Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)
- Class of 1959
Page 1 of 304
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 304 of the 1959 volume:
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LLOYD W. CORNELL JR. '44, Dean of Admission and Financial Aid upper left, directs the big job of sifting through nearly 4,000 applications to determine those best qualified for the 600 openings in the incoming freshman class. Benjamin McKendall '52 and Bruce Hutchinson '48, Assistant Directors of Admission and top members of the efficient and highly-effective admission team, confer over a promising candidate's folder at left. Early September brings tlie swarm of freshmen, followed closely by the Wise 0ld Upperclass- men. Representing 43 states, Hawaii and Puerto Rico, and 16 foreign countries, they are the select graduates of hundreds of high schools and prep schools, having won tfieir place in the class over tremendous competition. Each class includes almost a hundred senior class presidents, dozens of newspaper editors and team captains. First job on campus for everyone: move in. FINDING THE TRANSITION DIFFICULT, these Brownmen still cling to their pre-college affectations. Left to right Repre- senting a formidable West Coast delegation are Martin Bogdano- vich from Death Valley, California and Robert Parks, Portland, Oregon. David Moto barely visible in parka. Port Barrow, Alaska. Skip Hokanson, West Los Angeles. A completely anonymous gentle- man from Omaha, Nebraska. Rick Abbott, Palm Vista, Florida. EASILY FITTING IN to Psi U. with its strong Missouri repre- sentation are the typical Missourian Brownmen pictured above: Ted Simmons. Al Hanser, Jim Conzelman, and Roland Baer. Below: Bailey Blethen, Mankato, Minnesota; Bruce Anderson, Omaha, Nebraska; Charlie Sieburth, Wiesbaden, Germany-turned- Ohioan; Steve Oberbeck, Kirkwood, Missouri; R. F. Brown, Ard- more, Oklahoma; and Dave Sebens, Great Falls, Montana. All but latter two are A.D.'s. FROM POLAND House, but originally from Tokyo, Japan, are the Hsia brothers, John left, and Ming-Su right. Both are engineering majors. Ming-Su is a junior, while John is a soph- omore. Flanked by the Hsia's is a mere economics major, Toby Walker, from Portland, Oregon. Brown's engineering reputation is a strong drawing card for students from the Orient and accounts for scores of students from the East. AMERICANS : Julio Capo, San Juan, Porto Rico; Armando Garces, Cali, Columbia; Carlos Valencia, Panama City, Panama; and Eduardo Scott Vasquez, Guatemala City, Guatemala. Picture at upper-right brings two Hegeman Hall Texans together - Richard G. Rogers whose headmaster at St. Marks is Brown's second-oldest trustee from Dallas and Colston Chandler from Sherman. Brown's drawing-power is said to be strongest in St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, Minneapolis, Cleve- land, and Denver. Last-mentioned city proves itself irrevocably in the picture below: Lew Cady, George Linger, Mel lavitt, Rod Meyer, John Levy, Dave Rust, and Tom Carson. CREATING a position as an outspoken critic of American educational trends, President Keeney has easily completed the transformation from professor of medieval history to college president. As a teacher and scholar, he established high standards for him- self both in research and in the classroom, and he has sought to see these transferred to the American university. Symbolic of his growing influence and prestige was a trip to Isreel during the school year to inspect and advise on the Israeli educational system. The Class of 1959 began its career at Brown just as Dr. Keeney took the presidency. In just four years. Brown's growth has taken on amazing propor- tions. Physically, alone, Brown '59 is far from what it was when Dr. Keeney became its twelfth president. The West Quadrangle and the Walter S. Hunter Lab- oratory of Psychology iiave been built, and the re- novation of Hope College undertaken. With an eye on the future, the Dexter asylum was purchased for nearly $2 million and preliminary steps made toward the reconstruction of Brown's physical athletic plant. ADMINISTRATION PROVOSTof Brown University is Dr. Zenas R. Bliss 'l8. He has taught at Brown since 1923, was created full pro- fessor of engineering in 1940. A Sigma Xi, he has been executive officer and director of research in Brown's engineering department. DEAN OF STUDENTS, Edward R. Durgin, is a grad- uate of the U. S. Naval Academy and came to Brown after a career in the service during which he attained the rank of admiral. He acts as the main liason between University Hall and the student body. ASSISTANT DEAN OF STUDENTS, Dr. Emest Fre- richs '48, is assistant professor in the religious studies de- partment, and an expert and popular lecturer on Hebrew and 0ld Testament studies. DEAN OF THE COLLEGE, author, lecturer in the early American novel, and friend. Dr. Charles H. Watts '47 replaces Dean Bergethon, now president of Lafayette Col- lege. A dedicated educator. Watts brings the same youthful vigor to his post in U.H. he does to his job of teaching. FACULTY SPECIALIZING in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century English and American Literature, Dr. Isracl J. Kapstein '26 left. Professor of English, is interested primarily in the novel form - although he has done a great deal of work in the Romantic era and teaches a graduate seminar on Byron. In addition, Dr. Kapstein teaches a course wherein the assignment is to Avrite an extended work of prose - usually a novel. An autlior, himself Something of a Hero, a novel written tovard the end of his close companionship vith Brown schoolmates Quentin Reynolds, Nathaniel West, and S. J. Perelman, a sense of excitement and deep concern permeates his lectures as well as his casual conversation. Dr. Charles H. Philbrick IT '46 below left, like Dr. Kapstein, earned all three of his academic degrees at Brown. Dr. Philbrick is an Assistant Professor of English and particularly interested in the Victorian period, although he is best known for his work with poetry. A poet, as well as a teacher of poetry. Dr. Philbrick has been published in The Atlantic and The Saturday Revieiu, among others. He won the Wallace Stevens Poetry Prize for 18958. Dr. Philip J. Bray '48, Professor of Physics below, holds two contracts from the Atomic Energy Commission, under which he does research in solid state physics, specializing in nuclear- magnetic and electron-spin resonance. He turned to his alma mater in 1955 and was made full professor last year. Dr. Charles A. Stuart '19, Professor of Biology right, combines a gieat deal of teaching ability with an active research program in his specialties, bacteriol- ogy and immunology. Dr. Stuart did both his undergraduate and graduate work at Brown, receiving liis doctorate in 192.5. ADVANCED courses in Electrical Engineerinsf are taught by Professor Frederick N. Tompkins 'l8. Power electronics and alternating current machinery are his specific specialties. Dr. Tompkins is pictured at left in the electrical machinery laboratory. Dr. William W. Russell '18 below, professor of chem- istry, is shown in his office in Metcalf Laboratory. Teaching a number of elementary and advanced courses in quantitative analysis, Dr. Russell also finds time for research in the specialized field of heter- ogenesis catalysis, Dr. Russell earned his Ph. B and Sc. M. degrees at Brown, and took his doctorate from Princeton. Tompkins and Russell are typical of the many outstanding graduates of the class of 1918 who have returned to Brown as members of the faculty. Others include Dr. Raymond C. Adams, chairman of the mathematics department, Dr. Zenas R. Bliss, Provost of the University and professor of engineer- ing, and Dr. J. Walter W'ilson, chairman of the biol- ogy department. HONORS courses in Shakespeare, seminars in Ben Johnson, and undergraduate classes concerning 18th Century and Restoration literature are the main concern of Dr. Robert G. Noyes '21, professor of English. Primarily a historical scholar. Dr. Noyes is the author of several volumes including Ben John- son on the English Stage. On March 3d, the State Department announced the award of a Fullbright fellowship to Dr. Roderick M. Chisholm '38 right, chairman of the philosophy department. Dr. Chis- holm will use his grant to conduct research at the University of Graz in Graz, Austria. A member of the Brown faculty since 1947, he serves as Romeo Elton professor of natural theology and as president of Brown's chapter of the American Association of University Professors. In 1955, Dr. Chisholm was one of four winners of the George A. Eliza Gardner How- ard Foundation awards. He graduated from Brown magna cum laude, with highest honors in philosophy, and did his graduate work at Harvard, receiving his Ph.D in 1942. SERIOUS CONCERN with academics has led to a faculty-encouraged loosening-up of attendance requlations. Compulsory attendance now comes from within the student, himself, rather than from without. As an example of the Brown man's fresh interest in classroom activity, Professor Vincent Thomas' philosophy lecture Philosophy in Mod- ern Literature draws an average of a third more students than are signed for the course, caused its move from the ordinarily sufficiently spacious Rhode Island Hall room to Carmichael Auditorium far right, second largest lecture hall on campus. Other courses overflow with vagabonds and audits, too, but the rising intellectual barometer reads most impressively at casual buUsessions and dormitory-sponsored discussion groups in every corner of the campus. The classroom, as it should be, is only the beginning. A NEW INTENSITY has swept through Brown in recent years. It is seen in the faces of the students and faculty mem- bers, alike, and lieard in conversations all over campus. Jerry Haskins right, pins down a visiting lecturer. Blue Room conversations take on new depth and seriousness. Freshmen Jones and Hinman below talk o'er a few new ideas in an afterclass coke-and-coffee session. The fresh concern with learning is apparent in increased student-faculty involve- ment; Associate Professor John Hawkes, important young novelist Cannibal, The Beetle's Leg, and others and a creative writing specialist at Brown, talks with a student lower right who has discovered the excitement and pleasure of working closely with his teachers. SHERRYING, a custom on Resident Fellows' open house nights, plus a wide range of student- faculty bantering another custom, involves the four residents of Everett House pictured above. Paul Hie far right in picture, temporarily re- tired instructor of Spanish now working for his doctorate, is the Resident Fellow of Everett. He provides the sherry with the help of the Univer- sity which encourages Resident Fellowing by providing complimentary room, partial board, and an entertainment-for-the-dorm allowance for those faculty members, single or married, who are interested in the program. Everett House has two of them: Below, Robert M. Haythorn- thwaite, a member of the Engineering depart- ment and Senior Resident Fellow of the West Quadrangle, chats with a quintet of his dorm- mates. fR: N H 2 U4 OWR PARRYING mentally, but barely able to fight off a forced knight-attack below by shoeless Dick Press, a junior member of Jameson House, is Elmer M. Blistein '42, Resident Fellow of the house and an Assistant Professor in the English De- partment. Diversity of departments represented in the Resident Fellow system is an attractive feature since many students make a practice of visiting the faculty members-in residence of houses other than their own. Henry Kucera, an Assoclate Professor of Russian and Linguistics and Head Resident Fellow, pictured above holding weekly court in his apartment over Wayland Arch in the Wriston Quad- rangle, has been active in the program for several years. He's been especially interested in the Resident Fellow-sponsored Discussions '59 series. RESEARCH e b s NEW HUNTER LABORATORY, probably the finest psy- chological research lab in the world, opened in September. Richard Keesey above, a teaching assistant, runs a setup designed to study intercranial self-stimulus among rats. National Science Foundation Fellow Bob Hall below tries out his own concept of the circular maze. BRAIN ACTIVITY in the rat and cat families is stimulated and recorded by the apparatus examined here by Dr. Robert Erickson, Instructor, and Grad- uate Assistant Sam Nord. UNDERGRADUATE Kleinman abovel and his apparatus will determine the rat's attitude toward electrically-charged food. Equipment below records brain waves of animals being tested, shows them on an oscilloscope, and runs them through an elab- orate speaker system. 24 A AAAAAAAAAAAAB AAAIAAAAA LEADING POJ ation are brough the year under s of the Whetmord past four years have included such men as Ar Robert Penn Warren abovel, and Robert Frost of whom drew capacity crowds. LECTURERS CANDY IS DANDY, but liquor is quicker. Saying of proven use on campus was endowed with special significance when Ogden Nash read selections from his sensible nonsense to an overflow Alumnae Hall audience. PRESENT AND PAST Harvard profes- sors appeared: Paul Tillich, University Professor at Harvard, and Tom Lehrer, professor of mathematics-turned-songster and witty commentator on the world scene. BROWN has extended its libraries' hours in keeping with the increased student use of library facilities - much of which is due to the I.C. cur- riculum's textbookless emphasis on independent research. George DeWit fat top of page and Al Osborne below work on papers in the Reserve Book Room - often called the I.C. Room. Above, Dave Toser and neighbor Pete Vale enact the age-old I-just-dropped-by-to-see-if-you-could-return- the-overnight-reserve-checked-out-for-me scene under a wall of Hirsch- feld cartoons in Dave's room. UNIVERSITY copped national TV at- tention top as Brown met Northwest- ern in NBC's Quizbowl show. Bruin- Pembroke foursome narrowly missed 145-135 knocking off four weeks-in-a- row champs from Evanston. Brownmen on the spot were Steve Dyson and Paul Hagenau. RICHARD A. FOREMAN '59, Scarsdale, N. Y., took part in the Honors program in English Expression Composition. Aside from occasional experiments with painting. Fore- man's interests and activities almost completely involve drama. As an actor, he's starred in many Sock and Buskin roles in addition to a heavy schedule of summer stock work. As a playwright. In addition, he has authored a novel, Circle of the Grass, served as Literary Wattlebit, performed by the Scarsdale Summer Theater, Frankie and Johnny, given by a Sarah Lawrence theatrical group - and has written a play as his honors thesis. The Man Who Was Not Wise. Foreman is an admirer of Bertolt Brecht, the great modern German playwright. In addition, he has authorized a novel. Circle of the Grass, served as Literary Editor of BRrRuUNoNIA, and founded the Creative Workshop - a showplace for under- graduate artistic efforts of all kinds. WILLIAMH. TRAUB '59, Richboro, Pennsylvania, is a member of Delta Upsilon. Bill is most well-known for his football ability. In addition, he is a firstclass skier both kinds, water and snow and has earned his pilot's license. Although he missed four complete games, he led the Ivy League in passes-caught in his last season, tied the Brown record for passes-caught in a single game against Harvard-7, was named to the coaches' 2nd team All-Tvy, honorable mention Associated Press All-TIvy, and 2nd team All-New England. Academically, Traub is a top student highest grades on football team, is ARTHUR C. LAMB JR. '59 above, Baltimore, Maryland, has followed a course of study in his major. Biology, toward the realiza- tion of his pre-med aspirations. Much of Art's interest involves the Jazz idiom: He wrote a regular jazz column for the BDH; he ex plored new directions, dimensions, and distillations in jazz as co- founder and co-leader of the Nunotes, a prominent and alternately hot and very, very cool jazzgroup. For a decidedly cool sound to be introduced on a campus as dixie-infested as has been Brown for many years, it takes a dedicated group unwilling to play anything unpleasant to its own tastes. Art's Nunotes are Jjust such a group - and he has taken the punishment lack of work and reaped the rewards a dedicated and steadily-growing following of his ironclad dedication. His creative weapon, generally, has been a tenor sax- aphone, although Art trades it occasionally for the pen, specializing then in a highly-personal brand of poetry and short story. Next big scene: med school. JAMES S. GURNEY '59 left, Brockton, Mass., Beta Theta Pi, comes from a family with a strong Brown tradition including two uncles one amember of the Iron Men , two cousins, a grandfather, and a brother. As a debater Jim was vicepresident of Delta Sigma Rho, he took part with a great deal of sophistry in Debating Union-sponsored dinner debates. He upheld the affirmative in a match the topic of which was Resolved: We should give the Cam- marian Club away for Christmas, and the negative against a resolution that the I.D.C. is out to lunch. For amusement, Jim likes to just sit down and write speeches. This has been useful to his active career in campus affairs: he was a member of the Key and the Cammarian Club and served during his last three years as president of the Class of '59. Under his direction, the class sponsored lectures by Eleanor Roosevelt with '58 and Clement Atlee. BRUNO B. MODIA '59, Gloucester, Mass., majored in English Expression Honors, specializing in composition. A Wayland Scholar and a member of the Dean's List, Bruno dropped out of the Cammarian Club his junior year in order to have more time for academics. As editor of Brown's literary magazine, BRUNONIA, he arranged for a sales agent in New York and broke all circulation records. Born in Genoa, Italy, Modia came to this country in 1951 became a citizen in '56, and has worked closely with the World Community Commission, a meeting-ground for Brown's Foreign students. Making use of his interests in international affairs and writing, he's writing his thesis on the beginnings of Fascism - and illustrating the points he makes with excerpts from fiction rather than with statistical and strictly factual material. As a substitute for Philosophy IC 1-2, Bruno did a paper on the concept of Googoolplet; and for an honors course, he traced Chaucer's origins in Boccaccio - arguing against modern currents of criticism, he proved that Chaucer didn't have a full understanding of this source material in Boccaccio. Bruno has also served as captain of the fencing team. He plans to do graduate work in International Relations at John Hop- kins or at the American University of Foreign Trade in Phoenix. 30 STEPHEN K. OBERECK 60, Kirkwood, Mis- souri, is an English Expression Honors major composition and a member of Alplia Delta Phi. At Williston Academy, he was tire New England interscholastic diving champion. This accomplish- ment, combined witli his work with a professional Indian dancing society fat age 13 and his spear- heading of a drive to establish a fund for seagulls, comprise Steve's main non-literary activity. Steve is a poet - one of the finest undergraduate poets in the country. He's had dozens of poems pub- lished - this fact, plus an impressive publication list of short stories and criticism, makes him an important literary figure on the Brown campus. Although he didn't get his gym credits done until his sophomore year, he made dean's list. Steve was Associate Editor of EDITOR and Poetry Editor of BRUNONIA. His book and movie criticism was a popular feature of the BDH. At seventeen, he pub- lished a magazine Protons. His favorite poets are Villon, Rimbaud, Mallarme, Valery, Crane Hart, Stevens, Cummings, Thomas, Hopkins and Holder- lin. Teaching, writing, foreign service, and journal- ism are being considered for post-graduate school endeavor. JOHN L. LAZZATTI '59, Somerville, New Jersey, was an honors major in Classics. He was a member of the Cam- marian Club where he opposed changes made in the Club's system of representation and the Inter Dormitory Council where he favored constitutional changes leading to the formation of the Interhouse Council. As a junior, John served in the presidency of the Debating Union. During his tenure in that post, the Union held the First Annual Brown Debate Conference which was - as anyone who was able to sneak into the Saturday night party will testify - a howl- ing success. The topic was the right-to-work law and the scores of delegates had hundreds of debates before the event- ual winner. Harvard, emerged at the top of the heap. John won two of the Ratcliffe Hicks Prizes and Premiums for Excellence in Debate. His honors thesis is a commentary on the fifth Aneid. Plans teaching classics on the college level. STEPHEN L. DYSON 59, Pleasantvile, N. Y., graduated from Brown Summa Cum Laude. He was a junior Phi Beta Kappa secretary. President of LIBER BRUNENIS Publications publishers of this volume, secretary of Sphinx, and president of the Classics Club. He was one of Brown's repre- sentatives in the Quizbowl. Valedictorian of his high school, Steve turned down large scholarship offers from every other distinguished university in the nation to attend Brown.Soon after his arrival in Providence, he became involved with Brown's Haffenreffer Museum of the American Indian in Bristol, Rhode Island. Steve set up the museum's lecture series. He wrote his Classics honors thesis, Acculturation in Roman Gaul, as an attempted application of modern anthropological ideas to people known only through archaeology and literature. This summer, Dyson will serve as a field scholar at the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. Recipient of a Fullbright award, he will begin studies at Lincoln College. Oxford next fall, withteahinq as his goal. Preferably at Brox'nm,l w adds. ; i BROWN 1959 WILLIAMDYCKES '59, Hamden, Conn., majored in American Liter- ature. Bill devoted a great deal of his activity toward introducing the campus to Latin America serving for an interminable length of time as president of the Spanish club. He is an Ortegaphile. He organized exhibits, lectures, and informal get-togethers involving Latin culture. Other positions of note held by the gentle Mr. Dyckes include the High Priesthood of The Cellar Club and Elves, Gnomes, Leprechauns, and Little Men's Chowder Marching Society. The Club, composed of Mead House basement occupants bound together by their cinder-blocked proximity to one another, is a powerful faction of artists, faddists, and eccentrics at Brown. Bill's great talent for caricature often reached the pages of the BDH. Most important oratorical endeavor, delivered at a Mead House dinner: TV Westerns and Their Effect Upon American Middleclass Mercantile Philosophy. EDWARD S. GINSBERG '59, New York City, was graduated from Bronx High School of Science and followed his brother Brown '58 to the University to study physics. Ed was a Sigma Xi, James Manning Scholar, and a Phi Beta Kappa fas a junior. He combined outstanding work in physics with comparable achievements in math, doing honors work in the former. In his senior year, Ed served as president of the Sphinx club, an honor- ary group which draws its membership both from the student body and from the faculty. For three years, Ed played goalie for the soccer team, receiving all-TIvy mention after his junior season. After graduation, he plans to continue his studies as a graduate student, probably in theoretical physics, holding open the door to positions in college teaching, industry, or the government. JOHEN H. BARCROFT '59 above, Memphis, Tennessee, came to Brown choosing the smallest so-called Ivy League college over the oldest because of its emphasis on the undergraduate and his proximity to the great men of the faculty on a General Motors Scholarship. During his four years at Brown, John has never veered from his position as an articulate exponent of an in- creased empiiasis on an educational attitude for the University. He began making his opinions heard through the pages of the BROWN DAILY HERALD where he attained the position of News Director. John has spent several summers as a reporter for Memphis newspapers. He served as vice-president of the Cam- marian Club in his senior year. Next fall, John will enter graduate school, either at Minnesota, Columbia, or Harvard to prepare for a career as a college teacher of history. . . f ALVIN S. CURRAN '60, Providence, ma- jors in the honors program of musical com- position. He composes a iew hours each day and is absorbed vith it. Al has done a great deal of serious ivork including two movements for a brass ensemble and per- cussion, a ballet for the Pembroke modern dance group, and For That Which Be- falleth, a work for mixed chorus, which von him honorable mention in a statc'vide com- petition. Al wrote the musical score for Chelsea Street and has done arrangements for the Bruncotes and Chattertocks. He plans to do graduate work in musical composition at Julliard or Eastman. : WALLACE H. TERRY, JR. '59, Indian apolis, Indiana, majored in Religious Studies. As Jjournalist, he was editor of the Daily Herald and president of Pi Delta Epsilon; as campus leader, originator of the Inter-House Council plan and voice for voluntary chapel; as writer, author of A. W. Hamilum poetry which appeared in the Daily Herald and the American Anthology of College Poetry. He Avill soon combine his interests in religion and journalism as a summer reporter for the Washington Post and as a divinity school student at the University of Chicagoc under a Rockefeller Fellowship. WILLIAM M. MACKENZIE, JR. '60, Provi- dence, R. I., majors in English Literature, and is amember of Kappa Sigma. Will's great interest is in the theater. He directed Brownbrokers as a junior. He's a member of actor's equity and has played four years of summer stock three as a pro and one non-equity. Will's credit list includes The Boy Friend, Desire Under the Elms, The Tempest, Richard II, and Caesar and Cleopatra with Brown's Sock and Buskin; Fid- dle-de-de, and Down to Earth with Brown- brokers; and The Windslow Boy, The Match- maker, and The Rainmaker, - my better summer stock parts. In addition, he played the title role of Peter Pan in summer stock - the only male ever to have the part. Will has appeared with Basil Rathbone, Henry Morgan, 'Jan Sterling, and Joan Bennett. He hopes to go on to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts or to take private theater training from Sanford Meisner. FRANK H. FINNEY, JR. '59, Royal Oak, Mi igan, majored in Political Science and is amember of Lambda Chi Alpha Vice-President. As a boy of fourteen, Frank was stricken down by polio - seven years later, he had become the holder of fourteen University football records, and one of the greatest athletes in Brown history. Frank brought forth an amazing storehouse of defensive skill and offensive cunning and ability which eventually brought him nearly every laurel it is possible to receive: He started every game of his last three years at Brown and all but one quar- ter. He scored 74 points as a senior fourth in the nation. He holds the record for individual offense season and career. He won the Bulger- Lowe Award - symbolic of the most outstanding football player in New England. In the off-season, Frank squeezes precious rounds of golf and a deep interest in foreign affairs around the captainship of the baseball team, and still finds time to direct his academic work toward a career in law. 35 ROBERT J. SUGARMAN '60, Meriden, Conn., majors in Classics Honors Program, and is a member of Pi Lamb- da Phi. Bob has a great deal of writing talent spread over a number of specific fields. He is a creative vriter; he works in both the short story and poem forms. He is an expository writer - his skill in this field led him to be chosen Editor- in-Chief of the BROWN DAILY HERALD. Half-kiddingly, Bob says that he has brought the HERA LD color and truth. It is only half-kiddingly-said, indeed, for, under Bob, the HERALD has maintained a high level of integrity - integrity carefully spiced by keen, often revealing, insight. Future: Law - oossibly. RICHARD J. RAMSDEN '59, Providence, R. I., majored in American Civilization Honors, and is a member of Phi Gamma Delta. After graduating from Exeter, Dick entered Harvard, transferred to Brown after a year to be able to meet the great professors in small classes as an undergrad- uate, plans to go back for graduate work in either teaching or law. At Brown, Dick has distinguished himself in many ways: He played soccer, becoming captain his senior year. He won the Gaston Prize for the best original oration by a senior. Due to his consuming interest in Brown he worked as chairman of the 1959 25th Reunion Gift Committee. Sally is Mrs. Ramsden. e RO STEPHEN C. KAYE '59, Jericho, N. Y., majored in International Relations, held position of secretary in his fraternity. Alpha Delta Phi, was a member of Sphinx. Steve's been Features Editor of the BROWN DAILY HERALD, was described as a rebel in arms at that time. While with the BEERALD he was also Ed- itor of TEE DIRECTORY, an annually-published calen- dar of eventsphonebook guide to girls' schools ad- vertising tipsheet. In his junior year, Steve founded THE EDITOR, an independent literary magazine, of which he is Editor and Publisher. THE EDITOR has solidly taken its place as an outlet for the creative efforts of members of the Brown and Harvard com- munities. Steve's intense interest in contemporary writing and thinking I believe in living of the world, he says was the main impetus behind the idea of THE EDITOR; he's used the quarterly as a personal way of assessing current college opinion. In general, his interests involve important recent trends and perscnalities in art, history, politics and litera- ture. Steve's athletic endeavors include polo and a position on Brown's squash team. Last summer, he worked as an artlicled dark in a firm of London solicitors. He plans to attend Law school: either Columbia or the University of Virginia. LEWIS C. CADY '59, Denver, Colorado, was an American Literature major. He has worked an ex- ceptional photographic talent into a broader interest in the graphic arts wrote a definitive paper on Mon- driaan. Magazine layout and design is his greatest forte. Lew's first experience in this field came with the editorship of his high school yearbook prize- winningist in nation in 1955 and a number of photo contest awards; at Brown in which he was first interested by the '52 LIBERJ, he became Editoi-in- Chief of this volume after posts of Photo Editor and Format Editor. Lew also was Brown Editor for Ivy Magazine; did Brown Daily HERALD special edi- tion covers; was Photo Editor for BRUNONIA Town:, Susan Strasberg, and Macameraonic . Summer Jjob: Staff photog for Denver posT shot fires, floods, gambling raid and plane-crashvV Wel- coming the opportunity to lay his Nikon aside. Lew also worked in the verbal media. Results: a novel, now undergoing its thirty-seventh revision, And the Darkness Shall Be Called Night, a number of poems two of which were published in the HERALD'S controversial poetry section, and an even dozen short stories five of which were entitled The 75ip - one Trip published in BRUNONIA and one in the HERALD. Lew plans to do graduate work at Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism. W ith- out Nancy. WILLIAM E. VOGEL '59, South Orange, New Jersey, has done Honors ivork in his major. Psychol- ogy. His thesis was a determination of the reinforcing effects of light on albino rats. Bill was a Phi Beta Kappa as a junior, but his greatest contribution to Brown and to the United States during his four years as an undergraduate probably came from his Avork with the Brunotes, a gioup of jazz oriented entertain- ers which has done much for the spreading of the University's name on the other side of rhe .thmtic - bringing Vogel a State Department citation. Vogel has taken his group to Europe the past two summers, and has played for over 4,000 troops in France and Germany during 33 days in connection with the Armed Forces Entertainment Division. In 1958, the Brunotes were booked for a series of concerts by the American Embassy 1in France and made several appearances at the World's Fair, appeared on tele- vision in Switzerland, France, and Monte Carlo, and spent ten days in Barcelona. Bill has received many offers to go back and is making another trip. In the States, Vogel's Brunotes he owns the name have appeared at all the Eastern schools, have perfor;ned in Carnegie Hall, and have made stereo tapes. Vogel has been called on to produce up to 13 Brunotebands in one night - and has done it Spring Weekend, of course. Next year, he'll trade his trumpet for a long gig in the insurance business. ROBERTS. ROGERS, JR. '59, Atlanta, Georgia, majored in Music under the Honors Program and is amember of Kappa Sigma. Bob's interest in music is as wide in scope as it is deep in intensity: He served as an Undergraduate Teaching Assistant in the music department. He was a member of the chapel choir. Student Director of the Brown Chorus, and Musical Director of Brownbrokers, the student- run group which annually produces an original musi- cal comedy. Bob's greatest loves are music for the theater he particularly enjoys reading plays as a side- interest and music for the church one summer, he filled in as substitute organist in a large Atlanta church. He wrote his first musical comedy, When and If, while at Andover, and began his association with Brownbrokers by creating some special ballets for a show several years ago. Bob likes choral music, too, and hopes to teach at a college where he can combine choral music, church music, and theater music - mixing instruction with liberal quantities of composition. Bob describes his Honors thesis com- position, Mass in C or Missa Sancto Stephani , as my first serious work. If so, his tremendous musical talent and drive won't let it be his last. JOHN CHRISTIE, JR. '59, Lake Forest, Illinois, above is a Sigma Nu and majored in International Relations was number one man, gradewise, in I.R.. John played a significant role in campus activities, being a member of the Vigilance Committee, the Brown Key, and the Sphinx Club. His greatest contribution, un- questionably, came as the president of the Cammarian Club. Under his direction, the Oldest Student Governing Organization in the United States sensed a different Brown scene and advocated a number of academically-oriented changes including a new character for student organizations taking part in freshman week, a revamp- ing of the proctor system, and an extension of library hours. A Phi Beta Kappa, and winner of a Woodrow Wilson fellowship, John's plans for the future are as yet undecided, but he will probably attend Harvard Law. NACK-CHUNG PAIK '59, Seoul, Korea, majored in English-German Literature a special interdepartmental honors program he set up for himself. Paik first became interested in Brown when he came to New York in connection with a HERALD-TRIBUNE forum for outstanding foreign high school students. Master of five languages English, German, French, Russian and his native Korean, he plans to follow a few years of additional study in English Literature on a graduate lewvel with a trip back to Korea, where he will begin a career in the writing of fiction in Korean. Paik's honors thesis concerns Goethe. Nack-Chang has received only one grade lower than A while at Brown a B in English 4s and became a Phi Beta Kappa as a junior. JOHN W. CRONIN, JR. '59, Providence, majored in English Literature. A leader in campus affairs, his presidencies include: Delta Kappa Epsilon, Inter- Fraternity Council, and the Class of '59 as a freshman. In addition, Jack has taken an active part in Brown's athletic scene, captaining the freshman football team, and racking up the highest average per catch in the league as a senior he played end. A product of Wilbraham academy, where he edited the literary magazine and won all-New England honors as end, Jack regards the most valuable part of his activities getting to really know president Keeney and Dean Watts. Summers found Jack working as a dynamiter for the Gammino '32 Construction Company. His specialty is Victorian literature read all of Dickens - also Vanity Fair, five times. Jack hopes to go to University of Virginia lawschool or Harvard Business. 38 PHILIP S. HOLLMAN '59, Brockton, Massachusetts, lias majored in Brown's American Civilization program and taken an active part in a number of student-govern- ing organizations including the Brown Key, the Cam- marian Club, and the Inter-Dormitory Council of which he served as president. Some of his ideas which have be- come realities due to his work in these organizations in- clude: group living for independents, bringing big names to the campus Lehrer, Shearing, et al., revamping of Caswell lounge, extending of library hours, and offering group insurance to Brownmen. As chairman of gradua- tion, the committees arranging for class day, the senior dinner, the dance, and the reunions are all under his direction. In addition, Phil has spent three years as a leader in the Brown Charities Drive. His favorite freetime reading is Sinclair Lewis There's not much of him I haven't read, I guess . Hemmingway and Melville are other interests - he's read an even dozen books about Moby Dick. Althought he's an avid stock dabbler, Phil looks toward law as a career. EDWARD J. ARMOUR '59, Mamaroneck, New York, below served as vice-president of his fraternity. Pi Lamb- da Phi, was a member of the Vigilance Committee, and danced in the 1958 Brownbrokers musicomedy. His ma- jor is art, however, and it is in that field that his greatest contributions have taken place. As a cartoonist, his sketches in the HERALD predicted many a Bruin football win. The poster designs he did for his fraternity were topics-for-conversation the last few homecoming weekends. His cartooned stationery carried nearly ten thousand messages from Brown, Dartmouth, B.LT., and Oberlin. His real interest, thought, is in painting. He traded a paint- ing for his drawing table. Winner of the Gilbert Stuart Prize in Art in 1957, Ed won a fellowship to the Yale Summer School in art between his freshman and soph- omore years. Last summer, he set up a nine-week art course for 35 neighborhood children which convinced him that his real interest lies in teaching art -but on a college level. He will do graduate work either at Yale or Indiana. ENCSPNRREE N B i GEORGE E. MCCULLY '60, Northfield, Illinois, 1s secretary of Delta Upsilon and a history major. A product of New Trier where he directed a student musicomedy, George has taken an active in- terest in campus activities. He is a member of the Faunce House Board of Governors, treasurer of BroAvn Chairities, and a member of Sphinx and the Vigilance Committee. He was recently named president of the Cammarian Club for 1959-60. George has spent the last three summers in a traning program at Bell and Howell. Reading Thomas, Eliot, and Dickinson and writing McCully poetry are additional interests. As a matter of fact, he confesses, I originally planned to be a music major. His musical taste favors the early classicists - especially Bach. With one year left at Brown, George is as yet undecided concerning his future. Either college teaching thistory - or, possibly, American literature or law. IRA J. SCHNEIDER '60 I only feel 20 , Lawrence-Tenafly, is a phychology major. Carrying a University Course College Scholar Program in cosmology on his back, intramural softballing center field, Avorking toward his Lucubrator two arroAvs, sending up the second sputnik 12 erroneous calls to the Journal equals one frontpage story, facing John Hay to the west, the opener makes a slam try by bidding four in a new suit, co-authoring witli Cady The Frantic Pedantic Semantic Antic, the copper columns shook and swayed and the bull roared Kazantzakis, rescuing an over-wrought student from his final in Sayles Hall on a stretcher liberated from Marvel Gym, authoring the only documented biography of Yuan Shih-Kai in English, visiting Bunbury on a safari for English IC8, ripping apart a ficticious 3 hour loan book in the librarv. rearing May 1st, Ira J. Schneider is a biped. y p G Z ,. 