f^ ai,*. ■•>_ vt' JH,^' «*> ..,j*S' !■•» «•"$ aa'.'ii^ «.**'' «% «<$ >"

i^ -^ .^ -■ -•- ■■ -

mi'* y4%

)V ' ■!>'

1^. .•.I! •? '<ri'f «... .

m^ T»,% -=!'-* •,>■ >> iflf 1

,% ^if arfi;^ rf, )% ;% ;

(** mtf m% Wt- «t^ .-J'* 1-

■»¥ w't ■■%-; j,> -1%: i>- _,

il t* 1% i% II i> .^, ;>

* A^ )%■ Jt )^ )t .1^. ' \\ if \ ;

-s^ ^ ^ ** ^ * ^ '^ ^' * . ^ ^ ^ . ^ -^ r ^ '*■ ?fc ^ u

I* : ^ .. i^;

[■ ^\ m* "ST. i.>1», 'ri»

)^^ 1\.

c% ,: ^ ^ ^

:^ '■ n"

;*. W

i> 'V

^:c*'

'^•; d

'^'■*.

* •*. - «. ^ ». ''

'1^ .^

* i

I

I

I

\

'r" t

'*-- ^> V^- ¥» >>' I'v

'-■ i* j> 'V* i*

*■' i>! " i»\ '■

™miii»i.iiiiiiH

1953

COLLEGE

The pooX^^'^''

Oi

^^.

Digitized by the Internet Archive

in 2009 with funding from

Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation

http://www.archive.org/details/recordofclass1953have

THE RECORD

of the

Class of 1953

John Hitchcock, editor; Labe Shuman and John Benton, associate editors; Pete Moore and Lutz Prager, photog- raphy editors; Bill Kaye, business manager; John Trumper, advertising manager; Jerry Van Sickle, editor's manager. Cover by Jim Coote.

HAVERFORD COLLEGE

Haverford, Pennsylvania

IN MEMORIAM

It was with deep regret that we learned of the death of Gilbert Hoag last fall. In his seven years as Dean of Haverford, Dr. Hoag earned the respect and affection of the entire College. He was an excellent administrator with a genuine interest in the College and in the students. We take this opportunity to express our appreciation and our deep sense of loss.

IN DEDICATION

Haverford is not tlie sort of college that is inclined to give athletics the greatest attention. Coaches are accepted as a part of the athletic program, and as a rule are not singled our for particular credit or praise. "Pop" Haddleton is probably little more than a name for those who are not track enthusiasts. However, we as a class have, perhaps, more reason for gratitude to Pop than most, and we feel that the quiet, patient dedication of this man to a particular sport and to its participants should not go unnoticed or unappreciated. With this in mind, we dedicate the 1953 RECORD to Alfred W. Haddleton.

1

INDISPENSABLES

1 ^

William E. Cadbury, Jr.

Maris Moore

ADMINISTRA TION

The courts of the Commonwealth of Pennsyl- vania have ruled that the Administration of a College shall act "in loco parentis" to the student body. An Administration has the right to confiscate hotplates, double library fines, and limit the consumption of alcoholic beverages. Some Administrations let the children sow their wild oats and hope everything will turn out for the best; others dote over the little darlings like a setting hen nursing another's eggs.

During the term of the Class of '53 at Haverford there has been a noticeable tightening of the umbilical cord into what appears to some to be a noose. The frivolities preceding the Swarthmore football game have been limited to the explosion of a few soggy and carefully tended firecrackers. The Watch and Ward Society has investigated public morals and insti- gated reforms. Thoughtful students have been in- structed to find a time each day to clean their rooms.

On the other hand. The Administration, though maternal, may be shown to have the interests of its students at heart. Anyone who has been bailed out of the pokey by the Vice-President knows this. In fact, it appears that student complaints have been listened to and actually been acted upon, so that some Haver-

fordians have become almost fond of the maternal visage of Roberts and have a hidden respect for the sterner Whitehall.

It may have been noted that thus far The Administration has been awarded the capital letters due a collective object. There is sociological evidence to show that it is in the very nature of a collective object to receive criticism or at best grudging tolera- tion. When one deals with the personalities and at Haverford one still deals with personalities of the trinity of Dean, Mac, and Gilbert, or even the arch- angel Aldo, the situation changes. Here are human beings who, like all others, are liked by some and disliked by others.

Dr. Caselli has inspired some minds by his inter- pretation of Dante, and has offered to instruct others in sophisticated imbibition-a; Mac finished his studies a semester before the class of '53 at Penn; President White, though not invited out for a beer by a misin- formed Rhinie for some time, still keeps up the friendliness that makes him the "best college presi- dent" in the minds of many. Haverford, though "mothering through," is administered by men who are willing to be friends as well as foster parents.

Gilbert F. White

Aldo Caselli

Archibald Macintosh

Lester C. Haworth

FACULTY

BIBLICAL LITERATURE: A serious scholar with a vast knowl- edge of his subject, Flight seems to have an adequate department all by himself.

ECONOMICS: Teaf has a passion for precise and concise think- ing; his art of questioning may alienate the sensitive, but he seems to care whether his students learn something. Despite his great accomplishments in economics, a select number will remember Hunter best for his hot licks on the drums; in class he specializes in acrobatics and deadpan humor. Bell has made his mark in the one year he has been around; he admits to an occasional pipeful to make himself feel older.

ENGLISH: Ashmead calls you "Mr.," belittles your view, and then has the audacity to tell you that the form is related to the content. Friedrich, small and bustling, is unquestionably good in his field, but perhaps should stop peeking at his students. Lester catalogues nine- teenth century literature with a librarian's vigor; his jokes are funny, even if they are in his notes. Sargent continues to bounce around in his Shakespeare class looking like the life of the cocktail party. Snyder will still give the most callous veteran a start with his ecstatic exclama- tions; his love for poetry is catching. Mead, temporarily at Haverford from Shady Side Academy, is rather inclined to think that all the world's a rostrum. Wishmeyer, disenchanter of small boys, wants to put a meaning into life. As C. S. Lewis' prize product, Quinn has added a touch of Gaelic freshness and serious scholarship to the scene. His vivacious counterpart, Woodroofe, looks for all the world like a casually tailored leprechaun. Both, Tweedledum and Tweedledee seem to love life for its own sake. Quinn appears twice in the pictures so he could be with "Ken."

HISTORY: The arrival of Rex Arragon has put a spoke in the Luntians' historical wheel. The boys complain that they can never tell what his course is history of. Coming from Reed College, where marks don't seem to matter, he has handed many a shocker to less-enlightened Haverfordians. Drake, now back from a sabbatical, continues his quiet, sincere treatment of American History, with a Friendly bias.

HISTORY OF ART: Bernheimer is the course. He is a brilliant lecturer, with just the right flavor of an accent. His knowledge of philosophy and history, as well as art, makes his course one of the richest offered at Haverford.

HISTORY OF QUAKERISM: W. Comfort is still at his post offering a complete, if slightly sarcastic, view of the people known as Quakers.

MUSIC: Swan is that wonderful looking gentleman with the goatee; his rules for music composition are aesthetic rather than mechani- cal. Reese's white locks can be seen streaming from his eternally open convertible when the Glee Club hits the road; he is a genial taskmaster, who is busy busy busy.

10

(.

John W. 1-'lr.ht

ll

Ralph M. Sargent, Frank J. Quinn, John Ash- mead, Jr., William H. Wishmeyer, John A. Luster, Jr.

Willard E. Mead, Gerhard G. Friedrich, Quinn again, Kenneth S. Woodroofe

Thomas E. Drake, Reginald F. Arragon

\

Richard M. Bernheimer

11

PHILOSOPHY: Steere's general demeanor, in and out of class, is that of a big friendly bear; he is amazingly versatile, qua philosopher, and will accept insights from any quarter. Foss, perhaps the most lovable member of the department, is better as a philosopher than as an interpreter; under his interpretations, some of the most surprising things become dynamic. Parker is one of the most acute analytic thinkers in the college; his objective approach to things has made a great many people seek him out for advice on matters small and large. Bodde is giving a course in Chinese Philosophy during Steere's absence.

POLITICAL SCIENCE: Somers is a political "realist" who demands top-level performance, frequently to the dismay of the gaseous thinker; as a teacher he has the unqualified respect of his students. Haviland is an extremely capable discussion leader, with a tendency toward letting explosive intellectuals hoist themselves on their own petards. Roche says: "Marx is Hegel on a tricycle." A stimulating lecturer, for the men he has disenchanting bits about Lincoln; for the boys he stages gun battles. Reitzel, new this year, is excellent at holding discussion to the mark.

PSYCHOLOGY: In class Pepinsky confounds his students with his high syllabic ratio, containing undertones of Herr Ebbinghouse; his interest is in the physiological aspects of psychology. Campbell balances the department with his emphasis on the social aspects of human behavior, and with his belief in the powers of discussion to solve problems.

SOCIOLOGY: Reid is the master of discussion par excellence, although rather prone to operational gobbledygook; he has a personal charm and savoir faire that is undeniable. Schwab is a pleasant- mannered anthropologist, who, together with his wife, is still doing a study of a Nigerian culture. He teaches underclassmen and graduates the ways of anthropology in general and of the Ashanti in particular.

Howard M. Teaf, Jr., Holland Huntlr, Philip W. Bell

Alfred Swan, William H. Reese

Douglas V. Steere, Francis H. Parker, Martin Foss

r vV Jim '

■fefaL

Tm

^^^K •^^^^^ v'

IkflH

John P. Roche, Herman M. Somers, H. Field Haviland, Jr.

William B. Schwab

John D, Campbell

Ira De Augustine Reid

FRENCH: Gurwirth is a brilliant lecturer and is a scholar, not only of French, but of world literature. He is probably best known to students at large for his keen insights in the humanities course. Wylie is an extremely personable Mid-Westerner with a passion for French culture; he has done a careful study of the French village of Rousillon, and in the main his interest is more sociological than literary. Malecot, returning to the department this year, seems to have a passion for the sound of the French language itself.

GERMAN: Kelly is a wispy chap of wide imagination, a scholar of literature in general, and a lover of F/miegan's W^ake. With finger to chin: "Oh Nein, who can be romantic at 3 in the afternoon." Pfund, currently dividing his time between the graduate program and the German department, is the most German member of the department. A connoisseur of Nordic verse, painting, and music, he has endeared himself to students with his mid-seminar "snacks." Steer, famed for his role as chief interpreter at the Nurenburg trials, seems to be definitely concerned with his student's welfare; as a person his feet are squarely on the ground.

GREEK: Post is a real scholar who is obsessed by the obscene roots of language and the impending threat to his garden by the seventeen-year locusts.

LATIN: H. Comfort considers if wrongly his ancient history course to be his personal contribution to the football team. He prays for a Latin major every fourth year.

RUSSIAN: Miss deGraafi is the charming and handsome grand dame who teaches Russian at Haverford and Bryn Mawr.

SPANISH: Seiior Asensio is distinguished by his continental manner and the affection of his students. He and Mrs. Asensio together preside over the dark luxury of Spanish House. Mr. Jacob is here to replace the sefior while he is on sabbatical.

William W. Comfort

Abraham Pepinsky

i

L. Arnold Post

Laurence W. Wylie, Marcel M. Gutocirth Frances deGraaff

15

Louis C. Green

ASTRONOMY: As well as being an excellent theoretical physi- cist, Green is a serene, amiable guy with a wealth of casual stories about the human side of inter-planetary phenomena.

BIOLOGY: "Dixie" Dunn's shyness in introductory courses seems to be largely discarded when he is dealing with the advanced material that really interests him. Henry ruffles the young ones by asking odd questions in lab. More at ease with freshmen than Dunn, it doesn't usually take too long to see through his rough exterior.

CHEMISTRY: Benfey can generally save "strange" reactions from going through the roof or down the drain, without losing his air of bemused serenity. "T. O." Jones, still not embittered by a closetful of acid-eaten pants, continues to illustrate his lectures with anecdotes from a checkered career. Long tradition has not succeeded in dulling the appreciation of Meldrum's flawless set of lectures. Together with Cadbury, and his sweater and pipe, these men make up one of the top departments on campus.

ENGINEERING: Hetzel runs the non-academic program in gen- eral, and the work camps in partiailar, as well as performing his normal departmental duties. Holmes is head man in the department, and seems to perform the functions of a minor deity. Wilson is a photog- raphy bug, gun collector, and general expert around the lathes and milling machines of the Hilles shop.

MATHEMATICS: Strehler is a very competent mathematician who takes an artistic delight iq drawing precise diagrams. James, who has recently installed himself in the second self-made home of his career, is extremely thorough and willing to put himself out to clear up shady points. Wilson is the kindly "grand old man" of the department. His patience with confused minds is phenomenal.

PHYSICS: Flanked by electronics expert Benham, and encour- aged by a national award for outstanding teaching, Sutton holds firmly the reins of the physics department. "Mad Dick" shows his ability as a practical technician by demonstrating his way through a maximum number of physics courses.

Alfred G. Steer, Jr., John A. Kelly, Harry W. Pfund

Norman W. Wilson, Thi;odori; B. Hi:tzel, Clayton W. Holmes

^H ^K -t' 'Ji M

WjgKr^^^ ^''

H^H^Hv ^p|i

1>1

^

^^^^^^^L ^^^^

^

Roy E. Randall, William Dochlrty, Jr.

Richard M. Sutton, Thomas A. Blnham

Robert C. James, Allen F. Strehler, Albert Wilson

id

psB

H^^B iH

^

HK'> \

. t^ j 1 ^^H

lii

i^

Sfl

B^^yn

^^^1

u

-jjj^^^k

i^D

1^^

O. Theodore Benfey, Thomas O. Jones, William B. Meldrum

Manuel J. Asensio, Mrs. Asensio, Alfred B. Jacob

17

DISTING UISHED

Walt Kelly and Pogo in Collection

Eleanor Roosevelt

Unquestionably the most unixersally appreci- ated \ isitor to the campus was Walt Kelly, creator of the greatest literature of the twentieth century. The finite deity spoke to his followers on the mean- ing of symbols. He held a devotional meeting after his talk, but was forced to leave early.

The Philips Program itself, now going into its second year of operation has been a very happy innovation at Haverford. During the year two men were able to teach complete courses at Haverford. Dr. Hans Rademacher, one of the world's leading authorities on number theory, taught one course each semester. The other, Dr. David Mitrany, eminent political scientist from the Institute of Advanced Learning at Princeton, spent the first semester teaching an advanced course in Political theory.

Dr. Archibald MacLeish, poet and sometime

statesman, was on the campus for two weekends, reading from his poetry and talking with those interested in creative writing. He also gave the major address at the formal coming out party of the North Wing of the library.

Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt spoke in collection on her work in the UN and lunched briefly with stu- dents afterward. Other visitors the first semester were Dr. Roger Adams, outstanding organic chemist, and Dr. John Rees, British psychiatrist.

The second semester saw such men as James Callaghan, future shining light of the British Labor Party, and Dr. Ralph Bunche, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for 1950, and director of the UN Trusteeship Department. The field of science was represented by Subrahmanyan Chandresekhar, who is considered the ablest living mathematical astronomer.

18

VISITORS

Unidentihed \'isitor with Cap Harris

Archibald MacLeish and Rare Book

MP James Callaghan with John Benton

19

20

21

Clockuise: Phelps, Masland, Felstiner, J. C. Harris, Heller, Comfort, Caskey, Sachs, Minnich, Weaver, Brainard, Miller.

STUDENTS' COUNCIL

The job of the Students' Council is, for the most part, one of dull routine. Its position in the Haverford Community is somewhere between the Administration and the students, an undesirable position under the best of circumstances. The role of the council had been spotlighted last year by the crusading zeal of Gerald Freund. Issues burned, and intellects were titillated far into the night. Luckily for the ulcers of all concerned, the council lost some of the natural law zeal, while retaining the competence of last year.

The administration of the newly created Capital Expenditures Fund was perhaps the most significant change in student self government. The new source of income, resulting from the retention by the Students' Association of its annual surplus, made it possible for the Council to allocate over $1100 to various campus organizations for capital

improvements. The improvements ranged from a set of dimmer lights for Roberts Hall, an oboe and piccolo for the Orchestra, and the fixing up of a room in Barclay for Cricket practice in winter, to a music carrying case for the Glee Club, a ping pong table for Founders Hall, and photographic equipment for the Sharpless darkroom.

The Council and the Honor System Commit- tee continued their efforts to strengthen the Honor System and create an increased student awareness of their responsibilities to it. The main efforts of the Council and the Honor System Committee were directed toward acquainting the Freshmen with the system, and discussing it with them. The com- mittee also completed its preparation of a brochure describing the system which should be ready in the near future for distribution to incoming Freshmen and interested friends of the College.

22

Numerous Council-appointed committees aided greatly in carrying out certain Council functions. The Customs Cominittee felt that its primary objec- tive was to help the Freshmen become active and interested members of the college community, and not to impress them with their lowly status. Cus- toms policy reflected this point of view; there was a minimum of hazing and coercive treatment and an emphasis on "positive" methods of Freshmen indoctrination. The Council felt, however, that the whole Freshmen program could be improved, and it appointed a committee to look into this area objecti\cly and make recommendations to the Council. The Curriculum and Education Com- mittees studied various academic problems and made some specific recommendations to the faculty. The Philips Visitors committee arranged student meetings with the many distinguished persons who visited the campus on the Philips bequest. Another committee gave suggestions to the Administration of speakers whom students would like to hear in collection.

In its liaison capacity, the Council made sug- gestions in connection with changes in dormitory policy, advised the Administration of student opinions on plans for the proposed new dormitory, and brought many other suggestions and com- plaints to the attention of the Administration. In short, though quiet, the Council was quite busy.

Harrison, Schmitz, Shedd, Stansbury, Phelps.

HONOR SYSTEM COMMITTEE

CUSTOMS COMMITTEE

Back: Feeser, Reno, Crichlow, Penick, Braker; from: Borton, Lissfelt, Harri- son, Morrow, Helweg.

23

Editor Crawford and successor Kelly.

Advertising Manager Kaye and Sports Editor Koch.

THE NEWS

Guided by the apparently nerveless hand of Editor Jim Crawford, the 1952-3 NEWS staff this year put out a sheet noteworthy for its outspoken commentaries on campus affairs, and for its suc- cessful, if singular, support of the Republican presidential candidate.

Employing a policy of "attack only that which is holy," the minions of the NEWS crusaded against dining-room food, panned Bryn Mawr shows, and scoffed at campus architecture, at the same time performing the noble office of trying to combat student apathy on such subjects as Honor System amendments.

Informality, coupled with an attitude of studied calm, seemed to characterize this year's staff. Wednesday night often found NEWS Editors Wilson or Benjamin chuckling ruefully over the fact that half of page two still had to be filled, in spite of the fact that Thursday the paper went to press. The usual procedure at this time was to move down the road to Marrone's for a little spiritual refreshment, and then flip to see who

would fill the gap in the editorial column.

The only tense moments came on Thursday afternoons, when the editor on duty at the printer's, usually Benjamin or Shedd, had not only to re- write heads that didn't fit and lead out stories which fell short, but had to subdue, often by main force, irate typesetters who were going to be an hour or two late for supper.

