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Reflections v4 - Manlius Pebble Hill School

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SPRING 2010<br />

Commemorative Edition in Honor of Our 140th Year<br />

T H E O F F I C I A L M A G A Z I N E O F M A N L I U S P E B B L E H I L L S C H O O L<br />

1


MANLIUS PEBBLE HILL SCHOOL has been<br />

named the recipient of a $2 million endowment<br />

grant from the Colorado-based Malone Family<br />

Foundation. The grant will be used exclusively to provide<br />

scholarships to top students with financial need.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

Awarded<br />

$2 Million<br />

Endowment<br />

Grant!<br />

MPH is the first and only school in New York State<br />

ever to receive a grant from the Malone Family<br />

Foundation, whose mission is to improve access to quality<br />

education for “gifted students who lack the financial<br />

resources to best develop their talents.”<br />

Through its national Malone Scholars Program, the<br />

foundation annually awards endowment grants to no<br />

more than three independent schools in the country. The<br />

recipients, according to the foundation, “are selected on<br />

the basis of their academic caliber; the quality of their<br />

staff; excellent accommodations for gifted and talented<br />

students; strong AP and enrichment programs; attention<br />

to the individual student’s needs, interests, and talents;<br />

financial strength and stability; a commitment to financial<br />

aid; and an economically, culturally, ethnically, and<br />

socially diverse population.”<br />

MPH will award its first Malone scholarship next fall!<br />

The number of scholarships will grow in succeeding years<br />

and will be distributed among students in grades seven<br />

through 12. The scholarships will fund tuition and schoolrelated<br />

expenses (e.g., book fees and computers) for<br />

highly capable students in the top five percent of their<br />

class with demonstrated financial need. The Malone<br />

scholarships will continue throughout the students’<br />

enrollment at MPH.<br />

Head of <strong>School</strong> Baxter Ball said, “We are very pleased<br />

that our academic excellence has received this national<br />

recognition, but even more pleased that, with this grant,<br />

we now will be able to bring even greater numbers of<br />

motivated and talented students into our school.”<br />

More than 40 percent of MPH students are currently<br />

receiving financial assistance through tuition grants and<br />

the Crosby merit scholarship program.<br />

“Although we are already providing more than<br />

$700,000 in merit scholarships for the next academic year<br />

and over $1 million in need-based tuition grants, many<br />

more exceptional students with limited financial resources<br />

are unable to attend MPH,” Mr. Ball said. “With the<br />

addition of the Malone scholarship funds, a growing<br />

number of them will be able to benefit from an MPH<br />

education.”


LETTERS TO THE<br />

Editor<br />

Dear Mr. Ball:<br />

As a <strong>Manlius</strong> “Old Boy,” I appreciate your<br />

commentary in the Final Word article in the<br />

recent MPH <strong>Reflections</strong>. Having many years’<br />

experience as the head of two private<br />

schools, I am in complete agreement with<br />

your remarks about the importance and<br />

pleasure of the printed word.<br />

Years ago, I visited Cushing Academy when<br />

my Citadel friend, Dr. Joseph Curry, was<br />

headmaster. Joe was a forward thinking,<br />

distinguished head of school, and the<br />

library he created in the side of a hill was<br />

most impressive and infinitely inviting…it<br />

would be interesting to know how he<br />

regards this move at Cushing.<br />

Best wishes and thank you for your<br />

leadership of MPH.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Harrison Kimbrell ’51A<br />

Dear Mr. Ball:<br />

I enjoyed your thoughts on the role and<br />

future of books in this so called “Digital<br />

Age.” (The Final Word, MPH <strong>Reflections</strong>,<br />

Fall 2009). I agree with you 100%. F.Y.I.<br />

here’s a related article I hope you enjoy<br />

(attached to original letter). In the second<br />

paragraph I mention Latin IV but what I<br />

didn’t say was that it was in a classroom at<br />

MPH nearly 40 years ago (1970) and Mr.<br />

James Lawrence was my teacher. Hope you<br />

enjoy it!<br />

Regards,<br />

Pete Mires ’71<br />

Table of Contents<br />

From the Board President 4<br />

MPH – 140 Years Strong 5<br />

Our <strong>School</strong>’s Proud Heritage 10<br />

Now and Then – Snapshots of Our <strong>School</strong> through the Years 19<br />

Building Memories 22<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions 35<br />

Coaches and Athletics Memories 53<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories 66<br />

Military Memories 85<br />

A History of Goodyear-Burlingame <strong>School</strong> 93<br />

Commencement 2010 Speaker 95<br />

Alumni Scrapbook 96<br />

The Final Word 106<br />

<strong>Reflections</strong> is published twice a year for the alumni and friends of<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>, 5300 Jamesville Road, DeWitt, NY 13214,<br />

Phone: 315/446-2452, Fax: 315/446-7359, E-mail: alumni@mph.net,<br />

Web: www.mph.net.<br />

HEAD OF SCHOOL<br />

Baxter F. Ball<br />

EDITORS<br />

Maureen Anderson,<br />

director of alumni relations<br />

Nancy Gallery,<br />

advancement associate<br />

Susan Gullo,<br />

director of communications<br />

Susan Leahey,<br />

director of annual giving<br />

Tina Morgan,<br />

director of development<br />

BOARD OF TRUSTEES<br />

George S. Urist, president<br />

Peter G. Manolakos, president emeritus<br />

Paul C. Sack, vice president<br />

Josh Wells ’89, vice president<br />

Jennifer L. Hicks, treasurer<br />

Janis Hampton, secretary<br />

Baxter F. Ball, head of school<br />

Frederick B. Benedict ’58A<br />

James F. Bright<br />

Peter D. Carmen<br />

Jayne R. Charlamb ’87<br />

Nancy L. Dock<br />

William A. Futera<br />

Gary Grossman<br />

M. Gail Hamner<br />

Gloria Hooper-Rasberry<br />

Daniel S. Jonas<br />

Mary Lerner<br />

Melissa Montgomery<br />

Gary R. Slutzky<br />

Jamie Sutphen<br />

Russell Andrews ’64, alumni association<br />

representative<br />

Jennifer L. Reece-Barnes, parents’<br />

association representative<br />

THE ALUMNI<br />

ASSOCIATION BOARD<br />

Josh Wells ’89, president<br />

Russ Andrews ’64, president emeritus<br />

Bob Theis ’67B, vice president<br />

Marna (Suarez) Redding ’96, secretary<br />

Jim Amodio ’65<br />

Rolly Anderson ’66B<br />

Steve Burchesky ’66C<br />

Al Cicci ’60C<br />

Doug Craig ’89<br />

Tom Denton ’65<br />

Stuart Grossman ’56<br />

Dan Klemperer ’02<br />

Bryan Manolakos ’97<br />

Claire Myers-Usiatynski ’72<br />

Tom Potter ’67B<br />

Nat Reidel ’65<br />

Sondra Roberts ’91<br />

Eric Spevak ’77<br />

David Temes ’97<br />

Wendy (Harwood) Van Der Bogart ’74<br />

Hilary Yeager ’95<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 3


From the President<br />

of the Board of Trustees<br />

WHEN REFERRING TO MANLIUS PEBBLE HILL SCHOOL, the Rev. Suzi Bahner Hariff,<br />

daughter of a former <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> teacher, uses the metaphor of a “tapestry.” It is an apt<br />

description. Throughout its 140-year evolution, MPH has held tight to all that was best in St. John’s <strong>School</strong>, The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>, Goodyear Burlingame, and <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>, weaving their ideals and standards into the fabric of today’s MPH,<br />

which honors and celebrates the rich traditions and memories of those earlier schools.<br />

Honoring the heritage of <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> is important. Today’s students should know about those who came before them;<br />

and those who came before need an anchor. Without MPH, there would be no place for the “Old Boys” to come back to or<br />

for <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> and MPH students to reminisce together. So many alumni have told us it is comforting to know that memories<br />

and names will live on for friends, family, and current and future students.<br />

The generosity of those who continue to feel connected to MPH has spurred the growth of both our campus and our<br />

endowment. Those donors recognize that, even as we pay tribute to our past, what we do here now is so important and<br />

valuable that the <strong>School</strong> must be sustained for generations to come. Tomorrow’s students, too, deserve the opportunity to<br />

experience the “magic of MPH.”<br />

George Urist<br />

President<br />

Board of Trustees<br />

Celebrating 140 Years<br />

ALITTLE OVER TWO YEARS AGO, I sent an e-mail asking alumni for their suggestions for faculty<br />

members to profile in upcoming <strong>Reflections</strong> issues. I was pleasantly surprised when hundreds of<br />

alumni responded. Clearly alumni had passion for the men and women who molded their education.<br />

I wondered, “How can we capture and share that passion”<br />

Then, an idea began to form…what if we honored MPH’s 140th year, by providing a forum for alumni to share their school<br />

memories These are stories that deserve to be told and remembered.<br />

With our Head of <strong>School</strong>’s support and the Alumni Office fully behind the effort, we began asking alumni, faculty, and former<br />

faculty for their favorite “<strong>Manlius</strong>,” “<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>,” or “<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>” memories. And the memories came flooding into<br />

our office. Some are hilarious, others more poignant, but all convey a sense of who we were and who we are. It is our hope<br />

that by combining these memories with historical facts and current information about our school, we can give readers a<br />

snapshot of our 2010 MPH community.<br />

On a personal note, I have truly enjoyed the countless conversations and e-mails that these memories have triggered. Thank<br />

you for sharing your stories with MPH. I look forward to continuing the dialog.<br />

Happy reading!<br />

Tina Morgan<br />

Director of Development<br />

4 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


m a n l i u s P e b b l e H i l l<br />

140 Years Strong<br />

Certainly much has changed in the<br />

140 years of our <strong>School</strong>’s history.<br />

Clothing styles, lingo, haircuts,<br />

even the number of states in our<br />

union have changed dramatically.<br />

Despite these changes, however,<br />

many things remain the same. Still<br />

true to the ideals of our founders,<br />

MPH endeavors to provide students<br />

with the tools they need to succeed<br />

and to make a difference in the<br />

world we share.<br />

The following are snapshots of our<br />

academic departments in the year<br />

2010. While the accoutrements<br />

may differ from your school days,<br />

the thread of academic excellence<br />

remains strong and unbroken.<br />

Whether you are a graduate of the<br />

1930s or an alumnus/a of the new<br />

millennium, you will recognize in<br />

today’s <strong>School</strong> the same spirit that<br />

permeated your own education.<br />

After you read about MPH now,<br />

take a look back with us and<br />

remember times gone by, reflect on<br />

what has changed, and discover<br />

what has remained the same. In<br />

the words of the great William<br />

Shakespeare, “What’s past is<br />

prologue.”<br />

We hope you enjoy this<br />

commemorative issue of <strong>Reflections</strong><br />

as much as we enjoyed putting it<br />

together. Here’s to the next 140<br />

years!<br />

The Editors<br />

Who We Are<br />

HISTORY AND<br />

SOCIAL STUDIES<br />

How does a history teacher engage<br />

youth who seem obsessed by the<br />

“here and now” and make them care<br />

about events that happened long<br />

before they were born At MPH, one<br />

teacher placed the American flag<br />

across the classroom entrance on the<br />

first day of his constitutional law<br />

class, challenging students to make a<br />

decision: step on the flag or jump<br />

over it. The discussion that followed<br />

about the choice each student made<br />

set the stage for a semester-long<br />

dialogue on the power of symbols.<br />

Another instructor regularly challenges<br />

his students to define the term<br />

“modernity” and to present an argument<br />

as to when the “modern world”<br />

began. This discussion unwinds over<br />

the course of the entire year.<br />

Beyond these deceptively simple yet<br />

powerful approaches, the History and<br />

Societal Studies Department addresses<br />

major topic areas, stressing the<br />

importance of social, ethnic, and<br />

cultural variety throughout history.<br />

The department is devoted to<br />

analyzing how humankind has<br />

structured its societies over time,<br />

thereby giving students the chance to<br />

understand humans and the world<br />

they have created. The curriculum<br />

encourages open-minded and creative<br />

thinking and helps students develop a<br />

sense of respect and understanding<br />

for a variety of views, values, and<br />

traditions, while simultaneously<br />

giving students the tools to articulate<br />

and defend their beliefs.<br />

The department accomplishes this<br />

broad agenda by employing a range of<br />

learning approaches to help students<br />

assimilate information effectively and<br />

to critically appraise diverse ideas<br />

from the sweep of human history.<br />

Combining tried and true practices<br />

with new experiences, the department<br />

continually refreshes its approach to<br />

curriculum. The faculty always looks<br />

for new and exciting ways to “spice<br />

up” the curriculum. New courses<br />

appear frequently, reflecting the<br />

intellectual flexibility of the faculty, as<br />

well as its deep commitment to<br />

challenging inquiring young minds.<br />

In addition to purely academic<br />

approaches, our exchange program<br />

with the Soroe Academy in Denmark<br />

offers our students the opportunity to<br />

experience firsthand the family and<br />

school life of their counterparts in an<br />

independent school in Europe.<br />

Finally, our History Club affords<br />

motivated students the chance to<br />

deepen their knowledge of select<br />

fields by tapping into the wealth of<br />

faculty expertise, as well as the<br />

chance to publish their own work in a<br />

nationally recognized journal, The<br />

Concord Review.<br />

MATHEMATICS<br />

Over the past eight years, 50 percent<br />

of our Seniors (on average) have<br />

successfully completed AP Calculus<br />

before graduating from MPH. At<br />

MPH, math classes are multi-age,<br />

allowing every student to complete<br />

the required three-year sequence of<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 5


college preparatory mathematics<br />

while providing the flexibility for<br />

gifted students to progress at a different<br />

pace. (Over 80 percent of our<br />

students complete five years of math<br />

study.) Whenever possible, we utilize<br />

a five-point approach to presenting<br />

material: numerically, algebraically,<br />

graphically, verbally (descriptively)<br />

and concretely (through an activity or<br />

with a picture).<br />

Most students also pursue a variety of<br />

elective courses, including those in<br />

advanced mathematics (such as<br />

Calculus III, AP Calculus and AP<br />

Statistics) and/or independent studies<br />

with faculty members. Our precalculus<br />

curriculum is associated with<br />

Dr. Helen Doerr at Syracuse University,<br />

whose program/research MPH<br />

helped pilot a number of years ago.<br />

Teachers blend the best of traditional<br />

pedagogy with proven contemporary<br />

teaching practices, including frequent<br />

collaborative projects and open-ended<br />

investigative activities. Faculty members<br />

encourage students to take<br />

intellectual risks by raising questions<br />

and formulating conjectures using<br />

mathematical argument. Interactive<br />

computer software, graphing calculators,<br />

and the Calculator-Based Lab<br />

(CBL) are used in courses when<br />

appropriate. As part of the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

“Writing for Life” initiative, students<br />

are required in their math courses to<br />

express mathematical concepts in<br />

clear, coherent prose.<br />

MPH students actually enjoy participating<br />

in math and many choose to<br />

spend their free time testing and<br />

sharpening the math skills they have<br />

acquired. Our Math League team is a<br />

popular extracurricular activity and<br />

consistently places first among<br />

similarly sized schools in Onondaga<br />

County. Last year, more than 80<br />

students signed up to take the Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong> American Competition Exam<br />

(AMC), even though it was not<br />

required and had no bearing on their<br />

class grade.<br />

ENGLISH<br />

“To have a sense of creative<br />

activity is the greatest happiness<br />

of being alive.”<br />

MATTHEW ARNOLD<br />

The MPH English Department recognizes<br />

the creative tension generated<br />

by the pull of the utile against that of<br />

the gratuitously beautiful; it is as<br />

necessary to have literate engineers as<br />

it is literary geniuses. We seek to<br />

balance these two energies, inculcating<br />

basic literacy while wistfully<br />

agreeing with Vico that “ …in the<br />

world’s childhood, men were by<br />

nature sublime poets.” To that end,<br />

the standard survey courses are<br />

enhanced by AP and elective offerings,<br />

access to which any Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong> student may be granted upon<br />

receiving permission from the<br />

teacher. These courses explore a<br />

culturally diverse range of fiction,<br />

non-fiction, and poetry, as well as art,<br />

film, and music. To give some idea of<br />

the range of these offerings, recent<br />

students may have read and discussed<br />

works by authors as diverse as<br />

Nelson Mandela, Milan Kundera,<br />

Stuart Dybek, and Karl Marx; discussed<br />

the uses of cinematography in<br />

Psycho and The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari;<br />

examined the role of gender in 20th<br />

century literature; and written<br />

original scripts in a playwriting<br />

course. Our students assume increasing<br />

responsibility for their learning as<br />

they make choices, design projects,<br />

work collaboratively, evaluate their<br />

work, and reflect on the connections<br />

between classroom experiences and<br />

their own lives. We believe that precision<br />

of expression leads to<br />

complexity of thought, which in turn<br />

leads to empathy and engagement. To<br />

learn to express a thought efficiently<br />

is to gain access to ones better nature,<br />

and empowers one to move<br />

confidently and compassionately in<br />

the greater community.<br />

MPH’s student literacy magazine, The<br />

Windmill, is an example of the<br />

English’s department philosophy in<br />

action. It kindles passions for poetry<br />

and prose through the medium of<br />

community participation and interaction.<br />

The Windmill has received<br />

national recognition, including<br />

Columbia University’s Gold Award<br />

for best literary magazine, First Place<br />

in the National Scholastic Press<br />

Association Competition, and numerous<br />

awards from The Empire State<br />

Student Press Association. In 2006<br />

and 2007, The Windmill was named<br />

best over-all literary magazines for<br />

New York State schools with<br />

enrollments of fewer than 1,000<br />

students.<br />

The English Department also supports<br />

the <strong>School</strong>’s newspaper, The<br />

Rolling Stone, which is published four<br />

times a year. In years past, The Rolling<br />

Stone has garnered its fair share of<br />

praise and notoriety, the milestones of<br />

any publication that matters to its<br />

readers. Additionally the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

yearbook, eMPHasis, is produced<br />

entirely by the students in a journalism<br />

course designed to support all<br />

student publications.<br />

To foster a powerful involvement<br />

with the world of literature and<br />

writing, department members provide<br />

additional learning opportunities<br />

through interdisciplinary programming,<br />

summer reading projects, trips<br />

to theater performance and lectures<br />

by authors of national and international<br />

stature, (such as George<br />

Saunders, Tobias Wolff, Michael Herr,<br />

and Mary Karr) and student-directed<br />

writing workshops, poetry readings,<br />

and literary cafes. The teachers<br />

themselves have published their own<br />

work in nearly every genre, and serve<br />

as passionate advocates for the life of<br />

the mind as both a solitary and public<br />

activity.<br />

It is the English Department’s goal<br />

that by the end of their time with us,<br />

every student will have taken to heart<br />

Emerson’s dictum that “No man ever<br />

forgot the visitation of that power to<br />

his heart and brain, which created all<br />

things new; which was the dawn in<br />

him of music, poetry, and art.”<br />

SCIENCE<br />

Bright kids frequently set the bar<br />

higher than the teacher and push<br />

themselves into personal risk areas if<br />

they sense an air of respect and trust.<br />

As a result, the faculty at MPH is<br />

committed to providing an atmosphere<br />

in which new experiments and<br />

6 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


experiences are revered and encouraged<br />

and the risk of failure is<br />

understood to be a necessary cost of<br />

success.<br />

The Science Department believes that,<br />

in order to be informed members of<br />

the global community, students must<br />

achieve a “scientific literacy” that will<br />

enable them to weigh disparate ideas,<br />

facts, and points of view in order to<br />

make ethical decisions. The department<br />

firmly believes in the value of<br />

hands-on and inquiry-driven teaching<br />

that allows students to experience<br />

science firsthand.<br />

Science is presented as an open-ended<br />

process that leads to an understanding<br />

of theories and laws about the natural<br />

world. Opportunities are available for<br />

students to work both individually<br />

and as part of a team to develop the<br />

skills to test questions using the scientific<br />

process. This process involves<br />

researching a question, designing and<br />

carrying out an experiment, solving<br />

problems, analyzing data, drawing<br />

conclusions, and communicating<br />

findings.<br />

A perennial favorite among our Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong> science electives is the forensic<br />

science class, which epitomizes handson,<br />

community-based learning. The<br />

ultimate measure of students’ success<br />

in the class is their team’s ability to<br />

solve a “crime” staged in the lab.<br />

Students are first taught crime-solving<br />

skills [how to take fingerprints,<br />

develop latent prints, type (simulated)<br />

blood, gather footprints, assess bite<br />

marks, and conduct glass analysis,<br />

lipstick chromatography, and additional<br />

forensic analyses]. Then, students<br />

must actually use these newly acquired<br />

skills to successfully solve the<br />

crime.<br />

For the past five years, about 60 MPH<br />

faculty and staff members have each<br />

year volunteered to act as suspects in<br />

the crime. The students delight in<br />

asking their AP Language teacher for<br />

a (simulated) blood sample, the<br />

librarian for a shoe print, the calculus<br />

teacher for a hair sample. Teachers<br />

willingly step out of their usual roles<br />

to expand students’ learning experience.<br />

Legal and civics lessons<br />

frequently become a part of that<br />

experience – teachers have unexpectedly<br />

demanded search warrants,<br />

refused to hand over evidence, insisted<br />

their lawyers be present, or<br />

demanded to hear their Miranda<br />

rights.<br />

Students also present case studies of<br />

high profile crime cases rich with<br />

sometimes exemplary and sometimes<br />

weak examples of forensic science.<br />

With attention paid to both the real<br />

and the simulated, students report an<br />

air of excitement in the class, while<br />

they realize that real-world forensics<br />

involves dealing with people who are<br />

managing the difficult moments of<br />

personal loss.<br />

Science students also drive campuswide<br />

environmental programs in<br />

recycling and composting and have<br />

brought about changes such as the<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s decision to discontinue the<br />

use of paper cups and to use only<br />

recyclable paper napkins. This year,<br />

students are working with the<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s administration on a plan to<br />

use stainless steel containers in lieu of<br />

plastic beverage containers. Student<br />

interest in green initiatives has also<br />

led to the seating of Upper <strong>School</strong><br />

student representatives on the<br />

governing board’s Green Committee,<br />

where they can discuss with trustees,<br />

administrators, and parents their ideas<br />

to make the <strong>School</strong> more environmentally<br />

responsible. This dialogue<br />

has led to the <strong>School</strong>’s $250,000 grant<br />

application to the New York State<br />

Energy Research and Development<br />

Authority (NYSERDA) for installation<br />

of solar energy panels.<br />

WORLD LANGUAGES<br />

At MPH, we believe that fluency in a<br />

foreign language is the gateway to a<br />

truly international life. We value the<br />

study of languages not only for the<br />

immediate practical benefits, but also<br />

because the study of a foreign<br />

language enables students to learn<br />

about others culture and thereby<br />

understand their own more clearly.<br />

MPH offers instruction in classical<br />

languages (Greek and Latin) and<br />

modern languages (Spanish, French,<br />

and Mandarin Chinese).<br />

In classical studies, students focus on<br />

the reading and writing of Greek and<br />

Latin in order to gain an understanding<br />

of the linguistic and cultural<br />

heritage derived from these languages.<br />

Our students’ study of the modern<br />

languages begins in Pre-kindergarten<br />

in a concentrated effort to promote<br />

accent-free speaking ability by the<br />

time a student reaches the Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong>. Students often pursue their<br />

language of choice through the AP<br />

level; many also take advantage of our<br />

international travel and cultural<br />

immersion programs. A recent trip to<br />

China allowed our students to showcase<br />

their Mandarin fluency in venues<br />

such as Tiananmen Square, the Ming<br />

Tombs, and the Summer Palace. This<br />

year, students have the opportunity to<br />

travel to Poland with two teachers<br />

who are fluent in the Polish language.<br />

Small classes are the key to MPH’s<br />

excellence in language instruction.<br />

Students are immersed in the cultural<br />

products of the country whose<br />

language they are studying. They may<br />

prepare a Spanish meal, read a French<br />

magazine, or watch a Chinese film.<br />

Because the study of a world language<br />

entails a progressive acquisition of<br />

linguistic skills, our program is<br />

intentional in its vertical articulation.<br />

Students progress, over their time<br />

here, from beginners to truly fluent<br />

speakers and connoisseurs of the<br />

culture, and many choose to master<br />

more than one language.<br />

PERFORMING ARTS<br />

The home of our Performing Arts<br />

Department is the Coville Theater, an<br />

intimate black-box auditorium. Each<br />

year, more than 30 performing groups<br />

and events grace the Coville stage. It<br />

is a magnet for MPH students, not<br />

only for the aspiring Broadway star (a<br />

recent graduate is currently starring<br />

in the role of Elphaba in the North<br />

American Touring production of<br />

Wicked), but also for the quiet scholar<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 7


who feels comfortable enough in her<br />

surroundings to take a chance.<br />

Students’ passion and talent is shaped<br />

through classes and activities that<br />

range from string quartets and jazz<br />

ensembles to concert chorale and fullscale<br />

Broadway-style musical<br />

productions. MPH also has a strong<br />

dance program, offering one of only<br />

two full-credit, high-school dance<br />

programs in the Central New York<br />

area.<br />

MPH firmly believes that valuable<br />

educational opportunities exist outside<br />

the classroom, and our Performing<br />

Arts Department provides students<br />

with a variety of off-campus<br />

performance opportunities. One such<br />

example is our arrangement with<br />

RedHouse, an arts and cultural center<br />

located in downtown Syracuse.<br />

Through this collaboration, student<br />

performances are presented free of<br />

charge to a community audience. This<br />

year, MPH students will present four<br />

dance, theatrical, and musical<br />

productions at the RedHouse venue.<br />

The beauty of the performing arts<br />

program at MPH is this: when<br />

presented with a talented student,<br />

from whatever walk of life, MPH has<br />

the faculty, the resources, and the<br />

passionate commitment to allow that<br />

student to fully inhabit his or her own<br />

talent. Last year, we told the stories of<br />

Nick Frenay and Noah Kellman, both<br />

members of our Class of 2009, and<br />

how their experience in the MPH<br />

Performing Arts Department cultivated<br />

their talents.<br />

For example, Nick Frenay, a 2009<br />

graduate, was a third grader when he<br />

took his first trumpet lesson from the<br />

Lower <strong>School</strong> band instructor, himself<br />

a world-class jazz musician. The<br />

student went on to participate in the<br />

Lower and Middle <strong>School</strong> bands.<br />

Under the tutelage of the MPH jazz<br />

department and inspired by the<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s award-winning 315 All Stars<br />

band, he continued to progress in his<br />

abilities as both a musician and<br />

composer and eventually found<br />

himself performing on stage at the<br />

GRAMMY awards. Nick and MPH<br />

classmate Noah Kellman were<br />

selected as two of fewer than three<br />

dozen students in the nation to play<br />

with the prestigious GRAMMY<br />

ensembles. This story came full circle<br />

last year when Nick and Noah<br />

developed a Senior Thesis Project that<br />

involved mentoring Lower <strong>School</strong><br />

musicians through a series of<br />

workshops and performances.<br />

Upon graduating last year from MPH,<br />

Nick and Noah joined the highly<br />

competitive Brubeck Fellowship<br />

Program at the University of the<br />

Pacific in California. Their stories<br />

continue to inspire current MPH<br />

musicians, and our Performing Arts<br />

Department is busy cultivating<br />

current talent. This year, two talented<br />

seniors, Abner Bogan and Philippe<br />

Lewalle, are continuing the MPH<br />

tradition of giving back to their<br />

community by mentoring Lower and<br />

Middle <strong>School</strong> musicians while<br />

discovering where their own musical<br />

talents will take them.<br />

Nick, Noah, Abner, and Philippe are<br />

exceptional, but not unusual. The<br />

<strong>School</strong> is full of young artists finding<br />

inspiration and resources right on<br />

campus. Our hope is simply that, if an<br />

artistically gifted young person shows<br />

up on our doorstep – talented, but not<br />

yet focused; energetic, but not yet<br />

directed – we can provide that student<br />

with a sort of “one-stop shop” as he or<br />

she explores that talent.<br />

The strength of the MPH performing<br />

arts program is evidenced by the<br />

extent to which its students excel in<br />

outside theater, dance, and musical<br />

organizations. Most numerous among<br />

them are musical organizations, which<br />

include the New York State <strong>School</strong><br />

Music Association (NYSSMA) the<br />

Onondaga County Music Educators<br />

Association (OCMEA), All-County,<br />

Area All-State, Conference All-State,<br />

Syracuse Children’s Chorus, Syracuse<br />

Symphony Youth Orchestra, and<br />

Syracuse Stage and Syracuse Opera.<br />

We are very proud that nearly 90<br />

percent of Upper <strong>School</strong> students are<br />

performing artists. These actors,<br />

musicians, dancers, and singers are<br />

the creative heart of MPH.<br />

FINE ARTS<br />

In the main lobby of <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>, you will find the<br />

Solomon Family Art Gallery, which<br />

showcases the considerable talents of<br />

our student artists. At MPH, art and<br />

creative expression is revered and<br />

not limited to formal instruction<br />

time. Our art program is about more<br />

than developing and sharing a skill;<br />

it is about creating an atmosphere of<br />

openness and exploration.<br />

Students are invited to create<br />

original works in a variety of media<br />

and to become literate, lifelong<br />

aestheticians. The incorporation of<br />

art history in classes, visiting artists,<br />

and visits to museums and artist<br />

workshops help to develop each<br />

student’s perspective on the arts.<br />

Emphasis is always placed on<br />

respectful nurturing of individual<br />

creativity. The medium of choice<br />

ranges from traditional art materials<br />

to photography, film, and computergenerated<br />

art. Routinely, nearly 10<br />

percent of the most talented students<br />

in each MPH graduating class<br />

continue a formal study of art at the<br />

nation’s leading art institutions.<br />

Recent graduates have attended such<br />

notable schools as The Art Institute<br />

of Chicago, Maryland Institute<br />

College of Art, Pratt Institute, and<br />

Rhode Island <strong>School</strong> of Design.<br />

MPH students vary widely in the<br />

intensity with which they pursue the<br />

fine arts, from those who are<br />

experimenting and stretching<br />

themselves to learn new ways of<br />

self-expression to those who have<br />

committed themselves to the life of<br />

the artist. The fine arts program is<br />

flexible enough in breadth and depth<br />

that all these students can have the<br />

art program they need, whether it is<br />

one that permits sampling from the<br />

array of course offerings or one that<br />

8 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


is focused on sophisticated portfolio<br />

development and college-level critique.<br />

SENIOR THESIS PROJECT<br />

Seniors at <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> are expected to<br />

complete a Senior Thesis Project (STP) as part<br />

of their final year. The STP is intended to<br />

help students become change-agents within<br />

their community, taking on projects that have<br />

deep personal meaning and have a lasting<br />

impact on the community.<br />

Creating an official Senior Thesis Project is a<br />

multi-step process. The first step is to complete<br />

and submit an STP Proposal. From<br />

there, students convene an STP Committee<br />

that includes two mentors, one from MPH<br />

and one from the larger community, to<br />

review the proposal. These mentors offer<br />

feedback based on the merit, scope, and<br />

sustainability of the project. Once the proposal<br />

is revised and approved by the STP<br />

Committee, the student begins carrying out<br />

action research, studying previous approaches,<br />

obstacles and perspectives that convey the<br />

complexity surrounding their chosen issue.<br />

The Senior Thesis Project concludes with a<br />

Culminating Event that is a public sharing of<br />

the student’s work and accomplishments<br />

toward this worthy cause. Culminating events<br />

can be performances, presentations, or public<br />

events but must convey the action taken in<br />

addressing a given issue or cause. The goal of<br />

the Senior Thesis Project is to give seniors an<br />

opportunity to complete an exciting challenge<br />

as a culmination of their high school experience.<br />

Seniors who elect not to participate in<br />

the STP process are expected to attend classes<br />

and sit for final exams alongside Juniors and<br />

underclassmen.<br />

POST-GRADUATE YEAR<br />

(reprinted from the<br />

2010 Parent/Student Handbook)<br />

A post-graduate year is available for students<br />

who have completed Senior year, whether at<br />

MPH or at another school, but who wish to<br />

experience the rich learning environment at<br />

MPH for an additional year before college.<br />

The extensive selection of Advanced Placement<br />

courses allows students to enhance the<br />

skills and knowledge needed to succeed in<br />

college. In some cases, students may arrange<br />

to take coursework at a nearby college or<br />

university. Five-day or seven-day boarding<br />

with MPH families, faculty or administrators<br />

can be arranged for students living outside<br />

the immediate area.<br />

BAXTER BALL, current head of school, began his tenure at<br />

MPH in the fall of 1990. He was interviewed during his first<br />

year for the 1991 spring newsletter. Here is an excerpt from that<br />

article:<br />

Do you have any plans for involving alumni in the <strong>School</strong><br />

I’d like to see a strong alumni association, with class agents and secretaries<br />

and a regularly-published alumni newsletter. I’ve made a commitment to<br />

establishing an alumni headquarters by creating an Alumni Center, which<br />

we expect to open in the fall of 1992. The Alumni Center is a charming<br />

house, next to the administrative building on the MPH campus. It will<br />

serve as a focal point for alumni activities.<br />

I am also looking forward to greeting alumni and Old Boys at the<br />

Clambake in June. I’m anxious to talk to many Old Boys around the<br />

country, and I want to meet as many alumni as possible. Alumni are<br />

important to me – and to MPH.<br />

Living up to his promises…<br />

Interview<br />

with the<br />

Head of <strong>School</strong><br />

Mr. Ball has certainly lived up to his alumni promises!<br />

■ In 1995, The Kreitzberg Family Alumni Lodge was dedicated and<br />

staffed with a director of alumni relations.<br />

■ Since the mid-90s, <strong>Reflections</strong> magazine has been published twice<br />

a year for our alumni.<br />

■ Clambake Weekend numbers have grown from a mere handful to<br />

over 400 in 2009!<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 9


Our <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

PROUD<br />

Heritage<br />

HISTORY<br />

OF<br />

The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong><br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> was<br />

founded in<br />

1869 by the<br />

Rt. Rev.<br />

Frederic Dan<br />

Huntington,<br />

Bishop of the<br />

The Rt. Rev. Frederic<br />

Dan Huntington, S.T.D.,<br />

L.H.D. Founder of St.<br />

John’ <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Protestant Episcopal Diocese of Central<br />

New York. On August 24th of that year<br />

the Bishop and nine other prominent<br />

citizens of Central New York, including<br />

Judge George F. Comstock, met and<br />

incorporated St. John’s <strong>School</strong>.<br />

As a home for the new school, the<br />

building of the <strong>Manlius</strong> Academy,<br />

founded in 1835 in <strong>Manlius</strong> Village.<br />

The Academy building was taken over<br />

at an annual rental of one dollar a year<br />

and a large residence nearby was<br />

bought for additional dormitory space.<br />

Although considered a diocesan<br />

institution, there was no Church<br />

ownership then or at any time since,<br />

but the self-perpetuating Board of<br />

Trustees was entirely composed of<br />

Episcopalians.<br />

The first class entered October 1, 1869,<br />

with Bishop Huntington as President<br />

of the Board and Locke Richardson,<br />

A.M., a noted Shakespearian scholar, in<br />

active charge as Headmaster.<br />

Headmasters were changed frequently<br />

during the first few years, but Bishop<br />

Huntington retained his presidency<br />

until his death in 1904.<br />

In January 1871, the new building on<br />

the site of the present Comstock Hall<br />

was occupied. Constructed of brick, this<br />

was in its day a modern and suitable<br />

building for a civilian boarding school<br />

for sixty pupils. It was steam heated<br />

and then or later there was gas illumination.<br />

An electric light plant was<br />

installed eighteen years later.<br />

By 1880, attendance had dwindled and<br />

there came insolvency. In 1881, there<br />

was a new corporation, as “St. John’s<br />

Military <strong>School</strong>.”<br />

A three-story wing was added to the<br />

main building, the first story being<br />

devoted to lavatories. The second story<br />

was an assembly room for formations -<br />

all formations were indoors until 1902<br />

- and a well-appointed and attractive<br />

chapel occupied the third floor. A<br />

splendid gymnasium that served also as<br />

a drill hall was built on the site later<br />

“First and last, <strong>Manlius</strong> is an educational<br />

institution. Its mission is not to train<br />

soldiers, but to develop good and useful<br />

citizens.”<br />

R. W. Barker, Major General US Army (Ret.)<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Superintendent 1947-1960<br />

Reprinted from The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> Guidebook<br />

occupied by the school kitchen and the<br />

King Club.<br />

The new head was the Rev. John W.<br />

Craig, a clergyman with high Church<br />

tendencies. Either because Mr. Craig<br />

wrapped himself too narrowly in the<br />

Church or because he was not a leader<br />

and disciplinarian, or for both reasons,<br />

the Trustees again found themselves in<br />

1887 with rapidly dwindling attendance<br />

and meager funds.<br />

Discouraged by two failures, they<br />

looked about them for an individual<br />

who would take over the complete<br />

responsibility, including the financial<br />

risk, and they called William Verbeck, at<br />

the time co-principal of a military<br />

academy in Aurora, NY, on Cayuga<br />

Lake. Legality of the step was assured by<br />

granting him a lease not only of the<br />

tangible property but also of all the<br />

academic and other rights, he assuming<br />

all financial risks, including an existing<br />

indebtedness, and being entitled to any<br />

profit he could make in lieu of a salary.<br />

After a series of setbacks, including<br />

depressions and fires, from each of<br />

which it emerged better than before, he<br />

was to leave the school at the time of<br />

his death in a strong position, marred<br />

as yet only slightly by the country’s<br />

financial collapse of 1929.<br />

Starting off with fewer than eighteen<br />

returning students, of whom he<br />

eventually had to expel ten for various<br />

reasons, he filled the school to its<br />

10 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


capacity of sixty before the end of the<br />

first year and within five years he had<br />

doubled that attendance, remodeling<br />

Huntington Hall to provide additional<br />

rooms. He had already changed the<br />

cubicles of the four dormitories in the<br />

main building into separate rooms for<br />

two boys each, had provided a water<br />

supply and had installed an electric<br />

light plant. More improvements made<br />

the place livable, but it was his<br />

enthusiasm, energy, and ability to<br />

inspire and manage boys that enabled<br />

him to build up the school and bring it<br />

to national prominence.<br />

From History of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Harry C. Durston<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Alma Mater<br />

O <strong>Manlius</strong>, dear <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

Thy sons can ne’er forget;<br />

That golden haze of student days<br />

Is round about us yet.<br />

The Phoenix flight to sunlit height<br />

Uplifts each loyal heart.<br />

The name we bear unites us there,<br />

Where friends shall never part;<br />

The name we bear unites us there,<br />

Where friends shall never part.<br />

‘Twas in those days we learned the ways<br />

That manhood’s feet must find’<br />

‘Twas here we knew the friendships true<br />

Which time can ne’er unbind.<br />

Whate’er life bring, caress or sting,<br />

Those mem’ries still will guide.<br />

Where’er we are, or near, or far,<br />

Those friendships still will bide.<br />

Where’er we are, or near, or far,<br />

Those friendships still will bide.<br />

HISTORY OF<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> originated in 1927<br />

when a group of Syracuse fathers<br />

sought to establish a school outside the<br />

city where their boys would receive the<br />

benefits of an academic and physical<br />

education to train their minds and<br />

bodies for the future. Goodyear-<br />

Burlingame was teaching their<br />

daughters.<br />

The <strong>School</strong> was to be structured after<br />

the country day school concept, in<br />

which students would have evenings<br />

and weekends at home with their<br />

family, not away at boarding school.<br />

Meetings were held and the number of<br />

interested parents increased. A<br />

committee was appointed to find a<br />

suitable rural location for this venture.<br />

The site committee consisted of Alden<br />

B. Sherry, Douglas Drummond, W.<br />

Cornell Blanding, Elwyn C. Smith, and<br />

Stewart Hemingway.<br />

They would report to William A.<br />

MacKenzie, the leader of the group and<br />

the first Board President. In addition to<br />

the site committee, members were Carl<br />

Amos, Charles W. Andrews, Jerome D.<br />

Barnum, Irving N. Bielre, Guy B.<br />

Dickenson, Marshall H. Durston,<br />

Alexander R. Grant, Franklin F. Moon,<br />

Oscar F. Soule, Harold Edwards, James<br />

R. Marsden.<br />

The mothers who helped to sell the<br />

idea were Mrs. C.S. Estabrook, Mrs.<br />

W.B. Gere, Mrs. C.E. Hancock, Mary E.<br />

Jenkins, Mrs. Stuart Raleigh, Mrs. H.E.<br />

Stowell.<br />

Early in 1927, the Committee reported<br />

it had taken an option on a farm on<br />

Jamesville Road in Orville (DeWitt).<br />

This was part of the Conway estate. The<br />

site was approved, title taken, and the<br />

rebuilding started. Lane & Goes were<br />

the contractors.<br />

Mr. Robert Boyden was selected to be<br />

Headmaster. A graduate of Harvard and<br />

experienced as Headmaster of several<br />

Country Day schools, Mr. Boyden<br />

assisted with the planning of<br />

classrooms, a gymnasium, tennis courts<br />

and playing fields (formerly an<br />

orchard).<br />

The school was to be nonsectarian,<br />

nonprofit and in the first year would<br />

enroll boys ages 7-15. The fee for the<br />

Lower <strong>School</strong> was $275 and the fee for<br />

the Upper <strong>School</strong> was $400.<br />

Teachers were hired mainly from New<br />

England where the old type Latin<br />

<strong>School</strong>s and Country Day <strong>School</strong>s<br />

originated. They were hired because of<br />

their academic background and ability<br />

to coach sports. If they could not coach,<br />

they taught music, art, public speaking<br />

and manual training.<br />

<strong>School</strong> opened September 20, 1927<br />

with 49 boys and closed in June with<br />

65 students. Classes started at 9 a.m.<br />

and ended at 5:30 p.m. The day started<br />

with a Salute to the Flag, a prayer,<br />

reading from the Bible and daily<br />

announcements.<br />

Each boy participated in some form of<br />

athletics every day after lunch, then<br />

would shower and go back to study hall<br />

and tutorial help, if needed.<br />

There were two types of transportation -<br />

parent car pools, many of them<br />

chauffer driven, and the Trolley.<br />

Students taking the Trolley were met<br />

each morning at 8 a.m. at the Yates<br />

Hotel by a faculty member. They rode<br />

to Orville, changed to the Jamesville<br />

car, were taken to the bottom of the hill<br />

in back of the <strong>School</strong>, from which they<br />

walked to classes.<br />

In 1928, attendance increased as classes<br />

were added to 100 and the <strong>School</strong> was<br />

off to an excellent beginning. The first<br />

graduating class was in 1931 and<br />

included Edward Jonder, Benedict<br />

Hobert, Camby Kerr, Franklin Moon,<br />

and William Belden.<br />

Mr. Boyden retired in 1932 to fully<br />

devote his time to his summer camps.<br />

Charles W. Bradlee, a New Englander,<br />

was selected to replace him. Charles<br />

Bradlee served <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> as headmaster<br />

until 1952, when John<br />

Hodgdon assumed the headship for the<br />

next decade. In 1963 Jim Draper<br />

became the headmaster, his tenure<br />

lasted until 1968. For the 1968 school<br />

year, the board of trustees recruited<br />

Richard Barter as headmaster of <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> and, after the 1970 merger,<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>.<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> Alma Mater<br />

Oh, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, to thee we pledge<br />

Our efforts one and all<br />

To work each day at books and play<br />

Thine honor to extol;<br />

Fortier, Fideliter,<br />

Our motto e’re shall be.<br />

With courage and with loyalty<br />

To win high praise for thee.<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 11


Memories<br />

from<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s First Year<br />

John Hancock ’31 was part of <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s first student body and<br />

shared some of his recollections in the Spring 1995 <strong>Reflections</strong>.<br />

Syracuse at the time had a private girls’ school – Goodyear-Burlingame – but<br />

no non-sectarian boys’ school. A small group of parents of boys, believing that<br />

such a school was needed, acquired the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> farm and hired Robert<br />

Boyden as founding headmaster.<br />

Mr. Boyden assembled a small faculty and in September 1927 opened the doors<br />

of the converted farmhouse to roughly 50 boys enrolled in grades 4-9. The<br />

school added one grade a year thereafter, graduating the first class in 1931.<br />

Most of us came to school at first by trolley, which ran from in front of the Eckel<br />

Theater of Fayette Street to Jamesville. This was later abandoned in favor of car<br />

pools, driven by mothers.<br />

HISTORY OF<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>’s long<br />

history in our community dates back<br />

to 1869, when The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> was<br />

founded. In 1970, it merged with<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> to form <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>. Many of our<br />

traditions, such as Winter Carnival, Red<br />

& White Day, and the Handshaking<br />

Ceremony, began at our predessor<br />

<strong>School</strong>s and continue today. Perhaps<br />

the most important legacy from both<br />

<strong>School</strong>s is our tradition of academic<br />

excellence. While The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

was recognized as one of the top<br />

military academies in the country,<br />

serving at one time as a feeder school<br />

for West Point, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> graduates<br />

were going on to some of the best<br />

colleges and universities in the country.<br />

Each day of school began in the Farmhouse with assembly at which Mr. Boyden<br />

played college songs on the piano with great gusto. After this, we dispersed to<br />

classes, all of which were also in the Farmhouse. There were two study periods<br />

daily, one after lunch and the other after athletics. Each Friday all grades were<br />

posted on the bulletin board.<br />

Since the circumstances called for instant tradition, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> cheers and<br />

songs soon made their appearance, most being adaptation of college songs (e.g.<br />

substituting “<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>” for “Eli” regardless of metrical problems.)<br />

There was a school paper called The Rolling Stone, which had an editorial<br />

column called “Gathers No Moss,” and the school colors were green and white.<br />

The motto “Fortiter, Fideliter” appeared in school jewelry and was also featured<br />

in the alma mater.<br />

The present theater building was our gym, with the lockers behind. We fielded<br />

teams in baseball, football, and basketball, and later hockey (playing in the<br />

State Fair Coliseum), competing with junior teams at Nichols, Allendale, Troy<br />

CD, Utica CD, and Verbeck Hall teams from The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>.<br />

The football field, which had been a pasture, was a far cry from the level and<br />

manicured field of today: it had an undulating surface and was full, not of<br />

pebbles, of rocks. We all spent time picking up rocks before each day’s football<br />

practice.<br />

The library was meager; and such terms as “multimedia” and “Model U.N.”<br />

would have been meaningless to us. But we did struggle through Caesar’s Gallic<br />

Wars under patient tutelage, learned and then forgot algebra, wrote turgid<br />

essays, and enjoyed weekends…just like the students today.<br />

And I like to think that we first students at <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, along with those<br />

visionary parents and pioneering masters, helped lay the groundwork for the<br />

<strong>School</strong>, which rolled over a long, bumpy road to the thriving MPH of today and<br />

were ourselves well-served in the process.<br />

The MPH school year begins with each student<br />

welcomed by shaking hands with each teacher<br />

and the entire administration. As a rite of<br />

passage, members of the Senior Class join this<br />

line after receiving their welcome handshake.<br />

Today, with the support of over 3,000<br />

alumni throughout the world, <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> benefits from giving<br />

students a strong sense of history.<br />

Plaques dedicated to alumni who gave<br />

their lives in WWI, WWII, Korea and<br />

Vietnam personalize these significant<br />

events. Photographs of the undefeated<br />

football teams from The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> encourage school pride in our<br />

athletic tradition. “Headboy” plaques<br />

lining the hallway of the McNeil Science<br />

Center inspire top students to work<br />

hard so their names will live on in the<br />

school archives.<br />

In a culture increasingly obsessed with<br />

“today,” <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, with<br />

roots firmly planted in our community,<br />

relies on the wisdom and strength of<br />

the past to give its students the finest<br />

education possible for the future.<br />

12 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Our history lives on our walls, in our people, and<br />

is imparted to our students.<br />

The Making of<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>:<br />

A Tale of Two <strong>School</strong>s<br />

By Tina Morgan,<br />

director of development<br />

Reprinted from the Spring 2006 <strong>Reflections</strong><br />

Head of <strong>School</strong> Baxter Ball often<br />

refers to <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> as<br />

the “little school that could.” A casual<br />

visitor to the campus might interpret<br />

this to mean that the accomplishments<br />

of the students, alumni, and faculty are<br />

amazing despite the small physical<br />

plant…and they are indeed. However,<br />

when referring to MPH’s history,<br />

perhaps a more apropos analogy would<br />

be “the little school that almost wasn’t.”<br />

A child of its two parent schools,<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> and <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, MPH retains<br />

qualities of each. Its history is one of<br />

struggles and triumphs, and alumni can<br />

be proud of the part they each played in<br />

making MPH the success it is today.<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> Heritage<br />

“To rear men well-built and vital, full of<br />

wisdom… full of energy… full of faith.”<br />

With these words the Rev. Frederick Dan<br />

Huntington founded St. John’s <strong>School</strong><br />

in 1869. St. John’s was a non-military,<br />

all-boys school for the first ten years of<br />

its existence. The military component<br />

was added to St. John’s in 1879, but by<br />

1887 dwindling enrollment left the<br />

<strong>School</strong> on the verge of closing. To<br />

survive, St. John’s needed to change.<br />

The man responsible for turning around<br />

St. John’s was Col. William Verbeck.<br />

Assuming all financial responsibility for<br />

the <strong>School</strong>, he was a man with a gift for<br />

educating, managing, and inspiring<br />

boys. Military schools were gaining in<br />

popularity and Verbeck capitalized on<br />

the country’s enthusiasm for military<br />

education. He placed emphasis on and<br />

refined military training for boys<br />

believing that “under such a system a<br />

truly manly and independent nature is<br />

cultivated.” Under his leadership, the<br />

<strong>School</strong> thrived and was renamed The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> in 1924.<br />

Verbeck served The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

until his death in 1930. For the next 40<br />

years, The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> continued to<br />

thrive and gained national acclaim as<br />

one of the country’s premier educational<br />

institutions, both militarily and<br />

academically.<br />

Not Alone in Battle<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>’ Position<br />

at the time of the Merger<br />

For all appearances, The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

of 1969 was in a great position. It was<br />

graduating some of the finest students<br />

in the nation, was recognized as a<br />

Military Honor <strong>School</strong>, had recently built<br />

a new dorm, and had just kicked off its<br />

Centennial Campaign to raise money for<br />

the endowment. A mere 12 months later,<br />

however, The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> merged<br />

with <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. More than one Old Boy<br />

asked “What happened”<br />

Fiscally, <strong>Manlius</strong> was standing on thin<br />

ice. The <strong>School</strong> relied on an enrollment<br />

of 300 students to meet its operating<br />

costs. Without an endowment, something<br />

the Board was trying to address<br />

through the Centennial Campaign, even<br />

a slight decline in enrollment meant the<br />

<strong>School</strong> was operating in the red. Unfortunately<br />

timing was also not on<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>’ side as the country’s enthusiasm<br />

for military education was quickly<br />

waning. Vietnam had a profound effect<br />

on America’s perception of the military<br />

and military schools. Although <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

seemed to be busting at the seams, as<br />

evidenced by the necessity of building<br />

Pixley Hall in 1967, it was in a precarious<br />

position. Much of the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

infrastructure was in need of updating<br />

and repairs, and operating costs had<br />

increased dramatically with the oil<br />

embargo in effect. <strong>Manlius</strong> treasurer, Al<br />

Wertheimer ’55C remembers that the<br />

heating costs had increased from around<br />

$40,000 annually to over $300,000 in<br />

just two years.<br />

To meet the fixed operating costs,<br />

The conditions that led to the merger and subsequent demilitarization of<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> impacted hundreds of military schools nationwide.<br />

During the heyday of military education, there were 116 military secondary<br />

schools in the Northeastern United States. Today, only three remain.<br />

For a listing of schools that had to choose between evolving and changing,<br />

or closing their doors, go to www.cadetweb.net.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> was forced into further debt,<br />

which they took on in good faith,<br />

counting on an upswing in enrollment,<br />

a promised bequest, and the success of<br />

the Centennial Campaign. The fiscally<br />

minded Board, however, started working<br />

on an alternate option. It was during the<br />

spring of 1969 that the Board first<br />

approached <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> about a<br />

partnership. Even after <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s<br />

initial rebuff, <strong>Manlius</strong> knew it needed to<br />

change with the times. That spring, the<br />

Board’s Executive Committee voted<br />

unanimously to recommend that<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> be converted to a non-military<br />

prep school.<br />

Despite these precautionary measures,<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> remained confident that the<br />

tide would turn. However, when only<br />

285 cadets returned for the 1969 school<br />

year, <strong>Manlius</strong> knew it would have to act<br />

soon. Although the Board appealed to<br />

parents, alumni, and faculty, and all<br />

fought valiantly to boost enrollment,<br />

solicit Centennial Campaign pledges,<br />

and cut back on as many programs as<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 13


Robert M. Kallet ‘39B, 1970 Chairman<br />

of the <strong>Manlius</strong> Board of Trustees,<br />

Robert B. Simonton ’50, 1970 President of<br />

the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> Board of Trustees,<br />

Dr. Richard Barter, 1970 Headmaster of<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, and Col. Hugh Irish,<br />

1970 President of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Sharon King ‘71, Richard Clemow ‘71B,<br />

O’Hara Humphries ‘71B, and Dorothy<br />

Maffei ’70 collaborate on merger ideas.<br />

Sharon King ‘71 and<br />

Richard Clemow ‘71B reflect<br />

on the impending merger.<br />

they could, <strong>Manlius</strong> was quickly<br />

running out of time. By December of<br />

1969 the banks were unwilling to lend<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> further funds and called on the<br />

Board to form an action plan. Without<br />

the banks willingness to lend further<br />

money, <strong>Manlius</strong> would have to shut its<br />

doors mid-year. As <strong>Manlius</strong> Board<br />

Chairman Bob Kallet ’39B said in a<br />

December 10, 1969 Board memo: “We<br />

have been requested by our supporting<br />

banks to present a realistic program for<br />

the continued successful financial<br />

operation of the <strong>School</strong>. Our deficits<br />

continue, due largely to the failure of<br />

15% of accepted candidates to register<br />

for the fall term, and despite the<br />

imposition of every possible economy<br />

upon the <strong>School</strong>’s operation.” The talks<br />

with <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> took on a new urgency<br />

and with <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s renewed interest,<br />

a formal proposal was planned for the<br />

January 17 Board meeting.<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s Story<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> was founded with a mission<br />

that mirrors that of <strong>Manlius</strong>. In 1926 a<br />

group of Syracuse fathers decided to<br />

establish a school where their “boys<br />

could receive the benefits of an academic<br />

and physical education to train<br />

their minds and bodies for the future.”<br />

The current DeWitt campus was purchased<br />

and classes were held in the<br />

Farmhouse until 1929, when a new<br />

building was constructed to house<br />

Upper <strong>School</strong> students. Twenty-three<br />

years later, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> began to accept<br />

female students.<br />

Throughout the next twenty years,<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> had its own challenges and<br />

champions. Like <strong>Manlius</strong>, it had a Board<br />

of Trustees that was instrumental in<br />

assuring its growth and success. Slowly<br />

but steadily, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> continued to<br />

grow and by the late 1960s the <strong>School</strong><br />

was in desperate need of more space.<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> at the<br />

Time of the Merger<br />

To the students of the 60s, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

was a thriving institution. In 1969, it<br />

boasted an enrollment of 292 day<br />

students, the highest in its history.<br />

Financially, although <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> was<br />

better off than <strong>Manlius</strong> in that it had a<br />

low mortgage on the property and did<br />

not carry many outstanding debts, it too<br />

had been funding capital improvements<br />

out of operating income. According to<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s Board of Trustee President,<br />

Bob Simonton ’50, during the summer<br />

of 1969 <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> had arranged for<br />

short-term borrowing to meet its<br />

operating costs and had operated at a<br />

slight deficit for the past few years. The<br />

proposed merger was seen as a<br />

collaboration that would potentially<br />

decrease some overhead costs in administration,<br />

student aid, and faculty<br />

salaries, while increasing campus<br />

facilities. The Board viewed the other<br />

option, expanding the DeWitt campus,<br />

as too limiting. As stated in the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

January 22, 1970 press release, “further<br />

expansion of <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> is possible, but<br />

only at particular grade levels because of<br />

the size and inflexibility of its present<br />

plant.”<br />

But increasing physical space and lowering<br />

the overhead costs were not the only<br />

concerns for <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. Although<br />

enrollment was at an all time high,<br />

there were still only approximately 100<br />

Upper <strong>School</strong> students. A 1970 <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> press release elaborates: “the<br />

present size of the <strong>School</strong> does not<br />

permit parallel programming of honors<br />

and advanced courses.” A survey of<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> students who left before<br />

graduation, mostly to attend boarding<br />

schools, further confirmed the need to<br />

expand the student body. Survey results<br />

showed that many students would not<br />

have left <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> had the size of the<br />

Upper <strong>School</strong> permitted greater scope<br />

and depth of athletic, cultural, and<br />

social activities. Even current students,<br />

parents, and administrators recognized<br />

the limitations that the small student<br />

body had on <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. The question<br />

wasn’t if <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> should expand, but<br />

rather, how <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> should expand.<br />

