Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA)
- Class of 1938
Page 1 of 264
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 264 of the 1938 volume:
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PREFACE 7 YEAR BOOK is a year book, and ever since some bright sentimentalist got the idea years ago that every class should have a tangible record of its college days, Swarthmore has been following a rigorous suit. The book you nov hold in your hands, or more likely propped up on your lap, is a part of what a goon would call that recapitulating unity. You have already heard the adjectival prog- nostications of its superlative worth. Just turn the pages, and if you have ever seen such photography or read such lucid prose we ' ll eat the cover, which is also, you will notice, a rather nifty break with the past. If you still don ' t like it, you probably will many years from now when your kids blow the dust off the thing and laugh at the funny clothes you v ore. 1936 The HALCYO of nineteen thirty-eight Published by the JUNIOR GLASS Swarthmore College 1937 DEDIC ATIO THE CLASS OF 1938 RESPECTFULLY DEDICATES THE HALCYON TO ROBERT B. MacLEOD, A FRIEND WHO HAS BEEN A STIMULATING TEACHER AND A SPLENDID ADVISER TO US ALL. President FRANK AYDELOTTE Dean of Men HAROLD E. B. SPEIGHT Dean of Women FRANCES BLANSHARD President of the Board of Managers CHARLES F. JENKINS THE ADMINISTRATION Reading vertically: First picture, Hull; second, Wilcox, Malin; third, Newman; fourth. Palmer; fifth, MacLeod; sixth, Pennock; seventh, Jenkins. F Reading vertically: First picture, Fraser, R. C. Brooks; second, Spiller, Iribas, A. M. Brooks; third. Hall, Marriott, Pitman; fourth, Albertson, Hicks, Nason, Scudder; fifth, Holmes, Adams; sixth. Hunt, Rubinow, Winspear; seventh, McCrumm, Trigger, Thom. Reading vertically: First picture, Stilz, M. Wen- celius; second, Garrett, W. Wright; third, Anderson, Pittenger; fourth, Foster, Creighton, Keighton; fifth. Carpenter, Bourdelais, Lilly; sixth, Dresden, Malin, Speight, Rubinow; seventh, Koehler, Brinkmann. f tM ' ' Reading vertically: First picture, L. Wencelius, Forest, Fairbanks, Reinhold; second, F. B lanshard, Klees, Baer; third, Kille, N. Jones, R, M. Jones; fourth, Rubinow, Manning; fifth, Brun, Goddard, Torrey; sixth, Newman, Aydelotte, E. C. Wright, B. Blan- shard; seventh, Wilcox, Mandelbaum; eighth, Jacobs, Enders, Scott, Worth. First Semester Officers SCHROEDER, ELLIS, HAFKENSCHIEL, LEWIS Second Semester Officers PRENTICE, BROOKS, ROSS, LONGSHORE S E I O R S ■winy II i, tlr- t JANE SHIRLEY ALBEN CHRISTIAN ANFINSEN, Jr. SAMUEL F. ASHELMAN, jr. EARL PHILIP BENDITT WALTER S. BARCLAY JOHN SCOTT BALLARD 14 ALAN EDWARD BLOCK MARION BEST ISABEL REST BENKERT E. ANNE BROOKE BARBARA B. BROOKS 15 MARGARET B. BROOKS THOMAS H. BROOMALL G. LUPTON BROOMELL, Jr. JAMES E. BUCKINGHAM WILLIAM C. CAMPBELL C. OLIVER BURT JEAN ALISON CARSWELL 16 DORWIN CARTWRIGHT KEITH W. CHALMERS JOHN SOWDEN CHILD JAMES HULME CLARKE ARNOLD F. CLARKE MARGARET A. CLARK 17 MYRTLE E. CORLISS BETTY FOREE DENNIS BENJAMIN COOPER MARGARET E. CUFITT T. MALCOLM CLEMENT MARGUERITE C. COTSWORTH 18 FRANCES T. BERING MURIEL C. ECKES WILLIAM DIEBOLD, Jr. GRACE AMALIE ECKMAN ELIZABETH L. DOBSON MARION ELLIS 19 LEO GBURSKI GEORGE E. FORSYTHE OLVA FULLER FAUST JAMES R. GARDNER 20 WARD S. FOWLER MARGARET L. GERMANN LYLE BENNETT GILL WESLEY R. GODDARD A. THOMAS HALLOWELL MASON HAIRE JOSEPH HAFKENSCHIEL 21 JAMES ALAN HARPER ELIZABETH S. HAY ERNEST HERBSTER RICHARD HEAVENRICH ALMA BIELE HELBING 22 JOHN EVERETT HICKOK HELEN F. HORNBECK FRANK A. HUTSON, Jr LOUISE P. HOUSEL GEORGE D. HULST, Jr. 2;j ELIZABETH W. JACKSON JOHN JUSTUS KIRN JOAN C. KELLEY RICHARD KOENEMANN SAMUEL I. KALKSTEIN ROBERT KLABER 24 WAYNE LOWRY LEES CHARLES W. LOEB BARBARA LESHER W. ALLEN LONGSHORE, Jr. RUTH MARY LEWIS VIRGINIA L. LUPTON 25 CHARLES STUART LYON ADELE CONWAY MILLS 26 PATTY P. MORRIS HAROLD P. NEWTON, Jr. IRVING A. MORRISSETT, Jr. MARGARET A. PARTON BARBARA W. PEARSON OLIVER PAYNE PEARSON HUGH GORDON PELTON THOMAS BENTON PERRY JOSEPHINE H. PETERS 28 EDWIN BURR PETTET MARY DORIS PHILLIPS J. ARCHER POTTINGER WILLIAM C. PRENTICE 29 DONALD H. PURCELL C. BARNARD PRICE, Jr. FRANCES S. REED EDWIN PHILIPS ROME JOHN MUIRHEAD RICE 30 BARTON W. ROPE ISABEL HOLLY ROSS ELIZABETH B. ROWLAND ELEANOR RUSSELL E. MORTON SCHAFFRAN ALAN HERMAN SALM 31 ABE SCHLESINGER, II WILLIAM TAUSSIG SCOTT RAYMOND G. SCHROEDER JOSEPH SELLIGMAN IRVING S. SCHWARTZ RUTH ANNA SHOEMAKER 32 ROBERT M. SKETCHLEY MARTHA LOUISE SMITH GEORGE WILEY SINGISER MANNING AMISON SMITH ERWIN F. SHRADER CONSTANCE L. SMITH 33 WILLIAM FRANCIS SMITH THOMAS F. SPENCER HELEN SOLIS-COHEN WILLIAM STEVENS WALTER STAAKS F. PALIN SPRUANCE, Jr. 34 MARGARET H. STICKLER RICHARD JAMES STORR ELIZABETH BOYD STILZ GORDON STRAKA LEONARD F. SWIFT CHARLES I. TAGGART 35 ANN BRADLEE VAN BRUNT THEODORE VELTFORT, Jr. RICHARD C. THATCHER KATHRYN WALKER MINA WATERMAN :)6 FRANCIS WILLIAM WEEKS « %- BARBARA E. WEISS f ANN E. WHITCRAFT MURIEL BARNETT WHITE EMILY WHITMAN 37 KATHARINE M. WHITE SIDNEY WICKENHAVER FRED J. WIEST I CAROLYN V OOD ISABEL L. WILDE 38 CYRUS FOSS WOOD DREW MacK. YOUNG JOHN H. WOOD, Jr. 39 WETZEL, DANA, SCOLL, BUDDINGTON 40 41 Quigley but a memory ' Call me Colonel ' In the line of things for swing JAMES LEWIS ANDERSON Localite and then Delaware ' s Quigley Ander- son, Jim had a memorable two and one-half years within the classic portals. Always planning canoe trips to the Arctic, bibliophile with a passion for bind- ings, Quig called himself a logician, gave himself a nickname, was en garde in fencing. A D-sectionite with an urge towards the usual, Quig liked lacrosse sticks, admitted that he did things on hunches, went to bed at nine o ' clock, never did seem to catch up on sleep. English major and dabbler in the fine arts, Jim took French leave at mid-year, may be back. JOHN ELSON BAER Placement week found John Elson ( Colonel ) Baer issuing a pronunciamento. Announced Baer: Call me Colonel. To lend authority to his name the Colonel strides around campus wearing a Western Stetson, Swarthmore ' s only one, garnered during a summer in Arizona. When the call for assistant managers for swimming went out, Baer answered, was the only one. Manager Weeks scurried out for competitors, found one. But the Colonel triumphed. Result: Assistant Manager of Swimming. Conscientious, Assistant Man- ager Baer gave away his dessert at dinner during exam week because he had failed to retire early enough the night before. Such conscientiousness pays; Early to bed John entered Chemistry honors. ALFRED FRANK ASH Ample in deed is New York State ' s Alfred Frank Ash. Hon- ors student in mathematics. Little Theatre Clubber Ash is the life of the party on any- body ' s cello, piano, guitar, ban- jo, double bass, or what have you in the line of things for swing. Chairman of the Phoe- nix Advisory Board and Secre- tary-Treasurer of M.S.G.A., ex- pectant architect Ash takes time off for photographing nature ' s wonders. Man with initiative, he spent last summer learning control over puppets; seems to be able to achieve the same results with profs. 42 ' Conservatively chaotic Enthusiastic mayhem ' Domination in default FAITH BARSALOW Though bred in New Eng- land, brunette Faith Barsalow came to college with the firm belief that a warmer clime bet- ter suited her languid disposi- tion and noticeable inclination to sing with a southern accent. Versatile in her interests, she is a Gwimper, artist, sailor, horseback rider, besides having natural concern over Colgate jewelry (not pins) and Phi Delts. Always broke yet never in debt, she studies sparingly and spurtfully, constantly stews about scientific drawing. Good natured and easy-going. Faith ' s secret desire is to dominate, though up till now her success has hardly been noticeable. JAMES HODGE BEARDSLEY Indefatigable Sketch Clubber, Bronxville ' s Jack in the Box, James Hodge Beardsley carries no easel to show off his talents. A thick crop of hair, conservatively chaotic, is his only concession to Fine Artistry. Journeys often to ivy-covered cloisters, pondering philosobstrac- tions; quotes the English masters to prove versatility; croons a mean tenor with the Glee Club and Chorus. Possessor of a Profile, Wildcat Beardsley studies architecture just in case. By nature chatty, prefers to discuss private matters privately; holds open house in his room every evening from 11:00 to 11:03 for this purpose. Admittedly a kitten fancier. JOSEPH CHRYSTAL BENDER Native of New Jersey, Exeter product Joseph Chrystal Bender transferred this year from Rutgers, plunged into zoology and mathematics with instant suc- cess. Professional among amateurs, he owes his tri- umph to summers spent as summer counseler, tutoring math. Quiet and conservative in social life, photog- rapher Bender shows that still water depth with such diverse things as interest in music and enthusiastic mayhem in lacrosse. Plays cello and trombone; mem- ber of Glee Club traveling unit No. 1. Spare time Chorister, the practical Mr. Bender finds his athletics an excellent method of practicing for his chosen work — osteopathy. 43 ' Surrealistic seminar subver- sion Future boxer now bouncer ' Knew Paul Revere ELIZABETH FUNSTON BIGGERSTAFF Bouncing, bibulous (coffee), brilliant, beady-eyed Bugs behaves beautifully, but traps unwary seminar- observers into unseemly mirth by her ability to make instantaneous, unexpected, and astounding faces. A bona-fide example of versatility, sock-maniac (surreal- ism?) Biggerstaff sidles in and out of the arts: drawing, tumbling. May-day dancing, mimicking, and plunking the ivories, all on a diet of coffee and cigarettes. Off- campusing means nothing to this flying-haired, ubiq- uitous babe: a harum-scarum hostess, hiding guests ' coats, squirting amazing perfume on her friends, she justifies it all by her virtues: sewing, knitting, egg- cooking, midnight-soup fixing, and a turned-up nose. HARRIET ELIZABETH BITTLE Brown-eyed Betty Bit-tie, pint-sized second wester, giggles individually, is known as Bouncing Bet be- cause, like the lady at the World ' s Fair, she wiggles when she walks. Poll. Sci. major Betty spends much time beating out papers, relaxes by donning white sweate r, dining with fellow Gwimpers. Vociferously Republican but also good-natured, little Bittle was hailed as future soap-boxer by her home floor ' s Demo- cratic element, endured even the indignity of having Roosevelt buttons attached to her cringing person. Friend of all, Betty ' s steady emotional keel enables her to lend a sympathetic ear to everyone ' s troubles, accounts for her having none of her own. MARGARET ANNE BILL Having progressed from the Paul Revere of Joyce House days to the Freshman class whom she now dates eight days a week, Meg has also be- come an honors student with a dread of all horn rims and size ten shoes. Although portrayer of an insipid heroine in Inspec- tor General, Meg when not act- ing maintains a gay and cheer- ful appearance by means of low scores on the golf team and graceful skill on skis. Cute and perky, Meg also dotes on Dart- mouth — possessing everything green from toy elephants to bows in her curly black hair. 44 Classics contradict cakes Going down the drain BORIS BLAI, Jr. A familiar gait, remembered as a gangster in Waiting for Lefty, also a tough egg on the football field, Melrose Park ' s Boris Blai, Jr., once known as Izz and now as Blizz adds a lot of musical talent to a carniv- orous dramatic career. About him no suspicion of being arty, Blizz is a member of the string sextet, noted for his Joe Venuti style of playing, majors in psy- chology, hopes to study art after Sworthmore. A card player of the top deck, Blizz goes in for interior decorating as a hobby, doesn ' t expect to wear an eye glass, has no desire to decorate dowagers ' boudoirs in pink. VIRGI NIA BEW BOND Ginny Bond bumps joyously through college con- tradicting herself in every other sentence, majoring in English, loving to dance, reminding people of a stylish super-sunbeam with paradoxical serious intentions. Like many another, she scintillated first in the Fresh- man Show. Now, in her own contradictory fashion, her activities flow in the more learned channels of French and Classical Clubs. The sunbeam simile stops at her able routine work as Somerville Forum ' s busy secretary. Ginny is rightfully proud of her crack coke-making, her banner-strewn room, modest about her concrete activity list, her studying. MIRIAM RAVI BOOTH Proxy Booth, Third West ' s portly paragon, finds life too short to indulge her many interests, usually camou- flaged by general insouciance and gaiety. Her interest in her fellow woman is demonstrated by W. S. G. A. and F. A. C. work; her (vicarious) love of sports by Gwimping; her interest in the beaux arts by concert — and Little Thecrter-ing. Executive and capable, Mim adroitly works a history through the extra-curricular welter; turns her still unlimited energy into a laugh that sounds like water going down the drain. Versa- tile to a high degree, la Bottle prides herself most on her basso profundo which shakes the pictures off Third West walls. Beware of smooth talkers Lanky Westerner memorable as lanky Westerner She does Byrd imitations ' GEORGE DORSEY BRADEN Coming to Swarthmore with a long list of the usual but in this case unforgettable high school achieve- ments, Louisville ' s, New York ' s, Indianapolis ' , South Bend ' s open scholar Braden sets a new standard in card indexing, careful typing, 76 in golf. One of the turf diggers ' most perfect swingers, Prexie manages intercollegiate verbal tilts, quotes Hocking, Moulton, and Dad, adds a raucous laugh to the comedy team of Diebold, Chalmers, and Storr. Politician, incandescent honors student, and holder of the freshman and soph- omore debate medals, smooth talker, dresser, actor Braden advises frosh to beware of glib talkers. JOHN HOLT BRECKENRIDGE From distant Idaho ' s potato patches hails Long John Breckenridge, a true westerner who combines his drawl and thorough frankness with a clear-visioned grasp on life that steers him steadily thru the Swarth- more whirl. Class president freshman year, he strug- gled arduously and successfully for basketball man- agership, becoming an ardent Kwinker as a result. Easily distinguishable by his physical eminence, Breck can be seen cavorting nobly on the fall soccer field. Well rounded, this lanky westerner took a memorable dramatic lead as a lanky westerner in Green Grow the Lilacs, and though valiantly honoring in chem, still finds time for recreation in the social sciences. EMILY BREARLEY Third East ' s candidate for champion lecture - attender, Emily Caroline Brearley finds her favorite sport often spoiled by knitting — a pet objection. A summer geologist with no in- terest in tea sets even as gifts, Em is fond of exercise — tennis, walking, swimming — thinks nothing of a sudden 5-mile jaunt in Byrd weather; alter- nates sessions of reading (Mark Twain addict) with long naps. Because it ' s good for her, takes history, plans to suffer chemis- try and physics; always plays solitaire before exams. A long- wished-for phenomenon: ex- hibits a sense of humor that balks at practical jokes. 46 ' Sobered soul Lush snowballs from an august rostrum But slowly ELIZABETH BROSIUS Bet Brosius doesn ' t bounce! She dances. The sprightly Soul of her first Somerville Day has been sobered by such seri- ous matters as honoring and Gwimping, but still her mo- ments of real Bet-ness are tip- toe and breathless. The air- way from Joyce House to Wool- man may not have been most direct, but when flights of fancy lead to building snowmen in the back yard, walking in the rain to Wallingford for fun, singing on gateposts after dark, it seems to have been a gay way. With a delicate flick of an exquisite eyebrow, Bet can hold reality at bay, or accept it, as she chooses. DAVID BROWN Throughout the rowdy, rampant rumblings con- stantly emanating from notorious E section, the in- sistent words, Dirty Dave, seem suspiciously omni- present, omnipotent, ubiquitous, and eternal. Perhaps unjustly maligned upon superficial, though remarkably convincing, impressions, we find him seriously major- ing in math, more seriously occupying himself with be- ing one of the merman team, lacrosse manager, and Kwinker. Climaxing this respectable appearance is his recent appointment to the august MSGA, imquestion- ably placing Dave in the rostrum of academic irre- proachables, were it not for sinister repercussions of accusation immortalized in Phoenix letters concerning certain lush snowballs in unwelcome places. JOHN HUNN BROWN Tenacious horseman, Hill School product John Hunn Brown galloped into Swarthmore from the wide open spaces of Wyoming — Delaware. Avid reader in the fields of government and economics, he needs only to learn the technique of oratorical exhibitionism before embarking on a career of politics. Despite diplomatic tendencies, capitalist Brown admits a preference for redheads and Bryn Mawrons, both of which constitute an audience worth holding. Vocalist and track man — but slowly. Dances well with goils and foils; baseball and tennis enthusiast, although he prefers resting and eating. Suspects he has one enemy — his barber. 47 A nocturnal absentee ' He keeps them from reverting to the classics RICHARD STEWART BRUNHOUSE One of the Brookline aristocrats, Dick is a day- student with a vengeance, for, though an athletic flash, we get only occasional fleeting glimpses of his stocky figure. Having played football, basketball, and base- ball, all equally well, he varied his schedule this fall with a dash of soccer, proceeded to become varsity goalie with almost terrifying rapidity. But other than for athletics, gruelling hours in engineering labs, and frequent visits to that frigid anomaly, A section, Dick shows surprisingly little interest in our complex little world, and though possessing a car, employs it noc- turnally elsewhere, thereby causing much sinister speculation by campus gossips. CHARLES ADAMS CALDWELL Lanky Villager, Charles Adams Caldwell, rhythm boy, is the Swarthmore candidate for swing. His T. P. ' s are chaotic carousals. Actor, dancer, statue lover Caldwell increased his good times, proved his taste, by the addition of the Brooklyn blond. Typical reporter, he lists Phoenix columning and press board adjectivating among his minor accomplishments. Dun- nie ' s left hand man on the diamond, Soccerite Cald- well still manages to write themes that keep the English department from reverting to the classics. Revels, for the most part, in passive resistance and what he terms delightful lethargy. AUGUSTUS BUDDINGTON Famed as Wisconsin ' s Loch- invar, redheaded, energetic, Augustus Frank Buddington has become one of Swarth- more ' s most versatile individ- uals. Sophomore member of the glee club and the renowned double-quartet, Gus rounded his individuality by his election to the football managership and thereby attaining place on the A. A. council. Junior year has seen Delta Uvian Buddington become President of Kwink and one of the loquacious J. V. Bookies, self-organized group of raw-raw boys. Said manager Buddington when he gained a partnership in the remunerative cracker room, I like to make money. 48 I Manages peace and quiet Spartan principles and cuss words JOHN CARLSON Empire State ' s Johnny Carl- son, chemist and no addict to swing, combines a rather retir- ing manner with a rather star- tling sense of humor. The result is a worthy adjunct to the other- wise mute team of Staaks and Carlson, students extraordinary. A glee clubber with a hefty high note, basso Carlson puts in his inflated two cents at Wharton bull sessions, knows when to stop; a conservative with a latent desire to see things happen, non-hopper Johnny cuts around collection, hasn ' t settled down to monotonous and monogamous junior bliss. Sulphur burner and Creighton protege of the first rank, John says he ' s just ordinary, never complains of the food, probably once had a stamp collection. ALICE EUGENIA CARRIGAN Guppy-tender on less than a Funkhouser scale, Alice Eugenia Carrigan otherwise confines her love for the great outdoors to dogs and plants. Limited to local rambles with the Outing Club during the school year, Gene enjoys more extensive traveling during vacations. Lover of the better things in life — perfume, prune whip, orchestra seats — she is notorious for a violent dislike of butterscotch sauce. The domestic touch evidenced in almost constant room-cleaning and friend- feeding does not take too much time from her duties of business managing Little Theater Club and general managing peace and quiet on the hall. WILLIAM ROBERT CARROLL Called the healthiest person in the class, studious, aimiable Willie Carroll, mid-western product with a 4H appearance, furthers his Spartan principles with jayvee football and the captaincy of swimming. Chair- man of the social committee and last year ' s class treasurer, Willie managed to pull down a good average and whiz into honors. Social mogul, Illinois ' Carroll majors in zoology, shows keenest intellectual interest in rabbits, boasts no phobiae. Respected, liked, his most violent expression is oh cuss word ; no Carrie Nation, his tastes just don ' t run to the fermented things; a lot of savoir faire, but that ' s because we can ' t tell when he ' s blushing. 49 ' On lawn with Landon ' Baby lion pillar One of the mythical beings GEORGE CHIDESTER CARSON Cheerful Trojan, George Chidester Carson man- ages to squeeze in some college courses along with his thirty-six hours weekly of off campus work. Not to be outdone. Village Boy Carson rivals Jenkins with his own sailboat, plus a trailer to transport it to and from the spacious Crum. Participates in the gentle- manly sports — tennis and golf; was on lawn with Lan- don when the latter received Presidential nomination; has a startling sense of humor. As proof of this, Engi- neer Carson went to see about buying a seaplane — and took the boys for a ride. BARBARA ANNE CHAPMAN Barbara Chapman has a mane of yellow hair and button blue eyes, looks something like a baby lion. Pillar of Little Theater, she directs plays and designs costumes besides indulging a flair for comedy in some of Swarthmore ' s best characterizations. One of those who thirst for knowledge, Chappie combines one part of French with three of English, writes clever verse for Manuscript, holds forth at Bond musical tete-d-tetes. The Section ' s enfant terrible, possessing many things to be proud of, limits herself modestly to two: her natural wave, cultivated for years, and her relation- ship (by marriage) to Mrs. Simpson. DAVID WEBB CHANEY Transferring from Carleton College, situated vaguely some- where in the middle west, Dave joined our distinguished ranks last year to room in C section, where his frequent generous and often noisy feasts became a popular social institution. Living near Swarthmore, how- ever, he decided this year to become one of the day-stu- dents, those somewhat mythical beings, and consequently par- ticipates less in our mad whirl. A chem major, Dave somehow or other finds intensive study both profitable and enjoyable, but occasionally deserts his un- obtrusive, almost mysterious, manner to indulge a bit in such extremely orthodox campus ac- tivities as the Interfrat Council. 50 Cousin of Little Boy Blue No Country Club Poor conductor CARL COFFIN COLKET Member of that group of hard- working B-2 juniors, Brooklyn ' s Carl Coffin Colket has found that Swarthmore is no country club for him. First-class engi- neer, Carl is one of the Garnet ' s best all-around athletes. While inter-fraternity basketball and jayvee lacrosse engage him during the winter and spring periods, his great interest is in soccer. One of Dunnie ' s best hooters, Captain-elect Colket plays right halfback on our championship team. Quiet and reserved, Carl is no rah-rah boy, but a serious student who came to Swarthmore to work and is succeeding in his aspira- tions. CATHERINE COOK Joint owner of the wildest door in Parrish (excep- tion: Room 200), Press Boarder Catherine Cook is mod- estly proud of the assembled match cover, trumpet, poem, etc., collection thereon. Kate is great on trans- portation, a last-minute train chaser, an occasional tan- dem rider to Haverford, and a boat lover any time. She ' s also strong for horses — down or up; for intrigu- ing posters — first down then up; but hard against the Swarthmore anti-Haverford spirit. Dusting under the bed (only place in room) to keep slippers clean com- pensates for wild expeditions sitting on holes in boats, sleeping in haystacks. ANNE COOPER Langley Field Army Post ' s Anne Cooper took honors first as production manager of her freshman show. Inherently efficient and businesslike, she is an actively effective Press Board participator. The south- ern girl drawlingly wisecracks, ardently gestures, com- pletely relaxes whenever possible. Button-nosed, curly- headed, she bets readily on Army-Navy games, bridge, elections, conducts herself so as to keep conduct busy, finds fame as perennial Friday and Saturday nighter and willing bridge player. Psych major Cooper prefers to study from life and has never been known to go to the libe when the lodge was within walking distance. 51 ' In a class with Mae West ' Out to be a problem GEORGE BRINTON COOPER Avaricious reader, Halcyon Editor George Brinton Cooper confounds the library with books taken out. To make use of wide knowledge, Cooper treks weekly to eminent Dr. Robert Clarkson Brooks ' home for tea, discusses all phases of the social sciences. True politico, Editor Cooper gets into everything; struggled for basketball managership, making Kwink; was buf- feted room choosing chairman; gathers autographs; is a linguist of the last declension; chairmans E sec- tion; is gallant. Lost named gave him a commission on the staff of the Kentucky Governor; cost the state of Kentucky twenty-two cents to put Colonel Cooper in elite class of 6,000, including Mae West. HARRIET MERRILL DANA Bunny ' s bubbling exuberance, observable only if you look a little ahead of where she just was, is applied in quite normal fashion to a decidedly super-normal number of things and people. Nobody social, athletic, executive, studious should turn out to be a problem child — but how one litlle round person is divided into one hockey captain, one basketball forward, one tennistar, one AA official, one FAC-er, one Zo honorer, and one corsage-newspaper hoarder, seems an insoluble prob- lem. And Bunny herself is no help at all. Even in the long, strenuous bull-sessions of the Joyce-Woolman- ites, she sits and knits intently and never tells. NANCY JANE COOPER Nancy Cooper passed her sophomore year at Ohio State, but realized the mistake soon enough to be in the 1938 Halcyon. Blond and freckled, occasionally serious, she often appears as a happy socialite, warmhearted gesturer, and good- natured druggie fiend. Cute, twinkling Eatalot, she can keep a straight face while tell- ing tall stories and entertain with side-splitting imitations. Apparently sane as social com- r- ' Uteeworker, she is possessed of a rabid desire to take clothes apart and put them together again differently. Ambitious Nancy nightly borrows fat re- serve books which, however, are found no thinner for wear in the morning. 52 ' G woman ' Ingenious clothes-acquirer Lives with corpses MARGARET DAVENPORT Another one of those ubiquit- ous George School alumnae, Peg is rated as the most thoughtful and the second most bowlegged member of the Eat- alots. Hailed by her intimates as Davenpot or Sofa, with characteristic demoniac inno- cence she deftly turns the laugh back upon the punsters, her in- genuity equal to any situation, even to acquiring an entire opera getup once when caught in New York incog, and strictly informal. She manages to man- age Golf-Gwimping, Conduct, and F.A.C.; but as a student she ' s an inveterate sleeper, or else. Flattie or not, would much rather go to the druggie. JANE VIRTUE DAVIS With a dual passion: poetry and a protege, Jane manages to swing an English major and still keep Snippy, the turtle, from hibernating simply by waking him every m_orning with an electric light. German- gabbling Jane must also deal with strenuous objectors to her plebeian bread-and-gravy slurping taste, and with soft answers turneth away wrath only to find fiendish efforts being made to remove forever from her loving care that questionably beautiful animal, Hucky Ray (color: green). Attempts to thwart dognappers so in- clined rival the best demonstrations of J. Edgar, but gentle (?) Jane ' s lank dark hair remains smooth through any teapot tempest. SARAH JANE DEARDORFF Country Dutch ' s Sal Deardorff bounced into col- lege to the tune of a healthy York accent, was promptly elected hall president partly to hush it up. Unabashed, she hilariously adorns her room with lurid dime novel corpses, sugarfoots gaily at table parties and collec- tion. Exhibiting a passion for neatness with smoothly fitting clothing, she, however, hides customary worry- ing under a dimpling grin. Frequently sleeping, when awake Archie ' s pal cleverly alternates interest in English with love of radio, proves her sports enthusiasm with membership in Gwimp. Effectively combining efficiency and love of fun, Sal nightly tires of the books just in time for a date at nine. 53 ' Standard oiler ' Receives free diagnosis from a Scott Monkey mangier MARGARET ELIZABETH DEKNATEL Ordering Pictorial Review for six com ing years, Margo apparently considers chucking a science (main- ly Psych) vocation to stay on as M section ' s permanent rock-in-time-of-distress. With staunch Dutch fidelity she nightly places her eight plants upon the telephone table, sings chorus blues to and from supper, allowable because of redeeming bull-session partialities, the sec- tion ' s most beautiful legs, and math knowledge suf- ficient to solve all financial tangles. Professedly pacifistic, Margo makes Military Balls, supports Stand- ard Oil alter-wards, and grimly golfs (varsity), her perfect blond wave unruffled even through crises of Wednesday Rose-Valley transportation or the acquisi- tion of a December ' s white orchid. MARY ELIZABETH DUMM A Sunday hostess for tea, Mary Elizabeth Dumm has ample opportunity to demonstrate a good disposi- tion in other ways than merely giving up the pickle chaperoning roast beef on its luckier days. Mary Lib is noted for her good luck in having an aunt in Philly with a rideable horse, for being a faithful member of all Theater Guild audiences, for optimistically attempt- ing to raise snails in her room. She helps decorate the blackboards of the zoo building, giving Dr. Kille board-washing pain, meriting Dr. Scott ' s epithet, a carefree honors student with a pathological sense of humor. MARTHA DUDLEY Tall, serene product of New Haven, Martha still is a fiend for anything pertaining to Yale. Sojourning at Swarthmore, as a well groomed committee- woman, Dudley aids such func- tions as our famous co-ed week ; and as co-head of the Community Chest fund she ex- cels as collection speaker and hard working canvasser. By day zo major Dudley is one of our foremost monkey manglers, at night she is asleep early to the despair of potential noise makers. Hitting every avail- able youth concert and inspir- ing the younger generation of summer campers with her ten- nis teaching, she puts her ac- cent on youth. 54 Testimonial ' ' ' With 1000 models in his room ' CHARLES EAMES Tiny mite among behemoths, E section ' s Charles Frederic Eames gravitates naturally into the forefront of activity. Native of the flowering metropolis of Tamaqua, Pa., English major Eames forgoes nature loving to devote himself to the task of campostulating. Vice-president- ed for the Kwinkers; manages the divot diggers; yells Fire when E section burns. A div- ing specialist and member of the singing shower boys ' quar- tet, quadruple threat man Eames ' saxophone, clarinet, tenor, and swing tendencies make him the dance floor de- mon. Is learning the bakery business from the ground (flour) up. Promises thinner slices and more of them when he arrives at the cutting department. HERTHA EMMA EISENMENGER Lab haunting Hertha Emma Eisenmenger is the foremost product of Third East ' s ability to rouse sleepy heads, have its vertebrae counted, send forth a mem- ber with the right date near the right time all on a Saturday night. In return, the corridor may be favored with a wordless rendition of a new song, a constant supply of food, the thrill of having a night picture snapped from a rainy window sill. Appreciative of her roommate ' s kindness in explaining jokes and her leniency in the matter of lima beans, Hertha plays favorites, breaking a rule by remembering the room- mate ' s name. THOMAS HENRY ELLIOTT Calm, complacent cheerfulness marks Seattle ' s Thomas Henry Elliott, Washington ' s single representa- tive in Quakertown. Despite Teutonic leanings, Chem- ist Elliott names German as his only anathema. Is uncrowned handball king; relaxes from such vigorous exercise by eight hours daily on the books. Pre-med- ical honors student, zoologist Elliott spends summers islanding on Puget Sound, Robinson Crusoe ' s ' round the mountains. Acquired nickname of Bucket from similarity to Thomas A. Beckett in minds of punning Whartonions. With 1000 models in his room, Sketcher Elliott disclaims title of genius from enthusiastic critics, is forced to have monthly open house to display his newest additions. ' Bird at hand ' Mysterious foreign hands Champion of the boiled potato ANNE HAMMOND EPLEY Anne Epley, Second West ' s most prolific corre- spondent, gets a dozen letters daily in mysterious foreign hands, nonchalantly neglects to call for them. French honors student with inexplicable Teutonic lean- ings, she talks German incessantly, even over the telephone. Apparently placid, she exhibits occasional eccentricities: genuine liking for rootabaga and fond- ness for the works of John Calvin. An enthusiastic chorister, manifestly music-loving, she plays no instru- ment save the victrola on which she performs with proficiency, not to mention persistence. Usually serene, Anne ' s only emotional upset occurred when her pet teddy-bear, Lumpi, was lost, and thorough scouring of Wharton (by telephone) failed to restore him. JEAN ANNE EVANS According to the handbook, Jean Anne is pres- ident of the day students, but she frequents the campus as much as any resident, sojourning on Third East, trekking to the druggie for buns garnered by bet-hedg- ing, or potato chips gratis, retreating into the libe for an afternoon snooze. Twin to a charming robin, ener- getic Evans is a chronic member of squads swimming, hockey, tennis; graces WSGA exec, FAC, English honors. Harboring a fondness for people, plays. Cut- ting records, Jean Anne systematically files her thoughts on index cards, unsystematically loses them; keeps five pairs of shoes on Third East — to be ready for all possible occasions! DORIS EPPINGER The toujours tryout from 2nd West (anything from plays to Phoenix), Doris Eleanor Eppin- ger now leads a comparatively quiet life of scenery painting, story writing, tennis playing. She is envied for ability to capi- talize on summer libe work, quickly drop off to sleep over winter libe assignments; main- tains a reputation for uniquity by insisting on fondness for the Swarthmore Boiled Potato. An outdoor woman (Outing Club), Dorrie lacks domesticity; re- sults: (a) an unmade bed often overturned during the evening (causing strongest imprecation Ye gods and little fishes! ); (b) a series of welcome drawer- straightening expeditions on the part of Mamma Eppinger. 56 ' Wolf in sheep ' s clothing Grade B A future in an asylum MIRIAM RUTH FEELY A slow-moving Woolmaniac with a passionate desire for sleep (can it be Morpheus) Ruth nevertheless once learned a whole history course in one night (grade B). A friendly, gregarious individual, she slings it in the corridors, swings it in collection, and Gwimps it in the dining room. Having spent many nights on French as a freshman, she casually decided Botany labs in the afternoon were preferable. This leaves us slightly bewildered, as we can ' t see its connection with her professed intention of being a dress designer or some- thing, although it ties up vague- ly with her interest in dances (corsage — Messmer — flowers). ELEANOR HEWITT FERGUSON Elephant collector, Eleanor Hewitt Ferguson plans eagerly for (can spell and explain) a career in occupa- tional therapy. A baby wonder in the eyes of those who don ' t get Kohler A ' s, Ellie however has her weak- nesses: an inability to get to bed according to schedule, a ditto to attend lectures without knitting. As she oc- cupies her time cutting pictures from newspapers, paint- ing scenery, attending Sketch Club meetings, her pres- ent (comparatively) ladylike bearing misleads the com- mon herd, blissfully ignorant of what are referred to in whispers as her freshman escapades. ALICE ELIZABETH FERNSLER A devotee of the Early-to-Bed school, Alice Eliza- beth Fernsler stays in condition for her Outing Club activities with surprise excursions around the country- side. In high spirits she giggles inanely at nothing; writes innumerable letters necessitating daily dashes for mail; for amusement combines mothballs, rice, beds; wishes on new moon, first star; develops will power by going in and out her door without stopping at the candy stand in front — all this leading to a future in an insane asylum — preferably as psychiatrist. 