Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA)

 - Class of 1960

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1960 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 204 of the 1960 volume:

Swarthmore College 1960 Halcyon There is sometimes a moment when we must step back and ask why ... A FABLE Once, long ago, the fathers of a certain village decided that they wanted their children to learn. They chose the man in the village whom, from their own contact, they thought wisest; and he took the children to sit under a tree to talk and listen. Occasionally it would rain, and a shelter had to be built. That shelter was no more than the tree. College is the people, the players: the Professors and the students; different points of view; a variegated but compact community where men and women can mirror developing aspects of the self and form the trial ground for other minds ' theories and one ' s own. College is a faltering, guided exploration beyond yesterday, alone . . . watching the student next to you, across from you, growing . . . under- standing nothing, then something, and finally everything; or, if one has learned anything at all, enough. Knowledge means ever renewed assur- ance by defeat that victory is somehow still to reach. College is tangible and permanent. Trees change and buildings spring up, but the Tree and the College have a steady role and a steady voice. But how does one put the mark of the self on time? College is the words and sounds from which some of us may frame a star. Why else . . . E.W. 11 13 14 15 ■« ;6- -,- ' - •■-::- • • ■ ' ■ i ■; ; ; ' ■■ ' i ' %;; ■;4?7 ■- ' ■ f Vj... !• ' ■■ ' ' -• ! :, r -,--,: ■ ' ■■ . ' ?■ ■ . , ' ' :: • - --Jr. .. ' ■ ••. •«■- .■ ' ■ •• V . , -. ' - .  --■- - . M ■ -v. 18 ' Vf ' J f t ' ' ' ' J 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 m mmmMK 27 The tree is there spread upward and we abou t it below, standing in group or alone. The tree becomes the answer sought, the order, the rhythm and sense that must be in all that flows about us all that spreads in concentric circles from us. It is more than us yet not so great. There are two movements: we step outward from the source imagin- ing we understand following the fiberous implications, involvements and fatalities with surety masked comfortable in our assumed knowledge of the order; we can move from the tangled cords and haze inward, in search of the core, uncertain, certain only of parts but never of wholes. The first movement is illusory: it is not for now when time and youth are rich — it is for then perhaps when we are silent as old men, all wealths but that one stolen from us. All we may know now is the search. It is said: ' There is a special providence in the fall of a sparrow. It is said: Soft you: a word or two before you go. I have done the state some service, and they know ' t. It is said: Ripeness is all. But this was spoken at the end, not in the beginning. Time and the Tree remain, but not our time and our tree. It is there and we about it in group or alone. Between I and Us there is a chasm: at once no bond yet all, all the myriad filaments, all we can speak of and all that is. Alone is a lie: We are, therefore I think; I think, therefore we are. If there is more it will be learned but once. 28 ■p ' 1 1 1 1 WmL 1 1 I H ■WW• ' I 1 - ■ ...... . «MI« ai i 1 1 Wagr ! 1 HI c 1 1 1 1 J b IP 1 ' - 1 IB ' iSr-- m§ m 1 H I K !!. ;J M H K| ■| J ■ 30 32 . «5? . . V, - . 34 35 36 37 38 39 - MA w K ' 9 40 RECTORY CONRStlONC Itl AUtMNI PUN OPPCtl I3( NINC tTORE lit SMITH FOR OMN HOUUS I0(! lANS-OfFICt in SAC ROACMCS 147 NELSON FOR OCAN UV OCAO aOAlB 9 VON PBAHK UWBI 00 nCVCNT l eNTIOBB  - Pmiies ARC sexY i t4 tfw IS NEATi -WBcri mecnm «ii CUT PPT 8PU0NUC atm  ■ •OT AH ID SHEILA N0 BILL BOOO OO HOME 8888 SHERM IS CUTE 45 y 46 47 48 For it seems that everything ' s trying to hide us. Look, the trees exist; the houses we live in still stand v here they were. We only pass everything by like a transposition of air. And all combines to suppress us, partly as shame, perhaps, and partly as inexpressible hope. — Rilke (Leishman and Spender) 52 :% ii ' s-. Courtney Smith, President Robert A. Barr. Jr. Gilmore Stott 54 OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Edward K. Cratsley John M. Moore Joseph B. Shane Ann E. C. Passoth Susan P. Cobbs, Dean of Women ADMINISTRATION t. ■ ' -: :f h William C. H. Prentice, Dean of Men 55 OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Susan P. Cobbs Helen F. North, Chainnun Martin Ostwald 56 CLASSICS J M SUSAN HANDLER (Greek— Honors) You really ought to read what Plato has to say on that. — that unplaceable accent! — A confirmed Londoner, returned to S ' more, finds expanding in- terests in a contracting world — A wish to drink deeper from the Pierian spring. ANITA NAOMI COOPER (Latm) From senior to senior. This section is hers. Hu- morous empathy. The trucks are noisier from the 4th than from the 2nd. New Yorker without so- phistication. Undercover Greek. Come smoke an Abdulla. 57 Edward C. Fei Clair Wilcox. Chainitan ECONOMICS 11 I Ql - « VV ' ? . 1 KSsiTi William H. Brown, Jr. OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Edward K. Cratsley Joseph W. Conard Willis D. Weatherford Frank C. Pierson 58 Helen Manning Hunter GERALD J. BATT JUDITH SCORPIL BRYER (Honors) Sunny smile plus poise and tact — spring in Wash- ington and Christmas in Florida. Let ' s elect Judy fire corporal. Practicing but impractical domestic economist. Instant air mattress. Well, Dick says JOSEPH BURNS (Honors) Often laughing, arguing, joking, and explaining. but always smiling and blabbering. Tries to be as unpretentious and as understanding as possible. Above all, he has established some fine ideals here. 59 L. WALLACE CLAUSEN (Honors) Wally — four years of wrestling — lacrosse — KS — IFC Pres. — Ec. club prexy, C section proctor — serious, quiet and organized plus — Well, it ' s off to the stacks! jazz enthusiast — great steak roasts. HUGH DAVY Digs art, jazz cuckoo clocks, and Danish girls. Bridge in Commons, bongo sessions in the Par- lors. Les is in California, where is Larry? mem- ories of a perplexed Social Committee and Tri- College Prom Chairman. t! „flK- .rwr i. •■ St i li tW? WILLIAM B. FAIRLEY (Honors) ELEANOR DUGUID (Honors) Tennis racket and bookbag — ever effervescent but serious — Good Neighbor Policy and other-di- rected ponytail — Featured fact from Elly ' s alma- nac — Chemists and Economists can agree — That type thing — blondy — EUy. 60 MARTIN C. GIDEONSE (Honors) PAUL FRISHKOFF (Honors) Man, do I have troubles! How can you sit like that? Comes the Revolution, everyone will have 3 Simcas (with spare parts). Constant labor of one uniform kind destroys the intensity and flow of a man ' s animal spirits. if i MARY E. GOODEN (Honors) After a year the world ' s rosy walls fell away — Another day all black clothes — On good days frilly white blouses and sunshine hair — Weeks of waitress-mornings and organization meetings — Facing a world of no walls. ARTHUR RONALD HAUVER Economics (finally after foray into pre med and math). 4 year varsity soccer, 2 years swimming and 3 years track. Poet Independent Working man. Will fly jets for 5 years. Ronnie. 61 ROBERT BRUCE HEATON Married. Expert bridge player, terrible hearts player. Honorable mention, All-American la- crosse. K-Sig president. S.A.C. Recognizes every bit-player in filnidom. Second best place-kicker the Bearcats ever had. The Heating. N.i s ' FREDERICK F. HINZE DAVID A. HORR Economics major studying music — coffee, crack- ers, and stolen salt shakers — campus reactionary — I didn ' t tell him to resign; it was only a sugges- tion — spastic organist and record composer. 62 HARRY KAHRS Habitue of the stacks where familiar titles are most conducive to satisfaction of the intellectual Urges — cosmopolitan with a weakness for the in- ternational elite and a crafty capitalist with Strath Haven investment. PATRICIA PRICE Pat — talents on both ends of the Phys Ed Dept — three years on WAA — athletic versatility — two season co-captain: hockey and lacrosse — added color to the football games — loves MGs, crewneck sweaters, and weddings in July. WILLIAM F. LEE. JR. Wink — D.U. vice president — Unknown Roman — from cleat cleaner to brains behind football team — world traveler — ante up — one of Van de Kamp ' s best star gazers — hard worker who enjoys a good time — future in life insurance. 