Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA)

 - Class of 1946

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Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 76 of the 1946 volume:

THE 1946 RECORD Published by The Class of 1946 at Haverford College THE 1946 RECORD STAFF Editor DAVID LONG Associate Editor WILLIAM CHARTENER Business Manager JAMES MUMMA Advertisng Managci JOSEPH STOKES Advertising Staff. . . FREDRICK BARTLETT THOMAS BIRDSALL, MALCOLM CAMERON and BERTRAM KUMMEL Circulation Manager BEN LEUCHTER Circulation Staff WILLIAM SHERPICK Editorial Staff. HANS PETERSEN, Write-up Editor; GEORGE MONTGOMERY, Activity Editor Donald McNeill, Thomas Ryan, Lewis Coffin, William Cowan and Robert Clayton — Write-ups Charles Ryrie, Paul Henkels, Activity Write-ups Photographic Editor, STEWART SCHNEIDER Art Editor HARLEY GROSS Photographer RICHARD RIVERS Dr. Frederick Palmer, Jr., is retiring from service to Haverford College this year, after forty years of teaching. In grateful remembrance of his long contribution to this College, we the Class of 1946, are glad of the opportunity to dedicate our yearbook to him. For his valuable instruction, his helpful guidance, and for his ready friendship, we are choosing this method of expressing the appreciation of the whole College Community. Dean Macintosh THE ADMIISISTRATION Felix Morley, our president, performed his du- ties as the head of a small liberal arts college with great success by having an article pubHshed in the Saturday Evening Post, serving on an Army advisory bo.ird, speaking at the commencement of the University of Kansas, and joining the staff of a news letter. Mrs. Morley knitted and made cocoa while the president explained Soc- rates for a seminar in political thought. In mid- May, time was taken out from three packs a day, to warn of excessive indulgence in the dining hall and poor examples for the undergraduates. Nevertheless, and despite all these activities, the president has taken time out to do a fine job of overcoming the wartime problems of Haverford, and of getting to know a great many more students. Brint Stone had more jobs than Ickes by the end of the year. Dean Gibh narrowly escaped writer ' s cramp helping out Pop and some of the cut-conscious members of the faculty. Mac maintained a far-flung correspondence with our draft boards, and tried to keep a floor on the student population. President Morley, Dr. Meldrum First Row — Wills, Hepp, Steere; Second Row — Stinnes, Benham, Evans, Post, Lockwook, Pres., Morley, Vice-Pres. Macintosh, Flight, Hetzel, Ohl; Third Row — Jones. Kikuchi, Sutton. Wylie, Drake; Fourth Row — Stone. Pfur.d. Holmes. Herndon. Pepinsky. Gibb, Rittenhouse, Watson, Comfort; Fifth Row — Meldrum, Greene. O.ikley. Palmer. Haddleton. Snyder. Teaf. THE FACULTY The Government and the endowment helped us to keep the faculty in such numbers as nearly to surpass the student body. Alum.nus Francis Cope Evans came from Oxon to fill the place of Zoologist Dunn, oif to Bogota chasing snakes. Fetter was in India most of the year with Lend lease, but brought back some choice autographs of Anglo-American generals and politicos for the library. Dr. Allendoerfer, who had just finished a stay in Washington, went there again after the ASTU evacuations. Monty Melchior ' s de.ith was a shock, and great loss to the entire College. After forty years with the Haverford Physics Department, Fritzie Palmer retired. And Dr. Rittenhouse announced that next January he would become an emeritus. Omar Pancoast expected a call from the Army next month, month after month, and finally turned the fourth floor of the stack into the Main Line Academy of Music. Uncle Edmund Stinnes made Rosemont seem much closer. Eloise came as faculty secretary; T. O. Jones didn ' t have to apologise for Oshkosh anymore. Douglas Steere made his third attempt to train relievers and re- constructors, and finally seems to be succeeding because he works from within. Watson and Sargent engaged in a competition for students for their 8b and ?2b respectively. Dr. Lunt gave History 6 and lectured on Louis XV, Mesdames Maintenon and Pompadour: DuBarry. gentlemen, was not a lady. THE MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 1946 ELWOOD TATE BAKER J72.1 S3rd Street, J.ickson Heights, N. Y. Grace Church School Glee Club (1); NEWS Board (1), Circulation M r. (1). One of the North Bareliiy Boys . . . First from the class of l ' M6 to crash the NEWS with a picture . . . Star of the Mcruui soccer field . . . Give me a pipe anytime, provided I have a cigarette to fill it with . . . Left Haverford for the scholastic wilds of Dartmouth. WILLIAM PERRIN IJAKER . 33 Columbia Avenue, Palmerton, Pa. George School I. V. Fouthall (1). One glimpse, and then his Uncle Sam got him . . . successor to the Heimlich-George School tradition ... a first floor Barclay man . . . powerful in foot- hall . . . Let ' s play cards . . . hard-working, but not too much. FREDRICK HENRY BARTLETT, JR. .vi4 C Jiester Pike, Norwood, Pa. Westtown School Chemistry Varsity Soccer (1); Var.sity Baseball (2); Glee Club (1); Intramural Basketball (2); Varsity Club (2). Consistently hard Vv-orker, but definitely one of the hoys . . . his pet peeve is his hair, which is on the waning side . . . famous overnight due to Ryan ' s words, I ' m looking for the Bots . . . noted for his endeavors to keep away from Mac . . . heavy supporter of the Fifth Entry Quartet . . . never re- fused an invitation . . . good man in a clutch. n WILLIAM HENDERSON BARTON 1818 Russell Street, Nashville, Tenn. Transfer from Vanderbilt Cricket (2): Cap and Bells. Bu:;:; . . . our first martyr, wrecked a tooth in a water fight . . . can you lend me five until Mon- day? Then I can borrow forty doUahs from Mistah Wills . . . liked his old overcoat . . . freshman theme on ant life . . . advertiser for dates in the Main Line Times. ROBERT HAIG BEDROSSIAN 4301 State Road, Drexel Hill, Pa. Upper Darby High School Chemistry Glee Club (1), Manager (2): Fencing (1); Founders Club (2). Bedrose . . . When better razors are built, Bedros- sian will build them . . . those brunette wenches (and ladies, of course) . . . helped hold the lid on Panmure, and make it the center of the Haverford Reformation . . . That 99 in Chem 4 . . . the Upper Darby Kid ... a great loss to Haverford, and a blow to its extra-curricular activities, but a gain for Temple. THOMAS MORRISON BIRDSALL Booth Lane, Haverford, Pa. William Penn Charter School Chemistry Soccer Team (2); Tennis Team (2); Varsity Club. Birddogie . . . su Bett gehen, Herr Birdsall? . . . the only person in the history of H. C. who could finish half of Chem .i experiments on last day . Main Line delux . . . let ' s go to the Club for a little Christmas cheer ... pin ball fanatic ... $5 and you can cut off all my hair ... my feet get sunburned between the toes. ARTHUR EARL BRYSON, JR. 1J2 Myrtle Street, Wmnetka, 111. New Trier High School Engineering Corporation Scholarship (1, 2); J. V. Wrestling (1); B Football Team (:); Glee Cluh (2). Curly hair . . . stumps Hetzel with a question and then helps him answer it . . . the little man with the deep voice . . . Pop Haddleton ' s plunging full- back . . . blue jeans and slide rule . . . can grow a beard, too . . . has sisters, but nice . . . Merion Annex, bottom floor . . . studies hard, but can also relax . . . left Haverford after four terms to join the Navy V-5 . . . Sky Anchors Aweigh! STANLEY SHERMAN BURNS, JR. 460,1 Pershing Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. St. Louis Country Day School Chemistry Glee Cluh (1, 2): Fencing Team (2); Cap and Bells (1, 2): Cap and Bells Steering Committee (2); Corporation Scholarship (1, 2). Rollo . . . acting National Bank of Panmure and Fifth Entry . . . mad genius of boogie-woogie . . . the lad who hunted in seven states for the right girl and finally found her in his own backyard- at Harcum . . . don ' t mind if I do . . . let ' s have an- other be kind to Rollo week . . . along with Birddog, kept the Botts in knots . . . keep quiet or 111 hit you on the dorsal caudal region of your spinetrape:ius muscle . . . Burp!! ALBERT BUSH-BROWN Ambler. Pa. Germantown Friends ' School Chemistry Football (2); Tra:k (2); Dance Committee (2). Bush . . . Take me back to my boots and saddle . . . corduroy coats and levis . . . Walk-talk dates at Bryn Mawr . . . Deep Springs drawl . . . Sig- nals, hike, ready, one, two, three, four . . . Hey, hang on to this for a minute . . . flair for writing and women; excelled at the former; spell-bound the latter . . . good student, fine athlete, excellent mixer . . . Lou Coursey ' s comment: The ideal college man . . . left May 1944 for the Navy and is now at Camp Peary, Virginia. JONATHAN FREEMAN BUSHNELL 5. Hancock Street, Rochester, N. Y. Harley School Ba- cball (1): Track (1); Nautical Club (1): Cheer Leader (1). He made the varsity . . . sidelined with the cheer ' leaders . . . tjrrrrr, fight!! . . . saiHng at the Middle Atlantics . . . where is that medal, Commodore? . . . supporter of Haverford spirit . . . cheers for Haverford in Swarthmore ' s V-12 and makes the chief tear his hair . . . Hey! there goes Doc Leake, the best tr.imer in the world. ANGUS MALCOLM CAMERON ?1,S Sth Avenue S. E., Minot, N. D. The Blake School Chemistry Tennis Team ( 2 ). Just call me Angus . . . You see, hey, it was Harmon ' s last year . . . Does she eat a lot? — Can she dance? — Does she eat a lot? — Does she neck? — Does she eat a lot? . . . It was Michigan ' s hall on Minnesota ' s ten yard line . . . two tries at Physics 1 . . . Who ever heard of Odell . . . You mean there ' s another kind of elev.itor that cirries people? LAWRENCE HENDERSON CANAN, JR. 1S(I3 .ird A cnue, Altoona, P,i. Altoona High School Radio Cluh (1); Debating Society (1): Glee ri:b (1); T. V. Football O): Freshman Track Team (1). Bubbling over with enthusiasm . . . ever-ready smile . . . Why Walt, that ' s marvelous . . . hand ' some redhead . . . music lover . . . Young People ' s leader . . . This is Station WHA V . . . chugs around the tr.ick . . . pencil behind the ear . . . I wonder how m.iny years of Greek I ' ll hav? to take to get into seminary , . . from Haverford to Scout Cimp counselng, to Tank Corps, to Medical Corps in six months. 10 VvARD CALVIN CASE 45 Preston Road, Columbus, Ohio Columbus Academy J. ' . l-,H.th..ll (1): J. V. Ba.-kelball (1). Butch ... he of the curly hlond locks . . . into Fhilly and on to New Yoik with Hook . . . blocking back of J. V. football team, and saw varsity . . . who put Torrence ' s bicycle on top of the flag pole? . . . have any of you guys done your math? . . . 4th entry gang . . . paintmg as an avocation at Swarthmore . . . one oi st)mc fifty Haverfordians to go to Swarthmore in Navy V-12 program. WILLIAM HOUSTON CHARTENER Monesson, Pa. Mercersburg Academy History NEWS (2), News Editor (2): I. R. C. (1. 2), Secretary (2); Band (1): Debating Society (1, 2), Chairman (2): Record Assistant Editor (2): Tau Kappa Alpha, Secretary (1), President (2); Founders Club (2): Corporation Scholarship (2). W. C. . . . Billius . . . fiend for dates (history) . . . never turned down a bottle, nor kept it down . . . Charles Atlas protege ... not conceited, just self-confident . . . let ' s you beat up that Rhinie . . . Windsor knot, cuff links and rainbow socks . . . off to the opera with Brownie . . . wit (?) ... also at the Gov House bridge table . . . Clarence Dar- row Chartener . . . what was that about Doctor Johnson, Bill? Strumpy just left . . . Donkey-hater . . . dreams: Damn the British, they ' ve got us Corp(se) scholar. ROBERT FRANCIS CLAYTON, JR. 4V E. Providence Road, Lansdowne, Pa. Friends Select School Mathematics Studerts Counc-I (2): J. V. Soccer (1); Varsity Basket- ball (2). 