Wesleyan University - Olla Podrida Yearbook (Middletown, CT)
- Class of 1962
Page 1 of 192
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1962 volume:
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OLLA PODRIDA BOX 235 WESLEYAN STATION MIDDLETOWN, CONN. Co-Editm COLBERT ANDRUS, Layout Editor BARRY CRAIG RICHARD COLTON, Literary Editor ROBERT LEVY COLIN MacKINNON, Pbotngmplyy Editor SCOTT WILSON, Bminem Manager Dear Reader, I Durante mlS PI'IITWI'OS dlaS CH Wesleyan,var1as VCCCS 01 COHVCISaCIODES como esta. c Olapod? Me preguntaba que era e50 Al rincipio, la platica continuaba sin que yo preguntara por el significado de olapod. Habia tatas y tantas expresiones nuevas que era imposible investigar e1 significado de todas ellas pues e1 informal coloquio se hubiera convertido en clase de Gramatica 0 en un curso completo de 'Tslang En realidad no puss: mucha atencion a1 termino, pero parecia estar de moda. Todos se rcferian, invariablemente, ai olapod. Para entonces mi curiosidad ya 56 habia despertado pero por una razon u otra nunca pregunte a nadie. I Pasaron los dias y yo segum intrigado con el olapod. Un dia, encontrandome en la biblioteca leyendo, tuve que consultar la biblia de todo esrudiante extranjem Me reiicro a1 diccionario. Entonces vino a mi meme la misteriosa expression. Busque avidamente en la pa'ginas de mi diccionario pero no encontre nada.Hun1,pense,a de ser un termino muy elevado donde mi diccionario no lo registra Pero yo teni1 que saber que era eso. Busque a1 rededor, pero todo en vano c Han estudiado algum vez en el famoso pit 2 Todos Parecian embebidos en sus libros y las inmobiles est1tuas parecian no inmutarse ante mis interrogantes miradas. Ah! Al fm! Habia encontrado alaguicn que podria inform1rmc El Senor Webster segur1menre lo tendria registrado. Pero, i Oh sorpres1! Debi1 561 um palabra tan elevade que ni aun cl ilustre gr1matico l1 s1bi1. Un poco frustr1d0 voivi 1 mi asiento y vi que las dos horas per 1.15 que habia s1c1d0 mi libro del Reserve Room h1bi1n Ilegado a su termino. Entregue el libro y me dirigi a mi c111rto dccidido a pregunmr 21 L1 primera persona que encontrara. No habi'a nadir: 11 rededor. Me encontrgcon una pareja, pero. .decidi que era mejor no interrumpir .Liequc a mi cuarto y 1hi encontre mi salvacion. Larry, mi companero dc c111rto renia que saber. Ansiosamente le pregunte que era olapod. El me explico que era un libro o algo por cl cstilo y sin embargo no estaba yo muy convencido que habia yo entendido. Ante mi expresion dc no entiendo nad1 , L1rry me mostro un libro lujosamente encuadernado. 'Oh God fue lo unico que pude .I z decir pues no podia dejar d6 relrme. Por fin habia encontr1do el significado de Olapod En mi propio idioma; Olla : Recipiente de barro 1clay-pot-g en el cunl se cocinan una variedad de deliciosos platillos; y Podrida descompuesto, edme 21 perder, 1putrid, rotten1, Olapod, Ah! Contributor: Photography ELLEN FRANKLIN RON LIPPMAN DON KNAPP DAVE NOBLE MIKE MICHALCZYK KEN WOODROW FRED MURPHY AGUSTIN CEBADO HERB SHORT WINDMILL SOCIETY OF UNHISPANIC KNIGHTS - L L 14 rugby , ,, 3, Lin; , g 4 44' v.1: E ; ,3: $451 54$?!Nv4tiu. 7' i i 1 M Wesleyan University Middletown, Connecticut 1962 volume CIII Presented to the class of 1962 by the Class Of 1963 6 1 l hprvfnrp Ihp iflnrh 151m 59111 him fnrth frnm Ihp 131111th nf E21911. 1n till the grmmh frnm 1111121119 hp 111115 takpn. gm hp hrnnp nut the 1mm: ,9 . . . Genesis 3; 23, 24 And likewise was the undergraduate driven forth from his paradise of innocence and made to fall into the bottomless pit of sin. Only it was not the Lord God who drove out the undergraduate and placed him coldly in the world, but the Board of Trustees, who had themselves been tempted by the serpent and eaten of the apple. And so it was decreed that the freshman should no longer rush in innocence, but should have his eyes opened by a semester of college life, and should know both sides of The Fraternity Picture The upperclassman, too, was no longer to return from a summer of forgetfulness and fall enthusiastically into the embrace of warm idealism which each year has proved indispensable to the building of house spirit. Rushing will never again be the same, for now it must take place against 3 semesters frustrations when cynicism will abound. u 11h lltp 111mb Kath 11mm 1119 EPertIl, Eerauap lltmt 112151 hmw thia, 111ml art wrath almup all rattle, anh ahnnp pupry hpaat nf the fiplh; upntt thy lwlly altalt lltmt gm anh hum altall lhnu eat all 1112 haga nf 111;; lift. Genesis3;14 And as surely as the administration and faculty did beguilingly cause the apple to be eaten when the fraternities, in their new-found state of sin. shall foul the air and rend the earth with the evil and pestilence of dirty rushing and stereotyped houses. For once thrown from the state of innocence, the undergraduate was left to decide upon his own system of rushing and to choose what- ever time and Whatever rules he would like tsubject, of course, to the approval of . . . eth. But the Wesleyan student didnt really want to rush during the middle of the year and didn't, in fact, want to come back early from the summer to rush either. Neverthe- less, the choice having to be made, numer- ous hollow arguments Heated around cam- pus 0n myriad mimeos, vigorously support- ing one side or the other. To clean up the mess a variety of inconclusive referenda were held, vaguely resembling multiple choice hour examinations, in which the stu- dent indicated his preference as to the time of rushing. Since more students were willing to give up skiing at Stowe over semester break than were willing to give up the trip to Fort Lauderdalc during Spring vaCation, and since absolutely nobody wanted to come back to Middletown on the first of Septem- ber, the referenda finally yielded a majority decision in favor of February rushing at the beginning of second semester. Thc fannl effects Of this fall from radical innocence upon the fraternities are yet to be seen. The prophets of doom scc limncial collapse to be inevitable for some of the small houses. The common prediction is that all the houses will be weakened by the coming of typed fraternities. do not believe that Wesleyan is such a bad place that it should in all respects be held secondary to its social system. Fraternities have a positive contribution, but certainly not to the detriment of the cultural and academic Wesleyan. is even possible that the two might be complimentary, and this without the necessity of anyonris being purged by fire The eager freshman, his beanie perched atop his pointed little head, faces quite innocently the process of registration as a Wesleyan student. Unaware 0f the horrors soon to confront him, knowing nothing of the hungry IBM which will soon attack his soul and spit it back on neatly punched cards, he looks with as yet guileless eyes toward his first week at fair Wesleyanna. But deep in the caverns below North College lives a troll whose only thought is to tear the student inside out, shatter his privacy, expose his fears, crush his morals, and end his self-confidence. 11 A '7 : ' - OFFICE or THE nmmwxn SCHEDULE AND,XOR GRADE REPORT 0F: : WESLEYAN UNYVERSITY , MIDDLETOWN. CONNECHCU? uh . ' - xvii: awn 5:353 STUDENT COPY 3 3 ACADEMIC RECORD or: W m WWED V I ESLEY x , M M I MIDDLEAN UNIVERSITY THIS RECORD IS AN OFFICIVA TOWN, CONNECTICUT TRANSCRIPT ONLY WHEN BY THE REGISTRAR AND EMggssggl f H THE UNIVERSITY SEAL CLASS AFHUATION a Whm mM NM hw h jigiiifE TlTLF ' WESLEYAN U MIDDLETOWN, CONN W V NIVERSITY ECTICUT BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE f r on UniversSty is based on SIGNS 2:3: eiyiconFS fitness f0 pursue't: c$;:g:wdence t nce um . fefaegnifonce Exqminuhon Boarc E ADDRESS 'On to Wes! l , NAME AND HOM Admxssx C YHDFNT S evidence of the OPP . M r1 mecific nurflb? FSCHEDULE ANWOR GRADE REPORF OF: OFFICE or ms REGISTRAR WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY MIDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUT RECHSTRA DATE PREPARED X v L. , A CLASS AFFILIATION L l1 VEGISTRAR V, xllVERsny F Ecricur ya W I a aagshaaeaassaaaasa , ns6aa6sas ?T??11313777772177172 28; 388 14 Conformity is the staple of the Ivy League community, and so the Freshman must be oriented. Eagerly, the new collegiate buys his XVesleyan jacket and beanie proud badges of honor. Not so eagerly he peruses Ddedalm and prepares to face his first con- test With Academia. If he has played it cool, he hasn't yet opened his summer reading and has no fears of the upcoming seminars. If, however, he has made the mistake of attempting to comprehend this literary gem, W'csleyan is fortunate that he can at all, Daedalm is enough to fill many seniors with trepidations. Orientation is a challenge, and it should be. Those who sit in rapt attention will become Wesleyan's scholarsther contributions to the world of wisdom personified. Those who sleep will become her C+ gentlemen, rewarding the school in later years with rich endowments. Now they are all just Freshmen, with 700+ college boards and a National Merit semi-fmalist certificate under one arm, a long list of high school extra- curricular activities under the other, and a National Honor Society pin on their Chests. We are committed to providing gifted students with as gifted teachers as we can hnd, men of liberal and scholarly distinction, concerned to nurture the growth of young men in knowledge and wisdom, ememplifying the integrity, conviction, and generosity of gentlemen. XVc must support these teachers to the full, giving them the tools they need for reaching, and opportunities for their own growth as scholars and persons. We must give them full responsibility and freedom to teach, to think, and to speak as the judgment, the conscience, and the character for which they are hired may dictate. President Victor Butterfield, The Faith of a Liberal College The faculty, both as a source of learning and as a catalyst in the learning process, must