries, a constant stream of copy, assignments, corrections, and occasional blunders on the part of his reporters, and must buck frequent lack of co- operation and incompetence of others. lt is no wonder that his voice is sometimes more of a bellow, and at times he replaces his telephone receiver on the hook with a startling firmness. When something big breaks, the oHice is a beehive of activity irre- spective ofthe time ofday, and this became evident to me when the medium bomber ploughed into the Empire State Building last summer. lt would be hard to imagine hotter copy for a New York paper, unless a group of Martian paratroopers should land on the skating rink at Rockefeller Plaza. I am speaking of local happenings now, which are the primary concern of the city room. Of course, such world-shaking events as the atomic bomb and the end of the war caused a much greater stir in the office and on the front page, but these could hardly be classified as local happenings, and, as I have said, the main job of the city room is to handle local news. By this we mean murders, accidents, meetings, speeches, and other events which concern and take place in the vicinity of the city in which the paper is published. When the Empire disaster occurred last summer, it was no time at all before at least a dozen reporters and photographers were on the job, working on various angles of the story. One or two reporters get eyewitness accounts from the nearby buildings, another tries to find out what the Plane was doing there and where it was headed, including the crew members' identities, someone else gets hold of a Sea Scout, or someone who may have made ten trips up the stairs with Unguentine tubes for the injured, and gets his version of what happened, still another finds out exactly who was injured in what ofiices and the estimated damage, and so on, far into the night. Back at the ofiices several huge enlargement photos of the stricken edifice are sprawled out on a desk for examination. Phones -iangle and the St21CCat0 drone of typewriters hammer out their particular angles , and toward late afternoon the copy begins to run in earnest. lfor an event like V-J Day the paper will prepare certain feature stories in advance, such as, for instance, the history of the japanese rise to power. Such an article would have reader interest at the time of the collapse, and it is easy to see that such a story could be prepared beforehand. Then, as 71 things build up to a climax and the great presses begin to rumble in the bowels of the building, the scene becomes one of chattering typewriters, scurrying figures, nagging telephones, barked commands, and mumbled curses. Everything builds up to a sort of wild jamboree of action swirling around the city desk, with its four busy men chewing on four husky cigars. The horseshoe-shaped copy desk, or rim, where headlines are written and copy corrected, is crowded with men industriously brandishing their well- sharpened pencils. Thus have I tried to give you a brief, although incomplete, picture of deadline bedlam in a newspaper oH'ice. There are dull days by com- parison, to be sure, but there is hardly a day that does not bring its quota of happenings. And after all, when the quiet days come along, it's all right, for otherwise how else could we recognize and appreciate the exciting ones? And I for one am convinced that not even the arrival of a presumably flawless and placid Utopian civilization would detract from the interest of our newspapers, as long as there are enough devoted newshounds around to carry on the tradition of competent coverage versus cheap sensationalism. American journalism is redeemed by the papers which run all the news that's fit to print rather than describing themselves as fit to print all the news. - l' n 0 in Peter Mallet, Form VI DF,ATH, you came slipping through the trees Rustling leaves and whispering my Name, and I just sat there watching Your twitching skirts turn the Brown earth black and the day To night. Death, you called me and still I would not come for fear that There was yet some hope. You laughed, And the trees between us seemed To fade away one by one until Your lips upon my cheek were cold, and I felt the chill, but I didn't want To go. You smiled and shook your Head, Death, and I knew that Hope was gone with day, and ere the sun Should rise that I'd be far away. 72 The Iliumunil Huisvslme Millard H. C. Davis, Form IV I WONDER if it was my fancy the