57 Her appearance not always Lukensproof A woman can build a house What a barber hath wrought JULIETTE KNIGHT FOULDS Our own nominee for a reward for valor, Juliette Knight Foulds manages to cyclonize her room in defi- ance of the neat German-descended roommate ' s fight- ing spirit. Redheaded Julie dares to express in public a preference for art schools; atones for her presence at college by concentrations on music and painting; by going home on week-ends. A good girl on the whole, Julie has been known to do more unorthodox things than sketching unusual train companions, namely gut- ter-traipsing and druggie-ing in what suspiciously re- sembles pajamas. KRISTEL FUCHS From progressive education among German Friends, Kristel came to Swarthmore this year to be a pillar of German Club and International Relations. An accomplished teacher of handicrafts, she has worked with peasants and delinquents in her native land, giv- ing herself a practical basis for her Psych major, but not affecting her optimism: even building a house was pie for Kristel though the furniture had to be put in be- fore the walls, the door was so small. Her round face is known to many, but her fidelity to her motto: don ' t talk, but act makes her acquaintances few; alas, Kristel frowns on chatterers. EVAN WAYNE FRAZER Native Pennsylvanian, By- wood ' s first citizen and flower lover Evan Wayne Frazer makes the most of a grin. Care- ful by nature. Conservative Frazer sometimes takes as long as two years to make a deci- sion. Soccer and lacrosse star, Varsity man Frazer has a nat- ural predilection for red, which he exercises in the Library of the Friends. Tenors on occasion for and against Glee Club har- monizers; mixes business acu- men with one part English and two parts economics in leisure moments. Natural salesman, ex class president Frazer is a constant reminder of what some barbers can do with wire hair and a pair of clippers. • 1 : ' ■' , ' ■' l ' . h k ' A far cry from Jonah Serious stamper -. c«-yi ' i w. ' Tr-- tiO l itk Reads about snakes ' ELISABETH FUNKHOUSER K Section ' s friend of little fishes, Elisabeth Mary Funk- houser voluntarily assumes responsibility for her friends ' entertainment; pins cartoons on her door a la Brooksie; draws posters of animals that would feel at home on a Collier ' s cover; admits to a private in- sane asylum specially qualified applicants. A zoo major (wit- ness the ex-mouse on the lamp cord), embryo ichthyologist, she is responsible for the aquarium in the zoo lab and its little brother in her room; enjoys such games as Are You a Sacred Cow?; thinks bathtubs the right place for turtles. ELSA GAEDE With a touch of the Wagnerian, glamorous Gaede reigns supreme in the halls of Clothier, playing leading ladies at will. Dividing her allegiance between the dramatic and the terpsichorean, Elsa hankers also to be a disciple of the modern dance, stamps about seri- ously in black tights. Digressing from such high aspira- tions, she snatches time to pursue a psychology major, eat apples at Enders ' Thursday nights, indulge her fanatic love of music. Possessor of a languorous husky accent and the ability to compose herself gracefully in any situation, Elsa combines the picturesque with the personable, plays hob with local hearts. JAMES JOSEPH GARDNER Smiling, genial, James Joseph Gardner arrived from New Rochelle, New York, to be appointed a mem- ber of the freshman committee. With a passion for dancing and sleeping, James Joseph soon became Sleepy Jim. Intellectually he interests himself in the reptile. Reads about snakes and Frank Buck and in imitable Gardner style says, I might do that for a livin ' . Having earned his varsity soccer letter this year, Sleepy spends his spare time arguing with Clarkie about the Giants and the Red Sox. Typical Sleepy Jim action — Falling asleep on the bench at the Hamilton baseball game. 59 ' Child of Bethlehem Discourses to a mere one JANET MILDRED GINGRICH Unique in being freshman attendant to the May Queen one spring, crashing the Halcyon the next, little Janet manages beautifully. With a purposeful efficiency she handles badly behaving people, as eas- ily wields numerous statistics to clinch an argument, or dispenses varied Hersheys and nut chews designed to satisfy the sweet tooth of Parrish. Displaying notable tact, this child of Bethlehem Steel remains an inof- fensive though forceful individualist even while term- ing non-conservatives hopeless sentimentalists. Hav- ing proved her acting abilities in Green Grow the Lilacs, she rests on her laurels as much as one can rest while carrying five stiff courses. KERMIT GORDON Rabid honors man in economics, day-student Ker- mit Gordon manages to give ample time to his pet subject as a Phoenix devotee. Owning an unholy col- lection of disconnected facts that he garnered over a long period as reporter for a Philadelphia paper, as official lecture reporter, Drexel Hill ' s Gordon attends all economic spiels, cuts the lengthy discourses to a mere one column. Transfer from Penn State lacrossite Gor- don caught up on Phoenix work during his sophomore year, became the K. G. of local newspaper fame. Gor- don ' s ambition is to exemplify the proverbial city editor who glowers behind his desk and tears to shreds the carefully composed work of the cub reporter. DAVID GOLDSMITH Dave, a quiet soul from noisy Chicago, is sometimes called Colonel Stooge. It all goes back to freshman year when he stooged for the Glee Club dance, was grossly underpaid (ASU please copy). Footballer Dave, no longer a stooge, man- ages Clothier ' s stage, honors in chemistry, delves into German. Though shy and retiring, Dave became one of Kentucky ' s colo- nels — thanks to a member of the college fair set. Now an officer, suh, of the first julep, the windy city ' s contribution to Wharton Hall likes his sleep, collects stamps, is proud of his home town, can put on a dead pan act at the slightest provoca- tion. 60 % m.;.mJ 7 Late she ate Boston t ' Harrier RACHEL GREENAWALT Having forgotten seven ap- pointments made for the same hour, round-faced Rae seeks refuge in the druggie, eating mashed potatoes and stowing away all get-at-able signs. Con- duct ' s weekly problem for two years, Orph. 2 of the 1935 Freshman Show has now re- formed, and, with hat plunked squarely on top, once crawled up the asphaltum ice on hands and knees to make 12:30. Late of 4E, she now gargles for L section, and though Pennock ' s reprimand for a split infinitive drove her from honors, she val- iantly pursues a press board career, holds the record for long, loud laughter, and never gets up for a Saturday class. ELISE CECILE HAGEDORN L Section ' s effervescent Elise struggles with the chain of her Oxford glasses, also the uncomplimentary nickname Elouse. Formerly dismissing her academic problems with insouciance, Hagedorn now honors hon- orably, pursues her English major with grim determina- tion. In her scant leisure, trimly-togged Haggle rushes about for Press Board; in serious moments officiates at Classical Club; relaxes at the bridge table where she engages in contract with philosophy if not with fervor. In spite of her roommate ' s comment that she looks terrible in the morning, it is not apparent to the public as happy Hagedorn appears at breakfast . . . usually at 7:59% A. M. JANE HAMILTON Janie Hamilton entered college with the famed Joyce House tribe of 1934-35, is still a mainstay of that ecstatic gang. Originally from Boston, she is poised and social; temporarily from Woolman House, she is neither frigid nor flowery. Hidden behind such fasci- nating but minor detail as a Beans-dog at the dean ' s, a stubbornly discriminating taste, an aversion to little gray mice who are not cute, behold the Little Job sit- ting in the middle of an uprooted room laboriously typing psych honors papers, pouring tea for Personnel, going steadily and serenely with West Virginia ' s con- tribution to the Garnet Harriers. 61 Gentleman in volcanic out- bursts ' Lily-maid WILLIAM THAYER HARRISON In view of his habitual quiet and gentlemanly be- haviour, it is somewhat surprising to find Bill a member of that E-1 bunch. Really a serious student, he goes gently insane trying to get snatches of concentrated work in between the frequent volcanic outbursts of that infamous floor. Besides being a successful engi- neer, a distinction in itself, this Upper Montclair boy is a connoisseur of athletics, dabbling more or less effectively in soccer and basketball, though his real forte is in the art of slugging, in which by his inspired hitting and outfield cavorting he is one of the fairest of Dunnie ' s fair-haired boys. GEORGIA ELAINE HAYNIE Over and above Little Theater Club, Elaine has for three years played with the Swarthmore Players ' Club. Partly diverted by interests in French Club, horseback riding, and bridge playing, Elaine manages to hold a straight B average with a minimum of work, for that ulterior motive of mid-week privileges — (although ' tis said it ' s the week-ends far removed from the signing-out book that make her life really interest- ing.) Perhaps by virtue of being a sweet bit of fluff whose telephone conversations entertain the neighbors, this once-termed lily-maid of Parrish continues peace- fully unharmed after an occasional good scream. VARTAN HARTUNIAN Stage luminary and philos- opher, Philadelphia ' s Varton Hartunian transferred from Wheaton sophomore year and doesn ' t seem to have regretted it yet A brilliant leader of any collegiate bull session, Vartan knows the ins and outs of prob- lems, Balkan and otherwise. A lucky addition to the Clothier footlights, linguist Hartunian creates roles ranging from Lan- castrian England to the modern class struggle. Reached the peak of dramatic success in the latter field when he ran the gamut of emotion from A to A prime as an old man crying that he once had powers. A semi-day student and a little on the elusive side. Titan Hartu- nian zishes down Magill at all hours, carries a brief case. 62 ' Trained late goldfish ' Crammers devour her Uncle Sid her alibi KATHERINE HEALD With braided black hair, flashing black eyes, dangling earrings and a superlatively small waistline, Quito ' s Span- ish exoticism is belied by her ambition to become a criminal lawyer, and that belied by oft- evidenced talents in art and literature. Script-writer and Dance-director of The Great Sir Pant E. Woyste, she finds the narration of fantastic tales, fortune-telling, nonsensical- verse concocting, and piano improvisations to be mere bag- atelles. Canny crammers de- vour her notes and coaching as the perfect antidote for pre-ex- amination jitters, while protect- ed by an ominous Danger, Woman Working, Quito quiet- ly upholds Poli-Sci honors, calmly concentrating and cal- lously confronting the incom- parable confusion of her cham- ber. MARGARET JANE HEISLER From across the river in Jersey comes very blond Marge Heisler to manage the circulating end of Manu- script. Nautically minded (she got here, didn ' t she?) and artistic, she designs stage sets, keeps herself beau- tifully dressed. President of L Section, she provides her parties with so much food that they run themselves even in her absence. Warm-hearted Marge tenderly trained her goldfish (until they died); they would leap to the sound of her voice or a note on the radio. Pos- sessing a predilection for brown hats, she betops her- self in one of her many, and goes to sleep thumbing her nose at wintry winds. CLARE HELLMAN Able to walk faster than she can run, Clare in desperation tried skiing and skating for the first time last year — and still walks, her vim, vigor, and noisiness doubtless acquired from frequent and far from solitary snacks of cheese and sausage. Little Theatre prop manager, she relentlessly urges her cohorts to unspeak- able deeds in acquiring embarrassing objects for period plays (have you a shotgun? a pair of lace pantalettes?). With poise born of blue-grass-land, Clare escapes retribution for her loud warbling of favorite sym- phonies: an ubiquitous Uncle Sid presumably explains declaredly innocent though suspiciously frequent week- ends in New York. 63 A. S. U. overlapped ' Post cupid Has favorite cow CHARLES DANIEL HENDLEY Charles Daniel Hendley has three great interests in college: track, A. S. U., and zoology, we hate to say, in that order. Varsity two-miler since freshman year and captain-elect of the 1937 cross country team, run- ner Charlie during the winter track season overlapped his first two activities, was often seen in track suit wearing one of Coach Waksrnan ' s masks while fencing with the ASUers. Secretary of the Swarthmore chap- ter of the American Student Union, Charlie is one of the leading spirits of the group, was one of the Youth Act lobbyers in Washington. MARY ELLEN HERRICK With a perpetually changing facial expression be- coming sometimes like a downcast daisy, sometimes like a Saturday Evening Post cupid, with an Ado Annie walk and talk and a hit-or-miss-why-worry conversa- tion, Rickey Herrick fidgets efficiently through college. Her range is as complete as it is bewildering; she plays them all, from the windblown innocent to the svelte sophisticate. While a torn-between-history-and-psy- chology aboulia is in the process of resolution, Wal- lach ' s little Gothic angel seeks sustenance from sym- phonic stuff, grimly blue-pencils Halcyon write-ups, conducts herself in general like the rest of the Joyce-to- Woolman-ites. ELIZABETH HENSZEY Blond, dreamy-eyed Betty Henszey recalls pre-college days with frequent reference to Peter G. Prospect, her favorite cow. Unbelievably naive, she takes cheerfully the constant beating of witty friends. Usual- ly serenely happy, the origin- ator of Swing it, Reverend Hotchkiss, worries about look- ing smooth but proves the pos- sibility of combining beauty with efficiency by membership in Little Theater and presidency of Third West. For relaxation she whips gracefully over Crum ' s frozen waters or sails through Michigan ' s saltless swells. An Eatalot who loves ice cream and little boys, Betty can usually be found returning from just having had the neat- est time. di ' Colossus of adjectivation ' Propagandizes for profit Disavowed by Scotch CAROLYN HOGELAND Life of Second West and death of N Section, Carol is al- so a denizen of the dome, where her poli-sci papers assume prodigious proportions in the wee small hours. Her manner of throwing herself into her jun- ior-editor-of-the-Phoenix speech made fearful freshmen shake in their boots. Swept into soci- ety by friends who keep coming out (debutantes), she extends her acquaintanceship to in- clude, no doubt, somebody who knows somebody you know. For pecuniary profit Carol preaches that cleanliness is next to godliness, but has proved that the greatest of these is charity by having Nitti ' s Committi to tea. WILLIAM JASPER HOWELL Super superlative, ultra ultrinated colossus of dashing, crashing, whizzling, sizzling adjectivation, script writer William Jasper Howell is not an English major. Summer glass factory worker, the man from Ohioway wrote a one-act ploy, helped start a move- ment for surrealism in dramatics. Member of Kwink, and Track Manager with a sense of humor, twinkle eyes Howell has bought ear stoppers to prevent over- taxed membranes from his stupendously silent assist- ants. Chemistry honors student; as Phoenix Business Manager, is absolute tyrant, holds passes for Hedge- row, swells Phoenix coffers by dispensing them for exhorbitant considerations. NATHALIE LETITIA IRVINE Sleek, dark Nathalie ' s Spanish allure is disavowed by Scotch ancestry and a refreshingly American point of view in matters of dancing, studying, and extra- curricular concern. Superlative splash of the swim- ming team. Little Theater designer, WAA treasurer, and ex-Phoenixonian, Nat honors demurringly in spurts and in English. Variable, verging upon vagary, she blows dandelions in December and sun-bathes in Feb- ruary. As Woolman House ' s new prexy, Nat cal- lously conducts house meetings with no complaints allowed, keeps a cardboard column entitled, Advice to the Lovelorn, thrives on companionship and fresh air. 65 ' Keeps cutting collection ' His ideal: Non-coed ' MARY IVINS M Section ' s major musimaniac is Mary Ivins who fills her room with Swarthmore ' s most complete col- lection of musical instruments, including a mandolin, two victrolas, and a radio. Besides managing her own large collection of records she serves on the Cutting Collection Committee, holds forth at musical soirees in Bond. By way of keeping up with the other arts she helps edit Manuscript, Somervilles energetically. Keen-eyed and lanky-locked, fearing nobody, she be- trays a pungently Bohemian humor in her ready casual conversation. A brilliant history major, Mary ' s in- cisive intellect leads her into the leftist environs of the ASU, where her slightly Rabelaisian witticisms are highly appreciated. PETER KASPAR The image of Bing Crosby, Pete sets feminine hearts palpitating in fond hope of his crooning to them. In vain, for iconoclast Pete states his ideal Swarthmore would be non-coed. Though musical, his sympathies are more symphonic, being a staunch glee-clubber. His practical nature is more evident on campus by his quiet, forceful efficiency on press-board and inter-frat douncil. Notorious quad-frequenter, Pete snowballs there in winter, lacrosses in warmer weather, often to the tune of broken windows. This normal boyishness conceals the fact that he is really a cultured New Yorker, his innate artistry evidenced by an occasional interest in pianists. ELEANOR JOYCE Adroit splashing into a laun- dry tub was soon mastered by Eleanor Joyce, who met a foamy fate as hen-pecked hero- ine of a French Club play, Melodramactress Joyce next wielded incongruous pick and shovel, received unlively bar- rage in Outing Club ' s version of Clementine for the Hamburg Show. FAC member more awed than floundering fresh- men, she confesses also to freshman-like fear of Mrs. Blan- shard. Vice-president of Parrish, Joyce apologetically sends neat and needful notices to its in- habitants. Gay even in depres- sion, joyfully enthusiastic, she forgets sorrows in reading; and alarms profs by ardently ap- preciating all that rhymes. 66 ' Blond and curly and indelicate environs Man with a principle Redheaded trapshooter GEOFFREY KELLER Languid, poised but extra- ordinarily ambitious Jeff is one engineer who thinks there ' s something besides wheels, wid- gets, and gadgets. New York- er, open scholar, Jeff ' s the tall mutt of the silent pair of Oesper and Keller, Pitt Hallers, and open scholars incarnate. Stage crew indispensable, seen flit- ting around back stage carry- ing pianos, bird cages, fake mirrors. Blond and curly, Mosholu Parkway ' s present to Hicks Hall and Beardsley shows an interest in economics, claims he doesn ' t know any- thing about it, carried away something in the indelicate en- virons of three point during his first two years. HELLMUTH LUDWIG KIRCHSCHLAGER Politico-scientific in theory, Varsity man Hellmuth Ludwig Kirchschlager ' s brain-to-hand paper work mere- ly serves to complement his more strenuous campus activities, including football, track, and blonds. State champion out Ohio way in the quarter-mile; smoothie dancer, but no hopping, his taste runs also to chocolate sodas, brunettes, and redheads. Man with a principle. Right Halfback Kirchschlager cheerfully sacrifices all but one spot of hair for greater streamlining on the track. Likes to croon when stepping with campus beauties; got nickname of Ham from these vocal efforts; not lazy — just has no appetite for work. JANE SPROUL KLAER Relation to Sproul of Sproul Observatory and resi- dent of Chester, Jane is usually glimpsed batting wild- ly to and from college in her Buick convertible. A lover of mountains — especially the Poconos — she swims, fishes, and adores trapshooting. Very much of an idealist, Jane loves to read, often staying up till small hours to finish a good book. The addition of a free period each morning this semester, making pos- sible another smoke with pals at the lodge, would seem to prove that this tall, redheaded day student is not nearly as dignified as she looks. 67 ' Honors in sartorial brilliance A true engineer didn ' t read Recognized after the first flurry NATHAN SCHELLENBERG KLINE Thinker, schemer, doer, is Atlantic City ' s Nathan Schellenberg Kline. Philosophy Clubber and Psychol- ogy honors student. Press Boarder Kline runs a summer real estate agency in the World ' s Playground. Asso- ciate Editor of Manuscript, Debater Kline acts for the Little Theater, dashes to Phoenix office to cover the show with rave notices. Combines cynicism with humorous style; achieved immortality as co-creator of Lizzie the kangaroo; rose to greater glories with Petty Pace. Is proud possessor of room crammed with pilfered signs and Gordon Pelton. A candidate for honors in sartorial brilliance, he stands on his record — is non-member in good standing of ASU. HENRY KURTZ Engineer Henry E. B. Kurtz, no relation to the famed H. E. B. S., is a true engineer — didn ' t read Alice in Wonderland until this year, at the age of twenty. In- formed of his oversight, he purchased a copy, read it, enjoyed it. A resident of Miami, Florida, Hank proves the point by the color of his skin after each vacation. A candidate for the tennis managership last spring, he missed the mark, kept on smiling. An engineer ab- sorbed in his work, he doesn ' t have time for activities, but always on the spot with his smile and his yo. GRACE MARY KOCH Unless she ' s at home in El- kins Park, Grace is always to be found when somebody needs moral support or Third East wants pretzels. Usually clad in a shade of red envied by Aunt Jemima, she may be recognized after the first flurry of snow as trousered as Mar- lene Dietrich. She is a hockey player ' s horror, trying to de- stroy her reputation for good- natured sympathy by bruising all within reach on the field. Grace calls herself a history major, apparently hoping by extensive studying in bed to overcome the primary handi- cap of never having gathered the energy to visit Indepen- dence Hall. 68 A genius truly confessed ' Ambition: to be taken seri- ously LAURENCE D. LAFORE For mountainous Lafore, the dubious honor of being the only monarchist in college. This somewhat empty achievement doubtless contributes to the in- imitable majesty with which he enters the dining room and to the romantic cynicism of his florid metaphores. Adjectival in literary style as well as ap- pearance, a faintly royal aura surrounds the careful phrase- ology of seminar papers which are the delight of Brooksie ' s eye. Once a promising fresh- man, slightly insulted by the smiles of the administration, Larry has now relaxed into the appropriate and welcome lassi- tude of an Honors life. Bed un- til eleven A. M., a languid few hours of Thomas Hardy, tea at five, scintillating conversation until two A. M. — such is the ex- istence of this sybarite. EUGENE MICHAEL LANG During freshman year New Yorker Gene Lang ' s roommate charged him with having a touch of genius. Ever since Gene ' s worked hard to prove it. Economics major, he belligerently presents his leftist theories aided by charts, graphs, pliable of course. A Kwinker, he ' s constantly reforming; a debater, he is constantly arguing. Potential CIO mogul, challenging Lang has boxing pretentions, claims he understands the man on the street, is sincere. Said graph-obsessed Gene when one of his theories was questioned: If you turn the chart upside down it will work. STANLEY LANGE One may characterize our editor by a huge grin, which often seems larger than himself, a respectable size. Filled with an optimism and good nature hardly warranted in a world-weary New Yorker, Stan ' s pres- ence sends forth a sense of universal well-being. Steadily climbing, he followed his class-presidency sophomore year to the somewhat precarious pinnacles of editing this enterprising annual. Although a con- scientious student in such erudite subjects as philos- ophy and English, his chief objection to life is that no one takes him seriously. If a true complaint, Stan has been grossly misjudged; to realize this one has merely to hear his subtle pianoforte interpretations of the latest hits, or one of his involved, if rather bewildering, philosophical discussions. 69 Eat a lot of ice ' Manifests pretended disinter- est Urbane gentleman — not a farm hand ANN WILLETS LAPHAM Bowlegged sportswoman of Third West, Lapham gathers varsity letters in her easy stride. A flash at hockey, tennis, and basketball, inexhaustible Ann takes on all comers, beats them even at ping-pong, with enough energy left to endorse any active project as really NEAT. Virtually president of the Wednesday Night Lonelyhearts League, Lappie somehow cracks down on her major English, produces papers with phenomenal previousness, efficiently execs on AA Council, seasons studying with sonnets and such. Lap- pie ' s only vice involves a morbid craving for ice, which she slyly swipes from pitchers, butter bowls, and water- coolers. ROBERT GEORGE LEINROTH II Second in a long line of Robert George Leinroths, Political Scientist Robert George Leinroth carries on the tradition with aplomb. Mischievous beneath his look of injured innocence. Economist Leinroth finds time for diverse activities. Manager of orchestra; looks dreamy with a violin tucked tenderly above his chest; property manager for the Hamburg Show; shows excellent ex- ecutive talent. Enthusiastic Kwinker, Baseball Man- ager Leinroth manages to get support in whatever he undertakes; has a fear of the fair sex that is manifested by pretended disinterest; biggest problem is how to keep the Ford roaring — well, squeaking. JOHN LASHLY To refute the base assertion that the Middle West breeds only crude farm-hands, we present: Mr. Lashly, tall, hand- some, and as urbane a gentle- man as ever menaced Swarth- more ' s impressionable co-eds. A native of questionable St. Louis, he transferred from Mon- mouth this year to become prominent here in footlight art, witnessed by his incredibly noble Duke of Lancaster. Equal- ly a realist, John majors in the social sciences, and we mean social, plays the piano in off moments, c onceals any pos- sible nostalgia for the wide open spaces by an occasional fondness for the crowds offered in Collection. 70 V ■■- , ' Plays around on her own hook Rounder-faced ' ' Borders on frenzy FREDERICK LEVERING One of Baltimore ' s proud delegation to our campus, Fred has contributed much here by his cheer-leading, which some- times borders on frenzy, but which has given our blase stu- dents a new and valuable en- thusiasm. Not content with this aspect of athletics, Fred shoots baskets in winter, slugs in spring. A member of rowdy E-1, luckless Lev ' s innate seri- ousness proves often a calming influence. His prize anecdote concerns the vacation he and Tapley cruised to Cuba as en- tertainers to the boat ' s unat- tached ladies. Said dowager as Fred asked her to dance; Thank God for a real passen- ger; I ' ve danced with every d— gigolo on the boat! EDITH RUTH LEWIS Ruth Lewis distinguished herself in her sophomore year, after transferring from Connecticut, by taking a record number of athletic overcuts (13), by her crack golf on Swarthmore ' s first Women ' s Golf Varsity. With a ringing purr of a voice and the kind of personality that gets talked to, Ruth majors in English, minors in history, has well thought out ideas on everything from coeducation to a proper golf stance. A wearer of smart sports clothes, day student Lewis obstinately awaits the spring when she can work off her overcuts to her own happiness and Swarthmore ' s glory on the traps and greens of surrounding links. HERBERT LITTLE Often taken at the beginning of the year for round- faced John Lashly, rounder-faced Herbert Woodruff Little has not followed Uncle Jack in his pursuance of feminine interests. A transfer from the University of Michigan, proselyte Little was first conspicuous as one of few who wore coats to classes, later yielded to conformity. An economics major from Toledo, in practice he fails utterly to keep his accounts straight; he believes some force works to keep him in the red. Possessor of a subtle wit, Herb has a propensity for missing the last train from Philly, sees nothing funny in the situation. 71 Back to the open spaces ' A chair for each spare j. moment ' - : S Reference to the comb and brush PETER LOMBARD, JR. Tall and rangy, erstwhile Harvard man Peter Hall Lombard, Jr., engineers because he likes that type of training. A summer in Europe instilled in him the spirit of Columbus. Amateur photographer, Swarth- more ' s member of the Massachusetts Lombards feels duty bound to take pictures of whatever he sees — but rarely visits Crum. Musician and opera lover, he sails, cruises on and off the dance floor, longs to get back to the open spaces, where men men are. Modest to a fault, Mr. Lombard, Jr., will give no statements on capabilities, honors, distinctions, nor sex life. MAVIS LYONS Debonair transfer. Mavis Lyons magnetizes Swarthmorites with fathomless eyes and a hairtrigger smile. Wandering from Wisconsin U, Mavis stopped off for a year in hometown New York to edit four Pop- ular Publications magazines (pulp), returning to college this fall for the peaceful pursuit of Reading For Honors. A quick tongue and impressive vocabulary make soap- boxing simple and find her fame as a spinner of fast repartee. L Section ' s frank champion of the lower classes, Mavis ASUs, enthuses over the New Deal, devotes her spare time to upholstering chairs and collecting hideous masks. JOHN KING LOVE An avaricious reader in phi- losophy, Easton ' s problems in the form of John King Love is a familiar figure with impetuous stride. Never to be accused of any special reference to the comb and brush, zoology ob- sessed Lovie finds time to con- sume the contents of the forty odd books he has out of the libe in a continuous string, swims, works in the A.S.U., practices his English accent. A sophomore terror in the terror- filled C section, Johnny in- vades Pitt Hall sanctity with the same boisterous abandon. Re- markably brilliant in one sub- ject. Doc has no pretensions to social things, doesn ' t dissect on the dance floor. 72 I ( «V ' Everything but dark glasses ' Shuns brink of brilliance ' Pigskin chaser MARY McDERMOTT Soft-voiced Mary, prairie product, hails from Kansas, evi- dently found enough water in that drought-stricken area to enable her to become a varsity swimmer. Retaining a roman- tic interest in such frontier sports as archery, she twangs away at straw targets, seldom misses. Besides managing the Dresdens ' musical teas she helps edit Manuscript, con- tributes to it poetry of an extra- ordinary subterranean high voltage. She finds too few books for her voracious read- ing, will soon turn to writing them instead. Earnest honors student, Mary confesses to a fatal fear of falling into the abyss of intellectuality. ELLiCE McDonald EUice goes on record as being luke warm to hav- ing anything printed about him in the Halcyon. Tepidity to the contrary, we will tell you all. Ellice deserted Wharton this year to reside at home and since then he has taken over some of the more secretive habits of the day student. A familiar figure in the libe, localite McDonald, who transferred here during his sophomore year, is less familiar at college functions. Omnivorous reader and man with a principle, Mac does everything but pull a dark glasses act d la Gorbo to shun publicity. BETTY lEAN MADDEN Capital consoler of unhappy underclassmen, Betty Jean Madden awaits the as yet unnamed day when she will eat her second oyster. Fond of big football games, BJ derives yearly excitement from a last-minute successful effort to get Army-Navy tickets. Wander- lust and love for stage shows combine to make fre- quent trips to New York a necessity. Willing to stop studying to learn cooperation with horse or tennis racquet, turn out a mouth-melting butter cake, or listen to the radio (accent on the Vallee), BJ is the happy com- promise between the proverbial butterfly and book- worm. 73 ' Foregoes new prints Nothing immoral in electrons Pvl 4 ' Watching for his date JAMES ARTHUR MALCOLM, JR. Burly Adonis from New York State, James Arthur Malcolm, Jr. vaulted the walls of Jericho in his zeal to study within the hallowed halls of Swarthmore Col- lege. Prominent member of the Society of Kwink, and dark-haired demon on the soccer and lacrosse fields, Electrical Engineer Malcolm distresses the ladies by going for blueprints and foregoing their new prints. A fast man (in the water) with an unconquerable thirst (for travel). Engineer Clubber Malcolm is a study in self-control; clean living strong man, he reaches for a pillow, favoring bed. JOHN MARSHALL, JR. A transfer in his sophomore year and a day stu- dent to boot, the village ' s John Marshall, direct descendant of Supreme Court ' s best known member of the same name, is a familiar campus figure on Magill Walk. Physicist with a flare for the unspectacular, slide rule addict, John ' s a follower of Franklin Institute exhibits, likes Bryn Mawr, is a Bryn Mawr girl ' s brother. Beset with hobbies that range from radio to humming vacuum tubes, John ' s not to be accused of any time wasted in collection. Cloisters, Friday t. p. ' s. Oc- casionally seen on the soccer field or with the tip of his ear out of the water in the pool, Johnny doesn ' t seem bent toward vice: nothing immoral in electrons. MICHAEL MARSH Red shirted and tall. District of Columbia ' s Michael Marsh puffs away on his pipe, ex- pounding radical ideas to save the world, arguing strongly with his opponents. Economics major with a trend toward Veblen, Mike studies hard to find the millennium, works vigorously through the ASU. Relaxation comes when contract bridge is in order or a tea dance in hop. At one tea dance in Pitt Hall European jaunter Marsh stood on the porch, watched for date to arrive from Parrish. Why go for a date if date will come to you? 74 ' Unlicensed Good circulation MARGARET MARVIN Arrived orientation week from Louisville: one Margaret Marvin to undermine all theo- ries concerning slow, languid southerners: her energy and animation leave other Wool- maniacs exhausted. Having elected an economics major by process of elimination, Peggy slid in and out of honors in one semester, murmuring commiser- ately, Poor Mr. Malin. With benign myopic gaze she strug- gles to see six feet forward, once walked straight into the outstretched arms of an Ed. Continually chuckling. Peg bobs into Beggar on Horse- back to say six words, em- barks on ten-day week-ends, re- tains her conviction that Louis- ville is the best place on earth or under water. ELIZABETH MATZ When cats (?) come in, Matz goes out, and claim- ing that the rest of the world is early, she is, con- veniently, always on time, be it hunting (no gun, no license; no ducks, surprise), settling the affairs of the nation, flying to Chicago (via New York, Pittsburgh, New York: ceiling zero), or Sunday breakfast. After beating several sturdy Democrats into submission, machiavellian Matz managed to make $9 on election bets, perhaps because of Poll Theo, perhaps not. Her apparent daze doesn ' t fool friends who ' ve seen her crush crossword puzzles, put through long distance phone calls, or eat; anyhow, they know that when really asleep she sings. MARGARET MARTIN MENUEZ Smooth silent Menuez, blond siren of ' 38, is a noted figure on Swarthmore ' s dance floors where easy hoof- ing keeps her in rapid circulation. An English major without seeming so, Peg can dance all evening and then sleep ten untroubled hours before an exam, annoy- ing everybody by consistently maintaining a B average and indispensable midweeks. Although an opponent of the hot and violent school of athletics, Menuez swings a mean mashie, holds down a varsity position. Late riser, lodge and druggie addict, Menuez is re- nowned for cool unruffled dignity which she is reported never to have lost . . . not even when she fell into the Crum. 75 Innocence to Ingenuity Wolf MARY JANE MILLER Escape may be the better bet for bumpkins, but behold M. J., brought out by a big blond ( ' 37), from guilelessness and Cape-May-sick tears to Gwimping, upholding eatalot chorus harmony, collecting string and old wrapping paper on Third West. So hard to get up in the morning that it ' s a wonder she ' s awake for all those Temple telephone calls (how did he ever penetrate so far into civilization?), Mary Jane makes study outlines hopefully, wages three-year-old battles with Newkirk, laughs like a fire siren, and sinuously slinks (and sleeps) about the libe, dreaming, yes, of Cape May. EVELYN ESTHER MOHL But, the point is , and Evelyn is off on another of her philosophical disputes. A well-travelled woman, she is able to illustrate her frequent arguments with personal experience. One of the few possessors of a 3-point, this student has an unique system of thrice-con- densed notes which is still a wonder to K section as a whole. A lone wolf since the departure of the studying- in-Germany Lavoris twins, she devotes her excess time to French Club and Little Theater. Median-ette and bow-and-arrow champ, Evelyn is convinced of the foolishness of small talk, and contends that archery helps concentration. ELIZABETH MIMS The libe ' s best customer, Mimsie is nevertheless sym- pathetic about the ignorance of others. Charter member of the Little jobs and member of the S.P.C. (could it mean Soci- ety for the Prevention of Cul- ture? — see Vaughn), she lives up to her red-headed tenden- cies, though many think her quiet and serious. Peppy, cheer- ful, a member of Gwimp, var- sity hockey star, and chairman of point system, she still has a hard time keeping Sal on the straight and narrow behind their ghoulish door. An honors student despite her size, Mim- sie, however, sometimes relaxes in order to better enjoy being Messmerized. 76 Nursie Milks her way to matrimony ' EDWIN EVANS MOORE Small but formidable, New Jersey ' s Edwin Evans Moore majors in Electrical Engineering and minors in sports. When in voice, the redoubtable Mr. Moore is chairman deluxe of the Greater Engineer Clubbers ' Everynight Bull Session — a campus tradition. Charter mem- ber of Sigma Tau, and gargan- tuan figure in the Association for the Government of Men Stu- dents, he draws down grades with the best of them. Like all good Kwinkers, Soccer Man- ager Moore exemplifies the spirit of Effort. Gets muscles metal working in the summer. Serene and unblushing. Athlete Moore calls the motions he makes playing tennis. MARGARET GLOVER MOORE How to treat children and adults by suggestion during sleep intrigues tongue-in-cheeked Peg Moore, eager experimenter on roommate or neighbors. A life complicated with Personnel teas, French and Classical Clubs cannot be too crowded for seeing-America ex- cursions with the same roommate or for golf, a game causing the good-natured Peg to lose a bit of temper along with five balls and one club on a nine-hole course — the language then employed being unsuitable for the ears of Winspear the younger for whom Missa Moore sacrifices her rep to entertain in public. GEORGETTE KEATH MOYER Private haunter of the Sophomore Lodge (compromise between Parrish and Worth as residence). Georgette Keath Moyer is public enigma No. 1. A plain nuisance in the eyes (or ribs) of ticklish acquaintances, Georgie turns from moments of peace-wrecking accompanied by loud shrieks to serious poetry writing (Manuscript), fiddling (musical teas). She plans to marry rugged individualist in form of Future Farmer of America, in preparation for which knows how to cook, milk, keep houses; likes to landscape garden, clean her room; Bronx cheers eggplant, seniors who show it, sissy men of Swarthmore. 77 Poor little rich girl Bespectacled with a ven- geance With the brain of a baby VIRGINIA ALICE NEWKIRK D. U.-ey-eyed Ginny, Venus rising from the mud- flats of New Jersey, has ranked as Swarthmore ' s ace- high heart-juggler since 1934. Extravagant-lashed Newkie looks at her rogues ' gallery, says, I just can ' t make up my mind, and so diverts it Gwimping, left- halfing on Varsity hockey. Social Committeeing, and rising at 6:45 (her dimples deep for gloomy eight o ' clockers). Heartbreaker-Newkirk startles attendant Eatalots by earnest studying; claims her concentration dubious, but lurking librcrryward pays the sad price of pulchritude: friends flock so fast Third-West seclusion seems the sole solution, and there ' s always the tele- phone. PETER OESPER The Buckeye State ' s Peter Oesper, open scholar with a flare for the three-point, manages to remain as hidden as possible beneath his quadratics, differentials, and other calculating attractions of the mathematical art. A globe trotter seeing service in Turkey and Nazi Germany, Pete has managed to concentrate his travel- ling around Swarthmore on Magill Walk from Pitt Hall to meals. Possessor of that famous cap, and a familiar vanguard of the weekly trek into the dining room of those who studied their German, Pete sports a pair of horn-rimmed specks, placed on his face with a vengeance. WILLIAM NUTE Turkey ' s donation to Swarth- more, William Laubach Nute, apparently a harmless cuss, en- joys a reputation of frightening innocent freshmen by sudden public winking. Slugger; future missionary to the heathen, after lackadaisical practice on the side within the cloisters. Dis- ports himself on roller skates, carries to exams a human bone for luck, tends to his own knit- ting. Maternally inclined, with the brain of a baby in a jar in his room, Psychologist Nute wangled half the Underhill prize, subsidy for a sophomore smarty. Widely known for his seminar and Collection sock darning, Kwinker Nute set a standard for managerial ten- acity by spending all of his sophomore year digging. 78 The art of extreme suffering ' School isn ' t the place . . ' ' Wife beaters infest her room ' FRANK PARKER Elusive Frank C. Parker, Jr., couldn ' t make up his mind. Starting his college career with a year at M.I.T., then another as a pre-med at Swarthmore, he then spent two years learn- ing to fly. Giving that up to start anew he returned to Swarthmore, spent a year and a half as an engineer. Still dis- satisfied with his education, Frank stopped school at Christ- mas vacation, enrolled at Ran- dolph Field, Texas, in the Army Air Corps Training School with a reserve commission in the off- ing. Said Dr. Scott: School ob- viously isn ' t the place for him. Said his pals: We miss him. ROBERT EARL PERLOFF A former member of the best-forgotten ultra col- legiate trio of Le Chateau Bilgewoter, Bob has con- tinued to find relief from majoring in the stern realities of zoology by indulging continually in the fascinating world of the footlights. Usually cast as a sensitive, though not always sweet spoken youth, he has become quite adept at the art of extreme spiritual suffering. Once active in Glee Club and Phoenix endeavor, Elkins Park ' s dramatist still finds time to play around on the track and soccer field thus completing the well-rounded- ness Swarthmore so enthusiastically and somewhat tiresomely praises. MARGARET WHIPPLE PETER Wide-eyed, glowing Margaret Peter, quietly seri- ous as a freshman, now hides her philosophic streak under a cheerful and breathless exterior. Sympathetic befriender of lonely lowerclassmen, she bubbles with enthusiasm over peace cam_paigns and cooperatives, eagerly advocates more mixed breakfasts. This New Mexico convert loves horsemanship, believes pro- foundly in the superiority of West over East. Although exemplifying chronic haste, she takes time to chat on subjects Indian, Chinese, photographic; earnestly cos- tumes and acts for Little Theater. Intrinsically sensible in daily life, a wild streak irregularly sets Peter off to adorn her room with Mexican wife beaters or noc- turnally sketch snoozing friends. 