Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA)

 - Class of 1961

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Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1961 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 210 of the 1961 volume:

Ma Ley ON °iU If there is anything Swarthmore students have in common, it is frustration; the inherent frustration of learning and of trying to suc- ceed. The freshman enters suitably awed by the competition he faces, intellectually and socially, but with a secret confidence that his straight A ' s in high school really did mean ' something — that it will be the others, not he. who will get the B ' s and C ' s and unimaginable Ds and E ' s. Very few confirm these hopes; fewer, if any, do so without strug- gle. All must find some encouragement to keep at it — a group, a cause, a person, a study. Prote ' ge ' s and children of praise enter a fiercely competitive society in which praise is rarely deserved, more rarely granted. Will we, as one professor predicted, change radically in our years here only to slide back into our original opinion patterns? Will what we learn in books here prove inappropriate, useless, and, as James Michener warned us in Collection, nothing compared to the moral idealism we imbibe here? And will those physics exams really all be the same in 100 years ... or even ten? Each must find an answer to the new challenges and stresses, to the change in himself. The solutions are the diversity of Swarthmore, each contributing to the richness of the whole, to the impact on other students. So varied are the solutions that they cannot be character- ized by one pattern of tastes or appearances. A yearbook cannot depict the individual changes, the inner con- flicts and inspirations hiding behind the peaceful grey walls that greet the visitor. Pictures can only show the variety of solutions — the moment of relief celebrated at a pep rally, the creativity shared in the student art shows, concerts, and plays, the political conscience splashed on the bulletin boards, the irrational reactions of a group striving for rational perfection. Something keeps people here in spite of their frustrations. The something is the subject of this book. Monica Pannwitt I ■■: A. i r ' - -. -. ' .. ..- ■■■■ « fe 8§!? ■ 7c: - 10 r A $ 11 ' W$- v i 5 ■ % £ £ ' 1 ' ' H ■ J, i !■- 8f %4 fe -, - : __3 • ■ - H 13 14 rap; 15 16 17 19 21 w ,« V ' «(.• 23 m 24 j 1 V i 26 RECTORY OMI SSIONS OFFICE 122 PLUMBING FUN 13S BOOSE STORE |Qs 132 UUU-SEXY OFFICES tos DEANS ' MAIDENS lOt HOUSE WRECKER 147 NEKT OFFICE 111 PERSONA NON GRATA 129 PRESIDENT 502 GIRL CHASING 123 TERRIFIC ; 124 RHODES SCHOLARSHIP 0ISTRUST221 STENOPHILE 159 STUDENT VICE BUREAU 119 PRESEN TS NO SECONDS - . 211 VACATIONAL RIDDANCE DIETITIAN p l It is not enough to develop intellect, for intellect by itself is essentially amoral, capable of evil as well as of good. We must develop the char- acter which makes intellect constructive, and the personality which makes it effective. — President Courtney Smith, Inaugural address, 1953 The college calendar, shows implicit agreement with the President ' s ideal. Swarthmoreans are NOT solely bookworms. Social, cultural, religious, and educational organizations occupy a considerable por- tion of our already crowded hours, and the uncharted activities of our daily existence do much to create the environment that we have come to identify as college. Hot sticky buns and coffee in Somer- ville, spontaneous folk sings, long hours of bridge and talk in Com- mons, petitions, penny-pitching on Parrish steps, snow rolling, and the unforgetable Thursday morning Collection — these are as much a part of us as are the library and the dorm. A pressure to join clubs and organizations for the record or to meet the necessary requisites of a Big-Man-On-Campus has diminished. Extra-curricular activities now derive their existence more from their function as a source of sheer fun, the much-needed break in a rigorous academic program, and from their value as an opportunity for the in- dividual to experiment with and develop his own potentials, to dis- cover more about himself and others and the possible relationships be- tween them. Activities are an extension of individual interests and abilities; one gives by, and grows from, participation in groups. Organ- izing to accomplish what each could not achieve alone, all profit from concerts, lectures delivered by guest speakers, literary publications, so- cial and community services, stands and action on national and inter- national affairs, and a practical realization of the fruits of cooperative effort. 32 Sculpture by Susan Womer wb fl L lfl l HH e R5 j=j «■ fe- , ' v -Qe I WW iM 1 Orchestra 35 Band Palmer-Pittenger People ' s Parlor Party Engineering lab: Joy-Yee Shin, William Welsh Blood Drive screening in Somerville A is youR T Students for Disarmament at Kennedy rally in Lawrence Park Presidential Candidate Nixon ' s motorcade ap- proaching underpass in Vil Students for Disarmament and Students for Nixon at political rally in Chester Phoenix hoard meetine Student Employment Office; managers Al Maxwell and Karen Simpson Woody Fleisig debating Student Council amend- ment in Commons King Lear Sunday Bond Concert: Alan Broughton and Ann Singleterrv Russian Table Bowling Club member: Ralph Bailey 40 International Club meeting Band members Ro Werner, Mary Williams, Bob Putnam, Phil Wion Cheerleaders Proctors; Standing, left to right: David Swanger, Phil Littleford, Walter Carter, David Wegman, and David Walter. Seated, left to right: Marc Waldbaum, Wentworth Of u a t e y-Kodjoe, John Schuchardt, Robert Row- ley, David Peterson, James Himes Social Committee Dance in Wharton Basement Coed Folk Dance Group Social Committee Dance Coed Folk Dance Group 42 „;a- MMMMMM WWW Student Council H.D.K. Kitto, Cooper Lecturer Lorraine Hansberry and LTC Cast Party 1 43 niHI r — inniiiiiiiiiinifli minium Chess Club tournament Flying Club visiting Princeton U. German Club meeting; left to right: Professor Brinkmann. Nick Passell, Carl Wittman, and Carolyn Perry 44 Spanish Club, left to right: Bruce Leimsidor, Marke Woodward, Jill Harris, Laura Denny, Stephanie Ross, Pete Shoenbach, Carl Jockusch, and Mr. Sorber Arts and Crafts Evelyn Edson at Phoenix meeting Student Council meeting in a lodge Russian Club, left to right: Debbie Ayres, Rose-Marie Bentele, Mrs. Olga Lang, and Barbara Hall Debate Club; Back row. left to right: Robert Gross, Tom Mayer, Glenn Coven, and John Pollock. Front row, left to right: Bill Brod, Miriam Dick, Conrad Weiler, and Richard Kaiser W.S.G.A. skit at W.S.G.A. formal Potter Poetry lecture; left to right: Lee Cross, Professor Ostwald, and Naomi Kies 46 Palmer-Pittenger People ' s Parlor Party Mrs. Barbara L ange and I.TC group L.T.C. ' s first production of 1960: The Bald Soprano 47 CHORUS 48 Mike Westgate and voters in front of Student Council voting machine Voting i •■: Engineering Club: William Welsh. Willis Post, Mr. Barus, Etna Binford, Joy-Yee Shin, Herbert Juneau gs - . . ■■j I ig ]iiiiKiiTii?V Student-Affairs Committee; left to right: Dean Cobbs, Mr. Shaffer, Dean Stott, Dave Wegman, and Cynthia Heynen 50 Arts and Crafts drawing group Philosophy Club lecture in Bond May Dance, Spring 1960 AFTERNOON LABS 52 53 54 COLLECTION Student Council meeting in Bond Sunday Bond Concert: Vic Ludwig on flute Engineering Field Trip: Dave Felter, John Wheeler, Mr. Carpenter Blood Bank in Somerville Albatross staff member Forum for Free Speech: Walter Carter ques- tioning Socialist speaker Flying Club members receiving instruction in sky-diving k I ■ -in The Wind That Blows Through Vacant Rooms, by Leo Braudy ' 63 Barahhas, by Charles Jackson ' 61 ' Memorandum, by Rebecca Adams ' 62 ONE ACT PLAYS 59 After the Haverford Game Operation Abolition: Tim Williams and Fulton Lewis III Folk Festival Square Dance Spring Bike Race Halcyon photographers Steve Izenour and Walt Pinkus International Club African Symposium: Speaker Alfonso Cas- tagno with Lila Towle and Ollie Fein Cooper Foundation: The Vienna Octet tcSrs ' WSGA WEEKEND 63 INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL First row. left to right: J. Merrill (Phi Sigma Kappa), R. Moore, (pres.) (Delta Upsilon), S. Schoenbaum (Phi Sigma Kappa). Second row, left to right: R. Sterne (Tau Alpha Omi- cron), R. Bechtel (Phi Kappa Psi), A. Plitnik (Delta Upsilon). Third row, left to right: T. McCrosson (Tau Alpha Omicron), P. Brandt (Kappa Sigma), R. Colket (Phi Kappa Psi) 64 First row, left to right: Emlen, R. H. Ellis, Put- nam, Solodar, C. Ellis, Raich. Second row, left to right: Mabry, Schoen- baum, Lister, W. Ayres, McKelvey, Hopps, Rich- mond, Phillips, Bestor, Hampton, Sober, R. Johnson. Third row, left to right: Scott, Becker, Patla, Coven, G. Jones, Weiler, Rosner, Banet, Mansbach, Rice, Fein- gold, Grubmeyer. Fourth row, left to right: Rus- sell, Treuenfels, Crist, Kimmel. Shmurak, Wein- berg, Ludlam. Bailey, Goldstine, W. Johnson, J. Kaplan, J. J. Robin- son, Harrington PHI SIGMA KAPPA inUiHchrf ii ' oriili i t rlni--l;vai ,i. tii ' ,,TiiiWui[i IvrMlmiiiifrTiiih.-iriiliiiu Ml ' Mii-iniljiw, wn timm fft luswmliiiiirTwnJuvuMttiii !i, ( )llffl[ T ll , .