other night When leaning from a door I saw a Winged horse, a sparkling stallion, flitting O'er that plain called Milky Way, leaving Stars that twinkled in his wake. What delicate shoes could have spawned these sparks But those of the lightest of diamond-shod feet? I wonder if it would be good luck To hurl one of these over my shoulder? That would be a task, I warrant you Yet so light a shoe, a diamond horseshoe. I Saw A Lulu Millard H. C. Davis, Form ll' I SAW a life in one night's dreamg lt flickered lightly and blossomed into flame. The slightest gust of wind was enough 'l'o bend this Hame, first one way, then the other. l reached out my hand to shield it, But was burned by its tongue. lts strength increased and soon Was stirring the very air about it. A few creatures flew into its Kindled flame and died an unmourned death. l saw a life one night - - --it was my own. lusl Think, Dilfllllil Michael tl. Garvey, jr., and Frederick G. llarvis, Ill, Form ll' ik H4 Pk ik Dramatis Personae BARBARA RloHARnsoN S'rANl.m' RICHARDSON, her husband l'Hll.il' RICHARDSON, brother of Stanley :lf Bk Pk wk Thr .vrenr ix ilu' living room Qf a large .vuburbrziz lzouxr on flu' oul.fkirl.f QI! Nfw York City. There ix an ow'r.rized .fqfrz in Ihr middle of the .vlagqlfrzriizg Ilia' llIlIfi6'716'f'. ll f.fAffIl71kt If by Iwo roiimln lflbffi. .rl ivflilfllg' lrzbfr ix 10 flu' 73 spectators' left, a sideboard and clock to the right. A coffee tablc is in front W' the couch. Part Q' a two-way dictaphone is built into the wall afew inches to the lcyft cy' the couch. dfull-size portrait of BARBARA RICHARDSON is visible on the wall. The entrance to the library is on the left. drmchairs and lamps are placed about the room in excellent taste. As the curtain rises STANLEY RICHARDSON, dressed for the street, is crossing the stage from right to left. He pauses for a moment to .straighten some magazines on the cojee table. A telephone rings vibrantlv from of- stage left lthe libraryl. He goes to answer it, and soon the sound of the lifting of a receiver is heard, and S. R.'s voice booms: STANLEY. Hellol. . .Speaking . .Oh, hello, Ray! l-low are you? The golf engagement isn't off, is it? .... No, l haven't looked at it yet. ls there anything wrong? .... l can check it for you, live got it right here, Ray. ll'ause.l May 3, 255 dollars, May 7, 122, lVlay II, 422. Got that? .... 20,000 dollars! My God! 'I'here's your mistakeg l've never drawn out 20,000 dollars in my life! .... Barbara? Are you sure of that? .... OK. Then there's one other item. lSlowly.l,lVIay 23, 277 dollars and 55 cents. lTo himsehf, hahf aloud.1 Huh! 20,000 bucks! .... Mloudl Nothing, Ray. No, the account seems to check .... No, no trouble at all, Ray. See you Sunday. lHe puts the receiver back on the hook, reenters the living room, and stares at his wnfels portrait.I Now what in hell did you want 20,000 dollars for? lHe stands pensivelv for afew moments. The voices of BARBARA and PHILIP are heard laughing of stage, right.I Oh, l see! lHe turns guiclely to the desle and opens the top drawer, takes out a small revolver and puts it into his pocket. He hesitates a moment. Footsteps are heard approaching the room. Suddenly he turns to the wall switch ofthe two-way dictaphone, snaps it on, and leaves hurriedly, left. BARBARA enters,followed by PHILIP. They seat themselves on the left side ofthe couch. There is silence-for a moment as they gaze af each ofher.l BARBARA. just think, Darlingg at 8:15 he'll be dead. VVe'll be free to start our new life together. l'll be so damn glad to get rid of him! IPHILIP rises and goes to the sideboard, takes out two glasses, some ice, a pitcher of water, and a liquor bottle. He places them on a tray, carries them to the cofee table, and proceeds to mix highballs.1 PHILIP. Here, take this and relax. We've got a tough twenty min- utes ahead of us. BARBARA. l'm afraid, Philip. lHer voice is low and tense.l PHILIP. lWith assumed calm.l VVhat's there to be afraid of? Harry's got his orders straight. BARBARA. lWith strained emotion.l I don't know if i-t's right to kill him, Philip. Couldn't there have been some other way? PHII.IP. He's got to die, hasnlt he? BARBARA. Does he have to sit there in his car Waiting to he crushed to death? 