Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA)

 - Class of 1943

Page 1 of 108

 

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 108 of the 1943 volume:

OHJ0WNNY,H0WY0U can LovrU P6) t ALL THINGS YOU ARE TONlQHT,MY AMAPOLA,MY PRETTY LITTLE POP PY BLUFS IN THFNIQHT I KNOW WHY AMD SO 00 YOU REMEMBER, THEYC UL ITTHf JFR5EY BOUNCE OMEBODY EISF STAKING MY PLACE ilNQLF THE 1943 RECORD voatch the waves and quiet walls Of willows in the setting sun And know as night in silence falls My day is done. I see the scarlet fading where The shadows sink to stir the breeze And greet the dark which waits me there With memories. Two FOREWORD The Class o! 1943 stands ai the doors l life, unique in the history of Haver- ford College. It is a sadly depleted group. Ol the 87 original members, almost one-quarter now serve their nation all over the world. Because ol the acceleration and the war. the RECORD has frozen llie (lass as it stood last April 25. Some of the men who appear in these pages are now in Libya, China, or even India. Others are in Tennessee and New Hampshire. Perhaps more are with the A. E. F. in Britain and Iceland. Many members of ' 43 will never receive their diplomas. Some may never see their classmates again. The Class of ' 43 is disintegrated and disintegrating. We are a (lass united through memories alone. As far back as the fall ol 1911. the war began to pull us apart. This book is an attempt to keep fresh forever the two. the three, the lour college years the members of ' 43 knew together. And through such memories as it may bring back, we hope the RECORD will some day help serve to bring us together again as we were in September, 1939. Four -« Seniors M i s t o r y Athletics Activities features Six DEDICATION Directoi ol Admissions Archibald Macintosh is tin firsl Havcrfordian mam ill is nn im i He ' s the man who sal .mil lei us do thi talking ai thai initial interview. And he was oui patient guidi when wi selected oui freshmen courses ic Presideni Mai In tosh is one ol the mosi respected tni n on the Haverford campus, lie is the person who wrote to oui draft boards and goi us deferred. inl In is the understanding membei who won us .1 second chance when iln Delinqueni Students Committee assembled. Directoi ol Athletics Macintosh is the formei captain who siis on thi end ol the bench worrying the football team to victory. He is the fellow with the weak backhand who tries to beai Bramall ai his own game. ud he is the main reason E01 the return ol good athletii teams to Haverford. Acting Dean Macintosh is the man who shakes Uncle Bill V hand after Meeting on I hursday. He is the our person in Roberts who is nevei too bus loi .in appointment. And he ' s the man who pui up youi date for the funioi Prom. Mac is the fellow who walked into .1 I loyd loom and looked .11 the pictures ol nude women on 1 hr wall, remarking: How do you u. 1 1 n sleep in here. 111l he ' s the conversationalisi who puis his face right up 10 yours .mil makes you look ai the ground. Mac is iln m.in who h.is made it unnecessary to have a studeni on the Academii Council. Hi ' s the fellow who iiimi s|H.iks unless linn ' s something ta s.i . And he ' s the sour-faced gu) who ' s never lost his temper. To Archie Mac, then, we dedicate this, the 1943 RECORD Front Row: Levintow, Wilkie, Coffin, Ryrie, Lippincott, Wingerd. Second Row. Newell, Hunter. Anderson, M Brown, Sevringhaus, Ferris, MacCrate, Woodward. Third Row: Steins, Widney, ( -nil n i . Whitehead, Mason, Enck, Stevens. The 1943 Record Board Editor-in-chief Tristram P. Coffin Business Manager John B. Wilkie Photographic Editor George M. Ryrie Class Historian H. Mather Lippincott Sports Editor William Wingerd Art Editor Leon Levintow Club Activities vrel Mason Senioi Write-ups Christopher Cadbury William Woodward . Issislants Eugene E. Anderson Man in Brown l ' aul Cope fohn J. En k Sumner Fei i is 1 [olland Hunter Howard Kriebel Robert MacCrate Stet ling Newell (olin Sevringhaus Kenedon P. Steins fohn Stevens Haskell Torrence John C. Whitehead Carl Widney Eight - FACULTY Changes in the faculty generally | .iss unnoticed among the majority ol si IK III IK. III II i II II lln longCl I LIS .1 I i II I I si II I nil I .1 CI I I llll | II Ml ' ssi II . I I II ,ISSIIIII|i nun is 111. nil ih. ii ilns |nulrssi)i siill goes . 1 1 1 1 •_; teaching others al the s.hih place. I liis 1 1 mi In nni continues until someone says, ' Rcmembei . . . . whereupon hasty comparisons ari drawn Various professors have comi and goni in the 1 1. 1 si 1 1 i 1 1 years. Lestei and Walton departed in 1940. I afi and Sargeni replaced Reitzel and Hotson in the English department. I. Hi. however, ; I n i .i yeai thoughi Ins services would help the army: Vfelchioi ol the French departmeni arrived ai the same conclusion. I In death ol I K krlh cui short . 1 1 1 devoted to philosophy. Betz and Ulendoerfei transferred theii knowledge « l mathematics to othei spheres. I he teams ol 1942 l I will have to play th h games without the coaching ol Docherty. Dean Brown undoubted!) is discovei ing in liis satisfaction thai nun do not cui classes in the Navy. Deans Stoni and Gibb now know 1 1 i.i i in college nun si ill do. Green I us recendy been added in the astronomy departmeni and Pancoasi to ili economics. Meanwhile, against these changes, the majority ol the faculty has remained with assuring stability. Left to right: Dixon, Halter, Hale, Wrigley. rod Students Perhaps the changing of the Graduate house to a Government House discouraged (hem. Whatever tin- cause, the shrinkage in the number of graduate students placed the enrolled number at seven. Of these, two did not appear. Of the live, three work in chemistry, one in sociology, and one in English. William Hale commutes from Pendel Hill. Dr. John Mullowne) holds a room in East Founders. Jonathan Dixon, Robert Halter, and Arthur Wrigley devote most of their time to the chemistry lab. They are noi babes, but they seem lost in (he woods. Ten ■ ' Semester Class Officers Fri.mi.man Firm Half President MacCrate Vice President Dewald Secretary Hogness Treasurer Coffin Executive Council Coolidge Mason Tomlinson Sophomore Firm Half President Torrence Vice President Meader Secretary nderson Treasurer Collin Executive Council ddoms Evans Whitehead Junior First Ham President Evans Vice President Hogness Set retary MacCrate Treasurer Coffin Executive Council Cope Mason Whitehead Senior Summer Session President Whitehead Vice President Set retary MacCrate Treasurer Coffin Exei utive Council Newell Evans Lee Twelve m Freshman Second Half President MacCrate Vice President Torrence Secretary Hogness Treasurer Coffin Executive Council Coolidge Mason Widney Sophomore Second 1 1 ai i President Torrence Vice President Evans Secretary Whitehead Treasurer Coffin Executive Council Cope Marsh MacCrate [unior Second Half President Whitehead Vice President Cope Secretary MacCrate Treasurer Cofiin Executive Council Newell Evans Lee Senior Second Half President Evans Vice President Newell Secretary MacCrate Treasurer Cofiin ■ xecutive Council Lee Marsh Whitehead 1-ioni Row. WoodVard, Lee, Gilbert, Evans, Whitehead, Coffin, l  in. i Ik i Morse, Ryric Second Ron Marsh, Stiles. Mason, rorrence, Kirk, Ridgeway, M.Brown, Hall, Lyman Halletl Third Ron l n. l Cad bury, Sutterlin, Bell, Kibbee, Coolidgi Sevringhaus Hill, Williams, | Brown, Widne) Fourth Row Otto, Meader, Shinn, Peterkin, Hunter, Lutz, Wingerd, Lippincott, Ferris, Newell, romlinson, Vllcn, Levintow, Stevens. In the earh pari ol Decembei ' 43 mei to choose i i - permaneni c l.iss officers. Whitehead was elected to take n the duties ol president. Evans elected vice- president; MacCrate, secretary; Moon, treasurer; and Hunter, Newell and [ 01 rence to the executive committee. I ' l K l M 1 (I ss Ol I II 1 ks eft to right: Mad rate, Ne well, Moon, Evans, Whitehead, Hunter, rorrence. |MU. n ADDOMS 8( 1 Park Place, Brooklyn. . Y. Polytechnk Preparatory Schoo] Government (lass Executive Committee |2); tennis Tram (3); l ' reshman I ciinis ream; Basketball Squad (2,3); Jayvee Basketball Team ih; I liiul ream Soccei 1 1 1. Where ' s Jerr) . . . Chestnut Hill . . . took a while but hnalh got the tennis smooth enough lor the varsity . . . handsome link 1 man. could kill any gal . . . Chestnut 11 ill : )(). )() . . . Imessrs Studies, dors sports with finesse . . . inseparable with Johnny to the Straw, movies, or Mat ' s . . . Hey, Shinn! fOHN M. ALLEN 2681 Lee Road. Shaker Heights, Ohio Shaker Heights High School Engineering Glee Club (1.2.3,4); Cap and Bells (3,4); Engineering Club (1,2,3,4); Service Project (2,3,4); Freshman Mathematics Prize. Potential scholar . . . but it ' s much niter to sleep . . . Huh, can ' t heai out ol that ear . . . connoisseur of the happy tranquil lite . . . lazy dater . . . occasionally unfathomable, especially on the female angle . . . charter member of the Ancient Order of Who ' s Done Tomorrow ' s Math . . . good man in the clutch. EUGENE E. ANDERSON, [R. Sharon, Pa. Ki i School Latin Students ' Council (4); Class Secretary (2); News Board (1,2,3,4), News Editoi (3), Editoi (1); ' 43 Record Board; Phi Beta kappa; Corporation Scholarship (1, 2); Chairman ol Cap and Gowns Committee. E. E. . . . hard-boiled editor with the velvet glove . . . AH right. Halleck . . . ol course Latin is ital today . . . what he is speaks louder than what he says . . . And it ' s yo a short game . . . I ' ll answer that question by referring you to the News . . . Tiger . . . In ' 39, l ' l ' s scholastic number one . . . sa something. Anderson . . . Center aggressor . . . All right, so much for that. Fourteen |oll I ' .l VRDS1 n 1919 S] Street, Philadi Iphia, Pa lli s nglish Swimming I earn i 1 1. Crumpets and gin . . . outdistanced his own record Ini overdue arrivals . , , two .11111 .1 lull years late in getting in Haverford . . . vague ideas in clipped accents . , . effete stories and poems - . assumes minis hnil his mis-adventures as amusing as he does and correctly . an unending search Coi knowledge 1 i the contents ol courses . . . I ' m .1 Marine . . I ' m tough . . . swims like a lis] 1 when he h.is .1 mind to AR 1111 K II. BELL Millonon I liaison. New lolls Marlborough High Schooi Engineering Engin Club (1,2,3, li; Newspapei li;nii (3), Directoi i i i . . . il you want something fixed, Art ' H h it, even to tractors in Hems ' garages . . . Center ' s techni- ( i.m loi lom c.iis. with .1 happy interlude in Sixth . . . Serenely combined Diesel engines and piano concertos . . . ship fiend . . . papered walls with pictures ol inulss . . . only tolerated the Foolish loin . . . Extra! Extra! MURDOCK S. BOWM 17 Alvarado Road, Berkeley, California 1m i Si mini Chemist) ) Varsit} Club (3); Chemistr) Club (3); College Orchestra (1); Wrestling ream (1,2,3); Baseball ream (1,2). Dorky . nn s don ' l know what work is ' Wait ' U I gel my roommates . . . You . . rosy i heek d toughie . . . no one would believe oi Eorgei thai Doi w.is twenty one . . . Ask me anything aboui Chemis- try . . . Rhinie rabble-rouser. Result: the pond . . . II we all vote twice we can ' l lose . . . Center ' s Shirley I emple. [ARED s. BROWN Linden Avenue, Mercersburg, l ' a. Mi i ( i km ' .i t«. A i  i n i n Chemistry News Board (1, 2, 3, I Circulation Managci (4); Glee Club (1, 2, . ' !. 4), Accompanist (1, 2, 3, 1); Chemistr) ( lul (3, 1 1; I I.H k Sc]U.lcl i 1 1. Ihi birds, the bees, and the budding trees . . . the feline obstetrician . .. devotee oi Austrian tea in a si i . slv way ... as sugar is to llics so is Jerry i inebriates. ... a girl, a moon, a coupe, and a radio — so the) listened . . . yeoman service with the Glee Club . . . I get a kick out ol fishes . . . Dots she really? M R INI BROWN ITS Manheim Street, Philadelphia, Pa. (.i km am own Friends History Corporation Scholarship (1); German Club (1); I ' f Record Board; Football Squad (1, 2, 3); Track Squad (1, ' 1. 3). A bargain in teddy bears . . . complete with genuine Eur coat . . . gives the dodge to college on week-ends . . . the As an- in . . . gives his all lor Pop and Roy . . . jitter session jonsis with the Baron . . . sometimes bloody Inn nevei bowed . . . From the Halls ol Montezuma . . . to be earl) is not to be late. CHRIS rOPHER |. CADBUR ' i 7 Buckingham Place Cambridge, Mass. Wf.sttown Friends Philosophy Glee Chili ih; ' 43 Record Board; Soccei ream (2, :!, I); Jayvee Soccer (1). Named the Cad Eor brevity only . . . ' 43 ' s only persis- tent Phil major . . . sees clearly the mote in his own eye . . . Remembei thai time m paper was in before (he deadline ... a quiet, unassuming sense ol humor . . . re-models Eor Esquire . . . that businessman stride. . . . tolerance, the greatest virtue . . . too bus) with Bergson i bother with buttons ... I wouldn ' t touch it with Cadbury ' s. Sixteen I Kls I K Wl I CO I KIN Box 89, Edgi wood I M aki lii Id, l I Mom s Brow n ( lass l I, .1 .mi i I 2 I I); Ncwi Hoard i i diloi ;, Managing Editoi (4); Edilol R I tl Stacl Board I ilni.i I); Varsity ( lull (4); ap and B II Con tei i ,. n Dance Co illci Founder Cluh Prize I ii I ' oi irj Prize i2j Chcci U adi H( ad | I); I ennis I earn (3); Fn ihman 1 1 mi Clasa Poet. I. P., ii. ii Imsii.iiii Pollei Budding Byron and would-be Wordsworth . in matters ol love nevci sa) die . . . II ' (nihil, tennis instruction cheap . . . rubbers in ili showei . . mosi populai poel ai Bi Vlawi . IN l dai nedl Leo Duroi hei I iln [ootball league . . . peculiai sleeping habits . . . bewari ol his innuendo .mil snapp) comeback . . . a producl nl the Vankee Karin System . . . don ' l whine, Coffin, speak up. I) VII COOl IDGE 1127 Kensington Road, Grosse Pointe Park, Mich. Kountain Valley Schooi History Executive Committee (1); Corporation Scholarship (4); News Board (1, 2, 3, I), Business Manage) (4 ; Cap and Bells I, Executive Committee (S, I); Glee Club (1, 2, S, I); Stacl Board 1 1, 2, S, I); Badminton I i am (2 3 I) lady ' s man bui nevei the same one twice . . . Davo, a constam blush, reall) red . . . sure, sure . . . Ipana massage . . . ( .i i . diat ' s swell . . . i llri ii c i oi ticklei . ( .n.ii stuff, old boy . . . history wizard . . . .in apple foi the teachei . . . Gee, neat . . . hard work- n wiili i he News .uicl studies . . . Braxo . . . k.t . P Ml M. COPE, [R Hotel Morton, Vtlantii City, . |. Westtown Kriends Government ( l.iss Executive Committee (2); Class Vice-Presidenl • : Man agei Cooperative Store (3); Founders Club Record Board; International Relations Club 2 : ; Presidenl News Business Board (1, 2, 3); [unioi Prom Dance Committee; Cheerleadei (2), Head (3); Service Project (2); rhird ream Soi cei I rhere once was a man from the Morton . . . liberal Quake . has the true Center spirit, in all bui one respect . . . W ' h.u am I saying? . . . See you in tin- (; ()l i|i . . . h ; hundred feel from the Boardwalk. . . . Wake me up ai 10:30 . . . jokes, jive, and Jcx I lege . . raconteui . . . Let ' s iA in die midnighi show . . . and it ' s yo China. — — ■ Sf I !• ll- DEWALD lis Central Park West, New Yoik Cii 1 ' ii i ns io Chemistry Class Vice-Presidenl (1); News Board (1, 2); Glee Club (1, 2); football ream (2, . . Ii; Jayvee Football team il). llic oik ' Mr. Fishei can ' l forget . . . feff ' s hiding in sonic house in ;i remote corner oi the Main Line . . . or staining his fingers three new shades in the Chem. Lab . . . but we paid ten dollars lor that disk . . . remember those News stories? . . . Moseley ' ll never forget . . . gridiron grit and scrap-iron merchant ex- traordinan . THOMAS H. ECKFELDT, 3rd (il ' Bond Street, Fitchburg, Mass. Loomis Chemistry News Board (1, 2. :!. I); Service Project (2). lorn, from Fitchburg, where a tar is a tali ami your shirt gets haad staach . . . laundry man, ami one of the best ol the Coffee this morning? crew . . . pipe down. Sleepy Hollow, it ' s Midnight . . . the man ol main moods ol t In. inoffensive sort . . . the typical New Englander . . .one person who ' s really worked his way through college. JOHN J. ENCK 15 From Street, Lititz, Pa. I i i 1 1 School English Record Hoard 1 1): Slack Hoard i. ' t. I); Fencing Squad (2,3). John J. . . . aesthetic aesthete . . . Gertrude Lawrence, Hildegarde, I. S. Eliot ... a surrealistic human be- ing . . . who ' d ever guess he was Pennsylvania Dutch ... a ie ne sais quoi young man ... a dramatically critical existence . . . II yon can spare an hour. I ' ll explain my poem . . . modesty, his virtue . . . his favorite song is the foycey Bounce. Eighteen — I MORRIS EVANS Vwbury, Gei mantovi n, Pa Germantown Friends Economics Class I ' ii si, l ;, 1 1, si mil in ( il (1, 2, 8, I); lass Vice President (2); ( lass I xccutive ( ominittcc - 1 S, I i; Store oin iiiiiiit (3); Founders ( I ■ ■ I ■ (3 I); I i iangle sm ietj (S I) Cusl s Committee Hi; Varsit) Club (1, 2, 8 I) Secretary I reasurci (4); [ rack I earn 1 1 . ' . ' . 