It was at this time that <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

approached <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> with the idea of<br />

collaboration.<br />

The Rocky Years<br />

Although there were the obvious downsides<br />

to a merger, the potential benefits<br />

for each school were intriguing. <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

had the opportunity to disengage itself<br />

from the military stigma, which they<br />

had already planned to do before<br />

approaching <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, while having<br />

an instant influx of students who would<br />

accommodate for the attrition of<br />

demilitarization. <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> saw the<br />

merger as a solution to its space<br />

concerns and felt that the addition of<br />

the <strong>Manlius</strong> cadets would quickly<br />

enhance their academic, athletic,<br />

14 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


cultural, and social offerings.<br />

On paper, the merger seemed like a<br />

great idea but neither <strong>School</strong> foresaw all<br />

the difficulties that would arise. Had the<br />

merger gone as envisioned, both the<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> and the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> campuses<br />

would be preserved and alumni and<br />

friends would continue to support their<br />

alma maters. In reality, the newly<br />

formed <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> faced<br />

challenges and trials that no one<br />

anticipated.<br />

Once the merger was officially<br />

announced in January of 1970, <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

and <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> moved forward with the<br />

consolidation plans. Richard Barter,<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s Headmaster, was appointed<br />

as Headmaster of the new <strong>School</strong>, with<br />

most of the Board of Trustees from<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> and <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> agreeing to<br />

serve on the newly formed Board.<br />

Although Barter used his considerable<br />

skills to keep the <strong>School</strong> going, the<br />

merger affected morale, enrollment, and<br />

financial support more negatively than<br />

anticipated. Enrollment dropped rapidly<br />

and neither <strong>School</strong> had an endowment<br />

to weather such a decline.<br />

By April 1973, MPH was forced to close<br />

the Upper <strong>School</strong> on the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

campus as a cost-cutting measure. Board<br />

members started holding the first of the<br />

“save the school” meetings. Faculty<br />

member and alumnus Tom Denton ’65<br />

remembers the “lean years” and credits<br />

the Board of Trustees, and current and<br />

former parents, for keeping MPH open.<br />

Often they reached into their personal<br />

pockets to pay heating bills and even<br />

faculty salaries. Denton recalls these<br />

meetings as revival-type forums which<br />

took place in the Barn. During this time,<br />

even faculty members were expected to<br />

tighten belts.<br />

From the heroic efforts of MPH parents<br />

and Trustees, the <strong>School</strong> was able to<br />

reopen in the fall of 1973 by consolidating<br />

onto the DeWitt campus. Although<br />

the MPH Board gave careful thought<br />

and consideration to moving the <strong>School</strong><br />

out to the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus, the cost of<br />

rehabilitating the buildings was<br />

prohibitive and there were no facilities<br />

to accommodate Lower <strong>School</strong> students.<br />

In addition, the “superhighway” that<br />

would have connected <strong>Manlius</strong> to the<br />

city of Syracuse was never constructed,<br />

limiting the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus’<br />

accessibility for day students.<br />

Even vacant, the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus cost<br />

the <strong>School</strong> in excess of $100,000 a year<br />

for debt service, amortization of the<br />

Pixley Hall loan, sewer, security services,<br />

insurance, and other miscellaneous<br />

upkeep costs. These expenses forced<br />

MPH to put the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus on the<br />

market in the fall of 1973 with an<br />

asking price of $3 million. Even though<br />

the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus was appraised at<br />

$2.9 million, it turned out not to be a<br />

quickly liquidable asset. Zoning<br />

restrictions, rehabilitation and/or<br />

demolition costs, and rising interest<br />

rates turned away prospective buyers.<br />

After a few years on the market, the<br />

asking price was dropped to $1.2<br />

million, an amount that barely covered<br />

the <strong>School</strong>’s debt on the buildings and<br />

land. During the time the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

campus was for sale, MPH was able to<br />

survive largely because of the $1 million<br />

Pixley bequest it received in 1975. This<br />

money allowed the <strong>School</strong> to survive by<br />

paying creditors, meeting current<br />

operating deficits, and buying more<br />

time to sell the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus.<br />

Despite marketing efforts, the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

campus sat vacant until 1979, when<br />

Longely Jones purchased it for a little<br />

over $800,000. Contrary to rumors, the<br />

sale amount barely covered the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

remaining debt.<br />

Stronger Together<br />

At times, alumni of both <strong>Manlius</strong> and<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> have questioned the wisdom<br />

of the merger. There is no question that<br />

the <strong>School</strong> has evolved. <strong>Manlius</strong> had no<br />

choice and <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> took a chance.<br />

And MPH continues to evolve. Even<br />

alumni from the 1990s sometimes find<br />

it hard to recognize “their” school. But<br />

by the looks of MPH in 2007, all alumni<br />

have had a hand in its success and can<br />

be proud of their roots.<br />

As a key player in the merger, former<br />

Trustee Les Deming ’46A sums up the<br />

reasons for the decision to merge: “I just<br />

couldn’t stand to see all the money and<br />

work that had been poured into<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> for the past 100 years, be sold<br />

off and used to make some ‘banker’<br />

richer. By reinvesting our efforts into<br />

academia, we would ensure that the<br />

work of our predecessors was not in<br />

vain. Boys, and yes, girls too, would<br />

continue to benefit from the vision of<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>.” To survive, <strong>Manlius</strong> needed to<br />

change. To grow and continue in its<br />

VOICES<br />

FROM THE MERGER<br />

“The old <strong>Manlius</strong> is not a place, nor buildings;<br />

but it is rather people and ideas with whom we<br />

have become friends. In this sense, the old<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> is not gone, but is still <strong>Manlius</strong> and ever<br />

will be. Those of us here view the merger of the<br />

two schools with mixed emotions – the mixed<br />

emotions of a father who regrets the passing of<br />

his son’s boyhood yet looks ahead with hope to<br />

his son’s future. We can look to the future with<br />

the hope inherent in Sir Walter Scott’s words,<br />

‘Nothing that was worthy in the past departs…<br />

it lives and works through endless change.’”<br />

– Dave Edwards,<br />

head of the English Department at <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

for the past 24 years, as printed in the Winter<br />

1970 Old Boys Bulletin.<br />

“During my 30-years at <strong>Manlius</strong>, I have<br />

witnessed three cycles in public acceptance of<br />

military schools. It’s hard for us to remember that<br />

prior to World War II many parents harbored<br />

unfavorable opinions of the concept. Many<br />

expressed their disapproval in writing and in<br />

their reluctance to send their sons here. Shortly<br />

after WWII, military schools became extremely<br />

popular and it was fashionable to have a relative<br />

at <strong>Manlius</strong>. Twenty-five years ago, classrooms<br />

were full. The years since have seen a steady<br />

decline in both parents’ and students’ interest in<br />

attending even as good a military boarding<br />

school as <strong>Manlius</strong>. No reflection on our honor<br />

school, but rather a complete turnabout in adult<br />

and juvenile attitudes…no, <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> is<br />

not dead. Instead, it has a new life and a new<br />

meaning for today’s students, tomorrow’s<br />

leaders.”<br />

– Bernie Shaw,<br />

former <strong>Manlius</strong> and MPH faculty member,<br />

as printed in the Summer 1970<br />

Old Boys Bulletin<br />

“It is my personal opinion that the merger of the<br />

two schools should not bring to an end the<br />

traditions and memories of either school, but<br />

should reinforce our conviction that through the<br />

merger we are able to continue the quality<br />

education both offered. Each school brought its<br />

strengths to the merger and hopefully we can<br />

continue to offer a much needed service to young<br />

men and women.”<br />

– Chuck Beeler ’54,<br />

director of admission,<br />

as printed in the Winter 1971 Alumni Bulletin.<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 15


success, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> needed to<br />

change, too. Together they<br />

succeeded.<br />

MPH was truly created by the<br />

blood, sweat, and tears of its<br />

predecessors. As reflected in the<br />

October 11, 1969 <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Board minutes, it was the Board’s<br />

heartfelt wish that “the gates of<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> always remain open for<br />

those who seek knowledge and,<br />

once attained, signify a friendly<br />

welcome to all ‘Old Boys,’ their<br />

families, and friends, down<br />

though the years.” Judging from<br />

the hundreds of students who<br />

seek knowledge in our halls and<br />

the scores of alumni who attend<br />

Clambake each year, the valiant<br />

men and women of <strong>Manlius</strong> and<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> ensured that those<br />

gates remained open. At MPH,<br />

all alumni are welcomed with<br />

open arms and encouraged to see<br />

for themselves just how much<br />

they have to be proud of. The<br />

Phoenix has indeed risen from<br />

the ashes.<br />

A special thanks to the following<br />

individuals who contributed to this<br />

article by sharing their memories or<br />

simply reviewing it for accuracy:<br />

Chuck Beeler ’54, Les Deming<br />

’46A, Tom Denton ’65, Harold<br />

“Bud” Edwards ’40, Jon Lichtman<br />

’70, Bob Simonton ’50, and Al<br />

Wertheimer ’55C.<br />

MANLIUS PEBBLE HILL SCHOOL<br />

Historical<br />

Timeline<br />

1869<br />

St. John’s <strong>School</strong><br />

founded by<br />

Episcopal Bishop<br />

F.D. Huntington<br />

and Judge George<br />

Comstock as<br />

diocesan<br />

institution without<br />

Church ownership,<br />

located in the<br />

Village of <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

1933<br />

Thomas McIntyre,<br />

future U.S. Senator<br />

from New<br />

Hampshire,<br />

graduates from The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

1881<br />

Military<br />

component added<br />

to St. John’s,<br />

becomes St. John’s<br />

Military <strong>School</strong><br />

1935<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

campus completes<br />

major renovations<br />

and facilities<br />

expansion<br />

1888<br />

General William<br />

Verbeck takes over<br />

as Head of <strong>School</strong><br />

1940<br />

Colonel Verbeck<br />

dies and Brigadier<br />

General Asa<br />

Singleton becomes<br />

Superintendent;<br />

Norman Waldron<br />

is appointed<br />

Headmaster<br />

1902<br />

Major fire<br />

destroys the<br />

majority of St.<br />

John’s buildings<br />

on April 8<br />

1946<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> admits<br />

girls in the<br />

“primary<br />

school”(Lower<br />

<strong>School</strong>)<br />

1960<br />

1970<br />

1973<br />

1979<br />

16 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010<br />

Howell Estes, III,<br />

future four star<br />

general and former<br />

U.S. Commander<br />

in Chief of<br />

Aerospace,<br />

graduates from The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

and The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> merge,<br />

forming <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>;<br />

the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

campus is used for<br />

the Lower <strong>School</strong><br />

and the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

campus for Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong><br />

MPH closes the<br />

Upper <strong>School</strong> on<br />

the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

Campus to cut<br />

overall expenses<br />

and moves its<br />

entire operation to<br />

the DeWitt campus<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Campus<br />

is sold to a real<br />

estate developer<br />

after six years<br />

on the market


1919<br />

1920<br />

1924<br />

1927<br />

1930<br />

1931<br />

William Randolph<br />

Hearst, Jr., son of<br />

the founder of the<br />

Hearst Newspaper<br />

Corporation, attends<br />

St. John’s Military<br />

<strong>School</strong><br />

Main academic<br />

building burns<br />

down on<br />

November 14<br />

St. John is renamed<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

under Gen. William<br />

Verbeck<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

founded by group of<br />

Syracuse fathers as a<br />

nonsectarian,<br />

nonprofit<br />

organization under<br />

the Regents of the<br />

State of New York,<br />

located in Orville<br />

(DeWitt); 49 students<br />

between 7 and 16 are<br />

enrolled. Robert<br />

Boydon is<br />

headmaster.<br />

General William<br />

Verbeck dies and<br />

Colonel Guido<br />

Verbeck becomes<br />

superintendent<br />

First class, consisting<br />

of three students,<br />

graduates from<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

1947<br />

1951<br />

1952<br />

1954<br />

1959<br />

1960<br />

General Ray Barker’s<br />

reign as<br />

superintendent<br />

begins<br />

Dodge Gymnasium<br />

catches fire on<br />

Lower <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

Campus<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

becomes<br />

coeducational<br />

through Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong><br />

The first female<br />

graduates from<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Steve Wynn,<br />

current Las Vegas<br />

entrepreneur and<br />

business mogul,<br />

graduates from The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

General Ray Barker<br />

steps down as<br />

superintendent<br />

1990<br />

1992<br />

1994<br />

1999<br />

2006<br />

2008<br />

2010<br />

Baxter Ball<br />

takes over as<br />

Head of<br />

<strong>School</strong> at<br />

MPH<br />

World War I<br />

cannon<br />

monument is<br />

moved to the<br />

MPH<br />

campus<br />

McNeil Science<br />

and Communications<br />

Center is<br />

constructed<br />

Historic flagpole is<br />

moved from The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

campus to current<br />

location at MPH;<br />

Mezzalingua Humanities<br />

Center is<br />

constructed, and the<br />

Barn is renovated<br />

The Laurie<br />

Mezzalingua ’86<br />

Center for Early<br />

Learning is<br />

constructed and<br />

MPH’s fourth major<br />

capital campaign<br />

begins with a goal of<br />

raising $6 million<br />

MPH opens with<br />

its largest number<br />

of employees – 100<br />

faculty and staff –<br />

and graduates its<br />

largest class in<br />

recent history –<br />

80 Seniors<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

celebrates its<br />

140th year.<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 17


Heads of <strong>School</strong><br />

OUR SCHOOL HAS BENEFITED FROM GENERATIONS OF STRONG LEADERSHIP.<br />

General<br />

William Verbeck,<br />

the President of<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

for over 40 years.<br />

Charles Bradlee,<br />

the Headmaster of<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

from 1932 to 1953.<br />

James E. Crosby, Jr.,<br />

the Headmaster of the<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

from 1975-1979.<br />

Baxter F. Ball,<br />

the current Head<br />

of <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>.<br />

1869-1970<br />

St. John’s <strong>School</strong>/The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

1869 Rt. Rev. Frederick Dan Huntington,<br />

founder<br />

1888 – 1930 General William Verbeck<br />

1930 – 1940 Col. Guido F. Verbeck<br />

1940 – 1942 Brig. General Asa I. Singleton<br />

1942 – 1946 Lt. Col. D. P. McCarthy<br />

1947 – 1960 Maj. Gen. R. W. Barker<br />

1960 – 1969 Brig. Gen. J. K. Wilson, Jr.<br />

1969 – 1970 Col. Hugh J. Irish<br />

1869<br />

1927-1970<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

1927 – 1932 Robert Boyden<br />

1932 – 1953 Charles Bradlee<br />

1953 – 1963 John Hodgdon<br />

1963 – 1968 James B. Draper<br />

1968 – 1970 Richard Barter<br />

1970-today<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

1970 – 1973 Richard Barter<br />

1973 – 1975 Leibert Sedgwick<br />

1975 – 1979 James E. Crosby, Jr.<br />

1979 – 1982 Raymond Nelson<br />

1982 – 1990 James Songster<br />

1990 – present Baxter F. Ball<br />

2<br />

0 1<br />

0<br />

18 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


NowAND<br />

Then...<br />

Snapshots of<br />

Our <strong>School</strong> through the Years<br />

Forbidden Hair Styles:<br />

circa The <strong>Manlius</strong> 1959<br />

Student Handbook<br />

“Cadets will have their hair cut as<br />

frequently as is necessary to insure a<br />

neat, well-groomed appearance. Hair<br />

will be kept short on top, with a<br />

maximum length of about two inches; it<br />

will be clipped closely on the sides.<br />

Cadets will keep their hair neatly<br />

brushed or combed. Unusual, or “freak”<br />

haircuts such as the ‘ducktail,’ the<br />

‘flattop,’ or the ‘balboa’ are prohibited.”<br />

THEN<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> Lower <strong>School</strong> – 1950s <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> Lower <strong>School</strong> – 2010<br />

Lee Sedgwick<br />

Adjutant<br />

Dress Code: reprinted<br />

from the 2009/2010<br />

Parent/Student Handbook<br />

Learning to recognize generally accepted<br />

standards of appearance in academic<br />

and social situations is an important rite<br />

of passage to adulthood. While students<br />

will wish to follow current fashion<br />

trends, the <strong>School</strong> expects them to dress<br />

appropriately.<br />

NOW<br />

The goal of the dress code is for<br />

students to wear clothing that is neat,<br />

clean and appropriate for school. If<br />

what a student is wearing is not – even<br />

if it seems to be within the letter of the<br />

code outlined below – the student will<br />

be considered out of dress code and will<br />

be expected to wear either an MPH<br />

collared polo shirt or MPH sweat pants<br />

for the day, as needed. Repeat offenders<br />

will be subject to more severe consequences.<br />

The following items may not be worn:<br />

• Yoga pants/hard tails (essentially, skin<br />

tight pants with no pockets)<br />

• Sweatpants or athletic pants<br />

• Facial piercings, body piercings, or<br />

unnaturally colored hair<br />

• T-shirts<br />

• Inappropriate graphics and/or writing<br />

on clothing<br />

• Pajamas<br />

• Hats indoors<br />

For boys, shirts with long tails must be<br />

kept tucked in.<br />

Daily Program for <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> Lower <strong>School</strong> in 1950s<br />

8:30 a.m. Arrival<br />

8:50 Classroom Plans<br />

9:00 Studies<br />

10:30 Recess<br />

11:00 Studies<br />

11:45 Lunch<br />

12:20 p.m. Prepare for Rest Period<br />

12:30 “Lights Out” (soft music)<br />

1:15 Littlest Ones Continue<br />

Rest / Older Ones –<br />

Studies<br />

2:10 Recess<br />

4:00 Refreshments<br />

4:10 Studies<br />

4:50 Dismissal<br />

THEN<br />

Daily Program for<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

Second Grade in 2010<br />

8:00 a.m. Arrival<br />

8:15 Must Do’s and Welcome<br />

8:45 World Language or Music<br />

9:25 Reading<br />

10:15 Integrated (Social<br />

Studies/Science Theme)<br />

11:05 Lunch<br />

NOW<br />

11:45 Physical Education<br />

12:15 p.m. Spelling/Phonics<br />

12:50 Math<br />

1:55 Read Aloud<br />

2:35 Recess<br />

3:05 Check Out<br />

3:15 Dismissal<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Calendar for 1929-1930<br />

Sept. 17<br />

Nov. 27- Fall Term Begins<br />

Dec. 2 Thanksgiving Recess<br />

Dec. 20-<br />

Jan. 6 Holiday Recess<br />

Feb. 22 Washington’s Birthday, no<br />

classes<br />

Apr. 3-14 Spring Recess<br />

Apr. 18 Father and Son Banquet<br />

May 30 Memorial Day, no classes<br />

Jun. 6 <strong>School</strong> Closes<br />

Jun. 9-14 College Entrance Review<br />

Jun. 16-21 College Entrance<br />

Examinations<br />

THEN<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Calendar for 2009-2010<br />

Sept. 14 Fall Term Begins<br />

Oct. 12 Columbus Day, no classes<br />

Nov. 11 Veteran’s Day, no classes<br />

Nov. 25-27 Thanksgiving Recess<br />

Dec. 21-<br />

Jan 1 Holiday Recess<br />

NOW<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 19


Jan. 18 Martin Luther King Day,<br />

no classes<br />

Feb. 15-19 Winter Recess<br />

Apr. 19-23 Spring Recess<br />

May 3-7,<br />

10-14 AP Exams<br />

May 31 Memorial Day, no classes<br />

Jun. 6 Commencement<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> Lunches in 1930<br />

Reprinted from a 1930s <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

admission guide<br />

A hot lunch is served at the school every<br />

day. Boys are required to eat lunch at<br />

school. The menus for the lunch are<br />

carefully prepared to give a balanced<br />

diet, and the food is plain, but<br />

wholesome and nourishing. Boys sit at<br />

long tables by classes with a master at<br />

each table. The serving is done<br />

according to the cafeteria plan, but boys<br />

do not choose their own foods.<br />

THEN<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Dining Hall<br />

Regulations in the 1950s<br />

Reprinted from The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>’s 1955 student handbook<br />

The wasting of food, taking of food, or<br />

equipment from the tables out of the<br />

Dining Hall or interfering in any way<br />

with the food of others is prohibited.<br />

THEN<br />

• Marching in and out of the dining<br />

hall will be at attention.<br />

• Faculty will be seated at the head of<br />

tables when they are eating in the<br />

Dining Hall.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

Lunches in 2010<br />

Reprinted from MPH’s 2009-2010<br />

Parent-Student Handbook<br />

NOW<br />

MPH students are expected to share in<br />

the lunchtime experience — talking<br />

with others at the table, enjoying the<br />

meal, and cleaning the tables at the end<br />

of lunch.<br />

Many options are available for lunch.<br />

These include a complete salad bar and<br />

vegetarian offerings. Daily entrees offer<br />

a wide variety of nutritionally wellbalanced<br />

choices. Soup, assorted<br />

sandwiches and fruit are available each<br />

day. The complete menu is posted on<br />

the school website.<br />

Students go immediately to the dining<br />

hall at the end of the class or activity<br />

preceding the lunch period. There are<br />

no table assignments for Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong>ers. In the Middle <strong>School</strong>,<br />

students are to be seated at assigned<br />

tables and must remain in the dining<br />

hall until they are dismissed. Lower<br />

<strong>School</strong> students are assigned seats with<br />

other Lower <strong>School</strong> students and faculty<br />

members.<br />

It is the responsibility of each student to<br />

see that tables are clean and/or set<br />

correctly for the following lunch period.<br />

Food may not be taken out of the<br />

dining hall without permission.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Discipline<br />

Reprinted from the 1960<br />

student handbook<br />

Demerits are not punishment, but a<br />

means of rating cadets in conduct. They<br />

will be given for every violation of<br />

regulations. A cadet will be reported as<br />

deficient in conduct if he exceeds 200<br />

demerits during the academic year.<br />

THEN<br />

Understanding the<br />

Academic Conditional –<br />

MPH 2010<br />

By Jim Eagen, head of Middle <strong>School</strong><br />

Reprinted from the Icebox Bulletin,<br />

March 2010<br />

NOW<br />

Over the years, the “academic conditional”<br />

has become a part of the MPH<br />

vernacular and a part of the school<br />

experience for many students. In place<br />

since the days of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>,<br />

the academic conditional continues to<br />

serve as a support mechanism for<br />

students having difficulty completing<br />

assignments. An academic conditional,<br />

which requires a student to remain after<br />

school to complete work, is not the<br />

same as a behavioral conditional. It is<br />

not recorded in the same manner, nor is<br />

it meant to be a punishment. Students<br />

are held after school, not because they<br />

are “in trouble,” but because they may<br />

be headed toward academic jeopardy<br />

due to incomplete work.<br />

Here is how an academic conditional<br />

works: It starts quite simply – a student<br />

doesn’t complete his or her work. The<br />

reason might be other obligations, like<br />

playing sports, a lack of focus, or just a<br />

lapse in memory. Whatever the reason,<br />

a student can be assigned a conditional<br />

by his or her teacher in order to get the<br />

work done. At the time a student is<br />

informed of an academic conditional,<br />

the teacher also notifies the Middle<br />

<strong>School</strong> Office, which then contacts the<br />

parents to let them know their son or<br />

daughter must stay after school to<br />

complete the necessary work.<br />

It is crucial to understand that, once the<br />

conditional is assigned, the student is<br />

responsible for making the conditional<br />

happen. It is not the teacher’s responsibility<br />

to track down the student after<br />

school. If a student misses or refuses to<br />

show up for the conditional, he or she<br />

is then entering the behavioral conditional<br />

system, which is punitive in<br />

design. This willful behavior constitutes<br />

“failure to heed the instruction of a<br />

faculty member” and “skipping without<br />

permission” – infractions far more<br />

serious than failing to complete<br />

academic work. Once a student stays<br />

after school with the teacher and<br />

completes the required work, his or her<br />

academic conditional is satisfied and<br />

the student is free to leave.<br />

That’s it! Educators agree that missed<br />

work and incomplete assignments make<br />

it nearly impossible for a student to<br />

succeed in Middle <strong>School</strong>. Teachers,<br />

therefore, use the academic conditional<br />

to prevent academic problems from<br />

developing, and it often happens that a<br />

student who serves his or her first<br />

academic conditional resolves to<br />

thereafter complete all work and avoid<br />

future conditionals!<br />

Typical Daily Schedule<br />

for a <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Cadet in 1969<br />

Reprinted from the 1969 <strong>Manlius</strong> Cadet<br />

Handbook<br />

THEN<br />

First Call 0615<br />

Reveille/Mess Call 0630<br />

Assembly (In Formation) 0640<br />

1st Mess: 2 companies 0645-0715<br />

2nd Mess: 2 companies 0720-0745<br />

Sick Call 0745<br />

<strong>School</strong> Call 0750<br />

Recall 1540<br />

Recreation/Athletics 1545<br />

Sick Call 1700<br />

20 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Recall from Athletics 1730<br />

Mess Call 1740<br />

Assembly/Retreat<br />

(2 companies) 1745<br />

1st Mess 1750-1820<br />

2nd Mess 1825-1850<br />

Study Hall 1945<br />

Recall from Study Hall 2145<br />

Call to Quarters 2200<br />

Tattoo 2205<br />

Taps 2215<br />

A Typical Schedule<br />

for an MPH Upper <strong>School</strong><br />

Student in 2010<br />

8:10 – 9:30 First block<br />

9:30 – 9:45 Break – snack<br />

available in<br />

Dining Hall<br />

9:45 – 11:05 Second block<br />

11:05 – 11:45 Tutorial – teachers<br />

available in<br />

classrooms for<br />

extra help<br />

11:45 – 1:05 Third block<br />

1:05 – 1:45 Upper <strong>School</strong> lunch<br />

1:45 – 3:05 Fourth block<br />

3:05 onward Extracurricular<br />

Activities/<br />

Athletic Practice<br />

NOW<br />

History of The Windmill...<br />

MPH literary magazine,<br />

newspaper, magazine<br />

The Windmill Literary Magazine has<br />

always served a significant and historic<br />

role in the history of <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>. The Windmill was first<br />

published on February 27, 1892 as a<br />

bimonthly periodical for the St. John’s<br />

Military <strong>School</strong>. The short magazine<br />

had articles, poems, and sketches of a<br />

light-hearted nature and sold for 10<br />

cents a copy. MPH still has the first<br />

volume of the “Wind Mill”, as it was<br />

then called, in its possession.<br />

By 1916, the Wind Mill had grown in<br />

size and quality. More technical<br />

cartoons and captivating short stories<br />

graced the pages as the Wind Mill<br />

seemed to become thicker each year. As<br />

St. John’s transformed into The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>, the Wind Mill also found a new<br />

niche on campus. The Wind Mill<br />

developed into the <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

newspaper through the 1930s and<br />

1940s. A. Richard Arnold ’43HQ, the<br />

editor of the Wind Mill from 1942-43,<br />

recollects his fond experience of<br />

working on the Wind Mill:<br />

I had taken printing as an elective course as<br />

a sophomore in Nottingham High <strong>School</strong> in<br />

Syracuse in 1940-41. The printing<br />

equipment in the village of <strong>Manlius</strong> was the<br />

same as that in Nottingham. On my<br />

weekends, I went into town on a special<br />

pass (the envy of the entire Cadet Corps...<br />

I could ogle and be whistled at by the local<br />

teenage females because of my classy formal<br />

dress uniform) where I set the hot-lead body<br />

type via Linotype, letter-by-letter handpicked<br />

and composed the headline type and<br />

block-mounted illustrations, and ran the<br />

local printer’s Heidelburg Press and his<br />

collator. Because both his assistants had<br />

been drafted into the Army when WWII<br />

started in December of 1941, and, because<br />

as a military school, we had a military<br />

priority for the newsprint paper itself, this<br />

combination of conditions was the only one<br />

under which our local printer could print<br />

this “non-essential” newspaper. The<br />

Windmill thus continued its (then) 30-year<br />

unbroken history as a <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> (and<br />

now MPH) tradition.<br />

History of the<br />

Student Newspaper,<br />

The Rolling Stone<br />

The Rolling Stone student newspaper<br />

has been delivering news and opinion<br />

on the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> and <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> worlds since at least 1927.<br />

The newspaper earned its moniker from<br />

the experience of clearing the campus<br />

and playing fields and finding so many<br />

stones. Stuart Hancock, Class of 1931<br />

PH, was The Rolling Stone’s first editor,<br />

He was succeeded by Franklin Moon, Jr.,<br />

and William F. Cutler.<br />

During its early decades, The Rolling<br />

Stone was produced six times a year and<br />

covered the usual topics of student<br />

interest (sports, “hops,” and school<br />

news), but sometime in the 1940s or<br />

1950s, The Rolling Stone became the<br />

yearbook of the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>. The<br />

trail goes a little cold, but it appears that<br />

in the 1960s, the newspaper and<br />

yearbook began sharing the name and<br />

did so until the merger in 1970 with<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Stewart F. Hancock, Class of 1968 PH,<br />

revived The Rolling Stone as the school<br />

newspaper when he came to MPH to<br />

teach a newspaper class in the early<br />

1990s. At that time, according to former<br />

MPH English Department Chair Diane<br />

Cook, the same editorial board served<br />

The Rolling Stone, The Windmill literary<br />

magazine, and the school yearbook.<br />

With Hancock’s initiation of a class<br />

devoted to publications and Cook’s<br />

stewardship of that class from 1995 to<br />

2006, The Rolling Stone gathered<br />

numerous awards at state and national<br />

competitions, including the Empire<br />

State Scholastic Press Association and<br />

the Columbia Scholastic Press<br />

Association. As a result, The Rolling<br />

Stone has become an enormous source<br />

of pride for MPH.<br />

Today, The Rolling Stone is produced by<br />

the journalism studio class, and Seniors<br />

taking the class receive elective credit in<br />

English. Recently, The Rolling Stone has<br />

been published five times per year, but<br />

the class is exploring the development<br />

of an online presence for the newspaper.<br />

In an age in which more and<br />

more schools are moving to a strictly<br />

online newspaper, it is a noteworthy<br />

indication of MPH’s institutional<br />

commitment to The Rolling Stone that<br />

it will continue to provide print editions<br />

even as it expands online. Regardless of<br />

the medium, The Rolling Stone<br />

continues to provide a forum for young<br />

people to accurately disseminate<br />

information and express their ideas,<br />

thus continuing the publication’s<br />

original mission of 1927.<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 21


Building Memories<br />

Our Campus,<br />

Past, Present and Future…<br />

While a school void of students is just bricks and mortar, there is no<br />

denying that the buildings and grounds surrounding our academic<br />

experience leave a lasting impression. In the last 140 years, our <strong>School</strong> has<br />

undergone tremendous growth and change. From the single building in the<br />

village of <strong>Manlius</strong> that housed the first class to enter St. John’s in 1869 to the<br />

present <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> campus in DeWitt, our spaces help define us as an<br />

institution and certainly have made for some fond memories.<br />

Our <strong>School</strong>’s first building and campus,<br />

St. John’s <strong>School</strong>, as it looked in 1869.<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Taking you way back to 1936-38...<br />

In the end part of the barn, there was a<br />

second floor. In my first weeks there,<br />

practicing football, my muscles<br />

tightened up to I could hardly climb the<br />

steep stairs.<br />

In study hall in the barn, I remember<br />

little, but my best memory was when<br />

Charles “Baldo” Swift, president of our<br />

class, learned about euphoric acid and<br />

iron filings in our chemistry class. He<br />

tried mixing the two and hiding the test<br />

tube in the back of a book in the library.<br />

The reaction sure worked and we ended<br />

up having to evacuate the school for<br />

about an hour.<br />

Then when the Andrews boys would try<br />

to study out on the concrete patio off the<br />

gym, they often ended up drenched by<br />

someone pouring water down the roof.<br />

Ed Barnard ’38<br />

(I must be the oldest living alumnus now)<br />

Editors’ response: Ed – you are in good<br />

company…we are still in touch with a good<br />

many alumni from the 1930s.<br />

I went to <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> in the late<br />

1930s and was also involved later as a<br />

board member. I remember helping to<br />

raise the money to construct the Bradlee<br />

building. We needed a ten classroom<br />

building and had a strict budget. When<br />

the architects came back with a high<br />

figure, Gene Irish and I decided to try<br />

and nail down a design that met both<br />

our needs and budget. We were successful<br />

and Bradlee was constructed at a<br />

total cost of $150,000.<br />

Bud Edwards ’40<br />

I remember when <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> had a<br />

janitor who raised carrier pigeons<br />

upstairs over the boys’ locker room in<br />

the barn.<br />

John R. Hamel ’57<br />

The Knox Farmhouse on the current campus.<br />

I remember in kindergarten that my<br />

best friend Ruthie (now Prof. Ruth<br />

Small) and I would sit on the porch of<br />

the Farmhouse. Birds made nests on the<br />

tops of the columns and frequently<br />

babies would be shoved out of the nest<br />

too soon. They would land at the<br />

bottom of the columns with broken<br />

necks and we would feel sad. Then<br />

Ruthie skipped a grade and went<br />

upstairs for class with Mrs. Bisdee and<br />

I felt sad that I was still downstairs. We<br />

ate in the Farmhouse at big tables with<br />

the teachers serving the food to the<br />

whole table. I hated the stew and<br />

corned beef hash but the masters still<br />

served it up and I had to eat it. Grace<br />

was said by all with table manners<br />

stressed. No one left the room until<br />

everyone was dismissed.<br />

In fourth grade we moved over to the<br />

“big building.” We had study hall<br />

upstairs with fourth graders on one side,<br />

fifth graders in the center, and sixth<br />

graders on the other side. Ruthie and I<br />

tapped out Morse Code to send messages<br />

across the room. When we<br />

couldn’t go outside (rarely) our teacher<br />

22 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


ead “Tom Brown’s <strong>School</strong> Days” to us.<br />

There were two small classrooms next<br />

door. In one we were taught by a highly<br />

lauded (by our parents) Harvard<br />

graduate who cried when the boys<br />

wouldn’t behave. It took years before I<br />

felt good about Harvard after that.<br />

When we reached seventh grade we<br />

moved to downstairs study hall. It<br />

seemed like there were 100 students; it<br />

was so big! All along the walls were<br />

plaques with names of those best at<br />

every subject and I vowed to get my<br />

name on at least one plaque. We had<br />

seniors as proctors and we actually<br />

behaved very well for them. We loved<br />

buying candy from the Senior class at<br />

recess. No one worried about excess<br />

sugar in those days. We had Latin from<br />

Mr. Krohl at the same time that he<br />

taught the seniors trig. Years later, when<br />

I became a math teacher, I wondered if<br />

having older students in the same room<br />

made me feel that trig was not so hard.<br />

Penelope Peterson Black ’60<br />

The boys’ locker room had a special<br />

flavor but the jewel was the towel room<br />

and its inner sanctum. It gave the<br />

student with that job a private “locker”<br />

area under the stairs and an excuse to<br />

leave class when the towel truck came.<br />

Phil Young and Dave Phieffer milked<br />

this plum to the hilt. It paid to be their<br />

buddy and get more than one towel per<br />

week. Of course Phil and Dave had<br />

multiple towels daily.<br />

Another locker room note: The girls’<br />

locker room was off the second floor<br />

hallway across the hall from the<br />

science/lab classroom. This writer<br />

cannot provide any details as to the<br />

decor, furnishings, etc. of this room for<br />

as he would saunter past the half open<br />

door, his full concentration was on his<br />

fellow students inside. However, they<br />

were onto his kind so I have no more to<br />

report on that subject.<br />

I remember........when Chip Smith arm<br />

wrestled Joe Krol to a draw and when<br />

Steve Johnson and I learned as much<br />

about Wally Habel’s exploits with the<br />

Philadelphia Phillies organization as we<br />

did about civics in Mr. Habel’s class.<br />

Most challenging writing assignment<br />

from Mrs. Alden: describe how to tie a<br />

Windsor necktie knot.<br />

Gregory “CJ” Young ’62<br />

Of course the Barn is one of the best<br />

memories... the noise of changing<br />

classes in that building was something<br />

else, as dozens of students trooped out<br />

of classrooms over aged wooden floors.<br />

I remember my first day, freshman year,<br />

being utterly charmed by the Barn’s old<br />

wooden floors, painted steam radiators<br />

and scratched-up desks. Study hall was<br />

held in a large open space on the first<br />

floor, behind the administrative offices<br />

and book store [there were two (or<br />

three)] classrooms to the left as you<br />

faced the science building. Later, some<br />

of this space became the Senior Room.<br />

The library was upstairs, above this<br />

same space, and there was also a girl’s<br />

room up there, and I can remember the<br />

smells of Taboo and hair spray and<br />

(sometimes) cigarettes... And the smell<br />

of chalk and our American History<br />

teacher’s pipe tobacco. He made a<br />

mesmerizing art out of packing and<br />

lighting his pipe while delivering his<br />

lectures. Cherry Blend<br />

The science building (now the Amos<br />

building) was new when I was a<br />

freshman, and we had Physical Science<br />

there; art class was also held in this<br />

building. While we had our first<br />

assemblies in the gym (the women’s<br />

gym – now the Coville Theater) of the<br />

barn, later they were in the bottom floor<br />

of the science building.<br />

Speaking of the women’s gym - we had<br />

gymnastics class in this old, dusty, drafty<br />

space, where we practiced on a homemade<br />

balance beam. We also did theater<br />

productions here. If memory serves, the<br />

boys also practiced wrestling here.<br />

Another memorable place was of course<br />

the dining hall. I was a waiter, which<br />

meant we put the dishes out on the<br />

tables and got to sit at the waiter’s table,<br />

rather than with a teacher. The room<br />

was smaller than it is now, though I was<br />

pleased to see the academic award<br />

plaques are still there - and I’m still on<br />

the French award plaque for my senior<br />

year. It was actually kind of fun to have<br />

a more, what, “civilized” lunch with<br />

your classmates. We actually did have<br />

lunch time conversation, and really did<br />

get to know our teachers better as a<br />

result.<br />

While I ran track and was a cheerleader,<br />

most of the sports I competed in<br />

(basketball, volleyball and gymnastics)<br />

weren’t outdoors (that is, I wasn’t on<br />

the field hockey team!). But I still<br />

remember being outside on a glorious<br />

fall afternoon cheering on our 6-man<br />

football team, and being in the gym<br />

(with its relatively small bleacher<br />

section) during basketball season. And I<br />

remember those unbelievably long bus<br />

rides to Park and Harley... but that’s<br />

another story. And of course if you<br />

didn’t participate in an organized sport,<br />

there was always Mr. Stephenson’s Herd.<br />

And who can forget Mrs. Woesner’s<br />

office in the girl’s gym, which was<br />

always a small but safe haven where<br />

girls gathered to gossip and get Ma<br />

Woesner’s own brand of wisdom<br />

Nancy Roberts ’68<br />

My memories of the PH campus Where<br />

do I begin I suppose with the payphone<br />

that used to stand just outside<br />

the middle school boys locker room off<br />

the end of the Old Gym. Two weeks<br />

into my first year (sixth grade) at PH, I<br />

missed the bus and tried to call Mom to<br />

come pick me up. When no one<br />

answered, I decided to hitchhike home<br />

with a load of books on my hip (no<br />

book bags in those days). I guess I’d<br />

walked the better part of four miles<br />

Building Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 23


Building Memories<br />

before my parents came looking for me.<br />

I never tried that again.<br />

At the time I thought the cool thing<br />

about that phone was that you could<br />

hear WNDR on it, but as close as the<br />

station was—maybe a thousand feet<br />

behind the Bradlee Building—I suppose<br />

some people could pick it up on their<br />

molar fillings. Anyway, I’ll always have<br />

a tender spot in my heart for the Old<br />

Barn. For years, the gym there was<br />

home to a family of funky skunks. After<br />

a while, you became immune to their<br />

scent. That was just the way the Old<br />

Gym smelled. To this day when family<br />

vacations take us past a skunk road kill<br />

and everyone else cries out in anguish, I<br />

conger up images of wrestling matches<br />

and drama club rehearsals. Sweet.<br />

I think it was 10:00 or so every morning<br />

that Dave Murray would open the<br />

fridge under the stairs and start passing<br />

out bottles of chocolate milk for a<br />

dime. “Gates Farms” was emblazoned<br />

across those bottles with a prose worthy<br />

of a Pulitzer: “I come to visit, not to<br />

stay. Please return me every day.” Poetry<br />

not being my strong suit that was<br />

probably the only verse I ever really<br />

understood. (My apologies to the<br />

English Department.)<br />

For some years the Upper <strong>School</strong><br />

library was housed on the second floor<br />

of the Old Barn. Metal racks filled with<br />

well thumbed copies of “Madame<br />

Bovary,” “Sound and Sense,” the<br />

“Complete Works of Shakespeare,” and<br />

“Catcher in the Rye” lined the walls and<br />

formed divided study areas with heavy<br />

oak tables. The charm of this room was<br />

not apparent to the naked eye, but you<br />

had only to start bouncing one leg on<br />

the toes of your foot, and you could<br />

produce a sympathetic vibration<br />

through the floor that would have the<br />

racks rattling as we were being hit by a<br />

7.6 earthquake. Get both legs going,<br />

and maybe a like-minded accomplice<br />

and you’d swear the whole building<br />

was teetering on the precipice of<br />

collapse. Of course, the librarians<br />

frowned on the practice, which made it<br />

all the more delicious when, in my<br />

senior year, we discovered that we could<br />

produce the same effect in the library<br />

from the sanctity of the senior room<br />

next door. Great fun.<br />

While I’m on the subject of the library,<br />

I guess I should say something about<br />

the ozone layer. I think it was my<br />

sophomore year (’68) when part of the<br />

Old Barn library was converted into a<br />

study room with semi-private carrels. I<br />

guess the powers that be had<br />

envisioned that we would at some<br />

point use audio-visual equipment in<br />

our studies, and so they had provided<br />

electrical outlets in all the carrels. My<br />

apologies if the credit is misdirected,<br />

but I think it was Randy Harwood who<br />

discovered that folded foil gum<br />

wrappers could be inserted into the<br />

receptacles and touched together with<br />

the tip of a Bic pen to produce a<br />

stunning pyrotechnic display. The smell<br />

of vaporized aluminum we all mistook<br />

for ozone, which is, of course, odorless.<br />

Nevertheless, as good old Diefendorf<br />

used to say, there’s probably still a<br />

massive hole in the ozone layer with<br />

our names on it. I’m so ashamed. Well,<br />

no, not really.<br />

Eighth Grade. 1966. Gotta be my<br />

favorite memory. A classmate and I<br />

flush with adolescent hormones and<br />

equipped with a full pack of Lark<br />

cigarettes, decided we’d crash the<br />

Middle <strong>School</strong> girls’ pajama party in<br />

the New Gym. Okay, crash isn’t<br />

probably the right word here; we<br />

weren’t really all that bold. Spy is a<br />

closer characterization of our loosely<br />

knit plan. It was already dark when we<br />

got to the campus. We both had one<br />

girl in mind. I’ll spare her the<br />

embarrassment in this public forum.<br />

The urge to see what’s-her-name in<br />

pajamas being simply too much for any<br />

love-smitten adolescent to resist, we<br />

quietly made our way over to the<br />

breezeway between the Bradlee<br />

Building and the New Gym and, after a<br />

thorough surveillance, used the football<br />

tackling dummy to climb up onto the<br />

roof of the girls’ locker room. From<br />

there a metal ladder afforded access to<br />

the gym roof. What we were after was a<br />

bird’s eye view through the gym<br />

skylights. What scuttled the plan was<br />

the unfortunate fact that the skylights<br />

are translucent, so all we could see was<br />

the glow from the gym lights. Defeated,<br />

we sat up on the roof and smoked half<br />

the pack of Larks while we discussed<br />

the finer points of what’s-her-name.<br />

There aren’t many connecting moments<br />

in adolescence, so we savor the few<br />

we’re afforded.<br />

Ninth Grade. Autumn,1966. Hamilton’s<br />

drama club put on a group of plays<br />

which included Lucille Fletcher’s<br />

thriller, “Sorry, Wrong Number.” Al<br />

Amos and I were given the job of<br />

lighting the stage in the Old Gym, a<br />

daunting task, given the complexities of<br />

that production. Risking life and limb, I<br />

installed flood lights on the ceiling and<br />

spent hours fashioning a control box to<br />

run them. The casting of Myron<br />

Ransom in the role of the murderer was<br />

sheer genius. I owe a lifetime’s love of<br />

theater to that short three-night run.<br />

Eleventh Grade. Autumn, 1968. A<br />

classic homecoming celebration. The<br />

football team crushed Harley, the soccer<br />

team gave it their all and came up a<br />

little short. There was a dance that<br />

night in the cafeteria. Tables were set up<br />

in the vestibule, where officials would<br />

take your money and stamp your hand.<br />

Seems like nobody danced. I’m not<br />

sure I ever went to an Upper <strong>School</strong><br />

dance where anyone did much of<br />

anything but stand around talking,<br />

mostly about how good or bad the<br />

band (or DJ) happened to be.<br />

But this night was to be like no other.<br />

With the band still wailing away, Pete<br />

Harth and Barbara Borecki and I<br />

slipped out to the parking lot to grab a<br />

smoke. Standing directly in front of the<br />

Bradlee Building we had an<br />

unobstructed view of the hundred-yearold<br />

farmhouse that served as rectory to<br />

the adjoining church across Jamesville<br />

Road. As we stood there smoking and<br />

talking, Barbara suddenly pointed<br />

behind me and said, “Look at that. It<br />

looks like that house is on fire.” I<br />

turned and checked it out. It seemed<br />

impossible—had to be an optical<br />

illusion—but there were flames clearly<br />

visible through the windows at the<br />

right end of the house.<br />

Finally convincing myself that I wasn’t<br />

seeing things, I sprinted down the<br />

24 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


driveway to the road. But a closer view<br />

only confirmed the impossible. At that<br />

point, I told Pete and Barbara to go<br />

over and bang on the door to see if<br />

anyone was home, and then I took off<br />

back to the gym to get help. Now, I<br />

admit that I’ve always had a fascination<br />

with fire and a reputation to match.<br />

And I had always had a secret desire to<br />

pull a fire alarm. Not a false alarm, but<br />

a real one. So here, at long last, was my<br />

golden opportunity. And this was no<br />

small campfire behind someone’s<br />

garage, either. I rushed breathlessly into<br />

the vestibule and shouted to Mrs. Glass<br />

that the house across the street was on<br />

fire. And with that, I took hold of the<br />

fire alarm and pulled it.<br />

Okay, so it wasn’t as fulfilling as I had<br />

long imagined, but it was pretty cool<br />

when the bells began to ring. With the<br />

authorities properly notified (I<br />

assumed), I ran back outside and down<br />

the driveway to the road. I found Pete<br />

and Barbara still standing there staring<br />

at the house. I asked them if they had<br />

banged on the door. Getting only blank<br />

looks, I ran across the road and up the<br />

lawn to the front porch. From there I<br />

could see the flames were climbing up<br />

a bookcase along the side wall. When I<br />

ascended the steps and went to the<br />

window, I saw a wastebasket full of<br />

flaming wads of newspaper at the<br />

bottom of the bookcase. I’d never seen<br />

arson before, but I knew it when I saw<br />

it. My greatest concern though at that<br />

time was whether there was anyone<br />

inside. With that in mind, I went to the<br />

front door and banged on it for several<br />

seconds, shouting as loud as I could,<br />

“Wake up! The house is on fire!” When<br />

no one replied and no lights came on, I<br />

used my elbow to break the window so<br />

I could unlock the door.<br />

Inside, I went to the door of the den<br />

where the fire was and looked in. At<br />

that moment the flames were<br />

consuming the window drapes. I never<br />

even toyed with thoughts of trying to<br />

extinguish a blaze of that ferocity. Still,<br />

I didn’t imagine that the house was<br />

doomed, what with the fire department<br />

on the way. I left the den and went to<br />

the foot of the front stairs, shouting up<br />

the stairwell to “Wake up! The house is<br />

on fire!” Again, no reply. I hesitated<br />

then and turned to check the progress<br />

of the fire: Still confined to the den. I<br />

took a deep breath and started up the<br />

stairs. It was a huge house, with many<br />

bedrooms, so it took me several<br />

minutes to make the rounds. Finally<br />

convinced that the place was empty, I<br />

headed back to the stairs. By that time,<br />

the flames had escaped the den and<br />

were shooting into the foyer and up the<br />

stairwell.<br />

I had to duck as I descended the stairs,<br />

and the heat was unbearable. I could<br />

smell my hair singeing. Back on the<br />

first floor I went into the huge living<br />

room—more like a ballroom—where<br />

the flames were swirling around the<br />

ceiling in great blue and orange spirals.<br />

A layer of thick smoke was forming at<br />

eye level. The whole scene was eerily<br />

fascinating. But the heat was something<br />

else, so I turned and left by the front<br />

door. Pete and Barbara were still<br />

standing on the front lawn, but by this<br />

time the rest of the dance party was<br />

coming down the driveway to view the<br />

spectacle. What I couldn’t understand<br />

was why the fire department hadn’t<br />

arrived yet. I couldn’t even hear their<br />

sirens. At that point Corey Bock came<br />

over to me and explained that they had<br />

all thought my pulling the alarm was<br />

another Kenny Jasper prank.<br />

Consequently, Mrs. Glass had called the<br />

fire department to cancel the alarm. She<br />

was then informed that the alarm<br />

system wasn’t even connected to the<br />

firehouse and they hadn’t received any<br />

alarm. At that moment someone found<br />

her and told her there really was a fire<br />

and she passed the alarm to the fire<br />

department. Unfortunately, by that time<br />

the flames were shooting from the front<br />

windows and lapping over the edges of<br />

the porch roof. (See the attached<br />

photograph.) The Dewitt firemen<br />

fought a valiant battle that night, but<br />

the house was a total loss and was<br />

bulldozed some weeks later.<br />

These days, it’s a parking lot. But that<br />

was not the end of the story, either. Not<br />

nearly. The following January, Pete and<br />

Barbara and John Hosmer and I were<br />

all called in to Dr. Barter’s office, where<br />

we were intensively interrogated over<br />

the better part of a week by the NY<br />

State Bureau of Investigation, who<br />

seemed convinced that we had set the<br />

fire. Some of us even submitted to<br />

polygraph examination. None of us<br />

ever admitted to anything. There was<br />

nothing to admit to, except a night of<br />

excitement that none of us would ever<br />

forget.<br />

Twelfth Grade. 1970. Spring brought<br />

out the adventurous bad boys in us. As<br />

graduation approached we began<br />

taking our study halls outdoors. Way<br />

outdoors. Like down the hill to<br />

Butternut Creek, where we wiled away<br />

the hours building dams and frolicking<br />

in the reeds with various females. What<br />

a glorious finale to my seven years at<br />

PH.<br />

Finally, there’s one more event that<br />

deserves mention. It was in the fall of<br />

’63 that Chip Carson treated the Upper<br />

and Middle <strong>School</strong>s to a magic show in<br />

the Old Gym one Friday afternoon. At<br />

its conclusion the Middle <strong>School</strong> boys<br />

got into our P.E. duds and headed out<br />

to the football field. I was walking with<br />

Al Getman and we were passing by the<br />

Farmhouse when Bob Dowley came<br />

running past and said the president had<br />

been shot.<br />

Getman told Bob that wasn’t funny, but<br />

Dowley insisted it was no joke. We were<br />

out on the field for only a few minutes<br />

before we saw them lowering the flag to<br />

half staff in front of the Bradley<br />

Building. Getman called off the session<br />

and we headed back to the locker<br />

room. Someone had a radio there, and<br />

we showered and got dressed while the<br />

announcer kept saying, “The president<br />

is dead. President John Fitzgerald<br />

Kennedy is dead…” But everyone<br />

knows where they were when they first<br />

heard that.<br />

Ken Jasper ’70<br />

Building Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 25


Building Memories<br />

The Crest<br />

A Phoenix is rising from the<br />

flames of a castle turret. The<br />

Phoenix is a legendary bird<br />

which rose from the ashes of<br />

a fire and gave new hope to<br />

all of a rebirth and new life.<br />

This signifies the rebirth of<br />

the <strong>School</strong> after the fire of<br />

1902.<br />

The Three Stars<br />

These signify three attributes<br />

of a Cadet’s attitude towards<br />

the <strong>School</strong>: Honor, Love,<br />

Duty.<br />

The Two Chevrons<br />

A heraldic symbol signifying<br />

the supporting arches of a<br />

building. These denote the<br />

strength of the <strong>School</strong> and<br />

the student body.<br />

Reprinted from the 1969<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> Cadet<br />

Handbook<br />

THE MANLIUS SCHOOL<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Memories - The good, the bad, and the ugly!<br />

When I arrived at <strong>Manlius</strong> in September of<br />

1963 little did I know that a group of stately<br />

buildings, and a collection of the most unique<br />

group of humans I have ever met, would<br />

create emotions and feelings that nearly fifty<br />

years later leave me wondering at the boy I<br />

was and the person I became at <strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

A little of each has been forever with me, a<br />

part and parcel of who I was, whom I became<br />

and what I will be. It interests me that in so<br />

many of the following reminiscences and tales<br />

there exists so many common threads of<br />

experience unified by a school now consigned<br />

to memory and the pages of yearbooks.<br />

Those yearbooks bearing silent witness on<br />

shelves, seldom taken down and not often<br />

read, little appreciated by children and<br />

grandchildren who will never have had the<br />

perspective of an adolescence punctuated by<br />

the staccato beat of drums, the blare of bugles<br />

and hum of a floor polisher on Friday nights.<br />

For those of us fortunate enough to be here<br />

now, we have the chance to revisit those<br />

buildings and remember those friends and<br />

roommates, the good, the bad and dare I say<br />

the ugly, for while memory plays its tricks, my<br />

mirror does not.<br />

Jon Statler, ’68A,<br />

former day boy, Thomson Hall, Pixley Hall,<br />

and Farmer Hall resident.<br />

(Apologies to those Old Boys who might not<br />

regard Hadley Hall as “stately”)<br />

26 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Ah those were the daze...<br />

As a five year resident of Thomson Hall<br />

which housed “A” Company on the first<br />

three floors and “HQ” on the top floor,<br />

it was the newest and most comfortable<br />

of the three barracks. The drill field<br />

separated us from Knox Hall where we<br />

prayed, danced, viewed movies and<br />

assembled. Have to add there were a lot<br />

of balcony activities during those<br />

dances. Of course, Comstock was the<br />

academic center and mess hall. The<br />

King Club, which was the donut shop<br />

and pool hall, sat just behind<br />

Comstock. Fronting Comstock was the<br />

parade ground which was far from a<br />

smooth surface for marching. There<br />

were no gopher holes but many areas<br />

might be considered covered with<br />

moguls. “C” Company was across from<br />

the main gate surrounded by the Gym,<br />

Infirmary and Commandant’s residence.<br />

Not part of campus and just adjacent to<br />

the Commandant’s house was Suburban<br />

Park where no Cadet was ever allowed<br />

to visit. Just below Knox were three<br />

hallowed sanctuaries - the Varsity Club<br />

shack, football field and the Verbeck<br />

Memorial Garden. Can’t forget the<br />

captured World War I German howitzer<br />

which was prominently displayed half<br />

way up the main roadway.<br />

Those are my recollections of <strong>Manlius</strong>,<br />

1942 - 1947.<br />

Andy Tedesco ’47A<br />

Response from the Alumni Office:<br />

Thanks for sharing your memories.<br />

Thomson Hall was a beautiful dorm. I was<br />

on the old campus a few weeks ago and was<br />

able to walk around Thomson. I couldn’t<br />

believe the beautiful fireplaces it has on<br />

each floor. Were cadets allowed to have fires<br />

in them<br />

I also just got back from visiting your<br />

classmate (and company mate) John Lenore<br />

’47A, who lives and works out in San<br />

Diego. I also dined with Betty Knox while I<br />

was there. Knox Hall was built by a gift<br />

from her father-in-law, Henry Knox. Betty’s<br />

late husband, Jim, graduated in 1934 from<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>. It is such a treat to talk with<br />

Betty, because Knox Hall was such an<br />

integral part of life at <strong>Manlius</strong>…and her<br />

memories …priceless.<br />

Andy’s response:<br />

Never had a fire in a fireplace in my<br />

time. Happy too! It would have been<br />

one more special task for “Gups” out<br />

chopping fire wood. I don’t know if<br />

any of the old blueprints and renderings<br />

of what Knox was planned to be when<br />

completed remain. They used to be<br />

displayed in the entry hall. The Knox we<br />

know was only one-quarter of the<br />

original plan as it was to be two “L”<br />

units on that plan. I believe there was<br />

another structure to be built also but I<br />

know not where or what for. I suppose<br />

the 1930s were not the most opportune<br />

time to complete such a structure. As<br />

you may be aware, the Knox family<br />

lived in East Aurora, near Buffalo, and<br />

had a magnificent horse stable and<br />

mansion there. I believe it survives.<br />

John Lenore was a classmate and standout<br />

football player in my time. Coach<br />

Nevin Shankweiler had some really<br />

outstanding teams in the 40s with a two<br />

year stint undefeated, untied and unscored<br />

on. That ended with a defeat by<br />

the combined teams of two top notch<br />

Lynn, Mass. high schools in a<br />

snowstorm. If memory serves me<br />

correctly, John’s entire team went on to<br />

play college football all over the east<br />

coast but especially at Cornell<br />

and Syracuse.<br />

I may be able to dig up some photos of<br />

the campus in my time. If I can find<br />

them I’ll send to you.<br />

Although still somewhat shy of my<br />

dotage, I can’t for the life of me recall<br />

the name of the big, white, ramshackle<br />

wooden building that housed the<br />

barber shop, the dry cleaner, the supply<br />

store, and probably other school<br />

facilities I can’t recall. I do recall it also<br />

was the dormitory for the janitors and<br />

the kitchen help. It had to have been<br />

built at some point in the previous<br />

century, possibly not long after the<br />

founding of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> in<br />

1869. It fascinated me in two respects -<br />

its slanting, even wavy wooden floors,<br />

and I imagined that at any moment<br />

we’d be rousted out to witness its<br />

burning to the ground, the latter in part<br />

because Fay McCarthy allowed us to<br />

smoke in his barber shop.<br />

Bill Kilpatrick, ‘43A<br />

Response from the Alumni Office:<br />

That would have been Huntington Hall!<br />

I would have loved to see it! Loved your<br />

recollection…and I have heard similar<br />

sentiments about the “Barn” on the DeWitt<br />

campus.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> “Fire” Alarm<br />

Sparks Discussion<br />

In 2008, MPH sent out<br />

the following<br />

e-mail and received quite<br />

interesting responses.<br />

Some about the fire<br />

alarm, and others about<br />

different <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

memories. It certainly<br />

stirred some interesting<br />

communications, like<br />

this one from David<br />

Slocum ’48HQ and<br />

Craig Tarler ’48HQ.<br />

Dear Old Boys,<br />

A few weeks ago, I was strolling across the<br />

old <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> campus with my<br />

children when we came across this treasure<br />

from our past. I imagine that this fire alarm<br />

once performed an important function at<br />

the school. As you undoubtedly know,<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> survived many fires, prompting the<br />