[ 65 PHI KAPPA PSI Front row. left to right: Rabinowitz, Jacobi, Thorpe. Savran. Li] lie. Mathews. Roy, Lederer. Heider, Pollock. Back row, left to right: Glass, Cornell. Meisel. Kitt- redge. L. Christianson, Patton. Felter, Mutchler, Wick. Quarles. Bechtel. Maybee. H. Caplan. W. Lipshutz. Appel. Steel- man, Rothman. Colket, Toy, Steinberg. Booser, Cook, Dickey (Pres.), Hodgson. Berryman, G. Clothier (Alumnus). Absent: Brand, Jacobi, Keller, Feldhusen, A. Kaplan. Tweed, R. Leh- man, Khamsi. Leonard, Tyler. hh TAU ALPHA OMICRON First row, left to right: Morehead, Held. R. Newman. Stein. Dau- benspeck. Setlow. Sec- ond row, left to right: D. Thompson. Potter, Stearns. Latham, Aizupi- tis (Pres.), Bunker, Sto- rozuk, McCrosson, Wes- tine, K. Stephens. Ab- sent: Wyse, Kapp. r mmzm DELTA UP SILON First row, left to right: Schuster, Houle, Hallowell, Laucius, B. Cooper. Milton, Cardillo, Jaquette, Maxwell, McNinch. Sec- ond row, left to right: Allison, S. Blum, Buek, McLanahan, Harner, Springer, Weiss, Thurman, Caroff, Warn, Farlow, Austrian. Third row, left to right: R. Hall. C. Booth, Warring- ton. Plitnik, Teush, Carpenter, Schembs, Koehl, F. Spruance, Fernald, Knst, Jewett, Fitchett, R. Moore, Vessey. Absent: Churchill, Coles, Ebersole, Welsh, R. C. Ellis, Goor, S. Koch. Latshaw, Orr, Prescott, Armstrong, Burnes. L. Cooper, Crats- ley, Dewees, Kane, McKibben, Murray, Nyquist, Creighton, Safft, Hart, Simian, Kronfeld. Bertsch, Allen, Burt, J. Peter- son, Hickey, Sales f II 1 1 1 r I SE I a 4 % First row, left to r ight: C. Brown. Willis. Han- num, R. E. Smith, Rayner. Second row, left to right: K. Johnson, Henley, Ruhnka, J. Nesbitt, Bupp, Brandt, Morehouse, Eddy, L. Moore, Parsons, Uehlein, Post, Oglesby, H. Nesbitt, Rowley (Pres.) KAPPA SIGMA Most people, including some of superior intellect, enjoy competition, enjoy being outdoors in the fall, and enjoy festivity. Apparently Swarth- moreans aren ' t like most people. — Clyde Prestowitz Why should there be any festivity at all, even on the finest of fall afternoons, when our glorious teams go down to ignominious defeat? — Larry Shepley To play for fun is, I believe, the highest type of sportsmanship. The game is more enjoyable when we aren ' t tensed up over a win. — Mike Meeropol Admittedly sports don ' t provide an outlet for individualism like wear- ing a beard . . . but they do teach something fundamental and some- thing unteachable in the classroom. They teach leadership, cooperation for a common end, persistence, and the will to win. We take great pride in our Rhodes scholars, Fullbright scholars, etc., but when it comes to athletics, we suddenly look down our intellectual noses and say well we play for fun. I only ask: How much fun is there in losing? — Clyde Prestowitz. The win-win-win philosophy expressed here is quite disgusting. It seems to me that the fact that we played the best we could, played to- gether as a team (quite well at that), and even did better than expected is enough to make any Swarthmorean proud. We still learn teamwork, we improve our skills, and we still get the exercise, even when we lose. Even more important, we learn to be good sports while losing, which we wouldn ' t learn winning all the time. — Mike Meeropol Being outdoors is much too enjoyable on a nice day to waste in the midst of a shouting, pushing crowd, with the only view a group of agitated cheerleaders, some empty stands across the stadium, and a group of athletes on a once-green field. — Larry Shepley I can ' t help wondering if there is not something seriously wrong with a school when it cannot muster more than a few hundred at a football game on a crisp fall afternoon. Life may not have been too far off the beam when it pinned a bohemian label on Swarthmore. — Clyde Prestowitz. If so few people were present at the game, then they were obviously non-conformists conforming to their own non-conformity. I was horrified to see that you wished to increase this small group of people (who gave Life the impression of Bohemianism). I would suggest that if you were really interested in setting things straight, you might try your best to eliminate this small group before it grows and gets out of hand. Stanley Rosenberg Reprinted by permission of the Phoenix from the issues of October 1960. 70 tmW b, — « •■% l %% Portrait from Student Art Show, Spring 1961 by Kate Killebrew, ' 61 First row, left to right: Coach Elverson, Meisel, Welsh. Austrian, Cardillo, Rowley, Coach Swan. Second row. left to right: Sirman, Safft, Caroff. Blum, Prescott, J. Green, Booser, B. Cooper. Third row, left to right: Cook, Prestowitz, Spruance. Tyler, McLanahan, Laucius, Buek, Lipshutz. Fourth row, left to right: Hallowell (mgr.), Seymour, Schembs, Henley, Fernald, Lillie, Houle, Hickey, Coles (mgr.). Fifth row, left to right: Krist (mgr.), Burt, Heynen, Teush, Roy, Jewett. Beit- man, Kronfeld (mgr.). Sixth row, left to right: Coach Cannon, Field (faculty rep.). Coach Lukens. . SP ■ r ► j i H i r,: v ■ m v I « f ' ■ ' ■ ■ •- ' H| wf 9i ► ■- - ■ - . SJ n ■ 72 ' ? Wk FOOTBALL Captain Neil Austrian and Coach Lew Elverson 74 Sw. Opp. 14 Susquehanna 32 36 Hamilton 25 26 Ursinus 7 18 Wesleyan 12 21 Johns Hopkins 18 7 PMC 14 Haverford 76 First row, left to right: Giese, Sober, Ayres. Henderson, Snygg, Phillips, D. Snyder, Simon. Sec- ond row, left to right: Thompson (faculty representative), Hart, Shield, R. Moore. Henning, Kidder, Kittredge, Ashelman, Held, Coach Miller. Third row, left to right: Todd, Gaffin, New- man, Morehead, Warn (mgr.), Van Camerik, Hammond, Miller. CROSS COUNTRY Sw. Opp. 27 28 Delaware 32 23 Lafayette 27 30 PMC 20 41 F M 22 37 Hopkins 18 44 Haverford Sixth place in MASCAC , A ■ 7S • ;!;;s;5Sj;sJi ii . •••Si First row, left to right: Coach Dunn. Johnson. Post. Aizupitis, Ebersole, Kern, Quarles, Stoll. Second row, left to right: Toy, Morehouse, Eddy, Lamb, Menaker, Coach Suny. Third row, left to right: Igharo, Setlow, Guthrie. Savran, Hannum, Wordley, Richmond (mgr.). SOCCER Sw. 1 Opp. 3 Alumni 1 Princeton 1 4 1 Hopkins Penn 5 2 2 Lafayette Ursinus 4 3 F M 4 1 Lehigh 1 1 4 4 Navy Haverford 79 53KM BASKETBALL First row, left to right: Sirman, Rabinowitz, L. Christianson. Lande. Towle, Henretta. Second row, left to right: Coach Stetson, Moore (mgr.l. Adams, Many, R. Ellis, Stein, Warrington, Welsh (mgr.) 80 m ,X2 Coach Stetson with captain Larry Christianson Sw Opponent 55 72 Moravian 60 89 F M 37 63 Dickinson 41 92 Penn 59 54 Johns Hopkins 60 57 Ursinus 63 76 Delaware 66 71 Albright 58 68 PMC 52 64 Drexel 48 62 Haverford 68 54 Washington 65 80 Ursinus 67 85 PMC 60 76 Haverford 63 72 Delaware 83 Sw Opponent 8 21 Moravian 8 20 Muhlenberg 17 13 Ursinus 27 3 PMC 20 6 Delaware 13 18 Lafayette 14 12 Johns Hopkins 21 8 Haverford 19 8 Drexel 10th place in MASCAC Meet Left to right: Dave Swanger (Co-Capt.). Coach Davies. Dave Walter (Co-Capt.) WRESTLING First row, left to right: Glass, Armstrong, Bickford. Worthington. Dickey, Laucius, Feingold, Burt, Cook, Goodwin, Weiler. Swanger (Co-Capt.). Henning, Keller, Walter (Co-Capt.), Parsons. Coach Davies. Berman. Second row, left to right: C. Booth (mgr.), 85 Left to right: Eddy, Wohlreich, A. Williams (Co-Capt.), Weeks, Leonard. Henley, Berryman. Mayhee, Coles, (Co- Capt.), Salisbury, Passell, Cratsley, Toy, Murray, Thurman, Wellington. Jaquette, Piatt. Coach McAdoo SWIMMING Sw 65 73 61 7 62 37 63 33 42 Opponent 21 PMC 18 Temple 34 D re e 1 58 Bucknell 32 Lafayette 58 F M 32 Gettysburg 62 Dickinson 51 Delaware 8th place in MASCAC Meet Dick Coles and Sandy Williams, Co- Captains SWIMMING m v First row, left lo right: Welsh, kxoon, Denhardt (co-capt.), Feld- husen (co-capt.). Evans. Second row, left to right: Fairbanks, Vessey, Hen- derson. Beshore, Rowley, Dickey. Third row, left to right: D. Snyder, Ayres, Sober, Bechtel, Creighton, J. Green, S. Blum. Fourth row, left to right: Khamsi, R. E. Smith, Laucius, Buek, Weitzman, Spruance. Fifth row, left to right: Coach Drumm, Maxwell (mgr.), Snygg (mgr.), Cratsley (mgr.), Christiansen (mgr.). Shield, Dayton (faculty rep.), Coach Elver- son. TRACK 1960 ? , First row, left to right: H. Caplan, Finkelson. McLanahan, Christianson (capt.). Kerzner. Westine. Towle, Sirman. Second row, left to right: Morrill (faculty rep.), Coach Dunn, Burnes, Springer, McCrosson, Hurchalla, Sta- ples, Van Camerik, Coach Mayor, Ellis BASEBALL 1960 ss Left to right: Chamberlain (mgr.), McKibben, Himes, L. Moore (capt.), Far- low, Ebersole, Lister, Coach Stetson. GOLF 1960 LACROSSE 1960 First row, left to right: Coach Cottman, RufF, Kershaw, Heaton, Robinson, Maisel (capt.). Shorb, Quarles, Griffith, H. Price, Coach Heaton. Second row, left to right: Uehlein, Littleford, Kittredge. Kidder, Morehouse, Hannum, Brandt, J. Nesbitt, Churchill. Walter, Austrian, Fitchett, H. Nesbitt. Colket, Taylor (mgr.). Third row, left to right: Cover, Henley, Patton, L. Cooper. Bupp, Rayner, Eddy, Miele, Even, Fedoruk, B. Cooper TENNIS 1960 Left to right: D. Worth (manager), J. Shertzer, R. Smith (Captain). P. Lieu. A. Jenks, D. Latshaw. R. Lande. M. Waldbaum, B. Kern. E. Faulkner (Coach). 91 , «E -{■ . . - v  KWINK First row, left to right: E. Kronfeld, A. Maxwell, S. Da- vidson, W. Brod. Second row, left to right: P. Ebersole, C. Booth (pres.), J. Warrington, B. Post, A. Plitnik. - 94 95 FORMATION SWIMMING ■ r fl PS lUllE A. .+ jJBflBBjL - jfe ' •j ' La P S First row, left to right: Hodg- kin, Preston, Hildum (co- capt.), Garrett (co-capt.). Smith, Blocksom. Second row, left to right: Terada (coach), Cochran, Jahoda, Kertesz, Phil- lips, Murphy, Northrop, Garri- son, Stallman, Fulton. Absent: Kauffman, Kreps, Potter, Sams, Shelby. Simpson, Ware. First row, left to right: Eves, Ayres, Diebold, Braxton, Lutton, Graham, Fezandie, Hay, Perry, Kline, Wright, Flaccus, Spiegelberg, McCutchan. Second row, left to right: Foster, Welsh, Kelly, Wood, Brand, Horan, Stein- bach, Hess (coach), Moore, Broadbooks, Sargent, Brad- bury, Lee, Pollack, Mallonee, Barcalow. HOCKEY Sw. 8 Opp. Immaculata 2 1 4 Rosemont Ursinus 2 1 1 Bryn Mawr Beaver () 1 2 1 Temple Penn Drexel Back row. left to right: J. Woodbury (manager), M. Wright. B. Brown, M. Back. S. Law. B. Daly, C. Hodges, J. Jones, M. Eldredgc, B. Perkins, M. McDiarmid, E. Hess (Coach). E. Faulkner (Coach). Seated, left to right: B. Hallock, J. Lutton (Captain), S. Kreps, J. Harris. B. Read, S. Pritchard, S. Merrill, H. Kerr, S. Conhoy, V. Ladd. BADMINTON VOLLEYBALL Front row, left to right: M. Gardner, B. Seymour. E. Strong, S. McConnell, R. Koplowitz, M. Dunn. S. Womer, B. Diebold, S. Merrill (manager). Second row, left to right: S. Kreps, J. Glenn, E. Wehmiller. K. Bergstrom, A. Rubio, S. Oltman, B. Wright, I. Moll (Coach). Not pictured: L. Clarenbach, S. Duvall, P. Foster. A. Mercer (Captain), A. Miller. 