74 Pi-m.u'. IBlanrllVv.I He'll never know what hit him. BARBARA. But we will! PHILIP. What's the matter? Your conscience bothering you? BARBARA. I'll be all right in a couple of minutes. Here, give me another drink. IThere is a pause.l Philip, are you sure that there was no way that he could have found out? PHILIP. l'm positive we're safe. After all, l've planned this thing two weeks in advance so that it would coincide with his directors' meeting. lt was the only concrete thing we had to go on. BARBARA. Yes, we've been lucky. Hooking ar the rlork.I But, how long do you think our luck is going to last? PHILIP. lf it lasts for ten minutes longer, l'll be a million dollars richer, and you'll have a new husband. lPause.l BARBARA. Just what did you ask Harry to do? PHILIP. The chauffeur wasn't hard to get out of the way. Harry must be near the railroad intersection now. I told him to stop and ask Stan what time it is. While he's finding out, Harry'll knock him out. He's supposed to wait till he hears the train coming, drive the car onto the tracks, and start back. The trainfs going through at 8:15. BARBARA. VVhy do we have to kill him? PHILIP. lf you don't know, who does? He was your husband. You lived with him, not me. He was my brother, but I stayed as far away from him as l could. BARBARA. You only saw him when you needed. money. lPause.I That's the only attraction he had for me, too. Then, after the accident, l wondered if it was worth it. It was even more horrible because only half his face was burnedg the other half remained as it was. lf I had loved him, l think l would have been able to endure it. He made it worse by staying in here day after day. I was never free from him. Even his business. lSpilefully.I livery morning when I came down to breakfast, here he was, lying on his couch, talking into his beloved dictaphone. Then, sometimes he'd sit there and play it back to himself - probably just to hear his own voice. lSairl as though she dirln't care whether he would die or not. Ahrupllv she fhanges the suhjeel.l Philip, promise me you won't gamble after we're married. We could have avoided this whole mess if you hadn't lost that 2o,ooo. PHILIP. Barbara, are you sure he doesn't know about it? ls there any way he could have found out? BARBARA. No, he never goes over his bank account till late Friday night. That's why we couldn't let him come back. lfls her last word is spoken, the chimes of Ihe eloek slarl fo sfrike the quarter hour. The two remain motionless ana' lense. As the las! nole of lhe flock dies away, she throws her arms around him, as fhe lension snaps. ll'hile lhey still emhraee, the silence is hroken hy:l just think, Darling, at 8:15 he'll be dead. We'll be free to start our new life together. l'll be so damn glad to get rid of him ....,. ICURTAINI 75 Llnknuwn Horn James H. Bates, Form IV WHO is the hero resting there Within that marble tomb? VVhat were his wishes and his thoughts When he was living yet? ln God did he believe and trust? What was his mother race? lt matters not, for who is he Beneath that marble face? The hero who is resting there Can boast no special name. His thoughts and Wishes are unknowng Only he could make them plain. He worshiped freedom and love of man And hated war and death: He faced his pain and anguish then To grant us peace and breath. F I rv Olavo A. Ferraz, Form ffl ZEDAUI, JACKSON had lived a more sheltered life in his youth than most boys, for he had been born into a wealthy family and had enjoyed all the comforts which money and fond parents could of-fer. Paul was un- spoiled by the advantages which fell to his lot. Yet his lot, as this story shows, wasn't really as enviable as one might suppose. While still a child, toddling about the nursery on uncertain legs, his quick and impulsive movements caused Nellie, the nurse, to spill scalding water upon him. The pain and horror which he felt at the time remained in his memory as the only experience of his early childhood. A scar on his arm and shoulder served as a constant reminder to the sensitive boy. Fire was the word the nurse had used at the time, and this word quickly came to symbolize all causes of pain in his little mind. Wlhen the Suburban Public School burned down in the middle of a cold winter morning in 1926, headlines screamed throughout the country a story of official neglect. Paul was then in the fifth grade. Three children had been seriously burned, one of them fatally. Paul was not one of them, but he had seen them suffer. He became hysterical at the repeated call of l+'irel and was carried from the building by a rescuer. More than ever fire now became an obsession to the boy. Nightmares disturbed