3, l ,. aptain (4); S ream (2,3, 1), Captain (4); Basketball ream (2); |ayve S 1 1 1; Jayvec Basketball (1); u alton up (3, I); Vat jit) up; Pel ma nei) I Vi e President. Mm . . . soccei ll American . . . Pop ' s | 1 1 f .mil |o . . . craft) Quake, nevei came oui second besl in .i bargain . . . thai voice . . . irresistible dimple, Inn hard to gel . . . these Vassar women are tenacious . . . would-be woll . . . .i treasury ul Gilberi and Sullivan, . . . oui one real athlete . . . look ai the list above. SUMNER W. FERRIS 68 (..ii held Street, Watertown, Mass. ( Ihoa i i s in ii History Varsit) Club (3, 1), President h; funioi Prom Dance Commit- tee; ' 43 Record S|n iis Board; Radio Club (4), Business Manage) ili: Soccei ream (3, I); Goll ream (3); Squash ream (2); [ayvee Soccer (1.2); fayvee rennis (2); Freshman rennis ream Hayseed . . . lnl ! ol the regimeni . . . ii k nine nun ;iik1 ;i razor to cultivate Ins chesl . . . Have :i cigar . . . life in .i Rash, love with .i splash and poison i . . . . Dietrich Eoi inspiration . . . | !nm One-note . . . gentleman sportsman, with the accent on sports . . . she didn ' t like hot ses. EDWARD A. GAENSLER 317 Linden Lane, Merion, Pa. Lower Merion High School Chemistry Phi Beta Kappa; Corporation Scholarship (2, 3); Cap and Bells (3); Chemistr) Club (1, ' J. 3), Secretary (3); Engineering Club (1, 2); Charit) Chesl Committee (2); Service Project (2, 3); News, Photographu Board (3); llnnl ream Soccer, The mass ul romance (Inn the) .ili got married) . . . comps and Phi Bete in three years . . . Don ' i you think sin ' s i ttte? . . . fourth for bridge . . . when faster i. ns are made. Gaensler will drive them . . . noted for a Hollywood ancestor and an especiall) invigora ting tea . . . please do not disturb . . . Oh damn. another petition . . . mastei financier, Mush on Mon- day, broke on I uesday, in it always a good i i k . . . Is ii true what they sa about Chinese women - I WIKS 15. GILBERT 6838 Woodland Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Springfield ITownship High Schooj Chemistry Store Committee (3, I) Chairman (4); Chairman, Charity Chest Committee (4); [unioi Prom Dance Committee; |ayvei Soccei (2, 3); Soccei ream (4); Wrestling Manage) (4); Chair- man I Spoon Committee. Gils ... I think I ' ll go to the Music Room for a while . . . efficient wrestling manager . . . Where ' s Watkins? . . . dari champ . . . soccer star . . . keeps a watchful eye mi Coop and Crumb . . . champions Charity Chest . . . wavering between chem ami phi] . . . wine anil song, bin no women. WILLIAM L. GRALA, )R. |()l North Church Street, Hazleton, Pa. Wyoming Seminars Government Varsit) Club (3, I); Communications Club (3); International Relations Club (2, 3); Intercollegiate Cricket Executive (inn mittee (3); Cricket Irani d. L ' . 3), Captain i:i); Jayvee Basket- ball ili; I hird 1 cam Soccei 1 1). Man ol great talk and resolutions aboul work and women . . . really got interested in cricket and pushed it alone, Morse along with it . . . talked a good M. 1). . . . caterpillar eyebrows, or some think so . . . a lot ol Scotch and an atmosphere in Willowburn . . . Hazle- ton senilis must be some stull from what we hear aboui it daily . . . tried to beat Tom Little ' s record on tuts . . . hot dog ol the campus . . . who ' s that little drunk with his hat pulled down over his eyes? . . . one o£ the horsemen. HARRY S. HALL I HI North Woodstock Street. Philadelphia. Pa. Centrai Hit. it School History Badminton Team it. -, 3. I). Captain C-. . ' !); College Badminton Champion (1, ' - ' . . ■ ; Jayvee Football (1, ' _ ' ). .Serious leader of Pop ' s volley-ball squad . . . librarian and scholar . . . changed from English to the ordered linn . . . originator ol the Haverford badminton team and captain . . . originator ol Haverford bad minion tournaments and champion . . . Mall, were you ever drunk? ... a sincere and loyal friend . . . will give you his right arm and not want it back . . . il silence is golden, Hall is plenty rich . . . he used to be a day student. Twenty K ® DOUGLAS R 1 1 l I I I l ; ■ I i mi i si Vvcnui Bi n Vvon Pa Vvonwor rH High Schooi I • onon i B p and Bcll« (•!) Glc Inl) I ' ■ ■ Vai iil lub (! I , miiis I .mi (2, 3); |ayvcc Basketball (I Fn hman I • n Ills I 1,1 III II, ill, ,k . . . You think he won ' t bi up tonight, you , .in think again ... n I w n .ill going to i .., play . so buxom, blithe, and debonaii .i n.ish mi the tennis i oui i . . . one ol thai smat i Pitts burgh sei ... ii I it ' s A Ambling . . . the Crisco Knl . . . ,i si) le .ill his ow n in .ill spoi is. !1 s II Will I I I W I kl i ikli S( HOOl I I in ing Squad (I, 2, S). Hi : Gentleman fim . . . eight-suits . . . brutally hank . . . ,i walking thesaurus . . . always an answei . bui nevet a righi one . . . night clerk at Haverford Couri . . . sell appointed assistant to Monsieui Gordon . . . Is ll.nnill still in this course? . . . What ' s Shostakovitch have that Beethoven doesn ' t? . . . Do you mean An- derson the novelist oi the playwright? II 1 I l M II RRIs 32 Portsmouth rerrace, Rochester, New York Harlei l ' 1 ' ( ,i|i and Hills ,-_ ' . 3, I). Third finger, left hand (from Savannah) . . . his othei interest is electricity . . . il you looked through his keyhole you ' d get a shock . . . a revolutionary stag switchboard . . . prizes at Princeton foi same . . . il nu think he ' s the clinging type, n again . . . photo- phobia . . . functional wardrobe . . . Uncle Sana reall) wanted him. ■ Twenty-one fOHN F. HILL 3415 Porter Street, X. V.. Washington, 1). C. Woodrow Wilson 11k.ii Schooi Engineering Engin Club (1, 1. 3, I); Service Project (1). ( .en! kin. hi hI the old South . . . Dahgone yo ' all, Ali haven ' t any ol ' accent . . . never out ol trouble . . . Hill did it . . . dispenser ol joy . . . Damn those spar- rows . . . Engin enigma . . . gracious grappler . . . Do you iliink I ' m really college material? . . . charm- ing telephone voice . . . can take it, and dish it out too. . . . commissar. fOHN R. HOGNESS 5758 Blackstone Avenue, Chicago, III. University High School Chemistry Class Secretary (1); Glee Club (. ' !); Class Vice-President (3); Customs Committee i:it; Mine Committee (2, . ' !): Cap ami Bells (3); Basketball Manager (3); I ink Team (2, :i); [ayvee Foot- ball 1 1. 2, 3); i:! Record Board; Chemistry Club lii. ' .S). Hoagy . . . amiable . . . mammoth . . . Ridley Park , S:!(i . . . two meals a day, bin what meals ... a human teddy bear . . . muscle, every roll ol it . . . vocal or- chestrations . . . suits by Omar (the tent-maker) . . . chiel asset: grace (al least in those dainty digits) . . . pel diversion: trying to acl tough . . . we lost him to Med School. BYRON E. HOWE, JR. 7 Crandall Street, Adams, Mass. Williston Acaih ii Chemistry ( ap .mil Bells (3); Glee Club (1); [rack It-am (1, U. :!); Soccei ream (3); fayvet toccei (1, 2). Early to bed. early to rise: bul a special weekend schedule . . . hates to come home in the rain . . . that memorable nighi in the tipper bunk . . . never killed himsell with work, bin doesn ' l have to . . . gets pretty high with a pole . . . You ain ' t kiddin the public . . . life with a smile and a shrug. Twenty-two HOLLAND HUNTER I is Easi 18th Street, New York n Fountain Valley Schooi onornit s Phi Beta Kappa; Corporation Scholarship (1, 9); Cap ami Bells (2, S); Philosophy Cluh (3); Service Project (I li.nl Squad (1.3); Valedictorian; Permanent Executive ( millci Perennial!) a corn scholar, ncvei a grind Beal me Basie eigln to the bar . blues to Bergson . . . ;i realisi who can see the foresi in spite ol the trees . . . in .i quiei .uhI thorough way, a man ol the world . . . equally .it home in a book oi ai the gul buckets . . . Ho . . . niii In | ] 1 1 hi I ' In I . I hi i Fettered to E l can ' I gel anywhere with her, bul I still like to take het out. I i .mi figui c il. I EWIS C kll ' .lll I 17 Crafts Road, ( Ihestnut 1 1 ill. l .iss Bishop ' s Colleci Schooi Economics Service Project (2, ■ : ( ross t ountr) ream (1), Lew, the Quake-shakei . . . Let ' s weld something . . . enjoys Raleighs . . . completes the trio ol the Bell- Harris special research committee on anything mechanical and illegal . . . drives anything, from a luiisc to a road roller . . . Boy won ' t Doggy be mad . . . those oi iginal names foi c h.u lie ' s Food . . . When I w .is up in Canada . . . there ' s no place iliis l hasn ' t been . . . carbon copy letters to all those women . . . wish he ' d bring some i l them around . . . slims lx . DAVID KIRK Mill Hall. Pa. (.1 ORG) S( HOOl Mathetna !i Inii.iinui.il Committee (3); Math-Physics Club (3, I); [azz On liestra i 1 1; [ayvee Baseball i 1 . 2). Dave from Mill II. ill . . . the ivory tickler ol the ( lass ol ' 43 . . . Oh. ih.it phone bill . . . math— math- math . . . How about some bridge? . . . does he have a | u i .iic life at home . . . an apathetit appearant e and slouch thai covers an extremely active night-life . absorbs copious quantities « l aspirin and coke during exams . . . never seems to worry about his women, tnd the are numerous and nice . . . m photo ol thai mule. — — ■ I() R1) B. K.RIEBEL Mn I. in. Pa. W ' l M U Biolcg) Cap and Bells (2, :.. h; Charit) Chest Committee (3. h. Co Chairman (4); ' 43 Record Board, Vssistanl Editor; Biolog) Club (1. ' - ' • 3), Secretarj 2, 3); Service Projecl (1); fayvee Soccei (1,2, 3) krirl) . . . associate l Henry, Dunn, and Co ... I ihink I ' ll take .i walk .in look at da ' choiping boids . . . has the Auk come? . . . handsome, but doesn ' l know ii . . . Ihink I ' ll (in a bug . . . wood-smoke and flannel shirts . . . swing and swa) in a moderate wa) . . . Elodia Densia grows in the pond . . . Knock- kneed ... I gol this tan in Florida . . . what a chest. EDMUND J. LEE, 2nd. 518 East Auburn Avenue, Chestnut Hill. Pa. William I ' i Charter School Chemistry ( lass Executive Committee (3, I); Cap and Bells (3, 4); Chemis- try Club (1,2, 3, Ii: Football Manager (4); Squash ream (1, 2, 3); Jayvee Football (1); Jayvee Wrestling (1). E. E. E. E. J. . . . Jennings . . . sweet Genevieve . . local Joe Burk . . . Softball and squash . . . epicurian of manna . . . bovine contentment . . . Eu-fu-fu-fundament- allv . . . thirsty social lion . . . not as shrinking as Kelly thinks . . . That ' s right, you got it . . . Want to bu) an owl? . . . he got the boys to Meadville, in spite of the monke) . . . The Mole . . . what this campus needs is a good ladies ' room . . . and it ' s oui boy, Eddie . them ' s fightin ' words. LEON LEVINTOW 5749 North Fairhill Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Olney 1 Ih.h Schooi Chemisti y News Board (1,2,3, I), News Editoi (3), Managing Editoi (4); 13 Record Board, Vrl Editor; Chemistry Club (1, 2, 3, h; Cross- Countrj Squad (2, 3); luik Squad (1); fayvee Football (1). And now I ' ll call on Mi. Levington . . . phenomenal photographii memory ... I just can ' t seem to hit the dan board tonight . . . nominall) a chemist, a maestro at heart . . . o. k. you ' re through, Levant Escort in thirty minutes . . . Rabellasion sense oi ' humor . . . those damn boogs are getting artistic again. ... I hope these wj ite ups are better than the last five yeat s. Twenty-four II l I III l I ll ' I ' IM O I I |l l-.isi I am ( Im jtnui Mill Philadi I phi a V i I SI II. UN I OUIldl i I 1 1 1 1 ■ . I I News Board I, I) • ! % • rliting M.m.. I i IS Record Board Ed R 11 II I Soccci I ' ract S |iiad (4); ( rickel Squad I I .in, ( 1 1 .1 1 1 in. in laiu ),i ( nmmiltci inl it ' s urn boy Man mi should be abl to |nsi ilni|) ii in ilu basket . . . waltzes l Strauss, polk • is . , . | ii ii ki i handkerchiefs . . . Easiest best-dressct in college . . . finished finesse . .i truly ordered life . i leanliness is nexi to godliness . . . minx an thost [urn little animals ... I low is 1 1 ■ . n ii ml- ' . . And it s iisihi Haughton, gehieten, gehaian gehooten gewi si ii si in . . Isn ' t n. though? . . . look ,n ilmsi Quaki s goin 1 to meetine . . . you damn Hicksite. Ill is l . | || | i | ii ) ii i id. i Boulevard, Rochester, V Loomis Si iiiiih Chemistry Havcrfordian (2); Wrestling ream I I); I lull ream 2); fayvee Football I); Vssistani |ayvei Football Coach. Allis the (.nun . . . .iiul ihis is im laughing matter . . . tried id pierce Lloyd .is a Rhinie and nevi to liisi Entry ... ] used in play Varsity, but they needed me to coa h the |. V. ' s . . . bear-like affe tion. . . . sincere . . . but he broke the record Im re-exams. . . . they won ' t di aft me . . . I love girls. HOWARD 111 I 318 niili Lansdowne Wenue, Lansdowne, Pa. Upper l) kin I Inn Schooi History sci nr l ' in|ii i 2 i Debating I In be respected .is ,i man who lias received his pur- pose in life and acted upon it . . . slight weakness Fot aged apple juice . . . I ' m glad I hee lias lime for this Synagogue ol Satan . . . disagreements are best setded from the rostra . . . Freshman Picnit and Howie ' s weenies . . . Ilim do you feel about ii.- . . . spiritual and physical motivatot ol the Service Project . . . should have been born in .i Iol; cabin. RUSSELL M 1 A M 210] Nortli Van Buren Street, Wilmington, Del. li ri i rsbi rg At in n Economics ( ap .mil Bells (2, , ' i. h: News Board (2, ' . ' , I). Composition Manage] (4); fayvee Cross Countr) ream (2). Who ' s going to the Harcum dance? . . . other things in hie besides hooks . . . owns an address book the si r ol a directory . . . variety is the spite ol life . . . loin Pepsi ' s a daj are bettei than an apple . . . Care- ful thai si ii f 1 ' s jail bail . . . extensive research in the local refreshmeni establishments . . . he always brings them to su| |K ' i . ROBERT MacCRATE 1, ' il Milton Street, Brooklyn, . Y. Brooklyn Friends Government ( hiss President (I); Class Secretary i. ' i. I); Class Executive Committee (2); Students Council (1, ' _ ' . 3, h; Studenl lhiiis Committee i. ' t. I): Triangle Societ) 3, h: Cap .mil Hells (2, 3. I). Executive Committee (3, I). Business Manager (I); Glee Club (1, 2, 3, Ii: Service Project (3, 1); Foreign Relations Club (3, Ii; Common Room Committee (1, L ' . 3); ' 43 Record Board; ( harit) Chesl (2); Varsit) Club (4); Football ream (3, 1); Base l). ill Manage] (4); Jayvee Baseball (1,2); fayvee Basketball (I): layvee Football Team (1, ' _ ' ): Permanent Secretary. The oik ' time he lei his hair down lie cut his head . . . his only vice is betting on the Dodgers ... a finger in every pie on the campus . . . the people ' s man . . . ihinks lie will be an honest politician . . . leveler . . . seven white shirts a week ... a real Committeeman . . . a gentleman and a scholar . . . blind dales . . . puritan Hob . . . Bob ' s been on the bench as lone as his lather. fOHN C. MARSH R. F. 1). _!. Westport, Conn. 1 .oomis S( inioi English ( tass Executive Comuiittee i-. I): Students Council (4); Cap jihI lulls ii ' . :i. I). President il); Customs Committee (2); si.uk Board il!. :!. Ii. Collection Committee l!. : ' .. 1); Si nil Prize (3); Chairman, funior Prom Dance Committee; [ rack Team (2); Football Squad (l, 2); Freshman rrack Team. Crespi . . . Casanova at his besi Dnke . . . almost in Hollywood little eoose, what ' s a goslee? . . . . MuggS) and the . . II a goslin is a as mood) as 1 lelen Wills . . . I low- about a game ol bridge? . . . funny as and on a crutch . . . wit, il noi a brain . . . When I played poker with Anita Louise . . . five o ' clock shadow . . . Whai are you, jealous? . . . Wilmei. the second . . . Howard Comforl will nevei forget that masterful kiss in the dark. Twenty-six ■ Kl I l S() I )cr|i Run I ' . Pci kasie, Pa. i m i H i I. si mioh High S hooi n im ■ ( l.is-, Executive ittce (1, 2); Inlrai .il title I i j ( lull (2, .. I); i ngincei ing ( lub (I, 2 3, I) Scci ;, President (4); Cap and Bells I 2, 3 i Secrclarj (4); i ' ■ Record Board; Wrestling ream (3); [ rack [ ' cam (2 3 1) Manage) (4); Freshman ii.uk I ■■ [ayvee Soccei ream (1); ( hail in. i ' Hi I ommil tei nil it ' s yo . . . Vvirile . . , , . , You can maki I 15 il .mi don ' l eai Eoi .i week. - . . the Fellow who wasn ' i Mnkccl undei . . eas) going . . , dunks musii is lik .i train and needs a conductoi . . - finally decided h wasn ' i spiritual enough fot life . - . Mrs. McLellan ' s closesi friend . . . addicted to mole lulls . . . Ritten house ' s Diil .niisi . . . whal do you think ol an Engin maioi taking an ... Robbie ' s bo) . . . and it ' s york. JOHN II. ME DI K 17 Colonial iiiin. Moorestown, N. | Moorestown Friends lli im Class Vice-Presidenl (2); Beta Kim Sigma Societj (2, 3 1) I n dergraduatc Secretary (4); Customs Committee (2); Football ream il.L ' . :!. I), Captain (4); Wrestling Squad (1, 2); Varsit) Club r. 3, I). lit ' d . . . beei .mil i.iin|ilins on the ferse) shore . . . Well, some pig ' U go oui with me . . . kt-| i Do ui ol trouble . . . Gargantua ' s youngei brother ... in the movies, the Pike, Mac ' s, lriuh. and so i bed . . . on the gridiron hum scratch to captain . . . nevei .i beef horn Meader ... I haven ' t read .ill m father ' s hooks . . . the Irani thai heal Ysli an and Sw.it 1 1 i more. |()ll M. M( ( 31 Penarth Road. Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Frii nds Select i onomit i Intramural ( oinmittee (3); ' 43 Record Board; Newspapei genc i. ' t. h: ( idi ' i j;c ' nc (3); li.uk Squad (2, 3); Freshman li.uk I c.i iii : [ayvee Football (1, 2); Permanent treasurer. Cooked . . . Done in. . . . ridiculously meticulous. . . . How boui that? . . . an Ec. Major . . . Moon. what ' s a corporation? ... so he majored in dining room . . . Which ol you nil hois didn ' l sign up foi Swarthmore 200? . . . President ol the Recount the l!il(i Vote Societ) . . . It ' s Center to-day . . . hero: Bungle . . . Judas . . . No Kidding. I GEORGE I MORSE 1 I WI1H II H.I I S( HOOI News Sports Board (2, 3); ( rickei ream (1, 2, 3, I). English Radical conservative ol Haverford . . . call me Fox- croft, noi George . . . The) always cui lull oui ol m articles . . . psychological Eear ol batting first . . . Dr. Morley, you need more equipoise . . . lie- and Krom, stinging letters to the News . . . I ' ll get ii done eventu- ally, il not later ... in his senior year Morse found life as bad as he always said it was . . . Oh, Judas, that slinking, pussy-footed dastard . . . his roommate has a sister . . . nothing opens Morse ' s eyes . . . critit ol the Charybdis classroom technique. STERLING NEWELL, JR. 17485 Lake Road, Lakewood, Ohio Univi ksi i School Government Class Executive Committee (3); Class Vice-Presideni (4); Tri- angle Societ) (4); Nautical Club (1, 2, 3, 1): ' 43 Record Board, Vdvertising Manager; Charit; Chest (4); Swimming Team (4), Captain ill: [ayvee Soccei (3); Uumni Oratorical Prize (3); Customs Committee (3); Jayvee I5.iscli.ill il. 2); Permanenl Ex- ec utive Committee. Bunch) . . . Any women running around? . . . blistered arches . . . from First to Fourth to Ninth to Sixth to Tenth . . . he talks a grand slam . . . convinc- ed everyone but Randall . . . ran a lap once, heal the Senator too . . . Jodie the Bushwoman . . .anything lot a laugh . . . FIa ei lord ' s first swimming Captain . . . now, that ' s one babe. . . Hey, Whitehead, 1 goi a letter from Ohio today . . . George ' s boy . . . il all the women in tin wot Id die. I ' ll lake . . . second only to Whit Yeaple. FRANK K. Oil O L ' llh Kalorama Road. Washington, I). C. Centra: I Ik.ii Schooi Engineering Engineering Club (2, 3, I); h;id Squad (1, 2, 3, I); Cross ountr) Squad (1, 2, 3, I). Membei ol the Stiles-Otto engineering combination . . . . hard at ii with engin, math and the like . . . F. K. . . . Have you gol an extra cigarette? ... I think I ' ll take a short nap (i. e. — all afternoon) . . . never fails to trump his partner ' s niik ... I live the life I love . . . and what a lile I love. TwENIY-EIGHT — — RICHARD H I ' I I n Massachusetts Institute oi [ ech i cxn hi i nislry Club (3 I); lingi I Dick in i 1 1 in. nihd 111. 111 . . .mil with kids, loo. . . . still they ' .;a l and mi thcii wondci grew . . . Di. k umks .11 College .ill day, ai atalytic Develop mi in Co. .ill nighi . . , when do you sleep? a good ,n.M, ion lew mI us know him . . . look loi him in I [illes oi the I Ihi m I ab . . . that ' s a good lool ing sistei you have ... a challenge to oui consciences. NORM W I ' l I I KKIN I7 i Coopei Vvenue, Uppei Montclair, | M ii i ik 1 1 ii.ii Si in mi Fn in h Cap .hkI Bells I 2, 3, I), Stage Managci f4); Communications Club (2); [ayvee Football (1,2); [ayvee Baseball I 2) li nui in. in . . . outwatches the beai . . , an oracle on anything Erom baseball to Balzai . . . A Peterkin joke .nui .i damp dishrag . . . Now .i fellow 1 worked with List summer . . . chiel behind ih - scenes in Roberts. . Batted ,361 before the Giants goi him back in 16 . . . a lone woll and a man ol mystery I gel home faster hitch-hiking than driving. Ml R I 1 RIDGEWAY I l l 58th Street, Niagara Falls, . x I si low Si HOOl Mathematics Corporation Scholarship I. I); Phi Beta Kappa (4); Freshman Mathematics Prize I I hess I earn I - - aptain l ; ( rickel Manage] (3); Radio Club I- 2, 3, I); Engineer, H i Math Physics ( 1 1 1 1 1 1. 2). sui . . . Captain Future . . . texi Imoks . . . amazing sioiK-s . . . fourth dimensional brain . . . I ' ll takt .i oi„« . . . the man who put Allendoerfei in his place . . . When you have .i girl who will ride in th i umble seal mi i rainy night, that ' s true love . . . unsalaried instriu mi in Math ami Physii s . . . two minutes to live. . . . Ridgeway isn ' t tin only member of his family, t ither . . . did he ever . rat k a hook!- GEORGE M. RYRIE 1007 Henry Street, Alton, III. siciw Brook Prep. Economics Cap .iikI Bells (2, . ' .. 1); News B d (1, 2, S, 1), Photographic Editoi ill: ' 43 Record Board, Photographic Editor; Stage (i.u (1, 2); Varsity Club (2,3,4); rrack ream (2, 3, 4); Fresh- man I l :k k I (.mi. Flash — either on the cinders or catching Haverford oil guard with his double picture box ... a great help .iiiiimd Bryn Mawr ( strictly business, he insists) . . . meticulous, industrious, conscientious . . . the sweater- boy . . . showers in April and eleven othei months . . . hails from God ' s country, or so he says . . . strange double dales with Kirk . . . Church every Sunday . . . lasi enough to pull a muscle . . . these pic lines you see are all Ryrie ' s WOI k. JOHN W. SEVRINGHAUS 3914 Cherokee Drive, Madison. Wisconsin Madison West High School Physics Cap .iikI Ki lis (2, 3, 1); Glee Club (1, 2, 3, I): Service Project (3); News Photographic Hoard (1. 2, 3, I); Chemistr) Club il 2, , i. h; Engineer WHAV I 1). Mama ' s good boy . . . photographer . . . I ' ll bid three kings. and he does too . . . Dr. |ohn . . . boisterous singer . . . good enough in Physics to instruct officially. . . . music enthusiast . . . never happier than when taking a radio apart . . . II I had a daughter I ' d send her to Bryn Mawr . . . questions in Chem 4 . . . the speed of waiters . . . remember the Third Floor of North . . . and how did Mac ever guess so well? si III T. SHEPARD 51 West Lennox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Bt ihisda-Chevv Chase High Schooi Government Math-Physics Club (1. 2); Biolog) Club (1); Chess (lull (1); International Relations Club (3). Nevertheless, Dr. Morley, in the latest issue of . . . . . . A point ol order, Mr. President . . . learned wrestling out of a book . . . buttermilk . . . night and da pajamas . . . says hullo to everyone . . . encyclope- dic . . . hey. that ' s real cute . . . Mr. Reit el what do you want me to do with these hymnals? ... I don ' t agree . . . Hello. Seth . . . First ' 1:1 to speak In Meeting. . . . volley-ball. Thirty - II I I l F. SHIHADEH I 13 Sution Road, Vrdmore. Pa I ou i R Ml KH I Ik. ii ni io Glee Club (I. 2); Christmas Canl Vgcnc) (2) Ncwspapci Vgcnq (2); I..iiiihIi Vgenc) (3); Wrestling ream (1 ' 1) Captain (8); ( loss m Squad i 1 1 Bill . . . Don ' i nil Wilmci ... oli! I know In r . . . . holds his own among the Foolish Foui studied science I applied muscle - . , So majoi , , don i ask him Ins middle name . . lush fruii .mil fresh aii . . . worriei . . . You ' re .i good man . . . affectionate gullible . . . He) pal ... I think they ' re wonderful things . . . more than jusi laundry bags. joiix G. sinw 1705 Caton Wenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Erasmus 1 1 mi High Schooi Chemistry Varsity Club (3, I); Chemistry Club (3, 1); Basketball ream i:i. I), Captain (4); Soccei ream (3, 1); rrack Squad (2); Fresh in. in l i. nk ream; [ayvee Basketball (1.2). |ohnn . . . Mow in the Hell do you sleep in here? (quoting Ma on the Pett) chamber) . . . twelve houi bridge . . . let ' s go nun Blackstone now . . . tall bru- nette From Rhoads . . . diddled with a javelin and played .i kind ol basketball, then blossomed forth as a ten-poini man awi captain . . . Ohio ' s ,i long a bin he siill holds mi ... a sh.n|i poker player. I) 11) D. SOMERS 17 From Street, Marion, Mass. I M-.ok ( iii n ngineei ing Varsit) Club (2, 3, 1); Nautical Club (1, 2); Cleaning Commissai (3, 1); Soccei ream (2, 3, 1); [ayvee Baseball (1, 2); Jayvee Soccei 1 1 ). Smiling Dave . . . Schlameil . . . Sam (.aim ' s apprentice. . . . nii ought in have seen the bab) 1 met down ai the lmk last night ... rhe whole trouble with thai electrics course . . . . . . AW, the hell, I should worr) aboul ii . . . effective hall on the soccer team . . . Dili I evei tell you aboul after the Nantuckei race ih. ii summer? . . . hard working cngin major, just ask him . . . Knows moic about Pattons than a shoe- maker. KENEDON P. STEINS 518 Prescoti Road, Merion, Pa. Friends C.i ntrai Government Corporation Scholarship (3, I); Dehate Council (3); internation al Relations Club (2, 3); 13 Record Board; Fencing ream (3) Kenedon Pottei . . . Enck ' s noonday shadow . . . brevity is the soul ol a wit . . . up with the Times . . . one of the less celebrated jockeys ol the Horse . . . authority on Litvinofl to Lippman . . . thai scholarship caught us unaware . . . a Stein sous is a limerick . . . you can I foil, Kenny . . . the original K. P Hey, Enck, have you seen thai cartoon in the New Yorker . . . (onus back to College to play paternal tennis. ] )11 1). STEVENS, JR. 175 Fifth Avenue, New Kensington. Pa. New Kensington High Schooi Government Vi Dance Committee (3, 1); ' 43 Record Board; tennis Manage) Mi: Jayvee Football (1); Track Squad (1). Deliberate is the word lot J. D. S. Jr. . . . blissfully un- aware of time, that singleton heart deserves ten minutes thought, the Inquirer a good four hours . . . violent defender of Alcoa ... a southpaw tennis player ol note and manager extraordinary . . . John is at home in a Hemdon seminar, more so in bed. but happy anywhere in a Chesterfield . . . John ' ll do it . . . has Norm (ailed? . . . don ' t suing this racquel too tirflt, she won ' t lie using it next summer. E. CLARKE SI Ills. JR. 512 California Avenue, Oakmont, Pa. Shady Sim At vdemv Engineering Cap and Bells (3, t); Glee Club (2, . ■. I r. Engineering Club ( 2. 3, h: Chemistr) Club (1, 2); Debating Team it. 2. li: liiinni Oratorical Prize :ii; |ayvee rennis (2,3). Named the Senator ' ' alter ten minutes al College . . . COUld sell Uncle Adolph a synagogue . . . glib longued promoter ol shrewd and smooth deals . . . patron of the Opera and teller of tales extraordinary . . . ale- fellow-well-met . . . among the ■Regulars. President, founder, and (barter member . . . lor his pals, the shin oil his bad; lor others, one died and two got fired . . . the loin M ' s ol Engineering . . . Why you slce ... he looked like a pirate without make-up. Thirty-two ' II I I l S I I l) I I I I p Vshland Avenue, Ph asanh ille, V V Packard Hi isinicss Coi.i.kgi I • man i ,,. and Hi II. ■ , i, (.hi ( lull I); Band ' luh l I); Scrvici I ' rojecl )|,cii thai door, Willii famed Foi i xquisiti i ai i .11111 1 in borrowed books . . . Sorry sir, I ihml I studied the wrong lesson . . . Diamond Hill . . neighboi relation unh Swarthmon . . . the Foundci i ,n . . . ivpisi extraordinain foi other ' s | .i|mis. Inn in vi i ' 41 is .n 1 11 1 1 11 1 to liis own . . . great ■ ' « I. si ml well! . . . the in. in who luii 1 quixotii 90 in Spanish. [AMES S si 1 1 l • «| l 208 Wilkinson, Frankfort, Kentucky FR VNKFORl S IIOOI I ■ 111 li (ni|i hi Scholarship (3); Del g ream 2 ' • 4 Jayvci Fencing ream (2, 5); Cross-Countr) ■ 1 0.1 , ! (3) Jimmie . . . Language I louse . . . rainbow li ss 1 begin the beguine . . . modestly poetit . . . Darling, ji vims aime beaucoup . . . Fred Vstaire is good, bui .1 1 iii .ill I (In have hair . . . intelligence ai .1 premium. . . . good-natured, good-intending, Goodharted . . . Sir w I1.1t the liovs iii the back-room will have . . . Mm look lot him in Enck ' s room . . . let ' s debate it. ALEXANDER C. I OM1 1NSON, JR. Ill West Ring ' s Highway, Haddonfield, N.J. II niKi i 11 in Mi miikim 1 1 k.i 1 Si 11001 Economics t l.iss Executive Committee (1); International Relations ( lnl (1,2); Vii Dance Committee (1,2,3. I), Chairman (4); Debate ( Hum il 1 2, • 1 1, Managei 3 , hairman Sand) ... .is socially impeccable as his namesake . . . Dale Carnegie in the Hesh . . . recently turned family man . . . new car, five good tires, and an A end . . . the master ol any situation, especially female . . . Any- body up around here? ... This place is well named . . . Vic dan es are his spet i.il vice . . . Five dollars 01 no dance . . . soii.il arbiter . . . Anybody n .1 date lor Friday? v II skELL TORRENCE 2001 South Woodland Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio Shaker IIik.his 11k, ii School Chemistry Corporation Scholarship (2); Class President (2); Class Vice- President ill; Debating ream (1, 2), Manage) _u Students Council i Ii: Cap and Bells (3, Ii; Founders Club ill; Customs Committee (4), Chairman Hi; Chemistry Club (3, h. President (4); Glee Club (1, 1 ' . :i. 1 . President (4); Student Vctivities Committee . ' !. h; Everett Societ) Medal (2); [unioi Proin Dance Committee; Manager, Soccei (4); Permanent Executive Com- mittee. Hack . . . an undergraduate Tat, when he ' s not study- ing . . . writes to more than one- gir] . . . quite a laugh you ' ve got there, Hack . . . will do more lor you than tin Umbrella Man . . . got to first bass with the Glee Club . . . (an have Inn everywhere and does . . . sun- shine joke cracker, but never crumby . . . Rhinie ter- ror . . . oh, that little white bed-cap . . . ' 43 ' s Kictnel Kid. ALBERT E. TURNER, 3rd. 307 Hamilton Road. Wynnewood, Pa. Lower Merion Senior Hic.u School Government Cap and Bells r_ , ' i. I), (.let- Club (1, 2, :i). Quartet (2); Stamp (lull (3); Bi lcn Club (3); [ayvee Wrestling (3); L ' hird Team Soccer (1); News Hoard ill; Everett Societ) Medal (2). Al . . . with that guitar and those soothing tones, he couldn ' t miss . . . phone lor Turner . . . grotesque masks and weird noises . . . bugs on Bug, no love lor Gov . . . what was that awful hat for, Air . . . when vent see his room, von begin to wonder . . . roomed with Studwell lor a year . . . managed Mary ' s madri- gals the sunshine ol the Dinine Room ads on and oil the stage . . . yes, 1 am engaged. WILLIAM T. WARREN, JR. 49 Thomas Avenue. Bryn Mawr, Pa. Lower Merion High School English News Board it. 2. 3. I). Bill . . . I ' m going to be a minister . . . majoring in English, not Bib. Lit. . . . reputed highest 1. O. in (lass . . . industrious . . . generous . . . it ' s about time the world owed him a living . . . and Keats didn ' t write the Ancient M.ninei . . . Von ought to see them al Lower Merion. . . . the boy who got Chem grades in Browning. . . . the Bryn Mawr Library knows him better than MacBride . . . whiskers . . . No. I ' m not related to Dick. Thirty-four |oil c. win I i in i 110 Summil e, l ppci Montt laii . N | Montci mi 1 1 H. 1 1 Sc in mi Economics mm, l, ins Council (3 I) Secretary 1 ' ieasiirci (3), I ' rcsidcnl (1); Founders ( lul) (3, I), Sci rctai) ( ' !): ap and Bi lit I) Glee ( lull (1, 2 3, I); ( lass President i I); lass Si i n tar) (2); Class Executive Committee (2, l)i Corporal Scholarship (-1) News Board (2. 3, I); Varsity Club (3 I); Student Facult) ll.m ■ Committee (3, I); Uircctoi ol Inn al i liter i • i ommon K (in ttee (3); lniriii.iiniii.il Rclal s lub ' I); 13 Re I Board; [uiiioi P I nitlec; |ayvee Baseball |ayvee Basketball (2); [ rack Squad 3) Fresh I ' rack ream; rn in. mi in ( l.iss President. |. ( ;. Whiteside . . , B. l. O. ( in everything bui complex . . . suspeel he didn ' l join the Patience casl miIi K Ini the love ol musit . . . dilletante athlete . . the Alliens nl America, right oi wrong . . . an aversion in breakfasi . . . most likel) to succeed . . . smiling champion ol law and ordei . . . one man and .i horsi . . . well, Whitehead, are the (.iants siill In the League? . . . sure ii is . . . the lap thai ladies love in sit in . . . Inn alas, . W. A. B. CARL E. WIDNEY 10 Mitchell Place, New York Cm I in McBt km j S hooi 1 onomu s Class Executive Committee (1); Corporation Scholarship {A ; ' 43 Record Board; Swimming ream (4); Chairman ol Invitation Committee. The Mrntoi nl Founders . . . I. mud Eor the knife-like creases and the w.iv thai collar lies . . . patron ol St. I ' . hi nk . . . popular with the colleens, bul the X.iw ;_;ot him . . . keeps the iluini in smokes . . . shave, shower and dress in five minutes . . . regulated l regularity, . . . does .ill his studying in die librar) . . . modest, quiet, with a build . . . one ol the Ninth Entrj ( ..in;,;, or is it I en ill: . . . what a chest. |()ll B. Wll.kll- M ilton, New York Marlborough Centrai High Schooi Economics News Business Board (1, ' . ' , 3, I); 43 Record Board, Business Manager; Chemistr) Club Ik international Relations Club (2, 3, 1); Communications Club (2); [ayvee Fencing ream (2), Manage] (3). Hackin ' Jack . . . he had the most peculiar cough . . . Gel out. on i;n s. I have to study . . . one lung . . . Gel oil youi back, W ' ilkie. struggle . . . did you set his name in the Deb Doings column? . . . lie doesn ' t walk, he paddles . . . feuded with the fixer — lost . . . he can take a beating (and does) . . . Ooooooh W ' ilkie. . . . Business Manager deluxe . . . W ' ilkie! Stop breathing . . . eal your carrots, Wilkie . . . is ii Seed) or Man Francis tonight, Hacker? HUGH R. Willi WIS 8] Myrtle Avenue, Maplewood, . J. VIillburn High School Chemistry (,ltv Club (2, 3, Ii: Cheraistrj Club (3, l : Service Proiecl (I, ' ■■ 3, li; Breshman Debating ream; fayvee Football (1). I lie worldl) Friend . . . concerns with the Service Project, bridge, and Bryn Mawr, plus an occasional one with Physics 2 . . . swamp dweller from Essex count) . . . [nternationalist, he ' s been u Mexico Hii the books, you guys ... I wonder il 1 ethically should? . . . According to Freude . . . the dorms aren ' t so comfortable. WILLIAM N. WINGERD Edgar Avenue and Riddle Road. Chambersburg, Pa. Government Ml RCERSBURG ACADEMY News Sports Board (1, 2. 