The Record of the Class

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The Record of the Class The 1943 EAX C O R D P6)**t\ "OHJ0WNNY,H0WY0U "ALL ^THINGS YOU ARE" can LovrU "TONlQHT,MY "AMAPOLA,MY PRETTY LITTLE POP PY" "BLUFS IN THFNIQHT" "I KNOW WHY AMD SO 00 YOU REMEMBER, "THEYC/UL ITTHf JFR5EY BOUNCE OMEBODY EISF STAKING MY PLACE ilNQLF Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2009 with funding from Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/recordofclass1943have THE 1943 RECORD / voatch the waves and quiet walls Of willows in the setting sun And know as night in silence falls My day is done. I see the scarlet fading where The shadows sink to stir the breeze And greet the dark which waits me there With memories. Two ^~* FOREWORD The Class o! 1943 stands ai the doors <>l life, unique in the history of Haver- ford College. It is a sadly depleted group. Ol the 87 original members, almost one-quarter now serve their nation all over the world. Because ol the acceleration and the war. the RECORD has frozen llie (lass as it stood last April 25. Some of the men who appear in these pages are now in Libya, China, or even India. Others are in Tennessee and New Hampshire. Perhaps/more are with the A. E. F. in Britain and Iceland. Many members of '43 will never receive their diplomas. Some may never see their classmates again. The Class of '43 is disintegrated and disintegrating. We are a (lass united through memories alone. As far back as the fall ol 1911. the war began to pull us apart. This book is an attempt to keep fresh forever the two. the three, the lour college years the members of '43 knew together. And through such memories as it may bring back, we hope the RECORD will some day help serve to bring us together again as we were in September, 1939. Four <-« Seniors M i s t o r y Athletics Activities features Six < DEDICATION Directoi ol Admissions Archibald Macintosh is tin firsl Havcrfordian mam ill is nn im i He's the man who sal .mil "lei us do thi talking" ai thai initial interview. And he was oui patient guidi when wi selected oui freshmen courses \ ic < Presideni Mai In tosh is one ol the mosi respected tni n on the Haverford campus, lie is the person who wrote to oui draft boards and goi us deferred. \inl In is the understanding membei who won us .1 second chance when iln Delinqueni Students Committee assembled. Directoi ol Athletics Macintosh is the formei captain who siis on thi end ol the bench worrying the football team to victory. He is the fellow with the weak backhand who tries to beai Bramall ai his own game. \ud he is the main reason E01 the return ol good athletii teams to Haverford. Acting Dean Macintosh is the man who shakes "Uncle Bill\V hand after Meeting on I hursday. He is the our person in Roberts who is nevei too bus\ loi .in appointment. And he's the man who pui up youi date for the funioi Prom. is "Mac" the fellow who walked into .1 I loyd loom and looked .11 the pictures ol nude women on 1 1 n hr wall, remarking: "How do you u. 1 \ sleep in here." \111l he's the conversationalisi who puis his face right up 10 yours .mil makes you look ai the ground. "Mac" is iln m.in who h.is made it unnecessary to have a studeni on the Academii Council. Hi's the fellow who iiimi s|H.iks unless linn's something ta s.i\. And he's the sour-faced gu) who's never lost his temper. To "Archie Mac," then, we dedicate this, the 1943 RECORD Front Row: Levintow, Wilkie, Coffin, Ryrie, Lippincott, Wingerd. Second Row. Newell, Hunter. Anderson, M Brown, Sevringhaus, Ferris, MacCrate, Woodward. Third Row: Steins, Widney, ( -nil >n \ i . Whitehead, Mason, Enck, Stevens. The 1943 Record Board Editor-in-chief Tristram P. Coffin Business Manager John B. Wilkie Photographic Editor George M. Ryrie Class Historian H. Mather Lippincott Sports Editor William Wingerd Art Editor Leon Levintow Club Activities \vrel Mason Senioi Write-ups Christopher Cadbury William Woodward . Issislants Eugene E. Anderson 1 [olland Hunter Kenedon P. Steins Man in Brown Howard Kriebel fohn Stevens l'aul Cope Robert MacCrate Haskell Torrence k Stet ling Whitehead fohn J. En< Newell John C. Sumner Fei i is (olin Sevringhaus Carl Widney Eight < - < FACULTY Changes in the faculty generally |>.iss unnoticed among the majority ol i i II .1 I II I si II I .1 I I llll II ssi II . I I II ,ISSIIIII|i si IK III IK. \\ III II II lln longCl I LIS I I nil CI | Ml' 1 1 nun is 111. nil ih. ii ilns |nulrssi)i siill goes . 