<strong>School</strong> to adopt the “Phoenix rising from<br />

the flames” as its symbol. This fire alarm<br />

now sits beside Shankweiler Hall – and,<br />

incidentally, it still works!<br />

I am hoping that some Old Boys can recall<br />

where this alarm used to reside on campus<br />

and when it was used for real or ceremonial<br />

purposes. I look forward to hearing your<br />

replies.<br />

Sincerely,<br />

Tina Morgan, director of development<br />

A Conversation with<br />

David Slocum ’48HQ<br />

Graduated in 1948 and never heard the<br />

fire alarm. However, there was one real<br />

alarm and it was sounded by the bugler<br />

late one snowy night. The eeriest bugle<br />

call I’ve ever heard!<br />

Craig Tarler ’48HQ<br />

Building Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 27


Building Memories<br />

Response from the Alumni Office:<br />

Thanks for your e-mail. Gathering from the<br />

responses I received, it seems the alarms<br />

were installed in the mid-1960s. We are<br />

working to bring it to our current campus,<br />

as it is a neat part of our history.<br />

What alarm was sounded by the bugler<br />

Was it for one of the building fires<br />

Craig’s response:<br />

I think it was a suspected fire. There is a<br />

special bugle call, fire call that I remember.<br />

Maybe you could contact somebody<br />

like Dave Slocum who was with the<br />

band at that time.<br />

Alumni Office E-mail to David Slocum:<br />

I have been e-mailing back and forth with<br />

Craig Tarler ‘48HQ about this mysterious<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Fire Alarm. He mentioned a<br />

special bugle call that you had at <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

for the fire alarm and suggested I check<br />

with you on the logistics.<br />

Do you recall such a thing Was it a<br />

specific melody How did the band get<br />

notified What instrument did you play<br />

Any information you might recall would be<br />

very helpful (not to mention interesting).<br />

David’s response:<br />

I’m certain there is (or was) a special<br />

bugle call for fires, but frankly we never<br />

had a fire. I was HQ Company<br />

Commander, of the Band, and I never<br />

heard any of the buglers say anything,<br />

and I was also in charge of them. I’ll e-<br />

mail Craig Tarler about this. I was at the<br />

<strong>School</strong> from 1944 -1948, so if there had<br />

been a fire, I believe I would have<br />

known about it. However, I don’t think<br />

anyone there would have recognized<br />

such a call. Interestingly, I never<br />

remember the Fire Gong. Good thing<br />

no one ever used it.<br />

The fire alarm has generated many interesting<br />

discussions. Let me know if you hear<br />

anything back from Craig.<br />

Glad to be in touch!<br />

David’s response:<br />

I e-mailed Craig Tarler, and he stated<br />

that he never heard the fire alarm, but<br />

that there was one real alarm. (I think<br />

he was sleepwalking) He lived on the<br />

third floor directly under and alongside<br />

HQ’s rooms. I was at the top of the stair<br />

to the fourth floor. As far as being<br />

notified of a fire, I believe it would have<br />

had to come from Bernie Shaw, the<br />

Commandant of A and HQ Companies.<br />

There weren’t any phones to call<br />

students. He also wouldn’t have known<br />

where to find a bugler within HQ<br />

rooms, so the only way to have reached<br />

one would be to come to my room.<br />

There was a very loud buzzer system<br />

throughout the campus. It started at<br />

6:10 a.m., and then the bugler stepped<br />

outside in all kinds of weather, and<br />

blew reveille. Then came assembly to<br />

form up to go to mess, and the raising<br />

of the flag on the pole now at MPH.<br />

Buzzers dictated your whole life,<br />

through to 9:30 p.m. or so, until Taps<br />

ended the day.<br />

However, my roommate for 3 years was<br />

Peter Blinco, and he was at one time a<br />

bugler. No one and I stress this, ever<br />

told me there was any special buzzer<br />

call for fires. I’ll ask him about all of<br />

this.<br />

I played, or more accurately tried to play<br />

the oboe, but you couldn’t play it in a<br />

marching band. So, I appointed myself<br />

drum major, and I really received my<br />

scholarship of $300. No one ever<br />

challenged me about this. My first 2<br />

years – ‘44 and ‘45, I played the<br />

cymbals, which I could do.<br />

This is fascinating information about the<br />

buzzer system…thanks so much for sharing.<br />

I hadn’t heard about the buzzer system,<br />

although I did know about reveille and<br />

Taps. I also liked your story about trying to<br />

play the oboe.<br />

Let me know what Pete Blinco says…and<br />

keep in touch.<br />

I remember that on May 16, 1951 the<br />

Dodge Gymnasium burned down.<br />

Doug Betts ’53HQ was the bugler and<br />

he said that he hoped to blow fire call<br />

some day. We all blamed him for the<br />

fire, but it actually was started by two<br />

cadets in the 8th grade who were<br />

smoking in the mattress storage room in<br />

the gym’s attic.<br />

Walter “Bill” Grahling ’52A<br />

HQ Company room in Thomson Hall<br />

during my freshman and sophomore<br />

years. Most of us lived in the attic,<br />

which gave us easy though dangerous<br />

access to the roof for sun bathing. We’d<br />

drag our mattresses out the window and<br />

lay out on the inclined Spanish tiles.<br />

One day I carved the date 5-5-55 on the<br />

outside wooden window frame. It’s<br />

probably still there!<br />

Bruce French ’58HQ<br />

Memories from<br />

Woody Obrig ‘59C<br />

Verbeck Hall - Home of Company “C” -<br />

what great memories I have of the<br />

Company spirit - pride - we had- the<br />

snowball fights we had with the “<strong>Hill</strong><br />

Companies.”<br />

Moving to Farmer Hall was a trauma<br />

Response from the Alumni Office:<br />

Thanks for the e-mail. You were commander<br />

of the band How cool! You must have<br />

worn the “cheetah” that we have here in<br />

the Alumni Lodge.<br />

I know that David Bahner instructed the<br />

band for many years, but that may have<br />

been after your time<br />

If you have a Haversack of 1948, you<br />

will get a chance to see all of us.<br />

Response from the Alumni Office:<br />

I am looking at the ‘48 Haversack right<br />

now. You are quite the handsome cadet!<br />

Although I have to ask, where did you get<br />

the nickname “Slug”<br />

The Phoenix Tavern<br />

28 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


ut it turned out to be a good move<br />

with much better showers and a TV in<br />

the day room — what a luxury!<br />

Who can forget the joy of hamburgers at<br />

the Phoenix Tavern or Winter Carnival<br />

and dances and movies in Knox Hall.<br />

The gym was awesome and I especially<br />

enjoyed the rifle range, practice drills<br />

with the Phoenix Rifles and watching<br />

Dolph Shays and the Syracuse Nats<br />

practice.<br />

Preliminary plans for the 1st floor of Comstock<br />

Hall reconstruction circa 1902 Windmill<br />

I remember the smell of Comstock Hall,<br />

slightly acrid and musty. Most of all I<br />

remember the snow. Snow from mid-<br />

November until April. One particular<br />

day stands out, a frigid minus 20 or 30<br />

degrees February 1956 at 6:45 a.m.<br />

marching from Verbeck Hall to the<br />

dining hall. I was in the rear of 4th<br />

squad 2nd platoon. As we rounded a<br />

steep curve near the Verbeck gravesite<br />

several guys at the front of 1st platoon<br />

slipped on the glazed ice, fell, slid<br />

backwards and wiped out the entire<br />

company formation like a giant bowling<br />

strike. It was hilarious.<br />

Friday nights were magical. I, along<br />

with about 20 other cadets, rode the<br />

old black bus to Cazenovia to act as<br />

dance partners for the girls at<br />

Cazenovia College. A good time was<br />

had by all! They kept us under close<br />

scrutiny but it was great touching<br />

female flesh, smelling perfume and<br />

stealing a kiss. Tough duty. Makes my<br />

blood stir to think about it. Whew!<br />

Back to campus. <strong>Manlius</strong> campus was<br />

absolutely beautiful, fall, winter, spring<br />

or summer. Yeah, I attended one<br />

summer school - something to do with<br />

my grades. I forget what. Oh yeah, I<br />

remember - it is very embarrassing<br />

though!<br />

On the first landing of the Comstock<br />

hall stairway hung a trophy engraves<br />

“Obrig Mathematics Trophy.” I saw it<br />

daily. Well, Math, Algebra in particular,<br />

was not my forte’ nor my fifthe’. Despite<br />

supreme effort on the part of Prof.<br />

MacMillan and countless others, I<br />

barely squeaked by with a 65 or 66<br />

which was probably a gift in<br />

remembrance of my grandfather J.A.<br />

Theodore Obrig, who donated the<br />

trophy and my father, Elwood M.<br />

Obrig, Sr., who graduated in 1924, C.<br />

Company,<br />

who died<br />

in 1958<br />

while I was<br />

a junior at<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

Hadley<br />

Hall “B”<br />

company<br />

was a<br />

mysterious<br />

place I<br />

never<br />

Mac the Barber<br />

visited. Scary.<br />

The closest I got was going to see Mac<br />

the barber, who had cut my dad’s hair<br />

in the twenties. Good Old Mac – what<br />

a treasure.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> was not buildings, it was<br />

people; people like Mac, Capt.<br />

Sedgwick, Major Millington, Bill Caron,<br />

Whitney Anderson, Tom Cahill, Cmdr.<br />

Rugh, and, my personal favorite,<br />

Reverend Edmund Randolph Laine.<br />

What an inspiration the faculty and<br />

staff were to all of us!<br />

The students were the real energy of<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>. Our athletes were indeed our<br />

heroes. The entire cadet corps in<br />

formation for Sunday parade or trip to<br />

Syracuse or West Point was truly a sight<br />

to behold. We marched as one with<br />

dignity and pride in ourselves as part of<br />

a bigger thing and pride in <strong>Manlius</strong> for<br />

what it did for each of us in our own<br />

separate lives.<br />

Thank you <strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

Thy son,<br />

Woody Obrig, ’59C<br />

A Conversation with<br />

Dave Rosso ‘61C<br />

My first year was 1956 and, as a<br />

cadet in Company C, I was living in<br />

the barracks situated across the<br />

highway at the bottom of the hill<br />

before the new brick Company C<br />

was built at the top of the hill. The<br />

“old” Company C was a wooden<br />

structure. My bunk was against a<br />

wall near a window and I vividly<br />

remember one morning waking up<br />

and looking up and out the window<br />

at a large dog looking down at me.<br />

In the morning, we marched across<br />

the highway and up the hill to eat<br />

and attend classes. One very dark<br />

and wintry morning — well, it was<br />

New York! — we marched up the<br />

hill into the blowing snow and into<br />

a snowplow parked on the side of<br />

the road.<br />

Dave Rosso ’61C<br />

Response from the Alumni Office:<br />

Thanks for sharing your memories. I<br />

laughed out loud at the image of the<br />

dog staring in at you…quite a picture<br />

to wake up to.<br />

So you must have lived in Verbeck<br />

Hall That must have been a cold walk<br />

to class indeed. Is that why you are<br />

living in California<br />

Dave’s response:<br />

We moved to California in 1959,<br />

which is why I did not graduate<br />

from <strong>Manlius</strong>. I attended <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

1956-1959. Thanks for the Verbeck<br />

Hall. I had forgotten. We went from<br />

Verbeck to Farmer Hall. My father,<br />

Henry Rosso, had worked at the Old<br />

Boy’s Association in the small office<br />

between Farmer Hall and Comstock<br />

Hall. We left when he got a job in<br />

San Francisco and I went from an<br />

all-boys school to a 15-year-old<br />

surrounded by tanned teenaged<br />

California girls. Quite a transition!<br />

Building Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 29


Building Memories<br />

Having been raised on the campus, I<br />

probably remember more than most<br />

about the grounds. They were where I<br />

played, learned, and worked. Two events<br />

stand out. One was the fire in the old<br />

gym by Verbeck Hall. I loved that gym. I<br />

learned to ride a bike there one<br />

Christmas. I used to play in the balcony<br />

while basketball games were in progress<br />

- and brought some of them to a<br />

temporary lull as my own ball would<br />

have to be retrieved from the floor. The<br />

pool was always a mysterious place to<br />

me. I did manage to get the sister of my<br />

best friend to go down there to see the<br />

swans, once. The swans turned out to be<br />

cadets sans suits in the pool.<br />

Verbeck Hall<br />

Farmer Hall Construction<br />

The other event was the building of<br />

Farmer Hall. Yes, Verbeck was an old<br />

building that needed to be replaced. But<br />

I had lived in the apartment for the first<br />

nine years of my life. Also, the<br />

separation of Verbeck Hall from the rest<br />

of the campus seemed to make the<br />

cadets of “C” Company tougher. I can<br />

remember “Guards Out” to stop the<br />

usually non-existent traffic as the cadets<br />

marched up the hill each morning. That<br />

walk built character when done in<br />

January and February. So, for me, the<br />

gym and Verbeck Hall not only defined<br />

the school, but defined a very formative<br />

period in my life.<br />

Dean Sedgwick ’61HQ<br />

Thomson Hall<br />

The mystery of the fourth floor. One of<br />

the odd things about living on the<br />

third floor of Thomson Hall was the<br />

mystery staircase. It led off the third<br />

floor lobby up to a locked door which<br />

prevented access to the fourth floor.<br />

The staircase itself was blocked off by a<br />

chain and a padlock. What were “they”<br />

hiding up there<br />

One day I passed the staircase and saw<br />

that the chain was hanging loose. I<br />

looked up the stairs and the door was<br />

open! I never found out why, but this<br />

was an opportunity not to be missed.<br />

Quietly I mounted the stairs and<br />

looked through the door. In front of<br />

me was the open door of a three-man<br />

room, with a bay window no less.<br />

Faded red curtains emblazoned with<br />

the <strong>Manlius</strong> crest, obviously decades<br />

old, hung from the windows. Three<br />

beds, devoid of mattresses. waited<br />

patiently for cadets who would never<br />

come. I took a step through the door<br />

and there came a loud crunching<br />

sound beneath my feet.<br />

I looked down and found I had<br />

stepped on a six inch deep carpet of<br />

pigeon bones! The hallway, from end<br />

to end, was covered with the skeletons<br />

of many generations of birds, a regular<br />

avian ossuary. Thousands of pigeons,<br />

many generations, had lived out their<br />

lifespan on the fourth floor of<br />

Thomson Hall with the cadets below<br />

none the wiser.<br />

I backed out and went to my room to<br />

get my camera and perhaps my friends<br />

to come see this wonder, but when I<br />

returned, the door was closed and the<br />

chain was re-locked. I never found out<br />

who was up there, and I had no proof<br />

to show my classmates. The fourth<br />

floor had returned to mystery.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

The alumni office sent out a request to<br />

(see story p. 27) <strong>Manlius</strong> alumni to help<br />

identify the purpose of this “fire alarm”<br />

that still stands on the former campus next<br />

to Shankweiler Hall. (See reprint by<br />

David Slocum’s ’48HQ entry.) We<br />

received a lot of responses, but none quite<br />

as detailed as this one from Jon Statler.<br />

As I recall, those fire alarms were<br />

placed during the tenure of Col. Hugh<br />

Irish, USMC (Ret.) in 1967 or so when<br />

he took over as commandant of<br />

Cadets. The school went through an<br />

alarming period of “Jarhead”<br />

decoration prior to the visit of LTG<br />

Lewis Walt, USMC, then Commander,<br />

US Marine Expeditionary forces,<br />

Republic of Vietnam. His son, Larry<br />

Walt ’68A, was prepping for West Point<br />

at the time.<br />

Col. Irish had several of these placed<br />

around the <strong>School</strong>. As I recall, Farmer,<br />

Pixley, Thomson, King Club, and<br />

Comstock, along with the gym had<br />

these iron bars painted tastefully to<br />

look like Chinese jack-o-lanterns.<br />

They were to be used only under the<br />

pain of death or dismemberment. We<br />

had a fire in Thomson Hall in the<br />

winter of 1967 (I was not responsible, I<br />

swear) but several cadets did receive<br />

Phoenix Medals for their quick<br />

reaction. And I don’t recall using the<br />

fire alarms for that.<br />

Jon Statler ’68A<br />

30 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


MANLIUS <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Building Memories<br />

During our senior year, we had this<br />

large black steam pipe that ran<br />

overhead from the Bradlee building to<br />

the Barn. The pipe broke under the<br />

parking lot feeding the Bradlee<br />

building and the cost of digging it up<br />

was not in the budget. So we had this<br />

steam pipe over head for a time until<br />

Bradlee could be put on the system of<br />

the gym. If you look in our senior year<br />

book you will see pictures of this 4”<br />

pipe going overhead to the two<br />

buildings.<br />

The old gym was also a handball court!<br />

Jim Songster and Jim Rattray would use<br />

the South wall as the back and played<br />

as well as students. Carrying chairs<br />

from the cafeteria to the old gym for<br />

assemblies was a common activity; we<br />

would then carry them back when we<br />

were done.<br />

Gary Beach ’74<br />

You asked about memories of the<br />

physical space at MPH. I remember<br />

Knox Hall, site of our commencement<br />

exercises – I believe the last such<br />

exercises on The <strong>Manlius</strong> Campus, and<br />

held there despite the <strong>School</strong> having<br />

consolidated operations to the DeWitt<br />

campus. It was a wonderful place for<br />

commencement, full of history, full of<br />

spirit. I remember Chuck Oelsner’s<br />

office in the basement, the computer<br />

lab located there, where we hung and<br />

worked on programs for hours on end.<br />

I remember<br />

well the radio<br />

room, where<br />

a few of us<br />

relaxed,<br />

eating Ritz<br />

and peanut<br />

butter<br />

(“radio<br />

room<br />

specials”).<br />

Charlie’s<br />

Tavern<br />

was a very<br />

special place –<br />

especially for<br />

French class. Heading to the Tavern<br />

for a milk shake and then gathering<br />

under the tree outside for French class,<br />

that relaxed, trusting atmosphere, that<br />

attitude to foster learning, was what<br />

made MPH so special.<br />

Alan Marcum ’74<br />

Does anyone remember the weight<br />

room that was next to the theater in<br />

the barn I remember working out my<br />

senior year after school every day<br />

during the winter to get ready for track<br />

in the spring.<br />

John Osgood ’80<br />

I remember the “courtyard” between<br />

the barn and the two main buildings.<br />

One day in late spring, the weather was<br />

fantastic and several people were<br />

sitting on top of the electrical<br />

generator. I asked everyone to gather<br />

on top and pose for a set of pictures. I<br />

managed to take three before the bell<br />

rang and everyone dispersed to go to<br />

their classes.<br />

Blair Frodelius ’82<br />

Knox Hall<br />

remember all of my times hanging out<br />

in the student lounge. From dodging<br />

seniors when I was a freshman who<br />

weren’t allowed to come in, to playing<br />

foozball with Mrs. Dooher and Doc-O,<br />

to taking cat naps in between classes,<br />

and just taking time to talk to my<br />

friends while listening to Johnny Cash.<br />

I still have fond memories of the<br />

student lounge and always make it a<br />

point to go see how it’s changed since<br />

leaving there whenever I visit MPH.<br />

Zach Sanzone ’00<br />

My fondest memory is of the tree that<br />

was planted in honor of my sister<br />

Jennifer Marie Randall. It was planted<br />

by the Barn originally, but now is<br />

located behind the Farmhouse near the<br />

main driveway of the school. When I<br />

left MPH in 1989, it was a tiny little<br />

tree, and now when I’m in Syracuse, I<br />

visit her tree, and enjoy the beauty and<br />

presence of it. Beauty and presence...<br />

how appropriate.<br />

Mary Randall Kirby ’93<br />

I<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 31


Building Memories<br />

THE FUTURE OF OUR CAMPUS…<br />

While <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> can be proud of all that<br />

has been accomplished in recent years, the <strong>School</strong><br />

is still challenged by an aging physical plant inadequate to<br />

meet the needs of a student body of more than 585<br />

students. In a recent analysis, similarly sized independent<br />

schools across the country were found to have an average<br />

of 262 square feet per student, compared to only 150<br />

square feet per student at MPH.<br />

In addition, the <strong>School</strong>’s endowment, far smaller than that<br />

of comparable independent schools, is too small to<br />

provide future financial stability or to generate the income<br />

for financial aid and scholarships that our commitment to<br />

diversity demands.<br />

Mindful of these issues, the Board of Trustees, with<br />

valuable input from faculty and staff, initiated a long-range<br />

planning process that culminated in the development of a<br />

new mission statement, the complete revision of the<br />

master site plan, and the initiation of a $6 million dollar<br />

capital campaign – the most ambitious campaign in the<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s history. This long-range planning process<br />

identified four campaign priorities:<br />

• The Laurie Mezzalingua ’86 Center for Early Learning<br />

• Campus Renovations<br />

• Library/Media Center<br />

• Growing Our Endowment<br />

Each of these campaign objectives will have a direct,<br />

demonstrable impact on <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s enduring<br />

mission.<br />

The Laurie Mezzalingua ’86<br />

Center for Early Learning<br />

The road to a lifelong love of learning begins very early in<br />

childhood. With the freedom to explore the world through<br />

play and hands-on learning experiences, children satisfy<br />

their natural curiosity, develop independence and<br />

confidence, and discover their own talents. Researchers tell<br />

us that the earliest years of a child’s education form the<br />

bedrock from which a genuine love of school and learning<br />

grows. For that reason, the new Center for Early Learning<br />

was an important priority for <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>.<br />

The new Center for Early Learning, home to an expanded<br />

Prekindergarten and Kindergarten program, was designed<br />

specifically to meet the needs of four- and five-year olds,<br />

enhancing a program already well-known throughout the<br />

region. From the playground and classrooms to the<br />

gathering space that accommodates group assemblies,<br />

musical performances, and presentations, the Center is<br />

designed to meet both the cognitive and physical development<br />

needs of our youngest learners. Counters, sinks,<br />

toilets, mirrors, even windows, are designed at ageappropriate<br />

heights, which is not only safer, but helps<br />

encourage self-reliance. From the new playground to the<br />

cubbies in the classrooms, the new Center for Early<br />

Learning makes each child feel welcome. It says to them,<br />

“This is for you.”<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> chose this project as the catalyst for<br />

the capital campaign, in part, because of its impact on the<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s enrollment. The new facility allows for a<br />

combined increase in enrollment capacity in<br />

Prekindergarten and Kindergarten from 39 to 50, including<br />

a doubling in the size of the Prekindergarten class, which<br />

opened with full enrollment for the 2006-2007 academic<br />

year and a waiting list of prospective parents vying to get<br />

into the program. This expanded enrollment not only has<br />

had a significant, positive impact on the <strong>School</strong>’s financial<br />

stability, but it has also help ensure full enrollment<br />

throughout the Lower <strong>School</strong> grades.<br />

Campus Renovations<br />

One of <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>’s greatest virtues has<br />

always been managing to do so much in so little space. It<br />

seems we have always been challenged by a lack of space -<br />

space for specific programs like athletics or music, space<br />

for faculty members to have their own individual<br />

classrooms, space for students to find a quiet corner to<br />

study and think. Our capital campaign construction<br />

projects also enable the renovation of additional spaces<br />

across the campus, enhancing many different aspects of<br />

student life.<br />

The renovations, for example, will have a direct impact on<br />

the Fine and Performing Arts programs. The current library<br />

will be renovated to create a new fine arts classroom for<br />

three-dimensional work and a new soundproof band<br />

room. The current orchestra room will be converted into a<br />

32 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


dance studio with bars and mirrors, alleviating competition<br />

for use of the stage by choral groups and dance<br />

groups.<br />

Don Ridall, director of athletics, remarked in early 2009<br />

that, “The biggest challenge we have right now is finding<br />

enough useable field space to accommodate our fall and<br />

spring athletic teams. We have 100 players on five soccer<br />

teams and only one full field. Creating additional field<br />

space shows students and the community that we consider<br />

athletics an integral part of our students’ education.”<br />

By the fall of 2009, the leasing of approximately 13 acres<br />

of farmland adjacent to the campus had given the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

athletic program several new athletic fields. This land was<br />

graded and seeded to accommodate the increasing needs<br />

of both fall and spring sports schedules.<br />

In addition to these renovations, plans call for the<br />

renovation of a variety of classrooms and offices on<br />

campus to ease current space constraints:<br />

• Additional Middle <strong>School</strong> classrooms will be created,<br />

allowing courses like history and English, in which<br />

every Middle <strong>School</strong> student enrolls, to be divided into<br />

smaller sections. This will permit a slight increase in<br />

enrollment in the Middle <strong>School</strong> grades, and, at the<br />

same time, smaller class sizes and a smaller teacher-tostudent<br />

ratio.<br />

• The health classroom has already been moved from the<br />

Barn into a more centralized location within Bradlee.<br />

• The Second Grade classrooms have been moved into the<br />

Lehman Lower <strong>School</strong> Building so that Second Grade<br />

faculty and students can work more closely with the<br />

Blend, allowing for a smoother transition between these<br />

grade levels.<br />

• Lastly, with the construction of the Center for Early<br />

Learning, the <strong>School</strong> has created a new campus entrance,<br />

allowing for additional parking and a longer waiting<br />

space on campus for buses and cars. A dedicated dropoff<br />

and pick-up area for Prekindergarten and<br />

Kindergarten students makes this a safer process for our<br />

youngest students.<br />

As the breadth and depth of our program grows, it is<br />

important that we continually assess how our campus can<br />

meet the changing needs of our students. All of these<br />

renovation projects have been carefully planned to have<br />

positive impact on our entire community.<br />

Growing Our Endowment<br />

Of the $6 million the <strong>School</strong> has pledged to raise in this<br />

capital campaign, $2 million is slated to go into the<br />

endowment, doubling its current size. Why is growing the<br />

endowment so vitally important to <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong><br />

First and foremost, the larger endowment will provide<br />

stability against the unpredictability of annual income and<br />

operating expenses, helping to secure financial security for<br />

future generations of students. A recent survey of 27<br />

comparably sized independent schools across the country<br />

found that a third had endowments of over $10 million.<br />

Three-quarters had endowments of more than $5 million.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s current endowment of slightly over<br />

$2 million is far smaller than that of most independent<br />

schools – and too small to adequately protect the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

long-term fiscal stability.<br />

Secondly, a larger endowment will support our<br />

commitment to financial aid and scholarship assistance for<br />

deserving students. Approximately 40 percent of our<br />

students now receive some amount of financial aid or<br />

scholarship, ensuring economic, cultural, and ethnic<br />

diversity in our classrooms. Currently, this commitment to<br />

financial aid and scholarship assistance is met through the<br />

operating budget. There is enormous pressure to balance<br />

the <strong>School</strong>’s commitment to financial assistance with the<br />

obligation to meet other expenses. That means that every<br />

year, young men and women who are academically<br />

qualified to study at <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> and who would be real<br />

assets to the <strong>School</strong>, are unable<br />

to attend because our<br />

financial aid or scholarship<br />

funds for the year are<br />

exhausted.<br />

Hundreds of <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

alumni have directly<br />

benefited from<br />

financial aid and<br />

scholarship assistance<br />

throughout the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

history and can personally<br />

attest to the fact that their<br />

lives would be significantly<br />

different today had they not been<br />

given the opportunity to attend this<br />

<strong>School</strong>. In addition, our scholarship recipients historically<br />

have added great value to our community by bringing<br />

different perspectives and talents to the student body.<br />

The best approach to protecting <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s<br />

commitment to financial aid and scholarship is to grow<br />

the endowment. That effort will, in every sense, be an<br />

investment in the <strong>School</strong>’s future and in its future of<br />

generations of students.<br />

Building Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 33


Building Memories<br />

Library Media Center<br />

Remember that book that stirred your imagination That<br />

changed your view of the world What you discover in a<br />

library - what you read - can challenge you, motivate and<br />

exhilarate you. It can awaken you to realities and<br />

possibilities.<br />

The anchor of any academic institution is its library. In a<br />

school that values the life of the mind, the library should<br />

be prominently located, aesthetically inviting, and<br />

supportive of all the learning endeavors of students and<br />

faculty. It should be equipped to bring the world into<br />

focus through technology. It should be a place to study,<br />

read, contemplate, and learn.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s library is currently located in the<br />

basement of the Amos Building, far from the flow of<br />

student activities and classrooms. The square footage of the<br />

library has not changed in recent decades, even though<br />

enrollment has more than doubled. The library must<br />

accommodate all grades in a single space, so a teacher may<br />

be reading aloud to a group of Second Graders in one area<br />

of the library while Juniors are researching constitutional<br />

law a few feet away. Without dedicated spaces for small<br />

group work, teachers and students feel the frustration of<br />

balancing the advantages of group work with the need of<br />

others for quiet study, research, and reading. In short, the<br />

existing library is poorly equipped to serve the current<br />

needs of students and faculty.<br />

The new Library Media Center will be built at the back of<br />

the McNeil building, overlooking the Chappell athletic<br />

field. In addition to distinct spaces for the Lower <strong>School</strong><br />

and Middle/Upper <strong>School</strong> libraries, the building will<br />

include a reading room, a computer lab, two additional<br />

classrooms, and spaces for teaching, group and individual<br />

work. The new Library Media Center will allow the library’s<br />

book collection to grow from 11,000 to 20,000 volumes.<br />

Acknowledging that we now live in an age of instant<br />

information, the design will provide for a technology<br />

infrastructure to integrate online and print resources<br />

seamlessly throughout the facility.<br />

The library should be a space that brings us all together<br />

while meeting our different needs – from First Graders<br />

gathered in a circle for storytime to Model United Nations<br />

students researching global warming to a quiet place for an<br />

alumnus to rekindle memories. The new Library Media<br />

Center will become just this space, anchoring the <strong>School</strong>,<br />

telling the world what we value, and serving the entire<br />

school community.<br />

We have now raised over $3.8 million in pledges against<br />

our campaign goal of $6 million, with 100 percent of our<br />

Board of Trustees and Alumni Association Board<br />

committed to the campaign. Perhaps most significantly,<br />

100 percent of faculty members and administrators have<br />

also pledged their support, and a growing list of families<br />

have committed to the campaign. The <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

administration and campaign volunteers look forward to<br />

the opportunity to sit down with as many parents, alumni,<br />

and grandparents as possible to share our story and ask for<br />

support.<br />

34 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Student Life<br />

& <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

Who was your prom/Winter Carnival date First crush<br />

Most satisfying team sports victory Favorite teacher It<br />

seems that, regardless of how long ago we graduated from<br />

high school, many details remain very vivid (although<br />

perhaps somewhat embellished) in our minds. This is not<br />

nearly as often the case with other parts of our lives, especially<br />

most of the many years spent since those school days. Why<br />

not We can speculate, but it does appear that the years we all<br />

spent at <strong>Manlius</strong>, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, or MPH are simply a singular,<br />

unique stage of our lives.<br />

As with many remembrances, we often look back upon those<br />

years with rose-colored lenses, in the way that I recall being a<br />

star on the soccer team, lead in the school musical, most<br />

popular kid in the class, straight-A student (hey, why not -<br />

I’m on a roll), and so forth. There’s no need to confuse things<br />

with the facts, so at least this is the way that I (choose to)<br />

remember it. The good news is that part of the bargain allows<br />

us these “adjusted” memories, with no one eagerly volunteering<br />

to correct us (or remind me that I wore braces all<br />

through high school and got the “small” locker senior year).<br />

Remember physics Not the class, classroom, and teacher, but<br />

the actual substantive material taught (No cheating if you<br />

have a son or daughter who recently struggled through this.)<br />

Didn’t think so. How about English Again, surely we recall<br />

our instructors, their mannerisms, our classmates, the room<br />

where class was held – but can you remember what Hamlet<br />

meant by “A little more than kin and less than kind.”<br />

(Probably you didn’t understand it even back then, but that’s<br />

much ado about nothing). Or what John Donne meant by<br />

“Get with child a mandrake root” Or even who John Donne<br />

was in the first place Most of our time in school was<br />

obviously spent in the classroom (and on homework), yet<br />

most of that information seems to be locked away in that<br />

very dark, hard-to-find part of our brain.<br />

Contrast that with the most trivial details of our nonacademic<br />

student life experiences in high school: the dress<br />

worn to the school dance, the music we listened to, butter<br />

fights in the mess hall, the skunk smell in the Barn, the large,<br />

marble “Head Boy” plaques on the walls, your sports team<br />

jersey number, the Phoenix Tavern.<br />

Most of us probably cannot recall much of what we did at<br />

work five years ago (or last week), yet we remember<br />

seemingly far less important minutia pertaining to Mr.<br />

Lawrence’s bust of Homer, hiding liquor behind dorm room<br />

mirrors, standing in formation through Central New York<br />

winters, visiting Suburban Park, daily lunch in the<br />

Farmhouse, Mr. Denton’s wall of magazine covers.<br />

That so many of us continue to harbor so many memories<br />

from a relatively brief period of time many years ago is a<br />

testament to the fact that these “trivial” things were actually<br />

not trivial at all, but in their own way represent an experience<br />

which shaped us into the men and women we’ve become.<br />

And that is why, while we lock away the formula for a Mole<br />

(6.02 x 10[23]) deep in our memories’ biggest black hole, we<br />

choose to carry memories of our days at <strong>Manlius</strong>, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>,<br />

or MPH in our front pocket, to remind us from where we<br />

came, who we are, and (if we choose sometimes) how we<br />

once scored the winning goal in the C.U.P.S. League<br />

Championship, were prom king/queen, valedictorian, and –<br />

of course – invented the Internet. Enjoy.<br />

President, Josh Wells ’89, President<br />

Alumni Association Board<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 35


Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Code of Honor<br />

and Conduct<br />

Reprinted from the 1969<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Student Handbook<br />

As a member of the Corps of<br />

Cadets of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>, I<br />

will endeavor to live by its motto:<br />

“Manners Makyth Man.” It<br />

signifies that the right conduct of<br />

man is characteristic of civilized<br />

society and indicative of highmindedness,<br />

honor, courage, and<br />

unselfishness.<br />

1. I will be truthful and honest<br />

in my association with<br />

others.<br />

2. I will conduct myself as a<br />

gentleman in public and<br />

private, always concerned for<br />

the good name of the<br />

<strong>School</strong>.<br />

3. I will practice the highest<br />

ideals of sportsmanship,<br />

playing courageously but<br />

fairly in all contests.<br />

4. I will take proper care of my<br />

belongings and respect the<br />

property of others.<br />

5. I will accept my<br />

responsibilities as a cadet<br />

and perform all tasks<br />

promptly and properly.<br />

6. I will give my best effort on<br />

all school assignments and<br />

will work to make my<br />

signature a pledge of honest,<br />

personal work.<br />

7. I will familiarize myself with<br />

and follow the rules and<br />

regulations of the <strong>School</strong> at<br />

all times.<br />

_____________________________<br />

Signature<br />

I noted<br />

the other<br />

day a<br />

snow<br />

storm was<br />

reported approaching Syracuse and that<br />

the temperature was expected to plunge<br />

to single digits.<br />

If at one time you were a kid standing<br />

at attention for what seemed like<br />

forever on a snowy evening during the<br />

retreat ceremony, a biting wind<br />

sweeping up the hill, you can appreciate<br />

the appeal of points south - far south.<br />

I used to feel sorry for the guys in “C”<br />

Company because they were subjected<br />

to a double whammy; they had to fall<br />

out at their dorm then march in<br />

formation up the hill to stand retreat. I<br />

still can see all of us leaning ever so<br />

slightly into the wind as poor Herb<br />

Forst, standing at the foot of the<br />

flagpole and hoping, I’m sure, the<br />

mouthpiece wouldn’t stick to his lips,<br />

struggled to blow “Retreat” on his<br />

cornet (or was it a trumpet), hitting<br />

the notes more or less at random and<br />

causing a collective cringe and giggle at<br />

every clinker coming out the end of his<br />

horn. Old Glory always came down,<br />

however, and then, gratefully, we<br />

trooped into the mess hall, frozen feet,<br />

runny noses and all.<br />

For me one of many cherished <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

memories.<br />

Bill Kilpatrick, ‘43A<br />

An indelible impression was made on<br />

me early in my first year. One day at<br />

noon mess the cadet adjutant, Doug<br />

Florance ’42A, his hands trembling,<br />

read an order busting the four-pip and<br />

stoic First Captain to private. I never got<br />

over the shock of that young man’s<br />

humiliation, and I never learned the<br />

nature of his offense. What I did learn<br />

from that experience was to pay<br />

attention.<br />

Bill Kilpatrick ’43A<br />

the MANLIUS <strong>School</strong><br />

A January night in 1943. Rich Flagg and<br />

I occupied the Northwest corner room<br />

on the ground floor of Thomson Hall.<br />

After Rich turned in I opened fully both<br />

the North and the West windows. It<br />

snowed HEAVILY that night - from the<br />

NW, of course. Come morning, we had<br />

approximately two inches of snow<br />

throughout our room - on the bunks,<br />

desks, everywhere! Rich moved up to<br />

the third floor (HQ Company) that day.<br />

Took me two weeks to convince him to<br />

return.<br />

Bob McClinton ‘43A<br />

After graduation in 1943, I voluntarily<br />

enlisted in the army. When called for<br />

induction and by sheer coincidence,<br />

George Clune II ’43C and I went by<br />

train to NYC for induction and then<br />

went through basic training together.<br />

Contact was lost until after the war.<br />

It took another 60 years until the<br />

autumn of 2003 to find out that I was<br />

only a few miles away from Albert Reed<br />

’43HQ. Thanks to that year’s <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> Clambake, these contacts<br />

were reestablished (and also with Dick<br />

Arnold ’43HQ.)<br />

Cleland Ross ’43HQ<br />

Hijinks in Thomson Hall<br />

The year was 1942 and it was one of the<br />

first warm spring days. The rear sloping<br />

roof of Thomson Hall facing away from<br />

the campus became a tempting place<br />

for several adventuresome cadets to<br />

36 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


climb out on<br />

it. They then<br />

decided it<br />

would be cool<br />

to shed<br />

clothing for<br />

some full<br />

body tanning.<br />

It might have<br />

gone<br />

unnoticed<br />

were it not for one of the cadets slipping<br />

and falling rear-first onto a sharp roof<br />

tile. This ended the caper and made<br />

necessary several stitches in the poor<br />

cadet’s behind. I can still see him to this<br />

day maintaining a stiff posture in classes<br />

while sitting on only one side of the<br />

chair. It was a dumb and dangerous<br />

thing, but it was cause enough for much<br />

levity among the other cadets – they too<br />

in stitches! I’m not certain, but the<br />

school authorities most likely felt that<br />

this was punishment enough!<br />

Cleland Ross ’43HQ<br />

Dorm Room<br />

Becomes a Wind Tunnel<br />

With my first year at <strong>Manlius</strong> learning<br />

the ropes, I decided for my next year to<br />

make some “improvements” in my<br />

dorm room’s heating and cooling.<br />

During the summer vacation, I built an<br />

automatic temperature controlling<br />

device that would fit in place of one<br />

glass panel of a window in Thomson<br />

Hall. It was a wooden box sized to fit in<br />

a single panel of glass in the window.<br />

The box had a hinged glass back that<br />

would swing open. It also contained a<br />

fan, a thermostat, and an old wind-up<br />

clock. The key for the clock alarm windup<br />

was rigged to hold the glass panel<br />

open. On hot days, the fan would blow<br />

in cool air. At night, with outside air<br />

cold, the clock’s alarm key (bell<br />

removed) would start rotating at a preset<br />

time and cause the panel to swing<br />

closed while switching off the fan, if not<br />

already off by action of the thermostat.<br />

This allowed time for the dorm room to<br />

warm up before getting up. The room<br />

became known as “Ross’ Wind Tunnel.”<br />

Cleland Ross ’43HQ<br />

Sneaking back from Cazenovia and/or<br />

Suburban Park… the coziness in Fay<br />

McCarthy’s barbershop... the gravelly<br />

voice of Major Jacobs. Sunday afternoon<br />

return parades… Limestone Creek and<br />

the related lime collecting in our palms<br />

when showering… the woven<br />

newspaper ceiling in the movie theater<br />

in town…the shooting range.<br />

Art Henahan ’45A<br />

Cross-country practice was a good way<br />

to legally go off-grounds!<br />

Anonymous ’47<br />

Parking my Model A behind the<br />

bleachers at the football field.<br />

Weekends, Pete Pratt and his stepbrother<br />

would go to Cooperstown to<br />

the Knox <strong>School</strong> for Girls and meet<br />

some very nice ladies. One weekend we<br />

went to Lake Placid. I took part in Vegas<br />

II not III, connected with John Cossitt<br />

’56A.... now deceased.<br />

Hampton M. Miles ’49HQ<br />

In the spring of 1951, my three friends<br />

and I (Dave Small ’52A, Jack Kokoletsos<br />

’51B, and Bob Allan ’51B) decided to<br />

visit “Birdland” in New York City. At<br />

the time, it was a Mecca for jazz music<br />

on the east coast. It still exists today<br />

even though jazz today is quite different<br />

than it was then.<br />

David Murphy ’51A<br />

Seated at the table, from left to right are: Dave<br />

Small ’52A; Dave Murphy ’51A; Slim Gaillard,<br />

Birdland musician; Jack Kokoletsos ’51B; and Bob<br />

Allan ’51B; standing is Duke Ellington, the<br />

famous jazz musician and composer who was<br />

visiting Birdland to hear Slim Gaillard who played<br />

10 instruments and spoke eight languages.<br />

A Conversation with<br />

Pete Hovell ’52C<br />

Dodge Gymnasium fire<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> provided me with a foundation<br />

for my life. I benefited from the<br />

education, discipline, organization, and<br />

socialization. I can clearly remember<br />

my great teachers, Sedgwick, Shankweiler,<br />

Edwards, Shaw, Verbeck, and<br />

MacDonald. In contrast, I have no<br />

recollection of my college instructors.<br />

And there are many other memories –<br />

watching my first television in Lee<br />

Sedgwick’s apartment, the fire at Dodge<br />

Gym, company competition, trips to<br />

Syracuse, drinking beer behind Verbeck<br />

Hall, intramural football (B league),<br />

and butter fights in the mess hall - to<br />

name a few.<br />

Peter Hovell ’52C<br />

Responses from Alumni Office<br />

are italicized<br />

Thanks for your submission. I am<br />

intrigued.<br />

The first time you watched TV was in Lee<br />

Sedgwick’s apartment Do you remember<br />

what you saw I would love to hear more<br />

about that.<br />

Lee Sedgwick was the Commandant<br />

(i.e., he lived in the dorm with his<br />

wife and two boys) of C Company.<br />

C Company was down the hill next<br />

to Dodge Gym and between the<br />

infirmary and General Barker’s<br />

house. We watched Friday night<br />

boxing.<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 37


Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

Also…you remember the fire in the Dodge<br />

gym If I have this right, the Barber gym<br />

was not built until a few years later,<br />

leaving the athletic teams to practice in the<br />

town of <strong>Manlius</strong>. How did the fire start<br />

Were the cadets on campus Did they have<br />

to help the fire department<br />

Dodge Gym - I do not know who<br />

started it - but I think that it was<br />

an electrical fire. Yes, school was<br />

in session. A lot of us helped the<br />

firemen with their hoses - but<br />

overall they wanted us away from<br />

the scene. The building was<br />

gutted – but did not fall in. The<br />

gym had a swimming pool, a rifle<br />

range and a basketball court.<br />

Regarding the fire - I should think<br />

the old newspapers and OB<br />

Magazine would have covered it –<br />

it was probably in 1951.<br />

I also wonder what the punishment was for<br />

the dining hall butter fights!<br />

I am not sure that we were caught.<br />

If you took a pat of butter and put<br />

it on a cloth napkin - then<br />

snapped the napkin swiftly - it<br />

would go up in the air - and the<br />

objective was to get it to stick to<br />

the ceiling. If we were caught - we<br />

would probably have been ordered<br />

to march back and forth outside<br />

Comstock Hall for X number of<br />

hours. As I think of it - I think we<br />

did it as a random act. Most lunch<br />

meals you had faculty members<br />

sitting with you at the table.<br />

I often wish I could go back in time to see<br />

the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus in action. I spend a<br />

lot of time in the school archives and am<br />

quite fascinated by the history. Strolling<br />

around the former campus, you can still<br />

feel the spirit of <strong>Manlius</strong> today.<br />

C Company had a very high<br />

esprit de corps – being down the<br />

hill and away from everyone else.<br />

Also, Lee Sedgwick was a great<br />

mentor and leader. We won a<br />

disproportionate number of<br />

athletic and military awards<br />

(annual company competition -<br />

we were like the Yankees - we<br />

won more often than any other<br />

company). When we marched up<br />

the hill in the morning - we were<br />

there for the day - whereas the<br />

other cadets could go to their<br />

dorms when they had a break.<br />

I remember acquiring the keys to the<br />

military carryall for transport to the<br />

Syracuse University campus during<br />

evening hours of darkness. I also<br />

remember prior to an in-room inspection<br />

encouraging excessive flatulence so<br />

the aroma would shorten the<br />

inspector’s visit.<br />

Another time, we welded Whitey<br />

Anderson’s Chevy to the curb with<br />

short pieces of steel and thermite<br />

process sand relieved from the<br />

chemistry lab.<br />

Then there was the time we<br />

reassembled a “Model A” Ford in Dr.<br />

McDonald’s outer office during the<br />

night. The fireguard saw and heard<br />

nothing according to his report.<br />

Emmett Greenleaf ’53HQ<br />

I remember that Capt. Shaw and Tom<br />

Cahill took the place of my father and<br />

helped me through growing pains of<br />

“regimentary” living. They are both<br />

heroes in my memory. I also remember<br />

the not so publishable times: Our<br />

Sunday afternoon cocktail parties in A<br />

Company where we had built little bars<br />

behind the wall mirrors and stocked<br />

well. A horrible moment when the<br />

horrid Col. Smaim lifted my gym bag<br />

from my window seat during an inspection<br />

and it was full of quarts of beer. But<br />

these were part of the great life <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

offered and I still consider it the most<br />

important phase of becoming an adult.<br />

Mike Taitch ’53A<br />

I remember the snowball fights where<br />

“C” Company would take everyone else<br />

on and check them in to their barracks.<br />

William H. Parker, III ’55C<br />

It was the Spring of 1956, basketball<br />

season was completed and the weather<br />

was still cold. Lee Shaffer from<br />

Company A and I, from Company C,<br />

decided that we had had enough of<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> and went AWOL. We hitchhiked<br />

to Syracuse with no “bags” and<br />

ended up at the Greyhound Terminal.<br />

He going to Pittsburgh and me to<br />

Malone, N.Y. When we said “good-bye,”<br />

we never knew if we would see each<br />

other again… to say nothing of going<br />

back to <strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

I was in Malone only 8 hours before<br />

my father drove me back to <strong>Manlius</strong>,<br />

and, before Capt. Sedgwick, he said<br />

“you have my permission to do<br />

whatever you want... and I think he<br />

should be punished accordingly for his<br />

actions.” So I spent the next two<br />

months marching “extra-duty”... and<br />

the next day guess who was also<br />

back...Lee Shaffer... who, of course, was<br />

issued the same punishment by Capt.<br />

Sedgwick... he took “no pity” and said<br />

it was one of the most severe<br />

“punishments” he had issued as<br />

Commandant of Cadets.<br />

To make it worse, he forbid Lee and I<br />

to speak. So the only times we were<br />

together were “marching” and the first<br />

day our hours were increased by 10<br />

because we were laughing while<br />

marching. We spent everyday there<br />

marching, in the rain, in the sleet, and<br />

in the snow…probably more than any<br />

other two cadets in <strong>Manlius</strong> history...<br />

fortunately graduation was NOT denied<br />

to either of us.<br />

Ernie Mason ’56C<br />

38 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Faculty member Frank Milliman had a<br />

boxer dog named “Candy” during 1955-<br />

1958.<br />

The dog got loose one day and<br />

encountered a skunk. Frank asked for<br />

volunteers to shower the dog in the old<br />

field house. Three or four of us<br />

“volunteered” to wash the dog in the<br />

shower room in bathing suits using<br />

brushes, dog shampoo, and cans of<br />

tomato juice. It was quite a scene as the<br />

dog did not enjoy the process and the<br />

skunk smell was unbelievable. We all<br />

had to shower afterwards to get the<br />

skunk smell off of ourselves! To thank<br />

us, Frank took us to dinner the following<br />

Sunday before the afternoon parade.<br />

Fred Benedict ’58A<br />

I remember running the electric floor<br />

buffer in the halls and company room<br />

in prep for Saturday morning inspections<br />

& Government Inspections…<br />

smelling the perfume on my pillow after<br />

the girls went home and we moved back<br />

into our rooms, after having been<br />

billeted in the infirmary and/or doubled<br />

up in other barracks. Smelling the<br />

Wedge’s cigar smoke as soon as he<br />

sneaked into the barracks during<br />

evening study hours. Hearing Chaplain<br />

Laine recite the Book of Prayer from<br />

memory in Sunday Chapel. Trying to<br />

avoid getting caught sunning ourselves<br />

on the mattresses we dragged onto the<br />

roof of Thomson Hall.<br />

Bruce French ’58HQ<br />

Annie was the black Newfoundland B<br />

Company mascot. When my wife and I<br />

lived beneath the Phoenix Tavern, we<br />

had a Springer Spaniel—Nancy—who<br />

made friends with Annie. The latter<br />

loved to dig into a snow bank and<br />

spend the night. I could always find my<br />

dog, who was not made for cold, cold.<br />

Then there was the Saint Duchess, who<br />

in my cadet days belonged to Col.<br />

McCarthy. She’d come up the hill—<br />

sometimes on her own—and spend the<br />

day under McCarthy’s secretary’s desk. I<br />

don’t know if photos of her have<br />

survived.<br />

Col. John Marsh ’46B,<br />

faculty member ’57-’60<br />

Barry S. Knaut, 1st Lt. B. Company, George<br />

Montgomary, Major HQ Company, Dick Greene,<br />

1st SGT B Company, Annie, Company B Mascot,<br />

given to Mr. McPhee in 1952.<br />

Annie (Annastasia) was the B Company<br />

mascot and lived in the MacPhees’<br />

apartment in the front right corner of<br />

Hadley Hall. Like many “Newfies,” she<br />

developed hip dysplasia and had to be<br />

put to sleep. I think she lived with us in<br />

Hadley Hall for perhaps three years<br />

students formed up and marched, whatever<br />

the weather, all the way into the<br />

village of <strong>Manlius</strong> to attend Mass at St.<br />

Ann’s on Academy Street. The people<br />

there were very friendly. Military Science<br />

and Tactics classes were realistic. We had<br />

many field exercises. One that stood out<br />

in my mind was the day our eleven man<br />

squad advanced in two groups across a<br />

smoke-filled football field to an<br />

“enemy” target. We had M-1’ rifles with<br />

blanks and the “enemy” at their end of<br />

the field had a machine gun with<br />

blanks. Not a game, we were graded on<br />

our battle. I really enjoyed Mr. Shaw’s<br />

forestry club. We not only learned a<br />

great deal about trees, but on at least<br />

one occasion, our group spent an entire<br />

day planting trees on a local farm.<br />

When I last saw that land, the trees were<br />

at least 50-feet tall.<br />

Bob Obrest ’59B<br />

One afternoon some of us were talking<br />

in the Phoenix Tavern when we started<br />

laughing about something. I ended up<br />

aspirating part of a milk shake, which<br />

alarmed me considerably. Steve Wynn<br />

was there and immediately calmed me<br />

down. I couldn’t have had better care if<br />

he had been a physician.<br />

Bill Rankin ’59HQ<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

Annie, the B Company mascot, poses for a photo<br />

Bill Goff ’59B<br />

At the end of many very busy school<br />

days, I needed more time to study, but<br />

the order passed through our B<br />

Company barracks, “lights out,“ so<br />

under my bed covers, I studied into the<br />

night with a book and my flashlight.<br />

Every Sunday morning, most students<br />

marched a short distance to the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

Chapel on campus, but Catholic<br />

I was an immature, humorless twit who<br />

worked his ass off for three years,<br />

willing to trade a self-imposed state of<br />

fear and over achievement for a chest<br />

full of medals and a scholarship to a<br />

good college. I imagine that most<br />

graduates will settle for tales of nostalgia<br />

rather than their real stories. Being a<br />

teenager in an all boys military school is<br />

a fast way to grow up with an elitist<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 39


Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

attitude and a love/hate relationship<br />

with the military.<br />

John Scarlett ’60C<br />

I remember how rough it seemed to<br />

stand in formation at 6:30 in the<br />

morning, in the cold, drizzle, snow. I<br />

remember snapping to attention in the<br />

mess hall, and all students standing<br />

straight when the teacher entered the<br />

classroom. I remember with pride, even<br />

today, how good the cadets looked on<br />

the parade field on a warm spring<br />

afternoon. If I shared them all, the<br />

memories would fill a book.<br />

Donaldo Hart ’61HQ<br />

Hey, it was a boys’ school and boys will<br />

be boys and <strong>Manlius</strong> is where I started<br />

smoking. Why Because we weren’t<br />

supposed to. I was able to have my<br />

dorm door closed during study hour<br />

and I smoked by the window and I<br />

found a couple of, what I thought, very<br />

clever ways to hide the evidence. Our<br />

bunk beds had hollow metal legs with<br />

metal caps. They made for very handy,<br />

very large ashtrays. During the winter,<br />

Mother Nature took care of it. We just<br />

dropped our butts out the window.<br />

Until…yep…spring time. The snow<br />

melted and there was this very large pile<br />

of cigarette butts under our window.<br />

Fortunately, my room was on the third<br />

floor. Who Me<br />

There was Suburban Park, the amusement<br />

park across the street. Now, who<br />

could resist that It beckoned to us<br />

cadets. There was the music, the lights,<br />

the girls and we were, after all, boys. So,<br />

we would sneak across the highway and<br />

Students smoking in the Phoenix Tavern!<br />

into the park and stroll through the<br />

various activities and flirt with the girls<br />

from town. But we had one rule, stay off<br />

the rides. If Capt. Sedgwick came into<br />

the park and we were on a ride, there<br />

was no escape. And there were many<br />

chases across the highway and the<br />

football field back to the barracks with<br />

Capt. Sedgwick’s headlights in hot<br />

pursuit. Some of us did find the tunnel<br />

that went under the highway. Look, it<br />

was good field training.<br />

Dave Rosso ’61C<br />

I was thinking about meals, not that the<br />

food was so good, but the speed in<br />

which the entire corps could be fed. I<br />

was also remembering that <strong>Manlius</strong> was<br />

a place in which we said grace before<br />

every meal: “We thank thee, Dear Lord,<br />

for this provision of thy bounty. Bless it<br />

to our use we pray thee. Give us grateful<br />

hearts and keep us every mindful of the<br />

needs of others through Jesus Christ our<br />

Lord. Amen Seats!”<br />

I also had the pleasure of spending my<br />

last two years at <strong>Manlius</strong> in Farmer Hall,<br />

in the 3-man room on the bottom floor.<br />

Not only was this closest to Suburban<br />

Park, but closest to the highway. So,<br />

every once in a while we would bemoan<br />

the absence of curtains. Then we would<br />

remember our motto. “If they hadn’t<br />

seen it before, they wouldn’t know what<br />

it was. If they had, it was no big thing<br />

anyway.” Funny what an all boys school<br />

will lead to.<br />

Dean Sedgwick ’61HQ<br />

Let’s see – what memorable moments<br />

do I have about The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> I<br />

do have a lot. One of the most<br />

memorable things I remember is the<br />

Chaplain – he had a great influence on<br />

my life and my future. Also the<br />

“Wedge.” I saw him years later at Ithaca<br />

College and he was behind me – he<br />

said “Hey there Nick Verro!” I was<br />

shocked that he remembered me. He<br />

was an amazing man. I played football<br />

at <strong>Manlius</strong> and the big game I remember<br />

was when we played the West Point<br />

Plebes! I was hit so hard I still remember<br />

because it rocked my boat for a<br />

while. I played in a rock and roll band<br />

at <strong>Manlius</strong> but I don’t remember the<br />

name of the band. We had a lot fun<br />

though and I do remember that John<br />

Hayden was also in it. Great memories<br />

from the school – helped me a lot in<br />

my future – got me into college too.<br />

Hope this is something – I can’t tell<br />

some of the stuff we did – I would get<br />

hard duty!<br />

Funniest thing I can remember is seeing<br />

Ukers underwear up on the Flag Pole in<br />

the morning – there are more but that<br />

one sticks in my mind. We took all the<br />

beds in Farmer Hall and put them<br />

outside one morning.<br />

Nick Verro ’61B<br />

The Ring Dance, 1963, and my date is<br />

Carole Conklin, Miss Teenage Syracuse<br />

of 1962. Gorgeous blonde and I’m<br />

envied by all. Then came the highlight<br />

of the evening – the kiss while standing<br />

in the Ring replica – and the photographer<br />

is there to catch the Big<br />

Moment. And boy does he catch a<br />

moment, a great shot of our kiss but<br />

what’s the suave cadet doing Standing<br />

right on her toe. That was my first and<br />

last date with Miss Teenage Syracuse!<br />

Bill Darrin ’63HQ<br />

The Ring Dance<br />

40 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


After a meal I remember climbing up to<br />

the water tower with friends, Neal<br />

Rogers and Al Farrell, to have a smoke<br />

and Captain Sedgwick, a.k.a. the Wedge,<br />

would be waiting for us. Needless to say<br />

we had to forgo the smoke that day.<br />

David Frier ’64C<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>, during my time<br />

there, was light years ahead of the<br />

nation with respect to integration and<br />

equal opportunity. While the South was<br />

in an uproar over desegregation and the<br />

Ku Klux Klan was running amuck (de<br />

jure segregation) and the North was<br />

apathetic on the subject (de facto<br />

segregation), The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

accepted African-American students and<br />

many, such as Chip Hasbrouck ’62A,<br />

George Lawrence ’62B, Odell Hancox<br />

’63C, John Sutton ’63HQ, Morris<br />

Thomas ’65A were all positive role<br />

models in forming what became a lifelong<br />

passion of supporting the civil<br />

rights movement after graduation from<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> in 1964. After a stint in Florida<br />

as a VISTA volunteer and later as a law<br />

student at Miles College in<br />

Birmingham, AL (a historically Black<br />

college) in the 1970’s, I relocated to<br />

Detroit and have served as Legal<br />

Coordinator of the Fair Housing Center,<br />

a civil rights organization that<br />

investigates and litigates housing<br />

discrimination cases for the past 30<br />

years. I wish to acknowledge The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>’s progressive thinking in<br />

the 1960s and a belated personal note<br />

of thanks to Chip, George, John, Dell,<br />

and Morris.<br />

Mike Olshan ‘64 HQ<br />

In late May of 1965, a week or two<br />

before graduation, I found a newly<br />

hatched snapping turtle at the bottom<br />

of Limestone Falls. This little turtle still<br />

had the remnant yolk sac on its belly. It<br />

was submerged, belly-up on the gravel a<br />

few feet from the wash of the falling<br />

water. It appeared the little turtle had<br />

come over the waterfall.<br />

I picked up the turtle, it was limp. As I<br />

turned it over and right-side up in the<br />

palm of my hand, it moved. The<br />

decision was made to rescue this critter.<br />

I shared a room on the south first floor<br />

of Farmer Hall with Fred Knox. Fred<br />

helped me conceal the turtle, nurse it<br />

and feed it. It began to respond to<br />

earthworms found outside…and boy<br />

baby turtles sure can eat. We tried some<br />

raw hamburger that a cadet on tablewaiter<br />

duty had “liberated” from the<br />

school kitchen. The turtle got sick and<br />

nearly died until it ejected that lousy<br />

meat from both ends. Another happy<br />

diner’s reaction to the school’s food<br />

service! Fresh worms or grubs from the<br />

area around the dorm brought the turtle<br />

back to health.<br />

Plans were made to conceal the turtle if<br />

the Battalion Staff or Faculty were going<br />

to take it away. But we didn’t have to;<br />

they either ignored it or offered it food.<br />

Someone in Farmer Hall coined the<br />

name “Turkle”, and that name stuck.<br />

Many visitors said Turkle was getting<br />

bigger, as it learned to reach out and<br />

take food from our fingertips. The turtle<br />

appetite was indeed growing.<br />

After commencement, parades and pack<br />

up, my mom and dad (Richard W.<br />

“Dick” Hawley, ‘27C) agreed to take<br />

“Turkle” on our drive back to Washington<br />

State, as my dad had rescued turtles<br />

while growing up in Iowa.<br />

The arrival of summer meant, get a job,<br />

college or the Armed Forces in the fall<br />

so I had to agree to release Turkle in late<br />

June to our pond on rural Camano<br />

Island in the northwest of Washington<br />

State. The yolk sac was gone and Turkle<br />

was indeed healthy and growing. Turkle<br />

swam off into the duckweed, but that<br />

was not the last I saw of him.<br />

Late summer of 1972, I was in the Navy<br />

in WESTPAC. My dad sent a photo from<br />

the Stanwood (WA) News of a neighbor<br />

man holding a live snapping turtle he<br />

found in his pond. This turtle was over<br />

12 inches across the shell. The State<br />

Game Agent said the snapping turtle<br />

was a male, it was not a ‘native’ species,<br />

so it must have been ‘imported’, the<br />

only one found in the area. It was taken<br />

to a local zoo and The <strong>Manlius</strong> turtle<br />

lived happily ever-after, I hope.<br />

Rick Hawley ’65HQ<br />

Are you speaking of things like: The<br />

“great pickle fight of 1965” held in<br />

Thomson Hall, 3rd floor vs. 2nd floor<br />

Hoisting Mrs. Wilson’s (Gen. Wilson’s<br />

wife) unmentionables up the flag pole<br />

for Senior prank Resetting the entire<br />

mess hall in the quad area while setting<br />

General Wilson’s silver Corvette in the<br />

mess hall Scattering clues around<br />

campus so that “the Wedge” would have<br />

to drive his grey 4 door Oldsmobile<br />

(with snow tires always on it for all<br />

seasons) all over the grass on campus in<br />

order to try and catch us Which he<br />

didn’t ...that time!! How lunch time in<br />

Comstock Hall was always punctuated<br />

by the sounds of cadets up stairs with<br />

Col. Sedgwick saying, “Thank you sir!!!<br />

May I have another“ Do you mean<br />

stuff like that<br />

Robert Lichorwic ‘65A<br />

During the Winter Carnival dance I<br />

remember getting a good stiff poke in<br />

the ribs by Lee Sedgwick for dancing too<br />

close to my date. Boy, that guy had eyes<br />

in the back of his head!<br />

Dick Moran ’65HQ<br />

At one of the dances I was given the first<br />

“TIME OUT” for smooching on the<br />

dance floor and it was with a teacher’s<br />

daughter.<br />

Chuck Cross ’66A<br />

Winter Carnival<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 41


You’re talking to the all time record<br />

holder for soak slips!<br />

life and what true friendships are all<br />

about... Thanks Dave for our friendship!<br />

Bill Shallcross ’66C<br />

Steve Burchesky ’66C<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

You never know where a seemingly bad<br />

friendship may go! That is what I never<br />

thought of when I threw my summer<br />

roommate, Dave Corcoran, out of our<br />

dorm room and into the hallway at<br />

Farmer Hall. I don’t recall what Dave<br />

did or said at the time...but I know it<br />

didn’t agree with me! That summer of<br />

‘63 was my second summer at <strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

I thought I’d never see Dave Corcoran<br />

again! Well...what was never part of my<br />

high school plans was becoming a fulltime<br />

cadet at <strong>Manlius</strong>! That quickly<br />

changed inside of a year. In the fall of<br />

1964, I found myself enrolled as a<br />

cadet, dressed in a “C” uniform and in<br />

Hadley Hall.<br />

It was the first day of school when I<br />

decide to explore my new surroundings.<br />

I was walking down the hall on the 2nd<br />

floor thinking back when I was last at<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> wearing cut off shorts and a<br />

madras shirt. Suddenly, down the hall<br />

came a cadet with a red cord, lots of<br />

medals, lots of stripes and his spit<br />

shinned shoes with big ‘ol heels<br />

rhythmically stomping at a fast pace.<br />

“Oh my GOD!” I screamed inside...It’s<br />

that jerk Dave Corcoran! I just imagined<br />

Dave pushing me against the wall,<br />

arrested and tossed into the stockade for<br />

insubordination. I began shaking as he<br />

came closer. Maybe he wouldn’t<br />

recognize me! I could run but knew I<br />

could not hide. I had to face whatever<br />

was coming my way. As Dave came up<br />

to me, he stopped - looked at me,<br />

leaned forward and said “STEVE<br />

BURCHESKY...HOW THE HELL ARE<br />

YOU” and shook my hand like a<br />

long lost friend!<br />

Dave and I became the best of friends<br />

over my next two years at <strong>Manlius</strong> and<br />

today, Dave and I are the dearest of<br />

friends and see each other about once a<br />

year or so when he comes to our home<br />

for a visit. That incident when I tossed<br />

Dave on his kisser back in 1963 has<br />

certainly been retold on occasion...but it<br />

is all just a laugh now... It was just a<br />

small wrinkle in the whole scheme of<br />

I remember:<br />

■ Mr. Weeks (Director of Admissions)<br />

had a huge head of white hair the<br />

day he accepted me.<br />

■ Col. Potter never raised his voice.<br />

■ Standing by the door of my room in<br />

Thomson Hall at the end of study<br />

hall ready to race downstairs to the<br />

Day Room to get a good seat for the<br />

TV show Hulabaloo.<br />

■ Cmdr. Rugh’s Saab, the only car that<br />

had front wheel drive in those days,<br />

the rear wheels would freeze up in<br />

the winter and we had to push him<br />

to try and help free them up.<br />

■ Cmdr. Rugh screaming “The Lord<br />

helps those who help themselves!”<br />

■ Col. Morse always was willing to<br />

open the gym for us to shoot hoops<br />

on Sunday afternoons in the winter.<br />

I now understand the sacrifice he<br />

made for us and I am grateful. Those<br />

were good games.<br />

■ Nobody wanted to guard Col. Morse<br />

in a pick up game because he was so<br />

quick!!<br />

■ Bill Edwards had a great voice<br />

barking out orders to the Battalion.<br />

■ Jack Maddox gave a history quiz<br />

everyday!<br />

■ Rev. Scarlett’s daughter was a<br />

beautiful young lady!<br />

■ The Drill Team that went to the<br />

World’s Fair.<br />

■ I loved being CQ.<br />

■ “First Call. – 10 to check out for<br />

reveille – 5 to check out for waiters!<br />

The uniform for the day is C.”<br />

■ Special orders were always<br />

interesting!<br />

■ Smoking in classes.<br />

■ We owe Mr. Millard an apology for<br />

the way we greeted his arrival home<br />

to Farmer Hall in the evening. He<br />

did nothing to deserve that.<br />

■ Sam Bigelow never raised his voice<br />

either.<br />

■ Waiting to use the pay phone after<br />

study hall.<br />

■ Dave Edwards and Bernie Shaw were<br />

very reserved gentlemen until they<br />

laughed out loud. They both did<br />

that with great gusto!<br />

■ When Lee Sedgwick talked it was<br />

always LOUD!<br />

■ Mop bucket races! The only time<br />

my skinny little body was an asset!<br />

Charlie Duke could make me fly in<br />

one of those. Nobody could beat<br />

that combo!<br />

■ Our “after midnight” parade in<br />

downtown <strong>Manlius</strong>, and the Wedge’s<br />

red station wagon arriving on the<br />

scene.<br />

■ Gary Steele was the best athlete I<br />

ever saw in person until I met Wes<br />

Unseld while I was in college.<br />

Brad Garrity ’66C<br />

Mop bucket races<br />

42 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


This is a photo of “Chargin’ Charlie” the<br />

mascot of C Company during the fall<br />

semester of 1966-67. He was owned by<br />

Dan Fogarty, the Company Commandant<br />

of C Company in Farmer Hall. Mr.<br />

Fogarty taught history. If memory serves,<br />

he got a job in the athletic department<br />

of SU and left at mid-year.<br />

As you can see from the picture, Charlie<br />

was a scruffy-haired puppy that visited<br />

cadets in their rooms and was spoiled<br />

by all. What you can’t see are his sharp<br />

little puppy teeth. When he was<br />

teething, he used to inflict little pinprick<br />

bites on anyone who picked him<br />

up, but we didn’t mind.<br />

I couldn’t begin to imagine what breed<br />

he was, or if he was, as Mark Twain<br />

described one, a “composite.” But he<br />

was cute and we all appreciated having<br />

him around.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

The kitchen staff thought they had<br />

stumbled on to a great deal. A whole<br />

bunch of single serving pizzas, wrapped<br />

in plastic. What could be easier! Only<br />

one problem; they had been designed<br />

to be heated in the then-new microwave<br />

oven. What the hey, an oven’s an oven,<br />

right So in they went to the regular<br />

oven. When they came out, the plastic<br />

wrap had melted into the pizzas. They<br />

were not only inedible, they were<br />

mummified. It turned into a PBJ lunch<br />

that day. The pizzas were never seen<br />

again.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Chargin’ Charlie<br />

The Way the Ball Bounces<br />

The Superball appeared on the scene in<br />

‘65 or ‘66, I forget which. They were<br />

amazing. They rebounded to something<br />

like 95 percent of their original drop<br />

height. Throwing them hard returned<br />

amazing results. Physics teachers all<br />

around the country were using them in<br />

their classes. We began to wonder how<br />

high they could go. Could you bounce<br />

one over, say, Comstock Only one way<br />

to find out. One day, just before lunch<br />

formation, the Battalion gathered in the<br />

Area. The largest, strongest, Red Knights<br />

lineman was led to the center of the<br />

mob.<br />

With much ceremony, he was presented<br />

with a brand-new superball. After some<br />

cheers and a NASA-style countdown, he<br />

hurled the superball to the asphalt. We<br />

all looked skyward. Nothing. Then we<br />

looked down. The superball lay<br />

shattered in hundreds of pieces on the<br />

ground. We all wandered away, the<br />

question of conquering Mount<br />

Comstock never to be answered.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

It was fore-ordained that Bob Pratt<br />

’67HQ and I would wind up as roommates.<br />

Our mothers met in the waiting<br />

room of their mutual obstetrician, and<br />

gave birth to their first-born sons within<br />

a few weeks of each other. Twelve<br />

years later, Bob and I met as 7th grade<br />

New Boy Day Students, the lowest form<br />

of animal life. We teamed up for<br />

mutual protection. I think that is what<br />

motivated the powers-that-be to make<br />

us roommates six years later. They<br />

probably figured that we were less<br />

likely to want to throttle the other.<br />

Confession being good for the soul, I<br />

must now own up, publicly, to a prank<br />

I played on Bob John Meyers (Battalion<br />

Commander Cadet Lt. Colonel John C.<br />

Meyers, ‘68HQ) who had a clock that<br />

ran counter-clockwise. He explained to<br />

me that it was simple to make a clock<br />

run backwards. You simply had to<br />

change the positions of two magnets<br />

and voila! I stored this knowledge<br />

away.<br />

One afternoon while Bob was at<br />

Driver’s Ed, I sabotaged his clock-radio.<br />

It was some minutes after he returned<br />

that he noticed.<br />

“Hey, my clock’s running backward!”<br />

“Oh yeah. We’re in a new dorm and Mr.<br />

Long and the engineers are running the<br />

power backwards through all the south wall<br />

plugs for some test or other.”<br />

“When are they changing it back! I need<br />

my clock!”<br />

I had to confess before Bob went off in<br />

search of an explanation. He must have<br />

forgiven me because Bob is still one of<br />

my best and most steadfast friends, all<br />

these decades later.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Emergency Rations<br />

On every table at breakfast time, back<br />

in the days when we still had waiters,<br />

was a 10-pack of single-serving cereal<br />

boxes. They were the usual selection of<br />

popular brands. Then there was Triple<br />

Snack. The closest thing to Triple Snack<br />

around today would be a cross between<br />

trail mix and muesli. Nobody ate it.<br />

Pour milk on peanuts Please! What<br />

only I appreciated was that what was a<br />

failure as a breakfast cereal was a<br />

perfect snack for study hall at night.<br />

One morning, with the connivance of<br />

some friends, I managed to accumulate<br />

14 boxes of the stuff. How to transport<br />

them to Thomson You weren’t<br />

supposed to take food from the Mess<br />

Hall, after all. Thank heaven for the<br />

loose, floppy “C” jacket. With careful<br />

packing I managed to distribute all 14<br />

boxes in my jacket. They stacked up like<br />

a cereal flak jacket. Soon I had<br />

nighttime snacks for several weeks. As<br />

diligently as I looked, I could never find<br />

Triple Snack in any reputable grocery.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 43


Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

A Few Things<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Taught Me<br />

By John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Rules of Spit shining:<br />

Materials:<br />

Polish:<br />

Liquids:<br />

Old T-shirt<br />

Cotton Ball<br />

Handkerchief<br />

Straight from the can and<br />

melted under your desk<br />

lamp<br />

Water<br />

Spit<br />

Spray shine from the store<br />

The best nasal decongestants:<br />

Sinex<br />

Horseradish<br />

Brasso<br />

Observations<br />

Can anyone ever forget the smell of<br />

burning Right Guard<br />

Did you ever notice that there was a<br />

hole in the floor of Doc Williams’<br />

biology lab that was directly above the<br />

large soup kettle in the kitchen below<br />

Was there ever a more uncomfortable,<br />

fragile, ill-fitting, and generally ugly<br />

garment as those horrible plastic<br />

raincoats<br />

A Stray Thought… or Two<br />

Remember how you could take your<br />

latex cap cover, suck a little bubble of air<br />

into it, twist it tight to create a little<br />

nodule, and squeeze it to make a<br />

surprisingly loud snap<br />

We, of the Battalion Staff, having<br />

nothing productive to do, were given<br />

the task of preparing Farmer Hall for the<br />

arrival of the ladies for Winter Carnival.<br />

I don’t remember why, but we “shortsheeted”<br />

all the beds.<br />

Impress Your Kids (or grandkids)<br />

Let them know that you went to school<br />

with the man who invented the<br />

emoticon ;). That’s right, Scott Fahlman,<br />

‘65HQ.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

B Company circa 1967<br />

I recognized this picture immediately, as<br />

well I should. I was the First Platoon<br />

Leader of B Company and this picture is<br />

part of a larger picture of two of my<br />

squads. I caught it good for not having<br />

all the members of the platoon show up<br />

for this photo and the subsequent one<br />

of the rest of the platoon. One in the<br />

know would recognize that the missing<br />

members are mainly the seniors. Since<br />

breakfast was not a mandatory meal at<br />

that time (although it escapes me why),<br />

I allowed those who wished not to go to<br />

mess to fall out at our formation in<br />

front of the new dormitory (unnamed<br />

at the time). If only I had known… I<br />

believe the dog in the photo belonged<br />

to our B Company Commandant, John<br />

Long, and his family.<br />

Mark McDade ’67B<br />

As I recall in ’66 or ’67, Steve Haight<br />

brought a piranha to his room and<br />

charged us rubes a dollar to watch it tear<br />

a gold fish apart. A real “Bomba the<br />

Jungle boy” moment. The piranha and<br />

gold fish immediately became buddies,<br />

so we anxiously awaited nothing and<br />

just sat around watching some fish<br />

swim in a bowl. Well, probably better<br />

than staring at the bare walls. However,<br />

our money was not refunded.<br />

As I recall, the piranha and the gold fish<br />

after being roomies for a couple of days<br />

had a falling out and the gold fish was<br />

halved. It really did resemble barracks<br />

life in Thomson Hall circa ’67... The<br />

piranha eventually succumbed as well<br />

and was flushed, but with a hand<br />

salute!<br />

Jon Statler ’68A<br />

A Fish Story<br />

For the <strong>Manlius</strong> student, there was only<br />

one time when the rules were relaxed<br />

and he could act like a reasonably<br />

normal teenager – SATURDAYS. Depending<br />

on afternoon activities,<br />

Saturdays represented anywhere between<br />

five and ten hours of carefree existence.<br />

Study periods filled the evenings<br />

between Sunday and Thursday. Friday<br />

evenings were dedicated to preparing for<br />

Saturday morning inspection. But<br />

Saturday afternoons and evenings<br />

offered a wide range of things to do or<br />

not do. One could amble – not march,<br />

amble—to Knox Hall to watch that<br />

week’s movie; one could watch TV in the<br />

company day room or even just hang<br />

out in one’s room basking in the aura of<br />

unrestricted indolence.<br />

Saturday dinners could come from a<br />

number of sources. There was an<br />

evening meal in the Mess Hall, but<br />

attendance was optional. Cadets on day<br />

passes or Parents’ Permission could dine<br />

off-campus. Many others chose to<br />

forego the Mess Hall for a burger at the<br />

Phoenix Tavern. Then, for a brief period<br />

in my senior year, another option<br />

presented itself – PIZZA. An enterprising<br />

pizza parlor in <strong>Manlius</strong> Village<br />

managed to wrangle permission to<br />

deliver pizzas on Saturday nights to the<br />

school dorms. This arrangement lasted<br />

for only a few months, and I’m not sure<br />

why it stopped. But for a few glorious<br />

weeks the option existed for us to enjoy<br />

something that was prepared for one or<br />

two diners instead of 300.<br />

There were a few times that my roommate<br />

Bob Lovell and I would pool our<br />

resources and take advantage of this<br />

fleeting taste of “real-people” food.<br />

[Brief reality check here: In those days,<br />

“pooling resources” consisted of scraping<br />

together five bucks for a large pizza<br />

– delivered.] Anyway, we quickly<br />

discovered one of the ironclad axioms of<br />

campus life. If you want to find out the<br />

identities of 150 of your nearest and<br />

dearest friends, simply introduce a pizza<br />

into a dormitory environment. One<br />

whiff of warm pepperoni and there’d be<br />

a lineup at your door knowing how<br />

willing you would be to share.<br />

However, we had an ace up our sleeve:<br />

44 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Bob was perhaps one of three people on<br />

the North American Continent who<br />

enjoyed anchovies. In spite of the fact<br />

that I’d be just as happy if those little<br />

guys remained part of the Mediterranean<br />

food chain, I’d gladly chip in for a large<br />

pizza with pepperoni and anchovies.<br />

The resulting dialogue would be<br />

repeated often:<br />

Nearest and dearest friend:<br />

“You guys got pizza!”<br />

Us:<br />

“We sure did. It’s got anchovies.<br />

Want a slice”<br />

Nearest and dearest: “Um, no thanks.”<br />

Following enough of those exchanges to<br />

get the word out that we had the<br />

dreaded fish on our pie, things grew<br />

quiet enough for me to transfer my<br />

anchovies to Bob’s half of the pie<br />

whereupon we could enjoy our pizza yet<br />

still not seem like greedy gluttons to the<br />

rest of the dorm.<br />

Chris Ellis ‘68HQ<br />

During the blizzard of 1966, only about<br />

forty of us Cadets made it back from<br />

vacation. We were commissioned to<br />

Always plenty of snow to shovel at <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

shovel all the roadways and walkways<br />

by hand for three days. When everybody<br />

made it back to school, the “shoveling<br />

forty” got to go skiing for three days<br />

while everyone else was in class. We<br />

worked hard but we were rewarded.<br />

I was among the forty who had made it<br />

back because my Dad had just bought a<br />

new 4-wheel drive pickup for his<br />

business.<br />

Lucky me.<br />

Jay Johnson ’69B<br />

Well, I can hardly remember the<br />

incident. It was Spring, and definitely<br />

time for the Senior prank, as they called<br />

it. Many Seniors and I’d guess as many<br />

underclassmen as well participated. The<br />

ruse started around midnight to 2:00<br />

a.m. when someone got access to the<br />

main building (Comstock) and took<br />

every chair out of every floor and<br />

somehow transported them all to the<br />

top of the gym. Everyone was back in<br />

bed long before sunrise. Monday, they<br />

had to suspend class due to lack of<br />

seating and Seniors were scolded. Not<br />

sure who was the ringleader, but it was<br />

funny.<br />

Dan Klawer ’70C<br />

I remember the one time I had to go to<br />

“soak line.” This was a panel of other<br />

students/cadets and the company<br />

commander who handed out demerits<br />

and discipline. I was in “C” company<br />

and I got caught smoking out on the<br />

“trail” (a path going into the woods). I<br />

was a freshman and quite apprehensive<br />

about this and rightly so. I received my<br />

demerits but also received a punishment<br />

of having to smoke a “Parodi” cigar<br />

under a wool army blanket. It curbed<br />

my future smoking habits for the rest of<br />

the school year. I have hundreds of<br />

stories about <strong>Manlius</strong> and <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, four years worth. They were<br />

some of my most memorable<br />

memories.<br />

John Murray ’71C<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

pebble hill <strong>School</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> Hymn<br />

Oh, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, to thee we pledge<br />

Our efforts one and all<br />

To work each day at books and play<br />

Thine honor to extol;<br />

Fortier, fideliter,<br />

Our motto e’er shall be,<br />

With courage and with loyalty<br />

To win high praise for thee.<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 45


Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

When I was 16, we lived down in the<br />

Valley section South of Ballentyne Road.<br />

Moving from public to private school<br />

was different, plus all the new friends to<br />

get to know. <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> was entirely<br />

different, plus all day from 8 a.m. to 5<br />

p.m. was a bit strenuous by itself, but<br />

then I went out for football, playing<br />

right guard against two big guys. I was<br />

aching and always tired.<br />

But the second year was entirely<br />

different - played touch football and<br />

tobogganed down hills across the street,<br />

then was manager of the baseball team.<br />

Combined French of three years into<br />

two, plus Latin of Cicero & Virgil. At<br />

graduation, all ten of us (haha). I<br />

addressed the 5th Form, and received<br />

Citizenship award. Just loved the<br />

homey-relaxed atmosphere out on the<br />

farm! Great teachers/staff!<br />

Ed Barnard survivor of Class of 1938<br />

(depression)<br />

About 2 weeks before we graduated in<br />

June of 1961, a group of us went “over<br />

the hill” with a 6-pack to celebrate our<br />

impending graduation. In those days,<br />

the legal drinking age was 18. In any<br />

case, we got caught drinking on school<br />

property. We were all told to bring our<br />

parents to see the headmaster to discuss<br />

whether we were to be suspended from<br />

school or be allowed to graduate. One<br />

of the guys I got caught drinking with<br />

was Geoff Hodgdon, whose father John<br />

Hodgdon was the headmaster. So Geoff<br />

had to bring his mother to see his<br />

father. The irony of that was not wasted<br />

on our parents, so our punishment was<br />

to clean up the boys locker room in the<br />

old barn. We all graduated and scattered<br />

to the wind, but I still saw Geoff, Don<br />

Timbie, Anne Aloi and Doris Denton<br />

from that class for many years to come.<br />

Geoff and Anne have since passed on,<br />

but I am hoping to see all of the<br />

members of the class of 1961 at our<br />

50th reunion next year.<br />

Dick Doust ’61<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

(in the late 1950s and early<br />

1960s) was…..<br />

….study hall in a big room together<br />

with everyone in Forms I-VI (a.k.a.<br />

Grades 7-12, or Upper Middle <strong>School</strong><br />

and Upper <strong>School</strong>). Each morning, after<br />

attendance was taken, a different<br />

student each day gave a short speech, a<br />

kind of “Thought for the Day.” Some<br />

were funny, some serious. Some<br />

students looked forward to the<br />

opportunity, and others dreaded it, but<br />

for all it was great practice in public<br />

speaking. The walls of the room were<br />

hung with wooden plaques showing the<br />

winner for many years past of the<br />

annual award for best student in Latin,<br />

French, two foreign languages, English,<br />

etc. How I wanted to see my name up<br />

there for future classes to gaze upon!<br />

…midterm and final grades being<br />

posted in rank order on a bulletin board<br />

at the back of the study hall. Everyone<br />

would rush to the back of the room to<br />

see how he/she (and everyone else) had<br />

done as soon as they were posted. I had<br />

no idea what was happening my first<br />

term there when there was a sudden<br />

rush to the back of the room, and I was<br />

shocked at the public posting. Being all<br />

together in one room meant that we all<br />

truly got to know everyone in all those<br />

grades, not just our own classmates.<br />

And when there were teachers’ meetings,<br />

some of the oldest students were sent to<br />

Lower and Middle <strong>School</strong> to babysit the<br />

younger kids, so we knew many of them<br />

as well.<br />

…gym (or sports) every afternoon,<br />

inside or outside. The boys who didn’t<br />

want to play football or basketball or<br />

baseball (or who didn’t make the team)<br />

joined the “B Squad.” Later soccer was<br />

added. Every girl was on just about<br />

every varsity team. Even I, who have not<br />

a single athletic bone in my body and<br />

am 5’2”, was on the varsity basketball,<br />

volleyball and field hockey (when we<br />

had that) teams. Tennis and swimming<br />

were more selective. The girls went<br />

bowling once a week. Cheerleading was<br />

the most competitive physical activity<br />

for the girls. “Give me a P! P! Give me<br />

an E! E!...” All the girls wanted to be<br />

cheerleaders, and tryouts were very<br />

important. All games were held in the<br />

gym, which was very small, with hardly<br />

any room for spectators.<br />

….school dances (all held in the gym).<br />

There was sometimes a themed fall<br />

dance, once a square dance, once an<br />

event called “Bubbles, Bangles and<br />

Beads.” (I got my first kiss at a square<br />

dance in the gym, when the caller said<br />

to “kiss your partner.” At that moment,<br />

it was a boy two classes behind me!)<br />

Each year there was a Christmas dance,<br />

with decorations by the senior class. My<br />

senior class had three girls and seven<br />

boys in it, and I persuaded them all to<br />

cut out hundreds of snowflakes one<br />

Saturday (and they had to be 6-pointed,<br />

which is much harder to make than 8-<br />

pointed – was I crazy) and hang them<br />

at different heights from threads high<br />

up in the room so it really did look like<br />

a winter wonderland. (Thank you, Bill<br />

Hatch, for all your work on that<br />

ladder!) There was an annual spring<br />

dance, and of course prom night, when<br />

the junior class did the decorations,<br />

which always included the school’s<br />

sparkling crystal ball with lights with<br />

colored gels in front of them. The GAA<br />

(Girls’ Athletic Association, which was<br />

renamed Girls’ Activities Association<br />

when I was its president) sponsored the<br />

spring dance yearly, I believe, and I<br />

think Student Council did the fall<br />

dance.<br />

…Saturday-night parties most weekends<br />

for the whole Upper <strong>School</strong> in<br />

someone’s basement.<br />

…carpools to get to school for many<br />

kids; a bus from the Sedgwick area off<br />

James Street for others.<br />

…the Great Debate over Kennedy vs.<br />

Nixon in 1960. Anne Cleveland, a<br />

junior whose father (Harlan Cleveland,<br />

then Dean of the Maxwell <strong>School</strong> of<br />

46 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Citizenship at Syracuse University) was<br />

later appointed Under-Secretary of State<br />

by Kennedy, was one of the debaters<br />

arguing for Kennedy.<br />

… learning how to give and get more<br />

equal treatment for girls and women<br />

than they had had in the past. My<br />

mother, Ruth Rudolph, was, I think, the<br />

first woman appointed to the Board of<br />

Trustees. And how tradition-breaking it<br />

was when Anne Aloi ’61 was elected the<br />

first female Student Council president!<br />

Many of the girls had schemed together<br />

to elect her, feeling that any of three of<br />

the girls in that class would make a<br />

better president than any of the boys,<br />

but knowing that if we split our vote<br />

among the three girls, a boy would win.<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> was still all white at that<br />

time, at least in the Upper <strong>School</strong>, but<br />

there was some religious diversity.<br />

…working on The Rolling Stone<br />

(student newspaper) and the Panther<br />

(the yearbook) upstairs in the barn for<br />

hours on end, especially my senior year.<br />

What fun it was, and how proud I was<br />

of the products! I was sad that there<br />

wasn’t a band when I came to <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong>, but those of us who played an<br />

instrument occasionally got together<br />

and played in The Rolling Stone room.<br />

And there were great choral groups<br />

under Mrs. Crosby, and a very good art<br />

program, too.<br />

…an invitation to join Mrs. Alden’s<br />

Great Books discussion group or Mr.<br />

Jay’s Great Events discussion group,<br />

which was a big deal.<br />

…candy sales at morning recess,<br />

organized by different classes and clubs<br />

to raise money for teams and events.<br />

…lunch daily in the Farmhouse, with<br />

seat assignments changing every two<br />

weeks (). A senior headed each table<br />

and served the food. We had fish every<br />

Friday. The student council president<br />

made the day’s announcements at<br />

lunchtime, I think.<br />

…and, of course, classes: Latin, first with<br />

Mrs. Joiner (Amo, Amas, Amat…), then<br />

with Mr. Krol. Math with Mr. Krol,<br />

interspersed with philosophical discussions<br />

and many anecdotes. English with<br />

Mr. Littlefield (“I don’t like peaches and<br />

cream over… should it be much or<br />

muchly”), then Mrs. Alden. French<br />

with Monsieur Tufts. German with Mr.<br />

Stephenson. Chemistry and Physics with<br />

Mr. Van Wagenen. Problems of<br />

Democracy with the headmaster, Mr.<br />

Hodgdon (where we learned, among<br />

other things, about brainwashing, so we<br />

would know how to resist it if we were<br />

ever taken prisoners of war). We also<br />

had to write an essay on how we would<br />

pay for our college education without<br />

our parents’ help. We had to pick a<br />

school, compute the costs, and account<br />

for every nickel. I picked Sarah<br />

Lawrence, then the most expensive<br />

college in the USA. I figured annual<br />

expenses would be $3,600, a fortune in<br />

1961). History with Mr. Jay or Mr.<br />

Littlefield. I think I got an outstanding<br />

education. Excellent, caring teachers and<br />

small classes really helped. Thank you.<br />

Frani Rudolph Bickart ’62<br />

I remember...... how proud I felt when<br />

history teacher Edward Jay announced<br />

that recent grad Don Palmer was aboard<br />

the first submarine ever to go under the<br />

North Polar Icecap. I believe it was the<br />

USS Nautilus in whose wardroom I was<br />

later invited to dine.<br />

I remember....... throwing spitballs over<br />

the head of Mrs. Sherman as she was<br />

writing on the blackboard. They would<br />

hit the wall with a great SPLAT. I never<br />

tried this antic in Mr. Don Thomson’s<br />

classroom. I don’t think anyone did and<br />

lived to talk about it. I remember the<br />

loss of gridder Chuck Macabelli to<br />

Solvay H.S. where he was All City<br />

halfback. The CUPS league cheered. I<br />

wondered how anyone could drive to<br />

school a cooler car than Kem Brannon’s<br />

hotrod. Virginia Speno had to be the<br />

most intense and cutest girl athlete in<br />

the school. But I got nowhere with the<br />

girls. In college, I tried to rekindle a<br />

flame I had for Wendy Hunter by<br />

calling her for a date while she was at<br />

Pine Manor Junior College. I drove 600<br />

miles round trip only to find out she<br />

had a boyfriend in Vermont. I think<br />

they still live in Stratton. I was able to<br />

track down Jack Machold in North<br />

Carolina, and we keep in touch<br />

regularly. He wanted to know if I had<br />

heard from Gretchen or Lele, but sadly, I<br />

hadn’t.<br />

Gregory “CJ” Young ’62<br />

Did you know that <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, in the<br />

early to mid 50s, had a maintenance<br />

person who kept carrier pigeons over<br />

the men’s locker room I don’t have any<br />

additional information except to say<br />

the gentleman was only with <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> one year and lived in the Knox<br />

Farmhouse. This was prior to the<br />

construction of the “new” gym when<br />

the gym and locker room were in the<br />

barn. The birds were over the locker<br />

room and I’m sure there are remnants<br />

of them being there to this day!<br />

John Hamel ’57<br />

I have always been proud of having<br />

been a part of <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>. It was<br />

a wonderful opportunity that few<br />

people have the chance to experience.<br />

The small school environment allowed<br />

for the chance to participate in many<br />

activities both athletic and extracurricular<br />

that would not have been<br />

possible in a large public school setting.<br />

The academic expectations were<br />

challenging and the preparation for<br />

college was excellent. My experiences<br />

have a great deal to do with who I am<br />

today. I am grateful to be able to return<br />

to <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> a small amount<br />

compared to what I took with me.<br />

It is important that MPH continues its<br />

role in offering Central New York<br />

students the same opportunity that I<br />

enjoyed. It is a great investment for me<br />

as I know the school creates great<br />

citizens for the future. There are not<br />

many things in today’s world that can<br />

give you that return.<br />

Nat Reidel ’65<br />

I only went to <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> for a year, 65-<br />

66, but what a year! I tried field hockey,<br />

but hated it, so I was allowed to practice<br />

with the boy’s soccer team. The barn<br />

was very old and drafty, and it always<br />

felt as if it was just one more windstorm<br />

from coming down. I had two classes<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 47


Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

upstairs in the barn. French with<br />

Monsieur Stevenson, and history, but I<br />

don’t remember that teacher’s name. He<br />

was a former Episcopal priest, and<br />

always had the windows open. We had<br />

to wear many layers in his class. If you<br />

could get him talking about one of his<br />

pet ideas, you could just sit back and<br />

listen to him expound all class. I’m not<br />

sure what I remember from history, but<br />

I left M’sieur Stevenson actually<br />

understanding and speaking French.<br />

Everyone knew everyone else.<br />

Our sophomore class was huge by backin-the-day<br />

standards-28 kids, so they<br />

had to split us into two sections.<br />

Fourteen was the highest number of<br />

kids allowed in a class. I was a new kid,<br />

but I never felt that way. I had friends<br />

from frosh to seniors – everyone was<br />

treated as family. The farmhouse was<br />

the Headmaster’s home. I was friends<br />

with Mr. Draper’s daughter, Allison, and<br />

we would go up to her room and hang<br />

out. It was odd to find it the offices<br />

when my kids started going to MPH.<br />

I took Trig in math, and never could do<br />

the steps as they were laid out in the<br />

textbook. They didn’t make sense to me.<br />

One day the teacher asked the answer to<br />

one of our homework equations, and I<br />

was the only one who had gotten the<br />

right answer. He had me put my work<br />

up on the board, then looked at my<br />

work and told me it was all wrong.<br />

There was no way that what I’d done<br />

should have worked. I told him that it<br />

had worked for me. He said, maybe for<br />

this one equation. He then filled the<br />

blackboards with other equations using<br />

my formula, and every one proved<br />

correct. He then had the class copy my<br />

method down, and use it for that night’s<br />

work. I loved all of my year. I wish my<br />

parents could have afforded the $3,000<br />

tuition for my junior and senior year,<br />

but my brother went off to Colgate...<br />

Liz Belden Handler ’68<br />

I was entering Mr. Johnson’s math class<br />

with my hand on the door knob when<br />

the bell rang. He told me I was late and<br />

to leave. I was NEVER late to a class<br />

again!<br />

Susan Martin ’69<br />

MANLIUS <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

I have memories of Chip (Lewis ’79)<br />

being on the Green Team when the<br />

<strong>School</strong> was <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> and then on<br />

the Red Team when it became<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. As a first<br />

grader, he always wanted money to<br />

go to the “Camper’s” Shop (Campus<br />

Shop).<br />

And there are memories of Andy and<br />

Phil attending kindergarten when it<br />

was housed on the 2nd floor of the<br />

Farmhouse. When I was teaching<br />

preschool on the first floor of the<br />

Farmhouse – we used to have music<br />

“sing-a-longs” in what is now the<br />

Headmaster’s Office. Having taught<br />

under five different headmasters and<br />

adjunct under Baxter Ball, a lot of<br />

memories come rushing back – all<br />

wonderful I might add.<br />

Gelene Lewis, former<br />

faculty member<br />

Being the only girl in every one of my<br />

classes my first year (junior year) meant<br />

I was guaranteed to be called on. This<br />

meant I had better have done my homework.<br />

I also remember not being<br />

allowed to wear pants to school so my<br />

legs were freezing walking between<br />

buildings on the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus in the<br />

winter…then working to get the administration<br />

to allow girls to wear pants.<br />

Lynn Townsend Feindel ’72<br />

48 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


(including the teacher) glued to the<br />

window as the woodchuck was captured<br />

and relocated somewhere else.<br />

Gary Beach ’74<br />

I always liked the skunks that raised<br />

families under the barn over the years –<br />

at least throughout the 70s and 80s.<br />

Riding in Fred Jacquin’s car from the<br />

Lower <strong>School</strong> to the <strong>Manlius</strong> Campus<br />

the first year of the merger. This in and<br />

of itself was nothing unusual unless you<br />

factored in that Chuck Beeler, the dean<br />

of admissions, was the driver of the bus.<br />

It was always a race to see which would<br />

arrive first and if we could stop at the<br />

donut shop for coffee and still arrive on<br />

campus first. It was just a fun way to<br />

start the morning.<br />

I was pledging a sorority that included<br />

girls in Nottingham, Jamesville-Dewitt,<br />

Fayetteville-<strong>Manlius</strong> and MPH. I had my<br />

pledge ribbon attached to the underside<br />

of my cheerleading uniform (because<br />

you couldn’t deface the uniform with<br />

non-school “stuff”) and was a passenger<br />

in Bob Platner’s car riding back to the<br />

Lower <strong>School</strong> Campus. I was smoking a<br />

cigarette – which was not allowed in<br />

either uniform or as a pledge, but<br />

figured that no one in the car cared. All<br />

of a sudden I looked up and saw that<br />

we were behind our own MPH school<br />

bus and Cindy Jackles and Laura Lavine<br />

(both in the sorority) were in the last<br />

row of the bus looking back and<br />

shaking their fingers at me for doing a<br />

No-No. I was mortified.<br />

Eating lunch and dangling my feet in<br />

the creek across Route 92 (it wasn’t<br />

quite as busy then as it is now) on<br />

warm spring days.<br />

In the fall of 1970, my parents were out<br />

of town one weekend and I decided to<br />

have a small party at my home after a<br />

Red Knight’s football game. Roger Glass<br />

had his mother’s station wagon and<br />

Eddie Barth had his car – both filled<br />

with PG’s following the cheerleaders in<br />

a caravan traveling down East Genesee<br />

Street (remember, there were no Routes<br />

690 or 481 at that time so Genesee<br />

Street connected everything). At the 5<br />

corners of Salt Springs Road, Bradford<br />

Parkway, East Genesee and Croly Streets<br />

all of the PG’s got out of their respective<br />

cars and proceeded to do a Chinese Fire<br />

Drill around my lead car. Normally this<br />

wouldn’t be such a big deal EXCEPT<br />

that they did it through two cycles of<br />

the stop light AND I was driving<br />

illegally – being only 15 at the time. Just<br />

picture ten BIG football players running<br />

circles around this little Chevy Nova,<br />

banging on the windows, waving their<br />

arms. Roger and Eddie thought it was a<br />

riot. Needless to say I almost had a<br />

heart attack right then and there. I<br />

remember it clearly to this day forty<br />

years later.<br />

I remember Julie Heer choreographing<br />

what was probably the first cheer<br />

“dance” to music. It was to “Windy” by<br />

The Association.<br />

Claire Myers-Usiatynski ’72<br />

I was a graduate from MPH but have<br />

memories from all three schools.<br />

I remember the critters under the barn.<br />

We would often smell skunks. Often on<br />

a cold morning you would know they<br />

were near because the smell permeated<br />

the whole building and it was very<br />

strong. One time during the summer,<br />

there was an infestation of fleas and the<br />

whole building was full of them. I<br />

remember being leery of going into the<br />

building because I didn’t want to get<br />

bitten.<br />

One time, the fish and game warden was<br />

called to campus to trap the woodchuck<br />

who lived under the barn. We did not<br />

learn much that day since we were all<br />

Wes Fleming ’74<br />

I seem to recall a skunk that inhabited<br />

the space underneath the Barn on<br />

occasion in the early 1980s!<br />

Jenifer Holcombe Soykan ‘83<br />

I think my favorite, or should I say least<br />

favorite pet was the skunk that lived<br />

under the Barn. It would cut loose at<br />

the most inopportune times, usually<br />

when I was in algebra class. I couldn’t<br />

imagine being in Coach Ridall’s office<br />

that was most likely directly over its nest.<br />

Several times my brother and I<br />

discussed the demise of the little rodent.<br />

We even offered Mr. Songster our<br />

services of hunting it down on a<br />

Saturday or some evening. For some<br />

reason he kept turning us down, I guess<br />

something about running around the<br />

school at night with loaded guns made<br />

him nervous.<br />

Alan Wood ’85<br />

No discussion of mascots would be<br />

complete without a mention of Tom<br />

Denton’s cat, Molly, and the family of<br />

skunks that lived under the Barn in the<br />

‘80s.<br />

Joe Kolinski ’86<br />

Tom Denton’s response:<br />

Joe remembers me making frequent<br />

references to Molly, my first cat as an<br />

adult. I illustrated sort of a mnemonic<br />

device in remembering the meaning of<br />

the word “mollify” when I would calm<br />

down my chronically hyperactive cat.<br />

My fondest “pet” memories, besides<br />

Georgia (the MPH cat of the late 90s<br />

and early 00s), are of the golden lab,<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 49


Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

The Origins of M.U.N.<br />

Dr. Hugh Snyder, MPH faculty member from<br />

1983-1987, shared with the <strong>School</strong> a report<br />

about MPH’s 1986 participation in The Hague<br />

International Model United Nations conference<br />

(THIMUN). The report was assembled by Anne Roth<br />

Heuber, a staff writer for the Syracuse Herald Journal.<br />

THIMUN has now been in operation for over 40 years<br />

and has grown from 2,000 delegates in 1986 to more<br />

than 3,000 in 2009.<br />

Since 1986, <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> has continued to<br />

participate in this exciting conference, and the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

Model United Nations program still thrives as a<br />

favorite student activity.<br />

Following is an excerpt from<br />

Ms. Heuber’s 1986 report:<br />

The delegates, experienced in Model United Nations<br />

conferences, were carefully chosen by their peers and<br />

faculty to represent their school. They are the first local<br />

group ever to attend the prestigious conference. The<br />

idea to apply for participation came about through<br />

Robert Slentz, chairman of the science department at<br />

MPH.<br />

In the three years that MPH has had an MUN club,<br />

they had participated in conferences at Georgetown<br />

University, the University of Rochester, Syracuse<br />

University, and Harvard University. English department<br />

chair Marsha Gerhart and history teacher Dr.<br />

Hugh Snyder decided to initiate the long application<br />

process. Each school at the conference represents a<br />

nation. For MPH it was Botswana. It was decided to<br />

try for possible open slot, which they won. Luck was<br />

with them as Dr. Snyder spent five weeks in Botswana<br />

in 1979 as a consultant for the Agency for<br />

International Development.<br />

The students quickly became immersed in the study of<br />

Botswana; its political structure, cultural factors,<br />

geographical considerations, economic structures,<br />

natural resources, military factors, and established<br />

views on world problems and history. They became<br />

Botswainians in thought and attitude.<br />

“When we first applied, about a year ago, it was<br />

more of a hope that we would get accepted and<br />

be able to attend, but I didn’t expect to go. This<br />

club has gone far in its three years of existence.<br />

Just yesterday I was a freshman at a very<br />

mediocre conference, now we are leaving for an<br />

international conference, on a different<br />

continent, with kids from around the world.”<br />

Delegate Thomas Stinchcomb ’87<br />

Dickler, the golden retriever of MPH<br />

Dickler, who was owned by<br />

the Dr. Dubes of <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

Circle. Check out a late 70’s<br />

yearbook and you’ll see a<br />

picture of him. I think he<br />

attended more classes one<br />

year than a few of the<br />

seniors.<br />

Tom Denton ’65,<br />

MPH faculty member<br />

1972-2007<br />

So many stories, so many memories. Some of my favorite memories<br />

are included in the class trips we used to take, from Mrs. Danial’s class<br />

trip to Gettysburg, to our Senior trip to the dude ranch! Aghhhh the<br />

sweet smell of sweat from sleeping on the wrestling mats at Wooster<br />

College, to the scrumptious taste of SPAM in Chewonki. How about<br />

stopping at the L.L. Bean outlet on our way back from Maine to make<br />

sure we all stocked up on our bluchers and flannels Those were such<br />

great memories and I feel so fortunate to have had so many great<br />

opportunities!<br />

Amy (Zaborny) Sutton ’92<br />

I don’t remember how long this went on, but for between a few days<br />

and a week, there was a baby vole that kept popping up outside. It<br />

roamed a triangle area between Bradley, Amos, and the Barn (this was<br />

in maybe ‘94, ‘95). It was the middle of winter and that is the only<br />

reason I now know what a vole is - no one recognized it so we all did<br />

some research.<br />

Jackie Bunting ’98<br />

I remember when I first entered MPH as a student; I was greeted<br />

warmly by so many. The most memorable was when I entered the<br />

Farmhouse looking for “my” English room. The receptionist showed<br />

me to the upstairs classroom along with a white board, marker, stack<br />

of pencils, and other various items. I stood confused until I realized<br />

she thought I was the professor! Laughs were shared, smiles<br />

exchanged, and memories made. A hilarious start to a great first day!<br />

Dustin Langler Smith ’99<br />

I remember hiding out in the boiler room during the 1998 Christmas<br />

Pageant reading “Into the Wild” for Mr. Denton’s class. I not only got<br />

to miss the pageant, but I finished my homework too!<br />

Zach Sanzone ’00<br />

A special memory of a moment shared with students — friendships<br />

made — teacher-student-”Dr. O” and the Babson family.<br />

Class trips, field trips — when I taught Art History (Senior history —<br />

1967, 1968, 1969) we took a trip to the Albright-Knox Museum in<br />

Buffalo.<br />

Clubs and Sports — We had an after-school “art club”, mostly<br />

middle-school students.<br />

Dr. JoDean Orcutt, former faculty member<br />

50<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Remember the big pre-first-day-ofschool<br />

picnic when we all got together,<br />

met our classmates, picked up our<br />

books, science goggles, P.E. uniforms<br />

and then ran around the upper field<br />

eating charred hamburgers and<br />

hotdogs Maybe for some of the more<br />

recent grads this day is not part of their<br />

cache’ of memories, but it is absolutely<br />

one of my first memories at MPH. And<br />

what does this have anything to do with<br />

friends Well, before attending MPH,<br />

my elementary school years were spent<br />

at H.W. Smith and with two very good<br />

friends. So, imagine my surprise when I<br />

walk into the gymnasium – floor<br />

covered with tarp, tables lined wall-towall<br />

and books stacked endlessly on<br />

these tables – and I see these exact two<br />

people picking up their books<br />

(completely unplanned, completely by<br />

chance)! I count myself one of the<br />

luckiest people on earth to be able to<br />

say that I attended school with two of<br />

my favorite people from Kindergarten to<br />

12th grade. Who were the faces that I<br />

saw that day None other than Brandon<br />

Gill and Paolo Vidali. These two people<br />

influenced me in so many ways and<br />

provided smiles, jokes, stories, fun<br />

times, support and so much more –<br />

because of these two wonderful friends,<br />

my years at MPH are filled with many<br />

happy memories.<br />

Naomi Ostrander ’00<br />

Theatrical Antics<br />

I spent a lot of my<br />

time at <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

on the stage. From<br />

performing in a<br />

musical or play to<br />

singing in Concert<br />

Chorale, Opus<br />

16, even helping<br />

to form the<br />

Barbershop Quartet. I also<br />

managed to find my way into the<br />

Orchestra and even the Big Band for a<br />

little while. The MPH Performing Arts<br />

Department is definitely a big part of<br />

who I am today. (Thanks, Mr. Copps.)<br />

I live in New York City and I spend<br />

almost all of my time travelling and<br />

acting professionally throughout the<br />

country. I have many wonderful<br />

memories about my time performing at<br />

MPH. I have many wonderful and<br />

talented friends who are succeeding in<br />

the performing arts at a very high level<br />

with whom I’ve shared many of these<br />

memories. But one memory, in<br />

particular, stands out high above the rest.<br />

My senior year Ms. Jackson (Now, Mrs.<br />

Gregory) and Mrs. Koziara chose Guys<br />

and Dolls as their Spring musical. A<br />

wonderful opportunity for a lot of men<br />

to shine on the stage. I was fortunate<br />

enough to play one of the leading roles,<br />

Sky Masterson, while my best friend,<br />

George Telonis, got to play the other<br />

leading man, Nathan Detroit. My other<br />

best friend, Julian Ferraldo, played the<br />

very funny and underrated character role<br />

of Benny Southstreet.<br />

The man behind what makes this<br />

memory special was not a good friend of<br />

mine. In fact, we weren’t very close at all<br />

except when he was in the choir. He had<br />

other interests which actually included a<br />

stint in the Army after high school. His<br />

name was Bill Rose. Bill and I had been<br />

in Fiddler on the Roof together freshman<br />

year. Bill played Nathan’s other lackey,<br />

Nicely Nicely Johnson, whom you may<br />

remember sings the title song “Guys and<br />

Dolls” together with Benny Southstreet<br />

and also “Sit Down You’re Rocking The<br />

Boat.”<br />

Nicely Nicely is a fantastic character role<br />

and Bill did a marvelous job with it.<br />

Traditionally, Nicely Nicely is played by<br />

a rather large individual because the<br />

character in the script is always eating.<br />

Bill was a rather athletic guy in pretty<br />

good shape. The humor was not lost<br />

though as throughout the run of the<br />

show Bill was often found eating a peanut<br />

butter and jelly sandwich or a bag of<br />

chips every time he entered the stage.<br />

This is where it gets interesting. One<br />

day, I believe it was a matinee; either<br />

Bill or our spotlight operator Chris<br />

Thomas (who was quite a proficient<br />

trumpet player at MPH) had an idea.<br />

This idea included ordering a six foot<br />

long party sub from Wegmans with<br />

everything on it. This party sub was not<br />

for an after show cast party. It was<br />

intended to be used as a prop during<br />

the show. The only problem was<br />

nobody knew about it except Chris and<br />

Bill. I found out shortly thereafter and<br />

got to witness the pay-off to this<br />

wonderful plan.<br />

There is a scene in Guys and Dolls that<br />

leads into the song “The Oldest<br />

Established” where every gambler in<br />

town is on stage asking Nathan where<br />

the crap game is going to be. Almost<br />

every boy in the show was onstage for<br />

this scene. No one knew about the sub.<br />

So here comes Bill, party sub in hand,<br />

onstage with his mouth full and he was<br />

chomping away on oily “subby”<br />

goodness trying desperately to get his<br />

line out. It didn’t matter everybody on<br />

stage lost it! George and Julian tried to<br />

fight their laughter and deliver their<br />

lines but it was no use. The<br />

underclassmen turned themselves<br />

upstage, away from the audience, to<br />

soften the blow. The house went nuts as<br />

well. Everyone was laughing! The sound<br />

was deafening.<br />

I had the good fortune, as I look back<br />

on it now, to be backstage looking<br />

through the wings. I am SO GLAD I was<br />

not forced to keep my composure<br />

during that moment. To this day I can<br />

still smell the onions, salami, and<br />

Italian dressing that accompanied that<br />

sub onstage. And to this day I still crack<br />

up at the thought of it. Thank you very<br />

much Bill Rose and thank you very<br />

much MPH performing arts department<br />

for reminding me why I love what I do.<br />

Steve Copps ‘03<br />

When I graduated from MPH on that<br />

ridiculously hot summer day of 2005, I<br />

was incredibly grateful for all of my<br />

experiences and opportunities MPH had<br />

given to me. But on that day I don’t<br />

think I realized that MPH would keep<br />

giving to me in countless ways. MPH has<br />

employed me for many summers, both<br />

in the Alumni Lodge, the Farmhouse<br />

and the theater. However, those<br />

experiences after graduation were far<br />

more meaningful that a passing summer<br />

job. It was a chance to come back to the<br />

place I had called my second home for<br />

four years. It was a chance to reconnect;<br />

to see old friends, teachers, staff and<br />

walk on the campus I may have<br />

sometimes taken for granted.<br />

Furthermore, the summer positions I<br />

acquired allowed me to delve even<br />

Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 51


Student Life & <strong>School</strong> Traditions<br />

deeper into the history of MPH; sure I had given tours when I was a<br />

student and knew a little about the history, but working in the<br />

Alumni Lodge really made MPH’s past come to life. While there is so<br />

much that comes to mind about my experiences at MPH, I’ll move<br />

on to the original purpose of my reflection, friendships. Seeing where<br />

I am now and looking back at high school, I am able to recognize<br />

how my close friendships changed throughout high school. I entered<br />

MPH with Pam, someone who was also from the East Syracuse-<br />

Minoa school district whom I hadn’t ever really spoken too even<br />

though she had practically been in my backyard for fourteen years.<br />

Now, she and I try to catch up when ever we’re both back in Syracuse<br />

and have had our fair share of fun ladies nights out. There was<br />

another friend, Erin, technically my oldest MPH friend, whom I first<br />

met at Summer Place in Crime Busters (back when I thought Mr.<br />

Spear was sixteen years old he looked so young and I was very young<br />

myself, just out of 6th grade!) To this day we still reminisce about our<br />

first meeting, our time playing on the tennis team, dance class and<br />

how we’ve stayed friends ever since. Helen, Alexandra and Laura were<br />

three more close friends in high school and although we are all<br />

continuing our lives outside of the Syracuse area, I continue to be<br />

ecstatic whenever I get word from them of what they’ve recently done<br />

or achieved. In addition to MPH being a second home, I also found<br />

my second family there. Pam, Erin, Helen, Alexandra and Laura all<br />

became my close friends whom I could talk with, share my life with,<br />

turn to for help and most importantly be myself with. The aspect of<br />

sisterhood has always been important to me, not only because family<br />

has always been in important to me, but also because I am an only<br />

child. Although I befriended many in my four years at MPH, there is<br />

one more very important person who needs mentioning. Maureen<br />

and I didn’t start out very close in high school, it was a friendship<br />

which grew slowly and was one of those aforementioned friendship<br />

transitions that in hindsight I now recognize. I don’t even think I can<br />

begin to explain what made our friendship transform, but what I do<br />

know is that our friendship is incredibly strong to this day. I see it as<br />

what a true friendship should be; without any doubts I can talk to<br />

her about absolutely anything, I know she won’t judge. We’ve shared<br />

many tears which were due to mostly hilarious times, but sad times<br />

as well. I know I can go to her with any problem, experience or<br />

situation and she’ll selflessly and without flinching talk it out with<br />

me like a true friend. Although Maureen has two brothers, she has<br />

become my sister; sometimes I even refer to her as my sister in<br />

conversation! Also, I’ve found yet another family – hers – a family I<br />

still visit with even though Maureen is currently working in Germany.<br />

It’s been more than eight years since I’ve met Maureen and the class<br />

of 2005 is coming upon their fifth year high school reunion. I know<br />

she probably won’t be able to attend, as she’ll be finishing out the<br />

school year as a teaching assistant in Germany. However, as she and I<br />

have been doing since she left, I’m sure I’ll Skype with her soon<br />

afterward and catch her up on the weekend and anything else in my<br />

life. The friendships, the connections, the history, the memories; there<br />

is so much wrapped into one amazing place I sometimes have a<br />

difficult time comprehending it. But even if I have a hard time<br />

realizing how so many good things can come from one place, I know<br />

something which is not difficult for me: the realization that I have<br />

been beyond lucky in my life to have experienced almost everything<br />

MPH has to offer, including sisterhood for an only child. One thing I<br />

know for sure, as I go on through the years, friendships hold whether<br />

far or near.<br />

Stefania Ianno ’05<br />

52 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010<br />

Winter<br />

Carnival –<br />

A Longstanding<br />

Tradition<br />

Winter Carnival today<br />

starts off with a week<br />

of spirit days for<br />

Grades Five through<br />

Twelve. After half a<br />

MPH Winter Carnival<br />

day of classes on the<br />

Friday before February<br />

break, the games<br />

begin. The afternoon<br />

starts off with the<br />

talent show, then<br />

some very intense<br />

games of dodge ball.<br />

And of course, the grade that wins dodge ball overall<br />

then plays the faculty. After dodge ball, the outside<br />

games start. The snow competitions include snow<br />

volleyball, snow soccer, relay races, snow sculptures,<br />

and everyone’s favorite, sledding.<br />

After interviewing Jack Wells ‘60B and Bill Goff ’59,<br />

and checking out some yearbooks, we learned that<br />

Winter Carnival has changed radically. One thing that<br />

stood out for us was how much the snow sculptures<br />

have changed. In the 50’s and 60’s during Winter<br />

Carnival the four separate companies versed each<br />

other in a snow sculpture competitions. The<br />

Companies, A, B, C, and HQ competed with making<br />

a dog, a whale, a cat, the Liberty Bell, and Snoopy<br />

from Charlie Brown, among others.<br />

When asked about Winter Carnival, Bill Goff ‘59 said,<br />

“Winter Carnival was the most enjoyable high point<br />

of a cadet’s life at <strong>Manlius</strong>. After all, we had girls<br />

around and for the balance of the school year; they<br />

were pretty much excluded from our lives.” Jack Wells<br />

remembers the informal dance, snow sculpture<br />

contest, snowball fights, basketball, a formal dance,<br />

and concluding with a tea dance, but said that his<br />

favorite event was the Varsity Club Casino.<br />

The Winter Carnival of today is still a social highlight<br />

of the school year. Involving the fifth through twelfth<br />

graders, the MPH version of Winter Carnival pits<br />

grade against grade for events and contests. Winter<br />

Carnival dance, Middle and Upper <strong>School</strong> talent<br />

shows, community food drive, and spirit week are just<br />

some of the many events that comprised this year’s<br />

Winter Carnival.<br />

Winter Carnival still brings out the competitive spirit<br />

in students and the competition is fierce, but<br />

completely worth it. Although Winter Carnival has<br />

changed a lot since it first happened in February of<br />

1937, <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> has managed to<br />

keep the tradition alive every year since.<br />

Ally Gyder Reece ’11<br />

Elyse Maugeri ’11<br />

Ahmed Khater ’11


Coaches<br />

& Athletics<br />

Memories<br />

MANLIUS PEBBLE HILL SCHOOL enjoys a strong<br />

athletic legacy that stems from both The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> and <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>. Our alumni can be proud of<br />

the fact that our predecessor <strong>School</strong>s’ dedication to athletics<br />

continues at MPH today. We offer an extensive array of<br />

sports, including soccer, tennis, cross country, equestrian,<br />

swimming, volleyball, basketball, indoor track, alpine skiing,<br />

golf, softball and lacrosse. All students are encouraged to<br />

participate and, in fact, over 70% of Middle and Upper<br />

<strong>School</strong> students body choose to do so. Our no-cut policy<br />

creates the opportunity for every student to be part of a team<br />

and to participate at either the varsity or junior varsity level.<br />

We are proud to honor the <strong>School</strong>’s enduring commitment<br />

to athletic excellence by highlighting three teams whose<br />

stories provide a small glimpse of the many outstanding<br />

teams, coaches, and players who contributed to this strong<br />

sports legacy.<br />

Tribute to <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> Coach<br />

Wadleigh Woods<br />

With MPH’s Athletic Hall of Fame scheduled to be<br />

unveiled during this spring’s annual Alumni Clambake,<br />

nominations for alumni, teams, and former coaches have<br />

been rolling into the Alumni Lodge. One of those<br />

nominees is Mr. Wadleigh Woods, whose history at MPH<br />

includes a coach and faculty member.<br />

Mr. Woods was honored by <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> alumni in 1998.<br />