3, li. Editoi (4); Varsity Club (1, 2 3, t); Director, Haverford College Sports Bureau (4); Baseball ream ,1. 2, 3); Jayvee Basketball (1, 2); Beta Rlio Sigma (3 I); i:s Record Board. Bill, siill Joe io the Horse . . . U dun ' s one thing 1 hare . . . Wait ' ll next year. I ' ll bat .400 . . . all I Ian urn l,, ed those eves . . . Haverford News (April. 1942) Wingerd siuuk out. The guy who wrote dial got canned from the Sports Board . . . How was thai hawt tawdy ai the Maul Dawbs? . . . Quake- baiter . . . Is that whai you ' re saying, Wingerd? . pumpkin pie . . . straighten ' em out, Bill . . . Yipe! Thirty-six € WILLIAM H ooim VRD I longan 1 1 ills. si. hi ii Island, New 01 I PlNGRY Si in n m .ii,ii Club l c ;i ' cwa S|xiru Board i Kngiin Mill, i 1 1 1 1 1 1 .. i I ' m. in Dance ( nil u I Board; [ racl I ' cani I I I); S« ii inn I cam v ' i i i l ' I ' ■ r Cro ■ 1 1 am i Kn liman I rati l i .mi Wood) . . would In assistant . . . thai famous hom slli Ii Ii ill l ( . . . 1 1,1 1 I i.i 1 1 1 i iis In Ills i nniiiiii.il is!- . . IIiuiih Smith . . . il you wain something dom Woody. Mill ilu ii liis own wa) and do ii right . Havi you done youi Spanish, Coffin? M) God, do I have in lu Ii I ' m Mm again? . . . and who was that gu) with ilu olive-green rod . . . where li l you learn in walk, Woodward? . . Wood) has plent) ol scrap. . . . ili. ii nil II. nun I shirt. wiiii n s. yi i ' i i 1 1 illsboi ,1. i u I lampshire l ' i i i 1 1 Si hi h it Lllll Glee ( lull (3, 1 1; ampus Havcrfordian s i oi 1 1 1 petrel . . . Amherst to First to Eighth to Bar- ( la in Mci inn and the Languagi House, missing Founders l .i semestet . . . knows .ill about the grand cur that was Rome . . . but considers the glorj just .iikii Ik i m ih . . . then there ' s Spanish, .i more recent acquisition . . . Whit ' s eyebrows soai to such a height ih. it the) (Id not descend. . . he frequented .i certain VmIiikiic restaurant mi often that he ' s been taken .is a temporaril) permanent fixture . . . fought gallant 1) with the (..inijuis I l,i ( i Ini di.iii . . . h.is anyoni W ' hii ilus month? Thi(7 - £K-MfMbers ' l. ' i ' s casualty list is long and varied. Some changed horses in midstream, others just up and left, and only Genera] Hershey can account for the rest. D()l (. B KKR swept lots before him. A militant rebel against Rhinie regu- lations, he was equally militant about not doing his accounting and life in general. Doug departed more quietly than he arrived, slipping away to a theatre group in Germantown. . . Harvard called to Swiss BOB CRYAN, ol the long tresses, English accent, and French verse, and he answered the call like a homing pigeon. . . [ACQUE ELWELL was proud of two things, how he got his name and Rochester. X. Y. His ability to talk a professor out ol a point in class, only to find himsell out in the cold at exam time was something facque could never fathom, lie- cpiil trying and lell lor Hobart. lie ' s probably never been la ed yet. . . First an organist, second a briel-case carrier, thirdly the spotter of a Dickens physique was JOE E.SREV. Hell never change. . . G. HOBART FITZGERALD ol parts unknown and abilities unimaginable is out contribution to culture. Majestic owner ol a Sanskrit dictionary, he could hold his own on any subject from Bolivar to Seabiscuit. II anyone was ever going t find a mistake in 1 ami ' s English History, Fit would have done it. . . fOHNNY HERMAN ' walked out of Gov , ' i one day and disappeared into the wide blue yonder of the Air Corps. He ' s probably still smiling at 10,000 leet. . . Professor Haddleton used to cure insom- nia by counting AL ROGERS ' laps around the track. II that didn ' t work, he counted the plates ol ice-cream Al ate in the Coop. Al ' s Norristown grammar weren ' t too good, and he didn ' t like studying. But Al did point out vividly: Pop ' s a nice lellar. but he don ' t know nothin ' about training. . . . An intellec- tual anarchist, the man who got 00 lor one semester in Greek, the Erasmian Thirty-:i hi wolf, ARNOLD SA1 I 1 K I 1 1 I I found Centei too noisy one year, Foundei s too quiel the next, the draft board too much the third, s.m was the most belligerenl pacifist in Pennsylvania, and don ' i think Mr. Fisher didn ' t know it. . . . 1 used in be .in introvert, someone remembers [(MINN 1 I 1 1 (.l ll- ' .R saying. Extrovert plus, we knew him. Quite a ladies man, he wears a pa it of golden wings today. Hey, rhakker, you here? . . HAROLD (Don ' t Call Mi Ih. id IIIOMSOX. fake ' s kid brother, left Slipper) Rock and Haverford, with two i lass hats, to associate with Filipowicz, Andrejco, and company. Tom- my would have beaten Falconet il he hadn ' t slipped. No, that ' s no flashlight, that ' s m probost is. . . . R. l WINDER, IV. poet, scholar, political leadet . wit, the man who studied in the Barclay water tank, left for Libya to drive an ambulance. 1 I u- chances are he onl) won his pajamas. R. B. will be recalled h three things: LOO Riverway, Boston; an affection for thai scholarl) detective, and it ' s o. . . . [ocular | U K RHIND played banjo and harmonica and wi esded .md went to Ohio Man- BILL K.NOWLAND left Haverford last year with- out cracking a hook or remaining sober Eor a week. Oddh. his departure was shoiiK followed l Wilmer ' s. Perhaps, we live on criticism. . . . Rabelaisian raconteur DAVE WINDER liked nothing better than to laugh londh in the middle ol a double-entendre. He ' s now a menial chief-cook and botde-washet ai a (. ' .. P. S. camp, getting up when he used to go to bed. . . . DOUG VNDER ' s date bureau folded. He uever recovered, and departed. . . . | CK. GILMOUR probabl) siill knows all ' 43 ' s first names. . . . DAVE BUSHNELL went to the Coast Guard almost before he ' d ;oi started. . . . and ED WEBS! I R. who had the honor ol being the Rhinie who was furthest from home, regretted the fact and returned to Kansas. . . . BUB SMILED was another man to go west, but Old) after a colorful wresding career. llu sa he ' s in Arizona. FOSTT Front Row. Buyers. I. [ ' nomas. Bolei; McShane, Mathias, Vlvord, l).i . S. Stokes Baird Hamilton Ham mond, Vila. Miller. Second Row, Clark, Downing, Balderston Klein, Haden, Wood, Smith, Roysen ■„ t  Com] i Third Row. Gray, G. Hopkins, Stadt, Funk, Foz, Grier, Hubler, Goerke, Craig, Davis, Lloyd Fourth Row. Murphy, Logan, Moore, Houston, Stuart, Ibbott Bair, |acobs, Hedges, Krom. Pease, Eager, fordan, Elkinton, Warren, I). Stokes, Hollander, Wendall, Sutton. Class of ' 44 rhere is no unit) ol personalit) in the i lass ol I ' M I. I o describe the wholt . din musi describe each membei individually. I hat ' s .1 pretty hard job. I here is no geographical centei ol the lass. I rue there are cliques in South .iikI Fifth Entry, bu l are the) an) more important than the small Language House contingent ol the ole redhead, fodie Crabtree, Sam Stokes, perpetual las-, treasurer, and led Irving, Corp scholai and tmitatoi ol Ralph Sargent? We don ' i dress alike. Mike Curtis Mill wears Ins old brown shin and dun- garees; whereas Funk is addicted to beautiful purple-maroon jackets, rastes in music vary from | lm Krom and his 1899 Louis Armstrongs, through the Samni) Kaye fans, to the I .i . Worl, Stokes, Haden quartet, who have never missel .1 youth concert. George (io ks speaks faster than- though noi so distinctl) as Floyd Gibbons, bui Bill Hedges drawls so leisurel) thai George Montgomer) the elder once asked him whether he suffered from tapeworm. lic! dark, particularl) on week-ends, large numbers frequeni the well- known local Eountainheads. Bui there is a small group who do not realize thai anything exists in Vrdmore beyond Horn .n Hardart ' s and the Suburban rheatre. As to studying, all are forced to ii more 01 less, Snatch Balderston most- ly less and |ohn 1 1.1111 mole than the rest. I here is litis l 01d up to his , in exit a 1 ui 1 ii ulai activities, and then the good athletes ol the foe fordan type. But who can des ribe II adequately. Look .11 the mass picture and 11 to figure them out. II probabl) looks as ' 46 is. - I BE Front Row: Widdecombe, | [ohnston, Balls. Ricks. Second Row. Law ton, (.rant. Gager, Domincovitch, Harrar, Fetterman, Ulinson, Alford, Feroe, Swartley, March, deLong, Lehman. Third Row. Root, Bartholomew, Brinton, Hunter, Boteler, Herndon, Vox. Snoke, D. Smith. Pierson. Fourth Row: Vinsinger, fackson, Block. Fifth Row. Hit. Cole. Crosman, Pancoast, Calhoun. M. Wright. Cary, Valentine, Deitsch. Sixth Row. Hsia. Handy, Purdy, Ambler, Clement. Van Hollen, P. Morris, Warnken, Lankford. Seventh Row. Mallery, Bache, L. Johnson, Schmidt, Willar, W ' aite. Terrell. Rush. Evans, Harned, Pontius. Eighth Row. Bassert, Preston, Libbon, Prins, Mankewicz, Trainer, M. Smith. Sheppard, C. Young. Ninth Row. Hopkins. Hulings, Dyer, L. Young, Robbins, St. Clair. Last Row. deSchweinitz, Gilmore, |. Wright, Shields, Slotnig, G. Moi lis. Barnes. The Class of 1945 The class ol ' 45 slatted off with eclat by presenting the Rhinies with a record amount of furniture and the usual tails ol be there. Rhinie delivered with the grim desire for vengeance accumulated during the previous year. The first real effects of the class, however, were felt on the athletic fields. The football crowds had reason to cheer such stalwarts as (ones. Ambler, Heimlich, Pancoast, Evans, Boteler, C. Young and others. The soccer team was aided In the presence of men like Bartholomew, Cary, Matlack, and Preston. ' 45 then began to examine itscl! and found that it had welcomed three Japanese students, Tanaka, Murase, and Kato; thai the Metion Penthouse had been given a new transfusion by Messrs. Feroe, Swartley, and Co.; that Bosun Fox still knew the name of every gunboat in the U. S. Navy; thai the Chinese still have ambassadors at Haverford in the form ol I In and Hsia; that California had accidentally shipped Mankiewicz east with a crate of artichokes; that Clement. Van Hollen, and Mann had volunteered their services to the Bell Telephone Co.; and that kirk and Huston had been ordered to lend their services to the Nav) and Marines respectively. With that, the class settled down to the year ' s work. The class coffers were emptied into the Joint Fall Prom, and Winter found foslin, Fetterman, and Pontius applying throwholds on the wrestling mat, while Alford, Swartley, Shields, and Schnaais were performing on the basketball court. As the Ginkgo trees in front of Founders began to cultivate a new nop ol the sacred fruit, two members of the class who had just received their government questionnaires were overheard asking each other Where do we go from here? - which quickly sums up the present status of the class of ' 45. Forty-two (€( RflBI : wfj: BBS ■ Front Row: Kummel, Kirkpatrick, (.mss. Coffin, rhawley, Peterson, Pfeifer, licit, raylor. Second Ron Nunez, Case, l Neil, ( .iliiiniii . I ' . Baker, Grosholtz, Harper, Long, Clayton. Third Rou Wood Mumma, - Elkington, Smiley, Bryson, Edgerton. Fourth Ron 1 : Ryan, Wingerd, ( I, Barton, Coale, Lippinoott, I ,ibby. Fifth Row: i onan, Price, Montgomery, hitall, Bartlet, Lynch, Olmstead, Courtright. Sixth Schneider, Ryrie, Chartner, Guthrie, Rankin, Stackhousc Lee, Leuchter. Seventh Row: Dclp, Meldrum, Sherpick, Bedrossian, Stuart, Wolman, Rhue, Eighth Row: Conklin, Macintosh, Prusser, Sangrei rhomas, Werntz, Sutor, Baker, Bushnell, II. Petersen, Birdsall, 1. ( dman, |acobs The Class of 1946 I his is the class ol ' 46. Some ol them, the first-class Rhinies, are the first accelerated Freshmen in the history ol Haverford College I li.it sounds good liui along with the unaccelerated Freshmen, they wore pins, scarlet and black how lies and garters; they feared tin bridge after meeting, they acted in the Club Founders show, they kepi of) the ■_;] .iss. served Rhinie duty: and yei even with all this they were still just green, little looked-down-upon Rhinies. Vlthough they wet e green it didn ' t take them long to gel in stride with this thing called college life. [ he majority ol the accelerated Freshmen had dates for tlif Y.usii Club dance this summer, and the Prom on the ' _ ' 7th ol Novembei didn ' t overawe anyone enough to cramp his st lc. ' hi has both athletes and brain ttnsts. Bob Finley, fohn Bushnell, Buuh Case, and Charlie Rose being on tin .nsii football squad with Fred Rhue, rommy Ryan, An Bryson, Benny Leuchter, Dot Ritchie, Bill Baker, Dot Smiley, Bob Courtright, Bob Henderson, and Dan Wingerd playing jay-vee. Wall Cope, Bert Forsythe, Fred Bartlett, |oe stokes. Pete Olmstead, Birdie Birdsall, Pete Elkington, Reds Wolman, Bob (lax- ton, and Rob Nunez played jay ve soccer, while Sergei rhomas played atsit . rom Goodman, Hans Peterson, Monty Montgomery, and Stan Burns excelled in the intellectual side ol it. I hen com the executives. s president they elected Dan Wingerd; vice-presideni George Montgomery; secretary, Vnson Good; treasurer, Reds Wolman. rhey will make every effort to keep .1 united ilass all thret Mats ol the accelerated program, but know thai many il not all ol them will be fighting for Uncle Sam before they graduate. Bui no matter what happens they will always remember the good old days when they were Rhinies .11 I (averford. 