bear major responsibility for the quality of a Wesleyan education. Indeed, this fact has somewhat dubiously proved to be the final falling-back point for the distraught Wesleyan student, who having just received a monstrous drubbing d Amherst in football can only weakly reply, Well, we have a better faculty than you. r w. If learning is in fact ou.r business here, as some observers would contend, than there can generally be little slighting of the faculty. Rarely do you'hg men fmd themselves in so close association withaa faculty of such distinction; rarely does so distinguished a faculty commit itself with such concern to the education of young men. 4 It,um-jjl 22 r- T'bxapck urock'; MN I. EOwnng .. LacI-Pt; rum 8.: Dah't'P Suakccprvo' H mc POPC Vonc-r roho WM ' 24 25 26 27 But Heaven is not on earth, nor is Wesleyan Plato's Republic, and the dialogue between student and teacher is on occasion unpleasantly'disrupted. One such occasion presented itself last Spring when Professors Baritz and Brown were removed from the History Department. This incident was most disturbing not simply because of the loss to the university of two outstanding faculty members, but was made especially unfortunate by the apparent fact that the History Departments action with respect to Professors Baritz and Brown was not based wholely on impersonal considerations. As even other members of the department admitted, the behind-the-scenes story was not a pleasant one, and had personal overtones of dispute and jealousy. tThe word vendetta , however inappropriately, keeps coming to mindj When the faculty cannot live with its differences and moreover grow by them, it discredits itself, and loses esteem in the eyes of the student. But even more important than internal considerations, the departments decision to ignore the student response toward the failure to give tenure to Professor Batitz was extremely unfortunate. On a campus Where apathy is said to abound in all forms, the overwhelming disbelief and anger which met the History Department decision was a positive sign, and spoke well for the concern Which the student has for his own education and for the strength of Wesleyan. It is true and even fortunate that the students do not beat the responsibility for policy decisions at Wesleyan as is often the case in some foreign universities. Nevertheless, the outright disregard for student opinion and interests which the History Department displayed in favor of less rational considerations can hardly add favorably to the quality of student experience at Wesleyan. As the May 1961, Wexleymz Alumnm so correctly said, The faculty has as its primary responsibility the safeguarding of the character and quality of a Wesleyan education. It is indeed questionable whether the history faculty safeguarded the character and the quality of a Wesleyan education in acting as it did for the reasons it did in removing Professors Baritz and Brown from its ranks. To the students, those for Whom the Wesleyan education is ultimately most important, there was no question that the quality of that education had been severely weakened. 28 Critics of contemporary Wesleyan, most of them within the family, insist that the college has lost its sense of purpose, does not know where it wants to go or is going. Alumni from the Class of ,00 write to the Almzzzzm urging that Wesleyan rediscover its purpose by reafhrming its Christian foundings and moral teachings. Faculty members call for a new university as the only way of saving Wesleyan from sinking directionless into mediocrity. Wesleyan has not lost her sense of purpose. Failure to reussert wom-out ideals is not purposelessness. Nor can purposelessness be rightfully found in Wtesleyzm's reluctance to hazard the step of becoming :1 full university. And the search for new forms and methods which XVesleyan is conducting is not symptomatic of a drift into purposelessness. As a liberal arts college XWesleyan is aware, even agonizingly so, of its mission and duties. Where indecision and change exist it is not over substance but over form and method. Believing that only stagnation breeds purposelessness, the university seeks through experiment to find the forms most conducive to meeting thC aims of the educational process. .ah ve'v-------'e m, i I U I c A me-Ik' N e e e u esQ t e; i I w , u KW w iv 12'35 is. r. Mr E The curriculum is a broad one. It is made broader by the addition of such new courses as student interests and outside needs demand. It is further extended by the liberality of requirements. The XVesleyan student who cares enough to try can take or avoid almost any course in the school. Except gym. Wlith the increasing availability of private and informal tutorials, depth of study is becoming limited only by the student's ability and interest. Except gym again, where 5-6 is the highest course offered. The program of distinction work also serves to broaden and deepen the quality of the curriculum. On a range of subjects from epitaphs to star clusters the distinction thesis gives to the student :1 sense of immediacy and personal meaning in his intellectual endeavors. The most self-conscious attempt at XVesleyan to find forms for education has been the college plan experiment. NOW at the end of three years a Hood of evaluations is being offered to judge the success of this experiment. A yearbook cannot Offer any succinct appraisals eit can only note the overall enthusiasms within the colleges and point with hope at the high results of the senior examinations. Many expectations were tOO high, but many have been fulfilled. The question seems not to be whether or not to continue the college plans, but rather how best to improve them now that their essential worth is apparent. 56 Nevertheless, students sense a wandering aimlessness within the university. Study is a virtue at Wesleyan ea fact of which too few liberal arts colleges can boast; but despite their earnestness, students remain without direction. Their commitments are shallow, often reflecting those of their professors, and their willingness to participate in their education is at best a mediocre thing. In a certain sense students can blame their faculty. Facile with their lectures and penetrating with their grades, professors all too often fail to seek to involve the undergraduate. The classroom becomes the only avenue of communication between the learned and the learning. Faculty members demand to be sought out when they should be seeking, and student problems are handled according to appointment schedules. Too often the busy professor becomes to the student the unapprOachable professor. It sometimes seems that the faculty has forgotten that its first duty is to the student. Fraternities are an enigma at Wesleyan. 38 Frequently both outsiders and fraternity members err in taking fraternal life too seriously. Indeed, fraternities have become apologists seeking excuses to justify their existence. Futile efforts are made to become an integral part Of the academic community. Wesleyan has been inundated with forums, debates, colloquiums, dialogues, and speakers. WW an, s- , l , . M M'Vw'w . earl , Yet despite this smoke screen of academia, the fraternity sticks out like a sore thumb. Independents take the somewhat blatantly obvious attempts of fraternities to join the academic circle as a sign of a hasty attempt to update a hopelessly antiquated system, and in a sense they are right. For in its hurried efforts to find a place in the University Plan, the fraternity has failed to emphasize the very aspects Which could make it a vital and essential force in the community. The fraternity is basically a social organization. T here should be nothing wrong or distasteful in such a concept; and in fact, there should be everything to cherish in it. No educational center can live solely on academics, and to assert that it can is demonstrating an incredible degree of naivete. Even faculty members lave, get drunk, and go to the Webb. Neither should the social and the academic be unable to co-exist. T0 assume that the Wesleyan student will or should spend all his waking hours with a book in front of his nose is ridiculous. After all, often as it has been mentioned, the development of social relationships and the growth of an ability to accept group responsibility and group discipline can be termed a legitimate segment of a liberal education. 39 4O ks prone to C811 man y of graduates So , C131 the under- . ac ' . QC X5 as Ilkely UVltl-es tra t nSC . . O 6nd5 hatemmes. . 