46 s first war veteran . . . drafted m M.irch ' 4}, discharged in October 4. , back to Haverford in February 44 . . . jitterbug Bob . . . size 1 1 feet, but how he could move them . . . got mixed up with corp scholars in Latin 7 . . . hked to have the rado accompany him while toot ng his clarinet . . . Camp Butner is by far the worst hole in the country. EDGAR BELLVILLE COALE 521 E. Mermaid Lane, Chestnut Hill Germantown Friends Stack (1). Ned . . . one of our more prominent Quakers . . . sang loudly the praises of Hart Crane, Thomas Wolfe, and Ned Coale . . . ten bucks and Til jump from the third floor of Barclay . . . eccenter of the North Barclay after-lunch literary set . . . Mrs. O ' Neill thinks Ned ' s a fine boy . . . now in Army Air Forces. LEWIS E. COFFIN 130 Church Street, Newton, Mass. Newton High School Chemistry Glee Club (1), Manager (2). Lew . . . Parson Coffin ... a fundamental funda- mentalist ... he upheld the musical life of the College ... a liberal science major . . . No inter- ruptions. Dr. Kelly . . . Well, now — ... a scion of New England . . . one of our budding brains. GEORGE LEWIS CONKLIN 601 Merion Avenue, Penfield, Upper Darby, Pa. Haverford High School Day student . . . late to class again . . . look what the wind blew in . . . pale, but smiling . . . Profes- sor Cadbury would frighten anybody . . . blue suits, blue sweaters, blue eyes . . . left here Christmas, 1942. 12 EDWARD MARSHALL COOK, JR. 56 Ccd.irhr(ii k Ruad, Ardmoro, Pa. Havcrford High School Physics Oldest standing; member of our class ... a patient worker, who h.id the guts to return to school after he had once left it . . . first of 46 to be married . . . drives a maroon car which is the envy of the College ... a physics man, who is the despair of the lesser breed . . . hopes to do great things in the Scientific World. WALTER HARVEY COPE Hotel Morton, Atlantic City, N. J. Westtown School J. V. Soccer Team (1). Walt . . . why go to college during a war? . . . it ' s the Field Service for me . . . hung around about long enough to see what the rest of his class looked like, then left . . . do you blame him? . . . Cope, the dope (not really) . . . pretty good in soccer in a professional way . . . wait ' til we sandwich this center half . . . Cope, Cope, Cope did it . . . how about hitting the midnight show, men? ROBERT CADY COURTRIGHT R. D. 1 , Pipestone Road, Benton Harbor, Mich. Benton Harbor High School Glee Club (1); Band (1): J. V. Fuothall (1). Corky . . . defender of Spike Jones and Slan Th.iw- Icy . . . indispensable tenor because he could sing loud . . . back from Camden at six a. m. . . . thirty pancake- ' i at breakfast, then church . . . Dr. Palmer would like you to close the windows when you play your trombone . . . also tried to play piccolo, cor- net, clarinet, piano, etc., ad fin. . . . Gawd! Tha t voice! 13 WILLIAM EDGAR COWAN 3220 Cuve Ro.id. Merchantville, N. J. Moorestown Friends ' School Baseball (2). Where are those yearbook write-ups, Cowan? . . . weather, weather, and additional facts about the weather . . . their room looks like a meteorological station . . . other half of Gross and Cowafi . . . wild jam sessions in first entry with Thawley . . . quietest person in the class, but he gets the work done . . . serves as an mspiration for Gross. WILLIAM TAYLOR DELP 520 Derstinc A -cnuc. L.msdale, Pa. Lansdale High School Glee Club (1); Basketball (1): Baseball (1). Bill ... a good word and a smile . . . sympathetic with other folks ' troubles . . . Saturday night par- ties: oh, that dapper man! . . . hey, Charlie, tell her I ' m not home; I broke my toenail . . . father an osteopath who came to treat Bill ' s sinus and cheer up the neighbors . . . left for Swarthmore under V-I2 program, July 4. ' . JAMES ALGER DURLING 1. 4 Main Street. Wadsworth, Ohio Riverside Military Academy J. V. Football (1). Doc ... at Riverside we really buckled down . . . graphic descriptions . . . did I ever tell you about the air races? . . . Midnight feasts . . . the other fellow went to Hull-Dobbs . . . this is serious busi ' ness . . . Saturday nights in Philly . . . Navy blue . . . Wooster, Whitman, St. Mary ' s. 14 HUGH McILVAlN EDGERTON Ciillcs:c Avenue, Havcrford, Va. Havciford High School Let ' s go over to the d.irkroom and print some of her pictures . . . how is thee today, friend? ... I never could get those chem problems worked out right . . . can I help out with th.it dance Saturday . . . No, really? . . . moved into Lloyd when the mumps pushed him from his home . . . tran.-jferred to Swarthmore when the V-12 removed a ood part of the class. PETER WEST ELKINGTON 6314 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Germantown Friends ' School J. V. Socce:- (1). Stopped his world travels just long enough to take in two terms at Haverford . . . only member of the Class possessing a ticket to Hell and back again . . . Speak up, Mr. Elkington . . . No, it ' s not so far to Vassar . . . Now in Holland — . . Who wants to see my gas mask? d. ite: - JOHN NICOL ENGELHARDT li.)U Lower Maple Avenue, Narberth, Pa. Lower Marion High School One of the day students who add a certain mystery to the dross of college life . . . tall, thin, and schol- arly . . . another in a line of illustrious Engelhardts who have been seen on the Haverford campus . . . made a daily trek past the various Lloyd entries, and always ended in the same place. 15 JOHN PHILIP FEIL Alger Court, BronxviUc, N. Y. Bronxville High School Glee Club (1); Corporation Scholarship (1); Debating Society (1); Honorable Mention — Chemistry 2 and Eng- lish 2b. Math major, or was it English? ... J. P. Fell, the FOURTH . . . authority on Freud . . . cross- country courser ... a way with the teachers . . . budding poet ... I used Roget ' s Thesaurus, and besides I have a large vocabulary . . . substitute nightwatchman, complete with keys and revolver These keys will open every door on campus, and don ' t think I haven ' t used them . . . now V12ing at Dartmouth. ROBERT KENT FINLEY, JR. 10.1 E. Dixon Avenue, Dayton, Ohio Football Team (1): Baseball Team (1); Varsity Club. Finner . . . I-M-I- been kinda sick ... no flies on me . . . plink-plank ' plunking on the keys . . . take this sac solo slowly, son ... to Swarthmore in July, ' 43 . . . girls shriek, women faint, men pale, and in walks Finley . . . first team material ... to Naval Hospit.il and then on to Med School . . . Fin, you slay me! ALBERT HAYES FORSYTHE Medford, N. J. Westtown School J. V. Soccer Team (1); Class President (2): Corporation Scholarship (2). Bert ... a regular guy and a great friend to every- body . . . what a brain you have, my boy! . . . was it 93 or 94 in that last test? . . . Y — e — a . . . nice clearing the ball, Bert . . . guess I ' ll call up Mary Jane ... is there any sport you don t play? West- town ' s tops, no doubt about it . . . just ask my fam- ily, they went there. 16 : - NEIL GILMOUR, JR. 429 Green Avenue, Lansdinvne, Pa. Lansdowne High School Track Team (1); NEWS Board (1): Glee Club (1). Neil . . . GiInioLir ,ind Stewart ... he wasn ' t born Scotch for nothini; . . . noted: a beautiful attrac- tion from home . . . ' Yi)u liberal arts majors just don ' t belong in a j ood college . . . part of the Second Floor Barclay Gani;, but they were all se- duced by Lloyd . . . phleijmatic, but efficient . . . Swarthmore here he came. ANSON BIXLER GOOD 1414 Snider Avenue, Waynesboro, Pa. Waynesboro High School Corporatiun Scholarship (1); Class Treasurer (1, 2): Ex- ecutive Committee (2); Permanent Class Secretary. Bix . . . pride and joy of the math department . . . pull your knees together. Good . . . looked so re- freshed and rested in the mornings . . . Guess I ' ll take a vacation — you guys move . . . took History and litter sessions in his stride . . . kept Murphy from f.dling out the window . . . ■let s try the Cove . . . this letter oughta do the trick . . . never found time to study out under the trees . . . hard to keep those ' blues ' clean, huh fellow? ... VI, V-5, Penn, Muhlenburg, Chapel Hill, and is now flying the big babies. ROBERT CROCKER GOOD 419 Homestead Street, Mount Vernon, N. Y. Amherst Philosophy Glee Cluh (2); Track (2): Foothall (2): Students Coun- cil (2): Dance Committee (2): NEWS, Sports Board (2). Bob . . . pillow fights in Founders . . . hold this for a while . . . nothing ever stopped him, not even skylights . . . Now at Amherst they — , but turned to Antioch for improvement of the honor system . . . Jim, I have a tremendous amount of work to do ... 6 a. m. student discussions in the Gym . . . Why don ' t they have more than four fouls? ' . . . midnight milk at Snyder ' s . . . Take a letter — read that back again — scratch that out. 17 MERRILL GOODMAN 4909 Wynnefield Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Overbrook High School Chemistry I V. Fuuthall (1); Basketball (1); Freshman ' Track (1). Lefty . . . professor . . . how can women resist me? ... 97 in the Calculus final made. him angry . . . another of the Haverford men who put on blue at Swarthmore . . . the Navy made him admit his first initial was A ... It was always I threw her over . . . left-handed pivot shots . . . Chink Cros- sin and Goodman . . . baptised in the pond . . . incoordination personified, hut he always tried. THOMAS PATON GOODMAN . ' i33. ' i University Avenue, Chicago, 111. University High School Engineering NEWS Editor (2); Debating Society (1), Manager (2); Track (1. 2); T. K. A. (2); WHAV (1), Production Manager (2); Founde;s ' Club (2); Corporation Scholar- ship (1, 2). T. P. . . . gee, fellows, that ' s swell! . . . average pulled down by a bad 9.V6 term . . . looks like hell when he doesn ' t get nine hours of sleep . . . kept filth out of WHAV . . . how about an editorial on singing in the dining room? . . . But Tom, I ' m engaged. fK iJ yL a JAMES RICHARD GROSHOLZ 112 Schoolhouse Lane, Ardmorc, Pa. Episcopal Academy Cross Country Team (1). Jamie ... it must be run like lightning . . . nobody can throw mc m the pond and I ' ll punch anybody who tries . . . golly, it ' s wet in here . . . convoy me up to the gym, will you, Pop? ... do you know her, too? . . . naturally I got an invitation . . . Royer, you ' re so dumb . . . ' 46 ' s Glenn Cunning- ham is now one of Uncle Sam ' s darlings . . . oh, Jamie, you look so handsome in a uniform! SHELDON HARLBY GROSS Qu.irtcrs 13.i, Fort Mycr, Va. Hope High School History Buschall (:). Cowan .ind Cross inseparable . . . creator of art ... I almost missed that Bryn Mawr express , . . Barclay, to Lloyd, to Merion, to Lloyd — they get around . . . wrestling with Teaf . . . he must have competition with all those soldiers ... on the mound for the hall team . . . member of the Dorr Club. EUGENE HARDING GUTHRIE 15 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Woodrow Wilson High School Eugene They can ' t draft me Cuthrie . . . Sweet- est sax in center . . . I ' m gonna move way out on the outskirts of town . . . Let s see is it acid into water, or water into acid? . . . Look at the peg on those pants . . . joined the Coast Guard to pro- vide one more argument for a two-ocean navy. ROBERT HARPER 190 Crowell Avenue. Staten Island. N. Y. Port Richmond High Schot l Radio ( luh (I). Radio bug . . . blarmg amplifier . . . Modulation, Q Circuits, Oscillators, Electrolytic Condensers, were his language . . . hours of tinkering for WHAV . . . clarinetist . . . classical music lover . . . Inter-dorm soccer on Merion Field . . . Army got him after one term at Haverford . . . back to school in khaki . . . now he ' s tinkering for the AAF. 19 ROBERT EARL HENDERSON New Castle, Pa. Shady Side Academy J. V. Football (1): Baseball Team (1): Glee Club (1). One of the Summer members of our class . . . roomed in the luxury of Old Lloyd . . . one of Bartholemew ' s comrades . . . the J. V. football team and baseball kept him on the good side of Pop . . . sports and singing ... so retiring they al- most forgot him . . . left early fur the Service. PAUL MacALLISTER HENKELS. II 446 Church Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Germantown Academy Economics J. V. Baseball (1), Varsity (2): J. V. Basketball (1), Varsity (2); Students Council (2). He of the scarlet cheeks . . . pardon our in souciance . . . one of the erstwhile day students . . . Now our old Afro-American ret.iiner . . . at the Straw oftener and with more than most Haverfordians . . . Aw! Mr. Clibb . . . upholds the dying College sports life. GEORGE WAYNE JACOBS Haverford Villa, Woodside Road, Ardmorc, Pa. Admiral Farragut Academy Physics Photo Board NEW.S (1); Band (1). Jake . . . seven subjects and nine jobs, all at the same time . . . the most littered room in College . . . that jerky way of talking . . . never without a comeback . . . funny man . . . did you hear the latest. Dean Gibb wants to see me again — I mean still . . . takes millions of pictures but never de- velops any . . . has to go to New York to get a pair of shoes ... A Benny Goodman album, a pipe and Esquire magazine . . . hello men; you, too, Lars. 20 WALTER YONEO KATO 3210 Wmthrop Street, Chicago, 111. Franklin High School Physics Radio Club (1), President (2): Debating Society (1, 2), TKA (2): Cap and Bells (1, 2); Founders ' Club (2): NEWS Board (2): Baseball Team (2). Tactful handler of every situation . . . Hey, lookit chum . . . eCiciency plus . . . boy scout booster . . . mountain-climber from way out West . . . boss of the Haverford network . . . innumerable phone calls to Bryn Mawr (Radio business) . . . debate lineup: Walter Y. and Walter I. . . . math prof . . . Seattle is God ' s country — (C. of C. man, of course.). RICHARD BRUCE KIRKPATRICK 206 Oak Street, Butler, Pa. Butler Senior High School Kirk . . . sensitive-dependable . . . philosopher and pipe lover . . . evening bull sessions: I have to work, fellas . . . damn this Spanish!! Oh, Buenos dias, Senor Blanc-Roos! . . . fervent prayers in jitter sessions . . . photograph albums . . . high school yearbook . . . homemade cookies . . . Swarthmore has him now. BERTRAM MYRON KUMMEL 1 10 Mayhcw Drive, South Orange, N. J. Newark Academy Chemistry Radio Club (1), President (1): Chemistry Club (2); J. V. Football. Only Rhinie in South Barclay . . . One of 46 s youngest members . . . Creator of WHAV ' s only original and interesting program, e.g. Haverford Man ... a red-hot gridman . . . the rest of the year he avoided Pop . . . Hot letters to the NEWS . . . Long, long weekends at home . . . Left in June to enter Pcnn Medical School. 21 WILLIAM MARSHALL LEE 4 P.irk Lane, East Walpnle, Mass. Walpolc High School Class Secretary (1); Wrestling (1); Baseball (1). One-hundred twenty pounds of dynamite . . . no- body else was light enough to wrestle that weight . . . was pinned in 57 seeonds . . . Rene said it was a College reeord . . . infeetious grin . . . got a kick out of penny-ante during a blackout . . . W-ell, Pi-ne-h? ... got into V-1 at the lith hour . . . the Navy sent him to Swarthmore . . . one-woman man . . . preliminary naval training in the Annex water fights . . . To the buckets, men! BEN ZION LEUCHTER East Park Avenue, Vineland, N. J. Vineland High School English NEWS Editor (1), Editor-in-Chief (2); I. R. C. (2): Debating Society (1, 2); J. V. Football (1, 2): J. V. Basketball (1); Baseball Vars-ty (2); Circulation Manager. Record (2). B. M. O. C. . . . hey, Benny, how ' s the radio to- night . . . shut-up Hu Shu ... I can ' t stand beer, but then Tm on my honor as a Students ' Council member . . . now Mac . . . We must uphold the honor and traditions of the College; the upperclassman ' s burden . . . you should see what he ' s got in Vineland, but then don ' t forget Atlantic City . . . G — D — teachers don ' t appreciate his talent . . . chief journalistic mainstay of the College. JOHN KELWAY LIBBY KIOS Massachusetts Ave. N.W., Washington, D. C. Annapolis High School Economics Secretary-Treasurer Students ' Council (2); Managing Edi- tor NEWS (2): Manager Debating Society (2); Tau Kappa Alpha (2): International Relations Club (2): Nautical Club (1); Cricket (1). Jack . . . salesman for the Libby-Leuchter Furniture Agency . . . we need the money more than the Rhinies do . . . Hobart and the U. S. N. grabbed him in his fifth semester . . . the politician of the class ... a pack a day keeps the doctor away . . where I come from, we ' d get out the rope . . The D. A. of the Students ' Council ... he (we ' l, Chartencr, too) beat Harvard. 22 BRUCE GROVE LIPPINCOTT 82 W. Marshall Road, Lansdowne, Pa. Haverford High Dance Orchestra (1, 2). Lippy . . . better known for that teriffic tenor sax which carried him into the union long before he was knee-high to a grasshopper . . . day student with a green Ford coupe . . . what else could one ask for? . . . the car with a history and many spots . . . always happy . . . out of my way, little one . . . say. Buck, lets bu;: up to Bryn Mawr . . . did you wear your pegs tonight. Doc? DAVID EUGENE LONG 1522 Cleveland Avenue, Wyomissmg, Pa. George School Government NEWS, News Editor (1), Business Manager (2), Manag- ing Editor (2); Record Editor (2); Store Committee (I); I. R. C. (2). The Mole . . . Gov House Gorilla . . . smokes like a flame-thrower and talks like a machine-gun . . always says something, but God knows what . . . does she love me, or my? . . . knows the back en- trance to Whithall . . . good fourth for bridge . . . maligner of cranberry bog aristocracy ... 98 from the Baron . . . just repulse her into my - anytime ... 42 times at George School , . Swarthmore Cooperation. HAROLD VINCENT LYNCH, JR. 720.1 Cresheim Road, Phil.idelphia, Pa. Germantown High School J. V. Soccer (1). An illusive day student who wandered in and out . . . somewhat of a soccer enthusiast in the wild contests on Merion field . . . sometimes he talked, but he is still remembered for what he is, rather than for what he said , . . left these Sacred Portals for the U. S. Army . . . expects to return when Victory is achieved. Ir L 23 WALTER BRUCE MacINTOSH, JR. 1444 West 28th Street, Miami Beach, Fla. Riverside Military Academy Nautical Cluh (1); Band (1). Mac ... a born sailor . . . strong pipes and tales of adventure . . . impromptu wrestling matches . . . hold my glasses, somebody . . . snow drifts on the window-sill . . . it s too cold here! . . . Well, perhaps Uncle Sam has him in a warm place now. DONALD BABBITT McNEILL 2.V W. 8th Street, Erie, Pa. Strong Vincent High School Chemistry J. V. Football (1); NEWS (1 ); Cap and Bells (1, 2): Stage Manager (2); J. V. Baseball (1); Varsity Baseball (2); Customs Committee (2). Don-Fearlcss-0 Wingle-McNeill . . . hula-hula at four . . . Did you get permission, McNeill? . . . We were just discussing our philosophies of life . . . Let ' s obey the rules this time, but if we aren t . . . Sex bores me . . . the hottest temper in Col- lege, almost . . . working at the Straw . . . McNeill and Heimlich . . best damn slugger on the baseball team . . . chemistry, chemistry, and more chemistry . . . the McNeills have gone to Hahnemann for generations. THOMAS WILSON MELDRUM 747 College Avenue. Havcrford, Pa. Haverford High School Chemistry Doc . . . yeh, found a sweet little combo last night . . . quiet but friendly . . . knew his chem inside out . . . Doc and his sa. helped out in many a Haverford dance . . . those fast trips to Ship- bottom . . . boogie on the piano or any other instru- ment . . . rubber boots and felt hat ... off to Naval Hospital in September and now studying medicine at Cornell. 24 WILLIAM H. MOHN Valmont Farms, Robesonia, Pa. Blair Academy Here tiiday, gone tomorrow (into the A. F. S.) . . . part of the bridge-playing second entry boys . . Where has he gone on all those week-ends . . . Reading seemed to have held a lot of attraction . . . tough as hell . . . Pruser, Mohn, and Case, thou no more Mohn, GEORGE MONTGOMERY, JR. 6124 Columbia Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. The Hill School Chemistry Corporation Scholarsh ' p (1); Basketball Team (I, :), Captain (2): Baseball Team (1); Tennis Team (2); Students ' Council (1, 2); Custom Committee (2): Sports Editor, the NEWS (1, 2); Sports Bureau (1, 2): Beta Rho Sigma (1); Founders Club f2): Vars ty Club (2) Class Vice-President ( 1 ) ; Class Executive Committee ( 1 ) : Dance Committee (2); Permanent Class President. Monty . . . jelly beans and olives . . . basketball player deluxe — he led the nation . . . always man- aged to wake up in time for his afternoon nap . . . einen grossen Schuss, bitte . . . let ' s drop it out the 1 7th floor and hear it smash . . . aw, finess it . . . liked to slam his roommate up against the wall, and then tramp on him . . . Glenn Miller could play it better . . . took up dart-throwing as a minor sport . . . left Haverford in July and can now be found in the halls of old Penn Med. JAMES FENNINGER MUMMA 101 Enterprise Avenue, Waynesboro, Pa. The Mercersburg Academy Chemistry Bu-ness Manager, the Stack (1): Cap and Bells (2); Glee rkih (1. 2): Tennis Team (2), Manager (2); Or- chestra (2); Business Manager, Record (2): Permanent Class Treasurer. The Admiral . . . joined the U. S. N. R. way back m the dark ages (1942 to be exact) and superbly stalled them until June 8, 1944 . . . (Naval Hos- pital, Penn Med) ... hit Ritchie and lived to tell the tale ... he carried the adhesive and bought the next morning ' s newspapers ... I play tennis . . . cmon. Good, quit combing your hair! . . . red roses . . . pipe me aboard, will you, Botts . . . you know, Waynesboro, out in God ' s country . . . Joy says he ' s shy, quiet, inexperienced and naue, but we don ' t believe it . . . I ' ll see you at Franklin Field. 25 VASCO EMILIO NUNEZ, JR. Sunset Rock Road, Andover, Mass. Philips Andover J. V. Soccer Team (1): Baseball Team (2). Robin . . . the third member of the indomitable Case, Pruser, Nunez trio . . . love me little, love me long . . . Rene ' s blooming protege . . . just wait til you see Pam . . . joined Monty in Haverford ' s biggest and longest laugh riot when they saw Price ' s blind date . . , think I ' ll run up, I mean fly up, to Boston this weekend . . . get off your back. Case, and fight . . . sleek and suave, to be sure . . . off to Swarthmore in V-12, and we haven ' t seen much of him since. PETER SCOTT OLMSTEAD Mt)ylan, Pa. Westtown School J. V. Soccer Team (1); Glee Club (1). Pete . . . let ' s talk about anything but Physics II . . . for gosh sakes, fellas . . . will you please be quiet and listen to what I have to say . . . tried Swarthmore first and came to agree with Haversack . . . I ' m leaving for C. O. camp tomorrow . . . Customs Committee? what the hell ' s that? ... no pants and garters and our first M. C. at Club Founders . . . G ' bye now. WILLIAM SNARE PEIFER . 