Fall 1966 MA Bulletin

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Academy BULLETIN

DEDICATION HOMECOMING DAY

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1966

winter 1967


Profile

“Pillar of the Community” is a cliché H at is often Abused but is, nevertheless, a highly appropriate descrip­ tion of Howard P. Johnson. The amiable and astute Montclair Academy Founda­ tion president has long been an active leader in town affairs. Just this fall he relinquished the Chamber of Com­ merce presidency and, as past president, is still busy with the multitude of Chamber involvements that help make Montclair a desirable community in which to live, work and educate children. Howard Johnson has been a member of th^Academy Board of Trustees since 1958, and was responsible for putting together the properties needed to build the new campus on the west side of Lloyd Road. His leadership ability and dedication to Montclair Academy was pub­ licly recognized last January when the trustees elected him President of the Board. Howard is a graduate of Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, and Yale University. Following gradua­ tion from Yale, he served as a World W ar II pilot with the rank of captain in the Air Transport Command, Pa­ cific Theater of War. A lifelong resident of Montclair, Howard Johnson has served as president of the Montclair Board of Real­ tors, the Kiwanis Club, and is a past trustee of the Com­ munity Chest. He is a member of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church and an enthusiastic golfer at the Montclair Golf Club. Howard is president of Howard P. Johnson, realtors, 15 Church Street, Montclair. He resides with his wife, Katherine, and their three children, at 22 Melrose Place, Montclair.


comment John G. MacVicar founded the Montclair Boys’ School in a 1,one-room building on Clinton Avenue with an enrollment of eighteen boys.

■URg h t y

yea rs

ago ,

During the past eight decades the school has run the gamut of independent school education as the needs of each era dictated M boarding school, military academy, business training, and finally, independent day sch;ol.

“Always to be the best and to be distinguished dbove^gthers.” Ffomer, Iliad VI, 208

The history of the Academy and its people provides a valuable heritage. There have been great masters and headmasters, outstanding athletes, brilliant students, and dedicated trustees. It was stated in the spring B U LLET IN that “a school is only as good as is the faculty and student body.” This is a fundamental truth but it did not go quite far enough. Recognition, comes to masters and students in many different forms. They eventually have their place in the sun. The unsung heroes are the men who serve on the board of trustees. Since the Montclair Academy Founda­ tion was formed in 1948, trustees have accepted the re­ sponsibility of determining policy and guiding its destiny. They are busy people with many commitments in busi­ ness, community, church, and of course they have families. But without exception, the tfustees have had a total dedication to make Montclair Academy and Brookside the best possible schools. They have given unselfishly of themselves in terms of time, financial resources, and in more than just a few instances, at the expense of their health. Trustees serve without salary. Their only reward is the satisfaction of knowing that their guidance has pro­ duced a school that educates young men who will be­ come responsible adults, emotionally mature parents, and patriotic citizens. Not enough has been said about the men who serve on-,the Board and their role in making this school what it has been in the past, is today, and will be in the future. But if this is not as it should have been, it is as they would want it. The students, faculty, and parents have long bene­ fited from Montclair Academy because John MacVicar founded the School in 1887, guided it masterfully for 38 years, and the trustees have made uncounted sacrifices to maintain and improve the excellence that is the hallmark of a Montclair Academy education. bob walker editor M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

Contents Editor’s Comment ...................... ..............I ..................... 1 Dedication .............................. .................... • ..................... 2 Campus N e w s ................................ - • . . . . . • 'V.T..^'C H w l Record E n r o llm e n f ò ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ * > Jf Faculty Expansion Keeps P a c e ; . , . . . ............................. 18 First A.F.S. Student ......................................................... 18 Sports

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Mathematics as a Language . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

1 . • • • • • -22

A Year of Success . . . I A , . vA y i -' -^ 75th Anniversary Program . ............

.26

Matching Gifts . . . . . . .

35

Awards at 79th Commencement ..................................... 37 Glass Notes ......................................................................... 41 Necrology .............................................. Inside Back Cover R o b er t :JK: W

alker

........................ .. • .............. .. • • Editor

C h a r l e s G oetz ...................... Associate Editor

The Montclair Academy Bulletin is published quarterly: Autumn, Winter, Spring, and Summer by Montclair Academy Foundation at Montclafl§New Jersey. Second Gass postage paid at Montclair, New Jersey 07042.

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of file L. I). BARNEY SCIENCE BUILDING and R U D O LPH H. D E E T JE N SC IEN CE LEC TU R E HA LL

THE NATIONAL ANTHEM

: The Reverend George M. Bean, Rector, St, Luke’s Episcopal Church of Montclair.

in v o c a t io n

O God who has created man in Thine own image* and taught us to love Thee with all Thy heart' and soul and mind, the sons and friends of the Montclair Academy pause a moment in the steady march of life to lift up their hearts to Thee. Let us remember with gratitude, "all those who have labored in the past to make this school possible. Let us acknowledge with thankfulness all those whose generosity is making a great future equally possible. And grant that today knowledge may be increased among us, and all good learning flourish and abound. Bless all who teach and all who learn, and grant that in humility-of heart and mind, we may ever look unto Thee who art the ^fountain of all wisdom, through Jesus Christ Our Lord, Amen.

ski .k (m i o n s :

The Montclair Academy Glee Club. .Nixon S. Bicknell, director. F all-W

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1966


WELCOME JfROM THE FACULTY, STUDENTS AND PARENTS

Philip L. Anderson, Acting Headmaster Ladies and Gentlemen, it&is- my pleasure and honor to bring you a wordglff welcome for the parents, the faculty, and the students of Montclair Academy on this grand day of dedication. Our hearts are filled with excitement and gratitude as we stancpibefore pur most recently completed structure. It is a far cry .from the -science facilities to which-we had become accustomed. And although what we had may have "been the .latest and most’ modern for the class of 1916, somehow I feel that, even then some of the newness had been lost. We are deeply indebted to many like these men we honor today, whose foresight, vision, tireless, energy, effort and dogged determination have resulted in brick and mor­ tar, glass and steel, being blended into the building of beauty we now occupy. To our parents, Montclair Academy means that you have been able to exercise the God-given right of choice. Because of the dreams and efforts of men like these, you have the opportunity to select for your sons that which offers! the. finest possible in independent secondary school! education. To the faculty, the men we honor mean inspiration and a rededication to the; ideals and objectives of our profession, the opportunity to work with the latest and newest in design and equipment under an aura of aca­ demic freedom, exercising an extensive latitude for new ideas and techniques, free from script lesson plans and dictated curriculum. And to the students, all of this is for you. The men we honor, who stand out among those many who have done so much to make this building possible, no doubt stand facing you today with hearts full of gladness as they see the building and the boy come together. For these men of vision and foresight, these publicspirited and civic-minded leaders, recognize that in the Academy boy of today, we have tomorrow’s leader. How then, boys, do you repay these men? W hat do they "expect? Simply your best, your diligent effort. To this rich inheritance that you receive today, add effort, add diligence, add determination. Widen your horizons, dedicate yourself to the promise to use your capable minds to the fullest: In this way, you honor these men. In St. Luke, Chapter 12, verse 48, we find these w ords: “For whom much is ’given, of him shall be much re­ quired: and to whom men have committed much, of him they will ask more.’’ To these words, then we, the parents, the faculty, the students of Montclair Academy commit ourselves today. M o n t c l a ir A c a d em y B u l l e t in


WELCOME FROM THE TOWN OF MONTCLAIR

Theodore MacLachlan, Commissionef When one thinks about Montclair anljthe surrounding towns and the contributions that have been made to their civic life by people who have graduatedflrom this school, I don’t know where we in West Essex-—and I am sure it mush spread out much further than this:—would have been. You who have graduated, from this school have certainly been the backbone of many,: many civic enter­ prises and efforts that, without your help, would not have been the success they were. I know that to single out people, we would make a mistake and miss the most popu­ lar and the hardest workers. W e’re just so proud to have you in Montclair. We welcome you here and hope there will be many, many good students come out of this building—which we know there will—and when these boys stand up here and sing, this is all I ever need to 'get started. Because if you didn’t have goose pimples when they were singing, I want you to go home and examine yourself. Welcome to M ont||air and we’re delighted to have you here. Thank you.

WELCOME FROM THE TRUSTEES AND ALUMNI

Rudolph H. Deetjen, T5, Charter Trustee I think the best way to address this wonderful gather­ ing today composed of the students, parents, friends and everybody else is to simply say that I can hardly believe it when looking over these beautiful buildings-—and it’s not yhe first time I ’ve seen them, but I think I ’ve appreciated them more today than I ever have before. The weather has a littleilbit to do with it too, but I think you’ll agree with me that the whole layout exceeds our fonde-st dreams. And when Mr. Anderson made his opening remarks about the Academy-||now in its eightieth . year—it was pretty hanf’for me to realize that of those eighty years I have been associated with the Academy since 1907. First as a student, and then with the other pleasures the Acad­ emy has offered me over the years. It is really an honor to have you all turn out today for what I consider perhaps the most marvelous .event thdt I have seen enjoyed by the Academy in the approxi­ mately 56 years that I have been connected with it, start­ ing as a student in the fifth grade when we had the old building mown below. And when you look around, there are only two more buildings to construct and we are going to put our shoulders to the wheel and finish those pretty s®n. . . . I thank you and bid a most hearty welcome to you from the Board, from the alumni, and all those here at school. F all-W

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CITATION TO HERMAN A. SCHMITZ

Presented by Howard A. Van Vleck, ’22 Chairman o f the 75th Anniversary Program We are here today to dedicate a building, but there is one thing that I want to say before my appointed pleasure, and that is to mention that we have built a springboard for boys. A lot of us had a lS of fun doing it. It’s been a little work all the way along the line, but we do have with us today Mr. Brooks Kaufman of the firm of Epple and Seaman, the architects who have conceived this whole complex of buildings and have placed it so magnificently on this hillside site. In addition to Mr. Kaufman, we have Messrs. Peterson, both senior and junior, of O. A. Peterson Company, who have really put their shoulders behind this job. I just want to say from my own heart that it has been a wonderful opportunity and privilege for me to have worked with these men, the architects and the contractors. And this is a real labor of love. A tre­ mendous amount of devotion has gone into these buildings. It is very seldom that we have an assignment which gives us so much pleasure and joy to perform. I have here a citation to be presented today and I ’d like to ask Mr. Herman Schmitz to come and join me at the podium. I take great pleasure in reading the citation, which goes to Mr. Schmitz, because without his original effort, we wouldn’t be here today.

(Ettation In securing two of Montclair’s finest assets, this glistening new? Academy and a reborn Brookside School,-, no single advocate embraced the cause at a more critical time than H ERM AN A. SCHM ITZ. These were sharp challenges, demanding all of th e , polished intelligence which won highest honors for him on his 1939 gradua­ tion from Princeton, all of bis leadership experiences as a wartime Lieutenant Commander, all of his years of investment counselling—and still more. To outbalance hard crises at both schools, a dynamic dedication was essential, and of this H ERM AN A. SCHM ITZ had an abundance when he was elected to the Board of Trustees of the Foundation in late 1957. Ref using, to let a weakening Brookside die, he under­ took a crash program of repairs and fund-raising which yielded a fire-safe plant and a major building. Then, des­ ignated President of the Board in 1959, he faced up to the ramifying complexities of selecting a new Headmaster. At the same time, he articulated the very first prospectus for the 75th Anniversary fund drive. When he stepped further in those early, uncertain days and developed a massive gift of $ 100,000, it was a foregone ;conclusion that he should become the first campaign chairman. In the months that followed, his awareness of the need an® capacity for meticulous organization bonded together the M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in


new Committee, galvanizing them into raising in excess of $500,000 during the year of his chairmanship. In 1964 H ERM A N /A . SCH M ITZ gave still further testimony1 to hijpj empathy for Brookside’s goals. Aware of the real, value of installing a swimming pool there, he overcame the high degree of difficulty: involved, met with designers and builders, and even raised $ 10,000 of the $15,000 required. Father of a former Montclair Academy student and currently parent of two undergraduates there, H E R M A N A. SCHM ITZ has given contemporary meaning to Alfred North Whitehead’s reminder that “Our forefathers in the' dark ages saved themselves by embodying high ideals in great organizations.” Tomorrow’s . students, absorbing the high ideals alive in this great organization, will see and know what was saved for them during dark days by the rare dedication of men like MR. HERM AN, A. SCHMITZ.

MR. HERMAN A. SCHMITZ

I just: want' to say, Howard, that was beautifully stated, the sort of thing I would expect from a man whose fine hand can be seen everywhere in the beauty of these buildings and at a schogl where hospitality and generosity of those who inherit the hill is so evident today. It gives me real pleasure today to be here among friends; among friends of Montclair Academy and in particular, Howard Van Vleck, Rudy Deetjen, Dave Barney and associates. I would like td say that by accepting this honor, I feel personally that I am expressing the full measure of my qwn regard for everyone who, by their sponsorship, or by their daily attendance here at Montclair Academy, consider this school important, not only for what it stands for today, but for what each of the Academy’s graduates carry forward into the future and throughout the land. I thank you very much. F all-W

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1966


THE L. D. BARNEY SCIENCE BUILDING

Présentation by Howard P. Johnson, President, the Board of Trustees Last January at the annual organization meeting of the Board of Trustees there was a general shifting of responsibilities. And at this time Marston Ames, who had been treasurer of the Foundation—:as a matter of fact, he had been the only treasurer that I can remember—de­ cided to step aside and let George Egbert take over these duties. Jim Vandermade, who had been president through five very exciting, critical, and important years at the Academy, decided that somebody else should take over the duties of the presidency and he stepped up to become chairman of the board. I might say that this is not a retirement position. Jim has been working almost as hard as chairman as he did as president. Dave Barney, who had been board chairman since 1958 and prior to that was board president, stepped down and accepted a char­ ter membership on the board. At this same meeting last January ifgfelf to me to make the appropriate remarks about the service to the Academy of each of these indi­ viduals, and I did the best I could, complimenting each for the many, many things he had done for the school. A fter the meeting, Dave Barney came up to me and said, “Howard, it sure is nice to get flowers while you can still smelt them.”

Presentation: We are here today to dedicate this fine addition to Montclair Academy and, in doing so, to honor a great friend whose strength and wisdom have contributed so much to the rebuilding of Montclair Academy. l

No school, no.'institution, can come into being and remain in being without broad support throughout the community. Montclair Academy has, obviously, enjoyed such support if we but look at the accomplishments of the recent past. We have other buildings and numerous facilities yet to be named in recognition of the schoolV many friends. However, the Board of Trustees is in unanimous agreement that it is entirely fitting and proper first to name this science building for a man whose fore: sight, patience, strength, and leadership have played, and do play, such an important part in the preservation and re-emergence of Montclair Academy. Let us never forget that had it not been for Dave Barney and a handful of others, there might very well have been no such insti­ tution for the rest of us to support. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

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The new Montclair Academy : had its birth in 1948 when, to their everlasting credit, a few public-spirited alumni formed the Montclair Academy Foundation and purchased the school which had been operated for many years under a proprietorship. Rudy Deetjen, who is here with us today, was th afirst president of the foundation. It is well known that the buildings the foundation acquired were antiquated, obsolete, dilapidated. The schoolhad lost much of the favor and support of the Montclair community.;-. This: small group, however, was convinced that there was a need for an outstanding independent boys’ day school in Montclair and that, if this school were brought up to a level of excellence, it would be supported. The job ahead, however,'was formidable and the persbn who thought it could be accomplished was unique in his far­ sightedness. Dave Barney first came to Montclair from Milwaukee,Wisconsin, in 1944 as the new president of Hoffmann La Roche in Clifton. The story of his brilliant success in industry as president of Hoffmann La Roche and later board chairman is well known to all. Busy as he was, Dave always found time for civic responsibilities. Montclair Academy can be forever grate­ ful that he selected it as his favorite project. Dave went on tfe|SBoard of Trustees at Brookside in 1948. He was president of the Brookside School in 1950 when it became'a part of the Academy Foundation. He has served as a foundation trustee ever since. H e was president of the .board from 1955 through 1958 and served as board chairman from that date until this past January when he stepped down to become a Charter Trustee. It was no accident that things began to happen as soon as he became a trustee. First, we saw the dramatic aca­ demic rejuvenation-of the school. Capable, dedicated edu­ cators were attracted by the new challenge. Gradually, an awareness grew in the community that something ex­ citing was going on “on the hill.” It was no accident that the property on which these fine buildings now stand, was assembled.' It was no acci­ dent that the aims, aspirations and achievements of this school became known,' andiSt was no accident, that the community responded in a manner which made the at­ tainment of these aspirations realizable. Dave Barney is the first to agree that this has not been a one man show nor will it ever be. The accomplish­ ments to date are the results of an -extraordinary team effort by the faculty and staff, the headmasters and other administrators, the alumni, the parents, the -many academy friends, the students themselves, the trustees. Montclair Academy has come a long way in the past few years. It still has a long way to go, in fact, thé job is never ending, but the day is not far off when we can 8

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say “here is an independent boys’ day school which knows no superior.” Today we dedicate this building. More important, we honor Shis man, our good friend, Dave Barney, for bring­ ing to 'Montclair Academy strong, imaginative and effec;|)ve leadership at a time when such leadership was a necessity. Now, as president of The Board of Trustees of the Montclair Academy Foundation,-it is my high htinor and privilege to dedicate this science building and to name it the L. D. Barney Science Building.

ACCEPTANCE AND RESPONSE '

L. D. Barney, Charter Trustee Howard, thank you very much. Ladies and Gentle­ men, I assure you I accept this great honor with the utmost humility. It has been, as Howard said, a team effort and no single person was responsible. Therefore, I would like to pause for a moment to analyze what really makes this Academy great. W e have marvelous tradition going back eighty years, plus a high record of perform­ ance. It so happens that during my business career I became close friends with Mr. Charles Walgreen, who is the son of the founder of the Walgreen drug chain. And a few years ago, Walgreen stores were going to have their fiftieth anniversary. They are headquartered, as you know, in Chicago, so they spent hundreds of thou­ sands of dollars on billboards, streamers, and everything that goes with it. And about a month after this was all over, I said to Charley, “How did it work out?” “Well,” he said, “I got a bunch of nasty letters.” “W hat were these letters saying?” “Well,” he said, “most of them said, ‘We don’t care what you did the last fifty years, what are you doing for us today?”” And I am thinking in terms of today in relation to this Academy. We have a great faculty. We have good facilities and more to come. We have good extracurricular activities for the boys. We have friends, and we have scholarships . for our boys who qualify. I have to say that many of The boys who have come through this school with scholar­ ship aid have done exceedingly well in their chosen fields after graduation from Montclair Academy. Our endeavor, by that I mean the endeavor of the Board of Trustees, is to make this school, not only the best in the area, but the best in the East. And I assure you that it is well on its way. In these days of interna­ tional tension, I think it is very fitting for us to give our time and energy to noble enterprises such as this so M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

that our boys graduate and go out and bring fame to the school and acclaim to themselves. In this connection, I like to remember the words Pf the poet: God give-us men a time like this demands „ Strong minds, true faith, great hearts qndcready hands} Men who can stand bM;pze::w d0dchert^s demagogue And siorn his m ocke^f£f^inout blinking. Tall men,- sun crowned, who live. aboz'e the mob in private life and in public thinking. Thank you. 9


THE RUDOLPH H. DEETJEN SCIENCE LECTURE HALL

Presentation by L/ D. Barney Ladies and Gentlemen, I can assure you that I am most happy to double in brass on this occasion. Our nextispeaker is well known tg all of you. He has been a close friend of mine for many years. While he wouldn’t say this, I can say it. .W hen I was president of the board at the Brookside School, he was the first presi­ dent of the Montclair Academy Foundation. It was he, with two other members of this board, who met with me and two members of our board at Brookside; and he was the motivating factor, without exception, to putting these two fine schools together under the same foundation. He worked! very diligently and very hard. In fact, he’s a very hard worker to start with. I want to tell you something else about this man—he’s very conservative, very modest. One day I was having lunch with him in New York, so I said to him, “W hat do you think the market is going t& do$” He is an expert in the brokerage business,:'; “Well,” he said, “Dave, one thing I am sure of, it’s going to fluctuate.” And he was absolutely correct. Therefore, I am very happy to participate in naming the Rudolph H. Deetjen Science Lecture Hall in honor of my good friend and yours, Rudy Deetjen. ACCEPTANCE AND REMARKS

Rudolph H. Deetjen, T5, Charter Trustee Thank you. With those wonderful, kind words from my very dear friend, Dave Barney, he recalled the time when we put the two schools together, but he left out one thing, and that is when we met I said, “Dave, I think this will be a wonderful union, provided however, that you and your two top associates,” who were then the moti­ vating geniuseSSdown at Brookside, “join our board.” One was St. John Webb and the other was our late friend, Hugh McConnell. And he said, “Oh my gosh, we’re trying to get out of a job.” I said, “You’re not getting out of it, Dave,' You’re going to get a bigger one.’SE And that was one; .of the lucky days of my lifetime and all of our lifetimes connected with Montclair Acad­ emy. Because it reminds me, in spite of what Dave has said, of a little story about a very wealthy lady who took a bus to New York instead of driving her own car and went to the Port Authority Terminal and boarded a taxi to go over to the Waldorf. She looked at the meter and thought it said a dollar, and she said to the driver, “How much do I owe you?” He looked, and said, “two cents.” ? F all-W

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And sHe said, “It can’t only be two cents, the last time I looked at the meter it said a dollar.” And he said, “Yes, madam, but you did ninety-eight per- cent of the driving.” I feel very much that everyone who has followed me in activity here, including Dave and all the other trustees, have done so much more than it has been my pleasure to contribute to this school, that Dam like the two cents change for the dollar. It has been a privilege to be con­ nected and; to work with everybody. And the greatest privilege of all is to feel that by putting our shoulder to the wheel, we are helping the future generation that is going to run America get positions in life that will carry on. this great country. I was reading just the other day, and could hardly believe it, that out of two hundred some odd million peo­ ple in this country, fifty per cent are under twenty-five years. ' Now that’s hard to believe, but-figures don’t lie. And those are the boys who are going to be counted upon to lead us. I think the facilities that are offered by this school are great facilities which can train our boys for that leadership, Therefore, it is a great honor to accept this dedica­ tion today. I am so glad to have my name connected with that of Dave, to whom we have dedicated this beau­ tiful building. Nobody could be more deserving of it. Before I conclude, I just want to say that I am so glad to look around this audience and see some real old friends here like A1 Stapf, who was one of the original trustees, Oscar Mathiasen, and in my book, one of the greatest prep school football coaches in the world, and that’s our friend Casey Jones, who now lives down in St. Thomas but is with us today. Thank you all. Once more, I ’m so thankful to have the privilege of joining with you on this fine day. INTRODUCTION OF THE SPEAKER

Daniel E. Emerson, ’42, Dedication Program Chairman I would like to introduce the dedication program committee to you. First is Rosanna Adams. She and her committee of mothers have done so much work on this affair that it is simply too much to enumerate. Hal O’Neill, who drove from Washington, D. C., this morning, just to be here, Howard Van Vleck, whom you have met, Gene Speni, Dr. Edward Seymour, Arthur Goldman, and Bill Dixon, Now for the members of the Academy Staff who I assure you have really done the most work on this project and have been at it night and day for many weeks. I ’ll start out with John Sodoma, who is the business manager, and Bob Walker, who as you know, is the director of de­ velopment and alumni affairs, and last, his secretary, Mrs. Risdon. I would like to thank each of these persons and all the others who have helped make today a success. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in


On July W), , 1962» ust a little ovefc| f # :^ year^ago, : the first active communications?! satellite was thrust into ; ggrbit, This ¿Satellite, you will regali, was called Telfjptar. ^ S d jjtfp n -YiS P r e s e n t Johnson, Spoke to Frederick R. . Kapjfgl, at® . chairman of the board of die American Tele­ phone ®.nd .Telegraph Gpmpany, via 'Pel Star. A whole new world-of communications began. Now,'.standing bv during -that historic conversation, our speaker today was more than just an interested ÿRèctator. B p r it was,. 1}?/ who .provided the guiding intelligence and the original incentive which . paved the way for ibis project. ItjiSÿ^S who recognized^s^ the father of the concept of com"munsations by satellite. , John R. Pierce is the executive director of research of the Bell Tele|îtp.hè Laboratories; in Murray Hill, New Jersey. He wits born in Des Moines, Iowa, and carne#1, east after getting his doeiorate at California Institute of Technolpgy. Now looking over the information about John, he has so many ^accomplishments that to mention, them all would.be completely impossible. He is the author gof nine technical books and many technical articles. Under thé pen name'vpf J. J. Coupling, he has written a number ofpcience fiction stories. Among his many awards are: The Golden Plate award of the Academy of Achievement, the :Waldemar Folsom Medal of Science, the National Medal of Science and the Edison Medal. Dr. Pierce holds six honorary degrees and a t least eighty-three pat­ ents. He iSija, memìMr of the National Academy of Sci­ ence.!',’ the National Academy of Engineering, and the American Academy ¿0 Arts and Sciences.

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In ,this day of scientific' specialization, D r.P ie rc e is well known by his colleagueSAin his profession. as the “wholes scientist, as a man whose contributions in society and the welfare of mankind have resulted from a skill­ ful marriage of deep analytical insight and a keen sensi­ tivity of the human element in our environment. He is-a scientist: whose predictions and achievements! readUike the science fiction that he writes. I heard him described as a kind of engineer, poet, and historian, alijg wrapped into one. Montclair Academy is indeed honored to have Dr. Pierce here today and I amSfxtremely pleased to introduce him to you at this time.

