The Record of the Class

The Record of the Class

^61 2218 R 3 1967 pts.1-4] Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2009 with funding from Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/recordofclass1967have HAVERFORD PRIMER iL 221fa R 3 11967 pta I I lohl ^..-..^=%"4©^ :€:: I ADMfSS/ONS ARTS ^?1- mm ASTRONOMY *^ BOREDOM BIOLOGY #^ ^^^ \ 1*1 CHEMISTRY ^'^^^ / I h ' mmm^:iiF' CLASSICS CONSTRUCTION MULFORD CONSTRUCTION CO. no ARDMORE AVE. ARDMORE Ml 2-0500 DRAMA ECONOMICS ENGINEERING ENGLfSH FOUNDERS ^ FRENCH GERMAN GLEE CLUB HISTORY \ INFIRMARy INTERMURALS /ANITOR /l/NK 10 Y KIDS LAOEFACTION MATHEMATICS ^/ MUSIC NATURE PHILOSOPHY PHYSICS POLITICAL SCfENCE 3^i;^Aii> PSYCHOLOGY % RELfGfON REGISTRAR STUDY SOCIOLOGY SPANISH SWITCHBOARD SOCIAL ACTION WIILIARD, INC. ^feA^f- Serving Haverford for Many Years FUEL OIL OIL BURNERS Domestic Industrial F. C. HAAB CO.. INC. 2100 CHESTNUT STREET Philadelphia, Pa. Service Around the Clock LO 3-0800 ARTCRAFT PRINTING COMPANY Printing with Typographic Technique 919 WALNUT STREET Philadelphia, Pa- 19107 WAInut 2-7743 McCANDLESS FUELS INC. Your Local Dealer Serving the Entire Mainline for 30 Years Oil Burner Sales & Service, Maintenance Contracts Harvard Rd. and Penna. R.R. in Havertown call HI 6-5300 TENSION figures, Students are requested to include ALL work (trial scratch work, notes, etc.) in this book. !averford College Examination in. Instructor Date Nome- HONOR PLEDGE Please do not sign until examination has been completed I accept full responsibility under the Hoverford Honor System for my conduct on the examination. Signed- ADDING A DIMENSION TO STUDENT DINING You did it. Class of '67 ! Congratulations ! We're proud to have served vou and we all wish you Bonne chance ! Bonne sante! et Bon voyage! LombjrJ and JMh Streets. PhilaJclphia. Pcnnsyl-. jn.J 1Q14(. • j diMsion ol Automjtic Retailers ot Amcn.a. ln>: ^A-RA. UNION VEHICLE E. Adrian Teaf. C.L.U., C.P.C.U. WINTER WASHING WOMBATS XENOPHOBIA THE RECORD 1967 Editors: David Stephenson, William White Faculty and Patrons Editor: Leon Torrey Advertising Editor: Francis Richards Sports Editors: Robert Gorchov, Frederick Sydlik Circulation Editor: Steven Gold Art Editor: Charles Cecil Photographers: John Czarinski, Donald Frankel, Glick Studios, Carl Grunfeld, Theodore Hetzel, Christopher Kane, Arthur Louie, Robert Manoff, David Whiting. Staff: Henry Berliss, Curtis Glick, Christian Kopff, Thomas McCafferty, Michael McCann, Evan Mawdsley, James Ritter. The Library OF Haverford College HAVERFORD. PA. PURCHASED FROM THE 1949 Campaign Fund MO.Q2 - ^9i^y SENIORS (967 LD 2218 R 3 1967 pt.2 bJJ Q.:2.iS LOUIS COURSEV THE LIBRARY OF HAVERFORD COLLEGE HAVERFORD. PA. PURCHASED FROM THE 1949 CAMPAIGN FUND 6' MO. ^a 19 1^ 7 ACCESSION No. ^ i"-? <£> yS *CAP AL ALADJEM BILL BEARDSLEE GEORGE BELL STEVE BENNETT O TAPLEY BENNETT ALEX BLACHLY LAIRD BLACKWELL MIKE BOWDEN JACK BOWERS ANGUS BRAID MIKE BRATMAN RICK BREADY PAUL BRESLIN AL BROWN RICK BROWN BOB GATES CHUCK CECIL BARRY CHAMBERLAIN JIM CLIFFORD ^ [.. mMJH' JOHN COOPER ! 