Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)

 - Class of 1962

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1962 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 312 of the 1962 volume:

1962 LIBER BRUNENSIS 104TH EDITION BROWN UNIVERSITY PROVIDENCE RHODE ISLAND Academics:pages 16 to 41 A new vice president came to Brown. Younger facul- ty men challenged the students. While the Sphinx looked to the south. Student Organizations: pages 42 to 125 L Loberstermen looked at the BDH. WBRU got the money for FM. Pacifists debated. And the Liber staff met their deadlines. Football wins moral victorics. Soccer wins real ones. Hookey has a stadium. And crew is a sport. Squash is secretive. And tennis has individuals. Mermen are tops. The ruggers won the ERU. And fencing wants to be. Houses: pages 170 to 221 1 w f g Santas abounded. And Beta had a gas pump. AD feared leaks and won. A Friar won at Archibald amidst borrowed pumpkins. While Pi Lam is tops again with the numbers. o Yrunes ODAYS SPECIAL , rirarigee vy Clu i Doadiee Bk o Lse plusts Prineelontan Datablis hnent Undergraduates: pages 222 to 261 Freshmen were cramped. And seniors moved off. Wilson didn't wear a tie and snowed the 'Brokers. Sam's father spoke to the seniors. While '65 wished to stay alive. 4 Academics In the Blue Room, Professor Perkins meets with his students before class; Professor Schnerr is well-known for his traditional patronage of the basketball team; Mr. Madeira always drops over to the pool to check up on the swimming team, and the Classics Club meets in Professor Robinson's home. These are instances of an important part of Brown which is forgotten in casual conversation with an outsider and is not depicted in the University's brochures. Yet this aspect is very significant; the informal encounter is a common campus experience, and this is the great advant- age of the intellectual environment at Brown over other colleges. The deans and faculty exert, of course, the greatest - influence upon the academic community, and it is for this reason that the following pages, enlarged upon in compar- ison with past yearbooks, have been devoted to these groups. The aura of academics hangs like a mist about many students; there are few who attain the stature which per- mits clairvoyance in a discipline or even in any one course. Yet, the accessibility of the faculty in the community of Brown avails even the average student of the advantages of intimate contact with renowned scholars. Brown undergrad- uates profit from the fact that their college is part of a university, and yet, because the college ic the largest and most important body within this university, undergrad- uate education is not relegated to junior members of the faculty. For both the student and the professor, Brown's size has been an important feature; the former finds per- sonal challenge in a multitude of discussion courses, while the latter is provided with intimate student contact and time for research. The deans find themselves able to form more than superficial acquaintanceships among the stu- dents. Not only do freshmen attend lectures in Manning and Alumnae Halls given by department chairmen, but they also are assured of the opportunity to visit with the kind of men who, on other campuses, are often too occupied with graduate-level instruction to cope with every undergrad- uate problem. The reaction of Brown undergraduates to these oppor- tunities is indicated by the popularity of IC and University discussion courses. And for the student enticed to delve further into a discipline along lines of personal interest, the Independent Studies program offers great rewards to an annually increasing number of juniors and seniors. The honors program in every department offers extensive oppor- tunities for the above-average student. Such diversity of approach is possible and effective only because of the enthusiasm of the faculty for these programs. And, only the influence of the faculty can command the continual respect of undergraduates for the academic honor societies such as Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi and others. If a professor and student do not meet in class, they are inevitably thrown together in the current of campus life. Apart from strictly academic societies, the professor is involved in most of the extra-curricular campus organi- zations. Lingual, political and majors clubs, to mention a few, are graced with his presence and are marked with an immeasurable amount of academic and personal flavoring by his actions. On an even less formal level, faculty-student friendships are born sometime over a cup of coffee in the Blue Room, or within the housing units. The resident fellow provides a close-up view of the scholar for the aver- age student in a way which greatly encourages contact between the two bodies on the basis of mutual interests. Elsewhere, the concerned student, in trying to transform his beliefs into action on a fair housing committee for Provi- dence, for example, may find therein, a dean with similar ideas. The other side of academics centers around the profes- sor's or dean's personal interest in and motivation for his activities apart from student contact. The amount of re- search and writing being accomplished by the scholars of College Hill is prodigious. Especially strong in the sciences, Brown is the home of the Journal of Applied Mathematics and of the Journal of the American Acoustical Society. The recent construction of new facilities for the departments of psychology, biology and engineering, and the plans for a huge new physical sciences center, evidence the continued confidence of the university's supporters in the contribu- tions to be made by Brown scholars in the sciences. But confidence in the continuance of excellence at Brown is not, of course, limited to the sciences; the Ford Foundation Challenge Grant is aimed not so much at aiding the build- ing program as it is at supporting the high level of educa- tion existing throughout the university. The deans and faculty, then, are marked by an unusually personal interest in the undergraduate body, as well as by an outstanding record of research. Thus, the following section is justly set aside to present a cross-section of deans and scholars, especially some of Brown's outstanding young professors, in a perspective broader than the image cast in their offices and classrooms. Included in addition is only a small glimpse of the multitude of lecturers from outside the Brown community heard this year. Several sketches of students whose excellence in academics has been demon- strated through their participation in the College Scholar Program are included. 17 SRR, s The President ENSCONCED in one of the somber inner sanctums of University Hall is the President, Dr. Barnaby C. Keeney. President Keeney, after completing his undergraduate work at the University of North Carolina, went to Harvard where he received both his mater's de- gree in 1937 and his doctor's in 1939. He resigned his teaching position at Harvard in 1942 to enter the United States Army. Released three years la- ter with the rank of Captain, Dr. Keen- ey continued his studies with a Gug- genheim Post-Service Fellowship. Brown undergraduates first learned of Dr. Keeney in 1946 when he arrived to assume his duties as assistant pro- fessor of history. Three years later he became the Dean of the Graduate School. This was followed in 1953 by his appointment as Dean of the College. In 1955 the Brown Univer- sity Corporation elected him twelfth President of the University, succeeding Henry M. Wiriston. President Keen- ey's years at Brown have been inter- rupted only once, when, in 1952, he left temporarily to serve in the Central Intelligence Agency. The President works intimately with the Corporation since, in large meas- ure, it determines the administrative policy of the University. In accordance with the Charter of 1764, the Cor- poration is composed of two bodies: the Board of Fellows and the Board of Trustees. The Fellows, twelve in all, have as their presiding officer the President of the Umiversity; whereas, the Trustees, a somewhat larger group, elect the Chancellor of the University as their chairman. Both Boards have their particular functions; for instance, only the Board of Fellows may award degrees. Yet, fundamentally, the business of the University can only be conducted with the concurrence of both groups. Through the mechanism of the Ad- visory and Executive Committee, whose members are drawn partly from the Fellows and partly from the Trus- tees, a high level of coordination is attained, thus facilitating business pro- cedures, The nature of the problems brought before the Corporation varies consider- ably. They may discuss and attempt to resolve the housing dilemma, as they did during the post-war years. Or they may review the degree requirements and change the curricula. Even the de- cision to appropriate funds for the construction of new buildings rests with the Corporation. Certainly one of the more controver- sial issues lately has been the National Defense Education Act. According to this act, students requiring financial assistance may receive loans from the government providing they take a loy- alty oath and sign a disclaimer affida- vit, disavowing membership in or sup- port of any organization teaching the overthrow of the government. The NDEA was widely attacked both on and off campus because of the dis- claimer affadavit. President Keeney, himself, spoke out against it. Finally the Advisory and Executive Commit- tee of the Corporation voted to with- draw from the program, thereby for- feiting $250,000 annually in govern- ment assistance. Two momentus occurrences, both having propitious portent for Brown's future, were revealed by President Keeney and the Corporation in June of 1961. These were the endowment of Brown with a $7,500,000 challenge grant by the Ford Foundation and the signing of a contract whereby the De- fense Department's Advanced