Haverford College - Record Yearbook (Haverford, PA)
- Class of 1951
Page 1 of 134
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 134 of the 1951 volume:
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:Y.A Class L3)S,2.15 BOOK 113 THE LIBRARY  S5I HAVERFORD COLLEGE THE GIFT OF CLASS OF 1951 ACCESSION No. 8 2 T 5 . y V h « ,;; - ' J r i:r« ■|i w ..J •j rii THE RECORD THE NINETEEN HAVERFORD COLLEGE HAVERFORD PENNSYLVANIA FIFTY-ONE ..? We have attempted to portray the College iniormally and realistically. The result oi our efforts will speak for itself . . . A SENIOR PUBLICATION Dedication There are few of us who will forget the Collection late in the first semester when Bill Docherty, soon to leave to return to the Navy, stood on the stage, tickled and embarrassed, to receive a silver tray as a gift from his friends at Haverford. In the moments while he unwrapped the gift there passed in swft review the many things that we were indebted to Bill for . . . and we were proud to think, as we looked over our shoulders and saw Pat smiling even more proudly and a little wistfully, that we had had the sense to dedicate our yearbook to this couple. To Bill, who had made his friendship and under- standing available to every student, and who will always be the ideal of coach and leader to us. To Pat, whose cheery good humor must remain a marvel amidst the difficulties of her bookstore, and whose door was always open to all. Realizing that it has been a pleasure to call them our friends, the class of 1951 dedicates this Record to Bill and Pat — and Mike. mgf-— ' - ■i. - .w Bill and Pat Docherty C5 HAVERFORD Here is Haverford. Here is the story of four years of study, fun, and growth. Here is a place with memories for all who have been associated with it. What this place means to you, and what you think of it is affected not just by the buildings, but also by the people you meet, the things you do, the exams, the important and not so important things that composed your every day life. Haverford means a scared freshman sitting through a Lunt Jitter session as well as a group of sober seniors on the long path to a Chemistry Comprehensive session. It means a water fight in North Barclay and overturned fire extinguishers in the halls of Lloyd. It is the remembrance of being thrown into the pond as a wise Rhinie, and discussions over a cup of coffee in the Coop. It is also the story of exams. The last minute cram- ming before a final. The arguments in the class room, and the many hours spent on a term paper. The discussion with the professors and the understanding to be found in them and the other members of the Haverford community. Seated: Feeser, Armstrong. Stand- ing: Reynolds, Moore, Thomas, Kit- tridge, Leqgett. THINGS THAT CHANGE The college year 1950-51 brought a profound change upon the Haver- ford ccmmunity. The world situation affected every member of the com- munity from worker to faculty. Students were now faced with the prospect of military service, and the faculty and administration with problems of running a college with a shrinking student body. Collection announcements about the draft were frequent, bulletin boards filled with draft bulletins, and the question was How does the draft affect you? The seniors found many of their plans for the future would have to be postponed as problems of what to do after graduation became quite different. For many the problem involved a decision about what branch of military service they preferred to enter. For underclassmen the problem was somewhat different. With a draft law providing for deferments only until June, the attitude was one of uncer- tainty and insecurity. Many felt that some men would be able to finish college, and decided to take their chances. Others felt the best plan was membership in some kind of military reserve or R.O.T.C. Hence the picture of uniformed students emerging from the Haverford dormitories on their way to other places or institutions for training was a new but not totally incomprehensible one. JhinqA THAT NEVER CHANGE Each semester the Haverford student changes his courses and schedule. But there are two things in his schedule that never change. These are Collection and Fifth Day Meeting. Each Tuesday the entire student body gathers in Roberts to hear a speaker on politics, religion, philosophy, or even athletics. And each Thurs- day the students take the Ginko bordered path over the bridge to Meeting. Above: Collection ad- journed. Upper right: Holy Trinity. Lower right: On the way back from Meeting. Haverford is more. It is the griping about the food, walking through the Ginko fruit outside of Founders, breakfast at 8:09 each morning. President White ' s jokes in Collection, and all night arguments about anything from Haverford student government elections to philosophy. It is the race to make it to Bryn Mawr by 2:00 A.M. The parties in Lloyd and the bell in Founders ringing to announce a football victory as you walk through the rustling leaves away from Walton Field. Haverford means a walk every Thursday to Meet- ing House for an hour of contemplation or reading whichever the case might be. It means Cap Harris on the steps of Roberts ushering late-comers to Collection. Haverford means two hours in the Physics lab or an evening seminar at the home of a professor, or the many trips to the library when the dormitory is too noisy to study. Haverford is the excitement over an intramural basketball game, and the desire to beat Swarthmore whether it be in volleyball or varsity football. It is Pop Haddleton bracing against the wind, sending his boys through the paces around the track while Bill Docherty shows prospective linemen how to tackle. It is a cricket match on Cope Field. But most important, Haverford is the process of growth. It is change from a freshman who sees a strange place for the first time and meets strange people from all over the world, and then leaves four years later with friends and joyful days behind him. Haverford is the growth of minds, a finding of knowl- edge, and an understanding of those things learned both in and out of the classroom. It is a preparation for life ahead, whether you plan to be a business- man or doctor, a teacher or minister. Here is the story of Haverford. ADMINISTRATION PRESIDENT Gilbert Fowler White The Class of 1951 has watched a fledgling college president achieve maturity in administering Haverford. The Gilbert White we saw as freshmen had experienced only a sampling of the problems to come in his past five years here. These last four years have made manifest an air of confidence in Gilbert White, echoed daily by the faith of the college community in him, his tact and judgment, as it relies on his solving its countless problems. Mr. White has retained through the fire of functional formalism an informality that on Campus Day made a dungaree-clad college president no more inappropriate than a sweating junior. The truly personal relationship that Gilbert White has built up with the members of the college community, his willingness to help individuals, and his insight into what is best for Haverford, have made this man a vital factor in moving Haverford smoothly toward its goal in education. VICE-PRESIDENT Archibald Macintosh Mac will never need introduction to any group of Haverfordians. Cast in the unhappy- role of being responsible for all of us being here in the first place, he is then stuck with the job of making sure we don ' t make him look bad. But most important in our minds, he always has time for a couple of words and a grin, behind which lies the knowledge that he is always available when help is needed. DEAN Gilbert T. Hoag Somehow managing to be available at all times, the Dean combines a deep love for Haverford with a realistic view of its problems. Although his job has many unpleasant aspects to it, his friendly and understanding guidance is the reason for the academic success of unknowable numbers of students. We have been lucky to have a man of his caliber in his key position, and we will not forget the value of his practical approach to our misdemeanors any sooner than he would dissociate socialism from intermediate composition. VICE-PRESIDENT Lester Haworth Haverford owes much to Lester Haworth for his effective handling of the fund drive. The biggest and most amtitious campaign in Haverford history and one destined to help the College over the difficult times to come was a success due in a large measure to the efforts of Haworth and his assistants. Another of his contributions was a guiding hand behind the formation of the much-needed press club. COMPTROLLER Aldo Caselli The proprietor of Haverford College. Every- thing depends on his approval, and luckily so for the continued financial success of the Col- lege. Voluntarily withdrawing a little from the everyday life of the College, Aldo nevertheless will do anything for you within the bounds of good business with a sincere interest in your particular problems. If you really want to be his pal, just ask him if he actually got Tos- canini ' s autograph, or if Club 50 isn ' t a white elephant after all. MANUEL JOSE ASENSIO Assistant Professor ol Spanish JOHN ASHMEAD, JR. Assistant Professor of English CARL B. ALLENDOERFER Professor of Mathematics OTTO THEODOR BENFEY Assistant Professor of Cfiemisfry s THOMAS A. BENHAM Assistant Professor of Pfiysics RICHARD MAX BERNHEIMER Associate Professor of History of Art on joint appointment with Bryn IVfawr College FACULTY -■I WAYNE CLAYSON BOOTH Assistant Pro essor o( English EDWIN B. BRONNER Instructor in History WILLIAM E. CADBURY, JR. Associate Professor ol Chemistry HOWARD COMFORT Associate Professor o Latin and Greek FRANCES DE GRAAFF Assis(an( Pro essor ol Russian on joint appointment with Bryn Mawr College WILLIAM DOCHERTY, JR. Associate Pro essor ol Physical Education and Director o Physical Education WILLIAM WISTAR COMFORT President, Emeritus JOHN W. FLIGHT Pro essor o Biblical Literature THOMAS E DRAKE Associate Professor of American History EMMETT REID DUNN David Scull Professor o Biology MARTIN FOSS Lecfurer in Philosophy MARCEL MARC GUTWIRTH Assistant Professor ol French and MADELYN GUTWIRTH ins(ruc(or in Romance Languages LOUIS C. GREEN Associate Professor of Aslronomy ALFRED W. HADDLETON Assistant Professor of Physicaf Education, Emeritus H. FIELD HAVILAND, JR. Assistant Professor of Pofilicaf Science % 1 1 Li Pss P HOWARD K. HENRY Assistant Protessor of Biology WILLIAM ERNEST HOCKING Visifing Professor of Phiiosophy JOHN C. HERNDON Professor of Public Finance P -i f CLAYTON W, HOLMES Associafe Professor of Engineering THEODORE B. HETZEL Associafe Professor of Engineering HOLLAND HUNTER Assistant Professor of Economics JOHN A. KELLY Professor of Geiman : f THOMAS O. JONES Associafe Professor of CJiemisfry JOHN A. LESTER, JR. Assistant Professor of English ANDRE MALECOT Instructor in Romance Languages WILLIAM E. I.UNT Waffer D. and Edith M. L. Scull Pro- fessor of English Constitutional History 9, I V Y 1 r CLETUS O. OAKLEY Professor of Maffiemafics FRANCIS H. PARKER Assisfanf Professor of PfiiJosopiiy ABRAHAM PEPINSKY Professor of Psychology WILLIAM BUELL MELDRUM John Farnum Professor of Cfiemisfry HARRY W. PFUND Professor of German ROY E. RANDALL Associate Professor of Pfiysicai Education and Director at Intercollegiate Athletics WILLIAM H. REESE Assisfanf Professor of Music and Direc- tor of Glee Club and Orchestra on joint appointment with Bryn Mav r College IRA De AUGUSTINE REID Professor of Sociofogy JOHN P. ROCHE Assistant Professor of Political Science IRWIN M. ROSENSTOCK Assisfanf Professor of PsycJio ogy LEVI ARNOLD POST Professor of Greek HERMAN M. SOMERS Pro essor ot Political Science RALPH M. SARGENT F. B Gummere Professor o English ALFRED G. STEER, JR. ns ruc(or in German EDWARD D. SNYDER Professor of English DOUGLAS VAN STEERE T. Wistar Brown Pro essor of Philosophy RICHARD M. SUTTON Pioiessor of Physics JAMES H. STREET Assisfanf Professor of Economics ALFRED J. SWAN Professor of Music on oin( appoint- ment with Swatthmore College I. HERBERT W. TAYLOR Physician HOWARD M. TEAF, JR. Pro essor of Economics ALBRECHT UNSOLD Visiting Lecturer in Physics and Astionomy RICHARD H. WARREN insfrucfor in English ALBERT H. WILSON Pro essor o Mafhematics, Emerilus WILLIAM H. WISHMEYER Instructor in English KENNETH S. WOODROOFE Lecfurer in English m -sM j ' ' - m M M I ' K B ' ' . IH H LAURENCE W. WYLIE Associafe Professor of Romance Languages SENIORS HAVERFORD COLLEGE THE CLASS OF 1951 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Standing: Secretary Nevius Curtis, President Darwin Prockop. Seated: Vice-Presi- dent Sam Colman, Treasur- er John Hume. The class of ' 51 spent its four years at Haverford in what appears to have been the only period of four years duration when the college was functioning under normal conditions in the last or present decade. Consequently, the Class of ' 51 was a normal class. Our first major contribution to the community came early in the fall of 1947 when Vic Jowers rendered the classic state- ment; I ' m gonna break that Customs Committee wide open! With this setting the tone of our attitude, a few weeks later led by Scottie Kimmich we successfully draped the mess hall chandeliers with our ties. Although we suffered, this rebellion was our first notable accomplishment as Haverfordians. Since that auspicious beginning, we ' ve done the usual things with more than the usual success. We engineered the usual dances, annexed intramural championships, won intercollegiate victories, and obtained our share of social, artistic, and scholastic distinctions. For example, our intramural A basketball team won the league three years, our soccer squad tied the JV ' s, and our volleyball, football, and soft- ball teams also had their share of success. And all these accomplishments were in spite of the obstinate opposition from our brothers directly below or above us in seniority. In varsity athletics we also had our share of success as well as our share of very capable athletes. John Hume and Bud Garrison stood out on the gridiron, Paul Shipley kicked a penalty kick at Swarthmore and led the team to a mid-Atlantic soccer championship, Sol ToUin was high scorer in the similar basketball league, Gouv Cadwallader was a mid-Atlantic wrestling champion, and Bill Boteler was a capable receiver for the baseball team. In still other fields, the class of ' 51 won Class Night its junior and senior year, due in large measure to the directing and staging talents of Sam Hud- son and the musical accomplishments of Al Clayton and Don McCargor. Besides winning the best show laurels twice, Tom McNutt and Karl Spaeth each took individual honors for the class. Elsewhere Tony Morley ' s astute leadership kept the News editorial page in constant hot water, Ken Dol- beare kept the student government out of the same, and Darwin Prockop somehow got class activities attended to. In short, we feel entitled to a certain amount of self satisfaction over what we ' ve done at Haverford. It has been both work and play, enjoyable and painful, and rewarding and disappointing. And all have contributed in one way or another — but here we have mentioned only a few — to making these four years the successful years which they have been. H. DAVID ABBOTT LiNWOOD, N. Y. History Glee Club 3,4; Bridge Club 2,3,4; Film Club 3,4. Dave . . . first seat in classes, first in collection, first in the ' 51 Record . . . quiet, but get him in a bull session . . . Founders to Library to 4th . . . Hey Abbott! . . . Film Klub koifer-keeper . . . slam that door; the only 4 cylinder V-8 on campus . . . those bridge hands . . . closing time ' . . plans: grad school and government work. S. NWANNEKA NWAOBODO ADIMORA Agulu, Awka, Nigeria Chemistry and Biology j.V. Soccer 2; French Club 2; Manager Cross Country 4; Var- sity Club 4. Nwanny . . . medicine, politics, and music . . . No compromise between British imperialism and Niger- ian irredentism! . . . knows his Squalus acanthias inside out ... ... and anything of that nature. . . . patient extractor of Bach and boogie-woogie from weary pianos . . . can and does argue in almost any field . . . cheerful disdainer of prototypes and conventionalities . . . Harvard Medical and back to Nigeria by the fastest plane. W. DONALD ALLAN COATESVILLE, PA. English l.V. Football 1; Glee Club I; Flying Club 2,4; News ' 3. Don . . . frustrated dart shooier . . . easy going but with firm convictions . . . that delicate sunlamp pink . . . Sure I eat it. I ' ve gotta live. . . . two loves had he — both Bubbles . . . from Barclay to Bryn Mawr Deanery in one intriguing step . . A auy can ' t even shave in peace! . . . bilious green Ford with valuable rear bumper . . . headed for Boston, and then who knows? . . . aim in life: early retirement. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 25 DONALD SINCLAIR AMUSSEN Chevy Chase, Md. English Basketball 1,2,3,4. Varsity Club 1,2,3,4. Vice-President 4; WHRC 1,2,3,4, Producfion Director 2; Cutoms Comm. 3.4, Chairman 4; Jnframura Comm. 4; Ministerial Forum 3; Triang e Sociefy 3,4. Moose . . . Don . . . one of the four Henrys . . . indefatigable comedian and impersonatoi . . . Yuss! . . . avid promoter of modern jazz . . . Billy Carter ' s most persistent mail hound . . . I ' m hun- gry. . . . Where ' s Sam? . . . Nick ' s rum runner . . . Class of ' 54 ' s best friend noted Class Night actor . . . Haverford ' s John L. C. Silvoney . . . that night against P.M.C. — 31 points . . . plans to be Bishop of Washington. LAURENCE HUNTER AUTENREITK Pittsburgh, Pa. Sociology WHRC 2,3, Secretary 3; Spanish Club 1,2,3: Glee Club 1,2; Band 2,3, Leader 3; Bridge Club 2; Phofo Club 3,4, Secretary- Treasurer 4. Class Night 1,2,3,; Record 4. Larry . . . Scoop . . . the inevitable camera . . . owns a fabulous collection of potential blackmail . . . robs the cradle . . . music maestro please . . . Haverford ' s own Arthur Murray; Class Night chorus line mentor and dance floor Charleston addict . . . Keep your drink off the piano! . . . Ira ' s boy . . . nas been known to walk out on overbidding bridge partners . . . 6th. RICHARD BALTZELL Columbus, Ohio History Dickie . . . one of the four Henrys . . . 5th Entry ' s Al Capone . . pushing Dennison for reckless driving laurels . . . Major: P.E. Minor: History . . . Pem East ' s favorite son . . . I ' m emancipated, don ' t you know. . . one of Squire ' s boys . . . Do get me . . . . . . perfectionist in the art of snoring . . . But I am right, you are w rong. . . . Can ' t Dush the damn car, Arnold. . . . the bishopric of Long Island is the plum he wants to pluck. THE CLASS OF 1951 26 JOHN ERNEST BELL Milton, N. Y. Engineering Cross Country 3,4, Captain 4; Track 1,2,3,4. John . . . Holmes ' persevering pupil . . . Why is Bryn Mawr always busy? What ' s going on over there? . . . Pop ' s tenacious terror . . . What can we do to make this room look decently? ... he doesn ' t run, he gallops . . . They can ' t do this to me! . . . apple orchard, gladiolus, and chicken engineer deluxe . . . up-state New York dry humor . . . ambi- tion: to be a $100,000 a year executive. EDGAR THOMSON BELLINGER Bethesda, Md. English WHRC 1,2,3,4; Varsity Tennis 3,4; Varsity Club 3,4; News ' 2: Press Club 4. Ed . . . the Count . . . three blankets and a quilt in September . . . entertains at militarisiic weekends . . . Scoop Jr. . . . terrorized the intramural league with a one hand push shot . . . delights in waving the Dixie ilag . . . Dale Shears . . . Great! . . . ace sportscaster . . . Stop shivering, Ed! . . . training is the secret of his tennis success . . . 6th. WILLIAM PIERCE EOTELER Washington, D. C. English Varsity Football 2,3,4; Varsify Baseball 1,2,3,4, Caplain 4; Var- sity Club 1,2,3,4, Secretary-Treasurer 4; Beta Rho Sigma. Bill . . . Botz . . . capably lilled brother ' s athletic shoes . . . Little game? . . . solitaire king . . . I ' m only 645 dollars in the hole . . . dated Miss Atlantic City . . . But Roy, I called for a curve. . . . nothing like sitting on a couch before a blazing fire . . . intramural basketeer . . . Bill, don ' t take the paper to the Coop! . . . 6th. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 27 JiiL JAMES CHEYNE BOYD Milwaukee, Wis. Chemistry Football 3,4, l.V. 1,2; j.V. Basketball 1; j.V. Track 1; Varsity Club 4. Jim . . . one of the four Henrys . . . Wnere ' s the pineapple queen? . . . meticulously neat . . . easy- going . . . the plunging fullback . . . that Hamilton game . . . 5th Entry ' s medicine cabinet . . . hungry almost as much of the time as Amussen . . . not quite as round as his brother but getting there . . . staunch advocate of his home town ' s golden liquid . . . member of 86 proof senior quintette. JAMES D BROWN, JR. Honolulu, T. H, English Glee Club 1; Nautical Club 1,2,3,4; Varsity Club 3,4 Jim . . . the man with the beautiful mind . . . Are you hungry? . . . loud shirts and Japanese sandals . . . We ' ve got to educate these girls. . . . makes the best saki on campus . . . Quick hand before class? . . . squandered Nautical Club dues at Penn House . . . Thank God I ' m an athlete! . . . leis girls on first date . . . firm believer in God . . . It ' s just like sea- weed! . . . will comb beaches in Tahiti. JOSEPH C. BROWN Clarksboro, N. J. Biblical Literature WHRC 3; Track 1; Fencing 1; IFO 1. Joe . . . pipe and slippers man . . . deserted campus for married bliss . . . used to walk from Barclay, now commutes from Jersey . . . never missed a class . . . doesn ' t mind Flight ' s eight o ' clocks . . . deep thoughts, dry wit . . . calmed the troubled waters of WHRC . . . public school teaching is his field. THE CLASS OF 1951 28 ROBERT DeP. BROWN Philadelphia, Pa. English V HRC 1,2,3: News 2,3; Photography Cluk 3.4, Secretory- Treasurer 3, President 4; German Club 3,4, Secretory-Treasurer 4; Record 2. Bob . . . haw, haw, haw . . . only man to remove his glasses in presence of women . . . jitney to Bryn Mawr . . . home away from home: 33 B.C. . . . impeccably dressed . . . goodby LaSalle, hello Olds — an 88 in ' 51 . . . history under brother Marvin . . . peerless photographer . . . even acts — Jeder- mann . . . Robert von Brown — Deutsch Student . . . those glorious years on WHRC . . . probably navy bound. GOUVERNEUR CADWALLADER SoLEBURY, Pa. Engineering Cross Country 1,2,3: Wrestling 1,2,3,4, Co-Captain 4: Tracfc 1.2, 3,4; .v. Soccer 4: Varsity Club 1,2,3,4; Drama C ub; Bridge Club; Chess Club. Gouv . . . champion wrestler, math wizard, and lover . . . Hello, Rhoads? I was wondering if . . . . . . always figures the obtuse angle . . . It ' s not due ' til ten tomorrow. . . . ardent conversationalist . . . Back at George School we ... ... knows the odds on everything . . . Then I break ' em in half with a figure four. . . . prime member of Holmes fan club . . . can ' t miss in engineering. RICHARD M. CAMERON, ]R. Concord, Mass. English WHRC 2,3; Sfuden; Council 2. Dick . . . run by faith . . . deserted the bachelor ranks early . . . Hello, boy. . . . master singer of folk songs . . . faithful disciple of Dr. Foss . . . wisht I was in Arkansaw settin ' on a rail ... ... com- mutes from Swarthmore in tired Ford ... an island of sanity in an insane world . . . feet tirmly planted on a cloud. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 29 OSCAR W. CARLSON, IR. Baltimore, Md. English Track 1,2,3, Managei 2,3, Customs Comm. 4; Band 2; Varsity Club. Occie . . . the steadying influence of 5th entry . . . keeps Sam on the straight and narrow . . . studious and retiring, trades fifth ' s parties for weekend work camp . . . convictions and the courage to back them up . . . Who wants a ride to Luther League tonight? . . . had a date once ... an idealist with his feet on the ground. PAUL BARKER CATES East Vassalboro, Me. English Glee Club 1,2,3,4; .V. Soccer 2,3,4, Fi m Club 3; Dramatic Club 2; Service Fund Chairman 3. Paul ... a mere I 13th of ths Cates clan . . . You see, the Cates are East Vassalboro . . . last of original C.B. B aboons . . . champ gladioli raiser . . . chickens put him through college . . . sabbatical to Danbury . . That ' s impawtant. . . . wreaked more havoc among varsity soccer fullbacks than any other right wing in J.V. history . . . plans to be a guide like his daddy. ALLEN BARTHOLOMEW CLAYTON Lansdowne, Pa. History Varsity Soccer 2,3,4, J.V. 1; Orchesfra 1,2,3,4; Glee Club 1,2, 3,4; Octet 2,3,4; Band 2; Chess Club 1,2,3; Customs Comm. 2; Varsity Club 3,4; Beta Rho Sigma 3. Al . . . Albie Clinton ... 6 foot four with bow-lie decor . . . composer, arranger, and musician . . . lives in his own cultured little universe . . . sleeps 8 hours a night with monotonous regularity . . . God of the octet ... 13 points to open . . . bad knee, big head, and bigger feet on the soccer field . . . Great Scott! . . . unerring eye for gut courses . . . will teach six year olds modal progressions. THE CLASS OF 1951 30 SAMUEL COLMAN, JR. BiNGHAMTON, N. Y. Philosophy Class President 2. Class Vice-President 3; Students Council 3; Varsity Basketball 1,2,3,4; J.V. Soccer 3, Varsity Soccer 4; Var- sity Club 1,2,3,4. Sam . . . keeps Oc out of trouble . . got regular mauling as soccer goalie . . . veteran basketeer . . . most valuable player . . . true-blue to Marilyn these four years . . . those long distance phone calls . . . Ben Cooper ' s favorite athlete . . . firni religious convictions ... on to seminary . . . has done a lot for Haverford. RICHARD K. CONANT, jR. Lincoln, Mass. Sociology J.V. Football 1,3; Nautical Club 1. Christian Association 2,3,4; GJee Club 3,4; Service Fund 2,3, Chairman 4 Ricky . . . square dance caller par excellence . . . 1st Entry ' s mascot has him on the leash . . . Now where did I leave that causal nexus? . . . nylon shorts, sunflower seeds, and orange juice . . . I ' m concerned about that boy! . . . Doris speaks to his condition . . . he ' s ashamed of his poor Harvard relation . . . Grand Right with Ira and Lett with the Service Fund . . . Rick the Ripper. WILLIAM T. CONKLIN Ardmore, Pa. Economics Varsity Football 2,3,4, I.V. 1; Lacrosse 2,3; Varsity Club. Bill and Lil . . . caused the fair catch rule to be scrapped . . . Archibald Barassol . . . memorizes Lunt ' s history and Time . . . lived with the perfect roommate his senior year . . . psychologically deranged at 7 when his yellow taxicab was broken . . . This helmet is too small, Roy . . . retired mem- ber of the Vets . . . knew Otts Helm personally . . . tw enty-two white shirts and two bow ties . . . I ' m not losing hair. I just have a short iiair cut. . . . master of the straight-faced jest. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 31 JOHN J. COONEY Paoli, Pa. Psychology v. Baseketball 1; ICG 3,4; Class Vice-President 1. Cheese . . . Haverford ' s debonair cover boy . . . crack salesman — pots and pans and Fuller Brushes with genial John Acton . . . I ' m sorry Mr. Powers, but on Sundays I pose only lor churches. . . . the sermon by the pond . . . professional debutante charmer until he met Phyllis . . . You guys don ' t know what you ' re missing! . . . olaymaker and haymakers for intramural Vet five . . . hopes to get through Law School before son Thomas Aquinas enters Haverford. HAROLD 1. CRAGIN Merchantville, N. J. English Football 2,3,4, I.V. 1, Baseball 1,2,3,4; Varsity Cluh 4. Harold . . . Muthuh . . . constant concern for his brood in the Tower . . . Hi Bart, Hello John. . . . frustrated comic entertainer . . . speed and agility as defensive end . . . the new Culbertson; finesses studying with the same ease . . . I ' m fast for a big man. . . . nucleus of Senior Vets . . . Bird time, men. . . . batting practice competition with Mark Randall . . . grand-dad . . . I ' ll be married by June. . . . coach . . . drove past tenth, once . . . C.A.I.W.H. NEVIUS M. CURTIS Granby, Mass. Economics Glee Club 1,2,3,4, Business Manager 3, President 4, WHRC 1,2,4, President 2; Founders Club 3,4, Secietaiy 4; Ciass Secre- tary 3,4; Film Club 3, Treasurer 3; Cap and Bells 3,4; Cheer- leader 1,2; Record 4. Nev ... an efficient administrator . . . Chug-Chug, Pogo ' s maleman ... I have an announcement. . . . saved the goldfish from a norrible fate . . . Damn psychology anyway! . . . knows every estate within five miles . . . in with students and faculty. . . . But I like her mother. . . . These matches are only 4 ply. . . . always has a receptive ear . . Harvard Business School, maybe. THE CLASS OF 1951 32 HUNTER OPPERMAN CUTTING RocKFORD, III. Chemistry Debating Society 1,2,3,4, Secretary-Treasurer 3; Chess Club 1.2,3,4, Secretary-Treasurer 2, President 3: Glee Club 2,3; Wrestling 2,3: Spanish Club 4; Track 1 Cut ... a hustler all the way . . . dauntless senior soccer player . . . sleeps at night . . . arranged debating trips to New England ' s feminine colleges . . . one of the Williams House aristocrats . . Let us suppose ... ... uses psychic one cluD bid to perfection . . . Out in God ' s country, near Rock- ford. . . . Irish as the Blarney Stone and shortly to be as bald . . . Northwestern med school. D. ELWYN DAVIES Washington, D. C. Political Science Glee Club 1,2; Cap and Bells 2,3,4; IRC 2,3, Secretary 2, Presi- dent 3; WHRC 2; Cricket 2,3,4; French Club 1 3. Cricket . . . I ' m a Welshman, dammit, a Welsh- man! . . . decidedly international — Rule Britannia! . . . the perfect mesomorph . . . speaks the King ' s English — Half and hawf. . . . star boarder at 13 Lloyd . . . Just one more game of chess? . . . hopes to give Britain an aggressive foreign policy; but in the meantime — Howard, may I have another cigarette? JOHN HERBERT DAVISON New York, N. Y. Music Glee Club Accompanist 1,2,3,4; Orchestra 3,4; German Club 2; IFO 1,2. John . . . nervous energy . . . Sit down, John, you ' ll wear out the rug. . . . pianist, composer . . . with- stood the Reesian temperament for four years ... a lonesome music major . . . sonitinas, sonatas, and square dances . . . non-conformist . . . Are you by any chance driving over to Dr. Swan ' s tonight? . . . Phi Bete in spite of himself . . . allegro vivace after midnight . . . courses anywhere but Haverford. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 33 ALLAN SHEA DAYTON, IP. Pittsburgh, Pa. Political Science WHRC 1,2,3; ICG 2,3; Dance Committee 2,3; Class Night 2,3,4. Al . . . Wait ' til Boopie sees those pictures . . . half hour phone calls to Pittsburg.h . . . expert on world affairs . . . he ' s got the biggest, the most tremen- dous ...!... Now when I worked on the river . . . . . . captain and leading decimator of ' Si ' s soccer all-stars . . . Red, Field, John, and myself ... ... The Dean and I have been buddies since my fresh- man year. . . . 6th. DREW W. DEACON Philadelphia, Pa. Philosophy News 1,4; WHRC 1; Tennis 2,3,4; Squash 2,4; Chess Club 3; Vaisily Club 4; Phiiosophy Club 3. Drew . . . the deacon . . . Say, that ' s a pious idea. . . . snazzy ' 36 Plymouth — well it has a motor any- way . . . those long weekends . . . It bounces that way. . . . knows who pitched the third game of the 1903 World Series . . . favorite haunt: G.C.C. . . . plays squash with Bud Weiser . . . Frank Yeutter ousted in favor of Deacon , . . Boys, this work is killing me. . . . bound for Strategic Intelligence. L. CROSBY DEATON Baltimore, Md. Biblical Literature Band 1,2,3. Bing . . . the Barclay Friar ... By love ' I don ' t strictly had a . wine, mind the dust, as long as it ' s orderly. . a one girl man . . . that purposeful walk little chat with Deaton last night, 7 to 1 WOMAN, and song — first and last ecclesiastical only . . . did in seven semesters what most do in eight . . . John Flight ' s boy. THE CLASS OF 1951 34 STANFORD C. DENNISON Jeannette, Pa. English News 1,2: WHRC 1.2,3,4: Track Manager 4. Stan the Man . . . scholar and sage . . . master of the dramatic pause . . . Jacques of 5th . . . Sargent ' s bus-boy . . . Achilles, et al . . . old time psychiatric aid . . . looking for a plan . . A million and one, a million and two ... ... makes coffee best with hand-knit argyles . . . grad work at Indianapolis Speedway. ALLEN HILLES DEWEES Glen Mills, Pa. Geology Al . . . Goulawash . . . spontaneous laughter . . . capable of great concentration . . . Now out in Montana ... ... likes the wide open spaces . . . Jinks and me was cruising along ... . Let ' s get arselves in gear. . . . suds and skwaaaks . . . itchy nose when in a jam . . . high-stepped for the J.V. oooters . . . petroleum geology; plans to make an oily pile. JOHN L DODGE Orangeburg, N. J. Political Science Wrestling 1,2,3,4, Co-Captain 4: Sailing 1,2,3,4, Commodore 4: Varsity Club 1,2,3,4, President 4. John . . . Deals Dodge . . . straight man for Brown . . . Surely there ' s an easier way to do this. . . . enthusiastic about corner daybeds . . . How ' m I going to tell these girls I can ' t return their love? . . . enjoyed life until Varsity Club made him presi- dent . . . But we Christian Scientists are antisep- tic. . . . wrestles harder with his love-life than for Shihadeh. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 35 KENNETH M. DOLBEARE Garden City, N. Y. English Students Council 3,4, Treasurer 3, Presidenf 4; Customs Comm. 2,3; Intramuial Committee 2,3,4; Triangle Socie(y Ken . . . our plebian president . . . the greatest intra- mural athlete in the history of HaverforJ . . . can write a 90 paper in 30 minutes . . . Gotta go and see Gilby. . . . rye and soda . . oversees campus activities from his windov seat . . . Well, i hardly know what to make of that. . . . frequent get-rich- quick schemes . . . will make a million, somehow. RICHARD J. EBERLY RiVERTON, N. J. Chemistry Students Counci 3,4, Secretary 3; Record 3,4, EJifor-in-Chief 4; News Business Manager 3,4; Handbook Editor 3; Founders Club 3,4; Varsity Tennis 4, j.V. 1,2,3; IV. Sasketball 1; Squash 2. Dick . . . Pooh-Bah, the Lord High Everything Else . . . entrepreneur of campus publications ... I dis- agree! . . . finally emerged from shadow of Mateer, Foster, and Co. . . . T.O. jabbed us again today. . . . Senior A ' s hustling ploymaker . See what I mean? . . . conservative believer in free enterprise . . . sweet, pure women . . . will make druggists rich after Columbia Med. PHILIP EDGERTON Haverford, Pa. Engineering ;.V. Soccer 1,2,3; Track 1,2,3; Flying Club 3,4, Presidenf 4; GJee Club 3,4. Phil . . . Scab . . . last of a long line of 1st Entry Edgertons . . . enthusiastic engineer with real com- mon sense . . . Teal ' s buddy . . can be serious . . . aviator first class . . . he ' ll gladly take you tor a ride . . . super-sonic whistle . . . Beagle Scout . . . can ' t miss that cackle . . . Quaker cannoneer . . feet con- vex downward . . . Here puddy-tat. — Wham! . . . swift weekends at Vassar . . . still insists that Holmes has a sense of humor. THE CLASS OF 1951 36 ROBERT BEVERLY EDMISTON State College, Pa. English Cheerleader 1,2,3, Head Cheerleader 3; Gee Club 1,2 Customs Comm. 4. Bev . . . the golden one . . . How are you now? . . . head mechanic of the cheerleading Lquad . . , Why spend $5.40 for 25 minutes? . never at a loss for swimming pupils . . . studies, parties, and sleeps with the same determination . . Shunkie . . . intramural basketball ' s best ref baiter and bench jockey . . . Penn State ' s gift to scholarship . . . now to Penn Med. FRED EXTON, JR. Washington, D. C. History Glee Club 1, French Club 1,3,4, President 4; IRC 1,3. Friedrich der Kleine . . . What is he? He ' d be Chinese if you ' d believe it . . . entered college three times . . . Now it can be told; I was a counterspy. . . . free lance in Paris . . . Who ' s that old man? . . . French Club ' s foremost actor . . . may be destined for the State Department. PAUL THOMAS FEESER Schuylkill Haven, Pa. Political Science Glee Club 2,3,4: Octet 3,4; J.V. Football 1,2,3: Basketball Man- ager 3: Students Council 4: Founders Club 4: Cap and Bells 4: Varsity Club 3,4. Tom . . . Pretty Boy . . Look what Marilyn made me for Christmas! . . . carries more weigtit in the Glee Club than any other tenor . . . You guys must have been born in a pig pen. . . . lives with the three nicest guys in college (they say) . . . Kannst du nicht a funge? . . . frequent trips to Philadelphia . . . octet faithful . . . his future road is well cindered. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 37 JOHN D. FIFE HOBOKEN, N. J. Political Science Film Club 1,2; Sailing 3,4; Varsity Club 2. Dusty . . . Bilgewater . . . won his letter drifting on the Delaware . . . missed bacoming student body president by a hair . . . Pass the goddam mashed potatoes! . . . most altruistic (.ilumnus of the CBCCC . . . product of Hoboken politics . . . flat feet and I-A . . . Yq ever want to us 3 my car again? . . . most physically fit man on campus . . . gracious living from a teapot . . . that infectious moan . . . Just try and collect it . . . destined io become the most gaseous oil man in Texas. FLOYD FILMORE FORD, ]R. Berwyn, Pa. Sociology and Economics News 1,2,3,4, Alumni Editor 3; Bridge Club 2,3,4, Secrefary- Treasuiei 3, President 4; Film Club 3; Cap and Bells 3,4; CSA 1; UNC 2,3. Floyd . . . Aw fellas, I ' m married. . . .has a lucra- tive chaperon business (free drinks) . . . strayed from the kindly arms of the Eaglish department into dens of iniquity . . . the one person not lernfied by supply and demand curves . . . still living down boners on the sports page of the News . . . Well, gotta go now, my wife ' s waiting. Princeton Grad School. ROBERT W. FREEMAN Caldwell, N. J. Psychology Gfee Club 1,2,3,4, Secretary-Treasurer 3; Cap and bells 3,4, Manager 4; Fencing 1,2,3; Debating Club 1; Spanish Club 2; WHRC 1; Cheerleader 4. Bob . . . the tall one with the knowing look . . . found at Bryn Mawr, Swarthmore, U. of P., or occasionally Haverford . . . Why did Sanford have to leave? . . . Student Council reformer ... a walk to the Meet- ing House at midnight . . . papers for the dean . . . Let ' s have an intellectual discussion! — Well, then let ' s have a water fight! . . . the practicing psychologist. THE CLASS OF 1951 38 JAMES C. FRENCH Haddonfield, N. J. Economics Band 1,2,3,4, Secrelary-Treasurer 4, Glee Club 2, Radio Club 1,2,3. Jim . . . Whitey . . . Dottie . . . Sorry fellows, gotta go baby-sitting tonight. . . . entrepreneur of the twenty cent hot dog . . . sunshine . . constant smile and blonde crew cut . . . the drummer . . . headed for marriage and family life . . . Navy taught him to type . . . investment banker . . . Can you take me down to the Pig and Whistle? . . . ukulele . . . filling a hope chest with Raleigh coupons . . . Tower. THOMAS JAY GARBATY SCARSDALE, N. Y. English l.V. Soccer 1; I.V. Fencing 1,2, German Club 1,2,3,4, French Club 3,4; Counterpoint 4. Tommy . . . man with the block coat . . . Gotta take a poof. . . . three term papers in four days . . . that underarm brief case . . . Don ' t shoot, Blackie. . . . three years in 15 B.S. . . . That English mark has me worried. . . . future officer in the Legion Etranger . . . ' Si ' s Erich von Stroheim . . been up for ivro hours, time for a nap ... a Scarsdale Gala- had . . . supplied English majors with writing sup- plies from his tattered but loaded pencil case. JOHN BROOKE GARDINER Bryn Mawr, Pa. Chemistry Track 1,2,3,4; Chemistry Cl jb 2,3,4; ICG 2,3; Class Night 1,3. Brooke ... 6 feet 6 inches tall . . poor Pearson can ' t find a bed that fits him . . . when he smiles he puts his whole face into it . . . willing and able to discuss a wide variety of subjects . . . has done time in the Chem building . . . Pop ' s artillery man with the 16 pound shot ... a skier, concocter of chemicals and Studebaker owner . . . doesn ' t go to Bryn Mawr, comes from Bryn Mawr. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 39 HARRY GARRISON Philadelphia, Pa. Sociology Football 1,2,3,4, Co-Captain 4; Basaball 1,2,3,4; Varsity Club 1,2,3,4. Beta Rho Sigma. Bud . . . athlete par excellence . . . played on two iootball teams that beat Swarthmore . . . Hi Bart, Hello John. . . . successfully leads away irom Ace- King , . . This miserable hole ... ... dated a Bryn Mawr girl once . . . steady shortstop . . . I ' ll throw a party if I can get an 80 average. . . . will never again combine Moscow Mules and cigars . . . My finesses never work. ... ex Northeast High luminary . . . If you ' ll pardon the expression. . . . perfect co-captain . . . C.A.I.W.H. EDWIN OSCAR GECKELER, JR. Wynnewood, Pa. English Spanish Club 1; Literaiy Club 2. Edwin . . . the Duke of Wym=wood . . . last of the Eminent Victorians . . . Haverford by gas light . . . expert on cats (four-legged) . . . Jack L ' -sler ' s little helper . . . gracious host at gay literary soirees . . . doomed in an automobile but headed for a brilliant career composing epigrams . . Secret ambition: to own a 1915 Rolls Royce. CHARLES DRAKE GRIFFITH Bradford, Pa. English Fencing 1,2; Cricket Manager 2,3,4; News 1; Film Club 4; Class Night 3. CharUe . . . 8 to 5 . . . Will You Love Me m Sep- tember as You Did in May? . . . virtuoso on low C . . . Who ' s your little tin god? ... his own second cousin . . . You owe me five dollars, at least. . . . Bryn Mawr 9176, please. . . . hangover fiom the roaring twenties . . . noted for famous deaths and Nearer My God to Thee. THE CLASS OF 1951 40 WILLARD B. HANSEN New York, N. Y. Sociology Glee Club 1; News 1; IRC 1,2,3. Will . . . one of Ira ' s social planners ... an esoteric vocabulary . . . interactional nexus . . . heated sem- inars on psychosexual case histories and population pressures . . . frustrated by Statistics and Swarth- more . . . overflows with sarcastic quips . . . Don ' t be vulgar! . . . paradoxically an optimist . . . Hey Will. Still writing that projected term paper? No, Soc. class minutes. . . . Proud owner of membership in American Society of Planning Officials. LEE HARING New York, N. Y. English Drama Club 1,2,3,4, President 3,4; Cap and Bells 1,2,3,4; WHRC 1,2,3. Lee ... a Quaker by conversion and a Bryn Mawr English major ... all appearances of Forrest Raring are arranged through his local agent . . . has been known to invest a dollar in a bullish five-string banjo market . . . former key figure in Ford athletic organ- ization . . . from 33 B.C. to Yarnall House, somehow . . . boy wonder of the Drama Club . . . orator in the Churchill-Thon tradition . . . incipient Boiasco, but will gain notoriety as a canary tiainer. DONALD B. HARRIS Bethesda, Md. Economics Baseball 1,2,3,4; ].V. Baseketball 1,2; Varsity Club 2,3,4; News 1; Record 4; Press Service 4. Bucky . . . Dot, Dot, Dot . . 10:25 dates at Bryn Mav rr . . . Get off the phone, Harris. . . . Ec major with only two Teaf courses . . . Ed, you can wash my car. . . . Roy ' s best base coach and pinch runner . . You can use my carrel tonight, Quil- len. . . . Cousin V eak-Eyes . . . Dates tonight, men? . . . ' Si ' s star Class Day basketball performer . . . set modern record for consecutive dates 6th. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 41 HARRY HEYDEN HOEHLER Strafford, Pa. Philosophy .v. Football 1,2,3.4, Glee Club 1,2,3,4, Cap and Bells 3,4; Debating Society 3,4, Philosophy Club 3,4; l O i. Happy ... 1st Entry ' s all-nite philosopher . . . relaxes 24 hours a day . . . lives witn the three nicest guys in college (they say) . . . Did I sleep through lunch again? . . . Ally ' s week-niqht beau . . . punctuality is relative . . . ape-man of J.V. foot- ball . . . four years of phys. ed. . . . Value judg- ments . . . horizontal Harry . . Don ' t cry, Joe . . . Aristotle with a bay window. JOHN LYNDON HOLCOMBE Havertown, Pa. Political Science Football 1,2,3; Golt 1,2,3; Varsity Club 1 .,3; Triangle Society 4. Jack . . . Piggy . . . Slants and Views by Red Hol- combe . . . ready tenor in any quartet . . . Haver- ford ' s Dick Button . . . Scoop . . . weekends in the Poconos . . . impresses profs by leaving classes fif- teen minutes early . . . Bantam Ben . . . Good after- noon ladies and gentlemen; welcome to Walton Field. . . . Merchant Marine and intramural Vet. CHARLES DALLETT HOOPES Bethesda, Md. Engineering Radio Club 1; Engineering Club 3,4; J.V. Tennis 1,2; Wrestling 2; Band 2; Glee Club 2; Chairman Dining Room Committee 4. Dal . . . better known by advertising firms as Del Hooper . . . Bourbon and water, please. . . . Wash- ington socialite . . . Chevy Chase Club . . . perennial loser on college football programs but makes it up on Christmas cards . . . electronics wizard . . . idol- izes Jerry Babb and John Kemmerer . . . Navy com- mission then patent attorney . . . Tower THE CLASS OF 1951 42 SAMUEL W. G HUDSON White Plains, N. Y. English WHRC 1,2,3,4, Treasurer 1; Fencing 1,2,3,4, Co-Captain 4; Clas:: Night 1,2,3,4; Varsity Club 3,4. Sambo . . . Now when was at White Plains . . . . . . Hmm. Nope, Teddy has nicer legs. . . . little blue Ford . . . Leon . . . one of the original Mr. Classnighters of ' 51 . . . Are you sure there are no rich school teachers? . . . only man in class to call female prof Kiddo ... I want Teddy! . . . writer of informal scholarly papers . . What, and mess my epee hair? . . . GIN! (ger ale) . . . ou mean you ' re not McCarn? JOHN MITCHELL HUME Upper Darby, Pa. Biology Football 3,4; Track 3,4, Captain 1 Varsity Club 3,4; Class Treasurer 4; Triangle Society 2,3,4. John . . . one of the four Henrys . . . Dammit, time to go to the rink again. . . . Haverford ' s one man track team . . . Quick, grab that bug! . . . Type this paper for me, Batz. . . . the other half of 22 Lloyd ' s amateur wrestling team . . . Stop the car. I see a rare leaf! . . . Hume brought gloom to Garnet with touchdown toss . . . Tell her I ' m not here. . . . plans a career of vivisection, at least for the next four years. RICHARD M. HUFFMAN Washington, D. C. English WHRC 1,2; Goll 3,4. Dick . . . Huff . . . 6th ' s future M.D. . . . What ' s at the flicks, Ed? . . . studies all night, sleeps all day . . . Let ' s go watch television. . . . That paper was due last week. I ' ll have to get started on it soon. . . . intramural basketballer . . . Anybody want to throw darts? . . . best caddy on campus . . . well- conditioned wing of equally well-conditioned senior soccer team. HAVERFORD COLLEGE ■ 3 WILLIAM JARDINE, II Upper Darby, Pa. Economics l.V. Soccer 1,2; Track 1,2; ICG 1,2,3,4; Debating 1,2; Squash 1; UWF 1,2; Wreslling Manager 2. Bill . . . Jaaahdine . . . articulate conversationalist . . . profound economist and political scientist; argu- ments on any topic . . . always on the go . . . Y ' know, Parker ' s great! . . . keen psychological and character analyst of everyone on campus — or both campuses . . . Colorado Hopalong Cassidy . . . Ergo. . . . member of two o ' clock club . . . Hi there, how ARE you? ... his steel-trap mind will click. VICTOR T. A. lOWERS London, England English Soccer 2,3,4, Co-Captain 4, J.V. 1; Track 1; Crickef 3,4, News 3; Varsity Club 3,4; Intramural Committee 2,3. Vic . . . Limey . . . scourge of the soccer field and cricket crease . . . A king of men, by God! . . . tweeds, a pipe, disdain and scorn . . . unpredictable outbursts of laughter — and insults . . . was ' Si ' s prize Rhinie . . . equal success in studies and romance . . . We ' re going to beat that !$ ! ! Swarthmore. . . . I ' m an individualist. . . . specializes in obnox- ious ties . . . has all the makings of the English gentleman. ARKADY KALISHEVSKY Ardmore, Pa. Economics Arkie . . . until recently a loyal subject of His Majesty Nicholas II . . . Belgrade U. alumnus . . . worked for IRO . . . husky, handsome Slav ... I study and study all the time. . . . weekends busy, too . . . graduates after one year at Haverford . . . one of Mrs. Beatty ' s pillars ... on Teal ' s chain gang . . . Pennsy section hand . . . economics major set loose in the wilds of anthropology . . . considering social work. THE CLASS OF 1951 44 JOHN L KEMMERER Palmkrton, Pa. Engineering Foolball 2,3,4, I.V. 1, Engineering Club 3, .V. Basketball 1; Varsity Club 4. Bumkin . . . never known to hurry; not even v rith an intercepted pass in the ' 49 Juniata game . . . Hi Bart, Hello John. . . . pride of Palmerton; Valo, Mlkvy and Bumpy . . . rates high in Holmes book . . . ordered a coke at tenth once . . . charter member oi Club 22 . . . That ' s nuthin ' . , . . his twelve foot cornerstone by front gate . . . has been seen at Bryn Mawr . . . C.A.I.W.H. F. SCOTT KIMMICH Haverford, Pa. English Varsity Football 1,2; Wrestling 1,3,4; Varsity Club 1,2,3,4; Cus- toms Coram. 2,3,4; Class President 1; Students Council 1; UWF 1; Class Night 1,2,4. Scotty . . . last of Haverford Kimmichs and one of the college ' s most loyal boosters . . . O.K. Babe. . . . longest resident of 5th . . . serious about culture if nothing else . . . leads perpetual war against phillistinism . . . Boy! . . . sneaked off to wrestle when Cuppy wasn ' t looking . . . met Nemesis in Brown ' s saki . . . Look, those girls would be honored to go out with us. . . . Haverford could use more like him . . . med school. WAYNE T. KRATZ WiLDwooD Crest, N. J. Political Science Drama Club 3,4: Orchestra 4; Spanish Club 1; WHRC 1. Wayne . . . Now listen, Docherty ... ... Only man in the country to the right of Taft ... I said BLACK coffee, dammit! . . . Plymouths, port, poker, and parties . . . Never one to let college interfere with his social life . . . Almost majored in archaeology . . . Well, it figures ... ... Emperor of Wildwood . . . bus driver, waiter, man about town . . . Enlist, hell! . . . potential GM president. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 45 R. B. KUNKEL ROSEDALE, N. Y. Sociology Drama Club 2,3,4; Chairman Playieading Committee 4; News 1; Cap and Bells 2,3,4; Counterpoint 2,3,4; Phootgraphy Club 4. Jiggs . . . insists on his nickname, even in print . . . Class Night sensation as a freshman . . . chairman of non-existent Drama Club Comm. . . . noted local actor ... in Soc, playing one Reid course against another, definitely a thinking Reid . . . his apparent hauteur gives away to a deadpan humor in presence of Ranck and Treynor ... no snob, he, Jiggs plans to sociologize all the oilmen in Texas. GILBERT M. P. LEIB New Haven, Conn. Chemistry WHRC 1,2; Class Night 1,2,4; Dance Committee 3; Chemistry Club 4. Gil . . . Choate was never like this. . . . Ma Beatty ' s little v atchdog . . . No we don ' t serve free lunches here. . . . alarm clock of the Annex . . . Drake ' s history was the toughest course I ever took. . . . usually seen administering first aid to ailing Cushman . . . Just practicing, you know. . . . Toddle House runner . . . gets fantastic grades — just a matter of brains ... Is there a chow hall at Yale Med? EDWARD KELWAY LIBBlf Washington, D. C. Economics News 1,2; Debating 1,2; Nautical Club 1,2, Secretary- Treasurer 2; French Club 1,2,3,4, Treasurer 4. Theodore . . . antedates White and Hoag . . . O.K. Gentilshommes. . . . Economy is a mistake. . . . middle-man of the Ed-Ted-Fred trio . . . Get me up in the morning, will you? . . . certified war hero . . . Saw it all from my bunk. . . . ambition: to be the first skinny banker. THE CLASS OF 1951 16 WALTER B LOUCKS York, Pa. History Philosophy Club 3,4; Glee Club 1,2,3,4, Cap and Bells 4. Walt . . . campus authority on the Monophysite heresy and Byzantine eikonography . . . Solemn vespers tonight — anyone coming? ... a cozy little bordello on Race Street ... I simply deplore labour unions. . . . But I always buy suits in Baltimore! . . . Does anyone here want to join a Committee for the Restoration of the House of Wittelsbach? ... an embodiment of the uncertainty principle: one may know either his location or his velocity, but never both. JAMES LESLIE MATHIS Wyalusing, Pa. History Glee Club 1,2,3. Tim ... a gay and witty personality . . . But grandma, ■where did you get that big bass voice? . . . fled campus senior year for town life . . . one of the married set . . . un homme du monde . . . toured southern colleges at 70 miles an hour with the Glee Club . . . contempt for abstract philosophy . . . never says anything twice . . . flair for the dramatic . . . is awaiting to be informed of future plans. WILLIAM F MATLACK Philadelphia, Pa. History Glse Club 1,2,3,4, Photography Club 3; Wrestling 1; Debating Society 3,4. Kaltam ... I hate Squid! . . . midnight shimmy dances . . . learned to stand on his head at 22 . . . Sally in our Alley . . . learns on his stomach . . . Vive I ' interieurel . . . size 11 shoes on a size 8 body . . . studied German under Mark Twain . . . Shrewsheit! . . . O ' Neill, your head should come off! . . . The National League? I was talking about baseball. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 47 DONALD EDWARD McCARGAR Paoli, Pa. Chemistry Chemistiy Club 2,3 A; Band 2,3 A: Orchestra 3,4. Don . . . ' Si ' s only real family man . . . can tell you about isotopes, Grey Gorden, constellations, moral universes, and augmented tenths . . . headed towards a chemical future . . . I ' ve got a little deal cooked up for Swan. . . . man with the horn . . . can blow choruses from Bach or bop with the same ease . . . How can anyone study with two kids and a television set? DAVIS BARTON McCARN WiLMETTE, III. Mathematics WHRC 1,2,3,4; Fencing 1,2,3; Varsity Club 3,4; Class Night 1,2, 3,4; Bridge Club 2; UWf 2. Mac . . . the genius . . . Hudson! I ' m taking your car up to Rusty ' s! . . . late to bed, late to rise . . . the perfect schedule: no classes . . . mainstay of the Welcome Dialer humor department . . . one of the original Mr. Classnighters of ' 51 ... makes like Errol Flynn, with an epee . , . GIN! (and beer) . . . You mean you ' re not Hudson? THOMAS RAYMOND McNUTT Havertown, Pa. Philosophy Tiack 1,2; GJee CJub 1,2,4; Philosophy Club. Tom ... a big hello and a bigger smile . . . the original Golden Throat . . . day student ' s spokesman and lunch time librarian . . . one of Pop ' s faithful Glee Club soloist . . . sometime master of improvisation . . . brought Class Night prizes to ' 51 and Snyder to his feet . . . never known to appear unhappy ... on to seminary. THE CLASS OF 1951 48 WILLIAM P. MELCHER West Hartford, Conn. Mathematics Math Club 1; Drama Club 3: Cb mistty Club 1,2,3, Secretary 3; Tracfc 1,2,3; Wiesthng 1,2; WHRC 2,3. Wild Bill ... I see. . . . part-time genius . . . always working on some new gadget . . . Drama Club electrician . . . Come in. Don ' t trip over the wires. . . . often not seen for days at a time . . Boy, that ' s a long walk back from Bryn Mawr. . . . will probably wind up — clocks. BARTON MILLIGAN Westfield, N. J. .. HEMISTRY Band 1,2,3,4, President 3,4; Wrestling Manager 2,3,4; Cricket 1.2,3,4; .v. Football 1; Orchestra 4; Founders Club. Bottomly . . . Rhoads scholar . . . What a mess! . . . T.O. ' s nemesis . . . You guys pay up on that phone bill. . . . diligent manager, Thirty seconds! . . . owns the only bow-tied baritone sax in captivity . . . What ' s your major maladjustment? . . . No given dame is worth the trouble. . . . four dates a week . . . shepherded band deficit . . . alcohol dis- tilled from listerine ... I washed my cars the other day. . . . grad study in chem. ALEXANDER BUSCH MILYKO Bayville, N. Y. Chemistry Glee Club 1,2,3,4; Chemistry Club 3,4; UWF 4; Cheer eader 4. Alex . . . the shortest Texan in existence . . . when he ' s not smiling or studying, he ' s doing handstands ... I flunked that one for sure, no kidding! Freely translated this means: I got another 92. . . . takes his chemistry, photography, music, and a pair of soft brown southern eyes quite seriously . . . another fortunate pre-med draft-dodger. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 49 ANTHONY I, MORLEY Washington, D. C. History News 1,2,3,4, News Editor 2, Managing Editor 3, Editor- in-Chiei 4; Counterpoint 3,4, Business Manager 3; IFO 1,2; French Club 1; German Club 4. Tony . . . brashness, candor, and Monday afternoon at the printers ... a fellow of infinite pun . . . Now my girl in Hamburg said ... ... once a budding Ec major, but couldn ' t resist Lunt ' s peine forfe et dure . . . unkempt locks, aerated loafers, and a cig- arette behind the ear . . . capitalist in a ' 34 Plymouth . . . But that ' s just not right — oh, phantastich! . . . barefoot boy from Tennessee . . . short-haired jour- nalist, present and future. PAUL MOSES Ardmore, Pa. French and Latin Art Committee 1,2,4: Varsity Football 2,4; Founder.-- Club 2.4; French Club 2,4; Track 1,2,4. Pablo . . . the versatile one . . . artist, athlete, classi- cal scholar . . . Get annee en France . . . never too busy to talk . . . What do you think ... ... French House, Library, Founders or 4th . . . We need a poster, Paul. . . . fills holes in the News . . . runs art exhibits single-handedly . . senior statesman of campus affairs. FREDERIC O MUSSER Quakertown, Pa. French Glee Club 1,2,4; Vice-Presiden French Club 4. Fred . . . Grand Tour and Junior Year Abroad medals . . . similarity to a Studebaker: Is he going forwards or backwards? . . . needs two profs to keep him busy in seminar . . philologist . . . commutes to Quakertown on the Death Gar . . . M.A. and Ph.D. simultaneously . . . obviously going to teach. THE CLASS OF 1951 50 RICHARD J. OBEREMBT Milwaukee, Wis. Political Science WHRC I; Spanish Club 1,2; Bridge Club 1; Baseball Man- ager 4. Dick . . Obe . . . Overdork . . . the jack of all trades . . . As a matter of fact ... ... When I was in Blotz ... ... pays off campus numbers racket in cigarettes . . . I ' ve seen it once but what the hell. . . . Hot Damn Hearse . . . I ' ve been in one too. . . . Actually ... ... will make a million brewing greener beer. HOWARD T O ' NEILL Huntingdon Valley, Pa. History News 1,2,3,4; ICG 3; WHRC 1. Llieno! . . . you egghead . . . contortionist par excel- lence . . . frustrated at every turn, whether it ' s writ- ing an Ec paper or getting a date . . . make-up editor and self-styled champion on the News . . . long legs and a harried expression — fitting for a future reporter . . . makes his most sensible remarks in his sleep — Eat them alive! EDWARD BELL PATTERSON, JR Merchantville, N. L Chemistry Chemistry Club 4; Flying Club 3,4. Pat . . . Barney . . . loves those wide open spaces . . . into the air, Junior Birdman . . . Catch that one and paint it green. . . . boy chemist finally makei good ... I feel awful. I ' ll have to stop seeing mother. . . . Hey fellas, ducks ' necks turn all the way round. . . . Cyrano! If you ' re going to have a nose, you may as well have a real one. . . . Dillin- ger only has him by twenty years . . . papered his walls with dean ' s notices . . . Live a little, I always soy. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 51 JOHN FREDERICK PAULSON Providence, R. I. Mathematics Math Club 2,3,4; Glee Club 3,4. Dreamy to the girls at Bryn Mawr . . . one of the notorious senior soccermen . . . Long John, always to be confused with Jon . . . Let ' s take your car, Hudson. . . . sings a nice baritone to Jill ' s alto . . . No letter today? That med school must have burned down. . . . GIN! (rummy) . . . It ' s easy I tell you. That ' s Hudson and that ' s McCarn. JAMES CLARK PEDEN, JR. Tulsa, Okla. Spanish WHRC 1,2,3,4, Secretary 1, Production Manager 3, J.V. Fencing 1,2: Spanish Club 2,3,4, President 3; Glee Club l,i. Jack . . . Tulsa ' s gift to Can You Top This? . . . Have you heard this one? . . . I ' ll leave a note, Nev. . . . His day runs from noon to 3 a.m. . . . bull sessions and blue stars . . . Oh, no! . . . Ma Beatty ' s food sent him home for a semester . . . kept Darwin from phylogenilogical gold fish experiments ... El linico de ' 51 . . . heading west to med school. WILLIAM M. PENICHE Jackson Heights, N. Y. Sociology WHRC 1,2,3,4, Advertising Manager 1, Program Director 2; -News 1,2; Spanish Club 1,2,3; ].V. Soccer 1; ].V. Tennis 1; Photography Club 4; Dance Cornmittee 2,3. Bill . . . Prince . . . urbane gentleman from the big city . . . women, sociology, and used cars ... A quarter ' s worth of gas, please. ... in four years not one prof got his name right ... a girl in every college . . . This girl is THE one. ... his wallet supports the library . . . Oh, so that ' s a cow. . . . Slats Marion of the intramural league . . . Mexico, Air Force, and big business (in a small way) . . . Tower. THE CLASS OF 1951 52 DARWIN JACKSON PROCKOP Palmerton, Pa. Philosophy Cross Country 1; Track 1,2; .V. Basketball 2; Debal,Lg 1,2,3,4; News 3; Class President 3,4; Student Council 4; Phi Beta Kappa 3. Darwin . . . our harassed but competent prexy . . . Well now that ' s hard to say ... ... changes majors with the weather . . . stellar intramural basketeer . . . believes in studying, if it comes easy it isn ' t worth knowing . . . calamitous weekends . . . stop thinking, you ' ll ruin the team . . . engineered ' 51 ' s fabulous Junior Weekend . . . student body ' s only absent-minded professor . . . medicine. TAYLOR PUTNEY New York, N. Y. Mathematics Glee Club 2,3,4; Radio Club 1; Cap and Bells 3,4. Put . . . My stones! Where are my tensors? . . . But they can ' t draft me! . . . does math problems thirty-two hours a day ... up at twenty of nine, coop at ten of, and class at nine . . . faithful intra- muralite . . . What do you mean, the Glee Club concert wasn ' t any good? . . . janitor ' s greatest misery . . . still waters run deep . . . headed for grad work in math. ROBERT JAMES QUILLEN, ]R New Castle, Del. Economics l.V. Soccer Manager 2; Record 4. Jim . . . Boats . . . I ' ve got so much work to do there ' s no use starting now. . . . Is Barb getting off this weekend? . . . Damn the nursing profession! . . . Ford ' s Out Front . . . from a Model A to a ' 36 road- ster . . . Dates tonight. Buck? . . . New Castle Ferry . . . Get me up for class. . . . hates libraries and hospitals . . . 6th. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 53 JAMES BYRNE RANCK, JR. Frederick, Md. Philosophy Drama Club 1,3,4; WHRC 1,2, Philosophy Club 3. Jim ... a Haverford rarity — the normal intellectual with the perfect amount of eccentricity . . . developed the Junior Year in Haiti and the Senior Year in Bed program ... an idealist surrounded by rugged Tower realism . . . cigarette salesman and Chianti buyer . . reputed to have confused both Mr. Evans and Dr. Hocking with his logical positivism . . . always promises, but never does clean up the room . . . Columbia Med. FRANCIS H. ROBERTS St. Davids, Pa. Physics Radio Club. Frank . . . Evolution? Bah humbug! . . . just another Fundy . . . typical reaction to a philosophical state- ment: That savors. . . . Now we ' re getting down to reality, the essence of things. . . . much devoted to that Sunday School department . . . Must attend to important things ... a telephone, why sure! . . . Dallas Seminary. WALTER G. ROBERTSON Port Blakely, Wash. English Track 1; Wresfiing 2, Glee Club 1,2,3,4: Librarian 2, Business Manager 3; Cap and Bells 2,3,4: D rama CluD 3,4. WHRC 2,3: Spanish Club 2: German Club 2,3: Photography Club 4. Walt ... all the way from Puget Sound . . . veteran smoke-eater . . . battered hat . . . perpetually start- ing a beard . . . naked without his guitar . . . Coin down the road feelin ' blue ... ... cafe singer of Paris . . . one of Pappy Conant ' s squar ' dance boys. THE CLASS OF 1951 54 ANDREW I. W. SCHEFFEY Merion Station, Pa. Political Science IRC 4; Photography Club 4. Andy ... a two year stand . . . after trying three colleges finally found Haverford . . . the day- dodger with the old green Packard . . . an ardent UWFer . . . Have you done that reading yet? . . . numerous field trips to D. C. . . . can be dragged from the books for a party . . . lure of the wild . . . future in farming and conversation. C. STANLEY SEARLE Merion, Pa. English English scholar, philosopher and aesthete . . . dash- ing from Chase with his briefcase swinging . . . likes a good argument about anything . . . scorn and fatherly advice . . . It ' s all wet! . . . has done a lot for the English department . . . intellectual discus- sion with professor after every class . . . plans exhaustive graduate work. DONALD F. SEARS, JR. Williamsport, Pa. Philosophy Band 1,2; G ee Club 1,2. Soccer Manager 4; Varsity Club 4, IFO 1,2,3; Big Brother Chairman i; Philosophy Club 2,4; Intra- mural Committee 4. Don . . . the gay philosopher . . . apostle of Saint Doug . . . spirited soccer manager . . . Three to two! . . . cosmopolitan of Fifth Entry . . . High Potentate of Lardy Club . . . But I ' ll just be a min- ute ... ... early morning librarian . . . Let ' s transcend all this. . . . the Big Brothers ' big brother . . . regular contemplation of the eternal verities . . . headed for Princeton Seminary. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 55 RICHARD MALCOLM SEGAL Philadelphia, Pa. Sociolcxjy ICG 2; WHRC 3. Dick . . . one of the unseen ones . . . partner in Gil Arthur Productions . . . Good afternoon, this is ' Coffee at the Coop. ' ... One of Reid ' s slaveys . . . But if fertility is declining, can we say that there has been any change in fecundity? . . . market researcher extraordinaire . . . will try for a career after a fling as Navy brass. F. PARVIN SHARPLESS, IR. Lancaster, Pa. English Varsity Soccer 4, J.V. 1,2,3. Orchestra 1,2,3,4; Band 1,2,3: l.V. BaseOall 1,2. WHRC 2,4; Record 4; Class Nigkt 2,3,4; Varsity Club 4. Parv . . . Most Valuable Player on championship soccer team . . . 150 pounds of tough runt. . . . sax, clarinet, Sunapee, the Phillies, and a blonde . . . basketball court histrionics . . . This Jack Lester knows literary scholarship when he sees it. . . . still waiting to hear a bid for the Green Beetle . . . When Uncle Issoc was here ... ... clinched a Softball league berth after seasoning with Roy . . . teaching and coaching. PAUL EMLEN SHIPLEY Philadelphia, Pa. Political Science Soccer 2,3,4, Co-Captain 4, J.V. 1; j.V. Baseball 1,2; Cricket 2; Class Vice-President 1; Class Treasurer 3; Glee Club 3; ICG 3; Triangle Society 3,4; Founders Club 4; Varsity Club 2,2 A: German Club 4. Paul . . . led Fords to Mid-Atlantic soccer champion- ship . . . Yes sir, Haverford 3, Swarthmore 2! . . . 2nd team Ail-American boy . . . Sundays at Light- house B.C. . . . beat Pott with the year ' s most impor- tant penalty kick . . . fearless wicket-keep . . . But Bill, the ' Hour of Nocturne ' is on. ... up in the morning, out on the job — at 7:15 . . . Two dips o{ butter almond. . . . lover of opera . . . How many cuts do I have, Paul? ... 4 years with Tassman . . . O.K. George . . . post-war lawyer. THE CLASS OF 1951 56 J. HOWARD SHOEMAKER, III Garden City, N. Y. Ekglish Cap and Bells 3,4; Christian Association 3,4, President 4. Roomshaker . . . delightfully easy to caricature . . . My day ought to begin at noon. . . . fervent defender of Lunguyland and Wagner . . . uses Squid . . . cross-word puzzle demon . . . Methodist Youth leader: How Firm a Foundation. . . . straightens his room once a month . . Matlack, want to borrow my tux? ... a man of weighty matters; what more can one say. KARL HENRY SPAETH Philadelphia, Pa. Philosophy Varsity Soccer 2,3,4, J.V. 1; Fencing 2,3.4, Co-Captain 4, ].V. 1; }.V. Tennis 1,2,3; Spanish Club 1,2,3,4, Secretary-Treasurer, President 4; German Club 3,4; Philosophy Club 3,4, President 4; Debating Society 2,3,4, Manager 3; Glee Club 1,C, TKA 3,4, Manager 4; Founders Club 3,4; Varsity Club 2,3,4. Karl . . . Lummox . . . BMOC, VIP, and Dean of Spanish House . . . the versatile one . . . that big left foot . . . expert at making opposing wingmen look silly — witness Swarthmore 1950 ... a thud on the back and, Hey you! . . . Haverford ' s answer to His Master ' s Voice . . . It takes years to be a good fencer. Haverford ' s own Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. . . . a connoisseur of everything . . . international law. FRANK CANNING GREELEY STAHL Chappaqua. N. Y. Philosophy Orchestra 3,4. Greeley . . . I ' m constantly in a state of emer- gency. . . . weekends at New York ' s Harvard Club . . . suit, tie, and tennis shoes . . . French poetry at Bryn Mawr for poetic inspiration . . . former music critic for Herald Trib . . . values leisure more than efficiency . . . leisurely thinking about academic career. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 57 PETER KORMANN STEERE Marquette, Mich. English Football 3,4, Co-Captain 4; Class Vice-President 3; Customs Comm. 2; Varsity Club 3,4; Collection Ccmm-.ttee 4, Beta Rho Sigma. Pete . . . Pierre , . . Tower ' s homey philosopher . . . Hi Bart, Hello John. . . . Get me up for breakfast. . . . 