his sleep for years as he relived the dreadful experience in his old school. He vividly recalled to mind the names and, worst of all, the faces of the fellow pupils who had suffered so in that disaster. ln his thoughts the horror of the fire 76' was enlarged by his vivid imagination. He was drawn to accounts of the fires that appeared in the newspapers, and in reading them he shuddered as if he were experiencing their every horror. Unlike his fellows, however, he never cared to see fire-engines or to follow them to their destinations. liven when he had grown to manhood, the sight, or even the thought, of fire disturbed his calm. While in college he often thought about his fear and tried to free himself of it by analyzing himself and by trying to persuade himself that injury by fire was highly improbable. Surely he could not be such a coward. What if others noticed that he harbored such an unreason- able and unmanly fear. But a small accident with a Bunsen burner in the college laboratory unnerved him to such a degree that he chose to drop the course rather than subject himself to the possibility of another reminder of his secret phobia. Paul jackson was pursued by the word fire to his ignominious end. When the war broke out, he was an agent in the War Department. 'l'he fact that he was entrusted with matters of great military importance helped restore some of the confidence the lack of which had disturbed him so much throughout his life. He enjoyed the special deference which certain jap- anese agents paid him. He soon realized that these agents were trying to win his favor, and when they offered him large sums of money for secret information, he yielded to their demands. It was not that he was in need of money, rather he saw here an opportunity to live dangerously, to do some- thing which might prove to him that he was not really a coward at all. Here he could play with fire and not, so he thought, get hurt. 'I'wo years later, when the American troops occupied Tokyo, Paul jackson, with some japanese ofiicials, was brought before the court of the army of occupation. He was found guilty of treason. Overwhelming evidence was brought against him also in Washington. WVith the consent of officials in Nvashington the army court in Tokyo sentenced him to the death prescribed by the army. His, life ended amid a mental turmoil as he heard, one gray morning, the word l ire! Hume For Hfilllflltl james Ben Beaird, jr., Form Ill COULD tell Susan was angry by the way she stacked the dishes in the dish pan. 'l'here's a good movie on at the Majestic, l told her. Pa can look after Diana if you'd like to go. She snapped at me, You know I don't like to leave Diana with your father, jim. He's so old he can hardly take care of himself, let alone Diana. Because I knew she was right, l got mad. 'li'or the love o' Pete, Susan, what could happen? The whole darned apartment house is full ofpeople. . One can never tell, she answered darkly. e l watched her shake soap flakes into the pan and begin swishing the soap about. She didn't look in my direction when she said, The Dowds are getting their new piano today. '77 I knew what was bothering her. I had a good, steady job, but my salary hardly ran to pianos, and Susan had set her heart on one for Diana. Mothers are like that. IVIaybe sometime, Susan, I began placatingly. She turned on me. You know we could have one now if you weren't such a weak sister, Jim. The rent we could get for your father's room would take care of the monthly installments. Now, Susan, I began, but she was ahead of me. I suppose you haven't said a word to him yet. I suppose you're still dilly-dallying around . ...an old man like that! He'll set himself on fire some day with that smelly old pipe. All he's got is that pipe, I said defensively. I'm not begrudging him his pipe, but they let them smoke in the Home. Why, lVIabel's uncle Ed has been there nearly two years now, and she says they treat the folks' there swell. There are nice grounds where they can sit in the sun and, if they're sick, there's a nurse right there. It's not as though you couldn't visit your Pa and bring him tobacco, or anything he wants. He'd be happier, once he got used to it. Old folks his own age to talk to, a garden to putter in ..... She began to cry. I stared at her in dismay. I Look, quit that, I-Ioneyln I went to her and put my arm around her. You're dead right, you've been swell having Pa this long. I'll tell him 1-ight