- DEDICATORY ADDRESS

Dr. John R. Pierce, Executive Director, Research Communicationsj*Sciences, Bell Telephone Laboratories ‘ When I was young, I didn’t have anything like the facilities for studying science which generous donors have provided for Montclair Academy. But science wasn’t as important then as it is now. Ther® wasn’t as great a need to train scientists, or to give other young people the sort of' education that will enable them to live wisely in a world in which science is important. I was born into a world without radio broadcasting, or TV, or air travel.- Telephones didn’t play the part in my parents’ lives that they do today, and most people didn’t have automobiles. Just a few generations before that, man’s world included only natural objects—grains and vegetables, cows and horses, rivers, lakes and seas— together with plows and boats, houses and mills, things man-made, but produced more by traditional skill than through deep intellectual, understanding. Today we use trains and automobiles rather than barges and horses, and we live amid a host of. other things which have no counterpart in earlier times, and which would have found no place in an earlier society. These new things include airplanes and electric power, but telephones, television and computers are even better examples. We have roots in the ..past, but we have had to grow and change in order to make use of the products of sci­ ence and technology, We have developed needs and habits which are based on .science and technology. : And surely every human endeavor has been affected by this change. Indeed, science itself has been profoundly affected by our progress in science and technology. Increasingly, sci­ ence has found itself in a world, not just of learning for its own sake, but of works toward filling man’s needs and realizing his aspirations. I believe that traditionally the highest value of science to scientists has been the: value of understanding, of the F all-W

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human mind comprehending the universe in a philosophi­ cal-Sense.-^Twentieth .century science has increased our understanding of .a wide range of natural phenomena immensely, in the fields of chemistry and genetics as well as in physics. Yet this very wealth of progress has un­ dermined rational hope of edmprehensive understanding-^ of science or anything else enabling man to comprehend the universe.' By insisting on details and verification, science de­ stroys the intellectual and emotional appeal of old philoso­ phies and sweeping generalizations. And the very wealth of understanding which the pursuit of science opens up convinces us, not only that no one man can understand everything, but that of "all the things that can be under­ stood mankind has time and energy enough to under­ stand a small fraction only. Science is that it does give true and verifiable understanding, but it will never enable us to understand everything. The practical importance of science to most of us „is not that it enables us to understand the universe, but that it enables us to change the world. The American govern­ ment spends billions ton science and technology primarily because these have demonstrated their power in producing radar, and atom bombs, and sources of power, and means for curing diseases, and the supposition is that adequate support of science will go right on producing militarily and socially useful marvels. Science and technology can continue to change the world as they have changed it in the past. To work th's change we must find that part of new knowledge which will give us more in return than the effort we put into it, and we must be willing to accept unforeseeable conse­ quences, Science and technology are powerful but limited. Sci­ ence gives us not what we think we want, but what we can have. We get plastics instead of the philosopher’s stone, and TV instead of elixir of life. And because science gives us what it can, not what we think we want,, the world that science makes for us is more surprising, more’: different, and in many ways more challenging than the world we would have iWscience did give us what we think we want. It is scientists and engineers whq make these profound changes in our world possible. Certainly, we need to edu­ cate more young people to become scientists and engineers, and your new science building will help in doing this. But, is there any reason why young people who won’t become scientists should learn about science?.'; We don’t need to understand vegetables or animals deeply in order to cook and eat them?- We don’t have to understand telephones or television sets deeply in order to use them. But I think that in today’s world we miss much fun and a good deal of wisdom if we don’t under­ stand something about science and technology. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

The fun we miss is the ability to get behind the magi­ cal “effect” and see man at work in going'from uncer­ tainty to certainty, andSjn acquiring?and exploiting.a new understanding of nature.. It may spoil the ^effect of a magician’s act to know how the tricks are ;done. But to know something about what matter is and how it sticks together; or to understand something about how a radio works does not satiate wonder—it?*opens up new and never ending vistas of wonder and surprise. Learning to, understand a little of science and technology starts one on a journey into an endless realm of intellectual adventure which is open to all of us, however true it may be that the trained and hardy explorer will surely travel further than the fascinated amateur. But a knowledge of science and technology; can give us wisdom as well as fun. W e c a n :^sèg§hat life often changes, not because people are stupid, lazy, or bad, or perverse, but because new opportunities and powers are put into their hands. Crusty old-people-lament that TV programs aren’t just like bqoks. newspapers^ or plays, "or’ concerts. They miss the fun of seeing that whatever TV is like, it is different. A few weeks ago. a European ;c.omposer decried to me the way in which Americans; zoom from place to place in automobiles. IB u st don’t think that he has seen the things that they see in their travels; and, fifty years ago, none did! Average people lived in small towns. They lived lives that many men now recall with wistful regret. But they didn’fisee America and the world the way common people d® today. Science is fun and science is powerful. A knowledge of science is fun, and a knowledge of science, and tech­ nology can make us wiser and moreflorebeabing in judg­ ing the world about us. And, a knowledge of science and technology is easier to acquire than it :once was. But here, much remains to be done. If there is a best way to study and learn science, no one knows what it is. There can be many delightful adventures in finding out how to teach science better. Diversity is one of the greatest Strengths of our na-| tion. It is only by having many well equipped schools that we can try many approaches before wéijëven attempt to choose a “best” one. I am exceedingly’happy that- Montclair Acàdemÿl'is dedicating a new science building. I hope the Academy wiljgjfind ’adequate and increasing support for the? use of this important facility in the teaching of ^science,; and in learning how to teach science better. We need many more scientists, but we also need to inspire all young people with what joy, power and wisdom Science has to offer. I, myself, think that science is the most, practical th ing.in thé world but I feel, -M»est and enthusiastic ii| recommending'it as worthy in all aspects j |f all our lives, whether or not we are scientists. 13


The coach and his boys. L eft to right: Charles “Casey” Jones, Montclair Academy football and basketball coach 1916-1917; Oscar “M atty” Mathiasen ’17; Mrs. Mathiasen; Dr. Edward “-Ned” Seymour ’17.

A time for reminiscing.

F a l l - W in t e r 1966


The Deetjen Family. L e ft to right: Mrs. Arthur Schlobohm (Marilea Deet­ jen ); Rudolph Deetjen, Jr. ’50; Mrs. Rudolph Deetjen; Mrs. Rudolph Deetjen, Jr.; Rudolph H. Deetjen ’15; Mrs. Randall Deetjen Decker; Mrs. Carl Deetjen; Carl Deetjen ’18, M o n t c l a ir A c a d em y B u l l e t in

15


r le u A b

NEW H EA D M A STER SELECTED

During higftenure at Montclair Academy, Philip An­ derson’s duties have included those of director of admis­ sions, director of studies, director of the summer school program pand chairman of the history department. He also is on the 75th Anniversary Program Committee. Mr. Anderson was a member of the faculty and ad­ ministration at Milwaukee University School, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for. eight years as a teacher of history, mathe­ matics, physical education and coach of football and track. He then had five years as. administrative assistant with experience covering admissions, college counseling and placement, directing studies,- chairing the history depart­ ment, alumni, public relations, annual giving and publi­ cations. >: He is a native of Michigan and a graduate of Luther L. W right High School, Ironwood, Michigan. He at­ tended Notre Dame University and graduated from Mar­ quette University with Ph.B. and M.A. degrees following World W ar II service as a first lieutenant in the Marine Corps. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson have three children, Cheryl, a freshman at Connecticut College for Women, Scott, a sophomore at Montclair Academy, and Dennis, a sixth grade student at Brookside School.

■ f e r u s t e e l o f Montclair Academy have announced the appointment §Ç Philip L. Anderson as the'.sixth- head­ master Tn BfeâgKtv-vear history of this independent day school for Troys. Mr. Anderson has served the Academy ; as assistant ilieadumstir sin<ré; 1962 and was named acting headmaster last April, succeeding Henry Bi Poor. In making the announcementMioard of trustees presi­ dent,^Howard P. 'Johnson, sa id ® W e are particularly happy that the selection committee has tpund Philip L. Anderson, to he the best qualified of the numerous strong candidates; considered for the headmastership. ‘‘Mr.’ AnddrSon brings eighteen years; of broad inde­ pendent'School1! experience to. his new position-;e he has already contributed to the building of P ur.strong faculty, helped ¿strengthen d u r collège counseling and ' placement program,, and has been instrumental in forming the close ties we have with our school parents.” 16

Mr. Anderson is a member of the Notre Dame Mono­ gram Club, Marquette “M” Club, Cum Laude Society, New Jersey Association of Independent School Teachers, board of trustees, Montclair-West Essex Guidance Cen-ter,' Montclair Kiwanis Club, and the Montclair Red Cross board of directors.

*

*

*

Students in the tenth, eleventh, and Twelfth grades from the Academy and Kimberley School are enjoying the New York Arts Program, under the sponsorship of the Parents’ Associations of the two schools. The boys and girls will attend eight performances in New York City during the winter months. The programs include performances ranging from opera, ballet, and the philharmonic, to drama and folk singers. F all-W

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Record Enrollment-Curriculum Innovations This Year Three hundred ten boys: in grades seven through twelve, the largest student body ever, were on hand for the opening of school, September 14th. The “all-time” high—increased from 282 students last year- 7-was right on schedule with the Trustees’ long-range planning that will result in an enrollment of 350 by Steptember, 1968. Com­ pletion of the L. D. Barney Science Building made possible the accommodation of increased student body projection that was established when plans for the 75th Anniversary Program were put into effect five years ago. The maxi­ mum number of students—350—will be reached in two years and upon completion of the Gymnasium. Along with more boys, several significant additions to i the already broad curriculum are being offered. New this year is a course in Asian studies, physical science for freshmen, a required music and art program in the sev­ enth and eighth grades that is also an elective®or upper grades, and a new two-track mathematics program de­ signed to broaden the higher levels of geometry and algebra and provide a full five year mathematics program for a greater number of boys. On a club basis, but of educational significance and importance, are the following organizations: Leones De­ bating Society, Audio Visual Aids Club, Computer Club, Folk Music Club, Glee Club, Library Council, Press Serv­ ice, Red and Black Society, Cum Laude Society, Student Council, Yearbook 80 and Montclair News, the student newspaper. *

*

*

'Another “new” addition this year is the organization of the Computer Club, under the direction of president Richard Brightman and faculty advisor, Richard Conner.

Director of Development, Bob Walker, has been elected development division chairman: ,New Jersey Association of Independent Schools, and Independent Schools Chair­ man of the American Alumni Council, District II, which includes jail independent schools in New York, Pennsylva­ nia, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia, District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and Ontario, Canada. *

*

*

James H. Scolnick and Richard S. Smolan, members of the Class of 1968, are spending this, their junior year, studying in Spain under the Schoolboys Abroad program. Schoolboys Abroad Is sponsored by PlJiflips Exeter Acad­ emy. 'Jamie and Rick will return to Montclair Academy next September to complete their senior year. S

*

The student council, under the leadership of president Jay Sperling, son of Dr. and Mrs. Walter J. Sperling, ’34, has planned and initiated a series of fund raising projects that will result? in total financial responsibility ¡fbr sponsorship of the Academy’s American Field Service foreign exchange student next year. The council held car washes during the autumn months and will promote .a -joint concert with', the girls from Beard School, and the annual Academy-Kimberley dra­ matic production next spring. Another “first” for the student council is - a group of Kimberlêÿ girls as cheerleaders îo r varsity games.- A d­ dition of the cheerleaders is a student council effort--to instill better attendance and additional spirit at athletic contests.

The members of the club will visit Monroe Labora­ tories in the near future to operate the four Monrobot computers. Each boy will be assigned a program until he becomes proficient in programming techniques and then graduates to running programs that he has created and worked on himself. *

*

The winter sports schedule represents one of the most ambitious in history. Students have a choice of partici­ pating in varsity Red, varsity Black, junior varsity, and junior basketball, varsity, junior varsity and junior wrest­ ling, varsity swimming, ice skating, weight training, fenc­ ing, and bowling. M o n t c l a ir A c a d em y B u l l e t in

W A LTER JAY SPE R LIN G III, ’67 17


Faculty Expansion Keeps Pace W ith School Growth Eleven new masters grace the classrooms this year. The faculty now numbers 32 fulltim e teachers. Returning to the Academy following two years at Robert Academy, Istanbul, Turkey, is Joseph H. Kerner. Mr. Kerner, a graduate of Princeton, serves as English department chairman, directs the testing programs, serves on the academic and college counseling committees, and assists- with varsity football. He previously taught at the Academy from 1959-1964. Barry Nazarian, a 1962, alumnus of the Academy and recent Columbia University graduate, teaches seventh and eighth grade English, serves as varsity football line coach and |H head, coach of varsity wrestling. Henri Bernier instrudp French, his native language. Mr. Bernier received his baccalaureate from La Rochelle College and has studied at Sir Williams College, Mon­ treal, Canada. Dr. Ronald K. Blair a Cuban born in Jamaica, teaches Spanish, Dr. Blair received his Ph.D. in literature from the University of Havana'.; From 1933 to 1965 he served as chairman of the English department at Instituto PreUni versitatio, Santiago, Cuba, and from 1947-1965 he was chairman of thd|§ 6reign languages department at the University of Oriente, also in Santiago. Kenneth Gibson is a master for economics and intro­ ductory;» physical science in addition to his duties as junior football and basketball coach. 'M r; Gibson is a graduate of Mount Hebron School, Davis and Elkins College and the U n iy S ity of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Eco­ nomics. He has taught at Chatham College|and Pitt. Ignacio Saavedra comes to the Academy with teaching experience at Miami, Fla., Military Academy and St. Thomas Moore Academy, Conn. He isga graduate of the Inter-American U niversitjiin Puerto Rico, teaches Spanish, coaches weight training and will assist with var­ sity track, T.amont D. Thomas has joined the history department and teaches modern European and world history, and coaches junior and junior varsity soccer and junior varsity tennis. He is a graduate of Trinity College with both a B.A. and M.A. and has studied at Kings College, Uni­ versity-of London, England. His previous" teaching ex­ periences include Phoenix Country Day School, Ariz., and in Liberia, West Africa. . Allan Penner, a graduate of Qberlin and Boston Uni­ versity, comes to the 'Academy from Madison, New Jer­ sey, High School. He teaches' eleventh grade English, serves on the discipline committee, as adviser to the Leones Debating Society, as faculty adviser for the Parents’ As­ sociation Book Fair, and coaches junior soccer. 18

Charles Faurot®s, a graduate of Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., and Yale University. He teaches'mathe­ matics, Mr. Faurot previously taught at Suffield Acad­ emy and Fenwick High School, 111. He was a member of the Yale swimming team and will assist with varsity swimming and junior varsity baseball. James M arnelj also instructs mathematics. He is a graduate of Penn State with majors in journalism, chem­ istry, and mathematics. He will coach golf. Miss Katherine B. Twyeffort is teaching the new art course. She received her B.A. from Vassar, M.A. from Harvard, and has taught at the Chapin SchoolHn New York.

German Youth Is First A .F.S . Student

Axel Epe, 16, of Remscheid, Germany, is spending the 1966-’67 school year as a member of Montclair Academy’s senior class. He is studying in the United States as an exchange student in the American Field Service International Scholarship Program. In Germany, Axel attends Städtisches Gymnasium fur Jungen School in Remscheid. His major vocational and academic interests are English and journalism. He par­ ticipates in tennis, swimming, %jrack and field, and has traveled and studied in Holland and Great Britain. He was a member of the Academy varsity soccer team last fall. Axel’s American “parents” are Mr. and Mrs. James G. Paterson of Montclair. The Patersons have two sons attending the Academy, James, Jr., a-senior, and David,» a freshman. This marks the initial year of participation in the ex-' change program for the Academy. Frederick L. Redpath, board of trustees vice president, is president of the Mont­ clair Academy Chapter, American Field Service. Financial support of the A.F.S. program this year has been shared by the student council, Parents’ Asso­ ciation, Alumni Association, and the Board of Trustees. F all-W

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Fall Sports Varsity Soccer — 8-2-2 N O RTH JE R S E Y IN D E PE N D E N T SCHOOL SOCCER LEAGUE C H A M PIO N S--1965 and 1966 3 ............ ................ St. Bernard’s . .. ........................ 1 1 ............ ............ Englewood School . ........................ 2 5 ............ ................ King School . . . ........................ 0 7 ............ . . . . . . Morristown School ........................ 0 1 ............ .............. Wardlaw School .. ........................ 0 2 ................ Rutgers Prep . . . ........................ 1 7 ............ ............ Rye Country Day . ........................ 2 2 2 .......... 1 ................ Rutgers Prep . . . 0 ............................Wardlaw School .. ........................ 0 4 ............... 7 . . . . . Morristown School . ........................ 0 3 ............. . . . . . . St. Bernard’s School ........................ 0 1 ............ . . . . . . . Collegiate School . ........................ 2

10

36

1

Pre-Seasem Game ............... . . . . . . . East Paterson . . . . ........................ 2 Fieldstem Invitational

Semi-Fined 5 ................ ................ F ield sto n ................... ................ 0

0

Varsity Soccer Coach Ian Naismith watching anxiously from the side-

line.

Final .............. . Rutgers ................ ................ 3 .................

Jayvee Soccer —4-1-1

Junior Soccer — 5-0

Peter Adams ’67, right, demonstrates the détermination that typifies M.A. teams. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

19


Varsity Football - 3-2-2 13 33 6 30 41

.. . .................. Morristown . . . . 13 . . . .................... St. Luke’s School a: . .... 7 . . . .................... Collegiate S c h o o l.................... . . . 6 . . . . ..............Rye Country Day School . <■ . .. . 0 . . . ........................King School . . , . .. , . . . . . . . . . . 6 0 . . . ,.................... Newark A cadem y............ .. .. 34 13 . . . ................ St. Bernard’s SchoolA..vckSfeji^H 20

Jayvee Football — 1-1-2

Junior Football — 2-4

P E T E R BRUNDAGE ’67

Cross Country - 6-4 5 0 ........ .. . . . . . .■ Morristown S c h o o l.............. ........ 15 . . . . College High S chool............ .......... 31 36 .............. ........Immaculate Conception............ .......... 19 31% . . . . . ........ Wardlaw SchSiliBiM lliBS ■- ¿ s m 1 5 .............. u : . ■ . 1 Rutgers P r e p .................. 1..........44 4 0 ............ . . . . . . Englewood S ch o o l............... ........ 16 2 9 .............. . . . . . College High S chool............ '...........31 1 6 .............. 1. .. . .; 11 : m Rutgers P r e p .................. ..........3 9 à i .............. Wardlaw School ................ . . . . . 36 20 . . . . . : . . .......... Newark AcademfSBRRsswH ........ 43 *Low score wins in. Cross Country

20 . . . . . . . . ..

20

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Athlétic Director* Carmen Marnell : “We Play'to Win.”

Jeffrey J. Podesta, ’67, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerard B. Podestaf|35, became the first student to win the Wood­ ford Memorial Cup Tennis Trophy for three years. Jeff also won singles championship in the 34th Eastern Inter­ scholastic Private School Tennis/Tournament-at Colum­ bia University- this fall and is a top ranked junior in the Eastern Lawn Tennis Association. The junior Woodford Memorial Tennis Trophy was won this year by Peter Redpath, ’72, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Redpath. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in


ff... M athem atics m ust be regarded as a language” MR. NU GENT

Chairman Philip StaekpoleJ Richard Conner, John Nugent, R o llrt Purcell, Charles Faurot, and James Marnell, Montclair Academy’s mathematics masters, occupy the second floor of the Academy’s new L. D. Barney''Sci­ ence Building, an|j| although the mathematicians don’t have in their classrooms the array of equipment that Academy science instructors‘ can finally display on the floor below, Mr. Stackpole and Company do have a bright­ ly burnished, recently augmented curriculum which ds] every bit as impressive as anything else you care to point out in M.A;’s newest facility. And *8ie Montclair Acad­ emy |§ourse: of mathematics studies is built firmly upon a foundation of “new math.” “The whole position of ‘new math’,” explains Rich­ ard’Conner,, “is that you can’t teach mathematics through applications because the applications change, or they may be meaningless to the student. A fter all, what does a ||by in high school know about electronic tubes for radios? W hat does -he Tnow about-population'problems, or phys­ ics problems? If a boy does know about electronic tubes, or population problems, or physics,; then his knowledge about them will probably exceed his ability to understand the mathematical statements about them. This is not to deny that in some cases an example from outside mathe­ matics may help a student to understand a mathematical principle.”

22

The organizing principle behind Montclair Academy’s mathematics curriculum is that math must be regarded as a language. The pure mathematician works with the language of mathematics in almost the same way as a grammarian works with, say, the English language. How­ ever, mathematics is a language which, because of its abstraction, is capable of being applied in areas which are vastly different from one another. This concept domi­ nates the whole development of modern mathematics, which is away from specific applications. It is increasingly recognized by engineering and science colleges that appli­ cations change and, therefore, for engineers and scientists, the need for learning pure mathematics is more impor­ tant. There must be a language, a set of tools, which is useful even if a particular thing in a specific field becomes obsolete or changes. Therefore, the people who attend classes at Montclair Academy must have a language which is flexible and common to both the physicist and the social scientist. In a secondary school, the masters don’t know which of their students will never study math again, which will go into the social sciences, which will become physi­ cal scientists. They must have a language and a method­ ology sufficiently general to be useful to all students. The same computer involved in plotting the path of a satellite may also be used in solving the army’s inventory problems, or to predict the outcome of an election, withF all-W

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"W e hope to develop at the m ost elem entary level, a creativity in mathematics.”

out any internal change in the machine itself. The same language serves all of these radically different functions. In the process of using a computer, the physicist, the stock clerk, and the sociologist are all using the same mathematical langua'ge—but perhaps different dialects. Likewise, certain kinds of equations in calculus can be used to predict population patterns or to solve physics problems. The identical mathematical formulation is used for two entirely different practical applications. Dazzling as are the recently discovered uses for mathe­ matics, Montclair Academy's mathematics instructors point out that, for the past century, mathematical think­ ing itself has been running some fifty years ahead of the applications. And, Mr. Stackpole notes, discoveries in pure mathematics are still being made daily, indeed, al­ most “hour by hour.” At Montclair Academy, explora­ tion of the “theory of the theorems” begins even before boys get to Algebra 1 class. John Nugent points out that beginning in Math 7 the student is introduced to proper­ ties of the real number system.

Claims Mr. Conner, “There’s a great deal of what might be called art in the most practical aspects of mathe­ matics. It takes art, not science, notQsome sort of pre­ determined mechanical approach, to discover, for instance, an approximation technique that works in numerical analy­ sis, one of the most practical areas of mathematics; Once somebody' has done it, it’s a mechanical business to re­ produce it. But being able to pick an approximation, when you can’t have a pure solution, requires a high degree of intuition. And to discover a way of showing that your answer is better than somebody else’s is another ‘artistic’ achievement.” Thus, the philosophy of M.A.’s math department is that to learn math is a creative endeavor and that mathe­ matics itself is a language which students can use to ex­ press in a succinct, unambiguous way certain ideas about experience. With an approach which stresses discovery rather than rote learning, one can understand Mr. Stackpole’s contention that “Math is fun.”

If he’s reasonably adept in the more formal aspects of mathematics he is enrolled in the Modern Geometry course, the text for which was written by Mr.- Conner. Before this year, an Academy senior might have taken a course combining trigonometry, advanced algebra, and analytic geometry, while those who had completed this course were offered advanced placement classes in calcu­ lus. This year, the Academy’s senior math program has been enhanced by the addition of two new courses-: a half-year of probability, followed by a semester of matrix algebra, and a half-year of trigonometry, then a; semester! of analytic geometry. While recognizing the importance of preparing stu­ dents who are competent in basic mathematical skills, Mr. Philip Stackpole, the chairman of M.A.’s math depart­ ment, prefers to regard mathematics as an art. “We hope,” declares Mr. Stackpole, “to develop, at the most elementary level, a creativity in mathematics. It’s one thing for a student to see and memorize a proof that someone else has written, whether that someone else is an author, his teacher, or his classmate ; it’s another thing for him to discover a proof of his own, even though it may have been done a million times before. If he’s never seen it until he discovers it himself, then he has a little of a sense of the artist’s creativity.” M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

MR. CONNER 23


Sequence of the Mathematics Program

Calculus 12th Grade

Probability Matrix Algebra 12th Grade

Trigonometry Analytical Geometry

11 th Grade

12th Crade

Trigonometry Advanced Algebra Analytical Geometry 10th Grade

11th Grade

MR. PU RCELL

Plane Geometry 11 th Grade

Modern Geometry

u Algebra II

9th Grade

10th Grade

8th Grade

Algebra l

9th Grade

Math. 8

8th Grade

Math. 7

7th Grade

7th Grade Accelerated Track

Standard College Placement

MR.; STACKPOLE 24

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A YEAR OF SIGNIFICANT SUCCESS SEPTEMBER 1965 - SEPTEMBER 1966

75th Anniversary Program Progress Continues • The L. D. Barney Science Building was completed in time for the beginning of classes this fall and the Trustees have set their sights on construction of the Gymnasium.

Annual Giving Sets New Record • The Living Endowment Program of the Annual Giving exceeded $20,000.

Scholarship Endowment Fund Established • Charles Hayden Foundation grant of $20,000 received to endow scholarship aid.

M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

25


75th Anniversary Program

Progress

Report

Total Gifts and Pledges to Date: ............................... .... Expenditures to Date: Humanities Building ...................................................... $419,200 Humanities Lecture Hall .............. 57,700 Library ....... 141,400 L. D. Barney Science Building..................................... 385,000 Rudolph H. Deetjen Science Lecture H a ll................ 47,300 Administration B uilding............ ................. 575,900 Acquisition of Building Site ........... _......... ............... 161,900 General Site Work .......................................................... 116,900 Nonfixed Equipment and F urnishings....................... 60,000 Interest and Development C o sts................................. 125,000 Total Expenditures ...................................................... ...... Balance on hand in Gifts and Pledges toward Gymnasium and Meeting H a ll....._............

Remaining

$2,090,300 $ 598,791

Needs

Projected cost of Gymnasium (including Swimming Pool) .........................................$1,100,000 On hand toward the Gymnasium.....................................$ 498,791 Needed to construct the Gym nasium ............................. Projected cost of Meeting Hall (including Music and Art Studios) .............................$ 400,000 On hand, invested, and restricted to the Meeting H a ll................ ....................................................$ 100,000 Needed to construct the Meeting H a ll........................... Needed to develop the Athletic F ie ld s..................-....... Remaining needs: TOTAL COST..................... ........... $1,550,000 On hand in Gifts and P led g es.................. .......................$ 598,791 Needed to complete the Building Program

26

$2,689,091

$601,209

$300,000 $ 50,000 $951,209

F a l l - W in t e r 1966


On September 15, 1965, an anonymous friend issued a challenge to the Board of Trustees. The donor pledged a gift of $100,000 toward the 75th Anniversary Program, effective as soon as the Academy received a total of $700,000 in new contributions for the building program. On September 26, 1966, the requirements of the chal­ lenge were met, $700,000 had been raised and the $100,000 gift became activated.

During the past year two major gifts totaling $500,000 were received, along with a $50,000 contribution and others in the range of $ 10,000-$20,000.

As a result of these gifts, construction of the L. D. Barney Science Building was started last December and the facility was completed in time for the opening of school in September.

