Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA)

 - Class of 1948

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1948 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 176 of the 1948 volume:

Bobbie Rlseman Swar-fhrmore College Swarthmore, Pennsylvania FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS out of the sack . . . limp eggs . . . trotter e-11 . . . sait . . . collection . . . endless lunch lines . . . cigarette in commons . . . labs . . . bowman and bach . . . boring, langfeld, and weld . . . let ' s knock oflF ... no mail . . . meet you at six . . . back to the books . . . general reserve . . . druggie at nine . . . sack. 5ft THE 1948 MLCYDN Published by tbe Junior Class m fJ09! - I « ' m ' 4, SWARTHMDRE COLLEGE Swarthmore, Pennsylvania DEDICATION A YEAR after the Avar ' s end . . . but vith true peace far a vay . . . we returned . . . who had been away for a suinmer . . . and longer ... to the camptis vhich four years of var did not change . . . too much . . . returned to find out . . . ho v to make a living . . . ho s ' to live ... to establish the foundations for a better s ay of life ... to that campus . . . and to lluit vay of life ... we the class of 1948 dedicate this Halcyon. ADMIIVISTHATIDN THE PRESIDEIVT JOHN W. NASON A college president is all things to all men. To the Board of Managers he represents the administration, faculty, and student body; to the stu- dent body he represents the Board of Managers. To all of us he repre- sents the idea of Swarthmore education, education as development of the mind and of the individual, rather than the accumulation of knowl- edge and the learning of a profession. Calm, dignified, efficient, John Nason has known many colleges and universities from the inside: Carleton, Muhlenberg, Harvard, Pennsvl- vania and Oxford; and his degrees include both Doctor of Laws and Doctor of Literature, but we prefer to remember him in shirtsleeves pitching the faculty to victory over the girls ' softball team. Sincere and approachable, he is an integral part of all that goes on at Swarthmore. DEAN HUNT Dean Hunt is Swarthmore, his duties, very extensive and rather un- definable. Having been relieved by Associate Dean Moore and Assistant Dean Carrell of some of the admissions work, he now centers his atten- tion on the problems of the men students in college and on the general fimctions of the whole institiuion. This affable, sandy-haired Westerner with his dry humoi and engag- ingly crooked smile is one of the most popular men on campus. Famous for his passion for Milton and Bach— an amateur movie enthusiast for his movies of Western scenes. The surest way to his heart, he says, is through Jackson Hole. THE DEANS DEAN COBBS Relying on her easy southern charm and poise, Miss Cobbs has slipped easily into her second year of Deanship in one of Swanhmorcs most dif- ficult jobs. Friend and ad iser to the upperclass women, and oiganizer of a series of teas designed to bring closer together student and professor, she also represents .Swarthmore to new and prospecti e freshmen while perform- ing her remarkable balancing of both names and strawberrv ice cream. In addition to the full routine of the all-important inteniewing of, and passing judgment on the hopeful, directing the feminine half of the school ' s administration, and teaching Latin and Greek to those vith a classical bent, she claims that she e en finds time to relax with an occa- sional game of bridge or a crossword puzzle from the Times. JAMES A. PERKINS Mr. Perkins, although only in his second year as vice-president, is a well-known Swarthmorean having graduated from here in 1934. This year the majority of his time has been spent in the capacity of executive chairman of the five million dollar campaign. This work requires a great deal of traveling and speech making, but has not removed Mr. Perkins entirely from campus life. Here he works in close contact with President Nason, serves on several committees and takes over the presi- dential duties in Mr. Nason ' s absence. His informality makes him easy to approach his constant teasing is the bane of the occupants of the 2nd West offices. For relaxation, he and his wife (class of 1936) and their children head for Buck Hill on weekends. •% MR. CARRELL Jep Carrell, our Young Man in a Hurry and new Assistant Dean of Men, received a Franklin and Marshall degree while in the Marines although he originally be longed to Swarthmore ' s class of ' 45. With Deans Hunt and Moore, he shares the work of interviewing freshmen applicants plus coaching the freshman soccer team and carrying through his graduate work at Penn. MR. MOORE John Moore, having left the Swarthmore Philosophy Department for a more active life, divides his time between the many duties of an Asso- ciate Dean and of the executive director of the National Council on Re- ligion in Higher Education. Using his organizing ability to co-ordinate his multiple jobs, as Associate Dean, he handles much of the admissions procedme, and he is entrusted with the important job of acting as the veterans ' faculty adviser. MISS MORAN Young, auiatlive, tfficiem Alice Moian, Associate Dean ol Women, is also in her second successful year at Swarthmore. As ach isor to the Con- duct Committee, adviser to the Social Committee, and administrative coordinator of student activities in general, Miss Moran has numerous, varied responsibilities demanding her constant attention. .She shares with Miss Cobbs the task of interviewing prospective Swarthmore co-eds, and her office keeps tabs on the state of campus life through the VSG.A books. MR. THATCHER As comptroller, Mr. Thatcher probably has the most thankless job at Swarthmore College. It is his job to allocate funds in such a manner so as to pacify the desires of the student body, the various departments and activities. He performs this task with understanding, sinceritv and genuine interest in student welfare. In addition to this, Mr. Thatcher is responsible for procuring housing for members of the faculty and the married veterans. As an ex-engineer, he relies on his slide rule to pull him through the maze of figures his vork encounters. MRS. BEEMAN Swarthmore ' s answer to all employment problems, Mrs. Beeman, quietly and efficiently guides Swarthmore women into appropriate ca- reers or summer jobs. In her capacity as women ' s vocational director, she arranges field trips, conferences, vocational guidance tests, and keeps her memorable bulletin board crammed with interesting ideas. Apart from this she also shoulders the duties of Parrish House Director. Al- though she has been with the college for only two years, her pajama parties for Parrishites lia e become a tiadition. Is Bender ' s Fluid Mechanics in yet, Mrs. Sorber? ... I want to reserve a room in Bond . . . No turnips, please . . . May I have ten 3 ' s . . . What ' s playing at the movies, Amye? . . . Miss O ' Meara must be on her rounds . . . Where should we sit, Mildred? . . . Good-night, Mr. G. . . . But it ' s only one minute after, Mrs. Selmes . . . Can I reserve this book for over- night? ]2 THE FACULTY CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS Chemistry: Creighton, Cox, Foster, Keighton, Enos Physics: Wright, Elmore, Freeman, Garrett ENGLISH First Row: Wright, Becker, Hunt Second Row: Ball Hicks, Collins 1 4 ECONOMICS Kennedy, Pierson, Stolper, Brown ENGINEERING Civil: Carpenter, Lilly, Hummel, Foner Electrical: Jenkins, Garrahan, McCrumm Mechanical: Moore, Mustin, Dugan HISTORY Manning, LaFore, Tolles, Cuttino, Beik, Albertson LANGUAGES Bibault, Shero, Pervy, Cobbs, Philips, March, Sorber, Bush Mi MATHEMATICS Dresden, Marriott, Van de Kamp, Brinkmann, Pitman, Wasow, Binnendyk, Miller, Kelley, Delaplaine, Lippincott MUSIC AND FINE ARTS Walker, Wolpe, Swan, Stilz PHILOSOPHY Firth, Christian, Brandt, KaUsh, Few POLITICAL SCIENCE LaFore, Lipson, Thomas, Pennock, Wood f PSYCHOLOGY Krech, French, Crutchfield, Ritchie ZOOLOGY First Row — Irving, Jones, Schmidt-Nielsen Second Row — Scholander, Scott, Worth, Schmidt-Nielsen, Enders STUDENTS 19 THE CLASS DF MIIVETEEIV The graduating class of ' 47 is a diverse group. Among its members are veterans who would normally have graduated as far back as ' 42; returned Swarthmore men and vets who have come from other colleges; former Swarthmore V-12 ' s who have stayed on here as pre-meds; accelerated seniors who came in on the Navy speed-up program, and non-accelerated seniors who have taken their four years in the normal manner. Because they are so interwoven chronologically, it is difficult to trace their class history as that of a coherent group. No attempt will be made here to unravel the threads; the nucleus of the class of ' 47 will be considered as those of us who were freshmen in ' 43. The freshmen who arrived in 1943 came in the early winter rather than in the fall, for the college was then in its Navy-set schedule of three semesters a year. The Frosh went through the usual routine of sign-wearing, celebrated their initiation into col- lege life with a carnival and later with a barn dance, and went all out for the Little Theatre, the Phoenix, Dodo, Halcyon and the rest of Swarthmore ' s myriad of activities. The Fresh- man Executive Committee of 43-44 was headed by Lee Town- send, assisted by Keith Culverhouse, Amy Roosevelt, Eleanor Gillam, and Elizabeth Pope. In their sophomore year, the class of ' 47 found its roster still consisting largely of Navy men, one of whom. Chuck Scriver, was chosen class president in an unusually lively election, along with other officers Sue Bradley, Liz Crawford, and Bobbie Gates. The class had increased in size, for it was augmented now by a large group of accelerating ex-freshmen who had survived the summer term of ' 44. 1945 found the college still on its wartime program, but with V-12 ' s giving way to a smaller unit of V-5 ' s, and with the influx of returning veterans getting under way. Ex-Swarthmore men were coming back from the service, ex-V-12 ' s were joining the civilian ranks as med students, and more accelerators were beina absorbed into the junior class. Elections in the fall of ' 45 re- sulted in the choosing of ex-12 ' s Fuzzy Fausnaugh and Chip Paxson as president and vice-president, with Demi Affleck as sec- retary and Sue Bradley as treasurer. The class took on a new significance and a new unity that year; V-J day had come and gone, and a new spirit had invaded Swarthmore; a post-war re- vival of all the college traditions and activities which had been temporarily extinguished by the war. It was not till its senior year that the class of ' 47, which had been a war baby from the start and had never known the dining room when it wasn ' t a cafeteria, or Wharton when it wasn ' t a barracks, finally saw the semblance of a return to normalcy. The fall of ' 46 brought a large contingent of veterans back to Swarth- FDHTY-SEVEIV CLASS OFFICERS: Fausnaugh, Allebach, Lorwin, Eber- f sole more— and a return to the pre-war schedule of two semesters, with the fall term beginning in late September. The Mary Lyons Annex ' as purchased to help house a greatly expanded student body; long lines formed outside the dining room, the post office and the bookstore. Swarthmore, like so many other colleges, was suffering from o er-crowding and an increased strain on equip- ment and facilities. But despite these new handicaps, the spirit of the old pre-ivar S varthmore -(vas beginning to sho ' iv through again. The year was an especially active one for the college. The five million dollar campaign fund drive was laimched; Swarth- more ' s AVC chapter gained new members and new strength; another O ' Rourke campaign (the second in the history of the class of ' 47) was held; the Phoenix, the News Bureau, and SN all grew greatly in size and importance; the faculty was ex- panded, courses revised and new seminars offered; new officers were built in Parrish, and a new building was erected on the campus; the return to peacetime brought some new esthetic ad- ditions to the life of the college; a redecorated Commons, music in the din.ng room . . . Swarthmore was reconverting fast, and the class of ' 47 was to leave a college very different from the one ■(vhich the) had entered in wartime ' 43. The senior class, of course, was active in all aspects of the new routine and the stepped-up activities of the college. For their class president they elected By Ebersole, veteran and Swarthmore man of pre-war vintage. Vice-president was ex-V-12 and class officer of long standing, Fuzzy Fausnaugh. The secretary was Teny Lorwin, ex-Phoenix editor and woman-about-campus. Treasurer was veteran Ken Allebach whose meteoric rise in status (he was president of the freshman class the year before) was typical of the chronological confusion in the pigeonholeing of veterans as to class. 22 The graduates of 1947 ha e seen the beginning and end of one era and the beginning of another, and better one. They vary widely in age, in the experiences which the past four years have brought them, and in the plans which they have for the future. But they leave the college as a unit, and as a testimony to Swarthmore ' s survival over five years of confusion, change, and anxiety. They are a testimony to the return of its former unity, its plans, and its ideals to a college which, with these men and women as its first alumni, can look ahead to a new day of ex- l ansion, improvement, security, and peace. N I O R JOHN DONNELL BACON varied interests . . . outdoor boy . . . that car . . . innate charm . . . arthur murray . . . ping- pong fiend . . . takes his a ' s in his stride . . . phi sig forever . . . boyd ' s buddy . . . not lazy, just philosophical . . . limerick lover . . . party boy . . . quizzical look . . . slightly satirical ... a definite appreciation of the finer things in life . . . women, music, wine . . . jack. THOMAS LEES BARTLESON, JR. slender, short and usuall) dignified . . . sur- prising unexpectableness . . . cynical attitude merely a veneer over a sympathetic heart . . . intellectual interests include economics and chemistry . . . baseball, li ' l abner, and hillbilly music also hold fascination . . . favorite answer to requests for cigarettes— go away, i never saw you before in my life ... as he offers two or thiee . . . tom. LEO ARTHUR BORAH, JR. underslung Washington accent . . . outdoor man . . . aim in life ... to find a new string for his yoyo . . . slaves and stuff at the ingleneuk . . . and man, that ' s good! . . . prefaces all out- bursts with hey . . . english major . . . senti- mental leanings are bane of the department . . . lee. GEORGE HUNTZINGER CAVIN phi delt secretary . . . his third east harem . . . perennial bachelor . . . short but potent . . . i gotta type a report . . . eager . . . surrounded by du ' s . . . beats on schwertner . . . chubby and al- ways cheerful . . . which one shall i ask this time? . . . pool shark . . . lacrosse . . . the daddy of 306 . . . everybody ' s buddy. ROBERT LADD DECKER teed off here in ' 39 . . . but signed early with r.c.a.f. . . . taciturn . . . ec major . . . easy going boy . . . easv smile, plenty of savvy . . . more time in air than most pilots have in sack . . elinor, his charming wife. 24 CLASS O F 19 4 7 GORDON WHIPPLE DOUGLAS doiig . . . staunch man for the lacrosse and foot- ball squads . . . earnest and straightforward in everything ... an example of friendliness . . . ever proud of wife, wilma . . . service on student council . . . steady and persevering . . . doug and dog firmlv attached to the mechanical en- ROBERT FLEMING GEMMILL Softball pitcher extraordinary ... a connois- seur of early jazz ... a plii psi from way back friendly, cjuiet . . . millions of roommates . . . educated wit ... an ec. major with potentialities . . . off campus affairs . . . always ready to help out in a pinch ... a good mind . . . bob. GEORGE W. GEIGER electrical engineering ambitions ... a hand- some brain . . . sliy and imassinning . . . paleness a result of daily 25 mile jaunts from home to school in horton ' s car . . . ardent bridge fan . . . continual look of vmhapplness perhaps caused by greek tragedy class . . . gets along well with uncle John . ALAN NORMAN HALL swarthmore ' s expert on thiuber . . . passion for airplanes and ferry boats . . . big appreciation for the little things in life . . . e ' en disposition and impeccable dress . . . penchant for the unique, the subtly humorous . . . noted for a warm hello and those blue, blue eyes. ROBERT GOUGH HAYDEN head of family of three . . . has the finances of both family and fraternity well under control . . . headed for business school to corner tlie golden buck . . . soccer goalie and golf enthu- siast . . . will probably jitterbug his Ava to fame on wall street. N O R CLIFFORD HUTCHINSON KEHO future sam carpenter . . . hails from way out in the corn country . . . when i stand sideways and turn ni) head, no one can see me . . . chy touches of humor . . . d.u. . . . chorus and en- gineers club . . . keen analytical mind . . . girls fail in the competition over the books . . . cliff. ROBERT RAYMOND KUSKE extreme bridge addict . . . senior c.e. . . . what a load of tomatoes. . . . rapid wit and comeback artist ... ex ceebee and v-12 . . . look for him in commons . . . knows all and everyone . . . gener- ous and s mpathetic . . . constantly on the move . . . coffee at the druggie. WALTER LEE LUKENS, JR. lee . . . loves reading . . . history, philosophy . . . current news fiend . . . fond of tennis . . . big dogs . . . dot . . . ambition to be a history prof . . . country life for him . . . d.u. ... a certain- quietness . . . indicative of some profound thoughts ... a perfect husband . HAIKAZ GALSTAUN MARCAR a zoo major with romantic leanings . . . the Indian operator . . . i.r.c. . . . extrovert ... to india with moore . . . love in iambic pentameter . . . joker ... a scholarship for medical studies . . . never a butcher . . . always friendly . . . come with me to Calcutta . . . talent. CHARLES EDWARD NEWITT came back married . . . soccer and lacrosse . . . fast and indestructible . . . d.u. ' s newitt memo- rial . . . book and ke . . . always willing to chaperone . . . dependable . . . well-liked and respected ... a future for him in hatever he does ... a good friend . . . charlie. 26 CLASS O F 19 4 7 CARROLL FAHNESTOCK POOLE forensic ability plus . . . according to the by- laws . . . cess ... a future blackstone . . . softball on the side . . . poetry, too . . . brown ' s buddy . . . statuesque dancing . . . earnest and sincere ... a man to trust and respect . . . i ' m glad to be back . . . those jokes . . . phi delt from way back . . . cal . . . pardon me while i go be sick some- where. WALTER MARSHALL SCHMIDT marsh . . . kinny . . . long and lean . . . basket- ball whiz . . . reserved . . . dignified ... a true phi psi . . . navy man . . . my roommates . . . maryland . . . tennis fiend . . . married in June . . . an ec major with good business possibilities . . . dark hair floating in the breeze . . . new house in the offing . . . there ' s a future for him. CHARLES HIRAM SCRIVER chuck . . . brings midwestern friendliness to the east . . . adds a sincerity hard to beat . . . quiet, but don ' t let him fool you . . . loves fim and can be as screwy as the screwiest . . . student of bridges and i-beams . . . master at bridge table or on a sailboat . . . and oh! those big blue eyes. WILLIAM CHARLES SIECK hope ' s big brother . . . the word is smooth . . . party boy . . . seen above any crowd . . . infec- tious grin . . . and the big laugh . . . sings too . . . baltimore . . . phi sig . . . Philadelphia chor- ister . . . friendly, expansive, you always know he ' s there . . . classical music lover . . . an ec major with unlimited possibilities . . . freshman interests ... we hate to see him go. KENNETH MOORE SNYDER determined . . . slowball pitcher ... a phi sig asset . . . ex v-12 and jv lacrosse . . . cle man . . . phenomenal sports memory . . . always plays to win . . . younger interests . . . ex-45 . . . hard ATOrker . . . those sweaters . . . ping-pong fiend . . . commons hound . . . ken. 27 N O R ' J ERNST WOLFGANG TREUENFELS chemistry student with a serious, preoccupied expression . . . polite, even to the point of rude- ness , . . works liard, but would like to sleep . . . wonderful, indi idual sense of humor . . , quietly opinionated in politics . . . likes best: music, goethe ' s faust . . . gossip is lowbrow, ideas are highbrow— i ' hat ' s your idea? RANSOM HUDSON TURNER, JR. handsome ransom , . . one of the pillars in the e-3 ' s culture center . . . pierces life ' s incon- gruities with satiric wit . . , liberalized old guard republican . . . after hours ran tends to be a disciple of omar khayyam rather than charles atlas . . , knoivs more about con law than cul- bertson , . . spent three years in the air corps behind blazing t peivriter kevs. RICHARD CALVIN UNGER hails from nearby phoenixville , . . not very tall but nonetheless an important man on the arsity basketball squad . . . dick ' s a kappa sig from the word go , . , majors in ec . . . amateur football expert . , . ne ' er at a loss for words and always plentv of fun ... a man with a lot on the ball ■. . . dick. CLYDE ARNOLD WILLIS Cherokee Avill has been e ery vhere, done evei7- thing . . , ditched his plane for scholarly pur- suits . . . genial leader of the aloof phi psi ' s. . . . pulled the social committee through ■svhat could ha •e been a dry season , . . finds time foi a few classes, varsity football, bull sessions . . . the singing poker king ... if only he could read. JACKSON deCAMP WILLIS jack . . . energetic with many interests . . . but never perturbed . , . talkative with a t vinkle . , . sincere , . . can be found in roberts with his lovely wife, an ex-46 ' er and son, pete . . . pipe and flight jacket . . . ex-navy pilot, also pilots the student commons . . . ec major . . . southpaw hurler . . . will it be business or teaching? 28 It ' s Traditinnal ! THE CLASS DF IVIIVETEEIV 30 FDRTY-EIGHT It started oli rather pessimistically •itll oysters ai the first col- lege dinner, but a freshman picnic and games in Commons gave each new comer a chance to meet and like his other 105 class- mates. The male contingent ot 11 bore up nobh under over- whelming odds, once they got over the initial shock of sharing honors with 95 enthusiastic coeds. E er since, cheerfid adapta- tion has characterized the class of ' 48 in a kaleidoscopic environ- ment of Navy tempo and U.S.S. Wharton, Haverford raids, five courses, retinning vets, and the Mary Lyons one-mile dash. Life was at first a happy whirlwind of strange new activities, punctuated with all-night sessions with Thurman Arnold and the typewriter. We remember the Pink Elephant dance, classes on January 1, 1945, and picking May flowers at 6:00 one rainy morning. The fresh serenade, held mid falling snow and water, was one of the best ever, and North Wingers ilhistrated one of Prexy ' s speeches by dividing Commons in half, a la Quaker style, one side for men, and the other for women. Finally came June, and exams were finished somehow. November greeted our return with one extra course, to make us more well-rounded , and a group of V-5 ' s to replace the old V-12 ' s. A tug-of-war o ' er muddy Crum proved that the summer freshmen hadn ' t neglected biceps for books, too much. We held our first elections, the Navy placing first and second: President, John Ryan; Vce-President, Tom ' ilbor; .Secretary, Jeanne Cinn- mins; Treasurer, Lois Ledwith. Longer vacations were accepted gleefully, and the advent of the spring semester brought another reconversion note. Veterans began streaming back— pictines in old Halcyons come to life. With them were revived the longer T.P. ' s, more interest in fraternities and other campus groups, as growing and important activities. This summer Swarthmore took a rest; some vets went off to add up credits at other colleges. School started early in October, and we old-timers were now admitted to the portals of the junior class and the Friend ' s Libe. But it wasn ' t the same peace- ful campus we ' d left in June. Over 200 additional enrollees made life a series of lines to stand in, and strange crowds made us feel a bit like bewildered frosh all over again. Our own class was swollen with many of these new-comers— those who weren ' t wandering in a daze between second semester soph, first junior, or one-third senior. Election results came out with: President, Bud Stratton, Vice-President, Jim Nash, Secretary, Enid Hobart, Treasurer, Dick Schwertner. The Men ' s Gym became a tempo- rary barracks while doors were put in at Mary Lyons, and the big news was the no-gym reqiurement for upperclasswomen and veterans. Another first for us was college without the Navy, though many stayed on as civilians. Collection rush turned into a mild counterpart of the 8th Avenue subway at 5:15, and cer- tain general reserve books were as hard to find as a co v at said location. We slowed down enough to attend a class tea-dance before Christmas, and became better actpiainted with each other with relaxation between semesters at Buck Hill Falls. Now. spring once more finds us busy, happv, and reach lor whate er comes up next on the list. u N O R JEROME ABRAMS a joke for every occasion ... a million dollar smile that lays ' em in the aisle . . . far be it from me to spread rumors, but . . . generous, genial, gentlemanly . . . smart dresser . . . won- der who has a date with monique tonight? . . . one of the future ' s more friendly doctors. GERALD ERNEST ACHTERMANN jazz fiend . . . the day student with the ' 47 dodge . . . slow smile . . . staunch phi delt . . . football and lacrosse his specialties . . . the jit- terbugging mech engineer . . . that arched eye- brow . . . red-headed but steady ... a good man to kno v . . . jerry. PAULA ADLER a laughing twinkle that makes her whole face look like a cheerful cherub . . . she ' s sam-happy ... a cellist of no little skill . . . from college concerts to kantcjrei performances . . . one of our more gracious scholars . . . her hair is curly in the rain. BETH MIRIAM ASH an indi idualist . . . hates convention, tradi- tion, formality of any sort . . . exciting and excit- able . . . inrpulsive, vivacious, dramatic, and imaginative . . . dances that way . . . secretly sentimental ... an idealist . . . intense and seri- ous under that gay exterior . . . invariable cri- terion— did you liave an intellectual conversa- tion? . . . brilliant appearance to matcli that honors mind . . . alwa s a little bit of the devil. JOHN MANLEY AUSTIN tales galore abcnu bement . . . always ready viih a joke . . . usually on himself . . . extremely careful about his hair . . . neat dresser . . . after- noon naps . . . varsity football . . . fraternity bas- ketball ... ex v-12er . . . english major, history minor . . . dreams of summer traveling . . . fre- quent trips to dog house . . . solid phi psi johnnv. 32 CLASS O F 19 4 8 BARBARA JEAN BABCOCK elusive bostonian charm . . . innately shy and sedate she sometimes does amazing things . . . has odd quirks and contradictory qualities . . . talk- ative eyebrows . . . utilizes vocabulary in pic- turesque manner . . . rarely ruffled . . . maintains that disturbing poker face . . . tall with a sweep ot long dark hair ... a conventionalist in dreams of garden, hearth, and sunny window-seat. BETTY ELAINE BASSETT wilhelmina tell for archery ability . . . top scorer for the varsity . . . activities committee . . . math major . . . friendly . . . studious . . . one of the famed pennsyhania dutch . . . neat . . . efficient . . . gwimp . . . badminton . . . sunny disposition to boot . . . it ' s hard to ruffle her feathers . . . betty. ANGELICA GABRIELE BAUMANN french house standby ... a gal with brains and ability . . . always out of nickles and stamps . . . she knows her psych ... a girl to talk with . . . never misses the true perspective . . . one of your best friends . . . geka. EDITH GRACE BAYER neVer drinks more than a hall cup of coffee imusual and large collection ot perfume and . fiend for bridge and subs . . . new yoik accent . . . twinkling blue eyes and dimples ■vvhcn she smiles . . . enolish major . . . edie. cologne CHARLES LEMON BESTOR the nuisic major of swarthmore . . . composes for the long hairs and alligators too . . . singing cross-country cajHain and fond hope of the track team . . . the navy took his hair biu left chuck his good nature under a persevering exterior . . . finds room for a few parties between cleats and cadenzas. 