During that tribute, organized by Ed Barnard ’38, alumni<br />

shared fond memories of their teacher and coach<br />

“Waddy.” Following are some of those memories.<br />

Mr. Woods was with <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> throughout the 1930s<br />

and early 1940s as a member of the faculty. Serving as<br />

Head of the Upper <strong>School</strong>, the <strong>School</strong>’s athletic director, a<br />

French teacher, and coach of the baseball and football<br />

teams, Mr. Woods made his mark on the students of<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>. After leaving <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>, Mr.<br />

Woods continued to teach and coach at independent<br />

schools in New York, Connecticut, and Massachusetts, for<br />

more than 45 years. Mr. Woods passed away in 2001, but<br />

it is the hope of many of his former students, that his<br />

legacy will live on in the MPH Athletic Hall of Fame.<br />

“He was a great teacher and someone we all remember in<br />

a special way. When I look back on my time at <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong>, Mr. Woods has a permanent place in those<br />

memories.”<br />

Donald Boudreau ‘41<br />

“Waddy was the best baseball coach – he could teach well,<br />

in fact, he taught [me] how to catch a ball at first base.”<br />

Anthony Chambers ‘43<br />

“He was indeed the mentor of my school days –a<br />

marvelous teacher, coach, man.”<br />

Jim Robinson ‘42<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

“Without hesitation, I can vouch that he was tops on my<br />

list of teachers/professors in all my years of schooling.”<br />

Ed Barnard ‘38<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 53


pebble hill <strong>School</strong><br />

Did you know<br />

The first “calisthenics” class was begun at<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> in 1944 because the faculty<br />

believed that, “exercise will keep the<br />

students’ bodies in better health and<br />

physical condition, and will make the boys<br />

hardier soldiers.”<br />

For much of <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s history,<br />

athletics were a required part of the<br />

students’ curriculum. All students had<br />

to participate on a sports team each<br />

season. Different sports were available<br />

to students of different age groups. The<br />

emphasis was always on teamwork and<br />

the development of sportsmanship.<br />

Alfred Romeo, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> athletic<br />

director, 1961<br />

1961 <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

Athletics Schedule<br />

K-3<br />

■ Fall – organized games,<br />

calisthenics<br />

■ Winter – skating, sledding,<br />

tumbling<br />

■ Spring – baseball and tennis<br />

Middle <strong>School</strong><br />

■ Boys Winter – Basketball<br />

■ Girls Winter – Stunts and<br />

Tumbling, Basketball,<br />

Handball, Sledding, and<br />

Skating.<br />

■ Boys Spring – Softball<br />

■ Girls Spring – Tennis and<br />

Modified Soccer<br />

Chuck Beeler ’54 –<br />

Basketball Record Holder<br />

Reprinted from the Spring 1997<br />

issue of <strong>Reflections</strong>.<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> was an integral part of<br />

Chuck’s life. In addition to his 13 years<br />

of study at the school, Chuck’s father,<br />

mother, and grandmother worked at<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. His mother, Mary Beeler,<br />

dedicated 35 years of service of<br />

professional life to the school, retiring<br />

in 1969.<br />

Sports were a large part of Chuck’s life<br />

in the Middle and Upper <strong>School</strong>s. He<br />

still holds the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Basketball record for making 42 points,<br />

in one game, against The Harley <strong>School</strong><br />

during the 52/53 season. To our<br />

knowledge this record still stands.<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

I remember when our football team<br />

would take railroad trips to Rochester<br />

and Buffalo to compete. While on the<br />

train, some of us would sneak off to the<br />

club car and smoke. Great conditioning.<br />

Bill Stone ’55<br />

Did you know<br />

The <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> fielded its first<br />

football team in 1931. The football team<br />

began formal competition in the CUPS<br />

League in 1947, but didn’t see its first<br />

championship until 1966.<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> introduced soccer in 1961<br />

with the first boy’s team. Off to a rocky<br />

start, the boys didn’t see a single win<br />

until their 1964 season.<br />

7th and 8th Grade Boys<br />

■ Fall – Football and Soccer<br />

■ Winter – Basketball, Wrestling,<br />

Skating, Tumbling<br />

■ Spring – Baseball, Tennis, Track<br />

7th and 8th Grade Girls<br />

■ Fall – Basketball, Tennis, Field<br />

Hockey, Cheerleading<br />

■ Winter – Bowling, Volleyball,<br />

Basketball, Stunts, Swimming,<br />

and Cheerleading<br />

■ Spring – Dancing, Golf, Tennis,<br />

Softball<br />

Boys 9-12<br />

■ Fall – Football or Soccer<br />

(choice)<br />

■ Winter – Basketball (levels<br />

based on age and skill level)<br />

■ Spring – Baseball or Track<br />

(choice)<br />

Girls 9-12<br />

■ Boys Winter – Basketball<br />

From 1970-1974, Chuck served as<br />

Director of Admission at MPH on The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> campus. He coached<br />

girls’ basketball, boys’ cross-country,<br />

and was assistant football coach under<br />

Don Fudge.<br />

Did you know<br />

The 1956-1957 <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> basketball<br />

team played eight of their home games at<br />

the War Memorial. The <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

matches were preliminaries to Syracuse<br />

Nationals basketball games – and the first<br />

time in Syracuse that professional games<br />

were preceded by high school action.<br />

■ Girls Winter – Stunts and<br />

Tumbling, Basketball,<br />

Handball, Sledding, and<br />

Skating.<br />

■ Boys Spring – Softball<br />

■ Girls Spring – Tennis and<br />

Modified Soccer<br />

When I was at <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, we were<br />

required to play a sport in every season.<br />

In some cases we even doubled up. For<br />

example, we all played football (6<br />

man), basketball and baseball, but we<br />

also had some dual meets in swimming,<br />

and CUPS League meets in Track<br />

54<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


and Field. One basketball memory was<br />

when we were playing The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> at The <strong>Manlius</strong> Field House in<br />

1960. Right before half time, with<br />

seconds to play in the half, Geoff<br />

Hodgdon was inbounding a ball from<br />

under the basket to Mark Norton who<br />

was almost at the other end of the<br />

court. He threw it overhand, hollered<br />

“Hey Norton,” and when Mark turned<br />

around and looked up, the ball went<br />

into the basket. A full court shot without<br />

anyone inbounds touching the ball.<br />

The refs and the <strong>Manlius</strong> bench were so<br />

stunned that they didn’t realize the ball<br />

was never touched in fair territory and<br />

allowed the basket. In the second half<br />

of that game, we only scored about two<br />

points and got buried. However, we got<br />

revenge by beating <strong>Manlius</strong> when they<br />

came to our gym. As small as PH was,<br />

everyone got a taste of sports, and a<br />

number of grads went on to compete at<br />

the college level.<br />

Dick Doust ’61<br />

Did you know<br />

Field hockey was first introduced at <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> in 1962. The field hockey<br />

program was an immediate success. By<br />

season two, the team was undefeated in the<br />

County League Championships.<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> Field Hockey<br />

Joe Kroll, football coach and Latin<br />

teacher, who could and did, while<br />

writing on the blackboard, turn and fire<br />

little pieces of chalk at the students<br />

talking in class; usually, Lele Andrews<br />

and Gretchen Groat. Also, Wally Habel,<br />

baseball and basketball coach who<br />

would have all his players over to his<br />

house on a Saturday morning to make<br />

and antipasto salad for the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

all-school cookout. We did this from<br />

scratch, cutting, dicing all the veggies<br />

and meats. And, as I remember, it was a<br />

big hit at the cookout. Later, I found<br />

out that the coach did this so the<br />

players would learn how to work<br />

together as a team.<br />

Jack “Mac” Machold ’62<br />

I remember....... the loud sounds of<br />

groans and crashing pads when Dick<br />

Stinziano would hit the red-cheeked<br />

halfback from Deveaux <strong>School</strong>,<br />

knocking him out of bounds and<br />

sending the chain holders scurrying.<br />

Almost forgot...I remember winning the<br />

Green and White track and field day<br />

trophy and I was only a freshman!<br />

Gregory “CJ” Young ’62<br />

The Heer Family<br />

The Heer family has been involved with<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> and <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> for<br />

over 50 years. Dusty Heer, a member of<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s class of 1964, and his wife<br />

Sylvia continue to be beloved members of<br />

the MPH community. They direct the<br />

Grace Kniesner Extended Day Program<br />

and serve as Lower <strong>School</strong> classroom<br />

assistants.<br />

Some of Dusty’s most poignant memories<br />

involve sports. When he was at <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong>, the quad was in the middle of the<br />

campus, where the flagpole currently<br />

resides, with a metal fence surrounding<br />

the perimeter. He recalls spending most of<br />

his time there playing basketball and a<br />

game called sockey—a combination of<br />

soccer and hockey.<br />

Dusty’s parents also figure prominently in<br />

his memories of <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. His mother,<br />

Martha Heer, worked at the <strong>School</strong> for<br />

33 years as a teacher, admission director,<br />

and director of Lower <strong>School</strong>; his father,<br />

Charles Heer, served as the <strong>School</strong>’s<br />

athletic director and chair of the History<br />

Department. His father coached Dusty in<br />

football, basketball, track & field, and<br />

baseball. He said it was his father’s<br />

experience that made him a great coach<br />

– he had trained soldiers in the Navy<br />

during World War II.<br />

Dusty said the small class sizes, school<br />

uniforms, his parents, and a top notch<br />

education are what he thinks of when he<br />

remembers his <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> days. He sums<br />

up his experience as “unique.”<br />

Our championship baseball team of<br />

1964 will always have fond memories<br />

for me. It was a team made up of two<br />

super ball players – Dusty Heer and<br />

Frank Netti – and a group of solid ball<br />

players. We played well as a team, got<br />

along real well and helped each other<br />

at all times. We were trounced in an<br />

early season game but came back and<br />

won the rest of our games. We clinched<br />

the championship at Allendale. The<br />

feeling of finally being a championship<br />

team resonated with us ever since!<br />

Pete Livshin ’64<br />

I remember all of us who were part of<br />

Mr. Stevenson’s “Animal Squad”... we<br />

were the ones playing tackle/soccer/<br />

basketball on the tennis courts all winter<br />

long in the snow. We did this to avoid<br />

basketball, or ‘regular’ physical education.<br />

Let’s see. There was Shifty Gere,<br />

David Campfield, (who else, as my<br />

memory eludes me at this senior stage of<br />

life), and me…good times getting cold<br />

and wet and trying to kick a ball through<br />

basketball hoops in the snow.<br />

Jim Amodio ’65<br />

Before the “new” gym was built on the<br />

DeWitt campus in the early 1960s,<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> basketball games were<br />

played in the barn where the Coville<br />

Theater now resides. Consequently<br />

during that era, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> athletes<br />

could say they had a unique home court<br />

advantage – by knowing which boards<br />

to hit on the hardwood court, they<br />

could attempt to alter their shooting<br />

percentage during basketball season!<br />

Some of the more poignant athletic<br />

moments included the CUPS<br />

(Conference of Upstate Private <strong>School</strong>s)<br />

League Championships, overnight<br />

athletic trips, the old gym and the<br />

dedication of the new gym. Bob<br />

Richards, who competed in the 1948,<br />

1952, and 1956 Summer Olympics as a<br />

pole vaulter, and also was a decathlete<br />

in 1956, was on hand to dedicate the<br />

new gym. This was a profound moment<br />

in the history of the <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Athletics played an integral role in the<br />

<strong>School</strong> as all students were required to<br />

play a sport during that time. Students<br />

who didn’t play a “traditional” sport<br />

(football, basketball, baseball, etc…)<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 55<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories


Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

played outdoor games including sledding<br />

and/or Capture the Flag. Many<br />

athletes traveled to other parts of the<br />

state as part of their athletic program. It<br />

wasn’t unusual for the basketball team<br />

to travel to Buffalo to play the Park<br />

<strong>School</strong> on a Friday night, spend the<br />

night with a host family and play a<br />

game on Saturday morning before<br />

heading home. This type of travel and<br />

spending time with other families<br />

taught the students not only about team<br />

work on the court or on the field, but<br />

also respect for someone else’s home<br />

and property. Typically, students would<br />

stay with the same family for several<br />

years, creating lasting bond and<br />

memories.<br />

Tom Denton ’65, teacher and coach<br />

1972-2007, Alumni Association Board<br />

2008-present<br />

What I remember most about <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> athletics was gymnastics in the<br />

barn. I’m trying to remember the name<br />

of the women’s PE teacher (Sayre) who<br />

introduced gymnastics to us...but she<br />

was great, very enthusiastic. We had to<br />

make do with older equipment - our<br />

balance beam may even have been<br />

home made, but she encouraged us to<br />

do our best, including compete in State<br />

meets. Same for track - we even did<br />

pretty well in the relay. I’d say, in retrospect,<br />

she was on the cutting edge of<br />

involving women in sports in a way that<br />

was seldom done in earlier years.<br />

Certainly for me she set a tone of<br />

wanting to be active in a variety of<br />

sports and regular workouts.<br />

The other thing that, of course, has to be<br />

mentioned is those wonderful gym<br />

“dresses” we wore! Dark green.<br />

Nancy Roberts ’68<br />

I remember as if it was yesterday<br />

charging down the field as the Center on<br />

the field hockey team and not realizing<br />

how silly we looked in those green<br />

tunics. I loved that game and as I look<br />

back, girls at <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> were way ahead<br />

of our peers in exposure and opportunity<br />

to play sports. It was tremendous<br />

training for life skills in sports and our<br />

professional careers as well. What a joy!<br />

Chandler Ralph’70<br />

A Football Powerhouse<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> was known as an<br />

athletic powerhouse for most of its<br />

existence. As a boarding school, it was<br />

able to draw from a national pool of<br />

athletes. In addition to being wellknown<br />

in the secondary sports world,<br />

colleges often recommended that new<br />

recruits attend <strong>Manlius</strong> for a postgraduate<br />

year to fine-tune their athletic<br />

abilities before entering college.<br />

And at <strong>Manlius</strong>, athletes had plenty of<br />

opportunities to work on those skills<br />

since <strong>Manlius</strong> teams played a<br />

demanding schedule that included<br />

many college freshmen teams, including<br />

Syracuse, Army, Cornell, and Colgate.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> football history is especially<br />

interesting and began more than a<br />

century ago.<br />

the manlius school<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>’ predecessor school, St. John’s,<br />

has been said to have introduced<br />

modern football to Central New York in<br />

1889, when the <strong>School</strong> fielded its first<br />

team in formal competition. For many<br />

years, this team, regularly played and<br />

defeated Syracuse and Colgate University<br />

freshman teams. St. John’s was also<br />

part of a 1905 movement to rewrite the<br />

rules for modern day football. A<br />

resolution the <strong>School</strong> sent to President<br />

Theodore Roosevelt is credited with<br />

touching off a campaign to “clean up”<br />

the game.<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>’s football teams<br />

played their most successful seasons in<br />

1944, 1945, and 1946, with three<br />

consecutive undefeated seasons. During<br />

the 1945 season, the team did not give<br />

up a single point. Coach Nevin<br />

Shankweiler attributed much of the<br />

team’s success to the structure of the<br />

school and its campus life. While other<br />

schools may have been out partying,<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> boys were in bed,<br />

with lights out by 10 p.m.<br />

In total over these three years, the Red<br />

Knights played 23 scheduled games and<br />

scored 626 points while their opponents<br />

only scored 73 points. <strong>Manlius</strong> was<br />

noted for having one of the top high<br />

school football programs in the country,<br />

with most of the starting players<br />

continuing their football careers in<br />

college programs.<br />

The Black and Red squad of 1944 was<br />

the first team in 29 years to go through<br />

a season undefeated. The team was<br />

captained by Jim Farrell ’43B and<br />

coached by Nevin Shankweiler and<br />

assistants Charles Shearer and Clarence<br />

Sampson, who also coached the 1945<br />

team. The season pitted the Trojans<br />

against regional high school teams such<br />

as Nottingham and Oswego, as well as<br />

against the Valley Forge Military<br />

Academy. One of the highlights of the<br />

season was the little Army-Navy game<br />

against the Admiral Farragut Naval<br />

Academy in New Jersey, where the Red<br />

and Black, braving rain and a field like a<br />

sea of mud, came back in the fourth<br />

period to gain its most valued and<br />

impressive triumph of the season, as Bill<br />

Nixon ’45A ran 45 yards for a touchdown<br />

after getting a lateral from Buzz<br />

Hummer ’45.<br />

In 1945, the team completed a perfect<br />

season – undefeated, untied and<br />

allowing not a single score by an<br />

opponent. According to the 1946<br />

Haversack, the line “was not large, but<br />

what they lacked in size they more than<br />

made up for in speed, aggressiveness<br />

and teamwork.” Ends Art Spinney ’46B<br />

and Spike Gannon ’46 came in “like<br />

pincers” on opposing teams. Herm<br />

Warren ’47A and John Lenore ’47A were<br />

“crafty and aggressive” as guards, while<br />

center Pat O’Shaughnessy was as<br />

dependable as the “Rock of Gilbraltar.”<br />

Captain Bill Nixon’s sensational<br />

climactic running was invaluable. After<br />

completing its perfect season, <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

received a bid to play the Lynn All Stars,<br />

before over 10,000 spectators. The team<br />

suffered its only loss of the season and,<br />

returning home to <strong>Manlius</strong>, the entire<br />

student body turned out with<br />

thundering cheers – a moving example<br />

56 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


of true <strong>Manlius</strong> loyalty and spirit.<br />

For the third year in a row, the Black<br />

and Red football team of 1946 was<br />

undefeated, that year playing a tough<br />

schedule against college JV teams,<br />

including St. Lawrence, Cornell and RPI.<br />

Lieutenant Fisher, the new head coach<br />

replacing Shankweiller, who became the<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s athletic director, recruited<br />

many outstanding new players, such as<br />

Ted Shiro ’47A, and introduced the “T”<br />

formation.<br />

Why were these football teams such<br />

powerhouses John Lenore ‘47A notes<br />

that they were not a physically large<br />

team, but “these kids had hearts bigger<br />

than buildings, they were tough, classy<br />

guys…solid citizens… a great credit to<br />

what they did.” It was not their<br />

physicality, but their spirit that carried<br />

them to success in game after game.<br />

Coach Nevin Shankweiler attributed the<br />

teams’ success to four factors: “A fine<br />

balance of power, a great team spirit,<br />

high intelligence and a practically<br />

impregnable forward wall.”<br />

Dan Warren ’47A remembers the depth<br />

of the teams, noting that the “subs<br />

made everyone work hard…scrimmages<br />

on Wednesdays were often harder than<br />

games on Saturdays and their spirit<br />

made the team.” The starters had to<br />

earn their positions every week; yet<br />

there was no animosity nor any ill<br />

words. This was a very cohesive unit.<br />

For whatever reasons, the <strong>Manlius</strong> teams<br />

of 1944, 1945 and 1946 were unstoppable,<br />

and the memories live on in both<br />

the players and the cadets who supported<br />

them week after week. During<br />

Clambake Weekend ’96, this group<br />

reunited, sharing their experiences at<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> and catching up on their lives<br />

since graduation. At the end of their<br />

dinner on Friday evening, John Lenore<br />

captured the spirit of what they were all<br />

feeling: “Those two years were the<br />

turning point in my life. They probably<br />

helped create in me the foundation that<br />

was necessary to face a lot of the travail<br />

that I later faced. I thank you from the<br />

bottom of my heart for allowing me<br />

that experience.”<br />

Parts excerpted from Fall 2000 issue of<br />

<strong>Reflections</strong> magazine.<br />

Peter D. Schwarz ’43C received his first<br />

camera at the age of 8 and shared with<br />

MPH some of the photos he took from<br />

his years at <strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

Mr. Getman and a <strong>Manlius</strong> football<br />

team from the early 40s.<br />

An early 1940s <strong>Manlius</strong> Football Game<br />

The HQ Band plays at a football game<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> vs Army<br />

When Hitler had swept virtually<br />

unopposed through Europe in 1940, it<br />

became pretty obvious that the USA’s<br />

best interests were tied to a free Europe<br />

and that war was just around the<br />

corner. Somehow people got the idea<br />

that this war was going to be different<br />

than World War I: The new high-tech of<br />

reliable radio communications would<br />

find the average GI Joe risking his neck<br />

driving Army tanks and piloting Army<br />

airplanes into the enemy’s guns and<br />

flak (there was no separate Air Force<br />

then) while their officers, sitting safely<br />

in forward observer camouflaged<br />

foxholes dug into the ground, and<br />

highly trained in military tactics, were<br />

going to be doing the directing, by<br />

radio as to where the endangered were<br />

to drive or fly.<br />

When the draft was passed into law on<br />

September 16, 1940, parents started<br />

trying to figure out ways to protect their<br />

teenage boys from future danger.<br />

Somehow word was ‘leaked’ (ha, ha)<br />

that the answer was to give their sons a<br />

head start towards ‘officer-ship’ by<br />

sending their kids to ROTC (Reserve<br />

Officer Training Corps) military high<br />

schools like <strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

ROTC was a four-year course, but if you<br />

had two years under your belt as a high<br />

school junior and then a senior, for<br />

example, and got accepted to an ROTC<br />

college, why then the Army<br />

‘hinted’ (not guaranteed) that their<br />

recruitment officers would simply defer<br />

you from the draft for two more years<br />

until you were a 2nd lieutenant... much<br />

more valuable to The Army, and much<br />

safer from danger than a military tyro<br />

GI Joe. (And then, perhaps, with the<br />

USA doing the fighting, the war might<br />

be over.)<br />

Thus encouraged, my parents, like<br />

thousands of other parents who could<br />

afford the tuition, looked around them<br />

and, lo and behold, only 11 miles<br />

from our Syracuse home was one of the<br />

highest-rated military prep schools in<br />

America. (Distant Culver also had a top<br />

rating, but as the <strong>Manlius</strong> song said,<br />

“<strong>Manlius</strong> was <strong>Manlius</strong> when Culver was<br />

a pup.” Our town’s school was prestigeplus.)<br />

But on September 20th of 1940, the<br />

1940-41 school year had already<br />

started, my parents, believing that the<br />

military schools would quickly fill up,<br />

wisely paid in advance and signed me<br />

in for the following year. My spot was<br />

saved. After another year of<br />

Nottingham High <strong>School</strong> in Syracuse, I<br />

would start <strong>Manlius</strong> in the first week of<br />

September 1941. (Uh, oh. Notice that<br />

date. Exactly two months thereafter,<br />

December 7, Japan would attack Pearl<br />

Harbor.)<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 57


Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

Every room held two boys, a single bed<br />

against each right and left wall. The<br />

<strong>School</strong> was full to capacity. But it was a<br />

special kind of “full” ROTC-blessed<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> had been very choosey and<br />

loaded those availabilities with proven<br />

high school sports stars. Jealous of the<br />

fame of ‘upstart’ schools like Culver,<br />

which won The Title in their prep<br />

school football leagues on a regular<br />

basis, <strong>Manlius</strong> had sent “scouts out” (a<br />

military term), recruiting proven<br />

athletes in the several sports. It was a<br />

cinch to woo athlete-types away from<br />

their ‘regular’ high schools where the<br />

‘officer-ship-benefit of ROTC<br />

protection’ did not exist.<br />

We had gotten our pick of the best<br />

performing athletes of last years’ crop<br />

of high school juniors, making sure first<br />

that their parents could afford the<br />

tuition. (The best of both worlds: we<br />

didn’t have to give up a single cent of<br />

income to become ‘overnight’ winners.)<br />

The whole thing had been orchestrated<br />

by a very successful retired Syracuse<br />

University football coach, who was<br />

bored with retirement and had come<br />

up with the plan. (With thought<br />

processes like that, no wonder he had<br />

been successful.)<br />

It is of interest to note here that<br />

although I was tall enough and good<br />

enough to play on our Headquarters<br />

Company intramural teams against<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Companies “A,” “B,” and “C,”<br />

my specialty was playing the saxophone<br />

in the concert orchestra and the<br />

marching band. Headquarters was<br />

composed ONLY of the Cadet Officers<br />

and the <strong>School</strong> band/orchestra. Not<br />

many of us: far smaller in numbers<br />

than in each of the other three. We very<br />

seldom won anything, except in<br />

academics. No football hero types on<br />

our 3rd Floor of Huntington Hall.<br />

What <strong>Manlius</strong> did on the high school<br />

level was also done by the US Military<br />

Academy at West Point, 200 miles away.<br />

Every member of Congress was entitled<br />

to appoint two high school graduates<br />

with good grades to this extremelydifficult-to-get-into<br />

institution.<br />

When Hitler had started World War II<br />

by invading Poland on September 1,<br />

1939, the word went out to the<br />

congressmen (no congresswomen then)<br />

that one way to intimidate that idiot<br />

Hitler would be to have an awesome<br />

football team to show the world how<br />

tough our Army cadets really were! It<br />

was silly, but the congressional public<br />

servants played into that rubbish and<br />

only appointed high school seniors<br />

who were both bright and football<br />

super-stars. The red-shirt freshman<br />

gimmick had not yet been invented... If<br />

you were an entering cadet the only<br />

team you could play on was the<br />

freshman team.<br />

Army’s freshman team had, for years,<br />

played The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>’s varsity<br />

football team in a warm-up game<br />

before their “real” season started, and<br />

even though their coaches had<br />

instructed their players to “take it easy<br />

on the high school kids”, the Army<br />

freshmen, seeking to impress the Army<br />

brass that demanded that their<br />

“Plebes,” from day-one, never settle for<br />

less than perfection, gave the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

varsity no quarter whatsoever.<br />

OK. But it was September, and the<br />

congressional appointments had<br />

already been made for the year. So West<br />

Point had 1940 and 1941 to let the<br />

congressmen know that football was<br />

king, and to feed them the best<br />

freshman footballers in their districts.<br />

The arch-enemy, the Naval Academy at<br />

Annapolis, never did catch on to what<br />

was happening.<br />

Back in those days the biggest sporting<br />

event in America was The Army-Navy<br />

game on Thanksgiving day at Soldier<br />

Field in Chicago. Bowl games were not<br />

yet the rage. With our armed forces in<br />

wartime involved, every radio in the<br />

land was tuned in to the game. (No TV<br />

yet, of course.)<br />

Next year’s Army varsity was eagerly<br />

tracking its 1941-42 freshman squad for<br />

its 1942-43 new fresh input of gridiron<br />

stars. They were about to get a rude<br />

awakening.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>-Army game day dawned bright<br />

and clear. Cheerleaders from nearby<br />

Cazenovia Girls High <strong>School</strong> had been<br />

‘imported’ to brighten things up, and<br />

the 1941-42 version of our marching<br />

band, with only three weeks of practice,<br />

performed adequately. The playing field<br />

stands were filled, and <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

townspeople toting folding beach<br />

chairs lined the borders of the running<br />

track. As a contributor to The Windmill,<br />

our school newspaper, I filled in the<br />

time between band performances<br />

taking notes.<br />

I wish I still had them today. I could<br />

sell them for a fortune on eBay.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> made history on that day. We<br />

beat the tar out of “The Army’s Finest.”<br />

A. Richard “Dick” Arnold ’43HQ<br />

I still revere ‘Bem’ Woods as our ski<br />

coach. Yes, he taught French with a<br />

textbook that had postage stamp size<br />

photos of how to hold your mouth<br />

when pronouncing French words, but<br />

he did his best. But skiing. Wow!<br />

The ski team would leave Friday<br />

afternoon in that old army truck with<br />

the canvas top and we kids trying not<br />

to freeze in the back. We stayed at the<br />

Lake Placid Club for a high school ski<br />

meet and packed out the downhill trail<br />

through the trees. There were no<br />

control flags then, just the hardwood<br />

trees just off the course and you sure<br />

didn’t want to tangle with them. Later<br />

on we listened to music from a small<br />

trio in the lounge - soft drinks only -<br />

then dinner. And we did all this while<br />

the cadets back at <strong>Manlius</strong> were playing<br />

tin soldier with inspections, parade and<br />

what not.<br />

Thank heavens for Bem Woods,<br />

Dartmouth ski team, 1936 Olympics,<br />

and one of my role models. At 78, I’ve<br />

got season passes in Colorado and all<br />

my three kids and their families ski, so<br />

Bem Woods I salute you!<br />

Merriam Trube ’47A<br />

I entered <strong>Manlius</strong> as a Sophomore. My<br />

athletics were Football Co 6-man and<br />

later varsity 11-man. I received a Letter<br />

in 6-man. Also in the fall I ran cross<br />

country. I was also on the swim team.<br />

58 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Coach Tom Cahill<br />

Coach Tom<br />

Cahill was a<br />

Syracuse native.<br />

He graduated<br />

from Niagara<br />

University in<br />

1942 and served<br />

in the United<br />

States Army<br />

during World<br />

War II. In 1947, Coach Cahill joined<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> as head football,<br />

basketball, and baseball coach. He<br />

remained at The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> for<br />

10 years, with an overall coaching<br />

record of 66-8-2. In 1957, Cahill<br />

took a job as a football coach at<br />

Riverdell High <strong>School</strong> in New Jersey.<br />

During his two years with Riverdell,<br />

Coach Cahill worked with Bill<br />

Parcells, who went on to serve under<br />

Coach Cahill at West Point as<br />

assistant coach, before making his<br />

mark in the NFL.<br />

In 1959, Coach Cahill left New Jersey<br />

to serve as the freshman football<br />

coach at the United States Military<br />

Academy. At WestPoint, he gained<br />

notoriety for his coaching skills and<br />

dedication to football, and in 1966<br />

when the head coach position<br />

became available, Cahill was hired.<br />

Coach Cahill led the Army team to<br />

an 8-2 season in 1966 and was<br />

named the Eddie Robinson National<br />

Coach of the Year. During his tenure<br />

as head coach, Army beat Navy five<br />

times, and then Cahill left the<br />

Academy after the 1973 season.<br />

Cahill later coached for five seasons<br />

at Union College in Schenectady<br />

before returning to West Point in<br />

1984 as an analyst for the Army radio<br />

network. Cahill also taught history in<br />

Clifton Park until 1990. Coach Cahill<br />

passed away in October of 1992, after<br />

almost half a century in football. The<br />

impact he had on his players and<br />

students has not been forgotten.<br />

MPH will unveil its Athletic Hall of<br />

Fame in a few weeks as former<br />

players and alumni look back to<br />

some of their most fond memories of<br />

their coach and mentor. Tom Cahill<br />

is an important part of our strong<br />

athletic tradition.<br />

In the spring I ran the mile in track,<br />

and won a varsity letter. This was due<br />

to my friend in A Company, Jim Wells,<br />

that let me go ahead of him when we<br />

ran against NYMA so I could come in<br />

third. He had already won his letter<br />

when he came in first in the 440. I was<br />

also was on the varsity basketball team<br />

when “Doc” Savage was the star.<br />

Hampton M. Miles ’49HQ<br />

In 1950, The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> experienced<br />

an athletic set-back when the Dodge<br />

Gymnasium burned down. For the next<br />

several years, <strong>Manlius</strong> teams had to<br />

practice in a borrowed town gym until<br />

their new Barber Gymnasium was<br />

constructed in 1953.<br />

Cross country skiing on the Olympic<br />

trails at Lake Placid can be injurious to<br />

your health. Try catching both tips<br />

under a fence wire just above the snow<br />

in a March meet. My knees still hurt 60<br />

years later.<br />

Emmett Greenleaf ’53GQ<br />

I have a favorite memory of Captain<br />

Tom Cahill, head varsity football coach<br />

and Commandant of Company B (later<br />

Company C). When he was at<br />

Company B in the early 50s, I looked<br />

up to him as my hero. In the fall of<br />

1954, when I was a senior and he was<br />

Commandant at Company C, I was<br />

playing A League football and got<br />

injured in a game against Company C.<br />

As I limped across campus the next day,<br />

he came by and said “heard you played<br />

a great game.” This simple compliment<br />

from Captain Cahill made my day, my<br />

year, and my entire career at <strong>Manlius</strong>. I<br />

remember it fondly more than<br />

any other incident.<br />

Jim Landon ’55B<br />

Did you know<br />

that before<br />

coming to<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>, Mr.<br />

MacPhee played a<br />

couple of games<br />

in baseball’s<br />

National League<br />

and 10 games in<br />

MacPhee<br />

professional<br />

football for the<br />

1926 Providence Steam Rollers His<br />

playing name was “Waddy” MacPhee.<br />

When he arrived at <strong>Manlius</strong>, he inherited<br />

the baseball coaching position from<br />

Whitey Anderson. He had snow white<br />

hair, which earned him the nickname<br />

Silver Fox.<br />

MacPhee was a no “BS” guy… down to<br />

earth, a natural leader, and a wellrespected<br />

mentor among the entire<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> community. He was a<br />

very strong influence on the B<br />

The 1960 <strong>Manlius</strong> Basketball Team with Coach Whitey Anderson<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 59


Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

A TRIBUTE TO COACH<br />

Whitey Anderson<br />

From 1950 until his retirement in 1977, Harold “Whitey” Anderson was a<br />

beloved mentor and coach at both The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> and later <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>. Although Whitey was best known as a basketball coach, he<br />

also coached football and baseball.<br />

Whitey’s involvement at our <strong>School</strong> dates back to 1926 when he entered <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

as a cadet. During his time at <strong>Manlius</strong>, he was cited as both an outstanding<br />

scholar and an athlete. He earned the top academic distinction, the Head Boy<br />

award, and also was awarded the best all-around athlete award in 1928.<br />

After graduating from Colgate University, Whitey coached at two high schools<br />

before coming “home” to <strong>Manlius</strong> in the fall of 1949. The following is reprinted<br />

from the 1950 Haversack dedication:<br />

Our new athletic director is a former Head Boy and a four letter athlete at <strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

Harold J. Anderson, better known as “Whitey,” graduated from <strong>Manlius</strong> in 1929 and<br />

went to Colgate, where he starred in baseball and basketball.<br />

Upon graduating from Colgate, he became basketball coach at Kellogg Central High<br />

<strong>School</strong>, where he remained until 1935. Then he joined the faculty of the Binghamton<br />

Central High <strong>School</strong> where, in addition to teaching Physics and Physiology, he became<br />

athletic director and head coach of basketball and baseball.<br />

Whitey holds onto his infamous “rope” which kept<br />

him from rushing onto the court in the heat of the<br />

moment.<br />

During the war (WWII) he served<br />

for three years as a Field Director<br />

of the American Red Cross in the<br />

European Theater. In this service<br />

he was wounded and awarded the<br />

Purple Heart and the Bronze Star.<br />

Whitey is already building stronger<br />

and better balanced schedules for<br />

our athletic teams and we look<br />

forward to an even better athletic<br />

program under his direction.<br />

Whitey certainly personified the<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> and <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

spirit and left a lasting impression<br />

on all who knew him.<br />

contact with each other thanks to Tim<br />

Cohane who has more <strong>Manlius</strong> prank<br />

notches in his gun belt than all of us<br />

combined. He fixed me up with a<br />

Winter Carnival date from his town in<br />

White Plains, N.Y. After the weekend,<br />

he got the switchboard operator to call<br />

me in the dorm and tell me he was the<br />

date’s father. The imposter father told<br />

me that I was less than a gentleman<br />

with his daughter and he was contacting<br />

the <strong>School</strong>’s authorities. Needless to<br />

say, I bought it hook, line and sinker.<br />

Cohane is a Naval Academy graduate,<br />

decorated in Vietnam, highly successful<br />

on Wall Street, and formerly a great<br />

college basketball coach. He continues<br />

to make sure all of his <strong>Manlius</strong> teammates<br />

remember their <strong>Manlius</strong> days.<br />

Recently I saw him wearing an original<br />

issue <strong>Manlius</strong> field jacket. Another<br />

former <strong>Manlius</strong> cadet is my best friend.<br />

Paul Morton was in my wedding 45<br />

years ago and lives in our same neighborhood<br />

not even 200 yards away. His<br />

children and ours are best friends. Bob<br />

Maguire, Phil Allen and Ed Foehl are all<br />

good friends and we enjoy seeing each<br />

other from time to time. All of us owe a<br />

huge debt of gratitude for our year at<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>. We are better Americans and<br />

better men because of our experiences<br />

at The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Bill Koss ’61C<br />

Commander Rugh was my science<br />

teacher, but he was also the varsity<br />

soccer coach. He was a great mentor<br />

and got me to play goalie on the team<br />

from 8th through 12th grade. The<br />

second faculty member who made a<br />

memorable impression was Lee<br />

Sedgwick. He was the person that was<br />

in charge of discipline and I saw a great<br />

deal of him but I have fond memories<br />

of his integrity and compassion.<br />

Company guys, we always got “good<br />

guidance” from him, and he never<br />

minced words. His wife, Jean, was a<br />

very warm and thoughtful person –<br />

maybe that came from her long<br />

background in the medical profession.<br />

Bob Swaney ’58B<br />

Some of my best friends to this day are<br />

my <strong>Manlius</strong> classmates. Our basketball<br />

team was guided by a great man in<br />

Whitey Anderson. We actually enjoyed<br />

one of the best won- loss records in the<br />

history of the basketball program. His<br />

life is indelibly etched into the character<br />

of each individual who played for<br />

him.<br />

Several of my <strong>Manlius</strong> basketball<br />

teammates have maintained close<br />

Harold Schwartz ’62HQ<br />

Master of the Sword is what they used<br />

to call the director of physical education<br />

at West Point. But for us cadets, the<br />

Master of the Sword was J. Torrance<br />

Rugh. Commander Rugh ran the<br />

fencing club. He taught us, obtained<br />

the equipment and mainly kept us<br />

from skewering each other in our<br />

60 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


youthful exuberance. It was a great<br />

place for those of us unsuited for the<br />

“major” sports to let off some steam.<br />

My favorite memory of Fencing Club<br />

revolves around Commander Rugh’s<br />

knees. His knees would occasionally<br />

bother him. One afternoon they were<br />

particularly troublesome, so he took a<br />

chair and set it in the middle of the<br />

room and sat down. He then proceeded<br />

to fence with all of us from the chair.<br />

He beat us all. I guess that proves the<br />

old saying that age and guile will always<br />

defeat youth and enthusiasm. Taught<br />

me a lesson, anyway...<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

I was playing flag football the afternoon<br />

the lights went out, for me and the East<br />

Coast. It was the day of the great<br />

blackout of 1965. It was just getting<br />

dark when Stu Hancock ’66HQ decided<br />

to come through my spot on the line to<br />

score a touchdown. I see him coming,<br />

then, WHANG! Stu‘s elbow hit my jaw<br />

and put my lights out. When I came to,<br />

Referee Sedgwick pointed out that I had<br />

indeed grabbed the flag out of Stu’s<br />

waistband, and he was down. So was I.<br />

Then I tasted blood. I had bitten my<br />

tongue. The Wedge sent me off to the<br />

infirmary to have Doctor Wilcox look at<br />

it. By the time I staggered into the<br />

infirmary the lights were flickering, and<br />

then went out altogether. Dr. Wilcox<br />

mumbled something about fuses and<br />

this old wiring and checked me out<br />

with a flashlight. My tongue had<br />

stopped bleeding so off I went to walk<br />

up the drive in the dark. By now the<br />

lights were off everywhere. When we<br />

marched into the mess hall, all the<br />

tables were illuminated by candlelight.<br />

It was a cold meal, eaten off paper<br />

plates, but with my mangled tongue, I<br />

tasted little of it. But out of adversity<br />

comes good. There was no study hall<br />

that night.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Did you know<br />

If you were a <strong>Manlius</strong> Cadet in 1964-65<br />

your gym teacher was L. Maitland Blank.<br />

While at another school, L. Maitland Blank<br />

was also the gym teacher of General H.<br />

Norman Schwarzkopf!<br />

MANLIUS <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Playing on the Red Knights basketball<br />

team and being the all time high scorer.<br />

Phillip “Mike” Eades ’72<br />

I remember playing field hockey and<br />

being part of the first undefeated team<br />

in MPH history.<br />

Claire Myers-Usiatynski ’72<br />

While doing track meets, our PA system<br />

was an inside system and gave you a<br />

shock if you touched it. We had to be<br />

very careful not to get jolted while<br />

using the system. During our bus rides<br />

to school events Howie was the bus<br />

driver. Geoff Gordon would always ask<br />

Howie to get this orange crate going.<br />

We were in the Oswego County League<br />

for Football. After the game at Mexico<br />

we were ask by the opposing team if<br />

we wanted to go to their sock hop. I<br />

had no idea what a sock hop was until<br />

a few years ago. That league and our<br />

school used different terminology for a<br />

dance.<br />

Gary Beach ’74<br />

Boy’s soccer at MPH saw its first victory<br />

in the Oxford tournament in the fall of<br />

1988, and then went on to receive that<br />

title again in 1995 and 1996. During<br />

the 1995 season, Coach Don Ridall<br />

earned his 250th win with the team,<br />

and was voted Section III coach of the<br />

year. The 1999-2000 team claimed a<br />

OCL League Championship. The squad<br />

saw the most successful season in the<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s history with an 18-0 record.<br />

The boys played their first ever<br />

homecoming game that year. Girl’s<br />

soccer was introduced to MPH in 1976<br />

with the <strong>School</strong>’s first squad playing in<br />

the Oswego County League.<br />

My two best girlfriends, Jess Holzer and<br />

Annie Walker, and I decided to play on<br />

the men’s lacrosse team our Junior year.<br />

We loved all the war wounds and<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 61


Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

Mental<br />

Toughness<br />

By Alex Verbeck ’12<br />

MPH Tenth Grader and great granddaughter of<br />

General William Verbeck<br />

Reprinted from the MPH student newspaper “The Rolling Stone.”<br />

While the MPH soccer teams have been lauded as the<br />

school’s only beacon of athletic hope, the women’s<br />

tennis team has proved their excellence by playing their<br />

hearts out. The team started their 2009 season with a loss to<br />

Jamesville-DeWitt, but ended their season with a victorious<br />

win at team sectionals against Beaver River. The team has<br />

made it to sectionals since their 1992 season and won team<br />

sectionals eight years in a row until 2002, when the team<br />

was moved up to Class B after their Class C competitors<br />

were sick of losing every year.<br />

Class B has presented a challenge for the tennis team; that<br />

stretch ended in 2002. The girls 2009 champions rose to the<br />

occasion to play the very best they could and managed to<br />

snag the 2009 championship. “I’ve had kids go to the state<br />

tournament for the past decade [but] I absolutely knew we<br />

were going to make it to sectionals,<br />

I had great faith in this team. I knew it was going to be both<br />

hard and well earned. I am thrilled. It is so exciting because<br />

we all worked so hard for the same goal as a team,” Varsity<br />

Coach Maureen Anderson proudly stated.<br />

Coach Anderson is the reason that some girls play on the<br />

tennis team. “I wouldn’t have played tennis if Mrs. Anderson<br />

wasn’t the coach. She is always really good with helping you<br />

personally, and she worked with me through my busy<br />

schedule. She works with you specially; she wants to help<br />

you be the best you can be,” said Senior Jeremy French-<br />

Lawyer. Mrs. Anderson developed these qualities on the<br />

other side of the Atlantic Ocean. “I am from Glasgow,<br />

Scotland. My husband was transferred from London to<br />

Syracuse in 1981. In 1986 my son started Kindergarten here;<br />

my daughter started in Eighth Grade and graduated from<br />

MPH in 1997. I came here to work at the Alumni Lodge; in<br />

1992. I applied for the alumni position.” Coach Anderson<br />

had no intention of coaching the tennis team. “I had put in<br />

my résumé that I played tennis. When I was appointed to<br />

the alumni position, Mr. Ball kindly informed me that I was<br />

also the first girl’s tennis coach,” she said with a laugh.<br />

relations. The position of the<br />

alumni director involves<br />

communicating and<br />

organizing events for the<br />

alumni of MPH, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

and The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>. It is<br />

quite clear that Coach<br />

Anderson genuinely enjoys<br />

this job. She truly loves<br />

working with people. Not<br />

only does Mrs. Anderson<br />

coach the girls tennis team<br />

and hold a very important<br />

position in the Alumni Lodge, but she also coaches the boys<br />

tennis team. Her interests outside of school and tennis are<br />

skiing, gardening and she has a loving bond with her two<br />

black Labradors, Maggie and Millie.<br />

Coach Anderson is always working to improve her coaching<br />

skills; she goes to educational clinics every year. Anderson<br />

got her USPTA certification in 2000 as well. “The way you<br />

teach the strokes has had to change because one doesn’t<br />

have to be quite as accurate because the racquet face is<br />

larger, but you have to be quicker and in better shape. The<br />

new equipment has made tennis more user friendly,” Coach<br />

Anderson observed.“To be a good coach you have to adapt<br />

to different players. In practice you have to take over all the<br />

area that needs the most work and work on it. In tennis,<br />

mental toughness is critical in developing competitive skills<br />

and is a very challenging concept to teach. It is a hugely<br />

important part of the game. Fitness and mental toughness<br />

are interwoven, and it is the combination that makes a great<br />

competitor.” Coach Anderson believes that the success of the<br />

tennis team was a mixture of the two. Coach Anderson has<br />

inspired many players and has fostered long lasting<br />

friendships on her teams. “Mrs. Anderson has encouraged<br />

me to play my own personal best. She always meets my<br />

needs while coaching me,” said Senior Laura Flagg, a 2009<br />

Varsity co-captain. “I love my team because we are really<br />

close and everyone is constantly cheering each other on. We<br />

all know each other so well and we can identify each other’s<br />

weaknesses and help strengthen them.” To some, tennis<br />

might seem like just a game, or even an activity for school<br />

credit, but in Flagg’s eyes it seems to have a different<br />

meaning. “Tennis has taught me how to be part of a team<br />

and take on leadership positions. This game and team will<br />

stick with me for the rest of my life. Tennis is a life sport,<br />

and I will play this game competitively or not for the rest of<br />

my life. I have Mrs. Anderson to thank for that,” Flagg said.<br />

MPH has taken pride in the girls tennis championships and<br />

feels fortunate and thankful to have Coach Anderson, who<br />

encourages her team, above all, to love the game.<br />

Coach Anderson worked at the Kreitzberg Family Alumni<br />

Lodge from 1992 until 1997.” Mrs. Anderson left the<br />

Alumni Lodge in 1997, but in September of 2008 she was<br />

asked to come back to the alumni office and she accepted<br />

the offer. Coach Anderson is now the director of alumni<br />

“Tennis is about personal growth, I want them all to<br />

continue to love the game,” said Coach Anderson. Coach<br />

Anderson is not only the coach of the championship team,<br />

but more importantly, she is a leader and a role model in<br />

the MPH community.<br />

62 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


getting to play rough, totally against<br />

society’s standards for a girl. We played<br />

one exhibition game against Nottingham<br />

and coach had us all put our<br />

helmets on before we got off the bus.<br />

Annie, the smallest of us all, Jess and I<br />

each looked like another one of the<br />

guys as we bounded off the bus in full<br />

gear. Toward the end of the game,<br />

Annie was put in on attack and totally<br />

creamed a guy that came down the field<br />

at her. I mean, he went a** over tea<br />

kettle, and Jess and I looked on in<br />

honor as our friend continued to rip<br />

the Nottingham guys apart. By the end<br />

of the game it was no big surprise that<br />

we did not win, Class D versus Class<br />

A... almost no competition, right Not<br />

so! The MPH men’s lacrosse team may<br />

not have won in points, but when we<br />

took off our helmets to shake hands<br />

after the game, we won based on sheer<br />

shock value. The boy Annie creamed<br />

could not believe a “girl” (half his size<br />

mind you) had taken him out. There<br />

were some awesome guys on the team<br />

that year, who worked very hard to<br />

make sure we did the best we could<br />

and I cannot remember one moment<br />

when they made us feel unwelcome.<br />

Thanks guys (players and coaches<br />

alike)! Men’s lacrosse rocks!<br />

Naomi (Ostrander) Scanlon ’00<br />

Did you know<br />

In 1976, the tennis team had a<br />

12-0 season. The team went<br />

undefeated in the Oswego County<br />

League Championships, and<br />

claimed its first title since the<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s merger.<br />

In 1972, lacrosse replaced<br />

baseball as the “big sport” for<br />

5th year boys, and is still a<br />

popular sport for MPH students<br />

today.<br />

The boy’s team won sectionals in 1996.<br />

This win marked the first title in 19 years<br />

for the team. The 2009 girl’s team claimed<br />

victory at the Section III Championships.<br />

Did you know<br />

The Alpine Skiing team earned Section III<br />

Championship titles in 1995 and 1996.<br />

MPH fielded their first indoor track team<br />

in 1992.<br />

Both the boys and girls soccer teams<br />

have enjoyed decades of success. The<br />

crowing events for the boys 2000 and<br />

2001 teams were winning New York<br />

State Championships. Dan Klemperer<br />

was a member of both the<br />

2000 and 2001 boys team and<br />

took time to share some of his<br />

recollections about the<br />

experience:<br />

MPH Takes Home<br />

the State Title<br />

Reprinted from The Icebox<br />

Bulletin, November 27-<br />

December 10, 2000<br />

Just wanting it wasn’t all that<br />

the boy’s soccer team had<br />

going for them. The energy of<br />

the crowd, the high from the<br />

win the day before, coach Don<br />

Ridall’s words of wisdom and<br />

the confidence of knowing that<br />

as a team, the MPH Trojans are<br />

skilled and talented athletes,<br />

2000 Boy’s Soccer – NY State Camps<br />

brought the team to the highest of<br />

heights that Sunday, November 19.<br />

The New York State Class D finals<br />

game was played at Liverpool High<br />

<strong>School</strong>. The crowd of a couple hundred<br />

fans chanted and cheered throughout<br />

the game. The game against Section V<br />

champions Fillmore Eagles began at 9<br />

a.m. and within the first 5 minutes,<br />

forward Brian Perry socked a goal into<br />

the net at close-range. The second goal<br />

came halfway through the second half.<br />

Dan Klemperer picked up a fumbled<br />

ball after an attempted shot and passed<br />

it left to Alan Rivera who got a clean<br />

shot into the unprotected goal. MPH<br />

saw the opportunity and took it. That’s<br />

how both games were played over the<br />

weekend.<br />

Fillmore’s only goal came toward the<br />

end of the second half as a penalty<br />

kick. Though the score seemed close,<br />

MPH seriously outplayed the Eagles.<br />

The Trojans outshot the Eagles 19-3<br />

and held possession of the ball the<br />

majority of the time. The final score<br />

was 2-1 when the whistle blew. MPH<br />

players jumped up, hugged, tackled,<br />

and high-fived in disbelief. The<br />

Trojans’ first time to the state finals<br />

competition earned them a welldeserved<br />

crown. Coach Ridall was<br />

struck speechless when handed the<br />

microphone to announce his players.<br />

The MPH Trojans closed their most<br />

successful season in history at 23-0-1.<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 63


THE ROAD TO A<br />

State Championship<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

It ended abruptly with the double-screech of the final<br />

whistle signaling both <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s first ever<br />

state soccer championship and the start of a frantic dash<br />

across the frozen AstroTurf at nearby Liverpool High <strong>School</strong>.<br />

For myself and the majority of our team, that dash ended in<br />

a haphazard pile-on somewhere near midfield, but for Don<br />

Ridall the invisible finish line was drawn at the far side of<br />

the field directly in front of the screaming crowd of MPH<br />

fans who braved the cold and snow to cheer us on. After<br />

recovering from the meandering 60 yard sprint that<br />

culminated with him reared back on his knees, hands in the<br />

air, Coach Ridall was given a microphone and the rambling,<br />

drawling words he spoke to the crowd were a willing<br />

testament to the elation and shock he felt. One might have<br />

gotten the impression from the scene that our victory was<br />

somehow unexpected or ill-prepared, but nothing could<br />

have been farther from the truth”.<br />

I believe our quest for a state championship began when we<br />

were in Middle <strong>School</strong> right after we witnessed the Ridallcoached<br />

MPH varsity team lose in the sectional semifinals.<br />

After the game, an emotional Don Ridall rounded up the<br />

ballboys which included myself and many of my future<br />

teammates, and told us that in a few years we‘d be playing<br />

on that field and that we could go all the way. From that<br />

point on, the goal of winning a sectional championship was<br />

always in mind as we practiced and played together yearround<br />

for the next six years. We ran captain’s practices<br />

during the summers, played in indoor leagues together in<br />

the winter, and during the regular season when some of our<br />

opponents didn’t provide us much challenge, some of the<br />

hardest fought and most competitive games were intrasquad<br />

scrimmages on the practice field after school.<br />

Now that’s not to say we didn’t enjoy ourselves, even a little<br />

too much at times, as we grew as close as players and<br />

coaches can get. When I reminisce about playing soccer in<br />

high school, I think as much of winning those two state<br />

championships as the fun we shared and trouble we got<br />

into. I think of the time Coach angrily huddled us up<br />

during practice so we could all listen in for one player’s<br />

excuse why he showed up an hour late for an important<br />

practice, and then not being able to keep from laughing<br />

when the student claimed his house burned down (which<br />

actually turned out to be the truth). I’m reminded of the<br />

McDonald’s fry eating contests at pit stops coming back<br />

from away games, playing “red light” on the bus rides, and<br />

the always eye-opening experience of staying over for the<br />

Oxford Tournament. Whether it’s for the championships we<br />

won or the camaraderie we shared, I do know for certain<br />

that I’ll always look back fondly on my soccer experience at<br />

MPH with Coach Ridall as one of the most memorable<br />

times of my life.<br />

64 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Some of my most vivid memories of<br />