The critical need for a new gymnasium in the imme­ diate future is portrayed in the photographs. The present building is not merely too small and obsolete but is physically beyond economic rehabilitation. Completion of the new gymnasium will provide facilities for basketball, swimming, wrestling, locker and shower rooms, visiting team rooms, training rooms, laundry, storage, and ath­ letic offices.

HOW ARD A. VAN VLECK, ’22 75th Anniversary Program Chairman

Also of significant importance, completion of the new gymnasium will permit the demolition of the old facility and redevelopment of its land site into an additional playing field. At the present time our many teams are restricted to one field that must be used for all games and practices.

As is evident from the achievements of its graduates, Montclair Academy is providing the educational excellence demanded in this last half of the twentieth century; but the building program must be completed if this level of excellence is to be maintained. Toward this end the trustees solicit and encourage the continued loyal generous support by friends of the Academy who have brought this school to -the home stretch of a campaign that seemed impossible ten years ago. M o n t c l a ir A c a d em y B u l l e t in

The tremendous evidence of enthusiasm for the Acad­ emy continues to he translated into tangible support of the aims of the 75th Anniversary Program as the cam­ paign progresses. This is a great tribute to all those of both the past and present who make Montclair Academy what it is. It is the trustees’ intention to tangibly express the Academy’s appreciation by inscribing the names of all Share Plan participants on a plaque for mounting in one of the new buildings. N ot all who:wish to have a part in the great forward step of the Academy have yet had an opportunity to participate, but the trustees wish to express appreciation to the present list of contributors: 27


LEADERSHIP SHAREHOLDERS Mrs. Janies W. Ames Mr. and Mrs. Marston Ames Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Anonymous Winfield Baird Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Maurice E. Bale Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Barney Colonel and Mrs. John L. Bates Mr. and Mrs John L. Beckley Beecham Products, Inc. Beinecke Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence P. Berra Mr. and Mrs. John deC. Blondel Mr. and Mrs. Howard D. Brundage Mr. and Mrs. Olaus W. Caspersen Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Courter Mr. and Mrs. John M. Coward Mr. and Mrs. Bernard K. Crawford Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph H. Deetjen Mrs. Everett L. DeGolyer Mr. and Mrs. Everett L. DeGolyer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Fairleigh S. Dickinson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Willard W. Dixon Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Drysdale Mr. and Mrs. Martin Dwyer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel E. Emerson Epple and Seaman Mr. Edward C. Epple Mr. Clinton D. Seaman Mrs. Charles K. Etherington Mr. and Mrs. Edwin D. Etherington Mr. Edward L. Fabian Fabian-Rosen Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Craig C. Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth T. Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Hanus, Jr. The Honorable Albert W. Hawkes

Dr. Walter D. Head Mrs. Allan M. Hirsh Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Hobbins Mr. and Mrs. Russell B. Hobson, Jr. The Howard Savings Institution The Lillia Babbitt Hyde Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Johnson Mrs. Belle Rogers Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Norfleet R. Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Otto E. Kuhlmann Mr. and Mrs. Herman Lane Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Lieder Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Livesey Mr. Harold W. McGraw Mr. and Mrs. John S. Magrane Mr. and Mrs. Peter Malcolm Memorial to James H. Diehl and William Grant Gaiennie Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Miller, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Miller Montclair National Bank & Trust Company Mr. Russell T. Mount The Vincent Mulford Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. O’Neill Parents’ Association, Montclair Academy Mr. and Mrs. S. Barksdale Penick, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Rasmussen Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Redpath Mr. and Mrs. H. Ward Reighley Mrs. Lyster C. Reighley Mrs. G. Benjamin Reisweber Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Roosma Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Sanders, II Mr. and Mrs. Herman A. Schmitz Mr. and Mrs. John J. Schumann, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. Ford Schumann Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lee Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. John T. Sessa Mr. William W. Skinner Mr. and Mrs. Douglas B. Stearns Mr. and Mrs. Benedict Tessler Mr. and Mrs. C. Wallace Tiernan Mr. and Mrs. Wallace F. Traendly Mr. Abram Vandermade Mr. and Mrs. James S. Vandermade

COMPLETED 2—L. D. Barney Science Building 3—Rudolph Deetjen Science Lecture Hall 4——Humanities Building 5— Library

28

Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.

and and and and and

Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs.

Howard A. Van Vleck Thomas N. Vultee H. St. John Webb, Jr. N. Conant Webb Charles W. Williams, Jr.

ANNIVERSARY SHAREHOLDERS Mr. and Mrs. Seymour H. Abrams Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Abramson Mr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Baldanza Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Calder Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. B. Carlisle Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Derby Mrs. Carleton Ellis Mr. and Mrs. Roger B. Etherington Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Francia Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gregg and Family Mr. and Mrs. Maurie J. Gurtman The Helm Foundation Mrs. James C. Higgins Mr. and Mrs. James R. Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Kovacs Mr. and Mrs. Milton L. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. A. H. McIntyre Dr and Mrs. Franklin J. Mascia The Medical Economics Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Penick Mr. and Mrs. Peter N. Perretti, Jr. Mrs. E. E. Poor, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Raker Mr. and Mrs. Saul Rosen Mr. and Mrs. Giles St. Clair Bud Schwartz 1943 Mrs. William W. Skinner Mr. and Mrs. C. Thurston Woodford

BENEFACTOR SHAREHOLDERS Mr. and Mrs. Alastair B. W. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Baten Mr. and Mrs. Graham Bell Berkshire Color and Chemical Co. Mr. Leon W. Gerst Mr. Elmer C. Warshaw

6— Humanities Lecture Hall 7—Administration Building STILL TO BE CONSTRUCTED 1—Gymnasium 8—Meeting Hall

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Mr. and Mrs. Eric H. Brach Mr. and Mrs. Arthur K. Brown, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Bull Dr. and Mrs. Orlando G. Caprio Dr. and Mrs. Peter C. Castiglia Mr. Harold H. Demarest Dr. and Mrs. Alphonsus L. Doerr Mr. and Mrs. Janies F. Dorment Mr. and Mrs. George P. Egbert, Jr. Mr. Albert P. Everts Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Fink Mr. and Mrs. George A. Frost Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Goldman Mr. and Mrs. A. Rudd Graham Mr. and Mrs. Ridgely W. Harrison Dr. and Mrs. Marion F. Kaletkowski Mr. and Mrs. Herbert I. Katz Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Lamborn Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J. LaRocca Dr. and Mrs. Virginius D. Mattia, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Elliott Middleton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Mulford Dr. and Mrs. Walter Nudelman Dr. and Mrs. Louis L. Salerno Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Sheldon Mr. and Mrs. Peter Simon Mr. and Mrs. Randolphe P. Swenson Dr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Szot Mr. and Mrs. John C. Trackman Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Wolff

SPONSOR SHAREHOLDERS Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel S. Aiello, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Allen, Jr. Mr and Mrs. Melvin S. Alpren Mr. Elliott Monroe Anderson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Apter Mr. and Mrs. John K. Baker, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Beck Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Bell Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Belmont Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin J. Benigno Mr. and Mrs. John C. Biggins Dr. and Mrs. Sanfurd G. Bluestein Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bonniwell Mr. and Mrs. Emerson E. Brightman Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Brightman Mr. and Mrs. W. Bertil Bronander, Jr. Mr. Arthur Herbert Brook, II Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bruck Mr. Stanley G. Calder Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cargill, Jr. Mrs. John Howe Carlisle Mrs. John C. Cattus The Honorable and Mrs. Alfred C. Clapp Mr. and Mrs. Quentin W. Cole Dr. and Mrs. Richard S. Colfax Miss Clarissa W. Collins Mr. Wentworth B. Collins Mr. and Mrs. John A. Cosentino Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Crook Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Derby, III Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Doubleday Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Driver, III Mr. and Mrs. James Duva Mr. and Mrs. George P. Egbert Mr. and Mrs. Samuel V. Ehrenberg Mr. and Mrs. William Alton Ennis Mr. John O. Eshbaugh Dr. Irving Fain Mr. and Mrs. Fay M. Farrar Fenwick Machinery, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Fernald, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Theodore R. Flagg Mr. and Mrs. William E. Frederick Mr. and Mrs. Gus C. Gellas Mr. and Mrs. William D. Gordon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. P. Guerrieri M o n t c l a ir A c a d em y B u l l e t in

Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Haines Mr. Arthur Hanisch Mr. and Mrs. Ridgely W. Harrison, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Carl W. Hauck Mr. and Mrs. David Haviland Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hayward, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Hesse Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Higgins Mr. and Mrs. Edwin B. Hinck Mrs. John H. Hirsh Mr. Malcolm McC. Hirsh Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Hirsh Mr. and Mrs. John A. Hoff Mr. and Mrs. Franklin M. Hogelund Dr. and Mrs. T. Campbell Hooton Mr. and Mrs. Bridgford Hunt Mr. and Mrs. Colman S. Ives Mr. Wallace S. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Joseph Mr. and Mrs. William P. Kennard Mr. and Mrs. John Kirvin Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf Kuhlmann Mr. and Mrs. Jerome F. Kuzmick Mr. and Mrs. Barney Levine Dr. and Mrs. Bruno V. Manno Mr. Theodore C. Nevins, Jr. A. B. and J. Noyes Foundation Mrs. William D. O’Gorman Parent-Teacher Association, Brookside School Mr. Raymond T. Parrott

The Present Gymnasium Mr, and Mrs. James G. Paterson Dr. and Mrs. John C. Pellosie Mr. and Mrs. Gerard B. Podestà Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Poor Mr. and Mrs. Robert Potters Dr. Richard W. Rado Mr. and Mrs. John Redfield Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Riter, IV Dr. and Mrs. James A. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Howard C. Royce Mr. and Mrs. John P. Schroeder Mr. and Mrs. David Schwartz Mr. William D. Seidler Mr. and Mrs. Julius Shupik Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Silloway Dr. and Mrs. Walter J. Sperling, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Steggles Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stern Mrs. Augustus C. Studer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bogart F. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. John W. Thummel Mr. and Mrs. Neal E. Tonks Professor and Mrs. John H. Van Vleck Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. Wahl Mr. and Mrs. Robertson D. Ward Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Weis

Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.

and Mrs. Edward F. Weston Henry C. Weston and Mrs. John C. Whitehead and Mrs. Gustave E. Wiedenmayer and Mrs. Richard Wigton Zamore

LOYALTY SHAREHOLDERS Mr. and Mrs. Eugene W. Adams Mr. and Mrs. William J. Ahearn, Jr. Mr. S. Thomas Aitken Mr. and Mrs. John E. André Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Appenzellar, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David G. Baird, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. B. Baldwin Mr. Stephen L. Bartholomew Mr. George R. Beach, Jr. Mr. C. Lee Beard Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Berman Mr. and Mrs. Mendel Bernstein Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Blakney Mr. Joseph L, Bograd Mr. E. Herman Boos Mr. and Mrs. John A. Booth Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Brightman Mr. and Mrs. William R. Brogan Mr. Arthur K. Brown, III Mr. and Mrs. Milton Bruck Mrs. William Brune Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Burkart Mr. and Mrs. Norman Carignan Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert S. Carpenter Mr. John C. Cattus Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Cleaves The Coe Foundation Mrs. Whitney C. Colby Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Cole Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Cralle, II Mr. Frederick W. Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Davanzo Mr. and Mrs. Bernard W. Deehan Mr. and Mrs. Carl Deetjen Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph H. Deetjen, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Austin C. Drukker Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Dudiak The Honorable and Mrs. Wayne Dumont, Jr, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Eells Mr. and Mrs. Lester D. Egbert Dr. and Mrs. Gordon B. Emont George Engstrom, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Fazio Dr. Frank Finnerty, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred J. Funk Mr. and Mrs. Gene Gallo Mr. Michael C. Gennet Mr. William Geyer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Manuel J. Gibbs Dr. and Mrs. Harold Grubin Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. Hahn Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Hanschka Dr. Mark R. Hanschka Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Hare Mr. Martyn Hart Reverend and Mrs. N. Wesley Haynes Colonel Christian and Valesca Heidt, II Mr. and Mrs. Walter Reginald Hess Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Hoyt Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Iandoli Mr. and Mrs. John Intili Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Jacobs, Jr. Mr. Mark M. Jaffe Dr. and Mrs. Grover H. Jensen Mr. and Mrs. Philip F. Keebler Mrs. Arthur M. Kerr Mr. and Mrs. David L. Kerr Mr. Gilbert M. Kiggins Mr. W. Adriance Kipp, Jr. The Kleinhans Family Mr. and Mrs. John W. Kress Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Kunzier Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Labowsky 29


Architect’s Rendering of the New Gymnasium Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Lackey Dr. and Mrs. Milton Elliot Landman Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. Norman Lax Mr. Hudson B. Lemkau Mr. and Mrs. Philip G. Leone Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Levin Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Lewis, III Mr. and Mrs. Frederick D. Little Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Lowry Mr. and Mrs. Bernard H. Lowy Dr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Lukos Mr. and Mrs. Joh^D . McAleer Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. McKaba Dr. and Mrs. Richard A. Macksey Mr. and Mrs. Burnard Margoles Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Marin Mr. O. Karl Marquardt Mr. and Mrs. S. Lawrence Martin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Metaxas Mr. and Mrs. A. Stanley Miller, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Carl N. Miller, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William A. Mitchell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moir Mr. William R. Mount Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Myers Mr. F. Stark Newberry Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Nolan Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Northwood, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Olcott Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Orgain Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Palen Mr. J, Dabney Penick Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Perry Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey J. Phares Mr. Russell B. Phillips Mr. and Mrs, Richard W. Poor Mr. Richard L. Rausch Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Ripley Dr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Guido R. Rocco Mr. and Mrs. R. Tyler Root, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Salzberg Dr. Richard T. Sanborn Mr. and Mrs. W , Murray Sanders, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. G. Sanderson Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Sandler Mr. and Mrs. William M. Sayre Mr. Joint A. Schaffer Dr. and Mrs. Raeto Schett Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Schlobohm, Jr. Mr. Charles B. Schubert Mr. and Mrs. Perry Schwartz Mr. Bernard Scolnick Mr. and Mrs. Leonard S. Silk Mr. Alvin F. Sloan Mr. and Mrs. Marvin M. Smolan Mr. and Mrs. Robert Spaulding Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Speni Mr. Philip Wyllie Stackpole 30

Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Sterling, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Stufko Mr. and Mrs. George R. Styskal Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Sussman Mr. and Mrs. Gerald B. Swart Dr. and Mrs. William Taffet Mr, and Mrs. Frederick H. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. David C. Thompson Dr. Leopold Edward Thron Mr. and Mrs. Reginald F. Towner Mr. and Mrs. Reginald F. Towner, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas S. Townsend, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Trippe, Jr. Mrs. Enid E. Wakefield Mr. and Mrs. John Joseph Walsh Mr. and Mrs. J. Hunter Walton Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Warner Mr. Nelson W. Webb Mr. Joseph E. Wiedenmayer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas K. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Susumu Yamashita Dr. and Mrs. Harry Yolken Mr. and Mrs. George W. Young Mr. and Mrs. William C. Young Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Zanetti

ALL OTHERS Mr. and Mrs. H. Lawrence Abbott Mr. and Mrs. David T. Agens Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel S. Aiello Mr. and Mrs. William M. Aitken Mr. Robert F. Allabough Mr. and Mrs. Paul Allen, III Dr. and Mrs. Frederic A. Ailing Mr. Wilson S. Ailing Mr. John H. Ames Mr. and Mrs. Henry Holt Apgar Applegate Farm, Inc. Mr. John R. Aubry Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Baird Dr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Bamford, Jr. Mr. John Barker Dr. and Mrs. Frank G. Barnard Mr. Randolph C. Barrett, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David S. Bate Mr. and Mrs. Warren G. Bauer Mr. Milton C. Beard, Jr. Mr. Robert W. Beattie Mr. and Mrs. George B. Biggs Mr. and Mrs. Hartley Dodge Bingham Mr. Robert J. Bishop Mrs. Albert J. Blake Mr. and Mrs. George A. Bleyle Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bogdanffy Mr. John B. Braine Mr. Thomas Bancroft Braine Mr. and Mrs. Melville S. Brandt Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Braunworth

Mr. David W. Brett Mr. and Mrs. Frederick M. Broadfoot Mr. J. Robert Brown Mr. William F. Brown, II Mr. and Mrs. William J. Brown, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brune Dr. William C. Bugbee Mr. Yerbury G. Burnham Mr. and Mrs. William Campbell Mr. and Mrs. John L. Carlee Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Carlee Mr. and Mrs. Anthony L. Carrad Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Carrie Miss Mary-Hale Carson Mr. Thomas E. Cassidy Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Albert Chase Mr. John W. Clapp Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Clark Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Clifford Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Cockshaw Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cohen Mr. Larry L. Constantin Mr. and Mrs. Willibald H. Conzen Mr. and Mrs. Russell M. Cook Mrs. Kent R. Costikyan Mr. and Mrs. Carlton W. Cox Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T. Crane Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Creshkoff Dr. and Mrs. Allan B. Crunden, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop Culver Mr. and Mrs. Jerome C. Cuppia Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Davies, Jr. Mr. Richard H. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Davis Captain and Mrs, Bernard P. Day Mr. and Mrs. Dickinson Debevoise Mr. Wells Case Dennison Mr. and Mrs. Saul M. Denver Mr. and Mrs. Willard J. Dixon Mr. and Mrs. William Donald Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Donaldson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Donatelli Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Donnelly Mr. and Mrs. Warren H. Donnelly Dr. and Mrs. George A. Downsbrough Mr. Leonard Dreyfuss Mr. Richard Drukker Mr. Howard E. Dunney Mr. and Mrs. George W. Dwenger Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Dwyer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Ebers Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Edelstein Mr. and Mrs. Rene P. Eliezer Mrs. Lucilla Carmichael Ely Dr. William B. Farrington Mr. and Mrs. Armand S. Ferrara Mr. and Mrs. Clayson W. Foley Mrs. John E. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Mickey Franciose F all-W

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Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Francisco Mr. and Mrs. Luther H. Frost Mr. Richard R. Fuller Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gang Garden Club of Cedar Grove Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Gardner, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Gilbert K. Garretson Dr. and Mrs. Ernest D. Geannette Mr. J. Baxter Gentry Mr. and Mrs. Norman M. Germond Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Gilbert, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Gilbreth Mr. and Mrs. Lester D. Gill Mr. and Mrs. Vincent A. Gill Mr. Ralph C. Gleason Dr. and Mrs. Robert G. Greene Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Griffiths Mr. and Mrs. Clifton A. Griggs Mr. and Mrs. Ralph M. Guerke Mr. and Mrs. Hans L. Guterman Mr. Max Habernickel, III Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hain Mr. and Mrs. H. Kimball Halligan Mr. Jules F. Halm Mr. and Mrs. John Burdick Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. David Q. Hammond Mr. Joseph F. Hammond, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Charles R. Harms Mr. and Mrs. Morton Harris Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Harrison Mr. Varick D. Harrison Mrs. John F. Hawley Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S. Haynes Mrs. Robert L. Hedges Mr. McCaughan Heizer Mr. Jack Heller Mr. John R. Helm Mr. and Mrs. George J. Hemmeter Mrs. Constance R. Hemphill Mr. and Mrs. John F. Hennessey Mr. and Mrs. Harold Higgins Mr. and Mrs. Percival S. Hill, III Mr. and Mrs. Hilton H. Hodges Mr. Henry Phipps Hoffstot Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Hofmann Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Holmes Mrs. Harold D. Holmes Mr. Richmond B. Hopkins Mr. and Mrs. Prentice C. Horne Mr. and Mrs. John Howald Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Hutson, Jr. A. Cremieux Israel Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. David Jacobs Mr. Francis J. Jacobs Mr. Robert Van Ness Jennings Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Johnson Mr. Robert L. Johnstone Mr. and Mrs. Frederick J. Kaiser, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Kalt Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Kalt, Jr. Mr. Stuart E. Keebler Mr. and Mrs. Ernest F. Keer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Kelly Mr. and Mrs. William C. Kennard Mr. and Mrs. T. Ramsey Kenny Mr. Alan M. Kessler Mr. and Mrs. Harold Alan Kessler Mr. and Mrs. John F. Kidde Mr. and Mrs. James N. Killgore, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Gay B. Kim Mrs. Willard I. Kimm Dr. and Mrs. Jack Kindler Mr. James P. King Mr. Walter A. Kipp, III Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Kneip Mr. and Mrs. Clayton P. Knowles Mr. and Mrs. George J. Kramer Mr. Paul D. Kramer Mr. Herbert M. Kreger Mrs. Samuel R. Kuzsma M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

Mr. and Mrs. A. Lacazette Mr. Robert H. Ladd Mr. and Mrs. William P. LaPlant Mr. David E. Lewis Mr. Louis Lippman Mr. William E. Littlefield Mr. Michael C. Ludlum Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. McCullagh Mr. and Mrs. William D. McGregor Mr. Donald McKee Mr. F. Donald McLean Mr. and Mrs. Alfred R. McWilliams Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore MacLachlan Mr. and Mrs. Robert MacNeary Dr. and Mrs. Louis Magid Mr. and Mrs. Reid Mahaffy Dr. and Mrs. Max A. Malkin Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Marino Mr. and Mrs. Edmond Mathez Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Maxwell Mrs. Eleanor Mayer Mr. Peter Mayer Mrs. Trenetta F. Mead Mrs. Gertrude Mount Mekeel Mr. and Mrs. James L. Melcon Memorial to Seymour H. Abrams Memorial to Albert Betteridge Memorial to Arthur K. Brown, Jr. Memorial to Herbert M. Warner Mr. Edward F. Merrey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George Miller Mr. Bernard A. Milstein Mrs. Helen S. Milstein Mr. and Mrs. William Osgood Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Walter Morris Mount Holyoke Club of Northern New Jersey Mrs. Oscar F. Muller Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Muller Mr. and Mrs. Robert R. Munoz Mr. and Mrs. William H. Munson Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Mutchler Mr. Richard Namkin Mrs. S. G. Nazarian Mr. and Mrs. George P. Nelson Mr. B. Michael Noone Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Nowoslawski Mr. and Mrs. Richard Edward Noyes Mr. J. Alexander Onderdonk The Honorable and Mrs. Harold S. Osborne Mr. and Mrs. Carbery F. O’Shea Mr. Laurence H. Parkhurst Mr. Charles Parmelli Dr. and Mrs. Guy Payne, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Pearson Mr. and Mrs. Ib Pedersen Mr. Douglas J. Penick Mr. Frank Van Wie Penick Mr. and Mrs. John F. Podesta Mr. Newton H. Porter, Jr. Mrs. Herbert W. Puschel Mr. and Mrs. David G. Ramsay Mr. William F. Redfield Mr. and Mrs. James B. Regan Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Reifenstein, III Mr. and Mrs. William C. Renwick Mr. Raloh C. Rinzler Mr. F. Somers Ritchie, Jr. Mr. James H. Ritchie Mr. and Mrs. Cecil E. Roché Mr. and Mrs. Douglas P. Roome Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Roselene Mr. T. D. Rosenberg Mr. and Mrs. Addison P. Rosenkrans, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Rowbottom Mr. and Mrs. John K. Rudd Mr. and Mrs. Theodore O. Rudd Mr. Stanley A. .Russell, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. James P. Russomano Mr. and Mrs. Franklin M. Sachs

Mr. Stephen St. Clair Mr. William Scheerer, II Mr. and Mrs. Francis H. Schiffer Dr. and Mrs. Arnold Schleifer Mr. Robert A. Schlichting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Schlobohm Mr. W. Kent Schmid Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Schneeweiss Mr. Richard B. Scudder Mr. Dorrance Sexton Mr. Dorrance Sexton, Jr. Mrs. Herbert B. Sexton Mr. and Mrs. Dan Seymour Dr. and Mrs. Edward T. Seymour Mr. Harold J. Seymour Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Sheriff Mr. and Mrs. Morton Silberfeld Mr. William J. Silberman Dr. Samuel A. Simon Mrs. Constance C. Skinner Mr. and Mrs. J. Franklyn Smith Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. W. Smith Mr. and Mrs. R. Lape Smith Mr. and Mrs. Ben G. Solomon Mrs. Anthony C. Stefanelli Mr. Charles A. Sterling, III Mr. Edward C. Stillwell Dr. and Mrs. Edward C. Stillwell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin A. Stone, Jr. Mr. D. Arthur Straight Mr. and Mrs. Beaver Strassburger Mr. David F. Stroming Mrs. Rodney B. Stuart Dr. and Mrs. Julius Sucoff Mr. Michael I. Sucoff Dr. and Mrs. Donald E. Super Mr. Frank J. Sweeney, Jr. Mr. arid Mrs. William F. Switzler Mr. Peter L. Sylvester Mr. and Mrs. Paul Thompson Mr. and Mrs. George T. Tierney Mr. Everett P. Tomlinson Mr. James Haviland Tompkins, Jr. Colonel Dallas S. Townsend Mr. Lewis R. Townsend Mr. John G. Troast Mr. Thomas F. Troxell, Jr. Two Hundred Club Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Van Vleck, Jr. Mr. Roy T. Van Vleck Mr. and Mrs. John Vassilowitch Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Villarosa, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. John C. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Warren Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Watt Mr. and Mrs. Roger S. Webb Dr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Weisman Mr. and Mrs. Lewis E. Wenger Mr. Alan J. Werksman Mr. Leonard P. Whitmarsh Mr. Sanford Wiedenmayer Mr. and Mrs. Rudolf F. Wild Mr. David C. Will The Clare Wilson Memorial Mrs. Robert Wilson Reverend and Mrs. Arthur K. Wing, III Woman’s Club of Verona, Inc. Woolsulate Corporation Mr. and Mrs. John W. Wyatt Mr. and Mrs. Ernest A. Wye, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome L. Yesko Mrs. Percy S. Young Mr. Arthur V. Youngman Mr. Gerald E. Youngman Dr. and Mrs. David Zuckerman 31


1965-’66 ANNUAL GIVING Alumni

...........................................................................$ 6,873.69

Parents

..is. ; :.,U.v:....:.....,:..;..;...;........................................... $ io ,961.94 .......................................................................,....,......... $ 2,346.12

Friends

$20,181.75

As chairman of last year’s Living Endowment Pro­ gram of Annual Giving, I speak on behalf of the entire Academy community. W e are grateful for this oppor­ tunity to thank all of you who participated in the 1965-’66 Annual Giving Program. It is with great pleasure that I report on the success of the campaign. The satisfactory conclusion of any project necessarily depends on the work of many generous and loyal supporters. I believe that the Alumni, past and present parents, and friends of Montclair Academy share my confidence that this is merely the first step in a continuing annual program of generous financial support for one of the truly great independent day schools.

