Shady Side Academy - Academian Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA)
- Class of 1943
Page 1 of 176
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1943 volume:
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I 22,0-J' 12 f '1 ', 93- Q ld-V. wg, 1- ..--. M ,A H.. my L Hb J M... - ' Wk - fm Y Q ' K Ygxf . wsu f+ -TQ N 'WR H . mf' ,vs ,- fm -'IQ ' UQ? Q' av- ff. . mmm ox M x - Smart-.5 -3-,:,:fS+-fv M, .V . A -fmmm ,W -Am ' Nm, - MN 'mm f w-'fxzwwf , - . :MW -'Tim -Atffffv . N-N ?g ' ....--Q .V ., . 'N , A Wm ,AN K - ggrmw -gr ,fix X ,gwm Qfgxvfw Q ' 'W mm Wim ,rim f THE ACADEMIAN IQ!-L3 SHADY SIDE ACADEMY PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA l'ulnl1'shc'cl by TIIIE CLASS OIT 1943 l51nD1.rf A. VJIIIUIIAINI Edizor-mfChief Rulilflrl' N. DANlf0R'I'lI liusinoss Manager orewor C-L96 As in the past years, the 1943 Academian is published as a permanent record of the events at Shady Side Academy. The board has com- bined all its efforts and ideas to make this book one which will recall many pleasant memories. We feel that this Academian is of particular significance in relation to the present World conditions in that many Shady Side Alumni are already in the service and a number of the members of the graduating class are about to enter some branch of the Armed Forces soon. C-LQ?-D FACULTY Gomfezzfs SIXTH FORM UNDERGRADUATE S HOUSES FEATURES ORGANIZATIONS ATHLETICS IUNIOR SCHOOL ADVERTISEMENTS e icafiozz Win I 171' KYIIISX of IU-1 5. r1'sp1'1'Il'11lli1 1l1'1I1ic'1111' Vulzum X Xixf ul, Ihr , ic'1lcf1'IHIiil!7 lu Ihi' l771'!771Jrgl of Ihr' Icllm' MR. HARRY WILBUR RICKETTS lfiir iwur lhirlcun yunrs, Mr. Rickults w.1s .1 lc.1cl1u1' uml. .incl CULIIISCIOIA of thu hwys oi' Shady Sidi' Ac.1dc111y I lmiiigh his iiiiwdcsly .md quicl sincerity. hc g.1ii11-ci 111.1111 iii1-mis whim rcspcclcd his illLigIUL'I1l and .1LilUifL'Ki his rc 1rk.1hlu 11i11l1'rs1.1i1dii1g. In his p.1ssi11g, wc h.1vc suti- iirvil .1 y1I'L'.ll loss: his 111ui11ory will livc with us, un- T? f f 5 Z 12? E70 ,fasiiriyisezw acuffy 4' isa:-.x W -SX, P: : ul .'Www,. , '41 4 l-f'FK , .BEEF 529511 f ' ' ' VV f ', 'ssfen .. , W, ., . I- ' I gg? -gr: j- ,Q 'V 'fn' Qanx . P W 7 6-fin 4 JA I, ,, I .rs N- ij G' f 1 I 1 r ,4 '.'f1 ,lf rl, ' 'li,.i-1 :! ,: .lj -U, I,-th 'I U .1 ff, 5 f Q 'MH M G1 ' ' 64: W f Q jf 4 'ff Q Mtg X I N f f 4 M ff, 1 1 cifsla 15, Mlilalalmfw. JR., A B lll.1rx'.11mI l.JINV4'I'SllYl : llmzfffmmfr 1011 Icnvnz ol .llwscmcl CI.II5'I'ON O. PAGE, A.B. Qlkuwdnin Cullcgch: MA, ilndinnn Ul1iX'0l'SilY, fhlingf HL'tHfl77lISI1'I', Appointed Scplcn1hcr. I0-il GLENN LESLIE JONES, funi- versity of Nebraskztlt A.M. lUni- versity of Pittsburghl. Appointed September. 1925. Head of English Deparlmenl, Global Geography, As- sistant Headmaster. MERLE M E R EDITH ALEXANDER. Ph.B. qllranklin and Marshall Col- legej, lJefferson Medical Collegej. Appointed September, 1918. Dean, Aeronautics, Head of Science Depart- ment. I,owEt.t. INNES, B.A. QY.1le Univer sity: M.A. lUniversity of Pitts burghl. Appointed January. 1020 English, Assistant llearlmuslvr, CLARENCE JAIVIES GEER, .lHamilton Collegel. English Emer- ltus. I Q new Q ,M XI I III Iv I I .XIII IN' IfI'Y, fi I IUHI' KIIIARI I'S II I' Y I f SIIIQIYI-R, .'X.I71 xvrxnfv HI IIIIISIIIIIKIII I ,Nplwunxmxul .Inu II r.1nIxIin ,xml INI.1rsIm.1II llwllcgvl. Ap ll.IIY IWW llw.1.lf,1 .Ilnllnvmzlnx IL' gminlui ScpIcn1Iwr, I 'I I H, .Ilnllvr Inlrlrrfwfvl nmlzlx, . -,I .' , .. rn - Im .md INI.1lsI1.1II CnIIugcI. INIJX. IUl1Ix'n'I'SIIy ut I'illsI1urgI1 I. Appoint- ULI NOX'x'I11I1L'!, I II ,I 'I . IIIIllf7I'r7Nlll4.x. IIIm'lmuuIm1L1 fk,'Xl'I,XI'Y XVII I I,XXI JXIQNUI IP I'.'XI CII-Oliklli IIYRUN NYAI IURUIX :X IS XII H ll I' I lN.1Iv I IIIYVISIIYI' ISA! Ilicmgcluwn l'nIIcgvI: .'X,INI. I In III- Cgzuk 4 I-Ilvgfc. II 5. I.Xr1mI1I CMI Iam' Univrrsllxl NM. 1II.11'x'.1r:I Ivgqrb. I I IIIIKVISIIX' ul I'1llsIwur5,I1l. LIIIIYCVSIIVI Xppuinlrd Sx'1WIx'I'llIWl .XIIIFUIIIIUKI Nvplvr11Iwl I 'I I 'I lima lm' I '7 .I I, Ilvmf ul 1.11m ami filvvlc IL' nl ,-Ilhlrlzf-. mul l'Imw1II1l l7Ilm.1llfw7. fmllmvnls, Vw'1I.13R11JCRAV1TN CRAIG. QUHI- versity ol' Rochcstcrb: tUnivcrsity 01' Munich 1. Appointcd Scptcnibcr, 1025. l rt'r7tl7 l?I77l'l'l-ILIS, 1 1 Russilti, W A R N ti R DAVIS, BS tUniversity of Michiganh. Appoint- cd Scptcmhcr. 1927. ASSl'Sl1lV7l AII7' Iwlit lim-tiwr. Sutizil Sltitfilvs, SII,I'I7t'A'. Lewis C11AR1.1fS CTi1i.ifs'i'iN. 15.8 tUnivcrsitc dc 13nris1: 131. 1Unit'vr site dc N.mcy1: Omucr t14.fXc.1dct1iic Appointed Scptcmlwix 1015, llutitl ul lfra-m'h l,Jt'17tlI'H77t'l7l. 1 fXl.I,lfN Vicfiotz I.AUis, AB, tLc' .1AM15S1IAROI.IJSAMI'1.15. AB, tY.1lc high UniVcrsity13 IXM. tI,nfnycttt,' Univcrxitylz IKM. I11.lfY.1l'L1 Univcr- Collcgcl: QCo1um11ia Univcrsity1: sityl. Appuintvd Scptcmlwtfr. 1026 11V1idd1c11ury Collcgct Appointed t1lL1fl7L'l'l7tlHL'S. .1.1nu.try. 1926. Iltfmi ol' Sptuitsh tmtl Gi-rnmn Dt-ptzrlmvnfs. f XVII I M 5-rf :lv Ii MI-Ml. IRS. tlhvcrtu . ,' minlul Sl'lYlCIlllWl', 1928 K nllryrl X111 Romflrl' Vlcimk How.xR1u. Wins- lwurglm Musical lI'lSlillllC5. Appoinlca lmlmly. Hqplcmlwr. l'7l'7. Mum um! Radio. .Io11N l'AYsoN I.ANi1, lS.S. fY.1lc Univcnsilybz 1Columlvi.x Univvrsilyhz lUnivcrsily ui A1.lI'YI.lI'lLil Appoint- ucl Scplcl11lwr. 1038. SL'It'l7lL' mul Nm'- nmtmn. X lm-U Sur IIAIUIAI-, AJS. rllnivvrr CIIARHQN P11 VSTON YORVII, A I3 sity ui I'rnnsylv.mi.lJ: 111117. 1LXl1l' tMiddlvhul'y5: 1X.M. 1fXIiddlvlmryb vcrnily ul llitlslmrglmb, .Mwpoinlrd Spqqiql l7iPlU!'lI.lSI Univcrsilc dc l.ill1 'Wph'xnlw1. 1953. l.ulm. Hun! ul lllx ,md 'l'hq Sorlmnnp, l5r.mqcA ,Xppninl 1.1111 Hwy HIIIIVIVIII, cd Svplvlulwr, IU34. Sfmnzlxly. P.-XRKI-'R Blflitl. AB. tlxhigh Univer- sityl. Appointed Scptcmlwcr. 10798. Ifntllzlwlz and Mullzttrmzlzhs. 1011 leave nli Jbscnccb. l,Awm-Ncjli Srktfm, IES. tUnix'crsity of Pcnnsylvaninli Kfarncgic Tcchlz tUnix'c1'sity of Pittslwllrglitp tCaIiiAor- nia State 'I'c.1cl1crs Collcgcb. Appoint' cd Scptcnilwr, 19-tl. Wtmtltumlzznq and Art. WI1,1,1AM Vs OOI,SIfY Y,xRpt,t2i', AB Llohns Hopkinsbz lid M. 1II.1rv.l1'dJ Appointed Scptcmbcr. IOVP. Ifr7gyl1sl7 XX'At51't-R D. Wl1.KlmN. AB. twvst- Ctmtttlss S 'tp ti W A 14 't' Mt-i,w. I5.A minsncrb, Appointed April , IUBS. flliowduin Collcgcti M.A. 1Middlt' ,'i1l7IuIr'ts, lmryl. Appointed Scplcinhcr, I9-tl lfrwlzsfy mul ll1'.slm'tf, oarri of zrusfees OFFICERS MR. E. BRUCE I-IILLL . L .- . . . . .President COL. ROBERT E. WITHERS . -- Vice-President MR. DON R. CONNER.. . . .Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Mr. M. W. Acheson. Jr. Mr. Charles B. Baton Mr. W. F. Bickel Mr. H. Vaughan Blaxter Mr. Stanley N. Brown Mr. John G. Buchanan Mr. Samuel B. Casey Mr. James C. Chaplin Mr. John O. Chesley Mr. W. St.C. Childs Hon. John P. Egan Mr. John C. Ferguson Mr. E. Bruce Hill Mr. Roy A. Hunt Mr. Artemas C. Leslie David D. Kennedy, M.D. Mr. Charles Lockhart Mr. C. E. Lott Mr. Charles L. McCune Mr. Marshall L. McCune Mr. W. L. Mellon Mr. W. A. Meyer Mr. Augustus K. Oliver Mr. Alfred C. Pollock Mr. James C. Rea Mr. Robert N. Waddell E. R. Weidlein, Sc.D., LL.D. Col. Robert E. Withers ALUMNI REPRESENTATIVES Mr. W. St.C. Childs Mr. John C. Ferguson mior DON R. CONNER.. L WALTER D. WILKISON., BELINDA LUZELL BEHE KATHRYN M. TIERNEY- Lois G. SWEITZER-. L CLARISSA I. LEAC1-L.. . EVELYN H. CROSLAND . Mr. W. A. Meyer School 16666125 ALVILDA OLIVER, R.N.L. E- Regislrar and Bursar Field Secretary ......,. L Accountant .Secretary .. Secretary . Secretary ,- Matron Health Director JOHN L. MARSHALL, M.D..- .. .... . .... Physician WILLIAM R. MARSHALL. M.D ..... ................. .... . Physician W. M. THOMPSON, JR., D.D.S ..... .... . ....... ............... , - Orthodontist JOHN A. GRAHAM.-. . .-.Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds FRANK RICHARDSON.. .- .... Assistant, Athletic Department sf Li f ? 5' X i mf M A L X 1 Y' if - ,il- '? Sixfk gorm EUGENE EDMOND AYRES llEdYY Entered Shady Side 1937 Born May 3, 1924 Evergreen Hamlet, Babcock Blvd. Pittsburgh, Pa. I cannot liue without books. 1941-1942: 'ANEWS : Blackfoot. 1942-1943: 'ANEWS : Library Gargoyle Play: Blackfoot: Tennis Squad: Cum Laude Society. CROFT HoUsE PREPARING FoR YALE I'm like a bull in a china shop. -Marryat. 1941-1942: NEWS g Mohawk: Tennis Squad. 1942-1943: 'ANEWS : Library Committee: Mohawk: Tennis Squad. DAY STUDENT PREPARING FoR THE ARMY DONALD MoRR1s BAER JKDOHH Entered Shady Side 1936 Born September 24, 1926 900 ,Webster Hall Pittsburgh, Pa. Jefferson. Committee: livery man has his fault. -Shakespeare. 1941-1942: NEWS : A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: Gargoyle Society: Mohawk: .l.V. Soccer: J.V. Baseball. 19-121943: NEWS : Gargoyle Society: Li- brary Committee: Mohawk: Varsity Soc- cer Squad: Varsity Tennis Squad. DAY STUDENT PREPARINQ I2oR THE UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH RICHARD DEXTER BAKER, JR. Rick Bake Entered Shady Side 1935 Born December 14. 1925 1221 Wightman Street Pittsburgh, Pa. CHARLES WILLIAM BAIRD Charlie Entered Shady Side 1931 Born June 23. 1925 1417 Inverness Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. I have Iiued and loved. -Schiller. 1941-1942: President, Fifth Form: Student Council: Secretary, Athletic Council: Var- sity Baseball: Varsity Basketball Squad: J.V. Football: Chairman, Fifth Form Dance Committee: Sargon Society: S.B.C. Club: Seven Arts: Mohawk. 1942-1943: President, Sixth Form: President. Student Council: President of School: President, Athletic Council: President, Sargon Society: S.B.C. Club: Co-Captain, Varsity Baseball: Varsity Basketball: Var- sity Soccer: St. Andrews Society: Forum: Mohawk Athletic Council. ELLSWORTH I-IoUsE PREPARING EOR YALE I to myself am dearer than a friend. -Shakespeare. 1941-1942: J.V. Football: Varsity Wrestling Squad: Varsity Track Squad: Co-Captain, Gun Club: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Glee Club: Mohawk, 1942-1943: Varsity S o c c e r Squad: Varsity Track S q u a d : UNEWSH: Academian Board: Glee Club: Mohawk. DAY STUDENT T PREPARING EOR YALE BURNETT GRAHAM BARTLEY, JR. Bart Entered Shady Side 1939 Born November 10, 1924 420 South Dallas Drive Pittsburgh, Pa. LEE DAVID BEATTY Baron Entered Shady Side 1937 Born June 1, 1925 1228 Bennington Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. He that sups with the Devil must have a long spoon. -English Proverb. 1941-1942: J.V. Football: Seven Arts Club: Gargoyle Society: Wrestling Squad: Track Squad: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: J.V. Football: Cast, Gargoyle Play: Gargoyle Society: Wrestling Squad: Varsity Track Squad: Blackfoot. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR CARNEGIE TECH Heads I win: tails you lose. -English Saying. lO42-1943: .l.V. Soccer: Varsity Basketball: Golf Squad. CRoi2T HOUSE PREPARING EOR DARTMOUTH ALAN Ioo BENNETT, JR. MAI!! Entered Shady Side 1941 Born May 2, 1926 R. D. No. 2 Ligonier, Pa. WILLIAM WALTER BECK Gambler Farmer Entered Shady Side 1942 Born June 17, 1925 Karns City, Pa. So many heads, so many brains. -Italian Proverb. 1941-l942: J.V. Soccer: Assistant Manager, Varsity Basketball: Assistant Manager, Varsity Track: Honor Roll: Blackfoot. 1942- 1943: Cum Laude S o c ict y 1 Varsity Wrestling, Manager, Varsity Track: J.V. Soccer: Honor Roll, Blackfoot. MOREWOOD HoUsE PREPARING EoR CARNEGIE TECH THOMAS HARTIN BOYD, II Tom Bum-about Entered Shady Side 1937 Born October 17, 1925 5700 Lynne Haven Road Pittsburgh, Pa. God is proud of those who are tall. -Talmud. 1941-1942: Varsity Soccer Squad: Varsity Tennis Squad: Section Leader, A Cap- pella Culee Club: Culee Club: Seven Arts: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer Squad: Varsity Tennis Squad: Stage Hand, Gargoyle Play: Oration Contest: Blackfoot. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR CORNELL We are dancing on a volcano. - Conte de Calvandry. 1941-1942: Mohawk: Lightweight Football: Varsity Wrestling S q u a d 1 Ciolf Squad: Cilee Club: Fifth Form Dance Committee. 1942-1943: Mohawk: .1.V. Soccer: Varsity Wrestling Squad: Varsity Golf: Vice- President, Forum: A Cappella Cilee Club: Glee Club. MOREWOOD HOUSE PREPARINCI FOR WILLIAMS WILLIAM AIKEN BRADSHAW, JR Bill Entered Shady Side 1940 Born November 11, 1924 1315 Beechwood Blvd. Pittsburgh, Pa. Cards are the Deuil's books. -English Proverb. 1941-1942: Varsity Soccer Squad: J.V. Bas- ketball: Golf Squad: Fifth Form Repre- sentative, Student Council: Cast of Gar- goyle Play: Gargoyle Society: NEWS : Library Committee: Honor Roll: Latin Prize: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer Squad: J.V. Bas- ketball: Gargoyle Society: Editor-in- Chief, NEWS : Library Committee: Honor Roll: Cum Laude: Blackfoot. DAY STUDENT ENTERED PRINCETON IN JANUARY 1943 JAMES JUNKIN BUCHANAN Jim Entered Shady Side 1937 Born March 7, 1925 Murrayhill Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. RoY FRANK BUCHMAN, JR. llROy7Y Entered Shady Side 1941 Born August 23, 1925 35 Norwich Avenue West View, Pa. Love all. trust a fetu, do wrong to none. -Shakespeare. 1941-1942: Library Committee: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Blackfoot: Latin Prize. 1942-1943: Forum: St. Andrews: Library Committee: Blackfoot: Blackfoot Council Member: Captain, J.V. Soccer: President. Morewood House: Student Council: Var- sity Tennis Squad. MOREWOOD HoUsE 1 1 PREPARING EoR YALE t N : 1 DONALD HOMER BURRY HDOHU Entered Shady Side 1940 Born November 28, 1925 3968 McClure Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. I know everything except myself. ' -Villon. 1941-1942: Varsity Football Squad: foot: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: Orchestra: Saxaphone Quartet: J.V. Base- ball. 1942-1943: Varsity Football Squad: foot: Business Manager, Musical Saxaphone Quartet: Saxaphone Chorus: Orchestra: Varsity Baseball Squad. CROET HoUsE PREPARING FOR PENN STATE Dorf! monkey with the buzz-saw. -American Proverb. 1941-1942: Varsity Football Squad: Varsity Wrestling Squad: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Varsity Football Squad: Varsity Wrestling: A Cappella Cilee Club: Cilee Club: Mohawk. CROET HoUsE PREPARING FOR PENN STATE FRANK JAMES BURRY, JR. Elder Berry Entered Shady Side 1940 Born July 12, 1924 3968 McClure Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. Black- Black- Clubs: Singers are merry and free from sorrow and care. --Luther. 1941- 1942: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: Assistant Manager, Varsity Basketball: J.V. Baseball: Mohawk. 1942- 1943: Manager, V a r s i t y Basketball: Leader, A Cappella Glee Club: Cilee Club: Varsity Soccer Squad: Varsity Tennis Squad: Mohawk. DAY STUDENT PIQIQPARING EOR PRINCETON JOHN LEADER CHISLETT ChI's Entered Shady Side 1937 Born May 26, 1925 Squaw Run Road Fox Chapel, Pa. JOSEPH Hot-IART CHIVERS Hobie Entered Shady Side 1939 Born December 16, 1925 'SO Club Drive Baldwin Township, Pa. The gods are on the side of the stronger. -Tacitus. 