79 Grand wizard, potentate, or something ' Canters at odd moments Deepens in cold weather CHRIST JOHN PETROW Cele brity in our midst, Nebraska ' s Christ John Petrow has a full schedule. Honors student in political science, with a dash of economics and history, the good-natured Mr. Petrow has visions of success as a restauranteur before embarking into politics. Grand wizard, potentate, or something of the national fraternal organization, The Sons of Pericles, dictator Petrow alternates his time between here and Washington. Plays lacrosse and football between train rides, de- bates, demands that the Brierly kitchen be well stocked with vinegars, oils, peppers, and other Hellenic sneez- ers. Relies entirely on a time budget to keep the ends of the candle apart. KATHARINE PROCTOR Proctor ' s Kit Proctor has green eyes, ash blond hair, a Vermont twang. A French major with artistic leanings, clever Kit wields a mean pencil. Musically sympathetic and possessor of all qualifications save figure for an operatic career, she adores Lawrence Tib- bett and Gilbert and Sullivan, hates Valse Triste. Concealing her emotions, poker-face Proctor carries on scintillating repartee, has a reputation as an unparal- leled raconteuse. Casually capable, at odd moments she may be seen cantering offhandedly in the riding ring; at other moments abstractedly wielding knitting needles, with which she turns out the neatest ladies ' knit wear yet seen on the campus. JEAN PORTER Unexpectedly naive pie-eater Porter ' s hair seems to be paint- ed on: it never varies, unlike her southern accent, which deepens in cold weather de- spite ankle-length protection. A nicotine-bridge addict, logic- loving Bobby thinks living in the lodge paherfectly prahe- shus. Her vegetable consump- tion per year averages 26 lima beans, her sweater consump- tion per month, three. Georgia ' s exotic unsophisticate wants no career save matrimony, leaning towards lawyers. Learning they are lemons too late, she cheerfully convulses crowds re- counting such calamities, for aeroplanes alone shake her calm. A distant hum, and, turning pale green. Porter gulps, retiring hastily to bed where she goes early anyhow. ' Halusianation He lends his moral weight VIRGINIA RAEBECK Iggie Raebeck comes from New York and has a pug nose, prides herself on both. Possess- ing round rosy cheeks, she gives an impression of 4H vital- ity, undermines it by a fiendish devotion to nicotine which she absorbs in large quantities with the lodge devotees. Her inter- est in the ars medica is dem- onstrated by her pre-med course, Thursday nights at Enders ' , frequent week-ends in Baltimore. Afflicted with an in- curably argumentative streak, an eccentric habit of secreting towels under beds, and a Brook- lynese tendency to distort such simple words as little into lih-ul, Iggy appears most normal when reinforced with her favorite dish: lenh-uls. HELEN MARIANNE RANK With explosive informality Helen plunges heart, soul, and gestures into almost anything — French plays, Zo labs, assorted sports, the arts, and Woolman House. Austrian-born and Paris-bred, she has gravitated quite naturally to the ASUers, is seen with them both in and out of organization activities. Though listed as a pre- med, it would seem that she has definite advertising abilities: her brilliantly crayoned posters offering tutor- ing rates and small slips of paper saying, Lost, etc. signed Halusia vie with Gwimp and Social Com- mittee in decorating the walls of Parrish. HARRY FAIRFAX REID, JR. Of the mad inmates of E-1, this Open Scholar is the one nearly exemplary member, even altruistic enough to lend them his moral weight whenever neces- sary, which is only too often. A proud southerner, one of the Baltimore Fairfaxes, Harry has overcome admirably his consequent distaste for undignified labor by long, arduous engineering labs, gaining thereby a Sigma Tau membership. Besides prancing about on the football and lacrosse fields and being dramatically inclined, Harry also evinces a marked taste for our frothy social life, the recognition of his extensive activ- ities in this field resulting in his Social Committee ap- pointment (and subsequently causing some of the more unusual social features recently fostered upon us.) 81 ■' Innocent of painted pans f ' Divides oil between midnight and vinegar Suspicious murmurs; two blondes. FLORENCE JANE REUTER Representative of Towanda, residence of the famous insane Poole family, Jane sweeps down Third- West in pale blue Dr. Denton pajamas (they have feet) to answer telephone calls which may be from Army, Navy, Yale, Pri nceton, M. I. T. or even our humble home, but are probably Halcyon photographers. Perfect house-party hostess, original organizer, and master-manager, Jane regales her hall with feasts of Towanda turkey and with clever clowning. This wide- eyed blond, from utter innocence of painted pans, now heads Little Theater make-up crew. But even master mentalities have their foggy moments: Jane once signed out as going to Media with Chester. EDITH AMELIE RUNGE Burning the midnight oil, Edith works and worries about German honors despite the distinction of sem- inars alone wth Baer and the ability to shock L sec- tion with German telephone conversations. Abandon- ing her DuPont friends last summer, she visited her favorite nation, returning with another language for her witty tongue, quantities of German sweaters, and a definite leaning towards the Navy, her main relaxa- tions here being Gilbert and Sullivan, poetry, German Club, and Manuscript. Neat almost to finickyness, she decks her room with myriad sacrosanct animals, but beyond that Edith has but three manias: black- berry brandy, jewelry, and vinegar and oil with every meal. BURTON RICHARDS Somewhat a mystery man, Burt pursues his various ways with a reserve that disappoints several winsome hopefuls. A resident of the borough, he ap- pears at classes as faithfully as other economics majors, but ex- cept for fleeting glimpses as he whizzes by in his car, he ab- sents himself from most college functions. Those who know him well, however, murmur suspiciously about his summers in Ocean City, where, some- thing of a beach comber, he displays his tan masculinity. And with heartening results, it seems, for it is reported he has been seen contentedly tramp- ing the boardwalk with a blonde on each arm. 82 i; it--A. : i, ' ' 5 u Chemist of the iirst ion ' East Lynn gone Fourth West Unconsciously choral commis- sary CONSTANCE S. RUSSELL Connie Russell possesses big blue eyes, a New England twang, all the qualifications for a mellerdrammer heroine. Am- bitious to teach English in Francs, she continually rushes papers in after the deadline, receives them back marked A. The essence of femininity, Con- nie loses her temper only when the dining room fails to under- stand her roast beef raeh. Emerging from her fourth west sanctum the tranquil Miss Rus- sell makes periodic struggles with executive life, always abandons it in favor of her first interest, her friends. Conscien- tious Connie prides herself on her memory, actually knows the name of every individual she greets in her sedate progress through Parrish. WARWICK SAKAMI Day student of the more elusive type, local boy Sakami manages to get along without letting anybody know how he ' s getting. Chemist of the first ion with medical ambitions, Warwick manages to confine his time to that part of the campus frequented by the strong silent type of engineer, doc, and physicist. No stickler for Germanic linguistics, Lansdowne ' s Friends ' School product Sakami drives a car with a careful aban- don. Result: one morning freshman year a fairly new car landing down the hill behind Wharton; new car following week. JEAN SAUERWEIN Jean comes from Boston, serves as Harvard ' s high priest in the halls of Swarthmore. Though an Ec major, she refuses to dedicate her life to the principle of marginal utility, knocks off to week-end with the Out- ing Club. Jean will do anything for anyone, even if nervously aware that she shouldn ' t, frequently holds the bag for her Third East coterie. Informal commissary for the hall, she provides all the food, constantly goes on fancy diets, constantly quits them. Good-natured almost to a fault, Jean ' s only vice, as expressed by a rancorous neighbor, is her habit of singing without realizing it. 83 Pursues an eclectic Advocate of old age security Trained in the arts of assimilating KATHARINE WHITNEY SCHERMAN Animated, industrious Kathy is always in a dither engendered by just having lost all the material for the next Manuscript. Pursuing the highways and by- ways of menticulture, she studies sans attire, adorns her window-sills with whisky bottles, pursues an eclectic policy in reading-matter, eliminating College Humor and most books-of-the-month which she scatters among avid associates. Celebrated concert pianist, cellist, Cutting Collection chaperon, she spends Friday afternoons at symphony adding to her profundium of aesthetic learning. An inveterate nocturnal coffee in- gurgitator at the new druggie, Kathy keeps body and soul together with daily doses of fifty different kinds of medicine. ELLEN BURNS SCHOCK Oklahomon sea lover, Ellen Burns Schock dec- orates her room with symbols that would warm an old salt ' s heart. A Westerner with no trace of veneration for tradition, Ellen casts aspersions on our sometimes snowy countryside, refusing to be consoled with ice skates or sleds. Rumor has it that she would walk (or what amounts to a half-run) two miles for a Philip Morris, spend her last cent on books, her last bit of energy faithfully keeping a journal supposed by room- mate to be rather personal. A kindergarten student of old glass, she hopes to entertain her old age with more than grandchildren. HELEN SCHMIDT A wild career of majors — through freshman Poli-Sci, sophomore English, and junior History honors — has trained Schmidt in the arts of assimilat- ing two-weeks ' work in four hours. Sleepy-eyed, she naps often, owning four pairs of bed- room slippers and an untowsel- able mop of natural curls for which she cherishes bright green hair-ribbons. Oh, I ' m so unhappy invariably signals a change in her course (of ac- tion), otherwise she smokes furi- ously, talks to herself, and rap- turously regales in Beethoven. With exasperating ease she ac- quires phenomenal grades, but friends feel that Hellie ' s extreme absent-mindedness somehow sort of (St)evens things up. 84 From scintillation to a mere sparkle Presses by proxy EMANUEL SCOLL Press Board Chairman, Balti- more ' s Emanuel Scoll practices salesmanship to supplement his more abstract studies. Econom- ics major and honors student, Executive Scoll delves vigorous- ly into the mysteries of philos- ophy and psych, to obtain a well rounded headache. Hal- cyon Advertising Manager, he can be depended upon to give sound advice to the Social Committee. Soccer and lacrosse player, Class Treasurer Scoll finds time to participate active- ly in the Little Theatre Club. After careful analysis, finds business looking to Swarthmore for executive talent; is willing to provide it. FREDERICK METTAM SHAFFER One of Baltimore ' s noisy campus contingent, Fred has achieved the pinnacle of being one of The Boys by rooming with that omnipresent E-1 gang. Only too well-known in the past for his scintillating sense of humor, biting wisecracks, and cutting comebacks, it has been slyly rumored that a more ethereal freshman influence this year has calmed him down to a mere occasional sparkle. Even if true, this Shaffer lad still continues unabated his various activities, shady and otherwise, ranging from wearily majoring in economics, indulging in frequent quad snowball socials, to wielding a mean lacrosse stick, like others from his vaguely southern home-state. RUSSELL MILLS SHEPHERD Honors student in the field of political science. Keystone Stater Russell Mills Shepherd puts his theories of economics to practical tests, making himself Swarth- more College ' s busiest figure off the campus. Picture of modern endeavor, student Shepherd cleans and presses by proxy, oversees Tea Room triflers, and does scholarship work between seminars. Member of the Interfraternity Council, Representative Shepherd leads the way for intensified rushing by his own example. Clear in his judgments, he finds little cause for change once a decision is made; is modest about accomplish- ments; requires only a handclasp or a gentle pat to achieve best results. ' A barrage of questions on obeah ' The swing ' s the thing. A yearning for husbandry ERIC LESLIE SIMMONS Arriving in Swarthmore with an Esperanto accent, a case of guava, and a desire to see snowballs and people with shoes on, St. Thomian Simmons became the center of a barrage of questions on obeah, hurri- canes, and whether human flesh tastes salty. Now secretary of Kwink, Little Theater technician, smoothie dancer, and Doc Palmer ' s right hand man on the flora side, Eric manages to room on the noisiest floors in Wharton, clips Virgin Islands dispatches from the Times, illustrates chemistry books. Accomplished artist with a distinct distaste for praise, Eric spends his spare time deprecating himself and eating strange in- sular jellies. ALLEN GOODMAN SNYDER, JR. Long since designated by the appellation of Snitz, Chestnut Hiller Allen Goodman Snyder, Jr., allows his steady grin to corroborate the testimony of his slightly egotistic middle name. Short in stature, but long in ambition, soccer man Snyder looks forward to the full life of a manufacturer, with the completing of a full house as his first major production. Political Scientist, cheerleader Snyder has a definite preference for Fats Waller and the other adherers of the prin- ciple that the swing ' s the thing. E. BURROWS SMITH English major with a tenden- cy toward the continental, Washington ' s Open Scholar Smith likes opera, understands poetry, provides a good accent in French plays, calls himself by his middle name. A sea- soned veteran of raucous D section, Burrows came to col- lege a political scientist, took lots of economics, now minors in history, and completes the versatility with some seminars in French. Agricultural tycoon, rotund Smith admits he ' s ob- sessed by Tudor-Stuart farming, discovered Barnaby Googe, browses through tomes on compleat husbandrie. With no desire for the spectacular, B is at home with a pot of tea and an English seminar, even if it ' s in a professor ' s house. Splashes but means well Sucker for a steamship line MARIAN SNYDER A day student from Lans- downe for two years, Marmee is now at home on third west. Once established at Swarth- more (astounding those not real- izing that discussing dog-rais- ing with her future dean doesn ' t disqualify an applicant), she garnered coveted varsity hock- ey and swimming positions. Pos- sessor of a mobile and expres- sive face, she regales friends with imitations of Donald Duck and me with buck teeth, and good-naturedly takes their kidding about long hours spent in vain attempts to draw. Impulsive and generous, Marmee entertains the hall with food from home and frequent rides in her Puddlejumper. HOFFMAN STONE Another of those strange-tongued Brooklynites, Hoffman has risen to athletic fame by his ability to splash effectively in the swimming pool. Wishing to maintain that healthy build for swimming and other purposes, he politely refuses to join any of the team ' s questionable nightly activities on its rather imusual trips. Although a brave chem major. Stony this year left the stern portals of that red monstrosity awhile to take part in our artistic dramatic program, a part in- cidentally lasting only ten seconds. A genial person, he appeases Bunny in book-store work in spite of any blunder for as she so forcefully put it — he always means well. ROSE ELISABETH STREET Trimly perky. Rose compensates for lack of stature with almost aggressive independence and untold energy (voilct — a bed spread, chair cover, and numer- ous pillows of her own lily white handiwork). An ambitious woman majoring in math to be a statistician, she would appear almost stern with a violent dislike for toy animals and baby talk when spoken to a guinea pig. She humanizes however with a fondness for real dogs and a tendency to give herself over to extreme mirth at uncomfortable moments. Possessed of a wan- derlust. Rose has a hand on travel literature and on eye on Europe. 87 Captain in a small way Campus figure, once removed ' Metamorphosed by Pennock ELIZABETH REISLER STUBBS Third and smallest edition of a series of distin- guished sisters, Elizabeth Stubbs soon sought and found fame in her own right as freshman varsity tennis woman, diminutively captained freshman hockey team, the next year scrambled up the steep pinnacle of suc- cess as full time right inner. Stubby ' s determined and deadlocked debates with Lappie delight their audi- ences; her guttural chuckle is the pri ze possession of the Eatalots; her penchant for picnics and boisterous bouncing is one of their vital forces. Telephones are a major problem for deeyou sister Stobbins, who stands ten feet away to shout into their distant heights. GORDON PAUL TAPLEY Campus figure, Plymouth Meeting ' s perpendicular Tap, E section boisterer, intrepid cloisterer, is taking his junior year in the college of hard knocks. Ubiq- uitous still, carried back to college dances by con- stant nostalgia. Tap became a big man on campus freshman year, will repeat the process in the next. A baseballer now one season removed, a Larkinman when that was what you called basketball players. Tap ' s an engineer with a social conscience, never allowed dynamos to interfere with t. p. shindigs, settled down early, will be back. DOROTHY SUTTON With charge account keeping everything under control, small Sutton wends her way, invari- ably late, but always equipped with giggle and airy explana- tions for you-all. The re- formed bridge-fiend ' s many moods are conveniently diag- nosable from the position of the snapshot: wall or bottom drawer — but Dot never gets vio- lent, being hampered by the fact that she, like the gardenia, bruises easily. This embarrass- ing susceptibility to blows is ap- parently not only physical but mental, since Pennock ' s Am. Fed. Gov. has affected her so deeply that she ' s vocationally turned from Chevy-Chasing to serious social (service) work in order to save the pieces for posterity. His Utopian plan discovered lopsided ' A too thin Richard NORAH TIMMIS Quote Timmy: I was born in a coal mine, and for the first five years of my life I never saw the light. Then I came to Swarthmore. Afterthought (smiling sweetly): I ' m bats. Corroborative proof: thinks nothing of walking home (12 miles) for car; given to sprin- khng tooth-powder in friends ' hair, which she diagnoses as no joke, just practical ; ex-4th- east spent a whole year laugh- ing at her. Grains of salt: recep- tivity to literature, art, sym- phony concerts, and jazz; erst- while junior-editorship of Phoe- nix and current secretaryship of Phoenix Advisory Board; ener- gy, efficiency, generosity. DAVID TODD Although a conscientious chem major, Dave ' s greatest interest extends far from steaming test-tubes to this mad world ' s social welfare. No new plan for bet- tering anything whatever is unwelcome to Dave, and if none are offered, he neatly turns them out himseH with amazing rapidity. An ASU leader, the history of his social activities recedes from present dignified bull- sessions in Pitt Hall to sophomore Woolman House, where he was an eager exponent of a communal pool- ing and division of resources, which worked well until one member suddenly discovered his contributions formed the majority of the funds. Descending occasion- ally from superhuman idealism. Dove finds time for tennis and even feminine inspiration. GUERIN TODD, JR. Highest points of the college days of Guerin Todd, Jr., were lead in Richard of Bordeaux, infatuation with leading lady Elsa Gaede. Following John Gielgud and Dennis King in this role. Red Bank ' s Todd and Elsa carried on their rehearsals all over the campus from periodical room to druggie and back again, seemed to profit by the extra practice. Reviewed as re- strained in the first half of (Gordon Daviot ' s ploy but showing understanding, imagination, poise as the older Richard, history honors major Todd took his part well, was too thin for his fourteenth century costume. 89 ' Clash-precluder ' In 4th East ' s gutter JEAN ANNABEL TOMPKINS Small, sober Jean in the course of her cosmopolitan career upset the whole Turkish nation by swimming the Bosporus at the age of eleven. Spouting Turkish, French, Greek with facility, she roams the USA with an English accent, having bean here, there, and in Arizona sans parental protection. Tennis, swimming. Social Committeeing, running rats in mazes present no difficulties for this capable confederate of the Eatalots; but the copper-colored curls are a real problem: clothes must rhyme or contrast with hair, and lipstick is chucked completely to preclude a clash. Afterthought: maybe it wasn ' t the whole Turkish nation, but she cer- tainly created quite a splash. ANN TRIMBLE With sphinx-like sang-froid and a riotous color- sense, sloe-eyed Ann slashes her modernistic way through Sketch Club, designing and executing Little Theater stage-sets, and turning out indispensable and enticing decors for college dances. Confident in her own ability to pull through anything, quietly but defi- nitely self-reliant, she also turns the battery of her concentration-power on a zo major, combining brilliant work with a heavy social schedule, Vespers Commit- teeing, Gwimping, and raising two kittens in 4th East ' s gutter. Feeding innumerable zo building cats, Ann, ardent champion of the mistreated, obviously feels for felines. ANNE TRACY Chicago ' s Ann Tracy pre- sents the paradoxical picture of the Socialist debutante. Al- though a member of Swarth- more ' s radical set she is more frequently seen with orchids on her shoulder than the chronic communistic chip. Among her extra-curricular interests she counts the A.S.U., lectures in Philly, victrola records from Stravinsky to Organ Grinder ' s Swing. In the curricular line she honors in English, invari- ably arrives late for seminars, wedges immense stacks of cor- respondence between bouts of study. Famous for her giggle, drolly-drawling Tracy ambles along, enjoys life. 90 Floral fantasy Logical lodge lover GEORGE VALENTINE Six feet, three and one-half inches of burly seriousness, New York State ' s George Whitely Valentine forsakes team sports, taking little time out from the more rigorous intellect- ual duties of college life. An- other major in the field of sur- veying apparatus and blue prints, Engineer Clubber Valen- tine achieves diversity by a concentrated study of what ' s what in economics; learns the same thing from a practical standpoint by summer work. Gets exercise from baseball and football in leisure moments; achieves the same result with a motorcycle as his summer mount. Worthy model for Brother Bruce, airplane addict Valentine holds undisputed ownership of the pedestal with a rating of lOO ' r in all purity tests. MARJORIE WILK ES VanDEUSEN Bottecellian Marge VanDeusen graces the environs of Second West, living, Primavera-like, amid flowers, which, however, she most mundanely cultivates, con- stantly burdening her astonished friends with floral tributes. Since the Red Menace (?) no longer stalks our halls, the mists of Poll Sci honors hove closed over the fragile (looking) Gwimper, and though she will occasionally emerge at the mention of Middle Western peace caravaning, for the most part she is subtle-smil- ingly serene. Her untroubled state has, in fact, only one serpent: she positively yearns for and greedily covets wooden cows with wiggly feet. JANET CORRALL VAUGHN Blond, sophisticated Janet Vaughn, popular with girls as president of Gwimp, prefers, however, to spe- cialize when wth the stronger sex. Possessor of an excellent mind and a lovely voice, she is quick on the trigger, a spicy jokester. Though a lodge lover and dancing enthusiast, she possesses a logical mind and an intelligent manner; but Honors Work does not hin- der an interest in Le Cercle Frangais, poetry, dramatic work in student productions. Notwithstanding a poised and unruffled manner, on week-end nights Jan is often found making the most of the Media Inn. 91 Little girl under a bushel Not for all the rice in China Hitler with pretzels and beer VIRGINIA HADLEY VAWTER This is flaxen-haired Jinny who runs around being awfully afraid somebody is going to find out that she has an ounce or two of gray matter which really func- tions. If anybody discovers that she tosses off manag- ing the swimming team, Gwimping, FAG, and the Halcyon ' s business, Jinny looks modestly down and either says nothing at all or talks about something else very fast without breathing. The mo st sought- after confidante of the Joyce-to-Woolmanites, Jinny sel- dom knows what to do about her own troubles, relieves them by pounding the history books, by turning somer- saults, or by walking rapidly somewhere in the dark. MARGARET HELEN VOSKUIL Mano ' s indomitability is implicit in the recounting of her oddessey from Amoy, wild doings in Shanghai, to Swarthmore Psych honors and all-night paper writ- ing; her setness of opinion is a result of her missionary upbringing in Ghina. Mano likes the poetry in Good Housekeeping, varsity swimming, German Club, does not like the flutes in I section or vegetables (eating them only to make the best of what you ' ve got ). Yet rumor hath it now that she is wavering, and of late the hitherto steadfastly despised U. S. has inex- plicably become dearer than the hitherto incomparable dragon kingdom. ARNOLD VIEHOEVER The Borough ' s Arnold Vie- hoever reversed the usual es- cape act of the average day stu- dent, was as evident as a Whartonite. Pole vaulter with high ambitions in the Middle Atlantics, E section addict, and possessor of a car peren- nially for sale, the frater part of Sister Vie is taking his junior year in Munich. Last named Bavarian town the scene of an historic meeting; self-subsistent Fuehrer on tour of beer garden greeted by hail from Viehoe- ver. Result: for der Fuehrer free pretzels and a glance at localite Arnold, for Arnold, a dubious delight. 92 That forgotten campus figure .it0 % Likes nature in the raw ' Located capering ANN BAKER WARREN Hilarious hostess of the Eata- lot hotel, Warrie transferred from Earlham her sophomore year to enliven the libe with her omnipresent giggle. A smooth dancer, she may often be located capering in Collec- tion, or grinning under the clock; an easy conversational- ist, she pries others away from their books, lending a sym- pathetic ear to any woes and mirthful encouragement to kid- ding. Famous for hard wallops on varsity hockey, she refuels with minced ham and egg sandwiches at the druggie, maintaining that vital versatil- ity of mind by which she keeps her English major majored with- out impairing her audible en- joyment of the funny papers. MARTIN BACON WALTHALL Southerner with a drawl, Tennessee ' s Martin Bacon Walthall likes loafing, travelling, and the Sworth- more social system, plus a dash of variety in his night life. Nevertheless, on all other matters of policy. Economist Walthall exemplifies that forgotten campus figure, the conformist. Manager of the racquet wielders and prominent Kwinker, Beau Walthall has reputedly gone on record as favoring Varsity letters for moon- light sports, on the grounds that they have as much athletic content as those already recognized. Has only one complaint — it takes too long to get all his work done. ELIZABETH DISSOWAY WATSON Ardent Outing-Clubber, and present president of the week-ending enthusiasts, Betty Watson is also on eager Eagle Scout; as sophomore was local lieutenant, taught young Swarthmoreans the essentials of Amer- ican womanhood. Despite domestic tendencies toward cooking and sewing, she indulges in exotic pursuits such as the hula on the hall after modern dancing, and cultural pilgrimage, climbing the Statue of Liberty on sight-seeing tour; in more business-like mood, she manages circulation for the Phoenix. V otson has a penchant for nature in the raw — such as carrots and cole-slaw uncooked. 93 Has a reservoir ' In dignified spurts ' ' Foreign correspondent ELIZABETH LINVILL WAY Unique in her refusal to join the occasional orgies of self-revelation which shake our college, Libby will- ingly suffers the introspections of others without indulg- ing in any herself. Not satisfied with travelling necessi- tated by living in Lansdowne, this ardent Outing Club- ber goes here and there and to Pitt ' s farm with her fellow hot-dog fiends. Unassuming and seemingly quiet, Libby has a reservoir of perseverance which is manifest in the pursuit of psych-lab-labors even at night. Her most apparent assets are her irrepressible health and her pug nose; her chief foibles, a passion for knitting and a propensity for playing on all class teams. CHARLOTTE IAN WEAVER Enigma of the nether and the nebulous, Ian is the 1938 version of heavenly hash. Her voice is like vel- vet, but she uses it to demonstrate cowboy songs. Her eyes qualify as wide and luminous, but they crinkle at most surprising stories. Her poise is impeccable, but as a ratter she is Woolman House ' s worst. In dig- nified spurts she graces Personnel, Social Committee, FAC, Halcyon ; in other spurts applies Little Theater grease-paints, attends May queens, achieves the Main Line roll. So many things to point to — yet she sighs that her love affairs bring her no rings, no pins, no concrete evidence — just indigestion. GERTRUDE S. WEAVER Anything but a resident stu- dent, Gertrude Weaver frolics away her lunior year in the home territory of sauerkraut and Hitler. Interesting but quite harmless, her perhaps censored letters from Germany reveal the same chipper activity that manifested itself in days past in leading the day students to bigger and better things some time between intervals of study- ing and secretarying the Eng- lish department. Perhaps the urge for travel that carries her around Europe inspired her refrigerator - winning slogan: A breath of the Arctic at a turn of the switch. 94 r Frothless thinker bean-bom- barded ' In receiving line Gives vent to a superlative JEAN WELTMER Blond personification of a Grecian column, Weltmer is more like a whirlwind. A hu- man information bureau, she is Third West ' s busiest busybody, chattering endlessly and at great detail on every subject from the best route to Pottstown to why freshmen marry. Brusk, efficient, always proper, ener- getic Weltmer loves social do- ings; dresses up and sips tea whenever possible. Gwimper and Zo student, she is also a competent Dorothy Dix. Monop- olist of better ideas, Weltmer, as sophomore class officer, stood next to Editor Lange in receiving line, was later heard to remark, That person next to me didn ' t know anyone ' s name! BARBARA WETZEL Pennsylvania Railroad ' s Main Line Barbara Wetzel first bruited herself into the college limelight virriting and singing music for the Freshman Show, becoming, herself, a target for that occasion ' s legumic hail. Since then Psych-honors-major Wetzel, besides acting in Co-ed, FACing, and conducting Conduct Committee, has become known as one of the college ' s stellar pianists, one of its spontaneous sorcasticommentcrtors, one of its darndest inexhaustible coiners of come- backs. Yet all is definitely not froth with Wetzel: keen observers, penetrating Bobbie ' s periphery of laughter, find able intellect and canny cogitation behind the picturesqueness of her view. JUDITH ABBOTT WILLITS With bobbing blond hair and a sphinx-like coun- tenance, Judy peregrinates from lab to lodge and back again, with ten minutes a day out for meals. An in- cipient bacteriologist, she pulls down a steady two-point by virtue of botany labs, blood counts, books, brains and in spite of a maximum of two trips per semester to the libe. The peaceful pan is all a snare and a delusion, for within the stronghold of the lodge Judy gives vent to a superlative sense of humor, discloses her cigarette- bridge fiendishness, gesticulates wildly, and plays a wicked game of pounce. 95 ' She daubs . . . Swarthmore whistles The rapidity of Manning DEBORAH WING English honors major Debby Wing ' s versatile talents have ably disproved theories as to modest man- ners meaning minus minds. Looking for Debby would be a tiring but worthwhile job; she might be at varsity practices of hockey or swimming, she might be back- stage daubing scenery, she might be almost anywhere studying. Also claiming her well spent time are Honor Committee and Freshman Advisory Committee. To cap a continuous climax, while relaxing on strenuous Outing Club tramps she presides over in the minute book. No mere trustworthy plodder, able socialite Wing combines laughter with labor, makes Swarthmore whistle at speed, wonder at accuracy. RICHARD BOWMAN WRAY A home-town boy, Richie has shown a definite share of local talent. Combining quietness upon proper occasions and rugged individualism, Richie indulges in a bit of somewhat sinister wood-selling business on the side of his more academic life. An athletic flash, he whizzes across the basketball court with the breath- taking rapidity of a lecture by Dr. Manning, and in the spring knocks baseballs to the four winds. Adept at minor sports, he manages some pretty shots on the pool table. A conventionally well-rounded ec- major, his studious side betrays itself by long sieges in the library, his even more artistic side by an interest in music and other of the beautiful objects life offers. JOSEPH WINSTON Joseph Winston, although a psychology major, is the ex- emplification of those qualities unrelated to Dr. Koehler ' s spe- cialty. A Phoenix phenomenon hunter and a member of the Social Committee, the pride and joy of White Plains combines these two activities into one at the college social center — the Phoenix office. Pleasant com- pany, Joe doesn ' t add to his unconvincing delusion of being tough by his bouncing walk and his serious smile. Psy- chologist Joe ' s snappy ensem- bles of brown corduroy pants, 55c Army-Navy store shirts, his blue sweater and moccasins set the styles in men ' s clothing at Swarthmore. 96 Ties to forget ' Miss Lukens watches her LOIS LAURA WRIGHT Freshman Lois Wright first crashed into college life by fall- ing down Magill Walk steps in- to the middle of the Sophomore picture. Now she plans ener- getic parties for Outing Club, spouts liquid French for Le Cer- cle Frangais, as FACommittee woman allays Freshman fears. Junior editor and efficient news- hawk, Lois haunts the Phoenix room, is Alumnist under Miss Lukens ' eagle eye. On sum- mer Outing Club hike Adiron- dackwards, she joined up with itinerant Vermont collegians, used their tent. As outdoor social functions ' funster, Lois is Swarthmore ' s veteran violator of the point system. CAROLA ZIGROSSER Unique, unrestrained Carola Zigrosser is an exu- berant element in campus life. She mixes a taste for good pictures with joy at walking on her hands (not hitch-hiking), capably supports her stand on any con- troversial question from politics on down (or up), for- gets a morning of seminar-papering for the afternoon by persuading reluctant friends to return from Hedge- row via railroad ties — one by one. It is as easy to hide under a bushel of her sincere joy of living as it is to force her loose golden hair under a hcrt. 97 WARRINGTON SOPHOMORES 100 101 %%S -7i W- : ? ?: F R E S H M E Executive Committee Second Semester Officers President DON WELTMER Vice-President CORNELIA BROWN Secretary MARY LOIS BROOMELL Treasurer JACK SANDERSON 104 105 ACTIVITIES MSG A Gardner Macy Poliironi Heavenrich Kalkstein Hafkenschiel Cartwright Schwartz EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President Samuel Isaac Kalkstein Secretary-Treasurer Dorwin Cartwright MEMBERS Joseph Henrington Hafkenschiel, Jr. Edward Arthur Macy Vincent J. Polifroni Richard Heavenrich Irving Samuel Schwartz James Gardner FOLLOWING the principle laid down by those who named it in the far distant past, the Men ' s Student Government Association has functioned during the present school year to govern the men students. No problem is too large, none too small, in the maintaining of a happy, well-fed group of huskies. In con- nection with the well-fed angle. Student Government recently found itself face to face with a very serious situation. To quote the minutes, Eames deplored the manner in which the v aitresses snub the fellcws. Clark defended the waitresses on the whole. Polifroni explained the situation. Obviously, there is a crying need for adjustment. The Student Government Executive Committee meets twice monthly, with attention given to current problems, such as breakage, dormitory conditions, the social situation, freshmen rules, mail collections, and miscellaneous. The latter serves to initiate student mass meetings, which in turn bring forth concerted action. A recent piece of such administration which somehow has failed to manifest itself except in the minutes is as follows: Perloff moved that all visitors of the immediate family be allowed to visit in the dormitories on Sunday afternoon. Goshorn desired the inclusion of women of any kind. A representative group, the M. S. G. A. comprises students and athletes (the terms are synonymous) in various hues, ranging from sheer gray to delicately saturated red. 108 WSG A Ellis Ross Lewis Brooks Mims Evans Dennis Booth Smith Wilde Macy MYSTERIOUS W. S. G. A. Executive is that super-committee which is made up of chairmen and representatives from all committees governing Woman (strictly) Student Life. Presided over by Mim Booth, Exec, meets fortnightly to mull over its agenda, brood over the coming Faculty Reception, speculate as to (say) the number of white dresses for Somerville Day, appoint some miserable wights to write the Handbook, or others to attack the Bulletin Board. Briefly and broadly. Exec, aims to uplift, enliven, and generally benefit the Women Students. The latest innovation perpetrates: development of the F. A. C. from Big and Little Sisters; new plans afoot: organization of Student Discus- sion Groups, and promotion of bigger and better Alumnae-Student relations: the Alumnae Sponsor Plan (A. S. P. ?), but in the mean- time such cheerful details as W. S. G. A. meetings and (horrors!) room-choosing, are their happy lot. ISABEL HOLLY ROSS President ISABEL LOUISE WILDE BARBARA BICKFORD BROOKS BETTY FOREE DENNIS RUTH MARY LEWIS ELIZABETH WEBB MIMS MARION ELLIS MIRIAM RAVI BOOTH JEAN ANNE E ' ANS ELEANOR PANCOAST SMITH DOROTHY MACY 109 Prentice Brooks Reuter Blackman Rickey Morningstar Dobbins Cooper Grinnell Kaltenbach Dana Livingston THE SOCIAL COMMITTEE No sinecure is a job on the Social Committee. Sponsors and planners of anything from a Sun- day morning breakfast in the lodges to a college dance, committeemen spend many hours rounding up and cajoling helpers, directing operations. Best example: Co-chairman Barbara Brooks changing from honors to course in order to devote more time to social work — on the committee. Open meetings every Sunday night, social events of every sort almost every evening precludes the reappearance of a Median. Determined to bring new ways to play to Swarthmore, the committee introduced trade dances, a barn dance, roller skating. Most spectacular revival was Coed Week, with the same dire effects to many masculine egos. Prizes for most dates went to Heywood Broun and Roo Schorling; he, because his was the sole entry; she, because she escorted him to the prize award. Social season 1936-1937 made many neophyte socialites, was proclaimed a success. Brocks Prentice 110 Goodrich Bond Betty Foree Dennis President Virginia Bew Bond Anne Cooper Elizabeth W. Goodrich Mary Ivins Ruth Mary Lewis Mary Katharine McDermott Marian deKay Rous Katharine Whitney Scherman Paula M. Swarthe Joan WooUcott Carola Zigrosser Swarthe Dennis Rous Lewis WocUcott Cooper SOMERVILLE SOMERVILLE sponsors John Mason Brown every year. This year they also were responsible for Alexander WooUcott and several other people who lechired here. You can always tell when Somerville sponsors a lecturer because, be it the case, Betty Dannis will introduce him. This is very nice for everybody concerned. Somerville also places itself in the widely discussed but hardly tangible lime- light every spring, with a Day. On this Day the girls all wear white dresses or leave college, and the men all leave college. Then lots of alumnae congregate in Clothier, and there prevaileth the Somerville spirit. This is also the orjy Day when the college serves ice cream with chocolate sauce at lunch. The origin of this society is lost in the mists of long ago. It is a tradition for the ' Halcyon to say: Whether Somerville Forum started as a girls ' baseball or basketball team seems to be a subject open to debate. You can debate this if you like; personally we think it was created in memoriam of somebody. Of course it could still be a baseball or basketball team. It is also a Somerville custom to give teas for vague but lovely reasons. Sometimes people talk on these occasions. Usually everyone drinks tea. All the women in college belong to Somerville. So do all the women who used to be in college. So will all the women who will be in college. Just think of it! Ill HALCYON Editorial Editor, COOPER Photographic Editor, REUTER 112 STAFF THESE are the people who perpetrated this book. There are a number of them every year. We, of course, have been an unusually industrious staff. We have burned the midnight oil at both ends. We have held a candle to the best of staffs. We have exhibited a tremendous amount of pains, push, per- severance, patho-logic, and so forth. We have given up everything for the Halcyon — life, liberty, and the pursuit of — oh, why be specific? Editor Lange has flunked one logic test after another, unquestionably on account of the Halcyon. Cooper rewrites each and every one of the 80-some junior men regularly every week. Rickey expects to spend the rest of her college days atoning for that one mad moment when she told Kohler that the Halcyon came before her duties to psychology. Reuter is reduced to roar- ing, What is the Halcyon? I never heard of it. Fisher flings forth a faint Photography — phooey! Braden bellows, My work is shot to Halcyon. Jinny gibes, It ' s a man ' s world. Larry lisps, Leave me alone and let me work on the Halcyon. Weaver whimpers, What shall we do? while Manny mur- murs miserably, My, my, my . . . Now we will give you a brief resume of what the Halcyon is. It is a subtly calculated attempt on the part of engravers, printers, and photographers to make each member of each staff feel like the bottom end of a cork-screw which has just been pushed circuitously through the cork which is still in the bottle. This is all camouflaged by calling the thing a year book and is surrounded with tradi- tion and not too much veneration. However, there are two or three people every year who like it, and so, year after year and all year, this thing goes on and on. Advertising Manager, WEAVER Circulati-n Managsr, SCOLL Above Business Manager. VAWTER Snapshot Editor. FISHER 113 PHOENIX ARNERING subscriptions by virtue of Campus Comment and numerous features, the Phoenix has never yet failed to make its scheduled appearance on Tuesday night. But how it regularly accomplishes this is unknown even to the editor. Thrown together Monday night until all hours of the morning in that distraction of all distractions, the college social center — the Phoenix office — the weekly is. no criterion of college papers, but has infinite student appeal. Biggest asset is Campus Comment. Annie Trimble thinks it is disgusting; Dave Davis thinks that only prudish people gat into the column, promptly got in herself; but Irv ' s cleverly phrased dirt makes the student body expec- tantly await Tuesday night, cringing and fearing that their latest escapade would become known to the college. Specializing in polls of student opinion, the Phoenix proved us to be in a hotbed of conservatism, not radicalism. Voting for London by 243 to 188 and rising against Roosevelt ' s court plan, students found the most inter- esting ballot was the question of Mrs. Simpson and Edward. Best answer: Henry VIII did it, why not Wally? Final score: 197-125 for Wally as Queen. Best quip of the year: there is no ace like rome; best crusade: Sport Shorts Caldwell ' s against the library drinking fountain; worst shot: cut of R. C. Brooks 20 years ago as a slim man. • ' P - s ■114 STAFF Editor-in-Chief IRVING S. SCHWARTZ, ' 37 Managing Editor JOHN H. WOOD, ' 37 Business Manager OLVA F. FAUST, ' 37 Exchange Editor ANN E. WHITCRAFT, ' 37 Associate Editors, ANNE BROOKE, ' 37; MURIEL C. ECKES, ' 37 Circulation Manager ISABEL R. BENKERT, ' 37 Ass ' t. Circulation Manager, ELIZABETH WATSON, ' 38 Advertising Manager ..J. ARCHER POTTINGER, ' 37 JUNIOR EDITORS Kermit Gordon, ' 38 Carolyn M. Hogeland, ' 38 Peter Oesper, ' 38 Norah M. Timmis, ' 38 Joseph Winston, ' 38 Lois L. Wright, ' 38 BUSINESS ASSISTANTS James L. Anderson, James H. Beardsley, ' 38 WiUiam J. Howell, ' 38 Jean T. Weltmer, ' 38 115 FRONT ROW: Lipman, Yard. Epstein. Rome. Graves. Cooper. Barsalow, Scoll. MIDDLE ROW: Hough, Kaspar. Cook. Moore, Rossmore. James, Kaltenbach, Goodwin, Eppinger, Madden, Hagedorn. BACK ROW: Boss, Dobbins. Cheeseman. Souder. Gross. PRESS BOARD AIDED by the enthusiastic co-operation of a staff of nineteen freshmen and sophomore candidates, the Press Board, administered by a staff of seven juniors, has attained new heights in the history of Swarthmore College news releases. The Press office is literally deluged with newspaper articles which have been printed in the country ' s largest dailies. Press Board is unlike any other college organization. Its outlook is funda- mentally a cosmopolitan one, and so campus opinion is liable to be completely ignorant of Press Board ' s real purpose in the college program, which is to con- vey an accurate and well-rounded picture of Swarthmore College to news- paper readers throughout the country. This end is accomplished through daily press releases to the Philadelphia and New York papers as well as through the agencies of the Associated Press and the United Press. Last winter a newly elected staff of the Press Board began its operation under a system of re-organization and division of functions which is designed to introduce a greater efficiency into the organization. All of the seven junior candidates were retained, two of them being appointed chairman and asso- ciate chairman, respectively. The new plan is designed to keep the valuable members of the staff. Under the new organization each individual staff member has been appointed a correspondence assistant for a single Philadelphia or New York paper. Thus, by bringing the Press Board into a more personal relationship with the editors of the various newspapers, the college news agency has been molded into a more smoothly running unit. Increased efficiency has also resulted from the system whereby each staff member is the personal super- visor over a group of the freshman and sophomore candidates. As well as laying new groundwork, Press Board has also expanded along the lines laid down by its predecessors. Through the creation of hometown and photographic departments, there has been an increased use of pictures of students, and stories to hometown and high-school newspapers of students have been released on every occasion. 