/tL Gerard B. Podestà, ’35 Chairman

ALUMNI ’04 James A. McGraw ’ll Donald G. MacVicar

’IS

Rudolph H. Deetjen Martyn Hart Wilfred B. Utter ’17 O. E. Mathiasen ’22

Howard A. Van Vleck ’23 Richard E. Kleinhans Percy S. Young, Jr. ’24 G. Findley Griffiths ’25 Chester Baylis, Jr. Arthur A. Goldman Dr. Leopold Edward Thron ’26 Fred C. Griffiths ’27 Sanford Wiedenmayer ’28 Henry B. Fernald, Jr. Hudson B. Lemkau Dorrance Sexton Alvin F. Sloan Alfred F. W. Stapf

32

’29 Nathan Kaminski ’30 McCaughan Heizer Frederick S. Wilson ’31 Wayne Dumont, Jr. ’32 Thomas Bancroft Braine Robert L. Carlee David Haviland Henry E. Perry Blake Reynolds ’33 Dr. Henry M. Doremus Robert Van Ness Jennings Myles T. MacMahon William M. Sayre ’34 Marston Ames Eugene I. Haubenstock Dr. Walter J. Sperling, Jr. Beaver Strassburger ’35 Donald L. Mulford Dr. Eddy D. Palmer Gerard B. Podestà Bogart F. Thompson James S. Vandermade ’36 Theodore Donaldson H. Ward Reighley Ralph E. Watt

’37 John Barker Robert E. Livesey John P. Schroeder ’38 Ronald A. Westgate ’39 Dr. John E. Ackerman, Jr. Bridgford Hunt ’40 Graham Bell Robert T. Braunworth John A. Cosentino ’41 Richard L. Carrie William S. Decker, II Everett L. DeGolyer, Jr. Roger B. Etherington Charles M. Holmes, II Randolphe P. Swenson Lewis R. Townsend ’42 John M. Coward Daniel E. Emerson ’43 J. Robert Brown Edwin D. Etherington Paul R. Miller, Jr. ’44 Ridgely W. Harrison, Jr. Peter J. Linder W. Ford Schumann F all-W

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’47 Andrew Davlin, Jr. Frank L. Driver, III George P. Egbert, Jr. Joseph F. Hammond, Jr. Douglas F. Musler ’48 Dr. Frederic A. Ailing ’49 Richard M. Drysdale E. Alden Dunham, III Jules F. Halm Samuel L. Lewis, III Peter N. Perretti, Jr. Carl H. Shaifer, III Clark M. Simms John G. Troast ’50 Rudolph H. Deetjen, Jr. Frederick S. Magnus William L. Rowe, III Reginald F. Towner, Jr. ’51 Robert N. Lieder ’52 Michael C. Ellinger Dr. Robert M. Kim Ralph C. Rinzler Roger S. Webb ’53 Dr. Howard T. Beilin Peter A. Cockshaw David J. Connolly, Jr. J. Alexander Onderdonk Philip H. W. Smith ’54 Sheldon W. Buck John M. Foster Roland A. Jacobus, III Donald M. Karp George J. Kramer ’55 . Donald P. Menken Rev. O. A. Mockridge, III Edward C. Reifenstein, III ’56 Richard R. Hobbins, Jr. Eric F. Jaeckel Dr. Lawrence F. Nazarian H. St. John Webb, III ’57 Rev. John S. Allen ’58

Michael C. Gennet Mark M. Jaffe John Van der Veer Judd Martin N. Rosen Charles Y. Small David C. Will ’59 Richard Feinsod Lt. Kent J. S. Miller Bernard A. Milstein Howard A. Van Vleck, Jr. ’60 Marc Steven Kirschner Peter J. Lima E. Hawley Van Wyck, III ’61 Denis G. Addonizio Wilson S. Ailing J. Roger Goldin Arthur G. Rosen ’62 John A. Bleyle Milo R. Gerow, Jr. Robert E. Gerst Kenneth J. Kessler ’63 Jesse L. Byock Daniel R. Hodges M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

John A. Lawrence Michael R. Ramundo, Jr. Henry Richardson, II Robert L. Snyder Jon W. Tarrant Randolph Paul Thummel ’64 Bruce F. W. Anderson Paul R. G. Horst, II Roy T. Van Vleck ’65 Henry V. Allen Henry Holt Apgar, Jr. Robert J. Ferrara Michael R. Fink Joseph H. Hare, Jr. James J. Kuzmick Robert S. Livesey Jeffrey Silberfeld

PARENTS Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Abramson Dr. and Mrs. John E. Ackerman, Jr. ’39 Mr. and Mrs. Eugene W. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Gabriel S. Aiello, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Marston Ames ’34 Mr. and Mrs. John E. André Mr. and Mrs. Graham Bell ’40 Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin J. Benigno Dr. and Mrs. Sanfurd Bluestein Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bonniwell Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Brandow, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Melville S. Brandt Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Milton Bruck Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Cargill, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Carignan Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. B. Carlisle Mr. and Mrs. Donald P. Close Mr. and Mrs. John A. Cosentino ’40 Mr. and Mrs. John M. Coward ’42 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Coyne Mr. and Mrs. Kendall B. DeBevoise Mr. and Mrs. Milton B. Dorison Mr. and Mrs. Allen B. DuMont, Jr. Dr. William B. Farrington Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Fazio Mr. and Mrs. Craig C. Fitzparick Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Francia Mrs. Ernest D. Geannette Dr. and Mrs. Paul Glicksman Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan R. Golding Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Gosner Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gregg Mrs. Maurie J. Gurtman Mr. and Mrs. Hans L. Guterman Dr. and Mrs. John S. Guttmann Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hain Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Haines Mr. and Mrs. Ridgely W. Harrison, Jr. ’44 Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Harrison Mr. and Mrs. Eugene I. Haubenstock ’34

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S. Haynes Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Hirsh Dr. and Mrs. Robert V. Holman Dr. and Mrs. Charles Honig Mr. and Mrs. John Howald Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Jaeger Dr. and Mrs. Marion F. Kaletkowski Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. King Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. King Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Kunzier Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Labowsky Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J. LaRocca Mr. and Mrs. George H. Laufenberg Mr. and Mrs. John D. McAleer Dr. and Mrs. Louis Magid Dr. and Mrs. Bruno V. Manno Mr. and Mrs. Edmund C. Mathez Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Miller, Jr. ’43 Mr. and Mrs. William A. Mitchell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moir Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Nash Dr. and Mrs. John Nosco Dr. and Mrs. Walter Nudelman Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. O’Neill Mr. and Mrs. Frederick P. Palen Dr. and Mrs. Eddy D. Palmer ’35 Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Pastorini Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Peaty Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Perry ’32 Mr. and Mrs. Franklin A. Peters Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey J. Phares Mr. and Mrs. Gerard B. Podestà ’35 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Rasmussen Dr. and Mrs. George E. Read Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Roosma Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Rork Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Rothwell Mr. and Mrs. John K. Rudd Mr. and Mrs. William M. Sayre ’33 Mr. and Mrs. Herman A. Schmitz Mr. and Mrs. John P. Schroeder ’37 Mr. and Mrs. W. Ford Schumann ’44 Mr. and Mrs. Perry Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. John T. Sessa Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Sheldon Mr. and Mrs. J. Franklyn Smith Dr. and Mrs. Walter J. Sperling, Jr. ’34 Mr. and Mrs. John C. Steggles Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Sussman Mr. and Mrs. Randolphe P. Swenson ’41 Mr. and Mrs. William F. Switzler Dr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Szot Dr. and Mrs. William Taffet Mr. and Mrs. Herbert H. Tate Mr. and Mrs. C. Wallace Tiernan Mr. and Mrs. John C. Trackman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Vultee Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. Wahl Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Weis Mr. and Mrs. Walter I. Weiss Dr. and Mrs. Harrison R. Wesson Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Wilson ’30 33


Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.

and Mrs. Hewlett P. Wing and MrfflSamuel L. Wolff and Mrs. Susümu Yamashita and Mrs. Gregory Zanetti

FRIENDS Mrs. James W. Ames Miss Mary U. Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. John deC. Blondel Dr. and Mrs. Francis C. De Lorenzo Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. Evans, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardner Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Gartley Mr. J. Baxter Gentry Mrs. Robert L. Hedges Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Johnson Nineteen Sixty-Six Montclair Academy Swimming Team Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Nugent Mrs. William D. O’Gorman Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L, Redpath Mr. Philip Wyllie Stackpole

Mrs. Benyaurd B. Wygant

TRUSTEES Marston Ames ’34 Richard L. Carrie ’41 John M. Coward ’42 Rudolph H. Deetjen C5 Everett L. DeGolyer, Jr. ’41 Willard W. Dixon Richard M. Drysdale ’49 George P. Egbert, Jr. ’47 Daniel E. Emerson ’42 Edwin D. Etherington ’42 Mrs. Ernest D. Geannette Howard P. Johnson Robert E. Livesey ’37 Harold J. O’Neill Peter N. Perretti, Jr. ’49 Frederick L. Redpath W. Ford Schumann ’44 James S. Vandermade ’35 Howard A. Van Vleck ’22

FORMER PARENTS Mr. and Mrs. David T. Agens Mrs. Frank L. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Baten Mr. and Mrs. Warren G. Bauer Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin J. Benigno Mrs. Richard S. Bethell Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Blakney Mrs. Alexander Calder Mr. and Mrs. John A. Cosentino ’40 Mr. and Mrs. John M. Coward ’42 Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph H. Deetjen C5 Mr. and Mrs. Willard W. Dixon Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Driver, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel V. Ehrenberg Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson Ely Mr. and Mrs. William A. Ennis Mrs. Ethel B. Etherington Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Fink Mrs. John E. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Goldman ’25 Mr. and Mrs. A. Rudd Graham Mr. and Mrs. Donald Gregg Mrs. Maurie J. Gurtman Mr. and Mrs. David Haviland ’32 Mr. and Mrs. Philip F. Keebler Mrs. Willard I. Kimm Mr. and Mrs. William P. LaPlant Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Livesey ’37 Mr. and Mrs. Alfred R. McWilliams, Jr. Mrs. Gertrude Mount Mekeel Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moir Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. O’Neill Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Rasnjussen Mr. and Mrs. Saul Rosen Mr. and Mrs. James W. Sanders Mr. and Mrs. Herman A. Schmitz Mr. and Mrs. John P. Schroeder ’37 Mr. and Mrs. John T. Sessa Mr. Dorrance Sexton ’28 Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Sheldon Mr. and Mrs. Randolphe P. Swenson ’41 Dr. and Mrs. Alexander C. Szot Mr. and Mrs. Benedict Tessler Dr. Leopold Edward Thron ’25 Mr. and Mrs. James S. Vandermade ’35 Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Van Vleck ’22 Mr. and Mrs. H. St. John Webb Mrs. N. Conant Webb

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Charles Hayden Foundation Endows Scholarships A $20,000 grant from the Charles Hayden Foundation has provided the beginning of a much-needed endowment fund for Montclair Academy. All the sources of financial support are important to the on-going progress at the Academy. However, impor­ tant as immediate completion of the building program is to our program, the Board of Trustees also recognize the vital need in areas other than “bricks and mortar.” The fulfillment of the essential school plant will not be enough for the perpetuation of the school’s academic excellence. The great schools and colleges are the ones that have the most discretionary money beyond bare needs. If a school has the money, it progresses, if it doesn’t, no amount of wishing will bring it progress. The Annual Giving Program provides some of the

assistance needed to provide salaries that will attract and retain outstanding teachers and provide a measure of scholarship aid for deserving young men who desire the quality education available at Montclair Academy. But the real key to long-range planning is endowment. —monies that can be invested and from which the Trus­ tees can use income to help meet rising costs of education. Toward this end, the Charles Hayden Foundation has given the Academy its first significant endowment grant. The gift has been invested. A portion of the income each year will be allocated for scholarship aid and the remain­ ing annual income will be reinvested in the principal. It is hoped that other friends will recognize our need fo r endowment and share in this type of support that has been initiated by the Charles Hayden Foundation.

Matching Gifts A gift to Montclair Academy will be matched if the company for which you work is listed below. An increas­ ing number of firms have joined this roster, maintaining “matching gift” programs as part of their over-all pro­ grams of support of education. When you make a contribution, you fill in a short form Air Reduction Company, Inc. The Albion Malleable Iron Co. Abex Corporation Associated Box Corporation Atlas Rigging Supply Corporation The Bank of New York Barton-Gillett Company Bishop Trust Co., Ltd. Whitney Blake Co. Blue Bell, Inc., Foundation Boston Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Co. Bowen & Gurin & Barnes, Inc. Bristol-Myers Co. Burlington Industries Foundation Cabot Corporation Campbell Soup Company Carter Products, Inc. Cavalier Corporation Cerro Corporation The Champion Paper Foundation The Chase Manhattan Bank Chemical Bank New York Trust Co. The Citizens & Southern National Bank The Cleveland Electric Illuminating Foundation M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

provided by your employer, who matches your gift by sending an equal amount to the Academy. You are the reason for these matching gift programs. Your employer is offering support to your school in rec­ ognition of the contribution, you, as an educated person, are making to your company.

Cleveland Institute of Electronics Clevite Corporation James B. Clow & Sons, Inc. Coats & Clark, Inc. The Columbus Mutual Life Insurance Co. Container Corporation of America Foundation The Copley Newspapers Deering-Milliken, Inc. Difco Laboratories, Inc. Draper Corporation Electric Bond & Share Co. The Ensign-Bickford Foundation, Inc. First National Bank of Hawaii Ford Motor Company Fund Ford Motor Company of Canada, Ltd. Forty-Eight Insulations, Inc. Gardner-Denver Foundation General Foods Corporation Fund, Inc. General Mills Foundation General Public Utilities Corp. M- A. Gesner of Illinois, Inc. Ginn & Company The B. F. Goodrich Fund, Inc. Guy Gannett Broadcasting Services

WGAN Radio/Television Hawaiian Telephone Co. The Hoffmann-La Roche Foundation J. M. Huber Corporation Hughes Aircraft Co. Insurance Company of North America International Flavors & Fragrances, Inc. Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Co. Johnson & Higgins Kidder, Peabody & Co, Kingsbury Machine Tool Corporation Richard C. Knight Insurance Agency, Inc. Knox Gelatine, Inc. H. Kohnstamm Company, Inc. P. Lorillard Company Foundation The Lubrizol Foundation P. R. Mallory Company Foundation, Inc. Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. Matalene Surgical Instruments Co., Inc. McGraw-Hill, Inc. Medusa Portland Cement Co. The Merck Company Foundation Miehle-Goss-Dexter Foundation Monticello Life Insurance Co.

35


Mutual Boiler & Machinery Insurance Co. National Distillers & Chemical Co. National Lead Company New England Gas & Electric Association Norton Company Olin Mathieson Charitable Trust Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corporation Pennsalt Chemicals Foundation Phelps Dodge Foundation Philco Corporation Philip Morris, Ine. Pilot Life Insurance Co. Pitney-Bowes, Ine. The Putnam Management Co., Ine.

The Quaker Chemical Foundation ' Riegel Paper Corporation Riegel Textile Corporation Foundation The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Ine. Rockefeller Family & Associates Rohm & Haas Company Rust Engineering Company Schering Foundation Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Ine. Security National Bank of Long Island Signode Foundation, Ine. Simmons Company Simonds Saw & Steel Co. Smith Kline & French Foundation

Smith-Lee Co., Ine. The S & H Foundation, Ine. J. P. Stevens & Company, Ine., Foundation Tektronix Foundation Textron Foundation J. Walter Thompson Co. Fund, Ine. Towers, Perrin, Foster & Crosby, Inc. U. S. Trust Company Foundation The Upjohn Company The Warner Fund Incorporated Martha Washington Kitchens, Inc. Charles J. Webb Foundation Whirlpool Corporation Winn-Dixie Stores Foundation

The Best Years O f Their Uves


AW ARDS PRESENTED AT TH E SEVENTY-NINTH COMMENCEMENT JU N E 11,1966

is awarded to that member of the graduating class who, in the estimation of the faculty, is outstanding in character, deportment, scholarship, and good' influence among his fellow students. the faculty head boy medal

1903—Raymond F. Haulenbeck '1904—George G. Cornwell 1905— Charles S. Campbell 1906— H. King Cornwell 1907— Kdmund T. Kennedy 1909— Karl Mathiasen 1910— Laurence B. Morse 1911— Laurence G. Payson 1912— Lewis W. Douglas 1913— Alfred Mathiasen 1914— Robert J. Baker 1915— Winthrop P. Culver 1916— C. Ewen Cameron1917— Russell Hopkinson 1918— Arthur V. Youngman 1919— Charles Edward Maxwell 1920— James Douglas 1921— Michael John Callow 1922— Otto Maurice Boos 1923:—Richard Erwin Kleinhaus 1924— George Findley Griffiths ‘ . 1925— Fferbert Francis Kleinhaus 1926— Fred C. Griffiths 1927^John Boyce Sisley 1928— Hudson Bardon Lemkau 1929— Edward Morris Holmes 1930— Harold Hunt Demarest 1931— Wayne Dumont II 1932 —Jameson Gilbert Campaigne 1933— John Dale Sylvester 1934— John Edward Kayser 1935— Eddy Davis Palmer 1936— Robert Loyd Brightman 1937— John Frederick Ross 1938— Frederick Morris Shelley III 1939— Robert Heyer Muller 1940— Thomas Johnson Dwyer 1941— B-Charles Mason Holmes II 1942— Daniel Everett Emerson, Jr. 1943— Edward Summer Olcott 1944— Gilpin Hazard Jefferis 1945— Richmond Benner Hopkins 1946— William Ferdinand Brown II 1947— George Pennington Egbert, Jr. 1948— Richard Martin Sandler 1949— Edgar Alden Dunham M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

1950— Walter Burnet Rauscher 1951— Frederick Arnold Möller 1952— Robert M. Kim 1953— John Alexander Onderdonk 1954— John Munozfjpster 195 5-S Samuel Laurence Martin, Jr. 1956— Michael I. Sucoff 1957— J 9hti Shepley Allen 1958— Martin Nathan Rosen 1959— James Andrew Courier 1960— Fenton Peter Purcell 1961— Alan Ralph Tessier 1962— B-Ethan Lawrence Feinsod 1963— Thomas Victor Parsonnet Alpern 1964— John Cunningham Sheldon .1965—Arthur Kerr Brown III 1966—Alan James Balma -

1966. Head Boy Alan Balma receives his award from Headmaster Philip L. Anderson. 37


Awarded to Brant Switzler, senior ; Micnàel/S.;; Yamashita, junior ; Alan K. Yamashita, sophomore; Frank J. LaRocca, freshman. t h e barras p r iz e i n e n g l is il / fosters the memory of William Avery Barras, who, with inspiring :scholar­ ships taught English at the Academy for twenty-eight years, until his death in 1957. For the outstanding single performance in senior English this year, the- prize is given for a thesis on Tragicomedies of the Modern Playwrights,, Edward Albee and Arthur Kopit. Awarded to Fred S. Gurtman. t h e m o n s o n p r iz e i n l a t i n , in , honor of Claude Wilmot Monson, Classics Master Emeritus, for thirtynine years a teacher of Latin at Montclair Academy, is given to the boy who, in the judgment of the Language Department, has distinguished himself by his work in this language. Awarded to Mark A. Geannette.

THE RUDOLPH H. DEETJEN AWARD, given by Rudolph

H. D'eetlln of the Class of 1915, consists of a sum of money to be applied to the payment of college expenses of a member of the graduating class who* in the opinion of the faculty, has made a creditable record in athletics, and academic work and whose/character and deportment have been/a positive influence in the life of the school. Awarded to C. Brant S w itz lb |||| TH®BUnlM BKEEL MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP, g iv en in

memory of O. Stanley Mekeel of the.Class of 1929 to a worthWsenior, consists bf a sum of money to be applied to the payment of freshman expenses in the college of his choice. ' Awarded to Carter Fitzpatrick.

t h e m il l e r p r iz e i n -.s c ie n c e , in memory of William Henry Miller, Associate Headmaster Emeritus, for fortysix years a teacher of the Sciences at Montclair Academy, is given to that boy who, in the judgment of the Science Department has distinguished himself by his work in Science. Awarded to Fred S. Gurtman. t h S w il l ia m h . m il l e r p r iz e i n s c ie n c e , presented to the boy in the senior class who has the highest rank in Science. Awarded to Robert H. Yolken.

THE DEMAREST MEMORIAL ENGLISH PRIZE, is given in memory of Charles H. Demarest, Jr., to that member of the graduating class who has attained the highest average for the year in the senior English course. Awarded to Robert H. Yolken.

.CITIZENSHIP p r iz e , is giv en to th a t m em ■•ber-of th e ju n io r class w ho, in th e estim a tio n o f th e fa c ­ ulty,; h a s ^ u r i n g th f e c u r r e n t y ear, sh o w n th e b est sp irit o f loyalty to th e school as a w hole a n d ex e rc ise d a w h o le / som e tand: w ise lead ersh ip . t h e faculty

Awarded to Michael S. Yamashita. t h e Pr in c e t o n clu b a w a rd , presented by the Princeton Alumni AsICciatSn of Montclair and Vicinity, is given to a member®')f the junior class, whose, strong academic record is supplemented by evidence of leadership in school affairs,/athletics, and community endeavors. Awarded to Peter Adams.

XJ j h e /k l e i n a w a r d s , awarded for combining achieve­ ment in athletics with achievement in academic pursuits, are given in memory of Dr;/-. William Klein, eminent physician, Jig ifts enthusiast, and grandfather of two boys who have graduated from Montclair Academy.

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the

s e n io r

s c h o l a r s h ip

p r iz e ,

is awarded to the

ranking scholar in the senior class) Awarded to Robert H. Yolken. are given in memory of W ilfred John Funk of the Class of 1936 to the boys with the highest scholastic standings in grades seven through eleven. Awarded to Robert L. Ely, seventh; Michael P. Grady, eighth; Frederic A. Miller, ninth; Alan K. Yamashita, tenth ; Edward G. Voss, Jr., eleventh. the fu n k

m e m o r ia l a w a rd s ,

is given in memory of John Stein Barclay of the Class of 1927 to that hoy who has attained the highest degree of excellence in be­ ginning Latin. Awarded to Edward A. Griggs, Jr. THE BARCLAY

m e m o r ia l

p r iz e ,

t h e RAUSCHER p r iz e , is given by Donald W. Rauscher, Class of 1922, to that student who has attained the highest degree of excellence in mathematics. Awarded to Robert H. Yolken.

THE RENSSELAER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE GOLD MEDA^*

presented by the Rensselaer Alumni Association, is given to that member of the junior class who has done the best work in mathematics and science throughout his prepara­ tory work. Awarded to Robert C. M. Fazio. t h e l ib r a r y a w a r d , is g iven to th a t boy w h o by his fa ith fu ln e ss, diligence, and. sp irit h as been th e o u tsta n d in g

lib ra ry w o rk e r f o r th e y ear.

Awarded to Richard A. Sheriff, Jr. t h e m o n t c l a ir m u s ic club a w a r d , is given in rec­ ognition of outstanding musical talent and noteworthy participàtion in the Academy’s musical activities. Awarded to Robert P. Coyne.

Special recognition for outstanding achievement was accorded to : Richard C. Kuzsma, in Journalism. Peter A. OrgainjJn Dramatics. William D. Roome, in Electronics and Audio Visual Aids.

t h e Sp a n is h p r iz e , is awarded for outstanding achievement in the study of the Spanish language and keen interest in Hispanic culture and civilization. Awarded to Robert J. Mascia. the

germ an

p r iz e ,

is awarded to the student who

has made for himself a creditable record in Third Year German and given evidence of genuine interest in the German language and culture. Awarded to John F. Hawley. t h e f r e n c h p r iz e , is awarded by the Alliance Fran­ çaise of Montclair for outstanding achievement in the study of the French language and keen interest in French culture and civilization. Awarded to C. Brant Switzler.

c u m . la u d e

Fred Saul Gurtman Robert Joseph Mascia Charles Brant Switzler Norman Stuart Weisman Robert Henry Yolken

THE MONTCLAIR SOCIETY OF ENGINEERS AWARD, pre­ sented by the Montclair Society of Engineers, is given to an outstanding senior who shows promise in pursuing an engineering career by his excellence in mathematics and the sciences, Awarded to William D. Roome. t h e h is t o r y p r iz e , is aw a rd e d to a m em b er of th e ju n io r o r se n io r class f o r h is su p e rio r p e rfo rm a n c e in th e

stu d y o f h isto ry .

Awarded to Robert H. Yolken. THE

u n it e d

NATIONS PRIZE, is given by Dr. and Mrs.

Leon H. Fradkin to that student who has written, m competition, the best essay on a topic associated with the United Nations. Awarded to Richard C. Kuzsma. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

39


PARENTS . . . Are we sending your son’s mail to his present correct address? Many alumni have graduated from college and no longer live at home with their parents. The,alumni office should be notified of all address changes as soon as possible to avoid undeliverable mail and mail going to an address where the alum­ nus no longer resides.

Younger Alumni Sponsor College Chair Project

1966Wçofnmencement speaker, Dr. Gustave W . Weber, Presi­ dent, Susquehannaf§Jniversity.

USED B U T U S A B L E The following items are needed for use by the students, faculty and administration. The list is published because-alumni, parents and friends some­ times have equipment and furniture they are no longer using', pj| plan to trade, which they would make available to the Academy when the need is apparent. Anyone wishing -fife donatejjjtems ( should w rite'o r call Mr. John Spdoma, Business Manager.^ Typewriters Standard Portable Electric Typewriter Stands,''', .M imeograph Copier® dry); y Adding Machine Filing Cabinets (metal) all sizes 40

Four captain’s chairs emblazoned with the seals of Colgate, Princeton, Wesleyan, and Williams . have been received and placed in the library. T h ^ c o lle g e 'chairs-are the .first to arrive, as a result of a project conceived by Wilson S. Ailing ’61. One year a g o l Wilson suggested that groups of recent graduates, enrolfld as undergraduates, on a -college or university campus, ;could make a meaningful gift to the Academy by purchasing and sharing the cost of a captain s chair and thereby be represented within their prep school and by their college. llA jhli four chairs received thus far are the gifts yof James A. Courier ’59, Colgate ; Bruce F. W. Anderson ’64, Jeffrey Silberfeld ’65, Robert S. Livesey ’65, H. Holt Apgar ’65, and James J. Kuzmick ’65, Princeton; Michael R, Fink ’65 and Robert E. Gerst ’62, Wesleyan; Joseph A. Courier 57, Williams. . Alumni interested in the college chair project may -obtain additional details from Wilson A. Ailing, River dale Country School, Riverdale, New York City. F all-W

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“O Montclair Days Thy Memory Lives On Forever.”