The serious business of formulating editorial policies took place at the weekly editorial stafT meetings, which followed a prescribed pattern. Managing Editor Phil Stansbury would lead off with a dissertation on the merits and demerits of various members of the Philosophy department, after which Crawford and Benjamin would en- gage in a heated debate as to Who was responsible for shaping editorial policy. This would invari- ably end with Crawford saying, "It's the editor's job to shape editorial policy . . . he's responsible for whatever gets printed. You men can .suggest and influence, and of course if you have any serious objections I'm willing to listen, but ..."

24

By this time Senior News Editor John Kelly, who would have been quietly dozing through every- thing, would raise his head off the table and begin, "May I take it as the sense of the meeting that we are agreed that ..." at which point the various members would have mumbled their excuses for leaving, and would be sneaking out the door.

The sports department, which was handled by Heinz Koch, ran smoothly and efficiently. The only note of discord appeared about every three weeks, when Koch would stumble into the NEWS office in tears, begging to be released from his responsibilities, due to "pressure of academic pur- suits," a phrase he clung to with despairing fond- ness. Fortunately for the NEWS, he was always persuaded to stay on for just another week. He

was ably assisted in this department by Johns Hopkins and Dick Rivers.

Somehow the task of Alumni Editor had been foisted ofT on unsuspecting Jack Harvey, who bore up with a good grace, shuttling regularly between the Union and Ben Cooper's office.

The business end of the paper was captained by Drew Lewis, who, with Advertising Manager Bill Kaye and Circulation Manager Norm Barker, managed skillfully to keep the paper's deficit at a healthy norm.

Crowning glory of the year for the 1952-3 staff came when Editor Crawford, on behalf of the whole aggregation, accepted a suitably inscribed pictorial testimony from Walt Kelly, creator of the comic strip Pogo.

Upper left: Blanchard, G. Anderson, A. Klein, Minnich, Irvine, P. Armstrong, Goldstein, Jordan, Richardson, Dick; upper right: Harvey, Benjamin, Shedd; lower left: Stansbury and Lewis.

25

26

WHRC

The radio station proceeds on its steady path of repair, construction and repair. Under the eagle eye of Ridge Bolgiano WHRC now has one enormous console, and an even more enormous patch panel. Lights blink on and off, wires go under the floor and above the ceiling, stations get turned on and off automatically, the fifth entry telephone still picks up most of the programs with alarming clarity, and 78 rpm records still idle around at 33 V^. Although its manifestations are different every year, a reassuring human element is ever present.

Besides a bewildering technical display, WHRC has acquired a number of personalities that people actually listen to. Fred Muth, chatting casually

along with some excellent jazz recordings, was frightened by a big parade when he was very young. Bill Packard's hand may be found in a number of programs, some of which have the smoothness which can only result from a script, an almost unheard of thing.

Under Bill Morrison's comparatively steady hand the station now broadcasts not one, but two, FM stations. Even if you've never heard of WHRC, you can pick up good music on 690 while passing from Sabatini's to Marrone's. Dick Hardy, production manager, Bruce Hollman, secretary, and John Flint, treasurer, constitute the remaining offi- cers of this unpredictable organization.

Hardy, Carpenter, Bolgiano, Morrison, Garver, Flint, Hummel.

27

DRAMA CLUB

The 1952-1953 season has been, without a doubt, the most successful in the recent history of the Haverford College Drama Club. Under the leadership of its president, Thomas A. Wood, the club arose from seasons of lethargy and organi- zational chaos, emerging as one of the most active and dynamic campus groups.

The production of Philip Barry's "The Phila- delphia Story," which opened the season, was an outstanding success. Directed by Brooks Cooper, '50, the play drew the largest houses in the memory of most members ot the audience. Featured in the cast were Robin Nevitt, Dick Lingeman, Bill Wat- son, John Kittredge, Tod Mikuriya, and John Hawkins. The fine performances of several fresh- men, notably Bill Packard and John Pfaltz, fore- shadowed continued excellence.

W. Somerset Maugham's Satire of contempo-

rary society, "The Circle," was presented at Good- hart Hall, Bryn Mawr, as the second production of the season, in accordance with the tradition of cooperation with the Bryn Mawr College Theatre. Haverford men in the cast were John Kittredge, Robin Nevitt, and Nicholas Mabry.

In the Spring the club presented Christopher Fry's "A Boy With a Cart" and did a reading of MacLeish's radio play, "The Trojan Horse."

Particular plaudits for the success of this season belong to the production and business staffs. Under the guidance of John Tomec and Bryan Williams, the technical inadequacies of the Robert's Hall stage vanished, so far as the audience was concerned. The size of the houses and the finan- cial stability of the club were made possible by a complete reorganization of the business mechanism which was directed by Bill Bibbins.

29

j».-ih!SBEJft;*-iS'raiJ4«»!. ; :*^:

Glee Club and Orchestra at the Christmas concert.

GLEE CLUB

At the start of the Glee Club season, Dr. Wilham Reese had httle more than a baton and a great deal of student good will and enthusiasm with which to reconstruct a Glee Club that had been seriously hit by 1952 graduations. Faced with a tough schedule, the Glee Club displayed steady improvement in its fall concerts with the Shipley School, Wilson College, and Bryn Mawr. In con- junction with the orchestra, the club presented a very successful concert at Bryn Mawr on Feb. 21.

An even heavier spring schedule was high- lighted by a trip to New England from April 10 to April 13 during which performances were given in New York City for the Alumni and at Mount

Holyoke College. In addition, major concerts were presented when the choruses of Mount Holyoke and Sarah Lawrence Colleges sang in Roberts Hall. Equally as ambitious as the schedule was the repertory of the Glee Club which included works by Bach, Schubert, Vivaldi, Purcell, Vaughn- Williams, and Ross Lee Finney.

The Glee Club was served well during the season by its officers: Milton Isay, President; Morris Johnson, Business Manager; Peter Gardner, Secretary; John Trumper, Treasurer; and Robert Read, Theodore Bledsoe, and Jack Beatty as Librarians.

30

The combined Orchestra of Havcrford and Bryn Mawr, armed with a newly purchased oboe and piccolo, was also undergoing a process of rebuilding during the season. This organization directed by William Reese, was officered by Harri- son Rapcr, who attcd in the capacity of President, and by Philip Howorth who served in the dual role of Business Manager and Treasurer. In addi- tion to participating frequently in concerts with the Glee Club, the Orchestra presented a concert on March 1 3 in Roberts Hall, in which the featured work was Handel's Royal Fireworks, and a concert

at Westtown School on May 2.

The Octet, directed by Roger Good and David Sutton, busied itself early in the season in attempt- ing to replace an old, slightly fossilized repertory with some newer pieces. The Octet did not con- tent itself with music requiring only male voices, but conjoined upon occasion with the Octangle of Bryn Mawr, in a new venture in the field of inter- collegiate cooperation. The Octet performed sev- eral times at functions throughout the local area in addition to its traditional appearance at Haver- ford dances.

OCTET

Bjci: Good, K. Johnson, Sieverts, Parker; from: G. Albright, Sut- ton, Gardner.

BAND

Back: Chang, G. Albright, D. Har- ris, Comfort, Hutton, J. Albright, Hansell, Wightman; from: Hoge- nauer, Berger, Meads, Schatanoff, Sutton, Ruddick.

31

REVUE

Back: Jameson; middle: Harper, Wightman, Kidney, J. N. Smith, Goldstein, Merrick, P. Silver; front: F. Miller.

Founded in 1952, the Haverford Revue is the only purely "literary" magazine published in the area. It was originally conceived of as a work- shop and publishing outlet for students and faculty who were interested in serious artistic endeavor. Since its inception it has become less experimental in its design in an effort to satisfy the current need for collegiate expression. This compromise is effected by including a certain amount of material, of good execution of its kind, which will satisfy less exacting aesthetic standards.

It is implicit in the overall policy of the Revue that there is present a more positive need for the publication of works more ambitious in their aesthetic ramification, than there is present the need for works which are designed solely to amuse or distract.

The Revue does not limit itself to only the written word, but also has presented the works of Fritz Janschka, the Austrian Surrealist painter, in an effort to present to its public examples of visual as well as graphic accomplishments in the scope of contemporary art.

On a larger scale Mr. Janschka has just pre- sented an exhibition of his paintings in Philadel- phia; in which exhibition seven poems of J. N. Smith, a regular contributor to the magazine, were displayed. The Revue takes great pleasure in pub- lishing regularly the stories of Fredric Jameson, the essays of Walter Kidney, and the poems of Richard Silver and Philip Silver. The Revue is published once per semester.

32

RECORD

Back: Sexton, Arnold, Shuman, Van Sickle, Prager; jroni: Hitchcock, Winn.

Business and Advertising managers Kaye and Trumper.

The story of the Record has been one of gradual but never complete emergence from chaos. During the last week after the deadline, Editor John Hitchcock could be seen rushing around campus with an anxious look in his eye and a clip- board under his arm, and vice versa.

Editorially, Labe Shuman and associates Mitch Winn and Mark Sexton did yeoman's work in arranging the senior section, and in giving a gen- eral helping hand throughout the rest of the book. John Benton did his share of make-up work, writ- ing and general polishing. Jim Goldstein and Hack Arnold filled in the chinks with odd jobs of all sorts.

The business half of the book proceeded with- out a hitch under the efficient administration of Bill Kaye and John Trumper. The systematic solicita- tion of patrons was used to even greater effect this year than last, and the list of ads was impressive in view of Haverfords notorious isolation from the local commercial field.

The whole photography staflf did more than their share of work in picking up the pieces in the last minute scramble, but special praise should go to Pete Moore, both for his photography and his work on organization. Stew Swihart, Ray Falge, John Korper, and Alex Goldfinger were the other principal contributors.

33

ICG^ et al

Back: Muth, Kunim, Kaye, Prager, Goldstein, Broekman, Craig, Sachs; front: Bcatty, Reno, Dixon, R. Wilson, McCann, Fry, G. Werner, Gontrum, Morrison.

Just to get the record clear, Haverford's Poli- tical clubs are now neatly under the over-all sur- veyance of the Political Affairs Association (PAA), with Lutz Prager as President. Vice-President Bill Kaye is also in charge of the Political Affairs Forum (PAF), while Mike Shor, another Vice- President of the PAA, heads the Intercollegiate Conference on Government (or the ICG). Ronnie Reno is secretary of the PAA and Bill Morrison is treasurer. For some reason this arrangement makes things easier for everyone.

The PAA serves as over-all coordinator and central organ for dispensing patronage. This par- ticular aspect of the trinity organized Haverford's participation in the fall elections, in which nearly a hundred students were involved.

The PAF's principal function is to sponsor talks on a variety of subjects pertinent to political affairs. The year's first speaker, and one of the best, was Philips Visitor David Mitrany. He was followed by Mme. Hussein of Egypt, Kazimir

Vidas of Yugoslavia, and a representative of the ■World Bank. Vidas, head of the Student's Council of the University in Zagreb, was in America learn- ing about school governments in this country. He spent half a day visiting with Haverford's students, and talking over old times with Mitrany in the Penn House. The Forum also heard Mrs. Khouri- Makdissi of Lebanon talk on the Palestine situa- tion, and Dr. Herman Somers tell of his findings as an investigator for the Mutual Security Adminis- tration.

The ICG started organizing shortly after Christmas vacation. Dividing into committees, ICG members prepared bills to be presented at both regional and state wide meetings. These bills were similar in nature to those that have been proposed in the Pennsylvania State Legislature. At the regional meeting in 'West Chester, the group succeeded in politicking Mike Shor into the speaker's chair. From there the ICG proceeded to the annual blow-out at Harrisburg.

34

Around Swiharc: Goldfinger, Falge, P. Moore, Garver.

Back: Togasaki, G. Werner, Swihart, Chodorov, Richard- son; front: Ladenburg, Goodman, Johnson.

PHOTOGRAPHY

For the Photography Club this has been a year of expansion. Besides offering the usual oppor- tunities for the use of the Hilles dark room and an occasional model, the club joined the Photographic Society of America, was active in a traveling salon, and was host to several outside speakers. Several members were also active in providing photography for the Yearbook.

DEBATING

Debating on the a\'erage of twice a week, the William Wistar Comfort Debating Society has remained one of Haverford's few contacts with the major intercollegiate world. Contending suc- cessfully with such institutions as Harvard, MIT, Columbia, Smith, and Vassar, the Debating society well serves its purpose of developing the ability to think quickly and speak convincingly. The pro- posed integration of debating with the public speaking course should strengthen the club in the future.

Back: Weiland, M. Smith, Willis, Shor; jront: Stein, P. Wood, D. Thomas.

a\\ k \\ \l

'AJ\f^*\/\\

|l|nii

l*j|l!.'

^jmJ^l

ml

S

IS

v-^>-*

MK >1

•■.V

I

to

MOUNTAINEERS

The Haverford Mountaineers were formally established on October 17th, 1951, by the signing of a constitution by eleven charter members. Dur- ing the succeeding years of its existence Peter Wood has been President, Joseph Stein, Secretary- Treasurer, and Archibald Macintosh, Faculty Ad- viser. This pioneer group has made in all about twenty trips, participating in actual rock climbings which ranged from the instruction level to difficult pitches for ad\anced climbers.

35

VANITY FMR '

36

CLASS NIGHT

In times past Class Night was, properly speaking, the one purely innocent activity of Haverford College. If not innocent of scandal, at least innocent of controversy. It passed as a rather amusing Saturnalian venture into the shadier realms of satire and personal criticism; a veritable Tartarian passage into the underworld of psychological aggressions, social consciences, and natural inhibitions in which both students and faculty participated vigorously. Phantasms of authority symbols, Dean-symbols, Board- of-Managcr-symbols might be met in this twilight land, and might be disposed of as, perhaps Aristophanes had disposed of Huripidcs in his comedy The Frogs,

This year's adventure into humour was no exception to the witty performances .of yesteryear. That it became more innocent of scandal and less mnocent of controversy is a measure of its conscientious attitude and double-barreled purpose. Resolutely the intellects or at least, that which passed for intellects in some cases of each class banded together to exorcise from their endeavor the demon of sexual expressionism and sublimate her lusty histrionics into a more powerful weapon. The mountain strained in labour and gave forth Allegory!

The Freshman Class, previously abandoned by most historians as an "intellectual slum, " had, in its initial encounter with Ha\ertord, decided that Paradise was well lost. Thus it turned from mountainous Milton to the simple strains of Eierymcw: wherein the innocent student is pursued by bursar-clerics, Italic of accent, who vend unknowing babes to eager pederasts and thus call the way to trial and deceit.

The Sophomores, characterized by faculty wit as "rudely awakening to the higher worlds beyond," awakened so far as to build their show upon a subjective image of heaven no doubt wrongly conceived of through proper instruction; in which sad celestial light an Haverford Philosopher swam to the tune of a Beatrice gone divinely wrong.

The Juniors recipients of the Class Night Award struck through the mask and boldly built their meeting-house in a jungle, so to speak. Clearing away the vines and roots of hypocritical con\ention they poked away at the flabbier parts of academic anato- mies. For their pains and trials, bloody from the hands of the censors, they received the laurel.

The Seniors (alas), intimidated by some inward fear these were among the first to feel the agonies of McCarthy's disease declined the challenge of satire and retired to a more gracious and elegant field. Magnificent in acting, richly adorned in scenery, they lacked courage. In honor of perfection one of their number was awarded the acting trophy.

Joyce has written: / hear ivi drniy charging upon the land; thus it was that the Faculty Show, rushing on like an horde of Philips' Visitors, stampeded upon Class Night. In the deathly rain of its hoo\es it sought not only to lay bare the panting vitals of satire, indeed, by placing the \ery butts of previous jokes upon the stage, as one might exhibit a richly-dressed fowl or a diseased organ but also the growth or possibly the withering of the student's perception as he passed through the bowels of education. One felt in this production the presence of an uncanny mind wrestling with the very grapples and ballasts of morality itself. But sweet Madonine, he might as well have carried his daisys' worth to Florida, for the students, e\er mindful of the faculty's homely tricks, transcended the crude snares of armchair psychology, and, held aloft by equal invention, sang with transport: even to the very heights of serene Roberts, even to the stormy depths of Whitehall.

37

THE SOCIAL

The Swarthmore Dance

Perhaps the most singular, and the most pleas- ant aspect of Haverford social life is the lack of pressure towards any kmd of uniformity, with the attendant lack of a clear-cut caste system. Coin- ciding with this individuality is the absence of a "big weekend, big impression" approach toward dating. Haverford has only two large scale week- ends during the year, and there does not seem to be much demand for more. On the whole, people here haven't got too much use for young ladies who require big things doing ail the time.

There is something healthy and good-natured about the sort of environment in which you can introduce sweet young things to scantily betoweled strangers in the hallways as a matter of course. Occasional embarrassments occur, but people seem to recover from them. The common study date,

though academically questionable, is a sounder basis for understandmg than frenzied dance week- ends. Because of the lack of large scale entertain- ment, the Haverford man must stand socially on his own ability to be entertaining. Although this may mean social oblivion for some, for many it provides an education that otherwise might never be acquired.

There are drawbacks to Haverford's indivi- dualistic mode of living. Parties tend to break up into two-by-two affairs with no real community give and take. In the day to day existence, too, Haverford men have no reason for going much outside their own given clique. But then perhaps these things are necessary concomitants of a situa- tion that is in other respects ideal.

38

ANIMAL

39

40

41

42

43

SOCCER

3^3l\

Back: Coach Mills, L. Thomas, C. White, B. Thomas, Curran, R. Wood, Broekman, Kreisher, Blanchard, Bradbeer, manager Leggeit; front; H. Wolf, Singh, Richie, Young, P. Silver, Pearson, Woznicki, J. Barwick.

SCORES

Haverford

1

Alumni

2

Haverford Haverford

2 4

Temple Princeton

4 3

Haverford Haverford Haverford

1 2 2

Navy

Rutgers

Drexel

5

1 2

Haverford

2

Stevens

2

Haverford

4

Lehigh

1

Haverford

2

U. of Penna.

3

Haverford

5

Ursinus

2

Haverford

1

Swarthmore

1

Haverford

2

Earlham

1

If you don't count the Alumni game, and nobody ever does if you lose it, the Haverford soccer team finished the season with a 5-3-3 record. There was no real disgrace in losing to Temple, Navy, or the University of Pennsylvania, and the three losses did not rankle in the hearts of the fans. Much more significant were the three ties, two of which combined to prevent the Fords from going into the playoffs for the Middle Atlantic Championship.

Swarthmore went into the annual Hood Trophy contest with an unmarred record of four league vic- tories behind them. Haverford had squeaked past Rutgers, 2-1; trounced a strong Lehigh squad, 4-1, for the most impressive victory of the year; and worked out against Ursinus for a 5-2 win. In the middle of the season, however, they had played to a 2-2 tie with Stevens, by no means an outstanding team. It had been thought that the Stevens stalemate would not affect the Fords' standing in the league; if they beat Swarthmore, they would still win the divisional championship, and if they lost, they were out of the picture.