n0w.', I walked down the narrow hall into the front room. I could hear my daughter's shrill, three-year-old voice: . . .and then the nice man killed the old wolf dead - bang! - and I want to go for a walk, Gran'pa. I grinned a little and went in. Pa was sitting in his favorite chair, Diana sprawled across his lap. The room was heavy with smoke. Whewl,' I said, and went to the window and opened it. I felt awk- ward and ill at ease. Pa had been with us a year now, ever since my moth- er's death. My mother had been ill for years, and all his savings had gone for doctor and nursing bills. I-Ier death had left him homeless and stranded. He had at first tried to find odd jobs. I knew his pride was hurt by his dependence on me, but his hands, shaking with the palsy, were pretty use- less. Yet, on the other side of the picture was Susan, a good wife to me, and I loved her. I couldn't blame her for wanting things for Diana. Then why was it so hard for me to tell him? I began to fuss with the window blind, first pulling it this way, then that. Sure is a nice day,', I stammered at last. Diana stood up on Pa's lap. She patted his cheek with her little hand. I suppose that's what made it hard for me to tell him. Diana was the apple of his eye, and the baby was crazy about Grandpa. Walk, Gran'pa? she said now. All right, Baby. He looked at me then. His voice had a way of quavering a little, just as his hands shook. Anything on your mind, Son? I looked at him, hating myself for my indecision. Why - not a 78' thing, I mean, I .... Through the open window we suddenly heard a great commotion. W'hen I looked out, I saw that a big moving van had backed up to the front door. l.ooks as if the Dowds' piano has arrived, I announced Iamely. Diana scrambled down. Want to watchl Come, Gran'pa, lift Diana. Oh, look, look! Pleased at her bossiness, he did as she told him. We been hearing plenty about the piany. Want for Grandpa to take you down there, Baby? Susan glanced at me when I returned to the kitchen. I see you didn't tell him, she said bitterly. I'Oh, jim I I felt guilty and snapped at her. A man can't - I mean, it wasn't the right time. He's taking Diana down to see the Dowds' piano. But tonight I will v tonight. That's a promisef' I wandered out into the hall. Heads had popped out over the entire length of the stair railing. The piano now stood in the lower hallway. The janitor was concerned about his walls. Be careful that you don't chip the paint off, now, he fussed. I grinned in spite of myself. Come along, Susan, I called back, this is better than a circus. I could see Pa and Diana standing in a corner, IJiana's little hand was held tightly in his, and she danced up and down in happy excitement. Susan came out, her face still with a resentful expression. The fuss they makel , she murmured. The men got the piano on a platform and began to move it up slowly. It's the third floor, Mrs. Dowd yelled. I leaned on the rail and watched. Wouldn't think that thing could be so darned heavy. Diana had pulled away from I'a. You get back, IJianaI Susan called down sharply. I turned to grin at Susan and say something. Then it happened. The men came to the step, halfway up. I guess no one had thought to tell the men about that step. All of us knew it gave a little when you stepped on it, but it was safe enough if you were used to it. The front man hesitated, halfstumbled, and the piano began to move backward, gathering momentum as it went. I heard Susan give a loud, terrifying shriek, DianaI Diana stood directly below and in the path of the sliding piano. In that moment something rushed between Diana and the piano, caught the full impact of the heavy instrument, at the same time pushing Diana away so hard that she fell sprawling against the opposite wall. I rushed down the steps. There wasn't a sound anywhere. Pal I shouted. Then, in a half whisper, Pal I looked up savage- ly. Get the damned thing off him! Get it om His face was contorted as I bent close. Diana? She's all right, I whispered. But you, Pa? 79 llis eyes were shining. There was something beautiful in their depth, a calm tenderness ee and understanding. Reckon e you e won t H- need to tell me ee about the me Home now, eh, Son? Behind me l could hear Diana whimpering. A woman sobbed wildly. l looked down into my fatherls still face. No, Pa, l won't have to tell you now.'f llr Your Money Bark Philip F. Evans, Form Ill OHN B.