116 117 DEBATE BOARD EXPERIENCED entrepreneurs in the art of elucidating exposition, the Debate Board members are rapidly establishing their prestige among campus activities. Employing a t-wo group system, with one group concentrating on the Pi Kappa Delta Question, the other available for whatever subject is cur- rently in the public eye, the Swarthmore debaters have shown a willingness to meet any opposition. This year as never before, progress has been made through experimenta- tion. Fledgling debaters learned the science of cultured address through the cooperation of Mrs. McLeod and the English Department, while radio became the chief medium for resolving the issues. After the Freshman-Sophomore campus altercation, even the D U Speaking. Con test went hook-up, with Dorwin Cartwright and Elvin Souder outlasting the gong. A Spring vacation trip through Indiana, Ohio, and Illinois, followed by the Extemporaneous Speaking Contest, closed the Board ' s busiest season. Manager of Debate EDWIN ROME Assistant Manager GEORGE BRADEN Weeks Olds G. Braden Lang Rome C. Braden Souder Petrow lis COMPRISING Electrical, Civil, and Mechanical Engineering students, the Engineers ' Club is one of the few societies linn- iting its membership to a specialized group. Despite this tech- nical snobbery, its members are broad-minded, devoting a night yearly to the edification of the mere academician, who is awe- struck, but, alas, uncomprehending in the face of giant widgets, blueprints, and aluminum pipes. Exhibitions are arranged, exper- iments are performed, in an effort to show the problems and accomplishments of the struggling practicalists. Wearied of useless ostentation, the Engineer Clubbers hold meetings only when necessities arise, conceding the reins of executive power to a single member of their fellows. To him falls the responsibility of arranging programs with outside speakers, and keeping the wheels of progress properly greased. Proud claimer of all Sigma Tau ' s, the club is supreme in its own resources, conceding only the annual Bowling Tournament to the aroused faculty group. The latter may be construed as a diplomatic gesture, however, rather than one of inferiority. President BEN COOPER ENGINEERING CLUB 119 THE LITTLE THEATRE CLUB 120 DEFORE we begin, it is necessary to clear up one -•- tricky little point that Mrs. MacLeod insists upon: that this report is really about Swarthmore College ' s Dramatic activities, not principally about the Little Theatre Club at all, which is only a sort of super- super sitting loftily above everything else, with the membership now soaring somewhere in the fifties. Although the outward surface of Swarthmore Col- lege ' s Dramatic Activities has continued in its own inimitably efficient fashion, Mrs. MacLeod ' s direct- ing class alternating with last year ' s acting class, the stage crews functioning almost brilliantly, the make-up class of Jane Reuter, ' 38, achieving startling effect ' s, there have been sinister rumblings under- neath it all, an undercurrent of unrest, that bode to result in some change of the whole system. To clarify this somewhat alarming statement, let us regard just what has occurred since last year. The whole thing started with the four original one- acts last spring: Alexander Dean, visiting critic, voiced authoritatively the consensus of opinion con- cerning them when he condemned the flagrant use of questionable language in most of the plays. This general outcry from faculty, alumni, and even stu- dents, resulted in the present system of putting the selection of all the Little Theatre Club ' s productions into the hands of the English department. Having caused the hasty change of Night Over Taos to The Inspector General, a Russian farce by Gogol, for the commencement play, the conservative reac- tion was further evidenced by the stern cutting of even the mildest oaths, including those uttered in a gentle, speculative mood. A very pleasing comedy, it displayed equally well the sparkling abilities of Keith Chalmers, ' 37, in the title role, and the novel sets of Barbara Weiss, ' 37. A forewarning of a memorable year was the change of the dramatic director ' s title from Beatrice Beach to Mrs. Robert MacLeod, one of those major events that mean so much to Phoenix columns. How- ever, our theatrical season began in quite an ortho- dox manner with the usual three one-acts: Irma Lewis ' Wee Diamond Ring, directed by Barbara Chapman, ' 38; Private Hicks, by Alfred Maltz, under the direction of Edwin Pettet, ' 37, and a de- lightful production of Trial By Jury, directed by 121 i li -y l (,; __ -. Front Row: Booth, Hellman. Peter, Matsuoka, Carrigan, Henszey, Trimble, Best, Weaver, Wing. Second Row: Cupitt, Morris, Eckes, Eckman, Director Beach, Chalmers, Weiss, Dobson, Ross, Faust. Third Row: Sketchley, Buchanan, Macy, Herbster, Reuler, Rome, Shrader, Diebold, Keller. Rear Row: Clement, Goldsmith, Broomell, Smith. Drew Young, ' 37, with Keith Chalmers and Betty Boss, ' 39, singing ably in leading roles. The fall play, Richard of Bordeaux, by Gordon Daviot, was one of the most ambitious productions ever offered to a Swarthmore audience. A drama of the life of Richard II, it required a huge cast of principals, ten different sets, and a lavish display of medieval costumes. Exceeding even the most sanguine hopes, it was an inspired pageant of 14th century England, aglow with lovely costumes and the massive settings of medieval architecture. King Richard and Queen Anne were played by Guerin Todd and Elsa Gaede, both ' 38, with Roland Ball and Molly Grinnell, both ' 39, as Lord and Lady Derby; William Diebold, ' 37, as Gloucester, and John Lashly, ' 38, as Lancaster. Our dramatic contingent was naturally somewhat exhausted so that it was rather surprising to dis- cover that the spring play, a faculty-student produc- tion, was to be Begger on Horseback, a fantasy- satire by Kaufman and Connelly, which, with a nightmare as a subject, lightning-like changes of scene, and a dancing chorus, was to prove equally, if not more, difficult than Richard of Bordeaux. By a brilliant stroke. Dr. MacLeod, of psycholog- ical fame, had the role of the young composer whose confused dream forms the basis of the drama, and if anyone should know the inside facts about dreams. he was certainly the man. The sight of Wilcox, Klees, MacLeod, and even Mr. Pittenger, cavorting about the stage in typical nightmare fashion was a classic in dramatic lore, so much so that it is to be repeated for the commencement play. After the announcement of this play, general criticism of the type and difficulty of the plays se- lected this year began to circulate around the campus and culminated in an open discussion group led by Mrs. MacLeod for those interested in Swarth- more College ' s dramatic activities. The outcome was the proposal of several changes: the enlarge- ment of the Little Theatre Club proper to include all students exhibiting a marked interest and participa- tion in any field of production; a workshop plan, whereby the place of dramatics as an extra-cur- ricular activity would be greatly enlarged; a new method of selecting plays, which would provide for the selection of proposed plays by an open meeting of interested students, the final approval resting with a committee of representatives from the Little Theatre Club and the faculty. Though nothing is yet definite concerning the application of these plans, it is prob- able that next year will see some alteration and enlargement in the dramatic field, the purpose of which is not only entertainment, but also the offering of dramatics as an important extra-curricular activity. The future promises to be, at the least, interesting. 122 THE Standing, front: Director Young, Clark, Carlson, Kehler, Jessup, Edmunds, Baer, Mukerji, Kaspar, Robinson, Hutson, Souder. Rear: Foster, Forsythe, Smith, Polifroni, Walthall, Fowler, Strong. T r ' t ' r TlTTT Seated: Shrader, Rockwood, Selmes. At piano: Chalmers. Front Row: Pemberton, Olds, Goshom. Second Row: Myers, Jessup, Thomson, Eames. Rear Rov : Green, Bennett, Hulst, Carlson, Watts. THE BAND 123 124 OUTING CLUB ' LAD mostly in shorts and knapsacks the Outing Club tramps from place to place, taking in their stride such widely separated and varied terrain as Benkert ' s-on-the-shore to the Blue Mountains, Pearson ' s farm to the Media Inn. By way of steady activity the Outing Club sponsors weekly hikes for Sun- day supper or breakfast, and the sale of eatables to the football crowds or ravenous Parrish coeds; but this program is varied with many other projects . . . canoeing on the Rancocas, swim- ming, sailing and innumerable campfire sings. High points of this year are a College Week (coed) in September with the major Eastern colleges and another three-way meeting with Mount Holy- oke and Bryn Mawr in Connecticut. Also their long-cherished plan of a club cabin is now being actively pursued by Betty Watson, ' 38, who will have it or die. With the dark collusion of the faculty, the Outing Club camps on the Frazer and Jones property for meals, week-ends at Pitt ' s Farm where they exercise his horse to the point of exhaustion. (The spacious advertising of this organization which says Pitt Farm . . . horses is a snare and a delusion; there is only one horse.) OFFICERS President OLIVE HENDMCKS, ' 39 Secretary VIRGINIA MAYER, ' 40 Treasurer MARY ELLEN BELKNAP, ' 39 Fiogiom Chaiiman MARY LILLIAN GOODWIN, ' 39 Assistant Program Chairman DOROTHY Y. ' EBSTIR i: Membership Chairman JANE HASTINGS, ' 39 Cabin Chairman ELIZABETH WATSON, ' 38 Scrapbook Chairman POLLY BIRDSALL, 40 125 FRATE ITIES ■' ' -rttaj mmm ii - ! , •• DELTA 128 UPSILON Class oi 1937 Christian B. Anfinsen, Jr. John Scott Ballard George Lupton Broomell, Jr. James Hulme Clarke Ben Cooper Samuel Isaac Kalkstein William Allen Longshore, Jr. Irving A. Morrissett, Jr. James Anderson Murphy T. H. Dudley Perkins, Jr. Robert Michener Sketchley Frank Palin Spruance, Jr. Class oi 1938 Joseph Chrystal Bender Augustus Frank Buddington i • B William Robert Carroll George Brinton Cooper Evan Wayne Frazer Laurence Davis Lafore William Francis Smith Arnold Viehoever Class oi 1939 Willem E. Boom I. Walter Budd Edward L. D. Dobbins David Harmon Herman Charles Krattenmaker Bainbridge Morse Larkin Leland Stanford MacPhail, Jr. Stephen Phares Malone Robert Dudley Neale, Jr. Nathan Lewis Smith, Jr. Keith Simmer David Howell Starr John Burwell Warrington Gary White Class oi 1940 Heywood Hale Broun Edward Drewry Henderson Edward Aloysius Jakle Leonard Coulson Mercer Isadore Milton Sachs William W. Smith Frederick Gordon Smith Lawrence Clark Wolfe FRONT ROW: Morrissett, Kalkstein, Dobbins, Longshore, W. F. Smith, Sketchley. SECOND ROW: Broomell, Clement, Perkins, Larkin. Spruance. Neale. Buddington, Carroll, Anfinsen, Ballard, Cooper. THIRD ROW: Budd, N. Smith, Warrington, MacPhail, Malone, Clarke, Lafore, Bender. BACK ROW: White, Starr, W. W. Smith, Broun, G. Smith, Mercer. 129 FRONT ROW: Wray, Cresson, Bigelow, Wood, Ball, Janes, Kaspar, Palmer, Gross. SECOND ROW: Rice, Schroeder, Lceb, Ashelman, Hulson, Hallowell, Kirn, Macy, Prentice, Young, Fowler, Caldwell. THIRD ROW: Lange, Barclay, Colket, Worth, Blackman, Erichsen, Breckenridge, Reid, Levering, Geddes, Richards. BACK ROW: Fisher. Rice, Reller, Booth, Alford, Robbins, Sanderson, Hull, Cofiman. Class of 1937 Samuel F. Ashelman, Jr. Walter S. Barclay Ward S. Fowler A. Thomas Hallowell Frank A. Hutson, Jr. John J. Kirn Charles W. Loeb Edward A. Macy Clinton Budd Palmer William C. H. Prentice John M. Rice Raymond G. Schroeder John H. Wood, Jr. Drew M. Young Class of 1938 John H. Breckenridge Charles A. Caldwell Carl C. Colket Peter D. Kaspar H. Stanley Lange Frederick A. Levering, III Harry F. Reid, Jr. Burton Richards Richard B. Wray Class of 1939 Roland C. Ball, Jr. John L. Bigelow James H. Blackman Samuel L. Cresson Hans S. Erichsen Ralph H. Fisher F. Bramwell Geddes, Jr. Mark Gross Robert L. Janes Edward S. Little Edward H. Worth, Jr. Class of 1940 Newell G. Alford, Jr. Richard B. Angell Newlin T. Booth, Jr. Charles G. Braden Ray H. Coffman John R. Huhn, III George I. Hull Jacob W. Jackson, II Robert M. McCormack William H. Reller Charles S. Rice Lewis M. Robbins John P. Sanderson, Jr. 1.30 PHI KAPPA PSI Mm ' ' iw L !L VT% m |HHB| i ' ' jk iL iiir-ff i B 131 KAPPA SIGMA 132 FRONT ROW: Moffet, Harper, Weist, Beck, Hafkenschiel, Thatcher, Hickok, Pottinger, Malcolm, Buckingham. SECOND ROW: Crolhers, Boyer, Smith, Gburski. Dorris, Gardner. Beardsley, Taggart, Carson. THIRD ROW: C. B. Price, Broomall, W. H. Price, Moore, ColUns, Lombard, Kirschlager, Tompkins. FOURTH ROW: Brown, Patterson, Albertson. Byrne, Harris, FornwaU, Peele. BACK ROW: Homans, Shilcock, Roy, Gemberling, Morrison, Bennett. Class of 1937 John Newlin Beck Thomas Hamilton Broomall James Ellis Buckingham William Curtis Campbell Leonard John Gburski Joseph Henrington Hafkenschiel, Jr. James Alan Harper John Everett Hickok John Andrew Moffet John Archer Pottinger Manning Amison Smith Charles Isaac Taggart Richard Cassin Thatcher Fred J. Wiest Class of 1938 James Hodge Beardsley George Chidester Carson James Joseph Gardner Hellmuth Ludwig Kirschlager Peter Lombard James Arthur Malcolm Edwin Evans Moore Carroll Barnard Price Class of 1939 Raymond Cadwallader Albertson Charles Robert Bell Vincent Saull Boyer John Robert Brown Whitney Collins William Howard Doriss George Robert Fornwalt Raymond Richards Harris David Mclntyre William Doerr Patterson Robert Beatty Peele William Hoggott Price Class of 1940 John Brehm Baumgardner, Jr. Alden Stanle y Bennett Harry Charles Byrne Charles Henry Crothers Charles Albert Eberle Charles Allen Gemberling Arthur Carman Hartmon, Jr. Alan Homans Peter Reed Morrison Arthur Willis Post Joseph Albert Roy James Thomas Shilcock Rexford Emerson Tompkins Samuel Woodward Warburton Donald Kessler Weltmer 133 134 PHI DELTA THETA Class of 1937 George Elmer Forsythe James Richard Gardner Mason Haire Richard Koenemann Charles Stuart Lyon Harold Pierpont Newton, Jr. Thomas Benton Perry Thomas Furman Spencer Class of 1938 David Webb Chaney Henry E. B. Kurtz John Henderson Lashly John King Love, Jr. Martin Bacon Walthall Class of 1939 Lewis Crowder Bose Paul Hyde Buchanan Richard Albert Dimpfl Wellington Downing Jones, Jr. William Ashby Jump William Toliver Livingston, II Edward Martin Morningstar John Watts Roberts John Cunningham Thomas James Morrison Wilson, Jr. Class of 1940 John Hopkins Atkinson Robert York Austin Thomas Goodwin Custer Edward Fairchild Green Robert Donald Hall Raymond Crary Ingersoll Walter Erling Isgrig Dhan Gopal Mukerji, II John Klahr Myers Arthur Fenimore Snyder Paul Heston Snyder FRONT ROW: Newton, Spencer, Forsythe, Snyder, Dimpfl. Thomas, Mukerji. SECOND ROW: Isgrig, Buchanan, Atkinson, Snyder, Lyon, Walthall, Haire. THIRD ROW: Kurtz, lump, Ingersoll, Hall, Livingston, Roberts, Green, Bose. BACK ROW: Jones, Chaney, Gardner, Lashly, Koenemann. 135 136 PHI SIGMA KAPPA FRONT ROW: Wickenhaver. Eames, Thatcher, Coffin, Booher, Burke, Thorn. SECOND ROW: Shepherd, Shaffer, Pittinger, Hoadley, Polifroni, Austin, Snyder, Herbster, Smith Shrader. THIRD ROW: Herndon, Weeks, Burt, Straka. Olds, Brown, Watts, Singiser, Adams, lones. BACK ROW: Hulst, Craig, Wolf Class of 1937 C. Oliver Burt Lyle Bennett Gill Ernest R. Herbster Henry Harold Hoadley George D. Hulst, Jr. A. Lincoln Pittinger Vincent J. Polifroni Barton Whitefield Rope Erwin Fairfax Shrader George Wiley Singiser Charles Douglas Smith F. Gordon Straka Francis William Weeks Sidney Lament Wickenhaver Class of 1938 David Brown Charles Frederic Eames Robert George Leinroth, 11 Frederick Mettam Shaffer Russell Mills Shepherd Allen Goodman Snyder, Jr. Class of 1939 Louis Fussell Coffin, Jr. Lawrence Carey Craig Dale L. Herndon Edmund Jones George Brinton Lykens, Jr. David McNeil Olds Elvin Rittenhouse Souder Edward Power Thatcher Stewart Thorn Robert Wolf Gordon Spencer Watts Class of 1940 Harold Armstrong Adams William Colbert Adamson Henry Exum Austin Edward Bair Booher Richard Ludlam Burke, Jr. Thomas Andrew Mawhinney John dejarnette Pemberton, Jr. 137 INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Kaspar Morrissett President James R. Gardner Vice-President Manning Smith Secretary-Treasurer Gordon Straka Shepherd Lafore Chaney Straka Gardner Smith Kappa Sigma Fowler Manning Smith James Beardsley Phi Kappa Psi Ward Fowler Peter Kaspar Delta Upsilon Irving Morrissett Laurence Lafore Phi Sigma Kappa Gordon Straka Russell Shepherd Phi Deha Theta James R. Gardner David Chaney 138 T) HI Beta Kappa is the national honorary scholas- tic fraternity the members of which are chosen each year from among the highest standing students in the arts courses. PHI BETA Class oi 1936 Herbert Bernstein Philip Crowl Robert Greenfield Margaret Huntingdon Charlotte Jones Frank Krutzke William Whyte Katherine Lever Jane McCord Margery McKay John Seybold Elizabeth Smith Harold Steinberg r KAPPA Fratres in Facultate et Socii in Collegio: Mary G. Anderson (Smith) Troyer S. Anderson (Dartmouth) Frank Aydelotte (Indiana University) Lydia Baer (Oberlin) Beatrice Beach (Swarthmore) Frances B. Blanshard (Smith) Ethel Hampton Brewster (Swarthmore) Heinrich Brinkmann (Stanford) Isabelle Bronk (Swarthmore) Robert C. Brooks, Indiana University) Milan W. Garrett (Stanford) Harold C. Goddard (Amherst) John Russell Hayes (Swarthmore) Philip M. Hicks (Swarthmore) Jesse H. Holmes (Nebraska) William I. Hull (Swarthmore) Walter B. Keighton, Jr. (Swarthmore) Maurice H. Mandelbaum (Dartmouth) Frederick J. Manning (Yale) Henrietta J. Meeteer (Indiana University) John A. Miller (Indiana University) John W. Nason (Carleton) J. Roland Pennock (Swarthmore) Frank C. Pierson (Swarthmore) Edith Philips (Goucher) Frances L. Rheinhold (Swarthmore) Louis N. Robinson (Swarthmore) Lucius R. Shero (Haverford) Richard W. Slocum (Swarthmore) Harold E. B. Speight (Dartmouth) Mary B. Temple (Swarthmore) Elizabeth Cox Wright (Swarthmore) Mary H. Fairbanks (Swarthmore) 139 G T j JvT 7 . C IGMA Xi is an honorary scientific society for the purpose of encouraging original scientific re- search. Full membership requires completion of some research work worthy of publication. Under- graduates in their senior year are eligible for associate membership. Fratres in Facultate: George Bourdelais I Heinrich Brinkmann Samuel T. Carpenter Edward H. Cox 2 I H. Jermain Creighton Arnold Dresden Robert K. Enders I Duncan G. Foster Milan W. Garrett John S. Hall Howard M. Jenkins Mrs. Norris Jones Walter B. Keighton, Jr. Frank R. Kille Wolfgang Kohler Michael Kovalenko Scott B. Lilly Ross W. Marriott Robert B. MacLeod John A. Miller Orren Mohler Edwin B. Newman Samuel C. Palmer John H. Pitman Walter J. Scott Andrew Simpson Charles G. Thatcher George B. Thorn Winthrop R. Wright C. Brooke Worth Associate Members: Earl Philip Benditt George Elmer Forsythe Ward S. Fowler Ernest Matsner Gruenberg Wayne Laury Lees William Taussig Scott Erwin Fairfax Shrader ]40 O IGMA Tau is a national honorary engineering G T Q TVf 7i fraternliy established in 1904, Swarthmore ' s chapter being initiated in 1917. From among junior and senior engineers are chosen members on the basis of ability shown in their work. Fratres in Facultate: George Bourdelais Samuel T. Carpenter Howard M. Jenkins i ir T T Scott B. Lilly 1 A U Ross W. Marriott John D. McCrumm Andrew Simpson George B. Thorn Charles G. Thatcher Kenneth J. Trigger Student Members: Elected 1935-1936: G. Lupton Broomell, Jr. Ben Cooper Leonard John Gburski Alan Harper Charles I. Taggart Elected 1936-1937: William Thayer Harrison Geoffrey Keller Edwin Evans Moore Harry Fairfax Reid, Jr. 141 Dennis Hornbeck Ellis Kelley Weiss Benkert Ross MORTAR BOARD Betty Foree Dennis President Isabel Rest Benkert Marion Ellis Helen Frances Hornbeck Joan Catharine Kelley Isabel Holly Ross Barbara Elizabeth Weiss 142 BOOK and James Ellis Buckingham Dorwin Cartwright Ben Cooper Alban Thomas Hallowell Samuel Isaac Kalkstein William Allen Longshore, Jr. Irving A. Morrissett, Jr. Oliver Payne Pearson William C. H. Prentice KEY 143 ■' ■f m ' Bittle VanDeusen Trimble Barsalow Vaughn Brosius Davenport Vawter Weltmer Newkirk Booth Tompkins Feely Deardorff Miller Mims GWIMP Faith Hambly Barsalow Harriet Elizabeth Bittle Miriam Ravi Booth Elizabeth Stewart Brosius Margaret Virginia Davenport Sarah Jane Deardorff Miriam Ruth Feely Mary lane Miller Elizabeth Webb Mims Virginia Alice Newkirk Jean Annabel Tompkins Ann Trimble Marjorie Wilkes Van Deusen Janet Corrall Vaughn Virginia Hadley Vawter Jean Thompson Weltmer H4 John Elson Baer John Holt Breckenridge David Brown Augustus Frank Buddington George Brinton Cooper Charles Frederic Eames William Jasper Howell KWINK Eugene Michael Lang Robert George Leinroth, II James Arthur Malcolm, Jr. Edwin Evans Moore William Laubach Nute, Jr. Eric Leslie Simmons Martin Bacon Walthall y w;ii,i; V Moore Breckenridge Brown Eames Walthall Howell Leinroth Lang Simmons Nute Herbster Malcolm Cooper Baer Buddinglon 145 A T L E T I C S FOOTBALL THOUGHT and asserted the student body: We will have a winning football team this year. Impelling reasons: ten returning varsity letter- men, excellent freshman material, new facilities for all-weather practice, a new coach. Record for the 1936 season: two wins, seven losses. Newly-appointed Director of Athletics Mark Macin- tosh came East from Arizona State Teachers ' Col- lege, brought all-round athlete Jakle with him. Chosen because of experience with colleges of size similar to Swarthmore, Mac replaced George Pfann as football mentor, a five-year vacancy as ath- letic director. No mere football theorist, Macintosh was well equipped for his job as football coach by playing professional football, writing workbooks on spheroidology. First practices appeared with the ten lettermen, not so successful members of last year ' s squads, and the usual wealth of freshman material reporting. Macintosh sees good year ; all had hopes for the realization of this ambition. The freshmen opposed the veterans in a practice game, tied the upper- classmen at one score apiece — prospects looked good. Union College ' s record was not too impressive: one loss, one tie in two starts; the Garnet chances should be good in their opening game. Captain Ben Cooper started the Garnet machine running in the first quarter when he took the ball from Jimmie Clarke, ran 23 yards to Union ' s 43-yard marker. Eberle ' s quick kick went out on the visitor ' s 5-yard line to set the stage for Swarthmore ' s score. The men wearing the Union suits soon kicked, the ball was caught by Frosh Buzz Eberle, who outran all competitors or restrainers for 40 yards for a touch- down; his pass to another frosh, Johnny Huhn, com- pleted the day ' s scoring. Union possessed the ball on the Garnet 15-yard line and on the 23-yard line later in the game, but failed to advance further. Renewed vigor of the Swarthmore team in the final minutes of play marked by Weltmer ' s interception, Eberle ' s 15-yard gain on a bootleg play, and — a 15-yard penalty for holding by the Garnet put the spheroid on the Union 20-yard line as the game ended. The bell was rung with energy. Prospects still looked good before the Hampden- Sydney game: new regime . . . excellent frosh ma- terial . . . one victory out of one start . . . but: assuming an early lead by virtue of a second-quarter safety, the Tiger team was always on the offensive, pained Swarthmore rooters by scoring eight points before the Garnet accounted for any points. As a thriller the game will rank high in Swarthmore athletic annals because Eberle ' s 90-yard kick-off re- turn and run through the whole Hampden-Sydney team made the score 8 to 6, gave the home rooters something to yell for. A false dawn, though; the Tigers quickly scored again, sent the spectators home glum. But that game was an off-day; the boys should not really be held to account; they would beat Dickin- son. But Padjen was too good. On the second play of the game Eberle fumbled, Dickinson recovered, in six plays Dickinson had scored. In the only bril- liant Swarthmore play Captain Cooper ran 20 yards from a reverse deep into Dickinson territory only to 150 Third Row: Coach Eckerl, Paris, Dutton Olds, Wolfe, McCormack, Jakle, Jones, Mukerji. Fourth Row: Burt, Morrissett, Perkins, Anfinsen, Adams, Leber, Booth, Neale Krattenmaker. Back Row: Manager Buddington, Hen derson, McCone. 151 f00- sustain an injury on the play which kept him out of play for a large part of the remainder of the season, to have the ball called back and a penalty inflicted. We do not need to stress the rest. Final score: 55-0. Founders ' Day was a big celebration ending with the Hamilton football game. Of course, the boys would win — rebound from the last two games. With a first down on the visitor ' s one-yard line, possession of the ball on the 15-yard line twice during the game, and the game ending with Swarthmore on Hamil- ton ' s 2-yard marker, Macintosh ' s boys still managed to lose. Visitors ' lone score resulted from a lateral which yielded 36 yards and a series of end runs and plunges. For Swarthmore, moral victory: 1 1 first downs to Hamilton ' s 5. For Hamilton, the vic- tory: 6-0. There is one team which Graduate Manager Pal- mer should strive to keep on the Garnet schedule: Johns Hopkins. No matter how good or poor our team is, it can always count on smothering the future doctors. Last year they saved us from a season of complete failure; this year they made us think that we had a football team. First quarter scoring: a touchdown three minutes after the start of the game when Jakle passed to Dick Heavenrich. Second quarter scoring: (a), fake reverse by Jakle, who ran 36 yards to a touchdown; (b). Eberle ' s 70-yard run to score; (c). pass to Krattenmaker for 14 yards, plunge by Huhn to score; (d). pass from Hafkenschiel to Welt- mer, who ran 15 yards for the last touchdown of the half. Score at half: 33-0. Returning after the half, Johns Hopkins scored two touchdowns in quick suc- cession and put a scare into the Garnet supporters when the visitors scored again. But the Swarth- more team regained control of the situation when it scored the final touchdown of the day in an off- tackle play by Jakle. We won, 40-19. Confidence was of no avail against St. John ' s. Although the Swarthmore ball-carriers held on tightly throughout the first half which was a punt- ing duel between Eberle and Lambros of St. John ' s, the second half was a different story. Fighting des- perately, the Garnet forward wall held the Johnnies on the 2-yard line for four downs at the end of the third quarter, then blo cked a St. John ' s kick and recovered on their 15-yard line. But this threat was speedily repulsed and the home team took the con- trol of the game into their hcmds from that point. A 70-yard kick by Lambros of St. John ' s and a 10-yard kick by Eberle of Swarthmore put the Johnnies in scoring position. They quickly took advantage of the situation and scored on the second play. Lam- bros ' 57-yard run to the Garnet 8-yard line and his pass to Right End Stallings completed the scoring for the game. The final score was: Swarthmore 0; St. John ' s, 12. The scoring of the Drexel Tech game began early when a pass and a plunge gave the Philadelphia team a touchdown after three minutes of play. The Dragons scored again in the second quarter by the same process of pass-plunge. A pass netted Drexel their first touchdown of the third quarter, and another aerial, combined with clever broken-field running, gave the Garnet the opportunity to show their fight by taking the ball on downs on the 4-yard line. An off-tackle play and an end run provided the remain- der of the scores for the game. As the game ended, Swarthmore threw its offensive into action, advanced to the 8-yard line to have a pass intercepted as the game ended. The 1936 football season was practically mo- 152 • •ff: - . nopolized by the freshman members of the team. Eberle ' s spectacular runs culminating in the 90-yard dash in the Hampden-Sydney game kept the spec- tators interested. Jakle ' s running and beautiful pass- ing was an outstanding feature of every game. Huhn ' s plunging gave us many victories. McCor- mack and Hartman more than earned their letters. On the line: Mawhinney, McCone, Roy, and Sachs gav e the veterans Anfinsen, Fowler, Hutson, Mor- rissett, Prentice, and Spruance a good fight for their positions. Weltmer was the outstanding frosh candi- date for the end position. But most credit of all goes to Captain Ben Cooper, whose knee injury sustained in the Dickinson game prevented him from playing a large portion of the games. Whether in the game, leading the men to victory or defeat, or on the bench because of his injury, Benny was always a true captain, a sportsman, and a leader. The Drexel game also marked the close of the collegiate foot- ball careers of eleven other men: Ward Fowler, Mac Clement, Sonny Spruance, Dick Heavenrich, Chris Anfinsen, Joe Hafkenschiel, Dudley Perkins, Ollie Burt, Jimmy Clarke, Bill Prentice, and Frank Hutson. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 7 SWARTHMORE 6 SWARTHMORE SWARTHMORE SWARTHMORE 40 SWARTHMORE SWARTHMORE UNION HAMPDEN-SYDNEY 14 DICKINSON 55 HAMILTON 6 JOHNS HOPKINS 19 ST. JOHN ' S 12 DREXEL 32 153 Back Row: Coach Dunn, Frazer, Colket, Carlson, Manager Straka, Gburski, Beck, Harrison, Coach Stetson. Beloiv; Co-captains Hailowell and Schroeder. THOUGH football must be somewhat glossed over, their contemporary booters on the soccer field crashed through with a record that sur- prised everybody, even Dunny, though he took the phenomenal successes with the usual calm and the usual number of cigarettes. The beginning of the year found only three of last year ' s varsity missing through graduation, and, to be painfully frank, other reasons: Oehmann, Mac Falconer, and Peter. De- parting with the second mentioned was an addi- tional bulwark of the fairer contingent, but the boys went bravely on trying to forget Euretta and were surprisingly successful. Perhaps the fact that there were other ardent sideline supporters filled in the breach, notably one lovely freshman babe who was heard fo remark: I don ' t see why anyone goes to football games when there is a soccer match going on. Such precision , and then with a wistful sigh, and that Paynie! But although the sidelines were in top rooting form, the team still deserves the greatest attention for having turned out one of the most successful seasons in years. And this was done in spite of the appallingly numerous accidents with which the games were gruesomely replete. The full extent of this morgue-like business will be evident as this rambling chronicle continues. After despatching with the two local clubs at the first of the season: Philadelphia Referees (2-1), and Germantown Cricket Club (1-0), with comparative 154 SOCCER ease, the Dunnmen found themselves facing the inter- collegiate meets with a team that looked top-notch in both drive and play development. The new goalie, Brunhouse, though playing his first college soccer, proved able to take intense peppering with spec- tacular fortitude, with Co-Captains Hallowell and Schroeder together with center forward Harper hav- ing an ethereal vision of high scoring in their eyes, and a grim, determined look about the mouth. The first game with Stevens was an auspicious beginning, the furious battle with a team undefeated in two years ending with a satisfying score of 4-0 tucked away on our credit side. The second game was a titanic struggle with the University of Pennsyl- vania on our field, and ended in the first victory over the Red and Blue in our history. Harper matched a Penn goal in the second quarter, leaving the score 1-1, and the Swarthmore spectators nervously ate hot dogs and jabbered incoherently in the suspense between halves. After a skilful goal by Hallowell in the third quarter the onlookers relaxed, but to their horror, in the fourth quarter, the Big Quakers were given a penalty kick directly in front of our goal, and the heroic save of Brunhouse was fol- lowed by a sickeningly successful goal on the fol- low-up play. The regulation period ended 2-2, while the spectators began going more or less quietly mad and taking large bites out of their hats or those in front of them, but in the extra period the combina- tion of Hallowell to Schroeder to Harper scored, and the hats still undigested went up in the air amid general bedlam, the sheer joy of which was tem- pered only by the fact that Gory White had sus- tained a foot injury which was to keep him out of most of the season ' s remaining games. We add with a sinist er leer that he was soon to be joined by others. The next set of three games proved somewhat dampening, and we need not dwell overlong on the subject. We are forced to admit that Princeton won a tight defensive game, 1-0, and that we dropped a 2-1 game to Cornell. The latter game was on un- usually rough one, with many uncalled fouls, and nothing need be said on the manner of playing other than that Colket broke his nose and Rockwood nar- rowly missed a fractured jaw. In the process of this jolly little free-for-all, Dunny bit his pipe in two, and even Hallowell lost his impassivity at some of the referee ' s unique decisions. With the next game, the gloom lifted a little as the hooters left Lafayette with a tie score of 2-2, our goals being made by Barclay and Harper. Though this was a clean, hard fought battle, our team ' s in- finite capacity for getting injured was demonstrated by Beck ' s removal at the first of the game, and Long- shore ' s subsequent broken wrist. The following contest with Lehigh ended cheer- fully for us with an impressive 5-0 score, with Sleepy Jim Gardner waking up long enough to cop three goals and incidentally a large amount of feminine 155 adoration, Schroeder and Harper making the other two. Hallowell had joined the hospital club with a sprained ankle, but was back the next week to stone-face Haverford in the season ' s last scheduled game. The battle with our traditional rivals meant the difference between a good and mediocre season, and the terrifying manner in which the Garnet booters gnashed their molars should have informed the other Quakers at the first that only divine inter- vention would avail them. After a threatening rush in the first qu arter by the Haverford men, the Garnet team took the offensive, but the only goal in the whole epic struggle came midway in the second period when a neat play from Gardner to Schroeder to Hallowell ended in the latter ' s booting through the welcoming arms of the Scarlet and Black goalie to land snugly in the far corner of the cage. The last half, played skillfully but ineffectually, left the r score 1-0, and Dunnie ' s prodigies found themselves tied for second place in the Middle Atlantic League. As a sort of bonus, the team discovered that they had to face Lafayette again on a delightfully mud-laden field, December 5, to play off the champ- ionship of the Upper Division of the National Inter- collegiate Soccer Conference. Lafayette ' s Carlton tallied in the first quarter, and not until the first of the fourth period, when Schroeder scored a difficult shot, did our mud-besplattered heroes have victory once more in sight. A little later Schroeder passed the ball to Harper in scoring territory, whereupon Harper took his chance and booted what proved to be the winning goal. Not even the several inches of mud on the faces of the Garnet team could conceal their obvious satisfaction at the completion of such a remarkably fine season with the NISC champion- ship. 156 THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 2; PHILADELPHIA REFEREES 1 SWARTHMORE 1; GERMANTOWN CRICKET CLUB .0 SWARTHMORE 4; STEVENS SWARTHMORE 3 ; UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA 2 SWARTHMORE 0; PRINCETON I SWARTHMORE 1; CORNELL 2 SWARTHMORE 2; LAFAYETTE 2 SWARTHMORE 5; LEHIGH SWARTHMORE 1; HAVERFORD SWARTHMORE 2; LAFAYETTE 1 157 FRONT ROW: Coach Macintosh, Weltraer, Captain Buckingham, Hallowell, Manager Pottinger. BACK ROW: Malone, Reller, Jokle, Beck, Wray. WHEN in the first week of informal basketball scrimmage, Coach Macintosh, fresh from football season (that is, as fresh as humanly- possible, all things considered), beheld a last year ' s varsity practically intact and a wealth of freshman material, he was so delighted as cautiously to predict that a successful season was in store for his first year at Swarthmore. Such pre-season optimism, unfortunately not always fully justified, was in this case eventually fulfilled, for the merging of the new and the old, the Coach and the irrepressible fresh- man group with the veteran team of Captain Buck- ingham, Hallowell, Kalkstein, Wray, and Murphy, by a new and rather complicated fast break system, all taking place in the new Field House, proved gratifyingly successful before the winter was over. Though the first few practices were bewildering, what with positive hordes of aspirants milling about the court, gradually Reller, Bill Smith, Eberle, Jakle, Weltmer, and Malone joined the original weather- beaten five and the season was on. The first two games, with the Alumni and the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy, went beautifully for the Garnet team, to the delightful tune of 49-28 and 43-30, respectively. The new system of fast breaks, which seemed to consist of long passes to the player who was the greatest possible distance away, kept the spectators ' necks jerking back and forth as at a tennis match, but together with the 158 BASKET BALL advantages of having a large number of reserves boded well lor the coming games. The next game with Penn, however, pre- ferred not to be boded well for, and the Swarthmore team went down 35-22 in a truly heart-breaking contest. A crowd of 1700 in the field house watched the exciting battle, and the half ended 22-22 only to be fol- lowed by a Penn lead in the second period which even intermittent tallies by Reller, Wray, and Jakle failed to overcome. Thoroughly aroused, the home team proceeded next to trounce Hampden- Sydney, 48-23, with Buckingham and Wray leading the scoring. A rather decided lead of 15-2 was piled up against the Tigers in the first period, and though near the close of the game Hampden-Sydney de- cided that points after all were rather nice tangible evidence of prowess and proceeded to act upon that principle, our Mark kept slyly replacing tired Garnet men with fresh bench-warmers and pretty well squelched the comeback. This victory was followed by another over Hamilton by a 47-28 score, with Jakle, Arizona ' s minor athletic gift to the Quaker matchbox, as top scorer with 15 points. This cheer- ful run of successes continued with the next contest with Johns Hopkins, which the Macintosh men took at 45-38. Buckingham and Hallowell were both absent through their succumbing to the popular wave of sickness, but Wray, Reller, and Weltmer starred competently to overcome with sheer speed the advantage of Hopkins ' steeple-like players. This pleasant little record of five wins out of six games was soon to be dampened by the following game with Lehigh. The first road game of the season, it was hard-fought and although the Garnet team ' s passing was spectacular in its abandon and victory seemed within grasp, the last few minutes the Lehigh five bounded one goal ahead and with the bell the score was 27-25 in the wrong favor. The next game, being a 38-31 victory over Ursinus, helped some, naturally. The first half of this laconic battle was extremely ragged, with Ursinus vaguely and vainly Top: Smith, Murphy, Malone, Weltmer. Middle: Beck. Bottom: Wray, Hallowell, Ebeile. 