63 ii LINDA ROTHWELL DU ' s favorite gal — contagious laugh — hair style for every occasion — to know her is to like her — bleary eyed waitress — flair for fabulous water show — seven years and still going strong — My Swiss family — Linder. RONALD HADLEY SMITH Economics with sidelines — Smitty, the Joe (life- time extra point record of one for two) — Tennis captain — Stomach varies inversely with tennis season. Open mind and heart, but don ' t try and fool him. Supper at Green ' s? RAY TYLER (Honors) Southerner with a British accent — many and var- ied interests — It ' s never too late to change your major The ditto man! born to the purple — Do you smell smoke? Well, well, what do you know! 64 Elizabeth Cox Wright m . - ' := ' ||HK ' fMb nM ■ wm w Hb ' . Frederic S. Klees ENGLISH LITERATURE OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS David Cowden Samuel L. Hynes Alex Zwerdling Barbara Pearson Lange George J. Becker. Cliai} Daniel G. Hoffman John S. Coolidge 66 JOSEPH E. ADCOCK (Honors) SARA BOLYARD (Honors) Troops! Long hair is a philosophy of life — hill- born — a large spray of tiny rosebuds — an affinity for fog, a dash of poetry and a little acting — Bemels and Woolman — A Moral Victory is bet- ter than none. . . PATRICIA L. BROOKS (Honors) GLADYS BROOKS (Honors) . . . and yet I love the sticky little leaves as they open in spring. 67 JUDITH A. FETTERLEY JOAN SHUSTER FABER DETMAR H. FINKE (Honors) 68 MARCIA J. FREED (Honors) SUSAN D. HAGER From SHD to SDH — Art, music, literature and Softball makes a well-rounded wife. Predictably unpredictable. Roses from the fraternity — Beeth- oven and his beret. The solid gold bicycle. Come up for tea or orange juice. CATHERINE HEBLEY Actually a Phil major. Four years without a re- striction. Bio 1-2 for seniors. Last of the Phi Delt sisters. Swarthmore ' s answer to Maria Callas. I am so too! Will be an understanding teacher. Shorty. 69 AKIKO IIDA SUSAN E. LARDNER (Honors) RONNY KATZ Two years of Northwestern were enough — Con- firmed pessimist: It seems as though there ' s little chance for my survial! — Dynamic debate organi- zer — But the girls were good-looking in Texas. —Ron. 70 RUTH HOCHMAN LIEBOWITZ MARTHA MERRILL JANET LOCKARD Gus — copperheads, firecrackers and gangrene — Turk fan — 4-year bridge scholarship — Too cool for words on guitar — 48 hours? — people and pa- pers, echhh! — winning smile that lost — life is just a big blister — Jan. 71 LYNN N. MILGRIM (Honors) r ROBERT L. PATTEN (Honors) 72 BARBARA S. PAYNE Chantilly lace, a pretty face and a ponytail — sure she flunked but is B ' s up — terrible — B.B.G. — girl with most off-campus phone calls and prob- lems — mother Payne — just resting my eyes. JANET POWELL SWENSON HELI SPIEGEL (Honors) 73 Hedley H. Rhys FINE ARTS Robert M. Walker, Chairma Lee Johnson 74 VIRGINIA ALLEN English-speaking Texan flying North for the win- ter — Dior and dungarees — that ' s four, where ' s the fifth? — coeducational analysis — apres vous, trors- d ' oeuvres — eiglit maidens? — the zoo for lobster and shuffleboard — Ginny. DAVID BANCROFT (Honors) The point is followed by nonsense; connoisseur of art; literature, form and Green ' s; Council tough guy; statues, away games, boycotts, the Phi Psi composite?; made the tour; perfect cocktail party guest. AIKO OKADA CATHERINE MARIE HUNTLEY (Honors) Alternation of enthusiasm and trauma — organiza- tion and procrastination — art cards for her friends — But it really isn ' t my cat — fine arts for six years olds. Cathy. 75 OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Mary Alhertson, Chainnan Paul H. Beik James A. Field, Jr. Frederick B. Tolles R. Arnold Ricks Harrison M. Wright F. Hilary Conroy Laurence D. Lafore HISTORY Peter N. Riesenbori 76 1 TERRY WHITEHAND BROWN SUSAN COTTS (Honors) Susan enthuses on man and the muses, On Gou- nod, Othello, Bismarckian ruses. Who dares to re- pair all her smiling confusion? ANNE O. DZAMBA MADGE ELLIS Light-headed lass, wields a wicked hockey stick; guitar plucking at odd hours — But the water ' s colder on the other side. Time is never around when you want it Get your skeleton out of my closet! 77 PETER G. FILENE (Honors) PETER L. FABER (Honors) ESTHER D. GLASER (Honors) JAMES BERNARD FRITTS Jim — Phi Sigma Kappa and Gamma Xi. Camera and railroad not — Custom room in Roberts — Martha — met her over a plate of kidney beans and things just developed — wedding bells in August — no sweat. 78 JOANNA GOTTFRIED (Honors) SETH GREENWALD Manages football — Tiger? of JV Lacrosse — Politician and Poker Player — History is Bunk — speaks Brooklynese — plays Bridge, with the Grif- fiths Method — Remember the Turf — C Section and Phi Psi. JUDITH A. HUELSTER DAVID MARtv GRIFFITHS Ho! The Chesire Cat. Bodo jock in football, la- crosse. Culture vulture. Would-be Goren. Knight of the porcelain room. Pint a day. Oh, my Wrist! Social success. Got Phi Psi ' s handshake, but horny. Griff. 79 ELISE LANDAU CHOONi. I I EE Very impressionable, independent-minded adven- turer — hails from — er — well, you-know-where — doesn ' t look as serious as he appears here — ear- nestly claims to have found a sense of direction and lasting inspiration here. P P T PATRICLA NETHERLY (Honors) Better yet than Xanadu — She found a kingdom in Peru, And better stil l she found a king — As she was gone a ' Peasleying. JUDITH S. NORDBLOM The world is a stage and I ' m in the wings. Spar- kling intensity. Anytime is lime to talk. Edinburgh and a scooter. Picasso and a giant Rorschach. Six courses and I think I ' ll audit music. I don ' t really smoke. 80 SUSAN REISBORD VIRGINIA P. RANDOLPH ,« ' - ?r MARGARET A. ROTH WILLIAM ROBINSON (Honors) Prolific honors student; effective C-section proc- tor. Can be found on lacrosse or football field, or in bed. DU enthusiast. Dammit, who ' s belliger- ent? Guts ball, it ' s the new Robinson. Mickey. 81 HARRIET SHORR (Honors) LAWRENCE H. RUBIN (Honors) JEANNETTE STRASSER (Honors) To take, to give is all. HELEN SPANN Amazing combination of naivete and sophistica- tion, detachment and intensity — old books and new styles, old and new friends — a sparkle, almost hidden. 82 MARA TAUB (Honors) . . . Born with the gift of laughter and the sense that the world was mad. IRENE TILENIUS With history, stop fantastisizing gently and start footnoting firmly. (All right, not loo firmly). With the peace-and-freedom politics, be hard- headed. (OK, a little more.) Yes, Rene, I know reason has limits, but. . . JUDITH ZIMMERMAN (Honors) An improbable series of impossible circumstances — Well, at Chicago. We went Dutch and split pitchers. Seminar papers in prose and poetry. It ' s like a train whistle on a foggy night. Pre-med to history via physics. Zim. 83 MODERN LANGUAGES OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Franz H. Mautner Hilde D. Cohn Olga Lang Frederic Grover Jeanne Theis Whitaker Robert Silhol George Avery Jean Ashmead Perkins Albert Schmitt Edith Philips. Chairman Elisa Asensio Harold March James D. Sorber Justus Rosenberg JUDITH ANDERSON (French Honors) Recevons tous les influx de vigueur et de tendresse reelle. Et a I ' aurore, armes d ' une ardente patience, nous entrerons aux splendides villes. II me sera loisible de posseder la verite dans una ame et un corps. SHELDON M. FRANK i I JOAN ATHERTON BOND (French) Mais les vrais voyageurs sont ceux-la seuls qui partent Pour partir; coeurs legers, semblables aux ballons, De leur fatalite jamais ils ne s ' ecart- ent, Et sans savoir pourquoi, disent toujours: Al- iens! 85 MARION HEACOCK (French) Brother ' s keeper — Easy weeper. Props the play — Toujours gai. Call me Madame — Back to Adam. Bibble-Babble — Will not squabble. Goes for Qu- dads. Heart throbs now she ' s gone — Marion. DEBORAH R. KURMES (Honors) JUDITH LEEDS (Spanish) Linguist par-excellence. Oh. that reminds me of a joke. Headed for government service in some obscure foreign country. Relatives in every near- by town, oh, those puns Un dia puro, alegre, li- bre quiero. 