33 J u N O R BARBARA JOAN BETSCH perpetual motion and mile-a-minute chatter . . . always loping around . . . sentimental over high school days in millburn . . . those wonder- ful hen-parties . . . and the trumpet players . . . studying hard all week . . . then weekends at johnny ' s . . . here ' s the set-up . . . sport clothes or shorts . . . and a beautiful summer tan . . . it ' s a wonderful life. JANE LATTA BLAIR can be found in the smoker . . . wonderful in- tuition about people ... a unique new jersey accent . . . puckish laugh ... a taste and amaz- ing memory for poetry . . . knits fancy stuff . . . writes papers ' till dawn . . . still a member of the twelve hours sleep a da) clan . . . and we do mean day . . . janie. HELEN ELIZABETH BLANKENAGEL always ready to listen— and help . . . the first to laugh at a good joke . . . the last to bed when there ' s work to do . . . knows her classical music . . . but never fazed by boogie on the dance floor . . . poise and personality, topped by blonde waves ... as to the future— parlez-vous fran- cais? . . . wsga president. JOHN BRIERLEY BLOSE hides out in the engineering libe . . . likeable . . . easy to get along with ... ex v-12er . . . com- mutes from yeadon in his blitzer . . . social life centers around new york . . . always ready for a good time . . . conscientious worker . . . take yoiu troubles to him. JAMES PENNINGTON BOWDITCH galloping jim, the pride of blake ' s bearcats . . . town boy, who lives down that horrible term . . . famous for arno, his personable dog . . . but manages not to be outshone by the campus mas- cot . . . smiling, affable, hard working . . . defi- nitely a man ' s man . . . but knows where to draw the line. 34 II CLASS O F 19 4 8 r,:,i! ijpt ' ■m - -:t:- ' ! CARROLL GA WAYNE BOWEN the best of the best . . . steadfast in liis ideals . . . cully ' s path has not been easy, but it has won the respect and admiration of all who know him ... a clear mind in the midst of rebellious spirits . . . man of many parts . . . student, ath- lete, bridge fiend, musician, worker, liiinker, composer— friend! JOHN IRWIN BROOKS an english major, poet, and critic . . . healthy disdain lor ivory tower esthetes and intolerant reformers ter rationalization with a psychiatrist ' s scalpel . . . jack ' s lanky figure seen on the tennis courts . . . plays a studied game of bridge applying culbert- son doctrines . . . newsbtneau no-w . . . Chicago journalism later. smile breaks into tonent of laugh- . ardent dream analvst . . . cuts thionsh WENDELL V. F. BROOKS del ... a liberal chem major with interests far afield . . . swarthmore ' s gift to chemical research . . . serious bridge ... an undergroimd social life ... a quiet interest in current affairs . . . earnest . . . sack time means a shot of c[uink . . . headed for graduate school . . . the good brooks . ISABEL MARGARET BROWN little and very lovable . . . brownie . . . eyes that twinkle . . . rare common sense . . . and a good mind . . . flair for writing . . . just a hint of melancholy . . . lots of ideals to cling to . . . and things to talk about . . . the most delightfid himior . . . you can ' t help feeling happy inside. ROBERT ZANES BROWN combines real artistic talent with scientific knowledge . . . plans to continue his work as a scientific illustrator . . . his drawings are the envy of anatomy and embryology stuclents . . . in- dulges in landscapes on the side . . . creator of some of the worst puns ever . . . smokes a bunch of weird looking pipes ... a day student you ought to know. 35 u N O R CAROLYN JAMES BRYAN that certain air of kiKnving exactly what she ' s aiming at in life ... a love of horses . . . faint Oklahoma twang ... a proficiency on the flute laetrays a keen interest in music ... a way of taking honors work in stride . . . one of those people behind the scenes in Itc . . . carolyn. CLIFFORD MILTON BRYANT one of mark. b. moore ' s men . . . day hop . . . mad dash from home to class . . . du social chair- man . . . when i was here in ' 42 . . . gentleman of distinction . . . calm, cool, and collected . . . sandwiches in engineer ' s libe for lunch . . . cliff. JOSEPH ADDISON BULLEN, JR. ex-president of ssa . . . poll sci major . . . de- bates . . . mountain climbing for relaxation . . . a mature and serious intellect ... a natural social leader . . . domestic status to be settled soon . . . usually to be found with betty ... he knows whcLt he wants. NANCY RUTH BURNHOLZ nan. from the big city . . . dual personality . . . dependable and how efficient . . . varsity archery . . . found in managers ' parlor knitting garnet sweaters . . . seen with ed . . . helpless femininity . . . big brown eyes . . . anxious follower of the free style swimmers . . . give her a wabbit for any occasion and she ' ll be happy. MARY MacNAIR BURNSIDE zombie . . . ex-north wing president . . . paul . . . will listen to all . . . laundry cases stuffed with food . . . generous too . . . can ' t dislike her . . . history major ... an originator of words . . . host of friends . . . president of worth . . . then what shall we do, paul? ... we appreciate her mother. 36 CLASS O F 19 4 8 EDWARD ALLEN BURROUGHS, JR. shorty . . . beer party fiend . . . phi sig forever . . . my roommates . . . bridge in commons . . . an avid wrestler, he practices on all comers . . . a c.e. with a heart of gold . . . outside interests . . . batch ' s buddy . . . sometimes sarcastic but alwavs friendlv. BEREL CAESAR pre-med (psychiatry) . . . e.b.e.— eager beaver extraordinary . . . Itc and wsrn . . . dramatics for its own sake ... a conscientious proctor . . . dances in commons in his spare time . . . tall, dark, and attractive . . . look for him in martin . . . barry. FRANCES ELLEN CAREY no hair tearing before exams . . . writes letters instead ... all sorts of things can happen . . . danger!— pillo ws flying . . . is anybody hungry? . . . barber shop haimony . . . devil in her eye . . . sews a fine seam . . . designs one too ... in search for the best, but no moping if she doesn ' t get it . . . frannie. RICHARD NETHERTON CHAMBERS perennial tousled hair . . . loud hunting shirts and blue jeans . . . throws his books in the air anytime to head for the druggie . . . proud builder of the loudest phonograph on campus . . . forever playing bach organ music records . . . don ' t mind him, fellows, he ' s only ray room- matel WILLIAM JOHN CLARK party boy from way back, but no kidding about his work . . . always the engineer . . . day student, lives in Chester . . . heartily dislikes those early morning bus rides ... a sometimes athlete easy to know, hard to understand ... a man ' s man . . . contented grin . . . mischievous mind. 37 u N O R MARION ELIZABETH CLEMENS having anahsed dreams, became a histoi ma- jor . . . gay in commons, grave in cutting . . . prized possession: modern libe giant of freiid . . . saltines and sardines at 10:15 . . . committee hater . . . curls up in chairs . . . musical tastes from mozart to king cole trio . . . clem. RUTH W. CLIFTON hails from Illinois . . . termer technical ad- visor in hollywood . . . now field director of the just leer club . . . cliffy combines practicality and theory into something workable . . . future journalist . . . spends more time in ne v york than swarthmore . . . still ample time for Itc, newsbiireau, creative writing duh, outing club, dfjdo ... by the way did we mention grant? MARJORY ANN CLOUGH one reason men pledge d.u. . . . mag . . . the kind of blonde gentlemen prefer ... a certain may queen quality . . . eyes that shine . . . listen, kids! . . . always trying to diet ... no one could be as naive as she looks . . . will you be a psych subject? MARGARET VAN BARNEVELD COLE maga . . . delightfully indecisive ... a picture of harassed bewilderment as she copes with midtitudinous activities . . . and a douljle major in honors . . . somehow gets things done . . . spon- taneous eagerness to join . . . always a lady but the fim shows through . . . remains sweet-tem- pered in the most hair-raising of situations . . . madcap sense of humor. NORMAN A. CRANIN how can i eat?— the dodgers lost today . . . off-campus interests . . . new yorker fan . . . oper- ator . . . easy to know . . . drive— remember those cheers? . . . party boy . . . idea man . . . future dentist . . . and he ' ll make a good one . . . wsrn . . . captain of cheerleaders . . . I ' ll get that an- alyzed in new york . . . the kid from brooklyn . . . norm. 38 CLASS O F 19 4 8 ROBERT AARON CRESSY wee robert . . . detender of Shakespearean women . . . middleman without profit between commons and parrish 20 . . . let ' s go to class, kettner . . . charters pogo stick for daily flight to swarthmore . . . leaves ministerial responsibil- ity at lionre . . . bob. JEANNE MARIE CUMMINS i ' ll do it — and she will . . . blonde langtiid- ness . . . sam-sam . . . delightful roommate . . . gwimp president . . . phoenix associate editor girl to know . calm and collected . . . con- scientious psych major ... a wonderful futiu-e in store for her ... a sympathetic understanding and unex])ected btirsts of humor mark our jeannie. BARBARA DARROW everything from ire president to fire corporal . . . bobby infects all around her with her zest for life . . . gay laugh is heard at all hours of the day . . . and night! . . . zoo keeps her interest . . . and har ard . . . and people in general . . . touche . . . bobby ' n btntny. HENRY DEKKER ear-wiggler from ohio . . . philosophy major in honors . . . monstrous feet . . . music lover, from classical to jazz ... a futin-e consulting philoso- pher ... a good man . . . ctdtured . . . intelligent . . . affable introvert . . . gentlemen prefer blondes— and so does dek. JESSE CAMERON DENTON big grin from ear lo ear . . . no one else woidd laugh at his corn . . . lost without his sliderule . . . cair repair anything . . . expert on submarines (two kinds) . . . almost lost his north Carolina accent . . . plans to go to graduate school . . . ]3roud imcle of twin nieces . . . not above con- versing vith mere english majors. 39 u N O R DAVID ALLEN EHRENFELD sn genius . . . french house habitue an- other pre-nied . . . well-liked . . . early riser . . . ladies ' man . . . nice . . . plaid shirts . . . that bicycle . . . cheery splashes in the face awaken his iQommates ... he can fix anything with dials or wires. PHILIP KELLER EVANS outstanding athlete . . . baseball, basketball, soccer . . . tall and easy-going . . . conservative . . . a rational math major . . . strong likes and dislikes . . . chooses his friends carefully . . . good humored and intelligent . . . ex-uss wharton . . . thoughtfulness enables him to reach valuable conclusions ... a definite asset in any group . . . a man ho will go far. trust her, . understanding and considerate, MARIE LOUISE FAILLA m ' loo . . . cjuality not quantity . , she won ' t tell she gets along with anyone and everyone . . . the world ' s most wonderful listener . . . has a fetish for exotic perfumes, tarzan, voodoo, and wood ' s hole ... a fascinated spectator of life in general . . . utterly imperturbable and so sincerely sweet it ' s incredible. MARY ELIZABETH FAIR petite . . . worries too much, but always ends up smiling . . . dimples . . . psychology . . . arch- ery . . . modern dancing . . . collects sor ' s . . . oh, those blue eyes . . . likes chiclets, waltzes and ]3eople named gene . . . fond of music . . . goes bv just plain mary . DAVID FREEMAN FIELD imperturbable blue stare . . . defiantly neu- rotic . . . wins all verbal duels with dignity and an acrid comment . . . tou jours le mot juste . . . able to retain composure even while being di- vested of pants in the hamburg show . . . claims mystic experiences while under the navy ' s aegis in India. 40 CLASS O F 19 4 8 GERALDINE FINK definitely a personality . . . and a good mind . . . jerry . . . the new yorker ' s approach . . . ex- citing perlumes ... a sparkling wit . . . five labs a week . . . and she used to be an english major . . . sensitive and surprisingly sentimental . . . refreshing frankness . . . the gang at plushie ' s . . . music and laughter . . . and good food and people. BRADLEY FISK, JR. those vests . . . and pipes . . . plagued by un- paid dues ... an ec major . . . eccentric— and loves it . . . his smoke filled den . . . longs for the Canadian woods . . . expressive eyebrows . . . a second barney oldfield . . . he ' s a good man . . . has ideas about cooperatives in the future . . . buffalo or bust . . . friendly . . . bea er . . . unusual donn attire . . . spaghetti lover . . . brad. WILLIAM LOUIS FORD ex-member of the v-I2 imit before he toured the pacific . . . Ism as deck officer . . . still makes his bed for inspection . . . friendly and likeable . . . methodical in his work . . . usually fomid in hicks or back in e section . . . what a grin . . . fjill. WILLIAM HEISLER FREDERICK, JR. d is for delta, u for upsilon . . . Wilmington friends alum . . . lessons from wolpe ... a two- fingered virtuoso . . . i.r.c. and working for a better world ... a former prelaw student, now swarthmore ' s first horticulturist . . . weekends at Connecticut . . . friendly to everyone . . . bill. ANNE LOUISE FREIDINGER a touch of oriental mystery . . . Saturday . . . but she can look so vulnerable . . . well, you see, i ha e a sister named triday, and so— . . . seems hard to know, but she isn ' t . . . from childish antics to sophisticated poise . . . speaks in cliches . . . teller of tall tales . . . and jokes too , , . how much time do you have? 41 u N O R EDWARD LAWRENCE FROST one of the hicks hall slide rule boys . . . elec- tricity ' s his field ... a jitterbug style all his own . . . ed ' s a rabid dodger fan even though he hails from long island . . . president of a.i.e.e. . . . alwa)s in a good mood . . . delta upsilon, for thee . EDWARD LAWRENCE GALLIGAN the head . . . came to swarthmore by way of the v-12 . . . english major with writing ambi- tions . . . d.u. . . . sports expert . . . princeton doesn ' t stand a chance of beating penn . . . what happened to the red sox, ed? . . . phoenix and newsbureau writer . . . always willing to bend an elbow. JOAN LOUISE GALLMEYER that out of the band box look . . . toujours cashmere sweaters . . . i live on third west short . . . completely generous . . . can be a little girl or a smooth sophisticate as the occasion demands . . . i met her first off and should have gone home then . . . club 339 . . . gallie. DAVID BARNES GALLOWAY one of swarthmore ' s five day men . his mind to skidmore every weekend cjuently goes along with it . ner hides a raucous sense of humor . . . plans to further evade the grim spectre of work by gradu- ate school and travel . . . true apostle of democ- racy . . . spends his time with engineers. sends . fre- . thoughtful man- KAREN MARIA GELERT intellectual but creative also . . . interested in acting and directing . . . ballet and picasso ' s white lady . . . english and philosophy . . . exists on druggie food . . . pink lightning . . . tea par- ties in ' her room . . . well dressed even in jodli- purs . . . gesticulates . . . in a sense . 42 CLASS O F 19 4 8 HARRIET ANN GLUECK isn ' t college v■oluleliul? . . . siili ihat en- thused lieshman air . . . it ' s always new year ' s . . . starts each semester with big plans and ideas for organization and order . . . usually in a hurry . . . her warm smile wins many friends . . . wonderful to talk to . . . our favorite canary . . . gentle and sympathetic . . . harii. HENRY ADOLPH GORJANC an Ohio lad . . . capable e.e. . . . plays a lot of guard for the football team . . . call him hank ... an outstanding trencherman in the nook ' s little men ' s chowder and marching society of lower crum creek . . . those ])ackages from home ... a good man in a tight spot, or at any other time for that matter. SIMON PHILIP GOUDSMIT hails from holland . . . handy man on a picnic ... he lemembers the can opener . . . always de- pendable and ready to help . . . enthusiastic chess player ... he can ' t be ruffled . . . soccer and lacrosse . . . an individualist with plenty to offer ... si. HELEN GERBER GREEN greenie . . . heinie to intimates . . . wide-eyed and innocent appearing, but a brain under those bangs . . . small packages of dynamite . . . gotta work . . . and loves it too . . . keeps the libe in business . . . custodian of the engineer ' s libe . , . and the engineers . . . wonderful capacity for losing things . . . , history and more history . . . peanut butter fiend. MALCOLM RALPH GURBARG mal . . . sudden bursts of energy . . . newspaper editor from way back . . . go away, you ' re too interesting . . . red shirts . . . map happy . . . do not disturb signs . . . snap sliot and ivho ' s who fiend . . . heart and soul . . . only piano accom- plishment . . . files of all sorts. 43 u N O R ERLING HENRY HAABESTAD the canny drawl . . . what was the question? ... a man o£ many interests (major, that is) . . unemotional poise and moderation in all things . . . plays at tennis, works on his car ... blonde with piercing blue eyes . . . habbo viking WENDY HACKETT longish blue raincoat and bright sweaters . . . addicted to earrings and odd jewelry . . . infec- tious accent . . . blithe spirit of the druggie and commons ... on friendly terms with most of her fellow-creatures . . . cats and dogs too . . . english major, anti-intellectual, with literar) tendencies . . . looking for a myth— and the swarthmore local . . . gaunt faces cram notebook. GRISELLA CHRYSTIE HALL friendly to ail . . . will laugh at anything . . . can wear her hair that way . . . burner of mid- night oil . . . up early too . . . rusty and zell . . . contagious giggle heralds her arrival . . . deep imderstanding . . . domestic abilities . . . from day student to resident . . . tliat milk-maid look . . . zellie. MARIAN VODGES HAM english major in honois . . . gets excited about ideas . . . forever questioning . . . is art neces- sarily moral? . . . cozily disorderly room in pitt with vines in tea-pots . . . cutting habituee . . . writes, draws, and midnightly discusses . . . car- tons of chesterfields . . . silver earrings and harle- qiim glasses . . . please call her marian. LUCY ROGERS HAYES lu, lovely blue-gray blonde . statistician but can ' t count to two an a half honors . . . one of those people the professor ex- pects to be late every day . . . not knowing she can sleep twenty-five hours a day ... a day stu- dent . . . spends most of her time chasing that black puppy Iiome. 44 CLASS O F 19 4 8 RICHARD HUGH HEINEMAN a.s.m.e. . . . I ' riendly and sincere . . . i ' ll try two spades . . . loves to plan future . . . mar- riage and mid-west . . . engineer ' s club . . . joan . . . unusual desire lor accurate calctdations . . . phi delt . . . subbies and movies . . . ohio na- tionalist . . . pontillo ' s or charlie ' s for Iriday night feasts . . . social committee . . . dick. JOHN CHARLES HENCHEL another aliminus of the v-12 unit . . . the spook . . . sack hoimd of no mean ability . . . math ma- jor with actuarial ambitions and lacrosse player . . . no, with you engineers is that enough about literature . . bridge addict ... a great guy . first string soccer hank, the trouble you don ' t know . somewhat of a . . . the hench. ALICE WADE HIGLEY vim and vigor plus ... a math major, no less . . . phil . . . couple-thee . . . badminton fiend . . . concertizes . . . beer party addict . . . sharp wit . . . enthusiastic phi delt . job . . . and a home for him pendable ... a girl who hig. looks to a bank . . . loyal and de- leaves her mark wherever she goes . HELEN McDowell hill it ' s so hot in here . . . teasing grin . . . friends from lisbon to bogota . . . westtown . . . greek gods watch out! . . . original decorations . . . camera and paintbox wherever she goes . . . does my haii ' need ciuting? . . . unaffected . . . frank opinions . . . vegetables are so uninterest- ing . . . righteous indignation— but only for a moment . . . vivid letters . . . it hurts my aes- thetic sense . . . effervescent . . . lynn. ENID MARGARET HOBART from Canada and moorestown . . . lively prac- ticality . . . forthright laugh . . . dark. i ' id. and colorful . . . badminton and bud . . . arm mack- inaw and ballet shoes . . . not at the same lime . . . phil honors . . . theatrical flair . . . rememljer antigone? . . . personnel committee chairman and student council. 4.S u N O R LUCY MAY HOISINGTON refreshing lucibelle . . . candid and honest . . . ranges from rufBy feminine black formal and up- sweep to tomboy traces in army shirt and jeans . . . her zoo interests give rise to astounding anal- ogies . . . the baby ' s voice delicate as a mem- brane ... a loyal friend . . . romantic . . . artistic flair . . . adorable pug nose and infectious laugh- ter ... a gloAv that comes from inside. ELIZABETH HASTINGS HORTON history honors . . . papers don ' t phase her . . . let ' s go to the druggie . . . lots of fun . . . gv. ' imp . . . whizzes around gayly . . . sparkling laugh . . . slothes over ciggy-butts . . . delight- fulh effervescent . . . but serious side too . . . she ' s little but she will help when she can . . . liz. JOHN EDWARD HOUTMAN a c.e. with a beautiful wife . . . poli sci sleeper . . . poker fiend . . . hates westbrook pegler and the new deal . . . ex-navy man . . . ex-bucknell and ohio wesleyan . . . expert shot . . . conserva- tive . . . quiet sense of humor . . . off-campus . . . horse-hater . . . good business prospects . . . sacker. BETTY .A.NN HUMMELL goes out of her way for adventure . . . compe- tent freshman counselor . . . and president at palmer . . . wears glasses in her hair between classes . . . then wonders where they are when the lecture begins . . . betty ' s future? ... a home in the west (Colorado) . . . and a guy named joe. BETTY PEEBLES HUNTER red plaid shirt, dungarees, even a cigarette holder . . . in the midst of everybody ' s bra vls . . . astounding memory for people ' s addresses and popular songs . . . poli sci major with inter- est in ssa, Washington, d. c. and perot ' s bicycle . . . involved endlessly in people ' s problems . . . satirical sense of humor . . . we call her hunta . 46 ! CLASS O F 19 4 8 RICHARD MERRITT HURD a naturally nice person . . . always helpful, al- ways friendly . . . secretary of tfie ainerican so- ciety of civil engineers . . . varsity football and la- crosse . . . grand mogul of kappa sig. yet ... a big, infectious grin . . . happy-go-lucky with abil- ity . . . you can ' t help liking him . . . let me sit at my desk and be a friend to man . HARRIET INGLESBY sweet, petite rebel who seems to take to yankee- land . . . horseback riding, dancing and good music . . . she loves ' em . . . totich of oeoroia in her talk . . . recipient of wonderfid launch-y cases . . . level-headed and light-hearted . . . patty . . . essence of fenrininity. LAURA CLARE JOHNSON english major with a leaning to poetry semi- nars . . . wispy hair and long stocking cap . . . fresh english complexion ... a well modulated voice . . . breaks half smiling silences with bril- liant theorizing . . . scribblings of dogs and ma- donnas . . . reaction from mozart to brahms . . . likes boston streets . . . walks in rose valley in spring . . . i was very well pleased . CATHERINE BALDERSTON JONES emphatic enthusiasm . . . her three fevers . . . maine, music, morphology . . . labs galore and cousins in every corner . . . henry martin in c.j. ' s versatile voice, inimitable guitar . . . var- sity basketball, baseball, hockey . . . it makes me so mad. . . . oh. gosh. CHARLES FREDERICK KAERCHER led and green jeep . . . part interest in a plane . . . horses ... he just doesn ' t like to walk . . . likes the country . . . phoenixville younger set . . . jolly and grinning ... he listens well . . . hates women with gum . . . kappa sig and ex v-5 . . . chuck. 47 u N O R PETER WILLIAM KAISER big boy . . . student council . . . interfraternity prexy . . . universally liked and respected . . . kappa sig . . . motions under the basket . . . stan kenton fiend . . . off-campus weekends . . . dyna- mite with a lacrosse stick ... a commanding presence in any gathering . . . always fair . . . a good man to have around . . . pete. ISABEL KELLERS zoo major . . . honors . . . devoted follower of dr. enders . . . you ' ll meet her at his Sunday teas . . . rather be outside than inside . . . hikes through cruin and loves it . . . martin is home to her . . . wood-chopper ... an amazing laugh . . . j.v. swimmer . . . chief wony— seminar papers . . . ibbv. THOMAS KILLIP, III tom . . . synonymous with frankness . . . only the big things matter . . . logical thought pro- cesses and a keen intellect . . . pre-med with varied interests . . . something of an authority on birds . . . well read . . . sensitive and inquir- ing ... with a warm grin . . . completely unpre- dictable and rather moody ... a set of values worth imitating. JAMES VERNON KINDALL a sincere and genuine friend . . . the man with the hats . . . ex-usir . . . but doctor marriott . . . happily married ... a chem major with post- graduate ambitions . . . hails from Colorado . . . to know him is to like him . . . piano virtuoso . . . navy gear . . . definitely a good man. JAMES BRUCE KIRKHOFF gentleman from Indiana . . . purdue and but- ler before swarthmore . . . easy going and cheer- ful . . . lacrosse . . . flying trips west for a reason . . . escaped engineer in ec . . . haunts the d.u. lodge ... in the basement shooting pool . . . jim. 48 CLASS O F 19 4 8 CYNTHIA JEAN KIRKPATRICK individualist . . . bahston accent . . . long- blonde hair . . . tabu . . . not partial to trite con- versationalists . . . literary flare . . . washes her face . . . often . . . coffee and cigarette fiend . . . likes interesting people . . . and liked by iirterest- ing people . . . black slacks . . . languidly lean . . . kirk. ELAINE ALMA KITE transfer from goucher . . . for a simpel reason . . . sparkling eyes . . . sparkling smile . . . spark- ling diamond . . . kiritting needles in winter . . . golf clubs in summer . . . oh, twang ... at- tempts to hide vivacity with those intellectual specs . . . lane. ROBERT GARLIN KULLER physics major . . . back fronr radar school . . . math club . . . astronomy sidelines . . . lacrosse . . . anrateur hiker and minerologist . . . member of the misogynist society . . . sack time specialist €ven though a conscientious student . . . serious, sober, analvtical . . . never sans that red sweater. DONNA LOUISE LARRABEE sentimental and thoughtful . . . pastels by day, siren black by night . . . classical tastes contrasted with real athletic ability . . . her badminton is tops . . . she ' s a knitter of numerous socks . . . english major . . . soft, brown eyes . . . um-m-m. GEORGE RICHARDSON LEDERER he ' ll stick by his o])inions . . . and he has many . . . takes life earnestly . . . there ' s time for laugh- ing too . . . math and horses his main interest . . . maryland ' s his home . . . walks vhh deter- mination . . . boxmates tear hair over his numer- ous catalogs and magazines. 49 u N O R LOIS LEDWITH loie . . . the most generous person you know . . . complacent manner . . . those green eves . . . and a ery contagious laugh . . . inner - varmth that makes people Avant to tell her things . . . persistent reader . . . d.u. and ed . . . and all the little things that count . . . she ' s completely at home in the world. ESTHER HALLET LEEDS bach and boats (sail, that is) . . . cape cod ex- cites eulogies . . . prejudice and hvpocrisv lead to bitter denunciation ... if she savs sire will, it ' s done . . . name a committee she hasn ' t served on . . . or an office she hasn ' t held ... no matter where, she kno vs someone . . . les. HENRY OTTO LEICHTER s •arthmore ' s biggest unconscious wheel . . . avc and Itc . . . thinks that slacks on the female are an abomiiration . . . the magnificent roosian . . . dark hair with a life of its o vn . . . deeply attached to his army clothes . . . honors . . . hurr ina; henr . ARTHUR GEORGE LEVIN ever worrying about the i ory to ver and campus conditions . . . short hair-cut and clean shirts . . . can be counted on for generous offers of potato chips and apricot brandy . . . pet loves: ne - vork citv and the theater . . . erratic— but all for the best . . . ' hen does he get those papers done? DOROTHY SEILER LONGAKER lo- es music by the three ' well-kno ' n b ' s . . . climbing mountains in Wyoming . . . married life Avith richard . . . can sing an aria from carmen . . . play a hand of seven card stud ... or drink gallons of black coffee -(s ith equal enthusiasm . . . her prediction: marriage and the atonr bomb are here to sta . 