Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) - Class of 1933 Page 1 of 296
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1933 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 296 of the 1933 volume: “
N β N-g ' j: ' aiiS.,-S!StSS88cSΒ iSJ8SSi ' SaSiiig a- k SS SSi.Β«iSΒ«SSSS a hff: S C, V GLn , 1 f I hi HAL! Nineteen Hundred Thirty Three c OPYRIGHT 1932 by Bassett Ferguson, Jr. dnd John M. C. Betts V, The Nineteen Hundred and. Thirty Three HALCYON rutlisKccL by t JUNIOR CLASS ( l the SWARTHnORE: COLLEGE edication TO JESSE H. HOLMES, PH. D. THROUGH the art sequence of this Halcyon we have tried to catch some of the more human aspects of early Quaker life, while pre- senting a modern record book of life at a Quaker college. We feel that it is fitting, therefore, that the book be dedicated to a re- spected and beloved member of the Swarth- more faculty, who is in thought and action a perennially modern, and withal a thoroughly human, Quaker. 1932 1902 ORDER OF THE SECTIONS The College The Classes Fraternities Activities Athletics Features THE STAFF Editor-in-Chief BASSEH FERGUSON, Jr. Associate Editors THEODORE LYNN BABEHE SCHILLER Junior Editors WILLIAM KAIN MARGARET MacKNIGHT Athletic Editors RAYMOND WALTERS, Jr. BARBARA COLONA Organization Editor MARJORIE MOHAN Feature Editors KATHERINE ROWE RICHARD M. FOX Art Editors JANE SICHER EDITH BALTZ Photographic Editors LAWRENCE WILSON MARGARET MOORE OLIVE ADAMS Circulation Managers ELIZABETH PASSMORE ELSIE STAMMELBACH Business Manager JOHN M. C. BEHS Advertising Manager CATHERINE HIMES The College β THE- 1 ? 3 3 ' MALCYOH β Administration Presidei!t Frank Aydelotte, B.Litt., D.Litt., LL.D. Acting President John Anthony Miller, Ph.D., F.R.A.S. Dean Raymond Walters, M.A. Deal? of W omen Frances B. Blanshard, M.A. Dean of Men Alan C. Valentine, M.A. Librarian Charles B. Shaw, M.A. Comptroller Nicholas O. Pittenger, A.B. THE BOARD OF MANAGERS Wilson M. Powell, President Charles F. Jenkins, Vice-President Hetty Lippincott Miller, Secretary | J. Archer Turner. Treasurer, Term Expires December, 1932 Charles F. Jenkins Mary Lippincott Griscom Lydia Foulke Taylor Robert H, Walker Ada Graham Clement Edith Wilson Jackson T. Stockton Matthews J. Archer Turner Term Expires December. 1933 Hetty Lippincott Miller Elsie Palmer Brown Daniel Underhill Howard Cooper Johnson Henry C. Turner Robert E. Lamb Joanna Wharton Lippincott Phebe Underbill Seaman 1 Term Expires December, 1934 Rebecca C. Longstreth Edward B. Temple Frances M. White Caroline H. Worth Walter Roberts, M.D. Clement M. Biddle Robert Pyle Edward M. Bassett Term Expires December. 1935 Edward Martin. M.D. Lucy Biddle Lewis Mary Hibbard Thatcher Wilson M. Powell Philip M. Sharples Isaac H. Clothier, Jr. William W. Cocks Barclay White Absent on leave. β 1 β ' THE - J H 3 3 β MALCYOIi BOTAlSni ' AND BIOLOGY HEAD β Samuel CopeUind Palmer, Ph.D Professor of BolMiy J. W. Thompson, A.B Jnstriictor in Biology CHEMISTRY HEAD β Henry Jermain Maude Creighton, M.A., D.Sc Professor of Chemistry Edward H. Cox, M.A., D.Sc Associate Professor of Chemistry Duncan Graham Foster, Ph.D Assistant Professor of Chemistry Gelbert AUeman, Ph.D Professor of Chemistry Walter B. Keighton, A.B Instructor in Chemistry ECONOMICS HEAD β Herbert F. Eraser, M.A., F.R.Econ.S Professor of Economics Clair Wilcox, Ph.D Professor of Economics Paul F. Gemmill, Ph.D Lecturer in Economics Louis N. Robinson, Ph.D Lecturer in Economics Richard W. Slocum, A.B., LL.B Part-time Instructor in Law W. J. Carson, Ph.D Lecturer in Economics EDUCATION HEAD β Mrs. Mary Wentworth McConaughy Lecturer in Psychology and Education Thomas Woody, Ph.D Lecturer in Education Edith M. Everett, M.A Lecturer in Education ENGINEERING HEAD β Charles Garrett Thatcher, M.E Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering Lewis Fussell, E.E., Ph.D Professor of Electrical Engineering Andrew Simpson, M.S Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering George A. Bourdelais Instructor in Engineering Scott B. Lilly, B.S., C.E Professor of Civil Engineering John J. Matthews, A.B Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering S. W. Johnson Part-time Instructor in Accounting Howard Malcom Jenkins, E.E Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering ENGLISH HEAD β Harold Clarke Goddard, Ph.D Alexander Griswold Cummins Prof, of English Philip Marshall Hicks, Ph.D Professor of English Robert Ernest Spiller, Ph.D Associate Professor of English Everett L. Hunt, M.A Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory Frederic S. Klees, A.B Instructor in English Elizabeth Cox Wright Part-time Instructor in English Marvin T. Herrick, Ph.D Acting Associate Prof, of English Townsend Scudder, 3rd, B.A Assistant Professor of English FINE ARTS HEADβ Alfred Mansfield Brooks, A.M Professor of Pine Arts Ethel Stilz, Ph.B Instructor in Fine Arts Helen B. Chapin, A.B Research Assistant in Fine Arts GERMAN LANGUAGE HEAD β Clara Price Newport, Ph.D Professor of the German Language and Literature Lydia Baer, Ph.D Instructor in German Karl Reuning, Ph.D Assistant Professor of German GREEK AND LATIN HEADβ Ethel Hampson Brewster, Ph.D Professor of Greek and Latin L. R. Shero, Ph.D Professor of Greek Henrietta Josephine Meeteer, Ph.D Emeritus Professor of Greek and Latin HLSTORY AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS HEADβ Frederick J. Manning, Ph.D Professor of History Troyer Steele Anderson, Ph.D Assistant Professor of History Mary Albertson, Ph.D Assistant Professor of History William Isaac Hull, Ph.D., F.R.Hist.S., Howard M. Jenkins Professor of Quaker History THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y H MATHEMATICS AND ASTRONOMY HEAD β Arnold Dresden, Ph.D Udward H. Magill Prof, of Mathematics and Astronomy John Anthony Miller, Ph.D., F.R., A.S. Director of Sprout Observatory and Research Professor of Astronomy Ross W. Marriott, Ph.D Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy John Himes Pitman, A.M Associate Professor of Mathematics and Asf.onomy Michel Kovalenko, Ph.D Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy Alice M. Rogers, A.B Research Assistant in Mathematics Holbrook M. MacNeille, A.B Instructor in Mathematics Dorothea Kern, M.A Research Assistant in Astronomy MUSIC HEAD- -Alfred J. Swan, A.B Director of Music PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION HEAD β Brand Blanshaid, Ph.D Professor of Philosophy Jesse Herman Holmes, Ph.D Professor of Philosophy John W. Nason, M.A Instructor in Philosophy Theodore M. Greene, Ph.D Lecturer in Philosophy PHYSICAL EDUCATION HEAD β Robert Dunn, B.S Director. Physical Education for Men Virginia Rath, M.A Director. Physical Education for Women Virginia Neal Brown, A.B Assistant in Physical Education for Women May E. Parry, A.B., B.S Assistant in Physical Education for Women George R. Pfann. B.A Instructor in Physical Education for Men Dorothy L. Ashton, A.B,, M.D Lecturer in Hygiene Franklin S. Gillespie, A.B., M.D Lecturer in Hygiene PHYSICS HEAD β Winthrop R. Wright, Ph.D Morris L. Clothier Professor of Physics Milan W. Garrett, D. Phil Assistant Professor of Physics George Arthur Hoadley, D.C Emeritus Professor of Physics PHYSIOLOGY AND ZOOLOGY HEAD β Walter J. Scott, Ph.B Instructor in Physiology and Zoology John G. Farrow, B.A Laboratory Instructor in Physiology and Zoology POLITICAL SCIENCE HEAD β Robert Clarkson Brooks, Ph.D Joseph Wharton Professor J. Roland Pennock, A.M Instructor Harold E. Snyder Instructor Paul Lewinson, Ph.D Assistant Professor of Political Science ROMANCE LANGUAGES HEAD β Louis Cons, B.esL., L.esL., Susan W, Lippincott Professor of French Language and Literature Charles R. Bagley, A.M., B.Litt Associate Professor of French Margaret Pitkin Bainbridge, Ph.D Assistant Professor of French Edith Philips, D.U.P Associate Professor of French Mercedes C. Iribas, B.S.E Instructor in Spanish Enrique Bustos, A.B Assistant in Spanish Elizabeth H. Brooks, A.B Language Tutor Leon Wencilius, L.es.L., Th.D Instructor in French Isabelle Bronk, Ph.D Emeritus Professor of the French Language and Literature Robert Elson Turner, D.U.P Acting Associate Professor of French Margaret Wencelius, M.A Part-time Instructor in French LIBRARY Charles B. Shaw, M.A Librarian John Russell Hayes, LL.B Librarian of Friends Historical Library ARBORETUM John C. Wister Director of Arthur Hoyt Scott Arboretum Absent on leave. of Political Science in Political Science Political Science I TME β’ J H 3 3 ' MALCYOn The Year Act I (The stage is set with budding leaves, green new grass, warm sunshine, tops down on roadsters, girls sitting in windows of Parrish.) An exciting discussion of new Women ' s Student Government rules is in progress. The rules pass, the girls are free and college men gain an equal footing with outsiders. Alas, the privileges are but fleeting! (The curtain falls to indicate the passing of one short week, known as spring vaca- tion. As it rises, we see three portraits and a railing where once was the Pet, and furnishings are now over-stuffed in green and rust, with a home-like atmosphere.) People are going to supper whenever they wish. Green glass plates, then pink ones, appear, along with the famous strawberry short-cake or an orange . Crum takes on civilized airs with paths and shrubbery, although some long for the old days of the forest primeval. Exciting baseball games, lacrosse games, track meets, and tennis matches follow in quick succession. May Day, with even the water tower decorated in spring array of orange and black. Nymphs trip around the May poles despite bitter breezes and frozen toes. The men crown their king of May, with fitting ceremonies, and the fair sex follow suit with their queen. The famous, or infamous, raid takes place in Wharton, and Swarthmore once more reaches the front pages of the nation ' s newspapers. Tap night is held, with suspense at the breaking point. Seven new neophytes are dragged to their fate while the whole college looks on. The girls are serenaded m the annually customary fashion, with trucks and automobiles galore to carry the gay Romeos. Rehearsals, rehearsals, rehearsals, and the freshmen women crash through with a grand show. Mortar board elections are announced. Honors exams begin; we lesser students note the haunted looks on the faces of our brilliant brethren, and start studying in earnest. We cram and worry, but somehow senior comprehensives come and pass, regular finals do likewise, and soon it is all over for the year. Prexy ' s lawn suffers that prophecies, histories, and wills can be read. Graduates receive suitable gifts from colored porters whose identity is ill-concealed. Alumni return in hoards β even Dean Valentine is not above wearing a clown suit for the glory of the class of ' 21. The alumni dance is a big success, as is also the junior play, The Piper . Then comes Baccalaureate, and the Ivy Oration. An excellent Commencement is the first held in Clothier, with no room to spare. The senior dance is under way as the curtain falls on the happy scene. Act II (Three months later. The actors are tanned and radiant. The scene has an early autumn appearance, with occasional crisp days to send the summer on its way) . Crowds of new actors appear, soon to be distinguished by red dinks or berets, and large tell-tale signs. They take placement exams, make friendships, and wait expectantly. Upperclassmen are back, and things really begin. Men rush and are through with it; the women hold a W. S. G. A. reception, and drag their rushing on for weeks. Class THE- l ' ?33- MALCYOH receptions are held for the freshmen, and the table parties look as if they were for the freshmen too. Finally everything is settled ; studying begins. Swarthmore scores on Penn β free hair cuts and lots of happiness despite the final defeat. More exciting football games follow, while the soccer team is having a fine season. Dr. Eyler Simpson talks on Mexico to enthusiastic audiences. The school feels the depression; accordingly the juniors turn out in old clothes for their dance, despite the formal affair held by the seniors. The mixed chorus concert is a success. The Little Theatre Club proves that Ann Harding isn ' t necessary to make Holiday a success. The village celebrates the opening of the new underpass, with awe-inspiring officials, parades, and everything. The Chest Fund puts on a real campaign that goes over the top in fine shape. Then comes the Hamburg Show, proving that the lion isn ' t dead after all. The men in ballet costumes are even better than those in the evening dress of former years. And you can ' t kill a man by running swords through him! The Haverford soccer game for charity is exciting enough to compensate for losing by so very little. The Greek Gods haven ' t a chance with these superior Swarthmore co-eds , even with big blaA cigars to help the men along. This victory closes the usual successful season of the girls ' hockey team. We give up our turkey to help the unemployed. That short but awful period before Christmas, with term papers under way and days dragging out interminably. The D. U. ' s have a speaking contest as usual, and give the prizes to the Phi Psi ' s β honestly. The basketball season starts propitiously; we hope for a good season, and our wishes prove to be fulfilled. Inter-fraternity games take up all our afternoons. The D. U. ' s and Kappa Sigs play a game for charity. Finally comes Christmas; β packing, exchanging presents, the best Christmas dance ever, crowded trains departing as the curtain falls. Act III (Two weeks later. The men ' s gym presents a new appearance, with the useless and dangerous balcony removed.) Everyone returns for the hectic cram before exams. The girls give a winter dance that proves a big success, although everyone is almost snow-bound in the first real storm of the year. Professor Lowes of Harvard packs the Meeting House for his splendid lectures on Chaucer. Men ' s Night is held, with a notable Swarthmore alumnus back to talk to the male faction, while the girls are left out in the cold. The school is excited about the problem of the women ' s fraternities. Various re- forms or abolition are discussed, with no decision except to retain fraternities in some form. Voting, voting, and more voting. Then mid-years, with their usual strain and wearisomeness. No snow for Skytop, but a grand time anyhow for the Swarthmore crowd. Grades come out, being unani- mously acclaimed far too low. Green cards, white cards, schedule sheets, fees, registra- tion in the gym, and the new semester is under way. Spring fever epidemic is starting early, as sunshiny days and star-lit nights make books seem odious. Flowers are in bud, and the feeling of spring is in the air. Light- heartedness and gaiety fill the scene as the final curtain falls on another year at Swarthmore. 1 T I-TE } H 3 3 li A L C Y O H t( J f LS 6 The Classes 5 riN10fe ' 2 A T ME J H 3 3 HAL C Y O M THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y H First Semester President Edmund Dawes Vice-President Florence Williams Secretary Dorothy Ogle Treasurer Monroe Vansant Senior Class Officers Second Semester President Benjamin Ludlow Vice-President Mary Fisher Secretary Helen Seaman Treasurer Edward Lutton 1 THE J H 3 3 li A L C Y O M William R. Alstaetter + K ' 54 E. 54ih Street. Savannah, Ga. Physics Honors Loumis Preparatory. Track; Varsity (I II III IV); Football (I II); Chemistry Club; Student Government (IV). Henry Davis Baker z K Pennington, N. J. Economics Trenton High School. Halcyon (II); Junior Editor (III); In- terfraternity Council (III); Pi Delta Epsilon. E. Sidney Baker 1 A H 82 T Forrest Drive, Hagerstown, Md. Social Science Honors Hagerstown High School. Manager of Football; Kwink; Phoenix (I II); Glee Club (I II III IV); Class Treasurer (III); Lacrosse (I II) ; Varsity (III IV); S Club. Katharine Ravi Booth K K r 1 Monument Ave., Old Bennington, Vt. English Northfield Seminary. Record- ing Secretary of Somerville (II) ; Gwimp; Little Theatre Club; Manager (JV); Class Hockey (II III IV); Class Basketball (II III); May Day (II III); Hamburg Show (I II III IV); Student Council Committee (IV); Point System Committee (III). Nora Ravi Booth K K r 1 Monument Ave., Old Bennington, Vt. English Northfield Seminary. Table Committee (I II III); Person- nel Committee (I III); Sopho- more Court; Secretary of Class (I); Assistant Manager of Bas- ketball; Gwimp; Freshman Ad- visor; English Club; May Day Court (III); Hamburg Show (III IV); Mortar Board; Vesp- ers Committee (IV); President of W. S. G. A. Guy Douglas Boston Berlin, Maryland English Honors Berlin High School. Glee Club (III IV); Hamburg Show (IV). Edith Bowman 465 Broadway, Hastings-on-Hud- son, N. Y. N B Education Scarborough School. Class Hockey (I IV) ; Class Swim- ming (I); Varsity Swimming Squad (II); Freshman Show; Chairman of Dance Committee (IV); Hamburg Show Commit- tee (IV) ; Class Secretary (II). Edward M. Brecher 1000 W. Franklin St., Minneapolis, Minn. Philosophy Honors LIniversity of Wisconsin. THE 1 33 H A L C Y H Kenneth F. Broomell A e 6233 Winthrop Ave., Chicago, 111. Economics Honors Phillips Andover Academy. H. Franklin Brown A e Las duces. New Mexico Political Science Las Cruces High School. Class President (I); Football (I II III IV); Kwink; Inter-fraternity Council (III IV) ; Student Coun- cil (III); J. V. Lacrosse (I II); Varsity (III). Marjorie McGee Calvert K K r 199 Hollister Ave., Rutherford, N. J. English Rutherford High School, Class Swimming (I II III) ; Class Hockey (II III IV) ; Class Bas- ketball (I II III IV) ; Sophomore Court; May Day (II III); Ham- burg Show Committee. Anne Stevenson Chapman K K r 160 Hicks St., Brooklyn, N. Y. History Honors Brooklyn Friends School. Ath- letic Council (III IV) ; Class Hockey (I II III IV) ; Varsity Basketball Squad (I II III IV) ; Class Basketball (I II); Class Swimming (III) ; Manager of Hockey (IV) ; Property Man- ager, Little Theatre Club (IV); Secretary (III); Costume Man- ager Commencement Play (III) ; Student Conduct Committee (III); Honor Committee (IV); Gwimp; Chairman, Honor Com- mittee (IV) ; Hamburg Show (III) ; Vice-President of Class (III); Junior Sportsmanship Blazer. W. Wendell Clepper e 2 p 388 Orchard St., Sharon, Pa. English Honors Ruth Cline X n 718 Hamilton St., Easton, Pa. English Honors Easton High School. Chorus (II III IV); Manager (IV); English Club (IV) ; French Club (II III IV); Secretary (IV); Opera (II) ; Costume Commit- tee, Opera (II). Helen Eckels Cocklin M 41 154th St.. Flushing, N. Y. French Flushing High School, French Club (II III IV); President (IV); May Day (II); Property Committee, May Day (II) ; Freshman Show; Hall President (III); Chest Fund (III). John A. Crowl A T 802 Far Hills Ave., Dayton, Ohio Economics . Dayton High School. Basket- ball (III IV) ; Lacrosse (III IV) ; President of Class ( II ) ; Treas- urer of Class (II); President of A. A.; Kwink; Manager of La- crosse; Book and Key. 1 THE 1 H 3 3 HAL C Y O H Robert C. DaCosta 8419 Anderson St., Chestnut Hill, Phila. Socui! Science Honors- Glee Club (II IV); Dramatic Editor, Phoenix (III IV); Model League of Nations Conference (111). Stanley Howard Daniels i X 946 Boulevard, Westfield. N. J. Engineering Westfield High School. A. S. C. E.; President (IV); Football Squad; Lacrosse Squad. Deirdre M. Dann A r 8552 112th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. French Richmond Hill High School. Class Archery (III); French Club (III IV); Orchestra (I II III IV). William Robert Davenport β’I ' A e 131 East Du Bois Ave., Du Bois, Pa, I ' hyiiology-Zoology Honors Mercersburg Academy. Henrietta T. Davis X n 323 Otter St., Bristol, Pa. English Bristol High School. Class Hockey (II III); Gwimp; May Day (I II III); Hamburg Show (I III IV). Edmund Dawes ! K 1020 Dyre St., Frankford, Pa. English Penn Charter. Baseball (I); Varsity (II III IV) ; Basketball (II III IV) ; Little Theatre Club; Class President (IV). Anna Janney De Armond 6334 Sherwood Ave., Overbrook, Pa. English Honors Friends ' Central School. Phoenix (I II); Exchange (HI); English Club (III IV); Presi- dent (IV); Hamburg Show (I); Freshman Show; Class Hockey (I II); Honor Committee (111); Samuel Underbill Scholarship. Dorothy Deininger A r 3854 Girard Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. English Honors Overbvook High School. Iish Club. Eng- THE 113 3 H A L C Y H James B. Doak 406 E. Baldwin Ave., Media, Pa. Social Science Honors Media Higti School. Phoenix (I II III); Advertising Manager (IV) ; Halcyon Business Man- ager (III); Pi Delta Epsilon; Chorus and Glee Club (III IV). James B. Douglas, Jr. K 600 N. Chester Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. Economics Swarthmore High School. La- crosse (I); Varsity (II III IV); Football (I II III); Curtain Theatre. Winston M. Dudley Wharton Club Oakmont, Pa. Electrical Engineering Oakmont High School. Halcyon Photographer (ill); Sigma Tau; Glee Club (IV) ; Inter-fraternity Council (III) ; German Club; Sigma Xi ; President, A. I. E. E. William Wright Eaton A T 2835 Selma St., Jacksonville, Fla. Physics Honors Richmond Academy. Glee Club (I II III IV); Tennis (I II); Varsity (III IV); Orchestra (I 11 III ) ; Student Government (IV); Chemistry Club; Greek Oods; Hamburg Show (IV); Omicron Omega; Sigma Xi. John W. Evans e s n St. Michaels, Md. Mathematics Honors George School. Football (I II) ; Track (I II III). Mary Fisher K K r 1920 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. Education Pottsville High School. Class Vice-President (I); Freshman Show; Honor Committee (II); May Day (III) ; Junior Play; Hamburg Show (III IV); Pho- tographic Editor Halcyon (III) ; Circulation Manager, Phoenix (IV); Chairman, Personnel Committee (IV); Student Ex- ecutive Committee (IV) ; Man- ager of Tennis (IV); Gwimp; Mortar Board. Wilbert p. Frantz Wharton Club 219 N. Jackson St., Media Pa. Electrical Engineering Media High School. Engineers Club; A, I. E. E. ; Sigma Tau; Band. Helen Garrett 79.3.T Park Ave.. Elkins Pk., Pa. Philosophy Cheltenham High School. Chorus (III IV); German Club; Liberal Club. 1 T ME i H 3 3 Ji A L C Y O M Helen Gates 733 Eighth St., Wilmette. III. Eiigliih New Trier High School. Eng- lish Club (III IV) ; Chorus (I II); Conduct Committee (II). David Glunt ! :s K 436 Edgewood Place, Rutherford, N. J. Mechanical Engineering Rutherford High School. En- gineering Club; Phoenix (I II); Lacrosse (I II); A. S. M. E. ; Hamburg Show (IV). Virginia Good X V. 407 Linden Ave.. Riverton, N. J. Chemistry Ursinus College. Chemistry Club; German Club; May Day (II); Class Swimming Team (II). Helen Grumpelt A Z Harrington Park, New Jersey Social Science Honors Englewood High School. Freshman Show ; Sophomore Court; Swimming (I II); Bas- kefball (II III); Debating (II III); Auditor (IV); Chest Drive (III). Robert E. Hadeler A T 900 Harmon Ave., Dayton, Ohio Economics Oakwood High School. Foot- ball (I II III); Varsity (IV); Lacrosse (II III IV); S Club. Ruth Helm Masonic Homes, Elizabeth, Pa. English Shippen School for Girls. Freshman Show; Chorus (I II Katharine Herschleb X n Briar Cliff Manor, N. Y. History Honors Briar Cliff High School. A. Price Heusner ' l K 612 High St., York, Neb. Premedical Honors York High School. THE 1 H 3 3 H A L C Y H Morris L. Hicks K 33 Windermere Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Alech.inical Engineering Moses Brown Preparatory ' . Football (I); Varsity (II III IV); Captain (IV); Track (II); Class President (II); Sigma Tau; Book and Key. Florence Hoadley 518 Walnut Lane, Swarthmore, Pa. Political Science Honors Swarthmore High School. Ju- i ior Play; Class Hockey (III IV). Roger K. Hoopes 5U W. Minter St.. West Chester, Pa. French George School. Charles Howland Hunt e z n 19 Grandview Ave., White Plains. N. Y. Engineering White Plains High School. A. S. M. E.; E. E. Club. Louise Isfort 119 Princeton Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Botany Honors Swarthmore High School. Chorus (I II III IV); Hamburg Show (I). Howard Weston Johnson t 2 K 41 Amherst Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. General Engineering Swarthmore High School. Engineers Club; A. S. M. E. ; Dramatics (IV); Vigilance Committee; Football (I) ; J. V. Lacrosse ( I ) . Carolyn W. Jones A r 464 Riverside Drive, New York City Economics Honors Lincoln School. Gwimp; Little Theatre Club; Propertv Manager (IV); Chorus (I); Honor Com- mittee (II); May Day (II III); Freshman Show; Hamburg Show (III). James Russell Jones 2 K 123 West Ave., Vineland, N. J. Engineering Vineland High School. Presi- dent of Student Government (III_ : Secretarj ' -treasurer (III); Kwink; Glee Club (I II); La- crosse (II III IV); Captain (IV); Football (I II); Varsity (III IV); Track (I); President of Class (III) ; Sigma Tau; President Engineers Club; A. S. C. E.; Greek Gods; Vigilance Committee; S Club. I 1 T I-fE ; 3 3 li A L C Y O 11 Dorothy Keller K A e c|o O. E. M. Keller, Kasco Mills, Toledo, Ohio Political Science Honors Deerfield Shields Township High School. Open Scholarship; Institute of I. E, S. ; May Day Court; Freshman Show; Ham- burg Show (I IV); Dance Com- mittee (II); Sophomore Court; Varsity Swimming (II); Class Hockey (1 II). Clark Kerr K 2 Jacksonwald, Pa. Social Science Honors Reading High School. Class Treasurer (III); M. S. G. A. Student Executive Committee (III IV); President (III); Phoenix (I II III); Sports Edi- tor (IV); Associate Editor, Halcyon (III) ; Freshman Debate (I); Frosh-Soph Debate; Varsity Debate (1 II III IV); Manager of Debate; Manager of Basket- ball; Soccer (I 11 III); Varsity (IV) ; S Club; Pi Delta Epsi- lon; Kwink; Delta Sigma Rho; Publicity Committee (1 11); Greek Gods; Book and Key. Jonathan H. Kistler Tamaqua, Pa. English Honors Girard College. Soccer Varsity (II III IV); S Club; Con- temporary Literature Club; Glee Club; Student Government Com- mittees. Max Kohn 1517 N. I6th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Social Science Honors Central Hit;h School. Public- ity Committee (1 II III); Chair- man (IV). Frank Frederick Kunca t s K 1587 New Chestnut Ave., Trenton, N. J. Economics Trenton High School. Phoenix Staff (I II III) ; Business Man- ager (IV); Business Manager, Handbook (III); Pi Delta Epsi- lon; J. V. Lacrosse (IV). Anna Kurtz n B 1023 Adams St., Wilmington, Del. English Honors Wilmington High School. Freshman Show; Hamburg Show (III IV); May Day (I II 111); Junior Play; Conduct Committee (III); Class Secretary (III); Swimming Manager; Art Editor, Halcyon (III); Mortar Board; Gwrmp; English Club (III IV); Class Hockey (III IV); Chest Drive (1 II); Treasurer (III). Mabel Exton Lawrence M 1418 Erie Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Latin Germantown High School. Classical Club (I II III); Presi- dent (IV); Property Committee; May Day (1). Davis Levis Lewis, Jr. K 2 Elkins Park, Pa. Engineering William Penn Charter. Kwink; Chairman Dance Committee (IV); Engineers Club; President (IV); Varsity Golf (1 II 111) Co-captain (IV); Greek Gods Hamburg Show; A. S. M. E. President (111); Phoenix (I). TT H E 113 3 M A L C Y O H Robert George Lewis K 225 Goldsmith Ave., Newark, N. J. Economics Southside High School. J. V. Basketball (II III); Captain (III); Varsity Football (III IV); Varsity Track (III IV); College Record Javelin Throw ; M. S. G. A. Executive Commit- tee (IV) ; S Club. Margaret Littlewood K K r 445 Lyceum Ave., Roxborough, Pa. English Roxborough High School. Pan- hellenic Council; Gwimp; May Day (III); Hamburg Show (III IV). Hilda Margaret Loram K A 6 299 Lawrence St., New Haven, Conn. English Honors St. Swithin ' s School, Win- chester, England. Secretary, Eng- lish Club; Junior Play; Hamburg Show (III); May Day (III). ' Benjamin Harrison Ludlow A T 225 Glenn Road, Ardmore, Pa. History Lower Merion High School. Glee Club (I II III IV); Di- rector (III IV); Manager (IV); Omicron Omega; Boo k and Key; Greek Gods; Kwink; Or- chestra (II III IV); President of Class (I). Edwin S. Lutton A e . 25 Grandview Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Chemistry Honors South Hills High School. Chemistry Club (I II III IV); President (III); Orchestra (III); Glee Club (III IV) ; Class Treas- urer (II); Editor-in-Chief 19.S2 Halcyon: Tennis (III IV); Cap- tain (IV) ; Student Government (IV); Secretary-treasurer (IV); Sigma XI ; Book and Key. Charles Bertram McCord ! A e 7 Boulevard, New Rochelle, N. Y. Economics New Rochelle High School. Soccer Squad (I II III), Vars- ity (IV); Kwink; Omicron Omega; Lacrosse (I II III), Varsity (IV); Glee Club (I II III IV); Chairman Lost and Found Committee; S Club. Margaret Martin 2300 Oakmont Ave., Oakmont, Upper Dariby, Pa. French Haverford Township High School. Cercle Francais; Class- ical Club; Freshman Show. Winifred Marvin K A e 515 Yale Ave., New Haven, Conn. English Honors New Haven High School. Mortar Board; Little Theatre Club (II III IV); Secretary (IV) ; English Club (II III IV) ; Junior Play; Vespers Commit- tee; Hamburg Show (IV) ; Cor- anto; Personnel Committee (II); White Open Scholarship; Fea- ture Editor, Halcyon : Prize One Act Play (II); Class Archery. I T MZ J 1 3 3 li A L C Y O 11 Virginia T. Melchior X V. 108 E. Greenwood Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Politic )! Science Lansdowne High School. Hamburg Show (I III) ; May Day (I III); Propertj ' Manager, Little Theatre Club; Freshman Commission (II); Gwimp; Manager of Basketball; Sopho- more Coun; Vice-president of Class (III) ; Fire Captain, Par- rish (III). Priscilla G. Miller K A e White Horse Road, Phoenixville, Pa. English Phoenixville High School. Chorus (I II); Phoenix (I II); Freshman Show; Junior Class Play; Class Basketball (II- 111); Class Hockey (II III IV). Robert Donald Moore i :; K 4X7 Linden Ave., Riverton, N. J. Civil Engineering Palmyra High School. Man- ager of Track; Kwink; A. S. C. E.; Vice-President Engineers Club; Chairman, Men ' s Night (IV); Head Cheerleader; Ham- burg Show; S Club. Dorothy Ogle Kenwood Ave., Cantonsville, Md. Social Science Honors Roberts-Beach School. Fresh- man Show; Chorus (I II III IV); Phoenix (I II III); News Editor (IV) ; Class Swimming (I); Varsity Swimming (II III IV); Class Basketball (II III); May Day (II III); Liberal Club (II III IV); Coranto; Secretary- Treasurer (III); Junior Blazer; Class Hockey (III IV); Pan- hellenic Qjuncil (III IV): Class Secretary (IV); Student Conduct Committee (IV) ; Lost and Found Committe e, Worth (IV). George W. Ozias K 22 Centerview, Missouri History Training High School Missouri University Thomas C. Park A T Swarthmore, Pa. Engineering Swarthmore High School. Manager of Soccer (IV) ; Band (I II III IV) ; Interfraternity Council (III IV) ; J. V. Lacrosse (I II); S Club; Engineers Club; A. C. S. E.; Glee Club (IV); J. V. Tennis (III IV). Richard E. Passmore Wharton Club Middletown Road, Media, Pa. English Honors Evelyn T. Patterson K K r 14 Derwen Road, Cynwyd, Pa. Education Lower Merion High School. Hamburg Show (I) ; (I 11 111); Gwimp. May Day THE 113 3 HALCYON Eda Brill Patton M 28 Glenolden Ave., Glenolden, Pa. Hhlory Upper Darby High School. Freshman Show; Junior Play; May Day (II); Class Hockey (III); Archery Tournament (IV). William H. Perloff 8246 Ogouty Ave., Elkins Park, Pa. Physiology-Zoology Oak Lane Country Day School. Band (I II III); Trotter Bio- logical Society (II) ; Vice- President (III); President (IV); Glee Club (IV) ; German Club (IV) ; Little Theatre Club Play (IV). E. Marian Pierce n B t Hilltop Farm, New Castle, Del. French Wilmington Friends School. Varsity Hockey (I); Class Hockey (II III IV), Cap ' ain (III); May Day (I II III1 ; Cer- cle Francais (III IV) ; Gwimp. John B. Pollock n s 4207 State Road, Drexel Hill, Pa. Economics Upper Darby High School. Band (I II); M. S. G. A., (IV); Glee Club (IV); Complaint Committee. Ray Leslie Potter A e 198 Main St., Hamburg, N. Y. Philosophy Honors Hamburg High School. Phoe- nix (1 II) ; Junior Editor (III) ; J. V. Tennis (III IV); J. V. Soccer (II) ; Contemporary Lit- erature Club (III IV). Ralph Preston Swarthmore, Pa. Education Honors Swarthmore High School. Elsie K. Powell K A e 130 East 70th St., New York City History Honors Miss Nightingale ' s School. Freshman Show; Class Hockey (I); Hamburg Show (I III); Orchestra (I II III IV) ; Sopho- more Court; Chorus (III IV); Little Theatre Club Play; Com- mencement Play ; President, Som- erville Forum; W. S. G. A. Ex- ecutive Committee (IV); Little Theatre Club (IV). Edna N. Pusey 228 East Biddle St., West Chester, Pa. French Honors George School. Debate (I) ; Freshman Show ; Chorus ; French Club. ! T ME I H 3 3 li A L C Y O li Eleanor Y. Pusey 228 East Biddle St., West Chester, Pa. French Honors George School. Debate (I); Freshman Show; Chorus; French Club; Secretary (III). Stephen John Pyle K 15 Windmere Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Economics Lansdowne High. Football Squad (I II III IV), Golf (I II III), co-capt. (IV), Glee Club (IV). Kathleen Carberry Quinn K A e β’401 Pembroke Rd., Cynwyd, Pa. English Honors Lower Merion High School. Hamburg Show (I III); L ' ttle Hamburg Show (I II); Little Theatre Club Play (I II III IV); Little Theatre Club; President (III IV); Class Vice-President (II); Sophomore Court; Eng- lish Club (III IV); Commence- ment Play (III). Catharine B. Rambo 11 B β’! 207 East 30th St., New York City Social Science Honors James Monroe High School. Freshman Show; Ma Day (11 III); Chorus (IV). Frances Reinhold II B 273 South Cecil St., Philadelphia, Pa. Political Science Honors Overbrook High School. De- bating (I); Class Hockey; May Day; Chairman N. S. F. A. Com- mittee (III). Jean Reynolds K A e 309 Woodlawn Rd., Baltimore, Md. History Honors Central High School. Class Basketball (I III); Captain (III); Enghsh Club; Treasurer (III); Vice-president of Parrish (III); Pan-hellenic Council (III IV); Class Secretary (III); Gwimp; Personnel Committee (III). Edwin J. Reynolds 234 E. 3rd St., Media, Pa. Electrical Engineering George School. Susan Roth M 117 E. Fourth Ave., Conshohocken, Pa. English Shipley School, Bryn Mawr. Freshman Show; Hall President (I); Student Council for Con- duct (111). THE 1 3 3 M A L C Y O N Henry Cox Rudy K 120 Fountain Ave., Paducah, Ky. Economics La Chataigneraie, Switzerland. Varsity Soccer (I II III IV); Captain (IV) ; Book and Key. Doris Runge M 1315 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. German Honors The Misses Hobbs School. German Club (I II III); Fresh- man Show. Helena Salmon A r Dysard Hill, Ashland, Ky. English Honors Ashland High School. Phoenix Editorial Staff; Halcyon Edi- torial Staff; Hamburg Show (III IV); Freshman Show; English Club; Gwimp; Class Vice-presi- dent (II) ; Chairman, S. F. N. A. Committee; May Day (I); Per- sonnel Committee (IV); Sopho- more Court; Pan-hellenic Coun- cil; Coranto. Sarah Sargent M 606 West 116th St., New York City English Lincoln School. Freshman Show; Honor Committee (II); Organization Editor, Halcyon (III); Hamburg Show (III); Gwimp ; Junior Play. Bertram H. Schaffner 4606 Highview Boulevard, Glenwood Hills, Erie, Pa. English Honors Harvard College. Sadko (II); Liberal Club (II III); Chairman (IV); Classical Club (II); Halcyon (111); Contem- porary Literature Club (II III IV); German Club (IV); Trot- ter Biological Club (IV). Helen Seaman X n 12 Grant Ave., Glens Falls, N. Y. Education Glens Falls High School. Class Hockey (I II III); Varsity Bas- ketball Squad (I II); Varsity (III IV); Varsity Tennis (1); Captain (III); Personnel Com- mittee (IV) ; Student Conduct Committee (IV) ; Treasurer of A. A. (Ill); President (IV); Junior Sportsmanship Blazer. Fred David Silber Wharton Club Highland Park, Illinois Social Science Honors Wisconsin Experimental U. Glee Club (III IV); Manu- script (IV); Liberal Club (III IV). Dorothy Elizabeth Slee X S2 Whitemarsh, Pa. Political Science Cheltenham High S c h o o I. Personnel Committee (II); Pan- hellenic (III IV) ; Junior Month; Chorus (II III) ; Freshman Show; Junior Play; Varsity De- bate (II III); Manager (IV); Liberal Club (II). T I-f E } 1 3 3 HAL C Y O H Edith Smiley K A e 55 StujTesant Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. English Cathedral School of St. Mary ' s. Helen Mitchell Smith A Z 26 Oak St., Salem, N. J. Physiology-Zoology Salem High School. Phoenix (I); Pan-hellenic Council (III IV) ; Trotter Biological Society (II); Secretary (III IV); Business Manager, W. S. G. A. Handbook; Editor (IV) ; Chorus (IV); Freshman Show; Ham- burg Show (I); May Day (II). Walter Snyder 224 Woodlawn Ave., Merchantville, N. J. Latin Honors Camden High School. Classical Club (I II III IV); President (IV). Robert C. Sonneman ' ! A e 814 South George St., York, Pa. Economics Honors William Penn Senior High School. Phoenix (I II); Junior Editor (III); Managing Editor (IV); Athletic Editor, HiiUyon (III); Editor, Freshman Hand- book (III); Debate (I II); Frosh-Soph. Debate; Hamburg Show (IV); Greek Gods (IV); Junior Play (III); J. V. Lacrosse (I II); Varsity Squad (III IV); Pi Delta Epsilon. Harold Sprague 100020 194th St, HoUis, N. Y. Engineering Boys ' High School Band; Field Band (I 11); Soccer Squad (I) ; Lacrosse (III IV); Engineering Club; Hamburg Show (IV). Harry Sprogell 411 N. Broad St., Lansdale, Pa. Social Science Honors Lansdale High School. M. S. G. A. Executive Committee (II III); Employment Committee (I IV); Liberal Club (1 II III); Executive Committee; 1932 Hal- c)on Staff (III) ; Library Prize (III); Tennis (II III); Glee Club (I II III IV) ; Band (I II III); Leader (IV); Orchestra (I II III IV) ; Chorus (III IV) ; Omicron Omega. Thomas Starling A e 1716 South Main Ave., Hopkinsville, Ky. Economics Hopkinsville High. Class Dance Committee (I II); Opera (II); Glee Club (II III IV); Manager of Tennis (III IV) ; Hamburg Show (III IV); Junior Play (III) ; S Club. Elizabeth Smyth Sterling K a e 1212 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. English Tower Hill School. Varsity Hockey (I II III IV); Varsity Basketball (I II III); Captain (IV) ; Varsity Tennis Squad (I II); Freshman Representative; Student Conduct Committee (III); Chairman (IV); Junior Editor Halcyon (III); A. A. Council (II III IV); Coranto; English Club; Junior Sports- manship Blazer. THE 113 3 H A L C Y H William Taylor, Jr. Wharton Club 133 East 3rd St., Media, Pa. History Honors Media High School. Liberal Club; Advisory Committee (III IV). Katharine Easthern Thompson K K r 5016 Schuyler St., Germantown, Pa. History Germantown Friends ' School. Freshman Show; May Day (I III); Hamburg Show (I); Class Archery (III IV) ; Junior Play Helen Townsend A z 526 Clark St., Westfield, N. J. English Honors Westfield High School. Chorus (I II III IV); Debate (III); English Club; May Day (I); Freshman Show. Mary Tyler n B ! 2 Park St., Riverton, N. J. English George School. Class Secretary (I); Varsity Swimming (1); Class Hockey ( 1 ) ; Captain II III IV) ; Treasurer, Somerville. t-Β« Monroe Vansant e s n i4l5 Ridge Ave. Phila., Pa. English Honors Central High Sch ool. Phoenix Staff (I II III); Editor-in-chief (IV); Interfraternity Council (III); President (IV); Chorus (I II III); Glee Club (I II III IV) ; Manager of Baseball; Class Treasurer (IV); Omicron Omega; Pi Delta Epsilon; Kwink; Book and Key. Jean Walton n B 490 Riverview Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. French Swarthmore High School. Var- sity Hockey (I II III) ; Captain (IV) ; Varsity Tennis (I II III) ; Class Basketball (III); May Day (I II III) ; W. S. G. A; Secretary (II); Vice-president (III) ; Conduct Committee (IV) ; Pan-hellenic Council (III); President (IV) ; Cercle Francais (III IV) ; Class Vice-president (I II) ; Sophomore Court. Lewis Edwin Walton K :: Box 131 Ward, Delaware Co., Pa Economics Moorestown Friends ' School. Freshman Basketball; J. V. Base- ball (I); J. V. Basketball (II); Interfraternity Council (IV). Louis S. Walton, Jr. A e 2416 Second Ave., Altoona, Pa. Social Science Honors George School. Phoenix (I II III); News Editor (IV); Soccer (I II) ; Varsitv Squad (III IV); Debatmg (I II III IV) ; Senior Dance Committee; Publicity Committee (I II); Band (I); Hamburg Show (IV). T f E 113 3 li A L C Y O M Katharine Baker Warren K A e 517 Walnut Lane, Swarthmore, Pa. English Connecticut College. Hamburt; Show (II III); May Day Music (II III); Opera (II); Chorus (II III IV); Junior Play; Eng- lish Club (III IV); Freshman Show; Archery Squad (III). Helen Louise West X o 161 Valley Rd., Montclair, N. J. Chemistry Honors East Aurora High School. Mortar Board; President (IV); Chairman, Student Affairs Com- mittee (III); Hamburg Show (I III); Class Secretary (II); Sophomore Court; May Day (I III); Class Shows (I II III IV) ; Junior Play; Debate (II); En- dowment Committee (I); Gwimp; Chemistry Club; Secre- tary (IV) ; Sigma Xi. Florence Williams A r 154 West Tabor Rd., Olney, Phila., Pa. Physiology-Zoology Honors Mt. Holyoke College. Vice- president of Class (IV); Mor- tar Board ; Chairman, Point Sys- tem Committee; Vice-president, Trotter Biological Society; Sigma Xi; N. S. F. A. Committee (IV). Katharine Adair Wilson K A e Old Gulph and Hagy ' s Ford Roads, Perm Valley, Pa. English Honors Agnes Scott College. Hamburg Show (II III IV); Opera (II); Junior Play; Corresponding Sec- retary, Somerville (III); Eng- lish Club (IV) ; May Day (II III); Class Hockey (II III); Class Basketball (II); Chorus (11). Thomas A. Wilson A e 2500 Van Buren St., Wilmington, Del. Chemistry Honors Tower Hill High School. Chorus (I II III IV); Orches- tra (I II III IV) ; Treasurer, Chorus and Orchestra (IV) ; Chemistry Club (I II III IV); Band (I II III); Glee Club (I II III IV); Football Squad (I); Freshman Chairman; Pi Delta Epsilon; Secretary (IV); Sigma Xi, Advertising Manager, Hal- cyon (III); Opera (I II); Omi- cron Omega; Hamburg Show (I II IV). Jane Maxwell Wood- Smith M 5052 Forbes St., Pittsburgh Pa. English Thurston Preparatory School. Freshman Show; May Day (II); Class Basketball; Class Archery (III IV); Pan-hellenic Council (III IV). Anne Worth K A e Ledgeworth, Claymont, Del. English Baldwin School. Hamburg Show (I II) ; Chorus (I IV); May Day (II) ; Class Dance Committee (I II); Freshman Show; Opera (11). β THE- 1 ? 