Research Projects Agency would provide $3,500;- 000 in the next four years to support materials research by Brown's scientists. Both grants had direct implication for the Bicentennial Development Pro- gram, whose success was henceforth assured. But the Ford Foundation grant had even more immediate import for the Corporation's decision earlier that same month to proceed with the Uni- versity's entry into a six-year program of medical education. In referring to the approval of this report, Dr. Keeney remarked that it marks the start of one more phase in Brown's rapid de- velopment as one of the world's great universities. Involved in the ARPA interdisciplinary laboratory program at Brown will be the Departments of Chemistry, Physics, Engineering, and Applied Mathematics. Unusually broad in scope and conception, this grant will support a whole spectrum of materials research from the microscopic to the macroscopic. Perhaps most spec- tacular in regard to the Universitys physical plant, however, will be the construction of a new multi-story Phys- ics-Engineering building to dominate Brown's planned physical sciences cen- ter. In the academic structure of Brown, too, President Keeney has taken ac- tion of equal significance. Dr. Keeney, acutely sensitive to trespassers upon the ground of intellectual freedom, again in convocation remarks set forth cer- tain of his standards. A bold statement against Attorney General Joseph Nu- gent's ban on Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer, and his decision that the Uni- versity would take action to test the legality of the ban provoked comment on all sides. At the action of the Free- thinkers Society in marking the con- vocation prayer as their target of re- form, President Keeney reasserted the fact that Brown is still a university in the Liberal Protestant tradition, and he successfully encouraged the picke- ters to apply their indignation to is- sues of more relevance, Brown's greatness is, in part, a func- tion of the Corporation's singleminded efforts to achieve greatness. The plans for the Bicentennial Celebration dem- onstrate an awareness of this. It is not by mere chance that the recent period of rapid growth has coincided with President Keeney's tenure in office. His own prodigious efforts to make Brown a superior university have great- ly influenced the Corporation and the entire Brown community. Administration ONE OF Dean Watts' current interests is the abrupt transition between secondary school and college. Al- though secondary schools make a genuine effort to liberalize the student, they often fail to prepare him well enough for college. To help gear the late high school years with the early period in college, Dean Watts supports a plan by which students may be per- mitted to enter college when they are ready, and not when they have simply fulfilled certain minimum re- quirements for college entrance. As their secondary education improves, according to Dean Watts, students entering Brown will improve in caliber, though he ad- mits he is impressed by the growing percentage of excellent students at Brown. The students today, he feels, have a greater ambition to learn through their own efforts, without any prodding by a fatherly ad- ministration and faculty. The university must provide a full range of intellectual opportunity and excitement for such ambitious students, while it must also assume a passive role in advising and admonishing them, and thereby encourage them to seek their education ac- tivelv, Dean Watts feels the University's attitude of aca- demic and social non-intervention is one of its most important policies, for it forces the student to experience the pain of making the same value judgments in college that he will be making for the rest of his life. TO CO-ORDINATE public relations, alumni relations, and fund-raising ac- tivities; these are the primary responsibilities of a man who, although new at Brown, has already imbued it with a growing sense of his truly dynamic personal- ity. Armed with the firm friendship of President Keency and a belief in the greatness of Brown, past, present, and future, Dr. John Van G. Elmendorf suc- ceeded Thomas B. Appleget in the post of Vice-President last May. Dr. Elmendorf returns to this country from Mexico, where he has spent the last ten vears as linguist and college administrator. A native of South Orange, New Jersey, he re- ceived the A.B., M.A., and the Ph.D. degrees in comparative linguistics from the University of North Carolina. After serving with the 35th Infantry Division in Europe during the Second World War, he was named to head the Mexican- American Cultural Institute. In 1953 he joined the staff of Mexico City College, and in 1955 became Vice-President and Dean of the Faculty. Among the more tangible results of such a background is a house full of Mexican art works and relics, and a wealth of proverbs in several languages to suit every situation and purpose. CE.g.-El diablo es mas diablo por se viejo que por se diablo; The devil is more devilish for being old than for being the devil! Perhaps his most out- standing accomplishment since coming to Brown was Dr. Elmendorf's organiza- tion of last summer's Alumni Leadership Conference. This conference, whose purpose was to demonstrate to alumni those attributes of Brown which qualified it as a recipient of a Ford Foundation challenge gift, and to study the program which has been developed to meet that challenge, was adjudged by all to be a success. The result of President Keeney's appointment, then, is certainly a brighter future for Brown; day by day in the long corridors of University Hall the question, But whom should I see about this?, has been answered by Vice-President Elmendorf, of course! DEAN ROBERT EDWARD HILL was appointed Assistant Dean of Students at Brown in 1960. In this position he took on additional duties in the counscling of undergraduates, while retaining his posts as Manager of Men's Residences and supervisor of University rental properties. Joining the Brown administration in 1951 as assistant to the controller, he was named Assistant Manager of Men's Residences in 1954 and Manager in 1957 From 1958 to 1960 he also served as an assistant to Edward R. Durgin, Dean of Students. Entering Yale University in 1943, Mr. Hill received his commission in the Navy with his Bachelor of Arts degree, three years later. He sub sequently served with the Navy during World War Il and the Korean conflict as well as acting as a United Nations observer in Israel for six months in 1948. He is currently a lieutenant commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve. Personal interest, as well as a desire to aid the undergratute, motivate Mr. Hill to attend all major student activities. Speaking to an undergraduate he stated: CMy . . . only reason for being here is for you folks . . . If I can get to know people, then I can be more effective in my job. s AS DISCIPLINARIAN Dean Durgin is known by the greater part of the Brown student body. Most students see him only as frequently as they break the attendance rules. But this truant-officership is not the most im- portant of the Dean's functions; by virtue of his daily contact with the stu- dent body, and his membership on the Committee on Academic Standing, Dean Durgin acts as a link and a buffer between the University and the undergraduate body. As the University expands in size and complexity, and attendance regulations are loosened, this aspect of the Dean's responsibilities predominates all the more. Dean Durgin feels that his four vears at Brown as Professor of Naval Science, which immediately preceded his appointment as Dean of Students, afforded a valuable period of transition in which to adjust to the conditions of civilian and academic life. His duties as both naval officer and Dean of Students are essentially those of resolving personal, human problems. It is the human factor, with its variety and unpredictability, which Dean Durgin considers the most rewarding aspect of an often vexing position. Dean Dur- gin's activities at Brown followed a distinguished career in the regular navy. A graduate of the U.S. Naval Academyv in 1922, he saw submarine duty on both coasts and served as assistant Naval attache to the American Em- bassy in Berlin from 1937 to 1940. During World War II he rose from commander of a destrover to become, in the later years of the war, member of the staff of the Commander-in-chief of the U.S. Atlantic Fleet. He holds numerous militarv decorations of honor, and honorary degrees from Franklin and Marshall College and Brown. At present Dean Durgin is uncertain as to whether this will be his final yvear at Brown. Whatever the decision, he does not contemplate full retirement. And any spare time he may have will be easily occupied by his continued interest in the game of checkers. : PHYSICIST John A. Dillon, Jr. was the Assistant to the Dean for Freshmen when the Class of 1962 arrived at Brown. Dividing his time between cramped offices in Wil son Hall and U.H., Dean Dillon helped many Freshman realize and meet the responsibilities attending their status as undergraduates at Brown. One surprised Freshman was asked to which graduate school he planned to apply, and realized suddenly that the continuing task of evalua- tion and preparation for the Future had not ended with his addmission to Brown. Dean Dillon, who received his Ph.D. from Brown in 1954, was appointed Assistant Pro- Fessor of Physics that same year. Now an Associate Profes- sor, Dean Dillon is able to devote most of his time to re- search on metallic crystal surfaces, but only after taking a sabbatical leave in 1960-61 to catch up on research neces- sarily postponed in order to carry out his counseling duties. ROBERT O. SCHULZE, tcacher, researcher and admin- istrator, has become an institution at Brown since his arrival in 1955. The University recognized his talents and in 1959 he was appointed Assistant Dean of the College and made associate professor last