159 trying to get into at least eyesight of the basket, and Swarthmore consistently missing most of their golden opportunities. Picking up in the second period, each team began dropping a few goals here and there and the score was tied at the bell. The Little Quak- ers, becoming annoyed at all this fooling around, put some heavy pressure upon the burly, but hardly antelope-footed Ursinians, with Reller and Hallowell at scoring fore, thereby clinching a somewhat under- done struggle. There followed a depressingly even series of ups and downs for the Garnet courtmen, beginning with a defeat by P. M. C, which might well be passed over without much comment. The prevailing note of the evening was rough and tumble scrim- mage with myriads of foul shots, and despite a much- needed Swarthmore rally at the beginning of the second half, the scoring spree of an individual with the onomatopoetic name of Bang Spang, who played forward (in several senses) for the military boys, put the final score at 38-31. Lafayette came up next and proceeded to go down as promptly. The first half found the Garnet men somewhat bewil- dered at the Leopards ' novel system of long passing, which is vaguely amusing when and if one stops to think about it, and the score at the end of the half was 14-13 for Lafayette. Coming out of their fog, the Swarthmore courtmen completely dominated the second half, while the Leopard outfit desperately hurled balls at the basket from every possible place but under the grandstands. The next was a close defeat by the University of Baltimore, and little else need be said. The team ambled up to Williams for the following battle and came strutting back with a victory of 32-28, which was, incidentally, the only road victory of the whole season. A rather definite defeat by Stevens was the next item in the season ' s history, with the Swarthmore men so dumbfounded at the brilliant, if erratic, pyrotechnics of that amazing team that they almost forgot to score at all in the first half, and even a subsequent awakening left the score 36-24. The next game scheduled was a return match with P. M. C, and the Garnet team neatly turned the 160 tables this time by snowing them under with a score of 36-24. Always the most popular game of the whole year, the annual Haverford-Swarthmore battle took place the following Saturday and proved to be a field day both for the Garnet team and for the thousands of native students and alumni who jammed the field house to overflowing. Using the fast-break system to superb advantage, the Swarthmore team showed a precision of playing seldom before equalled. The starting team of Buckingham, Hallowell, Smith, Wray, and Reller, worked beautifully together, scor- ing abandonedly all around the perplexed Haver- fordites, and the half ended with the comfortable lead of 26-12. The new combination of Eberle, Welt- mer. Murphy, Jakle, and Beck, was somewhat luke- warm but held the raging Main Liners to only nine points to their own six. Midway in the second period the starting five re-entered and ended the somewhat one-sided battle by a lovely score of 43-23. Captain Buckingham gave one of the finest performances of his career, and the playing of Bill Reller, high scorer for the evening with eleven points, who had turned in a season of consistently excellent work, was equally noteworthy. The whole Swarthmore crowd went gently insane, and both Main Liners and Swarthmoreans proceeded to clog up a congested Collecti on Hall till 12 o ' clock. As a sort of sordid anti-climax, the last game of the season was lost 44-24 to St. John ' s, and that is positively all that is going to be said about it. Though the road record was not particularly bril- liant, lo put it mildly, nine victories in ten home games was something one may well cheer over, so that the season of only six losses out of sixteen games was, as our Mark had so clairvoyantly pre- dicted, a really succsssful one. And now rotund manager Archie turned over his beaming team, with the loss of only two stats, Buck and Tommy, into the capable hands of his understudy, metaphorically speaking only, of course, Long Shanks Brecken- ridge, and from the looks of that spirited freshman contingent the next season should be another howl- ing success; and if it isn ' t, — well, then I guess it just isn ' t. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 49 SWARTHMORE 43 SWARTHMORE 32 SWARTHMORE 48 SWARTHMORE 47 SWARTHMORE ,,, ,45 SWARTHMORE 25, SWARTHMORE 32, SWARTHMORE 31 SWARTHMORE 34, SWARTHMORE 32, SWARTHMORE 32, SWARTHMORE 24 SWARTHMORE 36 SWARTHMORE 43 SWARTHMORE 28 ALUMNI 28 PHARMACY 30 FENN 35 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY. ,23 HAMILTON 28 JOHNS HOPKINS 38 LEHIGH 27 URSINUS 24 P. M. C 38 LAFAYETTE 24 U. OF BALTIMORE .36 WILLIAMS 28 STEVENS TECH 36 P. M. C 24 HAVERFORD 23 ST. JOHN ' S 44 BACK ROW: Ccach Stetson, Miller, Harmon. Buddington. Harris, Junior Manager Brsckenridge. FRONT ROW: Clarke, Starr, Livingston, Little, Base. 161 Front Row; Captain-elect Carroll, Captain Benditt, Thomas, Stone, Zinner, Strong, Junior Manager Baer. Back Row: Eames, Mawhinney, Pemberton, White. Seated in front: Manager Weeks. SWIMMING THE return of ex-coach G. E. Tomlinson, ' 19, as swimming mentor, seven victories out of ten meets, Johnny Thomas ' total of 59% points for the season, and Mawhinney ' s orgy of record-break- ing made the 1937 swimming season one of the most successful. The University of Delaware swimmers were lead- ing by two points before the last event, the 100-yard freestyle. Thomas won to clinch the victory by 37-32, and led the scoring for the day as he also won the 50-yard event, swam anchor on the relay team. Three firsts and five seconds offset the effect of the numerous Delaware blue ribbons. Three days later Johns Hopkins allowed the Garnet only one first, in diving, won, 49-23. Close races all went to the doctors, spelled defeat for Swarthmore. Retaliating with a victory over Union, the Garnet won six first places as Mawhinney broke two breast- stroke records and Thomas garnered ten points to pace the scoring. First places: to Benditt, Carroll, Mawhinney, Brown, Thomas, 400-yard relay team. Record: to Mawhinney, in the 200-yard breaststroke, 2:50.4. Final score: 44-27. Eight out of nine firsts in the Temple meet gave Swarthmore the victory, 162 59-19. Losing only the diving, the Garnet team gained easy victories in all events over the inexperienced, n e w 1 y-formed Owl team. Breaking of three pool rec- ords marked the loss of the Vil- lanova meet as Mawhinney broke the mark in the 200-yard breaststroke event, as Villa- nova men shattered existing records in the 200-yard and 50- yard freestyle races. The Gar- net swimmers started strong, ended weakly, as the Wildcats won firsts in seven events, all marked by close finishes. Captain Earl Benditt led the pack with ten points as the Swarthmore natators defeated West Chester State Teachers ' College, 48-27. Only first places to West Chester were in the diving and the 40-yard free- style, as Benditt and Thomas starred in their events. Ten points each for Benditt and Bill Carroll paved the way for the victory over Lafayette, as Maw- hinney and Dave Brown each won their events. Fighting gamely throughout the meet, the Leopards were able to win only three blue ribbons. Final score: 42-27. The 50- and 100-yard sprints to Hoff Stone, victories in their events to Thomas, Mawhinney, Carroll, and Brown, loss of only the diving and the 400-yard re- lay gave the Little Ouakers a 45-30 victory over the Philadel- phia Turngemeinde. Continu- ing their winning streak, the swimmers swamped St. Jo- seph ' s College by 52-23, as the Garnet splashers won seven out of nine first places. Benditt ' s breaking his own pool record for the 100-yard freestyle at 59 seconds flat was t he high point. After losing to the strong Le- high team, when we were able to win only two first places, the season ended for the Garnet team with a fifth place in the 400-yard relay at the Eastern Collegiate Swimming Associa- tion Championships. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 37; SWARTHMORE 23; SWARTHMORE 44; SWARTHMORE 59; SWARTHMORE 31; SWARTHMORE 48; SWARTHMORE 42; SWARTHMORE 45; SWARTHMORE 52; SWARTHMORE 27; DELAWARE 32 JOHNS HOPKINS . .- 49 UNION 27 TEMPLE 19 VILLANOVA 47 WEST CHESTER 27 LAFAYETTE 27 PHILA. TURNERS --30 ST. JOSEPH ' S -23 LEHIGH -.-47 163 LACROSSE flCCORDING to its enthusiasts, who really ought to know, lacrosse is a sport deserving much more world-wide attention than it gets, for as one of them ecstatically put it: It has the grandeur of football, the breathtaking dash of bas- ketball, and the consummate skill of soccer. If this is true, and we have no reason to doubt it, then the popular idea of lacrosse as a game abounding in cracked skulls and snapped leg bones overlooks entirely its more spiritual side. This may explain the fact that the Garnet team has increased its percen- tage of wins from only two in 1934 to the season under question with five victories out of nine games, an average which after some painstaking calculus we have discovered to be 55.56%, in that the Garnet boys are gradually developing the almost god-like qualities a successful lacrosse player must possess. The season began with Coach Blake confronting an eager horde of fifty-four lacrosse aspirants and proceeding to divide them into 21 varsity men head- ed by Captain Laird Lichtenwalner, a jayvee squad, and a vague group of miscellaneous. The first prac- tice game with the Philadelphia All-Stars was an auspicious, if somewhat wet, beginning. A per- sistent drizzle converted the front campus into a delightful little plot of lush mud, but our boys ended with a tidy lead of 8-4. A unique feature of the game was the placing of the pleasingly plump Pottinger in the visitors ' goal, where he skillfully kept out the hopeful balls of his erstwhile teammates. To further complicate matters, Harry Reid was gamboling around somewhere or other in the ranks of the enemy; but we won anyway. The next game with the strong Mt. Washington Lacrosse Club we shall pass over lightly and hastily, as it resulted in a somewhat definite defeat of 13-4, in spite of some very noble playing by the Garnet men. The next game again raised our spirits, being a 1 3- 1 win over the Lafayette Leopards. Unable to get under way very effectively at first, the Swarthmore lacrosse men later took a decided offensive against the boys with the savage nomenclature, and scored nine goals in the last half, Lichtenwalner and Oeh- mann being high scorers, each with four goals to his credit. The defense also must not be slighted, put- ting forth a valiant fight with Troeger and Jenter in the goal. The aforementioned spirits were im- mediately dropped again when the Garnet stickmen lost their next game with Army by the ominous score of 9-0. We make no excuses for a poorly played contest, but would like to mention the heroic work of Troeger in the goal with 32 saves to his credit, who fortunately was structurally fit to take this ter- rific battering with Spartan fortitude. Avery ' s men proceeded to avenge this defeat by severely trouncing the Nassau Lacrosse Club of 164 Long Island to the cheerful tune of 12-2. The steady barrage at the visitors ' net was led by Cooper, Kalk- stein, Price, and Gburski, each of whom tallied twice. Our much-mentioned spirits promptly and con- sistently fell again (and this up and down business is becoming tiresome), at the next game with Yale, our first ever to be scheduled with the men of Eli. Although the Yale team was inferior to ours (hon- estly), it possessed that day an inspired zeal which managed to triumph over the off-form passing and stick-handling of the Garnet men with an exasperat- ing score of 7-6. An unexciting first half ended 2-1 against us, and a later general flurry advanced the score to 4 even, whereupon the Yale men proceeded once more to raise it to 7-4, and a late rally by Swarthmore failed to call them in time before the game ended. Instead of winning the next game to keep a sym- metrical season of ups and downs, the Swarthmore stickmen kept our spirits at a new low by dropping the next contest also, by a tough 6-5 count to the Stevens ten at Hoboken, of all places. The game was an unusual one in that each team did all its scoring in one half, Stevens first and Swarthmore second, which is probably significant of something or other. This was followed by a pleasant win of 20-9 over Union, bringing the record of the season to a 50% average. Kalkstein led the fray with six tallies, with Bob Bell following closely behind with four to his credit. The Garnet team sped ahead of its opponents at a rapid rate, the Union men getting goals only after creeping cautiously around the defense men, who had been rendered somewhat lefhargic by our decided lead. The season ended cheerfully with a 9-4 victory over the University of Pennsylvania squad. Penn played a good defensive the first half, the score being 2-1 for us, although the Garnet team had possession of the ball most of the time, but in the third quarter the Little Quakers jumped merrily ahead to the tune of 7-1. There was a Red and Blue rally in the last quarter, by which they exceeded our two additional goals with three of their own, but it availed them naught when it came to the final score. The season, which was really very successful, raised the prestige of the Swarthmore lacrosse team tremendously, to say nothing at all about our spirits, which were finally left at quite a pleasant altitude. 166 t ■ii(  - .: SWARTHMORE 8 SWARTHMORE 4 SWARTHMORE 13 SWARTHMORE SWARTHMORE 12, SWARTHMORE 6, SWARTHMORE 5 SWARTHMORE 20 SWARTHMORE 9, THE RECORD PHILA. ALL-STARS 4 MT. WASHINGTON L. C 13 LAFAYETTE 1 ARMY 9 NASSAU LACROSSE CLUB .. 2 YALE 7 STEVENS 6 UNION 9 PENN 4 107 Frcnt Row: Meader, Bose, Philips, Smith, Loeb, Todd, Hendley, Beardsley, Purcell. Second Row: Jackson, Janes, Coflman, Price, Austin, Morrison, Warner, Nute. Third Row: Manager Young, Ottenberg, Msrning3tar, Roberts, Brown, Coach Scudder. Upper Left: Coach Scudder. Upper Right: Captain Loeb. CROSS COUNTRY INFANT prodigy among Swarthmore athletics, the Cross Country team ended its second year of competition with a record of three wins in four meets, the single setback coming from the sizeable feet of the harriers from Franklin and Marshall. A squad of thirty men reported in shape for travel, but it fell principally to the lot of Manning Smith and Charley Loeb, the team ' s captain, to negotiate the five-mile home course for victories. Virtually the entire squad was made up of seasoned campaign- ers, with Lew Bose and Ken Madder, last year ' s freshman stars, aided by Don Purcell and Captain- elect Charley Hendley. In the first meet of the year, Swarthmore emerged victorious on the short end of a 22-36 count, Smitty romping in alone twenty-five minutes after the boys toed their marks. Incidentally, the scoring system in use in cross country is to count the contestants in the order in which they finish, so that the lowest score is the one that pays off. Following the opener, Johns Hopkins threatened vainly before succumbing, 23-32. After the 24-31 de- feat by Franklin and Marshall at Lancaster, the Scudders won the finale with a close 27-28 victory over the Leopards of Lafayette. To put the final touch of perfection to a well seasoned season, the marathoners stood right up and looked happy for the photographers. Last year the Halcyon took some chastisement for comparing them to pall-bearers. Perhaps we had better ex- plain we were judging their pictures, not their ability. Anyway, from this easy chair they look good even in print, so everybody should be satisfied. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 22 SWARTHMORE 23 SWARTHMORE 31 SWARTHMORE 27 DREXEL 36 JOHNS HOPKINS 32 F. M 24 LAFAYETTE 28 16S TRACK PACED by Captain Oliver Payne Pearson, the Swarthmore College track and field representa- tives eked out a three to two majority in dual com- petition during the campaign of ' 36. Ripping rhythm in the low hurdles, Captain Pearson was the indi- vidual star of the season, yielding nothing as he showed his undefeated supremacy in this event. A fair sized nucleus of letter men responded last spring when Coach Bert Barron issued the call for candidates. Walt Barclay and Arnold Viehover took over where they had left off on the pole vault, and Tommy Hallowell returned to the high jump. Kirchschlager, hair stream-lined for action, prepared for the quarter-mile run, while Manning Smith started jogging in anticipation of the long distance wars. The season ' s opener found Johns Hopkins under an anaesthetic, with Hallowell personally responsi- ble for two firsts and a third place in both track and field events. Lehigh reversed the decision almost immediately, however, taking the Garnet for a top- heavy victory. Drexel invaded the local lair in vain, while Delaware likewise succumbed to the prowess of the home boys, but Haverford came through to spike their guns in the final dual meet of the year, despite the fact that Swarthmore captured eight out of fourteen first places. Tommy Taylor, diminutive javelin thrower, established a new Swarthmore record in this meet when he moved his spear through the air a distance of one hundred seventy-two and one-quarter feet. During the campaign, freshman Bose established himself as a future great with a series of triumphs in the half mile. Small in stature, he ran a heady race, letting his opponents set the pace until near the three-quarters mark, where he opened up into a spurt that carried him past the tape yards ahead of his competitors. Hendley also found himself with victories that carried him to a varsity letter. Vie- hover and Barclay soared serenely through the air 169 for first and second places, while Dick Post dropped in between lacrosse games to score with the shot. Promising material such as Herndon and Jones tried hard, but were unable to surpass the veterans. The Penn Relay Carnival occurred jointly with the rainy season, and the Swarthmore mile relay team found the going much too soggy on Franklin Field. A fifth and a fourth place was the best they could muster in two days of mudding under threatening skies in the City of Brotherly Love. The season ended colorfully, with the Garnet act- ing as host to the Middle Atlantic States ' Athletic Association in a two-day meet that pitted fourteen schools in this area in competition. The two days passed in a constant series of heats and finals, with Rutgers victorious. Swarthmore, in its position of perfect host, limited itself to a single victory in the 220 low hurdles, where Paynie Pearson knew no master, breasting the tape in the fast time of twenty- four and seven-tenths seconds, two-tenths of a second over the existing MASCAA record for this event. Nevertheless, this single triumph was sufficient to earn the home team sixth place, just above the seventh place Haverford contingent, and the squad was thereby enabled to affirm that they had reversed their previous setback at the hands of the Main Liners. After the meet, the letter men elected Man- ning Smith, dependable distance man as captain- elect for the spring of 1937. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 75 SWARTHMORE 54 SWARTHMORE 83, SWARTHMORE 68 SWARTHMORE 48 JOHNS HOPKINS 51 LEHIGH 72 DELAWARE 42 DREXEL 58 HAVERFORD 77 171 4m M ' , ■p ESPITE the presence of seemingly good ma- J-- ' terial the baseball season was exceedingly poor. Victories over St. John ' s and Stevens were the season ' s highlights. Lack of pitching material was the main source of trouble as well as failure to hit in the pinches. The scheduled opening game with Penn A. C. was rained out . . . — from The 1937 Halcyon. And so it is year after year; to correct this excerpt merely substitute Penn and Army for St. John ' s and Stevens, and continue with the following paragraphs. After weathering the tides of spring, the Garnet batsmen opened the season by defeating the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania team for the first time in seven years. Swarthmore Captain Paul Peter opened the scoring with his home run in the first inning, but the Big Quakers rallied in the second frame to score two runs on a hit batsman, a single, a double. Pitcher Lyon ' s walk, Schroeder ' s sacrifice, and Peter ' s hit in the fourth inning, an error, a hit, a walk, and a double by Rollo Griffen in the fifth produced the remainder of Swarthmore ' s score. With the bases loaded and no one out in the sixth. Coach Dunn took out Lyon, sent in Ace Dimpfl. The batter obligingly hit into a double play, gave Dimpfl something to tell his grandchildren about. By carefully pushing lone runs across the plate, Penn drew to within one run of the Swarthmore team, needed one hit to tie the score. When Field of Penn 172 BASEBALL tried to steal third, Griffen tagged him out, and the Garnet was the victor. Swarthmore won by a 6-5 score. The Little Quakers extended its streak to two vic- tories out of two starts by defeating Johns Hopkins, 12-8. With Dimpfl holding the doctors in check, the batsmen had a spree of eight runs in the fourth in- ning, two in the fifth, two in the seventh. After the visitors opened up in their half of the seventh frame with five runs, the score remained the same. On a two-day jaunt to Dickinson and Gettysburg the team received decisive setbacks for the first de- feats of the season. Dick Dimpfl went the whole route in the first game, but the six Garnet errors were an unsurmountable obstacle. The final score was 8-3. Errors — seven of them — continued to plague the Little Quakers in the Gettysburg game, to the tune of a 12-1 defeat. Singles by Schroeder, Brunhouse, Griffen scored the lone run in the first inning. Following the slump, the team traveled to West Point, outslugged the Army by 13-10. The Garnet opened the scoring in the first inning when Schroeder made first on a dropped third strike, Harrison walked, and Peter and Patterson singled. The West Pointers rallied in the first and second innings to take the lead at 3-2, but Swarthmore retaliated with five tallies in the third. Harrison ' s single, hits by Griffen and Blackman, a walk to Patterson, Larkin ' s hit, Clarke ' s fly to left, and an error by the first base- man netted five runs to put the Garnet in the lead. Undaunted, the Army team slowly whittled away the visitor ' s Isad to again forge ahead by three runs, 10-7, at the opening of the ninth. With Patterson and Clarke on bases, Dimpfl struck out for the second out but Schroeder sent the Garnet stock up when he doubled, scoring the two men on base. Then with the tying run on third and the winning run on first. Captain Peter hit a single to score Schroeder. Grif- fen and Blackman hit safely to put the game on ice. Victory over Army: 13-10. After this great victory, the Dunnmen hit another losing streak, succumbing this time to Lehigh, Hamp- den-Sydney, and Guilford. In spite of Johnny Bige- low ' s home run and the fourteen scores by the Gar- net, Lehigh hit the ball a bit harder to win, 18-14. Errors and a strong offense spelled defeat for the Little Quaker team in the Hampden-Sydney and Guilford massacres, by scores of 17-2 and 12-2. Charley Lyon, by holding the Stevens Tech team to six hits and by tying up the game at 3-all in the eighth inning, was the individual star in Swarth- more ' s fourth win of the season. Griffon ' s double and Blackman ' s hit were the features of the ninth inning rally which cinched the game for Swarthmore. With this victory under its belt, the team approached the Haverford game with confidence, but a deter- mined Red and Black nine turned them back by a score of 9 to 2 to end the 1936 season. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 6 SWARTHMQRE 12 SWARTHMORE 3 SWARTHMORE 1 SWARTHMORE 13 SWARTHMORE 14 SWARTHMORE 2 SWARTHMORE 2 SWARTHMORE 4 SWARTHMORE 2 U. OFPENNA 5 JOHNS HOPKINS 8 DICKINSON 8 GETTYSBURG 12 ARMY 10 LEHIGH 18 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY . .17 GUILFORD 12 STEVENS 3 HAVERFORD 9 174 GOLF Little, Wickenhaver, Captain Finley, Boyer. Both top-flites were six feet away from the cup on the eighteenth green; both putters held victory in their grasps. Both putts rolled slowly toward the cup, veered to the right, rested two inches from that ex- cavation, deprived the golf team of an unblemished record. Both Garnet golfers looked away in disgust. Five decisive victories in the first five starts pointed to a strong team, an undefeated season. The six boys who traveled to Bethlehem were a little over- confident; it looked like a Swarthmore triumph, but Ollie stepped up and missed. The putt would have meant a Garnet victory, 5-4; missing reversed the score. Temple and St. Joseph ' s were smothered by the rebound from the defeat by Lehigh. The following week-end, golfers journeyed up the Hudson to Army, saw West Point, met the Cadets, conquered the Storm King, but George looked away in disgust. The re- sult was a tie with the future generals. Haverford had lost the first match at Merion, 6-3, so the Main Liners arrived at Rolling Green for the return match with a juggled line-up; they expected to win by the same score. Result: Swarthmore SVi, Haverford V2 (Wick was duly ashamed). Captain-elect Murphy Week after the close of the season, the A. A. Coun- cil met to consider golf as a major sport, passed on it. Varsity golfers now sport new white sweaters. High points of the season were the victories over the Red and Black, low points the missed putts. THE RECORD Braden Burl SWARTHMORE 6 SWARTHMORE 6 SWARTHMORE 5 SWARTHMORE 6 SWARTHMORE 7 SWARTHMORE 4 SWARTHMORE 7 SWARTHMORE 9 SWARTHMORE 41 2 SWARTHMORE 8 1 2 SWARTHMORE 6 JOHNS HOPKINS . - 3 LAFAYETTE DELAWARE 4 HAVERFORD 3 OSTEOPATHY 2 LEHIGH 5 TEMPLE 2 ST. JOSEPH ' S ARMY 41 2 HAVERFORD V2 P. M. C TENNIS As spic and span a group of Adonises as ever ■adorned the level clay beyond the somber gray of Wharton, the flashing, slashing racqueteers did themselves proud during the campaign of ' 36 with a record of nine wins to six losses. Led by Captain Johnny Albertson, the lads put on some exhibitions of real court form, opening the season with shut-out victories at the expense of American University and Albright on the Field House boards, before dropping the first outdoor encounter to a sure-stroking City College of New York team. Albertson played a spectacular game in an effort to overcome Bernie Friedman, New York courts champ, but steadiness prevailed as the lanky redhead ' s best shots came back with tantalizing regularity until they finally found their way into the net. The University of Pennsylvania squad, replete with such luminaries as Lott and Friedman, visited the local bulwarks and had little trouble in reassert- ing mastery over the Garnet, while the Navy too found the slants of the Faulknermen to their liking, but a victory over St. John ' s balanced the books. After clean sweeps over both the representatives of Dickinson and Ursinus, the locals dropped one to a strong Army team, but returned to stroke out quick decisions over Lafayette, Muhlenberg, and Doiiis Johns Hopkins. The year ' s final loss at the hands of Lehigh seemed to rejuvenate the pace-weary squad sufficiently to outmaneuver Haverford by the narrow margin of five victories to four. Macy was the individual star of the day, coming through from behind to gain the deciding point that sent the Main Liners down to defeat. Frank Hutson, captain-elect of the ' 37 sextet, tied for high scoring laurels with freshman star Bill Doriss. Both presented records of ten victories in fifteen starts. Hutson fitted in perfectly with the movie tradition of smoothness triumphant, while Doriss lived up to his pre-season predictions with Turner, Faulkner, White 176 picture stroking in the number six spot. Albertson and Whyte garnered many victories. Albertson showed frequent flashes of real style in defending his first-man position, and Whyte ' s con- stant practice sessions between shots paid off despite his rather unorthodox style. Turner made use of his height to win games, and Macy was a dependable champion when the going was close. Doriss and Albertson teamed up in a doubles com- bination that somehow gave the impression of latent but unproductive power. Both possessed ability and height worthy of bothering the most formidable op- position, but weakness overhead cost them points on lobs that should have been put av oy. The one thing that manifested itself throughout the campaign was an attitude of courtesy and sports- manship among players that left nothing to be desired. Earnestness combined with good-natured appreciation of a rival ' s worth seems to be peculiarly identified with the sport, but a far more reliabl e reason for the 9-6 margin of success could probably be given in terms of winter practice facilities in the Field House. U- JOj USSL ..-.S M ' Hutson THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 9 SWARTHMORE 9 SWARTHMORE 2 SWARTHMORE 0, SWARTHMORE 9, SWARTHMORE 1, SWARTHMORE 9, SWARTHMORE 9, SWARTHMORE 1 SWARTHMORE 3 SWARTHMORE 9 SWARTHMORE 6 SWARTHMORE 8 SWARTHMORE 1 SWARTHMORE 5 AMERICAN UNIVERSITY ALBRIGHT CITY COLLEGE OF N. Y 7 PENNSYLVANIA 9 ST. JOHN ' S NAVY 8 DICKINSON URSINUS ARMY 8 FRANKLIN MARSHALL ,5 LAFAYETTE MUHLENBERG 3 JOHNS HOPKINS 1 LEHIGH 8 HAVERFORD 4 Albertson 177 CAPTAINS OF MEN ' S ATHLETIC TEAMS m ' ' If -A. M : |P 1? Kalkstein LACROSSE Murphy GOLF Buckingham BASKETBALL Brunhouse BASEBALL Smith TRACK Hutson TENNIS Hallowell SOCCER Loeb CROSS COUNTRY Schroeder SOCCER Benditt SWIMMING Cooper FOOTBALL 178 CAPTAINS OF WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC TEAMS Smith Whitcraft Jackson Brooks Weiss IMMING BASKETBALL HOCKEY TENNIS GOLF 179 WOMEN ' S ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ' SN - Jk., ipfc- ' Wood Jackson Leeper Irvine Solis-Cohen Whitcraft Brooks Dana Stone Mims ANN ELIZABETH WHITCRAFT ... BARBARA BICKFORD BROOKS HARRIET MERRILL DANA NATHALIE LETITIA IRVINE ELIZABETH WILSON JACKSON MARGARET FRASIER LEEPER ELIZABETH WEBB MIMS MABEL ALICE RICKEY MARY SOLIS-COHEN ANNE EXTON STONE ANNE BAKER WARREN CAROLYN MIDDLETON WOOD President 180 Slubbs, Mims, WooUcott. Dana, Leeper. Lapham, Warren, Kellock, Whilcraft, Newkirk. WOMEN ' S HOCKEY Captain Jackson 7 LTHOUGH a 2-2 tie with Bryn Mawr prevented a technically undefeated season for the Swarth- more women ' s hockey team, a record of six wins in seven starts is one to be proud of. Led by Captain Betty Jackson, ' 37, and coached by Miss May Parry, the Garnet players whipped through their first four games without a goal being scored against them. Swarthmore Club, the first opponent of the season, furnished little opposition as the Little Quakers tri- umphed 9-0. Captain Jackson led the scoring with four goals to her credit, the other scores being made by Dana, with three, and Stubbs with two. Six of these goals were made during the first half, when the Garnet obviously led the offense. Marion Cricket Club was faced on the home field the following week, after one postponement, and fell by a 3-0 tally. Although three All-American hockey- ites played on the Merion team, scores by Captcdn Jackson, Stubbs, and Rickey scattered throughout the two periods, brought the Little Quakers to their final victory. The Merion team, however, was notice- ably handicapped by the absence of Barbara Strob- har, one of their leading scorers. Garnet conquers Ursinus 2-0 for third victory. So ran headlines as the Swarthmore team continued a string of shutouts against opponents. Bunny Dana and Anne Lapham did the scoring in a fast game played on a wet and slippery field. One of the largest scores ever to be run up in a women ' s hockey game was made the following 181 Stubbs Dana Mims Saturday against Rosemont, when the latter fell, 16-0. Bunny Dana again led the scoring with a total of seven goals to her credit. Captain Jackson man- aged to get the ball past Rosemont ' s goalie Flan- nigan three times, and Anne Lcrpham tallied twice. A scintillating Little Quaker attack and sterling de- fense throughout the entire game kept the Rosemont players well away from goalie Woollcotl ' s stick. Captain Betty Jackson and Bunny Dana again shared scoring honors as Beaver College fell, 2-1, in a game where all scoring was made during the first half. Last year, due to a penalty bully after the final whistle had blown, the Garnet succeeded in tying the Jenkintown lassies 2-2 in a hotly-disputed decision. This year ' s game was only the second lost by Beaver since 1934. Marion Edwards, stellar Beaver player, was the first to score against goalie Woollcott this season. A trip to Bryn Mawr the following week gave the Little Quakers their first and only tied game of the year. Captain Betty Jackson ■did the only scoring for the Garnet, while Weddock and Bennett shared scoring honors for Bryn Mawr. The game was fast and spectator enthusiasm great, and many spec- tacular goal tries were features of the game. A 4-3 victory over Penn ended a highly successful season. Elizabeth Stubbs played a beautiful game in her usual position of right inner, scoring three of 182 the four Garnet goals, while Captain Jackson scored the other. Bunny Dana, captain-elect for 1937, helped out with some excellent passes and Joan WooUcott saved the day for the Little Quakers with her skill in defense. Sally Deardorff moves into Frances Dering ' s position as senior manager and Mary Hoagland was elected assistant manager, for next season. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE , 9; SWARTHMORE CLUB SWARTHMORE 3; MERION CRICKET SWARTHMORE 2; URSINUS SWARTHMORE . 16; ROSEMONT SWARTHMORE 2; BEAVER COLLEGE 1 SWARTHMORE 2; BRYN MAWR 2 SWARTHMORE 4; PENN 3 Whitcraft Newkirk Lapham 183 Jackson Leeper Whitcraft Lapham Wood Dana WOMEN ' S BASKETBALL Captain Whitcraft 184 DEGINNING the year with a varsity that had -I— ' played together for a whole year and several promising freshman candidates, the Swarthmore basketeers were off to a fine season with a fast and skilful team. Wood ' 37, Leeper ' 39, Whitcraft ' 37, Jackson ' 37, Lapham ' 38, and Dana ' 38 were the veterans while Evans, Kellock, and Andrus, all ' 40, brou ght new talent to the team. Off to a good start with a 29-24 victory over the alums, the team was, however, fated to meet with ill-luck at New College when Garnet shooters were unable to surpass • the New York team due to loss of Wood and Leeper for the game. Stepping out with a faster playing team than had before started, we took Elizabethtown Nor- mal in our stride, 39-17, with Wood as high scorer. Beaver ' s championship team shot itself to victory over the Garnet courtwomen in the next game, scor- ing 32 points to our 18. Real tragedy of the game, however, was star-shooter Wood ' s shoulder injury, sustained first at New College, but now putting her permanently out of competition. With Bonsall ' 37 substituting for Wood, we narrowly missed victory over Rosemont by a score of 21-19. Penn came next with an overwhelming victory for us, 25-13. Kate Hood, a former Swarthmore gir l, played on the Penn team. The best game of the season was played against Ursinus with guards Whitcraft, Lapham, Jackson doing excellent work. Although defeated by a score of 16-8, we held the undefeated Ursinus team to their lowest count of the season. Great excitement ac- companied our next game ' s victory over Bryn Mawr, first win for us over that sextet since 1929. Winding up a season of five wins, four losses. Coach Parry ' s girls swept the Mount St. Joseph ' s team off its feet to the tune of 32-15, Captain Whitcraft starring. The first year during which all games were played under the two-court system, Captain Whitcraft led an enthusiastic team, if not always to victory, at least usually to success. Jackson, Whitcraft, high-scorer Leeper, all stood out for their accurate and precise playing on a team on which guarding excelled. A better season could have been expected had it not been for loss of Wood. The second team had an undefeated season, tying once only with Ursinus. As for prospects for next year, the team will feel the loss of Whitcraft, Jackson, Wood, Shoemaker, and Bonsall, but with Lapham to lead the remainder, and with several fast-stepping freshmen, the future looks quite promising. Present Manager Cupitt ' 37 will step out, leaving her place to Miller ' 38, who will be assisted by Maginniss ' 39. With such a set-up we can safely predict a successful career for Coach Parry ' s courtwomen. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE __ 29; ALUMNAE 24 SWARTHMORE 12; NEW COLLEGE 19 SWARTHMORE 39; ELIZABETHTOWN N. . 17 SWARTHMORE ,. 