5th Entry romance with a fire extinguisher . . . This is inhuman. . . . combs his hair with a wash- cloth . . . That ' s absurd. . . . Poo-poo . . . perfect co-captain . . . Time for a snooze, men. . . . skin- top . . . sporadic trips to Bryn Mawr . . . diddled Ralph Sargent . . . C.A.I.W.H. THOMAS HOPKINS STEERE Waynesboro, Va. Sociology I.V. Soccer 1,2; J.V. Tennis 1,2. Hop . . . enthusiastic racketeer . . . bathtub baritone . . . never without a pipe . . . armchair cogitator . . . Somethings no smell so good around here. . . . Goulawash . . . expands his wardrobe on clean- ing evenings . . . saves his social energy for thc- summer . . . clever shifts of wit . . . master of cere- monies of the ranch hour. ROBERT SUTCLIFFE Philadelphia, Pa. Bob Biology navy medical corpsman and a natural bug major ... at home with the verts and inverts . . . ichthyologist and herpetologist at the Philadelphia Academy . . . main interest: comparative anatomy . . . long nights out make lab tiring . . . sweater stretcher . . . Listen! Not three but four tiroes. . . . lunches with Simpson . . . looks like he ' li stay with the academy for a while THE CLASS OF 1951 58 ROBERT LEEDS SUTTON Haverford, Pa. Geology Glee Club 1,2,3,4: Octet 1,2,3,4; ].V. Soccer 1,4, Varsity 2,3. Simion . . . Sut . . . Bob, the boy soprano and octet comedian . . . Physics a struggle . . . the scribe . . . mountaineer . . . versatile outdoor sportsman . . . 220 steps to home . . . incredible pranks through the wall of the closet . . . Class Day wrestler . . . Who are you sir ? no date problem his senior year bounces like a spring. DIOGENES A H TABOGA Philadelphia, Pa. Engineering Football 1,2, Baseball 1. Dodge and Evelyn ... I don ' t mind the smell but the smoke gets in my eyes. . . . that P.M.C. touch- down pass and the ' 48 Juniata trip . . . scored 17 points for the Vets once ... I took English 31 because I like poetry. . . . seventeen sweaters and one briefcase ... a trick knee and Navy boxing don ' t mix . . . Have you heard the one about . . . . . . charter member of the Coop Luncheon Club. WILLIAM S. TASSMAN Philadelphia, Pa. English WHRC 1,2,3,4, Secretary 3; Fi m Club 3,4, Secretary 3; Photog- raphy Club 3,4, French Club 4: I.V. Football 3,4; .V. Fencing 2; Class Night 1,3. Bill . . . sharp sport coats . . . That ' s the way the ball bounces. . . . that 65 yard punt . . . color photogra- pher supreme . . . and those stories of France . . . French Club member who speaks the language . . . four years with Shipley . . . partied with Princess Margaret . . . What ' d he say, what, what? . . . always has food on hand . . . perseverance plus . . . teams with Brown in Magna-Productions . . . soft-shoe artist . . . Aide the Cassel . . . master of repartee. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 59 p JOHN WRIGHT THOMAS Maplewood, N. J. Physics Varsity Tennis 2,3,4, ].V. 1; Varsity Club 3,4. Jack . . . Red . . . straight from New Jersey via New- Mexico . . . year round tennis terror . . . Oh, he ' s not a bad prof, but ... ... the only man on campus with his own dance floor . . . Who wants to go to a movie? ... if he isn ' t at home try Sharpless . . . Ruth makes two, and for graduation a third . . . headed for higher honors in Physics. PETER THORAN Berlin, Germany Political Science IRC 2,3; French Club 3; German Club 3, President 4. Pete . . . transplanted from Schmargendorf (West Sector) . . . New Jersey weekends . . . part-time hard labor on Thomas Drake ' s homestead . . . waiters ' pest . . . humor of true Berliner lurks under usually serious facade . . . quadri-lingual . . . Ich bin der Tod. — sparkplug of many a German Club produc- tion . . . worried about state of the world, may forsake politics for rock formations. SOLIS TOLLIN Merion, Pa. English Varsity Basketball 1,2,3,4, Captain 3,4; Beta Rho Sigma 3,4. Sol . . . Sunshine ... a constant worrier . . . Say, what do you think Ralph ' s gonna ask on this test? . . . pushing Adolphe Menjou for honors as the best dressed man in U. S. . . . intellectual automaton . . . Beauteeful! . . . one of Ned ' s boys . . . Got another piece of gum? . . . Mid-Atlantic scoring leader . . . staunch supporter of the Athletics . . . deadliest out- side man in Philadelphia basketball circles . . . Easy, easy! . . . formerly the Chester Kid. THE CLASS OF 1951 60 JACK LAWRENCE TREYNOR Council Bluffs, Iowa Mathematics Football 1,2,3,4; Wrestling 2,3: Glee Club 2,3.4; Debating Club 2.3,4, President 4; WHRC 2: Math Club 4; Varsity Club 4. Jack . . . luggy . . . corn-fed Iowa isolationist . . . immovable guard . . . logician par excellence . . . But Hap, I ' ve tried Bryn Mawr. . . . math whiz . . . can do anything, given enough time . . . I ' ll call her the iirst chance I get . . . lives with the three nicest guys in college (they say) . . . the thinker, concentration plus . . . trunkful of laundry . . . Harry Truman ' s War . . . first million by thirty, then marriage. DAVID KEIM THUMPER Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Physics WHRC 1,2,3, Chief Engineer 2,3; Debating 1; Spanish Club 1. Dave ... or just plain Papa Marconi . . . one more year and Haverford would have WHRC-TV . . . remember the Franklin and astrophysics with the interesting satellite . . . and then there ' s the Holy Trinity of Benham, Sutton, and Trumper . . . Mow about a hovie? Hal ' s a spoonerist . . . the rare scientist with a keen aesthetic insight. ROBERT NEWBOLD TUCKER Paget East, Bermuda Political Science Drama Club 3,4; WHRC 1; J.V. Soccer 2, Varsity 3 Tuck . . . Mother ' s little boy . . . But how could my phone bill be $64? . . . Bryn Mawr 9181, please. . . . looks for the angle . . . But I thought he was bluffing! . . . volleyball veteran . . . soccer, scotch, and stud . . . You think YOU have problems? . . . strong liquidity preference . . . ambition: to be a Texas oil magnate. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 61 CLARK ALVARD VAUGHAN Milton, Mass. History News 1; Cap and Bells 1. Clark . . . the happy tourist . . . returned to Haver- ford for his degree . . . tales of Pacific islands, secret mysteries of Neapolitan society, the making of crepes suzette, what the well trained morgue attend- ant should know and English Constitutional History . . . combines with British empire builders in Coop philosophizing . . . planning to teach. HAROLD F. VEDOVA Engineering Glee Club 2,3; Track 1,2,3; I.V. Soccer 1; Varsity Club 2. Hal . . . sailor boy . . . wartime diplomat to the Orient . . . ready for another hitch . . . Yes I beat Ev Jones in the 220. . . . sourdough for two summers . . . Armenian gourmet . . . piano virtuoso . . . frustrated mathematician . . . knock, knock: Stay out! . . . . . . Where ' d you get your license? . . . Why it ' s dirty ole ' . .. ... membership in French Club leads to all sorts of things . . . Now just a minute. . . . rah, rah, rah, horsefeathers . . . prospective engineer. CHARLES N. WELSH Haverford, Pa. Philosophy Mister Welsh . . . oldest man in the class, even Presi- dent White ' s senior . . . Major: Philosophy. Minor: Philosophy . . . Tell me, what do you think of that theory of ethics? Because I was thinking ... ... Flashy black Jaguar, grey suits, blue ties . . . often mistaken for a professor . . . schooled in Bermuda, educated at Haverford . . . married and a proud father . . . At least I ' ll graduate before they do! THE CLASS OF 1951 62 EDWARD WILLIAM WESTHEAD, IR. St. Davids, Pa. Chemistry Chemisity Club 2,3,4, Vice-President 4; Wtestling 2,3,4; Glee Club 1,2,3,4. Ed . . . transportation via motor bike or red Rambler . . . weekend courses at Hollins . . . Isn ' t that amazing conscientious chemist . . . author of famed treatise: Shortcut Laboratory Procedures by the Westhead Method ... 1 3 a Sourdough . . . would gladly lend you his data sheet, if he could only find it . . . Good Lord! ... his chemistry not alloyed with medicine. DONALD ELLIOTT WILBUR, JR. Bryn Mawr, Pa. Engineering Glee Club 1,2,3,4; Octet 3,4; Drama Club Business Manager 3.4; Cap and Bells 3,4, Vice-President 4; .V. Soccei Manager 2,3:J.V. Tennis 2,3; Engineering Club 3; WHRC 1,2,3; Founders Club 4. El . . . 1st Entry ' s fair-haired boy ... a real Main Liner — except that all the girls he knows have gone away to college . . . fulhlled all phys. ed. require- ments playing squash . . . lives with the three nicest guys in college (they say) . . . Bryn Mawr 1245 . . . energetic engineer . . . wants to build a tunnel from Lloyd to Rhoads . . . has been known to over- bid . . . Jill . . . left end of the octet . . . low C before breakfast — sometimes. ALAN THOMAS WILLOUGHBY Philadelphia, Pa. Chemistry Glee Club 1,2,3,4; Octet 1,2,3; Cla s Night ' ,2,3,4; Tiack 1,2; Chemistry Club 3,4; Cap and Bells 3,4; Photography Club 4. Al . . . the lovable tenor . . . never listless . . . author of Four Years in a Sweater . . . keeper of the little black book . . . devotee of wine, Liz, and Reese ' s Little Lithuanian Group . . . offers Bedmaking 11-12 for janitors . . . corduroy camper in chem lab . . . fourth-draft letters on salvaged scrap paper . . . Where ' s my mail? spurns special speeches and spieling spouters with sound sleep . . . bright road ahead in chemistry. HAVERFORD COLLEGE 63 WILLIAM D. WIXOM MONTCLAIR, N. J. Fine Arts UWF 1; Ah Committee 1,2,3, Chairman 3; Film Club 2,3, Presi- dent 3; Ten O ' Clock Club Chairman 3. Bill ... a Quaker with a smile . . . and a cup of coffee to hand out at the Ten O ' Clock Club ... a movie? sure, but it ' s got to be one of the Film Club ' s . . . amazing ability to do a semester ' s work in three sleepless nights . . . John Dewey, Renoir, and the Barnes Foundation ... an exile to Columbia for the senior year but no expatriate . . . beware of the pacifist sword in the reformation of Art Education. Wyncote, Pa. JACK GEHRI ZERRER Political Science Radio Club 1,2,3,4, Treasurer 3; Giee Club 2; Drama Club 2: Cricket 1; Band 1,2; J.V. Football 2: Class Treasurer 2. Jack . . . and Jane Ann . . . I ' d be better looking if I only had more hair. . . . the only convertible that used more oil than water . . . Man, that ' s sweet- pops. . . . Bryn Mawr 9229, please. . . . Sammy Wilson ' s right hand man . . . When are you going to pay your phone bill? . . . the war was rough (fought the Battle of Fort Belvoir) . . . After Hours . . . Princess Papouli . . . Tower. CLARK LIGHTFOOT The sudden death of Clark Lightfoot early this year, shocked and saddened the whole college community. Clark will be remembered as a fighting wrestler, as one of the hardest workers we have known, and as a man whose interests were as varied as life itself. In those who knew him he instilled a part of his own vitality that can never be forgotten. 64 CLASSES JUNIORS Class Officers: Treasurer Norton, Secretary Collins, Vice-President Sterner. The Junior Class started their year at Haverford last fall with American troops in Korea, Dr. Steere in Europe, and the Phillies in Yankee Stadium. For many of them it was their last year before artillery replaced art and sergeants replaced Sargent. They were determined to make a good year of it. A bright and festive Class Night show told of the happenings in Quezaltenango, that little Latin American country where men are hombres and Quakers are amigos. It was there that El Supremo, an unlikely dictator, musically subdued a rebellion and married off a daughter in a riotous half- hour. This year ' s climax to the social life of the Class of ' 52 came a night later, the long awaited Junior Prom. Besides these high spots, the juniors were well represented in college activities, from athletics to zoology, from acting to zymurgy. First How; Boger, Loeb, Willis, Getman Collins, Sterner, Norton, Wilson, Newbold, Grant, Well. Sec- ond Row: Young, Adimora, Marble, Oliver, Ives, Eller, Austin-Small, Guttmacher, Basuik. Third Row: Broadbelt, Jones, Bliss, Milner, Sorg, Chandler, Keetz, II. ■N ' Mead. Fourth Row: Pike, Miller, Sharp, Hammond, Killian, Rittenhouse, Forsythe. Fifth Row: Whitaker, Foley, James, Franke, Gilpin, Dewees, Nelson, Wurster. i Pllllll ' e li . i  r, First Row: Corson, Werner, Hurtubise, Forker, Reed, Caskey, Burqe, Lafer, Fasdone, Saidel Ecrir, Kopf. Second Row: Molteson.Schlegel, Moore, Hillis, Fithian, Little, Goldsmith, Logan, Coote, Neviti, Rose. Third Row: Good, Burtt, Wood, Roberts, HoIUngshead, Mat- teson, Leibold, Garrity, Isay, V ightmcn, Deaton. Fourth Row: Dibble, Lingemcm, Davis, Frazer, Loder, „e «-.. ' - Of S Schmitz, R. Lane, Somerndike, Lewis, VonSickle, G. Lone. FUtb Row: Crichlow, Stonsbury, Linthicum, Hickman, Millspough, Tomec, Ledeboer, Seeley, Anderson, Bockol, Scherer, Fernandez. Sixth Row: Sechrest, Morris, Piotrow, Wheaton. Seven(h Row: Hellwege, Dvorken, Falge. Hollman, Clark, Morrison, Howson, King, Vance. Determined to make their second year at Haverford a booming success, the class of ' 53 began by . indoctrinating the Rhinies. Soph ' s gladly arranged one-way motor tours for interested freshmen, and took pains to familiarize members of the Class of ' 54 with the piscatorial resources of the pond. Having welcomed the Rhinies, the class turned its talents to running the Sophomore Dance. The spectacular undersea decora- tions included a sunken ship, a school of fish, a treasure chest, and a stray octopus, and lacked only Davy Jones cavorting with some mermaids. The Class Night show involving Coedu- cation and audience participation was novel and enjoyable. Throughout the year, members of the class became busily active in all extracurricular activities, adding a great deal to campus life. SOPHOMORES J- i Treasurer John Surge, Secretary Dave Caskey, President Ed Reed, Vice-President Mai Brown. FRESHMEN Secrefary-Treasurer Bourne, President Miller, Vice-President Watson. Off to an aggressive start, the Class of ' 54 proved as Rhinies that they v ere going to make a big impression on Haverford. When denied admission to the dining hall for refusing to obey the Customs Committee ' s directives, they took all the silverware, as a means of bargaining with food-stained upper classmen for their rights. In brief, they were allowed to become regul ar freshmen at the unusually early time of two weeks before the Swarthmore game. Their Class Night show reflected a maturer spirit than freshman shows of the past, with much o fthe slapstick being left out in favor of satire. On the lines of The World from a Dog ' s Eyes, they hoped the show would prove One long howl. Thus the Class of ' 54 became an integral and responsible member of the Haverford community. First flow: Meads, Ruddick, LissfaU, Armstrong, K. Miller, Watson, Morchand, Hutton, Prager, Jones. Second Row. Seeley, Stern, Benjamin, Muth, Schofer, Ruff, Carpenter, Pepper, Sachs, Rothermel. Third flow: Howorth, Gatch, Mathews, Perry, MacDonald, Williams, Kaye, Clark, Trumper, Hankamer. Fourth flow: Hiss, Firth, Koch, Jameson, Ricketts, March, Grove, Steele. Fifth flow: Fry, Frink, Bibbins, H. Crcng, Eagleton, Reno, Beatty, Rentschler, Kelly. Sixth flow: Kindig, Klaver. YEAR IN REVIEW REMEMBER SEPTEMBER? When Haverford sees the return of a group of football and soccer players, eager to work off in a few short days the effects of a summer long debauch. It sees soon after the return of the remainder of the college, accompanied by eager handshakes and vivid accounts of summer exploits in varied fields of endeavor. ■!►-, W  AND OCTOBER When the autumnal haze drifts over the campus covering the opening contests of the fall athletic sea- son. The class room routine is assimilated, new pro- fessors and obnoxious Rhinies are discussed, and the latter betvreen furniture carrying and movie schedule recounting may move the upperclassmen to some sort of occasional action. NOVEMBER In November the rash of mid-term exams, which the faculty cleverly schedules to fall on the same day, as well as the earnest but usually ill-fated attempt of a politically minded few to stir up some interest in the election, give the campus an aura of intensity. This lasts through the hectic days of the Varsity Club weekend with its numerous athletic encounters with Swarthmore and its festive dance. Also there is Campus Day which brings out un- imagined talents in the fields of painting and shovel wielding in dungaree-clad profs. DECEMBER The short weeks of pre-Christmas school bring treks to the south end of the campus for firewood and to local gasoline emporiums for anti-freeze. Basketball, fencing, and wrestling begin, and the avid intramuraJites fill the revered rafters of the gym with groans and moans at referees who refuse to see it their way. The holiday season begins with the Christmas party where the faculty pro- vides a few pleasant entertainers and has the pleasure of eating in the dining room. ■' ■Ak- ifc ■■■JANUARY January brings all-night lights in many rooms and an increased patronage to the library as stu- dents begin to feel the cold breath of finals on their ill-prepared necks. Basketballs resound in the gym almost without cease as do cries of Touch in the cricket shed, and the anguished moans of perspir- ing wrestlers as they plod around the track. s  f imsttr V V 0 ' W ' M TS55T5 FEBRUARY A new term with a new and reasonably clean slate. The old term gone with only the comparing of grades and the damning or idolizing of the pro- fessors to keep it qlive. This is the time when the surface of the pond changes from its fall duty oi receiving wise Rhinies to a smooth surface for winter recreation, and the time when the beauty of a new fallen cover of snow is soon destroyed by the tramping of thousands of footsteps. 