8 m the DeIta Dda b . Tau ridge C T.V. addiCtS a ard to game in Clark Han $$ 5 d0 0117, and 63 J fe . Oh W fr . - umversal n atem tham the frate Wm The p mes havc as manY mi: tob1 y 6m ' . System , 1f It exists, is mUCh mor 6 minor . porno,1 Ofa and r Hy b1 0 f ame rater - 165 can be attrib uted Onl a 41 There is no question but that the last few yeais have found fraternities increasingly on the de- fensive. The progressively large number of fresh- men whu have chosen to remain among the ranks of the uncommitted clearly demonstrates that fraternities have failed to answer the question of mimn d'etre. Wihat is a fraternity at Wesleyan? XVe all agree with our rushing chairmen that somehow it is different from the animal houses of the Big Ten. But here the agreement ends. The list of answers to the proverbial question, Why did you join a fraternity? is endless, but through the variations in answers one perceives that there is a very unclear idea among fraternity members themselves as to exactly what mean- ing a fraternity should connote. The response Brotherhood seems to be inadequate, for we all know there isn't much truth to it. Each house has its splits and divisions. One would have to be :1 St. Francis to like all the members of any fra- ternity on campus. Very few brothers don't have a list of some in their own houses Whom they cautiously avoid introducing their date to. It would seem that fraternities might find the answer to their problems in their own backyard. Wihy should houses pretend to be what they are not. The social sphere is a legitimate part of any educational process, Fraternities provide rm ideal answer to this need Lets be content that they do. In one of its enlightened moments, Wesleyan's Holy Trinity tthe adminisnration, the faculty, and the Board of Trusteesl, 21 three in one proposition if there ever was one when it comes to fraternities, decreed the advent of delayed rushing The decision shouldn't have been hard to foresee. The faculty, by its very nature, hates fraternities per :9 tprobably due to frustrated desires to become pledges in their undergraduate yeatsl. The administration, despite its allegiances t0 Eclectic and Chuck Wlork, would like to see fraternities unftaternityize; land, incredible as it may seem, they really think they can do it Without abolishing theml, And everyone knows that the Board of Trustees is in fact a holy ghost No one ever sees it until it applies its rubber stamp. The Trinity, bubbling over with consideration for student opinion, granted the Senate the freedom to determine the time at which rushing would take place. Grateful for the invitation to attend their own hanging, student leaders manfully stepped into the vacuum left by the courageous Board of Trustees; and the drama commenced. The Senate quickly demonstrated that it had learned its lessons well from its elders, Procrastination is perhaps a harsh term; but after the fourth referendum, the campus began to wonder exactly why they'd been crazy enough to elect a student government, Fraternities, anxious to give their rushing committees time to develop new programs, began to rumble about a stronger B.H.P.; but through it all, junior campus manipulators were having a field day. Why stop now when its so much more fun to play with Charts on the second Hoot Of North College. Young's Printing did an unusually brisk business while the con- cerned tried to exhort the increasingly unconcerned. Telephoning was also a big kick as Commons Club and North College jockeyed for position. A few spectators even began to appear at Senate meetings. Yet sanity at last prevailed After several months of what can kindly be called cautious deliberation and a Careful discussion of all the issues. and after the appointment of a new rushing committee tin order to develop n rushing program more suited to the needs of the campus than the wholly inadequate report of the old committeel. the Senate managed to adopt a rushing program almost identical with the report produced by the old committee in the first place. But wasn't the entire affair a lot of fun anyway? mm, On rl W14 45 46 Maturity is a wonderful thing. Thank God Wesleyan students have it. 7F fitlcl fill- fill- ment in his now-academic life, the Wesleyan student turns with his frustrations to companionship with the opposite sex. The freshman Who fails initially to recognize this central fact comes to a sudden appreciation of it early in the fall. The social season begins with Pledge Dance and an inHux of girls for the flrst football game. As yet innocent new Smithies, the finds of the previous weekend's mixers, and numerous blind dates waiting to have their eyes opened, all adorn the campus. Football weekends are fun for most people. Quick to get excited when the team is Winning, slow to care when the team is losing, the student de- pends but little on the game for the center of his weekend. 50 Many prefer their own contact sports. For others, the fall weekend can be long, less carefree, even lonely. v mu; 6 3b Many blind dates donet look like their pictures in the directory. Or the Fraternity party may not be appealing, but fall has come and nights are cold, but not too cold to . . . take a walk alone together, Slowly across the campus, or through the cemetery. And beer is good but nectar is better and they dontt serve it at the bar. The wine of love is slow to age sometimes. But Fall House Parties is quick to arrive and there is no time for soul searching. Social life and party weekends are not a decision; they are a response. We are told that Walter Winchell has said he would never allow his daughter to attend either Dartmouth Winter 58 . . Carmval 0r Wesleyan Fall House Parties. Though this remark appears somewhat derogatory to our institutional and moral Character, and does in- deed put us in infamous company, there is yet room for hope in it, for we are much encouraged to know that Mr. Winchell has heard of us. 59 But whence do we gain this reputation for doing acts of violence to the fair sex, and Why is Fall House Patties singled out as the moment of our greatest infamy? Perhaps Mr. XVinchell was only on campus earlier in the Fall and heard loud noises about the mass horror show which would surely be thrown at the House when finally training was Over. But, alas, the team was so spent from breaking training on every other weekend in the Fall that by Saturday of House Parties few of its members were seen after ten, and those who remained passed quietly out of sight in the r fran- I curse, the twister an usy in his own mod But the actions are1ft all primitive, and the contemplators arenlt all cerebrative, and Party weekends 5 0n the whole , may be la a good deal more Civilized than C weekly routine of umonastic livingll through Which we suffer in our own Joe College way A consensus grows as the winter approaches that a little co-education is a good thing, perhaps even more than a little. Quickly, the football season is over and Wesleyan must go until March before another party weekend comes to thaw the colds of Winter. The center of the Wesmants social life moves to Smith dn Saturday night; or Holyoke, or Conn, or sometimes even Baypathewherever your girl goes to school. Too oftengthough, the worry of the next paper or the C- on the last hour exam finds no warm smile and amber'glass hof beer to vanish in; it has to be endured, or perhaps drowned in a pitcher atGoody's. But the winter has its moments, and the quiet twosomeness of an off- party weekend has its own warmth, slower, more friendly, than a house 'party. Candlelight Concert, basketball games, the Parley: all bring a few girls into the Wesleyan world for a brief moment before they disappear into the Monday morning mists, and the classroom, and the notebook. After months of cumula- tive frustration, frequent weekend escapes, occa- sional fish-throwing at basketball games, and other such symptoms of u llP a party weekend once again comes to Wesleyan. The winter sports are over and the bleachers i111 e come down. Inhtheir place 'go the Prom decorations and the bahdstand. Fraternity booths are set up around the Hoor and the punch bowls come out. If it doesn't snow like hell people have a good time. Then for weeks it seems that rring will never come. It rains in liddletown and the Wesman gazes aefully at the disappearing snow, ling for a green blade of grass. ' the esoteric questions of value leaning and time and existence 1 plagued the soul throughout 1e winter are distant, remote. e student begins to yearn for Lcademic varieties of education. The freshmen stage a riot. 3irls begin to appear on campus in Bermuda shortse and not just on weekends, but often by Thursday. Spring House Parties, festival of the great god Pan, arrives in turn. u..W.W The parties are now out on the porches and in the back yards. There are fewer blind dates than in the fall, and the weekend is friendlier, freer. The last weeks of school bring academic pressures. The student must shut himself up and Study hwriting distinctions and taking comps. But he doesn't fare very well. It's too sunny. Crowds build up. very co-educational, at baseball games. Cars depart for Ocean Beach and places south along the shore. Dates at Conn, near the beaches, increase. So do dates elsewhere. G 2 Q .01 2 N m T... A .L Mu D; D; PARKWAY SS ?3 , 3::5333? i nli 77 mu m Bhutatmn likpahlp thing. 78 caliber . . . 79 is Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Middlebury Bowdoin Coast Guard XVIII. Amherst Hamilton Williams Trinity Otto Graham 81 college, as 0 ea 11 ,. 4.? W ,ww Professor C bairman Professor Professor Asxocz'ate Professor Associate Prafessor Assistant Professor Assistant Professor Asxistant Professor k Secretary Superintendent Trainer Asistant Trainer Hugh G. McCurdy Norman J. Daniels Frederick J. Martin Stanley C. Plagenhoef John J. Wood Neil D. Keller Nathan Osur Donald M. Russell Lucille EQNeviue Jothillarella . Steve 15., Witkowski Walter Grockowski x On the other han characters. The allegation is made that the XVesleyan student, like American students in general, fails to carry the liberal spirit of the classroom into his extra-curricular activities, fails to commit his beliefs to action, fails to take an active concern in the political and ethical problems of the time. Occasional student par- ticipation in areas such as civil rights and peace walks is a notable, though often small, exception to the rule. Almost without nutice, the rule of student unconcem has been increasingly broken in the area of extm-curriculnr intellectual nctivin s. A surprising in- terest and moreover. consensus, has brought both politics and philosophy into sharp focus outside of the Classroom in the Wesleyan sphere. Almost as if by agreement, student sponsored panels and lectures have centered on the major political problems facing the nation and the world. It seems that the student, if not yet committed to action in these grease is at least concerned with obtaining a deeper knowledge about them. There is even :1 sense of urgency which presents itself, however slightly, in political forums and discussions. This concensus of interest has taken form in 21 variety of fraternity spon- sored events tThe Beta Symposium on the decay of tradition and the loss of meaning, the Gamma Psi forum on the Tennessee Apportionment case, Mrt Einzuldi's speech at Eclectic on US. foreign policy in the Cuban revu- lution, and