44

45

^

I

The prognosticators had shrugged off the possi- bihty of a tie with the Garnet, and that is exactly what occurred. The match on the rain-soaked Swarth- more field lived up to the tradition of being a hard- fought thriller. Both teams had opportunities to score that were hobbled, and both gave the old college iry throughout. Swarthmore, aided by a puddle of water, took the lead m the second quarter and main- tained it until seven minutes of the final quarter, when substitute right wing Howie Wolf raced from the forty to the twenty to shoot cleanly into the right corner of the goal. The Fords could not score again, and the tie, combined with the previous stand-off with Stevens, gave the Garnet the championship.

For the third straight year Haverford, who should have had enough of tie games, drew even with Drexel. Again, however, they showed the spirit to come from behind as Earl Harrison set up a shot off the goalie's body and drove it home in the dying seconds of the game to knot the score at 2-2. In this match, as throughout the season, the Ford hooters blew hot and- cold, unevenly combining superb play with careless casualness that made Coach Jimmy Mills come close to swallowing his cigar.

Besides the other games mentioned, the Fords had the pleasure of defeating Princeton early in the season, 4-3. The bragging value of this victory over a perennial rival weakened as time revealed that Princeton fielded one of its weakest teams in years in 1952. The season ended, however, on a strong note on Thanksgiving weekend when, before a large crowd composed mostly of Westonians, the Fords

downed visiting Earlham, 2-1, in a physical consum- mation of verbal intersectional rivalry.

End-of-the-season statistics confirmed the spark plug role which center forward Dave Richie showed on the held. Richie not only scored eight of the teams 28 goals including a first period hat trick against Lehigh but led the squad with seven official assists. Earl Harrison and Jack Kreisher had four tallies each and Phil Silver three, while six other players had one or two. Assists were also well dis- tributed, and even fullbacks Chris White and Dick Wood broke into this column.

Captam Bob Young finished his fourth year as a Varsity halfback, and it was mainly his spirit that provided the drive for such innovations as the taking of the first Haverford soccer movies. Other seniors who will be missed next year are: Dick Wood, solid, steady, and long kicking fullback; Lew Thomas, scrappy, hustling halfback, and Ted Curran, who backed up Baylis Thomas in the goal. Richie, though still permitted another season of soccer eligibility, has been lost to the Naval Air Cadets.

Coach Jimmy Mills is left with a strong nucleus of men for the 1953 season. Baylis Thomas played some inspired goal-tending last fall, and Chris White and Jim Bradbeer did fine work at the fullback and center halfback positions. Phil Silver made himself into a dependable halfback or forward. Mills can also count on captain Earl Harrison, Amar Singh, Jack Kreisher, Jim Barwick, and Doc Blanchard on the line, as well as his freshman developments, Bruce Pearson and Han Broekman.

Although strengthened by the influx of a number of freshman standouts, the Haverford football eleven finished another victoryless 0-7 season in 1952. Such a string of losses was enough to convince WPTZ tele- vision magnates that Coach Roy Randall had devel- oped a truly non-professional gridiron squad, and in an effort to bring pure, uncontaminated football to

the living rooms and taverns of the Philadelphia area, they chose to feature the annual Haverford-Swarth- more classic as the November 22 "Game of the Week." On a muddy, rain-soaked field the Scarlet and Black forces matched their Garnet foes touchdown for touchdown, but were foiled in their conversion attempts, and finally bowed 12-14.

48

FOOTBALL

Eight seniors turned in their mud-caked uniforms for the last time after the defeat which gave Swarth- more one Hood Trophy point. Ford captain Phil Vance, who was awarded the Ada StefTen Wright Cup for his outstanding play during the contest, parted with number 17 after three years of service at right end. Sixty-minuteman Jack Ledeboer proved to be the only lineman who survived the entire season with- out an injury. Other seniors were quarterback Joe Helweg, backs Joe Bockol and Denny Lafer, centers Reid Allison and Jerry Crowley, and lineman Bob Schcrer. Wayne Hurtubise also received a letter, but was sidelined by an injury after the Juniata game.

The Garnet capitalized on two plays to outpoint the Fords. The first of these, a 63 yard dash to the

SCORES

Haverford

13

Wagner

18

Haverford

6

Juniata

36

Haverford

0

Ursinus

19

Haverford

13

Hamilton

32

Haverford

6

Union

25

Haverford

14

Susquehanna

47

Ha\'erford

12

Swarthmore

14

litjit: Maii.i.utr liiirinn, (r.iicicr Mnrsch, luii- tiiatli l)(ithtrt\, Scoii, Weaver, Braker, J. W. Baker, J. Thomas, Marienis, Strotbeck. Manchester, Reeves, D'Arrigo, Cohill, Osller, assistant coach Prudente, head coach Randall ; jroni: Kern, Regan, Ortman, Retew, B. Scherer, Allison, Bockol, Vance, Lafer, Helweg, Ledeboer, J. Allen, Bourne, Crowley.

49

two yard line, was Swarthmore's longest gain from scrimmage during the season. On the next play, Jones bucked over, and James, who had made the run, con- verted a very valuable point. Ledeboer recovered a fumble on the 31 to allow the freshman backfield of Bill Ortman, Don Cohill, and Phil D'Arrigo to go into action, D'Arrigo going across to score. The conversion was blocked, however, and the Garnet still led.

Swarthmore scored their second TD on their only completed pass of the afternoon when James hit Bruce in the end zone. Jack Strotbeck and John Allen com- bined to block a punt and recover on the 9 to set up an Ortman tally three plays later.

The games which preceeded the annual classic showed an undermanned squad fall on the short end of six contests. The opener was a close 18-13 game with Wagner which raised the hopes of local gridiron fans. For the first tmie smce 1947 coach Roy Randall was blessed with an abundance of backfield material, especially among the incoming Rhinies. Bill Ortman tallied both touchdowns for the Fords.

The second game saw the squad travel to Juniata and come back after a 36-6 trumping. Don Cohill tallied the lone marker for the locals. Ursinus then downed the Fords 19-0. At Hamilton the local rooters had their hopes raised during the first half. The freshman backfield of Ortman, Cohill, and Ted Regan, witli Helweg as blocking back, put the Fords ahead 13-6 at the half. That was all for the Home Team however, as the New York State boys won 32-13.

Union followed and the Fords bowed 25-6, and the 47-14 trouncing by Susquehanna preceeded the Swarthmore game. The three touchdowns were scored by D'Arrigo at Union and Ortman at Susquehanna.

Juniors Ned HoUingsworth and John Rettew were elected to lead the '53 Scarlet and Black gridders. Both men started, when they were not sidelined by injuries, at the guard slots, with Rettew seeing some service at offensive center. Defensive end Dick Bourne was the only other junior letter-winner. Fresh- men dominated the squad with often as many as five of the ele\en starters being Rhinies. Along with Ortman, Regan, Cohill, and D'Arrigo, other regulars were John Thomas at left end and Jim Baker at guard. Tom Martenis and Hal Weaver also showed poten- tiality in the backfield for the freshmen. The sopho- mores showed strength in the line with 215 pound Bray Manchester, Jim Braker, John Allen, Jack Osier and Jack Strotbeck.

50

CROSS COUNTRY

Bad: Coach Haddleton, Pfaltz, L. Miller, With- erspoon, Friedman, Kushner, Sangree, Bob Gage, managers Bittel and Shor; front: Schwaru, Nash, J. Albright, Bill Gage, Seeley, Hinshaw, Klots, Morgan, Stein, Raper.

SCORES

Haverford

99

St. Joseph's

22;

LaSalle

50;

Temple

75

Haverford

20

Albright

39

Haverford

33 V

•', Johns Hopkins

■> 35;

F & M

551/2

Haverford

15

Muhlenburg

48

Haverford

16

Lafayette

43

Haverford

32

Lehigh

39;

Gettysburg

60

Haverford

25

Delaware

32

Haverford

18

Swarthmore

31

Led by co-captains Joe Stein and Bob Seeley, the harriers finished off a banner season by defeating Swarthmore on the difficult Garnet course, and start- ing the Fords off on the right foot towards the Hood Trophy. The main strength of this year's team lay in its incredible balance all the way down the line. Often the sixth and seventh men on the team followed close on the heels of the first Haverford men across the line, and it was a common event for seven Haddle- tonmen to finish the course before five of the opposi- tion had. Pop's excellent coaching and rigorous training schedule produced results, particularly with underclassmen Jay Albright and Harrison Raper who added the weight needed to take a couple of close meets. Bill Gages fine season and the stellar per- formance of sophomore Eph Klots gave great hope for the future. These four, plus Bob Hinshaw, a two-year letter winner, will give Pop a nucleus around which to build next year's team.

51

BASKETBALL

Back: Coach Prizer, trainer Morsch, Schwartz, J. Thomas, Barton, Irvine, Harrison, JV coach Pru- dente, manager Lewis; front: Bisson, Kepner, Mor- row, Clark, Feeser, D'Arrigo, Penick.

SCORES

Haverford

51

Rutgers

88

Haverford

45

Moravian

75

Haverford

55

F&M

95

Haverford

78

Textile

72

Haverford

73

Lehigh

85

Haverford

65

Ursinus

87

Haverford

76

PMC

87

Haverford

75

Alumni

53

Haverford

65

Delaware

96

Haverford

57

Drexel

78

Haverford

65

Swarthmore 77

Haverford

46

PMC

94

Haverford

81

Ursinus

77

Haverford

58

Delaware

56

Haverford

62

Drexel

72

Haverford

66

Swarthmore 85

The Basketball team this year was an unwilling partner to ill fortune and an adverse schedule. Many minor injuries hampered the efficiency of several main- stays. Captam Da\e Clark's steady play, distinguished by tine defensive work, was one of the highlights of the year. Senior Wayne Hurtubise contributed experi- ence and finesse. Although erratic, he displayed an occasionally brilliant floor game.

Pivot-man Bob Feeser, hampered at times by a wrenched back, was one of the steadiest scorers. His jump shot was effective, and his rebounding outstand- ing, in a department where the Fords were sadly lacking. Grant Morrow, one of the most colorful players of the season, added a potent scoring threat with his set shot and driving lay-up.

A new star arrived on the horizon in the person of Phil D'Arrigo, Freshman sensation, whose aggres- sive play kept him in the limelight after the F&M game. Sophomore Ted Penick, at times showing flashes of brilliance, was the sixth man who ably spelled the starting five.

52

WRESTLING

Back: Cohill, manager Garver, Fettus, R. Wilson, J. W. Baker, Arnold, Martenis, coach Harter, M. Johnson, Hirss, W. White, manager Good, Azumi; front: Matteson, Hollingsworth, Strotbeck, Bair, Sangree, L. Miller, Rickert.

SCORES

Haverford

5

Lafayette

31

Haverford

9

Delaware

21

Haverford

0

Gettysburg

32

Haverford

16

Muhlenburg

14

Haverford

18

Bucknell

16

Haverford

15

Drexel

16

Haverford

18

Ursinus

15

Haverford

14

Swarthmore

12

Haverford finished the wrestling season with a breathtaking 14-12 win over Swarthmore, putting the season's record at four wins and four losses, the best mark since 1941. Heavy setbacks at the hands of Lafayette, Delaware, and Gettysburg sent the cam- paign off to a bad start. Heavyweight Jack Strotbeck was the only winner in the Lafayette match, while Captain Harry Bair (123), freshman Lou Miller (137), and Strotbeck were successful against Dela- ware.

Matters took a turn for the better in the Muhlen- burg meet when Bair, Hugh Sangree (130), Bob Matteson (157), and Jim Baker (167) won bouts to squeeze out the first victory of the year, Ned Hollings- worth (177) and Strotbeck won the last two bouts by pins to gain the year's second victory over Bucknell on the following Saturday. A surprise upset at the hands of Drexel stunned the Matmen, but Hollings- worth and Strotbeck won again at the finish to turn defeat into victory. With the loss of only Harry Bair and Bob Matteson by graduation, future hopes are higher than they have been in a decade.

54

55

FENCING

Back: Reno, Leibold, coach Gordon, Mattson, Finklestein, Morris; front: Noble, Leger, Beatty, Masland.

SCORES

Haverford

10

Lehigh

15

Haverford

6

Penn

21

Haverford

19

Lafayette

15

Haverford

8

Princeton

19

Haverford

17

Stevens

10

Haverford

8

Temple

19

Haverford

12

Johns Hopkins

15

The Fencing Team had every expectation of com- ing through with a winning season, but it ran into some unexpectedly rough ground at Temple and Johns Hopkins. The outlook for next year depends on what Coach Henri Gordon's skill can do with the replace- ments for this year's seniors.

The foil team has consisted of Skip Mattson, Co-Captain of last year's team and veteran of four year's competition, Ronnie Reno, Amar Singh, and Jay Noble. Senior Larry Morris, junior Larry Finkle- stein, and sophomore Bill Masland have comprised this year's saber team. The weapon has consistently shown strength, and reached a high peak in its 9-0 defeat of Stevens' saber team. Morris has had his best season and will be sorely missed next year. The epee team has drawn from the resources of four men; Captain Art Leibold, senior Trev Leger, fencing his first year of varsity, John Eagleton, and Bill Bittel. The epee team has shown development and should be quite powerful in the Middle Atlantic Champion- ships.

CRICKET

Though the participants of more traditionally American sports scoff at them, Haverford cricket players continue to see the serious side of their form of athletic endeavor. Stimulated b)- an undefeated intercollegiate season and the thrill of having their pictures in Colliers last year, the cricketeers put down their tea cups and beer bottles long enough to practice their form in the basement of South Barclay through the winter, play a sprmg season against a scliedule of strong college teams, and make plans for an international Canadian tour after graduation.

Captained by Dick Gundry known to Colliers fans as Grundy and managed by John (four numeral man) Benton, the 1933 cricket squad depended on such stalwarts as the imperturbable Malani; Amar Singh, the Darjeeling Demon; Dick Wood, the Riverton fly trap; and Wood's fellow farmer, H. G. Taylor III. Though undignified by any other title than "Sharpie, " Jim Barwick also deserves mention, as well as Ted Curran, Pete Barwick, Stan Forster, Dick Klein, and Jerry Innes.

57

TRACK

Back: Lewis, Mathews, Kummer, J. W. Baker, Gar- rity, Alvord, Bill Gage, Watson, Scott; mid- dle: Stern, Shor, Barton, Arnold, Mead, Howorth, Pfaltz, Kern, Sieverts, Kumni, Reeves, Tabbutt, Seeley, Hershey, Kindig, Rettew, Klots, Weaver, coach Haddleton, managers Garver and Flint; front: Bob Gage, Leibold, Engler, Stein, Thomas, Broughton, Klinman, Friedman, Kushner, Shaw, Patt.

SCHEDULE

April

18

Ursinus

Away

April

24-25

Penn Relays

Away

April

28

Lehigh

Away

May

2

Muhlenburg

Away

May

5

PMC

Home

May

9

Swarthmore

Away

May

12

Gettysburg-Albr

ight

Home

May

15-16

M.A.C.T. & F.

At Lancaster

It IS unlikely that this year's Track team will produce all the excitement that last year's did, but it should at least provide the sports page with some cheerful news. The team last spring maintained a dual meet skein of twenty one. The two-mile relay team, running without its star, picked up third place medals at the Penn Relays, and the javelin saw a new record set by Roger Sorg.

This spring Walton Field will see an imposing array of runners. Karl Kumm has become a fine dasher, and looks for support from fellow seniors Joe Helweg and John Garrity. In the longer races, Pop Haddleton can pick and choose from among Bob Lewis, Bob Gage, Eph Klots if his leg heals Joe Stein, Bill Gage, Bob Seeley, and Bob Schwartz. Fred Tabbutt who emerged last year as a good hurdler, will be helped in the lows by Tom Englar, and in the highs by Doc Blanchard, who will double in the high jump.

The field events are badly hit by the loss of Roger Sorg and Dick Eller, but Baylis Thomas, a fine pole vaultcr by all reports will take up much of the slack. Freshman Hal Weaver will join Dick Bourne in the discus.

58

V:a«r

I

59

60

BASEBALL

\ / w^

m

Back: Coach Randall, Keelv, M middle: S. Walton, E. Miller, W Harris, Ledeboer, Longstreth, A

April 8 April 10 April 11 April 15 April 18 April 22 April 25 April 28 April 30 May May May May May Ma)-

2 6 7 9 12 16

SCHEDULE Drexel St. Joe's Alumni Villanova Moravian Delaware Drexel Lehigh Ursinus LaSalle Pennsylvania PMC Ursinus Temple Swarthmore

artcnis. Freeman, Marsden, Cohill, managers Rice and Koch; Wood, J. Albright, Borton, Ortman, Regan; front: Linthicum, Klein, Eldridge, Mikuriya.

With a fifteen game schedule and only seven returning lettermen, Roy Randall is faced this spring with the tough job of plugging the gaps left by Away graduations. Nevertheless, at the beginning of the

Away season the Fords have high hopes of improving on

Home the 1952 record of 3 wins, 11 losses.

Home The Randallmen are captained this year by first

Away baseman Jack "Little Slug" Ledeboer, a big gun in

Home the Haverford attack since his sophomore year. An-

Home other senior, Summy Linthicum will probably be fill-

Away ing in at second for the second straight year, and

Away Wayne Hurtubise, a consistently good hitter, com-

Away pletes the double play combination at shortstop. With

Home Jake Johnson on the injured list, Harry Bair is the

Away only letterman to return to the outfield, though

Home Randall will probably be able to use last year's promis-

Home ing JV players. Jay Albright and Ross Eldridge. The

Home pitching staff, which lost the services of only one

man, is spearheaded by senior John Hitchcock and Morris Longstreth.

61

TENNIS

The 1953 Haverford tennis team has five of last season's varsity players as the nucleus of a squad expected to continue one of the most suc- cessful of Haxerford sports. In addition to Captain Jack Piotrow, who has held the position for two years, Dave Caslcey, Chessie Winston, Earl Ham- son, and John Burge remain, with Phil D'Arrigo, Geofifrey Steere, Howard Wolf and Dave Perry on hand to round out the squad. In 1952, Haver- ford won for the fifth consecutive season the Middle Atlantic Championship, and this spring's net men will fight to retain their position in spite of the strong opposition which may be expected from Swarthmore.

-'^mw^

'■- "v>*^^^

^*^-:'$«#'

SCHEDULE

\-*»,>*-*r>^ .

April 11

LaSalle

Away

■■^»*- Jf

April 15

Ursinus

Away

,^0^^^

April 18

Gettysburg

Away

April 22

Lafayette

Home

April 25

Moravian

Away

April 29

Drexel

Away

.^

May 1 May 2

Pennsylvania Temple

Home

W^

Away

1

May 6

Lehigh

Home

1

May 9

Swarthmore

Away

May 13

Muhlenburg

Home

62

GOLF

Bad: Morrow, Eapleton, Feeser; front: Semans, J. Allen, Logan.