1941-1942: J.V. Football: Varsity Wrestling: Forum: St. Andrews: Golf Squad: Mo- hawk: Fifth Form Dance Committee. 1942-1943: Varsity Football Squad: Captain. Varsity Wrestling: Forum: St. Andrews: Vice-President, Morewood House: Varsity Golf: Sargon Society: Mohawk. MoREwooD HoUsE PREPARING FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN DONALD ANDREW COLEMAN llDOnV7 Entered Shady Side 1940 Born August 14, 1925 1727 Beechwood Blvd. Pittsburgh, Pa. Lz'fe's more 1941-1942: Squad Dance foot. 1942-1943: Squad: ident, Form: drews amusing than we thought. -Long. Varsity Basketball: Varsity 'Track St. Andrews: Forum: Fifth Form Committee: S.B.C. Club: Black- Varsity Soccer, Varsity Baseball Captain, Varsity Basketball: Pres- Croft 1-1 o u s e 3 Treasurer, Sixth Sargon Society: Forum, St. An- S.B.C. Club: Blackfoot. CROET HoUsE PREPARING EoR CORNELL As innocent as a new-laid egg. -Gilbert. 1941-1942: J.V. Soccer: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer Squadg Mohawk DAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR CARNEGIE TECH CHARLES ROBERTS Cox Bob Entered Shady Side 1941 Born June 22, 1925 141 College Avenue Beaver, Pa. Reason und judgment are Ihe qualities of a Imdi-r, -Facitus, 1041-1042: Vice-President, Fifth Form: Chairman, Orchestra Committee: Secre- tary, Blackfoot Club: Vice-President, St. Andrews Society: Forum: NEWS : S.B.C. Club: Athletic Council: Honor Roll: J.V. Football: J.V. Basketball: Golf Squad. 1042-1043: Vice-President, Sixth Form: Vice- President Of School: Managing Editor, UNEWSH: Business Manager, Academian: Vice-President, Student Council: Forum: Vice-President, Sargon Society: S.B.C. Club: Honor Roll: Varsity Football: Var- sity Basketball Squad: Varsity Baseball Squad: Vice-President, Athletic Council: Secretary, Croft House: Cum Laude So- ciety. CRO171' HOUSE PREPARINO EOR YALE FRANK HARPER DUNKLE, JR. Dunk Fntered Shady Side 1942 Born October 21, 1924 700 Allegheny Avenue Oakmont, Pa. ROBERT NICOLA DANEORTH Bob Entered Shady Side Born November 24, 1931 1925 212 Tennyson Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. One pair of heels is worth two pair of hands 1942-1943: Varsity S O c c e r Squad Varsity Track Squad: Blackfoot. CROET HOUSE PREPARINO EOR THF ARMY Fuller 2 Forum I llflix a little folly with your wisdom: a little nonsense is pleasant now and then. 1941-1942: Varsity Soccer: Varsity Wrestling: Vice-President, St. Andrews Society: Sar- gon Society: S.B.C. Club: Secretary, Fifth Form: F i f t h Form Dance Committee: Forum: Yale Award: Academian Board: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Captain, Varsity Soccer: Co-Cap- tain, Varsity Wrestling: President, Croft House: President, Sargon Society: S.B.C. Club: Secretary, Student Council: St. An- p drews Society: Forum: Mohawk. CROPT HOUSE ENTERED LEHIGH UNIVERSITY IN JANUARY, 1943 ALAN HITCHCOCK EDWARDS Al Spooker Entered Shady Side 1939 Born May 25, 1925 R.F.D. No. 3 Coraopolis, Pa. JosIAH REAMER EISAMAN, III Ice Joe Entered Shady Side 1940 Born October 9, 1924 6949 Claridge Place Pittsburgh, Pa. I bear a charmed life. -Shakespeare. 1941-1942: J.V. Soccer: Forum: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: 'ANEWS : Varsity Track Squad: Fifth Form Dance Commit- tee: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: NEWS : Academian Board: Sec- tion Leader, A Cappella Glee Club: Cwlee Club: Varsity S o c c e r Squad: Varsity Track: Gargoyle Society: Second Place, Oration Contest: Blackfoot: Class Day Speaker. DAY STUDENT PREPARING FOR DARTMOUTH l Silence is strength. -Ovid. 1941-1942: Varsity Soccer Squad: J.V. Bas- ketball: Seven Arts Club: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Varsity Football Squad: Reserve Basketball: Varsity Track Squad: Oration Contest: Blackfoot: Cum Laude Society. DAY STUDENT PREPARING FOR CARNECAE TECH WALTER EMANUEL ELLMAN Hzigsnf' A'WaIt Entered Shady Side 1941 Born August 6, 1926 1323 Murdoch Road Pittsburgh, Pa. W11,1.lAh1 HOOPIZS FITLFR Bill Adoph Entered Shady Side 1939 Born June 23, 1924 1007 Highmont Road Pittsburgh. Pa. Facts are stubborn things. -Smollett. 1941-1942: Forum: St. Andrews: Fifth Form Dance Committee: J.V. Football: lV1o- hawk. 1942-1943: A Cappella Glce Club: Glee Club: Forum: St. Andrews: Secretary-Treasun er, Morewood House: Mohawk. MOREWOOD HoUsE PREPARING r1oR M.I.T. JAMES POWELL GILL Jim Entered Shady Side 1942 Born November 25, 1925 850 Weldon Street Latrobe, Pa. More hair than wit. -Shakespeare. 1941-1942: St. Andrews: Forum: J.V. Foot- ball: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Mohawk: Varsity Track Squad. DAY STUDENT PREPARING FOR PITT He that seeks trouble always finds it. -English Proverb. 1942-1943: Forum: St. Andrews: Varsity Wrestling Squad: Varsity Baseball Squad Mohawk. MOREWOOD HOUSE PREPARING FOR LEHIGH UNIVERSITY FRANK RICHARD GRAHAM Dick Entered Shady Side 1940 Born August 8, 1926 127 Conover Road Pittsburgh, Pa. Better sit still than rise and fall. 1941-1942: J.V. Football: Varsity Track Squad: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Varsity Football Squad: Varsity Track Squad 3 Blackfoot. DAY STUDENT PREPARINCQ 11oR YALE W1I.1.1ANl W111'1'AK1i1l GIUIIEEN Bill Orff Entercd Shady Side 1940 Born May 27, 1925 5310 Wcstminstcr Place Pittsburgh, Pa. 1 1 -Heywood. 1 F1-.HOMAS ALEXANDER GREULICH Tommy Entered Shady Side 1940 Born January 14, 1925 778 Osage Road Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Thai' shall he, shall be. -Heywood. 1941-1942: Mohawk: Varsity Tennis: Fifth Form Dance Committcc. 1942-1943: Mohawk: Captain, Varsity Ten- nis. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR CARNEGIE TECH LEONARD DONALD HARRISON, JR. Len Entered Shady Side 1942 Born May 4, 1925 Squaw Run Road FOX Chapel, Pa. Talk is cheap. Two heads are better than one. -English Proverb. 1942-1943: Mohawk: V a r s i t y Wrestling Squadg J.V. Football. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR DUKE UNIVERSITY JOSEPH BARTON HETHERINOTON Joe Entered Shady Side 1938 Born August 20, 1925 411 Glen Arden Drive Pittsburgh, Pa. -English Proverb. 1 1941-1942: Forum: Seven Arts: Blackfoot. 1942- 1943: Forum 3 Blackfoot. CROFT HOUSE PREPARINO EOR PRINCETON No pains. no gains. - -lznglish Proverb. ll?-ll 1042: .l.V. Football: Varsity Wrestling Squad: Forum: St, Andrews: A Capella Glee Club: Glee Club: Gargoyle Society: Blackfoot: Orchestra. Ill-12-IU-H' Varsity Football Squad: Manager, Varsity Wrestling: Gargoyle Society: St. Andrews: Forum: Section Leader, A Cap- pella Glee Club: Glee Club: Leader, Or- chestra: Secretary-Treasurer, Ellsworth House: Blackfoot: Cum Laude Society. lil.l.SWOR'lill Hoosli Illufwxttltstcs 14014 'rms UNlvt51es1'1'Y oil P12NNsY1.vANtA JoHN CHR1sToPHr2R HOAR, JR. Jack Entered Shady Side 1941 Born December 23. 1925 375 Riverview Drive New Kensington, Pa. Htststlo' Ktstsnvooo Homitss Hunk 'l'c1nl2 lintered Shady Side 1940 Born August 23, l92'5 Zl5l Beechwood Blvd. Pittsburgh, Pa. I am no orulor. as Brutus is: But. as you know me ull, u plum blunt man. -Shakespeare. l9-ll-1942: Circulation Manager, NEWS ager, J. V. Soccer: Mohawk. tary, Gargoyle Society: Business Manager NEWS : Library Committee: Mohawk DAY S'ruDEN't' PREwxR1No iron Dtciqmsow Co1.t.EoE Seven Arts Club: Gargoyle Society: Man- l942-l943: Manager, Varsity Soccer: Secre- 1 The good and the wise lead quiet lives. 1 -Euripedes. , 1941-1942: Forum: St. Andrews Society: Li- brary Committee: Honor Roll: J.V. Soc- cer: J.V. Basketball: Track Squad: Dance Committee. 1942-1943: Fo r u m : St. Andrews Society: Honor Roll: Varsity Soccer. CROFT HOUSE ENTERED WASHINGTON E5 JEFFERSON COLLEGE IN FEBRUARY, 1943 JAMES PALMER JABOB Jim Entered Shady Side 1940 Born April 12, 1925 1451 Main Street Wellsburg, W. Va. GEORGE EDWARD KLINGELHOFER. Kling Entered Shady Side 1938 Born July 6, 1925 6815 Reynolds Street Pittsburgh, Pa. Man is a gaming animal. -Lamb. 1941-1942: Varsity Soccer: J.V. Basketball: Varsity Track: Honor Roll: NEWS : Academian Board: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer: Varsity Basket- ball Squad: Captain, Varsity Track: Cum Laude: S.B.C. Club: Sargon Society: As- s i s t a n t Editor-in-Chief, Academian: NEWS : President, St. Andrews: For- um: Blackfoot Athletic Council. ELLSWORTH HOUSE PREPARING EOR YALE Divine tobacco. 1941-1942: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Blackfoot: Honor Roll: Library Committee. DAY STUDENT PRUPARING 12oR YALE A1.151iR'I' CHAMB1iR1.1N KULQNTZ AAAI!! Entered Shady Side 1940 Born August 20, 1925 928 Grant Avenue Plainfield, New Jersey Spencer. JOHN PARKER KNABLE, II Jack Entered Shady Side 1931 Born May 22, 1925 615 Amberson Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. Art is power. -Longfellow. 1941-1942: Varsity Soccer: J.V. Wrestling: Varsity Track Squad. 1942-1943: J.V. Wrestling: Varsity Track Squad: Art Editor, Acudemian Board. CRo11T Housia PREPARING FOR WEST POINT ALBERT RAYMOND KUMER. JR. MAIN Entered Shady Side 1937 Born May 8, 1925 410 Pasadena Drive Fox Chapel, Pa. Shorl folks ure soon angry. 1941-1942: J.V. Soccer: Gargoyle Society: Honor Roll: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer: Honor Roll: Cum Laude Society: Mohawk. DAY S'rUDEN'r PREPARINQ you M.I.T. Mc'n are not angels. ---Clarke. 1941-1942: Varsity Football Squad: Varsity Track Squad: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Varsity Track Squad: Blackfoot. Cnorfr Hoosis PREPARING ron CARNEGIIE 'lliecri ALAN Sol, LANDAY Pee lVee AI Entered Shady Side 1940 Born May 3, 1925 2006 Beechwood Blvd. Pittsburgh, Pa. Kelley. The roast is clear. f-English Phrase. 1041-1042: Mohawk: .1.V, Football: Golf Squad. 1042-1043: Blackfoot: Football Squad: Var- sity Wrestling Squad: Varsity Tennis Squad. Cizoifr Housv - PRIEPARINU VOR T111? UNIVIQRSITY Olf PENNSYLVANIA DAVID MI'I'CII1EI.I. MANLIEX' Dave Entered Shady Side 1035 Born March 30, 1025 1030 Murrayhill Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. JOHN VJICKERSHAM LIND Hijack!! Entered Shady Side 1040 Born August 10, 1025 Ingomar Road Ingomar, Pa. 'He is happy fha! knoweth no! himself other LUISQ. -Fuller. 1041-1042: Varsity Soccer Squad: .1.V. Bas ketballz J.V. Tennis: Mohawk. 1042-1043: Varsity Soccer Squad: .1.V. Ten nis: Mohawk. DAY STUDENT PIQIQPARING iron YALI2 LEONARD MARVIN MARKS Len Marksy Entered Shady Side 1941 Born November 27, 1924 5442 Hobart Street Pittsburgh, Pa. Content is more than kingdom. -English Proverb. 1941-1942: Mohawk. 1942-1943: J.V. Football: Golf Squad: Mo- hawk. DAY STUDENT PREPARING IIoR THE UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH The smile that won't come off. -Standish. 1941-1942: J.V. Soccer: Basketball Squad Varsity Tennis Squad. 1942-1943: Gargoyle Society: Varsity Soccer Basketball Squad: Tennis Squad: Black- foot, DAY STUDENT PREPARING FOR UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVINIA JOHN JOSEPH MCCARTI-IY Mac Entered Shady Side 1941 Born March 15, 1926 5129 Bayard Street Pittsburgh, Pa. Her large. stueel, aslzing eyes. --NVhittier. 1941-1942: Forum: St. Andrews: J.V. Soc- cer: J.V. Basketball: Varsity Track Squad. 1942-1943: President, Ellsworth 1-louse: Var- sity Soccer Squad: Varsity Track Squad, St. Andrews: Forum: Student Council. E1.l.SWOR'I'l1 HoUsE Plusivxlumo iloia PHNN S'rA'1'E ROBERT EARL MCGILL Bob McGoose Doc Entered Shady Side 1941 Born July 18, 1925 560 Walnut Street Meadville, Pa. 1 1 l JAMES AGNEW MCDONALD Mac Jim Entered Shady Side 1941 Born August 5. 1924 423 Jefferson Avenue Bellevue, Pa. liusu come, easy go. --English Proverb. 1941-1942: Varsity Football Squad: J.V. Bas- ketball: Varsity Track Squad: Treasurer Fifth Form: Fifth Form Dance Commit- tee: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Varsity Football: Reserve Basket ball: Varsity Track Squad: Forum: St Andrews: S.B.C. Club. CROIIT Housri PREPARING 11011 AI.1.EG111ENY JOHN J . MCSORLEY Mac Entered Shady Side 1941 Born May 30, 1925 Fox Chapel Road Fox Chapel, Pa. W1'thout music life would be a mistake. -Nietzsche. 1941-1942: Varsity Soccer Squad: Orchestra: Leader, Saxaphone Chorus and Quartet: Honor Roll. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer Squad: Leader, Sax- aphone Chorus and Quartet: Orchestra: Cum Laude: Honor Roll. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR THE UNl'FED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY Never too Iatelto learn. -Kelly. 1941-1942: Varsity Wrestling Squad: J.V. Football: Blackfoot: A Cappella Cilee Club: Glee Club. 1942-1943: Blackfoot: V a r s i t y Wrestling Squad: Varsity Ciolf Squad. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EoR YALE HENRY FERNANDIS MUNNIKHUYSEN Hank Entered Shady Side 1935 Born April 24, 1925 1450 Bennington Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. Silence seldom hurts. 1042-1043: Varsity Football: Varsity Wrest- ling: Blackfoot: St. Andrews: Varsity Baseball Squad: S.B.C. Club. Moiaiswooo Housis PRIQPARING ifoiz CORNELL EDWIN ANDRVW Ol.SON 0lI1'e Sparkles Entered Shady Side 1940 Born May 2l. l925 I I3 Cherry Valley Road South Hills, Pa. -Ibid. ALLEN WALTEI1 OBERC. KIAIU Entered Shady Side 1942 Born April 29, 1924 1014 California Avenue Tarentum, Pa. In all labor there is profit. -Proverbs. 1041-1042: J.V. Soccer: J.V. Basketball: Var- sity Track Squad: Honor Roll: Black- foot. l942fl943: Varsity Soccer: Cum Laude Soci- ety: Blackfoot: Oration Contest: Varsity Track Squad. DAY S'rUUt2N'r PREPAIUNG 12011 QHIO STATE Knowledge is power. -Bacon. 1941-1942: A Cappella Glee Club: Cilee Club: Assistant Manager, Varsity Tennis: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Mohawk: Honor Roll: French Prize. 1942-1943: Manager, Varsity Tennis: Ciar- goyle Play: Library Committee: Mohawk: Honor Roll: Gargoyle Society: Cum Laude Society. DAY STUDENT PREPARING I1oR THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN STANLEY VICTOR OSTROW Stan Ozzie Entered Shady Side 1941 Born December 17, 1925 5446 Plainfield Street Pittsburgh, Pa. HORACE ALLEN PAGE Hal Joe Entered Shady Side 1942 Born April 8, 1925 Eastover Fox Chapel, Pa. Patience is bitter, but its fruits are sweet. -Rousseau. 1942-1943: St. Andrews Society: Varsity Football: Varsity Wrestling: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: Varsity Tennis: Mohawk. DAY STUDENT PREPARING FOR THE MARINE RESERVE My fate is l1t'lL'I'l77I.l'1l'fl.' but I have not deter- mined il. -De Crevecoeur. 1941-1942: Varsity Football: Varsity Wrest- ling Squad: Varsity Track: Forum: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: St. An- drews Society: Library Committee: Coun- selor, Mobawks. 