Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA)

 - Class of 1940

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 224 of the 1940 volume:

Published by the CLASS OF 1940 EDWARD F. GREEN MARY JANE CALDWELL Director Photographic Eclitor MORGAN G. SMITH ELIZABETH ROGERS Business Manager Co-Editor RICHARD P. MOSES MARY ELLEN STURDEVANT Production Manager Co-Editor Copyright (939 ( ' h- ' B •f Teg ' cm SWARTHMORE COLLEGE SWARTHMORE, PENNA - 1 J We, tKe members of tKe HALCYON staff, dedicate the 1940 HALCYON to Robert E. Spiller, whose encourage- ment and friendly advice bave been valuable to us in our work on this book throughout the year. ROBERT ERNEST SPILLER [ Sometime in a far-off future, you II come across a pile of dusty textbooks, yearbooks ana sucK, packed away on tne bottom shelf of a dilap- idated bookcase in a bidden corner of the attic. And we bope that as you blow off the dust and turn the pages of the 1940 HALCYON, memo- ries of four years of glorious sunny days and dull rainy afternoons, sad times and happy ones, vill nostalgic- ally arise. If they do, our purpose has been amply fulfilled. inii Faculty Administration ci asses Activities Fraternities Athletics Features I: : « ■:-• r: ?!: 1. M  ' Sit ■ilii iih SI h liSfi- J- u PRESIDENT FRANK AYDELOTTE IIAkollJ E. B. SPEIGHT EVERETT HLINI FRANCES BLANSHARD EDITH PHILIPS ENDERS W ' ORTI I E. NEWMAN M. NEWMAN WALLACH LIVINGSTON PALMER KILLE BLACK IRVING SCOTT R. JONES N. JONES BROOKS WILCOX COPPOCK BUXTON MacLEOD PENNOCK REINHOLD MALIN ERASER I5rp:wsier MANDELBAUM STILZ SCUDDER GODDARD BLANSHARD TURNER BOOTH l ' ll:(.(:l.p,l:uf; hai:r «EUN NG WENCELIUS MARCH SCHERER BRUN MAN.MXC ANDERSON DRESDEN BRINKMAXX CARPENTER JLLY McCRUMM JENKINS MARRIOTT THOM THATCHER NASON ASPINALL ki:ic.iht;n cx;x AMYE WRIGHT Pm EN ' GER E MA r I iii ■ ' :V Nil;  r li« M:r . i|; V 1 tl s ■1 ? « «-%, I l - ' ? ' [ WHITE. BAYS, GOODWIN. SOUDER FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER ' ■ BOSS. DOBBINS. LIPPINCOTT. BAYS Senior Class Orhcers LARKIX, BOSI:. II.LNIKR. C.oODWIN. BAYS. WlllTr:. TIIORX. I5F.NDER Bl ' DD. TROKGER. EALE. LARKIN. BUCHANAN. STARR ERICHSEN. WILSON. HOAGLAND MAGINNISS. PRICE. BOWERS MARTENET, CRAIG THOMAS OLDS. LITTLE THORN. HOAGLAND. BOWERS. OLDS FORNWALT. CRESSON M. TSUOKA KRA ITENMAKER. BENDER DOBBINS GRINNELL. JOHNSON ALEXANDER. BOSS SLACK. ACKERMAN N, SMrm EPSTEIN. GROSS. DIMPFL WILSON HARMAN. PEELLE BURGER. MEYERHOF. HASTINGS SUTTON. UNDERHILL. DAVIS. STEARNS. COLLIER BOSS. GOODWIN STARR DORISS STONE, BELL JUMP DEAN. SCIIOCK. lOI INSOX. I.IXDSAV, TRIMBLE. RICKEY. GRIWELL McClelland BAYS PRICE STEEL LADENBURG ERICHSEN PEELLE, PRICE THORN MILLER LYKENS HERNDON WILSON STONE. GOODWIN, KALTENBACH, SHAW. GEE LINDSAY, RICKEY DEAN. SCHOCK, BAKER. GRINNELL. STEVENS, JOHNSON, FISHER. BLACKMAN, BALL. LITn-.E BL ' DD ' .a.: iUL- _■ KALIENBACH. GOODWIN. PRICE JONES. LIVINGSTON. illwMA WHITFORD WOOLLCOTT . - -- •,r r: - ' Jl BARBOUR CROSBY BRADEN FIRST SEMESTER BENNETT BROOMELL CLPITT WOLFE Junior Class Officers HAROLD ARMSTRONG ADAMS I lal lias managed to become a necessary part of the Managers Parlors; Nvithout him the room is quite bare - or maybe just quiet. Best known as that streak of hoht- ning that flashes tfnougli tlie underpass just as a train pulls in. Hal commutes daily from his home in Philly - really effervesces when he says hello. He s a K vinker and one to swell the stag lines at college dances -and he spends a lot of perfectly good time getting c oncerned over a little matter of an Engineering major, but a close rival to over-abundant work is that eternally brain-twisting matter of women. WILLIAM COLBERT ADAMSON Bill is a paradox. Republican in political faith, staunch and die-hard, one of the old school, yet, contrary to cus- tom, he s one of the clearest thinkers to be found. Besides that, ■we suspect he s turning fast into a jitterbug. Pint- sized jayvee soccer player, Glee Club supporter, devotee of Martin labs for pre-med courses. Bill, who is precise in all he does, continues to work like a little beaver — so he says, on through the night. And it ' s much to the good- natured dissatisfaction of his roomies, as well as secret admirers vho, so ve ve heard rumored, wish he devoted more time to their social life. RICHARD BRADSHAVV ANGELL An idealist with plenty of power within himself to tr ans- fer his convictions to actual practice, that s Dick. And perhaps it s these qualities that have led him to become chairman of the ASU s program committee. Dick is ex- tremely sensitive to his surroundings, and this quality, combined with a rare appreciation for beauty and form, is developed in his poetry, written for the Poilfolio or purely for enjoyment. Honors work in the social sciences which he intends to utilize, gives plents ' of room for his inquiring mind. Dick s college life is rich and varied because he has the strength and energy to make it so. NEWELL GILDER ALFORD, Jr. Alfy, the human paradox, is one of those people that defies pigeon-holing. A brilliant, tempestuous honors student, an equally tempestuous and skilful defender in jayvee lacrosse, an actor for Little Theatre with a leading part in Judg- ment Day, and a clever person possessed of a smooth and dangerous wit, are gen- erally clifjerent people around campus, but Alfy is all of them at once or each of them in different season. W e are really certain about one thing however; Alfy never bores us, and although his be- havior may be unpredictable, it ' s always intriguing. •MItW EIJOT TAf -I-:R ASINOF Elly transferred Irom Williams sopli year. I le was a New York resitiei)! and a(f|iiirrd alldclic lalriils lli re whicli today disliriKuisli liim as one ol tne Ijeller varsity basketball team n)embers wben it comes to making un- canny shots. Part of Elly ' s talents are musifal; llie Slront for You ' he wrote for the HamburfJ Snow this year was one of the top tunes and I ' lly playing tbe piano means a crowd around sinking. He s a history honors sliidcnl who gets )5rodigious amounts of work clone witli (omplele ease and seems to have plenty of time for a little so( iai life and joking here and there. HENRY EXUM AUSTIN Martinites all know what follows that gay whistle which arrives early in the evening. It s Doc Austin, botany and bird enthusiast, who has come for a night of study. But alas, he s off! The bull session starts, and round alsout eleven o clock we reluctantly go back to our studying. Always with the hearty smile of a warm and friendly personality, he has the gift of the gab, dashed with bluff- ing. Besides vice-presidency of Kwink and an eager liking for the out-of-doors, he devotes the rest of his boundless energy to music — managing and playing in the orchestra and fiddle lessons in Phillv. ROBERT YORK AUSTIN Bob, unassuming and debonair, sees all, knows even more, but speaks nary a word of disapproval. Economics books reposing upright on library tables usually have Bob behind them studying with concentration to be envied. Debate manager, you can question him on anything and get a well-informed answer, but fellow debaters warn about being well armed with arguments or you haven t a chance! Once aroused. Bob can force anyone eventually to retire with misgivings. He belongs to Ivwink, had a Phoenix career, is quiet, but handles work capably, hon- ors effectively, possesses dignified composure and still isn t deficient in appreciating humor. AiS .,£ DORIS RUPRECHT B.A. R Carefree snatches of song up on second east usually turn out to be Dorie. She has a fe v worries however, in the Nvay of a tough chemistry major, yet takes it all easily and. judging from results, rather effectively also. There s time too, for fun vith best friend and three-year roommate Ginny, and that neatly kept head of brown hair and equally neat wardrobe, topped off by a pair of huge iDlue eyes, belie any braintrust tendencies and assure membership in the 400. Dories nicest habit is that of applying the old adage about laughing yourself out of it when- ever life gets too complex. ELEANOR KATHARINE BARBOUR The little job with the infectious giggle and a facult - for being continuously on the ball, Binkie Inspires a sort of steady current of amused chuckles interspersed by waves of uproarious mirth, for it s one subtle pun alter another — her cleverest come-backs fall at the least sus- pected iTioments. Bink s a freshman Aveek starlet that hasn t faded — witness an ex-class officer— varsity goller who can t bear to spend a sunny day other than in shoot- ing balls all over the front campus. Though it took her a long time to do it. she satisfactorily decided the to-be-or- nate-to-be question in the aHirmative. ELEANOR BROWNING BARTON If you see a streak of red approaching topped by a head ol black curls or hear a wild giggle nearby, you II know it s Eleanor and ten chances to one she s headed for the libe. That love of red just complements her personality, and while Eleanor appears never to study and is certain she 11 pull down D s. the three point average never fails to appear. Class hockey and basketball, French Club meetings, poetry writing and the daily trip to the druggie, along with the tremendous liking she has for music, make up most of her campus life. ALDEN STANLEY BENNETT Aunie is sole representative of Maine and gets awfully excited about winter sports. Furthermore, he has artistic leanings towards Walt Disney and animated cartoons, has practically absorbed certain of the creations into his soul, and at a moment s notice presents ludicrous imitations of Donald Duck s cjuack and such. In more serious moods, he manages the lacrosse team, works for Little Theatre, and honors in ec; for three years he has with both wit and wisdom translated friend Jakle to the college public. And if a display of college spirit is forthcoming, Alden s sure to be in evidence somewhere. BARBARA ANNE BINGER Bingie proves beyond a doubt, the old adage about the best coming in the small- est packages, especially hearts of gold. With a neat room that s a picture gallery of many friends lor whom she 11 do any- thing — Bing gets more accomplished in less time than any other inhabitant of sec- ond west. She s a Gwimper and member of FAC and Little Theatre Club, an Eng- lish major with French running a close second — and her inconceivably tiny clothes are. we all agree, the best of ogue s latest dictates. And. so say friends, when you want a shoulder to cry on, try Bing s. cai ' iii:kini-: siii-i vvood imrdsaij. | olly, (|ui l a ' l ' l cIlHifiil. ' -asily arrics a .o majors ,|„ ' m pnipior, l ' .csl l ' jarri- J,u. c- I ' Lvcr Civcn by Outint CI., I. I.Mnul I ' olly in iKirtic and alll.ou[,4i shn ' s first vio- linisl ill llic orrlicslra. she ' s iiol averse I., lid-Hint. ' lor riot- ous s((uare-danc:in( on lliirti east lloors. lond ol so( ( er. Molly made valiant eliorts to round up a girls ' teari), once even ( anvassed Miss Luken ' s room. Slie is ambitious iihout antiiropoiocy, but of a pradical mind ifiat leads to sludying liovvever l )lly would mudi rallier talk enthu- siastically about ramp in Midiitfan, Chicago and ihe midwest, that pampered pel l )oli bear and above ail her greatest hobby, Indians! EDWARD BAIR BOOHER Ned has managed to make a pretty big dent in t oiiege life; he manages the soccer team, guided the destinies of Kwink, served on Interfraternity Council, and was elected prexy of it besides. And in llie spring, when lie ' s not in the libe studying pob sci or carrying on a conversation Somewhere, he ' s usually chasing little white balls around the campus by way of training up for jayvee golf. Still Ned finds time to say Hello to everyone, keep up his established curricular record and give an impression of quiet dependability and an even disposition covering an unusual genus of dry wit. CHARLES GOETZMAN BRADEX Chuck came to Swarthmore intent on studying in hon- ors and absorbing Eastern culture; the latter culminated in an exalted occupation, namely, trust ' 6;00 a. m. Wool- man house fireman! He distinguished himself early when he outwitted some lofty sophs during a frosh-soph battle by pulling a fainting act and ended up class prexy and ec honors student. There ' s an alert, aggressive attitude of dynamic energy about Chuck in seminar discussions, de- bating, tennis playing and all the rest he does, plus de- termination and an elusive something else. In fact, after literally scores of attempts. we just plain give up and admit Chuck can ' t be pinned down in a hundred words. MILES WESLEY BOWKER Known to most merely as Ajax, ne even passed through the receiving line at tne sophomore dance as Mr. Ajax, One of the smarter engineers to hit campus, he was selected for Sigma Tau, has the propensity of studying at any time of day or night and rises to diabolical heights of inspiration anywhere from 5;00 to 6;00 a. m. He s often seen rooting enthusi astically on football and basketball bleachers, swinging baseball bats, or con- tributing to the behind-the-scenes work- ers for Little Theatre productions. Ajax is always on hand for a college dancer woulcin t miss a rat for a million dollars. MARY LOIS BROOMELL Right off tlie bat we marked Lo clown as one co-ed headed straight for May Day and a cynosure of the stag hne at every social event. She s furthermore the vorld s most democratic person; has al- most every one of her ten efficient little hngers in a pie— Gwimp— Social Commit- tee—class officerships— chairmanship of Point Committee. Still she dons horn rimmed glasses in the Friends ' libe to pull down two points, hut manages to stop work in time for a little druggie socializ- ing every night. Poised and reserved, loyal but clear-sighted and sincere, Lo ' s reallv a co-ed ideal. HEYWOOD HALE BROUN Busiest-man-in-college ought to be his nickname- not Woodie. ' Activities covering a wide range of inter- ests show inimitable dramatic ability— he ' s Little Theatre Club member— author and producer of Hamburg Shows- football manager who capably saw the team through its best season in years— hence Ivwink— also ASU, Phoenix sports editor. Woodie stays up all night writing clever papers for English seminars, never rises before 10:00 a. m.— possesses the campus medal for crackling wit and admi- rable ability ' to keep any number of co-eds amused at once— also a voluminous red ski jacket. CORNELIA VVOOTTON BROWN Peetie is beginning to object to her reputation as a Woman of Purpose, which we can hardly blame the col- lege for maintaining. Open scholar, ex-president of Par- rish and present WSGA prexy, FAC-er and ASU-er shows executive force not to be overlooked. Yet steady and conscientious as she is, Peetie is also perfectly capable of being a wild young thing, and much more interesting than the average worth-whiler away of time. There ' s the dramatic flare that came to light as Elizabeth in Pride and Prejudice, ' the intelligence making a brilliant scho- lastic record, and still an utter impishness lurking beneath poise. MARY JANE CALDWELL M. J. is the little girl with the rattlesnake vertebrae necklace, her fingers in all sorts of activities. A keen eye for the target when it comes to archery, and a still keener eye for the artistic when it comes to Photographic Editing of the Halcyon, hard and conscientious worker who is friendly, calm, and collected about it all, three year pre- med student who rarely leaves Martin ' s walls except for a good bull session in J section— M. J. can ' t keep still one minute and devotes her extra time to the darkroom, the Camera Club, captaining badminton and to FAC. I. AURA PlllJJNDA CAMI BHIi, I ' liil lliiiiks, oats, even lall s in fif-r slff ' |), in Spanisli iuliilarrJitd willi Irf-ncli. She was lonf lacJy al. t u- lirsl (ncetinc ' of llic (J. ol P. Spanish Clul and lound Ijcrsfll unanimously elected president somehow! Phil spends summers in Mexico, where she hales tourists ' and, instead, exer- 1 iscs iindcnialdr (harm on the natives, Rjipidly (|jan[ in[, ' rnoods (omhined with a dclitilillul tendency towards the frivo- lous Hiarl her daily existence ahoul lam- pns. rliil has (urifiermore manat ed to keep an all A average helore honoring, jjctome a druggie fixture, and arrjuire a reputation for playing l.illle I licalre ' s temperamental lady roles. WILLIAM PERRINE CAMP The 39 40 Phoenix editor wears a serious, contem- plative mien that accounts for his honors work, but there s a Keen insight there too. and a pungent v ' it that super- sedes everything else at surprising times. Bill became a cracK ping pong player under roommate Mawhinney s tutelage, but mention bridge and he removes hiinself from the spot in a hurry. Bills existence divides itself between the Phoenix office. French Club and Kwink meetings, library and consistent dates. In connection vith the latter, Bill spends some time on the problem of dress. It s the mark of a gentleman and a serene personality. LLEWELLYN MORRIS CLEVENGER. 2nd Lew, who ' s another grinding engineer, also day student, doesn t often saunter leisurely about the campus, but sel- dom misses college dances and persistently supports all athletic teams. He capably manipulates several jobs at once, but along with this, he dives for varsity swimming and plays lacrosse. He s one of the more superlative bowl- ers of the Engineers League — even brings his own ball to matches. Furthermore, he s one of those outdoor men with a love of hunting and skiing. Lew had a breezy motor- cycle that served him two years — but now it s that joyfully wheezy grey Ford, and he s really proud of it. RAY HAROLD COFFMAN To see Ray extroverting before the football stands dressed in cheer-leader ' s garb, one would never guess that half an hour after the game he ' ll be introverting fort ' miles an hour on a money and banking paper, yet such will probably be the case. Ray concentrates on versatility- hence Kwinking, honors, cross-country— and admonishing fraternity brothers to acquire the psychological approach. It can be plausibly argued that he has somehow accom- plished all this in his quiet and efhcient way and with comparative ease, since he still takes time out for games of contract and badminton. ERNST DA ' ID COURANT A Swarthmore institution is Ernst! Wliether scurrying along the lialls of Parrisli (for Phoenix his Rrst two years) or studying quietl up in tlie matli libe, he seems an essen- tial part of college atmosphere. Despite small stature, hjnst goes in for jayvee cross country and swimming: but I hat ' s pretty insignificant compared to the ease with which he breezes through the highest branches of math, physics and chemistry. One of those honors students who rates highest and w itii a minimum of studying. Courant is (he true scientist; but he attends IRC and ASU meetings for xarietv s sake. ALFRED DAVIES COX, Jr. Straight from the Naval Academy came Cox— a seem- ingly painless and easy transition, because he fits so well into the picture of Quaker football, Hamburg shows, col- lege dances and campus life. And when you see Al s face pale and eyes not exactly open and hear a slower drawl than usual, don ' t blame the proverbial night life; he s probably been burning midnight oil far into post-midnight hours only because he s an engineer. To see him at his best is to see him at his worst, namely when he emerges mud-coated but grinning from a furious football pileup. CHARLES HENRY CROTHERS Baby of the class. Chick had just passed his sixteenth birthday when Freshman week came along. But he s of the proverbial tall, dark and handsome elite, a baseball and basketball player and soccer captain after having played two years. So it s only natural that Chick should call forth no little feminine interest. But this is by no means all, for he was president of the class sophomore year, is a Glee Club member, maintains B averages, majors in botany and resents its being called a snap. Chick sings and plays the piano like a pro— collects crowds in the managers parlors. HELEN PRATT CROSBY The sophisticated wisp with the chang- ing coiffure is Piglet, the Pagan, who claims descent from the Witch of Endor. Considering the quantities of young men whom she has effectively bewitched, this is believable— and we are inclined to con- sider supernatural aid as explanation for an appalling list of activities. Social Committee, Portjolio, a stray class officer- ship— plus scholastic achievements near three point and frequent Princeton week- ends. Or perhaps the source of her power lies in psychology honors work where she learns all about us from continuous rat- running in Martin. And we think it s a Good Thing that Swarthmore is not Salem! SUZANNE CUNNINCIIAM Lazy Sue spends time in ncd laic iii( lils and lale mornings -has a monstrous (ello embellishing licr room which often travels to Dr. Dresden s teas. Sue sings in chorus but loves most lo munch chocolates, read maga- zines, or dance. There s a striped Princeton tiger llial snoozes on her bed — and she gets all excited about expi li ments in international living also receives pictures and letters from lumierous derman correspondents. With beautifully kept. Huffy blond hair that calls fortti no few compliments. Sue knows exactly what she likes and dis- likes ' —rates numerous phone sheet s ril)l)lings — na.s. a com- pletely silly giggle. DOROTHY JUNE CUPITT Cupie s inain charm is that of a black-haired liltle girl with a grown-up appearance. There s a fresh naivete about ner that s a relief from sophistication, which per- haps lias something to do with her election as class officer. Social Committee membership and the broad range her social life has consistently covered since freshman week. Cupie writes English honors papers in fits and spasms, manages the business for Little Theatre, superintends press board stories as an assistant chairman and acts on FAC. She s a fiend about ping pong, riding and dogs, ana the only mystery about her is how she manages to make people feel at ease always. THOMAS GOODWIN CUSTER In case you re wondering how to get the spots out of your last year s suit or whether that date you had Friday night was really a blonde, Tom s the man to see; he s a chemist. But you d never suspect the debonair fellow with the crew haircut and omnipresent bow tie was the serious student he is. Tom s manner is as fresh as a salty New England breeze. He heads the Press Board and rates the pro billiards league. (P. S. They say Tom s a man s- man-from-way-back-when, and we don t kno v what to make of these rumors aljout lovely Massachusetts lasses!) RALPH IRVIN DUNL P, Jr. Ralph, who is Arfy to the initiated. is one of those honors students found in the chem building at all hours of day or niglit. But fie doesn t limit himself to a scientific education, for he s Cross-Coun- try manager. Glee Club member, and has distinguished himself in debating. With a smooth voice that could convince even Chipper that the Hamburg Sho v is a manufactured meat, he s a menace to mankind; for even those who kno v him best have at one time or another believed one of his tall stories. But success greets Ralph in whatever he tries, except the disastrous time he attempted dating t vo women simultaneouslv. MARY ELIZABETH DUNNING It s only a perniaiiently jjleasant disposition that keeps Mary from waxing realK- violent on the subject of the early 7:00 a. m. train from Westtown, necessitating 6:00 rising every morning. But she spends her commuting hours and a lot of class time drawing Fadies in ultra- smart clothes — sa s something vague about dress-design- ing careers. Procrastination in the matter of papers is Marys self-confessed vice — she habitually does them in all night spurts. An interesting sidelight on the Halcyon ' s feature collector is the way she spends a matter of hours in the druggie — for she professes an irrepressible yen ior everything on the menu. FAE ETHELDRA EAST An intellectual with an aesthetic sensitivity to the under- lying meanings of Shakespeare and Shelley and Tschai- kowsky s Fifth, ' subtle vit. quick mind, tongue that acts on impulse most of the time- with a flash of irritation one moment but serenit ' the next, and that s Fae. She s a person who candidly admits she 11 never move unless she has to, and she admits equally frankly that she enjoys being dependent on others for plans and decisions, yet Fae, once alone, is competent of doing all this and more. Moods? Not dependable, but they only make Fae more interesting. MARTHA McILVAIN EASTWICK Pat ' s a Baltimore beauty who ' s not dumb. A steady two point average combined with a lot of serene cominon sense, deep sincerity, ready low-toned laugh, propensity for completing everything without haste and on time, gives us an inkling as to why. Soft-voiced Pat has clothes galore — looks really smooth in everything from Gwimp sweater to formal, even when applying greasy make-up for Little Theatre Club. Persistent waver of white mit- tened hands to the skies, her only worry is the new dome for Parrish when aviation interests nv too low. CHARLES ALBERT EBERLE, Jr. I3uzz is one of those best and best- known men on campus. That chorus of uproarious mirth to be heard for miles, sure to be Buzz plus e. -roommate Don, may be part of the cause. Spectacular runs on the gridiron early freshman year proclaimed him one of the speediest backs in years — fie s a three letter man -e.xcels also in basketball and track. Always on the go, democratic by nature, he s an ad- dition to any crowd, and the deeply un- derlying sincerity ' , loyalty and seriousness that comes out on occasion, makes Buzz lots more than just one of those popular all around persons. MARIAN IONI£ EUWARUS l iilii(iiin IcalurffJ, blacK-nairecl Marian presents a per- l(( I piiliirc ol sinoolnly tiressecl allraclivcness to the woria ill lartfc. Sr)c s a person wno (fets a maximum enjoyment out ol anything that appeals to her yel slill takes lilc seriously, and is even, so say friends, sulijcf I lo oetasional moments of l)lci l moodiness. I he lallcr. however, are shortlived, ihanks lo an innale love ol Inn and willingness to please, fc-ddie s always in demand when a bridge game is in order and she ' s the model mannequin ol Personnel fashion shows: she trel s to Lehigh at week-end hids and jnajors (hy nts and starts) in ec. JOSEf HINE ELIAS May Queen attendant for two years and deservedly so. Jo manipulates life well from either the social, studious or activities angle. Dramatic interest made her secretary oi Little Theatre and director of make-up, good sense put her on Conduct Committee and FAC, speedy efficiency led to basketball managership and Cwimp membership, popularity made her class secretary sophomore year. Jo owns a collection of the smoother clothes on campus — rumors and telephone sheet data corroborate as to the out- sider - — and she and roommate Jean have provided the Parrish show room for Mrs. B. s prospective freshmen. DORIS LOUISE ENGLISH Dot s a good listener, but sa ys just vhat she thinks about things when necessary. She s furthermore one of the most generous persons ever. Dot s room is one of those that seem to remain in a miraculous state of per- petual neatness and has won notoriety on third east, as has her secret (primarily so) love of dogs and horses. Dot gets up at disgustingly early hours to go on breakfast hikes with the Outing Club, but getting to bed early at night remains her chief objective outside of teaching and social service some day. As for that nephew of hers, he ' s an all-consuming interest. MARY DOAN ELLIS A childhood spent in Chile has left little impression on Mary; even the Portu- guese in which she learnt her lessons in the lower grades has been forgotten. But her interest still centers in South Amer- ica, for her family lives in Rio de Janeiro. Perhaps this cosmopolitan outlook ac- counts for her cool-headed way of taking life, as Mary has found time to honor in history, juggle expenses as Outing Club treasurer, v ' ork in Little Theatre produc- tions, write Phoenix sports stories, knit at various sweaters which never seem to be completed. But none of it seems to bother her. ELEANOR GREER EVANS EI started out freslinicin week by dating practically every datable upperclass male and spending her waking moments dancing in Collection: she s one of tliose unusual blonds lliat members of tlie stronger lialf of tbe college simply don I miss seeing. But besides this angle ol El, there s the athlete who pushes balls into the cage for the varsity hockey team and tosses them into the basket lor varsity basketball, acts as president of WAA, manages the tennis teaiii and belongs to Cnvimp. Then too, she doesn t miss many of the sessions up on second west and El certaiidy doesn t neglect the coeduca- tional advantage of Swarthmore. NANCY FLANDERS We are tempted to ascribe Nancy s individualit ' to the rugged Vermont environment from which she springs, and she gives spice to any group with her frankness and inter- est in everything proposed. Her particular hobbies lie in varied fields — mathematics and astronomy — consumers co operatives — the removal of advertisements from highways, and she has been known to hew down billboards in the dark of the moon. Nancy likes hard cider, and MUSIC — knows more about more kinds of music than anyone else in college except Dr. Dresden and the Swarms, and we must add that she s generous with time, friendship, and mate- rial possessions. ROBERT WILSON FOSTER When we say that Bob ' s interests and activities are as vast as his frame, we are really saying something. Bereft of his substantial influence, such varied things as ec seminars and Social Committee co-chairmanships, the glee club, the track team, the Wharton bull-sessions and the Chest Fund would all seem to buckle a little, and sag in the middle. This capacity for getting things done is coupled, happily, with a ready and cordial grin bespeak- ing warmth of personality and an internal calm which defies even the turbulence of life at a small Quaker col- lege. For his wholehearted manner, Swarthmore likes Bob. JUSTINE GARWOOD Human dynamo of knowledge and perspicacity, Gus divides her ambitions between writing and the theatre, while in characteristic associate editor style she thinks on a typewriter and reels off Phoenix and Portfolio copy, Eng- lish seminar (lapers. Student Board minutes and ASU exec reports in last minute frenzy. Author of a one-act play produced her freshman year, Gus frequently directs workshop dramas. Wearing a gray workshirt that s a relic of Whitefield summer theatre days, she amazes the Phoe- nix staff with her unexpected remarks and is noted for her lucid understanding and unerring critical sense. jANf-: r.if.RijTij f lilly loves lo liiin up lor ' liii H ' t willi odd liair-flo s. aod lliis just goes lo prove ,1 lot (il)oril lif-r personality in wfiicfi the I ' li-niinl ol iiiicxpei leclness plays a domi- II. mt part. Wlieltier it ' s poetry or lunch lahle f onversiilion or caricatures drawn in odd iiiotriciils. il Oilly ' s behind it. the- result is hound lo he highly enlertainintj. And il Iriend Penny is in trie vir inity. ohservers are kept in a state ol uproarious laughs. On ifie serious side, riiljy enjoys serious ( onversations on anylliing that (oncerns life in general, and honors in philosophy, frantirally dashing off papers III (lo K limited time. CHARLES ALLEN GEMBERLING A member of one of Woodstovvn s first families, easy going Gem is rabid on the merits of South Jersey, but once on the dance floor Gem s diffidence is forgotten. Along with brother Art, Charlie has playboy tendencies — likes to shag and shows an exceptional sense of rhythm. He s one of the better jayvee basketball performers in the winter and was elected to I wink membership too. Despite the fact that he s an inmate of the tumultuous A-three hotel, level headed Gem somehow manages to maintain a B average in his zo courses. • CLARIBEL GOODWIN Ye perfect twentieth century version of a romantic hero- ine, Claribel is firmly convinced she really isn t anyone: yet she eats dinner with Gwimp on Thursdays, is an ex-member of the orchestra, likes golf, horses and knitting, and embellishes Hades (hers and Cupie s room) with in- genuity. Clarie gives a dominant impression of calm- eyed, quiet serenity to the world, but she s quite capable of sticking up for her own ideas or slipping into a gay mood as the occasion demands. And she s usually just announcing offhand that she won t have a date for Friday night about the time the telephone rings! ELIZABETH KIRKPATRICK GRAVES Pat is one of those singularly rare phenomena that can restore one s joie de vivre more quickly than sleep, finish- ing a term paper or bromo-seltzers. She has an unusual and delightful sensitivity to the humor in mortal things and can express this in a fashion that is wont to result in a hysterical condition for all within hfty yards. But Pat is more than this. She is a paragon of human capabili- ties on the side — member of Gwimp, Personnel and the English honors program plus a close affinitv ' to the Tribune and New Way. EDWARD FAIRCHIIJ OREHN Mix well tlie inyreclieiits of iiilcllec tualily. coniiiioii ' sense, aiicl Ijaik-none; tnen superimpose a llaniing reel tliatcK witli a dash of tenacity to go witii it. and add a warm, sincere grin. To tliis intriguing combination add some of tlie deep-seated idealism that s rare in a true con- servative, and a liberal quantity of that indelinablo some- thing of which friends are made. I he resultant indi idual will possess a few of Ed s manifold characteristics. Then, too, much of the c|uiet efficiency behind the scenes of Halcyon publication this year can be traced directly back to Editor Green. HOPE GRISWOLD Curly is one of those rare persons around campus who manipulate the curricula and a million extras with equal thoroughness and still maintain unlimited enthusiasm with a nary-a-care-in-the-world air. She s the member of the second east to second west gang whose vociferous and I ' ery dependable giggle sets all the rest off too. She ad- vises the freshmen for EAC, records what they do for Point Committee, manipulates the golf schedule, goes to Gwimp meetings and handles all the funds for WAA. And never yet, they say. has Curly shown signs of losing that perpetually even temjjer. JEAN H. HANDLER An extraordinary ability ' for searching and often ex- ceedingly witty comments is the first outstanding charac- teristic noticed in Jean, who becomes more amazing when better known. Her artistic choice of words is reinforced by color schemes, pictures, music, and philosophy pro- fessors. Few possess Jean s sure choice of encouraging remarks, and friends she introduces into the wild and woolly Bassett atmosphere are as interesting as herself. Perhaps the secret of her success is the determination with which she goes to bed at an hour at which other inmates are just waking up — except on week-ends or when a par- ticularly good bull session is in progress. ROBERT DONALD HALL Bob, with the smooth black hair and penetrating dark eyes, couples a bound- less supply of energy with a genuine readi- ness and will to work and is definitely an A-number-one man to have around when there are things to be done. He aban- doned soccer this fall to give more time to studying, Dunnie s loss being the gain of the Engineering Department. Bob. who lives nearby, devotes himself off campus to working with bees and turkeys and caring for his interest in the vil. It ' s an intriguing diversity ' of hobbies, but he looks after all of them with character- istic thoroughness. Pix;(;v iiAKDiNc; No one utquuinled witli l ' c[;[;y fin ' 1 I l iiinv lli il she hails from Minncsolfi, land of lakes and idyllic loresls, for she tells ils t ' lories lo the skies. She s ahle to take care of herself in conversalional sword-play, possesses an increasing ability to produce excellent short stories as Portfolio editor, investigates thoroughly whatever she linds interesting. One of Bassett ' s seven psychology majors, she croons in her sleep such words as field-theories and vectors, draws little arrows all over the l)lanl et. Asleep, Peggy is just another female psychologist; awake, there s no one can ef|ual her impishly incorrigihie remarks! ANN HARGREAVES A tall New Yorker with inclinations toward the middle- west, especially Iowa. Ann takes her share of teasing admirably well. Between tearing about giving intelligence tests to children and Swarthmore intellectuals, and travelling to U. of Penn. for a sociology course or two, she works in the dean ' s office, takes part in French and Outing Clubs, Uncle George s forging class. With a record for not missing even one of the college lectures in two years, Ann, who was intent upon getting the most out of college, has given up idealisms-lectures have lost the battle to Charlie McCarthy! EDITH LEWIS HARPER Edie belongs to the group who begin every other sen- tence At George School— ' . Furthermore, she ' s a shrewd person, knows what we intend to say almost before we do ourselves. She works at ASU, was on the Phoenix, and assists the chairman of press board with her characteristic air of liking to get things done rather than sit around and think about them. Apt to disappear mysteriously some- times, Edie turns up sooner or later with strange stories and a philosophy paper, knows well all kinds of people on campus, wears smocks hind end foremost and plays around in the German Club. ARTHUR CARMEN HARTMAN Art, Chester ' s gift to football, tips the scale at the two hundred and ten pound mark. He s a day student engineer, first class scholar and one of the reasons for the uplook in Little Quaker athletics, a triple threat starter freshman year vho comes out for scrimmage again each au- tumn. Art s potentialities run in the line of track, too. where tossing the shot and javelin make him a letter-a-year man. Art isn t the rah-rah t pe or the let-come- hat-may person; he s congenial ana idealistically inclined, and goes about get- ting prettv- much what he wants out of college. HARRY HOYT HAN ' ERSTICK. Jr. Hilarious Harr ' Irom Havorlord i aiiic over to Swailli more second semester freshman year, willi an eye on sociability. And soon he began amazing everxbody with his golf, things like a victory over Horton Smith and Jimmy Thomson, and capturing the Feinis l ania Ama- teur! Golf Captain iiill lakes to the court in the winter with an uncanny eye for shooting baskets. A glib, joking manner plus a sense of responsibility and knowledge or exactiv hat to do and when to do it are characteristic of him. The only thing we don t understand about Harry Hoyt is where he ever picked up that cognomen of Bill. ILSE HEINE This Deutsche f lcidchen has a wit as many-sided as a prism. Whetlier discussing a serious question or whiling away her time lightly, she always gives the impression of being thoroughly alert to what goes on about her. Use has an unusual lilting quality in her voice and her favorite diversion is riding horseback. But she spends afternoons skating and racing down hills on skis whenever Swarth- more s unpredictable weather permits. Then whenever Use can ' t find anything else to do, she sits down and writes papers that have a reputation for being the best in her seminar. EDWARD DREWRY HENDERSON The Big Swede comes from Minnesota, has a thor- oughly winning way about him and a liking for hard work. Ed, living up to a lively pre-college record, honors in zo as preparation for med school, and does it with a keen mind and willingness to work that make him tops student and more. Athletically, he ' s carved out quite a niche for himself on the varsits ' football squad and jayvee lacrosse team. Of no less importance about Ed is his friendliness coupled with that flair for kidding with a serious countenance that fools almost everyone. PETER HENLE Standing thoughtfully in the pande- monium of the Phoenix office, mad-poet- eyes upcast — that s associate editor Henle. who looks more serious than he is and is more serious than he thinks. Precise 4-A student now honoring in ec, co-editor of tKe ASU Bulletin and member of its exec, Pete yet has lighter moments of hitting soft-balls on the front campus, being adept at bridge and inadept at music and whistling continuously. Pete s one weakness is his sleeps-he needs time and quiet to get it and wakes up on slight- est provocation, specially at radiator knockings coming at ungodly hours any- way! IMCliW IIOI I- Perhaps il is llic Norvvccfiii ar](cslry or f i-r ui i lli - New fvifjI ' Hid fnvironincul lljiil ;i ( fxjiits lor Inc blona dynamics wo. (inci in Doniiic, l.illlf I licairo curi-cr. cul- minating in a supcrl) inlcrprclalioii ol l,llr j)ii s wjlr, leader ol llio Swiirllimorc R( ' lLit cc ( oiriiiiiltr ' c, lionors vvorK in l nulisli, and a class olli( crsliii) llirovvii in, sugfcsl llio dr-nt I )( nnic lias made in S v arllirnori ' lilc. A passion lor music (ornl)incd witli a dclinilc propensity for llic New Yorkar and all it implies, an elliereal loveliness (ombined witn a very earthly kind ol joic ac vii ' rc and poise are signilicant of Oonnie. ALAN HOMANS Buckeye AI may be distinguished Irom the rest of the crew of three-H inmates by that individual chortle of his. He ' s usually c[uiet and reserved and studies hard main- taining two point ratings. AI, lurthermore. belongs to l wink, manages roommate Bill and fiis golfing cronies and the rest of the team and practices for the jayvee him- self. He has a practical eye out for the future, including a specialized business course next year. And in spite of claims to the contrary, AI leads a life of ease, for he ignores the fairer half; well, at Swarthmore anyway. SAM TEMPLE HOWELL Sam is a curious mixture of contrasting opposites. He has red hair, indicative of an extraordinary amount of devilishness which is his when he chooses, but he ' s usually serious, a person others enjoy talking to. Though he pre- ceded Swarthmore with Colgate as an alma mater, Sam came out as a one hundred and eighty pound tackle for jayvee football, earned Kwink membership and manipu- lated well this year s sweater getting job. He s a bridge player par excellence and, so say fellow fans, usually wins. Though he s reticent about details, there was a time too, when Sam won a Jones Beach ping pong tourna- ment. JOHN SOUTHERTON HOUGH Jack s one of those silent, but brainy poll sci majors who hold a comprehensive supply of good staunch information on world events. He trains himself for a smooth and cultured life in diplomatic service by reading his favorite books and mystery thrillers. Of the three-H trio, he and Homans sit about in musing moods and occasionally enjoy a calm and col- lected smoke while Haverstick hies him- self off in disgust. Jack ' s a basketball fan and resorts to the golf course in the spring. He s probably utterly unic|ue in that he never yet has been to a single Sunday morning breakfast. ESTHER GREELEY HOWES Sou, red-liciired girl, sans the char- acteristics usually accompanying such people, is easy-going and undemanding, generous to a fault, but by no means al- ways acquiescent; vitness her frer|uent remark, You know vhat gripes me? She s an archery enthusiast and a pre- med student who spends hours peering into microscopes and studying formulae in those frequent inroads on Martin s labs and libraries. Those friends of hers with the insatiable appetites do the same upon the olt-coming reinforcements of delect- ables — cake, cookies, jams, which she brings from her Media home. Quietly loyal, interested in people, unassuming - that ' s Sou. ' DOROTHY PETERS HUBBELL Dot presents the almost phenomenal picture of a girl with a fervid liking for chemistry, and that is her nonors major -which she just complicates further by a math minor. However, the most singular thing about Dot is the en- tirely ne v and different brother she can (figuratively speaking) drag forth upon all occasions to illustrate a voluminous repertoire of amusing anecdotes. Dot sings with the chorus and hikes with the Outing Club— is famed among friends for her Garden City, Long Island, variety of hospitality which she offers to all those traveling to the nearby metropolis. JOHN RAHUE HUHN. Ill First member of the class to get a date back in freshman week! Don t suspect Johnny of onesidedness, however - he has since expanded into honoring in poli sci, advertis- ing the Halcyon, and upholding football and baseball teams for three consecutive seasons. Quietly serious in everything he does, Johnny s the veil-rounded person per- sonified. A generally dignified appearance stays ever vith him except when he steps to the dance floor— then there s a joe-college version of a twirling Turkish dervish. He has paid a rueful penalty, however; for the Social Com- mittee roped him into giving free dancing lessons! GEORGE IRVING HULL He s A section s proponent of reincarnation and he manages to keep himself from getting foo involved in this world by taking frequent sojourns to the observatory, where he contemplates the universe in general and the moon in particular. He s the black-haired fellow who takes an adequate interest in co-eds and majors in Eng- lish because the subject provides him with sufficient quo- tations to support his views on life and talks on and on and on. George also likes to sing, conventionally with the Glee Club and unconventionally with the sho%ver-room- quartet. RAYMOND CI XKV l, C ,f:i,fS01.L Ray the stuflent, anrJ Ray tfic artist, lead a i oiriloilahly wcll-roiiiiOffi follege lilc. Repeatedly surveyintf wlience he lias (orne and wliillier lie is goiritj. I ay is a faun. (Iciir lliiiilrr. lie liiids mo iiK oii[;riiily in l)eiii(( a soi iaiile and a sloiil rnemher ol llic Student Union, a I oniliin.ilion wliiili speaks well lor liis sijKcrily ol interest in oiilernporary problems. StocKy and povverlul, Ray hools a loiitjli ball lor llie jayvee soccer learn. He majors in ent ' ineering anrl besides tnese inlellectual anrl atrMelir aspirations, lliere are tlie (lever little far- toons tliat t raee llie Por ro ' io. ELIZABETH S ALTON STALL HURST Hurstie started out by not only living in famed Scott House, but being selected first pr esident. Sbe firmly recom- mends exercise vvnere vocal chords are concernea, sings itn tlie sextette, mixed chorus, played in Trial by Jury her frosh year, and is chattiest individual on second vest. Hurstie is efficient and practical, and she plays on badminton varsity. She discourages those who have the ill luck of using the same mail box as she because of the gross amount of letters she rates from potent outside inter- ests. Roommate perfect, says Kay after three years e.x- perience of it. WALTER ERLING ISGRIG Rough-cut smoothie Walt is most inveterate outside- the-dining-room-door waiter in coIIege — also young Loch- invar out of Milwaukee— thanks to the Western Scholar- ship committee. Though occasionally pursuing seminars for Brooksie s poli sci department, an ability ' to rate tops in good conversation on any subject makes his presence fre- c(uent and desirable in bull sessions — that wavy blond hair and what ' s under it— more than looks— fills the bill for Phyl. The mystery about Ipswich, man vith a penchant for blue sweaters, is how he ever succeeds in more than amply justifying that scholarship of his by dint of prac- tically no studying. JAY WILLITS JACKSON There ' s an air of permanency about Jack borne out by the fact that he has outlasted three