year. His contact with the student body is through his various official capacities as well as through his B. D. H. notices and Chapel introductions. In the latter capacity Dean Schulze has excelled in the role of a sublime touche artist and establisher of a renaissance in hymns. Be- cause of his many official and unofficial duties, Dean Schulze has become our peripatetic administrator and has been known to fulfill his appointment obligations by walking with students to the Blue Room for a fresh supply of cigarettes before his next appointment, The more serious side of this humorous and energetic man reveals that at the end of his sophomore year at the University of Michigan he entered the army for two years of service. Upon his return to civilian life, he completed his studies in sociology, receiving his A.B. in 1947. After graduation, he found employment as assistant personnel manager of Sandia Laboratory, a division of the Los Alamos Atomic Laboratory in Albuquerque. Unsatisfied with the business world, he returned to Co- lumbia for his M.A. and finally received his Ph.D. from Mich- igan in 1956. In his present position Dean Schulze finds teach- ing and administrative work rewarding, but this makes research difficult. However, as he has pointed out, his administrative position might be a good place for research on graduate schools and undergraduate social structure. MANNING CHATH Th s o Pt 24 THE REVEREND Charles A. Baldwin came to Brown in 1958. Since that time he has worked to make religious awareness a constructive force in the life of the University. As an administrator and University official, he coordinates the work of the denominational chaplains at Brown. As the Chaplain of a University historically and intentionally committed to Protestant Christianity, he officiates at various University cere- monies. As a minister, his duty is to challenge the com- placent, unthinking students into an examination of their convictions and of the world around them. In opening pravers at convocations and in the dailv morn- ing services at Manning Chapel, he tries to awaken in the students a realization of the wonder and majestv of the world and its Creator. His goal is to arouse students from their slothful complacency in a materialistic world, to see that outside of themselves are values that tran- scend the day-to-day wants of the individual, and to re- place the popular cynical hedonism with a more feaning- ful set of ideals. To this end he strives to confront the students in their daily lives. It is in this pastoral role that Charles Baldwin sees the challenge and purpose of his vocation and the meaning of the chaplaincy at Brown. ORIGINALLY ATTRACTED to art as an undergraduate by his professors at Boston University and by the works at the Kaiser Friedrich Museum in Berlin, Assistant Professor Richard B. Car- penter has drawn a large number of Brown students to his courses on Italian Renaissance and Baroque art since joining the faculty in 1957. Having received his A.B. and M.A. from Boston University, Assistant Professor Carpenter was granted a Harvard fellowship to study in Europe for his Ph.D. Here he pursued his special interest in Fragonard. Although he has attempted, in an informal manner, to emulate the skill of the artists whom he studies, he retains the primary role of art historian. Besides lecturing in three courses, he works closely with students in his seminar where he teaches contemporary Americans to use their eyes for more than avoiding doors and ob- serving women's figures. One of his objectives is to break down the compartments which have been erected in one's personality by contemporary verbalized ideas, for in appreciating and understanding Baroque art, a response of the total individual is required. The dis- sociation of the student's personality must be healed in the synthesis of an intellectual eye, a capacity to see the brute reality of the world in a more direct fashion. His courses teach a greater reliance on the validity of perception and experience, a faith which science has sought to render obsolete. To complement his studies, As- sistant Professor Carpenter writes magazine articles and has sub- mitted a series of essays for publication on sixteenth and seventeenth century art. His hobbies include reading philosophy and theology, and he is also fond of hiking and swimming. Faculty TAKING FIELD excursions is one of the fa- vorite pastimes of Dr. Donald F. Eckelman, the new chairman of Brown's Geology Department. His past summer was spent exploring the Grand Tetons of Wyoming in search of pre cambrian rocks. Prior to this, much of his field work has consisted of ex- ploring the Southern Appalachian Mountains and the Rocky Mountains. He has written manv sci- entific articles concerning his work. Dr. Eckelman received his B.A. from Wheaton College in Illinois and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia Univer- sity. After doing two vears of postgraduate work at the Lamont Geological Observatory, he went to Columbia and then came to Brown in 1957, After three vears of experience as a graduate teaching assistant, Dr. Eckelman decided to enter the teach- ing profession. Dr. Eckelman has won the admira- tion of virtually all of his students in courses rang- ing from Elementary Physical Geology to the Ad- vanced Petrology Seminar. He enjovs teaching be- cause it is a creative activity that involves other human beings, not only in passing on information, but also in creating the teaching framework that develops a student's mind. X COLLEGE PROFESSORS, machinists, physi- cians in both our country and on its campuses are the victims of overspecialization. Mr. Donald Fanger believes that this social evil should be com- batted by an attitude of healthy generalization, and he actively promotes such an attitude at Brown through his new course in comparative literature, Encompassing the language and literature of three cultures, the course deals with the works of Balzac, Dickens, Dostoevsky and Gogol - the Romantic- Realists. The course gives students a chance to make extensive comparisons through intensive analysis of French, English, and Russian cultures. Such a course in the literatures of three people requires of the instructor an extensive knowledge of each and a background in the comparison of works from widely diverse societies. As an English major with an interest in Russian, Mr. Fanger received his B.A. from U.C.L.A. and his M.A. from the Slavic In- stitute at Berkley, California. Awarded his Ph.D. from Harvard in comparative literature in 1961, Mr. Fanger has successfully blended his preparation in English and Russian with a background knowledge in French. Mr. Fanger's widely published articles indicate his diversity; he has published papers on Beowulf, James Joyce and George Meredith, a lengthy study of Dostoevsky, and an article en- titled, Emergent Romanticism and la Literature Comparee. Mr. Fanger obviously cares little about the spe- cialists who are always ready to puncture the gen- eralizations so important to learning. He admits that generalizations may be wrong, but that the very risks taken in generalizing itself contribute greatly to learning and to intellectual awareness. Attacking hedgers and rationalizers, Mr. Fanger asserts that if you are not willing to take risks, you are missing a part of life. And people who are not willing to take intellectual risks are not intellect- ually alive. IDEAS AND IMAGES in French literature and thought are the main concerns of Mr. Henry F. Majew- ski, Assistant Professor of French. In basic and inter- mediate French courses, he emphasizes major aspects of French language and culture. Of course we cannot convey a thorough knowledge of the whole field of French literature in a survey course like D11-12, says Mr. Majewski, instead Le hopes that in this course his students will develop a critical ability and will learn to understand and appreciate another culture. He feels that after taking French D11-12 a student should be able to read a French novel and criticize it intelligently for both style and content. . Mr. Majewski received his A.B., M.A., and Ph.D. from Princeton, and was formerly a Proctor Fellow in the graduate school and an instructor and assistant pro- fessor at Princeton. His doctoral thesis on the seldom- studied field of pre-Romantic theses led to a continuing interest in the late-eighteenth-century period, and he spent last summer in Paris doing research for a forth- coming article on one of the recurrent ideas which ap- pears in the literature of this period. This year, as the advisor of French Club, he enjoys meeting students in- formally, and he finds that Le Cercle Francais is a good place to teach something of the flavor of French civili- zation through programs and conversations. After all, he says, Literature is the creation of a particular people with their own distinet attitudes of mind, and it should not exist completely divorced from its background. JAMES O. BARNHILL, Assistant Professor of English and Associate Professor of Dramatics, has both professional and academic interests in the theater. Hav- ing played summer stock for the past ten years, Mr Barnhill has spent his past three summers acting at the Lakewood Theater in Skowhegan, Maine. A regular contributor to the Player's Magazine and to the New England Theater Conference Bulletin, he is vice-presi- dent of the New England Theater Conference and chairman of the stock committee of the American Edu- cational Theater Association, Here at Brown, Mr. Barn- hill teaches courses in voice and diction, public address and debate, as well as play production. The effective- ness of his work is shown by his enthusiastic students. A native of Mississippi, Mr. Barnhill received his B.A. from Yale, M.A. from New York University, and M.E.A. from the Yale School of Drama. During his undergraduate years he was quite active in the theater. Mr. Barnhill came to Brown in 1953 and has since be- come one of the directors of Sock and