-XRLUW had never learned to dance. He spent his evenings in his apartment reading books or listening to the radio. lt wasn't that he didn't like people, he simply, felt that he was not the gregarious sort. ln self-defense he sometimes reasoned that his bachelor existence had compen- sations for which benedicts might well envy him. Anyway, meeting people, particularly young ladies, always seemed to involve dancing. Why was his generation so taken up with this peculiar pastime? When John Barlow was promoted to the Claim Department, he found himself in a huge oHice with many stenographers and secretaries. ln time he learned to be quite fond of the young lady who typed so busily at the desk in the far corner of the room. And she, a girl whose efliciency in the office in no way detracted from her charm, was so sympathetic, so under- standing, such a good fellow. John Barlow began to entertain the hope that he might find in her the companionship which, after all, was a man's right. The compensations which a bachelor enjoyed were real enough, but ............ . By what means he might win Miss VVagnall's heart, he didn't know, but sooner or later, he knew, the matter of dancing would come up. Foreseen, forestalled: he would learn to dance! Rather than face the embarrassment ofjoining a dancing class, he decided to send for the well-advertised book, Dancing Se0'-Taught. Even before the book arrived, he spent hours listen- ing at the radio to dance bands. The music relaxed him, and he tried to get into the mood for dancing by moving up and down the floor to the tunes. You have to get into the swing of it first, he reasoned. He visualized him- self gliding across a ballroom floor with smooth movements. Before long he whirled around the room at a dizzy pace, unknowingly applying more vig- or than grace to his gyrations. ln his mind's eye it looked good, and in his mind's eye Miss Wagnall played an important part in these preliminary exercises. ' The following week the book came. It was on a Saturday, and fortun- ately, for this gave him the opportunity to devote the week-end to his book. He read the encouraging introduction with a growing zeal to get going. Finally, the practical instructions - Lesson I! Book in hand he stood in the 'middle of the floor and began: Left foot forward - - Bring up the 80 right on the diagonal lfeet together Csee illustration on this pagej. Now to the count of three ..... Why, it's quite easy! Now try it to music, remembering to count ONE, TWO, THREE! lt was hard to do it with the music, but by evening it worked quite smoothly. Weeks went by, and the book of instructions was never honored by a more ardent pupil, nor by one more systematic. One morning a month later John Barlow, complete master of Lesson I-XXX, strode into the oHice with Perfect confidence that he was now able to face the world and, what was more important, a certain Miss Wagnall. - Miss Wagnall seemed pleased when he asked her to go to dinner that evening. Throughout the day he was a happy, though ineflicient, worker. lle could hardly keep from humming the pleasant, rhythmic tunes he had heard so often during the past month. He would take her to the St. George, for here his favorite band played. lt was going to cost him a lot of money, but, he felt, the setting must be just right tonight. That evening they sat in the Blue Room of the St. George - and right near the dance floor. john was restless, for the orchestra was playing and he had not yet summoned up courage enough to suggest that they dance. He kept pointing out the marvelous decorations in the huge room. Sudden- ly Miss Wagnall said, Oh, please don't always say 'Miss Wagnall'. just call me Ruth, won't you? Shall we dance, Miss YVagnall? he almost screamed as he rose to take her arm. Miss Wagnall made no move, however. She looked at him with a pleading, embarrassed expression. I was afraid you'd .... Gosh, Mr. Barlow .... john, l've got to con- fess, l just don't dance. You see, I've never learned. She lowered her eyes and began to sob. john stared at her, half un- helieving, but indescribably happy. I'alvnl Nll'llllVlIll' Noel Chase Crowley, Form Ill I-Ili SHl.l.lNG of patent medicine has long been a practice in the United States. Early in our history peddlers made their way over the country in covered wagons to sell cure-all medicine, and frequently stopped at springs to replenish their supply. These peddlers usually put on a show, often in the form of an animal act, to attract a crowd, and then brought