1 PAUL DAGDIGIAN LEON DEMAR NEIL DIDRIKSEN NATT EMERY KEN EVANS GREG FAVIS DICK FRASE HpHHH|^^ atf» FRED FUMIA JEFF GAMBLE TIM GANTZ JIM GARAHAN RICH GARTNER CURT GLICK STEVE GOLD PETER GOLDMARK BOB GORCHOV Ji «H STEVE GREIF CHUCK HARDY JOHN HAYWOOD ^0^ RUSS HESS BILL HOFFMAN AL HOLBROOK SAM HOPKINS TEM HORWITZ DAVE HOUSER TOM HOWE BARRIE HURTUBISE DAVE JACKSON V —-rt*/ JIM JANOWITZ RALPH JAXTHEIMER 'M GEOFF KABAT MIKE KAPLAN MIKE KEENAN ^^^^ BOB KLEIN DAVID KOTEEN BOB KROGSTAD STOfCES HALL -1963 • • • r H IS H A L L FOR I NST R.UCT ION • • • ! N T hi E P LI Y.S IC A L S CI ENCES • A r^ D M AT H E M.AT ( C 3 [ S iNlAMED ; IN • HO NO a • OF S. EMLEN STOKES. M.D. STEVE LAFFEY MIKE LEADER i'*'<m,^mSr^ DAVID LOWRY DAN MAAS JIM MACKINNON ROBBIE MANOFF ilk ROB MARTIN EVAN MAWDSLEY ^^-"W. ""^ "^^4 )K- ^t; TOM McCAFFERTY CHRIS McCANDLESS DICK McCONAGHY DAVID McCONNELL DOUG MEIKLEJOHN PH HENRY MEYER JOHN MILLIKEN TOM MURRAY DOUG NEAL DAVE NOBURU BEN OLDMIXON DICK OULAHAN DAVID PARMACEK STURGE POORMAN -«*>N lOE PURVIS HARVEY RARBACK JOE REINHARDT .^.. • %. ROB RIGGAN TRENTON RUEBUSH lERRY RUTTER JOHN SCHOONOVER VANCE SENEGAL DAN SERWER JESSE SIGELMAN STEVE SCHATZ BILL SCHAUMAN «^'. t Pj^-, BOB SINCLAIR BOB SINGLEY GEORGE STAVIS DAVID STEPHENSON FRANK STEVENSON m fc iSS JEFF STEVENSON tm FRED SZYDLIK DUNCAN THOMAS E JOHN THOMPSON JOHN L. THOMPSON LARRY TINT LEON TORREY TOM TRAPNELL JACK ULLMAN DON URIE PHIL VAN NEWKIRK DAVE WATTS WILL WHITE BILL WILKE DAVE WILSON FRED WILSON ^HOURnytKING BOB WISMER CHARLIE WOLFINGER SERGE ZEIBER I SPONSORS Mr. & Mrs. Edgar G. Brown, Jr. Mr. Richard Manofi Mr. cS Mrs. Gilbert F. White PATRONS Mr. Albert T. Aladjem Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Alwine Prof. & Mrs. Francis C. Evans Dr. Edward A. Favis Dr. <S Mrs. Fred J. Fumia Mr. & Mrs. Donald E. Gamble Dr. 6> Mrs. Charles Haywood Mr. John S. McConaghy Mr. 6c Mrs. Donald Meiklejohn Mr 6. Mrs. David J. Reinhardt Mr. & Mrs. Luther S. Singley Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Stephenson Mr. & Mrs. Morris B. Stevenson Mr. Paul A. Szydlik Dr. 6. Mrs. Fred Wilson Mr. David L. Wilson 1 V.-l^&Jl^C'- DEPARTED Alfred W. Baker Kenneth J. Bernstein John P. Blair Robert D. Bott John C. Bowers Jeffrey L. Briggs Roger F. Clapp C. Christopher Eggert Frederick G. Farley Charles T. Franckle James W. Friedman John B. Fry Hubert B. Herring S. Kent Higgins Thomas W. Hoover Steven W. Ings Peter C. Kauffman Robert S. Kruger T, Christopher Lee Terry N. Litmon Peter A. McKay David K. Nickels Johannes W. Ponsen Robert E. Primack Yianni Pyriotis David B. Reinheimer Francis A. Richards, Jr. Jeffrey J. Scott Anthony E. Shaftel Howard E. Stine Randall C. White (^'' o ,^ fif. 1^^-%^- SPORTS ?^ 5 m FOUR YEARS MADE A D/FFERENCE. You think of Mike Bratman as a freshman: Only it was the end of the season, and awkward. He iiad a rocker-step, the 'Bratman Breuninger was in the background Shuffle' they used to call it, in which the back shouting 'Drive, Trapnell, drive !' and rem?'ned ramrod stiff while the legs kind Trapnell's arms were all over the place, of shook to and fro, wobbling at the knees. up around his head, flung behind his But he worked, practiced for hours, and back, down by his waist, and still he di-ank Nutrament, and ran the cross-country won.