98 : i i SWIMMING Seated, left to right: N. Gardner, D. Eves, B. Prentice, R. Smith, C. Hart (Captain) with Hex!, K. Kertesz, G. McColl. Standing, left to right: S. Potter. B. Berger. M. McCaslin. J. Dixon, S. Butler, D. Judd. I. Phillips, J. Stallman. V. Rath (Coach). Not pictured: N. Mc- Grayne, L. Graham, K. Kauffman. L. Northrop, B. Sams, N. Hall, N. Gunning, S. Blocksom. First row. left to right: M. Barcalow, J. Cntlin, M. Anderson, J. Bradbury. J. Brand, M. Steinbach, M. Sargent, S. Hutchison. M. Williams. Second row. left to right: S. Gen- tleman (manager), J. Davis, A. Handsaker. R. Werner, P. Fezandie , M. Flaccus (co- Captain), A. Spiegelberg (co-Captain). N. Braxton, V. Lowe, J. Broadbooks. J. Tomp- sett. Third row. left to right: B. Wright (manager). J. Glenn. M. Pannwitt, E. Weh- miller, M. C. McCutehan. M. Chase. A. Rubio, B. Smith, H. Harris, S. Preston. G. Mallonee, I. Moll (Coach). Not pictured: H. L. Clements, M. Doehlert, J. Kelly (man- ager trv-out). BASKETBALL TENNIS 1960 Kneeling, left to right: Arnold, Malsin, Dellmuth, J. Harris, Pinter (Co-Capt.) Duguid, (Co- Capt.) Welfling, Kerr, Greenfield, Perchonock, R. Brown, Bentele. Standing, left to right: McCutchan, Miller, Flaccus, Yoder, Hodges, Heynen, Perry, Lutton, Braxton, Ehrlich, S. Moore, Perkins, Coach Hess. Missing from picture: Brand, Chase, Davis, Iverson, Rutter, Thorp, Emerson (mgr.) Kneeling, left to right: Pickett, Tomkins, Nordblom. Malley, Barcalow. Roulston. Harrar, Steinbach. Standing left to right: Coach Moll. Werner, Cross, H. Harris, Barron, Pannwitt, Leeds, Brownell. Missing from picture: Sargent (mgr.), Spiegelberg, Huston, Foster. SOFTBALL 1960 101 ARCHERY 1960 First row, left to right: Ladd, M. Wright. Hinsdale, Coach Rath and Hex. Handwerk, Scott. Second row. left to right: Foster (mgr.), Mueller, Fine. Woodbury. Berkely. Missing from picture: Ganung. Hotf iJS- g;, LACROSSE iimi 1960 Kneeling, left to right: Pres- ton, Mallonee, Price (Co- Capt.), Rothwell (Co-Capt.), Fezandie. Lotta. Standing, left to right: Palmer, Coach Welsh, Jahoda. Eves. Myers, Williams, I Uliedge. Wright. Missing from picture: Cochran, Clarenbach, (mgr), Duthie, Fox. Hart, Judd, Wehmiller, Welsh, Wood Editor ' s Note: Spring sports teams are not selected in time to be included in the Halcyon of the same spring. 102 First row, left to right: Sargent (pres.), Jahoda, Maginniss, Chatelaine. Second row, left to right: Eldridge, E. Wright, Humphrey, Woodbury, Foster, Judd, Clarenbach, Emerson, Gilruth, Myers. Absent: Fulton (sec-treas.). Gentle- man, McDiarmid, S. Wright, Hart. Reno, Simpson, Goss, Page, Vexler, Churchill, Feingold. GWIMP WAA First row, left to right: Lutton (pres.), Barcalow, Hay, Mal- lonee, Preston, Moore. Second row, left to right: Hodges, Wood. VIOLET DRAGONS A dream of dragons come and gone Awoke, unspringing the fresh time, Turning the blocks, red ballons away Laughing; In the shadow loquacious pidgeons Murmering pidgeons fancies Ceased to move for a time; You came upon them in stillness, The shivers of their talk spreading About your calves as you rested by the tree. Your shadow cast two large hands Each pidgeon upon a finger Balanced, uncertain that I watched From an uncertain point An uncertain distance away, Then abruptly oblivious Turning with the shadow-hands Beyond, the tree a marker, Their murmur renewed falling away With the foot falls. a november nun floating among stems of cold petrified gardens, among gothic arcades floating through air perfectly contained cold overwhelmingly silent, deeply dark in the forgotten autumn earth sleeping roots dream of spring, in her box of air closed with a sky grayer than this earth or her eyes she floats dreaming of god. David Kresh, ' 61 Robert Kramer, ' 61 Poems reprinted from the Roc with the permis- sion of the authors. Miss Raycroft at Four Miss Raycroft was folded neatly on tlie sofa, Her bun pinned securely, Her feet crossed at the ankle, Miss Raycroft sniffed her pale j asmine tea. Miss Raycroft said no, she had never read Kafka (Never intended to; After all, the Brownings . . .) Her cup and saucer clattered quietly. She regarded the leaves on fine white china. Limoges cups, she noted And look a final sandwich. Miss Raycroft felt it was time to leave. Miss Raycroft buttoned her parchment-coloured gloves, and Sticking in her hatpins, Asked herself one question — why Had she never really cared for the taste of tea? Carolyn Goldberg, ' 61 104 x Poster by Sandra Woodward, ' 63 October, 1960 i t i. , m ii i «... COURTNEY CRAIG SMITH. President I find it more useful in trying to find the way from day to day, to think of education, quite simplw as the development of the self for the sake of others. President Smith, Inaugural Address. 1953 106 WILLIAM C. H. PRENTICE, Dean of Men m EDWARD K. CRATSLEY, Vice-President SUSAN P. COBBS Dean of Women 107 ' GILMORE STOTT, Associate Dean JOHN M. MOORE, Associate Dean m 0 108 MARGARET L. MACLAREN Assistant Dean for Admissions JOSEPH B. SHANE, Vice-President ROBERT A. BARR. JR. Jm Assistant Dean for Admissions Humanities BARBARA AYERST English Literature Rule Britannia JENNIFER ABRAHAM English Literature Jenny JEROME A. SHA FFER [ssistant Professor of Philosophy K 110 RUSSELL MEIGGS, Visiting Professor of Classics MAIJA BAJARS French Honors GEORGE C. AVERY, Instructor in German 111 SUSAN C. BANNERMAN English Literature Honors PERCY LINWOOD URBAN, JR. Assistant Professor of Religion. JOHN W. WILLIAMS, Instructor in Fine Arts JEANNE M. BARRON Fine Arts 112 HAROLD M. MARCH, Chairman, Department of Modern Languages FAITH AVERY BLOCKSOM English Literature Honors Topper HILDE D. COHN Associate Professor of German 113 WENDY COLEMAN English Literature DEBORAH HOPE LATTA CLEMENTS English Literature MARTIN OSTWALD Associate Professor of Classics SHEILA L. CONBOY English Literature 114 JUDITH E. DAVIS English Literature Where ' s Judy? No one knows . . . busiest gal ever — on and off campus. Dedicated to chil- dren and teaching, with her heart all wrapped up in a Purdue sweatshirt (she ' s even got a Hoosier accent). Halfback, fullback, forward — hockey, basketball, and tennis — with all the bruises to prove it. The one who never cam- paigns, but always gets elected. Judy. HT OLGA LANG, Assistant Professor of Russian PETER J. EUBEN Philosophy Honors An eye for Rodin, an ear for Bartok, and a taste for argument — anytime, any subject, any rules. Logic tempered by cosmopolitan car- nality and missionary instincts. Rational reflec- tion and compassionate poetry. Polarization of interests from SC and SAC to a blond in Honolulu. Wine, women, and honors. ROXANNE FEINGOLD Fine Arts Ricki 115 ELLEN L. FERBER Englisli Literature Honors HSKu sSffl H ELIZABETH COX WRIGHT, Professor of English m FRANZ H. MAUTNER, Professor of German PAMELA B. FEZANDIE English Literature The barefoot girl who summers in Nantucket . . . glowing personality that makes you always feel welcome . . . happy hostess of the arti- choke-hearts-and-Mom ' s-salad -dressing parties ... I hear those turtles sighing and I just don ' t know ... a varsity for every season . . . Go-pher Chris and that Minnesota sweatshirt . . . We ram with Poom . . . Pam, Pammy. 116 STEPHEN J. BROWN, Assistant Professor of English MARTHA K. F RITTS English Literature Krist-Fritts to the gals she left behind her. Left to compete with Billie Burnett and Andy ' s. Got a bachelor and working toward a doctor. Incurable punstress. I think I ' ll take a nap. SAMUEL L. HYNES Assistant Professor of English 117 JEAN GEIL Music €L MONROE C. BEARDSLEY Professor of Philosophy JAMES D. SORBER. Associate Professor of Spanish PETER D. GESSNER English Literature Honors CAROLYN B. GOLDBERG French Literature Honors 118 JANE GRIDLEY HAY English Literature Jayhay . . . Many more at home . . . Day stu- dent ... I have not yet begun to type! . . . The boyfriend image . . . Scott Foundation, Hockey, Silver-work, Chorus . . . Live for, not look for, the answer. ... I do not propose to write an ode to dejection. I. m FREDERIC J. GROVER, Associate Professor of French GEORGE J. BECKER, Chairman, Department of English ik SUSAN D. HOWARD English Literature Honors I JEANNE THEIS WHITAKER Assistant Professor of French 119 MARY LOU JACOBSON English Literature But I ' d rather live on German hall! . . . He ' s at the University of Illinois this year . . . Folk Dance club . . . Presbyterian choir . . . passion for horses . . . You haven ' t heard of New Paltz? . . . Wie, bitte? HEDLEY RHYS, Professor of Fine Arts ROBERT M. WALKER, Chairman, Department of Fine Arts DAVID B. G. KRESH English Literature 120 PETER GRAM SWING, Chairman, Department of Music ELIZABETH SUSAN LADD English Literature Honors It is curious that the density of life on a given plane is ascertainable by dividing the number of legs one sees by two. At least the number of people may thus be fixed. DANIEL G. HOFFMAN Assistant Professor of English 121 V CECILY A. LANGDALE English Literature perennial question: youthful exuberance or im- maturity? . . . singular number of major changes . . . linquist . . . enthusiastic member of Student-Faculty Relations Committee . . . but where in New York? . . . that face in the window . . . apewalk in Commons at 3 AM . . . sadistic love of late fire drills . . . supports the hf industry almost single-handed . . . Ces SUSAN RAND1 LIFF English Literature Honors JFAN ASHMEAD PERKINS, Lecturer in French SHEILA MAGINNISS English Literature Impromptu w alks in the i am Hilda— Coffee at the Phi Si house The eternal triangle I think hissing is nasty 4 years of Mercer! I ' m not getting up because I can ' t think of anything to wear. Formation Swimming Manager Lifeguard 122 ALEX ZWERDLING, Instructor in English JOANNA K. MEIGS English Literature ANN TAYLOR MERCER Fine Arts I thought I ' d die laughing peanut-brittle hoagies! Georgia Rebel Bike rides and blue jeans Varsity Volleyball = sprained thumbs Kiss me and I ' ll scream Ugly men and great Danes Mercer Maginnis — 4 year pad pals ARTHUR PARRIS. Assistant in Music 123 g JT w SABINA MUELLER German Sabina Quiet until you get to know her . . . Hates to give up . . . Scientific approach to German lit- erature . . . Love of out-of-doors . . . Archery . . . One finger in the grease paint ... I always get my mords wixed . . . Midnight tea parties . . . But I LIKE to iron . . . Roommates who never meet . . . Sometime, somewhere: teaching. PATRICIA MYERS English Literature Pat — Fifth generation of Swarthmore Quakers . . . TAO ' s senior sister . . . Interested in people . . . Three years of sports and a Junior blazer . . . Presided over GWIMP meetings between swimming meets . . . Keeps N-section supplied with food . . . Roommates who never meet . . . I still don ' t speak German . . . Engineers and English majors do get along! CLAUDIO SPIES, Assistant Professor of Music 124 DOROTHEA PERSICHETTI, Instructor in Music SIDNEY OLTMAN Fine Arts Many hours a week in Fine Arts office — Vol- leyball — Dreams of going back to Japan — John — Chicago bound JUSTUS ROSENBERG, Assistant Professor of German and R ussian 125 HELEN F. NORTH, Chairman, Department of Classics FAITH H. PATTEN English Literature Honors SALLY PRITCHARD English Honors Exponent of Benjamin Franklin ' s guide to liv- ing — , tempered with genteel hedonism . . . It ' s all a matter of Platonic forms — dolt . . . teller of bed-time stories — The weasel who went to