1942-1943: Varsity Football: Varsity Wrest- ling: Varsity Track: S.B.C. Club: Sargon Society: Assistant Business Manager, A Cappella Glee Club: Cilee Club: President, Library Committee: President. St. An- drews: Secretary, Mobawks. Momfwooo Housrz Pittaivxieiwo 1301! PURDUF EDWARD FRANCIS PETRUS Ed Peaches Pete Entered Shady Side 1941 Born July 4, 1924 1317 Virginia Avenue Monaca, Pa. ALIIRIED ROBERTS PRICF Bob Prt'cey Entered Shady Side 1941 Born May 6, 1926 Rosslyn Farms Carnegie, Pa. Be good. And if you cr1n't be good be careful --American Proverb. 1941-1942: Forum: Assistant Manager, Var sity Baseball: Fifth Form Dance Com mittee: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: President, Forum: St. Andrews Manager, Varsity Baseball: J.V. Soccer Secretary-Treasurer. Library Committee Blackfoot. CROFT Housri PREPARING Fort PR1NcEToN Come now and let us reason together. -Isaiah. 1941-1942: Forum: St. Andrews: J.V. Bas- ketball: Varsity Track Squad: Assistant Manager, Varsity Football: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Forum: St. Andrews: Manager, Varsity Football: Varsity Track Squad: Blackfoot. CROFT HOUSE PREPARING FOR LEHIGH JoHN HENDERSON RICHARDS. JR. Jack Entered Shady Side 1940 Born March 27, 1924 1431 Washington Road Mt. Lebanon, Pa. CHARLES LOVE RIDALL, JR. Charlie Chz'ck'7 Entered Shady Side 1938 Born November 3, 1924 5467 Wilkins Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. The noisy drum hath nothing in it, but mere air. --Fuller. 1941-1942: Forum: St. Andrews: Wrestling Squad: J.V. Soccer: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Forum: A Cappella Glee Club: Culee C l u b : Vice-President, Ellsworth House: Mohawk. ELLSWORTH HoUsE PREPARING FOR M.I.T. I, too, am a king. -Beethoven. 1941-1942: Tennis Squad: Orchestra: Black- foot. 1942-1943: Oration Contest: Orchestra: Ten- nis Squad: Blackfoot. Ciioifi' Housis PRE PAR1NG FOR CORN 13 1.1- Ausxammaii I-Ioiiiii' RUDD, HH YY Entered Shady Side 1940 Born December 1, 1925 6525 Darlington Road Pittsburgh, Pa. II IRA ROSENBAUM Rosey Entered Shady Side 1937 Born April 9, 1925 Schenley Apartments Pittsburgh, Pa. Live while ye may. ---Milton. 1941-1942: Gargoyle Society: J.V. Football: Mohawk. 1942-1943: President, Gargoyle Society: Cir- culation Manager, NEWS : Acudermhn Board: J.V. Football: Mohawk. DAY STUDIQNT PREPARING Foil YALE DAVID MULEORD SCHILLER Dave Entered Shady Side 1941 Born August 2, 1925 5638 Callowhill Street Pittsburgh, Pa. There was never a saint with red hair. -Russian Proverb. 1941-1942: Secretary, Mohawk Club: Varsity Soccer: Forum: Varsity Baseball Squad: Fifth Form Dance Committee. 1942-1943: President, Mohawk Club: Varsity Soccer: Forum: Varsity Baseball Squad. CROFT HOUsE PREPARING FOR YALE We are all hrothers-by! every morning my brother or my sister carries out my dishes. -Tolstoy. l941-1942: J.V. Football: Varsity Baseball Squad: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Varsity Football Squad: Varsity Baseball Squad: Mowhak. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR CARNEOIE TECH HUGH MACBURNEY SCOTT Scotty Hugie Entered Shady Side 1939 Born February ll, 1923 1746 National Road Wheeling, W. Va. I will laugh like cz hyena. -Shakespeare. 1941-1942: Golf Squad: Varsity Wrestling Squad: F i fth Form Dance Committee: Varsity Track Squad: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer: Varsity Track Squad: Blackfoot. DAY STUDENT PREPARING FOR PRINCETON PORTER HEWITT SCOTT Po Port Frump Entered Shady Side 1940 Born October 17, 1924 5637 Elgin Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. VJ1l,l.1AM lVl11,1iS S1-'IERTS Phil Clark Entered Shady Side 1940 Born June 4, 1925 Fox Chapel Manor Fox Chapel, Pa. It is misery enough to haue been once happy. --Clarke. 1941-1942: Honor Roll: J.V. Football: J.V Baseball Squad: J.V. Basketball: Forum Mohawk. 1942-1943: Honor Roll: J.V. Soccer: J.V Basketball: Varsity Baseball Squad: For um: Mohawk: Cum Laude Society. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EoR M.I.T. 1 1 Never give advice in a crowd. 1 -Arab Proverb. 1941-1942: Gargoyle Society: Cast, Gargoyle Play: Saxaphone C h o r u s 3 Saxaphone Quartet: Leader, Clarinet Quartet: A Cap- pella Glee Club: Glee Club: Honor Roll: French Prize. 1942-1943: Treasurer, Gargoyle Society: Cast, Gargoyle Play: Saxaphone Chorus: Saxa- phone Quartet: Honor Roll: Cum Laude Society: First Prize, Oration Contest: Class Day Speaker. DAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR M.I.T. WILLIAM MCCONXVAY SIEBERT Sz'eb Entered Shady Side 1934 Born November 19, 1943 Fox Chapel Manor Fox Chapel, Pa. NATHAN AARON SIEGEL Navy Entered Shady Side 1941 Born April 14, 1925 1222 Denniston Street Pittsburgh, Pa. As busy as a one-armed paperhanger with the y itch. fAmerican Saying. y 1941-1942: J.V. Basketball: Tennis Squad: Golf Squad: Glee Club: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Gargoyle: Tennis Squad: Mo- hawk. IDAY STUDENT PREPARING EOR CARNEGIE 'TECH 1941-1942: Captain, .I.V. Football: Varsity Wrestling Squad: Fifth Form Dance Com- mittee: Mohawk: Varsity Tennis Squad. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer Squad: Mohawk. EI.I.swoRTH HoUsE EN'I'l5R1?D NORTH CAROLINA PRE-FLIGHT Sciiool, IN JANUARY, 1943 JAY GRIlilfI'I'11S'1'1iP11I5NS. JR. .YBOQUN Entered Shady Side 1940 Born September 24, 1925 7041 Penn Avenue Pittsburgh. Pa. 2 1 Then he Iullzs, good gods, how he will talk. -Lee. JOHN GARNETT STARR, JR. Jack Entered Shady Side 1938 Born October 8, 1924 King Edward Apartments Pittsburgh, Pa. I cowhearted? l'm as bold as a lion. -Anon. 1941-1942: Manager, J.V. Football: Manager, Gun Club: Fifth Form Dance Committee. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer Squad: Glee Club: Business Staff, Academian. DAY STUDENT PREPARING FOR YALE ROBERT LEE STEWART Bob Entered Shady Side 1942 Born December 7, 1924 508 North Liberty Street New Castle, Fa. Shes beautiful and therefore to be uJoo'd. -Shakespeare. 1941-1942: Blackfoot: Reserve Basketball: St. Andrews: Forum: Varsity Baseball: Fifth Form Dance Committee. 1942-1943: Varsity Basketball Squad: Varsity Soccer: Co-Captain, V a r s i t y Baseball: S.B.C. Club: St. Andrews: Forum: A Cappella Cilee Club: Glee Club: Blackfoot. ELLswOR'rH HOUSE PREPARING EOR PRINCETON lVho then is sane? -Horace. 1942-1943: Varsity Football: Varsity Basket ball: Varsity Track: S.B.C. Club: Black foot: President, Forum. ELLSWORTH HOUSE PREPARINO EOR CORNELL ROBERT WIIJLIAM SWINSTON SuJinr1ie Entered Shady Side 1938 Born April 18, 1924 1335 Murdoch Road Pittsburgh, Pa. I can answer in two words-im possible. -American. 1941-1942: J.V. Football: J.V. Baseball: Blackfoot: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club. 1942- 1943: Academian B o a r d 3 NEWS : 1 Blackfoot. DAY STUDENT . PREPARING EOR YALE JAMES FRANCIS TOOLE Jim Entered Shady Side 1940 Born March 22, 1925 214 Hampton Road Aspinwall, Pa. lVllC1lAFl. GRISWOLD 'TURNER Mike Entered Shady Side 1940 Born March 2, 1925 131 1 Denniston Street Pittsburgh, Pa. 1 He who finds not loue fiinds nothing. -Spanish Proverb. 1941-1942: J.V. Football: J.V. Basketball: Varsity Tennis: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: NEVVS : Fifth Form Dance Committee: Library Committee: Honor Roll: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Varsity Football Squad: Varsity Basketball Squad: Varsity Tennis: A Cap- pella Glee Club: Glee Club: Student Council: President of Day Students: Sports Editor, NEWS : Honor Roll: Intramural Council: Mohawk: Cum Laude Society. DAY STUDENT 1 PREPARING FOR CARNEGIE TECH l4EdV7 llWheeIY7 EDGAR EARL WEIL, JR. He that shows his purse longs to be rid of it. -Clarke. 1941-1942: Varsity Football: Varsity Base- ball: V a r s i t y Basketball Squad: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: Captain, Varsity Football: Var- sity Basketball Squad: Varsity Baseball: S.B.C. Club: Treasurer, Sargon Society: Vice-President, Croft House: Blackfoot. CROFT HoUsE PREPARING EOR YALE Entered Shady Side 1939 Born September 18, 1923 Mt. Royal Blvd. and De Haven Rd. Glenshaw, Pa. No pleasure ever lasts long enough. -Propertuis. 1941-1942: J. V. Football: Reserve Basketball Squad: Varsity Baseball Squad: A Cap- pella Cwlee Club: Cwlee Club: Academian Board: S.B.C. Club: Fifth Form Dance Committee: Honor Roll: Mohawk. 1942-1943: Varsity Soccer: Varsity Baseball Squad: Sargon Society: S.B.C. Club: A Cappella Glee Club: Glee Club: Editor- in-Chief, Academian: Secretary, Sixth Form: Student Council: Mohawk. DAY STUDENT PREPARING FOR LEHIGH UNIVERSITY BIDDLE ARTHURS WHIGHAM Bid Whig Entered Shady Side 1940 Born November 9, 1925 1534 Denniston Street Pittsburgh, Pa. 1 Reudzing mulcelh a full man. -Bacon. 19-121943: Varsity Soccer Squad: Basketball Squad: Varsity Tennis Squad: NEWS : St. Andrews Society: pella Glee Club: Glee Club. Moieiswooo Housri P1rEPA1a1No FOR PENN STATE STANTON MoNRoE WILLIAMS Stun Entered Shady Side 1940 Born October 10, 1925 3135 Breckenridge Street Pittsburgh, Pa. Varsity A Cap- lVlA LCO1. M A RTH U R WPlIT1i Mao ' Entered Shady Side 1942 Born July 18, 1925 511 E. Prospect Street State College, Pa. Wherever there's smoke lhere's fire. -Proverb. 1941-1942: J.V. Football: J.V. Basketball: Varsity Track: Blackfoot. 1942-1943: J.V. Football: Varsity Basketball Squad: Varsity Track: Blackfoot. DAY STUDENT PREPAR1No iron UNIVERSITY oil PITTSBURGH -.fo-vii ,, 'v X 1 Q4 ' f ,f 1 X , xQ 1 lf! x . -V, 7:9 . If TH'-- 5' ml xx! In 1 + A fy ff'In!,vjAli va 'W X fi x K X x f My erqrczhzafes FIFTH FORM OFFICERS DAVID QUINN STEELE EE,. EEEEE JOHN LEIPER BALLANTYNE President Vice-President FREDERICK WILLIAM WILLEY, JR. .L ROBERT JACKSON DOUGLAS L L MEMBERS John Stokes Adams. III Clyde Wilson Armstrong Joseph Gray Armstrong, III Herbert Frazer Ayres Ralph Cooper Bailey Frank Raymond Bailey, Jr. John Leiper Ballantyne John Stratton Becker Warren Lazell Beeken William Greason Birmingham Walter John Blenko, Jr. William Hugh Cosgrove, Jr. James Orville Craig, Jr. Frank Thomas Donnelly Robert Jackson Douglas Robert Ward Duggan James Murry Egan Jerry Fink George Hosack Follansbee James LeRoy Foster, Jr. David John Fox William Morris Furey, II Samuel Taylor Gilmore James Randolph Goldsboroug Louis Patrick Greulich George L. Hoffmann Robert Satler Hofmann John Harrison Hubbard Donald Allen Hunt James Archibald Jacob, Jr. William Lawrence Jacob, Jr. William Cary Jones M. Martin Light John Taylor Mansmann Donald Friedman Markstein Clarence Taylor Marshall Donald McGinnis Clement Morris Morton h , Secretary Treasurer John Stewart Murray, Jr. Pasquale Navarro Paul Drew Neuenschwander Berri Groves Powers Wilson Kennedy Ray, Jr. John Hanson Ridall John Stephen Ridinger, Jr. William Weldin Sauers Eugene Seder John Rothrock Sieber Edward Heckel Sipe David Quinn Steele Robert Charles Sunstein Richard Tennant Raymond Louis Weling Donald Ferris White James Edward Moresby White Frederick William Willey, J Jerome Wolk, Jr. FOURTH FORM OFFICERS HUGH MCKLQNNA LYNCH . President JJIIEODORE ROHRER LEAMAN, JR. .. VI'CC'-P!'0S1'd6'!7f SAMUEL BROWN CASEY. JR. . Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS James Harold Autenreith, Jr. John Howard Barnett Harry John Bechman, Jr. William Wallace Booth, Jr. Hamilton Busser Bowman Ernest Rutherford Braun, lll John Chipman Brown Robert Alan Burry James Morton Callahan, Jr. Samuel Brown Casey, Jr. George Spencer Cooper, Jr. George Newell Crawford, Ill William Miller Davis Samuel Robert Destein, Jr. John Harrington Dwyer James Artley Eckstein Frank Rinehart Fleming, Jr. Thomas William Frank Kenneth Adelman Gardner Bruce Glick Stuart Hamilton Goldsborough Richard Alexander Gray, Jr. Irving Jerome Halpern John Laing Samuel Miller Haszelbart, Jr. James McCarson Jackson G. Elkins Knable, Jr. James Thoburn Knox Robert Harrison Lasday Theodore Rohrer Leaman, Jr John Edgar Lohstoeter, Jr. Hugh McKenna Lynch Richard Smart Major, Jr. James Burns McClements, Ill Robert Boyd McKee, lll Richard Dustin Mercer William Don Miller Charles Noble Mitchell Mead James Mulvihill, Jr. Bernard Charles Sabel Bertram John W. Sayles, Jr. Edward Lawrence Solomon, Jr James Pettigrew Waddell Adolphus Leo Weil, ll John Hastings West Jonathan Frank Whetzel Roger North Wiewel Wise, Jr. X THIRD FORM GFFICERS FRANK CORDES KLINE , ,.. .N, Pres1denr EDWARD ERNEST RIECK, II RRRRR s n,Vz'ce-President VOIGT MOONEY, JR.,,,, W ,,,,, , ,,,,,,, Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Robert Anthony Bissin Don Balman Blenko William George Bolanis, H Donald Douglas Borden Eustace Watkins Buchanan John Miller Carroll William Borah Chesley William St. Clair Childs, Jr. Winthrop Carver Collins Thomas William Cook, Jr. Francis William Crandall, Jr. Richard William Danforth Robert Louis DeRoy Thomas Gordon Ferguson, Jr. Byron Lee Foster, Jr. Richard Smith Frankenstein John Ernest Friday, Jr. William Hurlock Hoffmann Alexander Holliday Hoon Arter Fisher Hughes James Louis Kendall, HI James Wesley Kinnear, Ill Wallace Hunter Kirkpatrick Frank Cordes Kline Ralph Lynch, Jr. John Andrew Martin William Richard Martin, II Thomas Edward McCarthy Patrick McCurdy John Brooks McFeely William Evert McKnight Edward Zinn Merriman Voigt Mooney, Jr. Charles Stanton Morris Robert Dietz Morrow Dominic Joseph Navarro, Jr. Thomas Lazear Orr, Jr. Arthur Michael Pivirotto, Jr. Donald DeWitt Rait, Jr. Charles Wesley Ridinger, III William Charles Ridinger Edward Ernest Rieck, II James Ellis Robertson William Young Rodewald Walter Linn Shanahan, Jr. Frank Hastings Stephens, Jr. Edmund Frederick Truter, Jr. Charles Woodward Tuthill, Jr Robert Norman Waddell, Jr. Walter Edwin Werner, Jr. William Herron Woodwell Y .--... ...- --...-.. .... M ...W,,.. y-. .,.