18- BEAVER 32 SWARTHMORE 19; ROSEMONT 21 SWARTHMORE 25; U. OF PENNA 13 SWARTHMORE 8; URSINUS __ 15 SWARTHMORE 26; BRYN MAWR _ 20 SWARTHMORE 32; MT. ST. JOSEPH 15 185 Front Row: Coach Rath, Williams, Wing, Irvine, Michael, Ladenberg, Embree, Brown, Snyder, Watson, Dean. Back Row: McLelland, Tappan, McDermott, Captain Smith. WOMEN ' S SWIMMING SEVEN victories and three defeats closed a bril- liant season for this year ' s Swarthmermaids. The team was strengthened by the addition of four fast freshmen, Cornelia Brown, Gail Tappan, Catherine Embree and Myra Williams, whose capable work did much to alleviate the loss of Alice Rickey, ' 39, and Gretchen Watson, ' 38, through illness. Out- standing performances among the varsity veterans were made by Nathalie Irvine and Captain Marian Snyder, both of ' 38. Starting the season auspiciously, the girls tri- umphed first over Savage and Syracuse, but failed to vindicate last year ' s defeat by Penn Hall, going down to a 41-22 score. Penn was taken for an easy victory. Since Temple ' s rules allow only interclass meets, the freshmen, sophomores and juniors swam separately. The sophomores, dropped 26-31, were the only losers; the freshmen and juniors forged ahead for substantial leads. A large and enthusi- astic audience witnessed the Swarthmore-Bryn Mawr meet, where despite the greatly superior diving of the yellow-suited Bryn Mawrmaids, whose ranks include Renninger, mid-Atlantic cham.pion, the Swarthmore swimmers came through for a comfort- able 49-35 victory. Also in this meet we broke our 186 own pool record for the 160-yard freestyle. Beaver was outclassed both in diving and speed events, and took a sound drubbing, 73-17. The N. Y. U. meet again proved to be our Waterloo, however, when the Middle Atlantic A. A. U. champions, Con- stance Hanf and Constance Diemling, defeated the Swarthmore entrants in the 100- and 40-yard freestyle as well as the breaststroke and backstroke. No feeling of gloom accompanied this defeat, however, or if it did, it was quickly dispelled by the hilarious interclass meet, which the freshmen, by dint of noise and numbers, were the victors. Novel chiropractic events were featured, such as the tandem crawl, a tug-of-war, a race with lighted candles and diving for pennies, in which last event a member of the sophomore class was missing for at least ten min- utes. This year ' s new material combined with the veterans of the previous years has made a smooth, fast squad. The lengthy stroke of Gail Tappan and the clean-cut diving of Petie Brown have been of great value to the team. Having negotiated a more extended and more difficult season with an outstand- ing number of victories and consistently good per- formance, the varsity can feel justly proud of the 1936-37 schedule. THE RECORD SWARTHMORE , 38 SWARTHMORE 29 SWARTHMORE 22 SAVAGE 19 SYRACUSE 28 PENN HALL 41 SWARTHMORE 76 SWARTHMORE 34 SWARTHMORE 26 SWARTHMORE 33 SWARTHMORE 49 SWARTHMORE 73 SWARTHMORE 21 U. OF P 57 TEMPLE (feeshmen) .22 TEMPLE (sophomores) 31 TEMPLE (juniors) . 23 BRYN MAWR 35 BEAVER 17 N. Y. U 36 187 Captain Brooks WOMEN ' S TENNIS T ED by Captain Jean Harvey, and coached by -L-J Miss May Parry, a veteran women ' s tennis team breezed through an undefeated season. Anne Lapham moved into the vacancy at first singles left by the graduation of Doss Sonneborn, last year ' s captain. Brooks, Dana, Harvey, Jackson, Stubbs, and Tompkins formed a nucleus of netwomen who had experience behind them on Sworthmore courts, with Mary Solis-Cohen the only member of the class of ' 39 to wear a letter sweater at the end of the season. In the first match of the year, the Garnet players easily conquered Rosemont, 5-0. Only in the first doubles match was there any real competition, when Stubbs and Solis-Cohen finally came through to win over Dives and Schroth, 6-3, 6-8, 6-2. Ursinus College, the next opponent, was also easily overcome by the score of 5-0. Brooks, Har- vey, Stubbs, Dana, Jackson, Thompson and Solis-Cohen all vanquished their rivals by conclusive scores, despite the absence of Lapham, stellar first singles player. Pierce School provided more opposition, but Swarthmore revealed superior skill by conquering Pierce, 4-1. In that match, Harvey and Stubbs lost to Sonneborn and Morton, 6-2, 6-3. Solis-Cohen, playing singles for the first time of the season, won a hard-fought match over Baker, 8-6, 6-1. The rest came through with easy victories over their oppo- nents. Swarthmore, 5; Penn, 0. So read the scoreboard at the end of the next match. Each member of the Garnet team exhibited such fine and consistent play- ing that not a single match was won by the Red and Blue. Brooks continued her record, having been undefeated for over two years. William and Mary fell, another easy victim of the Swarthmore coeds, by the same score of 5-0. Jack- son and Dana met hard competition in Harrison and Torrence, but emerged victorious with the game 188 scores of 6-3, 2-6, 6-1. Lapham, Brooks, Harvey, Stubbs, and Solis-Cohen each swept their opponents off their feet, winning by scores which conclusively proved their superior playing. Penn Hall, although victorious over the Garnet during the svi imming season, lost to the tennis team with an overwhelming score. Shutouts were the rule rather than the exception for last year ' s net- women, and Penn Hall fell conveniently into that classification as the Garnet triumphed, 5-0. Not one of the Little Quaker women had any trouble in com- pletely subduing their Chambersburg rivals. However, Beaver College in the last match of the year, presented the first real competition, and the Garnet emerged victorious only by the narrow score of 3-2. In this match, Lapham beat Marsh in a hard- fought game, 6-2, 7-5. Brooks finished the season still undefeated as Mahler fell to a 6-4, 6-2 count. But Gillingham conquered Captain Harvey by the score of 8-6, 6-4, although the latter fought hard and ex- hibited fine tennis playing. Lapham and Brooks defeated Marsh and Gillingham, 6-4, 6-0, to obtain the winning point; Mohler and Orr having taken the second doubles match, 6-1, 6-2. Bryn Mawr, the college which has furnished the lone defeat of the season for the last few years, was not on this season ' s schedule. But if the Garnet showed as much skill and fine playing as they did in several of their matches, their ancient rivals might have been defeated. With her graduation, Jean Harvey passed her cap- tainship on to Barbs Brooks, v ho, in three years, has made a remarkable record for herself on the courts. Floss Lyons ' job as manager of the squad will fall to Grace Eckman, ' 37, with Virginia Newkirk, ' 38,. assisting. Jackson, Dana, Stubbs, Solis-Cohen, Lapham, Captain Brocks. 189 Manag3r Dcbson. Bill, Lewis, Davis, Weiss, BoDlh, Bdss, Coach Reynolds. Captain Weiss Booth GOLF Hastings As a new departure in major sports, the Women ' s Athletic Council has decided to take judicial notice of the good old game: Golf. The naming of the secret seven fulfilled promises of Freshman prowess, with Janey Hastings, brunette of ' 39, as ace player, and Bets Michael, but the class stars, Meg Bill, Emily Lomb, and Bobby Weiss (captain of the sturdy crew) were also seen gamboling on the green. Under the coaching of Emma Michael, supported by Betty Dobson, manager of 1936, and Peg Davenport, struggling to achieve that distinc- tion for 1937, the team played four matches, and, at the end, amid exams, a mixed foursome (first with seven men and women players — get it?) won by Ruth Lewis and Ed Little. Although only one Senior member, Euretta Davis, leaves a vacancy, there is always place for new talent, but why should we mention the incoming Freshmen, whom every- body knows to be superlative anyhow? This Golf ' s a noble venture! THE RECORD SWARTHMORE 1 SWARTHMORE 3 SWARTHMORE 4 SWARTHMORE CEDARBROOK C.C. .6 SPRINGHAVEN 4 MT. ST. JOSEPH ' S 1 ROLLING GREEN 7 190 ARCHERY Archery at Swarthmore, though technicallY still in its infancy, has expanded from one of the so- called lily sports into the field of competitive interest. Formerly there were two classes of people who cul- tivated the art of archery: a) those who disliked get- ting into gym clothes; b) those who disliked swim- ming; but to these has been added a third class: c) those who really like the stuff. These last are easily distinguishable by their leather wristbands and the professional way they wet their fingers to judge the windage. The archers among the classes are divided into two teams, the first of which, led by the capable shooting of Evelyn ( Deadeye ) Mohl, ' 38, and Mina ( William Tell ) Waterman, ' 37, crashed through vic- Walerman, Murphy, Goodrich, Whitman, Chapman, Kaltenbach, Mohl. toriously in a meet with Temple, and pretty much made fools of several local high schoo ls ' boys ' clubs, while the second team did likewise to the girls ' clubs. Miss Rath, a good shot herself, is in charge of this embryonic organization and has delegated much of her authority to a manager, who, although rather bewildered by it all, has written a great many letters to various people about matches, schedules, etc. One thing is fairly definite, however, they wont an organized varsity, if for no better reason than to have the Gwimp girls chase arrows for them. When that goal is attained, what with interclass and tele- graphic meets as well as the intercollegiate get- togethers on the greensward, Swarthmore will be set to attain new glories in the athletic line. Even now they have a highly respectable place in the National Archery Association ' s records in addition to the widespread fame they achieved when several comely members of the class made their own weap- ons and had their pictures taken for the local news- papers. Although still among what might be called our disorganized sports, and still some ' what shrouded in mystery, archery bids fair to become an up-and- coming competitive sport and not merely something athletic that a girl can do and still remain a lady. 191 ' SSii ' v ?- 192 THE PASSING SHOW 193 JUNIORS-JUST JUNIORS 194 beginning in the usual manner- at the top of the opposite page we have a picture of pluck, and to the right of it is dave worrying but not studying and then pete studying but not worrying, watch the birdie, woolman house, but better keep your eyes off breck who is in a state of before-breakfast deshabille, yo hitler! and these are juniors hanging out of the junior hangout, we always heard that gangsters carry their machine guns in violin cases, hello, henszey-bottom! heave, everybody; you won ' t get any help from hibernating burrows, wing ' s over the paint pots, gee, they really do study at swarthmore: look at winston and lashly and ash on the books but meg alleviates matters with a week- end, not graceful, but that ' s college, and that ' s levering lining his limber legs, woolman house weekending again and oh oh! a soph on the junior page! and now a perfect ending — a. willets and prexy. and this is our two-hundred- and-f orty-seven pound may queen languishing in the vo- luptuous atmosphere provided by super-specimens of the finest type of american young man- hood, honor is given where honor is due, says slugger as he crowns p e 1 1 o n (with a wreath), notice that the court is one of lavish splendor peo- pled by admiring not to say avid adonises, the terpsicho- rean arts as practiced at swarthmore are exhibited about the maypole, lush! the Hamburg show, speaking lor itself. 195 LITTLE QUAKER MATCH BOX 196 MAY DAY 197 PASSING-JUST PASSING 198 we never thought it possible that you could cover up that much of budd with just two people but the candid camera proves it. perhaps something should have been done about stubby too. another sit-down with those in front going to extremes about it. freshman bill smith looks out of the corner and here is the weiss man straying from the beatsn path, this sort of thing happens to the best of tires but only the best of boys can smile about it. straka seems to be going berserk, and my my but alien must have been cunning when he was twelve! the bishop sheds for a hot day. there must be a lacrosse game veering toward the well-known rocks, judging from the pans of pretty boy and the press board, anyway, dinny doesn ' t look dismal about disappearing into dark- ness, which ought to dispel the gloom, way down in the corner We have 6 gorgeous girls 6, who would much rather have their pictures taken than watch what looks from here like a foot- ball game, we always did wonder what went on in wharton of an evening, and we still do. and to put an end to this page we have the phi psi smoothies at home. and these boys and girls are the jayvee bookies, alias the machine. a lot of people in college don ' t know about the jayvee bookies but then a lot of people in college don ' t know about a lot of things, in spite of the borrowed s sweaters, la- crosse sticks et al, we have in- side info that their real forte is tiddley-winks. clarkie says they run the school but judging from the confident smiles of the knit- ting bee we hove no doubts about who runs this organiza- tion. 199 STILL PASSING 200 ike budd has replaced troeger in the inevitable halcyon picture of milk-fed, candy-fed, or whatever- the-advertiser-wants-fed behemoths, featuring mr. pitt and the rsst of the college at one of the better baseball games, sal, you may have a cigarette around parrish but we know it ' s not lighted, wesley adds cheerful culture to the passing show, and this is fuzzy: honest i didn ' t mean to step on that ant! ok joe you old smoothie, wipe off that complacent grin! let ' s tone up this page with a rolls; don ' t be nonchalant, larry, we know it ' s yours, informality is the best feature of this halcyon, bridging at the soph lodge: this is a female hide-out — ho-hum, we must rest our eyes somewhere, mustn ' t we, roosy. men in the cloisters — just men. pipper ' s slide rule may have frightened bobby away temporarily, but don ' t worry, she ' ll be back, featuring uncle george ' s pipe with uncle george along to keep it going, and finally, roo stoops to make this page once more. this sort of thing happens every year but trust the ' 38 halcyon to be the first to feature it. this is the season of caps and gowns and tears and partings and, to put it briefly, sentiment runs riot all over the place, this may be just one more chance for the faculty to display their awards and honors but for us and for the seniors it is a big event — one both sad and happy, happy because — well, it is nice to see everybody finally pull through the good old culture factory, and sad because we will no longer see their bright and shining faces and oh we could go on and on like this but ho ho! one glance at koehler ' s pleasure at having a chance to wear his oh-so-different bonnet dispels all gloom and now you can turn cheerfully to the next page. 201 ON AND ABOUT fkJ. ' 202 ye gods, here they are again! left page again: attention breakage committee! we offer this picture to you at a nominal fee as proof of who were the perpetrators of the various and sundry accidents to the wharton windows, not to mention breck ' s black eye. caldwell and rice trying to prove to us that men are men and glad of it. maybe they are responsible for that horned animal in the flattie lodge, and this is the home of the original brierly balls, the machine was swiped from a wpa road project, this bevy of beauties is the press board ' s idea of college youth, their faces grace the pages of newspapers from Philadelphia to langley field, we see them here posing by a borax ski trail but they are really very versatile, sometimes they stand by m.agnolia blooms and sometimes they typify the swarthmore coed week and sometimes they even vfatch athletic events, this probably entails a huge clothes allowance, or then again they may be sub- sidized, for the college has to have one good team. 203 up in the corner we have the esprit de corps, followed by the 9:20 rush which invariably gets in katie ' s hair (the post office is closed to students after 8:30 on Wednesdays on account of collection). these people bet on landon, ha ha. the junior dance, featuring weltmer and mimble. note that mr. Jones and chris both made the prom. 204 bud and bart preparing for faculty lunch, bart is carrying the cream because — well, you know bud plus a cream pitcher, this thing looks like a super-switchboard but — h ' m, maybe it is; cur line is yearbooks not engineering (there is even some doubt as to whether our line is yearbooks), spring housecleaning for the deeyous. and then they also serve who only stand and ■wait. 205 faculty lunches are a great institution: the campus commentator could probably corral some hot tips there, come on, patty, smile for ralphie! two knights in a pool room, the three musketeers have nothing on us, on the other hand it is obvious that vre have nothing on the three musketeers. 06 CAMPUS SHOTS ,,.JSt - •ut ' lMa ' 1 y - , ' ' - ■■si i ' . -sr ■; ' 207 - .t ' vi ' .- - V FROM THE TOWER 208 209 210 SWARTHMORE -JUST SWARTHMORE SPRING is here again and so are all the things that go with it (e. g. the Halcyon — though it sometimes veers toward the edge of summer). In spring the Swarth- more campus is alive with color and other things. It presents a strolly-groupY appearance. In fact, one of our seniors, attaining the objective point of view for a moment, was forced to remark: This college certainly looks like a biological institution. During the course of the year a group of coarse gourmands com- bined to voice vulgar protest against the library drinking foun- tain. Complaining that they did not get enough water, they forced the administration to adjust the cooler in such a manner that a large gush of liquid pours forth at the slightest touch. While it is not the business of the Halcyon to take sides (Ha, Ha, Ha), we do feel that some clarion voice should be raised in defense of the principles of Escoffier, Lucius Beebe, Armand, Arnaud, George Z. Tunkle, and other great bon vivants. One does not drink champagne in tin cups, one does not eat escargots au limonade with a spade, and finally one does not consume Kaskaskia Deep- Rock Spring Water ' 37 in great gasping gulps. These selfish com- plainers were probably unaware of the fact that every drop of the superb liquid that once flowed from the font was carried 78 miles over the mountains in marble casks wrapped in bay leaves to preserve the marvelous flavour that makes the gourmet savour every drop of this queen of liquors with delicately restrained pas- sion. It is not a drink for children, this Kaskaskia ' 37, and in its sparkling depths there lurks pow- er that has turned the heads of strong men. But now that magic is gone. The mob could never understand; their palates were too crass; their thirst was too great. Now they happily lap up Perm Reservoir ' 37, a plebeian vintage, while those who knew the magic of Kaskaskia Deep-Rock dream of distant, golden days. Neatest salutation of the year: How ' s life, what there is of it? Better Speech Department: Most people think it ' s about time Bea MacLeod got to work on some of the faculty. For years now, stu- dents in the English department have had to put up with disserta- tions on spiwwitualism and twans- cendentalism, and the economics majors have had to contend with miwwions and biwAvions of dol- lars. But all the students agree that this 1- and r-complex can go just so far; and when it comes to 211 BONWIT TELLER c ?o Phyl Stevens in a Wragge sports dress B. H. Wragge Exclusives . . . are to be found only at Bonwit Teller in Philadelphia Patty Eastwick in a four-piece Wragge play suit. a word like teleological, it ' s time to quit. Not so our youthful post-office administrator, who thinks that Fwitzie-Witzie is a wonderful thing to call that lank dark mem- ber of the English Department. This is only the beginning of our story. Fwitzie-Witzie didn ' t go for the name at all, and lodged a complaint with High Authority in the person of Miss Stilz. Miss Stilz on the other hand was en- tranced. The lady immediately ado pted the name, coupling with it various endearing adjectives. such as sweet and little — so we are told. This apparently went on for some time, Fwitzie- Witzie getting madder and mad- der and Stilzie-Wilzie making more and more merry (this is all good clean fun, you understand) when suddenly — who should walk in but — prexy-wexy. This, according to our Informer, is the climax of the story. What happened thereafter we were not told, but we imagine that a good timesy-wimesy was had by all. At one point in the above recit we played with the idea of putting in a psychological moment. Then we thought of MacLeod, who says there isn ' t any such thing, and since this book is dedicated to him, we thought we had better leave it out. Phenomenally speak- ing, however, we as an individual run into a psycholo gical moment or two practically every day — phenomenally speaking. Cliches are all very charming in their own place, but sometimes we wish we were possessed of the subtle art of nipping them in the bud, so to speak, feeling as we do that in their case enough is too much. Conssquently, we are very envious of the guy who, when his date pulled the one about I ' ve just washed my hair and I can ' t do a thing with it, came back with: What happens when you take a bath? With fuss and furor the Fresh- men were inducted into the mys- teries of the small, co-educational, liberal arts college last Septem- ber in a ceremony known as Freshman Orientation Week. On arriving at college, each Fresh- man was outfitted with a button, thirty-six little pink cards asking personal questions, thirty-six little yellow cards asking personal questions, a door key, and a big smile, courtesy of Book and Key or Mortar Board depending on the sex of the Freshman. After this the Frosh unpacked trunks, called up Mom to tell her everything was just fine, or sat in their rooms cry- ing softly. The next five days were busy ones for the neophytes who listened all day to words of wisdom about adult education, and danced all night with glam- orous new girls from cornbelt high schools. They all learned the songs, and they all learned the cheers, and they all learned that they were supposed to hate the sophomores who even at a small co-educational liberal arts college are their traditional enemies. It was a gay week and the Frosh began to realize the ramifications 212 EVERYTHING YOU NEED IS IN THE WELL Stocked Shelves of the COLLEGE BOOKSTORE of the word collegiate, but soon the upperclassmen, a cynical crew, began to drift back to their pennant-filled suites and the Frosh were outfitted with little red caps ■and a sense of humility, courtesy of the student body. It must have been a very successful plan be- cause they ' re going to do it all over again next year with more little buttons, more little cards, and more big smiles. Keep your chin up, ' 41. We knew that this place looks gloomy during the winter months but we didn ' t realize to what a pass it all had come until we ■came across the following dis- heartening placard attached to a long rope dangling in front of the showers on 4th East: Depressed? Hang yourself here. One of the more or less cohesive couples on campus was standing — the male half leaning on a closed door, back to, the better half facing him, talking — just talk- ing. Suddenly the door opened: the lad lurched backwards, the lass clutched at him to keep him from falling. In through the door came the head of the night-watch- man — the long one with the piercing eyes. A look of startled embarrassment spread over his face, as he said in great haste, Go right ahead! and slammed the door. Overheard from a B. M. O. C: All great men are dying and I feel a little sick myself. As a little addition to all the other functions which the Hal- cyon fills in campus life, it con- ducted a contest this year for the Best Chaperones of the Year. However, we ran into a little dif- ficulty because the judges, Mr. A, Mr. B, Mr. C, and Mr. C-prime, were unable to come to a decision. In fact they each voted for sep- arate people (Mr. and Mrs. Ander- son and Mr. and Mrs. Torrey be- ing considered as one). So we decided to throw the whole thing open to campus suffrage (ballots to be put in Box 212). Here you are: Mr. A ' s candidate: Mr. Pitt, who didn ' t show up at a party imtil it was half over, because he had been asleep. Mr. B ' s candidate: the Ander- sons and the Torreys, who donned shorts for the Kids ' party. Mr. C ' s candidate: Mr. Wilcox, who had every ec major and one or two minors at the Phi Delt House grouped around him all evening to the annoyance of the dates of said majors and minors. (We feel called upon to explain that Mr. C was at the Phi Delt House at the time and had a lot of fun with the loose dates.) Mr. C-prime ' s candidate: Mr. Mandelbaum, who, when asked to oversee a college function, re- plied: I ' m sorry but my wife ' s away and I ' m not a fit chaperon. 213 ■I o CORNER Hornbeck, Barbour and Part on ' ' making a brisk exit from the druggie. Poggie is out of step. U . Eckman, Buddington, Booth, Broun, Clarke, and Bays at Michael ' s filling station. Bays at her favorite sport again. Michael ' s College Pharmacy 214 UNDERGRADUATE GUIDE TO SWARTHMORE SWARTHMORE College campus is located on a hill a Short and convenient distance from the metropolis of Phila. It is approached by a tunnel under the station called the underpass, which is dry when everything else is wet and wet when everything else is dry, And we are informed that a lot more goes on down there than meets the eye. And then there is the stately oak-lined Asphaltum, since most of us still balk At the fanatic pressure of the administration to get anyone (including the administration) to call it Magill Walk. The whole front campus is dominated by majestic old Parrish Hall, Which has some lovely old lamps in front, but that ' s about all. Parrish has never been the same since it burned down in 75 And it does an awful lot toward keeping the spirit of the past alive. However, Miss Lukens likes it that way, so most people are hesitant About doing anything about Parrish, from George (the janitor) to Pres. Aydelotte (the President). And to our left there is Clothier Tower given to us by a generous alum. Rather on the lines of the Woolworth building ex- cept that it ' s built on the proceeds of dry goods, not gum. Then there is a large white building called Hicks Hall which is inhabited by engineers Who are a strange race of individuals who know an awful lot about gears. And every now and then they have an open house at which they exhibit all their wldgits, and the Division of the Humanities stands and looks in awe, Having always been secretly afraid of the members of Sigma Tau. And then there is the Chemistry Building, from within which is heard an occasional explosion, And it is a hideous and graphic illustration of the horrible effect on red sandstone of erosion. And then comes the meeting house, which is known to the less pious and more ardent As the last point in civilization before you come to the President ' s garden. In which is that very cold marble bench dedicated by one Carolyn Hayes White, Who, we think, must have known her way around all right. And the whole campus lies serene in the leafy arms of Crum, The annexation of which vernal woodland proves that our dear administration is not so dumb. Because it just shows you that they know as well as anyone else that you can ' t make a success in lines matricular Unless there ' s at least one place on campus where one doesn ' t have to be too particular. A Complete Fur Institution Now Unto the Third Generation T fuu). . §ieL AL FURS OF THE BETTER GRADE 171 A LNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA 215 SWARTHMORE ' S MOST MODERN DRUG STORE WITH A COLLEGE ATMOSPHERE 216 TWO STORIES FRONT FLAP JUNK The following are two excellent short-short-short stories (complete on this page) written by a budding young author. They are an attempt at the old style method of genius writing; that is, they were written under perfectly terrible conditions, and on the back of an honors paper. It may be of some interest to the casual reader to know something of the author. In a way he is an exceptional person — in a way. The underlying philosophy in these two short ex- cerpts from his work can perhaps be recognized by the more intellectual of his close friends (clausi amici) as being slightly autobiographical; although with his exceptional modssty he would not want it known that he thinks he is the cats. Chapt. I The Strange Cat We once had a cat that made odd noises when she shed her fur, about this time of the year, and it was all very odd because we never could tell when she was purrin ' and when she was furrin ' . The only way we finally found out was when a Knight of Malta came to the house and said: She is a Maltese cat and furrin ' cats always make pur- rin ' noises when they ' re furrin ' . Isn ' t that strange? Chapt. II A Catastrophic Population Problem She was queer in another way, too. You see, she understood everything we said to her and she was very literal. One day she misunderstood Mother, when she said I needed some mittens every year. She (our cat) is now the closest approximation to perpetual motion that many scientists have ever seen. She literally has a literall over the place every year. She is queer, isn ' t she? She sometimes reminds me of the wife in Good Earth, in a way. Mary Lo Broomell ready for anything in a black or navy crepe dress with embroidered coat from Frank and Seder, 11th and Market Streets, Philadelphia. Fuzzball Frazer snapped at the D. U. steps wearing a new 1937 Glen Plaid suit in double breasted style. It comes from Frank and Seder ' s. There is also a Frank and Seder store at 69th and Market Streets. 217 YOU ' LL ENJOY SKYTOP CLUB THE YEAR ROUND The Scene of 9 Mid-winter Swarthmore College House Parties You Can Have Fun with a Group at Any Season, Skytop ' s Open All Year . AMM All Winter Sports Facilities — and Golf, Tennis, Riding, Trap-Shooting, Polo and Other Activities Reservations may be made at Skytop Club SKYTOP, PENNSYLVANIA THORNTON RANEY, Manager THIS IS ANOTHER Candid Year Book LAYOUTS BY ARVID KANTOR One of a small select group of yearbooks containing some- thing really different, with em- phasis on informal layouts. This publication is a product of the yearbook studios of MAJESTIC PHOTO- ENGRAVING COMPANY 50 WEST SEVENTEENTH STREET NEW YORK CITY NEW YORK Good Food, Drink, Lodging ALL THAT IS EXPECTED IN A MODERN, YET INTIMATE, SMALL TOWN HOTEL Mebia 3nn MEDIA 218 Y is for the freshmen with their pseudo-savoir-faire O is for the way they carry on U is for the football team who tries to do and dare C is for the stuff we hear from Swann A is for the Crum where Ann and Bill perambulate N is for ice-cream-or-sliced-ba nana G is for the silly nose that ' s on the youngest Speight E ' s for girls who dance with outstretched fanna T is for the Bastille Boys so silent and so smooth M is for the campus commentator O is for Jack-Tony and the wayward ways of youth R ' s for Hey wood Broun the thirteen-dater E is for old Parrish, sentimental gray and staunch O ' s for Captain Frank who now is twenty U is for the junk Babe Brierly mixes up for launch T ' s for Conduct of which there is plenty O is for the A. S. U. and Avid Agitation F is for McCone who socked Mawhinney C is for surrealism and conglomeration ' s for god-you ' re-rcrvishing Miss Minnie L is for the red rag soup we eat at Sunday supper L is for the Kwink initiation E is for B. M. O. C. ' s and classmen mostly upper G is for the A. Hoyt Scott Foundation E is for t.p. ' s and stuff and even for Collection T ' s for Troyer ' s thrice-told snappy stories H is for the cloisterers and press-box predilection A is for the things you learn at Torreys ' N is for the lengthy wind that emanates from Price W might be for human BOND-age H is for the seniors who can give us all {ad)vice A is for the friends-but-very-fond stage T is for fraternities although we don ' t know why 1 is for the Beach-MacLeod connection S is for some couples that we wish would liquefy I ' s for stuff that doesn ' t bear reflection N is why does Eddie bother with his hair at all? T is for the door of Room 2-hundred H is for the Pettet-Little Theater Club squall E are people about which we ' ve wondred B is for the Main Line Roll so sinuous and swirling O is for contemporary mores O is for the lecture-pesters, purling-knitting-purling K is for Rodney Mills ' s chores S is for Koehler $ are for Pitt % is for the Manager ' s perlor Where you can sit. Put them all together: they spell SWARTH- MORE At least part of it. Yea, morals matter Yea, up and at ' er Yea, morals matter So they say. Well, they may. COMPLIMENTS OF YE WEEKLY SCANDAL RAG to its SISTER SLANDERER Tin IE IHaMLCT ' DN To handle the pressure of extra business, the Phoenix announces the addition to its staff of a second full time Campus Commentator, shown above, atop Clothier Tower on the newly created moon- light shift. Spring beat of our veteran Commentator includes Libe, Crum, Druggies, Vi oolman House, U. S. Route 1, Parrish Hall and Book Key House. COMPLETE COVERA GE ASSURED Additional and Unusual Phoenix Features Printed in Conjunction with Campus Comment 1. GENERAL NEWS 2. CAMPUS COMMENT 3. SPORTS NEWS 4. CAMPUS COMME— 5. DULCET EDITORIALS 6. CAMPUS 7. CAMPU— 219 SOCIAL LIFE AT SWARTHMORE From the Point of View of Cold Insanity To create in the reader ' s mind a general idea of just what cold insanity is, first. requires our taking him to the objective point of view where he can see himself under such conditions that he thinks, pos- sibly rightly, that he must be insane — which thought leaves him cold. This all has no foundation and is very silly, getting the reader nowhere, but so are the various phases of the things that we go through here at Swarthmore in advancing socially, shall we say, as we decline mentally. As the outsider ap- proaches the campus — for the outsider is in the best position to see things as they really appear to the orthodox mind — there are several surprises in store for him. Just for convenience ' s sake, we ' ll have him arrive around lunch time. Now one of our greatest social institutions around this place is what might be called cluttering up the hall, which generally occurs with excruciating exactness when the dining room doors open for meals. It is particularly amazing to find another phenomenon taking place in direct coincidence with this activity, and this is that everyone suddenly is in a tremendous hurry to go either east or west except an obdurate majority which insists upon staying rooted to the main drag regardless of those who wish to proceed. Although this friction con- tinues but for ten minutes or so, nevertheless it suc- ceeds in rousing the ire of at least a half dozen of the more irritable, crushing the weaker, and start- ling any outsider terribly. As Mr. Outsider opens the first set of swinging doors on the front of Parrish, only to be confronted with another and more complicated pair, he is filled with dismay at the sight of mortal combat choking the passageway before him. His first thought is to turn back before he is hit by a stray co-ed, but the thick ahead of him begins to thin out, and, seeing a fairly sane looking behemoth with a huge S looming under his chin he inquires in a civil tone. Evidently drinking Highland Dairy ' s Milk in the College dining room isn ' t sufficient for Bays and Pottinger. They ' re taking seconds between meals at the Cloisters ' edge. Highland Dairy Products Co. Chester, Pa. Chester 2-2412 ihe MAROT FLOWER SHOP JOHN SPENCER, INC. Artistic Corsages a Special ty 315 DICKINSON AVENUE CHESTER, PA. • PRINTERS TO THE PHOENIX SWARTHMORE 220. It took Sally McLelland just 30 minutes to ride the bus from College to 69th St. on one of Aronomink ' s latest numbers. Swarthmore students can save money by buying 5 cent single fare tickets at the Sup ' t ' s. office. And schedules have been speeded up. Buses leave Swarthmore at 21 and 51 min- utes after the hour, and run every 15 minutes between 6:21 and 9:21 A. M. and 4:21 and 7:21 P. M. Aronomink Transportdtion Compdny How do I find so-and-so? The behemoth doesn ' t know (but then he doesn ' t know anything much anyhow), and turns to another person with a dif- ferent color S on a different color chest, who is kicking dead faculty members to the side to clear the way for the next lunch rush, and who says a few words in a low tone, does not excuse himself, lumbers away, and can be heard in the distance grumbling over some popular tune that he is just beginning to get under control. The second man with the letter seems to know a little more and tells Mr. Outsider about the telephone system, pointing out that so-and-so usually has a class that period. Gleaning that so-and-so will be near the edge of the next rush, Mr. Outsider thanks the second man with the letter, but discovers that it is really a third man with a letter who has just come out of a third set of swinging doors accompanied by several more men with all sorts of letters, some backwards, and others on their backs. Completely bewildered, and somewhat annoyed, Mr. O. decides to take a turn about the grounds (and the reader says oh-oh, for he knows that Mr. O will soon come upon a phase of one of the more accomplished social activities at Swarthmore — namely, anything you want to call it). Having decided upon this course of action, he whips down the hallway to the West end of Parrish, and spying a water bubbler, makes for it to quench. his thirst. He suddenly jumps ten feet into the air, says Pardon me! and approaches the bubbler with averted eyes, and by a more circuitous route. After he has reached the door at the end of the hall, he has recovered his rational train of thought and realizes that he has just come upon a shining ex- ample of anything you wont to call it. The afternoon wears on — a stroll about the campus has netted four good anything you want to call its right out in the broad daylight and Mr. O takes on a knowing smile as he vainly tries to locate so-and-so. Another vain attempt to extricate from the late-lunch rush the person for whom Mr. O was searching, has left him a bit the worse for wear, but he makes his cheerful way on crutches and the social life at Swarthmore unfolds before him its 221 Learn This One Great Lesson: Wherever you go, you will need to wear clothes. The world judges you FIRST by your appearance. Instead of buying clothes because you have to have them . . . buy them for the GOOD they can do you. Reed ' s Good Clothes have proved the economy of quality for 113 years. They give you style, ease, distinction, and GENUINE ECONOMY! DRESS UP . . . RIGHT ... AT REED ' S. Jacob Reed ' s Sons Men ' s Quality Apparel Since 1S24 1424-1426 Chestnut Street PHI I. A DELPHI. H. D. REESE. Inc. MEATS POULTRY BUTTER BIRDSEYE FROSTED FOODS 1208 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Spruce 5811 Race 2431 COVERS AND BINDING OF THE 1938 HALCYON Manufactured by NATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, PA. manifold expression. As twilight falls Mr. O feels that he has the situation pretty well sized up. All the social system consists of around here, he thinks, is two riots each day at about eleven and twelve in the morning, and just sitting about in the afternoon doing anything you want to call it. But Mr. O has reckoned without Tuesday Nite Collections — in short, without the most violent and at the same time most expressive social function that we have. To obtain access to the dining-room around six for dinner is somewhat less of a feat, and Mr. O, who has at last found so-and-so, manages to get his business out of the way as well as so-and-so, but has a little more trouble with the dinner. This, too, he finally accomplishes despite the barrage of bread pellets that is constantly whining overhead, and he leaves the dining-room as several plates are shied at some woman dressed in black. He is re- lieved to see that she ducks expertly, however, and, absently pensive, he leaves the dining-room and enters a room with a bunch of couches in it. Here, at least, he murmurs to himself, anything you want to call it is in its simplest stages, and, confident to the last that he has the whole thing in a nut-shell, he wanders on in the general direction of music that seems to waft itself from above. Climbing a flight of stairs, his curiosity becoming stronger and strong- er, he opens still another set of swinging doors and staggers back several paces at the blast of sharps and flats that whirls about his ears — not to mention the hysteria that sweeps inexorably about in un- ending turmoil before his eyes. It is exactly seven- fifteen by his watch, and the holocaust is at its height. Hearing a voice at his shoulder mentioning coffee and then turning to watch its owner brave the whirling mass to achieve the other end of the room, he decides that he will see what his chances are for a cup of Java, and steps hesitantly out from the edge onto the floor. As he takes a few steps a couple of figures, stuck together like postage stamps in your wallet on a damp day, detach themselves or itself from