Henry “Harry” Gold, 86 years young, isfelfhe elder statesman among Montclaii Academy alumni: H a r r y and his wife, Freda, live in Bay Pines, Florida, and are the parents of three sons. Harry’s attendance at the Academy began in 1893 and terminat­ ed with his graduation in 1898. He holds an A.B. degree from Amherst, ’03, and a B.A. from Yaie, ’04.

05 Henry

Hoffstot writes “I regret that distance makes it impossible for me to at­ tend the alumni reunion. I am certain some of those who were in school while I was there from 1896 to 1905 must still be on the map. While our football and basketball records may not compare with those; of some later:'years, we were not as bad as we might have been. Regards to any old friends,” Henry and his wife, Marguerite, ‘live at S057 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ ia. He received his A.B.‘from Harvard in 1910 and has been retired for several years.

m : The Honorable- Spruille Braden, Business m ail and Diplomat. Ph.B. in Mining .Engi­ neering, Yale, (Sheffield Scientific Softool), 1914; honorary, fellow olf University of Buenos Aires 1938; LL.D., honorary Johns Hopkins': University 1939; Clark University and Albright ■College, 1946; E.D., Montana '. School of Mines,'"‘1947. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

SPR U IL L E BRADEN ’10

First, wifp, Maria, died May 1962. Re­ married May 1964 to Verbena Williams. Childreff-yMaruja, Laura Isolina, William II, Patricia, Spruille Jr. Began as minejf 1912; Mining engineering,. 1914-1919 ; Represented father’s-and AnaBinda Copper interests in Chile’ 1917-19; negotiated financing and obtained contracts for electrification of Chile State Railways , for Westinghouse.Electric and Manufactur­ ing Company, §§20; Negotiated large oil concessions in Latin America^ 1921-22; ne•gotiated several important loans in Latin America 1922-25; all paid off in fujMbefore maturity; organized Cohoe PrsifcgCpesJvIne.» 1926; r|<frganized Englishtown. Carpet Com­ pany (changing name to Monmouth Rug Mills Inc.)' 1925-29 ; -organized Rehabilitation Corp., financing income. producing propers ties, 1932. 1925-33 — Became interested in various!, enterprises, within the United States,, serving., as director of such corporations a s : Ameri­ can’ Ship and Commerce CorporatiqmfAJ^ A. Harriman Securities; Pennsylvania Coal and. Coke; Marion Steam Shovel Co., Mon- 1 mouth Rug Mills; Kingscote Realty Corpo­ ration; The Capitol Theatre Corporation;! and various; Ethers. Advisor Delegation Pan American Fipkfeial ' Conference, Washington,. D.C., 1920; U.S. Delegate , to 7th International CGonfereneefiiAmerican States, Montevideo) ¿1933; Pan American gjmmerci^l Conference,. 1935; chairman of United States Delegation,: ’rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, to-Chaco Peace Conference. 1935-39; represented President Roosevelt as

41


arbitrator in final settlement of war between Bolivia and Paraguay, 1939; U.S. AmbassdA;" dor to Colombia, 1939-42; became Ambassa-,.. dor to Cuba, May 19, 1942; U.S. Ambassa­ dor to Argentina, May-October, 1945; then Assistant Secretary of "State for American Republics Affairs, resigned Juno 1947: spe­ cial Ambassador B inauguration of P ||siderit of Panama, 1940 ; Costa Rica, May 1944; Cuba, October, 1944, Guatemala, March, 1945. Trustee and Executive and other Committe.es of Dry Dock -Savings Bank; mem­ ber The Pan American Society of the Unit­ ed Statesplncf (President 1953-59) ; hon­ orary President 1959-; Inter-American Commissiiil Inter-American Panel of Arbiters.; chairman, Inter-American Commercial Ar­ bitration Commission, 1934 - 39 ¡« jaferary Iciitiirmati of same - since; 1939; chairman advisory committee Division of International Conferences, Department of State- 1933-35. Honorary citizen City of La Paz, Bolivia, Cieffluegos, Cuba, and other cities; honorary member Institute of International Law of Argentina; honorary member Institute San Martiniaribi; honorary member Museo Social University of Buenos Aires 1938; honorary Dr. of Laws, Johns Hopkins University, 1939 lifelarke -University, Albright College, 1?46:; : honorary D f l of Engineering, Montana Scho.ol of M in efe^;7 ; and others. Awarded Grand c-CrOs^ Order of Merit .(-Chile), Grand Cross . Order of Condor-. : (Bolivia) awarded medal, rank of Officer, Order Adf ijMerit (Chile) gold medal of Pan American Society; gold medal InterAmerican Commercial Arbitration Commis­ sion ; Grand Crda's:.fCruziero do-,Sul (Bra­ zil) ; Grand Officer Order H f Quetzal, Guatemala, Grand Officer OrdeiSpf Merits Paraguay ffflrand Cross .Order of Red Cross, Cuba; Medal of Freedom, (United States;|-T; Grand-Cross' of Honor and Merit, (Haiti) ; Grand rCp>s^^>f c Manuel, de VSespedes, IX C u b a G ra n d Cross °f Boyoca, (Colom& iai). Grand Crd§s of Merit, (Peru);; Gold ■Mecial -of -Sons of -the American Revolution^ the,-.-; Americas Foundation “The Americas Award for 1957;” medal of City of New York; Grand.;Cross»;-Order||f Ruben D a rili (Nicaragua). Grand Cross of the Order of the Quetzal ibi Guatemala, Freedom Award of the Order of Lafayette,-Grand Cross of theriKnightly ;® der|of St. Brigitte- -Grand •Cross of Honor and Merit—Legion of HonXSbr of the Republic of Cuba. Honorary Mem­ ber-pi Inter-American Education As|.ocia-. tionL Gold Medal—Cubans in Exile. Award­ ed keys to- various, cities. - Clubs: Metropolitan (New York), Board of Governors, chairman, Admission Com­ mittee, chairman Inter-American Committee of Avenue pf Americas- As^HatiBHehsiirm a n lfe New. York City Anti-Crime Com-

42

McGraw-Hill Company. The- text has been described with no blasphemy intended, as “the fufll raiser’s bible.” Among the many accolades the book has received was Harold W. Dodd's, President Emeritus, Princeton University, statement: William “Sarge” Bugbee, 6 Edgemont “I don’t see why it (Seymour’s book) can-, R i d i Montclair, is an Osteopathic Physi­ riot become for American fund raising, the cian. Dr. Bugbee and his ;0vv|fe, Dorothy, attended the October Dedication and Home­ sort of authoritative guide to good practice that Kent’s Commentaries became for early coming program. Ih - l^ ^ g h e received the W G. Sutherland Award for Distinguished American law.” pt R udolph H. D eetjen Servii^ from The Cranial Academy. 28 Clearman Place Dotmld G. MacVicar has retired and lives- I Belleville, New Jersey at 561 North Church Street, Naugatuck, Winthrop Culver, a sales representative Connecticut. Donald received hìs M.E. de­ for Rainfair, Inc.jf-lives at 55 North Moun­ gree from 'Cornell in 1915 after having tain Avenue, Montclair with his wife Jule. attended the Academy from 1899, when he Win graduated from Lafayette with a entered first grade, until graduation in B.S. in chemistry 1919 and completed the 1911. requirements for his chemical engineering degree in 1923. He served as a first lieu­ tenant in Infantry and Ordnance, U. S. Monroe F. Hess is an executive with J. A. Army. -Ludlow and" Company; ANew York City. Wilfred Utter, 89 Beach Street, Westerly, Monroe, who attended the University of R. L, is the President and Publisher of the Pennsylvania, resides at 165 East 66th Street, Westerly Sun. New York City. ' “Pop” is a 1919 graduate of Amherst and Harold" “Doc’’ Seymour has acquired the a member of the American Newspaper distinguished title “Dean of American Fund Publishers Association and the New England Raisers.” Harold and his wife, Martha, Daily Newspaper Association. live at 44 Old Smith Road, Tenafly, New Jersey, and have three children. . He entered the Naval Air Service as Theodore M. Edison had a very scholarly aril ensign in 1917 following graduation from Harvard in 1916 and upon his dis­ article entitled: VIET NAM — WHAT SHOULD W E DO? printed in the Sun­ charge- at the end of World War I began day, October 16th issue of -THE NEW his career when he joined the staff on the YORK TIMES, section 6 , page 5. The inHarvard Endowment Fund Campaign. Often called,, “the most quoted man in the field,” depth analysis expanded the common-sense theme “New paths to peace might come to he has been .engaged in some aspect of life if both sides would take more pains fundraising ever since. tofSsee how things must look from other The most recent of Si’^m ultitude of points of view.” : accomplishments is the publication of his book DESIGNS FOR FUNDRAISING, D r. E dward T. S eymour

’ittee, 1951-58; President Americas Founda.fc'bn 1960- ; Dempc-at. Address : 320 East 72nd Street, New York, N. Y. 10021.

B

55 Hillside Avenue Tenafly, New Jersey T h e F ifty Y ear Class ' ,

Golden Anniversary reunion, Friday, April 21, 1967, at the Montclair Golf Club.

HARO LD SEYM OUR ’12

; Dr. Edward Semour is the most enthusi­ astic of many Academy graduates who summer in Bay Head, New Jersey. Ned and Leona are |p;e- parents of three children. Dr. Seymour is: still going strong as one of the few dedicated general practitioners—a vanishing -species of doctors in this-: day and age. Following his graduation from the Aca­ demy, Ned attended the University of Michi­ gan and then received his M.D. from Ohio State in 1926. F all-W

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three children, all girls, and live at 1000 Waukegan Road, Lake Forest. Edward Chace is the Superintendent of Schools in Bridgeton, New Jersey. Ed ob­ tained his&Ph.B. and A.M. from Brown . University, and his Ph.D. from New York University. He was a Rhodes: Scholar finalist in . Lester Hazel, 506 W. Prospect Street,/ 1925 and 1927, is a member of Rotary and Marshall, Michigan, has retired following past presidentHf Kiwanis. Ed was principal of the first vocational high school in Massa­ 29 years with the Eaton Manufacturing chusetts-, and serves on the executive comCompany. mitteeiiof the N. J. Assoiiation of School Administrators. He and Evangeline reside at 50 Woodland Sydnor Barksdale Penick, Jr. is Chairman Drive, Bridgeton. Of the Board, S. B. Penick and Company, Samuel Scott is a partner in the firm New York City, and lives at 168 Gates Scott, Neely, and Dunn in Pittsburgh. Avenue, Montclair with his wife, Evie.. The “Sam” and Virginia live at 2503 Mt. Royal Penicks are the parents! 5|)f six children: Boulevard, Glenshaw, Pennsylvania. three boys and three girls. He received his A.B. from Princeton in “Barkie” i s , an enthusiastic and loyal 1926 and his LL.B. from Harvard Law in Princeton alumnuSi. He graduated Phi Beta 1929. Kappa with his A. B. in 1925. ' “Scotty” is first vice president, of the Dr. Paul P. Smith graduated from the National Association of Hearing and Speech Philadelphia College of Osteopathy in 1925 Agencies, a director of the American Auto­ and 'obtained his M.D. from the Chicago mobile Association and past president of the College of Medical Surgery in June 1946. ' Pennsylvania Motor Federation, AAA. - Smitty and Clara live at 32-02 Ryan ^ R ichard K lein h a n s Road, Fair Lawn, New Jersey. He is the m Scribner Avenue police surgeon' in Fair Lawn and associated South Norwalk, Connecticut attending physician for thè Saddle Brook Robert Munoz is president, Southwood General Hospital. Exploration Co., Inc., in Denver, Colorado." ^ ^ H oward A. V an V leck, Bob and his wife, Jimmy, live at 1770 Glen M M 21 Van Vleck Street coe Street, Denver. Montclair, New Jersey He graduated from Princeton with a B. S. George R. Beach Jr. served as Mayor _-of the city of Lake Forest, Illinois, from in 1927 and served as a major in the Mili­ 1960-63. Geot-ge is not a professional politi­ tary Intelligence from 1942 until 1945. A Phi Beta Kappa, Bob has been award­ cian. He is the retired Midwestern Regional ed the Gold Heart Award by the Colorado 'Manager for E, I. DuPont de Nemours. Heart Association and is an honorary mem­ George ..graduated- from Princeton with ber of the Rocky Mountain Association of his B. S. in 1926. He and wife, Jane,-have

Platt Spencer has retired after many years with the ,Gulf Oil Corporation. Platt and Mabel have moved' to 777 South East 2nd Avenue, Apartment 108, Deerfield Beach, Florida, from their previous home in Newtonville, Massachusetts, i

20

Geologists. Perpÿ Young graduated, from Phillips Exeter and Princeton, A.B., 1928. He was a lieutenant ^Commander in the Navy, from 1942,/intil 1946 and is now general invest-:/ ment manager with the Prudential ; Insurance .Co. Percy and wife Patricia have two sons and reside at 549 Long Hill Road, Gillette, New Jersey. Jonathan W. Chatellier and his wife;.jhe former Alice Vexin of Montclair, reside at 16 West Elm Street, Yarmouth, Maine. “Jack” , is a representative, foi" Columbus.. Coated Fabrics (Wall-Tex), a subsidiary of Borden llompany.

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Harold Allenb/y is . owner oh, the .firm, H. F. Allenby Company, 230 West 41st Street, New! York City. He attended Lyc.ee Jaccard School, Lusdnne, Switzerland and Williams College. Harold and Kathleen are the parents, of two children and live at- 55 Jacobus A venu|| Great Notch, New Jersey. Donald Masson, president of Don Masson Associates of Glen Ridge, New. Jersey;! lives at 52 Lincoln Street, Glen Ridge. Don and Helen have three children and six grandchildren. Joseph E. Wiedewmayer Joined the For­ eign Service shortly after, “Pearl Harbor’ in 1941, following twelve years in private business. As U. S. Consul and First Secre-,. tary in the Diplomatic Service, from whichhe retired in mid-1965, he served, in various! capacities at our Embassies and Consulates! in the Far East, Europe and South America. He is an international economist, free lançç' writer, public speaker and speaks, several languages.

The Undefeated 1915 Football Team

. wm

SslISSl M A 239 points-Opponents 13 points. Left end, Platt Spencer; left tackle, Charles. Praster; left guard, Walter Mallon; center O.’ E. Mathiasen; right tackle, Philip Hoag; right-guard, Rolf Sylvan; right end, Curry Bartlett; quarterback,'Clement Buck; left halfback, John Manners; fullback, Homer Hazel; right halfback, Walter Radford. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

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JQ S E P H W IED EN M A Y ER ’24 At every.,port’.,’of call devoted much of hR spare tiine to. eMour^ingVifae deaf and hard of M arijiS for which he repeiv« a W 0 $ e -to ^ o p l& Program citationpiJB his “Outstanding Contribution to International Goodwill,” in 1961. Mr. Wiedenmayer was. rewarded for his -succfss^ in the Foreign Service when Presi­ dent. jh h n E: Kennedy nominated him promotion in 1962 and with the advice and confent of the Senate he. reachedAlenior of­ ficer, jlg & I Later, President Lytt|on B. Johnson,1 while Vice President, personally scatnmended him. for his .accomplishments ;and sge'nerShsMer^ce to others,” Prince-: Philip, Ambassador Ellis O. B rigg^ Senator Jacob J avits, also commended him for hisg achievement.?, in the U. 5. Foreign Service. In 1965 heOvyas; aw ardS the Meritorious ServiHSertificate from Secretary of State Dean R i|l ||a n d .^ f e l ^ f e h e was honored! with the Achievement Award of the. Execu­ tive Audial Rehabilitation Society (EARS) of Corpus Christi, Texas-: He is listed in “Who’s Who in America.” . -’BinCe hiSretirement from the Foreign .Service he has been engaged,in a new career ;a^lij® ial Assistant of the Alexander-'Gra­ ham Bell Association for the Deaf, Wash­ ington, D.C; His hobbies.i.are painting and drumming... .. Deaf youngsters, parepts and teachers in Jordan) Lebanon, Syria and other, countries will liSeh audf. fommunibat.c with Consul Wiedenmayer in November, 1966. At thelf§|ly Land||nstitute for the Deaf, in Salt, Jordan,,Blither , Andeweg’s Institute Bfor the Deaf; in Beirut, Lebanon and m other oral schools fpr (leaf children'in the ¡Middle East, Consul wMenmayer will show films P ) n m l educaW,® of deaf . youngsters in the! • United States and will speak about his exnerie | | p .;m the. Diplomatii|’S ery ic^g Traveling on the invitation of the Mid.C die’ E a st Association for the Deaf, of which he i§jfHonorary President, he will b e . r # ceived by the King of the Hashemite King­

44

dom of Jordan, and the President of the Re- 1 public-of. L;ebd^J as^well as. by U. S. Am­ bassadors to thes'e|''®mtries:.;; ^ From Lebanon he wiltlgo to Holland and 'Italy. In Rome, Mr. Wiedenmayeptilil meet, with the Secretary General of the W^Hd Federation of the Deaf (W FD) which isl Shedulmg .its Sth International Congress, in Warsaw, Poland, in August, 196.7’. / ’ g8 ffih«fc: S. -Department; ;of. State, t h a U S . Information Agency and the Voice of Amer­ ica are cooperating wltMMr.. Wiedenmayeriri hissed of ts to p/ofnote international good­ will. among thoseSf^pncerned,- with education and vocational Importunities for the handicappefr-in the United States,land abroad^ 'Consul Wiedenmayer $gki born -in New Jersey and graduated from .'Cornell Univer-; sity with a B.S.iSn 1929. He is. married, with three children'find four grandchildren, and residetPLChevy Chase, Maryland. He % a member of various: national and inter­ national organizations. ^ Gt; stave E. W iedenmayer _ M 487 Berkeley Avenue . . South Orange, New Jersey Albert Penick graduated from Episcopal High School and the University of Virginia after he. Jeft the Academy at the end of. his junior year. A1 is president of S. B. - Penick & Com­ pany, New York City, ancffiives at 48 Porter Place, Montclair, with kis|iwife Virginia. The Penicks have two children.

Homer Grant Whitmore and wife, Alice, reside at SOS A ntl||s Drive, Rochester, New Y ork. “Whit” graduated from Syracuse , and Harvard Universities and spent over two years in the China-Burma-India Theater of War during World War II. He was dis­ charged with the rank of- major and was awarded the Bronze Star Medal.

H O M ER W H IT M O R E ’26

E. Herman Bigs I® managing director, J. N. Harriman & Co., Ltd., in PoW of Spain, Trinidad. Herman graduated from Lafayette in 1930 and dives at S Mary; Street, Port of Spain. He and his;wifeiJCamila, have four children.

CAMILA and H ERM A N BOOS ’26

M HM f /

M. E ugene S pen i 85 Undercliff Road' Montclair, New Jersey

. John J. B. Cooper is President of Lawson-Cooper, Cine., Wilmington, Delaware. “Jack” gradauted from the University of Virginia and Columbia University, and served in the Air C o rp s from 1942-1945 with the rank, of Captain. He and Louise live at 49 The Strand, New Castle, Delaware. ^ H enry B. F ernald, J r. V Q 221 North Mountain Avenue! Montclair, New Jersey . ¿Alexander Hehrheyer received his B.S from Yale in 1932 and LL.B. from Colum­ bia Law School in 1935. He is a partner in the firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, Madison Avenue, New York City. ton Square, New York City and have two children. Hudson Lemkcm, 10 Heights Road, Plandome, New York, responded to the appeal in the spring BULLETIN for year books need­ ed to provide a complete set in the alumni office by sending the ’23, ’24, ’25, and ’26 Ye Yeare Book. _ : i “Lem” graduated from Princeton in 1932 andÿ|erved as a lieutenant in the United States Navy during World War II. He and Jandt, are th e . parents, of two sons and a daughter. A lim Sloan and wife, Helen, reside at 89 Grand Avenue, Washington, New Jersey. Al is Secretary-Treasurer and General Man­ ager of the St. Cloud Building Corporation in Washington. F all-W

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D r. J ames R ogers

E m M H l 34th Street Paterson, New Jersey , Dr. J. Tufton Mason is a physician, gen­ eral practice, 'in Cedar Grove, New Jersey. He and Winifred, are the parents J of six children. , T'Tuffy'lSreceived his A.B. from PrincetbjiS in 1936 and his M.D. from Columbia Medi­ cal School in 1940. From 1942-’46 he served in the Army as a captain. . John Sayre and Isabelle reside at 519 Royal Plaza, Fort Lauderdale, Florida.'. ./' i#/^gck” graduated: from Princeton, A.B. in ;393i'|and was. granted his M.B.A. degree/; from Harvard Business $chool in 1938.

Golden Eagle Fabrics — Alfred Stapf ’28

/. Alfred F. W. Stapf, formerly of Convent Station, New Jersey, now lives' at Laurel Woods, Centre Brid|e, Pennsylvania. (Mail­ ing. .address! Star Route, New 1lope, Pa. 18938). Having retired from the textile business in New York City, where he was president of Stapf Fabrics Inc., heHpened.a store in Peddlers Village, Lahaska, Pennsylvania, known as Golden Eagle Fabrics, and serves as ,president of Retail Associates, Inc. While a student at Montclair Academy' from 1925: to 1928, he was .awarded the coveted “M”, In three sports, football, basketball and base­ ball, When the Montclair Academy Founda­ tion was established he s e rv e tta the original board of trustees for three years, as chair­ man Of the Athletic Committee. While serv­ ing in this capacity he originated the idea of a dinner at the close of the school year to honor boys who earned their letters in any sports. . He is ‘ active in The Exchange Club óf : New Hope, Pennsylvania, and recently served as chairman of a West Point Cadet GleeClub Concert held there. Al extends a cordial welcome to any and all Montclair Academy friends,, alumni and Students.-to visit-him at The Golden Eagle Fabrics Shop in Peddlers Village. _

N athan K a m in s k i

622 Highmarket Street Georgetown, South Carolina . Robert Buchnan is.;treasurer and chairman of the board, Bigelow Company Department Store in Jamestown,' New York. “Buck” is married and lives at 52 West­ minster Drive in Jamestown. Class Representative "Ram” served in thè Navy from 1940 to 1945, graduated from Washington and Jefferson. College, and has been awarded'the Silver,-Beaver medal by

“Brud” served in WW II as a navy lieu­ the Boy Scouts of American for his leader­ tenant and resides at 43 Gbrdonhurst Avcship in Scouting. nu^U pper Montclair, with his wife, Bev- I Nat and Nora live at 622 ,Highmarket erly, andLsons Craig and Sgotfli Both boys ; Street, Georegtown, South Carolina where are. Montclair Academy students. . Scott: is a . he is president of Kaminski Hardware. . sophomore and Craig is ahsenior. Craig is captain-elect of the varsity wrestling team _ R ichard -R. Cole and was state champion in his weight class Cj Q ?915 Washington Avenue.. among the N. J. Independent Schools last Santa Monica, California In addition to his position as deputy man­ winter. ager of Property Management for Douglas ~ R obert V an N ess J en n in g s :. Aircraft in Santa Monica, California, Dick | H 25 Woodcrest Road J r .D. 1 Cole is one of the outstanding ;bowlers in Boonton, New Jersey Southern California. He has participated^ Robert 'V . Jennings is a partner in TH E Ten American Bowling Tournaments, five POLICY SHOP, Madison, New Jersey. Peterson Classic Tournaments, and numer­ He graduated from St. John’s University in » ous other “big league” tourneys throughout 1937 and is fetirrently Lt. Governor, Div. 16, the United States A ” New Jersey Kiwanis Clubs. Dick and wife, Jessie, have 2 children. Harry Hazzard, wife Erna, and thei/five; Hazzard children have moved to 8 Autumn Hill Road, Princeton, New Jersey. . “Hap” attended Phillips Exeter for a post graduate year following his senior year at the Academy and has earned his A.B., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from Princeton. Lubin Palmer has. been named president of J. P. Glasby Manufacturing Company, Inc. of Belleville, New Jersey. An alumnus of Rensselaer Polytech®/Iifi; stitute,, Lubin and D oi|thear reside at 50 Glen Road, Verona.

X Jr

M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

Henry Perry left the Academy to attend and graduate from the. Tajfe School and: Princeton. ‘ He is sales engineer with Bab­ cock & Wilcox, N. Y. C .,

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T J >1

D r . W alter J. S perling,. J r.

338 North Mountain Avenue Upper Montclair, New Jersey

_ ^ Ax O

RICHARD COLE ’30

W. K ent S chmid 30 (Mdchester Road Essex Fells, New Jersey Randolph Barrett spent a post ‘ graduate - year at Governor Dummer Academy and graduated from Yale in 1941.

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iljîRandy’’ i#' général b u sin g irèseardHghp* pérvisor for the New Jersey Bell Telephone Company and d-i'ves at 147 Fells Boad, Essex Fells, with his wife, Harriet, and three childrenl^feCs.eiyed; two js|ints- in the Army Military Intelligence as. a captain from 1942.1.946 and 1950-tg 1952. Robert Bnghtmtm turns ..back the calendar twenty years each day .when h issfe , Rich­ ard, leaver 'home for. classés at Montclair Academy where he -isiPa-senior. "Bob” .is president of Kohaneson Wales and Sparre, Inc.,.Nejy. York City. He at­ tended Exeter for a post graduate year and fë§eivedAis B.A. from Princetonl|i 1941. A' past president of the NalibnalKÇouncil igf America^Hmporters and listed in “Who’s Who É|pAmerica;,” Bob and Marion live at 118 Cooper Avenue, Upper Montclair. s -Cotonêl Walter GreenwoodwIS made the army hfe; career — and a very distinguished one. He is currently director, Command and Staff 'Department, U. S. Armor School, Fort Knox, Ky. . ‘‘Walt” graduated from Virginia;Military ^¿§titufe H.A. 1940, and them received his. M.A. from George Washington University in i-9§|. He has been awarded the Legion of Merit, Bronze‘Star, Army; Commendation ¿Medal and Joint Services Medal. Walt a n ^ Mary «live at. Qtrs.w.408, 5th Avenue, Fort Knox, with their two children.

W A LTER GREENW OOD ’36

William Barnard graduated from Lehigh' Tin 1942 with a B.S.E.E. degffe and'is .assist^ ant program manager, -Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, Bethpage', Long Is­ land, New York.