-,..., , , , ,, , SECOND FORM OFFICERS DAVID Miro CURRY . President Wll.l.lANl JAMES ASKIN, III V1'ce-I'res1'den1 JoHN HAYNus Eo1,1.ANsBEE, JR. Secretary-'lreasurer MEMBERS Noel Terry Adams VVilliam James Askin, III Robert Porter Babcock, Jr. William Lyttleton Barclay, Ill Walter Dean Burnham George Singer Caplan Stephen Lee Cohen David Milo Curry Frederick Maul Fair John Haynes Follansbee, Jr. William Frederick Gauss, Jr. Felton Lewis Gibbons Lawrence Bernard Gordon Robert Bole Heppenstall, Jr. George Hetzel Frederick Dexter Humphrey, Jr. l.awrence Lovejoy Humphries Henry Darby Jew, II Brewster Buflington King John Milton Kitner Frederick John Lind, Jr. William Wallace Lowe Charles Joseph Margiotti, Jr. William Howard Overly Jay Taylor Overpeck William Morrow Patterson, Jr Charles Reed Prichard Bayard Dodge Rea Walter Eckhard Reineman, Jr. John Early Rieck George Baton Scheetz Carroll Elon Sinclair Louis Wainwright Voigt, Jr. Vernon Laing Wise, Jr. STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICERS RICHARD D. BAKER, JR. President ROBERT N. DANPORTH - . Vice-President ALAN H. EDWARDS CHARLES R. Cox RICHARD D. BAKER, JR. . ROY F. BUCHMAN, JRE., JAMES A. MCDONALD ALAN H. EDWARDS CHARLES R. Cox. . ROBERT N. DANFORTH BIDDLE A. WHIOHAM . DAVID Q. STEELE . L J. MURRX' EGAN . L MICHAEL G. TURNER fFIrst Term? Secretaru- Treasurer lSeeond 'I erm! Secretary- 'I 'reasurer MEMBERS . .. President of Sixth Form and School . ,. President of Moretvood House ., . President of Ellsworth House . tFirst Term!! President of Croft House fSeeOnd Termi President of Croft House . . . ., Sixth Form Representative Sixth Form Representative President of Fifth Form . Representative of Fifth Form Day Student Representative THE UNDERGRADUATES Although the members of the Senior Class make up the greater part of the athletic teams and participate more fully in the various organizations of the school, it must be added that the undergraduates, by their co-operation. assist the Sixth Formers in practically all of their activities. And although the underformers compose only the minor part of the campus activities, it is from this minority that the future leaders of the school will be chosen. The underformers have a place in the governing body of the school by virtue of the two Fifth Formers on the Student Council. David Q. Steele. President, and J. Murray Egan, Representative. are the members serving on this year's council. Traditionally, the members of the Junior Class each year sponsor the Annual Commencement Dance, given-for the graduating class. In their management of the dance this year the Junior Class has shown themselves well able to shoulder responsibilities-responsibilities that will increase in future years. The chairmen of this year's committees are David Q. Steele, J. Stokes Adams, and John L. Ballantyne. Also there should be mentioned here The Egerian. a literary magazine, containing contributions by members of the school, selected each year by a board of members from the Fifth Form. This year's board is headed by John L. Ballantyne. Q From the foregoing paragraph it might be inferred that only the Fifth and Sixth Forms take part in the school's activities. Such is not the case. The younger boys make up the non-varsity teams, and they are being trained for possible future positions on the varsity squads. Their loyal support of Varsity teams is an indeterminably great morale-booster. We, the graduating class. then, do leave Shady Side with a deep apprecia- tion for the generous co-operation given by the underformers and with great faith in the fact that those who follow will keep, as we have endeavored to keep, the name of Shady Side honorable and outstanding. O Hf0LL565 NJ ELLSWCRTH HOUSE OFFICERS JAMES AGNEW MCDONALD . L S eeee so President CHARLES LovE RIDALL, JR, EEE.,E L EEEEE Vice-President JOHN CHRISTOPHER HOAR, JR. ,,,,,, Secretary-Treasurer MR. RUSSELL WARNER DAVIS e e House Master MEMBERS Richard Dexter Baker, Jr. Edward Zinn Merriman Samuel Brown Casey, Jr. Dominic Joseph Navarro, Jr William Hugh Cosgrove, Jr. Pasquale Navarro Samuel Robert Destein, Jr. Bayard Rea Stuart Hamilton Goldsborough Charles Love Ridall, Jr. John Christopher Hoar, Jr. John Hanson Ridall Lawrence Lovejoy Humphreys Walter Linn Shanahan, Jr. Donald Allen Hunt John Garnett Starr, Jr. Frank Cordes Kline Robert Lee Stewart, Jr. George Edward Klingelhofer, H Robert Charles Sunstein James Thoburn Knox Robert William Swinston Clarence Taylor Marshall Edmund Frederick Truter, J James Agnew McDonald Louis Wainwright Voigt, Jr John Laing Wise, Jr. I' CROFT HOUSE ALAN H1'I'ctHc:oCR EDWARDS . CHARLES RoBI2R'rs Cox . LDGAR EARL Wlill., JR. Romsm' NicioLA DANITORTH . MR. GLENN L. JONES . . President fFirst Term!! President fSecond Termql .. .. Vice-President .. Secretary- Treasurer .. . House Master MEMBERS Clyde Wilson Armstrong Donald Morris Baer John Howard Barnett William Walter Beck Warren Lazell Beeken Robert Anthony Bissin Ernest Rutherford Braun, lll Donald Homer Burry Frank James Burry, Jr. Robert Allen Burry James Morton Callahan, Jr. Charles Roberts Cox George Newell Crawford, Ill Robert Nicola Danforth Robert Jackson Douglas Frank Harper Dunkle, Jr. John Harrington Dwyer Alan Hitchcock Edwards Jerry Fink Frederick Wilson Fisher, Jr. George Hosack Follansbee Thomas William Frank Richard Alexander Gray, Jr. James Randolph Goldsborough Joseph Barton Hetherington, Jr. Robert Satler Hofmann James Archibald Jacob, Jr. James Palmer Jacob Albert Chamberlin Kuentz Albert Raymond Kumer, Jr. John Wickersham Lind Charles Joseph Margiotti, Jr. John Andrew Martin William Richard Martin, Il Robert Earl McC:ill William Don Miller Voigt Mooney, Jr. Clement Morris Morton William Howard Overly Alfred Roberts Price Donald DeWitt Rait, Jr. John Henderson Richards, Jr. Ira Rosenbaum, Jr. Hugh MacBurney Scott Edgar Earl Weil, Jr. Vernon Laing Wise, Jr. MOREWOOD HCUSE OFFICERS RoY FRANK BUCHMAN, JR.,,,, FFF,. FFFFF President JosEPH HOBART CHIVERS FFFF ttVice-President RICHARD TENNANT., ,J ,,FF. 7 ..,,, Secretary-Treasurer MR. JOHN PAYSON LANE FF.FFFF ..FF J .F.FFF H ouse Master MEMBERS Herbert Frazer Ayers Ralph Cooper Bailey John Stratton Becker Allan lgo Bennett, Jr. Thomas Hartin Boyd, ll John Chipman Brown Roy Frank Buchman, Jr. Walter Dean Burnham Joseph Hobart Chivers James Artley Eckstein William Hoopes Fitler James Powell Gill, Jr. Samuel Miller Haszelbart, Jr. Frederick Dexter Humphrey, Jr James lVlcCarson Jackson Henry Darby Jew, ll Richard Smart Major, Jr. Paul Drew Neuenschwander Allen Walter Oberg Edward Francis Petrus Wilson Kennedy Ray, Jr. Richard Tennant Charles Woodward Tuthill, J Malcolm Arthur White I'. 'WU ' f .fp Fx s '1 g ai, M, 4AA+14QInl geafure5 DAY BY DAY SEPTEMBER 14- Oh, joy! Oh, bliss! School! CNO, brother, I'm not trying to kid any- body.D The Fall season opens with the usual, as the Seniors and Dick Major cut into town. SEPTEMBER 18- Surprisel Each member of the Senior class and Dick Major take only four demerits apiece after the other day's escapade, as Mr. Wilkinson nails up that Hrst 'FI CD l::i5aeoe 'l CI?? demerit list on Ye Olde Bulletin Bored. SEPTEMBER 21- Form lists show the enrollment of 84 new students. All hope abandon, ye who enter here. SEPTEMBER 2 6- Mr. Page's oflice: CThe headmaster speaks.D Won't you have a seat right over here, young man? Boarder: No, thank you, Sir, I'll just kneel right here. SEPTEMBER 2 5- CA little late, due to censorshipj A certain new kid, the proverbial one, inquired today if he could attend the Forum without a Toga. OCTOBER 2- Mr. Conner reports best selling cigarette of last year to have switched from Camels to the imported and scientifically proven Rangoon Reefers, as the football-soccer season gets under way. OCTOBER 21- Mother: Well son, what have you been doing all afternoon? Prichard: Shooting craps, Mother. Mother: That must stop. Those things have just as much right to live as you have. OCTOBER 27- Al Kumer asks Mr. Dickey who the handsome man in the middle row of the 1914 Academian is and receives four extra points in his math average. OCTOBER 3 1- Eric the derrick Rhodin's Varsity soccermen down Cranbrook 1-0. Determination held the boys together: Philip Morris, the Coach. NOVEMBER 7- Whistling ban in dining hall finally passed after five years of pleading by Mrs. Crosland. NOVEMBER 9- Tweet, tweet, twe-Awwwkkkl! NOVEMBER 15- Charlie Baird, examining a bottle of 'LePage's Glue,' Golly, now they're even naming this stuff after him. f ' Gov-rA AV ova son '-' kan P X THIS Ac KE uf H E RITIES FOR ,Q 'r f 0 B 9,59-X AND JU 0 Ro k 5 S i Qi 5 -A 11' MUST Bl: NEW fiTNTHETlc Q Pianos aan LJ 5 W xx XXXX XX sq Q N , GQ QP Em ,----Q tb Qin' ' ' V f W 0,5 4 r 455 5 '- ' aff ' V ul 3 I VI VI X F sm: v R DAY BY DAY--Continued NOVEMBER 21- The usual crowd about the Bulletin Board after the posting of the demerit list Numbro-Two. Four more silver throated Orioles drawn and quartered before the eyes of all. Whistling and Mrs. Crosland do it again. NOVEMBER 28- CBloody Mondayb The school is threatened by an invasion or a revo- lution, quoth he from Room No. 3 today. The carpenters do a hurry up job on a gun rack in the Faculty Smoking Room, while each instructor is given a Spalding bull whip and a Souse American bola. DECEMBER 5- First heavy snow blankets campus. DECEMBER 1 2- Thirteen boarders and Mr. Shriver occupying rooms in the infirmary after digging out operations under guidance of Chief Alexander. DECEMBER 1 9- Helpful fourth formers checked while attempting to turn in seats 1-132 of study hall to the giant scrap drive. DECEMBER 2 6- Burnett Bartley sees a great similarity of the humorous little Parry photog- rapher to a certain Diamond Street theatrical entertainer. JANUARY 8- Biddle Whigham navigates his ship from Atlantic to Paciiic by way of Chicago, Salt Lake City, and San Francisco. JANUARY 1 2- Don Burry, upon being quizzed about his recent accomplishments with women, responded shyly, You've just gotta be good, that's all. JANUARY 20- McGill: Hello, coach. Mr. Vorce: I thought you were told not to drink while in training. McGoose: What makes you think I've been drinking, coach? Mr. Vorce: l'm not the coach. JANUARY 2 6- Mid-year examinations commence tomorrow, as the Underformers and Chick Ridall attempt to do three months Work in one night. JANUARY 27- This is it. Saw the dawn break this morning after a terrifying night filled with the revelations of Wooley's Hand Book and 173 pages of C1rosjean's French Verb Book. JANUARY 28- Exams still packin' 'em in! Let me see: the Pythagorian Theorem states -tomber, venir, mourir, naitre--Oh! !S'l O 'oeaef5????!I 'I--l ' JANUARY 30- It's all over but the screaming! Y ,xt 'I 1 X' 1 ','.- 'Vt V 'Q-. -' 0 V5 X N O A me 5 ' 0, 1 NL' X ...A LHP.. 'ji ' 'Ro 5 k if 'Q . D TMS A I my ,WM N-Y. L 3 J If ' Q 'N Q- .y i X f' 1 Qc A ,Q OL 59,1 P :AZ I X ,gf Q x K J E f Er-.xt-1 2523 E? Q J' nl Q' -1-,p In 3--Q X X 154 lgifp, 41' r rooqefs --ff l .4-.N xx QM? FZ aAn.tv ' DAY BY DAY--Continued FEBRUARY 7- Strem's stranglers crack Oakmont invaders 12-4. Haszelbart threw Ficari: Brown bounced Barnabei: Capt. Chivers throttled Libertore and Hal Page threw a little fellow oddly named Smith. FEBRUARY 12- Callahan pulled a funny one today by asking at the Tuck Shop for that unobtainable substance known as candy. FEBRUARY 13- I guess yesterday's gag wasn't so funny. Caught Callahan today in the recesses of the locker room devouring the last of a school pennant and what seemed to be a copy of Longley 25 Marsh's Advanced Algebra. FEBRUARY 22- Walt and Don Blenko, the boys from Hidden Hill, do a duet on Byron Foster for his undisciplined love of snowballing. FEBRUARY 29- Klingelhofer celebrating Cum Laude accomplishment: drinks all around for Seibert, Landay, Bennett and Sharpie Olson. U MARCH 6- Radio Class: Joe Eisaman gleefully expresses desire to be a big operator. MARCH ll Congratulations, Dr. Sochatoffl MARCH 17- First Spring thaw sets in, as four boarders and a boy disappear in quag- mire of the Sixth Form Campus, MARCH 21- Nov smoz ka pop! CDon't forget the Egerian Dance.j MARCH 25- Spring vacation! Buses set new records for drive into town, Boarders unshackled and led out to graze for ten days. MARCH 28- The Merry-Go-Round broke down: long live Joe Mazer's! APRIL 2- The expression Chug-a-Lug banned from among the Academiarfs Favorite Sayings, as Mr. Yardley suspected a hidden meaning. Heh, Heh, Heh! APRIL 6- A prominent English teacher to an anxious Sixth Form: They can't en- force this draftg it's too unpopular with the masses. APRIL 9- Could the faculty be wrong? Two seniors and a prominent English teacher seized today by Uncle Sam. APRIL 13- Vorpel Less Northmuffle, type setter at Stevenson 'ZS Foster Printing Co., reports, Emboro acabei noro para pensoes proprio quando convecindi Duz does everything aviab estratat egicos o aparelho geantes Duquesne,Pilsener too dadamente estou sequinte. Mesmo prisao ante comprei tenho we want diseteria luta porto portare portavi portatus more money rubicinda outras estas vamos and booze buscar babdripe. Cadinho bourbon minutus cima ducas gin luta. I-lcademian aface naitre sobre bruit. Gegen naquel goes to press. Hojo dia anarnjous finis, finis, hurrahf' Kmart 1 Pom? THEY DON'1 Gff V4-Q. 21 N010 Q S, X Aww A FP U1 ::E:f?:fE?E W waklf v. WE WANT MEN si., X43 ll F 5 tan s 'W 1 x 1 4 FAMOUS SAYINGS Tomorrow, I anticipate rain. oo,. Right, sheriff: come on, boys! ..,o You gotta be smo-o-o-oth. ,...o rrr,-----,Jim White r,,-,--Joe Eisaman -r-,-v---,.Bob Swinston Come on, you doodies! ...oov...,. oooo,o.,oo.,.o, . R. W. Davis Why, I'll break you in half! -,.,- ...ooo,o George Klingelhofer All right, I'1l mark it againflr, ,,voo..,,oo,,o, A. C. Dickey How do you do, suh. ,..oo,,..,,.....o,,...ooo,,,. .o,ooo,,...ro H arvey VV'atch out, or I'll pop off and haul ya. ,ov.. ,oo,,o . Byron Foster Tee, hee, hee, hee. ..,.......o,o....o..,,....,,.,..., ...o,,...oo E ddie Sipe Tous les livres sour les chaises. ooo....,. oo.o..,o L . C. Celestin Who's got the dice? oo,....,.,o.,...,o.,...,.,, oo,.,,oo,,,. B ill Beck Yeah, the girls are all crazy about me. c,,.c, Dick Baker Thank you for your cooperation. ,...c.., O. Page We-uns kin lick younse. ..,,,....... Say it again. ooo.,...,o.oo......o So naturally, I floored it. ........,a......oa Where were you in athletics yesterday I was there, sir. ,.,........a.,,...... . aa,,...... Yes, very stimulating problems. .-- My blouses are the very best. ..,o Now back at Arnold . . . --- Oh you, silly you. ,..o..., Let s haul. ..,,...,...... - r,,r-,, Hank Jew -,,,,r.-Virginia Dare W.- -r-- Sonny Kumer W. D. Wilkison W,,-John McSorley R. Leaman --,-,,---.Bill Sauers Seder r--.,rr,Johnny Carroll ,-----r-Eric N. Rhodin HORSE ELECTIONS Typical Boarder .... EEEE,,......E K umer Most Alert ......, ...,r,r H etherington Class Drunk ,rr.... .....,..,,,, A yres Soberest ,, .....,.. .... .,.,,.,. B a ird Most Serious ..,,....-.,,- ,-------Graham Busiest Man on Campus , ......... Stephens Teacher's Pet ......,, Lady Killer ..r.,.,. ---------,Bartley -----,-----,Schiller Smoothest Operator ...,.....,,, , Rosenbaum Most Timid ...,.r Wildest Driver Best Dancer ,,r. Thinks He Is .,...,.r Been Most Around Class Comedian ,,r. Noise Maker ..e,.. Trouble Maker r...re Never in Trouble L Matinee Idol ....... Class Sourpuss r.,., Man of Future Old Man Gloom -,--- B. M. O. C. -. Little Napoleon ..e, Campus Cutie .,tt Class Dude .r,,r,.t Nearest Appearing .,.rrt, Man About Town -----,------,Weil -----,--R1dall ----------Baer --,,a-Greu1ich ---------.Danforth Klingelhofer ----,-tBennett ------,Siebert --.. ..., Lind ---------,-,Rudd --.---,.-.McSorley L------Knable ..,. McCarthy ...... Ellman ------,Landay McDonald ------,rPetrus .---.-,Edwards Scott S.S.A.'s Gift to the Army ......t Stewart The Army's Gift to S.S.A. ........., Siegel Library Kill-joy -- ..........r,......r Ostrow First Married ..r.., .......,, H olmes First Divorced ...,.r .. ....,.. Richards Most Married ....... .. ......., Kuentz Best Voice .,..,,r,. ..,..... C hislett Self-Conscious L t,..,. - -------Beatty Class Bully ..... Don Juan ....... City Slicker ..... Class Sissy ......, Egotistical ,....... Girl Crazy .......... .. .......... Oberg -----,Coleman ,--------Beck ----------Page ------.Gill -----.