forth cartons of their mixture, guaranteed to cure rheumatism, neuralgia, snake-bite, indigestion, and dandruff, and sold in large, small, and medium sized bottles. The large size, of course, assured the buyer of a great saving. - 81 A few salesmen still drive around the country selling oil extracted from rattlesnakes, but most of today's patent medicine is sold through advertis- ing. Radio commercials advertising cold tablets or vitamin pills are heard at regular intervals, and almost every drug store window is plastered with triangular signs. Bus and subway signs help to promote the sale of head- ache pills, gargles, and hay-fever preventives. Unlike the early herb doctors, often called perfessors , who sold one medicine guaranteed to cure everything, the modern patent-medicine merchant has a different concoction for almost every known ailment. The companies which produce these medicines often guarantee the buyer double his money back if he is dissatisfied with the product. They admit that their products are not always capable of curing the customer, and instruct him to see his physician if his ailment persists. They also caution him to read the directions carefully, since taking too much medicine may result in serious consequences, often diagnosed as a hangover. Although the entire nation does not surfer from that low and run-down feeling , companies which produce patent medicines still do a thriving business, and in all probability will continue to do so as long as sickness, pain, or gullible people abound. ljlicllfl' lirwin H. W'atts, Form II FTER the din of battle XVhen the guns have ceased to roar And God has granted peace And crushed the thought of war, XVe'll go some place and settle Where friendship will never cease And live our lives in sunshine And everlasting peace. 812 EXCHANGES Ye .Skzrzzm Bookc acknowledges the following exchanges: Thu Dome' Berkshire School The Drzzgou St. George's School The Alhvfnarh' lfessenden School The Ponlfjfravt Pomfret School The Grolonian Groton School The Soulh K 6111 Recon! South Kent School The lfindex St. Mark's School The llfooxler Genera! Nvooster School The Day Smr Day School Ye Smp Indian Mountain School The Biyhop Brooks School The l,oomi.f Lug Loomis School The ,rlcadenze Albany Academy for Girls The Fish am! Pumpkin Albany Academy for Boys The Bllfftlflllilld f2,lllll'lL'lfV Fairfield College Preparatory School S3 WAKE ROBIN INN LAKEVILLE, CONN. TELEPHONE, LAKEVILLE 143 ROUTE 41 52 Attractive Hotel Accommodations Fine Food -- Paneiieci Tap Room OPEN ALL YEAR Casey's Garage Authorized FORD Sales and Service E Canaan, Conn. Tel. Canaan I IO ll ISTAILIIIIID illl' QZIQQMZW 'sliig-156133 Kms rishings,HzEafShuss IOC IADIIOII AVINUI CGI. FORTY-FOURTH lf. NEW YORK 81, N.Y. For Summer Sport Brooks llrothvrs' good rcputzl- lion ut the lm:-at-known Schools and Collcgos - like thcsc institu- tions IIICIIISCIVOS- luis stood thc test of many yt-urs. Good faith, good nmtcriuls, good workman- .E Q filg I 1 1'- nf 55115, li A, f ig ,5 i 'K l ii! , I L' ef I 9-.vfiv-vs ' ii. Damn ummm 1. ' ' ' mi , f I '3 .rf , Ml I QQ I MP rw 'iii 455.693 Q Q. file i t rl' Ji ' I 'Lf ' I-'Z'i fiiff?' .Q 'l.'-rx. f' I I f i ff g , S5525 if it - iii, vii ,i Iewbgf ' . kvsfqgfi 2 I I i t 'I Z :gif my 'I X l IQ gl .5 J -M X E 46 X X J if .1 as X ship :md good lzlstc nc-vcr go out of fashion BOSTON BRANCH 1,5-'fi-V M Now IN THE SECOND QUAR'FER or ook SI-:coNo CENTURY, I 81 8-1 946 NIWIUIV, CDI. IIIKILIZV STREET, IOSTON ll, MASS. AS CIVILIAN' NIIILITARY R Si-ok1'1No CJUTFITTERS AN INVITATION Is vxtvmlvd Lo the faculty :md stiidm-nts to Visit tliv Oslulm- lislimvnt to inspovt thc various rlvpzirtim-nts, including articles for pr-rsonzil uso, VV4-tlfliiigs, llirllidays, Ai1r1ivs'rszu'y und Pre-- :44-ntgntion Gifts: .Im-wvls, VVz1tc'l1vs, Clovks, Silvvr, Chinn, Glass, Stntioiwry :md Novvltivs. Al DI. -li., Eg!! Iishrlalixlmrl' 11932 1218 Clic-slnut Strom-I Philnclvlphiu 5 DESIGNERS ANI? IVIAKERS Ol? 