50 CLASS O F 19 4 8 BETTY ARTHUR MACK black braids and peasant blouses . . . as the mood strikes me . . . we prefer the condition of perdition . . . finds romance in russian . . . honors in middlebiny, martin and the math libe . . . came to college an artist, now all she draws is graphs . . . one of the pipple who live in the triple. DONALD R. MacLAREN pipesmoking sage of the media inn . . . back- ground of french cathedrals and fine old brandy . . . ever dependable bulwark of the golf team . . . modestly disclaims literary triumphs . . . local philosophers shun exposure to mac ' s dev- astating logic . . . his continental manner . . . old world charm . . . add much to life at swarth- more. MARGARET LOUISE MacLAREN won ' t somebody please buy a halcyon? . . . the book ' s capable business manager . . . gwimper . . . she says she doesn ' t have a southern accent . . . but there ' s no place like texas . . . smile for everyone . . . wor ks hard, but can always be per- suaded to stop for a cigarette ... or just talk . . . psych major . . . peg. JANET I. MacLELLAN hails from bet ' lehani . . . always new ideas for that 3rd west room . . . from steig cartoons to hummell prints . . . sings constantly ... a born mimic . . . have you heard the minnesota or Pennsylvania dutch accents? ... a jack knife dive that ' s all her own . . . works hard . . . peren- nial hall president or committee chairman . . . waater . . . iani. HOPE MARINDIN eyes flash when she ' s excited . . . madonna- like appearance hides a bit of the devil . . . ar- tistic . . . erratic efficiency . . . worries about little things . . . determined to jitterbug . . . and did, in record time . . . Itc . . . loves to sing-at any hour . . . talents enough to spread them wide . . . martie. 51 u N O R JOHN CALVERT MARSHALL thatcher-thveller ... a gentleman and a diplo- mat ... is that middle name significant . . . quiet, dignified, and friendly . . . sincere and affable . . . thinks before he talks, and it ' s worth listening to . . . ec major, fraser minor . . . culti- ated speech . . . nookie menial . . . but always dapper . . . phi psi . . . the ideal blind date. SAM RANKIN MASON sharpie . . . operator from way back . . . friendly . . . music and dancing . . . swimming and tennis his specialties . . . pre-med headed for Avestern reserve . . . one of the mary lyons crowd ... ex v-12 . . . hard worker . . . future dr. kildare . . . psychological explanations of character— real and fictional . . . sam. JEAN McCARTEN zoo major . . . from way out west in michigan . . . gwimper . . . spur-of-the-moment ideas . . . and the enthusiasm to go with them . . . convert to horseback riding . . . wonderful smile ... off to bound brook e% ' ery we ekend . . . with a suit- case twice her size . . . she ' s lovely, she ' s en- gaged . . . jeanie. GENE ELTON McCORMICK truly interested in his work as an english ma- jor . . . gets down to the library at 7:50 a.m. with- out fail . . . forever smoking a variety of pipes . . . mixtine 79, of coiuse . . . sunday schedule . . . bathrobe, sack and philharmonic broadcast . . . get to. know him . . . he ' s interesting and intelli- gent . . . are vou taking the jeff home? SUE HIETT McELDOWNEY suz) . . . refreshing as her Canadian summers . . . probably the only west virginian who wears shoes . . . plenty of vitality . . . her dancing is su- perior . . . that breathless quality . . . wait ' till i tell ou! ... a pre-med with ambition . . . ham salad on toast, please . . . i ' d swap my horse and dog for you . CLASS O F 19 4 8 ALICE SHOEMAKER McNEES a star at hockey . . . excitable and enthusiastic ... a collection of small animals, thanks to bob . . . the dear, sweet soul . . . takes her trench ill large doses and likes it . . . works intendy . . . brown tweed and philip morris. ANN CAYWOOD MECKES outing club . . . diuigarees every weekend . . . last minute rush . . . the more confusing the more fun ... so many things to talk about she talks about them all at once . . . square dances . . . looks slight but try chasing her up a moun- tain . . . child psych and science courses for fun ... no idea of directions . . . you haven ' t heard about college week? . . . one minute up, one minute down, mostly up . . . woody. JOANNA MEYER hilarious malapropisms . . . quietly efficient . . . staunch democrat . . . keen interest in current happenings . . . ardent rooter for u. of p. ' s light weight varsity rowing crew . . . he ' s at penn you know . . . subbie fan . . . phoenix senior editor . . . future plans include domestic application of economics. EDWARD BIDDLE MIFFLIN not a care in the world . . . man of many names . . . mift, eddie, mouse . . . many expressions . . . ready for an excursion any time to the 103rd or the ranch . . . hits the books in the pinch . . . there i was, flat on my back at forty thousand feet . . . likeable, entertaining. DEVARONA MILLER tall, bespectacled . . . friendly, easy-going . . . an explosive laugh . . . pet pee e: always too many people in his room . . . says he ' s just an average guy . . . kentuckian by residence, west- erner at heart . . . history major . . . junior editor for the phoenix ... all the latest records . . . dc . 53 u N R IRIS LYDIE MIROY sunnx iris, alwavs smiling . . . zoological psy- distinctive purely worries herself thin chcjlogist with linguistic abilitx . . walk . . . finds pearls very engaging objectixely speaking . . . worries about exams but gets a ' s and gains . . . experi- enced pencil sharpener . . . loves cookies ... a letter a day, cause andy ' s away . . . she too ' s of the pipple who li e in the triple. RUTH ELIZABETH MONK betty possesses a knack for making people and life soiuid tremendouslv pictmesque ... an in- defatigable honors student but waves it aside . . . that easter morning look ... a sparkling humor that takes one by surprise . . . assorted mishaps have not dimmed her enthusiasm for horses nor dustv dorms her domestic zeal . . . warm, loval, generous, a friend worth the seeking ... al- though a connoisseur of sleeping, she remains an energetic worker in numerous extra-curricular activities. BARBAR. MOORE sober-faced laugh . . . listens to third west ' s troubles . . . does anyone want a date? . . . makes vou laugh n Uh her . . . pittsbiu ' gh accent Avith the moore touch . . . something always hap- pens to her but she makes amazingly quick re- coveries . . . bobby. JOHN BEVERLY MOORE, III the long, lanky extrovert who admits to benton, illinois . . . when cross-e.xamined . . . only spring will bring out this smooth socialite . . . hibernates in winter . . . denizen of martin, commons, phi psi lodge, and the shanghai water- front where everyone knows jb . . . penn relays hurdler . . . barron ' s standby . . . mike happy product of wsrn. WINIFRED TAYLOR MUIR ■i innie . . . the most teasing eyes— and temper- ament—on campus . . . and the men love it . . . right hand lady for l.t.c. . . . dark lady . . . antigone . . . wants to teach and direct high school dramatics ... go to her for the most graphic descriptions of any and all events . . . but there are mountains in north jersey. 54 CLASS O F 19 4 8 JAMES HERBERT NASH swimming and j.v. football . . . bookie ... a man who gets around . . . quiet and potent sense of Iiumoi . . . California ' s contribution ... a level head . . . valuable constructive criticism ... a well-balanced personality . . . many friends attest his well-deserved popularity . . . bouird for success . . . author of controversial literature- ask the phi psis. EDWARD PETER NEUBERG hidden from view by more gross characters and his own self-efiaceness, ned is not seen often or enough around campus ... a scholarly soccer star . . . pantomiming riot of the hamburg show ... a quiet natiue bursting into good humor and laughter . . . those three-hodges, field and neuberg. MARIAN NEWLIN pug . . . psych major with determination . . . amnesty parades . . . love of the rough and tough outdoors . . . plays the viola . . . passion for burl ives . . . serious about her work . . . making her more enjoyable when it ' s fun time . . . mid-west- erner . . . quiet but friendly . . . modern dancer . . . active young friend . . . seasoned work camper . . . oh, i forgot my pills. FRANCIS TIM NICHOLSON nick, the strong and silent one . . . the army and a blonde bombshell have changed his noto- riety of the ' 42 era . . . long legged standout of dunny ' s muddy soccer team . . . liberal mind in a revolutionary soul . . . appears ready to settle down to solid respectability. ARTHUR NORTH euphoria in the diugstore . . . conversation clothed in symbol and metaphor . . . hainionizes any song into jazz . . , engiish major . . . does things quietly without collegiate splash . . . pall malls, but it ' s always the last one in the pack . . . ex-sargent, ex-art student with literary tend- encies. 55 J u N O R VASCO EMILIO NUNEZ, JR. rob, the man of a thousand romances . . . car- ried on simuhaneoiisly . . . dapper character from the wilds of andover . . . takes his weekends anywhere but swarthmore . . . ex-haverford alien converted by the navy . . . sometimes soccer flash, badminton ace . . . spasmodic student . . . fluctu- ating tempers . . . constant friend . . . headed with his little black bag for the bedside of mrs. monevbags. GEORGE CARROLL OPPENLANDER pixie— who else? . . . swarthmoron from way back . . . frank ' s ... a true kappa sig . . . frus- trated footballer . . . his friendh ' , bluff exterior conceals a really fine mind . . . semantics lover ... a philosopher at heart, a pre-med by choice . . . sincere and likeable . . . easy to know . . . un- usual picnics in crum ... he taught culbertson the game. GWINN FARDON OWENS swarthmore once more . . . after a navy career . . . Iiistory major . . . cello player . . . also, tennis . . . singing . . . newsbureau . . . avc . . . pre-war junior editor of phinx . . . orchestra . . . cham- pion harmonizer ... of shower room . . . easy- going . . . hopes of future journalism . . . duffy. ALICE PAPAZIAN hails from rochester . . . transfer from rochester university . . . still trying to make up her mind between a history or ec major . . . and getting used to eight o ' clocks . . . first in her college his- tory . . . n section prexy . . . could she be selling mittens in preparation for a merchandising fu- ture? . . . vivacious, very friendly . . . allie. JOHN GLENN PARRISH, JR. skyscraping toothpick ... a thoughtful gentle- man . . . unique and mysterious bridge system . . . pre-med with three years in the army . . . mec and garnet club committee . . . great teaser and teller of tall tales . . . does a very convincing imitation of a cow . . . needlessly pessimistic about his studies, especially in the morning . . . jack. 56 1 CLASS O F 19 4 8 MARY H. PEROT s.s.a. . . . he ' s a reactionary . . . subsidizes book store . . . intelligent glasses . . . i ' aded blue jeans . . . extreme social consciousness . . . unex- pectable ... an organizer supieme . . . concocter of novel soups ... an enthusiastic supporter . . . delightlul companion . . . constantly seen with stacks of books . . . always typing madly . . . par- rot. RAYMOND ALFRED PETERSON, JR. serenely convinced of male superiority . . . phil, history, and psychology reflect a critical in- terest in humanity . . . mary lyons, cutting and martin libe . . . brahms in the showei . . . pet peeve: college stew . . . serious, hard working, re- served . . . trolley cars and english hold a fascin- ation for this sky pilot in the making. EDITH MARGARET PHELPS people and fun— there ' s bininy too . . . china background . . . deeply sensitive . . . understand- ing . . . maybe that ' s why she ' s conduct head . . . also scm, modern dancer . . . can you sack . . . hates inhibitions . . . psych has the answer . . . an especially deep faith in people . . . her love of life contagious . . . bunny ' n bobby. PATRICIA PLANK one of those rare brown-eyed blondes . . . pat . . . math honors . . . keen instincts about people ... a spark of wisdom . . . careless humor . . . reticent manner concealing an independent spilt . . . you know it ' s funny, but . . . life is fascinating . . . the slow, searching mind . . . evfry thing ' s under control. BURDETTE CRAWFORD POLAND it ' s strictly bud . . . dark and interesting . . . a conscientious histor) ' major . . . looks serious . . . uniil he smiles ... a good sense of himior is kept alive beneath that dignity . . . good looking . . . genuine friend . . . sometimes seen doing push-ups and heaving dumb bells ... an in- triguing dimple . . . kappa sig. 57 u N O R JOAN ADRIENNE POYNTON joannie ... so much silky black hair . . . and lor such a little girl ... a growing, imaginative mind . . . understanding and sensitivity . . . classics student . . . she actually likes latin . . . and lots of other things too . . . people for in- stance . . . and bull sessions . . . and dancing . . . an ethereal quality . . . rather a dreamer . . . what is it all about? EDWARD BYRD RAWSON long, 6 ' 2 , and lank) ... a flair for physics . . . penchant for puttering . . . one of the george school gang ... a perfectionist with ability . . . cellist for the orchestra . . . staunch phi delt . . . hand) man of his hall . . . and authority on prac- licalh anvthina;. ROBERT LOUIS ROEMER griunman his ideal ... a top engineer with no office work . . . lab reports far into the night . . . penn and v-12 . . . his data sheets must be good . . . everybody uses them . . . jv football and phi psi . . . his spare time goes for the internals of cars and shakespeare . . . bob. AMY ROOSEVELT exuberant is the word for roosevelt . . . she doesn ' t laugh, she guffaws . . . that rare item: a human dynamo who ' s easy to take . . . amy does everything— and nothing by halves . . . enough varsity letters for a game of anagrams . . . opin- ions strong, but never oppressive . . . vital as a manning lecture, enjoyable as plushie ' s . . . she ' s incomparable. FRANKLIN TAYLOR SANDT one of swarthmore ' s many conquered men ... he and his better half occupy a one room suite down on benjamin west avenue . . . one of the fleet men in the v-5 naval imit ... an engineer ... a d.u. . . . cpiite a sense of hiunor vhen you get him going . . . steady and depend- able . . . frank will go places. 58 f CLASS O F 19 4 8 MARK LAWRENCE SCHEIBER a psychological hedonist of the present mo- ment . . . regardez les lys de champ et ainsi de suite . . . murmured as a boomerang is hurled into the air . . . prone to recumbent reading of the world ' s gieatest literature . . . owns and oper- ates own painting apparatus and cello . . . mark. EDYTHE ELOISE SCHLICHTING where does she get her energy? . . . let ' s play tennis . . . dances like a dervish . . . studies with same intensity . . . strengthens her convictions with logical argument . . . star swimmer . . . cap- tain of the championship team this year . . . elaborate schedules . . . well, i tried to stick to it! . . . she tries to know every name in the di- lectory ... el. LUISE SCHMIDT-BAEUMLER always friendly in spite of those shy blushes ... a zoo major . . . finds time for the swimming team . . . painting and postering hold her in- terest . . . cookies from home . . . knitting is one of her majors . . . inexhaustible vitality. HOWARD ALLEN SCHNEIDERMAN bright mind under that bright hair . . . new )orker . . . quite a conversationalist . . . honors . . . bio and physics . . . also weight lifter in spare time . . . fond of theater and poetry . . . math club organizer . . . sienerous . . . diliocnt . . . vivacious howie. impetuous rust ' RICHARD WALLACE SCHWERTNER a staunch d.u. and don ' t ou forget it . . . good natured. infectious grin . . . junior class tieasurer . . . beer hound . . . wheie ' s de witt . . . lab re- ports at 2:00 a.m. . . . beats on cavin . . . con- sulting engineer of b section . . . jv football . . . outside business man . . . beaver . . . kwinker . . . friendly, easy-going . . . still looking for his bench . . . dick. 59 u N O R EDWIN COLBY SEVRINGHAUS one of the famous c-3 . . . dartmouth . . . u. of Utah . . . madison high . . . Wisconsin . . . likes are varied . . . pliotography . . . skiing . . . iolin . . . music in general . . . pre-med . . . excellent sense of humor . . . friendly . . . one of the more Svell-rounded of swarthmore . . . ed. HERMAN JAMES SHEEDY, JR. tall and good natured . . . swimming team manager . . . ex-prexy of d.u. . . . efficient and dependable ... he can handle any meeting . . . big smile coming easily . . . quiet and competent ... he speaks with authority . . . budget commit- tee with the spectacular spectacles . . . jim. WILLIAM MIDDLETON SHEPPARD sensitivity and passive resistance . . . last of the gladstonian liberals, but with fabian tendencies superimposed . . . enemy of pretence and the fixed opinion . . . ec major, but human . . . keen and learned sports observer, with emphasis on baseball . . . still has a few cmly hairs left , , , gentle sceptic, mild misogynist , . . anglophile , . . ex-infantryman, e.t.o. . . . shep. CHARLES WESLEY SHIKE a man with strong and lasting principles . . . chairman and founder of the student christian association . . . background of four colleges , , . political science major . . . sincere ... a fiery debater . . . enthusiastic young friend . . . head- ing for divinity school ... a jitterbug withal . . . ■ ' es. JOHN GEORGE SIEGLE combines ivork i ith pla), candor with diplo- macy . . . after a few years as a naval officer, wider John tells taller stories . . . natural leader and organizer . . . but. on occasion, sits back and philosophizes ... a happy grin, a jolly chuckle, wonderful luck with cards and a host of friends . . . johnny. 60 CLASS O F 19 4 8 NADIA DEEM SMEALLIE nade . . . very much the up-stale new yorker . . . definitely has a way with people . . . likes to organize . . . I ' ve simply got to wear a hat to philly . . . disarming candor . . . and poise sinprising preoccupation that seldom falters 1 propriety . . the american look with propriety . . . exuberant as a young colt GLADYS M. SMITH rusty . . . lavender, green and gray suits . . . ex-day student . . . now worth resident . . . chem and calciUus . . . dark led nail polish . . . oh, it ' s horrible . . . lovely red hair . . . florida jaunts . . . he ' s there . . . bridge addict . . . good, too . . . dogged determination under that gay exterior. JOYCE SMITH she likes swarthmore food . . . cape cod and rhode island . . . sense of hmnor . . . especially when she talks in her sleep . . . persecutes her poor roonrmate . . . comes from a long line of assumed names, and we don ' t mean jones . . . classics honors student Avith a sense of perfection. BARBARA CLARK SOSMAN SOS or bobby . . . any wa) you slice it, it ' s still sosman . . . horsewoman nonpareille . . . dan- seuse moderne . . . and, of course, the other half of that anachronism, the dodo . . . poetess lau- reate on mountain top or depth of pun . . . master of hounds, wolves, and turtles . . . two loves: the arts and straight a . . . the epitome of friendship . . . and no moment is too short for an eternit ■ of fun. GAVIN P. SPOFFORD smiling and easy going person . . . surprises with sudden outbursts of strong, definite opin- ions . . . another expedient student . . . ready for the books ... if fun, football, movies, women and basketball don ' t interfere . . . tempered by the service to a good-natured disdain of shallow pseudo-intellectuals . . . favorite of the pagan phi psis . . . spa. 61 u N O R HOWARD STEIN psych major with chemistry difficulties . . . fio-( ' ing checked coat . . . homemade lunches gen- erously passed out . . . consuming and sensitive concern about people . . . wild and gay laughter . . . elderly green car . . . free rides for anyone . . . breathless way of talking . . . morning coffee in the druggie. SUSAN ELIZABETH STOLL susie . . . new mexican from way back . . . phoenix editorial advisory board . . . skier par excellence . . . femininity . . . enthusiastic friend . . . ever willing to help out . . . room enlivened by her touches of personality . . . who wants to eat dinner now? . . . delightful, warm style of A i iting. ROLAND PANCOAST STRATTON, JR. pre-med with a good bedside manner . . . uni ersally liked . . . taken to studying friday nights in crum . . . phi delt prexy . . . junior class prexy . . . champion serenader . . . that laugh ... ex of the prr . . . plays soccer and la- crosse with equal agilitv . . . and a kwinker too . . . enid ... a man vou won ' t soon forget . . . bud. MARY STR.A.WBRIDGE one of the romantics, devoted to wagner and the russians . . . historv major . . . tennis and riding . . . will open ■(windows even in the dead of -(vinter . . . ho ' sv ghastly! . . . tea and stickv- buns in the druggie . . . admits she ' s irrational . . . belie e her when she savs she ' s a liberal. DOROTHY LOUISE S ' WERDLOVE peaches pie, where did you get that beautiful red hair? . . . you can hear her coming, hop, skija and a jump . . . comes of a family of vits . . . saucv . . . veteran conference goer . . . iron i -ill-poA er but Avhen she goes o erboard she takes a fl)ing leap . . . competent, jack of all sn trades clotty. 62 CLASS O F 19 4 8 MARION ELMA TAYLOR mikie . . . allentown, new jersey that is . . . friendly . . . harried honors student . . . reads the post regularly . . . call operator 20 in trenton, mike . . . natural blonde hair . . . fre- quent pims . . . dawgone it . . . softly feminine . . . one third of the basssett-williams-taylor com- bination. HENRY EDWARD TEMPLE mainstay of the social committee . . . phi sig rusher . . . bound to a slide rule . . . dry, subtle sense of himior . . . party boy . . . transfer from webb institute . . . tliat wavy red liair . . . friendly and sincere . . . mary lyons dweller ... a massa- chusetts boy . . . footballer . . . the strong silent type, but once he gets going . . . hank. ANN THOMPSON tommy ... a natinall) confident air . . . con- stant bridge player . . . chica and the gang . . . turkey sandwiches after vacations . . . always wants to be doing something . . . quick mind . . . studying is no task . . . social inclinations . . . why don ' t you all come to my house? ... no strain at all. ELIZABETH KAY THURMAN kay . . . tho she li es in the ■ill, she sneaked off to middlebury before swarthmore finally claimed her . . . vivid sense of humor and hearty laugh . . . expert hemstitcher . . . hope chest nearly full . . . pert and lively. NANCY TWITCHELL animated . . . appreciative sense of hiunor . . . an acute sense for and disliking of hypocrisy . . . instinctive liberal from the midwest . . . demol- ishes affectation with oh, boodely-boo . . . that twitchell twang . . . edits halcyon with noncha- lance . . . distinctive vocabulary . . . definitely a gooder . . . fits in wherever she is . . . twit. 63 u N O R RALPH VALTIN versatile athlete . . . varsity baseball and bas- ketball, all-american soccer . . . willing worker for care . . . and the student council . . . appreci- SLtive of symphonic music . . . ivould-be ciilbert- son . . . phi psi . . . scavenger for butter . . . book and key . . . argyles by nancy . . . roUo. NELSON SANFORD VAN VALEN cross-country . . . fond of ill-gotten ice cream ... an expert on railroads and political theory . . . chasing bryn mawr rabbits . . . quiet and personable . . . open house in the friends libe . . . a iilack hate for Pennsylvania weather . . . one of faidkner ' s boys ... a challenge to more than one girl vho can ' t belie e that he won ' t. ROBERT HO ' WARD VERNON lots of action . . . lots of enthusiasm . . . chief t.p. arranger for d.u. ... a big grin and a long stride . . . unfailing optimist ... a born engineer and a fine pianist . . . captain of the track team . . . overflowing with good will . . . e er)body knows Jhim . . . bob. RUTH VOGT a history major in honors . . . definite musical and artistic leanings . . . studies hard . . . can al- ways take time out for fun or to lend a sympa- thetic ear . . . enthusiastic early riser . . . avid reader of the herald tribune . . . loads of friends . . . loyal supporter of many clubs and activities . . . long, blonde haii . . . blue eves . . . rufus. NICHOLAS HARRY WAGNER, III or is it I ' V? . . . Cornell transfer . . . aloof . . . e.e. . . . individualist . . . day student from media . . . kappa sigma and the crescent and the star . . . ex-infantr) ' . . . always a good word for every- one . . . analytical mind . . . shrewd sense of Jiu- mor . . . pinple heart . . . married . . . nick. 64 CLASS O F 19 4 8 JOSEPH LEE WALDAUER psych major in honors, but has savoir-faire in low bars . . . mahler and proust . . . oh, let ' s be fin de siecle! . . . casual but effecti e humor . . . not as easy going as he seems . . . naive enthusi- asm about things in the moment . . . i won ' t speak to you if you wear that swarthmore dollar sian. ANDREW WARREN WEIL easy going, hard working . . . majors in wsrn . . . minors in poli sci . . . glib tongued florida drawl . . . debate, oratory, inexhaustible energies . . . his ideas work . . . headed for the profes- sional air waves . . . dark, suave, quiet . . . bull session enthusiast . . . andv. LAWRENCE WEISKRANTZ lanky, conscientious phinx editor . . . sizeable collection of pipes and colorful plaid shirts . . . siuprised looking hair ... a budding writer . . . filled his notebook with acute observations of people and places while an air force cryptogra- pher in egypt, arabia and iran . . . genial hiunor masks a sharp awareness of the incongruities in people and things. JOHN CALELY WENTZ erudite english major in honois ... a pen- chant for fair-play and the unbiased view . . . phenomenal memory . . . the man with a thou- sand voices and a joke for every occasion . . . rather amazing vocabulary used with a deft touch . . . basketball manager and rabid phillies fan . . . anglo-phile . . . aspires to the contempla- tive life . . . j.c. JOHN R. WENZEL iolent scribblings in eco notebooks . . . da student from chestnut hill and member of 5:19 club . . . real emotion in jazz . . . heavy tread in reference room . . . concerned about politics . . . aloof but surprisingly present . . . tendency to go to sleep on campus . . . hidden purpose under reserved exterior . . . children are beasts . 65 J u N I O R MARY TALBOT WESTERGAARD sailing pictures and bicycle parts all around the room ... ski club meetings and westinghouse friends . . . energetic . . . friendly and ambitious about everything . . . outing club amazon . . . square dance fiend . . . always just a wee bit late . . . and that green bag slung over her shoulder . . . quite a gal . . . westy. JAMES RUTLEDGE WHIPPLE the name ' s Whipple, sir . . . jim returned from the wars to find himself a campus by-word, a legend from parrish to mary lyons . . . seconcl only to jurgen heberle . . . quiet, hard working, non-grind . . . jim belies that word that Whipple did it ... a calm demeanor ruffled only by the thought of the many backward policies rampant at swarthmore. ROBERT VANDUYNE WHITMAN hydroelectric engineer . . . president of kwink . . . Pittsburgh and the pirates . . . the lead should have been hearts . . . studies for the re- quired number of hours . . . d.u. . . . whitty . . . a serious and ear nest person ... an engineer in honors . . . envied those regularly occurring per- fect marks . . . bob and alice. ELEANOR DOROTHY WICKES psychology major in honors . . . competent writer of seminar papers . . . life well-filled, well- organized . . . prize possession— a red and black knitted skirt . . . interested in singing, work- camps . . . people are fascinating . . . raconteur, with effects . . . definite ideals . . . ellywix . . . you ' re miss wickes because you look so fearsome. SUE GRAU WILLIAMS friends central should be proud of this gal . . . an enviable sports record . . . first team hockey, basketball and lacrosse ... her real passion is sailing . . . the world revolves around barnegat ba) ' . . . where she can be found in the summer . . . winning races in the ivedunk . . . practical joker . . . diehard republican . . . tall, curly- licaded . . . susie. 