Buskin, the Uni- versity's undergraduate dramatic society. Because of his work in the theater, he feels that he can appraise the current professional theme with enough perspective to give an accurate view to his students The theater's relation to the English Department is satisfactory because it allows students interested in the fine arts to work in the bounds of a department which feels strong- ly about the theater as a serious endeavor. He is inter- ested in teaching dramatics sometime in the future, and would like to start a course in the five-year master's program directed toward secondary school teachers. But his goal for the present is the establishment of a fine arts center at Brown. u ' a. e L L - u ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR of Psychology Frances Louise Clayton first came in contact with Brown in 1950 as a candidate for the M.A. degree. A native of Elizabethtown, Illinois, she received her A.B. degree from Indiana University in 1949. Continuing her edu- cation at the University of Minnesota, Miss Clayton was granted her Ph.D. in 1954. She taught there for one year before becoming a member of Brown's faculty. Originally attracted to college teaching because col- lege could provide her with the necessary facilities for psvchological research, Miss Clayton soon found that the student-teacher contact was helpful to her research as well as personally rewarding. Miss Clayton's particular interest is animal behavior, especially the study of learned rewards. On her sabbatical leave next year she will conduct research in child psychology to discover whether the idea of learned rewards applies to children. In particular, she feels that the tactile as well as the basic rewards of food and water may be factors affecting a child's learning. A further interest of Miss Clavton's lies in writing programmed instruction books, a vital part of machine teaching. This relatively new method of teaching re- quires the student to fill blank spaces in a series of statements. The advantage is that the machine gives the student the correct answer after he has answered it. Faulty ideas are thereby prevented from forming and the student's knowledge is increased with each suc- cessive statement. RESEARCH is the primary interest of Dr. George H. Borts, professor of economics. From his undergraduate con- cern for the causes of the Great Depression, Professor Borts' attention has shifted over a variety of subjects, arriving at his present specialty of economic growth models. A grad- uate of Columbia University with a master's and doctorate from the University of Chicago, Dr. Borts taught at the Illinois Institute of Technology and was a research assis- tant at the University of Chicago prior to his arrival at Brown in 1950. His progress in research was complemented by his pedagogic elevations to associate professor in 1955 and full professor in 1960, On leave from Brown in 1955 as an associate with the National Bureau of Economic Re- search, he established for the first time the relationship be- tween cyclical variations and the regional growth character- istics. A large Ford Foundation grant enabled him to join other members of the economics department in a three year study of economic maturity as it applies to regional eco- nomic development in the United States. In 1960 Professor Borts also received a Ford Faculty Research Grant to investi- gate depressed areas in Great Britain. Recently he acted as a consultant to the governments of Alberta and Manitoba concerning railway cost functions, while in Rhode Island, he has advised various business groups as a member of the College Community Research Program. Through his in- termediate courses and his graduate course on economic theory, the wealth of Professor Borts' research and exper- ience is available to students, exemplifying what he consi- ders a great advantage at Brown - the availability of origin- al knowledge, attributable to the fact that the many excel- lent faculty members teach as well as engage themselves in research. Dr. Borts considers present economic theory a much more sophisticated and intellectually demanding dis- cipline than that of twenty years ago and maintains that the contemporary Brown student is a great improvement over recent graduates, having more intellectual interest and a greater willingness to experiment in careers. As a result, Professor Borts is interested in organizing a five year mast- er's program. IN ARNOLD LABORATORY, Mr. Seymour Lederberg, Associate Professor of Biology, studies various aspects of the structure and function of bac- teria. Bacteria illustrate in miniature general prob- lems which occur throughout the animal kingdom, he explains; and in his bacteriology courses he teaches students the value of bacteria as experimental tools for research. In both courses he emphasizes the importance of laboratory work, for he knows from personal ex- perience that this field becomes more exciting as the student acquires practical knowledge. Associate Professor Lederberg decided to become a bacteriologist as a result of a parttime job in the laboratory of a bacterial geneticist. Until he became involved in bacteriology, his many interests seemed equally alluring and even now he studies chemistry, archeology, and languages in his leisure time. Mr. Lederberg received his B.S. degree with honors in chemistry from Cornell University and completed his Ph.D. in bacteriology with a minor in physical chem- istry at the University of Illinois. As a post-doctoral fellow and an Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of California, Berkeley, he conducted re- search in the regulation of protein synthesis in protoza. At present, he is studying this process in bacteria which have been infected by viruses, and has publish- ed several papers on his results. When he describes his work, he communicates his enthusiasm for research, which he defines as asking a meaningful experimental question and then following your question with a lot of drudgery. Somehow, as Mr. Lederberg tells about it, drudgerv sounds exciting, and as one student was heard to remark, He could even make an English major want to be a bacteriologist. AFTER ORGANIZING the Mellotones Orchestra at the request of a Greenwich Connecticut radio station, Mr. Erich Kunzel, in his junior year of high school, began leading them on the radio as well as conducting the Greenwich High School Orchestra. In the summers of 1952 and 1953 he directed the Summer Youth Music Festival of Old Greenwich, conducting operettas and opera. Mr. Kunzel is an alumnus of Dartmouth College, graduating in 1957 with Distinction in Music. While at college, he was President and Student Director of the Fresh- man Glee Club and member and piano soloist of the Dartmouth Glee Club, as well as the Assistant Director of the Dartmouth Marching and Symphonic Bands. During the summers of 1956, 1958, and 1959, he studied at the Domaine School of Conduct- ing under Pierre Monteaux and as part of his study conducted Beethoven's Ninth Symphony and Mozart's Jupiter Symphony with the Hancock Symphony Orchestra. In 1957 he conducted the Santa Fe Opera Company in its premiere season. That fall and in 1958, he did graduate work at Harvard University and in June of 1960 he received his Master's degree from Brown. Since he began post-graduate work at Brown in 1958, Mr. Kunzel has been a member of the faculty of the Department of Music and Director of the Glee Club. He has directed the Club on all of its extended cross-country tours and has often added to its successes by joining in some of the novelty numbers him- self, as well as by tossing-in occasional ad libs and unexpected gestures. One critic was so overwhelmed by one of the selections that he wrote: Dry Bones' . . . was so amazing . . . I wish I had had a cow bell in order to join in the fun. In addition to his classes and to his directing to Brown Glee Club, Mr. Kun- zel also directs the Pembroke College Glee Club and the Car- mina Club of Pembroke. He has published an arrangement of Prelude to Western Star and several editions of pieces of Nineteenth Century male chorus which heretofore have not been available and has plans for completing one such work each year. 30 PROFESSOR BARRETT HAZELTINE s almost as interested in sociology as in his professional field of com- puter research. As Dean of the Class of 1965 and Assistant Professor of Engineering he has many opportunities to practice his avocation. At present he is organizing a counsel- ing group in conjunction with the Brown chapter of Tau Beta Pi, engineering society, to work with engineering Freshmen in need of encouragement. Born of American parents in Paris, France, Dean Hazel- tine came to this country when he was one year old. Early interested in science, he graduated from Princeton with a Bachclor of Science degree in Engineering in 1953. During the year following his graduation he held an administrative position at the Hazeltine Corporation - an electronics re- search and manufacturing company founded by his father. Returning to Princeton, he took his master's degree in en- gineering in 1956 and received his doctorate from the Uni- versity of Michigan in 1959. Since coming to Brown in 1959, Professor Hazeltine has published several papers on computer programming theory. Well-liked by his students as a person and a teacher, he has been known to distribute to his class a program for getting up and to work each morning. Among other honors accord- ed Dean Hazeltine during these years are membership in the Institute of Radio Engineers and in Sigma Xi, the hon- orary science fraternity. IT WAS IN MADRID :among the Spanish people, with whom he lived and worked, that Mr. Frank Durand, Spanish department instructor, discovered a new facet of Spanish life by which the people are drawn into sympathy with their literature and their heritage. It is the literary gathering, the tertulia, where the foremost writers of Ma- drid and Barcelona mingle with the people in an atmosphere