Of the members of last year's golf team, which finished off a successful season by beating Swarthmore, only Paul Sterner, last year's captain, has graduated. The returning veterans include Grant Morrow, the spectacular sophomore who had a hole-in-one against Gettysburg, Bob Logan, a consistently steady golfer, John Allen, John Eagle- ton, and Captain Bob Feeser. With the addition of only one promising freshman, the team should do at least as well as last year.

The Nautical Club sees brighter days ahead due to increased interest, especially from the Freshman class. New boats have been ordered trom England, and are due late this spring. Called Fireflies, the boats were designed for the 1948 British Olympics. The club now hopes to join the fleet of Penn and St. Joseph's on the Cooper River, Camden, thus enabling Haverford to spon- sor its own regattas. Present officers of the club are Con Hellwege, Commodore; Charlie Fry, 'Vice Commodore; and Mike Hummel, Secretary.

NAUTICAL CLUB

Back: D. Harris, Bolgiano, Monroe, Nevitt, Meads, Gatch, Bibbins, HoUmann, G. Werner; front: Fry, Hell- wege, P. Seaver.

64

65

STA PROGRAM

Row 1: Marie Gilstrap, Anja Olin, Yoshiko Seki, Marie DiGiacomo, Anne Haase, Ruth Trumper, Nickie Harala; row 2: Hiroto Zakoji, John Singleton, Raoul Kulberg, Robert Keller, Paul Weiser, John Plank; row i: Peter Klopfer, Frank Wood, Fanasi Mgbako; missing: Carmen Moran.

66

Row I: Sandy Wieland, Gerry Goodman, Sellers Walton, Frank Evans, Bob Broughton, Buzz Miller, John Armstrong, Jack Fettus, John Thomas, J. W. Baker, Don Cohill, yince Averna, Jack Thompson, Bob Traut; row 2.- Ted Kummer, Lamar Woznicki, Jon Korper, Mike Mann, Perk Pedrick, Harold Friedman, Dave Kushner, Tom Garver, Tom Ladenburg, Hal Weaver, Joe Green, Otis Johnson, Jon Dungan, Joe Horner, John Gould; row 3: Bruce Pearson, Jim McMas- ters, Jim Viney, Bill Packard, Dick Monroe, Gerry Witherspoon, Tom Martenis, Al Irvine, Marshall Greenberg, Will Marsden, Jim Shuster, Carl Ruppenthal; row 4: Enrique Capo, Phil Street, John Pfaltz, Jerry Klinman, Paul Neimark, Dick Johnson, John Perera; row 5.- Harvey Freeman, Bob Wallace, Charles Lane, Jack Barrett, Bob Greer, Dick Isay, Eric Tuata- galoa, Joe Hoag, John Hawkins, Jerry Innes, Guy Sotomayor, Andy Hirss, Stark Semans, Bob Patt; row (>: John Stephens, John Marquardt, Bob Barton, Thayer Willis, Lew Woodham, Ralph Barlow, Pram Changtrakul, Dan Harris, John Hershey, Bob Togasaki, Arthur McLean, Craig Mackown, Jim Baker, Joel Judovich; row 7: Walt Douglas, Win Hall, Don Mead, Rodger Gilmour, Dave Greene, Rod McDowell, Rod Clurman, Lou Miller, Bob Turner, Han Mikhail, Sam Bishop; row 8: John Wallace, Pete Armstrong, Jack Dick, Nick Mabry, Bob Sener, Walt Langsam, Geoff Steere, George Anderson, Bill Hitzrot, Ed Minnich, George Malko, John Rhoads, Nick Swinton, Bert Shaw, Mike Smith and Lutz Prager.

CLASS OF 1956

67

Rou' I; Harrison Raper, Chase Kepner, Sam Coniakos, Chuck Neuhaus, Irv Freednian, George Gray, Lee Hazelton, Hu Sangree, Jack Lubin, Jay Noble, Jim Braker, Alex Allen, Charles Brain- ard; row 2: John Dixon, Grant Morrow, Eric Blanchard, Don Maiden, Art Klein, Carl Schultheis, Marc Forman, Ned Scherer, Dick Rivers, Buzz Kanter, Dick Marek; row 3: Hack Arnold, John Jordan, John Cato, Pete Moore, Bill Bradfield, Bob Schwartz, Dan Rice, Dick Croasdaile; row 4: Lou Holmes, Chan Malani, Paulding Phelps, Henry Hamburger, Gordon McDonald, John Flint, Bob Wilson, Al Scott, Bruce Reeves; row 5/ Dick Turley, Ted Penick, Dave Suttcjn, Bob Apmann, Joe Schatanoff, Norm Hill, Johns Hopkins, Don Cone, Stacy Wood, Morris Longstreth; row 6: Bob Read, Nat Merrill, Jim McCann, Doug Dannay, Dick Fuller, Lehn Franke, Jack Strotbeck; row 7: Jack Beatty, Bill Momsen, Lee Bennett, Bob Alvord, Koya Azumi, Tom Goodkind, Dave Hogenauer, Berkeley Harris, Ralph Jaeckel, Ted Bledsoe; row S: Bob Lewis, Bob Mackenzie, Jack Kreisher, Alex Goldfinger, Jim Chang, Eph Klots.

CLASS OF 1955

68

CLASS OF 1954

Row I: Carl Veneziale, Bob Werner, Ken Miller, Fred Hiss, Dave Beatty, Ronnie Reno, Dick Bourne, John Eapleton, Earl Harrison, Bob Feeser, Charles Morchand, Townsend Ruddick; rou- 2: Dick Klein, Aniar Singh, Jim Goldstein, Lutz Prager, Howard Kalodner, Kearney Car- penter, Al Stern, Tim Bell, Dave Perry, Keith Hardman, Dave Ingles; row 5; Bill Gage, Flip Howorth, John Trumper; row 4: Stan Forster, Norm Mathews, John Kelly, Paul Craig, Monty Furth, Rod Rothermel, Donald MacDonald, Marc Lissfelt, Pete Gardner, Stew Swihart, Bill Meads; row 5; Wis Comfort, Ed Schofer, Fred Muth, Morris Johnson, Bill -Kaye, Jim Felstiner, Bill ^'atson, J. C. Wren, Jean Wolf; row (>: Bob Hutton, Tex deBerry, Bill Bittel, Dick Silver, Pete ^X'oU, Jack Harve\, Phil Benjamin; row 7: Bill Wilson, Dick Taylor, Heinz Koch, Bryan Williams, Tom Rentschler, John Walton, Darrah Thomas, Chris White, Chris Hansen, Larry Finklestein.

69

THREE DA Y RESER VE

ELMER . . . transferred from Drexel . . . dislikes technical education sans liberal arts . . . hep on Work Camps, Young Friends movement, and philosophy . . . telephone operator at Merion Annex . . . electrical engineering assistance in foreign lands. Philosophy Club 3, 4.

DAVE . . . would rather be a mad chemist than a hacker of cadavers . . . hydronamics went to his head he tried to flood the chem lab . . . wielder of a wicked torch . . . Apple Creek Kid . . . plays a mean old organ.

Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Spanish Club 2; WHKC 3; Asst. Mgr., Football 2, 3; Collection organist

2, 3.

TIEN . . . from Peking to the States in 1947 . . . Haverford via Earlham where he learned, the hard way, that there is more than one brand of Quakers . . . courage of his convictions . . . summer work in a mental hospital and as dietitian for an AFSC project ... a permanent and smiling fixture at the reserve desk . . . eager to learn ... a serious student of social problems and international relations . . . hopes to do graduate work in sociology somewhere in the East.

GEARS

BRUTCH . . . "Oh Ma-al" . . . quiet resignation in early Merion years ... "I wouldn't go so far as to say that" . . . lives in Hilles . . . enroute to MIT . . . racy television parties in Bayside . . . "I'd like to dedicate this record" . . . known to produce gears from pocket at instant's notice . . . conscientious sock-washer . . . found beside milk machine or in a bowl of potatoes . . . GREAT . . . amateur Hornblower on the Delaware . . . red shirts ... to settle at X-ray corporation.

Nautical Club 1, 2, 3, 4; WHRC 1, 2, treasurer 3, secretary 4; German Club 1, 2, 3, 4.

REDTOP

YN ... 1st year: disillusioned engineer takes up residence in 33 Lloyd . . . makes unholy alliance with Math . . . beset by Loebism, 34 Lunt . . . succumbs to cold water and wastebaskets ... 2d year: resurrected . . . migrates to Founders, and sees advent of cheese, and sees destruction of the English language . . . becomes pre-med ... has a date ... 3rd year: fresh from Wood's Hole, takes up life with polar planimeter . . . No Jane . . . sees Beaver the hard way, via Glee Club . . . 4th year: back to eighth . . . Accepted at P&S . . . Halleluiah !

Glee Club 1, 2, 3; ICG 1, 2; Cricket, Asst. Mgr. 1; Fencing, Asst. Mgr. 3; Campus Day

Committee 2; Service Fund 3.

CLASS OF 1953

70

Bruce Z. Hollmann

Engineering

X

to. ^

David P. Mayer Chemistry

Hsin-Yuan T'ien

Sociology

Elmer B. Carter

Physics

L.. hvANS Roberts, Jr.

Mathematics

71

John R. Tomec

Zoology

R. Scott Anderson

Chemistry

Frank J. Little, Jr. Biology

Edward P. Rich German

72

SPOTLIGHTS

SCOTTY . . . Hopi maidens and sackless G.I.'s ... the place was known as the Barclay Hotel . . . swore never to buy a Ford again . . . rewrote Aesop to fit the times . . . hopes to go to school some more, but will probably end up in the infantry . . . has been known to insert Lorenz transformations into a philosophic argument with disastrous results to all concerned . . . "My God, it's a derivative."

WHRC 1, 2, 3; Drama Club 2, J, 4; Cap and Bells 2, 3, 4; Class Night 1, 2, 3.

JACKSON . . . "It'll be a fine haircut when it grows in" . . . "it looks like bloody hell!"

... 50 MPH and the wheel came off . . . New Orleans, and I was too young . . . "Dinner

date tonight guys: waiter, table for ten" . . . the Tozer, now there was a car . . . "I'll

drive you anywhere, for a fee" . . . "It's a pandoratus you bonehcad" . . . modernism:

chains, red lights, driftwood . . . FRAMP . . . "My God, again?" . . . Butch . . .

Charles Adams, a veritable genius.

Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4; News 1, 2: WHRC 1, 2, 3; Cap and Bells 2, 3, 4; Drama Club prod, mgr. 2, 3, 4; Class Night 2, 3, 4; Dance Committee 2, 3.

CRA WFORDS BOYS

MAC . . . "NO, it's not spelled Max!" . . . made it in three years . . . "Is anyone driving to Northampton this weekend?" . . . still thinks Taft could have won . . . Cincinnati is not Middle Western . . . great faith in social poise . . . "No. Crawford, no! " . . . "Ezra Pound is a great poet" . . . swears New York is the only place to see a show . . . the best time of the day is from four to seven . . . will devote a lifetime of study to Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.

Drama Club 2, 4; WHRC 1; Nautical Club 2, 4,

TED . . . WANTED: for parking a long, gray, unregistered Cadillac convertible in Miss Wonson's private spot . . . small man in a big car . . . "What's the German assign- ment?" . . . hopes to try his accent in West Berlin . . . new twist on the old Quake . . . first entry, downstairs . . . "Can you spare a cigarette?" . . . second generation at Haverford . . . managed a great cricket XI . . . will work out his frustrations with a 'dentist's drill.

Cricket, manager 3; Orchestra 1, 2, 3.

LEVIS

BOBO . . . monarch of 5 Lloyd . . . connoisseur of fine literature "Westerns" . . .

"Little, we do that inside" . . . "When it's free the price is right" . . . full of fine

spirits . . . alternated with Lewis going to Meeting . . . lover of Freshman Math . . .

leader of Rhinie riots . . . always ready to give you a lift . . . footmat for the fairer

sex . . . will make a great veterinarian . . . levis and T-shirt are full dress . . .

smoker of smelly pipes . . . has been seen in the library.

]V Football 1,3: JV ureslling 1, 2; Varsity Wrestling 3; Drama Club 4; Faculty Women's Liaison Officer 3; Record 3.

73

Cs er D's

CASK . . . "Oh, my back" . . . "My God, I'm going blind" . . . "Wake me up in an hour" . . . "Who kleptoed my pencil?" . . . "Who pulled your leash?" . . . "I'll beat that Piotrow yet" . . . "If Id only known then what I know now" . . . Haver- ford's most frustrated athlete . . . thinks the East is a den of iniquity . . . member of the Freund machine . . . says he can't carry five subjects and proves same . . . still prints his name . . . loves: golf, da boss, telling same jokes for four years, 3:30 time limit in spite of Mary ... six hour council meetings . . . law.

Student's Council 2, secretary 3, president 4; Class secretary 2; JV Tennis 1, 2; Varsity

Tennis 3, 4; Founders Club 4; Varsity Club 3, 4.

DA'VE . . . the last of the praying mantises . . . Bones ... a dis-integrated math major ... the Connecticut Yankee ... all elbows on the hardwood . . . never gets mad, well hardly ever . . . "I've got an idear" . . . those ones . . . "Aw, shoot " . . . put North Barclay through Freshman Math . . . detested Social Science . . . tall and silent . . . problems, problems, problems, I'm going mad . . . wore his letter sweater once . . . Engineering courses with Holmes.

Basketball 1,2,3, captain 4; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4.

DOC . . . hopes to enter medical school ... the Southern Gentleman . . . likes to sleep till noon . . . "Ah'm so tired " . . . "Deaton, lend me a buck" . . . good grades with a minimum of study . . . "We'll have no vulgarity here" . . . went to an eight o'clock once . . . lives on Pacific Standard Time ... has half his meals in the Coop . . . classical music till 4 A.M. . . . "Deal me in" . . . disagrees with Deaton on everything . . . has a way with the Dean . . . holds modern flick record.

HUGH . . . phenomenal worker . . . runs in the family ... has lively conversations with himself . . . always has at least three girls on the string . . . only monotone in the glee club . . . Davis' financial backer ... I am too S-py? fiendish grin . . . sure fire success as MD . . . will debate anything . . . "Another lab like that will kill me" ... has half-baked Southern accent . . . Chem consultant before every exam . . . hypnotist and magician ... six letters a week from Baltimore. Chemistry Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa 3.

David H. Caskey Political Science

William B. Davis, Jr. Chemistry

David V. Clark Mathematics

Hugo L. Deaton Chemistry

75

John W. King

Chemistry

76

Leo Dvorken Chemistry

Dennis J. Lafer

Chemistry

Labron K. Shuman Political Science

THREE ROOM CIRCUS

LEO . . . "Put your whole body behind it" ... a most middle-class guy ... a knee injury gave the JV a coach ... his team broke a record: first Haverford victory since 1950 . . . loves dogs, pipes, slippers, fire, and from time to time a girl . . . "Everyone should help his mother with the dishes" . . . "Why didn't I take it when I had the chance!" . . . has conducted Franck with the best 8th's Toscannini . . . cast the deciding vote for the cloth wall . . . only person who can make a scarf sexy.

Glee Club I, 2; Chemistry Club I, 2, 3, 4: Customs Committee 2; Football I, 2, 3, JV coach I, 2, 3; Track 1, 2; Varsity Club I, 2, 3, 4; Commencement Speaker Committee 4.

JOHN . . . "Dum vivimus, vivimus!" . . . enthusiastic believer in the art and practice of getting a good night's (and day's) sleep . . . continually developing his bedside manner . . . destined to become an accomplished physician . . . rangy denizen of the intra-mural leagues . . . doesn't believe in worrying: "Might lose weight, and I can't afford it" . . . "Up for breakfast tomorrow" . . . cool (set the alarm for ten), calm (Oh, my God, I have an exam this mdrning), collected (well I still have an hour to study) . . . finds trouble passing phys. ed., but doesn't worry about other subjects. Chemistry Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Bridge Club 3, 4; Senior Class Gift Committee.

DENNY . . , big little man . . . guts of a six foot two inch, two hundred pounder on

the football field . . . willing to tackle anything . . . two pictures in the Bulletin and

they call him Braker . . . turned down Penn to be a P&S grad . . . more agile in the

corner chair than most guys are on the couch . . . tries to make embryo's at Bryn Mawr

. . . "How do you get I owe you that much?" . . . "Don't worry, I'll pay, but all I

have is a ten" . . . party ice breaker . . . affectionately, the Menace.

Bridge Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Chemistry Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Football 3, 4: JV Football I, 2; Class Night 1, 2, 4; Dance Committee 2, 3; Varsity Club 3, 4; JV Baseball 3; JV Track 1, 2.

LABE . . . tweeds for dress . . . learned the Mayan calendar at Bryn Mawr . . . lister

of dates, starts big, ends blank ... his Alaskan Sweater, Parisian Gloves, Swiss Watch,

and Arab Kaffir give him the international look . . . sometime idealist, most time prag-

matist ... a scratcher from way back . . . America still needs Stevenson . . . Flying

Tigers is flying not dying . . . Joe never quite appreciated Stalin's picture over the desk

(Rogue's gallery) . . . Philadelphia grows by comparison . . . John wants to sack,

Denny seeks a date, Labe looks for a fourth, and Leo hunts for a fifth.

NEWS, advertising manager I, 2: Record 1, 2, 3, editor 4: ICG 1, 2, 3, 4; PAA 4; Spanish Club 1, 2, 3; Debating 3, 4; Freshman Introduction Committee 4; Commencement Speaker Committee; Class Night 2; Theatre-in-the-Round 2.

77

FIFTH DAY

JOHN . . . gentleman scholar . . . always a surly "good-morning" . . . "Wood, when will thee learn to say, 'Who is it?' and not 'Come in.' "... incipient Red Smith . . . knows just enough about everything to set anyone on his can . . . "That wouldn't be cricket" . . . "Come now, Elspeth, let's sit up and act like civilized folk" . . . Royal Messer of the Royal Mess . . . "Come on now, Rhinies, let's get Lloyd." . . . "Well Dr. Lunt, I'm sorry." . . . baits Ledeboer . . . "Watch my back, you big brute" . . . OED et QED, "I want a girl I can talk to. " .

Cricket Squad 1, 2, storekeeper 3, manager 4; German Club 1, 2: Assistant Manager Voot- hall 2: Wrestling 2, 3; Soccer 3; News Bureau 4: NEWS, staff 1, alumni editor 2, sports editor 3, contributing editor 4: Record, staff 3, make-up editor 4; Corporation Scholar- ship 1; Founders Club.

FONZO . . . grew his handlebars for a passport photo . . . "Hunhh?" . . . used to make his bed twice a day . . . resolution for '52-'53, "I will not be neat." . . . caught on fast in the Royal Mess . . . Anglophile . . . "On the London, Midland, and Scottish Railway, we do it this way" ... off his trolley . . . always a cheery, "Get the hell out of here, Neimark." . . . promoter of open house at "Cousm Julia's" on First Day afternoon . . . three years at the L-Q door for Fifth Day Meeting . . . "Who put the salt in Mrs. Lunt's tea?"

Track 2: Drama Club 1, 2; German Club 2. 3.