66 CLASS O F 19 4 8 DAVID RUTTER WORK a local boy but he started here in the v-12 program . . . never grouchy but a hard hitting tackle on the football squad . . . dave ' s an m.e. . . . gives and takes a lot of ribbing ... a staimch republican . . . holder of an official school record tor throwing the javelin . . . workey ' U come out all right. LAWRENCE ASH YEARSLEY the eagle, now come home to roost after long wanderings . . . c[uiet and hard ivorking student, trying to suppress an effervescent smile . . . stand-by, wliile ruth sits by, of varsity soccer and basketball . . . smooth and pleasant host . . . calm, portentious judgment . . . infectious per- sonality . . . larry will be a success. GEORGE BUSEY YNTEMA tall, friendh, but sh) . . . superior mathema- tician in honors . . . takes organic for chuckles . . . haunts the observatory . . . and the lacrosse Held . . . willing, quietly eager . . . Itc ' er . . . the russian butler . . . vsr.i . . . talented . . . affable, stargazes for van de kamp . . . -what lie says is worth listening to. PAUL M. ZALL english major, honorfied but won ' t admit . . . fantasies for the phoenix . . . secret passion to edit the new yorker some night . . . one of mil- dred ' s bus boys . . . big woods guide and bear hunter . . . belie es in individualism and nothing else, politically . . . don ' t be a fool! . . . the pipe. THE SDPHOMDRES With the blare of the peace trumpets, the class of ' 49 entered Swarthmore as the first class to begin in peace time for many vears. Besides this, we are distinguished for many firsts. We were the first class to be a heterogenous mixture of aging veterans and callow youths; the first to begin under the five course plan, under which we struggled manfully, and at times unsuccessfully, from its inception to its conclusion. We were the first to initiate many of the good old customs, so prevalent in pre u ' ar )ears. Sparked b)- Chris Pedersen as anchor man, we were victorious in pulling the bedraggled second semester freshmen across cold and forbidding Crura Creek. We mo ed on to greater triumphs when the Ro er Boys succeeded in painting the water tower a brave yellow. Our pride, hereto- fore enormous in the accomplishment of these facts, was some- what dampened when history reversed itself this vear and the freshmen pulled us through. We made our niche early in the athletic department, con- tributing Sallv, Selma, Kay, and Barb to the varsity swimming team. Not to be outdone, many of the men played varsity and JV sports ith a gusto which may or may not have been pro- portional to the results achie ed. Many of our number are ac- tive in clubs and publications: SN, SSA, LTC, Phoenix and IRC— all are fully represented and staffed by an imisosing list of sophomores. We blossomed out socially as a class this year with a dance and a picnic, both huge successes. CLASS OFFICERS: Orton, Perkins Jenkins, Urey, THE FRESHMEM CLASS OFFICERS The hallowed halls of Swarthmore witnessed t ' .ieir 82nd annual Ireshman in asion on Septem- ber 27, 1946— the class of ' 50 had arrived! Claiming the distinction of being the largest fresh- man class in the school ' s history, several aggressive individuals further asserted the class ' s im- portance by painting a flashy 1950 on the water tower. Freshmen spent their first college weekend ia a whirl of activity: getting settled in their new quarters, meeting together for the first supper, being welcomed by Prexy. exploring Crum at their picnic, getting acquainted at a mixer dance, enjoying tea at the president ' s home, and going through the mill at registration. It wasn ' t long, however, until classes and studying filled most of the day ' s schedule and left little time for other activities. The pretty freshman co-eds rather enjoyed the punishment of wearing huge name signs the third week of October, gaining the strategic ad antage of being the center of school (espe- cially male) attention. Doing their share to iqahold the honor of the class, the freshman men attained a wet but conclusive victory in the traditional freshman-sophomore tug-of-war across Crum Creek. On the other hand, the girls were decidedly on the losing end when they received only bruises and cold showers in return for th ir attempts at serenading ' harion and iMary Lyons. Mary Lyons later was the scene of one very successful freshman class activity, an informal dance, where class members and their guests worked off the surplus energy released by the foot- ball victory over Haverford that afternoon. The first class officers were elected in January. They recognized their classmates ' desire to take an active part in Swarthmore activities by sponsoring first a cle er March of Dimes campaign and then another class dance in the spring. The vear ' s end found the Ireshmen older, perhaps wiser, at least more aware of their own abilities and limitations, and looking forward t the day when they would be full-fledged soph- omores. 71 Dff Campus ACTIVITIES PHDEIVIX April Fool ' s issues, threats of extinction, 10,000 copy issues, The Real Phoenix — the life of a Phoenix reporter is never dull. Few students who saw the renascence of the bird this year realized the struggles that accompanied its labor pains. The be- ginning of the semester found the Phoenix in the financial doldrums. That it might lift its battle-scarred head again, Mai Gurbarg, editor, and Mike Glucksman, business manager, and his staff put on a high-pressured advertising campaign. Ads poured in, and the Phoenix presses rolled once more. 74 A subscription campaign was tackled next, and the room be- hind the prison bars in the basement ot Parrish began to hum with activity as a 10,000 copy issue was planned and sent to all the alumni in conjunction with the opening of the $5,000,000 campaign. Addressographing, folding, and pasting were the order of the day, and under the direction of Pat Niles, business manager, the herculean task of getting 10,000 copies in the mail was accomplished. Soon after this our bird almost became extinct again. The Phoenix was without a publisher and harried editors with long faces began checking upon the possibilities of receiving unem- ployment compensation. However, with an added grant of money from the college, the Phoenix set up a new domicile at the Long Publishing Company in Philly. Horace Breece, asso- ciate editor, resigned and Isabel Brown took his place. Heading the rest of tlie staff were senior editors Jeanne Cummins, Jo Meyer, Blair Moffett, Sue Stoll, Bart Trescott, and Larry Weis- krantz, and sports editor, Gene Macchi. The Staff weathered many blasts from returning students who remembered the Phoenix in its hey-day before the war. Although they could not live up to these standards of perfection, Mai and his staff did much to produce a livelier, more representative paper. New editors with new ideas gave the spring semester Phoenix a modern, simplified format with emphasis on sparkling featiues and opinion columns. Notes from the Underground , viz., the subversive faculty, gave the other side a chance to answer stu- dent gripes expressed in Off My Chest columns. A new find was Art North, whose subtle cartoons became the first thing Swarthmoreans looked for as they grabbed their Phoenix from the front hall table Wednesday nights. Larry Weiskrantz, editor, and Jeanne Cummins, associate edi- tor, were aided and abetted by senior editors Mary Burnside, Pete Dodge, Dick Everett, Sue Stoll, and Bart Trescott. Labor trouble dogged the footsteps of the new editor as rebelling copy- carriers put out The Real Phoenix , a parody on the Record strike. However, Editor Weiskrantz went Stern one better, bought out the rebel paper, and restored the cage to peace and quiet once again. April 1 found the l hoenix scooping every newspaper in the country widi the first news of the mass Swarthmore faculty resig- nation. Although we know that a few of the faculty had been leaving the Ivory Tower to find their place in the outside world, we had not realized that such a crisis had been brewing. Faced with this catastrophe. President Teddy Selmes carried on ad- mirably and the whole Phoenix staff, pledged to his support, had a grand time with this year ' s April Fool ' s issue. Once more a Phoenix staff puts a weary bird to bed, hoping that the past year has added new and brighter feathers to its plumage and that the future will add man ' more. THE 1948 HALCYDIV The Halcvox got under way this fall ith a large staff and many freshman tryouts. The battle cry was It Must Come Out on Time , but the original fenor died down, and true to tradition, mid-sumnrer means the arri al of the Halcyon to Swarthmore students. Money seems to be of vital importance in putting out a year- book so a vigorous subscription campaign was staged by Peg MacLaren, business manager, with the help of John McCutcheon and Martv Ma- rindin, subscription managers. .-V parade around the football field and selling outside the dining room were designed to arouse student interest. In the meantime Eloise Schlichtina; and her staff, composed of Kay Underhill, Nan Glass, Meg Guckes, Jean Baker, Margy Hench. Jack Chap- man, Gloria Lane and Dan Beshers, pounded the pavements for ads to assiue the bird a safe financial flight. Joan Adams, as literary editor, had a her- culean task this year as our class swelled to al- most twice its size and every additional member meant an additional writeup. The presidents of clubs and heads of committees were verv helpful in supplving us with information on their activities, many in finished fomi. Joanie had the excellent help in her work of Bill Jenkins, Chuck Stabler, Janie Morfoot, Les Leeds, Jim Nash, Mary Finch, Joan Poynton, Bebe Lucking and Aase . rnold. Jani MacLellan had the thankless task of pro- duction manager, assembling lists, calling for typists, copy readers etc., and pulling all the ragged ends of the book together. This )ear we were very fortunate in ha ing a large stafE of student photographers. Headed by Steve Mucha, the camera boys adequately covered all campus activities— social, sport and scholarly. Our pride and joy, the map inside the cover, was done bv Marcia Olds and Enid Tucker. John Siegle also contributed art work to the book. Caged in our office in the West Basement of Parrish, we sometimes despaired of there ever being a H.alcyon of 1948, but here it is— the record of a year of change from war to peace, the settling back into a normal schedide, but the looking ahead to greater things. Hd. r i f DDDD Is the Dodo extinct? Required every year to defy biology with two unarguably living issues, the Dodo maintains itself on a diet of uncertainty which has con- tributed as much as anything else to its stubborn existence. This year ' s staff en- trenched itself for the first time in years in an office (West Trotter Basement), painted the editorial tables bright blue, and set back to relish their battles with art, money, and its absence, spiders, and a critical audience newly home from the wars. The streams of expression from our supposedly tacit neighbors, as surprising as ever, carried the sinking-swimming Dodo to publication. The fall issue was edi- tored by Janet Gay, labeled Dodo Head by a Phinx caption writer and not al- lowed to forget it; the spring issue was managed by Robert Brentano and Barbara Sosman, to whose regime belongs the now-famous fifth of Scotch used as bait in a prose contest. Contributions began to creep toward pre-war quantities, leaving quality about where it had always been; if the poets went to war, they were not yet ready to say so. What effect tlie war had on the pen, if any, was left to another year. 78 IVEWS BUREAU The News Bureau, the official college publicity bureau, is a hardworking group of students whose purpose is to see that Swarthniore is kept in the public eye, whether it be for beating Haverford, sponsoring a chrysanthemum show, or promoting a five million dollar campaign. Its activities are of three kinds: acting as official correspondent for the Phila- delphia papers, sending news of national interest to Al and UP and the New York papers, and getting news about Joe Jones, freshman or Sally Smith, senior into hometown papers. An active organization with a long history, noted for its cutthroat competition with the Phoenix for recruiting writing members of the student body to its staff, it became temporarily inactive at the end of last year. Last fall it was reorganized under an official publicity director, pleasant and efficient Jan McCombs, class of ' 45. She supervises the work of the eighteen News Bureau writers and the three editors: AI Hovey, General News Editor: Woody Compton. Sports Editor; and Donna Larrabee, Women ' s Sports Editor. The first semester men ' s sports were handled by Gene Macchi. WSHIV WSRN, a member in the Ivy and Middle Atlantic Networks of the Intercollegiate Broadcasting System, has become an in- creasingly important source of entertainment and radio educa- tion for Swarthmore students. Under the direction of Manager Andy Weil, the station has not only greatly increased the professional caliber of its pro- grams, but broadcasting hours have been extended to twenty five hours per week. Helping fill this time were new programs such as Stump the Profs : classics in jazz called, Red, Hot, and Blue ; and two supper time shows, which besides being on the air, were fed through loudspeakers in the dining room and com- mons; and an inspiring list of network programs originating in the various studios of the eighteen college stations comprising the Ivy Network. Still other programs arranged in cooperation with some of Philadelphia ' s commercial stations and national newspaper publicity, have served to project WSRN into the eyes of not only professional radio, but the general public as well. Lovers of serious nrusic were amply supplied with their favor- ite classics through the efforts of Dave Redding and a staff of able script writers. The Radio Workshop, under first and sec- ond semester directors Ward Edwards and Dot Swerdlove, pro- duced a bumper crop of outstanding radio plays and provided invaluable instruction in the technique of radio dramatics. In the realm of popular music, the station has built up an exten- sive collection of popular records to fill the requests of any hep audience. None of this progress would have been possible without the boys with the soldering irons— the WSRN technical staff. Headed by technical director Joe Rutledge, these electrical wizards Dan Detwiler, Ed Dennison, Bob Kerr and others, have revitalized and installed everything from the two new turntables to facilities to Mary Lyons. Handling growing numbers of knobs and dials were fast learning members of Dave Ehrenfeld ' s engineering de- partment. After surveying this list of personnel and accomplishments, one wonders when this activity will stop growing. WSRN has reached big league proportions. STUDENT COUNCIL The Student Council is coin])o.sed of ten members elected by the student body from candidates nominated by the out-going Council and any students nominated by petition. There are three ex. officio members representing W.SGA, MEC, and the Interfraternity Council. The Fall Coimcil settled d(jwn to busi- ness by putting through a job which has been on and off the agenda for two or three semesters. A student committee is now established to allocate the Green Cai d Ftmd, that is the money that students pay for an acti ities fee. The allocation is based on reports from the different activities in the previous semester, and is passed by the business office before it can go into effect, ft was felt that the students who participate in the activities shoidd have some jurisdiction in planning the distribution of those funds. The Fall Coiuicil also -ivorked lo vard a closer luiderstanding between lacidt , administration, and students. Members of the facidty and Board of Managers were invited to different meet- ings of the Coinicil and showed a li el ' interest in and appre- ciation of students ' problems. Council members also had an opportimity to get better acc[uainted •l{h the administration and consequenth ' to have a more complete luiderstanding of their point of view. The groundwork vas laid for the establishment of an inter- organizational gioup to coortlinate campus acti ' ities as to time of meeting, place, and facilities to be used. Personnel and cur- riculum guidance were considered and it was recommended that the .Student-Faculty Cinriculimi Committee be instituted to con- sider student suggestions aboiU the academic ]3i(igram. 81 WSGA How did we get those one-thirty permissions? Who bought the dishes for the lodge kitchens? Who sponsors the Vocational Conference each semester? WTio gives those Freshman parties? Vho ran the Christmas tea? Vho sees that there is some semblance of order to the bulletin boards in Parrish? How did we get pemrission to have men in the class lodges in the afternoons and evenings? Vho collects clothes to send to Europe? Vho punishes those girls who forget to sign in? AVho gave S250.00 to the Endowment Fund Campaign? The answer to all these questions is WSGA or Women ' s Student Government Association. It goes about its business quietly and efficiently through the Executive Board composed of hall presidents and committee chairmen. i MEC In considering matters of secondary and larger importance, the MEC has al- wavs been a vital liason committee between the administration and the men students. Ablv headed by Ken Allebach and later by Bud Stratton, the MEC this year considered a number of problems which were representative of typical yeai- ' s woik. Ranging all the way from petty matters such as broken Avindo vs and snowball fights to problems of cars on campus and student guidance, the committee this year covered a good deal of ground. The Cracker Room in the basement of C-Section, now a fait accompli, was discussed at great length, several abortive attempts having been made before operation was actually begun. The committee made several valiant attempts to raise the standards of the men students in regard to dress at evening functions— whether they were successful, t me will tell. Room assignments, a perennial task, were handled with as much dispatch as is possible in such an arduous task. The question of overall student guidance, particularly as it pertained to fresh- men, was considered, and a plan, soon to go into effect, was formulated. Lines of proctorship authority were cleared up, and general problems were handled ad infinitum bv the joint activity of these two executive bodies. In all. the committee did good work, and they are to be comniended for their ivillingness in tackling difficult and sometimes disagreeable tasks. 82 IHC Vilh a large group of students interested in learning more about the inter- national scene and its problems, the IRC has been an acti e organization on campus this year. On the social side there is the annual picnic and this year the club combined with the Social Committee for a United Nations dance during the UN week along with the publicity campaign and the selling of UN Charters. The main project of the year has been the sponsoring of a Model General Assembly of the United Nations conference on April 3, 4, and 5. This conference was attended by over forty colleges from New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania with nearly two hundred delegates attending. VETERANS AFFAIRS EDMMITTEE The Veterans Affairs Committee, active last year in smoothing the veteran ' s adjustment to college routine, as inactive this year, lea ing the Veterans ' Council to run the program of facidtx advisers for veterans. The only national veterans oiganizatlon on campus is the American ' eterans Committee whose slogan of Citizens First, Veterans Second was found to fit the Swarthmore veteran ' s very civilian mood with the result that he easily fell in with the everyday pattern of campus life. The campus chapter, formed in the spring of 1946. has taken an actixe part in campaigning for civil liberties, veterans ' housing, and other topics of both local and national interest. Henry Leichter served as chairman in the fall this vear and Herb Kaiser took over in February. 83 STUDEIVT FEDERALISTS The Swarthmore chapter of the Student Federalists got under way with the election of officers: John McCutcheon, president; Jing Schauffler, vice-president; Bill Sieck, treasurer; Nancy Abbott, secretai7. Several meetings were held to discuss world problems such as the atomic age and prevention of world war by world federalism. In February a national convention of all student world government groups was held to merge them into a more efficient educational organization. DEBATE SDEIETY The Debate Society has enjoyed a thriving second childhood. Its reputation has spread throughout the East since it won the Philadelphia Inquirer Trophy at last year ' s Benjamin Franklin Debate Conference. Colleges debated include West Point, Annapolis, Columbia, North Carolina State, Pennsylvania, Syracuse, and Lafayette. Mai Gurbarg, Vic Herbert, ViIl Roth, Howard Sachar and Andy Weil were elected to Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary forensic fraternity. 84 SSA The Swarthmore Student Asseinblx provides a realistic ap- proach to current socio-political problems through a program of both education and action, discussion and participation. It is a member chapter of the United States Student Assembly, a na- tional student organization. Starting out the year with a bang, George Strauss, Dave Thatcher, and Howie Bowman led the campaign to send pro- fessor Vernon O ' Rourke to Congress. The students emerged from defeat disappointed but not disillusioned, and certainly well aware of the realities of doorbell pushing and the vicissi- tudes of local politics. Amy Roosevelt was the president for the fall semester. While Bob Ganier and the Political Action Committee tried to salvage a few remains from the election, the Race Relations Committee under Zara Shakow and Shifra Levy carried on a letter writing campaign and climaxed their activities with a weekend conference attended by students from all over the eastern region. The Industrial Relations Committee with Janet Orton as chairman investigated the Philadelphia Record strike and some of the moie curious students toured the strike head- quarters while others interested in Labor Education tripped up to the Hudson Shore Labor School and kept in touch with local groups in Chester. The spring semester saw a shift in personnel with E. A. Bancker as president. There was some shift of emphasis toward activities more closely related to the campus with the establish- ment of a Student Government atid Curriculum Committee but the assembly continued to supplement the classroom in all its events. LITTLE THEATER ELUB Under the direction of Barbara Pearson Lange, the Little Theater Club entertained the student body with excellent pres- entation of two major productions. Picking a bit of serious drama, the club presented Antigone , a modern version of Sophocles ' ancient tragedy on the 7th of December. Enid Ho- bart as Antigone very skillfully played a difficult role opposite James Gildersleeve as the tyrant Creon. The set, simple and se- vere, supplemented the mood of today established by contempo- rary costuming and modern speech. Much of the credit for an excellent production belongs to the unsung workers backstage. Their jobs are not glamorous, and are rarely noticed by the audience. Bouquets to the hardworking crews and their chairmen: Lucretia Gottlieb, Art Kaplan, Bill Kinter, Ellen Meyer, Brad Fisk, Roy Menninger, Lucy Hoising- ton, Betty Ayer and Rachel Thies. The light comedy, You Can ' t Take It With You by Moss Hart and George Kaufman, given on the 21st and 22nd of March, was a planned escape from the heavier, moralistic dramas of previous seasons to a lighter, more amusing production. Under the directorship of Karen Gelert and Gaby Staub a group of students produced The Astonished Heart by Noel Coward and The Man with a Flower by Pirandelo, a pair of one-act plays, in April. The male lead of both plays was carried effectively by James Gildersleeve. Both directors showed ability in their staging, as well as their acting, and a thorough compre- hension of the finer points of the dramas. As a subtle form of propaganda, the Little Theater Club pre- sented several short one-act plays in Collection during the school year. One of them, The House of Juke, with Forrest Comp- ton and Doris Campbell leading, was especially well met. SwarthmnrG Sings! 1 1 might be the One O ' Clock Jump or the Rachmaninofi concerto, but one is likely to hear either at an) time whether from the stage of Clothier or the much used piano in the Man- ageis ' Parlor. Let ' s say you ' re coming up from Wharton— you pause past the stage tloor, and peer through the window to dis- co er the source of melody. ... If it ' s late Ttiesday afternoon, it ' s the Band having a warm-up session for the dancing in Commons later. Ted Heitcamp ' s been doing a pretty fine job with that combo of his, and it ' s really hot to go . . . . AVell. you ha e to beat Mrs. Selmes to the door, so you hurry on. and enter the dining room to the strains of— well— our ideas of dinner music ar , but )ou ' re likely to cut your meat in waltz time. . . . There might be anyone tickling the ivories in the MP as vou walk past. The school is swarming with piano players- trained musicians and the play-by-ear improvisors— all good too! . . . Clothier is ali e vith music on your way back, and from the ([iiality and voliune you can tell it ' s orchestra practice. Dr. Van de Kamp is brandishing the baton with fervor, and the mem- bers are working hard imder his conducting iir preparation for the next concert. . . . ff )ou have a voice, then Mr. Sorber wants to see you— come to chorus Monday night! He ' ll tell you about its ambitious pro- gram this year, the performance of the Messiah in collabora- tion with the orchestra, the trips to present it at George School and ' esttown, the good times on the bus going and coming. . . . However, should )ou be carrying a spare bass-fiddle iir your hip pocket and you enjoy sight-reading— stop in at Dresden ' s Monda evening. There you ' ll find a group of like-minded mu- sicians playing for their own pleasure and for those who just come and listen. Whatever your instnmient. Papa Dresden can find something among his scores of scores . You ' ll like the informal, home atmosphere. ... Of comse, any afternoon or evening Cutting Collection is open— have vou seen its new location in Bond tower? The old Mortar Board room is well adapted to house not onh the rec- ord collection, but also more people. Once you discover its wealth for your listening pleasure Cutting is bound to be- come one of our favorite haunts. DUTING CLUB Tf it ' s diversion you ' re cravin , one need look no further than I he Outing Club. Though it may not be the most publicized, the SOC is certainly one of the most active clubs on campus and holds events that any guy or gal who likes the outdoors can en- joy. Variety is the least of our difficulties, for there are bike hikes to various nearby points; canoe trips to the Rancocas, Egg Har- bor, May ' s Landing, and even Crunr; overnight camping trips in the Blue Moimtains of western Pennsylvania; roller skating parties; skiing at Paxon Hollow; and picnic supper excursions close to home in the fall and spring. The O.C. ' s treasure is the famous cabin on Pitt ' s farm. Set back in the woods on the edge of a stream. Outing Clubbers are seen here iriany a weekend hiking cross-country, chopping logs, swimming when it ' s warm, dancing New England squares of an evening— or just stretching out to make up for those long hours behind a desk during the week. Here too, clubbers representing various colleges from Maine to Florida may be found, as well as many alumni. The SOC ' s intercollegiate activities are among its foremost. Om- three delegates to the annual lOCA conference in New England keep us posted on all the latest goings on in the out- door world, an intercollegiate weekend for skiing at Dartmouth College natinally draws all our winter sports fans, and of course College Week, the grand summer attraction in the Adirondacks for hiking and camping aroimd picturesque Lake Colden with swimming only for the hardiest. SOCIAL COMMITTEE The Social Committee for the fall semester, headed by Esther Leeds and Clyde Willis, was faced with the usual problems of hiring orchestras, obtaining food and chaperones, getting people to decorate and clean up after social events, and finding willing artists to publicize Social Committee activities. Added to these was an unusually large student body for whom to provide entertainment. Many of the traditional functions— dancing and bridge in Worth and the Lodges; Club Rocatorso; orchestra and record dances in Commons after football games, movies and basketball games; and WSGA weekend— were on the calendar. A new twist was given to the Christmas formal by holding il in Mary Lyons, which turned out to be so successful a location that it was repeated for the Flunkers ' Frolic in January.