46

Richard Benson and his wife, Serena, live “Bill” and Jeah liV|3 on Bavberry Lane,' at 548 White Oak Ridge Road, Short Hills, Stony Brook, L.^Hwitb their five, children. G. Lloyd Fishbeck is vice president, George New Jersey.-ifjlhey have seven children. Dick received ;his A.B. from Amherst in Uhe Co., Inc,, New York City. The Fish1943 and spent four years during World becks KEdith - and four children) reside' .-at War IT as a lieutenant in the navy. He is 344 f N. A tlingto§ Avenue, East Orange, employed by Erwin Mills, a division of Bur­ New Jersey. lington Industries, with, his office-located in G. Clifford ..Geib has joined the staff of New York City. Black - Russell - MorrisJ Newark advertising Ralph Heintz is senior research engineer, agency, as ai||account executive. He was Stanford R searci| Institute, Menlo Park, formerly with 0 . S. Tysbn Co., In^j and California. He received his B.A., M.A., and Lewis Advertising Agency.. E.E. degrees from Stanford University, Cliff’s home address is 311 Jordan Road, Ralph and wife Marcella have four chil­ New Milford, New Jersey. dren and live at 725 University. Avenue, Los “Bob” ILvesey had the herculean task of Altos, California) He also serves as Presi­ serving as chairman of the 25th reunion, dent, The Perham Foundation. ■Class of 1941,~at Princeton last Spring. Re­ Bridgford Hunt and his wife, Esther, re­ ports from “Tigertown” confirm the ' fact side at 1 Greènview Way, Upper Montclair that his efforts resulted in a highly success­ with their three children. Bridg received his ful, reunion weekend for his classmates and B.S. from the University" of Pennsylvania the''university.. .• Wharton School and served as a captain in the infantry from 1943-1946. He is Presi­ dent of the Hunt Company, New York City. , Arthur W. Dixon is the owneiypf Beckley William Marchese entered the navy in Perforating Co., Garwood, New Jersey. He 1942 and holds the rank, lieutenant com­ graduated ■_from William and Mary, and mander, in the active reserve. In addition to served as a first lieutenant in Army Ord­ the time he devotes to the navy, Bill is an nance from 1943 to 1947. attorney and heads his own firm, William J . Art and Betty have three children and.live Marchese, Passaic, New Jersey. at 51 Holton Lane; Essex Fells, New Jersey. Bill received his B.S. from Villanova and Robert Salzberg, a Bucknell alumnus, was LL.B. from Rutgers University Law School. in the army as a first lieutenant from 1943 He and Anne have a daughter and reside at until 1946 and 1951-1953. Bob is now Unit 151 Luddington Avenue, Clifton, New Jer­ Manager for John Hancock Mutual Life In­ sey. surance! Company in Palisades Park. Dr. Robert Muller and his wife Joan, are. Bob, Betty, and their two children, reside the proud parents of Robert H., Jr., 3 and at 8-02 Plymouth Drive, Fair Lawn, New Russell Craig 1 year. They live at 36 Glen Jersey. Son Charles' is a sophomore at the Ridge Parkway, Montclair. Academy. Former Head Boy Bob is a loyal and a c ­ Lewis Sandler ifeipresident'-of the Sandler tive alumnus who serves on the alumni as­ & Worth Carpet Stores and Hudson Rug sociation executive committee. He received Co., New York, a subsidiary. The Sandlers his A.B. from Princeton and M.D. from live at 140 Raymond Avenue, South Orange, Columbia. From 1948 to 1950 he served in New Jersey, the army medical corps as a captain and is William Seidler transferred from the now Director, Employee and Student Health Academy to Kent School and then went on Services, Mountainside Hospital, Montclair. to Yale for hi^JB.A. in.1942 and LL.B. from Albert Pels is with the Manufacturing Yale Law School i£^1947,'He was a mem­ Standards ' Division, American Can Com­ ber of the Dean’s List at Yale and served as pany, New York City. Al graduated from a lieutenant in the navy from 1942-1945. Wesleyan University and served four years Bill is in the legal department of National in World War II as a technical ¡sergeant in Dairy Products, New York City, and lives the army. at 15 Undercliff Road,!; Montclair, with his He and Elizabeth have two sons and a wife Ann and four children. daughter and reside at 17 Francisco Avenue, West Caldwell, New Jersey. Seth Washburn attended Dartmouth from 1939 until 1942 and received his B.S. and - John Ackerman is president, Arrow Car­ M.S. in electrical engineering from M.I.T. rier Corporation, Carlstadt, New Jersey. He He is now executive director, Switching Di­ graduated from Peddie School, Princeton vision, Bell Telephone Laboratories, Colum­ 1943, and Columbia College of Physicans bus, O h io ;; and Surgeons- às angM.D. in 1946. Seth spent three years as a navy lieutenant Jack and Dp|is havè five-children and re­ and resides at 400 Medick Way, Worthing­ side at 744 Paiute Place, Franklin Lakes, ton, Ohio, with Janet and their five children. New Jersey. F all-W

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During World War IT Fred flew as a Peter V. K. Funk’s recent published novel,. technical sergeant, radio operator and gunner LOVE AND CONSEQUENCES, Chilton on B 24’s. He was missing in action behind Books, Philadelphia, Pa., has received very Russian lines in Hungary in 1945. The late fine reviews. In a letter to the alumni office, Colonel Dallas S. Townsend was'second in Peter wrote*}“Publishing this book has been llbmmand when Fred and his crew were an interesting experience because -I find that people have stfeng reactions to it either way.^ finally repatriated to Budapest at the end of they like it, tell me it’s the story of their’ the war. ii f ^ o r else they disagree almost violently D avid W . B rett with the premise. Some people even call it a 43 Woodland Terrace Cedar Grove, New Jersey "hard, bitter book.” But § | disagree with that last thought. David Baird graduated.} from Princeton in Rather,; I like sSwjiat Michael Ellis, |||h e 1947' and received his M.B.A. from Wharton Broadway producer says: “The most ac­ Graduate SchOolloi Business in. 1949. He curate and hilarious scenes of the hectic served as a'first lieutenant in the air force family life of suburban children in the last for two -years and is a stock broker with five years. Really marvelously funny stuff.” Baird and Company, |iew York City. “Dave” and Gail live at 9 Parkway, Mont­ clair, with their three children. David Caldwell is seirior mechanical engi­ neer with the General Electric Company in Phoenix, Arizona. Following World War II service a s . ;i corporal in the army, Dave obtained his M.E. degree from Stevens Institute of Tech­ nology. He and Suzanne have three children and reside at 17436 North 24th Drive, Phoenix. Randolphe P. Swenson of 100 Warren Place, Montclair, has been admitted ai a general. partner at Wood, Walker & Co., members of the New York Stock Exchange since 1869, and the American Stock Ex­ change. Prior to joining Wood, Walker & Co., he was an assistant vice president at Clark,. Dodge, Inc., where he w.ás'-a senior research P E T E R FU N K ’39 specialist. He was formerly associated with the Petroleum .Department of Empire Trust Peter’s previous novel, M V SIX LOVES, .Company as an assistant .vice president. was adapted a§ a highly successful motion “Perry” is current secretary tof ,the Néw picture starring Debbie Reynolds and Cliff York'Oil Analysts Group and a member of Robertson. It is currently being run as a the American Petroleum Institute, the Inde: feature movie on television networks. pendent Petroleum Association.'of America Peter lives on Goats Hill Road, Lambertand the New York Society of Security ville, New Jersey, and has succeeded his fa­ ther, the late Dr. Wilfred Funk, as7|he Analysts. writer and editor of Reader’s Digest month­ ly patì, IT PAYS TO INCREASE YOUR WORD POWER. R obert T. B ra u n w o rth ^1 Q 203 East Northfièld Avenue Livingstoh, New Jersey Frederick Little, his wife Jeanne, and daughters Linda and Jane, live a life that is the envy óf their friends who reside in the metropolitan area. From May 15th until November 15th the Littles operate Old Londonderry Workshop, Londonderry, Vermont. Fred writes that the gift shop features .everything from Vermont cheese (cut to order) to deerskin glovés and is located near Magic'-Mountain Ski Area. - The winter months,^November ;4^|M ày, aref.spent at 1705 N.E. 43rd Street, Foit Lauderdale, Florida.

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He served with air force in the South Pacific during World War II' as a first^. lieutenant and received his B.A. .degree from. Princeton in 1948. “Perry” is . alumni association -treasurer and a member of theJexecutivejiommittee;) son Eri||% ja freshman at the Academy. Lewis Townsend’s ma|j|; should .be ad­ dressed to: American Embassy, APO, San; Francisco^rjlilifornia 96243. He .Ts •;sepond~ secretary at the American Embassy^ SaigOn,! Vietnam. Lewis.,graduated from Columbia,. B.A,, n l |7 and Yale Law School in 1950. From, 1943-1946 and 4J950-1952 he served as a captain in the army. He is a member of: the® U. S. Supreme Court Bar and the Bar of the District of Columbia. Frits Von Bergen is another member -of the, class of 19.41 who i|^-w®fking abroad. Fritz is at Ch. de Mancy, 21 K, Vesenaz, GE, Switzerland. He graduated from Lehigh in 1944 and is an executive with F.M.C. International, 633 Third Avenue, New’York City. Fritz and Diane,have two children. . ~

D a n ie l E . E merson

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18 Chaucer Road Short Hills, New Jersey THSE¡§¡fwENTY-FIVE YEAR CLASS-'-.

Silver, anniversary reunion, Friday,s April 21, 1967, at the Montclair Golf Club.

Arthur Hoffman is vifel president 'and/aglj count ; supervisor- for .Cunningham and Walsh,-New York City. He graduated from Wesleyan and service as a lieutenant com­ mander î in :the navy from 1943-1965. “Art” and Ornell live at 14 Tuxedo Road, Glen Ridge, N. J., with their two children, David Lewis received his A.B. from Yale in 1944 and graduated from Harvard LawSchool, in 1947, He was a navy lieutenant from 1944-1946.


Dave is vice, president in charge of mar­ keting, West Point-Pepperell, Inc., New Yhrk K ity resides at Red Gate Road, 'RFD, ^jjtew-^Jeisey' with his wife, -Senne,i|n d threeilphildren. ja n ie^R U S ^e hvesgsiSi» 232 East j l s t Streèet,New York City with his wife, Hope, and fijpffjfhildren. Jim graduated from H ar­ vard in::| q1!8 *arid spent two years in the air fo rc e ® ...a lelfenant. Dr. Malcolm Tenney is district health di¿redt'Or"of fiiuffi«intie^ffl .Virginia. His offidejis located in Staunton.. Malcolm Has1 degrees from Washington and Lee . Ùnivèrsity, Columbia Universitv, Medical College of Virginia,: and John® Hopkins University. 1 le was in the; air corps: as :a ||srgeant for three years and TivesVat 24 Woodland Drive, Staunton, with Marjorie and; their threg children. The-.:car]5el§»fEdipin Rtherington educa­ c i ” admi^ffiatdr, lawyer, business'man, fi­ nancier and president of a corporate-body, came fu l^» cl® ld st summer with the announcement that he had •submitted his resig­ nation as presidl'ntlpf the American Stock Exchange tp-Secome the twelfth president of : Wesleyan Uftlvéfsity in MiddletoyfjSConn. H e^^pam e president of the American Sfitek Exchange m September of 1962. " Tedhis the first Wesleyan alumnus to suc,peed. t,o S presidency in 75- years; In 1948 vhe. wàljigpàdhated, from Wesleyan with a B.A. Degree with honltts, witii ^distinction iScreative. writing, and as a member of Phi Beta Kappa. During' his ¡SijJege,. yieafs he was vice president®! the College Body, editor-inIhhief of t h | college newspaper, ¡ ^ s t a n t edi|^ tor -of the, literary magazine, -chairman'^óf the Honor SjfStemBoinmittee, a member of j 't ^ J p f e r d '^ the-.Christian Assoelation and ;;. w itsactive^in; athletics and other campus organizations. After graduation he remainecMt Wesleyan as assistant to the dean , and instructor .it: English ® d : has Ifiih u e d his Connection with Wesleyan’as a member of the Alumni Council and in, other activities. - lit 1965, the university awarded him an honorary LL.D. Degree. . B p p -.tófo" he wàsj honored by Montclair Academy w i« the first annual “outstanding; a}umnS’_award. He is alsj|a trustee of the - school.. Before matriculating at Wesleyan and fol­ lowing his ^graduation from The Lawrenc^ ville School in 1943, Ted served in the in­ fantry section 0 the Army. ■1h After ssprving a year in his 1administrative and teaching posts at Wesleyan, he enrolled in the Yale Law School, from which he was

48

E dward E. O lcott graduated in the. top tenthhof his ‘class in : ©nefJEbrraine Road 1952. Summit, New Jersey . While there, he was a- member®! the /. William Gardam graduated from Union honorary sO'cieiy of the Order ofrylie Coif, eligibility in which i s : limited to students Itlollege with his A.B. .and completed the re­ quirements Tor ■■Lis M.B.A. at New York with excellent' academicé records, '.fn; his sen­ University. He is senior training: specialist, ior year, héjwas; chairman of a group-of student assistants in instruction at the:?scho® 'Field Training and Manpower, Prudential Insurance Companp:|Development Division, He worked on the Yale Law Journal and coNewark. authored with Professor Fowler V. Harper Bill spent three years in the air force as a an article on the work of the Supreme staff sergeant and lives at 59 Falmouth Court, which appeared in the Pennsylvania Street, Short Hills with his;Wife,. Carol and ¡Law ReviewPA; During 1952 and 1953 Ted served ."aSBegall twolhohildren. Ridiely Harrison graduated from Exeter secretary in^tl® Washington office of United but remains an interested and enthusiastic ; States Appeals C;Srt Judge Henry W. EdAcademy alumnus. He, and Margaretta, and gerton, who se rv S for the DistrictSof Co­ children, live at 36 Summit Road, Verona, lumbia. Later he practiced law with. the Ridge graduated from Wesleyan Univer­ Washington firm of Wilmer & Brown and sity and- is president, Miniwax Company, the New York firm ® !,, Milbank, Tweed, Hadíéy & Mc.Cloy, counsel for the New Delawanna, New Jersey. Perdval Sr,Hill, one of M.A.’s “all time’’; York Stock Exchange. football greats, is facilities supervisor, New In 19.% he wa.®ppointed assistant sepreJersey Bell Telephone. He and Patricia live , táry of The New York Stock Exchange and at 48 Hawthorne Avenue, Nutley: with their became secretary the same year. Two years later he wash: named a vice president in three children. “P e rc || attended Lafayette from 1944charge. o S lja fM with "governmental agen­ 1945, interrupted his education to spend four cies and other organizations,^ years in the air force, and then returned to college and graduated from Rutgers. William Polheumus, wife Alice, and three children receive their mail at P.O. Box 481, East Greenbush, New York. Bill is assistant superintendent for person­ nel, Board of Education, East Greenbush. He received his B.A. and M.A. from Lehigh and has done advanced graduate work at 'Columbia. “Polly” was a high honor graduate at Lehigh and- spent four years in the , navy, Paul- R. Miller of 71 Eagle Rock Way, formerly director® public affairs and com­ munications, Business Week magazine, has been ,named assistant managing editor and a member S|f the board of .editors.' Tony’s son, Fred, is a sophomore at the Academy. . , Dr. R ichard W. R ado In 1961 he joined Pershing. & Co. as a dlL A Smoke Rise Road general partner,;iafter resigning from the Smoke Rise-, New Jersey , New York Stock Exchange: He served as a : Dr. Richard Rado was married several special;.'h0»sultant_t«a committ|§ which it$ months ago. to the former Jar.e.Currelly of lffflfelinvestigajed'i the American Stock Ex­ Welcome, Ontario. The wedding was held change : and made specific recommendations in Port Hope, Ontario, Dick and his bride, for a strengthened organization.ffliliis led to live on Smoke Rise;Road, Smoke Rise, New hik iselectidllMds'president Sf the Exchange. Jersey,,. In addition to his service^Sfthe apademy Donald Castle spent three years in the jpard, Ted- is an honorary trustee of the navy before receiving his B.S. from Lehigh -Neighborhood Council.and is a member of in 1949. He is a special agent with North-, The Union- Congregational Church, the Bradwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company •f®T®Bath and .Tenlig Club, the Montclair andTa member of the very select Million Golf Club and the Upper. Montclair Golf Dollar Round Table. ‘Club. Ted and Katherine Etherington were “Don” and Priscilla have two children and married in 1953. and have four children. live at 369 Ridgewood Avenue, Glen Ridge, They will move to the Wesleyan campus in New Jersey. , Middletown, Connecticut, next summer.

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F a l l - W in t e r 1966


The 1966 Alumni Dinner

Alumni Association past president Dick Drysdale ’49 and 1966 Outstanding Alumnus Award recipient, Jim Vandermade ’35.

TH E CLASS OF 1941. Front row, left tejj,right: Richard Carrie, Roger Etherington, David Baird, Randolphe Swenson, Dr. Rob­ ert Lamb. Back row: Charles Ebers, Somers Ritchie, David Brett, Charles Sanders, Carl Eisen, Dr. Richard Sanborn, John Weyer. M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in


TH E ALUMNI ASSOCIATION EXECUTIVE COM­ M ITTEE : left to- right, Richard Carrie ’41, Henry Fernald ’28, Charles Ebers ’41, Arthur Goldman ’25, M. Eugene Speni ’27, Dr. Walter Sperling ’34, Carl Eisen ’41, Dr. Robert Muller ’39, Charter Trustee Rudolph Deetjen' ’15, Richard Drysdale ’49, Robert Livesey ’37, Gerard Podesta ’35. Miss-

ing when the picture was taken: Wilson Ailing ’61, Lee Beard ’51, John Cosentino ’40, Austin Drukker ’52, Roger Etherington ’41, Robert Lieder ’51, Stephen O’Neill ’61, James Regan ’48, Thomas Spence ’53, Randolphe Swenson ’41 ; Edwin Van Brunt, honorary, and Reginald Towner ’50.

Plan Now To Attend This Years Dinner Friday, April 21st Montclair Golf Club

Vice-president, Arthur Goldman ’25, right, presenting Dick Drysdale ’49, with a token of appreciation for Dick’s two .years as alumni association president. SO

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Frank Groten is a teacher of Greek and Latin at the Hill School, Pottstown, Penna., where he lives with his wife, Joan, and two children. Frank received his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. from Princeton, was a Robbins and Page Fellow while at Princeton, and the recipient of a Fulbright Teaching Fellowship in 1956-1957., Raymond Ward, Betty, and their two chil­ dren, live at 17 Columbia Avenue, Cranford. Ray is a Physical Education Teacher in the Cranford Schools. He spent three years in the navy, received his B.S. from Panzer School of Physical Education and his M.A. from Rutgers. J oseph F. H ammond , J r.

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52 Lawrence Road Wayne, New Jersey George Biggs is a member of the music faculty, Barrington College, Barrington, R. I. and resides at 11 Briarwood Drive, with his wife, Jean, and two children. George graduated from Dartmouth, A.B.; Eastman School of Music, M.M.; Wheaton College, M.A.; and is working toward his Ph.D. in music at Indiana University. He graduated Cum Laude from Dartmouth and served three years in the army. A. Stanley Miller attended Duke Univer­ sity in 1952, enlisted in the army where he served with the ordnance until 1955, then returned to Rutgers. University to earn his B.S. in 1961. “Stan” is sales manager, Unette Corpora­ tion, Livingston, New Jersey and lives at 5 Briar Hill Road, Montclair* with his wife, Frances, and two children. A. Robert Rafner is manager, Quality Control Procedures, General Electric Com­ pany, King of Prussia, Penna. He was granted his B.B.A. from the Uni­ versity of Miami and M.B.A. from New York University. Bob had four years’ duty as a naval lieu­ tenant and lives at 102 Calvarese Lane, Wayne, Penna., with Marlene and their two children. Edward Schotz received his B.A. in 1951 and LL.B. in 1954 from the University of Virginia. He is an attorney with the firm Shavick, Thevos, Stern, Scotz and Steiger in Paterson, New Jersey. Ed and Marilyn have two children and re­ side at 57 Wellesley Road, Glen Rock, New Jersey. Coleman Sheehey is a manager for the Mobil, .Oil ' Corporation in Minneapolis, Minn. “Rocky” and Patricia have two chil­ dren and live on Route 4 (Box 94), Wayzata, Minn. Dr. Allen Toub, 15 Crescent Avenue, M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

Newark, is a surgeon podiatrist in Madison, New Jersey. Al’s many academic and professional hon­ ors were noted in the spring BULLETIN. His wife, Gwen, has been named an instruc­ tor in English at Newark State College and the Toubs’ five year old son, David, was credited with saving the life of a younger boy by his “prompt and thoughtful action.” F rank J. D avies, J r.

862 Seneca Road Franklin Lakes, New Jersey “Fred” Ailing, Martha, and their three daughters, have moved to 30 Oak Street, Tenafly, New Jersey. Dr. Ailing is a psychiatrist with offices in New York City. Richard Kimm has been named manager, special market sales, Television Receiver Department, General Electric Company, Syracuse, New York. Dick, Patricia, and their five children, re­ side at 108 Euclid Drive, Fayetteville, New York. r

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S amuel L. L ewis

44 Afterglow Way Montclair, New Jersey Richard M. Drysdale joined Xerox Cor­ poration’s Education Division as president of Professional Library Service, a subsidiary of University Microfilms, Inc. Organized in 1959 after five years of re­ search and field study, Professional Library Service offers a complete service to place books on library shelves, including book wholesaling to school and public libraries, custom-tailored cataloging and processing, and rebinding services. Like University Microfilms, it will concern itself primarily with the editorial selection, production and distribution of books, dissertations and other materials for libraries. Founded six years agof&Professional Li­ brary Service-r'serves a primary function of supplying any book from any publisher and has published an extensive guide for new and expanding high school libraries. The firm is developing a model library where teachers and librarians from all across the country can investigate ways to improve their own library operations. Previously vice president for sales of BroDart Industries of Newark, New Jersey, Dick joined Xerox in July. A native of Newark, New Jersey, he received an A.B. degree in English from. Lafayette College in 1953. Following college graduation he be­ gan work for Duradex, Inc. of Clifton, New Jersey, manufacturer of custom designed office systems and supplies, where he became eastern regional sales manager. As vice president of sales for the library firm, Bro-Dart, he was responsible for the com pany!^ total..-sales and marketing activi­ ties, including the furniture, supply and book

RICHARD M. DRYSDALE ’49 divisions. Dick’s civic and professional activities in­ clude membership in the American Library Association. He is chairman of the special membership committee and a member Of the board and banquet chairman of the ALA’s exhibits round table. He is also a member of the American Documentatioh Institute and Catholic Library Association, and is af­ filiated with the Marine Historical Society, the New York Athletic Club, the Bay Head (N. J.) Yacht Club and the Essex Fells (N. J.) Country Club. He is On the board of trustees and a member of the alum­ ni executive committee of Montclair Acad­ emy. Dick’s office will be located in the new Xerox Building, Madison and 58th Street, New York City, after January 1st. He is currently in Santa Ana, California. Jules Halm is administration manager, Vtol Systems Division,. Curtiss-Wright Cor­ poration, Caldwell, New Jersey. Jules graduated from Lafayette, spent three years as .a first lieutenant in the army, and lives at 91 Eagle Rock Avenue, Roseland, New Jersey with his wife, Gale, and two children. Roger Hansen attended the University of Vermont, served three yars in the army as a sergeant, and is in business for himself:* in Kennebunkport, Maine. Roger . and Jean have four children. George Halmer is general manager, Edie and Company, New York City and resides at 109 Hendria Avenu|, Riverside.(Greenwich), Conn., with his wife, Robyn, and daughter Heidi. He is also president, Newton Broad­ casting Company, Newton, Mass. ' George received his B.A. from Lafayette in 1953 and graduated from the Wharton Graduate School of . Business, in 1954., While attending Wharton, he was a Samuel S. Fels Scholar. From 1954-1956, George served as a first lieutenant in the army. \ Craig Hurst lives at 5366 Denwood Ave-. nue, Memphis, Tenn., and is southern dis­ trict representative, Union Carbide.