the Kappa Nu Kappa Forum on church-state relationst. All have mirrored student desire to have a deeper understanding of significant contemporary politics. There would seem to be a swing away from the bent generation's renunciation of the politiCal and social world in favor of a renewed commitmenn at least on the intellectual plane, to grappling with the live political forces. But the students politics is nevertheless an intellectual politics, and issues still tend to be treated as problems of philosophy, or at least discussed in a quasi-philosophicnl framework. This factor, as well as other forces, has brought a renaissance of philosophical inquiry to the campus in the past year. In some cases this inquiry has been objective and fruitful; at other times it has shown a marked subjectivity, avoiding answers, lacking finality. Louis Mink commented on this phenomenon as he closed the Beta symposium. People no longer argue about ideas as such, he said, referring to the reactions of the audience rather than the speakers. Ideas and issues are not considered important in and of themselves, but are looked on much as a game, which one can play or not, for as long or as short as one wants. The interest was not on whether tradition itself did hold some quality worthy of preservation from loss of meaning, but rather simply whether or not tradition had in fact decayed, and whether this did imply some loss of meaning. Individuals were not ready to fight for their own positions; they were quick to accept the sufficiency of another's view. Wlhat is to be believed no longer depends on what may be objectively true, but on what best provides professional or personal meaning for the individual. 89 Accompanying this subjectivity is an unwillingness, al- most a fear, of exposing oneself through pushing personal beliefs too far or too hard. There is general reluctance to be a crusader of any sort. Our faiths re- main private, particularly where religious faith exists. Sunday evening chapel is at best regarded as an intel- lectual experience when a good speaker is giving the sermon, or perhaps attendance is only brought on by the new organ, or a Stan Lewis composition sung by the choir. For better or for worse, the Wesleyan student is content to hold his deepest beliefs in private. But when philosophy as an extra-curricular intellectual activity remained more public and objective, it had te- markable successes. The Philosophy Department's lec- ture series in the history of philosophy was enthusiasti- cally attended and well received. Both students and faculty found the lectures instructive. The suggestion has been made that other departments should offer simi- lar programs in succeeding years. If Wesleyan exists as an intellectual community apart from the confines of the classroom, this type of educational venture, with the guiding enthusiasm of both lecturers and audience, has proved an indispensable ingredient in that community. Emerging as a real focal point for intellectual activity and academic endeavor, the Center for Advanced Studies assumed a new prominence on campus this year. Many of the hoped for benefits of the Center, previously viewed with a skeptical eye by observers, were firmly realized through the activity of this years fellows. The communi- cation between the Center on the one hand and the fac- ulty and the students on the other was much greater than before, both as the fellows came up to the campus to give lectures and as the faculty and students went to the Center to visit the members in residence. w:?.ogvnwf mhc.u r! W HIHI Tl 92 A CENTER in herself during her first semester stay. Hannah Arndt captured the interest of a wide spectrum of students. Her series of three lectures On Revolution, taken from a book she is currently writing, set contemporary revolution, the characteristic political phenomenon of the twentieth century, Within the analytical framework of the modern worldis first two revolutions, the American and the French. Her seminar on Machiavellfs Prince and Discourse brought a rare and valuable degree of insight to the attending students. A CENTER of curiosity, though less one of interest, was Sir Charles Percy Snow. Sir Charles was seen and heard everywhere by decreasing numbers of onlookers - lecturing on American education, examining his mail while seated on the Downey House Hoot next to his absolutely capacious mailbox, and talking to the CQS about the subject which bores him the most, the two cultures. At the CSS, where his audience, being comprised mainly of the third culture, was singularly unreceptive, he gave a few thoughts on the problems of decision making in a democratic society. His wife, however, Lady Pamela. herself a novelist, proved to be a most scholarly and charming person as she gave a series of lectures on Marcel Proust at Honors College. 94 The very positive benefits accruing to Wesleyan from the presence of the Center and its fellows seems certain to act to strengthen the Center even further in the future. Both for broadening the intellectual life of the community and for bringing distinction to the University, the Center for Advanced Studies has become an integral part of the cultural and academic Wesleyan. George Boas and Brand Blanshard, both professors emeritus of Philoso- phyt but very dissimilar in their ap- proaches, were at the Center :1 full year. Both participated often in the History of Philosophy lecture series Students found both men very ap- proachable, though Blanshard, per- haps the greatest living rationalist philosopher, received less sympathy in his views from the predominantly anti-mtionalist XVeslcyan student. Father Ong. a leading Jesuit intel- lectual and professor from St. Louis University addressed a variety of groups on campus. In his deep faith in a strictly structured religious sys- tem, his beliefs often diverged from those of his audience, though by his commitment and his learning he gained the respect and quite often the understanding of his listeners. X f l! l l I Any university must assess the value uf its components in terms of both thc tungiblc And tllt: intangible. A classroom in the PAC, thc bulmnics on the freshman dorms. the smoke stack all of these arc substantial but inherently superficial cvidcnco of character. A univcrsity is .m organisnx lix'ing an existence which um only be :15 full as rlmt ml its faculty and students. It is a search for thc idem the argument. Wlhcrcvcr students and faculty gather the university be- comes :1 vibrant force, It is true of the classroom, the fraternity; but must notoriously it is Ullc 0f CONVlZRSATlONS AT DOW'NEY HOUSE. m2 $03 KM 1.2! qu'l 108 In an increasingly secular Wes- leyan, the occasions when the drapes cover the cross in the chapel are coming to outnumber those when the cross stands out behind the speaker. at is interesting to note in this regard that the cross was left uncovered for Nobby Brown's lecture on Freud held in the ChapelJ But the quality, how- ever secular, of Chapel activities has remained high and has attract- ed large attendance. Perhaps in a student body where faith is not an open thing the Chapel is serving its best purpose when it quickens the intellectual life of the communicant rather than attempting to give un- wanted aid in questions of the spiritual life. Wesleyan experiences no feelings of inappropriateness when the Chapel becomes the scene of the Concert Series or the Assembly Series. Presenting what one of the music instructors called the finest series of concerts available in the area, including Hartford and New Haven, the Concert Series had un- usual variety and appeal. From sitar music to the Modern Jazz Quartet the outstanding characteristic of all the performers was their unusual ability to elicit enthusiasm and ex- citement from their audience. Wes- leyan was quick to respond with this excitement. 109 The response was not always the same to the Assem- bly Series and the Parley. Occasionally, the quality was sufficient explanation. Parley was a magnificent Hop, not so much because of the vigor of the par- ticipants, but because of poor organization and a vague topic. It was unfortunate that having a man of Mt. Dullesis stature on Campus proved a waste of time due to student ineptness. Even a Dulles finds it hard to compete with the Highwaymen at a school like Wesleyan. The assemblies, though generally well- received, were also scheduled on nights when conflicts cut into attendance. Sir An- thony Wedgwood-Bean, whom many con- sidered the best assembly speaker of the series, spoke to an audience which barely filled the first ten rows in the center of the chapel. , .. hwmmvmmumnm- Student involvement in cultural and intellectual activities takes place mostly in music, theater, and art. The most successful of the Wesleyan student groups have been in music. With the reputations of the Smith-Wesleyan Concert Choir and The Highwaymen, XVesleyan can be said to have truly lived up to its nickname, the Singing College Of New England. The Concert Choir has been recognized on and off campus as one of the finest groups of its type in the nation as a result of its successful Candlelight Concerts and Concert Series appearances. This year it extended its realm of renown by a concert tour to Mexico, where it received further recognition for consistently excellent performances. R.K7W?N356WN Hate H.925... GUN pSJlOP 3UOIE 1113 Stevie , Stevie Many fmd it ironic that Wesleyan, a school which has consistently sought greater renown through academics, should fmally achieve a large measure of that greater recognition through a folksinging group. No longer is Wesleyan the other one of the hlittle three ; it is the Highwaymetfs school. Nevertheless, few would deny that the Highway- men deserve the laurels they have received. From a group of friends who got together for a freshman skit on a Fall Houseparty Weekend four years ago, they have risen to national and world fame as a folksinging group. TN IT 1c i a RTISTr; n Another center of student activity has been the Art Center and its annex in the basement of John Wes, where student painters confine their oils and water colors. Occasionally a paint covered artist will appear from the depths seeking a model; and at times these efforts are displayed at the Art Center, but few students seem to know about them. In fact, a general lack of knowledge about what goes on at the Art Center seems to prevail. Few students seem to realize the excellence of both the artists on campus and the permanent prints collection at the Center. One gets the impression that the connection with the Center often ends with the Humanities Workshop. 