5 Y PHYSICS CLUB RADIO CLUB LONG-WAVE demonstration on the tuning-fork by Stan Armstrong above left and pocketscope display above right are parts of the Brown Physics Club's regular reper- toire as presented to the public on Activities Night. Meetino- reqgularly in Wilson Hall, the club schedules programs ol interest to physics majors and laymen, alike. SHORT-WAVE installation of Brown Radio Club operates under two sets of call letters: KNAR, part of the Army-Navy Emergency Relay Network; and KIVPY, a link in the All- Ivy Short Wave Network. President Gerry Rosen directed the instruction in code and theory for inexperienced mem bers before allowing them to use the NROTC-donated equip- ment . INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB THE FLICK scheduled by the International Relations Club in the Theater Lounge of Faunce House proved to be an effective way of assembling students and faculty members interested in Avorld affairs. After the movie, a panel, a lecture, or an open discussion usually took place - the topic, of course, having been interestingly provided by the motion picture. Tom Ketchum above, serving as president, made the necessary introductions. CHEMISTRY CLUB y 25 THE CLICK of test tube against beaker signalled that the members of the Chem- istry Club were toiling busily. Picture above shows a quartet of devotees doing Oa little extracurricular work in the Metcalf Research Laboratory. The Biology Club below, informally gathering around post-meeting experimentation in the 3 Arnold Biological Laboratory similarly provided a casual meeting-ground for stu- dents and members of the department. Colloquia, featuring noted members of the epartments of other universities in addition to those of Brown, supplemented club programs BIOLOGY C 43 ICAL SCIENCE CLUB POLI THE GREAT LURE that brought over 70 political science majors to the Arnold Lounge in March was a discussicm of comprehensive exams sponsored by the Polit- ical Science Club. Other particularly successful programs: Dr. Manwaring on legal aspects of segregation in the south, Asst. Prof. Cornwell on the R.I. election, Asst. Prof. McConnell on Khrushchev's headaches, and Prof. George on the part he played in the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. Club's officers above were P. Drake Allen, Jr., Quentin R. Searle, Dick Laudati, and Paul Hollos president. ENGINEERING SOCIETIES o THE NATURE of the engineering curriculm at Brown is such that students are grouped according to their options only in their senior year. For this reason, each of the engineering societies helps to fill the gap between the student and his professional specialty through an active program of meetings, lectures, and field trips. The American Society of Civil Engineers shown below right, in class in- cluded in their list of speakers leading civil engineers, construction men, and architects. In the spring, the Brown chapter president: George Ullrich hosted a conference of New England A.S.C.E. groups. The American Society of Mechanical Engineers below left, on activities night. The American Institute of Electrical Engineering, The Institute of Radio Engineers, and The Institute of the Aeronauti- cal Sciences above right are other Brown engineering groups. The I.A.S. members pictured are Peter Skowronek, Al Ramos, Tom Lutz, Associate Prof. R. F. Prob- stein, Seth Anthony, and Pete Howard. Brown Engineering Society officers above left: Peter Skowronek, Harry Townes, and John Solomon. SPANISH CLUB THE NUMBER of Latin Amer- dents now at Brown, combined with a grooving interest of many students in the language and traditions of Spain, Mexico, and the Central and South American countries, has built the interest in the Spanish Club to its present high level. Leaders: Julio Capd, El Greco, Bill Dyckes presi- dent, and Carlos Valencia. ERMAN CLUB THE WORD went out in the Brown Briefs section of the HERALD nearly every week: Ver- ammlung luie gewohnlich im Ivy Room um halt sechs Uhr. At that sign, German language stu- dents and others wanting to keep their command of German pol- ished not a word of English is alloAved to pass across the table. THE EMPHASIS is on a serious study of classical languages and literature. Featured were talks by Professor Coucli Brown's classics department on the study of classics in England and by William Glavin St. Mark's School on opportunities for classicists in secondary education. Officers were Tom Sullivan, Vickie Demirjian, Stephen Dyson president, Al Hanser, Jack McTigue and Ed O'neil not pictured. CLASSICS CLUB THE QUARTET of BroAvnmen and Pem- brokers pictured below are enjoying the trio of things for Avhich they have gathered in the Commons Room of Maiston Hall: coffee, do- nuts - and French. John Tasker is the mem- ber on the right of the duo captured above - involved as is the custom of the French Club in a conversation in Avhich not a single Avord of English is spoken. GEOLOGY CLUB THE TOP floor of Rhode Island Hall contains Brown's Geology Department where these four ma- jors meet to rehash a slideshow meeting presented by a Yale professor of geology. Field trips and close contact between majors also helped to prepare men for the rigorous field examination at the end of the year. Above: Raymond Miko, Karl S.N. Arndt, Dave Berger, and Reid Higgins. THE STARS were kept under close examination by Brovn's active Astronomy Club. Frequent trips to Ladd Observatory and work with the planetarium in Angell Hall were supplemented by a generous quantity of work with small telescopes. Here, Roger Lee uses one, trying to locate Ceres. Gathered around him: John Weeks, John Turtle, Bruce Glass, Carl Wattenberg, and Bruce Burton. ASTRONOMY CLUB Daniel S. Wolk, Roger W. Cummins, Richard Efron, John Christie, Jr., Jack J. Rosenblum, WilliamE. Vogel; sitting Michael j. Hittle, Theodore J. W. Chu, Gordon S. Cohen, and Paul A. Russo. These men and several others missing from the picture have been elected to the Rhode Island Alpha of Phi Beta Kappa society, a nationwide symbol of academic dis- tinction, now in its 129th vear at Brown. Speaker at the initiation banquet following services during which 14 Brown juniors and seniors were taken into the society held on March 12 was Professor Lawton P. G. Peckham '27, Dean of the Graduate Faculties of Columbia University. Official poet for the occasion was John Hollander, currently lecturer in English at Con- necticut College. PHI BETA KAPPA INFORMAL contact between faculty and students is the purpose of the Sphinx Club, a unique organization in that it draws its membership from both Brown's upperclassmen and its faculty. During the year, Sphinx members heard lectures by Juan Lopez-Moril- las, professor of Spanish; Wil- liam T. Hastings '03, professor of English; George Trov, lit- erary editor of the Providence JOURNAL; and Walter White- hill of the Boston Athenaeum. Left: George McCully. Right: Edward Ginsberg president. - SPHINX 5 2 x el SCIENTIFIC activity on campus is stimulated by Sigma Xi, an organization which brings together the outstanding scientists both on the undergraduate and graduate levels of the University in the belief that mutual association among men of great ability and high interest is beneficial to the interchange of scientific ideas at a professional level. On March 5th, the Brown chapter of Sigma Xi held its sixtieth annual initiation and dinner. Dr. Harry F. Harlow of the University of Wisconsin gave the address - a discussion of his study of the intellectual development of young animals. Pictures below show newly-elected members on their way to the Dining Room in Alumnae Hall just after their initiation. Requirements for membership as an undergraduate include having demonstrated a high level of achievement in at least two of the basic sciences. 1 g b 11 1 2 g I- . HONORING those undergraduates whose scholarship in the field of engineering has been outstanding is Brown's chapter of Tau Beta Pi. In the pictures below, a trio of members talk over their engineering projects before the February dinner meeting of Tau Beta Pi. Guest at the dinner was Professor C. A. Robinson of the classics depart- ment. NEWAT BROWN is a chapter of the oldest national collegiate journalism honorary society. Pi Delta Epsilon. The chapter at Brown is the result of a conversation between K. Roald Bergethon, former Dean of the College, and Wallace Terry in the spring of 1358. Bergethon, who belonged to Delta Sigma Chi, another journalism honorary, during his undergraduate days at DePauw, agreed with Terry that such a chapter at Brown would promote higher journalistic standards, provide a common meeting ground for Brown's newspapers and press of the air, and promote student interest in Jjour- nalistic endeavors. With the idea ready to be put into action, Terry met with the sixteen top newspaper men and women on campus, representing the DATILY HERALD, W.B.R.U., the LIBER BRUNENSIS, and the Pembroke RECORD . They liked the idea, petitioned for recognition, were accepted, and all became charter members. This May they elected new members, includ- ing four honorary members, Barnaby C. Keeney, Charles Watts II '47, Sinclair Armstrong and Henry Kucera. Pictured above are seated from left to right John Oliver, Girard Stein, and Geraldine Caruso. Standing from left to right are Wallace Terry president, Tyler Beebe, A. William Murphy, J. Stewart McLaughlin, Alan P. Miller secretary, Alan Stuart, Phillip Baram, Barbara Dumont, Howard S. Curtis faculty adviser, Paul RUSSO thistorian, and Lew Cady. Also among the founding members are John Barcroft, Peggy Brooks vice-president, Eugene Kay treasurer, and Victoria Santipietro. s M'RIS O Id o MISSION of the Alr Force Reserve Officers Training Corps is to train selected students for positions of leadership in time of national emergency. In charge of Brown's AFROTC unit is Colonel George W. Hutcheson; he is designated Professor of Air Science. Three other officers assist him in providing a two year basic course in Air Science and a two year advanced cotirse for those physically and mentally qualified who have indicated a desire to attend flight training after graduation. Cadet Tom Maloney middle of picture above left is a member of the crack drill team. COMMISSION as a Second Lieutenant has been received by Lou Sgarzi pic ture above left on the day of his graduation. Proudly, he inspects his newly- won insignia as his father looks on. Cadet Norman Pineault above right drills a quartet of men taking part in Brown's AFROT C program. Courses are offered in the subjects of principles of flight, instruments of national security, aerial warfare, military management, evolution of warfare, and the senior course military aspects of world political geography. One month summer camp is required between junior and senior years. NAVAL unit at Brown, composed of 250 midshipmen, is a source of qualified officers for the Navy and the Marine Corps. Classroom instruction, outdoor drill, and summer cruises help the midshipman gain technical knovledge in gunnery, navigation, engineering, and law. Complimenting regular navy education are the activities of the Brunavians, the official undergraduate organization of the Unit. The Brunavians sponsor the NRO T C Drill team which, under the direction of Midshipman V. J. Loiselle, won the Adjuctant General of Rhode Island Trophy, the Rifle team which, under the direction of Midshipman J. Russo, won the Commandant First Naval District Trophy for the New England area, and the Pistol team which scored a 5 and 2 record. Besides a weekly newsletter, the Brunavians publish a magazine which is sent to other NRO T C units. NROTC TRAINING includes an active participation in intramural athletics. The Bruna- vians' athletic program, run by Midshipman G. A. Seaver, won tlie Milner Touch Football Trophy, the Samuel T. Arnold Volley Ball Plaque, the Basketball cham- pionship. The Browning Cup, and the College Trophy - symbolic of University athletic supremacy. Social life for the NRO T C men included a stag affair at Maxcy Lounge in the fall, a formal dance in Lyman Hall followed by a trip to Quonset Naval Base on Sunday in the spring, and a number of dinners-with-speakers. Among the guests vere members of the crevs of the Nautilus and the Skate. For its ambitious contributions. Brown's NRO T C unit received a salute on the Navy Hour radio program - recognizing both the Brown men serving with the fleet and those training vith the Batallion at Lyman Hall. a et SOPHOMORE RUSHING BALLOTS are counted above after a dramatic April vote on the most controversial issue to be faced by the Cammarian Club, the Oldest Student Governing Body in America, during 1958. Soon after Michael Trotter '58, former Club president's stirring speech in favor of the recommendation below, the Lobstermen passed the question, 13-12. The University replied vith a compromise April rushing plan eivhich, it believed, vould achieve many of the hopes of the Club - plus better freshman organization and a stronger fraternity system. Under the capable leadership of John Christie, president, and John Barcroft, vice- president, the Club became strongly inter- ested in academic improvement. This resulted in extensive discussion of an academic honor code, a recommendation for extended library hours granted, and a re-evaluation of the freshman orientation program. The group, operating for the first time under direct class representation, proposed the Interhouse Council plan, an increase in aid for proctors, and a student insurance plan - which proved successful after its installation in the fall of 1958. The Club once again tackled all the issues proposed at its first meeting, raised by the DAILY HERALD, the fraternity and inde- pendent councils, or brought forth by con- scientious students. To the 1959 edition of the Club was left final discussion on the Honor Code, the Vigilance Committee and the hearing of the University's decision on the Interhouse Council. PUBLISHERS of the Freshman Classbook, FRA- TERNITIES AT BROWN, specialties such as the Hope College booklet, and Brown representatives to IVY magazine, LIBER BRUNENSIS PUBLICATIONS' main job is putting out this volume. This, the story of Brown's 195th year, is due largely to the efforts of Editor-in-Chief Lew Cady richt's allnight efforts. Greatest assistance was that of Layout Editor Jack Dauer '6l left. Others whose participation was invaluable include squinting Bob Watson '58 top left, and Marty on-the-phone Meckman and Dave Rust, pictured above with Editor Cady. 58 N DN QUSd D3 n'0 IOL 7, s A g 74 ations, per se, was PRESIDENT of LIBER BRUNENLS Public the amazing Stephen L. Dyson above. His job was to co- ordinate the many activities of the second largest to the BDH budgeted campus organization - and, mainly, to sit on Lew. Without Doc, this volume would never have appeared. Assisting him was a whole stable of highly talented if preoccupied Brovnlnen including Managing Editor Andy Stevart below. PRESENT, even when not called-for were several eager members of the LIBER staff, one of Tvhom Marty Meckman makes one of the hundreds of phone calls above it takes to put together a volume like this. The LIBER, which regularly ranks higher in eastern collegiate circles than any of Brown's athletic teams, prides itself on its fine photography. Below right, Mike French, a freshman staffer, makes one of the many outstanding photographs he contributed to this book. LIBER staffers take more pictures than any other yearbook staff in the country. .7 BEARING UP under the strain of creative overindulgence was Business Manager Paul Andrew Hollos. He built the LIBER its largest income ever, soldmore ads, kept better books, and was, in many ways, the best Business Manager the Book has ever had. Hardivorkers below, are Mike French, Mike Saper, Dave Carr, Dave Rust, Sam Fisk, and Bruce Anderson. BRUNONIA WANTS f'TM.EtW puES Bt EpMeRER MO mnwt .wM Tampren. KrEHCE BEARING DO WN on campus literary figures vith modest money-in-hand was BRUNONIA, cele- brating one of its most successful years. Pete Anderson above right contributed a few stories. So did Literary Editor Richard Foreman and Poetry Editor Oberbeck. But much of BRUNOMA 'S material came from the campus-at-large. The magazine published a number on non-staff works, including the immensely popular works of graduate student Ely Stock, and an exerpt from the novel by Armin Frank '56. Arthur Levin below left served as Business Manager and Ed Nielson below right and Bruno Modica held the position of Editor-in-Chief. K U X 3 0 ? 0 K 0 TWENTY-ONE YEARS OLDER than last year due to some sharp- eyed back-issue typographical-error spotting on the part of Joseph Mayo, the BDH had another event- ful year - this time under the cap- able editorship of Wallace H. Terry. At right, he sifts through a mountainous mass of material in preparation for a comprehensive electiontime issue. Wendell B. Buzz Barnes, below, works over some copy for the same project while Ty Beebe, left, local adver- tising manager for the HERALD, muses over the vastness of the BDH budget. Editorially, the paper found to be the second oldest col- lege daily in the country after the correction of the founding date was as uneqguivocal as ever: the revolu- tionary and controversial I.H.C. idea was conceived and backed; compulsory chapel was fought and the idea of monthly class meetings was suggested; sophomore rushing was pushed; personality politics were blasted; and a stinging parody on Dartmouth life hit home so effectively in the North that the HERALD lost its press privileges in 6 6 -isititxsgloksiton. e FAME came to Wally Terry when the press associations spread the story of Negro-college-newspaper-reporter- meets-Faubus onto front pages of papers all over the world. Story hit nation's best and biggest papers above. Later, Wally became the 91st Editor-in-Chief of the HERALD. During his reign, the paper ran a great deal of creative writing and a number of unusual special features. The biggest story of the year concerned Brown's psychology department 's findings concerning the relationship between obscenity in literature and juvenile delinquency. The findings of the study took the form of a powerful weapon against censorship and were carried by the Associated Press; the demand for copies of the three-part HERALD article was so great that special issues were printed - fifty of which were requested by an anti-censorship agency of the motion picture industry. Other features picked up by A.P. include a series on segregation-integration, a pen- etrating analysis of Rhode Island economics, and a study of education and government which included interviews with ill-fated Notre Dame Coach Brennan, Illincis Gov- ernor Stratford, Rhode Island's Del Sesto, and university heads Kirk Columbia and Kimpton Chicago. g Pl 8 REIVESTI MEET WO RK at the typewriter by Al Miller sports editor is watched over by Paul Russo editorial chairman. Flow of creative talent in above pic- ture 1is taking place in one of the HERALD's new partitioned sub-offices; one of the '58-59 board's biggest moves was the rearrangement of phys- ical space in the office through an extensive and expensive system of sub-division. FORTUNE , good or bad, was the re- sponsibility of John Oliver, HERALD Business Manager belov, and na- tional ad manager, Al Stuart, and production manager. Stew McLaugh- lin at mechanical abacus. The BDH took over THEDIRECTORS, an annual all-purpose living guide for Brown- men, ran special Christmas, home- coming, spring veekend, and nev coach issues - and made its usual lot of money. PLAY for HERALDinen often took the form of attendance at the newly-or- ganized HERALD lecture series. Once a year, however, recreation overflo'ivs onto the intermedia field in the form of the fabled Greeze Bolvl belov as the pen-pushers engage the mike- men of WBRU in a horrible dis- play of football skill. SMART move on part of Bill Stamm, Chief Engineer, was procuring of Connecticut plate WBRU. It took three years of trying. Station Manager Gene Kay top of page works on phone during elaborate election network. f Surrounded by a few of six tape recorders used that night are Jack Resnik, Chief Con- trolboard Engineer for network, and John Wolff fat right. Great tragedy of year took place that night as Billiken below, God of Things as They Ought to be was accidently destroyed. SMARTING from ill-considered University decision to restrain them from broadcasting all night using mechanical means, W B R U went ahead with its elaborate election night hookup. Rest- ing from the pressures of the ambitious production, Mike Sheyne takes a veil-deserved cigarette break above. Copyvriters Sheyne, Paul Forrest fat machine, Ken Burrows, and Dave Lessard lurk- ing in background bang out a fev of the thousands of vords needed for an all-night production of the scale a national election demands. Closeup belov sholvs Forrest ripping copy from ma- chine under the guidance of Program Director Lessard. Ne v equip- ment for nation's oldest college station: a 250 watt transmitter. DEBATING UNION POLITICAL strife raged through the Debating Union. Pres- ident Wayne Stork finally called in William Surprenant, Direc- tor of Faunce House, to untangle the multitude of troubles and dissensions. The question of membership was one of the largest issues; missing a debate had been sufficient cause for dropping a person from the official rolls of the Union. After the smoke cleared, Ted Somerville '61 was readmitted. He had been secretary. Intercollegiate debating suffered someivhat due to the inner discord; the LTnion registered a disappointing record. Nevertheless, a large meet was scheduled on the home grounds sfen by the Coast Guard Academy, drawing many of the outstandinos debatins; teams in the east. YELLOW INTO THE SIDE POCKET g a line Richard Foreman -twn't soon forget. Neither will the many Foreman-admirers in the audience of Sock and Buskin's performance of Chekhov's The Cherry Orchard. SCENES are from the Chekhov play - one of the last productions before the installation of a nev $15, 000 light board, one of three of its kind in U. S. college theaters. Other innovations for the oldest undergraduate dramatic society in continual exist- ence included the use of a scrim screen which can be changed from opaque to transparent in The Waltz of the Toreadors, and unusual storm mood lighting in the season-opener, The Tempest. i 1TH LT - 3 ANNUAL CUSTOM of Sock and Buskin is to produce a recent Broadway play. This year, the board chose a musical, The Boy Friend - rehearsal scenes are shown on this page. At left, Steve Spencer and Roberta Olson enact an outburst of musicomedy passion. Below left, Will Mackenzie sings one of the showstoppers to freshman lead, Deena Rosen. Bob Elson and Penny Ritter run through a dance number right to the cool rhythms of drummer Ted Osmer. The group begins each season with an Elizabethan play; an experimental play and a period work are also annual features. Pirandello's Henry IV was scheduled, but Sir John Gielgood bought up the rights and plans to open with it on Broadway next year. The New England Drama Festival was held at Brown in October and a special performance of The Tempest was presented. BAD LITTLE GIRL, Lisa, played by Nancy Otto, plays it cool right with Jerry Richard Bird, a conniving Village painter, while naivete-in-pinafore-person- ified Good Little Girl Maggie-from-KEN- tucky soaks up the Village from Louis' Bar. Chelsea Street, book lyrics by Thomas Neal Crater, music by A1 Curran, played at Faunce House Theater from April 20-25. As is Brownbrokers' custom, an original undergraduate written produced musi- comedy was presented. 74 9A mi GOOD LITTLE GIRL, .l.iggic, played by Penny Ritter, turns out to have 1. a KEN- tucky boyfriend hot on her trail to drag her back to matrimony, cloddish Bill, played by Steve Spencer and 2. an uncle Max John Reiss, vho directs the Museum of Modern Art. Jerry tries to keep both Maggie and goldbricking Lisa on the line, but Maggie soon learns with the help of Roberta Olsen and Al Weber, who play Village boarding house and cafe operators that she must decide betveen Bill and Jerry. Will Mackenzie directed the show, a new role for the Brownbrokers veteran. BROWENBROKERS E SINGING four days a veek as part of Brown's chapel exercises are the members of the Chapel Choir. Bob Rogers above and George Tyler and Jim Lindsley above right take part in the services - as do Gary Smith, Tom Gatch, Chuck Pickhardt, and Harry Usher below. The Choir's excellence is admired and appreciated by the entire student body. CHAPEL CHOIR JABBERWOCKS SWINGING into a successfuf sale of their new record album were the Jabberwocks, undoubtedly Brown's most famous singing group. Besides carrying the name of the University from Maine to Florida in various public appearances at colleges, alumni clubs, and benefits. The group, often noted for its air of informality, has recorded on the Columbia label and performed on television and radio. The Jab- berwocks, now in their 10th year, sing a variety of songs, including folksongs, calypso, and Christmas carols. Under the direction of Ted Martin, the group arranges all its own music. Ben Lambert, the bus- iness manager of the group, planned numerous performances for the year they often appeared three times a week, including engagements at nightclubs, on campus, andat many eastern colleges, including Conn. College, Columbia, Wheaton, Wellesley, St. Lawrence, Wheelock, and Marymount. Due to an extra-early scheduling, the Jabberwocks had to turn down an appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show due to insuf- ficient practice. Members of the group were Walt Roe, John Hutchin- son, Dick Tinker, Walt Kiernan, Tom Turley, Jimmy Steiner, Walt Pickett, James Orr, Stephen Spencer, Bob Whiting, Ted Martin, Vic Elting, John Simpson, Pete Kindler, and Martin. SING at St. Thomas' Church in New York City was a November highlight of the Chorus' most successful year. Traveling further than ever before, the group performed a concert of Christmas music in Manchester, Connecticut, in addition to several other off-campus engagements. Handel's Judas Maccabeaus was one of the greatest challenges the group has faced itself with in some time. A combina- tion of the best voices from both Brown and Pembroke, the Chorus ended its season with the traditional Outing Reservation affair. GLEE CLUB SONG, under the personal direction of Mr. Erich Kunzel, the new head of the Glee Club, reached further and wider from Glee Club throats than ever before in Brown history. The Club scheduled spring concerts in most of the major cities in the northeast and midwest, in addition to the ambitious program per- sued by the Bruinaires, a small ensemble composed of Glee Club members. The Bruinaires took part in a half-hour musi- cal program with the Glee Club on WCGN-TV nationally broadcasted, performed two other nights in Chicago, and appeared at the Winter Carnival at Colby Junior College as a feature of an all campus dance. CONCERT BAND COMBINING for the first time formally the talents of tlie Brown marching band and the would-be baiidsters at Pembroke is the Brols'n University Concert Band. Under the clirection of Prof. Martin Fischer, the band performed several times during the non-football part of the school year for large audiences, featuring Prof. Ron Nelson's The Mayflower Overture. NUNOTES ART LAMB AND ROD SILVA pictured, re- fusing to play The Mexican Hat Dance' or any- thing like it, have brandished swinging axes in an extended effort to introduce new sounds to the Broivn scene. In marked contrast to the two- beat dixie and stilted sound of yesterday's high society music, Lamb and S$ilva's Nunotes have offered music that is at once listenable and dance- able. Although sometimes suffering from a lack of gigs, the group, varying non-Lamb Silva per- sonnel when necessary to fit the occasion, played several all-campus dances and many dormitory and fraternity parties, preferring a swinging combination of vibes, trumpet, and sax Lamb, plus rhythm section Silva on the skins. AR LEADING the Brunotes during impressive visits to Europe over the last two summers was Bill Vogel. Dur- ing this time, the famous jazzgroup worked a number of highly-listenable vocal numbers into their repertoire. FOLLOWING a itinerary which included 33 days of U. S. Armed Forces entertainment, several TV appearances, and a number of night club engagements, the Brown- blazered group capped their European tour with a series of shows at the Brussels World's Fair above. f mnptes ' o ncluditng ex-meiber . z 5 i ,muma A f Tomr Wan 9 $ fonal ??r'vmw Que gopearance with Ed Sullivan IM i SRS e T v B8 RS TY BRUNOTES GIFT COMM ITTE 25TH REUNION b 3 g MOST AMBITIOUS project ever undertaken for a 25th reunion gift has been conceived and brought before Brown's Class of 1959 by the men pictured above, Glennard Frederick, Robert E. Kresco, Richard M. Ramsden, and Robert A. Hastings. A ten dollar dona- tion is asked of each member of the Class each of the next twenty- five years. This money will be invested with tlie Massachusetts In- vestment Trust, a mutual fund organization. With 100 participa- tion, the Class of '59 can amass half a million dollars in time for its 25th reunion in 1984, the largest reunion gift ever made to a uni- versity in the world. Other colleges have used life insurance plans under such a plan, Brown's Class of '59 would be able to give around $120,000 in 1984, but no class has ever used a mutual investment fund to build its reunion gift. At right, Committee members Charles Waterman and Thomas Nathan approach Andy Davis, a member of the class, with literature and information con- cerning the program. Psi Upsilon was the first housing unit to reg- ister 100$ participation as the committee came up with a 3059 record in time for the kick-off dinner the evening of the 24th of March. BROVNfN PHOTO CLUB 83 CONTRARY to popular belief, the Brown Photo Club will not hold its 25th reunion this year. In its place, there will be a wake in honor of Dick Benjamin. Cam- era-sliy members left the hardy octet at right to pose for the yearbook pictures. Under the direction of Robert Watson '58, no meetings were held. Due to the steady hypo-pouring hand of Sid Williams, operations con- tinued uninterrupted nonetheless. It was a good year for the Photo Club; everyone gave up filtering filter- able enlarging paper, gave up on the dryers altogether, took up D-76, and forgot their negatives in the drying room. REPUBLICANS DEMOCRATS REPUBLICAN WIN in the Rhode Island gubernatorial election makes these leaders of the Brown Young Republicans smile. Many Brown stu- dents were present at Republican headquarters when DelSesto's victory became a reality. Above smiles belong to Dan Cromack, Pete Hood, and John Wilson president. DEMOCRATIC WIN of Senate con- trol brings thoughts of the 1960 Pres- idential election to the minds of these Young Democrats: Dave Margolis, Sue Livermore, Gene Nojek, and Lew Krieger president. Besides partici- pation in election publicity, the Brown Democrats sponsored the New England Conference of Democratic Clubs. FOOD TIME is laugh time for Bruce Rogers and friend above at Wana- lancet after New Hampshire woods hike. NIGHT TIME is studyfor-finals time for Pete Reller, and study-for-climb- ing time for Bobbie Nurhaus and Tom Hughes. Pete and Bobbie be- low pause for a short break during the Outing Club tramp through the woods. N1 ONILNO e SIXTY-FIVE YEARS ago. Manning Hall became too crowded to hold Bro'svn's compulsory chapel exercises and they were moved to Sayles Hall. On March 8th, President Barnaby C. Keeney and Chancellor Harold B. Tanner '09 led a procession out of a com- pletely redecorated fat a cost of $49,000 Upper Manning Hall which meant it had been rededicated - as a place for free and voluntary worship. Final action to eliminate compulsory weekly chapel in Sayles Hall is expected to be passed by the Corporation in June. Charles A. Baldwin, Chaplain of the University left since September, has been known to favor the abolishment of compulsory chapel - and has planned a complete program of voluntary religious services to find a greater degree of fulfillment of our religious commitments than has been heretofore possible at Brown. NMOoOydda 1Y NOoOIDIT3N CLUB ' o o WR CLOSE TIES between Brown's Episcopalian popula- tion and St. Stephen's are maintained by the Canterbury Club. Under the direction of Canon Crocker at right in Z picture above, replacing Can- on Wylie the architect and builder of the Club who last year took a national post, U a very active year vas planned, highlighted by the visit of Father Michael right. The Club held Sunday serv- ices at the church, and formed an excellent choir and several study groups. NEWMAN CLUB GATHERING around the refresh- ments at a Newman Club function right are a few thoughtful mem- bers. Above are the officers: Beth Fahey, Roberta Eiriksson, Ray Sul- livan president, Richard Laudati, and Irving Guyett. Among the pro- grams presented during the year was an especially popular discus- sion on Presidential-hopeful Ken- nedy's Catholicism and its likely effect on his aspirations toward the White House. SINGING is one of the many Hillel activi- ties; the Sunday brunches brought many out- standing speakers: Dean Watts '47 on What are parents for? ; Dean Lewis Pembroke on Pembroke Looks at Brown ; Prof. Tomas on Religion and Contemporary Philosophy ; Prof. Frank Greene R.I.C.E. on contribu- ting factors in bigotry; and Prof. Crary on religious introspection. A parents' brunch va.s also held. 13TTIH INTENSE study of the Bible and Biblical sources and interpretations is the purpose of the Intervarsity Christian Fellowship. On-target Bible studies example: Dr. Graham Loveluck, on Revelations 3 were held, open to the public. Officers pictured above are Nancy Olsen, Pete Esser, Pamela White- Atevens, Bob Estes, and Barbara Conkline. WIDE RANGE of activity Avas planned for the year by the University Christian Association. Samuel Newcomer, executive secretary of the group, picture above left helped the members set up an exciting lecture series example: Dr. Julian Hartt, chairman of Yale's department of religion, on tensions between science and religious faith and a special series entitled The Image of Man in the American Culture, the fiist speaker of which was Dr. Hyatt Waggoner, professor of American literature. Professor Wag- goner spoke on the images of man created by Eliot, Hemmingway and Faulkner. In addition, the U.C.A. sponsored MISSION '59, a series of five lectures by Dr. Samuel H. Miller, professor of pastoral theology at the Harvard Divinity School. Presented the week of March 15th in Manning Chapel, the main theme of the talks was Why Are We? Other activities of the U.C.A. included the publishing of BEAR FACTS, and the operation of the blood bank. Officers which took over in March included Richard Tucker president, James Langmead, and William Wood. GIVING to the less fortunate and to other worth- while charities, and accomplishing this through the HI stimulation of a campus-wide desire to give gen- erously - these were the goals of the leaders of the Lg Charities Drive: Mel Lavitt chairman, Jim Dery, Karl Tunberg, and George McCully. $4724.38 was collected, the largest amount in the history of the BROWN CHAX GIVING to the less fortunate of their time - at- tempting to bring happiness to underprivileged children in the Providence area, the members of the Brown Youth Guidance are provided with a fascinating experience in human relations. The quintet of BYG members above await the appear- ance of their famed VW Micro-bus to take them to scenes such as the ones shown beloiv - thanks enousfh for the time involved! SPORT is excitement. It is blurs, motion, power, strength, and skill. It is a stadium, packed with spectators - rising as one with a roar. It is nine men, gently stroking through the water, no one watching but themselves. It is the sound of soft strides on a lonely path, each one measured against another's. Or the splat of a tennis ball. Mostly, sport is sweat. Sweat and testing. A calculated competitive fierceness. It ismen - and these men have two masters: them- selves and Brown. SINN3IL Inav.i RIVER CITY, R.I.; Down in the smoke-filled west wing basement of Faunce House, where the sun never shines, there are two florescent-1lit rooms. One ascetically-decorated room is equipped with table tennis tables; people play pingpong there. The other is more spacious and more sumptuously appointed, but the air is heavy with chalk dust; serious of face and cunningly calculating of pose, its inhabitants go about their work. Billiards is their life - indeed, it is their reason for being. Over in the corner, some play pool. CHESS CLUB MEETING all comers in a November display of checkersScchess prowess ivas Tom Wiswell, defending world checker champion, shown above look- ing over his game with Barton Lilly, a freshman from Denver, during one of his many rapid circuits of the boards in Faunce House. Wiswell took on 13 checkers players Stephen Hass '6l held him to a draw in addition to 11 chess competitors. Throughout the year, the Chess Club held regular meetings to determine Brown's representatives in the newly-formed Ivy League Chess League, where Brown's highpoints were victories over Col- umbia and Dartmouth. Stu Hastings and Dennis Osmond were president and number-one man, respectively. BRIDGE CLUB MEETING each week for the regular Bridge Club tournament were pasteboard devotees from both Brown and Pembroke. Buff Lovell below studies his hand dur- ing one of these competitions. Other vin- ners throughout the year included Roger Cole, Al Parr, John Maryak, Dave Milne, Bert Raphael, John Head, Dick Wegman, Mike Gershman, and Wally Gordon. Win- ners of the Club's first full master point tournament were Steve Feinberg, Dave Victor, Katie Mumper, Cole, Gershman, Bob Aronheim, Paar, and Siddy Smith. BROVfN KEY BUTCH BRUNO XX, under the direction of Key members Hugh Carmichael and Stan Perl, completely destoyed an umbrella on his way to Princeton and nearly did the same to an elderly spectator during the Thanksgiving Day encounter with Colgate. The famous quadruped's deportment was generally of a more amiable nature, however, and his Brown Key- pers' unselfish devotion and care are certainly to be commended. While Bruno Co. was serving as emis- sary of a particular brand of good will toward oppos- ing football forces, other Key members busily worked at the pleasant task of greeting the University's vis- itors, both athletic and non. PRESIDENT Mark Joseph extended the Key's ac- tivities to include an important new function for the future Brown. Over vacations. Key members worked with alumni groups coast-to-coast, contacting especially promising applicants and prospective fresh- men candidates. Many localities, of course, are not represented in the present membership of the Key; these were taken care of by undergraduates selected by the society and assigned to work with the alumni. After eight seasons as head coach of the Bruin football squad, Alva E. Kelley, left Brown to tangle with a similar post at Colgate. In a popular and unanimous move, the Athletic Advisory Council quickly chose Kelley's suc- cessor: Amherst head coach John J. Mc- Laughry '40, son of Tuss McLaughry coach at Brown for 15 seasons and mentor of the famed Iron Men team of 1926. Per- sonable Coach McLaughry brings with him an impressive list of qualifications besides that of a solid Brown tradition. In twelve years of coaching nine at Amherst, three at Union, he's compiled an outstanding 61-29-5 record. He was an All-Fast performer as quarterback for Brown. BROVAfN'S 16TH COACH OF FOOTBALL ONITLSIUM 102 SURPRISING reigning New England Champions Springfield, 14-12, the Bruins opened the season with an auspicious victory. It was rare that the talented Bruins' thinness-in-ranks didn't show after that, though, and, as the season progressed, many men were forced to wrestle in unfamiliar weight classes. This inconvenience forced the Bears to accept a 14-14 tie with Princeton and, compounded by an unfortunate stalling penalty, to drop a close one to Columbia, 15-16. In addition to the win over Spring- field, the Brown squad notched victories over Penn, 20-5, Harvard, 22-6, and the University of Con- necticut, 33-2. The team also lost to Cornell, 20-8, and Yale, 15-9. Brown had two standout wrestlers in George Seaver and Capt. Lou Winner. Together, they compiled a 13-1 record and a total of 49 points out of a possible 52. Winner shown in large picture with body-press on Columbia opponent was undefeated in the regular season 6-0-0, but dropped a match 6-5, on riding time to the number one-seeded man in the Eastern Inter-Collegiate Championships where the team did poorly due to poor seedings and injuries. Seaver, a crowd pleaser, fat top of page, with double arm-bar in Columbia win notched a 7-1-0 record. The third best record was compiled by junior Art Giorgini at heavyweight: 5-3. The rest of Coach Anderton's team was composed of Dick Siebel, Ralph Lincoln, Bob Perrine, Gene Bouley, John Moyle, Terry Case, Walt McNamara, and Gene Roberts. Case and Moyle each posting records of 2-4, both juniors, never wrestled before coming to Brown. Moyle is shown above right giving Columbia opponent a Navy Ride; referee signals for points for escape and advantage. LLL BRUINS entered one team in each of the three divisions of the Providence Squash League, finishing 2d, 3d, and 4th. Officers of the Brown squash team were Ted Simmons, president, and J. Jefferson Flood, treasurer. Simmons was sent by the University to the Eastern Inter- collegiate championships at Princeton, where he progressed to the quarter-finals. Other out- standing players were Rule Bullock and Toby Callaway. Callaway is shown in pictures below and above. SQUASH OPENING ITS SEASON with a spring vacation tour Avhich included matches with George Washing- ton, Georgetown, Johns Hopkins, Navy, and Penn, the Brown tennis team looked toward an outstanding year. Coach Art Palmer called the squad as good as any he had coached in his ten years with the team. Ted Simmons, ineligible last year, will be Palmer's number-one singles man. Simmons, a St. Louis prod- uct who came to Brown via Deerfield, will be backed up by another junior, Doug Crock well, from Glens Falls, New York and Taft School. Crockwell com- piled a 53 record as a sophomore. -Other key netmen included senior Rule Bullock Captain, junior Bill Sprinkel 7-2 record last year, and Paul Putzel. TENNIS 105 o b el oL SR U T LAST SUMMER, the Brown Yacht Club, under the direction of Charlie Trammell, Commuclore, and Bud Webster, Team Captain, sent a team of four men to the National Sailing Championships in Newport Harbor, Cal- ifornia, where Brown finished fifth in the country. It was the first time a University team had competed on the West Coast since Brown played in the Rose Bowl. Charlie Shumway was elected president of the Inter- collegiate Yacht Racing Association of North America. Back on more familiar waters the club won the Schell Trophy, symbolic of the New England fall championship and placed second in a field of fourteen teams from all over the country in the Navy Fall Invitational War Memorial Trophy. Journeying to Chicago to defend the Angsten Trophy Midwestern championship which Brown has held for four years, the club wasn't able to score better than third place in the team standings. Shumway, in the capacity of presi- dent of the I.C.Y.R.A. of N.A., was in charge of selecting the site for the National Championships. As might be expected, he chose Brown and designated Brown's fleet of Beverly Dinghies as the official boat. The members of the ,club got a real chance to prove their versatility this year; the boats raced ranged in size from their own fOv2-foot dinghies to the 44-foot yawls used in the Millar Regatta at Annapolis. A heavy load for the club's future success rests on the shoulders of Commodore and Team Captain-elect Ted Turner as a brilliant team of seniors graduates including some of the best yachtsmen in Brown history: Noyles, Webster, Quinn and Day. LAST WINTER, the Brown Ski Club brought snowy slope- lovers the usual combination of fun, relaxation, and thrills. The club sponsored the Brovn Ski Team which placed third, second, and first in its first three meets. At right, Roy Chapin twists do sTi a course in competition with top ski enthusiasts from the East. The team, co-captained by Rufus Bullock and Corby Day, opened its season with an in- vitational meet at Cranraore. 