3 3 β¦ HALCYON ' β Ex-Members, Class of 1932. Eunice Terry Birch William Moore Kordsiemon Rhoda Thompson Bohn Richard Williamson Leach Philip E. Bomgardner Louis C. March Mabel Emma Brooks Virginia S. Merritt John Walker Clephane Osmond Molarsky Mary Helen Clough Eleanor Morris Joseph Engle Colson Genevieve Hellene Morris Mary deWaele Cookman LucRETiA Ann Mott Ralph DeSola Elizabeth Estelle Moxey John Miller Dickey Irene Scott Nichols Ellen Ann Dunham Mary Louise Palmenberg Ralph A. Emling Thomas Thompson Patterson Ann Dorcas Eyler Alfred Reid Rauch Edward Joseph Fairbanks Priscilla Alden Rawson Dare Farquhar John Butlin Rothermel Clara Palmer Ferguson Mary Elizabeth Royce Orris King French Mary Relief Rumley Howard Fred Gillespie Henry Bogart Seaman Ruth Geraldine Hadley Nelson Amos Sharfman Allen Lemuel Hardester Adeline Margaret Shortlidge Grace Chappell Haskell Harvey Cox Smith Ralph Burdette Head Wales Eugene Smith William Lynn Hendrickson Elizabeth Josephine Spaulding James Dixson Hull Sara Louise Stidham Katharine Hunt William Irving Steiglitz William Harrison Ingersoll, Jr. Richard Townsend Turner H. Arabel Jaquette Samuel Hellyer Walker Charles Albert Jeffries, Jr. Robert Lukens Wetter Edward Janney Johns Mary Helen Willis Alfred Ladd Killingler Louise Fairlamb Windle Priscilla Sterling Yard β 1 β ' T ME J 1 3 3 Ji A L C Y O 11 JUN10FI5 T If E ; 3 3 HAL C Y O ri THE 113 3 H A L C Y H Firs Semester President Lloyd Pike Vice-President Nancy Harvey Secretary Ada Clement Treasurer Howard Sipler Junior Class Officers Sty T ' FT Second Semester President Howard Sipler Vice-President Marcia Lamond Secretary Jeannette Marr Treasurer Edward Leber 1 T ME i H 3 3 M A L C Y O li Junior Class History Economists say that when you get off and look at the business world from a dis- tance, its functioning seems to proceed in cycles. Say we begin with a crisis β the prob- able consequent is a depression β then we struggle through a period of reconstruction β and finally arrive safely at prosperity. All of which brings me indirectly to my subject β the Junior class history β for without very much stretching of the imagination, we can liken the college career of the class of 1933 to the aforementioned business cycle. To begin with, our freshman year was most decidedly a crisis. Or rather, a quick succession of crises. By this, our first appearance, we would stand or fall. To be, or not to be, a class of importance and distinction? Well, no sooner had we arrived at this institution of higher learning than we were faced with the obstacle of hazing. Guileless maidens who dared to flirt across the table found themselves in black stockings, berets (no hair showing, at that!) and middies hind-side-foremost. And perfectly well-behaved young men performed at the witching hour of midnight for the pleasure of those brutal sophomores. And what ' s more, we not only had to deal with the little matter of hazing, but with rushing and such like as well. However we survived both these ordeals most success- fully, and looked cheerfully about for another crisis to overcome. (P. S. When it came our turn to boss freshmen, we got soft-hearted and abolished hazing.) No sooner said than done β next we elected officers to guide us through our stormy first semester. With rare good judgment we chose Bill Stetson, Bobbie Batt, Yvonne Muser, and Lloyd Pike. Next on the program came athletics. Could we show them we weren ' t to be trifled with? Well β Sipler, McCracken and Schembs brought home varsity letters in football, and Sipler and McCracken in basketball. And we pointed with pride to Betty Passmore, Nancy Howard, and Mary Tomlinson, our hockey players; to Nancy and Mary, again starring in basketball; and to Mary Legate and Edith Jackson, our varsity swimmers. So with the question of physical prowess well settled, we turned to deeper things. Lew Gill, Bill Kain, Ralf Owen, Lawrence Wilson and Molly Yard debated with bril- liance. Many of our members followed the movements of the Liberal Club, and others worked perpetually and efficiently on the Phoenix and Manuscript. So far so good β ' but how would we hit our first mid-years? Well, we said goodby to a few luckless classmates, and pulled ourselves together for another vital moment. Behold our second set of officers β Ed Delaney, Frances Passmore, Sis O ' Neill, and Whitey Joyce. In the spring we produced a superior class dance, and a quite remarkable picnic for the Juniors β not to mention a Freshman Show which surpassed anything this college had seen up to that time. So may we be allowed to say that we passed our crises fairly successfully? But as a number of people have discovered, the depression is bound to come, do what you may. Which is just another way of saying that we reappeared in September, 1930, all set for the sophomore slump. XHC- 1 H 3 3 β’ MALGYOri We began with a brave attempt to stop the downward sHde by picking Eddie Walker, Genie Harshbarger, Aldy Longshore, and Jimmy Crider for our new bosses. And then we really got down to work! Trying out for athletic managerships and Halcyon kept us busy in all senses of the word β but when elections were over, not a few of us expected to reap our rewards in time. Of course there are exceptions to everything. There were bright spots in our de- pression. We shone in dramatics. Koshy Rowe, Molly Yard, Margaret McKnight, Babs Schiller, Fuzzy Himes, Whitey Joyce, Frank Porter, Jimmy Crider, Eddie Stevens, and Howard Turner all acted for us at one time or another. And we electrified the Swarthmore world with our large capacity for athletic en- joyment and achievement. Joyce, Porter and Stetson were our lettermen in soccer, Schembs, Sipler and Scattergood in baseball. Walker and Willis in track, and Pike and Joyce in lacrosse. The girls added Aldy Longshore and Edy Jackson to the hockey list, Helen Fisher to swimming, and produced three tennis stars, Joan Loram, and the Tomlinsons. In February we caught our breath from all our hard work, and elected some new officers. The lineup being Oram Davies, Mary Lu Spurrier, Edith Jackson, and Brad Arnold, it didn ' t depress us at all. In the spring we recreated with another dance and another picnic, observed a number of college couples, cheered the new and lenient fussing rules β and as Juniors started up the road to recovery. We gave ourselves quite a boost when we picked four good gloom-chasers for officers β Lloyd Pike, Nancy Harvey, Ada Clement, and Howard Sipler. And while we ' re on the subject of elections, may I mention some of our athletic captains? Schembs of football. Stetson of soccer, McCracken of basketball. Walker of track, Sipler of base- ball, Legate of girls ' swimming, and Longshore of girls ' hockey. Some of us find the road up to a boom in honors work pretty steep, but we ' re plugging along and intend to get there in the end. In extra-curricular literary work, we find it easy going. The Manuscript is becoming a great success under the direction of Ruth E. Cook and John Foster. The Halcyon, edited by Bassett Ferguson, is now await- ing your approval. And the Phoenix will be published next year under the able manage- ment of Raymond Walters, Jr. Now and then however, we feel it wise to forget our responsibilities temporarily β so at Hallowe ' en we dressed in rags and tatters and had us a barn dance. Much fun! And plans are a-foot for a junior dance in March. The officers were acquired this February β Howard Sipler, Marcia Lamond, Jeannette Marr, and Ed Leber β are hoping it will prove a big step up in our climb. So you see, now that we have passed through all the preliminary stages β pre- requisites, so to speak β we are looking forward to prosperity next year. We don ' t expect life to be perfectly simple even then, but we ' re going to try to make it run more smoothly and satisfactorily. Wish us success and the prosperity we ought to find β and we wish the same to you. T ME J H 3 3 li A L C Y o n Emily Olive Adams 26 Channing St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Physiology-Zoology Can you imagine a physiology-zoology major with a happy smile on her face? Well, you don ' t even need to imagine Olive ' s smile; it ' s there all the time. And Olive is even more fun than her smile would make you think. If you don ' t believe it, just aSk her roommate. But one doesn ' t get to be photographic editor of the Halcyon, a member of Gwimp, and President of Parrish just by smiling. A fund of enthusiasm, a great joy in what she does, courage in attacking hard work, both ability and willingness to accept re- sponsibility, besides jollity and friendliness are back of Olive ' s smile. Willis Armstrong Bailey ' s Island, Maine Social Science Honors A T Bill came here in his Sophomore year hav- ing transferred from Hamilton College and soon established himself as the best dressed man on the campus. Such a combination of flannels, sport shoes, and belted coats has rarely been seen at Swarthmore. Part or maybe a great deal of his clothing successes are due to the fact that as a Woolmanite he moved under the critical eye of Teddy Selmes whom everyone recognizes as the epitome of good taste. But alas, the inevit- able social combination of flannels and tea- drinking has come to pass, for Bill is now a full fledged Honors Student. 1 THE 1 33 M A L C Y N H. Bradford Arnold 1821 Olive St., Santa Barbara, Cal. Economics Honors K If you see an enormous grin, huge shoul- ders, and a barrel-chest supported by stocky legs coming down the hall you know it ' s Brad. Those are notorious legs and shoul- ders, for they helped develop a real foot- ball player. That smile is famous, too, for it helped make Brad class treasurer and manager of track. To know Brad you ' ll have to argue with him β let him boil over a question for a while and he ' ll be your friend for life. He ' s at his best in dormitory bull sessions ; when the words won ' t come he uses his hands. After seeing Brad dump beds in one of the Wharton wars we wonder how he became so ex pert at balancing a tea cup. Jane Ashby 618 ' Willow Grove Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. English Honors X a. Honora Jane Ashby β like her name, the picture of precision. Hair, brown β soft, regular waves, neat roll. Eyes, serious. Clothes, perfect upon all occasions. Mind, keen, well-ordered, conscientious. Even the way she walks β light, brisk, purposeful. Always the conservative; we have it on her own statement. An exquisite picture. Very sad, Jane β you almost got away with it. But there are a few corners you forgot to tuck out of sight. What about those clothes β a little too smooth, hmm ? And that laugh ; you haven ' t the whip-hand over it. And your mouth ought to fit the complete Puritan ; sorry, it doesn ' t. Try taming that quirk β go on β try it ! Some day you ' re going to shock yourself β but not us. We knew you ail along. THE J H 3 3 H A L C Y O n Beenice Margaret Ball Gambier, Ohio English Honors K K r At this point, we introduce Peggy Ball, the little girl from Ohio who arrived at Swarthmore her Sophomore year and took the place by storm! They say that Fresh- men get the rush, but mere Freshmen didn ' t have a chance till Peggy settled down and went in for football coaching in a big way. Peggy has curly hair that doesn ' t have to stay put, and her dimply smile proves that being a staid and serious Honors student could never sour her on the world. They say she holds down a mean average, too. Thanks, Randolph-Macon, for sending us Peggy, β and just try to get her back! Edith May Baltz 66th and Sawnton Aves., Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. A r Sometimes when freshmen first come to college, there are so many bright lights and loud noises to make their heads go round that they don ' t discover Edie right away, because she never does anything upsetting. But after awhile they begin to get together and whisper, Who is that dark, distin- guished girl β a Russian countess β or β or what? And then they find out that she ' s not a glamorous, distant person, but a capa- ble, human one β with special talent for smiling, doing hard work, keeping quiet, and being liked. And they look at her Gwimp pin, and hear the telephone ring for her, and like her, too. THE 1 ? 3 3 fi A L C Y N Alice Ridings Bechtold 285 N. Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. French II B The freshmen on second west last year spent their first few days of college won- dering how one sophomore could get so many phone calls, telegrams, and special delivery letters. They heard the constant cry of Becky! Tele phone! and they saw a tall, tall girl with red hair rush to an- swer. It didn ' t take long for them to un- derstand. They found out what a grand sense of humor she had, and that no amount of kidding could disturb her a bit. They saw how well those clothes set off her hair, and they learned how genuine and sincere she was. They ' ve been rooting for her ever since. John Moeeis Cosgrave Betts 437 Cedar St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Chemistry ' K When a man can major in Chemistry, worry over life ' s problems, and still be popular, he ' s going some. It seems that ab- solutely all the trials and hardships of this cruel world are duly thought over ' by John- ny. But, in spite of all this, he has per- mitted himself to indulge in some lighter pastimes such as managing the business end of this publication, doing the same for the 1931-32 Freshman Handbook, and as- sisting in ditto on the Phoenix staff. Yet there must be something in all this seri- ousness. The female inhAitants of Par- rish and Worth seem to be pleasantly aware of his presence around college. I 1 THE J H 3 3 M A L C Y O n Marie Brede 701 Beechwood Ave., Collingdale, Pa. English Marie is like a little Quaker kitten that hides away in the mellow grayness of Swarthmore ' s halls so that one can rarely find her. She comes skipping in every morn- ing and badk again every night, for she is a day student. And in between skipping in and out she is always busy. Every time that we are about to swoop down upon her she frisks away on some important errand. In her Freshman and Sophomore years we used to peer curiously in through Mr. Pittman ' s open office door and glimpse Marie curled busily over his huge account books. But now when she isn ' t in classes here, Marie is at home in Collingdale. Jessie Brown Swedesboro, New Jersey English M If you have ever watched Jessie on her way to the telephone, you probably said, Dear me, she bounces! And if you have ever looked on when the happy presence of her fond friends was inspiring her to a funny streak, you probably said, Yes, she does bounce! And then you smiled and did a little bouncing yourself. But maybe another time you ran across her all sedate and dressed up in a powder-blue outfit β with her big surprised blue eyes and her pink cheeks and her yellow curls β and that time you undoubtedly said, Why, she looks like a rather delectable doll! And said it wistfully. TT H E 1 ? 3 3 HALCYON Wesley Bird Case Powelton Ave. and 36th St., Philadelphia, Penna. Chemical Engineer ! 2 K Although Wes has only three vacant pe- riods a week, his room is the haven for harassed souls, either financially or chem- ically, and he runs a sort of college advice to the lovelorn bureau. Wes came to college with a purpose, and that ' s why he ' s majoring in the most dif- ficult subject offered. That ' s why he spends the daytime in the science buildings, and evenings studying thermogoshdarnics. That too, perhaps, is why he doesn ' t give the college girls much of a break, but if you linger long enough in the vicinity of the phone in Wes ' section you will find he re- serves a pretty potent line for a certain Bell subscriber in the Quaker city. . Ada Graham Clement Meeting House Road, Jenkintown, Penna. Economics 11 B You hear about Ada as soon as you get to Swarthmore, but you don ' t get really ac- quainted with her the first time you meet her. That is partly because the people who are most worth knowing are always like that; partly because the lucky people who do know her well always manage to keep her so busy that others seldom find her alone and unoccupied. It isn ' t her many jobs of responsibiUty that take all her time, either, for Ada wears a small golden la- crosse stick and is always on band when the serious side of college is gone and for- gotten. I TME J H 3 3 HAL C Y O M Barbara Colona 623 N. Harrison St., Wilmington, Del. English l M Barbara has worried for three years that the Halcyon would call her quiet and stu- dious, but at last she is going to be relieved. Neither accusation is justified. I ' m not im- plying either that the opposite is true. She has ease and poise and that enviable ability to act unruffed even when circumstance. ' make her private life turbulent. She always looks unruffed with every hair and even the seams of her stockings in place. We finish a survey of her outward perfection with her eyes and one look at their sparkle is sufficient proof that quiet and studious do not describe Barbara. Barbara is inclined to be modest about her accomplishments but her activities speak for her. She has a natural ability for doing things and believes in doing them well. Ruth Ernestine Cook Swarthmore, Pa. History Honors The rest of us β most of us β can talk about work being the real thing in life and how everyone should have a real interest. Ruth does too, and she means it. We com- fortably assure ourselves that a person can be clever in almost any line if he will only apply enough effort, and of course, we don ' t think of applying any. Ruth does, and proves it. ' We talk about the delights of wide reading and pride ourselves on sound- ing like real college students. Ruth knows these delights. We think it would be nice to be independent and energetic and clear- headed β and Ruth actually manages it. THE 33 M A L C Y n Joseph Coppock 68 W. 3rd St., Peru, Indiana History Hoiiors K Joe has fooled a great many people around college. You hear he was a star ath- lete at Culver and then you discover he is Indiana ' s gift to scholarship. Sometimes he is loaded down with History books and other times he is playing bridge all night with the boys. One day you learn he has made another 3.0 and the next afternoon you see him, the best touch football player in college. But everything is settled now β no doubt he is one of the smartest boys in the Junior class, but Joe is one of the most human, too. If you don ' t think so it ' s because you ' ve never seen him rat. James Hunter Coebett 55 Tiemann Place, New York City, N. Y. Philosophy 2 K We really haven ' t seen a better chap about college than this suave Jim. His apparent assets consist of an engaging smile, a versatile conversation, and a good-fel- low disposition. His liabilities are a host of good friends, who would like to lend him last shirts, and share last crusts of bread, etc., together with a liking for phi- losophy. To continue with our banking simile, he has a large surplus of energy (used in J. V. lacrosse) and is inspected daily as to his reserve by a marr-tinet who is thoroughly interested in his future. His stock is very high with the holders, and we know that there can never be enough of a run on his deposit of good-nature to exhaust it. 1 T f E i H 3 3 li A L C Y O H Mary Louise Cbeageb 800 Summit Ave., Milwaukee, Wisconsin English Honors M Mary Lu went to Europe last summer, and came back sporting the keenest doll and dog collection in Worth, not to men- tion a wee cuckoo clock which just fits its owner. We mean in size, of course. Far be it from us to underestimate the mental pow- ers of an English Honors Student. Last year Mary used to play bridge all day, and then had to drink coffee to keep awake at night. Then she decided to honor, and reverse the order. There ' s another dif- ference this year, too β for she ' s one of those clever people who has picked up Contract with ease. Drop in and admire the souvenirs, or play Contract β or just drop in. Mary Lu will be glad to see you. GUSTINA CeOLL 264 Mather Ave., Jenkintown, Pa. English X n A good disposition is a pretty general term to use to describe anyone, but when we use this in respect to Gustina, we really mean a good disposition. We mean that she is quiet and reserved at first, but really genial and jovial, a good natured person whose friends appreciate her generosity. It is hardly necessary to mention her ath- letic ability, for her appearance in sport clothes suggests that she should be at home in the thick of the game. What is less ap- parent and less known is that Gustina pos- sesses a lovely singing voice and the faculty of pulling high grades without working. THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y n Barbara Crosse 832 DeGraw Ave., Newark, N. J. French Honors A Z How could Batbara help being good company? She has such a friendly, distinc- tive smile, such lots of jolly freckles, and such a sense of humor that you know in two minutes that she really enjoys having peo- ple around. Barby is the sort of person who is sure to have loyal friends. And did you say that someone wanted a manicure? Surely, Barby would love to help her with it, and she ' ll do a good job, too. Or she ' ll help you understand that hard assignment, if she isn ' t busy helping some- one else with something by now. Ax,BERT Oram Davies 3009 Stevens St., Camden, N. J Economics Honors K 2 We ' re sorry but this picture just doesn ' t do Rosie justice β we wanted to have it col- ored and show how he won the Most- Freckle Contest at the age of twelve. And a little tinting certainly would have let you all see why he was elected class President with that wavy, carrot hair to attract the women ' s vote. But no picture would show why he won the goalie ' s job on the lacrosse team or why he ' s such a scrappy basketball and football player. Rosie ' s got something you ' ll never see in photographs β and that ' s plenty of spark and a world of fight. Have you ever seen anyone step all over Rosie? We haven ' t! 1 T f-TE I H 3 3 H A L C Y O H Edwin Gbiswold DeLaney 601 Lockhart St., Sayre, Penna. Chemical Engineering l ' A Born some five hundred years too late! β By rights, Ed should have been a diminutive knight in armor rescuing fair maidens in distress. But the lack of a suit of tin and a good sword does not stop him. Not tour- neys, tilts, or trysts, but table parties trail- ing tigers at Pierre ' s. Thus Ed became the first president of his class, and in his sec- ond year he was elected to Kwink and be- came assistant manager of lacrosse by dint of good hard work. With this good start, we may expect a whole lot from Ed in the year ahead of him. Kathleen Patricia Dent 2935 Cathedral Ave., Washington, D. C. French Major A r Pat is tall and Pat is slim, Pat exhibits endless vim β Pat has very useful eyes, Pat ' s a major in surprise β Sunday night at ten o ' clock Pat lets loose a little shock β Dashes off to Washington β Heck, the weekend ' s just begun! Such things don ' t disturb this dame β Pat will get there just the same! Humor makes a hard life fun β Pat can always make a pun β Pat has wit without compare β P.it ' s the solemn prof ' s despair β Gentle reader, don ' t delay β Cultivate the Dent today! THE 1 β ? 3 3 H A L C Y H Elizabeth Winslow Dickinson Lincoln Avenue, Swarthmore, Pa. English M Betty lacks the prover ' bial fiery red-head- ed temper. She lacks the proverbial red- headed temperament β the instability, the irresponsibility, the sulks. And the impul- siveness and light-headedness she might lay claim to are counter-acted in Betty by a cer- tain undemonstrative, broad-minded sanity. She knows what she wants and she goes after it imhurredly, efficiently, and success- fully. But like all red-heads Betty has charm, and unlike the rest of them, hers is individual. She has the charm of twinkling brown eyes that are quietly aware of all that goes on around them; she has the charm of an engagingly slow, wide smile, and she has an amazingly potent gift for making people feel that she understands and ap- preciates them. Henry Franklin Donahower Philadelphia Hconomics K 2 Hen is really a misplaced member of the F β section Y. M. C. A. He has been living off campus for the last two years and as a consequence we don ' t see a great deal of him. But it ' s an uninteresting contest that doesn ' t find him in the front rank of root- ers, out there yelling for victory for dear old Swarthmore. Hen is also generally around when there ' s any golf to be played. He was on the team his first year. He was likewise interested at one time in becoming manager of tennis, but found that it took too much time from table parties, dances, and other social events, so the interest was short lived. 1 T i-r E i H 3 3 H A L C Y O li Constance Draper β’33 Pleasant Avenue, Canton Mass. Education K K r Connie has a reassuring equanimity and tact and graciousness that make her an easy and pleasant person to live with. She has a manner in the grande dame tradition, a manner that is impressive and still friendly; she has a cordiality and poise that ease the wheels of every-day affairs. It ' s hard to im- agine her ever anything but dressed up; she ' s one of those distinctively social peo- ple that are always ready for any emergency hospitality and whom nothing flusters. Con- nie has a faculty of getting on with al- most everyone, β and it ' s said that gentle- men prefer blondes. Elizabeth Falconer 2737 Endicott Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio Polilical Science 11 B 1 When Biff came to college in her fresh- man year, she had a certain chic boyishness that made her the perfect hero for the Freshman Show. She was tall and slender, she had a rich, deep, singing voice, and she wore her blond hair in a wind-blown. Now when you see her as a dignified junior with her hair in soft waves and that dreamy look m her eyes, she seems quite grown up. However, her slenderness still sets off those good-looking clothes to perfection, and when we hear her sing the latest hits in her inimitable manner, we wish that Biff would be a hero β or a heroine β again for us some- time soon. THE 13 3 HALCYON Bassett Feeguson, Jr. Ridley Park, Pa. Chemistry Ho)iors Wharton Club Who? Oh, Ferguson . . . wastes a lot of time over in the Chemistry building in the organic lab, or reading trade journals in the chem library. No ... he doesn ' t work ALL the time. Bridge . . . um . . yes. Contract. And after that billiards. Plays soccer in spare time, in between labs. Tennis .- ' A little. Ping pong? Oh, yes! That ' s it. Quite a few ways to waste time, aren ' t there? Oh, yes. Yes indeed. Even reading ... or writing. No. he hasn ' t finished his first novel yet. Budding young playwright until he saw his stuff acted. The light in the corner room on the third floor of F section, at 2:00 A. M. ? Oh, Ferguson, getting his work done. Maybe he ' s working on the Halcyon. Dorothy Verxox Fiij ' kenaur 308 St. John Ave., West New Brighton, N. Y. French K A e If this photograph were colored you would see bright yellow hair, and bright blue eyes, and sun-tanned skin. And if this photograph could talk you would hear a low husky voice sing low husky blues. And if this photograph could move you would be reminded of a medieval queen. But Dot is possessed of a humor sense that medie- val queens sadly lacked, and she has a cer- tain whole-heartedness and generosity and sincerity and spirit and evenness of tem- per that we somehow don ' t associate with timid ladies of the middle ages. For Dot is modern: sophisticated as her clothes, frank as her eyes, and sunny as her hair. T ME 113 3 Ji A L C Y O li Frank Elmer Fischer 1501 North 36th St., Philadelphia, Pa. Philosophy Honors B i: 11 Gaze at that manly countenance, fair reader, and remain unmoved if you can. None other than Omar the Tent-maker who thinks the thoughts of Socrates and Plato, studies the habits of his pet gold- fish, Ethel and Ray, and plays around with soccer balls. He is the joy (if not the pride) of the philosophy seminars, and in his bet- ter moments Bob Dunn ' s model halfback. He is not content with being a mere ath- lete and a scholar! He continues by rat- ting A section, knowing innumerable girls by their first names, and slapping the Phoe- nix editor on the back. Truly a versatile and fearless lad ! Helen Fisher 14 Linden Terrace, Leonia, New Jersey Social Science Honors Phil is in Paris now, getting an inter- national slant on her economics. We always thought she was busy here with Phoenix, swimming, and music, but we hear that she ' s even busier over there living up to the superior intellectual standards of Euro- pean universities. Latest reports indicate that she spends her spare moments en boiiq iinant siir les qiiais, taking in operas and plays, and ex- plaining to four year old French children what makes typewriter wheels go round. And she elucidates to those of more mature years the fact that there is a difference be- tween the Salvation Army and the Quakers. We ' re looking forward to seeing her return next year to the place that ' s waiting for her here at Swarthmore. THE H 3 3 HALCYON Helen Flanagan 3211 West Penn Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Mathenidtics Honors A Z Pat is one of our so-called Local Talent and she devotes it mainly to honoring in Math and Physics, to being assistant man- ager of the debating team, and to being on the varsity swimming squad, all of which requires her best and hard work besides. In spite of all this evidence, one simply doesn ' t connect enthusiasm for the unknown quan- tity with curly brown hair and twinkling brown eyes and smart little num ' bers on a smart little person. On the other hand, it taikes only a look to see the alertness in those twinkling brown eyes, and the quickness in the smart little person and to realize that they might be worth having in more ways than one. John Burt Foster 640 Fourth Ave., S. W., Faribault, Minnesota English Honors A e Tall, American ank, be-spectacled, the type of intelligentzia is probably the way Time will describe John on the eve of the appearance of his sixth best seller. For here, may I say, is one of those bolder mor- tals who has written a full-length novel, a mystery at that, Murder While the Cur- Not content with such a feat, virtue of his literary work, as- editorship of the Manuscript, into Enelish honors work. His tam Falls. ' he has, by sumed the and gone field lies in making pen-scratches act alive, and any Thursday evening he may be found at Dr. Spiller ' s playing Scheherezade with any number of people acting as the Caliph ! W 1 T I-TE i 1 3 3 li A L C YON BiCHARD MiDDLETON FoX 630 Crown St., Morrisville, Pa. Morrisville High School Fie ?ch I ' 2 K If you haven ' t seen the collegiate edition of the Fox coat-of-arms, drop around some time. It has a bull rampant upon a radical background, fringed with a ring of equine feathers and topped off with a medley of brushes, pens, swords and tennis racquets. Somewhere in the background you may spy the muses of poetry and drama lurking, but they haven ' t quite decided to appear yet. Below is the motto: Allie wirk and noe play mekkes Diccon a dulle ladde. All this is mounted attractively on a base of sound accomplishment, such as Editor of the manuscript or Feature Editor of Halcyon or Jay-vee Tennis; and you may see the life-size production any day in A section. MOREIS H. FUSSELL 451 Riverview Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Economics e 2 n Any balmy spring day you may see Mor- rie indulging in his favorite spring sport, which is not fussing, all reports to the con- trary. Tongue between teeth, he will be stretching his legs over the high hurdles, in which event he has won not a few points for the track team. His major is an economic one, and his minor β well, quite cute we should say. A good man to know, frank of speech and friendly of action, and an excellent student, we recommend him to any position that de- mands trust and personality. In hoc signo (the last sign, of course) vinces! I THE 113 3 HALCYON Feaxces Marian Gaines Bethel Woman ' s College, Hopkinsville, Ky. English n B From our point of view, Marian made one big mistake. She didn ' t come to Swarth- more nearly soon enough ! ' We knew that the moment we met this junior transfer from the blue grass state. Her soft voice with its southern accent is intriguing to listen to when she talks, and is lovely when she sings. There is something about her that makes us think of a gala ball on an old southern plantation, with gallant gentle- men and dainty ladies in crinoline. Yet Marian is a very modern young lady who fits into Swarthmore life naturally, and who already is making her professors join us in wishing that she had come here two years ago. Caspar Sharpless Garrett 228 Garrett Ave., Swarthmore + A e With a major in pole vaulting, a minor in football, and now and then β yes, really β an occasional trek to the books, our Cap, pride of Swarthmore the village, leads a pretentious public a merry chase through the ebbs and flows of a college career. And what a careerl Look closely if you want to find him, and the library ' s hardly the place. Working out on the track or gridiron, or bending a critical ear to the latest Guy Lombardo recording, there he ' ll be, probably sporting a big, broad smile. What. ' no smile. ' Well, even the most ac- complished Lotharios have their troubles, and Cap ' s sometimes get puzzling. I T UZ 113 3 H A L C Y O M Sylvester Sharpless Garrett 7933 Park Ave., Elkins Park, Penna. Social Science Honors A T Shades of Jonathan Swift! Here in our midst we have one who is not only an adept epigrammatist, but also an athlete of talent. Syly or Syl β whichever you prefer β has booted the ball on the soccer field in two years of varsity play, and has come within range of another S by his dexterity in whirling the discus. Besides being thus occupied for the fall and spring, he has entered the field of social science. We think that he takes most of his seminars leaning against the railings in Parrish, but we are sternly contradicted by his ratings in the subject. Lewis M. Gill 235 Kenyon Ave., Swarthmore Social-Science Honors e i; 1 ' Lew is the high-pressure salesman who persuaded so many inhabitants of these parts to invest in Pictorial Rerieiv during his Freshman and Sophomore years. Lew has never gotten over his salesmanship yet, for in slinging the line he is unexcelled. Now he ' s on the College Publicity Committee and is on hand at all the games to write up Swarthmore ' s athletic feats for the papers His other occupations are Honors Work, ping pong, and swimming. The college made a big mistake in not having teams for these two sports, in which Lew ' s great prowess could have won it many a victory v reath. Incidentally, Lew ' s sense of humor and amiability make him a ratter par ex- cellence. nr nr H 3 3 HALCYON Janet Graves 922 West Lehigh Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. English Honors X n If some day you retire from your well- worn career, and settle down to breed wire- haired fox-terriers and write mystery stories, remember Janet, for in her you will find the perfect character for your detective ' s con- federate. She could go sleuthing without anyone noticing, for she hardly ever says a word. And she could pretend to read a book while the villains plotted, for Janet reads so many books that even the most hardened criminal would think it the most natural thing in the world. Then if by any strange chance she should arouse suspicions, she could just look at the murderer with her honest eyes, and smile confidingly, and he ' d reveal all his secrets. And the detective would murmur, Exxellent, my dear Wat- son. BEN.JAMIN GkEEXSPAX 1219 North 8th St., Philadelphia, Pa. English Honors It is fairly safe to say that Swarthmore is going to wait a long time before it finds a more efficient and enthusiastic contestant for Tennis Manager than Ben Greenspan. Roll- ing the courts, lining them, and officiating at varsity matches were all in the day ' s work, and his election as Assistant Man- ager and to Kwink was the natural conse- quence of his fine work. But then, this in- terest is easily understood, for, you see, Ben is a fine player himself and is assured a place on the jay-vee team this year. More recently, however, Ben has made a name for himself on the soccer field as an agile goalie, and in Honors work as a really profound student of English. THE J 1 3 3 li A L C Y O H L. Eugenie Haeshbargek 239 Gladstone Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. Psychology-Education Genie Harshbarger would stand out from any crowd. She ' d be among the first to catch your eye in a class picture even if she weren ' t in the first row for having been vice-president. Her eyes, shining with mer- riment, seem to be looking straight at you. Genie, though at times she might seem aw- fully poised and aloof to a brand new Freshman, appears friendly as can be to a seasoned Sophomore. There ' s something especially striking about Genie whether she ' s efficiently and calmly hurrying about being business man- ager of the Little Theatre Club, dancing divinely in her newest formal, or just stroll- ing across campus in a Gwimp beret. Naxcy Ridings Harvey 6 College Avenue, Swarthmore, Pa. Ediicalional Psychology n B ! ' Nancy is one of the powers-that-be in college. ' When she talks in that slow Phila- delphia drawl, you feel impelled to listen to what she says; it ' s sure to have weight. β W ' hen she walks, with that characteristic dragging step, you are sure to watch her as she goes by. When she smiles at you from under those pointed, well-defined eye- brows, you feel that something very definite and very pleasant has happened to you. One can hardly imagine Nancy hesitating, wavering, or doubtful. She always knows what she means to say and to do, and what she thinks. Her independence and her ini- tiative carry her into class offices; her skill carries her onto the hockey field, and her charm makes her one of the arbiters of Swarthmore social life. THE H 3 3 HALCYON Paul Heritage Mullica Hill, N. J. Economics A e Hurricane Heritage is a good man to have around in time of stress or trouble β the epitome of girlish grace and youthful beauty. There is always a cheery word from Senor Heritage and the twinkle of the eye which bespeaks unserious moments. There was formerly a v acancy at guard on the football club until Mr. Heritage arrived here from Bucknell, but after that the said vacancy was no more . The bulk of the Senor is practically immovable. And no one has seen Paul in the process of hitting the books as yet, but the marks seem to come anyway. What a man ! A haircut, shave, and a sharp pencil and Hurricane is in shape to take the hardest exam and put it in its place. Walter V. Herrmann 426 Old Boonton Rd., Boonton, N. J. German Honors e 2 P Yes, this is the Herrmann, he of linguis- tic fame. Walt likes German so well that he had a lot of trouble choosing some other Honors course to go with it, and in des- peration he finally picked French. He hopes to do graduate work in German, get his Ph.D., and then perhaps teach poor college Freshmen how to say Ic-c-c-h-h-h and R-r-r-rang, and the like. Outside of study- ing languages, Walt spends his time play- ing bridge or taking care of business for the Phoenix. If you should meet some sophis- ticated-looking fellow singing Zwei Herzen im Drei-Viertel Takt with the real German accent, you ' ll know it ' s Walt. 1 T I-JE J H 3 3 li A L C Y O H Ruth Herzbekg 720 Ft. Stockton Dr., San Diego, Calif. French X p. One of Ruth ' s friends said not so long ago: I really can ' t tell you much about her, except that she ' s an awful nut, and always bursting into somebody ' s room when they ' re trying to study. She has a pet horse named ' Twilight ' which is always going to sleep under her, but she likes it on that account. She ' s full of fun, she ' s noisy and she ' s crazy about California. She thinks it ' s the only place on earth. Every June when she leaves she ' s so glad to get away from the Alma Mater that she vows she ' ll never come back, but she always does. Louise Hemsteeet Hiller 144-88 37th St., Flushing, N. Y. English Honors A r This is the story of an old-fashioned girl β one that mid-Victorian maids would have welcomed to their sewing-bees and spell- downs. For Weezy has big innocent brown eyes, and a quiet voice, and a demure way about her. But this is also the story of a modern young lady β one who fits naturally into twentieth century doings. For Weezy ' s eyes have a way of becoming twinkly and mischievous ; and her voice sometimes makes very sly remarks and sometimes announces a decided opinion in a very firm way; and her demure manner often vanishes β as for example when she ' s proving her prowess on the tennis court. So you see, this might be the story of a girl with a dual personality, if it weren ' t too utterly ridiculous to asso- ciate :uch things with Weezy. THE 1 Β«? 