09 Santa Rit.i Apartments, Atlantic City, N. J. Atlantic City High School Band (1): NEWS Board (1). Versatile musician at all hours . . . everything from piccolo to sax . . . mainstay of the football band . . . short end of the Courtright-Peifer duet . . . cub reporter . . . omnipresent ringing alarm c ' ock . . . midnight meals under compulsion . . . NaHCOa always handy . . . now marches through Georjia in an AAF band. 26 HANS EBERHARU PETERSEN 145, 93th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. New Utrecht High School Greek Rccod Stall (1): Curpuratiuii Schola;s!i p (1, 2). Efficiency expert of the yearbook . . . Greek scholar, and he seems to hke it . . . You ' ve never seen me smoke, have you? . . . Oh, yea! . . . perpetual corp scholar . . , You ' re wrong . . . Mr. Petersen, have you anything to add? . . . week-ends . . . private office in the library . . . midnight musicalc . . . doesn ' t believe in summer sessions. LARS OSCAR PETERSON, JR. Bryn M.iwr Cour t, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Lower Merioii High School Radio Club (1), Mr. Five by Five . . . Down and djwn I go, into the gates of hell . . . hefty commuting from Bryn Mawr ... I don ' t agree, Mr. Gibb ... a potential minister, if voice and virtue make a man of God! ... a most volatile and unphlegmat c Swede. ROBERT NELSON PRICE 4918 Hillbrook Lane, Washington, D. C. St. Albans School Chemistry Var,s:ty Fuutball (1). Baseball Team (1); Varsity Club. Nelse or Bobby La Freezer ... I don ' t live in Chevy Chase, Mtmtgomery! . . . one chug-a-lug is enough . . . the party ' s rather dull, isn ' t it . . had her up to see a baseball team and struck out three times: iust nervous probably . . let ' s really jive this one Finner . . . lo! he doesn ' t walk, he waddles ... off to Swarthmore, July 42, and oh! the tales that came hack to Haverford. 27 HERMANN H. PRUSER 69 N. Garden Avenue, Nutley, N. J. Haverford School J. V. Fo..th.ill (1). Hook . . . music, be it hot or sentimental, Let ' s listen all night . . . terror of the upperclassmen . . . P-night started as a get Pruser night, but they didn ' t . . . star telegrams ... off to New York, and points beyond, with Butch ... he could spend more on one week-end then most Haverfordians could earn in a month . . . me and my gal . . . merchant marine. RICHARD ENTWISLE RANKIN 71. S E. 2nth Street, Chester, Pa. Chester High School ]. V. Basketball (1). Lawyer and economist ... on the basketball floor at every opportunity . . . champion reducer . . . I lost ten pounds today . . . hard worker Well, now, you see, it ' s this way . . . law clerk in his father ' s office for a year after leaving Haver- ford . . . until he donned a sailor suit in June 1044. FREDERICK FULSOM RHUE 2547 N. Summit A ' enue, Milwaukee, Wis. Milwaukee Country Day School J. V. Football (1). Fred . . . Where ' s Doc . . . Yes, that is where Schlit; comes from . . . finessed Chem 1 . . . those clothes would have made Hollywood take notice . . . famous for that certain trip and that certain night . . . Maybe we took too much off those juniors . . . Where is the night watch- man? 28 J GEORGE BLAKE RI 1 CHIE 25 Gore Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Coughlin High School J. ' . I-oothall O). Doc . . . What IS the ditTcrencc between a woman and a submarine . . . poker g.imes in center . . . ' Tm from Wilkes-Barre, where the coal comes from . . . Where is Freddie? . . . luckily they waited until after Doc left, before they hit Ford s - CHARLES OSCAR ROSE 7313 N. 20th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Central High School Varsity Football ( 1 ). Strong man of the Class of 46 . . . Ah, gee, fel- lows, you should see my girl . . . He never could get up in the morning . . . perhaps he has improved in the Service . . . Delp, Bushnell, and Rose trekked from Barclay to the rarified air of Second Entry . . one of the Scarlet gridmen who lived to tight for the Garnet . . . but he really joined the Navy to see the Swarthmorc girls. RICHARD CAESAR ROGOFF 25 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Amherst Chemistry Baseball Manager (2). He could stand Amherst . . . that is, he couldn ' t stand rising in the cold early dawn . . . Good and RogofF moved into Gov House, and out again . . . sniff, sniff, sniff . . . plenty of sound ideas, but the Founder ' s gang is hard on them . . . steers the base- ball destinies (by free will?) . . . one of the few with a more or less permanent H.iverford tenency. 29 THOMAS J. RYAN, JR. 1216 Lindale Avenue, Drcxcl Hill, Pa. St. Joseph ' s Prep English |. V. Football Team (1): Fuothall Team (2); Baseball Team (2). Rock ... do I really use my friends? ... is the beer on ice? . . . .S, 9, 12, 21, 27, . 8, 42, .i8, 60 (cut it out, will ya, Ryan!) . . . here ' s a new one — one fellow says to the other . . . laugh or I ' ll beat you with .1 rubber hose . . . we English majors have culture . . . snap exams . . . my personality is perigrinating all over the place ... I ' d like to re- serve a room for Saturday night. CHARLES CALDWELL RYRIE 1009 Henry Street, Alton, 111. Stoney Brook Academy Mathematics Cap and Bells (1). Vice-President (2): NEWS Editor (1), Sports Editor (2): Track Manager (2); Founders ' Club (2). Saint Charles? . . , one of the mainstays of campus fundamentalism . . . wheel-horse for the NEWS — others talked, he worked . . . those week-ends in New York . . . Charlie ' s Aunt (will he live it down) . . . Schneider and Ryrie Inc. . . . one of the last of antiquitarians . . . Hsia v. Ryrie . . . They can ' t take a math major. CHARLES SPAHR SANGREE 10? Madison Street, Wellsville, N.Y. WellsviUe High School Glee Club (1): Tennis Team (1): NEWS Board (1): De- bating Society (I); TKA (2). Well, no, but it ' s only about one hundred and fifty miles west of New York . . . So what? You threw my bed out of the window first . . . A-12, ' V-12, what ' s the difi ' erence? ... At the Cricket Club dances . . . that powerful forehand, that pitiful backhand . . . Brush them off your ears, Charlie. 30 STEWAR I FOR TERFIELD SCHNEIDER 14 H.ith.iway Lane. Vcroii.i, N. J. St ncy Brook Academy English NEWS first .ilunini editor in years . . . Corp scholar, once . . . Sorry, sir, my eyes have been bothering me and I couldn ' t possibly have finished all this reading . . . knew more about the Bible than Flight . . . No, I ' m not majoring in Bib Lit . . . Major: Phys Ed until Pop hooked him to manage the track tc.im . . . left in June to enter the Reformed Episcop.il Seminary in Philadelphia . . . I ' ll deform ' em. WILLIAM EDWARDS SHERPICK 430 E. 37th Street, New York City, N. Y. Philips Exeter Academy Chemistry NEWS Board (1). Circulation Manager (2): Nautical Club fl). Commodore (2); Dance Committee (1), Chair- man (2): Founders ' Club (2); Freshman Track Team (1), Varst (2): Cheerleader (1, 2); Customs Committee (2); Founders ' Club Freshman Pr.ze (1): Honorable Mention — Chemistr 1(1); Vars ty Club (2). Wonderboy . . . genial man about campus . . . if you missed the local, you can always catch his station wagon to Bryn Mawr . . . has a remark- able knack for knowing what is going on ... a good worker and a potential chemistry genius . . . very well liked — shouldn ' t have any trouble with a Bedside Manner . . . the Commodore really added to the prestige of the Nautical Club. FRANCIS SMILEY, JR. The LaurcLs Mohonk Lake, N. Y. New Paltz High School Orchestra (1). Setting down in Lloyd, First Entry, he could be found industriously grinding away his freshm.in year . . . always the quiet type, except when he worked with Pop ' s jayvees and Rene ' s wrestling squad ... he started to follow in Bub ' s footsteps . . . hummm, this candy is good . . . hey, Mac, was that a 40 you got on the Physics e.xam . . . swell . . . Doc left Haverford m June to enter the Navy at Renssalaer. 31 RICHARD EDWIN SPATZ 344 Cornell Avenue, West View, Pa. West View High School History Secretary-Treasurer Students Council (2); Manager De- hate Society (2); Class Vice-President (1); Tau Kappa Alpha (1); NEWS Editor (2); Band (1). Dick . . . biggest wardrobe of 46 . . . switched to khaki in August, 1943 . . . What ' s wrong with Pittsburgh? . . . changed prefere;ice from blonde to brunette in middle of freshman year ... in his sleep the night before a jitter session: Doc Lunt, you , please don ' t give me that question . . . Harry James and Dick Spatz . . . for sake, Lee! . . . placed bets with Lee on who could get the most mail . . . always a gentleman, but Haverford corrupted him. DAVID SMITHSON STEWART 143 Pelman Road, Rochester, N. Y. Looniis School , News Editor ( 1); J. V. Foothall (1). Stewart and Baker . . . the second floor Barclay boys ... a man of affairs, and of many women . . . Bryn Mavvr, here I come . . . the most con- fused, and one of the best editors the NEWS has had . . . quiet, shy, but on the ball . . . one of the black fifty-four who betrayed the Scarlet for the Garnet. ROBERT CLINTON STACKHOUSE Overbrook Wynnewood Apartments Neptuie Hig ' .i School Cheerleader ( 1 ). The OverbrtJok Kid . . . me for the merchant marine . . . oScially a day student, unofficially third floor Center . . . beer parties at the Merion Gar- dens . . . What a woman . . . Has anyone seen Charlie? . . . Saturday afternoon an asset to good cheerleading, Saturday night an asset to good music. 32 JOSEPH STOKES, III 159 Coulter Street, Uermantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Gcrmantown Friends ' School Chemistry NEWS Board (1). Business Mun.iucr {!): Class Prcsidenl (1. ;); Students Council (1, 2); Founders ' Club (2); Glee Club (1). Upholds Haverford ' s traditmn and morals . . . one of the numerous Stokeses, and eollateral lines, to grace these Haverford walls . . . I ' ve got to earn some money . . . He ' s in Boston . . . his blonde past . . . Stokes, have some champagne . . . busi- ness head par excellence . . . Whitehall pillar . . . back to the Cranberries . . . Rhapsody in Blue. JAMES FREDERICK SUTOR 6710 Anderson Street, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Gerniantown Academy Engineering Students ' Council (1): Baseball Team (1); J. V. Soccer (1). Big Jim . . . Peaches and cre.im complexion . . . pitched ag.iinst Swarthmore one year, tor them the next . . . potential B.M.O.C. . . . more than one picture of the same girl . . . cunny-thumb curve . . . third floor Founders where the gang h.ings (.)ut . . . why is it some people are always late . . . last man in the Kreml ad . . . that ' s the pay-off . , . the girls call him Sutey . . . collects class rings . . . Swarthmore in the Navy V-12. DANIEL McLANE TAYLOR, JR. 426 Maple Lane, Edgewood, Sewickly, Pa. St. James School Dan lived at Snyder ' s, and kept good order among that branch of the faculty ... he was the most troublesome Rhinre, who plagued the noble Cus ' toms Committee ... I won ' t wear this cap, un- less I get one that fits . . . we caught a glimpse of him now and then in classes and such . . . Off to serve Uncle Sammy in one way or another. 