LEDDYBO . . . thumb in the dike on Haverford's line . . . "Little Slug" . . . "Hello, Dr. Pepinsky? Is Jack Ledeboer there?" ... had a date at Holyoke . . . Lede- boer's law of semantics: "Verdi? That means green, don't it?" ... his mother is chief baker for the Royal Mess, or "Get the hell out of that box, you phonies!" . . . personal- ized all beds in the Royal Mess ... his song: I'm Looking for Another Mary! . . . all roads lead to Ambler ... the ladies love the Tigers !

JV Football I; Varsity Football 2, 3, 4; Varsity Baseball 1, 2, 3, captain 4; Varsity

Club 2, 3, 4.

T.L. . . . giant Jersey bowler . . . curator of Piano Roll Library . . . "Quack" . . . H.G.T.L. H-J DuBois III . . . "He believes he is, but he's not." . . . "Well, what were his parents? Ugh, careless!" . . . bedboard and wraparound pillow . . . HOLY TRINITY: Evaul, Clifford, and the Commie . . . innocently instigates all trouble in the Royal Mess . . . "Now cough, please " . . . loyal disciples of E. Halderman-Julius, Col. Ingersol, Patsy O'Bang, et al . . . "On, Preston, on, you wall-eyed huskies!" . . . wrote a paper in high school: it got him five A's in college . . . Broad major . . . scratch a CO. and you'll get a dirty joke . . . John-wall scribe.

Glee Club 1; JV Soccer 1, 2; Varsity Cricket 1, 2, 3, 4; Improvement Bat 1; Congdon

Ball 3; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4.

DICK . . . Quaker, through and through . . . rooming with Benton, his peace testi- mony has been well-tested . . . only man alive to successfully apply passive resistance to an opposing soccer player in an intercollegiate game . . . "Little one, thee ain't Nothin' "... unique specimen of a decaying race . . . English major, but dairy farmer from the top of his head to the smell of his shoes . . . "Padre's off delivering Truth to some Hicksites" . . . "If Woody shuffles his feet" . . . pumps a wicked Light Cavalry Overture on the player piano . . . member of the Royal Mess . . . "Get that moth out of there!"

Varsity Soccer 2, 3, 4; JV Basketball: Cricket 2. 3, 4, Haines Fielding Belt 3; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4; Ten O'Clock Club Committee 1, 2, chairman 3: HCSF Drive I, 2; Sergei Thomas Memorial Fund 2, 3: Dormitory Representative on the Student's Council 3.

Howard G. Taylor, 3d

English

79

George D. Schlegel Political Science

Philip G. Vance Economics

Homer R. Goodall

Philosophy

80

TOWER

LEE . . . "Where's Stump?" . . . "Where's Dave?" . . . frustrated Math major . . . precisely . . . Montana and medicine . . . "You guys don't understand me" . . . argues with his roommates . . . argues . . . Rye and Soda . . . Halsey Wood, class a' ten . . . the student's student . . . rhetoric personified . . . captained the class football team to a victorious season and flunked phys. ed. . . . a wonderful guy . . . Haverford should have more like him.

Glee Club I, 2, 3, 4; Cheerleader 3, 4: Class Night Commillee 1, 2, chairman 3; WHRC 3, 4; Freshman Introduction Committee 2, 3, 4; Junior Dance Committee 3; French Club 2.

HOMER . . . "aawwk, " the GREAT BIRD . . . rangy philosopher . . . forever flying from one pressing social obligation to another . . . "Isn't that killing !" . . . attachment to ships and opera . . . simply "killing" adventures with some of the fairer sex at Bryn Mawr . . . meticulously neat , . . smells own socks . . . the perfect roommate . . . unalcoholic life of every party . . . destined for unparalleled fame in the Armed Forces . . . renowned interpretive dancing . . . "Oh damn!"

Glee Club; Drama Club; Manager Tennis Team 2, 3, 4; Philosophy Club; Education

Committee.

STUMP . . . "Where's Lee? Where's Dave?" . . . "Incidentally" . . . "s'matter of fact" . . . given to bits of infectious laughter and frustrated romances .... a beer drinker's beer drinker . . . French House Fireman . . . free advice on ""How to play it cool" a strategy manifestly lacking in his own relations . . . applies irrational "logic" on every subject from sex to politics . . . five flicks a week . . . sleeps like Rip Van Winkle . . . undisputed king of the gag and the crossword puzzle . . . stubborn like an ass . . . they just don't come any better.

Glee Club 1. 2, 3, 4; Octet 2, 3; Wrestling 2, 3. 4: Baseball 1; Class Secretary; Varsity Club 3, 4; One act plays 3; Cheerleader 3, 4; Head Cheerleader 4; Customs Committee 3, 4; Freshman Indoctrination Committee 3.

DAVE . . . "Where's Stump? Where's Lee?" . . . "Did I get a letter?" . . . serious conversationalist . . . "We had a long talk. I've got problems" . . . magnetic person- ality necessary . . . infinitely superior to his roommates but modestly tolerant of them . . . debonair, urbane cavalier of the Tower . . . Nao-Dao . . . concessionaire about campus . . . crutch footballer . . . world traveler . . . conscientious student and political sciencer . . . "I'll be in the library all afternoon" . . . 'sfine man.

Varsity Football I, 2; JV Tennis 2, 3, 4; Freshman Indoctrination Committee 2; French

Club 1, 2; ICG 1, 2; Glee Club 2, 3, 4; Octet 3, 4.

PHIL . . . tweedy Cherokee ... a wheel but never would admit it . . . faculty student liaison man . . . "Don't worry, I'll see the Big Three." . . . infinitely superior to roommates, but modestly tolerant of them . . . "Maude? Vance!" . . . crusading member of the Honor System Committee on the woman's rule . . . Carrie Nation's brother . . . student of students, (in an unobtrusive way) ... a popular car of inde- scribable efficiency . . . fooled Caselli with off-campus eating . . . "Get serious" . . . "It's you and me, boys."

Track Squad 1, 2; Varsity Football 1, 2, 3, captain 4; Freshman Class Treasurer; Junior Class Vice-President; Custom's Committee 2; Founder's Club; Varsity Club 1, 2, 3, secretary- treasurer 4; Honor System Committee 4; Committee on Education, chairman 4.

81

MORE TOWER

REID . . . the intellectual dynamo . . . wore out vacuum on the Tower rugs . . . con- servative in all things . . . "Oh pooh" . . . connoisseur of gracious living . . . social finesse . . . well thought out but seldom voiced religious convictions . . . attracted by the intangible qualities of women . . . "But she has a wonderful mind" . . . bores roommates with dissertations on Bach's developments . . . will forsake medicine for a career in diplomacy . . . "Hey boys, it's clean-up time" . . . singular taste in everything but roommates.

Varsity Football 3, 4: Track 3; Chemistry Club 3: WHRC 2, 3; Varsity Club 3, 4; Varsity Club Dance Committee 4.

TED . . . Adonis of the Tower . . . modestly 4-F ... a good man in spite of his incredible attraction for women . . . Cape Cod by moonlight . . . Amico Caselli . . . ghost writer for hunt' s History of England . . . not what he seems . . . love 'em, leave 'em . . . seen at Tenth, once . . . ugliest non-simian toes in existence . . . the bathroom philosopher . . . SALLY, SALLY WATER . . . McCandless' nemesis . . . pleasantly sarcastic . . . barters with Coop employment . . . the sieve . . . "Tell you what I'm gonna do."

Collection Committee 2: Co-chairman, Haverjord College Service Committee 4: Coop Committee 1, chairman 2, 3, 4; Education Committee 1.2, 3, 4: German Club, secretary- treasurer 2; Soccer 2, 3, 4: Basketball 1, 2, 3: Cricket 3, 4; Intramural Committee 1, 2, secretary 3, 4: WHRC 2, 3: Spring Day Committee 2.

ART . . . freshman year in Bryn Mawr Hospital . . . "Shut that window Piotrow or I'll smash your alarm clock" . . . Tower's D'Artagnan . . . has harem at Bryn Mawr, but specialization is creeping in . . . ghost will haunt the Library . . . medicinal bottle in bureau . . . scholastic to the core . . . "Really ? Great !" . . . most conservative, i.e., polished, of Haverford's midwestern contingent . . . Holmes, sweet Holmes . . . infi- nitely superior to roommates, but modestly tolerant of them . . . Phila. lawyer.

Founder's Club 3, 4; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4: Phi Beta Kappa 3: Fencing JV 1. Varsity 2, 3, captain 4; Golf 2, 3: Track 1, 4; Debating 2; Dining Hall Committee 3; Faculty-Student Committee 4; Service Fund 2; Freshman Introduction Committee 3, 4.

The 'Wedge

Ad-

JACK . . . bathroom Caruso . . . thespian par excellence

miral of the Tower Fleet . . . adventures at the Blair House . . . "I'll get a date" . . .

distinguished Polish background . . . "Nicht ein hundert tausand" . . . katchia as

catch can . . . definitely a scholar . . . Cleanliness and neatness above all . . . match

Dan for shakes at the Coop . . . 7:40 alarm . . . "I'm afraid I can't flick out, I've

got to study."

Tennis Team 2, captain 3, 4; Virginia Cup 2, 3; Drama Club 1, 2, 3; WHRC 1, 2, 3, 4; Student's Council 2, 3; Phi Beta Kappa 3; Rhodes Scholar 4.

82

A. RniD Allison, Jr. Chemistry

Arthur W. Leibold

English

Robert T. Curran

History

F. Jackson Piotrow

German

83

John R. Hitchcock

Philosophy

Milton H. Isay Political Science

Daniel R. Fascione Psychology

James H. VanSickle Political Science

84

/ GO POGO

MILT

NICK

HITCH

SIC

fat

conscientious

bon bon

7:45

hi!

pajamas

bathroom

Tribune

semantics

Bill

Austen

phys ed

Bach

wienies

Glee Club

port

project 19

room

Barcelona

I.S.A.Y.

retailing

short

tall

thin

critical

casual

cautious

bon-vivant

bon-dormant

bon-etudiant

9:30

11:00

8:08

guys!

hey!

hoo boy!

checks

H-sweater

corduroys

bar

bed

bibliotheque

Weekly People

New Yorker

Newsweek

absolutely not

gray

absolutely

Abe

Frank

Ernest

Spillane

Plato

Adam Smith

soccer

baseball

tennis

Beethoven

Brahms

Berlin

steak

steak

steak

beard

record

Dining Committee

scotch

beer

milk

is she nice ?

bee -beep !

00-00

convertible

Studey

bushes

Paris

Fairbanks

Crawfordsville

A.D.A.

S.A.C.K.

GOP.

music therapy

contemplation

architecture

Milton Henry Isay, Jr.: Glee Gliib 1, librarian 2, secretary 3, president 4; Cap and Bells

3, 4; WHRC 2, 3; ICG 4; Class Night 1 ; Spanish Club 1, 2.

Daniel Roland Fascione: WHRC I, 2, 3; ICG 2, 3, 4; JV Soccer 1, 2, 3; Class Night

1, 2, 4: Bridge Club 3; Glee Club 1 ; Dining Room Critic 1, 2, 3, 4.

John Raymond Hitchcock: Baseball 2, 3, 4: WHRC 1, 2, 3; NEWS 1, 2, 3; Record

editor 4: Varsity Club 3,4.

James H. Van Sickle: Class vice-president 4; Record 4; Collection Committee 2, 3, 4; Dining

Hall Committee 3.

85

STOGIES

DICK . . . the Nobel savage . . . "Will you or won't you?" . . . "Smallest hills I ever saw, and I'm from South Jersey" . . . the rosebush . . . Tahiti bound . . . seegars . . . gone with the wine . . . "I'll flip you, Moore" ... . folk wisdom and local color . . . "Let's go to New York" . . . blanks and bombs . . . talks a good piece . . . are you 21 . . . small and dangerous . . . the sound and the fuzz. Glee Club 1 ; Class Nighl 3, 4: W resiling 1, 2.

MO . . . nonchalantly ... oil well . . . "It's a 37 Bentley, Goddammit" . . . "She IS a nice little girl" . . . the admiral . . . "When I was a young man courting the girls " . . . WE GO . . . apes and snakes . . . 30,000 screaming natives . . . pen- guins (plaid) theory . . . the eatus-CES . . . Math . . . wierdest succession of room- mates and cars . . . Junior year in bed theory . . . Cross Country moses . . . Vassar . . . Moore's Mad Mechanical Monster and Modes and Methods of Mechanized Motiva- tion . . . "Corson, did you hnally.' " . . . "Orgy art?" . . . moves his car into the room for the winter.

WHRC 1; Cross Country 1, 2, 3; Varsity Club J, 4; Trad 2: Spanish Club 1,2; Class

Nighl 3, 4; Glee Club 1.

LARRY . . . thatch . . . "That damn river" . . . Zorita . . . twenty cheering couples . . . those long weekends . . . the Quaker with a mallet theory . . . "MA, the original Hopalong Chastity" . . . "Wake me up at noon" ... "I just can't tight it" ... Oh? . . . the conservative . . . folk music and Jerome Kern . . . another vaporlock . . . the cockatoo . . . "Get the bottle, I have another paper to write" . . . the Kleenex- slip . . . GAWD.

WHRC 1, 2; Fencing 2, 3, 4: Varsity Club 2, 3. 4: Class Nighl 1, 2, 3, 4: Drama Club I, 2, 3; Glee Club 1.

MARKET WATCHERS

HERB ... a has-been chess player at twenty . . . "How could I lose to a 13-year-old child?" . . . "J'adoube! " . . . those postal chess games . . . "You mean you never played Kriegspiel?" . . . "Fourth" . . . AT&T's current asset . . . "But Alcoa is a sound company" . . . "What's risky about Mexican gold mining stock?" . . . "But that stock can't go any lower" . . . "Are you implying that I take gut courses?" . . . dried apricots, Pepsi-Cola, and pretzels "What, they serve breakfast here?" . . . "You call this snow? Why in Pittsburgh!" . . . wants to be an actuary . . . "But what if Strehler marks the comps?"

Bridge Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Chess Club 1, president 2, 3, 4; Debating 1; ICG 1; Mountaineers 3.

GORDIE . . . financial wizard got out of Alcoa before the crash . . . makes two words do the work of one . . . cowers at the sight of Howard . . . never supported a winning candidate . . . "But why can't I take eight courses?" . . . "What's wrong with this painting? You just don't understand it" . . . "It was due yesterday?" . . . debator extraordinary . . . "What's at the Wayne Avenue?" . . . "But they do prefer people with trick knees" . . . never sleeps . . . "Where's Gordon who's to say" . . . "But I do want to study in Italy" . . . Haverford's leading underwater sailor.

Debating 1, 2, 3, manager 4; NEWS 1, 2, 3, 4: ICG 1, 2. 3, 4; Chemistry Club 1, 2; Hand- book editor 2, 3/ Nautical Club 3, 4; JV Football 2; Chess Club 3: PAC 3, 4.

86

Richard H. Corson

Biology

Paul W. Moore Economics

Gordon Werner Economics

Herbert W. Hickman

Mathematics

87

Reginald E. Allen Philosophy

Karl W. G. Kumm Enghsh

Robert T. Seeley Mathematics

Fred D. Tabbutt Chemistry

William F. Haines Chemistry

88

YARDBIRDS

REG . . . "What has usually been associated with Platonic love has nothing to do with Plato, as far as I can ascertain" . . . noted for protitable speculation in the used car field . . . worked on the house that philosophy built . . . "But that still doesn't make me a pragmatist" . . . \aliantly attempted to synthesize Parker, Post, Steere, and Foss. Philosophy Club 2, presidcU 3, 4: Phi Bvla Kappa 3,- ]V Football 3, 4; Chess Club 2, 3.

BILL . . . drawback of JV football . . . denizen of Mcrion, Chem. and Bug. labs . . . veteran of numerous wash-bottle and dogfish battles . . . anatomy at Hood, Wilson, and Bryn Mawr . . . hopes to become an expert on human species . . . Dvorken's gridiron protege . . . rocky third of the Fuller-Tabbutt-Haines team.

KARL . . . flirted with track records, and little else . . . festi\e ICG meetings, Steven- son all the way: the American people made a big mistake . . . "But I don't want any stationery" ... an old salt with farming background . . . "Cm'on Fink, let's get going" . . . authority on pitchforks . . . that's symbolic . . . after college: U. S. Navy, editor of the American Neptune, or outstandmg Melville authority.

Tract 1, 2, 3, co-captain 4: ICG 1, 2, 3, 4: JV Football 1,2: Varsity Football 3: Varsity

Club 3, 4.

BOB . . . "See those boys working, that's why I'm sitting here" . . . "Are you going to eat your desert ?" . . . last one to breakfast club . . . also ran against Mai Whitfield . . . "What else do you do besides running those long distances.'" ... a mathematical Brahmin . . . hopes to learn Dutch, but tired of studying.

Cricket I; Wrestling 1, 2; Track 2, 3, 4; Cross Country 2, 3, co-captain 4; Orchestra 1, 2,

3; Phi Beta Kappa 3.

FRED . . . "Some day, when I'm great, people will laugh at me too" . . . favorite poet: Byron ... a real rock ... "I didn't know it was going to break" . . . still doesn't understand that joke about the female hurdler . . . "Y'know classical music isn't so bad after all " . . . "Let's ha\e an acorn fight " . . . "But I got to study" . . . hopes to get his doctorate at some school near BMC.

Track 1, 2, 3, co-captain 4: Chemistry Club I, 2, vice-president 3, president 4; JV foot- ball 1, 3.

JOGS

BURGO . . . "Have you seen my new shipment of books?" . . . Southern belles are

superior to Northern women . . . sleeps on a board . . . "How about a back rub?"

. . . "No, I'm going to study tonight" . . . plays a fast tennis game . . . does the

triple Charleston, Kentucky style . . . "If it's scarlet and black, I'll buy it" . . . "Let's

have a double H cheer" . . . "I'll bite" . . . "Anybody want to play hockey at Bryn

Mawr?" . . . Goren understudy . . . million dollar sporting goods concern.

Football 1; Soccer 2, 3.' Basketball 1, 2, 3.' Tennis 2, 5, 4: Intramural Committee I, 2, 3, 4: Class secretary 1, treasurer 2; Varsity Club 5, 4: Customs Committee 2, 3; Big Brother Committee 2, 3.

JOE . . . upper fifth ... 150 pounds of football dynamite . . . early morning study sessions . . . upper fifth mechanic . . . traded refrigerator for electric blanket ... "I got a new idea for making money" . . . "Listen to this record" . . . "I'm going to study this year" , . , never took a laxative in his life ... "I can't make lab today, T.O., I've got to move a horse" . . . chemistry mastermind . . . "When I was out in Hollywood" . . . "'What this country needs is a new embalming fluid" . . . future: professional undertaker or creative chemist.

Football 2, 3, 4; Track 3; Asst. Baseball Manager 2; WHRC 2, 4, secretary 3; Varsity Club 3, 4: Freshman Introduction Committee 3; Customs Committee 4.