4 MARCH when the amateur playwrights, and Ubreftists are seen huddling March, composers, over every available piano. Producers infor- mally resign from the college and -the resulting bits of drama provide Roberts Hall with one of its few capacity audiences. There, with catchy songs, buxom, sexy undergraduates, and a certain lascivious humor Class Night runs its greasepaint smeared course. APRIL In the places where the grass has not been eradicated by undergraduate footsteps treading the squishy ground, the campus begins to return to life. The grounds are cov- ered with athletes, the windows are filled with spectators, and the locker rooms begin to smell of rubbing alcohol and resound with the click of spiked shoes on the concrete floor. And at night youthful exuberances are liberated at the expense of a few window panes and fire extinguishers. ' .M MAY AND JUNE The closing days of the college year bring a concentrated battle between symptoms of spring fever and the demands of impending exams. Seniors suddenly are taken by an over- whelming desire to study as comps approach, many in shorts on blankets in the sun. The ten- nis courts are full and the after supper dormitory step sitting and Softball leagues go into inter- mittent action. Finally the exodus, the loading of cars, the farewell handshakes, the exchange of addresses, and the trooping of cap-and-gowned seniors to Roberts for their last Collection. ACTIVITIES Miller, Wilson, Chase, Dolbeore, EUer, Schmitz, Eberly. STUDENTS ' COUNCIL 1950 was the y cir when everything hap- pened. All the problems and situations that had been waiting a chance to grow into momentous crises seized the opportunity to do so at once and suddenly bloomed throughout the first semester. As a result, the Council was able to adjourn only for limited vacations over Christmas and New Year ' s weekends. In this atmosphere of continued tension, a few points of qualifiable achievement may be worthy of recall. A stormy Customs period was weathered without serious diplomatic difficulties, and the first really campus-splitting issue was the abolition of Swarthmore pre-game activities. The Presidential proclamation freeing Swarth- more from persecution was received with some reluctance, but in the interests of preserving the union and acknowledging the right of administration to control the athletic destinies of the different institutions, it was upheld in a test of will power heretofore unequalled in Haverford history. Minor affairs of state, mean- ing budgets and concessions, were handled with consummate tact and judicious use of a two-headed coin. President Kenneth Dolbeore. About the middle of December, when organ- izations had gotten their checks and the P.A. system was finally being manned at least twice a week, the Council started casting around for something else it could do to ensure re-election and continued salaries. It was felt Campaign Speeches in Union. First row: Eberly, Chose, Dolbeore, Huene, Lam- phere. Second row: McKenzie, Prockop, Wilson, Eller, Schmitz, Caskey, Miller. that an honor system that had been in unques- tioned operation for four years could stand some review, and a sub-committe was created. The report of this committee was read at a later Students ' Association Meeting and some changes made in the direction of strengthening the honor system. Real contributions to a memorable reign were made by the dormitory members, who got all the little sleuthing jobs and were the unwilling messengers of unhappy news in the shape of damage reports from Aldo. Bob Chase dispensed Students ' Association funds cheer- fully, rising up to meet the pecuniary threats of the Comptroller ' s office with courage becom- ing in one so vulnerable. Dick Eller kept up all the little details that make or break a Council, and undeservedly took the blame for most of what went wrong. Pete Schmitz neatly trod the tightrope between duty and public displeasure in handling the honor system com- mittee. Wayne Hurubise displayed tact and expended much charm in fulfilling the role of liaison officer between the Council and the Faculty Women ' s Club. Tom Feeser handled the onerous task of coordination of campus activities quite capably, and Dick Eberly and Tom Wilson ably filled their assigned roles of elder statesmen. And between repulsing over- tures of nice ladies who would wrest blood from hungry students, Ken Dolbeare managed to be on time to a meeting. i v First row: Norris, Hetzel, Morley, Eberly, Getman, Wirt. Second row: Freund, Cone, O ' Neill, Stonsbury, Tapke, Benton, Tomec, Werner, Foley. Third row: Prager, Koye, Crawford, Goldstein, Guttmacher, Muth, Kelly, Sachs, Ruddick. Fourth row: Morgan, Harrison, Wilson, Hutton. HAVERFORD NEWS Haverford ' s weekly journalistic hiccup, deceitfully called the News, began its 1950-51 season in an aura of turmoil and confusion which surprised absolutely no one. When Editor Anthony Morley finally came galumphing home from Germany in the early days of October, he found Richard Eberly, his business manager, ready for action with a prepared statement about the scarcity of advertisers, and his top editorial assistants, Fred Hetzel and Richard Norris, peering through an autumnal haze to ask plaintively, How about the new printer? Strange to say, their query was apposite; there was some question about a new printer, which was effectively and satisfac- torily resolved by the completion of nego- tiations with the Main Line Times and the first appearance of the Haverford News as an eight-column paper printed from stereotype on rotary presses. For the first time, also, the paper was distributed on campus at the close of Collection, ralher than Tuesday night, as previously. Once forced into publication, the News continued in the long tradition of reporting campus events and developments within the College community with a relatively accurate hand. There were plays, of course. and elections, and statements from President White, and so forth. Somewhat more atten- tion than in past years was given to College news which would interest 3,500 alumni readers as well as 500 students. The task, in view of w.ar scares and mobilization pro- grams, was not too difficult. There was a chance for some large-scale feature writing, too, in the development of a new and specially endowed freshman English course. Meanwhile, professors were profiled with sickening regularity, donations to the Cam- paign Fund were nicely handled, and club meetings duly recorded. John Wirt, besides writing, saw to it that stories were properly put to bed at the printer ' s on Monday afternoons. Except for his consistently anti- senior bias in intramural reporting. Bud Getman was a top-notch sports editor, man- fully assisted by Floyd Ford, John Benton, and a crop of competent freshmen. More than the usual number of freshmen came out and stayed for the regular news staff. In December Howard O ' Neill took over the management of make-up problems on pages one and four. Midyear brought two further changes, with Sydney Cone becoming busi- ness manager when Eberly resigned, and Peter Tapke replacing Mai Brown as one of Above; Fred Hetzel and Dick Norris. Right: Bud Getman. Lower Right: Tony Morley and Howard O ' Neill. the three news editors. Mysteriously a naive pseudonymity named Philpott invaded the columns of page two during the fall season for a brief and suc- cessful run of letters to his mother, Gerald Freund fulminated about national elections and local customs committees. Paul Moses gave Yahoos the word on art shows and Frank Lloyd Wright. Sydney Cone managed to be more or less clever about any number of things, including the offerings of Phila- delphia ' s stage. Various contributors dis- cussed books, movies, or the general state of mind of Haverford College. And when all else failed, there was always Charles H. Phelps to write letters about Milton Mayer. Editorially, of course, the News confined itself to subdued utterances on exalted themes. It urged, with boomerang success, that someone do something about the pitiful state of Haverford ' s publicity management. It contributed notes toward the definition of a liberal education, and counseled caution in matters of military enlistment. Finally, as usual, and quite properly, there were unavailing lamentations about the food and the inaccessible record collection. Right to Lett: Editor Morley, Senior News Editor Norris, Sports Editor Bud Getman, Photography Edi- tor Foley, Managing Editor Hetzel, Business Manager Eberly. 1952 h ' -« ' Editor Richard Eberly and Business Manager Robert Chase. THE RECORD HAVERFORD RECORD STAFF Editor-in-Chief Richard J. Eberly Business Manager Robert Chase Senior Write-up Editor F. Parvin Sharpless Phonography Edifor Robert Foley Sporis Edifor Bud Getman Activity Editor Nevius Curtis Phofographers Laurence Autenreith Burton Pike Advertising Manager Peter Jenny Jenney, Foley, Getman, Sharpless, Autenreith, Curtis. m. FOUKDEBS tlDB Sitting: Eberly, Curtis, Spaeth. Standing: Chase, Milligan, Feeser, Wilbur, Shipley. Founders Club is an honorctry organization, recognizing those Juniors and Seniors who have shown scholarship as well as leader- ship in many of the campus activities, such as Cap and Bells, Ath- letics, Literary I ibliccrtions, and Student Government. Each spring, the Founders Club makes an award to the Freshman who, in its opinion, has best lived up to its ideal of the well rounded scholar. VARSITY CLUB Victories over Swarthmore in soccer and football and a formal dance featuring the music of Buddy Williams provided the necessary ingredients for a most successful Varsity Club week-end. Besides sponsoring this climax to the fall ' s social season, the Varsity Club promoted spirit and sportsmanship within the college community. Throughout the year, it worked with the Alumni Varsity Club in bringing prospective athletes to Haverford. First row: Woll, Eller, Flan- ders, Boteler, Dodge, Amus- sen, Cadwallader, Harris, Bair. Second row: Broad- belt, Stein, Jones, R. Kirk, Boyd, Hume, Bellinger, Carl- son, Brown. Third row: Ve- dova, D. Kirk, Wilson, Lo- gan, Richie, Collins, Saidel Vance, Colman. Sears Fourth row: L a m p e r t i, Moses, Wurster, K i 1 1 i a n Chandler, Bockol, Sterner, Hibberd, Hudson, Clayton, Shipley, Woodward, Kem- merer, Feeser, Sorg, Young. Glee Club Members— Basses: Abbott, Austin-Small, Bell, T.; Bliss, Clayton, Deaton, deBerry, Dibble, Edgerton, Forker, Forsythe, Freeman, Frink. Gatch, Good, Goodall, Grimm, Gundry, Guttmacher, Honk- amer, Hansen, Herzel, Hoehler, Huene, Hummel, Johnson, Lissfelt, MacDonald, Marble, Matlack, Mat- teson, Matthews, Mattson, Mayer, Meads, Miller, Milyko, Morchand, Nevitt, Paulson, Peden, Pike, Put- ney, Reno, Roberts, Schlegel, Stern, Tomec, Treynor, Trump, Trumper, Westhead, Wilbur, Woll, J. Tenors: Carpenter, Conant, Coote, Curtis, Dunn, Feeser, T.; Furth, Gardner, Glatzer, Hudson, Ikeda, Isay, Leg- gett, Logan, Loucks, Mead, McNutt, Miles, Milner, Miller, Musser, Ohver, O ' Neall, Ridgeway, Schmitz, Schofer, Seeley, Sharpless, Singh, Watson, Willough- by, Wilson, R. GLEE CLUB Where ' s Dibble? Sleeping. Inter- esting, but unimportant. At last Dr. Reese is able to devote most of his efforts to Hav- erford, no more commuting to F. and M. A record group turned out in September eager to be introduced and conditioned to the strains of rehearsals ( You should feel sore after this. ), and tuning up exercises ( Sing the notes I give youl ). At first the Freshmen were so numer- ous that they nearly caused a secession from Union. However, they were quickly assimilated into the Club ' s fall activities which included concerts at George and Shipley Schools, as well as a presentation of several unusual works for the Renais- sance Conference of Philadelphia. Since Christmas was so late this year, the tra- ditional concert with Bryn Mawr was put off until February. Bach replaced Haydn, and Tarentella (drin, . . . Miranda), Acis and Galatea. In lieu of a spring trip, a series of con- certs in the area was undertaken. Joint concerts were arranged with the Nurses ' School of the Presbyterian Hospital (no uniforms please), and Wilson College (the new Reesemobile, still a hair-raising or- deal). An active and busy year was climaxed with the annual spring concert. Clayton, Feeser, Good, Coote, Sharpless, Furth, Schmitz, Sutton, Dibble, Leggett, Wilbur. BAND The band, resplendent in new, scarlet uniforms, contributed much cacophony and color to the football games this year. Bart (Saxy) Milligan, president, and Bill (Maestro) Meads, conductor, led the virtuosos in the usual selections at all the home football games. Class Night found them supplying intermission music. Also some members of the band played at many of the informal dances held throughout the year. ORCHESTRA The Haverford-Bryn Mawr Orchestra made two additions to its orchestral collection with the acquisition of a bassoon and a set of tympani. These, plus several new members and a new baton for Dr. Reese, enabled the group to undertake works that ranged from Haydn ' s Symphony No. 7 in C to Katchaturian ' s Lullaby. The Orchestra joined the Glee Club in its performances, and in addition, gave on excellent and delightful concert in May. Above: Scene from Deirdre of the Sorrows. DBAMA CLUB The season for Hoverford ' s Drama Club was a varied and busy one It opened with the production at Bryn Mawr of the modern mystery. Guest in the House, by Hagar Wilde and Dale Eunson. While some spectators questioned the choice of script, others found the play suspenseful and con- vincing. In any case, its success was largely owed to the professional direc- tion of Katherine Minehart of Germantown and the performances of Nancy Pearre and Lee Haring. Righf: Scene from Guest in the House, and Deirdre of the Sorrows. Haverford ' s winter production was I. M. Synge ' s last and best play, Deirdre of the Sorrows. Marjorie Low again gave her services to produce the most impressive effort seen on Haverford ' s stage in some years. Garrett Rob- erts ' space staging and the performance of Susan Halperin in the title role heightened the effectiveness of the tragic and beautiful play. The third production of the year was Henry Fielding ' s The Tragedy oi Tragedies, or The Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Great, which was put on in Goodhart Hall in March under the direction of Lee Haring. Haverford distinguished itself by participating in this third 20th-century revived of the 220-year-old satire. Historic and scholarly interests were secondary to entertainment values, however, as far as the much-amused audience was concerned. The Drama Club thus completed a round of mystery, tragedy and comedy during the year. Many new Thespians made their debuts, and considerable effort was contributed by the memisers of the costumes, make-up, publicity and stage crews which all added to make a success of the club ' s activities. Right, from fop to bottom: Scenes from Deirdre of fhe Sorrows, GuesI in (fie House, and Tom Thumb. if ♦¥ • . ,,:r-, i -. liHm W1 fTf1 rl Leff: Rehearsal {or Tom Thumb, Roberts at work on stairs for Tom Thumb. Dan Hardy at the switchboard. On the air. W. H . n . C ■WHRC had an improved voice during this year. It was a voice that was stronger, clearer, more professional, and which often originated from distant locations. Station Manager Don Hardy has led the station ' s stafi in a year of achievement which has included improvements and inno- vations in technique, administration, and programming. The control room has been completely remodelled, new technical equip- ment has been installed and a wider variety of programs has been offered. Among these new programs were Meet Your l- ' aculty, a program of campus news, and several live music programs. The play-by-play broad- casts of the football games at Juniata and Susquehanna and the afternoon classical- music programs were also a result of The Voice of Haverford ' s continuing expansion of operations. In addition to Station Manager Dan Hardy and his board of directors, congratulations are in order for the whole staff for making the year a success. Sitting: Grant, Hardy, Lamperti. Standing: Brown, Hummel, Hitch- Hoviland, Sollierndike, Fascione. SPANISH CLUB FRENCH CLUB Highlighting this year ' s activities for the Spanish Club was the production of the one- act farce, £ Mancebo Que Caso con la Mu er Brava. Presented as part of the club ' s Christmas party, it shared the program with the singing of Spanish carols by groups from Haverford, Bryn Mawr, and Sworth- more. In the second semester, the Spanish Club presented a more serious and ambiti- ous dramatic work. La Muerte de un Ven- dedoT, and sponsored the showing of the Spanish film, Don Quixote. The French Club stirred up campus interest with M. Gutwirth ' s lecture on Some Nasty Aspects of French Culture, which was only one of the topics discussed at a series of