7 2 .q n D S RIFLE CLUB GOLF TEAM CHECKING the lie of a ball on the edge of a green 1s Gerry Cantini, captain of the Golf Team. Despite a lack of spring practice, poor weather, and depth problems, the squad took the Rhode Island state championship. Pros- pects for the spring season were good with the return of top performers Cantini, Blethen, Scott, and Searle. Bailey Blethen, top per- former in many meets in his native Minne- sota, transferred to Brown from Stanford - to which he had transferred from Brown with year-around golf in mind as a sophomore. CHECKING a target, the Rifle Team evaluates a practice session on the range in Lyman Hall. Pictured are Robert Kuhn with target, Jim Spector, Don Kuhn, and Frank Puffer wearing heavily-adorned jacket. Captained by Bob Bregy, the team made a trip to Princeton and played a postal match with Dartmouth. Most of the team's efforts were concentrated on the building of a strong freshman representa- tion, however, for the squad was hard hit by graduation losses. CHECKING in with an unrevealing dual meet record of 3-3, the harriers made the best Ivy League showing in Brown's history and finished ahead of every League member ex- cept Yale in the I.C.A.A.A.A. meet. The team blasted Tufts 15-50 and blanked Dartmouth which failed to place a man in the first eight. Bob Lowe and Captain Vince Mac- Donald, the mainstays, finished one-t vo in a meet with P.C. - and Lowe finished second from a field of over a hundred runners in the New Englands. Next year, the whole squad is returning - a really good season is in sight. Freshman Ken Martin below takes the lead in a cub dual meet. AHLNNOD-SSOD TRACK LEADING portion of the team was the two-mile relay squad, comprised of Cal Keyler below, Vince MacDonald, Bill MacArdle above, Gerry Huetz, and Phil Schuyler - winners of the Boston Athletic Association match, in 7:49.9, for a Brown record. FOLLOWING the field, awaiting his time to move, is Brown great Ed Sullivan above. First individual IC4A champion from Brown since 1950 was sophomore Angelo Sinisi, who tied the 60 yard high hurdle record in Madison Square Garden with a 7.2 clocking. An- other record-tying effort 7.4 proved sufficient to win in the 12th annual Heptagonal games, and a 7.3 time took top honors in the dual meet against Yale. The team blasted Columbia 67172 to 32172. B-C 64 to 21, and Tufts 85 to 27, but was edged by Dartmouth, 54-55. 0 N E W England Junior Championship record for the 100 yard backstroke was shattered by Bob Taggart December 10th - and Prentiss De Jesus chopped 28 seconds of the 400 yard individual medley record. Ed Nicholson captured the New England 100 yard freestyle crown at M.I.T. in March and tied for the 50 yard title as Brown finished second in team competition. Nicholson gained All American recognition last year fas a sophomore . OLD record for the pool fell when Bob Taggartslg .2 seconds off the 100 yard backstroke mark during the New Englands at M.I.T. Other Bruin points were made by Bob Friedlander in the 440 yard freestyle, the freestyle relay team Nicholson, Captain Dick Claiborn, Jack Halliday, and Ned Sampson, the medley relay team Taggart, Bill Zani, Penn Brown, Jack Halliday, and Charlie Sieburth in diving. BASKETBALL 115 ASSISTED by Al Diussa 3, who blocks out a Dartmouth player, junior forward Dave Reed hauls down a re- bound. Reed was the hero of Brown's successful late-season weekend victories over Columbia and Cornell, pitching in 24 and 29 points, respectively. One of the finest clutch performances I've had at Brown, Ccocach Stan Ward called it. Reed's efforts, which included 13 of 14 free throws against the Big Red in a 66-63 overtime victory, led to his being named to the All-East team of the week. Reed poured in 93 points in his last four Bruin starts of the season. Other high- points for the cagers included a pair of wins over Harvard, one in overtime, and victories over Tufts, Trinity, Colgate, Penn, and Northeastein. The Bears also beat Providence College, 72-64, a team ivhich went on to take high post-season tournament honors. SOPHOMORE Chris Mitchell below waits for a possible rebound. Ward's squad, composed largely of sophomores and juniors, posted a 11-13 overall record - and a 67 mark in Ivy play, good enough for fourth place. The Bears, never- theless, reached a ne v high for total victories and Ivy finish during Ward's five year tenure as head coach. Senior Al Poulsen, the Bruin's 6'8 center, captained the team and dumped in over 300 points running his career total to 709, tying Fred Kozak for seventh place in the all-time Brown records in addition to carrying a heavy load of the rebound duties. JUNIOR Cliff Ehrlich left led the Bruins in scoring with 333 points and was named to the All-Kfy second team. Jack Bellavance, shown moving arcuncl a Dartmouth defender above, contributed over 150 points during the year, placing 4th in the Bruin scoring race - after Ehrlich, CIapt. Poulsen, and Reed. HOCKEY OFFENSE breaks up a threat in the Yale game. Brown's personnel prob- lems were great - only two lines and three defensemen were available after academics and injuries took their toll. Despite this, the sextet registered three impressive victories over Prince- ton. OFFENSE by Dick Cleary is foiled by goalie above, but the Buffalo line pumped in seven of eight goals four in the first period against Princeton and four in the last against Harvard in two consecutive games. The line accounted for four tallies against the Big m m Red of Cornell in a 82 win. I o m0 BATTLING deep in Army territory sends West Point goalie to ice. Below, Coach James Fullerton makes a point during session in dressingroom. Coach brought the undermanned squad through some fine perform- ances, including upset sweep of P.C. first since 1955- 56 for R.I. title. BATTEL below tapes his hockey stick in pregame dressingroom action. Bob was third highest scorer on team, following Capt. Wyn Eaton and Dave Laub another junior. Wyn, a spectacular performer, scored in nine straight games plus a hattrick against Harvard and in 12 of 13 in-a-row. Encouraging for future teams vas consistent show of soph goalie Rod McGarry left, who turned away 37 of 38 shots by P.C. in one contest. McGarry was backed up by Al Godreau and Bert Creese, both firstclass netmen who were deprived of regular action by McGarry's fine work. Il11 LACROSSESTER Terry McEnany takes on two Connecticut Valley Lacrosse Clubsters to provide an yl example of the powerful offensive play which high- lighted Brown's solid victory over the adversary from B the South. Led by Co-Captains Mike Carney and j Bob Pyper, the Brown Lacrosse Club compiled a 3-5 gK record over the season against the strongest competi- Q1 tion in New England. Particularly memorable were Ot h e strong wins over Adelphi and Connecticut Valley and a heartbreaking overtime loss to Trinity. The D 1958 squad was one of the strongest in the Club's J history, but never really showed its full potential clue to the lack of a full time coach. Still, the team was a young squad - only three regulars were sen- iors - and high hopes are held for the future. A full realization of the talents of the Lacrossemen of Brown can hardly be expected to be made, however, until the University contributes its official backing. Meanwhile, the status of Brown's entry in the La- crosse world will be limited to that of a club - albeit one steadil ining in stature and value to 123 STATE CHAMPIONS, despite a poor overall show- ing, the 1958 edition of the Bruin baseball squad gained in experience what it gave up in victories. Losing only one player by graduation, Pitcher-Capt. Nelson, and gaining several strong Freshman pros- pects gives Captain-elect Frank Finney a measure of optimism for the 1959 campaign. Below, Nick Pannes, a smooth-fielding first-baseman, makes a put- out. Strong infielding was one of the factors that kept the weak-hitting Bruins alive. Hard-luck pitcher Nelson worked 49 innings including 4 complete games one, against Dartmouth, a twelve-inning tilt, closing out his career with a shutout against Providence College. An earlier P.C. game went 8 273 innings before Skip Campbell, then Bruin first- baseman, delivered a single to save Brown from suffering a no-hit defeat. The fiasco of the season was a trip to Philadelphia for a game with Penn ivhich was eventually rained out. Statistically, the Brown team didn't fare too poorly. They matched their opponents in double plays 9 each, and home- runs, drew 11 more bases on balls, and left 12 fewer men on base. S OSW v B K SECOND-SACKER Bob Carlin, generally a long, pull hitter, lines one back at the pitcher. Carlin, a junior, is a fast, clean fielder. The Bruins could have used a little more error-free ball last year, having lost more than once by unearned runs. Regular pitching turns will probably be taken, this spring, by Jasins and Manson, with McNeish doing lots of relief duty and Perkins doing spot duty whenever he's needed. Actually, it will probably turn out that all four men will work whenever they're needed, vhether it be a starting assignment or relief work. Jasins has a particularly effective curve ball. Manson, another curve pitcher, struck out 28 opponents during the season, walking only 14. All was not well, however, for the Bruins lost 3 consecutive extra-inning games two of them last spring veekend, to Navy, Princeton and Dartmouth. Judkins led the batters with a .294; followed by Carlin, .256; Reed, .242; and Campbell, .200. 124 STROKE! The number 8 man in the shell sets the pace, is supposed to have the best sense of timing in the boat. Below: Carrying shell from boathouse at Brown is tricky, requires angling 60 ft. of boat out of small opening, down a steep gangplank and onto a half-sub- merged fleat at low tide. CEUZA-7imEif g 127 A GLIDING SENSATION is created by the steady rhythm of the 8 ocars as they push the shell and its crew over a smooth Seekonk. Below: Bow man did not drop his blade into the water at precisely the right angle or moment causing him to catch a crab . The speed of the boat dragged the oar into his chest and over his head. The shell moves so swiftly that the delicate balance can be upset by the slightest counter-motion - often costing a team the race. Crew requires a vast quantity of practice since it involves, more than any other sport, a kind of precision teamvork ivhich provides for no heroes - and allows for no failures. It is The Shell and no more. The men are part of the shell; they row for themselves and for each other. Attesting to this is the fact that Crev at Broivn is, officially, still a club. The University has not yet seen fit to recognize it and lend its long hoped-for support. Each man in the shell pulls his own weight - in more ways than one. FIRST player out at practice above aim- lessly dribbles the ball across the field. Ham- pered by loss of first-team lettermen, squad nonetheless showed moments of brilliance. A season-opening upset over Wesleyan and a 5-1 surprise victory over M.I.T. were high- points. Team Avas barely edged by Yale, 3-2. Bruin captain was Dick Ramsden, a hard competitor at center halfback. 7 E SOCCER THIRD game of the season. Homecoming match against Dartmouth, brought action in picture below. Coach Joe Kennaway's team dropped the contest, 3-0. A lot of help is coming up through the ranks, though. Soph John Master beat out All-Ivy mention '58 senior goalie Ginsberg for the position, stopped two penalty kicks in Weslayan game to save victory for the Bears. The freshman team scored many impressive wins, never iiad more than one goal scored on them, let only five by in eight games, and tied unbeaten and unscored-upon in six games U-Conn, 1-1. CHEERLEADERS RACCOONED against the wiles of New England football afternoons only lost one coat, swiped from under the nose of a Pinkertonian, the cheerleaders, headed by earnest Lew Krieger, swept through another outstanding season, losing only to Yale one megaphone. Krieger leans on his megaphone at far left, appreciatively watching the action on Baker Field as Brown downed Columbia's Lions, 22-0 in the season's opener. Kevin Hill, son of Robert Hill, Head of Student Residences, served as mas- cot for the second year in a row. He is shown ridings on the shoulders of Dave Schaeffer above. Dave gives a cheer left for Pembroke open houses during freshman week. ing customers, members of the Broivn Band have to struggle to maintain possession of their skimmers - prized highly by football souvenir-hunters from rival schools. Even so, they run through an average of two skimmers each during the season - and are lucky at that. The Band right spoofs the massed squads of calisthenicking football players before the Dartmouth game by doing a iew nip-ups of their own. The Band had plenty to be proud of this year, pleasing the crowd, especially, ivith new arrangements for old songs made by ambitious Al Curran, shoivn above ivith trombone. TREMENDOUS BURST of eniliu.M.ism is registered by the crowd as the Bruins rack up more points toward a 35-29 victory over Yale. The win, Brovn's second straight over the Eli, was described in nes's- paper accounts as the wildest game on Brovn Field in a coon's age ... a spectacular offensive show. Brown fans saw their team roll up 335 yards on the ground, almost twice that of the Yalies, still having to come from behind on three separate occasions to pull out the victory. MORE STAID reaction came from Pembroker's dads as they were provided with a victory over UR I at the College's Father-Daughter weekend. Below: Over the wall after the game is becoming a tradition in the mass exit from the stadium - and Steve Ober- beck courteously lets Brenda go first. Madcap Ira Schneider has taken the job of publicizing Music Night onto himself above Ileft during Cornell halftime. A FEMALE ADMIRER pays her respects to Butch Bruno XX at oontest at Cambridge. Brown Key's Hugh Carmichael restrains the animal, twice its opening-game weight. RUN to rejoin band comes after tussle over skimmer with sticky-fing- ered Pennsters. W i m '. o o L .Srigin- um AAA g A7 TRAUB HAS BALL, one of fiwe he gathered in from Pannes and Finney in the 22-0 whitevashing of Columbia which opened play for the 1958 campaign. Traub's romps accounted for about me- third of the total Brown offense in that game. Having just missed an endzone pass in the season's opener. Jack Cronin, a steady performer and terrific competitor, dejectedly pauses before getting up. BT SN B T AR FINNEY HAS RECORDS for season and career passes completed and yards gained. He is the highest scoring player ever to play for Brown. His best day came in a losing effort against Princeton when he completed 15 of 22 passes for 192 yards, then added 16 more of his own on the ground. Fifteen completions, too, is a Uni- versity record. He opened up his senior year by sharing the quarterback slct with Nick Pannes. RIDING DOWN Paul Bc om Boom Choquette is no easy task - as a Dart- mouth ivould-be tackier finds out above . Carrying his 200 pounds A'ith tremendous speed and power, Choquette's play this year was spec- tacular; he was counted on for short L hauls through the line for first downs ' ' as well as for defense-tiring long-yard- age end-s veeps. His greatest perform- ance 1vas 16 carries for 116 vyards record one game total by Brovn back since formal Ivy league formed against Yale. BREAKING INTO THE OPEN, Choquette slips past a trio of Quakers in the Penn game. Paul, a junior All- Ivy fullback from Nelv York, blasted his way into the record book in several places, the most notable being his resetting of the Brown individual rushing record season to over 600 yards. As a freshman, Paul smashed the Brown record for the indoor shot- put - a record his uncle had held for 23 years. Choguette is shown at right ivith Al Kelley, now head coach at Colgate. b, 3 CRASHING through the Rhode Island line into paydirt, Ray Berry, a fine sophomore back, carries the ball for six points - one of tivo such trips for him that day. The Rhode Island game helped Ray fatten his statistical edge on other leading soph candi- dates considerably. Besides the 12 points, he carved out 70 yards on only four carries - an impressive 17 yards a try! SHIFTING along with a blocker and a lone Penn defender bet veen him and a score, end Jack Cronin tries to make the most of a fine opportunity in the one-point loss. Good defensive play on the part of Penn's number 17 sloved Cronin down enough to allov number 20 to catch up and end the threat. Cronin pulled do'svn tivo aerials that day, good for 56 yards. Belov, Barry is cut down at Princeton. BILL TRAUB, one of the most talented Bruin ends in history, would most certainly own a number of records all his own he tied the one-game record for passes caught by plucking 7 Finney aerials from the air at Cambridge if it weren't for injuries. Bill's availability was spotty, but his performances were always superb. Despite missing a couple of games in their entirety, and parts of several others, Traub's sticky fingers reached out for nearly enough passes to break the single season record of 24 set in 1954 - and certainly enough to make him a recipient of several post-season honors. THE CROWD ROARED as a Finney pass arched high against the gray No sember sky. The score 'ias 8-6 in fal'or of Cornell and the Bruins were ewell intoc Big Red territory. Charlie Olobri, a fine junior end stood on the goal line, Avaiting. All-Ivy con- tender Skypeck was nearby, his arms outstretched, defending against the pass. Both moVed tolN'ard the ball and caught it together, ivrestling to the ground. The referee moVed in and judged Olobri to hale made the catch, gil'ing Bro s'n a 12-8 edge it neler gave up to the prel'iocusly undefeated team fi-om Ithaca. The game had been touted as a quarterback duel for All-INy honors bet veen Finney and Skypeck, and Brovn's entry, fresh from one of the best days of his career the week before in a losing battle against Princeton, proved equal to the occasion. Offensively, the Bruins ran up 406 yards, holding their opponents' total to 160, and Skypeck to 11 in the alr. Finney had another fine day - and this time Brown did, too. FRANK FINNEY, a polio victim at fourteen and holder of 14 Brown football records at twenty-one, quarterbacked the Bruins to three consecutive winning seasons. He started every one of the 27 games in his varsity career. He scored 52 league points in his senior year, com- pletely dominating Ivy League offensive statis- tics. He accounted for Brown's last 13 touch- downs of the season, passing for six of them and running for seven, himself. His most devestating offensive play above was the famous Finney Roll-out, a pass-run option. SMILING THEIR APPROVAL of Jack Lewis' display of cheerleader cunning are Phil Tene- baum and Allan Deutsch. Jack has just returned to the halftime-empty bench with a piece of headgear belonging to a U.R.I, majorette. Each year, the cheerleaders take positions as close as possible for close scrutiny of the damsels from Kingston. This year, the cheerleaders were in exceptionally good spirits, taking a breather from watching the Bruins roll up the highest score in Coach Alva E. Kelley's eight year tenure on the Hill 47-6. THE ONLY BLOCKED PUNT of the season is executed by end Charlie Olobri in the Pennsylvania game. The strength of the Brown foreward wall was quite instrumental in making this a winning season for the Brown forces. John Glasheen below and Tom Budrewicz filled the tackle slots far beyond the pre-season hopes of Coach Kelley. Gang tackling left, a sure indication of heads-up teamwork in a strong line, was often evident. Brown's ranking as the nations' second-best pass defense was due, to a large extent, to aggressive lineplay. Harvard was held to -1 yard in the air, Cornell with Skypeck to 11. Columbia and Dartmouth made 16 and 17, respec- tilely. 148 FORCED TO PUNT, Crimson player gets off kick despite aerial attack of Bruins. The 29-22 vic tory over the lads from Cam- bridge made it five years in a rov that Harvard has been un- able to beat Brown, the longest strina; of its kind in the Harvard- Brovn record books. Jack Cronin 82, at left breaks up Penn in- terception attempt. Cronin, a fleet end, was the number-two passcatcher for the Bruins. Big Number 55 in the background is Capt. Don Warburton, twice All-Tvy center. Below, big 240 pound junior tackle kicked his WNay into the record books with the third longest punt in Brown history. Loaded dovn the mid- dle. Bruins Warburton, Finney and Choquette all received AU- LV honors - as did Budrewicz. GLANCE over F.H.B.G. panel discussion plans is sufficient for William A. Surprenant '37, Director of Faunce House. Bob Cole, Bob Stein, and Joe Carr are the Board of Governors members sitting down to official business above. The F.H.B.G. is the only organization financially capable of backing a great number of panel discussions, lectures, and dances. Primarily interested in backing cultural activities of relatively specialized appeal, the group sponsored a great diversity of events this year including chamber music, creative workshops, and stereo recording concerts. TRANCE envelops Sam Fisk above left, dancing at F.H.B.G. - sponsored Christmas party. Grimac- ing, and sitting one out, are Lew Krieger with Selma and Joel Cassel with Ginny above right. In picture below. Bill Staples and Pembroke F.H.B.G. member confer with Phineas Newborn before Board of Governors-run jazzconcert. A favorite twice-a-year service performed by the group is free cartoons-after-exams open to the campus during final periods. F. H. B. G. 151 HOMECOMING DANCE on Friday night of Homecoming brought many misty-eyed couples. Formal was held in Sayles Hall withmusic provided by Harry Marshard and his band. Weekend began with annual HERALD -WBRU encounter in the Greeze Bo vl - where absurd irresistible force meets ridiculous immovable ob- Ject. Later in the afternoon, late-minute papier-mache patchings, retouchings, and mechanical failures herald the fraternity and dormitory poster-judgings. At the dance, the queen, selected from the women present, vas serenaded by the Glee Club's rendition of Brown Medley. Saturday afternoon's halftime ceremonies included the BroAvn Key's presentation of the queen and four members of her court in five sportscars supplied by a local foreign car dealer. JAZZ is one of the ingredients of Spring Weekend. Others include: The Favorite Girl many come great distances to join in the rev- elry, generous cquantities of fluid frivolity, and a general lessening of the narrow-lapelled brand of reserve which usually pervades the Brown campus. A Friday afternoon jazzconcert at Delta Phi competes with a number of athletic events for the privilege of opening the merrymaking. The finals of the fraternity singing competition on the steps of Sayles Hall by now, everyone has bought Spring Week- end skimmers are folloved by the big formal in Sharpe Refectory. The campus starts to swing Satur- day morning when the jazzconcert on the lawn between DKE and Phi Gam opens fire. Around noon, the exodus to the banks of the Seekonk begins, and 5,000 fun-bent pos- sibly warped would be better Brownmen their dates jockey for the choice riverside positions from which to watch the crew races. Afterward, the great multitude moves to the Wriston Quad for futher jollification. The jazz con- cert begins, and the courtyard is packed left. Partying goes on through the night. Monday finds the BG men busily picking up the remains 0:11':53 PEMBROKE COLLEGE is located, within walking distance, directly to the north of Brown University. Some Brownmen never discover this fact. Those who do soon fall into a pattern: nursing coffee in Toy Sun's Andrews Terracing, meeting just for a minute in the Blue Room. There is the nightly walk home along Brown Street. Some people even take out girls from King House! There is the well-kibitzed cardgame in Met- calf picture at right. There is The Gate, JA 1-2156, and The Pin. Some take out girls from R.I.S.D.; others try Jugbabies. Still, there is the fact: 60 5 of Pembrokers end up marrying Brownmen. L z W uZ EG z: I ilR DJ GWEEKEND : the number-one girl is essential. The Biltmore is booked up mont in advance. Girls fly in from all over g c try - some, even, from outside the country. Wherever Brovnmen are from. As any big veekend, delegations arrive from it. Holyoke, Wellesley, faravay Bryn Ma-ivr, farout Bennington, Conn. College, distress- ingly inconvenient Vassar, Smith, haughty Radcliffe, exotic Endicott, and -divell-infiltrated Wheaton VWWheatones, belotv, serenade Quad . I.D.c. INTROSPECTION during an Inter- Dormitory Council meeting brings question from Peter Hood at left in picture belov and answer from How- ard Crook. John IrVing, meamvhile, follows progress of the meeting. Crook was president of the group second semester, follo ving the reign of Nel- son Jones. RETROSPECTION finds year's I.D.C. in an almost constant state of dissension and stormy self-examination, allowing it little time tor the fulfillment of its ordinary duties. The central controversy concerned the question of vhat organization should represent the E y independent at Brown. One side, under the leadership of past-president Wayne Stork and AA AA AA A president Nelson Jones, Zfelt that the Inter-Dormitory Council was sufficient to handle the needs of all independents, both freshmen and upperclassmen; the other side, led by John Russo and John Lazzati and supported by the BDH, felt that a change was neces- Asary. They proposed an Inter-House Council, which would look after the interests of the upperclass independents - while the freshmen would be represented in a Freshman Council. Above: George Nebel, Howard Crook, John Irving, Mike Loughnane. GUFFAW from Santa philhoUman Claus brings laughs from entire populace at Archibald party for under- privileged children, including little Jay Agranovitch sitting on Santa's lap. Social highpoints: the Happy Hours prizes to the happiest people and the Western motif party Ira dressed as a West Martian. Archi- baldmen also racked up the second-highest dorm average, .003 behind Mead. Dr. M. Rintala was Resident Fellow. k. wtirAAAfAHSIBk Ny DRAW! Western part instict. After a night of dry gulchings and quick- draws, Cady retained his title of Fastest Gun in the West quad. Smoothie and Sweetie at right are Myrna Danenberg and Steve Harmon . Smoking .44 belongs to gunslinger Dave Birenbaum. Be- low, Jay a member of the foon-loving first floor gang and young lady take time out from dancing. ARCHIBALD PARTY people above are Mike Honer Cindy and Pete Pearson : Eloise. Sawdust-floored bohemian party brought in guitar-twangers and chianti-guzzlers below: Steve Isaacs Barbara, Chuck Sternberafh Linda, Carl Hirsch Gail, and Fred Foy Carol. Resident Fellow Blistein '42 provided eager chess opposition for members of the house. HARDY Jamesonmen took 2d places in foot- ball, basketball, and handball. Another as- pect of the house: it has the only dorm-spon- sored library in the West Quad. NOSaNVYr IN THE JUNGLE of Bronson's Lounge was held the Cuban Jungle Party. Rebels above included Bob Eckerman, Dick Bird, Marco Polo Stufano with bongos, and bandmember Roger Colter. Above right, Julio Capo', social chairman, dances up a storm - as does Don Rotfort right while Preston Hobart locks on. Beloiv: Rotfort and Lee the only sophomore en- gineer at Pembroke. Bronson got mention in the N. Y. HERALD-TRIB for cultural tradition. BRONSON - - IN THE CORNER at Bronson party. Bob Cannava finds himself surrounded by B.U. young ladies Elsie, Betty, and Alice. Bronson's size 97, second in West Quad made it a power in dormitory politics and allowed it to have many interesting programs, dinners, and colloquia. A special treat was a Christmas program held in Arnold Lounge where Prof. George spoke informally on English traditions, followed by carols led by Pembroke's Chattertocks. 3 EVERETT HOUSE WRINGLY CHAMP Joe Mayo finds himself surrounded middle of picture below at the Everett Warehouse Party. Surroundees are Wringly Champ Jack Dauer, Ann Miletta, Anita, and Ernie Von Simson. Party decorations consisted of trunks - moved into the lounge from the storage room - and a fe v additional odds and ends like a beatenup piano above, an occasional oil drum above, and a few cracks in the wall above. Also above are Ted Osmer and his date. Everett took squash, handball and basketball titles. WRINGLY CHAMP Ron Tschudy fat right in picture above sits around a candlelit table during Everett's Warehouse Party with Linda, Scott Nettrour, and Betty. Tschudy was president of the dorm, the largest at Brown with 114 students, and led it to camp- uswide fame with the WE BARK AT MIDNIGHT Party. Decora- tions for the W.B.A.M. affair included dozens of posters carrying quotes from the book of the same name - drawn under the super- vision of Wringly Champs Joe Mayo and John Oliver. WRINGLY CHAMP Ron Tschudy relaxes in a heavily-atmosphered Everett party with Frank Flanagan, Walt Gately, and Mary. A number of other noncurricular pursuits enlivened the lives of Everettman during the year. One of these, rocketry under the supervision of Resident Fellows Paul Hie and Robert Haythorn- twaite - the latter an associate professor of engineering, left the rooms and halls of Everett littered with Reynoldswrapped paper matches. Wringly is the game for human beings. 164 MEAD HOUSE SECOND ANNUAL Artists and Models Ball brought out the best and vorst in Meadmen. Among those attending were Fearless Frank Puffer, Dorothy vith Harry Rabinowitz, and Joan with Sid Cole. Meadmember John Brown glances over some printed trivia with Cindy at right. Below, the LIBER photographer has caught Meadophiles in characteristic poses: Swaggering Puffer, Business- like Ken Boyer and Mike Stein and ever-so-slightly-mad Bill Dyckes gather around Maggie. Note Bill's housekeeper, perched apprehensively on R.I.S.D. Maggie's shoulder. Mead is a varied house: it has the highest grade average of any dormitory on campus second highest of any living unit; it has an active program of dadaistic discussions, lectures, and dinners for which there are Committees; and it has The Cellar Club. That's plenty. POLAND HOUSE FIRSTANNUAL bar-building party in Poland House finds a number of would-be potable distribution-center designers gathered around chief architect Hank Singer. Below left, Poland members cluster around The Tube for Craig Stevens' weekly lesson. We e hours find pasteboard-oriented Polanders below right gaming eagerly while the bar-building committee fights over the fine points of bev- erage-dispension. SCANDALOUS cardplayers-and-hangers-on include Davidson, Gold- berg, Schleifstein, Murphy, Silver, and Stein. Poland activities were many-fold. There were dances, one of which featured the cool sounds of the Nunotes. There was a huge Christmas party for orphans and under-privileged children from Providence. DORMLIFE 3 HOPE that the pyramid ivon't topple doesn't seem to be a particularly great concern of the trio of West Quadmen pictured above. Furious snowball attack is unleashed below on freshman dorm Maxcy Hall by occupants of neighboring Littlefield Hall. Dorm rivalries are usually resolved on intramural fields. FAITH that there will be no misfortune in the next hand is strong in the mind of Maxcy Hallman Steinen belov. Safe above in the citidel of the overexhuberant independent, the Mead House bar, are Mike Stein, Larry Ackerman, Dave Breazeale, and Dave Hoiles - Meadmen all. Mead is no place for those fearing insanity - or inanity. CHARITY in the form of mutual assistance on a tough set of math problems is acceptable to this pair of low-altitude Everett House freshmen. Best sign of maturing independent system for Brovn which is over half non-fraternity is the developing of dis- tinct house persconalities in the new West Quad- rangle. SWIRL above is December Tower Club Formal. Couple at left is Elk Abramowitz and Janet; in center, Jon Dolger and pinee Maddy Barnard. Below, Bob Tunick and Al Deutsch do a Russian dance bit at a stag party following the annual fall outing at the Brown Reservation. Don Jacobs was president of the Club, a social organization. A Missis- sippi Riverboat party was a highlight of the year. TOV fER GIRL framed bottom of page is pledge plaque. Others in picture are Roger Widman, Bob Klein, and Joe Hay den. Girl at left in picture above is Pembroker Vail; others include Jon Dolger and Maddy. One of the biggest projects undertaken during the year was the presentation of Tom Lehrer to the campus in Alumnae Hall. Concert was a complete sellout and a roaring success. The Tower Club's cluarters are on the second floor of a building on Thayer Street - between Brown and Pembroke. TIONNOD ALINY3ALVAdE3LNI MEETING the Cammarian Club's sophomore rushing measure with powerful opposition wvas the main activity of the I.E.G., directed by T om Sullivan, John Cronin president, Dan Kiley, Al Walker, and Pickles Frederick. Secretary Sullivan is shown at left, sifting through I.F.C. documents and records. By soliciting the support of fraternity alumni, by polling un- dergraduate opinion concerning the issue, and by putting pressure on the University from many directions, the Council forced a compromise rushing plan - then suggested an alter- nate plan which was accepted. With rushing delayed un- til April, many adjustments in procedure became nec- essary. The I.F.C. made these changes quickly: free contact except during weekends between freshmen and fraternity men was greatly increased; the number of open houses was raised; and a rotation system was created whereby only six houses were open at a time. To encourage scholarship, the minimum grade average for freshmen to rush was raised to 2.0, and trophies were awarded to the house and individual showing the greatest scholastic improvement. The I.F.C.