86 WILLIAM LYON (French Honors) No, I am not Portuguese; Where ' s the rest of the harem? Live in the present! sincerity, concern, gracious living. The Aix-en — Ah! Jean-Jacques. Teaching French in Italy. Completely impractical. Comes the Dawn. MIRIAM SIEGMEISTER (French) Who are you? I hardly know, just at present — at least I know who I was when I got up this morning. But I think I must have changed ser- eral times since then. INGALILL LEANDER SCHUH (French) Sweden to S ' more, a year at home separating jun- ior and senior years. Returned with a Swedish di- ploma and a German husband. Understanding the human soul through French. Shyly teasing, Oh, but that ' s not so! 87 OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS John M. Moore Jerome A. Shaffer Hugo Bedau Gilmore Stott P. Linwood Urban Richard B. Brandt, Chairman PHILOSOPHY RELIGION Wm i ' i ' mmmmmmmmmmm Monroe C. Beardsley Michael Scriven MARY LYNNE AHROON GILBERT H. HARMAN (Honors) FRED BREEN Bach, Locke and a lion — variations on a theme of joi de vivre. — Aristotelianism, Averroism, and Positivism tempered by lengthy dinner debate, Woolman auf Deutsch and jaunts from Worth to Wharton. Ach, so ist das Leben! 89 BARBARA KLAMON Never imagine yourself not to be otherwise than what it might appear to others that what you were or might have been was not otherwise than what you had been would have appeared to them to be otherwise. ROBERT W. MAYBERRY (Honors) PAT ROULSTON (Religion) Rockin ' rodent — C.T.O.C. — banjo in basement — tree-climbing-koko illasshi la bete — not today maybe tomorrow — Fair! — I ' ll believe you if you ' ll believe me — Gotta Travel On — handstands in the rain — 76-45 ' s — Rat. 90 NORMAN SAUL SARACHEK ' SN, concert band, magician (woofle dust), classi- cal guitar, Courtesy of Freshmen Women, (et al). Proponent of enlightened pre-medism. As philosopher: certain that S ' more exists, probable. S.S., and house improver. SUSAN E. WASHBURN (Honors) SUSAN TURNER (Religion) Closed door and open window policy. Really? This way you don ' t get lumps in the coffee. Edin- burgh refrigerator suit. Humor in the strangest places. Stature with a smile. I ' m clutched. Sue. 91 OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Kenneth N. Waltz Charles E. Gilbert Gene D. Overstreet Zara Shakow Steiner POLITICAL SCIENCE J. Roland Pennock, Chairman James F. Guyot David G. Smith rm CHRISTOPHER CLAGUE (Honors) Humorous, handsome proprietor of Clague ' s Ta- ble in Friend ' s. Expert practitioner of logical analysis in philosophy, poli sci, tempered with warmth when applied to people. S.C., Senior Class president. MARGARET J. DICKIE (Honors) If you see her at breakfast, it ' s dinnertime. Please, no centipedes in the bathtub. The night is not for sleeping. You too can be a gloomist. Melancholy optimism. But not everything is power politics. Meg. NANCY DELLMUTH ( (Intern ' t ' l Rel.) Likes nothing better than traveling. Germany a favorite on her list. Badminton and tennis teams with a Junior Blazer to show for it. Can always be found in Post Office. Hard worker with a zest for what she does. ANN BROWNELL Heroical-comical, political-historical elephant-col- lector — (who) shuffled (the) slides? — great imagi- nation — determination — parties in the Woolman- oasis — they need a babysitter? thesis-trauma — Si. como no? 93 RUTH E. EISENHOWER (Intern ' t ' l Rel.) SANDRA HA Knitting her way thru poli sci — Florida winters, Cuban summers — Feenehortz — People like Sandy drove the Turf out of business. Stolen TV ' s — Three?!! My brother gave me that sign. EDWARD C. HAYES (Honors) JOHN HARBESON (Honors) But political science is important! — Bach must have hated tenors — If only could get my net game under control — Will you play number 92 please? — Her name is Sidney — Phi Sig Veep. 94 KAREN HUSTON LARISON FREDRIC HELM MJC. BMA. FB. DU. And a quick smile. King of the truck. R-Way at 2 A.M. It ' s all over! 4 D ' s and 4 years shot to Hell! It ' s warsh, not wash. Conservative cynic, sits in status quo. Nasal giant with TP. Lar. RICHARD LOEWALD (Intern ' t ' l Rel.) The Reference Room is — for looking at diction- aries and reading the Times. If the film is good, it was my idea, if not, the Committee chose it. lust one question. Has been around for awhile. CONSTANCE CARVER LONGSHORE (Honors) Wellesley ' s loss, S ' more ' s cheerful gain — but I like to get my papers done early — smile for everyone — hey, let ' s have a party at my house! — hard worker for Hess ' s hockey (again) — ball, tennis jayvee — Connie. 95 FRED MEISTER Wee, sleekit, cow ' rin!, tim ' rous beastie, O what a panic ' s in thy breastie! — Squeaking forth at the head of TAO nest meetings — seen foraging around campus with briefcase in paw dates in diestrus — sparse cranial fur. MARCIA ANNETTE MONTIN (Honors) Active, enthusiastic, with a million schemes and dreams. An international concert, from Peru to Paris to Africa. An equal concern with life at Swarthmore. Faces life with a smile. MICHEL C. OKSENBERG (Honors) INTA MUISNIEKS (Honors) Not e.xactly quiet, shy and retiring. — Poli sci with irrational approach — Panic motivated morning vigils — It ' s after midnight, I better write my pa- per — My mind isn ' t made up but facts confuse it even more. 96 SUSAN A. PICKETT (Intern ' t ' l Rel.) JUDITH FLIGHTNER PINTER (Intern ' t ' l Rel.) Breakfast at Green ' s — I think I ' ll take a nap — rackets and rebounds — interior decorator, favors red — 3 week Christmas vacation — Montanans call a spade a spade; here it ' s a short club — MRS be- fore BA— Flights. CHARLES RUFF (Internfl Rel.) A quiet cosmopolitan — in casual command of the situation anywhere. The corr ect answer from the back row. Collector of obscure facts. 14 hours of necessary sack. SUSAN RHODA WILLIS (Honors) The most efficient napper in the world — quietly in many activities — surprisingly dee-thinking — not easily ruffled — is that true? — Coffee and sympa- thy — I heard the best joke from my Mother last night! — Sue. 97 ASTRONOMY OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Sarah L. Lippincott Jacqueline L. Schroedter Peter van de Kamp, Chairman Frank Holden 98 PHILIP A. lANNA Member of Commuters ' Club. 1956-59. Roomed with a friendly ghost. Finally saw the (star) light. Sproul frisbee team. Ho! Those poor stairs. The seeing ' s terrible! Observer par excellence. Gnip-gnop, Jerry? H. JOHN WOOD K — Kwink — Senior Ma nager Swimming Team, bongo, bongo, bongo. Can ' t anybody here Charleston? Wood we could pun as well as he. The other of the Pair-o ' -lax observers. Ho! Well, when I was at McDonald. John. F. JERROLD JOSTIES World ' s best GALUMPH player. Sproul frisbee team. The relaxed Sproul Mole. C ' mon, tsgweet! One of Dr. van de Kamp ' s notorious Pair-o ' -lax observers. Stayed on an even Keele during ' 57- ' 58. Jerry. Boy Howdy, that ' s amazing! 99 BIOLOGY (See also Zoology) Lekh R. Batra t ' . .y V 1 r1 i K. i s t- 1 1 b hR ■R stji P l ' SdSfe- ¥i ' -3 H m 1 S 1 1 William C. Dciii.Miii 100 WILLIAM JOHN BOEHMLER Hot in summer, cold in winter. MJC chairman. Nice guy. Sterling despite Green ' s at times. Husky. Sacks best in lectures. Mad raper of Mar- gate. Varsity soccer, lacrosse. Phi Psi veep. Boms. LINDA BETH HABAS So what ' s wrong with Cytology and Mozart? — Charming tea lady on Sunday afternoons — Egad! Five rehearsals tonight! Efficient at moving props, kidney tubules, and Phoenix books. Expert on Cutting Collection. JOHN M. PALKA GEORGETTA HARRAR Getta — blonde bio butcher — impeccable direction of formation swimming show from DU House to Martin — she ' s a genius and a half — passion for far-away travel — my niece — loyal friend record for roommate survial. 101 HARRY L. PRICE PAUL P. ROSEN LEE SCHMIDT The non-scientific Bio major — a synthesizer — co-author of the Plug Theory — keen sense of ob- servation, especially of people — I ' ve got a ques- tion, William — get out of the Granny — still a camper at heart. 102 JOYCE A. SEELYE ELIJAH SWIFT A kid from across the track — life among the sav- ages in M.L. one, in the third niche to the left in the reference room, in the physics library — the social life one gets with five labs a week — The great bicycle race. THOMAS SNELL 103 Edward A. Fehnel Walter B. Keighton, Jr., Chairman Gilbert P. Haight Duncan G. Foster CHEMISTRY OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Peter T. Thompson William James Sheppard JAY M. ANDERSON (Honors) Jason Anders. Phi Sig ' s Thisbe. President of non- existent chem club. Activity Boys. Lab grader. Future chemistry teacher. Gotta go push back the frontiers of knowledge. ■ w ' ' «WS V 4 DAVID BALI IMORE (Honors; ALLEN STEPHEN BOYER Anyone who ' d major in chemistry is an idiot; anyone who ' d major in chemistry and then go out for swimming is completely senseless. The Hat — The other Boyer boy — Headed for medicine at Penn — Steve. 