51


University of Washington and served a cal School in 1961. He was both Phi Beta Craig attended the University of Colorado two year stint in the Navy with the. See- Kappa and Summa Cum .Laude while in from 1949-1950, was in the navy from college. His home address1 is 2460 S; W. Bees. 1950-1954, and then matriculated at Rutgers Sherwood Drive, Portland. He lives at 501 E. Mill Boulevard, Van­ where, he received his B.Sffin 1960. Werner Koenig has taken the name couver, Washington, and is single. Craig and Marilyn have three children. “Gordon Bruce” for professional purposes. Frederick Magnus is president of Magnus Joseph Reilly is president, Reilly Leasing Werner is a highly successful actor,'lives Corporation, Newark, New Jersey, and lives and Company, Inc., New York City. He at 54 Qearview Dr.,,. New Shrewsbury, New graduated from Rutgers; in 1954 and served in Hollywood, and has leading roles in “Combat” and “Run Buddy Run” television in the army from 1954-1956. Fred .and Jersey with his wife, Marilyn, and eight series. Ruth Itesidllf at 898 Route 23, Pompton children. “Joe” attended Fordham University. Dr. Michael Silverman is the radiologist, Carl Shaifer graduated from Phillips! Plains.. New Jersey. St. Joseph Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee, in William Rowe is president of Rowe Buick, .Academy Andover, Mass.,, and then attended addition to maintaining his own private Inc., Plattsburgh,, New York and lives at Princeton, where he earned this A.B in 1953, and the University of Pennsylvania for his “Valcour,” Peru, New York, with his wife, practice. He received his undergraduate and M.D. Bffiny, and one child. master’s degree in business administration in 1957. “Bill” graduated from Rutgers and spent degrees from the University of Tennessee and served as a captain in the army from He is treasurer, The Winchell Company, three years in the army medical corps. 1962-1964. Philadelphia,, and lives at 7200 McCallum Reginald Towner, public relations counsel, “Mike” and Kay have one child and live Street, Phila., with Kathryn and their four has been appointed a commissioner of the at 4744 Normandy Avenue, Memphis. He boys. Montclair Redevelopment Agency. is a-Diplómate, American Board of RadioDr. Raymond Briggs is a physician ofReg graduated from Governor Dummer internal medicine, Magan Medical Clinic, Academy and Amherst College. He served logy. Samuel Wood spent the years ,1952-1954 Corina, California. He received his A.B. as a captain in the air force, is vice chair­ in the navy and then attended Bucknell from Bowdoin, M.D. from Cornell Medical man of the Montclair chapter, American College, and completed his residency at Red CrossJ and has been active in . civic -University where he earned his B.S.M.E. degree in 1957. He is maintenance super­ Stanford University. affairs including the Montclair Defense “Ray” was Phi Beta Kappa ’in college and Council and Boy Scouts. He heads his own intendent, Hammermill Paper Co., Lock Haven, Penna. lives at 21211 Mesarica Road, Corina, with' public . relations consulting firm, R. F. “Sam” and Sue live at 114 Pennsylvania his wife, Carol, and four children. iiBowner associates, located in Montclair and Ave., Mill Hall, Pa., and have three Robert Bishop 582 Sparrowbush Road, is a member of the alumni association exchildren. Wyckoff, -New Jersey, is vice president in jjglutive committee. Kenneth L. Crowell is a professor at the charge of sales, Electric Service Repair Co., Reg and Jane live at 80 Highland Avenue, University of Calgary, Canada. Dr. Crowell Hawthorne, New Jersey. Montclair, and have four children. “Bob” graduated from Hobart in 1953 andilpent the following four years in the„ navy as a lieutenant. He and Marilyn have three children. Thurman Brown graduated from Oberlin with his A.B. in 1953 and completed the requirements for his M.B.A. at Oklahoma City University 'last June. “Thurm” is a specialist in business analy­ sis and measurments, General Electric Company, Oklahoma City, and lives at 4956 N.W. 31st Terrace. He and Beverly have two children. Gordon Bruce has left the U.S.A.F. fol­ Headmaster Philip L. Anderson and Alumni Association lowing 13 years of service. At the time of President, M. Eugene Speni ’27. his discharge, Gordon held the rank of received his B.S. from Yale in 1955 and captain. He is now a pilot with* Pan Ameri­ his Ph.D. from the University of Penn­ can and flies out of San Francisco. The sylvania in 1961. Frank Fiore■attended Brown University Bruce family, Maxine and two children, and Union College, and served two years live at 2208 Nancy Way, C a r m i c h a e l , “Ken” and his wife, Marilyn, have one in the army. He is now division manager, child and live at 82 - 2929 Unwin Road, California.,: •» E. Alden Dunham has resigned his posi­ Prudential Insurance Company, Albuquer­ Calgary, Alberta, Canada. que, New M exico;' tion as Director of Admissions at Princeton ^ J osefh L. E ograd Frank and Betty have two children and University and is now an executive associate ^ M 10 Gorham Court live at 3213 Alcazer N.E., Albuquerque. of the Carnegie Corporation- of New York. Wayne, New Jersey Dr. Mark Hanschka is an obstetrician and ^ R udolph H . D e e x je n , J r . Michael Ellinger is general sales manager, gynecologist, Kaiser Hospital, Portland; ^ Stanwich Lane Morgan Equipment Co., San Francisco, Oregon. His father reports that he is also Greenwich, Connecticut California. He graduated from Lehigh in teaching at the University of Oregon Medi­ Roland Emetaz is a forester and winter 1956, - Columbia in 1958, and served two“ cal School. sports’1 specialist with the United States years in the army as first lieutenant. Mark: received his B.A. from Amherst Forest*' Service -inBPortland, Oregon. Mike, AnnèJ? and their two children, re“Emmie” attended Penn State and the in 1955 and graduated from Harvard Medi­

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side at 15 Mt. McKinley Road, San Rafael, California. Karl Gerhard majored in physics at the University of Rochester where he received his B.S. in 1956 and then went on to Syra­ cuse University for his M.S. in 1960. He and Nancy have three boys and live at 3407 Turner Lane, Chevy Chase, Maryland. Karl is manager of Scientific Satellite Programming, I.B.M., and is located at N.A.S.A. Dr. Robert M. Kimm, Marianne, and their one child, live at 181 Parsons Street, Boston. Bob graduated from Yale with his B.S and Boston University Medical School as an M.D. He served two years in the army medical corps as a captain and is now sur­ gical resident at Boston City Hospital. George Lucas received his B.S. in in­ dustrial engineering at Lehigh in 1956, then entered the army where he spent two years in the corps of engineers as a captain. “Luke” is now an investment broker with Cooke & Lucas, N.Y.C., and lives at 733 Berkeley Avenue, Plainfield, New Jersey with Patricia and their four children. ^ ~ D avid J. Connolly, J r. v j 17 Linden Drive Basking Ridge, New Jersey Dairid Connolly received his B.A. from Williams, where he graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1957; and was awarded his L.L.B., Yale Law School in 1960. He is an as­ sociate with the law firm, Schenk, Price, Smith & King in Morristown, New Jersey. Dave, Judy, and their three children, live at 17 Linden Drive Basking Ridge, New Jersey. Dave is a trustee of Somerset County College and chairman, Somerset Hills Chap­ ter, American Red Cross. Robert Drain served in the air force from 1954-1958 and is weighmaster for the Whippany Paper Company. “Bob” lives at Cres­ cent Road, Pine Brook, New Jersey. Bernard Fenster 5610 Netherland Ave­ nue, Bronx, is a schoolteacher in New York City. He received his B.A. from Hobart College and M.S. from Montclair Stale College. Bernard and Gabrielle have one child. George Hertsberg graduated from the University of Vermont and is a systems analyst in programming, Creole Petroleum Corp., Apartado 889, Caracas, Venezuela. Dr. Arthur Jacobs graduated from Wes­ leyan University with his B.A. in 1957; the University of Rochester School of Medicine, M.D.,' 1961; Harvard School of Public Health, M.P.H., 1965; and served as a surgeon with the U. S. Public Health Serv­ ice from 1962-1964. Arthur is Assistant Professor of Public Health, Harvard School of Public Health, and the Department of Health Services Administration, City of Boston. He and M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

Marilyn have two children and live at 25 Sylvia Court, Hyde Park, Massachusetts. Captain Phillip La Zier is still located at 23 June Avenue, Ipswich, England, but since publication of the spring BULLETIN, he has completed his advanced air force training program and is now a pilot—-Com­ mand Post Officer, 81 Tactical Fighter Wing (OCP). “Phil” has received four service medals and an academic award during pilot train­ ing. He and Cathy have two children. Peter Rose, Phi Beta Kappa at Williams College in 1957; M.A., Harvard, 1958; a doctoral (Ph.D.) candidate, Harvard; and assistant professor at Yale, resides at 95 Olive Street, New Haven, Conn, with his wife, Elizabeth. Neil Stuart is an engineer with the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, N.Y.C. He re­ ceived his undergraduate and master’s de­ grees from Stevens Institute of Technology, is single, and lives at 2 Pearsall Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey. Howard Beilin has been commissioned as a captain in the U.S.A.F. and is stationed at Homestead Air Force Base, Florida. Dr. Beilin and his wife, the former Count­ ess Cristina Palozzi, live at 3595 Main Highway, Coconut Grove, Miami, Florida. The Beilins are expecting their first child sometime in March. ^

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101 Clarewell Avenue Upper Montclair, New Jersey Hobart Van Deusen graduated from Blair Academy, Dartmouth, A.B., 1958; and New York University, M.B.A., 1964. He is as­

sistant trust officer, Chemical Bank of New York Trust Co., N.Y.C. “Hobie” and Mimi have two children and live at 22 Clinton Avenue, Montclair, New Jersey, r*- ** o o

Howard Hak, Judith, and two children, live at 146 E. 30th St., Paterson, New Jer­ sey. He is in management with Community Charge Plan. Howard attended West Virginia Wesleyan from 1955-1956 and completed the require­ ments for his B.S. at New York University in 1959. He also served in the National Guard medical corps from 1956-1958. S. Lawrence Martin is African regional manager for H. M. Robbins, Company in B.P. 20321, Abidjan, Ivory Coast. The home address for “Larry” and Sharon is Box 311, R.D. No. 4, Newton, New Jersey. He received his B.A. from Yale in 1960 and served as a lieutenant in the air force from 1960-1963. Donald Menken also graduated from Yale, B.S., 1960, and is a senior associate pro­ grammer, IBM Components Division, E. Fishkill, New York.He and Karen live at R.D. No. 3, Hopewell Junction, New York, Peter Smith is staff planner, IBM, Endicott, New York. He received his A.B. from Princeton and was Phi Beta Kappa. “Pete” and Brenda have two children and reside at 723 Pheasant Lane, Endwell, New York. Air National Guard Captain Kenneth R. Lape was recently awarded one of the na-

Captain Kenneth R. Lape ’55 left, receives the Distinguished Flying Cross. 53


tidirf&filiighfesi military citations, the Dis­ tinguished Flying Cross. Capt. Lape re­ ceived also the Vietnamese Gallant for his hcroilS cxnMits as a forward observa­ tion pilot while -ant active duty with^the Air Force in Vietnam. Ken's awards wereAjp.resented by Major •■General D. W. Graham, ffimmander of the 21st Air ®.ofl|h whose ¡headquarters are at McGuire Air S lic e Base. The, presentations catijet during 1955 open h~oulsejfcere.monies held by the Aii^GuardH 111th Military Air Lift G r a n at Willow Grove (PaiiU Naval Air Station. Capt. Lape is now a civilian airline pilot asjjwell -a1| a member of the Guard unit. lie earnedcth$;^iwardsTij8|October, 1964, hear Tuy Hoa, RepublijFof Vietnam. “While pildtirif an L-19 on a jBtward air control mission, be skillfully Mirecteda; armed heli­ copters. to Viet Cong positions. by making low-passgS|j under, hazardous conditions, re­ spiting in a significant victory by South Vietnamese forces,” reads the station. PlSapt. ILajiei was-jeommissioned upon grad­ uation from Virginia Polytechnic Institute in

is. still, single and lives at 401 EastA74t.h Street, N.Y.C. Richard Hofibins received his-,A.B. from Princeton in 1960 and is a candidate for Ph.D. in metallurgy at the University- of Delaware. Dick and'’ Karen residellat 175 West Main ¡Street,'. Newark, Delaware! ; .' Dr, Lawrence - Nt^grwm and Sharon have moved*" to 393 O Mansfield- Street, New Haven, JGortnecticut, where he is a senior assistanf lresident in pediatrics at the Yale University Medical Center. ^ H aeoLd D. C o h e n J 49 Finnigari Avenue Saddle Brook, New Jersey T he T

en

Y ear C lass -.". •

Ten year reunion, Fridays April 21, -1967; at the Mdhtcialir Golf Club.

He S erved .¿wntll the ■Air Force from June, 1960, to December, 1965. As a “parttime" member of the< Pennsylvania Air Natlp^^.Guard, Captain Lape now flies airlifts and. car'gMmissions with the 111th Group to all parts of the world, including, .Vietnam. Ken, and his 'wife, Barbara have a tenmo'nth .old daughter Elizabeth Ann, and live in .Parsippanv, New Jersey. C Dr,.SteipUenW.einmann, 202 jCongessional Lane, Rockville, Maryland^' is specializing and training jfbr periodonticSat Georgetown University Dental School, Washington, D.C. “Ste'Ve” graduated from Lafayette &2®59; Donald Collester has joined the law firm with his B.A.; Temple* University D.D.S. ofVConrad and Jones, Montclair. He has iri-;1963'; and will have an M.S. in periodontIceS when he ylliiSMg| studies in Georgetown. ¡Seen assjjsjated with the Newark firm of Pitney Hardin & Kipp. since ,1965. A 1964 Dr. Weinmann is a memeberj.pf A.D.A.. graduate of Harvard Law School, he was■Newark; Dental Club; Royal S ociety of Phi Beta Kappa as jjafe undergraduate'/-at Health, American Society of Periodontists, Colgate. j the. ; Grffiter Washington Periodontia Don and Harnie have two.- sons, Gavin Society. He aniB,Retta' vhave. two small and Derek, and reside at 418 Valley Road, daughters. Moutclaij. C his ,wife, Diane, and Donald Coursen is a guidance director, Rieir two^*ildren, live at' 6500 West 8th physical education teacher and coach, Staun­ Street, Los A.ngellS;?Calif, “Bruce” graduate. ton High SchoH .Staunt|f, Virginia. . ..eirfrom Virginia Military Institute in 1959 He graduated from William and Mary .and attendedWMC.L.A. . in 19661 following with his B.S. in 1951 and received his M.A. thrfla ybarsfeslrvic^^s aSEaptaml in the. from Seton^adll in 1965. Don and Kirstin U.S.A.F. He is a member of the technical have one child and live at Star Route B, staff of Hughes .Aircraft Co. ihjpbS Angeles. ’Staunton. L£$d$ep>h Counter continues his studies at W. Clapp the North Carolina State University School o o 244 South Mountain Avenue -. of Design^ where he majors in architecture. Montclair,;.,®:^ Jersey Joe and Judith live at 3402 Hillsboro • \ vS:i TkoniOS ■’Mitken is assistant cashier, Streeet, Raleigh, N. C. First National City Bank, N.Y.C. “Tom” 54

John Robert Stewart Higgins isja counsel­ ing assistant, Bureau of Study : Counsel, Harvard University. H e received his B.A., with honors, from Bates; College in 1§6'1; B.D. and ST-M: degrees.; both Cum Laudgf: from AndMver Newt<^f^ Reverend Higgins was;';ordained ’in the United Church of Christ in 1964; served asjf Assistant Chaplain, Tabor Academy, Counseling Staff member, A ndo.ver Newton, and is. a candidate for. his doctorate; in the School of Education at Harvard. John'-arid Barbara live at 26 Maple Park, Newton . Centre;, Mass. David Marro&co has been- named ,to the engineering staff of Nopco Chemical, Co., ^Newark. H#gs. currently serving in the pro­ duction department of the . Fine Chemicals, Division at the company’s Harrison plant and was formerly associated with American

Cyanamid Co. and Lever Bros. Research. Dave lives with his wife Dorothee. and their newborn daughter at 20 Woodlawn Avenue, Clifton, New Jersey.' Peter Miller’s mailing address is now: 776 TCSx, Box 189, APO, San Francisco; California. He is a first lieutenant and navigator on a C 130 E aircraft based in Tai Chung, Taiwan, Republic of China. Dave recently was awarded the Air Medal with one Oak Leaf Cluster for combat mis­ sions flown in Viet Nam. Since the spring BULLETIN, “Pete” has taken a bride but did not supply the alumni office with any details except that Mrs! Miller’s name is Dorte. Michael Pollack has conquered stage, /screen and! radio." He appears under the name of Michael Pollard and fnay be seen in the motion -¡picture TH E RUSSIANS ARE COMING, and numerous network television shows. F all-W

in t e r

1966


Howard Levine received his B.Sjf from Bucknell in 1962 and is now attending , "Newark College- of Engineering working toward his B.S. in Civil/Engineering. Howard and his, wife, Susanne, .live at : 2100 Linwood Avenue, Fort Le^/ N. J. David Will is an aerospace engineer, Engineering Technical Division, McDonnell Aircraft Corporation, St. Lous, Msm® He «obtained his B.S. from the University of Michigan and attended the University, of Cincinnati on a full tuition graduate scholar­ ship for his M.S, degree. David ispsingle and; lives/;.at 10145-A Camshire Court.,-,¿St. Ann. Mo. Henley R. Webb was married to ■Helen Osgood Walton, at St. Mary’s; Church, South Dartmouth, Mass.,’ on July 23rd. Mrs. .Webb is; a graduate-, of the. Uhi- ' versity of Vermont and Henley is a gradu­ ate of Yale University .and the Harvard Law School. Dr. James Zager' is a commissioned®f^ ». M ark M. J affe ficer with the U. S. Public Health; Service, ^ Q . 385 East 41st Street 300 N. Los Angeles St., Room 5008, Los/. Paterson. New Jersey Angeles,^ Calif. Jim graduated from La­ Philip Amsterdam is a candidate for his Pli.D. at Boston College. He received his:. fayette and New York University School A.A. Western Resérve University in of Medicine. ». H erbert K reger 1959 ; B.A.-B.S., George Washington Uni­ ^ y 285 Aycrigg Avenue versity, W\%2 ; M.A. 'Brandéis University, Passaic, New Jersey 1964; M.B.A. Boston ./College. Phil has Milton ¿Heard- was married in southern garnered many academic honors. He is in France, where he is stationed as an ensign the Lester F. Ward Society at Brandéis on the USS Springfield, flagship of the and graduated first in his class at George Sixth Fleet, to the former Jean Teachout Washington where he was also' president of of Montpelier, Vermont. his, classi .-/■ Mrs. Beard was graduated from Lasell He is'.single and, along with his" extensive Junior College and' Lesley, College and re­ graduate study program-, finds time to work ceived her master’s degree from Columbia as assistant distribution manager for the five-state New England area, Ford Motor Teachers’ College. Ensign Beard.is an alumnus of Princeton, Company; 1963, and' Columbia University. School of David Blaqk reports-'- a promotion and Business Administration.. 11e is a member of change of address.. He is still with General Cap and Gown Club, the Princeton Club Foods Corporation but has:'been promoted -to district sales manager, Syracuse, N. Y. ’ of New York and the Montclair Golf Club,. Finn Casperson received his law degree Dave, Susan, and their two children, now from Harvard last June and immediatelyreside at 120 Winding Way, Camillus, New accepted a position' with the firm Dewey, York. Ballentine, N.Y.C. However, as of Septem­ Michael Chodorcoff is also making himber 1966, his address is : SA (OC), 2069 544, . self known in the business. world. Still OCS,; UiS-C.G., Yorktown, Virginia. with /David Marks . & Associates, N.Y.C., Robert De Cotiis is manager and owner he has been upped to the position, Associate. of Claims Service Agency, Inc., 67 Kipp Mike was married to the former Doris Cohen of Short Hills, N. J., in June and Avenue, Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey? Bob graduated from Hasbrouck Heights has moved. to. 585' Bloomfield Ave., West High School and went to University of Caldwell, NewSersey with his bride. Iowa on a football scholarship until a knee A note from “Mike” Germet states that he was to be married October 23rd, but gives no injury eliminated him from the. varsity/ information other than the fact his, wife’s, - squad. He has a daughter attending Kimber­ name is Meg. He also writes that he has ley School in Montclair. Byron Graham and wife/Janice, live at been twice named Director of New York 9725 Lytmlown Court, St. Louis, Missouri. Zone, National Association of Bedding Byron attended American University, is a Manufacturers. “Mike” is assistant Sales Director, Sleep- computer systems representative, Honeywell Inc., St. Louis, and is a member of the master Products Co., Newark, N .'J .

Mike .is also1 popular with the teenage set as indicated in the following letter in a recent issue of SIXTEEN magazine. “Would 'you please print ax picture of,/ Michael J. Pollard and let me know where I can write to him ? Signed, Harriet, Mem­ phis, Tenii.” . SIXTEEN editor’s reply: “Pear Harriet, Adorable (and very talented)- MICHAEL is from New jersey, is five feet eight inches tall with blond hair and blue eyes. He is ,25 'years '.old, and you can write/to him at Artists Agency,-' 9229 Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, California.” Philip' Sarna is vice - president, sales and traffic, Textile Motor' Express, Paterson, ■New Jersey. He received his B.S. in Eco­ nomics;, from Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania,- and was a captain in the Army Transportation Corps from 1961-1964. “Phil” and Anita have one child and •live at 405 Carriage Lane, Wyckoff, N. J.

M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

Associatio||foE Computing Machinery. Rip-hard Haiiey was granted his B.A. de­ gree from the University Oregon in .1963. H e. is alsfif in; Sales with Honeywell" Inc., Los Angeles, Califbrnia. ““Rick” 1.inda live at'" 1411 Sier.r.a-/?Alta Drive, 8 ?ust.in, California,- , “ Bernards Milslein graduated from La­ fayette in 19® : and will complete the re­ quirements for his M.D. at University of ffiexas,; Medical Branch, Galveston, ’Texas, this June. “Bernie”; and Phyllis - live . at 402 Winnie, Apt. 8 , Galvesjon. . I.)ai‘id Ramsay has changed job and re­ sidence. He is; ® w with Massachusetts Mutual Life-Insurance Ço.pjNéwark. Daveand Barbara have had. a new addition to. the Ramsay family -since. last spring/ and live at 16 Yale Street, Chatham,. N. J. Howard Van Fleck .was married to the. former. Lisa Pollard last, spring! H e /ik doing-'graduate work at. M.L/H and liv |i at 82 Oxford Street,' Cambridge,/Mass, ^ ». M arEc S. K irschnkr ^ Q 518 West Stadium Ann Arbor-, Michigan. ; Lieutenant Ge.gfgef Bleyle is; a pilot with the U. S. Navy and lives- at 14 Pine^a^w Drive, Topsham, Maine, with pis wife, Jane. George, is stationed at the Brunswick, Maine, Naval Sstation. Donald Gavin received his B.S. fr'orn the University? ?of Pennsylvania in 1964 on Dean’s List and was Distinguished. Milfe tary Graduate. He holds the commission 2nd lieutenant in the army/ordnance ebrps. and;/ is working for his law degree at the Uni-, versity Pennsylvania Law School. Dan.?; and his wife, Irene, live at 3717 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia. Peter Lima writes from 2835 Kalmia Lee Court,Falls Church, Virginia, to say that he is an aerodynamacist in the field of flight simulation with Melpar, Inc. Jdhn Marston received his B.A. from Middlebury and is a seriibr inspector, Re/5 tail Credit.Co., Jersey City, N. J. John and Anne live at Apt. 3D, Bldg, 3, 181 River Road, Nutley, New Jersey. f a W ii .® n ' :S. -Alling Q | Riverdale Scji|)oj RiverdallllNew York Jeffrey Abrams is still working toward hi§/- degree in architecture, at Yale. “Jeff” is single and lives at 195 Sherman Avenue, New Haven, Conn. Wilson Alling has :j|)ined the faculty of Riverdale Country School, Riverdale-onHudson, New York. He is teaching history and is'- a member of the school counseling staff. Wilson enjoyed a respite; from his,/year'; as/ a vocational counselor in New York City by working as a camp counselor last summer. He is working on his master’s de55


gree at Columbia in addition tojlis teaching and dormitory duties at. Riverdale. "Phil" Bellini graduated from Kearny High School,¿'received hiSB.A. at Trenton State College, and will) be granted his M.S. from Indiana University in June. His addreife’d S l 12 Seeley Avenue*: Kearny, New Jers.ey. • David Brack, 127 Qj|j| Short- Hills Road, West Orange,, has' been named asSciate student director of the New Jersey Branch of United World Federalists, Inc. . ) He „will fesist^the director in expanding the membership anSeducation programs iin ■high schools and colleges. Dave; a graduate®!' Tufts and currently a. student at RutgersfSaw School, addressed the Academyjgstudent - body - S t month on the t o p i c “The Need for International’ Government.” David Cafrad is ¿¿public relatiofisjtrainee with fSe Atomic 'Energy ¿Commission in (N.Y.C; received, his B.A. from Trinity .({Conn.), where, he was named to the Dean’s Hist, and M.S.J. at the Schjsol of Journal­ ism; Columbia University; Dave livfe|; at ,3§B|L,;Longmeadow Road, Smoke Ris^sJNew Jers.ey. Richard,: Ennis’ status has changed since th e; la s tU 3 |W f the^ BULLETIN. He has taken a bride, the former Marjorie MOcire, and has received his^snsigrfs'-commission in the navy. “RicB’s” home addreS'sTs 24 Mashnee Vil­ lage,: Buzzard’s,,. Bay; MajsjJ and he is statUfStdat the Naval Supply {School, Ath­ ens, Georgia. Douglas CiSJl ’is attending graduate school at the University of' Pennsylvania; He re­ ceived his B.A. from Colgate in 1965. “D dfiflS address is 4105 Chester Ave­ nue, Philadelphia. Alexander Mead received his A.B. from Harvard and Jives, at 520spj§s|st 77th Street, No.P3, New York City. . Arthur Rosen is attending law school at New York University following his gradua­ tion „from Columbia. Arthur andhiS wife, Milly Sue;'live at 96 Fifth Avenue, Apt. 19 G, N.Y.C. * i s —.

o z

B arry N ^ za ria x I

28 Gates Avenue Montclair, New Jersey ' _ ,JEmil .Jd-smh Peter Dul graduatedBrom the University of Virginia and is attending law school at Seton Hall University. “Doo­ ley” lives a t.395 Grove Street, Cljfton. Class president, Douglas Johnson, was married to Lynn PearsciuSlbf St. Albans, West Virginia, on August 29th. Doug and his bride are receiving'., their mail at Box 757, University of Kentucky Medical Cen­ ter, LexingtdM^Ky. He received his degree from ¡ the Uni­

56

versity of Verinont and is in the' University of Kentucky School of Dentistry. Roland Johnson H a':’senior ,af the Uni­ versity of Vermont at 7 Shepard Street, Winooski, Vermont.. ' . Ken Kessler graduated -from the Uni­ versity of Vijgraia w ith'“High ¿Distinction” and Phi Beta Kappa. HegSgSin his first year of Medicine at Cornell University and Medical^Hlege. Ken’s address is Olin Hall, 445 East 69th Street, New York City. Elliott Simon received his A.B. from the B R versity -of Rocheslier-/; where he was Phi Beta Kappa and Dean’s List with Dis­ junction in Chemistry. He was named to the Dean’s List* each semester during his .entire undergraduateHtenure and played varsity Sglfcer and g q ||s S '“El” is enrolled at the Yale ¡school.of Medicin§| New Haven, Conn. His home address is 22 Laurel Avenue, Clifton, New Jersey.