-spon- sored winter formal no freshmen or independents allowed was a financial success to the tune of several hundred dollars. The Fales trophy for outstanding community service won by Phi Delta Theta drew the houses' competitive spirit into particularly worthwhile channels. Intrahouse competition reached especially great heights in the traditional fraternity sing the finals of which were held on the Friday of Spring Weekend. c 3 3MOVIN I H G CARMICHAEL R WEBSTER 8 Alpha Delta 1hi ; - X e DR BROWN R E SCHIFFER 1 6 HALLIDAY J C vaRY 4 W BATES l R C CHILDS R a WIKDATT C A SIEBURTH E R MCLAUGHLIN S C MURCK l i s , ENJOYING a football afternoon cocktail party is Gig Shumway, at left in the picture belov. The Alpha Delts held a homecoming party at the University Club; the fact that the house had just won 3d place in the poster contest added to the festivity of the occasion. Other highpoints on the A.D. social calendar were ocean parties, boathouse parties, a clambake on a hotplate in the lounge, and an enthusiastic welcoming party in honor of the traveling secretary from the national. Informal sunrise services were held on several Sunday mornings. Initiation rites vere also held in the chapter room of Costa's. fc. EMPLOYING D. Binney Hall as bartender always meant a veil-kept and orderly crowd in the Pine Room. Here he ministers to Judy, Charlie Milmine, and Bruce Fur Anderson. Below left. Lew Covert, hopeful circumnavigator, leans into close camera-range. Walt Kernan has a talk with Vassarite Kay in picture, below right. Short-term members of the house ;vere Shakes, a goat, and nameless rooster. Amki. DESTROYING the normal serenity of the third floor of A.D. was the sudden appearay ug worth an estimated $600. Happily enough, it soon disappeared. Celebrating its departure are below Rod Meyer, Pembroker Ann, Bob Casey, and Michelle. The house grade average rose from 12th to 3d place - due in part to officers Andy Fine, Bailey Blethen presidents, George Hoot Wilson Polecat Linger, and Bruce Anderson vice presidents . J N FARRAR A E KRESKO PBeta Thela i j 5 B FLORA JR R. J HARRIS W M. SPRINKEL R G GREENLEE JR P S ZIMMERMAN l w I P woooHousE R J LANTON H R AUSTIN J G MC GALL I D L MORTON l DEALING up a storm in the Beta Library, the quintet below engages in a favorite Friday afternoon pastime. The house - composecl of 38 undergraduates - draws its party entertain- ment from far and wide. Although Providence nightclub talent has been the source of some of the fantastic shows, perhaps the most memorable examples come out of the past: the leopardskin sportjacketed rocksroll band, and the group led by a large lady bass player. Bottom of the page: Bruce Bates, Archie Frost, and Wellesley Smith. g x.,u,!iimz g' - LATE is better than never - or so thought the DKEs as they scheduled their Christmas party well into January, tree, S. Claus, ang 1 W U all. Bottom of page: Danny, Ski Holman, 2 Rick Teuscher, and Rill Kennedy. DKE alumnus opened up estate to tree and wreath AN cutters. LATE show draws large team. Rick Teuscher, Bill Kennedy, Dino Manos president, and George Posejpal are squad- members pictured at top of opposite page. Above: Manos, Bob Friedlander, and Spencer Silberstein., Taking in a little entertainment from the tube in picture at upper-right cor- ner of page are Teuscher, Roger Bosky, and Bill Glea- son. 4 POULSEN J W HOLMAN A P JONIKAS R L FRIEDLANDER J. J VALLONE J W CAONIN JA F N TEUSCHER J B- O'NEILL R M NuckoLs P CHOQUETTE G J POSEJPAL A C LAYMON I S M SILBERSTEIN R P TAGGART D L BABSON JR R F.LOWE JR DELTA TAU DELTA P LEER is deftly applied by Bill Littauer at otherwise pleasant Delt Christmas party. Friday afternoon of homecoming finds this octet below left lounging on the porch: Jack D'En- tremont, K. O'Reilly, Dave Walles, Cralg Carptenter, Joe Kelly, and Walt Brothers. Below right, Chattertock Judy Fall laughs over a Polaroid print with Kenny Crossland. Heavy party year included the annual Fantastic Jungle Party, a French party, and an Italian party complete with pizza - in addition to the Christmas formal. .f BEER and more appropriate . . potables help mellow partici- pants at the Delt Christmas party. Front rovmembers of the Chattertock's audience are Paul Krause, Jack McTigue and Paula, and Hugh Allen with pretty - but unidentified date. J M. WAKKILA J BRENNAN l U L MCTIGUE B ER PR BRIDGE built in the River Kwai tradition was D.U.'s 2d place winner in the homecoming poster contest. It was torn down by brothers in the same tradition. Bridge in the lounge, however, 1is a completely different thing. Sedate, reserved. Sideliners at a D.U. party above right are Pam Budrewicz LXA and Pembroke Linda Hoady Wetherald. Middle picture shows a pre-exam bullsession in Joe Crocker's room. Activity of this nature was not at all in vain, either, for D.U. successfully defended its second place position in the fra- ternity grade standings despite being the largest house on campus 61 mem- bers. The house also placed 2d in squash and 3d in football. Bottom picture shows Dick Beland and Fred Williamson exchanging a fe'v words with Sonia at a D.U. party. Clem Cracker was unable to attend. Jim Moody and Bob Bellows ivere pres idents of the house. DELTA PHI i 6 P.H OMSBEARG FRASER JR D CALOWELL D. SHAELD , s D H BESCHMERER H4C NAMARA w 0 SHAY JR 4.0 DE MERLIER J R LINNEY GOLDBECKER MORRISON l J G HEEHAFEn TELLING partytime stories left are Joe Linney captain of the tev team, R.I.S.D. Judy, Jack Kramer, Pembroke Linda pinned to Doug Smith, and Charlie Barton. Regular feature at almost all D. Phi social functions was the performance of Pieter a research assistant in chemistry from the Nether- lands van Heteren and Herman a visiting lecturer in Egyptology from Belgium De Meulenaere, shown putting on their show at right. Despite a full social season highlights: Greentinis for St. Patrick's Day and a special cocktail partydinner for the alumni, the house's scholastic improvement was phenomenal - it moved Delta Phi from 14th place to 5th in the fraternity standings. In addition, four brothers were on the wrestling team and every sport except basket- ball was represented in the house's membership. YELLING by bartender Bill Scott right brings together Marine Tom Reynolds not in the house, Al Caldwell, Ray Yost, Doug Smith, and Roger Mcjr- rison. Casual Fridaynight members of the bar team are above Al Caldwell, Phil Omsberg, Ray Yost, and Charlie Barton. Presiding is Brian Fee. High- lights of the year for Delta Phi included the Thanks- giving marriage by Chaplain C. Baldwin of Stark Biddle and Toyo Uyama Pembroke in the lounge. Champagne and caviar were available for those still in the house over the vacation. Another highlight was the Friday afternoon jazz concert during Spring Weekend. In addition, there was a full schedule of lawn sports: golf, football, and window-breaking. J A STEWART D S MOORE U 5. 0 MALLEY . C. BERKSON t W I STRAWBRIDGE JR. ; H W BATTLE S A OGDEN R ZETA PSI ii R A PHRANER JR MIDDENDORF 11f J.M HOWARD PRESIDENT John Howard second semester; first semester, it was Charles O0'Malley leads an early practice for the I.F.C. spring weekend fraternity sing competition. O'Malley and Henry Battle left en- gage in a post-cardgame bullsession. Below left, a quartet of Zetes check over their fraternity composite proofs. Below are pictured Bob Ziesmer and John Stewart. One of the most impressive projects under- taken during the year was the work of brothers Ed- ward Nielsen, Robert Lettieri, Stephen Duke, and Battle. The project, a large exhibitsale of artwork by Brown, Pembroke, and R.I.S.D. students, was un- dertaken by these four Zetes - and deftly managed into a very worthwhile and highly successful show. SECTION, as they called it, was set up in the West Lounge of Faunce House and offered lithographs and woodcuts priced from $3 to $12 and oil paint- ings ranging to $250. Weekends brought a large turnout of Zete cardplayers to the lounge. There, spring chills were ousted through careful application of medicinal compounds. With much success. DELTA CHI GAMETIME involves couple above while others drink and dance in the background. Favorite party in the Theta Delt house involves moving an abbreviated bar the keg collection upstairs to the livingroom, having all the action contained in one big fun-filled arena. GAGTIME involves Tom Turley, Ray Clark, and Bob Bogle above. TV trio small picture makes good use of the library while informal rushing operations take place out in the lounge. Over spring vacation, the Theta Delts had a doorvay blasted through the foot of concrete ivhich had for so long kept the bar separate from the gameroom. D HILLEGAS Delba Chi A G. MAGGIACOMO A J GIORGINI R A BOGLE J M. HaTCH - s i ,! D I LAGASSE F G vaNDYXE T E STECKBECK W M MACKENZIE UR CAMPEELL Y F GEREMIA L H HODGES MARS L 4 DEFTOS ; S B MARSHALL R I R 0. BROWN L X.WALLS C.F PICKHARDT JR D R COMBS BIG SESSION of song is enjoyed by the quintet of Kappa Sigs shown visiting nearby Pi Lam house below. Stan Marshall, his face betraying no fear, sits in a frightening corner of Frank Bonello's room in picture below left. Marshall took over the presidency of the house at midyear 1 86 elections. Former prexy was Bill Hodges. Many big weekends filled the Kappa Sig agenda. Among them were the shipwreck party, the Christmas formal, and Spring Weekend !. As always, the favorite turned out to be the annual minstral show weekend - a galloping recreation of vaudeville at Its very, very swingingest. In addition, the house moved up three places in fraternity academic standings. BIG SNICKER sweeps over the two partying couples shown above: Bob Perrine Pembroke Kathy and Mai Whittemore Pembroke Carolyn. It is very possible that the source of the joke was the combo playing for the party, because it was one of the more amusing sicghts of all time: elderly men with skimmers. Hotcha! BIG SURPRISE for Al Minter was sudden recognition of his birthday during a regular Saturday party - complete with cake candles below. Guitarplaying Kappa Sig Larry Brenner above provides a few folksy songs for Mai Whitte- more and Martha. - B s 7 VINDIS VddVWVM z ST i . W w LAMBDA CHI ALPHA HANGING ON in picture left is a Phi Delt; Lambda Chis Joe Laucius and John Bellavance also survey the homecoming-festive courtyard. Pembroker Barbara finds herself surrounded by Lambda Chis Gillin, Nivi- son, Euler, Carlin, Connors, Nelson, Swanger, and in lower right corner Forsythe. Parties were many and ranged from a rock roll party broadcast on WBRU , acalypso party, and party for underprivileged children to the Christmas formal. The Yankees of the intramurals, Lambda Chi captured a number of Uni- versity athletic championships - enough of them to insure the house possession of the Lampher Cup for another year. During the year, Francis Pettaro and Peter Dank served as president. TUNING IN are the TV teams pictured here: Above, Harry Swanger, Robert Blakely, Pete McNeish, and Jack Jangro. Below, Bill Lapinski, Bill O'Neill, John Baldasaro at bottom of picture, Bones Blakely, and Joe Larimore. iin A W CARNATHAN J E BELLAVANCE BB WATERMAN G A FORSYTHE J E WRIGHT J L. JANGRO R B CARLIN E P ROEDEMA M. J CONNORS J W LARIMORE R E NELSON A E DIUSSA A NIVISON 11 A.D. CHRISTMAN G A POWERS C J EMRLICH F A PITTARD C L OLOBRI ? CLEARY R F JUDKINS J W FLYNN LOUNGE scene above shows Steve Munzer, Pembroke A. Alice, Lesley College Joan, and Steve Kramer. Social highlights included the traditional senior dinner dance at the Biltmore, the rock roll parties - and the kiddie Christmas party. In addition, there were faculty cocktail parties and parents' weekend. Although 3d largest, the house again won the top spot in fraternity academic standings. LUNG S and assorted furniture get a good workout as four Pi Lambs get together to explore exotic new nuances of symphonic expression above left. TV squad above gets workout. Pi Lambs constructed huge poster designed by Ed Armour as their homecoming display - featuring the world's largest swizzlestick below . DARTHOUTHER The Brouow aiNv L +2 LUNGE through battlefield of Pi Lamb rock Sc roll party dance floor almost sends Paul Hirschfield and Maria St. Joseph College to floor. Dick Shohet took over the post of Rex from Dan Wolk for second semester. DON KARTIOANER JOSEFPH MUNZER ERISK PilaiuMi Phi ALAN STUART CHOCK JIM 1 SIDEL 5 ED ' 1 i 4RMOUR i ! ROSENBERG SIM6ERO ! PERLSERO ,ctg A JaV JIM fRIGERSON STERN - s o 3 OEOROE JACK WOLFSON I ROSENPLUM 4 7 l JERRY MOSKDWITZ 3j LIEBERMAN PRETTY Pembroker Sandy is pictured above with Ron Harrison and Bill Buneen. Above left. Bill Van Den Toorn, Mike Bums, and Stirling Johnson take in a little television. Four Sigma Nus work on the house's homecoming display in picture below. Sigma Nu took over 4th place in fratemity academic standings. PARTY pictures sho;v the house in action: Hank Smith with Rose- mary left photo in foreground and Frank Monahan vith Betty in the background; John Hemmeter and Ed Nicholson are the Sigma Nus in the other picture. Highlight of the year Avas traditional White Rose Weekend, for which several young ladies travelled many miles. RON HARRISON BEN LAMBERT l DICK YOUNG TARKESUTTH FRANK MONOHAN o JOHN CHRISTLE ToM KNIGHT anDx i CHARLIE TRAMMLLL DAM KILt CROTHERS A J WALKER B R COUKE gigma Ghi A E. STEWART JR A KALMYKOW 111 A LEAVER IR 4 V DEDERWIES 3 F BALLARD E.A SCHAFFZIN D N CROMATK o GO AGING B, DAMEST L i G, WHITKLE T e e e e s SANBI M. CHILDS I C S WILSON w F NIEPOLD A, SITCIK F THE NIGHT after the' judging of homecoming posters brings much merriment at the expense of the once-glorious displays. Ray Johnson above, with feather in mouth picks . apart the poster on th'e Sigma Chi patio, much to the amuse- ment of Sissy Hickoc:k, Left: Nestor Nicholas, Pembroke a Bonnie, Mike Mitche1ll fuzzy form in foreground is back of Mike's head, and Bob Crothers really swing. THE GIRL in the Sigma Chi bar pictured left finds herself surrounded by among others Jack Vaill, Nestor Nicholas, John Alp, and Bob Birch. Birch, George Ball, Marty Morris, and Harry Leggett are shown below gathered around Sylvia. THE BEER in the foreground belongs to across- courtyard Phi Delt Tony Yates. Sigma Chis in picture include Nestor Nicholas and George Ball. Popularity of Sigma Chi was attested to at party photographed - many non-brothers clutter these pictures taken in bar. Presence of attractive misses might be a factor, too. THE FUN which kept Sigma Chi jumping on the weekends didn't keep the brothers from their studies - the house maintained its 46 position on the fraternity academic ladder. Joe Carr served as president, James Childs and Ronald Whittle as rushing chairmen. GAMM O Zi QTA O HI COMPULSION to watch television is given in to by foreground Bill Birch, Jack Freund, John Soggs, Pete Briggs; background Jim Butler, Pete Alle- gaert, and Dee Gross. HANGING TREE is made of Phi Gam flagpole for homecoming. Shapely Gf ugly Indian maiden from Hanover is victim. Jim Bower is appointed overnight guardian - from DKE Al Poulsen, of course. R.W.STREETT A T HOATON 1 8 A RAE T J oaswELL M 6ROSS N 0 MC EACHAEN H.a TTLESON 1Ahi Gamma D M FORKER S W ROEMRIG F T PUTZEL M A SHEYNE 2 0 MERCIER COINTREAU T, B KETCHUM Delta 6 A COUGHLAN Il l R J RAMSDEN i W6 PERRIN JR L i 4 C FREUND D M LAMSON J l J l a N BAKERII f W K ENGEMAN P KINDLER SOUTH SEAS ADVENTURE was made out of the Phi Gam lounge for Spring Weekend. The Fiji Island party is a great tradition for the house; other parties included the Purple OW'L party and an orphan party during Christmastime. Presidents of the house dining the year were Bruce Gregory and Peter Briggs. The Phi Gam grade average jumped 175 of a grade point and a full nine places up the fraternity standings. Below, George Coughlan, Ann, and Dee Gross engage in friendly partytime discussion. 197 X Jc BUTLER A CLAYSON 8T MLENANY M. D WOODRING E 5 ORMOND M CHURCHILL e L R HARRIS J.K. SOEST , coTToN YULETIDE SEASON brought a special Phi Delt effort. There vas a specially-catered weekend including a buffet dinner in the house in a candlelit Christmas atmosphere. Above: Red Jubanyik and his date pick up their eats while Lou Gundlach and his fianceged Terry, right merely savor Xmas spirit. . D C WHITNEY JR J.P BANNING JR F W. STOCKWELL A. R BRIGHAM W D GRIMES Phi Delta Eheta E. EDWARDS M. H. BROKER JR A W. TOPPING a v C E MANGAN D S. TOLDERLUND F.A. YATES JR M J BOGDANOVICH l l L. S EVELETH E A FORREST l C.M. LYGNS J D MASTER J D GARDNER P J. SKOWRONEK l D. J. WARBURTON f x A A PERAGHIO l M. MASTERS i D. A. D'ANDREA M D SCARLATOS G V BATES L.T. GUNDLACH A.J JUBANYIK AFTER RUSHING, Phi Delts informally get together to discuss Freshmen: Russ Preston, Bob Topping, Frank Jeffreys, Andy Brigham, Barry Ellert, Angle Anzivino, Red Jubanyik, and Ed Forrest. Final formal rushing came just before Christmas vacation giving houses a chance to put on their festive best for '62ers. COMMUNITY SERVICE rendered by Phi Delta Theta is usually done in a big way. Something of a tradition is be- ing developed: the redecoration of whole houses that have been left in a state of disrepair for some time. Left: Tip Tip- ton touches a window. Below: This pic- ture made the front page of the JOURNAL. Right: Masters andguitar. Above: Charlie Dedrick shows arm to Kathy. HULAHOOPING BRUNO gets finishing touches from Fred Luvisi. The huge papier-mache figure built by Phi Psi delighted hundreds of home- coming Friday afternoon visitors to the Wriston Quad. It hulahooped a small caricature of the Dartmouth Indian into submission and won first prize in the fraternity poster competition. Above left: Ted Anthonisen and Patty. Above: Gail, Clark Goebel, Sheila, and Jim Holsing. Belo v left: Jeff Goldberg, Anthonisen, and Jack Fisher. 4 R HAGENBUCH 8 MONTGOMERY i K H HAUCK W G SANDERS aE WITT L Phi Rappa 1s; M CONNORS W C WORTHINGTON JR E c st 9 R L D E GILLES M STANFORD 4 B MULLEN S FORSTER C E. GOEBEL M C WUISCHPARD J J HOLSING G W ULLRICH M 5 FOSTER W B BARNES I8 GATHERED in the Phi Psi lounge are Bruce Montgomery, Buzz Barnes, Spook Gost, Don Almeida, and Clark Goebel. Highlights of the social year vere the Christmas formal and a dark, dank, ultrabohemian Greenwich Village party. Besides holding its o vn academically moved up in the fraternity standings two places and athletically first in hockey league, tied for Swain trophy and won Grecian cup for sportsmanship, the house reigned as I.F.C. sing champs since Spring Weekend '58. The fliptopsaving element in the house made Phi Psi the only house on campus with two phonographs provided by the Marlboro people. Fred Luvisi and Ken Hauck -fere presidents of the house. Many laughs were provided by the antics of Stowe ski tow-jumper, Sticks Ullrich - and by the scorge of The Germ. W A RILEY BANANA hanging from the Psi IT. flagpole is by now nearly as much a part PSI of homecoming as the foothall game. Although it hasn't been around as long as has Psi U. 119 years, the oldest fraternity in continual existence at eMAAGRHB AN, B BMo ri' there are few undergraduates who can remember a homecoming J f 251 L IM weekend when the banana didn't hang above the monster canopy stretching from the door of the Psi U. house to the sidewalk. Shadowy party figures above include Al Voorhees right and either Corby Day or Al Hanser. i I S.H.SPENCER 3 4 FLOOD it W.W. SMITH J.D. ROSS L M. MARSHALL JR. W. G DOW JR. 195f -E:sgilon J. A JENSEN R W PARSON R.S. SWANSON J 6. CONZELMAN JR C. B SWARTWOODII E C SIMMONS T J SULLIVAN l L C.MOSS M. K. CARNEY R . BULLOCK D. 5. MILTON T.L LAWSON R. OLNEY G.W HARRINGTON E.W MARTIN JR BARTENDER Brent Harold serves Ron Swanson below, transient party-goer. Scene above includes Bob Parson, Al Hanser, and Ron Swanson offering beer to Wendy of Colby. Behind Wendy is Laurie from Grosse Pointe and Corby Day. Presidents Al Hanser and Bruce Brougham directed the house's activities which included the traditicnal Psi U. Spring Weekend yacht - a fine viewpoint for the crewraces, and faculty and alumni parties. Psi U. walked away with the fraternity squash championship. CLASS OF 1962 BREAK THROUGH, SIXTY-TWO! With this cry, masses of irate freshmen poured into the hard knot of sophomores surrounding a heavily-greased pole some 15 feet high. From the top of the pole fle'v a Avisp of ivhite cloth. It ivas flagrush day and hun- dreds of spectators gathered in the parking lot at Marvel Gym to watch if the frosh could prove them- sehes spirited and organized enough to bring down the flag during the three minutes of action. After the usual amount of shirt-ripping and other forms of mob brutality, a freshman made it up the pole far enough to discover that the flag vas attached to the pole better than he had hoped, and he fell back into the churning group belov. The freshmen never got another good chance after that, and the Class of '6l successfully defended, the flag they had von in a rare freshman flagrush ictory the year before. Still, it had been a hearty battle and the college felt that the freshmen had become a bigger part of Bro vn after their display of tremendous spirit in the annual baptism-in-mud. REALLY yelling out the cheers and songs which fill Freshman Week rallies are the frosh pictured here. The usual drum was supplimented by an accordion this year. RALLY brings out swarms of The Best Class Ever. They sang and marched through the campus - and became targets of upperclass waterbombs while in the Wriston Quad. Z. NATTY P.K. Bob Schreiber talks to Pembroke freshman W.B. Nancy Otto above during a break in the Brown-Pembroke Freshman Week Dance. As 1is the custom, all upperclassmen were kept out except those who were able to equip themselves with beanie and pin. 7 NIGHTLY rounds of Pembroke freshman dorms were supplimented by an organized open house night in the middle of the week. The Pembroker above seems apprehensive about the amount of attention she's getting. At left, a couple discusses campus landmarks - as pic- tured in the map in BEAR FACTS, the Brown freshman's best friend. Below, George Gurney pauses on his way through the reception line to chat with President Keeney. Freshman Gurney is the cousin of Class of '59's president Jim Gurney. A full round of varied Freshman Week activities leaves each member of the incoming class well- STEPS of Sharpe Refectory is scene of traditional sing-for-your-dinner ceremonies inNolXing the incom- small picture precede '62's class elections. STEPPING along a la River Kwail are hundreds of freshmen in rally. Officers of class belov: George president, Jack Calhoun, ' William Vic- tor, and Dale Trickey. - 2 'f eeONsees o i oot - oveese d; s B teer 0000000 o o000 PO OSSO OOT , - N OO P O if o + : Y g S y .. ..' L 3 4 B S e ool - - v e oo At P in Faunce House CLASS OF 1961 STEPPING IN to protect timid Pembrokers is Vigilance Committeeman Dave Lessard left during '62 riot on steps of Andrevs Hall. V.C. chairman Raymond C. Childs directed the 26 chosen sophomores in a 4-point freshman orientation program. Phase two learning songs, cheers - and the answers to questions about Brown includes streetcorner singing on the way to dinner, and is enforced by the trio of V.C.s above. The V.C.s ended their activities with the first Bruin touchdown of the year in Brown Stadium against Yale. Soph officers: clockwise from top Art Anderson, Bob Tracy president, 'Jim Gordon, and Jack Crowley. JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS ';q,mmwy.auhrn b H 3anis MANY UPPERCLASSMEN serve as Student Ad- visors - helping freshmen to choose their courses and giving the kind of advice that only a junior or imm senior can give, the kind that comes from having learned all the ins and outs, the tricks of studying mand living at college in general and Brown in par- ticular. Above, Mike Saper and roommate Barry g Walter pick up a few pointers from their advisor, Bill Krafchik. Below, advisors Bailey Blethen and Dick Weil give Ken Dob- g son some hints on studying. Top brass meeting of advisors brings together the group shown at the bottom of the page: Murray Powers, Bill Hodges chairman, Ed Armour, Stan Armstrong, and Ed Nicholson. Officers of the Class of 1960 are pictured at left: Tom Caswell president, Don Poole, Alex Baumgartner, and Paul Kelly. VICE PRESIDENT of the Class of 1959 was Jerry Moskowitz above . Jerry also served Brown as a member of the Cammarian Club, Student Court, and Brown Key. Pete McNeish, also a mem- ber of the Cammarian Club and Brown Key - and a varsity foot- ball player - served as secretary and will hold this post for the class after graduation. 212 il IL N clg's B PRESIDENT, and serving in this post for the third consec- utive vyear, was Jim Gurney. Greatest contribution to the class by Mr. Gurney was the role he played in making the 25th Re- union Gift Plan a reality - a plan which will return $500,000 to the University in 1984 after reqgular donations from class members have multiplied through investment in a mutual trust fund. The class also estab- lished a series of class dinneis one of which featured the first return of President Emeritus Henry M. Wriston to the camp- us. Other speakers included Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, Clement At- lee, and the satirical songs of Tom Lehrer. Bill Traub richt, a Dean's List student and out- standing football player 2d team All-TIvy, was treasurer. F. R. Ackley, Jr. P.D.Allen B. F. Anderson S. F. Arena E.J. Armour G. C. Bailey G. R. Balaschak J. F. Ballard R. H. Ballou P.J. Baram J. H. Barcroft D. M. Bartlett L.F.Bateman R. S. Arnold R. C. Baer, Jr. F. G. Atwood J. D. Bagnall J.D. Baumgarten J. S. Beale 0.N. Bean W. S. Bearce J. M. Beatty L. S. Beaumont, Jr. W. A. Beck T. H. Beebe R. J. Beland A. R. Bellows J. F. Bennett, Jr. P. M. Bennett D. B. Beresford D. E. Birenbaum J. H. Blish G. E. Blowers C. R. Booth E. F. Bishop W. R. Blackman 111118 Q8 - LOFTY VIEW of Providence from College Hill shows bea- con-tipped Industrial National Bank building and Sheraton Biltmore at right. Biltmore is favorite hostelry for visiting young ladies from far reaches of the earth. Ghostly steeple 2 1 7 at left, with clock belongs to First Baptist Meeting House, site of every Brown commencement but two since 1776. J. R. Botbyl J. T. Botwick H. J. Braun E. R. Brendell T. A. Briggs, Jr. D. L. Brodsky G. A. Bottomly S, A, Boyan, Jr. R. S. Bregy W. R. Bridgeo W. T. Brightman C .B. Brown, Jr. CANDLES in the windows of University Hall on May 4th far left is a tradition dating back to Rhode Island's declaration of inclependence from British rule on that date in 1776 - a full two months before similar action vas taken on the part of the other twelve colonies. The candles burn, in addition, every Class Night - just before graduation. The eerie view across the Col- lege Green left was taken by moonlight one bleak fall evening. C. p. Brown R.F. Brown R. Bullock R. A. Burke L C. Cady T. p. Campbell, Jz R, D. Brown D. L. Bryson A. K. Burke R. B. Burhnam G. F. Calise R. L. Canepa J. p. Carr R. J. Castelucci S. M. Cattaneo J. A. Cederstrom J. C. Christie, Jr. R. D. Claiborn A. S. Clough R. A. Cleary G. S. Cohen J. M. Cohen P. M. Canevazzl R. P. Carpenter R. G. Carnes E. H. Carr R. L Cohen S.Cohen 220 R. R. Cole M. F. Collins J. R. Connet J. W. Cronin, Jr. K. L. Crossland G. S. Crout 0. M.Colley C. E. Conklin T. N. Crater H. M. Cronson R. D. Crothers D. F. Cubbison S. A. Diamond T. F'. Dietter A4 c w g 8 o BT L Ud a a S ST : . o NN R i1 P. N. Dana A. H. Davis, Jr. M. S. Davidson W. B. Davis, Jr C. P. Cutter W. A. Daley 2 2 2 H. E. Digel J. F. DiPaola P. J. DiSaia W. G. Dow S.J. Donnellan, Jr. M. N. Donohue, Jr. B. E. Donovan W. J. Donovan, Jr. B. F. Dudley, II L. L Dufrense D. R. Dustin W. Dyckes S. L Dyson W. Eaton, II L. M. Eber T. B. Eland SINCE 1904 Carrie Tower has been a prominent Brown landmark. The structure was given to the University by Paul Bajnotti of Turin, Italy, in mem- ory of his wife, the daughter of Nicholas Brown. A clocktower, as well as a memorial, the Tower has rung out the hours for two generations of Brownmen. V. Elting R. Fain R. G. Faux A E. Engler, Jr. A. R. Fairbanks M. Fedeli B. B. Fee C.D. Fenner A. S. Fine F. H. Finney, Jr. S. L. Fleischer F. J. Fleron, Jr. J.W. Flynn, Jr. R. A. Foreman J. H. Forsee G. E. Frederick R. L. Friedlander G. A. Forsythe J. R. French A. M. Fuji FORCE sometimes has to be resorted to in the annual conflict called the flag rush as the Sophomore class annually keeps itself bet veen the Freshmen and the flag atop the greased pole. The clas- sic struggle between the Class of '59 as sophomores and the once lowly Class of '60 has been recorded for all time by an alert if muddy, Liber photographer. P. H. Fuller R. M. Gardner J. D. Gardner G. C. Gaynor M. A. Ginsberg J. D. Glasheen D. E. Glass P. F. Goldbecker A. S. Goldberg P. J. Goldberg V. F. Geremia, Jr. J. A. Gibson L. M. Gibbs F. B. Gilbert E. L. Goldman J. H. Gordon G. Gorgodian D. B. Goshien T.I.Grand B. L Gregory R. E. Grenier L. T. Griggs W.D. H. Grimes G.A. Guild J. S. Gurney W. P. Hagenau P. J. Groblicki L. T. Gundlach A.C. Haas D. B. Hall THE CLASS OF '59 has changed in four years. So has the flagrush - changed, after decades of injuries caused by mud, to a less-dangerous dry-ground operation. Pictured here is a member t of the Class of '59, as a freshman, struggling up the greased pole toward the elusive flag. A gang of sophomores-now-alums is shown accepting the freshman's vow to give the T-shirt off his back in the attempt. J. G. Halliday J. P. Hansen A.D. Hanser C. A, Harris J. F. Haskins S. P. Hastings L. E. Hathaway, Il C. W. Hawley S.A. Harmon R. B. Harrison R. A. Hastings J. M. Hatch K. H. Hauck, Jr. W. B. Hayes D. J. Hebert R. W. Hebert D. P. Helpern J. H. Hemmeter D. Hillegas J. C. Hiney P. A. Hollos J. J. Holsing J. W. Holman, Jr. R. T. Horton N. B. Hirschfield F. P. Hobart, Jr. H. W. Hodges D. G. Hoiles C. G. Hokanson P. S. Hollman R. B. Houriet F. G. Hunt D. M.Jacobs J. L. Jangro A.F.Johann R. F.Judkins J. M. Howard T. L. like P. F. Jaleski F. J. Jeffrey, Jr. A. P. Jonikas W. L Kantaros gt HAVING W ON its first flagrush, '60ers tore down the pole and carried it down the middle of a mile-and-a-half of Providence street, from he gym back to the campus. The sight of two hundred 18 year-olds, barefoot and covered with mud, singing wildly and carrying a heavily- greased fourteen-foot pole the Avrong way up a one way street was too much for the local populace - some called the police, some barked dogs, and some just ran. It was a great day for the class of '60. D. Kartiganer R. P. Kasper W. J. Kauffman S. C. Kaye F.W.Kennedy, Jr. W.M.D. Kern, Jr. C. K. Keyler E. C. Keyworth, Jr. D. F. Kiley D. L Kinley W. T. Knight, Jr. R. C. Kohlmann B. G. Koether F. S. Koslowski, Jr M. S. Kleinman D. C. Kline R. E. Kresko G. C. Kyker, Jr. B. P. Lane E. F. Lapinski J. R. Lathan M. 8. Lavitt R. M. Lawson J. L, Lazzatti, Jr. E. A. LaBlanc K. T. Lee H. S. Lerman P. M. LeVasseur A, L. lLevin C. IM. Lieberman G. D. Linger J. R. Linney J.D. Linsley L.A. Lockman D.E. Loew A.B. Lovell B 3 ; : f e 1g the time fox Lime Yo rise Ikl 3es T4y 0w 33 eir co country for the a + Hos Jklsjkl;fdeamssszsikil; Jkkjilll ggood men tocome Lo thr aid of th n ithere 13 within the hearts of em n latent xle now is the tizme for all S'good men to up their typing speed to a minipum of eixt-Tive words g minute . . 8B for example T am doing as I write this at 2 rete of sixty-three per minuie i for I've learned that fifteen is inadequate as hell.. B181dkA ighgidkslia; cete : FOUND in a typewriter belonging to an English Literature major, this paper re- 233 veals the instinct for self-improvement latent in all Brownmen. F.P. Luvisi D. J. MacCallum A. G. Maggiacomo C.F. Manos E. J. Lynde P. A. Mackie C. E. Mangan R. D. Marden A. A, Lucco R. A. Luria J. T. Lum T. S. Lutz p. A. Markoff T. K. Mathews D. E. May J. I. Mayer D. G. Mayhew D. S. McGeorge 234 R. G. McKay J. S. McLaughlin P. F. McNeish R. P. McKendall J. M. McMorris J. L. McTigue ALMOST! The crowd jumps to its besneakered feet, and a gasp comes from ten thousand throats. An overwraught fan, Thomas Reynolds, nearly breaks down under the strain of the moment. A play later, the Bruins scored - and Tom wept softly. W. K. Meyers A.P. Miller G. Miller M. W. Mitchell B. B. Modica W. 0. Moore E. J. McVey L. A. Mendelson M. 0. Megrdichian D. M. Merchant J. R. Morava A. I, Morgan D. B. Morrison R. K. Morrison S. L. Morse D. L. Morton 1 B. W. Mosher E. G. Muldowney A. W. Murphy, Jr. T.M.Nathan W. S. Nettrour J. W. Norswerth J. Moskowitz A. W. Murphy D. Nadell R. E. Nelson E. A. Nojek F. C. Noyes, Jr. R. M. Nuckols D. R. Oasis E. L. Olivier J. Orr N. C. Paik T. R. Pampalone S. Nutt J. L. Oliver E. J. O'Neill D. N. Page W. A.Palumbo P. H. Paulsen C. K. Payne H. J. Pearce 0. Peet E. G. Perkins W. A. Perkins R. A. Perry A. I. Polsby K. A. Postlewa G. J. Posejpal A. Poulsen M. M. Peters R. P. Pfeifle R. M. Piazza W. C. Pickett II A. B. Plante S. T. Plumer F. Powell R. F. Pyper R. M. Quinn R. J. Ramsden W. R. Pressler J. F. Quinn A. A. Ramos, Jr. R. A. Ramsden WEEKENDS MEAN WOMEN! Brown's central location in Southern Nev England is ideal for drawing polocoated young things from such insti- tutions as Smith, Wellesley, Conn. College, Mt . Holyoke, Radcliffe, Wheat- on, Simmons, and Pine Manor. Brownmen take advantage of their prox- imity to Pembroke too, at times. Pembrokers are seen wending their way down Brovn Street to vard the main campus nearly every weekend, a com- plete transformation having taken place from their classroom appearance. d P. B. Reed C. A. Regnell HOMECOMING brings a wide variety of frolicking. It ivas not particularly surprising, therefore, to find the Phi Delt patio turned into a lake during that weekend a few years ago, a Dartmouth Indian canoe afloat thereupon, and a pair of denizens of the deep now safely graduated thrashing around therein. T. F. Osmer W. A. Riley A. W. Robbins E. F. Roberts L. Roberts, Jr. G. H. Rockwell R. S. Rogers D. E. Rollings N. P. Ross P. C. Rolewicz J. J. Rosenblum D. B. Rotfort W. C. Sanders D. K. Sanderson L. S. Sandler L. B. Santos K. B. Savel H. B. Savin D. B. Schaffer W. H. Scheick, Jr. J. W. Schiver B. E. Schwartz J. V. Russo K. V. Rutins P. A. Russo G. A, Sammartino R. P. Scobie W. W. Scott G. A. Seaver a. seidman SLEEP is not an uncommon activity for the Brown Man, though often a bit more uncommon than he might deem convenient. A selection of typical postures is shown here. First, there is the smothered-anxiety pose, enacted by Sleeper Dud- ley above. Then, there is the distraught-don't- disturb position by Sleeper Linger. Other favorites include Sleeper McCormick's I'm-just-looking-for- my-pajamas posture and the all-time champion, Sleeper Corrigan's I-never-fall-asleep-when-I- study-on-my-bed, enacted during the 1957-58 sleeping season. Turning the page will reveal two standard but less highly recommended attitudes for pre-dinnertime snocozing: the sun-worshiper and the quasi-eyes-closed-lucubrator. A.D. Semonife E. W. Sherman C. J. Shattuck J. M. Sherman R. M.Shohet W. Silver 242 C. A. Simberg P. J. Skowronecl W. A. Sitnik J. C. Smith J. W. Soggs R. R. Spik S. W. Stansmore R. D. Stein A. E. Stewart W. A. Stork J.M. Spector D. J. Stalica G. L. Stein A. L. Stern F. W. Stockwell A. L. Stuart T. W. Sudol R. E. Sullivan T. J. Sullivan W. L. Summerfield W. P. Suter D. H. Talbot J. Teixeira W. H. Terry F. N. Teuscher L. B. Thompson, Jr. W. B. Thompson M. D. Tobey A J.A, Topham D. F. Toser G. M. Trammell B. H. Tucker G.W.Ullrich C. Valencia R. W. Topping H. W. Townes W. H. Traub T. A. Turley P.R. Vale J. J. Vallone W. E. Vogel A.J.Walker E. M. Von Simson W. R. Wallace 0 R. 1. Weiner P. Wisner L. S. Wenner B. J. Westcott D. J. Warburton J. D. Waterbury J.D. Westfall V. E. Westgate H. D. Wetherald N. B. White C.E.Waterman A.A. Weber E. B. Weaver R. K. Weil R. L. Whiting D. G. Willard G. W. Whitney, Jr. F. M. Williamsoi J. M. Wilson Q. M. Wilson G. R. Wolfson D. S. Wolk P. G. Woodhouse D. A. Woodley J. E. Wright J. G. Wright R. A, Yost COMMENCEMENT 4 o BEGINNING a new portion of their life after passing through the traditional opened- once-a-year-for-invocation-and-once-for-grad- uation VanWickle Gates, having received traditional services at the oldest Baptist church in America, hundreds of Brown sen- iors mingle during graduation time Avith thousands of their predecessors, busily recall- ing The Way It Used To Be. The platforms are erected, the '05 Tree designated, and the armbands and buttons displayed proudly. It is a grand time to be a Brolv'ninan! ALUMNI REUNIONING is certainly a big part of Alumniing. The man at above left has peram- bulated his youngest to Providence - just so he could perambulate down college hill in the graduation procession. Buttons are important for reunion number five, multiples of five, and all those over fifty. Examples of the latter condition are shown above. Gathering around the thermos bottle at homecoming below is also a valid part of Alumniing. BROWN IN INTROSPECT UNDERGRADUATE: Richard J. Ramsden '59 A product of Phillips Exeter Academy, Mr. Ramsden transferred to Brown after his freshman year, during which he attended Harvard College. THE FOUR YEARS SINCE WE CAME TO BROWN AND THE UNIVERSITY INSTALLED PRESIDENT KEENEY HAVE BEEN YEARS OF CHANCE, YEARS OF MOVEMENT . THIS HAS BEEN BROUGHT HOME TO US IN SEVERAL WAYS: BY THE NEW BRICK WE SEE, AND BY THE MANY NEW MEN IN THE ADMINISTRATION WE MEET. THE GREATEST CHANGES, THOUGH, THOSE WHICH HAVE AFFECTED BROWN IN THE MOST SIGNIFICANT WAYS - HAVE BEEN IN THE STUDENT BODY. THE CONTINUAL REMOVAL OF CLASSMATES HAS MADE BROWN OFTEN SEEM AS MUCH A WAY STATION AS AN INTELLECTUAL MECCA. BUT THEN AGAIN, ONE IS NOT NECESSARILY THE AN- TITHESIS OF THE OTHER. THESE FOUR YEARS, LIKE AND YET UNLIKE THE YEARS PRECEDING THEM, HAVE WIT- NESSED A DETERMINED AND CONSCIOUS DRIVE FOR EXCELLENCE UPON THE PART OF THE UNIVERSITY. THE COMBINATION OF BETTER STUDENTS, A DEDICATED FACULTY, AN ABLE ADMINISTRATION, AND AN ENTHUSED AND YEARLY MORE GENEROUS ALUMNI, IS DAILY CREATING A NEW BROWN - A BROWN WHICH IS CHANGING SO RAPIDLY THAT IT QUICKENS THE PULSE OF EVEN THE MOST PHLEGMATIC OF BROWN MEN. A CONTINUOUS AND OFTEN SELF-CONSCIOUS SPARRING BETWEEN THE FRATERNITY AND INDEPENDENT CROUPS HAS BROUGHT ABOUT A HEALTHY AND MORE EQUITABLE BALANCE BETWEEN THE TWO. AS THE CLASSES HAVE IMPROVED IN QUALITY AND PURPOSE, THE GOALS OF THE STUDENT BODY AND FACULTY HAVE BECOME MORE NEARLY UNITED. WITH THE APPROACH OF BROWN'S THIRD CENTURY OF PROVIDING A SUCCESSION OF MEN DULY QUALIFIED FOR DISCHARGING THE OFFICES OF LIFE WITH USEFULNESS AND REPUTATION, THE UNIVERSITY SEEMS ON THE VERGE OF A GOLDEN AGE. A MEMBER OF THE ADMINISTRATION HAS SAID THAT THE NEXT DECADE WILL BRING THE RAPIDLY-CHANCING BROWN TO A POINT WHERE IT WILL BE ONE OF THE TWO OR THREE TRULY GREAT UNIVERSITIES IN THE COUNTRY. THIS WAS THE FEELING THAT WAS CARRIED IN THE TOLLING OF THE UNIVERSITY BELLS ONE THURSDAY MORNING IN OCTOBER OF 1957. FOR WITH THE ACQUISITION OF THE ALDRICH-DEXTER FIEID, BROWN COULD LOOK FORWARD TO THE CREATION OF ONE OF THE MOST MODERN AND CONVENIENT ATHLETIC PLANTS IN THE COUNTRY. LACK OF WEALTH HAS KEPT BROWN SMALL; SMALLNESS HAS MADE BROWN UNIQUE. A UNIVERSITY-COLLEGE, IT HAS BEEN POSSIELE FOR US TO WORK WITH AND KNOW WELL FACULTY OF EVEN WORLD-WIDE STATURE IN THE MUTUAL INSPIRATION WHICH THIS CLOSE WORKING RELA- TIONSHIP HAS PROVIDED LIES THE GERM OF ACHIEVEMENT - AND THAT WHICH PROMPTED PRESIDENT KEENEY TO STATE, SOME OF THE GREAT MEN OF THE NEXT GENERATION ARE UNDERGRADUATES AT BROWN TODAY. A UNIVERSITY IS ONLY AS GOOD AS ITS FACULTY, AND THE BROWN FACULTY IS EXCELLENT - PERHAPS FOR ITS SIZE WITHOUT A PEER IN THIS COUNTRY. WHAT BROWN'S FACULTY MEMBERS MAY LACK IN DESERVED SALARIES THEY MAKE UP FOR IN YOUTHFUL VIGOR. BY MEANS OF THE I.C. PROGRAM, AND SMALL CLASSES AS THE GENERAL RULE, THE BROWN STUDENT BODY IS MAKING GREATER AND GREATER USE OF THESE MEN. WITHOUT EXCESSIVE GRADUATE STUDENT DEMANDS UPON THEM, THE BROWN FACULTY, INCLUD- ING THOSE OF HIGHEST RANK, HAVE THE TIME AND INTEREST TO WORK CLOSELY WITH THE UNDERGRADUATE, EVEN DOWN TO THE UNINITIATED FRESHMAN. THIS IS UNDOUBTEDLY BROWN'S FOREMOST ASSET - THE OPPORTUNITY FOR ALL UNDERGRADUATES TO KNOW AND WORK IN SMALL CLASSES WITH RECOGNIZED LEADERS IN THEIR FIEIDS. THIS IS AN ASSET WHICH EVEN OUR MORE ILLUSTRIOUS NEIGHBORS TO THE NORTH AND SOUTH WOULD BE RELUCTANT TO CLAIM. FOR THIS REASON, AS BROWN CONTINUES TO DRIVE FOR QUALITY, AS SIZE CHANCES ONLY IN SO FAR AS THE UNIVERSITY CAN PROVIDE WELL FOR GREATER NUMBERS, BROWN FINDS ITSEIF AND WILL CONTINUE TO FIND ITSELF OFFERING AN UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION SECOND TO NONE IN THIS COUNTRY. JOHN WINTHROP WAS SPEAKING OF THE RELIGIOUS EXAMPLE THAT THE PURITANS MUST SET IN MASSACHU- SETTS WHEN IN A 1630 SERMON HE SAID, FOR WE SHALL BE AS A CITY UPON A HIIL, FOR ALL THE WORLD TO SEE. HOPE- FULLY, THIS TOO IS THE FUTURE OF BROWN UNIVERSITY THE CREATION OF AN INTELLECTUAL CITY UPON THE HILL - FOR ALL THE WORLD TO SEE. SMALLNESS HAS PREVENTED ARROGANCE - BE IT INTELLECTUAL OR INSTITUTIONAL. BROWN FRIENDLINESS AND BROWN HUMILITY HAVE MADE US DIFFERENT - DIFFERENT FROM THE PRUFROCKS TO THE NORTH, THE SWEEN- EYS TO THE SOUTH. PERHAPS AS THE CLASS OF 1959 MARCHES DOWN COLLEGE HILL. A HILL WHICH TOOK FOUR YEARS TO CLIMB' THE FEELING WILL ARISE THAT WE ARE A PART OF SOMETHING BIGGER THAN OURSELVES, OF SOMETHING MORE DURABLE THAN THE