105 DAVID DENHARDT (Honors) SHH . . ! This library is too damn noisy! Tells the chemists he ' s a biologist, and the biologists, a chemist — Bad morning! Always running in circles — A savage at heart — We ' ve got the world in our hands. ELLEN R. GLOWACKI (Honors) Winner of Rubber Book — Course student talked into Honors — Math Like inhabitant — Cat under a cold slate roof — Florizel — roads to Moylan — Girl at Cal Tech! — future molecular biologist — JOHN H. MUNCH (Honors) PETER OFFENHARTZ (Honors) Folks y — Lined nesque — mathematical physical bio-chemist doubling that quantity — Barbie — honors in one semester — mountain climbing and skiing — The world ' s a great place, and I ' m going to have fun. 106 GEORGE B. SALZBERG Phi Sig ' s shortest Prexy — World ' s expert on the Rhapsody in Blue — Green ear muffs, dungarees, coffee milkshakes — But, Dr. Dayton, premeds are human, too — Smith? Northampton? How far ' s that? You ' re kidding! MICHAEL L. SANANMAN (Honors) JOHN UREY (Honors) Phi Sig veep, 3 years of Pyramus and Moonshine — Let ' s drink to toast — the back libe — what d ' ya mean quantitative — Cal Tech, there are others? 107 David Rosen MATHEMATICS Heinrich Brinkmann, Chairnwn Orhan H. Alishah Edgar R. Miillins. Jr. Philip W. Carruth 108 ROSEMARY CRAWFORD BERTRAM GORDON D. ADAMS NANCY P. EBERT ( ' 60 F) IRENE HARTFIELD COTTON 109 WILLIAM W. FAIRCHILD (Honors) ROBERT WHITE LAFORE, JR. Semi-mythical guitarist from Moylan. Red MG. Sailing trips to the Bahamas. Weakn ess for ac- tresses. Only Math major to take Grad. Records in lit. If you ever find a dinghy named the Grib- ble — Bob. PETER J. MAY (Honors) MARY ANN MONGON Mathematical precision through perservence — long, hot showers — but I can say it all in one sen- tence — angelic aspirations — misplaced shoes and near forgotten glasses — Rationalization; the posi- tive approach. 110 ROBERT MOORE (Honors) Since his hypothetical children might collapse in laughter if Bob were reduced to a string of ellip- ses, it is simply noted that he has uncontrollable heads of hair and of steam. He also loves music. MARY CATHERINE PINKNEY Very content transfer from Wellesley, still alive in spite of her skiing experiments, lives in a green- house — no responsibility assumed, two tickets to Niagara Falls, please. — Cathy. HELEN TANG PETER SMITH What, only 5 Penn courses this semester? But, I ' m really on my fourth major. Fugitive from all ath- letics. Wandering minstrel, retired quiz-kid. Pass- port to greatness — his commuter ticket. Ill DONALD P. TUCKER (Honors) RONALD F. WALTER ERIC WALDBAUM 112 if ' - 9 ' t ' ij 4 is - ' ' ' : ' :. ' .j-? - • - ' ° 113 William C. Elmore, Chairman PHYSICS Milan W. Garrett OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Robert N. Euwema Irving E. Dayton Mark A. Hcald 114 GRANT BELL (Honors) What do you say — G. Bell — Green ' s team — No- bel chin — G-stomp — highest honors in sack with minors in physics and optics destruction — B.G. — G.B. — Four years of Phi Psi and track. FRED CHASE Swim team co-captain. K-Sig officer — sans necktie. Two wheels — no license. Philosophical Physicist. Late term papers to be returned P.D.Q. Amazing! Fred. MIKE CASPER (Honors) Fearless Phoenix forecaster — O-kay, let ' s go! — cannonball tennis serve — midnight buzzsaw in M.L. 1 — But I never snore above 30 decibels — physicist with a concern for civil liberties — more bounce per ounce — Mike. 115 JOHN GOODMAN (Honors) Clark Gable in n-space — a quiet charm — inde- pendently fraternal, fraternally independent — World ' s first Frisbee with running lights — joined a fraternity for social advantages and found Julie. ' - ARTHUR R. SWIFT (Honors) M.L. to Commons to parlors to ' — Physics by de- fault — What do you mean honors students never work? — Phi Sigma Kappa — The lanthorn doth — The brothers of Gamma Xi — Younger than Springtime — Alice. ALAN SHORB (Honors) The bode — Bearcats, larcrosse. and indoor sports. Kwink prexy — by default — Freshmen orientation — by design — DU pool champ — cowboy hats and scrufty bluejeans — Dining room despot. 116 Henry Gleitman Hans Wallach, Chairman Jacob Nachmias PSYCHOLOGY OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Solomon E. Asch William C. H. Prentice Joseph B. Shane Alice K. Brodhead Peter Madison Gloria Carey Evans 118 CATHERINE V. ALMY 93 pounds of romping, stomping deviltry. Adds an individual twist to all she says and does. I ' ve al- ways wanted to be a Koala bear What a jelly- bean! Originator of gray flannel book-bag — Kt. BETTY JO BENDIGO Double major, psych and physics — Wheel — Scott ' s coming, where ' s my soapy ammonia — What fun having a sister on campus — bubbling over with happiness — dancing — M is for marriage — that walk — BJ. ANN M. BAERWALD (Honors) 119 ANN CARTER Prospective social worker with experience. M, no mess, early to bed. early to rise. Go, Garnet. S ' more ' s spirit ' s dead. The voice with the smile. It ' s the funniest thing in the whole wide world what Freud could do with you? JUDITH COBB Sing ho! for a bear! Sing ho! for a pooh! And I ' ll have a little something in an hour or two! OLIVIA A. CONNER (Honors) CAROL CULLUM (Honors) Dedication to medicine follows from unselfish dedication to others. Chester Chairman — wide a- wake sleeper — midnights in Martin. Summers with the Navajos. The game is worth the candle. Carol. 120 JOHN DARLEY (Honors) Tall, slender, Ivy League dresser with a suave manner. Brilliant, penetrating, cynical critic of the intuitionist approach to psychology. DU ' s most liberal president in years. Amazing knowledge of a multitude of subjects. JANE FOSTER (Honors) Unconfirmed sceptic. Chamber music: favorite form of group therapy. Hopes of serving others. Chester Chairman. Contemplating a joint ap- proach to social work. LOLETTE FRANCOISE SUDAKA Hi-Lo — 7:00 phone calls — Paul says — 9:00 is too early to get up for class — exams are pure drasticity — bikini tan, French flair — M is for marriage — Yankee headed South — every big man needs a little woman. DAVIDA M. YOUNG (Honors) Quietly vivacious, calmly efl ' ervescent; long semi- nar papers; FSSFSSS; The Friends Library Lunch- eon Club. Ambition — to make social psychology more than bad philosophy. Inimitable joke-telling style. Vida. 121 sSiiM Neal A. Weber Robert K. Enders, Chairman ZOOLOGY OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS (See Biology) Launce J. Flemister Luzerne G. Livingston Kenneth S. Rawson Alburt M. Rosenberg Sarah C. Flemister Narman A. Meinkoth MELBA CARR (Honors) Sensitivity and perceptivity, sociable independence and spontaneity. Botany on a bicycle. Let ' s take a walk intensive concentration and delightful ab- sent-mindedness. Still searching for a white buf- falo. Melba. ALICE GRAFFLIN (Honors) Sally — refugee from the Martin libe — 4 years pro- gression from pre-med to botanist. Amazing things live under rocks — found secret of hibernation. Out out, out out brief candle, with the dagger up- side down. GENE ISAO HIGASHI MJC. Halcyon 1959, Proctor. After that soph year and has friends. Sleep ' til 12, turk ' til dawn. Doc Bowie in the back. Pull this finger please. Art and R-Way. Bull Road. Phi Psi president. Gene-o. 123 . « iii  . • • W BARBARA A. RYAN JOEL SIDNEY MINDEL Head wrangler of Swarthmore ' s Colt Corral. Poet Laureate of DU. Future M.D. that works in vein. Quiet, easy going with plenty to go on. Checkers anyone? Wrestling champ (?) Better student than cross-country runner. ::i YVONNE HERMINE SCHAELCHLIN (Honors) Two weasels under the front seat and an ermine on the roof — Summer in a spruce tree and an old Pontiac — Creative flair for paper birds and press- ed flowers — Distinctive chortle — does the polka in a sari — India or bust! HARRY P. SCHANE, JR. Solemn and tactful — Greetin ' s — suppose it hatches, then what? Peep! — Portly burgher with his pipe — Get your stuff cleaned up, Shotter. How can you stand him. Catherine? — I.F. Prexy — Good morning sunshine. 124 mii i f KAY SENEGAS (Honors) ... If you love a flower that lives on a star, it is sweet to look at the sky at night. . . ROGER SHOTT The Martin Mole — finally lost his DU pin — down the tubes — How ' s it feel to be coordinated — wants an M.D. and a D.M. — clutched out of his mind — A Methodist Friend — good talker, listener, and friend. JOHN HAINES SHERTZER Filler up with oil (and check the gas) — looks and acts like a doctor — adept at overcoming hurdles — Debbie, tennis and DU — abstain — the most underrated thing is an L M — kind, self-assured, and quiet. 