the Fourth Lateian Council . . . something ' umhle but in Beirut . . . Sallv of Arabia. DAVID H. PETERSON Philosophy Honors 126 ANNE PUSTMUELLER French Junior year in Paris RICHARD B. BRANDT, Chairman, Departments of Religion and Philosophy ISAAC H. SCHAMBELAN English Literature Honors FREYA SAMUELS French Honors 127 ■ DOROTHY P. SMITH Englisli Literature Honors CAROLYN P. SHIELDS English Literature Honors EDITH PHILLIPS, Professor of French I2X kb Mb BARBARA PEARSON LANGE Director of Dramatics and Lecturer in English SANDRA JO SMITH German Green eyes and feline grace . . . slacks and sandals . . . minor in student-faculty relations . . . taste for the erotic . . . idols and incense, beer and Beethoven . . . spreads shell-shock . . . Middlebury deutsche summers . . . Let ' s have a party! V DAVID COWDEN, Assistant Professor of English 129 BELINDA A. STREIT English Literature The Hall President who says Merry Christmas in green toothpaste . . . beware the second John . . . never knew the Sophomore Slump . . . a passion for fashion . . . rock ' n ' rolling to Raunchy . . . Did you know that Parisian streetwalkers look just like American college girls? . . . auburn hair and a winning way ... Bin HENRY C. TAPPER JR. Philosophy JUDITH TAYLOR Fine Arts Judy . . . Carlmann Ghia . . . always knitting baby sweaters . . . Robinson parlor parties . . . talks a great game of bridge . . . T.V., espe- cially v ' Mavenck . . . bikini sungoddess . . . generous and happy . . . backbone of the Swarthmore-for-Nixon crowd . . . can ' t stand a Southern accent . . . odalesque ... art books. JOHN S. COOLIDGE, Instructor in English 130 STEPHEN F. BARKER Visiting Professor of Pliilosopliy MIKE WESTGATE French Who says it can ' t be done: Delta Cephei ' s right there . . . Give me the jib, damn it . . . ML-bound women ride free . . . Publish it any- way . . . Brush my Navy uniform, dear, it ' s Monday ... Of course I ' ve got it in the Coun- cil files . . . some people need a moat between them and the college. . . . SC president LOUISE TODD English Literature Knocked England off her even Keele . . . can say anything with a straight face . . . farmer ' s daughter from Ohio . . . jolly good, gaw blimey, and even worse when people notice her English accent . . . searching for a tall red- wood . . . horseback riding . . . globe-trotting . . . courage and enthusiasm to try new things, even missing two planes at once ELISA ASENSIO, Assistant Professor of Spanish 131 Social Sciences - - PETER P. AIZUPITIS History letcher . . . you make me feel badly . . . medievalist, even in bawdy ballads . . . fourth hand three no trump . . . musical leanings . . . consistent member of Andy ' s club, also instru- mental in its abrupt demise . . . That damn Latvian toe . . . Chester Cultural Exchange Committee . . . salesman of roofs — and Aizu- pitis. MARILYN BACK Psychology Typecast as a siren . . . Remember, it ' s your money! . . . Marilyn, you ' re not right in the head! ... A future psychoanalyst already practicing . . . aesthetic outlook — Bartok and Odetta, Picasso and Renoir . . . morning mental fog . . . Backus HANS WALLACH Chairman, Departments of Psychology and Education 132 Wk JAMES A. FIELD, JR., Professor of History MYRA D. BARRETT Psychology J. ROLAND PENNOCK, Chairman, Department of Political Science 133 FRED C. BUCK Economics Honors Phi Sigma Kappa . . . yachtsman with one capsizing to his credit . . . Man, that Potomac water is cold . . . veteran College Band noise- maker . . . late to bed and late to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and — ? . . . What, 35 cents just on one book? . . . one of Adam Smith ' s boys . . . supplier of ribald jokes GENE DONALD OVERSTREET, Assistant Professor of Political Science. JOHN R. CHAMPLIN l ' i ' lineal Science Honors CARMINE J. CARDILLO, JR. Psychology Cy; Hoagie; All-around nice guy; stalwart full- back on the Garnet Eleven for 4 years; also outstanding punter. Member of Delta Upsilon fraternity, serving term as treasurer junior year. On Men ' s Judiciary Committee senior year. Hard worker; never gives up trying. 134 HUGO CHURCHILL Economics Very immaculate — a spot on the floor for everything; Carol inherited his laundry heap from long-suffering roommates; mellow tones known to all in library and on football field; Hey, you muthaahs! D.U.; lacrosse star and ex-Bearcat; famous alcoholic capacity; subtle humor — master of sign language; flexible polit- ical outlook CONRAD M. SCHIROKAUER, Instructor in History BONNY M. COCHRAN Economics The most wonderful thing happened to me today . . . C ' mon Garnet . . . Wanna hear a good joke? . . . rare moments of pensiveness . . . talent for water ballet . . . rolicking Robin- son recluse . . . Oh, you guys . . . five feet of well-dressed pep and energy . . . cuddly . . . always a happy smile. JEROME S. COHEN Political Science Jerry; Co . . . Beat Haverford . . . Charlie ' s for a quickie . . . Gotta get organized . . . Wan- na buy a rug? . . . Achela Zeechee Uncle Emil ... I will not be in a play this semester ... I thought there was a laugh in there somewhere . . . Kap . . . Law School and Singapore. 135 STEPHEN M. DAVIDSON Political Science Lean and muscular . . . Times for breakfast . . . Only three hours to dinner; no time to get started . . . Cool to College cuisine . . . The Silent Mover . . . Expert on attrition . . . Trimester: Best thing since Honors . . . Make-out- mono- make-up . . . Cohen ' s best audience . . . Dov JOHN D. CORBIT III Psychology FREDERICK B. TOLLES Professor of Quaker History and Research and Director of Friends ' Historical Library u 136 LAURA LOCKHART DENNY Political Science Honors More fun to tease . . . Beer and pizza for room- mates when the Pirates won the Series . . . But it ' s really fun to get dressed up . . . Span- ish is fun and a summer in Mexico better still ... A WJC president is a judge, not a police- man ... a happy way of looking at things . . . But I do have to work. LINDA GRANT DE PAUW History Honors I think we do know the sweet Roman hand. . . . fond of unicorns, people, the XII century and the au tail (four parts lait to one part the) . . . source of strange music and of un- expected remarks ... an army wife . . . Grantsey p R  WILLIS D. WEATHERFORD, Associate Professor of Economics WALTER M. DICKEY Economics How about a tour this afternoon? 4-year 4 team JV-veteran: Phoenix Sports Editor; law school beckons; Penn Kappa ' s National Medi- ator; Intercollegiate Archon; CA ' s Chester Projects; two big Kalloppas; Scott Paper Co.; seven alarm clocks; Later Than Kap; The Man Who Came to Dinner and Stayed and Stayed and Stayed — Blanche — Katherine — Mildred; Chip ROSANNE T. DOBBIN History 137 RICHARD R. EVANS Economics What are you doing? . . . It ' s too much trouble. From small, coeducational hick town to . . . Green ' s. And that ' s why I ' m a social- ist. Why don ' t you play it in my key? Bach and Stravinsky . . . everything else is schmaltz. The nonchalant nihilist. PETER D. EBERSOLE Psychology Gung-ho muddy goalie . . . the human trash- can: fiend for cereal and other dining room slop . . . Dorm life — Keep quiet: that means YOU, Ebersole! . . . free association (bull-slinging) conversation . . . Push-up practice encouraged by The Dumms . . . Radio programs: The Hamlet Approach for How to Snow a Girl: — Result: married in junior year. HENRY GLEITMAN. Associate Professor of Psychology CLAIRE FAUST Psychology Will marry Kirk Stephens about graduation time . . . very attractive . . . interests include caving, science fiction, and people . . . concen- tration in mathematics and astronomy as well as psychology 138 HERMAN FELDHUSEN III History MARY ALBERTSON, Chairman, Department of History HEYWOOD W. FLEISIG Economics Honors A penchant for presidencies, an acquaintance with lacrosse, an interest in the foreign service, and a disinclination to have anything more re- vealing printed on a Halcyon page. JONATHAN F. GALLOWAY Political Science Honors 139 SOLOMON E. ASCH, Professor of Psychology GRETCHEN GAYLE History Honors LINDA GORDON History Honors J MARILYN EMERSON GODWIN Political Science Emmi . . . relatives here since 1875 . . . Colo- rado ' s perfect! . . . Weekends at New Hope . . . the girl with the Juliet window and the pit beneath . . . sapphires from Ceylon . . . Horses are better than sailboats any day! . . . Would rather work than study, sleep than work . . . MRS before BA . . . loves Karmann Ghias and Bill. 140 JILL HARRIS History Say not, ' I have found the truth, ' but rather, ' I have found a truth. ' ANTHONY LUTTRELL, Instructor in History JOAN HEIFETZ History Honors CAROL HART History Honors Daumiers, map of Paris, Place Furstenberg on the walls ... I want to go back . . . Turkish calves — from swimming? . . . Trips to New York to work on thesis . . . the joys of book- collecting . . . Bien elevee Southern girl 141 MARY HOLMAN Economics But my marginal efficiency increases with each study break — Oh, they ' re all pretty negative . . . except — Anyone want to go dancing at the Nuthouse? Those Democratic beer parties in N.Y. — Long Island Miss with a fascination for the sea. — Cut Ec Theory again, Sis? Bargain basement fiend. Feminine economist — always a friend. MAGDALENA MARIE HERMAN Psychology LAURENCE D. LAFORE, Professor of History Ct ROBERTA HOTCHKISS Psychology Swarthmore is one place you can be an individ- ual simply by keeping your old enthusiasms and interests. 142 JOAN M. HOWARD Psychology Cre KENNETH N. WALTZ, Associate Professor of Political Science CHARLES E. JACKSON History Honors When in disgrace with fortune and men ' s eyes, I all alone beweep my outcast state, And trouble deaf Heaven with my bootless cries, And look upon myself and curse my fate . . . Dawn and the Blaze . . . Chitchatters . . . Best Minds . . . Toads . . . JHC . . . Santa Lucia — candles in the dark. ROGER N. JOHNSON Psychology 143 CHARLES E. GILBERT, Assistant Professor of Political Science ALAN K. KAPLAN Political Science Honors KAP — Fellow USYers . . . — Israel for a rest — difficulties with deadlines — Co — Par- rish keyboard — Phi Psi A G — greatcoat — See ya a little later — Think I oughta dye my hair? — What this campus needs is two Phoe- nixes a week — Senator Proxmire ' s small busi- ness expert — someday the bench — Binnie LINDA KEE History PETER KATES History Honors Odi et amo. Quare id faciam fortasse requiris. Nescio. Sed fieri senlio et excrucior. 