--Olson Most Contented ..............,....... Harrison Worst Musician ............ Munnikhuysen West Va.'s Gift to S.S.A ........r H. Scott Meanest ............................,....... Griffen Out of This World ................ Swinston Stuck on Himself ....... ........ W higham Just a Has-Been ......... ......... S tart One Track Mind ....... ....... T 00le Most Casual .......,.. ........ C hivers Handsomest ..... - Woman Hater ........ Our Dream Man ..... --------Manley ---------Turner -------,Fitler Most Sex Appeal ....,..... ........,,. S herts Most Likely to Flop .............. Buchanan Peter Prep .................. ........ . F. Burry Most Ignorant ....... Class Thug ......... Never Married ...,.. .- Shyest .....,...,,,,.., ---------Cox -------.Price --------Boyd ---,---Eisaman Class Grouch ...,,,,,,,,, ......r., M arks Hollywood Bound ...r..,......... D. Burry Class Book-Worm .....,.. ......... D unkle Never Studies ..,.. . Class Midget .....,..,. ,--,,------.Hoar M. White Always Talking ...,... .......... J acob Athletic Hero -- .... ..- Grace Personified Class Slouch ........... Buchman ,, ....... Bradshaw ...... McGill Weakest .......... . ......... ........... B aker Always in Trouble .....,,......... Williams CLASS PROPHECY This class prophecy is not written in idle thought merely to fill up space, Oh, nol lt has been given a great, I might even say a great, amount of work ac- companied by much perseverence in sound judgment and thinking, yes. The forecasts and predictions are as nearly perfect as possible, and an added assur- ance is given by the complete approval of Lobo Chromosome who, as you all know, is universally acclaimed as the Wor1d's greatest mystic, including Flush- ing. His past record shows that he has been 10057 correct in his predictions Cexcluding the case of the 1940 Presidential Electionb which leaves the editors in a somewhat confident frame of mind. To begin, let us look cautiously into the future twenty years hence, which makes the youngest of our class at least thirty years old and, well, not more than sexy sixty. Our first prediction takes us to Miami, where the 72 star final of the Miami Muddle, a member of Czar Buchanan's syndicate, reveals that President Roosevelt has appointed Joseph Hetherington, Frank Dunkle, and Frenchy Ellman as Democratic representatives to Potania, Ecuadania, and French Siberia, respectively. One of Miami's quieter spots, The Happy Hour Lunch Room lbar to youl is being run by Jack Knable and Charlie Baird, while Bill Griffen, Al Kuentz and Dave Schiller are selling women's founda- tions in Burry Bros. Department Store. Jim McDonald has apparently turned family man for he is seen strolling down Bennett Blvd. with his wife and eleven children. This great roadway has been named after the famous scientist, who proved that the earth has only fifty billion light years to exist before it is blown into oblivion by a collision with the planet O1sonia, so named after Edwin A. Olson, who was lost on his way there in the tried and tested Kumer-Lind rocket. On the pleasanter side Jack Starr and Bob Swinston have opened a new night spot, The Club Manoore, and are reported to be just raking in the rubles. Dick Graham, Tom Gruelich, and llflike Turner are ap- parently running for Republican positions, as proven by the pamphlets and billboards issued by the advertising firm of H. Scott 25 Self. The new Miami Airport has just been completed by those two great engineers, Bob Danforth and George Klingelhofer, and Ed Ayres, a rocket tester, has become quite out of the ordinary since fifteen of his buddies have been killed to date. Sweeping Northward to the glittering metropolis of mighty New York, it appears that the class of '43 has taken to society. Stanley Ostrow is still hav- ing the lead in that smash hit Mrs. Snootie's Cootie, while Jim Gill, Bill Bradshaw and John Hoar are Podunk matinee idols. Jay Stephens. the toast of New York, states in all the magazines and press interviews that, above all, he prefers Ridall Reefers after a hot day on the salt flats. The newly opened Five O'clock Club between 8th and 9th on Broadway features the 'iCrema- tion Quartet now as always under the guidance of Bill Seibert and Henry Munnikhuysen, while Rosenbaum and his violin is the guest artist. The Dancing Doodies, managed by Bobby Price, is said by the show critic Lean- ord Harrison to be the best in town, and it is rumored that Winner Wei'l, in tie and tails, runs a little gaming establishment directly upstairs where Bounc- er Boyd takes care of complaining customers such as Lee Beatty and Bill Beck, who come nightly to lose their shirts. Speaking of shirts, Bill Sherts is in the business. His slogan is, Remember, if it's a short shirt it's a Sherts. In the middle of Times Square is a monument erected to Don Baer, who, in the last war of 1941-46 fwe hopeb, killed three regiments of our little yellow friends and seven quarts of Black fd White single handed. Also great heroes were Nat Siegel, Roy Buchman, and Hal Page, all of whom participated in the big Jap Extermination Drive to the South Pole in the spring of '45. The Coleman Cathedral, built by the great chewing gum magnate, is known around the world for its splendor, and the firm of Baker-Landay is turning out plastic baloons for the benefit of small children, not to mention the 333,000,000 in- come. Lennie Marks, AI Edwards and Holley Rudd have retained their positions as Lieutenant Commandos in the International Army, while pilots Jacob and Fitler are barnstorming the country with a trick of picking a hand- kerchief off the ground at 500 m.p.h. upside down. Says news commentator C. R. Cox, It's a good job if it lasts, which may be taken one of several ways. Our friend Mr. Chromosome tells us that there is a rate war in the city between the Richards Rocket Cab Company and the TooIe Turbine Lines, and Pete Petrus' team of wrestlers consisting of Crusher Chivers, Oberg the Silent. and Strangler Stewart, is setting a great record for fixed lights at the Madison Round Room. Porter Scott, heard on many radio stations, has been waxing laughing records for Henry Holmes' Humor Hour, while John Chislett, Dean of Princeton, has just awarded Stan Williams The Harvard Pole Vault Pension. John McCarthy and Bob McGill, the Mc boys, have amassed a huge fortune through the sale of old Scotch melodies and beverages. Dave Manley and Mac White are reported to be going great guns in the Dapper Young Men's Department at Rook's Bros.', but it is believed that John McSorIey was eaten by sharks in the Field Club Pool several days after his graduation. Uncle Lobo, Mr. Chromosome to you, has now covered the class of '43, and leaves with his last prediction. Joe Eisaman and Burnett Bartley came to no good end, for today they are writing Class Prophecies under the hard boiled editor of the Yearbook Yerks, B. A. Whigham. CLASS FAVORITES Expressions So long sucker, 10: I 1-o-v-e you, 14: You're pathetic, 3: O.K., 15: What's the time? 2: See you, 6. Actress ....,,. Ingrid Bergman, 9: Bette Davis, 8: Jane Russell fif and whenj, 34: Patsy Kelly, 1. Religion, ..,. Mohammedan, 6254: Republican, 14: New Deal, 3: Eat, drink, and be merry, 8. Girl ....,e The Army Burma , 66: Alice the Goon, 2: White, 8: Miss Brasstield, ll: Anything Petty draws, 7. Magazine ..,... .,,...., . Time, 14: Life, 12: Esquire, 6: Spot, 2: Downbeat, 7: Commercial.. Beverage Hero.. Athletic Team ..,v,, Greatest Fear..-.,,. Literature .... . ....,,. . Police Gazette, 10: Action Comics, l. I'm a bright little nickel. I'll use my noodle: I'll buy younse a Dypsy Doodle, 8: Virginia Dare, 126: Rinso White, L1 3 Listen Goebelsl , 2. Kick-a-poo joy juice, 33: Anything with alcoholic ingred- ients, 14: Anything without same, ll: Flying Fortress, 9. Prune Face, 9: Harvey, 17: Cap Palmer and his Com- mando Unit, 24: Bogey Jay, 1. Coach Strem's Junior Varsity, 17: Rosenbaum's Varsity Checkers Squad, 7? SCJ. Knable's Nicotine Trio , 3. Palmer's Commando Course, 78: Oberg's wrath when aroused, 4: Room No, 3, 62: Doc Marshal1's physical ex- amination, 24. News, 45: Love Was My Undoing -Pola Negri, 5: W. W. Yardley's corrected papers, 13: Olson-Williams football dope sheet, 2 : Bulletin Board conscription list, 19. HONOR and PRIZES in SCHOLARSHIP JUNE, 1942 COMMENCEMENT SPEAKERS First Honor Student E....,.....,,E.EEE.-E,E...A,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,--, ,, --,,E,EEw-EEEE-,,E--- ,JOHN REA Second Honor Student--- ---------------.-.-------------- WILLIS FREDERICK DONEY, JR. First Prize, Public Speaking Contest- -.---------- ALEXANDER PRESTON REED, JR. Second Prize, Public Speaking Contest --LIDLLLDLD-D-DDIM,-A,,, , ,AML W ,,A,,,V 'ROBERT MUNN MATHEMATICS AND SCIENCE MEDAL Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute JOHN REA LATIN PRIZES W1'Ili'am McFall Martin Memorial Award in Cicero and Homer JAMES -.IUNKIN BUCHANAN Evan Taylor Sage, Latin Prize ROY FRANK BUCHMAN. JR. ENGLISH PRIZE Gift of the Harvard Club of Western Pennsylvania for Excellence in Fifth Form English THOMAS CHALMERS DARSIE THOMSON FRENCH PRIZES Gift of the Government of the French Republic Fifth and Sixth Forms Sixth Form, First Prize ------------------------------------ WILLIS FREDERICK DONEY, JR. Fifth Form, Second Prize ---------- ----------.-------- ----WILLIAM CONWAY SIEBERT SCHOLARSHIP PRIZE CHEAD BOY OE ENTIRE SCHOOLD Gift of Mr. Alfred Clare Dickey EDWIN ANDREW OLSON THE YALE AWARD Gift of the Yale Club of Pittsburgh ALAN HITCHCOCK EDWARDS HARRIS MEMORIAL BASKETBALL TROPHY FRANCIS BRYAN BLACK THE AURELIAN AWARD Gift of the Aurelian Honor Society of Yale University JOHN DONALD MATTERN, JR. SCIENCE PRIZE Gift of Mr. M. M. Alexander JOHN REA E. BRUCE HILL, JR. MEMORIAL PRIZE GEORGE HOCC. GILMORE ALL-ROUND CUP Gift of the Shady Side Academy Club of Princeton University JOHN DONALD MATTERN, JR. CAPTAIN WILLIAM A. PALMER PLAQUE JOHN DONALD MATTERN, JR. MALCOLM GOLDSMITH FRENCH PRIZE Offered by Mr. Malcolm Goldsmith STANLEY VICTOR OSTROW THORNTON OAKLEY AWARD IN CREATIVE ART WILLIAM PENDLETON HACKNEY DARTMOUTH SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD Best Sport to Watch How to Get a Drago Presented by the Dartmouth Club of Western Pennsylvania FRANCIS BRYAN BLACK EDWARD J. TIMMINS AWARD CHARLES HARVEY SHERTS CLASS' OPINIONS I I f'Bogie Jay Stephens washing his car at 2 o'c1ock in the morning on the coldest day of the year, 10: Mr. Celestin going over the Commando Course, 13: Jack Knable wait ing on tables, 4: Sixth Former trying to get a seat on the bus, 20. ' ' Ch'Gn, 13 Donald Duck In physics class, 9. Mr. Shriver s ain a g . ,L,L , L Laugh at Mr. Yardley's jokes, 11: Act inter- ested in class, 5: Be a wise apple in class, 4: Give the play cast a ride ' ' ' ' d ons in room 8, 16: In town, 13, Deposit all extra tires an gas coup Slug a couple of masters, 20: Swear in class, 3: Get caught C-H-E-A- T-I-N-G, 14, Joe Hetherington 4' Ann Strip Girl With The Best Figure , L cc., , . . . , 1 . . h d h.t Corio, ll: Bill Watson s Beef Trust, 2, That girl In t e re , w I e, and blue bathing suit at the Field Club, 16. The gym 6' Spring Vaca- What the School Could Do Without .L L Y L C gLV,Lte, C , . tion, 0: Demerit list, 14, Honor Roll, 10. Academlan, 30, rownie the Bulldozer Qthat dog in Rowe Hallj, 5. Down the hatch 13' Here 5' Words Said Most Frequently as .L C, . , , . , ' ' d 61' N e Chug-a-lug, 10. Where were you at Athletics yester ay, , on of your di- business, O: I hate you, 3: Very lovely curves, 7. Nice 5' Good looking 10' How's The Kind of Girl to Marryee . ,C eee, C , , , , ' ' ' ' h t was she put together?, 14. R1ta Hayworth, 17, Built w en mea cheap, 12: Who Cares?, 5. Byron Foster in a nudist camp 30' Life Best Movie of the Year L L, , L r , , ' ' ' ffi h ' l d it et, History of Jim McDonald, 4. The Hays O ce asn t re ease y 22: Any defense picture in Chapel, 1. Bonnie 6' 'VIr Page 7' Varga Luckiest Person in the World ., ,.,a,e , , I . , , , ' ' - 70: A. Best Refreshment 18: Hank Ridall Che never losesl, 4, Harvey, 2, Stewart, Hitler, 30. L . eee,eeee aeeWater, 14: Mr. Lane's home brew, 8: Otto Cream Top, 22: Coca Cola, 9: Singapore Slug, 16: Zombie, 2: Sul- phuric Acid and aspirin, 4. rqarzizafiofzs ACADEMIAN BOARD Editor-in-Chief BIDDLE ARTHURS WHIGHAM Business Manager ROBERT NICOLA DANFORTH GEORGE E. KLINGELHOFER, IL A. HOLLEY RUDD, IIE L JAMES F. TOOLELL, BURNETT G. BARTLEY, JR. . JOSIAH R, EISAMAN, III., JOHN L. BALLANTYNE EEEE FREDERICK W. WILLEY, JR .EEEE L. HAMILTON B. BOWMAN., ,L BERNARD C. SABLEW, WILLIANI M. FUREY, IIE L FRANK R. BAILEY, JR-, WALTER J. BLENKO, JR. L L MR. ALFRED C. DICKEY MR, WILLIAM W. YARDLEYL, L Assistant Editor Sixth Form Editor . L..L Feature Editor L Feature Editor L ,LL, ,, Feature Editor L ,.L. Feature Editor L ,L .Feature Editor Feature Editor , ,,,, ,Feature Editor Assistant Business Manager Art Editor ,,,,e,,,Photography Editor - Faculty Adviser L. Faculty Adviser NEWS BOARD .lAMlES J. BUCHANAN RCJISIEIII' N. DAr:r1oR'r1i li. lilmown AYIQRS, III C11-ioRfai1 Ii. K1,1Nc1i21.11o11iaR, II Jfxmlss If. 