Soirees Chez les Gutwirths. These sessions covered topics ranging from Exis- tentialism and Sartre to modern art and Picasso. The club ' s activities also included a presentation of Sartre ' s allegorical com- edy Les Mouches. A gala week-end in February highlighted the social season. GERMAN CLUB The German Club, this year, continued to feature close cooperation with the- Ger- man Club of Bryn Mawr. In addition to hear- ing talks on contemporary German life, the principal activity of the fall semester was the production of Jedermann, a three-act play by Hugo Hofmannsthal. In the second semester, the club presented a German language movie and another play and con- tinued its close cooperation with the Ger- man Club of Bryn Mawr. Sealed: Brown, Thoran, Garbaty. Standing: Shipley, Hollmann, Ewald, Benton. Morley, Seated: Werner, Treynor, Steeley. Standing: Kaye, Crawford, Craig, Leibold, Muth. First row: Wilbur, Hoehler, Pike, Milyko. Second row: Loucks, Spaeth, Roberts, Claylon, Freeman. DEBATE CAP AND BELLS The past year saw the W. W. Comfort Debating Society continuing to build up its reputation as one of the leading debate teams on the eastern seaboard. Outstand- ing were its victories over Rutgers, Ford- ham, Columbia, and Vassar. On campus, the club sought to stimulate thought and discussion amongst students through a series of debates on Important Issues of the Day. Both home and crway, the talking terrors engaged successfully in many hotly con- tested albeit bloodless bottles. Cap and Bells, a student-alumni club, is the parent organization of the Drama Club, the Glee Club, the Orchestra, and the Band. John F. Rich ' 24, and Elliot Wilbur ' 51, have led the club in a vigorous and promising publicity campaign, aimed at interesting people in the vicinity in support- ing Cap and Bells ' productions. A new savings bank policy will enable member groups to deposit bassoons and other prop- erties with the parent organization. I.C.G. The Haverford chapter of the Intercol- legiate Council on Government sent thirty members into the election battle in Dela- ware County this fall, some working for the Democratic candidate for Congress, and others supporting the state Republican ticket. In the spring, the group sent twenty- five members to the annual Harrisburg con- vention, which climaxed the year ' s activi- ties. Having successfully promoted Gerald Freund to being elected convention chair- man at Harrisburg in 1950, the club members were the elder statesmen of the 1951 fracas. Firsf row: Freund, Prager, Sachs, Norton, Kelly, Wilson. Second row: Wood, Loechel, Green, Kumm, Lande, Hudson, Kaye. Third row: Shumon, Gold- smith, Kirk, Fascione, Keetz, Leggett, Harper, Hansen, Jameson. Fourth row: Jardine, Shanks, Franke, Stern- er, Rittenhouse, Hammond, Collins. BRIDGE CLUB In the fourth year of its existence, the Bridge Club undertook its most ambitious program to date. After three years of play- ing each other, the members left the campus in search of new boards to conquer. Presi- dent Floyd Ford ' s plans for an intercollegi- ate league fell through, but the club found a number of exhibition rivals, meeting Lafayette, LaSalle, Penn, Swarthmore and Bryn Mawr in home and away matches. With increasing student interest and a more extensive schedule, the club had a most successful year. S0ated: Cadwallader, Trump, Later. Standing: R. Kirk, Hickman, Ford, D. Kirk, Greene, Abbott. CHESS CLUB PHOTO CLUB We propose to fight it out on this board if it takes all winter! This motto, in essence, represents the spirit of the Chess Club. Though the club was locked in a terrifying struggle with Temple ' s team for three months this year, they only drew a 2V2-2V2 tie. In their other scheduled matches during the year, the Haverford men who move the pieces on the scarlet and black played with steady skill, losing only to Ursinus. The Photographic Club, though the youngest organization on campus, doubled its membership in the ' past year. With the benefit of a fully equipped darkroom and instruction from an experienced faculty ad- visor, Mr. Norman Wilson, the Photographic Club highlighted its year with model nights featuring photogenic objects from Bryn Mawr. The climax of the year was an exhi- bition of student work in the Spring. Lett to right: Morrison, Greene, Allen, Haines, Cad- wallader, Hickman, Lamperti. First tow: Autenreith (with camera), Walton, Brown, Bellinger. Second row: Foley, Tossmon, Howson, Rosenboum. CUSTOMS Promoting the outdoor sports of swimming and hiking were two of the techniques the Customs Committee used in an energetic attempt at integrating the Rhinies. In addi- tion, they supplied answers to the myriad questions of the newcomers and made them familiar in their new surroundings. Dining room sieges, vanished silverware, and various antics on the part of the Rhinies kept the Customs Committee on their toes. By the Swarthmore Weekend, the Customs Committee disbanded, feeling that their job of Rhinie integration had been accomplished. First Row: EUer, Amussen, Edmiston. Second Row: Burge, Osier, Wilson, Carlson, Jones, Young. COUNTERPOINT FILM COUNTERPOINT started the year with loud chattering, threatened to produce four issues, muttered through October and November, was reduced to gibberish in the first issue in December, and was properly humble. By February it regained confidence and presented a second issue of determined quality. Spring saw the third appearance of the two-college tome of prose, poetry, and artistic endeavor, which issue wrote iinis to COUNTERPOINTS ' SO- ' Sl activities. Unrestrained Friday night audiences of Haverford students, dates, and friends of the College, were treated to many films not generally available and of more than usual interest by the Film Club. Under new man- agement, the club strove for its best year in the 1950-51 season. It succeeded in present- ing a cinematic fare ranging from As You Like It to Ivan the Terrible and at least partially solved the acoustical problems pre- sented by Roberts Hall architecture. Watson, Leggelt, Philips, Cone, Norton, Morley, Mor- chand, Muth. Griffith, Abbott, Foley, Milner. ATHLETICS i I FOOTBALL Schedule Haverford 20 Ursinus Haverford 7 Rider Haverford 13 Juniata Haverford 32 Hamiltcn Haverford 13 Hobart Haverford 7 Susquehai.na Haverford 13 Sworthmore First down Haverford. Tfie Fords roll. The best team that I have ever coached are the words with which Haverford College Football Coach Roy Randall describes his team of the 1950 season. They didn ' t gripe, and they had a will to win and work. It was so much fun coaching them that it didn ' t seem possible that the last Saturday before Thanksgiving was the end of the season. So far as the record was concerned, it was a good one. We started with what we expected to be a weak team, and we ended the season with a better than fair record. The record to which Coach Randall referred was four wins and three losses. What makes this fairly even win-loss per- centage into a good record is the fact that the Fords beat Swarthmore, 13-6. It was the first time since 1947 that the Scarlet and Black had emerged victorious over the Garnet on the gridiron. But there were other highlights to the 1950 Haverford football calendar. The Ford eleven ' s 32-0 Homecom- ing Day rout of Hamilton was perhaps the best-played game of the year. Bud Garrison received the Maxwell award for his play that week — an honor given weekly to the First row: Lingeman, Saidel, Bourne, HoUingsworth, Todd, Rettew. Second row: Chandler, Briod, Young, Boyd, Hume, Boteler, Sleere, Garrison, Cragin, Kem- merer, Treynor, Dvorken. Third row: Coach Docherty, Moses, Ledeboer, Bockol, Hibberd, Vance. Collins, Robinson, Bledsoe, Coach Randall. outstanding college football player in the Philadelphia area. In the opening game of the season the Fords won a well-deserved single touch- down victory over Ursinus. Then there was the exciting 13-7 victory over Juniata. If thefe was a game in the 1950 season that could have been classed in the one that we could have won if . . . category, it was the 13-7 Susquehanna contest, in which the Haverford eleven out-ran, out-passed, and out-fought but failed to out-score their opponents. In the other gridiron struggles of the season the Scarlet and Black was thor- oughly beaten by bigger and better Hobart and Rider elevens. It would be impossible to forget the thrills and excitement of the 1950 edition of the Haverford-Swarthmore gridiron classic. The Garnet scored first, but the Fords fought back to tie the score just before the half at Coaches Bill Docherty and Randall. M Hollingsworth leads Saidel around end. gridiron in the 1950 season. These senior lettermen were ends Bill Boteler and Hal Cragin; backs John Hume, Jim Boyd, and Paul Moses; and linemen Bill Conklin, Jack Treynor, and John Kemmerer. There remains a nucleus for a good team, both fast and strong. The 1951 Ford eleven, barring interference on the part of Uncle Sam, will be led by Co-Captains Elect Andy Briod, an aggressive back, and Walt Young, a center, who received honorable mention in the All-State football selections. Others around whom Coach Randall can build his team are backfield men Joe Bockol, Ted Hibberd, Wayne Hurtubise, Burt Saidel, Dick Bourne, and Dick Lingeman; and linemen Phil Vance, Don Chandler, Leo Dvorken, Carter Bledsoe, Ned Hollingsworth, John Rettew, Bob Collins, Jack Ledeboer, and Charles Robinson. 6-6 on a brilliant 75-yard pass play from John Hume to Phil Vance. Late in the fourth quarter lineman Hal Cragin fell on a Swarthmore fumble deep in Garnet territory to set up the winning Haverford touchdown. Perhaps one of the most important reasons that the team showed throughout the season a certain courage and determination was the outstanding leadership of co-Captains Bud Garrison and Pete Steere. Garrison was a natural born leader, while Steere always had that additional bit of fight and energy that is so important in playing winning football. These two and eight other Haver- ford men made their exits from the collegiate Garrison breaks into the secondary. Briod splits the uprights. CROSS-COUNTRY You wanted to talk to me, son? Wait a moment, I ' ll be right with you. Cross Coun- try team? Well, come into my office. Don ' t close the door, I ' ve still got the key in it. The team this year was fair. Joe Stein and John Bell are good boys. Bill Gage is the most promising freshman I ' ve ever had, son, except for Jim Grosholz, and he was pheno- menal. Paul Moore, Robin Nevitt, Henry Ewald, Bob Seeley, and Herb Huene all came along nicely. Seeley hurt his knee — no, it was his heel — against Ursinus. Oh, Bell was captain, and Nwanneka Adimora was manager. Next year Stein is captain, and Pete Lande manager. Our record? It was fair, only fair. I have it here in my book. We were last in our first meet against LaSalle, Temple, and St. Joseph ' s. St. Joseph ' s won the Middle Atlantic Championship Meet. We were sixth there in a field of seventeen teams. We lost to Lehigh and then won from Muhlenberg and Gettysburg. Against Ursinus we scored 16 points. Fifteen is perfect. Then we tied Lafayette, and in our final meet lost to Swarthmore, 19-39. I felt that we could have done better. Stein, Huene and Nevitt. show the way. This is my thirtieth season here coming up. The future? Indefinite. Draft, son. This sport takes a college with a lot of men. Bell ' s the only senior. By the way, what ' s your name, son? Sandy Burton and Pop. Kneeling: Ewald, Gage, Huene, Nevitt. Sfanding: Coach Haddleton, Lande, Stein, Moore, Adimora, Bit- tel, Bell, Seeley. First row: Harrison, Bookhammer, Kirk, Jones, Woll, lowers, Shipley, Sharpless, Spaeth. Second row: Coach Mills, Sears, Brown, Wood, Thomas, Hetzel, Colman, Curran, Richie, Young. Hour, SOCCER It wasn ' t, as co-Captain lowers predicted, an undefeated season, but it was a success- ful one. You ' ve got to have a successful season to win the Middle Atlantic Soccer Championship. And that ' s what the 1950 soccer squad did, for the first time in five years. It was also the first time in five years that the Fords beat Swarthmore. Undoubtedly, the Garnet game was their greatest. Playing as a strong defensive-offensive unit, sparked by individual starring and all-round team- work, the Fords came from behind in the last half to sink Swarthmore, 3-2. Lett: Co-Captain Shipley beats Pott with league- winning penalty kick. Below. Woll, Richie and Har- rison converge on Garnet goal. • iMtM ' S ' Uf. Above: Coach Jimmy Mills and Man- ager Don Sears, Right: Co-Captain lowers breaks up Sworthmore drive. After the game Coach Bob Dunn of Swarthmore came up to Jimmy Mills, Haver- ford ' s fine mentor, to congratulate him on the victory. I ' ve already scheduled my boys to play Franklin and Marshall this Wednes- day afternoon. I guess your team will have to take that over. Jimmy took great pleasure in replying, And dinna it ever occur to you that we might win the match? The Fords took over Swarthmore ' s date with F M, and beat the Diplomats, 2-0, to win the MASC title. This win gave the Scarlet and Black an overall record of eight victories, tour losses, and one tie, plus the Championship and a point for the Hood Trophy. Schedule Haverford 3 Alumni Haverlord 2 Princeton 4 Haverford 2 Harvard 3 Haverford 4 Rutgers Haverford 2 Navy Haverford 6 Stevens Haverford 1 Drexol Haverlord 4 F M Haverford 3 Lehigh Haverford 8 Ursinus Haverford 4 Penn Haverford 3 Swarthmore 2 Haverford 2 F M (MASC) On the other hand, the season was dis- appointing in that we were potentially strong enough to win all of our games. Even with co-Captain Shipley to provide skill and leadership and co-Captain Jowers to prove that training can be kept, the Fords bowed to Princeton, Harvard, Navy, and Penn. Members of ' 51 who contributed to the success of the team were goalie Sam Col- man, fullback Karl Spaeth, halfbacks Vic Jowers and Parv Sharpless, and linemen Paul Shipley and Al Clayton. Fullback Baur helps make background sign eat crow. 44 25 FALL INTRA-MURALS The 1950 fall intramural program was unique in several aspects. First, the seniors did not win the touch football league championship; there was a tie for first place between the Sophomore A team, which led the league most of the season, and the Junior A aggregation, which closed out its schedule with a rash of victories to pull up even with the sophs. Second, the seniors did win the soccer championship. Top: Dayton hips ball away Irom bewildered Miller to alert Dolbeare. BoHom: Senior Unemen Morley, Bellinger and Dolbeare display short pass- ing attack. Intromurals at Haverford during the fall sea- son also showed a marked increase in partici- pation — one of the main goals of the Intra- mural Committee and Intramural Director William Docherty. Seven teams competed for LeH: Championship Seniors discuss strategy. Below: Captain Dayton uses his head. rS Walton Field minor league action. Just a more complicated way of throwing a pass. Fifteen yards, holding. Opposing linemen gnash teeth. football honors, and four attempted to kick themselves to the soccer championship. These squads were comprised of more than 130 eager intramural athletes ranging from excited Rhinies to sober seniors. This total, of course. does not include the various incapacitated intramuralites and other interested spectators that viewed the more than half a hundred interclass contests. Lewis spots a rereiver. Above: Sol dunks another one. Left: Moose clears the boards. BASKETBALL In the 1950-51 winter season the Haverford basket- ball team compiled a record of five wins and ten losses. Two of the victories and eight of the defeats were the result of Middle Atlantic Conference con- tests. The high point of the season was the Scarlet and Black ' s overtime 69-67 decision over Delaware, a victory that was overshadowed by the disappoint- ment of twin defeats at the hands of Swarthmore, one of them a thrilling 76-73 overtime struggle. Leading the Fords offensively throughout the sea- son was Captain Sol Tollin, who scored 301 points. Tollin ' s average per game of 21.5 points put him with the third highest average in the Philadelphia district. Speedster Wayne Hurtubise was second in scoring with a 12.5 average. Following Hurtubise were Seniors Sam Colman and Don Amussen, with 10.9 and 9.8 averages, respectively. The team as a whole tallied an average of 64.8 points per game. Others who received their varsity H ' s were Don Broadbelt, Bob Feeser, Don James, Dave Clark and Ken Nelson, manager. Coach Bill Prizer. .. Sam drives in. Captain Sol Tollin was awarded the Bennett S. Cooper Trophy, given annually to the most valuable player on the basketball squad. Next year the Ford five will be led by Co-Captains-Elect Don Broadbelt and Wayne Hurtubise. Norris Hansell was chosen to succeed Ken Nelson as Manager. First row: James, Colman. Captain Tollin, Hurtubise, Broadbelt. Second row: Nelson, HoUingshead, Clark, Feeser, Burge, Coach Prizer. Third row: Wren, Keetz, Bourne, Ricketts, Harrison, Koch, Lissfelt. _ Captain Sol Tollin Sam Colman Moose Amussen Wayne Hurtubise WRESTLING Although a record of two wins, five losses, and a