HURTY . . . upper fifth's non-resident . . . always seen with a good looking woman . . . spark in Haverford College athletics . . . Main Line socialite . . . "Jeeze-ta-bits!" . . . Atlantic City gigolo . . . "Be serious" . . . "You should have seen the movie we had at Army tonight" . . . "Boy, did I foul up that test there goes my 80 average" . . . inventor of new words (congloburation) . . . grey chevy convert . . . high pressure mug salesman . . . "I'm going to see Ang-i" . . . Main Line pediatrician from Penn Med.

Football I, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Student's Council 2; Student Faculty Co-ordinator 2: Varsity Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Custom's Committee 2.

HARVE . . . upper fifth ... BR 5-9142 . . . "Joy Fox, please" . . . three years class president . . . 80% say Cavaliers are milder . . . likes a good manhattan . . . Dr. Reid's boy . . . coffee at B.M. . . . Earl-i's assistant mechanic ... a '37 Ford that runs better than new . . . practical and consistent . . . Denbigh's charmer . . . the perfect roommate . . . "That's what he said" . . . headed for law.

Glee Club 1, 2; JV Football 1, 2; Freshman Introduction Committee 3, chairman 4: Class

vice-president 1, president 2, 3, 4.

John McD. Burge, Jr. English

r^i

Joseph E. Helweg, Jr.

Chemistry

Wayne C. Hurtubise

Chemistry

H. Edward Reed Sociology

91

George Nash

Psychology

Mark Sexton

Spanish

/"^v f f

;i;

John E. Steely, Jr.

Mathematics

Mitchell Winn Political Science

92

NO TRUMP

GEORGE . . . Psych, madman with the Model A . . . Abe's babe . . . racetrack to Radnor . . . "Check your battery, sir?" ... an almost harrier . . . let his hair grow his senior year . . . the Spaniard of Founders . . . biggest bed in the college . . . fond memories of steel mill days . . . Pittsburgh psychologist . . . sack time in a sleeping bag . . . held work in Skid Row ... an original philosophy based on vast untold experiences . . . machine gun conversationalist . . . pretty, unpaid helper in the grease- pit .. . discriminating in his choice of associates.

MARK . . . sole senor of '53 . . bearded monk from Deep Springs . . . "Well, I'm learning something from this course" . . . "Gee, that's nice " . . . "Why don't you guys go downstairs and dance.' " ... in one ear and gone tomorrow . . . "There was oil on the beach at Acapulco " . . . keeper of George Fox in Ecstasy . . . "It was a case of middle-class morality, Mitch" ... a "guts" scholar ... "I only bird-dog when I'm high" . . . one-time journalist . . . "All I get is nickels and sentiment" . . . friend- ship over scholarship . . . love of the open road ... his heart to Haverford.

Press Service 3; Spanish Club 3, 4; ICG 3, 4; Service Commillee 4; NEWS 3; Record 4.

STEELY . . . the Reading cowboy . . . party pals from Princeton . . . beardless wonder . . . roommate from Bryn Mawr . . . "Let me show you the Mexican rope trick" . . . the mathematical approach to beauty . . . GOP spells John . . . "You guys think you're smart, don't you.'" . . . jazz, jazz, jazz . . . unsubdued extrovert who knows how to laugh . . . "Now when I lived with Spaeth-" ... I LIKE IKE . . . Bachelor? Damn Right!

Glee Club 1, 3, 4: WHRC I, 4: Debating 1, 2, Spanish Club I, 2, 3, 4; Sailing 3, 4;

Band 1,2, 3; Orchestra 1.

MITCH . . . ex-Scull A.C. . . . painting in Paris . . . "Dad" scores the hat trick ... no heads are better than some . . . poor man's Gallup spot's Ike . . . you can teach a new pup old tricks . . . "merde, alors" . . . "Ever had dreams of glory?" . . . Spanish House ringer . . . "I'm saving the world for democracy " . . . "It was a case of middle class morality, Mark " . . . "Look at those young kids running their guts out" . . . "The only reason I'm not a star is that I'm no damn good " . . . redheads is the best people.

Soccer I, 2, 3. 4: Cricket I, 2, 3; Glee Club I, ?/ NEWS I, 2; Class Night 1, 2,

3, 4; Drama Club 3, 4; Record 1, 4.

93

BRAIN TRUST

DICK . . . the perpetual day student . . . always needing a shave . . . ambition the future Dr. B. . . . can always advise you about something he knows nothing about ... a shrewd dealer in old cars . . . really hates cold weather . . . "Come on Haines, don't eat my lunch" . . . "Now when we worked down at Sun Ship, we really had it easy" . . . always losing something . . . comes in two minutes late for every class . . . can usually be found in the Coop or looking over specimens at Bryn Mawr (Biological.'). Chemistry Club 1, 2, secretary 3, vice-president 4.

JOHN . . . lacks self-discipline and is proud of it . . . didn't feel like studying on

Tuesday, November 8, 1951 . . . preference for Philadelphia musical comedy . . . why

won't they let me be a THEORETICAL physicist? . . . a hot weather baseball man . . .

innate hatred of snow and labs . . . first Cal Tech, then teaching.

WHRC 1, 3, technical director 2; Chess Club 2, 3; Baseball 1, 2, 4; Cross Country 2, 3: Varsity Club 2, 3, 4; Math Club 1, 2, 3; Phi Beta Kappa 3.

BOB . . . enthusiastic chopper of golf balls . . . human chopper to be . . . has spent his Haverford career on golf links, in a Renault, at Bryn Mawr (in class or lab, of course), and in the field of books and notes chemical, biological and mathematical . . . academic success most eminent.

Chemistry Club 1, 2, 3, secretary-treasurer 4; Golf 1, 2, 3, 4; Squash I, 2, 3; Varsity Club

1, 2, 3, 4; Spanish Club I, 2; Phi Beta Kappa 3.

BILL . . . statuesque figure in the dinmg hall and frequent object of friendly barrages of rolls . . . always moaning about tests that never turn out to be quite so bad as expected . . . writes term papers that are half text and half footnotes ... an endless energy for WHRC . . . "Fix it, Ridge" . . . "You don't need to put that in the miputes, Bruce" ... "I don't have time oh, all right" ... a Lunt man all the way: "On page 320 isn't it, "Vance.'" . . . library custodian . . . law? . . . teaching? . . . government ?

WHRC 1, 2, station manager 3, 4; ICG 2, 3, treasurer 4; JV Football 3, 4; Chess Team

1, 2, 3, 4; Founders Club 3, 4; Phi Beta Kappa 3.

GREG . . . foremost bull-slinger of the physics majors . . . once soldered some wires for WHRC, but now lowers himself to technology only for money . . . "I'm devoting my mmd to the construction of abstract logical systems" . . . "It's nothing, I made a mistake once" . . . expert on Alice in Wonderland, amplifiers, semantics, and Charles Adams . . . known by all who love him . . . the physics lab will certainly miss his sardonic laughter.

WHRC 1, 2, 3; Math Club 1. 2, 3.

94

Henry William Morrison, Jr. Political Science

95

Harry H. Bair Chemistry

Somervell Linthicum Political Science

John C. Harris

Political Science

Peter H. Wood English

1

4-

Robert W. Crichlow

Chemistry

96

STRABS

ROCK . . . upper fifth . . . soap and toothpaste magnate . . . Pittsburgh's chamber of commerce ... the Pirates are building ... oil city band . . . American culture's good enough for me . . . intramural star . . . "That was my goal" . . . baseball's perennial rookie . . . "Has Hel-wen , called yet?" . . . "I'm lost" . . . never argue with a fat Philistinian canary . . . sports stories and the Saturday Evening Post . . . 'Varsity Club president: how to get a big band with no money . . . "I'm next in the shower" . . . "gimme a sip" ... on to Temple med. .school.

Freshman Inlrodiiction Committee I, 2, chairman 3, 4; Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Club

1, 2, 3, president 4.

BOB . . . upper-fifth . . . '"Where's the soap, Bair.'" . . . "That couldn't be my stuff on the floor" . . . from treasurer of Students' Council to Bryn Mawr president, or, can I borrow your car to get Marilyn? . . . budget $6.50 a week . . . "OF COURSE I'll get up for breakfast" . . . flunked cricket . . . "Let's go see Stansbury" . . . "What do you mean we can't make 6 hearts?" . . . sings 'Verdi in his sleep . . . the three B's: Brahms, Beethoven, and Beer . . . stalwart intramural football lineman . . . next year at Penn Med.

Varsity Football 1; Varsity Wrestling 2, 3, 4; Customs Committee 3; Students' Council 2,

treasurer 3.

JACE . . . upper fifth ... BR 5-2801 . . . small room . . . in-laws . . . don't let the side show eat up the circus . . . Hohohohohoho (rising crescendo) . . . the Council voted 8 to 1 for . . . Haverford School's Knute Rockne . . . baseball pitcher: strong down the middle and over the fence . . . intramural rock . . . lost 5 pounds this week (he gained 10 the next) . . . John's other roommate? . . . shades of ancient sixth . . . BMOC, e.g., Student Affairs Co-ordinator.

Baseball 1, 2, 3, 4; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4; Glee Club 1; Students' Council 1, 3, 4.

SOMIE . . . upper fifth . . . too much . . . when in Rockville, do as the Linthicums do . . . "The trouble with this college is " . . . "God, I'm horny, and it's only Tuesday" . . . private line to New York . . . Southern charm . . . Roy finally found a second baseman . . . best intramural man in college . . . "Move your bodkin over" . . . an- other Stansbury fan ... "I can't eat this stuff, let's go to the Coop" . . . he's one of the greatest . . . Uncle Sam wants him.

Varsity Baseball 3, 4; JV Basketball 3; Varsity Club 3, 4; Freshman Indoctrination Com- mittee 3.

PIERRE . . . upper fifth . . . deserted for womanly charms and nine room house (Republican Headquarters) . . . country scjuire turned Haverford Host . . . "Some- body stole my glasses, chase 'em" . . . most orderly guy on campus . . . stump orator, sings in his cups shades of ancient sixth . . . father of Haverford Mountaineers . . . small-man's nemesis (leavin' the area?) . . . movies and the sack . . . spark of intra- mural soccer team . . . fourth? . . . weekends: Nassau, South Carolina, Washington, New York, etc. . . . that literary terms test is nothing . . . future: aw Din-Din.

Soccer 1, 2; Football 3; Track 2, 4; Mountaineers, president 3, 4; Class Night 3, 4;

Customs Committee 3/ Freshman Introductory Committee 3-

97

86.8

Once three lived in Seventh Entry. Two were philosophers, one an economist. The economist, T. Morris Perot by name, a scion of Chestnut Hill, was a quiet young man possessing white bucks at one end and a bare scalp at the other. He was a terror at darts, and also had the more unusual distinction of being far to the right of Taft. His avocations were sailing, Pem East, and the "Weekend Warriors." In his youth he was quite a rake, but as seniority crept up on him he settled down to a steady diet of beer, purely for the sake of keeping his hand in at darts and television watching. The first philosopher and the non (relatively)-drinker in the crowd was John P. Corry. He was firmly dogmatic in things philosophical, but his stand changed quite often, which was apt to be confusing, even to himself. He was to be recognized by an eager look, a four days beard, a sweater with no elbows, and somebody else's overcoat. His avocations were sleep, Wisconsin, and, in moments of complete debauchery, Flicks. He was a brilliant thinker, but transcended easily.

The second philosopher, John A. D. Kittredge, was a firm idealist most of the time, although liable to be almost anything late in the evening. Most of his mail came from the dean, in connection with his refusal to recognize anything earlier than twelve as a civilized hour for arising. He was to be recognized by gray hair (left over from the last play), and a room that rivaled the finest efforts of Langley Collier. His avocations were Scotch, science, fiction, Scotch, reading (almost anything except books assigned), and Scotch. Sic transit gloria mundi !

John A. D. Kittredge: Drama Club 1, 2, "i, 4.

JIM . . . "Ace" Ericson, known for his lanky frame, bouncy stride, and the general friendliness of a long puppy returned to Haverford after a semester vacation at Hobart . . . famous for his inopportune comments, Jim hit his peak while phoning his BM date: "Get good dates for the boys and try not to bring your personal friends." Wine before lunch 2, 3, 4.

MODEST

NORRIS . . . regimented activity . . . disdains history and languages, likes philosophy and natural sciences . . . spurious bursts of energy and sloth . . . quiet sincerity in the classroom . . . philosophical road to the ultimate scheme of things . . . music to suit the length of your hair . . . modest gentleman . . . dislikes long yearbook write-ups. Orchestra 3, 4.

98

John P. Corry

Philosophy

John A. D. Kittredge Philosophy

T. Morris Perot, 4th Economics

NORRIS Hansell Philosophy

99

Robert R. Reynolds Psychology

100

John M. Somerndike Psychology

Lewis J. Thomas, Jr. Biology

FLICKS?

JIM . . . small, but active ... 14 sweaters, gray flannels, regimental ties, and white bucks . . . "You mean I can't mix paint in our coflfee cups?" . . . art, skating, archi- tecture . . . the room's lone "rebel " . . . "Oh now really" . . . Sunday tennis . . . sun worshipper . . . "Oh shriek" . . . "That's killing" . . . beaches and women . . . parties, pad, politics . . . "Wake me up for supper" . . . Fledcrmaus . . . wine and fireplace . . . addicted to schedules . . . "Do you like this house?" . . . R. James Coote accepts with pleasure . . . "Texas Tommy, please" . . . "Lew, what?" . . . Navy . . . Interior Decorator.

Glee Club 1, 2, ?, 4: Drama Club 2, 5, 4; Octet 2, 3, 4; WHRC 3, 4; Record 4; Service

fund 4; Class Sight 2, 3, 4.

BOB . . . birthday parties at Tarello's ... "I nearly died " . . . "Let me tell you " . . . champagne ... "I hit a high B flatl" . . . flick hound . . . "They practically had to carry me out" . . . Gigli . . . breakfast? . . . Class Night Holland Tunnel . . . "Van says" . . . infinite source of humor . . . without raisins ... Is this the voice that launched a thousand ships? . . . boy wit and the Navy's first line of defense . . . "That's a panic" . . . when he laughs, women faint and babies scream . . . "Chicken noodle, my favorite" . . . "and so I said to Reese" ... off to the Met. Glee Club soloist 1, 4: Drama Club I, 2, 3, 4; WHRC 1 ; Class Night 1, 3.

SOMMY . . . member of the flick squad . . . Glee Club's magnificent monotone . . . "Watch me take this corner" . . . the little waiter who is never there . . . boy mechanic . . . letters at 2 A.M. . . . "Jim, what?" . . . can be found behind coffee cup in Coop . . . homespun philosopher . . . "It has a rebuilt engine" . . . hands stained with nicotine . . . "Ten years from now" . . . "Kill it before it reproduces!" . . . annual serape trouble . . . '"Strecker says " . . . cliches . . . "Can you cash a check?" . . . Haverford sweatshirt . . . "She doesn't meet my standards" . . . cool moves . . . future M.D.

Glee Club 4: WHRC 1, 2, 3; NEWS I, 2, 3: Freshman Introduction Committee 3, ICG 2; Class Night 1, 2, 3, 4; Service lund 3.

LEW . . . "H'lo" . . . "Beg pardon?" . . . "uh-uh" . . . versatile star of Bruno Lynch's aggregation . . . "Comet? Chest tones" . . . "It's guys like you"' . . . "You"re begging the question"' . . . Dionysian debauches at Penn . . . '"Oh yeah? How many dates have you had?" . . . '"Do you know we have a turkey oak right here on campus?"' . . . "'Oh, its nothing" . . . owns the only car that shifts back . . . "Anyone want to buy a watch? ' . . . Bryn Mawr's blood bank . . . "Why do I always have to water the plants?" . . . if it doesn't match, he'll wear it . . . "John, what?" . . . boy barber . . . future M.D.

Class Treasurer 3, 4: Soccer, ]V 1. Varsity 2, 3, 4: Varsity Club 2, 3, 4: Freshman Introduction Committee 3, 4; Cricket Club 3, 4; Orchestra I, 2, 3, 4: Band 1; Glee Club 4; WHRC 2, 3; Class Night 2, 3.

101

JAG

GEORGE ... in four years, never failed to make the first basketball practice . . . found Haverford basketball as inspiring as church ball . . . master of the calculated risk with a shot for every situation . . . originally pre-med, now pre-cloth . . . took most of the math and chemistry courses offered by the college . . . only Philadelphian to master Port Washington irony . . . eventually found a more worth while interest in Ruth.

Basketball 1, 4.

CASUAL

JOHN . . . once lived in Yarnall House . . . "Harry, wake me up for Cletus's class tomorrow" . . . Pop Haddleton's steadying influence in the 440 . . . prime member of Snyder's fan club . . . "Back at Lawrenceville we " ... at seven thirty in the morn- ing seen crawling on hands and knees, "where are my glasses?"

Varsity Football 1; Varsity Trad 2, 4; Physics Club 4; Varsity Club 2, 4.

FIDDLER

TED . . . not quite at home away from the tall tapers and swinging censers . . . Theo- dore has spent his earthly exile fiddling at square dances, writing sonatas, interpreting Scriabine, and studying Heidegger with unusual and compelling devotion . . . perhaps the Library desk, where he so often was to be found, if not in far-off Lansdowne, formed gothic meditations that will bear later fruit, in or away from Mother Church.

MR. X

MIKE ... "I was born in a little hamlet of New York State, far from the maelstrom of the twentieth century, on the 13th floor of a little hospital on 86th street. This, so far, has been the most significant occurrence in my life. From there, the unreal city of broken trees, I wandered up to God's country of Connecticut, to cultivate a pine tree or two. From there to Haverford, and four years on the other side of railroad avenue, where I have distinguished myself for nothing at all. But pleasant."

16 CYLINDER

TED . . . local man from Merion . . . wields 175 horsepower Packard, said to have once been the province of a rich bootlegger . . . ardent Pogo fan . . . is said to carry small fire extinguisher to quench slide-rule fires . . . scene at one A.M.: "Guess FU head home to four hours of engin. problems" . . . third entry his home ad homenum . . . can be found snoozing placidly there any hour of the day . . . "Hey Loder, who's speak- ing in collection ?" . . . "Never heard of him" . . . "How about a pizza?" . . . secret ambition; 0-60 m.p.h. in 6 seconds.

Glee Club 1, 2, 3,- Bridge Club I, 2, 3, 4.

102

John F. Garrity, Jr. Physics

George C. Fuller

Mathematics

Michael Moore English

103

Joseph H. SxniN, Jr. Sociology

Thomas A. Wood English

104

HIGH SOCIETY

DICK . . . Lord Baltimore . . . coxswain of the cricket crew . . . "Love is not love which alters when it alteration finds" . . . the red and black belt from Bambbo Room to the Sunken Gardens to the Throne Room to the Bun House ... "I mean a what you think I ask her for.-* ' . . . acjuatic fauna collector . . . upon awakening: "Jocund day stands tiptoe on the misty mountain tops" . . . more coherent asleep than awake . . . "Ail darkness now!" ... "I know what it'd be like it'd be great!" ... his suitcase at BM . . . promising young doctor at Johns Hopkins.