of the four men with whom he has roomed. However, the same propensitv comes out in his work. Starting as a neophyte engineer. Jack changed to economics — engineering proving too arid for his taste. His avocations fall in the wanderlust cate- gory—include riding and flying. Jack has met his obliga- tions to society by working as tennis manager, on Freshman Executive Committee — toying vith cross country running. The Jack-outside-of-college lives in New York ' s exclusive Nassau County—; political party, Republican. m JEAN WITT JACKSON Black-haired, attractive and always well-dressed, de- scribes Jean s exterior; well-balanced explains her per- sonality. Together, these account for Gwimp presidency. Personnel Committee work, FAC advice to freshmen, badminton managership, WAA membership, an ex-vice- presidency of the class. And competent is the only adjec- tive for Jean s extra-curricular vork. Ever since freshman week, Jean s existence has been rather well filled with Bill, yet she majors in economics and plays on class ath- letic teams. f3ut perhaps the most outstanding thing about Jean is that she has never in three years been known to appear with a ruffled disposition. EDWARD ALOYSIUS JAKLE Out of Arizona comes one of the most skillfully versa- tile athletes Swarthmore has ever seen, four-letter-star- Jakle. who deserves them all — football, basketball, golf, baseball— and is, in addition, captain of this season s foot- ball team. With a broad smile, sincerely unassuming nature Jake doesn t let anything interfere with keeping up scholastically since he majors in history. He s an ex-class officer, but not a social lion, nevertheless, trite as it sounds, Jake really deserves his campus popularity and respect. Yet he took one look at that Philly newspaper last fall and lled DONALD ELMER JOHNSON Pep Johnson, member of the famed F section gang of engineers, runs up Mr. Pitt s electricitx ' bill studying far into the night -and sometimes even on into daylight, especially when one of those dreaded engineering reports is due next day. Good-natured to the last degree, Don s friendly grin is an institution about college and he spends time with the Glee Club. Aquaticly inclined, he swims the year around, spends his summers as a life guard, and with a little urging, Don goes on to tell us the pleasures of mid-winter swimming in the Atlantic Ocean. CARL FERDINAND JOHNSON It is interesting to lounge on the library steps on late fall afternoons and see coach- captain Carl, king of touch footballers, mustering his might ' forces. But Carl doesn t confine himself to football; he makes with ease the somewhat violent transition from a session in classical music to Bob Crosby and his contemporaries or to a discussion on Hegel, Marx and Kant in that famous circle of the new philos- ophy department, ' headed by best-friend- severest-critic. Dr. Ottenberg. Carl heads for future diplomatic service and past his- tory includes a period of harp playing. CHARLES MORRELI. JUDSON Charlies room, papcrcfl vviln riiinhow lined posters, bears resemljlance to the Rcnnsylvaniii railroad sialion. His greatest enjoyment lies in iigurint; out (omplt ' x prol)- lems, and tlie ei oniric ilics ol ncxi years loolnall s( rienule, my steries of a iog-lotj-duplpx slide ride ami liigfier matlie- inatics are all meat lor that omnipotent inlelle I ol liis. He was a medal winner in Hie lrosn-so|)li deliale liis lirsl year, and Cliarlie, boy with the Swedish name and (((lizzi- cal manner, has mounted the peak ol oratory with three seasons of varsity debating. Last year he deserted the Physics Department, so now Charlie just honors in chemistry. JOHN WARREN KALB Apparently quiet and unassuming. Jack started during his freshman year to distinguish himself as one of the better engineers ended up by winning a Sigma Tau honor. That he devotes less time to the books than all his fellow cronies put together doesn t affect a steady A aver- age, and that his concerns aren t narrowly centered, we know, because Jack has a keenly appreciative ear for all the liner selections from Brahms to Beethoven; will hurry through assignments so that he may just sit back and enjoy symphony concerts at his ease, or catch a train for Philly to hear the Philharmonic. JOHN HEIDEN KAUFMANN Black-haired, beetle-browed Johnny Kaufmann is enough by himself to explode the theory that fun and a con- science for social problems don t mix. and frosh year he even helped plaster the huge white 40 on the water tower. Johnny is president of ASU and he is known in weekly executive meetings as God, thanks to his diplomatic reasoning. Well-formed ideas are Johnny s. but his chief claim to fame lies in his ability to keep step with a whirl- wind of energy that puts a tornado to shame. How he keeps it up, and keeps the ex-campus commentator keeps the campus commentating. JAMES GRANT KEHLER. Jr. Vhen Jim isn t experimenting over in zo labs as a pre-med student, he ' s usually somewhere off in the woods riding horse- back or else just fooling around the stables, for horses are his foremost hobby. Music vies closely for first place, how- ever, and Jim plans all the excursions for the Glee Club. He also plays the tympani in the orchestra to which he belongs, even organized a jazz band freshman year and played the drums in it. But Jim gave that thing up as a bad job when his only e va d turned out to be a nickname of Sabu. JANE KELLOCK It is inipossiljle to encompass that person Kelly in a short space; she keeps sticking out at the corners, hke an overfilled suitcase! Consider her indispensable part as hotkey captain— on basketball team— wide musical talents — or o io— credits already acquired towards a Masters in English and med school. Kelly goes through life with an amazing intensity— studies furiously in the few hours she has time— demands perfection in everything from folk- dancing to chemical formulae— usually approximates it. Kelly is intensely interested in everything going on, and has more than minor abilities along the line of her own little animated antics. LAURA SHERMAN KNAPP Laurie, the history honors student of the soft voice and poised manner, is one of the reasons for bookstore bills running sky high, for she spends part of her time being an ornament down there. Other times, she proves to be the favored model of a portrait painter, acts as FAC member and a soothing influence on faculty children. And then too, Laurie spends whole days reading stacks of ' books for seminar papers except for daily afternoon cat- naps. But there s nothing Laurie enjoys more than a long and involved session of serious discussion or one ol just sheer hilarity with fourth west cronies. DOUGLAS HAIG LANGSTON If life ever becomes boring down at Pitt Hall, in money and banking seminar, the libe, or at Tuesday night Col- lection, you are safe in betting that Doug is absent. In company with roommates Jump and Marcley, the result is inevitably hysterical. Moreover, as a result of much hard work and cleverness, Doug fell heir to the manager- ship of swimming. He ' s an expert at the more lively art of repartee in his lighter moments— but he concentrates hard behind ec books in the periodical room almost every after- noon. Basically everything Doug does bears the Langston- ian touch. JEAN ELLEN LASHLY Of the genus of souls who create creditable poetry on the sly, is Jean, who we know on campus for her dignified poise but friendly hell-lo. Her friends tell us al)out the brand of wittv ' and salient sallies she can produce out of a mood of nothing but abandonment to the ridiculous. Jean is more than this, how- ever; she can discuss anything she chooses clear-headedly, capably, and with com- mon sense. She gives advice and man- ages her personal life with quiet serenity. Jean s one of those English majors who persistently gets work done days ahead of time and goes to bed early midst dis- gusted cracks of a bunch of honoring associates. ' ALWIN MAKEPEACE LEBER Al, llic liHric ol C lii|)|)i-r ' s exislcnce. fias a rc|jiilalir ii of heirjfi mosl-c oust icMiUous-ral lor- Swarl lirnoro-lias-Known- iii-lwculy-ycars! lyphal case; a Wliarlon t ant, ' of fffvils l)c(,ia]i llic usual |)aiic-l)ical iiiti process will] Ijard pai Uc snovvhalls and Al was a vi(liin. I en miiiul(,-s lalcr, said Unnu rcUirncd lo ificir various rooms to lind fhaotic messes. And llicn llicy say Al moves slowly! Al lias capabilities lurther than lliis, fiowever. lor lie has played jayvee lacrosse and lootjjall lor lliree years, worked on Phoenix sports, and at preseni lakes liis holany major willi a mild fleuree of seriousness. KATHERINE MERRILL LINDSLEY The essence of Kay ' s character lies in her even tem|)er, and it follows that she s exceptionally elhcient and de- pendable in all she does as vice-prexy of Parrish, on FAC. Conduct Committee, in French and Little Theatre Clubs, and Chorus. Kay bats birds for badminton varsity, fre- Cfuents collection— enjoys Friday night table parties. She rides horseback and plays a swift game of ping pong, bul there s nothing she likes better than doing things on the spur of the moment or breaking forth in conversation with a really good pun, but we promised we ' d keep tliis last under cover. ' . SHERMAN COXE LLOYD. Jr. Sherm ' s claim to fame is his expert marksmanship whether with camera or with rifle, and this year s Halcyon is a credit to his picture-taking ability and tenacious work. An inability to distinguish colors that s been a constant distress to him was climaxed by the time he failed to realize he had been given vanilla instead of mint ice cream. On top of this, his limber joints enable him to assume angles usually considered peculiar to an octopus, and being cold-blooded, he sleeps under five blankets the year round. Main vice: grumbling, but F section engi- neers don ' t object for it s the good-natured variety ' . JAMES OLMSTEAD LIPNL N Jimmy broke into freshman year life by going out and digging up so many un- assigned stories for Phoenix that his nick- name just naturally became Scoop - and everything Jimmy does at college has had that same energetic attitude back of it. He s a light-weigfit. but made good at athletics, upholding both lacrosse and football squads. When he s not study- ing zo, Jimmy runs around over in Whar- ton keeping up his cleaning and press- ing trade with efficiency. He was a ville resident and day student until junior year, but has finally moved up to Whar- ton, perhaps to make more leisure time for Jimmy. MARTIN LAURENT LOW Cincinnati lias made quite a few con- tributions to Swartlimore, and Marty s one of tne belter. Scnolastically be ap- pUes an exceptionally good mind to pur- suing ec nonors. biit also leads cbeering during fall and winter — acts as jayvee lacrosse goalie in tbe spring. Fresnnian year found bim a member of tbe college orcbestra. but lack of time made it a sbort career. His constant attendance at Pbil- adelpbia Sympbonies attests to an under- lying aestbetic nature; be ranks bigb in tbe galaxy of college dance boppers, tricK- step innovators, and after-meal-cigarette- smoKers on tbe front )5orcb of Parrisli. HENRY EDGAR McCONE Gaze upon Henry! For bere we bave tbe strong man of tbe Hamburg Sbow, Little Tbeatre bumorist portrayer, plus Popeye in a mask of indifference. We II never forget bis strong basso profundo rendition of sundry ballads redolent of tbe far-famed spinacb eaterl Otber tbings not to be forgotten: bis pitcbing arm in action — football refresbing Scotcb bumor waiting to break fortb at the sligbtest provocation— equally strong Scotcb temper. Ex- tensive tbeorizer, be still leads a social life, and, by tbe way— is it or isn ' t it true tbat you won a Cape May dancing contest, Mac? MARTHA B. McCORD Mickey makes Ne v Year s resolutions every day of tbe year (tbanks to a conscience tbat s sligbtly Quaker) and promjjtiy forgets all about tbem. Its always beginning loinoriow tbat sbe II keep ber room in order and study ten bours a day. Wben sbe bursts into tbe room, vill it be Mickey in tbat gay, wickedly clever mood wbere sbe excels, or an individual going down for tbe nine bundred and ninety-nintb time into fatbomless deptbs of black gloom? In addition to honoring in history, ber interests are mu- sical; vitness manager of the orcbestra, member of chorus, piano player exceptional. ROBERT MORRIS McCORMACK From what most of Swarthmore calls the frontiers of the mid-west, Sheboygan, Wisconsin, to be exact, comes Micky, and he s intensely proud of the state. With an outstanding pre-college athletic record, he has since von varsity letters from football and lacrosse and vas an un- usually good goalie on the latter. Micky goes about ful- filling bis overwhelming ambition to some day become a doctor by being one of the better pre-med honors students; he shows an understanding grin at humorous subtlety, has a friendly Hi for everybody. And wherever you see Micky, roommate Jake is apt to be present too. IXJROIIIY MACY I (OTiniy is UomU ' ' a deliriifc lai tor in llio lino ol wornon as flortors. lor norjf- ( an l)c mt)rf siniffroiy devotefJ to her work Ol ( licii li (liL ' li ' r ideals ol a future voca- lioM. We do not, llierr-lore, have the o|)|)Orl unity we snoiild like to appreciate lli.il ( liarinint; and suntle mjuior ol lif-rs. llie unusual understandint; ol. arjd syin- piitny for otlier peopu! s problems tfial all liespeak lja( ki rour)fl and t ' ood breedintf. And we must add to tnis fornmys deep appreciation and wifle knowledge ol tin; ( ulliiral sifle ol lile. art, literature, musie. hven tnen we lall vliorl. by far. of truly skel( bing ber. ELIZABETH JEAN MacDONALD Jean Mac is a picture of bands gesticulating wildly and the phrase. It serves you jolly well right, ending with an infectious laugli. She ' s a pre-med student, conscien- tious about it too. Her home is in China, in whose wel- fare she is intensely interested and she discusses the topic at any opportune moment. Life is serious for Jean before breakfast, but this seriousness vanishes after the tradi- tional bowl of shredded wheat. Jean lias traveled in many countries on her trips from China to the States and holds a record for having cousins scattered all over America. JEAN CALDWELL MAGUIRE A person who likes Nature, she s the one who sug- gested the early morning bird walks that developed into the Bird Club. Jean pleasantly divides her week-ends between visits to her Germantown home, social hobbies at college, and Outing Club jaunts; during the veek. she diligently applies herself to psych vhich will probably lead to progressive school vork. Mickey bravely answered the old Swarthmore cjuestion of honor-or-not-to-honor in the affirmative— but whether buried in studenthoocl. swimming for the varsity, hiking or just fooling around, she s outstanding in genial serenitj ' of disposition and practical good sense. BARBARA JANE MANDELBAUM Exquisitely tailored suits, tweeds and handknit sweaters are the things Mandy ' s friends envy most, seconded by a plenty baffling bridge game. Her usual manner is one of matter-of-fact eciuilibrium and the only thing that upsets it is a passionate hatred of buttons. Mandy attends Friday symphonies in Philly and collects classical records on the side; honors in English and conducts meetings of Somer- ville Committee. Most renowned things about Mandy are her capabilities in (i) defending her convictions to the last inch in any argument and (2) emitting incomparably comic cracks for hours and hours on end. ANN PENNOCK MARSHALL Ann is small, hut she grows reclwoocl trees in tier room, likos horses and the outdoors, and really does some punc- tilious studying plenty of the time too, 1 lie light in her room hums all hours of the night signifying that an honors paper is in progress wliiih would never he com- pleted without the numerous cups ol tea she drinks. Ann is also an up-at-seven-without-fail person — is congenial hut freezes visitors out hy constant suh-zero temperatures diw to always wide open windows, no matter what month of the vear it is! THOMAS ANDREW MAWHINNEY Big, hrawny Tom stands out in a cro d — thauKs partK to his six feet three inches and a fraction of height and t o hundred pounds of hrain and hrawn and the amaz- ing faculty for saying ordinary things vith an unusual tAvist that amuses people on the lihe steps or in poli sci seminars is no less responsihie. Captain of the swimming team, he splashes a mighty hreaststroke — tackles opponents on the gridiron with grim determination. Then too. Tom plays a sharp game of hridge and holds up some rather definite ideas in English class discussions and Wharton hull sessions. LEONARD COULSON MERCER ()uiet, happy-go-lucky, the fellow who makes sly cracks and is seldom seen around; that s Len Mercer who makes an obstreperous trio out of the Smith Smith duet. Len s always on the spot when something goes on socially, or when sagacious (?) sessions ensue in the lihe; he sings with Ivwink, belongs to the Interfraternity Council and plays inter-frat sports. Then he employs odd moments with ec and cracks hooks at least an hour before an e.xam. Besides this, Len manages to wear a completely unruffled countenance at all times, and we ve hearcf something vague about Houdini disappearing acts. MARY VIRGINL MAYER Ginny s middle name ought to he ' Ex- uherence, for it s the essence of what she instills into her main interest. Outing Club, of which she is president; also among all her friends, vho are forced to admire (or else!) her repertoire of funnv songs, with all forty-nve verses included. In contrast, she gathers togetlier sym- phonic records and plays them frequently; and when not at an Outing Club con- lerence, studies zo or swims the relay for the varsity. With irrepressible tendencies to good times, she seldom gets blue, and the wide grin is just part of Ginny. CHARLES F. R. MIFFLIN Great Stone Face, as he is known to some. Ixlics an affable nature witfi a roiinlenance ol suhlime serenity llial is completely unlrouhlecl by all the .stupid little Hurries that stir the mortal vvorltl down here f)elow. Cf)arle.s, English major, suecesslully (ombines scholarship with residence in unholy D sei lion. It s only a man ol his self-possession who could possibly analyze Shakespeare amid the din of Ooshorn ' s ocarina trio. Cross-country and swimming have been the contribution ol the boy Irom Delaware to Swarthmore athletics, but both ol these have been helped by those tremendously long legs ol his. WALKER LYLE MIFFLIN, Jr. Swimming has claimed Walker s attention for a large part of his S ' arthmore career, while it was only a physi- cal injury that kept hiiii from the cross-country team. Per- haps one reason for his strenuous aquatic antics and prowess is that paddling in Coach McAdoo s pool re- minds him of the long vacation days on the beach which he so thoroughly enjoys. English and history rec|uire a certain amount of effort and Walker does creditably, but he s much more interested in the attractions of Philly theatres. It is rare that a major dramatic production es- capes him, and he is furthermore a regular attendant of Sunday night campus lectures. BETTY LOU MITCHELL Bet Lou is the neat looking girl who models for Per- sonnel fashion shows and has quite an assortment of clothes herself. Living in the village doesn t exclude her from exercising her social graces at formals on campus, but it does set Bet Lou off as a fortunate individual with a car. M section friends tell us about the determination which is her attitude towards anything she does and good grades as well as Gwimp work and FAC are proof. And diminutive Bet Lou, who is a petite Bgure of good looks and smart appearance, has at least one eye on Annapolis. MINNIE THOMPSON MOORE Minnie — and its not a nickname — thank you, is made of sparkle plus a social conscience. The sparkle accounts for triumphs as a member of Social Com- mittee with special references to dancing classes or just dancing, for a successful class officership career, brief excursions into the dramatic, the universal good nature and her own particularly engag- ing grin. The social conscience convinces us that there s a brain beneath that smooth exterior — it ' s functioning in honors at present. Minnie is one of those rare but happy people who can get excited about Benny Goodman and the fate of the Masses with equal intensitv ' . PETER REED MORRISON Hard- orl ina honors student. Pete is to l)c lound main an afternoon in the chem or zo buildings, lunicd anions beakers, rats, and test tubes, muttering all the while in- coherently to himself. Socially secretive. i- ete prides him- self on the high quality of dates wisely secured far in ad- vance—while athletically, attention is divided among cross-country, jayvee basketball, and track where, by hard work and constant practice, he hurdled and high-jumped his way to a hard-earned letter soph year. Neat, com- fortable, and cheery, is Pete ' s well-kept room— and that s a key to the quiet, exact, and sincere life he lives. RICHARD PHILLIPS MOSES High tension scurrier— getter-of-things-done Dick fits the Production Manager of this publication, for Dick is always in a hurry, whether it be to type a psychology paper for a seminar, get into a gaine of bridge, or just light another cigarette. Tremendously serious much of the time, there ' s a quick sense of humor lurking somewhere that s always popping out. He s defense man for lacrosse and goalie for the soccer squad, but spends most of his time running around seeing that things get done in short order. Highly efficient and friendly, he ' s a person with whom people really enjoy working. JOHN KLAHR MYERS Jake is quiet and conscientious by nature, hence his ec honors work comes first. But the college dance band rates a close second, since it was Jake s direction and professional second saxophone that started it off in the first place. He s far from being as taciturn as his reputation and casual observation would indicate, and his quick subtleties liven up the bridge and billiard sessions. The popularity he has among the men is exceeded only by his number-one-mystery-man rep among the co-ed element. For, dateless one and one-half years, Jake still considers co-education Swarthmore s necessary evil! DOROTHEA PENNINGTON NELSON Dorothea Nelson, native of Baltimore and Cincinnati, further divides her per- sonality by answering to the various nick- names of Admiral, Dick, and Squee. Pre- lerring the latter, Squee goes her merry way armed with a tape measure for Little 1 heatre costumes, an accent for her French major, and a surprising love of cockeyed poetry. Though supervised by her chaperone, a peculiar little brass statuette with very large ears, she man- ages to get into endless and amusing scrapes. Squee studies only in last-min- ute spurts of desperation and vows fer- vently at the end of every month that she II never again enter the druggie. MAf ll-: OSIAND-HII.I. Marie is one cxt ciiljoi] lo llic atcoptcd lr;i(lition ol iIji- yriivily ol llx ' I ' rifilish, lor sljc s(;os iilf; Ironi an arnusinj anyic aiul lliis ( arrifs lier lliroii[, ' li a Cicriiiari honrtrs rrjajor. She lias ai] ii)lcri ' slirit liai Ktiroiind, naviiit, ' liccii Ixjrii iu C liina. 1)1(1 will) hor present lioine in Lontlon where she speixis her stiiDiDcrs. Yet Marie passes lor a [JoofJ Amer- iiaii. II she isii I lojilliiiy aDolher sweater or ai) (-xtra pair ol Diiltens, sintfing, l eepint( up her end ol an enorn)ous correspondence or studying, Marie may be lound in the gym hitting the outsides of birds with the insiaes of cats. THEDA WILDER OSTRANDER Theda began an irrepressible career by playing the lead in the Hamburg Show melerdrama of 1956 and has since directed her unlimited energy to psych bonors. Phoenix junior editorship, ASU bookkeeping, German Club leadership, chorus singing. Social Committee-ing lor a year, she became known for the wassail refresh- ment at Christmas dances also vociferous upholding of liberality and hilarity that shatters Phoenix office ecjui- librium. Spending plenty of time in libe and druggie, she receives countless air mail letters — enlivens activities with imagination. Friends are impressed by her absolute sin- cerity and downright amazing, though not unkind, frank- ness. MARY H. PAXON Long walks in the rain and naps on Parrish roofs are among the favorite diversions of Penny, pint sized con- noisseur of hamburgers. Sbe manufactures energy faster than she can possibly consume it — could teacb riding even to fishes — runs the complete gamut of various style of giggles in about two seconds — can practically skate back- wards. There seems to be no middle ground for leisure in Penny s life; wherever she s going, whatever she does, she s always in a roaring hurry. And then again we II sometimes find Penny happily fast asleep with a million things waiting to be done. JACQUELINE MARY PARSONS Not conducive to the scientinc method of analysis is this particular species of flora from Flora Dale. Her master-senti- ment, a propensity for the theatre, ac- counts for the sympathetic portrayal of the charming leading lady in Beggar on Horseback, an active and successful career in Little Theatre and a radio debut already made. Then there is Somerville Committee, English honors, and the mid- night creation of poetry. A dash of mad, artistic temperament and more than a dash of drawing rooin will further char- acterize Jackie -and if this were the 18th century, she would hold court in one of those salons bulging with intellectuals and kings. JOHN DeJARNETTE PEMBERTON. Jr. Ask Jack about tilings fiiiaiK iai or musical and lii ' II nave a ready answer previousK ' tnoiiglit out. for lie s like that, and lias included in nis career botn busi- ness managing the Phoenix and college orchestra playing. While on the athletic side, he swims backstroke, there s nothing at all backward about Jack when it comes to presenting his argument in a good hard debate and snapping back answers to a rapid lire of comment. An asset to poli sci seminars, quiet, capable, and versatile, there s also nothing backward about that whole-hearted grin that makes us think he s one of the original Honest John category. RUTH HELEN PIERCE Ruth is a third-easter who doesn t believe in concen- trated studying, but can drag down A averages with very little effort. Her room is the coziest on the hall, per- petually haunted by friends vho drop in to talk and marvel at the stacks of letters postmarked from Lehigh: they fill her desk drawer and have to be taken home frequently to make room for more. When not entertain- ing, she is usually busy with her zo major, or off on a trek with the Outing Club, but she leaves The Dog. a huge stuffed animal with a real canine collar and leash, to keep vatch. BETSY PLATT Betsy would like nothing better than to become a poet, and from her collection of attempts, produced in one or another of her varying states of mind, she pulls out short but unusual verses for Portfolio publication. Zo honors gives Betsy preparation for med school and possible psychiatry, but she became utterly disgusted with zo when the egg that was supposed to incubate became hard boiled. Betsy laughs at things usually — lost her temper only one memorable time, when the night vatchman sug- gested she sign in twice— she accidentally ' threw a book at him. ROBERT WATSON POOLE In his first name, R stands for roundabout, O for obvious, B for brisk, E denotes excellency, the other R stands for rash, and last but not least, T for taci- turnity. Adding all of this together gives a partial con- ception of Bob— he ' s a brisk settler of affairs of both state and heart, worthy student, rash bull sessioner with an abundance of likeable fun lurking underneath reserve. Bob tries to hide further under a distinguished brow with a multitudinous assortment of eyebrows — and those in- tense dark eyes of his don t miss much that s going on. ( no PI IIMMM Czc( lioslovakian Olfo, (-x-Oxlorfl aiicJ University ol Prague man, didn ' t sulff-r Ijy arrivint late— for his peculiar typf; oJ lujipior and prauKs Ijave made nistory — broken arnpiis (omment records by ap- jjearin(f in print lor seven weeks succes- sively! Outstandinti in alliletic records. Otto l)e(, ' an soccer this lall and definitely made yoofi — (an tell us all tliere is to Know aboiil liild Ijoi key, skiing, tennis. Willi Ills versatility supreme, anility to enjoy lieln; file kidded as much as the kidder, lie advocates subdued swing and taking studying less seriously. (They don ' t at Oxford.) Otto hates hop-dancing ' — likes iTiovies— and keeps Swarthmore guessing. ARTHUR WILLIS POST ' Little Stick, second of the Post brothers to liit Swarth- more, roams the campus along with friend Kalb, and the two of them keep telling people that the other is the most brilliant ever to cross Hicks sacred portals! During the year. Bill somehow manages to slip a little soccer and tennis in between long labs — and socially, Posty follows neither a negative nor a positive policy, but dates occa- sionally from college and even inore occasionally from out- side. Quiet, unselfish, and hardworking engineering hon- ors man. Bill takes life pretty seriously and admirably believes in making the most of opportunities. ETHEL v.vnRODEN PRICE Ethel, native of the city of brotherly love, presents an unusually serene and contented countenance to the world at large, which belies the hectic and harassed inner life of student and Halcyon staff member. Ethel is complex and contradictory; she believes the ideal life one of grace and charm, still she rises early and devours the -weekly Saturday Evening Post literature. Ethel, the conscien- tious naif at any rate, is often found studying in a corner of the libe, but Ethel, the expert on chuckles, has been known to reach heights far from dignified. ADALYN FRANCES PURDY A quiet and conscientious New Englander vith a true Quaker background, Lynn manages simultaneously to accomplish more than fifty million other people put to- gether, managing Quakerette mermaids, running point sys- tem, chorus singing, varsity hockeying, FAC-ing, Little Theatreing and so on far into the night— for it s then that we nnd her producing French honors papers that call forth the praises. Superlatively, uproariously silly at mo- ments, always friendly and serene, Lynn reveals an innate versatility by an ability to turn to the quietly serious thinker with depth of character that sets her above the general run of people. JOIE REDHEFFER Joie s loiimila for fame is to get along on as little sleep as possible. And althougli he has an avowed dislike for coffee, he nightly manufactures a vile brand of dark licjuid to ward off drowsy tendencies. Joie, the wrestler, lias more than once brought distress to iellow upper F inmates, and afforded amusement to those who have watched his laciai expressions. With a predilection for sailing, he collects anything pertaining to it. And he utilizes experi- ence gained from a summer with a steel construction gang h being completely at ease high above terra firma while directing the stage crew for Little Theatre productions. JOHN WALIJNG REID JacK is another one of those persons who periodically accosts friends with the human guinea pig idea that psych majors have. And he takes it all rather seriously, devotes much time to studying, amazes people by spending the first half of seminar periods in absolute silence but lis- tening intently meanwhile, and the last half in expounding upon certain of his unusual ideas on the subject. Jack lives in Ardmore, drives a red and black Chewy con- ■ertibIe back and forth, and spends part of his time sort- ing out our mail. Jack plays a good game of tennis, and also has a good head for business. GUENTHER REUNING Guenther, of the somewhat continental manner plus un- mistakable Brooklyn accent, is the would-be artist who puzzles everyone by honoring in mathematics and astronomy. He s a day student now, and returned to college somewhat regretfully after b vo years of freedom, to haunt the math libe, swimming pool. Camera Club darkroom, join the campus stargazers over in the Ob- servatory. However, these are admittedly secondary in- terests to Wagner and the opera Gunther is composing. And if there are only two sides to a heated argument, individualist Reuning will see the third, mix everyone else up, and good-naturedly uphold his theory to a triumphant end! WILLIAM HARRIS RELLER Third of a distinguished line of Rellers to grace the portals of Swarthmore, Hoosier Bill s perpetual grin, sane, loyal, well-balanced personality, and cheery Hi are reason enough for his popularity. Class president first semester of sopho- more year, Interfraternity Council mem- ber, he is reputedly the best basketball player ever to captain a garnet five. Never having seen a soccer ball before college. Bill is one of Dunnie s mainstays, and a varsity golfer. All of this Rell ' combines with being led astray into the social whirl, making a fourth in the shy C(uartet of Rice, Weltmer, Eberle, and Reller. chai ij:s stix rice Campus Comment promptly did its best lo iau inid- western Chu(l a typical smootnie, and he looks it, even acts it; but all who Know C hu( l well resent such a super- ficial estimate. He has an appreciation of wit liiat ap- pears in subtle cracks at unexpected moments — and fire- crackers! Ricie majors in poli sci, also [jlays f, ' olf with vindictiveness. A week-end in New York several times yearly suffices for outside social interest and further con- vinces Chuck his unspoken loyalty lo Swarthniore isn I misplaced. He s a strong member in the Weltmer-f eller- Eberle contingent, and according lo liieni, ;idfls that cer- tain polish. JANE ADELAIDE RHTENHOUSE Jane is the girl who spent her sophomore year in France and somewhere in the course of it acquired a gourmet s appetite for French food, especially patisserie. She is re- served in public, but is a continual source of amusement to those who know her -a long suffering good sport about the frecfuent teasing that comes in her direction. And when ten o clock arrives each evening, she appears first in line for Parrish crackers and milk, well protected by a pink and white baby s bib. Jane is considerate in her attitude, becomes pessimistic at times, but usually hides it behind a calm exterior. LEWIS MORRELL ROBBINS Little sandy-haired Lew Robbins is entrepreneur e.xtraor- dinaire. Whether managing basketball, guarding the din- ing room door against any stray maniacs that might try to crash a Sunday night supper, Kwinking, playing tennis, or studying, ve can t imagine Lew in a moment of repose without that brand of humor — that queer contortion of physiognomy resulting in a quizzical look on the upper half of his face and an infectious grin beIov ' the eye- brows. And don t forget hilarious Weltmer-Eberle-Reller- Rice rats, featuring sheets, firecrackers and water. P. S. He s still the Dean s right hand manl JOHN MARK ROBINSON A Swarthmore borough boy who mi- grated to Exeter and then back to major in economics, Mark s a person who would thoroughly enjoy a life just spent around horses. Since that s scarcely possible, he resigns himself vith that perpetually cheerful grin to things like cross-countr running; — vas elected co-captain of the team -enjoys daily vorkouts more than meets. He belongs to Glee and Inter- national Relations Clubs — won ' t miss a single barn dance if it s vithin hlty miles. Having cast a vote for honors, not course, Mark expects to break into a political career sometime in his come-what-may- it so. k. existence. ALIMIRT NORVIN ROBSON, Jr. ( uiet and unassuming. AI has sufficient work to keep Iiimself busy witlioul heing too much concerned with the affairs of others. He has an all time job as CircuhTtion Manager of the H.xlcyon. but otherwise plugs determinedly at history honors, riuis ii|) rising scores for varsity golf and does more than just hold his own with a tennis racquet. Don t let tliat apparent quietness of AI s fool you though; those who know him best say that he usually conies out on the better end of any race he wants to enter, wliiih proves quite a little about him. MARY MOORE ROELOFS ' The Madonna of the Bicycle, Mary has been known to cycle to the Delaware, returning with tales of friendly seamen who seemed overcome by a respectful awe and filled her basket with road maps. Philosophy major, daughter of an outstanding philosophy prof, she s much at home on her family s farm near Buffalo, where she drives the truck, rides, bakes bread, and takes as a matter of course managing the farm alone for a fortnight. A characteristic of freshness — a different outlook on life — produce surprising things in coy remarks in the margins of textbooks, and Mary deviates from attitudes of caution to complete impishness. FRANCES ELIZABETH ROGERS Betty, that attractive third west Gvvimper who capably heads the Halcyon editorials, belongs to the ranks of the one day dieters. She goes on study sprees every so often and firmly believes in a change of scene when life gets o erly complex. Yet in stern fits of conscientiousness, she s been known to set the alarm for ungodly early hours of studying. With a long face, Betty approaches friends for cheer, but it usually ends up with the situation be- coming humorous and Betty the cause. Attractiveness, capability, serenity, mark her— and she loves to hike, drive a car or pet purring kittens. JOSEPH ALBERT ROY J. Albert is another fellow who finds himself in all the extra-curriculars, and how he keeps a B average is a subject of amazement to all the fellow engineers. Sturdy guard for two years on the football team and doing all the rough stuff, AI usually carries a scraped nose and admits the fall is the low point of his social life. With track in the spring, stage-crew, handy-man to the Social Committee, and chief bottle-washer in the cracker room evenings, Al ' s day rivals a Blled up date book. Socially? Well, the girls arrive from everywhere! MARGARET ANN RUSK Intlcpenclence is I lie l)a kljoric o( Marys ( fjuracler; fiirllicrmoro, slif loves no(liin( Ijetler llian oocJ times. Hut lliprc s an atliniraMo tcna ious slreal of ( onscif-ntious- ncss in licr naliiic llial won I Id any oi it interfere with more sciiods inleresls, and lliis is made evident by an aijovc Iwo |)oint average maintained lor two years— l.nolisli honors now. Marge is greatly intrigued by e. - periiiicnls in international living and gets e, ited all over again as she recounts tales ol group traveling in Europe. She s serene, poised and Iriendly, one ol I hose (jersons who gets telephone rails and has Princclon avoralions. MARION EDITH RVDIIOI.M When Marion appears, we immediately think. What iiext! , for that mischievous gleam of the eye means some- thing — and we discover upon closer observation that it ' s a hint of vivaciousness. Marion is an interesting conver- sationalist with friends, quiet when in the public eye. I3ut we realize after talking to her seriously, the broad scope covered by her interests at college and elsewhere. Marion likes good music, is an accomplished organist and pianist, sings in the college chorus and Presbyterian church choir. She also enjoys German literature as well as discussing contemporary problems, and pursuing ec. JOHN PHILLIP SANDERSON. Jr. It s lucky for Jack he s in a co-educational college, for Swarthmore co-eds ' charms have. Jack admits, played a dennitely integral part in his existence. Small wonder, however. Jack s popularity, for he ' s good-natured, likes fun and has a husky singing voice that helps out the Glee Club. He s a cross country runner, and vhenever snow arrives, he spends his days on skis. During ordinary weather, though, he ambitiously holds down an Ingleneuk job and studies after everyone else is in bed and room- mates Cresson and Hull can t decide whether to be amused or just give up in despair. GEORGE GERHARD SALOMON With an existence torn mildly between two divergent interests, a yen for Latin and Greek classics and a private predilec- tion for printing, most of philosopher George s time is taken up somewhere be- tween one of the two pursuits. He cloesn t haunt the thoroughfares — prefers loung- ing in seminars rooms, allowing the peculiar scent of what he calls the ter- rible pipe to permeate the air of the place. Most contented when he has dis- covered some potential or kinetic argu- ment, or when utilizing it, a person of earnestness and interest, vith a lively eye forever set on greater things — that s Creorge. ANNE CLAIRE SCHECHTER Nancy s a titian-liaired package of ex- liuberant Cuban good will, with a pen- i liant for anything Spanish. She s care- Iree. easy-going, sure to entertain friends any time — spends hours revelling in snow . — lives in a happy mess of books, papers and clothes. With a former rep of never cracking a book, even noNV Nancy livens up some honors work with Outing Club. Cercle Francais, Little Theatre props managing, slamming tennis balls, fenc- ing. She takes special pride in her talent for breaking unbreakable glasses. Main ambitions: be sophisticated, manipulate new coiffures daily, wear red always, be legally elected President of the United States and Cuba simultaneously! THONIAS DAV ' SHARPLES When Sharpies, Swarthmore s ace wrestler, comes rushing towards us down in the field house, muscles bulging, we 11 run. An expert authority on anything in which he displays interest, including glass-blowing and photography, Tom presides over Camera Club meetings — catches choice shots of rare beauty for the Halcyon, or just fun — finds his pictures, anything from a toothbrush to a puddle by streetlight, displayed in Collection every so often. Tom learns huge amounts of engineering in short doses, and has a particularly engaging grin in addi- tion to all this quiet genius that s made his name famous on campus. JAMES THOMAS SHILCOCK Jim waited til last fall s Kappa Sig formal before ba- ing convinced on the merits of co-ed affairs, which may be a reason for the prevailing opinion that he s shy. Actually he s not, and the phrase best characterizing him and his interests he himself invented, bang-up. Jim starts the year off with soccer, txirns to a bit of basket- ball later and finishes up in the spring by tabulating hits, runs, and errors as baseball manager. And he holds a perpetual post as one of the chief color-adding factors of the time-honored Post-Shilcock-AIbertson combine. VIRGINIA LAWSON SITES Attractive brunette Jinny, an ec major in honors, has black eyes that crinkle up at the corners when she chuckles, and she is constantly chuckling. Jinny finds time for extra-curricular interests, too: has responsibilities on Honor Committee, as hockey manager and Gwimper. But she does it all tranquilly and thoroughly — has plenty of time to devote to innumerable lodge companions or join the crowd on the back steps of the library. Her carefully selected wardrobe is enviable, and she s one or those e.xtremely rare people who sincerely enjoy everv- thing and Jinny is always cordial and obliging. MORGAN GARSED SMI ' I ' H Born 1018— died . and so will be- yin iIk- WIio s Who review. Chem- ii ;il engineer and liniirif ier — , it will ton- liniic. Point is llial since Doc, tenacious iid ticllcr lor Pliocnix and HAl.r:yoN, and liusiness nuiDnucr ol iIk- liiMrr, inlonds to ])(• In is, lie proljanly u ill, tnariKs to that sli( Kinc ' -to-il nanit. Also, lies (ne sincere Mi livichi;ilisl who does wrial i - Ixlieves. I )of lias plans about M. I. I . hut spends lime at present in driving an enviable green Plymoulli loupe lo anfl Ironi Wall- inglord, hjrning up at all worth while so( ial lun( lions, improving an already ex- cellent tennis serve, and struggling to get reports in on llic dot. FREDERICK GORDON SMITH Long, lanl y southern boy, sandy-haired and surprising, is what Tennessee offers in the way of open scholars. Tenny s surprising because he can and does do a multi- tude of things well; varsity lacrosse and jayvee basket- ball claim him athletically and as defense for lacrosse he s outstanding. With a keen mind, Tenny honors in his- tory — still has time to be associate-chairman of press board and escort co-eds druggyward. Practical jokes and a rather serious mien are incongruous, but that phrase best explains those devil-may-care actions and thought-provok- ing ideas of his. WILLIAM WIMER SMITH Big Bill, day student from Ridley Park, manages to spend Jiiost of his time on campus studying — but there s a special emphasis on Jacksonianism, and we don t mean in the historical sense. He shifted from engineer- ing to economics and does good work — but where he shines most is on the athletic held — member of varsity soccer squad, first baseman for jayvee baseball players, center on varsity basketball contingent. Bill s abilitv ' to cover territory and a determination to win distinguish the general success of this giant wiui one of tnose person- alities that constantly views the lighter side of life. ARTHUR FENNIMORE FRENCH SNYDER Art, on good authority the younger of the inseparable Snyder twins, is ecjually at home pushing around some opposing guard or center, usually twice bis size, on the gridiron, or, impeccably clad in tails, indulging in smooth talk with some lovely lady on the dance floor. In up- holding the conservative side of a social or political dis- cussion, A. Snyder s middle-name is hght. Behind all ol this lies the breeding and instinctive good manners of an old Philadelphia family, which are deeply imbedded in Art s nature. If you chance upon someone around college answering to this description, and it s not Paul, that will be Art Snyder. PAUL HESTON HALL SNYDER Paul, so nis brother woula nave us Deliexe. is the taller, smoother, and handsomer of the ronibine. Art will tell us also that he is a better football and lacrosse man and is deliniIeK- superior with the ladies. Paul, on slightest provocation, will tell us the same things about Art. As one would expect. P. Snyder is also the type of person w e might meet at a Bellevue-Stralford Cotillion or ha e straining at us across the line of scrimmage. A lortimate combination of conservatism, determination, common sense, and personality. Paul s individuality is in no way restricted h being a twin. EVELYN ELIZABETH SPENCER Lynn, who can tell everyone all about Japan, is r7ios( distinguished among Bassett House inmates for appearing at odd hours of day or night with freshly baked peach coffee-cake and thus wrecking everybody s good intentions of study or sleep. She gets off high stacks of corre- spondence for IRC besides conducting the meetings of the club and honoring in psych, successfully loo. (Lynn once made five As all in one semester!) When there s nothing loo pressing at hand, Lynn writes to a physicist fiance and displays a vicked streak that s utterly unpredictable, but pleasantly so. MARY ELLEN STURDEVANT As friendly and bright as she is efficient, Sturdie can be seen in everything, for example — working on Halcyon, assisting the Phoenix sports editor, FAC-ing, Gwimping, co-chairmanning the Social Committee. In spite of it all, she majors in the libe, socializes on the back steps, rarely misses Friday night t. p. s or college dances or chances at fjarn dancing. A rare combination of character, ability and popularity — Hoosier with a soft voice — she is prone to growing more flustered than one might suppose at