MPH were created during my time<br />

participating in sports. Some moments<br />

that stand out are: Watching Toni, Sally,<br />

and Ralph Torrillo play ball while<br />

hoping to be just like them some day<br />

(’91-‘98), winning the night game<br />

under the lights at Onondaga in the<br />

pouring rain (soccer ‘00), playing the<br />

softball season opener at McGraw in<br />

below freezing temperatures (‘02), a<br />

bus break-down on the way to the<br />

Oneonta tournament (soccer ‘01),<br />

taking a team photo with the 1999<br />

Women’s World Cup Trophy (soccer<br />

‘02), serving 15 straight points to win a<br />

perfect game (volleyball ‘99), getting<br />

physically abused by Stockbridge Valley<br />

(soccer - every year), the Seniors<br />

seriously dominating Winter Carnival<br />

in ’03 (outdoor games + quiet games),<br />

Pat Ridall being sad that his State<br />

Championship T-Shirt got ruined when<br />

he was run over by a bicyclist in<br />

Montreal (’01), Ellen Gorra finally<br />

getting a hit and then tripping over first<br />

base (softball ‘02), telling Mr. Denton<br />

he couldn’t cancel practice to go home<br />

and mow his lawn (softball ’99-<br />

‘03)….and the list could go on! But<br />

what really made athletics enjoyable for<br />

me was that it wasn’t just about<br />

winning the game, it was about<br />

teamwork, heart and building<br />

friendships!<br />

I love MPH athletics because of its<br />

tradition of excellence, but I really love<br />

MPH athletics because of all the great<br />

experiences and memories it created.<br />

Carla Torillo ’03<br />

Coach Don Ridall celebrating with his<br />

players<br />

Don Ridall:<br />

SHAPING MPH ATHLETICS<br />

FOR 34 YEARS<br />

“It’s been a good fit for me,” says Don Ridall of his 34 years at <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. Hired in 1976 as a physical education teacher, he has been MPH<br />

athletic director since the spring of l978 and is greatly respected among his<br />

colleagues for having built one of the strongest high school soccer programs<br />

in Central New York.<br />

He’s been offered positions at other schools, but, for many reasons, has<br />

stayed at MPH. Don says he appreciates “the independence I’ve been allowed<br />

and the ability I’ve had to be creative in experimenting with programs.” He<br />

enjoys teaching a variety of ages and acknowledges that, “It’s more fun to work with kids who actually enjoy coming to<br />

school.” He says he has always thought MPH the right place for his own children, as well. (Son Patrick graduated in<br />

2003, and daughter Cady is in Sixth Grade.)<br />

Coaches & Athletics Memories<br />

He stays, too, because of the MPH athletic philosophy. The <strong>School</strong>’s no-cut policy, unique among area schools, enables<br />

every single kid who wants to play to be on a sports team. Don believes that’s important. And he points out that, even<br />

with the no-cut policy, “Some of our programs are as good or better than any in the area.”<br />

Don supports the <strong>School</strong>’s philosophy that there should be “a balancing of academics and sports,” and takes some<br />

pride in noting that, although that creates a different level of play, “MPH has produced some great athletes, including<br />

many All-State athletes and at least two All-Americans.”<br />

What’s changed in his 34 years at MPH “We’re not seeing as many three-sport athletes as we used to,” Don says.<br />

“Because of academic demands, more kids now specialize in one sport. They can play it year-round by participating in<br />

club teams.”<br />

Don recalls the time when the <strong>School</strong> had only 200 or so students: “With that small enrollment, we needed kids to<br />

play three sports in order to just have teams.” In 2002, Don was named National Soccer Coach of the Year by the<br />

National Soccer Coaches Association of America. As a coach, he looks at the state championships won by his Boys<br />

Varsity Soccer Team in 2000 and 2001 as especially notable achievements.<br />

Those are among the kinds of achievements that will be recognized in the <strong>School</strong>’s soon-to-be inaugurated Athletic<br />

Hall of Fame. Don believes that the Hall of Fame has the potential to inspire students and to promote athletics: “In the<br />

history of the <strong>School</strong>, we have had some great athletes who deserve to be recognized, and our current athletes should<br />

know about them.”<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 65


Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

Inspired by a powerful course I took in graduate school one summer, I subjected my poor Tenth Grade English classes to a depressing year of<br />

Holocaust literature. Much as they might like to, several of those students, including Lyndsey Weiner (MPH ’01), will never forget that<br />

year. Now that Lyndsey works at MPH, she will never let me forget it either!<br />

Teachers know there are times when some private matter clouds a student’s mind so heavily that nothing short of a fire drill will reach him,<br />

yet we should also be mindful that students sometimes will notice and remember (sometimes for decades) day-to-day interactions, an offhand<br />

comment, an unscripted moment shared, a depressing reading list, or an inspiring course. But students often have the same effect on their<br />

teachers, by offering us a new way to see a subject we love or by providing us a chuckle. I am reminded here of Peter Fanelli (MPH ‘03)<br />

entering my classroom carried in his own trombone case. I owe so much of who I am as a teacher and person to my teachers, but also to my<br />

colleagues and students.<br />

The power of the student-teacher bond fills the following entries with humor and inspiration, relating ways in which these relationships<br />

influenced people’s thinking, their perspectives on a subject or on themselves, and certainly their experiences at the school. The following entries<br />

make it clear that <strong>Manlius</strong>, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, and <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>s have always valued the bond between teacher and student and<br />

provided room for these relationships to grow.<br />

Pat Bentley Hoke, chair, MPH English Department<br />

The manlius school<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

Lt. McTiernan was<br />

my English teacher<br />

at <strong>Manlius</strong> and as<br />

Captain<br />

McTiernan, my<br />

instructor at the<br />

Army Parachute<br />

<strong>School</strong> at Fort<br />

Benning, Ga. He<br />

was killed in action<br />

in Europe during<br />

WWII.<br />

G.H. Clune II ’43C<br />

A man named<br />

Robert Stoddard<br />

Hopkins taught<br />

English at <strong>Manlius</strong>,<br />

and it turned out<br />

Lt. McTiernan he had a profound<br />

effect on me. He<br />

once returned a composition of mine<br />

marked A+ and in the margin was the<br />

notation, “You write very well.” I was<br />

ruined! I started to read Gene Fowler,<br />

Ben Hecht, John McNulty, Joseph<br />

Mitchell, and other knockabout writers,<br />

all of whom were or had been<br />

newspaper or magazine writers, and<br />

decided that was the life for me.<br />

The cliché is “ink-stained wretch,” and<br />

that’s pretty much what I’ve been ever<br />

since. In class one day, Hopkins called<br />

me to my feet and had me rattle off the<br />

demonstrative pronouns. It was an act. I<br />

said, “Dis, dat, dese, dem, and dose,”<br />

and he’d shoot back, “Dat’s right!”<br />

• Phil Jenkins - The he most fun, had<br />

us read “Studs Lonigan.” Wrote the<br />

play “Moon Over <strong>Manlius</strong>.”<br />

• Tom Wight - The kindest, wisest,<br />

most paternal. Exposed me to S.S.<br />

Pierce’s Czarina tea.<br />

• Robert Langdon - Amusing, a good<br />

teacher.<br />

• Charles Reid - Always kind and<br />

helpful to me. Taught me a certain<br />

degree of elegance and loved to<br />

gossip.<br />

• Lt. Colonel Collette (PSM&T) -<br />

Paternal, kind, to me a superb role<br />

model and boy did he make us<br />

work.<br />

Bill Kirkpatrick ’43A<br />

Nevin James Shankweiler was<br />

Commandant of Co. B, 1940-1943<br />

(maybe before and maybe later). He, his<br />

wife Grace, and their daughter were the<br />

adults in our barracks. He was a great<br />

role model - strong, steady, fair, consistent,<br />

honest, great sense of humor and,<br />

above all, understanding of the problems<br />

of a bunch of teenage boys. He<br />

taught chemistry and was my role<br />

model, first in becoming a good student,<br />

a man of honor and also a chemical<br />

66 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Voices from the Past<br />

Excerpt from “Bahner’s Incentive”<br />

By David Bahner<br />

David Bahner<br />

conducting a typical<br />

band rehearsal in<br />

Knox Hall<br />

Reprinted from the Spring 1964 Old Boys Bulletin<br />

As I write the article, the cadets are preparing for the annual Government<br />

Inspection (G.I.). This is a busy time for the band members, for each of them<br />

must have his instrument in first-class condition. The most tedious job at this<br />

time for us is getting the “dress drums” in shape.<br />

These are the British regimental drums, painted with The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>’s crest,<br />

which form the front line of the marching band. These drums are difficult to<br />

work on because they are the old style rope tension drums – and it is only<br />

through real effort that they can be made to have a well-balanced snare sound.<br />

Every year the drum section says “We’ll never be able to get those drums in<br />

shape” and every year at G.I. they are ready.<br />

There are two lessons to be learned from this: the drummers learn that a<br />

problem that seems insurmountable can be overcome by sticking to the job; the<br />

other lesson can be applied to the cadets…that even though a boy may seem to<br />

be a poor cadet, oftentimes with a little extra attention and individual help, that<br />

same boy can be made a part of the team.<br />

The Ceremonial Drums<br />

The youth of today are the world of tomorrow, and we at <strong>Manlius</strong> have an opportunity to help shape that world by the impact we<br />

make on the minds of the students today. I am glad that I can help minds grow through the medium of music.<br />

engineer. He was, as I remember, from<br />

Kutztown, Penn. and spoke with a slight<br />

Penna-Dutch accent. Great guy.<br />

William M. “Bud” Marcussen, ‘43 B<br />

I entered <strong>Manlius</strong> in 1939 and have a<br />

vivid memory of “Gunner” Knapp who<br />

taught history. His remark to an errant<br />

student was, “I’ll tear off your arm and<br />

beat you over the head with the bloody<br />

stump!” It caught the attention of this<br />

new student immediately.<br />

Bob McClinton ‘43A<br />

“Duke” Eddington, my senior English<br />

teacher, inspired me to be a writer. He<br />

taught us to think critically and<br />

analytically. I was a skier at <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

who ended up as an aerospace engineer<br />

on the teams that landed the Viking on<br />

Mars and got photos for three years. I<br />

also was on the team of the Magellan<br />

spacecraft that orbited Venus and got<br />

95% of the surface with a synthetic<br />

aperture radar.<br />

Merriam Trube ’47A<br />

Capt. Tom Cahill will always be remembered.<br />

Other faculty members will be<br />

forgotten and have to be renewed by<br />

reading my 1949 Haversack. Long story,<br />

but his interest, guidance, and<br />

understanding resulted with my having<br />

what I consider a very successful life...I<br />

will never forget our off-the-record and<br />

un-military school conversations... I am<br />

sure that this man was very important<br />

to many other cadets. If you have any<br />

information about Capt. Cahill, I would<br />

appreciate your sending it to me...<br />

Thanks....<br />

Edward H. Ehrenspeck’49HQ<br />

Editor’s Note: After a long, illustrious career<br />

in coaching, Tom Cahill passed away in<br />

1998. His wife Bonnie passed away in<br />

2001. Many, many alumni recall Capt.<br />

Cahill’s integrity and guidance both on and<br />

off the field, and he is still missed.<br />

The first of my five years on the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

faculty (1948-1949), I lived in the<br />

bachelor quarters on the second floor of<br />

Tom and Bonnie Cahill’s B Company.<br />

Among the few alumni who might<br />

remember me from that year were the<br />

two student non-coms across the hall<br />

who showed me how to keep the brass<br />

on my uniform bright with clear nail<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 67


A Faculty Wife’s Memories<br />

of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

For 15 years prior to its merging with <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, my husband, Dave<br />

Bahner, was the director of music at <strong>Manlius</strong>. For just about all of those<br />

years, we lived in faculty housing on campus, with our two daughters. Our<br />

lives were merged with those of the cadets – especially with Headquarters<br />

Company (HQ...THE BEST COMPANY HQ ..THE COLOR COMPANY).<br />

My memories are not of classroom experiences, but rather those associated<br />

with being a family, offering a “home away from home” atmosphere to<br />

lonely and homesick cadets. Here are a few of those memories:<br />

Suzi, David, Carol, and Sue Bahner circa 1964<br />

We usually ate the evening meal in the dining hall…it was a memorable<br />

moment when Dave attempted to serve dessert by slicing into a frozen<br />

block of ice cream, causing it to skitter down the length of the table onto a<br />

cadet’s lap. I remember providing Kleenex to cadets just prior to some<br />

Sunday afternoon dress parades – not because they had a cold, but because<br />

they needed to cover up the “ring around the collar” on their white shirts,<br />

and the Kleenex worked perfectly (from a distance)! One of the unique<br />

experiences was chaperoning the Winter Carnival dates, who were housed<br />

in a dormitory. Sleeping in those bunks was challenging.<br />

My kitchen was often home to cadets who were brave enough to want to<br />

learn how to bake and decorate cookies, or who came for a feast of<br />

buttermilk pancakes. Since our daughters, Suzi and Caryl, were both in<br />

Girls Scouts, they were the prize winners for selling cookies, since they had<br />

Farmer Hall residents as customers. We also made wonderful life-long<br />

friends with other faculty families. But the memories are still being made<br />

Carol, Sue, and Suzi<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

when we gather at Clambake and reminisce. And usually someone will talk about the Senior<br />

Pranks… especially the time some enterprising cadets procured some highway signs and late at<br />

night placed them in a way that diverted all the traffic driving east on 92 through the campus. I<br />

imagine it was the rumbling of heavy trucks driving through that awoke some faculty member (yes,<br />

it probably was The Wedge!) who handled the situation.<br />

We counted it a privilege to play a part in helping to shape the lives of young men. Whenever I hear<br />

a Sousa march, my mind flashes back to a view of The <strong>Manlius</strong> Battalion, with flags flying,<br />

marching in formation on the parade field. Thanks for the memories!<br />

Sue Bahner<br />

“I am aware of how the legacy of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> has been grafted into<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> through the merger, because our grandson is an MPH graduate,<br />

and I have seen first-hand the excellent education he received. He was taught<br />

to think critically, and never to forget that Manners Makyth Man.”<br />

P.S. Because <strong>Manlius</strong> merged with <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> and became <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>, I thought it<br />

appropriate to provide some more current memories. I am aware of how the legacy of The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> has been grafted into <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> through the merger, because our grandson is an MPH<br />

Keeping it in the family,<br />

David and Sue’s grandson,<br />

Michael Harriff, is a 1996<br />

graduate of <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong><br />

graduate, and I have seen first-hand the excellent education he received. He was taught to think critically, and never to forget that<br />

Manners Makyth Man. If you want a constant reminder of this excellent merged school known as “MPH,” look no further than<br />

the dashboard of your car, where you will see that same “MPH” shown! It can become a symbol to you of progress being made<br />

in educating the students of today.<br />

68


polish. What they didn’t tell me was<br />

that nail polish remover and new polish<br />

were needed occasionally. I like to<br />

believe that was the source of one of my<br />

nicknames that I, like all private school<br />

faculty, learned after graduation – “Dirty<br />

Dave.” I also was sufficiently overweight<br />

that my Eisenhower jacket was seldom<br />

buttoned, causing the Superintendent –<br />

Major General Raymond W. Barker – to<br />

call me aside and beg me to be just a<br />

little bit more military. I like to think<br />

that I had some part in the faculty<br />

members eventually being permitted to<br />

switch to “civvies.”<br />

I coached soccer and swimming and got<br />

a lot of support in starting lacrosse.<br />

Because the football team played college<br />

freshman and JV teams, all other teams<br />

had to play college teams. My first<br />

“away” soccer game was against Cornell<br />

JVs. They bumped our goalie into the<br />

post and took him and his concussion<br />

to their infirmary, where I picked him<br />

up for the trip home. We didn’t know<br />

they had broken our middle half-back’s<br />

leg until we had to leave him at a<br />

hospital half way back to <strong>Manlius</strong>. I<br />

don’t remember the score, but I do<br />

remember sitting up with a demented<br />

goalie from our getting back to <strong>School</strong><br />

at 3 a.m. to the opening of our<br />

infirmary at 8 a.m.<br />

I know I was responsible for another<br />

athletic policy change. The coaches of<br />

minor sport teams drove the bus until,<br />

on a snowy trip to a swim meet at RPI, I<br />

underlined the school name on the new<br />

bus by sliding into a parked truck on an<br />

icy city street. For my last three years on<br />

the faculty, custodians drove the bus<br />

and the kids were better behaved.<br />

After a year as a newlywed in a second<br />

floor apartment in the village, my bride<br />

allowed me to move with her into what<br />

had been Bernie and Mary-D Shaw’s A<br />

Company. As Commandant of A<br />

Company, I was “promoted” from<br />

lieutenant to captain and could learn<br />

gardening from Bernie on his farm<br />

during vacations. But the learning I<br />

most appreciated came from my student<br />

officers and non-coms. All four of our<br />

boys are named after A Company<br />

students.<br />

While I have never seen much advantage<br />

to a student being a private in a<br />

military school, I am still awed by the<br />

educational opportunities given to<br />

student officers and non-coms. I was<br />

proud of being a part of A Company<br />

each of my three years there; but I can’t<br />

help being most proud of the A<br />

Company cadets winning Company<br />

Competition in spring of ’53. It had<br />

been a difficult year on the military side<br />

of things with company officers<br />

demoted for disciplinary reasons. But<br />

every one, regardless of rank, came<br />

together to achieve the best marks in the<br />

military competition to join with their<br />

long-standing academic excellence.<br />

Anne and I were extremely proud to<br />

watch the company captain carry our<br />

infant son at the front of the victory<br />

parade.<br />

My five years on the <strong>Manlius</strong> faculty<br />

marked the beginning of a teaching<br />

career that lasted until 1992. The last 17<br />

years I sold out to administrating, but I<br />

always had one class a day “on my<br />

lunch hour.” To the end, I kept learning<br />

what I learned at <strong>Manlius</strong> – that, as all<br />

teachers know, we always learn more<br />

from the kids than they learn from us.<br />

Dave Meier, <strong>Manlius</strong> faculty member<br />

1948-1953<br />

Let me note that I was a <strong>Manlius</strong> cadet<br />

‘43-‘46 and a <strong>Manlius</strong> faculty member<br />

‘57-‘60. I call to mind two individuals I<br />

knew first as students and then as fellow<br />

teachers. Bernie Shaw I had for a course<br />

in world history, I think. What relish,<br />

what enthusiasm he brought to his<br />

subject. And not least, he made sure we<br />

could pronounce with confidence the<br />

great names of history. His was a class<br />

we all looked forward to. The “Jake” was<br />

another matter. He taught with the<br />

confidence of one who’s been there.<br />

He’d not read a text or two, but he’d<br />

done the original research that lent<br />

authority to his presentations and was a<br />

real plus for the <strong>School</strong>.<br />

I have the ego to include myself as<br />

a teacher out of the ordinary. I came to<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> from two years on the faculty<br />

of the University of South Carolina, and<br />

with my 11th Graders, I used a college<br />

literature text. I can still recall beating<br />

them through William Faulkner’s “The<br />

Bear.” All concerned were hanging on<br />

for dear life. Then, when I returned to<br />

college teaching, I used that same text<br />

with sophomores and juniors. But then<br />

the college president called me into his<br />

academic woodshed: “You can’t expect<br />

your college folk to handle what your<br />

prep school students could.” Cadets<br />

who’ll recall the carnage in my classes<br />

include Steve Wynn and Dean<br />

Sedgwick. The former even majored in<br />

English at the University of Pennsylvania,<br />

from which I earned my Ph.D.<br />

Ahhhh… the damage a teacher can do.<br />

Another faculty member who comes to<br />

mind is a Don Jenks, who taught 10th<br />

Grade English in the late ‘50s. He used a<br />

text that had been out of print for years.<br />

That meant the bookstore had to search<br />

out used copies. Joy oh joy, this gem<br />

brought back those wonderful distinctions<br />

between “shall” and “will,”<br />

between “should” and “would.”<br />

Col. John Marsh ’46B, <strong>Manlius</strong> faculty<br />

member 1957-60<br />

Bernie Shaw was HQ and A Company<br />

Commandant. He would come to me as<br />

HQ Company Commander and suggest<br />

that it was time to have all the rifles<br />

cleaned, or something similar. I seemed<br />

to have ESP about these things, and was<br />

able to tell him that HQ had already<br />

done it. A Company then would have to<br />

do it. It was uncanny. He was always<br />

very fair and aboveboard. While this is<br />

not necessarily earth shaking, by<br />

entrusting me to do what was right, he<br />

taught me a great lesson. It’s a principle<br />

I’ve followed throughout my life.<br />

David Slocum ’48HQ<br />

I remember “Duke” Eddington, Senior<br />

English teacher who made us write<br />

something every day and then we had<br />

to defend it in class…sure got us to<br />

think on our feet, and it made me into a<br />

writer that together with engineering is<br />

how I’ve made an exciting aerospace<br />

career and a good retirement.<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 69


Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

Dave Edwards, John MacDonald,<br />

Walter Sherman, Lee Sedgwick<br />

I really have so many stories about<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> that it will be too long to tell<br />

all of them, but I just remembered this<br />

one. It was March 10, 1952. I was at a<br />

class with Mr. Howell and in that class,<br />

too, were Alberto & Guillermo<br />

Fernandez, all of us Cubans. Mr. Howell<br />

said to us, “Do you know that the<br />

president of Cuba, Carlos Prio, was<br />

overthrown by a former president of<br />

Cuba, Fulgencio Batista“ We would not<br />

believe it, but when the classes finished,<br />

I went to my room and put on the<br />

radio. I had a short wave radio, and it<br />

was true. It is because of this action that<br />

there are so many Cuban people living<br />

in the US right now.<br />

Rafael Sanchez ’52C<br />

Nevin Shankweiler was deadly accurate<br />

with a left-handed piece of chalk<br />

delivered to the back row. Now that is<br />

chemistry in action.<br />

Emmett Greenleaf ’53HQ<br />

One of my fondest members of Bernie<br />

was during a history exam. He passed<br />

out the test with a number of<br />

challenging essay questions, and Harvey<br />

Ruvin, from the back row, was heard to<br />

mutter, “Jesus Christ!,” apparently in<br />

appreciation of the difficulty he foresaw<br />

in answering. Without missing a beat,<br />

Bernie looked up from his desk, peered<br />

over his reading glasses and said, “You<br />

may call me Mr. Shaw….” It broke me<br />

up! I recounted this story to Harvey a<br />

few years ago when he made contact<br />

with me through the Internet, and he<br />

couldn’t remember the incident, but I<br />

sure did.<br />

Dave Edwards and the entire English<br />

Department deserve much credit. The<br />

four years of English I had at <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

were the most valuable single contribution<br />

to my education from any school<br />

or college, a listing that includes the US<br />

Naval Academy, Rensselaer Polytechnic<br />

Institute and Stanford. At the time, I<br />

hated the précis-writing classes with Mr.<br />

Patton – such drudgery! Years later,<br />

however, I came to understand that he<br />

and the others in English were responsible<br />

for really teaching me to write<br />

well. An engineer who could actually<br />

write well! How strange…. The ability<br />

to write well had a great deal to do with<br />

whatever success I had later in life. Andy<br />

Forrest in English was a great inspiration<br />

in literature and poetry. The inimitable<br />

Doc Williams in biology was also pretty<br />

memorable. I remember one day one of<br />

the South American boys was sleeping<br />

in class, and Doc quietly moved over<br />

beside him. He raised the heavy pool<br />

cue he used as a pointer and slammed it<br />

on the desk beside the poor sleeper’s<br />

head and nearly scared him out of his<br />

wits. Frank Milliman in math – quiet,<br />

very patient, and a great teacher. Those<br />

were the days….<br />

Jon Ives ’55C<br />

My dear friend and teacher Commander<br />

J. T. Rugh came easily to mind. One<br />

thing that sticks in my mind is hearing<br />

Commander Rugh talk with General<br />

Barker. The General affectionately<br />

addressed Commander Rugh as “Sailor.”<br />

Many years after my graduation, I<br />

visited J.T. and Lotte at their home in<br />

Maine. J.T. and I went snow shoeing.<br />

There were many great teachers - Frank<br />

Milliman, Mr. Jay, Mr. Edwards, Mr.<br />

Jenks, Mr. Patton, Bernie Shaw, Col.<br />

Chase. Each one made a difference.<br />

James E. (Jed) Waterbury ’56A<br />

I remember Nevin Shankweiler’s last<br />

day in the classroom. I had signed up<br />

for chemistry my Senior year because of<br />

Mr. Shankweiler’s reputation for<br />

excellent teaching — the best in the<br />

<strong>School</strong>, some of his students said. But<br />

when we returned to <strong>School</strong> in the fall,<br />

we learned that Mr. Shankweiler had<br />

cancer. His substitute, Mrs. Knudson,<br />

was competent enough, as I recall, but<br />

she wasn’t “Shank.”<br />

Then one day, Mr. Shankweiler did<br />

come to <strong>School</strong> to teach us. He was<br />

very thin and weak, and I remember his<br />

clarity, his earnestness, and his almost<br />

wistful smile. That class wasn’t, as I had<br />

hoped, the first class of his return, but<br />

rather his farewell to his classroom and<br />

us boys. I remember it, and him, with<br />

particular poignancy this semester,<br />

which may very well be the last in my<br />

own career.<br />

My other memory, a very fragmentary<br />

one, is of P.P. Hanson telling us a joke<br />

in geometry class in 1954 or 1955. I’ve<br />

forgotten the lesson, and I’ve forgotten<br />

the joke, but I remember that “P. P.”<br />

told us we’d remember the joke longer<br />

than the lesson. If any Old Boy<br />

remembers the joke, I’d appreciate being<br />

reminded of it!<br />

Dave Cole ‘57 B-HQ<br />

There are so many (teachers) who left<br />

positive memories. Shankweiler was a<br />

brilliant teacher of chemistry. One day I<br />

spilled acid on my thumb and I went to<br />

him for help — but instead he called<br />

the class to attention and told them to<br />

watch my hand change color. He then<br />

explained the harmless reaction that the<br />

acid had caused.<br />

Dave Edwards was a great and inspiring<br />

teacher of English. He knew how to<br />

squeeze the best work out of his<br />

students. Commander Rugh had a good<br />

sense of humor and related well to<br />

students. Rev. Laine must have been the<br />

world’s kindest, gentlest man. The<br />

rumor was that he had been shot in<br />

WWI, but that his Chaplain’s cross<br />

saved his life. The bullet hit the cross<br />

and thus did not kill him. The story was<br />

that he had the cross rebuilt and still<br />

wore it on his uniform. Was that true<br />

The Commandant, Lee Sedgwick, was in<br />

charge of discipline. He had an old<br />

Buick that roared when he drove it and<br />

thus you could always hear him coming<br />

to check on us during the night. “Turn<br />

off the lights, here comes Sedgwick.” I<br />

wonder if he knew that, used it as a<br />

decoy, and strolled up to Hadley Hall<br />

on foot sometimes.<br />

Mark DeLancey ’57B<br />

70 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


I arrived at <strong>Manlius</strong> with little if any<br />

respect for authority. Then I met Walter<br />

MacPhee. Mr. MacPhee was the adult in<br />

charge of “B” Company for the three<br />

years I was incarcerated at <strong>Manlius</strong> and<br />

he made darned sure that I understood<br />

the meaning of respect, honor, and<br />

discipline. I think I made every soak line<br />

every week for the whole three years and<br />

Mr. MacPhee saw to it that I had<br />

enough extra duty to keep me occupied<br />

while I contemplated changing my<br />

ways. He never gave up on me and I<br />

know I tried his patience to the max.<br />

Without his guidance I never would<br />

have lived long enough to retire, which I<br />

now have done. Thanks, Mr. MacPhee,<br />

for your dedication to the principles of<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> and finding some thing good<br />

in even the most recalcitrant student.<br />

Norman McGill Jr. ’59B<br />

Frank Milliman was an outstanding<br />

math teacher. He was on top of his<br />

material and immensely patient with<br />

his students. David Bahner, the band<br />

faculty member, was the epitome of<br />

kindness.<br />

Bill Rankin ’59HQ<br />

A formal dance. Fourteen years old.<br />

Dressed in my dress blues, white belt,<br />

polished brass belt buckle, mirror<br />

polished shoes, white gloves, and my<br />

date on my arm. Nervous to the point<br />

of panic and trying to remember the<br />

school motto: Manners Makyth Man.<br />

We had to go through the reception line<br />

and I had to think of something to say. I<br />

was never very good at that. We had a<br />

real military major that the cadets all<br />

thought resembled an owl and we<br />

called him Major Tweety — behind his<br />

back, of course. Well, the major was in<br />

the reception line and, sure enough, as I<br />

reached the major with my date on my<br />

arm, I reached out my hand and said,<br />

“Good evening, Major Tweety.” I just<br />

kept moving down the line.<br />

Dave Rosso ’61C<br />

You obviously will get input from my<br />

year group on John Edwards, Bernie<br />

Shaw, etc. However, one of my favorite<br />

teachers was Larry Leighton, the French<br />

and Latin teacher. He was a frail<br />

individual, who smoked too much and<br />

had the harsh, raspy smoker‘s cough.<br />

The classroom was on the third floor —<br />

as far as you could get from the<br />

entrance — and he would come into<br />

the classroom out of breath. Yet, he was<br />

most patient and had an obvious love<br />

for the students. He did not touch as<br />

many students as the English, history,<br />

science, and math teachers; but he made<br />

an impression on me. And I still<br />

remember that old Gaul was divided<br />

into three parts!<br />

Dean Sedgwick ’61HQ<br />

I had two great teachers. The first was<br />

Bernard Shaw...He made you think and<br />

he brought history ‘to life.’ I still have<br />

both volumes of English history- as well<br />

as the American history text he used.<br />

(The snap quizzes tended to reduce my<br />

overall grade.)<br />

The second great academic influence<br />

was Robert ‘the Huntah’ Hunter.<br />

Without his weekly 50 word paragraphs,<br />

literary discussions and ability to hone<br />

interpretive skills, my college career<br />

would have died in freshman English.<br />

There were also others. Commander<br />

Rugh who helped me get through Latin<br />

and who was our soccer coach. Our<br />

absent-minded chemistry professor,<br />

Claude Williams, who was forever<br />

lighting Bunsen burners and having<br />

them blow back through the ports, yet<br />

he would continue to teach unaware of<br />

the ‘problem’ until someone notified<br />

him of the hazard. Last, but not least,<br />

our Band Master David Bahner, who<br />

didn’t just stop the music at Sousa....<br />

John Castor ’64HQ<br />

Bernie Shaw (US History); Dave Bahner<br />

(Senior Advisor); Commander J.<br />

Torrence Rugh, USN (ret) (Latin I); Bob<br />

Hunter (English III); Dave Edwards<br />

(English I); L. Brooks Lakin (History 9);<br />

Jack Lewis (9th grade General Science &<br />

Thomson Hall housemaster); O.<br />

Howard Correll (Algebra I); Larry Porter<br />

(Algebra I); Paul Vang (housemaster);<br />

Frank Gibson & Walter Sherman<br />

(advisors); all the foregoing are<br />

“honorable mention.” My favorite was<br />

Bruce Carlson (Latin American<br />

history....) Ironically, the actions of the<br />

person pictured in your e-mail (Bernie<br />

Shaw) had a significant effect on my<br />

life.<br />

Part II - more “honorable mentions” -<br />

Paul Wacholz (Modern European<br />

History); John McDonald (Dean); Frank<br />

Koegel (Math II); Larry Leighton (Latin<br />

II); but Bruce Carlson remains my alltime<br />

favorite... plus Major Bob Curtis<br />

(military department), and even Lee<br />

Sedgwick and General Wilson....<br />

Mike Olshan ’64HQ<br />

A Debt Owed<br />

Combining my years as a cadet and my<br />

years as a faculty member surrounds the<br />

merger. Much was different to be sure,<br />

but much was surprisingly the same.<br />

Dave Edwards, Bernie Shaw, Lee<br />

Sedgwick, and the remaining <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

faculty joined Dick Barter and Chuck<br />

Beeler and the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> faculty in<br />

seeking excellence in education in every<br />

way possible. But as I reflect about the<br />

events and people who had an impact<br />

on us, one face, one name keeps<br />

coming to mind – Lawrence!<br />

I wish I knew his last name out of<br />

respect that I have acquired for him<br />

since I learned to appreciate what it<br />

takes to make a good school run well.<br />

I just knew the ubiquitous, wiry thin,<br />

age-lined face, overall jeans and a worn<br />

green jacket, and the ever present pipe<br />

of a man who served us all very well!<br />

He did it all. He drove the bus. He<br />

drove the tractor to mow the campus<br />

and fields. He spread sand and salt in<br />

the winter and spent untold hours<br />

coaxing the old boiler in Knox Hall to<br />

generate enough steam to travel all the<br />

way over to Farmer Hall underground.<br />

That was a major task in the last few<br />

years as major maintenance had to be<br />

deferred due to enrollment.<br />

It was Lawrence who was in the dining<br />

hall at 2 a.m. when I went in search of<br />

my car ,which the Seniors and PG’s had<br />

“stolen.” He was just standing there,<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 71


Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

pipe glowing in the dark, as I entered<br />

the double doors. Who knew that<br />

Comstock was not locked up at night I<br />

suggested I just leave the car there since<br />

it was obvious that the kids had been<br />

very careful in transporting my VW in<br />

there. With his normal dearth of words,<br />

Lawrence commented on the old beams<br />

in the basement not sounding too good.<br />

“I bin downstaiaiaiairs” he said in his<br />

characteristic voice from Maine. “Don’t<br />

sound too goooood.” I jumped in the<br />

car and carefully backed it out, with<br />

Lawrence holding the doors for me.<br />

It was Lawrence who could make the<br />

old equipment run well past their useful<br />

lives and saving the <strong>School</strong> operating<br />

dollars I am sure. And I am almost as<br />

sure he didn’t cost us too many of those<br />

dollars either. It was Lawrence who we<br />

left behind to take care of the place<br />

while the rest of the <strong>School</strong> moved out<br />

and the banks began the process of<br />

taking over. I wonder what he thought<br />

as he watched his world change that he<br />

had given so much of his life to. I<br />

would ask Bill Bisgrove about him and<br />

the only real addition he could give me<br />

was that Lawrence loved to fish. Bill<br />

didn’t know what happened to<br />

Lawrence after the sale. I hope he had<br />

some quality time fishing.<br />

Thank you Lawrence! You served us all<br />

long well.<br />

Brad Garrity ’66C<br />

One night a year we were allowed to<br />

visit Suburban Park, the amusement<br />

park across Route 92. We had our cutrate<br />

tickets that we bought from Sgt.<br />

Becker and a couple of hours to enjoy<br />

our freedom. We rode all the rides,<br />

played skee-ball, practiced our<br />

marksmanship at the shooting gallery<br />

and most of all, we rode the bumper<br />

cars. We rode them not only to release<br />

our pent up testosterone, but to do<br />

something otherwise unthinkable.<br />

You see, the bumper cars were centrally<br />

located and provided an ideal location<br />

for Captain Sedgwick to keep an eye on<br />

his rambunctious charges. He would sit,<br />

pipe in mouth, endlessly circling, his<br />

eagle eye missing nothing. But to do<br />

this he had to endure getting smacked<br />

by his boys. Who could resist getting a<br />

free shot at the Wedge I suppose a<br />

mathematician could have worked out a<br />

formula correlating number of hits by<br />

each individual to his current level of<br />

Extra Duty (E.D.) hours. But there was<br />

the “X” factor. You would have to face<br />

him in the morning.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

In Sixth Grade, I lived literally 90<br />

seconds away from <strong>School</strong>. Now in<br />

Seventh Grade, <strong>School</strong> was twelve miles<br />

away, and started earlier. My sleep<br />

patterns were shot to ....pieces. It caught<br />

up with me on a Tuesday morning<br />

when English with Mr. Anderson was<br />

the first class of the day. I struggled to<br />

stay awake, if not alert. But the room<br />

was hot, and Whitey could drone on a<br />

bit. I lost the battle. Predicate nominatives<br />

gave way to slumber. Bang! A blow<br />

to the back of the head jerked me back<br />

to the world. Whitey had ordered Don<br />

Cross to give me a whack with his<br />

English book. Whitey’s English class was<br />

the first class I ever fell asleep in. It<br />

would not be the last. Questioned on<br />

this point in 2009, Don Cross denies<br />

any memory of this incident. But I<br />

remember it well. It made a deep<br />

impression on me.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Friday afternoon; the weekend so close<br />

you could taste it. I mounted the stairs<br />

to the third floor of Comstock. French<br />

class awaited. Hurley Smith barreled<br />

past me, yelling “Kennedy’s been shot!<br />

Kennedy’s been shot!”<br />

“Sure, Hurley”, I groaned.<br />

Stu Capenter, leaning over the third<br />

floor railing, said, “He’s not kidding,<br />

you know...”<br />

Mr. Vang spoke no French this day. He<br />

told us of his time as a Navy translator<br />

in Paris, during which there was many<br />

attempts to assassinate Charles<br />

DeGaulle. The door opened. Mr. Rey<br />

poked his head in. “Il est mort.” was all<br />

he said. So I learned of the death of the<br />

President in the French language.<br />

No Greek mythology was discussed next<br />

period with Mr. Edwards. We heard the<br />

bugle and reasoned that the guard must<br />

be lowering the flag to half-staff. We<br />

rose and saluted. Probably not the<br />

correct etiquette, but it seemed the right<br />

thing to do.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

As long as Gerry Morse was in charge,<br />

athletics were an important part of OCS,<br />

the annual trial by fire that would<br />

decide who would hold the leadership<br />

positions in the Battalion for the next<br />

year.<br />

This particular afternoon we were<br />

playing touch football, down near the<br />

tennis courts. As if the whole OCS<br />

process weren’t pressure-packed enough,<br />

Col. Morse was the quarterback of my<br />

team. I played my usual line position<br />

for most of the game. Out of the blue<br />

Col. Morse called an unusual play.<br />

“Ellis, you line up in your usual<br />

position. Right End, you line up a yard<br />

back. That makes you, Ellis, eligible. At<br />

the snap, you go down 10 yards and<br />

turn. I’ll hit you and you go like hell for<br />

the goal line.”<br />

Gulp! My mind reeled as we lined up.<br />

The ball was snapped; I ran ten yards<br />

and turned. The ball hit me square in<br />

the chest. I turned and ran. And scored.<br />

My only touchdown. It all took about<br />

seven seconds. But in those seven<br />

seconds, Col. Morse taught me a lot<br />

about self-confidence and performing<br />

beyond your perceived capabilities.<br />

It wasn’t the Super Bowl, but it was fine<br />

by me.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Without a doubt, Commander J. T.<br />

Rugh Jr. USNR (ret’d), my German and<br />

Latin Master, fencing and soccer coach.<br />

An amiable lunatic, who always said,<br />

“Translate concepts! Not words!” Advice<br />

I still hold close.<br />

Jon Statler ’68A<br />

Scholar, Latin I&II. German I, I, II &<br />

III (flunked I)<br />

72 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


There was not one teacher that made<br />

my experience at <strong>Manlius</strong> a positive<br />

effect on my life. Therefore, the man<br />

that put the teaching staff together and<br />

ran the <strong>School</strong> has to get the credit;<br />

hands-down it was Lee Sedgwick. I<br />

remember the look on Lee’s face the<br />

morning of our Senior prank (we had<br />

taken all the chairs and desks and put<br />

them on the top of the gym) when<br />

Capt. Kinsey asked him if he had been<br />

upstairs yet. Lee’s eyes widened and he<br />

took off like a bat out of hell. One of<br />

the best breakfasts I ever had.<br />

Carl Gibbs ’69C<br />

Col. Morse is one sharp soldier and I<br />

respected him a lot. He helped to make<br />

me a better man. He was “LOOK<br />

SHARP, FEEL SHARP, AND YOU WILL<br />

BE SHARP.”<br />

Jay Johnson ’69B<br />

Being a Cornell University graduate and<br />

my faculty advisor, Mr. Shaw strongly<br />

recommended that I apply to that<br />

institution. I did, was accepted and<br />

attended. Earning a degree in mathematics<br />

from Cornell has had a<br />

significant effect on the trajectory of my<br />

life.<br />

William (Bill) Walker ‘70B<br />

pebble hill school<br />

From 1955-1960, I was a small part of<br />

the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> scene, serving<br />

as teacher, coach, Middle <strong>School</strong> head,<br />

athletic director. For the ’57-’58 and<br />

’58-‘59 basketball seasons, we played<br />

our home games at the War Memorial<br />

as preliminary games for the<br />

professional Syracuse Nationals.<br />

Dick Sargent, Mark Norton, Chuck<br />

Mancabelli went on to play football in<br />

college. In 1955, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> consisted<br />

of only the Farmhouse and Barn. The<br />

Middle <strong>School</strong>/Elementary building<br />

began in 1958. It was a tremendous<br />

addition.<br />

The class day ended at 2 p.m.,<br />

followed by play period which ended<br />

at 4 p.m. Every student participated in<br />

Play Period…Varsity athletes practiced,<br />

Grades 4-12 girls had special activities,<br />

Grades 4-8 boys participated in<br />

intramurals, and elementary children<br />

had organized activities. Everyone<br />

went home, mostly by car pools, at 4<br />

p.m.<br />

Detention was held on Saturday mornings<br />

for those found guilty. Teachers<br />

rotated the supervisory responsibility.<br />

My tenure at <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> was for five<br />

years. After five years as a minor league<br />

baseball player in the Phillies<br />

organization, the complete change of<br />

lifestyle at <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> was a tremendous<br />

experience. If there was a<br />

retirement plan of any nature, I would<br />

have stayed forever.<br />

Walley Habel, faculty member 1955-<br />

1960<br />

Sue Bond and me getting caught<br />

chewing gum in Mr. Krol’s Latin class.<br />

He made us kneel on the floor for the<br />

whole period. It was very<br />

uncomfortable and we never did that<br />

again. (We did do other things<br />

however......until we got caught ...<br />

again). In retrospect, I don’t know how<br />

our teachers put up with us…we were a<br />

prankster-ish lot.(Oh yes, you, too,<br />

Dickie Doust)..but we sure had fun<br />

(not just my class). We had a contest<br />

once as to who could get on detention<br />

the most.(We LIKED coming to school<br />

on Saturdays because we got to be with<br />

our friends in a relaxed atmosphere). I<br />

am now embarrassed to say that I won<br />

that contest and want to sincerely<br />

apologize to every teacher that had to<br />

put up with my antics for my entire PH<br />

duration...but we sure had fun!!!!<br />

Carolyn Whittaker Weaver ’59<br />

In about 1960, our class was taking<br />

English from Mrs. Alden. One of Mrs.<br />

Alden’s teaching techniques was to have<br />

us read our book reports out loud in<br />

class so we could learn a little public<br />

speaking. A member of our class,<br />

Dwight Hasselberger, got assigned a<br />

book on Ben Franklin. Dwight was very<br />

easy going and quick to laugh. When he<br />

got up to read, about five of us decided<br />

to sit in the front row and cross and<br />

uncross our legs in unison every time<br />

Dwight looked up from his notes. Sort<br />

of an early “wave.” Dwight was talking<br />

about Franklin’s family, and he got to<br />

the part where he said, “First his mother<br />

died,” and he looked up and we uncrossed<br />

and crossed our legs in unison.<br />

He started to chuckle. Then he said,<br />

“Then his Father died.” He looked up,<br />

and saw all of our legs go in the other<br />

direction, and he just lost it laughing.<br />

Mrs. Alden who was standing in the<br />

back of the room couldn’t understand<br />

what was so funny about a young man<br />

losing his parents. She was a good sport<br />

though, and when she found out what<br />

was going on, made us stop, and<br />

Dwight finished the report. Every time<br />

Dwight looked up, we were smiling at<br />

him, and he, of course, lost it all over<br />

again.<br />

Dick Doust ’61<br />

Here are some of my recollections about<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> faculty…<br />

• Mr. Littlefield English, Boston accent,<br />

hated the Syracuse nasal twang.<br />

• Mr. Stevenson, soccer coach… French<br />

teacher… school photographer.<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 73


Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

• Mr. Van Waggenen, chemistry/<br />

biology/earth science/etc. I think he<br />

was a retired business man – always<br />

wore bowties.<br />

• Mr. Collea, our calculus teacher,<br />

would quip, ”It took me 15 minutes<br />

to do this test so it should take you<br />

birds 45, since I’m three times better<br />

than you.” Author of quips on<br />

quizzes: “Are you stumped by logs”<br />

“Do logs have you out on a limb”<br />

etc.<br />

Jim Amodio ’65<br />

This is Steve Draper, PHS class of ‘67,<br />

and I am always surprised by the power<br />

of the memories of those years. Here<br />

are a few of my favorites:<br />

Mr. Stephenson – French teacher, soccer<br />

coach, and leader of the Herd, a nowlegendary<br />

winter, sports ensemble. He’s<br />

the only teacher I ever had who<br />

communicated the joy in recreation and<br />

sport.<br />

Mr. Nicholson – fully British, with his<br />

accent and historically bushy eyebrows,<br />

and dry jokes that no one really<br />

understood. He was the assistant<br />

headmaster and taught geometry, at<br />

least. He personified “gruff” but had a<br />

forgiving heart.<br />

Mrs. Alden – an English teacher who<br />

single-handedly provoked me to be a<br />

reader of literature. She was such a<br />

sweet, very old lady, who never raised<br />

her voice. You felt like if you sneezed in<br />

her direction, she’d be blown over, but<br />

she could draw you into a story.<br />

Steve Draper ’67<br />

Mrs. Joiner, 7th Grade Latin, deadliest<br />

aim with chalk to noggin across the<br />

entire classroom to waken sleeping<br />

beauties.<br />

Allan Pryor was the English teacher<br />

everyone was really annoyed with<br />

because he made us... gasp... read and<br />

write every day. And he read what we<br />

wrote. And he criticized it. And he<br />

pushed us to do better. Today I can<br />

write, because of him. And I’m always<br />

amazed at how many people can’t. We<br />

had a very special experience and we<br />

didn’t know it at the time.<br />

Charlie Brown ’68<br />

Mr. Stephenson worked so hard to teach<br />

French to some of us... he would be<br />

shocked, and probably pleased to know<br />

that I can still read the street signs in<br />

Montreal, and have even translated a<br />

letter for a buddy who had relatives in<br />

France.... not bad for somebody who<br />

took five years to complete French III;<br />

never understood why they kept giving<br />

me other teachers who couldn’t help me<br />

see how to learn it and then the second<br />

time with him it seemed relatively<br />

easy.....<br />

Doug King ’68<br />

I have to say that all of my teachers at<br />

PH really left an impression on me - I<br />

still remember so much of what I<br />

learned.<br />

I cannot recall her name (darn!) but our<br />

teacher for ancient and medieval history<br />

gave fascinating lectures. She didn’t so<br />

much lecture as tell us stories (about the<br />

Egg Kings, for example). This was the<br />

first time I’d really experienced history<br />

not as a bunch of names and dates, but<br />

actual stories of people who lived and<br />

breathed and worked and impacted<br />

their worlds.<br />

Another history teacher who challenged<br />

me personally was our American history<br />

teacher (again, the name escapes me<br />

right now), who was a big proponent of<br />

reading the actual writings of the people<br />

who were involved in the things we<br />

were studying. This was another lesson<br />

that stuck with me - don’t just read<br />

some historian’s (potentially biased!)<br />

interpretation of “the facts,” but read<br />

what the people who were actually<br />

living the events had to say about them<br />

as they were living them. I use that<br />

lesson to this day, and insist on reading<br />

original documents whenever I can.<br />

Mrs. Orcutt was another teacher whose<br />

classes stayed with me and helped form<br />

the way I approach learning. She taught<br />

art history, and showed us how a<br />

culture’s artwork is a brilliant insight<br />

into the way people thought, what was<br />

important to them, how they<br />

commented artistically on their world.<br />

We learned to read the clues in a<br />

painting, a sculpture, or the architecture<br />

of a period, long before Dan Brown<br />

popularized the idea that a painting<br />

could contain much more than form<br />

and color and light.<br />

Mr. Stephenson (French) was also<br />

memorable. Thanks to his drilling, I was<br />

eventually able to read French without<br />

translating – even to have dreams in<br />

French! I can remember him<br />

encouraging us to read Paris Match (the<br />

“Life” or “Look” of France), which<br />

helped us not only with colloquial<br />

French, but to learn a bit about the<br />

culture, as well.<br />

I will never forget Mr. Solvig and pithing<br />

the frogs. Enough said.<br />

Mr. Martel introduced us to the more<br />

free-wheeling discussions we would find<br />

when we got to college, and how to<br />

hold our own in a lively debate.<br />

And I remember, oddly, Mr. Johnson<br />

(advanced algebra) tossing chalk at you<br />

when he asked for the answer to an<br />

equation – long before “accelerated<br />

learning” studies demonstrated that<br />

when you disarm someone with<br />

physical activity during a learning<br />

exercise, you can actually improve their<br />

retention/recall rate. Did he know that<br />

Or did it just come naturally<br />

I don’t think I had a teacher who, in<br />

some way, didn’t shape the way I<br />

approached learning, and whose lessons<br />

didn’t stay with me all of my life.<br />

Nancy Roberts ’68<br />

Mrs. Alden was one of my favorite<br />

teachers. She absolutely made Latin<br />

come alive, which I did not think was<br />

possible the first two years...Go Ovid!<br />

Chandler Ralph ’70<br />

74 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


While neither of us were ever students<br />

The Moving of<br />

a Flagpole<br />

By: Catherine Allison ’99<br />

Reprinted from the 1999 Fall <strong>Reflections</strong><br />

On June 12, 1999 the 80-ft tall<br />

flag pole from The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> campus was moved to the<br />

quad of <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>.<br />

The old flagpole is not merely a<br />

replacement of the one damaged in<br />

the Labor Day storm of 1998; it is a<br />

piece of history and tradition<br />

transplanted from the past of our<br />

<strong>School</strong> to the present. Local legend<br />

tells us that the flagpole came off the<br />

original battleship Missouri, and<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> alumni tell us that the<br />

flagpole was an important part of their<br />

summer to grad school, I wanted to<br />

experience at The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>. The recall saluting the flag every morning of<br />

their school year and taking the flag down each night.<br />

The decision to bring the flagpole to the MPH campus was partially practical,<br />

partially nostalgic, but mostly a tribute to the heritage of our <strong>School</strong>. “It is a<br />

school treasure,” said Head of <strong>School</strong> Ball. “We wanted to promote the heritage<br />

of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> and honor the men who died for our country in wars.”<br />

Besides promoting a sense of respect and appreciation of our alumni veterans,<br />

a scholarship was also created in the flagpole’s name.<br />

The Flag Scholarship is an endowed scholarship program that provides the<br />

opportunity for, primarily, the children of alumni to attend the <strong>School</strong>. The<br />

scholarship seeks well-rounded students who have exceptional academic<br />

promise that can also contribute to the athletic and artistic programs at<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. The first recipient is Meredith Theis, the daughter of Sally<br />

and Bob Theis ’67B.<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> flagpole standing proudly<br />

on the MPH campus.<br />

ring or of having to ask her to marry<br />

me in a few hours. I managed to keep<br />

from losing the ring, fumbled my way<br />

through the question (at Phoebe’s<br />

restaurant later that night), and - to my<br />

everlasting delight - she said yes. The<br />

sight of the end-of-year tent going up at<br />

MPH never fails to bring back happy<br />

memories of that Friday!<br />

Brian Hoke,<br />

former faculty member<br />

In October of 1968, I was The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>’s newly hired teacher of Latin,<br />

French and chair of the Language Dept.<br />

One of the department head duties was<br />

to fulfill a task called “major duty.” The<br />

duty lasted from 3:00 p.m. on Friday<br />

afternoon until 8:00 a.m. on Monday.<br />

On that particular Saturday morning, I<br />

was completing a tour of Knox Hall,<br />

when the telephone rang in the<br />

Headmaster’s secretary’s office. It was<br />

the Headmaster who informed me that<br />

I should gather up some students and<br />

supervise the destruction of a snow<br />

sculpture depicting an 8-feet tall phallus<br />

that was in front of the <strong>School</strong>’s chapel!<br />

A well-meaning person driving along a<br />

campus driveway had called the<br />

Headmaster with due haste. The<br />

Headmaster made it clear to me that I<br />

was not to bother the maintenance crew<br />

in any way. It was to be a student<br />

project with me as “mentor.”<br />

The story got around by noon!<br />

Jim Lawrence<br />

“Semper Ubi Sub Ubi”<br />

Jim Lawrence, <strong>Manlius</strong> & MPH Latin<br />

Teacher 1968-2006<br />

Can anyone translate<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

While neither of us were ever students<br />

there, the lovely former Patricia Bentley<br />

and I met while both young teachers at<br />

MPH in the early nineties. We began<br />

dating soon after Pat began teaching at<br />

the school in ‘93 (I had started the year<br />

before) and soon talked of getting<br />

engaged. As I was heading away for the<br />

pop the question before the school year<br />

ended in June.<br />

I remember sitting in the faculty section<br />

under the tent at the ‘94 Baccalaureate<br />

ceremony with a very sweaty<br />

engagement ring in my pocket; I’m not<br />

sure if I was more terrified of losing the<br />

Submit your answers to<br />

tmorgan@mph.net.<br />

Here’s a little story about my favorite<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>/MPH teacher, Mr. Lawrence. He<br />

was kind enough to loan me a book<br />

when he saw that his Latin III course<br />

had sparked an interest in the ancient<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 75


city of Troy. (We were, after all, reading<br />

Virgil’s “Aeneid” line by line.) The book<br />

was Carl Blegen’s “Troy and the Trojans,”<br />

and the year was 1970. I kept that book<br />

for 27 years. When I finally returned it<br />

by mail, I got the nicest letter in reply.<br />

Nothing was said of the book that I had<br />

kept for more than a quarter century.<br />

Pete Mires ’71<br />

I had Stu Hirsch ’63B as a teacher for<br />

10th Grade biology back in 1967/68.<br />

He was a great teacher, most likely one<br />

of the future-shaping teachers I had at<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> who helped me become a high<br />

school A.P. biology and human<br />

anatomy and physiology teacher for<br />

over the last 32 years.<br />

Bob Wilson ’71<br />

As the two <strong>School</strong>s merged, I enjoyed<br />

the staff at the <strong>Manlius</strong> campus. I<br />

remember Mr. Edwards, who taught<br />

English and amazed me at what he<br />

knew; Casper Becker, who ran the<br />

bookstore; Mr. Sherman, who taught<br />

reading; Mr. Shaw, who taught history;<br />

Mr. Bisgrove, who taught Physics; Mr.<br />

Garrity, who taught Biology; Mr.<br />

Sedgwick, who was our dean; and Mrs.<br />

Hanna, his secretary, who printed The<br />

Blotter.<br />

There was Mrs. Wheeler in the kitchen<br />

and her assistant Johnnie, who was way<br />

over 70 when I was a student. He drove<br />

a Ford Galaxy which had rocks or loose<br />

lugs in the hub cap. They rattled as the<br />

wheels turned every day he came to<br />

work and back.<br />

My parents “proposed” MPH to me. I<br />

tried to fail the entrance exams. I was<br />

rewarded with summer school, during<br />

which Sandy Torelli and Martha Heer<br />

took me under their wing. I am now a<br />

writer, speaker and teacher trainer. I<br />

majored in English and philosophy at<br />

St. Lawrence University where they<br />

asked me to be a writing tutor. I went<br />

on to get straight A’s in seminary and<br />

have written three books. I am currently<br />

working with University Hospital to<br />

publish a book called the Second Set of<br />

Hands—a practical and spiritual guide<br />

for families in medical crisis. I love what<br />

I can do with the English language and<br />

thank Mrs. Heer who cared enough for<br />

me to bring out my best.<br />

Wes Fleming ’74<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

Robert Johnson came from <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

and was only at MPH for one year. I<br />

didn’t have him until summer school<br />

that year (I took extra courses so that I<br />

could graduate a year early) but, he was<br />

the cheerleader’s advisor and “called”<br />

me on possible inappropriate behavior<br />

in such a way that made me want to<br />

prove to him, and to myself, that I was<br />

worthy - of lots of things. He influenced<br />

me to become the best that I could be,<br />

which has stayed with me from that<br />

point in the fall of 1970 on.<br />

Claire Myers-Usiatynski ’72<br />

After we merged with The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>, I became acquainted with Fay<br />