the general crush to swoop about him and force him back to the edge again as a series If you really adore her you ' ll adorn her with a Messmer Masterpiece Sold Exclusively by WAYNE FRAZER 222 of astounding gyrations is accomplished. It is im- possible to try to evade these juggernauts by open- field running. They have an uncanny way of clos- ing in without the slightest warning. And to try a power play would be sheer suicide, so Mr. O des- perately sets his foot into the arena once again, determined to get his cup of grounds, and the blare miraculously ceases. With the blare, the motion also ceases and he can distinguish faces and dis- tinct figures out of the seething melee that had con- fronted him a moment before. Taking advantage of the lull, he squirms rapidly through the buzzing throng and has reached its very core when the blare commences with renewed vigor. With the blare begins a sudden mad chaos about Mr. O, the likes of which he has nev er seen in the past, and he almost loses his senses as he is pitched to and fro on the surface of the bubbling mass. After what seems to be an eternity he is suddenly belched forth into the arms of the coffee circle where the delicious aroma of steaming Java afflicts his nostrils, but where there are no cups just yet. A sweet young thing swoops upon him after several minutes, how- ever, with some murky water in a small piece of crockery, and Mr. O sinks into a window seat of blazing orange, and reflects. This, he remarks to himself, is an entirely new and different light upon the social situation at Swarthmore, and he must confess that it is extremely difficult to fathom. But while he is pondering over the new obstacle to his 223 Milden White INCORPORATED OVER 60 YEARS IN BUSINESS 45 PEOPLE AT YOUR SERVICE Poultry, Game, Butter, Eggs and All Sea Foods 1212 Filbert Street PHILADELPHIA Colonial Old Method A Roofing Tin of unexcelled quality, pro- duced by experts to uphold the integrity of that most satisfactory of all roofs — the Good Tin Roof CONSULT YOUR ROOFER Fdble Compdny, Inc. PHILADELPHIA TROY LAUNDRY THE COLLEGE LAUNDRY Chester 6238 Sanderson says: Next to myself, I like my b. v. d. ' s when they ' re laun- dered by Troy. FELIX SPATOLA SONS Fruit and Vegetables SINCE 1880 We have maintained a record for best quality and service. Supplying Hotels, Clubs, Restaurants, Hospitals and Institutions. READING TERMINAL MARKET Keystone: Race 7351, 7352, 7353 Bell: Walnut 5600 line of reasoning, there is a sudden surging for the two very small doors of entrance and exit to the room as the blare ceases for good and the last notes fall limply to the floor. The huge arena is vacated and a colored man in a white coat rolls up his sleeves to begin the task of cleaning up broken china, mangled limbs, and the usual two or three bodies which have lost their identity entirely. Mr. O is extremely broad-minded, but Tuesday Nite Col- lection is just a little too much for him to under- stand, and so he walks down the steps to the main hall once more, permitting himself to curse softly and not above a murmur. Within several minutes even the main hall is vacated but for a few who are to be seen in the halls at all times anyhow, and Mr. O has once more gained control of his faculties, however warped they may be by now; but he realizes with a tremor that it took him fully ten minutes or more this time to get back to normal, and a vague apprehension toys with him as he approaches one of the old stand- bys, who stands by the splintered and scarred din- ing-room door. He discovers that everyone has either gone to a place called the druggie or to any- thing you want to call it (this last being extremely consoling to Mr. O, for this is understandable and GENERAL INSURANCE REAL ESTATE NOTARY PUBLIC EDWARD L. NOYES Swarthmore, Pa. 13 So. Chester Road Sw. 114 gives him new courage). The stand-by points out the way to the druggie, warning Mr. O to avoid a place known as the Libe which is near the route and which is sure death by slow torture if one be- comes entangled in its tentacles; and our visitor commences his tortuous journey across the campus towards the town and civilization, carefully picking his way among the couples that are engaged in anything you want to call it. As Mr. O approaches the druggie he feels a premonition that all is not right. The gruelling or- deals that he has been through in the past after- noon and evening have told severely upon his physical constitution and there are rumors of squir- rels in his penthouse, but he resolutely sets his foot inside the door and shoulders his body painfully into a throbbing mass of humanity that is gorging itself on toasted cinnamon buns, sodden with butter, and various poisonous beverages which they draw into their faces avidly until they have reached the bottom of the container from which they are drink- ing. At this point a horrible sucking sound gives forth for several seconds in blood-curdling starkness. Mr. O looks wildly about him for something real to which to cling, his eyes stinging from the clouds of blue smoke that are rolling over the room from a series of little booths. In a last attempt to grasp at reality, Mr. O desperately remembers that he is in a drug store and whirls about towards the soda fountain where three figures in white are dashing to and fro punching buttons, pulling levers, squirting, squeezing, spreading; he calls hoarsely for a small coke, there is a snapping sound as of a lock break- ing as the squirrels take over his penthouse, and, with a burst of hysterical laughter, Mr. O screams: SOCIAL SYSTEM! and passes out cold— and we realize that this was social life at Swarthmore as seen from the point of view of cold insanity. FRANK V. WARREN, Inc. Philadelphia, Pa. 225 GENERAL ELECTRIC SUPPLY CORPORATION 429 N. Seventh St. Philadelphia, Pa. Electrical Supplies and Electrical Appliances LAUNDRY DELIVERED TO YOUR DOOR THE NEW V AY LAUNDRY CO. offers you The Lowest Prices in College Collections Twice a Week EFFICIENT SERVICE Agents CAROL HOGELAND PAT GRAVES BOB ROCKWOOD JIM WILSON New Way Laundry Company PHILADELPHIA Baring 6164 BERWIND ' S EUREKA COAL RAIL - CARGO - BUNKERING The Berwind-White Coal Mining Co, PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK 226 When an unstoppable missile hits an immovable object, a lot of rather funny things are generally supposed to happen. For instance, if a morbid love of women ' s dorms should ever have to conflict with other more ob- vious desires or Laphan. Or if a mania for pubs Should outweigh other interests of Stubbs. Or if a man with a weak stomach, direly Should be forced into the co mpany of Brierley. But the funny things that would happen under such a set of circumstances Are as nothing when compared with an episode which invariably entrances All Swarthmore intelligensia. There was a coed once, pretty, as men see her. Truly a butterfly Social, who ' d cut her eye Teeth to get just that sort of an atmosphere which as a social light she felt she needed A long string of men who ' d been carefully seeded. This was her goal, and she had succeeded in achieving it very nicely By sharpening her weapons till they wounded fatally and also precisely. And then all of a sudden this unstoppable, relent- less, bloodthirsty coed, who would just as soon spiritually beat a man black and blue. Fell for a member of the A. S. U., Earnest, immovable, seedy. And weedy. She fell way from the top with a hard bump, and then decided that she would teach him to play bridge And make him otherwise socially minded in order to tunnel the ridge Between them. But he tunneled instead and ulti- mately reached his goal And gave her a soul. So then she joined in earnest, and talked about steel and peace, and frequented the activities lodge after lunches (late). And ate at mixed tables with people like Todd, and Heineman, and Pettet, and Sillars, and such ar- tistic innovations of Speight. And took to wearing shoddy shoes like those of the proletariat. And became worked up over the unhappiness of mankind, and wary at WHAT YOU COI RIGHT 1932 by INS. CO. OF NORTH AMERICA End further risks . . . This is no time for.tiie average man to gamble — no time for him to take further risks with his possessions. His duty, to himself and his family now is to protect what he has against all hazards. Property Insurance in a sound company is the best means of protection against loss through fire, windstorm, explosion, and similar perils. Your agent can show you how economically he can protect you in the 145- year-old Insurance Com- pany of North America INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA 1600 ARCH STREET PHILADELPHIA Typical Swarthmore habit — a quartet of Gourmets packing away the hamburgers at HARRY ' S in Springfield, N. E. corner Baltimore Pike at the traffic light Harry delivers them if your order amounts to a dollar. Just Telephone Swarthmore 655 The homes of bourgeoisie and parlor pinks, And gave up collecting uncollectable freshman dinks As something frivolous and light. She had it right. And when she ultimately married a bourgeois pro- fessor of psychology She wrote the union — her union — an apology. There is no moral to this story except that it shows that an unstoppable object can be stopped If properly bopped. So that maybe some day Roosy will stop getting new men. And will be content with a few men. Or Caldwell-Johnson Incorporated will get into Par- rish before 12:30 has struck, With luck. Or the dean will relapse and accept an athletic specimen. Though I confess a man With biceps would be dangerous, as far as Frances ' end of the situation is concerned. Or maybe some of Thatcher ' s brood will have learned Something about the social sciences or the human- ities. Or David Olds will outgrow his sublimated vanities. Or Goddard will become less spiwwitual, Anderson softer, and Malin more lenient. Which would be convenient. Or Buck Ball will marry a girl who has no family to speak of. And will reek of The lower middle classes. Or Kermit Gordon will become unbusinesslike and frantic. Or Schwartz will do something which will put him into a new and better campus comment, gigantic. In fact we are convinced that almost anything could happen to almost anybody if you just wait long enough. It ' s tough. 228 CHESTER ' S FASHION CORNER Edgmont Ave. — Seventh and Welsh Sts. WHERE DELAWARE COUNTY SHOPS WITH CONFIDENCE c tlffllHlli WALTER T. KARCHER r (GUMP) RgAL ESTATE AND 817 East Chelten Avenue LIVINGSTON SMITH Germantown, Phila., Pa. Victor 3300 ARCHITECTS • 1520 LOCUST S TREET, PHILADET PHIA A Complete Insurance Brokerage Service All T ypes Except Life 229 The McLdin Lines McLAIN LINE, INC. c : : ' -O McLAIN MARINE CORPORATION MARINE TRANSPORTATION HARBOR INLAND OCEAN Coal freighting on New York Harbor and tributary waters General and bulk cargoes carried on New York State Canals to Buffalo and for transshipment beyond. Bulk cargo service to West Indies and Europe FOR truckin ' and rollin ' and good taste in floozies, Our recommendation ' s the flat-footed smoothies, The magneto-center of feminine sighs. Epitomized, inherent in the PHI SNAPPY TIES. There is an adonis named Palmer Than which we have seen many calmer; He behaves like a crowd With its head in a cloud. And he never will grow any sol ' mner. Buck Ball Isn ' t small But then again He isn ' t tall. Prentice has everything But swing. Bro. Plecky found life quite a blur, up Till a freshman created a stir-up; She ' s sailing in June, And that ' s pretty soon. So now he is going to Europe. Sanderson, a-wildely-spreeing, Met his Waterloo On Alligator Rock in Crum (Looking at the view) Leaning over (for some reason) He lost his grip and rolled Forty feet into our vernal Green and muddy wold. 230 ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES AND ROOM GADGETS Supplee ' s Hardware Store SWARTHMORE, PA. Joey Brown Can go to town On hopping. When he starts to dance There is no chance Of stopping Him. Nor is there any chance For anyone else to dance. FOR the strong, silent type who habituate Hicks And fellows from farms and the outlying sticks, We beg you regardez that campus enigma. The Swarthmoric Chapter of old KAPPA SWIG-MA. A lazy young loafer called Ham Has hair weighing one milligram; After a shearing You see quite a clearing Which proves there ' s a head there, by damn! We wonder if Dorriss Would floor us Or bore us. Pottinger, by being bigger. Has become a campus figger. We should think that Sleepy Jim Would find the world had favored him With daylight saving ' s system. Because when autumn comes again Things are an hour slower then And he can keep up with ' em. W. C. Ayres Company 1929 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia CHINA - GLASS - SILVER Liberal Discount to All Students of Swarthmore CHARTER A BUS AND GO TOGETHER PENNSYLVANIA GREYHOUND SAFE ECONOMICAL DEPENDABLE 231 Fine Photographs at Fair Prices IF YOUR PHOTOGRAPH APPEARS IN THIS BOOK, YOU ARE URGED TO SEND US YOUR ORDER FOR ADDITIONAL PORTRAITS NOW ... AT OUR SPECIAL SCHOOL RATES. Apeda Studio, Inc. 212 West 48th Street New York City Tel. Chickering 4-3960 232 THE STAFF RECOMMENDS FOR QUALITY OF WORKMANSHIP AND RELIABILITY Apedd Studio, Inc. OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS FOR THE 1938 HALCYON 233 FOR a gang that ' s cohesive as old-fashioned glue, And even eats collective breakfasts d la A. S. U. You ' ll see them in rain and in sunshiny weatha, The famous Phi chapter of PHI STICK-TOGETHA. It ' s practically everyone ' s knowledge That Brown is the perfect Joe College. Elongated David Is h ey-hey behaved And verily near to the brawl-edge. Chester Hospital 25 Private Rooms 13 Clinics Capacity 250 beds The Largest and Most Completely Equipped Hospital between Philadelphia and Wilmington Polly- Golly! Lyle Gill comes from Nebraska. If there is anything you want to know about Ne- braska Just aska Lyle. Founded 1865 Seventy-second Year BUSINESS TRAINING Courses that offer thorough preparation for young men and women who intend to make business a career. Summer session of six weeks be- gins July 6. Fall term, Sept. 7. PIERCE SCHOOL 1 422 WEST PiNE STREET PHILADELPHIA Mawhinney is a great big guy With yellow hair and sleepy eye. He also waits on table As well as he is able. Singiser Is wiser Than he used to be. Most Seniors are. The Delaware, Lackawanna Western Coal Co. 120 BROADWAY NEW YORK 234 EURO PA — ' Modern Theatre x . i2;k_4 •iKi£-f ' M Up Where Swarthmore students go to see the finest products, American and foreign, of the cinematic art. The Europa is the only theatre in the Philadelphia area that specializes in artistic and distinctive films. 16th and Market Streets Philadelphia THE scholar, the hero, the smoothie combined, The happY median we all have in mind Cerebro-socio-perfecto innata Just ask any member of PHI MELTA DATA There is a young Phi Delt named Lyon Who doesn ' t look bad with a tie on; He ' ll pass when he ' s dressed up. But when he is messed up. He ' s not what you can rest your eye on. The noble young brother John C. Is all that a sophomore should be: He can dance a la fashion. His manner is smashin ' . But after all, what ' s it to me? There goes Mason Haire. Where? There. Mukerji is a handsome gent; His time is of the kind that ' s spent. There ' s something that you ' ve got to hand him.: Not many people understand him. Getting along with Dimpfl Is comparatively simpfl. To see George Forsythe dipping Is positively gripping. 235 A Delightful Place to Meet Your Friends C ?3 CO-ED BEAUTY SALON 409 Swarthmore Ave. Swar. 595 BRIGGS Headquarters for Spring and Summer T. Frank Mc Call ' s Sons Sports Goods Distributors of SCOTT TISSUES c to Swarthmore dollege Outfitters to Swarthmore Varsity Teams CHESTER, PA. c ?o Phone: Chester 9245 CHESTER PENNSYLVANIA for flavor and downright goodness, you just cant beat ABBOTTS the standard of fine quality in ICE CREAM 236 FOR muscle and noise and chaotic t.p. ' s And lots (?) of gray matter and afternoon teas, And occasional guzzles for auld lang syne It ' s the beer bottle brothers of D USA-LINE. Gather round us, children, while we tell a story Of a dirty trick the D U ' s played one night: Oh, the D U ' s are a nice team — They stole the flatties ' ice cream And things between them since ain ' t been just right. Sometimes Perkins Reminds us of gherkins (Sweet ones, Dudley dear) 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 Joseph ' s Barber Shop WHERE ALL SWARTHMORE COLLEGE MEN MEET 14 PARK AVENUE Scalp Treatment A Specialty PAINTS of Quality M. BUTEN SONS 6926 MARKET STREET 1834 SOUTH STREET 33 N. SEVENTH STREET 56 1 7- 1 9 N. BROAD STREET 5711 GERM ANTO WN AVE. PHILADELPHIA IN CHESTER, PA.— 624 EDGMONT AVENUE If We Say It ' s Good— It Is Good m M 237 Of all the Swarthmore Delta U ' s, If we were asked, We ' d surely choose Lafore and Budd As the boys Distinguished for circumference And avoirdupois. Longshore is a model lad Always good and never bad. (That ' s tradition; We are wishin ' That the real truth could be had.) Anfinsen, And then What? CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE BROUN CALDWELL GRINNELL PALMER TEMPLE WOOLLCOTT TIME AND ENERGY Stop in at MARTEL ' S for PARTY FOODS CANDY COOKIES PASTRY GINGERALE FRESH FRUITS Quality without Extravagance Swarthmore 2100 VAN HORN SON, Inc. ESTABLISHED 1852 THEATRICAL COSTUMERS COSTUMERS TO THE LEADING SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES OF AMERICA Costumes, Wigs and Accessories to rent for every purpose S. E. Cor. 12th and Chestnut Streets Philadelphia, Pa. ROLLIN W. VAN HORN, President LAST MINUTE CONTRIBUTION of the FEATURE EDITOR ADVERTISING MANAGER (We just couldn ' t bring ourselves to leave this space empty.) 238 immfHeHiiHdtfUukiMs Translating the Year Book editor ' s ideas into a book of beauty and ever-increas ing interest requires the services of a highly skilled printing organization, of which Lyon Armor, Inc., is an outstanding example. Here are craftsmen who special- ize in Year Book work; who this year are producing 44 Annuals, for institutions in five states. Yet they regard each book as a separate challenge of their artistry, whether as type-setters, proof-readers, make-up experts or press men. They are aided by complete, modern equipment, much of it designed especially for Year Book work. The ingenious spray gun, shown in foreground, prevents ink smears as your pages speed through the press. iaBuUdkeui lieo Beok We ' ve installed the latest spray gun equip- ment to prevent annoying offsetting ; a new line up table to insure perfect page margins; and many other devices to make your Year Book better. These are recent additions to our already unusual facilities, including a battery of linotype machines, and press equipment for producing several books at once. Our wide type assorlmenl, with both domestic and foreign faces, permits distinctive effects to suit the tastes of all editors. — If you ' re planning a Year Book, call Walnut 0234 and let us tell you the full story of Lyon Armor ' s complete, dependable service. Skilled printers, with such equipment as this new make-up table, assure you of a book of which you may be proud. LYON ARMOR INCORPORATED 147 N. Tenth St., Philadelphia 239 Index to Advertisers ABBOTTS DAIRIES, INC 236 APEDA STUDIO 232, 233 ARONOMINK TRANSPORTATION CO 221 W. C. AYRES COMPANY 231 BERWIND-WHITE COAL CO 226 THE COLLEGE BOOKSTORE 213 BONWIT TELLER 212 THOMAS L. BRIGGS 236 M BUTEN SONS 237 CHESTER HOSPITAL 234 CO-ED BEAUTY SALON 236 DELAWARE, LACKAWANNA WESTERN COAL CO 234 THE EUROPA THEATRE 235 FABLE CO., INC 224 FRANK SEDER 217 GENERAL ELECTRIC SUPPLY CORP 226 GREYHOUND BUS COMPANY 231 GUMP, REAL ESTATE 229 HARRY ' S 228 HIGHLAND DAIRY COMPANY 220 INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA 227 JOSEPH ' S BARBER SHOP 237 KARCHER SMITH 229 LYON ARMOR, INC 239 McARDLE COONEY, INC 237 T. FRANK McCALL ' S SONS 236 MacLAIN LINE, INC 230 MAJESTIC ENGRAVING COMPANY 218 THE MAROT FLOWER SHOP 220 MARTEL ' S 238 MEDIA INN 218 MESSMER, FLORISTS 222 MICHAEL ' S COLLEGE PHARMACY 214 MILDEN WHITE 224 RODNEY MILLS, PHARMACY 216 NATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY 222 NEW WAY LAUNDRY COMPANY 226 NOYES, INSURANCE 225 THE PHOENIX 219 THE PIERCE SCHOOL 234 JACOB REED ' S SONS 222 H. D. REESE, INC 222 THEO. F. SIEFERT 215 FELIX SPATOLA 224 SKYTOP CLUB 218 SPEARE ' S DEPARTMENT STORE 229 JOHN SPENCER, INC 220 N. WALTER SUPPLEE 231 TROY LAUNDRY COMPANY 224 VAN HORN SON 238 FRANK V. WARREN COMPANY 225 240 The Faculty FRANK AYDELOTTE, B.Litl,, LL.D., President 324 Cedar Lane FRANCES B. BLANSHARD, M.A., Dean oi Women 513 Ogden Ave. HAROLD E. B. SPEIGHT, M.A., Dean of Men 603 Elm Ave. JOHN ANTHONY MILLER, Ph.D., Director of Sproul Observatory and Research Professor Emeritus of Astronomy Wallingford WILLIAM ISAAC HULL, Ph.D., F.R. Hist. S., Howard M. Jenkins Research Professor of Quaker History and Librarian of Friends Historical Library 504 Walnut Lane JESSE HERMAN HOLMES, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus cf Philosophy ' y lan ISABELLE BRONK, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of the i-rencn Lan- guage and Literature 317 N. Chester Road GELLERT ALLEMAN, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Chemistry, Wallingford JOHN RUSSELL HAYES, LL.B., Librarian Emeritus of Friends Historical Library 517 Elm Ave. HAROLD CLARKE GODDARD, Ph.D., Alexander Griswold Cum- mins Professor of English 3 Whittier Place ROBERT CLARKSON BROOKS, Ph.D., Joseph Wharton Professor of Political Science 410 Sv arlhmore Ave. CLARA PRICE NEWPORT, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of the German Language and Literature - Germany HENRIETTA JOSEPHINE MEETEER, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Greek and Latin 315 Cedar Lane ALFRED MANSFIELD BROOKS, A.M., Professcr of Fine Arts, 513 Elm Ave. SAMUEL COPELAND PALMER, Ph.D., Professor of Botany, 612 Ogden Ave. EVERETT L. HUNT, M.A., Professor of English 604 Elm Ave. HENRY JERMAIN MAUDE CREIGHTON, M.A., D.Sc, Professor of Chemistry 515 Elm Ave. •ETHEL HAMPSON BREWSTER, Ph.D., Professor of Greek and Latin West House ARNOLD DRESD.EN, Ph.D., Edv ard H. Magill Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 606 Elm Ave. ROSS W. MARRIOTT, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 213 Lafayette Ave. CHARLES B. SHAW, M.A., Librarian 5 Whittier Place BRAND BLANSHARD, Ph.D., Professor of Philosophy, 513 Ogden Ave. L. R. SHERO. Ph.D., Professor of Greek 651 N. Chester Road WINTHROP R. WRIGHT, Ph.D., Morris L. Clothier Professor of Physics 4 Whittier Place HERBERT F. FRASER, M.A., F.R. Econ. S., Professor of Economics, Wallingford Hills SCOTT B. LILLY, B.S., C.E., Professor of Civil Engineerino, 600 Elm Ave. PHILIP MARSHALL HICKS, Ph.D., Professor of English, 525 Elm Ave. FREDERICK J. MANNING, Ph.D., Isaac H. Clothier Professor of History 215 Roberts Road, Bryn Mawr CLAIR WILCOX, Ph.D., Professor of Economics 510 Ogden Ave. EDWARD H. COX, M.A., D.Sc, Professor of Chemistry, 8 Whittier Place ROBERT ERNEST SPILLER, Ph.D., Professor of English, 6 Whittier Place tEDITH PHILIPS, D.U.P., Susan W. Lippincott Professor of French, 1 Whittier Place NORMAN L. TORREY, Ph.D., Professor of French .... 521 Urn Ave. WOLFGANG KOHLER, Ph.D., Visiting Professor of Psychology, 501 Walnut Lane A. D. WINSPEAR, A.B., M.A., Acting Professor of Greek and Latin West House •CHARLES GARRETT THATCHER, M.E., Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering 613 Ogden Ave. JOHN HIMES PITMAN, A.M., Associate Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy 328 Vassal Ave. HEINRICH BRINKMAN, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Mathematics, 405 Walnut Lane MARY ALBERTSON, Ph.D., Associate Professor of History, 317 N. Chester Road MILAN W. GARRETT, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Physics, 102 Dartmouth Ave. TROYER STEELE ANDERSON, Ph.D., Associate Professor of History 2 Whittier Place Absent on leave, 1936-37. t Absent on leave, second semester, 1936-37. 241 MARK MacINTOSH, M.A., Associate Professoi of Physical Educa- tion and Director of Athletics for Men 612 Ogden Ave. HOWARD MALCOLM JENKINS, E.E., Assistant Professor of Elec- trical Engineering West House •ANDREW SIMPSON, M.S., Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering College Campus MICHEL KOVALENKO, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy Wallingford Hills +DUNCAN GRAHAM FOSTER, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry 621 MagiU Road ALFRED I SWANN, M.A., Assistant Professor and Director of Music ' 21 Oberlin Ave. LEON WENCELIUS, L. es L., L.Th., Th.D., Assistant Professor of- French 133 Ogden Ave. KARL REUNING, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of German, 47 Amherst Ave. TOWNSEND SCUDDER, 3d, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English, 415 Thayer Road WALTER I. SCOTT, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Zoology, 504 Swarthmore Ave. LYDIA BAER, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of German. .510 Elm Ave. • J ROLAND PENNOCK, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Political Science 302 N. Chester Road ROBERT K. ENDERS, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Zoology, Cunningham House R OBERT DUNN, B.S., Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Men Carver Hall, Oxford Ave and Harrison St., Frankford ROBERT B. MacLEOD, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Psychology and Education 615 N. Chester Road VIRGINIA RATH, M.A., Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Women 519 Walnut Lane JOHN W. NASON, M.A., Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Rose Valley PATRICK MURPHY MALIN, B.S. in Econ., Assistant Professor of Economics 8 Whittier Place MARCEL J. BRUN, L. es L., Th.D., Assistant Professor of French, 403 Walnut Lane W. R. GAEDE, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of German, 423 Harvard Ave. GEORGE B. THOM, M.S., Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engi- neering 315 Harvard Ave. WALTER B. KEIGHTON, Jr., Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chem- istry 530 Riverview Ave. FRANK R. KILLE, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Zoology, 406 Haverford Place MERCEDES C. IRIBAS, M.A., Instructor in Spanish, State and Runnymede, Lansdov ne GEORGE A. BOURDELAIS, Instructor in Engineering, Wallingford Hills FREDRIC S. KLEES, A.B., Instructor in English Wharton Hall ETHEL STILZ, M.A., Instructor in Fine Arts Parrish Hall VIRGINIA BROWN GREER, A.B., Instructor in Physical Education for Women Rose Valley MAY E. PARRY, A.B., B.S., Instructor in Physical Education for Women 541 Pelham Road, Mt. Airy AVERY F. BLAKE, A.B., Instructor in Physical Education for Men, 101 Sylvan Avenue, Rutledge ELIZABETH COX WRIGHT, Ph.D., Instructor in English Moylan ORREN MOHLER, Ph.D., Instructor in Astronomy 511 Walnut Lane RUTH McCLUNG JONES, A.B., Instructor in Botany and Zoology, Bobbin Mill Road, Media MAURICE MANDELBAUM, M.A., Ph.D., Instructor in Philosophy, 519 Walnut Lane JOHN S. HALL, Ph.D., Instructor in Astronomy 313 Park Ave. EDWIN B. NEWMAN, Ph.D., Instructor in Psychology, Wharton Hall SAMUEL T. CARPENTER, B.C.E., C.E., Instructor in Civil Engi- neering 608 N. Chester Road JOHN D. McCRUMM, M.S., Instructor in Electrical Engineering, Wharton Hall E. J. FAULKNER, Instructor in Physical Education for Men, 4025 Huey Ave., Drexel Hill tFRANCES REINHOLD, A.B., Instructor in Political Science, 273 S. Cecil St., Philadelphia RAYMOND RUBINOW, M.A., Instructor in Economics, 435 Riverviev Ave. MARJORIE LAWSON, Ph.D., Instructor in German, 403 Walnut Lane KENNETH J. TRIGGER, M.S., Instructor in Mechanical Engineering, 313 Harvard Ave. S. W. JOHNSON, Part-time Instructor in Accounting Amherst Ave. MARGUERITE WENCELIUS, M.A., Part-time Instructor in French, 133 Ogden Ave. NORRIS JONES, A.B., Part-time Instructor in Scientific Drawing, Bobbin Mill Road, Media SYLVIA GELMI FOREST, M.A., Part-time Instructor in Italian. 4726 Hazel Ave., Philadelphia ELIZABETH H. BROOKS, A.B., Tutor in Modern Languages, 410 Swarthmore Ave. ROY W. DELAPLAINE, A.B., Assistant in Astronomy, 106 Cornell Ave. CHARLES P. LARKIN, A.B., LL.B., Assistant in Physical Education for Men c o Cambridge Trust Co., Chester ALBERT M. BARRON, Assistant in Physical Education for Men, 4244 Old York Road, Philadelphia WILLIS J. STETSON, A.B., Assistant in Physical Education for Men 1002 Prospect Ave., Melrose Park BEATRICE BEACH MacLEOD, A.B.. M.F.A., Assistant in English, 615 N. Chester Road D. OWEN STEPHENS, Assistant in Fine Arts Rose Valley MARY FAIRBANKS, A.B., Assistant in Political Science, 311 Park Ave. EMMA MICHAEL REYNOLDS, A.B., Assistant in Physical Educa- tion for Women 300 Park Ave. C. BROOKE WORTH, A.B., M.D., Assistant in Zoology, 602 Elm Ave. HANS WALLACH, Ph.D., Assistant in Psychology, Men ' s Dormitories, S. Chester Road WILLIAM F. LUTZ, A.B., Assistant in Physical Education for Men 612 Ogden Ave. HANS RADEMACHER, Ph.D., Exchange Professor of Mathematics, 519 Walnut Lane ' EDITH M. EVERETT, M.A., Lecturer in Education, White-Williams Foundation, 21st St. at Parkway, Philadelphia LOUIS N. ROBINSON, Ph.D., Lecturer in Economics, 411 College Ave. JOSEPHINE ADAMS, A.B., Lecturer in Fine Arts, 500 N. Chester Road JAMES MULHERN, Ph.D., Lecturer in Education, 4518 Chestnut St., Philadelphia LAUREN H. SMITH, M.D., Lecturer in Psychology, 111 N. 49th St., Philadelphia THOMAS H. JOHNSON, Ph.D., Lecturer in Electrical Engineering, 621 MagiU Road GERTRUDE GILMORE LAFORE, M.A., Lecturer in Education, 2143 Locust St., Philadelphia ttM. H. JACOBS, M.D., Lecturer in Physiology R.D. 2, Media ttW. BROOKE GRAVES, A.B., A.M., Lecturer in Political Science, 48 Whitemarsh Road, Merion Golf Heights DOROTHY L. ASHTON, A.B., M.D., Physician for Women and Lecturer in Hygiene 502 Cedar Lane FRANKLIN S. GILLESPIE, A.B., M.D., Physician for Men and Lecturer in Hygiene Harvard Ave. and Chester Road Part-time leave, 1936-37. • Absent on leave, 1936-37. t Absent on second semester leave, 1936-37. t Part-time leave, first semester, 1936-37. ■Absent on leave, 1936-37. ttAAppointed for the first semester, 1936-37. 242 Students, UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS ABRAMS, JEAN CAROLINE, ' 40 Fr3nch 60 Walker A.vi., Bradford, Po. ACKERMAN, RUTH HARRIET, ' 39 Psychology 404 Ycile Ave,, Morton, Pa. ADAMS, HAROLD ARMSTRONG, ' 40 Physics 5355 Webster St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1 Q ' R- ' V ADAMSON, WILLIAM COLBERT, ' 40 Zoology ■■' - ' ' ■• 706 Hawthorne Ave., So. Milwaukee, Wis. ALBEN, JANE SHIRLEY, ' 37 Psychology 332 Carnegie Place, Pittsburgh, Pa. ALBERTSON, RAYMOND CADWALLADER, ' 39 Westbury, II. 7. ALEXANDER, JOSEPHINE LOUISE, ' 39 English 1934 Kenyon St., N. W., Washington, D. C. ALFORD, NEWELL GILDER, Jr., ' 40 Chemistry 314 So. Homewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. ANDERSON, JAMES LEWIS, ' 38 English 56 Sunset Road, Newark, Dsl. ANDRUS, RACHEL LUCILLE, ' 40 150 Jackson Ave., Bradford, Pa. ANFINSEN, CHRISTIAN B., Jr., ' 37 Chemistry ' 1013 Lindale Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. ANGELL, RICHARD BRADSHAW, ' 40 Economics 59 Walbrooks Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. ASH, ALFRED FRANK, ' 38 Mathematics 25 Claremont Ave., New York, N. Y. ASHELMAN, SAMUEL F., Jr., ' 37 Economics 130 Pike St., Port Carbon, Pa. ATKINSON, JOHN HOPKINS, ' 40 Engineering 210 S. Washington Ave., Moorestown, N. J. AUSTIN, HENRY EXUM, ' 40 Zodlogy 323 Park Ave., Sworthmore, Pa. AUSTIN, ROBERT YORK, ' 40 Economics 1313 Park Ave., Rochester, N. Y. BAAR, DORIS, ' 40 642 Cherry St., Winnetka, 111. BAER, JOHN ELSON, ' 38 Chemistry 537 W. 121st St., New York, N. Y. BAKER, MARGARET ELIZABETH, ' 39 319 S. 44th St., Philadelphia, Pa. BALL, ROLAND CONKLE, Jr., ' 39 English 105 S. 15th St., Richmond, Ind. BALLARD, JOHN SCOTT, ' 37 Engineering Route No. 4, Rockville, Md. BARBOUR, ELEANOR KATHARINE, ' 40 110 S. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. BARCLAY, WALTER S., ' 38 - Pol Science 205 Lippincott Ave., Riverton, N. J. BARNEY, RHODA STANTON, ' 40 71 Soundview Dr., Greenvvrich, Conn. BARSALOW, FAITH HAMBLY, ' 38 Psychology 166 Whitmarsh Ave., Worcester, Mass. BARTON, ELEANOR BROWNING, ' 40 3610 Mass. Ave., Washington, D. C. BAUMGARDNER, JOHN BREHM, Jr., ' 40 Economics 50 Kenwood Road, Chombersburg, Pa. BAYS, MARJORIE, ' 39 2330 Ewing Ave., Evanston, 111. BEARDSLEY, JAMES HODGE, ' 38 EngHsh 12 Park Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. BECK, JOHN NEWLIN, ' 37 Engineering 2 Chestnut Ave., Norberth, Pa. BELKNAP, DOROTHY JEAN, ' 40 - - - 503 E. 2nd St., Port Clinton, Ohio BELKNAP, MARY ELLEN, ' 39 English 503 E. 2nd St., Port Qinton, Ohio BELL, C. ROBERT, ' 39 419 Yale Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. BENDER, JOSEPH CHRYSTAL, ' 39 Zoology 9 De Forest Ave., Summit, N. J. 243 BENDITT, EARL PHILIP, ' 37 Zoology 247 S. 63rd St., Philadelphia, Pa. BENKERT, ISABEL REST, ' 37 Mathematics 658 Feme Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. BENNETT, ALDEN STANLEY, ' 40 Economics 33 Fairmount St., Portland, Me. BEST, MARION, ' 37 French 115 Brightwood Ave., Westfield, N. J. BIGELOW, JOHN L., ' 39 History 179 N. Laurel St., Hazleton, Pa. BIGGERSTAFF, ELIZABETH FUNSTON, ' 38 English 444 E. Tulpehocken St., Philadelphia, Pa. BILL, MARGARET ANNE, ' 38 English. 32 Occom Ridge, Hanover, N. H. BINGER, BARBARA ANN, ' 40 . Broadway, Tarrytown, N. Y. BIRDSALL, CATHERINE SHERWOOD, ' 40 904 Vernon Ave., Glencoe, 111. BITTLE, HARRIET ELIZABETH, ' 38 PoL Science 102 Walnut St., Sellersville, Pa. BITTLE, JUNE HONSBERGER, ' 39 Cressona, Pa. BLACKMAN, JAMES HORTON, ' 39 PoL Science 1121 McCausland St., St. Louis, Mo. BLAI, BORIS, Jr., ' 38 Psychology 4th and High Aves., Melrose Park, Pa. BLOCH, ALAN EDWARD, ' 37 Chemistry Springhill Farm, Hillsdale, N. Y. BLOOD, GERTRUDE RENWICK, ' 39 25 Metcalf St., Worcester, Mass. BOND, VIRGINIA BEW, ' 38 English 103 S. Avolyn Ave., Ventnor City, N. J. BOOHER, EDWARD BAIR, ' 40 Economics 414 N. Main St., Greensburg, Pa.. BOOM, WILLEM E., ' 39 Economics 5 Joh. Verhulstlaan, Bussum, Holland BOOTH, MIRIAM RAVI, ' 38 History Old Bennington, Vermont BOOTH, NEWLIN T., Jr., ' 40 Economics New Castle, Delaware BOSE, LEWIS CROWDER, ' 39 Economics 2625 N. New Jersey St., Indianapohs, Ind. BOSS, EVA ELIZABETH, ' 39 English R. F. D. No. 4, Trenton, N. J. BOWERS, MARY CATHERINE, ' 39 16708 Kenyon Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio BOWKER, MILES WESLEY, ' 40 Engineering 209 Hillcrest Ave., Morristown, N. J. BOYER, VINCENT SAULL, ' 39 Engineering 6320 Lawnton Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. BRADEN, CHARLES G., ' 40 Economics 354 N. El Molino Ave., Pasadena, Cal. BRADEN, GEORGE DORSEY, ' 38 Pol Science 4400 E. 38th St., Indianapolis, Ind. BREARLEY, EMILY CAROLINE, ' 38 Psychology 57 Princeton Ave., Princeton, N. J. BRECKENRIDGE, JOHN HOLT, ' 38 Chemistry 137 7th Ave., N., Twin Falls, Idaho BRIGHT, ALFORD BAXTER, Jr., ' 40 English 308 Tasker St., Ridley Park, Pa. BROOKE, ELIZABETH ANNE, ' 37 History 233 Essex Ave., Narberth, Pa. BROOKS, BARBARA BICKFORD, ' 37 English 45 Orchard Road, Akron Ohio BROOKS, MARGARET BOLLES, ' 37 Pol. Science 14 Dewey Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. BROOMALL, THOMAS HAMILTON, ' 37 PoL Science 100 Moylan Ave., Moylan, Pa. BROOMELL, FRANK E., Jr., ' 40 Economics 6233 Winthrop Ave., Chicago, III. BROOMELL, G. LUPTON, Jr., ' 37 Engineering 429 W. Stafford St., Germantown, Pa. BROOMELL, MARY LOIS, ' 40 3423 Paxton Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio BROSIUS, ELIZABETH S., ' 38 English 61 Baldwick Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. BROUN, HEYWOOD HALE, ' 40 English R. F. D. No. 1, Stamford, Conn. BROWN, CORNELIA WOOTTON, ' 40 148 Dickerman Road, Newton Hlds., Mass. BROWN, DAVID, ' 38 Mathematics 40 5th Ave., New York, N. Y. BROWN, JOHN HUNN, ' 38 History Wyoming, Del. BROWN, JOHN ROBERT, ' 39 1107 E, Darby Read, Brookline, Pa. BRUNHOUSE, RICHARD STEWART, ' 38 Engineering 11 Mill Road, Brookline, Pa. BUCHANAN, PAUL HYDE, ' 39 5001 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. BUCKINGHAM, JAMES ELLIS, ' 37 History 252 E. Philadelphia St., York, Pa. BUDD, ISAAC WALTER, ' 39 Economics 1407 Baird Ave., Camden, N. J. BUDDINGTON, AUGUSTUS FRANK, ' 38 PoL Science 3049 E. Calhoun Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. BURGER, VIRGINIA, ' 39 Mathematics 2971 Brighton Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio BURKE, RICHARD LUDLAM, Jr., ' 40 Chemistry 915 Westdale Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. BURT, C. OLIVER, ' 37 Engineering 402 E. 20th St., Chester, Pa. BYRNE, HARRY CHARLES, Jr., ' 40 English 6366 Columbia Ave., Overbrook, Philadelphia, Pa. CALDWELL, CHARLES ADAMS, ' 38 English 909 Westdale Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. CALDWELL, MARY JANE, ' 40 Zoology Walden Woods, Cos Cob, Conn. CAMP, WILLIAM PERRINE, ' 40 English 11 Edge Hill Road, Abington, Pa. CAMPBELL, LAURA PHILINDA, ' 40 412 Hillside Ave., Orange, N. ]. CAMPBELL, WILLIAM CURTIS, ' 37 Economics 236 Haverford Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. CARDOZO, NANCY, ' 40 English 340 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. CARLSON, ARTHUR GUNNAR, ' 39 English 4914 Kingsessing Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. CARLSON, JOHN ROBERT, ' 38 Chemistry 114-80 179th St., St. Albans, N. Y. CARRIGAN, ALICE EUGENIA, ' 38 Economics 808 W. Broad St., Quakertown, Pa. CARROLL, WILLIAM ROBERT, ' 38 Zo61ogy 701 Delaware Ave., Urbana, IlL CARSWELL, JEAN ALISON, ' 37 Psychology 107 Bryn Mawr Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. CARSON, GEORGE CHIDESTER, ' 38 Engineering Swarthmore Apts., Swarthmore, Pa. CARTWRIGHT, DORWIN, ' 37 Psychology 3104 Rose Terrace, Chattanooga, Tenn. CARUTHERS, EDWARD GRAHAM, ' 39 Economics Ashland Ave., Secane, Pa. CHALMERS, KEITH WALDOW, ' 37 English 2536 3rd Ave., N. St. Petersburg, Fla. CHANEY, DAVID WEBB, ' 38 Chemistry South Chester Road, Swarthmore, Pa. CHAPMAN, BARBARA ANNE, ' 38 English Mahwah, New Jersey CHASE, MARGARET, ' 39 Pol. Science 85 Brookside Road, New Britain, Conn. 244 CHEESEMAN, MARGARET RUTH, ' 39 French 225 N. McKean St., Butler, Pa. CHILD, JOHN SOWDEN, ' 37 Economics 3126 Mid vale Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. CLARK, ARNOLD FRANKLIN, ' 37 Physics 2136 Van Hise Ave., Madison, Wis. CLARK, FRED EUGENE, ' 39 Economics 1602 Ashland Ave., Evanston, 111. CLARKE, JAMES HULME, ' 37 Economics 15 Meadow Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. CLARKE, MARGARET ANDREWS, ' 37 History 858 Myrtle Ave., Albany, N. Y. CLEMENT, THOMAS MALCOLM, ' 37 Engineering Lincoln University, Pa. CLEVENGER, LLEWELLYN MORRIS, 3rd, ' 40 Engineering Box No. 14, Wallingford, Pa. COFFIN, LOUIS FUSSELL, Jr., ' 39 Engineering 820 C St., SparroviTS Point, Md. COFFMAN, RAY HAROLD, ' 40 Economics 5648 Dorchester Ave., Chicago, 111. COLKET, CARL C, ' 38 Engineering 44 Monroe Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. COLLIER, GRETCHEN KOCH, ' 39 121 Beckwith Terrace, Rochester, N. Y. COLLINS, WHITNEY, ' 39 Engineering 7 Leighton Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. COOK, CATHERINE, ' 38 Psychology 8231 Woodbine Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio COOK, FERN MARJORIE, ' 39 French 12 S. Seventh St., Youngwood, Pa. COOPER. ANNE, ' 38 Psychobgy Langley Field, ' Virginia COOPER, BEN, ' 37 Engineering Marlton, N. J. COOPER, GEORGE BRINTON, ' 38 . PoL Science 4657 Tampa St., Philadelphia, Pa. COOPER, NANCY JANE, ' 38 . Psychology 4811 Jefferson St., Bellaire, Ohio COPPOCK, HAROLD WEST, ' 40 Physics Moylan, , Pa. CORLISS, MYRTLE ELIZABETH, ' 37 Psychology 131-29 Farmers Blvd., Springfield Cardans, N. Y. COTSWORTH, MARGUERITE CLAIRE, ' 37 Psychology 422 N. Scoville Ave., Oak Park, III. GOTTEN, JEANNE ELIZABETH, ' 40 76 Remsen St., Brooklyn, N. Y. COURANT, ERNST DAVID, ' 40 Chemistry 142 Calton Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. CRAIG, LAWRENCE CAREY, ' 39 Zoology 460 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. CREIGHTON, ROBERT HENRY JERMAIN, ' 39 Chemistry 515 Elm Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. CRESSON, SAMUEL LUKENS, ' 39 Zoology 527 Riverview Road, Swarthmore, Pa. CROSBY, HELEN PRATT, ' 40 Psychology 201 W. 16th St., New York, N. Y. CROTHERS, CHARLES HENRY, ' 40 Economics 146 Collingwood Ave., Detroit, Mich. CUNNINGHAM, SUZANNE, ' 40 45 Park Road, Maplswood, N. J. CUPITT, DOROTHY JUNE, ' 40 205 Sylvania Place, Westfield, N. J. CUPITT, MARGARET E., ' 37 English 205 Sylvania Place, Westfield, N. J. CURTIS-BROWN ANNE, ' 40 Zoology 27 Cheyne Walk, London, S. W. 3, England CUSTER, THOMAS GOODWIN, ' 40 Chemistry Avon Old Farms, Avon, Conn. DANA, HARRIET MERRILL, ' 38 Zoology 2031 Hill St., Ann Arbor, Mich. DAVENPORT, MARGARET V., ' 38 History 131 Du Bois Ave., Du Boia, Pa. DAVIDSON, DeWITT SANGER, ' 39 English 308 E. 79th St., New York, N. Y. DAVIS, JANE, ' 38 English 229 Elm St., New Rochelle, N. Y. DAVIS, JEAN KNOX, ' 39 2215 Delamero Dr., CleveVj . , DEAN, CHARLOTTE, ' 39 Economics 236-20 