33 STANLEY BREVOORT THAWLEY 245 N. Somerset Avenue, Crisfield. Md. Peddie School Band (1). Stan ... a natural lint;uist . . Thawley, you need a haircut! . . . night owl ... he and his d--- trum- pet! . . . Hey! Corky, let ' s hit One o ' Clock Jump, and they did . . . moved to Founders . . . fourth for bridge . . . played a wicked game him- self . . . sure to pass a two-no opener . . . has a new suit, as of the spring of 44 . . . all khaki. SERGEI CLEAVER THOMAS 149 Lincoln Avenue, Newark, N. J. Westtown School Soccer Team ( 1 ). Seegar . . . must have eaten tons of grass during soccer season . . . too bad, Thomas, that one wasn ' t your fault . . . broad smile and Veronica Lake hair- do .. . never take math or Latin, its useless . . . I ' m only kidding, fellas . . . slung low for speed . . . had a wicked boot from that wing position. DUDLEY MILES TOURISON 606 E. Mt. Pleasant Avenue, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Germantown Academy Engineering Miles, not Dudley . . . roomed with Jake and was lucky to get a drawer . . . can swing any deal he really tries to . . . most likely to be a millionaire . . . day-lion the first term . . . Quake-baiter . . . his heart belongs to Cornell ... the ragged edge . . . U. S. Merchant Marine and has been to Bas- sara (Arabia) and England. 34 DONALD FACKLER TREAT lV2nd LiiKMshirc lv(vi(J, Dctnnt, Mich. Western Reserve Academy Executive Committee (1); WHAV Production Manager (I); NEWS Busiheff Manager Statf (1): Freshman Ten- nis; Glee Club (1). Dcetreat . . . quiet, hut seems to get around . . . could be those cute dimples . . . letters and pack- ages galore . . . please, fellows, I ' ve got some studying to do . . . the strong, silent type . . . big man on WHAV . . . what the well-dressed man will wear . . . likes tennis . . . spent the spring in Bryn Mawr Hospital and still got his nineties . . . V-12 at Swarthmore after one year at Haver- ford. DONALD REYNOLDS WERNTZ l. ' i?, Louden Street, Philadelphia, Pa. William Penn Charter School Assi. tant Mana icr of Soccer ( 1 ) , Hey! Werntz . . . everybody ' s enemy in the morn- ing, but he warms up by nightfall . . . lets get a date, I haven ' t seen a girl for weeks . . . oh, Swarthmore! ... I don ' t like to drink, but I like other vices . . . music by the tons, be it swing or classical . . . transfer to Guilford. WILLIAM HARPER WHEELER Wayiata, Minn. The Blake School Band (1). Wee-willie Wheeler . . . what was a jam session without Wheeler? . . . Who wants to go to Fay ' s? . . . blew east on the chaff . . . the guy that put the jitter in the jitter-sessions . . . No, they don ' t all dress like this . . . you should see him in his A.F.S. uniform. M ' tft ipv 35 RICHARD WHITALL Havre de Grace, Md. Dick ... off for the week-end . . . who ' s running today? . . . think I ' ll try Behnont next week . . . Mr. Gibb tried to develop his talent . . . salt- blown stories of the sea . . . forty-five cuts one quarter, still had two to go . . . Nedder, why doesn ' t Henry clean this room? . . . Army, March, ' 43. DANIEL HENRY WINGERD Edgar Avenue and Riddle Road, Chambersburg, Pa. Chambersburg High School Engineering J. V. Football Team (1): Basketball Team (1): Track Team (1); Class President (1); Varsity Club: Students ' Council (1); Customs Committee (1). The wing . . . ran like he had them, too . . . mus- cles and grin, that ' s all you could see . . . wake me in time for lunch . . . fancy Dan . . . our first class prexy . . . meeting? What ' s that? . . , off to Harcum every week-end . . . left for Swarth- more July, 42 . . . cheek rubber . . . won enough medals at the Middle Atlantics to make a light cruiser ... is wearing the Garnet today, but it ' s still Haverford always. MARKLEY GORDON WOLMAN 3213 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, Md. The Park School Students ' Council (1); Class Treasurer (1); J. V. Soccer (1):NEWS Board (1). No, it ' s not Red, it ' s Reds . . . Sure, you can borrow my bike, but watch out that that back wheel doesn ' t come off going down a hill . . . From Barclay to Ninth Entry in one semester (he knew a senior) . . . Drafted, yes, just plain drafted, m the middle of his second semester. 36 HARRY DUNSETH WOOD 6921 Ogleshy Avenue, Chicayo, 111. High Park High School Dunny . . . Llnyd m.in t ' min the first . . . one of the Trail Blazer Boys . . . left Haverford in Feb- ruary, I ' MJ . . . re-entered Haverford in February, 194.1 . . . in khaki . . . stuck it out here in the PM unit tor a whole year. Due to the large number of memhers of the Cla s of 1946 in the Service, we have been unable to secure a picture of every member of the class. 37 Term I and II: First Row— Nofer, Richie. W. Thompson. Adams. Meyers. D. Thompson, Miller; Second Row— Sanders. Huebsch. Parker. Blake. Konowitz. Seligsohn; Third Row— La.ty. Freeman. Wright. Gross. Term III and IV: First Row— Davi;. Ecroyd, Ewell. Lenton. Katchen. Long, Steefel; Second Row— Annesley, Rivers, Taylor. Buckley. Hood. Whitehead, Muench. Sturr. Bacon. HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1946 The summer of 1942 was an experiment for the College, but it proved uneventful. The Varsity Cluh dance was well attended by mem- bers of the freshman class, and 46 learned r.ip- idly that the week-end was not intended for study. Freshman hazing was at ,i low during those summer days, but the belligerent spirit i)f 46 first manifested itself in the Lloyd-Bar cl ly fights. These summer-Rhinies were well loaded down with pre-meds, and so, oddly enough, many of them were the last to depart, and so became the veterans of 1946. In September this nucleus became tirst-class Rhinies, and the rest of us became the lowliest of the lowest order of Haverford beings. All ninety of us had to wear those scarlet beanies, loud ties, garters, and identification badges: all ninety of us feared the bridge after Meeting; but we knew those things were binding us to- gether into a Class. Bob Finley was given sheets for a week for his bilious coat by the coat, while Ch.irlie Rose carried around a pitcher and glass of water for the refreshment of the whole College. Rhinie Grosholz uttered the famous words, Nobody in this College is big enough to throw me in the pond, and either there wasn t, or the Committee just be- lieved in safety first, since Jordan, Ambler, Heimlich, and Boteler et al joined in the task. Ncdderboy Coale also swam, while in Club Founders, Cherry Sangree and D.in Taylor played Romeii and Jubet, and sir-r-r FK ' .HT was born to Johnny Bushnell. We saw the greatest football team ni Haver- ford s history beat Wesleyan and Swarthmore, and Charlie Rose and Bob Finley were on the varsity, while Bushnell, Case, Ryan, Rhue, Bry- son, Leuchter, Ritchie, Bill Baker, Smiley, Ciurt- right, Henderson, and Wingerd held up the J. V.s. Sergei Thomas led the class on the soc- cer varsity, as Cope, Forsythe, Bartlctt, Stokes, Olmstead, Birdsall, Elkington, Wolman, Clay- ton, and Nunc: shared in the J.V. honors. We elected Dan Wingerd our first president; George Montgomery, vice-president: Bix Good, secretary, and Reds Wolman as treasurer. When the Rhinies of Barclay tried to capture Hack Torrence, Chairman of the Customs Committee, Barclay v ' as raided late that night, and a mass Rhinie-ducking was finally stopped by the pres- ident and vice-president in person. Returning m Spring, 1943, we found Cope, Lippincott, Baker, Clayton, Elkington, and Wood had slipped away unnoticed, while each new day brought other departures. Two hun- dred meteorologists arrived to save, if to pro- fane, the campus, and drove us from Barclay, and with twelve men from the Class of 1947 we had arrived. The winter sports season had seen a new star rise in the firmament, as our George Mont- gomery rose from a sick bed to achieve a 17- point average. We were walloped by Delaware, 69-27, but Monty and Hook Pruser chopped up the Newark station for firewood in revenge. Montgomery, Dan Wingerd, and Blly Delp 39 won their basketball letters, and Merrill, Good- man, Leuchter, Bushnell, and Henkels got nu- merals. Class elections in March, 1943, resulted m Bert Forsythe as president, Dick Spatz as vice- president, Bill Lee as secretary, and Bix Good as treasurer. The Merion Monsters edged out the 2nd Entry Sluggers, 13-14, in a mostly 46 game. Perhaps the most important event at Haverford that spring was the repeal of prohi bition. Beer and ale, with hedging on porter, were permitted, and Ryan, Rhue, and Ritchie lined the casement on their walls with bottles which Lee knocked down by stamping on the floor. The Annex water fights rolled merrily on until the house began to sag, and the vice-presi dent got hit. The Great Exodus of July saw some fifty Haverfordians move bodily into the Garnet camp. That was rendered especially bitter when Charlie Rose and Bob Finley starred for the Garnet against Haverford in the annual game in the Fall. Dick Spat: was elected secretary- treasurer of the Students Council, and when the army got him, we got Kelway Libby to represent us on that austere assemblage. Stokes headed the Class in the new election, and Spats continued as assistant, while Chartener became secretary, and Sangree was named treasurer The NEWS, with Yip-Yip leading off, began crusading for better lighting, less soporific Col- lection speakers, and patriotic CO ' s, battered at Petey Lockwood s classical influence on the li- brary, and stung the mighty administration into threatening to expel the whole NEWS board from within these hallowed walls, if we didn ' t begin to see, on the double, how hallowed they really were. What was left of the Class of 1946 played football on Haverford ' s second straight unde- feated football team, even though we did play prep schools. Haverford defeated the Garnet, with Case and Price opposing us, 20-12. The Scarlet and Black finally produced a win ning basketball team during the winter of 1943- 44, largely through the record-breaking per- formance of Monty, who led the nation ' s scor- ers with a 26.8 game average. Bob Clayton re- turned to College as our first veteran. The athletic life of the Class closed during the Spring of 1944 with McNeill, Kato, Leuch tcr, Henkels, Gross, Bartlett, Ryan, and Cowan sparking the baseball team, while, Birdsall Mumma, Montgomery, and Cameron were win ning letters in tennis. Bill Sherpick and Tom Goodman served on the track team, if they be track activity. The end was drawing nigh, and in May. guided by the laws of our Class Constitution, we who remained elected George Montgomery as duration president, and Joe Stokes, Bix Good, and Jim Mumma to the other offices, with the understanding that after the war the whole Class would join in choosing the permanent class officers. In these two short years we rose from lowly, green Rhinies to a position of leadership on the campus. We learned what the word Hav- erford means and have tried to teach it to the incoming students. The Class of 1946 never had much of a chance to show what it could do, but it has been the Class of 1946 which has kept H.iverford and its traditions alive thus far during these trying war days. We worked from day to day, since there was no security in stay- ing. There are few tangible results of the Class of 1946, but when the war is over and all of us can return safely to our old spots on campus, if Haverford is what we knew in the Fall of 1942, then we will know that we did not fail. BEN LEUCHTER. 