McCarthy, the <strong>School</strong>’s barber. I enjoyed<br />

his stories, especially the ones about<br />

school pranks. There was the time the<br />

cadets in the band played and marched<br />

down Cazenovia road early in the<br />

morning. He also mentioned how the<br />

clock on Knox Hall received Mickey<br />

Mouse hands one year as a joke.<br />

When he first got there in the 1920s, he<br />

mentioned how a cadet thought if he<br />

burned down the <strong>School</strong> he would not<br />

have to go, so he started a fire in the<br />

practice room on the top floor of<br />

Comstock. This is why some of the<br />

bricks that make up the current<br />

Comstock Hall don’t match. Look<br />

closely, and you can tell which bricks<br />

are from earlier versions of Comstock.<br />

Then there was Charlie Parsons who ran<br />

the Phoenix Tavern and Gary Sargent,<br />

Elmer and Louis Friend, and Lawrence,<br />

who were on the grounds crew. These<br />

are a few of the people that I remember<br />

that made my experience at MPH a<br />

memorable one. Thanks for the<br />

opportunity to share.<br />

Gary Beach ’74<br />

Mr. Songster was MPH’s wrestling coach<br />

1970-1973. He sucked weight with us<br />

(he lost 30 pounds one year) and<br />

shaved his head to inspire us through<br />

example. His commitment to coaching<br />

went above and beyond the call of duty<br />

when demonstrating bench steps one<br />

fateful practice. “This is how you do it!”<br />

he yelled and thrust himself up on a<br />

bench. His head crashed into an iron<br />

sewer pipe that was directly above the<br />

bench. He fell to the ground and<br />

blacked out. As he recovered, a member<br />

of the team quietly said, “That’s how<br />

you do it”<br />

Wes Flemming ’74<br />

Martha Heer saved my life—maybe not<br />

physically but spiritually. My parents,<br />

much to my dismay at the time, hauled<br />

me out of public school in 5th grade<br />

because I was adrift and entering a<br />

strong peer-dependent current. In a few<br />

years, I would have been left without<br />

academic skills and interest for learning.<br />

Bob Johnson was an absolutely terrific<br />

math teacher at <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>. A lot of<br />

kids were scared of him because he was<br />

so tough but he completely believed in<br />

my math aptitude and would not allow<br />

me to give anything less than 100%. I<br />

doubt I ever thanked him and I always<br />

wondered what became of him<br />

Nina Wickett ’74<br />

My most memorable teachers/people at<br />

PH/MPH are Tom Denton, Martha<br />

Heer, A.J. Torrelli, Mark Regin, Doctor<br />

Chamberlain, Jim Songster, and last but<br />

not the least, Headmasters Jim Crosby<br />

and Richard Barter for their leadership.<br />

And also Lee Sedgwick for his overall<br />

dedication to MPH.<br />

Karl Gates ’77 and ’06<br />

A letter from Karl Gates ’77 to MPH<br />

faculty member Tom Denton on the<br />

occasion of his 2007 retirement.<br />

Dear Mr. Denton:<br />

Have you ever wondered<br />

What has happened to various people<br />

from your past Or how much of a<br />

difference you might have made in their<br />

lives And what are their stories<br />

Especially when the number of students<br />

you have touched must be five digits<br />

strong!<br />

76 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Memories from<br />

CHUCK AND SYLVIA OELSNER:<br />

MPH FACULTY MEMBERS<br />

I started teaching at <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

in 1970, the first year of the merger of<br />

the <strong>Manlius</strong> Military Academy and<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>. Many of my<br />

memories of those early days are of the<br />

Foreign Language Department – Jim<br />

Lawrence, Vivian Gregory, George<br />

Meeker, and Ginny Vandenberg. There<br />

was actually a Language Department<br />

office on the top floor of Comstock<br />

Hall, and we would gather there during<br />

our free time to discuss classes and to<br />

gossip, but primarily to work the<br />

Sunday New York Times crossword<br />

puzzle that Jim would bring in.<br />

In those days, faculty meetings were in<br />

the evening, and the foreign language<br />

teachers began having dinner together<br />

before the meeting, either at Vivian’s<br />

house in <strong>Manlius</strong> or in my apartment<br />

on campus. Of course, no meal was<br />

complete without at least one bottle of<br />

wine, and we joked that that was the<br />

only thing that sustained us through the<br />

two-hour meeting that followed.<br />

Can anyone else remember the “Titanic”<br />

party After three years of the merged<br />

schools, the burden of debt caused<br />

MPH to close before the end of the<br />

school year with a plan to consolidate<br />

on the DeWitt campus. So, what do<br />

teachers do in such dire circumstances<br />

Party, of course!<br />

After that spring, many of our faculty<br />

friends moved on to other schools but I<br />

was lucky enough to stay. Through<br />

those rough times, the MPH parents<br />

offered support in multiple ways.<br />

Mothers like Peg Fleming and Toni<br />

Tepper, who worked tirelessly at the<br />

Campus Shop and fundraising projects,<br />

they really inspired me to get involved<br />

once I became an MPH mom.<br />

The first two students I met at MPH,<br />

Pam Jones and Lorie Rakov Rudolph,<br />

who show me the way to the headmaster’s<br />

office for my interview with<br />

Dick Barter. They convinced me that<br />

this was the <strong>School</strong> for me before I<br />

even met Dick.<br />

On my very first day of teaching at<br />

MPH, about 10 minutes into my<br />

advanced placement calculus class, a<br />

loud noise came from inside my desk.<br />

Then out climbed 8th Grader Randy<br />

Poe. I think he had been put into the<br />

desk by Kurt Hallick, Tom Randolf and<br />

Steve Brace. Their welcome to the new<br />

teacher.<br />

I arranged for a time-sharing computer<br />

terminal with Syracuse University<br />

during my first year at MPH. After Alan<br />

Marcum discovered how to get free<br />

computer time, SU decided they<br />

couldn’t beat him so they hired him<br />

and launched his computer science<br />

career.<br />

Those great camping trips during the<br />

70s. How could Janice Rasmussen stay<br />

so spotlessly clean after 3 days of<br />

camping in rain and mud! Those trips<br />

were the only way to get Bob Hoffman<br />

and Randy Omel away from their stereo<br />

and ham radio equipment in the dorm.<br />

We had one bitter cold camping trip to<br />

Chip Melvin’s property in Constantia.<br />

As it got colder we gave up on the tents<br />

and went into the cabin. Liz Holstein<br />

and Jane Weeden, on newspaper<br />

mattresses, were the last to come<br />

indoors, and only when the temperature<br />

hit 30 below! Wes Fleming tried to talk<br />

us into a small-compact fire in the<br />

fireplace, but we overruled him and<br />

then we invented Molten, the spirit of<br />

roaring fire.<br />

Chuck Oelsner, with his wife Sylvia, looking on,<br />

delivers a humorous and touching speech during his<br />

retirement party.<br />

Marylyn Avery, and Chip Melvin when<br />

we were caught in a blizzard. We had to<br />

abandon our trek and return to the<br />

shelter of our tents, but had to climb<br />

out every hour or so to keep the snow<br />

from totally burying the tents. There was<br />

no warm campfire that night.<br />

Then there was the trip where Donna<br />

Loftus lost one of her contact lenses and<br />

refused to continue the hike until it was<br />

found because “my mother will kill<br />

me!” So Donna and I began turning<br />

over every leaf in the immediate area.<br />

Thousands of leaves and half a day later,<br />

the tiny lens was found and the hike<br />

resumed.<br />

Of course, MPH was where I met and<br />

married Miss Wysocki, the Spanish<br />

teacher.<br />

I am happy to share these nostalgic bits<br />

from the 70s, my first 10 years at MPH,<br />

but here are my most valued memories<br />

of my 34 years there:<br />

A faculty of professional educators who<br />

measured their success not by the<br />

money they earned, but by the<br />

accomplishments of their students.<br />

Those parents sharing their favorite<br />

dishes at faculty luncheons as just one<br />

small token of their continual support<br />

and appreciation for our efforts.<br />

Hundreds of wonderful kids taking their<br />

sometimes-clumsy steps to adulthood.<br />

A teaching career I can be proud of.<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

Sylvia Oelsner,<br />

MPH faculty member, 1970-1975<br />

Once we were cross-country skiing in<br />

the Adirondacks with Dennis Poe,<br />

Chuck Oelsner,<br />

MPH faculty member, ’72-05<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 77


Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

It all started during a time when MPH<br />

was faced with near fatal financial<br />

devastation. Working sometime with<br />

little or delinquent pay, you persevered<br />

with MPH because you knew the value<br />

in the <strong>School</strong> from which you<br />

graduated. No one can have more<br />

respect, admiration, and appreciation<br />

for you, and what you have done for<br />

me. Even after I dropped out of MPH<br />

after my junior year, you remained my<br />

friend and became my mentor. If we<br />

had only known then about dyslexia.<br />

I remember one day, when I was considering<br />

joining the U.S. Coast Guard,<br />

you had mentioned that you had been<br />

in the Coast Guard. This somehow<br />

made the decision easier. After being in<br />

the “The Guard” for a while as a rescue<br />

swimmer at a small boat station, I<br />

looked you up to tell of my adventures.<br />

Before I had that chance, you disclosed<br />

your real reason for joining, how you<br />

hated it, never made rank, worked with<br />

the Corpsman, and never got wet. I<br />

thought “Oops...I’ll keep it to myself.”<br />

So I never told you much about my<br />

rescues (and rarely tell anyone).<br />

I have always felt that you played a big<br />

part in who I am. Together “we“ saved<br />

lives. Who would have thought that for<br />

you to save lives on the water, you<br />

needed to become my teacher at MPH<br />

My grandfather told me, a person is<br />

judged by the number of people he<br />

helps who cannot help themselves. And<br />

a good person does so expecting<br />

nothing in return.<br />

You, Mr. Denton have always been a<br />

true coasty! Congratulations on your<br />

retirement. We all judge you well, and<br />

wish you the very best.<br />

Semper Paratus,<br />

Karl “Goofy” Gates ’77 & ’06<br />

Based on the classes Karl took after leaving<br />

MPH, his Coast Guard service, and his life<br />

experiences, <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> was proud<br />

to award Karl his high school diploma<br />

during the 2006 commencement.<br />

Third Grade teacher Marian Johnson<br />

was the kindest and wisest teacher I ever<br />

had – or at least that’s how it seemed to<br />

“scared little me,” new to <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> in<br />

the Third Grade. She had an amazing<br />

sense of calm and made you believe in<br />

yourself because you believed she<br />

believed in you. The lowest form of<br />

misery was to feel that you had let her<br />

down, because she didn’t yell or scold,<br />

she just let you know how disappointed<br />

she was that you had let yourself down.<br />

So you didn’t. Looking back, it’s where I<br />

learned to have faith in myself – and<br />

anything good I’ve achieved in my life<br />

can be traced back to that room at the<br />

end of the hall with the pastel desks. It<br />

was without doubt the happiest and<br />

most formative year of my childhood. I<br />

left MPH in the Seventh Grade, but<br />

continued to send her letters and<br />

Christmas cards throughout high school<br />

and college and treasured her letters and<br />

cards to me, which got fewer and less<br />

legible as her health declined. But even<br />

then, with her handwriting so scratchy<br />

that it was hard to read, I had the<br />

feeling that I must be somebody because<br />

Mrs. Johnson was writing to me! I may<br />

be turning 50 this year, but a part of me<br />

(and maybe the best part) will always be<br />

Ricky Barter, age 8. Thank you, Mrs.<br />

Johnson. I hope I’ve made you proud.<br />

Richard Barter ’78<br />

Mrs. Heer was one of my most<br />

memorable teachers. She taught me<br />

when I was in 5th Grade in 1970. I<br />

make my cursive Ks the way I do today<br />

because I loved her writing and tried to<br />

emulate the way she wrote. (I write<br />

those Ks a lot as I am signing<br />

prescriptions all the time, so her Ks are<br />

all over the place!) She once<br />

admonished me for writing Xmas<br />

instead of Christmas. I have never made<br />

that mistake since. I also liked that she<br />

and my mom were friends. She once<br />

did an experiment with our class to<br />

show us that we didn’t do as well on<br />

tests when we had candy in our mouths.<br />

We took a test with mouths empty and<br />

then we took a test sucking on hard<br />

candy....I don’t remember the results but<br />

the experiment itself was something I<br />

never forgot. She was fair, energetic, and<br />

really dedicated. I count myself lucky to<br />

have had her shape a year of my life.<br />

Kim Kusiak ’78<br />

Dr. Tretler made me his assistant<br />

director in the musical, “Little Mary<br />

Sunshine,” and I recall feeling like I was<br />

in the presence of a PRO. He gave me<br />

an experience of a lifetime as well as<br />

inspired my “creative side,“ I am forever<br />

in his gratitude for the kindness and<br />

friendship he showed me during a<br />

difficult time in my life also known as<br />

high school. Bravo Tretler…see you on<br />

the other side my friend.<br />

Amber Martin Demarest ’81<br />

The faculty members that most inspired<br />

me were those that challenged me,<br />

believed in me, and encouraged me to<br />

fulfill my potential. Among them: Mr.<br />

Bernard Shaw (9th Grade modern<br />

European history), Dr. Jo Ann Davis<br />

(8th and 10th Grade English), Mr.<br />

Robert Slentz (chemistry and physics),<br />

and Mrs. Laurie Hadlick (five years of<br />

Spanish).<br />

David Roth ’87<br />

Dr. Davis was an English teacher, AP<br />

English, when I was at MPH. I believe<br />

she went on to teach at Syracuse<br />

University. Dr. Davis commanded<br />

respect. Her class remains one of the<br />

hardest that I have ever taken (including<br />

my English classes at Colgate<br />

University) and was also one of the<br />

best! I still have the marked up books<br />

we used in that class. My notes from<br />

high school English on the classics we<br />

read served me well in college classes<br />

(my college friends also insisted on<br />

borrowing them!). I am not sure we<br />

appreciated Dr. Davis as much as we<br />

should have at the time, but she pushed<br />

all of us in her AP English class to new<br />

levels and left me with a love of reading.<br />

Beowulf, Chaucer’s Tales and the like<br />

will always remind me of Dr. Davis.<br />

Sarah Warburton Halliday ’88<br />

Having time with students outside of<br />

the classroom was very special. I well<br />

remember our trip to Washington, D.C.<br />

for the Presidential Inauguration, as<br />

well as a summer in England and other<br />

trips to Europe. The classroom became<br />

alive as students experienced first-hand<br />

other cultures. (A few student<br />

comments: “I want to become the first<br />

78 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


woman president.” “How old did you<br />

say these buildings are” “My suitcase<br />

won’t close anymore.” “There’s no<br />

shower curtain.” “Why is English so<br />

different in Britain”)<br />

Ellie Weir, former Sixth Grade team<br />

leader and teacher<br />

Students demonstrate photosynthesis<br />

There are so many memories of times<br />

spent at MPH from 1987-1990. I<br />

remember the time that a group of<br />

students dressed up as the photosynthesis<br />

equation to demonstrate the<br />

process to my class.<br />

Cross country skiing at Highland Forest<br />

with Mark Stefanski, Marsha Gerhart<br />

and the Sixth Graders was awesome. I<br />

do believe we stayed overnight as well.<br />

Good times, great things for kids to do.<br />

Some had never been on skis and those<br />

that made it all the way around found a<br />

sense of accomplishment. I do think<br />

that Mark and I ended up with some<br />

nearly skiing on our backs as we went<br />

downhill though!<br />

Lunch family style...with a faculty member<br />

at each table…need I say more<br />

I remember the countless hours in the<br />

gym coaching volleyball.<br />

Assisting Don Ridall with boys soccer<br />

and the trip to where was it again for<br />

the weekend. I think Don’s parents<br />

lived there. Oxford Great memories.<br />

I sure hope that my daughter has as nice<br />

a school experience as students at MPH<br />

had access to!<br />

Amy Rath Leibeck, employee 1987-1990<br />

I remember when Mr. Ridall would give<br />

me a ride to school if I missed my bus<br />

(he didn’t live too many blocks away).<br />

That’s classic.<br />

Sondra Roberts ’91<br />

Sometimes I have the opportunity<br />

to tell someone where I worked<br />

before I retired and to try to<br />

explain to them about MPH. The<br />

first thing that always comes to<br />

mind is the wonderful traditions<br />

and special ceremonies held every<br />

year. My favorite is the handshaking<br />

ceremony. As hard as it<br />

was to remember everyone’s name<br />

so quickly, it was great to see the<br />

new seniors come first through<br />

the line, then to recall all my<br />

students from the previous year.<br />

The positive energy was<br />

invigorating as we started a new<br />

school year. I loved the<br />

atmosphere of a fresh sense of<br />

possibility on that first day of<br />

classes with new students. Even<br />

better, it was so nice to have many<br />

former students with me again for<br />

AP biology with that same sense<br />

of excitement. I loved sharing the<br />

cycle of learning with each class<br />

that I taught.<br />

Throughout the year, I delighted<br />

in sharing in the learning process<br />

with my students. Over and over,<br />

it was great to see the light of<br />

discovery on a student’s face or to<br />

have a deeper conversation with<br />

someone about a topic of special<br />

interest. After school was a time<br />

for these conversations as students<br />

came to my room to meet with<br />

their friends and to work together<br />

on biology. I always liked having<br />

students in my room on a more<br />

relaxed basis because it offered a<br />

way to get to know my “regulars”<br />

on a more personal level.<br />

Coaching tennis for so many years<br />

was also a great way for me to<br />

connect with students.<br />

MPH is known for its<br />

individualized learning<br />

atmosphere, and it is that<br />

personal connection that I take<br />

with me as the most enduring of<br />

memories.<br />

Susan Loedel, MPH faculty<br />

member, 1991-2008<br />

I was in the Lower <strong>School</strong> at MPH from<br />

1980-1985. My mother, Jo Ann Davis,<br />

was an English teacher in the Middle<br />

and Upper <strong>School</strong>s. I wish I had a<br />

special story to share about Mrs. Heer,<br />

but it’s been so long (and I left MPH<br />

after 7th Grade) that I can’t recall any<br />

specific anecdotes that would properly<br />

capture her spirit or role in our lives.<br />

But I have the very fondest, warmest<br />

memories of Mrs. Heer and of her<br />

presence in our lives. She was somehow<br />

always there in the Lower <strong>School</strong> – at<br />

book fairs, at gatherings, at Christmas<br />

performances and other dramatic<br />

productions, at Red and White Day, on<br />

field trips....Her distinctive smile, the<br />

warmth of her presence, her affection<br />

for all of us, are clear and happy<br />

memories in my mind, as is her firm<br />

but loving stewardship of the whole<br />

Lower <strong>School</strong>. She always hit just the<br />

right balance of real guidance in how to<br />

live and real consideration for the<br />

young people who were in her charge.<br />

Please give her my very best wishes and<br />

warmest thanks for all that she did for<br />

me and everyone else in the <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Julian Davis Mortenson ’93<br />

Dean Berger inspired me the most while<br />

I was at MPH. He challenged me in our<br />

Honors English class, as well as acted as<br />

my teacher for an independent study<br />

my Senior year. Not only did he teach<br />

me to fight for what I wanted from my<br />

education, but also that I could make<br />

my education my own. I went on to do<br />

independent studies in college and<br />

graduate school because of his<br />

generosity and dedication to my success<br />

as a student.<br />

Thank you, Dean Berger!!<br />

Sarah Barter ’94<br />

MPH has provided so many wonderful<br />

experiences and memories for me, but<br />

one of my favorites was the day the<br />

“Chocolate Pilot” flew over the MPH<br />

campus and showered us with hundreds<br />

of little white parachutes carrying<br />

chocolate bars. The real “Chocolate<br />

Pilot” was Air Force Col. Gail Halvorsen<br />

who served as a pilot in Berlin during<br />

WWII. During his service, he became<br />

know as the “Chocolate Pilot” because<br />

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Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

he dropped chocolate<br />

bars, gum, and candy<br />

(in addition to other<br />

supplies) to the<br />

children (and citizens)<br />

of West Berlin when<br />

the city’s land supply<br />

routes had been cut<br />

off by Soviet leader<br />

Joline Hemminger Josef Stalin. This<br />

effort became known<br />

as “Operation Vittles.” Margot Theis<br />

Raven, the aunt of an MPH student<br />

wrote a children’s book about Col.<br />

Halversen’s experience in West Berlin<br />

called Mercedes and the Chocolate Pilot, a<br />

true story about a seven-year-old girl,<br />

Merecedes Simon, who wrote a letter to<br />

Col. Halverson asking him to drop<br />

candy near her home in West Berlin. Ms.<br />

Raven arranged for Col. Halverson to<br />

come to MPH to tell his story and to<br />

host the re-enactment of the chocolate<br />

drop. You can only imagine the<br />

excitement when three WWII era planes<br />

flew overhead and started dropping 650<br />

parachutes holding chocolate bars. The<br />

children were excitedly running here<br />

and there to collect the treats. But the<br />

true spirit of MPH came through when<br />

older students brought their “catch” to<br />

the younger students to make sure all of<br />

the little ones had a chocolate bar. Each<br />

year, I read Mercedes and the Chocolate<br />

Pilot to the Pre-K class and fondly share<br />

the story of the candy drop here at<br />

MPH.<br />

Joline Hemminger, MPH faculty<br />

member, 1995-present<br />

Two things. First of all there were three<br />

teachers that changed the way I looked<br />

at the world and they were all at MPH.<br />

They were (in no particular order):<br />

Bruce Bayliss, Susan Loedel, and Diane<br />

Cook.<br />

Mr. Bayliss instilled in me a permanent<br />

skepticism when dealing with sources of<br />

information. Mrs. Loedel showed me<br />

the moment to moment wonder and<br />

mystery in the living systems of the<br />

biological world. Mrs. Cook taught me<br />

how read, not in the literal sense but in<br />

the sense that she showed me how to<br />

interact with and live within the text. As<br />

a surgeon and medical researcher, I see<br />

these elements at work in my daily work<br />

all the time.<br />

Shreyas Roy ’96<br />

Ted Curtis was the teacher who really<br />

touched my life. He was my AP US<br />

history teacher and also my advisor. I<br />

have so many memories and stories<br />

about him; I couldn’t pick just one to<br />

share.<br />

Mr. Curtis always went the extra mile to<br />

show that he really cared about me,<br />

both as a student and as an adolescent.<br />

I think he sacrificed a lot of his free time<br />

to coach students like me in matters<br />

relating to school, career/college<br />

choices, personal/family life, etc. He<br />

inspired in me a passion for learning,<br />

thinking, and history — he pushed me<br />

to get my first 5 on an AP exam.<br />

I would like to thank Ted Curtis for<br />

helping to make me the thoughtful,<br />

healthy, and happy person that I am<br />

today.<br />

Karen Bobrow ’99<br />

Having lived in Baltimore for two and a<br />

half years, I recently moved to a new<br />

house. Shortly after moving in, I met<br />

my roommate’s boyfriend. Something<br />

was familiar about him, but I wasn’t<br />

sure what and passed it off as nothing.<br />

It didn’t click until I mentioned<br />

Syracuse, at which point we discovered<br />

that despite what statistics would have<br />

you believe, we both went to MPH. I<br />

had found Babila Lima, MPH ’98. As<br />

you do when you meet a blast from<br />

your past, we rehashed our experiences<br />

at the <strong>School</strong>, and began to review<br />

which teachers we had shared and<br />

remembered fondly. A name that came<br />

up, and that always comes up when I<br />

reminisce with other MPH students, is<br />

that of Jeff Mangram.<br />

My history with Mr. Mangram began<br />

when I entered MPH as an 8th Grader.<br />

He was new to the <strong>School</strong>, as well, and<br />

taught a class on cultures and civilizations<br />

in a drafty, hay-ridden room above<br />

the lockers in the Barn. The class<br />

married something like anthropology,<br />

sociology and history, with a healthy<br />

dose of straight curiosity, and was a far<br />

cry from the civics class I had left<br />

behind in public school. The class<br />

project, which I vividly remember,<br />

required groups of students to imagine<br />

a civilization, create a written language,<br />

produce artifacts and evidence of their<br />

existence, and then bury the contents in<br />

the grounds behind the tennis courts<br />

and soccer field. Then, teams were<br />

assigned to find another team’s site, and<br />

begin an archaeological dig. We<br />

unearthed video tapes, action figures,<br />

burnt pieces of paper, and other<br />

“evidence” of each other. If I remember<br />

correctly, one team never even found<br />

the site for their civilization. What we<br />

learned is how people and cultures leave<br />

their mark on the world – how we will<br />

leave our mark on the world (imagine<br />

the thoughts of future anthropologists<br />

who DO find that dig site!)—and how<br />

each generation learns from the<br />

previous generations, including what<br />

they might miss. The salience of that<br />

message lives with me today.<br />

That was my first experience with Mr.<br />

Mangram, but by no means my last. I<br />

was always a lover of learning, but<br />

under Mr. Mangram’s tutelage I became<br />

nothing short of obsessed. I joined the<br />

debate team, which he lead, and took<br />

every class he taught if I could, including<br />

constitutional law and media<br />

literacy. And I wasn’t alone. Mr.<br />

Mangram generated a little following of<br />

devotees, of which Babila, a “scary<br />

Senior,” also became a part when he<br />

came to MPH.<br />

Our devotion was born of the recognition<br />

that Mr. Mangram demanded<br />

something in us that we couldn’t yet<br />

demand of ourselves, but which we<br />

desperately wanted to produce. It<br />

wasn’t just excellence. It was the knowledge<br />

that being the best among the rest<br />

wasn’t going to be enough. He drove us<br />

to be the best not as measured against<br />

others, but the best as measured against<br />

ourselves.<br />

I cannot overstate how powerful that<br />

difference is. Measuring against others<br />

is a flimsy business – empty successes<br />

come when your competition isn’t<br />

fierce, and the impact of failing to be<br />

number 1 can seem devastating.<br />

Throughout my career at MPH, I believe<br />

80 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


everyone was trying to teach me the<br />

lesson that measuring against my own<br />

abilities was the only measure worth<br />

taking. Mr. Mangram stands out, as<br />

usual, as an outspoken advocate of that<br />

position.<br />

The lessons from my interactions with<br />

Jeff Mangram, both in and out of the<br />

classroom, have shaped my personal<br />

history. And he continues to shape me<br />

in subtle and overt ways. When I visit<br />

MPH – a rare occasion now that I’m in<br />

town for holidays only – I seek out Mr.<br />

Mangram and other teachers. When I<br />

do, he inevitably asks what I’ve been up<br />

to in the years since he last saw me. I’m<br />

proud to report on my achievements,<br />

flattered by his interest, and buoyed by<br />

his support. Though the interactions<br />

are chronologically distant, they stand<br />

out in my mind and remind me why I<br />

push myself to be better, to question my<br />

own assumptions, and to leave the<br />

world a better, more thoughtful place.<br />

I’m lucky that the fates collided to give<br />

me the opportunity to learn from such<br />

an inspiring teacher. I hope Jeff<br />

Mangram continues his work at MPH,<br />

and that MPH continues to draw<br />

teachers of his caliber, whose inspiration<br />

reaches outside of classroom<br />

lessons, and gives us lessons for life.<br />

Jess Holzer ’00<br />

Ph.D. student in health policy and bioethics<br />

Johns Hopkins <strong>School</strong> of Public Health<br />

Laurie Hadlick and Michael Salter were<br />

by far the most influential teachers<br />

throughout my high school career. Both<br />

were so encouraging and always<br />

believed in my potential, even when I<br />

had difficult times believing in myself.<br />

Without a doubt, I can attribute my<br />

academic success to not only these<br />

outstanding teachers, but the entire<br />

faculty at MPH.<br />

Jane Nicholson ’00<br />

When A Student<br />

Becomes the Teacher<br />

Now that I myself am a teacher, I constantly<br />

reflect on my life as a student,<br />

which means that I am constantly<br />

thinking about my teachers at MPH.<br />

Whether it be Sra. Dooher reminding us<br />

about our accent when we say, “yo,” or<br />

Mr. Mangram (he hadn’t received his<br />

Ph.D. yet) playing devil’s advocate to get<br />

us to think more critically, all of the<br />

teachers at MPH are excellent in one<br />

way or another. Today, I can say that I<br />

definitely appreciate them with a fresh<br />

and much indebted understanding. I’ll<br />

begin with my science teachers: Mrs.<br />

Stewart taught me not to be cynical,<br />

because we are all capable of being “the<br />

smartest kid in the class.” Mrs. Loedel<br />

expected the best, she never let me<br />

accept anything less than better than<br />

what I thought was good enough, which<br />

has turned me into a very meticulous<br />

learner and teacher. My dad, I mean Dr.<br />

Ostrander, showed me that he is smart<br />

(because he’s a teacher), but also<br />

because even teachers need to keep<br />

learning and so I model my educational<br />

fortitude after his enduring love of<br />

learning. Mr. Gregory taught me that it’s<br />

ok for teachers to be “normal” and so I<br />

keep in mind that laughing at myself is<br />

probably good medicine for my<br />

students too! Mr. Slentz, Dr. Jaquin,<br />

Mrs. Foster and Mr. Vural were never my<br />

teachers, but they always made me feel<br />

welcome in their rooms and offered<br />

strength and support to the special class<br />

of MPH student…the faculty kid. My<br />

math teachers: Mrs. Meehan encouraged<br />

me even when I was sure math was<br />

impossible and has willingly extended<br />

her expertise so that my teacher partner<br />

and I can challenge our own students<br />

today. She reminds me that setting high<br />

expectations causes students to achieve.<br />

Mrs. Weidner (we were your first-year<br />

students!) showed me that real teachers<br />

never give up on their students, she<br />

made math intelligible for me and<br />

believed so much that I could not help<br />

but believe, too. Mr. Olesner’s class was<br />

a lesson in focus and he taught me that<br />

there is always room to get to know<br />

your students and amidst stories of train<br />

track collectables, math can be learned.<br />

My Spanish teachers: Sra. Dooher<br />

practiced unending patience. When I<br />

have a difficult student today, I often<br />

think of saying, “chicos, chicos,<br />

tranquilo…” and attempt to show my<br />

students the patience and kindness she<br />

showed me. She is the reason I minored<br />

in Spanish and studied abroad in Spain.<br />

Sra. Hadlick helped me to realize the<br />

connection between Spanish and<br />

English, which is one reason I studied<br />

linguistics in my master’s program. My<br />

history teachers: Mr. Ball’s (Donald)<br />

class was held in the small room in the<br />

barn, where we all had to squish into<br />

the desks. He bet us Estelle’s ice-cream<br />

sandwiches wouldn’t melt and you<br />

know what He was right! Mr. Mangram<br />

encouraged us to, “walk around in<br />

someone else’s skin,” which comes in<br />

handy everyday! Thinking critically was<br />

one of the essential tools in his room<br />

that I borrow for mine every day. Mr.<br />

Salter was a teacher and a coach. He<br />

believed in my abilities in and out of<br />

the classroom, he gave me a love for<br />

history, but also a love for men’s<br />

lacrosse, which I now share with my<br />

own students. My elective/fine arts<br />

teachers: Mr. Buchman convinced me<br />

chorus was my thing and Annemarie<br />

made me feel confident enough to<br />

audition for a part in the school musical<br />

and then to sing a duet with Jess Holzer<br />

at the senior recital. Thanks to those two<br />

ladies, I have no regrets about not going<br />

for it! And thanks to Annemarie, I often<br />

serenade my students when they need<br />

to pay better attention to lessons! Ms.<br />

Byrnes (Mrs. Holstein now) told me,<br />

“Naomi, it’s ok to make pencil drawings<br />

dark, don’t be afraid of black.” My<br />

husband thanks her for her encouragement.<br />

Ms. Sherman (Mrs. Salter now)<br />

taught me calm and to find the beauty<br />

in all things, how to batik, how to mold<br />

clay, and most of all how to find<br />

something I can love in every day. Mr.<br />

Copps, Mr. & Mrs. Potter, Mrs. Koziara<br />

and our drama coaches all taught me<br />

that it is possible to enjoy what you do,<br />

every day. Mr. O’Brien taught me to<br />

write what I hear, not what I think.<br />

Sounds strange right Well, his creative<br />

writing class helped me to find my<br />

written voice, which continues to grow.<br />

Last, but definitely not least, my English<br />

teachers (whose ranks I join): Ms. Cook<br />

taught me that literature and bagels<br />

always go well together. Her style of<br />

delivering critiques and constructive<br />

criticism are a model for how I do so in<br />

my own classroom. Ms. Bentley taught<br />

me to love the Classics, after reading<br />

Frankenstein I picked up whatever I<br />

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Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

could get my hands on at the library. I<br />

encourage my kids to read new things<br />

every day, the same way she did for us.<br />

She also never took any crap, no<br />

excuses, just reasons to get better. My<br />

kids would say, “She don’t play.” I agree.<br />

Dr. Temes defined interconnectedness,<br />

by helping us see how literature really<br />

does help us understand what goes on<br />

in life. She also taught me that teachers<br />

are “real people.” These three ladies are<br />

a large part of the reason I am becoming<br />

an excellent ELA teacher. Most of all,<br />

I learned from the teachers at MPH that<br />

it takes a special kind of person to teach<br />

and a very special kind of person to be a<br />

MPH teacher. As students we worry a lot<br />

about how we will be able to finish all<br />

the work they assign, but now I see that<br />

they worried much more about how<br />

they would teach all the information to<br />

us in the first place. I couldn’t write<br />

about just one teacher, because I have so<br />

many good memories about all of<br />

them. Of course, I only mentioned the<br />

teachers I had, but all of the staff at<br />

MPH work equally as hard to make<br />

education meaningful for their kids. I<br />

am proud to be an MPH grad, in part,<br />

because of all of the MPH teachers.<br />

Thank you for standing by all of us,<br />

through our good and bad moments,<br />

our highs and lows, and when we might<br />

have given you a run for your money.<br />

You are much appreciated… and now<br />

much understood.<br />

Naomi Ostrander ’00<br />

Mr. Denton used to give us vocabulary<br />

quizzes where we had to write out<br />

sentences showing that we knew how to<br />

use the words correctly. It used to drive<br />

me nuts! Ten years later, I now use the<br />

same format when I quiz my English<br />

students...and they don’t like it much<br />

either, but it helps them learn!<br />

Zach Sanzone ’00<br />

Mr. Oelsner was always my favorite<br />

teacher, even though math was never<br />

my favorite subject. He helped me get<br />

through a subject I generally despised<br />

and made it fun, and he was also good<br />

to talk to one-on-one. I could always<br />

come to him with my personal<br />

problems. He definitely helped me get<br />

through school.<br />

Jess Jakus ‘02<br />

I cannot simply write one memory, for<br />

there are too many to count. When I<br />

think back on my days at MPH, a few<br />

vivid memories stand out. One of them<br />

was the declamation contest held<br />

during my Eighth Grade year. I<br />

remember tirelessly studying, writing,<br />

and then performing my paper about<br />

Eva Peron and receiving a trophy.<br />

Another was when my Seventh Grade<br />

teacher, Mr. Rodewald, was teaching us<br />

about DNA. He placed a banana into a<br />

zip lock bag and proceeded to squash it<br />

repeatedly by sitting on it. That was the<br />

most remarkable sight I had ever seen at<br />

school. Lastly, perhaps the most<br />

memorable bit of MPH, was Mr.<br />

Mangram literally and sincerely stating<br />

the first day of class with a bright smile<br />

and chuckle, “If you remember only one<br />

thing from this class you WILL<br />

remember The Mangram.”<br />

Vanessa Crane ’04<br />

The MPH English Department is filled<br />

with open-minded intellectuals with<br />

unique and slightly odd personalities…<br />

and I mean that as a compliment.<br />

Within that department, I guess I’d have<br />

to give the most credit to Fred Montas.<br />

The irony to this is that I did not like<br />

him as a teacher in 10th Grade. I got a B<br />

on an essay in which I tried to compare<br />

“Blue Velvet” and “The Great Gatsby.” In<br />

hindsight, that comparison doesn’t<br />

make very much sense so I understand<br />

the grade.<br />

However this film reference got his<br />

attention and as time went on he and I<br />

became much closer through our<br />

discussions about film. “CACHE” IS SO<br />

GOOD! Like me, Montas and the rest of<br />

the English Department were people<br />

who were highly critical and analytical<br />

about what they love. So thank you<br />

English Department for cultivating my<br />

critical and analytical “eye.” Now my<br />

friends and I have screaming matches<br />

over various books and films in which<br />

hair is pulled and teeth are smashed.<br />

Again I say thank you...<br />

Salamo Manetti-Lax’08<br />

Memories: Honestly, there are way too<br />

many teachers to name who helped<br />

make my MPH experience memorable.<br />

A few are Mr. O’Malley, Mr. Spear, Mr.<br />

Salter, Dusty Heer, and Mrs. Salter. Mr.<br />

O’Malley is the most chill teacher I’ve<br />

ever had, and I’ll never forget our<br />

constant talks about sports. Mr. Spear is<br />

one of the coolest teachers in the entire<br />

school. He’s always down for a good<br />

conversation. Mr. Salter gave me the<br />

most fun year of history ever (Sorry, Mr.<br />

Spear. Jeopardy was awesome, though.).<br />

I’ve known Dusty since I was in<br />

Kindergarten, and he was one of the<br />

people who helped develop my love for<br />

sports. I can never thank him enough<br />

for all the fun times. Last but not least,<br />

Mrs. Salter is literally the nicest person<br />

I’ve ever met in my whole life, and the<br />

two classes I had with her were the two<br />

most fun art classes I’ve ever taken.<br />

Andrew Hicks ’09<br />

A lot of things happen in my<br />

Information Studies class, and that’s<br />

why I like it. Sure, we do the stuff we’re<br />

supposed to, but many other things can<br />

come up in-between, and we deal with<br />

them all. One day, the subject of Afro-<br />

Centrism came up, and when Zach<br />

Sanzone ’00 asked what it was, this is<br />

how I responded:<br />

Afro-Centrism is the idea that we invented<br />

everything and that you white people stole it<br />

all from us. A big part of Afro-Centrism is<br />

looking at Egypt as the height of African<br />

civilization. We were all descended from<br />

kings and queens in Egypt... even though<br />

very few African-Americans are of Egyptian<br />

descent, and most Egyptians would deny<br />

any connection to us.<br />

But there is one little problem with<br />

worshipping Egypt as the pinnacle of<br />

African civilization… if you’re at all<br />

familiar with the Bible, you’ll know that<br />

this means that we owned slaves. Not only<br />

that, but we owned slaves who we treated so<br />

badly that God had to rescue them.<br />

And I’m not sure we really want to go<br />

there!<br />

Keith Gatling<br />

MPH faculty member, 1992-present<br />

82 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


A Few of my Favorite<br />

Teaching Experiences<br />

During an Eighth Grade trip to<br />

Japan, Gavin Byrnes ’07 learned the<br />

entire subway system and wowed the<br />

math classes by solving problems,<br />

correctly, in Japanese!<br />

Feeling safe and secure, on 9/11 as<br />

we came together in the gym as one<br />

<strong>School</strong>, lead by Baxter Ball.<br />

Taking the 2006-07 Masterminds<br />

team to the Nationals in Chicago.<br />

Watching other teachers teach,<br />

especially memorable visits to<br />

classrooms and lectures by great<br />

teachers like Delia Temes, Karen<br />

Brang, Joline Hemminger, Sue<br />

Foster, and Jeff Mangram.<br />

Serving on the MPH interview<br />

committee to nominate Jeff<br />

Mangram for New York State<br />

Teacher of the Year.<br />

Serving on the <strong>School</strong>’s first<br />

Diversity Committee.<br />

Being part of the <strong>School</strong>’s technological<br />

transition between the 20th<br />

& 21st century.<br />

Watching Lower <strong>School</strong> teachers’<br />

commitment to and struggle with<br />

the social and emotional issues that<br />

affect their students – as if they were<br />

their own children.<br />

MPH <strong>Reflections</strong><br />

By Liza Morrison, director of library services<br />

aren’t, we have policies and<br />

procedures in place to help them<br />

learn from their mistakes.<br />

We are committed to making MPH<br />

work for every kid, unless we believe<br />

she or he would be better served at<br />

another school.<br />

We teach all kids to speak up, take<br />

charge of their own learning, and to<br />

handle leadership and<br />

independence.<br />

How do the students<br />

here stand out<br />

They are more polite than their<br />

peers elsewhere.<br />

They are often secure in their<br />

“uniqueness.”<br />

“Smart is cool.”<br />

Why I decided to work<br />

at MPH and why I stay.<br />

I came to teach here so I could offer<br />

my children the education MPH<br />

provides.<br />

I stayed because I enjoy the<br />

intellectual freedom to influence my<br />

own teaching as well as the freedom<br />

(and the expectation) to contribute<br />

to the overall culture and climate of<br />

the <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Early in my 17-<br />

year career at<br />

MPH, uncertain I<br />

wanted to stay, I<br />

glanced across the<br />

quad on a windy<br />

spring day to<br />

observe the<br />

Prekindergarten<br />

class, like ducks<br />

Sue Foster following mom,<br />

headed across<br />

campus. The wind<br />

was hearty and carried that sense of<br />

spring dampness and warmth. Leading<br />

the huddle of children was a woman<br />

wearing a pleated, colorful, gauze skirt.<br />

The wind created the allusion of<br />

flowing colors as she walked; the wind<br />

then settled. I watched, in stunned<br />

silence, as the first child behind the<br />

woman promptly lifted her skirt up<br />

over his head to make it flow, again.<br />

I paused as a young teacher eager to<br />

see the response. The teacher turned<br />

on her heels and said, “Oh, dear, I bet<br />

you know who Mary Poppins is, don’t<br />

you” The child nodded, not sure he<br />

was in trouble or not. The teacher then<br />

knelt down, achieving an eye to eye<br />

position. “Well, I am magical in ways<br />

different than Mary Poppins, so my<br />

skirt does not fly up like hers, okay”<br />

The child agreed and they finished<br />

their walk. I think about this moment<br />

as one that convinced me that MPH<br />

was a place I could love teaching.<br />

Sue Foster, MPH faculty member,<br />

1991-present<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

What makes MPH unique<br />

A set of shared values about the<br />

endeavor of learning, including<br />

respect for teachers, which stems<br />

from a broad appreciation of the<br />

culture and climate our faculty instill<br />

by knowing and valuing each child.<br />

That we assume our students will be<br />

good and honorable. And when they<br />

I stayed because I love the students.<br />

I stayed because I am invigorated by<br />

the quality of the faculty.<br />

I stayed because I am humbled and<br />

awed by the dedication, care and<br />

commitment of the faculty and staff<br />

to each and every one of the<br />

students who currently attend and<br />

have attended MPH.<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 83


Andrea<br />

Danial<br />

Faculty-Academic Memories<br />

An indelible part of MPH history,<br />

Andrea Danial recalls her 30<br />

years here from numerous perspectives<br />

– teacher, parent, and Head of Lower<br />

and Middle <strong>School</strong>.<br />

That 30-year tenure nearly didn’t<br />

happen. Hired initially as a Lower<br />

<strong>School</strong> teacher, Andrea remembers<br />

receiving a holiday bonus her first year<br />

– along with a notice that the<br />

financially burdened <strong>School</strong> was not<br />

sure if it would be able to open the<br />

following fall. When she left <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> 30 years later to take a<br />

position at a Philadelphia area private<br />

school, MPH had become a financially<br />

healthy and academically strong<br />

institution.<br />

Andrea was witness to three decades of<br />

change and growth at MPH. She recalls<br />

when enrollment growth led to the<br />

double-sectioning of grades. It was then<br />

that Andrea and her teaching partner<br />

attended a conference on computers<br />

and technology. They returned with an<br />

innovative plan for integrating<br />

multimedia tools in the classroom, a<br />

plan that she was thrilled to see<br />

supported by Head of <strong>School</strong> Baxter<br />

Ball and funded by the Board of<br />

Trustees.<br />

Andrea sees the use of technology, once<br />

considered a tool of the future, as an<br />

extremely positive change in education.<br />

Young people will be living with everchanging<br />

technology throughout their<br />

lives, she says, and they pick it up<br />

quickly. Most teachers, on the other<br />

hand, undergo a learning process in<br />

order to use technology effectively.<br />

Lower <strong>School</strong> teachers use technology<br />

to improve pedagogy, how they teach<br />

and present lessons; students use it to<br />

communicate their learning and ideas.<br />

Today’s students, Andrea believes, are<br />

much the same as those that came<br />

before them, though they are facing a<br />

different world and the expectations of<br />

students have changed. “Children still<br />

want to be heard; they ask endless<br />

questions and enjoy discovering new<br />

things, which is what learning is all<br />

about,” Andrea says. “MPH has always<br />

done that very well!”<br />

One of Andrea’s fondest teaching<br />

memories is of one of her Fifth Grade<br />

classes. Culminating a unit on<br />

Shakespeare, the class put on the play,<br />

“A Mid-Summer Night’s Dream.” A<br />

local cable company came to the<br />

<strong>School</strong> and taped the production, and<br />

it was broadcast once a week for over a<br />

year!<br />

Since leaving MPH two years ago,<br />

Andrea says, she has missed many of<br />

our school traditions. “Traditions,”<br />

she insists, “are an important aspect of<br />

the <strong>School</strong> – they maintain community<br />

beyond graduation and maintain a<br />

connection to the <strong>School</strong>.” She says she<br />

has thought about the opening-day<br />

handshaking ceremony in September<br />

and the singing of “The 12 Days of<br />

Christmas” in December. She worries<br />

about traditions disappearing.<br />

Traditions are what ground you within<br />

a community, she says, especially when<br />

change is necessary and inevitable.<br />

Andrea has very warm memories of<br />

her students and colleagues at MPH<br />

and is grateful for having been given so<br />

many opportunities to grow and<br />

improve as a teacher and administrator:<br />

“I am who I am as a professional<br />

because of MPH.”<br />

84 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


<strong>Manlius</strong> Military<br />

Memories<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> uniform circa 1960<br />

History of the Military<br />

Tradition at The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong> from 1881-1949<br />

For almost 90 years, the military<br />

component was an important<br />

component of our <strong>School</strong>’s history.<br />

Established at The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> in<br />

1881, military training was initiated<br />

because the president of the Board of<br />

Trustees and the Headmaster believed<br />

that the academic course of instruction<br />

would be materially benefited by the<br />

inclusion of military training. Little or<br />

no government assistance was received<br />

by the <strong>School</strong> in accomplishing the<br />

conversion from a civilian to a military<br />

school.<br />

The <strong>School</strong>’s founder, Bishop Huntington,<br />

enlisted the aid of a regular Army<br />

Office, 1st Lieut. John E. Myers of the<br />

3rd F.A. Regiment. Lieut. Myers took a<br />

two month leave of absence during the<br />

fall of 1881 to come to St. John’s.<br />

During that period he functioned as<br />

Commandant and military instructor<br />

teaching both faculty and students the<br />

rudiments of military discipline and<br />

training. The task couldn’t have been<br />

too onerous because the <strong>School</strong><br />

numbered only five faculty members<br />

and twenty students.<br />

The early uniform was blue trimmed<br />

with yellow and patterned after that<br />

worn by the Cadets at West Point. The<br />

school provided the Cadets with<br />

muskets and side arms. The military<br />

instruction consisted of foot drill, the<br />

manual or arms according to Upton,<br />

and saber practice. The climax of the<br />

year’s military training was a one week<br />

camp at Cazenovia Lake held after finals<br />

and before commencement.<br />

During the next five years, the cadet<br />

body varied in number from 20 to 70<br />

and was organized and drilled as a<br />

company of Infantry. The introduction<br />

of military training and discipline was a<br />

very pronounced change in the life of<br />

the students. Doubtless, it was the<br />

source of considerable barracks conversation.<br />

However, it appears that it was<br />

readily accepted. The following excerpt<br />

is from a member of the class of 1886,<br />

“Therein were manifest the results<br />

sought, of obedience, order, and<br />

soldierly pride. And all the outcome, not<br />

of destroyed individualism but of the<br />

united action of well-trained and<br />

strengthened personalities.”<br />

The summer of 1888 brought a new<br />

superintendent to St. John’s, Lt. Col.<br />

William Verbeck, who was to be a<br />

dominate figure in the life of the <strong>School</strong><br />

for the next 42 years. He manifested an<br />

unusual interest in the military phase of<br />

the school life throughout his entire<br />

association with the <strong>School</strong>. The years of<br />

1888-1891 were devoted to formalizing<br />

the military training and improving it to<br />

reach a standard that would win<br />

government recognition and assistance.<br />

The muzzle loading rifles were replaced<br />

with the breech loading Springfield<br />

Cadet-type rifle. Horsemanship, cavalry<br />

drill, and mounted gun drill were<br />

introduced. Regulations were patterned<br />

after the system used in West Point and<br />

a rifle-range was constructed on campus.<br />

Calvary was no new thing at St. John’s.<br />

With the exception of West Point, it was<br />

the first school in the country to teach<br />

cavalry systematically. In 1888, the<br />

school was organized as a cavalry<br />

school. There were on hand 24 horses<br />

and the instructor was Micah Jenkins,<br />

formerly a Lt. Cavalryman in the U.S.<br />

Army and later to be remembered as a<br />

Major in Roosevelt’s Rough Riders.<br />

In 1891 the Corps of Cadets was<br />

organized as a Cadet Battalion, with a<br />

battalion headquarters, and two<br />

companies (A & B) organized. The close<br />

of the school year was marked by the<br />

first competitive company drill of which<br />

B Company won. Its reward was the<br />

honor of being “Color Company” for<br />

the following year. In 1891, the school<br />

had its first government inspection.<br />

1902 was destined to be a red-letter year<br />

in the life of the <strong>School</strong>. On March 28, a<br />

drill team of 40 St. John’s cadets<br />

competed in a competitive drill against<br />

similar units from other schools. The<br />

drill was held in Madison Square<br />

Garden and the St. John’s detachment in<br />

a near perfect performance won the<br />

competition hardily.<br />

On April 8, 1902, the first of the great<br />

fires, which all but destroyed the school,<br />

was discovered at 5:30 p.m. The military<br />

discipline of the Corps of Cadets was<br />

largely responsible for the prompt<br />

response to orders which resulted in<br />

saving large amounts of property and<br />

no loss of life or serious injury to any<br />

individual. This same sense of devotion<br />

to duty and response to orders enabled<br />

the administration to organize and<br />

impromptu set of living quarters and<br />

classrooms so promptly that only one<br />

day of class work was lost. This, despite<br />

the fact that the living quarters and<br />

Military Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010<br />

85


Military Memories<br />

academic facilities of the school were<br />

entirely destroyed.<br />

In 1903 Krag rifles were issued to<br />

replace the obsolete Springfields and in<br />

1904 a saber squad was organized. On<br />

May 26, 1904 Major George Bell, 1st<br />

Infantry, USA came to inspect St. John’s.<br />

As a result of this inspection, St. John’s<br />

was named by the War Department as<br />

one of the six institutions “whose<br />

students have exhibited the greatest<br />

interest, application and proficiency in<br />

military training and knowledge” and<br />

therefore it is entitled to the appointment<br />

of an honor graduate as a second<br />

lieutenant in the Army. As a result of the<br />

1904 government inspection, Cadet<br />

Benjamin Mart Bailey was commissioned<br />

2nd Lieut., 4th Infantry USA,<br />

passing the Army examinations at the<br />

head of all the candidates.<br />

In 1908 The Cadet Corps of St. John’s<br />

was organized into A Commandant and<br />

Staff, the Band, “A”, “B”, “C” Companies<br />

of Infantry, Troop “A” Calvary,<br />

1st and 2nd Battery of Artillery composed<br />

of two sections; a Signal Corps<br />

Detachment and Signal Corps. In<br />

addition to the routine military instructions,<br />

there was formed this year an<br />

Officer’s <strong>School</strong> to perfect the theory of<br />

military training. In 1930 the Cadet<br />

Corps was reorganized once again into a<br />

Battalion Staff, the Band, Troop “A” of<br />

Cavalry, and “B”, “C”, and “D” Companies<br />

of Infantry and in 1913 the old<br />

Krag-Jorgeson rifle was replaced with<br />

new Springfields.<br />

In 1914, the War Department issued to<br />

St. John’s a complete detachment of the<br />

Colt Automatic Machine Gun. St. John’s<br />

was the first school issued this weapon<br />

and consequently the first to organize a<br />

Machine Gun Platoon which served also<br />

as a motorcycle unit during the 1916-<br />

1917 school year.<br />

In 1918 “E” company was added to the<br />

Corps of Cadets. Newly formed, E<br />

Company carried the colors that year<br />

since the annual company competition<br />

was not held. E Company was comprised<br />

of cadets who all measured 5’10”<br />

or taller. In 1919, St. John’s Corps<br />

because an Artillery <strong>School</strong>, instead of<br />

Infantry. However, that edict only lasted<br />

a year, by the 1920 school year, all<br />

cadets received training in one arm of<br />

the service only and all work was<br />

infantry.<br />

St. John’s continued to earn the honor<br />

school ranking each year until 1921, at<br />

which time the school was notified that<br />

because of expenses, there would be no<br />

inspection. In place of a formal inspection<br />

that year, a Military Day was set<br />

aside and the battalion was reviewed by<br />

Brig. Gen. Robert Alexander, from<br />

Comm. Gen. of the 77th Div.<br />

Enrollment stood at 282 at the start of<br />

the 1921-1922 school year with the<br />

Battalion reorganizing itself into the<br />

following companies: HQ Company<br />

(the band and the communications<br />

section), three rifle companies (A, B,<br />

and C) and D, the machine gun<br />

company.<br />

The Honor <strong>School</strong> rating resumed in<br />

1922 until 1931, when for the only time<br />

in its history of Government Inspections,<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> did not earn the Honor<br />

<strong>School</strong> honor. In 1924, under the<br />

guidance of General William Verbeck,<br />

St. John’s was renamed The <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>School</strong>. <strong>Manlius</strong> resumed its Honor<br />

<strong>School</strong> rating in 1932 and maintained<br />

this honorable designation until the<br />

<strong>School</strong> demilitarized in 1970.<br />

Lt. William J. Verbeck came to <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

in 1936 as the new PMS&T. He was the<br />

first Old Boy to return to <strong>Manlius</strong> as a<br />

PMS & T and stayed at the school until<br />

1938 when he was sent to Japan. In<br />

1939, the annual company competition<br />

was abolished by a vote of the cadet<br />

officers. Cadets received gas mask training<br />

this year and a small maneuver was<br />

executed on the school grounds using<br />

smoke to simulate gas.<br />

The outbreak of WWII on December 7,<br />

1941 brought a change in the War<br />

Department that directly affected The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>. First, the age limit for<br />

eligibility for 2nd Lieutenant commission<br />

dropped from 21 to 18 years of age<br />

and a large number of cadets became<br />

eligible for commissions at graduation.<br />

In the 1942 school year, the Springfield<br />

Rifles went to war and in their place the<br />

War Department furnished the so called<br />

Victory Rifle with a wooden stock,<br />

dummy barrel, but with bolts of metal<br />

that simulated the motions of loading.<br />

The Howitzer, which had stood on<br />

campus since the end of WWI, went the<br />

way of all scrap metal, and was<br />

contributed to the war effort.<br />

The Victory Rifles were disposed in<br />

1943 and once again the battalion<br />

received its quota of Springfields from<br />

the War Department. The War Department<br />

also changed how it conducted its<br />

annual inspection. Now, two inspections<br />

were held as before with the 1st<br />

inspection making up 25% of the final<br />

mark. <strong>Manlius</strong> continued to produce<br />

winning rifle teams and its 1944-1945<br />

rifle teams achieved the highest position<br />

attainable by any ROTC school in the<br />

country. The team won both the<br />

National Championship in the William<br />

Randolph Hearst Trophy Match and<br />

also in the intercollegiate match.<br />

On October 26, 1946 the <strong>School</strong> paid<br />

homage to a great citizen and soldier,<br />

General Jonathan M. Wainwright. Later<br />

that year, <strong>Manlius</strong> was classified as a<br />

Military Institute. This rating qualified<br />

the school to back a more advanced<br />

military program. A cadet who completed<br />

four years of military service at<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> was entitled to exception from<br />

the first two years of college at ROTC.<br />

Satisfactory completion of the last two<br />

years of the college course and a<br />

summer ROTC entitled him to a commission<br />

as 2nd Lt. in the Reserve Officer<br />

Corps. In April of 1947, Major General<br />

Ray W. Barker succeeded Lt. Col.<br />

McCarthy as superintendent of the<br />

<strong>School</strong>.<br />

General Jonathan M. Wainwright’s visit<br />

to <strong>Manlius</strong> in the fall of 1946 was a<br />

highlight of that year’s military season.<br />

The main event for the battalion was the<br />

General’s review, which had hundreds<br />

of spectators present. During the review,<br />

General Wainwright was awarded the<br />

New York State Conspicuous Service<br />

Cross and later at Knox Hall he was<br />

invested as Commander, Order of the<br />

Phoenix.<br />

For the 1947-1948 school year, the<br />

infamous “soak” system of discipline<br />

was adapted at <strong>Manlius</strong>. Each day soak<br />

reports regarding cadets’ behaviors were<br />

heard by the Commandant of Cadets<br />

and Company Commandants.<br />

The opening of the 1948 school year<br />

began what was to become another<br />

86<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


<strong>Manlius</strong> tradition – Officer Candidate<br />

<strong>School</strong> (OCS). Prior to the opening of<br />

school, cadets who were thought to<br />

have cadet officer ability were brought<br />

back early to attend OCS. Upon<br />

completion of this week-long program,<br />

the most capable cadets were made<br />

officers and the remainder were chosen<br />

as senior non-commissioned officers<br />

(NCOs) to guide the cadet battalion<br />

through the school year.<br />

Later that year, the Ski Platoon, which<br />

had fallen by the wayside, was renewed<br />

under the coaching of Mr. Woods and<br />

T/Sgt. Spears. They put on a fine<br />

exhibition of “Platoon in Attack” during<br />

that year’s Winter Carnival. The 1948-<br />

1949 cadets were also introduce to the<br />

“M1” rifles, which would later become<br />

an important part of <strong>Manlius</strong> military<br />

instruction. Each cadet was allowed to<br />

fire the M1 at the 200 yard range.<br />

Excerpted from History of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Military Department<br />