'I'oo1.12 W. KIENNHDY RAY, JR. MAl.cto1.M A. Wumi J. S'ioRl's Aimms, Ill W11.1,mM M. DAVIS Muiimiil. G. rliURNliR Joim l.. BAI.I.AN'I'YNIE l5RIiDIZRllIK W. Wl1.1.1aY, JR. CIlmR1.iss W. BAIRD Wliimm M. FURIEY, II DoNA1.n M. BAISR .los1AliR.ElsAMAN, III BURNli'I I' G. BAR'i'1.m', JR. WILLIAM C. Jorsuas A. HOl.I,lfY Room, Il Dowxxin lf. Wilma HIINRY K. Hoimlis. JR. DR. A. lllilill SOCIIIA'I'Olfll lfclilorbin-Chwf Managing lfdilor l'it'tllLlI'L' l.di1or lieu! un' lfcliior lieu! u rv I: cl il or Fvulurc lfcliloz' l cal url' lfdit or 1'lUtllLlI'L' lfclilor Fcfulurc lfdilor Sports lfdifor Sports Editor Sports lgdilor Alumni lfdilor Alumni lfclitor Columnist Columnist Columnisl Phologruphvr Circulation Munugcr Circulul ion M unugcz' liusinvss M unugcr liucull if Adviser SARGON SOCIETY OFFICERS AI,AN HITCHCOCK EDWARDS to E fFirsr Termj President RICHARD DEXTER BAKER, JR. E I 1Second 'llerml President ROBERT NICoI,A DANFORTH so to or to Vice-President EDGAR EARL WEII., JR. ,, , Secretary-Treasurer CAPTAIN WlLl-IAM A. PALMER E E Faculty Adviser Founded in 1922, the Sargon Society is an honorary organization in which all boys of the upper two forms, who have made an outstanding contri- bution to school life in athletics, literary pursuits, or service through the student council, are invited to membership. Formal Tap Days are held on the campus in the fall, winter, and spring, at which time candidates who have met the society's requirements are tapped. or invited to join, before the entire school. A brief period of pledgeship follows Tap Day, and a secret ceremony completes the full membership requirements. MEMBERS: J. Armstrong, Ballantyne, Baker, Chivers, Cox, Danforth, Edwards, Klingelhofer, Petrus, Weil, Whigham. GARGOYLE SOCIETY OFFICERS ALIEXANDIER HOl.l.liY RUDD, Il I'resir1t-nz DAVID Q. S'l'12ia1,Ia Via--I'resi'dt-nz Wll.l.lfXkl M. S112BiaRT 'I'reasurer HIINRY K. Ho1.Mi2s Secreturtf Miz. l.oxvis1,1, INNIQS Faculzy Adviser MR. Wll.l.Al2ID E. MEAD Associuze Adviser The Gargoyle Society, the dramatic organization at Shady Side, produces every year a play for the students, parents, alumni, and friends of the school. On March 19, under the direction of Mr. lnnes and Mr. Meade, the club pre- sented The Nervous NVreck, written by Owen Davis. The leading parts were played by Williain Furey, Alexander Hoon, Williain Siebert, and Stanley Oslrow. MEMBERS: Baer, Baird, Beatty. W. Blenko. Buchanan, Egan, Eisaman, Fox. liurey, Hoar, G. Hoffmann, Holmes, Hoon. Hubbard, Hunt, A. Jacob. l,anday, Ostrow, Rudd. Siebert, Steele, D. Wliite, Willey. THE FORUM OFFICERS, FIRST TERM A. ROBERTS PRICEHH. E FFFF E -,....President ROBERT N. DANEORTH - Vice-President CHARLES R. Cox . Secretary-Treasurer MR. CHARLES P. VORCE., . . E Faculty Adviser OFFICERS, SECOND TERM ROBERT L. STEWART, JR. - . A President THOMAS H. BOYD, II E . ..... . E Vice-President J. ARCHIBALD JACOB, JR. . - Secretary-Treasurer Each week the members of the Forum discuss a topic of current or politi- cal importance at their meetings, which are guided by Mr. Charles P. Vorce. One member of the group presents the topic with a short talk, and then the subject is Open for group discussion. The club, which is composed of members of the upper three forms, often has guest speakers to talk at their meetings. MEMBERS: Buchman, Baker, Ballantyne, Boyd, Casey, Chivers, Cox, Crawford, R. Danforth, Dunkle, Fink, Fitler, Follansbee, Ciill, R. Goldsbor- ough, Curay, Hetherington, Hoar, R. Hofmann, Hunt, A. Jacob, Klingelhofer, Knox, McDonald, Major, Marshall, McGill, P. Navarro, Petrus, Price, Rich- ards, C. Ridall, H. Scott, Stewart, Swinston, Tenant. ST. ANDREW'S SOCIETY OFFICERS, FIRST TERM EDWARD F. Primus I'resz'dt-nr JAMVS P. JACOB Secrelary-'lrerlsurez' MR. C. S'l'liWAR'l' Mmm Ifaculzg Adviser OFFICERS, SECOND TERM Ciieoiuaiz E. Ki,1Noisi.1io11i5R. II l'1-esilimr WARRIQN l.. B12isio2N VIDCC'-I,l'L'Sl.ClL'T7f Rcnsizm' J. Doucams Secretary-'lreasurer At each weekly Tuesday evening meeting. the members of the St. Andrews Society discuss various methods of improvement in character development. The Society has taken part in various civic and social drives. Founded originally as a religious Club, the St. Andrews Society retains that idea as a basis for the purpose of the organization. MEMBERS: C. Armstrong, Baker, Beeken, Ballantyne, Buchman, Chivers, Cox, Douglas, Edwards, Fitler, Gill, Hoar, A. Jacob, J. Jacob, Klingel- hofer, Marshall. McDonald, McGill, Oberg, Page, Petrus, Price, Richards, Swinston, M. Wlaite. CUM LAUDE SOCIETY Shady Side has been a member of the National Cum Laude Society, an organization that is similar to the national college honorary society Phi Beta Kappa, since 1929. Of the members of the graduating class, each year the twenty per cent who rank highest in scholarship are elected to the Society. In order to qualify for membership, candidates must have at least two years accredited work in Shady Side, and their average for their Junior and Senior years must be over eighty per cent. The members to the society are chosen twice a year, once at the end of the first semester, and once at the end of the second semester. MEMBERS Alan I. Bennett Alan S. Landay James J. Buchanan Henry E. Munnikhuysen George E. Klingelhofer Edwin A. Olson William M. Siebert EGERIAN BOARD .loxm I.. BAI,I,AN'I'YNIi PAsQuA1.1a NAvAR1zo CIl.Ym2 W. ARMs'I'RoNc3 WAliIiI?N I.. BIZIEIUSN Rolslsm' J. Doucams WII.I.IAN1 H. Coscanaovls J. HANsoN RIDALI. C. 'I'AY1.oR MARSHALI. MR. GLIQNN l-. .lowes Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Associate Associate Associa! e Associate Associate Associate Faculty Advisor A CAPPELLA GLEE CLUB OFFICERS JOHN L. CHISLETTC.. C C H . C Leader FRANK J. BURRY, JR. Business Manager S. ROBERT DESTEIN, JR. C Publicity Manager WILLIAM C. RIDINGER - C . Assistant Manager MR. ROBERT V. HOWARD C C .Director For over twelve years, the A Cappella Glee Club has taken trips to Florida and Washington to make various broadcasts. But this year because of the transportation trouble the Club had to limit its activities to several engage- ments with the Ellis School. On March 12, a combined concert of the two glee clubs was held at the Ellis School. During March, the glee clubs sang over KDKA in Pittsburgh and WKPA in New Kensington. The section lead- ers were John C. Hoar, Jr., Josiah R. Eisaman, HI, Edward F. Petrus, and John L. Chislett. The members showed fine spirit for staying with the organi- zation when the glory of taking trips was gone. MEMBERS: J. Adams, C. Bailey, Becker, Boyd, Buchman, D. Burry, Callahan, Casey, Chislett, W. Davis, Dwyer, Eisaman, Fitler, Fink, Fox, Furey, Hoar, R. Hofmann, A. Jacob, Knox, McFeely, Merriman, Petrus, C. Ridall, Sipe, Swinston, Turner, Whigham, M. White. ORCHESTRA OFFICERS .IOIIN C. Home JR. I-et1der MR. Rotslflu' V. I-lowARD Director 'l'he music for the hymns sung in the daily chapel services is provided for hy the Orchestra, which is composed of a pianist, a violinist, and several saxophonists. The saxophonists in the Orchestra have formed a Saxophone Chorus, under the leadership of Henry F. lVlunnikhuysen. The Chorus broad- casted on several occasions during the year, and it also participated in the annual Musical Clubs Concert in May. lVllfMl5llRS: D. Prlenko, Bowman, ll Burry, Dwyer, Glick, Kendall, E. Knahle, Martin, Munnikhuysen, P. Navarro, Rosenbaum, Siebert, Solomon. SAXAPHONE OUARTET OFFICERS HENRY F. MUNNIRHUYSEN . . Leader JOHN C. HOAR, JR, .- 7, . Accompcmist MR. ROBERT V. HOWARD . . Director MEMBERS Hamilton B. Bowman Henry F. Munnikhuysen Frank J. Burry, Jr. William M, Siebert On several occasions, the Saxaphone Quartet accompanied the A Cappella Glee Club on various trips and engagements. The Quartet has also made sev- eral broadcasts by itself over local stations. The organization took part in tbe annual Musical Clubs Concert in May. SAXAPHONE CHORUS OFFICERS HENRY F. lVlUNNIliHUYSEN l,eadt-r JOHN C. HOAR. JR. 1LlCC0!7717t1!7l.SI MR. Rostam' V. Howzxuu Direclor The Saxaphone Chorus. which is comprised of the saxaphonists of the orchestra. is in its Hrst year of existence. This group made a special broadcast over station WKPA in New Kensington during March, and performed on several other occasions for the school. The Chorus plays both popular and classical numbers. MEMBERS: D. Blenko, Bowman, F. Burry, Glick, Kendall. E. Knable. J. Martin, Munnikhuysen, P. Navarro, Sable, Siebert. Soloman. ATHLETIC COUNCIL OFFICERS FOR 1942- 1943 RICHARD DEXTER BAKER, JR. ROBERT NICOLA DANEORTHC JOHN LEIPER BALLANTYNE O, ROBERT JACKSON DOUGLAS S OFFIC JOHN LEIPER BALLANTYNE A ROBERT JACKSON DOUGLAS ERS FOR 1943-1944 CC--CCCCPres1'dent Vice-President Represenl atiue Representative President Vice-President LIBRARY COMMITTEE OFFICERS Iluwmun Iftmxcits Pl1'l'RUS Ifrt-sim-nt Autumn Rotstlitws Ptucitf xfliffffl,I'l'SlltIL'Hl Mit. Wttttmt W. Yatuvtiar lfacultif Adviser 'l'he l.ibrary Committee, under the advisership of Mr. Yardley, has been lunctioning lor the past three years. During each regularly scheduled period, some member ol' the l,ibrary Committee takes charge ol' the library. The mem- bers are all familiar with the catalogue system and help the students locate various books. MIZMBIZRS: CI. Armstrong, E. Ayres. Baer, Baird. Pnallantyne, Birming- ham. l'muchman, Douglas, Iiox, Holmes, J. Knable, Ostrow, Petrus, Price. Witte-y. Q als E i E x 1 S fkfefics BITS - Q wg , , I . f l,1,f1Q,fff,f'ff fgff ',5L,v2 ' 1 ff ' - yz4,,4yzA,f' f fy 4 N . ffl ., 1 whiff? ' - is - ' x U WX n l V '- .f fi, ' 0' I n pq !- ,m V xy f , ,N 1 V 4 , lil, . X f ' 1 f fl , , ,I M V ,I A f ,I f N N N . XX ,qi 'v f f ' .fi - ff f Xl - - ,il l - K 1' Qxxz ' MFI . X 1 ' ' V , 'svn f '24-if hifi JK 2:-fn N-L X fl jjj, F5132 15' r Wf9Z22f,f F ' Mx,wlx,,lf,fvp V 1 y,' Qu 1 ,J J A S Wu.-JE ,N LE W it Q wma at Eli? we wa SYS 53 1, if meal K , VARSITY FOOTBALL EDGAR E. WEIL, JR.st .. JoHN H. RICHARDS, JR.o- I, DR. J. ROBERT LARUEW, so MR. RUSSELL W. DAv1sot With only three lettermen returning to base the l942 team on, the Blue and Gold eleven, captained by Ed Weil and coached for the last time by Dr. J. Robert LaRue, lost all but one of their seven games. The Indians, however, throughout all the con- tests showed a definite lighting spirit and the determination to win. I. tsCapta1n Manager I, -, Head Coach I, -, ,oo,, Assistant Coach Opening the season on October 2 with its traditional rival, Peabody, the Indians went to defeat for the first time in eight years through this Peabody eleven. The Shady Siders scored in the second quarter by a thrill- ing 77 yard run by Alan Oberg, but they were unable to hold the lead for long because Peabody scored 12 points in the third period. S.S.A.: 6-Peabody: 12. A hard driving fullback of Penn High virtually led his team to a smashing victory over the Blue and Gold eleven by a score of 21 to O. Not until the nnal period did the Indians appear in the shadows of the visitors' goal posts. S.S.A.: 0-Penn: 21. The Indians opened the defense of their championship when a Western Reserve ag- gregation invaded the Shady Side gridiron on October 17. The visitors handed the Shady Siders their worst defeat of the season by a 33-O score, as the locals were literally pushed all over the field by a strong Reserve eleven. Ed Weil was the hero of the losers with his outstanding leadership throughout the fray. S.S.A.: O-Western Reserve: 33. Leading at the half 6-O, the Indians re- turned to the gridiron and were defeated by a spirited South High eleven in the third and fourth quarters by an 18-6 score. Hugh Lynch scored the only touchdown for the Blue and Gold. S.S.A.: 6-South: 18. The inspired Shady Side gridmen chose the Annual Homecoming Day to obtain their only victory of the season by handing a tough Cranbrook el e v e n a 12-7 defeat. Hugh Lynch crossed the goal line in the first quarter with a line buck, and Ed Weil snagged a pass from Stewart for the second tally in the same period. The large crowd of spectators were brought to their feet as the Cranbrook eleven threatened the Shady Side goal in the closing minutes of the game. S.S.A.: 12-Cranbrook: 7. Traveling to Cleveland on November 7, the Indians were defeated by University School, 20-0. The Clevelanders scored two quick tallies in the first seven minutes of the game, but the Indians buckled their defense and held them to only one more score. This ended an eight year winning streak over Uni- versity School. S.S.A.: O-University School: 20. On a hard, snow-covered Nichols School gridiron November 14, the Blue and Gold rounded out their schedule by dropping a hard fought duel to the Green and White eleven of Buffalo by a 27-13 score. Stew- art passed to McGill w ho, after dodging would-be tacklers, lateraled to Ed Petrus for the first score. In the fourth quarter Ed Weil caught a short pass thrown by Bob Stewart and ran 60 yards for the second score. S.S.A.: 13-Nichols School: 27. Lettermen: Weil, Captain: Richards, Man- ager: T. Marshall and J. Armstrong, Cap- tains elect of the 1943 team: C. Armstrong: J. Ballantyne: W. Cosgrove: R. Danforth: R. Douglass: T. Leaman: H. Lynch: R. Mc- Gill: A. Oberg: H. Page: E. Petrus: R. Stewart. Reserve Lettermen: B. Glick. Varsity Numerals: S. Adams: D. Burry: P. Burry: W. Ellman: S. Gilmore: L. Greu- lich: T. Greulich: J. Hoar: J. Mansmann: J. lVlcFeely: H. Ridall: D. Schiller: J. Sieber: M. Turner: F. Willey: R. Tennant. Captain Eddie Weil smears a South High back for a short loss. VARSITY SOCCER ALAN HITCHCOCR EDWARDS .- HENRY K. Ho1.MEs, JR. - . MR. ERIC N. RHoD1N - . -. . -- . . Led by Captain Edwards the Blue and Cvold soccerites, with few returning letter- men and a very inexperienced squad, lost their Hrst games: but through its fighting spirit and determination to win came back to win three and tie one of its last Eve. The Hrst two games were lost to Connelly and Washington Vocational, 4 to l, 2 to 0: the only score a penalty kick by Klingelhofer. In their flrst league contest w i t h Western Reserve on a muddy Held, the booters m a d e the champions earn their 4 to 2 win. On Oct. 20, t h e soccerites were held to a scoreless tie by Peabody. Two goals tallied by Tom E r a n k were a l m o s t A enough for a greatly improv- ed S. S. A. team , . ,.Captain .