125 V JOAN M. STADLER SUSANNE WELLINGTON TUBBY DAVID TELLER (Honors) A three-year Martinite — Twice co-captain of wrestling team — Outing club — once president — The out-of-doors is an escape from laboratories. 126 ENGINEERING CIVIL ENGINEERING OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS M. Joseph Willis Clark P. Mangelsdorf - W Samuel T. Carpenter, Cliainiuiti MECHANICAL ENGINEERING William J. Cope, Chairman Bernard Morrill, Acting Chairman Philip C. Prager Toshiyuki Fukushima Charles W. Ncwlin 128 ANDRIES VAN DAM (Honorsj CHARLES C. TAPPERT (Honors) ROBERT GURFIELD No, I didn ' t do the homework, but would you like to hear a poem I just wrote — Never mind that stuff just read me the formula. Unrivaled contri- butions to refrigerator-liberation — C.E. ' s cap- tain of the H.M.S. Pinafore. FREDERICK V. LAWRENCE Solis Lab in Beardsley Hall — the Cape Cod Con- sulate at S ' more. Ranking ambassador Freddie is a day-time CE, but watches the submarines after office hours. Bach was the world ' s greatest engi- neer. 129 VIVI-ANN HALL Maybe it would be easier if I read the book first — but I have started the problem-four times! The whole thing is in the book by whatzizname — I can ' t add — Jesus loves me — through the train station — Blither. JAMES HURCHALLA THOMAS A. KERSHAW III T.K. — D.U. Gavel man — lacrosse defense men don ' t have to run — I know a great band — the organizational man — A.S.M.E. — good show on the dance floor — enthusiastic — personable — M.E. with future in business. 130 PETER J. KROON BENONI WU Wo can wrestle against sleep? — Martin Tupper. The great Wu-er — That is substantially correct! Vu, and nooo kidding, wan Dan. The Erotica again — Veee! Electrical at heart. Most valuable Player (soccer). EDWARD STEINER It ' s the Steins! — Big jock football captain, last minute grunt ' n groaner, SC — opposed? Steiner. — My little Margie — infamous DU pledge-master. Proctor ' s helpful roommate, NO! — what me worry? 131 Howard M. Jenkins, Chairman ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS John D. McCrumm David L. Bowler Carl Barus 132 ALBERT E. ABLER, JR. THOMAS D. HENDERER Organization man — DU V.P. — Bearcats — but we ' re not getting ANY pledges Turfmobile — iron ' em out! — Sigma Tau but I don ' t lend my car — KWINK — baseball manager — but you or- dered it — Really serious — top of pledges ' list. ROGER E. RONEY DAVID K. ROSE 133 Peter Gram Swing, Chairman MUSIC OTHER DEPARTMENT MEMBERS Vincent Persichetti Arthur Parris Claudio Spies SWARTHMORE COLLEGE CHORUS 135 OTHER GRADUATES CLASS OF 1960 DAVID H. ASHWORTH (Economics ' 60 F) PATRICIA M. CARPENTER (Political Science) JOHN P. FARKAS (Zoology) BRYAN D. MANGRUM (History Honors) JAMES L. PERKINS (Fine Arts) KAREN ORNER RUDIN (Chemistry) CAROLYN PANZER SOBEL (French Honors) JOHN W. VINCENT (Political Science Honors) 136 Yes, I am going into the woods; I am going into the unity of ail things. — Vasudeva (Hermann Hesse) 138 TWO ANTHROPOLOGI LOOK AT SWARTHMORE Perhaps the dominant impression of any Swarthmore year is the sense of challenge virtually every student finds in the intellectual life of the college. Indeed, the eagerness of the students to learn and the climate of learning that enables them to observe that others wish to learn, plays a large part in determining the spirit of the year, and of any year, on this campus. President ' s Report 59-60 It is your reporter ' s opinion that it is misleading for President Smith lo attempt to categorize the multifarious facets of a cidture in terms of the intellectual life of that society. This approach is not restricted to the administration alone. We have heard it similarly voiced by many of those whose actions arc supp osed to be guided by this cultural pattern. Thus it is ' ery surprising for your observers to find out that attendance at Student Cotmcil (the student government body) is minimal, that de- bates about the rules imposed on the students by the administration generally carry with them a defeatist, pessimistic attitude; and that many of those questioned characterized the intellectual life of the col- lege as apathetic. We should therefore like to propose an alternate dominairt impression to that given by President Smith. Not only is the intellectual life of Swarthmore seemingly restricted to the classroom (except for a fe v students •ho receive no support from their fellows) but also conversation outside the classroom (chaiacterized as intellectual by some of the students) seems to be more of a ftuile protest against the ills the students feel themselves subjected to than anythiirg of a more constructive nature. On the basis of this we conclude that the most per- vasive ctdtural pattern to vhich its members are subject is the belief that their actions are of one kind, while their actions as performed lead an unbiased observer to believe them to be just the opposite. We have chosen to call this the conflict between the ideal image and the be- havioral patterns of a society. As more and more observations were made we found that most of our data could best be interpreted in light of this concept. 140 Referring again to President Smith we find that the statement of the aim of the college depends on the identification and development of talent. Let this be our mis- sion, to discover and develop talent in the pursuit of excellence . . . let us seek out talent wherever it is to be found: seek the student with a compelling desire to learn, the student with a desire to put the trained mind to the benefit of his fellow men, the student with qualities of character and motivation and personality which will enable him to use the trained mind constructively and effectively. This is what we mean by the well-rounded person. The first question is of course: what is meant by talent. If it means, as seems to be intended, a compelling desire to learn and the use of the learning for the benefit of his fellow men, then it is quite unex- pected to find the students often characterized as apathetic. The com- pelling desire to learn more often seems to be a compelling desire for social recognition on the basis of intellectual pursuit. This interpreta- tion would explain the lack of constructive activity in intellectual areas outside the classroom. A desire to put the trained mind to the benefit of his fellow men seems to be transformed into an Ivory-tower concept of learning irrespective of the benefits that might be given to his fellow men. This is one more example of the dichotomy between the recog- nized social ideals and the behavioral indicators of action. One further demonstration of this can be seen in the above characterization of the well-rounded person. Strangely enough we have not seen this defini- tion of the well-rounded individual put forward by any other mem- bers of the society. Could it possibly be that this is not their ideal, or at least that it is a concept which they would not like to dictate their own actions? This is no surprise because such a definition definitely ignores certain ever-present biological drives and previously learned cultural patterns. However we may perhaps be giving an unfair presentation of Mr. Smith ' s ideas. At another place in his report he refers to those aspects 141 that we have just accused him of ignoring. He points out the particu- larly amtising stereotypes of Swarthmore which would seem to be antithetical. One of the stereotypes of Swarthmore is that only the number one and two students in any high school or preparatory school can get admitted and. once admitted, they grind, grind with all work and no play. The other picture is that of the visitors to the campus who see the fluttering btdletin boards up and down Parrish Hall announcing dozens of extra-curricular activities and read the weekly calendar of events with its activities jostling for attention seven days a week, and almost inevitably end by asking: how on earth do these students ever have time to study? Those students that we have interviewed do not seem to find this con- flict quite as amusing as Mr. Smith does, nor do they feel that the stereotype is without a factual basis. Their view seems to be that life at Swarthmore (except for the exceptionally