the phe- nomenal amount of teasing she gets and goes slightly mad over horses and soft fuzzv animals. PHYLLIS STEVENS Phyl — impulsive, generous, and warm- hearted, takes on anyone s problems; if she can t help, she consoles — a perfect per- son for Personnel, where we ve seen fur- ther evidences of good work in teas and fashion shows smoothly maneuvered. Be- cause days are so short. Phyl tears every- where — adding long columns of figures for Chest Fund, writing involved poli sci jsapers at 4:00 a. m. — golfing, bridging, carrying on a budding social life. One of the best dressed co-eds on campus with a definite flair for interior decora- tion, she laughs spontaneously, collects riotously funny books— has a passion for tnings reminiscent of Montana ranch life. MARGARE1 ' IMELDA TEBBEITS Willi the swirl of i (ireen skatini: sl irl antJ a wi( l f l parliny remarK, i el)by disappears up the sl(-ps inio tlie inalli lilirary — lo do what? Play shufflehoard!? But she must study a little, for she has a reputation of the mad mathematical genius. ' Tehf)y is secretary of the Interna- tional Outing CluD Association, scenery painter lor Little Theatre, and she observes stars every clear night. In sum- mers, she bicycles, and in winters waxes her skis, prays that the weather will wa. snowy. (Jome football games, Tebby dons her Cwiinper s sweater and starts out with the hotdogs — EDWARD BRINTON TEMPLE, II It would seem that Lafayette Leopards can change spots; for though Ed arrived a year late on the campus, he has made a decidedly real place for himself. Perhaps he felt the need of inspiration by the fair sex for his poetry and music, for the latter have enriched the cultural side of college life from Portfolio to Hamburg Show. Then there s the song contest where he copped not only first, but second place too. Ed s favorite escape from creative art and H.vlcyon sports writing is diligently practicing golf shots on the front campus. DONALD GARDNER THOiMSON Don ' s happy-go-luclcy attitude has often sent him into hot water but has equally often provided hiin with a good time. His late seminar papers for Pennock are difficult items to laugh off, but to him it s all in a good day s work. Combined with this outlook on life is an uncanny ability to live without money — hence vacations hitch-hiking South and West on about twenty- five cents daily. An expert s fondness for iTiusic keeps him in Bond with the Cutting Collection, and a never-to-be-ended series of crazy antics have stifled any buried bookworm ambitions. REXFORD EMERSON TOMPKINS The day really ought to be longer than twelve hours for people like Rex— or else maybe shorter so the expectations of profs and people wouldn ' t be so great. But as a budgeteer of time. Rex excels. Activi- ties, including soccer, baseball (ask Brown Prep.), class treasurership soph year— plus moments of wild hilarit ' that appeal definitely to our lighter side, are all the more remarkable because of a definite propensit ' for switching from a rip-roaring bull session into long hours of solid study requisite for an economics major. Rex is an athlete and tops student characterized by subtle remarks and a quizzical grin. BYRON HALSTED WAKSMAN Many are tlie maidens thinlcing they perceive a lonely neart beninci Byron s forceful exterior, few are tliose to reach searching conclusions. He s a scientific genius of boundless energy, patron of the arts, pre-nied honors worker. French and German Cluh member, organizer of a Greek reading group. He seeks music in a number of directions— likes acting and folk-dancing. With his legendary speed in conversation — also studying — the zo department was hard put to keep him oilicialK- occupied, and there is a rumor that Otto of the Martin building lies awake nights inventing frog-tanks for him to build! ELIZABETH PENDRELL WALKER Betty came straight from Shanghai and proved to be another example of easy adaptation to new environment. And whether it ' s as ASU worker or cliecking in books at the libe, there ' s an air of efficiency, verve, and indi- vidualism about her, all lurking under a charming manner. There ' s a brain under the blond wavy hair that ' s some- thing to be reckoned with; for in either a history seminar or free-for-all discussion down on the back steps of the libe, Betty s capable of sticking up for lier definitely formed ideas and telling us just exactly why she thinks thus and so. SAMUEL WOODWARD WARBURTON Sam is one of those fellows wlio knows better than most people where he s going, and he could teach many of us something we d like to learn— that rare trick of hitting finals for all they re worth. Quiet and reserved, with a depth of character that tones down just a little the sur- face frivolity of many a college gang, day student who has nevertheless seen action in both football and base- ball contests, Sam still doesn t spurn campus social life by any means, and hnds time to pursue most effectively a stiff engineering course and win a Sigma Tau honor. LOUISE WATTERS Freshman dormouse, Luigi has more than outlived it— an adept at bull sessions in the midst of which she consistently falls asleep— also at putting on beards for Little Theatre productions. She spouts Gilbert and Sullivan frequently— holds as her deepest passion Martyn Green, D ' Oyly Carte Company; secondary ones. Sir Cedric Hardwicke in Shadow and Sub- stance, quoting Shakespeare (also Gil- bert) in every honors paper, calmly puff- ing pipes in seminars. Luigi owns an eighteen-foot bookcase of first edition es- says and drama that ' s rapidly overflowing —belongs to Somerville and ASU— tells amusing stories with an individual twist. Like Manning, she mixes checks with plaids. DOROTHY LANCASTi: WEHSTER [)ol ( oriics liDin ( onscrviilivc liostoii. nu hioKf Ini ' Ira- (lilioii lliis lall wlicii snc ;irrivfitl wilri an upsw - :|j oillurc — onK oiic on (iirn|)Lis — iiiid il surviven fill ol two mofitns. Dol liiiiDS slic was well Iriiincd and dial means ealint; nil ill fits set jjclorc one, so slic (onsinncs ( ' uaiylning willilii leacli, including her roomiriale s hidden pe|)|)ern)inl sup ply! Slie superintends scndiiio llii ' I ' liociiix to Calilornia and Siam every I uesday as ( in ulalion nianager, prelers the Friends lil)e for studying her Imglish major, and has a reputation among Iriends lor indepcndiiK • and lon- stantly makiiig peo|)le (IhkkIc. DONALD KESSLKR WELTMHR Ol one thing we are sure, the high intelleetual atmos- phere of Swarthmore will never change Don. A rare bird, his spirit mustn ' t be bent for everyone thoroughly enjoys the effervescence and gay insouciance that marks Weltmer around campus. That remarkable vitality of his runs along lines of stellar action in football, basketball and golf plus a little (?) social life here and there. Then, too, he was first class prexy. It ' s a mystery how he does it, but we re glad he does, and inclined to blame his happy propensity of eating or sleeping at any hour of day or night. BARBARA LOIS WITTER Twitter— import from India — a self-contained young lady who rises unsuspectingly to bait is nevertheless able to look after herself. She takes life seriously, delights in complicated philosophical discussions with anyone includ- ing Hindus in Green vich Village. Soprano mainstay of the Bassett Sings, folk-dancer who s a real addition to some of those wilder parties, manager of an eating-co- operative once. Twitter sob erly renews all her books in the library, and no one dreams what wild pranks she can play. All in all, in ability and personality. Twitter beats the above-B average she has achieved throughout her career. MIRIAM HOLLISTER WIGHT Mimi always reminds us of a Dresden shepherdess under a glass case. First, because of the incredible size ana blue- ness of her eyes, and second because of an air of spotless daintiness that we as- sociate with porcelain pastoral scenes. Mimi likes music, is an expert on Gilbert and Sullivan, manages chorus and sings alto. It s her dependability and efficiency that made her Somerville ' s secretary for two years and Alumnae worker, Mimi s weakness is being teased easily about any- thing from the hurricane that devastated her native New England, to her idiosyn- crasy of keeping people waiting for hours. JEAN LOUISE WOEHLI NG An unassuming air and a head of at- tractively-coiffured blond liair are Jean s. She hhes dogs and the characteristirallx neat room in which she uves is nlled with representatixes of all the canine species. Jean has a remarlohle facility for getting vorl; done ahead of time, in Iier English major or elsewhere, but she is l ept rather ijusy lending advice to other third-easters who not infrer|uently land up in her room. Jean tells us the funniest tiling that has happened to her was the time she unawaredly led a procession of bacK- to-nature-advocates ' up the asphaltum from village to Parrish. LAWRENCE CLARK WOLFE Maybe it s the Pittsburgh steel country — but mostly it ' s just Larry: because wherever we hear something lil e. C ome on, gang. Jet ' s go! Larry ' ; dl s usually arounc ing it up. Whether running down the field for a touch- down, miraculously dodging opponents, or slashing at them out on the lacrosse field, in poli sci seminar or vork- ing for Social Committee, Larry has fight and lots of it- is intent on doing his best. Along with these qualities of seriousness and steadfastness are a lot of genialit ' and sincerity ' and challenging wit -just vatch him outside the dining room doors or do vn in the librarv sometimes. JOAN LOUISE WOODCOCK Constantly refuting the accusation of being someone s little sister through three years of college life, Joan pays the price for that halo of blond loveliness, that innocent and winsome look that ' s her chief charm. Misleading in- formation, this, for she does superlative honors work in psych and philosophy, gets involved in deep discussions ' — ASU and otherwise. Joan s life is the libe, where she tends the desk, carries on whispered conversations, or stealthil y retires to the stacks. But she takes time out to perform weird psychology experiments on unfortunate victims or to enthuse over folk-dancing. i;i.i:a oi yearsi.ey Willi a porsoriality hr;st (Jescrihcd as (■l( lri(, fll nas a rcpulation of npv r nav- iiiti lail( l l() i- -( licrMl) Iroin ' orriplcx silnalioiis in wfiiili ricr IricruJs try to en- lantjlc lifr. I fiosf l(-vfr rr-marks of ners ciilcrlaiii no lew Ihillics, Ijolli in ( rowciS and alone. Slic plays varsity lio l«-y and l)asl (ll)all. kcfps llif minutfs lor Conourt ( oiiiniillci-, vvorKS on ( jwinip ari ' l VVAA will) ( liara Icrislir f|ai( k cnfrUy. A nalin.illy popular anfl allrafilve ro-ecl, IJ liiifJs li(-r social lalcnflar ( orriplr-tely loll lar in advanrc ol events— and tfie Vearsleys ' El along will) ifie Evans ' El. form second wests 1 roiiljlf .md iJoiiMi- I roiil)le. MARGARET WYMAN Peggy has a crown of red-gold hair — Iil es English, his- tory, and philosophy -Outing and French Clubs. Through her college life she just alternates a love of fun with studious seriousness. Always genuinely surprised to dis- cover in seminar that a vful paper was rather good, she spends quite a lot of time debating the where to study question— usually decided in favor of the library confer- ence room, though Martin is intriguing, especially when locked. Peggy cherishes an intense longing to live on a farm and raise Irish terriers; but, rider, her most enjoy- able moments are frequent sojourns on a pet horse. HELEN NEFF ZENTMYER Helen is one of the genus of those naturally peppy indi- viduals who talks incessantly, and in spite of tearing about all day, never seems to exhaust that supply of energy. A member of the class of 40 Parrish north wingers for her first two years. Halcyon seller and aid to the PJioeiiix cir- culation staff, she s studying at the Sorbonne in Paris just at present and spends her days worrying because she still can ' t talk French with the rapidity of English. Re- liable report hath that Helen has become distinctly ski- conscious after a Christmas vacation spent in the Alps. rj y W f . oy WILBUR CLINCHY XORIHI ' I ' RAMSEY FIRST SEMESTER SEMESIER CAX ' ERT ALEXANDER MEL ' ILLE PARKER SophoQiore Class Oniceis n [ front mw: BROWN. SILLS. TRAIjTMAN. Bncf. row: JOHNSON. WOLFF, GRISCOM. STETSON. WOLFE. EXEC: FIRST SEMESTER SECOND SEMESTER SALTTER PELZ DECKER GRISCOM Freshmen Class Oiticers ! ' ■ ' n: 4 . ■ S 4 M S G A THOMAS LIPPINCOTT PAITERSON. KRA1TENMAKER. EPSTEIN MSGA includes every man on campus and acts by an executive board that puts on a reorganization drive about every five years with clocklilce regularity ' and varying degrees of vehemence and success. 1938 being the year assigned for re-organization, the movement appeared and by way of outcome, four committees providing for cases of breakage, theft, fire regulation enforcement, and general affairs, plus a prexy chosen by the men of the Student Council, will, at least for the next five year period, make up the body of MSGA. Theoretically, the body acts as a type of figurative bumper be- tween the administration of the college and the men. It concerned itself with rules for underprivileged freshmen this year and the subject proved so interesting that a Committee on Freshmen Affairs was created as intermediary between freshmen and sophomores. And thus it is that when John Zilch (sophomore) enters Thomas Schultz s (freshman) room with the leer of a thorough-going ratter upon his criminally sinister face, Thomas Schultz may, vith proper propriety cry Help, helpl ' for the MSGA, who will appear from the four corners of the campus within five minutes, and with due dignity, render omniscient justice to the abused and bestow proper punishment upon the disappointed culprit ratter vho probably had his room ratted in- numerable times during his first year of college life! Putting ubic[uitous little notices into College Mail every so often by way of keeping post office workers busy, giving a nice feeling of repentance and reform to enterprising extroverts and raising the ego of otherwise non-mail-getters, is another one of the legal functions of MSGA. Seriously, though, MSGA has always found itself minus in actual work to be done, and it might be argued that com- pared to WSGA activities this definitely proves something stupid about the coeds, but then again, it might be equally well argued that it doesn tl KneeUncf: Melville. Sillinq: Trimble. Boss. Ramsey. Hastings. Grinnell. Standing: Kallenbacli, Brown, Purdy, Wilson. SlurJevanl, TWICE a year or so, tKe fairer portion of tfie student laody, gently prodded by an announcement in Wednesday morning Collec- tion—words attendance requested — hies itself off to the Meeting House for WSGA meetings. And once there, they elect officers, or hear reports of work under vay and future plans of Exec s multiple committees, all done with due decorum. (No one understands it all at the time, of course, but manages to find out later.) Bi-monthly hall meetings occur on the night everyone jilnnned going to bed at ten, but all attend and offer comments about the amount of noise on the hall lately (a tactful hint to the person across the hall who starts typing at inidnight, but said person usually fails to hear the remark anyway). Exec proper meets fortnightly to cogitate over prob- lems concerning the co-ed body and those taken in hand specincally by committee heads. This year, besides the established tasks of tradition, several new functions were incorporated. A reorganized Point Committee records extra-curricular activities of all women; balances said interests with curricular work and natural capacity and (with the help of Per- sonnels FAC) prevents enterprising freshmen from slaving all day long on Phoenix, Press Board, or Little Theatre tryouts, and ending up by collapses from overwork that s distinctly not scholastic. Per- sonnel proper sponsors fashion shows and gets everyone to go to Bond and drink tea. Other innovation of importance: the Alumnae Committee vas placed under Exec in September and began to help students towards better relationships with alums. Conduct Committee fell heir to the rather-the-worse-for-wear duties of Honor Committee, and a newly organized Vocational Committee henceforth exists. w s G A EPSTEIN. GROSS BOSS. KALTENBACI I. WILSON. K.AUFMANN wooLLCorr MnrPHAIL. SOL!DER HASTINGS DOBBINS. GARWOOD Student Board Student Board, youngest of college administrative organizations, was voted into being by tbe student body last spring, and began its life this year as a council of fifteen under tbe gavel of Ed Dobbins vith Justine Garwood recording the minutes. It functions as a sounding board for faculty and student opinion on questions of interest to the whole campus rather tlian merely the men or the women separately. It was responsible for the protest meeting organized against the Jewish perse- cutions in Europe and a committee appointed by it handled the collecting and dispensing of funds in the refugee campaign. Discussion groups were held con- cerning the revision of courses in several departments under the direction of the board also. The marriage course, recently added to the curricula, is also a result of its efforts. Other problems which vere discussed by the board were library fines, better lighting in the library and noise in college buildings. Routine meetings consist usually of handling small complaints and suggestions and testing student opinion regarding potential actions of the administration. The board is not an organ of student government, but rather serves to pass on sug- gestions to the various organizations, so that much of its activity comes under names other than its own. Greater coordination between faculty and various organizations of the student body is the main aim which it sets out to accomplish. The board was composed of representatives of various campus organizations with only four popularly elected members during its first year; however by the new constitution drawn up and passed by the students in February after much discussion pro and con, the eleven members who will henceforth compose the board vill be popularly elected with at least one representative from each of the four classes. Although still in the experimental stages, it s a step towards campus coeducational government. DOBBINS ROUS AWAY, way l)ii l wlicii riiDltier was a girl mid [ ' arrish was llie only ouilclintf worlli mpniioiiiny on llic lampus, Somerville Committee was one of tnose lrighteniii( tilings known as a JJIerary Society. I lie mere name brings up a |)i lure ol anihillous young ladies meeting over tea lips to read original poems and essays to earli ottier; hut history (and back numbers of the Hai.cvon) snow that this was an 1 . S. witfi a practical side, lor in iHc) ' sulli ient funds were raisecj lor llic building ol tlie women s gym. f ' urtlier linancial enterprise ba resulted in (lie maint( ' nan(e ol two lellowsnips lor women s graduate work, ifie l.ucretia Mott Fellowship and the Martha ll. Tyson Icllowship. As the work ol Somerville grew in scope to touch all students and to have real signilicance on the (ampus, it was incorporated as a lunctioning rommittee under WSGA. Somerville sponsors a particular day each spring when every girl wears a white dress and goes to hear a program in Clothier; alumnae sufldenly pojj up from everywhere, and all the men are content because the (ollege serves i( e cream with chocolate sauce for lunch. Somerville has this year, in cooperation with the Cooper Foundation, brought speakers ranging in lield Ironi writers lor the Neil ' Yorker through light opera singers to prison ollifials. It lends a hel|)ing hand to new and struggling organizations, sponsoring the Oance Club in parti( ular. maintaining a bureau to provide ambitious poster-makers with work. ancJ arranging art exhibits in Collection. Though busy carrying out such ventures as these, Somerville, headed in the first part of the year by Chairman Marni Rous and later by Barbara Mandelbaum, continues a more or less placid existence, interrupted by a few hectic moments as Alumnae Day draws near. You know, it s really a tremendous thing! Every woman who has ever come to Swarthmore to college belongs to it, and so do all the women now in college, and so will all those future generations of Swarthmore co-eds yet to come! s o II) e r V i WAITERS. JONES, WIGHT. KNOTT, JENKINS, CLARKE. PARSONS. OSL.A D-HlLL Social Committee J ront row: Lax. Green. Brooniell. Davis. Marcley, Moore. Back row: Cavert, Sturdevant, Wolfe. Clark. CupUl, burner, hluhn. Grinnell, Morningslar, Wilbur. Foster, Crosby. AKE isn t complete vitliout icing, and college life isn t complete without the Social Committee. It seems as necessary as classes, maybe more so. They (to be exact, co-chairmen Grinnell and Morningstar and their committee, who, having given their all, were followed by Sturdevant and Foster and their com- mittee) are responsible for all after-hours life. They meet as a body each Sunday afternoon at five, but sweat and slave twenty-four hours a day to entertain people, cajole non-daters to become daters, get ne v ideas and continue old ones, satisfy every one or the hundred and fifty special ideas of amusement on campus. Cries Molly, They even mal e us come bactc a week early. Why, there ought to be a law! Yet they go right on coming back early and keeping fresh- men amused every minute by Paul Jones up in Col- lection and spoon dances in Bond before the rest of the college arrives. And then the committee goes right on planning dances, roller-skating parties, parties to play The Game, barn dances, and with the help of Mr. I Clees, all sorts of movies from Mickey Mouses to weird German and Russian silents. They lead a sort of perpetual bated-breath e. istence for fear everybody will have a horrible time at things like the new experi- ment of double-cutting at a college dance. Every so oHen it lays itself open for cracks and finding out just what people want anyway, by holding open meetings where anyone can come for a good hash session on the college social problems, or Phoenix polls where every- one says exactly what he thinks of them. Yes, they spend their college careers entertaining six hundred and fifty people, being on deck at every single social func- tion. And wliat we want to know is, Won t some- body please entertain the Social Committee, just once? ' Perliaps liiyli lioiiors lor llio Diosl iiclivc ol Swarthmore s many activities slioulcl yo lo I lie Debate Board, for there is no clesit ' nated dehaling season at Swartliinore, but instead, someone is treking to Jersey City. Bucks Counly. Wilming- ton, and of course Philadelpliia, llirougliout llie entire year. And tliat s not counting liie spring trip through New England and tlie Middle West. Then too, such colleges of note as Princeton, VVilham and Mary. Penn State, Lynchburg, Uni- versity of Florida, and Duke have been guests at home battles. Ancf almost all these debates go floating out into space by radio. As usual, this year s annual Frosh-Sopb strug- gle, held in the fall, was a non-decision affair and the prize was divided between Dalton McAl- ister (42) and Patti Leopold (41), while lots of new talent came to light and a large number of those interested turned up. Bob Austin, man- ager of this year s board, has had his hands full, not in finding places and opportunities for his debaters to perform, but in getting enough de- baters to fill all the calls, emergency and other- wise, for them. And besides debating with other colleges, the versatile body of verbal fighters pre- pares itself to take either side of any sort of ques- tion before or against Women s Clubs, Rotary Clubs, Lions Clubs, Leagues of Women Voters and any other one anybody can think of. Austin Orators are versatile — will and have handled as- signments ranging from How to bring up the SOUDER AUSTIN Debate Board young to Reorganization of the Supreme Court problems. It really looks pretty much as if Swarth- more were finally hanging out her shingle about orators They II speak at births, weddings, funerals! Front row: Austin. Olds, Martin. Van Name, Peniberton. l-eopold. JacKson. Lax. Cuncli -. Swarlley. Oliver, Back roio: Verlie, Heilnian. Mills. Tiiorn. Boam. W ' riglit. Li[ pincotl. GulicK. Dunlap. Juason. Carr. W. Dietz. Ca ' in. Leicn. Bond. Jonnson. louder. Hal CVOll C.REEN After a lot of inter-individual and group opinion over the question, an all-class meeting of lengthy pros and cons voted for maintaining the old tradi- tional type Halcyon — and with that over, things be- gan gradually to get under way. With an advisory board of class prexy. dean and faculty representa- tive, Ed Green was chosen Director; and by that time there was business to be looked after in rather tremendous quantities. Photographers appeared from New York and elsewhere, contracts appeared to be read, looked over with a magnifying glass, re-hashed and signed. Dick Moses produced a production schedule and began playing hide and seek vith the staff to get it adhered to. Freshman and sophomore tryouts came to lots of meetings and the college spread Halcyo.n napkins in their laps one night for dinner, thanks to Johnny Huhn, and said, Oh, yes, they d forgotten all about the H. lcyon. The class helped out all along by explaining what they wanted for their Halcyon anyway, and the College came through with a substantial financial grant. Where- upon all the campus activities groups waxed glee- ful and decided to be extravagant from now on because they didn ' t have to pay for having their pic- tures taken any more. Officers and just plain mem- bers of campus organizations answered all sorts of questions and the activities write-ups appeared; freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors turned in some features— all to be edited and re-edited and written all over by Miss Price (activities) and Miss Dunning (features) and Miss Rogers (the higher power yet). Mr. Moses hung over it all like a vul- ture waiting to gobble up all the little brain children SHARPLES IJ-ClD and tear iiilo llic priiilors. People began interviewing friends ol (lie Iriends of tlie Iricnfis of othar people and juniors wrote all alxjut llicir Iriends, and trie junior-write-ups-double-coverage products started straggling in. By llien it was Cnristmas. so trie staff said Merry-Cfiristinas-and-a-Happy-New-Year- and-fiave-fun and promptly spcnl three weeks tfiink- ing about wbat bad to lie done next. Miss Sturde- vant turned into a fiermitess buried in a room of crumpled wbite sheets (attempts at junior write-ups) and Mr. Robson chaffed at the bit and tried to sell Halcyons to aunts and uncles and second, third and fourtK cousins and home-town friends because he was three sales behind what the production schedule had decreed for the date! Mr. Smith used up twenty gallons of gas running around trying to slip the ROBSON SMITH STURDEVANT ROGERS HUHN noose over the necks of advertisers before he realized he was taking a vacation. And then they all got back to college, where Miss Caldwell was sorting out the successful from the unsuccessful efforts of Mr. Sharpies and Mr. Lloyd and the Camera Club— and wondering where in the world all the senior informal shots had gone to and what to do about the dividers and the inside cover of the book. So the staff had a meeting and got everything straight- ened out. Then by degrees everything got sorted out into little piles and copyread and sent to the mercy of the printer, who just sent it back to be proof- read. But finally all was done and the staff ad- journed to the Ingleneuk for dinner one night to retrospect about everything that had happened in general, junior year and all the funny things that happened in the course of putting out H.xlcyons in particular, and, believe it or not, about six months hence they d be seniors. PI loenix A FTER the aclclitioa of a iiiagnificent and efficient looking copy cieslv in tlie fall, the Phoenix decided to talce a new lease on life. For a few days the office maintained a properly newspaperish atmosphere, hut it has now lapsed into the customary social-center, hal- lowed hy years of Swarthmore tradition. (Where we can find anyone we want to and satisfy our insatiable curiosities about anything, almost any hour of the day or night.) By the combined efforts of one James (Morrison Mor- rison) Wilson as Editor first semester, abetted by Managing Editor Olds, Feature Editor Woollcott, Busi- ness Managers Ed Jones and Jim Zinner, and Circu- lation head Jean Slack, wlio were unburdened in January by Bill Camp, Justine Garwood and Peter Henle as Editor and Associate Editors respectively. Jack Pemberton as Business Manager, and Dottie Web- ster as Circulation Manager, the college newspaper still makes its scheduled appearance on Tuesday nights. And no one can possibly fail to know about it, because all the lirst floor of Parrish smefis unmistakably like Spencer ' s best printer ' s ink. This event is followed by a general collapse on the part of the staff, including the junior editors and freshman supporters, intensive reading on the part of the student body at Tuesday night dinner and iii Wednesday morning Collection, and a repetition of the cycle in time for the ne. t issue. One of its prime fields of endeavor is the poll, or survey. Student views on religion, social life, and methods of preparation for exams are laid bare by the machinations of modern journalism, and they ' re often prett ' revealing and surprise everybody, including the Phoenix. Attempts are also made at surrealistic art, which are successful in being at least unusual. (If any- one doubts this, please study the scorpion-octopus crea- tion on the north wall of the office.) Buck Ball ' s Sound and Fury was an e.xperiment this year that re-created the atmosphere about certain phases of college life. And in spite of slanderous remarks made both at and by the institution coyly known as Campus Com- ment, the column still kept on being the-thing-first- read and most-talked-about in the Phoenix. What can be termed the t ' pical attitude of members of the staff is expressed in succinct terms by Mr. Henle, FronI roir: Pelz. Jenkins, Jones. Clarlie. Lyon, Logan. Ernst. Rakeslraw. Webster, Earil. Durliee. Middle rou ' : P. Henio, Oslrancler. Austin. Camp, Wilson, Olds. Slack. Sturdevant. Couranl, Davis. Back row: Ballou. Harper, Williur. Lary, Greene, Bragdon. Tompkins. Adams, Brown, Krom, Bond, Coffman, Sclieuer. Darlington. McCoy. Smilli. I_euine. Devvald. G. Henle. Zipfel. Canedy. Associate Editor, quote: The Phoenix is proud that its first page never knows what its second page is doing, and it doesn t either. And the Phoenix en masse is also rather proud of tlie fact that it finally, and it hopes, forever, has rid itself of the instinctive PressLoard enemy (and there are a lot of perfectly good reasons besides instinctive too!) and that it now enjoys tlie jaeace (?) of the office in solitary majesty. However, we hear that internal peace doesn t reign complete, thanlcs to sufficient wrangling between sports and editorial staffs to make life interesting. All in all. Phoenix is definitely a good thing to go out for from the male point of vie v. It entails the privilege of re- maining within the sacred portals of Par- rish on Monday nights until 12:50 when other males retire at 10: ig. It means chiseling in o n the crackers and milk monopoly of the co-ed contingent. Then there was the night a midnight fire drill brought all the Parrish inmates proper to the first floor from the upper regions to sleepily parade past the open doors of the office ; but of course, the staff in true Phoenix spirit, merely continued to copy- read the Alumni notes! OSTRANDER AUSTIN HENLE WEBSTER ZINNER JONES Press Board SMITH, CUPITT, CUSTER. HARPER In lullilliiio tlie duty of expounding to tlie wait- ing public a well rounded picture of tlie high- lights of the college calendar, the Press Board Junctions as a determined and uninovahle whole. On second thought. unmo ahle doesn t fit! For in vie - of the recent rearrangement in Parrish. the industrious hoard can no longer be called unmovable. in the strict sense of the word. ISut they are still completely undaunted. It seems that the Phoenix, perhaps realizing their own infe- riority, put in a request for a moving day and thereby hangs the tale. Sam Epstein, at that time recognized as Chief, stepped forth and alone and haughty, transported the entire office to a not too distant part of Parrish with due ceremony — and there s never been such a furore heard around Parrish before. The room was number 130 — and thereby hangs another tale. It seems, at any rate, that the nomadic Press Boarders now share their office with the Halcyon and it ' s all just one big happy family except for fusses over the lone type vriter. For a job so complex and all inclusive as that of covering the vast numbers of college activities, a highly organized body is obviously a necessity. A great deal of routine work is covered by fresh- man tryouts while the upperclassmen usually re- port the more important events. The whole thing is worked on the assignment sheet basis. Were you to visit opportunely the Press Board office, you would perceive various and sundry press re- leases starting on their way to strange and unac- customed places, home town stories finding their way to the local district weekly, written up in order to publicize to all inhabitants for miles around the place all the events taking place at college and telling the proud old folks at home just what their little Willie and sister Susie are doing. It might well be mentioned also, that the board sends press releases to Philadelphia and New York papers as well as to the agencies of the Associated and United Press to be distributed throughout the country. Tom Custer has been appointed to carry on as Chairman the activities of the board for the 1939-1940 year, a position including both the financial and journalistic responsibilities of the body. Dorothy Cupitt. Edith Harper, and Gor- don Smith are associate chairmen in charge of covering women s sports, features and men s pub- licity, respectively. In the meetings, usually held on Sunday after- noons, freshmen are asked to give suggestions or ask questions about puzzling aspects of their v ' ork. It has been stressed especially this year, that accuracy and definite details are vitally neces- sary to good sjDOits and lecture write-ups. A re- cent innovation (which just mighl liave heen taken from Phoenix policy) is the Scoop Sheet and it ' s well enough known to all those memhers of the Press Board who have higher aspirations and cherish ambitions ahout newspaper wriling. It indicates two things: (l) that the undcrsigjicd is alert and has both eyes and ears open, (2) that he s a shrewd sort of person who doesn t want to get cut so he d better get on the ball. The present staff, aside from the chairmen, con- sists of John Crowley. Jack Ferguson, Peter Kar- lo ' w, Loran Langsdale, Stephen Lax, Jean McMuI- len, Helen Osmun, Marjorie Todd, and George Wright, jjIus a large number of freshman tryouts. To Sam (Eppie to some) go all manner of orchids for the capable way in which Press Board func- tioned in the 1937-1938 season -and how he man- aged to get all the photographers in Philly so in- terested in coming out here or the New York Times to give us space, we don t know! GOODWIN. EPSTEIN. YARD Front row: Todd, Lyon. Crowley. Epstein. Goodwin. Logan. Leopold. Cupitt. McMullen. Xoble. Brown. Bach row: Bond. Ferguson. Langsdale. Harper, Osmun, Carr, Kroni. Lax. C.AIANOOD. KELLOCK ANGELL, CROSBY IIAKOIXC. Portfoli lO I HAT few things are as capable of being diverse and contro- -•- versial subjects as literary criticism, is one of tbose sad but fundamental truths all English majors learn. And opinions of the Portfolio have proved it ever since the first issue appeared last year. Immediately following each quarterly appearance of a brilliant-hued digest size issue, two opposed factions express more or less mild opinion; the one advocates taking up a collection outside the dining room after late lunch to provide gold-tooled leather bindings with a Preserve Portfolio for Posterity cry, and the second goes around attempting to round up all copies of the thing for disposal in one huge bonfire, Disgrace to the college that it is! The editorial board wisely ignores all the fuss and fume, answers sedately that it s only a representative college literary magazine; it firmly declines the preservation for posteritv- move and scarcely an- ticipates shame and disgrace to descend upon its head. To the omniscient observer, the whole thing is just another illustration of the fact that people have psychologically irrespressible yens to (l) criti- cize destructively without lifting a solitary finger to aid, or (2) glorify to the heavens abo ' e and refuse to see one lone flaw. And in spite of all it has to contend with, somehow the campus literary catch-all gathers itself together for an inevitable three-day- late publication, with infallible regularity. Meanwhile staff mem- bers lose heretofore dignity, gradually gain rabid, feverish gleams in their eyes, and dash madly to and fro from an already hectic Phoenix office. The doubtful honor of whip-cracking position was conferred upon Peggy Harding, who. in spite of the vast proportions it assumes at times, proved rather more than capable. (Witness time Peggy filled a missing ten pages by short-storying from two in the morning through eight. Result? Good!) A meiicaii Studenl Union KADI-MANN ■ PHEY say thai (lie ASU has ciclinilcly arrived at -•- Swarlhniore. What do they mean? . . . What has arrived? . . . An organization which has one hundred members . . . which brings Luther Guliclc, Heyvvood Broun, Mordecai Ezekiel, James Wechsler and others to speak on campus . . . which takes an active interest in domestic and foreign arfairs ... is that the ASU? Some call it parlor pink ... to others it looks more like Moscow gold . . . Representative Dies declared it a communist front along with Shirley Temple . . . President Roosevelt recognizes it as an organization which strives to see freedom of speech and of teaching upheld as the cornerstone of democracy . . . Dr. Ayde lotte referred to it as Phi Bete s sister organiza- tion . . . what is this organization which rates so many conflicting sentiments? The ASU maintains that it is neither parlor pink nor Moscow gold, nor a communist front, nor Shirley Temple. The ASU believes in democracy, believes in its theory and practice. The ASU feels that neither the word democracy nor any of the hallowed symbols associated with it will hold the allegiance of the people if democratic government does not meet the needs of the people. Therefore, the students who are its mem- bers feel it is necessary to see their convictions enacted, to see the educational system, in particular, supporting the program that will make democracy more than a lip-serving term. That is why the ASU studies the international sit- uation, the industrial scene, educational institutions, the negro problem, fascism, and a host of other topics. That is why it publishes its own magazine, the Bulletin, and brings speakers to the campus. That is why it sent an ambulance to Loyalist Spain, raised money for Chinese students, is a member of the Swarthmore Cooperative, lobbys for the American Youth Act and slum clearance projects, entered into the National Peace demonstrations. After understanding the sig- nihcance of problems, its members attempt to see their convictions enacted. The ASU has the leadership of John Kaufmann and its Executive Committee: Pete Henle, Theda Ostrander, Dick Angell, Jim Blackman, Alden Todd, Betty Walker, Flossie Yard, Minnie Moore, Dick Setlow, Joan Woollcott. and Justine Garwood the first semes- ter; and Edie Harper, Jack Pemberton, Betty Walker, Jo Clarke. Bill Camp, Newell Alford, Heywood Broun, Theda Ostrander, Dick Angell, and Pete Henle the second semester. It attempts to relate knowledge gained at Swarth- more to the outside world . . . attempts to be more than a discussion group in acting on its beliefs . . . attempts to make the campus a fortress of democracy by realiz- ing the slogan, Think as men of action: act as men of thought. MOORE ANGEIJ YARD GARWOOD SETLOW BLACKMAN W ' OOLLCOIT HENLE OSTRANDER L i t t MURRAY. GRAVES. GROSS. HOFF. CHALMERS, BROWN. GARWOOD. ANGELL. OLDS. DOBBINS. WILSON I ' O lump all college theatrical activity under ■ ' - the heading Little Theatre Club is a com- mon campus fallacy. And it makes Bea very, very angry. Still we gravely nod our heads, say Yes, of course, and then quietly put Little Theatre Cluh at the head of the write-up. But there is a distinction between it and the Work- shop. The former is an honorary organization, the members being elected on the basis of sin- cerity of effort and interest shown in dramatics; and its chief concerns are the spring and fall pro- ductions given in Clothier. This year, the Little Theatre Club, led first by Mark Gross, then by Dagny Hoff, followed last spring s Pride and Prejudice (especially mem- orable for Barbara Chapman s and Heywood Broun s unusual and understanding characteriza- tions) with Judgment Day. ' Accredited by many as being the best campus production in many a moon, the play received enough plaudits (not counting those from Brooksie and the ASU) to merit a return engagement. And the proceeds of the latter augmented the Student Refugee Fund. The play was manned by an excellent cast in- cluding Marni Rous, Marge Todd, Elliot Alex- ander and Dalton McAlister, but all the laurels don ' t rest upon their brows. Joan Pascal ' s set and above all, Mrs. MacLeod s directing deserve any orchids we poor bankrupts can give. Tradition hath that the spring and commence- ment production be a light comedy. And this year Kataev s modern farce, Squaring the Circle, ' presented the humorous side of the Rus- sian housing problem. In contrast to the activities of the Little Theatre Club, the Workshop, open to all college stu- dents, does not usually concern itself with the T K e a t r e SHOTWELL, PETTY, RYAN. SCHECHTER. ELLIS. PURDY; CUPITT. BOWKER, GOODWTN, PIERCE general public. Its purpose is simply to study tlie dramatic arts; and its activities are divided into five extra-curricular classes in make-up, design, play-writing, acting and directing. Each Sunday night, the two-year-old workshop in Trotter, com- plete with a miniature stage, lights, and an honest- to-goodness wind machine, (Heaven help poor Nell, out on a night like this!) resounds with the ranting and raving of all the budding young campus dramatists. And every so often, when the spirit moves them, or else one of the jsowers-that- be decrees, all the classes collaborate on a pri- vate production such as Post Mortem. The make-up and design groups assist in all the Clothier productions. The acting class made a debut this year as a verse choir, in conjunction with the Modern Dance Group, which proved a novel but highly successful inspiration. It is diflicult to tell under whose jurisdiction this spring ' s set of three one-acts fell, for both the Workshop and the Little Theatre Club claim parentage. Nevertheless, orphans that they evi- dently were, they were well enough received to make a second collaboration very probable. Al- though intended to be a bill of original one-acts, the Faculty Committee on Arts and Crafts ruled that the material which had been submitted re- quired too much revision to make it available by production date, hence postponed the production presentation of them until next year. Instead they suggested John Heywood ' s Jehan, Jehan, Thornton Wilder s The Happy Journey from Newark to Camden and Leopold Atlas ' L, Organized by three members of the directing class, starring Ruth Franck, Heywood Broun and Bill Capron, the productions were supervised by Keith Chalmers, Mrs. MacLeod ' s dynamic sub- stitute for the second semester. Musi IC ■ ' •l tVERSlTY might well be the key word to — a lot of things about the Swarthmore Col- lege campus workings. And musical activities are no exception, for there s opportunity present lor absolutely everyone to exhibit talents ranging from the operatic and symphonic down through the milder forms of the popular, and ending up with (be it for bette r or for worse) swing. At the more lofty end of the hierarchy, operatic and symphonic geniuses are given outlets by the orchestra and mixed chorus, directed by Mr. Swann, who has been assisted this year by Mr. Peter Page of the Juillard Graduate School. Re- sults came out in a joint vespers service given during the winter when several madrigals of John Willbye were presented. After this, they got down to work again, and by the time spring rolled around, presented another joint concert, at which a scene from the Moussorgski comic opera, Fair of Sorochintsy, was produced. Individual talents as to liute, violin, clarinet, and voice were pre- sented in student vespers several times during the year, with Betty Boss, Ruth Knott, Marge Todd, Helen Cornfeld, Dick Weber and Ernst Courant carrving off honors. I ' innt row: Cllnsins, Marsliall. Strong. Robin- son, Bennett. Craig, Young. MicJd p rorc: DewEilcl. Taylor, Pelz, Barto. Sautter. Martin. uack roil ' ; Beck. Sonneborn. Hill. Frye. Gedcles. Mills, Anderson. Front roir: B. Elias. Hurst. W ' iglit, [landers. Osland-Hill. Middle row: W ' aksnian. Quadow, MacDonaid, MacMullen. Back row: Scott. Ingersoll, W ' rigbt, Shero, Anderson. Todd. Front roir: Keliler, Selinis. W ' illiiinis. Cleaver, Hunt, Crowley. Middle roiv: R. Dietz, Weber, Scheuer. Mc- Coy. Griffin, Gosliorn. Back row: Powers, Verlie. Traulnian, Leicli, Darlington. Pirnie, Aclanison. Front roil ' .- Howard. Huliljell. Cunningliam, Ryclliolin. Sutton, Kirn. Middle roll ' : Swann, Brown, Todd. SKero, McCord. Nickolson. Bncfc roll ' .