3k flk- PIIJI ■v?f : - X - A if j ! fl ||. fl i 1 mm n?s Forty-four C( 3resktnan year I he arrival upon the Haverford campus on September 19, 1939, oi the Class ol 1943 was heralded by no trumpets or welcoming committees, no miracles or prophetic signs. I lit illustrious class to come was on the bottom rung ol the ladder, for we were, the) told us, Rhinies. Oui naive question as to what Rhinie meant was raucousl) answered by wise Sophomores to the tiled that it was Greek for ' green worm ' , and that anyway we were the lowest of the low. Maley, Bowman and Baker found that a Rhinie is equally at home in the pond or on the Main Line at midnight in pajamas, while tuxedoed Jell Dewald reported that the Ardmore Theatre block is l. ' itiu frankfurters long. But drenchings in Center and upset beds in North were unable to dampen the spirit ol ' 43, and we organized politically in the East Math Room under the careful tutelage ol Student Bod) President Atkinson. Bob MacCrate ' s winning way won him the presidency, with Dewald as running-mate, while the broad shoulders ol big John Hogness brought him the job as secretary. Tris Collin got the job of squeezing dues from the wallets ol the class. Executive Committee members lomlinson, Coolidge and Mason helped the officers write a constitution that was a political paragon, while the rest of us optimistically voted for S5 dues. Several scrapes with Mr. Fisher and the Customs Committee resulted in two Club Founders at which Marsh ' s 10th Street spiel and ambisextrous Turner ' s love scene carried off honors. And Set h Shepard had to wear a blue baby bonnet in lieu ol his dink. Mornings became colder, and while Harris inaugurated a window-closing service, the (lass decided to throw a pep-rally before the Hamilton game on November II. Under the care ol the cheerleaders, ably assisted b two young ladies from Lower Met ion, a rip-roaring rail) tame off, replete with free apples, an accordian and some cremated Rhinie equipment. Like .ill good Rhinies mam ol us gol warnings aftet quarterlies, l ui thesi were soon Eorgotten in the revels ol the Freshman funioi dance on Decembei l which lc ,ti in c cl Chuck Gordon and .1 thematit display ol discarded Rhi :quip- nunl. Coming up fighting from midyears the class optimistically voted foi Presi ilnii MacCrate ' s hayride, which unfortunatel) weni to seed in .1 dull drizzle. I iu 1 s|n ing w .is M iii with us .is ihc I ,isi si 1 aw and the Si.uk came into existence. Undaunted l the hayride Fiasco, the Executive Committee, headed l new V. P. Torrence, made plans foi .1 | i 1 ■ ■ .11 Valle) Forge. Between Mason ' s Corn huskers and oui Weenie Queenie ii was a big success; ' 43 ' s enthusiasm became a i ampus wau hword. Late spring broughi out our athletes — in track Evans, Woodward, Rogers ami Howe helped win a triple meet, while Winge rd was our onl) representative on the baseball Irani, Coffin, Adduins and llallrll spurred a Irishman tennis team to victories, while Grala and Elwell helped revive an obsolescent cricket team. Finals were upon us. and we losed a happ) Rhinie year with cries ol Here ' s to ' 43, for we ' ll never, never. . . Ami we didn ' i eitherl 1  5? Sophomore year Septembei 1940 brought the Class ol ' 43 li.uk to College in a cloud oi self- assertion, leu no one in College is more important than a Sophomore, as the neophytes ol ' II were soon to learn. Aware ol our responsibilit) towards this class, we displayed remarkable ingenuit) in welcoming the Rhinies with water fights, dumped beds and the usual Rhinie-baiting. A class meeting in Whitall 15 revealed only a few members missing from ' 43 — Cryan, Bushnell, Esrej and Webster. But we siill had Zandei and Studwell; —how the) got through Freshman year nobod) knows yet — and the new Luis ol Smile) and Wilkie appeared among us. Class elections (leaned die slate, and Torrence came up with the presidency, assisted b) V. P. Meader, Secretar) Ander- son and Treasurer Coffin. Our Sophomore spirit soon began to express itsell — not in studies, for no good Sophomore grinds — but in extra-curricular activities. ] oie-de-vivre Suite came into being in First Entry, and the Cope-Cadbury hack, assisted abl) b) the Senator ' s car, took man) ol us on the pseudo-cultural pursuit ol the opera. Ferris ' Mercur) was used lor mote sane events, such as transporting athletic teams — at least so we are told. A College Willkie club formed to throw itsell, along with the new president, Felix Morley, solidly behind the Republican cause. As a matter ol lad. some ol us are still getting 1 he Young Republican no matter how often we change out address. Km then the cause is hard up. Fall spoils (ailed Meader to the football team where he helped whitewash Alleghen) 33-0, being among the home-coming warriors that we so uproariously greeted at the station. We lost the Wesleyan game on Felix Morley ' s Inauguration Day, Inn we got over both events. Al Rogers aided Cross-Countr) in a champion- ship season, while the soccer team took Evans, Cadbur) and Flwell into its ranks. Morrie was rated on the Ail-American second team, but we ' ll nevei forget Thacher playing his heart out at fullback during out hard-fought loss to Swarth- more. I In- l.i 1 1 season closed with .1 highly successful Soph-Senioi dance and I In s pian Marsh ' s fine .nihil; in Oui Town, which could have gone to Broadway. Meanwhile indued I ' .ill shih acleh paced his ie.iniin.iies to Haverford ' s greatest wrestling season an undefeated one. Despite Anderson, Gaenslei and Satterthwait, the Sophomore class placed .1 pool fourth m midyeai averages, Inn those were carefree days. Ba l Windei won the table tennis championship, and despite Morrie Evans the basketball team losi e ei game. Spring found the (hiss well represented on the track team, and 1 .1 won the [nterclass meet. Halleti made the tennis team while Wingerd was still ' 43 ' s sole representath e on the baseball team and Baker, HI well and Morse helped Captain elecl Grala keep nickel alive. And then there was the class punn thai weni the w a ol the h eshman ha 1 ide. I In (nnior Prom brought oui Ed Lee ' s manifesto that what this Colleg needs is a sal islac loi ladies ' room. a challenge thai has since been heeded. But finals were approaching, and the} made us suddenly realize thai oui college c a reel was hall o el . and oin mark was si ill to be made. Willi growing ic ndem ies toward sobriet) ol character we hade farewell to a happ) year. junior year Seventy-six strong the Class of ' 43 soberly returned to the campus in Septem- ber, 1941, with the realization that it was now an upper class. Rhinies were looked on with an almost motherly affection, and the coarse actions of the Sophomores wen- gazed upon with an amused tolerance. Fall elections gave the presidency to athlete Morris Evans, while Hoagy, MacCrate and Iris Collin topped the slate for the next three offices. Johnny Marsh headed the crucial Junior Prom Committee which he chose himself. A few laics were missing — Jack Elwell had transferred to Hobart, Tommie Thompson to Fordham and Jack Rhind to Ohio State, while Thacher was called to service in the Navy, our first depletion caused by the war. Doug Baker. Bayly Winder and Tris Coffin won a fiery skirmish between their Stack and the Campus Haverfordian. This seemed more important than the national draft under which lew had registered yet. Besides, college students were being deferred. The blackest day of the fall fell on November 15th when our rip-roaring football team lost the Swarthmore game, 12-7. due to what we shall always con- sider overconfidence. ' 43 ' s Beef Meader was right in there, but the team didn ' t click. What a mob though! 8000 at the game, and alumni wheeling over the campus all day, including a bewhiskered Chris Morley. But the loss was a blow- to all. including the special edition of the News which only sold 150 copies. November 26th saw Arnold Satterthwait draw a year and a day in a Philly court lor not registering in the draft, and it made us all soberly speculate on our chances of finishing college before the draft caught up with us, too. In a lighter vein was the fall play, Margin lot Error wherein Ed Gaensler, Doug Baker, Johnny Marsh, and Senator Stiles starred. At the news from Pearl Harbor, which interrupted the Sunday afternoon symphony, about 15 ambitious Haver- fordians drove to the Capitol in the wee small hours ol the night to catch FDR ' s declaration of war, though none reached the House chambers during his speech which those who ' d stayed home heard during lunch in the dining room. Out mine Is wcic i leared ol the firsl shock l .1 remarkable Collection address «  I Felix Morley ' s the nexi day. Bui the lull weighi ol i 1 new status .is citizens ol .1 nation .11 wai did nol sink in E01 sonic tim Midyears passed .is successfull) .is midyears do, and registration fot Selectivi Sci icc caughi mosi ol us on February 16th, .1 soui note aftet .i solid weekend .11 line k Hill with the Glee Club. II ' ed us gol thai little white draft card — now Vnderson could look the local bartenders in the eye without .1 qualm. Officers ' reserves I  1 ■ l; . 1 11 to attract us: uncertainty as to our chance ol graduating changed the tempo e l our college life. Bayly Winder Kit n eh he- an ambulance in Libya, l Rogers gave ii| .1 long fight with lat and joined the army, and Doug Baker, moustache and all, lcli to devote all his time to the Germantown 1 heatre, which he had been doing anyway. I ' iget Anderson became the new editor ol the Netus, Davo Coolidge . Matt Lippincott, Bill Wingerd, 1. 1 ' . Coffin and Lee Levington filling ihe other executive posts. Pan] ( lope took over the ( loop managei shi| and headed the I R t at the Model League Assembl) .11 Bryn Mawr. In the Februar) class elections |. C. Whitehead and Cope replaced Morris and Hoagy as President and V. P. War came a little closet to the College when the Student Bod) decided to give up ice-cream in the- dining room Monda nights and divert the- mone to ' ««...„ ■ DP War bonds, the Red Cross and the AFSC. The Coop did a rushing business. ' 43 showed ii had a conscience by considering the advisability of making a great expenditure for a Junior Prom under war conditions, but plans A and B went down to defeat as plan C gave Johnny Marsh a Tree hand. We did give up corsa ges though. Two more members of the class saw fit to leave us at Uncle Sam ' s beckon — Dave Winder to an Ohio C. P. S. camp and John Herman to the Naval Air Corps. Winter sports ended with basketball ' s John Shinn captain-elect and Harry Hall the school badminton champ. Hack Torrence became our head Air Raid Warden as Haverford College complied with the war ellort. At the Student-Faculty Banquet Uncle Billy once more drew out respectful cheers, while Muskett and Dr. Sargent added spice to the evening ' s entertainment. Spring brought the annual water fights and window breaking at Center, aggravated this year by the construction of a new road in front of Barclay which supplied missiles. The steam-shovel removing the road from Founders ' lawn provided a pleasant interlude between lunch and labs. Lew Kibbee, Art Bell and Bill Harris presented Tat with a steam roller in his garage, only shortly alter his war-nerves were tested by an auto-bomb in front of Roberts. rheatricals saw Marsh and ITurnei playing in Ha) Fever, while MacCrate, I orrence and twent) eighi others sang Patience ai Bryn Mawr. I he Glee Club enjoyed .1 quiel weekend at Vtlantii City, especially ai the Brighton Hotel Spring spoils finished in .1 blaze oi glor) .is the track team became Middle Atlantic Champions with Mi 11 1 is Evans repeating Ms triumph ol the yeai befon in the low hurdles. I In rennis team snapped Wesi Chester ' s long winning si 1 1 .1 k . .iikI the baseball team climaxed iis season with .1 victor) ovei Swarthmon I he goll team ' s loss to Swai thmore gave oui rivals possession ol the Hood I 1 |ili in iIk lnsi yeai nl 1I1. 11 mp ' s existence. Ami it ' s Yo Prom! 1 In- climax l the yeai came with our never-to-bi equalled [unior Prom, with solid Sam Donahue in tin Featured position. victory ovei Swarthmore in track .mil .1 lull moon that night reall) sei the occasion up, and the little woman .is particularl) tender, remembering thai this might well be our lasl Ring. The informal picnic and tea dance on Saturda) added 10 the weekend ' s festivities. liiii we got over the glorious weekend in time to tak finals, and Commeno 1111111 made us realize thai we would soon In- stepping into the shoes ol the departing Seniors. Our [unior year closed quietly, perhaps the last normal car which ihe College would sec for several years 10 come. SS! Senior year Hardly having time to unpack at home, the majority oi the Class oi ' 43 returned to college for the summer term. The first ol its kind in the history of the College, the nine week summer session was as new to the professors as to the students, but it was especially hard for ns to convince ourselves that we were seniors. liri settling down in our newly-screened rooms and straightening out Mr. Wills as to who was where and why, we began to take stock ol the (lass. Fifty-two of us were taking the accelerated program at college, while others got credit elsewhere — Marsh at a summer theatre, Sevringhaus at Wisconsin, and Hunter and Cadbury at .1 work camp. And Ave learned to our regret that some had left the class — Howe. Bowman and Hogness to med school, Harris to the Naval Reseat ih lab, and Addoms to Libya. Then there was Gaensler who graduated with ' 42; and he never introduced us to cousin Hedy Lamarr. Concentrated courses meeting 5 times a week fazed ' 43 little, for by this time we knew well how to mix studying and the fine art of finesse. The balmy weather and excellent facilities led ns into the ways oi sport. Wingerd forsook varsity baseball, which struggled along without him, and picked up a red-hot Softball team. Despite his fireball pitching he placed a close second in the league to Miller ' s team. A swimming team, with headquarters in the Haverford School pool, was led by Bunchy Newell in a close meet with Swarthmore which was lost despite the strong support ol Beardsly, Lee. Woodward and Widney. But then Bnnc h was out ol shape. An interclass track meet extending over several weeks brought out lots ol amazing material, including Coffin in two half-mile triumphs and Whitehead 111 high jumping, as Morrie and Woody led the seniors to a conclusive victory. Otto helped in a cricket match with the ' lac 1 1 1 1 w hie h Grala ' s men won. Along other lines Ferris and Mason engineered a successful Varsity Club dance on August 7th. while Tomlinson ' s Vie Dance Committee actually made monci as two dances drew many seniors. But not Kriebel — Dm le Sam chew him 1 O ' v .ind In tied up io the CPS camp ai Vshburnham, Mass. with I immii Haworth. iul In was ' 48 ' s sole pillai in the Biology Department. Finals ended .1 pleasani and unique summer, and .1 short vacation brought I. ill .ind the familial grind; incidentally ii was also the home stretch fot mosi oi us. Meadei and Evans returned earl) to whip theii football and soccei teams into shape, and Anderson ' s Neius came oui in .1 Freshman edition. 1 1 1 resl ol us returned on September 22, making .1 total ol sixty-two seniors. A shock greeted us the campus was still there, the Rhinies looked .is scared .is usual, .ind Do( I. cake was still bellowing in the gym; bul the sage ol Roberts Hall was missing, and we learned with amazemeni and sorrow thai II. lainall Brown was a I.i. Commander in the Navy. Shihadeh had also joined up, in th Naval Intelligence; the) mnsi have mixed up math work with mat-work. Political organization returned Evans to the presidency while Newel l ' s great work on the Executive Committee made him V. P. MacCrate and Coffin con tinued in office despite the reading ol the minutes and a treasurer ' s report. ()m February graduation was discussed and we learned that President Morle) was working on Paul McNuti as Haverford ' s Inst accelerated graduation speaker. Fall moved right along as the football and soccer teams piled up victories leli and right, ami a Soph-Junioi Prom came ofl on November L ' Tih. Student Body President Whitehead abl) del ended the Students ' Council against reactionist Morse, and on the side organized the Rhinie 1 lass and inaugurated a new Council 100m in the Union. Torrence ' s Glee Clubbers thrilled the Jefferson nurses and Marsh ' s thespians reached new heights in Barry ' s fantasy, Hotel Univt ()l course studies look up a little time, bui ii was hard to realize thai comps were to be a late Xmas preseni from the College. Bryn Maui drew a few oi us into its Art and Government departments. Yes, we ' ll never forget that art course —three of us and sixty girls. And then there was Haverford ' s first radio station, WHAV, to lake- our mind oil studies. Studies and postgraduation worries took up most of our remaining weeks, but there was still time for us to recall the effects oi lour years on Haverford College. The biggest influence was ol course the war which took our Dean and some twenty ol our members, and made us the first (lass to accelerate in the history of the College. We saw that grand old gentleman known as Uncle Billy hand over his presidential sceptre to vigorous Felix Motley. Swarthmore once more met us on the football held and we participated on Haverford ' s first swimming team. We lost Happy and Jules to the Sun Ship yards, Josh to Horn and Hardart ' s, and Wilmer to the Freihofer Co. About the campus we watched a new library replace the old, ill-lit firetrap, a lawn surplant Founders ' drive and a new waiters ' dining room come into existence. The Go and Lang- uage houses were instituted and Friday collections became relics ol the past. And we loo. as students, threw oil the old and looked forward to the ' new existence lacing us in a reall) broad and alien world. Our last glimpse oi the old college that had so faithfully nm lured us during loui crucial years was whitened with February snows, but our hearts were warm with memories ol Haverford, and we looked confidently forward to newer and better spi ings. M . I Front Row. Baldwin, Grier, Hill. Magill, Captain Meader, Jordan, Dewald, Crabtree, Conn. Second Row. Fctter- man, Heimlich, Balls, Pinch. Boteler, fones, Ambler, Harrar, Evans. Third Row. Barnes. MacCrate, Finlev, |. Wright. Rose. Crosman, Pancoast, Fox (Asst. Mgr.). Fourth Row. Coach Randall, Case. Gilmour, Man- kieuicz, Cornman, Hough, Line Coach Walker. Football Football at Haverford has mack ' amazing progress during the last four years. In 1939 the team failed to win a game, while last season it went through Haverford ' s only undefeated, untied football season and gained the distinction ol being the only unbeaten team in the Philadelphia area and one ol the out- standing small college teams in the East. During Freshman year Union and Wesleyan ran roughshod over (lie Fords, Lehigh and Johns Hopkins won narrow decisions, and Allegheny and Hamilton battled to ties with the Scarlet eleven. Beef Meader was ' 43 ' s only letterman on this team, but Eli Little and Johnny Marsh saw momentary action. Sophomore year the leant took a step forward as it sent Allegheny, Johns Hopkins, and Lehigh down to defeat, but lost to Union, Wesleyan, and Hamilton. Beef Meader stepped into a starting post at guard, and Doug Baker and Jell Dewald got numerals. 