few gifted students) is in- deed one of conflict between these two extremes. There appears to be no successful reconciliation of these opposites and students feel that one pursuit can only be engaged in at the expense of the other. Thus students are often characterized by which of these two extremes they wish to emphasize more in their own actions. Again the cultural ideal of the well-rounded personality seems to contradict the actual prac- tices of students at Swarthmore. The above distinction which we may categorize as workers and players at Swarthmore carries over into the division of the society into non-fraternity and fraternity members respectively. The latter may be further distinguished as different sub-cultures, the jock, drink- ing, intellectual and temporarily closed groups. The non-fraternity cross-section is characterized by the intelligentsia, the bohemians, the isolationists and the young scientists. Having pigeon-holed the ex- tremes of the population, the observers conclude that the other 95% may be termed normal. The term normal in reference to this particular 142 cultural system does not, of course, absolve its members from the ever- present conflict between work and play; the conflict here is only not institutionalized. Lost in the miasma of non-membership, without the supports of group identification, the actor concludes that the safety of security is found in the extremes of the two opposing campus groups, the jocks and the intelligentsia. Consequently he must strive for acceptance in one of these two in-groups thus increasing his inner conflict between work and play. The importance of these two segments of campus life as extremes and the existence of the need to participate in both simultaneously, is seen in the behavioral pattern necessitating the intelligentsia to act occasionally as jocks and the fraternity mem- bers to demonstrate intellectual interest and attainment. Only if one is able to demonstrate that he (or she) is both a jock and intelligent is prestige fully achieved and acceptance certain throughout the society. This again demonstrates the conflict necessitated by the disparity be- tween ideal image and behavioral patterns. Abstractly one should be both extra-curricularly and intellectually alive, but in practice one is forced to adopt one extreme with the possibility of full participa- tion in its antithesis, to constantly be conscious of one ' s actions, and to ignore the pitiful plight of the neglected middle man, the normal. As opposed to the overrigid demands for both work and fun partici- pation, the observers were struck by the lack of institutionalized pat- ternings for mating behavior. There are not even any institutions for mating behavior, it being reputed to your reporters that one of the members of the administration was heard to say that there is no physiological or psychological need for such institutions. Attempts by the students to form their own institutions, called tenements, are quickly discouraged. The mores of the society show great variety, being left to the determination of each individual as influenced by his particular sub-culture. These mores range from strict adherence to something called Christian or Mosaic ethics to freer self-determina- tion. The only exception to the lack of institutionalized behavior is the split between the fraternity and non-fraternity groups. Very few brave 143 souls are able to cross this color line (not to be confused with the picket line). Only in the upper-upper and lower-upper classes is this line crossed. It was observed by the reporters that one non- fraternity girl who was the head of the Folk festival activities (a prime status symbol and example of membership in the bohemia seg- ment of society) engaged in some sort of mating behavior with a mem- ber of one of the jock fraternities. (Nothing is all black or all white.) All institutionalized patterns become a shambles iii the annual rites of the spring mating call, Crum voods is the co-eds doom Evening shadows fill the gloom Suddenly there comes a hush checking the iniderbrush. (Quoted from the forthcoming article on this society by the noted sociologist, D. Boroff. Names are omitted to protect the innocent.) The administration ' s behavioral pattern, to say the least, attempts to restrict the mating behavior of the students. However, this clearly conflicts with the ideal policy as stated by Mr. Smith. For stirely democracy depends upon faith in the individual, trusting in one another, the presiunption of non-guilt imtil proven other ' vise. Again your observers are forced to conclude a disparity between ideal and real practices vhich traumatizes the members of the Swarthmore society. This tratnna becomes strongest when the student is faced with the real real, the outside world. Closest manifestation of this world is the Ville. Suppressed student indignation when asked to cope with reality is seen in the annual article in the student newspaper, the Phoenix. Swarthmore College is surrounded by a geographical entity and phenomenon known as The Village or the Vil (Vill, Ville). One of the primary aims of the college is to keep the Village happy. The administration does its part by making speeches and excuses 144 for student conduct. The students do their part by being good, by smiling at villagers on the street, by trading with the Village shops, and by going home over the summer. When forced to go home over the summer for the last time, the one- sided emphasis on intellectualism, and the disparity between ideal and real, work and fun, which causes the students to form mores of his own, is shown as the inadequate preparation for the well-rounded life that it is. The student is completely unprepared for this radically dif- ferent social system, our cross-cultural indexes having shown the total lack of accord between the two cultures. Consequently most students shun this outside world, go to graduate school, and return to the bosom of Swarthmore or similar cultures in the mistaken belief that the teacher ' s role will enable them to continue lack of contact with the repulsing culture. This is the extreme example of conflict between the ideal image and the behavioral patterns of a society. In conclusion we must confess that we have stressed the negative aspects of this culture (as good anthropologi should), but that the intellectual education of the individual emphasised at Swarthmore, though it has its faults, is undeniably outstanding. This college culture is no worse, and probably better, than most. It is regrettable however, that such a fine institution has not emphasised the place of intellectual life in the practical affairs of the numerous individuals who must return to the overall American society. N.B. We express our heartfelt gratification for the right to pay for the time expended upon the above report. Without the aid given us by the registrar ' s office, we would not have been able to complete this project. D.H.F. I.H.S. 145 - ' ' « -•■i f P s T Z ' f ' ' ' ■ If • : - - ! - ? I J K:|b r I v-r C I 5r£- ■ ■ f i tta fc=;-.- ' ,: .a KS ill - iL.. f .-ai ' ft- aSir n FW-.-n ■ 4i ' jrH 1 ■ ■1 -akiPB i 1 : r :iMB N- - ' ferr BSfe 71 148 149 ' . : f 151 W . ' a SL : A2TS 6- QAHS K T ' JiTtR s I CANNOT 157 isT ■ ik.- 9 -ff ii ' ' i iff-iti £i ' «u  !S ;S!SS5 5PS ' X - ' 5V  w «« w 163 t V ■ Si ;!, . ' vfe. . -_; ■■ .,_ .- . w . ■AvAVA« «. avi£: ' ._:v.!AMT• r ' ' „ . -T — «- !rtf ' ' 73ir-;7 -Tj;!;s;:i« ; TOW ei: 168 — .1 -. ' ■ - ' ' .-■ ■y 171 Jfcj- ' C: ■ ■ k V vE Hpi ■ r l 1 1 I E ' J 2 173 174 SOCCER 1st Row: Suny, Quarles, Yasir, Price, Hayes, Wu, Tappert, Dunn. 2nd Row: Rowley, Morehouse, Post, Aizupitis, Hauver, Ebersole, Boehmler, Colket, StoU. CROSS COUNTRY 1st Row: Fairbanks, Creighton, Snygg, Denhardt, Giese. Ayies. Heiideison. 2nd Row: Snyder, Sober, Kidder, Moore, Farlow, Kitredge, Smith. 3rd Row: Brownfield, Gelles, Bailey, Solodar, Carroll, Shield. Weitzman, Miller. 177 FOOTBALL iVf- isn 8 1st Row: Donaldson, Austrian, Feldhusen, Steiner, Robinson, Griffiths, Elver- son. 2nd Row: Mullins, Green, Cardillo, Welsh, Fitchett, Dummer, Meisel. 3rd Row: Lehman, Sirman, Cook, Bechtel, Prestowitz, Buek, Beshore. 4ih Row: Lee, Cooper, Caroff, Churchill, Harner, Burnes, Blum, Lukens. 