144 ? t JOHN R. KERN History Honors Iowa pennant makes a color door mat, along with wall-to-wall laundry pile. Swarthmore ' s original sidewalk artist. Galloping ghost of soc- cer and track. Snappy dress with the wide col- lection of S.K. shoes and stylish ties. JOSEPH W. CONARD, Professor of Economics t ' I BARBARA KOTZ Economics Honors RICHARD MAX KOCH History Phi Sigma Kappa Treasurer . . . Flying Club . . . L.S.A. . . . Students for Kennedy . . . Track? . . . That ' s the way the cookie crumbles. 145 LILLIAN E. KRAEMER History Honors ELINOR LANGER History Honors ROBERT KRAMER History Honors 146 ■: Xr HARRISON MORRIS WRIGHT, Assistant Professor of History PETER T. T. LIEU Economics MICHAEL S. LESSAC Psycliology Honors Long stretches daily, often characterized, per- haps ambulatory . . . Don ' t worry, its only Thursday . . . doorknob in every closet . . . clever but true . . . traveling iconoclast . . . the great Transcender . . . introspective con- jecturing, loudly producing semblance of as- sociation supported twice more than frequently construed . . . spindrift scudding down the foam flecked seas, darkly . . . 147 GAY LORRAINE Psychology I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky. And all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by. And the wheel ' s kick and the wind ' s song and the white sail ' s shaking. And a grey mist on the sea ' s face, and a grey dawn breaking. John Masefield JOAN LUTTON History The cheeriest member of the J-section quad. ' Lutton-kid . . . WAA boss tell you . . . that far away look . and the friendliest smile on campus is for tennis and other things . . teacher . . . Life is so absurdly funny. but did I gentleness . . Spring . aspiring Joanic JEAN V. LOVELACE Political Science Honors 14.X ■I r . FRANK C. PIERSON, Professor of Economics BJORN MATTHIASSON Economics Iceland ' s contribution to Swarthmore — Phi Sig- ma Kappa — What would you like for breakfast today?— Chronic wink of the right eye — C ' mon SMILE — Nimblest feet on the dance floor — So. what do you say, lady? — Next stop: Grad school USA. but which one? ALLEN B. MAXWELL International Relations Aye, lassie, ' tis Scottish, nae Scotch! — Oh, God, there goes Maxie in his kilt! — Midwest- erner with a journalistic flair — The last of the Bearcats — SEO — DU; editor; often the vice president, but never the president — KWINK prexy — the beat-up old cowboy hat — He voted Democratic — Ready to argue with anyone, over anything, at any time or place. 149 HELEN MANNING HUNTER, Lecturer in Economics THOMAS C. MAYER Political Science Tall, blond idealist with a boyish smile . . . staunch thinking conservative. Dedicated to the ' golden leading string ' of the Law ... a flair for Finance?! What, tious impetuosity — T. me worry? Cau- PAUL J. MEISEL Psychology Four years of football fame. Phi Kappa Psi president. Headed for Clinical Psychology. Small, sincere, and enthusiastic. Interests tend to lie off campus. bob a. McMillan Psychology 150 PHILIP MOMBERGER History Honors ALAN ALTSHULER, Instructor in Political Science THOMAS WILLIAM NEWMAN Psychology Honors THOMAS W. NEUMANN History Honors 151 KATHARINE P. T. NICELY History Honors Major outside activity: Roc creative writing. Planning to go into Byzantine art history, after years in Classical studies; particular inter- est in Sicily — different cultures represented there in the early and medieval periods — must work in a trip there someday! DONALD PETERSON History WENTWORTH OFUATEY-KODJOE Political Science Honors 152 PAUL H. BEIK, Professor of History PETER RAYNER Economics Pete . . . New England conservative from Weston, Mass. . . . Economics Major . . . Kappa Sigma president and social chairman . . . sports enthusiast . . . blasted his way across Europe, using a mature command of French and a get tough policy towards the natives . . . hopes to return in foreign service . . . and then there was Marge. BARBARA PRICE Psychology Honors 153 JOHN SCHUCHARDT Political Sciem e ANN SCRIBNER Psychology Course for the varied program . . . some volleyball and waitressing . . . lots of bridge in Commons . . . Eric T. PAUL SCHULTZ Economics Honors Political Pessimist. Naive Activist, Frustrated Idealist 154 CLAIR WILCOX, Chairman, Department of Economics JANA SRBA History Honors I was a Whig until I wrote my last paper . . . rapid conversationalist in French, Czech, or English . . . roses in a vermouth bottle . . . controversial wit . . . constant battle with that cool, well-tailored image . . . Dolce Vita ANN M. SPIEGELBERG History Honors An impressive confidence . . . the truth known only to her roommates . . . There ' s a horse back home . . . head of the J. Section Power Bloc . . . WSGA President . . . Mortar Board, basketball, Softball, hockey, lighting on LTC . . . that flag-bearer . . . Spieg 155 - «C3 FRANCIS H. TWEED. JR. Psychology Phi Kappa Psi fraternity, ML Proctor, still an athlete at heart, but happiness is king HANS R. STOLL Economics Mover — from ML to Wharton in four years, from PF to varsity soccer, from International Club to suspended animation . . . Where to now?  f% J. ARNOLD RICKS, Lecturer in History 156 JON VAN TIL Political Science Honors Master of time . . . the kind of student for whom Honors was designed . . . Phoenix I elusive: Interracial Tension in Nashville . . . research in Puerto Rico . . . Eight-time JV: soccer, basketball, tennis . . . Varsity tennis or bust . . . Prokofiev . . . Buck Hill . . . WSGA weekend darkhorse . . . kink between Garnet Club and fraternities . . . Does that really happen here? . . . human relations . . . JV MAKOTO WATANABE Political Science-International Relations WILLIAM BROWN, JR., Assistant Professor of Economics V ELEANOR E. WEHMILLER Psychology Ellie . . . boundless energy . . . sports, Folk Festival, chorus, Hamburg show . . . dumb blonde (?) plus fantastic grades . . . ivy bodo . . . everpresent smile . . . always somewhere to go . . . Ellie and Her Boys (singing or other- wise) . . . Miro, Modigliani, Klee . . . idols: Charlie Share, Adlai Stevenson, Doug Worth . . . TLC . . . Great tawny animal LOIS WEITKAMP Psychology Honors I never know what you are thinking. Think! ... I think we are in rats ' alley where the dead men lost their bones. 157 KRISTIN Y. BERGSTROM Biology Natural Sciences SANDRA C. BUTLER Mathematics Loves living overseas and travelling . . . Re- publican! . . . Camels . . . the alarm clock buzzes and she sleeps on . . . Commons till the wee hours . . . that type thing ... I never have time to read a newspaper! TV in Willets . . . Sprechen-Sie Deutsch? . . . time to con- sider everyone ' s problems WILLIAM C. DENISON, Assistant Professor of Botany HARVEY W. CAPLAN Zoology Elwood is a small, coeducational town. 40 miles northwest of Pittsburgh . . . Frustrated Fiddler . . . Wadda-ya-talk! . . . Bach, Bee- thoven, and Beer . . . Need a pinch-hitter, Dun- ny? . . . Dear Abbey . . . I ' m dreaming of a wet Seder . . . t IOP — confidential secretary . . . Med school next year . . . Harv 158 4F GILBERT P. HAIGHT, JR. Associate Professor of Chemistry LAWRENCE C. CHRISTIANSON Mathematics Ability, hustle and strong competitive spirit . . . two year baseball captain . . . Mercury on the basepaths . . . Gee, I ' ve gotta get to know that girl . . . introductory courses . . . math and diversification . . . N.Y. Times quizzes, Bee- thoven, hearts . . . Phi Psi . . . summers at the paper mill . . . Come on you guys . . . Larry ALICE H. CARROLL C lie mist ry I never get any mail! . . . Not a fast girl, a Swift girl . . . Summer research projects with Dr. Haight . . . Practically lives in DuPont. Majoring in Art . . . But I don ' t want to be a career woman . . . BA and MRS in June . . . Art DAVID ROSEN, Assistant Professor of Mathematics 159 OLIVER ABERTH, Instructor in Mathematics RICHARD W. COLES Zoology — Botany Honors Bird-watcher from way back . . . plaid book- bag . . . swimming captain . . . water ballet (?) . . . DU secretary, skit-star, critic . . . Want to see my skunk on top of Martin? . . . mover from the local area . . . Mother does the wash . . . stuffed stuff . . . whistled jazz . . . elevator ' brows . . . available sisters . . . con- tinually giving-up the weed . . . pun-ishment . . . oh, really . . . PETER T. THOMPSON. Instructor in Chemistry LINDA COOLEY Mathematics Honors ... the peculiar incident of the dog in the nighttime. The dog did nothing in the night- time. That is the peculiar incident. i 160 SANDRA DIXON Chemistry What ' s your major this week? — Knows Par- rish from top to bottom — Swarthmore College Balloon Committee and like subsidiary organ- izations — Sherkite — It ' s sort of semi-reason- able — Schutz and Scarlatti — The left is right — church and children — Pre-med by tradition and conviction — I ' d love to have a theolog- ical discussion with a porpoise. Sandy. IRVING E. DAYTON, Assistant Professor of Physics MARGARET ANNE DOEHLERT Mathematics A Friend ' s Friend . . . philosophical discus- sions between Charlie and Henry . . . math by the light of the Moon . . . Must we always discuss chemistry at the dinner table? . . . suits Irene to a tee when she ' s not throwing her for a hoop . . . My ego needs a game of gin . . . THINK ... all things in moderation . . . Margy WILLIAM J. SHEPPARD Instructor in Chemistry 161 ■ ' DAVID F. FITCHETT Zoology Strong, silent stalwart of football and lacrosse teams until knee trouble forced him out of action ... up the path from rowdy C-section freshman to proctor as senior . . . ruler of Delta Upsilon ' s senior committee . . . Delaware nationalist . . . future medic ... I think I ' ll get a date next weekend . . . Fitch CRAIG D. EDWARDS Zoology W. C. ELMORE, Chairman, Department of Physics 162 ' .iurfftiLifc: ! FREDERICK J. FUGLISTER Mathematics Honors Eric . . . four years of JV soccer and lacrosse perseverance . . . Fugey . . . quietly infallible . . . popular hearts player ... his rare Persian tapestry LINDA L. FUSON Biology Mathematical shortcuts as a liberal arts Bio major. Functional and enthusiastic . . . Why not go barefoot in Harvard Square? Puns and sklonchy-type words. I ' ve got three papers due last year! Cheery grin. I warsh so often be- cause I ' m cleaner than anyone else. Usual habitat — bed, sleeping — or studying? You lack appreciation! JAMES H. LOEHLIN, Instructor of Chemistry VIRGINIA W. GARRETT Math Honors Guess what — I got some sleep last night . . . Ask me — I might tell you (usually she won ' t) . . . sexy redhead . . . Won ' t somebody come paint the water tower with me? . . . tall and well dressed . . . Let ' s leap on Alice . . . But he has the nicest blue eyes! . . . What happened to the Illinois game? . . . Ginger DOROTHY F. GARRISON Physics Honors Long hours in Martin for all sorts of reasons — Simon Legree about nightly exercises — I want to waste time productively — Has plans to be- come biologist as result of summer in North Woods! Tries to be perpetual study machine — My family wants to glamorize me. — Mid- westerner — Let ' s keep our recreation unintel- lectual. PHILIP W. CARRUTH, Associate Professor of Mathematics ROBERT GELARDIN Zoology 1 — , A A JS .