Glee Cliih 1, 2, ?, 4: Cricket 1, 2, 5, captain 4: Education Committee ?, 4; Freshman Intro- duction Committee 3, 4; Varsity Club 3, 4; Class Night 3, 4: NEWS 1 ; Neus Bureau 4.

MAC . . . formerly of the Skull A.C. . . . shades of the ancient sixth . . . rich man, poor man . . . frustrated lacrosse player . . . we're out of gas . . . Grecian profile . . . scholarship to Quantico weapons school . . . "I've got friends" . . . "I'm worried about" . . . "Just show me a groundhog" . . . the well-dressed man . . . true-tone tenor.

Nautical Club 1, 2; Philadelphia Lacrosse Club 1; Mountaineers 1.

ROBIN . . . notable achievements on the Haverford stage . . . "What did I say this morning" . . . knows all the synonyms for moustache . . . "But, I LIKE Snyder" . . . Tales of the Turnpike . . . "We of the foreign car set" . . . Scull House to Annex, a change.' . . . "May I fill your tank with No-Nox" . . . Robert le Robain . . . "Little Robin Redbreast Splafi" ... "I do train, Pop, it's my asthma" . . . Mar-teen . . . What next?

C;iee Club 2, 3: Drama Club 1, 3. 4, treasurer 2; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4: Cap and Bells 2, 3, 4: Curriculum Committee 4; Class Night 2, 3; Cross Country 2, 3; Wrestling I, 2, 3; Track }, 2, 3; Sailing 4.

JOE . . . formerly of Scull A.C. . . . bachelor quarters senior year . . . speedy sylvian wanderer . . . "There's trouble" . . . intermittent red beard . . . another project for Ira . . . "Let's consider the lilies of the field" . . . "Wayne 1116; last year it was Dallas" . . . geology was a tough hurdle . . . future trip on magic carpet? . . . "Ths cartoons are better at City Line" . . . charter member of Mountaineers . . . from cold snow to hot sand . . . devoted to POP . . . that Miss America pageant . . . phantom roommate of upper fifth . , . "That's good for chuckles."

Cross Country I, 2, captain 3, 4: Track 1, 2, 4, captain 3: Mountaineers, secretary-treasurer 3, 4; Freshman Inlroduclion Committee 3, 4; Drama Club 3; Varsity Club 1, 2, 3, vice- president 4; Class Night I, 3, 4.

TOM . . . last surviving member of the Merion Annex "We" group . . . seen on the shores of Wai-ki-ki . . . dramatic spark on and off stage . . . discreet observer of all social activity, but loathe to relate said observation . . . academic wizard, athletic giant . . . His Majesty's loyal opposition . . . daring and necessary critic of first entry philosophy . . . known and admired by all at Bryn Mawr . . . exponent of the Main Line . . . Tweedy . . . "That's attractive" . . . "Isn't it something!" . . . upholds the Choate tradition . . . "Here's something for the column" . . . from actor to director to usher.

ICG 1, 2, 3, 4; Drama Club 1, 2, 3, president 4.

105

LAISSEZ FAIRE

KEN . . . famous for terse autobiographies . . . "Now down in DC, I " . . . sense of humor surpassed only by an ability to sleep through final exams . . . fern improves upon a liberal education . . . reads volumes of Pocket Books, fails to complete crossword puzzles, and indulges in numerous evening rhubarbs ... a rugged individualist and political debater . . . has plans to enter government service.

BILL ... the three loves of his life: fiancee, ham and milk gravy, and stewed potatoes . . . they make Fith a weekday roommate ... his gay blade's edge has been dulled by prospects of matrimony . . . only remaining campus orgy is Coop coffee at 9 . . . dexterity at tieing bow ties should help him be an artistic obstetrician. Photography Club 1.

JON . . . terror of the intramural gaming grounds . . . aborigine of the Platte River bottoms . . . nocturnal student, daylight makes him sleepy . . . ambitions: med school and a home away from the East . . . hanging up clothes or storing books impossible without a living room . . . derives a mysterious pleasure from taking long subway trips on weekends.

Photography Club 1.

BILL . . . Bill can see three states from his back yard, but cant see eye to eye with Teaf . . . uses Roget's Thesaurus to compose convincing love letters to Midwestern milk- maids ... the Keokuk Kid combats an early middle age spread by tracking North Woods bear and quail . . . plans to be a business journalist and a Republican.

Football 3,- Wrestling 2; JV Tennis 2; Varsity Club ?, 4; Band president 3, 4; NEWS

1, 2, 3.

Ki;nni;th L. Fernandez Economics

Jon K. Hillis Biology

William W. Fithian, Jr. Chemistry

William A. Wightman Economics

107

Herbert A. Huene Political Science

MiTsuo Ikeda Economics

Norman DeW. Mattson

Biology

Robert C. Scherer Biology

108

DEALER 'S CHOICE

HERB . . . "Why pass when you can shoot by yourself?" . . . got lost in the librar)' once when he was a freshman . . . with a broken wrist you can swing golf clubs, but you can't take exams . . . Skull A.C. ... a New York accent ... is it fer free ... "I can't go out with her, I'm the shy type" . . . "Hey, Mits, I don't need those books this year" . . . "Sorr)- can't, gotta pick HER up at four" . . . it's off for a quick eighteen, and ten.

Glee Club I, 2; Sliidenis' Council 2; Cross Country I, 2, 3, 4; Basketball 3, 4; Trad

1, 2; Bridge Club 1, 2; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4.

MITS . . . transfer from Dartmouth ... the non-rent paying member of 34 Lloyd . . . the studious member, the only one to be found in the library . . . Pat Docherty's overseer of the bookstore . . . driver of the Black Dragon . . . connoisseur of wine, women, and Scotch imports . . . Uncle Mits . . . "Sabatini's I can drive" . . . went fishing at Scherer's, but never did find Bob . . . "Well, guess I'll go and get some sleep" . . . (in unison) "Aw, stick around Mits." Track 1; Glee Club 2; Class Secretary 4.

SKIP ... 34 Lloyd's elder ... the serious one of the four . . . guardian of the dining room . . . foil man par excellence . . . one of the original Skull A.C. . . . Boston accent; but fellas, everybody talks that way . . . down to 195 and I feel GREAT . . . that's the kind of girl for me . . . building up quite a reputation at B.M. ... "I may be big, but I'm light on my feet" . . . tone deaf Caruso . . . "Well, see you at breakfast."

Football 3; Fencing 1, 2, co-captain 3, 4; Glee Club 1, 2, 4; Varsity Club 2, 3, 4.

SNOOKS . . . that cute little round one . . . those eighteen inch brook trout . . . those weekends at Jersey Shore . . . "Edna: I'm going to break up with that girl!" . . . a stubborn Pennsylvania Dutchman, or so it is said . . . another Skull A.C. member . . . one of Haverford's seven blocks of granite ... the buzzards over Cedar Run . . . Uncle Bob (Collins) and Brother Bill (Boger).

Football 1,2,3, 4; Glee Club I; Orchestra I, 2; Bridge Club 3.

2L'

TREV . . . "Now let's not have any of your petty mundane morals, Ling" . . . has run through four blue cards . . . third entry sophist and Cyrano with nose and rapier- like wit to match . . . "There's a choice tonight: take it or leave it" . . . "Beatty didn't fire me, I quit" . . . "That's eatin' bread, we want throwin' bread " . . . this steak tastes like wienies . . . that knocker from Princeton . . . Jan . . . Swarthmore in ten minutes flat ... no advice a-toU . . . it's the ding bing administration . . . "Don't let this get around, but I can be had" ... "I WAS thinking of becoming a lawyer."

NEWS 1; Record 1, 4: Photo Club 1; IFO Ij 2; WHRC 2; ICG 2, 5, 4: IRC 2; Philosophy Club 1, 4; Wrestling 2; Fencing 3, 4; Cricket 4.

LEG . . . disgustingly neat, consequently a get-that-junk-out-of-the-living-room-Leger attitude . . . chief dispenser of helpful hints to Leger regarding that fourth blue card: well now, no! . . , ultra-liberal: admirer of Father Coughlin, Gerald L. K. Smith, Allen Zoll, and Gerald Winrod . . . devotee of the BRC Daisey Spotters Club . . . profes- sional manager.

Founders' Club 2, 3; secretary 4; Cap and Bells 1, 2, vice-president 3, 4: Glee Club 1, business manager 2, 3, 4: Octet 2, 3, 4: Drama Club I, 2; NEWS 1, 2; Handbook co-edilor 2; ICG, IRC, VWF, PAA, 1, 2, 3; Counterpoint 1, 2; IFO 1, 2: German Club 1, 2; Soccer Manager 4; Varsity Club 4.

LING . . . let's make this an epic evening . . . AND THEN HE . . . you guys never let me have any fun . . . Pogo by candlelight . . . abnormal attraction for pre-p. v . . . compulsive resistance to engagement . . . had more fun stag . . . Wayne footlighters and that mud-on-his-knees cast party (oh, base wrecker of homes!) . . . accepted lummox in the Philadelphia Story . . . dcwey-eyed . . . poor man's Durkheim . . . the Nordic god with a Cheshire smile. Debating 1; NEWS 1; Drama Club 2, 3, 4; Football I, 2.

LODE . . . after English, psychology . . . architecture or psycho-analyst . . . con- scientious advocate of functionalism in Haverford buildings and living . . . perfectionist ... a taste for science fiction, avocados. Smith, smoked oysters, polished shoes, chocolate cake, goatees, pickled herring, and zundaps . . . third entry delicatessen . . . frequent pilgrimages to Northampton and skiing at Stowe . . . "You should have seen them dynamite that whale!" . . . conservative taste . . . "Who the hell's been taking ashes out of our fireplace."

F. Treville Leger Political Science

Richard R. Lingeman Sociology

John E. Loder Psychology

John M. Leggett Sociology

111

Walter C. Kidney, Jr. Philosophy

112

' I L

Frank J. Flannery, Jr. French

J. Peter Schmitz French

John Norton Smith, Jr. English

THE MOOR

FRANK ... "A rather imposing and complex figure, symbolizing very life itself; find the era in which he lived an era tuned to the pop of a champagne bottle nurtured by the careless giggle of a carefree girl or better yet the carefree giggle of a careless girl: colored by the dancing eyes of very small children playing in traffic: yes sir, that's Frank, big as life itself pulsating dilating joie de vivre hotcha, yes sir:" from Fitzgerald to Sheppherd to Flannery: Amen.

Drama Club 2, 3, 4; French Club 2, 3, 4; Domestic Metaphysics Club 2, 3, 4.

GOTHIC

WALTER . . . likes: candles, fin-de-siecle music, Victorian architecture, Gorgonzola cheese, Frank Lloyd Wright, metaphysics, Pittsburgh, India ink, argument, ideas, princ- iples, and 90-degree heat . . . despises: the American dream-house, moral snobs, intel- lectual snobs, practicality, politeness, and coffee with cream and sugar . . . ambitions: to revive ornament, proportion, and mass in American architecture; to be a great philoso- pher; to find a reason for people; to have attended the Panama-Pacific International Exposition of 1915.

NEWS 4; Revue }, 4; Education Committee 3, 4.

HONOR

PETE . . . spent two years getting oriented . . . homesteaded in French House . . . WoodruflFe protege . . . Quinn catal . . . cynical political scientist . . . minored in Pem West . . . humanities over history . . . varsity women's rule investigator . . . longevity on Honor System Committee . . . part time cricketeer . . . diplomacy his forte foreign service his career . . . solo voice on the octet . . . francophile.

Glee Club 1, 2, treasurer 3, 4; Cricket Team I, 2, 3, 4; Student Council 2; Honor System Committee 3, 4; PAF 3, 4; Octet 2, 3; Education Committee 2, 3; French Club 2, 3, 4.

EZRA'S FRIEND

JN ... J. Norton to the trade . . . "To fully appreciate Kierkegaard's influence on the trimerism 'efl^ect' which Eliot ascribes to Dante, you've got to go back to the Greek through Freudian inter-cosmology. Now obviously ..."... but beneath that long- haired exterior beats that booming, neat barrel house . . . when that banjo starts plunking the order of being rearranges itself . . . Jamboes sag slowly to the floor and gently rap out the . . .

French Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Haierford Retue editor 3, 4.

113

FOUNDER'S MOB

TOM . . . returned to Haverford seeking a feeling of bigness after Sophomore sab- batical at Cal . . . last birthright member of the Port Washington irony society . . . spent his Junior year teaching Don James the art of romance . . . careful study of Huene gave him a set shot which saved him from complete basketball obscurity . . . exhausted Lunt scholar . . . after Haverford, the Navy . . . "A'd say."

Orchestra 1; Baseball Squad I; ]V Basketball 3; Varsity Basketball 4.

JOE . . . worries when he has nothing to worry about . . . logged ten thousand miles to Maplewood before Nancy went to Beaver . . . "Our Meldrum who art in chem lab " . . . studies much and made Shuman empty the mousetrap . . . "You watch Hotsy go ...".. . medical idealist community service is his goal . . . medicine or Green- berg which comes first?

Chemistry Club I, 2, ?, 4: Freshman Introduction Committee 3: Varsity Football 2, 3, 4;

Varsity Basketball 1, 2, 3: Varsity Club 2, 3, 4; Commencement Speaker Committee 4.

TOM . . . was placed in South Barclay by an unknowing Ben Cooper . . . quickly rectified this and became a member of the infamous and informal "Club 51" . . . after interlude in Lloyd, joined Millspaugh in a migration to Founders . . . except for eve- ning sallies into town with Doc he remained there . . . these rambles have rendered him such an expert on Flick lore that Laura Lee frequently consults him ... in his senior year acquired an over-ripe pipe which he smokes almost continuously . . . inno- vator of Big Max and BJHL . . . "Flickers, Doc.'"

NEWS 1, 2: WHRC 2: ICG 1, 2: Bridge Club; Nautical Club 1, 2; JV Football 2, 3;

Commencement Speaker Committee; Freshman Dance Committee.

FRED . . . "Bear" Millspaugh entered North Barclay with a "woof" . . . couldn't get used to falling out of a top bunk . . . soon moved in with Goldsmith in South . . . a year in Lloyd was too much for him so he took a two years' rest cure in Founders . . . coming downstairs one morning he tripped over a differential and fell into the Math department . . . met Joan in his sophomore year and has since lived a life of sheer unbridled celibacy . . . one of the lucky few who evaded the long arm of Mac and ate off campus for two years . . . "'What rustlers?" . . . Club 51.

N£JI^5 1, 2, 3; Photography Club 1; Nautical Club 1, 2; Freshman Dance Committee;

Bridge Club 1.

HARRY . . . falconer and boat racer of note ... I do not choose to run, I do not choose to play . . . Schizophrenic Republican . . . "Mere facts hinder argument" . . . Aristotle to Plato to Roche . . . everything in its place and a place for everything . . . better things for better li\ ing through monopoly . . . Havcrfordophobe . . . roommates just fade away.

Fencing 1, 3; Football 1.

114

Joel M. Bockol

Chemistry

THOi\rAs H. Goldsmith

English

Thomas N. Bisson History

Harr"!' E. Richter Political Science

Frederick W. Millspauch, Jr.

Mathematics

115

Thomas M. Anderson, Jr.

English

%e»^ '^

Raymond L. Falge, Jr.

Physics

Philip R. Stansbury

Philosophy

Roger C. Good

Chemistry

Joseph S. Dibble Music

116

BRANDY, BOURBON ^ SCOTCH

TOM . . . invisibly grinding ... a mcrry-go-round of women: he has become an expert on the onc-datc-bhnddate system . . . well-dressed man in a Ford convertible . . . likes his brandy and his theater, but manages to fit pizza into the scene . . . one of the newly found Southern Republicans . . . quiet sophisticate ... St. Albans to James Joyce to law school. Drama 3, 4.

JOE . . . takes hot baths in harpsichord music ... an advocate of the this-is-my-third- time-through-the-laundry-bag school of thought . . . "There will be phys. ed. at 4 .M. on judgment day" . . . wedding bells: "You name it, it's happened to us" ... a monumental feeling of public responsibility . . . the business man's business man ... if you want a scare, watch him get out of the top bunk in the morning . . . prefers not to think about the future . . . Ann.

Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Orchestra I, 2, 3, 4; Octet 2, 3.

PHIL . . . has worn out a dozen carpets somewhere between Aquinas and Bergson . . . good Scotch and Dry Sack whenever possible . . . "You muttonhead " . . . "Give me strength" . . . Stevenson all the way ... a follower of the Norris theory that corrupt government is good for you ... 7 to 2 on the NE'WS ... an apropos dresser, who is not quite sure whether tweediness is a valid abstraction . . . Gray . . . law school . . . the only editorial that provoked action just happened to be about phys. ed.

NEWS 1, 2, associate editor 3, managing editor 4; Philosophy Club 3, 4; Curriculum Com- mittee 4; Education Committee 4; Honor System Committee 4.

GIN er TONIC

FALLGOTS ... the poor man's Albert Einstein . . . slept for three years and studied for one . . . uhh! . . . took ap English course once . . . "Now listen, when we had the Nash" . . . always threatened to take off for that weekend at Northwestern . . . "Now where do you suppose I put that car?" . . . "Did anyone get any ice.'" . . . chasing athletes with a camera . . . disorganized neatness . . . hairy office with Tom and Dick . . . took class notes on spare pieces of wrapping paper . . . future : pushing buttons at Los Alamos.

WHRC 3; NEWS and RECORD photographer 4; Class Night 2. 3, 4.

RODGE . . . Rhoads scholar . . . "Yes, Dear" . . . successfully avoided Glee Club warmups for four years . . . finally achieved lifelong ambition of being able to sleep until noon without cutting any classes . . . "Get me up for breakfast, not that I really expect to go" . . . "Anyone know of any good guts?" . . . aspires to be the A.M.A.'s G.F. of the year . . . fought a losing battle with roommates for Neatness, Cleanliness, and General Sanitation . . . "Turn ofif the alarm, Falge " . . . finished every chem lab before Christmas . . . left end on the octet . . . Anita and Medical School.

Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Octet 1, 2, director 3, 4; JV Football 1 ; WHRC 1. 2. 3; Wrestling

Manager 3, 4; Varsity Club 4; Class Night I, 2, 3, 4.

um

DREW . . . boy father . . . took Frosh math exam on honeymoon . . . campus con- tractor . . . alternated with Little going to meeting . . , master of half-hour chem lab . . . even tempered tennis player . . . "Rise and shine, Logan, it's 3 A.M." . . . believer in Teaf and Snyder . . . sold same car three times . . . water buckets from third floor Barclay . . . golf range in 21 Barclay . . . bridge expert . . . "If you can't do it in fifteen minutes, it's not worth doing " . . . always has good looking date.

JV Football 1; ]V Tennis I, 2, 3; Customs Committee 2: NEWS 1, 2, business manager 3, 4; 1952 Record business manager 3; Basketball manager I, 2, 3, 4; Parking Committee; Founders Club: Varsity Club.

