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Spring 2004
Sports
Rich Halpert was one of the team’s most valuable swimmers as a freshman following a phenomenal performance at the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) championship meet. Despite being sick for the previous ten days, he broke the school record in the 200 individual medley, with a time of 1 minute, 56.23 seconds.

Photo by Justin Allardyce Knight
   
Making Waves


Whether it’s in the pool or on a computer, senior Rich Halpert has always performed at an accelerated level. His proficiency at both has continued at Tufts, where he is a record-setting swimmer and a computer engineer who will graduate magna cum laude after just six semesters this May.

Raised in Acton, Massachusetts, Halpert was a prodigy who at three years old was already helping people with computers. He was a star student at programming camps in his youth. During high school he worked summers as a software professional on an internship at Thornton Inc., in Waltham.

Swimming was his other passion. He joined the popular town team at nine. At 12 he earned a spot on a local United States Swimming Club that competed around New England. His high school team won the state championship during his junior season, and Halpert was the runner-up in two events.

The combination of strong engineering and swimming programs led Halpert to Tufts, where his sister, Kim, and his brother, Jon, preceded him. He entered the university with eight AP credits from high school that matched almost exactly his freshman-year requirements. He also sensed he would have a very positive swimming experience on veteran coach Don Megerle’s team.

“Coach Megerle amazed me right off the bat,” Halpert said. “He was a very interesting, caring person. He was very positive and upbeat about everything and very excited to be doing what he’s doing. The team attitude was very inclusive.”

Halpert’s potential in the pool blossomed immediately. He was one of the team’s most valuable swimmers as a freshman following a phenomenal performance at the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) championship meet. Despite being sick for the previous ten days, he broke the school record in the 200 individual medley, where one is required to swim all four strokes (butterfly, back, breast, freestyle) in a single race, with a time of 1 minute, 56.23 seconds. He also swam in the 200 backstroke and two relays, finishing up as one of the highest-scoring freshmen at the meet.

“He was so sick that I thought he wouldn’t even make it to the meet, let alone perform so well,” Megerle said. “I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. He caught everyone’s attention.”

As a sophomore in 2003, Halpert was a part of record-setting foursomes in the 200 freestyle relay (1:25.24) and in the 400 freestyle relay (3:07.62). This season he was a member of the All-NESCAC 400 freestyle relay that provisionally qualified to compete at the NCAA national championship meet.
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His performance in the pool has been matched in intensity by his academic pursuits. In addition to carrying heavy coursework as a computer engineering major and mathematics minor, Halpert has been busy acquiring hands-on experience. He’s worked as a lab teaching assistant and residential computer consultant on campus, and as a consultant for several local computer firms. Combining his two considerable talents, Halpert is the webmaster of the swimming and diving team’s online site.

“He’s going all the time,” Megerle said. “I could be coming to the pool at 3 o’clock in the morning and he’d be walking the streets leaving the study lab. The guy is unbelievable, in the most positive way.”

Intending to graduate as a junior, Halpert took six and a half credits last semester. Five and a half were difficult engineering courses. The daily workload was strenuous, to say the least.

Swimming helped him through it. Megerle was disappointed when he first heard that one of his best swimmers was leaving a year early. But, “Coach” soon put his full support behind Halpert, as he has done for countless swimmers during a 33-year career at Tufts. Megerle scheduled individual practice times for Halpert and motivated him to persevere through the semester. Early-morning hours at the pool freed the swimmer’s mind. Halpert would earn his second-highest grade point average for the semester.
Megerle’s swimming and diving program features many excellent students. The squad’s 3.48 grade point average for the fall semester was second-best among all Division III teams. They were also competitively successful, earning third place at the 2004 NESCAC championship meet in late February. Halpert is disappointed to be missing out on his senior year with the team, but with plans to pursue a Ph.D., the sooner he can get started the better.

“I feel very accomplished with what I’ve been able to do at Tufts,” Halpert said. “The balance between engineering and swimming has been perfect. I had enough time for both, and both were intense. I’m looking forward to moving on to the next challenge.”