- Williams. Todd. Selmes, Tliomson, Hunt. Oriicmi ' alions are ni YOUNG The Men ' s Glee Club puts notices up on Mil- d ' s dining room blackboard ever ' Tuesday ght and sometimes on Sundays. Besides this, however, it can sing anything from the more dig- nified popular songs to rehgious and hght opera classics. Drew Young directs and this year herded together an all high number of forty-five mem- bers. The traditional Collection concert was given early in the season, and other appearances in- cluded a recital for Mary Lyons girls, shoppers at Snellenburg ' s in Philly, and two very popular week-end trips to Atlantic City and Washington. (Glee Club trips always manage to be jjopular; we don ' t know why, but suspect it s got some- thing to do with good food or fairer ones!) As for the band, it has now progressed beyond being a campus affair. (Also this H.vlcyon.) But finally getting down to business about that stuff swing, there s always the vie in Collection and the druggie nickelodeon and Friday night t. p. s. And anyone really interested in unusual rendi- tions can stand under the windows of barton and get all the vocal reverberations he wants as early as 7:15 a. m. every single morning of the liege wliole college year! rT c am era Club Front row: Heilriuin. Sharpies. Marshal!. Rogers. Caldwell Back roH ' ; Laiigsdale, Crowley, Schechter. Adaiiis. Lloyd, Hargrca es. PennricK, Webster, Carutliers, Dullon. NO doubt at one time or another ou may Kave been slightly perplexed at tbe sight ol an intent figure crouched in a corner of Collection or dangling pre- cariously from one of Magill s many lamp posts. How- ever, if so, pray don t lose faith in mankind in general; it was probably only a Camera Clubber seeking one of those proverbial new angles ! The only usual feature of the organization is its officers. But President Tom Sharpies, Secretary Mary Jane Caldwell, and Treasurer John Dutton have done a more than commendable job of piloting the Camera Club through its second year of existence on the campus. How- ever, here the conventionality of tlie group ends. Ques- tioned as to meetings, the reply was vague. It seems the last formal one was held in October, but very informal ones occur several times vs ' eekly in darkroom or studio. Nevertheless, members rationalize such erratic be- havior by importing noted speakers and giving exhibi- tions of their work which covers the wide range from candid shots to salon prints. They have performed a valuable service on campus by providing instruction for beginners in the intricate details of developing, printing and enlarging, and the club s fine library, splendid light- ing ecjuipment, two darkrooms, and facilities for develop- ing and printing in Trotter are evidence of the sincerity with which the members pursue their hobby. A fact the club is sure to mention is that President Sharpies edits his own photographic magazine. Photo Flashes. The true purpose of the club, we are informed with dignity. Is to furnish adec(uate equipment, and a place where people interested can meet and work informally. Judging by the results we ve seen in Collection exhibi- tions and parts of this H.xlcyon, it accoinplishes lots more than this. IN tlie spring, vvlii-n iIjc lliouylils ol iill nonnul Swiirlh- iiiore students turn (in ojjo way or anotlier) towards flora and fauna of the ranipns. ol ( ' riiin, and of trie vil- lage, and tlie appearance ol llic violcl, liyiuintli, anrl Swartlimore beer jacket ujiilorni anjioupKcs llie advent of the merrie montlie of Maye, tlier) lliere is sure to he a sweeping revival of interest in the Bird Cluh. Apparently the first lyric twitter of the first bleakly shivering robin has the power to break down all resistance of hardened non- activity-joiners. This is amply proven by the fart that Robert Hervy Jermain Creighton is the present head of the organization. According to Robin Creighton and his predecessor Sam Cresson, the purpose of the Bird Club is to further interest in the academic aspects of ornithology. This is theoretically accomplished in that the sixteen members give occasional informal talks on particular sections of the held at their bi-monthly meetings. There is no doubt but that The Place of the English Sparrow in fdaho Wild Life is intellectually stimulating, but in a more practical way, what perhaps excites campus interest to a somewhat greater degree is the policy of making energetic hikes and trips to such exotic places as Hawk Mountain, Fort Mott, Crum Woods and Dover, Delaware. The primary inter- est of the Bird Club is the study of ornithology, but it does some constructive things too, such as establishing numerous winter feeding stations about the campus and throughout the village. Although it is but two years old, the Bird Club has already achieved faculty interest, campus recognition (a lampoon in the Hamburg Show), and (although this is a debatable point) immortality (a page in the 1940 Halcyon). I ' jird Club H. SWIFT. H. AUSTIN, CHASINS, CRESSON. HENDERSON, CREIGHTON, E. THATCHER. WORTH Front roir: kitlcnKousc, Ellis. Durkee, King. Noeliren. ' !iitforci. Second row: Wyman, Hargreaves. Pulverman, Ciirison. Clarke. Boggs, Morelieaa. Third row: Pelz. Thomas. Morse. James. Sylvester. Purely. Holbrook, Williams BucL roil ' ; Davirlson. Reiining. Waksman. Lindsle French Club UNDER the leadership of President Peggy King, Le Cercle Fran ais has man- aged to chmb to even greater heights this year in jiroiiioting facile chatter in Frencli along witli other things. Al andoning attempts at formality that character- ized previous programs, the club has concentrated on the inevitable prolalem of helping earnest would-iae linguists conquer difficulties with a minimum amount of vorI and most fun possible meanwhile. Thus at the meetings field every so often in the French Center in Parrisli, Molly Whitford s program committee provides games, charades, and once even tried parlor tricks. To Marie Osland-Hill and Ed Chasins have gone the duties of recording the minutes and acting as tax- collector respectively. Native carols by a selected choir and an old folk tale of Christmas told by M. Brun were presented as traditional features of the annual Christmas tea in Bond. (The tale, which was perfectly amazing, was, the club strongly suspects, evoKed out of M. Brun s active imagination.) The meaning of the literary trend in surrealism was explained to the group when M. Urmatt came to the campus as guest speaker early in the winter. Activities in Nlarch included presentations ol the plays. La Coupe Enchantee and Les Plaisirs du Hazard for the nrst time in the U. S. In La Coupe Enchantee, based on a conte of La Fontaine, Kat Gibson played the role of an inquisitive teen-aged boy first realizing the existence of feminine wiles displayed by Peggy King. Jo Clarke was Kat s father. Giinther Reuning portrayed the frivolous bachelor about whom the plot of Rene Benjamin s Les Plaisirs du Hazard revolved, and MolK Whitford was a perverse maid adept at dropping tea trays. In the April program were the soiree held in Bond, and the Annual Banquet, which took place at the Ingleneuk. A farce, Qu est-ce que vous parlez, mon dieu! written by Ed Temple and painting a satiric picture of the typical American college boy travelling in Europe, was the feature of the soiree. The banquet was the festive close to a verv active vear. I w%niiiM ■illH M ,i!. Lt ' ji lo light: Ostrander. HeiidLTson. Reuning. Kellock. WeKster. Courant, Spencer. Newborn. Wallers. W ' aksii r alonion. Marp .T, I lander-. ' I ' HE German Club is probably unique among the language groups on tbe - ' - campus in that a good fourth oF the members are actually German. How about your meetings? is the inevitable cfuestion asked all clubs and organizations. And the German Club meets rarely, never regularly, and only when someone gets the idea that things should become more efficient ' around here. Even then, gath- erings are rather informal, since no minutes are taken and parliamentary procedure, after all, is a pretty stupid thing. When little notices are sent out about an impor- tant meeting, alas, it ' s usually a case of cfuality far surpassing c[uantity! But in spite of such shortcomings, the club di d some hard work last spring, and produced VVedekind s ' Kammersanger here on campus as their annual play; and it proved so successful that it was repeated by request once at Bryn Mawr and again at the University of Pennsylvania s Cultural Olympics. And when they settled down on campus again, the German Club counted up no less than five prizes it had carried off for the production thanks to Miss Lawson ' s directing and the performances of the three outstanding performers, Use Heine, George Salomon and Werner Brauer. One of the most enjoyable meetings of the fall proved to be an evening devoted to singing German songs, and one of the most hilarious times was the occasion when readings in numerous German dialects were given, including Swiss, Dutch and Pennsylvania Dutch. In January, George Salomon vas elected new prexy for 1939-1940, replacing Theda Ostrander, who was a rather distinctively peppy leader for the 1937-1938 season. Inspired by the success of last spring s play and the recognition won in the way of rewards, a feature of the second semester was a presentation of Thoma s Lottchens Geburtstag, directed by Werner Brauer, which occupied the interest of the members and gave them sufficient work to keep them contented and rather ambitiously busy for several months in the spring. G erman Clul: w OutiiiP Clul: n H llie aim of uiinging together girls who hke to walK, camp, ski and do things in tlie open, the Swarth- more Outing Club was organized six years ago. The Dartmouth Outing Cluh lent its assistance and the hole thing has been rather successful. In fact this year the Swarthmore group holds the e.xecutive secretaryship of the entire Inter- collegiate Outing CIuId. Outing Clubbers, clad in notorious slacks and huge lumber jackets, spend weekends on the Rancocas, take early morning breakfast hikes, picnic vith the faculty, ride bicycles, coast, skate and canoe on Crum. Most fun, however, are the intercollegiate weekends vith Dart- mouth, Holyoke, Wesleyan, or Radclifie. Monthly business meetings, conducted by President Ginny Mayer, are held around a blazing fire, and there are always movies or a lecture with marshmallows and hot chocolate to top it off. For business is distinctly secondary to pleasure and the large number of enthusiastic members is proof. Jane Northup records minutes, Mary Ellis collects dues, Polly Birdsall rounds up new members and cares for the cabin, Lois Corke keeps the scrapbook, and Laurie Knapp and Peggy Tebbetts are program chairmen. Front row: Carpenter. English. Birdsall. Webster, Ralccstraw. Mtaafe row: Pierce, Scnecliter. Tebbelts. Nortliup. Dacti row: Corke, Hargreaves, Ellis, W ' ynian, Clieyney, Emerson. Mayer. I i EW campus oiganizalioMS liavo! quilc llic - ' - universal appeal of llie International Rela- tions Club, for it mal es no demands on its thirty members otber than that ihey have an interest in world affairs. Meeting every other Tuesday night in the activities lodges, the club devotes several hours to thorough discussions of world problems. Started tour years ago by a group ol prospective peace caravaners, its purpose was simply one of study and discussion in order that the members obtain a complete Knowledge of political situa- tions for their summer work. Although the club has grown greatly in size and breadth of interest since then, the original aim has been retained. The club remains an organ of calm survey and objective study rather than one of direct action or propagandization. The group has reorganized as a member of the Intercollegiate IRC, which greatly facilitates exchange of ideas, speakers, books and pamphlets with similar study groups. One of the main accomplishments of the club in 1958, under the direction of Yoko Matsuoka, was the policy of bringing bigger and better out- side speakers to the campus. And as a result, the entire student body has had opportunities to hear lectures by Lord Lothian of England, Prince Loewenstein of Germany, and General I alshou- toff of Russia. The outstanding event of 38 was the Middle Atlantic IRC Conference in Decem- ber, which brought three hundred delegates rep- resenting seventy-nve colleges to Swarthmore, sponsored lectures by Clyde Eagleton, Hans Simons, ex-member of the German Ministry, and discussed vorld peace. The conference was highly successful and plans are under way for another under the new president, Lynn Spencer. In Febru- ary, Clarence Streit was a guest speaker and dis- cussed his famous plan for union of democracies. A point to be particularly stressed about the IRC is that it is not the protege and particular property of the Political Science Department but dra vs members and audiences to hear its speak- ers from many campus groups. Internationa Relations Club MATSUOKA SPENCER Front row: Mennig. Jackson, Matsuoka, Spencer. W ' aksnian, Sellignian, McMuIlen. BacR row: Steel, Peaslee, Robinson, Collier. Keeler, Flanders. Kellock, Inrornial ENGINEERS CLUB Reoreaiiizecl this year tlirougli tlie errorts of ' inoe Bover and Mr. I liDiii, liciKi ' now working under a tonipletely new set of by-laws, the Engineers Clula, rided hy governor Sam W ' arhur- ton and class pepresentatives Al That( her and Jack Howard, pro- ides for (loser contacts between the Mechanical, Electrical and Civil engineers. Meetings occur when a noted speaker arrives: also many times purely for fun and to eat the refreshments! Bock ro -  • GREEK READING GROUP The Greek Reading Group is composed of students and profes- sors who enjoy delving into the mysteries of Greek Classics. Led by Mr. Shero. meetings are held every other Monday evening, where discussions vax eloquent upon those still interesting hair- splitting philosophical prolalems of the Ancients. INFORMAL SINGING GROUP For those who enjoy the kind of singing in which a critical audience forms no part, and re- straints on vocal organs may be loosed, informal singing on al- ternate Sundays at Dean Hunt ' s or Professor Wilcox ' s is perfect. Enthusiasm is the only requisite for membership and it seems adequately present. G roups DR. DRESDEN ' S MUSICAL TEAS The Cliamber Music Group meets informally eacK Monday afternoon at the home of Doctor Dresden. Students entertain with selections on flute, violin, and ' cello; others come to enjoy a quiet hour of relaxation. The group, although sufficient unto itself, is sometimes entertained by a visiting musician. GEE. V PUDA OV ' -K ARTS AND CRAFTS It s Svvarthmore s grand old man, Uncle George, who shows entliusiastic students, memfjers of the faculty, and their wives, the arts of woodwork, metalworK and printing. Judging by the results, it s a case of time well spent, and the group recently received well deserved publicity from Pliilly newspaper cameramen. SKETCH CLUB Every Monday evening finds a group of embryo artists, tongues in cheelc, clutching pieces of char- coal or crayon, or even undertak- ing a watercolor or two. Directed by Mr. Edward Shenton, enter- prising sketchers have ample op- portunity thus to give full vent to the creative spirit. NUgu ' t - BU saU. Eo.e -- M-U. Hatg-ave. n [ Kappa Sigma Fronl row: C. Eberle. Teinple. Collins. Boyer, Patterson, Wriglit. Albertson, Peelle. Cox, Smith. Pease. Mic a e row: Hanmini, R. Eoerle, Hartinan, Sinison, Post. Morrison. Bennett. W ' arburton, Homans, SnilcocK, Delaplaine. Carr. Buck row: KaiD. HaversticK. Mustin, C. Geniherling, Donnelly, Janies Knucl-Hansen. Jolin KnucMfansen. A.. Geniberling, Miller, Enion. Stetson. Pi Chapter founded l888 Class of 1959 Raymond Albertson Robert Bell Vincent Boyer John Brown Wbitney Collins William Doriss George Fornwalt Raymond Harris Peter Lombard William Patterson Robert Peelle William Price Jobn Wright Class of 1940 Aiden Bennett Charles Crothers Alhed Cox Charles Eberle Charles Gemberling Arthur Hartman Harry Haverstick Alan Homans John Kalb Peter Morrison Arthur Post Albert Roy James Shilcock Edward Temple Rexforcl Tompkins Samuel Warburton Donald Weltmer Class of 1941 Anthony Degutis John Delaplaine Frederick Donnelly Richard Eberle Richard Enion Arthur Gemberling Edward Hannum James Knud-Hansen John Knud-Hansen John Miller Richard Pease Jerome Simson Robb Smith Class of 1942 Royce Beatt - Richard Carr William Faison Gilbert Mustin John Stetson Phi K appa Psi Pciuisyli ' diiid K ii i)a ( liaplcr jonntlcd iHHcj Class oi 1939 Roland Ball James Blai Kiiiaii Samuel Cresson Hans EricKsen Ralph Fisner INIark Gross Richard LippincoU Edward Little Gordon Fapley Edward Worth Class of 1940 Newell Alford Richard Angell Charles Braden Ray Coffman John Huhn G(!or(, ' c I lull Jay Jai Kson Robert McCormack William Reller Charles Rirc Lewis Rohhins John Sanderson Class of 1941 Preston Buck- man Ross Clinchy Robert Frye William decides Grant Heilman Stephen Lax William MacPhail Edward McNeill Donald Parker I hir ' il ' l R;i riscy l ' carrc Rayncr Siljley Reid John Sonneborn John Steer Alberl Tljaldier Ri, l,„rcl ' .-l,.r Class 01 1942 Wendell Be. k Stanton Qope John Griffin William Huganir Bates Johnson William Jones Carl Sautter Robert Shaw Rogers Smith Front row: icNeill, Lax. Steer. Clincliy. Sautter. Tliatctier. Geddes, Parker. Weber. Reid, Heilman. Beck. MklcUe row: McCormack. Sonneborn, Jackson. Rice. Lippincott. Fislier. Little. Cresson. Ball. W ' ortli. Tapley. Gross. Caldwell, Ericnsen. Ronbins. Bcicfc roil ' .- Hulm. Reller. Braden. Ramsey. Alford. Angell. Hull. MacPhail. Buckman. Frye. Coffman. Rayner. Sinitli. Sbaw. Jones. Griffin. Johnson. tront row: Simmer. N. Smilli. Bender, Dobbins, Neale, MacPliail, liite. Lnrkin. Kratlenmaker, Boani. Back row. Lonr, Vawter, Martin, A. Harriian, Appleton. Goodman, W. Smitb, Cooper. Jakle. W ' riglil. Larry Wolfe. Henderson. Lindsay W ' olle, Budd. Pi Kappa Oinicron Chapter jounded 189. Cl. ss of igjg Joseph Benaer William Boam Walter Budd Edward Dobbins David Harman Herman KraKenmaker Bainbridge Larkin Leland MacPhail Robert Neale Keltn Simmer Natban Smitb David Starr John Warrington Garv White Class of 1940 Ehot Asinor Heywood Broun Edward Henderson Edward Jalcle John Hough Martin Low Leonard Mercer Gordon Smitb WiUiam Smitb La%vrence Wolfe Cl.vss of 1941 Frank Appleton David Cooper James Goodman Arthur Harman Lauer Jones John Kuecble George Wright Class of 1942 Roger Frost Horace Green Freeman Lohr Charles Martin Webb Potts Wilbam ' awter Benjamin White Lindsav Wolfe ' v ' • : . iiiitek. Delta Upsilon Phi Chapler joundecJ igo6 Class of lOjQ Louis Coriin Lawrence Craig Dale Heriicloii I ' .clnuincl Jones Robert Lei n roth George Lykens Robert lorris David Olcis Elvin Soucler Edward 1 lialcber Stewart Tnorn Robert Wolf Gordon Watts Class of 1940 Harold Adams William Adamson Henry Austin Edward Boolier W illiam Camp Ralpk Dunlap Thomas Mawhinney John Pemberton Albert Robson Class of 1941 Robert Barto Charles Canedy Robert Cahall Francis Erdman Samuel Powers Fred Reed William While Class of 1942 Frank Beury Edward Bower Blair Luckie Dalton McAlister Peter McBean Robert McCoy John Mennig Donald Pelz Walter Skallerup Hewson Swift Robert ' an DeMark Robert Zipfel Front roti): Olds, Lykens, Watts, Camp. Craig, Wolf, Boolier. Thatcher, Mawliinney, Coffin. Middle row: Barto, Adams, Thorn, Cahall. Skallerup. Austin. Rohson. Herndon. Pelz. Morris. Reed. Back row: Adamson. Zipfel. Bower. McAlister. Van DeMark. Erdman. Mennig, McBean, McCoy. Luckie. White. Phi Sigma Ktippa Phi Delta Tlieta rofif row: A. SiiyJfi. Au liii. iUun, Livjntssluii. 11m  . Cf L,uii; Luii. Muniiiig.l.ir. Uiiii|JI. I u=li;i. Middle row: Jump, Kurtz. Darlington, Pirnie, Marcley, Hall. Jones. Ingersoii, Alexander. Poole. Isgrig. Steelnian, Wood. Oliver. Bacfc lort ' ; Trautmaii. Bond. P. Snyder. Capron. Crowley. Sniilli. Speers. Ferguson. Myers. Custer. Pennsylvania Kappa Chapter jouniled 1Ql8 Class of 1939 Lewis Bose Paul Buchanan Richard Dimpfl Wellington Jones Ashby Jump Wilham Livingston Edward Morningstar John Roberts John Thomas James Wilson Class of 1940 Robert Austin Thomas Custer Robert Foster Edward Green Robert Hall Raymond Ingersoii Walter Isgrig Douglas Langston John Myers Robert Poole Arthur Snyder Paul Snyder Class of 1941 Elliot Alexander Edward Cavin John Cro ley John Ferguson Robert Kurtz Berton Marcley David Oliver Morgan Pirnie Walter Scott Richard Smith David Speers Stanley Steelman Walter Steuber William Timmis Philip Wood Class of 1942 William Capron George Bond LeRoy Darlington Rowland Dietz William Dietz Edwin Krom John Leich Dean Trautman liiterrraternity Council Suiiiig, lejt to rifj ii; I laverstick. Blackman. MacPIiail. Rcller. Henidon. Boolie Slanainff: Price, Livingston. Foster. President Vice-President Secret. ry-Tre. surer William Price, ' 59 James BIacl man, 39 1938- 959 Officers Leland MacPIiail William Livingston Dale Hernclon Kapp. Sigma Harry Haverstiok, ' 40 Phi Kapp.v Psi William Reller, ' 40 Delta Upsilon Leland MacPLail, 39 Leonard Mercer, ' 40 Dale Herndon, ' 39 Phi Sigma Kappa Ed vard Booner. 40 Phi Delt. Thet.v William Livingston, 59 Robert Foster, 40 1939-40 Officers Edward Booker Harry Haverstick William Reller Fred Donnelly. ' 41 Harold Ramsay, ' 41 Frank Appleton, ' 41 Robert Caliall, ' 41 David Oliver, ' 41 I lii Beta Kappa Phi Beta Kappa is llie honorary scliolaslic fraternity the memhers of which are chosen eac f) year Irom amony the highest standing studenls in ihe arts courses. Class oi ' 1938 Alfred Ash Geoffrey Kelh-r Margaret Peter Ashehnan Laurence J-.afore George Braden Michael Marsh George Cooper John Marshall Thomas Elliott Elizabeth Mims Kermit Gordon William Nute Vartan Hartunian f eter Oesper Mary Katherine Heald Edith Runge Mary Ivins Helen Louise Schmidt I RATRES IN FaCULTATE ET SoCII IN CoLLEGIO: Frank Aydelotte (Indiana University) Frances Blanshard (Smill ) Harold E. B. Speight (Dartmouth) William Hull (Swarthmore) Jesse Holmes (Nebraska) Isabelle Bronk (Swarthmore) J. Russell Hayes (Swarthmore) Harold Goddard (Amherst) Robert Brooks (Indiana University) Henrietta Meeteer (Indiana University) Ethel Brewster (Swarthmore) Brand Blanshard (Michigan) Lucius Shero (Haverjord) Philip Hicks (Swarthmore) Frederick Manning (Yale) Edith Philips (Gaucher) Laurence Irving (Boivdoin) Heinrich Brinkmann (Stanford) Milan Garrett (Stanford) Troyer Anderson (Dartmouth) Lydia Baer (Oberlin) J. Roland Pennock (S(i ' or( imorej John Nason (Carleton) Walter B. Keighton, Jr. (Swarthmore) Elizabeth Co.x Wright (Swarthmore) Harold March (Princeton) Maurice Mandelbaum (Dartmouth) Frances Reinhold (Siuarthmore) Richard Brandt (Denison) Joseph Coppock (Swarthmore) Beatrice Beach MacLeod (Swarthmore) Louis Robinson (Sivarthmore) Nora Booth (Sunirthii ore) Mary Anderson (Smilli) Helen Benham (Gaucher) Mary Temple Ne vman (Swarthmore) W. C. Elmore (Lehigh) Samuel R. Aspinall fWest Virginia) Kieth Chalmers (Swarthnjore) Sigma Xi is an honorary scientific society wliicli endeavors to encourage original scientific research. Undergraduates are elected to associate membership in their senior year. Upon completion of a piece of research work orth of puhhcation they are eligilile for full memhership. Fr.vtres in F. CL ' LT. TE Samuel R. Aspinall Edgar Clark Black George Bourdelais Heinrich Brinkniann Samuel T. Carpenter Edward H. Cox H. Jermain Creighton Arnold Dresden Karl Duncker Oio ' niB .i William C. Elmore Robert Iv. Enders Duncan G. Foster Milan VV. Garrett Laurence Irving ( Howard M. Jenkins Ruth McCIung Jones Walter B. Iveighton, Jr. Frank R. Kille Wolfgang Ivohler Michael S. Kovalenko Scott B. Lilly Luzern G. Livingston Robert B. MacLeod Ross W. Marriott John A. Miller Orren Mohler Edwin B. Newman Samuel C. Palmer John H. Pitman Walter J. Scott Andrew Simpson Kaaj Aage Gunnar Strand Charles G. Thatcher George B. Thorn Peter van de Kamp Hans Wallach C. Brooke Worth Winthrop R. Wright Harry Wood Associ. TE Members Richard Crutchfield Elizabeth Funkhouser Norris Jones Virginia Safford Undercr. duate Associate Members Ann Douglass Mary Hoagland Alexandra Illmer John Thomas Robert W olf Sigma Tau is the nalioiiiil honorary onCinoprint fraternity, ineniberslii|) in lii( li is ylvcn Id jiniior ;iii(l senior engineers on llie basis ol ahillty snov n in llicir vorl . The society was roun(lc l in i()0|, while Swarlh- more s chapter was iniliah ' d in lyry. Fratres in Facultate George Bourdelais Samuel 1 . Carpenter Howard M. Jenkins Scott B. Lilly John D, MacCrumm Ross W. Marriott Anarevv Simpson Charles G. Thatclier George B. Thorn SiiJfnia Tau Student Members Elected 1937-38 Louis Coffin Whitney Collins John Dutton Robert Wall er John Warrington Elected 1939-40 Miles Bowl er John Kalb Samuel Warburlon James BlacLman Edward Dobbins Ralph Fisher Richard Lippincott Leiand MacPhail Jolin 1 homas Gary White Book and Key MorlcU ' hofirc Gooi« ' ' Elizabeth Boss Mary Goodwin Molly Grinnell Mary Hoagland Louise Kaltenbacn Marion Rous Joan ' oolIcott Binger, Mitcnell, tvans, 1 tbbttt.-;. Yearsley. hastw ick. BrouiiK-ll. Jacksun. RugL-rs. Sites. I ' urtly. hiias. Sturclevant. Goocivvin. G Wimp Barbara Binger Mary Lois Broomell Martha Eastwiclc Josephine Elias Eleanor Evans Claribel Goodwin Ehzabeth Graves Hope Griswola Jean Jackson Betty l.ou htchell Adalyn Purdy Betty Rogers Virginia Sites Mary Ellen Sturdevant Margaret Tebbetts Eleanor I earsley Kwink Angell. Geniberling. Adams, Coftninn. Howell, H. Austin. Camp, Hougli, Dunlop. Green, Poole. Jackson. RoDDins, Homans, R. Austin, BooKer. J Harold Adams Newell Alford Richard Angell Henry Austin Robert Austin Alden Bennett Edward Booner Hey vood Broun William Camp Ray Coffman Ralph Dunlap Charles Gemberling Ed vard Green Alan Homans John Hough Samuel Howell Jay Jackson Leonard Mercer Robert Poole Lewis Robbins John Sanderson James Shilcock • V , -- S •■ ' ' 4 ■ ' ' •IC - i ! ! VP; ' .W n w flllKI BROUN Football From roti ' : Miller, Bucld. Larkin, A. Snyder, McCorniack, Jakle, Reed, McCone, Roy. KraltenniaKer. Miihtle row: Sniitli. Hulin. Wolfe, C. Eberle, R. Eberle, P. Snyder, Harljnan, Pease. Harnian, Bacfc roin.- Renisey. Simmer, W ' riglit, Mawliinney. Goodman. Jones. D innelly. Cox. Under the able tutelage of Lew Elverson and Paul Stoflvo, the Garnet negotiated one of the best seasons in its history, brealving records right and left and setting marks that future teams will find difficult to beat. Lew Elverson in his first season as head coach of the Swarth- more eleven brought the team on rapidly to get it in condition for its opening game. He tool the loss of Buzz Eberle, his fleetest back, in stride and presented a formidable team to face Union. The Garnet rolled up two touchdowns in the opening half on a touchdown by Bud Jones and a long run by Larry Wolfe, ending with a lateral to Smokey Ramsey, for the second score. Unfortunately, neither point was converted, and the seemingly formidable lead of the home team suddenly vanished when the heavy Union line and the plunging backs pushed the ball over the goal line and converted one point afterwards to take a one-point lead. It was at this point that tlie Elverson men showed their ability to come from behind, A series of Ed Jakle ' s accurate pitches, coupled with a reverse by Larry Wolfe, brought the ball over the goal line and gave the Garnet the lead for good and for the game. Union tried desperately, but the line held every time the invaders threatened. Finally Swarthmore pulled the game out of the fire by giving Union an intentional safety, and after some fruitless scrimmaging the final gun found the Garnet out in front by a score of 18-13. Gaining momentum, the grid machine blazed into an already tropical nat ion ' s capital to face American University. Finding themselves six points behind as a result of a surprise pass, the BLAKE KI.VI-KSON SirjIKO Garnet powerhouse went to work on llic land and in llie air. Tfiey rolled oul loinlccii iirst downs, while American, bttcl ing the Ciarncl lini supported by Al Cox and Tony Deguli.s. loinid themselves face to face with a stone wall and could accumulate no more than the two first downs xN ' hich they collected in tine opening minutes of play. The first of the two Swarthmore scores was made by Hartman, who plunged over the line after runs by Wolfe, Hannum and Jakle had ad- vanced the ball up to the two-yard line. The second score was a result of some battery work, with Jalvie doing the pitcbing and Weltmer the receiving. Jakle converted both points to make the final score 14-6. And then Oberlin came roaring out ol the West to break the Garnet string. All during the first half of this game both lines dominated the play, fighting each other to a standstill. In the second half the debacle came. Oberlin struck twice through the ozone to score fourteen points and take a formidable lead. Ed Jakle, vhose passing arm had been damaged in the previous game, entered the fray, but his efforts to pass the team out of a bad jam were all to no avail. The cur- tain fell on a 14-0 score. Still bearing the sting of the Oberlin setback, the gridmen bounced back to a 21-6 victory against Hamilton with Ed Jakle again at the helm. It was a field day for the Swarthmore captain as lie scored all twenty-one of the home team ' s points, and as a result won the Maxwell award as the most outstanding player of the week in the Phila- delphia area. Wolfe, Hartman, and Jakle did most of the ball carrying, and as usual, the Garnet line played an outstanding game, with Mawhin- ney, Ramsey, and Donnelly sbaring the honors for the day. On the flanks Krattenmaker and Weltmer proved as hard to get around as the Phoenix copy desk. Cox and Degutis continued to back up the line well, while AI Roy and the Snyders also came in for their share of the glory. The Garnet traveled next to Baltimore to meet Johns Hopkins, but the rain and mud which they encountered there hampered matters somewhat. The net result of the entire trip was a scoreless tie. Hopkins threatened once, but the Garnet line held for downs and thus ended that threat. On a clear afternoon this would have been one of the best games of the year. From Baltimore the Little Quakers descended upon Annapolis and went about the somewhat simpler task of humbling St. Johns to the tune RAMSEY McCONE DONNELLY JONES P. SNYDER MILLER A. SNYDER STOFKO DONNELLY M.AWHINNEY of 42-0. Every member of tfie Swartli- more squad saw action and distinguished himself on the field of battle. Hartiiian was one of the high scorers with two touchdowns to his credit. hile Jakle s six points after the touchdowns must set some sort of record for efficiency. One of the most promising runners to see action was Fred Reed, whose speed and drive make him a threat against any de- fense, while Mickey McCormack did some brilliant open-held running for the Elversonmen. The Garnet covered themselves with glory when they played bost to tbe Earl- ham Hoosiers from Indiana and handed them a 15-0 setback in a mass of mud. A safety was all the Garnet could score in the first half, when Henry McCone blocked a punt that Earlham recovered in their own end zone to give Swarthmore two points. The Little Quakers gained much yardage during this period, but the only effect of the drives was to prepare everybody s spirits for two Garnet tallies in the second period. The Brst score came early in the second period in a play blanketed by a layer of fog when the combination of Jakle to Weltmer clicked again. The second touchdown was set up by Larry Wolfe with a spectacular 33-yard run. Hartman plunged to within scoring distance, and Jakle made the final score ol the season. The lion ' s share of the credit for the best football season that Swarthmore has had in more than a decade belongs to the coaching staff. Lew Elverson kept the team on edge for all games and perfected a strong and intelligent offensive machine, while Paul Stofko turned out one of the smartest as well as one of the best lines seen in the college for some years. The boys were almost impregnable on the de- fense, since Union in the hrst game was the only team to gain with any amount of success through them, and they also proved themselves constantly capable of opening necessary holes on the offense. Among the backs Ed Jakle remains the standout, for his passing and running BUDD SMITH were always spectacular and frec|uently effective, and his accurate toe tallied eleven consecutive points after touchdown. Larry Wolle made many long gains, while Hartman proved iiniilili ' lo he stopped when the team needed ground through the line. Fred Reed, Tony Degutis, Bud Jones, Mickey McCormack, and led Hannum all played consistent games throughout the season. In spite of the vagaries of predictions, we can- not help but predict a successful season for next year, with many of the 58 team returning and a promising lot of freshmen coming up to nil ihc gaps left by the graduating lettermen. All this, coupled with the adroit coaching of Lew Elverson and Paul Stofko, seems to be the formula for success, but time alone will tell, and in the mean- time we can contemplate pleasantly a successful season for 1959. SEASON 1938 Union 18-15 American U 14-6 Oberlin O-14 Hamilton 21-6 Johns Hopkins o-O St. Johns 42-0 Earlham 130 WOLFE lAKLE Front rotr: Howarci, Loliinan. Saltertliwaite. Dereklor, Trautnian. Wolfe. Carr. Oliver. Back roir: Blake, Jones. lolinson. Griffin. Taylor. Heilman. Fr e. Knud-Hansen. Howell, Clynier. Frosl. s occer In spite of the fact that the Swarthmore soccer team finished its first season in a numljer of years without a league title attached to its belt, the season can be called a success. Any season in which the home forces beat Pennsylvania can be called in itself success- ful, but outside of that, the team finished with a record of five wins, one tie, and two losses, wnich is not a bad record by any means. Statistically, the booters shaped up even better, and in spite of the vagaries of figures, here they are: the Dunnmen s offense clicked off twenty goals in eight starts in comparison with the oppo- sition s eight, while the Garnet defense hung four wliitewashings on their opponents, or one every other game. The Garnet stopped Gettysburg in the season s opener much as Longstreet must have stopped Lee in those same environs. The score was 6-0. It was a field day for Captain Gary White, who scored four goals, while Vince Boyer and Bill Reller divided the remaining two tallies between them. There was little doubt from the very start that the Garnet would come out on top; for their offense was crushing, and their defense absolutely air-tight. The Swarthmore side of the field was poor ground for the spectators, for most of the action unwound itself on the other side, where the Gettysburg goal was continually being menaced by Swarth- more s fierce attacks. The teamwork on the whole was excellent on the part of both the veterans as vell as on the part of the three new men, Jerry Simson at goal, Sonneborn at left fullback, and Delaplaine at right outside. After this game the outlook for the future was a pretty bright one. for the team displayed a newly- developed ability to add the final punch to their shots which was an improvement o er previous Swarthmore soccer teams. Returning home, the Little Quakers played host to the Brown DUNN and White from LeKigli. Tlie team was different, fjut tne result of tfie game added up to the same thing, another decisive Swarth- more victory, the final score laeing 4-1. Gary White continued in his goal-scoring spree Ijy adding two more talhes, and Bod Rockwood added the final brace of goals. George Fornwalt aided the Garnet attack vith some expert passing, while John Sonne- Dorn, Al Thatcher, and Jerry Simson in the goal made the de- fense almost air-tight. Simson, playing his first season as a soccer man, has proven himself one of the outstanding men on the Swarthmore team, making fine saves all season and showing his ability to throw the ball half ay down the field. In this game the Garnet again displayed that same fierceness of attack which was so evident at Gettysburg. Had it not been for the excellent defense of the Lehigh goalie, the score might have been consid- erably higher, for time and again, especially in the last period, he deflected strong shots that were heading straight for his territory. On the whole, the game was characterized by fast and flashy team- work throughout on the part of the Dunnmen. At no tiTiie did they seem to lose sight of their objective, or waste any shots, and the coordination with which they passed the ball back and forth was well-nigh perfect. There was certainly no let-down here. But the Dunnmen ran aground as they went sailing blissfully into their third game. Princeton downed the Garnet 20 as gloom settled over the campus. It was just a question of the Orange and Black s having a better team on that day. They outpassed and outplayed their rivals. The game was, however, a close battle all the way, for the Tigers did not score their second tally until late in the final period. But it was noticeable that the Garnet were definitely not up to the standard they had set in the first ' ,()() U.U CROTHERS. DUNN. P.MTERSON hvo games. Tliougli tliey displayed Hashes of hrilliance. on tlie wnole tneir teamwork was deficieiil. ajid tliey lacked tlie linal pun(di Willi wliiili to polish off their fast drives. Much of the credit lor keepijig the score comparati ely low goes to Jerry Sim- son at goal, lor more than once in the second period he staved, off a Princeton score by his mighty heaves to midfield. But the Garnet never Fashed their full fury against Princeton. They were too busy Keeping the tiger from the door, and in this endeavor the laurels go specifically to John Sonneborn and A! Thatcher for their fine defense work. But even the best of teams have their off days. At present our concern is with what may dehnitely be called an on day. The Big Quakers from Penn descended on the l ittle Quakers, and were merrily tripped up by their little brothers to the tune of 2-1. The Garnet played their best game of the year. They passed accurately, and shot with speed and precision. The credit for the two goals goes to Forn-walt and Delaplaine. The entire team played well, but if names must be mentioned they are those of Wright, Boyer, and Crothers. each of whom played one of tfie best games of his career. Coordination was once again the watch- word. Although the Garnet failed to score until the third period, their combined offense and defense were responsible for warding off most of Penn ' s attacks and for driving the ball deep into Penn territory time and again. 1 he Lafayette game proved to be a breather, and the Dunn- men downed their rivals, 3-0, while White, Delaplaine, and Crothers scored the points. It was an easy win for the team, and they really did not have to exert themselves in obtaining it. The Garnet scoring spree vas delayed by various hard breaks until the second period, when Rex Tompkins cleverly maneuvered the ball from the sidelines into Johnny Delaplaine s hands, who shot it over for a goal. Shortly afterwards, Delaplaine again figured in the scoring, taking a loose ball and passing it to Gary White, who received it in front of the goal and drove it in. The last score came in the fourth period, when Chic Crothers received a long, high shot from Al Thatcher and directed it into the goal. Cornell unfortunately proved themselves more obstinate, and after a long spell of futile effort by both teams the wheel of for- tune came to rest at a O-O tie. Chic Crothers and Gary White were excellent on the offensive, while on the defense Thatcher, Boyer, and Simson played good games and frequently nipped potential Cornell attacks in the bud. However, on the whole, the Garnet were not as efficient as they had been in previous games. Once again tlieir lack of tlie final |)nn( li losl lor tliem many opportunities to score, alliioKgii lo a great extent they outplayerl tlicir llliatan rivals. It was lliis unlortunate lie llial irlually (Iroppcd the Garnet out of reach ol a league tille. When Stevens caine along, however. Svvarlii- more ' jounced back with a vengeance and hum- bled the engineers to the tune of 2-o. 1 lie Dunn- men did no scramlDling in this game, for they had everything under control from beginning to end. Their offense was crushing and their defense solid, and, though scoring only twice, they were continually threatening. White and JDelaplaine once again figured in the scoring, and Bill Pat- terson gave invaluable aid to the Garnet cause. Special recognition goes deservedly to Dearborn, the Stevens goalie, who, through his spectacular saves, Kept the score as low as it was. In their final game against Haverford the Dunn- men put up a valiant nght, coming from behind twice, but they finally lost to their perennial rivals by the score of 4-3. 1 hatcher. White, and Cres- son did what they could to keep the team in the running in a very muddy ball game, but their three goals fell one short of succeeding. Jerry Simson shone in the goal, but the Red and Black, who went on to win both league titles, were just loo gcjon. cspei liilly In llic sloppy looling . As in llic I ' riiKi-lon g Din-. llic G;irn -I pi. yd hirgfly on dii- dclciise, iind ihcri- lay llir- flillrrr ' -iii i- Ijclween vi( lory and dclcal. So the li-ani hooped wearily hfjiiic. aud lln- ' 38 season became pasi history. Perhaps ihe sling of lliis dcfeal will supply the boys with added iinpilus lor next year. At any rate, the prospects lor .i siiapp) 1939 season are lar Iroiii discourag- ing. For the sf|uad will be swelled by surn val- uable additions as Llliott Alexander and liin Shilro( k Ironi llie J. V. s. and Preslo i Piik kiiian. Ed McNeill, and ' Shaw from the I ' reshirien. And besides, most ol the excellent material nl lliis year s team will be back headed fjy Captain-elect Crothers, so the team will certainly not Ije lack- ing their ability or will to win. SEASON 1938 Gettysburg 6-0 Lehigh 4-1 Princeton 0-2 Penn 2-1 Lafayette 3-1 Cornell O-O Stevens 2-1 Haverford 3-4 Kneeling: Delaplaine. 1 lialclier. RocUvood. Cresson, White. Boyer. Crotliers. Fornwalt. Sonnebom. SlanJing.- Boolier. Reller, Tompkins. Boani. Sliilrock Peelle. Smith. Simson. Wright. Clinchy. Alexander. Buchanan, Dunn. Basketl)all Front row: Sautter. Johnson. Cope. Griffin. Wolfe. Back roil ' . Howard. Bcatty. Van DeMark. Dielz. Stetson. TTT TTT TT • )«• ( • } 1 « J I I ( I •  i „, . . „ ,- , _ . , ..,,. • I •  j i ln  ♦ ♦  ♦ r • •  «i I • ♦ 1 1 • •       ♦    • I . . c t t t  • t i • r « « e • • « ♦ ••♦♦ «J t • • • • • t « « « 1 1 « k «   ♦  r .ii « i «l«t«« i J '  • J t « •  « jy S -i %% ' v . ■ HMO ? N ' V ■ ♦ ♦ i Bf .- II ' m • . H P ' ' ' • f- fc yJ . -5 RELLER aclNTosH The Swartlimore basketball team bas compiled a record this year that will long leave its imprint as a mark of excellence at which future Garnet teams can aim. With fourteen vic- tories and but one defeat, suffered at the hands of Lehigh, the followers of Mark Macintosh showed themselves to be not only one of the most powerful teams ever to play for the Little Quakers but also one of the most ef- fective small college fives in the East. The Little Quakers also established a record that will not soon be sur- passed. In compiling their remarkable record they ran up a string of 21 straight victories over a period of two seasons, and after the string was broken by Lehigh added five more wins to run up a total of 26 wins in 27 starts. In a final fling at the statistics it might be said that in the last three years the Swarthmore team of virtually the same players has won almost 90% of its games, and has improved its record each year, a trend which they hope to continue in their next and last season for the Garnet. ■ ' ivvv.w¥j : MjfA ' M mm mi m J►♦♦♦f ♦♦♦♦♦♦ tjiNjojfi ' twa ' ! I !ii §M FroMi roin: Asinof. Simson. Crollicrs. Reller. Elierle. Haverstick, Blackman, Bach loip: Doljhins. Weltnier. Sniilli. JaUe. Maclntosli. The Garnet won their first two games with ease, defeat- ing the Alumni 50-22 and Pharmacy 62-53 on t e home court. These two games were just warm-ups for the high- powered quintet and they experienced no difficuhy in getting well out in front and staying there against these two foes. The first real test for the Macmen came when a strong Beloit team traveled from Wisconsin to invade the East. The Blue and Gold got little sympathy from the Garnet, however, as the latter five took Beloit into camp by a 44-31 score. Wittenberg prohted little from the sad ex- perience of Beloit and traveled from Ohio only to be set back 46-36 in a fast, well played game. Eberle was the high scorer for the Garnet in this game, racking up six- teen points. Swarthmore then took to the road to find new victims and found two of them in upstate New York. The Little Quakers downed Hamilton and Union on successive evenings 63-36 and 55-46. This was Ed Jakle ' s week-end as he scored twenty-three points in the two games. The game against Union was hard-fought all the way, but the Garnet machine slowly pulled away in the second and third periods to build up a big lead, while Bill Reller chalked up twelve tallies and Don Weltmer snagged them consistently off the backboard. The Macmen returned home to play host to Drexel and Lafayette, and took both encounters. Drexel fell by the heavy score of 60-33 and Lafayette by the score of 41-27. It was in this latter game that the Garnet reached their highest point of efficiency, putting on a second period drive that they never ecjualled before or after. With the score 7-6 at the end of the first quarter the Macmen dropped the ball through the hoop so fast and furiously that Lafayette might just as well have joined the spec- tators, as they found themselves trailing at the half. 24-8. being outscored seventeen points to two in that memorable period in which Jakle, Eberle, and Reller vied with each other for scoring honors, passing and shooting with be- wildering accuracy. In the next game Hamilton fell for the second time by a 45-55 count. The main thorn in the side of the opposi- tion was Ed Jakle who scored twelve points in ten minutes as the team won under wraps. Then came the debacle. The Swarthmore string of consecutive victories, which had reached the imposing number of twenty-one, like all good things was finally brought to an end by Lehigh in one of the most thrilling battles of the year. The Garnet went into a half-time lead of 19-14 by dint of Ed Jakle ' s harvest of sixteen points. The second half was a thrilling affair with the score knotted four times, but in the closing moments the Lehigh engineers pulled away to a 43-55 victory. Harr - Haver- stick, filling in in the second half for Jakle, was high scorer for that period vith eight points. Returning with a vengeance to the winning ranks, the Garnet traveled to Dickinson and there downed Carlisle. Jakle again was the sparkplug of the Little Quaker attack, tallying twenb,- points in the three periods in which he participated, to register his high mark of the season. REI.l.ER lAKLE WELTMER BLACKMAN The Hopkins Blue Jays proved themselves a harder nut to crack. Without much delay they jumped into a lO-o lead. Their success was short-hved, however, as the Garnet did a sudden about face. The Hopkins team managed to hold a two-point lead at half-time, but after the intermission the Macmen overtook their rivals in a wild dash and ended in front by a 46-57 count. Jakle. Reller and Weltmer shared scoring honors. Returning home, the Swarthmore quintet entertained a. capacity crowd by trouncing Ursinus 48-29. This vic- tory was doubly satisfactory inasmuch as the team they conquered was the same five which defeated the Garnet the previous year in a camera finish, 45-44. Bill Reller sank one long shot after another, and was chiefly respon- sible for the baffling of Ursinus. Following some advance publicibi ' painted on the Haverford campus, Swarthmore invaded the gym of their traditional rivals to demonstrate their superiority. The Garnet found the going tough and the basket elusive as the scoring was kept down, but none the less managed to eke out a 55-22 victory over their inspired rivals who fought stubbornly to avert defeat at the hands of the heavily favored Garnet five. Weltmer and Crothers were the outstanding players on the floor. The Little Quakers pulled away from a 4-4 tie to take the lead which they never relinquished although at times they were hard pressed. In the final game of the season the Swarthmore sharp- shooters overwhelmed St. Johns of Annapolis by a 54-26 score. Harry Haverstick proved to be the big gun in this Garnet attack by scoring 20 points. The game was never close and the outcome was inevitable. ■ ■ H Hf H H K . ' ' r ' l 1 B ' ™igff ' ' H HEpHj VnOHI y fe ? H K- l ROBBINS HAVERSTICK ASINOF SMITH Coach Mark Macintosh deserves the hon ' s share of the credit for the great team that he has developed. He has brought the Swarthmore quin- tet along through successively better seasons for the past three years as his team compiled a string of twenty-one straight victories and finished this season with fourteen wins against one defeat. His chances of continuing are bright, as nine out of the ten men on the squad are returning next year, Jim Blackman being the only man lost through graduation. This, coupled with the fact that a strong Freshman squad is coming up to vie with the varsity for positions on the squad, make the outlook very rosy. Every man on the team acquitted himself with laurels. Jakle, Crothers, and Eberle were all shifty fast floor men with keen eyes, Reller ' s floor play was superb while Captain-elect Weltmer was invaluable under the basket both on offense and defense. In the second five Asinof vas deadly with his long set shots and Haverstick was always a scoring threat, while Blackman, Simson, and Smith were all worthy replacements. SEASON 1Q38-39 Alumni 50-22 Pharmacy 64-32 Beloit 44-51 Wittenberg 46-56 Hamilton 63-56 Union 55-46 Drexel 60-53 Lafayette 41-27 Hamilton 48-35 Lehigh 55-45 Dickinson 57-42 Johns Hopkins 46-57 Ursinus 48-29 Haver ford 35-22 St. Johns 46-26 IronI rnir: Marcley. Cavin. Donnelly. Bennett, Knucl-Hansen, Clevenge Bacfc roil ' .