3 3 Cathebine W. Himes Oxford, Pa. Mathematics K A e Once there was a little girl called Fuzzy β on account of her hair, I suppose β though it ' s really not fuzzy at all β just pretty and curly β and the kind all the other little girls wanted. Fuzzy had a gay way of looking at things that made her nice to know, and she was very quick and impul- sive in a delightful sort of way. Then all of a sudden Fuzzy grew up. But she didn ' t lose her childish charm, and she added some grown-up traits that strangely enough seem to fit right in with it. She plays bridge like a couple of fiends, and wears black velvet to perfection. And she ' s still envied by all the other little girls. Arthur Charles Holman 317 23rd St., Union City, N. J. Electrical Engineer 2 K Another note for Ripley! There is such a thing as a bashful lifeguard! Although a summer at the beach endowed Bud with a shock of Jean Harlow hair and a straw- berry tan, he sticks to his axiom that there are no girls like home-grown ones. Not only does he explore the mysteries of watts and ohms, but he also plays in the band, and is head cheer leader. A deep bass voice enrolls him in the glee club, where he demonstrates the possibilities of the Tuxedo for the good-looking man. All in all, he is heartily endorsed by those who know him for an ace of friendship, a king of fun, β but a deuce of hearts. 1 T f-f E i 1 3 3 M A L C Y O n Denise Elizabeth Holmes 200 Warwick Rd., Kenilworth, 111. Botany Honors K A O Anyone can see that the stork was think- ing about something else when he dropped this young lady down a Chicago chimney. She has the low, slow voice that you hear below the Mason-Dixon line. She has the smooth way with men that belongs to the Southern belle. She has a suppressed desire for sailing β and don ' t sailboats seem to be- long on southern bays. ' And she spends nearly all her time in the botany building β and trho ever thought anyone from Chicago would be interested in Botany. ' It ' s reassuring to think that even geographical mistakes like Bet end up right β at Swarth- more! Emily H. Howland Guernsey Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. History Honors A r First we asked someone in Emily ' s His- tory seminar about her. She writes marvel- ous papers, we were told. She must spend a lot of time on her work. When we went to Emily ' s roommate, she said, Yes, she studies a good bit, but not all the time. At least she finds time to have lots of fun, too, and to go to teas and bridge parties, and did you hear about ... We won ' t repeat the whole story, but really, Emily, if you want us to be perfectly convinced that you ' re a hard-working and serious-minded honors student, you ' ll have to stop doing things like absolutely disregarding your work and dashing off to Princeton that way. THE 1 i 3 3 M A L C Y H Charles Humphries 4712 Foster Ave., Sunnyside, L. I,, N. Y, Economics Major A T A man who beams in every Websterian sense of the word is Mr. Humphries. His manly countenance is continually swathed in an engaging smile β and in the final reckoning that should be an exceedingly valualble asset. And that ain ' t all. Our subject (he ap- pearing at the side of this page) is a Kwinker of very, very good standing; his social accomplishments such as waltzing, etc., etc., are above reproach, and as a pole vaulter he ' ll surprise you very much. In conclusion, it will suffice to say that Hump gets around in this dear old col- lege of ours, and that β why, that is the ultimate test of success. Barbara Ives 32 Laurel Place, Upper Montclair, N. J. English Honors Whom would you ask about art in the age of Pericles? To whom would you go to hear about the last Philadelphia sym- phony concert? ' Who could tell you the plot, the setting, the actors, their histories, criticisms good or bad about a Theatre Guild play or about Hamlet or about the Hedgerow ' s latest production? Or Tele- vision β now from whom would you find out about that? ' Who knows ail about the bull sessions in section I, third floor? ' Who would tell you what honoring is like and whether you ' d enjoy it or not? And who would you pick as one of the quietest-look- ing and most talkative and well-informed girls in college? Barbara? Of course! ! T ME J H 3 3 H A L C Y O M Edith Jacksox 133 Pelham Rd., Germanto wn, Phila., Pa. Political Science K A e When she walks, she carries her head a httle to one side, and when she smiles, it starts as a question and ends in a secret. She looks delicate and frail, but she plays varsity hockey, swims nurriber one on the team, and is the most tireless dancer on the floor. She can make sack-cloth and ashes look like a Patou importation. She hates affectation, artificiality and ostentation; she worries about trifles, but she rarely lets her emotions get the better of her. She knows when to be soothing, and when to be jolly, and she is unflaggingly loyal. Her consum- ing interest is consumingly interested in re- turn, which makes life very nearly perfect for Edy. EuTH Anx Johlix Vanderbilt Medical School, Nashville, Tenn. French Honors K K r What can you do with a girl who came to Swa rthmore, delighted her friends with the constant twinkle in her eye, was elected to French Club, became known around campus, and then rushed off to France to study for her Junior year? Ruth has done just that. And while we tramp the asphaltum, she ' s strolling the Champs Elysees. No doubt her accent would strike us green with envy, and she has learned to sing La Marseil- laise with feeling. But don ' t forget, Ruth, about Staunch and grey β . See you next year! THE 1 ' ? 3 3 H A L C Y H Harold Degner Jones 6410 N. Camac St., Oak Lane, Phila., Pa. Economics Honors Father, who is yon rugged merman. ' entreated the maiden. ' Tis none other than Harold D. Jones, returned the fond parent. Thus, we have no doubt, orig ' inated the picture upon our topic ' s bureau. A swim- mer of renown, being both a hfe-guard himself and having taught others to rescue the pool-perishing, he assumes these duties in the summer time. Aside from these more frivolous things, he writes lengthy treatises upon economic suibjects which turn fond glances his way from the faculty, and serves on committees that debate weighty matters in student gov- ernment. We prophesy that he will be not only a pillar of the church but also of the future business world. Leah Elizabeth Jordan Du Pont Boulevard, New Castle, Del. English The day is coming when Swarthmore will proudly boast of having graduated a famous author, who is incidentally an authority on the ways and byways of old Philadelphia, and the possessor of a renowned collection of Dickensiana. Then we will remember a truly brilliant Honors student, and her de- lightful seminar papers, a fascinating ra- conteuse who could hold us spell-bound far far into the night, and a fervent admirer and devotee of Charles Dickens. But to her for- tunate neighbors and those who have the good luck to know her well, Leah will be remembered first of all as a friend, who could always be depended on for enthu- siasm and sympathy. ! THE J H 3 3 li A L C Y O M George T. Joyce Chester Road, Swarthmore, Pa. Economics I ' K Here ' s one of those chunky Juniors whose career at Swarthmore reads like a catalogue of college activities. Whitey no sooner stops swinging at soccer balls than he begins managing the basketball team. When that ' s over he starts juggling a butter- fly net for the lacrosse squad, playing class politics between times. But you don ' t know Whitey unless you pack up at mid-years and go off to Skytop. Why, in that place he ' s everywhere at once; he gets around to see everyone, he plays in the hockey battle, he makes time with all the women and stays up later than anyone there. And, in spite of it all, he ' s still chunky. William H. Kain 45 E. Springettsbury Ave., York, Pa. Economics Honors ! ' A e Introducing Bill Kain, one of those rather lengthy fellows puttering around in eco- nomics. But Bill is really unusual because every now and then he gets very determined and claims to have at least two strong con- victions; one in the superiority of blond, Nordic types of manhood (the women think so too, unfortunately) and another in the principle, never bother to study at exam time. He has an awfully pleasant time in col- lege what with representing his class on the Phoenix Advisory Board, holding the job of Junior-Editor on the Halcyon, doing de- bating work and talking a great deal in general. Maybe he ' ll be a professor or economist yet. THE 113 3 HALCYON Charlotte Kimb. ll 134 Prospect Ave., Wollaston, Mass. Economics A r Kim? But of course you know her; every- body does ! Kim has a remarkable capacity for doing things. She is such a good man- ager that they are going to let her manage the circulating department of the Phoenix next year. Monday evening Kim sings in the chorus, and Tuesday finds her down in Bond playing in the orchestra. For exercise she goes out for varsity hockey. And she finds time to study, too ! The best part of Kim, however, is her good-nature, her friendliness, and the twinkle in her eye that betrays her grand sense of humor. You ' ve missed a lot if you don ' t know her. Marcia Lamosd 4 Penna. Ave., Brookline, Upper Darby, Pa. X V. An age, a type, or a mood don ' t repre- sent Marcia, for she can represent them all. She moves smoothly and gracefully through a world of ups and downs with its intricate and disappointing cross-currents, and every- where she is loved and admired. She is un- derstanding, helpful, and efficient, quiet and humorous, calm, always busy and always charming. She is lovely to look at, lovely to talk to, lovely to work with, lovely to meet anywhere. She can take the place of a crowd or make the crowd seem better. It ' s fun to talk about Marcia. Everyone agrees with you. 1 T ME ; 5 3 3 M A L C Y O 11 EiiwARL) C. Leber West Nyack, New York Economics 1 A e Well, if you didn ' t see him there, it must be because you weren ' t there yourself. Whitey is the big blonde boy in the green sweater, and he ' s a man-aJDOut-campus if Swarthmore has ever seen one. Whitey is THERE. There is no other way to describe him, and there are few who so perfectly fit the description. ' Whether he ' s guarding Garnet destinies out on the grid- iron, giving an exclusive demonstration of that strange power, or neglecting to break a record of long standing by turning up missing at a table part) ' , that one phrase just seems meant for him. WiLLi. M Lee College Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Economics A T Bill is one of these sandy-haired boys that continually wears a smile and seems to step out of a Mark Twain novel. Bill lives in the village and is one of those much envied individuals who can drive about in cars and go where they want to. Bill is go- ing lots of places of late but we are forced to add that he does not drive verj ' far nor ver) ' often by himself, nor is he ever seen alone in his favorite hang-out, the library. About the only place we feel free to talk to Bill is on the soccer field where he is rapidly becoming a very steady fullback. THE 1 β ? 3 3 H A L C Y O H Mary Elizabeth Leoate 38 Orchard St., Pleasantville, N. Y. German Honors A r If Mary should by some strange chance be sitting perfectly still when you first saw her, you might think she was the kind of Mary who would have a little lamb β be- cause she has such lots of fluffy golden hair and such big blue eyes. But pretty soon it would come to you that the Mary of Mother Goose origin didn ' t have pep enough to supply several dozen people, or the ability to swim like a genuine fish, or a skin that turned a browner-golden than her hair in the summer, or an uproarious sense of hu- mor, and that perhaps there had been an improvement in Marys since the time of Mother Goose. Aldyth L. Longshore 8203 Cedar Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. Botany n B ! We ' d better warn you before we start that this is a true story and not the fantas- tic fabrication of someone ' s deluded im- agination, because even the most impartial description of Aldy is likely to strike peo- ple that way. She ' s a rather tall person, with an easy, athletic walk as befits a hockey captain-elect; she ' s an unaffected, straight- forward person; she ' s an executive towards whom offices just naturally gravitate. But when you are hopelessly bored with life, Aldy comes along with some nonsense that puts the topsy-turvy world right in a min- ute. And although she doesn ' t go about ex- pounding nice-sounding theories about the beauties of friendship, when you get in a pinch, Aldy will be there to help you out of it. 1 T MZ J H 3 3 li A L C Y O ri Mary Alice Lilly 133 Ogden Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. French Honors We have with us once again a member from the Borough of Swarthmore β Mary Alice Lilly. You remember her no doubt, hurrying from seminar to seminar, or con- versing rapidly with native Frenchmen in their native tongue. Mary Alice is a lucky girl; she can paint and draw, and further- more she ' s particularly interested in sculptur- ing. Her weakness is detective stories ; would you ever suspect it? As a matter of fact, be- cause Mary Alice is a small person and quiet, you might not suspect many of her qualities. Her big brown eyes ought to give you a clue, though, to the fact that this is a good person to know. Theodore John Lynn 628 State Street, Camden, N. J. Economics K 2 The Quadβ Ten P. M. Voices: Cracker Room open? ? ? Hey Ted! ! 1 We want t ' e.at ! ! Ted Lynn! ! ! A tall slim, blond chap ambles out of F section with a pained expression on his face. You fellows are always thinking of something to eat. And I really held the cards that time. So Ted slips smoothly from one activity to another, working hard when he works and getting the most from play. You are liable to find him anywhere β leading a deep Halcyon discussion, lend- ing support to the Kwink song or giving an exhibition of sparkling tennis. Didn ' t he round out that undefeated, championship team freshman year? A well rounded gent ' e- man, welcome anywhere from a bull ses- sion to a formal. THE 113 3 M A L C Y M James MacCeacken 2336 S. Hemberger St., Philadelphia, Pa. Economics K 2 The virile and determined face now look- ing at you has struck more terror into the hearts of Freshmen than any other one thing in college. It ' s owned and operated by Jimmy MacCracken. The severe expression is useful for Freshman Parties, football, and baseball games; it is also well employed in work as captain of the basketball team, es- pecially when we are playing Haverford. But ole ' MacCracken lets down over in Wharton and takes those boys for an awful ride. He once even got Abrams mad. And he ' s a consistent student; studies daily with- out fail from eight in the evening until nine the same night. Maegaeet MacKnight 468 Riverside Drive, New York City English Honors K A e Margaret-of-yesterday came to college very scared and very unsophisticated, with a brilliant mind and intellectual enthusi- asms. You wouldn ' t have noticed her. Gradually she has become that grand in- dividual, Margaret-of-today, with the same brilliant mind and the same intellectual en- thusiasms. She is the sort of person who feels very deeply and very decidedly, but who has an uncanny genius for being able to see a point just as you see it. ' What draws you to her is her infallible sense of the ridiculous and the fact that she is too tol- erant and unruffled to bother about making enemies. Looking at her now, we hold our breath and wonder: what is she going to be when she is Margaret-of-tomorrow? I THE i H 3 3 HAL C Y O 11 Stephen M. MacNeille 140 Mountain Ave., Summit, New Jersey Mathematics Honors A T Steve is one of these ruddy-cheeked, fair- haired fellows whose physical makeup, along with the name, make one suspect he comes from the highlands of Scotland. Scottish or not, Steve is a meniber of a Clan, consist- ing of Ben Greenspan, Syl Garret, and him- self; and distinctly Scottish in character for very rarely are they to be found sep- arated from each other. We aren ' t sure that the Scotch are students but if they are Steve has inherited enough brains to do for a whole Scotch tribe. As an Honor Student in Mathematics he is rapidly following the footsteps of his brother Brooky, but we must say we can ' t picture Steve as a teacher. Jeanette Isabel Maer 1841 Wisconsin Street, Racine, Wisconsin Philosophy Honors II B l ' Breezy, peppy Jimmie came to us out of the West, packed brim full of determina- tion, enthusiasm, and the sheer joy of liv- ing. It wasn ' t long before Jimmie was pull- ing in those wonderful marks, handling all the hard jobs that other people would dodge, and still doing it all so easily that her carefree manner changed not a bit. She paints scenery for the Little Theatre Club, she sings harmony perfectly, and her skill at dancing is proved by watching her at any and all college dances. However, you ' re like- liest to see Jimmie out on those long and frequent walks of hers. THE 1 Β«? 3 3 H A L C Y H GusTAv C. Heckling 1534 Ritner St., Philadelphia English A e Just try ' n tell a stranger that the fellow swinging in to E section with the masterful gait and the smile that spreads from ear to ear has spent three years at Swarthmore be- ing an English major and looking forward eventually to expounding the knowledge he absorbs from a pulpit! And yet, folks, them is the facts. But besides classes in Chaucer, Shakes- pere, and the Greek language, Gus can be found with his boys any afternoon be- tween four and five at the swimming pool, where he schools male villagers of tender ages in the art of swimming, and sees to it that all natatorially minded Swarthmoreans receive due reward from the American Red Cross. LOEETTA KeBLEE MeECEE 1925 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Education 11 B ! It didn ' t seem right for such a little girl to have such a big name as Loretta, and besides, you can ' t be as formal as Lo- retta to this particular little girl β so they called her Ret. But even a very small girl with a very small name can like big things β such as horses. Ret plays polo at a ter- rific rate. And a little girl can have big tal- ents β Ret can imitate anything from Will Rogers up, and get away with it. And a lit- tle girl can accomplish big things, too β Ret has a gift for fascination. She ' s a big little girl! 1 T ME i H 3 3 li A L C Y O n Lou Meunier Park Avenue, Riverton, N. J. Mechanical Engineering l i; K And now the University of Alabama sends a delegate to this fair campus of ours β where Love is king and Industry pre- vails. This last, mind you, with a straight face. Massa Meunier is hardly the old south- ern colonel type, but he certainly can play a saxophone. And that puts him one up on the colonel by our very crude calcu- lations. Lou, while excelling in the aesthetic art of music, is not immersed in it. He takes a very fatherly interest in the current horseplay about Wharton β break- ing windows, etc. β which makes him def- initely one of the boys. Feanklix Miller, Jr. 1117 McCausland Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Mathematics Honors POSTAL TELEGRAPH CO. Paul Whiteman New York City June 7, 1933 Sending you Franklin Miller to play in your orchestra (stop) Plenty of experience (stop) Played in college classical or- chestra 3 years and organized one of his own (stop) Should be good at crooning as he sang in college opera Freshman year and also in Glee Club (stop) Has pleasing stature as he won letter at track and played soccer (stop) Also in classi- cal club if you care (stop) Telegraph answer at once as Rudy Vallee is also after him (stop) A.C.V. THE 1 ' J 3 3 HALCYON Max Millee 30 Abington Road, Kew Gardens, L. I. Engineering K S Max is known far and wide for his ready smile and his knowledge of the quick re- tort. He is right in there when it comes to engaging in the well-known banter either with his contemporaries or with perfect strangers. He doesn ' t care a particle. Although our friend Max is a mechanical engineer in good standing, he does not shun the many social functions to which he is continually being invited. In fact, we hear that Max is looking rather pale lately due to such a vast number of dances. For some reason or other, the Parrishers really seem to go for our little friend. Allen R. Mitchell 5028 Chew Street, Germantown, Pa. Economics One of the better thrills to be had around college is a ride in a car with Allen at the wheel. Not that Allen isn ' t a good driver β far from it. But you see he refuses to travel under fifty miles an hour no matter what the conditions β a fact which makes driving in traffic interesting to say the least. Besides being known as a speed demon Mitch is known as the boy with the hearty laugh, which he uses at all occasions, es- pecially when he is with Stevens or Ludlow. Ludlow ' s jokes must be good, for Allen has decided to go out and help him with the Glee Club both as a singer and bookkeeper. t T ME i 1 3 3 M A L C Y O N Anne Mode 1414 Surrey Lane, Merion, Philadelphia, Pa. 1! B l We are told that Anne has great ambi- tions to be a school teacher β maybe you ' ve seen her on Tuesdays and Thursdays en route for Chester to practice up on the in- nocents there. And what an athlete! She plays fullback on the hockey team. Sh! We aren ' t mentioning the victorious season. She ' s an old standby at the Phi Sig table parties, etcetera, and we hear she was nom- inated unofficial adviser-in-chief of their dance committee. Did you know that she went to Cornell last summer to summer school and took a course in How to Study, and ever since she ' s been back at Swarth- more she can ' t get out of the habit? Mar.joeie Br. iter Mohan 820 Foss Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. Social Science Honors ' 1 ' M There is nothing of the flimsy frivolous co-ed about Marjorie. She ' s grown-up. We picture her presiding at teas, or receiving guests at a dance, or entertaining a visiting celebrity. It ' s a talent, you see. A talent for managing people without their knowing it, a talent for making people have confidence in her, a talent for graciousness, and tact, and warmth. She carries it all off with an easy dignity, and a serious sort of pleasant- ness that fits in very well with the wavy brown hair, and the friendly brown eyes, and you like her instinctively. JaiSte Mooke 1128 Fillmore St., Frankford, Philadel- phia, Pa. Education-Psychology X a Some people might find Jane ' s list of ac- complishments awe-inspiring to the extreme. However, if you are brave enough to look beyond the impressiveness of titles like President of the Gwimp, member of Pan- hellenic, photographic editor of the Hal- cyon, and all the rest, you will find Jane herself. She is one of those persons who gets a tremendous kick out of life in gen- eral and everything in particular and is vitally interested in many things. You can ' t miss her; she is the blondest blond in Swarthmore, and happy or sad, she ' s al- ways singing. Katheriste Morkis Bethesda, Md. French K K r If a Halcyon reporter, in quest of infor- mation about Kay, goes to Kay ' s room- mates, she is overwhelmed with stories of her even disposition and her Southern so- ciability and the drug store parties she al- ways instigates. She hears of the grand va- cations Kay spends in Bethesda, which isn ' t really a town at all, but which is near enough to ' Washington to be exciting, and near enough to Annapolis to suit even Kay. And she hears that one of Kay ' s outstand- ing talents is putting over a tea very ef- ficiently, and being a gracious and tactful hostess. And she gathers that Kay is a peach ! I T f E i H 3 3 li A L C YO ri YvONaSTE MUSEE ' 128 Crest Road, Ridgewood, N. J. Gen icin K K r Swarthmore is proud of Yvonne. She maintains consistently liigh averages and works conscientiously and intelligently. The Junior Class is proud of Yvonne: she holds countless offices, assumes countless responsibilities, and has remained for three years the leading social light of the school. But most of all her friends are proud of Yvonne: they feel a personal pride when she achieves a new success. For Yvonne has a quiet beauty and modest charm and de- lightful friendly humor that make success inevitable. She is a happy person without being a Pollyanna, because she honestly enjoys life. Ida CXeill 1231 Foulkrod St., Philadelphia, Pa. Psychology UK Sis is one of Swarthmore ' s true sophis- ticates. Her endless supply of smooth clothes, her perpetually unruffled good na- ture, her suave manner, and her air of sa- voir-faire are all reasons why Sis is always in demand. How anyone can study so little and do so well is a mystery, but we are told that when she occasionally does retire be- hind her big glasses, a book, and closed doors, things get done in a big way. Last spring, we saw too little of Sis around here because of the call of the golf links most every weekend. But we hope to do better this year. THE 1 ? 3 3 fl A L C Y H Ealph H. Owen 624 Overhill Road, Ardmore, Pa. Social Science Honors e i; II If you happen to see a cheerful and op- timistic looking young fellow with blond hair and glasses walking briskly across the campus, you can be pretty sure it ' s Ralph Owen. Ralph wasn ' t so well known his Freshman year, because he lived in Wool- man House, but the last two years he has spent on the top of C section in Wharton, where he diligently pores over works on Economics. Ralph ' s secret ambition is to be a big business man and see the inscrip- tion Ralph Hilleman Owen on some mag- nificent addition to the Swartbmore cam- pus. Ralph spends his spare time scaring up news for that illustrious journal, the Swartb- more Phoenix. Elizabeth Passmoee 133 West Phil-EUena St., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Fine Arts n B + Betty Passmore, and you think of a blond, blue-eyed, petite person who wears the best looking clothes and dances marvelously. Her eyes have a frank, straightforward look about them, and her smile is as friendly as can be. She has very decided tastes; she never merely likes a thing, she loves it. What is more, she doesn ' t fool herself or anyone else ibout what she thinks. She is candid and outspoken, and when she says a thing, you can be sure she means it. She doesn ' t lack determination and ability to work hard either. If she did she would never have made the varsity hocky team, nor would she have been appointed assistant business manager of the Halcyon. β T ME i H 3 3 HAL C Y O 11 Henky Lloyu Pike Paradise and Prospect Aves., Catonsville, Md. Engineering K 2 And now, gentle reader, we come to Lloyd Prke β just another lacrosse player from down there in Maryland. But this one finds time to engage in many other pastimes having little to do with that noble sport of lacrosse. Lloyd ably lends his talent to the basketball and soccer teams and just to show his ability is president of his class and secretary of the A. A. Mr. Pike, it has been rumored, has added great fervor and enthusiasm to those famous brawls over in F section. With all this we wonder how he maintains his average. Per- haps the inspiration comes from week-ends spent in Oxford. ' L..LL Fraxklin Porter Chester Road, Swarthmore, Pa. English Honors t K ! ' If any one thing makes Parrish rise in feminine joy it ' s watching a jet black Ford roadster swing up to East End with Frank at the wheel. Somebody from that venerable dormitory is in for an exciting, fast-moving afternoon because the Iron Man never does things half-way. On the soccer field he looks like Mussolini in a mob fight; in dra- matics he ' s best playing this steel-will stuff. But Frank is like the rest of us after all β he may be muscle bound and he may have personality double-plus, but when all ' s said and done he ' s just another English Honor student getting culture from sipping tea. THE 1 ' I 3 3 Y n Homer Reese Ridley Park, Pa. Engineering Homer is the second Bucknellian to trans- fer to Swarthmore in as many years. He is a student and a gentleman, however, and not a football player (which of course would have nothing to do with his transfer any- way) . He is an engineer and what marks the boy pulls down ! Thanks to a tender nose Homer is also the masked marvel on the Jay-Vee bas- kedball team; his shooting eye is perfectly sound though, and except for going crooked sometimes the mask never bothers his shots. What ' s more he was a track man at Buck- nell and if this account doesn ' t prove Swarthmore was lucky to get him we give up. Thomas J. Reynolds 137 Bellevue Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. Political Science Z K β Well, anyway he looks like Bill Tilden! Having played J. ' V. tennis for two years now, and intending to start a new drive for the team after the depression is over, Tom is fighting for a varsity berth. Being one of these ambitious men, he went out for the Phoenix and Manuscript, as well as sports, but dropped them in favor of tennis and studies, in both of which he is bound for an enviaJble record. His suc- cess with the fairer half of Swarthmore is too well known to comment upon, and some- time we may be able to tell the kiddies that we knew the man who invented the Rey- nolds drag ' and taught Preston how to roll the ivories. I T I-TE ; 5 3 3 M A L C YON Katherine C. Rowe c o War Department, Washington, D. C. Social Science Honors K A e There ' s a new adjective around Swarth- more: Koshyish. It ' s Koshyish to put a sign on your door inviting everyone to come in and eat your candy; it ' s Koshyish to worry about the unhappy people and to make friends with them so they ' ll feel better; it ' s Koshyish to study very hard with complete concentration and be considered brilliant ; it ' s Koshyish to walk with a jiggly little spring and say good-morning instead of hello. It ' s Koshyish to say something slight- ly insane, quite suddenly and apropos of nothing at all, and to be surprised when people wonder whether it ' s supremely funny or deadly serious. Thomas Satterwhite 290 S. Ashland Ave., Lexington, Ky. Economics Honors K This heah gen ' lemun is the Dark Man from the Souf ' who can expostulate more oily-like language than any man from Lex- ington. Gigantic eight-syllable words come out of him like bilge water from a ship and his sentences fairly roll from one clause to the other. No wonder he won the D. U. Speaking Contest β the judges couldn ' t un- derstand him. Perhaps Tommy talks us into liking him; but anyway we all do, and when he ' s through with this Honors business and he gets his Blue Grass ponies and plantation and wife we ' ll all come down to drink mint julep (or anything you prefer) and enjoy some of that Southern hospitality. I THE 1 3 3 H A L C Y O H Winifred Scales 18 Ward Place, Caldwell, N. J. Chemistry Honors X n You could hardly be expected to know from Winnie ' s appearance β from her fluffy hair, her small inquisitive nose, and the green lights in her eyes that here was the final and absolute proof (if any was need- ed) that girls can make good in Chemistry. For Winnie is quite a different person in Chemistry Lab from the light-hearted Win- nie of normal life. She ' s calm, and analyti- cal, and level-headed, and it never enters her head then to go dashing off to Easton. As she herself once remarked, she hasn ' t decided whether to devote her life to Chem- istry or a Chemist. Betty Scattergood 1 1 5 South High Street, West Chester, Pa English K A e Betty can and does give the most gratify- ingly hilarious receptions to your jokes β and that, of course, starts you on the way to lik- ing her at once. Then you hang around for a while, and take in the fun that ' s usually going on where she is. By the time that you ' ve decided that she lives an altogether charming but frivolous life, you find her deeply involved in a mass of poetry, with a beatific expression on her face. Next you work with her on a committee, and are amazed at what one Betty plus one car can do. And after that you stick by her. I ! T I-TE 113 3 fi A L C Y O li Robert Vebnon Schemes Hillside, N. J. Economics Honors No Swarthmorean will recall the 1931 football season without a vivid recollection of Chunky ' s spectacular line plunging and powerful drive as a half-back. Last fall was his third season of varsity football, and in every game he could be depended upon for the same old grit and fight to make holes in the opponents ' lines. And now it is Captain Schembs who will lead fhe Garnet next season. In the spring, too, Rob makes quick trips between the baseball diamond, where he holds down a tight position behind the bat, and the track meets, where he puts the shot in a manner whidh worries most contenders. Babette Sohillek 5121 Drexel Boulevard, Chicago, 111. English Honors Babs has all the zest, the vitality, and the color of the Modern Age. She has its aversion to sentimentality; she has its pro- fane delight in the irreverent. But her brain is too keen and logical and her imagination too fertile to let her content herself with amusing superficiaHties. She can use her sense of form and rhythm and dexterous showmanship to create sparkling and tune- ful musical comedies; she can use them to satirize them with unerring penetration the bourgeois yearning for Art and Culture, and she can also subordinate them to the solid processes of mature reasoning. But always, and above all, academic or frivo- lous or creative, Babs will be a source of action, of excitement, of absorbing per- sonal drama. THE 1 33 HALCYON Jane Sichee 15 East Sth Street, New York City English When Jimmie came to Swarthmore, she brought part of New York along: its easy- going tolerance and friendliness, its gamin humor, rhe poise and glamor of the city, its staccato zest for life. She belongs in the East 80 ' s, to Fifth Avenue, to the open- ing nights of the big hits. She has the typi- cal New Yorker ' s flair for the latest thing, the enviable assurance of helping to create, not merely to follow a new style. She has the quick reactions and acceptances and the paradoxical nonchalance of the metropolis. Nothing shocks her, nothing upsets her, many things amuse and entertain her. Her personality, her whole existence is perfectly New York. Howard D. Siplek 430 South 4th St., Darby, Penna. Econo}nks A T Sipe is the newest addition to the Swarth- more Athletic Hall of Fame, an imaginary group of men who have been leading mem- bers on three athletic teams. Howard fol- lows in the footsteps of Pop Dellmuth, for both were and are equally at home on the football field, rhe basketball court and the basdball diamond. But Howard, like Pop, is far from pure brute athlete. In fact we are told he has other interests here at college that take just as much of his time as sports. We are also told that he is always to be found in front of a radio at ten o ' clock at night, waiting eagerly for the Guy to come on the air. Then he will get up and glide around the room with an imaginary dancing partner β but we know who it is β do you? 1 T ME J H 3 3 HAL C Y O 11 LoYD Rainey Smith 3431 Cedar Springs, Dallas, Texas Economics 2 K No, suh. Ah cain ' t see why you-all say Ah come from a state where they speak dif- ferent! Built low to the ground for speed, with a tough chassis, and an excellent top of curly brown hair, Smitty is a 1933 model of a Texas-Swarthmore man. His ap- pearance attracts ' em, his line holds ' em and his friendship keeps ' em forever and a few days over. He is the demon manager, being the stage manager of the Little Thea- tre Club, and the Curtain Theatre. He also, when spring rains wet the front campus, chases butterflies with the lacrosse- men. And at other times he lends his wis- dom to the Inter-fraternity Council. Thomas R. Smith 550 Elm Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Economics Honors A T Hy-O Pal, accompanied by a hearty slap on the back, means only one thing β Tommy Smith; and Tommy Smith, you know, is the boy who saw the light and transferred from Haverford. For this rea- son we feel like turning around and hit- ting him even harder and saying Con- grats. But Haverfords intellectual atmos- phere has left its stamp on Tom, for the learned carelessness with which he slouches by the library desk into the Honors book racks is the envy of all the frequenters of this house of learning. Tom lives at home, right off the baseball field, and, like most of the day students, we don ' t see him half enough. THE 1 3 3 H A L C Y O H Grace Snydee River Road R. F. D. No. 2, Harrisburg, Pa. English Honors X n Behind β and not far behind β that very quiet manner and beneath that smooth black hair is our iriend Peep. Under that demure gravity there ' s a very special brand of hu- mor, too, that makes Peep ' s black eyes snap and her friends shout with laughter. Left to herself Peep has two major pas- sions β riding horseback, and listening to the radio. She also has a fondness for writ- ing letters. This all sounds perfectly nor- mal, and you might not suspect that Peep ' s life is the exact reversal of almost every- one else ' s. The fact is, that while most of us escape from college over the weekend, Peep dashes home to Harrisburg as soon as her seminars are over, and, figuratively, if not quite literally, merely weekends at col- lege. ] Iary Lu Spukriee 419 West 118th Street, New York City English n B You ' ve all probably heard Helen Morgan and Kate Smith, but you haven ' t heard any- thing yet if you ' re not onto Mary Lu Spur- rier, the girl whose big brown eyes and rich, husky voice made Oscar famous. Someone else might have almost her talent for Blue Songs, but no-one could roll them out in such a booming voice, with such utter thrill in every part of her. Mary Lu lives just as she sings β with every part of her; one can ' t photograph her sparkle or describe it. She ' s a musical come- dy β the music, the fun, the color, all in one β and she ' s a hit! 1 T I-TE } H 3 3 li A L C Y O M B. Frank Stahl 26 E. Woodland Ave., Sharon Hill, Pa. Chemis ry A T Rotation pool and Ford roadsters seem to be Frank ' s main interest here at college, but the former game, we must admit, has largely disappeared with his growing quiet- ness and reserve. As a freshman and sopho- more Frank was one of the proverbial rat- ters, but this year he has changed much and has become almost dignified β and that ' s where the Ford roadster comes in. It all started last spring when the car first C-ame into use during lacrosse season when Frank could be seen drawing up to the Gym brist- ling with men and equipment. However it has been put to a more serious use this year and Frank may be seen most any weekend waiting for someone at west end. Marie Elizabeth Stammelbach 238 Taylor Ave., Beaver, Pa. French X n Elise has a twinkle in her eyes that just doesn ' t go with lots of studying, yet she is an honors student with a grand record. To see the way her nose turns up so pro- vokingly, you would never suspect that she sat on conduct committee, and even wrote those awful letters giving their decisions. When she is all dressed up for a dance somewhere, you wonder how that self-same girl could wring out bathing suits and get to be swimming manager. Elise is all con- tradictions β ' pleasant, surprising ones β and they make her the best company in the world. THE 1 Β«? 