1 < > 1 •_; teaching others al the s.hih 1 place. I liis 1 mi In nni continues until someone says, 'Rcmembei . whereupon hasty comparisons ari drawn Various professors have comi and goni in the 1 I 1. si 1 1 >i 1 1 years. Lestei departed in 1940. afi and Sargeni replaced 1 and Walton .i Reitzel and Hotson in the English department. I. Hi. however, ;< I n i yeai thoughi Ins services would help the army: Vfelchioi ol the French departmeni 1 arrived ai the same conclusion. I In death ol I K krlh cui short .< 1 1 devoted to philosophy. Betz and Ulendoerfei transferred theii knowledge «>l mathematics to othei spheres. I he teams ol 1942 l I will have to play th< h games without the coaching ol Docherty. Dean Brown undoubted!) is discovei ing in liis satisfaction thai nun do not cui classes in the Navy. Deans Stoni 1 si I and Gibb now know 1 i.i i in college nun ill do. Green us recendy been added in the astronomy departmeni and Pancoasi to ili< economics. Meanwhile, against these changes, the majority ol the faculty has remained with assuring stability. Left to right: Dixon, Halter, Hale, Wrigley. rod Students Perhaps the changing of the Graduate house to a Government House discouraged (hem. Whatever tin- cause, the shrinkage in the number of graduate students placed the enrolled number at seven. Of these, two did not appear. Of the live, three work in chemistry, one in sociology, and one in English. William Hale commutes from Pendel Hill. Dr. John Mullowne) holds a room in East Founders. Jonathan Dixon, Robert Halter, and Arthur Wrigley devote most of their time to the chemistry lab. They are noi babes, but they seem lost in (he woods. Ten < '& Semester Class Officers Fri.mi.man Firm Half Freshman Second Half President MacCrate President MacCrate Vice President Dewald Vice President Torrence Secretary Hogness Secretary Hogness Treasurer Coffin Treasurer Coffin Executive Council Coolidge Executive Council Coolidge Mason Mason Tomlinson Widney Sophomore Firm Half Sophomore Second 1 1 ai i President Torrence President Torrence Vice President Meader Vice President Evans Secretary \nderson Secretary Whitehead Treasurer Collin Treasurer Coffin Executive Council \ddoms Executive Council Cope Evans Marsh Whitehead MacCrate Junior First Ham [unior Second Half President Evans President Whitehead Vice President Hogness Vice President Cope Set retary MacCrate Secretary MacCrate Treasurer Coffin Treasurer Cofiin Executive Council Cope Executive Council Newell Mason Evans Whitehead Lee Senior Summer Session Senior Second Half President Whitehead President Evans Vice President Vice President Newell Set retary MacCrate Secretary MacCrate Treasurer Coffin Treasurer Cofiin Exei utive Council Newell / xecutive Council Lee Evans Marsh Lee Whitehead Twelve *~m 1-ioni Row. WoodVard, Lee, Gilbert, Evans, Whitehead, Coffin, \l>»in. \\ i Ik i< Morse, Ryric Second Ron Marsh, Stiles. Mason, rorrence, Kirk, Ridgeway, M.Brown, Hall, Lyman Halletl Third Ron l n. l Cad Fourth Otto, bury, Sutterlin, Bell, Kibbee, Coolidgi Sevringhaus Hill, Williams, | Brown, Widne) Row Meader, Shinn, Peterkin, Hunter, Lutz, Wingerd, Lippincott, Ferris, Newell, romlinson, Vllcn, Levintow, Stevens. i c l.iss In the earh pari ol Decembei '43 mei to choose i -^ permaneni officers. Whitehead was elected to take <>\n the duties ol president. Evans elected vice- president; MacCrate, secretary; Moon, treasurer; and Hunter, Newell and ["01 rence to the executive committee. I'l K\l \M \ 1 (I \ss Ol I II 1 ks / eft to right: Mad rate, Ne well, Moon, Evans, Whitehead, Hunter, rorrence. |MU.\n ADDOMS 8(>1 Park Place, Brooklyn. \. Y. Polytechnk Preparatory Schoo] Government (lass Executive Committee |2); tennis Tram (3); l'reshman I ciinis ream; Basketball Squad (2,3); Jayvee Basketball Team ih; I liiul ream Soccei 1 1 1. Where's Jerr) . Chestnut Hill . took a while but hnalh got the tennis smooth enough lor the varsity . 1 handsome link man. could kill any gal . Chestnut :")().")() 11 ill . Imessrs Studies, dors sports with finesse . inseparable with Johnny to the Straw, movies, or Mat's . Hey, Shinn! fOHN M. ALLEN 2681 Lee Road. Shaker Heights, Ohio Shaker Heights High School Engineering Glee Club (1.2.3,4); Cap and Bells (3,4); Engineering Club (1,2,3,4); Service Project (2,3,4); Freshman Mathematics Prize. Potential scholar . but it's much niter to sleep . "Huh, can't heai out ol that ear" . connoisseur of the happy tranquil lite . lazy dater . occasionally unfathomable, especially on the female angle . charter member of the Ancient Order of Who's Done Tomorrow's Math . good man in the clutch. EUGENE E. ANDERSON, [R. Sharon, Pa. Ki \ i School Latin Students' Council (4); Class Secretary (2); News Board (1,2,3,4), News Editoi (3), Editoi (1); '43 Record Board; Phi Beta kappa; Corporation Scholarship (1, 2); Chairman ol Cap and Gowns Committee.
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