DISAPPEARING ELMS OR THE BRICKS OF THE BUILDINGS. IN THESE DAYS OF SHAKEN CONFIDENCE AND LITTIE FAITH IT HAS BEEN GOOD TO HAVE KNOWN A FIRM FOUNDATION. cesSc H. M. PULHAM HAD AN ADVANTAGE OVER ME. A PERSPECTIVE OF TWENTY-FIVE YEARS VJAS HIS TO MEASURE HIS HARVARD EXPERIENCE. I HAVE ONLY FOUR TO MEASURE MINE AT BROWN. THIS FORESHORTENING WILL, NO DOUBT, DISTORT AND EXAGGERATE. YET, AL LOWING FOR BOTH, THERE ARE, I BELIEVE, SPECIFIC VIEWS WHICH MY FOUR YEARS AT BROWN GREATLY ALTERED-VIEWS ON MY OWN LIFE AND ON LIFE ITSELF. A PRIMARY FUNCTION OF A UNIVERSITY IN A DEMOCRACY IS TO FACILITATE THE PAS- SAGE OF YOUNG PECPLE FROM CILASS TO CLASS I USE THE TERM CLASS ADVISEDLY-TO PERMIT THE GARAGE MECHANIC'S SON TO ASSOCIATE WITH AND, IF HE CHOOSES, ASSUME THE MODES OF LIVING OF THE BANKER'S SON. BY MOVING FROM CLASS TO CLASS, THE YOUNG PERSON IS CONFRONTED WITH A VARIETY OF WAYS TO DRESS, DINE, CONVERSE, AND THINK. EACH CHALLENGES-SOMETIMES FORMIDABLY AND SOMETIMES INEFFECTUALLY THE STUDENT'S EARLIER ENVIRONMENT. THROUGH SCHOLARSHIP AID, BROWN PERMITTED ME THIS OPPORTUNITY . HOWEVER, BROWN AS A SPECIFIC TYPE OF UNIVERSITY SERVED A SECOND FUNCTION AS WELL. BROWN IS, I FEEL, ONE OF THE FEW UNIVERSITIES IN AMERICA WHICH TRANSCENDS MOST ALL LOCAL AND REGIONAL INFLUENCES AND CAN GENUINELY CLAIM A NATIONAL CHARACTER. FOR AN IMPRESSIONABLE YOUNG MAN FROM THE WEST, ARRIVING AT BROWN EQUIPPED WITH HIS OWN CAST OF REGIONAL PUBLIC FIGURES AND ISSUES, THE EXPERI- ENCE AT A NATIONAL UNIVERSITY GIVES HIM PROPORTION. IN RELATION TO THE AMER- ICAN SCENE, THE AFFAIRS AND FIGURES FROM MY OWN REGION ASSUMED THEIR CORRECT SIZE. ALTHOUGH I AM GRATEFUL TO BROWN FOR ITS CREATING THESE OPPORTUNITIES, THEY ALONE ARE NOT THE POINT. TO MOVE FROM CLASS TO CLASS OR TO SEE ONE'S REGIONAL INTERESTS THROWN AGAINST THE NATIONAL SCREEN IS, ABOVE ALL, TO LEARN VERY VITAL THINGS ABOUT ONE'S OWN PERSONALITY. THE ROLE OF A STRANGER IN A SOCIETY, EMPHA- SIZING AS IT DOES DIFFERENCES MORE THAN SIMILARITIES, REVEALS THE WAYS AND THE DEGREES BY WHICH CNE'S PAST HAS DETERMINED ONE'S PRESENT OUTLOOK. TO ME, THIS REVELATION BROUGHT STRENGTH. ONCE TO DISCOVER THE NUB OF PERSONALITY WAS THEREAFTER TO CONTROL, AS FAR AS HUMANLY POSSIEBLE, THE VARIETY AND INTENSITY OF FUTURE EXPERIENCE. THIS EELIEF, NEEDLESS TO SAY, MAKES ME LAMENT THE PLIGHT OF THE STUDENT WHO HAS NEVER NEEDED TO CROSS CLASS LINES OR WHO HAS CONTINU- OUSLY CONSIDERED THE NATION AS HIS HOME. MY DISCUSSION SO FAR HAS DEALT WITH BROWN AS AN INSTITUTION FULFILLING CERTAIN SOCIAL FUNCTIONS. APART FROM SPECIFIC LESSONS I LEARNED WITHIN IIS WALLS, BROWN, IN ITS CAPACITY AS AN INSTITUTION FOR HIGHER LEARNING, INFLU- ENCED THE WAY I LOOK AT LIFE ITSEIF. IT TAUGHT ME THAT LIFE IS NOT SIMPLY A GLOSSY LUCE PUBLICATION, BUT THAT IT IS AN OBJECT FOR SERIOUS THOUGHT. THE PROCESS BY WHICH I WAS CONVINCED OF THIS WAS SIMPLE. A FOUR-YEAR EXPOSURE' TO SCHOLARS STUDYING LIFE AND ITS ENVIRONMENT, AN EXPOSURE WHICH INCLUDED STUDYING THEM MYSELF, LED INEVITABLY TO THIS CONCLUSION. OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM, LABORATORY, AND LIBRARY, THE RAMIFICATIONS OF THIS CONCLUSION WERE EQUALLY CONVINCING. BROWN AS A COMMUNITY OF SCHOLARS OFFERED ME AS AN UNDERGRADUATE, THROUGH LECTURES, SERMONS, CONCERTS, AND THE THEATER, AN ALTERNATIVE SET OF CULTURAL VALUES TO THOSE IN POPULAR CIRCULATION. IN OTHER WORDS, BROWN TRANSLATED THE SERIOUS STUDY OF LIFE INTO THE PROCESS OF LIVING LIFE SERIOCUSLY. SOME OF THESE EXPERTENCES, ADMITTEDLY, WOULD HAVE OCCURRED IRRESPECTIVE OF THE PARTICULAR UNIVERSITY. BUT THAT IS NOT RELEVANT. NOR IS THE FACT THAT THIS ERIEE' ESSAY HAS NOT EXHAUSTED THE MANY WAYS IN WHICH MY PRESENT MODES 2SprIquery Jo ANSISATU 9820D s.auLIEyIE 1G JB IIBIOIIOP SIY PIEMO SUIOM AIUIIND ST UBWUD IJy JLVNAVHD LN3DO3H GG, uewydj 4 usiiep : Dr. Nils Y. Wessell '35 GRADUATE SCHOOL iversity. Wessell is President of Tufts Un Dr. Brown tangrht me the Joy and the Btimulus In scholarship, althouffh there are cynics who would say that such lessons are soon forgfotten hy persons lured into academic administration. There are three or four grrains of truth in the latter claim althougfh I will insist that my memory is still clear and sharp with respect to what Brown did for me at one time in this regard. It was as a graduate student that my three years were spent at Brown but in the intimacy demanded by the restricted quarters at 85 and 89 Waterman Street, the old Psycholog-y Building's, undergTaduate and g-raduate students worked and studied tog-ether. All too soon the g'rad- uate student stood in front of the class and attempted to teach the roomful of underg'raduates who were but half a step below him on the academic ladder. May the Impressive Walter S. Hunter Iiaboratories not lose throug'h their newness and expanse the kind of close intellectual association, among g'raduate students and between undergraduate and g-raduate students, that characterized the converted attics, cellars, kitch- ens, and dining rooms of 85 and 89 Waterman Street. I learned also at Brown the thrill in seeing young minds g'rasp and be moved by a new idea which as a teacher you first brought to their attention. My efforts as a graduate assistant and teaching fellow w'ere stumbling- many times, I know, but yet occasionally they seemed to be straig-ht and true and brought the response in the student which repre- sents the teacher's greatest reward. At Brown as a g'raduate student I was also Introduced to real mental discipline, the kind that soon tests your limits, the kind that in the intervening twenty or more years since those days seems to have in- filtrated into the undergraduate progfram at Brown also. On the latter count I speak only as an observer at a distance, but I have discussed in anonymity with Brown undergraduates what they consider to be the present intellectual tone of the campus. I am favorably impressed. With all this exposure to scholarship, to the Jjoys and rewards of teaching, and to the stem taskmaster represented by intellectual chal- lenge, how do I raticnalize my leaving the straight and narrow for the inlclUitous den that is university administration? I am not sure. My only hope Is that it is not counted a failure by Brown. I may no longer possess in the late 1950s these things I claim Brown taught me in the middle 1930s. But one thing Brown gave me I still possess - my wife; and as Robert Frost would say, That has made all the difference. 1 - 5 i 3 51 I, 8. 0 Py MIDDUBURY PUT IN Uil .Y o E NFINITs 1Y WIS f8o O OF A NAVY TRAINING - SORAM. AND I ARRIVED IN THE MI s TF P9 ws v DZ NE FOG PIESCTD ONLY BY MCARBON-ARC LAMPS WHICH - RAINTLY LIT THESTR: I ok Az WO Y :d H AER, ol 2 A CLASS THAT WA i O ! o o 4 AN WNO ONE EISES EIn o 51 8T wAS COMPOSED OF THOSE . OSHAFPENED 1 L e P4 w K THAr be - 82 B eINNING AT SOME FOINT S Tup. Hotbzumo?.mwmthaNmAm Ebwnmw OUOAZHEmmurbmeZU?nEN,ZLdQ SWAS T 5 i i 02X C S WN CIEGRAE o 5 e M LLOWING YEAR.I H, E NEV SFUL o UNDaR TOOD THIS. BUT EF WAS A oE HOT DAY, AND AN a7UO G TN TTEND, O W DS mmmmgdry T GRADUAT! Wu,ZHo-F z :NEXT YEAR S mbo BEGUN THREE YRAZS BEFOS - 'DID, z o MOVIES OF PRESIDENT WRISTON Pw Bl v ME WITH MY DIPLOMA; Ha II4,U, B 85 : g 1A SHOOH INSTEAD VER FINE CLOSE-UP OF THW FLO 33 HAT OF THE, WOMAN SITTINC E 8E IM. I HAVE NO IDEA WHO 5 B WAS. OPy CHx B+ ED TH womw w0 SUCH W TSE ARK 85 P CANMOTPE ON$NG CLOSE. IN BET B cPASSEC A i 1--F B g WIT-, U, 1.0 1Y - cvko s Vomspy w o YoTH OTHE 55 8Eo OIER. A e zgmuw AVIKG - NN IT AND wiT e oA WWHOSS PURP. 2 2 c 4 5F BUMAS Tow EN 6178 . 95 ENORMOLS. FEW OF eam.gaplwm L CINTEBgE BT of 8 O U RXSEFEDUCATNONS 3 BE OF THEM HATED THAT UFE AND FLUNKED OUT RAPIDLY AND EFEECFz+ . BUT MOST OF THEM W UE oOVaoTo 80 99 c. IME AND BEGAN TO THINK WITHOUT NOTICIN O THE OIXTU? X WERE PART OF IT: A CENTLE AND INDERFUL 8 s K B ARAN K . zo UINDS Z Map RA MARINE PILOT AND AN OSS MAN B EIN T TWOTCENZ X Mo BINC.T A m g o pe - SDENTS, TUDETS A BFOI AEa o sl A $ ERON '8YE 9, AND THE FACULTY, WHICH I THINK HAD SEEN T 8NG THE WORG T O 4TVARDGSM v 8 5N RENEWED DELIGHT. WE D A W CURRICULM, AND m A H AS UT F o oATION I SATE AND QEMH SIoHT A H;: wAND GOT AN EDUCATION ANY AY, AND NOT TOO sLF- w BFOUSLY AT THAT. I AM NOT mcam G Ed Wa QLL WER ,AND I 8 WEDVEZELO QWI o.ulonhwdemwr-Zocwmdwwtl.amabOwwHHamANMWMwmemewaSr ooSmggggHHOGmehA mm,bUHamaZGm THE BLESSING OF A FACULLY 8 OB ZHAN E oiss WED LEFT A STRONG TASTE FO8 GOON SOKS ANDA 855 0 o -F o 8 Gis5 oo BUNDEAND THE SIRE GTo g HEART OF LITERATE MEN. THY MUCH IS MEMORY. AND AS SUCH ITS OUTLIN EJARE AS PERSONAL AS ITS CONCLUSIONS ARE ABSTRACT; IT 2 RESANTO 4 EXPER gp N cPAg Y Iy wll: le L Au oPARTIY EMOTIONAL. MUCH OF CA BE RECAL Usp ONLY WITH EFFORT, AND YET TS FRUITS :MAIN MUCH LOST AND THAT W H REMAINS DEFINABZE ONLY BY THAT wNTO WHICH IT HAS o BV o IT 1 DIFFICULT TO COMPARE TZAT MEMORY ITH THE EXe ERIENCES O 2 T m 3, o CREDEATES 1 HAV s51 SWATCHED AND TAUGHT AND COUNSEL: O IT ISVDIFFICULT S4CAU B S7+ IGH IS OF SEA+ IMPORTANCE OCCURS VZTHIN, AN O Fo i R w EL WASS AND AT A BPAE SILY UNIMPORTANT TIMES. SOMETHING MAY S 2SAI 0 H'0 V20 30F ogme g sp M i g N, 22 Qe 8 ER AND 5 OHUSE STUDENTS A 51 AIX BOl 0 0 3 .M STNBS W.:i MOST OF THEM AR VB ho PR- '8 - 0 IN 051 0 o 70 FNOW WHERE THEY JP 04 PRETEND THEY DO L w INK TWE PAST IMPINGED UPON US MORE THAN THE FUTURE, AND FOR ALL OUc HURRY FEW OF US COULD PROCLA:M FASTICULAR A FUW RE NOT SO TENSE A: 5 ENTSAREz9 AY. nIv ATGREL ATIVE 8 SGAINED SOMETHING WH 1l THAY DON'T HAVE: BUT PHEY SWORAE B oL zElz THAN N HOW z0 MAKE GOO OUSE g7 A B NVESgITY. M A 1 YBAGREE THTw WHO WSIST THAT .HE ST NTs AR 0N P S8 : YGITHE S.CYRTY OF O BENEFITS, B ARE TOO XTEL KG5 N FOR' sAx lz T EY ARE A D TOO I NELLICE TAK: . THE2T N EORLOOG d B W SFOR o SNPED PEH'PETHO 4 A W A NCsD LESs OF MEN AND THe - 'THAN W HAD, BUT THEYY HAVE THOUC 5 E AS T TH AID THEY DO NOT ST 1KE M S UCTANT TO 1 sR JUO M, . 1 HAS BE 4 h MOURNoILLY THAT T 35 OENERATION OF STUDENTS v8 1588 WELL-ROUNDED THAN THEIR PRE c Hors, THAT THUY - JRoo BNolLAR OF MI O eTHIN ef wd g BUT THEY ARE NO 2 ARM OR HUMAN FOR IT. THAT A . SAINED INTELL: o 2CE SHOULD R SNDU A MAN LESS FIT FOR THE ;MPANY OF HIS , S i 8 X A XSTRUCK MS AS A CURIo P 2ESUMPTION. 81 . m Y MOST PL. A B-MF IS -H. PROGRES 1$ MANY OF THEM MACE FROM THE SEEKING Fo LI YRED GOALS TO DELIGHT IN I AS AND RESPECT FOR BN WHO AR: .Ng BNOUGCH TO 1: 11w o SO EDBAS. THIS WILw 5 2 o Eu dUk M ANE MN. 8 wd HAS BEEN DOING THIS FOR A o N IME; AND IT IS DOING IT BETTER TODAY THAN EVER 8 o0 83 i dio s 2 5ic Z 2 JzosOCZ FACULTY ADMINISTRATION: Dr. Charles H. Watts 11 '47 Dr. Watts is Dean of the College. vis '44 N o e o . N O vl r T ir. G eving: ig;t be N L 18 105D Ild?iLA 13 M so w. PUN 2 BROWN UNIVERSITY STILL KEEPS CROPPING UP IN MY DATILY LIFE IN A VARIETY OF WAYS 15 YEARS AFTER LEAVING COL LEGE HILL AND SOME 100,000 MILES, 30 COUNTRIES AND THREE WARS LATER. FOR EXAMPLE, IN MOSCOW I DIS- COVERED THAT AMID THE VOLUMES AND TRACTS ON ENGELS AND MARX AND LENIN THERE ARE COPIES OF THE BROWN ALUMNI MONTHLY. IN EMBASSIES IN TOKYO, BANGKOK, VIENNA AND PARIS THE BEST INFORMED ATTACHE OFTEN SEEMED TO BE A BROWN MAN. OR MAYBE THE MUTUAL ALMA MATER MADE HIM MORE WILLING TO SHARE HIS KNOWLEDGE AND OPINIONS WITH A NEWS CORRESPONDENT. IN SEOUL, KOREA AND LATER IN TAEGU AND PUSAN WHEN THE ADVANCING NORTH KOREAN AND CHINESE ARMIES FORCED THE UNITED NATIONS TROOPS TO RETREAT, THE AMERICAN AMBASSADOR HIMSELF WAS A BROWN MAN. WHEN I ACCOMPANIED A DELEGATION OF AMERICAN FARM EXPERTS THROUGH THE SOVIET UKRAINE AND CENTRAL ASTA THERE WERE NO BROWN MEN AMONG THEM, BUT A LEADING MEMBER OF THE GROUP HAD PLAYED AGAINST BROWN IN THE ROSE BOWL. THAT PROVIDED A KIND OF AFFINITY, TOO. ALTHOUGH THE STATISTIC CERTAINLY IS NOT TYPICAL OF THE PROPORTION OF BROWN GRADUATES AMONG AMERICAN FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS, THE FACT IS THAT AT ONE TIME THREE OF THE EIGHT U.S. CORRESPONDENTS ASSIGNED TO THE SOVIET CAPITAL WERE ALUMNI OF BROWN! THE APPRECIATION THAT A BROWN MAN MAY FEEL FOR BROWN IS ENHANCED BY THE OPPORTUNITY TO SEE INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE SOVIET STATE. MOSCOW UNIVERSITY IS A 35-STORY, BROAD-BASED SKYSCRAPER WITH DECORATIONS MORE APPRO- PRIATE TO A WEDDING CAKE THAN TO AN EDIFICE AND WITH CLOSET-SIZED CUBICLES FOR DORMITORY ROOMS. IN CON- STRUCTING THE BUILDING, THE SOVIET ARCHITECTS FAIIED TO TAKE INTO ACCOUNT THE UP-AND-DOWN TRAFFIC IN A HORIZONTAL CAMPUS, AND A STUDENT MIGHT VERY WELL WRITE A GOODLY PART OF HIS DOCTORAL THESIS WHILE WAITING FOR A LIFT TO CARRY HIM TO HIS DESTINATION. BUT MOSCOW UNLVERSITY'S DIFFICULTIES ARE MINOR WHEN COMPARED WITH THOSE OF THE UZBEK STATE UNIVERSITY AT SAMARKAND, THE ANCIENT CITY THAT ONCE PROVIDED A TEMPTING TARGET FOR CONQUEST BY ALEXANDER THE GREAT AND TAMERLANE. ENGLISH IS TAUGHT AT SAM- ARKAND UNIVERSITY, BUT WHEN SEVERAL AMERICAN VISITORS, INCLUDING MYSELF, WERE RECEIVED BY MEMBERS OF THE ENGLISH FACULTY THEY DECLARED THAT WE WERE THE FIRST ENGLISH-SPEAKING PERSONS THAT THEY HAD EVER HAD THE OPPORTUNITY TO CONVERSE WITH. THEY HAD LEARNED ACCENT AND RHYTHM OF ENGLISH FROM TAPE RECORDINGS OF RADIO BROADCASTS ENGLISH LANGUAGE PROGRAMS OF THE VOICE OF AMERICA AND OF THE BRITISH BROADCASTING COR- PORATION - ARE NOT ORDINARILY JAMMED . WHAT'S MORE, IT TURNED OUT THAT THERE IS NOT A SINGLE N ENGLISH LANGUAGE DICTIONARY AT SAMARKAND UNIVERSITY. I DON'T KNOW WHETHER OR NOT THE UZBEK 235 THEY SPEAK IN SAMARKAND IS TAUGHT AT BROWN, BUT IT WOULDN'T SURPRISE A PROUD ALUMNUS - WHO HAS COME TO REALIZE THE UBIQUITOUSNESS OF BROWN IF THERE'S AN UZBEK DICTIONARY AT THE JOHN HAY LIBRARY' EDNOTE- GLOSSARIES, BUTNODICTIONARIES; THEY 'RE ONORDER, THOUGH. w To properly evaluate the effect of college years upon one's afterlife is very difficult to do at 45. I suspect at 65 it would be simpler, and really easy at 75. Today, I am more prepared to write an essay on the things that I should have worked for and involved myself in and derived from Brown University. But SN 1 Il eX h 5 certainly Brown gave me many things, and I'll touch on a few of them. In college a young man for the first time meets the real neces- sity of learning an ability to get along with his fellow man. When he's in high school he goes home each evening to his family, and his inadequacies, his inabilities to get along with his fellows, can easily be covered by a doting sister, mother or father. At Brown, I met for the first time the need for understanding my fellow man and learning to get along with him on a friendly basis. I might say that in the ensuing 22 years I have realized each year to a greater extent how very important this lesson is. And second, at Brown I learned the necessity of meeting prob- lems as they arose and making decisions to solve these problems. Further, I began to learn that wrong decisions could seriously e Wb i b lucl,ngk L 2 E o sowo Yz Aq affect one's educational and moral life. For the first time, I began to do more than surface thinking in attempting to reach decisions. I'm not trying to suggest that I was ponderous or deep, or even a very good student, but I did know that I wanted very much to graduate from Brown University, and as a few of my friends and associates dropped by the wayside, I began to recognize that good personal decisions were necessary to govern w my life if I wanted to stay at Brown. During the years I spent on campus, I learned the great value of friendships with older people. In reading of ancient civiliz- ations, we notice that elders were generally looked upon as senior advisors and exerted a tremendous influence on governments and people. Some of the associations that I had at Brown had vivid effects on my business and personal life since then. Without the experience I gained at the University, it would have been very difficult for me to credit my elders in business and elsewhere with sufficient respect to enable me to take from them the ad- vice which has stood me in such good stead down through the px My IR B0 FUCED SSHUISY BUW years. On the scholastic side, I developed some appreciation of the tremendous amount of knowledge there is in the world and how little I really knew. At the same time, being exposed to the many ideas and accomplishments of man during the ages, I got a some- what better perspective of what a man could do if he wanted to. I gained an appreciation of the scope of civilization and an am- bition to use whatever talents I had to the fullest possible extent. In summary, while in four years of college a man may not ac- cumulate very much wisdom, he does accumulate common sense and a little realism - and without these things which I was forced to develop at Brown, I would have been completely unable to handle my present job or anything close to it. When Brown University was founded in Warren, Rhode Island, in 1764, under the name of Rhode Island College, its charter set forth well the purposes for the establishsment of the new school and, among them, was the . . . preserving in the commun- ity a succession of men duly qualified for discharging the offices of life with usefulness and reputation . . . Almost two hundred years have passed since then and such great changes have evolved during the passage of this time that the first officers, faculty and student body, should they be mir- aculously resurrected, would find almost no recognizable vestiges of their alma mater as they knew it - but the fundamental pur- pose remains the same. Situated now in the City of Providence, with a new name and with a vast complex of buildings to accommodate both men and women for the study of nearly every phase of human experience, Brown University has grown to be one of the finest and most influential institutions of higher learning in America. Through all of the changes and the growth of the University, its cornerstone has remained fundamental and strong. From the first day of my admission to Brown until I was grad- uated in 1887, and again as a graduate student, the need not only to apply myself diligently to the courses of study I had selected, but also to prepare myself for a future place in the community, was urged and impressed on my mind by the officers and faculty. The adherence to the classical standards of scholarship; the encouragement of interest in additional studies to develop a broad perspective; the constant awareness of the problems of communi- ties, states, and nations and their resulting impact upon the stu- dents who, as citizens, must soon meet those problems; and the constant efforts to instill confidence, nurture maturity and re- sponsibility in each of its students, have given Brown men and women the qualifications for discharging the various offices of life with competence and with honor. My student years at Brown provided the solid basis of mental discipline and self-reliance upon which I have built my life as an instructor at Brown, as a lawyer and businessman, as a Member of the Rhode Island General Assembly, as Governor of Rhode Island, and as a Senator of the United States. My interest and devotion to law and to national and foreign affairs, and to art, and to the welfare of my fellow human beings were all given focus and direction while I was a student at Brown. My experience in life has since taught me that there is nothing more important than the establishment and maintenance of su- perior universities capable of challenging and developing the minds of young Americans in order to bring forth the highest qualities of mind and body. I believe that the educational philosophy of Brown University, the liberal and comprehensive courses of study there, and the ability of the University to maintain pace with the progress of the world have created a spirit which flows to the students and remains with them as alumni in every field of worthwhile human endeavor. 901 DTWDPEIE UE JNO 1M 0 1942 9doad M3 911 JO 2UO ST UIIL 101RUIG I8, U9949 siduelq 3J0podyl Jojeuss ANIIAINHIAOD ADVERTISEMENTS EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK SENIOR BIOGRAPHIES 59 EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK For several years, the LIBER has tried to be more comprehensive than it is the custom in some cases, the fashion for yearbooks to be. Including a wide range of activities and senior portraits - to the Senior Board members of this book - is not really enough- Therefore, we added a section composed of interesting undergraduates and another section of essays by alumni; we tried to polish the flow of material throughout the book in an attempt to cap- no sections, no chunky succession of stories . Still, and we felt they should ture an impression of The Brown Experience not enough. There were gaps, be filled. dotal, Thus, the EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK . Anec- and generally factual although stories often do get out of hand, it is a story-in-sidelights of Brown over the last few years. The emphasis, prop- erly, is on the year 1958-59. The little bits of 1955-56 which stick in our minds seemn, now, somehow diluted. A fellow beanie-wearer, used to life in the temperate zone he was from Arizona, soon be- came so vividly aware of Providence's decidedly unProviden- tal climate that he made a precipitation chart. Results: it rained for snowed on 46$ of the days from September to May, not counting vacations. Innumerable all-nighters were also than a few of the rapidly-adjusting. experienced by more Heavy Freshman Week competion at the co-ordinate col- lege immediately to the north was indulged in, with temper- ing exploratory trips made to nearby educational outposts usually Wheaton . We counted the cases of beer on the sidewalks in front of fraternities the afterncons before parties. We were amazed. A trip to New Haven brought us into the midst of an anti- Adlai riot and we Jjoined in with all the gusto of another freshman riot. One of our classmates who later became a campus lum- inary started a small brawl in the Yale Bowl which spilled onto the field. During the confusion of all this, he made off with an official's hat, ran to the parking lot, added a piece of parking-lot attendant headgear to his collection, whipped up a second tumult, and slipped back to the campus. There he engaged in a pitched battle over a Brown banner and started a fourth fracas when a Yalie tried to swipe a can of beer. The original Bowlbrawl mushroomed into huge pro- portions after he left, resulting in the jailing of two Brown- men and a Yalie. Dean Durgin gives free-cuts to any freshman who can beat him at checkers. We heard this and some of us tried our luck. Very few if any had any success. Every year, U.R.I, colored paint is applied to the gigantic statue of Bruno at the gym before the traditional deflation of Ram egos. Every year, Bruno's statue has been coated with wax before U.R.I, can get to it. . . . and I'd like you to meet my roommate. Mono . . . Many of us did, sooner or later. We saw Brown's highly-reputed psychology department slowly and carefully extract Freud from psychology. Light-hearted luncheon debates in the Resident Fellows' Dining Room regularly drew more customers than could be seated with topics such as Resolved: that Nassar should be replaced by Farouk. Faunce House scheduled a double feature of gle and Blackboard Jungle. Asphalt Jun- Comment from sophomore audiophile, emerging from be- hind a gigantic speaker cabinet, upon hearing a freshman's plans to buy e. e. cummings' reading-his-own-poems record: I wouldn't. He doesn't talk up to 18,000 cycles. A beercan came flying through the window once. A snow- ball came through the window, too many times. Upon seeing Hollywood's version of Moby Dick I don't think Melville followed the movie too closely. We were flattered when a teacher we met over a split in the Ivy Room was genuinely interested in a paper we had written for another course-and proved it by coming up to our room to see it. The Chiefs make the best sandwiches and hot dogs in the world. Only Howard Johnson and Brown University are licensed to use the great frankfurters used by The Chiefs. ACKLEY, Frederick Roberts, Jr. A.B. English Literature. Born April 26, 1937. Prepared at South Side High School. NROTC, Interdormitory Council vicepresident, Class Cabinet. Crew freshman . Address: 431 Raymond Street, Rock- ville Center, New York. ALLEN, P. Drake A.B. Political Science. August 8, 1937. Prepared at New Trier High School. BrotvnDaily Herald Newsboard, Brown Youth Guidance, Political Science Club vice- president . Address: 255 Locust Road, Winnetka, Illimpis. ANDERSON, Bruce Franklin A.B. Classics. May 12, 1936. Prepared at The Lawrenceville School. Brown Youth Guidance, Freshman Week Committee, Student Court, Liher Brunensis Ad- vertisingManager, Classics Club. Crew, Sailing. Alpha Delta Phi vicepresident. Address: 503 Ridgewood Road, Omaha, Nebraska. ARENA, Salvatore Francis A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born November 12, 1937. Prepared at Port- land High School. Dean's List. Newman Club. Soc- cer freshman, varsity. Phi Delta Theta. Ad- dress : 139 Marlborough, Portland, Connecticut. ARNOLD, R. Steven A.B. Political Science. March 15, 1938. Prepared at McBurney School. WBRU Advertising Manager, Brown Daily Herald, Class Cabinet. Address: 50 Central Park West, New York City, New York. ATWOOD, Frank Gerald A.B. Mathematics. Born July 3, 1937. Prepared at Thomaston High School. Address: Walnut Hill Road, Thomaston, Connecticut. Born Bom Born BAER, Roland Charles, Jr. A.B. Classics. February 4, 1937. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School. Classics Club, Yacht Club. Tennis freshman . Psi Upsilon vicepresident. Ad- dress : 20 Picardy Lane, Clayton, Missouri. BASNALL, John David A.B. Economics. Born October 12, 1933. Prepared at Vermont Academy . Address: 21 Roberta Drive, West Barrington, Rhode Island. BAINLEY, CrougE C, Xl SeB., Bagulneceiring, Blegc trical Engineering. Born September 12, 1937. Pre- pared at Ipswich High School. NROTC, NROTC Drill Team. Sigma Chi. Address: 8 AgawamAve- nue, Ipswich, Massachusetts. BALASCHAK, George Raymond A.B. Mathemat- ics-Economics. Bom August 30, 1936. Prepared Meriden High School. Physics Club, Newman Club. Baseball freshman. ThetaDelta Chi.Ad- dress: Preston Avenue, Meriden, Connecticut. BALLARD, John Francis A.B. Economics. Bora April 29, 1933. Prepared at LaSalle Academy. Newman Club. Sigma Chi. Address: 12 Smith Street, Riverside, Rhode Island. Born BARAM, Phillip Jason A.B. History. Born July 29, 1938. Prepared at Woonsocket High School. Dean's List, PiDeltaEpsilon charter member . The Walter S. Brown University's new psychology laboratory Hunter Laboratory of Psyclwlogy built by Gilbane. Architects: Perry, Shaw, Hepburn Dean . ..an education in modern construction! THANKS TO THE VISION of today's dedicated administrators and loyal alumni everywhere, the Brown man of tomorrow will live and learn in fa- cilities designed and kuilt to make his college years both pleasant and productive. WITH THE OPENING of the new West Quad- rangle and the Walter S. Hunter Laboratory of Psychology, the Gilbane Building Company marked its fifty-eighth year of service to this famed New England University. We are proud and pleased to have played a part in this dynamic era of growth and achievement. WE SALUTE THE MEN of Brown who have made this growth possible, along with future generations who will carry on this program of progress in the spirit of tomorrow. WITH A FULL-TIME STAFF of over two hun- dred supervisory construction experts, imple- mented by the most modern and efficient equip- ment, Gilbane Building Company is in a position to handle all types of construction anywhere, anytime. Gitbane BUILDING g COMPANY Providence, R. I. 90 Calverley Sf. JAckson 1-5400 Hartford, Conn. 30 Gillett St. CHapel 7-4006 New York, N. Y. 15W. 44thsf. MU 7-4770 History, French, Debating, and Glee Clubs; Hillel executive board, Brown-Pembroke Student Zionist Organization president ; Brotvn Daily Herald feature editor, review editor. Address: 271 Gaskill Street, Woonsocket, Rhode Island. BERCROEINTchnNHE NN AN B s tor A BonnEDe cember 3, 1937. Prepared at Central High School. Dean's lList. Cammarian Club vice-president, Brown Daily Herald, Sphinx Club, Delta Sigma Rho, Freshman Week Committee. Address: 233 Pine Street, Memphis, Tennessee. BATSMAN, Lawrence F., Jr. A.B. English Lit erature. BornMay 15, 1937. Prepared at St. An- drew's School. Crew freshman, Wrestling freshman . Address: 525 Merrioaks Road, Bar- rington, Illincis. BAUMGARTEN, Joel David A.B. Mathematics- Economics. Born January 22, 1938. Prepared at Far Rockaway High School. Dean's List. Tower Club. Baseball freshman-varsity. Address: 1133 Neilson Avenue, Far Rockaway, New York. BEALE, Joseph Stevenson A . B. Internationfil Relations. BornDecember 21, 1936. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Dean's List, Sphinx Club. WBRU, Freshman Week Committee chairman, Sophomore Class Treasurer, Brown Key vice- president , Lacrosse Club. Beta Theta Pi. Ad- dress : N. Madison Road, Hinsdale, Illinois. BEAN, Oren Nelson A.B. History. Borne June 6, 1932. Prepared at Lyman Memorial High School. Dean's IList. Brown Christian Association. Address: 10 Creighton Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BEATTY, James Myron A.B. Economics. Born August 24, 1937. Prepared at Nelson W. Aldrich High School. Astronomy Club, Sports Car Club. Address: 42 Yale Avenue, Warwick, Rhode Island. BEAUMONT, Lincoln Spencer A.B. Internation al Relations. Born May 15, 1938. Prepared at Cranston High School. WBRU, Young Republi- cans. Address: 203 Lawnacre Drive, Cranston, Rhode Island. BEEBE, Tyler Hamilton A.B. Political Scien Born January 29, 1938. Prepared at Hillhouse High School. Brotvn Daily Herald advertising manager . Student Adviser, Freshman Week Committee, Faunce Board of Governors, Class Cabinet, Debating Union, WBRU, I.D.C, PiDelta Epsilon. Address: 470 Prospect Street, New Haven, Connecticut. BEHAN, Thomas Joseph A.B. Biology. Born Oc tober 4, 1925. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's lList. Address: Jacksonville, Florida. BELAND, Richard Joseph A.B. International Relations.BornApril 29, 1937. Prepared at Stev- ens High School. Brown Key, Varsity Club. Foot- ball freshman-varsity, Track freshman-var- sity . Delta Upsilon. Address: 8 Osgood Avenue, Claremont, New Hampshire. T THE. NAME OF BALFOUR MEANS THE FINEST IN CLASS RINGS a FRATERNITY JEWELRY REPRESENTATIVES OF Al OB R OCLEY fo L.G J5aiTO0ttf company ATTLEBORO, MASSACHUSETTS T L .................mm. ok DA - m Headquarters in the East for Foreign Sports Cars JAGUAR VOLKSWAGON - PORSHE ALFA - ROMEO LANCIA TRIUMPH - FIAT LS AHD SEEV R Wi morel gn Earshd L of Rhode Jsland 1 RESERVOIR AVENUE PROVIDENCE, R. I. ,,,,,,,,,,,, PO E352523252525nns s 0A0EEAN ERNIRRIAN R TTTTIMITITITITINIE1I1110IMITITIIITANNNANINRINNIE PP T LT LTt T T LT T LTt LT T T T O T LR TE N COU LU LT B Mz THE, I WAYLAND MANOR HOTEL AND RESTAURANT 5 500 ANGEL STREET AT I WAYLAND SQUARE l O - nil ml IIT nil T IT1 T M1 TTMIML. 411 nil M BELLINGS, Douglas Ernest A.B. Economics. Born October 10, 1986. Prepared at Mount Her- mon School. NROTC . Sigma Chi. Address: 40Em erson Road, Needham, Massachusetts. BELLOWS, Arnold Robert A.B. Psychology. Born May 14, 1937. Prepared at Manchester Cen- tral High School. Cammarian Club, Brown Key, Vigilance Committee. Football freshman-var- sity. Delta Upsilon president. Address: 400 Bridge Street, Manchester, New Hampshire. BENNETT, John Francis, Jr. A.B. Political ence. Born January 20, 1938. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Dean's List. Basketball freshman- varsity . DeltaKappa Epsilon. Address: 82 Brad- wood Street, Roslindale, Massachusetts. BENNETT, Peter Mann A.B. Economics. AUEUSE 5, 1857, Sedi Born Prepared at Classical High A visit to our English professor's apartment to hear recordsschool Brown DeMolay Club mresidenm , Brown of John Brown's Body was sufficient to convince us that the Brown faculty has a sincere interest in us. The sherry his own expense didn't hurt in the least. Finals brought the inevitable stories of those who had stud- ied all night, then slept away the exam, itself. There was a food riot which consisted of chants of WE WANT MEAT! accompanied by a barrage of potatoes. After the head of dining halls was hit by a potato, the uprising was quelled almost as abruptly as if someone had pulled out the plug. Method used: the lights were turned off. The year 1956-57 found us playing the roles of sophomores and liking it. Some of us made the trip down to the railroad station to welcome back the team after its season-opening victory over Columbia. The mob scene at the station and the parade back home were unforgettable. Don Larsen pitched his perfect game and we were reminded that the first perfect game of all time was pitched by a Brown- man on the day of his graduation. He quickly traded his cap and gown for a uniform to play his first and best major league game. We learned that Fred Quimby, director of Tom Jerries, is an object of worship, and noticed that the round of applause the appearance of his name on the screen receives has a direct relationship with the distance between the theater and Provi- dence. F.H.B.G.-sponsored exam-week cartoons were found to be worth a lot of welcome laughs-many of which were pro- vided by the audience. Sophomore year, we discovered Resident Fellows. Homecoming, although profitable on the gridiron for the fifth straight year 13-6, against Cornell, had many tragedies: dorm-looting during the height of festivities took a heavy toll; a high-flying spectator fell down the steps in the stadium, was carried out bleeding but laughing by three friends to be sewed up-no anesthetic was needed; a student, reaching for the traditional gigantic banana suspended from the Psi U. flag- 11114444 nil TIT T od mil nil lull il ml 11 IIT I TIL GAS COMPANY rilIMD1111111551531545 11611111111111111111 11111111111 1111111 11 111 11MME T T 1T 1T I T TIT T IMT I T 11 T TTITTT L4l o 52 i H E: F4 H o Christian Association. Address: 879 Pleasant Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. BERESFORD, Daniel B. A.B. Mathematics-Eco- nomics. Born July 15, 1937. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Ski Club, Student Advisor, Class Cabinet. Hockey freshman-varsity, ThetaDelta Chi vicepresident. Address: 411 Lone Pine, Bloamtield Hills, Michigan. BIRENBAUM, David E. A.B. English Literature. Born November 30, 1937. Prepared at Cheshire Academy. Dean's IList. Brown Youth Guidance, Student Advisor, Brotvn Daily Herald literary editor, Student Court, Class Cabinet. Address: 17 Stephana Lane, Waterbury, Connecticut. BISHOP, Edward Fowler A.B. International lations.BornJune 5, 1932. Prepared at Wooster School. NROTC. Address: 41 Everett Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. BLETHEN, Bailey Wilson A.B. American Civil- ization.BornOctober 19, 1937. Prepared at Man- kato High School. Dean's List, Chapel Choir. Golf freshman-varsity . AlphaDelta Phi president . Address: 111 Dell Avenue, Mankato, Minnesota. BLISH, John Harwood A.B. American Litera- ture. BornMay 9, 1937. Prepared at Washington Park High School. NROTC. Class Treasurer, Class Cabinet social chairman. Brown Glee Club, Freshman Week Committee, Proctor. Beta Theta Pi president. Address: 1438 W. Lawn Avenue, Racine, Wisconsin. BLOWERS, Gordon Edward A.B. International Relations. Born February 3, 1988. Prepared at Mayfield Central School. NROTC, Brunavians, Mathematics Club, Yacht Club. Address: 23 First Avenue, Mayfield, New York. BOGLE, Robert Angell, Jr. A.B. Political encse. Born July 31, 1937. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School. NROTC, Freshman Week Committee, Class Cabinet, Student Advisor, Ski Club. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 1915 Robeson Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. BOOTH, Charles Reynolds A.B. Philosophy. Born January 2, 1937. Prepared at Darrow School' Canterbury treasurer. Address: 1433 Bay Point Drive, Sarasota, Florida. Re- Seri 263 BOTBYL, James Richard ScB. Civil Engineer- ing. Born January 15, 1937. Prepared at Haw- thorne High School. Dean's IList, Brown Engin- eering Society, American Society of Civil En- gineers secretary, American Society of Mech- anical Engineers. Baseball freshman . PhiDelta Theta. Address: Grandview Drive, North Hale- don, New Jersey. BOTTOMLEY, Cornelius AWen A.B. Political ence. Born December 26, 1936. Prepared at Yar- mouth High School. Brown Christian Association, DeMolay Club president. Address: No. Main Street, South Yarmouth, Massachusetts. BOTWICK, James Thomas A.B. Psychology. Born June 28, 1937. Prepared at South Side High Scliool. WBRU, Class Cabinet, Brown Youth Guidance, Tower Club, Student Advisor, Crew freshman-manager . Address: 242 Hamilton Road, Rockville Centre, New York. BOYAN, Ara Stephen, Jr. Honors . Born April 18, 1938. Prepared at Rutherford High School. Dean's List, Brown Christian Association, Class Cabinet, Chapel Choir, Biology Club, Brunonia, Democratic Club. Address: 36 Daniel Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey. BRAUN, Howard Jay A.B. Psychology. Born June 20, 1937. Prepared at Lynbrook High School. Dean's List. WBRU, Brown Youth Guidance, Class Cabinet, Student Advisory Committee, Tow- er Club. Address: 161 Central Avenue, Lynbrook, New York. BREARTON, William Edward A.B. Economics. Born August 19, 1932. Prepared at Holmes High School. Address: 76 Spring Garden Street, War- wick, Rhode Island. BREGY, Robert Spotswood A.B. Mathematics. Born January 14, 1938. Prepared at Staples High School. Dean's List. Chess Club, Geology Club, Inter-Dormitory Council secretary. Debating Union vicepresident. Rifle Team varsity- freshman . Address: Weston Road, Westport, Connecticut. BRENDEL, Ernest Richard A.B. History. Born: March 22, 1937. Prepared at Bayley Ellard High School. Debating Union, Class Cabinet, Brown Youth Guidance. Soccer freshman. Address: Canfield Road, Convert, New Jersey. BRENNAN, Alfred Smiley A.B. English. Born March 24, 1958. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. AFROTC. Swimming freshman. La- crosse Club. Delta Upsilon. Address: Lake Minne- waska, Ulster County, New York. BRENNAN, Thomas Joseph A.B. Spanish. Born June 1, 1937. Prepared at Rye High School. Glee Club, Chapel Choir. Delta Tati Delta. Address: 12 Elmwood Avenue, Rye, New York. BRIDGEO, Honors . Born September 29, 1933. Prepared at Matignon High School. Dean's list. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 109 Montrose Avenue, Rosemont, Pennsylvania. Stifstablished 1894 Walter Robert A.B. Russian Studie T1L... .ITITTTITIMITIIL ........ 111 IMMEilT. ... IMIMIMIMMIMMI ... .IL......TMMIMMITIi1111M 111410131 nnnn I BANSPACH BROTHERS Quality Bakers j EL 1-1100 I 0o el Providence, R. I. pole, fell from the second floor window, injuring himself seriocusly despite having landed on the awning over the door- way; a Beta's car went out of control and smashed into a tree injuries to his Pembroke passenger were greatly re- A.B. Political Sciizas he threw himself in front of her at the last moment . We discovered that the idea of having a bear for Brown's mascot and symbol was first conceived by Sen. Theodore F. Green '87 see essay elsewhere in this volume, and became a part of Brown the first month of 1904. The Colgate game on Thanksgiving Day of that year, to those of us who hung around campus, was a heartwarming affair. The Red Raiders, who had scored over 40 points in a previous outing against Army, suffered a shutout at the hands of the Bruins and the Brown team ended its season the same way it began-with a 20-0 victory. One of the greatest tragedies of the football season, re- membered by all those who made the trip to Cambridge, was the refusal of Harvard to allow the P.A. system to carry the narrative describing the Brown Band's halftime study of sex ameba, etc.. Christmas came, and Phi Belt's Santa Claus fell out of his chair. A waiter at a big Christmas time Lambda Chi party lost track of the champagne at bottle number 77. Thirteen points in a row brought Brown another homecourt victory over Princeton, 88-69. We first became aware of Paul Choquette when he, as a freshman, broke his uncle Gilbane's record for the shotput. The Cammarian Club is the oldest student-governing body in America. A member of our class, his spirits raised by Friday night potations, visited a neighborhood Boy Scout troop meeting and took part in the festivities. After Providence College beat us in hockey, a swarm of P. fan-filled cars circled the Wriston Quad, shouting taunts and jeers. In return, we bombarded them with ashtrays and other small objects. It was fun. inn onidinninnniinnd TTITITIIIINT Ioioiiinniinninniinniinniiin Eg n 222A THAYER STREET I g i ONE-DAY SERVICE I MiniillMilMIIMIIMITTI411Mi1111531111M0iMITITMIITT I T IMI T TIMITTTTIT 2112111211 IMIITTTIT1T411111511MMINE. BRIGGS, Tyler Adelbert, Jr. ScB. in Engineer- 264 Hoosac High School. Canterbury Club, Quatre ing. Mechanical Engineering. BornApril 13, 137Bras, American Civilization Club. Delta Phi. Ad- Prepared at Hope High School. Brown Engineer- ing Society. American Society of Mechanical En- gineers. Address: 124 Port Street, Providence 5, Rhode Island. BRIGHTMAN, William Thomas, III A.B. Psy- chology. Born February 13, 1934. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Brown Christian Association. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 1295 Commonwealth Avenue, Allston, Massachusetts. BRODA, Frederick Charles A.B. Political Science.BomJanuary 14, 1937. Prepared at Ped- dle School. Vigilance Committee, Brown Key Squash Club, Football freshman, varsity, Base- 3 f T T L LRIt LR LTT L r LT L LL LRt L TL L L L Lt L LT LT L T L L L T LT T O OO TR LT CON YT T L 5 EO1, OF 2 WELL DRESSED MAN The Hillhouse label has been the mark of a well dressed man for over a decade and a half. That's because time- tested, traditional Hillhouse quality never of goes out style. 111fouje Itd 135 THAYER STREET di DISTINCTIVE MEN'S APPAREL T T T T et T e T L Te T LT oo e e T TR CR UL DL LU EEE LR LU LR Tr211225zemmmrrzi00RERE RRRRRERREERR R REERE R EEE R R RO R R R ball freshman, varsity. Delta Upsilon. Address : 3602 Market North, Canton 1, Ohio. BRODSKY, David Laeb A.B. Economics. Born May 13, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. Tower Club. Young Democrats Club. Student Ad- visei Address: 188 Sumter Street, Providence, R. L dress : 64 South Swan Street, Albany, New York. BROWN, Robert Frank A.B. Art. Born March 27, 1938. Prepared at Ardmore High School. Dean's List. Brotvn Daily Herald, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Outing Club. Swimming fresh- man . Address: 18McMullen Avenue, New Castle, Delaware. BULLOCK, Rufus A.B. Classics. Born October 17, 1936. Prepared at St. Mark's School. Ski Club president . Tennis freshman, varsity-captain, . Ski, Squash Team. Psi Upsilon vice-president, secretary . Address : BrighamHill Road, Grafton, Massachusetts. BURNHAM, Richard Bruce A.B. Art. Born Feb- ruary 10, 1937. Prepared at Williston Academy. Crew freshman. CADY, Lewis Carter A.B. American Literature. Born March 12, 1937. Prepared at East High School. PiDeltaEpsilon. Liber Brunensis editor- in-chief and vice-president, format editor, photog- raphy editor Ivy Magazine Brown editor, Brunonia photography editor . I.D.C. Class Cab- inet. Address: 1625 Olive Street, Denver, Colo- rado. CALNAN, George Charles A.B. Art. Born Octo- ber 25, 1933. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Brunavians. Delta Phi treasurer . Address: 727 Warren Avenue, Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey. CAMPBELL, Thomas Philip, Jr. A.B. American Civilization.BornDecember 3, 1937. Prepared at White Plains High School. NROTC, Bruononia, Class Cabinet, Track freshman, Delta Phi vice- president . Address: 253 S. Lexington Avenue, White Plains, New York. CANEPA, Richard Louis A.B. American Civili- zation. BornApril 29, 1936. Prepared at Hebron Academy . Basketball freshman, Track fresh- man . Delta Phi. Address: 81 Merrimac Street, Newburyport, Massachusetts. CANEVAZZI, Philip Mauro A.B. Biology. Born June 5, 1937. Prepared at Plymouth High School. Biology Club. Address: 17 Overlook Road, Ply- mouth, Massachusetts. CANTINI, Gerald Peter A.B. Art. Born May 19, 1937. Prepared at Lawrenceville School. Ski Club, Crew freshman . Golf varsity. Hockey fresh- man . Delta TauDelta. Address: 1314 Chetwynd Avenue, Plainfield, New Jersey. CARNES, Richard Charles A.B. American Liter- BROWN, Clarence Pennington A.B. Philosophjyittire.BornMay 14, 1938. Preparedat Northamp- Born September 20, 1937. Prepared at New Trier High School. NROTC. Chapel Choir, Freshman Class Secretary. Swimming freshman-captain, varsity. Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 866 Bluff Street, Glencoe, Illimnois. BROWN, Raymond Dutson A.B. American Civi- tion. Address: lization. Born February 3, 1933. Prepared at ton High School. Address: 8 Upland Road, Leeds, Massachusetts. CARPENTER, Richard Paul A.B. Sociology. Born October 23, 1936. Prepared at Phillips Exe- ter Academy. Ski Club, Brown Christian Associa- Green Street, Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. CARR, Edward Harris Sc. B. Physics. Born No- vember 29, 1937. Prepared at Rogers High School. Brown Christian Association, Brown Young Re- publicans. Address: 16 Greene Lane, Newport, Rhode Island. CARR, Joseph Peter A.B. English Literatur Born February 20, 1934. Prepared at Taunton High School. Faunce Board of Governors secre- tary, WBRU, Alpha Phi Omega treasurer, IFC, Proctor, Quatre Bras. Sigma Chi presi- dent . Address: Richard Street, Avon, Connecti- cut. CASTELLUCCI, Joseph Richard A. B. French Honors . Born September 9, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List, French Club treasurer . Address: Douglas Pike, Smithfield, Rhode Island. CATTANEO, Stephen Michael A.B. Biology Honors . Born June 29, 1937. Prepared at West Hempstead High School. Dean's list, Brunonia production manager and managing editor, IDC corresponding secretary, Student Advisor, Class Cabinet, Biology Club. Address: Hillcrest Lane, Woodbury, Long Island, New York. CEDERSTORM, John Alfred A.B. Mathematics- Economics. Born September 27, 1937. Prepared at Pittsfield High School. Brown Marching Band manager , Concert Band manager . University Christian Association, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown DeMolay Club, IDC. Address: 411 Pom- eroy Avenue, Pittsfield, Massachusetts. CHRISTIE, John C, Jr. A.B. International lations.Born October 15, 1936. Prepared at Lake Forest High School. Class of '52 Award, Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's Iist, Sphinx Club, Cam- merian Club president. Brown Key, Brown Youth Guidance executive board. Vigilance Committee, Freshman Week Committee, Class Cabinet. Sigtna Nu. Address: 871 Longwood Drive, Lake Forest, Illinois. CHURCH, Robert Fobes A.B. Economics. Born June 28, 1938. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Acad- emy. Francis Wayland Scholar. Phi Beta Kappa. Dean's lList. Address: 278 Doyle Avenue, Provi- dence, Rhode Island. CLAIBORN, Richard Drura A.B. Economics. Born August 26, 1937. Prepared at The George School. Brunonia circulation manager Interdor- mitory Council. Swimming freshman, varsity- captain . Address: 64 Blake Road, Hamden 17, Connecticut. CLARK, Raynor William A.B. Political Scie Born May 17, 1937. Prepared at Mahasset High School. AFROTC . Class Cabinet, Co-Chairman- Spring Weekend 1958, Glee Club, Arnold Air So- ciety vice-president. Student Court Investigat- ing Committee. ThetaDelta Chi president . Ad- dress : West Long Drive, Lawrenceville, New Jer- sey. COHEN, Gordon Seth A.B. Biology Honors. Born May 18, 1937. Prepared at James Madison High School. Dean's list. Brunonia business lIIllIIDSRIIIIIllIIIlIIIlIIIIillIIllIII: THE I BROWN UNIVERSITY i O - 2 - 2 rp! 3 e e n the ivy room d- the coffee lounge g g T g caterer to fraternities caterer to dormitories O T T L T T T T L LT L L T T L T L O T L L T O T 2 photo supplies : at school discounts g -I For Students and Faculty Members - ADLER'S PHOTO STORES y PROVIDENCE i WEST WARWICK I TMITMMIMITII TTIM TTTITITI TTAL TTITITIZTTHUM Te1113 ....... oo L e e B A PR oo o o oo SRR R B 0 oo o SR o nonn o I GASBARRO BROTHERS NC. i I 421 Atwells Avenue I PREVVIDENCE, B, 1 L T T e O T T N LT Your Best Move LANS Warehouse Co, of Wayland Sqg. 17 Seekonk Street, Providence UN 1100 s complete moving service local and interstate our 54th year modern storage packing and crating Authorized Agents for North American Van Lines, Inc. Monitor did a pick-up from George Shearing's concert that year in Sayles Hall. Hillhouse Ltd. had a sale on ugly silk gold-and-black checked dinner jackets, marked down from $85 to $10. The lucky ones bought them, while they lasted. A Brownman at Ft. Bragg sold his lettersweater for some outrageous price to a hobo, then ordered another at a con- siderably less outrageous price from Brown's athletic depart- ment . That was the year the Brown Flying Club had its own plane. Some of us were in the Glee Club which visited Wash- ington and took time out to serenade Senator Green '87, then celebrating his 70th year-since-graduation. The Club was mentioned in the Congressional Record. And the freshman crew sank into the murky depths of the Seekonk. A member of the class of '58 declared a tax deduction on a pair of khakis ruined in the chem lab: damage from the elements. A Phi Delt was offered $10 to get a Yul Brenner haircut and did. That was the year we discovered that the force behind the Lydia Pinkham Company was an Arthur Pinkham '02. Atlee spoke. The Harvard-Brown cricket match took place, tomary pre-gamesmanship. with cus- A lot of us went out to witness the Pembroke Sailing Regatta fusing Brown Yacht Club boats which hit Sports Illustrated. Spring weekend, a guy ran into a bus. girls from as far away as California, A DKE's letter-to-the-editor independent's hit Time. The baseball team pulled off a triple-play in its 12-1 de- FEie f U. R 1 Brownmen helped to fight the forest fire in Massachusetts. Some of us brought Hawaii, and Sweden. saw print in Playboy and an After an exam: Prof. Van Nostrand became N.B.C.'s American Literature consultant; his program immediately Dbefore the English 4142 final pretty much gave away the answers to the exam to those who were watching rather than studying. A member of our class brought his date from New York to the campus dance before graduation on his 48 foot yacht. I feel nauseocus. The year 1957-58 brought the West Quad and its machine Shop. We made at least one trip to the East Side Diner in our bare feet, leaving with a French fry hanging out of our ears. We lost money on our Basilio-Robinson bet. Some of us. Fraternity lounges buzzed for a few days with talk about the court injunction which was being made against Judson House for its occupants' habit of disposing of their trash i. e., beercans on their neighbor's lawn. At one point that year, top 44. our football team was rated in the The F.H.B.G. that year. helped bring Brubeck and the Tiilbot Bros. Most of us heard the bells of University Hall ring out for longer than we had ever heard before: the University had bought Dexter Asylum's 39 acres the only available nearby ground for $1,000,777.77. That meant a new athletic plant for Brown-due to one of the biggest landgrab moves the Uni- versity has ever made. 2677 aaron seidman. The movies showed that Brown should have won the open- ing game of the season against Columbia that year, but it didn't help our place in the standings much. A lot of us gathered around the tube in Faunce House to see the World Series in color. Everybody went down to Yale to see the game With The Storybook Ending. Yalies swiped the Band's skimmers. Those who could steole them back. Russia sent up the first sputnik that weekend too, and Brown's Radio Club was one of the first unofficial listeners to same. manager , Student Advisor, Biology Club presi- dent , BrownDaily Herald. Address: 40 Schenck Avenue, Great Neck, New York. COHEN, John Marshall A.B. Biology. Born May 16, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. WBRU coadvertising manager, Hillel, Biology Club secretary-treasurer, Brunonia advertis- ing manager . Track freshman. Address: 547 Fair Street, Warwick, Rhode Island. COHEN, Roger L. A.B. Political Science. Born March 2, 1938. Prepared at Perkiomen School. Student Advisor, Political Science Club, Hillel, Kappa Sigma. Address: 874 Port Drive, Mam- aroneck, New York. COLE, Robert Rockwell A.B. Economics. Born May 31, 1936. Prepared at Phillips Academy. FHBG president, Tennis freshman, varsity. AlphaDeltaPhi secretary. Address: 344 High- land Avenue, Upper Montclair, New Jersey. COLLEY, Orrin Munro A.B. American Civiliza- tion. BornMarch 17, 1937. Prepared at Governor Dummer Academy . Brown Daily Herald. Address: Partridge Road, Duxbury, Massachusetts. COLLINS, Michael Frederick A.B. Biology Hon- ors. Born July 27, 1937. Prepared at Detroit Country Day School. Dean's List, Debating Union. Address: 50 South Drive, New Brunswick, New Jersey. CONKLIN, Charles Eugene, Jr. ScB. Mechani- cal Engineering. Born December 2, 1936. Pre- pared at Peddie School. Brown Engineering So- ciety, ASME, Lacrosse, Phi Delta Theta. Address: 76 Stratford Avenue, Garden City, New York. CONNET, John R. Sc. B. Electrical Engineering Honors . Born December 19, 1936. Prepared at Hope High School. Brown Engineering Society, Dean's lList, IRE. Crew freshman . Address: 67 Whitmarsh St., Providence, Rhode Island. COOKE, James Boxley A.B. American Civiliza- tion. Born September 15, 1936. Prepared at Phil- lips Academy . Interfraternity Council, Beta Theta Pi.Address: 5Roller Road, Charleston, West Vir- ginia. COVERT, Lewis Burnham A.B. Political Science. Born November 24, 1936. Prepared at Brooks School. Vigilance Committee, FHBG, Rowing As- sociation, Class Cabinet. Swimming, Crew fresh- man . AlphaDelta Phi. Address: 296 Bair Ave., Berwyn, Pennsylvania. CRATER, Thomas Neil A.B. Art. Born Septem- ber 11, 1937. Prepared at Birmingham High School. Brownbrokers, Class Cabinet, Vigilance Committee, Freshman Week Committee, Sock Buskin, Student Advisor. Sigma Nu. Address: 2425 West Lincoln, Birmingham, Michigan. CRONIN, John Williams, Jr. A.B. English Liter- ature. Born March 9, 1937. Prepared at Wilbra- ham Academy. Freshman Class President, Vigil- ance Committee, Cammarian Club, Interfratern- ity Council president. Freshman Week Com- mittee. Cricket Club, Football freshman, sity. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Address: Street, Providence, Rhode Island. var- Elton CRONSON, HarryMarvin Sc. B. Electrical En- gineering Honors . BornMay 31, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. Francis Wayland Schol- ar. Sigma Xi, Dean's list. Tati Beta Pi, Brown Engineering Society, IRE treasurer. Address: 55 Raymond St., Providence, Rhode Island. CROTHERS, Robert Davies A.B. Economics. Born August 18, 1937. Prepared at Chaminade High School. Meikel john Prize in Logic. Student Advisor, lLacrosse varsity. Sigma Chi vice- president . Address: 40 Old Field Lane, Lake Success, New York. CROUT, Gerald Stanley A.B. Geology. Born 29, 1987. Prepared at Douglas High School. Way- land Scholar, Dean's lList, Sphinx Club, Student Advisor, Brown Youth Guidance, Democrat Club. Address: 2940 West Solano Drive, Phoenix, Ari- zona. CURRIE, J. Roger A.B. Geology. Born Januar 1, 1938. Prepared at Medford High School. Geo- logy Club vice-president. Interdormitory Coun- cl. Address: 20 Sunset Road, Winchester, Mas- sachusetts. CUTTER, Charles Parker A.B. Etiglish Literleo-vember 5 1637 7 5 ture.BornApril 2, 1936. Prepared at Phillips Ex- eter Academy . AFROTC . DeltaPhi.Address : 133 Seal Rock Drive, San Francisco, California. DALEY, William Arthur A.B. Economics. Bom November 14, 1936. Prepared at Gould Academy. NROTC, Sigma Chi secretary. Address: 10 Viles Street, Augusta, Maine. DAVIDSON, Michael Samuel A.B. Born June 21 1938. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Hillel, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 10 School Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts. DAVIS, Andrew Hambly, Jr. A.B. American Civilization.BornFebruary 10, 1937. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Brown Daily Herald, Brown Youth Guidance, American Civilization Club. Yacht Club. Sigma CM. Address: 251 Wood- lawn Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. DAVIS, William Bowdoin, Jr. A.B. Art. Born June 17, 1937. Prepared at Woodstock Country School. Ski Club vicepresident, Interdormi- tory Council, Ski Team manager . Address: 912 Poplar Hill Road, Baltimore 10, Maryland. DAY, Horace Corbin A.B. Classics. 1937. Prepared at The Hotchkiss School. Yacht Club vice-commodore, Ski Club, Ski Team var- sity. Sailing Team freshman and varsity. Psi Upsilon president. Address: Llewellyn Park, West Orange, New Jersey. DEDRICK, Charles Van Loan A.B. Psychology. Born July 8, 1937. Prepared at West Orange High School. Band. Cross Country freshman, Track freshman . Phi Delta Theta vice-president. Address: 24 Undercliff Terrace, West Orange, New Jersey. DEFTOS, Leonard John A.B. Psychology Ron- ors . Born December 3, 1937. Prepared at Brock- ton High School. Dean's List. Class Cabinet, Freshman Week Committee, Student Advisor. Baseball freshman. Kappa Sigma. Address: 12 Arlington Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. DIAMOND, Stephen Alan Sc. B. in Engineering. Mechanical Engineering. Born January 27, 1988. Prepared at Dwight Morrow High School. Dean's Iist. NROTC . Brown Engineering Society, Bridge Club, American Society of Civil Engineers. Ad- dress : 317 West Hudson Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey. LR111:1ETTER' Theodore Fred A.B. Born June 17, 19377. Prepared at Hamden High School. Hockey freshman . Address: 154 Woodlawn Street, Hamden, Connecticut. DIGEL, Howard Elder A.B. Geology. Born Au- gust 3, 1937. Prepared at Smethport Area Joint High School. Distinguished AFROTC Cadet, Re- 3Igublj.c Aviation Corporation Award. Dean's IList. AFROTC. Geology Club secretary-treasurer. Class Cabinet. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address 905 West Main Street, Smethport, Pennsylvania. DI PAOLA, Joel Francis Sc.B. Chemistry. Born Prepared at Freport High School. Chemistry Club, Newman Club. Address 249 Randall Avenue, Freeport, New York. DI SAIA, Philip J. A.B. Biology. Born August 14, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. L T T O T L L L L L LEL LT L AL L TTL T LAt It With Best Wishes For Success The OMbLel company Rhode Island's Largest Department Store L e President Plantations House, Newman Club. Ad- dress : 83 DaboU Street, Providence, Rhode Island. Born July 7, DONNELLAN, Stephen James Sc. B. Electrical Engineering. Born October 12, 1931. Prepared at Lexington High School. Brown Engineering So- ciety. Address: 19 Valley Road, Lexington, Mas- sachusetts. DONOHUE, Mark N., Jr. Sc. B. in Engineering. Mechanical Engineering. BornMarch 18, 1937. Prepared at Pinary School. Newman Club, Class Cabinet, American Society of Mechanical En- gineers treasurer. Brown Engineering Society. Interfraternity Council. ThetaDelta Chi. secre- tary . Address: 68 Valley View Avenue, Summit, New Jersey. DONOVAN, Bruce Ellict A.B. Classics Honors . BornMarch 8, 1937. Prepared at Phillips Andover Academy. Francis Wayland Scholar, Phi Beta Kappa, Dean's IList. Sphinx Club executive board . NAACP, Brown Youth Guidance. Student ELAND, Advisor, Freshman Week Committee, Classics Club. Address: 95 High Street, Andover, Massa- chusetts. DONOVAN, William Joseph A.B. Political Preparatory Country Day School. Tower Club, Hillel. Interdormitory Council, Student Advisor, Glee Club. Address: 177 137th Street, Belle Har- bor, New York. Timothy Brodie Brockwell A.B. Eng- lishLiterature. Born November 17, 1937. Pre- pared at Saint Luke's School. Brown Youth Guid- ance, Young Republicans. Address: Pembroke Drive, Stamford, Connecticut. Science.BornJune 19, 1937. Prepared at Kimballg1,1,70T, Craig Dewilton A.B. English Litera- Union Academy. NROTC Marine Officer Candi- date. Basketball freshman, varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 545 Haverhill Street, Law- rence, Massachusetts. DUDLEY, Benjamin Franklin A.B. Political ture. BornApril 2, 1937. Prepared at The Hotch- kiss School. Brown University AFROTC Medal- lion. Arnold Air Society. Wrestling freshman, varsity. Address: Vineyard Point, Sachem's Sadad, Guilford, Connecticut. ence. Born May 22, 1934. Prepared at GushingglTING, Victor III A.B. American Civilization. Academy. Band, Ski Club, Interdormitory Coun- cil. Address: 182 Frances Street, Portland, Maine. DUFRESNE, Louis Lawrence A.B.Economics. Born May 2, 1937. Prepared at LaSalle Academy. Address: 26 Montrose Street, Providence, R. I. DYCKES, William A.B. American Literature. Born February 21, 1938. Prepared at Hamden High School. Brown Daily Herald art editor .EVANS, Havdn- Barry A.B. English Literature. Photography Club. Spanish Club president. In- terdormitory Council. Address: 52 Mather Street, Hamden, Connecticut. DYSON, Stephen Lee A.B. Classics Born June 27, Honors 1937. Prepared at PleasantviUe L L O LT L L LT L L L L L L BRIGGS oD T LT L L L LT T L L T LR TR MEN'S HABERDASHERS 13 EXCHANGE STREET PP T I High School. James Manning Scholar, Phi Beta' Kappa, Pearce Prize in Ancient History, Foster Prize in Greek, Second Wayland Prize in Latin,i Sphinx secretary, Liber Brtmensis productDELI, manager, president, Class Album editor, In- terdormitory Council, Classics Club president . Rifle Team freshman. Address: 30 Spring Street, PleasantvilUe, New York. EATON, Wyndham II A.B. Born November 18, 1936. Prepared at Nichols School. Varsity Club., Track freshman, varsity. Hockey freshman,. varsity-captain . Beta Theta P1i secretary. Ad dress : 95 Columbia Avenue, Hamburg, New York.. Born April 13, 1938, Prepared at Polytechnic r FEE, Brian Burns A.B. Classics. Born February 23, 1938. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. NROTC Marine Officer Candi- date. Jabberwocks, Chapel Choir, Glee Club, Class Cabinet, Brown Rowing Association secretary, Brunavians. Crew varsity. Beta Theta Pi sec- retary . Address: 685 Burton Drive, Lake Forest, Born May 3, 1936. Prepared at The Bullis School. Delta Sigma Rho, Philermenian Society. Vigil- ance Committee, Centerbury senior warden . Secretary Class of 1959, Cammarian Club re- cording secretary . University Christian Associa- tion president. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 1709 Camp Alger Avenue, Falls Church, Virginia. AT, Rilghzueel Aenolel Se. B8, Blectizilesl Hngin eering. BornApril 16, 1932. Prepared at Wethers- field High School. Veteran's Club. Soccer fresh- man . Track freshman. Sigtna Chi. Address: Main Street, Dighton, Massachusetts. 269 FAIRBANKS, Alan R. A.B. Economics. Born July 15, 1937. Prepared at Wakefield High School. Yacht Club. Young Republican Club. Address: 9 Lawrence Street, Wakefield, Massachusetts. FAUX, Richard Gordon, Jr. A.B. Political ence. Born November 30, 1937. Prepared at Quin- cy High School. Vigilance Committee. Freshman 'Week Committee, Class Cabinet, Brtmonia. Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 99 Lincoln Avenue, Wollas- ton, Massachusetts. July 20, 1937. Prepared at James T. Lockwood High School. Address : 180 Natick Avenue, Green- wood, Rhode Island. 1937. Prepared at Manasquan High School. NROTC. Sports Car Club, Brunavians, Classics Club. Delta Phi. Address: 32 East End Avenue, Avon-by-the-Sea, New Jersey. Seil Michael Sc.B. Civil Engineering. Born Born July 10, FENNER, Clyde Douglas A.B. French Honors. EBER, Leslie Michael A.B. Biology HonorsBorn November 24, 1937. Prepared at Avon High School. Dean's List, French Club. Address: 166 East Spring Street, Avon, Massachusetts. FERGUSON, Theodore Parkman, Jr.Engineer- ing. Born August 21, 1927. Prepared at Crans- ton High School. Brown Engineering Society president. Signm Chi. Address: 186 George Street, Norwood, Rhode Island. FINNEY, Frank Hammond, Jr. A.B. Political Science. BornMarch 19, 1937. Prepared at Royal Oak High School. Brown Key treasurer. Var- sity Club corresponding secretary. Football, freshman, varsity. Hockey freshman. Base- ball freshman, varsity-Captain Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 921 North Edison, Royal Oak, Michigan. FLEISCHER, Stuart Lewis A.B. Econotnics. Bom May 27, 1937. Prepared at Yonkers High School. Dean's List, Tower Club. Address: 28 Caryl Avenue, Yonkers, New York. FLERON, Frederic J., Jr. BomOctober 4, 1937. Prepared at Rivers Country Day School. Brown Youth Guidance. Address: Center Street, Dover, Massachusetts. FLYNN, James William Jr. A.B. Psychology. Born April 2, 1937. Prepared at Darien High School. Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance. Bas- ketball freshman. Football varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 35 Deepwood Road, Darien, Connecticut. FORSEE, James Hedges, Jr. ence. Born September 8, 1937. Prepared at The W W A.B. Political ScterfzaiDelta president. American School. University Christian Associa- tion, Democratic Club, Political Science Club, In- ternational Relations Club, Brown Youth Guid- ance. Address: 7059 Alaska Avenue Northwest, Washington, D.C. FORSYTHE, George Arthur A.B. Economics. Born May 12, 1937. Prepared at Quincy High School. Class Cabinet . Basketball freshman, var- sity , Baseball varsity . Lambda Chi Alpha.Ad- dress : 12 Beacon Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. FREDERICK, Glennard Elder A.B. Economics. Born September 4, 1937. Prepared at Saint George's School. Dean's List. Student Advisor vice-president. Class Cabinet, Freshman Week Committee, University Christian Association, In- terfraternity Council Executive Committee, BrotvnDaily Herald, Basketball freshman Address: 23 Adelphi Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. FRENCH, J. Russell, eering. Born July 11, 1937. Prepared at West- wood Senior High School. Brown Engineering Society. Address: 28 Greenacre Road, Westwood, Massachusetts. FRIEDLANDER, Robert Lane Sc.B. Engineer- ing. Born February 23, 1937. Prepared at Evan- ston Township High School. Class Cabinet. Swim- . f?eShmam DeltaKappa Epsilon. Address : ing, Evanston, Ilinois. Football freshman. 9529 North Hard- CONTRACTORS and ENGINEERS ' 285 Pf+man S+ree+ ProchEmnce 6, fihode Isth Ly 1-6000 o IDIl Lk Se, 8, Bleetricell Biitgin 271 FU.II, Allan M. A.B. Political Science. tober 6, 1937. Prepared at Roosevelt High School. Dean's IList. Arnold Air Society, Class Cabinet, AFROTC Drill Team. Address : 3523 Kaau Street, Honolulu, Hawaii. FULLER, Paul Hayes A.B. Political Science. Born July 18, 1937. Prepared at Governor Dum- mer Academy. Political Science Club, Young Re- publicans. Tennis freshman, varsity. Address: 72 Corning Street, Beverly, Massachusetts. GALLUCCIO, Richard Adrian A.B. Chemistry. Born March 17, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. Wayland Scholar. Dean's List. Plantation's House vice-president. Address: 280 Mount Pleasant Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. GARDNER, James Daniel A.B. Geology. Born Octcber 13, 1937. Prepared at Boonton High School. Dean's List. Newman Club, Geology Club. Sigma. Address: 4 Harbour Terrace, Edgewood 5, Bt dee Tsland. GIBBS, Lippman M. A.B. Atnerican Civilization Honors . Born February 27, 1938. Prepared at W. C. Mepham High School. Dean's List, Student Advisor, Brown Youth Guidance, Brownbrokers, Class Cabinet, Student Court, American Civiliza- tion Club. Wrestling freshman, Crew fresh- man . Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 72 Lake End Drive, Merrick, New York. GIBSON, John Alexander III A.B. Mathematics- Economics. Bom January 19, 1937. Prepared at Penn High School. Intramural Athletic Council, Foothall freshman. ThetaDelta Chi. Address: 5756 Front St., Verona, Pennsylvania. GILBERT, Francis B., Jr. A.B. Economics. July 29, 1936. Prepared at Lawrenceville School. Yacht Club, Glee Club, Vigilance Committee, Freshman Week Committee. Sigma Nu. Address: Born Track freshman . PhiDelta Theta. Address: 420 South Woods Road, Syosset, New York. Green Street, Boonton, New Jersey. GARNO, Edmund Forsythe A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born April 13, 1937. Prepared at Camp Hill High School. Football freshman. Track fresh- man . ThetaDelta Chi. Address: Nob Hill, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. GINSBERG, GILLAND, James Henry A.B. Economics. Born May 30, 1937. Prepared at Crosby High School. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Address: 54 Meriden Road, Waterbury, Connecticut. Michael A. A.B. Political Science. Born April 28, 1938. Prepared at Durfee High School. Thomas Carpenter Prize in Elocution, GEREMIA, Vincent F., Jr. A.B. Biology. BorRgower Club president, Interdormitory Council, June 8, 1937. Prepared at Cranston High School. Dean's List, Newman Club, Yacht Club, Kappa L O L O T L T T LG e I from $1 to $10,000 diamonds watches gold jewelry costume jewelry sterling silver china crystal gifts and direct importations TILDEN-THURBER PROVIDENCE Branches at Wayland Square, Watch Hill, and Garden City Newport O T LT L LT LT LT T T Tt LTt LT T L LT LT LT L L L L T T O OO T T R T L L L Lt L L L L L L L L L L L L CL L L L L T eee. . IIIITIIIIIIL.....AMIMIMIZ313133133 ... 110000004 ... Football freshman manager . Address: Robeson Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. 2002 G, H. WALKER CO. Members of the New York Stock Exchange 840 HOSPITAL TRUST BUILDING i 1000 nn PP T I L L Lt EE oo e oo OO OO CUEECEOR T O UL EELURE LU UL TR R RE R AR R R R R R TIIMITITiil1MMDIIITTEIMITIMIIIE . . . . IMMIE11MIITTITTIIMIMITITinilMIMITIITIMITIIIT4111111111111M11114n51; GLASHEEN, John Davitt II A.B. American Civilizatiott.BornFebruary 9, 1937. Prepared aBorn May 13, Deerfield Academy. Brown Key, Football fresh- men, varsity. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Address: 5 Pomeroy Terrace, Northampton, Massachusetts. GLASS, David Edward A.B. Mathematics. Bom December 8, 1937. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Dean's List, Tower Club, Swimming freshman . Address: 4 Weston Place, Law- rence, New York. GOLDBECKER, Peter F. A.B. Americctn Civ-, ilzation. Born February 19, 1938. Prepared at Hopkins School. Yacht Club, Ski Club, Newman Club. Delta Phi secretary. Address: 45 Rich- mond Avenue, New Haven, Connecticut. GOLDBERG, Paul Joseph A.B. Political SciengeIlD, Honors . Born July 18, 1937. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Dean's List, Interdormitory Council, WBRU, Class Cabinet, Tower Club, Stu- dent Advisor, Swimming freshman, varsity. Address: 3141 82nd Street, Jackson Heights, New York. GOLDENBERGER. Richard David A.B.English Literature. Born April 25, 1936. Prepared at Woodmere Academy. Track freshman man- ager . Golf varsity. Beta Theta Pi. Address: 230 Central Avenue, Lawrence, New York. GORDON, Jay Holland A.B. History. Born Janpebating Union, uary 3, 1938. Prepared at West Orange High School. Dean's List, Interdormitory Council, Chapel Choir, Bridge Club, Sock Buskin, Re- publican Club. Address: 11 Crystal Avenue, West Organe, New Jersey. GOSHIEN, David Barney A.B. Classics Hon- ors . Born July 20, 1937. Prepared at New Bed- ford High School. Dean's List, WBRU, Student Court, Tower Club, Freshman Rifle Team. Ad- dress: 150 Cottage Street, New Bedford, Mas- sachusetts. GRAND, ruary 10, 1938. Prepared at Grover Cleveland High School. Dean's Iist, Biology Club, Browm Youth Guidance. Address: 44 West Cedar Street, Livingston, New Jersey. GRAY, Peter A.B. Psychology. Bom July 6, 1937. Prepared at Marblehead High School. Hock- ey freshman, varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha, Ad- dress : 4 Cherry Street, Marblehead, Massachu- setts. GREGORY, Bruce Laramie A.B. American Civ- ilization. Born January 2, 1937. Prepared at the Choate School. AFRO'TC, LiberBrunensis Pro- motions Manager, Phi Gamma Delta presi- dent . Address: 81 Gilbert Road, Ho-ho-kus, New Jersey. GRENIER, Richard Edward A.A. Mathematics- Economics. Born April 24, 1937. Prepared at Concord High School. Chorus, Sigma Nu. Ad- dress : 27 Thompson Street, Concord, New Hamp- shire. Theoclore L, A B, Biloloer. Borkn Ech- GRIGGS, Lawrence Trowbridge A.B. Classics. 1937. Prepared at Lawrenceville School. Brown Youth Guidance, Hockey fresh- man . Sigma Nti vice-president. Address: Box 684, Princeton, New Jersey. GRIMES, William David Whitman A.B. Psycho- logy. Born July 7, 1937. Prepared at Holton High School. AFROTC, Yacht Club, Brown Youth Gui- dance. PhiDelta Theta. Address: Durham Road, North Madison, Connecticut. GROBLICKI, Peter John Sc.B. Chemistry Hon- ors . Born May 5, 1938. Prepared at New Bed- ford High School. Dean's List. Chemistry Club. president, Newman Club, Outing Club, Stu- dent Advisor, Address: 496 Sawyer Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. Gerald Andress A.B. Econontics. Born 29, 1938. Prepared at Hoosac School. Address: 30 East 68th Street, New York 21, New York. GUNDLACH, Louis Thomas A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born November 3, 1937. Prepared at Mount Saint Michael's School. NROTC Marine Office Candidate, Football freshman, varsity, Base- ball varsity. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 2886 Zulette Avenue, Bronx 61, New York. GURNEY, James Stedman A.B. Political Scir- ence. Bom April 3, 1937. Prepared at Brockton High School, Cammarian Club, Class President, Freshman Week Committee, Delta Sigtna Rho, Brown Key, Beta Theta Pi vice-president. Address: 249 Moraine Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. HAAS, Alvin Charles A.B. Art. Bom April 3, 1937. Prepared at Albany Academy. Dean's IList. French Club, German Club treasurer. Address: 16 E1lm Street, Coxsackie, New York. HAGENAU, Walter Paul A.B. Latin. Born July 30, 1937. Prepared at Cranston High School. Bis- hop McVickar Prize. Dean's List. NROTC . Clas- sics Club, Brunavians. Address: 33 Jackson Road, Cranston, Rhode Island. HALL, David Binnev A.B. Classics. Born De- cember 24, 1937. Prepared at the Hotchkiss School. AFROTC . Liber Brunensis, Yacht Club, Ski Club, Cricket Club, Crew freshman, var- sity . Sailing varsity. Alpha Delta Phi Ad- dress: Valley Ranch, Peacedale, Rhode Island. HALL, Richard Hogiie A.B. Art Born June 12, 1937. Prepared at University School. WBRU , Soc- cer freshman. Tennis freshman, varsity. Phi Kappa Psi Address: 3339 Grenway Road, Shaker Heights 22, Ohio. HALLIDAY, John Gary A.B. American Civiliza- tion Honors. Born March 30, 1937. Prepared at Hingham High School. Dean's List, Student Advisor, Chapel Choir, Freshman Week Com- mittee assistant chairman, Canterbury Club, Sphinx, Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, Amer- ican Civilization Club, Vigilance Committee, Brown Key, Swimming freshman, varsity Track freshman. AlphaDeltaPhi Address: 59 School Street, Hingham, Massachusetts. HAMON, Charles Burr A.B. Mathetnatics. Born December 8, 1936. Prepared at Berkshire School. Swimming freshman, varsity . Address: Ridge- field Road, Wilton, Connecticut. HANSEN, John Peter A.B. Economics. Born April 22, 1938. Prepared at Bay Shore High School. Newman Club, Student Advisor, Football freshman, varsity. Sigma Chi Address: 329 Lakeview Avenue, Brightwaters, New York. HANSER, Albert Diez A.B. Classics. 30, 1937. Prepared at St. Louis Country Day School. Classics Club vice-president. Tennis varsity manager . Soccer freshman, P, si Up- silon president. Address: 601 South Price Road, St. Louis 24, Missouri. ralph Stuart and his orchestra Gfimfiiifik I 576 Fifth Ave, N R R A RN R R R R AR A R R 119 Wwaterman St. I New York City Providence. R. I. o The Cloisters, Sea Island, Georgia S T TT Lt L tr L LL Lt rt LT L T T L L T O T LT HARMON, Stephen Arthur A.B. Speech-Drama- tics Honors. Born November 15, 1937. Pre- pared at McBurney School. Sock Buskin Busi- ness manager Brownbrokers business mana- ger . Class Cabinet, Address: 11 Riverside Drive, New York, New York. Born Mags hard that a match couldn't be lit. Asian Flu almost meant no Homecoming. Bronson House became a partial infirmary; it was loaded with the local dead and dying. We registered our sixth straight Homecoming victory, this time against Penn, 20-7. One prominent member of our class spent Friday night on the floor of Psi U., Saturday night on a floor in A.D., and Sunday night leaned up against a bookcase in Jameson House. At no time did he Iloosen his tie or unbutton his vest. This was the year a lot of undergraduates discovered The Telephone. The crowd for the U.R.I, seasons. game was the biggest in twelve The 7-0 Princeton loss came - and it rained. It rained The Schlitz company made arrangements with Phi Delt, though, and a Schlitzfest was held. This made up for all the mossiness of Saturday afternoon. A horror flick was shown at midnight in Faunce House, I Walked With a Zombie. It was a tremendous success; beercans were thrown at the screen. The Debating Union had a party and as many of us as possible figured a way to sneak in. The occasion was a SI school debating conference, and about $700 worth of refresh- ments were served. W.B.R.U. broadcast their gridirony encounter with the B.D.H. that year, live. The radiomen used 10 girls at one time or another on their squad, so the penpushers were forced to encounter with 23 player teams and ten cases of beer. Coming back from Thanksgiving-in-New York, we met and argued Byron with a hobo in Penn Station. We watched Brown beat Colgate 33-7 on the TV set in the Biltmore. The Brunotes were a big hit at the Saturday night Carnegie Hall Jjazzconcert. It was no surprise to Brownmen to see a frontpage letter- to-the-editor in the New York Times demanding that the government provide softer launching pads for Cape Can- averal rockets. No surprise, that is, when it is considered that the Iletter was authored by a Brown Professor named Carberry. A lot of us packed ourselves into Phi Gam's lounge to listen to art professor Jordy blast the University's present- day architectural policy. We applauded. 