of quick wit threaded with a taut intellectual feeling. At the tertulias, always open to the public, Mr. Durand ex- perienced the strong literary attitude present in Spain today and reaffirmed his profound interest in Spanish literature. As a student of Spanish, Mr. Durand was impressed by the literature of the country more than the smoothness of the spoken language. Spanish literature was his primary interest as an undergraduate at Washington Square College. Doing graduate work at Northwestern University, Mr. Du- rand further narrowed his field to the authors of the nine- teenth century. In preparation for his Ph.D. from the Uni- versity of Michigan, he has completed a dissertation on the late nineteenth century novelist, Leopoldo Alas, Clarin. He studied Clarin in his role as creator of unusually bril- liant works in the form of the Spanish novel. Having thus narrowed his ifeld of study, Mr. Durand would like to again extend his interests to include an analy- sis of both the Middle Ages and the twentieth century, through the experience of comprehensive literature courses. At present, he is teaching grammar and courses in compo- sition and conversation, but he is anxious to move on to the more analytical courses in Spanish literature. AN HISTORIAN who might have been na- tionally known among baseball fans had he decided to enter the major leagues, Dr. Forrest McDonald is renowned instead for his rendering of the most definitive rebuttal of Charles Beard's economic in- terpretation of the American Constitution. Base- ball. curiouslv enough, had much to do with Dr. McDonald's decision to study history: while an undergraduate at the University of Texas he devel- oped a retentive memory for baseball history in his perusal of over forty years of the New York Times sports sections, Receiving a Social Science Research Council fellowship in 1950, Dr. McDonald studied in all of the original thirteen states, and in 1955 earned his Ph.D. degree from his alma mater. In 1957 he fin- ished a history of eclectric utilities in Wisconsin and was executive secretarv of the American His- torical Research center at the time. Primarily an economic historian, Dr. McDonald teaches courses on the Revolutionary era and on the decline of laissez-faire capitalism to 1930. Es- teemed by classroom students, Dr. McDonald is well-known in historical circles for his scholarship. His study of the economic origins of the Constitu- tion, We the People, has received outstanding ac- claim. As a sequel to this work, he is engaged in writing a two-volume history of the Confederation period. Next autumn, while on sabbatical, he will remain at Brown to continue this writing. 32 VIENNA BORN Professor John Wermer came to the United States in 1939 at the age of twelve in order to escape the tightening Nazi grasp on Austria. Then, after graduating from a New York high school, he became an American citizen in 1945 and went through Harvard, earning his doctor's degree in 1951. After teaching at Yale, he came to Brown in 1954 and was promoted to full professor here in 1961. A specialist in functional analysis, Professor Wermer describes his current work by noting that for a hundred and fifty years people have been studying analytic functions and it has always been an im- portant branch of mathematics. Around 1940 a Russian mathematician by the name of I.M. Gelfand introduced a theory of objects called Banach Algebras which has relations with many parts of mathematics. My own work has been in studying the relation between the relatively new theory of Banach Alegbras and the classical theory of analytic functions. Dr. Werner has recently written a survey on work in this field entitled Banach Algebras and Analytic Function. In addition, he contributes to various journals in this country and abroad. He cur- rently holds an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship and has pre- viously held a National Science Foundation Grant for research on Polynomial Approximation. Professor Wermer is a member of the American Mathematical Foundation, Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi. 33 A NEW THEORY of superconductivity has recently been developed by Associate Profes sor Leon IN. Cooper and several other outstanding physicists. Recipident of an M.A. ad eundem in 1959, Dr. Cooper is a specialist in nuclear physics and low temperature physics and has published numerous articles in these fields. In high school, he devoted much time to his own research in bio- logy. At Columbia University he changed his direc- tion and decided to major in Physics. He took ad- vantage of the opportunity to vagabond the courses of such mentors as Mark VanDoren and others in liberal arts. After taking a Ph.D. at Columbia, Dr. Cooper won a National Science Foundation Fellowship which enabled him to spend a year at the Princeton Institute for Ad- vanced Study. He has lectured in Vienna, Italy, and at the University of Bergen in Norway. He came to Brown to develop his ideas on super- conductivity, and this March, completed the ex- planation of the only phencmenon which did not appear to be properly explained by general theory. Dr. Cooper, Phi Beta Kappa, is a member of the American Physical Society and Sigma Xi. He currently helds an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Research Fellowship. TEACHING MODERN DRAMA as it should be taught, dramatically and with an emphasis on the humanity in art, Professor David Krause enjoys his profession because it is a 'way to stay young through mutual exchanges with his students. With sufficient time for his research he finds his work to be the most exciting means to keep close to art and life. Professor Krause has directed the Production Workshop during the last few years and has spent his summers in Ireland doing research on the lrish drama. As a consequence, he has published a book entitled Sean O'Casey: The Man And His Work. Pro- fessor Krause taught at N.Y.U. and Minnesota before coming to Brown. He believes that the good students should intellec- tually embarrass their elders through questions they raise and answers they oet. Professor Krause hopes the important ques tions of life will be raised before the student becomes too con- servative. a state of mind which he fears comes all too soon. COMING TO BROWN in 1949 as a post-doctorate re- search professor, now Associate Professor Edward F. Greene had in mind the purpose of working on shock waves. As a candidate for an A.B. in Chemistry at Harvard, Dr. Greene managed to finish his degree requirements in summer school before going into the Navy. In 1946 he returned to Harvard for graduate work on the behavior of gases at high temperature, and he received his doctorate there in 1949, Professor Greene's rescarch on detonation in gases, in addition to bringing him to Brown, attained for him a Master of Arts degree ad eundem in 1957. He has also studied at the University of Bonn, Germany, on a National Science Foundation Fellowship, and at Los Alamos on problems in detonation of nuclear weapons. Cur- rently he is working on speeds of chemical reactions induced by the collision of molecular beams of different chemicals. Pro- fessor Greene is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the American Chemical Society, the American Physical Society, and the Com- bustion Institute, GROWING RAPIDLY, two programs for independent studies, the Col- lege Scholar Program and the older Honors Program, are becoming increas- ingly prominent. In the Independent Study program students are challenged to present and carry through a plan of research that can extend or replace the normal course requirements. Since 1947, when the separate departmental honors programs were unified under the Honors Council, the number of students successfully completing honors work has risen steadily, nearly doubling between 1954 and 1959. More spectacular has been the success of the College Scholar Program. The program was initiated in 1958 with three students participating, The number of interested, and qualified, students increased rapidly until, in the second semester of this year, no fewer than thirty Brown and Pembroke upperclassmen were registered as College Scholars. In their In- dependent Study projects the ten seniors pictured on the following pages have investigated subjects ranging from the effects of World War I on the American chemical industry to the rise of Chaing Kai-Shek. Only a cross section is pre- sented here. Hopefully, it is representative of the diversity of response shown to the opportunities opened by the program. INDEPENDENT STUDIES INTRIGUED by the Twenties, Larry Chase found an exciting independent studies project in the annuals of Brown history. Desiring experience in re- search and closer contact with professors, Chase formed the framework of his subject with the aid of Professor Kenny of the English Department. Read- ing the works of I. J. Kapstein, 26, Quentin Reynolds, 24, Nathaniel West, '24, and S. J. Perelman, 25, Chase explored the atmosphere contemporary with these writers as undergraduates at Brown. The issues of the Brown Daily Herald, one of his sources, revealed that Brown, like much of the rest of the world, suffered a wave of disillusionment after World War I. The campus appeared to split into two bodies. The diversionary antics of the flappers attracted the majority of the students, while a smaller group of students found themselves deeply concerned and, at the same time, in conflict with the rest of the campus. Interviews and other research techniques provided a sociological analysis of the Twenties which enabled Chase to define the nature of the motives behind the works of these four well-known Brown graduates. ORIGINALLY INSPIRED when he received an art prize at Phillips Andover Academy, Phil Makanna chose this field for his independent studies program at Brown. His primary concern was that of relating himself to abstract art totally in terms of the two-dimensional surface of the canvas. Although the Impressionists