3 3 M A L C Y N Willis J. Stetson 1102 Prospect Ave., Melrose Park, Pa. Economics i: We ' ve about come to the conclusion that Bill is the smoothest athlete in school. Watch that boy in a soccer game β no won- der he won Ail-American recognition two consecutive years and the team captaincy as well. Watch him play basketball or baseball, too, or follow him in golf match β he ' s the coolest, most natural player of the lot. And you should see how he gets along with the books! Out come the specs, a scholarly frown covers the whole of his brow, and the world can see that Mr. Stet- son is ready for work. And all the powers that be can ' t disturb that whole-souled con- centration, not even the hig ' hest heels in that well-known trysting spot, the library. EdWAED E. STEVEiSrS Sea Isle, N. J. Economics A T This is the Ginsburg, originator and popularizer of My Aunt Jenny and the Bryn Mawr serenade. His voice has car- ried him a long way in Swarthmore circles β you can hear it anywhere; incidentally it helps his baseball game, too, and positively saves all Hamburg shows. The Gins looked awfully good in that Haverford-Swarthmore soccer band com- bination last fall; got into a little trouble though, that afternoon β took a pass at one of the Haverford boys and stuck his foot through their bass drum, but otherwise he had a slow time of it. We ' re campaigning to elect him representative to the interna- tional collitch boys union. Yes, girls, he ' ll be back next year. T f E J H 3 3 HAL C YOU Paul Johnston Strayee 417 West 246th St., New York City Ecoiiomrcs i A e Where there ' s a will there ' s a way, and that rule has stood up well under pres- sure for Paul many times in getting him a date at the last moment for a spring dance. Perhaps he likes to keep them in suspense. Paul ' s early ambition was to get into Swarthmore, and up to now, by spending his summers at one or another of New York ' s educational institutions he has re- mained among those here present and ac- counted for. But where he ' s really in his element is out on the baseball diamond carrying water and slinging bats and doing all the work, dirty and otherwise, which is incumbent upon next year ' s baseball manager. Gene Thoenbn Sistersville, W. Va. Political Science And here is a Southern representative to our fair campus. Gene says that Sistersville, though small, is up and coming and he is proud to be its sole male gift to American colleges (the other family of the metropolis being composed of girls). ' Whatever the case, the diminutive figure and beaming countenance of Mr. Thoenen has the esteem of all of his contemporaries at this institu- tion. He is always ready to lend his cheer- ful presence to any new project which is under way β be it athletic or otherwise. And any rebuffs serve only to deepen his grin; and, with tliat quality behind him, we ' ll bet on Gene to come through. TT I-I E 113 3 HALCYON Alla Tomashevsky 2629 Sedgwick Ave., New York City Psychology K K r One hopes this won ' t devolve into just another Halcyon write-up, because Alia de- serves something better than that. She cer- tainly isn ' t just another girl. If she weren ' t so sweet, one might call her exotic; the combination of the two qualities is in- triguing. A slow drawl, with a twinkle in her dark eyes; a perfectly howling imita- tion of a professor w ' hile she keeps a poker face; a brown-study, and then a quick smile β these are Alia. A quick sense of humor, a smooth contral to voice, a rapidfire knowl- edge of Russian β and they call her Peter! Perhaps you think you know what kind of a girl Alia is, but she ' s likely to surprise even her best friends. She ' s an elusive per- son. Maey Tomlixson 114 Yale Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. French ! JI Mary ' s the girl who spends most of her time driving a carload of people all over the place just for the sheer joy of being generous. She ' s big-hearted about every- thing else, too, and she lets everyone take advantage of her. Another characteristic her friends make the most of is her absolute gullibility. She doesn ' t believe any more that the moon is made of green cheese, but there ' re plenty of opportunities left for teasing. Mary ' s a joy in other things, too β ' hockey, for example, or basketball, tennis, or any sport you can mention β including bridge. She ' s the ideal partner, and β according to the way you look at it β the ideal or the worst possible opponent. I T I-f E J 1 3 3 M A L C Y O ri Maby Tupper 293 Park Street, Montclair, New Jersey Zoology K K r When we asked Tommy to tell us about herself, she complained that no-one took her seriously. Perhaps she let her wind- blown grow to try to acquire a new and unaccustomed dignity β but that curly long bob has only succeeded in making Tommy look just a bit more fly-away looking, and also more utterly distracting tjhan ever. Then we asked Tommy what she does with herself, and what she ' s specially in- terested in, but she says Everything takes all her time, and there ' s nothing left for anything in particular. HowAKD Sinclair Titrner 801 Harvard Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Chemistry Honors ! ' K T This, children, is the story of the man they couldn ' t get. Three years have come and gone and still the Swarthmore lassies are worrying over Howard. It all began when he broke into college dramatics his Freshman year; and the situation reached a crisis last fall when he played the lead in Holiday. But Howard, surrounded by test tubes and chemistry formulas, continues his bac ' heior ways. He even thought it would be better this year to forget his F-section bed-dumping days to see if a person can study more at home. And all these dark and scheming designs just because he plans to be a chemical engineer! THE 1 ' J 3 3 HALCYON Dorothy E. Uxderwood 445 North Broad Street, Woodbury, N. J. English A Z We were surprised to find out that Dot was a Junior, And perhaps the Freshmen will be surprised to know that their small red handbooks are in large part due to Dot β she was responsible for the business end. Dot ' s special leanings are social service work, horseback riding and eating β and she always has a supply of good things on hand. It hardly seems worth mentioning these things, though; they not only don ' t come as a surprise; they ' re the inevitable ac- companiments of anyone as philanthropic and as hospitable as Dot. Laweestce C. Vail 30 Norwood Ave., Plainfield, N. J. French e 3 n He ' s tall, he ' s handsome, he ' s broad β both as to his shoulders and his mind. He speaks French like a native American, is majoring in the parley- voo lingo and ex- pects some time to teach the kiddies to say oo-la-la! He likes Camels because they are kept fresh in the Humidor Pack (adv) and has even aibandoned football and baseball in the pursuit of the vile weed. His sport now is tlhe one of kings, as he is manager of golf. Not another thing is required to show his character, except to state that he is one of the all-time candidates for good nature and friendliness. T ME J H 3 3 li A L C Y O M Daniel S. Volkmae 59 Hawthorne St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Engineering K r; As we see two-point Daniel galloping here and there about the campus with a slide rule under his arm and an intent look on that handsome physiognomy of his, he ap- pears to be all business. However, this im- pression is hardly true. Although Dan seems to be holding his own in Hicks Hall, he manages to work in a lot of other things besides books. For instance, that B section ratting is not a prescribed course. The Volkmar, moreover, can certainly handle a lacrosse stick or a basketball with finesse. This same Dan is also quite a guy at dances. Ask anybody w ' ho the boy wear- ing the soulful look is dancing over there in the corner; Ans. β Volkmar. Nina Volkmar 59 Hawthorne Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Political Science X n Question: How does Nina do so much? One minute it is varsity hocky that she is playing, then it ' s basketball, or else she ' s managing the tennis team. When she de- serts athletics, you ' ll find her collecting properties for plays, or acting on conduct committee. How can one person do it all? Ansiver: That is just Nina. She is con- stantly bubbling over with surplus energy, which bubbles into speed on the hockey field or basketball floor, and into hard work and managing ability elsewhere. Even all this doesn ' t suffice to use up all her pep, for she is just as much in demand when work is over. When Nina ' s around, you know it, for if she isn ' t doing, she ' s talking. THE 13 3 M A L C Y n Feanz von Bitter Friedrich-Wilhelmstrasse 66, Schlachtensee, Berlin EcoiioΒ iics You ' ve seen them, haven ' t you, in the Student Prince and various other Teu- tonic dramas? But you don ' t know how friendly and affable they can be until you ' ve met Franz. A good fellow deserving of a Hoch! and a glass of beer even in these Volsteadian days. In spite of the short time that he has been here, he has managed to ensconce himself in the position of vice-president of the Ger- man club, and in view of his knowledge of Germany and her people was chosen to head the German delegation to the Model Disarmament Conference held at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania. We ' ll see and hear more of this man. Edward Walker 101 Robbins Ave., Fox Chase Econonucs A T Ed Walker, who is commonly known as the more dignified member of the famous George School duet of Walker and Ste- vens, first distinguished himself at track, and due to his brilliant running last season he was elected captain for this year. Next to his track work Ed will be remembered for the authoritative way he made the Freshmen toe the line when as class presi- dent he held the doubtful honor of being the chairman of the Sophomore Vigilance Committee. But now Ed has gone from bad to worse for he has turn ed out to be one of the charter members of the so-called Li- brary Club, I ' hat convenes at the Library and disperses in front of the Parrish at ten- fifteen sharp. T f-rr i H 3 3 Ji A L C Y O n Raymond J. Walters, Jr. Swarthmore Eiiglisii e s p And on the whole, my dear Watson, the criminal in this case is one of unerring taste and many variant accomplishments. His record shows him to have had a more than passing interest in the art of the silver screen, to lapse into the vernacular, and to have been an avid follower of literature dealing with crime and mystery. This in itself would probably serve to identify him, but when we add to it a still further de- veloped avocation β the indulgence of a by no means slight journalistic talent, w hich evinces itself in the editing of the Fresh- man handbook, a position on the Halcyon, and leadership on the Phoenix β we may be said to have the personality of Raymond, alias Deke, Walters, at hand. Edward Haviland Walton 115 Ogden Ave., Swarthmore, Penna. Engineer 1 ' 2 K Anyone in D section: WALTON! NED WAAAAALLLTOONNNN! ! Walton (sleepily, off) : What d ' ya want? Anyone in D.: Make a fourth for bridge? Walton (with renewed interest) O. K. Coming; (enter Ned perfectly groomed): Gosh! What a day. I studied ' til three, (voice off stage: Oh, Yeah!) played foot- ball, and just got back from swimming. Where ' II we play? Down at the house? Com ' on you guys ! Where ' s the rest of them? Oh, O. K. We off? Hurry up.β Say, you all got dates for the Table Party Fri- day night? You haven ' t! Well, get ' em quick. We want to make it a good one be- cause I ' m bringing β (exit all four). Cur- tain. I THE 1 H 3 3 HALCYON iΒ«l Joseph Haviland Walton 115 Ogden Ave., Swarthmore, Penna. Aiecha iical Engineer e S n Glasses Medium Height Affable Smile Day Student Always Busy Alu ' ciys B isy ALWAYS BUSY Difficult Major High Marks HIGH MARKS Friendly Witty Smooth Summing up: β JOE WALTON. Weldon Woodeow Welfling 308 Alleghany Ave., Coudersport, Pa. Economics Honors :s K Strangest Interlude Prof. W.: Mr. Welfling, I have decided to admit you to Honors. Waffles: (with his customary big grin) Thank you, Sir! (aside) Well, it ' s about time they started to appreciate me around here β the poor fishes ! β have n ' t i crashed through on the track team, played a mean gaime of basketball and knocked ' em for a row on the frosh tennis team? β didn ' t i die for the dear old manuscript, panic ' em with my trumpet in the band and lasso a scholarship? β i hope to tell ya ' i did! β and i studied now and then too! β well i ' ll be plunged in porridge! (to Prof. W.) Yes, Sir. Thanks again ! Curtain ! T ME i H 3 3 HALCYON Β iF ElCHAKD BrUXXER WiLLIS North Wales, Pa. Ecoi?o)? h-s A T Modesty is usually a good thing but when you have as much of it as Dick it becomes darned annoying. After hours of toil and hardship we finally got him to break down and confess that he broke the Freshman record at track. We assured him that it wouldn ' t be held against him, hoping he ' d tell us more, but to no avail. There were plenty of his old George School friends, though, who were willing to tell every- thing; we only wish we could print it all. But practically nothing we got on him would ever start a scandal. In fact except for indulging in basketball and scout work he seems to be quite all right. Lawrence Wilsox- Strath Haven Inn, Swarthmore, Pa. Economics Now hold it for just a moment, please β Right! Next? And the smiling face be- hind the camera is none other than that of Larry Wilson. Larry must have been born in a dark-room with an Eastman Kodak in his hand, because, as far back as anyone can remember, he ' s been snapping pictures of fair coeds, athletes, and anything else he could find around campus, for the Halcyon. Phoenix and Publicity. Between taking time-exposures he indulged in a little Fresh- man Debating and harmonized with the Glee Club. It has also been reported that he digs divots on the golf course β but, he says, for social reasons only. We see his future as head photograj her for College Humor. THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y H Molly Yard 1812 Chicago Ave., Evanston, III. Social Science Honors K A e Molly pulls her shining black hair back behind her ears, and with the help of smil- ing blue eyes and exquisitely carved Chinese jewelry manages to escape even the slight- est hint of disheveled radicalism. But by temperament she is an authentic agitator. No abuse is too well-established, no pre- cedent too accepted, no majority too over- whelming to silence her. Fortunately her energy is as well-adapted to enthusiasm as to indignation. There is no more heart-warming sight than that of Molly crowing delightedly. Isn ' t it mar- velous! and nobody ' s co-operation is more sincere or effective. KUKT ZiMMER Swarthmore, Pa. We all remember the Kurt who came to college freshman year, a cheerful, carefree, friendly fellow, full of energy and fun. And some of us knew the Kurt who was going to Penn State last fall, who had ap- plied his abundant energy to the business of study, and who was making good in his chosen field, engineering. β We ' ll all remember Kurt, but for some of us, who got to know him best, there is an empty place that cannot be filled, and we can only realize that in his untimely death we have lost a sincere and worth- while friend. ! β T f E - i 13 3 β MALCYOli β Ex-Students OF THE Class of ' 33 Cornelia P. C. Amoss Lawson Gentry Lowrey, Jr. Thomas Melville Baker Harry Frank McHale Barbara Burroughs Batt Benjamin McLain David Lukens Bockius William Merryman William Ingram Boreman Howard Reynolds Ogburn William G. Calvert John Carle Parry, 3rd. Mary Blanche Calvin Frances Darlington Passmore MoTT DwiGHT Cannon Dorothy Hester Pyle Jean Frances Carnine Melville Collins Rawnsley Florence Cocks Walter Hooton Roberts Ruth Alden Coolidge David Rumsey Alice Gertrude Cope Sylvia Louise Rush James Crider Susan Mary Russell William Bryn Curtiss Ann Elizabeth Seltzer James Vernon Downing Warren L. Sharfman Mark Kenyon Dresden Constance E. Smith Gillespie Stevenson Evans Henry Parker Stamford Caroline Miller Farquhak Sylvia Emma Thomas Maradel Lalentine Geuting Hazel E. Thompson William Mott Hicks Virginia Anne Tomlinson Nancy Howard Anne Elizabeth Tomlinson Howard Sampson Hudson Katherine Kerr Vinson Margery Moore Hull Mary Ann Vlachos Edward Lovett Jackson Anna Walling Katharine Turner Johnson Helen Miller Wayland-Smith Guy Duncan Kingsford Barbara Wertheim Ottilie Ruth Knauer Caroline Velma Wetzel Ellen B. Lamb Ralph C. Whitehead John Edinger Linch Elsie Cromwell Williams Joan Marian Loram Kurt Zimmer Marian Zerweck β 1 β SOhiOMbRE T ME J H 3 3 Ji A L C Y O 11 THE 1 Β«? 3 3 M A L G Y O H First Semester President Stokes Clement Vice-President Elizabeth Carver Secretary Grace Biddle Treasurer John Abrams Sophomore Class Officers Second Semester President John Abrams Vice-President DOBUS LiNDEMAN Secretary Mabel Clement Treasurer Davies Preston THE - i 1 3 3 ' liALCYOli The Class of 1934 John Abrams, History, K S 5445 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. Frances Allen, K K T 404 Sth Ave., Riverton, N. J. Margaret Roswitha Anderson, German, A T 905 Castle Point Terrace, Hoboken, N. J. Sarah Denny Antrim, Economics, K K T 5811 Meek Rd., Worthington, Ohio fohn Armstrong, Jr., Political Science, i A 9 316 Morton Ave., Ridley Park, Pa. Margaret Katherine Arnold, English, K K T 1821 Olive Ave., Santa Barbara, Calif. Walter T. Baker, Jr. Engineering, K East Aurora, N. Y. H. Craig Bell, Physiology-Zoology, 6 2 H 114 S. Chester Pike, Glenolden, Pa. Grace Anna Biddle, Social Science, K A 9 25 Laurel Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. David Wakefield Bishop, Physiology-Zoology, !β’ K 736 Harvard Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Elizabeth Ann Blessing, French, K K T Morehead, Ky. Nina Milner, Bowers, History, X 12 55 E. Greenwood Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Ajine Rothermel Bowly, French, M 43 Locust Dr., Summit, N. J. Ida Bowman, English, n B Hastings on Hudson, N. Y. David Brearley, Chemistry 307 Vassar Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. John Sydney Brod, Chemistry, A T 25 W. Fairview Ave., Dayton, Ohio Mary Helene Brown K A 9 336 Derwyn Rd., Lansdowne, Pa. Robert Masters Browning, Engineering, A T 232 W. Johnson St., Geimantown, Pa. Lorraine Gertrude Buckingham, French, M 223 Eighth Ave., New York City Kathleen Burnett 267 Hillside St., Milton, Mass. Alice Reinert, Burton, Physiology-Zoology, A T 18327 Muirland Ave., Detroit, Mich. Robert James Cadigan, Philosophy, K 132 Villa St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Samuel Dean Caldwell, Philosophy, K ' i ' Woodbridge, New Haven, Conn. Elizabeth Sanders Carver, German, K A 9 95 Ferry St., Easthampton, .Mass. Thomas Gridley Casey, English A 9 405 Hai-vard Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Elinor Home Clapp, English 206 Morton Ave., Rutledge, Pa. Stephen Clark, Economics, 2 K Somerset, England John Stokes Clement, Jr., Economics, A T 301 Meetinghouse Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. Mabel Galbreath Clement, Political Science, n B 1 Lincoln University, Pa. Margaret Ommert Cresson, English, A T 32 Amherst Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. William Henry Crouse, Economics, A T 226 E. Winona Ave., Norwood, Pa. Baldwin R. Curtis, i 2 K 1308 E. Ann St., Ann Arbor, Mich. Cedric Bolton Davidheiser, Chemistry Wagner College, Staten Island, N. Y. Abigail Dewing .8 Willard St., Cambridge, Mass. Kathleen Dillon, German 6634 Eastern Ave., Washington, D. C. Robert B. Dixon, Economics, l K Easton, Md. Evelyn Sayre Dotterer, French, X fl 123 Bloomingdale Ave., Wayne, Pa. Edith May Dudgeon, English, M 2932 N. Hackett Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Edwina Rogers Embree, History 900 S. Homan Ave., Chicago, 111. Mary Herron Fairbanks, French Bainbridge, N. Y. Marise Lillian Fairiamb, Mathematics Brandywine Summit, Pa. Florence HiUcox Faucette, French-English 1202 Grayden Ave., Norfolk, Va. Margaret Kirby-Smith Fayerweather Denewood, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Jane Foster, English-History, K A 9 640 Fourth Ave., S. Faribault, Minn. Nancy Wales Foster, Political Science Butterworth Farm, Foster. Ohio Ralph Hartzler Fox, Mathematics 630 Crown St., Morrisville, Pa. Frederic Barron Freeman, English, S K Valley Rd., Melrose Park, Philadelphia, Pa. Howard French, German 231 Walnut St., Greenfield, Ind. Elizabeth Worth Geddes, History, K A 9 21 Greenacres Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. Katherine Elizabeth Grier, Social Science, K K T 315 E. Broadway, Salem, N. J. Hilda Sidney Gruenberg, English 418 Central Park W., New York City William McBrown Hall, Engineering 30 Colonial Ave., Springfield, Mass. Albert Francis Halley, Economics, A 9 828 Columbus St., Raoid City, S. Dak. Ruth N. Hallowell, English, TI B I 300 Summit Ave. ' Jenkintown, Pa. Richard Eastwick Harper, Electrical Engineering, K S R. D. 2, Media, Pa. Katherine Dunning Hibbert, Fine Arts-English, 11 B Wallingford, Pa. Marion Reina Hirst, ! ' M 707 Main St., Riverton, N. J. Lee Elbert Holt, Chemistry R. F. D. 1, Edgemoor, Del. Marian Bellamy, Hubbell 89 Sunset Ave., Verona, N. J. 1 THE- -i 1 3 3 ' MALCYOH Richard Gibson Hubler, Englisli, 1 ' 2 K 1652 Monroe Ave., Scranton, Pa. Bettina Elmira Hunter, English 1019 Tenth Ave., Moore, Pa. Raymond Max Immerwahr, German 3270 Sheridan Rd., Chicago, 111. Jane Wright Jack, Political Science, A Z RowlandviUe, Md. Edwin Paul Jones, Mathematics, ' I ' S 11 6410 N. Camac St., Philadelohia, Pa. Elizabeth Barton Jones, English K K T 18 Holly St., Cranfoid, N. J. Nelson Hibbard Jones, Physiology-Zoology, K S Paoli, Pa. Laura Elizabeth Julian, English, K A 9 3621 Pennsylvania Ave., Kansas City, Mo. John Austin Jump, Fine Arts Easton, Md. James Frederick Kelly, Political Science, K S 201 Burrwood Ave., CoUingswood, N. J. Maynard Thomas Kennedy 1908 Fifth St., Altoona, Pa. Ruth Eleanor Kewley, English H B 1950 Noble Rd., E. Cleveland, Ohio Calvin Trexler Klopp, Physiology-Zoology, 1 2 K 1360 Perkiomen Ave., Reading, Pa. Clara Frances Lang, A V Oden, Mich. Robert Fisher Lewine, English 895 Park Ave., New York City Dorothy Lighrfoot, Political Science i M 370 Berry Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. Doris Elinor Lindeman, Social Science, K K T Greystone, High Bridge, N. J. Katherine Lippincott, English, K A 6 2 Crane Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Ruth Borton Lippincott, English, K A G Moorestown, N. J. Margaret Bertha Loeb, English 7 Radcliffe Ave., St. Louis, Mo. Paul Warttig Lunkenheimer, Political Science 5121 Hazel Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Marian R. McAvoy, Philosophy 455 W. I40th St., New York City Craig Morgan McCabe, Political Science, K S Englishtown, N. J. Arthur Tannyhill McKeag, Economics, J 2 K 401 Lees Ave., CoUingswood, N. J. Janet Duncan McNab, French 139 N. Warren St., Trenton, N. J. Charles Reid McNeill, Physiology-Zoology, K 2 19 W. Walnut Lane, Germantown, Pa. Lloyd Thomas MacGill, Jr., Electrical Engineering, K S 2420 Ken Oak Rd., Baltimore, Md. John Keith Mahon, A 9 141 E. Court St., Ottumwa, Iowa Helen Rogers Mansfield, Chemistry, A T 2067 Park Rd., Washington, D. C. Leonard Frank Markel, Economics, 9 2 n 1411 Fayette St., Conshohocken, Pa. Lorraine Edwards Marshall, English, K A 9 Woodcrest, Yorklyn, Del. Clifford Elges Maser, German 163 Brookside Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Rachel Anne Merrill, A Z 509 Glen Mitchell Rd., Sewickley, Pa. Kathryn Smith Meschter, Economics, X f! 318 Dickinson Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. James MacPherson Miller, Jr., Physiology-Zoology, 4 A 321 E. Scribner Ave,, Dubois, Pa. Mary Ann Miller, English, K A 9 30 Abingdon Rd., Kew Gardens, L, I., N. Y. Gertrude Elizabeth Mitchell, English, i M Hockessin, Del. Helen Annette Mitchell, Economics 1388 Lexington Ave., New York City Lucile Montgomery, Economics, A Z 1424 E. 58th St., Chicago, 111. Ben Tillman Moore, History, K 16 S. Plaza Place, Atlantic City, N. J. Carlton Elliott Moore, Jr., Engineering, ! 2 K Daretown, N. J. Edith Helen Munson, English 150 Gordonhurst Ave., Montclair, N. J. G. William Orr, Chemistry, K 2 331 Franklin Ave., Cheltenham, Pa. Helen Elizabeth Packard, French, A T 10 S. Ridge St., Southern Pines, N. C. Jane Parrott, Mathematics, X H Meetinghouse Rd., Jenkintown, Pa. Janet Logan Parry, French, X U 54l Pelham Rd., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Katharine Neumann Pennypacker, Mathematics 5418 Woodbine Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. James Alfred Perkins, A T W. Sunset Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. Marjorie Kathleen Pickell, English, A F 93 Montclair Ave., Montclair, N. J. Esther Breuninger Pierson, Latin, i M 6416 N. Camac St., Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Frank Cook Pierson, Economics, f ' K -ir 944 Pennsylvania St., Denver, Colo. Helen Margaret Pike, History, M 6333 Woodbine Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Donald L. Plummer, Engineering, A T 5621 Thomas Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. John Harvey Powell, A 9 109 N. College St., Ottumwa, Iowa Hamilton John Prest, Physiology-Zoology, 4 K 144 Walnut St., Jenkintown, Pa. G. Davies Preston, Economics, A T 535 Riverview Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. Alison Howe Price, Chemistry 1628 Pine St., Philadelphia, Pa. Charles Coale Price, III, Chemistry, I 2 K Sunbeam Farm, New Brunswick, N. J. Joseph Moore Price, English New Hope, Pa. Katherine Rea, English, X H 107 E. Market St., York, Pa. Renato Augustus Ricca 208 Church Rd., Elkins Park, Pa. Ellis Branson Ridgway, Jr., Economics, A T 355 W. Main St., Coatesville, Pa. Gilbert Walter Roberts, Political Science, A T Wallingford, Pa. Hilda Robins, English 539 High St., Pottstown, Pa. Elinor Robinson, French, K A 9 909 Nottingham Rd., Wilmington, Del. 1 T I-f E ; 3 3 HAL C Y O Β« Miles Hadley Robinson, A T 411 College Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Robert Seaman Rushmore, Economics, A 6 Roslyn, L. I., N. Y. Mimi Sch.iier, Art 950 Sheridan Rd., Evanston, 111. George Swift Schairer, Engineering 40 Elm Lane, Bronxville, N. Y. Clara Ward Seabun ' , French, n B 420 N. Euclid Ave., Chicago, 111. Elizabeth Meta Seaman, English, K A 8 117 Maple Ave., Monroe, ' N. Y. Elizabeth Frances Shafer, History, A Z 604 Roanoke Ave., Riverhead, N. Y. Grace R. Shelly, English 307 S. Chester Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. William Wilson Simons. Engineering 19 E. Steward Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Harriet Edith Smedley, Political Science, ! M 5231 Webster St., Philadelphia, Pa. Judith Dudley Smith, Chemistry, X P. 1650 Harvard St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Janet Hildegarde Snedden, Economics, K A 9 445 Riverside Dr., New York City Parker Stamford, Physiology-Zoology, A T 224 Cornell Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Charles Henrj Stauffer, Chemistry, 1 2 K 1516 N. Second St., Harrisburg, Pa. Thomas Noel Stern, Political Science Rose Tree Rd., Media, Pa. Louise Reisler Stubbs, English, X Β£2 1240 E. 40th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Virginia Hall Sutton, Classics, A Z 5601 Western Ave., Chevy Chase, D. C. Lucinda Buchanan Thomas, English, K A 6 240 W. Tulpehocken St., Germantown, Pa. Ellen Trua.v, Political Science 300 Egandale Rd., Highland Park, 111. Martha Lea Tufts, English, ' I ' M 63 Ridge Rd., Rutherford, N. J. Helen Louise Van Tuyl, English 241 Congress Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Walter Americo Vela, Economics . ' Guito, Ecuador, S. A. Esther Da% ' is Walker, English, M Chadd ' s Ford Junction, Chester Co., Pa. Jean Monroe Walker, French, A V 500 N. Negley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Mary Lee Watson, Political Science, n B 63 Thatcher Ave., River Forest, 111. Elizabeth Ruth Weaver, K K T 6742 Lawnton Ave., Oak Lane, Philadelphia, Pa. Joan Wells 642 Edmonds Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. Ned Blanchard Williams, Physiology-Zoology, A T 719 Belmont Pk., N. Dayton, Ohio Frederick Everett Willits, English, 9 S n Glen Cove, L. I., N. Y. Margaret Wolman, Economics 2444 Eutaw PL, Baltimore, Md. Raymond John Woodbury, Economics, t A 6 161 Vogel Ave., Ottumwa, Iowa Robert E. Worth, Engineering, 4 ' K β β St. Davids, Pa. Porter Reid Wray, Engineering, t K 540 Walnut Lane, Swarthmore ' , Pa. Robert Augustus Young, Jr., Political Science, K S 345 Highland Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Mary Claire Amthor Martha Lorraine Batt Mary Bryce Brooke Marian Roberta Brown Dorothy Coleman Phebe Cornell Charles Edmund Delp Stanley M. Elliott Thomas W. Elliott Marjorie Jane Epperson Isabella Eustice Harry Clay Evans, III EX-STUDENTS, 1934 William Arnett Hagerman Elizabeth Ames Hall Charles Spiegel Hoffman Dorothy Pauline Humphreys Virginia Hunsicker Gordon E. Hunt Joseph Iredale Richard Hugh McGuigan Agnes Metcalfe Eva Stanton Palmer Janet Logan Parry Sara Lewis Passmore Janet Olive Post Lydia Olivia Roberts Benjamin Alan Russell Grace Schiott Katharine Burrell Sicard Charles Richard Simmons Erik L. Sjostrom David Jones Somers Charles Jones Suplee, III Mary Pauline Tarbox Charles Dunton Watland Edmund Mackenzie Williams Charles William Super Zang smEN β 5 T ME i H 3 3 HAL C Y O n THE- 1 ? 3 3 M A 1- C Y O H Freshman Class Officers President Robert L. Bell Vice-President Elizabeth Reller Secretary Carlyn Ashley Treasurer James Turner I TNE ' i H 3 3 ' liALCYOM The Class of 1935 William Edwin Adams, Engineering Dingman ' s Ferry, Pa. James Reid Alburger 350 Meadow Lane, Menon, Pa. Samuel F. Ashelman, Jr., Physiology-Zoology, K Port Carbon, Pa. Carlyn Mandana Ashley, K A 6125 Seventh Ave., Kenosha, Wis. Elaine Stone Augsbur) ' 304 Barr Ave., Woodmere, N. Y. Kathleen Avent, English, K A 447 Kissel Ave., W. New Brighton, N. Y. Lydia Jeanne Ballard, Social Science, n B 3032 Rodman St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Richard Gleim Barker, Physiology-Zoology, 9 S n 207 Orange Rd., Montclair, N. J. Clarence Deshong Bell, Political Science, t S K 400 W. Summit St., Upland, Pa. Robert Lyon Bell, Engineering, K 3049 Warrington Rd., Shaker Heights, Cleveland, O. Helen Kingsley Bishop 15 W. 73rd St., New York City Lucy Ellis Black. English, n B 403 Park Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Elizabeth Mar) ' Blair, English, U B 237 S. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, lU. Myron Lewis Boardman, 4 2 K 15 State Road, Media, Pa. Harry R. Bomberger Rothsville, Pa. Anna Florence Branson, Mathematics, n B 121 W. Tulpehocken St., Germantown, Pa. Gordon Bromley Bietschneider, English, A 9 6909 Henley St., Germantown, Pa. Lionel Duffell Bright, Engineering, S K 206 Dupont St., Ridley Park, Pa. Frances Burhop, K K V 395 Riverside Drive, New York City Caroline Butler, Latin, K K T 424 N. High St., West Chester, Pa. Samuel Francis Butler, Engineering, S K 302 S. Chester Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. Thomas Richard Butler Newtown Square, Pa. Margaret Bye Basingstoke, Swarthmore, Pa. Elizabeth Webb Chaiiey 2983 Yorkshire Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. Jane Frances Cole, X P. 64 Hollywood Ave., Crestwood, Tuckahoe, N. Y. Ethel Rebecca Coppock Moylan, Pa. Rosemary Cowden, K K P 58 Spirea Drive, Dayton, Ohio Sarah R. CroU, English, X U 264 Mather Ave., Jenkintown, Pa. Arch Mitchell Currie 635 N. Chester Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. George Peddy Cuttino, Political Science, ' ! ' A 9 38 Jackson St., Newnan, Ga. David Edward Davis, Zoology, i S K 721 Elmwood Ave., Wilmette, 111. Marion Young Davis, Economics 1251 E. Main St., Coatesville, Pa. Shirley Davis Geneva, Switzerland. Care of D. A. Davis, 347 Madison Ave., N. Y. Mary Ellen Dobbins, English 104 Garrison Ave., Battle Creek, Mich. Gerr) ' Jane Dudley, English 895 Seventh St., Charleston, 111. Elizabeth Caroline Dunham, K K T Woodlawn, Maryland James Gardiner Engle, Economics, A T Clarksboro, N. J. Galen W. Ewing 633 Penfield Ave., Upper Darby, Pa. Frances Carolyn Fetter, English, n B ! 416 We t Ave., Jenkintown, Pa. James Canfield Fisher, K T Arlington, Vt. Dorothy Highi Fleming, English 61 Tulip St., Summit, N. J. James Miller Funke, Engineering, A T 515 N. Easton Rd., Glenside, Pa. Onnolle Louise Gates, I M Coudersport, Pa. Donald Lockhart Glenn, 1 ' i K HO Chestnut St., Berwick, Pa. Daniel Mace Gowing, Chemistry, A T 1125 Westover Ave., Norfolk, Va. Gerald Gabreal Greene, Zoology 302 Convent St., New York City Charles Herron Fairbanks, Chemistry Bainbridge, N. Y. Marcia Louise Hadzsits, ' i ' M 222 S. 43rd St., Philadelphia, Pa. Caroline Hales, Botany, n B ! ' 724 N. Oak Park Ave., Oak Park, 111. Albert Francis Halley, Economics, A 6 Rapid City, South Dakota Gertrude Millicent Hall, II B ! I6l0 Compton Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. Thalia Jean Hammer, French, A T 9 S. Brighton Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. Margaret Barclay Hardy, English 411 Bedford Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Herbert Beauchamp Harlow, Civil Engineering 319 S. Chester Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. Edson Sheppard Harris, Jr., Mech. Engineering, I K Moylan, Rose Valley, Pa. Edith Armason Harrison, English 1732 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. Georgia Bernice Heathcote, K A 9 104 Springettsbury Ave., York, Pa. Kenneth William Hechler, Economics, 6 2 n Glen Cove Road, Roslyn, N, Y. Theodore Herman, English 237 S. 49th St., Philadelphia, Pa. I THE β’ 1 -i 3 3 ' MALCYOH James William Heward, K w 6146 Columbia Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. H. Kimble Hicks, Engineering, 4 K ir 33 Windemere Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Lydia Evans Highley, K K T 229 N. High St., West Chester, Pa. Martha Jane Hillebrand, A r 218 Twin Oaks Rd., Akron, Ohio James Christian Hill 3607 Seminary Ave., Richmond, Va. Dorothy Lewis Hirst, M 6625 Boyer St., Philadelphia, Pa. Elizabeth Granstan Hodges, English, K A 9 117 Montgomery Ave., Cynwyd, Pa. Florence Eugenie Holt, Psychology, A F 5738 Blackstone Ave., Chicago, 111. William H. D. Hood, Economics, A T Hortter St. and Wissahickon Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Barbara Ivins, History 1245 Madison Ave., New York City Emily Jarratt, Education Pennsgrove, N. J. Betty Jeffries, n B 2861 Broxton Rd., Shaker Heights, Ohio Mary MoiStt Johnson, M 24 E. Sixth St., Emporium, Pa. William Alden Jones, Engineering 608 N. Chester Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. Jane Elizabeth Kellogg, n B 3285 N. Hackett Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. Van Dusen Kennedy, β’I ' K 1211 W. California St., Urbana, 111. Jean Kingsbury, 11 B 3 Fairfield Place, Yonkers, N. Y. Dorothy Alden Koch, English, A T 716 Clinton Place, Evanston, 111. Eugene Fred Koster, Engineering, A T 75 Woodbridge Ave., Metuchen, N. J. Frank August Krutzke, Chemistry Bortondale, Media, Pa. Elizabeth Babette Lane, M 2401 W. 18th St., Wilmington, Del. Dorothy Larison, English, IT B 1103 E. Monroe St., Bloomington, 111. John Wallace Laws, Philosophy, 6 2 H 12 Pierrepont St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Edith May Lent, English 1198 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Robert Beattie Lewis, t A 9 921 Madison Ave., New York City Mary DuBois McCarry, X n 37 W. Preston St., Baltimore, Md. Dino Enea Pstech McCurdy, Zoology, I A 9 4209 Tyson St., Philadelphia, Pa. Matthew DuPont Mason, Jr., Chemistry, I A 6 204 Rutledge Ave., Rutledge, Pa. William James Mercer, Economics, A T 2617 Hirst Terrace, Brookline, Pa. Helen Louise Merry, English, K A 9 3442 Middleton Ave., Cincinnati, O. Emma May Michael, Mathematics, M Windrim Lindley Aves., Philadelphia, Pa. Robery Carl Mitterling, Pre-Medical 5731 Baltimore Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. Alexander Wilson Morton, Chemistry, 9 3 n 117 Linden Ave., Rutledge, Pa. John Gray Moxey, Jr., Engineering, A T 41 W. Phil-Ellena St., Philadelphia, Pa. George August Dudley Muller, A T 333 Kenmore Rd., Brookline, Pa. David Moffat Myers, II, Chemistry, 9 2 n Strickland Rd., Cos Cob, Conn. John Harmon Nixon, Social Science, 9 S IT Brightford Heights, Rochester, N. Y. Charles Howard Nuttle, Jr 58 Western Ave., Morristown, N. J. Betty Bevan Owens, Chemistry 2 Maple Ave., Hyattsville, Md. Frand Claveloux Parker, Jr., Pre-Medical 42 N. Whitehall St., Norristown, Pa. Michael Steele Paulson, Economics 100 Park Ave., Swarthmove, Pa. Ellen Cameron Pearson, Social Science, K A 9 St. Thomas, Virgin Islands Courtland Davis Perkins, Engineering, A T 104 W. Springfield Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. William Frank Persons, Physiology, K 4401 Que St., N. W., Washing ton, D. C. Margaret Felton Peters, English, K A 9 Felton Place, Chester. Pa. Harry Frank Pettit, Political Science, 9 2 11 2904 Centre St., Merchantville, N. J. Julia Ruth Reeve, II B i 4069 Woodland Ave., Western Springs, 111. J. Richard Reid, S K 3515 159th St., Flushing, N. Y. Augusta Elizabeth Reller, IT B I 76 S. I4th St., Richmond, Ind. James Nelson Rice, Economics, K β Louella Aoartments, W.iyne, Pa. Beatrice Alice Rowe, Enghsh, X U 8562 87th S t., Woodhaven, N. Y. Mary Isabel Schorer, English 711 W. South St., Kalamazoo, Mich. David Hutchinson Scull, Chemistry 3101 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. Nancy Stoddard Seely, English Swarthmore Apartments, Swarthmore, Pa. Edith Johnson SerriU, Mathematics, t M Newtown Square, Pa. Mary Sharpies, Physiologj ' -Zoology, ? M 17 Farrar St., Cambridge, Mass. Edward Mark Siegel, Engineering 170 W. 73rd St., New York City Jane Burges Sill, Pre-Medical, K A 9 362 Riverside Drive, New York City Ehzabeth Smedley, English, A V Cornwall, N. Y. Charles Douglas Smith, English, 1 2 K 9014 63rd Ave., Elmhu-st, L. I. Janet Griswold Smith, History, K K T 1923 Orrington Ave., Evanston, 111. Sarah Cook Smith, English, X fi Ill W. Green St., ConnellsviUe, Pa. Watson Snyder, Jr., i A 9 Petoskey, Mich. Doris May Sonneborn, K A 9 5019 Penn St., Philadelphia, Pa. Elizabeth Soule, A V 416 N. Chester Road, Swarthmore, Pa. 1 TME β 113 3 ' liALCYOn Martha Jane Spencer, 1 ' M Glen Riddle, Pa. Thomas Francis Spencer 461 Harper Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. Parker Stamford, Physiology 224 Cornell Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. Marguerite Cannon Tamblyn, K K T 448 Riverside Drive, New York City SueLeggett Thomas, English, K A 6 Sandy Spring, Md. William Charles Thom,is. Political Science, K 2 1319 S. York Ave., Denver, Colo. Ehzabeth Van Anda Thomson, English, n B 202 Gara St., Ottumwa, Iowa Robert Wallace Tunis, Jr Kennett Square, Pa. James Alexander Turner, Jr., Civil Engineering, A T 857 Summit Grove Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Leslie Underbill, History 5 Church Lane, Scarsdale, N. Y. Virginia Mary Venable, English, M 1641 Madison St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Howard Smedley Vernon, Mathematics, K -i ' 128 N. Plymouth Blvd., Los Angeles, Cal. Janet H. Viskniskki, K K T 82 Park St., Montclair, N. J. Kate Fanning Walker, 11 B 1602 S. Detroit Ave., Tulsa, Okla. Katharine Wirt Walker, K K T York and Walker Rds., Govans, Baltimore, Md. Jean Brosius Walton, X U George School, Pa. Sylvia Linville Way, History 63 W. Drexel Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Edward Ronald Weismiller, English, 9 S II Brattleboro, Vt. Cynthia Wentworth, Mathematics, A T 30 Garden Rd., Wellesley, Mass. Clifton Burtis White, Jr., Economics, K 78 Croton Ave., Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Calvin Whiteman, Economics, 9 2 n 3701 Taylor Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. Stuart Wilder, Jr., Mechanical Engineering, S K 15 Storer Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Norman Jesse Wilgus, Economics 4022 Dayton Rd., Drexel Hill, Pa. Martha Ellen Willard, English 1264 Lincoln Rd., Columbus, Ohio Esther Pownall Wilson, History, n B 335 Sycamore Ave., Merion, Pa. Ruthanna Wilson. Social Sciences, K K T Elda Farm, Berwyn, Pa. Elizabeth Woodbridge, K K T 958 Gladstone Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. William Penn Worth, II, Economics, K Claymont, Delaware William King Yarnall, K :i 11 Springfield Ave., Merchantville, N. J. Dudley Etheridge Young, Political Science Vienna, Va. Be, ? ? t i Fraternities THE 1 H 3 3 ' MALCYOH 1 β T I-TE - J H 3 3 β’ H A L C Y O M β S««fl HH PfcVW jJ RT β’i ' l- ' Sf ' v ' rf Wk... M ' H H ' we? i_ E 1 MH iH lfc ' ' .| a , fl Mbl l . H H t fe-.---. ' β ' - vW- -V β ...8 β’β . H ' , 4 ' SB B HEHMP ' HP ' BMi β’ Li β JM .n IK jΒ«i iM H = S v β’β’ ' sJ ' ' i ; ' ' .W)kfcF y ' β --m ' β 1 Davies Satterwhite Smith Ferguson Willis DeLaney GUI 1 Walton Park Rudy Vansant Dudley Brown Baker 1 Interfraternity Council President Monroe Vansant Secretary-Treasurer Winston Dudley Kappa Sigma Louis Walton, ' 32 Oram Davies, ' 33 Phi Kappa Psi Henry Rudy, ' 32 Thomas Satterwhite, 33 Delta Upsilon Thomas C. Park, ' 32 Richard Willis, ' 33 Phi Sigma Kappa H. Davis Baker, ' 32 Lloyd Smith, ' 33 Phi Delia Theta H. Frank Brown, ' 32 Edwin DeLaney, ' 33 Theta Sigma Pi W. Monroe Vansant, Jr., ' 32 Lewis M. Gill, ' 33 Wharton Club Winston Dudley, 32 Bassett Ferguson, ' 33 β β 1 THE i 3 3 HALCYON Moore Spurrier Draper Yard Wood-Smith Slee Walton Reynolds Ogle Salmon Pan-Hellenic Council Kappa Alpha Theta Jean Reynolds, ' 32 Molly Yard, ' 33 Pi Beta Phi Jean Walton, ' 32 Mary Lu Spurrier, ' 33 Kappa Kappa Gamma Margaret Littlewood, ' 32 Constance Draper, ' 33 Delta Gamma Helena Salmon, ' 32 Mary Legate, ' 33 Chi Omega Dorothy Slee, ' 32 Jane Moore, ' 33 Phi Mil Jane Wood-Smith, ' 32 Marjorie Mohan, ' 33 Delta Zeta Helen Smith, ' 32 Helen Flanagan, ' 33 1 β β T ME - ; H 3 3 li A L C Y O M β iii Delta Upsilon SWARTHMORE CHAPTER Founded 1834 Seniors Established 1893 John Axtell Crowl William Wright Eaton Thomas C. Park, J oiiors Robert E. Hadeler Benjamin Ludlow Sylvester S. Garrett, Jr. Stephen MacNeill William F. Lee Charles Frederick Humphries Howard D. Sipler Thomas Smith J. Edward Walker Edward E. Stevens Benjamin F. Stahl, Jr. Richard Brunner Willis Sophomores Willis Coburn Armstrong John Brod Robert M. Browning John Stokes Clement, Jr. Ned B. Williams Freshmen William Henry Crouse James Alfred Perkins Ellis B. Ridgway, Jr. Miles H. Robinson Parker Stamford James G. Engle, Jr. James M. Funke Mace Gowing William H. D. Hood Fred E. Koster William J. Mercer John G. Moxey, Jr. George A. D. Muller Courtland D. Perkins James A. Turner β β THE 1 33 H A L C Y H Muller, Hood, Mercer, Engle, Funke, Moxey, Gowing, Turner, C. Perkins, Robinson J. Perkins, Preston, Browning, Clement, Brod, Williams, Roberts, Rumsey, Price Garrett, Stevens, Sipler, Walker, Lee, Armstrong, Grouse T. Smith, Croul, Park Ludlow, Hadeler, Eaton, Humphries, Doughty I β β THE β’ J H 3 3 ' HALCYOH β A Phi Sigma Kappa PHI CHAPTER Founded 1873 Established 1906 Seniors Henry Davis Baker Howard Weston Johnson David Glunt Frank Frederick Kunca James Russell Jones Robert Donald Moore Harold Fuller Sprague J niiors John Morris C. Betts Louis J. Meunier Wesley E. Case Thomas Jesse Reynolds James Hunter Corbett Loyd Rainey Smith Richard Middleton Fox Edward Haviland Walton Arthur Charles Holman Weldon Woodrow Welfling Sophomores Stephen Clark Calvin T. Klopp Baldwin R. Curtis Arthur T. McKeag F. Barron Freeman Carleton E. Moore, Jr. Richard G. Hubler Charles Coale Price, 3rd Charles Henry Stauffer Freshmen Clarence D. Bell David E. Davis Myron L. Boardman Donald L. Glenn Lionel D. Bright J- Richard Reid Samuel F. Butler Charles D. Smith Stuart Wilder, Jr. β f THE H 3 3 M A L C Y O H Glenn, Reid, C. Smith, S. Butler, Wilder, Boardman McKeag, Price, KIopp, Curtis, Stauffer, E. Moore, C. Bell Coribett, Hubler, Case, Walton, Holman, L. Smith, Freeman, Clark Welfling, Reynolds, Sprague, Glunt, Jones, R. Moore, Kunca, Betts, Meunier m 1 β β TNE β’ J H 3 3 β’ liALCYOM β 4) W Phi Delta Theta PENNSYLVANIA KAPPA CHAPTER Founded 1848 Established 1918 Seniors E. Sidney Baker C. Bertram McCord Kenneth F. Broomell Ray Leshe Potter H. Frank Brown Robert C. Sonneman William R. Davenport J. Thomas Starling Edwin S. Lutton Louis Stockton Walton Thomas Andrew Wilson, Jr. Juniors Edwin Griswold DeLaney William Henry Kain John Burt Foster Edward C. Leber Casper Sharpless Garrett Gustav Charles Meckling Benjamin P. Heritage Paul Johnston Strayer Sophomores John Armstrong, Jr. James Miller Thomas Gridley Casey John L. Powell Albert F. Halley Robert Rushmore John Keith Mahon Raymond J. Woodbury Freshmen Gordon B. Brctschneider Matthew D. Mason, Jr. George P. Cuttino Eno D. P. McCurdy Robert B. Lewis Watson Snyder, Jr. β β THE 1 33 HALCYON Cdsey, Miller, Lewis, Cuttino, Mechling, Powell, Woodbury, Bretschneider McCord, Halley, Rushmore, Strayer, Delaney, Kain, Leber Sonneman, Starling, S. Baker, T. Wilson, Brown, Walton, Potter, Broomell, Lutton, Davenport I β β TME β’ i H 3 3 liALC.YOM β ' Iheta Sigma Pi Founded 1924 Local Fraternity Setjio ' rs John W. Evans John B. Pollock Charles H. Hunt W. Monroe Vansant ]ini!ors W. Wendell Clepper Walter H. Herrmann Frank E. Fischer Ralf H. Owen Morris H. Fussell Lawrence C. Vail Lewis M. Gill Raymond Walters, Jr. Joseph H. Walton Sophomores H. Craig Bell Leonard F. Markel E. Paul Jones Frederick E. Willits Freshtnen Richard G. Barker David M. Meyers Kenneth W. Hechlers John H. Nixon John W. Laws F. Frank Pettit A. Wilbon Morton Edward R. Weismiller Calvin Whiteman β β THE 1 33 M A L C Y H Hechler, Laws, Myers, Whiteman, Nixon Markel, Pettit, Weismiller, WiUits, Barker Walters, Vail, Herrmann, Owen, Gill, Fussell, Fischer Clepper, Vansant, Pollock, Evans, Hunt I 1 T ME J H 3 3 li A L C Y O M Kappa Alpha Theta ALPHA BETA CHAPTER Founded 1870 Established 1891 Seniors Dorothy Keller Hilda Margaret Loram Winifred J. Marvin Priscilla G. Miller Elsie K. Powell, Jr. Kathleen C. Quinn Dorothy Finkenaur Catherine Himes Elizabeth Holmes Grace Biddle Mary Helene Brown Elizabeth Carver Elizabeth Geddes Jane Foster Laura Betty Julian Katherine Lippincott Carlyn M. Ashley Kathleen Avent Georgia Heathcote Elizabeth Hodges Helen L. Merry ]!iniors Edith W. Jackson Sophomores Freshmen Jean Reynolds Edith Smiley Elizabeth S. Stirling Katherine B. Warren Katherine A. Wilson Anna Worth Katherine C. Rowe Elizabeth D. Scattergood Molly Yard Ruth Lippincott Lorraine Marshall Mary Ann Miller Elinor Robinson Elizabeth Seaman Janet Snedden Lucinda Thomas Ellen C. Pearson Margaret F. Peters Jane B. Sill Doris M. Sonneborn Sue L. Thomas THE 1 H 3 3 M A L C Y H Miller, Peters, Marshall, Thomas, Biddle, Lippincott, Julian, Hodges, Sill, Ashley MacKnight, Wilson, Yard, Geddes, Finkenaur, Lippincott, Snedden Quinn, Miller, Powell, Rowe, Warren, Marvin, Keller, Loram, Reynolds, Stirling β β - TME β’ } H 3 3 β’ li A L C Y O H β Pi B ETA Phi PENNSYLVANIA ALPHA CHAPTER | Founded 1867 Established 1892 Seniors Edith Bowman Catherine Rambo Anna Kurtz Frances Reinhold Marion Pierce Mary Tyler Jean Walton Juniors Alice Bechtold Jeanette Marr Ada Clement Loretta Mercer Elizabeth Falconer Anne Mode Frances M. Gaines Ida O ' Neill Nancy Harvey Elizabeth Passmore Aldyth Longshore Mary Lu Spurrier Sophomores Ida Bowman Katherine Hibbert Mabel Clement Ruth Kewley Ruth Hallowell Clara Seabury Mary Lee Watson Freshmen Lydia Ballard Jane Kellogg Lucy Black Jean Kingsbury Elizabeth Blair Dorothy Larrison Anna Branson Julia Reeve Frances Fetter Elizabeth Reller Caroline Hales Elizabeth Thomson Gertrude Hall Kate Walker Betty Jeffries Esther Wilson β β THE 113 3 M A L C Y O n Wilson, Keller, Jeffries, Walker, Reeve Branson, Kingsbury, Fetter, Blair, Thompson, Larrison Hall, Hallowell, I. Bowman, Seabury, Kewley, Hales, Kellogg Clement M., Mercer, Spurrier, Mode, Gaines, Longshore, Eustace, Falconer Clement A., O ' Neill, E. Bowman, Kurtz, Walton, Pierce, Harvey 1 T ME ; ? 