tie was not what the wrestling team had hoped for or expected, the season was on the whole close and exciting. Climaxing the reg- ular schedule with a hair-raising 16-16 draw at Swarthmore, the Fords went on to cop a second and two-thirds at the Middle Atlontics to come in sixth. The season opened well with an 18-16 win over Lafayette. The Fords swamped Ursinus, 28-8, but lost to Delaware, Gettysburg, Bucknell, Muhlenberg and Drexel. Many of these decisions were deceptively close; Coach Shihadeh ' s grapplers matched their opponents in pins, sixteen to sixteen, but lost twenty-two out of thirty-eight decisions, many by very close margins. With Harry Bair and Co-Captains Gouv Cadwallader and John Dodge leading the pack, the matmen were particularly strong in the lighter weights. Harry Bair won the high- point trophy with seven pins and two deci- sions, while Cadwallader went undefeated during the regular season and came in sec- ond at the Middle Atlantics. Dodge won five out of eight regular bouts. Although Dodge and Cadwallader graduate this June, Coach Shihadeh has a strong nucleus of lettermen about which to form a successful team for 1952. Above: Coach Bill Shihadeh. Above: Co-Captains Cad- wallader and Dodge. Lett: First row: Bair, Dodge, Nevitt, Baur, Cadwallader, HoUingsworth, Wightman, Robinson. Second row: John- son, Matteson, Seeley, Little, Westhead, Hummel. Third row: Benton, Kimmich, Roth- ermel, Laler, L o e c h e 1 , Chandler Coach Shihadeh, Milligan. Coach Gordon, Young, Spaeth, Hudson, Jones, Lei- bold, Morris, Green. FENCING The Haverford fencing team parried its way to a 4-4 record and a demonstration of improvement over last year ' s swordsmen. Coach Henri Gordon ' s men won four out of their first five matches, but then slumped at the end of the season, losing three straight. The fencers routed Delaware, 21-6; Lafayette, 19-8, and Temple, 20-7, in their early season spurt. The Ford ' s win over Johns Hopkins was not assured until the next to last saber bout, but Lehigh outlasted the Scarlet and Black in a 14-13 thriller, the match being decided by a single touch margin in the last bout. Co-Captains Karl Spaeth and Sam Hudson led the team in individual winning honors. Spaeth won 19 out of his 24 bouts, while Hud- son ' s record was 17-7. Junior epeeman Roger Jones equalled Hudson ' s excellent 17-7 record. Sophomore Skip Mattson completed his first full year on the varsity, winning 14 bouts while dropping 10. The epee team, composed of Hudson, Jones, and Sophomore Art Leibold, won in six out of the eight meets. Spaeth, Don Young and Larry Morris fenced saber; Matt- son, Tom Woodward and Joe Greene com- posed the foil team. WINTER INTRAMURALS Haverford College ' s winter intramural pro- gram in basketball and volleyball once again filled the gymnasium to its revered rafters five days a v eek from afternoon until late at night. Over two hundred students participated in the 1950-51 winter schedules, either in the ca- pacity of players or referees. The Senior A team, reputedly the best trained aggregation in the twelve-team hoop league, closed out their intramural years at Haverford by dom- inating the league for the fourth straight sea- son. In volleyball, the Junior A ' s and Junior B ' s led a six-team loop throughout the year. Despite an increase in the number of volley- ball forfeits, the winter intramural program was a successful one, especially if judged by the enthusiasm and interest of its participants. Senior A Championship Team: Kneeling: Sharpless, Edmiston, Dolbeore. Stand- ing: Prockop, Eberly, Clay- ton, Willoughby, Putney. Junior Championship Vol- leyball Team: Kneeling: Perham, Messick, Hammond. Standing: Butler, Freund, Herzel, Franke, Shanks, Bliss, Mead. No, you fouled that man! Jim Boyd scores two in im- portant Vets-Senior B game. But Ref, it was out The Count treaks into the scoring column. Paul Sterner scores two Gerry Freund taps one to apparently confused Sophs. John Kemmerer at the foul line. CLASS DAY After three days of interclass athletic war- fare, the Juniors finally struggled to the top in the 1951 edition of Class Day. For the sec- ond straight year the Class of 1952 emerged Class Day victors by a single point. Following the 74-point Junior total were the Sophomores with 73 points, the Seniors with 72, and the Freshmen with 62. Honors in the individual sports were evenly split among the upper classes; the Seniors predominated in volley- ball, the Juniors annexed the wrestling crown, and the Sophomores won the basketball championship. .0|i Leil: Senior Volleyball Team: Kneel- ing: Brown, Leib. Standing: Auten- reith, Birdsall, Loucks, Tucker, Paul- son, Kratz. TENNIS For the fourth consecutive year Haver- ford ' s tennis team will be defending its title as Middle Atlantic Conference Champions. Despite the loss of four 1950 lettermen Coach Norm Bramall ' s current squad has prospects for the 1951 season which are far from bleak. Forming the nucleus of the team are returning lettermen Ed Bellinger, Drew Deacon and John Thomas. Also striv- ing for varsity pjosts are members of last year ' s junior varsity net squad — Dick Eber- ly, Dave Caskey, Don James, Drew Lewis, Jack Piotrow and Karl Spaeth. Coach Bra- mall also has several freshmen hopefuls at his disposal in his attempts to form another championship team. The 1951 twelve-match First row: Bellinger, Thomas, Winston. Second row: Pio- trow, Caskey, Eberly, Dea- con, James, Maclye. Below: Coach Norman Bra- mall. schedule has been modified over last yea r; four teams hove been dropped, and in their place the Fords will meet Bucknell, Dela- ware and Moravian. The glimax and con- clusion of the season will be the Hood Trophy match at Swarthmore on May 12. ' J ' ' y Far Left: Ed Bellinger vol- leys a backhand as John Thomas watches. Near Lett: Dick Eberly smashes an overhead as Jack Piotrow ducks. First row: Lamperti, Chand- ler, Hibberd, Richie, Hitch- cock, Heberton, Boteler, Hurtubise, Wurster, Sharp. Second row: Hollingshead, Ledeboer, Dunn, Bair, Broad- beh, Johnston, Ricketts, Clark, Rosenbaum. Third row: Obe- rembt, Klein, Koch, Young, Helweg, Coach Randall. BASEBALL As this is writlen, some weeks before training begins, Coach Roy Randall ' s 1951 baseballers look ahead to what could be their finest season in recent years. Many of the bugs in the Fords ' past play should be ironed out, with only First Baseman Jim Wood missing from the 1950 lineup. Prac- tice games during Spring Vacation should give Coach Randall an opportunity to fill the gap at first and perhaps come up with a needed pitcher and outfielder. The team will be led by Co-Captains and veteran battery mates, Pitcher Craig Heberton and Catcher Bill Boteler. Left- handed Heberton (4-2) has been brilliant in three years of service ' with generally light-hitting Haverford teams, and will be called upon to spark the 1951 mound corps. His catcher for three years, Boteler lends a strong arm and capable handling of Scarlet •y ' il ' JliSg • ' ' « - Leit: John Lamperti ready to bunt with Co- Captcrin Bill Boteler receiving. Above: Wayne Hurtubise and Jack Ledeboer run down John Sharp. 4r 1 • ' Wayne Hurtubise hits a high one as Bill Boteler watches. Ted Hibberd smacks one! pitchers to the Fords ' defensive strength. Ofiensively, the Fords will be led by Second Baseman Wayne Hurtubise (.447), who is also brilliant afield, and Don Chand- ler (.442), the strong and consistent junior outfielder. The defensive maneuvers of Shortstop Bud Garrison and Hurtubise should spark the Fords afield; Ckirrison has consistently displayed excellent shortstop- ping, and, teamed with Hurtubise, he should help to form what may be ranked as one of the finest infield combinations in Haverford history. Either Don Broadbelt or Dove Richie will perform at third, with Richie (.265), also available for outfield duty, along with the reliable Ted Hibberd, whose dependability at the plate was a feature of the 1950 season. Senior Bucky Harris and Sophomores Jack Ledeboer and Paul Hollingshead may well fit into Coach Randall ' s plans, with Ledeboer an active candidate for the vacant first base spot. To back up Heberton on the mound, strong- armed Charley Wurster (2-3), appears ready for a big season, along with 1950 reliefers John Lamperti and Jack Harris. On paper this 1951 Haverford baseball team has a bright season ahead, but actual success in ' 51 will depend on its abilities to live up to potentialities. Coach Randall and Wayne Hurtubise. John Sharp, John Hitchcock and Co-Captain Craig Heberton. TRACK With a string of victories extending over the entire 1950 season and the last four meets of the 1949 season behind them, Coach Pop Haddleton ' s track team looks forward with confidence and hope to remain unbeaten in 1951. Only four of last year ' s twenty lettermen graduated, indicating that, with the addition of some freshmen and a year ' s improvement on the part of the regulars, the team should be at least as strong as the 1950 cindermen. The 1951 schedule opens against Johns Hopkins on April 14 and includes six dual meets and one triangular contest against Drexel and PMC. On May 12 the Scariet cindermen hope to repeat their thrilling 1950 victory over Swarthmore. John Hume, who last year was unde- feated in the pole vauH and high jump, will captain the 1951 Ford trackmen. The Scarlet and Black shows strength especially in the broad jump and dashes. Hume, Amie Jones Above: Andy Briod. Burl Soidel and Joe Stein. Below. Ed Macbeth goes over the top. ' « Lett: ITnee ing: Nevitt, Briod, Soidel, Stein, Vance, Sorg. Standing: Coach Haddleton, Kumm, Ewald, Tobbutt, Rit- tenhouse. Captain Hume, K i 1 1 i a n, Gorrity, Gage, Moore, Bourne, Rose , Denni- son. : i % -i - ■i tp Jj- I - w Roger Sorg throwing the javelin. Arnie Jones takes off; and Phil Vance led the Fords to several broad jump sweeps in 1950. Eli Halpem and Burt Saidel pace the Scarlet in the 100 and 220. In the longer running events are Andy Briod (880), Dick Kirk (440), Joe Stein (1 mile), and John Bell (2 mile). Other returning veterans are Fritz Killian, Gouv Cadvrallader, John Woll, Tom Wilson, Dick Eller and the javelin throwers, Roger So g and Neel Rittenhouse. With these men and a promising group of freshmen, the Had- dlemen ' s chances for another successful season look bright. Manager Stan Dennison. Captain John Hume clears the bar. Griffith, Benton, Chase, Taylor. lowers. CBICKET In 1951 Haverford once agcrin strives to maintain its reputation as The Notre Dame of Cricket — a reputation it has kept in past years by beating Ursinus to retain its title as Inter-Collegicrte Cricket League Champions. Although the team will be without the serv- ices of Coach Howard Comfort, chances for the Scarlet and Black ' s keeping the cricket crown are excellent. Captain Vic Jowers should bear the brunt of the batting, with Howard Taylor carrying the bowling attack. Freshman Amar Singh also promises to be a great asset to the team in its 1951 attempt to retain the departing glories of cricket for Haverford. s , Right: Manager Gi and Captain lowers. iffith belt: John Benton drives an- other six while Dick Gun- dry acts as wicket-keeper for imaginary wicket. GOLF The 1951 golf season finds Haverford with three returning lettermen — Captain Paul Sterner, Al Adam and Bob Logan, who was unbeaten in nine 1950 matches. Other experi- enced returning players are Senior Dick Huff- man and Sophomore Dave O ' Neal!; untested men include Dick Lingemon, Art Leibold, John Eagleton and Bob Feeser. Around Adam, an erratic but long hitter, Logan, an accurate iron player, and Sterner, a good putter, the Fords hope to build a team capable of improving on last year ' s record of six wins and five losses. The team opens its schedule against Temple on April third and closes against tra- ditional rival Swarthmore on May eleventh. The Scarlet sextet looks for special revenge against the Garnet, who defeated the Fords 5-4 last year, only when Sterner ' s twenty-five- foot bid for a half on the twentieth hole hit the cup and bounced out again. Below. Kneeling: Lingemon, Huffman, Feeser. Standing: Leibold, Adam, Eagleton, Sterner, Logan, ' O ' Neall. Captain Paul Sterner. HAUTICAL For a good many years the Nautical Club has shuttled along in comparative oblivion on the murky waters of the Delaware River. This year, with a fresh allotment from the athletic department, the club is attempting to eliminate some of the limitations of the river site. At this time the plan is uncertain, but the proposal is to obtain the use of a large quarry near Paoli and to buy four new boats. The fall season was a good one, high- lighted by the performances of John Dodge, Jim Brown and Dusty Fife in the Eastern Sea- board Star Championships. The spring sched- ule involves regattas with most of the impor- tant competition on the east coast. Officers for the fall team were: John Dodge, Commo- dore; Jim Brown, Vice-Commodore and Racing Captain, and Tom Woodward, Secretary. For the spring session: Pete Cummins, Commo- dore; Bob Hammond, Vice-Commodore; Con Helwege, Secretary, and Jim Brown, Racing Captain. Sealed: . Hammond, Cum- mins, Hellwege. Standing: Perot, Collins, Brown, Holl- mann, Hummel, Craig, Car- penter, Watson, Ruff, Peck- ham. . . . Twelve, Thirteen, Four- teen. According to the Old Timers in and about Haverford, the 1950 fall athletic events were marked by one of the greatest dis- plays of college spirit ever put on by the student body of the Scarlet and Black. ' Many factors contributed to this increase in inter- est, the primary element being the com- mendable spirit and records of the football and soccer teams. An important contribution CHEERLEADERS was made by this year ' s cheerleaders, whose Friday night rallies and active antics at the various athletic contests, led by Head Cheerleader Pete Jenney, added greatly to the pandemonium and enthusiasm of the occasions. If this interest in Haverford ath- letics can be maintained, perhaps the Col- lege will see a continuance of 1950 suc- cesses on the athletic field in years to come. Right: Jenney, Helweg, Milyko, Rose, Bell, Freeman. 31 r.. s ' ■EL ' I r I ■W -I FINIS This is the final page of the 1951 Record of Haverford College. Here we have tried to show realistically some events, both important and unimportant, of a year at Haverford- With this year also came the close of four years at Haverford for the Class of ' 51, but not -the end of our thoughts about the place where we have w orked, played, and lived during this part of our life. For Haverford has become a part of each of us, and a part which we shall not forget in the days to come. THE 1951 RECORD WISHES TO ACKNOWLEDGE AND EXPRESS SINCERE GRATITUDE TO ITS PATRONS Mr. Charles D. Abbott Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Boyd Mrs. V. R. Bradford Mr. B. Cadwallader Mrs. Richard Cameron Mrs. Walter S. Davison Mr. John Dodge Mrs. Dorothea Dolbeare Mr. Frederick Exton Mr. Donald Freeman Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Holcombe Mr. John R. Hoopes Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Hume Mr. William Jardine Mr. M. E. Kratz Mr. Raymond S. McNutt Mrs. Ruth Milligan Mrs. Geraldine K. Patterson Mr. M. Peniche Mr. John Prockop Mrs. Gladys T. Quillan Mrs. Nita B. Segal Edmund B. Spaeth, M.D. Jeannette K. Trumper 121 WESTTOWN SCHOOL College Preparatory Boarding School for Boys and Girls maintained by Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of Friends Founded 1799 WESTTOWN, PA. A Flexible Engineering and Construction Service Available to Industry We Design and Construct STEEL MILLS . . . INDUSTRIAL PLANTS POWER DEVELOPMENTS . . . COAL CLEANING PLANTS GAS PLANTS . . . RAILROAD SHOPS and TERMINALS We Construct (from Architect ' s Plans) INSTITUTIONS OFFICES and BANK BUILDINGS SCHOOLS and COLLEGE BUILDINGS HOTELS . . . APARTMENTS . . . HOSPITALS UNITED ENGINEERS CONSTRUCTORS INC. NEW YORK 17 PHILADELPHIA 5 CHICAGO 2 With a Background of over Sixty Years ' Exper ience COMPLIMENTS TO THE CLASS OF ' 51 HAMBURG HEARTH 8391 2 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mav rr 2314 122 YARNELL CO. MEMBERS New York Stock Exchange Philadelphia-Baltimore Stock Exchange New York Curb Exchange (Association) 1528 Walnut Street Philadelphia 2. Pa. Ardmore 0953 JOHN TRONCELLITI BARBER SHOP 16 Anderson Avenue Next to Pennsylvania Railroad Station ARDMORE Also in Founders Hall Basement IN HAVERFORD Ifs The COLLEGE DRIVE-IN CLEANERS off the campus ... on the pike For Service, Ardmore 9525 SAMUEL J. DEL PIZZO Compliments of SMEDLEY MEHL CO. ARDMORE, PA. CRICKET HAND LAUNDRY 41 Cricket Avenue ARDMORE, PENNA. Ardmore 2809 1 Ardmore 6100 A. TALONE Since 1895 TAILOR - CLEANER - DYER 318 W. Lancaster Avenue ARDMORE 123 Senior Photographs by MERIN STUDIOS 1010 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA 124 PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK WASHINGTON CAMPUS PUBLISHING YEARBOOK SPECIALISTS ART • ENGRAVING LETTERPRESS OFFSET To our advertisers, from whom the 1951 RECORD has benefited, and who, we hope, will benefit from it, we extend our thanks. 126
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