- Ttie Buck Hill Weekend, new to those of us who had come to Swarth- more since the war, but remembered with enthusiasm by veterans, was revived between semesters. Skiing and toboganning weie found to be just the thing for after-exam relaxation! Comes the new semester with a new committee co-chairmanned by Myree Blue and Bill Tietz. Jack Chapman ' s reorganization plan promises to keep future committees from the usual pitfalls of the organization. It involves a division of the committee int o several subcommittees, each in charge of one of the Social Committee ' s functions— such as food, chaperones, and publicity— with an in- tegrater for each Saturday night ' s activity. These subcommittees, by means of preference sheets sent out early in the semester, draw from the student body for help. In this way it is hoped to make Saturday night entertainments more truly college functions with their actual planning done by a wider range of students than in previous years. KWINK Otto Amann John Austin Miles Brown William Carter Harry Clappier Brad Fisk Mike Ghicksman Earl Haabestad Paul Hare Bob Hunter AVilliam Kinnard Richard Lyman Ned Neuberg . Walter Sanville Dick Schwertner Jim Sheedy Da id Stolberg Roland Stratton John W ' entz Robert Vhitnran Curtis Williams 92 GWIM P Beth Ash Betty Bassett Edith Bayer Frances Carey Marjory Clough Jeanne Cummins Anne Freidinger Hairiet Ghieck Helen Hill Elizabeth Horton Harriet Inglesby Isabel Kellers Margaret MacLaren Hope Marindin Jean McCarten Joanna Meyer Joan Poynton Patricia Plank Luise Schmidt-Baeumler Susan Stoll Dorothy Swerdlove Nancy Twitchell Nadia Smeallie Sue Williams 93 BOOK AIVD KEY Clovde Lowell Fausnaugh Charles Edward Newitt Abner Howard Albertson, Jr. Philip Keller Evans William Noble Kinnard, Jr. Richard Wall Lvman B ron Stauffer Ebersole. Vaughan Crandall Chambers James Herbert Nash Clifford Riggs Gillam, Jr. Donald Edmund Kelley George Dudley, Jr. Carroll Gawayiie Bowen 94 MDRTAH BD IRD Jean Demaris Affleck Rosalind Lorwin Betty Alden James Adelaide Brokaw Eleanor Stabler Gillam 95 PHI BETA KAPPA Frances Mayhew Blackburn Beverly Brooks Miriam Malcolm Douglas Isabel Emory Gamble Susan Everett Harwig Barbara Raymond Hough Samuel Mesaw Loescher Sally Lee MacLellan Gerald Emile Nolin Edward Hamilton Page John Rosselli Paul Seabury Jeanette Defrance Streit SIGMA TAU Donald Merle Anderson Alan Louis Duke William Ward Hays Verne Hoar, Jr. Hugh Haynesworth McCallum, Jr. SIGMA XI Edward Lloyd Bradley Robert Gardner Bartle Russell William Christie Carroll Irving Crawford Joseph Brown Dillenbeck John Hamilton Easter Barbara Raymond Hough Herbert Warren Jacobs Roger Derrill Keenan yVlbert Lengyel Abraham William Martin Gerald Emile Nolin Hildreth Hubbard Strode 96 IIVTEflFRATERIVITY COUNCIL The Interfraternity Council is. as may be supposed, a council of representa- tives of all fraternities on the campus and, in addition to being the representa- tive of all the fraternities, has complete jurisdiction over them. The Council re- tains for itself the right of initial action on all matters pertaining to relationships between fraternities, among their members, and with the Student Council since the President of the Interfraternity Council, or his representative, is automatically a member of the Student Council. The program of the Council during the semester Is never planned in advance except that rules for rushing are invariably set up at the beginning of the semes- ter. The Constitution of the Council pro ided rules be always up to date and specifically omitted a set of standing rules. One of the first items on the calendar in the fall was the rec|uest from the re- activated Garnet Club for admission. Although they are not, in the true sense of the word, a fraternity, it was felt that their aims and raison d ' etre were suffi- ciently in accord with the policies of the Interfraternity Council and with those of the college that they were soon reinstated to membership. Also on the calendar was a program calling for more freedom and its accom- panying responsibility for the fraternities by proposing that the fraternity houses be o]3ened to women and their escorts on Fridays from 7 to 10. Saturdays from noon to midnight and Sundays from noon to 10 p.m. without chaperons. This program was actively discussed by fraternity men among themsehes. with the Administration, and with the Board of Managers, ending with the approval of the Board of Managers. Rules and procedure are this year in the tentative stage but the Interfraternity Council will be allowed, in future years, to request at the beginning of each school year that the prixiiege and responsibility be renewed. On the program foi- the Spring semester come, in addition to consideration of regidations concerning the co-educational uses of the lodges and rushing pro- cedure, consideration of the reinstatement of the annual Interfraternity Ball and improvements and modifications of the Constitution and By-Laws. 97 DELTA UPSILDIV As it was lor fraternities everywhere, the college year 1946-47 was the year lor Delta Upsilon. Last year some of the boys were back from the service and a few veterans trickled in; this year it seemed as if everyone was back. The lean war years when a chapter enrollment of more than a dozen was something to mar- vel at are over and the DU ' s found themselves with more than fifty brothers and pledges. Meetings and T.P. ' s were jammed to capacity, and the ping-pong and pool tables were seldom idle (a bunch of beavers, these DU ' s!) During the fall semester, Jim Sheedy was chapter prexy while Ed Frost had the awful job of chapter treasurer. Jim succeeded in doing what all fraternity men talk about doing and seldom carry out: he kept the weekly meetings short and business-like. Frost paid off part of the ever-present college steam bills, hounded everyone for dues, and balanced the budget. Dick Schwertner and Walt Leser succeeded Jim and Ed in the spring semester and kept things going very efficiently. High spots of the year were the extremely successful winter formal in Media and the equally popular Alumni Banquet. The brothers began dropping their pins in a mad rush during the first few months and local gambling circles are laying even money that a few more will be dropped before Haixyon publication. Other stand-out moments dining the year were John Need ' s explanation of how he got his face scratched and Sam Suvarnsit ' s speeches at meetings on the cjuality of DU scholarship. 98 Abner Alberison David Ainiington Robert Bartle James Blake Clifford Bryant Harrv Clappier William Clarke Russell DeBurlo, Jr. Philijj Drurv David Field ' William Frederick Edward Frost Herbert Frost Howard Fiissell Edward Galligan James GifFord ClifFord Gillam MEMBERS Simon Goudsmit Robert Hillegass Tom Hodges Justus Allan Ho ey James Robert Hunter Cliff Keho James Kirkhoff Pliilip Kniskern Robert Latimer Walter Leser Carl Levinson Walter Lukens Douglas McGrath Frank Miller James Mumper John Need Edward Neubers: Charles Newitt Frank Nichols William Osier Edward Perkins Henry Richards Theodore Sanford William Schweikle Richard Schwertner James Sheedy Donald Smith Philip Spencer Charles Stabler Robert Sundt Robert Vernon Robert Whitman Benjamin Vol ' erton Cloyde Fausnaugh PLEDGES Franklin Sandt Leo Borah Renoo Siuarnsit AFFILIATE GRADUATE MEMBER KAPPA SIGMA This year has seen a rejuvenation of fraternity spirit coinci- dent with the gracUial return of college life to normalcy. With modest candor it may be said that the members of the Pi Chapter of Kappa Sigma have done more than a little to support their fraternity and the school. This has been achieved by a full share of participation in diverse campus activities, and the results will perhaps merit attention even from timeless and contemporary hecklers of the fraternal institution. Although its mentionable activities are many and various, Kappa Sigma stands foremost in the field of collegiate athletics. Always having been outstanding in this respect, the chapter con- tinues the tradition. Football captured the spotlight at the be- ginning of the school year, and in the starting lineup were six members of Kappa Sigma, while over twice that number were on the team. Equally prominent representation was seen in the next athletic attraction, basketball. Three members of the chap- ter canied Swarthmore on to successive spectacular victories. Similarly good showing as had for lacrosse, baseball and other spring athletic activities. On the local scene, the Kappa Sigs walked off with the Interfraternity Basketball League champion- ship again this year. Swarthmore ' s social calendar has been marked by many func- tions given by Kappa Sigma. Although to date none of the ac- tive members appear to have yielded up their pins to the in- amoratas on campus, this has hardly been indicative of social decay, for there have been many successful T.P. ' s and informal parties throughout the year. The spring formal was the social climax of the year. Active membership in the fraternity at present is relatively high, and with pledges still on the list, Kappa Sigma anticipates a bright future. William Battin Millard Beatty Robert Bertolett Rocco Bonavita Charles Bush Robert Christie William Clark William Cornog Walter Cosinuke Robert Fergus David Galloway Joseph Gary Rex Gary William Black Richard Greenstein Malcolm Smith MEMBERS Jack Denton Henry Gorjanc Erling Haabestad Charles Hesner Richard Hurd Richard Johnston Charles Kaercher Peter Kaiser Donald Kelly Frank Ludemann George Carroll Oppen lander AFFILIATES Richard Turner Nicholas Warner George Frederick Oppenlander John Piper Burclette Poland William P e Colvin Shea Jacob Slick Franklin Stow Chalmers Stroup Jackson Taylor Richard Unger Jackson Villis Joseph Batlin John Blose James Bowditch Peter Hollaway Carl Horton PLEDGES Edward Lawhorne David Schofield Richard deCharms John Tmney 101 PHI DELTA THETA The Phi Delts eagerly welcomed back this year the host ol veterans who once formed the backbone of the fraternity. Past presidents and various assorted wheels returned in abundance to put new life into the old gang. Many pre-war customs eve introduced under the able presidential leadership of Bud Strat- ton and George Gavin, fall and spring respectively, such as sere- nades and orchids in abundance for the lucky pinnees, a week- end at Pitt ' s farm, Sunday night suppers at the lodge and others. Social events took a new twist as we capitalized on the 365 Excuses for Having a Party from Esquire ' s Date Book, with a dance thrown in honor of the hanging of Gaptain Kidd, replete with Kidd in effigv hanging from the rafters. Our activities ex- panded when -e, along with the other fraternities on campus, got the go-ahead signal from the alumni and the college to open the lodges unchaperoned on Friday and Saturday nights. Co-ed gatherings and bridge games were prolific, and the atmosphere was much more informal than in the past. Sparked by Orrick Metcalfe and Johhny Henchel, our basket- ball team had an interesting season, losing and winning in about the same proportion. We await eagerly the opening of interfra- ternity softball competition, when we shall field a team ivhich ■will be second to none (unquote from Lewis). ' orking under the new rushing rules, we acquired seven men in the rushing season, along with Saunders and Killip, Sigma Nu and Sigma Chi respectively, as affiliates. After a pledge luncheon at the Inglenuk. these men were initiated on the night before the Christmas vacation, incidentally an all-night affair. We have had a good year, and as the college giadually returns to its peacetime status and e nrollment, we expect even better times in the vears to come. 102 MEMBERS Gerald Achtermann Walter Edwin Ahrens Evert Bancker George Gavin John Chapman I ' hilip Curtin James Dolliver George Dudley Byron Ebersole Bradley Fisk Robert Forster Philip Gilbert Alan Hall Paul Hare Graham Harrison Richard Heineman John Henchel John Hoskins Norman Hoidljcro o W ' illiam Jameson Wilmer Jenkins Calvin Kaiser Da id Kirn Ro) Knudsen Lloyd Lewis John McCrory Robert McCoy Roy Menninger Morgan Moore Frederick Morev Stephen Mucha Fhf)mas Nichols Francis Nicholscjn Carroll Poole Echvaicl Rawson Willard Roth Walter San vi lie Griffin Stabler Roland Stratton Alan Thomas Morris Trimmer James Whipple Leo Woerner Theodore Wright Orrick Metcalfe PLEDGES PHI KAPPA PSI A sudden influx of biotliers in tlie faff rofling in from tlie air corps, Loclcheed Aircraft, tlie Cliicago Public Library, and the bars of Sfiangliai undeniably consolidated Plii Psi as the paragon of Swartlimore fraternities. As the rusliing seasons have shown, it is unexcelled in comradeship and good fellowship. Not depending on worldy goods such as jeeps and radar sets, Phi Kappa Psi with its battered lodge and decrepit furniture sliows tliat strong friendshijj and personal loyalties— to fraternity and to Swartlimore— are the important aspects of fraternal life. The brothers are well rounded, rounded out, all-around ' wheels ' , running from the Ail-American Boy type through the hen-pecked husband to Dangerous Dan McGrew. Dominating the football, soccer, basketball, cross-country, tennis, lacrosse, track, baseball, and parchesi teams, the boys find time for ser- vice and honorary organizations, class offices, news bureau, the Plush Mill , parchesi, song writing, Hamburg show, welfare fund drives ancl occasional classes. In fact, some of the younger brothers threaten to raise the grade average which has proudly been the lowest on campus since 1889. Phi Psi did not— —participate in the O ' Rourke campaign; —throw a swell formal on the 23rd of November: —march on Philadelphia with anti-conscription slogans; —write its Congi-essman asking for more money for its war services; Phi Psi did- — settle down to its post war task of aiding in the production of better American citizens; —become the first group on campus to back the Alumni Fund Drive 100%; —continue its established practice of pledging for mem- bership any staunch fellow, regardless of race or religion. • with one exception THIS IS A PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT. Robert Amussen Jolin Austin John Benient Charles Bestor Cairoll Bowen Miles Brown Forrest Conipton Dallas Cope George Corse Richard Cryer Robert Decker Gordon Douglas Buckley Garrett MEMBERS Robert Gammill Robert Hay den James Hayes Warren Higgins John Longstreet Pelser Lynah Ed-svard Mifflin Blair Moffett John Moore James Nash Vasco Nunez Donald Oyler Boyd Quint Herbert Reinhardsen George Reller Robert Roemer Marshall Schmidt Richard Schoepperle Gavin Spolford ' hitne Stearns Rolf ' altin Clvde Willis Lawrence Yearsley Domve Yntema Merle Yocke - John Marshall AFFILIATES Fredciick Green 105 PHI SIGMA KAPPA 1946-47 marked a strong revival of Phi Sigma Kappa on tlie Swarthmore campus. The return of many Phi Sigs from the armed services brought the chapter back to normal strength. A number of well attended T.P. ' s were held during the fall term, but the highlights of the semester ' s social events were the Christmas Party held in the lodge the Saturday before vacation and the formal dance held at the Paxon Hollow Country Club the Saturday after acation. The high point of this term ' s social schedule so far was the tea part ' held at the Secane home of Bill Kinnard. Phi Sigs are well represented in a number of extra-curricular activities. Bill Tietz is spring term chairman of the social com- mittee, while Andy Weil continues as director of WSRN and Mike Glucksman as business manager of the Phoenix. KWINK was thoroughly controlled by Phi Sigs, Dave Stolberg, Bill Kin- nard, and Mike Glucksman, during the fall term. Phi Sigs were also active in athletics during the year. Phil Evans was a member of both the varsity soccer and basketball teams; Shorty Burroughs, Herb Hillman and Johnny McCutch- eon were members of the wrestling team, and McCutcheon was elected captain for next year. As to spring sports, Ed Dunning tends the goal for the varsity lacrosse team, and George Myrick plays midfield. Bill Tietz runs for the track team, and Phil Evans, Gene Macchi, and Arky Chambers are out for baseball. The Phi Sig team took second place in the Interfraternity Swim- ming Meet, but, alas, only fourth in the basketball league. On the managerial side, Stolberg managed the football team, Kin- nard the wrestling team, and Glucksman, the lacrosse team. All considered, this year has thus far been a good one, and despite the fact that a number of brothers will be graduated in June, next year looks very promising. 106 John Bacon Edward Burroughs William Carter Robert Creed Vaughan Chambers Philip Evans MEMBERS William Ford Howard Harris John Woodland Hastings William Kinnard Richard Lyman Eugene Macchi John McCutcheon William Sieck John Siegle David Stolberg Richard Walking John Adamson Robert Alfandre George Barnwell William Clenden Robert Coyler John Douglas PLEDGES Howard Gilliams Michael Glucksman Robert Haney John Harrison William Moore Peter Papastratigakis Robert Piatt Kenneth Snyder John Tanguy Henry Temple William Temple CLUB ■V ev,-tm- ' f i ■ -vpvu. Saturday Mghl! no SPDRTS FODTBALL 112 REVIEW The opening day of Swarthniore ' s 1946 football season i ' as accompanied by high hopes for an enviable record. The team that would don the Garnet and White that day appeared to justify these hopes; twelve retiuning lettermen from the year previous and others who had played dining the v ' ar made up the large part of what would be an experienced squad. Also back and at his old post was Lew Elverson, who had been away in the Navy since 1942. Ave Blake, who had so ably coached the team in Mr. Elverson ' s absence, was on hand as assistant coach. New this year was Bob Adam, who played football at North Carolina and coached at Duke while he was in the Navy, and who would also assist in coaching. Despite any high hopes, the schedule did not look easy. Muhlenberg looked as tough as they had in the past. Highlight of the whole season promised to be the Haverford game, back on our schedide again. Also returned to the schedule were Wesleyan, Dickinson, and Drexel. There would be enough competition despite the Garnet ' s potentialities. SWARTHMORE 0; WESLEYAN 26 A much hea ier and more powerfid ele en from ConnecticiU Wesleyan stopped the Garnet cold in the first game of the season. 26 to 0. Swarthniore ' s defense held the victors to six points in the first lialf, but a combined passing and running attack forced the Little Quakers to yield one touchdown in the third quarter and two in the fourth. Some outstanding play for Swarthmore was seen in Dick Estey ' s kicking and punt returns, as well as active lineplay by Hank Gorjanc, Walt Dickinson, and Frank Miller. SWARTHMORE 7; FRANKLIN AND MARSHALL 6 Making up for the previous week, the Garnet bounced back to win over Franklin and Marshall in their second home game. Within a few minutes of the kickoff, Swarthmore drove sixty yards to score after Bill Black and Jack Denton sparked the ad- vance which led to the four yard line. Black drove off right tackle for the tally. The extra point which proved the deciding factor of the game was kicked by Dave Work. F R: M ' s score came in the third period on a short plunge bv fullback Chuck F ' ultineer, but the free boot went wide. The game ended soon after Dick Esrey and Jack Denton had led the Garnet to the visitor ' s one foot line where the defense checked the advance. SWARTHMORE 13: MUHLENBERG 52 The Muhlenberg game played avvay on October 19th pro ed a little too tough. The Garnet ielded to a more powerful eleven that displayed plenty of deception for the few Swarthmore fans who were able to attend the game. The Mules scored at will in every period but the second. Swarthmore scored in the secoiul quarter on a pass from Black to Dick deCharms. and again in the third on another aerial. Black to Gordon Mochel. Muhlenberg led in yardage, netting 275 yards as against the Garnet ' s minus 113 five. One of the outstanding players of the game was Ed Sikorski, speedy Mule fullback, who opened the game ' s scoring with a 70 yard sprint, and accounted for three of his team ' s touchdowns. SWARTHMORE 19; URSINUS 12 Bill Black was the sparkplug of a determined Swarthmore team which rolled over Ursinus, 19 to 12. Two long runs, one in the first and one in the third period by the junior halfback, put the Little Quakers out in front of the fast and shifty Bears who re- fused to yield until the final whistle. They exhibited one of the most deceptive T-formations seen all season. Westy Smith ' s dash for the Garnet ' s first touchdown early in the opening period and Black ' s 86 yard run several minutes later seemed to conclude the game then and there for the large group of Swarthmore rooters in the stands. Ursinus returned in the second half to score once on a Garnet fumble after they had tallied early in the second quarter in the same way. The game ended with Swarth- more again threatening the Bear ' s goal. SWARTHMORE 0; DICKINSON 14 Returning Swarthmore alumni were on hand at Alumni Field to see the Garnet gridders bow to Dickinson. After failing to check the visitors powerful ground offenses in both the second and third periods, the home team resorted to aerials late in the game unsuccessfully. The game featured plenty of pass inter- ceptions by both elevens and each team threatened more than once the other goal, only to lose possession of the ball. Dickin- son ' s particularly tight defense blanked the Garnet bv the score of 14 to 0. SWARTHMORE 6; JOHNS HOPKINS The Little Quakers took their third game of the season after playing away at Baltimore with a highly favored Johns Hopkins team. Both teams were in scoring position most of the game, and the evenly match ed contest almost resulted in a deadlock. After failing to score early in the first quarter following a long run by Black, the Garnet tallied in the final minutes of the game when Dick Cryer scooped up a Bluejay blocked kick and raced ten yards across the goal. The late score virtually assured the victory which became reality several minutes later. 114 SWARTHMORE 12; DREXEL TECH (i The fourth victory was chalked up the following week against Drexel at Alumni Field. Taking the ball shortly after the start of the game, Swarthmore drove 45 yards down the field to score on a short run by Black. Senior halfback Gordon Douglas led the drive with a 20 yard end run that put the Garnet in scoring position. Following the Garnet touchdown. Drexel reiinned to .score soon after. Tlie game remained tied imiil the last few minutes of the half. On a drive which seemed impossible to check, Black, Westy, Smith, Mochel and Douglas shared in the yardage gained that ended on a ten yard end zone dash by Pete Holloway. The second half was scoreless and the Garnet held on to their lead to win, 12 to 6. SWARTHMORE 13; HAVERFORD 12 The last and biggest game of the season took place on Haver- ford ' s Walton Field in the resumption of the 67 year old series of football games. Spirits were high and a large crowd was on hand to witness two almost evenly matched teams play top-notch ball throughout the contest. Honors for Swarthmore ' s conse- quent victorv largely went to Lefty Higgins who scored the two Garnet touchdowns and to Dave Work, whose second touchdown boot again put the score in Swarthmore ' s favor. In the cold weather both teams played cautious and tightly defensive ball. Co-captain Douglas highlighted a first period play with a 20 yard rim, but the Garnet couldn ' t follow up their opportunities. Haverford scored twice in the second quarter to go out in front before the half. Then, on a Cryer to Denton setup lateral in the third period. Higgins raced around right end to score. Again, in the fourth, with Esrey passing, the Garnet ' s aerial attack took them to the 32. On the next play, Higgins took Esrey ' s pass and went across. Work ' s extra kick irtuall decided the game for Swarthmore. SOCCER « K Tt«8| «| 4r - «. To the partisan observers of the college, the Swarthmore soc- cer team ' s 1946 season exhibited two criteria of success: a record of five victories compared to four defeats and the defeat of Haverford in the final gam e. In contrast to the teams of the last few years, Coach Robert Dunn had experienced men trying for e ery position, and in addition to the starting eleven he had a sound reserve on which he relied heavily. The schedule for the season was a difficult one which included many colleges much larger than Swarthmore, but the results show that the team was not above its level. Princeton, for example, concjuered the Garnet by a 3-2 score, but the game was well fought, and only a desperate defense in the last quarter sa ed the Orange and Black from at least being tied. Gettysburg fell easily next week when Rolf Valtin scored the first goal thirty seconds after the opening whistle. Two more by Valtin, two by Heinz Bondy and one by Larry Yearsley gave Swarthmore six goals to only one for the opposition. 