3 3 Ji A L C Y O H Kappa Kappa Gamma BETA IOTA CHAPTER Founded 1870 Estaiblished 1893 Seniors Katherine R. Booth Nora R. Booth Marjorie Calvert Anne Chapman Margaret Ball Constance Draper Eugenie L. Harshbarger Juniors Mary C. Tupper Mary Eleanor Fisher Margaret Littlewood Evelyn T. Patterson Katherine E. Thompson Katherine Morris Yvonne G. Muser Alia Tomashevsky Frances Allen Sarah Antrim Margaret Arnold Elizabeth Blessing Sophomores Elizaibeth Weaver Florence Faucette Katherine Grier Elizabeth Jones Doris Lindeman Frances Burhop Caroline Butler Rosemary Cowden Caroline Dunham Lydia Highley Freshmen Janet Smith Marguerite Tamblyn Janet Viskniski Katherine Wirt Walker Ruthanna Wilson Elizabeth Woodbridge 1 THE 13 3 HALCYON Viskniski, Highley, Tamblyn, Dunham, Walker, Woodbridge, Burhop, Wilson Cowden, Smith, Grier, Allen, Arnold, Butler Tomashevsky, Ball, Muser, Harshbarger, Draper, Tupper, Lindeman Fisher, Thompson, Littlewood, N. Booth, Chapman, K, Booth 1 T Mr ; 3 3 H A L C Y O n D ELTA G AMMA ALPHA BETA CHAPTER Founded 1873 Established 1912 Seniors Deirdre May Dann Carolyn W. Jones Dorothy F. Deininger Helena V. Salmon Florence Williams Olive E. Adams Edith M. Baltz Kathleen Patricia Dent Juniors Mary E. Legate Louise Hiller Emily H. Howland Charlotte Kimball Margaret R. Anderson Alice R. Burton Margaret O. Cresson Clara Frances Lang Sophomores Helen R. Mansfield Helen E. Packard Marjorie Kathleen Pickell Jean M. Walker Jean Hammer Martha Jane Hillebrand Florence E. Holt Freshmen Cynthia Wentworth Dorothy A. Koch Elizabeth Smedley Elizabeth P. Soule THE 1 ? 3 3 β’ H A L C Y O H Packard, Wentworth, Hillebrand, Koch, Holt, Pickell Anderson, Baltz, Kimball, Dent, Adams, Lang, Cresson Dann, Jones, Salmon, Williams, Deininger, Hiller β TME - 113 3 β HALCYOH β Chi Omega GAMMA ALPHA CHAPTER Founded 1895 Established 1919 Seniors Henrietta Davis Virginia Melchior Virginia Good Helen Seaman Katherine Herschleb Dorothy Slee Helen West Juniors Jane Ashby Jane Moore Gustina CroU Winifred Scales Janet Graves Grace Snyder Marcia Lamond Elise Stammelbach β Nina Volkmar Sophomores Nina Bowers Jane Parrott Evelyn Dotterer Katherine Rea Katherine Meschter Judith Smith Louise Stubbs Fresh zie l Frances Cole Beatrice Rowe Rebecca Croll Sarah Smith Mary McCarty Jean Walton β β THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y H Rowe, Rhea, Walton, Bowers, Parrott, Ashby Parry, Stubbs, Dotterer, Volkmar Lamond, Stammelbach, Scales, Moore, Graves Davis, Good, Slee, Herschleb, Melchior .β e!sΒ s- 1 β β T nz ' i ?33 β’ HALCYOri β Ic i Phi Mu BETA EPSILON CHAPTER Founded 1852 Established 1919 Seniors Helen Cocklin Mabel Lawrence Eda Pdtton Susan Roth Doris Runge Sarah Sargent Jane Wood-Smith Juniors Jessie Brown Barbara Colona Mary Louise Creager Elizabeth Dickinson Marjorie Mohan Mary Tomlinson Anne Bowly Lorraine Buckingham Edith Dudgeon Marion Hirst Dorothy Lightfoot Sophomores Gertrude Mitchell Esther Pierson Helen Pike Harriet Smedley Martha Tufts Esther Walker Freshmen Onnolee Gates Marcia Hadzits Dorothy Hirst Mary Johnson Elizabeth Lane Emma Michael Edith Serrill Mary Sharpies Martha Spencer Virginia Venable β f THE 13 3 M A L C Y O H D. Hirst, Hadzits, Johnston, Venable, Serrill, Sharpies, Spencer Pike, Smedley, Pierson, Lightfoot, Dudgeon, Tufts, Brown, Walker Gates, Michael, Tomlinson, Lane, Colona, Buckingham, Creager, M. Hirst Dickinson, Sargent, Runge, Wood-Smith, Patton, Cocklin, Roth T I-TE J H 3 3 H A L C Y O 11 f Delta Zeta BETA ETA CHAPTER [β ' ounded 1902 Established 1930 Helen Grumpelt Barbara Crosse Jane Jack Rachel Merrill Seniors Helen Townsend Jniiiois Dorothy Underwood Sophomores Virginia Sutton Helen Smith Helen Flannigan Lucile Montgomery Elizabeth Shafer THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y O M Underwood, Shafer, Sutton, Merrill Crosse, Jack, Montgomery, Flannigan Townsend, Grumpelt, Smith I T N E i H 3 3 li A L C Y O li Scull, Price, Ewing, Adams Von Bitter, Fox, Vela, Bomberger Passmore, Silber, Dudley, Frantz, Ferguson Wharton Club James Doak Winston Dudley Basset t Ferguson Ralph Fox William Hall Lee Holt William Adams James Alburger Harry Bomberger Galen Ewing Active Members Seiiiois Bertram Schaffner Fritz Silber William Taylor J i iois Franklin Miller Sophomores Raymond Immerwahr John Jump Preshmiei! Charles Fairbanks Howard French Gerald Greene James Hill Dudley Young WiLBERT Frantz Richard Passmore Franz Von Bitter Joseph Price George Schairer Thomas Stern William Jones David Scull Edward Siegel Walter Vela THE 113 3 M A L C Y H HONORARY SOCIETIES Phi Beta Kappa Phi Beta Kappa is the national honorary scholastic fraternity whose members are chosen from those students in arts courses who have maintained a high standard of scholarship. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Troyer Anderson (Dartmouth) Frank Aydelotte (Indiana Univ.) L ' l ' DiA Baer (Oberlin) Charles Bagley (Duke Univ.) Brand Blanshard (Univ. of Mich.) Frances B. Blanshard (Smith) Isabelle Bronk Robert C Brooks (Ind. Univ.) Milan W. Garret (Stanford Univ.) Harold Goddard (Amherst) Paul Gemmil (Swarthmore) John Russel Hayes (Swarthmore) Jesse Holmes (Nebraska) William I. Hull (Swarthmore) Raymond Walters (Lehigh) Walter Keighton (Swarthmore) Frederick J. Manning Henrietta J. Meteer (Ind. Univ.) Holbrooke McNeill (Swarthmore) John A. Miller (Indiana Univ.) John Nason (Carleton) Clara P. Newport (Swarthmore) J. Roland Pennock (Swarthmore) Margaret Pitkin (Swarthmore) W. Carson Ryan (Harvard) Lucius Shero (Haverford) Richard Slocum (Swarthmore) Harold E. Snyder (Swarthmore) Alan Valentine (Swarthmore) CLASS OF 1931 Beatrice Beach James Booser Elizabeth Chambers Thomas Chambers Charles Cheng William Cleveland Hyman Diamond Ellen Fernon Allen Howland Elma Hurlock William T. Jones William S. McCune Rogers McVaugh Mildred Maxfield Peter Nehemkis Walter Robinson George Roosen Marianna Webster Merritt Webster Margaret Zabriski 1 T ME } H 3 3 M A L C Y O M Sigma Xi Sigma Xi is an honorary scientific society which endeavors to encourage original scientific research. Undergraduates are eligible for associate membership in their senior year. Eligibility for full membership constitutes the completion of some research work worthy of publication. FRATRES IN FACULTATE George A. Bourdelais Edward H. Cox H. Jermain Creighton Arnold Dresden John G. Farrow Duncan G. Foster Lewis Fussell Milan W. Garrett George A. Hoadley Henry I, Hoot Howard M. Jenkins Winthrop R. Walter B. Keighton, Jr. Michael Kovalenko Scott B. Lilly Ross W. Marriott John A. Miller Samuel C. Palmer John H. Pitman Walter J. Scott Andrew Simpson Charles G. Thatcher John W. Thompson, Jr. Wright ASSOCIATES, CLASS OF 1932 Winston M. Dudley William W. Eaton Price Heusner Edwin S. Lutton Helen L. West Florence Williams Thomas A. Wilson I THE 1 i 3 3 H A L C Y H Sigma Tau Fotmded at the University of Nebraska, February 24, 1904 Sigma Tau is a national honorary engineering society. Majors in that department who have displayed marked ability in scholarship are eligible to membership after their Sophomore year. FACULTY MEMBERS George A. Bourdelais Scott B. Lilly Lewis Fussell, ' 02 John J. Mathews, ' 15 Howard M. Jenkins, ' 20 Andrew Simpson, ' 19 Charles G. Thatcher, ' 12 UNDERGRADUATE MEMBERS Winstone M. Dudley, ' 32 Wilbert P. Frantz, ' 32 Morris L. Hicks, ' 32 J. Russell Jones, ' 32 T fE β’ i H 3 3 ' MALCYOM Pi Delta Epsilon Pi Delta Epsilon is the men ' s national honorary journalistic fraternity. Members are chosen from those who have served on the Phoenix. Halcyon and Mjiniscript staffs. H. Davis Baker Frank F. Kunca James B, Doak Thomas Wilson Clark Kerr W. Monroe Vansant CORANTO Coranto is the national women ' s journalistic fraternity. Women who have shown real ability on student publications are eligible at the end of their Sophomore year. Winifred Marvin, ' 32 Ruth E. Cook, ' 33 Dorothy Og.le, ' 32 Helen Fisher, ' 33 Helena Salmon, ' 32 Babette Schiller, ' 33 Elizabeth Stirling, ' 32 THE 1 ' J 3 3 HALCYON Delta Sigma Rho Delta Sigma Rho is a national honorary forensic society, which chooses its mem- bers from those who have engaged m intercollegiate debating or speaking contests. Clark Kerr, ' 32 Omicron Omega Omicron Omega is the honorary musical fraternity. Men are chosen for interest and performance in musical activities. Edmund Dawes William Wright Eaton Arthur Charles Holman Benjamin Harrison Ludlow, Jr. Charles Bertram McCord Franklin Miller, Jr. Harry Edward Sprogell Edward Ermisch Stevens Wilbur Monroe Vansant, Jr. Thomas Andrew Wilson T ME J H 3 3 H A L C Y O 11 KWINK Bradford Arnold Edwin Delaney Benjamin Greenspan Charles Humphries George Joyce Theodore Lynn William Merryman Edward Stevens Daniel Volkmar I THE- 1 33- MALCYOH GwiMP Olive Adams Edith Baltz Alice Bechtold Ada Clement Barbara Colona GUSTINA Croll Constance Draper Eugene Harshbarger Jane Moore Marcia Lamond Anne Mode Yvonne Muser Elsie Stammelbach Alla Tomashevsky Nina Volkmar I T ME J 3 3 M A L C Y O W Book and Key John Axtell Crowl Morris L. Hicks Clark Kerr Benjamin H. Ludlow Edwin Scott Lutton Henry Rudy W. Monroe Vansant THE 1 Β«? 3 3 M A L C Y O H Mortar Board Nora Booth Mary Fisher Anna Kurtz Winifred Marvin Helen West Florence Williams ! i j f Lai Activities THE 1 3 3 M A L C Y O M I B T HE J 1 3 3 li A L C Y O 11 Ferguson MacNeill Vail Corbett Schembs Stetson Meckling Men ' s Student Government EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE First SeΒ i ester President Russell Jones Secretary-Treasurer Edwin Lutton William Eaton Fred Silber Clark Kerr Robert Lewis John Pollock Second Semester President Willis J. Stetson Secretary-Treasurer Robert Schemes Hunter Corbett Bassett Ferguson Stephen MacNeill Gustav Meckling Lawrence Vail THE 1 H 3 3 HALCYON Lang Longshore Clement Adams Fisher Stirhng Booth Powell Chapman Women ' s Student Government EXECUTIVE BOARD President Nora Booth, ' 32 Vice-President Elizabeth Stirling, ' 32 Secretary-Treasurer Frances Lang, ' 34 Anne Chapman, ' 32 Ada Clement, ' 33 Elsie Powell, ' 32 Aldyth Longshore, ' 33 Mary Fisher, ' 32 Olive Adams, ' 33 Ellen Pearson, ' 3Β°- T I-TE } H 3 3 HAL C YON PUBLICATIONS The Swarthmore Phoenix Af VANSANT THE Phoenix has celebrated two important anniversaries during tlie past year, the sixtieth birthday of SomerviUe .ind its own fiftieth anniversary. In both cases, as well as once m Β« Β°r twice besides, the Phoenix published an enlarged edition. P Β«l V The SomerviUe number contained special alumnae notei and reports of SomerviUe activities and history. The fiftieth an- niversary issue of the Phoenix told of how the paper started after the fire in 1881, what had happened to the college since that time, and what past editors of the Phoenix are doing now. The quantity and quality of alumni notes in these two par- ticular issues are typical of every week ' s Phoenix. It is con- sidered to have one of the finest and newsiest alumni columns of any collegiate paper. When alumni events seemed of special interest, there were individual articles about them elsewhere in the paper. The editors tried during the past year to mold the Phoenix around the ideal of a college paper as both a reflection of campus life and a constructive factor toward a better understanding of alumni and undergraduate problems. An attempt was made to present these fairly and to defend one side of each question. The editorial column was particu- larly active in advocating a little conference of small colleges in the East. Its sugges- tion that Dean Valentine have authority to organize such a league was followed, and the fruition of the plan is not far distant. Other editorials on the ideals of college and intellectual spirit and the social side of college, with special emphasis on the women ' s fraternity question, were frequent. Student opinion was incited and expressed in the editorial columns. The feature department has been especially improved throughout the past yean On Other Campuses was enlarged; the excellent columns of Dramatic Criticism and The Book Chat were added; a music column has been recently introduced. In pursuit of a brand of humor not typically collegiate Campus Comment was published. The policy of having feature articles signed was adopted. In order to improve the con- structive function of the Phoenix series of articles by prominent educators about the opportunities of college life and interviews with prominent graduates about business professions were begun Special efforts were made to increase the circulation of the Phoenix. After eight-page copies announcing a special intro- ductory offer for the last nineteen issues of the year had been mailed to alumni, the subscription list was raised considerably. A large group of enthusiastic freshmen were given a pre- liminary journalistic training. Because of the small number of junior editors, the sophomore candidates were more thoroughly broken in to the work of the Phoenix. ' With the paper in the hands of such a well-trained, capable group of junior editors we feel confindent that it is well started on the second half of a century of progress. KUNCA THE 1 3 3 HALCYON I Doak Walton Ogle Snyder Betts Kunca Kimball Vansant Owen Salmon Sonneman DaCosta Fisher Kerr The Phoenix Staff Editor-in-Chief W. Monroe Vansant, ' 32 Managing Editor Robert C. Sonneman, ' 32 Louis S. Walton, Jr., ' 32 Netvs Editors 1 β . ' Dorothy Ogle, 32 Sports Editor Clark Kerr, ' 32 Literary Editor Helena V. Salmon, ' 32 Staff Photographer Lawrence W. Wilson, ' 33 Alumni Editor Caroline A. Lukens, ' 98 Business Manager Frank F. Kunca, ' 32 Advertising Manager James B. Doak, ' 32 Circulation Manager Mary Fisher, ' 32 Assistant Circulation Manager Charlotte Kimball, ' 33 Exchange Editor Grace Snyder, ' 33 funior Editors Ralf H Owen, ' 33 Raymond Walters, Jr., ' 33 Chairman Phoenix Board Price Heusner, ' 32 T ME i H 3 3 HAL C Y O t1 I β’? Ferguson Betts The 1933 Halcyon OELIEVING that tradition and originality should be equally represented in a Swarth- - β ' more year book, we have employed the Quaker motif (but in a diilerent manner than heretofore) as the keynote of the 1933 Halcyon. Indeed, we hope that both the traditional past and the changing present are represented in this book. It has been our endeavor to include in this volume a number of unusual features which, together with the regular departments, will make the forty-eighth Halcyon more and more valuable as time goes on. Much time and thought has been spent, and enjoyably so, on the art work in this book. Through the sequence of section-divider plates we have tried to depict a lighter side of Quaker life and traditions. Further than this, we must let the Halcyon speak for itself. Especial acknowledgment is due to the advertisers and subscribers who made the book possible this year, and to the sophomore candidates who secured advertisements and subscriptions, to A. Harold Edgell, special service man representing the publishers. The Kutztown Publishing Co., for his untiring assistance in planning and producing the book and to Mr. Peter S. Gurwit for suggestions in connection with the art theme, and to those who have assisted in the photographic work. Schiller Lynn THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y H MacKnight Rowe Wilson Sicher Ferguson Betts Schiller Colona Mohan The Halcyon Staff Editor-in-Chief Bassett Ferguson Business Manager John M. C. Betts Theodore Lynn Associate Editors Babette Schiller William Kain Junior Editors Margaret MacKnight Raymond Walters, Jr Athletic Editors Barbara Colona Katherine Rowe Feature Editors Richard M. Fox Jane Sicher Art Editors Edith Baltz β, , . β ,. (β Olive Adams Lawrence Wilson Photographtc Edttors | Margaret Moore Elizabeth Passmore Circulation Managers Elsie Stammelbach Organization Editor Marjorie Mohan Advertising Manager Catherine Himes ! THE - } H 3 3 β HALCYOn The Manuscript THE Maiiusciipt concluded with its May issue a most successful year. The stu- dent body has ceased to regard its sulbscrip- tions as charity; instead it really looks for- ward to the issues. Alumni interest has in- creased ; and most important of all, it has been felt that the magazine has come to be a real reflection of student thought and a forum for discussion of student problems. Thus it has developed for itself a definite , β place in Swarthmore life. FOSTER During the year four numbers were pub- lished β in November, January, March, and May. For the distinct improvement in general organization credit must be given to Editor-in-Chief John Foster. Other editors of both the Edi- torial and Business staffs, have shown conscientious and earnest effort in their work with the magazine. While there has been no definite change in policy, the material, during this past year, has been of more interest to the student body. The Maniuc ' ript is a magazine endeavoring to express undergraduate opinion, and at t?he same time take somewhat the attitude of the critical obser ' er. Expressive of this aim are articles on such subjects as A Tutorial System for Swarthmore, The Perils of Endowment, American Unemployment, Education of an Undergraduate. No matter to what degree the theory behind each title is sound, they are indicative of topics in which the student has interested himself. For this reason they have become a part of the Manuscript, representing thoughtful consideration and an effort to make the magazine not only representative, but an integral part, of Swarthmore student life. Student opinion has been expressed also in the section devoted to book-reviews. This section of the magazine has been considerably expanded, giving a more satisfactory balance of material. Of the other contents β short stories, sketches, poems, essays β it is impossible to give any but a general idea. From the student contributions the editors have made readable selections. Occasionally there has appeared some- thing truly unusual. The task of pleasing as critical a reading public as an undergraduate college body is difficult in the extreme, and con- sidering the limited supply of material, the Manuscript has this year come through with credit. There is no doubt of its value in develop- ing and demonstrating real talent and ability. Encouragement of such is one of the chief functions of any college magazine, and to the many who need such an opportunity the Maii iscripl provides the necessary medium. For its subscribers in general the Manuscript provides real enjoyment, containing as it does material which they genuinely wish to read. THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y H Clark Snedden Yard Foster Marr Burnett The Manuscript Staff EDITORIAL STAFF EditoY John B. Foster . . r- ,. I F. Barron Freeman Associate hdilovs β (_ Stephen Ci.ark Book Review Editor Fritz Silber, Jr. Art Editor Katherine Lippincott ASSISTANTS Kathleen Burnett Jane Foster Abigail Dewing Hilda Sidney Gruenberg Florence Faucette Richard G. Hubler Margaret Fayerweather Margaret Loeb Molly Yard BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager Ruth Ernestine Cook Circulation Manager Jeanette Marr Assistant Business Manager Janet Snedden TME β’ I H 3 3 ' MALCYOn The Little Theatre Club ' T HE Spring 1931 production of the Little Theatre Club, The Importance of Being J- Earnest. by Oscar Wilde, proved to be very successful as well as remarkable in its innovation. For the first time, a Little Theatre Club production was coached by an un- dergraduate, Elma Hurlock, ' 31, and as a result of the successful experiment the Club will continue in the future to employ undergraduate coaches whenever possible. The Importance of Being Earnest is a clever comedy of manners, unusual in its charming and witty dialogue. The plot, while subservient to the dialogue, is full of humorous situations. Jack Worthing, Robert Cadigan, ' 34, who has come up to London on the pretext of straightening out a non-existing younger brother Ernest, calls upon his friend Algernon Moncrief, Edmund Dawes, ' 32, a young bachelor. Lady Brachnell, Elsie Powell, ' 32, his dowager aunt and her daughter Gwendolyn, Mary Dixon Palmer, ' 31, drop in for tea. Jack posing as Ernest proposes to Gwendolyn who adores his name, while Algernon, as Jack ' s younger brother Ernest, proposes to the charming Cecily Cardew, Dorothy Coleman, ' 34, Jack ' s ward. When the two girls discover they are both engaged to Ernest Worthington a very ridiculous and comical situation results which becomes even more so when Algernon turns out to be the younger brother of Jack whose real name is Earnest. The players carried off their parts with ease and poise. The 1931-32 season was opened with the presentation of Philip Barry ' s three-act comedy Holiday which scored a huge success. The largest audience that has attended a college dramatic production within recent years enjoyed the performance. The play was very excellently coached by Katherine Quinn, ' 32, who has starred in several Little Theatre Club productions. The setting of Holiday is present day New York. The play tells the story of Johnny Case, Howard Turner, ' 33, who is engaged to Julia Seton, Elizabeth Reller, ' 35, a girl of great wealth and social standing. But he refuses to make good in business to please her father, Edward Seton, Raymond Walters, Jr., ' 33, preferring to enjoy life as a holiday and an independent venture in happiness away from money and material standards. Because of this the two separate, but Julia ' s sister, Linda, Georgia Heath- cote, ' 35, realizing that the young man ' s philosophy is right and her family wrong, confesses she is in love with him and runs away to marry him. Additional entertaining characterizations and situations are afforded by Ned Seton, Edmund Dawes, ' 32, Susan and Nick Potter, Hilda Gruenberg, ' 34, William Simons, ' 34, two modernly witty friends of Linda, and Laura and Seton Cram, Babette Schiller, ' 33, William Perloff, ' 33, who represent unenlightened plutocracy at its worst and most amusing degree. Others in the cast were Henry, Richard Hubler, ' 34, Delia the maid, Katherine Avent, ' 35, and Charles, Howard Johnson, ' 32. The play depends a great deal for its success on the mterpretation of the parts and in most cases the players portrayed their parts very well. The Little Theatre Club is inaugurating a new policy in regard to the spring pro- duction. This year the alumni will give a spring performance, and the Commencement Play which before has always been given by the Junior Class will be given by The Little Theatre Club. THE 1 Β«? 3 3 H A L C Y O Ti Joyce Cadigan Dawes Chapman Volkmar Harshbarger Turner Smith Stammelbach Schiller Marvin Quinn Booth Marr Zilch OFFICERS President Howard Turner Secretary Jeannette Marr Business Manager Eugenie Harshbarger 1 TI-fE β’ J H 3 3 JiALCYOM Play Production FOUR student-written one-act plays were produced in Clothier on Friday, May 8, 1931, as the tinal bill of the 1930-31 year ' s trio of presentations of the Curtain Theatre. From these four, selected from a number entered in this seventh annual col- lege contest, the audience chose the winners of three prizes. Eieiisong. a play written in blank verse by Beatrice Beach, ' 31, received first place. Occurring in an Italian monastery cloister garden Ereiisoug had a most etfective setting against the arches at the back of the stage. Fra Benevento, an artist monk, is finishing at evensong time a Madonna with Bice, a little flower girl whom he loves greatly, as his subject. Knowing that the blindness that has come upon him is his punishment for this love, he is praying to see just once more his masterpiece when in a flash of light the prayer is granted. Fra Benevento was understandingly portrayed by Guy Kingsford, ' 33; The Keeper of the Gate was played by George Joyce, ' 33; Bice, by Molly Yard, ' 33; and a monk by H. Davis Baker, ' 32. Evensong was directed by Albert Hood, Jr., ' 31. A fantasy. The Nurseries of Heaven by Mary Dixon Palmer, won second prize. The play tells of Michael, a child angel in the nursery of Heaven for unclaimed chil- dren, and his mother, played by Peggy Loram, ' 32, who in her flaming red ribbons has climbed up the back stairs from Hell to find her son and is allowed to stay because of her great love for him. This play, directed by Kathleen Quinn, ' 32, showed the best coaching of the four presented. The child angels, ' William Ashton, Harriet Whitcomb, Dorothy Shaw, and Leonard Ashton, Jr., and Michael, played by Edward Morris Bas- sett, Jr., did some excellent acting. Others in the cast were Mary Dixon Palmer, ' 31; Helen Gates, ' 32; Daniel Sinclair, ' 31; Catherine Himes, ' 33; James Crider, ' 33; Sylvia Rush, ' 33; Kathr} ' n Sonneborn, ' 31; Katherine Rowe, ' 33; and Frank Porter, ' 33- The third prize was won by Allen Howland, ' 31, for his Elopement De Luxe, a comedy coached by Nox Kehew, ' 31. This story of the elopement planned by the chil- dren of two families estranged from each other was enacted by John Skinner, ' 32, and Louise Fisher, ' 31,. as Mr. and Mrs. Craig; Edmund Dawes, ' 32, their son; Richard Fox, ' 33, and Anna De Armond, ' 32, as Mr. and Mrs. Stafford. Another comedy, a skit about collegiate love at first sight on a Pullman train, was the fourth presentation. Twentieth Century Limited was written by Babette Schiller, ' 33, and coached by Winifred Marvin, ' 32. The cast included Barbara Batt, ' 33, and Richard Leach, ' 33, as the boy and girl; Henry Rudy, ' 32; Edward Stevens, ' 33; and Lloyd Smith, ' 33. The Curtain Theatre staff, Daniel Sinclair, 3rd, ' 31; Lawson Lowrey, ' 33; Lloyd Smith, ' 33; Marjorie Starbard, ' 32; and Helen Brooke, ' 31, worked hard to make this first contest held in Clothier a success. As its first public production of the 1931-32 season the Curtain Theatre presented four one-act plays Friday evening, December 11. They were well above the average of last year ' s productions. The Last Man In. a tragedy by W. B. Maxwell, was especially well acted. Robert Cadigan, ' 34, and Margaret Fayerweather, ' 34, deserve great credit for their work as THE- H 3 3 β’ MALCYOH the long-lost queer son who has committed a ghastly murder and his mother who watches him relive the murder in a dream. Richard Hubler, ' 34, as Mr. Billet, was the best of the minor characters. Others were played by Robert Young, ' 34; Clifford Maser, ' 34; James Douglas, ' 32; John Prest, ' 34; and Robert Lewine, ' 34. Babette Schiller, ' 33, coached Playgoers by A. W. Pinero. This comedy revolves around the futile attempt of a young married couple, played by Thomas Casey, ' 34, and Hilda Gruenberg, ' 34, to develop the intellectual and artistic side of their servants by an occasional trip to the theatre. iVlargaret Loeb, ' 34; Elizabeth Dickinson, ' 33; and Katherine Booth, ' 32, were maids. Marian Hubbell, ' 34; George Joyce, ' 33; and Kath- leen Burnett, ' 34, acted their parts excellently. Stuart Walker ' s Nevertheless, coached by Barron Freeman, ' 34, was a whimsical comedy about the attempt of a brother and sister to understand the meaning of the word nevertheless. Evelyn Dotterer, ' 34, was the girl; Miles Robinson, ' 34, the boy; Paul Lunkenheimer, ' 34, was a burglar; and Hilda Robins, ' 34, was the prologue. Overtones by Alice Gerstenberg presented a technical difficulty because we see not only two women, Harriet played by Sarah Antrim, ' 34, and Margaret, Olive Adams, ' 33, talking over the teacups, but also their real selves, Hattie and Maggie, Lucinda Thomas, ' 34, and Elizabeth Weaver, ' 34, respectively, hovering in the background and goading the women to speak their real thoughts, which are contrary to what they really say. Elizabeth Stirling, ' 32, directed this play. These four plays were well received by an audience which deservedly applauded the play production class that was responsible for this evening ' s good entertainment. As its long play of the year the Curtain Theater gave Lennox Robinson ' s The Whiteheaded Boy Friday, March 18. Like other productions of the class, it was student- coached. Elizabeth Stirling, ' 32, was responsible for the first act; Richard Fox, ' 33, de- serves praise for the second act; Edmund Dawes, ' 32, coached the third act. The play was thoroughly enjoyed by a large audience. An Irish play, The Whiteheaded Boy. affords an opportunity for local color and an interesting picture of a large family which has put all its hopes in its youngest member, Denis, played by Hunter Corbett, ' 33. Mrs. Geoghegan, well portrayed by Kathleen Burnett, ' 34, has always considered her Dinis the cleverest of all her children and continues to do so even after he returns from thrice failing at Trinity, where he has been studying medicine at the expense of his sisters: Kate, Elizabeth Dickinson, ' 33; Jane, Olive Adams, ' 33; and Baby, Margaret Fayerweather, ' 34; and of his brothers Peter, F. Barron Freeman, ' 34; and George, Richard Hubler, ' 34. In spite of Mother Geoghegan ' s protests, the children revolt and decide that Denis must go off to Canada. The intervention of Duffy, George Joyce, ' 33, the father of Delia, Lorraine Marshall, ' 34, who is promised to Denis, on behalf of his daughter prevents the fulfillment of this plan. Duffy himself, who outschemes even the wily Aunt Ellen, played by Mary Ann Miller, ' 34, is frustrated by th e elopement of Denis and Delia. The play ends rather unsatisfactorily just about where it began with Denis still the spoiled pet. Although the first act moved slowly and the dialect presented difficulties throughout the play. The Whiteheaded Boy is one of the best productions yet given by a Swarthmore group. 1 TME β’ J H 3 3 ' liALCYOri Men ' s Debate ' T HE 1931-32 debate season consisted of twelve contests, including the annual Fresh- - - man-Sophomore encounter, which this year was a discussion of whether the policy of the administration is antagonistic to the development of college spirit, a topic which had already aroused general interest. Other features of the season were two radio de- bates, the first with Union College over Station WGY, on the subject of free trade; and the second with Penn over WCAU, on the question of the adherence of the United States to the Monroe Doctrine. The outstanding event of the season, however, took place in the Meeting House on February 21, when Norman Thomas defended Socialism, while Kerr and Sprogell upheld the negative. Although there was no extended tour this year, the team journeyed to Washington to debate with American U., and to Brooklyn to meet Brooklyn College, in addition to the usual visits to colleges in the vicinity of Philadelphia. The team was composed of thirteen men, who debated the following questions: the adoption of a policy of free trade by the nations of the world, capitalism, adherence to the Monroe Doctrine, the entrance of a third party in the coming national election, and, in the special debate mentioned, opposed socialism. This excellent season closed on April fifteenth. TEAM H. Davis Baker, ' 32 Louis S. Walton, ' 32 Thos. B. Satthrwhite, ' 33 James B. Doak, ' 32 Joseph D. Coppock, ' 33 Clifford E. Maser, ' 34 Clark Kerr, ' 32 William H. Kain, ' 33 John H. Powell, ' 34 Harry Sprogell, ' 32 Ralf Owen, ' 33 Davies Preston, ' 34 Samuel F. Ashelman, ' 35 OFFICERS Manager Clark Kerr Assistant Manager William B. Merryman Coach Professor Everett L. Hunt THE SCHEDULE Freshman-Sophomore Debate, November 15 College Spirit Y. M. H. A. at Philadelphia, November 22 Free Trade β ViUanova at Villanova, December 7 Ptee Trade American U. at Washington, December 11 Capitalism Union at Schenectady over Station WGY, December 17 Free Trade Princeton, before Ethical Culture Society of Philadelphia, January 10 Capitalism Penn over Station WCAU, January 15 Monroe Doctrine Woodbury College at Woodbury, February 5 Capitalism Ursinus at Coiiegeville, February 8 Capitalism Norman Thomas vs. Swarthmore, February 21 Socialism Brooklyn College at Brooklyn, March 24 Third Party THE- i 3 3 ' HALCYOn Women ' s Debate ALTHOUGH this year ' s schedule for the women ' s debate team was somewhat shorter than usual, the season was marked by the splendid work and the fine spirit of the members of the team. Each of the five debates on the schedule showed that the team was composed of capable and enthusiastic debaters. The subject of all of the debates this year was some aspect of the question of Socialism versus Capitalism, which is a particularly interesting and pertinent contemporary problem. The Swarthmore women upheld first one system and then the other in their debates. In most cases there were no decisions. The first debate of the season was held on February 27 here ai Swarthmore, when Sally Antrim, Betty Shafer, and Virginia Sutton met a team from George Washington and upheld Capitalism as preferable to Socialism. On March 4 Betty Shafer and Virginia Sutton journeyed to William and Mary where they supported th: affirmative of the question: Resolved that Capitalism as a system of economic organization is unsound in principle. A Swarthmore team composed of Sally Antrim, Elizabeth Shafer, and Dorothy Slee met a team from Oberlin College on March 11, taking the negative of the question: Resolved that some form of Socialism be adopted in the United States. Frances Cole, Armason Harrison, and Virginia Sutton again supported Capitalism against the University of Pittsburgh in a no-decision debate on March 17. The last debate of the season was on April 8 at Ursmus where the Swarthmore team spoke in favor of Capitalism. OFFICERS DoROfHY Slee, ' 32 Elizabeth Shafer, ' 34 Armason Harrison, ' 35 Sarah Antrim, ' 34 Virginia Sutton, ' 34 Frances Cole, ' 35 TEAM ' 32 Manager Dorothy Slee, Assistant Manager Helen Flanagan, ' 33 Coach Professor Everett L. Hunt SCHEDULE February 27 George Washington University at Swarthmore March 4 College of William an d Mary at William and Mary March 11 Oberlin College at Swarthmore March 17 University of Pittsburgh at Swarthmore April 8 Ursinus College at Ursinus TME - ; 33 - MALCYOri Glee Club T AST year, during the absence of Dr. Swan, Ben Ludlow took charge of the Glee - - ' Club. He changed the repertoire rather decidedly, adding such popular numbers as Sweet and Low, John Peel, and several negro spirituals. He attracted a real crowd for tryouts, arranged an interesting series of concerts, and generally supervised a most successful season. All of which explains why the Club has continued under student management this year. Soon after Thanksgiving, Ludlow announced tryouts. There was a general rush in their direction, with the result that the Club ' s personnel could be carefully and effectively selected. The proper ratio of tenors to basses was made and kept, while a number of men were retained to sing at home concerts, though not away. During December and January the chosen ones practiced with gusto and diligence. They perfected, among other numbers, Loch Lomond and Blue Bells of Scotland, both arranged by Ludlow. They mastered several Beethoven selections which proved favorites during the season. The quartet became expert at The Big Brown Bear. And on Sunday evening, February seventh, at the Strath Haven Inn, they presented their first program. This concert was arranged with the management as one of their regular Sunday night musical features. It was well attended by guests at the Inn, and by residents of Swarthmore, and was apparently thoroughly enjoyed by all concerned. On Saturday, February thirteenth, the Glee Club left enmasse for Atlantic City. By arrangement with Josiah White, 4th, ' 29, a member of the staff of th; Marlboro- Blenheim Hotel, they spent the weekend as guests of the hotel, and returned to Swarthmore on Sunday. Saturday evening they gave their second fine performance β this time in the Blenheim Exchange, known for its excellent acoustics. This concert was most satisfactorily received by an audience of over six hundred. And afterwards the Glee Club β again enmasse β relaxed at a dance in the main ballroom of the hotel. On Friday, February nineteenth, the Haverford and Swarthmore Glee Clubs gave a joint concert in Clothier Memorial. The program consisted of selections by each club, the Haverford Instrumental Club, quartets from each college, and Swarthmore soloists. All of these offerings were warmly applauded, and the piano solos particularly well liked. The performance was followed by the annual Glee Club Prom. It was also well attended. By way of attractions there were decorations β modernistic silhouettes over black curtains disguising the walls of the dining rooms ; a floor show during the intermission β several acts including the famous telegram ; and much warm music provided by Meyer Davis ' fifteen piece orchestra. During the season tryouts were conducted for next year ' s Assistant Manager. This position was captured by Calvin Klopp, ' 34. And so, while the controversy rages concerning Swarthmore and its music, we point with pride to the Glee Club, and hope that it will continue to flourish even after its present able director has left us. THE- l ' ?33- MALCYOH Chorus and Orchestra ' β I HE Swarthmore Chorus and Orchestra have in the past years given several concerts and two operas: Vaughan Williams ' opera, Hugh the Drover and N. Rimsky-Korsakoff ' s Sadko, which received the appreciation and favorable criticism of both students and visitors. In the spring of 1931 the Mixed Chorus gave a concert for the guests of the Traymore Hotel at Atlantic City. Since Swarthmore singers had been featured at the Traymore a number of times previous- ly, the concert was regarded as the continuance of a practically annual affair. The program included several unusual selections by the chorus and a number of solos. The Chorus began its career of 1932 with tryouts in September, and the group proved to be considerably larger than the last year. The rehearsals included a number of English madrigals, church an- thems, chorals, and Latin and German songs. Several of the;e were rendered by the Mixed Chorus and Orchestra, at their first concert of the year on October 30, in the Clothier Memorial. Special features of the program were solos by Katherine Warren, Esther Seaman, and Charlotte Kimball, the latter being accompanied by the horns of the orchestra. On the same evening appeared the first of ths Swarthmore Choral Series, which consists of a collection of choral music issued by the Choral Society and dedicated to all singing in Swarthmore College, past and present. The Chorus and Orchestra also gave two programs in Sunday evening vespers in Clothier Memorial. One of these on December 13, was a Christmas program of beautiful old carols, accompanied by Dr. Shero at the organ. Director Alfred J. Swan and the members of the Chorus and Orchestra deserve credit for their achievements in present and former years in enlarging the scope of musical activities in the college. 