- Manager t,,.,, .. ,t,t .. -Coach to beat Carrick: but the visitors scored in the last quarter and in the overtime to win 'S to 2. A goal by R. Goldsborough and a save by goalie Cox enabled the booters to turn back a favored Cranbrook aggregation before a large crowd on the Annual Home-Coming Day, l to 0. Trailing at the half by one goal, the spirited Indian soccermen, playing away, came from behind on goals by Ed- wards and Baker to beat their traditional rival University School, 2 to l, thus attain- ing second place in the league by an average of .667. ln their last game under Coach Rhodin. who left that night for the Coast Guard, the soccerites defeated Connelly Trade, the City Champions, 3 to Z. P. Scott and R. Cmolds- borough scored our goals. Lettermen: Edwards, Captain: R. Golds- borough and Ray, Captains-elect: Holmes, Manager: Cox: J. Jacob: Whigham: Kling- elhofer: Swinston: Baker: Landay: Olson: Scott: Marks: Ayres: Erank: Dwyer and S. Goldsborough. Reserve Lettermen: Buchanan: H. Scott: Sable. Varsity Numerals: Munnikhuysen: Mc- Donald: M. White: Eisaman: Siebert: Dun- kle: Bradshaw: Beeken: Bailey: Wolk. VARSITY BASKETBALL Ci-mizrns R. Cox . . H Captain Joim L. CH1s1.r2T'r . . .... Mcznczger MR. Russtsu, W, DAVIS . . Coach Through its spirit, cooperation, and de- termination to win, this year's Blue and Gold basketball team, captained by Charles R. Cox, only returning letterman, won eight of its scheduled twelve games. The Cagers opened the season with a win over Avalon 26-l9, but dropped the next encounter with Edgewood 32-24. An easy 3l-l5 win over Etna made it two wins in three starts for the club. In their first game away, the Dribblers lost to Carnegie Tech Freshmen 29-36. The fighting spirit and stellar playing of the regular combination of Cox, Baker. Stewart, Beck, and Ridall enabled the Cagers to cop the next three games, winning over Carnegie Tech Freshmen, Springdale, 32-30, and Carrick, 29-28. In their eighth game of the season, the Dribblers lost to top-district team Aspinwall 37-23: but came back to win from Hampton 29-21. ln all of these contests, the able guarding of Baker and Cox, along with the steady playing of Stewart was evident. In their first league game of the season the Cagers, playing host, topped the University School aggregation 38-30, but failed to capture the League Championship by losing to Western Reserve Academy, playing away, by a 42-32 count. High-scoring forwards Ridall and Beck were a big factor in enabling the team to beat West- view 39-35 and Beaver, in a spe- cially arranged p o s t - s e ason game, 35-23. L e t t ermen: C o x, Captain: Chislett, Man- ager: H. Ridall, Captain - elect: Baker, B e c k . B e e k en, Cox, Stewart. R e - s e r v e Letter- m e n 2 W e i l . White, C. Arm- strong. Varsity Numerals: Bal- lantyne, Braun. Frank. VARSITY WRESTLING J. HOBART CHIVERS, JR, . . . .c...cCapra1'n ALAN H. EDWARDS 7,,,, 2 ,. ECO-Captain JOHN C. HOAR, JR.,,, 7 , .,Manager MR. LAWRENCE STREM, Under the guidance of Mr, Lawrence Strem, the Shady Side grapplers, captained by Hobart Chivers and Alan Edwards, went through a fairly good season with one tie, three loses, and three wins. The team was handicapped by injuries of Dick Tennant and Ed Petrus, and by the early departure of Co-Captain Alan Edwards for college, l The Indian l matmen opened their season on J a n u a r y 15 against D o r - mont. By win- ning the last Five matches, the locals gained a 7-7 tie with Dormont. On January 23 the grapplers lost to Millvale High, 4-7 . . . John Brown, S a m Haszelbart, and Hal Page gained Coach the only wins. The Indians trounced Oak- mont, 24-4, on February 8. All but two of the bouts were won by falls. University School, traveling from Cleve- land, won a close decision over Shady Side by a score of 16-13. Chivers, Burry, and Page scored well-earned victories, but the Cleveland grapplers scored too many times in the other matches. On February 20, the locals traveled to Hudson to receive their worst beating from the Western Reserve wrestling team by a score of 2-32. Captain Chivers getting the only win for Shady Side. On February 25 the Indians defeated Dor- mont in a return match, 9-6, as Haszelbart, Chivers, and Page gained falls. In the last match on March 2, the Blue and Gold wrestlers trounced Oakmont again by a ll-2 score. Lettermen: Chivers, Captain: Hoar, Man- ager: Applegate: Bennett: Brown: D. Burry: Follansbee: Haszelbartz Oberg: Page: Petrus. Reserve Lettermen: Tennant. Varsity Numerals: Ray. Date Apr. May May May May 30 4 l2 18 25 Ill!!! VARSITY TRAcK GEORGE E. KLINGELHOFER. ILL 4.. A - Captain ALAN I. BENNETTLLL cc , .-.Manager CAPT. WILLIAM A. PALMER. ...aaa or Coach MR. C. STEWART MEADL, L ,.-,Assistant Coach SCHEDULE Place A Penn High School , , Home Evan City High School Home Brentwood High School L, Home L Home Langley High School Inter-State Preparatory School Track and Field Championships. QTelegraphic Meetj VARSITY BASEBALL RICHARD D. BAKER, JR. ' .--EWCO-Captazn ROBERT W. SWINSTON-- 1 EEEECO-Captazn A. ROBERTS PRICE EEE.EE. . ,EEE,,, CManager MR. RUSSELL W, DAVIS, EEEEEE C ,, EEEEEEE,,EEEEE Coach MR. LAWRENCE STREM do CAssz'stant Coach May Date SCHEDULE Apr. Allegheny Vocational High School Apr. Peabody High School S, Apr. Springdale High School ,, May Schenley High School 7,EEEE, May Langley High School ,,,,, , May Crafton High School Peabody High School E Place Home Home Home Home Home Home Away VARSITY GOLF JAMES P. WADDlEI.l- ERNLQST R. BRAUN. III MR. JOHN P. LANE Dale SCHEDULE May Wcsl View High School May Baldwin Township High School May Ml. Lebanon High School May Baldwin Township High School Place Home Home Home Away Captain Manager Couch VARSITY TENNIS WILLIAM W. GRIFFEN. ., c LCaprain STANLEY V. OSTROW ,,,,,,,, ,,tManager MR. LOWELL INNES tott L,,Coach Date May 5 May l 2 May 19 May 26 SCHEDULE Mt. Lebanon High School L Central Catholic High School Mt. Lebanon High School, ,o,, Mt. Lebanon High School Place Home Home Away Home ii, JUNIOR VARSITY FOOTBALL STANTON WlI.l.lANlS DAVID FOXOO O MR. LAWRENCE STREMOOOO OO DATE SCHEDULE Oct. 26 Squirrel Hill Tigers Nov. 2 Aspinwall . O OO O Nov. 9 Peabody Junior Varsity Nov. 16 Peabody Junior Varsity Captain Manager O Coach S.S.A. OOOO 0 OOOOOOO 13 0 OOOOOOO OPP. 6 38 13 13 LETTERMEN: Williams, Captain: Fox, Manager: Beatty: Bowman: Cooper: Destein: Donnely: Fleming: Jacksong W. Jonesg J. McCarthyg Mc- Sorlcy: Raitt Sipe: Wiewel. JUNIOR VARSITY SOCCER RoY F. BUCHMAN, JR. , ,v , c Captain JAMES FOSTER ,,,vK,,. ,,.., .... ,,v,..., M anager MR. C. STEWART MEAD ..4RRR RRR...,. . Coach DATE SCHEDULE S.S.A. OPP Oct. 29 Prospect Junior High School ,.,.,,. ..o,o 1 ..,.a .... 4 LETTERMEN: Buchman, Captaing Foster, Manager' Beck, Bennett Beeken, Furey, A. Jacob, W. Jacob, Mercer, McKee, Mooney, Murray, Sherts, Solomon. Date Dec. ll Jan. 8 Jan. 25 Feb. 5 Feb. 9 Feb. 22 RESERVE BASKETBALL FREDERICK W. WILLEYLH, DONALD A. HUNT ..,. MR. RUSSELL W. DAVIS SCHEDULE S.S.A. Avalon High School L , 7 Etna High School LLL. 18 Springdale High School 20 Carrick High School LLL, 23 Aspinwall High School L... 25 Westview High School L,LLL Y Z7 Captain Manager ,-,Coach Opp 21 14 22 12 .. 17 15 LETTERMEN: Willey, Captain: Hunt, Manager: Douglas, R. Cmolds- borough, L. Cireulich, Jones, Leaman, Lynch, Marks, McGill, Olson, Turner Williams. Wm LIGHTWEIGHT FOOTBALL JAMES T. KNOX E EEEEEEEE I A Capram EDWARD E. RIECK, IIC E Co-Manager WILLIAM R. MARTIN, II ,I,, E, Co-Manager MR. ROBERT V. HOWARD ,C OO,O E Coach LIGHTWEIGHT SOCCER JAMES W, KINNEAR, III I I EEEE Captain FRED M. FAIR E, E. ,,Mcmager MR. WII,LIAM W. YARDLEY EEEEEEEE E ,Couch JUNIOR FOOTBALL DAVID M. CURRY ' OO Captain GRDRGIQ B. SCIIHIQTZO O Manager MR. JDIIN P. LANE O O O O O OO Coach J. V. BASKETBALL RAYMOND L. WFIBING O Co-Captain HAMILTON B. BOWMAN Co-Captain RICIIARD A. GRAY, JR.O OO Manager MII. CO STEWART MEAD Coach 5 F 'gs-Q is '1- v. Lmior Scboo , 'x .- X ' rf I . f f, ,WJ X 1 q x Ei.. ' M W A 1 A i , I ,,........ - ERWIN WARREN COLE, AB. Cortland Normal Schoolj: 4CorncllJg QUnivcrsity of Pittsburgh Headmaster. MARQQARIJI' VRUUMAN BROOKS, A.B. lUnivcrslly of Pillslmrghl: IKM. 1Colun1bi.1 Univcrsilyl. Summl Iform. fiqaryarc I fjrea-X5 AIJALIQI1 JUNE WR1csH'r, B.S. tOne- onla Normal Schooll: llthaca Con- servatory of Musicl: QNCW York State Collegcj. Thir Form 6Z4,J,.f ',,,,7ff N., ALAN CAlVlPl3Iil.l- GREGG, A.B. flh- diana Normal School! 3 LVw'cslcyan Univcrsilyl : lUnivcrsity of Pills- lmurghl. Svuvn1hI urn7 of Alhlvlics. A 71 l if M QVL7 X fi- ? 'JW LEILA CLANIEY, AB. lUnivcrsity of Pittsburghj. Firsl Form. JOSEPH THORNTON, fStDlC Teachers Collegel: MS, lUniversity of Pittsburghl. Sixth Form. CLAUDE HUBBARD, fAm- herstl: iHarvard School of Physical Educationll M.Ed. lUnivcrsity of Pittsburghl. Fifth If 0 rm and A! - Ietirs. X ,L flu :ae ., , A 1 ' f 1 ITREDA VJ, IXIEUGEBAUFR, versity of Pittsburg and Literature. 1 LUCILE LAUGHLIN LOGAN, A.B. ll?ennsylvania College for Womenj. Kmdergarlen. 'Xl II' lf I IUIIIARIJ .I. ISI-AKIIIAM. I'r.5. KSIII1- DARRISI. W. W1l.AND, qShippcnsf pvry Rx Mimi. ILM .Xu ll: I I ncgic QM? uk SIAM' 'IK-.u'I1vrs Cfollcgcli 1ix'rlwily ul I'illsIvurgImI. 63 burg SIAIC Teachers Collcgci: kUni- vcrsily of 'illsIuurghJ. Shop. Maxx, I XRI R II 0 41 U li, ISIippcry Rock Slalc 'I' c A c h c r s Collvgcli QI'cnn SIJICIZ illnivcrsily of Piltslw IYQIII. uurll7 l'IIJI'lII. f M, f,uf,4.' I f I CIVORQEV I.. INIVNIZIKIRY. ll7xI1'uI'lcrI' of A f , Slrrnqml IlISII'LlI7h'l7IX. lf, f I ,a Lf -f , -, ,J I ,',, ,, Ju ,.1r- MYRA ANN GRAII. AB. QWcIIcQIcy Q. Music. Collcgcj. Sucrvlary. X7 X' SEVENTH FORM Oliver Blair, Jr. James Leslie Boeringer James Youngson Booth Richard Henry Lee Childs James Howard Clark, Jr. John Hagedorn Cohen, Jr. William Ralston Curtis William Hean Dearth Glenn DeWitt Dunmire, Jr. James Marshall Ecker William Marshall Gardner, Jr. Sanford Herbert Goldstein Samuel Adams Hartwell, Ill Abram Hays, III Charles Warren Kimball, Jr. Howard McClintic Love Robert Addison Lyne, Jr. Charles Hale Matthews, III Grant McCargo ll Harold L. Mitchell, Jr. John Harris Briggs Phillips, Jr Richard Roy Pivirotto Carl Edward Rieck, Jr. Hudson Gilmore Samson, Jr Martin Snyderman, Jr. Peter Hartich Strachan Thomas Childs Woolfolk Laurence Rumsey Wunder Qfmdf Ubjl Jowrfv-CN! L'f'J L' If .Z I 1 i V- I Y X fi x 1 ' I. . Kfffa, I!! . X. . 35 . - xl fbi ' U I JV I I 79, ! M iXfOf1Ai Cf 7 'Tx f KM 4349! ' , s I xr H FORM , N , Qi QezL1i.z-Jw J: lf- ,+I Charles Lee Austin, Jr. Vinton Holmes McClure, Jr. C? James Scott Beckwith, III Douglas Stewart McKelvy 3 David Lytle Clark, III Bradley Middlebrook Don Read Conner, Jr. Clifford Norman Murray 'J , Theodore Wood Friend, III Scott Ricketson Charles Wolfe Heard Richard Cireenwalt Robbins, Jr. K Harry Cook Hicks Beverley Randolph Shriver, Jr. ' Douglas Carlton Howard Allen Ogden Smith L v Henry William Isaly, Jr. Wilbur Stephens Snow Milton Henry Isay, Jr. Frank Leovy Stanley ' IM George Armstrong Kelly, IV James Mellon Walton William James McCance Jerold B. Wilkoff X mlbilm 'I , 'grx Q Q., C CKJ FIFTH FORM Robert Paul Blair William Wightman Blair, III Fitzhugh Lee Brown John Edward Brownell, Jr. George Edward Clifford, Jr. Frederick Rufus Crawford, Jr Daniel Leslie Davis Rowland Erving, Jr. Herbert Davis Ferguson Alan Isaac William Frank William Barr Hetzel, Jr. Philip Benjamin Heymann William Rossiter Hinchman Edward Hooper, IV George Sheldon Hoster, Jr. John Bennett Hutchinson Thomas Craig LeCIere L. Greer Molyneaux David Wvn Patterson William Erwin Quinby, Jr Henry Mason Reed, Jr. Bruce Robertson Richard Mellon Scaife Edwin Freed Scheetz, Jr. Theodore Fell Smith, Jr. FOURTH FORM Herman Ernst Bakken, Jr. Lester Lawson Bartlett, Jr. Jarvis Dawson Cotton Barton Hallam Daniel Dale Russell Davis Stanley Baird Faller Charles Wood Friend, II Jack Kane Goldman Thomas Alan Isaly James Grier Little Robert Johnston McCallum, Jr Pressly Hodge McCance, Jr. Neill Hunter Payne William Drake Roberts Henry Franklin Scheetz, III Max Solomon, II Hugh Hartich Strachan Stuart Davis Tauber Gregory Walter David MacLane Wilkison THIRD FORM John Bradbury Austin George Herman Deike, III Herbert M. Heyman, Jr. Robert Victor Howard, Jr. Georg Richard Alexander Isay William McMichael Jones Joel Carl lVIcGurk Curtis Selden Scaife e Cummings Stephenson, Jr. SECOND FORM Glenn Owen Becker Elmore Arter Cotton John Emery Isaly Harry Christian May, III Edward Lenhart lVIcCance Edward Alembert Montgomery, Jr. Stephen Hewitt Nicholson Herbert Lynne Sander, III Sidney Thomas Scheetz Alvah Hall Warren, Jr. G. Warren Wattles, III Robert Elliot Wiland FIRST FORM William Dewey Erving William Ford Moreland, II William Dangerlield Harrison Abraham Oseroff, Jr. Charles Lockhart, III Fredrick Collier Rodgers Robert David Maynard George Robert Stanley, Jr. KINDERGARTEN Daniel Michael Clemson James Lee Parker Sherman Kane Goldman Wallace Crawford Parker John Erastus McKelvy, Jr. Walter Anthony Rosenbaum Andrew Bell Oseroff Alexander Dunbar Speer William Zang Stephenson -' 4 -.-,vw 4, mlb l 6 YIO L B A N J Q C L U B Herman Ernst Bakken, Jr. George Armstrong Kelly, IV William Ralston Curtis Charles Warren Kimball, Jr. Stanley Baird Faller Grant McCargo, II Abram Hays III Douglas Stewart McKelvy Richard Greenwalt Robbins. Jr. xwd XV'Hr'Z4w' - fTL1f'?jE.AFc3-'IL 50V5j QW M . .f,. 4 , mf' ,mr Ghverfifgmenfs I5 W Q M QNX 4 0 W gf 0 Q ,. 0 6 Gfckzzowfedqnzezzfs The business and editorial staffs of the ACADEMIAN are grateful to all those whose help has made this volume possible. We thank: The students of Shady Side Academy for their cooperation and patience in all things pertaining to the ACADEMIAN: Mr. Dickey and Mr. Yardley, Faculty Advisors for this publication: Mr. Weaver, Mr. Frederickson, Mr. McFarland, and others of the Steven- son S6 Foster Printing Co.: Mr. Reuter, Mr. Bragdon, and others of the Bragdon Bros. Engravers: Mrs. Parry, Mr. Fisher, the oHice staff, and the photographers of the Parry Studios: The advertisers who have aided in the financing of this book: All other Shady Side men and teachers whose help and guidance have so materially aided us in the publication of this volume. TRUST PRDTECTION 4-L Y XSQH- cr t V T --.Eg 'lf W 'Wil rg W ww . . . how does it benefit a SON and his inheritance? T provides for his education and his start in life. It leaves the management of his inheritance in capable hands until he is old enough and wise enough to invest and spend for himself. This protection can be made to extend throughout his lifetime, either through funds trusteed in his father's Will, or through a Living Trust set up now for his later benefit. In any case, aTrustce must be appointed. The permanent character of this institution makes it an ideal custodian for a son's inheritance. FmEu1YTnusT Con PANY 541-343 FOURTH AVE. DITTS B U R G H Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation OIL N IS AMMUNITION -AND MUCH MCRE t -- .'-- ' ,I ' ' 'Ili' nf l . o x ASPHALT FOI ROADS AND RUNWAYS- Great quantities of this material-a ' - X petroleum residue-are used for the construction of roads for mechanized ,, X equipment and for runways for our bomber and fighter planes. Result-our ' troops and equipment can travel faster...our planes can take off and land with a higher degree of safety. SYNTHETIC RUBBER FCRA THOUSAND USES- An extract from PC- I f , tmleum called buradiene is helping to make up for the stop- , , ...e.. I page ot' our natural rubber supply. Tires for trucks and jeeps, If ' I treads for tanks, bullet-proof linings forlplane- gas tanks, are Y 'iff' Q IK Z 'f among the war necessities being made from, Qld! r l' L , ' - r 'I this material. WW' . ..- A f' IN TIME OF WAR uncontrolled epidemics would take more lives than enemy bullets. In order to prevent disease, insecticides originally de- veloped by the petroleum industry for use in the home are being em- ployed by our armed forces to kill germ-carrying flies, mosquitoes, and other insects. ir The American petroleum industry has undertaken-and is per- farm Guy' Oil Companies take deep pride in the privilege of serving in tbese accomplishments. If I l -f f ll' f W an f f 4 f f 5 1 ff A M 1 X no ff ,, f 3 , I f A ,. , , . ffl, ff. Q ff , ,. M' ,.' J , ' .M f ing--bug: tasks of immense importance to our war ejort. The GULF OIL CURPURATION Peace Must lo Paid For-Buy War Bonds And Sfamps GULF REFINING COMPANY ESTABLISHED I8I8 , 1 f V. 4 f f ,mv ,af CJ fmfwfaf i ql fgi I fp- C Cl,QgQLcwLQ1uh4Qi5xD ,, X,-, tx A .U ff MFll5E1llflll5lllllg5,H315f3'E5l1Ul'5 ff f X ,X X - , 9 ,I 1' , 1 A X, MADISON AVENUE con. ronrv-rounm STREET 2 'ff,jj5?f'fi,,flg SW ' ' New Yom: -j .lf Sklwullmys' CHUIIICS and Acccxsurics .11 QL ,Y E . l'mmuk5 Iirollmcrs .xru markcd .ll dvinilvly Jfx 1 ' XX V Lvl rc.1sm1.1lwlc pxxws. l 'X:X K I xiii v. ., lp- C'ulI411'I1-sx Jclvlzvlx and Shorls. ' 'iff 'Lf' 3314.00 1.A..--- 6 7 .