$ ' • ' ■ . - ' . . DANIEL K. HARTLINE Physics Honors Half of H H . . . Member of That Group . . . ( atalyst for Outing ( lub ' s New Look . . . mud, mud, glorious (cave) mud . . . Dignity with an explosive sense of humor . . . aims to put precision in biology, but modest enough not to believe he can clean up the field in a year. BARBARA HALL Mathematu s Honors Ask Barb; she ' ll do it ... a true follower of Juliette Low . . . Every time I open my foot I put my mouth in it . . . Bogs . . . the Russians were in for some surprises . . . Sherkite . . . We saw my first yellow-billed cuckoo today! . . . PLEASE don ' t hit me . . . Janigro does NOT wear sneakers to church . . . 164 BEVERLY BURT HENDERSON Physics Honors Are there seconds on meat? . . . dropped math ' cause wasn ' t practical . . . most efficient sweater-knitting cook in physics . . . Everyone should work steamtables once. . . . Oh, fish- cakes! . . . Education courses are all a matter of common sense . . . Ions ions . . . Fold-danc- ing .. . quilt . . . What a goon!!! DUNCAN GRAHAM FOSTER Associate Professor of Chemistry DAVID W. HENDERSON Mathematics Honors Strains of the Iowa Corn Song — Switched from physics which was too practical — Twice as many beauty spots as Marilyn Monroe — co- cooker of the snickerdoodle — meticulous lab worker — great thinker — intensely enthusiastic about head playing, distance running, dancing, Fermat ' s principle, SOC trips, tuba playing, mathematical counterexamples, and Bev. ROBERT DAVID HOLLENBERG Biology Honors Martin dweller. Chaired Art Films and Pre- Med Committees, also on Movie and Library Committees. Interests: many. Plans to get med- ical degree. 165 Kjfe JAMES E. HUDSON Ph vsics Mi ili. M k ELIZABETH J. HUNTLEY Physics Prettier half of H H . . . one of That Group . . . Another biologist sneaking past the physics department . . . She ' ll still he 19 at 60 . . . I ' ll never get this cave mud out of my hair. . . . Basic premise: Biophysics and six children are NOT incompatible. ROMAN JACKIW Physics Honors A. LAUNCE J. FLEMISTER, JR., Associate Professor of Zoology 166 LUZERN G. LIVINGSTON Associate Professor of Botany _£ 7 JANET JONES Chemistry Honors Life at its informal best. Southern Republican with a vengeance. Equilibrium: constant. At- tendent to the good ways — the Preps, the math libe, the back libe. Balloon committee and others — dealer in statuary. Sherkite elder. In- organic and potted Petunia ESGC — SDDTS — Sure — May ' s known. MYRA L. JORDAN Mathematics Honors MARK A. HEALD, Assistant Professor of Physics 167 WALTER B. KEIGHTON, JR. Chairman, Department of Chemistry PATRICIA CLARK KENSCHAFT Mathematics Honors Mathematics major . . . enjoys singing . . . Something can be done for American high schools! ... six education courses as extras . . . enthusiastic . . . amateur philosopher . . . has a car . . . two rings on her finger i« ? : - JT KATE KILLEBREW Biology Martin mole reformed — Biology by trade, Fine Arts at heart — sporadic artist and perennial URP-let — enthusiastic wood chopper and first class scatterbrain . . . Biology, Beethoven, and Bacardi SARAH CROSSETT KIBBEE Biology Honors The trestle — Mephistopheles — the triumvirate — 125 students in Bio 2 and you — Dr. En- ders, March 1958 — Math libe native — haifisch — but that knife is my key! — May 28th — Crum Guide First Order— Sherry 168 ROBERT H. KOEHL Zoology Okole. Sweet thing. Great freshman physics student until toe got better. Spectacular but erratic drinker. Cramming down to a fine art by junior year. JV basketball ' s reluctant gun- ner. Pre-med with B.S. Dominated D.U. poli- tics by becoming athletic chairman. Champion field zoology owl-pellet collector. ROBERT EUWEMA, Instructor of Physics I PAUL KREISS Biology Honors The only thing of interest is the self. This can be explored, defined, played with variations. Yet in the end it becomes dull and those of others must be noticed. But others can hurt. The self may be damaged, at least for a while, and hurt. What can one do? SUSAN KREPS Botany Flowers and more flowers. 169 IRIS LANG Mathematics Honors ROBERT S. LANDE Mathematics MILAN W. GARRETT. Professor of Physics 170 JEAN A. LENNOX Chemistry PHILIP O. LITTLEFORD Chemistry ■ k ROBERT G. BEARD, Instructor of Biology DIANE R. MARSHALL Biology Biology is all around us — don ' t step on that roach; he has the most marvelous dorsoven- tral coloration . . . The most platonic D.U. on campus . . . Loses weight by leaps and bounds . . . Wild summers . . . Dining room vulture. Have some tea with your lemon? back to Old Virginny I get idears! Carry me Maybe I ' ll work for my P.H.T. ... Sly cracks from behind that shy smile . . . When ' s my birthday? HULBERT MARTIN Chemistry !t ' J 171 JOHN R. MERRILL Physics Honors September switch from Mathematics but it ' s all in the family — Phi Sig gavel holder with a heavy hand — Singer ' s — Chorus — family man. RANDOLPH G. MOORE Mathematics Personality, popularity, capacity for enjoyment . . . wall-shaking laughter . . . South Sea islander . . . summer surfing . . . wahines . . . It ' s always WSGA weekend . . . DL1 presi- dent . . . barefoot cross-country competitor . . . anybody wanna referee . . . sunrise skating . . . shirt-sleeves in the snow . . . Gotta iron a shirt . . . KWINK entrepreneur . . . campus voice of enlightened conservatism . . . Council Veep . . . business school . . . Rand . . . Guava. ROBERT K. ENDERS Chairman, Department of Biology 172 ARTHUR H. OKAZAKI Zoology Can-bender supreme . . . intimate friend of the ubiquitous Sgt. Zebley . . . transient double chin plus permanent pot . . . did basic research on nocturnal weed growth (Vertol grant) . . . likes amusement parks — especially the carou- sel .. . has evidence that he ' s 26 . . . Bodo EDWARD A. FEHNEL Associate Professor of Chemistry k i . t Am HEINRICH BRINKMANN, Chairman, Department of Mathematics 173 RICHARD H. QUARLES Chemistry Quiet, unassuming, and likeable . . . remarkable academic record . . . intelligence and enviable concentration . . . NCAA lacrosse cover sub- ject . . . co-captain of the lacrosse team . . . three years of varsity soccer . . . Orioles and Colts . . . Phi Kappa Psi treasurer . . . Med school or biochemistry? ... I don ' t want to just develop a new paint. . . . Ricardo . . . Dick MARGRETTA ANN REED Chemistry Medical ethics and ethical medics . . . What does he do in that big house all alone by him- self? ... Is it Friday? . . . for crying and left- handed tears . . . Man is a thinking reed. . . . WJC — some things are more relative than others . . . pun supreme . . . that ' s a hospital joke . . . member of students for the destructive distillation of Thorn Smith . . . Greta YALE RICHMOND Mathematics Phi Sig Prexy . . . smiling face who served you breakfast . . . hates Sundays without Ilene . . . loves Saturdays with Ilene . . . idealistic about love, politics and medicine . . . Phi Sig annual social chairman . . . broad generalizations . . . tours for the admissions office . . . Dr. Bowie ' s helper . . . serenade ' s for Ilene. — ALBURT ROSENBERG, Assistant Professor of Natural St ient e 174 EDGAR R. MULLINS, JR., Assistant Professor of Matliematics ROBERT S. ROWLEY Mathematics Honors . . . majors in extra-curricula . . . Nixon sup- porter who forgot to vote . . . KE President . . . shortest football career on record . . . Ever since the Dodgers left Brooklyn ... ... pre- fers water to beer . . . 200 pound plus anchor man on wrestling team . . . known for his sage judgement . . . R-Way breakfasts . . . many friends . . . Rolls JUNE LYNN ROTHMAN Zoology Honors The bundle of fluff that embodies dedication. Ten hours of studying today, and I didn ' t learn a thing! A Martin-dweller. Planaria — the most compatible roommates I have ever known. Only feminine member of the mid- night R-Way diner crowd. Molecular biologist with a twinkle — ■ Juniper. FRANK HOLDEN, Instructor and Research Assistant in Astronomy 175 LAWRENCE C. SHEPLEY Physics Honors ELEANOR SHEILA SCHUKER Biology Humanistic scientist ... or scientific humanist? . . . reliable bass fiddle, occasional guitar . . . sporadic tennis racquet . . . medical school . . . Honors, sort of . . . poetry on a snowy night . . . Three minutes for supper and five if the conversation ' s good! . . . lots of energy, no time to sleep ... a sympathetic ear and under- standing heart . . . Ellie KENNETH of Zoology S. RAWSON, Assistant Professor 176 KAREN E. SIMPSON Zoology Power magnate of the SEO . . . the day begins promptly at noon . . . At least her brother ' s cute. . . . midnight sessions with a cookbook . . . amAZing . . . my medieval shoes . . . down to a conservative ten cups of coffee a day . . . one of those nasty switchboard operators STEVENS HECKSCHER, Instructor in Mathematics ANN SINGLETERRY Mathematics Honors Madrigals at Swing ' s . . . Mozart in Bond Math at midnight . . . sandals in the rain 177 CHARLES E. SNYGG Chemistry Snarlie Chigger . . . seven roommates in two years . . . wild and woolly C section to ML-4 (Is this the proctor ' s room?) . . . engineer plus Dr. Haight yields chemist . . . P.T.T. ' s Activity Boys . . . Science Integration; ques.: Are you majoring in Chem, Math, or Physics? ; ans.: Cross country (Hey, I could have lettered at F. M.!) -M f V 1 STEPHEN H. VESSEY Zoology Dining room promotion from bus boy to door man . . . perpetual aches and pains in cross- country and track earned him the nickname Gramps . . . NY sports fan — Giants, Rang- ers, Yankees forever . . . inspired by trapping field mice in Field Zoo . . . pine trees . . . Steve WILLIAM K. STELL Zoology Honors The original wild man . . . Turk tonking the honk in vivo . . . Swarthmore Swinger . . . not so smartin Martin . . . Commoner and straight- arrow Swede with a little Scotch . . . But you ' re always