1 TME β’ 1 H 3 3 MALCYOli The Somerville Forum THE Somen ' ille Literary Society was founded in 1874 as a rival of the men ' s Eudel- phian Literary Society. The group was reorganized in 1922 and the present Somer- ville Forum was founded. Every alumna and woman student of the college is a member of the organization, and thus it has become a binding force which establishes a closer relationship between former and present students. Every spring a day is set apart for the annual meeting of the society, when the entirely feminine luncheon, the white dresses, the daffodils and the afternoon program have become traditions of Somerville. The Sixtieth annual meeting of the society was held in Clothier Memorial, on Saturday morning, April 11, 1931. It was opened by a speech of welcome given by the president, Mary Dixon Palmer ' 31. A special feature of the meeting was the annual award of the Lucretia Mott Fellowship, its recipient last year being Beatrice Beach. Elsie Powell was announced as president for the following year. The afternoon program consisted of an entertainment of music and dramatics given by the society, followed bv tea in Bond Memorial. The first program of 1932 was presented in Clothier Memorial on Thursday, December 3. The entertainment featured Anita Zahn, a pupil of the late Isadore Dun- can, and five Elizabeth Duncan artists, with Raymond Baumond as piano soloist and accompanist. The dances rendered were artistically portrayed, lighting effects and cos- tumes making the performance extremely effective. This year, under the leadership of the president, Elsie Powell, a new system of Thursday afternoon entertainment was introduced, as a means of rounding out social life ' at college and enabling volunteers to serve as members of the program committees. The aim of this system is to supply a cultural need with programs including music, dramatics, and poetry. The second program under the auspices of the Somerville Forum was to have been presented on Thursday evening, February 11, by Amelia and Harriet Mc- Allister. Owing to the illness of one of the players, the performance was cancelled, with the prospect of their appearance at a later date. OFFICERS President Elsie Powell 32 Vice-President Edith Baltz ' 33 Corresponding Secretary Margaret McKnight ' 33 Recording Secretary Nina Bowers ' 34 Treasurer Margaret Arnold ' 34 THE- 13 3 ' HALCYOn The Commencement Play The members of the Class of ' 32 chose to present as their Commencement Play The Piper written by Josephine Preston Peabody. It was given Friday and Saturday evenings, June third and fourth. For the first time the annual play was not given in the out-of-doors amphitheater but in Clothier Memorial. This added greatly to the ease of production. The leading role, that of the Piper, was taken by Kathleen Quinn. The nature of the part made it especially difficult to play but it was done with unusual conviction and finish. The play is the old story of the Pied Piper of Hamlin, and is principally con- cerned with what the Piper did with the children he had led into the country behind the hill. It reveals, as Browning ' s poem does not, that the Piper, seeing the stodgy, soul-less condition of the Hamlin Burgomasters, was resolved that the little children should not grow up to be like them, so he piped them away. The one person in the town who had a soul was Veronica, the mother of lame Jan. It was for her sake that he returned the children. Elsie Powell playing the part of Veronica was outstanding. The role, important in itself, Elsie interpreted with rare delicacy and sincerity. The others in the cast were remarkably well fitted to their parts, and played them in an interesting manner. The crowd of children which is so much a part of the play was made up of youngsters from the borough, who kept the audience constantly amused. The play was coached by John Dolman, Jr., of Swarthmore, who is professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania. No small part of the success of the play was due to his excellent coaching and inspiring spirit. The costumes and scenery were made largely by members of the class. The business end of the production was ably managed by Katherine Booth. The total profits were considerable, and of them two thirds were given to the Class of ' 31. The rest the Class of ' 32 donated to the Little Theater Club to make up a deficit. The audience on both nights was larger than expected, almost filling the auditorium. Composed of parents, under-graduates, and Swarthmoreans, as well as the Class of ' 31 and members of the faculty, it was highly appreciative, and felt well entertained by the play and players. T nz ' J H 3 3 li A L C Y O n Hiller Ball Merrill Cline Salmon Kurtz Marvin Wilson Ashby Schiller Quinn DeArmond Loram Tyler Kewley English Club OFFICERS President Anna DeArmond, ' 32 Secretary-Treasurer Hilda Margaret Loram, ' 32 THE 1 Β«? 3 3 HALCYON Di. ru.siL-i Dr. Cox Stahl Delaney Case Wilson Betts Lutton Mansfield West Ferguson Scales The Chemistry Club THE Chemistry Club is an organization of all the members of the chemistry depart- ment. Its meetings are held once every month for the purpose of bringing eminent chemists before its members. Men famous in both theoretical and industrial fields are invited to speak at these meetings. OFFICERS President Howard Turner Vice-President Bassett Ferguson Secretary Helen West Treasurer John Brod T f-rc i H 3 3 HAL C Y O M The Engineers ' Club THIS organization was founded in 1915 for the purpose of fostering social contact among engineering majors and faculty and for the discussion of technical and in- dustrial matters. Its program this past year has consisted of the annual Open Night, to acquaint arts students and secondary school students with the engineering department and a banquet for the engineering alumni. There was also a meeting sponsored by the student chapter of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, one sponsored by the student chapter of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, and one by the student chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers. The plan of having each meeting sponsored by the student chapter of a national engineering society is new this year. At each meeting, papers are presented either by students or by outside speakers. OFFICERS First Semester: Second Semester: President Davis L. Lewis Howard W. Johnson Vice-President Max B. Miller Max B. Miller Secretary-Treasurer George Schairer Richard E. Harper THE 1 ' J 3 3 M A L C Y H Scott Price Holmes Adams Burton Tupper Williams Smith Perloff Williams McNeill Miller Isfort Trotter Biological Society THIS year has marked a great change in the Trotter Biological Society, due to a new constitution making it an honorary organization. Formerly, it was open to all members of the department. There has been some discussion of making this society a chapter of a national honorary organization, but no such action has been taken. Several meetings have been held this year for the purpose of presenting speakers. Mr. Thompson, instructor in biology, spoke on cancer, as did also Mr. FoSbinder. Dr. Detlev Bronk, formerly head of the department, spoke on the nervous mechanism. Dr. Kurt Koffka, who spoke on The Intelligent Chimpanzee, was presented by the Trotter Biological Society in cooperation with other organizations. OFFICERS President William Perloff Vice-President FLORENCE Williams Secretary Helen Smith Treasurer James Miller 1 T ME J 1 3 3 HAL C Y O M etics THE- 1 3 3 ' HALCYON t SWARTHMORE CoLLEGE AtHLETIC ASSOCIATION Organized November 14, 1877 Mens Sana in corpora sauo ATHLETIC COUNCIL President A. A , John A. Crowl Vice-President A. A Edmund Dawes Secretary-Treasurer A. A Lloyd Pike Graduate Manager Samuel C. Palmer Physical Director {acting) Robert C. Dunn Football Captain Morris L. Hicks Soccer Captain Henry Rudy Basketball Captain James McCracken Baseball Captain Howard Sipler Lacrosse Captain J. Russell Jones Tennis Captain Edwin Lutton Track Captain Edward Walker Football Manager, 1931 E. Sidney Baker Soccer Ma iager, 1931 Thomas C. Park, Jr. Basketball Manager, 1931-32 Clark Kerr Baseball Manager, 1932 Monroe Vansant Lacrosse Manager, 1932 John A. Crowl Tennis Manager, 1932 Thomas Starling Track Manager, 1932 Robert D. Moore Football Manager, 1932 James Crider Soccer Manager, 1932 William B. Merryman Basketball Manager, 1932-33 George T. Joyce Baseball Manager, 1933 Paul Strayer Lacrosse Manager, 1933 Edward Delaney Tennis Manager, 1933 Benjamin Greenspan Track Manager, 1933 Hosmer B. Arnold Head Cheerleader Robert D. Moore Assistant Cheerleader Arthur Holman Assistant Cheerleader Wesley B. Case β β T ME β’ i H 3 3 ' HALCYON β Varsity Letter Men FOOTBALL Morris Hicks, Capt. Robert Browning Edward Leber E. Sidney Baker, Mgr. James Funke Robert Lewis James L. Crider Robert Hadeler James McCracken John Abrams J. Russell Jones Harry Evans H. Bradford Arnold Paul Heritage Howard Sipler Franklin Brown James Kelley James Turner Robert Schembs SOCCER Henry Rudy, Capt. Sylvester Garrett Benjamin Moore Thomas Park, M r. George T. Joyce Frank Pierson William Merryman Clark Kerr Lloyd Pike Dean Caldwell Jonathan Kistler Franklin Porter Steven Clark Bertram McCord James Perkins Frank Fischer James Miller Willis Stetson Louis Walton BASKETBALL James L. McCracken, Capt.WiLus Stetson Howard Sipler Clark Kerr, Mgr. John Abrams James Turner George Joyce John Crowl BASEBALL Carl E. Dellmuth, Cupt. Irwin Burton Daniel Hubbeli. Thomas W. Lapham, Mgr. John Cookenbach James McCracken Monroe Vansant Edmund Dawes Robert Schemes John Abrams Edmund Delp Howard Sipler TENNIS Richard Bond, Capt. William Eaton Edwin Lutton Thomas Starling, jMgr. Thomas Lapham Theodore Lynn Henry C. Rudy TRACK J. Gordon Lippincott, Capt.TnoMAS Casey Franklin Miller Paul Crowl, Mgr. James F. Kelley Edward Walker Robert Moore Edward Leber Richard Willis Clement Biddle Robert Lewis LACROSSE Thomas Keeper, Capi. James Douglas Rogers McVaugh Robert Kintner, Mgr. Joseph Har lan John Parry John Crowl Russell Jones H. Lloyd Pike Arthur Baldwin George Joyce Leon Rushmore Oram Davies Samuel Mahon John Skinner Frank Williams β β 5 fodti all fr I T f E ; 5 3 3 H A L C Y O 11 I Football CAPT, HICKS THE Garnet football season of last fall began with the most promising prospects of recent years, but gradually as each game passed and defeat followed defeat hopes dropped lower and lower so that by the end of the season there remained only disappointment and dismay. The team lost six games and was victorious in only one contest with their opponents scoring 148 points to Swarthmore ' s 46. At the start of school the rigorous practice and scrimmage introduced by George Pfann, the new coach made forecasts optimistic in spite of the lack of veteran material and when the Little Quakers opened the season with a stout showing against the University of Pennsylvania and fol- lowed it with a clean cut victory over Washington College it seemed certain that at last Swarthmore was to have a winning team. Such hopes could not last long, however, in the face of the .lJ trouncing Swarthmore received from that time until the end of the season. The team lost to Penn, Johns Hopkins, Franklin and Marshall, Dickinson, Delaware and Ursinus. The Dickinson game proved to be the only undeserved defeat with three touchdowns on sensational passes for the visitors beating an easily superior Garnet eleven by six points. Particular interest was centered on the work of George Pfann, former All-American Football player and Rhode ' s Scholar. No player will forget those sultry days before the opening of college when Coach had his boys tackling and scrimmaging in full uniform under a blazing September sun. Certainly it can be said that the Garnet squad was no five minute team this year and that the players were in splendid physical condition throughout the season. An exceptionally severe training schedule, however, did not prevent the usual toll of injuries β the team particularly missed the leadership and playing of Captain Hicks who was out most of the games first with a bad knee and later with an injured ankle. The line was further weakened in the last games by the absence of Brad Arnold and Bob Lewis, both of whom suffered internal injuries. In the backfield Jim Kelly had most of the hard luck with a sprained elbow at the first of the year and a head injury in the Ursinus game. Seventeen men received their letters, five Seniors, six Juniors, four Sophomores and two Freshmen. The opening game of the season against Penn came as a heartening surprise to Garnet followers. In contrast to the game of the preceding year the big team from the University had a hard time of it the first three quarters and the Little Quakers led by Jim Funke, flashy Freshman back, kept within one touchdown of tying the score during that time. It was Funke ' s running and passing that accounted for Swarthmore ' s lone touchdown in the third quarter with Bob Schembs kicking the extra point. As the end of the game approached the powerful Penn machine finally broke down the Garnet line and in spite of Swarthmore ' s strong defensive backfield made the final count 32-7. THE- 1 H 3 3 ' MALGYOH The next week Washington College came to the home field and went down before a hard driving, spirited eleven. The first half found the ball most of the time in the visitor ' s territory and three times in the opening quarters Swarthmore pierced the oppon- ent ' s hne for touchdowns, two of them scored by Jim McCracken and the other by Funke. The second half was marked by no scores and proved uneventful except for the splendid offensive and defensive work of Bob Schembs. The game ended with the score 20-0 in favor of Swarthmore. The beginning of the end came with the Garnet ' s first night game played against Johns Hopkins at Baltimore. A perfect pass from Funke to Sipler in the first quarter made chances for winning look bright but it was not long before the Jays started hammering the Swarthmore line and during the second half drove all the way down the field as many as three consecutive times, scoring in total number of points 24 to Swarthmore ' s 7. The most commendable work of the Swarthmore team was turned in by Jim Turner, promising Freshman tackle, and Frank Brown at center, but the rest of the line lacked the snap shown in the Washington game and were unable to prevent Reynolds, Beeler and Kelly from gaining consistently for Hopkins. In the current Big Game of the season Swarthmore found herself definitely outclassed by the strong aggregation from Franklin and Marshall. The trouble all started when Snyder, tackle on the Roses ' team, blocked Funke ' s punt on Swarthmore ' s 18 yard line and in spite of a fighting Garnet defensive paved the way for the Lan- castrians to score in the first quarter with Captain Bill Britton carrying the ball over. From then on the Little Quakers were a beaten team and except for a dazzling 35 yard pass from Funke to Sipler in the second quarter and another long heave from Mc- Cracken to Lewis just before the end of the game, Swarthmore did not even threaten to score. The Blue and White on the other hand refused to give any quarter until the final whisHe blew and with Prinkey ' s 50 yard end run to a touchdown and Britton ' s plunge through center for six more points the Franklin and Marshall piled up 20 points to Swarthmore ' s by the end of the game. The gloom that deepened with each defeat tended to lighten somewhat when Swarthmore made a surprisingly strong showing against Dickinson the following week on Alumni field. Statistics show that the Garnet gained 13 first downs to the visitors 6 only to lose by an 18-12 score. The three Dickinson touchdowns came on a long run from the kick-off, an intercepted pass and a last-second pass over the goal line for the most spectacular finish to any game this year. Swarthmore relied on straight-football and as a result of two long drives down the field Funke and Schembs smashed through to touchdowns in the second and third quarters respectively. The Swarthmore team was a hard-fighting, smooth-working eleven against Dickinson and deserved to win the game in every way. What hopes there were that the Garnet had found its stride were dispelled when the team went to play the strong University of Delaware eleven. For three quarters the Little Quakers, in the face of a 55 yard pass and run for a touchdown from Green to Kemske in the opening moments of play, withstood the Mudhens attack and actually 1 T Mr i 1 3 3 li A L C Y O H Hake, Dellmuth, Abrams, Heward, Curtis, Volkmar, Clement, McCracken, Heritage. Kelly, Young, Baker, Balderston, Snyder, Pfann Price, Mason, Hadeler, Ridgeway, Turner, Worth, Pyle, Daniels Evans, Prest, Funke, Schembs, Hicks, Leber, Browning, Arnold, Brown, Jones outplayed them. But in the last quarter the defensive line finally crumbled and Kemske, White and Crowe all got away for touchdowns, the latter on an intercepted pass. Howard Sipler, at end position for Swarthmore played one of the most brilliant games of his career, blocking passes, covering punts and smearing end runs. Funke and Mc- Cracken also were effective in the backfield along with Bob Schembs at fullback. The last game of the season saw a crippled Swarthmore team face the powerful Ursinus machine on Patterson field at Collegeville. From the very start the issue was never in doubt for Soeder, Troppe and Lodge began plunging through the Garnet line immediately for consistent gains. Before the half ended these three skirted the ends, pierced the defensive and passed accurately for three scores and sewed up the game before the Littl e Quakers knew what it was all about. A rejuvenated Swarthmore eleven returned to the field after half time and with a long pass from Funke to Garrett and runs by Garrett himself threatened the Bears goal line. The Collegeville team tightened, however and checked the rally before a touchdown was made. They then turned about and started a counter-offensive attack that brought the ball to the Garnet ' s 30 yard line. Troppe streaked around right end soon after and ran the remaining yard- age for a touchdown. The game closed with the score 27-0 in favor of Ursinus. THE 1 33 H A L. C Y H Captain Hicks for the first time in his long grid career suffered injuries during the season that kept him out of most of the games. When he was in the hne-up, however, he was the bulwark of the forward line, making many of the tackles and doing his offensive work well. Frank Brown at center turned in one of the best performances of anyone on the team. His steady accurate passing and strong defense work will be sorely missed next year. Bob Hadeler who won his first varsity letter this season is also graduating and another tackle will have to be found to fill his shoes. In his years of play for the Garnet football team Russell Jones reached the high point of his work last fall. Time and again from his position at end he would pile up the opponent ' s inter- ference and often make the tackle himself. Bob Schembs was one of the most consistent, hard-plunging fullbacks ever to play for Swarthmore. He was effective both in backing up the line and running plays and well deserved to be voted Captain-elect. In Howard Sipler the Garnet had a powerful left end for he was not only able to break up the o pponent ' s wide-run plays but also could bring down passes from anywhere. Ed Leber could be named the deadliest tackier on the team; in his position as guard he seemed to be in the midst of every play and more than once stopped a fourth-down plunge from crossing the Swarthmore goal- line. The punting and most of the passing was left to Jim Funke who in his first year at college proved to be a dependable safety man and brilliant open-field runner. Since only four lettermen are leaving this year it seems probable that Swarthmore will have a stronger more experienced team next fall. The shift from one coaching system to another will not have to be made since George Pfann will return again and the team, built around the thirteen returning lettermen, can settle down to work im- mediately. Probably the outstanding development in football at Swarthmore this season was the decision to seek opponents more nearly matching the Garnet team in the future. It has been pointed out for some time that the teams Swarthmore has met recently on the gridiron seldom come from colleges of size and purpose similar to that of the Little Quakers. Each year one or two games are played with large institutions definitely and completely out of Swarthmore ' s class as far as strength is concerned, and the balance of the games are with neighboring institutions, larger or smaller, with which we have little else in common. Looking over the schedule for the last season we fail to find a single natural contest with the exception of the traditional Penn game, played with hopeless odds of she and number against the Swarthmore team. Even the Delaware game has ceased to be regarded as anything more than just another game. This situation is true, to a considerable extent, with most other sports, except for the fact that football is the one sport which we do not play with Haverford. The main line institution is so very like Swarthmore in history, purpose and size that it forms one of the most natural opponents possible. TJ-TE β’ } H 3 3 ' MALCYOIi The graduate manager of athletics, Samuel C. Palmer, and the dean of men, Alan C. Valentine, undertook, in the fall, a trip to several of the smaller New England colleges with the purpose of discussing the entering into athletic relations with these institutions. Such colleges as Amherst, Williams and Union were visited and all received the idea favorably of including Swarthmore and Haverford in the schedule. This will be done to an increasing extent in the next two or three years and the launching of this plan should mark a definite improvement in athletics at Swarthmore. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE Su ' arlh uoie Opponents October 3 University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia 10 Washington College at Swarthmore 17 Johns Hopkins University at Baltimore 24 Franklin and Marshall College at Swarthmore .. 31 Dickinson College at Swarthmore November 7 University of Delaware at Newark 14 Ursinus College at Collegeville Totals 46 148 7 32 20 7 24 20 12 18 27 27 T nz J 1 3 3 M A L C Y O ri Soccer ' T HE 1931 soccer season opened rather dismally for the - - Swarthmore team with two intercollegiate rivals soundly trouncing them in the opening games. But Coach Dunn made some changes in the line-up, the boys went to work and from then on won every game on their schedule except the final con- test with Haverford. Although the squad lost seven of its var- sity players through graduation, jay-vee material filled the gaps and the team was even stronger than last year. Jim Miller and Dean Caldwell, both Sophomores, alternated at the half-back position left vacant by Woodie Bond while Elmer Fischer former jay-vee Imesman, was moved back to right- half played last year by Bill Potts. Frank Pierson, a Sophomore, CAPT. RUDY received Joe Walter ' s old job at left-fullback after the season had gotten underway, and Ben Moore took Hubbell ' s and Stickney ' s post at goalie. Franklin Porter and Bill Stetson completed the backfield, holding to their former posi- tions of center half and right full-back throughout the season. On the line Captain Rudy at center forward had Kistler and Joyce, his fiankmen of last year, at right and left inside; McCord and Clark traded off with Pike and Garrett at outside positions while Jim Perkins played inside half-back and left-fullback at various times during the season. Honors for outstanding defensive work go to Bill Stetson, captain-elect, and to doughty little Franklin Porter, on the forward line. Captain Rudy, high scorer of the team, was easily the most sensational player. The preliminary game of the season found the Garnet facing Merion Cricket Club, September 26. Considering the short period of practice the team looked surprisingly strong, holding their highly-touted opponents to an extra-period, tie score of 1-1. Merion made its goal in the first quarter while Swarthmore ' s came during the final period when Perkins drove a hard shot towards the goal and his teammates pushed it over. Fischer and Porter played a hard game and Moore made many spectacular saves. The trip to Franklin and Marshall the following week proved to be a disappointing opening of the intercollegiate season for the Swarthmore eleven. Instead of repeating the victory of last year over the Blue and White, Swarthmore was outplayed in every division of the game and suffered a 3-2 defeat. Remembering their decisive victory of last year the Garnet players confidently faced their rivals from Rutgers the following weekend. The game turned out to be one of the most amusing and interesting of the season; at least one if not both of the Swarth- more scores were made by Rutgers players. The first came in the opening period when Bill Stetson lifted a foul kick up from the sixty yard line to the oppenent ' s goal-posts; the goalie instead of making the simple catch, muffed the ball and it rolled into the Rutgers net. The second Swarthmore score was made by the opposing right-fullback when he attempted to drive the ball out of his territory but, instead, drove it into his own goal. Rutgers never overcame this lead and except for one ofi ensive drive which I THE 1 5 3 3 H A L C Y O H ' Vs ' H ii Park Joyce Stetson Caldwell Garrett Rudy Moore Pike McCord Porter Clark Dunn Pierson Miller Perkins Kistler Kerr F. Miller resulted in her only score she was on the defensive most of the game. The score ended 2-1 in favor of Swarthmore. The most disappointing showing of the Garnet team for the entire season was made in the next game with the University of Pennsylvania. Both the forward and defensive lines of the Swarthmore eleven proved surprisingly weak and the Pennsylvania players led by Kullman piled up six points to the Garnet ' s nothing. The Swarthmore team found itself in the Princeton game and hit a winning stride at that time which was to continue the balance of the season. By a last minute spurt the Garnet players tied the score and came back with a 2-2 final count. It was a rough, hard-fought game and the issue was in doubt up to the last moment in spite of the fact that Swarthmore definitely outplayed her rivals. Honors for outstanding play go to Captain Rudy who accounted for both goals and to Bill Stetson and Frank Porter in the backfield. But it can be said that the whole team seemed stronger and more spirited in this game, the forward line, particularly, showing more accuracy in its passing. By means of a whirlwind opening attack the Swarthmore eleven defeated their Lehigh rivals the following week by a 1-0 score. At the close of the first quarter Bert McCord placed the ball squarely in front of the opponent ' s goal as a result of a corner kick and Rudy neatly headed it past the goalie. The next game, played at home, showed a powerful Swarthmore machine that ran rough shod over the Gettysburg eleven and scored a 5-0 shut-out victory. Rudy started the fireworks by heading a set-up shot into the enemy ' s goal at the close of the first quar- ter. McCord did the same thing in the following quarter only to be followed by two scores TJ-TE β’ J 1 3 3 ' JiALCYOM off Captain Rudy ' s million-dollar foot. Kistler also counted for a goal with a hard- driven ball from the penalty area that proved too hot for the Gettysburg goalie to handle. Along with this strong offensive attack the Swarthmore defensive was invincible and at no time was their goal-line in real danger. The Garnet hooters continued their winning streak the next week-end by trouncing Lafayette 4-1. While the forward-line ' s passing was less accurate than in the preceding game and the backfield ' s play seemed weaker, still it was a decisive victory for the Swarthmore team. Heinle Rudy tallied the first goal in the opening quarter, only to see the score tied by Ewing, Lafayette ' s inside-left. Rudy came back in the second quarter to add another point while Perkins followed suit a few moments later. The second half found most of the play in Lafayette ' s territory ; the final goal was made for Swarthmore when Harkins, Lafayette fullback, missed a head-shot and the ball went over his own goal-line. The annual game with Haverford was played as the final contest of the season before five-hundred rooters on the Swarthmore field. The two teams came into the game about evenly matched and the long-standing rivalry between the two Quaker schools made this one of the most colorful and exciting sport events of the year. In the pre- ceding week of practice, however. Captain Rudy suffered a pulled tendon and with the scoring ace of the Swarthmore eleven out of the line-up the odds tipped in favor of Haverford. The score ended 2-1 in favor of the visiting team. The opening half was marked by no scoring, the defensive play of both teams proving faultless. The second period however found the ball hovering first around the Swarthmore goal and then Haverford ' s. It was Perkins of Swarthmore who first broke through the opposing back- field on a pass from ' Whitey Joyce but it was not long before Scarboro, the Red and Black ' s inside right, accounted for a Haverford goal. Some minutes later Longaker, the big Main Line center forward, drove a hard shot from center and added another point to his team ' s score. Although the Swarthmore players swept the ball far down into enemy territory many times during the final period they were never able to overtake their rivals. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE Swaythmore Op[ onents September 26 Merion Cricket Club at Ardmore 1 1 October 2 Franklin and Marshall at Lancaster 2 3 October 9 Rutgers University at Swarthmore 2 1 October 17 University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia 6 October 23 Princeton University at Princeton 2 2 October 31 Lehigh University at Bethlehem 1 November 7 Gettysburg College at Swarthmore November 14 Lafayette College at Swarthmore 4 1 November 20 Haverford College at Swarthmore Totals 5 4 1 1 2 18 16 I THE J 1 3 3 M A L C Y O n r Basketball [N A hard schedule of sixteen games, the Garnet court five of 1931-32 came through with the excellent record of eleven Β« victories and five defeats. Never defeated on their home floor, they flashed the best brand of basketball that has appeared about the little Quaker quarters for some time. Two games especially one weekend displayed unbeatable fighting spirit, the first being won by a single point in the last fifteen seconds of play, the next in an overtime period. Captain McCracken scintillated in his guard position, being second in the list of high scorers, and keeping his team playing snappy ball with skilled floor generalship. Abrams, sophomore flash, was high scorer for the season, with 179 points to his credit, including 71 fouls, nearly CAPT. MCCRACKEN seven times as many as his nearest rival ; at the end of the season he had run up a string of 28 straight. A good floor man and an unerring shooter from all angles, he was the bulwark of the team. Sipler, giant forward, was responsible in many cases for the points scored by his teammates. Rarely sho oting himself, he continually passed and maneuvered for an open- ing, until his eye found a hole in the opponents defense where McCracken or Abrams could add two more points. Turner, a new recruit at center, was virtually infallible on getting the tap and shooting on the pivot play. His main fault lay in the fact that he guarded too closely and more than once he was ejected from the game because of per- sonals. Heusner played his usual careful game at guard, effectively breaking up oppon- ent ' s attacks, until forced to give up basketball to do extra chemical work. Stetson, the other guard, was introduced to the fans a little late in the season, but became one of the coolest-headed men on the floor and a superb defense man. Rarely having fouls called on him he was continually breaking up enemy plays, and his work in passing out of danger was always consistent. Crowl, the other letter man, was the source of pep to the five, and considerable work on his account, in spite of the fact that he spent most of his playing time on the floor. Defeating a powerful alumni team, 27-23, the Swarthmore steamroller took its toll of the Pharmacy five, 52-30, then shoved the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy gently aside to the tune of 40-20, Abrams donating fifteen points to the good cause of defeating them. Not even an interval of rest during the Christmas holidays seemed to slow the team, for immediately upon their return, they rang up their third straight, taking Ursinus to the cleaners, 37-33. The game was just as close as it sounds, Swarthmore trailing until the final period, when due mostly to the efforts of Abrams, Swarthmore pulled the fat out of the fire. Stetson took Heusner ' s place in the lineup as guard. The first defeat charged up against Pard Larkin ' s wards was registered at Eas- ton, where the five from Lafayette, by virtue of a flashy first period attack took the game, 39-24. Abrams, as usual, was the high scorer, with McCracken right on his r X H E -i i 3 3 M A L C Y n heels. The Maroon trouncing left the men with a hangover and ill-effects continued until the second half of the next game. Meeting Delaware on the home floor, the Larkinmen allowed the visitors to score almost at will and secure a 23-22 lead shortly after half-time. In the second half, however, the playing pepped up and Swarthmore went on to an easy victory, 51-37. Pennsylvania Military College was met away, and although the weight and height of the kaydets nearly ruined Ihe evening for the punier lads from alma mater, the bad passing of the giants proved too much for them, and the Garnet won, 26-23. The next week Franklin and Marshall paid Swarthmore a short visit and was placed among the Garnet souvenirs with a score of 44-31 rated against them. The Blue and White put up a plucky battle, but we would not be denied our sixth victory. Now jinxes began to haunt the little Quaker trail, and the crossed fingers of Ruff were of no avail, until four straight games had been lost. At Hoboken, the Stevens team took the measure of the Garnet by the close score of 24-23. With a better team than in 1931 and more spirit, the Garnet was favored to defeat the erratic Penn five at the Palestra. But the idea of victory seemed too much for Swarthmore, and that combined with one of the on nights of Pennsylvania contrived the final defeat of the visitors, 22-17. Still visiting, the team gave Washington a fright at Chestertown, by snapping momentarily out of their lethargy and tying the count at 36 all with the final gun. This last minute spurt was only a dying gasp, however, and the Washington five pro- ceeded to take the Garnet scalp by two more field goals. Score: 40-36. Navy finished up the Swarthmore string of losses by giving the team its best trimming of the year at An- napolis, 46-25. Kerr Ridgw.iy Reese Sipler Abrams Crowl Reward McCracken Stetson Prest Larkm Turner ! F T ME i 1 3 3 H A L C Y O M The Red Devils from Carlisle swaggered Swarthmoreward on February 20th but were sent back to Dickinson on the short end of a 43-37 score. Turner found his eye in this encounter to top the list of scorers with eleven points. This victory gave the Swarthmore aggregation the needed spirit, and started them off on another streak of wins that lasted until the end of the season. The next two games were Frank Merriwell thrillers with Jim McCracken and Turner in the star roles. The first of this week- end pair was with Gettysburg and the visiting Bullets fought hard to pull up at the end, leading at 25-24 with about thirty seconds to play. McCracken, after the oppon- ents had gotten the tipoff, dashed into the middle of a group under the rival basket, and from a nearly prone position hurled the ball in the general direction of the basket. After nonchalantly running about the rim, it settled down for two points and the game. Although two foul shots were awarded to Gettysburg after the whistle, both attempts were missed and the game went to Swarthmore, 26-25. The second game was more or less of an uphill fight for the Garnet, and the opponents, St. Joseph ' s of high bas- ketball fame were leading by two points in the final minutes. Turner blinked at the basket from the middle of the floor and shot, tying the score. After that, in spite of the efforts of the wizened star forward of St. Joe ' s, the Garnet went on to win 37-33- The same score sent Lehigh back to Bethlehem, a sadder, but hardly wiser team. The home five piled up their points during the first half, and although threatened slightly in the second period were never seriously in danger. As an anti-climax to the season ' s hard games, Swarthmore spanked a Haverford five to the tune of 46-27, virtually the same score as the Swarthmore defeat at the hands of Navy. Haverford was at no time an opponent, except in the agile imaginations of the Main Liners, and had Pard so wished he could have run up an overwhelmmg score. But decisive victory was enough, the reserves went in, and everyone went home happy except the Red and Black. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE Swaiihrnove Opponents December l6 β Pharmacy Home 52 30 December 18 β Osteopathy Home 40 20 8 β Ursinus Home 37 33 9 β Lafayette Easton 24 39 15 β Delaware Home 51 37 16 β Pennsylvania M. C Chester 26 23 19_Franklin Marshall Home 44 31 6 β Stevens Hoboken 23 24 13 β Pennsylvania Philadelphia 17 22 16 β ' Washington Chestertown 36 40 17 β Navy Annapolis 25 46 20 β Dickinson Home 43 37 26 β Gettysburg Home 26 25 27 β St. Joseph ' s Home 37 33 2 β Lehigh Home 37 33 5 β Haverford Haverford 46 27 January January January January January February February February February February February February March March T ME ; 3 3 M A L C Y O li CAPT. KEEPER Lacrosse A FTER winning but five tilts in two years, the lacrosse team - of 1931 finally broke the jinx of ill-luck, and won not only six of the ten games played, but emerged with the trophy of the middle Atlantic States Association, having won all its games played in that kague. This double feat was accomplished in face of the fact that the schedule of ' 31 was even heavier than in former years, and that a new coach, Avery Blake, had taken charge of the team. Swarthmore opened the season at home playing the Penn A. C, and winning in the last half. The next two games were lost in rapid succession, the first to Mount Washington and the second to Johns Hopkins, considered one of the best teams in the country. After that the Little Quakers found their scoring punch for a time and submerged Lehigh, losing the next, however to the strong Penn team. Going abroad, Swarthmore then blasted Lafayette and Stevens out of the way in the next two jousts, but bowed to a stubborn Army team. Two victories climaxed the season, both Washington and New York University being beaten, the last game deciding the championship of the M. A. S. A. The season began earlier than usual, the red-ribbed boys meeting Penn A. C. on the 25th of March. The Pennacs sank their counter in the middle of the first half, and kept this lead until the middle of the second, when Joyce slapped two past the goalie, followed by two more from Pike and McVaugh. The game ended, 4-1, in favor of the Garnet. On the 28th, the Garnet team visited Mt. Washington and immediately reverted to ' 29 form, losing a listless game to the Baltimoreans by the score of 2-9. Following this disaster, they revisited Baltimore again and gave the gloomy prophets something to shake their heads over, being white washed to the tune of 11-0. After the Waterloo on the 11th of April, the team put in a hard week practising, and on the 18th entertained the Brown and White of Lehigh at Swarthmore. Mindful that they had only scored two points against their opponents ' twenty during the last two games, they promptly put the kibosh on the upstate visitors, led in the attack by Lloyd Pike. This package of fight was a whole team in himself, scoring five goals, while Harlan and Mc ' Vaugh made two more. During the Swarthmore breathing spaces, Le- high scored two but no one begrudged them the pleasure. The game ended with the score 7-2. The next week the Garnet twelve tripped over the University of Pennsylvania losing by a score of 3-1. A rough game, made more than usually so by the tactics of the Pennsylvania men, it resulted in injuring Pike temporarily, who had previously scored the only goal. The Penn scores were made near the end of the game, two by Reiser. THE 113 3 HALCYON On May second, Swarthmore journeyed to Easton and met the lacrossmen of Lafayette. The Blakesmen scored three goals in the first half and put in five more for good measure in the second. Pike again was a thorn in the side of the Maroon, sneaking four shots past the opposing goalie to garner high scoring honors. Driggs also scored two for Lafayette. Eight to two was the final total. Four days later Stevens was defeated, 8-3. This encounter was a runaway, four goals being scored in the first five minutes. Encouraged by this. Coach Blake made several substitutions which kept up the good work, Joyce attending to the heavy scoring honors for the Little Quaker twelve. On May ninth, the team went to West Point, and there were halted in their streak by a crack Army team that played hard and fast for what was proba;bly one of the best games of the season. For all but ten minutes of the first half, there was no scoring, Swarthmore finally cracking to let a score past goalie Davies. Three more tallies went into the Swarthmore net before the game ended making the final tally 4-1. Davies made several brilliant stops and was instrumental in holding down the scoring. Washington College then played us at home and went back on the short end of a three-two score. The game itself was somewhat spiritless due to the warm weather, and Swarthmore picked up her lead in the first period, with Harlan garnering two and Pike one. After this all the scoring was done by the Washington team as well as the balance of the good playing. The Garnet defense here proved its worth and Captain Keefer and Mahon kept the opposing line from making any more than two scores. McFeely (coach) Joyce Davies Pike Parry Jones Sonneman Baker Blake Douglas Harlan Williams Skinner Keefer McVaugh McCord Crowl Kintner ! T fE β’ 113 3 ' HALCYON In the last contest of the season, played away against New York University, the Blakemen displayed the best brand of lacrosse seen in the 1931 season. Both teams were undefeated in the league and both were playing their last game of the season. Swarthmore started in early, and controlled the play for the first half, when near the end Pike and Crowl each scored a goal to put the Garnet in the lead. Both were long accurate shots. The score of the Violet came in the last fifty seconds of play, when Manin drove one past Davies for the only score of his team. The game ended, 2-1, giving Swarthmore the trophy of the league. Pike and Davies undoubtedly controlled the starring honors between them, the former being high scorer with fifteen goals and the latter a goalie who saved several games with his adept guarding. Of the lettermen of last year, seven out of the fifteen have graduated, leaving a nucleous of about seven men for Coach Blake to build a team from. Keefer, Harlan, Baldwin, Mahon, McVaugh, Parry, Rushmore and Skinner will all be missed from the ranks, but Captain Jones and Coach Blake have a good jay- vee team and the remnants of an excellent varsity to build upon for 1932. Much of the credit must go to Coach Avery Blake for his untiring work in the sport and his unerring coaching. A winning team was carried out of somewhat doubtful material, and he may well be congratulated upon the results. Swarthmore scored 35 points against their opponents 38, even with the top-heavy scores of Johns Hopkins and Mount Washington included. The defense and offense were equally well co-ordinated, with Keefer bearing the brunt on the defense. The prospects for next year ' s team are quite good. With Captain Russell Jones, Jack Crowl, Oram Davies, James Douglass, George Joyce, and Lloyd Pike back, to- gether with material from the ' McFeelyites such as Curtis, Price, Sonneman, McCord, Baker and Sprague, the team should have a successful season in every particular. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE Swarthmore Opponents March 25 β Penn A. C. at Swarthmore 4 1 March 28 β Mount Washington at Baltimore 2 9 April 11 β Johns Hopkins at Baltimore 11 April 18 β Lehigh at Swarthmore 7 2 April 23 β Pennsylvania at Swarthmore 1 3 May 2 β Lafayette at Easton 8 2 May 6 β Stevens at Swarthmore 8 3 May 9 β Army at West Point 4 May 16 β Washington at Swarthmore 3 2 May 23β N. Y. U. at New York 2 1 Totals 35 38 1 THE β’ J H 3 3 ' liALCYOM Baseball TN ACTUAL results, the 1931 baseball team broke a little better β ' - than even, with five wins, one tie, and four reverses. Never- theless, the season was disappointing to Swarthmoreans looking for great things from this team. With the excellent pitching staff headed by Johnny Cookenbach and Reds Burton, an experienced and reliable infield would have meant a championship year. Finally overco ming a four-run lead spotted to Penn A. C. in the first two innings of the opening practice game, Swarth- more sluggers rapped out a total of eight hits to tie the score at 8-8. Pennacs were allowed only four hits, but with nine walks and poor support from the field, they made the most of their opportunities. Sipler led the attack by driving in three runs with a timely single and a long clout over the centerfield bank for a home run, while Captain Dellmuth came through with two hits, CAPT. DELLMUTH , , . , , β , , one bemg another prospective home run, which, however, got tangled up in a tree and rebounded to become a triple. Burton and Cookenbach shared the game equally, in the order named. Swinging into their regular schedule, the Garnet nine met next Lafayette and Lehigh on Friday and Saturday, April 17 and 18, respectively. Swarthmore broke even, taking Lehigh 12-3, but losing to Lafayette 13-12 in a set-to that was considered an outstanding comedy of errors. In the Lafayette game the pitching was good, hitting was heavy, but consistent support in the infield was lacking, with fatal results. The Garnet field strength- ened and held in the Saturday game, McCracken and Hubbell especially, in the outfield, turning extra base hits into put-outs, and turning the Quaker nine into a smoothly fuctioning machine. Relying on Cookenbach ' s arm for a full nine innings, and giving Penn a harder battle than at any other time in recent years, Swarthmore nevertheless came out on the short end of a 9-5 score. Starting things off, Dawes walked,. Abrams was safe on an error, Schembs singled, Sipler doubled, and Dellmuth hit safely for a total of three runs in the opening half of the first inning. A questionable decision on a double play retired the side and Penn was able to utilize four hits in scoring four runs in the second half of the inning. The score stood at 4-3 until the last of the sixth, when Martens, Penn initial baseman, poled out a clean circuit clout, Graupner scoring ahead of him. One other run in this inning and two in the following completed the Philadelphians ' scoring with a total of nine. At the start of the eighth, Delp, Cookenbach, Schembs, and Sipler hit safely, but when totalled up, it equalled only two runs. Thus the game ended with Swarthmore having eight hits and five runs; Pennsylvania, nine and nine. The Delaware game was cancelled on account of rain and Swarthmore returned from an encounter with the Army at West Point on the short end of a 12-8 score. Though Swarthmore hit profusely, with telling effect, the cadets were meanwhile taking seventeen hits from Burton during his seven inning stay on the mound, and though most of this number were infield bingles, many found their way into the final score. THE 13 3 HALCYON ;, V ' - %l Stevens Wray Cadigan Abrams Schembs Dawes Hubbell Cookenbach Dellmuth Dunn (Coach) McCracken Burton Sipler Back on the home field for a stand against Gettysburg on May 2, Swarthmore par- ticipated in the best ball game of the year, but Haas, Gettysburg twirler, proved to be an enigma which the Garnet could not solve. His record was seven scattered hits, eleven strike-outs, and no free passes. Of the seven hits, four were made by Sipler in as many times at bat. Cookenbach pitched an equally tight game, allowing only nine hits. After Swarthmore tied the score at 1-1 in the fifth inning, Gettysburg was able to obtain three more runs and the game, on a 4-1 basis. Next came a two-game series with Haverford, on the 9th and 15th of May. The first, played on Alumni Field, proved easy, the score being 10-4 in Swarthmore ' s favor. The second, played at Haverford, was even more one-sided, the Garnet margin of vic- tory being this time 14-3. In the first game Swarthmore pounded Tripp, Haverford pitcher, for a total of fourteen hits, five of which came in the first inning. Cookenbach allowed but six hits, well scattered, in the nine innings. In the second game Cookenbach teased the main liners with nine hits, so scattered that they accounted for only three runs, while virtually the entire Garnet team was going around the bases to bring the Swarthmore total up to fourteen. The first five innings of the Stevens game, played in Hoboken on the following day, presented an excellent pitching duel between Burton and Braden. In the sixth, however, the Garnet defense cracked, and, with the aid of errors, enough runs came across the plate to make the score 9-1 in Stevens ' favor. Allowing Ursinus only three hits, Cookenbach finished the season and his diamond career at Swarthmore in a blaze of glory, so to speak. Converting the eleven hits allowed ,t :;i ' ,f m!mM T fE β’ i H 3 3 ' HALCYON by Karppmen, twirler for the Bears, into six tallies, the Quakers scored their only shut-out of the year, no Ursinus player crossing the plate. The Swarthmore team, under the leadership of its captain, Pop Dellmuth, improved markedly as the season progressed. Johnny Cookenbach and Reds Burton officiated on the mound, with Schembs receiving. Howie Sipler covered first, while Johnny Abrams did a good job at second. Carl Dellmuth at third and Eddie Dawes at short completed the regular infield, while Dan Hubbell, Tim McCracken, and Eddie Stevens chased flies. Cadigan and Wray especially, among the jayvees, show promise as varsity material for the coming year. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE Swarthmore Opponents April 11 Penn A. C 8 8 April 17 Lafayette 12 13 April 18 Lehigh 12 3 April 21 Pennsylvania 5 9 April 29 Army 8 12 May 2 Gettysburg 1 4 May 9 Haverford 10 4 May 15 Haverford 14 3 May 16 Stevens 1 9 May 26 Ursinus 6 Totals 77 65 t T ME J 1 3 3 H A L C Y O n T Track HE 1931 track team, with only four lettermen of the 1930 season again winning letters, had a surprisingly successful year. Johns Hopkins and Ursinus were decisively defeated while Swarthmore was forced to bow to Lehigh and Haverford in dual meets. The Garnet also placed third in a triangular meet with St. Josephs and Delaware. However, the Swarthmore team en- tered this three cornered battle with a green team and with very little previous practice. Swarthmore sent a relay team to the Penn Relay and copped third place in the Middle Atlantic Mile Relay, being barely nosed out by Haverford. Our team was composed of Atkiss, Walker, Leach, and Willis. In the Middle Atlantics, the last meet of the year, Swarthmore took CAPT. LiPPiNCOTT sixth place with a total of l?! points. The first meet with Delaware and St. Joseph ' s at Swarthmore on April 11 found the Garnet trackmen with little organization due to adverse weather conditions which had hampered practices. Coach Barron thought the meet would be useful to the Garnet as experience gained even if we lost. Swarthmore put up a stubborn fight but did lose the meet, rolling up 35 points to St. Joe ' s 49 and Delaware ' s 42. The next meet on April 18 with Lehigh at Bethlehem showed a marked improve- ment in the Swarthmore performance although the meet was lost to Lehigh by the score of 71 to 55. Biddle with a first in the high hurdles, Walker with a first in the lows and Willis ' s double victory in the mile and half mile were high spots for Swarth- more rooters. After a ten day rest the team came through with the first victory of the year by defeating the Ursinus team on April 29 by the score of 74 to Ursinus ' s 52. Willis captured firsts in both the mile and half mile with Robinson gaining third in the latter event. Lewis took second and Hicks third in the javelin throw, with first in the discus and second in the shot going to Captain Lippincott. Walker, Leber, and Tomassetti took all three places in the hundred with Walker also winning the low hurdles and Leber winning the 220. In the two miles Miller finished second with Jones third. In the rest of the field events Evans won the pole vault, Kelly took second in the high and third in the broad jumps, and Alstaetter took second in the broad jump. On May 9 at home Swarthmore again won the palm by defeating Johns Hopkins by a score of 78% for Swarthmore and 471 4 for Hopkins. And still more improve- ment was shown by the marks set by the Garnet team. Biddle won the high hurdles. Leber took first and Walker second in the 100 while Walker also won the low hurdles and Leber won the 220. Willis took the half mile. Captain Lippincott won the shot put and the discuss while Schembs and Lewis supported him in the shot. Alstaetter took third in the discus. Leach took second and Casey third in the quarter. Miller won and Jones placed second in the two miles; Evans copped second in the pole vault with Humphries and Garrett tying for third. Welfing took second in the 880. Lewis and THE 1 ? 3 3 M A L C Y O H m2 ; f w Coppock, Barron (coach), Garrett Kelly, Miller, Bishop, Tomassetti, Welfing, Casey, Robinson Walker, Stickney, Biddle, Lippincott (captain), Lewis, Leber, Willis Hicks took first and second in the javelin, and in the last event, the high jump, Kelly won the event with Stickney tying for second. In the last dual meet of the year with Haverford on May 15 at Haverford, the Garnet winning streak was broken when Haverford captured 9 first places out of 14 to win the meet 78 to 48. Biddle took first in the high hurdles; Walker took first in the 100 and second in the low hurdles; Lippincott took first in the discus and second in the shot put; Lewis won the javelin throw and set a new college record in that event as well as taking third in the discus; Kelly came through by winning the high jump and at the same time setting a new freshman record in the event. The improvement in form of the trackmen this year should guarantee a winning team for Coach Barron next year. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE Su ' arthmore Opponents April 11 β St. Joseph ' s-Del Home 35 49-42 April 18 β Lehigh Away 54 5-6 71 1-6 April 25 β M. A. S. Relay Away Third place April 29 β Ursinus Home 73 5-6 52 1-6 May 9 β Johns Hopkins Home 78 2-3 47 1-3 May 15 β Haverford Away 48 78 May 22β M. A. S. C. A. A Away 17 1-4 Sixth place T UZ ' } H 3 3 β’ HALCYOri SWARTHMORE CoLLEGE TrACK ReCORDS Event Holder Record 100-yard dash F. B. Terrill, ' 05β J. W. Dutton, ' 28 9 4 5 seconds 220-yard dash F. B. Terrill, ' 05β C. A. Eberle, ' 11 22 1 5 seconds 440-yard dash G. M. Henrie, ' 08 49 4 5 seconds 880-yard dash L. G. Bradford, ' 11 1 minute, 57 4 5 seconds Mile walk P. Parrish, ' 96 7 minutes 10 2 5 seconds Two mile bicycle ....N. H. Mannakee, ' 08 5 minutes and 1 second 120-yard hurdles ....C. A. Eberle, ' 11 15 3 5 seconds 220-yard hurdles ....Henry L. Parrish, ' 30 25 seconds Pole vault O. D. Hampson, ' 22 11 feet, 11 3 4 i.iches Broad jump Willl m P. Kemp, ' 21 22 feet, 6 3 4 inches Shot put W. F. Kruger, ' 09 46 feet, 5 1 2 inches Discus throw A. G. Baker, ' 28 144 feet Javelin throw Andrew W. Guttormsen 168 feet, 11 inches Mile run P. Burdette Lewis, ' 27 4 minutes, 29 4 5 seconds Two mile run P. Burdette Lewis, ' 27 9 minutes, 46 seconds Mile relay Alden, ' 30; Atkiss, ' 31; , . , .. , ' 3 mmutes, 27 seconds Parrish, ' 30; Brown, ,30 Freshman Track Records 100-yard dash F. B. Terrill, 05 9 4 5 seconds 220-yard dash F. B. Terrill, ' 05 22 1 5 seconds 440-yard dash J. ' W. Dutton, ' 28 50 seconds 880-yard dash E. T. Baker, ' 19; R. Willis, ' 33 2 minutes, 2 3 5 seconds Mile run C B. Lewis, ' 08 4 minutes 32 1 5 seconds Two mile run L Zerega, ' 18 9 minutes, 57 3 5 seconds Mile walk W. H. Lippincott, ' 99 7 minutes, 33 2 5 seconds Two mile bicycle ....N. H. Mannakee, ' 08 5 minutes, 1 second 120-yard hurdles ....L. P. Gowdy β H. L. Parrish, ' 30 16 2 5 seconds 220-yard hurdles ....H. L. Parrish, ' 30 25 3 5 seconds Pole vault H. O. Olin, ' 18 11 feet, 1 4 inch Broad jump L. P. GowDY, ' 16 22 feet, 5 3 5 inches Shot put W. F. Kruger, ' 09 40 feet, 1 1 2 inches Javelin throw A. W. Guttormsen, ' 27 160 feet, 1 1 4 inches Discus throw A. G. Baker, ' 28 139 feet, 10 1 2 inches High jump James Kelly, ' 34 5 feet, 10 1 2 inches I T I-TE i H 3 3 HALCYON Tennis ' T HE tennis season last year was a fairly successful one show- - - ir Captain Bond ing six wins and four losses. This record does not seem so good when it is compared with the brilliance of 1930 when Captain Hammell led his team through a string of thirteen victories and no defeats. But when we realize that Coach Faulk- ner had only two letter men to work with β Captain Bond and Ted Lynn β the season must definitely be called a good one. Practice started early and after a few weeks the team lined up somewhat as follows, an order that was maintained during the whole season. Captain Bond, Lynn, Lutton, Rudy, Lapham, and Eaton were the first six but Hood and Diamond saw action in several of the games. The season started auspiciously with a crushing 9-0 victory over P. M. C. The match was a very uneventful one for the Garnet players encountered little difficulty with the exception of Rudy who was forced into a third set in order to defeat his man. The next weekend, however, told a different story for a strong Penn team arrived on the Wharton courts and by an 8-1 victory brought to an end a long string of eighteen victories started two years before. While Bond and Lynn lost close matches to Case and Green respectively Lutton produced the only bright spot of the afternoon when he defeated Waldow 6-3, 6-1. In the next two matches Swarthmore recovered some of her lost prestige by victories over Dickinson and Temple. In the first match Swarthmore won 9-0 but three of the points were ceded by Dickinson for after we had won all the single matches, rain made it impossible to play the doubles matches so Dickinson defaulted these. The match with Temple was a much closer affair than the score would indicate for all the matches with the exception of those of Bond and Lynn were only won or lost after a hard fight. Both Bond and Lynn were the outstanding players of the afternoon; for Bond ' s placement shots were working smoothly and Lynn was far less erratic than in the earlier matches. The next two matches were defeats for Swarthmore. Lafayette won a very unin- teresting match, uninteresting because it found almost the entire Garnet team way off their usual standard of play. The match with Lehigh was much better and although we lost 5-4, the fact that Bond was unable to play was the real cause of our defeat but this does not deny that Lehigh played some very fine tennis to win. Lynn played the best tennis on the Swarthmore team. Victory followed defeat when Bucknell and Delaware were defeated in the next encounters. Bond was back in the lineup in the Bucknell match and won easily in his singles as well as in his doubles when he was paired with Lapham. Lynn and Lutton won their matches but Rudy and Eaton did not fare so well. The doubles victory of I THE 1 ' f 3 3 M A L C Y M Lutton and Rudy ended the afternoon with Swarthmore on top 5-2. The Delaware match was an easy day for the Garnet for the score was 9-0 showing a clean sweep of all the matches. The victory over Haverford the following week found the Swarthmore team in the best form of the season. Bond played his best tennis of the season to beat Gray 7-5, 6-3. Lynn and Rudy lost their singles to Barnhurst and Robert which put Haverford in the lead. But victories by Lutton, Eaton, and Lapham ended the singles and placed the Garnet in the lead 4-2. After a few minutes rest hostilities were resumed and the match was clinched when Swarthmore won two of the remaining doubles matches. The season came to a close when Swarthmore was defeated by Army 6-3 an unusual match in that we lost all the singles matches and then turned around and won all the doubles. Bond, Eaton, and Lapham played good games and were only beaten after very close matches. Captain Bond was easily the outstanding player of the team both in his technique and court generalship. Lynn proved to be a dangerous player when he was playing his best game but was subject to several wild spells during the season. Lutton showed the most improvement for he has developed a terrific first serve and almost faultless net play. Rudy and Eaton have also improved a great deal especially Rudy ' s serve and Eaton ' s forehand. Lapham plays the most aggressive game of all and when he is on he is hard to beat. Eaton Lapham Lynn Lutton Rudy Starling (Mgr.) ! TME - i H 3 3 β’ HALCYOri The loss of Bond and Lapham will certainly be felt but Lynn, Captain-elect Lutton, Eaton, and Rudy will be back and these combined with some promising Jay ' ee players should give Coach Faulkner a good start for a new team. RESULTS OE THE SEASON Stvarthmore Opponents P. M. C 9 Penn 1 8 Dickinson 9 Temple 6 3 Lafayette 3 6 Lehigh 4 5 Bucknell 5 2 Delaware 9 Haverford 6 3 Army 3 6 WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION % OFFICERS President Helen Seaman Vice-Presidetit Aldyth Longshore Secretary Judith Smith Treasurer Edith Jackson TI-TE ; 5 3 3 M A L C Y O M Varsity Letter Women TENNIS Helen Seaman (Capt.) Kathryn Sonneborn (Mgr.) Jean Walton Joan Loram Mary Tomlinson Margaret Cresson Judith Smith Louise Stubbs HOCKEY Jean Walton {Capt.) Anne Chapman {Mgr.) Elizabeth Stirling Nancy Harvey Aldyth Longshore Mary Tomlinson Nina Volkmar Margaret Cresson Louise Stubbs Margaret Wolman Ellen Pearson Emma Michael SWIMMING Mary Legate (Capt.) Anna Kurtz (AI ;-.) Dorothy Ogle Edith Jackson Georgia Heathcote Lydia Highley Emma Michael Janet Smith BASKETBALL Elizabeth Stirling {Capt.) Virginia Melchior {Mgr.) Anne Chapman Helen Seaman Aldyth Longshore Nina Volkmar Sue Thomas Louise Stubbs OLD ENGLISH S The highest honor in women ' s athletics at Swarthmore is the blazer bearing the old English S . This is awarded at the end of the Junior year to any women who have attained a total of 35 points after participation in three sports. The members of the class of 1932 to whom blazers were awarded are: Anne Chapman Dorothy Ogle Helen Seaman Elizabeth Stirling I TI-fE β’ i H 3 3 ' MALCYOli Hockey ALTHOUGH the record of the 1931 Swarthmore women ' s hockey team shows a total of three victories and four defeats, the season cannot be called unsuccessful. There was a heavy schedule to face and the team made an excellent showing. Swarthmore made 30 goals to its opponents 24. The team ' s success was heightened by individual play, in some cases brilliant, in others, steady and consistently good. Had there been more evidence of team work, throughout the season as there was at some times, the result would probably have been a more successful season in terms of victories. The season opened on the home field on October 10, with a 5-1 victory for the Garnet over the Swarthmore Club. At this time the team was still without a permanent fullback, and Stirling was paired with Longshore. Other experiments were tried. The first goal was scored by the opponents before the Swarthmore team got organized, but as soon as the home team gained its stride, three goals were made before the half was over, and two followed in the last period. Although the visitors got away several times, the ball was kept in their territory most of the time. Individual play and cooperation im- proved as the game progressed. The second game, with the Saturday Morning Club, on October 17, was a 4-3 setback for Swarthmore. In this game Volkmar was paired with Longshore in fullback position, and by virtue of her fine work she kept the position all season. Two freshmen played in this game β Michael and Pearson β and did some excellent work. The forward line as a whole functioned very well, but the honors went to the backfield. However, the team was obviously not in stride at this time. The game which Miss Rath considers the best of the season was that played against the Buccaneers on October 24. Although the final score was 7-3 against the Garnet, the team fought hard and constantly against strong opposition. The first half of the game was closely contested, and the score was 1-1 as the whistle blew. During this half, the play was the best of the season up until that time, but during the second half the de- fense showed fatigue after their hard fight, and Cadbury, the Buccaneers ' Ail-American left inner, scored five goals. Individual play was exceptionally brilliant on the part of Stubby and Betty Stirling on the forward line, and by the fullbacks. Longshore and Volkmar, while the goalie, Emma Michael, fought hard during the whole game and prevented several goals. Real spirit was evinced for the first time, and the team work was noticeably better. Swarthmore won its second victory on October 31 against the Germantown Cricket Club, to the tune of 7-3, a reverse of last week ' s score. Stubbs and Wolman starred in this game, by virtue of the combination plays, which resulted in a number of goals. After considerable drill during the week, results were manifest in improved driving and rushing. The beginning and end of the game were slow, but after warming up, and before signs of fatigue became evident, the speed was the greatest of the season thus far. On Saturday, November 7 in a fast, closely contested game Swarthmore again suf- fered a defeat of 3-2 at the hands of the Merion Cricket Club, the only team which de- feated Swarthmore last year. The playing was very rapid and fast on both sides. The f TT H E 13 3 M A L C Y H Garnet team put up one of its best fights, playing a first class game of hockey. Louise Stubbs completing a long drive down the field broke through the defense with the first goal. The visiting team retaliated with two goals, then Nancy Harvey added a beautiful goal to the score. Emma Michael defended the goal exceptionally well, but the Cricke- teers had the advantage of several All-American stars, one of whom in the last few minutes broke through with the decisive goal. The hockey team was defeated by a 5-3 score on Thursday, November 12, by Bryn Mawr, their traditional rival, on Bryn Mawr ' s field. Due to a misunderstanding as to the time for the game, the team had to be hurriedly collected. However, Swarthmore got away to a quick start. In the first half the team was on the offensive and carried the ball into the opponent ' s territory time and time again, only to be repulsed as they were about to score. Betty Stirling played the best game on the Swarthmore side and tallied twice. In spite of the valiant efforts of the Garnet team, they were trailing at the end of the half 3-2. The second half found Swarthmore checked to a standstill by the bril- liant work of Evelyn Remington and Harriet Moore, Bryn Mawr captain, who managed to force the score up two more points. Betty Stirling tallied once more. Thus the game ended with Bryn Mawr ahead. The last game of the regular season was played against Rosemont College, and netted a 7-1 victory. The first part of the game was evenly matched and slow, but Swarthmore soon came forward with an overwhelming offensive drive which brought the half to a close with the score standing 4-0, due to the brilliant playing of Hirst, who scored twice, and to the additional goals of Tomlinson and Stubbs. In the second half, Michael Highley Passmore Harvey Walton Stubbs Geddes Wolman Roth Tomlinson Volkmar Stirling Jackson Longshore Bowman 1 T ME i H 3 3 H A L C Y O n Wolman replaced Hirst at center, and carried on in the starring role as well, for she, too, scored twice, while Stirling contributed with a counter. Rosemont ' s score came at the beginning of the second half. The team played excellently in this game, although the opposition was not as strong as in some previous contests. By this time the team was ready to meet its heftiest opponents, the Royal Order of Greek Gods, who had tied last year ' s varsity team. The result this year, however, was a 2-1 defeat for the crest-fallen Gods. During the first half, due probably to the Greeks ' faulty stick work, the girls had the edge consistently. At the beginning of the second half, however, the Gods gained, due to substitutions in the girls ' ranks, and the varsity had to return to keep the Gods from the goal. At the end of the game there was no score, but an extra period was granted. Wolman and Stirling then drove the ball over the goal line in defiance of Vulcan Brown, but Mercury Crowl avoided a shut-out and scored for the Olympians. Tribute is due Miss Virginia Rath for coaching and making so much headway with a team entirely new to her. Her intensive drill in technique vastly improved the individual work of each player, and her leadership was a great help to the team. The team will feel the loss of Jean Walton who made an ideal captain, showing wonderful ability in her leadership of the team, and Betty Stirling, a brilliant player of the forward line, but is fortunate in losing no more. Anne Chapman, the capable man- ager, will also be missed. Aldyth Longshore will succeed Jean, while Ada Clement will replace Anne as manager. Jean Walton ' 32 has been an excellent leader of the team this year, and although, as wing, she has not figured in the scoring, much of the team ' s success has been due to her speed, excellent stick work, and well-directed passing. Betty Stirling was a high scorer and star of several games, and as right inner was right in all of the offensive play. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE Stvarthmore Opponents October 10 Swarthmore Club 5 1 October 17 Saturday Morning Club 3 4 October 24 Buccaneers 3 7 October 31 Germantown Cricket Club 7 3 November 8 Merion Cricket Club 2 3 November 12BrynMawr 3 5 November 20Rosemont 7 1 I T nZ ' i H 3 3 β’ liALCYOIi Basketball THE 1931-32 basketball season was marked for the women ' s varsity, by an almost even number of wins and losses; three games were won and four lost. In all of the lost gamts the Garnet led at the half but failed to hold back the onslaught of the op- posing team. Throughout the season individual playing was especially fine, while the teamwork, under the coaching of Miss Brown, consistently improved. The four players lost through graduation were most satisfactorily replaced. In the first game of the season, Betty Stirling led her team to victory over Drexel Institute. During the first half Swarthmore led with a score of 22-9; but during the second half the visitors rushed the goal and our girls fought hard to keep ahead. They finally emerged victorious with a score of 34-30. The acting captain of the Drexel team, Peggy Brooks, was responsible for their rally which added six goals to their score in the third quarter. This progress was stopped only by the stellar guarding of Aldyth Longshore and Sue Thomas who diverted many attempts to score. Helen Seaman was high scorer for the Garnet, tallying 16 of the final 34 points. The Rosemont game, the next week-end, was not so satisfactory, for Swarthmore was defeated by a score of 22-16. Despite the fine passing which marked the game, and the good work of Stirling at center, the stronger playing Rosemont team could not be stopped. The two guards, Longshore and Croll gave strong competition to their for- wards. The Quaker maids were under the considerable handicap of playing on a much larger floor than that to which they were accustomed. They soon found themselves, how- ever, and managed to keep their opponents from scoring unti l near the end of the game. Every player was up to par β Captain Stirling, playing particularly well at center. Helen Seaman made beautiful long shots when she was unable to get near the basket to score. The first home game of the season was played with the Philadelphia Cricket Club February 15. On the whole Swarthmore team exhibited unusual weakness, and there was much fumbling. Helen Seaman, acting captain, showed the ' best playing and was ably upheld by Thomas and Longshore at guard. The opponents excelled in individual play- ing, though their teamwork was also good. Swarthmore was handicapped by the absence of Captain Stirling. The final score was 30-20 in favor of the visitors. A second team game was played in which Swarthmore easily defeated their opponents. Betsy Geddes and Mary Lu Spurrier starred at forward. Ursinus, played after a rest of nearly two weeks, was overcome by our varsity after a hard fight. The game was fast and the visitors played well, but in the end succumbed to the more efficient Swarthmore team. The Ursinus team did some pretty passing in the first half, but the final score stood 43-37. The Garnet players started the game with a bang, piling up a lead which they kept throughout. The passing was much improved from the last game. Helen Seaman and Louise Stubbs starred at forward for the varsity; Stubbie was high scorer of the game. Our team played with unusual spirit, stopping the rallys of their opponents quickly. The Garnet played their first match with the College of William and Mary this season. They found them strong opponents, though on the whole both teams were evenly THE 13 3 H A L C Y H I matched. The WilUam and Mary girls displayed unusual ability at passing, and their teamwork was excellent. Swarthmore, ahead in the first half, failed to keep the lead in the second. The opponents, returning after the half, were determined to make up for lost time; they drew even with the Garnet; we failed to score on free throws and finally the game closed with the score standing 26-25, their favor. This was by far the fastest and most exciting game of the season. The Alumnae game, as usual, called forth much enthusiasm from the audience. It was, however, not up to the usual standard this year, for the Alumnae were decidedly rusty, allowing the varsity to easily defeat them with a score of 35-18, in a slow game. During the third quarter Stirling ' s team worked so smoothly the the Alums were unable to score once. Virginia Brown was best player and high scorer for the Alumnae ; Anna Rickards, ' 30, at forward, and Jean Harvey, ' 31, at guard, played with their usual zest. Again the forward combination of Seaman and Stubbs starred for the varsity. After their easy victory and smooth playing of the week before prospects looked bright for our Garnet for the game with Bryn Mawr, the last of the season. However, the opposing team playing on their home floor, proved much superior, scoring a double victory over varsity and second teams. Bryn Mawr excelled in passing and in the ac- curate shots of their forwards. The Swarthmore girls fought with spirit and succeeded in piling up some score before Bryn Mawr caught up to them. The basket shots of our forwards were not up to par. The contest finished with Bryn Mawr leading, 33-18. The playing was swift during the whole game, and exceptionally free from penalties. At the beginning of the second half the Garnet team picked up and scored two goals, but Bryn Mawr soon snapped into action again and stopped the rally. Individual players for the Stubbs Melchior (Mgr.) Chapman Longshore Stirling Thomas Volkmar Seaman 1 T ni: β i H 3 3 ' HALCYOn Garnet sextet worked hard, though the team cooperation was not as good as usual. Stubbs at forward, Stirhng at center, and Longshore and Thomas at guard, were out- standing. The second team was well played, but despite a large lead in the first half, the Swarthmore co-eds dropped this contest also. Seven players were awarded their letters this year. Of these Swarthmore will lose three through graduation. Captain Betty Stirling, Anne Chapman, and Helen Seaman. Stirling, for four years has been a mainstay of the team at center. Her leadership as captain this last season has brought the team through many tight places ; she will be missed as much for her comradship as for her valuable playing. Skipper Seaman, one of the best shots on the team, and high scorer of the past season, has filled her position at forward as a steady and reliable player. Her teamwork is fine, and her shots are accurate. Anne Chapman is a quick, sure player at forward and gives her guard plenty of trouble. Nina Volkmar, at side center, has made herself invaluable by her excellent teamwork with Stirling. Her passing to the forwards is dependable, and she will be an important player on next year ' s team. Aldyth Longshore, ' 33, has shone all season by reason of her unusual ability at guard. She plays consistently well and hard ; many times preventing scoring or intercepting passes at the crucial moment. Louise Stubbs, ' 34, sharing honors at forward with Skipper, has proved an increasingly important member of varsity. Her quickness on the floor, and the fine accuracy of her shots has helped turn the tide of several contests. She has two more years to play for Swarthmore. Sue Thomas, ' 35, the only freshman member of the team, has been a great addition in her position as guard. Her guarding, along with Aldy ' s, has been an important factor in this season ' s play. Though this season does not show a majority of wins for Swarthmore, there seems to be no cause for discouragement. The team, under the guidance of Miss Brown, has improved steadily. Every member of the team feels that her interest and encouragement has been invaluable to them. This is her first year as varsity basketball coach, and we are sure that with the continuance of her guidance the prospects for the coming year look bright indeed. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE S. Opp. Drexel 34 30 Rosemont 16 22 Ursinus 43 37 William and Mary 25 26 Alumnae 35 18 Bryn Mawr 18 33 Totals 171 166 TI-TE β’ } H 3 3 ' liALCYOri Swimming FOUR meets were listed on the 1932 swimming schedule, not including the pre-season interclass meet in which many of the team swam under class A. However, the first meet, scheduled February 19 with Drexel, failed to occur because the Drexel team, organized for the first time this year, had to break up due to lack of support. Although greatly disappointed, the team, ably captained by Mary Legate, ' 33, worked harder than ever in preparation for the Penn Hall contest. The day before the meet, scheduled for Saturday morning, March 5, Coach Rath received word that an epidemic of grippe necessitated the postponing of the meet. It was later found impossible to arrange a satisfactory date for a meet at Swarthmore as originally planned; but a telegraphic meet was held March 15. For their victory ove r Bryn Mawr on March 11 in Bryn Mawr ' s own pool, that is strange in length and in the lowness of the beam over the diving board, the eleven members of the Garnet team deserve the highest praise. Defeated in 1931, lacking five of the accomplished senior members of that team and made up of almost as many freshmen as upper classmen, having had their enthusiasm quenched by the disappoint- ments of the two other meets, the Swarthmore team did very well to come out at the long end of a 46-39 score. Emma Michael, ' 35, and Mary Legate, ' 33, started the meet off well by taking first and second places in the 40 yard free-style. Edith Jackson, ' 33, starred in the medley and free-style relays and in addition came out first in the 80 yard free-style, breaking the Bryn Mawr pool record with her 58.6 time. She also was one of the four swimmers in the 200 yard relay Garnet team which broke the pool record bringing it down to 2 minutes, 2.6 seconds. Georgia Heathcote, Lydia Highley, and Emma Michael showed the mettle of the freshmen members of the team in this event. The team of Mary Legate and Georgia Heathcote came out first in the tandem crawl. Lydia Highley placed second in the 40 yard back-stroke, Mary Legate in the 40 yard breast-stroke, and Beth Carver, ' 34, in the crawl for form with Helen Flanagan, ' 33, and Meneely of Bryn Mawr tied for third. Emma Michael placed second and Dorothy Ogle, ' 32, third in diving, a good record considering the board. The competitive events of the meet were followed by an exhibition of figure swimming by the Swarthmore team. The girls, in powder blue instead of the usual Garnet suits, formed intricate figures while demonstrating various strokes and finished by forming a B and an M in honor of Bryn Mawr. Two Bryn Mawr swimmers demonstrated life saving. Following this the president of the Bryn Mawr Athletic Association presented cups to the girls who had scored the most in swimming and diving during the season. March 15 the Penn Hall girls swam in their pool and the Swarthmore team in theirs against their own team members. The results of each event were then sent to the other school and compared. The Garnet team broke three college records although the final score was Penn Hall 31 and Swarthmore 17. Edith Jackson clipped a tenth of a second from the previous pool record for the 40 yard free-style made by Marian Geare in 1929 by making it in 24.2 seconds. However, Mann of Penn Hall captured first place with her 23 second dash. Mann also took first place in the 80 yard free-style with 54.2 seconds. For the Garnet Edie Jackson captured third place in this event and Lydia THE- l ' ?33- MALCYOH Highley in the 40 yard back-stroke. Swarthmore shone in the 40 yard breast-stroke when Captain Mary Legate came in first bringing the pool record, made by herself, down to 32.5 , and Janet Smith secured the only second place the Garnet took besides Edie ' s second in the free-style. Although the Swarthmore 80 yard relay team of Heathcote, Michael, Legate, and Jackson came in after the Penn Hall girls, they broke a third college record by cutting the former record made in 1929 down 1.8 seconds to 47.3 seconds. Following these events the Garnet team repeated their Br)-n Mawr demonstration of figure and exhibition swimming; and Dorothy Ogle, ' 32, Beth Car -er, ' 34, Carlyn Ashley, ' 35, and Emma Michael, ' 35, gave an exhibition of diving for the benefit of the spectators whose applause and cheering had been the stimulus for the swimmers in the absence of out-side competition. The Garnet team swam a telegraphic meet March 22 with Syracuse although the latter postponed their meet until March 31 on account of grippe. Swarthmore placed in ever} ' event by taking four firsts and a tie for first betw een both entrants in the 40 yard free-style, two seconds, and a third. The only case in which all Swarthmore entrants failed to score was the 40 yard backstroke in which Syracuse broke their own standing record with a time of 30.8 seconds. Mary Legate scored highest with firsts in the 40 yard free-style and the 40 yard breast-stroke. Emma Michael tied with her for first in the 40 yard free-style. Edie Jackson came in first in the 80 yard free-style, finishing the gruelling two lengths in 58.4 seconds. Janet Smith, Kay Pennypacker, and Lydia Highley did their usual fine work in the 40 yard breast-stroke, 80 yard free-style, and 40 yard back-stroke respectively to give the Garnet its two second and one third placings. The Swarthmore 80 yard medley swimmers outdid the Syracuse girls by a half a minute and still swam 11.3 seconds slower than in the Penn Hall meet when they ranked only second. The 160 yard relay team composed of Heathcote, Highley, Michael, and Jackson equalled the college record of 1 minute 48 seconds and won first place. The final score was 39-18, making this the Garnet ' s second victor) ' . The team, Mary Legate, its enthusiastic captain ; and Miss Rath, its excellent coach, are to be congratulated for their fine work in winning two out of their three meets. This is a much better record than that of last year when Swarthmore won but one of four meets. It is a tribute to both team and coach that, new to e.ich other, they made such a fine showing. The team was efficiently managed by Anna Kurtz, ' 32. who arranged a schedule including teams more nearly the Garnet ' s equals than those met heretofore. It was Swarthmore ' s misfortune that the grippe overtook two of their opponents and that the Drexel meet could not take place; so the schedule as finally run off had only one real meet and that one away. Telegraphic meets are novel and a great deal of fun, but they do not give the team the incentive of competition. Swarthmore had but one chance to show their abilit) ' in diving and that under disadvantages. Even then they took both second and third places. High scorers were Captain Legate with 231 points and Edith Jackson with 22. Emma Michael came third with ISi . The Garnet ' s prospects for the next year look bright. Edie Jackson, ' 33, will captain the team, and Elise Stammelbach, ' 33, will be manager. This year ' s captain, Mary Legate, will be back to -w-in more points with her fine breast-stroke and free- I T fE β’ i H 3 3 ' liALCYOn style. Captain-elect Jackson can be relied on to lead her team to victory with her speedy crawl-stroke, which has often saved a relay team or won the 40 or 80 yard dash. The team is losing only one member through graduation; and although Dot Ogle ' s diving and back stroke will be missed, several freshmen are rapidly improving so as to fill her place. The Garnet expects much from Beth Carver, ' 34, Emma Michael, ' 35, and Carlyn Ashley, ' 35, in diving; from Janet Smith, ' 35, in the breast-stroke and Lydia Highley, ' 35, in the back-stroke, and from Helen Flanagan, ' 33, and Beth Carver, ' 34, in the crawl for form. Kay Pennypacker ' s crawl and Georgia Heathco ' te ' s work in relays and the tandem crawl will be valuable again next season. Certainly the team and its captain and manager have set a precedent by their excellent work and spirit that is worth striving for. RESULTS OF THE SCHEDULE Swarthmore Opponents March 11 Bryn Mawr ,. 