1911 brought the strongest Haverford grid team in many years. Opening the season with a brilliant display of power, Jim Magill and Company ran rough- shod over Allegheny, 45-7, an d Susquehanna, 27-0. Wesleyan proved to be the lly in the ointment as it pounded out a 32-18 triumph. Then the Scarlet romped on, topping Hopkins. . ' ISO; Guilford, 26-0; and Hamilton and Milt Jannone. tlte East ' s high scorer. 20-0, in the season ' s outstanding game. The renewal ol the Swarthmore series brought grief, as an underdog Garnet team carried oil the laurels, L2-7. In Dili probably the greatest grid team evei seen here overcame all opposition to become the only undefeated, untied leant in Haverford history. Though hard hit by graduation and calls to the service, and lacking sufficient Fifty-eight — reserves, Coach K Randall seni .1 Lcam on the in l I thai was invincibli W ' nli A11 [ones and (.liink Boeder, speed) Sophomore sensations, scoring 60 points each, the Hornets lolled up 177 points to theii opponents ' 54, Displaying tremendous strength, th s . 1 1 1 1 walloped Allegheny, 13-0, and Susquehanna, 27-6, in its firsi two encounters. highl) rated Drexcl aggi egai ion was stopped mi the mud, 18-0, and fohns Hopkins provided little troubli in [ailing, 24 0. Wesleyan again proved to be the strongest team on the Haverford schedule, bul iIhn time the Fords were not to b denied, I In took 1 26-0 lead at the half, Inn the superioi weight ol the Cardinal Inn .mil tin heal ol the da) began to nil in the second lull, and the Ford lead graduall) lessened until the game ended with the Scarlei in Front, 33-21. )nl the r . 1 w couragi ol the almost exhausted Haverford linemen, |oi [ordan, Sp Stuart, Bill Ambler, Beel Mc nlci. Keni Balls, and Bud Griei saved th day. Blocking li.uk Charlie Pancoasi also played an integral pari in the win, Ernie Heimlich was Inni in the Iiim half, and Bill Conn was unable to pla) because ol an earliei injury, Ihc Fords suffered .1 letdown in the Hamilton game bul were still good enough to snip Mill [annone again and win, 28-1 I. I Mr season ended in glorious fashion, .is the Scarlei sent Swarthmore down to dele. 11 Idi the In si time since 1916, winning I I 13. Botelei scored on .1 long run in the firsi half, bul the Garnei scored twice to lead, 13-7. I hen the Fords cam Inn k in the second hall to score again on .1 sustained march, and Crabtrei - placemen! accounted foi the decisive point. Soccer The lasi lour years has found Haverford soccer steadily in the ascendant, lour games having been lost in 1939, three in 1940, two in 1941, and only one this year under the able leadership ol All-American Morrie Evans. During Freshman year. Connie Atkinson led the Scarlet to victories over Ursinus. Lehigh, Lafayette, Wheaton, and Swarthmore, the latter by a 1-0 score, but l ' enn, Princeton, Cornell, and Stevens stopped the Fords by comfortable mar- gins. Morrie Evans, Johnny Thacher, and facque Elwell ol the class of ' 43 moved into first string berths during the 1010 season, and Dave Somers and Chris Cad- bury also saw enough action to win their letters. The team, sparked by Captain Ned Allinson, Chris Evans, and Ed Flaccus, had a good season but dropped a 2-1 decision to the Garnet. Alter losing the first two games to Princeton and Springfield, the Fords pulled themselves together and won six out ol the remain- ing seven, topping Ursinus, Lehigh, Lafayette, Wheaton, Cornell, and l ' enn, the Big Red going down 1-0, the Quakers, 2-0. Morrie Evans climaxed a brilliant season Junior year by driving home the two goals that gave the Hornets a 2-1 win over Swarthmore. These tallies raised Evans ' total in Middle Atlantic League play tcj seven to give him second in in- dividual scoring lor the season. Besides their hairline triumph over the Garnet, the Scat let booters also scored over Ursinus, Lafayette, Stevens, and Lehigh by big margins and ovei lYnii l .1 5 I score. Princeton .mil Cornell administered thi inn defeats l si ores ill 5 I and 8-2 i espei lively. Kin Roberts whs the captain ol the strong 1 ' f 1 1 aggregation w 1 1 1 I liad sii 1 1 si. lis .is Gord) Howe and Ed Flaccus. Evans, Chris Cadbury, Sum Ferris Id Howe, 1 1 ili n Shinn, and 1 .i ■ Soniers were lelterincn from the i l.iss ol l I I In iimisi successful sc.isiin ill the lasi foui years w .i s the 1942 campaign Mm i ii Evans, |im Gilbert and Dave Stokes tallied .is the Hornets opened theii sr.ismi with .i Mi triumph ovei Lafayette. Stevens MM in the second game, 2-0, in ,i sea ill mud with Stokes and Vrnii Posi tallying, I hen, aftei overwhelmii Lehigh, 6 I . and Ursinus, 1 0-0, the Scarlet ' s chj s ol at Ii feated season I «-i 1 h the wayside, when the mighty Princeton Hgers downed the Fords, 1-0 Following the Princeton defeat, the team came li.uk to score consecutive wins ovei Penn, Cornell, and Swarthmore, Penn was topped in overtime, I 3, when Dave Stokes drove home Ins third tall) ol the game, Cornell gave the Fords little opposition .is Evans scored twice, and Cadbury, Elkinton, and Stokes once each. I In season ' s finale was a glorious 2-0 win ovei the Garnet. The Scarlet dominated the pla) throughoul the game, the outcome nevei being in doubi aftei Morrie Evans tallied the opening goal .is (.il Moore turned in .i brilliant performance to stop ever) Garnet thrust. Captain-elect Dave Stokes proved to be the outstanding point gettei ol the team .is he tallied twelve times, Captain Morrie Evans being second with eight. Hob Da) and ferry Cary, both playing theii first year ol varsit) ball, proved an almost impenetrable pah ol fullbacks, while Ed Preston, Sophomore star, and Sum Ferris proved to be excellent running mates for Captain Evans ai the h.ills. He. ins M. ul.uk .mil Arnie Post gave the Scarlet two ol the best outsides in the Middle Ail.uuii League, |im Gilbert, Chris Cadbury, George Downing, and Tom Elkinton .ill saw considerable action ai the inside posts and | hn Shinn proved an able replacement for the brilliant Gil Moore in the goal. Front Row. Gilbert, Downing, Preston, Captain M. Evans, Matlack, Thomas. Cadbury. Second . ' ■■■ Coach Mull. in, Moore, Ferris, l);i . Elkinton, Stokes, Somers, Bartholomew, Shinn, Assistant Coach Evans. VI Wrestlinq The greatest wrestling team in Haverford history blazed its way through an undefeated season in 1941, with several members of the class of 1943 playing im- portant parts in its success. Bill Shihadeh was unbeaten in the 155 lb. class. In 1940 Baud Cotusin captained a team made up largel) of Freshmen. After overwhelming defeats In Rutgers and Lafayette, the team coached In Rene Blanc-Roos scored victories over Muhlenberg and Ursinus before being crushed b Maryland, Gettysburg, and die Lehigh Jayvees. Then in the final meet ol the season the Fords scored a well earned victor) over Johns Hopkins. Bill Shihadeh and Jack Rhind were lettermen on this team and Doc Bowman. Eli Little, and Beef Meader won numerals. Sophomore season proved to be the banner year in the history of Haverford wrestling. After winning eight consecutive meets, the team went on to carry off die Middle Atlantics crown. Captain Dick Bolster led the wax b taking die 128 lb. championship, and Don Kester, Bob Evert. Bill Shihadeh. Bub Smiley, and Jeff Hemphill were runner-up in their classes. Shihadeh ' s record of being Sixty-two unbeaten was approached l Don (tester, Jack Rhind, and l)i(k Bolster, each ol whom w as bea ten onl) on e. lici topping Muhlenberg, 26-15; Ursinus 13 and Gettysburg, 21 5; the proteges ol Coach Blant Roos whitewashed Kutztown, 38-0; University ol Man land, 21-0; and [ohns Hopkins, 32-0, ( he second victory ovei l rsinus, 27-3, served .is ,i tune up Eoi unbeaten Wesleyan, whom promptly downed, 19-11. With onl) i nit regular, Captain Mill Shihadeh, returning from ili 1941 championship team, the Scarlet wrestlers had .i rathei disappointing season in (942 with a record ol three wins and five losses, I rsinus, Muhlenberg, and Johns Hopkins fell uimi to the IIoiiui grapplers, while Kutztown, Maryland, Gettys- burg, Lafayette .mil Wesleyan scored victories over them. The mediocre season was in large measure atoned for, however, l the ( ,i pulling of individual titles in the Middle Atlantics l Shihadeh and Blackie Joslin. A Mason and Do Bowman ol the class ol ' 43 were integral parts ol the team, each scoring two victories during the season. Buster Alvord, depend- able 175 pounder, was named captain-eleci at the close ol the season v Basketball For three years ih basketball picture has been a bleak one. Foi two years Ro) Rami. ill coached the team; Bill Dochert) took over in 1912. and Haverford began to break into the win column. Behind this improvemeni was the develop- ment of John Shinn into one ol the best men on the team, and ilic playing of some spirited newcomers like An [ones and Crandal] Alford. shinn. a member of the .lavs ol 1943, was promoted Erom the fayvees to the .nsit aftei the first few games, and at the season ' s end was elected Captain for the 1942-43 season. The Rhinies ol the (lass ol 1943 watched Captain Art Magill, his brother fim, Dick Beeler, Ken Weyerbaclier, Al Dorian. George Warner, and Bob Miller, all upperclassmen, play the varsity games. The team was fairly strong defensive- ly, but weak on offense. They were good enough to heal decisively a local rival, Drexel, 29-19, and alter an earlier defeat l a strong Delaware team, showed their stuff bv taking a second encounter, 39-36. Swarthmore showed up with a team of siais. and the end of the season saw the basketball team smothered by their traditional rivals, .50-27. A low ebb of strength was touched during the following season, as the class of 1943 m?.de its first appearance on the court, with ferry Addonis, Morrie Evans, and Doug Hallett wearing the uniform. The team, after being beaten by Hamil- ton, 50-41, and alter dropping a (loser one to a strong Stevens team. 42-39, had rough going from then on. The end came on Haverford ' s own court when Swarthmore won again, 45-29. In 1941-42 season Morrie Evans retired from the court. The team, however, was able to break into the win column, Dochcrty ' s crew appearing some- what stronger throughout the season, because of the addition of si outstanding freshmen. Alford, Swartley, [ones. Shields. Boteler and Schnaars. And Shinn had become a real star. Sixty-four - — - Fencing Haverford Fencing i c:i i ns have scored sixteen victories and suffered only nine defeats during ' 43 ' s staj here. Freshman yeai the team captained In Bill McDevil had a fairly successful season winning six and losing three. The Inst member l the class oi ' 43 to earn a varsity letter in tins sport was Eoilsman Arnold Satterthwaii during Sophomore year. A consistent winner that season. Satterthwaii was one ol the mainstays ol (he team. Junior year found kemn Steins ami fim Hamill gaining varsit) berths for the first time and Bayl) Winder participating in several varsit) meets. Satterth- waii was no longer ill college. 1 He team record during this season was the best ol ' 43 ' s college career, as the team scored six wins against three defeats. The highlight ol each ol these three seasons was a victor) over Swarthmore. After winning decisions ol 18-8 and lii-ll during the Inst two years, the Scarlet came close to losing last year. The Scarlet finished on top however, by a score of 14-13, Captain John Fust getting the decisive point. I his victory kept Havci ford ' s record ol never losing to a Swarthmore fencing team intact. 9 Sixi Baseball Baseball al Haverford seems to get better and bettei as successive years mil h . In the Rhinie year ol the (lass oi ' 43, the baseball team was slow starting. Ii was a long season and an extra hard one — hard for the reason thai the team had an early spring tii| through the South playing teams like Virginia which are hot, even al thai time oi the year, when the Northern clubs are jnsi beginning to roll. Doc Bowman and ]ell Dewald were the onl) Ereshmen along. Dick Beeler, who averaged .117 for the season, Bob Williams, Gary Winslow, and ' l. ' i ' s outfielder and lone leiterman. Bill Wingerd, did their best, but ihe couldn ' t lilt the team out oi a hitting slump which continued through every game but the last. But the last game was a real conquest. The team came through, witli the inspired pitching of Al Dorian, to give Swarthmore a sound drubbing, 7-1. Sophomore year, with hit; Ralph Strohl leading the players from first base, things looked a shade or two brighter. George Warner was sensational in the infield ami led the hitting with a .315 average. Even though the rest ol the hatting was discouraging, the team picked up a win over a strong Stevens club Sixty-six I .1 6-4 margin and thoroughly downed Hamilton, Mi I. Swarthmore won the lasi « ; 1 1 1 1 c ■ l .i score ol 9-3, .i bitter disappointmenl aftei the previous yeai s victor) over the time-worn rival. Hitting iii the following season look a double-jump. Al Dorian, who was the team ' s Number 1 pitcher, also liii an astonishing .11 ' I to lead thi batting. l m the big guns in Haverford ' s offense were Bill Hedges, playing Insi bas ami hitting ,380, .n i (.il Moon- the outfielder who batted a strong .333 Winn George Warner lefl college, fim Magill became captain and watched his if. nn run up a respectable record. Included in this record were two nanus with Swarthmore. The firsi one was a defeat for the Scarlet and Black, .; I. Km on the return trip, the Garnet squad U-II beneath the guns ol powerful Haverford hitting, and the Fot ds cut anothei notch in their bat handle, winning dec isi cl , 7-2. For three yeai s, Bill Wingerd was the onl) letterman Erom ' 43 on the Varsity. Bui during the briel Eour-game summei schedule in 1942, he did not go out and Dave Kirk at first uplu-ld the honor oi his class. Swarthmore lost twice to the Scarlet in the summer, as the team won hall its games. v Track Alio a good season iii 1940 and a somewhai less successful one the following year, the representatives of the (lass ol ' 43 closed out their three year term on the Haverford track team with one of the best aggregations that the school has known. The 19-12 team lost but one meet, an early season affair to Virginia, and went on to win the Middle Atlantic Championship to bring it to Haverford for the first time since 1937. During Freshman year the track team was captained by Charlie Fisher, one of Haverlord ' s line of fine hurdlers, and lost only two meets, to Lehigh and to Lafayette. The first of these losses, a two point defeat by the Engineers, brought to an end a string of thirty consecutive victories the Scarlet trackmen had run up over the ionise ol six years. Among the scorers ol that season were Ed Howe. Morrie Evans, Bill Wood- ward, and Al Rogers. Evans and Woodward had not vet been placed in the cuts in whic h they were later to prove so effective, and Morrie was then working at the half mile while Bill was running the longer distances. Hayden Mason led the team in scoring in 1940 with the amazing total of 97 points won in the pole vault, high jump, and broad jump. Walt Falconer, then a sophomore, set a Haverford record of one minute, 58.1 seconds in the hall mile which has not yet been eclipsed. It was also in that year that the combination of Snipes, Sharkey. Janney. and Falconer won the Middle Atlantic one-mile at the Penn Relays to mark the first event won by a Haverford team at the Rt- lays under the tutelage of Pop Haddleton. Sixty-eight ■ Mi ' I ' M I record show s Inn threi mc is won. while foui were losi However, ii was dm ing iliis season thai the athletes who were to compose the championship nam til i In in i yeai developed then abilii ies. Mm i ii I ' .nis. h.i ing been shifted From the hall mile to the Inn dies, led i In ii .mi in scoring with 65 points, Ed Howe 1 1 1 1 Ins si i H Ii in i In | ii ilr vault .mil amassed .1 total ol 15 points, l Rogers, who was to be headed E01 the arm) before the stari ol the 1942 season, won ' -11 points, while Bill Wood- ward, George Ryrie, and Vvrel Mason were othci members i the 1 lass ti make aluable conti ibui ions to he I l.i ei lin il S( in in ' .; 1 11 ui d. In hill ' , the outstanding Haverford track yeai foi some time back, the Scaj In and lll.it k team, under the captaincy ui Wall fall onei . noi only won 1 1 1 - Middle Atlantii Championship From a Eavored Gettysburg team, l m also turn- ed in .1 fine 1 it ui d ol