Henry Richardson, 7 Davis Avenue, Mt. Fern, Dover, New Jersey. John Tarrant, Phi Delta Theta Fraternity, Box 1260, Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. Cadet Richard Howard, Box 1362, The Citadel, Charleston, South Carolina. Richard Skinner, 315 Avon Road, Devon,* Pennsylvania. ■-VCharles Vaughan, Gibbs Hall,'University of New Hampshire, Durham, N. H. . Matthew Gay, Yale College, Yale Station, New Haven, Conn. Donald Grieves, Dane House, Belknap College, Center Harbor, N. H. Paul R. G. Horst, Harvard University, 1295 Commonwealth Avenue, Allston, Mass. P.F.CLBw rr R. McKaba, R.A. 12734476, H.H.C 173rd Abn. Bde. (Sep.) A.P.O., San Francisco, California John Scott Magrane, Susquehanna Uni­ versity, 3 N. Orange Street, Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania. Ib Pedersen, Thiel College, 405 Middle Hall, Greenville, Penna. Frank Penick, Princeton University, 212 Dodge Osborne Hall, Princeton, N. J. Kenneth Stufko, University of Vermont, 115 Tupper Hall, Burlington, Vt. William Spaulding Turner is a candidate for his A.B. degree in June from Lafayette College. His address is Sigma Nu Frater­ nity, Box 385, College Station, Easton, Pa. Randy Thummel, Brown University, Box 2244, Providence, R. I. Donald Zuckerman, University of Penn­ sylvania, 4419 Osage Avenue, Philadelphia;! Pennsylvania. E L L IO T T SIM ON ’62 f , F rank J. S ciro 322 East 40th Street {:.L eslie Zucherman is attending Rutgers Paterson, New Jersey Medical School and lives at 4593 Davidson Bruce Anderson has returned to Princeton Road, Piscataway Township, New Jersey. for his junior year and resides at 211 1937 » J oh n A. L awrence Hall, Princeton, New Jersey. CJ 122 Gates Avenue . John Benigno is a member of the class ot Montclair, New Jersey 1968 at Vil.lanova and lives in Room 317, : •. “Andy" Abrams is a: student at Temple St. Rita’s Hall, Villanova, Pa. University and resides at 1510 W. Allegheny Fred Broadfoot, University of Rochester, Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Box 6435, Rochester, New York. “Tom" Alpem, Delta; Epsilbn Fraternity, Mike Donnelly, 207 Davis, Amherst ColAmherst&®llege, Amherst, Mass. ledge, Amherst, Mass. “Jeff" Blake/, a senior at MeJnell will re­ Bob Eliezer is-a junior in the school of ceive his; degree in February,- and plans to mechanical engineering, Cornell, and resides attend graduate- school next year. His ad­ at Phi Gamma Delta, The Oaks, Ithaca, dress is 102 White’-.Park Place Ithaca, New New York. York. Bill Lax, Moravian College, Bethlehem, Michael Baton, University, of Pennsylvan­ Pennsylvania. ia, 415 South 46th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Dannd Levin, Tufts University, 6-8 Capen H. Harvey Cohen, 746 Eastgate—Apt. 3S, Street, Medford, Mass. University Cijy, Missouri. Ira Levine, Box 5032, River Campus Arthur Gurtman,. ,3818. „Chestnut Street, Street, University of Rochester, New York. Apt. E401, Ehiladelphia,. Penna.-Steven Schwartz is a junior at Cornell Daniel Hodges, 528 West James Street, where he has been named managing editor of the yearbook (Cornellian) and secretary Lancaster, Pa.Marc Isenberg, Apt. 115, 2424 Pennsylvan­ of the Tau Delta Phi Fraternity. His ad­ dress is 40 Ridgwood Road, Ithaca, New ia Avenue, N. W., Washington D.C. F a l l -W

in t e r

1966


York. John Sheldon) Eliot House, G 54, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass:..Alan Staff graduated from Pompton Lakes High School and enlisted. in the army, Alan’s home address is 440 Viola Road, Spring Valley, New Y6 rk. Russell Stark is a jurijor at Foothill Col­ lege, Los Altos; California and a project engineer for animal research, Palo Altos,: Stanford Medical Center. “Russ” resides at 22440 McClellan Road, Cupertino, California. Jesse Byock attends the University of Vermont and resides at 9 Lions Avenue, South Burlington, Vermont. Albert Carpenter, Story House, Claremont, Men’s College, Claremont, Calif. Roger- Clott graduated from Kearney High School and is a senior at Fairleigh Dickinson University. He lives at 65 Liv­ ingston Avenue, Arlington, N. J. James Graham is a senior at Washington University and was Phi Beta Kappa as a junior last year. “Jim” was elected to re­ present Washington University at the Re­ gional Council of YMCA’s at the annual conference, Estes Park, Colorado. He lives at home: 10600 Clayton Road, St. Louis, Mo. Douglas Lackey graduated from Michigan State University in three years. He received his B.A. “with High Honor” and i s now enrolled in graduate school at Yale. “Doug’s” home address is 50 Juniper Road, Wayne, New Jersey. “Bill” LaPlant, Hobart College, Geneva, New York. John /Lawrence is a senior at Boston sfsollege and the Eagles varsity football manager. He lives in Loyola Hall, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Mass. Worth Noyes, a senior/at Upsala College, resides in Nessenius Hall, East Orange, New Jersey. Gabriel Rocco, Columbia University, Hart­ ley Hall, 1124 Amsterdam Avenue, N.Y.C. Ralph Sanderson, Hobart College, Geneva, New York. Philip Sommer, Moravian College, Bethle­ hem, Pennsylvania. f r * - M ichael R. F in k 25 Janice Terrace Clifton, New Jersey Holt Apgar, 20 South Edwards, Prince­ ton University, Princeton, New Jersey. A im Beck, Reed College, Portland, Ore. Barry Belmont, University of Pennsyl­ vania, 3924 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. R. Victor Bernstein, 8 South Carolina Apt., Brandon Avenue, Charlottesville, Vir­ ginia (University ?iof Virginia). James Burkart, Magee Hall, Foster Quadrangle, Indiana University, Blooming­ ton, Indiana. M o n t c l a ir A c a d em y B u l l e t in

Joe Hare is a member of the Dickinson James Duma, Ohio Northern University, 126 E. Highland Avenue, Ada, Ohio. College varsity football team. His college Stephen Edelstein, P.O, Box 205, Gettys— address is -Dickinson College 'Union, Box burg College, Gettysburg, Penna. 538; Carlisle, Penna. Peter Ehrenberg, Trinity College, P.O. Box 1475, Hartford, Conn. Robert Ferrara, Tower B, Room 1606, University of Pittsburgh, 3955 Forbes Ave­ nue, Pittsburgh, Penna. Ted Flagg, Box 484, Rollins College, Winter Park, Florida. Michael Fink is spending this first se­ mester of his sophomore year studying at the University of Madrid, Spain. He; will return to his studies at Wesleyan Uni­ versity in February.. Mike received his fresjp£ man numerals in track at Wesleyan last spring. He competed in the 100 and 220 yard dam jK

JO E H A R E ’65

M ICHA EL F IN K ’65 Bill FVies, Lake Forest College, Box 555, Lake Forest, Illinois. Greg Hare, Scranton -University, Stu­ dent Center, Box No. 99, Scranton, Penna. Steve Cutaia was a lineman on the out­ standing Vermont football team that com­ piled a 6-2 record. Steve’s address is G-234 Converse Hall South, University of Ver­ mont, Burlington/ Vermont.

STEV E CUTAIA ’65

Robert Hauck, Villanova IJniversity, Box 1141, Villanova, Pa. Sandy Kurtz, Boston University, Resi­ dence Hall I, Box 588, 273 Babcock Street, Boston,; Mass. Robert Livesey, 41 Holder Hall, Prince­ ton University, Princeton, New Jersey. Michael Manley, Box .1065, Georgetown University, Washington, D. C., Anthony Mascia, Box 485, Gettysburg College, Gettysburg, Pa. Neil Muckier, Marietta College, rowed on the freshman crew and it was the first un­ defeated season for the frosh crew in the seven years the sport has been organized. Neil’s address is 202D Parsons Hall, Mariet­ ta, Ohio. Harry Raker, 7337 Southshore Drive; Chicago, Illinois. , Dame Robertson graduated from the Marvelwood School- and is now a sophomore at Kenyon College, in Ohio. Francis, Schiffer ;is an undergraduate re­ search assistant at Michigan State „Uni­ versity and resides,‘at 242 N. Harrison, East Lansing; Michigan. Erich Schneider, P.O.-Box 202, University of Dubuque, Dubuque, Iowa,. Jeff Silberfeld, 512 McLaughlin, Prince-;’ ton. University, Princeton, N-. J. Jeff has made the varsity basketball team as a sopho­ more following his outstanding freshman season. John Sessa, Box 1003, Rollins College, Winter Park, Florida. John Geerlofs, Earlham College, Rich­ mond, Indiana. Win Gregg, Room 317, Box 288, ^Indiana Institute of Technology, Fort Waynqp Indiana. Owen Johnson, Room 805 Columbia Ho? tel, Box 11, 900, Columbia, S. C. 57


JE F F E R Y ¿pL B E R FE L D ’65 Petèr ' Gomes Sanderson, Hobart -College, Geneva^Sfew York. Edward Stillwell, New England College, Charter Hall 310, Henniker, N. H. 0 j .R ichard C. K uzsma Q Q 83 I.loyd Road Montclair, .New Jersey. Alexander "Sacha" Ames, P.O. Box 322, Union,Viillcgo, iSchènectady,- N. Y. I.arry Blake, R.P.O. 1633, Rutgers Uni­ versity, New Brunswick, -New Jersey. Robert Brandt, P.O. Box 1053, Trinity College,-. -Härtjord; •,Cpr.n. .'•;Craig Cameron, Box 351, 351 Cleenan Half|y University of gPcnnsylvaiiia, Phila­ delphia, Penna. Craig starteli at end for the- Penn freshman football team which lost only one; game—1to Princeton.

CRAIG CAMERON

’66

Carter Fitzpatrick started at. fullback for Lake Forest College varsity football team. 11is address is Lake Forest College, Lake Forest, 111. . Mark Geanette, Box ®4,- Brown Uni­ versity. Providence; R. !L Mark placed sec-ond. for the President Francis Way land Prize; in Lktin and will receive hisifaward at a Brown University Honors Convocation. David (rill, Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

58

Richard Kuzsma, Lafayette College, P.O. Box 286|i‘lCöUesÄ,StatiQriJEäston, Penna, Robert Me Aleer, Ro^m 30:3, Farley Hall, Uniyersity-'’of .Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana. Jack.MargoUs, Box 322 G—Converse H a llEast, University of Vermont, Burlington. Vermont. : .Reperì Mascia, Durfee Hall. 264 Yale ' 'Stati,On, Ne® Hayejfis Conn. Feier ¡COr-gain, Box 868 , .''trinity College, Hartford, - Conn. - William Peters, 213 Corbett Hall, Uni­ versity. of Maine; P ro n i» Maine. William Rò0mé* 322X University Hall, 'Cornell University, Ith4cf|: New York. Peter Sandivall, Box 3323, -Lynchburg College, Lynchburg, Virginia.. Craig ScKenek, Box 1898, New College, Sarasota, Florida. Brant Switzlef, 1089 Yale Station, Bing-, ham Hall, New Haven; Conn. ' Frederick Szot, Davidson Hall, Box 9056, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N. J. !" Blake Traendty, Dennison Hall, Room 124. Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Robert Wenger, 107 Mellhenny Hall, Uni­ versity &f Pennsylvania, 37th and Spruce Sifeets, Phila'delphia, Penna. Robert Yólken, 14 Holworthy, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. Lawrence Zanetti, P.O. Box 122, Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Penna. James Boak, 38 Norton Hall, Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio. Robert Bells, Cal - Western .University, Dormitory 2, 3902 Lomaland Drive, Point Loma, California. Geofgè Flynn, Portsmouth Priory School, Portsmouth, R. I. Barry Fries, Rpx 410 Lake Forest College, ; Lake Forest,' 111. William Hutson, Box 1454, Brown Uni­ versity, Providence, fR." I. Andrew McCullagh, Wooster School, Dan­ bury, Connecticut Andrew McWilliams, 211 Walker Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, N. J. Ross Magnane, Governor Dummer Aca-. demy, South Byfield, Mass. : Robert Potters, - C o l g a t e University, Hamilton;: New York., Michael Staff, University of T a m p a , Tampa, Florida. -James;¡¡Stearns, Box. 393, Williams Col­ lege, Williamstown, Mass. JameSiSmandermade, . Princton University, Prince® j; New Jersey. Larry Guerke, Bressler 1lalWRo.om 302, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, R. I. Fred Gurtman, 321 Warwick, 37th and '. Spruce, Sireet2 University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,. Pa. Harry; Haines, 357 South Colldge, La­ fayette College,,Easton, Penna.

John Hawley, Bowles Hall, Uniyersity of California, Berkeley, California. Michael Hennessey, Room 217 D, Men’s Dormitory, T empie University, •Amblefy Pa. William Hewlett, College Station Box 221, f.a feyette Collegi, Easton, Penna. John Howard, 223 Cadiseli Hall, Alle­ gheny College, Meadville, Penna. John has earned -a starting . position Mn the varsity basketball team. Chet Kaletkoisiski, Box 360, Susquehanna University, Selittsgrovè; Pènna.

JAM ES BURKART ’65

Former Faculty Francis D. Brogan, English and As­ sistant Headmaster, 1957-1963 : Head­ master, Storm King School, Cornwallon-the-Hudson, New York. Roger C. Cooley, History, 19551957 ; Èeadmaster, Englewood School, Englewood, New Jersey. Paul-¡A. Gaeng, Languages,; 19571963 : Chairman, Foreign Language Department, Montclair State College. Frederick W. Hackett, Headmaster, 1948 1954: .3435 Avenido Del Mare, Sarasota, Florida. F all-W

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Thomas W. Hall, Headmaster, .19541960 V South Shaftsbury, Vermont.

Claude' W. Monson, Latin, 19161946: Memorial Hospital, Hancock, New York.

Craig Morse, Mathematics, and Science, 1945-1964 : 421 Lafayette Avenue/Toms River, New Jersey.

Daniel O. J. Jennings, History and Assistant H e a d m a s te r , 1957-1962: Headmaster, Laurel School, Shaker ¿Heights, Cleveland, Ohio.

crowd that they were in those days, without doubt a happy way to picture them. I relive my life with them as' master of Bradley House—the fun we used to have in free moments playing softball and touch football, and bas­ ketball on Saturday nights in the gym. I remember the j unior teams I coached, with Eddie May, of later Harvard fame, as a backfield man, and Kimball Halligan as the little lad we used to ‘borrow’ from an even younger team because he was so good as an infielder. I remember Vinnie Stortz as my pitch­

er, and ‘Fat’ Stephens as a catcher, and Jack Chatellier afillGedrge Batten as members of ••the rifle team. I recall how the Bradley House boys used ill enjoy going with me on the long Me­ morial Day weekends on camping trips' to the Scout camp at Wariaque, And especially I recall;'my friendship with my faculty friends, particularly Claude Monson and William Miller.”

C h a n d le r T. J o n e s , Languages, 1917-1922: 144 Hudson Street, Hud­ son, Ohio. Mr. Jones writes, “As I look back over the years, I have the pleasantest recollections of my friend­ ships a t Montclair. I recall more ‘boys’ than there is space to name in this, letter—boys who'-in mind’s eye remain the same young, enthusiastic

Townsend W. Rawlins, Latin, 1956-, 1961: Greenwich Academy; 116 Maple Avenue, Greenwich, Connecticut.

The following graduates are “lost” to the alumni records office. If you know where or how any of these men can be located, a card or note to the alumni office will be greatly appreciated. 1910— Hazel, William J. Ingram, George 1911— Bickford, Harry D. Reynolds, William J./jr." . 1912—Bropby, Frank . Clark, Arthur W. 1913— Conant, Thomas A. Mathiasen, Alfred 1914—-Cooper, W. Ashley Lanpher, Henry -Coe 1915— Chapman, John McChestney yScudder, William W. 1916— Harvey, G. Roger Woodruff, Edward C., Jr. 1917— Betts, Philander H. Pizie, Stuart 1918— Doolittle, Frederick B. MacArthur, Arthur . M o n t c l a ir A ca d em y B u l l e t in

1919— Broome, Talbot Stauffer, John M. 1920— Fox, Russell Fülle, Milton 1921— Cleary, Malcolm Jones, Roland F. Morgan, Truman Oliver 1922rvrAbbottf Harry A. Dodd, George B. Mathiasen, Herbert 1923Ä-Benedict, Morton. Payne Rice, William Courtney Worden, Dayton L. 1921—Barbour, Stewart Boos, Carl Julius Owen, Alfred McMaster 1925- -Heuser, Dr. Victor L. Roberts, Frank Clark

1926:—Jackson, Hugh Kirk Smith, Alden W. 1927— Burbank, Abram L., Jr. McDermott, Harry Hugh Ward, Warren D. 1928— Fulle, Andrew Whiteside King, Thomas Hazeltor., Jr Rose, Dr. Marcus Allen 1929— Bennett, William F. J._ Holmes; Edward Morris 19^fS-Tupper, John B. Woodman, Charles Henry 1931— -Canfield. William B. Dodd, Richard Casper Moore,.. Edgar Allen . 1932— Bender, George Frederick Campfefl Willard G. A

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1933— Drake, Gilbert G. Moore, Edward Lockwood 1934— Kernan, Henry;Si, : Kernan, Robert M. Tiffany, Forrest Frazer 1935— Forker;, Clay E. Stacey, John Marked 1936—Caldwell, Robert M. Hess, John Laurie 1937 -Armstrong, Parker Broadhurst McAlister, Janies Robert Smith, Harry R. 1938— Carter, John T. Coulter, Harry Freeman Wilson., Charles E. 1939— Eppler, William Burgess Winner, James Robert, Jr. 1940— Dwyer, Thomas Johnson Post, John F. Post, William W. 1941— Bender, David Forster, Arthur Leon Wharton, Robert Franklin 1942— Downs, Richard L. Norris, Robert. T,angdon Quass, Frank Edward Sadri, Faridoon

1943—N orthup, Robert Wright Watson, William Ralph Wiener, Norman l94®-Brooks, Owen A. O’Brien, Daniel Francis,: O’Brien, Walter Patrick 1945—'Ball, Robert Edward Browne, Jerome G. Mravlag, Paul V., Jr. 1946 , .-Lawrence, Peter Brian Q’Nfel, Edward Hayden Teem Richard W. 1947— Bamford, David L. Benedict, James Michael Huey, Chester Francis Miller, William Beard Smith, Donald Manning Vander May, Robert Bernard 1948— Ferris, Dudley Hesse, William T., Jr. McDonald, Samuel F. Scott, David M., Jr. 1949— Groves, George Fuller Sayre, Russell Edward -Steele, Robert M. 1950— -Barclay, Ian D. Payne, Frederick Joseph

Richards, Thomas R. Warren, William J. 1951 - -Cullen, Merrill B. Stockham, TomWentz, Richard 1952— Battaglia, David Gary Iozia, Donald G. Martino, Nicholas 1953— Albert, John W. Grover, Bruce ' Lindeman, Neil Carl Lindsey, Peter Martino, >Italo Noll, Louis Stein, Dr. Richard Vitiello, Emilio Williams, Henry A., II 1954— De Stefano, Sande Robert Grimm, Peter William Vitiello, Romeo 1955— Bornstein, Harold M. Brawer, Robert Allen 1956— Barton, Seth S. Saperstein, Ralph 1959—Haney, Richard Alan

YOU CAN HELP THE ACADEM Y BY • Sending news and pictures for the BULLETIN. • Notifying the Alumni Office when you have a change of address. • Attending Alumni Association activities. • SUPPORTING THE LIVING ENDOWMENT PROGRAM OF ANNUAL GIVING. M. EU G EN E S P E N I ’27 President 60

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NECROLOGY ALBERT J. ARM STRONG, JR., ’24; November 23, 1966, at the age of 59. Mr. Armstrong attended Notre Dame University and had been an accountant in New York City for the past twenty-five years. During World W ar II he served in the Pacific Theater of W ar as a first lieutenant in the Army Quartermaster Corps.

Doctor of Flumane Letters from Hobart College. He taught at St. Mark’s ‘School and PhillipS Exeter Academy, then served as headmaster of the Nichols! School from 1917 until he came tllM ontclair as head­ master in 1925.

GROSVENOR B. BALL, C4; passed away in July, 1966, while on a trip to Rome, Italy. “Grove” is survived by his wife, Elizabeth Screven Ball, in Moline, Illinois! a daughter, Mrs. Penelope Rutter, and a son, Grosvenor L. Ball, Jr.

Dr. Head was president of Bergen Junior College from 1951 to 1954. When the college was taken over by Fairleigh Dickinson University in 1954Bhe remained for a year as provost. From 1956 untilhis retirement in 1960 he had been executive director of the Halkensack De­ velopment Association.

W ILLIA M G, BRODHEAD, May 30,11966, in Jamestown, New York, at age 84. “Chief” Brodhead served as the Academy athletic director from 1921 to 1933 and coached many championship teams. He also served as a National Football League official.

President of Rotary International in 1939-40, a con­ sultant to the United Nations in 1945, Dr. Head received the B. F. Goodrich Award for Distinguished Public Serv­ ice in 1940.

W ILLIA M W. CALDW ELL, T9; October 23, 1966, at his home in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Mr. Caldwell was chairman of the board of Caldwell-Scott Construction and Engineering Company and builder of many of the Fort Lauderdale area’s largest buildings including the Ft. Lauderdale City Hall, the Swimming Hall of Fame, Broward National Bank, and Nova University. Following graduation from Montclair Academy, W. W. Caldwell continued his education in Switzerland and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He was a member of the Broward National Bank Board of Directors, the Broward County Board of Examiners of General Contractors, the Church by the Sea, Lauderdale Yacht Club and the Lauderdale Country Club. Mr. Caldwell is survived by his widow, two sons, a daughter, two brothers and four grandchildren. JO SE PH W. DORLAND,. ’17; passed away last summer. GORDON DUNN, ’17; in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. JO H N O. ESHBAUGH, ’22; at the time of his death, March 29, 1966, Mr. Eshbaugh was 61 years of age. He was a graduate of Cornell University, associated with the firm, DeLane and Kipp since 1948, and formerly served as a trustee of Montclair Academy. W A LTER D. HEAD, Montclair Academy headmas­ ter from 1925 to 1948, died January 26, 1967]. He was 85 years old and lived at 157 Pascack Road, Hfillsdalg New Jersey. Dr. Head, a native of Revere, Mass., received an A.B. degree from Harvard, an A.M. from Columbia and ®

Surviving are his widow, the former Bernice Leigh­ ton ; a daughter, Mrs. Lois H. Fenn, and three grand­ children. W ILLIA M JEENRY SIMMS, ’21; in Berkeley, Cali­ fornia, July, 1966. Mr. Simms was thB fatheflof Clark Simms, ’49. D. A R TH U R STRAIGHT, ’118; July 3 f| 1966, Orange, New Jersey. Mr. Straight was graduated yrom Amherst College in 1922 and received his master’s degree in chemical engineering from M.I.T. in 1942. During his business career, Mr. Straight had Served as personnel director of Cities Service Oil Co. of New York, Kemper Insurance Co., of Chicago and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Smith, stock brokers. A well known organist and choir director, he wits a member of the American Guild of Organists? and was the organist at the Vincent Methodist Church, Nutley, New Jersey. Jle was a memberiaof the Hope Lodge of Ma­ sons and was active in the Deer Lake Club. D. Arthur Straight is survived by his wife, two sonSalgfister' and five grandchildren. FR ED ER IC K G, STROOP, ’13; Dayton, Ohio, Sep­ tember, 1966. Mr. Stroop was a graduate of Cornell University. H E R B E R T M. W ARNER, T8; June, 1966, in Little Falls, New Jersey. Mr. W arned was a pioneer in the amateur rad * field' and in the two-way radio communica­ tions industry. IgM was owner androresident S the W ar­ ner Engineering Company,HnS and a graduate of Stevens Institute of Technwgy.


WINTER S P O R T S SC H ED U LE V arsity Basketball— “ Red” Squad Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Reb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar.

3 6 9 13 16 4 6 9 12 16 18 1 4 7 10 IS 17 22 ) 25) 1) 3

Staten Island Academy Croyden Hall Academy Wardlaw School* Stevens Academy Arts High School Newark Academy Englewood School College High School* Jewish Educational Center College High School* Morristown School Wardlaw School* Rutgers Prep* St. Bernard’s School* Newark Academy Rutgers Prep* Morristown School*

A A A H A A A A A H A H A A H H H

8:00 4:00 8:15 3 :30 3:45 3:30 8:15 3:30 7:30 3 :30 3:45 3:30 2:00 4:00 3:30 3:45 3:30

H

3:30

N.J.I.S.A.A. Championships St. Bernard’s School* *N.J.I.S.B.L. Games

Junior Basketball Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar.

15 6 12 13 18 1 4 9 15 21 8) 10)

15 6 11 17 3 8 16 17 2 10

Saddle River Country Day Saddle River Country Day Pingry JV Bonnie Brae School Passaic Collegiate Princeton Day School Passaic Collegiate King School Bonnie Brae School King School

A 3:30 H 3:30 A 4:00 A 3:30 A 3:30 A 4:00 A 3:30 A 7:30 H 4:00 H 3:15

Jayvee Basketball Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar.

9 13 16 4 9 12 16 18 1 3 7 10 15 17 28 2

Wardlaw School Stevens Academy Arts High School Newark Academy College High School Jewish Educational Center College High School Morristown School Wardlaw School Neumann Prep St. Bernard’s School Newark Academy Rutgers Prep Morristown School Neumann Prep St. Bernard’s School

A 7:00 H 5:00 A 5:15 H 3 :30 H 3:30 A 6:00 A 3:30 H 3:30 A 3:30 A 3:45 H 3:30 A 3:30 A 3:45 A 3 :30 H 3:45 A 3:30

H 3:45 A 6:30 H 3:30 A 3:00 A 3:30 A 3:30 A 12:15 H 3:45 A 3:30 H 3:30 A

3:30

A A H A H H A

3:00 4:00 2:45 2:30 2:45 2:45 2:30

Varsity Swimming Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb.

4 11 16 18 2 6 16 18 22

V arsity Basketball— “ B lack” Squad Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar.

College High School Englewood School Passaic Collegiate Wardlaw School College High School Newark Academy Rutgers Prep Bonnie Brae School Passaic Collegiate Newark Academy Rutgers Prep Jr. Tournament St. Benedict’s Prep Hanover Park Delbarton School Rutgers Prep Hun School Montclair High School Wardlaw School Essex County Championships N.J.I.S.A.A. Championships

A

Varsity W restling Dec. 14 Dec. 30 Jan. Jan. Jan, Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. Mar.

6 10 13 3 7 10 18 25 1 8

Dec. Jan. •Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar.

14 13 17 3 18 21 1

Boonton High School Montclair High School Invitational Wrestling Tournament Rutgers Prep St. Bernard’s School Pingry School Morristown School Wardlaw School Englewood School Hun School N.J.I.S.A.A. Championships B.M.I. King School

H

4:00

A A H A A A H A

3:30 3:15 3:30 7:30 3:30 7:30 2:00

H H

3:45 3:30

H H A A A A H

3:30 3:30 3:30 7:00 3:30 3:30 3:15

A A A H

2:30 3:30 3:15 3:00

Jayvee W restling Boonton High School Pingry School Trinity School Morristown School Hun School Newark Academy B.M.I.

Junior W restling Jan. 17 Feb. 1 Feb. 3'« Feb. 22

Trinity School Wardlaw School King School Wardlaw School


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