- C. Mifflin. Mawiiinney. W. Mifflin. The initial turnout for the Swarthmore swimming team provided a shortage of material that was to prove unfortunate in the meets to come. Captain Tom Nfawhinney was the only letterman returning to the team, and lie iully lived up to expectations by being a consistent winner practically all season. Of the sophomores and juniors, several gave promise of an interesting season. Our lack of senior swimmers, though a handicap to this year s team, foretells an experienced team next year, with no graduation of personnel. Our first meet of the season, with St. Joseph s, provided Swarth- more with a good practice session, our team taking everything but the diving and the 400-yd. relay. The count was 32-27, and Fred Donnelly set a new pool record in the go-yd. free-style event. On January 14, our swimmers lost to Villanova, 55-18, winning firsts in only the medley relay and the breast stroke. In the next meet we competed with West Chester in our own pool and lost by a 47-28 count, bowing to their superior power. Tom Mawhinney came through in the breast stroke, and Fred Donnelly won the 30-yd. free-style to score the only Swarthmore victories. Journeying to Schenectady, we swam a vastly superior Union team, losing 24-51. However, the trip was enjoyed, and provided valuable experience for our entire team and managerial staff. At this meet Lou Clevenger, who had been shaping up all season, was awarded our initial first in the diving, while Captain Ma vhinney again came in s wi milling M.WN ' HINNEY. MacADOO WATTS. LANGSTON first in tlie hreasl stroke. Irj iIjc ■jO-ytJ. aiifl . -jo-yd. Ircc style r.j( fs ' rc iJoiiiu-lly linisliptl sototul. In our Jic.vl friccl. Iicrc io llif lioinc pool. .S arllnuorf nilcjilcd loljii I lopKins ny llie narrow margin ol ' )() ' . as lirsls were ( airic i hy JJorinclly in iIk- 50. Clevenffer in llic rliving, i oniicliy in the lOO, Mavvfiirnioy in tlie breast stroke, ano Walker Milllin in the | |0. I liis was llie lirst meet in which W. Milllin had swum this rate. Our medley relay learn. (onsislin[ ol Cavin. jMawriinney, C. Mifflin and [Connelly, also triumphed. Allhout, ' li the numner of points (gained rjy each team is indicative ol a hard-loiiyhl njeil, llu- ( larrjet were never seriously threatened at any time. However, the next week the Swarlhmore swimmers journeyed to Lafayette, where they were defeated hv llie decisive count cjl j-)i(). Captain Mawhinney came through with a hrst in tfie 200-yd. hreaststroke, while C. Milflin. trailed by two Lafayette men. won the lOO-yd. free-style in 1:04.6. I he other victory was rung up in the 500-yd. medley relay race by the Swarlhmore learn composed ol Cavin, Mawhinney, and Donnelly. After the unfortunate experience with Lalayelte. we swam our slrongest opponents of the season, Rensselaer, and lost 57-i ' S. Here Mawhinney sulfercd his only defeat of the season in the 200-yd. JDreaststroke, after a session in the infirmary. The Trojans took every event except the 400-yd. relay, in which Fred Donnelly fought hard in the closing minutes and managed to retain the lead built up by the Mifflin brothers and Bert Marcley. The Varsity closed the season with a defeat by Lehigh, as Captain Mawhinney won the hreaststroke and Swarthmore won the 400-yd. relay. This meet was featured by the breaking of two pool records by Captain Adams of Lehigh in the 50 anrj 100. The record in the former race was previously held by Fred Donnelly. Our Swarthmore swimming season of 1958-39 was especially successful from the viewpoint of team spirit and individual initiative. The prospects for next season are very bright. The 1940 co-captains, Mawhinney and Donnelly, will be leading a strong band of swimmers. All the veterans will be back and this years power- ful freshman squad will present a formidable front in the person of several valuable additions, including Roger Frost, Walter Skallerup, Dick Carr, Jim Scheuer. Freeman Lohr, and Roy Darlington. Certainly such a combination of super strength should produce an undefeated season, or something close to it. All the team needs in order to make this combination click is plenty of spirit, and both veterans and freshmen have definitely displayed an abundance of it this year. SEASON 1938-59 St. Joseph ' s 43-27 Villanova 18-55 West Chester 28-47 Union 24-51 Johns Hopkins 59-30 Lafayette 20-55 Rensselaer 18-37 Lehigh 20-55 DONNELLY MAWHINNEY F encing WAKSMAN. CANEDY, MURRAY. MARSHALL. LORENZ Fencing was instituted at Swarthmore t vo years ago by Byron Waksman, 40. who had been active in the sport in prep school. Many of those students who have come out for fencing have become very much interested in it, with the result that the college has finally allowed the team to have a series of official meets this year. The schedule comprises Penn, Le- high, and Haverford. The coaching is done at present by members of the team under the supervision of Waksman and Bent Boving, 41. who also had consider- able fencing experience before coming to Swarthmore. There are three different types of fenc- ing, depending on the weapons used: foil, sabre, and epee. In foil and epee, a good touch must be with the point, as though there were no edge on the blade. The target in foil is the chest, whereas in epee it is the entire body. In sabre, the cutting edge is used, and the target is the upper half of the body. The team consists of nine men, with three fencing each weapon. This year s team was arranged as follows: foil— Canedy, Lorenz, and Zimmerman; sabre —Rogers, Setlow, and Boving; epee— ' Marshall, Murray, and Waksman. Most of the members of the team have progressed rapidly since taking up the sport and seem only to lack e.xperience. By next year there will be several mem- bers of the class of ' 42 who will furnish plenty of competition to those on the present team. In a meet each man on the team fences the three men in his weapon on the oppos- ing team. A bout is usuallv the best out of nine touches; in epee it is the best out of five. The meet is decided on the basis of the bout score. In our first meet, with Penn, we lost, 23-2, although there was some nice fencing on both sides. The two bouts were won by Rogers and Setlow. In our meet vith Lehigh a month later we did a little better. Marshall and Waks- man each won two bouts, while Canedy and Boving col- lected one apiece, with the result that the score vas 21-6. If the team continues along these lines, we have reason to expect even greater improvement in the forthcoming meet with Haverford. SEASON 1959 Penn .. Lehigh 2-25 6-21 Informal Sports For the last few years an intensive winter sports program lias been in progress at Swarlliniore. This program has heen beneficial, not only from the standpoint of those interested in unorganized sports but also of those fall and spring varsity men who wish to keep in shape during the winter. Basketball and swimming are the only varsity sports; it is easy to see that they alone do not present a wide enough range of activities for stu- dents to choose from; so intramural sports do play an itiiporlanl role in the sports fdinalion schedule. Wrestling is very popular willi a great niiiii- ber of ifie students. Under the guidanfe ol lorn Sharpies, interest has become very great. Last year Sharpies, along with Pete Kaspar and I )ave Oliver, participated in the Middle Atlantic Wrestling 1 ournanu-nt. Tfie leading wrestlers are Sharpies. l ' )ol) Waller. Dave Oli er. I ' lol, Derektor, and liob Kurtz. Several outside rnali lies have been held and it is hoped that in a few years Wrestling will Ue recognized as a varsity sport. In the fieldhouse curriculum lor llu- winter, track plays an important part. The ( indermen under the tutelage of Coach liert iiarron train arduously through the week in preparation for the outdoor season. Informal meets with Temple, West Chester, La Salle and Lafayette give the track- men experience in competition. Badminton holds the attention of many college students down at the Pitt Hall Gym. A tournament is a feature of the curriculum. Racquet wielders include Bob Austin, Newell Alford, Hey wood Broun, Dick. Dimpfl, Chuck Rice and Bruce Hannay. There is also a bowling alley at the gym which has proved to be very popular. The tennis team also stays in shape and sharpens their style on the heldhouse courts in preparation for a difficult spring schedule. A and B ' teams each play in an interclub league. Coach Ed Faulkner also gives numerous lessons both to novices and to varsity men. Coach Bob Dunn keeps his soccermen in shape throughout the vinter by scheduling matches with various clubs in and around Philadelphia. Coach Dunn also has initiated a boxing program which he hopes will- develop into an intercollegiate sport. The percentage of student participation in athletics is unusually high at Swarthmore, as more than ninety per cent are engaged in either inter- collegiate or intramural competition. s asiit WHITE BLAKE SOIJDER BENNETT u acrosse Long before llie wintry blasts and glistening snow bave disappeared from tbe campus Coacb Avery Blake bas tirelessly rounded up all veteran and prospective lacrosseites and put tbem to work in tbe fieldbouse, eitber learning fundamentals or brusbing up on tbem, as tbe case may be. Tbe first day outside is a little tiring, perbaps, but really enjoyable. Tbe second and tbird, bowever, are featured by agonizing yells and painful groans as Ave metbodically and mercilessly works out kinks and stretcbes stiff muscles. As time pro- gresses, fundamentals are stressed less and sucli coined expressions as cream em, cbop em down, and work on bim ' can be beard riding tbe Marcb winds. After several weeks of intensive practice, including tbat grueling dasb ' around tbe born, tbe eve of tbe first game approacbes. Last Spring it was tbe Pbiladelpbia Lacrosse Club, and tbey proved an easy opening opponent. Tbirteen goals were rung up wbile tbe opposition was beld to eigbt. Tbe game was more or less informal and loosely played. However, tbe team looked good in spots and Ave s new zone defense sbovved promise. Barney Price led tbe attack witb five goals. Lew Coffin cbalked up tbree, wbile tbe rest were well divided. Tbe next week, bowever, an entirely different story unfolded as tbe Mount Wasbington Club came up from Baltimore witb a long winning streak and a national cbampionsbip in its pos- session, and in addition an active desire to remain undefeated. Witb tbat in mind, we will con- sider it enougb said to say tbat tbe boys played well and profited from tbe experience of playing against so many All-Americans. Tbe new de- fense proved its mettle in bolding tbe world s best attack to only eleven goals. Our attack vas erratic and could manage to ring tbe bell only tbree times. During spring vacation tbe squad travelled down to College Park to play tbe University of Maryland. Here again tbey were sligbtly out- classed but not outfougbt, and wben tbe final wbistle sounded tbey were on tbe sbort end of an 8-3 score. Barney Price again led tbe Garnet scoring witb two goals, and Ike Budd scored tbe remaining marker. The zone worked well, partic- ularly in tbe early part of tbe game, and enabled tbe defense to bold tbe score down against one of Maryland ' s better attacks. Lew Coffin bad tbe misfortune to fracture a rib in tbis game and was unable to return to action until tbe Jobns Hopkins game two weeks later. Tbe Williams game produced our first convinc- ing victory. Tbe final score was 10-6. In spite of tbe fact tbat Coffin and Price were on tbe sidelines witb injuries sustained in tbe Maryland game, tbe attack worked well and, paced by Ike Budd s tbree goals, bit tbe cords ten times. Tbis game was featured by tbe return of Captain Wayne Frazer, wbo bad been suffering from a pre-season sboulder injury. From roil ' .- Harinan. Lipnian, Ford (Mascol). White. McCoriiiack. A. Snyder. MklAle row: P. Snyder. Saclis, N. Sniilli. Peelle. Coffin, Atkinson. Back row: Blake, Reid, Price, G. Smith. Budd, Brown. The Little Quaker ten won their third game of the season by whipping the Swarthmore Lacrosse Club, ig-8. Barney Price accounted for four goals and played a fine, all-round game. Gary White also played well, while Harry Reid, defense man, left his end of the held long enough to score once himself. St. Johns of Annapolis, another of those hot tens from Maryland, defeated us 12-4 in the next game. Traditionally a strong outftt, the John- nies again presented a strong team against the Garnet and soon had a substantial lead which the Garnet were never able to extinguish. Gary White with two goals and Herm Krattenmafcer and Frazer with one each accounted for the Garnet scoring. The 11-0 shutout of Lafayette was the first ever recorded in the regime of Coach Avery Blake. Only the spectacular saves of Goalie Mickey McCormack kept the Leopards from scoring, however. The Garnet scored eight times in the second half. Jim Lipman rang the bell for three goals, while White and Frazer scored twice. The 8-6 defeat of Penn was probably the highpoint of the Blakemen s season. The Little Quakers outfought and outplayed their University brethren throughout the entire contest. Penn, however, was the nrst to score, and was leading at the close of the first period. However, the Garnet soon retaliated in the second period and maintain ed a 6-2 lead at halftime, scoring four goals in two minutes. Barney Price, Ike Budd and Wayne Frazer each scored twice from their attack positions. After the first half, the Garnet maintained their lead stubbornly to the end of the contest. Their defense work was very much in evidence when danger threatened their goal, but otherwise they took things fairly easy in the remaining minutes and did not have a great deal of trouble making their three final tallies. With the score standing at 6-2 as the second half began, Penn struck forth with two goals to come vithin striking distance. However. Ike Budd relieved the suspense by easing a smooth shot into the Big Quaker goal to make the score 7-4. Once more Penn fought back. I 3 8 KKA ' ri ' E.N ' MAKER N, s.Mrm MrCOI MACK IIARMAN making the score 7-5, but Wayne Frazer retaliated a moment later with our final goal, bringing the count to 8-3. Until the very end of the game, when Penn scored their final point, the Blakemen clamped down on them and completely thwarted their every attempt to rally. In the face of the powerful Garnet attacks and their stonewall de- fense Penn was kept constantly on the run. while Swarthmore made their op portunities and took advantage ol them. Johns Hopkins was the fourth Mary- land team to defeat the Garnet during the season. The game was witnessed by three thousand people in Balti- more. The stellar work of Goalie McCormack repulsed many of the Blue Jay attacks. The half ended with Hoji kins holding a 7-2 lead. Shortly after the second half began, Swarthmore drew within striking distance by scor- ing t vice in succession, but Hopkins immediately put on the pressure and scored three more, while holding Swarthmore scoreless. At West Point the Swarthmore ten found the going decidedly difficult. Army was entirely too strong in every respect. After a fairly close 6-1 first half, they rang up score after score and hnally stopped when the whistle blew and the count stood at 18-1. Army had such a large supply of reserves that the small Garnet squad was soon worn out. The game with the Palisades Club was a relief after the Hopkins and Army battles. Playing in a downpour, the weak Palisaders proved poor mud- ders and could not cope with the fast Garnet attack. Swarth- more was leading 9-0 at the half and hnally came out on top 17-2. In the next game the Swarthmore stickmen lost to Penn State 7-6, but they nevertheless made a good showing. Although pos- sessing a 3-3 lead, the Garnet could not hold State in check. Coskery of State nnally scored the winning point in the closing minutes when a penalt ' gave Penn State an extra man. The Gar- net used only eleven men during the whole game. The contest vas characterized by brilliant plays and good stick-handling. In the closing game of the season Stevens was defeated 8-3. The Garnet played one of their best games of the year and domi- nated the play from beginning to end. White and Krattenmaker each scored three times while dodging Tech defense men and the raindrops which fell intermittently. PEELLE P. SNYDER COFFIN BUDD Generally speaking, iQjQ sIiouIlI he a good siiison. Close defense is undecided, but Ine midlield and at- tack should both be strong. Tennessee Smith is iho only veteran returning, as Reid, Sachs, and Shalfcr arc no longer available. Larry Wolle, Bob Morris, iuin Al Roy are all strong possibilities. In the miclfield the veterans Nate Smitli, Bob Peelle, Dave Harnian, Paul Snyder and Sam Cresson will again hold forth with Tony Degutis, Al I hali ncr. I red Donnelly and Dick Moses ready for action as spares. At close attack Barney Price will be missed, but Gary White, Herm Krattenmaker, Lew Coffin, Ike Budd, and John Miller should be able to take care of the offense in capable fashion. Under the inspiring tutelage of Coach Ave Blake the lacrosse team should improve upon its 1938 record of seven wins and six defeats. An attractive schedule has been arranged which includes four newcomers, Washington and Lee, Union, Colgate and Lehigh. To show up favorably against the competition of such teams the Garnet will have to display top form and fighting spirit, and they are certainly capable of both. SUMMARY ur,H Phila. Lacrosse C lub 13-6 Mt. Wasliiiiglon 3-1 I Williams l ' )-6 U. of Maryland -yH Swartlimorc Lat rosse Clul) l - St. Johns .-j-ll I- afayette i 1-0 Army 1-18 |- ' alisades Lacrosse Club ' 7-2 Penn State 6-7 Stevens 8-5 Front i-Qir: Cosinuke, Tliatcher, DeGutis, W ' iiite. McCorniack. Krattenmaker. Middle row: Cresson. Boani, P. Snyder. Coffin. Budd. Wolfe. Donnelly. Back roip; Bennett. Peelle. Morris, Smith. Moses, Harnian. Blake. 1 9 3 9 Jront row: Worth. Warburton. Warrington. Asinot. McCone. Patterson. Biacl nian. Crotiiers. Simson. BucL rcw: Stetson, Dunn, Cox, Ramsey, Pease, Dimprl. SnilcocK. Baseball T ) AD breaks and a lack of hitting in tlie pinches proved the undo- ing of last year s baseball nine. Although fourteen games were scheduled, only nine were played. Not a game vas won until June, when an aged alumni outfit bowed to the Swartnmore foundlings. The annual game with the Penn A. C, usually scheduled before spring vacation, was rained out. A strong Wesleyan nine then in- vaded the campus in hopes of starting the season with the Garnet, but to no avail. As everyone had predicted, it poured all day and the Middletown lads wended their way wearily back to Connecticut. In the first actual game of the 1938 season, Swarthmore was shut out by a strong Lehigh outfit 4-0. The Dunnmen could collect only three hits from the offerings of the Lehigh twirler Lucard. Dick Dimpfl pitched effectively until hit on the arm by a batted ball in the fifth inning. This bad break, coupled vith several errors by the Garnet, gave Lehigh one run in the sixth frame and three in the seventh to clinch the game. Henry McCone toed the slab in the last two innings and allowed only one hit. On April 16 the Swarthmore nine lost a thriller to Rutgers at New Brunswick, 5-4. With the score 4-3 in our favor, with two out in the ninth, and with McCone pitching good ball, it seemed that victory was ours. But the Jerseymen pushed over two runs largely because of a pop fly single by pitcher Steadman. Both teains garnered nine hits, with Wray. Brunhouse, Crothers, and Jakle col- lecting two apiece. Although Ed Worth pitched a fine game against Stevens, the DUNN Little Quaker attack failed liim completely. An early Tech lead was erased and tne game went into the tenth haine with the score 2-2. Stephens then proceeded to score what proved to be the winning run. AUhough the home- sters filled the bases, they couldn t score due to lack of timely hitting. Only one game was lost on the Hamilton- Union trip, as the latter contest was cancelled due to inclement weather. Hamilton scored three runs in the last two innings due to the many errors of the fiarncl infield, and eked ou! a ' )- f decision in frigid weather. I he next sfx llacking on the list was ad- minislered Ijy (he liears of Ursinus. The game was very rlosc lor ciulil innings, very much (Milike Inc 2 1 ) liiisio ol I0 7- I he fielding lorces again deserted Dirnpll, who allowed only one earned run, and let Ursinus score two marKers in ihc ninlh inrjing. I lopkins opened the next game with one run in the lirst. hut Swarthmore came right hack and scored two hecause of Crother ' s triple which scored fSlackman and Wray. Hopkins could not tou( h Uimpll in ihe next two frames. Rain began to lall durijig ihe setond inning and finally the game was called in the hrst half of the fourth with the Garnet leading 2-1. The game was not of regulation length, and therefore did not count. The weird helding of Swarthmore and potent punch of Drexel batsmen resulted in a 15-4 win for the Engineers. This was the hrst thorough licking suffered by the Garnet, and the less said the better. The Muhlenberg game was a repetition of the Rutgers battle. Winning 6-g going into the ninth, the Garnet then handed the decision to the Mules on a silver platter. It was in this game that Johnny Bigelow broke his ankle sliding into second base. There was great excitement on the Swarth- more campus on the night that showed a 23-6 score in favor of our lads. But alas, it seems that the figures were actuallv reversed and that Penn DIMPFL TAFLEY nosed us out 23-6. Garnet errors and misplays and Penn ' s power at the plate proved too much for the Little Quakers. Rain caused the cancellation of the tradi- tional game with Haverford, leaving the Alumni as our only possible victims for 1958. George Earnshaw, former major league ace, pitched ror the Alumni against us and yielded one run in the fifth inning before retiring. Adelman, his suc- cessor, was not so fortunate, as the varsity scored three in the sixth to win 4-0 behind Dick Dimpn s four hit pitching. The leading player of the team was Captain Wray. Besides being a timely hitter, Richie was a marvel in center field. In the few games in which he performed, 1937 Captain Dick Brun- house proved to be as strong as ever both behind the mask and at the plate. Outfielder Bill Har- rison along with Wray and Brunhouse are the only lettermen who graduated, although John Bigelow did not return to college this year due to illness. The team, while it was rarely powerful of- fensively, played good ball at times, especially in the Rutgers and Muhlenberg games. The only player who batted over .300 was third baseman- pitcher Bill Patterson, although Bigelow, Wray, and Crothers crowded that charmed circle. Chic Crothers led in runs batted in. It is certainly reasonable to expect a better season for 1939. Nine lettermen are returning with several valuable additions from last year s junior varsity club. The pitching staff of McCone, Dimpfl, and Worth, which deserved better luck last year, returns intact. Carl Johnson, Rex Tompkins and John Sonneborn are also good prospects from the jayvees. Chic Crothers will again hold down the keystone sack as will Captain Jim Blackman at shortstop. Lettermen MacPhail and Patterson are available with the hot corner. John Huhn, Smokey Ramsey, and AI Cox are rivals for the backstop position. Th e powerful hitting of nllie Asinof marks him as a certainty at either the outfield or first base. Jerry Si.nson has a good chance of breaking into the line-up. Several of the infield candidates will probably patrol the outer gardens by the time the season gets under way, as none of last year s outfielders will be back, except possibly Ed Jakle. Let us hope that this nucleus will insure ever optimistic Dunnie a successful season. SEASON 1938 Lehigh 0-4 Rutgers 4-5 Stevens 2-3 Hamilton 4-5 Ursinus 1-4 Drexel 4-13 r Iuhlenberg 6-7 Penn 6-23 Alumni 4-0 Golf In its tliircl year as a major sport, Uoll moved into line limeli[ lil at Swartlimore. Completing one of the most flilTi(ult schedules ol any sport in tlie college, the team emerged vvilli nine victories out ol thir- teen matches. Led by the championship playing of Bill Haverstit k, they got off to a grand start hy beating Cornell, g ' a-a ' a. Finishing the season, they smothered Army, Q-O, being the first team in eighteen years to shut out the Cadets. Between the closing and opening matches the team polished off Temple, Lafayette, Haverford, and Dickinson, without allowing their opponents to score. F. M. was no match for the Swarthmore swingsters, who buffeted them from green to lee to the tune of 7-2. A well-groomed Virginia outfit overcame the Quaker golfers in both their encounters, and another defeat was suffered at the hands of Penn ' s experienced bag-toters. Captain Braden, mixing golf and highest honors, pfayed enviable golf throughout the season. Captain-elect Bill Haverstick led the team with the same brand of golf which later won for him the Penn- sylvania State Amateur Championship and which he displayed in nu- merous tournaments during the summer. In a mid-season excursion to Georgia, he and Jakle played bang-up golf in the Southern IntercoIIegi- ates. with Haverstick reaching the semi-finals, only to drop a hard one NEALE, WELTMER. JAKLE. ROBSON. RICE. HAVERSTICK. ROMANS to champion Tommy Barnes of Georgia Tech. Jakle s consistent playing and even temperament have proven valuable assets to the team, enabling him to go through the season with [ew defeats. A newcomer to the varsity team, Af Robson, paired with Braden to form a winning combination. His steadiness and dependability were by no means the least of his virtues. Weltmer, Rice, and Relfer compfeted the team by afternating in the fifth and sixth positions. Interest in golf at Swarthmore has been heightened with exhibition matches by such nationally kno vn golfers as Horton Smith, Jimmy Thompson, and Gene Sarazen. A coed match with the University of Pennsylvania provided the social atmosphere for which golf is known and brought a happy ending to a successful season. t SEASON 1938 Cornell j ' i-aVa Temple Q-o Lafayette 8-1 Virginia 1-8 Haverford Q-O N ' irginia 6-3 F. and M 7-2 Johns Hopkins iVa-e ' a Dickinson Q-O Haverford -2 Penn 2-7 Army Q-o Track A LTHOUGH inning hut two meets in six ' • starts, tile track team had several outstand- ing performers in the persons of Captain Ham Kirschschlager. Buzz Eberle and Art Hartman. Lack of manpower lost many points. The Garnet was noticeably weak in all held events, excepting the shotput and pole vault. Cap ' n Ham. with a total of fifty-nine points in six meets led the team scoring; was undefeated in the four-forty. Buzz Eherle got forty-seven points with four first places each in the hundred and two-twenty yard dashes. Shotputter Hart- man was defeated only once in dual meet com- petition. The pole vaulting was well taken care of by Ed. Jones. The season opened with a defeat at the hands of Lafayette 47-7 1- The sudden change to freez- ing weather after having trained in the comfort- able held house put the Garnet at a disadvan- tage. First places were captured by Kirschschlager, Gross and Hartman, while Jones and X ' iehover tied in the pole vault. Swarthmore s track, poor even under the best veathe conditions, was a sea of mud and made good times impossible. A decided improvement was noted at Bethle- hem the following week although Lehigh defeated us, 51-75. Five out of fourteen first places fell to the visitors. Ham won the two-twenty in 22.4 and the four-forty in 52. Lew Bose took the half in an exciting race. Other first places were garnered by Eberle in the hundred and Hartman in the shot. Lehigh s Elmer won both distance races in 4.48 and 10.51, while sweeps were regis- tered by the home team in the high jump and the javelin. The lollowing week the Garnet cindermen won and lost two close meets. In the 68-5S defeat of Drexel the Garnet won all the running events except the hurdles, but Art Hartman, with a put of 41 feet 7 ' a inches, was the only field event winner. Buzz Eberle, with 1 1 points, led the scoring, while Ham Kirschschlager won both the quarter and the half. Al Ash showed marked improvement, winning the two mile event and placing second in the 880. Chuck Hendley placed first in the mile and third in the two mile. Other point winners included Bose, Herndon, Blai, Morrison and Foster. Four days later Johns Hopkins defeated us 64-62. A certain Mr. Driscoll of Hopkins was largely responsible for this defeat as he won both the two mile and mile events, preventing the Garnet from taking a clean sweep in the track events. The pole vault was the only field event taken by the Garnet. Captain Kirschschlager won the half mile, the quarter, and in his first low hurdles race triumphed in the fast time of 25.2 for a total of 15 points. Buzz Eberle led the field in the 100 in 10.1 and also the 220 in 22.4. Against the weak Delaware aggregation the cindermen went on a rampage, 11 out of 14 firsts in the 78-48 triumph. Again reliable Kirsch- Y ne inQ: H. Kurtz. Bose. Kircnscnlager, Beardsiey. Kalb. Sianiino : Starr. Hernrlon. Asli. Price, i oster, Morrison. Blai. Barron. STARR KIRCIISC ' IILAC.liR 15 ARROW SMITH i PRICE Kb y mr ' HARTNL N ROBINSON schlager iinci Eljerle (aplnreu two lirst places. Eb- erle again won the lOO hi lo. i wliile Kirscnschlager easily won the quarter and low hiircHes. Pete Morrison took both the liigh jump and high hurdles. Ed Jones got nine points in the broad jump and the pole vaiiil, while Art Hartnian put the shot -41 feet. 8 ' 2 inthes. At the annual Penn Relays hard Iurl dogged Swarth- niore. Eberle. number one man for the little Quakers, ran a fifty-one-second quarter and, with a brilliant spurt, handed the baton to Herndon twenty yards in the lead. Herndon more tiian held his own and added another three yards. Bose, known for his slow starts and brilliant finishes, took the baton deliberately and as he rounded the first turn fell. Before he could regain his stride ten men had passed him but he gamely made up much lost ground and handed the baton to Kirschschlager in eighth place. Ham. with a marvelous .4g second quarter, passed man after man and gaxe Swarlhmore fourth place among sixteen teams. Undoubtedly the Garnet would easily have won. but for this unfortunate break. The traditional meet with Haverford resulted in a defeat 45-81. Unbeaten in ig consecutive starts, the Red and Black had one of the best small college teams in the East. Nine first places went to Haverford, while they swept the highs, the broad-jump, the high-jump and the javelin. Hartman easily won the shot, Kirschschlager romped home first in the quarter as did Hendley in the two-mile. Ed Jones topped the bar at eleven feet nine inches for the best vault of his career. Beaten in the hundred. Buzz Eberle won the 220 in a diving jjhoto finish defeating Joe Wingerd, vho had won the century in Q.g. His time of 22 seconds flat was a new college record. Although Kirschschlager ran a 24.8 in the low hurdles, he could obtain only third place because Derr of Haverford equaled Paynie Pearson ' s record of 24.2. Bill Price placed second in both the shotput and the discus. Coach Barron loses several valuable men in Kirsch- schlager, Ash, Hendley, Beardsley, Blai, and Kurtz, but under the enthusiastic leadership of Dale Herndon better results are hoped for. Lettermen returning include Cap- tain Herndon, Buzz Eberle. Ed Jones, Art Hartman, Pete Morrison, Lew Bose, and Bill Price, while the present co-captains of cross-country, Robinson and Reed, should fill the shoes of Ash and Hendley. There are several likely prospects from last year s freshman team. Track at Swarthmore will greatly miss Ham Kirsch- schlager. Good for at least ten points in every meet. Ham sacrificed times in order to double up in two or more events. SEASON ig38 Lafayette 47-7g Lehigh 51-73 Drexel 68-38 Johns Hopkins 63-64 Delaware 78-48 Haverford 45-8 1 Penn Relays 4th place out of 16 M.A.S.C.A.A 6th place STARR Cross Country Coacfi Scudder and liis Svvartliriiorc liarricrs liad a fairly successful season this year. I luMr avera[ e was less than .300, for out of six meets they won three, in which was included a trian[ ular nieel with f averford and Bridgevvater. Although this does not look very impressive at first glance, when one consiflers the schedule for the season, it seems to he a pretty good record. The team started off by easily outpointing Johns Hopkins, 22-53, on a muddy course at Swarthmore. Driscoll of the opposition showed the way home with a time of 26:20 despite the sloppy course. Captain Ken Meader came in close behind at 26:2) and was followed by his teammates Reed and Robinson in that order. The meet showed the promise of a good season. But then the Garnet fortunes suffered three consecu- tive headaches. The victors were Lafayette, Franklin and Marshall, and Rutgers, in that order. These col- leges have long been known for their superior cross- country teams, so considering all, we were fortunate to fare as well as we did with them. The first blow came at the hands of Lafayette, who defeated us 19-40 here on our own 4 ' 2-mile course. Three Lafayette men fin- ished ahead of Captain Meader, our first man. Sparks, the first man in, was clocked at the amazing time of 24:28, which broke the Swarthmore course record by as much as 32 seconds. After that jolt we journeyed to Lancaster, but still couldn t beat the bugaboo. F. M. polished us off to the tune of 16-39. Captain Meader led the Garnet runners, but finished in nfth place, after four members of the home team had tied for first. Dave Reed, Bill Price, Mark Robinson, and Dick Weber finished in that order for the Garnet. And then came the low point and the sudden rise, — but first about the low point— Rutgers was decidedly better than we were, and trounced us 15-40 on our home course. Three of the Queensmen tied for first place with the time of 24:50. Captain Meader and Dave Reed of the Garnet finished sixth and seventh respectively, while Mark Robinson came in ninth. However, llic leani voted t[)e season a success when I hey ended up in good style by beating both Haver- lord and Bridgewaler in a triangular meet al I laver- lord. Of course, the meet wilfi I Taverford. our tradi- tional rivals, was the meet of the entire schedule toward which all the Swarthmore runners were working. And it turned out that the competition was almost solely with Lfaverford, for none ol the Bridgewater men placed in the first ten. T he two co-(aptains for next year. Reed and Robinson, crossed the line second and liflh respectively. T hese two men. who are naturally afjle runners, promise to be the barkfjone ol next years team. Tlie two seniors, Meader and Price, finished their long and brilliant careers in cross-country at Swarthmore by gaining positions four and seven, respec- tively. Unfortunately, Captain Meader had fiard lurk in his last meet; for he was leading the field up to trie last stretch and would have come in first had he not lost a shoe at the crucial point. But this meet not only meant the end of a successful season for this past year; it also served as an indication of what can probafjly be expected next year. The power displayed by the men who ran in this last meet and by the Freshmen is promising. And besides. Coach Scudder will be on hand to get the most out of whatever Icind of material he has and to contribute his good-fellowship tonic to a season superior to the last. SEASON 1958 (Lowest score wins) Johns Hoplcins 33 Lafayette 19 F. M 16 Rutgers 15 Haverford 29 Bridgewater 40 Swarthmore 22 Swarthmore 40 Swarthmore 39 Swarthmore 40 Swarthmore 26 Swarthmore 15 T riangular Meet. REED AUSTIN PRICE BRAUN POWERS MEADER SLATER WEBER Tennis When June came, and tlie familiar twang ol tlie rackets and tlie cKeers ol tlie tennis laiis below the C|uad had died away, the Tennis team packed up their chattels and closed the hook on a record of eight wins and five losses. After completely humhiing St. Johns to the tune of go and after being crushed by the two 8-1 defeats at the hands of Penn and Haverford. the racqueteers had their taste both of brilliant victory and dark cleleat. J heir record compares closely with the record ol IQ37. when the same squad, comprised of the same men, collected eight wins and four defeats. Last spring, except for the middle of the season, when they alternated between victory and defeat in their matches with Penn, Johns Hopkins and I afayette, the Garnet racc(ueteers tended to win or lose their encounters in groups. Their first three games they won: of their last seven, they won the first four and lost the last three. Coach Faulkner s charges swung into the first week of the season by hanging up tvvo decisive victories against West Chester and St. Johns. West Chester bowed beneath the weight of an 8-1 score, while St. Johns was crushed completely. 9-0. In the latter con- test everything clicked. Bill Doriss beat Volkart, 6-0, 6-0; Buchanan disposed of Tindal, 6-1, 6-0; Todd tri- umphed 6-1, 6-2, while the other singles players were all victors without the loss of more than one game a set. In the three doubles matches Doriss and Buchanan displayed sparkling teamwork and net play to triumph 6-5. 6-1, while Guerin Todd and Levering won by the same count, and Lashly and Livingston finished victors. In the next match played with Albright on the home courts, the Garnet had more difficult going, finally con- quering 5-4 after their opponents had put on a threaten- ing last-minute rally. The locals won two out of three sets of doubles, while Levering, Lashly, and Todd triumphed in the singles. DORISS BRADEN. POST. DORISS. I.l l ( .M ) , iU CI lANAN. lAHLLY. LI I ' lLE. ROBBINS J But now the Garnet Fell heavily from their summit of victory, tripped up 8-1 by a mercifess Penn squad. The lone Swarthmore win was gained in the doubles by Levering and Todd who struggled through to a 6-4, 2-6, 7-5 triumph. In the next match against Johns Hopkins the Faulk- nermen swung back into the winning column, but soon descended again as Lafayette slipped them a close g-4 defeat at Easton. Three of the six singles matches went to Captain Levering. Todd and Livingston, and the contest was decided in the doubles, as Lashly and Livingston dropped a hard one, 5-6, 6-0, 3-6. The following match marked the beginning of a four- game winning streak for the Garnet. Against Muhlen- berg they triumphed 7-2 and won by the same count over Franklin and Marshall. Both matches were marked by accurate and confident playing on the part of the winners. This stateinent may be applied even more so to the following match, in which the locals defeated Dickinson 8-1, losing only one singles en- counter. The team had a more difficult time defeating FAULKNER MORNINGSTAR Delaware, but the final results showed a 5-4 victory. But now the Garnet were rudely rocked. The last three contests were losses. Playing Wesleyan on the home courts the team lost to the tune of 6-5. Captain Levering and Todd won the only tsvo singles victories for the Garnet, and then teamed together to take the only doubles match. The next match, played at Lehigh, was dropped by a 3-4 score. Levering, Buchanan, Liv- ingston, and Neilson winning their matches in the singles. The Haverford 8-1 defeat was the most ig- nominious of all, and was a dark and dingy denoue- ment for the season. Neilson saved the team from a shutout by winning his singles match 6-2, 6-2. This year the team will lack the consistent playing of Captain Levering and Todd in both singles and doubles. However, Buchanan, Doriss, Livingston, and Rockwood vill be back, and with this year s freshman and jayvee team, prospects seem rather favorable for a good season. SEASON 1958 West Chester 8-1 St. Johns 9-0 Albright 3-4 Penn 1-8 Johns Hopkins 6-3 Lafayette 4-5 Muhlenberg 7-2 F. and M 7-2 Dickinson 8-1 Delaware 3-4 Wesleyan 3-6 Lehigh 4-5 Haverford 1-8 Stainhnq: Boileau. Pike. Kellock, G. Smith. Lippincolt, Driver. Yearsley. Kneel if HI- I-eeper, E ans, Ramse ' , Jolinson. Kulin. Toniiinson. Murcli. Hock ockev I OOTBALL teams may come and go, but the - - Little Quaker liockey team apparently goes successfully on and on. How long it will be so, we can t say, of course, and wliile we don t ap- prove of blowing too many horns, we really can t help it this time. ou must admit that its just about an accepted thing on and off campus that the liocKey teain simply doesn t lose games, and this seems to be based on sound facts, too. For it s four years now since a game was lost. The closest they came to it was back in 1956 when they played to a 2-2 deadlock wiih Bryn Mawr; in the days when Manager Mary Hoagland was a hard-working try-out and co-captains Rickey and Woollcott were hoping hard from their posi- tions on the player s bench. Things have changed since then; this year saw Rickey ably patrolling the left wing of the forward line and Joanie more than successfully blocking the goal from all com- ers, while Margaret Leeper formed the spear head of an attacking line second to none of its oppo- nents. A promising crop of freshmen came along to replace graduation losses and produced, besides, a high scorer in the person of Molly Boileau. El Yearsley. El Evans, and Jane Kellock were three juniors who refused to be ousted by any amount of new talent, and sophomores Hennie ToiTilinson and Libby Murch were right with them in holding on to the positions at which they had distinguished themselves last year. The amazing part of it is that with all the change in line-up and personnel. Coach Parry goes right on turning out teams of steadily improving calibre with successful seasons. But this season was more than successful. It was terrific. Swarthmore piled up a total of sixt ' - two goals in the same amount of time that it took their opponents to push over four tallies! The season s starter was with Swarthmore Club on October 8. Most of the members of the visit- ing team were ex-Swarthmore collegians who once upon a time did a good job of upholding Little Quaker honors themselves. But lack of practice told on them and the varsitx ' scored an easy vic- tory to the tune of 11-0. The ne.xt week s game was with Temple Llni- versity, and although the tallies didn t run up into double figures, the score was a decisive one, 6-1 in Swarthmore s favor. May Parry was be- ginning to worry when she saw Temple push over that lone tally, but Molly Boileau, El Yearsley, and Margaret Leeper got equally worried and scored and the rest of the team helped them out. Thus any pending catastrophe was averted. lOMUNSfJN si ' n:s TKe following Friday, the Ursinus varsity traveled here witli high hopes. They held the Quakerettes to their lowest tally of the season but failed to run up any points themselves, so that the final results read Swarthmore, 4, Ursinus, o. Again the trio of Yearsley, Boileau, and Leeper, in the order named, took turns pushing the ball into the cage and accounted for all the goals made. Even the prospect of facing All-Americans on October ag. when they met the Merion Cricket Club team, failed to ruffle the calm of the Swarth- more eleven. They came out on the long end of the 5-0 score with the extremely pleasant feeling of contentment that comes of having defeated a team which is composed of players recognized as trie best in the East. But the self-satisfied feeling didn t make them sit back on their haunches in contented con- templation, and the next victim on the list was Beaver. They were burning under the 4-3 defeat of last year, and were prepared to do-or-die for Alma Mater. They didn ' t die, but the best they could do was to score one goal and hold Swarthmore to seven. Rickey made the Leeper- Boileau- Yearsley trio a quartette that day, and the monopoly on goals was broken. KELLOCK PAIiRY 1 he following week the varsity sallied forth for tlieir only away game of the season to beard the Br n i lawr lion and tome back with a 5-0 victory to add lo their row of scalps. Rickey did herself proud in tlie game, accounting for four goals, while Molly Fiioileau scored the hftfi and kept her record clean for scoring in every game. I he last two games of tlie season were played with Penn on November 17 and William and Mary on November 22. Penn was the only team to score more than one goal against the Swartli- iiiore team, and the final results of the game were I 1-2 in favor of the Quaker co-eds. The William and Mary girls were less fortunate and stood on the short end of a 13-0 whitewash which ended the season for Swarthmore in a blaze of glory. So until another fall, hockey sticks and bruised shins were pushed into the background. When tlie team makes its next ajipearance, Jane Kellock will have taken over the captaincy from the hands of Joanie and Rick, and Henri Kirn will be as- sistant to Manager Jinny Sites. And Coach Parry will be there, patiently teaching push-passes and circular tackles, and, we hope, continuing to turn out the teams for which she certainly deserves high praise. SEASON 1938 Swarthmore 11 Swarthmore 6 Swarthmore 4 Swarthmore 5 Swarthmore 7 Swarthmore 5 Swarthmore 1 1 Swarthmore 15 SAvartlimore Club .... O Temple 1 Ursinus O Merion Cricket Club O Beaver 1 Bryn Mawr O Penn 2 William and Marv.... o WHEN MORTALS MET THE GODS GolF GOLF, lo ihc majority ol us, is vvlicji you spcjul a IkjI allc] iiodji digging in the rough, wading rivers, and shouting lore ever so often. But leaving out the majority of us, tile select seven, members of the Garnet Girls Golf Team, climb into the station wagon loaded down with their bags of trusty weapons in the way of clubs, and go off to battle on the hottest afternoons. Often they come back to campus tired and disheveled but having accom- plished good results for ye olde Alma Mater. They lost three of their five matches in the 37 season, but