116 Pcnn scored three quick goals in the first period against a be- wildered defense. The backfield soon lost its clumsiness, how- e er, and limited the Big Quakers to only oije talh- in the rest of the game. One goal by Ab Albertson was all that the Little Quakers had to their credit at the game ' s end, so the final score was tour to one. Lafayette met the same fate as Gettysbur fall- ing before Swarthmore by a six to one margin. Herb Reinhard- sen, Heinz Valtin, Phil Evans, and Heinz Bondy were responsible for the size of the score. Ursinus ' Bears put up a good fight and the score was tied through most of the game at one all. Ralph ' altin broke the tie late in the fourth quarter to give the victory to the Garnet. Phil Evans got credit for the other half of the Swarthmore scoie which tallied two to Ursinus ' one. 117 At Army, the next week, the struggle was hard but unsuccess- ful as the Cadets won 1-0 in a very even game. Lehigh was on the short end of the onh ' shutout achieved by Swarthmore this year, with Phil Evans, Rolf, and Heinz Valtin making effective bv their scoring the excellent efforts of the defense. Although the score of the game was against the Garnet, in rising to hold the strong Navy team scoreless after two first period goals, the S ' al thmore team played one of its best games of the year and ga e the Middle goalie a good afternoon ' s work. Haverford, the traditional rivals of the Little Quakers, faced them in the last game oi the season, and put up a very strong disjDlay of good soccer. Two goals by Heinz Valtin and one by Rustv DeBurlo were sufficient to give the game to Swarthmore, as Haverford was able to score only two. With this victory, the team clinched the championship of the southern division of the Middle Atlantic States League. Prospects for 1947 are bright, as most of the starting lineup will be back next year. The places of those who go will be filled from this year ' s jimior arsity and the undefeated freshman team. . s a climax to the year, Rolf Valtin and Chris Pedersen, left inside and fullback respectively, were named to the second string of the Ail-American team. Others who contributed well were Cliff Gillam, Rusty DeBurlo, Heinz Bondy. Heinz Valtin and the entire set of regular players. At one time or another they all showed themselves as hard, superior players. n o- - % . CRDSS CDUMRY Emerging liom ihiee years of inactivity, tlie Swartiinioie Cross Country team celebrated its return to intercollegiate competition b) collecting a fine winning record. With a new coach, a new team, a new coinse, and the oldest uniiorms in the college, the team won three otit of its live meets. Coach Jim Miller took over a team made up largely ol freshmen (Captain Chuck Bestor of ' 42 fame excluded), a new and unmapped running course, and only nine clays of practice before the first meet. But Miller had courage, his lunners had speed, and F and M had only six days of practice, so we won 31 to 24. Alden Stevenson led the way, with Irv Dayton and Chuck Bestor close be- liind. The running cotnse over which the hairiers toiled that first Saturdax was a thing of beauty, ft circled at a respectable distance the nude statuary with which the new football area was being filled, and ended up by stampeding the horses in the bridle circle. It is incidentally the only cross country course extant which starts and finislies at the same point and is uphill all the way. The second week the team journeyed to the State Teachers College at West Chester. There they ended up on the short end of a 23 to 36 score, although Stevenson again led the field home. Frank Nichols and Doug McGrath also fin- ished in the first five. , fter a meet-less two weeks, the team took on Haverford o er the home coiuse. Suffering from a sprained ankle, Stevenson was beaten for the only time of the season, but Swarthmore neverthele.ss captured the meet b the decisive score of 39 to 22. The week following, coachless and rimning without Dayton ' s services, the stjuad eltided greens keepers and ducked golf balls on a Bethlehem course, beat- ing Lehigh 37 to 18. Misfortune dogged Swarthmoie ' s spikes in the final meet with Lafayette. Day - ton had to drop out before the finish, while Bestor managed to tear his pants on the cinders and crossed the finish line wearing a fig leaf. Stevenson won his fointh meet that day, but. unfortunately, Swarthmore lost anyway 24 to 31. ' l f f K tHlfz; — •■ ' ' ! iVWH f .1 vii t ( .A k ' l i iMi 120 BASKETBALL Basketball hit the postwar big-time everywhere. Swarthmore was no exception. The season began auspiciously, kept up at a fast pace of thrills and good basketball, and ended with a large blaze of glory for the team, its captain, its coach, and Swarth- more. What more can you ask from a hard working, hard play- ing group of athletes and sportsmen? With nine returning lettermen and some star recruits, Bill Stetson had the best material in a decade. Yearsley, Kaiser, Valtin, Cope, Gary, and Garrett were of pre-war stock; Faus- naugh, Evans, and linger were V-12 holdovers and Reilly, Hig- gins and Montgomery were new to Garnet basketball. From this material a quick moving, aggressive, sharp shooting outfit was soon molded. The team play was particularly outstanding. As a prelude to the first game, the new electric scoreboard was dedicated to Johnny Ogden ( ' 44), an athlete and friend whose spirit will always pervade the Swarthmore campus and playing fields. The starting five for this game— Valtin, Garrett, Cope, Yearsley, and Kaiser— were old teammates of John Ogden ' s. Score: Swarthmore, 85; Philadelphia Textile fnstitute, 28. The Garnet breezed by Philly Pharmacy (62-40) to hit its first setback at the hands of Penn. The first half was a thriller, end- ing with the boys only one point behind, 20-19. Penn ' s Chink Crosin soon found his eye however and the Garnet was through. Penn, 53; Swarthmore, 34. After decisive victories over F M and Delaware, the quintet, following Christmas vacation, traveled t( West Point for a heart- breaker. Outplaying the dogfaces all the way, Swarthmore lost out in the final forty seconds by one point. Tex Cope was high scorer of the game with ten points. Cloyde Fausnaugh and Jim Reilly were leading the team in scoring at this point. Lefty Higgins was pressing them close as he dropped in fifteen points to help the Garnet mangle PMC 73-28. The low roofed cigar box court of Drexel Tech was the site of the next mishap as we lost 57-55. Ursinus and Swarthmore were now tied for the lead in the league. To the standing-room-only crowd in the Field House, the see-saw game with Ursinus was filled vith thrills and much superlative play. Swarthmore came from Ijehind in the last half to win out 55-51. With sixteen points apiece, Reilly and Higgins respectively, were more than a match for Delaware ancl Johns Hopkins. Haverford bit the dust. PMC again was no match, as Reilly thre-iv in twenty-seven torrid points. The next two games were all thai were needed to clinch the Soiuhern Dixision Title of the Middle Atlantic States Conference. But Drexel and Ursinus were no push overs. The Garnet traveled through the sleet to Collegeville for the second Ursinus game. It was well-worth the trip as Sam Gary and his eighteen points led the way to a 58-49 Swarthmore vic- tory. Drexel was out-run and out-shot on the Garnet court as they were handled 54-45. Swarthmore was now Southern Di i- sioii Champions and entered in the Middle .Atlantic States pla - ofF. Anti-climactic to the season were victories oxer Haverford and Moravian and a close loss to Lafayette. The big interest was in the prospective tournament at Delaware. A large, happy and noisy crowd traveled lo Newark, Delaware for the opening night of the Middle Atlantic States Tournament. Swarthmore was matched against the conference guests , La- Salle, the Philadelphia champions. LaSalle, conqueror of St. Joe, Seton Hall, and Temple, expected slight trouble from the Little Quakers. They were disappointed but the crowd was not. Pla ■ing smooth basketball, the Garnet cjuintet gave the over- sized city boys an o er-sized scare, only to lose by the close score of 47-43. With Unger, Garrett, and Gary scrapping for the ball and Fausnaugh and Reilly tossing them in, LaSalle was hard put to release their high-scoring champs. But they managed to fight off a last minute Swarthmore foray, to take the game and a chance for the championship. Larry Foust. 6 ' 9 , was the game ' s high scorer with nineteen points followed by Reilly with four- teen and Fausnaugh with ten. In the consolation round of the tournament, Swarthmore met Albright, the Western Division Champions. Albright, also, had provided thrills the evening before by chasing Muhlenberg all the way in a see-saw fight. Muhlenberg squeezed by and went on to beat LaSalle for the championship. Coach Stetson started the second team of Evans, Kaiser, Montgomery, Cryer and Yearsley. Playing tight clefensi e ball, the second five so wearied the fast- moving Albright team that when the Garnet varsity entered the game, they soon took the lead and were never headed. It was another close game that gave the yelling crowd no time for their cokes and hot dogs. Showing some of the best floor play and shooting seen in this area all season, both teams played a good game all the way. The better balanced Swarthmore team ' on 49-42, as the audience lost its fingernails and voice. The fitting climax to an outstanding season was the awarding of the outstanding player of the tournament award to Captain Cloyde Fausnaugh. Fuzzy played hard ball all year— both as a team player and as a high scorer. His tournament work sparked the Garnet team to its best games of the year. The citation ac- companying the trophy described Fausnaugh as the kind of a basketball player that every coach would like to have on his team . The crowd of eager spectators more than concurred in this decision by tlie tremendous ovation which it poured forth. Swarthmore has been ery lucky to have such a man and such a team on her campus. Nothing too good can be said about last winter ' s basketball team. The pla)evs vere a hard-working, qiiick-mo ing, sharp- shooting, clean-plaxing lot. Their sportsmanship and drive were in evidence at all times and the overall record of the S varthmore basketball team deserves piaise from all sides. fini Reilly, in his freshman year, was team high scorer. De- spite his obvious need of bifocals, Reilh averaged more than thirteen points a game. Fausnaugh and Higgins vere close be- hind in the points. Dick Unger scrapped all over the court all season long to consistently steal the ball from hapless opponents. Gary and Garrett made it rough for opposing ollenses. W ' ith substitutes of the caliber of Yearsley. Valtin, Kaiser, Evans, and Montgonrery, the team looked good. With the exception of Cap- tain Fausnaugh, the team will ioe intact for next year ' s schedule. The 1947-48 basketball season will show no post-war recession. 123 SWIMMING Opening in December against Penn, Swarthmore suffered a decisive 55-19 defeat against strong opposition. Sam Mason scored the only victory for us, placing first in the backstroke. Re- turning from the Christmas vacation the Garnet defeated a vis- iting Brooklyn College team 46-29. The boys from the banks of the Gowanus has the privilege of watching Pete Daland twice in the 220 and the 440 free style. The following week Franklin and Marshall was defeated in a meet which sa v Rawson win the 100 yard free style and anchor two victorious relay teams. Le- high, not having read our press notices, managed to defeat us in the final event to take the meet 43-32. Bob Vernon set a new college record for the 200 ard breaststroke. Drexel, Dela vare, and Loyola fell before .S-ivarthmore in successive meets. Against the last named, Bruce Gra es set a new college record for the 150 yard backstroke. Three days before the Temple meet a suspicious character, stop watch in hand, was seen to enter the pool during time trials. Alert managers Sheedv and Stratton escorted a Temple spy to the door. LJndoubtediy aided bv the information which some- how had filtered through. Temple ovenvhelmed Swarthmore 56- 19. Another defeat came from a strong ' W est Chester aggregation, but Swarthmore ended the season with a victory over Lafayette. Dining the season a team made up of Vernon, Rawson, and Gra es lowered the college mark in the 300 yard medley relay. A review of the season would not be complete without a word about Steve Sickle who stepped into the breach occasioned by the absence of anv divers, and with his version of the standing front dive contributed at least one point to the team total in every meet in which he participated. WRESTLIIVG The wrestling team, under the guidance of Dick DiBatista, started the season inauspiciously, losing its first two matches. Coming out from under tlie cloud, it went ahead to win the next three straight, ending the season with a 32-0 shut- out over Haverford College. Captain Don Kelly sparked the sc[uad with five straight wins. With the Haver- ford meet safely stowed away, Kelly has been undefeated for two full seasons. John McCutcheon, Morrie Trimmer, and Herb Hillman, former lettermen. also returned from last year ' s team to bolster the small squad. In the first match of the season, Swarthmore played host to Muhlenberg and went down to defeat, 21-9. The score of the second match with Johns Hopkins was a little more even with Swarthmore losing, 16-12. In the third match Swarthmore journeyed to the University of Delaware and got its first win of the season, 21-18. In the match with Temple University, Morrie Trimmer electrified the spectators as he pinned his man in the last match of the meet. His pin gained a sorely needed five points to give Swarthmore its second win, 16-14. The meet with Franklin and Marshall was cancelled because of a blizzard. So at the start of the fifth and crucial match with Haverford, the wrestling team had won two and lost two. In this match, before a cheering crowd, the Swarthmore team swept the field and finally racked up the overwhelming score of 32-0. The team started the schedule rather weakly but showed steady improvement as the season progressed and valuable experience was gained. Much of the credit for this improvement goes to Dick DiBatista, Swarthmore ' s able coach. Bill Kin- nard. Brad Bodine, and Brad Fiske took excellent care of managing all the vital details. SPHIIVG SPORTS 126 4 The five spring sports teams are cliic lo be ror}iiall unxeiled in a lew weeks and the masterpiece imcovered should prove a sur- prise to e eryone including the artist who created it . . . With most ()[ last yeai ' s lettermen back, and a backlog ol leturning eterans who date back as I ' ar as the class ot ' 39, pre-season ]jrac- tice has been one great big old home week, with enough good athletes to make up five or six first teams, all of them equally good. The baseball team, we are told, has thirteen returning letter- men and Bob Dunn, the closest approach to an institiuion that the playing fields of Swarthmore has yet produced. Black is back and Dunny ' s got him-as captain no less, and holding down the second sack. Lefty Higgins, Jack Willis, Jack Denton, Phil E ' ans, and Walt Dickinson will make up half of the battery, with Elliott Richardson and Millard Beatty as the other half. Rirsty De Burlo and Dick Esrey should have the outfield to them- selves with Jack Denton standing by. Cliff Gillam will be on first when Lefty ' s not there, and Ed Mahler is on third. That old Indian game, laciosse, a no doiiljt significant factor in the decline of the red man on the American plain, will as usual glorify the systematic smashing-in of the student skull this yeai. Chief Ave Blake, it appears, has developed one of the smoothest aggregations of mass murderers that the old college has seen in many a year. The blood-bath will be led by captain, and AU-American, Jim Bowditch, who will ha e to help him such former mainstaxs as John Henchel, Pete Kaiser, and Ab Albertson. Way up forward in the front-line trenches will prob- ably be Walt Cosinuke, Herb Frost, Staff Metz. and John Piper. Ed Dunning will stand the gaff at goal. Bert Barron will have the help of Lew Elverson in coaching the track team this spring. Captain Bob Vernon should ha e the help of tjuite a few aried athletes in the actual iimning. Alden Stephenson will be scampering away from e eryone in tire mile and two, while Francis Nicholson and Bill Tietz show promise in the cpiarter. Vernon and Al Van Deusen will handle the team ' s dash work. Ray Posel and Da e Work will throw the arious things that get thrown in a track nieet (excluding the athletes), while John Moore and Merle Yockey will go tripping along o er the hurdles. The Garys and Gordy Mochel will cata- ]nilt themsehes over the pole vault bar. Ed Faulkner has more tennis players than he has balls, which po,ses a nice jiroblem. Morry Bodenger, Howard Frankel, and Herb Dordick cill probably be up in the first three spots, wAh captain BoncI Quint, Bob Rossheim. and Marsh Schmidt on the other side of some one of the nets. Golf is a genteel sport, and we ha e nothing but genilemen on the team. Mr. George Reller. Mr. John Longstreet. Mr. Don- ald MacLaren. Mr. Lawrence Yearsle), Mr, Fiancis Risko, and Mr. Howard Stein. Escp shoidd effecti eh- clout the pellet, po- litely that is, arormd the greens ■ard. 127 WAA A ne v program to face a new situation— WAA ' s feature for 1946-47. Juniors and Seniors, released from all gym require- ments, were objects of a drive to increase informal participa- tion in sports— Bring your dates to play badminton in the men ' s gym on Saturday afternoon. To promote sportsmanship and leadeiship, intercollegiate sports— awards for the letter women, fun for the amateur. Highlights of the season: candles and table cloths for a Hockey Banquet in the pre--ivar st le: indistinguishable shapes whooping through the niaiht- the Freshmen women off on a treasure hiuit: faculty fronting students on their own terms— playing the var- sity in soft ball at the spring picnic. The maintaining of old, the making of new traditions. For the records; the new Cabin Leader Committee— veterans of Pitt Farm, versed in the art of enjoying life in front of the open fire, with the cabin open to all comers. 128 HOCKEY The hockey team underwent quite a turnover as far as lineup goes. Tlie team of ' 45 had been made up of upperclassmen for the most pan. Of the lettermen there remained only Shirley Lyster, captain of th s year ' s team, Alice McNees. an extraor- dinarily good goalee. Sue Williams, fullback and Ellen Me er, halfback. Other members of the team included Selma Eble, Jean Abbott, Betty James, Margaret Hench, Connie Verrei, Helen Hill, Sylvia Turlington, Jean Michener, and Pat Edwards. An advantage held by this team was in the discontinuation of the accelerated program at the college, as the year started a month earlier, giving it a longer period of practice before play- ing the teams of the colleges of the Philadelphia area. Their final record included ictorIes over Drexel, Chestnut Hill, Temple and Wilson and defeat was met at the hands of Penn, Bryn Mawr and Ursinus. The climax of the season was reached in the game with Drexel, at that time the college in the area as yet unscored on, when, after showing the best teannvork of the year, the girls won the game by one precious point. At the intercollegiate hockey tournament, judges selected from the various college teams those who would qualify as best players . From Swarthmore, goalee Alice McJVees was elected to the first team, and center halfback Connie ' errei to the second. SWIMMING The women ' s s vimming team is making quite a name for itself this season. Composed of six gills, captained by Eloise Schlichting, the team has shoT ' n that the Vomen ' s Athletic Depart- ment has something to be proud of. The only newcomer to the team is Pat Niles, a freshman, who specializes in s% ' imming in the free stvle events. Selma Eble and Sallv Albertson s im backstroke, Barbara Beebe and Eloise Schlich- ting swim breaststroke, and Kav Bint also swims free style and back stroke. Sally Albertson is also the di er of the team. The swimming season was successfully launched with a victory over Penn ' s women ' s team in January. After exams, the next meet was at Iiome, with Ursinus. Due to the absence of tivo members, S varthmore lost the meet b ' the score of 29-28. The meet with Temple was scheduled to be both varsity and junior varsity. Howe er, due to engine trouble most of die jim- ior varsity team dicf not arrive nor did Eloise so the ineet was swum as a practice meet. It will be repeated sometime in March, it is hoped. The girls beat Drexel, by a score of 34-20, in the ■eightman Hall Pool at Penn. Meets yet to be swinn are with Brooklyn, in New York: A ith Bea er, Hunter, Bryn Ma r, and Chestnut Hill. In addition to swimming in the meets, the team emerged ' ictorious from the Eastern Inter- collesiate Meet. This meet held every year. and includes participants from all the colleges in the Philadelphia area. The team will also s vim in the Telegraphic Meet, in ivhich the best times in. a meet or in practice are sent in to com- pete Avith sAvinnners all over the nation. BASKETBALL Statistics are misleading. Ihe [jeiceniage ol g ames won by a team doesn ' t necessarily measure the successfulness of the season. The girls are imanimous on that point. Although they tied Bea er 15-15 and are proud of their excellent comeback in the second half of the Immaculata game, their only victory was against the Swarthmore Alumnae. Yet the season was a satisfaction. Captained by Dottie Dana during the first part of the season, and later by Amy Roosevelt, the girls never lost their team spirit. Miss Moll coached the team lor the first time this season, and she skillfully formed practices into a combination of hard work and lots of fun. The girls are pinning their hopes on the future. Dottie is the only graduating senior and half of the squad are freshmen, in- cluding Sylvia Turlington, Connie Verrei, Carol Stein, Myra Pfau, and Lucille Handwerk, all of whom played varsity ball. The same enthusiasm, the same excellent coaching and one more xear ' s experience should be enough to put Swarthmore back on the Avinning list. The J.V. team had a slightly more successlul season with two wins to their credit. Captained by Zell Hall, they showed plenty oE spirit and played good basketball even though there was a lack of substitutes. Highlights of the season included precarious jaunts in the WAA station wagon and a memorable supper at Miss Moll ' s. BADMINTDIV The 1947 badminton team under the able coaching of May Parry and Ed FaiUkner kept up a tradition set by Swarthmore birdwomen of the past b vinning fi e matches and losing none. This was the team ' s seventh successful undefeated season. The hopes for a good season, which the return of six lettermen had aroused, were encouraged by the shutting out of an older, more experienced Merion Cricket Club team in a pre-season match and the 5-0 defeat of Rosemont in the first scheduled match of the year. After that good start, Swarthmore kept up the pace by winning over Drexel 5-0, Chestnut Hill 5-0, Bryn Mawr 4-1, and University of Pennsyhania 4-1. Captain Gloria E ' ans, nationally ranking tennis player, holds the number one singles spot. Donna Larrabee, who played on the ' 42 and ' 43 teams before leaving to ser e two years in the WAVES, and freshman Jean Abbott are second and third re- spectivelv, Claire Croft and Shirley Lvster and Peggy Gwynn and Bobbie Jamison make up the doubles teams. Gloria, Jean and Donna entered the Philadelphia District Championship in March. .Although not winning top honors. Gloria got to the finals in singles to be defeated by the defending title holder, and Gloria and Donna lost the women ' s doubles also in the finals. Neither of them had lost in college competi- tion. SPRING SPORTS TENNIS With new blood in the line-up, this year ' s tennis team prom- ises to be one of the best that Swarthmore has had to offer. Captain Gloria Evans, Barbara Thorpe, and Barbara Jamison will return to the courts along with the new freshmen hopefuls: Jean Abbott. Margaret Hench, and Alice Clendenin. All in all Coaches Faulkner and Parry are confident of a successful season. MODERN DANCING This year the Modern Dance Group has had a new director. Miss Connie Renninger. The Modern Dance Club, a group of advanced students, are working on a repertoire to be performed later in the spring. Miss Renninger ' s emphasis in all of her classes is creati ity and originality based on a concept of tech- nique. Those interested have also been able to study ballet in a special class also directed b Miss Renninsrer. 133 - 3R 4 SOFT BALL With one ;ct;or behind them and six more games to be played Coach Moll and the soft ball team are looking forward to an excellent season. Newcomers are Sylvia Tmlington, Yuri Morikawa, Peg Allen. Pat Niles, and Lucille Handi ' erk. Amy Roosevelt, the onlv senior on the team, is expected to continue her splendid •ork on the moimd. C. J. Jones, Selma Eble, Jane De i ' ies, and Gushing Xiles round out the team. LACROSSE W omen ' s lacrosse, in its second year as a spring varsity, seems to be growing in popularity, not only at Swarthraore but on other campuses as well. With Swarthmore and the University of Pennsylvania leading the campaign for inter-collegiate lacrosse, Bea er and Bryn Ma r ha e followed suit this year and the piospect of greater college participation in the future is good. The squad this spring is made up almost entirely of new- comers. -ith only six of last year ' s gi ' oup returning: Sue Rey- nolds, Sue Villiams, Esther Leeds, Arden Fish, Liz Vilbur, and Sally Albertson. Most of the new additions, howe •er, are girls who have played lacrosse in high school, and Coach Jill Staman is looking forward to having an enthusiastic group and a success- ful season. ARCHERY The archers representing Swarthmore are Captain Anna Tor- rev, Anne Matthe s. Marv Fair. Bettv Bassett. Joan LeVino, Jane Morfoot, Nan Burnholz. and Vinnie Witcraft. ■  W ' - mm V - ' ' MICHAEL ' S COLLEGE PHARMACY EVERYTHING IN DRUGS DELUXE FOUNTAIN SERVICE TWO STORES College Store Open ' til 10 Theatre Store Open ' til 12 135 DIRECTORY BBOTT, JEAN THERESE 1703 Pine Street Norristown. Pa. ABBOTT, NANCY ELIZABETH Waru ick, N. . ABRAMS, JEROME 444 W. 7th Street Painhekl. N. J. CHTERMANN, GERALD ERNEST 4 Glen Marv Lane St. Davids. Pa. ADAMS, JOAN ,„ ,„ 5555N. Sheridan Road Chicago 40. 111. ADAMS, WILLL M FRANKLIN 1538 Constitution . venue Chester. Pa. ADAMSON, JOHN FULLER 810 W. 21st Street Wilmington 223, Del. ADLER. PAULA 2510 Braeburn Road Flossmoor, 111. AESCHLIMAN, BARBARA LEIGH 435 W. 1 19th Street New York 27, N. . AFFLECK, JEAN DEMARIS 56 Albert Street St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada AHRENS. WALTER EDWIN 4518 Klingle Street. N. W Washington 16, D. C. 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I., N. Y. BESHERS, DANIEL NEWSON 920 Cedarbrook Road Plainfield, N. J. BESTOR, CHARLES LEMON 435 Riverside Drive Ne v York 25, N. Y. BETSCH, BARBARA JOAN 62 S. Slope Drive ... Millbinn, N. J. BIRDSELL. ROGER. JR. 704 Park Avenue Beloit. Vis. BLSSELL, ROBERT KENYON 2977 Cointland Boulevard Shaker Heights, Ohio BLACK, VILLIAM HOWARD 403 Park Avenue Swarthmore, Pa. BLAIR, JANE LATTA 5-16 Marnum Street Bcverlv, N. J. BLAKE, JAMES KENDALL 16 E. iirown Street Norristown, Pa. BLANKENAGEL, HELEN ELIZABETH 214 High Street Middletown. Conn. BLEKE, ROBERT CHARLES R. R. 1 Fort Wayne. Ind. BLISS. KATHARINE LYMAN 1 160 Filth Aventie Ne i- York 29, N. ■. 138 BLOSE, JOHN BRIERLEV 607 Cypress Streel Yeadon. Pa. BLOUGH, RlCiHARD RO 1401 E. 56lh .Slrcc-t Chicago 3,, 111. BLUE. MVREE 6318 Connecticiu .Avenue Chevy Chase 15, Md. BODENGER. MORRIS 2140 N. 32nd Street Philadelphia 21. Pa. BODINE, CH.ARI.ES BRADFIELD 131 Cornwal Avenue Trenton 8, N. J. BONAVITA, ROCCO LOUIS 1548 Huddle Avenue Linwood. Pa. BONDY, HEINZ ERIC Windsor Mountain .Sthool Lenox, Mass. BONE, DOROTHEA DARROW 33 S. 37th Street Philadelphia 4, Pa. liORAH. LEO ARTHUR, JR. 4819 Quebec Street, N. W Washington 16, D. C. BO EE, GLENNA MARIE Turton, S. Dak. BOWDITCH. JAMES PENNINGTON 508 Cedar Lane Swarthmore. Pa. BOWEN, CARROLL G. Topeka, Ind. BOWLES, EDMUND ADDISON 77 Glen Road Wellesley 81, Mass. BOWMAN. HOWARD CHESTER 213 ' ale . ' venue Swarthmore, Pa. BOYCE. WILLIAM HENRY, 2ND Brookside Road Vallinglord, Pa. BOYER, MARY ANN LESQUEREUN Shirley Court Apartments, 106-D ...LIpper Darby, Pa. BRADLEY. SUSANNE TEN EYCK 3601 Crescent ' iew .Avenue Duliuh, Minn. BRADSHAW. WILLIAM RAYMOND, [R. 405 W. Dtirham Road Philadelphia 19, Pa. BRAIDER, DONALD TOWNLEY Croydon Farm Anselraa, Pa. BREECE, HORACE WILLARD 6721 Trinity Place Philadelphia 42, Pa. BRENTANO, ROBERT JAMES 1219 S.E. First Street . . ' Evansyille. Ind. BRESSLER, HARPER THOMAS 1467 Jefferson .-Vvenue .Akron, Ohio BRICKNER. PHILIP WALTER 316 V. 245th Street New York 63, N. Y. BRIEHL, ROBIN WALT 43 W. 93rd Street New York 25, N. Y. BRIGGS. JOHN ORMSBY 1029 Harvard Place Palisade, N. J. BRIGHTMAN, ROBERT SHEFFIELD 42 Braeland .Avenue Newton Centre 59, Mass. BRIX KJELGAARD, BIRTE Villa El Farhar, Avenue Lucien Saint Anfa superiein ' , Casablanca. Morocco BROADHURST, JOANN 37 S. Evergreen Avenue Woodbury, N. J. BRODIE, DOROTHY JANE 715 S. Madison .Avenue La Grange, 111. BROKAW, ADELAIDE DOROTHEA 161 Sagamore Road Maplewood, N. J. BROOKS, JOHN IRWIN 655 Grace Street Chicago 13, III. BROOKS, WENDELL V. F., 116 S. Day Avenue Rocktord, 111. BROWN, LS.ABEL MARGARET 7 Winslow Street PlMnouih, Mass. BROWN, KENNETH TAYLOR Purcellville, Va. BROWN. MILES JANNEY 1 Ridgecrest West Scarsdale, N. Y. BROWN, RICHARD CALVIN 620 S. High Street V ' est Chester, Pa. BROWN. ROBERI ZANES 138 S. Norwinden Drive Springfield. Pa. BRUMBAUC:H. JOHN MAYNARD 3769 Oliver Sti-cet, N. W Washington 15. D. C:. BRYAN. CAROLS JAMES 1624 E. 37th Street Tulsa. Okla. BRYAN, SHIRLEY MA 504 ' ine Street Elizabeth 2, N. |. BRYANT. CLIFFORD MILTON Box 322 Swarthmore. I ' a. ROOFING . . . SHEET METAL WORK ROCK WOOL INSULATION CITY and SUBURBAN Free Estimates - Budget Plan T. S. JOHNSON SONS CO. 622-4-6 Cherry Street WA 2-1366 ' .m .M j A J KEEP SUPPLIED WITH SCHOOL TICKETS GOOD ON BUSES AND RAIL CARS UNTIL USED 5c a Ride, mcluding Special free Transfers. Obtain Identifi- cation Cards at School Office. RED ARROW LINES Philodelphio Suburbon Transportation Co. ACCOUNTING SECRETARIAL l-2-i-Y ear Courses for Men and Women SUMMER TERM Special Typing Courses Brush-up and Regular Courses FALL TERM — Day and Evening Courses Early Enrollment Advisable PEIRCE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION PineSt. West of Broad, Philadelphia 2, Pa., PEnnypacker 5-2 100 B. J. HOY 5 and 10 i PARK AVENUE Swarthmore, Pa, FOR SCHOOL and ROOM SUPPLIES 139 Compliments of The BOUQUET BEAUTY SALON to THE GRADUATING CLASS of SWARTHMORE COLLEGE BRYNE, MARIE Hillevaag Pr Stavanger. Norwav BL ' CK, LAURA 153 LaSalle Road West Hartford. Conn. BCCR. PRISCILLA 1129 Emerson Street Palo .Mto. Calif. BLLLEN. JOSEPH . DDISON. |R. 1910 Elizabeth Street Pueblo. Colo. BURCH. GEORGIANNA JEANETTE 228 Willoughbv . venue Brooklyn. N. . BLRNHOLZ. N. NCY RUTH 271 Central Park West New York 24. N. i . BURNSIDE. MARY MacN.YIR 126 S. Franklin Street - - - - Wilkes-Barre. Pa. BURROUGHS. EDW. RD ALLEN. JR. 435 Middlesex Avenue - - Metuchen. N. J. BURT, K. THERINE 425 S. Elm Street Hinsdale. 