40 . Charley ' s Aunt WHAV Studio — Kato, Marvin Goodman PM Review Record-breaker Montgomery A YEAR IIS REV I Ell ! September 21 ( ' 43) Felix and Mac welcomed a new pack of Rhinies to the best small liberal .irts college tor men . . . Waiters abandoned for the duration. September 28 - The Wylies bicycled in a day late . . . What a wonderful place for mushrooms! October 13 — Orders from the Liquor Board and Commission of Undergradu- ate Morals to ask permission for women the day BEFORE they ' re in your room after dark. October 21 — NEWS crusading and English majors graduating as Bachelors of Science result in selling the classics down the river. October 28 — Let him have it . . . Christ, it ' s Mac . . . the last Merion water-fight for the duration. October 30 —Mr. and Mrs. Feli.x present at the christening of Science House With non-intoxicating beer. November 3 — Bryn Mawr College News reports two girls ready to take embryology at H.iverford. November 19- Our Varsity B football team knocked hell out of Swarth- more ' s Jayvees, 20-12 . . . another undefeated season. December 7 — We commemorated Pearl Harbor and celebrated the appear- ance of Felix at Collection. December 25 — Christmas. January 19 ( ' 44) — Midyears started . . . M. J. Gomez slept through his first com p. February 6 — We don ' t care if he is an alumnus, 2. ' i hours of hard labor with Doggie. February 12 — Felix held hands with our first girl graduate. March 3 — Our Monty ended the season with the top average in the nation . . . We all wrote to our friends back home to make sure they knew that we know him. April 1- Half the Model League and LIncle Edmund entertained half the Students Council at the Gov House. April 21-22 — Charley ' s Aunt played by Charley (Ryrie) . . . one methyl group would make it permanent. May 5 — Our first prom since November, 1 942 . . . The Nature Walk came into its own. May 20- T. J. Ryan was an army inductee. June 3 - T. J. Ryan was an army deductee, one C to the good. 42 A ctivities 43 STUDENT COUmiL The members of the 1943-44 Student Couneil faced many new and unexpected difficulties this year, yet managed to keep their heads above the surface at all times and definitely estab- lished themselves m the list of better Councils as they strived to m.untain a happy equilibrium between administration, faculty, and students and to protect the good name and traditions of Haverford College. The Council for the Fall term was headed by Edmund Preston, III, and consisted of T. Crandall Alford, Samuel Fox, III, George Montgomery, Jr., Joseph Stokes, III, David Y. Y. Hsia, and Howard M. Rawnsley, the last two named being ex-officio members. At the end of the 1943 Summer Session, Richard Spat; had been elected Secretary-Treasurer, but left col- lege to join the Army and Montgomery assumed his duties until the mid-Winter elections. Th ' s Council appointed the 1943 Customs Committee and made certain provisions for that organiza- tion, modified various clauses in the Women ' s Rule and set down rules for the giving of mid- night privileges, strove to do away with the problem of unequal student representation brought about by the establishment of the vari- ous houses, and heard and passed judgment on minor and more serious infractions of the rules. February saw James B. Wright ascend the President ' s chair, with John K. Libby his Sec- retary-Treasurer. Montgomery and Stokes re- tained their positions, while David Grant, Clark Hulings, Roger Bacon, John Arnett, and Bob Good were selected by their respective classes. Charles Ryrie and Ben Leuchter were ex-oflicio members. In addition to passing judgment on certain infringements of the rules, this group was concerned largely with problems arising with the new status of the Liquor Rule and the Honor System, which question arose during the Mid-year examinations. During May, the Coun- cil held several meetings with faculty members of the Post War Planning Committee and Stu- dents ' Activity Committee, discussing the future of the Honor System at Haverford College and the future of the college in general. First Row: Domintovich, Good, President; Kennedy, Clayton. Second Row: Long, Army Representatives, Thompson. Third Row: Rosenthal, Johnson, Coffin. 44 First Row — Mucnch, Long, Leuchter, Ryrie. Rivers. Schneider; Second Row — Kato. T. Good- man. Stuart, Roche, Chartener, Katchen; Third Row — Seligsohn, Adams, Sherpick, Montgomery, Sanders, Konowitz, Meyers. THE ISEIVS The Class of 1946 saw the NEWS change from a large to a much smaller format, from eight columns to five. But the NEWS never lost its influence on the campus. Some thought the paper was a hell-raiser, but it continued to be its own conservative self, with possibly a sense of added responsibility. In February, 194 J, the NEWS really became a part of the Class of 1946 when Ben Leuchter was elected editor; Dave Long, managing edi- tor; Jack Libby, associate editor; Charlie Ryrie, sports editor, and Bill Chartener and Tom Good- man, news editors. Joe Stokes continued to hold the financial reins as business man.igcr, while George Montgomery and Bill Sherpick retired as sports editor and circuLitum manager, re- spectively. The NEWS was published four times during the summer of 1943 and thcre.ifter appeared weekly from September uiul June, 1944. A newspaper usually takes a beating and gets very few thanks, and the Haverford NEWS was no exception. The NEWS continued to he a stu- dent newspaper published in the interest of the students. Its policy was formulated only by the consciences of its staff members, and its primary object each week of the year was to leave no stone unturned in m, iking Haverford a finer institution. CAP ArsD BELLS Af D GLEE CLLB Charged with providing dramatic and musical outlets and entertainment for the college. Cap and Bells has done well by the Class of 1946 In the theatrical line we remember as Rhinies Marsh and Hotel Universe, as well as The Beautiful People. Then as Sophomores and or Juniors we rather lost interest in Cap and Bells after Letters to Lucerne. But when the lead- ership was passed on to Charlie Ryrie our inter- est was rekindled, probably out of curiosity more than anything else. We watched him with his French catalogue for days, smiled when Charley ' s Aunt was chosen, laughed quietly up our sleeves when Ryrie got the lead, but never laughed more heartily the night of the performance. He made a wonderful old lady, no doubt about it. Don McNeill, the Stage Manasjer, and Frank Martin, Construction Manager, were undaunted by the physical handicaps of Roberts Hall and proceeded calmly to build three quite profes- sional-looking sets for Charley ' s Aunt. By the time they got all three sets up, there was hardly room backstage for Ryrie to put on his petticoat. Walt Kato, ' 46 ' s master electrician, was so cramped backstage that he had to go out front during the acts. As usual, the Players Club of Bryn Mawr provided the feminine roles, fur- thering the cause of Haverford-Bryn Mawr co- operation. Tom Gibb (who ' d ' ve thought it!) di- rected, and nothing was overlooked (they even had an orchestra) to make Charley ' s Aunt a play to be remembered. Along the musical lines. Cap and Bells, in addition to mothering the indomitable Glee Club, has sponsored with the Music Department sev- . ' From Charley ' s Aunt The men have the difficulty er;il outst.uidini:; concerts in Roberts Hall durini, ' the year. Many of us will not soon forget S;i- geli ' s recital, but more of us will probably re- member the Kentucky (or was it Virginia?) mountain folk singers. The Glee Club, under the care of Swan and Coffin, has had a successful season considering the reduced student enrollment and consequent lack of singing material. After a month of dili- gent rehearsals, the annual Harcum concert was held late in the F.ill. This year it was an ex- change affair, thus providing the girls with two chances to have dates. At Christmas the annual vesper service with Bryn Mawr was held at Bryn Mawr. After Christmas the Glee Club went into hi- bernation, and, except for Lew ' s frequent and lengthy announcements in the dining room, all was quiet. But as in spring a young man ' .s fancy ... so the Glee Club ' s fancy turned this spring til thoughts of Spence School. Nineteen civilians and three soldiers made the trip to New York the first of May to sing a very successful concert with the girls of Spence School. This summer, in the absence oi Mr. Swan, the group has been directed by Julius Katchen. GLEE CLUB First Row — Konowitz. Kat- chen. Davis. Coffin (Mana- ger). .Arnett. Bacon. H. Gross: Second Row — Selig- sohn. Laity. Whitehead, Starkweather. G. Gross. First Row — Leuchter. Hiia, Chartener. T. Goodman. Kato; Second Row — -B. Thompson, Roche, Konowilz. Seligsohn. . R. C. AND DEBATE Under the leadership of Chairman WilHam H. Chartener and Managers John K. Libby and Thomas P. Goodman, twenty-five varsity inter- collegiate debates were completed by the Wil- liam Wistar Comfort Debating Society duriny the 1943-44 season. Four were victories over Harvard, Brown, Ursinus Women ' s Debate Club, and Gettysburg. No decisions were lost. Other colleges debated were: Princeton, Johns Hopkins, M. I. T., Rosemont, Ursinus Men, Gettysburg Women, Pennsylvania, Moravian, Lehigh, Brooklyn, and N. Y. U., with whom two debates were held over station WNYC. Libby, Walter Y. Kato, Richard W. Cole, and Masamori Kojima were elected to Tau Kappa Alpha, national honorary intercollegiate debat- ing fraternity, for outstanding scholarship and public speaking. Bi-weekly joint meetings with the Interna- tional Relations Clubs of Bryn Mawr and Rose- mont were a feature of this year ' s activities of the Haverford L R. C. Membership was on an informal basis, all meetings being open to the entire student body. Several members of the ASTP unit stationed on campus were active participants. A delegation was sent to the Mid- dle Atlantic Intercollegiate IRC Conference at Johns Hopkins November 12 and 13, which in- cluded: Manuel J. Gome::, Masamori Kojima, David Y. Hsia, William H. Chartner, and Ma- ria Gildermeister and Lois Plumb of the R 6? R LInit. Haverford represented Brazil at the Model Assembly of the United Nations held at Bryn Mawr, Mach 30, 31, .md April 1. Hsia was chairman of the Political Commission. The dele- gates were Miss Gildermeister, Chartener, David E. Long, and Ben Z. Leuchter. 48 First Row — Mar in, Rivers, Kato. T. Goodman, Dowbinstcin; Second Row — Ecroyd, Street. Cole, Starkweather, Adams; Third Row — Konowitz, Davis, Parker, Lenton, Richie. THE RADIO CLIB We, too, were called Rhinies in 1942, those of us who were the first in Haverford ' s history to enter in July, and those of us who first ar- rived in September. There were about nmety of us then: only a handful rem. an now. But m two short years we have come to know Haver- ford, and Haverford has come to know us. We didn ' t have four leisurely years at Haverford; we had to work fast. This year under the enersjet ' c dTcction of Thomas Goodm.ui, production manager, and of Walter Kato, president, the Radio Club and Station WHAV have had a successful season. The technical direction has been in the hands of Cloyd Marvin, and the reception has been extended ,ind improved. The club has introduced ,i great use of clas- sical music, as well as the usual ja:z. Also, lan- guage programs have been given to help in the educational part which a radio station ca n play in College. The St.ition has also used frequency modulation in their sending at times. WHAV-WBMC cooper.ition has continued, now under smiling, and now under cloudy sky. The girls have added much to the facility of putting on programs, and the cooperation seems to have worked excellently. But the girls have shown a desire to have an independent ,ind iso- lationistic WBMC. The Club plans to continue next year despite the loss of Goodm;ui and Kato to the army. It will be able to secure recruits from the new batch of Rhinies. 