five i toi ies and Inn one loss. [ he single defeat was received in the firsl unci ol the season at the hands ol Virginia, .1 school which is athletically dim oi Haverford ' s class. Ii was .1 season ol records .is the Haverford standards were broken in both the mile and two mile runs and the mark for the 120 yard high hurdles was tied. Wall Falconer Inst erased the l ' )i mi 1 one mile 1 e oi d in the Swai 1 h more meet w hen he 1 an the distant e in I minutes, 33. l se onds to nose out his teammate Dave Poole b) an eyelash. I he following week in the Middle At- lantics the two were clocked in the same time for this distance and again lowered the record, this time to I minutes, 26.5 seconds. Even though Poole was given the nod as winner ol the race, the lei old was awarded to them jointly. In the lasi meei ol the season. Poole establish- ed his second record as he ran the two mile distance in 10 minutes, L ' .l seconds, while Monie Evans tied the college ' s 15.4 second mark in the high hurdles in the Gettysburg meet. I he outstanding feature i l the season, however, weir the Middle Vtlantics held on Walton Field, [ he beautifully balanced Haverford team thai stepped on the Hack for that meet was just strong enough to nose out the second place Gettysburg contingent b lit j points. So mam ol the events ol iliis meet were outstanding iliai it is difficult to pick one as the most notable. Walt Falconer ' s closing sprint which won the half mile after he was apparentl) Ear out ol the running, Bill Woodward ' s fine finish to take an important fourth in the same race, the magnificent running ol the mile by Falconer and Poole, and the finishing drive of Morrie Evans to win the 220 .tx. low hurdles in a time onl) .2 seconds oil the meet record were perhaps the highlights ol a thrilling clay. Having scored victories over Lehigh, Swarthmore, and Lafayette before this meet, the Fort Is went on to down Gettysburg 71-55, to show that then Middle Atlantic ictor had been no fluke, and the) closed the season b taking a quadrangular meet from P. M. C, St. foseph ' s, and Dre xel. Seventy Tennis l i ci having .1 pool season in I ' ' Mi. 1 |i Haverford Minus team showed stead ' improvemeni in the last two years during which the Class ol I ' • was represented mi 11 In all, three members ol the class won letters. Freshman year, when Bob Dewecs was captain, the team w .is exceptional!) weak .mil turned in bui one victory, thai being .1 1 ' 1 win ovei I nion linn mii no liisl 11 mi iIh Varsity, although Collin, Addoms, Hallelt, Ferris, Coolidge, Stiles and [ orrence played through .1 successful schedule undci Ra) Bramall as the Freshman ream, and becanu the first Rhinie aggregation to down 1 hr [unioi Vat sn in theii annua] tilt. During the Eollowing season, the varsit) showed .1 great deal ol improvement, winning seven and dropping six. I h addition ol Ed (  oi 1 k to 1 In squad was the principle reason foi this return in w 1 n 1 1 i 1 it; form. Moving nun the Numbet I spot about in id sr. isi hi. Goerke ended up nnh .1 record nl ten victories and three defeats. Doug Hallett, playing in five matches, became the first 1 bet Ol ' 43 In Will .1 1(1 III. I In result nl I. ill pi.uiiii and .1 tribute in Norm Bramall ' s coaching thi 19111 team w.is even better. Against tough opposition, n umi seven and lost three, breaking West Chester ' s 18-match winning-streak. With fimmy Schnaars, whom (in. uli Norm Bramall terms .is the best playei he has li.nl at Haverford, unbeaten ai Number I . with Ed Goerke at 2, and with rris Coffin, |nlmn Rocs ler, I ' M Flaccus, ll.nn Vila, ami [err) Vddoms rounding oul the team in thai order, nnl Penn, Muhlenberg and Swarthmon were able in top the Fords. In doubles, foi the mosl part, Schnaars .mil Coffin, Roeslet .mil Flaccus, .uul Vila .mil Goerke worked together. I us Coffin and [err) iltlmns were th lettermen mi the team from thi Class nl ' 43. Golf ' In i .n i triumphantly Eour varsity snorts in one season is .1 large assignmenl foi any small college. Consequently the record of the golf team, competing as it docs with baseball, tennis, and track, is likeh to be weighted down with just about as much bad news as good. When the (lass ol 1943 was in its Rhinie year, there was plenty of bad news. Captain Bud Gross and his team had a really poor season. However, the next year. 19 11, under Bill Lid- dell ' s leadership, the team was better off. Three talented Freshmen, Don Baird, Bill M Shane, and Spencer Stuart helped pull the record up to 3 wins. . ' ! ties, and (i losses. Sumner Ferris represented the (lass of ' 43 in the following season, playing sometimes No. (i, sometimes No. 5. The team was pretty generally erratic, although both Captain Don Baird and Bill Mc Shane played consistently good golf throughout. The best match of the season was with Swarthmore when the squad played brilli- antly against one ol the best college teams in the East, only to drop the. match by the i lose margin ol 5-4, Captain Baiid and Spence Stuart turning in si oi es in the low seventies. Part ol the blame lot an unimpressive record can go to the amount ol practice the team was able to get. Usually playing and practicing on the Merion Crickei (Hub. which is very dose at hand, the leant in 1942 had to trek all the way up to Paxon Hollo w for practice and home matches. Seventy-two Cricket ( me ill the sports in which the lass ol 1943 has been inosi outstanding is cricki t, I lie i enewed interesl in tin I I Engl isl pastime thai has taken place ai Havei ford during the lasl three vears has been largel) due to the efforts and the in I rest III I ll IS I 1 .1 ss. I )ni ing I ' i eshman yeai i he team cap tained l Ed S( heffei won Coui ol i he nine games thai ii played. Bill Grala and fa que I ' Iwell ol the lass ol 1943 played an impoi tani pai i in its sui ess .is iniih blossomed oui .is competeni bowlers, and Mail Lippihcott, (.in Fitzgerald, George Morse, and Bob Cryan also saw considerable action. I he high lights ol the season wei e the two it toi ies ovei Pennsylvania and the overwhelming defeal ol l ' i mi eton. Sophomore yeai Found the Intercolle- giate O ic kci ssik iation re formed large- ly be mii si ' ol the work ol Coach Howard Comforl .md .i group ol interested un- dergraduates. As Haverford was most influential in renewing this league, ii w.is altogether fitting thai the Haverford team should earn nil top honors. Ed Sheffer was again captain, and George Morse, facque Elwell, Bill Grala, and Doug Bakei were numeral winners on the championship team, which downed Ursinus, Princeton, and Pennsylvania on successive Saturdays. Bill Grala was awarded the Haines Fielding Belt and the captainc) ai the end ul the season. Last spring the team had only a medi iKic season, in spiic ol the brilliant i Urn is ol Arnie Post, who was the team ' s outstanding batter as well as bowler, and of Captain Bill Grala, both ol whom were awarded letters. George Morse, Dave Stokes, (. kiihc Downing, John Balderston, and ferr) Car) were numer- al winners. i ■ . ♦ J S- Front Row: [ rainor, s. Fox, Newell, Holgi.nu (President), (■. Hopkins, Root. Second Row. Macintosh, Buyers, Sherpick, Bushnell, M. smith, Houston. Nautical Club In 1939, the Nautical Club ai Haverford was negligible, llu- next year, the situation had improved slightly, li was Mill the same in 1941. However, by the spring oi 1942, under the careful Eostering ol its new Commodore, Paul Bolgiano, the Club began to blossom. Procuring Eour Penguins, and profiting from Alumni contributions, the Club look on a lull lime intercollegiate schedule of nuiis. This fall, headed b Crede Calhoun and Freshman Bill Sherpick, the yachts- men maneuvered their way to wins over Pennsylvania and Stevens, while losing to Drexel and at Annapolis. Cheerleaders The Class ol ' 43 first showed up in the i .inks ol tin- Cheerleaders Sophomore Year, when Paul Cope and 1 lis Collin joined Dave (.annex and Burns Brodhead in front ol the stands. In the fall ol Mill. Cope and Brodhead were Co-heads, while Collin helped out. Willi Cope in China and the resl ol the corps graduated, Collin look ovei the leadership in 1942. Getting Blackburn foslin as an assistant ami procuring the services ol lour freshmen, Kill Sherpick, Stan Burns, Hob Stackhouse ami Johnny Bushnell, the group was the largest in recent years. H | islin, si. ii khouse Coffin, Shei ick, limns Miss- ing: Bushn . StVENTY-FOJR Intra murals Intramural ai hlcl ics have bei ome moi c .mil moi i ' populat .n Haverford during re cent years, Leagues in touch football, soi (cr. basketball, voile) ball, and softball have .ii ii .ic ted man) participants . 1 1 k ! i he sum iiki session with ns few intercollegiati events greatl) increased the numbei In i In linn h football i niii|,i i ii urn. slip per) Rock, composed ol fohn Whitehead, Bayl) Winder, Bill ingerd, Bill Hedges, Ins ( .nil 111 .mil Pal K ' ibinson, bi eezed through .in unbeaten season [unioi year, hin the team was broken up lasi I. ill. .mil squads captained l Coffin .mil Kill Grala narrowl) edged oul several others to tie foi i In i itle. North Barcla) won in 1939 in soccer. I hen, ( entei Ban l.i reigned supreme for i In nexi two years ol ' 43 ' s stay. Bui a pow- erful Lloyd team snapped the streak lasi I. ill largel) due ii the pla) ol Man Lippin- cott, Bill Grala, Bunch) Newell, Bill Wood- ward and |iihn Whitehead, all ol the class ol 43. |.uk Moon, Hoag) Hogness, and Paul Cope were the powers ol .i volleyball team ih. ii proved invincible lasi winter, .is ii seni even the facult) down to ignominious de- feat. Lasi MiniiiKT saw .i team captained l Dan Millet win .i torrid softball pennant race b) topping Bill Wingerd ' s team in .i playofl sci ics. Miller ' s aggregation then capped then performance 1 defeating an all-star squad picked from the othei teams nl the league. An interclass track meet which Listed several weeks and included virtuall) ever) event imaginable was also held during the siiminci session, Mm in Evans, Bill Wood- ward, and Matt Lippincott pacing the Seniors to .i one-sided victory. Dee Crab tree and Dan Wingerd were high point si iii I i s for the odier ( lasses. Seventy-six - Front Row. rorrence, Alvord (Secretary-Treasurer), Whitehead (President), MacCrate, J. M. Evans. Second Row: Johnston, Vnderson, Crabtree, S M. Fox, Marsh, D. II. Wingerd. The Student Council John Whitehead ' s Council gritted lis teeth and plunged into the seething whirlpool of undergraduate laxity, determined to uphold the honor and integrity of its alma mater. In addition to revising the smoking and library rules to accommodate vacillating demands, the Council enlarged its si ope and took over the Liquor Rule, much to Third Entry ' s dismay. It cracked down on water fights. It plied undergraduate conscience into foregoing Monday night desserts and giving some of the money collected to a future Field House through the medium of war bonds. It refurnished its new Council Room. It planned a recreation room lot the negro help. And it even stalled ,i systematic file. The Council had a couple of tough cases to crack and prosecute while -i? was an undergraduate class. The members spent about hall their time arguing witlt the friendly Senatoi and pointing oul that footnotes and quotation marks have their place in the world. They spent hall the other hall writing letters to the NEWS to answer Kroin or their chief antagonist, Morse. The Council had lo revise and restate the Women ' s Rule, resurrecting the fad thai a dormitory room is no place to hold a dale. It had to settle arguments between the STACK and the CAMPUS HAVERFORDIAX. Ii had to do all these things, and its members still had to be able to show themselves in public. It did and the) ha e. SEVENTY-EIGHT Front Row. I i n ' (PhotographU Editor); Lyman (Composition Mgr.); Coolidgc Business Mgi Vnderson (Editor-in-chief); Wingerd (Sports Editor); J. Brown Circulation Mgi Lcvinlow (Managing Editor); Coffin (Managing Editor). Second Rou Lippincotl Vdvertising 1 Wilkie, Sevringhaus. Day, Baird, Bair, Whitehead, Morse Vlvord Third Ron H.nn R Warren, (.. Hopkins. Root, Van Hollen, Pierson, Ricks, M Wright. Hissing: Hough. Smith, Cary, Handy, Hsia, Schmidt, Widde ihe, Brinton Valentine, Watkins Purdy, Vinsinger, Eckfeldt, Stevenson, Blcxk. Dielsch, I. S n up. News The largei [or ma I adopted l the Haverford News in the Fall ol 1942 appears a step in a series ol innovations leading i the making ol an organ a l it more vital to the life ol the campus than the News has been in the past. ( )l u n the editorial policy ol the News sought sim erely to be the lack ol editorial policy. The end ol tins ' good taste al all sis ' attitude ol impersonal arbitrator between the eveni and die | i inted record l ii was sounded with the Guide to Ereshman ((Hirscs. which asserted honestly things formerly looked upon .is bad taste. I O mosi members ol the Class ol ' 43, the News will always be the si to eight page publication appearing on [ uesday night and printed on very while and glossy paper. Undei Anderson, who emulated I. Roosevelt in ruling techni- que, the various departments functioned smoothly. Managing editors Coffin and Levintow contributed, respectively, witty articles on almost anything and fairly literal reviews ol recordings. Wingerd kepi the sports page in active well trained condition during all seasons. Business Managei Coolidgt and the other members ol his staff, Lippincott, advertising, Brown, circulation, and Lyman, composition, struggled with increasing (osis. -w 1 1 i 1 1 will determine to a large extent the future ol the News. Credit noes to Ryrit foi the improvements in photographs and mis. I hese and a score, more oi less, ol members ol the other (lasses pooled theii highly individual talents to produce a papei thai was alwavs, at least, pleasant. Front Row: Vllen (Secretary). Studwell, MacCrate (Quartet), Williams, J. Brown (Accompanist), Mr. LalTord (Director), Torrence (President and Quartet), Holland Hunter, Whitehead, Coolidge, Hallett, siilis. Lippincott (Business Mgr.). Second Row. deSchweinitz, March, Baker, l)el] . [ackson, Widdecombe, Fetterman (Quartet) Bassert, Bache. Spatz, J. Wright. Lehmann, R. Warren. Third Row: Mumma, Frantz, Grosholtz, Bedrossian, Conn. Handy, Burns (Quartet), |. Stokes, Crosman, Henry Hunter. Sangree, Courtright, T. Goodman, Cannon. Glee Club Under the popular direction l Mr. Lafford, the Glee Club continued its climb to fame. Individual try-outs for membership are held each fall and this care has paid big dividends. The club finished second in this district last year in the Fred Waring contest, ahead of Penn and Swarthmore. Inaugurating the policy ol combining with Bryn Mawr ' s vocalists for Gil- bert and Sullivan operettas, the Club lias presented Pirates and Patience to large audiences. The latter, given last spring in Goodhart, had Torrence and MacCrate in the leads. Rehearsals at Bryn Maui, which lasted till 12 every night for two weeks, were capped off by a quick trip to The Greek ' s, which was okay with all parties concerned. Earlier in the year Mendelssohn ' s Elijah was given with a scattering of professional musicians to bolster up the accompaniment. The annual Harcum concert at their prom, the Jefferson concert and dance, the Buck Hill week-end, and thi ' trek to Drinker ' s on Sunday afternoons were the highlights of the season. No concerts were given during summer school, largely owing to Mr. Lafford ' s absence, but voluntary rehearsals kepi a nucleus of the club in voice. Jerry Brown, who joined to sing, ended up by being chief accompanist. Lippincott booked the engagements, and Torrence was president. Eighty H8S Front Row M Huntei i --si rreasurer); VlacCrate (Business lni.i. Marsh Vio President); Mason i svi Secretary); rorrence Pres l Glee lub). Second Ron Hallctt, Whitehead, Sevringhaus, Wood, Brown, Coolidge, Mini. Lee, Pcterkin Stage Mgi I, Lippincott. I Inxl Row. 1 mil in. Irving, li.nn . Coffin, Warren, illiams, Bachc Hollandei Ryric. Cap and Bells Dedicated to the supplying l plays and audiences Eor undergraduate .uihin the Cap and Bells leads a rather sporadit existence, li languishes between die semi-annual productions in Reinhardtian musings on future offerings, for exam- ple Mourning Becomes Electra. Given the ue for the actual starl on production in the turgid prose ol the French catalogue, the officers settle for something less pretentious, bui generall) more satisfying, for example, Hay Fever. In spile of certain technical handicaps, such as .t working space so small thai more than one sei creates .1 maze which threatens to lead electricians to the audience, and actors in the switchboard, or a system ol make-up based on assembly line princi- ples, the group manages on the opening and the following night to achievi .1 show well