were the first school to recognize the flat surface of a painting as having its own presence, the possibility of art creating its own world, divorced from the universe around it, was introduced by Kandinsky, whose primary con- cern was the modelling of organic colored masses on a surface to form a study of their interaction. The color forms are creat- ed in an abstract random fashion, a playing with images. Makan- na has not centered his development around any particular artist nor does he feel that he has found many specific answers in the ficld of art. for he looks upon the independent studies program as the first milestone on a long road to self-discovery. Reaching the academic zenith of participating in such a boundless endeavor has not resulted in a devaluation of his earlier, more basic courses. On the contrary, he considers the University's field requirements and the D-1 courses the essential steps in personal direction and expansion. His honors program is a culmination of this experience at Brown. As an under- graduate, Makanna has given two showings, one at Brocton, Massachusetts, and another in the Rhode Island Art Festival. As a graduate, he plans to continue his studies in preparation for a career of teaching by which he expects to support himself while painting. bittk C;l.sgr Mur?aj WELL KNOWN o Lis column, Standpoint, a weekly feature of the Herald Supplement, Roger Feldman, '62, has completed a study of The Application of Puerto Rican Principles of Economic Development to Venezuela in the Honors Program. Feldman fecls that the topic of his Honors thesis is especially significant because it focuses on the problems of democratic economic and social planning. It leads, too, into a study of social change and of the operation of democratic political parties in relatively illiterate nations. Feldman, a major in International Relations, regards the Puerto Rican experience as inspiring and sees Venezuela as one of the most likely places in Latin America for genuine progress to take place. Devoted to poet-politician, Mufioz Marin, who, in his youth, wrote of the dream of calloused hands, he admires, too, the pragmatic Puerto Rican plan- ners and attaches much importance to their approach to the goal, one shared by the United States, of alleviating poverty in Latin America. Graduating after only three years at Brown, Roger Feld- man is a native of Bronx, New York, and has attained membership in the Sphinx and Phi Beta Kappa. He is a Francis Wayland Scholar twice and has served as the Business Manager of the Brown Review. He intends to add-to the training in formal economics he gained through his honors thesis at graduate school next year, THE IDEOLOGICAL RIFT between the Soviet Un- ion and Communist China has held Paul Murphy's in- terest for the last three years. In the International Relations Honors program Murphy has followed up this curiosity with a thesis devoted to a study of the differences between Russia and China since 1952. Among the questions he dis- cusses are the developing cultural distinctions between the Chinese and Russians, and reasons for occurences of the split, His thesis, The Deceptive Rift, emphasizes the sub- tleties of the power relationship. The Sino-Soviet struggle is one directed toward the coveted center of power of world communism. Undoubtedly a long term element in international relations, the present stage Murphy said, must be understood to comprehend future changes, Murphy, President of Sigma Nu and formerly a varsity football player, plans on entering law school. Having passed the written exam for the Foreign Service, he is considering government work. Reflecting on the advantages of inde- pendent study, Murphy pointed out that he had gained valuable experience in handling a large body of material in one discipline, and that he was able to work at his own pace, with the advantage of close contact with a professor. THE RISE of Chiang Kai-shek: the Bases of Political Power, the title of John Wong's independent thesis, is the beginning of a study which he hopes to continue at a graduate school for Asian studies. Finding his pro- gram richly rewarding, Wong feels that the average Brown student is quite capable of doing primary re- search, and if the program were ex- panded the professors should provide a list of research topics so that the professors and the student could mutually learn and share their knowl- edge. From his experiences at Brown he feels strongly that a uniyersity should interact more with the com- munity and the government than it presently does. BEST KNOWN in his capacity as leader of the Brown Band on Saturday afternoon during football half-times, Far- rel Fleming has devoted much of his time to specializing in his philosophy concentration. He has concluded an honors program with a study of The Problems of Causation. In particular, Fleming has examined relationships between one event and another in time, and the types of causality which occur in science. Working with Professor Salmon in the philosophy department and taking graduate courses, he also worked as a teaching assistant in an undergraduate course in philosophy. Fleming feels that the independent studies program should be broadened and that compre- hensive examinations should be abolished. Planning to enter graduate school, Fleming wishes to continue his study of causality. HONORS WORK .nd the five year program were just the beginning for Arthur Anderson, a chemistry major. His interest in chemistry led him to explore the methods of synthesizing new organic heterocyclic compounds. Not satisfied with an insight into science alone, Anderson continued with an independent study project titled the Ef- fect of World War I on the Chemical Industry. Coordinating history, economics, and chemistry to gain a multiple perspective, he developed give- and-take relationships in several departments. To round out his own program of study, Anderson completed a second independent study project in American history where he analyzed Communica- tions In Colonial America. The average Brown student, he feels, is mature enough to adopt the independent program depending upon inclination and time. Anderson still found time enough to act as Secretary of the Class of '61, member of the Cammerian Club, President of the Chemistry Club, and President of Sigma Chi. During the summer, he sails and races his boat in the Great Lakes area, and follows his hobby of bookbinding for his col- lection of early Americana. In the Fall Anderson plans to attend Yale Law School. AFTER GRADUATING from the Bronx High School of Science, Ara Chutjian came to Brown, and while still a freshman his interest in chemistry grew until his research became part of the normal academic approach. As a consequence, he became interested in the honors program and developed a project in the Calculation of Di-electric Constants as a Function of Frequency of Alternating Fields. In simpler forms, the project involves the prediction, from basic theories of structure, of a quality char- acteristic of each form of matter. Through this study in theoretical physical chemistry, Chutjian is preparing himself for professional activity in a rapidly expanding seientific field. The honors pro- gram pleased him because it allowed a more in- timate contact with his science, especially of the step-by-step process of scientific research. In addi- tion to his scientific interests, Chutjian took part in BYG, the BOTC Drill Team, and played on the varsity soccer team. Chutjian plans to attend graduate school at Berkeley, where he will con- tinue his research work. 38 - CREATING and destroying have been the central activ- ities of the undergraduate life of Carl Hirsch, whose artis- tic ambitions have led him to do sculpture work for his honors program. Always interested in shape and form, Hirsch never attempted any creative work until he came to Brown. Beginning with pencil drawing his freshman year, he soon decided to concentrate in Art. Since then, he has spent as much time in courses at RISD as he has at Brown. Since his junior year he has avidly devoted his time to sculpture, and his honors project includes plaster and bronze heads and a welded bust. Although he has attempted self-expression in writing, he is more content with sculpture, a silent, more intuitive medium; yet, the latter presents just as bold a statement as the former, since, Art can communicate by itself. The creative artist is motivated with a sense of a new freedom from traditional morality. The barriers of the should and shouldn't world are torn down by the artist, who deals with intuition and pure emotion. Commitment to art involves difficulties in creation, Hirsch said, since each time the artist succeeds in completing a work, it is like jumping into life without a life preserver. Having created a good piece, one can't do the same thing again. It's like death to sink back into the same style. In spite of the irregularity of satisfaction, the heights, and depressions, Hirsch knows he is committed to art. Uncertain about the future, he looks back on his years at Brown as a great advantage, since he gained facility in verbal expression, a quality which he feels is often times lacking in artists. HAVING STUDIED abroad at Edin- burgh University his junior year, Neal Kurk, '62, returned to Brown to fulfill a wish of sophomore year to study the ori- gin of judicial review in America. As a History major, he worked with Professor Hedges, who guided and at times helped to shape his ideas. In particular, Kurk dis- covered that John Marshall's role in judic- ial review was motivated from political considerations and as such, his 1803 Mar- bury v. Madison decision constituted a political out. The historical benefit Kurk gained in his study was a realistic inter- pretation of our forefathers as shrewd poli- ticians, Kurk concluded that Marshall's decision was based on a sense of Real- politik and that the early American Con- gresses were in a very real sense like the fictional one described