46 39 March 15 Penn Hall 17 31 March 22 Syracuse 39 18 Total 102 88 Tl-fr β’ i H 3 3 ' MALCYOti Tennis ' ' I HE 1931 season of the women ' s varsity tennis team was most successful and gave - - ample promise of even greater things in the future. Five matches were played, of which only one resulted in defeat, and all the players showed steady improvement as the season progressed. Miss Parry was coach and Helen Seaman ' 32 was captain, while Kathryn Sonneborn, who organized the team in 1929, served her third year as manager. The Garnet girls netted their lirst victory on May the first, when they defeated Drexel on the College Avenue courts 4-1. Joan Loram at number 1 overcame her oppo- nent 6-4, 6-2 in an unexciting match after the first few games, The doubles team, Judy Smith and Louise Stubbs, quickly downed their opposition to the score of 6-1, 6-4. The fight came in Mary TomKnson ' s match. After winning the first set 7-5, she lost control .md dropped the second 6-1, coming back to win the third 6-3. Helen Seaman, number three dropped a close contest 4-6, 6-3. On May 5 the team journeyed to Ursinus and brought home another victory. Joan Loram provided the thrills of the day by winning her match after three hard sets 6-4, 6-8, and 6-3. The rest of the match was well played but not so thrilling. Mary Tom- linson won the singles 6-4 and 6-4, and Helen Seaman, playing her usual dependable game, triumphed 8-6 and 6-2 in the third singles. Louise Stubbs and Judith Smith met their only defeat of the season 2-6 and 5-7, but Margaret Cresson and Jean Walton made the victory decisive by winning their match 8-6 and 6-0. Matches scheduled with ' William and Mary and with the University of Pennsyl- vania had to be called off because of rain, and the team next played Bryn Mawr May 16, on the Bryn Mawr courts. Although this was the one defeat of the season, it was the best played and most exciting match. All the singles players were defeated, but only after fast hard playing. Joan Loram especially gave her opponent some trouble before finally being defeated in three hard sets. Stubbs and Smith played a splendid match to win the first doubles by a score of 4-6, 6-4, and 7-5, and Cresson and Walton also triumphed 8-6 and 6-4. The final score of 3-2 shows a decided improvement over last year ' s tally of 4-1, and gives grounds for the hope that in 1932 Bryn Mawr will at last jo.n the ranks of those defeated by Swarthmore. Beaver, the next opponent, was neatly trimmed to the tune of 5-0 on May 18 on the home courts. The Swarthmore women had no trouble in winning their matches, for they outplayed Beaver at almost every turn. Joan Loram was the only one who met any serious opposition. The Beaver first singles player was the best player on her team and was defeated only after three sets of steady playing. A match with Idle Hour on the Swarthmore courts May 22 closed the season most favorably with a score of 4-1. The match was defaulted since only two members of the Idle Hour team, the first and second singles players, appeared. Mary Tomlinson was the star of the match and played a beautiful game. The interest throughout the season was very keen due to the fact that the squad players were so nearly equal to the team players in ability that no one could be sure of her position unless she kept on her toes at all times. Joan Loram played a much THE H 3 3 HALCYON better game than she had the previous year and was only defeated by two very good players. Mary Tomlinson continued to play her hard steady game, her only loss being at Byrn Mawr. Helen Seaman ' s game improved as the season progressed. Judy Smith and Louise Stubbs had excellent cooperation and merited their victory against Bryn Mawr. Jean Walton and Margery Cresson played all season and were undefeated, their only close match being with Bryn Mawr. There were two juniors, two sophomores, and three freshmen on the team, so that no one was lost by graduation, although Joan Loram did not return. The three year career of the varsity tennis team, although brief, has been marked by unusual success, and such a wealth of material should insure a continuance of their brilliant record. Varsity letters were awarded to Margaret Cresson ' 34, Joan Loram ' 33, Helen Sea- man ' 32 (captain), Judith Smith ' 34, Louise Stubbs, ' 34, Mary Tomlinson ' 33, Jean β Walton ' 32, and Kathryn Sonneborn ' 31, manager. SUMMARY Sivarthmore Opponents Drexel at Swarthmore 4 1 Ursinus at Ursinus 4 1 Bryn Mawr at Bryn Mawr 2 3 Beaver at Swarthmore 5 Idle Hour at Swarthmore 4 1 Total 19 6 Cresson Tomlinson Parry (coach) Stubbs Seaman (captain) Walton Sonneborn (manager) Tf-TE β’ i H 3 3 ' liALCYOH May Day ' T HE 1931 May Day in accordance with the Swarthmore custom was celebrated in a - - simple manner just after sunrise on the east campus. The more formal celebration, held e very other year, will occur in 1932. Shortly after 6:45 the procession of Freshmen, Sophomores, and Juniors dressed in white and followed by the Seniors in caps and gowns marched from the front steps of Parrish to the east campus. Martha Wood of the class of 1931 ruled as Queen of the May. She and her attendants, Nora Booth and Anna Kurtz, ' 32; Betty Holmes and Maradel Geuting, ' 33; and Elizabeth Jones, ' 34, wearing elaborate gowns in pastel shades and carrying bouquets of spring flowers marched between the two long lines of students to the throne placed in front of the Rose Garden. As the processional march, played by Katherine Warren, ' 32, died away, Elizabeth Jones, maid of honor, stepped forward and placed the crown on the May Queen ' s head. Then four nymphs dressed in yellow, Mariana Webster, ' 31, Alice Wardell, ' 31, Marcia Lamond, ' 33, and Marjorie Mohan, ' 33, danced Sounds from the Vienna Woods before the royal throne in honor of the Queen. When the dancers had retired, representatives of each class wound in turn with streamers of the class colors their may- poles placed at the four corners of the lawn. Twenty-four Freshmen skipped into formation holding the blue and white stream- ers of their pole. They performed a sprightly dance to the accompaniment of Martha Tufts, ' 34. When the pole was all unwound again, the Sophomores took up their green and white streamers for a slower dance. This was followed by the winding of the Juniors ' maypole with orange and white ribbons to a sedate dance. Finally the Seniors, solemn in their caps and gowns and carrying the May baskets hung on their doors that morning by the Freshmen, stepped a stately minuet around the fourth maypole. As a symbol that their work was completed the Seniors according to the customary procedure left the red and white streamers wound around the maypole. The Maypole dances were coached by Sarah Antrim, ' 34, Marcia Lamond, ' 33, Anna Kurtz, ' 32, and Esther Seaman, 31, members of the May Day Committee, whose chairman was Elizabeth Newcomb, ' 31. Katherine Warren, ' 32, accompanied all but the Freshmen ' s dance. After the dancing the Seniors and Juniors marched through Parrish out the east front door where they sang the traditional Step Song in which they gave each step to the Juniors, who accepted them with a song. These two classes and the Freshmen and Sophomores who had met them outside the door formed two lines along the front walk and sang the traditional song of Where, Oh, Where Are the Verdant Freshmen? which placed each class a year ahead and concluded the exercises. Features THE ' i 3 3 H A 1- G Y O M ' nil,: i ftiui Fair Swarthmore Thy tall and stately towers are bedecked with Stiltz ' s flow ers And ads of cigarettes and ShaefFer ' s pen; Thine honor students swaller, not without a cultured holler Their daily cups of tea, thou mother of men! Each day we boldly grapple, with mystic soup and scrapple Washed down with draughts of garlicked milk and pale And although a trifle nervous, we feel that thou hast served us Swarthmore, to thee, and Parrish, hail, all hail! I TI-fE β’ i H 3 3 β’ HALCYOn Salutatio With such fitting Sentiments, we the Juniors, who are just entering the last year of our Apprenticeship in Life, present to you, our Dear Public, this souvenir of our College Days. These few short pages can only repre- sent to you a shadow of the Toil and Joy that has been ours these last Three and a Half Years. The importance of the long Hours we have spent over our Greek, our Algebra and our Mental Hygiene, and the short Hours spent in Pinochle, Old Maids sind other forms of Competition with Sister Institutions, will only receive their Full and Just estimation when we have Shouldered the Burdens and responsibilities of Life, better equipped to meet the Perplexities that will Face us than the less Fortunate persons who did not have our Educational Opportunities, who were not Able to sip at the same Fount of Knowledge. In accordΒ£uice with Tradition, we have Selected from our number, six Outstanding young men and ladies, each Distinctive and Unique. Portraits of these Young People are printed on the Opposite Page. We feel that our class is so Much on One High Level of excellence, even as to Aspect, that it is Unnecessary to print pictures of them all; further, the Sophomores turned in such Similar write-ups, that we have Deemed it Superfluous to reproduce cJl of Them. Therefore, there appear six Pictures, representative of the Young People of the Junior Class, with a Line taken from their Write-ups. Talk has been creeping around our Fair csunpus amd Insinuating itself into our hallowed Gatherings that Fraternities may be established by order of our Beloved Prexy. The Halcyon is Eager to take a Definite Stzuid on something, eind has Decided to select this Moot Point and Help to turn the weight of Public Opinion in favor of the Time-Honored Societies, and agckinst the Obnoxious Greek Letter Fraternity idea. Prominent Junior members of the Societies are depicted on this and Several of the Subsequent pages. OUR MUSICIAN Ed Mulanev OUR AESTHETE Tommy Supper OUR GENTLEMAN Frank Spor:er 1 w k .- J I Hr m M n HΒ£ . h-v.VV. β OUR STUDENT Mary Lu Furrier OUR SEVEREST CRITIC Ray Altars OUR STYLIST Bab Spiller HOWARD SHIPLER β ' Here ' s a really all-around young man. CONNIE SHAPERβ What this young lady goes after, she gets. JOHN LOSTERβ Just ask this young man β he knows. r nZ ' J H 3 3 ' liALCYOM Purpose The ' 86 Phoenix has offered some Extremely Uplifting comment upon an important Aspect of Morality. The Halcyon feels that it can per- form no Greater Service to the Youth of the present day thsin by Reprint- ing the most Inspired Portions. A rapid Change for the Better is antici- pated? A PURE HEART When we read, ' Create in me a Cleem heart ' , do we comprehend how much it includes? A Clean heart is impossible unless the rest of the body be Purified first. Does a man, who is a slave to the use of Tobacco, consider that he has a Pure heart? It would be well, perhaps, if there were an Island in mid-ocean, to which all Smokers, Chewers, and opium-eaters might retire. They could there enjoy a life of unmolested luxury, until the body should become so poisoned that life would be no longer tolerable. Purity is cheap; then why not be Pure? Women who Smoke are looked upon as auiything but Pure and Refined. Are men so Pure that they must counteract some of this by Smoking? Every man ought to know that whenever he Smokes in the presence of women, it is by a condescension on their part. Nine women out of ten will not object, simply because they fear it will lessen respect for them. Drink and Tobacco are so insepcu-able companions that the former has been called the Evil Spirit and the latter his w ife. Doctors eu-e daily contending with intemperance, insanity and scrofu- lous disease. Tobacco has been found a leading cause of such disease. Such being the true aspect of the case, what Pure-minded man can use Tobacco? I GENIE BUGHUSHER β She ' s always willing to help. LLOYD SPIKEβ His face is not entirely unknown in Parrish. NANCY HARVARD - are two Nancys β . There «« SOCIETIES Β Β Charlotte Thimble Ed Labor Ed Kennels THE PROMENADERSβ FOR THE PRESERVATION OF PEDESTRIANS TME ' 113 3 β’ HALCYOII Public Opinion Every new man in the College should, after due deliberation, join one of the two Litei-ary Societies. He should immediately have his name proposed in the Athletic Association, and, if fortunate enough to obtain admifsion, always keep his Dues peud up. If he expects to play either Foot- ball cr Base-ball, he should edso join the B. B. F. B. A. But above all things, let him subscribe to the Phoenix. D Besides much other apparatus. Microscopes are imperatively neces- sary in examining this year ' s freshmen, β at least so it is said. D An editorial on (he use of Ponies, has recalled to our minds the remembremce that much more of that kind of thing is done here than those in authority suspect. The Evil seems to exist moire generally amonj; Scientific students. D In no other branch of Athletics has Swarthmore gained so much Honor in the past as in foot-ball. Last year we were, perhaps, a little Un- fortunate. We have a Good gymnasium and Fine facilities for Training, and any man who wishes to secure a position on the team should train at least One hour a day. D Telegraphy is becoming quite popular on the West Wing. n With the opening of Spring, we ask ourselves the question, ' What is it that makes this season of the year so beautiful to us? ' D Since Base-ball at Sweu-thmore seems to have died a natural, and per- haps a timely death, one naturally may ask what will take its place. Why not try Cricket? Let the men make some Practical suggestions on the subject, instead of Idle wailings over the supposed Decline of Athletics at Swarth- more. X D A number of New books have been added to the library and some that seemed Objectionable, removed, D For the past Year or so the interest in Athletics, here, has gradually declined. Too much attention is given to Mental and not enough to Bodily development. rfrom The Phoenix, 1886) Marcia Almond Rosie Jayvees Betty Passless THE SUNSHINE SOCIETYβ FOR IMPROVING HEALTH AND BEAUTY Dick Ph lis Johnny Gets Brad Annulled Hob Shams HALOβ AND WINGSβ FOR THE FOSTERING OF NOBLE iLiJtALS OF YOUNG MANHOOD Joe Lockup Steve Sackmeal Syl Carrot THE HARD WORKERSβ FOR THE DISCOURAGEMENT OF SOCIETIES T ME i H 3 3 M A L C Y O n Athletics The Young Men and Ladies competing in Matches against other Uni- versities in Athletic endeavors, derived a great deal of Spiritual and Moral as well as Physical Good from the Contests. The results: Men: Water Polo: S war th more Ohio State Swarthmore 7 Sunday Morning Club 11 Swarthmore 13 Chester Y. M. C. A. 12 Cross Word Puzzles: Swarthmore 53 4 Pennac 1 Swarthmore 9 Vassar 91 4 Swarthmore 3 Green Lawn Club IO6I 2 i : Table Tennis: Swarthmore 2 Princeton 7 Swtirthmore 9 Liberal Club Croquet : Swarthmore 1 Third Ward A. A. 2 Alma Mater 7 Life Buoy 1 4 (Extra chukker) n We are saying nothing about baseball or football, not so much because we consider them to be brutal, but because they have become a thing of the past, Euperceeded and antidated by the more manly and certainly the cleaner sports named above. Following appears extracts from an article on football that we think is very fair. THE H 3 3 HALCYON Broom Ball With the hockey stick U. of P. once played But the Swarthmore boys Better scores had made. They little thought Of a similar doom When Swarthmore boys Should wield the broom. (Halcyon of 1900) Tl-fE β’ ; 33 β’ liALCYOn EDITORIAL From the Phoenix of November ' 85 The question of prohibiting foot-ball in American Colleges, or so modifying the present manner of playing the game that it may be indulged in without both Physical and Moral danger, is becoming a serious considera- tion among college authorities and parents; We venture to predict that if parents knew of one-half the dangers incident to a game of foot-beJl, the game would die a sickly axiA ignonninious Death, in short order. One of the principal reasons advanced for the continuance of foot- ball is the very absurd one, that all Englishmen play it, and that all good Anglo-maniacs should not hesitate to follow their English brethren in so small a matter as Muscle, if they do not hesitate to follow them in the cut of their Clothes. It is true that Englishmen play foot-ball, and have been playing it for many years, but we must remember that it is played in England in a much more Rational manner than in this country. The English people are free from the nervous impulsiveness of Americans. They are, therefore, less liable to over-exert themselves, both at Work and at Play. There is yet another danger to the foot-ball player. Greater and ntiore Lasting than any. We mean the injury a young mzm ' s Moral character is sure to sustain if he be of a quick and impulsive temperament; we have rarely witnessed a game where Violent emd Abusive language was not a part of the programme. The memory of such ebullitions Rankles deep in the breasts of the participants, and sooner or later is fruitful of Trouble and Bad Blood. To those who deny that foot-ball endsmgers Morality, we have this to say; tiiey either have never seen what is called a match game, or they are so blinded by a False admiration of it that they can see none of its faults. This feature of the game alone ought to be sufficient to Condemn it. With the mcmy Pieasant and Healthful exercises at the command of young men at college, there cam be no reason for permitting the presence of this very Objectionable one, which confers no benefit upon either Mind or Body, and remains almost alone among games, in portraying the Natural tendency of man to BruteJity. Mac Camacken Fuzzy Times THE AGRICULTURAL CIRCLE For the practicing of theoretical farming Tom Flatterwhite Pat Rent THE CHAIR WARMERS For tlie encouragement of meditation 1- J Edie Johnson Betty Homes Margaret MacDa Peggy Bawl THE BOTANICAL SOCIETYβ FOR THE APPRECIATION OF WILD LIFE AROUND COLLEGE Dot Thinkanhour Yvonne Amuser THE DOMESTIC CIRCLE For the cherishing of the home-like atmosphere Catherine Limes Gus Heckling THE YOUNG INTERNATIONALISTS For the betterment of International Relations Keep A Regular jy|icROPHONE pin with Home,. β¦!β¦ β¦ β¦ Set the Day and Hour-Throughout the College Year β¦β¦β¦ Pay Mother and Dad a Regular Voice Visit -Β BY MICROPHONE- .- t t t β¦I i It They ' H be thrilled to hear your thin and tremulous voice come over the air. Just clip the cou- pon I if you can find it) and enclose a check for TEN CENTS and you, too, can have one of these fine new voice tests at station MEOW. Of course you ' ll never be a singer or announcer, but you can 4 always try. At least you can ' t be any worse than Vallee or Damrosch. And look at the FUN. .VI.I, FOIi TKN CH.VTSS. f T β¦X t T T T T T T T T t T T T β¦ t t -OF... ...TO... HE.SKV UOO ' J ' . Skcuhtauv Office Hours β Noon to Midnight; Midnight to Noon -:Mix Your Own:- FRENCH GERMAN or just plain mixed (with Lemons) Y EAT THE COED WAY t β¦I t t T T T T t T T T t T T t T T T T T T β¦;β¦ DECORATIEURE - INTERIEURE A DON ' T BOTHER PIIONIXGI Just leave your car behind Whar- ton . . . WE will tow it away and store it overnight without troubling you. Andy Simpson - Hen Hoot β’β’ Β©(1 GARAGE Β«@K ' - No matter how bad your room looks, I can make it worse. β , ' Iriitation Assured : β ETHELE STYLITZ t THINK of the SERVICE....: X T t t t It isn ' t every coed that has the privilege of being served by HANDSOME FOOTBALL STARS IN LIVERY. Come late and join FASHION PARADE, J eat from our new pink and green plates, read the most recent W. A. A. FICTION, v and smile at Mrs. Selms. See the College Dining Room. !! β¦ Don ' t Be Vulgar DON ' T THINK of the FOOD, % ' ' ' it ' s safer. β ' β β β Adv. not vet paid for bv Miss Brierlv JL β¦β - - SYNTHETIC SOCIALISM.... t T t T T t t t t t T T T t T T t t ? T t All the advantages of full- fledged, bewhiskered radicalism without the disadvantage of be- - ing opposed to the party. β’ t t T T -w Philadelphia ' s most aristocratic Includes many prominent politicians, artists, professors, policemen and fed- J eral dope agents among its clientele. Golf all day (bring your own greens). 4 ...EXCLUSIVE... β’ IS our 4 BYWORD I m AND GIRLS!! 5 Buy Your ROOKS At the I 5 v ollegG KooK otoPG β¦1Β β i)i i. You ' ll need some new ways to rook your teachers. Every course can be rooked. We don ' t rook you. We sell Jl, you rooks. Also a full line of snaps, β¦ crabs and teacher ' s pets. The SUCCESS J of our rooks is guaranteed, certainteed, i teed off and half teed. t . in your room to dress for dinner Cheaper More Comfortable Eeisier Less Obnoxious Strictly Moral Undignified How often have you arrived to find that your favorite neck- tie is gracing the bosom of your roonimate! How much better to be receiving, say five cents sui hour! X T t T T T t t T T t . j yw j fc j fc jl lfc w fc W y . . A .j A j j . . iySlNESS-LIKEf Swarthmore Borrowing Syndicate Send ten cents in cigar cou- pons to the LIBERAL CLUBSKY and ask for membership appli- cation blank. Patrenize CPL H VCCD$ β¦ β¦ ' β¦ ' β¦ ' β¦ β¦ ' β¦β¦ β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦β¦ ' Advertising Section % The Pennsylvania Company FOR INSURANCES ON LIVES and GRANTING ANNUITIES Originally Chartered 1812 PACKARD BUILDING Southeast Corner Fifteenth and Chestnut Streets Aicouiits of Corporations, Banks, Firms and Individuals Soi.iciti:d Acts as Truster for Corporate Mort jages BRANCHES 15th St. S. Penn Square 7th and Wolf Streets 20 South 15th Street 517 Chestnut Street 307 Chestnut Street 1006 W. Lehigh Avenue 4826 Baltimore Avenue +5th and Walnut Streets 5th and Bainbridge Streets 49th St. Woodland Ave. 7th St. and Girard Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA Cable Address: Penco Menther l- ' ederal Reserve Syste [1] JOHN SPENCER INCORPORATED PRINTING - LITHOGRAPHING BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS EIGHTH STREET near SPROUL, CHESTER, PENNA. Bell β Walnutβ 5600 Keystone- -Race 7351, 1352, 7353 FELIX SPATOLA SONS FRUITS AND VEGETABLES The Year Round Reading Terminal Market Philadelphia, Pa. β THE Swarthmore College Bookstore Maintained by the College for the convenience of Students and Faculty Basement of PARRISH HALL Phone β Swarthmore 200 [2] The Traymore ATLANTIC CITY Pre-emineni in appoinimenis, in service, in location To live at The Traymore is to add immeasurably to your en- joyment of the seashore. Here, at the ocean ' s edge, you will find far-famed European and American plan restaurants . . . delightful rooms, luxurious and comfortable ... a colorful foyer . . . the largest and most beautiful of its kind in the world . . . spacious sun-decks, well appointed for lounging in the open sea air and glorious sunshine . . . private elevator to hotel bath house ...golf nearby... orchestra music and other fea- tures for your entertainment or subtle comfort, as you may prefer. Descriptive booklet and full information upon request. DANIEL S. WHITE H. JOSEPH WALTON MOTT Managing D ir ecior MONTGOMERY Manager iJil L. J Telephone: Swarthmore 1297 Vogue Beauty Shoppe Hairdressing Marinello iMethod of Facial and Scalp Treatments COLLEGE PHARMACY BLDG. Room 3 Chester Road and Park Avenue SWARTHMORE, PA. The Marot Flower Shop 315 Dickinson Avenue Flowers for All Occasions Bouquets Alade to Order Flowers Telegraphed Phone: Swarthmore 554 SKILLED DRY CLEANING .... Isn ' t NEATNESS ESSENTIAL TO STYLE? ENJOY THE WELL GROOMED APPEARANCE OF FINE DRY CLEANING Dresses, Kiddie Frocks, Spring Coats, Men ' s Suits, Topcoats, Boys ' Wear, Etc. Tf e Can Take Care of Everything for the Entire Family E-verything is Given Expert Attention TROY LAUNDRY CO. DIAL 6238 CHESTER, PA. Compliments of H. BERKELEY HACKETT Consulting Engineer PHILADELPHIA, PA. [4] THE SOUTHWESTERN A NATIONAL BANK WITH A TRUST DEPARTMENT Commercial and Savings Accounts COURTESY, SERVICE AND BANKING BROAD AND SOUTH STREETS PHILADELPHIA, PA. JOHN T. SCOTT, JR., Chairman of Ihr Board EUGENE WALTER, President JOHN M. DOTTERER, I ' ice-Presidrnt HARRY S. POLLOCK, Cashier JOSEPH S. WEAVER, Assistant Cashier [5] PERFECTLY PASTEURIZED MILK and CREAM FROM TUBERCULIN-TESTED HERDS HIGHLAND DAIRY PRODUCTS COMPANY ' PHONE CHESTER 2-2412 FOR DELIVERY SERVICE in SWARTHMORE SIMPSON CLOTHES Made and Sold a Better fVay SUIT TOPCOAT TUXEDO FULL DRESS 34.50 29.50 23.50 20.00 Absolutely Made to Measure When Simpson tailors your clothes they are made for you β not for just anybody. The pattern of your choice in the style you desire. MARTY SAMUELSON College Representative J. B. SIMPSON, INC. Custom Tailors DENCKLA BLDG. llTH AND MARKET STREETS PHILADELPHIA When you w,β, ,he Swarthmorc 450 Best in Flowers β Call CLARENCE ALWINE FLORIST Corsage Specialist β Flowers Wired Anywhere Baltimore Pike and Leamy Avenue SPRINGFIELD, DEL. CO. PENNSYLVANIA [6} Established 1881 CRETH SULLIVAH Inc. Incorporated 1925 INSURANCE 210 SOUTH FOURTH STREET PHILADELPHIA MARSHALL P. SULLIVAN, ' 97 FRANCIS W. D ' OLIER, ' 07 President Treasurer [7] An Investment in Success! In times like these, Good Appearance plays an increasingly important part in the life of every young man β whether in col- lege or out β for a smart, well-groomed appearance not only reflects success but increases the confidence that others have in you. With the reputation of being Philadelphia ' s fastest growing store for men , Jackson Mover offer a background of many years of experience in outfitting gentlemen, and a stock of exclusive yet moderately priced furnishings and clothing that you ' ll find a real investment in success. JACKSON MOVER 1610-1612 CHESTNUT STREET Strath Ha en Inn Swarthmore, Pennsylvania ALWAYS OPEN STRATH HAVEN TEA ROOM Telephone-Swarthmore 680 F. IVI. SCHEIBLEYβ Lafayette, ' 98 BREYER ICE CREAM CO. PATRONIZE THE BREYER DEALER PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK WASHINGTON NEWARK HARRISBURG [8] If you have experienced delays, mistakes, overcharges, or unworthy results in your printed matter, why not end your annoyance now by communicating with us? TO piece of work is too large or too small to receive our prompt and courteous attention. Catalogs, examination papers and stationery should be exactly right, delivered on time and at reason- able charges. Expert, interested service alone can relieve you of exasperations. Our expert service lifts all your printing troubles off your shoulders. We can devise styles to suit your taste and carry them through all your work. We specialize in educational printing. Catalogs, monographs, examina- tion papers, bulletins, foreign languages, school and college mag- azines, class records, stationery β work that is all Greek to most printers β all are handled by our large organization in a way that has pleased many of the best- known institutions in the East. Some have employed us for 40 years. THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY Bonk Publishers Printers and Binders WINSTON BUILDING 1006-16 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA, PA. [9] Thomas L. Briggs Sons ' E ' vcrything in Sporting Goods Tennis β Golf β Baseball Firearms β Fishing Tackle Camp Goods Discount to College Students Seventh and Welsh Streets CHESTER, PA. Colonial Old Method β A Roofing Tin of unexcelled quality, produced by experts to uphold the in- tegrity of that most satisfactory of all roofs β the Good Tin Roof. CONSULT YOUR ROOFER FABLE COMPANY, Inc. PHILADELPHIA THE INGLENEUK The Friendly Tea House in Swarthmore CHARMING ATMOSPHERE β INTERESTING PEOPLE β DELICIOUS FOOD β PERFECT COFFEE β STUDENT SERVICE On Somerville Day, 1916, the Ingleneuk opened with a seating capacity of twenty-five. In 1932, with a seating capacity of 125, we oflfer you a new type of service, greater charm, greater efficiency and, we believe, a better dinner than you can get anywhere in Delaware County for the same price. HOURS:β Breakfast 7.30-9.00. Luncheon 12.00-2.00 β Afternoon Tea 1.30-5.00 Club Dinner 6.00-7.30. Sunday Breakfast 9.00-11.00. Dinner 1.00-4.00 Sunday Supper 5.30-7.30 TELEPHONE: SWARTHMORE 69 WALTER T. KARCHER AND LIVINGSTON SMITH ARCHITECTS 1520 LOCUST STREET, PHILADELPHIA [10] SWARTHMORE PHOENIX The Weekly Publication of Swart hm ore College Alumni You are interested in Swarthmore, its development, its teams, its activities. You are interested in your classmates. The Swarthmore Phoenix, with its Alumni supplements, is the best medium for securing accurate and up-to-date information concerning these subjects. Seniors Subscribe to the Phoenix before graduation so that next year you may retain the contacts you form at your Alma Mater. Undergraduates If you would like to know Swarthmore ' s Past and Present, and if you would like to show that you are supporting Swarthmore activities β Support Your Col- lege Paper. Raymond Walters, Jr., ' 33 Editor-in-Chief John M. C. Betts, ' 33 Business Manager Charlotte Kimball, ' 33 Circulation Manager Subscription for College Year $2.50 [iij William H . Walters Sons 1310-12-14 No. Carlisle ' Street PHILADELPHIA Heating Mech. Ventilation Plumbing Power Piping Edward P. Dolbey Co. Microscopes - Laboratory Supplies Medical, Dental, Biological Books 3621 Woodland Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA. COMPLIMENTS OF SWARTHMORE NATIONAL BANK and TRUST COMPANY Paints and Glass of Quality The bare plaster walls and ceiling of the new Library have been painted with three coats of Ivory Saniflat over a coat ol Impervo Surfacer size. Examine this for a beau- tiful wall finish. OUR 35 YEARS ' EX- PERIENCE ENABLES US TO SUPPLY ANY- THING YOU NEED IN PAINTS AND GLASS CALL BOULEVARD 994 IMMEDIATE DELIVERIES DISTRIBUTORS OF BARRELED SUNLIGHT BENJAMIN MOORE COMPANY PRODUCTS KOVERFLOR CRAFTEX VALSPAR AND OTHER HIGH CJRADE PAINTS M. ] 6926 MARKET ST. IF WE BUTEN SC 1834 SOUTH ST. 5617-19 N. BROAD ST. PHILADELPHIA SAY IT ' S GOODβ IT IS n N. SEVENTH ST GOOD [12] When Good Fellows Get Together β¦ . Students tell us they like the friendly atmosphere of our store β and no less so, the kind of sodas and sundaes we serve at our fountain. And everyone is talking about the new ABBOTTS de luxe ICE CREAM. Have you tried it? Deliveries at all Hours. Just call Swarthmore 857 COLLEGE PHARMACY SWARTHMORE, PA. ri3} Established 1S95 S. F. Scattergood Co. UNLISTED SECURITIES BANK STOCKS INSURANCE STOCKS Packard Building Philadelphia, Pa. Bell β Rittenhouse 9122 Keystone β Race 1626 New York Telephoneβ Canal 4210 Morris P. Lewis, Trcas. L. I. Mead, Secy. Walnut 6253 β Main 5940 Noel Printing Company Incorporated Commercialβ PRINTERSβ Catalogues 112-114 North Seventh Street PHILADELPHIA HARDWARE STORE N. Walter Suplee Swarthmore Pennsylvania Co iipliments of John S. Morris Co. Wholesale Butter Dealers 27 South Water Street Philadelphia SKYTOP LODGE H ' u li in the Poconos SKYTOP, PA. THE IDEAL PLACE for YOUR VACATION OPEN ALL YEAR GOLF - TENNIS - SPl IMMING - BOATING - FISHING BOWLING - HIKING - RIDING - WINTER SPORTS For information as to our Club Plan of Operation Write Sam H. Packer, General Manager [14J 140 years of experience When the Insurance Company of North America was organized, in 1792, insurance needs were simple and few. Today they are many and complex. But they are met efficiently and economically by North America Policies and Service. Long experience, an equally long record of prompt and fair claim adjustment and the strength of a great organization are behind every North America Policy on your property risks. INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA Writing practically every form of Insurance except life BENJAMIN RUSH, President DIRECTORS EDWARD HOPKINSON WILLIAM S. GODFREY HENRY G. BRENGLE C HAR TMAN KUHN EFFINGHAM B. MORRIS JOHN S. JENKS CHARLES S. W. PACKARD JOHN O. PLATT JOSEPH WAYNE, JR. EDWARD S. BUCKLEY, JR.ARTHUR W. SEWALL JAMES D. WINSOR, JR. WILLIAM P. GEST SAMUEL D. WARRINER JAY COOKE BENJAMIN RUSH CLARENCE M. BROWN JOHN GRIBBEL CHARLES F. FRIZZELL HEAD OFFICE: 1600 Arch Street, Philadelphia Crc-th Sullivan, Inc., Agents, 210 South 4th St., Philadelphia, Pa. [15] BUCHNER ' S Toggery Shop 8 PARK AVENUE SWARTHMORE, PA. Distinctive Haberdashery COMPLETE LINE OF CLOTHES FOR COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN Victor D. Shirer Druggist At Your Service Headquarters for College Pennants, Cushion Covers, Stationery, Souvenirs and Gifts H. D. REESE, Inc. MEATS POULTRY CHEESE 1208 ARCH STREET PHILADELPHIA BERWIND ' S EUREKA COAL RAIL-CARGO-BUNKERING BERWIND-WHITE COAL MINING CO. PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK BOWERS BR OS. COMPANY ENGINEERS AND CONTRACTORS Heating, V entilation and Power Piping 2015 SANSOM STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. [16] SITTINGS BY APPOINTMENT BELL PHONE Our Portraits Live Forever Hollander Feldman Photographers 1705 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR 1933 HALYCON SPECIALIZING IN SCHOOL PHOTOGRAPHY [17] GOOD PRINTING plus A SERVICE (TTo be able to publish the annuals for such a list of represen- tative colleges and high schools in Eastern Pennsylvania as Swarthmore, Ursinus, Muhlenberg, Albright, State Teachers College at Kutztown, Hazleton High, Tamaqua High, Shen- andoah High, and others, should be sufficient proof of our ability and our claim to be known as specialists in this line. (TWe are willing to be judged by our work and service on any of these books. (J May we suggest to the editor and business manager of the annuals to be published next year that they ask those who had charge of the book this year, concerning our ability to assist them in planning and producing their books. We invite the opportunity to talk over your plans. (J We are also printing a number of college and preparatory school catalogs and are able to give them a very attractive proposition covering a number of years. Our layout department will be glad to offer you suggestions on your present catalog without assuming any obligation. Complete Printing Service KUTZTOWN PUBLISHING CO., INC. KUTZTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA Charles H. ESSER, President and directly in charge of all school work [18] THtS ANNUAL ENGRAVED BY JAMN OLLIER l_ ri9] (ifflehm (31itu BALTIMORE PIKE AT PROVIDENCE ROAD MEDIA, DEL. CO., PA. A small modern Inn β as hospitable and comfortable as any old time hostelry in Old England or on the Continent, yet prices and service conform to the modern practice and wonderful to relate, Good Food is treated as such and is served as food and not merely as a medium to make money. Operated By THE PATTONS Guest Rooms with Private Baths and Showers β Moderate Tariff β Several Dining Rooms, large and small TEMME-DALLER, Inc., Trinters THIRD AND SPRING GARDEN STS., PHILADELPHIA, PA. G. MORTON DALLER, ' 22 John Betts, ' 33 β College Representative Both Phones WALTER STOKES COMPANY INVESTMENT SECURITIES 104 SOUTH FIFTH STREET PHILADELPHIA Bell: Lombard 6969-72 Keystone: Main 4230 CATALOG FREE 518-516 MARKET STREET PHBLADELPHIA McARDLE COONEY Incorporated 519 ARCH STREET PHILADELPHIA Distributors of WALWORTH PRODUCTS PIPE FABRICATING SHOP Full Line of PIPE VALVES and FITTINGS PLUMBING and HEATING SUPPLIES [20] T. BROOKS McBRIDE Jf ' lioJesale d jnfectioner 306 LLOYD STREET CHESTER, PENNA. Sylvester S. Garrett Paper and Twine Headquarters 259 SO. THIRD STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. BOTH PHONES Chrysler Plymouth HANNUM WAITE SWARTHMORE, PA. Co mplete One Stop Service Stat on Goodyear Tires Exide Batteries FRANK MASELLI College Barber Park Avenue Svi arthmore Compliments of a FRIEND [21] Where Every Graduate is a Guaranteed Success A T the Conard-Pyle Rose Nursery every graduate we turn out is a guaranteed suc- cess. For here, each rose goes through a two-year period of growth under the most modern scientific methods, and in open, wind-swept fields where they ac- quire the vitaHty which makes our guarantee possible. The Faculty includes skilled nurserymen, trained in the science of horticulture and the traditions of Star quality which have been the standard for years. The Diploma or evidence of having met the requirements of Star quality is the durable celluloid star tag which Is on every rose, bearing the name of the plant and the guarantee that it will grow and bloom. Drive out and see 200,000 Star Roses in bloom, June till Frost. Stop at Red Rose Inn Delicious meals ' mid quaint antiques THE CONARD-PYLE COMPANY Star Rose Growers ROBERT PYLE, President West Grove, Pa. (28 miles from Swarthmore on U. S. Route No. 1) [22] Compliments of Worth Steel Company CLAYMONT, DEL. [231 Index to Advertisers Page Abliott Ice Cream 13 Clarence Alwine 6 Bervvind White Coal Co 16 Bovvers Bros. Co 16 Brej ' er Ice Cream Co 8 Briggs Son, Thos. L 10 Buchner ' s Toggery Shop 16 Buten Sons, M 12 College Pharmacy 13 Conard-Pyle Co 22 Creth Sullivan 7 Dolbey k Co., Edwin P 12 Fable Co., Inc 10 Garrett, Sylvester 21 Hackett, H. Berkeley + Hannum Waite 21 Highland Dairy Products Co 6 Hollander k Feldman Studio 17 Ingleneuk Tea Room 10 Insurance Co. of North America 15 Jackson k Meyer 8 Jahn k Oilier 19 Karcher. Walter T. Livingston Smith 10 Kutztown Publishing Co 18 Marot Flower Shop + Maselli, Frank 21 McArdle k Cooney, Inc 20 Page McBride, T. Brooks 21 Media Inn 20 Michell ' s Seeds 20 Morris k Co., John S 1+ Noel Printing Co 1+ Pennsylvania Co., The 1 Reese, H. D. k Sons, Inc 16 Scattergood k Co., S. F 1+ Shirer, Victor D 16 Simpson, Inc., J. B - 6 Skytop Lodge, Inc 1+ Southwestern National Bank 5 Spatola, Felix k Sons 2 Spencer, Inc., John 2 Stokes k Co., Walter 20 Suplee, N. Walter 1+ Strath Haven Inn 8 Swarthmore College Book Store 2 Swarthmore National Bank 12 Swarthmore Phoenix H Temme-Daller, Inc 20 Traymore Hotel 3 Troy Laundry 4- Vogue Beauty Shop + Walters Son, Wm. H 12 Winston Co., John C 9 Worth Steel Co 23 Printed and Serviced b The Kutztown Publishing Company, Inc. Kutztown, Penna. w fc sssi; :vg:?s?ssass!g SSSSSSfS, vS
”
1930
1931
1932
1934
1935
1936
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.