111. BURTON, M. RTHA COX 17 Green Lane Primos. Pa. BURWELL. ELE. XOR CHURCHILL 497 Bo Iston Street Brookline. Mass. BUSH. CHARLES MEIGS 78 Oxford Boulevard Garden Cit . L. I.. N. . BUSH, EDWIN .MONROE 78 Oxford Boulevard Garden Citv. L. I.. N. Y. BUTTS, ARTHUR BURDETTE 38 .Ydrian . venue Neu York. N. Y. BUTTS, MRGIMA JANE 1343 Montrose .Avenue Bethlehem. Pa. BYRD, JEANNETTE GOCHER 214 Vvnneuood . venue Lansdowne, Pa C. ESAR. BEREL 6235 Delancev Street Philadelphia 43, Pa. C. IRNS. JOHN. JR. 25 1 Kenmore Road Havertown, Pa. CAMPBELL. DORIS JEANETTE 125 Cliveden .Yvenue Glenside, Pa. CAXEDY. -WALTON FRANKS 7110 Oxford Road Baltimore 12. Md. CARAHER. JAMES CLINTON 204 W. Providence Road Aldan. Pa. CAREL. WALTER LEO 503 Lane G llpland. Pa. CAREY, FRANCES ELLEN 387 Lafavette . venue Brooklvn 5. N. Y. CARRINGTON. DONA MARIE 1216 Fifth .Yvenue West Seattle. Wash. CARROLL. FRANCIS JOSEPH. JR. 20 W. Magnolia .Yvenue .Yldan. Pa. CARROLL. THOMAS JACKSON 313 N. 13th Street Easton. Pa. CARTER. WILLIAM JOHN 161 Schenck .Yvenue Great Neck, N. Y. CASPARY, GERARD ' assar College Poughkeepsie, N. ■ ' . CAYIN. GEORGE HUNTZINGER 1628 21st Street, N. W ' Washington, D. C. CHADWICK, ELIZABETH BARBARA 11 .Yllen .Yvenue Ft. Monmouth, N. J. CHAMBERS. RICHARD NETHERTON 182 Oakridge .Yvenue Summit, N. J. CHAMBERS. ' AUGHAN CRANDALL 1 805 Marshall Road Lansdowne, Pa. CHAPMAN. JOHN HORNER 5940 W. Ohio Street Chicago 44, 111. CHEN. GEORGE LISENG 20 Route Pettier Shanghai, China CHIQUOINE, ALEXANDER DUNC.YN 501 Rutgers .Yvenue Swarthmore. Pa. CHRLSTIE. ROBERT .Y. 30C4 N. Bambrev Street Philadelphia, Pa. CHRISTIN, EUGENE HAMMOND 415 Old Boonton Road Boonton. N. J. CLANEY. JOHN HOLT 400 Strathmore Road Havertown. Pa. CLAPPIER. HARRY Westuoods Minersville, Pa. CLARK. WILLIAM JOHN 520 Parker Street Chester, Pa. CLARKE. WILLIAM ANDERSON, JR. Rogers Lane - - Vallingford. Pa. Complimsnts of THE KENT MFG. CO. 140 MILLER-FLOUNDERS DAIRY CHESTER. PA. CHESTER 6129 CLEMENS, MARION ELIZABETH Hudson View Gardens, J-53, 183rd Street and Pinehurst Avenue New York 33, N. ' . CLEMENT, GLORIA ELEANOR 2232 Manton Street Philadelphia 46, Pa. CLENDENIN, ALICE 2735 Silver Street El Paso, Texas CLIFFORD, ALICE BROADUS Pequot Road Southport, Conn. CLIFTON, RUTH W. 2510 32nd Street Moline, 111. CLINE. HARRIET ROSE 722 Ward Parkway Kansas City, Mo. CLOUGH, MARJORY ANN 36 Barley Mill Road Wallingford, Pa. CLUM, ELIZABETH BRIDGE Smith Street Chappaqua, N. Y. COHEN. HARRIET R. 20 W. 86th Street New York 24, N. Y. COLE, MARGARET VAN BARNEVELD Box 378, Route 12 Kirkwood 22, Mo. COLLINS, WILLIAM OTIS. JR. 7939 Winston Road. Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia 18, Pa. COLVILL, JOAN 144 Overlook Avenue Boonton. N. |. COLYER, ROBERT TRUE 1 Royal Place Elberon, N. J. COMFORT, MARGARET JEAN 108 Chestnut Avenue Narberth, Pa. COMPTON, FORREST STARR 1110 Fern .Avenue Reading, Pa. CONOVER, JOYCE ELIZABETH 390 Highland . ' Avenue Upper Montclair, N. J. CONVER, CHARLES MAXMILLIAN 326 W. Front Street Media, Pa. COPE, DALLAS THURMAN R. R. 2 Winchester, Ind. CORDRAY, RICHARD E. 1 14 Pine Ridge Road Media. Pa. CORNOG, WILLIAM LINDSAY, JR. 307 Barker Street Ridlev Park, Pa. CORSE, GEORGE FOX, JR. 41 1 Yale Avenue ' . Swarthinore. Pa. COSINUKE, WALTER 17 E. Parkway Avenue Chester. Pa. COSTIKYAN. IRIS SUSAN 573 W. 192nd Street New York 33. N. Y, COUPHOS. PAUL CONSTANTINE c o Mr. Chryst Loukas, 70 Morningside Drive New York 27, N Y COURANT, LENORE MARIANNE 142 Calton Road New Rochelle, N. ' W COYLE, DONAL KENNEDY General Delivery Toms River, N. J. CRAIGHILL, LLOYD RUTHERFORD, JR. 28 Hillside Avenue Eni;lewood, N. I. CRANIN, NORMAN A. 2120 Ocean . venue Brooklyn, N, Y, CRA ER, CHARLES C, III 404 N. George Mason Drive Arlington, Va. CRAWFORD, ELIZABETH CRAIG Box 1710 Havana, Cuba CRA . DOUGLAS WHITE 30 Marti ing . venue Pleasantville, N. Y. CREED. ROBERT PAY.SON Mary Lyons Apts., 825 Harvard Avenue, Swarthmore, Pa. CRESSV, ROBERT AARON 1 183 Morton .Avenue Rutledge, Pa. CROFT, NANCY CLAIRE Malacaiian, Manila, P. I. (A. P.O. 707. c o P.M., San Frauci-sco. Calif.) CRUM, JANET 1321 Hilcrest Avenue Kalamazoo, Mich. CRYER, RICHARD 273 N. Highland Avenue Lansdowne. Pa. CUMMINS, JEANNE MARIE 219 Oxford Avenue Terrace Park. Ohio CURTIN, PHILIP DeARMOND Mary Lyons Apts.. 825 Harvard .Avenue. Swarthmore, Pa. CURTIN, RICHARD W. Webster Springs, W. ' a. GUSHING, RICHARD TISDALE 355 Manor Road, R.F.D. 2 Birmingham. Mich. DALAND. PETER Pro idence Road Wallingford. Pa. DANA, DOROTHY J. 303 Elm .Avenue Swarthmore. Pa. DANIELS, STUART JACKSON Coast fiuard Depot Curtis Bay. Md. DARROW. BARBARA 68 Bedford .Avenue Hamden 14. Conn. DAVIS, ISAAC ROBERTS, 3RD Springhouse, Pa. D.AVIS, JOAN LYNNE 822 Harper Avenue Drexel Hill. Pa. DAVIS, RICHARD GROUSE 140 N. Euclid Avenue Westeld. N. J. DAWSON. WILLIAM ARTHUR 129 Violet Avenue Floral Park. N. Y. DAY, SAMUEL HAMILTON, JR. Swarthmore College Swarthmore, Pa. DAYTON. EMILY 41 Interxale Road Mountain Lakes, N. J. DAYTON, IRVING EUGENE 41 Intervale Road Mountain Lakes, N. 1. DEANE, PRISCILLA 1615 Kenyon Street, X. W Washington 10, D. C. DEATHERAGE. ALICE LUCILE 90 Bryant .Avenue White Plains. N. DeBURLO, COMEGYS RUSSELL, JR. 715 Lawson .Avenue [lavertoun, Pa. DeCHARMS, RICHARD, IV Woodland Road Hr n Atlnn, Pa. DECKER, HERBERT HERMAN Belle Haven .Avenue East Port Chester. Conn. DECKER. ROBERT LADD Box 7 Swarthmore. Pa. DEKKER, HENRY 524 Euclid Avenue Villard O DEMEREC, ZLATA ELIZABETH Cold Spring Harbor Long Island, N. DENNISON, EDWTN WALTER 101 1 Lincoln .A enue Ann .Arbor. Mich. 141 COMBINATION SCREEN DOORS EXTERIOR INTERIOR COAL - LUMBER BUILDING MATERIAL MASON BUILDERS SUPPLY COMPANY 331 Dartmouth Ave. Swarthmore, Pa. GOLD BOND ROCK WOOL INSULATION LIME - PLASTER - CEMENT - SAND - STONE TERRA COTTA PIPE - CINDER BLOCKS ROOFING PAPER - ASBESTOS SHINGLES CELOTEX - WALL BOARD - BRICKS PLASTI-KOTE PAINT PAINT BRUSHES Fresh Cut Flowers and the Unusual in Floral Arrangements PERSONALIZED CORSAGES SHELLENBERGER FLORIST 25 E. STATE STREET Media, Pa. Delivery Anywhere in the World For Prompt, Courteous Service PHONE MEDIA 0218 DEXTOX. JESSE CAMERON 309 W. 23rd Street Chester I ' a DENTON, JOHN ELMER 2813 W. Clementine Street Philadelphia 32. Pa. DETWILER, DANIEL PAUL Woodbmv. Pa. De ' RIES. JANE Old Chester Road Essex Fells. N. T. DICKINSON. ROV MacGREGOR 22 Fairfax Terrace Chatham. N. I, DICKINSON. WALTER HAINES 6 College Avenue Suarihmoie. Pa. DICKINSON. WALTER S. R. Brooklake Road Florham Park. N I DISNEV. GLORIA ELIZABETH 3502 Macomb Street. N. W Washington 16. D C DOEHLERT. DA ' ID HALLAM .55 Elizabeth Street Pemberton. N. I DOLLUER. JAMES MORGAN 3752 Jocelyn Street, N. W Washington 15. D. C DONALDSON, WILLIAM KENNETH 5 Cleveland Street Sand Springs. Okla DONO AN. JOANNE ELLEN 46 Laurel .Avenue Binghamton. N. V nORDICK. HERBERT S. 3129 W. French Street Philadelphia 21. Pa DOUGLAS. GORDON WHIPPLE Roberts .Apts.. Suarthmore College ..Swarthmore Pa DOIGLAS. WILLIAM BRUCE R-f D. I Cumberland. Md. l)Oi;CLASS. JOHN WILLIAM 1 14 Hempstead Street New London. Conn. DRURV. PHILIP MORGAN 435 Bishop A enue Secane, Pa. DUBIEN. JACQUES ROBERT 4S37 Cedar .Avenue Philadelphia. Pa. DUDLEY. GEORGE. JR. Old Wvomi.ssing Road ' vomissinc Pa DUNN. MARY JANET ' 247 Hilands A enue Pittsbtn- Pa DUNNING. EDWARD WAUGH. JR. Severna Park. Md. DUSINBERRE. WILLIAM WARNER. RFI - 1 Blacksburg, vt. EAGAN, THOMAS LEGGETT. [R. 6400 Maple Avenue Chew Chase 15. Md EBELING. ELSA VICTORIA 1561 E. 13th Street Brooklvn. N. Y EBERLE. NANCY 105 E. Durham Street Philadelphia 19. Pa EBERSOLE. BYRON S. 328 W. Magnetic Street Marquette. Mich EBLE. SELMA JANE 410 Jericho Road Abini ton Pa EDW.ARDS. CORINNE JENNIFER 1719 Hinman Avenue ' Evanston. Ill EDWARDS. PATRICIA ANN 3 Winthrop Place Maplewood. N. J. EDWARDS. WARD DENNIS 1719 Hinman . eiHie Evanston 1)1 EGEE. LEONARD PAUL 230 Rntledge Avenue Rutledge. Pa. EHRENFELD. DA ID ALLEN Box 571 Edgewood. Md. EISLER. HENRY MICHAEL 324 E. 41st Street New York 17. N. V ELDREDGE. WILLIAM BUTH 3907 Dakin Street Chicago 18. Ill ELLIOTT. JAMES MURRAY 2115 W. Grandview Tacoma 6. Wash. ELLWOOD. JOAN 96 Wadsworth Terrace New York 33. N Y EMERSON. WINNIFRED CORTLAND 1437 Steel Road Ha ertown. Pa. ENDERS. ALLEN COFFIN 31 1 Elm Avenue Swarthmore. Pa. EPSTEIN. ERNST 807 W. Fifth Street Marshtield. Wis. ESREY. RICHARD ALEXANDER 625 Coiuitrv Club Road Camp Hill. Pa EVANS. DIANE 22 N. New Jersev Avenue Vellston. Ohio 142 Mars hall P. SuUivan, President Russell Bleakley, Vice President Francis W. D Olier. Treasurer Francis J. Temple, Secretary Nathaniel T. Officer, Asst. Treasurer Archibald Carrick, Jr., Asst. Sec ' y. ESTABLISHED 1881 CRETH SULLIVAN, INC GENERAL INSURANCE 106-08 S. Fourth Street Philadelphia, Pa. REPRESENTING American Insurance Company The Franklin Fire Insurance Company Insurance Company of North America Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Company Queen Insurance Company of America Surety Fire Insurance Company Great American Insurance Company 143 EVANS, GLORIA EDITH 14 Godfrey Road Upper Moiuclair. N. J. EVANS, PHILIP KELLER 1526 N. 16th Street Philadelphia. Pa. EVERETT, RICHARD WHITTAKER 41 Shady Hill Road Movlan. Pa. FAILLA, MARIE LOUISE 4740 Iselin Avenue New York 63. N. . FAIR, MARY ELIZABETH 329 Jenkintown Road Elkins Park. Pa. FALLIN, MARY BUNTING 75 Bryn Mawr .Avenue Lansdoune. Pa. FARLEY, EUGENE SHEDDEN, JR. 202 S. River Street Wilkes-Barre. Pa. FARRAR, RICHARD A. 33 Washington Square West New York 11. N. Y. FARRELL, JOHN R. 161 W. Louther Street Carlisle. Pa. FAUSNAUGHT, CLOYDE LOWELL 2048 E. I4th Street Brooklyn. N. Y . FAVORITE, JOYCE 103 Grove Avenue East Providence, R. I. FEELEV, JAMES EDWARD 1418 Williston Street Chester. Pa. FEIGL, HANS ERNST JOHN 161 Rua Gomes Carneiro, Apt. 901, Rio de Janeiro Brazil FELTON, FRANK PIERCE, 3RD 109 E. Tabor Road Philadelphia 20. Pa. FERGUS, ROBERT HOE 1360 Midland Avenue. Fleetwood , cres. Bronxville 8. N. Y. FIELD. DAVID FREEMAN 84 Remsen Street Brooklyn 2. N. Y. FINCH. MARY JEAN Island Road Ramsey, N. J. FINK. GERALDINE 9 Highview Avenue New Rochelle. N. Y. FISH, ARDEN ELAINE 80 Washington Place New York 11. N. Y. FISK, BRADLEY, JR. 20 Berklev Place Buffalo 9. N. Y. FISKE. JOHN WYMAN 1 1 Brookline Road Scarsdale. N. Y. FLIGG, JAMES ALMA, JR. 8216 Cedar Road Elkins Park. Pa. FORD. WILLIAM LOUIS Box 46 Eatontown, N. J. FORREST, BARBARA Rogers Lane Wallingford. Pa. FORSTFR. ROBERT 421 S. Rolling Road Catonsville 28. Md. FOSTER, JOHN McGAW l. ' i Crest Lane Swart hmore. Pa. FRANK. ANDREW 225 E. 57th Street New York 22. N. Y. FRANKEL, BRIGITTE LILLI 552 Alvarado Row Stanford University, Calif. FRANKEL, HOWARD 2157 N. Natrona Street Philadelphia 21. Pa. FR. SER. R. IRGINIA 3228 N. Carlisle Street Philadelphia 40. Pa. FRE. R. ROBERT BIRDSALL Box 147 Montvale. N. J. FREDERICK. WILLIAM HEISLER, JR. 2915 New Road Wilmington 165. Del. FREEMAN, WILL A DOROTHY 5420 Euclid Avenue Philadelphia 31, Pa. FREIDINGER. ANNE LOUISE 502 Drvden Road Ithaca, N. Y. FREMONT, ROBERT FRANK, JR. 100 Foster Avenue Upper Darby. Pa. FREYGANG. LEE 1008 S. 48th Street Philadelphia 43, Pa. FRIED, CHRISTOPHER 705 Ridge Street Newark 4, N. J. FRIEDENTHAL, RUTH 425 E. 86th Street New York 28, N. Y. FRIEND. JANET WENDELA 131 Riverside Drive New York 24, N. Y. FROMMER, JOHN WALTER, JR. Sycamore and Levis Roads Clifton Heights, Pa. FROST. EDW. RD LAWRENCE 33 Massachusetts Boulevard Bellerose 6. N. Y ' . FROST. HERBERT HALSEY 33 Massachusetts Boulevard Bellerose 6, N. Y. FULLER. GEORGE RIPLEY 12 Sage Terrace Scarsdale. N. Y. FUSARb. BERNARD ALEXANDER 1211 Yarmouth Road Philadelphia 31, Pa. FUSSELL. HOWARD BARKER Paoli Road Newtown Square, Pa. FUSSELL. WILLIAM Paoli Road Newtown Square. Pa. GALLIGAN. EDWARD LAWRENCE 860 N. Evans Street Pottstown, Pa. GALLMEYER. JOAN LOUISE 919 San Lucia Drive S. E Grand Rapids, Mich. GALLOW. Y. DAVID BARNES 4612 29th Place, N. W Washington 8, D. C. GANTER. ROBERT LEWIS 830 Elsinore Street Chester, Pa. GARCEAU, CHARLOTTE LOUISE Dwellev Street South Hanover, Mass. GARNER, ARTHUR WALTER 133 Ogden Avenue Swarthmore, Pa. GARDNER. BETTE JO 133 Ogden .Avenue Swarthmore. Pa. Venturi FRESH FRUIT and VEGETABLES PHILADELPHIA. PA. 144 COMPLIMENTS OF PALMER GARRABRANDT. JAMES BILLS 121 Broadway Ocean Grove. N. I. GARRETT, BUCKLEY RASER 52 N. Maple Avenue Lansdowne, Pa. GARY. JOSEPH S. 1 Ingersoll Road Wellesley, Mass. GARY, REX IN ' GLIS, JR. 1 Ingersoll Road Welleslev, Mass. GATHANY. VANDERVOORT RISSER 1225 Chancellor Street Evanston, 111. GAVETT, DORIS RUTH 973 Kenyon Avenue Plainfield. N. 1. GAY. JANET 36 Riverside Stieet Rochester 13. N. Y. GEHRES, MARY JANE 422 Newbold Road lenkintown. Pa. GEIGER, GEORGE W.. JR. 7745 Temple Road Philadelphia 38, Pa. GELERT, KAREN MARIA RFD 5 Ridgefield, Conn. GEMMILL, ROBERT FLEMING 406 Thayer Road Swarthmore. Pa. GIFFORD, JAMES H. 1954 Sycamore Road Bethlehem, Pa. GIFFORD, WILLIAM WALLACE 824 Carlton . venue Plainfield, N. I. GILBERT, PHILIP LOUIS 8261 Beverly Road Kew Gardens, N. Y. GILDERSLEEVE. JAMES BYRON 345 W. Oak Street West Lafayette, Ind. GILLAM, CLIFFORD RIGGS, JR. Buck Hill Falls, Pa. GILLAM, ELEANOR STABLER Buck Hill Falls, Pa. GILLIAMS, HOWARD SOTHORON 745 Park Avenue Collineswood, N. I. GLASS, NANCY LEE 4119 N. Illinois Street Indianapolis 8. Ind. GLUCKSMAN, MICHEL AMOS 15 Elm Street Woodmere, N. GLUECK, HARRIET ANN Bo 284 Kensington. Md. GODOLPHIN. K. THERINE JEANNE 76 .Alexander Street Princeton. N. J. GOERTNER, JOHN FRANCIS Deneane and Edgewater Drives Hillandale, Md. GOLDBERG. RICHARD 7003 Emien Street Philadelphia 19, Pa. GOLLUB. MORTON JEROME 4514 N. 1 1th Street Philadelphia 40, Pa. GOODING, WILLIAM H. ROLD t o 416 Ephrata, Pa. GORDON. DONALD JAY 67 Nottingham Road Rockville Centre, N. Y. GORJANC. HENRY ADOLPH 16118 Huntmere .Avenue Cleveland 10, Ohio GORSIRA, WILFRED 351 E. 16th Street Brooklyn. N. Y. GOTTLIEB. LIFCRETIA JORDAN 18 Woodview Road West Hempstead, N. . GOTWALD, DOROTHY FRANCES 4701 Pine Street Philadelphia 43. Pa. GOUDSMIT. SIMON PHILIP c o J. van Weezel 80-82 Haven Avenue New York 3 ' ' N Y GRANT. JUDITH 107 Brown Road Scarsdale, N. Y. GRAVES. ANNE WILLIAMSON 420 Melrose .Avenue Winter Park. Fla. GRAVES, BRUCE BANNISTER 227 S. Grant Street West Lafavette, Ind. GREEN, FREDERICK, JR. 707 Colwell Road, Grace Park Chester, Pa GREEN, HELEN GERBER 230 Riverside Drive New York 25, N. Y. GREEN, RICHARD S. 113-32 84th Drive Jamaica, N. Y. GREENAWALT, ROBERT GORDON 4010 Dayton Road Drexel Hill, Pa. GREENSPUN, THEODORE 5115 North Warnock Street Philadelphia 41, Pa. GREENSTEIN. RICHARD MARMN 1550 Elmwood . enue Folcroft Pa GROBERT. ELINOR 40 Eastwood Street East Orange. N. I. GROSS. JANE MASSON 240 Burrwood . cuiie Collingswood. N. J. 145 Best Wishes from the Juniors to th( GRADUATING CLASS OF 1947 14C COMPLIMENTS OF PITTENGER HALL GUCKES. MARY EDITH Orchard Way Wayne, Pa. GUINN, PAUL SPENCER. IR. c o Foreign Service Mail Desk, Dept. of State Washington 25. D. C. GURBARG, MALCOLM RALPH 6036 N. 13th Street. Oak Lane ...Philadelphia 41, Pa. GWYNN, SARA L RGARET 1300 Roundhill Road Baltimore 18. Md. HAABESTAD, ERLING HENRY 37 S. Hillcrest Road Springfield, Pa. HAAS, JEANNETTE LOUISE 201 Washington Street Marietta, Ohio H. AS, WILLIAM ADDIS 629 Country Club Lane Havertown. Pa. HACKETT, WENDY .5 Knickerson Street Provincetown, Mass. HALE, SALLY LOUISE 1 109 W. Forest Road Lakewood 7, Ohio HALL, ALAN NORMAN 323 Park Avenue Swarthniore. Pa. HALL, GRISELLA CHRYSTIE 611 Strath Haven Avenue Swarthniore, Pa. HAM, MARIAN VOGDES 517 Lake Street . Ishpemin ' .;. Mich. HAMILTON, GWENDOLYN LUCILLE 1722 N. 16th .Street Reading, Pa. HAMILTON. VIRGINIA RUTH 1101 Walnut Street Allentown, Pa. HAXDWERK, LUCILLE ANNE 1721 Elm Street Bethlehem, Pa. HANEY, ROBERT GILBERT 6070 City Avenue Philadelphia 31, Pa. HANSEL, WILLIAM BRAY Roberts Apts., Swarthniore College. .. Swarthniore, Pa. HANSEN, LORENZ PETER, JR. 92 S. Keystone Avenue Upper Darby, Pa. HAPGOOD, DA ' ID 139 E. 66th Street New York 21. N. Y. HARE, ALEXANDER PAUL, JR. 4509 45th Street, N. W Washington 16, D. C. HARKNESS, MARION JUNE 157-40 12th Avenue Beechhurst, L. I., N. Y. HARRER, SUSAN SMITH 7138 Cresheim Road Philadelphia 19, Pa. HARRIS. HOWARD FRANK 315 W. 106th Street New York 25, N. Y. HARRIS. ROBERT EDWARD 18 Orchard Road Chatham. N. J. HARRISON. GRAHAM OLIN 204 Lorraine .Avenue Montclair, N. J. HARRISON, MARGARET ANN 69 Manhattan Avenue, Crestwood, Tuckahoe P. O.. N. Y. HARRISON, WILLIAM JOHN 69 Manhattan Avenue, Crestwood, Tuckahoe P. O., N. Y. HART. EARLE RUSSELL 41 Ridley Avenue .Aldan, Pa. HARTWELL, CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH 825 Paxinosa Avenue Easton, Pa. HASTINGS. JOHN WOODLAND Box 434 Seaford, Del. HAUPTLE, FREDERICK WILLIAM, JR. 36 Runnemede Avenue Lansdowne, Pa. HAVERSTICK, GEORGE, JR. 601 E. Newhall Avenue Waukesha, Wis. HAWKE. DAVID FREEMAN 310 S. Chester Road Swarthniore. Pa. HAY, ALICE 405 Harvard Avenue Swarthmore, Pa. HAYASE, SADAKO 1386 E. 50th Street Los Angeles, Calif. HAYDEN, ROBERT GOUGH Roberts Apts., Swarthmore College. .. .Swarthmore, Pa. HAYES, JAMES STODDARD Kershaw Road Wallingford, Pa. HAYES, LUCY ROGERS 323 Swarthmore Avenue Swarthmore, Pa. HALES, WILLIAM WALDO, TR 436 N. Church Street West Chester, Pa. HEINEMAN, RICHARD HUGH 120 Windsor Drive Rossford, Ohio HEINEMANN. ERIC GUSTAV 909 Clinton Street Philadelphia 7, Pa. HEITKAMP, FREDERICK BENJAMIN, JR. 61 W. 9th Street New York 11, N. Y. 147 HELD, RICHARD M. 49 E. 96th Street Xew York 28, X, Y. HENCH, MARGARET The Farm Lane Charlottesville, Va. HEN ' CHEL, JOHN CHARLES 1 126 Bridge Street Philadelphia 24, Pa. HENRY, PAUL MAXWELL 150 W. 106th Street New York 25, N. Y. HERBERT, VICTOR H., JR. Kirchotf Road Palatine, 111. HERNDON, CHARLES ALLAN 705 Oglethorpe Street, N. V Vashington II, D. C. HERNDON, MARY ISABELLA 1411 W. 4th Street Wilmington 34, Del. HERRINGTON, H. EUGENE 777 Corbin Avenue New Britain, Conn. HESNER, CHARLES JOHN 64 Drexel Avenue Lansdoivne, Pa. HEWITT, DAVID LEWIS 3224 Wellington Road Alexandria. Va. HEYROTH, ALICE 4 Inters ood Place Cincinnati 20, Ohio HIGGINS. WARREN PATRICK 21 High Street Glen Ridge, N. J. HIGLEY, ALICE WADE 8 Cortland Street Norwich, N. Y. HILL, HELEN M. 1816 W. Baltimore Street Baltimore 23, Md. HILLEGASS, ROBERT WARREN 4712 Leiper Street Philadelphia 24. Pa. HILLMAN, HERBERT RAYMOND 40 Acklev . venue Malverne. N. Y. HIRSCH. RUDOLF ERNEST 545 West End Avenue New ork 24, N. HIRSCH, VILLIAM JAMES 416 Ocean .-Vvenue Brooklvn, N. Y. HOAG, ELIZABETH LOUISE 210 Savin Hill . venue Boston 25, Mass. HOAR. JANE TOPPING 512 -N. Chester Road Swarthmore. Pa. HOBART. ENID MARGARET 1 1 Oldfield .-Avenue Montreal. Canada HODGES, TOM ' ICTOR 42 Tavlor Boulevard Harrisburg, Pa. HOFFMAN, RICHARD HENRY 390 Riverside Drive New York 25, N Y HOISINGTON, LUCY MAY 15 Highland Avenue Montclair, N. I. HOLLINGER, WILLIAM CARPENTER The Knoll West Chester, Pa. HOLLOWAY. PETER GEORGE, II Booth School Cottage Rosemont, Pa. HOOD. IRGINIA D.A.VIS 605 Stanlev . venue Clarksburg, W. a. HOOPER, MARY JANE 23 W. Baltimore Street Kensington, Md. HOPKIRK. JOHN WILLIAM 80 Arg le . venue New Rochelle. N. Y. HORTEN, CARL ROBERT 1346 St. incent Street Philadelphia. Pa. HORTON, ELIZABETH HASTINGS 787 Greenwood Avenue Birmingham, Mich. HOSKIXS. JOHN HERBERT 2500 Que Street, X. W Washington 7, D. C. HOSTETTER. JAXET LOUISE 258 Columbia -Avenue Palmerton Pa HOTSOX, JAXET Free Acres S:otch Plains, X. T. HOULBERG, XORM.YX LLOYD 161-13 S4th Road Jamaica 2 X Y HOUSER. HEXRY PAUL 120 Washington Avenue Xew York N Y HOUTMAN, JOHN EDWARD -Apt. C-8, Greenhurst - pts Media Pa FIO E-i ' . JUSTUS ALLAN. JR. Churchville. Pa. HOWARD. LOUIS NORBERG 3323 Stuvvesant Place. X. W Washington 15 D C HOWARD. MARJORIE XORTOX ° ■ ■ ■ 2227 S. Overlook Road Cleveland Heights 6, Ohio HULKA, LADA 3028 36th Street Long Island Citv 3 X Y HUMMELL, BETTY AXX 309 l.ena]5e A eniie Mavs Landing, X. J. SCOTT PAPER COMPANY Chester, Pa. 148 COMPLIMENTS of H. D. SIPLER ' 33 Hardware SWARTHMORE, PA. HUNTER, BETTV PEEBLES 1730 First Street. . W Washington I. D. C. HUNTER. J. MES ROBERT Swarthmore College Suarthmore. Pa. HUNTING, ALFRED CURTIS 23 Whitman .-V venue East Orange. N. J. HUNTLEY, H.AZEL HUTSON 310 W. Concord Avenue Fern Park. Fla. HURD. RICHARD MERRITT 624 Jaques Avenue Railway, N. J. INGLESBY, HARRIET 320 E. 50th Street Savannah, Ga. INOUYE, ELEANOR WARD 315 Cedar Lane Swarthmore, Pa. INOUYE, Mn ' OKO 3228 Chestnut Street Philadelphia 4, Pa. JACK, JORDAN THURLOW South Salem, N. Y ' . JACKSON, BROOKS 3 Westfield Street Dedham. Mass. JAMES, BETTY ALDEN 1 Seminarv Place New Brunswick. N. J. JAMESON, WILLIAM B.ATES R.D. 2, Bath Pike Bethlehem, Pa. JAMISON, ATHALIA CRAWFORD State and Spring Mill Roads Canshohocken, Pa. JEANNE. MARJORIE LOUISE 369 Hawthorne Terrace Momit ernon, N. . JENKINS, FRANCES PALMER 506 N. Chester Road Swarthmore. Pa. JENKINS, JOAN WHITE 506 N. Chester Road Swarthmore, Pa. JENKINS, WILMER . TKINSON, II 242 Madison Road Scarsdale, N. Y. JENNEY, RICH.ARD HARTSHORNE 625 Havdock Lane Haverford, Pa. JOHNSON, JOHN STEWART Tudor . rms Apts Baltimore 10, Md. JOHNSON, LAURA CLARE 1 107 State Street Rolla, Mo. JOHNSON. P. TRICIA ANNE 204 Avon Road Narberth, Pa. JOHNSTON. MARTHA ANN 224 N. Drew Street . ppleton. Wis. JOHNSTON, RICHARD AMBROSE 1290 Crittenden Road Henrietta. N. Y. JONES. CATHARINE BALDERSTON 511 W. Main Street Richmond. Ind. JONES, EDMUND LYDDANE. JR. 3006 45th Street. N. W . Washington 16, D. C. JONES, ESTHER FISHER 654 Carpenter Lane, Mt. .-Viry ...Philadelphia 19. Pa. JONES, JANE ANN 177 Jefferson Road Princeton, N. J. JONES, JOHN LLEWELLYN, JR. 704 S. Grove Avenue ' Oak Park, 111. JOURDAN, HELENA MARIE 30 Chestnut Street Meriden, Conn. KACPRZYK, EDWIN JOSEPH 118 Irvington Street New Bedford, Mass. KAERCHER. CHARLES FREDERICK ■In Hill Farm. R.D. I Phoenixville, Pa. K.MSER. CALVIN LEWIS 2514 S. 20th Street Philadelphia 45, Pa. KAISER, HERBERT 5701 I5th Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. KAISER, PETER WILLIAM Hillsides Farm Swedesboro, N. J. KAPLAN, ARTHUR LINCOLN R.D. 4 Ardentown, Del. KAUFMAN, BETTY ANN 514 Fairview Avenue Montgomery 6, Ala. KEHO, CLIFF HUTCHINSON Coin, Iowa KELLENBERGER, ROBERT HERMAN 828 Eastwood Avenue Chicago 40, 111. KELLERS, ISABEL 77 Essex Avenue Montclair, N. J. KELLEY. DONALD EDMUND 8212 Cedar Road. Elkins Park Philadelphia 17, Pa. KELLY. LOIS LAEL Westtown School Westtown, Pa. KENMORE, HANNA 34 Prospect , venue Larchmont, N. Y. KENNEDY, JOHN IRVING Stony Point, N. Y ' . KERR. ROBERT JAMES 621 Fairview Road Swarthmore. Pa. KERR. WILLIAM Jacksonwald, Pa. KETTNER. FRED 49 Grozier Road Cambridge, Mass. KIETZMAN. JOHN HOW. RD 149 Mountain Avenue Summit, N. J. KILLIP. THOMAS. Ill 139 Edgeview Lane Rochester 10, N. . KILLOUGH, . NN WINSOR 22 Belair Road Welleslev 81, Mass. KIMBALL. MORTON COWLING 1988 Clover Road Rochester 10. N. Y. KINDALL. JAMES VERNON Roberts Hall. Swarthmore College. . ..Swarthmore. Pa. KINNARD. WILLIAM NOBLE. JR. 900 Soiuh . venue Secane. Pa. KINTER. WILLIAM BOARDMAN Pine Ridge Road Greenwich. Conn. 149 COMPLIMENTS OF 3RD EAST KIRKHOFF. JAMES BRUCE 815 Campbell Avenue Indianapolis. Ind. KIRKPATRICK, CYNTHIA JEAN Dollibers Cove Marblehead, Mass. KIRN, D.WID FREDERICK 320 E. Main Street Lancaster, Ohio KISTLER, WILLIAM HENRY 339 Park Avenue Swarthmore, Pa. KITE, ELAINE ALMA 240 Ogden . venue Swarthmore, Pa. KLEINER, JACK 2337 S. 4th Street Philadelphia 48, Pa. KNAUR, PETER R. J FD. 1 Newtown, Conn. KNISKERN. PHILIP NESSEN 507 Rivervieu Road Swarthmore. P:i. KNUDSEN, ROY FREDERICK 511 Locust Avenue Westmont, N. I. KOCH, EVA FRIEDA 76-66 Austin Street Forest Hills. X Y KOELLE, JOHN BRAMPTON 5410 Trinity Street Philadelphia 43, Pa. KOPCHYXSKI, DOROTHEA MAE 18 Hill Street Glen Cove, N. Y KRELL. ARXOLD IRVING V i, wcJ.PJ ' ' ' ■ ' ' Philadelphia, Pa. KRIMSKY, JOSEPHINE STELLA 2924 Winters Road Huntineton W •) KSCHINKA, ELIZABETH ALBRIGHT 210 N. Main Street Muncv Pa KULLER, ROBERT GARLIN - luncy, ra. kundIr! wYlEiIm g ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ■ KS rOB ERTRAYMOND ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' - ' ' ' ' - Kli .W R, GrO GE ADRIAN,- JR. - S 121 1 Michigan Avenue Evanston Til L. CKEY, PATRICIA ANNE Evanston, 111. I Acv ' vh ll r. : Cranford, N. J. LAC , ELEANOR MAIE • 81 Irving Place New York 3, N. Y. LADD. JOHN 25 E. 83rd Street New York, N. Y. LANE, GLORIA 1480 Suffield Road Birmingham. .Mich. LANE, STUART COLLINSON 5 55X:herrv Street Winnetka, III. LARCHAR, ANNE ELIZABETH . partado . ereo 48, Call Colombia, S. A. LARRABEE, DONNA LOUISE Box M Old Greenwich, Conn. LARSH, BETTY JO 399 Dogwood Lane Manhasset, L. I., X. V. LASKY, WILLIAM RAYMOND 313 Vallev iew Road Media, Pa. LATIMER, ROBERT BOYD, JR. 244 Poplar . venue Hackensack, N. J. LAWHORNE. EDWARD SCOTT 44 Oak Lane Primos, Pa. LAWRENCE, JOHN KESTER 458 Edgewood Road Mansfield, Ohio LAYCOCK. HOWARD THOMAS 61 Saxer . venue Springfield, Pa. LEA, BARBARA EDITH 41 Hunter . venue Fanwood, N. [. LEAS, MARIANNE 17803 Fernwav Road Shaker Heights 22, Ohio LEDERER, GEORGE RICHARDSON 514 Woodlawn Road, Roland Park. Baltimore 10, Md. LED WITH. LOIS Brookside Farms Pittsburgh 16, Pa, LEEDS. ESTHER HALLETT 1025 Westview Street Philadelphia 19, Pa. LEHMAN, FREDERICK WILLIAM 1245 N. 65th Street Philadelphia 31. Pa. LEHMER, RUTH 2609 S. 34th Street Omaha, Nebr. LEICHTER, HENRY OTTO 316 W. 94th Street New York 25, N. Y. LESER. AVALTER HESS 7201 Cobalt Road (Wood .-Veres, Md.) Washington 16, D. C. LESLIE, GRACE PATRICIA 289 Parker Street Newark 4, N. J. 150 THE SWARTHMORE PHOENIX ESTABLISHED 1881 All the Nens That Fits, We Print PUBLISHED WEEKLY ON WEDNESDAY BY AND FOR THE STUDENTS OF SWARTHMORE COLLEGE 151 LEVIN, ARTHUR GEORGE 2315 Avenue R Brooklyn 29. X. V. Le ' INO, JOAN 94 Mercer Avenue Hartsdale, X. Y. LE ' IXSOX. CARL ANSELL 61 Ravnham Road Merion. Pa. LE ' V. LOUIS EDWARD 1016 Vestvieu- Street Philadelphia 19, Pa. LE T, SHIFRA 1401 Plainfield Avenue South Plainfield, X. J. LEWIS, JAMES PORTER East Jordan. Mich. LEWIS, JOAX A ERV 41 Linnaean Street Cambridge 38. Mass. LI, KUO CHIXG. |R. 22 Thompson Park Glen Cove, L. I.. X. Y. LI, TZE KU.AXG 285 Riverside Drive New York, X. Y. LIAXG. HOLT c o Mrs. Arthm Tov nil E. 61st Street Chicago 37. 