115 In reaction to the Cecil B. DeMille aspect of the previous yearls King 101972 production the theater played ostrich for a year. Confming itself largely to a series of five experiments and several short plays by the repertory group, the ,92 Theater was generally poorly attended. The decision not to aim at popular audiences and tastes is always a laudable one in the theater; however, in an academic community one would think that 21 theater program could be found which would be both instructive for the performers and appealing to a wide audience. The few who have steadily patronized the '92 Theater this year are but :1 thin slice of the XVesleyan students and faculty. To gain the support and interest of a broader group would not dictate a turn to mediocrity. It might only require doing a really good job on a good play instead of so often attempting merely an interesting or experimental or less significant play. 118 The failure to carry the spirit of the classroom into ones extra-cutticular activities is indeed unfor- tunate. Leisure for most students seems to be equated With a cessation of thought. Rather than at- tend a lecture, they go down to the Palace to watch a second rate movie; or they sit, motionless, in front of the television set watching 'The Untouchables. No attempt is made to relate ideas to reality, to integrate what has been learned in several apparently unrelated courses. Yet the student complains that he feels his education lacks form and a relation to the world about him. He expects to receive cohesion, not to obtain it for himself. A lecture or a concert Often leads to a new under- standing, or a desire to understand in a different way. But such challenges are too often avoided. Maybe it is better to have doubts than to avoid them by escaping a possible confrontation with reality. MIDDLETOWN: Your elegance is the faded elegance of the fallen queen who has become the chamber maid. The hot crowded tenement between Main Street and the sparkling Connecticut are yours; you accept the Sicilians and the Negroes who crowd in in their dirty blue jeans and low incomes. But you do not understand Wesleyan when it comes down from the hill in Bermudas, bate foot perhaps, to the package store or the bank. You Whistle from your moving convertibles, and the chattering of old ladies together stops momentarily after we walk past. We sometimes come down for Saturday night dinner and do not care that there is no good restaurant in Middletown, do not care that you find us strange. But other times we come down because for the moment there is no other place left to go, and when you do not see the difference we hate you. You would be tight in despising us, for we fmd you to be the empty and abandoned stage for a play which closed ahead of schedule. Your houses are inhuman as if painted on canvas, and we ate tilled with disbelief. You would be right if you despised us, because we find you a tragic joke, mock humanity, trapped in your ignorant and low income class. Even your children are aliens, try as we might to understand them. Bl 1T you don,t despise us, because you dorft know who we are. And your ignorance may be your wis- dom, for the times when we come down to your Main Street are sometimes the times when we arenlt sure who we are either, when we want to sit anonymously before the hypnotizing noise and color of whatever movie is playing, as long as it is noisy and in color, in recognition and sanctification of our impotence to control the events which in their interplay spell out the development of our lives. We are harmless, wandering passively along your street, looking aimlessly into a package store win- dow, or watching your thin-legged, over-made-up high school girls act out their rituals as we act out ours. We come down to Main Street at the times when we need most desperately to see the script and to understand the action in which we are involved. And we find, Middle- town, that you do not help us, that you do not even know what we are doing, that you are concerned with accommodating less intolerant intruders, the Sicilians, the Negroes. You do not help us, and for this we con- demn you, because we know that Cambridge or Man- hattan would understand what we need. The condemna- tion grows also out of shock. We spend our semesters thinking through the eternal problems of meaning and purpose which we know every generation and every age must face; and coming to you with our answers, Middletown, we find that you have never heard the questions. We are shocked in our recognition that the eternal questions receive the least time and that the questions which every man must ask are asked by the fewest, that the world once we leave will go on without noticing the rosy solu- tions of the liberal arts college. We can forget this thing that you tell us, you town of the Good- year Factory and the Mental Hospital, going back up the hill to write next weeks chapter in our Guide for the Progresse 0f the Soule to Self- Reconciliation, for we know that our fellows will understand what we are doing, and we can do without you, Middletown, until the next time we need a fifth of gin, or our Guides to the Progresse fail to guide even ourselves. 125 Even though it is not the most dig- nifled, Middletown, you have your glor Time was When the Wesleyan student stood proudly apathetiCa unwilling to challenge a world unworthy of his superior intellect. Easily swept up into the haughtiness of his academic surround- ings, he was all too willing to forget ialong with his professorsa that ideals must eventually suffer reality. Concern, as it related to anything more than a half-mile from Olin Library, became a totally unfamiliar term. 127 outside forces to their inner sanctum 0f OQXWJ ' tvajxq 128 129 Democrats, Republicans, and even Socialists Uhough a few at the Downey House table would assert that one of the three gave morex and dreams of the Heideman Trophy serve to shorten considerably the length of that needle. But we are speaking of past years. The angel of commitment has fmally chosen to seek an abode 0n Foss Hill. The undergraduate once more fmds a multitude of causes to satisfy his urge for reality. he most hallovgved dwell in Of these, t 1 Student Govern- the mythologies 0 meat. Th Wesleyan J4Kgll8 Establishcd in 1868 Enmevl as swvaclmss mauer on Apnl 20, 1943, under the Act 01' August 24, 19131 31 1he Post OHicr a1 Muddlemwu, Conn, 1'111111:hcd semi-wcekly dumvg 1hr schwl 3-111 0111c: o. puhhcznion. Andrus 113111 Muldlclown, Conn.- Represented rfur 1121 11111131 advcrhsmg by Nauonal Adxcning Scrvxce. Inc. Subscmmon pnce: $31110 per ycnr. 15 c9111; per Copy. Address :111 huslness communicanons m lhe 1111s1nes Managrr. The Summn Press, Middletown, Conn. Edimr's phone DI 6-0730 151111111111 phonc. D1 7-1891 Issue Editors: Haglund, Morcland Friday, 17111111111113' 16, 1962 Letter To The Editor Schroedervs Reply Dmr 511': 111 111mm I 1101101110 a 11111? pvrturbvd 211 1116 quick assoriution of student noiw xxith uzudcnt 11c1i0111 B111 vwn more disturbing is the clamor for ac- 1in11 for its own $211101 11 ix' why 10 1111111111 1111111111 :111'1'1'111111'111 :15 1111' administrationis Opi 1111511111111 Endrr 1111: 355111111111011, I suppow 1110 s1udr111 $111111 n'ou1d wither :m'm' and 11111 auto 1110 11111011111011 is 1111111110111. Nuodlmu 111 say; the SPnMv docs 1111111 shrious business 10 311111111. And 11111 5111111111 Chould 11101 111111 10 1111111170 univrrsity policy. B111 111v 111111 m Uilidlv impnww 1110 hurdrn 11 11111111111111 . Student opinion is no 111010 rr- x'mhd 11111111 111:111 fucuhy opinion. Adinu in support of opinion. 11111110111 rr11hi11v11111m1 101 111v 11121111111191 of 11x 1111111115, 1110 plausibility of 11: argu- 1111111111 11nd 1110 Ciuwrily 01 in dvnmnchY is 1101h folly and phony. 1 did 11111 assumv '0er 10 sonv ns 21 mouthpiece. Love of public opinion QCPITW c1nv01y allied 10 vanity and wcuknvss. I did not expect 1h;11 111v Argus or anyone clsv would equate vigor with noise or wisdom 111111 irrmpomihilitv, May I point out the remarkable surcvss of our XIPL'U- 11111111111 with 1110 administration M oxtominn of the track, waiving of 1he 1i1x1-1.151 class 111111111'1111111111, 1'00011811101'1111011 01 1h? NCAA dotision, and r0- suwimlion of 111111111th Day. I :1111 curiom to know, 111111 :111 11115 11dor211ion of public 01311110111 u by 1110 Argu: has been 50 Silent 11110111 .1 cvrminly more egregious Hamming 01 5111110111 opinion - the rcfusal of the smmlc to establish :1 rushingr date prvarrvd by :1 dr-cisive 111njority of 1119 student body. The shoddy journalism which chumrtvrizcs your rcponing is offensive, humuturv. and unskillcd 011v exports a student newspaper 10 be partisan. B111 0110 11150 cxpvrts :1 nmvspapvr 1o 1111;11 issues with just consideration of 1111- claims mudc by all parties. No wonder Mr. Matthews won't talk to you. Nrmsiuhmd 111portinq crrminly 5901113 your forte. If you and your 51:13 6.1111101 find morv mntvrial for 111v Argus than editorials from front 10 back, why donit you turn it into :1 111011111111 humor magazine and wri10 about yourselves? Faithfully yours, 01c. Milton R. Schrovder Praidmt of Ihe College Body Anh Ginh zaih. 11191 thprp be light nah 111m? maz light. Genesis 1 : 3 I mow this vague mm m Gut o? 91' :m 18h : muchJ butlam a mm d a Sumac, I know INS pmth 0? m shims ssfmt much: Dutlfm bowettfzg mewx V the dramatic, The Argm Body election as one of mg imaginable. that, but it was-to say ial bugabooeapathye ting our breasts, there,s about student govern- .dy Senate? Do C.B. om- they, as so often charged, 1' Is the Senate just a de- lid Pod crediQ or does it xactly tor whomi does hese and related ques- etings and bull sessions rustees fueled the fire. 1 d rushing, they left the mg will start next year, wed: Out the details. to be a test of student :st. Anything that touches to home on this campus; e emotion. 