so serious! . . . The C.A. will not ap- prove . . . Punning Procrastinator with a cap- ital BS, he waits PETER VAN DE KAMP, Chairman, Depart- ment of Astronomy and Director of Spronl Observatory 178 MARC L. WALDBAUM Biology NORMAN A. MEINKOTH, Associate Professor of Zoology GEORGE M. WILSON Mathematics 179 GORDON A. WYSE Zoology Swingin ' scruft . . . old family . . . forty-five . . . affinity for small mammals — Panamanian, Coloradan. Feminine . . . Andy ' s Club 1,2... Somerville 3 . . . Senitity 4 . . . Lonesome traveler . . . death of the Bomb . . . TAO . . . tweedy evil grin . . . Lady, I said ' no bid ' ! . . . Everything will be all right, but don ' t ask me when. . . . G. SAMUEL T. CARPENTER. Chairman, Department of Civil Engi- neering ENGINEERING NEIL AUSTRIAN Civil Engineering Neil; Captain of Lew ' s II; All East small col- lege end; one-third of the mother midfield; Mr. DU from Nuette to President; Hey Merritt — It ' s R-way time!; Senior Proctor — A section ' s nemesis: still thinks Swarthmore ' s a country club; Big mover on campus and off! CHARLES W. NEWLIN, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering RALPH C. BINFORD, JR. Mechanical Engineering CREIGHTON R. BOOTH Electrical Engineering High school lady killer from Middleburg, Vir- ginia . . . Kwink President . . . DU . . . Wres- tling Manager . . . P.M.O.Y.F. . . . Many an hour on or under Parilla . . . J.D. ' s boy in E.E. course . . . dislike of brand X ... no sweat HOWARD M. JENKINS, Chairman, Department of Electrical Engineering ■t nsm WILLIAM E. BROWNFIELD Civil Engineering From F Section to F Section in four short years . . . perpetual Camera Club treasurer . . . 90% property of the Civil Engineering Dept. . . . My chief ability is durability . . . It ' ll be a long one tonight . . . Bill BERNARD MORRILL, Chairman, Department of Me- chanical Engineering 181 DAVID H. FELTER Civil Engineering Four fast and furious years in lacrosse cage with sore shoulder to show for it; C section ' s frosh Turkey; Are 8:00 classes necessary?; Bridge or gin anyone?; Sometimes Bearcat (three practices per season); To dinner at seven — Catherine ' s and Mildred ' s nemesis; Phi Psi latecomer, Tall, dark, handsome; Blonde female following; The Felts HERBERT McGLASHAN JUNEAU Electrical Engineering An inmate of Hicks — one of those Electrical Engineers. Interests — the adult space west- ern, philosophy, and psychology. First I won- dered why I was and then I wondered who. A smiling alien from Minnesota. Mac HUGH P. NESBITT Mechanical Engineering Scott B. Lilly Scholarship, 1960-1961; Varsity lacrosse and football; Vice-President of Kappa Sigma. I am a capitalist, but some of my best friends are Democrats. CARL BARUS, Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering 182 RANDOLPH RENDA. Assistant Professor of Mechan- ical Engineering - LILLIAN L. RIES Engineering Sciences Honors Engineer of budgets. I don ' t really belong to that many organizations. I ' m just in charge of all of them. Fraternity brother; left wing con- servative. Scooter rides to Bartol; dinners at South China. Elm Street Girl ' s Club. Deutsch- land ho! My name is not Lil! R. WILLIS POST Electrical Engineering Kappa Sigma — KWINK — One of lightest soc- cer fullbacks in country — Also tried basketball, tennis and lacrosse with little success — Who needs to study around here. — Those darn Engineering labs — Grad School? CLARK P. MANGELSDORF. Assistant Professor of Civil Engi- neering 183 JOHN D. McCRUMM. Professor of Engineering JOY YEE JOSEPH SHIN Engineering Sciences Honors A physicist in Engineering ... six girls on his scooter . . . radioactive summer at Bartol . . . repairman of everything on campus . . . special investigator for Budget committee . . . faith in mankind . . . It ' s just common sense. . . . Joe TOSHIYUKI FUKUSHIMA, Instructor in Mechanical Engineering : PAUL C. WASER Met hanical Engineerin g There ' s a schooner in the offing, with her topsails shot with fire, and my heart has gone aboard her for the Island of Desire. . . . Hovey yachting, outing, missiles, and studies . search for an ideal ' ' system of units 184 WILLIAM A. WELSH, JR. Civil Engineering Delta Upsilon social fraternity and Sigma Tau Honorary Fraternity . . . interested in athletics: 4 years of football, 3 years of track, and basket- ball manager M 1 M. JOSEPH WILLIS, Associate Professor of Civil Engi- neering JOHN B. WHEELER Civil Engineering You, an engineer? . . . Got to get some more liberal arts . . . Dance? Let ' s go . . . Life without girls? Impossible. Light bridge to con- trol of Clothier . . . likes to run around on the rafters of Somerville . . . Lambretta bomber f ■ m DAVID L. BOWLER, Assistant Professor of Electrical Engineering 185 Seniors not pictured DAVID H. ASHWORTH, Economics MERRITT W. HALLOWELL. Economics EDWARD L. LEBEL, JR., History Faculty members not pictured HENRY ABRAHAM, Lecturer in Political Science ALICE BRODHEAD, Lecturer in Psychology and Education FREDERIC S. KLEES, Associate Professor of English JACOB NACHMIAS, Assistant Professor of Psychology NORMAN D. PALMER, Visiting Lecturer in Political Science PHILIP PRAGER, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering ANTHONY QUINTON, Visiting Professor of Philosophy DAVID G. SMITH, Assistant Professor of Political Science NEAL A. WEBER, Professor of Zoology VIRGINIA RATH, Associate Professor of Physical Education for Women ■ ' ' ■ ' ■■ ' ■■■■ ■ ' ■■■ •■ ■ ' -™ WILLIS J. STETSON, Associate Professor of Physical Education for Men and Director of Athletics LEWIS H. ELVERSON. Associate Professor of Physical Education for Men 186 AILYN TERADA, Instructor in Physical Education for Women, and Holly the Collie ELEANOR K. HESS, Assistant Professor of Physical Education for Women ROBERT H. DUNN, Associate Professor of Physical Education for Men IRENE MOLL. Associate Professor of Physical Education for Women E. J. FAULKNER, Associate Professor of Physical Education for Men 187 Swarthmore defies the single definition. The visitor ' s conclusion bears little resemblance to the student ' s experience. We ourselves disagree as to the college ' s attributes. Parrish may suggest a majestic southern mansion or a hideous monstrosity. The social life may be non-existent or it may be too demanding. The sports program may seem to lack sufficient status and spirit, or it may be deemed entirely superfluous. Who can say which is ' ' right? Swarthmore is to the individual, not to the mass. One thing we do know, however — that it has been hectic! We won- der how we ' ve survived it all. It ' s been Hell, it ' s been a nightmare, it ' s been aggravating, it ' s been frustrating. But it ' s also been Heaven, reve- lation, the peculiar joy of intellectual stimulation and intensity. At times we ' ve loved it. At times we ' ve hated it. Most of the time we weren ' t quite sure. One night we ' d beam and slam our books on the table and shout, Brother, Swarthmore, I ' ve got you beat! Next day we ' d be saying, O.K. Swarthmore, I give up again. But somehow we ' ve followed the crests and troughs for four years and in the end are glad for them both. If it had been easy — if we ' d witnessed no strug- gle — we would have felt cheated. But now it ' s over. What ' s next? Some of us know precisely, some have ideas, some still wonder. Once more, however, we can agree on some- thing. There is much to be done. Our preparation to meet the demands of the world has been a well-grounded beginning. To fail to use and build on this framework is to deny our own potential and forget our mission. That which lies before us is everything. Next, for all, is the possibility of anything. you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be. Now put the foundations under them. — Henry David Thoreau, Walden Diana Drake 188 .: .,.- ■,.;■ M w v . .— : ; ' ■M KATHLEEN MALLEY Activities DOROTHY PERRY Women ' s Sports JOHN NESBITT Sports MONICA PANNWITT Managing Editor SUSAN WOMER Art and Layout STEVEN IZENOUR MARILYN TINDALL DIANA DRAKE BONNY COCHRAN ANNE WELSH LARRY COOPER Photography Seniors Copy Circulation Business Manager Publicity THE EDITORS 1961 MALCyON THE SENIOR BOARD Paul Meisel Sally Pritchard Jon Van Til THE STAFF Activities Rose Marie Bentele, John Bickford, Lynne Fleming. Carol Fox, Shirley Law, Philip Morehead, Susan Ware. Rosemary Werner Advertising, Circulation and Publicity Barbara Allen, Martha Anderson, Jane Brand, Lucille Coberly, Richard Coles, Ben Cooper, J. Evan Deardorff, Mary Kay Dewees, Linda Fulton, Virginia Garrett, James Gezork, Barbara Hallock, Paul Hannum, Holly Humphrey, Suzanne Iverson, Katherine Kertesz, Robert Lehman, Richard Lubarsky, Joan Lutton. Sheila Maginniss, Randolph Moore. William Murray, John Nesbitt, Deborah O ' Brien, David Peterson, Maria Russell, John Schuchardt, Deborah Smith, Ann Spiegelberg, Terry Spruance, Richard Steinberg, Belinda Streit, Michael Taylor, Jean Thompson, Carl Uehlein Art and Layout Marcella Arnow, Anne Cochran, Barbara Ravenell Copy Carol Beattie, J. Evan Deardorff, Stephen Kirschenbaum Fraternities Douglas Broome, Jonathan Eddy, Larry Cooper Photography William Brownfield, Terese Loeb, Walter Pinkus, Paul Shield. Robert Tinker Seniors Alison Archibald, Marcella Arnow, Carol Beattie, Sandra Dixon, Helen Garrison, Suzanne Iverson, Margaret Pickett. Barbara Ravenell Sports Richard Bechtel, Peter Brandt Women ' s Sports Diana Judd, Gerilyn Kelly, Susan Lovell, Elinor Lee Professional Credits Robert Corsner, The Phillips Studio, 1523 Walnut, Philadelphia: senior portraits Harry Hladky, 522 Market, Chester: athletic team portraits Philip Mayer, 215 College, Swarthmore: campus scenes, pp 3-8 Carl Peterson, local representative, Wm. J. Keller Inc., Buffalo, N. Y., publishers 191 Index of Seniors Abraham, Jennifer 110 Aizupitis, Peter P. ......... . 132 Ashworth. David H. 186 Austrian, Neil R. 180 Ayerst, Barbara L. 110 Back, Marilyn A. 132 Bajars, Maiia 111 Bannerman. Susan C. 112 Barrett, Myra D. 132 Barron. Jeanne M. .112 Bergstrom, Kristin Y. . 