rebounded into the win- ning column with a vengeance in 58 by vinning lour out or the six matches played. The two lost were club matches, played against experienced players, but the four college encounters with Beaver, University of Pennsylvania. Perm Hall and a mixed four- some with the U. of P. are all to be chalked up as well-won victories. Coached by Nhs. Reynolds, the members of the ' 58 team showed great improvement in technicjue of playing over the pre- ceding year. The team consisted of Jane Hastings, Captain Mar- garet Bill, Eleanor Barbour, Margaret Deknatel, Gretchen Watson, Barbara Beckjord and Doris Shotwell, playing in the order men- tioned. The first match of the season with Cedarbrook, April 23, saw the entire squad defeated and a little discouraged, for Jane Hastings was the only one to win her match. This gave Cedar- brook a victory of 6-1. In the second match against the Springfield Club second team, the Swarthmore co-eds donned a determined air, but went down to defeat, 4-3. Bill, Barbour, and Deknatel scored the S varthmore points. The next match on May 2 witli Beaver gave the Quakerettes their only shutout of the season, 5-0. The battle with the U. of P. finally resulted in a 4-3 decision, after Deknatel, Beckjord, Bar- bour and Watson von their matches. After this match, Penn Hall fell easily, with only Meg Bill losing her match; the score was 4-t. The last match of the season, a mixed foursome with the U. of P., had couples from both the men s and the vomen ' s varsities playing, and whether or not it was due to the help of their betters, the girls won, 3-1, everyone but Hastings and Haver- stick victorious. Jane Hastings was elected captain for 1939 and Bets Michael slid into place as senior manager for the coming season. In the future, according to Coach Reynolds (Mike to us), there will be an attempt to build up intercollegiate competition rather than club matches, as the latter are generally against players far more experi- enced than college undergraduate teams, and the matches cannot, therefore, be upon an equal basis of competition. SEASON 1938 Swarthmore 1 Swarthmore 3 Swarthmore 3 Swarthmore 4 Swarthmore 4 Swarthmore 5 Cedarbrook Country Club.... 6 Springhaven (2nd team) 4 Beaver O Penn 3 Penn Hall 1 Penn (mixed foursome) i Upper: SKolwell, Goodwin. Barliour. atson, Hasliiigs. Boss. MiVM e: Hastings. Barbour. Lower : licnael , Sweet. Basketball FI.IAS MAGINNISS ![TT ' W ' n ' ' llS| ' J ■ m B vi H kK . I ■ yy ji iif il fril feW Fiunl low: Kirn. Leeper. Massey, Matsuoka. Kiihii. Middle row: Evans. Boileau. Pike. M. .lolinson, Lindsay. Tonilinson. Back roir: Sniilli. Kellock. Brearley. Edwards. Dri -er, Ycarsley. LippinroU. E. jolinson. Witli the cheering prospect oF four letterwonien from tlie preceding season, and the untapped reserve of a large tryout squad, Coach May Parry opened another basketball season. Captain Margaret Leeper, var- sity player since her Freshman year and high scorer for almost as long, brought experience and skill to the varsity forces, while letterwomen Henny Tomlinson, a consistent high-scoring forward, and Eleanor Johnson and Jane Kellock, filling guard positions, added strength. Mazie Johnson was a sensational Freshman forward, and Marge Brearley rilled in at the posi- tion of guard. This, then, was the team which began to click vith the first game against the Alumnae. Henny Tomlinson led a scoring spree which ended with a 57-3 result, boding ill for the next game with Beaver on the 13th of January. And the premonition was correct, for the final score was a somewhat close 28-22 score. The team was paced by Leeper and Tom- linson with 12 points each to the first win over Beaver in six years of rivalry. Almost a month after exams followed the game with New College, when the Garnet Sextet proved that a strange floor made no difference by ringing up a 25-22 victory. With three successes behind them the girls next took on the College of Chestnut Hill to the tune of 27-10, maintaining an easy lead. Leeper, making 12 of the points, and Molly Boileau 8. Three days later, February 20, on their own floor, the Quakerettes met L ' rsinus with their much-pub- licized forward, Bunny Harsha v, Leeper led her team to a 26-23 victory, scoring 18 points herself. Five times successful out of five starts, the basketeers now proceeded to defeat Temple on the 24th by 31-23. and Drexel on the 27th by 44-13. The Drexel game was marked by the excellent work of the guards. On March 3, Swarthmore travelled to the LI. of P. and chalked up their biggest score to date, 34-19. Mazie Johnson rolled up an individual score of 22 points with Henny Tomlinson a close second with 20. At the half-time, the Garnet was at the big end of a 29-Q lead, and this was almost doubled in the second hall. I lie RoscmonI ( ontcsl wiis an easy win vlii( li sli(jw(;(l the result j l-ai. I.eeper led llie scorint; vvilli iH lallics. With only Ivvo games left on llic si licdulc, Swarlhmorc was Icclint; ronFident, especially lor the rominy (, ' amc vvilli Bryn Mnwr on Man li ii. for this rival had gone down to defeat ihe last Ivvo years. I ' m! Iiiic iIji ' Garnet six met their first deleal in sixjcin games, heing outguarded hy the Bryn Mawr jjlayers. and unahle to keep up with llie rapid scoring of Sig or of the opposing team who accounted lor 22 (allies, still they came wilhin a three-point margin of winning. The last game with Manhattanville was played at home on Marcf) 18. Margaret Leeper accounted nobly lor herseli in her last game for Swarth- more with ig points of the 33 for Swarthmore as against ig for the visitors. The 1039 season closed with hut one defeat out of eleven starts. Cap- tain Leeper was high scorer throughout with Henny Tomlinson runner-up. The second team also enjoyed a successful season with only one defeat, conceded to Temple, 17-19. Letters have been awarded to Captain Leeper, Tomlinson, Mazie Johnson, Eleanor Johnson, Jane IVellocl , Marge Brearley, and YoKo Matsuoka. Manager Maginniss has been replaced by Jo Elias, whose own position as junior basketball manager has been taken by Joanna Hill. SEASON 1939 Swarthmore 37 Swarthmore 36 Swarthmoie 25 Swarthmore 27 Swarthmore 26 Swarthmore 31 Swarthmore 44 Swarthmore 34 Swarthmore 54 Swarthmore 32 Swarthmore 33 Alumnae 5 Beaver 22 New College 22 College of Chestnut Hill.. 10 Ursinus 23 Temple 23 Drexel 15 Penn 19 Rosemont 21 Bryn Mawr 35 Manhattanville ig LEEPER PARt ' JY Under the tutelage of CoacK Virginia Rath, and the close scrutiny of Theresa, the dachshund mascot, Swarthmoie s leininine s liiiniing con- tingent turned in a satisfactory record for tfie 1938-jQ season. Captain Dutch Watson made her teammates toe the mark set by their prede- cessors who estalilislied two eastern regional rec- ords. The lirst % as for the eighty-yard freestyle relay, swum in forty-three seconds by Marion Sny- der, Myra Williams, Virginia Mayer, and Jean Maguire. The second was established by Nathalie Irvine, who made the hundred-yard crawl in one minute, ten seconds. Both records were estab- lished during the telegraphic intercollegiate meet. This years varsity team won four out of six meets. It was paced by Gail Tappan. who was high scorer in tlie season s meets and made twenty points above any other swimmer. Varsity letter- women consisted of Captain Watson, who swam breaststroke and vas the team s star diver; Char- lotte Dean, crawl and form s vinimer; Bets Mich- ael, backstroke: Virginia Mayer, crawl: Mickey Maguire, crawl and backstroke: Libby Murch, breaststroke and diving; Gail Tappan, breast- stroke, backstroke, and crawl, and Vera Starbard, backstroke and crawl. Other outstanding mem- bers of the squad were Lo Decker, Mary Pulver- man, Jane Blankenhorn, Lenne Howard, and Janet Carpenter. The team was managed by Sally McClelland and Junior manager Lynn Purdy, who will be replaced next year by Edie Melville. Virginia Mayer and Mickey Maguire will act as co-cap- tains. s wimming Svvarthmore 32 Swarthmore 43 Swarthmore 4SV2 Swarthmore 33 Swarthmore 37 rth: wartrimore 21 SEASON 1939 Syracuse 15 Penn 59 Bryn Mawr ss ' a Temple 30 Savage 20 N. Y. U 35 T RATH Front roil ' .- BLinlvenhorn. Tappan, Michael. Decker. Middle row: Starbarcl. Murcli. Pulvernian, Wolf. Back row: Purdy. McClellanct, Ratli. WATSON F encing MACY The IQ38-3Q season nas oeen unusually com- mendable with hvo wins over Penn and the Bueno Studios, and a defeat at the hands of Bryn Mawr. The team is captained by Bobby Gould, who has ihe feeling and abilit ' necessary for fencing. She has performed vell, losing but three matches throughout the season. Coach Macy turned in a similar performance. Elizabeth Turner has not had the experience vhich her two teammates have enjoyed, but has shown excellent form. She has a mastery of fine points and has never made a bad touch. Mary Ann Parker is the most prom- ising substitute and the best competitive fencer. The rest of the squad consists of Barbara Deweese, Barbara Bowman, Helen Steel, and Nancv BOWMAN, SCHECHTER. GOULD, TURNER. PARKER. M. CY. DEWEES, GOODWI Schechter, with Clairibel Goodwin as manager. Three years ago when Tommy Macy first came to Swarthmore, fencing as a sport for women was non-existent. But with eight years of participa- tion and five years of non-professional coaching ' in the art of foils. Tommy s enthusiasm for fe nc- ing couldn t be held down. It spread rapidly to others. In one year she had organized a skilled team which was able to meet Bryn Mawr in open competition and defeat them successfully. The necessary hard work which Coach Tommy and her sc(uad have put into it are mainly responsible for the position to which fencing has advanced. The time-honored sport first developed as prac- tice for duelling, but has gained recent popu- larity for the fun it offers. Fencing demands agil- ity and lightning speed, while poise and natural dignity inevitably result from practice. By ama- teur rulings a team is limited to three participants, each playing a bout with every member of the opposing team, so that there are nine bouts in each match. Scoring is determined by the num- ber of bouts won by each player. SEASON i95S--,9 Swarthmore 7 Penn 2 S varthmore 2 Bryn Mawr 7 Swarthmore 6 Bueno Studios 3 Badminton JACKSON CAI.DWELI. LINDSLFY IIIJNS ' I ' WALKER MALCOLM BOWMAN ELIAS OSLAND-HILL I ' ARin ' Trying to return a bunch of feathers over a high net may seem silly to some, but that s be- cause they ' re just not in the s vim. Technically this is known as badminton and in the past fe v years it has become quite the thing to play. From a little-known sport, it has advanced to the ranks of varsity competition in colleges, and Swarth- more is not the least of these, as perhaps you ve noticed if you chanced to be in the men s gym when the team was practicing in those neat little vv ' hite sharkskin suits. Of the five matches played, they won every one (except that with the Panther A. C, the male contingent of the college, and it didn t count anyway in the final standing), mak- ing a commendable record for a first year varsity sport. Time vas vhen badminton was just another gym course that reluctant coeds struggled through for credits. Then M. .J. Caldwell came along and saw that things ought to be different. It is really due to her that the sport was organized for a team, together with the able help of Miss Parry and Jean Jackson, the manager. Last year only one match could be arranged. That was with Drexel and the Swarthmore contingent brought in a 5-0 victory. This year there have been five matches, tbe re- quirement necessary for any team to be ranked as a varsity ' . In all but one, every Swarthmore player was victorious over her opponent. That one was with Swarthmore Club, and though the score %vas close (3-2), it was a win. So went the season. As for the personnel of the team, it was captained by Mary Jane Caldwell, who played second singles, and was responsible not only for initiating the sport but also for keep- ing the enthusiasm at a high level. Barbara Bow- man, the only Freshman on the team, played first singles, and Avas its shining light, and she won all the matches she played. Betty Walker officiated at third singles with good results, while the two doubles teams consisted of Betty- Hurst and Kay Lindsley and Marie Osland-Hill and Josephine Elias. Beth Malcolm and Patty Eastwtck vere the other members of the squad who saw action. This is the first year that varsity letters and sweaters have been awarded for badminton as a sport. But this is only the beginning, for next year there will be more matches, and fortunately the same team will return t o service under Coach Parry s direction, looking forward to as honorable a record as was turned in for the past season. SEASON .959 Ursinus O Temple o Swarthmore Club 2 Panthers A. C 4 Drexel O Br n Mawr O Swarthmore 5 Swarthmore 3 Swarthmore S varthmore 1 Swarthmore 3 Swarthmore 5 Leji: KALTENBACtI, ORISWOLD. R.g ii; TEBBETTS. HUBBELL. CALDWELL CALDWELL. WOODCOCK. HUBBELL. TEBBEITS. KNOIT. HOWES Arch ery A RCHERY made its first impressive bid for a place on tlie campus last ■ ■ year, and has been recognized this spring as a definite sport with a manager and all that goes with it. The true enthusiasts vied hard for places on the squad and serious competition helped make it an outstanding sport. With instruction from Myrtle Miller, professional archer, and Nhss Rath as coach, the squad worked energetically. It held practices in the field house all winter, and when spring came, varsity archery was well on its way to importance in the way of women ' s sports. It was last spring that Swarthmore took part for the first time in inter- collegiate competition with good results to show, for the team won three out of the five meets in which they participated. The team of seven in- cluded M. J. Caldwell, Peggy Tebbetts, Dorothy Rakestraw, Ruth Knott. Joan Woodcock, Louise Kaltenbach, and Marge Brearley. M. J. led in individual scoring in all meets and won the cup for the highest score on Columbia Round in one meet. This spring, though it ' s too early to predict results, and the Halcyon must go to press, the schedule includes five meets with other colleges and prospects seem good. At any rate, the sport where one remains tranquil and dignified has progressed, and maybe some day Gwimp try-outs will chase arrows for them and even give teas after meets. SEASON 1938 Swarthmore 1581 Drexel 889 Swarthmore 1398 Friends ' Select 1277 Swarthmore 2048 Penn 1438 Swarthmore 1276 Sarah Lawrence 1468 Swarthmore (4th place) 2357, Intercollegiate Meet. Dance Group TURNER. SUnON. WHIIFORD FRANCK. JONES. CAPEHART, V. BROWN ' ' ' I ' HERE S no reason why interpretive dancing isn t just as mucn a - ' - form of creative art as charcoal sketches or Water color sketches or nallet dances, was the decision of a group of girls about two years ago, axid here was the little flicker that gradually grew into an active flame. That s the Modern Dance Group and how it had its start as an organized campus activity. And by now, wivn last year s inemorable May Day dancing exhibition chalked up in its favor, the Swarthmore Modern Dance devotees, as yet undomlnated by masculine influence, deserve meritorious attention. Few people realize the accomplishments of the group: it has composed and presented various original dance compositions in Philadelphia and at dance symposiums made up of neighboring colleges. Besides all this, it condescends to let the rest of us know dates and times, and is willing to act as agents for obtaining tickets to see recitals by Martha Graham or Humphrey Weidner. Having obtained rudimentary knowledge in technique from Miss Gates, members of the group put their genius to work along with all the abstractions reposing in their collective and individual heads, and lo and behold, original interpretive solos and compositions appear for jDresentation and criticism at meetings in the women s gym and for future recitals. Outstanding accomplishments of the year; a demonstra- tion for the college, several recitals in Philly, complete program of Somerville entertainment, exhibition in Wednesday morning collection late in April. Ruth Franck is the power both behind and on the presi- dent s throne and members find it s far easier to pay their shekels pronto to Treasurer Dot Turner than dodge her when she starts collecting. 1 ennis E. JOHNSON, rOMLINSON. M. JOHNSON. SOLIS-COHEN IKIMBLE. EVANS I HE fairer half of tne athletic prowess of the campus ' population can ' t very well be snubbed, at least judging from the 1938 tennis season. No matter what they take upon themselves to do, they seem to win; hence, not content with an undefeated hockey season and an almost undefeated basketball season, they gathered their racquets together in the spring and withstood all but the first onslaught of their opponents in tennis. This meant the breaking of a four-year winning streak and the doubtful credit for it went to the racquet-wielders from Ursinus, With but this one set- back, the 1958 team, captained by Elizabeth Stubbs, rallied and went on to vanquish all opponents for the rest of the season. Her fourth year on the team, Ann Lapham played number one with Helen Tomlinson, Mary Solis-Cohen, and Elizabeth Stubbs alternating for number two and three positions. The rest of the team consisted of Eleanor Johnson, Jean Tompkins, Betty Walker, and Carola Zigrosser, As most of the players were evenly enough matched, the position in both singles and doubles depended entirely on whose game happened to be especially on as the day for the match drew near. The most exciting match of the season was between Bunny Harshaw. Middle Atlantic States Champion from Ursinus, and Ann Lapham. The year before, Lappy had fought a tough battle and surprised everyone, including herself, by winning from Harshaw in three sets, hence there was much speculation over the ' 38 encounter between the two. On May 2, I rsinus ))la i-(l Swrii lliiuux;, hul Harshaw. sfiow- iiitj superior lorm. won the virtory wilii a 6-4, 6-i rciord. I lilcn I (i iilinsoii, (jlayirjy s(:foii ' J. )u SvvarlhiiioK- in lljc sforiiit, ' (oloniii Ijy winning a lony. tirawn rail find. 10-8, 10-8, but Solis-Cohen was (l :leal(;(J l y Van Kfeek, 6-5, 6-1. In the loiil)l( s. ijlayintf aaainsl I farsliaw anrl Van Kleek. Sinliljs ajiil I o iiliji ' ,()ji lost f(ni(l ly, arjfl Zitjrosser .1 1(1 lohnsoji also went clown lo umiUi- c mali li a )-2 win lor I Jrsiniis inslf-ad ol a riofeat, as harl heen llie record ol (lie ' -57 season. After tfiis one defeat, tfie J.itlie (.Quaker play- ers ran tfirougfi tfie rest of tfieir season witfi little ()|)|)Osition. lro|)|)jii[ only two infli i(lnal irial(|ies. I wo matcfies were rancelled. one with Beaver and one with Bryn Mawr. wliii Ij c ohM ,ui ,i- played due to rain. The latter would have Ijeen one of the hardest fought, thanks to (he natural Swarlh- more-Bryn Mawr rivalry in sports and the 5-0 victory for the Garnet in the hockey season. And thus closed the year, with Eleanor John- son and Mary Solis-Cohen elected co-captains; Elizabeth Stubbs and Ann Lapham were pre- sented with gold S ' s for four years of continuous play on the varsity squad, and Helen Tomlinson. Betty Walker, and Carola Zigrosser were, awarded varsity sweaters. Margaret Trimble, who had served as junior manager throughout the season, replaced Ginny Newkirk as senior manager, and Eleanor Evans was elected to take her place. Although the loss of Ann Lapham and the three other seniors, Carola Zigrosser, Elizabeth Stubbs, and Jean Tompkins, cast a shadow over 39 prospects, we hear well-founded rumors of valuable freshman propensities. And then, too, the same dependable abilities of Coach May Parry will be on hand to guide the destinies of the 1939 team. SEASON 1938 Swarthmore 2 Svvarthmore 4 Swarthmore 4 Swarthmore 3 Swarthmore 5 L ' rsinus 3 Rosemont 1 William and Iar . 1 Drexel O Penn o M. JOHNSON E. JOHNSON LATCHES CANCELLED Bn ' n Mawr Beaver [[i Says Rocko — A o ic (iy; W ' liiif a clay! That clarnecl spaniel next door — llie one that s too stucK up to even speak to a Russian well hound, started yowling about five and wrecked my sleep. And on top of that the missus started telling the mister at breakfast what she thought of the way he spread his clothes all over the house like Italian spaghetti, and he told her she wasn t so hot herself and got out of the ay. Ambled over to col- lege, being suddenly possessed of an insatiable curi- osity about those i o people I d seen together so much lately — wondered if it had gotten to the point where he d cut his first period French class to have an after breakfast cigarette with her down on the libe steps. Boy, I was right— there they were. I was nice and polite for a while — sort of tactful, you know — stayed in the background and took it all in. Wanted to play ball only they didn t. Great thing, love? Foo — !! Im a woman hater. I tell you. I ve seen enough people make fools of themselves, I have, to just steer clear of the stuff—. Managed to get into Parrish again, except that thing that everybody says looks like Mrs. R— kicked me out. (Someday Fm going to find that woman s very best pair of shoes and really go to town on em, 1 am!) Same old story — won t give a fellow a chance to find out what life s all about. Take Parrish now. I d like to see what goes on up there, nose around the gals rooms and maybe tear some shoes up or mess around with that wicked white satin I saw a couple of weeks ago and go to sleep on somebody s bed in a baby blue down puff. Nothing else very exciting happened — wanted to spit at that mangy old Murphy over in Whartoji but couldn t get in Wharton, so just sat and watched those fuzzy sheep-looking things the Enders call dogs for a while — don ' t intend to get chummy with those eggs — they re probably something he cooked up out of a South American llama job and a mink. Tuesday: Caught the missus eyeing me with the ambi- tious about-time-Rocko-had-a-bath look this a. m. and decided breakfast out of Pat Malin s garbage can sounded swell. No bath for me! No. sir! It s not every good-looking pooch can get by on one a year. Libe steps proved pretty good business today. One gang sat there most of the afternoon getting all excited about Hegel and Kant and a book about Primitive Origins Get your . . . Books, Stdtionery, and Incidentdls . . . from COLLEGE BOOKSTORE PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS and Russia the Red and finally they even slopfX ' d throwing st icks for me to chase — fine stale of things I must say. What s this college coming to! ou know what? I finally made collection tonight. A nun( h ol d u s were standing around smoking cigarettes on the front porch of Parrish anfl somefjody says — Well, Rocko, old kid. how d you like to go up lo olle( tion lor a while? So I says, says I. trying to he nonchalant about it all like I d really just as soon not smooffi, you know, Well, I might consider it — arf arf! So I got a ride up — had a mad desire to thumb my nose at that woman s back — she was going into the dining room — then got dumped! And golly what a time. I got all ready to chew that one guy s leg off after he d kicked me fifty times in the rear end after me politely getting out of his way every se cond — only the goon kept whip- ping those spindles up and down so fast I couldn t get hold of a ling. Everybody kept saying How are you — to everybody else and nobody ever answered anyway — and tom-toms (the kind I heard in the night- mare after I ate the mister s suspenders) kept beating away in one corner and I got a regular hangover head- ache. Had a hell of a time getting out of the place, ' ou d see somebody s feet and start going round them only the feet — they were either Johnny Huhn s or Johnny Thomas — kept leaping around too and they d go up on the air and land on your best toenail—. Some- body piiM hi-d me in the nose, loo, and then ifiat An- derson man gave me a cute little shove. Ah. home, sweei home! Where you can just sit and suck your toes in peace — . ' i ' (lit( sd(iy: Aly Ic ' l were slill so sore alter last nighl llial I just wen! lo bed on ihe IronI steps ol Parrish out ol sheer figony lirst period. Woke up and saw everybody amblir)g over towards C lolhier exiept ifie ones going lo the druggie or libe, I ' inijlly got lip trie energy to go see what it was all about. I lad an easy time getting in and for once in my lile nobody bddqod to kick me out. 1 here was somebody sitting in about every sixth seat and about three people way up on the stage and everything was dead silence except lor the APPROVED PENNSYLVANIA PRIVATE BUSINESS SCHOOL BUSINESS TRAINI NG Founded 1865 BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION AND SECRETARIAL SCIENCE for young men and women. One, Two and Three Years Day and Evening Courses 8 Weeks Summer Session PEI RCE SCHOOL PINE STREET WEST OF BROAD PHILADELPHIA, PA. 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. Circle 6-0790 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS On the Corner P— i Q Bill White, Doris Shotwell, Ed Campbell, and Dot Cupitt whiling away a few idle minutes in Michael ' s Druggie. MICHAEL ' S College Pharmacy Phone 857 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS newspapers cracklinf, ' . I jiisl lollowcfl my old policy— iTial e-tIie-mosl-of-your-opp )] lunilics and pio ceded witli usual dignity down the aisle ajid up I he steps to I lie stage. Spotted a cute pair ol shoes— llial Rcliiliold dame has darn good lasle. I ' rcxy woiildii I even look at me and all of a sudden he practically scared ihi ' lilc out of me— started shouting, so he ' d l)e heard over the newspaper rattling, I guess. Well, I saw Mrs. Roosevelt giving me the once over— she ' s one person I can t cope with— so I made a dive for tlie side of the stage along with the three faculty members who tried to grab my tail only I fooled tbem— arf arf— ha— ha! Libe wasn ' t populated very mucli tonight. Fraternity meetings were on, whicli means nobody comes down though I can t see why the gals don t— only they never do. I got one ear in a darn good cat session though— plenty good. That fifth west gang thinks Z section WortK is per- fectly fiorrifcfe— nothing but politicians and polishers and the things they ' d do for a Jate— and you know the things the fellows say about them. Incidentally, I says to myself, says I— they ' ve really got something there. But, boy. they just ought to know what Z section Worth thinks of 5th West Parrish! ' Well, I just sat for a while — thinking about how sweet womankind was in general till my hind legs wciil lo sl(i|) and my pos- terior plexus slarl d gelling liillifl. I hen llial Ijiinrfi of queens came along and were talking all arjout what a wonderful dancer Charlie was and how fane could break that date with Jim if only Tommy ' d a ' .k her to the spring dance and tlie thought tlie ( ould manage it o.k. And I says to myself, 1 does, there are some women I especially can ' t stand. And tfie u omen around here; they either talk Kant all da ' or else tripe like that stuff. You can just bet I ' m going to steer clear of dames! While I was still hanging around the cloisters admiring the flowers and studying stars and contem- plating life in general a regular din started over around Parrish with the Phi Thudda Psi ' s singing in front and the Phi Delta Mudda ' s singing behind and 1 could see the Du Usa Lina ' s and the Kappa Smoothinas would be coming around soon and the Phi Betta Sigs would probably show up and I guess I know my cue. came home! The stuff they ' ll do for these women! If they only knew, like I do. The pooch next door— the spaniel job— started yipping about the time 1 got ready to go to sleep and you should have heard me tell her where to get on! DeHaven Townsend Established 1874 Members NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE PHILADELPHIA STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YORK CURB EXCHANGE (ASSOCIATE) 52 Broadway, New York 1513 Walnut Street, Philadelphia PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Thursday: That pooch next door tool; what I said to heart. Sweet as pie — even grinned at me. Cute trick — she d be — if she d stop that stupid yipping. Rained this a. m.. so I decided on a nice easy day at home. The missus went to the grocery, so 1 finished up the bacon for her and then feehng pretty much in an obliging mood decided I d do something lor the mister and vrecK that yellow crepe de chine of the missus that he detests so. Anyway 1 felt like wrecking something. Did that and lounil the blue job — don t think he liked it — hope not. All of a sudden I happened to think the missus had a passion for that blue job — and there are times, says I, whe n one should tra ' el — so I did. Messed around the chrysanthemum garden in front of Worth for a while, nice and muddy, only I couldn t find the bone I buried last summer. Dug the whole thing up— quite a job — pretty disgusted. What s a fellow to do when he can t e en leave things bnried around here without their disappearing? I was pretty wet and sorta muddy and il was cold besides, so I sneaked past the main desk into the libe, which was pretty much of a madhouse. The shoes these people wear! There was that Dobbins guy with the moth-eaten moccasins on and millions of once-size-seven-now-size-nfteen saddle shoes and one-half of the black shoe some gal had on was gradually getting a divorce from the other Iralf. Well, the friend s libe was a little better — on account ol not being able to see all the shoes so well because so many of them were propped up on the tops of the tables. It was pretty quiet in there except for the one gang at the end who kept giggling and the one in the middle who kept talking about reorganizing the col- lege and the one at the far end who were throwing things back and forth and some others who kept talk- ing about letters to the Phoeni.x. It stopped raining in the middle of the afternoon and I ambled up to Par- rish about six and saw a pretty peculiar thing. All the dining room windows had girls standing doing awfully queer things—all I could see was the rear view — and everybody inside was raising quite a rumpus. Finally THE THOUGHTFUL ADVERTISER is interested in more than the circula- tion figures of his advertising medi- um. He wants to know whom it reaches, whether it will be read, and whether it will create action. The purchasing power of the read- ers of the PHOENIX is that of the cream of the crop. With a circula- tion of over 1500, it reaches all Swarthmore students and faculty, and a great number of the alumni in the Philadelphia area. The thought- ful advertiser realizes that he is reaching a select group with the highest buying power. The PHOENIX offers you reason- able rates for its advertising space and pledges itself to the most careful attention to your copy and to the most effective layout. You, as a thoughtful advertiser, will be inter- ested in Jfaunbet) 1881 Published Weekly on Tuesday PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS tliey got clown, so I wciil lioinc lor supiXT iiiyscll. And what a niglit toiiiylil! II I dicln I lialc llic wonicii. Id lind myself a gal. Bui you caji I IrusI cin — and any lioW ' — look at Woidiie. You know, onlidenlially. lie s my ideal — doesn t give a iioot alioul llic women and tliey all lliink lie s simply ii ' ondpijiil. I liink lie s got sometning there. Just Ignore them and ihey think you ' re Clark Gable or Robert Taylor. 1 hen just con- sider a few other gagas in the way of men. The way tney re always upsetting ;ul their own plans — what they want to do all because the gal hasn t got any work to do and wants to go to Chester to the movies! But boy — that was some moon — got pretty romantic about it my- self — sort of crescent shaped — balmy air and about a thousand stars — . Went up to the pre.xy s garden and thought f d just sit and think about life — only f kept Bring Us Your Scalp Troubles for Expert Treatment. BARBER SHOP Chester Road SWARTHMORE, PA. COMPLIMENTS OF WORTH STEEL COMPANY CLAYMONT, DEL. MANUFACTURERS OF SHEARED STEEL PLATES PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 817 E. Chelten Ave. Germantown, Phila., Pa. Victor 3300 A Complete Insurance Brokerage Service All Types Except Life iiinniny into couples all over tlie place. The funniest thing was when those two moon-struck things started going over to the bench not knowing a thing about those other two moon-struck things already there that honestly ought to pay rent for the place. Guess they were pretty embarrassed. The first ones said something about its being reserved from nine to twelve already and the second ones said you couldn t reserve it for more than two hours at a time — the Student Council said so — same idea as the general reserve books in the library and everything ought to be uniform — and could they please leave a sign so nobody else would get it first. Well, the first couple got pretty mad and vent off. And there they were, those two, with the prexy ' s bench. Pretty cagey, eh? Friday: Nice day today? Well, I really wouldn t know -spent most of it locked up In the cellar. It seems the missus liked botJi that yellow crepe de chine and the blue job and the mister was absolutely bats about the blue job and the yellow crepe de chine was a per- fect wow since she d had it made over: — and they were both ready to hill me till I started looking that appealing way — as if I wanted somebody to throw my favorite ball for me. Nasty place, that cellar — nothing to mess up. Saturday: Put on a yipping act myself today and it worked like a charm. Started in about five in the morning — yip — yip — — ye— ool!! - you know what I mean — and first thing I knew the mister came and let The Berwind-White Coal Mining Co, MINERS AND SHIPPERS OF Berwind ' s EUREKA BITUMINOUS COAL NEW RIVER COAL POCAHONTAS SMOKELESS COAL COMMERCIAL TRUST BLDG. PHILADELPHIA NO. 1 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS ESTABLISHED 1881 INCORPORATED 1925 Creth Sullivan, Inc General Insurance 420 WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA Associated MARSHALL P. SULLIVAN, ' 97 FRANCIS W. D ' OLIER, ' 07 JOSEPH T. SULLIVAN, ' 30 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS A Delightful Place to Meet Your Friends Co-Ed Beauty Salon 15 PARK AVENUE SWARTHMORE, PA. Sw. 595 me out. That spaniel ' s really got some brains in the back of her head. If it hadn t been for her. Id never have thought up that trick. Well— I started to get some breakfast out of the Anderson s garbage can, only they didn t have much, so I finished up on the Spillers and Miss Phihps— they seemed to have plenty. About eight o ' clock, people began smoking those white things again— and you know what? That couple I told you about— the one where he always flunks every first period class course so he can talk to her while she smokes a cigarette for ten minutes after breakfast— well, she ' s got his pin! Saw it myself. That ' s the fiftieth pin out this year. And with spring coming on, heaven only knows what II happen. I got so busy contemplating that I practically forgot where I was till I heard those Kant people talking about Doone ' s poetry and Stalin ' s new book. Nobody else seemed to be around, so I trotted over to Parrish with a vague idea of maybe sneaking inlo the dining room. I got in (he back kitchen door- knew better than to tr - to get past the Selmes woman. ( ' ot bumped b ' that swinging door a couple of times- then once I nearly bumped into Mildred and that Carr woman, fiut with n presence of mind I really ought to pat myself on the back for— specially in the midst ol all those wonderful odors like meat pie cas- serole with apple sauce and spinat h in i(— I simply dodged and tore through those next swinging doors. Ciuess I mi(s( have been in the dining room. It was plenty noisy— things kept clattering and white stuff kept flying through the air and a piece of buttered bread got stuck over my right ear and just about that time I heard that woman ' s voice— the one that looks like Mrs. Roosevelt — Eeek — get that thing out of here fast! Well, I was all ready to give her a piece of my mind! I resent being called a thing anyway— when somebody grabbed me around my middle and next thing I knew there I was on the front porch of Parrish again. I was pretty mad but there wasn ' t much I could do, so I just lay down in a corner and thought how nice it would be to set my teeth into that woman ' s nice juicy red chiffon formal! Spent the first part of the afternoon over in Wharton— or tried to. Went over to the game— a lot of screaming about nothing and people eating stuH those gals in white sweaters kept selling. Some- body threw a ball. Hot dog! says I, tearing after it- only about then a dozen two hundred pounders landed on top of me and I got a sprained ear and five broken toe-nails out of it and ached all over-. That ' s what you get for hanging around a college trying to get edu- cated. Felt prettv ' low tonight— wandered down by alli- gator rock— that cute moon out again— and just sat con- templating the sadness of life and wondering how long it would take those toe-nails to grow. Saw that spaniel on the way home and somehow got to telling her my troubles — most sympathetic, that spaniel — darn nice kid! Sunday: (Evening— early.) Thought Id write this early tonight as I have business later on that may last pretty late — in fact maybe I won t have much time to keep a PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS diary from now on. Anyway-— slept all morning anfl wol e up thinking wliat a swell rime I (I had talking to that spaniel last night. Decided to ask her lor a dale tonight. Well— I did— it s o.k.— and she imitcd ine lo dinner besides— and boy she really gets some swell food! We spent the afternoon together— derided jiol to go over to college -not much goes on on Sundays- boy, oh boy, oh boy, she s some haheJ Cute eyes— sort of soulful sometimes too! Cute nose— the aristocratic type! And on the ball too. She ' s got what it takes, I tell you. Reminds me of that gal over at college who always has fifty men around her— and boy I really don t blame them. Oh, oh— got a date with that spaniel in ten min- utes - so I guess I d better stop writing— ' . And This Is Life At Swaitnmoie — Wi( i apologies lo Ogden Nash There are a fot of peculiar things about this peculiar colIege — And by this I mean things outside of our spending hours and hours in acquiring various sorts of knowledge. I don t mean to imply that we aren t particularly indus- trious Graduates! Remember this! Wlierever you go, you will need to wear clothes. Tlie 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 Smart Clothes have proved the economy of quality for 115 years. They give you style, ease, distinction, and GENUINE ECONOMY! 1424-1426 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA Men ' s and Boys ' Qualily App arel Since 1824 E!EHiBIl] COPYRIGHT 1932 by INS. CO. OF NORTH AMERICA Dependable Property Protection . . . requires the selection of an insurance company of unquestioned stability. The financial stability of the Insurance Company of North America and its 147- year record of prompt and equitable settle- ment of claims, make North America Policies synonymous with dependable insurance. INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA PHILADELPHIA and the Indemnity Insurance Company of North America write practically all forms of insurance, except life. Capital $12,000,000 Surplus to Policy Holders over $73,000,000 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Or lli.il tlie spontaneous t oinlnistion inside our brains is not particularly comoustrious; I am sinipK tr inu to suyycsl llial we do not occupy ourseNes loo nun li willi lliinijs intcllec lual. And wc tliinl tli.il willioul e crN ' tliina ' else, lile would he one of thcjse lnin s ineiiectuai. In spite of our luiusual scholastic alDility. W ' e occupy a good deal of lime in other activities with unusual agility. Some of us dasli around in lal) coats, looking like some- thing prehistoric. And playing carelessly with acids — nitric, sulphuric, and In drochloric. We spend hours and hours in an atmosphere of test tubes and pneumatic troughs — Until our professors liave trouble dismissing us and resort to emphatic coughs. (This isn t exactly true, but I am sacrificing everything for the sake of rhvme, FOR DOWNRIGHT GOODNESS Abbotts the standard of fine quality in ICE CREAM And I am ha ing trouble thinking ol a better one due to lack ol lh me.) Scjme of us spend our time deUing into the mysteries C f loreigii languages and dillerent kinds ol literature ajid histories, Also into problems psychological, social and economic. If we had anything to do with solving these problems, conditions wocdcl cnidoubtcdK ' become clironic. Every once in a while something pops up out of the ground and someone says there goes an en- gineer — But before you can get a look at it beneath its long hair, it will quietly and mysteriously disappear. No one has ever known e. actly what we would do without them — Because they build bridges and things Without which we couldn t get across rivers unless we had wings Or boats Which are also made by engineers as well as other things that floats. There is also regrettably in our midst the wearer of the very loud jacket. And if there were a nasty crack that could be cracked about the wearer of the loud jacket we would be the nrst to crack it. We often think that the people who wear them do it for poses, tiut it is perfectly possible that they might be the vic- tim of a sort of complicated psychosis. The only thing to do if you see one of them is to cringe and look As if you had been hit in the face with something with sharp corners, for instance a book- While the ASU thinks we re much too reservative. 1 he rest of us go around in sweaters and are con- servative. When the life of study becomes insufficient. We find ourselves getting fairly proficient In making our lives a series of cycles. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Ill lii(li we walls from Michael ' s lo llic lilira y iuul Iroiii llie library to Michael ' s. If w n are feeling wealthy, we drown our sorrows in a coke And sil around and lalk and smoke The other fellow s cigarettes W ' illioul particularly caring what kind he gettes. One of our customs that seems to the uninitiated lo be very funny Is our habit of sitting at the table at lunch eating pea- nut butter and honey, While we dodge rolls and things that fly around pro- miscuously Thrown by demons who have to leave the dining room pretty inconspicuously. There is one other thing tliat I would lil e to mention that might not seem to have any connection, (But it does) and that is a custom that occurs on Tues- day nights and is called ambiguously Collection. The social committee or somebody sneafcs around antique shops to get a recording X ' Vliich since igoo the proprietor of the anticjue shop has been hopefully hoarding. And we try to dance to it and drink coffee and talk to our friends. When suddenly it ends. Suddenly this is going to end. LEW ROBBINS, Agent Troy Laundry THE COLLEGE LAUNDRY Chester 6238 GENERAL INSURANCE REAL ESTATE NOTARY PUBLIC EDWARD L. NOYES SWARTHMORE, PA. 23 So. Chester Road Sw. 114 VICTOR D. SHIRER DRUGS 13 SOUTH CHESTER ROAD Telephone 586 We Deliver PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS M° SWASTHMODl AVENUE 69 ; ST. TERMINAL LANSDOWm  « SPROUL VIADUC CHESTER 5TH S. fDGAlONf RED Red Arrow Buses will go to Chester via Lansdowne and Swarthmore. No Waiting. Every 30 minutes. Rush hours — every 15 minutes A. M., every 12 minutes P.M. Transfers will be issued In Chester to Southern Pennsylvania Buses as heretofore. MONEY-SAVING CASH RATES Through rate (3 zones) 25c Special Chester-Swarthmore rate . . 10c Present 22c joint ticket from 69th Street Terminal toChester via Sharon Hill continued. Get information and schedule from the Supt ' s office. . ARROW LINES ■ USES OPERATED BY ARONIMINK TRANSPORTATION COMPANY 40 on the Feenix If you were queer to begin with, if you already lived in a world of disorder, loud noises, piles of ye]]o v paper and little sense, if you didn t in the least care when you went to sleep and wouldn t anyway, you probably found your name on the PJioenix assignment sheet sooner or later after the doors of Swarthmore opened and caught you in the fall of 36. You swept into college along with a hundred or so others ready to take the whole newspaper over, you were a high school editor, feature editor, managin g editor, some sort of editor, you had been through a long training, and you Kne%v all about newspapers. After several anxious weeks, during which you haunted the Phoenix office and clung to the assign- ment sheet bulletin board, you were given a story to write on the Ouling Club. You scurried around and saw most of the members, but they didn t know where they were going to hike Sunday, if they were, and the president was in the infirmary. Someone finally told you that they were going to take a pre-breakfast run to lake pokahole with bacon waiting at the other end. You wrote this up ten different ways and finally handed the eleventh in. Somebody took it. wrote rewrite on it and said o.k. Then there were more silent weeks, until one day you were given copy reading Sunday night. The room was full of people, shocked because you didn t bring your pencil. You were given stories to correct, that vas all right because there were plenty of mistakes for you to find. ou were told to write heads which people could hand back to you to write over, you were yelled PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS 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 Bell: Walnut 5600 Keystone: Race 7351, 7352, 7353 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Compliments of THE TAR DISTILLING CO. 500 Fifth Avenue New York N. Y PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS at because you clichi ' l know llial id (ounlofl one aiul a Iiair, ou were editoiializina. you were artusecl ol mis placing your prepositions, of capitali Jnc clepartmenl of history. You were asked to retype a story no longer readable. Everybody was talking, laughing, and throw- ing things. A dictionary hit you, so you looked up judgment. You bravely looked for Ka( hoo, 87 in llic catalogue. Monday morning you tried to find the president of the MSGA to find out who had been made head of the cutting, sewing, and stitching committee. Gradually you became one of the Phoenix crowd. You were marked for life. English professors gave you sto- ries about the Potter prize. People began telling you that you looked sleepy. You took to drinking two cups of coffee at the druggie at 11. You took your class notes like headlines— War of Roses is discussed by Troyer, Mammals found to contain vestigal forms. You left your coat in the Phoenix office and gasped into silence when Irv. entered. You wrote journalistic papers. Now the class of 40 heads the staff, or rather frag- ments remaining after the fray hold the reins. And when it rains. ... It doesn t seem as if the freshmen and sophomores have the awe and deference you were wont to pour over editors that have been. There are still freshmen who were editors in high school and whose outing club stories have to be rewritten. There s still a lot of noise. There is still the puzzled world out- side, which looks in and thinks the Phoenix is crazy. And there s still a paper which comes out every Tues- day evening. That s all. MAKE THE Media Drug Store YOUR HEADQUARTERS You ' ll be delighted with the friendly service and lower prices that you ' ll always find at the Media. In The Eyes Of The Athlete June I, tgyj Dear Diary: Well, my Freshman year is over! As I look back at myself as a Senior in high school I remem- ber the great expectations I had in coming to Swarth- more. It was my fond hope to matriculate at a small college with a high standard of athletics, and I can see that I didn ' t err in picking this institution of learn- ing in the outskirts of Philadelphia. I looked forward to playing before huge crowds in an immense stadium and hearing the cheers of the crowd as Swarthmore racked up another victory. Support and loyalty %voula be the watchwords of the student body, and only the best athletic material money could buy would repre- sent the college in sports. Very few high school Seniors have tKe experience and foresight to pick the proper college suited to their talents, but I am going to state modestly that here is PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS COMPLIMENTS OF CYRUS WM. RICE COMPANY, Inc. FEEDWATER AND BLOWDOWN CONTROL PITTSBURGH, PENNA. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS one that as liicKV ( ' iion ;M to iiiaKc llie propt-r i lioic c Alter tlie first lootnall |)rnrtice it was easy to see lli.il my class had more than amply Imiiished ihc school with a supply oi rugged $50 a month alhlclcs; aller the iirst game in the Swarthinore stadium, I realized that I was attending a college with ojie of the most enthusiastic cheering sections in the country. The sur- prising fact ahout it all was that win or lose the stu- dent body was in the stands — loo ' r behind us. This spirit of loyalty and support continued to the end of the season and was carried on through basketball and base- Dali seasons. This past year is surprisingly similar to nigh school in so far as athletics have been foremost at all times. Instead of the usual semester or quarters, the school year for me has been divided up into three seasons- football, basketball, and baseball. There was some academic work, but the piofessors saw that we atKletes received due consideration and awarded us properly for our efforts: one touchdown a game meant a raise of one point in the grades. I can ' t tell you how much 1 am looking for vard to Sophomore year and the pleas- ures it will bring. June t, 1938 Dear Diary: Isn t it funny how much one can ma- ture within one year. Freshman year I thought that athletics was the only activity on campus and the only enjoyable recreation. Now 1 am able to see deeper into college life — to the other important things such as fra- ternities, co-education, and culture to be acquired on athletic trips. Swarthmore has done a wonderful service in giving an opportunity ' to the mistakes she made, by allowing them organizations and the like Avhich afford College Haberddshers -Or BETTER CLOTHES FOR EDS AND CO-EDS AT REASONABLE PRICES ■o BUCHNER ' S SWARTHMORE The Mdrot Flower Shop 315 DICKINSON AVENUE Swarthmore 554 Artistic Corsages a Specialty AGENTS Dick Weber Elliot Alexander PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS them with outside actixities. Probably tlie adminislra- tion has aLso foreseen the possibility that the athletes niiyht become bored or stale and allow Iraterniiies and social e eiits to roliexc the strain. They furnish us a place to read the latest magazines and listen to the radio or play swing nuisic on the victrola. Besides, we tal e our dates to a dance at the house every Friday night. While on ifiis date situation, dear Diarv. I Marge Trimble, Mary Lo Broomell, and Midge Bays buying delicacies for a Personnel Tea at Martel ' s. Stop in at . . . MARTEL ' S for PARTY FOODS CANDY COOKIES PASTRY GINGERALE FRESH FRUITS Swarthmore 2100 Quality without Extravagance wish to sa that this Near I have become aware that Swarllnnore is a co-educational iiislitulion. I must have been awfully young Freshman year not lo ha e been aware ol the beaulilul environment. It was sometimes a distra tion on the athletic field, but one that we didn t miiid too much. Another opportunitx lor adding to OLU- eduiation was the long trips we took around the coinitry livijig al the best hotels and eating the best meals. It also was a means of income, as the manager luniished us with ample spending money and allowed us to eat as much as we wanted by giving us two dol- lars for each meal. Swarthmore truly believes in look- ing after her favorite sons in a generous manner. No e. |5ense or effort is too great for the benefit of the athlete. The class of 40 is welding into a firmer unit as the members become better acquainted with each otlier. Even though there appear to be two groups with oppo- site interests, there is much toleration and broaa- mindedness in evidence as each tries to orient itself to the other. There is never a member of the class absent from our games, and the athletes in turn try to understand and enjoy lectures given every week by Socialist leaders and other radical agitators. In this way we are fully acquainted with the interests of each group. I hope that in my Junior year I broaden my intellectual outlook as much as I have Sophomore year. CHESTER ' S FASHION CORNER Where Delaware County Shops With Confidence Edgmont Ave. Seventh and Welsh Streets PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Evidently drinking Highland Dairy ' s Milk in the College dining room isn ' t sufficient for Crothers, Jakle, Reller, Weltmer and Eberle. These athletic stars are taking seconds between meals. Highland Dairy Products Co. Chester, Pa. Chester 2-2412 ii ie 1, tg-jg ' Dear Diary: In tlie first two years of my college career I failed to realize how hard I had been concen- trating on academic work, but this year has proven to me that I was indeed a slave to the books. When I came back to school last September, the Dean advised me to enter what is called the Honors System because, as he said, I wouldn ' t have to spend so TTiuch time away from practices because of scholastic work. This Honors System is a boon to all athletes. Now we have but two classes a week and no exams to worry about until the end of Senior year. Another feature of the Honors System is the fact that there are no grades. When I was in course, although I was given special consideration, there were times when I felt slightly irri- tated because other students were obtaining better grades. The Honors System gives Swarthmore a sig- nal advantage over its athletic rivals, and I doubt whether we appreciate it as much as we should. It may have been the great help oi the Honors Sys- tem or it may have been the close association of the fellows, but regardless which it was, we enjoyed one of the most successful years in Swarthmore history. Our football team lost only one game and the basket- ball team— made up principally of members of the class of ' 40— established a winning streak that will stand as a legend in Swarthmore history. Even golf was outstand- ing with matches against Princeton. Virginia, Penn, 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 HERALD AND MELROSE BRAND CANNED FOODS IMPORTERS OF COFFEE AND TEA Quality and Service Since 1861 Githens, Rexsamer Company 242-244 N. DELAWARE AVENUE PHILADELPHIA, PA. H. D. Reese, Inc. MEATS POULTRY - CHEESE 1208 Arch Street Philadelphia PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS VAN HORN SON THEATRICAL COSTUMERS 12th and Chestnut Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. COSTUMERS TO LEADING SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES IN THE U. S. A. COVERS AND BINDING OF THE 1940 HALCYON Manufactured by NATIONAL PUBLISHING COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, PA. Bouquet Beauty Salon 13 South Chester Road Swarthmore Phone: Swarthmore 476 nul W ' esleyan. Everyone in our dass will look back il till- s liool ear 1958-39 witli prkle. Diary, ok! man. wliat c!o on tliijik lies alieaci of the class of 40. ' ' Are we going to ha e another banner year when we rule the school as Seniors or will we fall into decay as a result of a life of Iuxur - and ease. The Honors System can ' t be improved upon; so new and interesting courses— such as the Marriage Relations course— will be open next year in order to increase the interest in academic work. After all, that is one phase ol college lile. Lou Umsted SHIRER BUILDING Swarthmore, Pa. OFFICIAL OUTFITTER TO SWARTHMORE COLLEGE ATHLETIC TEAMS PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS PAINTS of Quality . . . M. BUTEN SONS G926 MARKET STREET 1834 SOUTH STREET 33 N. SEVENTH ST. 5617-19 N. BROAD STREET 5711 GERMANTOWN AVE. PHILADELPHIA IN CHESTER, PA.— 624 EDGMONT AVENUE IN READING, PA.— 41 NORTH 9TH STREET If We Say it ' s Qood — it is Qood Free Delivery City and Suburbs PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS STEEL SUPPLIES WROUGHT IRON PICKET AND CHAIN LINK FENCE ALL FORMS OF STEEL AND IRON Sheet — Structural Stainless — Machinery Corrugated Roofing Siding BOILER TUBING -I WIRE ROPE STEEL STAIR TREADS AND FLOORING WELDING SUPPLIES This list indicates only a fraction of the manifold iron and steel supplies we keep in stock ready for immediate delivery. Orders taken by telephone. p s o Bell— REGent 7450 Keystone — Park 5351 HORACE T. POTTS CO. STEEL WAREHOUSE SINCE 1815 E. Erie Ave. and D St. Philadelphia, Pa. HANNUM WAITE CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH Yale Avenue and Chester Road Swarthmore, Pa. Phone 1250 In Retrospect .ACKERM ' KN. RUTH-Liltle Thealre Business Staff. Outing Club. I- ersuiineI Citmniiltfe. ' t)rkslH)p. Freshrunn Advisory Conmiillce. AIJJF.RISOX. R. ' X ' lMOND-FresI,, S. quii K E.veculive Coniniillee. Tennis iippa oignia. ALEXANDER. LOUISE-Condud Committee. Ereslin.an Show. Somerville Day Dance, May Day, Hamburg Show, Woodwork Group. BAKF-:R. .NIARGARET-Member of Little Tbenlre antl Little Tbenire Business Stalf, Varsity Swimming Team. BALL. ROLAND— Double Quartette, Student Vespers. Phoenix, Halcyon Staff. Social Committee. Lillle Theatre, Editor of Hand- book, Freshman Week Committee, Hamburg Show, Phi Kappa Psi. Bays. M RJ0RIE— Vice-President of Freshman Class. Production Manager of Freshman Show, Social Conmiittee. May Day At- tendant. Class Hockey ana Basketball Teams, Tennis Tournament, H. LCVON Publicity Editor. Hamburg Shnw, Workshop. Vice- .j President of Senior Class, Point Committee. Chairman of Fresh- man Advisory Committee, Permanent Class Secretary. BELL, ROBERT Debate Board. Little Theatre. Cercle Fran( ais. Kwink, Men s Athletic Association, Cast of ' Inspector-General, ' Beggar on Horseback, Production Manager of 5- - )0 Or Fight, Manager of Baseball Team. Production Manager of iQjQ Halcyon. Kappa Sigma. BENDER. JOSEPH-Men ' s Glee Club. Chorus. Junior Varsity Lacrosse Team. Delta L ' psilon. BIGELOW. JOHN-Varsity Baseball Team. Band. Junior Varsity Basketball, Double Quartette. Glee Club. BLACKMAN. JAMES— Discussion Groups. A.S.U.. Interfraternity Council, Social Committee, President of Sophomore Class. Chair- man of Chest Fund. Book and Ke ' . Basketball Team, Captain of Baseball Team, Intramural Tennis, Phi Kappa Psi. Walter Stokes Company INVESTMENT SECURITIES 1529 WALNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA Telephone Rittenhouse 0455 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 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS In Retrospect Coiiliniwd BOAM, W ' lLIJAM-lunior Vnrsily fin.l Vnrsily S.irr.r nml LncTosse Teams, Dolinlins I chiii, Frtncli ami (jcniiiin (liilis. ( o-hrlilor ol llie U.S.A. Bullit. Dflln Up.sil..,,. BOSE. LEW(S-Glee Club antl D..ul.lc Qiinrl.llc. Cross Counlry, Track Team, Phi Delta Tliela. BOSS, ELIZABETH— Class Hockey anil Swimming Teams, Cliorus. Conduct Committee, Freslmian Sliow, One Act Plays. May Day, Honor Committee, Vice-President of Sophomore Class, Point Sys- tem, Christmas Vespers, Varsity Goll, Tennis Tournament, Student Board, Circulation Manager of iQjy Halcyon. Scrrelary ol junior Class, Little Theatre, Hamhurg Show, Chairman ol Honor Com- mittee, May Day Attendant. Lead in igjS and 1Q50 Hamburg Show. President of Mortar Board, Permanent Class Vice-President. BOWERS, MARY— Class Hockey Team. Scenery Crew, Gwimp, Interclass Basketball NTanager. Workshop. Personnel Committee. BOYER. VINCENT— Freshman, ilunior Varsity and Varsity Soccer IVams, Freshman Lacrosse Team, ,1. V. and Varsity Golf, Treasurer of American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Kappa Sigma. BRAUN. KLAUS-French Club. BROWN. JOHN ROBERT-Freslmmn and Junior Varsity Soccer. Junior Varsity Basketball. Junior Varsity Baseball. Social Com- mittee. Kappa Sigma. BUCHANAN, PAUL— Little Theatre. Manager of Soccer, Varsity Basketball Squad, Tennis Team, Phi Delta Theta. BUDD, ISAAC— Varsity Football, Varsity Lacrosse, Kwink, Delta Upsilon. BURGER. VIRGINIA-Press Board. Photographic Club. Outing Club, CALDWELL. CHARLES-Varsity Soccer Team. Basketball Squad. Press Board. Pnoenix sports column. Phi Kappa Psi. CARUTHERS. EDWARD-Camera Club. CHASE, MAKGARin — rrrshinari Exi- ulive (Committee. Conduct Conimillee, C ' lass Baskelbiill Team. Little I heaire Props Crew. Srtmerville Day Conmiittee. Freshman Adviwory C ominittec. Gwimp, Point Crjnunittee. CHEESEMAN, MARGARi;r-Pr-ss Board, Condu.t Co.Mmrllcc. Co-Direclor of Dances for Freshman Show, Hamburg Sliow, CLARK, EUCjENE- Glee Club. Chorus. Freshman Executive Crim- mitt ' e, Kwink, Cross C ' ountry Team, Junior Editor of Phoenix. I lamburg Show. Camera Cluf.). COFFIN. I OUIS— Varsity Lacrosse Team. Engineer ' s Club. Kwink. Little Theatre, President of American Society of Mechanical Engi- neers, Phi Sigma Kappa. Sigma Tau Honorary Fraternity. COLLIER. GRETCHEN-lnternational Relations Club. Outing Club. Class Swimming Team. French Club. Point System Commillce, COLLINS. WHlTNEY-.lunior Varsity Football and Tennis Teams, Phoenix Business Staff. Kappa Sigma. Sigma Tau Ffonorary Fraternity. COOK. MARJORIE— Interclass Tennis Tournament. Tennis Squad. COWIE, DEAN BRUCE-Transfer in senior year, did research at Bartol Foundation. CRAIG, LAWRENCE-Cross Country Manager. Kwink. Glee Club Manager. Chorus. Men ' s Athletic Association Council, Phi Sigma Kappa. CREIGHJON, ROBERT-Soccer Squad. Bird Club. CRESSON. SAMUEL-Varsity Soccer and Lacrosse SquarJs._ Co- Business Manager of Halcyon, President of Bird Club, Phi Kappa Psi. DAVIDSON, DeWITT-French Club, Sketch Club. Junior Editor of Phoenix. DAVIS. JEAN-Editorial Staff of P ioeni.x, Outing Club. Camera Club, Crafts Group. LUMBER, PLUMBING HARDWARE CO. TENTH AND MORTON AVENUE CHESTER, PA. Our Home Builders Service will help you modernize or build a new home. Our Home Insulation Division will save you money while making your home more comfortable. FHA FINANCING ARRANGED PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS JOSEPH ' S BARBER SHOP WHERE SWARTHMORE COLLEGE MEN ARE ALWAYS WELCOME 14 PARK AVENUE Scalp Treatment A Specialty In Retn)S|)ect C oiitiniipd ni:, . CMAkLOnE-SwiniiMins if,...,. Lml.- Il.ralr.-. |-r.-„cl, CluL. Arls t.iitl Lr.ilts Group. niNlI IL. r lCHARD-P .oeni.v. Press Board. Ooss Country Squad. Vcirsily Baseball Team. I reasurer of Junior Class, Junior and Senior Class Dance Coniniittees, Plii Delia Tliela. DOlililXS. F-DW ' ARD-Permanent Class President. President ul Stiidi-nl Bfiartl. President of Men s A. A., President of Kwink. Manaiior of FiasKelljall. Book and Key. .lunior Editor of Phoenix. f,dilor ol - ' orl o io, lead in tliree Little Ilieatre [iroductions, Presi- dent ol Junior Class, Social Committee, Soccer. Baseball, aullior and producer of 1938 Hamburg Sliow, Delta Upsilon. DORISS. W ' lLLIAM-Captain Varsity Tennis. Football. Press Board. Switiiniinc!, Kappa Sigma. OOl •G(..ASS. ANN-Mcmber of Oulhis Club. Classical Club. A.S.U.. ( 1.1 ;s BasKelball and Swimming Teams. I )! I I 0. . JOHN— Camera Club, Engineers ' Club. President of Anier- i( an Institute of Electrical Engineers Branch, Sigma Tau Honorary I raternily. EDMUNDS. CHARLES-Me...ber of Glee Club. Porlfolio. P .oeni.v Staff. EXIENBURG. BARBARA-Freshman Sbow. Chairman of Point Sysleni. Porl o io, A.S.U.. Ijttle Theatre. EPSTEIN. SAMUEL-Sports Editor of P .oeni.v. .Iu.,ior Varsity Foot- ball Team, KwinK, Chairman of Press Board, M.S.G.A. Executive Committee. Student Board. Refugee Scholarship Commillee. El tlCHSEN. HANS-A.S.U.. Little Theatre. Ca.,.era Club. I.R.C.. Glee Club, Press Board. Phi Kappa Psi. FISHER. RALPH—Director of 19-59 Halcyon. Snapshot Editor of HaI-CYON. President of Camera Club. Debating. Press Board, Treasurer of Sopliomore Class. A.S.L ' ., Book and Kev, Phi Kappa Psi. GEE. MILDRED— Poster Committee. Sketch Club. Scenery Crew of Little Theatre. Costume Committee for Freshman Show. A Certiiied Laundry A Certiiied Lavrndry New Way and Swarthmore! For years the New Way Laundry has served Swarthmore ' s Eds and Co- eds. Prompt Wednesday and Saturday collections and high-standard certi- fied work have earned it top ranking on the campus. THE MOTHER ' S TOUCH MENDING, DARNING, BUTTONS REPLACED AT NO EXTRA COST Laboratory tested to give your clothes longer wear — exclusive certified process. BEAUTIFUL DRY CLEANING Bob Austin Agents Morgan Pirnie Pat Graves PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Ill Retrospect Co;i(i ,1, cici.. n„„ (■|„i.. GIBSON. ka ' itierine-Mlm.Jkt „i i; AssisUint Editor oi 1939 HalcVon. GOODWIN. MAr Y-Assisl,-inl Cl.iiirman ol Press Buarcl, Ouling Glub. Lillle 1 lieaire Cosliinie Crew. McTiiber of Class jlockty. Basketball and Golf Teams. Personnel Coniniittee. Secretary ol Senior Class, Secretary of Mortar Board. GOSHORN. ROBERT_P .oenix. Debating Team. Band. Basketball. Lacrosse. Hamburg Sliow. Little 1 lieatre Club Play. Bird Club. GRINNELL. MOLLY.-Manuscripl, Co-Cbairman of Social Com- mittee. Plioenix, Secretary of Sopbomore Class. W.S.G.A. Execu- tive. Student Board. Editorial Editor 1939 Halcyon. Editor of Portfolio, hresbman Advisory Comniittee. Mortar Board. Little Tbealre. . .S.U. GROSS. MARK-President of Lillle Tbealre. Lead in Liliom. Student Board. Varsity Track rearii. Press Board. Phoenix Ad- visory Board. ..lunior Varsity Football leam. Manuscript, Recipient ol Crane Prize in Pbilosopby. 195S. l I)i Kappa Psi. HARMAN. DAVID-Manager of Football Team. President of Kvvink. Varsity [. acrosse Team. Junior Varsity Basketball leam. Delta L ' psilon. HARRINGTON. ELIZABETH-Lillle Tbealre Costume Crew. A.S.U.. W ' orKsnup. HARRIS. RAYMOND-Fresliman and ,1. V. Basketball. Kappa Sigma. HART. BE.ATRICE— Treasurer of Somerville. Fencing Squad. HASTINGS. JANIE-Outing Club. Varsity Golf Team. Cborus. Personnel Committee, V A.A. Council. Conduct Committee. F.A.C.. Student Board. W.S.G.A. Executive Committee. Captain of Golf Team. President of VV.A.A. Council. HENDRICKS. OLIVE-Fresliman Representative to W.S.G.A.. Var- sity Basketball Team. Class Hockey and Swimming Teams. Presi- dent of Swartlimore and Intercollegiate Ouling Cluns. Secretary of Engineering Club. Social Committee. F.A.C., W.A.A. Council. HERNDON, DALE— Interfraternity Council Secretary-Treasurer. Kwink. Captain of Track. Little Tneatre. Phi Sigma Kappa. HEROLD. DORIS-Participant in Mr. Spiller ' s Writing Group. HOAGLAND. MARY-Outing Club. Little Theatre. WorksKop. Sketck Group. Personnel Committee. Pliotograpliic Editor of Halcyon, Gwimp, Manager of Hockey Team, F.A.C., Mortar Board. Sigma Xi Honorary Fraternity. HUBBARD. ANDRE-American Student Union. HUNTER. MARGARET Member of Sketch Club. Paint Crew of Little Theatre, Set Designer of Freshman Show. (LLMER. SANDRA— Personnel Committee. Tennis Tournament. Class Baskelball Team. Freshman Show. Outing Club. German Club. International Relations Club, Sigma Xi Honorary Fraternity. JAMES. MARY— Press Board. Literary Group. French Club. Little Theatre. Business NIanager and Treasurer of Little Theatre. JOHNSON. ELEANOR-Varsity Basketball. Co-Caplain of Tennis. Vice-President of Sophomore Class. Social Committee. W.A.A. Council. Gwimp. Class Hockey and Swimming learns. F.A.C, Lead in One Act Plays. .lONES. EDMUND-Debate Board. Business Manager of Phoenix. Business Manager of 1939 Halcyon. Varsity Track. Phi Sigma Kappa. JONES. HELEN-Class Hockey and Basketball Teams. Varsity Hockey Squad. Somerville Committee. Day Student President. .lONES. WELLINGTON-Varsity Football. Kwink, Drama Club. Pbi Delta Tbela. JUMP. ASHBY-Camera Club. Kwink. Cast of ■ ' Tbe Bridge. Beggar on Horseback. Phi Delta Theta. KALTENBACH. LOUISE-Conduct Committee. Social Committee. Freshman Show. Cast of ' Green Grow The Lilacs. Secretary of Freshman and Sophomore Classes. President of Parrisli. May Day Attendant. Gwimp. F.A.C.. Little Theatre. Student Board. Alumnae Conmiittee, President of W.S.G.A.. Mortar Board. KAUFMANN. PETER-German Club and Classical Club. KING. MARGARET-Sketcb Club. Personnel Committee. French Club President. F.A.C.. Cast of ' Beggar on Horseback. KRA1TEN.NIAKER, HERMAN-Varsity Football. Co-Caplain of Football. Varsity Lacrosse, Social Committee. M.S.G.A. Executive Conmiittee. Delta Upsilon. LADENBL ' RG. EVA Prize for Greatest Improvement in Freshman Class. Varsity SwimiDing Team, Little Theatre. Sketch Club. LARKIN. BAINBRIDGE-Varsity Football, Varsity Baseball, Ice Hockey. Delta L ' psilon. STRATH HAVEN INN A hotel of distinction, close to Swarthmore College. Comfortable rooms, attractive sun porches, beautiful grounds, excellent food — reasonable rates. TiOL LUNCHEONS DINNERS BRIDGE PARTIES TEAS AND EVENING PARTIES F. M. SCHEIBLEY MANAGEMENT W. C. Ayres Compdny 1929 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia CHINA - GLASS - SILVER Liberal Discount to All Students of Swarthmore FRANK V. WARREN, Inc. Building Construction PHILADELPHIA, PA. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS Ill Retrospect Conlinited l-EEPEK. MARGARET-Caplnin of Varsily Baskc-lball. V„rsily MorKcy. W ' .A.A. Council, Conduct Conimillec. Tennis Squiui, LEINROTH. ROBERT-Kwinli. Mnnagor oF Baseball Team. Phi Sigma Kappa. LINDSAY. SALLY-Varsily Hockey Squad. Varsily Basketball Squad. Fresliman Show. A.S.L ' ., Arts and Crafts Group. Drama Work- sno[i. Stat e Manaj er of .ludgment Day. LIPPINCOrr. RICHARD-Dobaling. Basketball Squad, Soccer. Book and Key. President Junior Class. Plii Kappa Psi. Permanent Class Treasurer. LHITE. EDWARD-Halcvon Staff. Pf.oeni.v, Junior Varsily Basket- ball Team. Golf Team. Treasurer of Junior Class. Pbi Kappa Psi. LIVINGSTON. W ' lLLIAM-Junior Varsity Basketball and Tennis. Phoenix. Social ComiDillee. in cast of Green Grow The i ilacs. Kwink. Varsily Tennis. Interfralcrnily Council Vice-President. [- Iii Delta Tbela. LOMBARD. PETER-Engineers Club. Kappa Sigma. LYKfE.NS. GEORGE— .Appeared in I_illle Theatre Productions. Phi Sigma Kappa. McClelland. S. LLY-P ,oeniA. Litlle Theatre. Chest Fund Com- mittee. Swimming Team. Sports Editor of Phoenix, Halcyon Staff. Gwimp. Manager of Swimming Team. Vice-President of Junior Class. F.A.C.. Workshop. Class Hockey Team. MacPHAIL. LELAND-President of Interfraternity Council. Book and Key. Baseball. Football. Delta L ' psilon. MAGINNISS. GERTRL ' DE-Class Hockey. Gwin.p. Basketball Manager. Conduct Committee. F.A.C., Dancing Class. Workshop. MARTENET. RACHEL- Varsity Hockey Squad. Varsity Swimming Squad. Gwimp. F.A.C.. Prop Manager of Little Theatre. MARTIN. JANE-Parlicipant in Vocational Conference. MASON. RICHARD-Camera Club. Engineers Club. A.S.U.. Sec- retary of American Institute of Electrical Engineers Branch. MATSUOKA. YOKO-Personnel Conunittee. Basketball Squad. Class Hockey Team. Little Theatre. President of International Relations Club. Archery. MEADER. KENNETH-Captain Cross Country Team. Track Team. Men ' s Athletic Association. A.S.U. MEYERHOFF. BETTINA-Transfer to Swarthmore in Senior year. MICHAEL. ELIZABETH-Varsity Swinuning Team. Varsily Golf Team. Gwimp. Manager of Golf. MILLER. SEYMOUR-J. V. Basketball. MORNINGSTAR. EDWARD-P ,oeni.v. Little Theatre. Halcyon Staff. Co-Chairman of Social Committee. Kwink. Manager of Tennis Team. Sketch Club. Phi Delta Theta. MORRIS. ROBERT-Junior Varsity and Varsity Lacrosse. Phi Sigma Kappa. MORSE. VIRGINIA-P ,oeni.x Staff. French and Ouling Clubs. NEALE. ROBERT-Press Board. Kwink. Manager of Golf Team. Delia Upsilon. OLDS. D. VID-P ioeni.v Junior Editor. Debate Board. Band. Orches- tra. Kwink. One Act Plays. Hamburg Show. Little Theatre, parts in Liliom and Pride and Prejudice. Publicity Chairman of Intercollegiate Newspaper Association. Football Squad. Phi Sigma Kappa. 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 Fable Company, Inc. PHILADELPHIA GE Exposure Meter Gives Correct Ca mera Settings Assures Correct Exposure Saves Film and Time Helps in Printing, Enlarging Used Exactly the Same for Movies or Stills, in Color or Black and White General Electric Supply Corp. DISTRIBUTOR 429 No. 7th St. Philadelphia, Pa. T. Frank McCall ' s Sons Distributors of SCOTT TISSUES to Swarthmore College CHESTER, PA. Phone: Chester 9245 PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS JOHN SPENCER INCORPORATED CHESTER, PA PRINTERS TO THE PHOENIX A Complete Banking Service embracing every personal and business need, conveniently located at the acknowl- edged centre of Philadelphia, Broad and Chestnut Streets. We are making loans of usual types as v ell as F. H. A. property improvement loans, and welcome an opportunity to consider the financial problems confronting businesses and individuals. Land Title Bank AND Trust Company PHILADELPHIA Main Office: Broad and Chestnut Streets Downtown Office: 517 Chestnut Street Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I lie I Iaixyon stall vvoiikJ liko to express its gratitude lo -.( Jal le. Tdeda Ostrander, and Belly Oillette for lealures, lo Mary Capehart lor llie insirlc rover map. aiifl lo llic lollowiiit, ' pco))le wlio idjinilled snapshots: Louise Alexander Newell Allord Joe Bender Ned Booher Bent Boving Cretclien Collier John Crowley Fred Donnelly Patty Eastwick Hans Erichsen Jody Ewing Ralph Fisher Betty Gillette Grant Heilman Gwen Jenkins Bud Jones John Kaufmann Jim Kehler Peggy King Henri Kirn Margaret Leeper Beth Malcolm Ginny Mayer Libby March Sib Reid Chuck Rice Becky Robinson Bill Rogers Bob Rowand Meta Shallcross Jean Slack Rogers Smith Elise Stone Maddy Tarr Grace-Mary Thomas Luigi Watters Trudie Weaver Javdee Wilson COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS In Retrospect (Jonliniic O ' lTENBL ' KG, lAMES-Execulive Board of M.S.G.A.. Little Tliealre, Worksliop, cast ol Green Grow the Lilacs. A.S.U.. Junior Varsity Cross Country Teant. Debating. PAQLIET. WILHELMINE-Presiclent of Modern Dancing Group. International Relation Clul). Sketcli Club. Transfer in Junior Year. PASCAL. JOAN-Outing Club. Sketch Club. Class Basketball Team. One Act Plays. Sonierville Committee. A.S.U.. Vice-President ol [..ittle Theatre, head of Scenery Committee, in charge of scenery and design for Judgment Dav. PAITERSON. WILLI AM-P ,oe„i.v. Social Connnittee. Varsity Soccer. Varsity Baseball, Executive Coiiimitlee of LS.G.A., Kappa Sigma. PEELLE. ROBERT-P ,ocr.;.v Advisory Board. Football Squad. Soccer, Lacrosse. Tnember of American Society of Civil Engineers, also .American Society of Mechanic-al Engineers. Senior Dance Com- mittee. Kappa Sigma. PEIT , JESSIE— Freshman Show. Hamburg Show, member of Little Theatre. Somerville Day Committee. PORTER. HELEN— Conduct Committee. Dance Director of Freshman Show. Hamburg Show. French Club. Gvvimp. PRICE. CELIA-Member of Class Hockey Team. Gwimp. Modern Dancing Class. PRICE. WILLIAM— Debate Board, winner of Extemporaneous Speak- ing Contest, Freshman Class President, Varsity Cross Couhtrv Team, Varsity Track Team, Vice-President of Interfraternity Council, Kappa Sigma. RAMSDELL. PAULINE-Class Hockey Team, Point System Com- mittee, Class Basketball Team, May Day. Hamburg Show. RICKEY, ALICE-W.A.A. Council, Co-Captain of Hockey Team, Var- sity Swimming, Social Committee, Personnel- Committee, Secretary of Sophomore Class. ROBERTS, JOHN-Cross Country Squad, Press Board, Secretary of American Society of Civil Engineers, Phi Delta Thela. ROCKWOOD, ROBERT-Glee Club, Quartet. Varsity Soccer Team. Junior Varsity Tennis. Phi Delta Theta. ROUS. MARION-Little Theatre. Somerville Chairman. Social Com- mittee. Director of One Act Flays, in cast of Richard of Bor- deaux. Waiting for Lefty. Beggar On Horseback. lead in Judgment Day. Feature Editor of lOjQ Halcyon. A.S.U.. Co- Editor of A.S.U. Bulletin. Dance Club, Sketch Club. Mortar Board. R A . M. ' RY— Member of Chorus. Personnel Committee, Freshman Show, Little Theatre, A.S.L ' ., cast of Hamburg Show. Editor of Handbook. SCHOCK. PATRICIA-Prop Crew of Little Theatre. Class Basket- ball. Gwimp, Intramural Manager of Hockev Team. SH. W, B. ' RBARA-Class Hockey and Basketball Teams, Co-Chair- man of Freshman Executive Conmiittee, Chorus, Sketch Club, Freshman Show, in cast of Trial by Jury, Christmas Vespers, May Day, Hamburg Show, Point Committee, F.. ' K.C. SHERO, CAROLINE-Member of Chorus, Informal Singing Group, Clirrslnias Vespers. SHOHL, J, NE-P;,oenix Staff, Classical Club. Outing Club. A.S.U. SHOTWELL. DORIS-French Club. Little Theatre. Captain of Varsity Golf Team. Class Basketball. SILLARS. ROBERTSON-A.S.U. SIMMER. KIEJTI— Varsity Football. Varsity Swimming, Junior Varsity Lacrosse, Kwink, Delta U|)silon, SLACK, JEAN ' -Circulation Manager of Phoenix. A.S.U., Gwimp. SMITH, DONALD-French Club, American Student Union. S.NIITH, NATHAN-Varsity Lacrosse Team, Swimming Tean,, Dell,, L psilon. SOLIS-COHEN, M.M Y-Conduct Committee, Vice-President of Parrish, Point Committee, Social Committee. Student Board, W.A.A. Council, Varsity Hockey Squad, Class Basketball Team. F.A.C.. Co-Captain of Varsity Tennis Team. Pfiocni.v. SOUDER. ELVIN-Chairman of Debate Board, Manager of t..acrosse. Secretary of Men ' s A. A., Treasurer of Senior Class, Student Board, Kwink, Glee Club, Press Board, Phi Sigma Kappa. STARR, DAVID-Kwink, Delta Upsilon, Junior Varsity Football and Basketball, Varsity Football and Basketball. Track Manager. STEARNS. B. RBARA-Sketch Club, Outing Club, Class Hockey and Basketball Teams, in cast of Inspector General. STEEL. HELEN-lnternational Relations Club. STEIN, PHILIP-J. V. Basketball Squad. Tennis Squad, Press R=ard. erville Commillee, Clas STONE. ANNE-P .oeni.v. Press Board. Varsity Hockey Squad. W.A.A. Council. Personnel Committee, F.A.C., French Club, STONE, ELISE-Class Hockey and Class Basketball Teams. STRONG, FRED-Member of Glee Club, Swin.ming Team. SUrrON. ANN CRAIG-Chorus. Christn.as Vespers, parts in Irial By Jury. Richard II, Lili„m, Directing Class. May Day. Dance Club. SWAR ' IHE, PA ULA-Skeich Club, S Basketball Team, One Act Plays. A.S.L . SWIFT. ARTHUR-Little Theatre. TAPLEY. GORDON_Engineer s Club, American Society of Mechan- ical Engineers, Treasurer of Sophomore Class, .Junior Varsity and Varsity Basketball and Baseball Teams, Phi Kappa Psi TATMAN, ALINA-Manuscript Staff. THATCHER, EDW. RD-Soccer Squad, Bird Club, Phi Sign.a Kappa. THO.MAS, GRACE-MARY-P ,oeni.v, Co-Cl,airn,an of costume com- mittee for May Day, French Club, Gwimp. THO.M.AS, JOHN— Football Team, Swimming Team, Lacrosse Team, Kwink, President of M.S.G.A., Book and Key, Student Board, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Xi Honorarv Fraternity. THORN, STEWART-Glee Club and Chorus .Accompanist, Chorus. Debate Board, Soccer, Phi Sigma Kappa. TODD, ALDEN-Chorus, Band, A.S.U.. Junior Varsity Basketball. One Act Plays. Executive Committee of M.S.G.A.. International Relations Club. TRIMBLE. MARGARET-Chorus. Freslunan Show. Conduct Con,- niittee. Class Swimming, Vice-President of Sophomore Class, part in Trial By Jury, Christmas Vespers, Alunmae Committee, Gwimp, Tennis Team Manager, Little Theatre, Dance Club. Hamburg Show. UNDERDOWN. MARGARET-Classical Club. Manuscript. UNDERHILL. SARAH-Class Hockey Team, lead in Faculty-Shident play. Outing Club. VALENTINE, BRUCE-Little Theatre Club. WALKER, ROBERT-Soccer Squad, Engineer ' s Club, Junior Member of American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Sigma Tau Honor- ary Fraternity. WARRI.NGTON, JOHN-Co-Captain of Football Team. President of Sophomore Class, Sigma Tau Honorary Fraternity, Delta L ' psilon. W.AJSO.N, GREJ CHEN— Captain of Swimming Team, Personnel Committee, W.A.A. Council. WAnS, GORDON-Glee Club, Band, Orchestra, Kwink, Musical Director of Handjurg Show, Track Team, Manager of Swi A. A. Council. Phi Sigma Kappa. WHn E, G.AR —Chorus. Varsity Soccer Team. Varsity Lacrosse. .All-.American rating in both. American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Captain of Soccer Team. President of Senior Class. Book and Key. Delta LIpsilon. WHITFORD. MOLLY-Classical Club. French Club. Secretary of Dance Group. A.S.U. WILSON. .lAMES-Editor of P .oeni.v, Vice-President of Student Board, Editorial Board ol Portfolio. Treasurer of Freshman Class, Little Theatre Club productions. International Relations Club. Debate Board, [- ress Board. Junior Varsitv Soccer. Track Team Phi Delta Theta. WILSON. JANET-Personnel Committee Chairman. W.A.A.. President of Gwimp. Interclass Tennis Manager. Secretary of Junior Class. Class Hockey Team. Vocational Conference Conmiittee. WOLF. ROBERT-Litl|e Theatre. M.S.G.A. Executive Committee. Phi Sigma Kappa. Sigma Xi Honorarv Fraternitv. WOOLLCOTT. JOAN- Varsity Hockey Co-Captain, ' One Act Plays. P loeni.v Feature Editor, member of Phoenix Advisory Board. Porllolio. Somerville Committee, in cast of Richard of IJordeaux and Beggar On Horseback, A.S.L ' .. Mortar Board. WORTH, EDWARD-Varsity Baseball Squad, Junior Varsity Basket- ball Team, Phi Kappa Psi. WRIGHT , JOHN— Varsity Soccer Team, Kappa Sigma, Varsity Track Squad. YARD, FLORENCE-Assistanl Chairman Press Board. Outing Club. A.S,U. Executive Connnittee, F.A.C. ZINNER, JAMES— Swimming Team, Business . lanager of Phoenix. in cast of Liliom, Press R ard. Intramural Tennis. vmimmg. IN YEARBOOK PRINTING Master printers of distinctive annuals reflecting the good taste of a discrim- inating clientele that knows and appreciates the artistry of craftsmanship. LYON ARMOR, INC., PRINTERS 147 North Tenth Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ! tT ♦ ' V -• fc - 1V40 •.-Kir VAT ' ftrl Br- -- mf ' ' - V ♦ ' ?  -irf  -w- «« riM F • « -r ' t ' J ■ - — — - — - -j iT -j -; -(iJ . -,«- a.r W ♦ ■ ■( Faculty Di rectory FRANK AYDELOTTE, B,A., M.A„ IVI.iii,, Dl.iii,. l.ll.D., LL.D., D.C.L.. Presic pril i-il Ci- liir Lane FRANCES B. BLANSHARD. B.A., M.A,. )«. - Wonum, 5 1 3 Of clon Ave. EDITH PHILIPS. B.A.. Doclcur Ae fUniversilr Ac Pdiis ' , Aotiny Deun of Women unA Susan W. Lippincfill Professor nj hn-nclt, 1 Whiltrer Place HAROLD EDWIN BALME SPEIGHT, M.A., Dean o The College fw Elm Ave. EVEREIT L. HUNT. B.A.. M.A.. D.Lilt.. Deun of Men and Professor of English 604 Elm Ave. JOHN ANTHONY MILLER. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. LL.D.. Director of Sproul Observatory anA Professor of Astronomy, Emeritus, Kershaw and lurner Roads. Wallingtord WILLIAM ISAAC HULL. B.A., Ph.D.. F.R.H.S.. Howard M. Jenkins Research Professor of Quaker History and Lifcrorion of ErienAs Historical Library 304 Walnut Lane JESSE HERMAN HOLMES, B.S.. Ph.D.. Professor Emeritas of Philosophy 656 Manchester Ave.. Moylan ISABELLE BRONK. Pk.B.. Ph.D.. Professor Emeritus of the French Language and Literature 317 North Chester Road GELLERT ALLEMAN. B.S.. Ph.D.. Sc.D.. Professor Emeritus of Chemistry Providence Road. Wallingford JOHN RUSSELL HAYES. B.A.. LL.B.. Librarian Emerilus of Friends Historical Library Embreeville HAROLD CLARKE GODDARD. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Ale.vander GrisirolA Cummins Professor of English 3 Whittier Place ROBERT CLARKSON BROOKS. B.A.. Ph.D.. Dr. rer.pol.. Joseph jnr(on Professor of Political Science 410 Swarthmore Ave. CLARA PRICE NEWPORT, B.A., Ph.D.. Professor Emerilus of the German Language ana lAterature, Care of Mrs. Chas. E. Price, Plymouth Meeting HENRIETTA JOSEPHINE MEETEER, B.A.. Ph.D., Professor Emeritus of Greek anA Latin 6g W. 71st St.. New York City ALFRED MANSFIELD BROOKS. B.A.. M.A.. Professor Emeritus of Eine Arts Gloucester. Mass. SAMUEL COPELAND PALMER, B.A.. M.A., Ph.D.. Professor of Botany 455 Riverview Ave. HENRY JERMAIN MAUDE CREIGHTON, B.A.. M.A.. M.Sc. D.Sc. EAmunA Allen Professor of Chemistry 515 Elm Ave. ETHEL HAMPSON BREWSTER. B.A.. M.A., Ph.D., Professor of Greek and Latin West House ARNOLD DRESDEN, M.S., Ph.D., Edu ard H. MugiK Professor of Ma(fiema(tcs and Astronomy 606 Elm Ave. ROSS W. MARRIOTT, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.. Professor of Molfiemalics Astron ,.2 15 Lafayetle Ave. CHARLES B. SHAW. B.A., M.A.. Librarian 5 Whittier Place BRAND BLANSHARD, B.A., M.A.. B.Sc. Ph.D.. Professor of Philosophy 513 Ogden Ave. L. R. SHERO. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Professor of Greefc. 651 N. Chester Road WINTHROP R. WRIGHT, B.A., Ph.D., Morris L. Clothier Professor of Pfiysics 4 Whittier Place HERBERT F. ERASER, M.A., F.R.Econ.S., Professor of Economics. Wallingford Hills SCOIT B. LILLY. B.S.. C.E.. Professor of Cipif Engineering, 600 Elm Ave. PHILIP MARSHALL HICKS, B.A.. M.A., Ph.D., Professor of English 325 Elm Ave. FREDERICK J. MANNING, B.A., Ph.D., Jsaac H. Ciotdier Professor of History 215 Roberts Rd.. Bryn Mawr CLAIR WILCOX, B.S., MA., Ph.D., Professor of Economics, 510 Ogden Ave. EDWARD H. COX, B.S., MA., Sc.D.. Professor of Chemistry, 8 Whittier Place ROBERT ERNEST SPILLER, B.A.. M.A., Ph.D., Professor of English 6 Whittier Place WOLFGANG KOHLER, Dr.Phil.. Professor of Psychology. 401 W ' alnut Lane ADsent on leave. Af)sent on leave. Rrst semester. Parl-lime leave, four months, second .semester. LAURENCE IRVINC;, l ' ,.A., MA.. PhD . Proje.sor of Hi„l,gy, 3 1 I filiri Ave. CHARM ' S GARRHFr TIIAICI IliR, B.A.. M.E.. Annociate Professor of Mfrhonirdl l,it(fin( ' i ' rirtff , Of OftJen Ave, JOHN HI.VIES PITMAN. B.A., M.A., Asmciale. Profesmr of Maihcimitirs ona Astronotny 328 Vassar Avo, IIEINRICII BRINKMANN. B.A., M.A., (• ' h.D,, Associal,. Professor of Muthi ' mulics 512 . . Chester Road MARY ALBERTSON, B,A., .M.A.. Ph.D., Associate Professor of History 405 Walnut l-iinc MILAN W. CARRE1T. B.A.. M.A.. D.Phil., Associate. Professor of Physics •-•55 N. Princeton Ave. IROYER S ' IEI:LE ANDERSON. B.A.. M.A.. D.Phil.. Associate Professor of History 2 Whittier Place MARK MaclNTOSH. B.S.. M.S.. Associate Vofes.sor of Physical EMiicalion atiA Director of Athletics for Men, I Ire Swarthmore Apartments HOWARD MALCOLM JENKINS. B.A.. E.E.. Associate Pro es.s„r of Electrical E.ngineering 612 Ogden Ave. ALFRED .1. SWANN. B.A.. M.A.. Associate Professor and Director of Music 21 Oherlin Ave. ILLON WENCELIUS. D.esL., L.Th.. Th.D., Associate Professor of Erench m College Ave. tROBERT B. MacLEOD, B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D., Associate Professor 0 Psychology anA Education gB Whittier Place PETER van de KAMP, B.S.. M.S.. Ph.D., Dr.Phil.. Associate Professor of Astronomy and Director of Sproul Ohservalory. 515 OgfJen Ave. IROBERT K. ENDERS. B.A.. Ph.D.. Associate Professor of Zoology Cunningham House DUNCAN GRAHAM FOSTER. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Associate Professor of Cfiemistry 302 X. Chester Road ANDRE V SIMPSON. BA.. M.S.. Assistant Professor 0 Mechanical Engineering College Campus JMICHAEL S. KOVALENKO. T.E.. Lie. es Sc, Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy Wallingford Hills JKARL REUNING. Dr.Phil.. Assistant Professor of German, 47 Amherst Ave. TOWNSEND SCUDDER. 3rd. B.A.. Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English 203 Elm Ave. WALTER J. SCOTT, Ph.B., Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of Zoology. 102 Park- Ave. LYDIA BAER, B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of German. Brookside Road. Wallingford J. ROLAND PENNOCK. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of Political Science 521 Elm Ave. ROBERT DUNN. B.S.. Assistant Pro essor of Pbysicaf Education for Men Carver Hall. Oxford Ave. and Harrison St.. Frankford VIRGINIA RATH. B.A.. M.A.. Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Yomen 605 Elm Ave. JOHN W. NASON. B.A.. M.A.. Assistant Professor of Philosophy. 550 Walnut Lane PATRICK MURPHY MALIN, B.S., Assistant Professor of Economics 221 N. Princeton Ave. MARCEL J. BRUN, Lie. cs L., S.T.Dr,, Assistant Pro essor 0 Frencfi 405 W ' alnut Lane GEORGE B. THOM, M.E., M.S.. M.A., Assistant Pro essor of Mechanical Engineering Blackthorn Road, Wallingford WALTER B. KEIGHTON. Jr., B.A., Ph.D.. Assistant Professor 0 Chemistry 511 Cedar Lane FRANK RALPH KILLE, B.S., M.S.. Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of Xoology 406 Haverford Place ELIZABETH COX WRIGHT. B.A.. M.A., Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of English Moylan SAMUEL T. CARPENTER. B.C.E.. C.E.. Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering 224 Park Ave. HAROLD M. MARCH. B.A.. PK.D., Assistant Professor of French. W ' esl House 4;Part-time leave. fAbsenl on leave, second semester. MALKICi: M.WDLI.BArM. I3.. .. MA.. PK.D.. .A.s.si.si ,„i Projcss r of P r(7()So ) iy 515 Elm Ave. EDWIN 15. .NEWMAN. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Assistuni Projessor 0 Psycfioloify 17 S. Cheslcr Road Ll ' ZERN Ci. LIVINGSTON. B.S.. Ph.D.. Assistant Professor of Botany 559 Park Ave. MERCEDES C. IRIRAS. M.A.. Instructor in Spanish. S Rimnymeae Ave., Liinscuiwnc GEORGE A. BOLRDEI.AIS. h,sU,utor in l ' .mji,werinq. Wallin,5l„ra Mills EREDRIG S. KLEES. B.A.. Inslru.l.u- „, l-.,„Jish Wharlon Hall ETHEL STILX. Ph.B.. MA. nslnulor in I ' ine Arts Parrish Hall MAY E. P.ARRY. B.A.. B.S.. iislr„ tor in PLysicat tVncntion for Women 5.11 Pelhatu Road. Ml. Airy AVERY I . BL.AKE. nslrnrlor in PItysical Ednailion for Men. 101 Sylvan Ave.. Rulledge ORREN MOIII.LR. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. (nslrnrlor in Astronomy. 5 I I Walnut Lane - RL ' TII .NhCLL ' NC JONES. B.A.. Instructor in Botany and Zoo ogv. Bobbin iill Road, . ledia JOHN D. McCRUMM. B.S.. M.S.. Instructor in Electrical Engineering Rivervlcw Farms. Riven ' iew Road E. J. FAULKNER. Instructor in Pliysical Education for Men. 255 Dickinson Ave. I RANGES REINHOLD. B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Instructor in PolilicJ Science Basset! Dormitory C. BROOKE WORTH. B.A.. M.D.. Instructor in Zoology. 602 Elm Ave. RICHARD B. BRAND ' ) ' . B.. .. Ph.D.. Inslruclor in Philosophy. jOi N. Chester Road JOSEPH DAVID COPPOCK. B.A.. M.A., Instructor in Economics. Wharton Hall ALICE A. GATES. B.A.. Instructor in Physiccu Education for ' ome i 605 Elm Ave. JACQUES SCHERER. Lie. es L.. Instructor in French. 128 Rutgers Ave. NORRIS JONES. Yi.A.. Instructor in Scientific Drawing. Bobbin Mill Road. Media KARL DLNCKER. Dr.Phil . Inslrnrlor in Psychology. 40g College Ave. SAMUEL R. ASPINALL. B.A.. Ph.D.. Instructor in Chemistry. 600 Elm Ave. W. C. ELMORE. B.S.. Ph.D.. Instructor in P .ysics. Yale and Swarthniore Avenues . LICE HOBSON. Instructor in Physical Education for W ' onien, 224 Park Ave. HERBERT SPIEGELBERG. Dr.Phil.. Inslruclor in Gcrn.an. 5 1 1 Walnut Lane S. W. .lOH.NSON. Part-time Instructor in Accjnniinp. .... niherst Ave. SILVIA GELMI-FOREST. M.A.. Pan-lin.e Instructor in Italian. 4726 Hazel Ave.. Philadelphia EDITH G. H. LENEL. Dr.Phil.. Pnn-lime Instructor in German, 649 N. Chester Road ELIZ. BE1 ' H H. BROOKS. B.A.. 7 ' nlor in Modern Lnigunges. 410 Swartlimore .Ave. ROY W. DELAPLAINE. B.A.. Assistant in Aslrono.ny. 106 Cornell Ave. WILLIS J. STETSON. B.A.. Assistant in P iysica Educalion or Men Melrose Park IBE.VI ' RICE BL. CII . |.,iLEOD. B.A.. M.F.A.. Assisioni in English SB Whitlier Place IIEMMA SlICHAEL REYNOLDS, B.A.. Assistant in Physical I ' .aucation for Women Swarlliniore Apartments HE. R ' ' C. FORD. B.A., AssisfanI in PItysical Education for Men. Sof) Glen Terrace, Cliesler CLII rORD F. DUNCAN. B.S.. . ssislnnl in Physical Eduction lor Men 4506 Locust St.. Phihid.l|)liia LEW El.VERSON. B.S.. A.ssistanI in Physical Education for Men. L ' niversity ol Pennsylvania EDW.- RD SIIE.NTON, AssislnnI in Fine . rls....Bonlicu Farms, Paoli VIRGINIA SAFFORD. B.A.. Assistant in Biology....40 ) College Ave. ELIZABETH FUNKHOUSER. B.A.. Assistant in Biology. .409 College Ave. IIKEHTI W. CHALMERS. B.A.. Assistant in English JANET DeVILBlSS. B.A.. Assistant in Astronomy. 5 I 2 Berkley Road. Merion MARION WOLI ' E. B.A.. Assistant in As(ronomy. 242 W. Horler St.. Gernianlown I. R. KLIiNE, B.A.. Sc.D.. Exclumge Professor in Matlteniatics (University of Pennsylnania) 529 River ' ie v Ave. LOUIS N. ROBINSON, B.A.. Ph.D.. Lecturer in Economics, 41 I College Ave. JOSEPHINE TRUSLOW ADAMS. B.A.. Lecturer in Fine Arts. 615 . Chester Road JAMES MULHERN, B.A.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Lecturer in Education. Gypsey Road. R. D. No. 1, Bridgeport LAUREN H. SMITH. B.A.. M.D.. Lecturer in Psychology. 1 1 1 N. 49lh St.. Philadelphia WILLIAM E. SCOTT. B.A.. Visiting Consultant, representing the Progressive Educalion Association Hamilton Court. Philadelphia THOMAS H. JOHNSON. B.A.. Ph.D.. Lecturer in Elerlrical Engineering 62 Ma gill Road GERTRL!DE GILMORE LAFORE. B.A.. M.A.. Lecturer in Education Moylan RICHARD SALOMON. Dr.Phil.. Lecturer in History. 205 College Ave. DIMITRIS TSELOS. Ph.D.. Lecturer in Fine Arts. New orK University, qSi Madison Ave.. New ork City §MARTIN WEINBERGER. Dr.Phil.. Lecturer in Fine Arts. New ork University, 9S1 Madison Ave., New York City DOROTHY L. ASHTON. B.A.. M.D.. F.A.C.S.. Physician for W oinen and Lecturer in Hygiene 502 Cedar Lane FRANKLIN S. GILLESPIE. B.A.. M.D.. Physician for Men and Lecturer in Hygiene Harv ' ard Ave. and Chester Road HANS WALLACH. Dr.Phil.. Resenrcd Associate in Psyc iology. 2 1 1 Rutgers Ave. EDGAR CLARK BLACK. B.A.. M.A.. Researc . Assoctale in Biology 513 Harvard Ave. CLAUDE E. BUXTON. B.A.. .NI.A.. Ph.D.. Researcfi Associate in Psychology Ogden and Crumwald Aves. WALTER F. SNYDER. B.A.. Ph.D.. Research Associate in Classics Wharton Hall K. Aa. STRAND. Cand.Mag.. Mag.Scienl.. Phil.Dr.. Research Associate in Astronomy 152 Park Ave. RICHARD S. CRUTCHFIELD, B.S.. Pli.D.. Research Associate in Psychology 513 Har -ard Ave. f Aosenl on leave, second semester. Appointed for the first semester. |! Appointed for tlie second semester. Stuclenl Directory ACKERMAN, EUGENE, ' 41 Physic, 283 CarficIrJ Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. ACKERMAN, RUTH HARRIET, ' 39 Eine Aris 40-) Yale Ave Morton, Pu. ADAMS, ARI ' Hl ' R KINNEY, t Cl.cmislry Falls Cliurcfi. Vn. ADAMS, HAROLD ARMSTRONG, 40 EngineerinK 5335 Wohslor St., Philntlflpliia, Pa. ADAMSON, WILLIAM COIJJERT, 40 ZoSloBy 810 W. 2isl St., WiliJiington, Del. ALBERTSON. RAYMOND CADW ' Ayj.ADER. 39 Pol. Sciencn Hilrhcock Lane. Wcslbury, N. Y. ALBURGER, DAVID E.. 42 350 Meadow Lane. Merion, Pa. ALEXANDER, ELLIOT RITCHIE, Jr.. ' 4, Chemi.siry 702 E. Marks St., Orlanrlo, Fin. ALEXANDER, JOSEPHINE LOUISE, ' 39 English 183.) Kpnyon St., N. W., Washington, D. C. ALFORD, NEWELL GILDER, Jr., 40 English 314 S. Homewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. . yNDRUS, JUNE ELIZABETH, 4 ' English 150 Jackson Ave., Braarord. Pa. ANGELL, RICHARD BRADSHAW, ' 40 Economics Nortligate Apartments. Scarsdale. N. Y. APPLETON, FRANK WIRT, Ir., ' 41 Engineering 30 RockricUe Rd., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. ASINOF, ELIOT T. ' GER. 40 History 20 AueroacK Lane, Cedarnurst. N. Y. AUSTIN, HENRY EXUM, ' 40 Zoology 224 Park Ave., Swarlhmore, Pa. AUSTIN, ROBERT YORK, 40 Economics 1313 Park Ave., Rocheste r, N. Y. BAAR. DORIS RUPRECHT. 