133 134 The Senate wrangled all fall over rushing. Four campus-wide referendums on the question were not only inconclusive, but utterly frustrating. This-plus student squabbling with the Administra- tion over fraternity hazing, dormitory regulations, and other irritantSeset the campaign scene. Everybody hun- gered for dramatic action. If we couldnt get action, we at least wanted drama. When the first curtain went up, it didnlt look like much of a drama. There were five candidates. One was a joker, one an anarchist, one an operator, one a smoothie, and one a nice guy. It was apparent to everybody that the real contest was between the operator and the smoothie. Nice guys finish last; jokers provide laughs and anarchists add color, but they dont win elections. At least thafs the way those of us with political savvy sized it up. E. C. Smith, buttoned to the neck in a black rain- coat, proposed the abolition of representative govern- ment. In place of a Senate, he called for delegation of the right to legislate to the students directly. Without elected representatives or CB. officers, the students would govern themselves by petition and referendum. A simple majority on a referendum or a petition would represent the campus wishes. If the Faculty or Administration did not take cognizance of these wishes, the next step was civil disobedience. ' i-Dick Ort, in the time-honored tradition of public servants, said he was reluctant to run but could not spurn the clarion call to duty sounded by his many support- ers. He solemnly proposed more tunnels leading to fewer places in the freshman dorms. In place of the an- nual freshman 'riot , he called for a constructive outlet I it boyishenergies: diversion of the Connecticut or Middletown slum clearance. Among his other 7 K were: uniforms and ranks for the Buildings and ' Crew; distinctive T-shirts for members of the 1 ollege Plans; and sending Wesleyan teams to all 'v mes, whether invited or not. Dresser, projecting a New Frontier image of furi- -rgy, lambasted the preceding C.B. administra- ineffectiveness. Emphasizing his personal tance with nine trustees tcount lem-nine! l, oested that under forceful leadership the students eal directly with the Board. Delayed rushing is it accompli, he insisted, and could be reopened if pus had a real leader. He would be one C.B. at who understands the power of the students ommitted to its use. 135 Dale Henderson launched a full-scale assault on the lack of con- cern for student interests by Wesleyads Holy Trinity, the Adminis- tration, the Faculty, and the Board of Trustees. To deal effectively With this Big Three, he offered a plan of action that would llexert continued pressurell in all its exploitable forms? Sincerely. In sober contrast to all these, Bill Roberts offered an Eisenhowerian plea for responsibility, integrity, and, of course, better communications. There was the usual flurry of soaring speeches, then the rapid de- scent from high idealism t0 the depths of accusation and countet-ac- cusation amid the murky machinations of the kingmakets. When the cigar smoke cleared, virtue had triumphed. Ort, the joker, was eliminated in the first round. Dresser, the oper- ator, went on the second. Henderson, the smoothie, sank in the third. In the fourth and final ballot, Roberts, everybodys nice guy, edged out Smith, the anarchist, by a mere 35 votes. Then standing on his original platform of More tunnels to fewer places, Ort ran for vice president. And won! Whether Vice President Ott will tally round President Robettls rapport banner or whether President Roberts will, in time, pump for more tunnels remains to be seen. Peasley Slat ,62 High Street has proved to be too small a world for the cause-stricken Wesleyan student. Peace walks, N.S.A., freedom tides, and Young Republicans have all served notice that the world must suffer the weight of student action. Apologists of causes attribute deep and thoughtful motivations to these youthful Don Quixorels. It would seem that the young men and women of America have finally awakened to the horrors of nuclear war in order to carry enlightenment to their demonic leaders. Suddenly, button-down collars have found it their duty to liberate the so-called American Negro and find for him his rightful place in society. Malcolm X and Robert Welsh might argue the practicality of student inspired panaceas, but it is diflicult to challenge self-tighteousness. Critics, of course, argue everything from dtaft-dodging to miscegenation, but the answer seems to be at neither of these two extremes. Wesleyan students stuck with their causes this year through thick and thin. Forty of the stalwart braved the February weather to join uTurn Toward Peace? sophisticated pep rally in the streets of where else . . . Washington, while others proved they had a little more originality by freedom riding along the Eastern Shore of Maryland. tOf course it was inevitable that some just had to see Route 40A N.S.A. lasted on campus despite its every effort to dissuade the CB. Senate from supporting it. There were also the usual Wesleyan-Middletown studies, as unprejudiced Wesleyan students tall members of the NAACPl sought to improve race relations between the Middletown Negro and Italian. 137 138 ALL DAY mm IN REAR 5 AUTHORHY The heart of the problem is not the cause but the stu- dent, himself. Concern is an admirable and, indeed, nec- essary attribute. College students should be encouraged to demonstrate it. Too often, though, one gains the im- pression that the ideal fails to permeate the surface. The critic is quite justified in questionng student motiva- tions when the student allows headlines to dictate his choice of commitments. Dedication could well be sub- stituted for spectacular stunts. But then it is difficult to know how much we can expect of ourselves. Perhaps our Freshman are . . . 139 a Ca mun tU$ f 9; . 4.!. l t l daft :1 ,. Z . . , Saniwdwf. f 142 143 . . . Se: 53 .azznum a: Era: 2:: 3:5 3:33: 58: 62. 53mm a: :m 2:: 68 diam a: w: 3me .35. EB 2m m: mdaumm 68 :me m5 ng $2 :85 E 69 .253:ng :8 5 imam .3335 .San 3w :wgm SE: 335 mz 75m by Midvelangelm in live Sixline Chapel A derail from The Creation of Adam 144 p adv 9 Wu. GORDON KEENE ABBOTT New Hartford, New York RICHARD EAGER ADAMS Auburndale 66, Massachusetts PAUL RICHARD AMMON Leonia, New Jersey FRAN K BRENT AMUNDSON Valhalla, New York CHARLES LI NDBERGH ARMSTRONG Springfield, Missouri DANIEL ROGER ARONSON Watertown 72, Massachusetts SAMUEL DAVID BALK Newark, New Jersey DONALD EMERY BENSON North Kingstown, Rhode Island 146 Senior Portraits EDWARD IRWIN BERRY, III Merchantville 8, New Jersey PHILIP ANTON BERTOCCI Wellesley Hills 81, Massachusetts STEPHEN RICHARD BING Hudson, Ohio M . PARKER BLATCHFORD Brooklyn, New York ROGER JOSEPH BREEDIN G Abington, Pennsylvania 1. LEHR BRISBIN, JR. Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania NELSON WARD BAILEY, JR. New Castle, Maine KENNETH M. BARR Dayton 24, Ohio STEPHEN HENRY BAUER West Bend, Wlsconsm BRUCE JOHNSON CALDER Glendale 22, New Jersey PHILIP LOWRAIN CALHOUN Clarendon Hills, Illinois LOUIS BRACKETT CARR, JR. Waltham, Massachusetts LINDSAY N ATH AN CHILDS Wellesley, Massachusetts BARTON WAYNE ROBERT B. BROWNING COOK Litchfleld, Leonia, New Jersey Illinois BRUCE CONRAD EIBCQJQEB comm BRUMBAUGH Los Angexes 69, Webster Groves 19, Californla Missouri PETER COPE DAVID WESLEY BUFFUM CREED Dedham, Dallas 25, Texas Massachusetts ROBERT CARL L. DOUGLASS CROIiilgfrgg BURDICK Massachusetts, Havertown, Pennsylvania WILLIAM ROBERT MIDWOOD SHERWIN CURTIS BURNETT Valley Stream, Mystic, Connecticut New York STEPHEN J. ANDREW ALBERT BUTTS DAHL Ridgewood, Poughkeepsie, New Jersey New York CHANDLER LAWRENCE DANIELS Buenos Aires, Argentina JOHN E. DAVISON, I I West Hartford 7, Connecticut JOHN A. DRISCOLL Pleasantville, New York RICHARD ALAN DUBANOSKI Manchester, Connectlcut JOHN WAGNER DURSTON McLean, Virginia PETER HERBERT ELSON New York 21, New York WALTER MARK EPSTEIN East Rockaway, New York HENRY LEON ERNSTTHAL Manhasset, New York 148 JAMES MALCOLM DOSSINGER Milwaukee, Wisconsin RICHARD J. DRANITZKE Patchogue, New York F REDERICK KARL ERRINGTON Ames, Iowa WILLIAM WADE EVERETT, III Washington 7, D. C. PETER MARSTON EWART Lexington, Massachusetts DONALD DAVID FALKENSTERN Terry, Montana RAYMOND E. FANCHER, JR. Springfield, Pennsylvania DAVID L. FISHER New Haven, Connecticut DAVID HOLLAND FISKE Philadelphia, Pennsylvania JOHN MAYO FISKE Sherborn, Massachusetts MICHAEL R. CALLAHAN Concord, New Hampshire KENNETH EUGENE CARROLL, JR. Jacksonville 5, Florida CHARLES JAMES COLE Leonia, New Jersey JAMES HENRY GATELY Leominster, Massachusetts ROBERT W. GAUSE Pelham, New York ROBERT HILLMAN FLETCHER Newtown, Pennsylvania HARVEY GEORGE FOTTER, JR. Cape Elizabeth, Maine DONALD BRUCE FRANKLIN Freeport, New York Now wandering around Africa some- place. ANDREW ROBERT GANZ New York 21, New York JACK HUNT HALGREN Los Angeles, California ROBERT CHARLES GELARDI Elmont, New York EDGAR C. GERWIG McLean, Virginia JOSEPH HOPKINSON GIBSON Swarthmore, Pennsylvania NAFTALY SHLOMO GLASMAN Kiryat, Hayeem, Israel DAVID M. GOTTESMAN New York, New York ERIC GREENLEAF Brooklyn, New York THOMAS G. GREGORY Milwalkee 11, Wisconsin MICHAEL HACKMAN Scarsdale, New York ION BURTHWICK HIGGINS Andover, Massachusetts EDWARD R. HILLMAN Schenectady, New York VIN CEN T DeFOREST