'l'IIIi OFFICIAL EIVIBLEMS T0 'l'IIIC SALISBIIRY SCIIUOI. DALMATIANS Well bred, infeiizgem' puppies Zlflldffy afvaiiaile. Prices begin at fjgy doilars. SAR UM KENNELS CRQ-D Salisbury, Conn. Lakeville 71 Repairing Storage Gas and Oils Dufour's Garage GOOD CARS FOR HIRE Tel. 77-2 Lakeville, Conn. FOR 'l'HE GRADUATE Sport Coats Arrow and Whitney Shirts Neckwear in Fancy Shades Interwoven Socks Knox and Emerson Hats Styled for Summer Wear Hickok Belts and Jewelry Luggage of all Types JOHN A. BIANCHI CANAAN, CONN. PHONE 320 A. E. BAUMAN SCNS Lakeville, Connecticut Plzzmfzzhg and Heatlhg Tel. Lakeville 54 -- 2 HOUSATONUC Q BOCKSHOP El SALrsBURY, CQBNNECTTIKDUT Standard and Recent Publications First Editions Old and Rare Books Importations Prompf Service W. H. Brine Company Athletic OutHrtersA to Salisbury School 93 Franklin St. Boston, Mass. M017 order: will receive prompt atfenlion. SALISBURY BANK Sc TRUST COMPANY H' Lakeville, Connecticut Bolton-Smart Company Wholexale Purvayor: Q' Choife BEEF, PoRK, LAMB, VEAL, POULTRY, FISH, BU'r'1'ER, CHEESE, EGGS and RELISHES BOSTON 17-25 South Market St. Telephone LAFayette IQOO RAGANONT INN Salisbury Connecficul P VI J' Tllzphomz Lakeville 24 Mgr: nil I l Hamlet Hill Farm A Salisbury Connecticut Specializing in Supplying the Best Pasreurized Grade-A Guernsey Milk to Schools and Camps l11'w'f11fz'01z To . . . SALISBURY SCHOOL BOYS . When In Lakeville Visit Leverty's Pharmacy The City Drug Store in ffze Country Barbcring Done For Salisbury School Boys QQ Thurston's Barber Shop Lakeville, Conn. Colonial Theatre Latest una' Ben' in Fifm Efzzermbzmenf Colonial Bowling Alleys Now Open Canaan, Conn. Telephone Canaan IIS--C1 BARNETT'S STORE Member of Federated Stores of Am erica l,AKEVILl,E, CONN. HARRY'S GARAGE Lakeville, Connecticut TAXI SERVICE Shuttle Bus Line Poughkeepsie, Lakeville, Canaan Hartford Sodas - Candies - Films and Magazines 24 Hour Developing and Printing Service Salisbury Pharmacy W. SAMUEL WHITBECK, Reg. Ph., Prop. Salisbury, Connecticut White Hart Inn SALISBURY, CONNECTICUT Telephone Lakeville 440 RoU'rEs 41-44 C Fine Room Accommodations Charmingly Furnished -- up to date Dining Room Famed for its Meals Colonial Tap Room llllll OPEN ALL YEAR Community Service, Inc. Coal Paint Lumber Hardware Masons' Supplies Electrical Supplies Feed Lakeville Salisbury Sharon Falls Village West Cornwall Charles H. Garrity General Contractor ffnv Excavating and Grading fflXw Lakeville, Conn. Tel. Lakeville 211 W e Sjieciolize in Printing ' Rulin For g Schools and College: Excelsior Printing Company North Adams, Massachusetts Telephone 59 Hamzey's Garage Y COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE I P KAISER-FRAZER CARS I I V Q4 HOUR SERVICE Salisbury, Conn. Telephone Lakeville 93 - .I 1 VAN D. HARVEY PRINTING STATIONERY ENGRAVING M1LLERToN, NEW YoRK Hu go's Novelty Shop LAKEVILLE, CONN. Phone - 188 We feature Victor and Bluebird Records. also Columbia and Decca Records Salisbury Jewelry Stationery Farnam Tavern A. IJ. 1795 Lakeville, Conn. I GOOD MEALS I FINE LODGING Antiques Modern Gift Shop C0mp!z'menf.v gf ArgaIl's Barber Shop LAKEVILLI-L CONNECTICUT I ll, JL .vc Jr. i Sharon nn ' SHARON - CONN. 'ic ac 'ic BJ Sharon lnn, rt charming New England Inn, in the foothills of the Berkshires welcomes the friends and families of students of Salisbury School. Reservations maybe made by tele- phoning Sharon I44. The Lakeville Journal Lakeville, Connecticut Q U The print shop with ideas 278.1 Hemlock Inn ROOMS LUNCHHUN DINNER Open All Year O Salisbury, Conn. Tel. Lakeville 413 M. GAR RITYQ Yvalton Street Lakeville, Conn. Room ana' Breayast Tel. Lakeville T76 Compliments of Kenwood Service A' -if CLEANERS and DYERS S':'?2 GREAT IRARRINGTON - - MASS Dale Brothers Laundry I INCC JR Pl DR.-XTl'ill t , 139 Deming Street Pittsfield, Mass. JQHN E. ERICKSUN Paizzfing I lll'6'l'Z.07' Deforafizzg Lakeville, Connecticut K 5 1 i i E i 3 E ' If-' ji 1Mi.:,vsr, E A P-w w f ., -f ., -vjysxf QQ.- 3 .- - J' 1- , Q ' fu, v - fi .. ' A ' .,:f..H- fc . f-M3 Sefsnagdf. ',.- , -J 4. ' Z T3 ., 1.f,,':f :Y -Il? 'f ,L 'Wig ' .. -f .- V- K, - ?af'3i6T!!-'77f'f?f'f'H7T'a,- f- 4 -go' ' - 1 ,yf '-gf f. ' ' . fx-1 '95 -Q - lg has ' -, ':?Ef.,, -, fa, f '- -. 'X'.:Lv- -24-1 V - '. V I 5 . 4 ,L za P WK .3 13+ N ,E d -, 35 93.-ab f an 'al' 'E' 53, .L '10 ., A L AV ,qs ,, 3 ,fn wk ,Agri-Fffi. , - 5 .5 K ,Ci P , 1 H:5E5-,.-- fz, H , ' X A -'fi . P ... p 5: . , 433,59 si Q Q' wx I ' ,f',CI.l.iiiggifV 1 -.24 , 'fr 'L'-' A 'Emil . KF A 7 rw: 1 4Fu?wV I 0 J U VF -Q muff: w ,, V --5qf1.l'.,e ,W V , I ,E HW ,wx , M :sf 'kv f1,k..g . 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Suggestions in the Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) collection:

Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Salisbury High School - Pillar Yearbook (Salisbury, CT) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966


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