49 First Row — T. Goodman. Chartener, Long: Second Row — Stokes. Hsla, WrJght, Sherpick Montgomery. FOVISDERS ' CLUB The scholastic ye ir 1943-44 saw nine mem- bers of the Class of 1946 elected to Founders ' Club, which was founded in the spring of 1914 as an honorary and social society for leaders in scholarship and extra-curricular activities at Haverford College. Membership in this highly respected organization is limited to those stu- dents who, in addition to sporting a scholastic average of 80 or above, have shown outstand- ing qualities of leadership by holding at least one elected office and engaging in at least two activities of the sub-divisions: (a) Athletic, (b) Literary, ,uid (c) Musical and Dramatic. The first members of 1946 to be chosen were George Montgomery, Jr., William E. Sherpick, Robert H. Bedrossian, and WiUiam H. Chartener, who were all selected at the December meeting of the Club. This meeting, which took the place of the annual banquet which had to be foregone this year, was highlighted by very delightful, entertaining talks by Rufus Jones and Professor Richard M. Sutton, President of the Club, after which refreshments were served. At the Spring meeting of the Club, held on Commencement Day in June, the other five members of the Class so honored were: Thomas P. Goodman, David E. Long, Joseph Stokes, III, Charles C. Ryrie, and Walter Y. Kato. At the same time, Lawrence D. Steefel of the Class of 1947 was chosen recipient of the Founders ' ' Club Freshman Award, given annually to that Fresh- man who has shown the best attitude toward college activities and scholastic work. 50 Sports 51 FOOTBALL The 194? h)()tb ill team was the first athletic group on campus to feel the effects of the dras- tic reduction of student enrollment. Only three games could be arranged for the team, two against neighboring preparatory schools and the third against the Swarthmore Jayvees, and hut twenty-five candidates answered the first call for practice. However, in spite of these adverse conditions, Coach Haddleton turned out a hard- fighting team, led by Captain Jim Wright, that turned back all its opposition to become the sec- ond consecutive undefeated footba ' l team de- veloped at Haverford. In the first game of the seas:in, the Hornets pounded out a 14-7 triumph over a well- coached P. M. C. Prep eleven on Walton Field. After a scoreless first half, Haverford went ahead on a pass from Wright to John Estey, only to have the Preppers tie it up a few min- utes later. The stalemate did not last long, how- ever, as Wright took the ensuing kickoff and raced 72 yards down the sidebnes for the win- ning points. Against George School, the Scarlet and Black was victorious, 2.vO, thereby becom- ing the first Haverford football team ever to defeat the schoolboys. Wright scored twice in this contest, once on a 60-yard scamper around end and again on ,i line buck from the 3 -yard line: Ed Klein tallied following a short run after taking a pass from Wright, and Ryan ended up the scoring when he pilfered an enemy pass and galloped 45 yards to paydirt. The Hornets took to the air-lanes more than ever to turn hack Swarthmore, 20-12, in the season ' s finale. Midway in the first period, fol- lowing a series of six sensational passes from Wright to Don Hutson Estey, Ed Klein shot through left tackle to give the Fords a lead they never relinquished. Once again, in the third quarter, a Wnght-to-Estey pass placed the ball on the Garnet nme-yard line, from which posi- tion Wright bulled his way across the double stripe. In the final quarter, with but a few min- utes to play, Wright faded to the Swarthmore 2.vyard line and let fly to Estey in the end zone for the last Ford score. Much credit for the team ' s success goes to the spectacular play of the Haverford forward wall, composed of Lehman, Good, Trainer, Taylor, Walters, and Kennedy, who were always in there plugging, making way for the wingbacks, and giving Wright the much-needed protection for passing. Haverford-Swarthmore. 20-12 Soccer Team in Scrimmage. SOCCER With only i h.indtul of experienced soccer players back in the told, Haverford launched its 1943 season with only one purpose, to keep a tradition alive. Twenty-five candidates an- swered Coach Mulian ' s first call for practice, and the usual Haverford policy of the coach ' s assumuiij that his team was f.imiliar with the fundamentals and proceeding to teach them the finer points of the game had to be abandoned, as Mullan was required to ' teach ' his team from the first practice until the last game. Captain Ed Preston, Fred Bartlett, and Paul Domincovitch were the only men returning who had ever played soccer for Haverford before. A few with prep school experience also reported, among whom were Tom Birdsall, Bill Annesley, and Chick Doehlert. This sextet was destined to form the nucleus of a team that won one, tied one, and lost three games. The first game of the season, a practice game with Temple, was played on a muddy, rain- soaked field and was won by the Cherry and White, 1-0. A week later the team engaged Ursinus in their first regularly scheduled inter- collegiate game, and bowed after a hard-fought battle, 2-1. Domincovitch was responsible for the lone Haverford goal. Shortly afterwards. Tem- ple was met once again, and the Philadelphians definitely proved that their first victory was no fluke, as they won out, 3-0. The Fords then jour- neyed to West Chester to taste the fruits of victory for the first time, winning 7-2. Domin- covitch and Birdsall accounted for five of the goals, Domi being high man for the day. The annual game with the Alumni resulted in a 3-3 tie, and a playoff of the stalemate was necessitated. In the second game of the series, the hard-driving, more experienced veterans were victorious, 3-1, although Halfback Preston, a fighter throughout the whole season, and Half- back Annesley and Goalie Bartlett, who took mote than their share of punishment on de- fense, played their best games of the year. 53 BASKETBALL It for no other reason, the Class of 1946 will long be remembered for its sensational basket- ball team. Led by Captain George Montgomery, unanimous choice on the All-Philadelphia team and the leading scorer in the whole United States for the 1944 season, and Coach Ray Mul- lan, the Scarlet and Black won ten of fifteen games for the best record m the history of Hav- erford College basketball. In recognition, the Alumni Association entertained the team at a post-season banquet and awarded silver basket- balls to the lettermen. Of these eight men, Jim Wright was the only senior. Besides Montgom- ery, who definitely established himself as the greatest basketball player ever to wear Haver- ford ' s colors, Frank Kennedy, Bob Clayton, and Paul Henkels represented 46, while Dave John- son, Johnny Estey, and Charlie Moses were from the lower classes. Paul Domincovitch turned in a splendid performance in the all-important managerial position. In a season that saw the setting of a new college scoring record of 79 points by the team in one game and the annexing of the nation ' s scoring honors by Montgomery with 402 points for an average of 26.8 per game, there were naturally many highlights. Standout victories were the second game with La Salle College, the 51-41 triumph over Loyola at Baltimore, and the 68-64 win over the Philadelphia Marines, probably the best team on the schedule, as Monty fired 29 points in his best all-around performance of the year to secure victory. Then there were the two thrilling two-point victories over Rider College. The second game saw the team overcome a late third period deficit of 15 points by a surge that cut it down to 10 points with five minutes to go and brought victory in the last thirty seconds. Never was the team held to less than 40 points, with the average being , 7 per game. The longest winning streak was six games in a row, and although the Fords bowed to Lafayette, 57-51, iri the season ' s finale, the team was a real credit to both Haverford and the Class of 1946. Johnson, Estey, Montgomery •■ y ysf - ' .v t _ - f, Y ' mi lRri . .v t ™ . WlRr fe Jj :- First Row — LcuchttT. Steefel, Kalo. Henkels, Wright. Trainer, Cowan. Taylor; Second Row — Coach Mullan, Davis, Gross. Parker, Bartlett, Kennedy. Annesley, McNeill, Rogoff (Manager). BASEBALL With C.iptaiii Jim Wright ind Shortstop Paul Henkels the only returning lettermen, there was little prospect ot the baseball team ' s win- ning any games on its ambitious schedule. How- ever, under the excellent and patient coaching of Ray Mullan, the Scarlet and Black turned in a record of four victories in ten starts, and, if it had not been for errors, the record would have been much better. Bill Annesley was the leading pitcher, but was ably helped by Fred Bartlett, the only right- handed flinger on the squad, and Harley Gross. Catching was held down by Freshman Dick Tay- lor. Wright held down first base for the second straight year, while Ben Leuchter, Don McNeill, and Al Davis took turns at the keystone sack. The first two named also played in the outfield. Henkels gave up his catching job of the pre- vious year to play short and Mase Trainer guarded the hot corner. In the outfield were Frank Kennedy, Tommy Ryan, Pete Steefel, McNeill, Leuchter, and Annesley, when he wasn ' t pitching. After a loss to Drexel in the opening game, the Fords bounded back to defeat Panzer, 12-7, P. M. C. by the same margin, and Drexel in an exciting return game, 11-10. Annesley allowed but seven hits, but many errors kept him in continual trouble. Eight men contributed four- teen hits, however, in the greatest power display of the season. The jitters had evidently come for good, though, as loose fielding was largely responsible for the loss of five of the six remain- ing games. The lone victory was a 9-2 trounc- ing of P. M. C. At the plate, Annesley helped his own cause considerably by leading the team for the season with a healthy .. ()1 average. He was closely fol- lowed by veterans Henkels and Wright, and the newcomers Taylor and Kennedy. Consider- ing the pre-season outlook, the coach and team should be congratulated for a season that was successful despite its disappointing finish. 