-T-' 1Agus 5 lo Um ,L 7 Q.- af' I f 'Lf M , , , . J. 4 iv Shflllf IRIAULISUI' SLIHS. 3120 and 3:22 ' s 'X' b ,W'!,-yfly mg.-5 ' IU an , ,1 .,1 ,f Gr 1,f!-FK . - . - , -Q Njrwuxlf' , fx 'Yfi'il1L'14 TWL W, 1 x ,fl l.um1 l1'uL1.w1' MSLIIIS. 312 and SU8 !IN,fS, X 4, 'fy mmm Il In my A ,XV ,X L1i4imQ9Q, 'I ,Ni AQ. 6 .I 1 i Q. ,l ,,,. ,. ,X A, .Srxlh flour Shop Suzls, mM.k...,u..,,..'4X Q1.,,n,... S43 to 5555 snnncnzs . . . . NEW Yom M ,Ummm SIRNIB mrz owl 115111 BOSTON: uzwuunv con, scnnnzv srnur 1XNNlVlfR5.'XRY BOOKI ffl! SHEET METAL SPECIALTY CO. Subszdiary of Follansbee Steel Corp. Manufacturers Of STOVE PIPE MILK CANS METAL STAMPINGS THIRD AND LIBERTY AVENUE PITTSBURGH, PA BATON COAL COMPANY COAL - COKE ATlantic 1576 McKeesport 7171 C pl t of A FRIEND Iron City Produce Co. lncorporared CHAs.BL1ckLE P 'd r o Whczlesule Murkeling Agents of FRUITS, VEGETABLES, BERRIES AND POULTRY O 2008 10 SMAI l MAN STRLET PITTSBURGH PA PITTSBURGH PLATE GLASS CO. ISALY'S ,,,,-f T W KQ--A-' Ti ff-gh ' AATA W GLASS A ' ' ' T.T.,TT' 5 'f M E!-ii ' 2 9' A' 1 :,f.- - PAINTS ICE CREAM ' DAIRY PRODUCTS The Colonial Trust Co. FOURTH WOOD DIAMOND PITTSBURGH HQIHIQ-. All Banking and F d y F It WITH CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES G. N. Crawford Equipment Co A. II. GLINN, Ph.G. O WAl N UT Pharmacy Prescription Spec1'aI1'st I 5541 Walnut, Cor. Ivy Street PITTSBURGH, PA. Phone - MA 2584 PITTSBURGH INSTITUTION O National Union Fire Insurance Company Home Offirc: 130 UNIVERSITY PLACE Allegheny Counly Dept.: UNION TRUST BUILDING BETTER LIGHT BETTER IGHT 1892-1943 C Musical Instruments Phonograph Records Popular and Classical Recordings C00 Band and Orchestra Music 321 BOULEVARD or ALLIES Chorus and Choir Music PITTSBURGH, PA. All Publishers' Music Carried in Slock ' GN 6545.1 MA11- ORDERS SOLICITED Advertising Novelties NSS School Invitations 632 L111,ER'1-Y AVENUE AT 1704 PriZQS - Gifts PITTSBURGH, PA, l 9 Q,-J, ,S CHAM PIO C0 'v.,,,o+ 9952 Zvfd' PITTSBURGH COAL COMPANY lg' ' 5 -R161 ,ie 1 Retail Division 6'1'iLT'g le Q-'L ' A ' tt 60 409 Wooo ST. GRANT 3121 f ' b 1 H. HEINZ CGMPANY V GROWERS, MAKERS AND DISTRIBUTORS OF THE 57 VARIETIES PURE FCCD PRODU CTS V PITTSBURGH, U. S. A. F. J. KRESS BOX CO Packaging Serfvice Since 1880 Complete Line of Corrugated Fibre Products 1 Twenty-Eighth Street PITTSBURGH, PA. Compliments of NAVARRO CORPORATIQN GENERAL CQNTRACTORS DOMINIC NAVARRO, President MONTROSE 3 0 7 8 O ITlcCauleq Shop GOWNS, COSTUMES. WRAPS Millinery, Accessories 131 S. HIGHLAND AVE. E. E., PGH. Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country. Yours for Victory, VINCENT C. DWYER, JR. 93rd Arm'd Rec. Bn. Co. B. Camp Beale, Cal. Shady Side, '36, and formerly manager, TANKI MAIL ADVERTISING SERVICE 3 I 9 Fifth Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. A REF RESHING EXPERIENCE UNTIL you have shopped at Mansmanns you do not know how refreshing shop- ping can be in an atmosphere of quiet dignity. Our time is your time with buy- ers and clerks who have learned the ways to serve the needs of particular families. A neighborly store, very conven- iently located. - lVIansmann's Fifty-Nine Eleven Penn Avenue 'l Liberty Baking Co. FLAVOR QUEEN BAKERY PRODUCTS Compliments of A FRIEND For Your Next Hat Visit INEZ dl' 222 SO. HIGHLAND Formerly of Schenley Apts. AIKEN AVENUE Meat Market FRANK ZWINGGI. Prop. HOME DRESSED MEATS AND POULTRY Fresh Fish and Oysters Eggs and Cheese Telephone IVIAyfIower 5918 815 SOUTH AIKEN AVENUE. E. E. LEWI DAIRIE' Inc. CE 0800 JIM - DUFF - BILL - LEWIS D. H. SERUSET COMPANY Dyefrs and Cleaneofs Hlland 4600 ELLIOTT'S Thank You FOR YOUR PATRONAGE Opticians - An Optical Service That Satisfies 35 YEARS ON SIXTH ST. B. K. ELLIOTT CO. Opticians PITTSBURGH Established 1900 COMMUNITY W.W.WARRICK M A R K E T Jewelers and W. A. HALL, PfOpfl'efOf MEATS gy? GROCERIES PRODUCE PENN AND SHADY EAST LIBERTY FOLLANSBEE STEEL CORPORATION Pittsburgh - - Pennsylvania ex. 12. sv QQ I look ike a 44MILLI0N ? 1 if 'U Q 0 cn Q-1 m: e's the Her ur Clothes to . yo eras BTH e Cleamngn 3: 9 'S an 2 Q S Phone MO. 2700 Y ...ENJOY... FOREMOST ICE CIQEAM IT'S HEALTHFUL V A Lifetime of Service for the YOUNG MAN GRADUATE W. W. Wattles 8: Sons Co JEWELERS SINCE 1859 517 WOOD STREET PITTSBURGH CUSTOM MADE COATS and SUITS 0 DRESSES Afternoon, Evening, Sport Q FURS AND MILLINERY glzffayfar 431 PENN AVENUE ESTABLISHED 1887 V Mayer Press PRINTERS 235 COLLINS AVENUE PITTSBURGH, PA. STRA SS'S Market Two Stores 5431 WALNUT STREET MAyHowcr 8308 937 MELLON STREET MOntrosc 8455 JOHN C. KOHNE 8 COMPANY Dependable I nsurance Service SINCE IST3 Louise M. Packard .,...,. CATERER 4900 CENTER AVENUE PITTSBURGH, PA. Phonc MAyf'Iowcr 8500 DUNN-SCOTT CO Quilts Obptirians Downtown Offife JENKINS ARCADE Suite 40474I7ourth Floor GRant 0878 Sfhvnley Ofliire PHYSICIANS BUILDING Commonwealth Building 121 University mace MAyHowcr 5242 316 Fourth Avcnuc Pittsburgh, Pa PITTSBURGH DI K'S M RKET WHOLESALE PGULTRY AND EGGS SUCKLING PIGS gp Q ff ' f 5 xx, 1, 5.2, U 15' ti' gig-Seq: .1 -'X X F4 - f9E'l'?' ' T v ' WV . '-TY? if ,.gwiQ?1v-Q:5?'5 TX' 1 w 'E ' ' - .X f, ' '4 ks 1 fig, Q ii: xm nh. fum xyl.-wif nn ,MW X ' 1. 1911-13 PENN AVENUE PHONE: ATLANTIC 4008 PITTSBURGH, PA Fried 8 Reineman Packing Co. PITTSBURGH, PA. .llll -1 l -1- PRODUCERS OE FORT PITT BRAND QUALITY FRESH AND CANNED MEAT PRODUCTS EOR OVER 50 YEARS Compliments of KAY, RICHARDS E99 OO. INVESTMENT BROKERS GREETINGS TO THE YOUNG MEN OF SHADY SIDE ACADEMY Atlus JOHN T. SHIRLEY, General Agent ALLAN I. SHIRLEY, Assistant General Agent New England Mutual Life lnsurance Co. of Boston The First Mutual Life Insurance Company Chartered in America-1835 wap.: 1909 OLIVER BUILDING PITTSBURGH, PA Get it at MM STEVENSON AGENCY Life Insurance and Annuities All Kinds of SPORTING GOODS v 5912 PENN AVENUE EAST LIBERTY BERKSHIRE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY PITTSBURGH, PA. Telephone: AT1antic 1875 Your Florist v 3719 FORBES STREET MA,1300-SC R. MAXWELL STEVENSON, Gen'I Agent Joseph Woodwell Co. Distributors DRAPER MAYNARD ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT V EXPERIENCE IN A DIFFICULT ART . . . F , f o f f Experience counts! And at Davidson's. only skilled craftsmen make and at your glasses. As a result your new glasses will fit better, look better and provide the very best vision. Bring your Eye Physician's Rx to Davidson's. Davidson N Co. Guild Opticians 3 705 Ross Avenue 701 Highland Bldg. WOOD ST. id BLVD. OI ALLIES WILKINSBURG EAST END 7076-7-8 Jenkins Arcade COURT 1060 PITTSBURGH CALL ATLANTIC 1546 The HOBBY SHOP Model Supplies for Boats, Railroads, Race Cars, Airplanes O ll4 SHERIDAN SQUARE EAST END PITTSBURGH, PA. HILAND 8 7 51 Open Evenings E. M. HILL LUMBER C0. Established April 17, 1829 0 George A. Kelly Company WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS I 102-104-106-108-110-112 NINTH STREET PITTSBURGH PENNSYLVANIA W. S. B. HAYS COAL CO. HAZEL 2900 O Builder's Supplies Coal - Coke - Slag Cordwood Ready Mixed Concrete Benjamin Moore Paints Tire Place Accessories O Quality - Weight - Service W. S. HILL COMPANHA ,Q 13 x P1'r'rsnUnml COMPLETE NATIUNAL ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS FUEL SIIURTAGE REAL DANGER TIII WIIITE qu Elm mmm ummefr mo l-lere'S lww Y S UP TOVB uml keep tool in 5 MORE and more fuel is needed for our war effort: war demands on transportation come first. Do your part - don't waste fuel! Insulate your home now the quick, easy way . . . with Gold Bond Rock Wool. This thick, efficient, fire- proof barrier cuts heat losses through walls and roof in winter . . . saves as much as one-third on fuel . . . soon pays for itself. In summer, it keeps out the sun's rays . . . makes your home up to l5'f cooler inside. Installed in just a few hours . . . no muss, no fuss, no bother. Gold Bond Rock Wool insulation costs remarkably little. Free estimate. DANFORTH CO. 5820 CENTER AVENUE PITTSBURGH, PA. EVERYBODY LIKES TEABERRY The cle a n , breezy, mountain - fresh flavor of Teaberry is a favor- ite with everyone every- where. Teaberry is dif- ferent - delightful - with a deep lasting taste and flavor all its very own. Sold E uerywbere d A Pro uct of CLARK BROS. CHEWING GUM C0- PITTSBURGH, PENNA. SERVING THE BEST IN DAIRY PRODUCTS TO SHADY SIDE ACADEMY ALUMNI SINCE 1887 Nleadow Gold Dairies, Inc. Randolph 8: McClements Co Established 18 8 2 and McClements Company, Inc. ww MONTROSE 2500 124 SOUTH WHITFIELD STREET EAST END PITTSBURGHS LEADING FLORISTS CHurchiIl 95 58 0 FRICK PARK CONFECTIONERY Delicatessen Newspapers Magazines Notions 7103 Reynolds Street PITTSBURGH, PA. LOUIS G. FUCHS, Prop. Rollier Bros., Inc fREGISTERED PLUMBERD O Plumbing, Heating. and Roofing 0 Repairing, Remodeling and Contracting 5501 WALNUT STREET EAST LIBERTY Phone MAyflower 3 7 31 SCHlLLER'S PHARMACY 811 S. AIKEN AVENUE AT WALNUT STREET MAyHoWer 5900 PITTSBURGH, PA. Prescriptions Compounded Secundum Artem or- GOOD FOODS at prices you can afford to pay. CONT? to The Grocery Corner Center and Highland Aves. Stevenson-Chislett, lnc. FLORENCE FISHER PARRY FREDERIC W. FISHER and the entire staff of The Parry Studios who par- ticipated in the making of this year's Shady Side Academian photographs wish to thank all the Sen- iors and the Academian staff for their f1ne help in making this year's photographic record so successful. We feel that this year's portraits will become of his- torical importance because so many of the 1943 class will be entering the war. Good luck! T e Parr Stu io Five Locations in Pittsburglfs Golden Triangle BURT H. RIVIERE, '29 Associated with N. S. RIVIERE AND COMPANY Insurance Brokers O 593 Union Trust Building PITTSBURGH, PA. ,lf ...... 3, Compliments of a FRIEND ...... ki, THE FABLE or THE BOY GRADUATE! Once upon a time there was a guy who attended Shady Side Academy. He was a nice sort of a guy . . . nothing sensational about him . . . but just an ordinary lug like you and me! Cat least, like melj So Time marched on, as it's accustomed to do . . . and finally the powers that be decided he knew almost enough to be tossed out with the rest of the graduating class. So he graduated, not bulging over with Honors or anything like that . . . you see, he was just the run-of-mine grad! He'd planned to get a position selling bonds and stuff . . . but bonds at that time were a dime a dozen . . , and he couldn't earn any commissions selling War Bonds Cadvertisementj. So he ambled about look- ing for another sitcheeation. But no soap. Y'understand, he was a nice fellow . . . no fog-horn inhibitions, no pink tooth brush, no your best friend won't tell you . . . BUT he was a sloppy-looking cuss, no end! Pants always un-pressed . . . coat like- wise . . . Funny no one ever told him these things are all-fired important! AND THEN . . . a lovely girl named Kittybelle Bullhnch, fof the J. Andrew Smythe Bullfinchesl advised him one day to send his other suit to Hutchinson Cleaners . . . SO, he did! And did it ever look swell when they returned it! l think the price was 85 cents but don't quote me! 'A' MORAL: Maybe he got a job after that . . . I wouldn't know! But his nicely cleaned and pressed clothes didn't hinder him, I betcha! HUTCHINSON Cleaners H Dyers STerling 4300 TO THE STUDENTS OF SHADY SIDE ACADEMY As you grow in need of Banking Service, we invite you to use this Institution. FIRST NATIONALBANK A1 P I T T S B U R G H FIFTHAVENUE S'WO0D STREET Uonvenient fbryou FEDERAL STREET BRANCH FEDERAL STREET and PARK WAY MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Joyce-McClements Quality Products Since 1912 FANCY DESSERTS BAKED GOODS CONPECTIONS TWO RESTAURANTS PENN AND SHADY SCHENLEY APARTMENTS Ce eaelz generative ef Httseurgizers, the leeel rivers tel! the stery ef determined and eeuseless aetieity N 1753, George Washington visited the present site of Pittsburgh and reported: . . . I spent some time in viewing the rivers and the land in the forks, which I think extremely well situated. The land at the point is very convenient for building. Building did take place, making Pittsburgh important to the state and to the nation. Such progress would not have been possible without adequate banking capital and assistance. Through the years, The Union Trust Company has had a direct influence upon the expan- sion of Pittsburgh, and continues to provide succeeding generations of customers with financial services. THE UNIUN TRUST CUMPAQNY UF PITTSBURGH PLAN YOUR TENTH REUNION NOW Celebrate your graduation by buying a War Savings Bond. Then appoint a committee of your classmates to arrange for the reunion in 1953. At that reunion class members present will tell what they are going to do with the money they will receive that year for the bonds they buy today. U. S. War Bonds may be purchased at this bank. FARMERS DEPOSIT NATIONAL BANK OF PITTSBURGH Establirhzd 1332 CAPITAL AND SURPLUS FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS BEHIND THE ENDURING INSTITUTION .... SUCCESSFUL CUSTOMERS MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANC 'ORPORATION An invitation to Western Pennsylfvanians When you select the Union National Bank of Pittsburqh as your own bank, you are definitely assured of these advantages: complete facilities to meet your needs, whether in connection with banking matters or trust service. Courteous treatment at all times, with helpful cooperation of the best type. And prompt, efficient attention to your financial affairs. We invite you to make the Union National your banking home. THE UNION NATIONAL BANK OF PITTSBURGH wooo STREET AT FOURTH AVENUE Member Federal Reserve System Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 1 1 F W 'T.'.1. ::: . ...... ,sm-. , :1 -... , fi. '--1121: -A Z .-E -.te -' ,- ' ' ' 7 . ii . , iii '55 sm-.f.,.'f1L5 53?-S :aa-P - : .l: , 519' ' -..-.E5- , r..i-? if -.. Gigi - L, ,, -----' . 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REED CO. Opticians Main Floor, Jenkins Arcade PREctIsIoN GI.AssI2s large assortment of styles. if 62l4 Penn Ave, HI. 1220 'A' Open from 7 a.m. to l c1.m. Sunday Included .14 1 .o . ff x tmgi yl c. ' I 'AY . . ,',. Ii QW Q'-liek , .k.i.3iZ.' Q HEADQUARTERS for MILITARY JEWELRY Stock-Water Proof Military Watches Identification Bracelets, all types Military Picture Frames Sterling Silver Service Rings Sterling Identification Neck Chains ik lllllllltllllllt SHANAHAN TRANSFER 8 STURAGE C0qIna Separate Fireproof Rooms Household Goods Only i' Established 1864 'A' Fifth Avenue - Penn Avenue The Stevenson 6- Foster Co PRINTERS - llTl'lllGRAPl'lERS - STATIUNERS 42I Seventh Avenue - Pittsburgh, Penn N l CQLLEGE ANNLJALS HIGH scHooL YEAR Boom Mommy Pusucf-xrloms l Our representative will be pleased to assist you when compiling your next Publication. . . . Telephone 6Rant I55l . . . 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