158 Binford, Ralph C. Jr. 180 Blocksom, Faith A. 113 Booth, R. Creighton 181 Brownfield. William E. 181 Buck. Fred C. 134 Butler, Sandra C. 158 Caplan, Harvey W. 158 Cardillo, Carmine J. 134 Carroll, Alice H. 159 Champlin. John R 134 Christianson, Lawrence C. 159 Churchill, Hugo M. 135 Clements, Hope Latta 114 Cochran, Bonny M. 135 Cohen. Jerome S. 135 Coleman. Wendy 114 Coles, Richard W. 160 Conboy, Sheila L. 114 Cooley, Linda H. 160 Corbit, John D. 136 Davidson, Stephen M. 136 Davis. Judith E. 115 Denny. Laura L. 136 DePauw, Linda Grant 137 Dickey, Walter M. 137 Dixon, Sandra D. 161 Dobbin, Rosanne T. 137 Doehlert, Margaret R. 161 Ebersole. Peter D. 138 Edwards, D. Craig 162 Euben, J. Peter 115 Evans. Richard R. 138 Faust, Dorothy C. 138 Feingold, Roxannc 115 Feldhusen, Herman, III 139 Felter. David H. 182 Ferber, Ellen L. 116 Fezandie, Pamela B. 116 Fitchett. David F. 162 Fleisig. Heywood W. 139 Fritts. Martha K. 117 Fuglister. Frederick J. 162 Fuson, Linda L. 163 Galloway, Jonathan F. 139 Garrett, Virginia W. 163 Garrison, Dorothy F. 163 Gayle, Gretchen 140 Geil. W. Jean 118 Gelardin, Robert R. 164 Gessner, Peter D 118 Godwin, Marilyn Emerson 140 Goldberg, Carolyn 118 Gordon, I. Linda 140 Hall, Barbara C. 164 Hallowell. Merritt W. 186 Harris, Jill L. 141 Hart, Carol A. 141 Hartline, Daniel K. 164 Hay, Jane G. 119 Heifetz, Joan 141 Henderson, Beverly Burt 165 Henderson, David W. 165 Herman, Magdalena M. 142 Hollenberg, Robert D. 165 Holman, Mary E. ,142 Hotchkiss, Roberta A. 142 Howard, Joan deM. 143 Howard, Susan D. 119 Hudson, James E. 166 Huntley, Elizabeth J. 166 Jackiw, Roman W. 166 Jackson, Charles E. 143 Jacobson, Mary L. . . . .120 Johnson, Roger N. .143 Jones, Janet G. 167 Jordan. Myra L. . . . . 167 Juneau, Herbert M 182 Kaplan, Alan K 144 Kates, Peter 144 Kee. Linda M. 144 Kenschaft, Patricia C 168 Kern, John R. 145 Kibbee, Sarah C 168 Killebrew, Kate 168 Koch, Richard M ....... 145 Koehl, Robert H. 169 Kotz, Barbara 145 Kraemer, Lillian E. 146 Kramer, Robert 146 Kreiss, Paul 169 Kreps, Susan E 169 Kresh, David B. G. 120 Ladd, Elizabeth S 121 Lande, Robert S. 170 Lang, Iris 170 Langdale, Cecily A 122 Langer, Elinor D. 146 Lebel, L. Edward, Jr. .186 Lennox, Jean A. 170 Lessac, Michael S. ... 147 Lieu, Peter T. T. 147 Liff, S. Randi 122 Littleford, Philip O. 171 Lorraine, Gay 148 Lovelace, Jean V. 148 Lutton, Joan M 148 Maginnis, Sheila H. .122 Marshall, Diane R. 171 Martin, Hulbert 171 Matthiasson, Bjorn 149 Maxwell, Allen B. 149 Mayer, Thomas C 149 McMillan, Robert A. 150 192 Meigs, Joanna K 123 Meisel, Paul J 15 ° Mercer, Ann T. Merrill. John R 172 Momberger, Philip 150 Moore, Randolph G. 172 Mueller, Sabina I 24 Myers, Patricia E Nesbitt, Hugh P I 82 Neumann, Thomas W 151 Newman, Thomas W 151 Nicely, Katharine P. T 151 Ofuatey-Kodjoe, Wentworth B 152 Okazaki, Arthur H 173 Oltman, Sidney S I 24 Patten, Faith H I 25 Peterson. David H I 24 Peterson, Donald 15 2 Post, R. Willis 183 Price, Barbara J 153 Pritchard, Sally I 25 Pustmueller, Ann 1 2 6 Quarles, Richard H 174 Rayner, Peter N 154 Reed. Margretta A 174 Richmond, Yale 174 Ries, Lillian L 183 Rothman, June 175 Rowley, Robert S 175 Samuels, Freya 1 2 6 Schambelan, Isaac H 1 2 7 Schuchardt, John 154 Schuker, Eleanor S : ... 176 Schultz, T. Paul 154 Scribner, Ann 155 Shepley, Lawrence C 176 Shields, Carolyn P 1 2 8 Shin, Joy-Yee J 184 Simpson, Karen 177 Singleterry, Ann 177 Smith, Dorothy P 1 2 8 Smith, Sandra J 1 2 8 Snygg, Charles E. 177 Spiegelberg, Ann M 155 Srba, Jana M 155 Stell, William K 178 Stoll, Hans R 156 Streit, Belinda A 1 2 9 Tappen, Henry C 1 2 9 Taylor, Judith 130 Todd, E. Louise 130 Tweed, Francis H., Jr 156 Van Til. Jon 156 Vessey. Stephen H 178 Waldbaum, Marc L 179 Waser, Paul C 184 Watanabe, Makoto 157 Wehmiller, Eleanor E 157 Weitkamp, Lois A. 157 Welsh, Vvilliam A., Jr 185 Westgate, Michael D. M. 131 Wheeler, John B. 185 Wilson, George M 179 Wyse, Gordon A 179 Index of Faculty and Administration Aberth, Oliver 160 Abraham, Henry 186 Albertson, Mary 139 Altshuler, Alan 151 Asch. Solomon, E. 140 Asensio, Elisa 131 Avery, George C Ill Barker, Stephen F 129 Barr, Robert, Jr 109 Barus, Carl 182 Beard, Robert G 171 Beardsley, Monroe C 118 Becker, George J 119 Beik, Paul H. 153 Bowler, David L. 185 Brandt, Richard B 127 Brinkmann, Heinrich 173 Brodhead, Alice 186 Brown, Stephen J. 117 Brown. William, Jr 157 Carpenter, Samuel T 180 Carruth, Philip W 164 Cobbs, Susan P 107 Cohn, Hilde D 113 Conard, Joseph W 145 Coolidge, John S 130 Cowden, David 129 Cratsley, Edward K 107 Dayton. Irving E 161 Denison, William C 158 Dunn. Robert H 187 Elmore, W. C 162 Elverson, Lewis H 186 Enders, Robert K 172 Euwema, Robert N 169 Faulkner, E. J 187 Fehnel, Edward A 173 Field, James A.. Jr 133 Flemister, Launce J., Jr 166 Foster, Duncan Graham 165 Fukushima, Toshiyuki 184 Garrett, Milan W 170 Gilbert, Charles E 144 Gleitman, Henry 138 Grover, Frederic J. 119 Haight, Gilbert P., Jr .159 Heald, Mark A 167 Heckscher, Stevens 177 Hess, Eleanor K. 187 Hoffman, Daniel G 121 Holden, Frank 175 Hunter, Helen Manning 150 Hynes, Samuel L. 117 Jenkins, Howard Malcolm 181 Keighton, Walter B., Jr. 168 193 Klees, Frederic S. 186 Lafore, Laurence 142 Lang. Olga 115 Lange. Barbara Pearson 1 3 1 Livingston, Luzern G. 167 Loehlin. James H. 163 Luttrell, Anthony 141 MacLaren, Margaret 109 Mangelsdorf, Clark 183 March. Harold M. 113 Mautner. Franz H. 116 McCrumm. John D. 184 Meiggs, Russell 111 Meinkoth. Norman A. 179 Moll. Irene 187 Moore. John M. 10 8 Morrill. Bernard 181 Mullins, Edgar R.. Jr. 175 Nachmias, Jacob 186 Newlin, Charles W. ISO North. Helen F. 126 Ostwald, Martin 114 Overstreet, Gene Donald 134 Palmer. Norman D. 186 Parns. Arthur 123 Pennock, J. Roland 133 Perkins. Jean Ashmead 122 Persichetti, Dorothea 12? Philips, Edith 128 Pierson, Frank C. 149 Prager, Philip C. 186 Prentice. William C. H. 107 Quinton, Anthony 186 Rath. Virginia 186 Rawson, Kenneth S. 176 Renda. Randolph 183 Rhys, Hedley 120 Ricks. Arnold 156 Rosen, David 159 Rosenburg, Alburt 174 Rosenburg. Justus 125 Shaffer, Jerome 110 Shane, Joseph B. 109 Schirokauer, Conrad M. 135 Sheppard, William J. 161 Smith. Courtney 106 Smith, David G. 186 Sorber, James D. 118 Spies, Claudio 124 Stetson, Willis J. ... 186 Stott, Gilmore 108 Swing. Peter Graham 121 Terada, Ailyn 187 Fhompson, Peter T. 160 Tolles, Frederick B. 136 Urban, Percy Linwood. Jr. .112 van de Kamp. Peter 178 Walker, Robert M. . 120 Wallaeh, Hans 132 Waltz, Kenneth N. 143 Weber, Neal A. 186 Weatherford, Willis D. 137 Whitaker, Jeanne Fheis 119 Wilcox, Clair 155 Williams, John W. .112 Willis, M. Joseph 185 Wright, Elizabeth Cox 116 Wright. Harrison Morris 147 Zvverdling, Alex 123 194 Phone Service 24 Hours Around the Clock Market 7-8450 PIERCE REESE, Inc. Just Consistently Fine MEATS - POULTRY - PROVISIONS FROSTED FOODS FOOD FOR HOME FREEZERS AT QUANTITY DISCOUNT PRICES 130-132 N. Delaware Avenue Phila. 6, Pa. STEVENSON 7-9000 PRIVATE PHONE EXCHANGE t lLDEN WHITE, INC. ESTABLISHED 1 B74 Poulbiu - (fjame. - s )£a )ooa - ijiozzn }ooai. 1224 NORTH 9TH STREET Philadelphia 22. Pa. GEORGE B. VROOMAN, Inc. WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS Quality Canned Foods Philadelphia 47, Pennsylvania VENTURI INC. FRESH and FROZEN FRUITS and VEGETABLES Philadelphia, Pennsylvania D. PATRICK WELSH REAL ESTATE INSURANCE 4Q9 Dartmouth Ave. SWARTHMOSE, PA. Phone: KInoswood 3-DS6D BARCLAY WHITE CO. INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTIONAL BUILDERS SI NCE 1913 195 EMBER ' S wishes the Class of ' 61 Success Prosperity Happiness COMPLIMENTS H. D. SIPLER ' 33 MARRA ' S RESTAURANT PIZZERIA 313 Baltimore Avenue Springfield COMPLETE CARRY-OUT SERVICE KI 3-1202 REMEMBER! THE FOUNTAIN 3 South Chester Road ISABEL ' S CURIO SHOP 17i 2 South Chester Road, Swarthmore 111 ISABEL P. i ASEMENT ESIDE ANK. UN TING, Prop. 19 6 New and Used Cars PORTER H. WAITE, INC. Swarthmore, Penna. Sales KI 3-1250 Phones Service KI 3-1251 Wearing Apparel for Both Ed and Co-Ed Swarthmore Toggery Shop, Inc. 8 PARK AVENUE Men, Women, Boys ' Wear KI 3-0240 Best Wishes from MICHAELS COLLEGE PHARMACY 197 KI 3-2513 Ruth D. Hartley Dress Shop 104 Park Ave. Swarthmore, Pa. Junior and Misses ' Dresses Sportswear and Party Dresses Compliments of SWARTHMORE PRINTING COMPANY Printers of the PHOENIX 407 Dartmouth Avenue HARRY E. OPPENLANDER Hi-Fi Studio 17i 2 South Chester Road Swarthmore, Pa. Componets Expert Service BEST WISHES CATHERMAN ' S DRUG STORE 198 CAKE BOX BAKERY Catering to College functions since 1947 THEATRE SQUARE Kl 3-3243 a snack or a meal THE SPOT 7 u |l i N —when shopping —after the concert —for Sunday supper —anytime 7 a.m. ' till 1 a.m. PROVIDENT TRADESMEN BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Delaware County Offices SWARTHMORE Chester Road Rutgers Ave. MEDIA State Street South Ave. SPRINGFIELD Saxer Avenue Hart Lane NETHER PROVIDENCE Beatty Road Baltimore Pike (Drive- In) MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP. 199 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, Po. — 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 Santa 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. $f$ Jenkintown • Pennsylvania Standard Pressed Sleel Co. • The Cleveland Cap Screw Co. • Columbia Steel Equipment Co. • National Machine Products Co. • Nutt-Shel Co. • SPS Western • Standco Canada ltd. • Unbrako Socket Screw Co., ltd. 200 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 3 A, 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. 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. This book printed by VELVATONE, a special process graphic printing. Sole producers: Wm. J. Keller Inc., BufTa No other printing firm is authorized to use the Velvatone , , - J_ ■ , t r , . , . . -_,. ' . ,-.i l (;- «- ' -r -. ... .!..■!. ;.-■ ., i. .. j - - r ■ . ■ r « ■ . ,...• - i •■ - -■ r - - -t-J ' - i-r.i. «. ■....I I- - - - - ....- .... ..-,,.. ! -L..-1   •  .! .-;;. r .. !,.-- •■ ■,•--. . 1 ..  J , J l- t l f 1-1 ■ • ..- - - ■ i . - - t I I ■ r i r - «•---•-- t.-i. it-i - j. i.|-  --t -(; ; «  c« J - ' ' -•... . . •  1 « . - , l. .if t  i ' Cii.-t _- . x - .:....- - ■ . ! -v.... .--,,«,,. w , .f. . f  ..«.- • n  ( fc t •....:. , t ■ I J -  .  • L - i f - • 1 -• 1 • • • i - ■-.•...-.- : t . ,,.,...:.. - - - .. B ■ ■ - I - ■ - - . E i   ■ r . I - i • t .■ ' =.. t ■..-.. ' r • j fl -.- «. - fl - - i- . - - - ..-- .,....,... - ■ ■.i it:.--... l . .. . -, ; fc ■ i . ,. . . . t  i - = ■. ...... L.-.i-. ..-. .,. . , , .._„,..,,..  ,.«... ■,. ,• j - • .... .--.


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

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

1958

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962

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

1963

Swarthmore College - Halcyon Yearbook (Swarthmore, PA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964


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