HOAGLAND, JR. Weston 93, Massachusetts JEFFREY PETER HUGHES Jenkintown, Pennsylvania ARNOLD LEE ROBERT E. HAYES, III HUNTER Providence 6, Cumberland, Rhode Island Maryland JOHN G. ALVIN JOHN HAZLEHURST HUSS, JR. Colorado Springs, Evanston, Illinois Colorado MORRISON DAVID MEREDITH HARRIS IRWIN HECKSCHER Rochester, Deavon, New York Pennsylvania WILLIAM DAVID MCADAM HAMILTON HEDGES JEFFERYS, III Rochester 20, Radner, Pennsylvania New York LARRY WN DEREK GREMEL JONES HELMBOLDT Western Springs, Illinois Storrs, Connecticut JAMES M, JAMES NELSON HENDERER JUDSON Wilmington 2, Haddonfleld, Delaware New Jersey HARDU KECK On a yacht some- where in the South Pacific. RICHARD GILBERT KNAPP Litchfield, 1 50 Connecticut LAWRENCE RICHARDS LIBBY Wethersfield, Connecticut SCOTT RICHARD LOWDEN Stamford, Connecticut ANGUS ARCHIE MacINNES, III Port Washington, New York ROBERT LOUIS KRUGMAN JOI-IEEX SEE?1;JE Paterson, W d ynnewoo , New Jersey Pennsylvania JOHN R. MARQUAND Berwick, Pennsylvania ROBERT MAY New York 25, New York WILLIAM E. JOHN R. LAMBERT, III MCCARRON Rochester 15, Wayne, Pennsylvania New York MYRON SPENCER McCLELLAN West Hamlin, West Virginia JOHN PORTER McLEOD, II Hatfleld, Massachusetts JOSEPH HENRY FREDERICK THEODORE MEINKE LEHNE Weston 93 Wynnewoqd, Massachusegts Pennsylvama RICHARD BRUCE MENKE Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania RONALD BART LEPOFF Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 151 R. PETER MOOZ Rocky Hill, Connecticut CHARLES ARTHUR MURKOFSKY North Arlington, New Jersey PETER H. N UELSEN Englewood, New 16 rsey WILLIAM WARD OLIVER Rochester, N ew York HILLEL S. PANITCH Nassau, New York EUGENE PECKHAM Roslyn Heights, New York ROBERT A PFENNING Scarsdale, New York PHILIP GRAVES PUTNAM Wyomissing, Pennsylvania JERRY MERCER RICE Washington, D. C. MICHAEL Hw RILEY Geneva. Switzerland EDWARD RAND RUBEL Pittsford, New York THOMAS ARTHUR RYAN, JR. Ithaca, New York ROBERT G. SALIBA Englewood, New Jersey H. LEE SCANTLIN Knoxville, Tennessee JACOB GORDON EDELSON Silver Springs, Maryland JOHN C. FARR Old Greenwich, Connecticut LAWRENCE C. FELDMAN Rochester, New York ANDREW G. SCHRADER Milford, Connecticut JAMES ADAIR SCHROEDER Owatonna, Minnesota MILTON ROBERT ROBERT C. SCHROEDER, JR. STALNAKER Jacksonvxlle, Illinois Northfield, Illinois HARRY EUGENE ?gggNY STANLEY, JR. SCIRICA West Chester, Norristown Pennsylvania Pennsylvania CHARLES HENRY HAMILTON J 0EL SEIBERT, JR. 1117301123 Troy, New York CO um usOliio, FRANK G. ANSON B. SIM-Oljl THACHER kiltlllstg'clki. Ojai, California BROWNLOW CRAIG THOMAS SUMNER SMITH TOWLE Swarthmore, Greens Farms, Pennsylvania Connecticut JAMES R. ROBERT IRVING SMITH TOWNSEND, JR. Wildwood, New York, New Jersey New York WARREN SALE SMITH, JR. New Canaan, Connecticut LAWRENCE HENRY SPROUSE, JR. Fairfield, Connecticut DONALD VAN NIMWEGEN Niagara Falls, New York FRANCIS G. W. VOIGT Oskaloosa, Iowa LEOPOLD WOOD VON SELDENECK, JR. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania GARY RONALD WANERKA Wantagh, New York STEPHEN ALLAN SPANGLER RAYMOND TROTT WEINSTOCK Broomall, Cincinnati, Ohio . Pennsylvama DAVID AVERY MICHAEL TURNER COOLIDGE Evanston, Illinois WELLS Mount Vernon, New York FREDERICK BURTON TUTTLE, JR. HAROLD TERRY Plattsburgh, WEPSIC New York Greenville, Pennsylvania BRUCE MARSHALL GA RY PIERCE TYLER WESTERGREN West Mystic, Portland, Connecticut Connecticut PHILIP LEE UTLEY . DIRKE EUGENE Columbus, Ohio WESTERVELT Oneida, New York DONALD HERMAN VALENTINE, JR. PAUL FREDVJVEEIIgIIE Montclair, Middletown, New Jersey Connecticut 154 RICHARD C. WHITELEY Newton, Massachusetts JOHN K. WHITMORE Silver Spring, Maryland RICHARD L. WILLIG Los Angeles 49, California KEITH ALBERT WILLIS Albany 8, New York LEONARD HARRY WILSON, JR. Patchogue, New York KENNETH RICHARD WING Cranston, Rhode Island WALTER ALAN WOLFE Merrick, New York FRANK STEPHENS WOOD Louisville, Kentucky CHARLES ROBERT WORK Salt Lake City, Utah WILLIAM ALLEN WORTM AN Malvern, Iowa HAL HUNTINGTON WYSS Deleware, Ohio CHARLES VINCENT GALLAGHER Middletown, Connecticut BURTON BERLINE KA PLAN Highland Park, Illinois DAVID NEAL LORENZEN Westport, Connecticut RICHARD E. MANNING West Chester, Pennsylvania WESLEY B. MASON South Ashbu rnham, Massachusetts WILLIAM C. MCCOOK, JR. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ROBERT H. McLAUGHLIN Pittsford, New York FREDERICK JOSEPH MURPHY Jacksonville, Florida TIMOTHY EDWARDS NOBLE New York 28, New York KARL STEVEN NORTH Princeton, New Jersey MICHAEL W. O'KIEFFE Kenilworth, Illinois LAWRENCE M. OKUN Somerville, New Jersey FRANK WARREN FERGUSON Washington 21, D. C. ADOLFAS KASTYTIS GAIGALAS Philadelphia, Pennsylvania WILLIAM FERGUSON PARHAM Groton, Connecticut ROBERT E. PARSONS Arlington, Virginia PETER S. ROSENBAUM New York, New York JONATHAN ISAAC SCHEINMAN Peoria, Illinois PETER BALL SCHNIEWIND Locust Valley, New York STANLEY J. SCHOLL Madison, Wisconsin JONATHAN HARRISON STALEY Albany, New York JOHN B. TAPPEN Short Hills, New Jersey CLAYTON LEIGH TRAVIS Tenafly, New Jersey WALTER REINHART TSCHINKEL Hamden, Connecticut GEORGE E. WALKER Santa Fe, New Mexico DONALD P. WALZ Brooklyn, New York DUFFIELD WHITE Cambridge, New York DIETER KLAUS ZSCHOCK Cleveland, Ohio 155 F OOTBALL First Row: Russell, Wood, Daniels, Osur, Witkowski, Grockowski, Aikman. Second Row: Mossman, Smith, Ware, Brown, Lapuc, Miller, Seabury, Morash, Oden- welder, Davis. Third Row: Ferguson, Navq Mattson, Martin, Cruver, Weiner, Emmott, Bardes, Humphrey, Forader. Fourth Row: Schick, Morris, Longo, Driscoll, Dooney, Erda, Franklin, Crockett, Snyder, Ransom. Fifth Row: Thuet, Buttles, Medd, Wilson, Atherton, Stanton. Co-Captains James Dooney and Red Erda. Coach Norman Daniels. Wesleyan 14 Middlebury 20 Wesleyan 0 Bowdoin 2 7 Wesleyan 9 Coast Guard 1 3 Wesleyan 2 0 W.P.I. 2 1 Wesleyan 8 Amherst 48 Wesleyan ' 2 1 Hamilton 2 0 Wesleyan 0 Williams 14 Wesleyan 14 Trinity 4 2 157 158 First Row: Helmholz, Perry, Ashworth, Sipples. Sec- ond Row: Needham, Heuer, Fiske, Fletcher, Dubano- ski, Scirica, Irwin. Third Row: McCurdy, Miller, Ber- stein, Palmer, UAmbrosio, Burt, Lehne. SOCCER Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan JAIUOOxHHGXWVrA Brown Bowdoin Coast Guard U. Conn. S pringfleld Amherst Tufts Williams Harvard Trinity waopixkawOw SWIMMING Wesleyan 5 7 Tufts 3 6 Wesleyan 5 7 U. Mass. 3 7 1 Wesleyan 2 6 M.I.T. 69 Wesleyan 40 Coast Guard 5 5 Wesleyan 40 Southern Conn. 5 5 Wesleyan 4 3 Union 5 2 Wesleyan 4 3 Amherst 5 2 Wesleyan 5 2 Williams 6 5 Wesleyan 3 0 Trinity 64 Wesleyan 3 5 Bowdoin 5 9 First Row: Shields, Brown, Bagg, Hedges, Harvey, Landgraf, Dayton. Second Row: Lang, Gallamore, Harfst, Moore, McCurdy, Hager, Lambert, Grossman. 159 160 W'K'Qy'. 4. , First Row: Evelyn, Brown, Rugg, Scirica, Brown, Russell, Weil. Second Row: Andrus, Smith, Wilson, Davis, MacKinnon, Westergren, Buddington. Wesleyan Wesleyan CROSS COUNTRY Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan W.P.I. Coast Guard Vermont Amherst Springfield M.I.T. Williams 21 50 27 45 21 39 55 $ . ' 3 5 1 ' 1w ,2 .. BASKETBALL I Wesleyan 75 Clark 7 6 Wesleyan 65 Kings Point 74 Wesleyan 7 5 W.P.I. 68 Wesleyan 85 Union 5 4 n Wesleyan 64 M.I.T. 5 8 Wesleyan 7 6 Bates 69 . f Wesleyan 7 8 Harvard 94 Wesleyan 88 Bowdoin 46 Wesleyan 81 Coast Guard 66 Wesleyan 7 5 Coast Guard 5 9 Wesleyan 7 7 Middlebury 6O Wesleyan 65 Amherst 82 i W Wesleyan 7 1 Trinity 7 5 Wesleyan 7 9 Trinity 66 1; 1 Wesleyan 5 9 Williams 66 Wesleyan 5 6 Williams 9 3 3' 1 Wesleyan 61 Tufts 5 8 Wesleyan 61 Amherst 7 4 First Row: Ricketts, Richey, von Seldeneck, Towle, Davenport, Srodes, Brands. Second Row: Hackman, Grockowski, Housel, Peterson, Mauer, Humphrey, Fleischauer, Russell, Wood, Tea- ford. 161 162 Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan 11 26 29 16 16 15 11 20 Coast Guard U. Conn. Tufts Springfield Dartmouth Amherst M.I.T. Williams U. Mass. 2 10 O 29 16 18 19 19 13 WRESTLING First Row: Brewster, Black, Judson, Westergren, Little- wood, Hansen. Second Row: Pfenning, Osur, Ransom, Fer- guson, Meinke, Keller. 135.! First Row: Childs, White, Smith, Carr. Second Row: Lehne, Hirsch, Older, Greenleaf, Magee, Corwin, Plagenhoef. SQUASH Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan NNUOOHOUNOOO Adelphi Navy Fordham Trinity Army Dartmouth Yale Amherst Trinity Williams M.I.T. xlNrbeXDOOVJJkOOH 163 Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan 164 55 273 70174 69 91172 58 75172 61 Trinity Springfield U. Conn. Amherst Williams Brown Coast Guard 53175 TRACK 64 374 66 43172 77 64172 74 First Row: Giurintano, Atherton, Peterson, Ort, Siegler. Second Row: Martin, Housel, Fletcher, McKinnon, Burnett, Schrader, Calder, Evelyn, Jones, Bagg. Third Row: Odenwelder, Sexton, Bud- dington, Wilbrecht, Rugg, Kingsley, Falkenstem, Keller. First Row: Lehne, Hochberg, Whyte, von Seldeneck, Plagen- hoef, Lepoff. Second Row: Spragens, Older, Blum. Wesleyan 9 Coast Guard 0 Wesleyan 4 M .I.T. 5 TE NNI S Wesleyan 9 Middlebury O Wesleyan 1 Williams 8 Wesleyan 7 Brown 2 Wesleyan 1 Amherst 8 Wesleyan 6 Trinity 5 Wesleyan 9 Springfield 0 Wesleyan 0 Army 9 165 L ACRO S SE Wesleyan 3 U.. Mass 9 Wesleyan 2 Mlddlebury 2 Wesleyan 1 5 W.P.I. 2 Wesleyan 6 Brown 1 2 Wesleyan 7 Bowdoin 4 Wesleyan 7 Union 1 Wesleyan 3 Amherst 9 Wesleyan 2 Williams 1 5 Wesleyan 11 Holy Cross 5 Wesleyan 8 Trinity 4 First Row: Osur, Peterson, Smith, McLeod, Scirica, Martin, Messing, Medd. Second Row: Ware, White, Russell, Motz, Richey, Thuet, Irwin, Snyder. 