5ih Row: Booser, Burnes. Spruance, Brod, Fedoruk. FALL SCORES FOOTBALL SOCCER X-COUNTRY Sw Opp Sw Opp Sw Opp 7 Oberlin 25 3 Alumni 29 Lafayette 27 13 Susquehanna 61 1 Princeton 5 24 Delaware 35 14 Hamilton 4 Johns Hopkins 3 2 PMC 35 22 Ursinus 6 Pennsylvania 1 17 F M 46 6 Wesleyan 28 2 Lafayette 3 22 Johns Hopkins 36 Johns Hopkins 28 5 Ursinus 15 Haverford 49 Haverford 1 F M 5 th MACSAC Won 2 Lost 4 Tied 1 1 Lehigh Won 5 Lost 1 1 Navy hood trophy matches Haverford Won 6 Lost 4 1 178 SWIMMING Fuglister. Newman, Eddy, Williams, Henley, Smith, B., Leonard, Maybee, Coles, Chase. Pascell, Cratsley, Toy, Khamsi, Murray, Bozer, Thurman, Batt, Wright, McAdoo. BASKETBALL m «0 5. i T 1 1 - ■ 1 ■ ■ [5 L J r J j:r Row: Towie, Henrettz, Sirman, Christiansen. 2nd Row: Stetson, Wurgaft, Many, Feldhusen, Warrington, Bernard, Shorb. 179 WINTER SCORES BASKETBALL SWIMMING WRESTLING Sw Opp Sw Opp Sw Opp 54 Moravian 63 48 Gettysburg 46 10 Moravian 21 45 Pennsylvania 69 60 PMC 26 23 Muhlenberg 9 60 F M 64 74 Temple 21 26 Ursinus 8 52 Dickinson 67 54 Drexel 40 18 Delaware 12 46 Johns Hopkins 47 31 Bucknell 63 24 P MC 6 61 Ursinus 73 37 F M 56 13 Lafayette 15 66 Delaware 73 35 Lafayette 59 18 Johns Hopkins 10 65 Albright 106 30 Dickinson 63 14 Drexel 14 38 Drexel 64 33 Delaware 61 23 Haverford 8 67 PMC 81 Won 4 Lost 5 Won 6 Lost 2 Tied 1 55 Drexel 83 hood trophy matches 49 Haverford 63 54 Washington 89 44 Ursinus 68 61 PMC 76 72 Haverford 78 86 Delaware WonO Lost 17 87 WRESTLING 1st Row: Dickey, Glass, Armstrong, Cooper, L., Munch. 2nd Row: Booth, Oksenberg, Sleiner, Rowley, Cook, Clausen, Parsons, Walter, Swanger, Her- man, Teller, Davies. 180 1st Row: Anderson, Hutchison, Brand, Tombins, Werner, Williams, Steinbach. 2nd Row: Handsaker, Smith, B., Braxton, Doehlert, Davis, Fezandie, Barcalow, Harris. 3rd Row: Moll, Bond, Gentleman, Mallonee, Spiegelberg, Wehmiller, Pinter, Chase, McCutcheon, Flaccus, Ellis, Wright, Page. Not in Picture: Latta, Heynan, Vexler, Huntley. BASKETBALL SWIMMING 7.S7 Row: Rogel, O ' Brien, Judd, Hart, Phillips. 2nd Row: Graham, Eves, Welsh, Picket, Seymour, Kertesz. 3rd Row: Gardner, Aflalo, Dixon, Rath. Not in Pic- ture: Butler, Malley, Ryan. 181 BADMINTON 1st Row: Carter, Ferber, Eldredge, Brown. 2nd Row: Ross, Reno. Kreps, Kerr, Delimuth, Hess. 3rd Row: Lutton, Hodges. Moore, Mongon, Back, Fulton, Woodbury. No! in Picture: Mr. Faulkner, Burt, Jones, Fetterly, Jones, Jeanet- ter, Pritchard. VOLLEYBALL 1st Row: Seymour, Mercer, Duvall, Peckham, Oltman. 2nd Row: Wright. Fos- ter, Eisenhower, Scribner, Clarenbach. 3rd Row: Kreps, Foster, Lardner, Roth, Moll. Not in Picture: Feingold, Cotts, Grant, Harrar, Miller. FORMATION SWIMMING Standing: Gower, Wright, Carter, Hildum, Maginnis, Phillips, Kertesz, Harrar. Middle Row: Reno, Drake, Ware, Rothwell, Cochran, Mongon. Bottom Row: Potter, Murphy, Duguid, Ben- digo, Coberly. Not in Picture: Butler, Shelby, Garrett, Ladd, Williams, Kreps, Pray. 183 1960 HALCYON Editor ERIC WALDBAUM Executive Editor ANITA N. COOPER Editorial Board DETMAR HEINRICH FINKE ROBERT KRAMER ISAAC HILLEL SCHAMBELAN Art ESTHER GLASER SUSANNE WELLINGTON TUBBY Photography PAUL A. BREST Sheldon M. Frank Steven Izenour William E. Brownficld Circulation MARY E. GOODEN A dvertising MARK A. WALKER Joel David Gelber Sports ROBERT S, LANDE Marc Waldbaum Staff Akiko lida Catherine V. Almy Judith C. Nordblom Jacqueline Lapidus Joan A. Bond Patricia Price Richard Loewald Constance C. Longshore David Baltimore 184 Was Ellis too far wrong, in his checkered vest, eating escarole salad and reading Kant under a tree? 186 0 INDEX- Adams, Gordon D. 109 Adcock, Joseph E. 67 Adler, Albert, Jr. 131 Ahroon, Mary L. 89 Allen, Virginia 75 Almy, Catherine V. 119 Anderson, Jay M. 105 Anderson, Judith 85 Bacrwald, Ann M. 1 19 Baltimore, David 105 Bancroft, David P. 75 Batt, Gerald J. 59 Bell, G. Grant 115 Bendigo, Betty Jo. 119 Bertram, Rosemary Crawford 109 Bock, Layeh Aronson 136 Boehmler, William J. 101 Bolyard, Sara L. 67 Bond, Joan A. 85 Boyer, Stephen A. 105 Breen, Frederick E. 89 Brooks, Gladys M. 67 Brooks, Patricia L. 67 Brown, Terry Whitehand 77 Brownell, Ann 93 Bryer, Judith S. 59 Burns, Joseph M. 59 Carpenter, Patricia M. 136 Carr, Melba E. 123 Carter, Ann F. 120 Casper, Barry M. 1 1 5 Chase, Frederick N. 1 15 Clague, Christopher K. 93 Clausen, Wallace 60 Cobb. Judith H. 120 Connery, Olivia A. 120 Cooper, Anita N. 57 Cotton, Irene Hartfield 109 Cotts, Susan E. 77 Cullum, CarolJ. 120 Darley, John M. 121 Davy, Hugh W., Jr. 60 Dellmuth, Nancy G. 93 Denhardt, David T. 106 Dickie, Margaret J. 93 Duguid, Eleanor 60 Dzamba, Ann O. 77 Ebert, Nancy P. 109 Eisenhower, Ruth E. 94 Ellis, Madge M. 77 Faber, Joan Schuster 68 Faber, Peter L. 78 Fairchild, William W. 110 Fairley, William B. 60 Farkas, John P. 136 Fetterly, Judith A. 68 Filene, Peter G. 78 Finke, Detmar H. 68 Forstall, Helen L. 136 Foster, Jane B. 121 Frank, Sheldon M. 85 Freed, Marcia J. 69 Frishkoff, Paul M. 61 Fritts, James B. 78 Gideonsc, Martin C. 61 Glaser, Esther D. 78 Glowacki, Ellen R. 106 Gooden, Mary E. 61 Goodman, John M. 1 16 Gottfried, Joanna 79 Grafflin, Alice W. 123 Greenwald, A. Seth 79 Griffiths, David 79 Gurfield, Robert M. 129 Ha, Sandra 94 Habas, Linda B. 101 Hager, Susan D. 69 Hall, Vivi-Ann 130 Handler, Susan J. 57 Harbeson, John W. 94 Harman, Gilbert H. 89 Harrar, Georgetta L. 101 Hauver, A. Ronald 61 Hayes, Edward C. 94 Heacock, Marion V. 86 Heaton, Robert B. 62 Hebley, Catherine M. 69 Helm, Larison F. 95 Henderer, Thoman D. 133 Higashi, Gene K. 123 Hinze, Frederic F. 62 Horr, David A. 62 Huelster, Judith A. 79 Huntley, Catherine M. 75 Hurchalla, James 130 Huston, Karen 95 lanna, Phillip A. 99 lida, Akiko 70 Jostles, Frederick J. 99 Kahrs, Harry J. J. 63 Katz, Ronald L. 70 Kershaw, Thomas A. 130 Klamon, Barbara J. 90 Kroon. Peter J. 131 Kurmes, Deborah R. 86 Lafore, Robert W., Jr. 110 Landau, Elise 80 Lardner, Susan E. 70 Lawrence, Frederick V., Jr. 129 Lee, Choong 80 Lee, WiUiam F., Jr. 63 Leeds, Judith 86 Liebowitz, Ruth Hochman 7 1 Loewald, Richard 95 Lockard, Janet 71 Longshore, Constance 95 Lyon, William 87 Mangrum, Bryan D. 1 36 May, Peter J. 110 Mayberry, Robert W. 90 Meister, Frederick W. 96 Merrill, Martha 71 Milgrim, Lynn N. 72 Mindel, Joel S. 124 Moflitt, Joan 72 Mongon, Mary A. 1 10 Montin, Marcia A. 96 Moore, Robert T. 1 1 1 Muiznieks, Inta V. 96 Munch, JohnH. 106 Netherley, Patricia J. 80 Nordblom, Judith S. 80 Offenhartz, Peter O. 106 Okada, Aiko 75 Oksenberg, Michel C. 96 Palka, JohnM. 101 188 Patten, Robert L. 72 Payne, Barbara J. 73 Perkins, James L. 136 Pickett, Susan A. 97 Pinkney, Mary C. 1 1 1 Pinter, Judith F. 97 Price, Harry L. 102 Price, Patricia 63 Randolph, Virginia P. 81 Reisbord, Susan 8 1 Robinson, William T. Ill 81 Roney, Roger E. 133 Rose, David K. 133 Rosen, Paul P. 102 Roth, Margaret A. 81 Rothwell, Linda J. 64 Roulston, Patricia H. 90 Rubin, Lawrence H. 82 Rudin, Karen Orner 1 36 Ruff, Charles F. 97 Ryan, Barbara A. 124 Salzberg, George B. 107 Sananman, Michael L. 107 Sarachek, Norman S. 91 Schaelchlin, Yvonne H. 124 Schane, Harry P., Jr. 124 Schmidt, Lee M. 102 Schuh, IngaliU L. 87 Seelye, Joyce A. 103 Senegas, Kay 125 Shertzer, John H. 125 Shorb, AlanM. 116 Shorr, Harriet 82 Shott, Roger J. 125 Siegmeister, Miriam R. 87 Smith, Ronald H. 64 Smith, Peter J. Ill Snell, Thomas C. 103 Sobel, Carolyn P. 136 Spann, Helen M. 82 Spiegel, Heli 73 Stadler, JoanM. 126 Steiner, Edward J. 131 Strasser, Jeanettc L. 82 Sudaka, Lolette F. 121 Swenson, Janet Powell 73 Swift, Arthur R. 116 Swift, Elijah V. 103 Tang, Helen 1 1 1 Tappert, Charles C. 129 Taub, Mara 83 Teller, David C. 126 Tilenius, Irene E. 83 Tubby, Susanne W. 126 Tucker, Donald P., Jr. 112 Turner, Susan 91 Tyler, John R. 64 Urey, JohnC. 107 Van Dam, Andries 129 Vincent. John W. 136 Waldbaum, Eric 112 Walter. Ronald F. 112 Washburn, Susan E. 91 Willis, Susan R. 97 Wood, Howard John. Ill 99 Wu, Benoni 1 3 1 Young, DavidaM. 121 Zimmerman, Judith E. 83 ADMINISTRATION Courtnev Smith 54 Edward K. Cratsley 55,58 Joseph B. Shane 55, 118 Susan P. Cobbs 55, 56 WiUiam C. H. Prentice 55, 1 18 John M. Moore 55. 