above the prep school and bordering on the amateur-professional. During the past three and one hall years the Cap and Bells, now headed l Marsh. Peterkin, and MacCrate, has shown a penchant for diversity In offering a melodrama, The Ghosi Train, a fantasy, Outward Hound, an experiment, Out Town, a mystery, Margin foi Error, and the Noel Coward corned) ahead) ment- ioned. It has also supplied a pari ol the motivation I01 the Gilbert and Sullivan productions ol the past two years. A more extensive experiment with radio plays ma) locate a new field in man) ways suited to the purposes ol the group. Members ol the Players ' Club ol Bryn Mawr have long appeared in the feminine roles, i luiN establishing one of the earliest examples ol Bryn Mawr-Haverford ooperation. I his fall a new high was re.u lied in the produi I ion ol Karr s I Intel I ' m, with the Varsit) Players. Deep, well-acted, with lavish musi and lights, the pla got five curtain calls. ■? Left to Right: Whitehead (Secretary), Evans, [ orrence, Collin, MacCrate, Alvord, Lippin- cott. Missing: Cope. Founders ' Club By the start oi Senior year, seven members oi ' 43 had restarted t lie Club in the performance of its usual functions. The highlight of this year was the annual banquet, sparked by the inimitable wit of Uncle Billy and the equally inimitable food of one Charles Clement. Professor Sutton was named President and J. C. Whitehead assumed the post oi Secretary. By fall, the mem- bership of ' 43 was down to six, as Paul Cope lell lor China. But it was still die first time in many years that a sophomore had joined the select Buster Alvord had made the grade. Phi Beta Kappa Zeta Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary fraternity, was opened at Haverford in 1898. Election to the society is made at the end ol Junior Year lor those ' with weighted averages of 90 or better, and at the end ol Senior Year lor those with minimum averages of 88. Anderson, Hunter, Gaensler, and Ridgeway made the grade early and didn ' t wail lor comps. While scholastic achievement is the primary requisite, other qualities are taken into consideration. Left in Right: Anderson, Hunter, Ridgeway. Eighty-two H Mi I Mr. 1 Hough Mi |or lan Mi offin Ml ( If j l i Vnibli i Customs Committee The Rhinie class blossomed oui in .1 pariicularl) colorful, il nauseating attire this Fall. I he annual hilarious Club Founders sessions wen held in th dining hall, presenting talenl as varied in nature as il was in quality Vleadei .mil M.nsh started the class ofl as Sophomore representatives on th committet l,, 1 ih, 1. ill ii in. Nexi yeai came the rathei k in ! I and tolerani rule ( H ness and Newell. I Ins year found [ orrence chairman, ;issisic l l Senioi mem bers Coffin and Evans, playing .1 lively tune to which the Rhinies, foi the mosi p. 11 1 . 1 1 11 in I I il. iiu ed. Vic Dance Committee Following two highh successful summei dances, fall and winter inform- al dances were held ever) othei Saturday night in the Common Room, featuring fewer lights and more refreshments. Local talenl looked bettei than evei and 1 imi Mawr lock on new significance because l the gas situation. Coffin kepi up on the latesl releases, and the stags, as usual without benefit ol introduction, had an especiall) good time after Stevens had skinned them. Left i Right ' , [ omlinson (Chairman), Coffin, Shields, Warren, Johnson, Stevens. — - £ Debate Council Student debators will always hnd sonic point aboul which to argue, so t li i s yeai the) plan to hold the iioiiii.il number ol ' _ ' I debates as opposed to lasi year ' s l_. The recent improvements in Haverford debating have been commented upon l ever) Record. Alexan- der Tomlinson, who heads the council, hopes to con- tinue the improvements, although he lias abandoned First Row. Tomlinson (Chairman), Davis, the expectation of an audience, which turns out only for ilie debate with Rosemont. Second Row. Steins, Hopkins. Sutterlin. Stack Started in the fall ol 1939, The Mud; has weathered periodic crises to emerge as a literary emporium featuring such stock in trade as origi- nal poems and stories, translations, philosophic essays, and plays, all of which an in quality to the extent ol the student-contributors ' talents. Nichols, under whose aegis The Stack first appealed, collected a group notabl) Erom the Class ol ' 43. Coffin, Baker, Marsh. Enck, Cool- idere. el al. contributed suggestions Erom the side. The committee which publishes The Stack elects its own members, and those already added from the lower classes indicate a future ol some sort tor it. Front Row. Coale, Bache, Marsh, Enck. Second Row. Collin. Coolidge, Uvord. Standing: Hedges, Mumma. Missing: R. Warren, I.. Voiing, Schmidt. Eighty-four eft to Right; Gilbert, Hollandei Fox [ordan, Evans Store Committee Tackling the seemingl) impossible job ol making the Coop store a paying proposition rathei than .1 losing one. this year ' s store committee, comprised ol jim Gilbert, chairman, Evans, [ordan, Hollender, and C. Fox, instituted somi drastii changes in store policy, rhe student bod) was given .1 well-deserved slap in the Eace l the abolishment ol .ill kinds ol credit; and the biggest single loss [actor, I in Ik i( c cream, was eliminated in favoi I read) packed tli ir cups. I hi net result ol several years ol griping l agenc) holders was .1 reduction to v , ol the Eormei agenc) tax ol 10%. The Senator lost his hold on the Crumb with the consequence that it is now absorbed into the store proper. Ii remains in be seen whethei the behind-the-scenes guidance ol this group will accomplish 1 lit- miracle ol permitting Charley Fox i write in hl.uk ink. Cope nevei did. Band I he band must be given credit Eor being a most enterprising .md courageous group. Amidst many caustic remarks and prophecies l doom, this organization stuck to its job and b the end ol the football season was able to turn out a ver) satisfactory El Capitan, or a stirring Washington Post. I he ranks ol iliis year ' s hand were considerabl) strengthened l the Rhinies, which bodes well for the future. John Marsh kept things running, Mr. Lafford directed and occasional!) played a resonant tuba, and the vast masses at the football games lent assorted qualities and quantities ol vocal support to the colle ge songs. I he kind has proven its worth— at least, as .1 Haverford institution. Front Row: Marsh, Sludwell. Spatz, rhawley, R Jacobs. Channel Second Row: Guthrie, Courtright, Lippincott. Third Row: Boy sen. Smith, (. Jacobs Ma Intosh. ■ i ii n I . ' on ' ; Mason, i i iffin Woodward, Evans (Secretary) Ferris i President i, fordan (Vice Presiden l I, Haiku. Grala, Somers. Second Row: Meader, Valentine, Elkinton, Shinn, Stuai i. l Shane, ila, [oslin, Rm ie. 1 bird Row Hough, Baird, Stokes, Wing erd, Vmbler, Calhoun, ood, Whitehead. Fourth Row: Bo teler, CrSbtree, Moore, Conn, Goerke, Warnken, Swartley, s hnaai s, Alvord,, Hedges Mai Crate. Varsity Club Continuing its policy l athletic promotion here at college, the Varsity Club had a busy year. At an early meeting new officers in the persons ol Ferris, [ordan, and Evans were elected, and ii was decided that membership would be opened to anyone receiving a Varsity letter award in a recognized spoil. In the way ol activities, the club sponsored a very successful first summer formal dance under the chairmanship ol Av Mason. The annual banquet was held on October 31, after the Wesleyan game. Athletes from neighboring prep schools were entertained at an excellent meal at the Haverford Court, talks and musical numbers finishing oil the program. Clubs Slaves ol the scientific method have ample Opportunity to expound their theories in the Big Four. Mason presided over the Engineers, who heard a series of lectures by men from the industrial world. The Chemistry Club, under Haskell Torrence ' s direction, featured student speakers as well as outsiders. Howard KriebcTs Biology Club, with headquarters in the Pond, ceased to func- tion actively with his absence. The active Radio Club inaugurated its new station. WHAV, with studios in the Union. Howard Lutz ' s Service Project pitched in and helped the local community wherever and whenever pos- sible. Last, but far from least, come the intellectuals who Hock to Ridgeway ' s Chess Club, the Model League- ol Nations and fack Hough ' s active International Relations Club. , to Right: Ridgewa) (Chess Club); Tor- rence (Chemistr) Club); Mason (Engineei in Club); Clark (Radio Club and WHAV); I ut (Service Project). Eighty-six - — Left: Nature in the raw. Right: II you ' ll dire i your attention to tin- young bargain. Well, jusi a bit. Left: Delivering the Foolish Four ' s evening paper. ]{iu,lit: The office doesn ' t open (ill nine. Left: The Coop branches out. Right: Come up and play with my linker io s. Left: Maybe Newell saw it. Su .ii i Iiiimii i had .1 son, Su ,ii i limoi i had .i daughter. . . ' ell. ihs. pleasing m l sitting down in lioiil. Left: I od.i . I am .i man. Right: rhere ' s no one in ( lollege l ii; enough to i In i w me in i he |  nd. Caul). ill io Cueball. 1 r.i e ii to t lope! Left: Hurry, hurry, hurry! Only 20(10 left. Right: . . . and I (.111 |jl.i trumpet, and sing, and play tennis, and . . . Lffl: Arts majors use a shovel. Right: What will Uncle Hillv say? Left: 1 hat ' s okay, he was a freshman himsell in 1940. Right: Oh, Nedder, you know you shouldn ' t. Left: Gentlemen watch a gentleman ' s game. Right: It ' s never a bad idea to Garry a spare. Left: Right below here, 1 siild a desk. Right: Gel a load ol this. Left rhe threi bears. Right: ll women in u ill lies. 1 t ' U | nmiiili das! Right: ( ..n ins. Rhinies Left: I lere ' s to Han um College, the) haven ' i need ol .m know ledge. Rieht: Meatless dinner. eft: In i are you gi ting to jiiii li tonight, Win gerd? Right: Mi. nlis ol the An h Street Opera. Left: tliKiii supporters. Right: II ilic s|iii ii nn i . you. A l Left: 1 he waltz ol the flowers. Right: Grrrrrrrr. Left: Joll) well lined old top. Riglit: Eye on the ball, McShane. ■ ■ ■■ I 111 Left: You ' re right Bair. Right: Don ' t let Charlie get that. . : ] right, who ' s Ci k It- el Manager? Right: Now, Felix— Left: Wonder what the Sophs are doing. Right: Who do you like? Top Gentlemen, l i • il ( iongi ess, i II : I li .ills ii|). Right: Owooooooo . . . Left: Sleeping beauty? Right: I he goose hangs high. eft: rake .1 letter, Editor. Right: I tome, fames Left: Now aboul the Wo- men Rule. . . Right; C.aw 111. 111. A Final Word .... before we leave. We wish to express our appreci- ation of the support of our advertisers. Their cooperation has made this yearbook possible. Ninety-four r ® ESTABLISHED 1818 QjJ rrA) j of ArAJ: fu$ f urnisliinip, Hints ' - %ots MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK IT PAYS TO BUY AT BROOKS BROTHERS It ' s lnnv many times you weai .1 sun how many times you can wear it and like to wear ii thai determines its real value. I he mosl expensive clothes in the world .irr those that are too cheap in construction or too cheap in taste — to permit long continued use. The most economical are thus. ' thai are mad. last -and to look well as long as they hold together. Brooks Brothers ' Ready made Suits grow old more gracefully than any other suits we know Ready-made Suits. $58 to $92 Ready-made Overcoats. $62 to $1 It) Sixth Floor Shop Overcoats. $4 5 to $69 BRANCHES NEW YORK: one wall street BOSTON: NEWBURY COR. BERKELEY STREET A. TALONE TAILOR French Dru ( leaning and Dyeing 118W, I M AS I i R A 1 ARPMORE PHONI ARD 416 DIESINGER ' S Jewelers Since 1886 Suitable gifts in diamonds and jewelry backed with our reputation ol fifty six years standing SUBURBAN SO 1420 WALNUT ST. MORI ' Pi HI I E. S. McCawley Co. Incorpi ratt J I ex t books for Haverford College Agent ji College: Fairles Jordan. -44. ukes textbook orders .ind hjs charge 1 gency at Founders Hours open posted on notice boards. OXFORD SHIRTS i ON DOWN COI 1 AR White, Plain J 2.50 WOOL 1 Ii s si SO up AlUA i 1 HOSE  0up MANN and DILKS OPEN Wl DNESDAY UNTIL ' ! 650 CHEM NU I si K ;l  ! That ' s the word for it. Taste Supplcc Sealtest Ice Cream and you ' ll join the cheer tribe — which is practically every- body. There couldn ' t be a nicer way of treating your friends, your family, and your deserving self than with the energizing, vitamin-packed food| called delightful Haverford Court Hotel Montgomery Ave. at grays lane HAVERFORD. PA Ideal Transient and Residential Accommodations Excellent Food Refined Atmosphere Ardmore Printing Co. Since 1889 Printers and Engravers 49 RITTENHOUSE PLACE Ardmgrh. Pa. Ard. 1700 Over Fifty Years of Service to the Main Line NiNETr-six - — H. Royer Smith Co. All Makes of RADIOS i J RECORDS PHONOGRAPHS RADIO-PHONOGRAPHS Easy Terms, Liberal Trade-in The Larqest Stock of Records m U. S. A. 10TH 8 WALNUT STS. PHILADELPHIA Krause and Spitko Successors to OTTO FUCHS BOOKBINDERS Magazines and Old Books Bound 2416 N 15TH STREET PHILADELPIII _J_ ARE GOING GREAT GUNS! Half-Tracks on the assembly line . . . Fire-power in high geai . . . Engines roaring a challenge to the enemies of freedom . . . Autocar is in the war— with the Army, the Navy, and the Air Corps, And under the stimulus of war production, the Autocar Trucks of 19 iX will he stronger, tougher, and better money-makers for you than ever before. A promise? A certainty! Product-development is fostered by war. In the meantime, keep your trucks rolling on the home front— and remember your pledge to the U. S . Truck Conservation Corps. Your trucks are your own, but their life belongs to the Nation. AUTOCAR Monuf aduri ' d in Ardmore, Pa. • Serviced by Factory Branches from Cooif to Coast Hull-Dobbs House 529 Wi st Lancaster Avlnu ARDMORE • Howard and Mary Parker Waiting to Serve } ' ou Compliments of Jeannett ' s Bryn Mawr Flower Shop with Best Wishes for a Successful Career for THE CLASS OF 194 Victor V. Clad Co. Manufacturers ot FOOD SERVICE EQUIPMENT Full Line of KITCHEN UTENSILS CHINA. GLASSWARE SILVERWARE 1 17-119-121 S. 11TH ST.. PHILA. Whitehall Hotel Apartments Transient Rooms--Furnished and Unfurnished Apartments Dining Room -- and -- Garage On Premises A KENNETH LINDSLEY, Mar. ' • ARTHUR W. BlNNS. Inc.. Management 410 LANCASTER AVE.. HAVERFORD. P, . Established 187 2 HOPPER. SOLIDAY 8 CO. Members Phila Slock Exchange INVESTMENT SECURITIES 1420 Walnut St. Philadelphia Compliments of SMEDLEY and MEHL Ardmore. Pa. Bryn Mawr College Tea Room LAMBART ROAD — SOUTH OF PEM ARCH Lunch -- Tea -- Dinner JOHN P. HALLAHAN, Inc. I Building Construction PHILADELPHIA Builders of the New Huverford || College Library John Troncelliti--Barber Shop Ardmore Arcade CRICKET LAUNDRY Agencu for the College Compliments ol ALBRECHT ' S FLOWERS ARDMORE THEATER First Mam Line Showings Ninety-eight n - i ICE CREAM A. VASSALLO BARBL R Y. A Bi II Ardmori stablished ' 1 v.s Wishes to the Class of 1943 PILGRIM LAUNDRY COMPANY Good Luck to ihc ( lass 0 1943 Charles E. Hires Root Beer Co. BUY WAR BONDS ( and STAMPS Best Wishes to The Class of 1943 Suburban Theater ARDMORI SEVILLE THEATER BRVN MAWR ANTHONY WAYNE THEATER WAYNI i mpliments 0 THE CLEANING AGENCY swii 1 i GANi i Tailor Ardmore Service Station J. L. MASSETI Gulf Gas 8 Oil I I 1 Rl 1 Zl CHAINS BATTEF 213 w. Lancaster Ave Phone 9 - TOM HARRISON PATRONIZE THE CO-OP. ARD. 9441 Flowers by U ' .r, NAOMI K GRIFFITH ' ' 1 QUI Tl K A 1 ARDMOR1 PA — SITTINGS BY APPOINTMENT BELL PHONE ()ur Portraits Live Forever Hollander Feldman PHOTOGRAPHERS 1705 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. «  Photographers for I he 1943 Record SPECIALIZING IN SCHOOL AND COLLEGE ANNUALS Zo the Class of 1943-. Our congratulations to you for a swell book: and our most sincere thanks for a well-managed book. In these days of acceleration and enlistment: of priority and scarcity, it is wonderful to have something done on time, and well! Zo the Classes of the Juture. You may have to lay off annuals for a while, and we will be pretty busy too, for the duration, but we are looking forward to working with future Haverford classes as printers and engravers. TV?? [J iSTlSTGN LIVINGSTON PUBLISHING CO. Printers : : Designers : : Engravers : : Lithographers NARBERTH, PENNSYLVANIA One hundred m r • OHJ0WNNY ; H0WY0U CAN LOVrU ALL W THINGS YOU ARE TOKIQHT.MY AMAPOLA,MY PRETTY LITTLE POPPY BLUFS IN THFNIQHT I KNOW WHY AND SO DO YOU FM£MW EARL HARBOR ' S 7Q THEYC UL ITTHf JfRSEY BOUNCE TANqRINF


Suggestions in the Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) collection:

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

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Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

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Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

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