- course, and before you knew it he was a junior scoring fifteen points a game. Beau- tiful. Of Sturge Poorman, thirteen goals in six games. He'd move down the field, striding long, smooth steps along the right sideline, cut to the middle, feint, cut again, and take a corner pass from Jarocki, and boom I — into the far end of the goal. And then he'd do it again, only this time with his head. Tliirteen goals in six games. Of Steve Gold; November 27, 1963, Wednes- day, Clothiei- Field, postponed game, one- thousand people in the stands, most people at home for Thanksgiving with papers to write, and anyway the Dunkel ratings fav- ored Swarthmore by a couple of thousand points. Gold w^as this big, nearly crew-cut freshman who got hurt a lot. It was the second period, Swarthmore's Lillie faded back to punt on his own twenty-five, when in charged Gold from the right side of the line, and Lillie dropped to kick but old Gold blocked the thing, and Al Letts, a psych major who wanted to go to Divinity School, picked it up and ran, really ran twenty odd yards for the T.D., and from then on it was all over. Of Koteen and Meiklejohn in a doubles- match; David was relatively hair- less then, and Doug's knees were O.K., and Of Donald Dean Urie, yessir Don Urie, they moved like a precision watch, always one-hundred and ninety pounds, blond together, always at the right spot. Incredible crewcut. Special K profile, broad sloping speed; Koteen, with a dead pan look and shoulders, tree-trunk legs, and fast. He slight bags under his eyes, darting back and stuck it out, all the way, four years. forth making impossible saves, all with that Said his coach: "I'd have to say that half-awake, dead pan look. Of Tommy Trap- Don was the best athlete this school nell on the hurdles ; his right leg taped from has had in recent years." And he was. the ankle up to the knee, still looking a little Thursday afternoon, November, a flabby, as if he was just about to begin light snow on the ground. The gym is training. crowded, the little rickety stands full. Aladjem is one referee; he wears a T-shirt with blue trim and the word NOBLES across the left br.east; Rick Brown is the other; he wears a blue T-shirt, bermudas, and low- cut Converse with strips of tape across the back. Post-bacs against Senior B : a hard game, lots of yelling; Leader and Koteen race down the court on a fast break, Koteen dribbles to the middle, d,ead pan look, behind- the-back-pass to Watts and whomp ! Lloyd Hardy, his white gym shorts hiked three inches above his navel, hits Watts and not the ball. Whomp. Aladjem blows his whistle. Spring, late afternoon, the sky is red- dish-blue. Fred Szydlik walks over the small island between New Dorm and Leeds. Base- ball practice is over, and he carries his glove in his left hand, two bats in his right hand. He is sweating and his nose is red and beefy. From the rear, heading toward the tunnel, he looks about thirty—tired, a veteran.

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