Page 57 - TRINITY 1959
P. 57

RGANIZA I ION, so much the rage at Trin­                      Form Four
               ity  in  1957-8,  seemed  to  come  to  a  dead
            Ohalt  when  it  hit  this  year’s  Sophomore  Class,
              for  the  Fourth  Form,  its sixty members sprawl­
           ing across both the third and fourth floors, seemed
           to  be  everywhere  and  doing everything.
              But  a  lack  of  class  organization  by  no  means
           prevented  the  Sophomores  from  contributing  to
           school  life. Whether leading the fight  for an exit
           from  the  new  lunch  room  without  passing
           through  the  locker  room,  or  the  struggle  for  a




































                   Seated—P.  Williams,  Lowe,  Lasersohn,  Hawkins,  Stamm,  Giusio,  J.  Elms,  Miles,  Levy,  Clemans,
                   Just,  Kirby,  Clough,  W.  Larson,  Adams,  Janeway.  Second row—Mr.  Bolduc,  Mr. Tornay,  Atkin,
                   M.  Lewis,  J.  Munro,  Carruth,  Winston,  Barnes,  Gamble,  Hempel,  LaGrange,  Brothers,  McCain,
                   Burr,  Koenig,  Risley, J.  Elliot,  T.  Smith, Lefcourte,  N.  Williams,  Hyden,  Mr. Bufill.  Third row—
                   Petruno,  Takizawa,  Deyrup,  Varriano,  Reid,  Titon,  Crawford,  CL  Michas,  D.  Elliott,  Klinger,
                   Bunche,  Christensen,  Carman,  J.  Moore,  J.  Harris,  Sze,  Mound,  R.  Schack,  Younger.  Absent—
                                               Clark,  Markovich,  Sweeney.



           Junior Varsity  Football  Team, they were always   college  applications  do  not  yet  loom  too  terrify­
           present  and  audible.  Some  of  their more off-beat   ingly,  those  who  failed  in  their  efforts  toward
           contributions were to the cross-country team and   intellectual  achievement  still  have  the  opportun­
           the  debating  team,  while  the  Dramatics  Club,   ity  to  find  the  way.
           the  publications,  the  Honor  Roll,  and  all  the   After  only  two  years  in  the  Upper  School,  it
           Varsity sports would  have suffered  without  their   is  too  early  to  sum  up  the  Fourth  Form.  One
           support.                                          thing,  however,  is  certain.  If  they  continue  at
             Although  examinations  proved  to  be  the  bane   their  present  rate,  the  Sophomores  are  sure  to
           of a good many Fourth Formers, sports and other   set  more  precedents  than  that  of  being  the  first
           school  activities  were  their  salvation,  and,  since  sixty-member class in Trinity history.


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