166 Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan Wesleyan HH VNUUJkOOxOxNApr-BWNOO Coast Guard Springfield W.P.I. Amherst Stevens Yale Williams Trinity Middlebury Brandeis Trinity Williams Amherst Coast Guard Coast Guard y-a H H waGxOUHr-Awmoxxlmwxom First Row: McIlroy, Helmholz, Seabury, Perry. Second Row: Watt, Wail, Towle, Berry, Humphrey, Burks, Tucker. Third Row: Haw- kins, Sipples, Brands, D'Ambrosio, Manos, Needham, Littlewood, Clark, Daniels, Peckham. BASEBALL 167 Alpha Delth Phi Front Row: Brian Murphy, Michael Timm, Michael Michalczyk, Bedford Bonta, Charles Landraitis, David Kingwill, Robert Beggs, Douglas Evelyn. Second Row: Kevin Twine, Kirtland Mead, William Owens, Gus Le- mesis, Stephen Lockwood. Third Row: Jeffrey Ricketts, Stewart McConaughy, Edward Rudd, Peter Smith, Lanny Walter, Roger Spragg, Douglas Wilson, James Russell, Kenneth Wing, James Miller. Back Row: Frederick Smith, Mark Creaven, Andrew Hult, Robert Maurer, Duffleld White. First Row: D. Pfeiffer, B. Rugg, R. Breeding, T. Bell, P. Pease, D. Brown, J. Johnson, D. Baker, N. Anderson, D. Henderson, J. Valentine, D. Sloane. Second Row: C. Sieger, D. Benson, B. Smith, J. Summer, W. Pilcher, D. Rouge, B. Knox, P. Lawson, N. Puner, T. J-Iarvey, K. Garlinghouse, P. Treffers, J. Berry. Third Row: J. Hun- ter, B. Stillinger, B. Rideout, D. Blazey, S. Bruskin, R. Smith, D. Thompson. 169 170 Commons Club First Row: J. Davison, J. McCaque T. Elliman, C. Srodes, C. Armstrong, B. Patterson, J. Jones, V. Mc- Cord, D. Landgtaf, G. Hale, G. Helmholz, B. Ruther- ford, J. Craig, B. Ashworth. Second Row: J. Baliles, G. Smith, D. Raskin, J. Kessler, R. Dalsemer, D. Good, C. Crum. Third Row: C. Sieloff, J. Cutler, T. Brachbill, W. Brueckman, J. Emmet, R. Ort, L. Berley, F. Wood, J. Bucar, L. Gray, B. Goodrich, F. Henn, R. Burdick, W. Kooser, L. Wilson, S. Drake, B. Miller. Chi Psi First Row: F. Larino, T. Hansen, W. Wiener, J. Reynolds, A. Peterson, M. Cusic, J. Hall. Second Row: P. Hunninen, D. Harsft, R. Flanders, H. Gorman, D. Kingsley. Third Row: B. Phenning, L. French, J. Miri, S. Smith, J. Reylea. Fourth Row: T. Carr, C. Seibert, J. Gray, W. Trapp, T. Irwin, M. Goldman, J. Miller, P. Whiteley. Fifth Row: C. Jacob, G. Parr, F. Nachman, J. Cousins. Sixth Row: A. Accetta, R. White, R. Erda, J. Bernegger, A. Cogswell, R. DeIBello, P. Fleisch- auer, S. Badanes, R. Abel, J. Henderer. Seventh Row: J. Smith, D. Cruver, D. Phillips. 171 Delta Kappa Epsilon First Row: F. Meinke, D. Sprenkle, R. Townsend, J. Gately, R. Mess- ing, D. Creed, J. Halgren. Second Row: D. Cunningham, P. Woer- ner, M. Landes, R. Gephart, R. Morash, N. Ensinger, R. Fletcher, D. Raub, E. Carroll, P. Blatchford. Third Row: L. McHugh, T. Littlewood, C. Orr, D. Richardson, j. Peterson, S. Miller, P. Stacey, T. Housel, P. Escholz. Fourth Row: G. Brubaker, R. Atherton, J. Dinsmore, S. Flance, R. Block, F. Lohse, F. Newschwander, M. Ange- Iini, R. Barton. Fifth Row: P. Oppmann, J. Thomasson, T. Lynch, B. Podewell, F. Judson, W. Thomas, P. Siegert, N. Shapiro. Sixth Row: R. Thorndike, P. Babin, S. Thuet, W. Davenport, R. Schmidt. Seventh Row: P. Rockwell, E. Burks, J. Stimson, R. Jacobs, L. Smith, M. Creed. Delta Sigma First Row: G. Lindemalm, T. OBrian, T. Lindstrorn, R. Michalski, L. Herbert, M. Folley. Second ROW: M. Becker, R. Typermass, F. Borger, J. Bell, J. Craig. Third Row: P. Sipples, K. Perry, D. Helmbodlt, I. Brisbin, M. Swanson. Fourth Row: V. Hoagland, C. Chase, K. Longo, M. Rosenthal. Fifth Row: W. LeBoueuf, P. Ammon, R. Montgomery, P. Rebillard, S. McQuide, J Schlessinger, J. Henderson. Sixth Row: R. Dubanoski, E. Gerwig, T. Bodman, C. Agle, K. Crusckshank, M. Hatch, D. Youngblood, E. Mossman, A. Bednarz, J. Dixon, C. Calendar, C. Hoch, V. Fegley, B. Smith, G. Westergren. 173 First Row: M. Jones, B. Courtney, J. Murdoch, A. Brewster, T. Ruefli, T. Howard, P. Ramaley, R. Arms- by, D. Schooler. Second Row: H. Bagg, J Huss, J. Rice, A. Schrader, C. Stauffacher, D. Owens, R. Barnes, J. Miller, W. Gilbert, J. Stewart. Third Row: P. Mooz, J. Dossinger, M. Dahl, W. Turner, B. Jones, D. Hager, A. Aikman, F. Odell, K. White. Fourth Row: B. Blaser, P. Hammond, J. Schroeder, F. Taylor, J. Lyon, P. Smith, W. Foord, W. Roberts. Fifth Row: D. Hottenstein, M. Heckscher, P. Hagen, S. Munson, S. Carlton, J. Edelen, J. Beiser, K. Robinson, W. Badger. Sixth Row: J. Oden- Welder, D. Valentine, D. Falkinstein, P. Brands, J. Workman, K. Overton. First Row: G. Wanerka, R. MacLean, E. See, L. Daugh- erty, D. Allen, E. Dreyfus, H. Sprouse, H. Wyss, C. Dauchy, J Ojo, W. Mercer, S. Traskos. Second Row: G. Decke, Man, F. Joseph, M. Ingraham, J. Dunton, C. Fluegelman, D. Gottesman, L. Yeo. Third Row: J. Graves, T. Dardani, B. Miller, D. Kennedy, C. Hearey, A. Rosenglick, J. Lang, R. Colton, W. White, L. Okun, F. Motz, M. Brown. Fourth Row: J. Mackenzie, D. Brown, C. Sehlinger, M. Vinovskis, J. Melillo, B. Bast, R. Young, D. Holdt, G. Cook, K. Nave, W. Medd, D. Geer, C. Rich. Delta Tau Delta Eclectic 175 176 Gamma Psi First Row: A. Mack, P. Seigler, F. Green, J. Jarzavek, J. Tea- ford, M. Edmiston, G. Peckham, D. Beach. Second Row: C. Basos, J. McDermott, T. Mands, M. Wells, T. Wilson, B. Solomon, G. Linton. Third Row: B. Sloat, D. Starr, B. Martin, H. Panich, P. Marth, T. Burrows, P. O,Brien. Fourth Row: B. Bruce, P. Vernon, M. Moore, C. Smith. Fifth Row: J. Harwood, J. Berka, J. Hawkins. Sixth Row: B. Pike, J. Kiehl, J. Bagg. EQV First ROW: J Kikowski, L. Redding, C. Daniels, D. Aronson, W. Winans, S. Upson, D. Iannucci, J. Soeten, D. Gregg, L. Kurlantzick, S. Locke, R. Knapp, W. Ainley, M. Dowds. Second Row: F. Brodhead, R. Fazendeiro, H. Ernsthal, J. Dal- ton, D. Fisher, S. Trott, D. Snyder, R. Lippman, J. Eten,, H. Lanford, P. Allen, D. Hartzell, N. Daniels, F. Cohn, T. Tiktin, B. Seibert, R. Turtle, M. Ehrman, B. Corwin, D. Skaggs, J. Ball, S. Oleskey, P. Altemus, D. Hamilton, J. Kaplan. 177 wanna; John Wesley Club First Row: W. Mozart, N. Gay, D. Brill, B. Hadden, E. C. Smith, B. Holbrook, C. Mur- kofsky, M. Burak. Second Row: D. Walz, J. Hopkins, M. Nico- laus, J Coatsworth, J. Wesley, J. C. Cooley, A. Ganz, A. Wein- stock, B. Grant. Third Row: A. Cebado, R. Levy, J. Munro, R. Price, J. Robison, W. Brown, B. Grimes, L. Libby, W. Tschinkel. Fourth Row: R. Currie, P. Nuelsen, T. Landau, J. Scheinman, P. Simon, D. Keim, B. Kirmmse. 178 Kappa Nu Kappa First ROW: J. Fiske, W. Donaghy, C. Smith, J. Brownell, D. Pierce. Second Row: K. Anderson, D. Sexton, J. Hickson, B. Craig, D. Buddington, C. Ham, C. An- drus, R. Wilson. Third Row: W. Wood, K. Mech, E. Rubel, G. Kozlowski. Fourth Row: D. Altorfer, B. Amundson, P. War- ren, T. Overton, R. Lepoff, H. Wilson, D. Van Nimwegen. Fifth Row: J. Clapp, M. Moise, P. Shive, G. Mitchell, J. Walley, T. Lehne, D. Hibbard, M. Ricci, J. Wil- brecht, M. Maloney, M. McClellan. Psi Upsilon First Row: R. Travis, P. Russell, R. Rollins, F. Kucker, Q. Bent, R. Quigley, T. Fricke. Second Row: E. Hardin, J. Hickey, R. Mahon, S. Hart, T. Pomeroy, P. Olney, R. Squires, P. Mann, W. Chamberlin, D. Travis, T. Donohue, R. Gause, P. Prindle, F. Bertsch. Third Row: J. McIlroy, D. Hedges, J. Buttles, W. Britton, 0. Wood, D. Watt, W. Grubb, L. von Seldeneck, B. Towle, J. Corn, J. Farr, J. McLeod, J. Hallett, P. Putnam, A. Scirica, J. Folley, R. Adams. Fourth Row: J Magee, J. Brown, P. Weinstock, R. Herriott, J. Brown, D. Eyler, D. Clark, R. Kingsley, M. OJKieffe, C. Martin, R. Hardin, C. von Seldeneck, R. Schick, R. Travis, J. Shields, J. Brown. 179 Acknowledgements: Jack Brown, John Kosinski, Jack Paton. Mr. and Mrs. Colebert L. Andrus; Elizabeth Haines Andrus, Companion; Freshman James Andrus, Floatation Consultant; Mr. and Mrs. George C. Craig; Alice Godfrey, proletarian; Luise Katzen and B. Stonorov, without whose help this book wouldtft have been possible; Edina Camera, Edina, Minnesota; Midtown Photo Center, Middletown, Connecticut; Monte Green Restaurant, Middletown, Connecticut; Photo Reflex of G. Fox and Company, Hartford, Connecticut; St. Clair and Price, Boston, Massa- chusetts. PATRONS SENIOR PARENTS Mr. and Mrs. Keene Abbott Mr. and Mrs. Winslow H. Adams Mr. A. Ammon Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Amundsen Mr. and Mrs. Edward 1. Berry, Jr. Mr. G. E. Bing Mr. I. L. Brisbin Mrs. R. I. Brumbaugh Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Childs Mr. and Mrs. Sherrill C. Corwin Mr. Allan M. Creed Mr. and Mrs. Max Dahl Mr. and Mrs. Laurence C. Daniels Mrs. Florence S. Davison Mr. John C. Davison Dr. and Mrs. J. Dranitzke Mr. James D. Driscoll Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Dubanoski, 81:. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Edelson Mr. and Mrs. Louis Epstein Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ernsthal Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Errington Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Fancher Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Fiski, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gately Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gelardi Mr. and Mrs. Everett Gerwig Mr. and Mrs. John H. Harris Mr. and Mrs. Gustave A. Hechscher Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Helmboldt Mr. and Mrs. M. Donaldson Henderer Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Hughes Dr. and Mrs. G. Vernon Judson Mr. and Mrs. Morriss A. Kaplan Dr. and Mrs. B. M. Krugman Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lehne Mr. and Mrs. N . S. Lepoff Mrs. R. M. Libby Mr. and Mrs. John G. Magee Mr. Richard E. Manning Mr. J. R. McCarron Mrs. Ruth L. McCarron Mr. and Mrs. R. Munkofsky Mr. Albert E. Nuelsen Mr. DeWitt O Kieffe Mr. and Mrs. Abe M. Okun Mr. and Mrs. Otto A. Putnam Mrs. John E. Rice Mr. P. W. Rosenbaum Mr. and Mrs. George J. Saliba Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schniewind Mr. and Mrs. William Schrader Mr. and Mrs. Otto A. Schroeder Mr. and Mrs. A. Benjamin Scirica Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Seibert Dr. and Mrs. Frank A. Simon Mr. and Mrs. James Smith Mr. and Mrs. John M. Stalnaker Dr. and Mrs. F. O. W. Voight Mr. C. E. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Walz Mr. and Mrs. John A. Wells Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Westervelt Mr. and Mrs. Leonard H. Wilson, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Theodore B. Wolf Mr. F. A. Wortman MERCHANTS Best Cleaners Garden Restaurant Middletown Savings Bank Bll.l. 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