88 GUmore Stott 54, 88 Robert A. Barr, Jr. 54 Ann E. C. Passoth 55 EMERITI Lydia Baer Alfred Mansfield Brooks Edward H. Cox Henry Jermain Maude Creighton Philip Marshall Hicks Everett L. Hunt Wolfgang Kohler Samuel Copeland Palmer L. R. Shcro Alfred J. Swan PROFESSORS Mary Albertson 76 Orhan H. Alisbah 108 Solomon E. Asch 1 1 8 Monroe C. Beardsley 88 George J. Becker 66 Paul H. Beik 76 Richard B. Brandt 88 Heinrich Brinkmann 108 Samuel T. Carpenter William J. Cope W.C.Elmore 114 Robert K. Enders 122 James A. Field, Jr. 76 Milan W. Garrett 114 Howard Malcolm Jenkins Walter B. Keighton, Jr. 104 Laurence D. Lafore 76 Harold M. March 84 Franz H. Mautner 84 John D. McCrumm J. Roland Pennock 92 Edith Philips 84 Frank C. Pierson 58 Hedley Rhys 74 Charles B. Shaw Frederick B. Tolles 76 Peter van de Kamp 98 Robert M. Walker 74 Hans Wallach 1 1 8 NealA. Weber 122 Clair Wilcox 58 Elizabeth Cox Wright 66 ASSOCIATE PROFESSORS Carl Barus Philip W. Carruth 108 Hilde D. Cohn 84 Joseph W. Conard 58 Robert H. Dunn Lewis H. Elverson E. J. Faulkner Edward A. Fehnel 104 Edward C. Fei 58 Launce J. Flemister, Jr. 122 Duncan Graham Foster 104 Henry Gleitman 1 18 Gilbert P. Haight, Jr. 104 Frederic S. Klees 66 Luzern G. Livingston 1 22 189 Norman A. Meinkoth 122 Irene Moll Bernard Morrill Helen F. North 56 Martin Ostwald 56 Virginia Rath James D. Sorber 84 Willis J. Stetson Peter Gram Swing 134 Kenneth N. Waltz 92 Willis D.Weatherford 58 M. Joseph Willis ASSISTANT PROFESSORS Elisa Asensio 84 David L. Bowler Wniiam H. Brown, Jr. 58 Gloria Carey Evans 1 1 8 David Cowden 66 Irving E. Dayton 1 14 William C. Denison 100 Charles E. Gilbert 92 Frederic J. Grover 84 MarkA.Heald 114 Eleanor K. Hess Daniel G. Hoffman 66 Samuel L. Hynes 66 Peter Madison 118 Clark P. Mangelsdorf Edgar R. MuUins, Jr. 108 Jacob Nachmias 1 1 8 Charles W. Newlin Gene Donald Overstreet 92 Philip C. Prager 128 Kenneth S. Rawson 1 22 Peter Riesenberg 76 David Rosen 108 Justus Rosenberg 84 Michael J. Scriven 88 Jerome A. Shaffer 88 David G. Smith 92 Claudio Spies 1 34 Percy Linwood Urban, Jr. 8 Jeanne Theis Whitaker 84 INSTRUCTORS LekhH. Batra 100 John S. Coolidge 66 Robert N. Euwema 1 14 Toshiyuki Fukushima James F. Guyot 92 Frank Holden 98 Lee Johnson 74 R. Arnold Ricks 76 Alburt M. Rosenberg 122 William J. Sheppard 104 - Robert Silhol 84 Peter T. Thompson 104 Harrison Morris Wright 76 Alex Zwerdling 66 LECTURERS AND ASSISTANTS George C. Avery 84 Hugo A. Bedau 88 Avery Blake Alice Brodhead 118 Nadia Chiikovsky F. Hilary Conroy 76 Gomer H. Davics John B. H. Donaldson Henry A. Drumm Barbara Elmore Sarah C. Flemister 122 Henry C. Ford Helen Hall Helen Manning Hunter 58 Olga Lang 84 Barbara Pearson Lange 66 Sarah Lee Lippincott 98 James W. Lukens, Jr. James J. McAdoo James C. Mayer James H. Miller J. Earl Ness, Jr. Arthur Parris 1 34 Jean Ashmead Perkins 84 Vincent Persichetti 1 34 Albert R. Schmitt 84 Jacqueline L. Schroedter 98 Howard D. Sipler Zara Shakow Steiner 92 Armen Suny Phoebe Lukens Welsh 190 FELIX SPATOLA SONS 440 NORTH 12th STREET Philadelphia 23, Pa. WAlnut 2-5600 New and Used Cars PORTER H. WAITE, INC. Swarthmore, Penna. Sales KI 3-1250 Phones Service KI 3-1251 ' THE SPOT a snack or a meal 7 a.m. ' till 1 a.m. —when shopping —after the concert —for Sunday supper —anytime MEDFORD ' S QUALITY MEATS FOR DISTINCTIVE FLAVOR Chester, Pa. GEORGE B. VROOMAN, Inc. WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS Quality Canned Foods Philadelphia 47, Pennsylvania BARCLAY WHITE CO. BUILDERS 3337 AAARKET STREET Philadelphia 4, Pennsylvania 191 CRETH SULLIVAN INC. TRADITION— STABILITY PROVIDENT TRADESMENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY AGGRESSIVE LEADERSHIP Delaware County Offices Philadelphia Chicago New York Buffalo Pittsburgh Minneapolis Portland Seattle Los Angeles SWARTHMORE Chester Road Rutgers Ave. MEDIA State Street South Ave. SPRINGFIELD Saxer Avenue Hart Lone NETHER PROVIDENCE B eotty Road Baltimore Pike (Drive- In) MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. San Francisco London ... A fully equipped national organiza- tion with highest quality analysis, marketing, underwriting, and hazard control services. PHILADELPHIA, PA. PHONE MA 7-7927 . . . Providing direct personal attention from the most experienced working executives and technicians. SEASHORE FROSTED FOODS CD. Insurance Brokers and Consultants Since 1881 324 Walnut Street BEST WISHES Philadelphia, Pa. CATHERMAN ' S DRUG STORE 192 TURNER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Founded 1902 New York Boston Chicago Cincinnati Philadelphia Builders of Willetts Dormitory and the P. S. DuPont Science Building SWARTHMORE COLLEGE Boston University Brearley School Brown University Cornell University Drew University Builders Also For Harvard University Masters School University of Pittsburgh Princeton University Purdue University Rhode Island School of Design St. Andrews School St. Lawrence University Smith College University of Pennsylvania World ' s Largest Volume Camera Store PEERLESS CAMERA 1020 MARKET STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA. WAlnut 2-1150 Discount House Pricing! Specialty Store Know-How ! Department Store Service! 193 Phone Service 24 Hours Around the Clock Market 7-8450 PIERCE REESE, Inc. Just Consistently Fine MEATS - POULl RY PROVISIONS FROSTED FOODS FOOD FOR HOME FREEZERS AT QUANTITY DISCOUNT PRICES ,S0-l, ' i2 N. Delaware Avenue Phila. 6, Pa. Wearing Apparel for Both Ed and Co-Ed S arthmore Toggery Shop, Inc. 8 PARK AVENUE Men, Women, Boys ' Wear KI 3-0240 STEVENSON 7-9000 PRIVATE PHONE EXCHANGE ,_y lLDEN WHITE ESTABLISHED IB ' E, INC. ESTABLISHED 1 B74 1224 NORTH 9TH STREET PHILADELPHIA 22. PA. Best Wishes from MICHAELS COLLEGE PHARMACY 194 Illustration from new thread metrology booklet shows SPS technician checking a thread rolling die for lead deviation, one of the most common but least understood causes of thread assembly problems. Three New SPS Screw Thread Metrology Laboratories help fastener users eliminate thread fit and gaging problems Optical comparator. Standard equipment at each lab. Permits magnification of screw thread profiles from lOx to lOOx on 14 in. viewing screen. Precision: .0001 in. To help fastener users meet today ' s de- mand for increased product reliability SPS has set up three Screw Thread Metrology Laboratories at key points across the country. The identical facili- ties make available the advanced gaging techniques, precision measuring ma- chines, and screw thread technology employed by SPS itself. These proving grounds of product reliability are lo- cated at : Jenkintown, Pa. — Just north of Philadel- phia, SPS headquarters plant. Highland Ave. Phone: TUrner 4-7300 Cleveland, Ohio — At the plant of the Cleve- land Cap Screw Co., an SPS Company, 4444 Lee Rd. Phone: LUdlow 1-3000 Sania Ana, Calif. — SPS Western, 2701 S. Harbor Blvd., Phone: KImberly 5-9311 Basic services of the new laboratories include analysis of thread fit problems; checking and setting of thread gages; setting up of sound thread inspection gaging systems; serving as a clearing house of information on threads and thread gaging. INDUSTRIAL FASTENER Division sps Each unit — a showplace of modern measuring equipment — is air condi- tioned and humidity controlled. Each is completely equipped for thread-size control of Unified Screw Threads — Class 3A, 2A, 3B and 2B; and Tapered Threads— AN PT, NPTF types. Fastener users are invited to put these laboratories to their service at any time. Simply contact an SPS salesman or dis- tributor or the laboratory nearest you. And remember, whether you have an immediate fastener problem or not, a visit will be welcome. Standard Pressed Steel Co., Jenkintown 32, Pa. JENKINTOWN, PENNSYtVANIA 195 Form 2369: SPS Screw Thread Metrol- ogy Laboratories. 24 pages with numer- ous illustrations, plus useful tables sum- marizing unified thread dimensions and tolerances. Write for copies. HARRY E. OPPENLANDER Hi-Fi Studio 171 0 South Chester Road Swarthmore, Pa. Coniponets Expert Sendee TROY LAUNDRY CHESTER, PA. FUSCO MOTORS South Chester and Fairview Rds. Swarthmore, Pa. ISABEL ' S CURIO SHOP 171 2 South Chester Road, Swarthmore in ASEMENT ESIDE ANK ISABEL P. II JJ UNTING, Prop. KI 3-2513 Ruth D. Hartley Dress Shop 104 Park Ave. Swarthmore, Pa. Junior and Misses ' Dresses Sportswear and Parly Dresses VENTURI INC. FRESH and FROZEN FRUITS and VEGETABLES Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 196 This book printed by VELV ATONE, a special process of litho graphic printing. Sole producers: Wm. J. Keller Inc., Buffalo, N. Y No other printing firm is authorized to use the Velvatone method m Ti.r r.-:: ■ •- ' • - - ■ ►-•■ ' ' ■; ' ■ . ' rLt ' rt i ■


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

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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