55 TRACK First Row — Miller, Roche, Sherpick. Domlncovitch, Richie; Second Row — Ryrie (Manager), Cole, Elkinton, Lehmann; Third Row — Coach Haddleton. Schneider (Assistant Manager), T. Goodman, Buckley, Sanders. Doc Leake. The 1944 track team, the twenty-third con- secutive group of cindermen to be coached by Pop Haddleton, followed the example set by the football team and competed mainly against local preparatory schools, limiting its intercol- legiate competition to the annual meet with Swarthmore. In the first meet of the season, against Pcnn Charter, the Fords were beaten by the Little Quakers, 65-52, although Paul Domincovitch, captain of the Scarlet and Black, was the star of the day, gaining two firsts, a tie for first, one second, and a third place. Bill Serpick was also a heavy point contributor, winning the discus and placing second in the shotput. One week later, the Fords broke into the win column by scoring 62V2 points to Friends ' Central ' s 59, and Wcsttown ' s 21%,- Once again Domincovitch was high scorer with 21 points, while Toby Leh- man, Bill Sherpick, and Tom Elkinton together contributed 22 points to Haverford ' s total. On May 25, exceeding everyone ' s fondest hopes, the Scarlet and Black showed surprising strength to place second to Swarthmore ' s Navy- studded squad and defeat Ursinus, St. Joseph ' s, and P. M. C. in a five-way meet on the winner ' s oval. Sherpick was high man for the Fords m this meet, winning both the shot and discus. Domi produced six points with places in the hurdles and high jump; Lehman won the jave lin, while Al Walker and Tom Elkinton, Mid- dle Atlantic medal winners, won their respec- tive events, the two-mile and pole vault. It is interesting to note that twenty-one of Swarth- more ' s 82 points were contributed by ex-Hav- erfordians, now members of the Navy unit sta- tioned at that college In the last meet of the season, the Scarlet and Black, undergoing a nat- ural let-down after their matchless showing against the Garnet, was badly trounced by both Haverford School, Interacademic champions, and George School. The final score read: Hav- erford School, 71; George School, 51, and the Hornets, 21. At the close of the season, varsity track let- ters were awarded to Captain Domincovitch, Elkinton, Sherpick, Walker, and Tom Good- man for their excellent performances. Domi takes the lead Utj- Mumnia, Montgomery. Birdsall. TENISIS The 1944 tennis season was highlighted by victories over Lehigh and Villanova, the latter a Navy and Marine training school, while de- i ' eats were administered to the Scarlet and Black by Loyola twice and Johns Hopkins. The team consisted of Ed Goerke at Number 1, Tommy Birdsall at 2, George Montgomery at ?, and with Bill Osuga, Jim Mumma, and Mai Cam- eron rounding out the team in that order. In doubles, for the most part, Montgomery and Goerke, Mumma and Birdsall, and Osuga and Cameron and sometimes CI. irk Hulings worked together. In the first match of the season, the Fords howed to Hopkins, yj-yVi, third doubles in- complete. Goerke and Montgomery were respon- sible for all of Haverford ' s points, as each won his singles with ease and then teamed together to win first doubles. The next Saturday, at home, Loyola ' s strong team trounced their hosts, 7-2, as Bill Osuga was the only Hornet to win his singles, and Mumma and Birdsall were vic- torious in doubles. The two highlights of the next match, a return engagement with Loyola at Baltimore which the Greyhounds won 6-3, were Goerke ' s fine 0-6, 11-9, 7-3 win and Mont- gomery ' s triumph, 6-0, 6-1, for the most over- whelming individual victory of the season. On May 10 at Bethlehem, the Fords finally broke into the win column by defeating Lehigh, 6-3, for the first time in Norm Brammall ' s reign as coach. Five of the six singles went to Haver- ford, and Goerke and Monty took care of the sixth point by winning their doubles. The sea- son ended the next Thursday, when Villanova howed, .v4, as Goerke, Birdsall, and Montgom- ery won singles, and then, with the addition of Mumma, collaborated to win first and second doubles and sew up the match. In the Virginia Cup tournament, Birdsall and Montgomery advanced to the finals with ease, each losing but three games in six sets of play. In the finals, after losing the first set, 6-1, Bird- sall turned on the heat to take the next three sets and win, 1-6, 6-4, 6-3, 6-1, thereby becom- ing the twentieth winner of this annual compe- tition. 57 T AVTICAL CLIB First Row — Meyers. Roche. Sherpick. C. Long, Sanders; Second Row — Hood. Konowitz. Len- ton. Walker, Rivers. The Haverford Nautical Club has become the most popular of the new activities at college since the purchase of four Penguins together with sailing facilities at the Corinthian Yacht Club at Essington-on-the-Delaware. Although the cream of the sailing abilities suddenly van- ished when Commodore Paul Bolgiano and Jon- athan Bushnell left for the Navy, the club has continued to maintain its activities throughout. The new Commodore, Bill Sherpick, initiated a series of lectures during the inactive winter sea- son by the club officers, Dean Macintosh and Dr. Palmer. When the Spring rolled around, the members put m many long hours at Essing- ton working on the boats to recondition them for the coming season. Due to the accelerated schedule, there was not much chance to travel to Essington in the Commodore ' s station wagon to practice, and the results were evident, as the Scarlet and Black placed last in a triangular meet at Annapolis with Pennsylvania and the Navy. However, the following week, Haverford came back to drive Navy to a hard-earned vic- tory in the Middle Atlantics as Bushnell missed high scoring honors for the second successive year by one point and Sherpick succeeded in winning three victories over the field. The final score read: Navy, . iS: Haverford, 56; Cornell, , 2, and Stevens, 48. The close score indicates the improvement with only brief practice. The Club plans to continue activity through- out the summer and fall seasons under the new Co-Commodores, Bob Roche and Charles Long. Transportation has been provided and several meets are in the effing. Instruction or censure? Mind ihf Sheets! The Right of Eminent Domain Waiter service reduced First Anniversary of the Repeal of the Liquor Rule At the Last Straw POSTSCRIPT THE UNION This book has been written in great haste and under exceptional circumstances, and for any errors of omission or commission present we apologize. We hope that it tells some of the Story of the Class of 1946, and of its members. This story will go on, since so many of our Class will be returning to Haverford. We hope that all who have had to go will be able to return, and that the College will be strong and alive to receive them. It is our job, we vho re- main, to help preserve all that is good in the Haverford trad ' tion, and to pass it on to our returning Classmates, as vell as to future Haverfordians. This book is an attempt to preserve a fine Haverford custom, and we will not slacken in our efforts anywhere along the line. 60 ESTABLISHED 1818 346 MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH ST. NEW YORK 17, N.Y. BETTER GO TO BROOKS A trademark iiit-ans little (jr n()tliiii,t; in itself. It is ju l a ilrawins f some familiar object (ir an unusual design, or a distinctive way of writing a firm ' s name. Its value is determined by what it stands for — by the standards, the dependability, and the integrity with which people have come through long associaticjn to invest it. Because of what the public has come to ideiitify with Brooks P.rothers ' familiar sheep — Quality, Taste, Straightforward Fair-Dealing — we believe that we have the finest trademark of its kind in the whole length and breadth of the United States. An l thousands of men all o er the country agree with us. Xou IN Till-: Second Quarter of Our Second Century, 1818-1944 .AS AI.AKERS OF MlLIT.. RY N.WAL UNIFORMS BRAN C H ES ONE WALL STREET, NEW YORK 5, N. V. 46 NEWBURY. COR. BERKELEY ST., BOSTON 16. MASS. WHITEHALL The Main Line ' s Finest Apartment Hotel FURNISHED AND UNFURNISHED ROOMS AND SUITES HOUSEKEEPING -•- Weekly and Monthly Rates Garage and Dining Room on Premises Banquet Rooms -•- Write For Descriptive Folder and Rates A. KENNETH LINDSLEY, Manager 410 Lancaster Avenue HAVERFORD, PA. ARTHUR VV. BINNS, Inc., Management JOHN TRONCELUTI EXPERT HAIR CUTTING Special Attention to Havertord Men ARDMORE ARCADE Phone: Ardmore 0593 WE TALK THE SAME LANGUAGE Quite so, old chap. With the aeroplane (airplane) making us such near neighbours (neighbors), that the trip across the Atlantic is just a short tram (trolley) ride, Anglo-American co-operation (cooperation) is the best life-assurance (life-insur- ance) for the future. A future in which the men and women of Autocar, instead of special-purpose vehicles for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Forces, will, once more, be building heavy- duty lorries (trucks) . . . Bless these Britishers! Why can ' t they talk English! Well, anyway, both languages agree on how to write peace . . and that ' s with justice. AUTOCAR OF ARDMORE Factory Branches in Leading Cities from Coast to Coast FRED J. COOPER I09 SO. 13 ' St ' rEET • PHILADELPHIA IT WAS THE WHIPPING POST that faced the jeweler v ho dared to misrepresent his wares in England during the fourteenth cen- tury. In later years, if a jeweler practiced fraud, he was heavily fined and expelled from his guild. In this modern age, those who purchase Silver, time pieces or jewelry must depend upon the experience, knowledge and integrity of his jeweler, for the protection once afforded by the law s and customs of a distant and stern age. 109 So. 13th Street PHILADELPHIA 7 PENnypacker 3678 Certified Gemologist, Registered Jeweler, American Gem Society. COPVRIGHT 1939. TmE COCA-COLA COMPANV WESTTOWN SCHOOL FOUNDED 1799 College Preparatory Boarding School for Boys and Girls Maintained by Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends (Arch Street) Quaker, coeducational, near Philadelphia, country, boarding and day, college preparatory, enriched by music, drama, art, home economics, shop, agricul- ture, work program, and sports. Simple, healthful living and constructive com- munity activities on 600 acre farm with orchards, dairy, woodlots, and lake. JAMES F. WALKER, Principal WESTTOWN, PA. PORTRAITS WEDDING GROUPS Compliments of MARLYN STUDIOS OF PHOTOGRAPHY SMEDLEY AND MEHL CO. 130 E. Lancaster Ave. WAYNE, PA. ARDMORE, PA. Telephone: Wayne 1518 57 W. Lancaster Ave. ARDMORE. PA. Telephone: Ardmore 5822 VICTOR V. CLAD CO. ManuiactuTers of Compliments of FOOD SERVICE EQUIPMENT Full Line of ALBRECHT ' S FLOWERS KITCHEN UTENSILS CHINA, GLASSWARE SILVERWARE NARBERTH — ARDMORE 117-119-121 So. llth Street WAYNE PHILADELPHIA A. TALONE TAILOR French Dry Cleaning and Dyeing 318 W. Lancaster Avenue ARDMORE Phone: Ardmore 416 EKSKINE HALL 438 West Montgomery Avenue HAVERFORD, PENNA. Breakfast — Lunch — Tea — Dinner A Pleasant Home For Permanent or Transient Guests Mary Virginia Brown, Proprietress Phones: Ardmore 9521, Ardmore 9627 BEST WISHES TO THE CLASS OF 1946 THE LAST STRAW HAVERFORD HULL-DOBBS HOUSE 329 West Lancaster Avenue ARDMORE OPEN ALL NIGHT FINE FOODS ARDMORE SERVICE STATION J. L. MASSETI Gulf Gas and Oil Anti-Freeze — Chains — Batteries 213 W. Lancaster Avenue Phone 9642 Compliments of WILLIAM T. FHEY Compliments of JEANETT ' S BRYN M AWR FLOWER SHOP With Best Wishes for a Successful Career for The Class of 1946 Established 1872 HOPPER, SOLIDAY AND CO. MEMBERS PHILA. STOCK EXCHANGE INVESTMENT SECURITIES 1420 Walnut Street PHILADELPfflA 2 HAVERFORD COURT HOTEL Compliments Montgomery Ave. at Grays Lane HAVEHFORD, PA. C. W. SPELLMAN, Mgr. of NORMAN Ideal Transient and Residential Accommodations BRAMALL Excellent Food Refined Atmosphere BUY WAR BONDS! —Xr oDistlnctive Ljearbooh . . • is the product of the efforts of a capable editor plus the interested cooperation of a seasoned specialist. To an editor, who wishes to make a success of his first publishing venture, speciali- zation offers innumerable advantages that are most helpful— in fact— indispensable. It is advisable to have a specialist handle your yearbook. Investigate the services of Campus, an organization whose entire business is college and school publications. mm mimm co. INCORPORATED 1316 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Penna. LETTERPRESS • ENGRAVING • OFFSET LITHOGRAPHY • ART SERVICE ENGRAVPRINT CAMPUS PUBLISHING COMPANY. INC. 1316 ARCH STREET. PHILADELPHIA 7, PA,


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

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

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

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Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1943 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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Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

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