in Drury's Advise And Consent. Very much pleased with his independent study program, Kurk plans to study Marshall further in conjunction with law school. THE MOST NOTED THEOLOGIAN of our time, Rein- hold Niebuhr, spoke to an over-flowing audience on College Hill. Author of countless books, Dr. Niebuhr lectured on the ambiguities of the political order and of the Nuclear Age. Many of the realistic Niebuhr theories were restated, and although Dr. Niebuhr ad- vanced no new theoriers at Brown, the man who has had such an effect on society thrilled his audience by his personal style of address. On January 24, B. F. Skinner packed Carmichael Auditorium with eager students and faculty, many of whom faced finals the next morning. As Skinner unfolded his ideas on behavior engi- neering, based on reinforcement principles, it became more and more apparent that he was serious about creating a Utopian community right here and now. According to Skinner, cultural designs are invented and then selected in terms of their survival value, but much of modern culture is out of tune with man's primitive biological equipment. Overeating, overbreeding, and ex- cess aggression result from reinforcement which could be avoided. Skinner's plan for a community includes such avoidance plus reinforcing constructive behavior. The nuclear family will be replaced by a community group, which would manage these technicalities ever so much better than parents. Questions flew thick and fast long after the speech had ended. One student queried anxiously, How soon do you think we can get started? LECTURERS ADRIFT IN SOHO was released to the public on the same week that the controversial British author Colin Wil- son was unleashed at convocation. Au- thor Wilson, who claims to be one of Britain's last Angry Young Men, spoke in the traditional costume of his group and revealed that the inspiration for his first book occurred while he was living on a park bench. He evoked both ad- miration and amusement from members of the Brown community. During his extremely active stay here Mr. Wilson visited U.C. and creative writing classes, exchanging some of his experiences with undergraduates. e CHRISTIAN MISSION, 1962 lectures were presented by the Reverend Jaroslav Pelikan of the University of Chicago. In his five speeches on the apologetic, missionary task of modern Christianity, Dr. Pelikan traced the ever- changing philosophy of the Christian Churches. He also spoke in a somewhat lighter vein - at a luncheon and at a colloquium. Dr. Pelikan, a professor of religious studies at Chicago, is the author of many books and an editor of the Encyclopedia Britannica. One of the grand old men of the American labor move- ment, A. Phillip Randolph, was the eloquent speaker at the first convocation of the second semester. Mr. Randolph presented three lectures to the Brown student body on the role of organized labor in the Negro's struggle for equal rights. With his resounding voice and his emotional ap- peal, he reminded Brown of the noble, evangelical fervor that used to characterize the American labor movement. Mzr. Randolph is the founder and president of the Brother- hood of Sleeping Car Porters, and is a vice-president of the AFL-CIO. HONORARIES SIGMA XI membership is granted to professional scientists and graduate students who have excelled in two or more fields of scientific endeavour. Each year, a small number of undergraduate students are admitted to associate membership in this national honor society, which is devoted to the encouragement of research in science. The So- ciety of the Sigma Xi, founded in 1886, has more than 130 chapters in American colleges and universities. New members this year are pictured above and are, seated from left to right: Albion D. Taylor, Lewis E. Little, Joel A. Shapiro, Stephen M. Pizer, and H. Blaine Lawson, Jr.; while standing from left to right are: David J. Mc- Laughlin, Ronald DiPippo, Thomas N. Gardner, Thoms Paoli, Carmine Bedotto, David M. Rust, Vincent M. Lo- Lordo, Peter A. Franaszek, Albert Hoke, Cyrus M. Hoffman, and Donald E. Hall. 43 il TAU BETA Pl s founded in 1885, to mark in a fitting manner those who have conferred honor upon their Alma Mater by distinguished scholarship and ex- emplary character as undergrad- uates in engineering, or by their attainments as alumni in the ficld of engineering, and to foster a spirit of liberal culture in the en- gineering colleges of America. Guest speakers this year were R. B. Lindsay and Professor Dillon from the Physics Department. Thomas Paoli was president, and members included: P. Franaszek, R. Dipippo, D. Roessner, T. Garn- er, J. Hsia, D. Baldwin, E. Iie- bert, and R, Wood. Pl DELTA EPSILON, Brown's honorary journalism fraternity, under the inspired leadership of President John Payne, had its most memorable year. Payne, Photography Editor of the Brown Daily Herald, was elected President in March, 1961, and then, in keeping with a campaign promise, he resolutely refused to call another meeting of PDE until it came time for the LIBER picture. I can't think of anything for us to do, he said proudly one day, when one of the leaders of the activist wing of PDE, Treasurer Walter R. Gordon, demanded a meeting. When time came for the LIBER picture, it was difficult for anyone to remember who was in PDE, and so several of the people in the picture may well be interlopers. Among those who can be unquestionably indentified are Charlie Tiedmann, who was elected unanimously to fill the position of Sergeant-at-Arms. Gretchen Anderson, Secretary of PDE, did the bulk of the work, but received little of the credit. Historian, Carol Sheinblatt, worked almost non-stop during the last ten months amassing the authorized history of PDE at Brown, but upon inspection it proved wholly unprintable, and the project was regretfully dropped. A campaign for abolition of PDE, led by Herald Editor-in- Chief Richard Holbrooke and Supplement Editor Prentiss Bow- sher, was beaten back in a dramatic meeting held while the LIBER picture was being taken. Unfortunately, shortly before some concensus might have emerged from the discussion, the photographers finished their work, and everyone went home. PHI BETA KAPPA members are chosen by the faculty from the junior and senior classes for out- standing scholastic achievement in a broad liberal arts background. This vear's new members of the national academic honor society were honored on March 5, at a dinner addressed by Professors Ed- win Honig and Carelton Coon. The newly elected members of the Alpha Chapter are: Howad Kashuer, Stephen M. Pizer, Vin- cent M. LoLordo, Roger D. Feld- man, James L. Thompson, Ed- ward A. Stettner, Jon J. Leibo- witz, Kenneth R. Blackman, Mat- hew P. Fink, and Daniel J. Or- sini, all seniors. Junior members are Axel Kornfuehrer, Richard M. Bernstein, Joel I. Cohen, and Stephen V. Tracy. MO ope TN COF P e Lo a7 THE SPHINX had invited the distinguished look- ing gentleman to address the group in the crowded living room of Professor Robinson's home. He spoke with a slight accent and a tone of authority. The Presi- dent of the Senate of Puerto Rico, Mr. Samuel R. Quinones, had come to Brown University to address the Sphinx. He was one of a number of unusual guests invited to address the group this year. Founded in 1905 for the purpose of discussing and arguing philosophical or contemporary questions, the Sphinx under Sam Friedman and Dave Trickey this year, is a society of sixty faculty members and students who meet several times each semester to listen to guest speakers. The year started with Professor Emeritus Curt J. Ducasse, who told the Sphinx about his recent book, A Critical Examination of the Belief in Life After Death. His talk cleared away the superstitions usually involved in such an issue and rationally examined authentic evidence for the possibility of existence after death. The Sphinx also heard Dr. Arturo Morales Car- rion, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, discuss United States relations with South America. 48 Crowded groups of bodies pushed and shoved up and down the stairs, in and out of Faunce House lounge and art gallery, gazing at bright red signs, pictures, unfurled sails and, occasionally, at Pembrokers. Activities Night brought freshmen from both campuses to scan the array of extra- curricular life beckoning to them. The display was impres- sive. A tousle-haired freshman stared upward at the massive, encased specimen of Butch Bruno in the lobby. As he bore the brunt of sporadic nudges from the flowing crowd, he thought, That bear is almost as impressive as Big Daddy Lipscombe. As he gazed, he was jarred by the clash of Jabberwocks and Brunaires as their sound rushed from nearby phonographs. He wandered over to a table littered with pictures and propaganda. Standing behind it were a few well-dressed gentlemen who appeared to be saying something, yet very strangely ah, yes, they were singing. One of them stopped and smiled as the freshman drew closer. Have you ever sung before? he asked. The boy replied that he had not, except that in the shower it sounded hopeful. Well, tryouts are next week. Why don't vou drop around? The stentorian voice barked over the din. What? They wanted him to join? How exciting! He quickly scratched his name on the paper, shook hands, and looked to the next display. Hardly had he moved on among the push-happy swarms when his attention was drawn to a Pembroker with army paraphernilia on her back. What's that? he asked. A chute, she replied, I'm a jumper! - and the head of the Parachute Club revealed the terrifying use intended for the khaki-colored trappings on display. It wasn't a case of deciding whether he wanted to join or not, The boy didn't have time to say no before his wallet was out and his first semester dues were paid. Continuing his survey, the boy edged carefully past the table where two massive forms were engaged in a violent argument over forensic technicalities, Searching for other fields, he turned around and was