CHARLIE . . . burly, but incredibly suave . . . exile from Princeton . . . easy come,

easy go . . . life of every party . . . "Take off your mask" . . . myriad of uninhibited

visitors from his past . . . impeccably dressed at all times . . . the child bride . . .

white clad chauffeur . . . intellectual soirees over that garage . . . Ebbets Field . . .

brilliant quips which dazzle the professors in his department . . . robbed of All-

American honors two years in a row . . . always welcome in the best of circles . . .

easily shocked by vulgarity . . . "That's attractive."

Varsity Football 2, 3; Customs Committee Chairman 3; Track 2; Wrestling 2; NEWS 2; Collection Speaker Committee 4.

BOB . . . can't shirk calisthenics now he's captain . . . deserted the Royal Mess for marital bliss . . . constitutionally unable to pass a language course . . . married life raised his average ten points . . . Carolyn types the papers . . . started raising a bow- legged soccer player already . . . quotes his father to Ira . . . student adviser to "Marriage and the Family " . . . still a determined champion of causes which are mostly lost . . . headed for law and eight little exemptions.

Soccer 1, 2, 3, captain 4; Varsity Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Drama Club 1.

Charles Norris Robinson English

Robert K. Young

Sociology

119

INDEX

PAGE

Allen, Reginald E., 843 Ormond Ave., Drexel Hill, Pa , 88

Allison, A. Reid, Jr., 2413 N. B St., Tampa, Fla 83

Anderson, R. Scott, 112 E. Ilth St., New York City 72

Anderson, Thomas M., 39 W. Montgomery Ave., Rockville, Md 116

Bair, Harry H., Greenwood Rd., McKees Rocks, Pa 96

Benton, John F., 2223 Rittenhouse Sq., Phila., Pa 79

Bisson, Thomas N., 97 Kmgston Rd., Berkeley, Calif 115

Bockol, Joel M., 1321 Levick St., Phila., Pa 115

Brobyn, Richard D., 3455 Midvale Ave., Phila., Pa 95

Burge, John M., Jr., 2560 Dell Road, Louisville, Ky 91

Carter, Elmer B., 45 E. Lee St., Woodstown, N.J 71

Caskey, David H., 318 Logan St., Rockford, III 75

Clark, Robert S., Lowden Apts., Main St., Stockbridge, Mass 75

Coote, Robert J., 6706 Exeter Rd., Bethesda, Md 100

Corry, John P., 216 Townsend Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y 99

Corson, Richard H., 107 W. Broad St., Paulsboro, N. J 87

Cnchlow, Robert W., 34th AA Brigade, Hq APO #46, c/o PM, New York, N. Y 96

Curran, Robert T., 2 Montague Terrace, Brooklyn, N. Y 83

Davis, William B., Jr., Rainelle, W. Va 75

Deaton, Hugo L., 520 Old Orchard Rd., Baltimore, Md 75

Dibble, Joseph S., 3145 19th St., N.W., Washington, DC 116

Dvorken, Leo, 435 W. 5th Ave., Roselle, N. J 76

Ericson, James, Brattleboro, Vt 99

Falge, Raymond L., Jr., 5 Thoreau Drive, Bethesda, Md 116

Fascione, Daniel R., 2530 S. 20th St., Phila., Pa 84

Fernandez, Kenneth L., 4604 Davenport St., N.W., Washington, D. C 107

Fithian, William W., Jr., 8th and Oak Sts., Millville, N. J 107

Flannery, Frank J., Jr., 908 Susquehanna Ave., W. Pittston, Pa 112

Forker, E. Lee, Rawlins Run Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa 80

Fuller, George C, 4634 Walnut St., Phila., Pa 103

Gatch, M. McCormick, Jr., The Maples, Woodville Pk., Milford, Ohio 72

Garrity, John F., Jr., 5209 Overbrook Ave., Phila., Pa 103

Goldsmith, Thomas H., 1207 Wagner Ave., Phila., Pa 115

Good, Roger C, 117 E. Woodbine St., Chevy Chase, Md 116

Goodall, Homer R., 1 1 Warfield St., Upper Montdair, N. J 80

Gundry, Richard K., 326 Tuscany Rd., Baltimore, Md 104

Haines, William F., 7115 Llanfair Rd., Upper Darby, Pa 88

Hansell, Norris, 2800 Darby Rd., Havertown, Pa 99

Harris, John C, 1316 Edgar Ave., Chambersburg, Pa 96

Helweg, Joseph E., Jr., 463 York Rd., Jenkintown, Pa 91

Hickman, Herbert W., 829 Osage Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa 87

Hillis, Jon K., 2200 Van Dorn St., Lincoln, Neb 107

Hitchcock, John R., Grassy Hill, Lyme, Conn 84

Hollmann, Bruce Z., 3926 2 1 3 St., Bayside, L. L, N. Y 71

Huene, Herbert A., 93-30 224 St., Queens Vilhage, N. Y 108

Hurtubise, Wayne C, 6 Strathmore Rd., Havertown, Pa 91

Ikeda, Mitsuo, Evesboro Rd., Marlton, N.J 108

Lsay, Milton H., 1230 Squirrel Hill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa 84

Kidney, Walter C, Jr., 8 Johnson Court, Germantown, Pa 112

King, John W., 6918 Lynnford St., Phila., Pa 76

Kittredge, John A. O., 3409 "O," N.W., Washington, D. C 99

Kopf, Theodore J., 19 S. Legion Terrace, Lansdowne, Pa 10}

Kumm, Karl W. G., 393 Main St., Chatham, N. J 88

Lafer, Dennis J., 29 Highland Ave., Maplewood, N. J 76

Lamperti, John W., 320 Crestmont Rd., Upper Montdair, N, J 95

Lane, Richard T., Jr., Kingwood Pk., Poughkeepsie, N. Y 79

Ledeboer, John W., 327 Lindenwold Ave., Ambler, Pa 79

Leger, F. Treville, #385, Pensacola, Fla Ill

Leggett, John M., 6632 Ridgeville St., Pittsburgh, Pa Ill

Leibold, Arthur W., 1011 Mulberry St., Ottawa, 111 83

Lewis, Andrew L., Jr., Haverford Manor Apts., Haverford, Pa 119

Lingeman, Richard R., 203 Wallace Ave., Crawfordsville, Ind Ill

Linthicum, Somervell, 1 10 S. Washington St., Rockville, Md 96

120

Little, Frank J , 14 Locust St., Pittsford, NY..- 72

Lodcr, Jcilin E., 144 Main St., Hingham, Mass Ill

Logan, Robert G., 1710 Cambridge Rd , Ann Arbor, Mich 95

Matteson, Robert S., 24 N. Oalrwood Terrace, New Paltz, N. Y 80

Mattson, Norman D., Wood Rd , Braintree, Mass 108

Mayer, David P., Apple Creek, Ohio 71

McCurdy, Kenneth F., 5820 Elmer St., Shadysidc, Pittsburgh, Pa 104

Millspaugh, Frederick W., Jr., 327 Windsor Ave., Haddonfield, N. J 115

Moore, Michael, RED 2, Westport, Conn 103

Moore, Paul W., #125, North Pembroke, Mass 87

Morris, Lawrence C, Wilmington Apts , Delaware Ave., Wilmington, Del 87

Morrison, H. William, 109 Spring Grove Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa 95

Nash, George, 4136 Bigelow Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa 92

Nevitt, Robert L. M., Wilson St. & Hillside Drive, Carlisle, Pa 104

Perot, T. Morris, East Mill Rd., Flourtown, Pa 99

Piotrow, F. Jackson, 62a Manor Parkway, Rochester, N. Y 83

Reed, H. Edward, 19 Bishops Lane, Short Hills, N. J 91

Reynolds, Robert R , Baldwin, Maryland 100

Rich, Edward P., 830 Buck Lane, Haverford, Pa 72

Richter, Harry E., 6257 N. 4th St., Phila., Pa 115

Roberts, C. Evans, Seneca, Montgomery County, Md 71

Robinson, Charles Norris, 130 Ashwood Rd., Villanova, Pa 119

Scherer, Robert C, 349 Allegheny St., Jersey Shore, Pa 108

Schlegel, George D., 434 Sunset Rd., W. Reading, Pa 80

Schmitz, J. Peter, 219 Harrison Ave , Ferguson, Mo 112

Seeley, Robert T., 1517 Dorchester, Rd., Havertown, Pa 88

Sexton, Mark, Fairway Apts., Pelham Manor, New York 92

Shuman, Labron K., 1130 Lakeside Ave , Phila., Pa 76

Smith, J. Norton, 531 N. 63rd St., Phila., Pa 112

Somerndike, John M., 2914 North Summit Ave., Milwaukee, Wise 100

Stansbury, Phillip R., 7010 Fairfax Rd., Bethesda, Md 116

Steely, John E., 1527 Garfield Ave., Wyomissing, Pa 92

Stein, Joseph H., Jr., 4 Hamilton Rd., Glen Ridge, N.J 104

Tabbutt, Fred D., 7108 Wayne Ave., Upper Darby, Pa 88

Taylor, Howard G., Ill, Taylors Lane, Riverton, N.J 79

Thomas, Lewis J., Jr., 40 Rockglen Rd., Overbrook Hills, Pa 100

Tice, Gregory, 322 Morrison Ave., Salem, N. J 95

T ien, Hsin Yuan, 4506 Locust St., Phila., Pa 71

Tomec, John R., 42 Melrose Place, Montclair, N. J 72

Trump, Charles E., 503 Baird Rd., Merion Sta., Pa .- 103

Vance, Phillip G., 840 So. Park, Springfield, III 80

Van Sickle, James H., Thornwood Rd., Crawfordsville, III 84

Werner, Gordon, 1 1 30 Sherman Ave., New York, N. Y 87

Wightman, William A., 1905 Grand Ave., Keokuk, Iowa 107

Winn, Mitchell, Stonev Hill Rd., New Hope, Pa 92

Wood, Peter H., Cold Spring Rd., Far Hills, N. J 96

Wood, Richard R., Jr., Riverton Rd., Riverton, N.J 79

Wood, Thomas A., 415 N. Franklin St., West Chester, Pa 104

Young, Robert K., 1165 5th Ave., New York City 119

Best Wishes

to

COACH HADDLETON

Compliments

of A FRIEND

KEYSTONE

CAISDY AND TOBACCO

COMPANY

354 W. Lancaster Ave. Wayne, Pa.

CASPER BONGIOVANNI

& SON

Incorporated

Plastering Contractors

205 Cricket Ave. Ardniore, Pa.

Ardmore 0547

Everything in Paints and

Art Supplies

BUTEN'S PAINT STORES

809 Lancaster Avenue

Bryn Ma%^r 5-3610

PHILADELPHIA, UPPER DARBY,

CHESTER, READING, CAMDEN

We Deliver!

Wawa

FARMS

WAWA, DELAWARE COUNTY, PA.

for home delivery call

MEdia 6-0545

WAWA HOMOGENIZED GOLDEN GUERNSEY MIIK

WAWA CREAMLINE GOLDEN GUERNSEY MILK

WAWA HOMOGENIZED A MILK

Rich CTc.im ill every drup

WAWA CREAMLINE A MILK

A fi/U cuj> nf cream lops every quart

WAWA REGULAR HOMOGENIZED MILK

Qiulily with economy

WAWA SKIM MILK

Same high quality without fat

WAWA BUTTERMILK

Tally, refreihing, healthful

WAWA CHOCOLATE MILK

Delicious hot or cold

WAWA TABLE CREAM

Makes fruili and cereals taste better

WAWA CREAMED COTTAGE CHEESE

A creamy, high protein food for all occasions

WAWA AA GRADE SWEET CREAM BUTTER

122

THE AUTOCAR COMPANY

Established 1897

ARDMORE, PA.

Manufacturers of Heavy-Duty Trucks

EVERYTHING AMERICANS EAT, USE OR WEAR COMES ALL OR PART WAY BY TRUCK

BRUCE Z. HOLLMANN HENRY HOLLMANN

Compliments of

X-RAY MFG. CORPORATION OF AMERICA

NEW YORK, N. Y. FRIEDA HOLLMANN SAUL A. SHLAKMAN

123

Compliments to the class of ^53

HAMBURG HEARTH

834 1^ Lancaster Ave.

Bryn Mawr 5-2314

Lee Super Deluxe Tires

Lee Tire Factory Branch

Bryn Mawr 900 Lancaster Avenue

YOUR NEIGHBOR

HAVERFORD FLOWER MART

Special Rales on Corsages for Students

SPECIAL ATTENTION TO RELATIVES

AND FRIENDS OF STUDENTS OF

HAVERFORD COLLEGE

HOTEL HAVERFORD

(Formerly Haverford Court Hotel)

Montgomery Avenue at Grays Lane

HAVERFORD, PA.

"A KNOTT HOTEL"

Your Guests and Date Deserve the Best

Dine In Our Lovely Main Dining Room

Served from Noon to 2 P.M.

Daily 6 to 8 P.M.

1 to 8 P.M.

Excellent Banquet Facilities for

Meetings, Parties, Dances, or

Supper Dances

Transient and Permanent Accommodations

Telephone: Midway 2-0947

JAMES J. McCaffrey

Jeweler

HAVERFORD SQUARE

HAVERFORD, PA.

Midway 2-7767

124

N. E. & H. R. HANSELL

Congratulations

Chrysler and Plymouth Motor Cars

and

^

Best Wishes to

Darhy an<l Eagle Roads

Class of 1953

Haverlown, Penna.

FRIEDA Z. HOLLMANN

^

-^ friend

%

125

The CENTER MAINTENANCE SUPPLY CO., Inc.

Wholesale Building Maintenance Supplies

556 So. 52nd Street PHILADELPHIA 43, PENNA.

GRanite 4-0837 GRanile 4-6042

All of your supplies from ONE SOURCE . . . SAVES YOU MOISEY!

CONRAD HECKMANN

Painting Decorating

GENERAL CONTRACTING

Stenlon Avenue & Mechanic Street

Philadelphia 38, Penna.

Livingston 8-2800

Interior - PAITSTIISG - Exterior

Residential

Industrial Institutional

Spray or Brush

Best Wishes

to the

CLASS OF '53

'AbMtts

ICECREAM

J. S. CORNELL & SON, INC.

Philadelphia, Pa.

^

Builders of the Philips Library Wing

^

ESTABLISHED 1857

126

'PORTRAIT BY

ANTHONY"

is a byword among people who appreciate really fine photography

ANTHONY STUDIO

2332 South Seventeenth Street Philadelphia 45, Penna.

INDIVIDUALITY IN PHOTOGRAPHY

127

PATRONS

MR. AND MRS. HARRY V. BAIR

MR. AND MRS. FREDERIC F. BENTON

MR. AND MRS. JOHN L. BOCKOL

MR. AND MRS. JOHN M. BURGE

BRIG. GEN. AND MRS. ROBERT W. CRICHLOW

DR. AND MRS. W. B. DAVIS

MR. AND MRS. AYDEN A. DIBBLE

MR. AND MRS. R. L. FALGE

MR. AND MRS. WALLACE FITHIAN

MR. AND MRS. PAUL H. GOOD

MR. AND MRS. HARLAN F. HAINES

MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH E. HELWEG

MR. AND MRS. A. H. HUENE

MRS. MILTON ISAY

REV. AND MRS. KARL G, KUMM

MR. AND MRS. FRANK A. LAMPERTI

MR. AND MRS. FRANCIS LANG

MR. AND MRS. JOHN W. LEDEBOER CAPT. AND MRS. AMES LODER DR. AND MRS. ALBERT LOGAN DR. AND MRS. N. C. MAYER MR. AND MRS. R. S. McCONNELL MRS. THOMAS R. NEVITT MR. AND MRS. H. E. REED

HARRY A. RICHTER H. T. SEELEY SAMUEL A. SHUMAN SOMERNDIKE MR. AND MRS. CARROLL STANSBURY MR. AND MRS. LEWIS J. THOMAS LINWOOD TICE R. F. TOMEC PHILLIP W. VANCE MILTON WINN

MR. AND MRS. MR. AND MRS. MR. AND MRS. MRS. JOHN M.

MR. AND MRS DR. AND MRS. MR. AND MRS MR. AND MRS

With Appreciation

THE 1953 RECORD wishes to acknowledge its gratitude to the many people who have made this annual possible.

To our advertisers, who have generously supported this pub- lication and who are indeed deserving of patronage;

To the patrons, whose interest and assistance has been invaluable;

To Mrs. William Docherty and Mr. Aldo Caselli, whose cooperation and thoughtfulness have enabled us to bring this publication to the students and College;

To the Livingston Publishing Co. in general and to Mr. George Tamke in particular, for being so helpful and so patient;

... to all these, our sincerest thanks and appreciation.

LIVINGSTON PUBLISHING COMPANY NARBERTH. PENNSYLVANIA

128

'^i ^ >ij»»i

,1 1. 1 Wl I

'1

;nllilS^:

'i !h iuiJU

,1? ' I'u

^MU*H-^-:'i^l-:^

:t;:i::-iu-

;:iti)j;t:ijlti;it', TiV ^Ti*'. ~

M « ^tj #1 ... .. "J tl * ft Ifi *

J ^ ^ f) fi t i * ^ ^ t^ »t «i rfl t ?^ f- f ( * ti.

- -^^ f * «

l< Ai J*

ii o

*i ■«,

« ^i

■*l VI *! *

1 '$i '■*:

1 * ii

■t t;

ti ♦>

•I •»

f( f(

|i ft

■.•^- , 'f »» *V«c JV^K *p» ifi rf;

vV'=- #v» "f^ «^ ^plf ^

»«► fw t»> ^flK i^>^

' -fe "»jr fi* >>«:,. J^' *i **-. iw «» ^■i,, f i

- f*> :f» ^- , <,,

»» 1^- *W .f. )f^

«!. !;• 'w. » -

t 1* If- Cm t ' . t »V S'*- ■»•• % r J,

'».- «• «•

«1 .0

I 'if

tS'

I f

t«'l

* # «i^

r ?;

;Si > *«l ■•.

mt'^' **'^ ..*.■■» -.f,

^ '^s^;' :.;v _ .

■^ p immj^ '"WW "■«,:?- *y'

1.5!. ■•i^., saJst, -d"^ i-i , r* »>- !«•% 3*"% .;%> -iV 1*'

■'1 m^ -#

1% i^ i^

. \^ I'

. It S^

ilk'' i>S

i^^ !>■'

'%..,%

.^ -)^. 1^-

m « .:

^^ ii .V

... >^ n ,

'%. 1^ ^: ^: X

%:. i>

^\^,*

^■* «««(». *ft.*., -aS..*.

'<^'f ^^ 1 1

:

1^ 'rfl^^^^^^^^l ^H ^1

*■ " t''^' 'It ■'

i * "^ » aw|, .s

i " t ^ . ,

: ? f «i ■*! ■*. *f m ti *i fi m r

, ^i .. fl 91 #t -

«^_v.«I.

;i . «.( , N#i sfi •■( ti

* ' a

♦• f. f:

#i «.'

•*'i '#«h 4--*fW far' »« fa. t^ ^fte v,. .*- #* ,f^ k' t.<r yta» t)B I- ^ «^ fW im f . tfe» #•> Urn itim. 1

•f; li

n .^,

H^H^HB^.-'

X!> --^ .^

»* »- «» .»■

^-1 *■» i«» .,•

■*' #