Military training continued to be a part<br />

of student life at <strong>Manlius</strong> until the 1970<br />

merger. However, even before <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

approached <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> with the idea<br />

of a merger, the time for military<br />

education at <strong>Manlius</strong> was drawing to a<br />

close. The 1969 <strong>Manlius</strong> executive<br />

board of trustees unanimously voted to<br />

demilitarize <strong>Manlius</strong> during the next<br />

two years in an effort to address the<br />

country’s waning enthusiasm for<br />

military secondary education.<br />

Military Memories from<br />

the <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

Dear fellow Old Boys,<br />

Some of the following memories about the<br />

military side of life at The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

will make you laugh out loud. While these<br />

memories are fun to read, the <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

military education was more than regimen,<br />

uniforms, drilling and parades.<br />

Military science courses were taught in a<br />

serious, national context. All cadets studied<br />

subjects like small unit tactics. All learned<br />

what weapons could do. All were given<br />

instruction concerning nuclear, chemical<br />

and biological warfare. There was an active<br />

Army military science cadre assigned to the<br />

<strong>School</strong>, for <strong>Manlius</strong> was a Junior Reserve<br />

Officer Training Corps institution, a<br />

starting point from which very young men<br />

could become Army officers, officers who<br />

would lead other men in war and in peace.<br />

Yes, these memories are fun to read.<br />

However, the serious nature of military<br />

education should not be forgotten.<br />

Bob Pratt ‘67HQ<br />

Lt. John J. McTiernan was my English<br />

teacher at <strong>Manlius</strong>. Then in 1944 at Fort<br />

Bennington at the US Army Parachute<br />

<strong>School</strong>, Captain McTiernan was again<br />

my instructor. My first night at<br />

Bennington, I was lying in my bunk<br />

advising my fellow paratroopers to be<br />

that I came out of a military school.<br />

Then on the loud speaker, from the<br />

orderly room, came the call for Clune to<br />

report to the orderly room forthwith. I<br />

Excerpts from<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> Ski Platoon<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> enjoyed a reputation of being on<br />

the cutting edge of military technology.<br />

In 1926, the <strong>School</strong> formed the first<br />

military ski unit of its kind in the<br />

country, but that unit did survive past the<br />

school year. The 1930s brought renewed<br />

Members of the 1937 <strong>Manlius</strong> Ski Platoon interest in organizing a ski platoon and<br />

on December 3, 1936, the famed Ski<br />

Platoon of The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> was initiated. This platoon altered a model for ski<br />

equipped troops in WWII and was made possible through a generous gift of a complete<br />

ski outfit from Captain Hugh Barclay. The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> secured Lieut. Charles Kurt<br />

Hoffman, formerly of the Hungarian Army, as ski coach.<br />

The Platoon was made up of three sections plus a machine gun section. The<br />

squad, made up of eight men, was armed with one BAR and seven Springfield<br />

.03 rifles. The machine gun section was equipped with the heavy water-cooled<br />

Brownings and their equally heavy tripods and gun mounts. Uniforms were<br />

dark wool trousers and white jacket-length ski parkas and white caps. There<br />

was also an identifying ski platoon patch sewn onto the white parkas and the<br />

ski caps.<br />

Maneuvers and practices were held on late winter afternoons and weekends<br />

and consisted of close order ski formations and attack and defense drills.<br />

Considering our youth and lack of experience, it proved a most interesting and<br />

effective addition to our military training at <strong>Manlius</strong>.<br />

The Ski Platoon took part in several winter carnivals and ski meets in the area,<br />

including Highland Park near Fabius, Colgate, and the Northwoods Ski <strong>School</strong><br />

at Lake Placid. Life Magazine did a write up on the unit with the Platoon<br />

putting on a demonstration at Madison Square Garden in NYC in early 1938.<br />

I graduated from <strong>Manlius</strong> in 1938 and am unaware of the future that followed<br />

for the Ski Platoon. I believe it was disbanded a year or two later with more<br />

emphasis being placed on straight infantry training, as the war was developing<br />

in Europe.<br />

I continued skiing while at Northwestern University and actually wore my<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> parka and cap. Much later, following the war, I even wore that parka<br />

when skiing in Austria in 1955. Unfortunately, it has long been lost, as a<br />

search in one of my footlockers has failed to locate it.<br />

By Frank Haigler ’38A, originally printed in the Spring 1998 <strong>Reflections</strong><br />

magazine.<br />

Military Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010<br />

87


an to the room,<br />

started up the<br />

steps when a vice<br />

in a Command<br />

Car said, “Clune<br />

get up here.” It<br />

was Captain John<br />

J. McTiernan. He<br />

very kindly had<br />

me to his home<br />

McTiernan<br />

for that Christmas.<br />

After parachute school, I was sent to the<br />

Pacific and was assigned to the 503rd<br />

Parachute RCT. Captain McTiernan,<br />

some time later, went to Europe, where<br />

he was killed in combat.<br />

George H. Clune, II ’43C<br />

nuts. The company would be marching<br />

along, every leg in unison, and at the<br />

end of this one squad there’d be this<br />

pair of frantically skipping legs,<br />

invariably accompanied by muttered<br />

admonitions to “Get in step,<br />

Fernandez.”<br />

Bill Kilpatrick, ‘43 A<br />

won the color company. I was chosen to<br />

carry the cup in the finale parade.<br />

Walter “Bill” Grahling ’52A<br />

Have you ever used the base plate of a<br />

4.2 mortar for a toboggan Works fine<br />

in NYS snow if you can handle the<br />

weight on the up trip.<br />

Emmett Greenleaf ’53HQ<br />

The snow was so cold some mornings<br />

that it squeaked under our boots as we<br />

marched.<br />

Bruce French ’58HQ<br />

Military Memories<br />

Talk about marching in the snow brings<br />

back memories of when I obtained over<br />

12 demerits. Marching around the<br />

flagpole in the snow, fifteen minutes per<br />

demerit! During this time of restriction,<br />

I figured out a way of leaving the<br />

campus by marching with cadets to the<br />

Catholic Church in the village of<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> on Sunday morning. Being of<br />

the Episcopal faith, I was familiar with<br />

the Catholic Church communion, in<br />

which I participated. When Mr.<br />

Sedgwick was informed that I marched<br />

with my fellow cadets to the Catholic<br />

Church in <strong>Manlius</strong>, he immediately<br />

looked up my religious affiliation,<br />

which was listed as Episcopal. As a<br />

result of his complete investigation, five<br />

more demerits were adding to my total,<br />

to be marched off in the snow…for this<br />

all happened during wintertime!<br />

Frank B. Harris II ’43C<br />

Soliciting <strong>Manlius</strong> Old Boys for memories<br />

is risking a deluge, for surely anyone<br />

who went to the <strong>School</strong> during his<br />

formative teen years has memories by<br />

the bucket. Here’s a semi-military one:<br />

I appreciate that Arnold Fernandez now<br />

is one of MPH’s avid supporters, but<br />

almost 70 years ago when he was an<br />

awkward New Boy in “A” Company,<br />

heard constantly whenever the company<br />

marched in formation was, “Get in step,<br />

Fernandez.” Despite cadence being<br />

counted out loud, the poor kid seemed<br />

never to get the rhythm of “left, right,<br />

left, right,” which flustered and embarrassed<br />

him and drove his drill masters<br />

Frozen air in lungs as we prepared to<br />

march to AM mess.<br />

Art Henahan ’45A<br />

There was very little fooling around in<br />

my time at <strong>Manlius</strong>. During the war<br />

years, it was an extremely serious<br />

environment with graduates going<br />

directly to the Army, Navy and Marines.<br />

Andy Tedesco ’47A<br />

Marching at <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

Reveille<br />

There was a very loud buzzer system<br />

throughout the campus. It started at<br />

6:10 a.m., and then the bugler stepped<br />

outside in all kinds of weather and blew<br />

reveille. Then came assembly to form up<br />

to go to mess, and the raising of the flag<br />

on the pole that is now at MPH. Buzzers<br />

dictated your whole life, through to 9:30<br />

p.m. or so, until taps ended the day.<br />

Dave Slocum ’48HQ<br />

I remember in 1949 when A Company<br />

Well, to tell you the truth, I have<br />

actually started a book of my three years<br />

at <strong>Manlius</strong>. But here are a couple of<br />

tidbits. Inspections were always<br />

moments for tension. You prepare,<br />

sometimes all weekend, for that one<br />

brief walk through into your room<br />

when you hope the floor is spotless, the<br />

shoes are mirror-like, and the blanket<br />

tight and folded perfectly.<br />

But there was always something. Like<br />

the day when I thought I had it nailed.<br />

The inspectors went through the room<br />

and didn’t find a thing wrong. Then,<br />

just as they were about to leave and I<br />

was about to breathe again, he turned to<br />

my record player, picked up the arm<br />

and found dust on the needle!<br />

In 1958, I joined the Phoenix Rifles,<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong>’ drill team, formed by Cadet<br />

Capt. Taylor Devine. On February 8,<br />

1959, we performed during half-time of<br />

the nationally-televised Syracuse<br />

Nationals-New York Knickerbockers<br />

basketball game at the Onondaga<br />

County War Memorial in Syracuse. OK,<br />

who remembers the Syracuse Nationals<br />

and the New York Knickerbockers<br />

The Phoenix Rifles had a pretty intricate<br />

routine that required a lot of counting.<br />

The 30 members, with rifles on our<br />

shoulders, would march in formation,<br />

break formation, come back into<br />

formation, form a circle, break the<br />

circle, form another formation, come<br />

back together, all looking like chaos and<br />

coming together in perfect harmony. So,<br />

there we were in the middle of the<br />

basketball court with a packed stadium,<br />

88<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Capt. Kamin orders the company into<br />

formation and open ranks. He retrieves<br />

the wounded shoe and walks the line,<br />

showing each “A” Company member<br />

the slit in the leather. He is not laughing,<br />

but he has an evil grin on his face.<br />

hundreds of people surrounding us, TV<br />

cameras, and bright lights.<br />

We are marching and I am counting<br />

and doing my steps and twirling my rifle<br />

and doing everything according to plan<br />

and then I had to do a right flank and I<br />

was all by myself, walking straight<br />

toward the stands. I was supposed to<br />

count a certain number of steps, do an<br />

about-face and rejoin my file. But, I was<br />

mesmerized by the crowd and I lost<br />

count and I kept marching for what<br />

seemed forever. Actually, it may have<br />

been perhaps three steps. I snapped out<br />

of it, did an about-face and quickstepped<br />

back into the ranks and the rest<br />

of the routine was flawless. But that was<br />

a scare.<br />

Finally, there was the time my friend and<br />

fellow cadet Gary and I were on a pass<br />

in Syracuse and having lunch before<br />

returning to campus. We had on our<br />

uniforms, which always caught stares<br />

and an occasional comment. This time a<br />

couple of girls approached us and struck<br />

up a conversation. They checked out our<br />

uniforms and noticed the patch on our<br />

shoulders with the ROTC and asked<br />

what it stood for. Actually, we weren’t<br />

sure, so we told them it stood for Royal<br />

Ontarian Tank Corps, which seemed to<br />

have impressed them, as well as us. We<br />

finished eating and Gary went to the<br />

restroom and the waitress asked if we<br />

wanted dessert, saying the meal had<br />

been paid for. I thought Gary was paying<br />

and didn’t want to add to his bill, so I<br />

said no. When he returned, I went to the<br />

restroom and the same exchange<br />

between Gary and the waitress happened.<br />

When neither of us paid, she<br />

explained that a man, who had noticed<br />

our uniforms, told he thought we were<br />

nice lads and wanted to pick up the tab<br />

for our lunch. We just missed dessert.<br />

Dave Rosso ’61<br />

The 1960 Phoenix Rifles<br />

Mess Formation<br />

I was the Battalion Adjutant in 1965<br />

and, as such, had to bring the entire<br />

Battalion to attention for various<br />

functions from Mess Hall formations<br />

daily to chapel on Sundays. For chapel,<br />

the Battalion Staff stood at Knox Hall<br />

facing Thomson Hall and the Battalion<br />

lined up on the sidewalk in between.<br />

When brought to attention and given the<br />

“right face!” command, the sound of the<br />

movement echoed as if there were 1,000<br />

troops at hand. It was such a clean, clear<br />

sound. I remember it to this day.<br />

Bill Edwards ’65B<br />

The year: 1963. A Friday afternoon in<br />

the fall. “A” Company is drilling on<br />

Thomson field. All the officers and noncoms<br />

are busy. Capt. Kamin is in overall<br />

charge. The platoon leaders drill their<br />

platoons; the squad leaders work with<br />

their people. All are busy.<br />

Except one officer. As company exec<br />

Charlie Mancuso has little to do. Out of<br />

the corner of my eye I see him. He is<br />

down by the old field gun near the flagpole.<br />

He is whiling away the time<br />

playing a sort of mumbledy-peg with his<br />

saber. High in the sky it whirls, end over<br />

end, sunlight glinting off the bright<br />

metal. A command from my squad<br />

leader brings me back to the business at<br />

hand.<br />

A few minutes later a cry of pain<br />

drowns out all commands. All heads<br />

turn to the sound. Down by the old<br />

cannon Charlie Mancuso stands, his<br />

foot transfixed by his saber. His saber<br />

had come down and gone right through<br />

his spit-shine and into his foot. Dumbstruck<br />

we watch as he jerks the saber out<br />

of his foot, rips off his shoe, and begins<br />

hopping down the road towards the<br />

Infirmary.<br />

Charlie Mancuso spent the next two<br />

weeks wearing one shoe, one sneaker<br />

and a cane.<br />

Here is where the calendar pages go<br />

flipping away, like in the old movies.<br />

The year: 1971. Once again it is the fall.<br />

I am working for Syracuse University,<br />

making student ID’s. This day we are at<br />

the law school. I look at the next card.<br />

The name is Charles Mancuso. I look<br />

up. I recognize him; he doesn’t<br />

remember me.<br />

“How’s your foot” I inquire. He looks<br />

at me, pain on his face.<br />

“You were there” I nod. We both smile.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Whoever said that sergeants run the<br />

army must have had a picture of<br />

Sergeant Major Dale J. Dann on his<br />

desk. Twenty-seven years in the army, he<br />

was our father confessor and mentor in<br />

the military department. He gave me<br />

one of the greatest pieces of advice ever.<br />

He said: “Always carry a clipboard and<br />

move from place to place in a purposeful<br />

manner. People will see the clipboard<br />

and the way you are walking and will<br />

assume you already have a mission and<br />

won’t stop you to give you another.”<br />

During Government Inspection, we of<br />

the Battalion Staff had to brief the<br />

Inspectors. We gathered in the first floor<br />

classroom of King Club. We were tense.<br />

Our nerves were stretched taut as violin<br />

strings. Suddenly SMAJ Dann marched<br />

through the door, slapping his clipboard<br />

on the door frame. We sprang to<br />

attention and looked for the officers<br />

who were certainly following him. No<br />

one. SMAJ Dann just grinned at us. He<br />

had known just how to break the<br />

tension. I do believe the briefing went<br />

better because of his knowledge of<br />

human nature. He was a great man.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

Military Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010<br />

89


Military Memories<br />

The times were different. <strong>Manlius</strong> was<br />

a small town then. There were many<br />

farms at the outskirts of the village. The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> Theater was so small there were<br />

only four seats on each side of the aisle.<br />

Edwards Falls was a special spot for a<br />

long walk in the woods. Lipe’s dairy had<br />

the best ice cream for miles and<br />

Suburban Park was a great place to go<br />

for a cool roller coaster ride on a hot<br />

summer day.<br />

Just outside the village stood the<br />

beautifully landscaped campus of The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>. The <strong>School</strong> was called<br />

St. John’s Academy until the 1920’s<br />

when the name was changed to The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>. As a military academy<br />

for approximately 300 boys from grades<br />

7-12 the school had extensive grounds<br />

and athletic fields, a large chapelauditorium,<br />

an academic building, an<br />

infirmary, a dining hall, barber shop<br />

even a snack bar called the Phoenix<br />

Tavern. The school prepared boys for<br />

college and or military careers. Academic<br />

classes, sports activities, and military<br />

training were important parts of the<br />

school program.<br />

As a college prep military school, the<br />

campus was run like a military post.<br />

Most high school students lived at<br />

school in one of three dormitories with<br />

their “companies.” There was “A”, “B”,<br />

“C”, and “HQ.” Various military<br />

uniforms were worn at all time. There<br />

were uniforms for class, for rain or snow,<br />

for work or sports, and for “dress”<br />

occasions. Military haircuts were<br />

standards. All students and many<br />

Alumnus Remembers<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

By Bob Oberst ’59B<br />

Reprinted with permission from Eagle Newspapers, October 11, 1995<br />

Bob Oberst ‘59B in his <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> uniform at Clambake<br />

teachers had military rank. Academic<br />

classes covered many college prep<br />

subjects from Latin or German to<br />

Algebra or speed reading in addition to<br />

PT (i.e. Physical Training) as well as<br />

M.S.T. (Military Science and Tactics.)<br />

There was a demerit system used to help<br />

control student behavior. Repeated<br />

incidents of student caught smoking in a<br />

school building resulted in their<br />

expulsion.<br />

I only attended The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> for<br />

one year, 1958-1959, my junior year.<br />

Due to my father’s job transfers my<br />

family moved several times while I was<br />

“As a college prep military school, the campus was run like a military post.<br />

Most high school students lived at school in one of three dormitories with<br />

their “companies.” There was “A”, “B”, “C”, and “HQ.”<br />

in high school so I attended three very<br />

different schools over my four years of<br />

high school. While this experience had<br />

many disadvantages, it gave me some<br />

unique insights on comparing schools<br />

and pinpointing the role that The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> played in my life. I’m<br />

sure every <strong>Manlius</strong> cadet who marched<br />

past Comstock Hall has unique memories<br />

of his student days and so I cannot<br />

speak for them but rather I can only<br />

recall with strong yet imperfect memories<br />

what those days meant to me.<br />

My first days as a new <strong>Manlius</strong> student<br />

were a lot like joining the Army:<br />

haircuts, uniforms, no civilian clothes,<br />

rules and more rules, no social life, and<br />

plenty of marching drills. Veteran<br />

students knew the rules and had some<br />

kind of rank. I was a “private” and<br />

everyone with “rank” was above me. I<br />

was assigned to “B” company. I soon<br />

learned the “B” company marching<br />

songs, played on the “B” company<br />

intramural sports teams and was proud<br />

to be a part of “B” company.<br />

Once classes started our week days fell<br />

into a regular routine. Up and dressed at<br />

dawn, we stood in formation with our<br />

company outside for reveille. Then we<br />

returned to our rooms to make our beds,<br />

etc. when we returned to our formation<br />

the entire student body watched the flag<br />

go up the pole and then we marched to<br />

the mess hall for breakfast. We sat with<br />

fellow members of our company with<br />

the highest ranking cadet at the head of<br />

each table. Each private had to take turns<br />

being bus boy for the day which meant<br />

he waited on two tables. Meal time was<br />

not always serious. One morning we<br />

marched into the mess hall to find a<br />

teacher’s compact car in the middle of<br />

the dining area with our dining tables all<br />

around it. Then there was the day when<br />

the head of our table was dishing out<br />

spaghetti and he found a dead mouse in<br />

it, so our table fasted for that meal.<br />

Our classes were small and demanding.<br />

Our tests were always harder then the<br />

Regent’s exams. One very strong<br />

memory of my first day of school was<br />

English 11 class. The classroom was full<br />

of students. The highest ranking cadet<br />

called the class to attention when our<br />

teacher, Captain Marsh, came into the<br />

room. Captain Marsh said, “At ease.”<br />

Then he said, “Before this academic year<br />

is over, half of you will fail this class.”<br />

Some students laughed, but by the end<br />

of the year we saw that he was correct.<br />

Most of my classes were not as intense,<br />

but a good deal of learning went on in<br />

them. I especially enjoyed Mr. Bisgrove’s<br />

speed reading class. It has served me<br />

well since that time. After classes were<br />

over for the day we had many activities<br />

such as intramural sports, clubs, and<br />

various tasks. I really enjoyed rifle club,<br />

planting trees in the forestry club with<br />

Mr. Shaw, and helping a friend in the<br />

school’s greenhouse. We had a snack bar<br />

called the Phoenix Tavern where we<br />

could entertain guests on weekends and<br />

enjoy free time. There were social events<br />

and dances but these were not<br />

expensive. Across the road from our<br />

campus was an amusement park called<br />

Suburban Park. One day a year our<br />

whole school was invited to go to the<br />

park exclusively. The rest of the year, the<br />

park was off limits. I enjoyed walks up<br />

to Lipe’s Dairy for an ice cream as often<br />

as I was permitted to go.<br />

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MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


Classes in Military Science and Tactics<br />

were an important part of our<br />

education at The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>.<br />

More than book learning, we had to<br />

learn to disassemble an M-1 rifle and<br />

then reassemble it in the dark. We<br />

had many field exercises such as the<br />

day our squad advanced in two<br />

groups across a smoke filled football<br />

field to an “enemy” target. We had M-<br />

1’s with blanks and the “Enemy” had<br />

machine guns with blanks. Not a<br />

game, we were graded on our battle.<br />

Many of our Saturdays were spent<br />

marching. Marching to meals, marching<br />

to church, marching to improve<br />

our marching. Marching so that “B”<br />

company could be the honor company<br />

in the year-end competition.<br />

Other Saturdays were spent in white<br />

glove inspections of our rooms, our<br />

uniforms, and our M-1’s. We spent<br />

plenty of time spit-polishing our<br />

boots and shoes so they looked like<br />

glass and making the blankets on our<br />

beds so tight a quarter would bounce<br />

on them.<br />

At the end of some very long days<br />

there was lights out time, but I still<br />

had school work to do so I used to<br />

study under my blanket with a<br />

flashlight.<br />

It was with great pride at the end of<br />

my year at <strong>Manlius</strong> that our entire<br />

school in our best “A” uniforms<br />

marched behind our color guard and<br />

our own HQ band in the May 1959<br />

Syracuse Memorial Day Parade.<br />

Looking back at my year at The<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> helped me to build<br />

self-confidence and showed me the<br />

value of academic as well as physical<br />

hard work. High academic demands<br />

pushed me even past some failures to<br />

work at greater intensity. Physical<br />

training where all students were<br />

mandated to participate in intramural<br />

teams and military training also built<br />

my self-confidence and physical<br />

abilities. My year at <strong>Manlius</strong> gave me<br />

a better understanding of my father<br />

and his years of military service. It<br />

also gave me some of the tools I<br />

greatly needed to graduate from<br />

college and complete my military<br />

service. I can even credit <strong>Manlius</strong> for<br />

my appreciation for marching bands,<br />

neatness, and Central New York.<br />

I still have my original nametag. In one<br />

year it will be old enough to sign up for<br />

AARP! One year I had Sgt. Becker make<br />

one up for me that read ELLIS D (LSD,<br />

get it Sorry.) I have one that I used<br />

white grease pencil to fill up the engraving,<br />

so as to leave a smooth surface.<br />

What a rebel I was.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

The Ties That Bind<br />

Was there ever a more practical,<br />

wonderful time-saving device than the<br />

Reveille Tie. That’s a clip-on tie to the<br />

rest of the world. Completely nonregulation<br />

of course, but, carefully used,<br />

it would allow you an extra thirty<br />

seconds of sleep. But this convenience<br />

must be balanced with the chance that a<br />

suspicious non-com or officer would<br />

come up to you in formation, insert his<br />

first finger behind your tie and flick it<br />

out to see if you were in violation of the<br />

dress code. Convenience versus peril,<br />

the oldest ethical decision.<br />

The time is April 1967. I am walking<br />

towards Farmer Hall when I encounter a<br />

young cadet who is holding in his hand<br />

a mangled, threadbare worn-out piece of<br />

black material that could only with the<br />

greatest of charity be called a tie. When I<br />

suggested that he go back to his room<br />

and get another tie, he said he couldn’t.<br />

“Why” I asked.<br />

“Because I don’t know how to tie a tie,<br />

sir.” he replied.<br />

It turns out that someone had tied his tie<br />

for him back in September and for eight<br />

months he had been sliding the knot up<br />

and down until this day he had slid it<br />

too far and it fell apart into the sorry rat’s<br />

nest he held in his hand. How could I<br />

write up a helpless case like that I told<br />

him to find someone to tie another tie<br />

for him and sent him on his way. He<br />

should have had a Reveille Tie.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

We were at drill. It was hot. We were in<br />

“D” uniform. For the uninitiated, that’s<br />

no jacket, with your tie ducked.<br />

Observing us was the Assistant PMS,<br />

Captain Rodolfo Haussler. He did not<br />

like what he saw. He told our Company<br />

Commander to form us up.<br />

“Gentlemen”, he announced, “You look<br />

pees poor. Your shirts are all pulled out and<br />

wrinkled. Look at mine! I will show<br />

you how to do this” He then ordered us to<br />

drop our pants.<br />

The Company Commander turned to<br />

face the company and ordered,<br />

“Company...Drop Trou!”<br />

Capt. Haussler then showed us how to<br />

tuck in our shirts. Ninety or so guys<br />

standing on Thomson Field, shirttails<br />

flapping in the breeze. Then I looked up<br />

towards the Battalion Area. Several<br />

secretaries were walking to their cars to<br />

go home. They stopped as if they had<br />

hit a wall. They stared in amazement.<br />

Never was I more grateful that I wasn’t<br />

in the first squad.<br />

John Ellis ’67HQ<br />

There is this memory of morning<br />

formation in the winter, an aesthetic<br />

one. We cadets gathered outside for<br />

formation in the DARK. It was bitterly<br />

cold, of course, but it was DARK. If<br />

there was any wind, morning formation<br />

became a ritual of pain. And the mackinaws<br />

and knit caps were not uniformly<br />

becoming. Oh, some of us were dashing<br />

in these outfits. Many of us looked<br />

patently ridiculous. Then there were the<br />

faces. There were circles under our eyes.<br />

But our eyes had this stare, the stare of<br />

grim determination. The grim<br />

determination to reach the mess hall, to<br />

get inside. We reached the mess hall. We<br />

ate breakfast. Then we left the mess hall.<br />

And there was LIGHT.<br />

Bob Pratt ‘67HQ<br />

In 1991, the<br />

WWI Canon<br />

was moved to<br />

the current<br />

campus<br />

Military Memories<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010<br />

91


The 1966 Platoon Competition<br />

by Chris Ellis ‘68HQ<br />

Military Memories<br />

The parade ground and Corbisello Field,<br />

named after Joseph J. Corbisello ’41B<br />

After 42 years, it might sound like<br />

a challenge for me to pick out a<br />

specific memory for the “Military”<br />

section of this collection of reminiscences.<br />

After all, there were so<br />

many formations, drills, parades,<br />

inspections, etc. to choose from,<br />

could there be any that stand out<br />

even through the fog of decades<br />

Surprisingly, yes.<br />

One vivid memory is that of the<br />

events surrounding the 1966 Platoon<br />

Competition. Platoon Competition,<br />

unlike the year-ending Company<br />

Competition, featured no showing<br />

off. There was no exhibition drill<br />

derived from the imaginations of the<br />

cadet officers. Platoon “Comp” was<br />

simply an inspection, close order<br />

drill and the manual of arms.<br />

In 1966, I was in the 2nd Platoon of<br />

“A” Company, commanded by Pete<br />

Vandersloot. I was a day student<br />

sophomore with less than stellar skills<br />

on the drill field. The trouble was<br />

that I was not alone. It could be said<br />

that the 2nd Platoon was a pretty<br />

ragtag bunch. It could be said that left<br />

feet outnumbered right feet by<br />

perhaps two to one. But don’t take<br />

my word for it. We were at the point<br />

where SMAJ Dann, the Military<br />

Department adviser to “A” Company,<br />

threatened to have us<br />

withdraw from<br />

competition rather<br />

than embarrass<br />

ourselves. We were at<br />

the point where we<br />

had “ringers” join the<br />

platoon to help us<br />

out. (The ringers were<br />

Company and<br />

Battalion staff<br />

members who<br />

removed their insignia<br />

of rank and masqueraded as<br />

members of the platoon.)<br />

Even with the extra help, we had a<br />

long way to go to keep in step, keep<br />

in formation and perform the<br />

manual of arms in unison. For<br />

example, the transition from<br />

“inspection arms” to “port arms” is<br />

fairly simple. On the first count, the<br />

bolt is released and springs home,<br />

producing a loud “click.” On the<br />

second count, the trigger is pulled,<br />

producing a slightly softer “click.”<br />

Done. That’s all there is to it. Yet,<br />

our rendition of that command<br />

produced the philosophical theory<br />

that states that if you give an infinite<br />

number of monkeys an infinite<br />

number of typewriters, sooner or<br />

later they will generate a cacophony<br />

similar to that of our platoon<br />

performing the manual of arms.<br />

Things were beginning to improve as<br />

competition drew near, and tensions<br />

began to ease just a bit. The day<br />

before “Comp,” as we practiced the<br />

inspection portion of the<br />

proceedings, SMAJ Dann approached<br />

“A” Co. Executive Officer Geoff Boyd,<br />

who was one of our “ringers,” and<br />

asked:<br />

“Son, who is your company<br />

executive officer”<br />

In a heartbeat came the reply:<br />

“Sir, my company executive officer is<br />

Cadet Lieutenant John S. Boyd.”<br />

[There actually WAS a Cadet<br />

Lieutenant John S. Boyd. The only<br />

problem was that not only had he<br />

never been a member of “A”<br />

Company, he had also graduated the<br />

year before. This is the only time I<br />

ever remember Geoff Boyd telling a<br />

joke.]<br />

We managed to get through the<br />

majority of “Comp” looking like a<br />

military unit is supposed to look.<br />

However, we still had the hurdle of<br />

the manual of arms to get through.<br />

At long last came the dreaded<br />

sequence of commands:<br />

“Inspection…ARMS!”<br />

Forty rifles are raised chest high.<br />

Forty bolts are drawn back.<br />

Forty heads check forty chambers.<br />

“Port……”<br />

Forty cases of flop sweat develop<br />

instantly.<br />

“ARMS!’<br />

CLICK…..Click…..(silence).<br />

That was it! Forty rifles sounding as<br />

one! No “rat-a-tat-a-tat,” just one<br />

loud click followed by just one softer<br />

click.<br />

At that point we knew we had the<br />

competition won. This was confirmed<br />

shortly thereafter and the<br />

question, “Do you still want us to<br />

withdraw, Sarge” rang in the ears of<br />

SMAJ Dann for the next several days.<br />

92<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


a h i s t o r y o f<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame <strong>School</strong><br />

(With thanks to the Onondaga Historical Association)<br />

Since the early 2000s, alumnae of the<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame <strong>School</strong> have been<br />

included as members of <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong>’s Alumni Association. Although<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame never officially<br />

merged with <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, its 1952 closure is<br />

often credited as <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>’s motivation<br />

for becoming a coeducational institution.<br />

The “Goodyear Girls” (and a few boys)<br />

have been seamlessly integrated into the<br />

MPH community and, each year, MPH<br />

hosts several Goodyear-Burlingame gatherings,<br />

wonderful occasions for getting to<br />

learn more of the Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

story. This commemorative edition of<br />

<strong>Reflections</strong> would not be complete without<br />

including a recap of Goodyear-Burlingame’s<br />

history.<br />

Humble Beginnings<br />

The following advertisement appeared<br />

in the Syracuse Journal on June 14,<br />

1888.<br />

THE MISSES GOODYEAR’S<br />

<strong>School</strong> for Boys and Girls<br />

Will open September 17th, 1888, at 99<br />

James St.,<br />

the late residence of Bishop<br />

Huntington.<br />

Special classes in English branches,<br />

French<br />

and German. For circulars apply to<br />

Miss Fannie Goodyear<br />

157 James St., Syracuse.<br />

The Misses Goodyear, Fanny and<br />

Harriet, were taken to Europe as small<br />

children to enrich their education. They<br />

were nieces of Charles Goodyear, who<br />

developed a method to vulcanize<br />

rubber. Financial reverses changed the<br />

lifestyle of the young ladies, and they<br />

were faced with the problem of earning<br />

a living. With their educational background,<br />

teaching seemed a reasonable<br />

venture. Thus the <strong>School</strong> was started.<br />

It all began in a charming house at 99<br />

James Street. It was a solid square house<br />

with a small front porch. The windows<br />

had pointed arches, and there were elm<br />

trees in the yard. The Right Reverend<br />

Frederick Dan Huntington, Bishop of<br />

the Episcopal Diocese of Central New<br />

York lived in the house for nearly 20<br />

years. The house then reverted to Judge<br />

Comstock, who leased it to Miss Fanny.<br />

In later years the numbering was<br />

changed to 509 and finally, by 1914, it<br />

was changed once and for all to 625<br />

James Street.<br />

There were several fireplaces in the<br />

building, and Miss Fanny had a rule<br />

that fires should be kindled in them<br />

when the temperature outdoors<br />

dropped to 18 degrees above zero.<br />

In 1890, Walter Burlingame, son of the<br />

Ambassador to China, joined the ladies<br />

as Co-Principal and the school became<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Burlingame’s brother-in-law, Frederick<br />

R. Hazard, President of Solvay Process<br />

Company, furnished the money for the<br />

three officers of the school to purchase<br />

the building. Hazard’s interest in the<br />

school led many Solvay Process executives<br />

to send their sons and daughters to<br />

the genteel care of the Goodyear-<br />

Burlingame faculty.<br />

An 1891 advertisement in the Syracuse<br />

Standard announced that Goodyear-<br />

Burlingame scholars were fit for Regents<br />

examinations and also for college.<br />

Graduation exercises were held on June<br />

14, 1899 at the <strong>School</strong> on James Street.<br />

Judy Oplinger and Ruth Hancock view the<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame memorabilia in the Alumni<br />

Lodge.<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame alumnae at a recent reunion.<br />

There were about 150 persons present.<br />

The address of the evening was given by<br />

Judge A. Judd Northrup, father of Miss<br />

Edith Northrup. He urged the young<br />

ladies to be conscientious at all times.<br />

Diplomas were presented by Rev. Dr.<br />

Samuel R. Calthrop, who reminded the<br />

graduates that their education had just<br />

begun. He urged them to be all-round<br />

women who could harness a horse,<br />

pump up a bicycle tire, and cook a<br />

steak, as well as understand the world.<br />

That was a large order. The house was<br />

prettily decorated with cut flowers and<br />

palms, and there was a reception<br />

following the program.<br />

Educational Innovations<br />

A 1911 brochure heralding the 23rd year<br />

of the <strong>School</strong> announced that the<br />

<strong>School</strong> aimed not only to give the<br />

pupils routine knowledge, but to<br />

awaken and broaden their minds by<br />

systematic guidance along the lines that<br />

lead to true culture. Interest was added<br />

to the study of geography by the weekly<br />

use of a picture lantern. French plays<br />

were given by Seniors as a test of their<br />

proficiency in the spoken tongue. It was<br />

felt that the body should go hand-inhand<br />

with mental training, and a<br />

thorough course of physical exercises<br />

was given in a gymnasium by a special<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 93


instructor. The <strong>School</strong> provided a sunny<br />

laboratory where the pupils could work<br />

among specimens of plant and animal<br />

life. Sciences were taught by modern<br />

laboratory methods for which complete<br />

apparatus was provided.<br />

The brochure for the 1914 school year<br />

noted that the <strong>School</strong> was now at 625<br />

James Street. It also contained the<br />

information that the <strong>School</strong> had the use<br />

of a large playground, and that a study<br />

hall was provided from 2 to 3:30 p.m.<br />

The fees per annum ranged from $150<br />

for the Academic Grades (Senior High<br />

<strong>School</strong>) to $80 for first year Primary.<br />

Instructors included Miss Fanny<br />

Goodyear as principal, Miss Harriet<br />

Goodyear and Mr. Walter Burlingame as<br />

associate principals, also Miss Edith<br />

Northrup, Miss Annie Dyer Tuttle, and<br />

Mrs. Ethel B. Ames. Monsieur Charles<br />

Berand taught French, Mrs. Blanche<br />

Weaver Baxter taught articulation and<br />

diction, and Mrs. Charles H.<br />

McCormick was the Gymnastics<br />

Instructor.<br />

Changes in Leadership<br />

Walter Burlingame retired at the end of<br />

the 1915 school year. One of the<br />

diplomas he signed was that of a<br />

Ramona Baxter Bowden. She<br />

remembered that Burlingame had a<br />

style of teaching essentially his own. “In<br />

English, history and German classes,<br />

educators would have been shocked at<br />

his casual pedagogy. He was a raconteur<br />

rather than a high school teacher. The<br />

stories of his life in China following the<br />

Boxer Rebellion and his travels with<br />

Mark Twain were fascinating and kept<br />

his students wide-eyed with wonder.”<br />

Burlingame died the year after his<br />

retirement at the age of 65.<br />

In 1925, Miss Edith Northrup, Miss<br />

Marion Edwards, and Mrs. Ethel Ames<br />

took over the running of the <strong>School</strong><br />

until 1946.<br />

Miss Harriet Goodyear ended her teaching<br />

career at the end of the 1926 school<br />

year. The following August, she died at<br />

her summer home in Cazenovia. Miss<br />

Goodyear was a leader in women’s<br />

organizations, art, music, and literature.<br />

She organized the Alliance Francais, and<br />

was president of the Political Equality<br />

Club and a leader in the suffrage<br />

movement.<br />

Former Governor Nathan Miller<br />

returned to Syracuse, his one-time<br />

home, to address Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

<strong>School</strong>’s 1938 graduating class. Among<br />

the graduates was Miller’s<br />

granddaughter, Mary Elizabeth<br />

McCarthy. The exercises were held in the<br />

Grand Ballroom of the Hotel Syracuse.<br />

In 1943, Miss Fanny Goodyear, the<br />

founder of Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

<strong>School</strong>, died at her home – 101<br />

Burlingame Road. Long after her<br />

retirement, she had served on the<br />

teaching staff and as president of the<br />

Board of Directors. She was a member<br />

of May Memorial Church and one of<br />

the first Syracusans, along with her sister<br />

Harriet, to campaign for women’s<br />

suffrage.<br />

Syracuse was chosen by Fortune<br />

Magazine as a test city for post-war<br />

planning, and in 1944, a Syracuse<br />

Onondaga Post War Council was set up<br />

to discuss and solve post-war problems.<br />

Miss Edwards represented the school on<br />

the council. Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

<strong>School</strong> participated in this plan by<br />

having three open discussions on postwar<br />

education, labor, industry,<br />

delinquency, and world peace. For their<br />

term papers, the Juniors and Seniors<br />

wrote about some phase of post-war<br />

planning.<br />

Goodyear Graduations<br />

Dr. Finla G. Crawford, vice chancellor of<br />

Syracuse University, addressed the 1946<br />

graduating class on June 22 in the Hotel<br />

Onondaga Ballroom. His topic was,<br />

“Your Atomic Bomb.” Miss Mary Baxter<br />

delivered the valedictory address.<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame <strong>School</strong> was then<br />

sold to three new owners – all recently<br />

discharged from military service as<br />

commissioned officers with lengthy<br />

teaching experience. The new owners<br />

were Frank T. Bertsche, Robert E. Fuerst<br />

and Gordon D. Smith. Miss Edwards<br />

remained with the <strong>School</strong>, and Miss<br />

Northrup served in an advisory capacity.<br />

Cloud Wampler, president of Carrier<br />

Corporation, gave the 1947<br />

commencement address, “Adventure in<br />

Living.” He urged the young ladies to<br />

arrange their lives so that they would get<br />

fun out of living. This was the last class<br />

to be graduated from the old building.<br />

The 16 members of the class included<br />

Mr. Wampler’s daughter, Miss Eleanor<br />

Wampler, and the ceremonies were<br />

conducted in the East Room of the<br />

Hotel Syracuse, with Headmaster<br />

Gordon Smith handing out the<br />

diplomas.<br />

The new owners of the <strong>School</strong>, working<br />

with a committee of parents, selected<br />

1055 James Street as the new home for<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame <strong>School</strong>. There<br />

was a simple but impressive dedication<br />

ceremony at which Mrs. Ames spoke of<br />

the simple traditions set by the<br />

founders. The old Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

<strong>School</strong> building was sold to Clark,<br />

Clark, Millis and Gilson, an<br />

architectural firm.<br />

In 1952, The Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

<strong>School</strong> was closed. The building at 1055<br />

James Street was sold. Arrangements<br />

were made by an interim board of<br />

trustees to dispose of the other assets of<br />

the <strong>School</strong>.<br />

Gone but not Forgotten<br />

In March of 1962, Mrs. John S.<br />

Hancock, of 211 Brattle Road, and Mrs.<br />

Stewart F. Hancock, of 12 Brattle Road,<br />

opened their homes for a reunion of<br />

graduates of the Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

<strong>School</strong>. About 50 young ladies were<br />

invited to each home. Because<br />

Goodyear no longer existed, there was<br />

a feeling that some of the school<br />

traditions should be carried on at<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>, where there were<br />

former Goodyear teachers and students<br />

on the faculty and where between 30<br />

and 40 children of Goodyear alumnae<br />

were enrolled.<br />

Albert Getman, assistant headmaster at<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, spoke at both gatherings.<br />

Among those attending were Mrs.<br />

Edward L. Bisdee, who taught at <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong> and used to teach at Goodyear, Mrs.<br />

John B. Crosby, a former Goodyear<br />

94 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


student then on the <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong><br />

faculty, Mrs. Charles Bennet, who<br />

taught at both <strong>School</strong>s, Robert<br />

Tucker, then on the faculty of<br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> and whose mother had<br />

taught at Goodyear. Also present<br />

were Miss Marion Edwards, Mrs.<br />

Gerard M. Edell, Mrs. A. McKinley<br />

Terhune, Miss Marie Achilli, and<br />

Miss Frances Gere, all former<br />

faculty members at Goodyear. Miss<br />

Edwards, who had become a coowner<br />

of Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

<strong>School</strong> in 1925, died soon after the<br />

reunion.<br />

The offices of the architectural firm<br />

of Clark, Clark, Millis and Glison<br />

at 625 James Street, former home<br />

of the Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

<strong>School</strong>, were destroyed by fire in<br />

1979. The building was a complete<br />

loss.<br />

A 1992 reunion, spearheaded by<br />

Mrs. Louis Steigerwald Jr. and held<br />

at the Onondaga Golf Club, was<br />

attended by 68 former Goodyear-<br />

Burlingame students.<br />

The Goodyear Spirit lives<br />

on.<br />

In 2002, Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

alumni were “adopted” by <strong>Manlius</strong><br />

<strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> in DeWitt at the<br />

urging of a few passionate<br />

Goodyear-Burlingame alumnae<br />

and with the support of MPH<br />

Alumni Board President Russ<br />

Andrews ’64. On May 18, 2002,<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> hosted<br />

the first Goodyear gathering on its<br />

campus, bringing the two<br />

educational institutions together<br />

and cementing their relationship.<br />

An archival area in the Kreitzberg<br />

Family Alumni Lodge is dedicated<br />

to Goodyear-Burlingame<br />

memorabilia. Goodyear-<br />

Burlingame <strong>School</strong> has a home<br />

again!<br />

Author<br />

Bruce<br />

Coville<br />

to Speak at MPH Commencement<br />

Bruce Coville, award-winning author of nearly 70 children’s<br />

and young adult books, will deliver the commencement<br />

speech at <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>’s 2010 graduation exercises<br />

Sunday, June 6.<br />

Coville will address the 75 graduating students in <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong><br />

<strong>Hill</strong>’s class of 2010. The writer has a long affiliation with MPH –<br />

two of his children, Cara and Adam, graduated from MPH in the<br />

late 1990s, and the <strong>School</strong>’s performing arts theater bears the<br />

Coville name.<br />

Populated by aliens, ghosts, unicorns, dragons, and zombies,<br />

Coville’s books are beloved by children and teens who delight in<br />

Coville’s world of fantasy, adventure, and science fiction. The<br />

prolific author has written numerous book series, anthologies,<br />

short stories, three musicals, a nonfiction book, and retellings of a<br />

half-dozen or more Shakespeare plays.<br />

A lifelong Central New Yorker, Coville is also founder and owner<br />

of Full Cast Audio, an audio publishing company in Syracuse that<br />

produces unabridged recordings of exemplary family-friendly<br />

children’s novels. The recordings employ a full cast of actors rather<br />

than a single reader.<br />

“The Last Hunt,” the fourth and final book in The Unicorn<br />

Chronicles, one of Coville’s hugely popular series for juvenile<br />

readers, is due to be published June 1.<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 95


Alumni Scrapbook<br />

Alumni Holiday Gathering<br />

The 2009 MPH Alumni Holiday Gathering brought together 60 former<br />

students and faculty members who gathered at The Mission Restaurant<br />

on Sunday, December 27.<br />

Maggie Philips ‘04 and Wendy Eklund ‘04<br />

Thank You<br />

to our recent reunion hosts<br />

We would like to thank a few very special volunteers who<br />

have gone to great effort for the <strong>School</strong> recently. Thank you<br />

to our gracious Florida Reunion host and hostess, Cathy and<br />

Bill Goff ’59B; St. Lawrence University Reunion host<br />

Hugh Biele ’60HQ; Sally and Bob Theis ‘67B, and<br />

Allison and Josh Wells ’89, who hosted the Alumni<br />

Association Board Dinner.<br />

Because of your efforts, more alumni have reconnected with<br />

their classmates and new memories have been created.<br />

Thank you!<br />

Monica Fruscello ’03 with Linda and Michael Salter<br />

New York Regional Reunion<br />

Twenty-two alumni living in the New York City area and<br />

their guests enjoyed an evening at Manhattan’s Slate<br />

Restaurant Bar and Billiards in late January. Over appetizers,<br />

drinks, and pool, they caught up with each other and<br />

shared stories of their years at school.<br />

Steve Herron’03, Nora Muakkassa ’03, Jesse Kraker ’03, Josh<br />

Kristoff ’03 and Carla Torrillo ’03.<br />

96 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010<br />

Jeremy Kraker ‘03, Lindsay Manolakos ‘99<br />

and Adam Saltman ‘02


Bill Goff ‘59B and<br />

Ed Ehrenspeck ‘49HQ<br />

Florida reunion attendees enjoying the afternoon<br />

Florida Regional Reunion<br />

Our host, Bill Goff ‘59B<br />

The Southern <strong>Manlius</strong> Barbecue was hosted by Cathy and Bill Goff ‘59B<br />

in Scottsmoor, Fla. Continuing a long family tradition of hosting<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> barbecues our gracious hosts entertained us at their home.<br />

Twenty alumni and guests attended and enjoyed reminiscing about the<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> and their classmates. A lovely collection of interesting<br />

memorabilia and photos were brought along to enjoy. The afternoon<br />

was livened by tornado warnings throughout the area, I am glad to say<br />

everyone made it safely home. We were honored to have as our guest<br />

Fred Benedict ‘58A, an MPH Board of Trustee, who traveled to be with<br />

us for this event.<br />

John Stilwell ‘58B, John Connelly ‘67C<br />

and Fred Benedict ‘58A<br />

John Stilwell ‘58B, Bobbie Badger, John Connelly ‘67C,<br />

Dick Bundy ‘60B, Elwood Obrig ‘59C, Gerald Hofschneider ‘62C,<br />

Bruce Badge ‘53A, Ed Ehrenspeck ‘49HQ, Cathy Goff,<br />

Hubert “Peppy” Callahan ‘58HQ and Fred Benedict ‘58A<br />

New York Regional Reunion<br />

Brett Messenger ‘07 and<br />

Sam Temes ‘03<br />

Erin Vella ‘03 and Carrie<br />

Manolakos ‘02<br />

Ashok Nayar ‘05, Emily Temple ‘04, and<br />

Shelly Pal ‘04<br />

MPH REFLECTIONS 2010 97


The Final Word<br />

by Baxter F. Ball, head of school<br />

Today’s educational landscape<br />

features everything from distance<br />

learning and home schooling to<br />

enormous public school classes and<br />

stultifying test preparation. I cannot<br />

help but be saddened by the fact that so<br />

many in this generation of students do<br />

not benefit from the vital and powerful<br />

personal connection that should exist<br />

between student and teacher.<br />

That incredibly dynamic interaction<br />

between mentor and pupil is what so<br />

often has inspired and launched real<br />

learning. Among my own generation, it<br />

was the encouragement, direction, and<br />

prodding of a good teacher that led us<br />

to accomplish what we have.<br />

I remember well the impact that a<br />

gentlemen and gentle scholar named<br />

Malcolm Willis had on me when I was a<br />

sophomore at The Gunnery. For some<br />

reason that I will probably never<br />

understand, he took me under his wing<br />

and told me that not only could I<br />

succeed, but I had something special to<br />

offer. Coming from a man who held a<br />

Ph.D. in Sanskrit from Yale, I found that<br />

a powerful statement of faith. From that<br />

moment on, I was determined not to let<br />

him down; I wanted to do well to please<br />

him and justify his faith in me.<br />

Malcolm Willis became a guiding light<br />

for me through a tumultuous adolescence.<br />

I will never forget his words of<br />

encouragement and the kindness that<br />

he extended.<br />

It is this kind of interaction that is<br />

particularly prized in independent<br />

schools and that rests at the heart of all<br />

that <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong> does.<br />

Having heard stories of the many<br />

powerful teachers who have taught at<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong>,<br />

and <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong>, I am<br />

convinced that the act of hiring is<br />

probably my most crucial and<br />

important responsibility. Teaching is<br />

more than delivering curriculum; it is<br />

about connecting with students,<br />

inspiring them, and being a role model.<br />

I am certain our current student body<br />

will look back upon our faculty in<br />

much the same way earlier students<br />

remember David Edwards, Whitey<br />

Anderson, Bernie Shaw and Mary Beeler.<br />

Indeed, I have already heard numerous<br />

tales from MPH students who claim<br />

that Peter Wozniak, Sue Foster, Jeff<br />

Mangram, and many others have<br />

changed their lives.<br />

A teacher’s ability to make a qualitative<br />

difference is the essence of real<br />

education. When a strong, trusting<br />

connection is made between student<br />

and teacher, what invariably develops is<br />

a passion for learning.<br />

Teachers who exude intellectual<br />

curiosity and real enthusiasm for<br />

creativity are, unfortunately, much too<br />

rare in many schools. At MPH, the<br />

ability to screen for the “life of the<br />

mind” is an essential feature of our<br />

hiring practices. It is no fluke, for<br />

instance, that all of our fine and<br />

performing arts teachers are<br />

professionally engaged in the disciplines<br />

they teach. Many members of our<br />

faculty, including Dave Rufo, Amy<br />

Terpening, Bill Preston and Chris<br />

Hempel, continue to publish in their<br />

various fields of endeavor. More than a<br />

half dozen of our teachers, motivated by<br />

the sheer desire to learn, are pursuing<br />

doctoral degrees not required as part of<br />

their faculty appointments. Teaching at<br />

MPH involves a commitment to the life<br />

of the mind, which cannot help but<br />

stimulate student curiosity and the<br />

desire to learn more.<br />

The passion for learning that permeates<br />

our <strong>School</strong> is, I believe, what make us<br />

unique in the region. We are so often<br />

told by visiting students that the reason<br />

they want to come to MPH is because of<br />

the in-class dynamic. They see here<br />

classes that encourage dialogue and<br />

intellectual debate. They do not see<br />

monotonous memorization for statemandated<br />

tests, but instead witness an<br />

environment in which real thought<br />

flourishes.<br />

“Thinking” demands an active<br />

interaction with the material. It is what<br />

an engaged faculty requires of young<br />

people. I often wonder how poor my<br />

life would have been without the advice,<br />

counsel and intellectual engagement of<br />

Malcolm Willis. His desire was to see<br />

me grow personally and, to that end, he<br />

provided the tools and skills that have<br />

made my life richer.<br />

Our purpose at MPH and at our<br />

predecessor schools has been the same<br />

– to enable students to find the fire<br />

within. I delight in the fact that so very<br />

many of our past and current students<br />

can point to a teacher who, like<br />

Malcolm Willis, has taken the time to<br />

say, “follow your star,” and taken the<br />

interest to start them on that path.<br />

98 MPH REFLECTIONS 2010


MANLIUS PEBBLE HILL SCHOOL’S<br />

ATHLETIC HALL<br />

OF FAME<br />

INAUGURAL<br />

Induction & Dinner<br />

COMMITTEE:<br />

Honorable<br />

Eric Spevak, chair<br />

Class of 1977<br />

Jim Amodio ‘65<br />

Fred Benedict ’58A<br />

Al Cicci ’60C<br />

Doug Craig ’89<br />

Tom Denton ’65<br />

Don Fudge, former coach<br />

Had Fuller ’66A<br />

Stu Grossman ’56<br />

T.J. Gunerman ’05<br />

Claire Myers-Usiatynski ’72<br />

Marna (Suarez) Redding ‘96<br />

Nat Reidel ‘65<br />

Don Ridall, Athletic Director<br />

Phil Rothschild ’79<br />

Ted Shiro ’47A<br />

Dave Temes ’97<br />

Jack Wells ’60B<br />

Josh Wells ’89<br />

$40.00 patron ticket<br />

Includes VIP reception,<br />

priority seating at ceremony<br />

and dinner, and program<br />

recognition<br />

$25.00 ticket<br />

Event will benefit<br />

MPH Athletics<br />

Dress is business casual<br />

RSVP online at www.mph.net<br />

or by calling Maureen at<br />

315/446-2452, ext. 136<br />

<strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> is proud<br />

to announce its inaugural inductees:<br />

• Coach Tom Cahill<br />

In his 10 years at The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong> (1947-57),<br />

Tom amassed an astonishing overall football<br />

coaching record of 66-8-2. He became head coach<br />

at West Point in 1966 and was named Eddie<br />

Robinson National Collegiate Coach of the Year. By<br />

the time he left the U.S. Military Academy after its<br />

1973 season, he had led Army to five victories over<br />

Navy. Coach Cahill’s award will be accepted by his<br />

family.<br />

• The Fall 1963 <strong>Manlius</strong> Red Knights<br />

Football Team<br />

With its record of 6 wins and 1 loss (to West Point),<br />

this Red Knights team was rated by United Press<br />

International the #1 prep school football team in<br />

the nation.<br />

• Mary Rulison ’73<br />

Mary began her athletic career at <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> <strong>School</strong><br />

and continued to excel in sports at MPH. She was<br />

named the <strong>School</strong>’s best all-around athlete in<br />

1971. Mary also was a key member of the 1972<br />

field hockey team, MPH’s first undefeated sports<br />

team.<br />

• John Brockington ‘67C<br />

John played football for <strong>Manlius</strong>, Ohio State and<br />

the Green Bay Packers. He was the first NFL player<br />

to ever rush for 1,000 yards in each of his first<br />

three seasons and was 1971 NFL Rookie of the<br />

Year.<br />

• The Fall 2000 Boys Varsity Soccer Team<br />

Led by captains Brian Perry ‘02 and Dan Klemperer<br />

‘02, this was MPH’s first state championship soccer<br />

team. With an impressive 24-0 record, the team<br />

took home the Class D title.<br />

Saturday, June 12, 2010<br />

VIP Reception 6:00 p.m. • Ceremony & Dinner 7:00 p.m.<br />

The John Lenore Legend Award<br />

The Lenore Legend Award honors alumni and/or teams<br />

that have made a legendary impact on our sports<br />

programs. Named in honor of John Lenore ’47A, this<br />

award is the pinnacle of our Hall of Fame Ceremony.<br />

2010 RECIPIENTS<br />

• John Lenore ’47A – Growing up in a West<br />

Virginia coal-mining family, John Lenore developed<br />

a love and talent for football. Thumbing through a<br />

magazine one day, he saw an advertisement for<br />

The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>. He wrote a letter requesting<br />

the opportunity to try out for the football team and<br />

if deemed “good enough,” to be afforded tuition.<br />

Lenore was thrilled to be offered a scholarship in<br />

1945 to attend <strong>Manlius</strong> and play football. During<br />

his two years there, he started every game, playing<br />

both offense and defense for the undefeated Red<br />

Knights. Paying it forward, Lenore has worked hard<br />

to ensure promising young athletes have similar<br />

opportunities at his alma mater.<br />

• Fall 1944, 1945, 1946 <strong>Manlius</strong> “Big Red”<br />

Football Teams – The <strong>Manlius</strong> <strong>School</strong>’s football<br />

teams were undefeated in these three consecutive<br />

seasons, during which the Red Knights played 23<br />

scheduled games and scored 626 points, while<br />

their opponents only scored 73 points.<br />

Honored Guests & Presenters<br />

• Marty Byrnes, former Syracuse University and<br />

NBA player<br />

• Lino DiCuollo, Major League soccer player<br />

• Jeff Mangram, MPH faculty member, former<br />

Syracuse University football player<br />

• Dolph Schayes, Syracuse Nationals and NBA<br />

player and NBA Hall of Fame Inductee<br />

• Chuck Beele ‘54, <strong>Pebble</strong> <strong>Hill</strong> Alumnus and<br />

basketball coach<br />

Seating is limited. RSVP today! www.mph.net


5300 Jamesville Road<br />

DeWitt, New York 13214-2499<br />

Alumni Events<br />

2010/2011<br />

June 6 Commencement<br />

June 11-12 Clambake Weekend 2010<br />

June 12 Athletic Hall of Fame,<br />

Inaugural<br />

Induction & Dinner<br />

July 17 Boston Reunion –<br />

Red Sox Game<br />

December 30 Holiday Gathering<br />

2011<br />

October Washington Reunion<br />

January 24 Chicago Reunion<br />

February Florida Reunions<br />

April 7 Phoenix, AZ<br />

June 10 -11 Clambake Weekend 2011<br />

Please check the Alumni Events Calendar at<br />

www.mph.net for more information.<br />

If you are at college in one of these reunion areas<br />

and have your home address listed with MPH, please<br />

let us know your college address so you can receive<br />

an invitation to the regional reunion.

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