273 Some guy not a student a Pembroke freshman dorm. a brace of angry Pembrokers sitting on top of him, Some A.D.'s had a clambake on a hotplate. A light-hearted member of our class decided that the end of the semester brings cartoon week-exams rather than exam week-cartoons. A simple matter of emphasis. During exam or cartoon week. Dr. Watts, then lecturer in a large American Literature survey course, put a sign on his door: No. Maybe never. tried to sneak into King House, He ended up on the floor with captured. A regular feature of exam week i1s the revival of the story about the classics professor who flunked his own son out of Brown. Flunkouts took their toll. The clientele of one engineer- ing course of 35 was reduced by thirteen. Three years of flunkouts moved the chapel seat belonging to a member of the class of '.88 whose name started with S from row V to row Q. Football captain Rohertshaw, drafted by the Chicago Cards, was the only Ivy League player to be chosen in the N.F.L. talent-sift that year. Somebody said that 147 companies drop by each year to interview Brown's engineering majors of which there are 43. At one point in Brown's 4-2 hockey win over Princeton, Princeton pulled their goalie, had six men swooping down on Brown's penalty-struck tric of defenders. HARRIS, Cra:l.g Alan A.B. BlOlOgY' Bom OCtO-A love-wrought young lady cut her wrists at a fraternity ber 31, 1937. Prepared at Providence Country Day School. Dean's IList. Brown Youth Guidance, Freshman Week Committee, Student Advisor, Chapel Choir, Ski Club. Delta TauDelta treas- urer . Address: Box 250A.R.F.D. No. 3, Esmond 17, Rhode Island. party. Two foreign students were expelled and deported after it was discovered that they were involved in an ingenious Gf highly illegal series of payphone lootings. There are four dollar-a-year men in the history department. The Glenn Miller band played for an I.F.C. formal. A CHIEEWN M1 S in the liigliest Parker tradition x i XHE PARKER REN COfSJ1PANV JANESVILLE WISCONSIN HARRISON, RonaldBruce A.B. EnglishLitera- ture. Born February 11, 1937. Prepared at Kim- kall Union Academy. Brovni Key, Brown Daily Herald, Varsity Club, Freshman Week Commit- tee, Proctor, Student Advisor, Basketball fresh- man, varsity. Sigma Nu. Address: 3V2 Holly Street, Salem, Massachusetts. HASKINS, Jerome Foote A.B. Gr eek-Latin Honors . Born August 12, 1937. Prepared at Grover Cleveland High School. First Wayland Prize in Latin. Francis Wayland Scholar, James Manning Scholar, Dean's IList. Brown Youth Guidance, Classics Club, Swimming freshman . Address: 16 Espy Road, Caldwell, New Jersey. HASTINGS, BornMay 27, 1937. Prepared at Swampscott High School. Brown Charities, Class Cabinet, Phi Kappa Psi secretary. Address: 12 Dennett Road, Marblehead, Massachusetts. HASTINGS, Stuart Pendleton Sc.B. Applied Mathematics Honors . BornMay 12, 1937. Pre- pared at Oyster Bay High School. Francis Way- land Scholar, James Manning Scholar. Dean's list, Band, DeMolay Club, Chess Club presi- dent . Address: 175 Ivy Street, Oyster Bay, New York. HATCH, John MacLlaren A.B. Art. Born July 1937. Prepared at Lenox School. Football var- sity manager . Theta Delta Chi. Address: 102 Bowen Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HAUCK, Kenneth Henry, Jr. Engineering. Born April 29, 1937. Prepared at Port Chester High School. NROTC, Brown En- HODGES, H. William A.B. American Civiliza- gineering Society, ASME, Brunavians, Swim- ming freshman . Phi Kappa Psi.Address: 7 Bis- hop Drive, Port Chester, New York. HAWLEY, Clyde Wesley Sc.B. Mechanical En- gineering. Born January 4, 1937. Prepared at Hope High School. Brown Engineering Society, ASME, Address: 43 Vineyard Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HAYES, William Bender A.B. Political Scien e Born June 10, 1937. Prepared at Rye High School. Class Cabinet, Track freshman, varsity, Football varsity. Delta TauDelta. Address: Blind Brook Lodge, New York. HEBERT, Donald Joseph A.B. Art. Bom April 24, 1936. Prepared at Cranston High School. Hock- ey varsity. Address: 327 Auburn Street, Crans- ton, Rhode Island. HEBERT, ence. Born August 30, 1937. Prepared at Man- chester Central High School, Debating Union treasurer . Republican Club, Class Cabinet, De- lta Sigma Rho, Newman Club, Address: 20 Roy Avenue, Manchester, New Hampshire. HELPERN, David Paul A.B. Art. Born March 22, 1938. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Dean's lList, Tower Club president, Interdor- mitory Council, Student Advisor, Brownbrokers, 2775 Sc.B. Mechanical Brown Daily Herald, Golf varsity, Swimming freshman, varsity . Address: 42 Auerbach Lane, Lawrence, New York. HEMMETER, John Henry A.B. History of Art. Born July 2, 1937. Prepared at Grosse Pointe University School, Freshman, Senior Class Treas- urer, Ski Club, Yacht Club, Glee Club, Class Cab- inet, Sock Buskin. Sigttia Nu Address: 507 Notre Dame Avenue, Grosse Pointe 30, Michigan. HILLEGAS, David A.B. Biology. Born March 26, 1937. Prepared at Friends School. Student Ad- visor, Class Cabinet, Yacht Club, Ski Club. Theta DeltaCM. Address: R. D. No. 4, Marshallton, Wil- mington, Delaware. Robert A. A.B. English Literature. HINEY, John Connor A.B. Spanish. Born De- cember 13, 1937. Prepared at Bergenfield High School. Interfraternity Council, Delta Phi presi- dent . Address: 13 East Clinto Avenue, Bergen- field, New Jersey. HIRSHFIELD, Neil Bernard Sc.B. Mechanical Engineering. Born June 14, 1937. Prepared at Baldwin High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Tau Beta Pi, Brown Youth Guidance, BrownDaily Herald, Brown Engineering Society, ASME, Class Cabinet. Address: 809 Lincoln Ave- 2pue, Baldwin, New York. HOBART, F. Preston, Jr. Sc.B. Engineering A.B. Born October 26, 1937. Prepared at Dwight Morrow High School. Glee Club president. Brown Engineering Society. Address: 885 Wood- land Avenue, Oradell, New Jersey. tion. Born June 3, 1938. Prepared at Baldwin High School. Cammarian Club, Student Advisor president, Faunce House Board of Governors vicepresident. Brown Youth Guidance vice- president , Omega, Interfraternity Council, Kappa Sigma President. Address: 1759 Rockville Drive, Baldwin, New York. HOILES, orn April 28, 1937, Prepared at Milford High School. Chapel Choir, DeMolay Club, Republican Club, Political Science Club, Class Cabinet. Ad- dress: 229 Orange Avenue, Milford, Connecticut. HOKANSON, Carl Gustav A.B. Mathematics. Born March 9, 1937. Prepared at Loyola High School. Ski Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Ger- man Club, Newman Club. Address: 1100 Casiano Road, Los Angeles, California. Richard Wilfrid A.B. Political SciOLLMAN, Philip Stephen A.B. American Civ- ilization Honors . Born October 27, 1937. Pre- pared at Moses Brown School, Interdormitory Council president. Brown Key, Cammarian Club, Brown Charities, Class Cabinet. Delta Sig- ma Rho. Tennis freshman. Address: 353 West Elm Street, Brockton, Massachusetts. HOLLOS, Honors . Born November 10, 1937. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Bushnell Premium. Dean's Class Cabinet, Sphinx Club, Alpha Phi David Gray A.B. Political Science. Paul Andrew A.B. Political Science and list. Debating Union, Brown Daily Herald Jjun- ior board . Student Advisor, Liber Brtmensis business manager . Political Science Club pres- ident. Class Cabinet, Interdormitory Council. Address: 53 East 66th Street, New York, New York. HUNT , Frederick Granger A.B. EnglishLitera- ture. Bom June 19, 1937. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Sock Buskin chairman, Brownbrokers, Ski Club. Address: 25 East End Avenue, New York 28, New York. JACOBS, Donald Martin A.M. American Civili- HOLMAN, John Willard, Jr. A.B. English Lifgarion. BomMay 17, 1937. Preparedat Pennsbury erature. Born March 12, 1937. Prepared at The Pingry School. Freshman Week Committee, Clas- sics Club, Cricket Club, Brown Christian Asso- ciation. Delta Kappa Epsilon treasurer. Ad- dress: 77 Addition Drive, Short Hills, New Jer- sey. HOLSING, James Judgson Sc.B. Mechanical En gineeting. Born July 9, 1937. Prepared at Tech- ncal High School, ASME, Brown Engineering Society, Track freshman, varsity. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 126 Roanoke Road, Springfield, Massachusetts. HOURIET, Robert Blaine A.B. American Liter ttire. Born May 23, 1937. Prepared at Buchtel High School. Dean's List. Brunonia, Orchestra, Brown Young Guidance, Chapel Choir, Student Advisor, Interdormitory Council. Address: 79 Marvin Avenue, Akron 2, OChio. HOWARD, John Mikel A.B. History. Bom June 27, 1937. Prepared at The Blake School. Glee Club, Bruinaires, Ski Club, Brown Youth Guidance. Zeta Psi president. Address: 15607 McGinty Road, Wayzata, Minnesota. T T T L T L L T L L LT LT L L L L L LR LR LA TR LT HOWARD C. BARBER DATRY Pasteurized Homogenized Grade A Milk 28 Mary Street EASTPROVIDENCE. R. I. GE 4-2165 O FO a 111M 11221111111111111121 111231+ 2220, . . - 111111111111291 11111111101 MM 111110000, . . . . 11111211111111111111 112112120003 High School. Interdormitory Council, Tower Club vice-president. Class Cabinet. Address: 114 St. Paul Street, Brookline 46, Massachusetts. JALESKI, Paul FiskA.B. Economics. Born Janu- ary 8, 1937. Prepared at The Hotckkiss School. Outing School, Photography Club, Hockey fresh- man, varsity. Sigma Chi. Address: 160 Power Street, Providence, Rhode Island. JANGRO, John Lineen A.B. Political Science. Born October 25, 1935. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Newman Club. Football freshman, ga-rsitw . Lambda CM Alpha. Address: 81 Allen Street, Greenfield, Massachusetts. JEFFREY, Frank Joseph A.B. Ecottotnics. Born July 29, 1937. Prepared at Stonington High School. AFROTC, Football freshman, varsity. PhiDelta Theta. Address: 48 Moss Street, Paw- catuck, Connecticut. JENSEN, Lawrence C. W.A.B. Botany. Born Oc- tober 5, 1936. Prepared at Scarborough School. Brown Christian Association. Address: 65 Shore Drive, Portchester, New York. JESDALE, William Todd Sc.B. A.B. Etigineer- ingandClassics.BomdJune 26, 1936. Prepared at Winchester High School. Hockey varsity. Delta Upsilon. Address: 1700 Butternut Drive, Fronte- nac, Missouri. JOHANN, Albert Francis, Jr. A.B. Biology. Born December 23, 1937. Prepared at Rutherford High School. Interdormitory Council, Newman Club, Ski Club, Yacht Club, Class Cabinet. Ad- dress: 240 Prospect Place, Rutherford, New Jersey. JONIKAS, Albert Peter, Jr. A.B. Econontids Honors . Born February 26, 1937. Prepared at Crosby High School. Francis Wayland Scholar. Interfraternity Council. Basketball freshman. DeltaKapjxiEpsilon president. Address: 332 Homestead Avenue, Waterbury, Connecticut. JUDKINS, Richard Friden A.B. Psychology. Bom June 20, 1937. Prepared at South High School. Football freshman, varsityl, Baseball freshman, varsity. Basketball freshman. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 79 Upsala Street, Worchester, Massachusetts. KANTAROS, William Louis A.B. Political Scietice.BornAugust 5, 1937. Prepared at Milton High School. Yacht Club, Political Science Club, Interdormitory Council. Baseball freshman, varsity, Track freshman. Address: 12 Vose Hill Road, Milton, Massachusetts. KARTIGANER, Donald M. A.B. American Lit- erature. Bom May 9, 1937. Prepared at White Plains High School. Dean's list. Brotvn Daily KFIGHT' Wllllam Thomas, Jr. A.B. American Herald. Brownbrokers chairman, Sock Bus- Literattire. Born August 25, 1937. Preplared at kin, Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 13 Fairway Drive, Moses Browln SChOOlI' Bro'wn Youth Gulldance, White Plains, New York. Interfraternity Council. Sigma Nu president. KASPER, Robert Peter Sc.B. Chemistry. Born?ddress: Gl e b B L June 19, 1937. Prepared at Harding High School. Kz;S'I'eIZl;:R 5 de 10 oo : : Dean's List. Brown Christian Association. Chem- i '23 er;19a3r7 P' i .d cto ;oin;cs 'H' O;n istry Club. Address: 38 Mill Hill Avenue, Bridge- S Hary 3, A e TR T ! School. Debating Union, Yacht Club, Phi Kappa e Psi Address: 304 Loring A Pelham, N KAUFFMAN, Warren Jay A.B. Art. Prepared YSlk - - at Lower Merion High School. Dean's list. Liber - i : : ; OHLMANN, Robert Clegg A.B. American Brtmensis, BrownDaily Herald, Student Advisor, , , . , e Civilization. Bom July 21, 1937. Prepared at Tower Club treasurer. Address: 601 Fairview j I E ; Garden City High School. Brown Christian As- Road, Narberth, Pennsylvania. Ll j : sociation vice-president. Freshman Week Com- mittee, Student Advisor. Address: 121-EI 15th Street, Garden City, New York. KOSLOWSKI, Francis Stanley Sc.B. Mechanical i Ettgineering. Born October 17, 1937. Prepared at KERN, Walter M. D., Jr. A'B'. History. IBornNorwich Academy. ASME, Interdormitory Coun- March 10, 1937. Prepared at Ridgewood High o1 Brown Engineering Socity. Address : 665 West School. Boldberg Premium in History. Dean's Thames Street, Norwich, Connecticut. Iist. Student Advisor, Interdormitory Council KRESKO, Robert E. A.B. International Rela- secretary . Republican Club vice-president. tjisris. Born August 8, 1934. Prepared at St. Chess Club. Address: 25 South Monroe Street, Mary's High School. Cammarian Club. Football Ridgewood, New Jersey. freshman . Beta Theta Pi Address: 7822 Cleve- KEYLER, Calvin K. A.B. English Literature. don Avenue, St. ILouis, Missouri. Born February 21, 1937. Prepared at Bloounfield KRIEGER, Lewis Lawrence A.B. Political High School. NROTC, Brunavians, Varsity Club, gcjence. Bom November 5, 1937. Prepared at Cross Country freshman. Track freshman, g gt Orange High School. Cheerleader, Demo- varsity . Sigma Chi gsecretarw - Address: 163 tic club president . Address: 158 Harrison Thomas Street, Bloomfield, New Jersey. Street, East Orange, New Jersey. KEYWORTH, Edward Cornell, Jr. A.B. Econontsasketball team added a 74-67 upset over Yale to the string ics. BornMay 9, 1933. Prepared at Vermont Acad- O;,;;tSlisa Brown-over-Yale events. So did the hockey team emy . Address: 25 Berkley Road, East Greenwich, Other notable hockey victories included those over B.C., Rhode Island. 10-4; Pri;ce;can, i?lh Eii a2 anccii a suclidlen death win over g L 2 Dartmouth, 4-3, wit rty seconds remaining. KILEY, Daniel Fallon A.B. Political SClence'Music and nightstatements were provided by Kai Wind- Born January 25, 1935. Prepared at Admiral Bil- ing, Billy Taylor and Jean Shepherd during the West Quad's g qA . Winter Weekend. 1 Academy' Political Science Club, Interfra- A senior had a suggestion: What they oughta do whitli ternity Council vice-president. Rushing Court, Rhode Island is cut it off from the mainland and let it float , ! 1 i Swimming freshman. Sigma Nu. Address: 517 7 Nobody was happy with the University's decision not to Pleasant Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. let W.B.R.U. broadcast all night. KING, Walter Francis, JCacat A 5 Physics. BornAnd that was the year a senior challenged himself to swim 0 the Seekonk and did. It was January, though, and slightly January 24' 1932. Prepared at Attleboro ngh out of season for Seekonk swimming. When he made it to School. Physics Club. Address: 5 County Street, the other side, he was met by his Pembroke assistant who was acting as clothes-bearer - and by a cop. When the Attleboro, Massachusetts. story hit the wire services, it was played up as a boy-swims- KINLEY, Donald Leslie A.B. Chemistry. BOrn river-in-middle-of-winler-to-prove-prowess-for-girl's-lovebit. The : swimmer's father, city editor of the Chicago Trib., learned Mayl 11, 1937, Prlepared at the Pingry School. about his son's deed from the AP. My God! he said, after Outlng ClU.b, Chenu.stry ClU.b, Soccer dreshman, examining the dispatch, he's Dbeen there four years - it's varsity. Address: 116 Ashland Road, Summit, 3Pout time he did something: KENNEDY, Francis WilHam, Jr. A.B. Biology. Born May 14, 1937. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Newman Club, Political Science Club. Ad- dress : 26 Lenox Circle, Lawrence, Massachusetts. A member of our class borrowed the Jag belonging to a New Jersey' fellow Phi Gam, went to New York. That was the Ilast KLEINMAN, Martin Stuart A.B. Psychology AEveel e I e EoRll CEREk The classic Brown-Yale Resolved: this is the house of 0'101101!5 . Born January 3! 1938' Prepared at Woolworth rather than the house of Wordsworth debates James Madison High School. Physics Achieve- brought the Bruin debators to New Haven in flowing judicial . . robes, waving long loaves of TItalian bread. It also brought ment Award. Dean's List, Student Advisor, Class ' J g g the Yalies their first defeat of the season. Cabinet. Address: 2717 Quentin Road' BrOOklyn' A minor West Quad-R.I.S.D. skirmish mushroomed into New York. a firecracker-throwing, Jeering, booing West Quad-Providence KLINE - . police conflict. Six carloads of police and one wagon L , David Crose A.B. Sociology. Born Seplistened to many renditions of Gee, Office Krupke and tember 16, 1937. Prepared at Windham High comments such as these: Decadent servants of the hour- School. NAACP, Alpha Phi Omega, Brown Chris- geosie! Loot the city! and Show us same gun tricks! tian Association. Address: Willington Hill, Will- B ElEEsLi oF eury Plamicel B0 By The mevic Highs e . gt C 4 t one of Prof. Taft's economics books. ilngcon, Connecticuc. 277 A 1A1111M M1 111111111111111111111111111111111 M11111111 4 11111 M11111111111 M1111111111111111111111111111 M1111 M11 M 13 T e e OO LU JUST FINE FOOD 93 . e e '-4 o O O o G w H 0 L :Z H E! B! MUSIC 109 Washington St., Located Across The Pond From The Old Grist Mill a0 s v Providence, R. I. DExter 1-5385 J 395 FALL RIVER AVENUE ' 1 SEEKONK. MASS. : CLTTICTTTITT I ETTTITIIMIEIKTIN T TTTTTTTITTII il mil zzzy sezy BUORREAREERRERRUREERRERRRERR R LAMB, Arthur Clifton A.B. Biology. Born Jaanet. Brown Charities. Crew freshman. Pi uary 11, 1939. Prepared at Douglas High School. Lambda Phi. Address: 16 Oak Hill Road, Wor- NAACP . Interdormitory Council, Brotvn Daily osster, Massachusetts. Herald.Address : 800 East 43rd Street, Baltimore, 1,INGER, George David A.B. Political Science. Maryland. Born May 3, 1957. Prepared at East Denver High LANE, Bernard Paul A.B. Economics Honors School, Vigilance Committee secretary. Brown Born June 27, 1938. Prepared at Midwood High KeYr Cammarian Club, Faunce House Board of School. Johnson Prize in French. Lamport Prize GOVeINors. Vice-president of Junior Class. Alpha in Economics. Dean's List. Band, Orchestra. Ad- DeltaPhi vice president. Address: 719 Frank- dress : 963 East 27th Street, Brooklyn, New York. lin Street, Denver, Colorado. ; ; LINNEY, Joseph Robert A.B. Economics. Born LANE, Whitney Lincoln A.B. Art. Born Febru- October 3, 1937. Prepared at Worcester Academy . ar'y e s e DeltaPhi. Address: 10 Lynde Street, Plattsburg, Sigma. Address: 235 Manhattan Avenue, Tuck- New York. ande, New York. ; LINSLEY, James Duncan A.B. History. Born LAVITT, Melvin S. A.B. American Civilizatigfyember 4, 1936. Prepared at St. Mark's School. Born September 9, 1937. Prepared at East High Chapel Choir, Brown Chorus business man- School. Brown Charities chairman. Vigilance ager . Crew freshman, varsity-manager. Ad- Committee, Class Cabinet, Ski Club, American dress : 101 East 74th Street, New York 21, New Civilization Club. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 726 york. Forest Street, Denver, Colorado. LOCKMAN, Lawrence Allen A.B. Biology Hon- LAWSON, Robert Mason A.B. Philosophy. BOTYNgrg, Born November 4, 1937. Prepared at Cleve- July 4, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. 1and Heights High School. Tower Club Dean's list, Canterbury Club. Delta Phi. Ad- tary. Dean's list. Orchestra president. Ad- dress : 12 Everett Avenue, Providence 6, Rhode Jregs: 2292 Allison Road, University Heights, Island. Chio. LEE, Kyu Tai Sc.B. Chemistry Honors. Born December 27, 1935. Prepared at Salinas Union :Z 7 8 High School. Hartshorn Prize in Mathematics. Freshman Chemistry Award. Chemistry Prem- secre- . Dean's 1o oA e LOEW, Donald Earl A.B. Mathetnatics. Born - ress. T M n o, 133 iocd o e o eou, Boreg, 7 : School. NROTC, Student Advisor, Brunavians LEVASSEUR, Paul Micila.elSc.B. Applied Matqge-cretarw . Class Cabinet. Address: 60 Hull matics. Born April 5, 1937. Prepared at Deering . - . . ree r r . glg,htSChizld' Deafn 358 L;St' Er Odwn Tgmee;mg LOVELL, Arnold Buffum A.B. English Litera- s SEPEh el PR ture. Born February 17, 1937. Prepared at Taft Lo b B0 e Islalnd. . School. Dean's list, Brunonia vice-president. LEVIN, Arthur lLewic A.B. Philosophy. BOM o igqc clyb vice president. Address: 2220 January 16, 1938. Prepared at Harding High Country Club, Coral Gables, Florida. School. Dean's List. Astronomy Club treasurer, LUCCO, Alfred Angelo A.B. SocioZofy Honors. Hillel, Brunonia business manager . Address: Bom July 12, 1937, Prepared at Plairville High 974 Cepitol Avenue, Bridgeport, Conmecticut. School. Dean's IList. Brown Youth Guidance LIEBERMAN, Carl Marcus A.B. English Lit- President. Glee Club. Address: 159 Broad erature. Born February 20, 1937. Prepared at gtreet, Plainville, Connecticut. Worcester Academy. Student Advisor, Class Cab- 1uM, Jon Tek A.B. Philosophy Honors. Born January 8, 1937. Prepared at Punahou School. PRINTERS OF QUALITY I Akerman Standard Co.,. Inc. PP 56 PINE STREET - PROVIDENCE, R. I. J GA 1-7620 A Hy - Dean's Ilist, Brown Youth Guidance, Student Ad- visor, Brtinotiia. Address: 3001 E. Manoa Road, Honolulu, Hawaii. LURIA, Robert Alan A.B. Born February 4, 1937. Prepared at Penn Charter School. Sigma Nu secretary. Address: 712 W. Mt. Airy Ave- nue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. LUTZ, Electrical Engineering. Born March 14, 1934. Prepared at Pawtucket East High School. Dean's Iist. Tau Beta Pi. IAS secretary. Brown Eng- ineering Society. Address: 900 River Road, Lin- coln, Rhode Island. Thomas Stanley Sc.B. Aeronautical STANPORT interior designers Color consultants to Brown University 27 DRYDEN LANE, PROVIDENCE :'ll ' ' 'l 'N ' ' H O e e T g O Address: 25 Mendon Road, Berkeley, Rhode Island. MARDEN, Richard Dow A.B. Economics. Born April 27, 1938. Prepared at Randolph High School. Political Science Club. Alpha Phi Omega. Address: 15 Fairmount Street, Randolph, Massa- chusetts. MARKOFF, Paul Aaron A.B. Philosophy. Born September 5, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. Bridge Club. Address: 221 Medway Street, Providence, Rhode Island. MATHEWS, Theodore Kenneth A.B. MMSIC. Born July 3, 1937. Prepared at Saginaw High School. LUVISI, Fred Paul Sc.B. Mechanical Enginegnd vice-president. Orchestra, Chorus, Bru- ing. Born April 18, 1937. Prepared at Chelten- ham High School. Interfraternity Council, De- bating Union treasurer. ASME . Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 8015 Cooke Road, Elkins Park 17, notes. Address: 511 Weadock, Saginaw, Michigan. MAY, David Elliot A.B. American Civilization. Born June 11, 1937. Prepared at Murdock High School. Brown Christian Association, American Pennsylvania. Civilization Club, Band. Address: 406 Mendenhall LYNDE, Edward J. A.B. Philosophy. Born FelStreet, Greensboro, North Carolina. ruary 23, 1938. Prepared at Newton High School. MAYER, James Ingram A.B. English Literattire. Brown Christian Association. Address: 105 Wood Born June 11, 1937. Prepared at Choate School. End Road, Newton Highlands, Massachusetts. Dean's List. AFROTC, Student Advisor, Class MacCALLUM, David .lohn A.B. Economics. BorEebinet, Chapel Choir, FHBG. Wrestling fresh- October 13, 1937. Prepared at Asbury High man . Kappa Sigma vice-president. Address: School. Class Cabinet, Student Advisor, Interfra- Box 327, Woodbury, Connecticut. temity Council, Brtmonia managing editor. MAYHEW, Donald GmorA A.B. Philosophy. Born Delta Phi vice-president. Address: Ivy Place, September 16, 1931. Prepared at Mount Hermon West, Allenhurst, New Jersey. School. Dean's List. NROTC, Address: 3 Pres- MACKIE, Peter Arnold A.B. Psychology Hon-cott Court, Rumford, Rhode Island. ors . Born February 17, 1937. Prepared at Holten MCGEORGE, David Sands Brown A.B. Political High School. Dean's Iist. Glee Club, Interdormi- Science.BornAugust, 30, 1937. Prepared at Up- tory Council. Address: 2 Withrop Street, Danvers, perMerion High School. Baseball freshman, var- Massachusetts. sity-manager . Address: 198 Crestway, King of MAHONEY, Thomas R., Jr. A.B. Art. Born Augrussia, Pennsylvania. ust 19, 1935. Prepared at Amityville High School. McKAY, Robert Gordon A.B. Psychology. Born Delta Upsilon. Address: 117 LeBrun Avenue, November 25, 1936. Prepared at Dalton High Emityville, New York. School. Republican Club. Crew varsity. Rifle MALONEY, Mathew C. A.B. American Civilizag-team freshman. Address: 41 Riverview Drive, tion.BomFebruary 2, 1934. Prepared at Canter- Dalton, Massachusetts. bury School. Psi Upsilon.Address: Terrace Place, MCKENDALL, Robert Paul A.B. Spanish. Bom New Milford, Connecticut. March 10, 1937. Prepared at Cranston High MANGAN, Charles Edmund A.B. Political Sci-School. Newman Club, Brown Youth Guidance, ence. Born November 6, 1936. Prepared at Classi- Student Advisor. Address: 5 Rockland Avenue, ical High School. Newman Club. PhiDelta Theta. Cranston, Rhode Island. 280 Jameson House took up a collection, the Road with special handmade introduction Hay Library. An article in the N. Y. Herald-Trib cited Bronson House's aggressive intellectual programming, colloquia, etec. A Brownman borrowed a car that weekend, ended up squelched in his northward flight after knocking down eight guardposts. His explanation: I just had to get to Welles- ley! Hockey coach Fullerton was named as New England Coach of the Ye.ir, and goalie Batcheldor made all-New England for the second year in a row. gave a copy of On to the John A Dbeat sophomore dedicated the remainder of his college life to the design of Charlie Parker album covers. A weekend exuberant ended up in a paddy wagon after he ripped a porch off a neighborhood home. Spring Weekend found a number of Quad wanderers in- cluding three gypsies, 'laiming they were on their way to Denver on one ski. One gentleman spent the weekend in a phonehooth with a keg of beer. Among the 5,000 riversiders was a Junior who had a telephone receiver connected to a helium-balloon, claimed he was talking to God. A truckful of jazz made its way up and down the traffic-clogged River Road. Gilbane workers, commuting between Providence and Poughkeepsie, where they were working on a new Vassar dorm, brought 17 young ladies up for the weekend. A Phi Delt fell in a cesspool. An upperclassman was Sseen carrying a wooden horse. One young man and his date finished off a fishbowl of beer, found seaweed, shells, etc. on the bottom. A B4G man repaired a window in Lambda Chi during a cocktail party, accepted drinks handed out to him during the Job, stuck his hand through the window after he had finished and left. 5:00 Sunday morning brought a pogo stick-riding celebrant into the Wriston Quad. Quote of note: I liked Sunday best of all because that is the only day I remember. A deportation nearly deprived the campus of the Toy Sun. Ricky Nelson did not come to Brown. Some West Quad funsters sent up a lighted balloon, made a few authoritative sounding calls to the Journal. Result: front page U.F.O. story. Can I borrow some lighter fluid? Got a lighter? No. I'm burning some poly sci books. After exam: I had my brain picked this morning. A senior whose father is an undertaker stores his stuff over the summer in a casket. The senior dance was a big success: at the paddy wagon. everyone threw chairs 1958-59 year is the main concern of this book, however, and the preceeding should be considered Jjust a warmup. We got a big kick of the freshman class' River Kuai. marching a la The tug-o'-war was cquite an event, too. The rope broke and the sophomores nearly dragged themselves to death. Nugget ran a fine story on the Carberry legend. A member of a short story class ran into a minister's office claiming he had seen a divine vision to see what the reaction would be for a short story he was writing concerning a sim- ilar situation. The reaction: Are you kidding? The Brunotes, on their way to a N. Y. ment, got involved in a five-car accident. niteclub engage- Pembroke sophomores, tired of the lack of excitement, staged a rict in front of the West Quad the likes of which never before had been seen. A member of the student body put a Yale decal on an Archibald House toilet seat-renamed it The Yale Bowl. And Brown defeated the Blue in a tremendously exciting contest, 35-29, for the first time Yale has ever lost a game in the state of Rhode Island. A guy and a gal, out for a fall evening sail, almost got run down by a tanker after their boat turned over on the Seekonk. Tanker passengers spotted the little boat Jjust in time, though, and effected a rescue. Help Stamp Out Pembrokers buttons were a big hit until the University objected to the spirit in which the demand was being fulfilled by the supply, stamped out sales oper- ations. A sophomore decided he wanted to see if San Francisco really existed, hitchhiked thereto, spent three weeks On the Road, seeing 26 states and 7,400 miles of road milage. Dis- missed. MCLAUGHLIN, John Stewart A.B. Economics. Born January 22, 1938. Prepared at Bay Shore High School. Brotvn Daily Herald production manager . Republican Club. Address: 38 Hem- lock Lane, Bay Shore, New York. McMORRIS, .lames Milton A.B. Political Science. Born April 22, 1938. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. NROTC. Soccer freshman, varsity. Beta Theta Pi Address: 173 Circle Drive, Plan- dome, New York. McNEISH, Peter F. A.B. Political Science. May 26, 1937. Prepared at Mt. Lebanon High School. Brown Key. Secretary of Senior Class, Cammarian Club, Vigilance Committee, Class Cabinet. Football freshman, varsity. Baseball freshman captain, varsity. Lambda Chi AI- pha secretary. Address: 773 Fruithurst Drive, Pittsburgh 34, Pennsylvania. MENDELSON, L. Aaron A.B. Political Science. Bom August 7, 1937. Prepared at Mercersburg Academy. Vigilance Committee, FHBG treasur- er . Brown Key. Wrestling freshman . Pi Lamb- da Phi Address: 5537 Rartlett Street, Pittsburgh 17, Pennsylvania. Born MERCHANT, David M. A.B. Ecottomics. Born July 1, 1937. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Brown Youth Guidance, Yacht Club, WBRU, In- terdormitory Council. Address: 12 Woodford Road, Barrington, Rhode Island. MILLER, Alan Paul A.B. Economics. Born Jan- ary 17, 1938. Prepared at Lyons High School. NROTC. Brotvn Daily Herald sports editor . Democratic Club, Class Cabinet. Address: 139 So. Sixth Avenue, LaGrange, Illinois. MILLER, George A.B. Classics. Born June 20 1937. Prepared at Durfee High School. Phi Gam- ma Delta. Address: 127 Oakland Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. MITCHELL, Michael William A.B. Political Sci- ence Born July 22, 1937. Prepared at Stuyvesant High School. Dean's IList. Interfraternity Coun- cdl, Liber Brunensis, Student Advisor, FHBG Freshman Week Committee, Brown Youth Guid- ance. Sigma Chi Address: 58 Jasper Street, Val- ley Stream, New York. MODICA, Bruno A.B. English Honors. Born January 1, 1936. Prepared at Gloucester High School. . Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List. Brtmonia editor, Cammarian Club, Student Court, Interdormitory Council. Fencing team captain . Address: 16 Gloucester Avenue Glou- cester, Massachusetts. y MOODY James Robert Sc.B. Mechanical Engin- eering Honors. Bom December 4 1936. Pre- pared at Roosevelt High School. Dean's IList, Tau Beta Pi president, NROTC, Brown Youth Guid- ance, Brown Engineering Society, ASME, Bru- naviansg, Rowing Association. Crew. Delta Upsi- lon vicepresident. Address: 30 Priscilla Ave- nue, Yonkers, New York. ....... xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx A1 R AR LILTIIEIEB Ty THE UNIVERSITY STORE 'THE PEMBROKE BOOKSTORE ! T B2 H, The convenient place to buy all you need for your life at Brown MOORE, William Dallon, Jr. A.B. Psychology. Born August 24, 1937. Prepared at Salisbury MURPHY, Arthur William, Jr. A.B. Music.l Born School. Sock Buskin, Brownbrokers, Glee Club, Decemberl 1z, l937j Prepared at Blelmont HI1L Hockey freshman. Delta Phi. Address: Wash- School. B Dlelta EP51lon, - BTHSkln' Newm:?m ington, Commecticut. Club, Debating Union, Chapel Choir, BrotvnDaily Herald, WBRU . Address: 79 Rutledge Road, Bel- MORAVA, John Ritchart A.B. Atnerican Civilgsnt 78, Massachusetts. zation. BornFebruary 5, 1936. Prepared at Law- renceville School. Crew. Beta Theta Pi secre- tary. Address: 1021 Romona Road, Wilmette, I1linois. NADELL, David A.B. American Civilization Honors . Born December 16, 1936. Prepared at Newton High School. Dean's List. Student Ad- visor, Class Cabinet, American Civilization Club, MORGAN, Anthony Ian A.B. American Litera- BrotvnDailyHerald.Address: 80Manemet Road, ture. Born January 18, 1938. Prepared at New Newton Center, Massachusetts. Rochelle High School. Dean's Iist. Hockey var- NATHAN, Thomas Martin A.B. Econotnics. Born sity-manager . Address: 88 Kingsbury Road, November 8, 1937. Prepared at the Milne School. New Rochelle, New York. Class Cabinet, Brown Charities. Swimming freshman . ThetaDelta Chi.Address: 25Mar- MORRIS, Monti A B, IEmedlisla Jii iz SR : Montigue e SferiEe ion Avenue, Albany 3, New York. Born October 2, 1933. Prepared at Brooklyn Tech- ! : nical High School. Brunonia advertising manag- NELSON, Richard Eliot A.B. Born December 12, er . Glee Club, Chapel Choir. Swimming fresh- 1936. Prepared at Tabor Academy. Basketball man . Delta Phi.Address: 2601 Glenwood Road, freshman, varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Ad- Brooklyn, New York. dress: 18 Lawndale Street, Belmont, Massachu- MORRTSON, Dudley Butler A B Fnolioh Liter ture. Born November 30, 1937. Prepared at Cul- NETTROUR, Walter Scoii A.B. Psychology. Born ver Military Academy. Sphinx, Chorus, Canter- December 1, 1937. Prepared at Culver Military bury Club. Crew varsity. Alpha Delta Phi. Academy. Football freshman. Address: Kum- Address: 907 Chestnut Road, Charleston 4, West mer Road, Allison Park, Pennsylvania. Virginia. NOJEK, Eugene Allen A.B. Philosophy. Born MORRISON, Roger Kent A.B. Psychology. Born February 27, 1938. Prepared at Leyden High April 21, 1937. Prepared at Cranbrook School. School. Orchestra, Democratic Club treasurer . Freshman Week Committee, Vigilance Committee, Address: 2013 North 18th Avenue, Melrose Park, Wrestling freshman . DeltaPhi. Address: 1263 Illinois. Brookwood Road, Birmingham, Michigan. : : NORSWORTHY, John Winger A.B. English Lit- MORSE, Stephen Lewis S.B. Engineering. Born ; erature. Born October 10, 1936. Prepared at the Wzvy 5, T8F7. Preparled ai? Manhasset Ililgh School. Gunnery School. Young Republican Club, Ad- Second Manning Prize in Mathematics. Dean's y . : dress : 254 Beechmont Drive, New Rochelle, New List, Tau Beta Pi. Soccer varsity. Lacrosse York. Club. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 166 Webster Ave- nue, Manhasset, New York. NOYES, Frederick Charles, Jr. A.B. Sociology. MORTON, David Lamb A.B. American Civiliza- Born December 26, 1233. frepared at Fhillips tion.Born July 1, 1936. Prepared at Phillips An- 2 Vlglla.ncel - el dover Academy. Freshman Week Committee. Yacht Club, Ceammarian Club, Freshman Week Hockey freshman, varsityl. Beta Theta Pi, Ad- Comuittee. Sailing freshman, varsity. Alpha dress : 256 Andover Street, Towell, Massachucerts, U0lfo P01, Bddress: 1 Drowne arkwey, Runm 5 . : . ford, Rhode Island. MOSHER, Bruce WilliamA.B. English Literature. Born December 8, 1937. Prepared at Wethersfield NUCKOLS, Robert Marshall 4.5 Botn Hoven High School. Dean's List. Physics Club, Chemistry T 26, 1937. Prepar?d L e s SC,hOOl' Club, Brown Christian Association. Interdormi- on Lveroity captain, lelfa Aeppe EPSllO.n 3 tory Council. Address: 13 Osee Place, Cos Cob, Address: Eagle Road, Newtown, Pennsylvania. Connecticut. OASIS, Donald Richard A.B. International Rela- MOSKOWITZ, Jerrold A.B. English Literature.tions. Bom April 5, 1937. Prepared at Phillips Born Octcber 1, 1936. Prepared at Mount Hermon Academy. BrotvnDaily Herald business board. School. Brown Key secretary, Cammarian Club, Soccer freshman, varsity. Address: 1836 Asy- Student Court, Class Vice-president. Football lum Avenue, West Hartford, Connecticut. freshman . Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 78 Math- : i OLIVER, John Lee A.B. International Relations. ewson Street, Jewett City, Connecticut. Born June 7, 1937. Prepared at Staples High Schoel. Dean's List. NROTC, BrotvnDaily Herald business manager, Interdormitory Council, Pi Delta Epsilon, International Relations Club. Crew freshman, junior varsity. Address: 135 South Compo Road, Westport, Connecticut. MOSS, Lawrence Castle A.B. Classics. Born March 16, 1937. Prepared at Choate School. Jab- berwocks, Yacht Club, Psi Upsilon vicepresi- dent . Address 578 Willow Street, Lockport, New York. O 1 NEIL i Edward Joseph, m A 5 B L Classi cs. B om ;J.ulmulnunnmum: v.. IL... ITTTTHITTTHITITIIIIICIOAML, . . ... de........ JLL..... IIIIIIIIMMIIIMg March 8, 1937. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. 5 Newman Club, Yacht Club, DeltaKappaEpsilon. : Address: 53 village Hill Road, Belmont, Massa- I BROWN AND PEMBROKE e I MEET HERE FOR THE BEST ORR, JAMES A.B. Psychology. Born February 18, 1930. Prepared at Pawtucket West High I CHINESE AND AMERICAN FOOD School. Jabberwocks. Address: 159 Francis Ave- nue, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. OSMER, Theodore Franz, Jr. A.B. Classics. gJQY S : ll February 20, 1937. Prepared at Millbum High School . Brunotes, Orchestra, Band, Brown Youth Guidance, Kappa Sigma. Address: 224 Millburn Avenue, Millburn, New Jersey. T 258 THAYER STREET 1 PAGE, David Nelson A.B. Art. Born June 5, 110 n el e ot 41115011 ORI ITTTPITTTICTITe 1937. Prep'ared at Phllllp? Academy' Deanls LJI'St' For a few days, Caswell Hall had its own radic station, FHBG, Liber Brunensis. Tennis, Swimming wcas. freshman . Squash Club. Phi Gamma Delta. The Bears rolled up 403 yards to smack UJL.I. treasurer. Address: 246 Mansfield Avenue, Gt : i The BDH's exuberant pre-Dartmouth game parody of the Darien, Connecticut. Green led to its press privileges being cut off from up Han- PAIK, Nack-Chung A.B. English German Litet way. No loss. a good one, The Bruins were second in the nation in pass defense. erature HOnOrS . Born January lO, 1938. Pre- Holding Skypeck to 11 yards in the 12-8 defeat of Cornell pared at Kyunggi High School. Gaston Premium. 406 yards to 160 and Harvard to -1 intheair in a 29-22 0 0 0 Bruin win helped Brown's fine defense record. Dean's IList. James Manning Scholar. Phi Beta p 1 Nearly everyone got a phone. Kappa. Sphinx. Address: 86 Chu-dong Street, Rollin' yer own became a fad for a while. Seoul, Korea. Two prominent Jokesters planted a three-hour loan in the PAMPALONE Thomas Richard Sc.B Chemis- Library, staged a fight over it, ripped it apart-all to the 5 S great amusement of a large crowd of I.C. room onloockers. try. Born August 18, 1937. Prepared at Newark The West Quad guards usually make sure they have quart- Academy. Chapel Choir, Chemj.stry Club. Swim- ers in change for machine shop devotees. Very thoughtful. ming varsity . Address: 53 Philip Place, Irving- One senior saw too many tank movies, finally enlisted. ton, New Jersey. A funloving unknown put a book opened to a story about big mythological birds in a seminar room in the library, PAULSEN, Paul Holland A.B. Political Scienglced some faked notes nearby, then spread feathers to Born January 24, 1937. Prepared at Washington the open window and scratched up the window sill. High School. Brunavians. NROTC, Freshman Reacting to the University decision to delay rushing, riot- p : : . g ers gathered in front of out-of-town President Keeney's home, Week Committee, Brown Christian Association, snowballed administrators Hill and Watts before being dis- Tiniaie il Eorey; CoumEitl, ACREEsE s Pl A5t Strsst, ore. A e rewing Frevieones polichiEm s e FE- 0 q i ture of the evening. Two Rivers, Wisconsin. Pembrooke's Chattertocks and Brown's Jabberwocks each PAYNE, C. Keith A.B. American Civilization came out with an l.p. Born August 25, 1937. Prepared at Wakefield High School. Vigilance Committee, Sociology Club, American Civilization Club. Chapel Choir, Class Cabinet, Brown Christian Association vice That a quartet of young men rolled up a 26-foot, $400 Sher- aton Biltmore rug and hired a cab to take it with them to the intersection of Brown and George streets did not necessar- ily mean the rug has been stolen by Brownmen - but the Providence cops thought so. They pursued this line of think- ing doggedly until the rug reappeared - as suddenly as it president. Kappa Sigma secretary. Address: had disappeared. 211 Vernon Street, Wawefield, Massachusetts. PEARCE, Harold Jillson, Jr. A.B. MathematiGs. Born February 7, 1937. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Address: 296 Benefit Street, Providence, I e CONVENIEN Rhode Island. gl TITTITTIITIII. o PEET, Christopher A.B. Mathematics - Physigs. BEAUTIFUL Born December 2, 1937. Prepared at St. George's T e QUIET School. Award in Marine History. NROTC, Ski , Club president. Crew varsity. Delta Phi o Address: 70 President Avenue, Providence 6, 1' RESTEUL L L PERKINS, Wayne Appleton A.B. Human Biol- ogy. Born April 11, 1937. Prepared at Westwood THE MIN D E N High School. Dean's list. Brown Youth Guid- ance. Baseball freshman, varsity. Address: 42 Willow Street, Westwood, Massachusetts. PYCT T LT L L LL L LR CLCCLCCL LT T L LT nanang 11MI111415111MITITTITIIIITIITMI TITIMIMITITTA11611411131111111MITITITIMIZ111M1111111111111111141111111T11MITTTTM PERRY, Richard Anthony Sc.B. Electrical En- gineering. BornMay 9, 1934. Prepared at Durfee High School. Dean's List. NROTC. WBRU chief engineer . Address: 145 Ridge Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. PETERS, Michael Morris A.B. Political Scieggft. Cheerleader, Classics Club. Crew Bom July 28, 1937. Prepared at Manhasset High School. Vigilance Committee, Freshman Week Committee, Class Cabinet. Basketball, Crew freshman . Lacrosse Club. Beta Theta Pi. Ad- dress : 33 Beechwood Avenue, Manhasset, New York. PFEIFLE, Richard Paul A.B. Psychology. BorIEcituate, July 25, 1937. Prepared at Patchogue High School. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 349 Maple Avenue, Patchogue, New York. Club. Address: 1102 Buttonwood Avenue, War- wick, Rhode Island. PRESSLER, William Raymond, .Tr. A.B. Class- ics. Born August 17, 1937. Prepared at Lower Merion High School. Rowing Association presi- var- sity. Beta Theta Pi secretary . Address: 1533 PowderMill Lane, Wynnewood, Pennsylvania. PROUTY, Russell Clement A.B. English Litera- ture. Born August 27, 1936. Prepared at Scituate High School. Football, Baseball varsity. Lamb- da Chi Alpha. Address: 45 Booth Hill Road, N. Massachusetts. PYPER, Robert Fendel A.B. Psychology. Born August 23, 1936. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Interfraternity Council. Cross Country, PIAZZA, Richard Mayo A.B. International Re-f-F66key freshman . Lacrosse Club captain. tions Honors . Born August 25, 1932. Prepared at Turtle Creek High School. Dean's List. Inter- national Relations Club. Address: 281 Seneca Street, Turtle Creek, Pennsylvania. PICKETT, Walter Curtis III A.B. American Cvilization.Born June 29, 1937. Prepared at Blair, Academy. NROTC, Jabberwocks, Brownbrokers, Cammarian Club, Chorus, Chapel Choir, Brunav- ians. Swimming freshman . Kappa Sigmxi. Ad- dress : 276 Indian Trail, Lake Mohawk, New Jer- sey. PLANTE, Adrian Bertrand A.B. Latin. Born August 24, 1938. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List. Republican Club. Cross Coun- try manager. Track freshman, varsity. Ad- Delta Upsilon. Address: Mount Hermon, Massa- chusetts. QUINN, John Francis Jr. A.B. English Litera- ture. Born July 6, 1933. Prepared at Admiral Bil- lard Academy . Dean's List. Address: 22 Arlington Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. QUINN, Richard Michael A.B. English Litera- ture. BornDecember 6, 1934. Prepared at Admir- al Billard Academy. WBRU . Yacht Club, Sigtna Nu. Address: 22 Arlington Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. RAMOS, Alfred Sc.B. Aeronautical Engineering. Born September 19, 1936. Prepared at East Provi- dence High School. Brown Engineering Society. IAS. Address: 59 First Street, East Providence, Rhode Island. dress : Danielson Pike, North Scituate, Rhode Island. POLSBY, Allen I. A.B. Economics. Bom Novem- ber 4, 1937. Prepared at Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School. Sphinx, Democratic Club presi- dent. Brown Daily Herald Editorial Board, Orchestra. Address: 4805 DeRussey Parkway, Chevy Chase 15, Maryland. z I g 1M11M111111M11M IM11MI1MI11M 1111 M M IMI11M111MI11M IMI111H 11M 11111111111M111MIM1111 Tt I M1 Ms INC. 278 THAYER STREET I FOTLLLLLLLL AL CLL LR n-' POSEJPAL, George JeTixesA.B. Political Scienkki Gamma Delta secretary. Address: Bom October 8, 1937. Prepared at Culver Mili- tary Academy. Football varsity. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Address: 400 Selbourne, Riverside, Il- linois. POULSEN, Allan A.B. Economics. ber 26, 1937. Prepared at Gilbert School. Basket- ball varsity captain. Address: Route 20, East Hartland, Connecticut. POWELL, Fourtin A.B. Sociology. Born July ? 1937. Prepared at Lockwood High School. Glee RAMSDEN, Richard James A.B. American Civ- ilization Honors . Born September 10, 1937. Pre- pared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Dean's List, Delta Sigma Rho, Chapel Choir, Student Court, Interfraternity Council. Soccer varsity captain . MAMTTIMITELLind11 s MMTI11IIMI111IMITE15115 151111 1IHTHIS 111K 1101115111111 1 EMIMTTTAIIII0MELL MERRY-GO-ROUND 242 THAYER STREET TIIITIT M1 Mil IMITAnilMIIMIindwd ... .. et cTMIMIMITMITMMITMIIMIS111111MIMIIIMIMIIIMMinillllMizi 155 Thayer Street, Providence, Rhode Island. REDFERN, Robert Davis A.B. Economics. Born July 21, 1937. Prepared at Andover High School. Sock Buskin. Address: 52 York Street, Andover, Born Novem-Massachusetts. REED, Philip Bruce A.B. Political Science. September 29, 1937. Prepared at Vineland High School. Ski Club, Class Cabinet, Cross country greshmam , Track varsity. Theta Delta Chi vice-president . Address: 534 N. West Avenue, Vineland, New Jersey. Born REGNELL, Charles Alfred A.B. Sociology. Born June 5, 1937. Prepared at Brockton High School. Address: 21 Doris Avenue, Brockton, Massachu- setts. RILEY, William Alton A.B. Economics. Born May 29, 1936. Prepared at St. George's School. Swimming freshman . Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 7 Peck, Attleboro, Massachusetts. ROBERTS, Eugene Frank A.B. Economics. Bom March 17, 1936. Prepared at Mercersburg Acad- emy. Wrestling freshman, varsity. ThetaDelta CM. Address: 1453 Main Street, Bethlehem, Penn- sylvania. ROBERTS, Lewis A.B. English. Born Novembe 20, 1936. Prepared at Salisbury School. Brown Christian Association. Chapel Choir, Brown Youth Guidance. Football freshman, Lacrosse var- sity . Theta Delta Chi Address; 566 Greenfield Hill Road, Fairfield, Connecticut. ROBBINS, Alan Warren A.B. BioZogfy. Born 0 4, 1938. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Photog- raphy Club, Biology Club. Crew freshman . Ad- dress : 910 Grand Concourse, New York, New Vol ROLEWICZ, Peter Conrad A.B. Economics. Born August 14, 1937. Prepared at Mount Car- mel High School. Newman Club. Track fresh- man, varsity . Cross country varsity. Address: 8848 Fuclid Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. ROSENBLUM, Jack James A.B. American Civi lization. Born January 10, 1938. Prepared at Shaker Heights High School. Francis Wayland Scholar. Dean's List, Sphinx Club, Brownbrokers, Student Advisor, Vigilance Committee, Class Cab- inet, Student Court. Soccer freshman . Pi Lamb- da Phi marshal . Address: 16714 Fernway Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio. ROTFORT, Donald Burton A.B. Mathematics- Economics. Born November 2, 1938, Prepared at Winthrop High School. Dean's IList. WBRU, Ad- NETTLETON SHOES HILLHOUSE LTD. H lllllllllllllllllllE L-' O a H 1 5 I m p O T TT T L TT LTt L e e e T E N LT dress: 47 Thornton Park, Winthrop 52, Massa- chusetts. RUSSO, John Vincent Sc.B.Physics. Born Ju 1, 1938. Prepared at Sidwell Friends School. NROTC, Cammarian Club, Interdormitory Coun- cil treasurer. Track freshman. Address: 2714 N. Norwood Street, Arlington, Virginia. SAMMARTINO, Clark Augustus A.B. Biology. Born May 1, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. Newman Club, Yacht Club. Track fresh- man . Kappa Sigma. Address: 55 Hawkins Boule- vard North Providence, Rhode Island. SANDERSON, Douglas K. A.B. Human Biology Honors . Born October 6, 1937. Prepared at Abington High School. Francis Wayland Scholar. Dean's List. Sigma Nu treasurer. Address: 375 Washington Street, Abington, Massachusetts. SANDLER, Lewis Sherman A.B. Mathematics. Born April 24, 1937. Prepared at Phillips Acad- emy. Second Hartshorn Prize in Mathematics. Dean's Iist. Address: 1166 W. Laurelton Park- way, Teaneck, New Jersey. SANTOS, Leonard B. A.B. Mathematics. Born October 2, 1937. Prepared at East Providence High School. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 390 Juni- Iper Street, East Providence, Rhode Island. SAVEL, Kent Brian A.B. Economics. Born Au- gust 22, 1937. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Yacht Club. Address: 49 Welland Street, Brook- line, Massachusetts. SAVIN, Harris Benjamin A.B. Psychology Hon- LJI:I?g . BornMarch 6, 1938. Prepared at Hope High School. Sigma Xi, Dean's List. Outing Club, Phys- ics Club, Chess Club. Address: 161 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island. SCHAFFER, David Bernard A.B. Biology Hon- ors. Born May 16, 1937. Prepared at East Orange High School. Dean's List. Cheerleader captain . Student Advisor, Tower Club. Ad- dress : 98 South Munn Avenue, East Orange, New Jersey. SCHEICK, William Hunt, Jr. A.B. Economics. Bom May 27, 1937. Prepared at Blair High School.. Brown Youth Guidance, Yacht Club. Football freshman . Phi Delta Theta. Address: 1214 Highland Drive, Silver Spring, Maryland. SCHEUER, John William A.B. American Civili- zation. BornApril 20, 1936. Prepared at Scranton High School. WBRU, Brown Youth Guidance, American Civilization Club. Address: 713 Pitts- don Avenue, Scranton, Pennsylvania. SCHWARTZ, Barry E. A.B. Economics. Born January 8, 1938. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Swimming freshman, varsity. Track fi'esh- man . Address: 42 Moore Street, Winthrop, Mas- sachusetts. 285 SCORIE, RobertP. A.B. Sociology. BornNovem- ber 13, 1936. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Brown Youth Guidance. Tennis freshman, var- sity. Sigma Nu vice-president. Address: 375 anand Street, Newburgh, New York. SCOTT, William Walker A.B. History. Born June 8, 1937. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Track, Basketball freshman. Golf varsity. DeltaPhiAddress: 437 Wastena Terrace, Ridge- wood, New Jersey. SEAVER, George Arthur Sc.B. Electrical En- gineering. BomJune 17, 1937. Prepared at Need- ham High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Navy Club Award. Dean's Iist, NROTC, Wrestling freshman, varsity. ThetaDelta Chi treasurer . Address: 130 Lindbergh Avenue, Needham Heights 94, Massachusetts. SEIDMAN, aaron A.B. Biology Honors. Born April 11, 1937. Prepared at Norwich Free Acad- emy. Stuart Prize in Art. Radio Club president. Photography Club secretary, Hillel, Biology Club. Managerial Council president. Soccer manager . Fencing. Address: 183 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island. Honors . Born October 20, 1936. Prepared at Brookline High School. Dean's List. Class Cabinet, Student Advisor. Track freshman, varsity, Baseball freshman . Pi Lambda Phi president . Address: 11 Arlington Road, Chestnut Hill, Mas- sachusetts. SILVER, William A.B. Mathematics. Bom Jan- SHATTUCK, C. Jonathan A.B. Psychology. Bormry 3, 1938. Prepared at Woodmere Academy. December 11, 1937. Prepared at Norwich Free Academy. Class Cabinet, Freshman Class Treas- urer, Brown Youth Guidance, Delta Upsilon. Ad- dress : 9 Chelsea Parade South, Norwich, Connec- e SHEA, Dion Warren J. A.B. Sc.B. Physics Born June 10, 1937. Prepared at Petersburg High School. Dean's list. Photography Club presi- dent, Student Advisor, Yacht Club, Chess Club, Physics Club, Chemistry Club, Newman Club. Sigma Chi. Address: 43 Bay Shore Drive, New London, Connecticut. SHERMAN, Edward Willner Sc.B. Mechanical Engineering. Born June 18, 1937. Prepared at Trinity School. AFROTC, Brown Engineering So- clety, ASME . Address: 37-2179 Jackson Heights 72, New York, New York. SHERMAN, John Moody A.B. Mathematics- Economics. Born July 31, 1937. Prepared at Moses Brown School. NROTC, Chorus, Brunavians, Chapel Choir, Kappa Sigma. Address: 118 Ber- wick Road, Attleboro, Massachusetts. Basketball freshman . Golf varsity . Address: 879 Broadway, Woodmere, New York. SIMPSON, Tracy L. A.B. Biology. Born July 12, 1937. Prepared at Manlius School. Orchestra. Ad- dress : 440 Homestead Avenue, Mt . Vernon, New . York. SITNIK, William Anthony Sc.B. Engineering. Bom November 16, 1937. Prepared at Springfield Technical High School. Dean's Iist, NROTC, Bru- navians. Track freshman. Sigma Chi Address: 128 San Miguel Street, Springfield, Massachu- setts. SKOWRONEK, Peter John Sc.B. Aeronautical Engineering. Born August 30, 1937. Prepared at Cross High School. Brown Engineering Society vicepresident. IAS treasurer. PhiDelta The- ta. Address: 90 Nash Street, New Haven, Con- necticut. SMITH, James Cyrus Jr. A.B. Mathematics. Born November 12, 1937. Prepared at Ridgwood High School. Bridge Club, Swimming freshman, varsity . Address 234 Elmwood Avenue Ho-ho- SHOHET, Richard M. A.B. American Literatureus, New Jersey. EELURECR RN R UG R RE R E RO L0000 4 LLLE11000 M11031110101 110 HTTIMITEMITIMIIMIMIT Mil T MTIMIIMIT TTHMind 1MIT M1 MM MITMIMIMITIIZTIIIIIIIITT IIMMIMMI R0 1000100100 TIMTE 1IN 111INITTIT L L L L Jo oS 776 Elmwood Ave. Rolls-Royce Bently Austin-Healy M.G. R INSKIP, Providence UN 1-3883 Authorized Retailers and Services of e T HMNTINIL........J ... D....IINIIMIMIIMIGILL ... 3illll1L0LI00NIITITIIIIMITIIN ... ... .. mL . LI The fastest selling 4aorw-car in?hteriea INC. also New York ST TT i LTt L LTt L L L T L T L L L L T T OO O Aston-Martin Riley Austin Morris 141112311 L L L LT C OO LT ..o ermrmemtrnamsnimoo SOGGS, JohnWilliam A.B. Classics. Born July 8, 1937. Prepared at New Hartford High School. Class Cabinet, Track freshman. Phi Gamma Delta. Address: Brantwood Road, Utica, New York. SPECTOR, James Marshall A.B. Political Sc ence. Born September 26 1937. Prepared at Barnard School. Soccer freshman, Rifle team. Address: 4666 Grosvenor Avenue, New York, New York. SPIK, Rudolph Robert A.B. American Civil tion. Born September 18, 1932. Prepared at West Allegheny High School. Dean's List, History Club, American Civilization Club, International Rela- tions Club. Address: Box 614 Imperial Pennsyl- vania. STALICA, Dennis Joseph A.B. Philosophy. March 19, 1937. Prepared at Nott Terrace High School. Yacht Club, Basketball freshman. Ad- dress: 29 Columbia Street, Schenectady, New York. STAMM, Charles William A.B. Economics. May 4, 1936. Prepared at Taft School. Chapel Choir, Yacht Club, WBRU . Address: 601 Mon- tauk Avenue, New London, Connecticut. L STANSMORE, Sidney William A.B. Philosophy Bom January 9, 1936. Prepared at Staples High School. Carpenter Prize for Elocution. Sock Buskin, Fencing team captain. Address: Woods Grove Road, Westport, Connecticut. STEIN, Girard Lloyd A. B. International Relfactor of Brown's tions. BomMarch 26, 1938. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Dean's List. Daily Herald manag- ing editor. Address: 11 Riverside Drive, New York 23, New York. i Bore dent . Address: 210 Harvard, Brockton, Massa- chusetts. STAURT, Alan Lincoln A. B. History of Art. Born April 24, 1936. Prepared at Fieldston High ,School. Pi Delta Epsilon. Brown Daily Herald associate business manager, Radio Club, Pho- tography Club, Tennis freshman manager . Pi1 Lambda Phi. Address: 895 Park Ave., New York, New York. At twelve o'clock in Sayles Hall, a young man put down $1$ pen and passed out - or so it seemed to final-taking on- lookers. In stepped a well-drilled pair of students bearing a stolen from the gym stretcher. They wore stolen from the refectory white Jjackets. After they toted the body away, all was well, again, in Sayles Hall. One of us called a local we-deliver-it bottle emporium and told the recipient of our call where to deliver it. Poland House? he asked, Is that in the new triangle? Cafe Medici and the Owl's Head sprung up, and Brown had espresso and a place to wear levis, play chess, and discuss Camus. If a cab disappears from downtown Providence one rainy night and reappears near Brown's West Quad - that doesn't necessarily mean students Dborrowed it. The Providence police think so, though. Born? sophomore decided that a trip to Mexico City would be invigorating - so he hitchhiked to Mexico City. He plans to return next fall, well-tanned, packing a portfolio of exotic photographs under his arm. A psychology class, listening to a lecture in Carmichael Auditorium, decided to run a little experiment. Everytime the professor went to the right in his wanderings across the platform, the class rustled uneasily, whispering and acting inattentive. When he walked to the left, everyone paid strict attention. The conditioning was a success: it wasn't long before he stayed on the left side. How many ways can the Iletters in the words, Arnold Lounge be rearranged to spell other words? An heir to the Heinz fortune, an alumnus, became a big $30,000,000 bi-centennial program when he left a million dollars to the University in his will. Maxcy Hall lost all its freshman occupants when it suffer- ed a spectacular $25,000 fire. No one was hurt - but the University made everyone move out. The BDH tried to arrange an on-campus speaking engage- ment for Fidel Castro. STEINI Robert David A.B. EngllSh theratursgcond semester visitors to the campus included Tom Leh- Honors . Born October 9, 1937. Prepared at Evanston Township High School. Wayland Scholar. Dean's IList. FHBG House Committee chairman. Brown Youth Guidance, Student Court Justice. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 1632 Touhy Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. STERN, Alvin Louis A.B. Political Science December 28, 1936. Prepared at Great Neck High School. NROTC, Brunavians. Theta Delta Chi Address: 23 Schenck Avenue, Great Neck, New York. STEWART, Andrew Emory, Jr. A.B. Art. Born November 4, 1937. Prepared at Manhasset High School. Liber Brunensis managingeditor. Sig- ma CM. Address: 35 Parkwoods Road, Plandome, New York. STORK, Wayne Allan A. B. Political Sciencechallenge. Born July 12, 1937. Prepared at Brockton High School. Hicks Interclass Debate Award. Hicks Intercollegiate Award, Bennett Prize in Political Science. Elocution Award, Dean's list, Delta Sig- ma Rho, Brown Debating Union president, Cammarian Club, Interdormitory Council presi- 287 rer, e.e. cummings, Duke Ellington, and Maynard Ferguson. English instructor Wade Thompson set the campus into paroxysms of concern and argumentation with his proposal that football be abolished. Time mag and Sports Illustrated played it up big. An escapee from the scandal of the Tweed ring by the name of Wilbour fas in Wilbour Hall, we found, assuaged his conscience was back when - by endowing Brown's egyp- toBgyrdgpartment to the tune of 800,000 Tweed-tainted dollars. Wrapping the end of a paper match in aluminum foil, then heating the enclosed match to the point of ignition, causes the unit to be propelled smartly across the room. The men in Everett House discovered this and spent a week in the throes of rocketry. Brown gathered in a dozen-or-so Woodrow Wilson fellow- ships - the highest percentage of the applicants granted to any college in the country. Compulsory chapel died a natural and hardly mourned death. It will be more than sufficiently replaced by volun- tary worship in the newly-decorated Manning Chapel. A WBRU announcer insulted a student at 2:00 over the radio. The student responded with a phone called duel- The encounter took place the next morning, a bleak March one, at 6:20 on the College Green. The in- sultee was at first thought to have died a desperate death, hut, on closed examination, was found to be uninjured. Some of us discovered the secret of Wringly, too, toward the end of the year, but haven't seen fit to play with such an unfair advantage. It is probably best that way. Clap for Fred Quimby. MMMIIMIMIMMIML .. ... 4 AMIMMIMMITMMIMIMIMIIMIIMMI IMMIMMMIMIMIMIMI IMIMIMIMIIMMI IIMM4 r 1 IMPERIAL PEARL CO. INE I MANUFACTURERS OF X I INDESTRUCTABLE PEARLS AND l I COSTUME JEWELRY l PROVIDENCE 1 s T EL LT T L T T T T T SUDOL, Thomas William A.B. American Civili- zation. Born October 13, 1937. Prepared at Ruth- erford High School. Newman Club, American Civilization Club, Class Cabinet, Band, Brown Youth Guidance. Baseball freshman. Address: Elizabeth Street, Rutherford, New Jersey. SULLIVAN, Raymond Eugene A.B. Biology. Born September 27, 1937. Prepared at Crosby High School. Dean's List. Newman Club presi- dent. Ski Club, Student Advisor, Freshman Week Committee, Alpha Phi Omega secretary. Ski Team. Address: 103 Woodtick Road, Water- bury Connecticut. president . Address: 355 Turrell Avenue, South Orange, New Jersey. 't::GGART, Robert Page A.B. Mathematics. Born ril 14, 1938. Prepared at Peddie School. Swim- ming freshman, varsity. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Address: Rd. No. 1 Box 688, Dover, New Jersey. TALBOT, David Hale A. B. American Civiliza- tion. Born November 10, 1937. Prepared at New Trier High School. NROTC, Brunavians, Brun- onia, Class Cabinet. Crew freshman . DeltaPhi. Address: 425 Sunset Lane, Glencoe, Illinois. TEIXEIRA, James A.B.Spanish Honors. Born August 4, 1937. Prepared at New Bedford High School. Foster Premium, Dean's List, Wayland Scholar. Address: New Bedford, Massachusetts. Francis 231 Church Street, TERRY, Wallace Houston A.B. Religious Studies. Bom April 21, 1938. Prepared at Shortridge High School. Second Hicks Premium in Debate, Second Bigelow Prize in Debate. Delta Sigma Pho, PiDeltaEpsilon president. BrotvtiDaily Herald editor-in-chief. Cammarian Club, Brown Key, Vigilance Committee, Student Court, Inter- dormitory Council treasurer. Sock and Buskin, Debating Union, Sphinx Club, Class Cabinet, NAACP, Classics Club, Brown Charities execu- tive board . Address: 3617 Boulevard Place, In- SULLIVAN, Thomas Joseph A.B. Classics. Borfienapolis 8, Indiana. August 22, 1937. Prepared at the Taft School. Interfraternity Council secretary. Classics Club treasurer, Psi Upsilon vice-president. Ad- dress: 183 Bishop Street, New Haven, Connecti- cut. SUMMERFIELD, William Lawrence A. B. Eco- notnics. Born October 26, 1936. Prepared at South Shore High School. AFROTC, Hockey varsity TEUSCHER, Frederick Nail A.B. Art. Born May 2, 1937. Prepared at St. Andrew's School. Dean's List. Freshman Week Committee, Brown Chari- ties Drive, Classics Club, Cricket Club. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Address: 1351 28th Street, N.W., Washington 7, D. C. THOMPSON, Leonard B. A.B. Philosophy. Born August 1, 1933. Prepared at Gardner High School. manager . DeltaUpsilon. Address: 7831 S. Ridge- Yacht Club, Alpha Phi Omega president. Ad- land Avenue, Chicago 49, Illinois. dress: setts. 58 Westford Street, Massachu- Gardner, SUTER, William Philip A. B. Political Science. Born June 20, 1937. Prepared at Columbia High School. Dean's List. Class vicepresident, Cam- marian Club treasurer, Interfraternity Coun- cil, Vigilance Committee. Delta Kappa Epsilon See Us First - If we 1 L Bette Gl We Can Tell You Who Does un uHuw H o o H TM ITIT MI M 111M MIITM M H M TTM MI11M IIT M M ITTITI11MUIMIITI1 MIMI11MIIM MI TTT11IT11M11MITIMITII11IT1T THOMPSON, William Brooks A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born April 17, 1936. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Republican Club. Cross County sity. Address: 123 Beacon Street, Maine. var- Portland, TOBEY, Malcolm David Sc.B. Physics. Born May 8, 1937. Prepared at Weymouth High School. Ad- dress : 8 Richmond Street, Weymouth 88, Massa- chusetts. TOPPING, Robert Warren A.B. Psychology . Born Eebruary 8, 1937. Prepared at Central Cath- olic High School. Newman Club, Proctor, Football varsity. Phi Delta Theta president. Address: 39 Hardy, Methuen, Massachusetts. TOSER, David F. A.B. Art. Bom August 8, Prepared at Milwaukee University School. Sock and Buskin, Brownbrokers, Spanish club. Ad- dress: 8224 North Gray Log Lane, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 288 1937 TOWNES, Harry Warren Sc.B. Mechanical En- Council. BRaseball freshman. Address: 130 gineering. Born October 12, 1937. Prepared at Lis- Blanchard Road, South Orange, New Jersey. bon High School. Tau Beta Pi, Dean's List. Brown Engineering Society vicepresident. Swimming varsity. Address: 159 Third Street, Auburn, Maine. TRAMMELL, Charles Monroe III A. B. Mathe- ASME Von SIMSON, Ernest Martin A.B. International Relations. BornMarch 17, 1938. Prepared at Ig- natius High School. Brown Daily Herald. Ad- dress : 5743 Maryland Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. matics. Born July 30, 1937. Prepared at WilsonwaALKER, Alfred Joseph A.B. Psychology. Born High School. Freshman Physics Award. Dean's list, Sphinx Club. Yacht Club, Brunavians presi- dent , Freshman Week Committee, Vigilance Committee. Crew varsity, Sailing freshman, varsity . Sigma Nu. Address: 4236 45th Street, N.W. Washington, D. C. TRAUB, William H. A.B. Economics. uary 29, 1937. Prepared at Council Rock High School. Dean's List, Sphinx Club, Student Court, Senior Class Treasurer, Student Advisor, Foot- ball freshman, varsity, Baseball freshman. Delta Upsilon treasurer. Address: 2nd Street, Pike, Richboro, Pennsylvania. January 3, 1938. Prepared at Arlington High School. Newman Club, Glee Club, Interfraternity Council treasurer. Class Cabinet, Freshman Week Committee. Sigma Chi secretary. Ad- dress: 167 Highland Avenue, Arlington 74, Mas- sachusetts. Born JRRITACE, William Raymond A.B. English Lit- erature. Born June 2, 1937. Prepared at Univer- gity School. Class Cabinet, Glee Club, Band, Brown Christian Association. BRasketball varsity manager . Address: 510 Overlook Drive, Alli- ance, Ohio. TUCKER, Bowen Hay ward A. B. MathematicsWARBURTON' bonald pedeph 2.8, Hiffondl Born April 13, 1938. Prepared at Dummer Acad- emy. Dean's List. Republican Club, Brown Chris- tian Association, Student Advisor, Class Cabinet. Address: 135 Woodbury Street, Providence 6, Rhode Island. ics -Economics. Born September 21, 1937. Pre- pared at Tolman High School. NROTC, Brunav- ians. Football freshman, varsity, captain. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 494 Columbus Avenue, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. TURLEY, Thomas Andrew A. B. Political SAARD, James Ronald Sc.B. Civil Engineering. ence. Born April 17, 1937. Prepared at Palmer High School. Cammarian Club, Proctor, Classi Cabinet, Chapel Choir, Jabberwocks, Outing Club., Football freshman . ThetaDelta Chi. Address; King Brook Farm, Palmer, Massachusetts. ULLRICH, George William Sc.B. Civil Engi.neggo-rus Chapel Choir, r ing. Bom September 13, 1937. Prepared at Or-, chard Park School. Ski Club, Brown Engineering, Society, ASCE, Lacrosse freshman. Phi Kappa Born April 1, 1937. Prepared at Erie High School. Dean's List, ASCE, Delta Kappa Epsilon. Ad- dress: 2821 Ash Street, Erie, Pennsylvania. WARD, John Ashton A.B. Psychology. Born February 19, 1937. Prepared at Pingry School. Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 58 A Troy Drive, Springfield, New Jer- sey. Psi. Address: 185 South Freeman Road, OrchardI WATERBURY, Jackson Dewitt, Jr. A. B. Eng- Park, New York. lishLiterature.BomFebruary 4, 1937. Prepared VALENCIA, Carlos A.B. Economics. Born May 2t St. Louis Country Day School. Soccer fresh- 28, 1938. Prepared at Colegio Javier. Newman Man, varsity. Beta Theta Pi. Address: 9685 Club, International Relations Club W:'Loe-presi-l Litzinger Road, St. Louis, Missouri. dent, Spanish Club, Brown Christian Associa WATERMAN, Charles Elbridge A.B. Interna- tion. Swimming freshman. Lambda Chi Alphd tional Relations. Born February 16, 1938. Pre- treasurer. Address: P.O. Box 4849, Panama, pared at Marblehead High School. Dean's Iist. B EmAmEL Interdormitory Council treasurer. Student VALLONE, John Joseph, Jr. A.B. American 1ifeurt, Christian Science Organization presi- erature. Born October 21, 1937. Prepared At deI?t' HBOIC, Bernd, Brdlvine, Addies 11 Moses Brown School. Newman Club, Delta Kappgzl: tince ftreet, Marblenead, Maooachisetre. Epsilon. Address: 1295 Cranston Street, Cran- WEAVER, E. Bradford A. B. Sociology. Born ston, Rhode Island. July 5, 1936. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. VINCENT, Stanford Bates A.B. History of Arflass Cabinet, Interfraternity Council Yacht Born May 31, 1935. Prepared at Kimball Union. Club, Crew varsity manager . Sigma Chi. Ad- Academy. Band, Orchestra, Delta Upsilon. Ad1 dress: 603 Angell Street, Providence, Rhode Is- dress : Box 192 Duxbury, Massachusetts. - land. WEBER, Alan Abraham A. B. English. Born VOGEL, William Edward A.B. Psychology manjune 23, 1937. Prepared at Horace Mann School. orlw - ornapril o8, 1957, Brepened ot IColu.mlbial Dean's list. Sock and Buskin, Student Advisor, High School. Wayland Scholar, Dean's List. Flrst;: Brown Youth Guidanee Crew frechman, bi Roserberger frize in Psychology. sphinx Cluby ;oppg phy, Address: 250 Cabrini Blvd., New Phi Beta Kappa. Band, Brunotes, Interdomdtoryf Yards,. New Vel , : 290 PO R TTMIMIMIMI TR RR jbkhuani Hummaoackd RESTAURANT Famous since 1905 245 Aliens Ave. Providence Prime Rib Room Cafe Midnight O R AR R R L T LT R T O T L L L LR L LR LT LRI IT LTI ITT I LT T T e S P S 8 P S S e L L O T L L L e L L L L L L LT LT WEIL, Richard Kalten, Jr. A.B. History. Born July 8, 1937. Prepared at Burroughs School. Brownbrokers, Student Advisor secretary. Class Cabinet, Soccer freshman, varsity. Pi Lambda Phi vice-president. Address: 6372 Forsyth, St. Louis, Missiouri. TR o o fhasbodos doodooonbonko ERIP I o dacomg om0 00 1o RITI 00000 LFifho o 0dosbaonooonoaosonoon PROVIDENCE PAPER CO. 160 DORRANCE STREET SR O e T L L L L L L L LT T T LTI PROVIDENCE, R. I Track freshman. Address: 18 Mt. Pleasant Road, Newtown, Connecticut. WHITING, Roger Lewis A.B. Psychology. Bom November 19, 1937. Prepared at Concord High School. Delta Upsilon. Address: 84 North Spring Street, Concord, New Hampshire. WEINER, Reuben L A.B. Psychology. Born Sep- tember 4, 1937. Prepared at Ithaca High School. Student Advisor, Glee Club, Chapel Choir, Class Cabinet Brown Youth Guidance, Cammarian Club, Football, Baseball freshman . Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 356 Floral Ave., Ithaca, New York. WESTCOTT, Bruce Jerrell A.B. Psychology. Born February 1, 1937. Prepared at the Hill School. Class Cabinet, Student Advisor, Swim- ming freshman, varsity. ThetaDelta Chi. Ad- dress: 60 E. Court Street, Doylestown, Pennsyl- vania. WETHERALD, Houghton A.B. Art Born February 3, 1938. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Sailing freshman, varsity. Delta Up- silon. Address: 353 Olney Street, Providence, Rhode Island. Honors . WILLARD, Dana G. Sc. B. Physics. Born Sep tember 14, 1937. Prepared at South Portland High School. Republican Club. Address: 10 Cloyester Road, South Portland, Maine. WILLIAMS, Gilbert Richard A.B. History. Bom August 18, 1936. Prepared at the Gun- nery School. BrownDaily Herald, DeltaUpsilon. Ad3ress: 67 University Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. WILLIAMSON, Frederick Michael A.B. History. Born March 8, 1937. Prepared at Hopkins School. Dean's List, NROTC Newman Club, Brunavians, Basketball freshman. Delta Upsilon. Address: 111 Deerfield Court, Oradell, New Jersey. WILSON, John Mortimer A.B. Political Science. Born July 1, 1936. Prepared at Norwalk High WHITE, Norman Bennett A.B. American Civiligchopl. Dean's Idst. Brown Christian Associa- zatioti.BornApril 11, 1937. Prepared at Staples High School. NROTC, Yacht Club, Interdormitory Council, Flying Club, American Civilization Club. L T L L e T L L L e L O O O OO O T C LT where you ALWAYS shop with confidence ST L T L L L L L LA L L L L LR LAt LTI LTLI I TULIANVINNTIIMT MO MML ML A2 L TTARCRRIRRARRRARREORERN VRN NRRIVEINIMT IMMTTIME M UM IMT MM 1100000 THMMT IMT T tion, Student Advisor, Republican Club, Class Cabinet, Political Science Club. Address: 12 ley Avenue, Norwalk, Connecticut. LR LR EE R RE LR RO RN R R 00RO 0RO Ty T TTTTTTITTIITIIIMITMITAniMIT REN AN ANTHONY'S DRUG STORE Over 60 years at Angell and Thayer Streets GAspee 1-2512 L L L L L L L L L L L T L S L L L L O L O L O L T O T 00 o oo pogoghioohnuoo 0008 TITITIIMMITIIMITIIIIITA11111111111141111111111111MIMi+111111111111 11 0ddri b MMIiMIMITIIMIIMIMIHMIMIIIIIIMMITIIMIMMMIMIMIMMEMME 0000000000000M U M Mi11 TT e31 Mi1l T Mill IT nil T HGaau . . WALKER ELECTRIC CO. 262 Weybosset Street PROVIDENCE, R. I. T L LL e L LTt LT L L L L L LU L LT LT LT O T T O LiiminMis IONIMNIINNINSiniiiniiiin MiLs ORI N i inii3iint Mint i ORI IR R WILSON, OQuin Morton AL Mathemat - ics. Born April 3, 1939. Prepared at Maine High School. Address: 2164 Manor Lane, Park Ridge, WISNER, Peter A.B. Political Science. cember 5, 1937. Prepared at Riverdale Country School. Brotvn Daily Herald, Brown Charities, Yacht Club, Republican Club, Address: 55 Park Terrace East., New York, New York. WOLFSON, George Robert A.B. Economics. Born April 6, 1937. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. New York Brown Club Scholarship. NROTC . Brunavians. Football freshman, Foot- ball varsity. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: Scars- dale Manor South, Scarsdale, New York. ,,,,,,, Mniiiiiminiiiniie MORRAREERRERERRREERRRRERRERRERRERE RO R0 233323333 Min14330 3 L L L T T T T T T L MANCHESTER and HUDSON PROVIDENCE, R. I. O T L L e L e fun nil T in M .. IIT T ITT IT ITTM IT ITT IT il IIT TITM IIT TTIT nil IT TIMM bl BREIREGIEA 0NN iniisinl Mizmizs Al ESTABLISHED 1836 PHILLIPS LEAD AND SUPPLY COMPANY Plumbing and Heating Supplies 231 South Main Street PROVIDENCE 3, R. I. SRR R R R R R R R LR R R N MO i ik iiiin A T O T O LTI WOLK, Daniel Simon A.B. English Literature. Born January 13, 1938. Prepared at Albany Academy. Second Misch German Prize, Dean's List. Student Court. Brown Charities. FHRG, rown Youth Guidance. Pi Lambda Phi Presi- B orla U Address: 220 South Main Avenue, Albany, New York. WOODHOUSE, Paul Gardner A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born July 3, 1937. Prepared at Wilbraham High School. Freshman Week Committee, Brown Key, Class Cabinet, Soccer freshman captain, varsity. Beta Theta Pi secretary. Address: 123 Farmingdale Road, Wethersfield, Connecti- cut. WRIGHT, James Ernest A.B. English Litera- ture. Born September 10, 1937. Prepared at Win- chester High School. Brunavians, Basketball freshman, varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Ad- dress : 8 Stratford Road., Winchester, Massa- chusetts. WRIGHT, John Christopher A.B. English Liter- ature. Born July 24, 1936. Prepared at Cleveland High School. Brown Daily Herald. Rifle Team freshman . Delta Upsilon secretary. Address: 23 Park Court, Verona, New Jersey. YOST, Raymond Arthur A.B. American Civil- ization.Born January 22, 1937. Prepared at Salis- bury School. Class Cabinet, Freshman Week Committee, Ski Club, American Civilization Club. Delta Phi. Address: North Syracuse, New York. Printedby BENTON REVIEW PUBLISHING CO. INC. Printers of fine Yearbooks FOWLER, INDIANA The Liber is made of many things; its main content, however, is photography - and it is upon the quality of its photography that any yearbook must rest its chances tor success or failure. We are therefore, proud and thankful to make our PHOTOGRAPHY CREDITS: Most of the pictures in this book were taken by Lewis C. Cady '59 and by the other staff members of the Liber, Michael B. French '62, David M. Rust '62, J. Maarten Meckman '61, Michael S. Saper '62, and Sidney S. Williams '60. In addition, Hillel and Tower Club pictures were supplied by Joel I. Brest '60, Ski photos by W. Bowdoin Davis, Jr. '59, Spanish Club picture by William Dyckes '59, and one NROTC photo by the U. S. Navy. The large cartoon was the work of talented Edward J. Armour '59. Robert W. Watson '58 lost control of himself at times - and did photography for the boock. The efforts of all of these men are greatly appreciated by the Managing Board. Although the staff members of Liber Brunensis Publications spent thousands of hours preparing this volume, its production depends heavily on a number of other pecple, all of whom gave unselfishly of their time and energy toward the eventual publication of the 101st edition of the Liber. It is to these people we make our ACKNOV fLEDGEIVIENTS: Mr. Benjamin W. McKendall '52, Faculty Advisor Mr. William A. Surprenant '51, Director of Faunce House Miss Ann Miletta, Secretary to Director of Faunce House Mrs. Winifred Sampson. Office of Student Activities Mr. James R. McWilliams, Jahn Oilier Engraving Co., Inc. Mr. David L. McConnell, Benton Review Publishing Co., Inc. Mr. Harry A. Grote, The S. K. Smith Co. Mr. John Hancock, Jahn Oilier Engraving Co., Inc. Mr. Marvin Merin, Merin Studios Mr. Baaron B. Pittenger, Jr., Director of Sports Information Mr. Wallace H. Terry '59,' Editor-in-Chief, Brown Daily Herald Mr. Robert J. Sugarman '60, Editor-in-Chief, Brown Daily Herald Mr. Edward J. Armour '59 The Alumni Office The Office of the Secretary of the University Stenographic Bureau The Office of Public Relations Brown Station, U. S. Post Office The Office of Admissions Faunce House Janitors Nancy, Pauline, and Nancy. The specifications for the 1959 Liber Brunensis are numerous and :- to many - inter- esting; therefore, the Managing Board would like to take this opportunity to tell ABOUT THE BOOK: It is printed by letterpress in l6-page sections on 100 lb. No. 1 white enamel paper by the Benton Review Pubhshing Company of Fowler, Indiana, and bound into covers manufactured by the S. K. Smith Company of New York from Pyroxylin-impreg- nated, vellum-finished, spice-colored Joanna Atlas Impreglin cloth. The engravings were made by the Jahn Oilier Engraving Company of Chicago - on copper, 133 lines to the inch. Throughout the book, the copy was set in 10 point Baskerville; the lead words in 10 point Gothic; and the headlines in 18 point Spartan Extra Bold Expanded. The page numbers have been set in 24 point Spartan Extra Bold Expanded. The senior portraits were taken by Merin Studios of Philadelphia and the majority of the other five hundred pictures were taken with two Nikons, an Exakta, a Retnia Ila, or a Prak- tica lenses ranging from 25 to 135 mm on Plus-X, developed in D-76, and printed on Verilour paper. Electronic flash by Heiland. Cover design by Thomas Reynolds '59. This volume contains 296 9x12 inch pages not including foldouts and weighs 3 pounds, 14 ounces. This is the 10lst edition of the Liber. LIBER BRUNENSIS PUBLICATIONS President: Stephen L. Dyson '59 e Editor-in-Chief: Lewis C. Cady '59 Business Manager.................... Paul Andrew Hollos '59 NERZIGLING IOBHEGIE 00 dac nosossssamassasons Andrew E. Stewart '59 ILEVOUE WEBHEGHE, s cosanansosb000550500000500005000000000d John L. Dauer '6l Advertising Manager...................... Bruce F. Anderson '59 SRIES WEMEGIDIE ixiooaromonenssssatnasososssmaasosud Stephen B. Duke '60 Photographic Co-ordinator........ J. Maarten Meckman '6l Assistant Sales Manager....................... Samuel H. Fisk '6l P ASSH Stant S siates. i e 0 David M. Carr '62 RIS S O ShTEE Edward J. Armour '59 PHOTOGRAPHY : Iewis C. Cady '59 David M. Rust '62 Michael B. French '6l Michael S. Saper '62 Sidney S. Williams '60 LITERARY: Stephen L. Isaacs '6l Richard A. Katzive '6l Robert J. Carney '6l Stephen H. Snyder 'el Nicholas J. Angell '62 ADVERTISING: Robert N. Iettieri '60 John N. Tine '6l James H. Higgins HI '62 Robert E. Casey '60 Christopher V. Brown '62 Grenville M. Gooder, Jr. '6l SALES: Robert J. Lodewick, Jr. '62 David M. Rust '62 Roger L. Campolucci '6L Robert S. Birch '6l Nestor M. Nicholas '6l Carmine Bedotto '62 Lawrence L. Gibson '62 T. John Chatsworth '62 SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS: Murray J. Powers '60, Manager A. McDonald Green, Jr. '60, BusinessManager FRATERNITIES AT BROWN : John L. Dauer'6l '62 CLASS ALBUM : Knowlton J. O'Reillv '6l Samuel H. Fisk 'el HOPE COLLEGE: Murray J. Powers '60 IVY MAGAZINE EDITOR: Lewis C. Cady '59 PEMBROKE SALES STAFF: AliceForsythe, Assistant SalesManager PamelaMantel JudithMayer Nicki Stevens Jacgqueline Roberts Judith Shelton KorleenDillabough Charlotte Seymour ior Portraits. gma Nu.. INDE Administration. Archibald House. Advertising-... AFIMTC iy Bronson House. Brownbrokers -.. BBOVrN' DAILY HEBAIXD.. Brown Youth Guidance.. BKUNONIA Brunotes .-... Cammarian Club... Canterbury Club... Chapel Choir. Charities, Brown. Cheerleaders........ Chemistry Club. Chess Club Classics Club... Commencement. Concert Band.. Delta Kappa Epsilon. .. ... .. Delta Phi............... Delta Tau Delta. Delta Upsilon.... Democrat Club.............cvunuiaadd Editor's Notebook Eng-ineering- Societies. Everett House. .180-181 French Club.. Freshman Class, as GeologTr Club .. German Club. ... ........... Graduation. HUlel... Hockey. ... . Homecoming-.... Interdormitory Interfraternity Counci I:R. Clubl. . . Y5 s Jabberwocks. Jameson House. Junior Class.... Kappa Sigma ...... .. Keeney, President... Key, Brown. ..... Tiacrosse LIBEB BBUXENSIS PUBLICATIONS. Mead House, NROTC... Nunotes. Phi Beta Kappa Phi Delta Theta.. Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi. Photography Club. Physics Club. Pi Delta Epsilon.. Pi Lambda Phi.. Poland House.... Political Science Club.. Psi Upsilon... Radio Club..... RepubUcan Club.... Resident Fellows. RiflelrEa e DR e . Ro-wlng- Association.......... 126-127 Senior Class Officer: 296 N N Y XS y x
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