Warwick Ave., Douglaston. L. I., N. Y. DEARDORFF, SARAH JANE, ' 38 English 743 S. George S ' ,, York, Pa. DEKNATEL, MARGARET ELIZABETH, ' 38 Zoology 234 Summit Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. DENNIS, BETTY FOREE, ' 37 English 2101 Dorothy Ave., Louisville, Ky. DERING, FRANCES TURNER, ' 37 Pol. Science 28 Rockridge Road, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. DIEBOLD, WILLIAM, Jr., ' 37 PoL Science 62 Columbia Terrace, Weehawken, N. J. DIMPFL, RICHARD ALBERT, ' 39 Philosophy 138 Penhurst St., Rochester, N. Y. DOBBINS, EDWARD L. D., ' 39 104 Garrison Ave., Battle Creek, Mich. DOBSON, ELIZABETH LOUISE, ' 37 French 1 Canterbury Lane, St. Davids, Pa. DORISS, WILLIAM HOWARD, ' 39 Economics 15 Maher Ave., Greenwich, Conn. DOUGLASS, ANN ELIZABETH, ' 39 144 Hempstead St., New London, Conn. DUDLEY, MARTHA ALLEN, ' 38 Zoology 15 Middle Road, Hamden, Conn. DUMM, MARY ELIZABETH, ' 38 Zoology 13 Sampson Ave., Madison, N. J. DUNLAP, RALPH IRVIN, Jr., ' 40 Chemistry 1338 Mound Ave., Jacksonville, 111. DUNNING, MARY ELIZABETH, ' 40 Westtown, Pa. DUTTON, JOHN C, ' 39 Engineering 2242 Pioneer Road, Evanston, 111. EAMES, CHARLES FREDERIC, ' 38 EngUsh 243 West Broad St., Tamaqua, Pa. EAST, FAE ETHELDRA, ' 40 EngUsh 4338 Forest Lane, Washington, D. C. EASTWICK, MARTHA McILVAIN, ' 40 EngHsh 2310 Kenoak Road, Baltimore, Md. EBERLE, CHARLES ALBERT, ' 40 Engineering 105 E. Dunham Street, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. ECKES, MURIEL CONSTANCE, ' 37 Economics 31 Gilford Ave., Jersey City, N. J. ECKMAN, GRACE AMALIE, ' 37 _ _ EngUsh Forest HUls, L. I., N. Y. EDMUNDS, CHARLES WALLIS, ' 39 Zo61ogy 1619 Cambridge Road, Ann Arbor, Mich. EDWARDS. MARIAN lONE, ' 40 Economics R. F. D. No. 3, CoraopoUs, Pa. EISENMENGER, HERTHA EMMA, ' 38 Zoology 159 Lorraine Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. ELIAS, JOSEPHINE, ' 40 Box 116, Armonk, N. Y. ELLIOTT, THOMAS HENRY, ' 38 Zoology 915 37th Ave., Seattle, V ash. ELLIS, MARION, ' 37 French 419 VaUey Road, Llonerch, Pa. ELLIS, MARY DOAN, ' 40 French West Grove. Pa. EMBREE, CATHERINE DAY, ' 40 4901 EUis Ave., Chicago, lU. ENGLISH, DORIS LOUISE, ' 40 30 Randolph Place, Ridgewood, N. J. 245 ENTENBERG, BARBARA JEAN, ' 39 370 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. EPLEY, ANNE HAMMOND, ' 38 French 2529 Atkinson Ave., Detroit, Mich. EPPINGER, DORIS ELEANOR, ' 38 English 225 Main Street, Tottenville, N. Y. EPSTEIN, SAMUEL ATKINS, ' 39 62 Ellington St., Longmeadow, Mass. ERICHSEN, HANS SKABO, ' 39 Economics c o New York Public Library, New York, N. Y. EVANS, ELEANOR GREER, ' 40 Zoology 324 Brookline Blvd., Brookline, Pa. EVANS, JEAN ANNE, ' 38 English 101 Lansdowne Court, Lansdowne, Pa. EVES, ELEANOR EDITH, ' 37 Zoology 318 East Market St., Danville, Pa. FAUST, OLVA FULLER, ' 37 Fine Arts 817 Madison Ave., Albany, N. Y. FEELY, MIRIAM RUTH, ' 38 Botany 734 Crescent Parkway, Westfield, N. J. FERGUSON, CATHARINE, ' 40 Mathematics 106 Euclid Ave., Willoughby, Ohio FERGUSON, ELEANOR HEWITT, ' 38 Psychology 9 Deering St., Portland, Me. FERNSLER, ALICE ELIZABETH, ' 38 Psychology 1009 Ohio Ave., Midland, Pa. FISHER, RALPH HART, ' 39 Economics 39 Grandview Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. FLANDERS, ANNA HARTNESS, ' 40 Astronomy Springfield, Vt. FLORA, WESLEY, ' 38 Psychology 6616 Piney Branch Road, N. W., Washington, D. C. FORNWALT, GEORGE ROBERT, ' 39 Zoology 112 Walsh Road, Lansdowne, Pa. FORSYTHE, GEORGE ELMER, ' 37 Mathematics 1819 Hill Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. FOSTER, ROBERT WILSON, ' 40 Economics 215 W. High Street, Monticello, 111. FOULDS, JULIET KNIGHT, ' 38 Fine Arts 225 Virginia Ave., Phoenixville, Pa. FOWLER, WARD S., ' 37 Zoology Eldora, Iowa FRAZER, EVAN WAYNE, ' 38 English 7102 Hilltop Road, By wood, Pa. FUCHS, KRISTEL, ' 38 Psychology Berlin N 65, Afrikanischestr, 140, Germany FUNKHOUSER, ELISABETH MARY J., ' 38 Zo6Iogy 33 Perdicaris Place, Trenton, N. J. GAEDE, ELSA, ' 38 Psychology 423 Harvard Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. GARDNER, JAMES JOSEPH, ' 38 Pol. Science 21 Columbus Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. GARDNER, JAMES RICHARD, ' 37 History 2601 Lawina Road, Baltimore, Md. GARWOOD, JUSTINE, ' 40 English Yale and Harvard Aves., Swarthmore, Pa. GBURSKL LEONARD JOHN, ' 37 Engineering 994 Eastern Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. GEDDES, FRANK BRAMWELL, Jr., Special 21 Greenacres Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. GEE, MILDRED, ' 39 Economics 146 Maple St., Brooklyn, N. Y. GEMBERLING, CHARLES ALLEN, ' 40 Zoology Woodstown, N. J. GERMANN, MARGARET LOUISE, ' 37 French 167 Rutland Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. GIBSON, KATHERINE JEANNE, ' 39 French 3700 Massachusetts Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C. GLADDING, ALBERT HAZEN, ' 38 GILRUTH, JANE MARTHA, ' 40 7206 Euclid Ave., Chicago, HI. GINGRICH, JANET MILDRED, ' 38 Economics 405 Washington Ave., Bethlehem, Pa. English Leicester, Mass. GOLDSMITH, DAVID ADOLPH, ' 38 Zoology 1706 East 56th St., Chicago, 111. GODDARD, WESLEY RAWDON, ' 37 English Box 151, Los Gates, Calif. GOODRICH, ELIZABETH WHITNEY, ' 39 English 7701 Cresheim Road, Chestnut Hill, Pa. GOODRICH, MARY ROGERS, ' 39 38 Clarendon St., Maiden, Mass. GOODWIN, MARY LILLIAN, ' 39 338 Eighth Ave., LaGrange, 111. GORDON, KERMIT, ' 38 Economics 746 Lindale Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. GOSHORN, ROBERT MUSSELWHITE, ' 39 King Road, Malvern, Pa. GRAVES, ELIZABETH KIRKPATRICK, ' 40 18 Donellan Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. GREEN, EDWARD FAIRCHILD, ' 40 3473 Queenston Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio GREENAWALT, RACHEL HECKERT, ' 38 PoL Science 519 Colonial Ave., York, Pa. GRINNELL. MARY KING, ' 39 380 Briarwood Lane, Ravinia, 111. GRISWOLD, HOPE, ' 40 2957 Eaton Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio GROSS, MARK, ' 39 English 3923 S. Calhoun St., Fort Wayne, Ind. GRUENBERG, ERNEST MATSNER, ' 37 Mathematics 418 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. HAFKENSCHIEL, JOSEPH HENRINGTON, Jr., ' 37 Zoology 454 Lexington Ave., Youngstown, Ohio HAGEDORN, ELISE C, ' 38 English 7945 Montgomery Ave., Elkins Park, Pa. HAIRE, MASON, ' 37 ... . English Snell Place, Fort Dodge, Iowa HALL, ROBERT DONALD, ' 40 Physics 323 Park Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. HALLOWELL, ALBAN THOMAS, ' 37 Chemistry Sandy Spring, Md. HAMILTON, JANE, ' 38 Psychology Punkasteest Road, Tiverton, R. I. HANDLER, JEAN HARRIET, ' 39 II V arren Place, Montclair, N. J. HANLEY, ELAINE ELIZABETH, ' 40 Chemistry The Whittier, Burns Drive, Detroit, Mich. HARDING, PEGGY, ' 40 58 Orlin Ave., S. E., Minneapolis, Minn- HARGREAVES, ANN, ' 40 332 W. 56th St., New York, N. Y. HARMAN, DAVID, ' 39 Economics 338 White Horse Pike, Oaklyn, N. J. HARPER, EDITH LEWIS, ' 40 5037 Hazel Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. GILL, LYLE BENNETT, 37 Pol. Science 635 N. I St., Fremont, Neb. HARPER, JAMES ALAN, ' 37 Engineering Glenarm, Md. HARRINGTON, ELIZABETH ANNE, ' 39 2 Highland St., Du Bois, Pa. HARRIS, RAYMOND RICHARDS, ' 39 Chemistry 360 Tenth St., Salem, Ohio HARRISON, WILLIAM THAYER, ' 38 Engineering 124 Bellevue Ave., Upper Montclair, N. J. HART, JANET OLINE, ' 37 History 72 Sherman St., Hartford, Conn. HARTMAN, ARTHUR CARMAN, Jr., ' 40 Engineering 133 E. Roland Road, Chester, Pa. 1246 HARTUNIAN, VARTAN, ' 38 Philosophy 5744 Rodman St., Philadelphia, Pa. HASTINGS, MARY JANE, ' 39 Economics 700 N. Front St., Milton, Pa. HAY, ELIZABETH SCHWENK, ' 38 Pol. Science 1734 Mahantongo St., Pottsville, Pa. HAYDEN, MARIAN SILVER, ' 40 3706 Liberty Heights, Baltimore, Md. HAYNIE, GEORGIA ELAINE, ' 38 Fine Arts 2817 Guilford Ave., Baltimore, Md. HEALD, MARY KATHERINE, ' 38 Pol. Science 100 Gladstone Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. HEAVENRICH, RICHARD, ' 37 Mathematics 110 Longfellow Ave., Detroit, Mich. HEINE, ILSE, ' 40 Zo61ogy Kew Gardens, L. I., N. Y. HEINEMAN, ROBERT BLOCK, ' 38 French 5552 Everett Ave., Chicago, 111. HEISLER, MARGARET JANE, ' 38 English 410 Midway, Riverton, N. J. HELBING, ALMA BIELE, ' 37 Zoology 509 South Sixth Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. HELLMAN, CLARE, ' 38 English Dartmouth Apts., Louisville, Ky. HELMICK, SUSAN, ' 40 French 719 Coleman Ave., Fairmount, W. Va. HENDERSON, EDWARD DREWRY, ' 40 Zoology 801 Ninth Ave., S. W., Rochester, Minn. HENDLEY, CHARLES DANIEL, ' 38 Zo61ogy 3210 Fairfield Ave., New York, N. Y. HENDRICKS, OLIVE GRAHAM, ' 39 Engineering 265 Wyoming Ave., Maplewood, N. J. HENLE, PETER, ' 40 West Hartsdale Road, Hartsdale, N. Y. HENSZEY, ELIZABETH ROBERTS, ' 38 PoL Science Woodlands, Oconomowoc, Wis. HERBSTER, ERNEST R., ' 37 PoL Science 10 East Langhorne Ave., Llanerch, Pa. HERNDON, DALE L, ' 39 Chemistry 2 College Lane, Haverford, Pa. HERRICK, GEORGE AMBROSE, ' 40 Engineering Lima, Pa. HERRICK, MARY ELLEN, ' 38 Psychology 807 Keystone Ave., River Forest, 111. HICKOK, JOHN EVERETT, ' 37 Engineering 35 Hillcrest Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. HILL, JANET STANTON, ' 39 Philosophy Madero, 25, Mexico, D. F. HOADLEY, HENRY HAROLD, ' 37 Engineering 518 Walnut Lane, Swarthmore, Pa. HOAGLAND, MARY ADELINE, ' 39 715 Kennedy-Warren, Washington, D. C. HOFF, DAGNY, ' 40 English Turners Falls, Mass. HOGE, MARY HOLLADAY, ' 40 Zo61ogy 1319 Willow Ave., Louisville, Ky. HOGELAND, CAROLYN MEREDITH, ' 38 PoL Science 4945 Catharine St., Philadelphia, Pa. HOLDERLE, FREDERICK STILKE, ' 39 Engineering 269 Sherwood Ave., Rochester, N. Y. HOMANS. ALAN, ' 40 Economics 1824 Wilton Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio HOPKINS, MARTHA TYSON, ' 39 History Maidens Choice Lane, Catonsville, Md. HORNBECK, HELEN FRANCES, ' 37 Pol. Science 8 College Grove, Kalamazoo, Mich. HOUGH, JOHN S., ' 40 PoL Science Connoquenessing Ter., EUwood City, Pa. HOUSEL, LOUISE PAULINE, ' 37 Latin 343 Washington Terrace, Audubon, N. J. HOWELL, SAM TEMPLE, ' 40 Psychology 137 Ansticr, St., Oyster Bay, N. Y. HOWELL, WILLIAM JASPER, ' 38 Chemistry 2041 Talbot St., Toledo, Ohio HOWES, ESTHER GREELEY, ' 40 Zoology 44 State Road, Media, Pa. HUBBARD, ANDRE, ' 39 148 S. Broadway, White Plains, N. Y. HUBBELL, DOROTHY PETERS, ' 40 Chemistry 69 First St., Garden City, N. Y. HUHN, JOHN RAHNE, IH, ' 40 Economics 105 E. Stiles Ave., CoUingswood, N. J, HULL, GEORGE IRVING, ' 40 Chemistry 11 Westway, Bronxville, N. Y. HULST, GEORGE D., JR., ' 37 Physics 3 Macopin Ave., Upper Monlclair, N. J. HUNTER, MARGARET ELEANOR, ' 39 6923 Sherman St., Philod. lphi ' -i, Pa. HURST, ELIZABETH SALTONSTALL, ' 40 1068 Kensington Ave., plamiieia, N. J. HUSSEY, FRANCES LOUISE, ' 40 Mathematics Strafford, Pa. HUTSON, FRANK ALFRED, ' 37 History 114 Park Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. ILLMER, ALEXANDRA, ' 39 24 N. Church St., Cortland, N. Y. INGERSOLL, RAYMOND CRARY, ' 40 Engineering 380 Qinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. IRVINE, NATHALIE, ' 38 English 42 Rokeby Place, West New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. ISGRIG, WALTER ERLING, ' 40 PoL Science 1547 Upper Parkway So., Wauwatosa, Wis. IVINS, MARY, ' 38 History 1501 Gallatin St., N. W., Washington, D. C. JACKSON, CAROLINE ELIZABETH, ' 39 310 W. Lafayette St., West Chester, Pa. JACKSON, ELIZABETH WILSON, ' 37 PoL Science 317 N. Chester Road, Swarthmore, Pa. JACKSON, JACOB WILLITS, ' 40 Engineering 43 Duck Pond Road, Glen Cove, L. I., N. Y. JACKSON, JEAN WITT, ' 40 Mathematics 16608 Aldersyde Drive, Shaker Heights, Ohio JAKLE. EDWARD ALOYSIUS, ' 40 History- Flagstaff, Arizona JAMES, MARY ISABEL, ' 39 English 1304 Broadway, Bethlehem, Pa. JANES, ROBERT LEE, ' 39 English Seminole, Okla. JESSUP, PAUL SHELLEY, ' 39 322 Liberty St., Penn Yan, N. Y. JOHNSON, CARL FERDINAND, ' 40 Economics 217 Springside Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. JOHNSON, DONALD ELMER, ' 40 Engineering 44 Abernethy Dr., Trenton, N. J. JOHNSON, ELEANOR MARIE, ' 39 Latin 107 80th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. JONES, EDMUND, ' 39 227 Haverford Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. JONES, HELEN PALMER, ' 39 Chemistry 608 N. Chester Road, Swarthmore, Pa. JONES, WELLINGTON DOWNING, Jr., ' 39 PoL Science 5603 Kenwood Ave., Chicago, 111. JOYCE, ELEANOR WOODBRIDGE, ' 38 English 30 E. Wheelock St., Hanover, N. H. JUDSON, CHARLES MORRILL, ' 40 Chemistry 3417 Northampton St., N. W., Washington, D. C. JUMP, WILLIAM ASHBY, ' 39 Economics 3247 Patterson St., N. W., Washington. D. C. KALB, JOHN WARREN, ' 40 Engineering 365 Beech St., Berea, Ohio 247 KALKSTEIN, SAMUEL ISAAC, ' 37 Chemistry 1562 38th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. KALTENBACH, ETHEL LOUISE, ' 39 Economics 38 Second Ave., Royersford, Pa. KASPAR, PETER DALZELL, ' 38 History 1150 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. KAUFMANN, JOHN HEIDEN, ' 40 Chemistry 418 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. KEHLER, JAMES GRANT, ' 40 Zoology 121 E. 2nd St., Mt. Carmel, Pa. KELLER, GEOFFREY, ' 38 Engineering 333 E. Mosholu Pkwy., New York, N. Y. KELLY JOAN CATHARINE, ' 37 Psychology 8212 Cedar Road, Elkins Park, Pa. KELLOCK, JANE, ' 40 Zoology Rosemont, Pa. KING, MARGARET HAZEN, ' 39 French Beech Drive, Noroton, Conn. KINGSBURY, VIRGINIA LOUISE, ' 40 3 Fairfield Place, Yonkers, N. Y. KIRCHSCHLAGER, HELLMUTH, ' 38 Economics 2801 Ailsa Ave., Baltimore, Md. KIRN, JOHN JUSTUS, ' 37 Economics 320 E. Main St., Lancaster, Ohio KLABER, ROBERT, ' 37 PoL Science 285 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. KLAER, JANE SPROUL, ' 38 Psychology Lapidea Manor, Chester, Pa. KLINE, NATHAN SCHELLENBERG, ' 38 Philosophy 15 S. La Clede Place, Atlantic City, N. J. KNAPP, LAURA SHERMAN, ' 40 Melville Road, Farmingdale, N. Y. KOCH, GRACE MARY, ' 38 History 308 Marvin Road, Elkins Park, Pa. KOENEMANN, RICHARD HENRY, ' 37 Zodlogy 410 CoUings Ave., CoUingswood, N. J. KONDO, SHIMICHL Special 506 N. Chester Road, Swarthmore, Pa. KRATTENMAKER, HERMAN CHARLES, ' 39 Economics 419 Haddon Ave., CoUingswood, N. J. KURTZ, HENRY E. B., ' 38 Engineering 405 N. E. 39th St., Miami, Fla. LADENBURG, EVA MARIE, ' 39 English 47 Hawthorne Ave., Princeton, N. J. LAFORE, LAURENCE DAVIS, ' 38 PoL Science Penn Valley Farm, Narberth, Pa. LANG, EUGENE MICHAEL, ' 38 Economics 443 East 87th St., New York, N. Y. LANGE, HENRY STANLEY, ' 38 English 240 W. 102nd St., New York, N. Y. LAPHAM, ANN WILLETS, ' 38 English Port Washington, N. Y. LARKIN, BAINBRIDGE MORSE, ' 39 Economics West Main St., Georgetown, Mass. LASHLY, JEAN ELLEN, ' 40 English 20 Windemere Place, St. Louis, Mo. LASHLY, JOHN HENDERSON, ' 38 20 Windemere Place, St. Louis, Mo. Zoology West Nyack, N. Y. LEEPER, MARGARET FRASIER, ' 39 Mathematics 6138 Lebanon Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. LEES, WAYNE LOWRY, ' 37 Physics 3430 Mt. Pleasant St., Washington, D. C. LEINROTH, ROBERT GEORGE, U, ' 38 PoL Science 920 S. 48th St., Philadelphia, Pa. LESHER, BARBARA, ' 37 PoL Science Wilson Drive, Ben Avon Heights, Pittsburgh, Pa. LEVERING, FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, IIL ' 38 English 304 Wendover Road. Baltimore, Md. LEBER, ALWIN MAKEPEACE. ' 40 LEVINTHAL, SYLVIA BETTY, ' 40 1901 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. LEWIS, E. RUTH, ' 38 English 505 Swarthmore Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. LEWIS, RUTH MARY, ' 37 Economics Roslyn, N. Y. LINDSAY, SALLY, ' 39 277 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. LINDSLEY, KATHERINE MERRILL, ' 40 600 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Livingston, N. J. LIPMAN, JAMES OLMSTEAD, ' 40 Zoology 736 Harvard Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. LIPPINCOTT, RICHARD EWING, ' 39 Economics Ridge View Farm, Egypt Road, Norristown, Pa. LITTLE, EDWARD SOUTHARD, ' 39 Economics 1002 Grand Ave., Toledo, Ohio LITTLE, HERBERT WOODRUFF, ' 38 Economics 1002 Grand Ave., Toledo, Ohio LIVINGSTON, WILLIAM TOLIVER, H, ' 39 Zoology 705 State St., Natchez, Miss. LLOYD, SHERMAN COXE, Jr., ' 40 Engineering 1402 Gilpin Ave., Wilmington, Del. LOEB, CHARLES WILLIAM, ' 37 History 945 Ridgemont Ave., Charleston, W. Va. LOMBARD, PETER, ' 38 Engineering 619 Boylston St., Brookline, Mass. LONGSHORE, WILLIAM ALLEN, Jr., ' 37 Zo61ogy 8203 Cedar Road, Elkins Park, Pa. LOVE, JOHN KING, Jr., ' 38 Zoology 25 N. 2 nd St., Easton, Pa. LOW, MARTIN LAURENT, Jr., ' 40 Economics Compton Road, Cincinnati, Ohio LUPTON, VIRGINIA LOUISE, ' 37 Economics 338 Market St., Lewes, Del. LYKENS, GEORGE BRINTON, ' 39 English IB W. Langhorne Ave., Llanerch, Pa. LYON, CHARLES STUART, ' 37 History 41 Church St., Saranac Lake, N. Y. LYONS, MAVIS, ' 38 English 40 Monroe St., New York, N. Y. McClelland, sally, ' 39 Economics Jarrettown, Pa. McCLURE, JOHN JAMES, ' 40 Economics Riverview Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. McCONE, HENRY EDGAR, ' 40 425 Harvard Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. McCORD, MARTHA BROOKS, ' 40 History 401 Chestnut Lane, Wayne, Pa. McCORMACK, ROBERT MORRIS, ' 40 Zoology 2104 N. Sixth Street, Sheboygan, Wis. McDERMOTT, MARY KATHARINE, ' 38 Psychology 223 Woodlawn Ave., Topeka, Kansas McDonald, ELLICE, jr., ' 38 English 901 Harvard Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. McINTYRE, DAVID, ' 38 Zoology 201 N. Portland Ave., Ventnor, N. J. MacDONALD, ELIZABETH JEAN, ' 40 Linan University, Canton, China MacPHAIL, LELAND STANFORD, Jr., ' 39 Economics 196 Greenhill Road, Cincinnati, Ohio MACTURK, MILDRED, ' 40 139 Wesley St., Salem, N. J. MACY, DOROTHY, ' 40 Zoology 159 E. 57th St., New York, N. Y. MACY, EDWARD ARTHUR, ' 37 PoL Science 12 Clarke St., Brooklyn, N. Y. MADDEN, BETTY JEAN, ' 38 English 248 Windmere Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. MADDY, JOAN LEIGH, ' 40 2801 Blair Blvd., Nashville, Tenn. 248 MAGINNISS, GERTRUDE ELAINE, ' 39 Mathematics 5836 Warrington Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. MAGUIRE, JEAN CALDWELL, ' 40 7015 Boyer St., Philadelphia, Pa. MALCOLM, JAMES ARTHUR, Jr., ' 38 Engineering Jericho, N. Y. MALONE, STEPHEN PHARES, ' 39 Engineering 711 Ferguson Ave., Dayton, Ohio MANBECK, FLORENCE VINCENT, ' 40 Chemistry Mifflintown, Pa. MANDELBAUM, BARBARA JANE, ' 40 1540 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. MARSH, MICHAEL, ' 38 Economics 1626 Riggs Place, N. W., Washington, D. C. MARSHALL, ANN PENNOCK, ' 40 1517 Pacific Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. MARSHALL, JOHN, Jr., ' 38 Physics Lincoln Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. MARTENET, RACHEL LaFETRA, ' 39 1705 Park Ave., Baltimore, Md. MARTIN, JANE WARD, ' 39 Economics 143 Parkway Ave., Chester, Pa. MARVIN, PEGGY HAMILTON, ' 38 Economics 2931 Reidling Drive, Louisville, Ky. MASON, RICHARD BENJAMIN, ' 39 Engineering 138 Rutledge Ave., Rutledge, Pa. MATSUOKA, YOKO, ' 39 Economics 147 Kago-Machi, Koishikavifa, Ku., Tokyo, Japan MATZ, ELIZABETH, ' 38 Economics 323 S. Washington St., Hinsdale, 111. MAWHINNEY, THOMAS ANDREW, ' 40 203 Forklanding Road, Maple Shade, N. J. MAYER, MARY VIRGINIA, ' 40 120 St. Marks Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. MEADER, KENNETH RANDALL, ' 39 History 423 Yale Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. MENUEZ, MARGARET MARTIN, ' 38 English 25 Grandview Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. MERCER, LEONARD COULSON, ' 40 Economics 2617 Hirst Terrace, Upper Darby, Pa. MEYER, KATE, ' 37 Psychology 5490 S. Shore Drive, Chicago, 111. MICHAEL, ELIZABETH IRENE, ' 39 English 300 Park Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. MICHENER, HERBERT EDMOND, ' 39 Engineering 427 Riverview Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. MIFFLIN, CHARLES F. R.. ' 40 PoL Science 2 North State St., Dover, Del. MIFFLIN, WALKER LYLE, Jr., ' 40 Chemistry 2 North State St., Dover, Del. MILLER, MARY JANE, ' 38 English 301 Franklin St., Cape May, N. J. MILLER, SEYMOUR, ' 39 Zoology 703 N. Broome St., Wilmington, Del. MILLS, ADELE CONWAY, ' 37 English 1616 S. Denver Ave., Tulsa, Okla. MIMS, ELIZABETH WEBB, ' 38 PoL Science Brookside Drive, Greenwich, Conn. MITCHELL, BETTY LOU, ' 39 Economics 630 University Place, Swarthmore, Pa. MOFFET, JOHN ANDREW, ' 37 Engineering 207 W. Chew St., Philadelphia, Pa. MOHL, EVELYN E., ' 38 English P. O. Box 209, Tel-Aviv, Palestine DeMONTALVO, LOUISE LEBLANC, ' 40 39-61 48th St., Sunnyside Gardens, N. Y. MOORE, EDWIN EVANS, ' 38 Engineering 417 Linden Ave., Riverton, N. J. MOORE, MARGARET GLOVER, ' 38 Latin 3329 Chalfant Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio MOORE, MINNIE THOMPSON, ' 40 Economics 16 S. Plaza Placa, Atlantic City, N, J. MORNINGSTAR, EDWARD MARTIN, ' 39 English 103 Walsh Road, Lansdowne, Pa. MORRIS, MARGARET LOUISE, ' 40 English 29 Grand Ave., Atlantic Highlands, N. J. MORRIS, PATTY F., ' 37 ., French 557 Grosvenor Lane, Bethesda, Md. MORRIS, ROBERT HARVEY, ' 39 Zoology 142 Vassar St., Rochester, N. Y. MORRISON, PETER REED, ' 40 1725 Lament St., Washington, D. C. MORRISSETT, IRVING A., Jr., ' 37 Economics 625 Grafton Ave., Dayton, Ohio MORSE, VIRGINIA WOODWORTH, ' 39 Fine Arts 615 James St., Syracuse, N. Y. MOSES, RICHARD PHILLIPS, ' 40 197 Serpentine Road, Tenafly, N. J. MOYER, GEORGETTE KEITH, ' 38 English Schaefferstown, Pa. MUKERJl DHAN GOPAL, H, ' 40 325 East 72nd St., New York, N. Y. MURPHY, CAROL ROZIER, ' 37 PoL Science 315 Cedar Lane, Swarthmore, Pa. MURPHY, JAMES ANDERSON, ' 37 Economics 813 E. College Ave., Appleton, Wis. MYERS, JOHN KLAHR, ' 40 PoL Science 803 Liberty St., Clarion, Pa. NEALE, ROBERT DUDLEY, Jr., ' 39 Economics 17 Oak Knoll Gardens, Pasadena, Calif. NELSON, DOROTHEA PENNINGTON, ' 40 3419 Ststtinius Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio NEWKIRK, VIRGINIA ALICE, ' 38 French Manor Apts., Haddonfield, N. J. NEWTON, FRANCES MAY, ' 40 Mathematics Lake Ronkonkoma, N. Y. NEWTON, HAROLD PIERPONT, Jr., ' 37 Engineering 22 Maher Ave., Greenwich, Conn. NUTE, WILLIAM LAUBACH, Jr., ' 38 Psychology Amerikan Klmigi, Tolas, Turkey OESPER, PETER, ' 38 Mathematics 2323 Ohio Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio OLDS, DAVID McNEIL, ' 39 PoL Science 953 LaQair St., Pittsburgh, Pa. OSLAND-HILL, MARIE, ' 40 German 28 de Vere Gardens, Kensington, W 8, England OSTRANDER, THEDA WILDER, ' 40 4154 Lark St., San Diego, Calif. OTTENBERG, JAMES SIMON, ' 39 PoL Science 161 West 86th St., New York, N. Y. PALMER, CLINTON BUDD, ' 37 History 15 N. 2nd St., Easton, Pa. PANCOAST, CHARLOTTE SNOWDEN, ' 40 5926 Greene Street, Germantown, Pa. PARIS, JOHN PAUL B., ' 39 818 W. Market St., Bethlehem, Pa. PARKER, FRANK C, Jr., ' 38 Engineering 42 N. Whitehall Road, Norristown, Pa. PARSONS. JACQUELINE MARY, ' 40 English Flora Dale, Pa. PARTON, MARGARET ANNE, ' 37 __ English Palisades, N. Y. PASCAL, JOAN MARY, ' 39 Economics 26 W. 76tii St., New York, N. Y. PATTERSON, WILLIAM DOERR, ' 39 Engineering 1333 Hunting Pork Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. PAXSON, MARY H., ' 40 English 524 Hamilton St., Norristown, Pa. PEARSON, BARBARA WALTON, ' 37 EngUsh Serpentine L one, Wyncote, Pa. 249 PEARSON, OLIVER PAYNE, ' 37 Zoology 210 W. Mermaid Lane, Chestnut HiU, Pa. PEELLE, ROBERT BEATTY, ' 39 Engineering 29 Euclid St., Forest Hills, N. Y. PELTON, HUGH GORDON, ' 37 Economics 3602 Springdale Ave., Baltimore, Md. PEMBERTON, JOHN deJARNETTE, Jr., ' 40 Pol. Science 930 8th St., S. W., Rochester, Minn. PERKINS, T. H. DUDLEY, ' 37 Economics Moorestown, N. J. PERLOFF, ROBERT EARL, ' 38 Zoology 8246 Brookside Road, Elkins Park, Pa. PERRY, THOMAS BENTON, ' 37 History 723 East 4th St., York, Neb. PETER, MARGARET WHIPPLE, ' 38 English Window Rock, Arizona PETERS, JOSEPHINE HARRIET, ' 37 English 134 S. Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. PETROW, CHRIST JOHN, ' 38 PoL Science 1009 N. Broad St., Fremont, Neb. PETTET, EDWIN BURR, ' 37 English 57 Parkview Place, Baldwin, N. Y. PETTY, JESSIE ELOISE, ' 39 English Royal Yorke Apts., Pittsburgh, Pa. PHILIPS, WILLIAM COMMONS, 2nd, ' 40 English 1805 Monroe St., Wilmington, Del. PHILLIPS, MARY DORIS, ' 37 French 167 Ov ren Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. PIERCE, RUTH HELEN, ' 40 125 Columbus Drive, Tenafly, N. J. PITTINGER, A. LINCOLN, ' 37 Engineering 239a Brooklyn Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. PLATT, BETSY, ' 40 Psychology 45 Maywood Drive, Danville, HI. POLIFRONI, VINCENT L, ' 37 Economics 1715 8th Ave., Beaver Falls, Pa. PORTER, HELEN, ' 39 French 1225 E. 25th St., Tulsa, Okla. PORTER, JEAN, ' 38 French 622 Seminole Ave., Atlanta, Ga. POST, ARTHUR WILLIS, ' 40 Engineering 250 Park Ave., Westbury, N. Y. POTTINGER, JOHN ARCHER, ' 37 Pol. Science 31 Brookway Ave., Englewood, N. J. POWELL, LOUISE UNDERHILL, ' 40 42-23 165th St., Flushing, N. Y. PRENTICE, WILLIAM C. H., ' 37 Psychology Chandler Court, Williamsburg, Va. PRICE, CARROLL BARNARD, Jr., ' 38 Economics New Hope, Pa. P RICE, CELIA ROGERS, ' 39 New Hope, Pa. PRICE, ETHEL VAN RODEN, ' 40 English 3946 Lancaster Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. PRICE, WILLIAM HOGGATT, ' 39 726 W. Beach Blvd., Pass Christian, Miss. PROCTOR, KATHARINE, ' 38 French Proctor, Vt. PURCELL, DONALD H., ' 37 English Eastview Ave., Pleasantville, N. Y. PURDY, ADALYN FRANCES, ' 40 96 Sherman St., Hartford, Conn. RAEBECK, ANNE VIRGINIA, ' 38 Zo61ogy 159 131st St., Belle Harbor, L. 1., N. Y. RAMSDELL, PAULINE ALDEN, ' 39 51 Hudson Ave., Englewood, N. J. RANDALL, MARY FRANCES, ' 40 English 59 Grafton Ave., Dayton, Ohio RANK, HELEN MARIANNE, ' 38 Zo61ogy 310 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. RAY, RUTH, ' 40 Long Ridge, Stamford, Conn. REDHEFFER, JOIE, ' 40 Chemistry 191 E. Walton Place, Chicago, 111. REED, FRANCES SUSANNA, ' 37 Pol. Science 6729 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. REID, HARRY FAIRFAX, Jr., ' 38 Engineering 115 Deepdene Road, Baltimore, Md. REID, JOHN WALLING, ' 40 English 622 Woodcrest Ave., Ardmore, Pa. RELLER, WILLIAM HARRIS, ' 40 Economics 76 South 14th St., Richmond, Ind. REUTER, FLORENCE JANE, ' 38 Economics 309 York Ave., Towanda, Pa. RHOADS, MARGARET ALICE, ' 37 History Tobyhanna, Pa. RICE, CHARLES STIX, ' 40 Psychology 6447 Cecil St., St. Louis, Mo. RICE, JOHN MUIRHEAD, ' 37 Economics Louella Court, Wayne, Pa. RICHARDS, BURTON, ' 38 Economics Swarthmore Apts., Swarthmore, Pa. RICKEY, MABEL ALICE, ' 39 Botany Clayton Road, Clayton, Mo. RITTENHOUSE, JANE ADELAIDE, ' 40 5 College Lane, Haverford, Pa. RITTER, RUTH ELLEN, ' 39 Latin 436 Locust Ave., Burlington, N. J. ROBBINS, LEWIS MORRELL, ' 40 Economics Riverton Road, Riverton, N. J. ROBERTS, JOHN WATTS, ' 39 Engineering 26 Washington Ave., Princess Anne, Md. ROBINSON, JOHN MARK, ' 40 Economics 411 College Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. ROBINSON, REBECCA MARY, ' 40 Psychology 130 Ogden Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. ROBSON, ALBERT NORVIN, ' 40 History Yorktown Heights, N. Y. ROCKWOOD, ROBERT BRUCE, ' 39 History 1 1 S. Portland Ave., Ventnor, N. J. ROELOFS, MARY MOORE, ' 40 Albion Ave., Glendale, Ohio ROETHKE, DORIS RUTH, ' 40 4737 N. Wilshire Road, Milwaukee, Wis. ROGERS, FRANCES ELIZABETH, ' 40 English 928 Haverford Road, Bryn Mawr, Pa. ROME, EDWIN PHILLIPS, ' 37 English 4400 Spruce St., Philadelphia, Pa. ROPE, BARTON WHITEFIELD, ' 37 Chemistry 263 Olean St., East Aurora, N. Y. ROSS, ISABEL HOLLY, ' 37 English 324 East 25th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ROSSMORE, WILLIAM, ' 40 1 McKinley St., Baldwin, N. Y. ROUS, MARION DeKAY, ' 39 English 125 East 72nd St., New York, N. Y. ROWLAND, ELIZABETH, ' 37 Psychology 420 E. Lancaster Ave., Wayne, Pa. ROY, JOSEPH ALBERT, ' 40 Engineering 93 Holly St., New Bedford, Mass. RUNGE, EDITH AMELIE, ' 38 German 1315 Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del. RUSK, MARGARET ANN, ' 40 English 445 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. RUSSELL, CONSTANCE SYMMES, ' 38 French Bow Road, Wayland, Mass. RUSSELL, ELEANOR, ' 37 English 205 Wischman Ave., Oreland, Pa. RYAN, MARY WEBB, ' 39 English 133 Oakleigh Road, Newton, Mass. 250 RYDHOLM, MARION EDITH, ' 40 2706 Wadsworth Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio SACHS, ISADORE MILTON, ' 40 Engine ' ering 1314 Terrill St., Chester, Pa. SAKAMI, WARWICK, ' 38 Chemistry 86 E. Essex Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. SALM, ALLAN HERMAN, ' 37 Economics 619 Adams Ave., Evansville, Ind. SANDERSON, JACK PHILIP, ' 40 Zoology 58 Westland Ave., Rochester, N. Y. SAURWEIN, JEAN, ' 38 Economics 247 Slade St., Belmont, Mass. SCHAFFRAN, EUGENE MORTON, ' 37 Psychology 131 East 21st St., Brooklyn, N. Y. SCHECHTER, ANNE CLAIRE, ' 40 6 No. 238 Vedado, Havana, Cuba SCHERMAN, KATHARINE WHITNEY, ' 38 History 450 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. SCHLESINGER, ABE, II, ' 37 Economics 1947 W. Erie Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. SCHMIDT, HELEN LOUISE, ' 38 English 9128 Bennett Ave., Evanston, 111. SCHOCK, ELLEN BURNS, ' 38 English 2524 S. Owasso Ave., Tulsa, Okla. SCHOCK, PATRICIA WARD, ' 39 344 Iroquois Place, Beaver, Pa. SCHORLING, RUTH MARY, ' 39 Zo61ogy 403 Lenav ee Drive, Ann Arbor, Mich. SCHROEDER, RAYMOND G., ' 37 History 464 Heights Road, Ridgewood, N. J. SCHWARTZ, IRVING SAMUEL, ' 37 PoL Science 65th and Broad Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. SCOLL, EMANUEL, ' 38 ' . Economics 2206 Whittier Ave., Baltimore, Md. SCOTT, WILLIAM TAUSSIG, ' 37 Physics 125 4th Ave., Milford, Conn. SEELY, JANE STODDARD, ' 40 English 680 N. Chester Road, Swarthmore, Pa. SELLIGMAN, JOSEPH, ' 37 Psychology 1415 Willow Ave., Louisville, Ky. SHAFFER, FREDERICK METTAM, ' 38 Economics 2705 Chelsea Terrace, Baltimore, Md. SHAW, BARBARA, ' 39 Zoology 7 Albemarle Place, Yonkers, N. Y. SHEPHERD, RUSSELL MILLS, ' 38 PoL Science 215 Kathmere Road, Brookline, Pa. SHILCOCK, JAMES THOMAS, ' 40 Cleverly and Cheltena Aves., Jenkintown, Pa. SHOEMAKER, RUTH ANNA, ' 37 English 510 Riverview Road, Swarthmore, Pa. SHOHL, JANE, ' 39 Psychology Mirror Lake, Wolfeboro, N. H. SHOTWELL, DORIS ROBERSON, ' 39 French 1 School Plaza, Franklin, N. J. SHRADER, ERWIN FAIRFAX, ' 37 Physics 518 Harper Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa. SILLARS, ROBERTSON, ' 39 English 5 Ray Street, Schenectady, N. Y. SIMMONS, ERIC LESLIE, ' 38 Botany St. Thomas, Virgin Islands SINGISER, GEORGE WILEY, ' 37 History 16 Stoneleigh Road, Watertown, Mass. SITES, VIRGINIA LAWSON, ' 40 Economics 233 Grove Road, South Orange, N. J. SKETCHLEY, ROBERT MICHENER, Special English Upsal Gardens Apts., Germantown, Pa. SLACK, JEAN CARTER, ' 39 English 40 Kent Road, Upper Darby, Pa. SMITH, CHARLES DOUGLAS, ' 37 English 141 Henry Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. SMITH, CONSTANCE ISABELLE, ' 37 Botany 329 Owen Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. SMITH, DONALD DAVID, ' 39 1097 E, 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. SMITH, EDWIN BURROWS, ' 38 English 2804 14th St., N. W.. ' Washington, 0, C. SMITH, ELEANOR PANCOAST, ' 39 History Lincoln, Va. SMITH, FREDERICK GORDON, ' 40 History Stokes Lane, Nashville, Tenn. SMITH, MANNING AMISON, ' 37 Chemistry 2042 Brunswick Road, E. Qeveland, Ohio SMITH, MARTHA LOUISE, ' 37 Zoology 19 Granger Place, B ' jffalo, N. Y. SMITH, MORGAN GARSED, ' 40 Chemistry 7 aliingford, Pa. SMITH, NATHAN LEWIS, JR., ' 39 Chemistry 4500 Carleview Road, Baltimore, Md. SMITH, WILLIAM FRANCIS, ' 37 Economics 44 Santa Clara Ave,, Dayton, Ohio SMITH, WILLIAM W., ' 40 Engineering 517 Harrison St., Ridley Park, Pa. SNYDER, ALLEN GOODMAN, Jr., ' 38 Pol. Science 523 E. Willow Grove Ave., Chestnut Hill, Pa. SNYDER, ARTHUR FENIMORE, ' 40 Chemistry 401 Swarthmore Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. SNYDER, CAROLYN E., ' 40 English 110 S. Avolyn Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. SNYDER, MARIAN READER, ' 38 English 233 N. Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. SNYDER, PAUL HESTON H., ' 40 Chemistry 401 Swarthmore Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. SOLIS-COHEN, HELEN, ' 37 Pol. Science Cheltenham and Mountain Aves., Oak Lane, Pa. SOLIS-COHEN, MARY, ' 39 Fine Arts 709 Rambler Road, Dkins Park, Pa. SOUDER, ELVIN RITTENHOUSE, ' 39 Economics 36 W. Walnut St., Souderton, Pa. SPEIGHT, CHARLOTTE FRANCES, ' 40 603 Elm Ave., Swrorthmore, Pa. SPENCER, EVELYN ELIZABETH, ' 40 21 Keigo-hondorl, Fukuoka, Japan SPENCER, THOMAS FURMAN, ' 37 Economics 187 Erie Road, Columbus, Ohio SPRUANCE, FRANK PALIN, Jr., ' 37 Chemistry 8204 Cedar Road, Elkins Park, Pa. STAAKS, WALTER, ' 37 French 3919 Georgia St., San Diego, Calif. STARR, DAVID HOWELL, ' 39 _ Economics 3301 5th Ave., Beaver Falls, Po. STEARNS, BARBARA, ' 39 Chemistry 254 Arlington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. STEEL, HELEN RAWSON, ' 39 Mathematics 4422 Lowell St.,.N. W., Washington, D. C. STEFFAN, PAMELA, ' 40 Larchmonl, N. Y. STEIN, PHILIP LOUIS, ' 39 PoL Science 1525 Cory Drive, Dayton. Ohio STEVENS, MARTHA MARIE, ' 39 _ Philosophy 205 Oakvi ood Ave., Ottumwa, Iowa STEVENS, PHYLLIS, ' 40 History 2105 East 31st Place, Tulsa, Okla. STEVENS, WILLIAM, ' 37 English 123 Heather Road, Upper Darby, Pa. STICKLER, MARGARET HELEN, ' 37 PoL Science 534 Brookvievf Lane, Brookline, Pa. STILZ, ELIZABETH BOYD, ' 37 PoL Science 5404 Julian Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. STONE, ANNE EXTON, ' 39 431 Berkley Road, Hcn ' erford, Pa. 251 STONE, ELISE EMMA, ' 39 152 Kilburn Road, Garden City, N. Y. STONE, HOFFMAN, ' 38 Chemistry 1375 Dean St., Brooklyn, N. Y. STORR, RICHARD JAMES, ' 37 History Blair Hall, Olivet, Mich. STRAKA, F. GORDON, ' 37 Pol. Science 1117 Stratford Ave., Melrose Park, Pa. STREET, ROSE ELISABETH, ' 38 Mathematics 123 N. 10th St., Clean, N. Y. STRONG, FREDERICK CARL, 3rd, ' 39 Chemistry 147 Pleasant St., Windsor, Conn. STUBBS, ELIZABETH REISLER, ' 38 English 1240 East 40th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. STURDEVANT, MARY ELLEN, ' 40 Perrysburg Road, Logansport, Ind. SUTTON, ANN CRAIG, ' 39 English Cia Cubana de Electricidad, Monte i, Habana, Cuba SUTTON, DOROTHY PHILIPS, ' 38 History 5601 Western Ave., Washington, D. C. SWARTHE, PAULA M., ' 39 Philosophy 418 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. SWIFT, ARTHUR LESSNER, ' 39 Economics 99 Claremont Ave., New York, N. Y. SWIFT, LEONARD FORDYCE, ' 37 History Maple St., Hinsdale, Mass. TAGGART, CHARLES L, ' 37 Engineering 407 Lincoln Way E., Massillon, Ohio TAPPAN, ELISE GAIL, ' 40 301 Northfield Place, Baltimore, Md. TATMAN, ALINA ELIZABETH, ' 39 English 240 W. Montgomery Ave., Haverford, Pa. TEBBETTS, MARGARET IMELDA, ' 40 137 Collins Road, Waban, Mass. THATCHER, EDWARD POWER, ' 39 Botany 613 Ogden Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. THATCHER, RICHARD CASSIN, Jr., ' 37 Engineering Lookout Mountain, Tenn. THOMAS, GRACE-MARY, ' 39 French 112 West Main St., Lock Haven, Pa. THOMAS, JOHN CUNNINGHAM, ' 39 Chemistry 46 Richards Road, Port Washington, N. Y. THOMSON, DONALD GARDNER, ' 40 PoL Science 450 William St., East Orange, N. J. THOMSON, PROCTER, ' 40 Economics 901 Reilly Road, Wyoming, Ohio THORN, STEWART, ' 39 21 Oberlin Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. TIMMIS, NORAH MARGARET, ' 38 English 202 Midland Ave., Wayne, Pa. TODD, ALDEN, ' 39 1657 31st St., N. W., Washington, D. C. TODD, DAVID, ' 38 Chemistry 1657 31st St., N. W., Washington, D. C. TODD, GUERIN, Jr., ' 38 History Red Bank, N. J. TOMPKINS, JEAN ANNABEL, ' 38 Psychology P. O. Box 660, Istanbul, Turkey TOMPKINS, REXFORD EMERSON, ' 40 PoL Science 1684 West 14th St., Erie, Pa. TRACY, ANNE ALEXANDER, ' 38 English 191 E. Walton Place, Chicago, lU. TRIMBLE, ANN, ' 38 Botany 808 S. E. Riverside Drive, Evansville, Ind. TRIMBLE, MARGARET, ' 39 Psychology 808 S. E. Riverside Drive, Evansville, Ind. UNDERDOWN, MARJORY, ' 39 French Ithan Road, Rosemont, Pa. UNDERHILL, SARAH GILPIN, ' 39 Psychology 2608 North 5th St., Harrisburg, Pa. VALENTINE, BRUCE ROBERTS, ' 39 Zoology 8345 Lefferts Blvd., Kew Gardens, N. Y. VALENTINE, GEORGE WHITELEY, ' 38 Engineering 8345 Lefferts Blvd., Kew Gardens, N. Y. VAN BRUNT, ANN BRADLEE, ' 37 PoL Science 1436 Lowell Road, Schenectady, N. Y. VAN DEUSEN, MARJORIE W., ' 38 PoL Science 10016 198th St., HoUis, N. Y. VAUGHN, JANET CORRALL, ' 38 Psychology Ponus Ave., Norwalk, Conn. VAWTER, VIRGINIA HADLEY, ' 38 French Benton Harbor, Mich. VELTFORT, THEODORE ERNST, Jr., ' 37 Physics Compo Parkway, Westport, Conn. VIEHOEVER, ELLEN MARGARET, ' 40 210 Rutgers Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. VOSKUIL, MARGARET HELEN, ' 38 Psychology 73 Edgemont Road, Upper Montclair, N. J. WAKSMAN, BYRON HALSTED, ' 40 Zoology 35 Walter Ave., New Brunswick, N. J. WALKER, BETTY, ' 39 1533 S. Detroit St., Tulsa, Okla. WALKER, ELIZABETH PENDRELL, ' 40 St. John ' s University, Shanghai, China WALKER, KATHRYN QUINBY, ' 37 English 100 Hewett Road, Wyncote, Pa. WALKER, ROBERT BELL, ' 39 Engineering Westtown School, Pa. WALTHALL, MARTIN BACON, ' 38 Economics Walcon Hill, Athens, Tenn. WARBURTON, SAMUEL WOODWARD, ' 40 Engineering 433 Pinecrest Road, Springfield, Pa. WARNER, RICHARD DIXON, ' 39 Engineering Walnut Road, Vineland, N. J. WARREN, ANNE BAKER, ' 38 English 517 Walnut Lane, Swarthmore, Pa. WARREN, RUTH ELIZABETH, ' 40 1511 Wood Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. WARRINGTON, JOHN BURWELL, ' 39 Engineering 602 Upland Ave., Noble, Pa. WATERMAN, MINA, ' 37 French 240 S. Goodman St., Rochester, N. Y. WATKINS, JANE, ' 40 2726 Belvoir Blvd., Shaker Heights, Ohio WATSON, ELIZABETH DISSOSWAY, ' 38 Psychology 491 Mt. Hope Ave., Rochester, N. Y. WATTERS, LOUISE, ' 40 English 2 E. Market St., Bethlehem, Pa. WATTS, GORDON SPENCER, ' 39 Economics 742 E. John St., Appleton, Wis. WAY, ELIZABETH LINVELL, ' 38 Psychology 63 W. Drexel Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. WEAVER, CHARLOTTE JAN, ' 38 Psychology 18128 W. Clifton Road, Lakewood, Ohio WEBSTER, DOROTHY LANCASTER, ' 40 126 Parker St., Newton Centre, Mass. WEEKS, FRANCIS WILLIAM, ' 37 English 1 1 Hawthorne Place, East Orange, N. J. WEISS, BARBARA ELIZABETH, ' 37 English 120 Ely Place, Madison, Wis. WELTMER, DONALD KESSLER, ' 40 Economics 3035 St. Paul St., Rochester, N. Y. WELTMER, JEAN THOMPSON, ' 38 Botany 3035 St. Paul St., Rochester, N. Y. WETZEL, BARBARA, ' 38 Psychology Strafford, Pa. WHITCRAFT, ANN ELIZABETH, ' 37 PoL Science 409 S. Church St., West Chester, Pa. WHITE, GARY, ' 39 Chemistry 301 College Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. WHITE, KATHARINE MORTON, ' 37 Botany 70 Tillotson Road, Fanwood, N. J. WHITE, MURIEL BARNETT, ' 37 French 113 Essex Ave., Narberth, Pa. WHITFORD, MARY LYDIA, ' 39 French 150-14 87th Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. WHITMAN, EMILY, ' 37 Pol. Science 39 Hurlbut St., Cambridge, Mass. WICKENHAVER, SIDNEY LAMONT, ' 37 Pol. Science 329 N. 24th St., Camp Hill, Pa. WIEST, FRED J., ' 37 Economics 19 North 2nd St., Minersville, Pa. WIEST, JEAN CLAPPIER, ' 40 English 19 North 2nd St., Minersville, Pa. WIGHT, MIRIAM HOLLISTER, ' 40 South St., Dalton, Mass. WILDE, IS ABEL LOUISE, ' 37 English 628 River Road, Beaver, Pa. WILLIAMS, MYRA ALICE, ' 40 Bancroft Road, Moylan-Rose Valley, Pa. WILLITS, JUDITH ABBOTT, ' 38 Botany 19 Potter St., Haddonfield, N. J. WILSON, JAMES MORRISON, Jr., ' 39 501 Puritan Apts., Louisville, Ky. WILSON, JANET DOROTHY, ' 39 Fine Arts 309 Wellington Road, Jenkintov n, Pa. WING, DEBORAH OSBURN, ' 38 English 15 Magnolia Ave., Newton, Mass. WINSTON, JOSEPH, ' 38 Psychology 115 Greenridge Ave., White Plains, N. Y. WITTER, BARBARA LOIS, ' 40 1100 S. Goodman St., Rochester, N. Y. WOEHLING, JEAN LOUISE, ' 40 English R. F. D. 2, Norristown, Pa. WOLF, ROBERT, ' 39 Chemistry 47 Sunshine Road, Upper Darby, Pa. WOLFE, LAWRENCE CLARK, ' 40 Pol. Science 410 Walnut Road, Ben Avon, Pa. WOLFE, RUTH ELVIRA, ' 40 French Apartado 215, Santiago de Cuba WOOD, CAROLYN MIDDLETON, ' 37 History 104 Chester Pike, Ridley Park, Pa. WOOD, CYRUS FOSS, ' 38 Physics 329 Hathaway Lane, ' Wynnewood, Pa. Economics Langhorne, Pa. WOOD, JOHN HENRY, JR., ' 37 WOOD, MARY TERESE, ' 40 History 329 Cornell Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. WOODCOCK, JOAN LOUISE, ' 40 Psychology 64 Barrow St., New York, N. Y. WOOLLCOTT, JOAN, ' 39 ... Eden Terrace, CatonsviUe, Md, WORTH, EDWARD HALLOWELL, Jr., ' 39 aaymont, Del. WRAY, RICHARD BOWMAN, ' 38 Economics 540 Walnut Lane, Swarthmore, Pa. WRIGHT, JOHN FISHER, ' 39 History 4 Whlttier Place, Swarthmore, Pa. WRIGHT, LOIS LAURA, ' 38 , History Parkside Apts., Hanover, N. H. WYMAN, MARGARET, ' 40 3612 Newark St., Washington, D. C. YARD, FLORENCE HICKCOX, ' 39 English 630 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111. YEARSLEY, ELEANOR, ' 40 English 577 Lincoln Highway, Coatesville, Pa. YOUNG, DREW MacKENZlE, ' 37 English 324 West Ave., Jenkintown, Pa. ZABRISKIE, HELEN LOUISE, ' 40 217 E. Franklin Turnpike, Ho-Ho-Kus, N. I. ZENTMYER, HELEN NEFF, ' 40 Marbern Road, Hagerstown, Md. ZIGROSSER, CAROLA, ' 38 PoL Science 4 Liberty St., Ossining, N. Y. ZINNER, JAMES SHANDOR, ' 39 723 Greenwood Ave., Glencoe, 111. 253
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