111. LIGHTEN . VILLIAM LEWIS 205 W. Tulpehocken Street Philadelphia 44. Pa. LIXSLEY. PAUL EASTMAN 242 E. Marthart Avenue South . rdmore. Pa. LIRIO, JOHX HALSEV 902 New Pear Street ' ineland, X. J. LITCHARD, JOAX EMERSOX Lincoln Road Lincoln, Mass. LIU, HSIXG HUI 41st Ta-kuang Road. Ta-kuang. New X ' illage, Xanking, China LLOYD, GEORGE VILLIAM Cherrvwood Lane, R.D. 2 Media, Pa. LOXGAKER, DOROTHY SEILER 41 E. Montgomery Avenue Ardmore. Pa. LOXGAKER, RICHARD PAXCOAST 41 E, Montgomery A enue .Ardmore, Pa. LOXGSTREET, JOHX MORFORD 624 Elm Terrace Riverton. X. ]. LORCH, WALTER LEICESTER MAURICIO Alfonso Celso 243 Sao Paulo, Brazil LORWIX, ROSALIND 3000 39th Street, X. W W ashington 16, D. C. LOWEXS. MARY DOROTHY 229 E. 79th Street New York 21, X. Y. LUCARIXI. DEAX ALBERT 3 Foster Street Poughkeepsie, X. . LUCKIXG, BARBARA LOUISE 825 Brodhead Street Easton. Pa. LUDEMAXX, FRANK JOHX 85-55 85th Street Woodhaven, X. Y. LUKENS, WALTER LEE, JR. 140 Hilldale Road Lansdowne, Pa. LUPU, MICH. EL X. 6110 Vashington . venue Philadelphia 43, Pa. LURIA, CARLOS DeLIMA 1 15 E. 89th Street New York 28, N. Y. LURIE, SUSAN MEHRER 160 Goden Street Belmont 78, Mass. LYNL X, RICHARD WALL 20 Wilkins Street Hamden 14, Conn. LYXAH. FRANCIS PELZER, JR. Turner Road Wallingford, Pa. LYSTER, SHIRLEY CLAIRE 225 Cra vford . eiiue Lansdowne, Pa. MACCHl. EUGENE EDWARD 19 Cornell Road Bala-Cvnwvd, Pa. M.A.CHLUP. STEFAX 41 Biubank Drive Snyder, N. Y. MACK, BETTY ARTHUR 4829 61st Street AVoodside, L. I.. X. Y. .MacLAREX. DONALD R. Summit . venue Broomall, Pa. .MacLAREX, MARG.ARET LOUISE 2001 Rockridge Terrace Fort Worth 4, Tex. MacLELLAX. JAXET I. 510 High Street Bethlehem. Pa. MAHLER, EDWARD 1200 Greebv Street Philadelphia 11, Pa. MAITLAXD, ROBERT J. 220 Hazelwood .Avenue ldan. Pa. .MALIGE. DEXISE 5429 A ' allev Street Frankford, Pa. MAXGELSDORF, PAUL CHRISTOPH, JR. Hotel Continental Cambridge 38. Mass. MARCAR. HAIKAZ GALSTAUX 10 Hungerford Street Calcutta, India MARCH, ROGER LEE 600 Elm Avenue Swarthraore, Pa. MARIXDIN, HOPE 84 ' alden Street West Hartford 7, Conn. MARSHALL. JOHX CAL ERT 33 Rockridge Road Moiuit ' ernon, X. V. MASOX, RICHARD G. 1 149 E. 21st Stieet Brooklyn 10, X. Y. MASOX. SAM RANKIN 504 Chestnut Street Erie, Pa. MATTHEWS. ANXE 131 Riverside Drive New York 24, N. Y. McBRIDE, ROBERT G. Yorktown Heights, N. Y. McCABE, THOMAS BAYARD, JR. 607 X. Chester Road Swarthmore, Pa. McCARTEX, JEAX 256 McKinlev Road Grosse Point Farms, Mich. COMPLIMENTS OF THE GRADUATES 1947 152 THOMAS F. CONWAY RADIO AND ELECTRICAL SALES AND SERVICES Phone Swarthmore 0456-W 0456-R CYRUS WM. RICE CO., INC. CONSULTING WATER CHEMISTS AND ENGINEERS 15-17 Noble Avenue Pittsburgh 5, Pa. McCarthy, daniel justin white Schoolhouse and Gvpsv Lanes Philadelphia 44, Pa. McCarthy, thomas edward 7021 Penn .Avenue Pittsburgh, Pa. McCLOSKEY, DOROTHY LOUISE 289 .Starling Road Englewood, N. J. McCORMICK, GENE ELTON 4041 Washington Boulevard Indianapolis 5, Ind. McCO , ROBERT LESLIE 707 Hunting Place Baltimore 29, Md, McCUTCHEON, JOHN DENT 315 Darst Road Ferguson, Mo. McELDOWNEY, SUE HIETT Washington Street Newell, W. Va. McGRATH, DOUGLAS DANIEL 1273 North Avenue New Rochelle, N. Y. McKINNEY, WILLIAM EDMUND, JR. 651 1 Wayne Avenue Philadelphia 19, Pa. McKMGHT, JAMES TENBROECK 809 N. Haves Avenue Oak Park, 111. Mcknight, laura lucci 302 Preston Court Charlottesville, Va. McLaren, anne dillard Naval .Ammunition Depot Shumaker, Ark. McMillan, or ille george 1515 E. Broward Boulevard Et. Lauderdale, Fla. McMillan, william james 1515 E. Broward Boulevard Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. McNEES, ALICE shoemaker 5th Street and Providence Road Media, Pa. MECKES, ANN CAYWOOD Marlboro, N, Y. MENNINGER, ROY WRIGHT 1724 Collins Avenue Topeka, Kans. MERRITT, SARA-PAGE 445 Gramatan Avenue Mount ' ernon, N. Y. merson, ruth hope 317 W. 83rd Street New ' iork 24, N. Y. MERWIN, MARJORIE LOUISE 134 Fidlerton Avenue Newburgh, N, Y, METCALFE, ORRICK, JR. 305 Broadwav Street Natchez, Miss. COMPLIMENTS OF 1949 METZ, ALBl RN STAFFORD 34 Willowl)rook Avenue Lansdowiie, Pa. MEYER. ELLEN HOPE 107 Washington . venue Cambridge, Mass. MEYER, JOANNA 425 E. Leland Street Chevy Chase 15, Md MICHENER, JEAN ARDIS Notch Highlands Great Notch, N, J MIFFLIN, EDWARD BIDDLE Wallingford, Pa. MILLER, DEVARONA 213 Wall Street Maysville, Kv. MILLER, FRANK A. 6 Bartol , venue Ridlev Park, Pa. MILLER, WALTER NEAL 720 W. 170th Street New York 32, N. Y. MILNE, ROBERT SAGER 185 Glentay Road Lansdowne, Pa. MIROY, IRIS LYDIE Paulding Lane Crompond, N. Y. MOCHEL, GORDON CLARKE 606 Thayer Street Ridlev Park, Pa. MOFFETT, BLAIR ALEXANDER 340 Powell Road Springfield, Pa. MONK, RUTH ELIZABETH 30 Park Road Maplewood, N. J. MONROE, ELNA 522 W. Palm Lane Phoenix, Ariz. MONTCALM, .MICHAEL THEODORE 406 Hill Street Boonton, N. J. MONTGOMERY, JOHN THOMAS 1 18 Colwvn Lane Bala-Cynwvd. Pa. MOORE, BARBARA 144 Beaver Street Beaver, Pa MOORE, JAMES GILBERT 803 Walnut Street CoUingdale. Pa. MOORE, JOHN BEVERLY, III 520 N, Main Street Benton, III. MOORE, MORGAN FRANCIS, JR. 518 Ott Road Cvnwvd. Pa. MOREHEAD, FREDERICK FERGUSON, JR. 427 W. Union Street West Chester, Pa. 153 HUMMER and GREEN Fifth and Fulton Streets EVERYTHING FOR BUILDING ANYTHING 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. Our Kitchen Service offers metal or wood cabinets for complete kitchens and laun- dry rooms, Westinghouse and other nation- ally known appliances. PHONE CHESTER 9171 ' i ' yt MEATS. WHOLESALE 402-404 N. Second Street Philadelphia RCA-VICTOR COLUMBIA CAPITOL DECCA HIS MASTERS VOICE RECORDS PHILCO - RCA-VICTOR - EMERSON RADIOS AND RADIO-PHONOGRAPHS THE MUSIC BOX 409 DARTMOUTH AVE. SWARTHMORE PLACES TO DINE DEW DROP INN COMPLETE BREAKFAST, LUNCHEON AND DINNER Sunday Dinner 12-8 P.M. Phone 062 8R Catering THE DOG HOUSE STEAKS - CHICKEN MILK SHAKES THE YELLOW BOWL (est. 1920) DISTINCTIVE FOR FOOD - ATMOSPHERE SERVICE 606 Sproul Street, Chester TeL 2-2115 Open Every Day THE WILLOWS FRESH GROUND HAMBURGERS, TASTY SANDWICHES, MILK SHAKES Baltimore Pike Springfield, Pa. EDWARD L. NO YES 8C CO. Swarthmore, Pa. 23 S. CHESTER ROAD SWARTHMORE 0114 HOLLYHOCK SHOP Swarthmore, Penna. GIFTS FLOWERS UTILITY SHOP 19 S. Chester Road Swarthmore C. M. MARSH 154 • Compliments of THIRD WEST ROARING SPRING BLANK BOOK CO. IVAN E. GARVER, Pres. SALUTES RUSSELL B. GARVER Sec ' y-Treas. Gen ' l Mgr. THE CLASS OF WEST END LUMBER YARD 1948 1817 W. 7th Street Chester, Pa. LUMBER - MILLWORK - BUILDING MATERIALS - INSULATION MOREV, FREDERICK RICHARD 310 Yale Avenue Swarlhnioie, Pa. NfORFOOT. JANE NEWTON 3703 Biookside Road Toledo 6. Ohio MORIKAWA, YURI 69 W. I02nd Street New York 25, N. Y. MORRIS. PETER ANDREW Barlol Research Foundation Swarlhmore, Pa. MOFLEY, YVONNE Chatswonh Gardens LarihnionI, N. Y. MUCHA, STEPHEN 233 Cornell Avenue Swarlhniore. Pa. MUIR. WINIFRED TAYLOR 17 Buckinf ham Avenue Trcnion S. N. J. MULI.ER, BARBARA HOLLY Quarry Farm, Belle Haven Greenwich. Conn. MUMPER, JAMES ARTHUR 203 Earle Avenue Easton, Md. MUNN, JEAN MARGARET 5-lAri Wilkins Avenue Pittsburi h 17, Pa. MIIRRI. ALBERT THOMAS 4137 N. 9th Street Philadelphia 10. Pa. MYERS, PETER BRIGGS 321 Dickinson . venue Swarthniore, Pa. MYRICK, GEORGE THOMPSON 5415 Springlake Way Baltimore 12, Md. NASH, JAMES H. 1005 Cornell Road Pasadena 5. Calif. NATHAN, BF:TTY HARRIET 215 W. 90th Street New York 24. N. Y. NEAL, FREDERICK JEFFERSON 270 Katahdin Avenue Millinocket, Me. NEED, JOHN LOGAN 906 Westmoreland Avenue Norfolk, Va. NELSON, BARBARA ANN 1121 N. Teton Street Colorado Springs, Colo. NEUBURG, EDWARD PETER 20 Lincoln Street Larchmont, N. Y. NEWBOLD, ALBERT GODFREY 52 W. Pomona Street Philadelphia 44, Pa. NEWITT. CHARLES EDWARD 20 E. Tmnbull , veinie Havertown, Pa. NEWLIN. MARIAN 2054 Ruckle Street Indianapolis 2, Ind. NICHOLS. FRANK 1225 VakeliuK Street Philadelphia 24, Pa. NICHOLS, THOMAS GILBERT 321 Normal .Avenue Slippery Rock, Pa. NICHOLSON, EDWIN GEORGE 25 Mcado vbrook Road Upper Darby, Pa. NICHOLSON, FRANCIS TIM 447 N. Chiuih Sirect Vest Chester, Pa. NILES, RAYMAR PATRICIA 4606 N. 32nd Sirccl rlinston, Va. NORFIEET, BARBARA ALSTON 633 5th Street Lakewood, N. J. NORMAN, ROBERT ZANE Deerfield, III. NORRIS, PAMELA MADELEINE 1025 E. Ogden Avenue Milwaukee 2. Wis. NORTH, ARTHUR 3138 Shadeland . vcnuc Pittsburgh 12, Pa. NORWOOD, WILLIAM KNIGHT, JR. 3231 Patterson Sticct, N. W Washington 15, D. C. NUNEZ, VASCO EMIl.IO, JR. Sunset Rock Road . ndo er, Mass. NUTE, MARY CARMELITE 575 Park Avenue New York 21. N. Y. OITA, KATASHI Swarthniore College Swarthmore, Pa. OJA, FRANK EDWARD 2100 W. 6th Avenue Gary, Ind. OKAZAKI. NANCY TERU 1066-D Green Street Honolulu, T. H. OLDS. MARCIA ELISABETH 222 Gladstone Roatl Pittsburgh 17, Pa. ONEII.L. GERARD KITCHEN MD-16, Balnivillc Newburgh, N. V. OPPENI.ANDER, GEORGE CARROLL 027 ale Ac Morton, Pa. 155 tee ' rfs . DR. WEST ' S MIRACLE-TUFT Double - convex shape conforms to all the tooth surfaces . . . makes it easier to get at the hard-to-reach places. OPPEXLAXDER. GEORGE FREDERICK 6819 Mower Street Philadelphia 19. Pa. ORIilSOX. MARALYN ROSE Silver Hills New Albanv, Ind. ORMES. EMILY Hovev Cottage. College Campus . . .Crawfoidsville. Ind. ORTON, JANET Palisade Avenue and 261st Street . . .New York 63, N. Y. OSLER, VILLIAM HULL 504 Walnut Lane Swarthmore, Pa. OTTO, SUSAN 315 Central Park West New York. N. Y ' . OVERTON, BRUCE 154-20 Bavside Avenue Flushing, N. Y ' . OWENS, GWINN FARDON Riderwood, Md. OYLER. DONALD CLUCK 38 W. Broadway Gettysburg, Pa. PAINE. SHEILA 325 Heath Street Chestnut Hill. Mass. PAPASTRATIGAKIS, PETER Rigillis St. 6 Athens. Greece PAPAZIAN. ALICE 1420 Dean Street Schenectadv 8. N. Y. PARKS. ROBERT HENRY 2713 Bovev Street Chester, Pa. PARRISH, JOHN GLENN. JR. 255 Leamv Avenue Springfield, Pa. PAXSON, EDWIN M. Wind Rush Farm Penns Park. Pa. PEABODY, DEAX, III 362 Clyde Street Chestnut Hill 67. Mass. PEARLMAX. MARGE 110 Old Post Road Croton-on-Hudson. N. Y. PEDER.SEN. CHRISTIAN HARAI.D Kendrick Road. Tall Oaks Summit. N J PEELE, DAVID ARNOLD 7221 Hazel Avenue LIpper Darbv. Pa. PEELLE, HENRY EDMUND. JR. 77 Blenheim Drive Manhasset, N. Y ' . PEIRCE, PRISCILLA 23 Davidson Road Vorccster 5, Mass. PENNELL, HOWARD YARXALL Wawa. Pa. PERKINS. EDWARD BETTS 274 W. Main Street Moorestown. N. J. PERLA, EDITH JOCELYN 1430 48th Street Brooklvn, N. Y. PEROT, MARY H. 712 Race .Avenue Lancaster, Pa. PETERS, SYL ' IA ANN 23 Lakewood Road Newton Highlands, Mass. PETERSON, LARS OSCAR, JR. .Ypartinent F-2. Br n Mawr Court Brvn Mawr, Pa. PETERSON, RAYMOND ALFRED, JR. 670 Eagle Rock .A enuc West Orange. N. J. PFAU, MYRA JOAN 10 Worcester Street Grafton. Mass. PHAIR. ALICE MARGARET 754 Franklin Turnpike .Mlcndale. N. J. PHELPS, EDITH MARGARET Chcngtu, Sze, China PIERCE, JAMES WILSON 323 Lafavette Avenue Swarthmore. Pa. PINSKER, ' POLLY 45 E. 82nd Street New o V 28, N. Y. PINTO. EUGENE RONALD 1 1 Central .Yvenue Law rencc. L. L. X. ' . PIPER. JOHX 213 Yale .Yvenue Swarthmore. Pa. PLAXK. PATRICIA 125 W. 96th Street New o V. 25. N. Y. PL.VTT. ROBERT KENNETH 107 N. Morgan Avenue Havenown. Pa. PLAUT, THOMAS FRANZ ALFRED Apt. II A, 33 East End Avenue New York 28, N. V. POLAND. BURDETTE CRAWFORD Deerfield Street Dcerfield. Mass. POLLEN. DAVID SAUL 32 Oak Lane Glen Cove. X. V. POOLE, CARROLL FAHNESTOCK 1409 Delaware .Yvenue Wilmington 35, Del. 156 GET TO KNOW THE COLLEGE BOOKSTORE GOOD BOOKS OF ALL KINDS STATIONERY PENNANTS and OTHER NOVELTIES We Encourage Browsing COMPLIMENTS OF CO-ED BEAUTY SALON 13 Park Avenue Swarthmore Phone: Swarthmore 9761 STRATH HAVEN INN Swarthmore, Pa. FRANK M. SCHEIBLEY— Owner-Mgr. FIFTY YEARS ENTERTAINING SWARTHMORE COLLEGIANS SWARTHMORE NATIONAL BANK and TRUST COMPANY Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation I ' OI ' F,, ELIZABETH TUXEU, 71 Wayne A fiiuc While I ' hiins, N. Y. I ' OKIER, W ' llIJAM OREOIC IU2 Hibbeid Avenue Collinedale. I ' a. I ' OR TERFIELD, JOHN U ' lEIJAM 1 I2L ' . Slate Street Moniiccllo. III. I ' OSEI,. RAMON LEE ' )I19 C.ainoi Road Philadelphia 31. Pa. POWERS. CAROLIEN H.WES !HV2 Monterey . enue Pelham Manor, N. V. POVN ION. |OAN ADRIENNE 1(11 Highland Avenue (erscv City. N I. PRA r 1. 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JOHN BUCKLEY George School. Pa. SHARPE. MYRON EMANUEL 20th Street and Providence . ' Vvenue Chester. Pa. SHAW. EDWARD BURNS 3504 Baring Street Philadelphia 4. Pa. SHEA, COLVIN CARMINE 3815 Yolando Road Baltimore I.S. Md. SHEEDY. HERMAN JAMES. JR. 2543 Fcnwick Road University Heights 18. Ohio SHELLENBERGER. ROLFE RICHARD 537 Strathmore Road. Brookline Havertown. Pa. SHEPPARD, WILLIAM MIDDLETON 217 E. Madison Avenue Collingswood. N. }. SHIKE. CHARLES WESLEY 1421 Arch Street Philadelphia 2. Pa. SHOP. BEATRICE DALE 641 West 238th Street New York 63. N. Y. SICKLE. STEPHEN M. 120 Lake Avenue Highland Park. 111. SIECK. MARY HOPE 120 Churchwarden ' s Road Baltimore 12. Md. SIECK. WILLIAM CHARLES 120 Churchwardens Road Baltimore 12. Md. SIEGLE. JOHN GEORGE 317 Orchard Road Springfield. Pa. SIMONS. JOHN PHILIP 4464 W. ' I94th Street Cleveland 16, Ohio SINER. JOEL LAWRENCE 109 . ' Vudley Street Kew Gardens 15. N. Y. SKIPP, WARREN CLARKE 109-54 212th .Street Queens Village. L. I.. N. Y. SLICK. JACOB STINEMAN 171 Grimth Street Salem, N. J. SMEALLIE. NADIA DEEM I McClellan .Av enue Amsterdam, N. Y. SMITH. CATHERINE JANE 428 N. Chuich Street West Chester, Pa. SMITH. CHARLES DAVID 3534 Union Avenue Merchantville, N. J. SMITH. DONALD WILLITS 132 Duck Pond Road Glen Cove. L. I., N. Y. SMITH, EVELENE HINCKLEY Ridgewood Farm Wallingford, Pa. SMITH. GLADYS M. 1407 Culhane Street. Highland Gardens Chester. Pa. SMITH. HAROLD LESLEY. JR. c o I. M. C.upitt 205 Svlvania Place Westfield. N. J. SMITH. JOYCE 43 Slater . venue Providence 6, R. I. SMITH. MALCOLM H. 6810 108th Street Forest Hills. I.. I.. N. V. SMITH. RICHARD NORRIS ,5335 N. 15th Street Philadelphia 41, Pa. SMITH, WESTON LANE Brvn , thyn. Pa. SNYDER. FREDERICK 930 Johlcr .Avenue Scranton. Pa. SNYDER. KENNETH MOORE S. Oakwood Terrace -; New Paltz, N. Y. SOLOMON. FRANK. JR. 13416 Ardoon A enne Cleveland 20. Ohio SONNENFELD. MARION WILM. IS18 Bogart .Avenue. Bronx New York 60. N. Y. SORBER. JANE 401 Walnut Lane Swarlhmore. Pa. SOSMAN. BARBARA CLARK 24 Lee Road Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. SPANGLER. WILLIAM JOHN 91 1 Serrill .Avenue Veadon. Pa. SPARKS. DAVID EGBERT Rose Tree Doivns. R.F.D. 1 Media, Pa. SPENCE. DA ' ID BARCLAY Box 209 Pacific Grove. Calif. SPENCER. GLORIA 15 Arnold Road Wellesley Hills. Mass. SPENCER. PHILIP HOWARD Wallingford. Pa. SPIERLING. RICHARD ARTHUR 3909 E. Lake Road Erie 2. Pa. SPITZ. DOUGLAS ROBERT 10 Far ' icw Hill Rochester. N. Y. SPITZER. ALAN BARRIE 305 W. Sedgwick Street Philadelphia 19. Pa. GITHENS, REXSAMER AND COMPANY 242-244 North Delaware Avenue Philadelphia. Pa. HERALD AND MELROSE BRAND CANNED FOODS QUALITY AND SERVICE SINCE 1861 159 SPOFFORD. GAMN P. 720 Ogden Avenue Swarthraore, Pa. SPRLVT, DIRK JACOBUS Trap Rock Farm Deerfield. Mass. STABLER, CHARLES NORMAN, JR. 24 Homer Avenue Larchmont. X. V. STABLER, GRIFFIN MILLER 24 Homer . venue Larchmont, N. Y. STABLER. LAURENCE JANNEY, JR. Rogers Lane Wallingford, Pa. STARBUCK, CHARLES L. 221 Summit Street Media, Pa. STAUB, GABY MARIE 159 E. 57th Street New York, N. Y. STEARNS, VHITNEY KNEELAND 254 . rlington . enue Brooklvn 8, N. Y. STEIN. CAROL HOLLAND 36 Jefferson Road Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. STEIN, HOWARD 152 E. 23rd Street Chester, Pa. STERN, VIRGINIA WILLLA.MS 383 North .Avenue Fanuood. N. J. STERNLIGHT. PETER DONN 222 W. 10th Street New York 14. N. Y. STE ENS. AMCE MARTIN 3130 Wisconsin Avenue Washington 16. D. C. STE ENSON, ALDEN 1326 College Street Scranton, Pa. STE ' ART. RUTH ANN 163 ' reeland .Avenue Rutherford, N. J. STEYTLER. .MARY LOUISE 322 E. Gorgas Lane Philadelphia 19, Pa. STICKNEY, .MILDRED WEBB 675 Longacre Boulevard Yeadon. Pa. STOLBERG, DA ID FOX 1922 N. Quincv Street .Arlington. Va. STOLE, SUSAN ELIZABETH R.D. 3 New Milford. Conn. STONE, ALICE GAYLEY 526 Spoleto Drive Santa Monica, Calif. STORER. JAMES PERLEY 1011 Puritan Birmingham, Mich. STOW, FRANKLIN PIERCE, JR. 140 W. Richardson .Avenue Langhorne, Pa STRATTON, ROLAND P.ANCOAST, JR. 274 V. 2nd Street Moorestown. N. J STRAUSS, GEORGE JOSEPH 220 Prospect .Avenue Staten Island I, N. Y STR,Al SS. LILO TEUTSCH 726 Chestnut .Avenue Teaneck, N. J STR.AUSS, WILLLAM FRANK 220 Prospect .Avenue ' . . . Staten Island 1. N. Y STRA VBRIDGE, MARY Wynnewood, Pa STRIEBY, MICHAEL 175 Sagamore Road Maplewood, N. J STROUP, CHALMERS CLARK. JR. Juliana Heights Bedford. Pa STRUIK, RUTH REBECCA 52 Glendale Road Belmont 78, Mass STUCKENRATH, ROBERT 300 Shaw .Avenue Lewistown. Pa SULLIVAN, ROBERT LITTLE 139 Ridgedale -Avenue Madison. N. J SUNDT, ROBERT STOUT 1 N. Jackson Street Venonah, N. J SUTHERLAND. JOHN HALE 1106 Highland .Avenue Bethlehem, Pa SUTTON, PATIENCE MARGARET Bishop ' s School Amman. Trans-Jordan SUVARNSIT, RENOO Siamese Legation Washington, D. C SWERDLOAE. DOROTHY LOUISE 1920 Hone Avenue New York 61, N. Y S VINDELL. BARBARA VAN NESS Tudor .Arms -Apts Baltimore 10. Md TANGLY, JOHN SCOTT 222 Rutgers -Avenue Swarthmore. Pa TATE. ROBERT WOOD 4432 Que Street, N. W AVashington 7, D. C TAYLOR, ANN Arke AVest Woodstock, Conn MORROW NUTS TO YOU NUT and HOUSE GOOD ONES TOO! 1240 MARKET STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. 160 TAYLOR, CAROLYN LINCOLN 3 Mason Street Cambridge 38. Mass. TAYLOR. JACKSON 3905 Jocelyn Street AVasliiiigton 15. D. C. TAYLOR, MARCLA 27 .Yrlington Road Waltham, Mass. TAYLOR, MARION ELMA 39 Church Street Allentown, N. J. TAYLOR. RICHARD GLENN 233 Elm Avenue Riverton. N. J. TAYLOR. ROBERT HILL. JR. 1959 Leyden Street Denver 7. Colo. TEALE. MARY GENE 127 Wellington Road Bulhilo 16. N. Y. TEMPLE. HENRY EDWARD 88 Northumberland Road Pittsfield. Mass. TEST, GEORGE AUSTIN 309 Pennsylvania .Avenue Prospect Park, Pa. TH.ATCHER. DAVID AUDOUN 213 W. Brow Oval Lookout Mountain, Tenn. TH.ATCHER, EDITH POWER 613 Ogden Avenue Swarthmore, Pa. THIES. RACHEL DIANA 106 Potter Road Scarsdale. N. Y. THOMAS. ALAN BUTLER, JR. 318 Dartmouth Avenue Swarthmore. Pa. THOMAS. GEORGEANN CONROW 1333 Fort Stevens Drive. N. W. . . Washington 11. D. C. THOMAS. ROBERT KINNEBERG 114 Summerfield Road Chevy Chase, Md. THOMPSON. ANN 5 Clubway Lane Hartsdale, N. Y ' . THOMPSON, CHARLES WESLEY, JR. 433 Maplewood Road Springfield, Pa. THOMPSON, GEORGE DALE 3484 Gunston Road Alexandria. Va. THOMSON, MARGARET ANN 9 Carvel Road Washington 16. D. C. THOMSON, MAY LOGAN Dillsburg, Pa. THORP. BARBARA ELLEN R.F.D. 2 Westport. Conn. THUR.MAN. ELIZABETH KAY 528 Cedar Lane Swarthmore. Pa. TIETZ. WILLIAM JOHN. JR. 611 N. Washington Street Hinsdale. III. TIPPING, BARBARA WINFIELD R.D. 7 York. Pa. TITUS, MARILYN CLARE Sherman Road Chesterland, Ohio TODES. SAMUEL JUDAH .1425 Hellerman Street Philadelphia 24. Pa. TOOLEY. HELEN JANET 7 Sound ' iew Terrace Greenwich, Conn. TORREY, ANNA MARSH Storrs, Conn. TORREY, JANE WHEELWRIGHT 1675 Metropolitan Avenue, Apt. 5C. Bronx, New York 62. N. Y. TOTAH, JANE ELLEN 74 S. . ' rlington Street East Orange. N. J. TOWNES, GEORGE FRANKLIN 500 Sumner Street Greenville, S. C. TRESCOTT. PAUL BARTON 115 Edge Hill Road , bington. Pa. TREUENFELS. ERNST WOLFGANG 140 75th Street Brooklyn 9, N. Y. TRIMMER. ELISABETH CHASE 312 March Street Easton. Pa. TRIMMER. JOHN MORRIS R.F.D. 2 . ' Andover, Conn. TROY, MELVIN BENSIN 2359 E. I8th Street Brooklvn 29, N. Y. TRUITT, THOMAS DAVIS 319 W. Miner Street West Chester. Pa. TUCKER. ENID DeVEAUX 1925 S Street. N. W Washington 9. D. C. TURLINGTON, SYLVIA 402 Warwick Place Chew Case 15. Md. TURNER. RANSOM HUDSON. JR. 254-18 West End Drive Great Neck, N. Y. TURNER. RICHARD MORTON 233 Garfield .Avenue Norwood. Pa. COMPLIMENTS GALLMEYER 8c LIVINGSTON CO. Grand Rapids, Michigan Manufacturers of Machine Tools SPECIALIZING IN PRECISION GRINDING MACHINES FOR WORLD WIDE DISTRIBUTION 161 Established 1881 Incorporated 1925 CRETH SULLIVAN, INC GENERAL INSURANCE 106-08 S. Fourth Street Philadelphia Associated Marshall P. Sullivan ' 97 Francis W. D ' Olier ' 07 162 COMPLIMENTS OF 4TH WEST ADOLPH ' S BARBER SHOP REDDINGTON ELECTRIC COMPANY 7 S. Chester Road 403 Edgemont Avenue Chester, Pa. Swarthmore, Pa. Wholesale Lighting Fixtures and Supplies TURNEY, JOHN STEPHEN 4009 Ellendale Road Drexel Hill, Pa. TWITCHELL, NANCY 39 Arcimore Road Springfield, Ohio UNDERHILL, CATHERINE TRUMAN Little Britain Road Newbingh, N. Y. UNDER, RICHARD CALVIN 383 First Avenue Phoenixville, Pa. UREY, GERTRUDE ELIZABETH ,5442 Hyde Park Boulevard Chicago, 111. VALTIN, HEINZ 601 E. 9th Street New York 9, N. Y. VALTIN, RALPH 601 E. 9th Street New York 9, N. Y. VAN DEUSEN, EDGAR ALLAN N. Main Street, R.D. 2 Boonton, N. J. VAN VALEN, NELSON SANDFORD Etiwanda, Calif. VERNON, ROBERT HOWARD 147 N. Keswick Avenue Glenside, Pa, VERNOU, HEL£NE ANNE 950 East .Avenue Rochester 7, N. Y. VERREI, CONSUELO 956 Pratt Street Philadelphia 24, Pa. VINCENZI, TONY PIETRO 420 S. Broad Street Rome, Ga. VOGT, RUTH 90 Prospect Hill Avenue Summit, N. J. VOORHOEVE, ERNST WILLEM 17 Rockview Terrace North Plainfield, N. J. WAGNER, NICHOLAS HARR Bowling Green Media, Pa. WALDAUER, JOSEPH LEE 674 West Drive Memphis 12, Tenn. WALKLING, RICHARD WARE 10 Derwen Road Bala-Cynw7d, Pa. WALTERS, DONALD BAUS 1 19 W. Wentz Street Philadelphia 20, Pa, WAN, KAI CHUNG 70 Tai Hang Road Hong Kong, China WARD, ALAN ALEXANDER 35-61 92nd Street, Jackson Heights . . . .New York, N. Y. WARD, ELIZABETH FLORENCE 1124 Noyes Street Evanston, 111. W.ASHINGTON, DELORES 3309 13th Street. N. W Washington 10, D. C, WATT, DOROTHY ELLEN 6 Fox Meadow Road Sc arsdale, N. Y. WEAVER. BARBARA JEAN . shland .Avenue Secane, Pa. WEAVER, WILLIAM MILLER 326 Denv n Road Lansdowne, Pa. WEBER. MARGARET CLAIRE 518 W. Laurel Street Fort Collins, Colo. WEBSTER, WILLIAM DEERING 91 Morris Avenue Mountain Lakes, N. J. WEIL. ANDREW WARREN 7016 Greene Street Philadelphia 19. Pa. WEISKRANTZ, LAWRENCE 2910 W. Oxford Street Philadelphia 21, Pa. WEISS, STEVENS HOWARD 320 E. 57th Street New York 22, N. Y. WEISZ. ELISABETH 3636 Gre) stone .■ enue New York 63, N. Y. 163 WELLES, DEBORAH 1100 Stone Canyon Road Los Angeles 24. Calif WELLS, MARTHA CECILIA 8 Harvard Place Ann Arbor, Mich. WEMYSS, COURTNEY TITUS 27 Washington Avenue Arlington, N. I. WENTZ, JOHN CALELY 1010 S. St. Bernard Street Philadelphia 43, Pa. WENZEL, JOHN R. 7830 Winston Road Philadelphia 18. Pa. WERTHEIMER, LISBETH ROSA 40 Wootton Road ; Essex Fells, N. I. WERTHEIMER, MICHAEL MATTHEW 40 Wootton Road Essex Fells N I WESTERGAARD, MARY TALBOT 33 Pinehurst Road Belmont, Mass. WEYMULLER, CHARLES FREDERICK 27 Garden Place Broolvlyn 2, N. Y. WHIPPLE, JAMES RUTLEDGE 171 W. 12th Street New York 11, N. Y. WHITE, BETTY LEE 36 Richards Road Watertown 72, Mass. WHITE, MARGARET S. 120 Hilldale Road Lansdowne. Pa. WHITMAN, ROBERT VANDUYNE 521 Locust Street, Edgewood Pittsburgh 18, Pa. WHITTLESEY, CLARE 100 Jackson Avenue Morgantown, W Va WICKES, ELEANOR DOROTHY 7314 Piney Branch Road, Takoma Park, Washington 12, D. C. WILBUR, ELIZABETH NORRIS 115 Pennsylvania Avenue Bryn Mawr Pa WILCOX, RUTH MARIE 415 N. Cascade Colorado Springs. Colo WILL, WILLIAM HENRY Limekiln Pike Dresher Pa WILLIAMS, CURTIS ALVIN, JR. Fairfax .Apts., 43rd and Locust Streets, Philadelphia 4. Pa. WILLIAMS, DAVID LOCKWOOD 808 Race Avenue Lancaster Pa WILLIAMS, EBENEZER DAVID 233 Nesbit Terrace IrvinTton 11 N I WILLIAMS. EDITH GOLDING ■ • t Tt , ' • ' ■ S Lake Road Birmingham. Mich. WILLIAMS, GEORGE HERBERT 42 Sycamore Avenue Aldan Pa WILLIAMS, JOAN U. • ■ 1717 Columbia Road, N. W Washino-ton P D C WILLIAMS, SUE GRAU • ■ • 127 Grays Avenue Glenolden Pa WILLIER, LOUISE CECILE .o-eno.aen. Fa. „ ' ' 9 Upnor Road Baltimore 12, Md WILLIS, CLYDE ARNOLD Vollmer Road Flossmoor 111 WILLIS, JACKSON DeCAMP flossmoor. III. 41 Lincoln Avenue Lansdnwnp Pq WITCRAFT, CAROL WINIFRED lansdowne. Pa. 930 Idaho Avenue, S. E Huron S Dak WITHEFORD. DAVID KENNETH 1603 N. Rodney Street Wilmington, Del. WITTE, LSABEL HOWLAND 504 Concord Avenue Belmont 78, Mass. WOLF, ANDREA 425 Riverside Drive New York N Y WOLF, JULIA MAY ' . ■ ■ 1229 E. 5th South Street Salt Lake Citv 2, Utah WOLFE, ANTHONY LEE 410 Walnut Road, Ben Avon Pittsburgh 2 Pa WOLFE, KATHRYN LORETTA 6809 Clinton Avenue Cleveland 2, Ohio WOLFSON, JUDITH CHARMIAN 124 W. 93rd Street New York 25, N. Y WOLVERTON, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN 2159 Blake Boulevard Cedar Rapids, Iowa WOOD, SARAH CADWALLADER Station Avenue Langhorne, Pa. WOODLE, MARY ELIZABETH 208 Cresswell Street Ridlev Park, Pa. WORK, DAVID RUTTER Elwyn Training School Elwyn Pa WRIGHT, JOHN PETER LaRoche , venue Harrington Park, N T WRIGHT, THEODORE PAUL, JR. 2918 Glover Driveway, N. W. . . ' . . .Washington 16, D. C. YARDLEY, MARY ELLEN 11 Green Hill Lane, Overbrook ...Philadelphia 31, Pa YATES, KATHLEEN 115 Elm Avenue Wyoming, Ohio YEARSLEY, LAWRENCE ASH 577 E. Main Street Coatesville, Pa. YNTEMA, DOU VE BUSEY 1331 N. Ash Street Waukegan, 111. YNTEMA, GEORGE BUSEY 1331 N. Ash Street Waukegan, 111 YNTEMA, JOHN AREND 126 Fuller Lane Winnetka, 111. YNTEMA, MARY KATHERINE 1331 N. Ash Street Waukegan, 111. YOCKEY, MERLE ALBERT, JR. 38 Oxford Boulevard Pleasant Ridge, Mich. YOUNG, DODDRIDGE ROWAN 1354 Club View Drive Los Angeles 24, Calif. ZALL, PAUL M. 2 Osgood Street Lowell, Mass. ZANDER, MARY KATHARINE 135 E. Magnolia Avenue San Antonio, Tex. ZELLERBACH, STEPHEN ANTHONY 3410 Jackson Street San Francisco 18, Calif. ZITT, HERSCH LEIB 2437 S. Sheridan Street Philadelphia 48, Pa. ABRAMOWITZ, TED RALPH 165 W. Susquehanna Avenue Philadelphia 22, Pa ARMINGTON, DAVID EVERETT 24365 Oakhill Drive Euclid, Ohio BARNWELL, GEORGE ALLEN Popham Hall Scarsdale, N. Y. CAROW, GEORGE WILLIAM 258 W. Fifth Avenue Roselle, N. I. CHACKO, CHACKO KOLLENPARAMPIL Pendle Hill Wallingford, Pa. TROY LAUNDRY COMPANY Chester, Pa. THE COLLEGE LAUNDRY 164 CHALMERS, DAVID MARK 5335 43rd Street, N. W Washington 15, D. C. CRESSEV, RICHARD CHATFIELD 101 Windsor Place Syracuse, N. Y. DANNUNZIO, JOSEPH CARLYLE, JR. 514 Parkway Avenue Trenlon 8. N. J. DIEBOLD, JOHN THEURER 62 Columbia Terrace Weehawken, N. J. DODGE. PETER 355 Riverside Drive New York 25, N. Y. DOWNEY. MARGERY ROBIE 130 Bellevue Avenue Upper Montclair, N. J. DOWNEY, WILLIAM WALLACE 130 Bellevue Avenue Upper Montclair, N. J. EARLEY, JOSEPH FRANCIS 5406 Cliester Avenue Philadelphia 43, Pa. ELEFTHERIOU, PETER EMMANUEL Vathy Samos, Greece EABRIKANT, MICHAEL J. 41 W. 82nd Street New York 24, N. Y. GEARY, WARREN TRUMAN ADRIAN 53 Ardmore Avenue Lansdowne, Pa. GILES. JOHN LAWRENCE 261 Vayne Avenue Oakland. Calif. HALL, NORMAN MALCOLMSON 1528 Duncannon Avenue Philadelphia, Pa. HANDEL, RICHARD 2060 82nd Street Brooklyn 14, N. Y. HA S, SAMUEL PFRIMMER R.r.D. 2 Corydon, Ind. HUNTER, WILLIAM, JR. 426 Orchard Avenue Yeadon, Pa. KIDDER. JOYCE BALDWIN 1 E. Providence Road Yeadon, Pa. KIRSCHNER, RICHARD WILLIAM 46 W. 95th Street Ne v York, N. Y. KOEHLER, KARIN 603 Elm Avenue Swarthmore. Pa. LEWIS, LLOYD WILLIAM 29 Dante Street Larchmont, N. Y. McCRORY, JOHN BROOKS 92 Kenyon Street Brockport. N. Y. MENZEL, OTTO JOHN 30 Espanade Mount Vernon, N. Y. MELTZER, ALLAN IRWIN 240 Highland Road South Orange, N. J. MOORE, WILLIAM McKAY 232 Newport News Avenue Hampton. ' a. NILES, (MARY) GUSHING 333 N. Charles Street Baltimore 1, Md. REDFIELD, FREMONT GOEFFERT 1401 N. 15th Street Philadelphia 21, Pa. RIEFLER, CAROLINE GREENE 503 N. Chester Road Swarthmore, Pa. SCHWEIKLE, WILLIAM CHARLES 2814 Pine Avenue North Hills, Pa. SIERRA, LUIS M., Crozer Seminary Chester, Pa. STEUBER, F. WALTER 209 Yale Avenue Swarthmore, Pa. TEMPLE, WILLIAM ARTHUR 88 Northumljerland Road Pittsfield, Mass. ULFSPARRE, LARS OLAF 136 E. Essex Avenue Lansdowne, Pa. WHITE, DANIEL DOUGHTY Wakefield Manor Farm Westtow n. Pa. WHITE, WALTER CARL DARROW 409 Edgecombe .Avenue New York 32, N. Y. WILSON, PAUL VICTOR Merritt Road Farmingdale, N. Y. WOERNER. LEO GEORGE, JR. 34 Morton Avenue Ridley Park. Pa. A. RAYMOND RAFF INCORPORATED CARPENTERS AND CONTRACTORS 1631-1633-1635 THOMPSON STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. 165 . . • I L. r iy W «y l l are as necessarv in the building of a fine yearbook as thev are in the construction of a skyscraper. Here at Campus we ha e gathered, over the years, an organization of skilled artists and idea men . . . experienced printing, engra -ing and production men ... all welded into a team that is readv to work with you and for you, to help build vour yearbook into a better and finer publication. Campus complete ser ' ice enables vou to get from a single source ever ' thing needed to produce your book, all under a single budget control that insures vou against unexpected extras. ' This service includes even, ' phase of the job from planning and layout to cover- makina and final printing and binding. Campus has helped hundreds of staffs build annuals that will be memorable for a lifetime. Each year several Campus-produced annuals take top honors in National competition. The Largest Designers and Producers of Outstanding Yearbooks in the East r.AMPUS PllBUSHlNG 1420 WALNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA 2, PfNNA. 37 WALL STREET, NEW YORK 5, N. y. PRINTING . ENGRAVING • OFFSET- LITHOGRAPHY ART AND LAYOUT SERVICE 166 MASTERPRINT CAMPUS PUBLISHING 1420 WALNUT ST.. PHILA. f Ejk;|i s iiV€ 1 1


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

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951


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