40 Chemistry 642 Cherry St., W innetka, III. BAKER, MARGARET E., g Pol. Science 319 S. 44th St., Philadelphia, Pa. BALL. ROLANT) C, Jr.. ' 39 English 105 S. 13th St., Richmond, Ind. BALLOU, MARY BARBARA, 4 ' Psychology Demarest, N. J. BARBANO, DORIS ESTELLE, ' 42 English 229 Edgewond Terrace, So. Orange. N. J. BARBOUR. ELEANOR KATHARINE. ' 40 Psychology 1 to S. Fairmount Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. BARKER, BEATRICE PERIN, 42 Mathematics 417 W. 117th St., New York. N. Y. BARTO, ROBERT EDWIN. 41 Zoology Elizabethville. Pa. BARTON. ELEANOR BROWNING, ' 40 Fine Arts 3610 Massachusetts Ave., W ashington. D. C. BAYS, MARJORIE, ' 39 English 2550 Ewing Ave., Evanslon, III. BAZETT, HAZEL, 41 English 629 HavdocK Lane, Haverrord. Pa. BEATTY, ROYCE EDWARDS, 42 ' Engineering 701 Saxer Ave., Springfield, Pa. BECK, CHARLES WENDELL, ' 42 Engineering 65 Lake Drive, Mountain Lakes, N. J. BECKIORD, BARBARA ANNE, t 303 N. Maple Ave., Greenwich, Conn. BELL, CHARLES ROBERT. ' 39 Psychology 419 Yale Ave., Swartnmore, Pa. BENDER, JOSEPH CHRYSTAL, ' 39 Zoology 9 DeForest Ave., Sunimil, N. J. BENNETT, ALDEN STANLEY. ' 40 Economics 33 Fairmount St., Portland, Me. BENNETT. ISABEL BRADSHAW. 42 History 397 Ridge Ave., Kingston, Pa. BEURY, FRANK GOULD, ' 42 Pol. Science 120 Taplow Road. Baltimore, Md. BIGELOW, JOHN LOWRIE, 39 History 179 N. Laurel St.. Hazleton, Pa. BINGER. BARBARA ANNE, ' 40 English Broadway, Tarrytown, N. Y. BIRDSALL, CATHERINE SHERWOOD, ' 40 Zoology 904 Vernon Ave., Glencoe. III. BLACKMAN. JAMES HORTON. 39 Economics 320 N. Skinker St.. St. Louis. Mo. BLANKENHORN. MARTHA JANE. ' 41 Zoology 6 Rural Lane, Cincinnati. Ohio BOAM. WILLIAM E., 39 Pol. Science 5 Jon. Vernulstlaan. Bussum, The Netherlands BOCiGS, MILDKIJ) VIRfdMA. ' 42 Woodstock, N. Y. BOILEAU. MARY ORBISON. ' 42 3 Henley Road, Ovcrbrook Hill . Pa, BOLCdANo. niARLorri-: marii:, ' 41 408 Baltimore Ave, Tow«on, Md. BOND. ( dXjRGE CUNE. 42 Economic. 27 College Ave. Montclair. N. .1. BOOIIER. EDWARD BAIR. 40 Pol. S.icnrc 4 I I N. Main St., Grccnshurg. Pa. BOSE, LEWIS CROWDER. ' 39 Economics 2623 N. New .Jersey St., Indianapolis. Ind, BOSS, EVA ELIZABETH, ' 39 English 54 Riverside Drive, New York. N. Y. BOVING. BENT GIEDE. ' a, Zoology 22 1 Rock Creek CJiurch Road, N. W., Washington. D. C. BOWER, EDWARD SEYMOUR, ' 42 3603 Quesada St., Washington. D. C. BOWERS, MARY CA1TIERINE. 39 ..P.sychology 16708 Kenyon Road, Shaker Heignt.s, Ohio BOWKER, MILES WESLEY, 40 Engineering 2og Hillcrest Ave., Morristown. .N. I. BOWMAN, LOIS BARBARA, ' 42 Psychology 6432 Kimbark Ave.. Chicago. 111. BOYER. VINCENT SAULL. 39 Engineering 6320 Lawnlon Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. BRADEN. CHARLES GOETZMAN. 40 Economics 334 N. El Molino Ave.. Pasadena. Calif. BRADFIELD, lENNIE DIXON. ' 42 Mathematics f853 Meridian Ave.. Miami Beach. Fla. BRAGDON. LILLIAN ELIZABETFI. 42 History 983 Kipling Road, Elizabeth. N. J. BRAUER. WERNER. ' 40 Zoology 687 W. 204th St., New York, N Y. BRAUN. KLAUS, ' 39 Pol- Science 19 Dotzheimerslr. W iesbaden. Germany BREARLEY. MARGERY CORNELL. 41 Zoology 57 Princeton Ave., Princeton, N. J. BRENNAN. NATALIE. ' 42 French 70 E. 270th St., Euclid. Ohio BROOMELL. MARY LOIS. ' 40 French 1338 Park Ridge Place. Cincinnati. Ohio BROUN. HEYWOOD HALE, English R. D. 1. Stamford. Conn. BROWN, CORNELIA WOOTTON, 40 Psychology 148 Dickerman Road, Newton Highlands, Mass. BROWN, FRANCES MARY, ' 41 .. Psychology 333 King ' s Highway, Swedesboro. N. J. BROWN, JEAN CAMERON. ' 42 English 54 Union Ave.. Mount Vernon, N. Y ' . BROV ' N. JOHN ROBERT, ' 39 Economics 207 Yale Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. BROWN, PALMER, 41 English 617 Milburn St.. Evanston. 111. BRO ' N. RUTH. ' 42 English 130 Melrose St.. Providence. R. I. BROWN. VIRGINIA SPOTTSWOOD. 42 148 Dickerman Road, Newton Highlands, Mass. BUCHANAN, PAUL HYDE, Jr., 39 Pol- Science 5001 N. Meridian St., Indianapolis, Ind. BUCKMAN, FRANKLIN PRESTON, ' 41 Economics George School. Pa. BUDD, ISAAC WALTER, ' 39 • -Po ' - Science 1407 Baird Ave., Camden. X. J. BURGER. VIRGINIA. ' 39 Mathematics 29-1 Brighton Road, Shaker Heights. Ohio CAHALL. ROBERT JENNINGS. ' U- Pol- Science Gambier. Onio CALDWELL. CHARLES ADAMS. ' 39 English 909 Westdale Ave.. Swarthmore, Pa. CALDWELL, MARY JANE, 40 Zoology Walden Woods, Cos Cob. Conn. CALLAHAN. HELEN MARGARET. ' 42 French 10 Summit Road. Media. Pa. CAMP. WILLIAM PERRINE. ' 40 English 11 Edge Hill Road. Abington. Pa. CAMPBELL. EDWIN GREENE. ' 42 Philosophy 88- N. Beechwood St.. PKiladelphia. Pa. CAMPBELL. LAURA PHILINDA. 40 French 761 Scotland Road. Orange. N. J. CANEDY, CHARLES LIVERMORE, ' 41 Economics 7110 Oxford Road. Baltimore. Md. CAPEHART. MARY TOWXSEND. ' 42 iSj Arfiomio Ave., Long Beacli, Calif. CAPRON. II.LI. M . IOSllER. ' .yl Economics 1 1 Br.ulford Ave.. Upper Monlclair. N. .1. CARPE.NTER, CHARLES EVERLYN, Jr.. 42 En.qinoering 55 17 Hamilton Si., Pliilnclclpliin. Pn. CARPENTER. JANET LOUISE, 42 Mathemaiics 5108 Green St., Harrisburg. Pa. CARR, RICHARD ASHTON. ' 42 304 Taplow Road, Baltimore. Md. CARR, SUSAN LOU, ' 42 English 67 S. 14tll St., Richmond. Ind. CARUTHERS. EDWARD GRAHAM, ' 39 Econo.nics Asliland Ave.. Sccane, Pa. CAVERT. MARY RUTH. 41 1 Glen Washington Rd.. Bronxville, N. Y. CAVIN, FR. NCIS EDWARD. 41 Economics 1028 21st St., N. W., Washington, D. C. CHASE. MARGARET, ' 39 Pol. Science . 85 BrooKside Road, New Britain. Conn. CHASINS, EDWARD ARTHUR, ' 41 Zoology 513 W. 68th St., New York. N. Y. CHEESEMAN. MARGARET RUTH. sQ French 225 N. McKean St.. Butler. Pa. CHEYNEY, JULIA, ' 42 Zoiilogy Serpentine Lane, Wyncote. Pa. CLARK, EUGENE, ' 39 Economics 1602 Ashland Ave., Evanston, III. CLARK, JEAN. ■41 French 54 Prescott Ave.. Bronxville. N. Y. CLARKE. JOSEPHINE THACHER. ' 41 French 314 W. 76th St., New York. N. Y. CLEAVER. HOLSTEIN DeHAVEN. Jr.. ' 41 Zoology 1 30 Inglcwood Drive, Mt. Lebanon. Pa. CLEAVINGER. MARTHA BEARCE, ' 41 Economics 39 Claremont Ave., New York. N. Y. CLEVENGER, LLEWELLYN MORRIS, 2nd, 40 Engineering Wallingford, Pa. CLINCHY, EVERETT ROSS, Jr., 41 Philosophy 46 Prospect St., Madison, N. J. CLYMER. HOWARD YOUNG. ' 42 Chemistry Morion. Pa. COFFIN, LOUIS FUSSELL, Jr., ' 39 Engineering 820 C St., Sparrows Point, Md. COFFMAN, RAY HAROLD, ' 40 Economics 3805 Blackstone Ave., Chicago, III. COLLIER. GRETCHEN. ' 39 Economics 121 Beckwith Terrace. Rochester. N. Y. COLLINS. WHITNEY. ' 39 Engineering 50 Summit Drive, Yonkers, N. Y. COOK. ELIZABETH ELMENDAY. 42 242 Culver Road. Rochester. N. Y. COOK. FERN M- RJORIE. ' 39 French Younqwooa, Pa. COOPER. DAVID BYRON. 41 Pol. Science 4871 Jefferson St.. Bellaire. Ohio COPE. STANTON ELIJAH. ' 42 Zoology R. F. D. 2. Winchester. Ind. CORKE. LOIS ELIZABETH. ' 41 Pol. Science 267 Clark St.. Westfield. N. J. CORNFELD. HELEN ETHEL. ' 42 2109 N. 33rd St.. Philadelphia, Pa. CORYA. PATRICIA. ' 42 34 Walbrook Road, Scarsdale. N. Y. COSINUKE. JOHN ALEXANDER, ' 41 Engineering 2601 W. 7th St.. Chester. Pa. COURANT. ERNST DAVID. ' 40 Chemistry 142 Calton Road. New Rochelle, N. Y. COVv ' DEN. D.AVID S.. ' 42 58 Spirea Drive, Dayton. Ohio COWIE. DEAN BRUCE. ' 39 Physics 2f8 N. Narberth Ave.. Narberth. Pa. COX. ALFRED DAVIES. Jr.. ' 40 Engineering 1607 Keystone Ave.. Upper Darby, Pa. CRAIG, LAWRENCE CAREY. ' 39 Zoslogv 460 Riverside Drive. New Y ' ork. N. Y. CREIGHTON, ROBERT HERVY ' JERMAIN, ' 59 Chemistry 515 E!ni Ave., Swarllimore, Pa. CRESSON, SAMUEL LUKENS. ' 39 Zoology 527 Rivervlcw Roaci, Swartlimore, Pa. CROSBY, HELEN PRATT. 40 Psychology 1G50 Harvard St., Washington, D. C. CROTHERS. CHARLES HENRY. ' 40 Botany 146 Collingwood Ave., Detroit. Mich. CROWELL, DOROTHY WALWORTH: ' 42 Douglas Road. Chappaqua. N. Y. CROWLEY, JOHN CRANE. -41 Economics 152 Colton Ave.. Redwood City, Calif. CUNNINGHAM. SUZ. ' KNNE. ' 40 English 43 Park Road, Maplewood, N. J. CUPriT, DOROTHY JUNE. ' 40 English 205 Sylvania Place. Westfield. N. J. CUfiTIS, .lEANNE H.VIH.XW.M ' , •42 8 Franklin Place, Summit, N. J. CUSTER, THOMAS GOODWIN, .(O Chemistry Avon Old Farms, Avon. Conn. DARLINGTON. CHARLES LeROY, 42 Chemistry 422 Chambers Ave., Camden, N. J. DAVIDSON. DnWHT SANGER. 39 English 375 N ' - End Ave., New York, N. S ' . DAVIES. .NIARGAREr ANNE. 42 Classics Maxwell Field, Montgomery. Alabama D. VIS, ANNE SH. W. 41 English 553 Highland Drive. Indianapolis, Ind. D.AVIS. JEAN K.NOX. 39 English 2213 Delamere Drive. Cleveland. Ohio DE.AN, CHARLOTFE. 39 French 236-20 Warwick Ave.. Douglaston, N. Y. DECKER. LOIS PATRICIA, 42 748 Vallamonl Drive, Williamsport. Pa. DEGUTIS. ANTHONY JOSEPH. -41 Engineering 818 Morion Ave.. Chester. Pa. DELAPLAINE, JOHN WATSON, 41 Engineering 106 Cornell Ave., Swartlimore. Pa. DERECKTOR. ROBERT EDWARD. 42 Engineering 4 Sycamore Ave.. While Plains, N. Y. DEWALD, PAUL ADOLPH, ' 42 277 W. End Ave., New York. N. Y. DEWEESE, BARBARA ANNE, i English 1727 Pepper Ave., Lincoln, Nebraska DIETZ, ROVN ' LAND ERNEST, ' 42 Pol. Science 2943 Fairfield Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio DIETZ. WILLIAM HARRY. 42 2803 Monroe St., Wilmington, Del. DIMPFL, RICHARD ALBERT, ' 39 Philosophy 138 PenhursI St.. Rochester. N. Y. DOBBINS, EDWARD L. D.. 39 Economics 104 Garrison Ave.. Battle Creek. Mich. DODGE. DIANA. ' 42 English 353 Riverside Drive. New York, N. Y. DONNELLY, FREDERICK STOCKH.AM, ' 41 219 Tunbridge Rd., Baltimore, Md. DORISS. WILLIAM HOWARD. 39 Economics 13 Maher Ave., Greenwich. Conn. DOUGLASS. ANN ELIZABETH. 39 Psychology 144 Hempstead St.. New London. Conn. DOUGLASS. WALTER LANDON. Jr., 42 Physics t44 Hempstead St.. New London. Conn. DRIVER, ANNA HILDRED, 41 7929 Park Ave., Elkins Park. Pa DRURY. RICHARD BOONE. 41 Engineering 5023 Wisconsin Ave., Washington. D. C. DUNLAP, RALPH IRVIN. Jr.. 40 .■;..Chemisirv 1338 Mound Ave.. Jacksonville. III. DUNNING, MARY ELIZABETH. English Westlown. Pa. DURKEE. ISABEL SIDES. 41 236 E. Commerce St., Bridgelon, N. J. DUTTON. JOHN C. •30 :Engineering 2242 Pioneer Road, Evanslon, III. EARLL. ELIZABETH EUSTACE, ■41 5045 Reno Road, N. W.. Washington. D. C. EAST, FAE ETHELDRA. 40 English 4338 Forest Lane. Washington, D. C. EASTWICK. MARTHA McILVAIN. History 2510 Kenoak Road. Baltimore, Md. EBERLE. CHARLES ALBERT. Jr.. ' 40 Engineering 105 E. Durham St.. Philadelphia. Pa. EBERLE. G. RICHARD. ' 41 103 E. Durham St.. Philadelphia. Pa. EDMUNDS, CHARLES WALLIS, ' 39 English 1610 Cambridge Road, Ann Arbor, Mich. EDWARDS. MARIAN lONE. ' 40 Economics Coraopolis Heignts, Coraopolis, Pa. ELIAS, BARBARA. 42 448 Central Park West, New York, N. Y. ELIAS. JOSEPHINE. ' 40 French Oregon Road. Armonk. N. Y ' . ELLIS. MARY DOAN, ' 40 History West Grove, Pa. EMERSON. NANCY, ' 41 23 Everett Ave., Providence. R. I. ENGLISH. DORIS LOUISE, ' 40 English 96 Park Ave., Vv ' orlendvke. N. J. ENION, RICHARD ALLEN. ' 41 Engineering 8 Parkway Ave., Cliester. Pa. ENTENBERG. BARBARA JEAN, ' -jo Psy.l,..lnKy 570 CcnIrnI I ' i.rk Wcsl. Ni w Y„rk, N. Y. EPSTEIN. SAMUEL ATKINS. ' 59 Pol- S.im.c 62 Ellin lon Si., LongrtK ' aJ{ w. IMiiss. ERDMAN. FRANCIS WICKOK, 41 EnBii.r.rinK 417 W. ChelkT Ave.. Pliil.uUpl.hi. I ' „, ERICHSEN, HANS SKABO. ' 30 1 ' i ' -i ' -fy 131 Kent St.. Brooklyn. N. Y. ERNST. DOROTHY JESSIE. n roi 71 si Si.. Brooklyn. N. Y. EVANS. ELEANOR GREER. ' 40 RsyrJioloRy 3-24 Brookline Boulevard. Brookline. I n. EVANS. THOMAS PASSMORE. ' 40. EnsineerinK Pennsylvania Ave., Avondale, |- a. EVVING. JOY FRANCES. ' 42 lf)4 W. Horlter St.. Pliilaclelpliia. Pn. FAISON. WILLIAM ALEXANDER, ' 42 Engineering Chestnut St.. Cliester. Pa. FERGUSON. JOHN BENJAMIN, Jr.. 41 Engiisli 64 1 Q N. 131I1 St.. Pliilaclelpliia. Pa. FERRISS. .lEAN ELIZABETH, ' 41 20 VV. lOlh St.. New York. N. Y. FINDLEY. THOMAS WAGNER. ' 42 Chennslry Student llealtli Service. Univ. of Pennsylvania, Pliiladelpliia, Pa, FISHER, RALPH HART, ' 39 Economics I I El Sueno, Orinda, Calir. FLANDERS. NANCY, ' 40 Mathematics Springfield, Vt. FORNVVALT. GEORGE ROBERT. ' 39 Zoology I 12 W ' alsK Road, Lansdowne, Pa. FOSTER, ROBERT WILSON, 40 Economics Monlicello. III. FRANCK. RUTH ANNETTE. ' 41 French 70 Avieniore Drive, New Roclielie, N. Y. FROST. ROGER ALAN, ' 42 33 Massachusetts Blvd.. Bellerose. N. Y. FRYE, ROBERT MILES. ' 41 Economics 64 Hansbury Ave.. Newark. N. J. FUDAKOWSKI. ITIOMAS IGNACE. 42 English Indian Chase Drive, Greenwich, Conn. GARWOOD. JUSTINE. 40 English R. F. D. 3. Media, Pa. GEDDES. WILLIAM WORTH. ' 41 21 Greenacres Ave.. Scarsdale. N. Y. GEE. MILDRED. ' 39 Economics 146 Maple St.. Brooklyn. N. Y. GEMBERLING. ARTHUR RAYMOND. 41 Woodstown. N. J. GEMBERLING. CHARLES ALLEN. ' 40 Zoology Woodstown, N. J. GERRY, KATHRYN ELIZABETH, ' 42 Weslaco, Texas GERSTLEY. ELAINE BACHARACH. 41 4 Surrey Road, Melrose Park, Pa. GIBSON. KAITIERINE JEANNE. ' 30 French 5700 Massacnusetls Ave., Washington, D. C. GILLETTE. ELIZABETH MANN. ' 42 English 303 Little Falls St., Falls Church, Va. GILRUTH. JANE. ' 40 Philosophy 7206 Euclid Ave.. Chicago. 111. GOODMAN. JAMES STANLEY. Ui Zoology 177 Porter St.. Warren, Ohio GOODMAN. LESTCR. ' 42 5 1 Main St., ShenandoaK. Pa. GOODWIN. CLARIBEL. 40 French 338 Eighth Ave., LaGrange, 111. GOODWIN. MARY LILLIAN. ' 39 Economics 338 Eighth Ave.. LaGrange. III. GOSHORN. ROBERT MLISSELWHITE. ' 39 Philosophy Malvern. Pa. GOUl-D. BARBARA. ' 41 251 Farrington Ave.. N. Tarrytown, N. Y. GRAVES. ELIZABETH KIRKPATRICK. 40 English 420 Melrose Ave., Winter Park, Fla. GREEN, EDWARD FAIRCHILD, 40 Economics 2473 Queenston Road, Cleveland Heights, Ohio GREEN, ELEANORE MAYO, ' 42 Zoology 407 New Broadway, Brooklawn. N. J. GREEN, HORACE PLANKINGTON. 42 Chemistry 1 E. Jefferson St., Media, Pa. GREENE, NORMA L.. ' 41 102 Cooper Ave., Montclair. N. J. GRIFFIN, JOHN KENNEDY. 42 Economics 2102 Timlin Road, Portsmoutli. Ohio GRINNELL, MOLLY KING, ' 39 English 380 Briarwood Lane, Ravinia, 111. GRISCOM. MARY LIPPINCOTT. ' 42 314 E. Central Ave., Moorestown, N. J. GRISV ' OI.I). IIOPE, ' 40 Psychology 2957 Eaton Road, Cleveland, Ohio ( ;ross. .viark. ' 39 „ Philosophy 30i3 S. Calhoun St., Fort Wayne, Ind. (dlli;. ROIll.kl VN ' IIJ.IAM. ' 42 Zoiilogy 48 Railroad St., Dunhar. Pa. GULICK. CLARENCE SWII T, ' 41 Ii ;onof.iic. 14 Sussex Ave, Bronxvillc, N, Y, HALL. ROBIJM IXJNALD. ' 40 Engineering R. F. D. 4. VVcKl Chester, Pa. HANDLER, JEAN H., ' ., Ilistr.ry 1 1 Warren Place. Montclair, N. .). IIANNAY, NORMAN BRUCE, ' 42 Chernisiry 2.|(j Biishnell Ave., San Antonio. ' lexas HANNUM, EDWARD ELLIS. ' 41 Engineering 18 Oherlin Ave., .Sw. ' irlhriiore. Pa. HARDING, PEGGY, ' 40 Psychology 58 Orlin Ave.. S, E., Minneapolis, Minn. HARGREAVES, ANN, ' 40 Psychology 10 W. I5lh St., New Y ,rk. N. Y. HARMAN, ARTHUR, 41 E.:or.omi.:« 338 While Hor.se Pike, Oaklyn, . . J. HARMAN, DAVID, 39 Pol, Srience 338 White Horse Pike, Oaklyn, .N. J. HARPER. EDITH LEWIS, ' 40 Philosophy 3037 Hazel Ave.. Philadelphiii. Pa. HARRINGTON. ELIZABETH ANNE, 39 Botany 2 Highland St., Du Bois. Pa. HARRIS. RAYMOND RICHARDS. 39 Chemistry 360 Tenth St.. Salem. Ohio HART. BEATRICE LAURA. 39 Zoology University Apartments, Durham, . C. HART. JOHN LIMOND. ' 42 History 2440 N. Craig Ave., Altadcna, Calil. HART, NANCY ELLEN, ' 42 35 Middlefield Drive, West Hartford. Conn. HARTMAN. ARTHUR CARMAN. ' 40 Engineering 133 E. Roland Road. Chester, Pa. HASTINGS, MARY JANE, ' 39 Economics 700 North Front St., Milton, Pa. HAVERSTICK, HARRY HOYT, Jr., 40 Economics R. F. D. 6. Lancaster. Pa. HAVILAND. ESTHER UNDERHILL, 42 PleasanKille, N. Y. HEGNER, FRANK ARNOLD, .Ir.. ■4 513 Hill Street, Sewickley, Pa. HEILMAN, MARLIN GRANT, ' 41 1025 Carlisle St., Tarentum, Pa. HEINE, ILSE, ' 40 Psychology 8208 Grenfell Ave., Kew Gardens, . Y HENDERSON, EDITH GUILD, 42 Chemistry 1250 N. Doheny Drive, Hollywood, Cauf. HENDERSON, EDWARD DREWRY, ■40 Zoology 801 Ninth Ave.. S. W.. Rochester. Minn. HENDRICKS, OLIVE GRAHAM, 39 Engineering 265 Wyoming Ave.. Maplewood. X. J. HENLE, GUY, 41 West Hartsdale Road. Hartsdale. N. Y. HENLE. PETER. Economics West Hartsdale Road. Hartsdale. N. Y. HERNDON. DALE L.. ' 39 Chemistry 2 College Lane. Haverford. Pa. HEROLD. DORIS, 39 English 90 Morningside Drive. New York. N. Y. HILL, ERNEST H.. Jr.. ' 41 95 East 1st North Street. Salt Lake Citv. Utah HILL. JOANNA. 41 Botany Rose Hill Farm. Richmond. Ind. HOAGLAND. MARY, ' 39 Zoology 244S Soulhwav Dri ' e, CoIumhu5, Ohio HOESLI, LYSBETH. 42 ' English 319 AsK Street. Winnetka. III. HOFF. DAGNY, 40 English 32 High St., Turners Falls. Mass. HOFMANN. CHARLOTTE MARIE. 42 4340 N. Capitol Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. HOLBROOK. ELIZABETH MARJORIE. 42 Zoology 9 BeacK St., Maplewood. N. J. HOLBROOK. MARY LOUISE. ' 41 25 W. Kirke St.. Che T Chase. Md. HOMANS. ALAN. ' 40 Economics 1824 Wilton Rd., Cleveland Heights. Ohio HOUGH, JOHN S.. ' 40 Pol. Science Connoquenessing Ter.. Ellwood Cit -. Pa. HOWARD. HELEN LOUISE. ' 41 Psychology 646 Argvie Road. BrookN-n. X. Y. HOWARD. JOHN MARTIN. ' 42 . . . Engineering 503 E. Jefferson St., Media, Pa. HOWELL. SAM TEMPLE. 40 History 78 E. Main St.. Ovsler Bay. N. Y. HOWES. ESTHER GREELEY, ' 40 Zoology 44 State RoHil. Media. Pa. HUBBARD. A.NDRK. yj Pl.ilosopl.y 14S S. Broadway, While Plains. N. Y. HUBBELL. DOROTHY PETERS. 40 Che.uisiry ()g Eirst St., Garden City. N. Y. HUGANIR, WILLIAM LEO.NARD. 42 Engineering R. 1- . D. 2, Norristown. Pa. HUHN, JOHN RAHUE. Ill, 40 Pol. Science 105 E. Stiles Ave., Collingswood, N. J. HULL, GEORGE IRVING, i English 1 1 Westway, Bronxviiie. N. Y. HUNTER. MARGARET ELEANOR, ' jg Psychology 6923 Sherman St.. Philadelphia. Pa. HURST, ELIZABETH SALTONSTALL. 40 Psychology 1068 Kensington Ave., Plainheld, N. J. ILLMER, ALEXANDRA. 39 Mathematics 24 N. Church St.. Cortland, N. Y. INGERSOLL. RAYMOND CRARY, ' 40 Engineering 380 Clinton Ave.. Brooklyn. N. Y. ISGRIG, WALTER ERLINC, ' 40 Pol. Science ' 547 Upper Parkway South. Wauwatosa. Wis. ■lACKSON, ELIZABETH HARWELL, U ' Pol. Science 421 King George Ave.. S. W. Roanoke. Va. .lACKSON. JAY WiLLITS. 40 Economics 43 Duck Pond Road, Glen Cove. N. Y. JACKSON, JEAN WIIT, 40 Economics 16608 Aldersyde Drive. Shaker Heights. Ohio JAKLE. EDWARD A.. 40 History 603 N. San Francisco St.. Flagstaff. Ariz. JAMES. MARY ISABEL. 39 French 1304 Broadway. Bethlehem. Pa. JENKINS. GWEN, ' 41 History 241 Allen Lane, Philadelphia. Pa. JOBSON. CHARLES REUBEN. ' 42 Engineering Strafford. Pa. JOHNSON. BATES, 42 4115 N. Illinois St., Indianapolis, Ind. JOH.NSON. CARL F.. ' 40 Economics 217 Springside Ave.. Piltslield, Mass. JOHNSON, DONALD E., ' 40 Engineering 44 Abernethy Drive, Trenton, N. J. JOHNSON. ELEANOR MARIE. ' 39 107 80th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. JOHNSON. ETHEL MAY. 42 Pol. Science 301 E. Wharton Ave.. Glenside. Pa. JOHNSON. MARGARET ZEL, 41 Botany 214 Avon Road, Narberth. Pa. JONES, ANNE COMFORT. ' 42 English Glaslyn-Chatham. Atlantic City. N. J JONES. EDMUND. ' 39 Economics 227 Haverford Ave.. Swarthmore. Pa. JONES. ELEANOR McL. -4. English 983 Memorial Drive. Cambrid ge. Mass. JONES. HELEN PALMER. 39 Zoology 608 N. Chester Road. Swarthmore. Pa. JONES, JOHN LAUER, Jr.. ' 41 Engineering 214 Rutledge Avenue. Rutledge. Pa. JONES. WELLINGTON DOWNING. Jr.. ' 39 Pol. Science .,„ 5603 Kenwood Ave.. Chicago. III. JONES, WILLIAM ROBINSON. ' 42 Engineering „ _ 6324 N. 21st St.. Philadelphia. Pa. JUDSON. CHARLES MORRELL. 40 Chemistry 34 7 Northampton St.. N. W.. Washington. D. C. JUMP. WILLIAM ASHBY. -39 .Economics 3247 Patterson St., Chevy Chase, D. C. KALB. JOHN WARREN. ' 40 Engineering „ ..,„,.,„.„ - ' °3 Bradley Avenue. Parma. Ohio KALTENBACH. ETHEL LOUISE. Q Economics ,,.„,„ 38 Second Ave.. Royersford. Pa. KARLOW. S. PETCR. 4, Engineering 201 W. 54th St., New York, N Y KAUFMANN, JOHN HEIDEN, 40 Ec rlon.ics . ' AT, .,A.,., ,.,. 4 8 Central Park West, New York. N. Y. KAUFMANN, PETER. ' 39 German ,,„_, _,„ „ . Charlottenburg 9. Berlin. Germany KEELER. KATHERINE BURTON, 42 „.. English „„,„„_ ,,.. ., 252 Boulevard, Scarsdale. N. Y. KEHLER, .lAMES GRANT Jr.. 40 Zoology KELLOCK. JANE, l. ' l. -l. l Si KELLY. lOHN FRANK. ' 42 ' ' :i ZL ,,„.,„ „  , „,..,„ 6726 Trinity St., Philadelphia, Pa. KENT. CONSTANCE RYDER. ' 42 20 Brighton Road. Springfield. Ohio KEITNER. FRED. ' 42 English 2325 13th St., N. W.. Washington. D. C. KIESS. MARGARET l-LORENCE. •4. Maihen.aiics 2928 Brandywine St.. N. W., Washington. D. C KING. .M. RGARET H.- .EN. 39 French ■ -■■. , ...,.,.,,,,,. Beach Drive, Noroton, Conn. KIRN. HLNRIEHA GKO.nI.nIE. ■41 ,., .„ , 320 E. Main St.. Lancaster. Ohio KL. ' LR, J. NE SPROUL, 39 English i.-K,.. .. . . Lapidea Manor. Chester. Pa. KNAPP, LAURA SHERMAN, 40 History .... Melville Road. Farmingdale, N. Y. KNorr. RUTH gillmore. 41 „.......; ,, ,. ,„ , i - ' ' D., Georgetown, Conn. KNUD-H, NSEN, JAMES, 4. French ,. ., „ Charlotte Amalie. St. Thomas. V. I. KNUD-HANSEN. JOHN. 4. Zoology ,.„.„„„ Charlotte Amalie. St. Thomas. V. I. KRATIFINMAKER, HERMAN CHARLES, 39 Economics „ 419 Haddon Ave.. Colling.swood, N. J. KROM. EDWIN HERMANCE, Jr.. ' 42 ,,. ,r, . .. . 7 Malba Drive. Whitestone. N. Y. KUECHLE, JOHN DANIEL, 41 Engineering 910 Adams St., Wausau. Wis KUHN, ANNA MARGARET 42 German 547 W. OIney Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. KURIZ. ROBERT EDWARD. 4. Engineering 403 N. E. 39lh St.. Miami. Fla, LACY. CREIGHTON BOUTELLE. ' 4. Pol. Science 15 Avenue Petain. Shanghai. China LADENBURG. EVA MARIE. ' 39 Psychology 35 Princeton Ave.. Princeton. N. J. LANGSDALE. LORAN BONSALL. 41 Economics 2402 Allendale Road. Baltimore. Md. LANGSTON. DOUGLAS HAIG. 40 Economics 143 Hicks St.. Brooklyn. N. Y. LARKIN. BAINBRIDGE MORSE. 39 Economics Georgetown. Mass. LASHLY. ,)EAN ELLEN. 40 English 20 Windemere Place. St. Louis. Mo. LAX. STEPHEN GIRARD. 41 Pol. Science 6609 N. 10th St., Philadelphia. Pa. LEADER. HENRY BOYER. 42 Pol. Science Route 2. Y ork. Pa. LEBER, ALVVIN MAKEPEACE, ' 40 Botany West Nyack. N. Y. LEEPER. MARGARET FRASIER. 39 Mathematics 33 Sellers Ave.. Upper Darby. Pa. LEICH. JOHN FOSTER. ' 42 10 Chandler Ave., Evansville. Ind LEINROTH. ROBERT GEORGE. II. ' 39 Economics 920 S. 48th St., Philadelphia. Pa. LEOPOLD, PATRICIA ELAINE, ' 41 Pol. Science no Simpson Road. Ardmore. Pa. LETTS. ELIZABETH JEAN. ' 42 English 261 W. Commerce St.. Bridgeton. N. J. LEWINE. HOWARD BERG. 41 French 220 E. 73rd St.. New York. N. Y. LEWIS. ALBERT HARRY. ' 42 English 525 West End Ave.. New York. N. Y. LINDLEY. SARAH RUTH, ' 42 Chemi.str ' 5201 Park Ave.. Indianapolis. Ind. LINDSAY. S. LLY. 39 .I.English 277 Park Ave., New York. N. Y. LINDSLEY. KATHERINE MERRILL. ' 40 Psychology 600 Mt. Pleasant Ave.. Livingston. N. J. LIPMAN. JAMES OLMSTEAD. ' 40 : Zoology 736 Harvard Ave.. Swarthmore. Pa. LIPPINCOTT. RICHARD EWING. 39 Economic. R. F. D. 3. Media. Pa. LIPPI.NCOIT. SARAH LEE E.. 42 Astron-my 266 W. Tulpehocken St.. Philadelohia. Pa LITPLF. EDWARD SOUTHARD. 39 Economic. 1002 Grand Ave.. Toledo. Ohio LIVINGSTON. WILLI. M TOLIVER. ' 39 ZoHlngy Na rliez. Miss. LLOYD. SHERMAN COXE. ,1r.. ' 40 Engineering 1402 Gilpin Ave., Wilmington. Del. LOEB. VIRGIL. Jr.. ' 42 ..Zoology 727 Radcliffe Ave.. St. Louis. Mo. LOGAN. ISABEL. 42 Candler. N. C. LOHMAN. LAURENCE. 42 Economics 752 Forest Ave., Rye. N. Y. LOHR. FREEMAN WILBURN. 42 Engineering 64 Ely Place, East Orange. N. J LOMBARD. PETER. ' 39 Engineering 201 Elm Ave.. Swarthmore. Pa. LORENZ. VWWAV BOAI.T. M Chemistry ■520 Ricliicway Roud, Duyton, Oliiu LOW, MAR ' IIN LAURLN ' I ' . ' .40 i-coruiinics C ' unipton RoucI, Wy(jminy, Oliio LUBS. KAlUkYN RinU, p l-rend. I goo (ireeiiliill Avr,, Wilniingtun. Del, LUCKIE. SAMUIiL BLAIR. Ill, 4i ■■ Hnsuu-pring 3gi Girartl Avt ' ., Hast Aurora. N, Y. LYKENS. GEORGE BRINTON. -jy Knglial, lO W. Langlninif Avt.. Llunfrcli. i ' a. LYON. LAURA LORE. 41 115 E. 861I. St.. New York. N. Y. LYONS. ALMA VIRGINIA. 42 430O Ruland Ave.. Balliniure. Md. McALISTER. DALTON CLIVE. 4X Rol. Science gi7 VV. Wildwood Ave.. Furl Wayne. Ind McBEAN. RETER COCHRANE. 41 History 7i Suiiiiiiil Ave., Bronxville. N. Y. McClelland, sally. 39 Economics Jarretlowii, Fa, McCONE. HENRY EDGAR, ' o History 425 Harvard Ave., Swart liinore. Ha. McCONNELL. BRUCE BOWER. ' 41 Cl.emisiry 1221 Wakeling St.. Pliiladelpliia, Pa. McCORD. MARTHA B.. 40 History 01 Chestnut Lane. Wayne. Pa. McCOR.MACK. ROBERT MORRIS. 40 Zoology 2104 N. 6tli St.. Slieboygan. Wis. McCOY, ROBERT THORPE. 42 Cliemistry New Vienna. Oliio McMULLEN. JEAN. ' 41 Pol. Science 626 Jaccard Place. Joplin. Mo. McNeill. EDWARD ALLEN. •41 Engineering 19 W. Walnut Lane. Pliiladelpliia. Pa. MacDONALD. ELIZABETH JEAN. 40 Zoology Lingnan University. Canton, Cliina MacPHAIL. LELAND STANFORD. 39 Economics 7 Reoeau Drive, Larclmiont. N. Y. MacPHAIL. WILLI.AM CURTIS. 41 Economics 7 Rebeau Drive, LarcKmont. N. Y. MACOMBER. MARGARET ALLEN. 42 Central Village. Westport. Mass. MACY. DOROTHY. 40 Zoology Hotel Winslow. 45 E. 55tli St., New York. N. Y. MAGINNISS. GERTRUDE ELAINE. 59 Mathematics 5836 Vv ' arrington Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. MAGUIRE. JEAN CALDWELL. 40 Psychology 7015 Boyer St.. Philadelphia. Pa. MALCOLM. ELIZABETH GARITJWAITE. 4 ' 36 Salter Place. Maplewood. N. J. MANDELBAUM. BARBARA JANE. English 1301 N. Stale St., Chicago, III. MANNING. CAROLINE WOODS. ' 42 QO Hillcrest Terrace. Meriden. Conn. MARCLEY. BERTON PAYSON. 41 Pol. Science 35 Clark St.. Brooklyn. N. Y. MARSHALL. ANN PENNOCK. 40 English 1517 Pacific Ave.. Atlantic City. N. J. MARSHALL. JOHN FORBES. ' 4 Physics 373 Bleecker St., New York, N. Y. MARSHALL. ROBERT BRUCE. Jr.. i Zoology 22Q N. Heights Ave., Youngstown. Ohio MARTENET. RACHEL LaFETRA, ' sq Botany 1703 Park Ave.. Baltimore. Md. MARTIN, CHARLES COPELAND. 42 Chemistry 926 Buchanan Ave.. Lancaster. Pa. MARTIN. JANE WARD. ' 39 Economics 143 Parkway Ave., Chester. Pa. MASON. RICHARD BENJAMIN. ' 39 Engineering 138 Rutledge Ave.. Rutledge. Pa. MASSEY. RUTH LYLE. U ' English 6441 Overtrook Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. MATSUOKA. YOKO. 39 Pol. Science 147 Ka o-Macni. Koisnikawa-Ku, Tokyo, Japan MAXWELL. HAZEL ELLEN. ' 42 3824 Waldo Ave.. New York. N. Y. MAWHINNEY. THOMAS ANDREW. 40 English 203 N. Forklanding Road. Maple Shade. N. J. M.MER. .M. VIRGINIA. 40 Zoology 120 St. Marks Ave.. Brooklyn. N. Y. MAYS. E.MILY CARR, ' 42 Glencoe. Md. MEADER. KENNETH RANDALL, ' 39 English 112 Rutgers Ave.. Swarthmore. Pa. MELVILLE. EDITH JANE, ' 41 English 3459 Midvale Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. MENNIG. JOHN BARNHARD. ' 42 Pol. Science Orchard Park, N. Y. MERCI ' R. LEONARD crjlJLSON, ' 40 E ;on««.ir 2617 IlirHt ' I ' crracc, Oakmont. Pa. .Mi-RRiri. ii:an wi;ndy. v,. p„i. Science 30 Merritt Road, I ' uririingdaic. N. Y. mi:yij iioi I . I ' d r UNA. Special Wilckeiitmlramc 21, Heidelberg, Germany MiciiAiJ.. i:i,i Ai)i;rii irene, ' 39 Phiio opi.y 300 I ' ark Ave., Swartlimore. Pu. Mil I LIN, CIIARLi:S I. R.. ' .lo English a N. Slate St., Dover. Del. Mil IJ.IN. WALKER I.YLi:. I, . ' 40 English 2 N. Stale St., Dover. Del, MILLER. GLE.NN EARLi:. ' 4, Hi«i«ry Bartol Ave.. Ridley Park. Pa. MILLER. JOHN ANTHONY. ■4. Engineering 411 I liayer Road, Swarlfimore, Pa. MILLER. MARCIA JI-AN. ' 42 6949 Waverly Si.. Bctliesda. .Md. MILLER. SEYMOUR. 39 7.«ology 1308 Pennsylvania Ave,, Wilmington. Del. MILLS. SARAH D.. -4, 314 Bryn Mawr Ave,. Cynwyd. Pa. MILLS. VICI ' OR MOORE. ' 4, English 322 Claremonl Ave., Montclair. N. I, MILNE. MARY LYDIA. ' 42 French 11 Greenough Place, Newport, R, I. MITCHELL. BE1TT LOU. 40 : Economics 630 University Place, Swarthmore. Pa. MOORE. MINNIE THO.MPSON. ' 40 History 16 S. Plaza Place, Atlantic City, N. J. MOREHEAD. BARBARA HAVILAND. ' 41 410 Lodges Lane. Eikins Park, Pa. MORGAN. MARGARET ANNE. ' 42 31 Warren Way, Watertown. Conn. MORNINGSTAR. EDWARD MARTIN. -59 English 103 W alsh Road. Lansdowne. Pa. MORRIS. ROBERT H.. ' 39 Chemistry 142 Vassar St., Rochester. N. Y. MORRISON. PETER REED. 40 Zoology 1723 LaMont St.. Washington. D. C. MORSE. VIRGINIA WOODWORTH. 39 Fine Arts 613 James St., Syracuse. .N. Y. MOSES. RICHARD PHILLIPS. 40 Economics 130 Stelle Ave.. Plainfteld. N. J. MURCH. ELIZABETH ROBINSON, i Psychology R. F. D. 3. Wilmington. Del. MURRAY. PAUL COOPER. ■4, Psychology Langley. Va. MUSTIN. GILBERT BARCLAY. ' 42 Engineering Herford Place. Lansdowne. Pa. MYERS. JOHN KLAHR. ' 40 Pol. Science 803 Liberty Place. Clarion. Pa. NATHAN. NL RTHA AN.N. ' 41 211 E. 35th St.. New York. X. Y. NEALE. ROBERT D.. Jr.. ' 39 Pol. Science 17 Oak Knoll Gardens. Pasadena. CaliL NELSON. DOROTHEA PENNINGTON. 41 French 3419 Stettinius Ave.. Cincinnati. Ohio NESBITT. ROBERT DOVv ' DS. 42 Zoology 408 Broadview Road. Upper Darby. Pa. NEVv ' BORG. BARB. RA, ' 41 History ' 75 V. 72nd St.. New Y ' ork. N. Y. NEWTON. FRANCES MAY. 41 Mathematics Portion Road. Lake Ronkonkoma. N. Y. NICHOLSON. KATHLEEN JULIET. 42 Chemistry 218 Ellis Ave., Wheaton, III. NOBLE, MARY ELIZ. BETH, 42 102 N. 8th St.. Allenlown. Pa. NOEHREN. BEATRICE CAROLINE. ' 41 88 Morris Ave.. Buffalo. N. . NORTHUP. JANE BRADLEY. ' 41 2114 bbottsford Ave., Duluth. Minn. OLDS. DAVID McNEIL. ' 39 Hutor 953 LaCIair St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. OLIVER. DAVID ROBERT. 41 Economics Beverly Road, Burlington, N. J. OLIVER. KATHLEEN GISLASON. 42 2804 E. 132nd St.. Cleveland. Ohio OPPENLANT)ER. ELIZABETH ANNE. 42 12S Re. Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. OSLAND-HILL. M.ARIE. 40 German Garden Cottage. Beaconsneld, England OSMUN. HELEN EDITH. 41 French 722 Clarendon Road, Narberlh. Pa. OSTRANTDER. THEDA WILDER. ' 40 Psychology 4134 Lark St.. San Diego. Calif. OTTENBERG. J. MES SIMON. 39 Pol. Science 161 W. 86tb St.. New York. N. Y. PAINE, RICHMOND SHEPERD. .ii . Zoology 6-(0l BoecliwuocI Drive, Chevy Ciuise. Md. PAINTER, MARY SM. LI. RIDGE. 42 Chemistry -1817 Pre nt . -f.. S. Minneapolis, Minn, PAQUET, WILHELMINE, -.s ,. Fine Arts r- Stliaunminkni, Prnnkfurl am Main, Germany PARKER, DON. LD GR.WES, .ii 1 1 5O . . Broadwav, linkers. N, Y, PARKER, MARY ANN, ai :■ ■ English 1218 Caniphell Ave.. S. ' .. Roanoke. Va. PARSONS. JACQUELINE M. RY. 10 English Flora Dale. Pa. PASCAL. JOAN. ' 30 Psychology Colcylown Road. Weslport. Conn. PAITERSON. W ' lLLI. ' XM DOERR. 39 Engineering 1533 Hunting Park Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. PAXSON, MARY H., -10 English 524 Hamilton St., Norristovvn, Pa. PEASE, RICHARD BURNETT. 41 Physics 1719 Becker St.. Schenectady, N. Y. PEASLEE, DOROTHY WADDINGTON, 42 :.. History Mantoloking, N. J. PEELLE. ROBERT BEAllT. ' sij Engineering 29 Euclid St., Forest Hills. N. Y. PEIRCE. ELIZABETH GILE, 42 :,■ - 14S Everit St., New Haven, Conn, PELZ, DONALD CAMPBELL. 42 ■■■■ 18 Mount Jov Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. PEMBERTON. JOHN DeJARNETIT;. Jr.. ' .|0 Pol. Science 930 8lh St.. S. ' .. Rochester. Minn. PENNRICH. CARL HENRY. -12 Engineering 2 rue Kindermans, Brussels, Belgium PERLZWEIG, JUDITH MARGARET. Ui Greek Duke Hospital, Durham, N. C. PETTY. JESSIE ELOISE. ' 39 ■ English Royal Yorke Apartment. Pittsburgh. Pa. PIERCE. RUTH HELEN, ' 40 .•■ ' °°}°S ' 125 Columbus Drive, Tenafly, N. J. PIKE, ANNE HOLLINGSWORTH, 42 Woodward Ave., Moylan, Pa. PIRNIE, MORGAN, ' 41 Pol Science 67 Dunmoreland St.. Springfield. Mass. PLATT. BETSY, ' 40 . - - Zoology 45 Maywood Drive. Danville. III. POOLE. ROBERT W ' ., 40 ■ Economics 713 W. 32nd St.. Wilmington. Del. PORTER. HELEN. 39 f 7, ' = ' ' 1225 E. 25lh St., Tulsa, Okla. POST, ARTHUR WILLIS, ' 40 Engineering 250 Park Ave., Westbury, N. Y. POTTS, JAMES WEBB, 41 Zoology R. D. 2. Consholiocken, Pa. POWERS, SAMUEL RALPH, Jr., ' 41 ..Zoology 106 Morningside Drive. New York. N. Y. PRIBRAM. OTTO. 40 ■ ■■; ■■ • ■■■■■ Prague XII, Kopernikova 63. Czechoslovakia PRICE, CELIA ROGERS, ' 39 French New Hope, Pa. PRICE. ETHEL vanRODEN, English 5946 Lancaster Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. PRICE. WILLIAM H., ' 39 History 726 W. Beach Blvd.. Pass Christian, Miss. PULVERMAN. MARY WALTER. ' 41 ; •■••■■ 21 Hedge Place. Kingston. Pa. PURDY, ADALYN FRANCES, 40 French 96 Sherman St.. Hartford. Conn. QUADOW. JACQUELINE MARIE. ' 42 ■ 740 Cornelia Ave.. Chicago. 111. RAKESTRAW. DOROTHY KINKADE. ' 41 Chemistry 1064 Maplecliff Drive. Lakewood. Ohio RAMSDELL, PAULINE ALDEN. ' 59 Zoalogy 51 Hudson Ave., Englewood, N. J. RAMSEY, ELIZABETH ANN, ' 42 French 620 E. Willow Grove Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. RAMSEY. HAROLD ARTHUR. 41 Engineering Big Stone Gap, Va. RANDALL. M. RGARET ELIZABETH. ' 42 Hudson View Gardens. New York. N. Y. R. YMOND. SAMUEL M.. Jr., ' 41 - Chemistry 405 Michigan Ave., Swarthniore, Pa. RAYNER, PEARCE TYLER, ' 41 Economics 3502 30th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. REDHEFFER, JOE ALEXANDER, ' 40 Engineering 257 E. Delaware Ave., Chicago, III. REED, FRED THORNTON, ' 41 ; Chemistry 12 Lafayette Road. Carney ' s Point, N, J, REED, JOHN DAVID, 41 Norwich, Conn. REID. I()ll W.XLLING. ' 40 English 622 Woodcresl Ave., Ardmore, Pa. REID, MAR.IORIE IMMSAY, 41 English Waverly Branch. Baltimore, Md. REID, SIBLEY, •41 Engineering Mahwah, N. J. RELLER, WILLIAM HARRIS, 40 Economics 6 S. 14th St., Richmond, Ind. REUNING. ERNST GUNTHER, ' o Mathematics 47 Amherst Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. REUSS, EDWARD HILARY, ' 42 Economics 261 Sycamore Ave., Merion. Pa. RHEAMS, CHARLES JOHN B., ' 42 Chemistry 503 Valley View Road, Merion, Pa. RICE, CHARLES STIX, 40 Pol. Science 6447 Cecil Ave., St. Louis, Mo. RICE. MARY AYDELOTJE. 42 History Black Mountain. N. C. RICHARDS. FREDERICK HOW. RD. 42 Zoology R. F. D. 4. West Chester. Pa. RICHARDSON. JANE STRODE. U- Philosophy 311 Lafayette Ave., Swarthmore. Pa. RICHARDSON. RUTH ANNE. ' 4 ' Botany Trevose Road. Philadelphia, Pa. RICKEY, ALICE, ' 39 Botany Country Life Acres, Clayton, Mo. RICKM. N. LUCY. 42 ri Kent Terrace. N. W. 1. London. Eng. RITTENHOUSE. JANE ADELAIDE. ' 40 French 6 College Lane, Haverford, Pa. RITTER. WILLIAM DAVID, ' 41 Chemistry 116 Lewis Ave., East Lansdowne, Pa. ROBB, JANICE ELIZABETH, 42 2413 20th St.. N. W.. Washington. D. C. ROBBINS. LEWIS MORRELL. 40 Economics Riverton Road. Riverton. N. J. ROBERTS. JOHN WATTS, ' 39 Engineering Princess Anne, Md. ROBERTS. RUTH BUCK. ' 41 Rankin Ave.. Basking Ridge. N. J. ROBESON. MARGARET ANN. 42 Beach Haven. Pa. ROBINSON. ALICE EVANS. U ' 883 8th Ave., S., St. Petersburg, Fla. ROBINSON, .lOHN MARK. ' 40 Economics 411 College Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. ROBINSON. REBECCA MARY. 4 750 Ogden Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. ROBSON. ALBERT NORVIN, 40 History Yorktown Heights. N. Y. ROCKWOOD. ROBERT BRUCE, ' 39 History Kurnool District, Kurnool, South India ROELOFS, NL RY MOORE, 40 Philosophy Glendale, Ohio ROGERS, FRANCES ELIZABETH, 40 Engli.sh 928 Haverford Road, Bryn Mawr, Pa. ROGERS. WILLL-XM HORACE. ' 41 Chemistry 38 Park Place, Geneva, N. Y. ROSENBLUM. ALEX. Jr., ' 41 Zoology 263 Gypsy Lane, Youngstown, Ohio ROSS, MICHAEL, ' 40 Economics 2310 Pine St., Philadelphia. Pa. ROUS. MARION deKAY, ' 39 English 125 E. 72nd St.. New York. N. Y. ROWAND. ROBERT ELLWOOD. ' 42 Engineering 732 Yale Ave., Swarthmore. Pa. ROY, JOSEPH ALBERT, ' 40 Engineering 93 Holly Street. New Bedford, Mass. RUSK, MARGARET ANN, ' 40 English 443 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. RYAN, MARY WEBB, ' 39 English 133 Oakleigh Road, Newton. Mass. RYDHOLM. M. RION EDITH. 40 German 2706 VVadsworth Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio SACHS, ISADORE MILTON, 40 Economics 1314 Terrill St., Chester. Pa. SALOMON. GEORGE GERHARD, 40 Classics 203 College Ave., Swarthmore, Pa. SANDERSON, JOHN PHILLIP. Jr.. 40 Pol. Science 58 Westland Ave.. Rochester. N. Y. SATTERTHWAITE. HENRY FLETCHER, 42 4 Green Ave., Lawrenceville, N. J. SAUTTER. CARL CHRISTIAN. Jr.. ' 42 Chemistry 129 Maplewood Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. SCHECHTER, ANNE CLAIRE, 40 • Psychology 562 6th St.. Habana. Cuba SCHEUER, JAMES HAAS, ' 42 Pol. Science 1 1 3 Central Park West, New York, N. . SCHOCK. PATRICIA WARD. ' 59 Economics ■ 44 Iroquois Pliice, Beaver, Pa, SCO ' lT. ANNE BOCKIUS, ' 50 ■■ l ' -nKli li Colony Fnrrn, WosI ClicsfiT, l i. SCOTT. WALTER JAMES, Jr.. ' .k Pliysits 10 ) I ' iirli Avr.. Swarllirliorc. Pa. SELLIGMAN. LUCY. ' 42 1(16 Willow Ave. llB. Louisville. Ky. SETI.OW. RICHARD BURTON. ' 41 Pliy. ' iics 1420 Grand Concourse. New York. N. Y. SEWARD. MARGOT. ' 42 P.syoliology 26a Kingsiey Ave.. Palo Alto. CnliF. SHALLCROSS. META. ' 41 English Odessa. Del. SHARPLES. THOMAS DAVY. 40 Engineering 220 Orange Grove Ave.. S. Pasadena. Calif. SHAW. BARBARA, jO Zoology 7 Albemarle Place. Yonkers. N. Y. SHAW. ROBERT J.. ' 42 Engineering 5 Wliittier Place. Swarllmiorc. Pa. SHERO. FRANCES LIVIA. ' 41 651 N. Chester Road, Swartlimore. Pa. SHERO. GERTRUDE CAROLINE, o Economics 651 N. Cliester Road, Swartlimore, Pa. SHERO. LUCY ADRIENNE. 41 651 N. Chester Road, Swartlimore. Pa. SHILCOCK. JAMES THOMAS. ' 40 Economics Cloverly anri Clieltena Aves., Jenkintown, Pa. SHOEMAKER. MARGARET JACK, 42 510 Riverview Roaa. Swartlimore, Pa. SHOHL. JANE. ' 39 Psychology Wolfeboro. N. H. SHOTWELL, DORIS ROBERSON, ■39 French 1 School Plaza, Franklin, N. J. SILLARS. ROBERTSON. 39 English 122 Elmer Ave., Scnenectaay, N. Y. SILLS, MARY LOUISE. 42 Bronxville, N. Y. SIMMER. KEITH. ' 39 Economics 750 N. Green St,, Ottumwa. Iowa SIMSON. JEROME. 41 Zoology 3376 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn. N. Y. SINNOTT. MILDRED SHAW. ' 42 445 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. SITES. VIRGINIA LAWSON. ' 40 Economics 233 Grove Road. South Orange, N. J. SKALLERUP. WALTER THORWALD, Jr.. ' 42 6567 N. Woodstock St.. Philadelphia. Pa. SLACK. JEAN CARTER, 39 English 40 Kent Road, Upper Darby, Pa. SLATER. MORTON LINCOLN. U Mathematics 1487 President St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. SMITH. DONALD DAVID, ' 59 English 1097 East igth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. SMIIX, F. GORDON, ' .lo History gi6 17th Ave.. N.. Nashville. Tenn. SMITH. GENE ROBERTS, ' 42 Baltimore Pike, Swartlimore, Pa. SMITH. MORGAN GARSED. ' 40 Engineering Avondale Road. W allingford. Pa. SMITH. NATHAN LEWIS. Jr.. 39 Chemistry 4500 Carleview Road, Baltimore, Md. SMITH. RICHARD OWEN. 41 Baltimore Pike, Swarllimore, Pa. SMITH. ROBE VanSOTART. ' 41 Zoology 314 Augusta Ave.. DeKalb. III. SMITH. ROGERS JOURDAN. 42 Zoology 34 W. 33rd St., Indianapolis, Ind. SMITH. WILLIAM WIMER. 40 Economics 317 Harrison St.. Ridley Park, Pa. SNYDER, ARTHUR F. F.. ' 40 Economics 401 Swartlimore Ave., Swartlimore, Pa. SNYDER, PAUL H. H.. ' 40 Economics 401 Swartlimore Ave., Swartlimore, Pa. SOLIS-COHEN, MARY, 39 English 709 Rambler Road, Elkins Park. Pa. SONNEBORN. JOHN GEORGE. Jr.. 41 Pol. Science 5019 Penn St.. Philadelphia. Pa. SOUDER. ELVIN RITTENHOUSE, 39 Economics 36 W. Walnut St.. Souderton. Pa. SPEERS. ADAM DAVID McK.. ' 41 1708 N. Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Ind. SPENCER. EVELYN ELIZABETH. ' 40 Psychology 2 1 Keigo-liondori, i-cliome. Fukuoka, Japan SPENCER. HELEN MARGARET, 42 638 East Town St., Columbus, Oiiio SPENCER, ROBERT WHITE. ' 42 Chemistry Providence Road. Wallingford. Pa. SPRAGIJE, B. SHELDON, 42 Chemislry 401 Swarthmorc Ave, Swarthrnore, Pa, STARBARD, VI .R A DAVIS, ' 41 80 Oak St., Ridgewood, N. J. SIARR, DAVID IIOW ' CI.L. ' 39 P„l. S i.nr.- 3301 5lh Ave Beaver Falls. Pa. STEARNS. BARBARA, vj Chemistry 254 Arlington Ave, Brooklyn. N. Y. STEEL. HELEN RAWSON. ' 39 M.-.tl,-maiic, 4422 Lowell St.. N. W,. Washington, D. C. STEELMAN, HERBERT S ' TANLEY. Jr., •41 Economics I of) I h)hiiccrc l Road, Jenkintown, Pa, STEER. JOHN VVILMI;R. ' 41 B;onoini.s 140 S. Lansdowne Ave, l ansdownc, Pa. STCEVES, MARY. ' 42 Lucas Point. Old Greenwich, Conn. STEIN. PHILIP LOUIS. 39 Pol. S.ier.«: ' 525 Cory Drive. Dayton. Ohio STERN. RICHARD STEPHEN. 42 Chemistry Media. I ' a. STERNE. BARBARA. ■41 Wilton. C mn, STETSON. JOHN BATTERSON. ' 42 E ,onomic« 1002 Prospect Ave.. Melrose Park. Pa. STEUBER. FREDERICK W ' AUTER. U Chemistry 405 Morton Ave.. Ridley Park. Pa. STEVENS, PHYLLIS. 40 Pol. Science 4 1 5 West 46 Terrace. Kansas City. Wo. STCVENSON. J. SHAW. 42 Engineering 1935 S. Cecil St., Philadelphia. Pa. STIX. DONALD. ' 4 1 Underbill Road, Scarsdale. N. Y. STONE. ANNE EXTON. ' 39 French 431 Berkley Road. Haverford. Pa. STONE. FUSE EMMA, ' 39 EnBli.sh 1 52 Kilburn Road, Garden City, N, Y, STOONG, FREDERICK CARL, - rd, 39 Chemistry 147 Pleasant St.. Windsor. Conn. STURDEVANT, MARY ELLEN, 40 English R. F, D. 5. Logansporl. Ind. SUTTON, ANN CRAIG, ' 39 English Apartado 1715,, Habana. Cuba SWARTHE, PAULA MATSNER, ' 39 Econon.ics 418 Central Park West. New York. .V Y. SWARTLEY, CYNTHIA MOYER, 42 916 E. Rrttenhouse St.. Philadelphia. Pa. SWIFT, ARITIUR LESSNER, 3RD, ' 39 Econon.ics 99 Claremonl Ave., New York, N. . SWIFT, HEWSON HOYT. ' 42 Zoology 00 Claremont Ave., ew ork, N. Y. SYLVESTER. EMILIE CONSUELO. ' 42 Psychology 1427 E. W ashington Lane. Philadelphia. Pa. TAIT. PHYLLIS ANN, ' 42 5415 Overbrook Ave.. Philadelphia. Pa. TAPLEY, GORDON PAUL, ' 39 Engineering Plymouth Meeting. Pa. TAPP. N. ELISE GAIL. 41 301 Norlnneld Place. Baltimore, Md. TARR. MARTHA MADELEINE. ' 42 1 College Road. Princeton. N. J. TATMAN, ALINA ELIZ. BETH. ' 39 English 240 W. Montgomery Ave.. Haverford. Pa. TAYLOR, ROBERT BURNS. Jr.. ' 41 ■,■ Chemistn,- 627 Noble St.. Norristown. Pa. TEBBETTS, MARGARET IMELDA, ' 40 .Mathematics 157 Collins Rd.. Waban. Mass, TCMPLE, EDW. RD BRINTON, II, 40 Latin 1005 Cattell St.. Easton. Pa THATCHER, ALBERT GARRETT, 41 Engineering 615 Ogden Ave.. Swarthmore. Pa. THATCHER. BARBARA ANN, 42 French R. ED. I. Somer -iIIe. N. J THATCHER. EDWARD POWER. ' 39 Botany 613 Ogden Ave., Swarthmore. Pa. THOMAS. GRACE-M RY. ' 39 .....f. English 112 WVst Main St.. Lcck Haven. Pa. 7HOMAS. JOHN CUNNINGH. M. 39 Chemistry- 46 Richards Road. Port Washington, N. . 1TIOMSON. DONALD GARDNER. ' 40 Pol. Science 450 William St.. East Orange. N. J. THORN, STEWART. ' 39 ; Economics 3203 McKinlev St., Washington. D. C. TIMMIS. WILLIAM W. LTER. Jr., •41 Engineering Pleasant -iiie. X. Y . TITELM. N. JAY RICH. RD. 42 3510 Oneida Ave., Altoona. Pa. TODD. ALDEN. 39 History- 1385 Langdrum Lane. Che -y Chase. Md. TODD. MARJORIE CLARA. ' 4. French 6o.| I Perrysville Ave., Ben . von. Pa. rO.NlLl.NSON. HELE. MARCARF.r. .ii .oslngy 11.1 Yale Ave., Swartlunore, Pa. TOMPKINS, HOWARD I-DWARD. .p Physics Q- r.illi St.. Brooklyn, N. Y. TOMPKINS. REXI-ORD EMERSON, 40 Economici: 168.1 Wcsl l.ltli St.. Eric. Pa. TRAl ' IMW. Willi I W.AN. tl Clicmislry -,-,j- Doliwood Road, Cleveland Hciglils. Oliio IKMNmi 1:. N| K ' ( ' .ARET! -jO PsyclioloRy 80R S. E. Riverside Drive, Evansville. Ind. lURNER, DOROmV EIJ7.ABETTI. ■.(. Psydiology I 1-57 Pliocnix Ave., Schenectady. N. Y. TURNER, DOROTHY JEAN, .n French i6oo Payne St., Evanston, III. UNDERDOWN, MAR lORY, -,0 French lllian and Ihornhrook Roads. Rosemonl. Pa. I ' NDERHIEL. S. R. I I Gil. PIN. -,o Engli.sh ifinS N. 5th St., Hnrrisburg, Pa. UNDERWOOD, CAROLINE DOWDELL, ■.(. Linden Lanes, Wallinglord, Pa. VALENTINE, BRUCE ROBERTS, ' 30 Zoology 8-,43 LeITerls Boulevnrd. Kew Gardens, N. Y. Van DuMARK. ROBERT LEWIS, 42 Engineering 1000 South Ave., Rochester, N. Y. VanKLEECK. M. R niA LOULSE. ' n Engli.sh 2030 Northern Boulevard. Manhasset. N. . Van name. FREDERICK W. RREN. ' i Physics 78 Summit Ave, Bron.Kville, N. Y. V.- TER. WILLIAM ARTHUR. .12 Benlon Harnor, Nlicli. VERLIE, EMIL JOSEPH, ■.,! 1421 State St., Alton. III. VOGT, JANE ELIZABElll. 42 • CheoMsiry 18 Stratford Place, Binghamton. N. Y. WAKSM.AN, BYRON HALSreD. ' 40 Zoology 33 Walter Ave., New Brunswick. N. J. V. LKER. ELIZABETH PENDRELL, ' 40 History St. John ' s University, Shanghai. China W.M.KER. ROBERT BELL, ' 39 Engineering Westtown, Pa. W.-VLTER. ROBERT IRVING. ' 41 Chemistry 230 4th Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa. WARBURTON. SAMUEL WOODWARD. 40 Engineering ■133 Pine Crest Road, Springheld, Pa. W. RRINGTON, JOHN BURWELL. Jr.. ' 30 Engineering 602 Upland Ave, Noble. Pa. WATSON, GRETCHEN LOUISE, ' 59 English 79 Monterey Ave., Detroit. Mich. WATTERS, LOUISE, ' 40 English 2 E. Market St., Bethlehem. Pa. WATTS. GORDON SPENCER. ' 39 English 742 E. John St., Applelon, Wis. WEBER. RICH. ' VRD RICH, ' 41 T7S Wilmont Road, Scarsdale. N. Y. WEBSTER. DOROTHY L.ANCASTER, 40 English 1 26 Parker St.. Newton Center, Mass. WEI.NTRAUB, M. RY C. ' 42 113 N. Raleigh Ave., Atlantic Citv. N. J. WELTMER, DONALD KESSLER. ' 40 Economics ■ i 4 Vassar Avenue. Swartlimore, Pa. WESCOTT, HOPE HAMMOND. ' 41 English -10 Potomac Ave., Buffalo. N. Y. WEST. MARY LOOCKERMAN, ' 4. English 3 Davis Road, Port Washington, N. Y. WHEELER. DOROTHY JANE, ' 41 Zoology 4453 Tibbett Ave., New York, N. Y. WHITE, BENJ.- M1N WARD, 42 4629 Hunt Ave., Chevy Chase. Md. WHITE, G. RY, ' 39 Chemistry 3733 Kanawha St., N. W.. Washington, D. C. WTIITE, WILLIAM I RANCIS, 41 Pol. Science Claysville. Pa. WHITFORD, ANN ELIZABETH, 42 44 1 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. WHIITORD. MARY I.YDIA. -,9 .....French 441 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. WHITNEY, ANNE MARIE, 42 Chemistry 8 Westminster Road, West Hempstead, N. . WIGIH ' . MIRIAM HOLLlSnER, 40 English Soutli Street. Dallon. Mass. WILBUR, RLHTI ELIZABETH, ' 41 English 1300 Ethel Ave., Lakewood. Ohio WILLI. MS, ELLEN LEWIS. ■41 French 6.(0 N. Chester Road, Swarthmore. Pa. WILSON, JAMES MORRISON, Jr., ' 39 History 1 405 Gociaard Ave., Louisville. Ky. WILSON. JANET DOROTHY. ' 39 Fine Arts 309 Wellington Rd.. Jenkintown, Pa. WINDLE, ANNE MOORE, ■.(2 Dellwyn. W est Cliesler, Pa. WIITER, BARB. ' XRA LOIS. 40 Psychologv 2-j Kingsley Road, Rocliester. N. . WOEHLING, lEAN LOUISE, 40 English R. F. D. 2. Norristown, Pa. WOLF, ElUEL, ' 4 1 47 Sunshine Road, Upper Darby, Pa. WOLF. ROBERT, ' 39 Chemistry 47 Sunshine Road, Upper Darhv, Pa. WOLF. RUTH, ' 42 ; 47 Sunsltine Roaa. Upper Darov. Pa. WOLFE. LAWRENCE CLARK, 40 History 410 Walnut Road. Ben Avon. Pa. WOLFE. LINDSAY HARPER, 42 Engineering 410 W alnut Road, Ben Avon. Pa. WOLFF. ALINE LOUISE. ' 42 English 167 Beach I44tli Street. Neponsit. N. Y. WOOD, PHILIP EMERSON, ' 41 History 200 Old Broadway, Haslings-on-Hudson, N. Y. WOODCOCK, ,IOAN LOUISE, ' 40 Psychology 64 Barrow St., New York. N. Y. WOOLLCOTT, JOAN, ' 39 History Eden Terrace. Calonsville, Md. WORTH, EDWARD HALLOWELL. Jr., 39 Pol. Science Claymont, Del. WRIGHT, GEORGE A., 41 • ' 26 E. Stiles Ave., Collingswood, N. J. WRIGHT, lOHN FISHER. 39 Pol. Science 4 WHiitlier Place, Swarthmore, Pa. WYMAN, MARGARET, English 3612 Newark St., Washington. D. C. YARD, FLORENCE HICKCO.X, ' 39 Pol. Science 630 Sheridan Road, Chicago, 111. YEARSLEY, ELEANOR. 40 Fine Arts 577 Lincoln Highway. Coatesville. Pa. YERKES. VIRGINIA MOON. ' 42 983 Vine St.. Winnetka. Ill ZIMMERMAN, GEORGE LANDIS, ' 41 Chemistrv 207 State St.. HarrisDurg, Pa. ZIMMERMAN, MARY JANE. ' 42 2 Surrey Road. Melrose Park, Pa. ZINNER, JAMES SHANDOR, 39 English 725 Greenwood Ave. . Glencoe, III . ZIPFEL, ROBERT NEIT, ' 42 Oradell Manor. Dobbs Ferry. N. Y.


Suggestions in the Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) collection:

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

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