confronted with a tall, lanky skipper in white ducks stooping over the dinghy and gesticulating vigorously 1o match his rapid battery of words. Yes, that's the underboard pin. No, Blue Jays don't have keels. Mention of cocktails and an adjustable yard- arm stirred a nautical fiber within the boy, and he could not help but sion his name. Then, a new acquaintance caught up with him. Have you seen WBRU? No, is it playing downtown? The radio station, chump! Oh! How do we get there? The last sign T saw led me' down to the post office. They passed a large group gathered around an activity which appeared to consist of coffee and doughnuts, hand- shaking, female typists and a large, U-shaped table. Two frantic upperclassmen brushed past them. You must have hidden those signs pretty well. Nobody's made it up to the office yet, one said. Well, maybe they don't like to climb stairs. The boy followed his companion, wondering vaguely whether he should have set aside any time for study. Just cross the bridge when you come to it, he thought to himself. ACTIVITIES RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS L. V. C. F. offered to Brown-Pembroke students, through daily scripture readings, an opportunity to investigate Christianity as a personal relationship to Christ. Week- ly meetings featured such leading speakers as Dr. Ewing, pastor of the Congregational Church in Wayland, Massachusetts and Paul Little, international student director of the LV.CF,, all of which augmented the spiritual growth of the student mem- bers. Highlighting the successful vear was the annual banquet and the weekend re- freat. Leading the organization were Ron- ald Hardyv, president, and Joseph Small, vice-president. CANTERBURY is the Protestant Episcopal Church for students of Brown, Pembroke, R.I.S.D. and Bryant College. Its central ac- tivity is the Sunday morning communion service in St. Stephen's Church led by Canon John Crocker. The money collected at this service and the supplying of ushers and acolytes is handled by a group of lay students and faculty. About twenty graduate and undergraduate students from the four schools are annually elected to the vestry by the student congregation at the mid-winter dinner. This year under Senior Warden, Peyton Howard, the vestry worked to assist Canon Crocker in the running of the service and to help students realize their responsibilities as Christians toward all human beings. A Social Action Committee was formed to help the Vestry direct its activities towards aiding persons outside the Church. The Committee aroused interest in the work projects sponsored by the University Christian Association. The Vestry actively sup- ported the program put on by the Forum for Civil Liberties around the film, Operation Abolition, and probed into the fair housing problem for Negroes in Rhode Island. Also, in the fall the Vestry ran a weekend conference for Freshmen at the Church Con- ference Center at Newport to introduce incoming Freshmen to the Episcopal Church and-to some of the prevalent attitudes towards religion at college. In its activities Canterbury has tried to fulfill the dual function of assisting in the worship service for the Episcopal students and reaching out beyond itself to non- Episcopal students through its Social Action Committee. UCA covers the entire spectrum of Christ- ian life and vocation. Under the direction of Jim Thomson, President, and the Rev- erend Sam Newcomer, executive secretary, the UCA went out to meet students of the Brown Community. To introduce the students to an intellectual understanding of Christianity and to break down his aversion to formal religion, the UCA pre- sented lectures and conducted residential seminars on Christianity. In an autumn series of five lectures and question periods, the ideas of leading contemporary theolog- jans were examined. Professor Stephen Crary of the Brown Religious Studies De- partment and four visiting professors showed how Niebuhr, Tillich, Barth and other Christian mentors have tried to relate and reconcile the ideas and experi- ence of the Twentieth Century to tradi- tional Christianity. The residential seminar was an intensive probing by a score of Brown and Pembroke students into the beliefs and realitv of the Christian religion. These people elected to live as a group to study Christianity and try to under- stand their own beliefs. By attendance at worship services, discussions and study programs, they tried to learn the meaning of the Christian faith. Christian responsibility and service was stressed in the volunteer work proiects in the Providence area. These served the triple purposes of physically aiding some destitute family, showing some untortun- ate individuals that other people do care about their misery, and educating some Brown students to the facts of other peo- ple's misfortunes. A visit to the Planta- tions Club pool would find UCA members teaching crippled children to swim. In other quarters UCA tutored students from Providence public schools, A breadth of activities represented an at- tempt to carry out the meaning of Christ- ianity in a modern University. To the skeptic or agnostic student, the UCA of- fered the service projects where the practi- cal application of Christianity was the aim. Yet, consciously or not, all of the UCA activities represented attempts of con- scientious students to understand and serve the world they live in within a Christian context. THE NEWMAN CLUB through its various functions presents to the Catholic students an opportunity to develop spiritually, intellec- tually and socially. Masses offered daily during Lent and on First Fridays encourage the meeting of students members as unified spirit- ual body. First Friday dinners promote the exchange of ideas by featuring such speakers Fathers Flannery, O'Shea and Blaine on subjects ranging from confession to existentialism. Through a series of sermons by the chaplains, Msgr. Geoghegan and Father Mullen, on moral theology and a series of lectures during the fall by visiting speakers the club attempted to answer the num- erous questions perennially confronting Catholic freshmen. This year John Lenahan organized a group of upperclassmen to guide informal personal discussions on such relevant subjects as the index and infallibility. The Annual Fall Banquet, the Christmas party for under- privileged children, the cineforum on the controversial picture, The Fugitive, based on a Graham Greene novel and the Mardi Gras festival highlighted the social and intellectual calendars. Led this year by Mariano Rodrigues as president, Janice Fernald and William Palmisciano as vice-presidents, the club underwent a reorganization designed to facilitate its functions in cooperation with other Catholic clubs in the area. Instrumental in the formation of the intercollegiate Regional Council of Newman Clubs, it brought members into contact with students from Rhode Island and South- eastern New England. 54 B 'NAI BRITH HILLEL Foundation offers a three fold approach to Judaism through its religious, social, and cultural activities. The foundation intends to bring the student mem- ber into contact with his six thousand year heritage. Regularly held services provided a mode of religious expression for the Brown- Pembroke student. Weekly brunches under the direction of Art Priver, I illary Ross, Merry Black acted as both a social gathering and a place for intellectual stimulation. Speakers included Professors Smiley, Taft, MacDonald, Clayton, Tomas, Kucera, and recently retired Von Copenhagen. For all its members, IHillel offered a full pro- gram of outings, supper-socials, musical events, Israeli folk activities, and a study program organized by Neil Scribner. For the freshmen there were the congenial dinners at the home of Hillel director Rabbi Nathan Rosen. By means of a program of colloquium and inter- school events culminating in the national con- vention in late summer, the Brown Hillel Foundation affiliated itself with the national organization. The musical highlight of the year was the Spring Concert bv the Aronsens, a nationally known Jewish folk singing group. Balancing the program on the more serious side was a series of lectures concerning the lives and the ideas of three major Jewish thinkers, Moses Maimonides, Judah Halevi, and Hillel The Elder. This year saw the conversion and estab- lishment of Froebel Hall, where Hillel was first located in its earliest vears at Brown, into the first permanent Hillel on the campus. The Hillel program was under the stimulat- ing leadership of President Bruce Saypol, and Vice President Cliff Detz. LANGUAGE CLUBS WHEN BEGINNING grammar courses become a blur of idiom and declension, or when classical allusions clog the flow of a literature course, the language clubs provide a respite - conversation. Just talking after a meal in the President's Dining Room gives beginning language students a chance to improve their accents and to speak naturally and more fluently. An after-dinner conversation lets advanced language students and even professors show off a little. And if the con- versation lags, a lecture can be planned to provide new topics of conversation with intermittent parties to give renewed spontaneity and intimacy to the group. SPANISH CLUB is modeled after the famed tertulias of Spain, those informal gatherings of writers and artists which form an important part of the cultural life of Madrid and Barcelona. The tertulia at Brown is unique in that it draws many Spanish-speaking visitors from outside the Brown community, who often stimulate impromptu dis- cussions, totally unpremeditated and consequently exciting. The ter- tulia, like those of Spain, relies upon a general love of the Spanish language and an interest in literature and the arts for topics of dis- cuission. S7 FRENCH CLUB dinners were apparent- ly enjoyed more by the professors than by the students. Professors love to talk about DeGaulle or Camus or their latest voca- tions; and even from snatches of con- versation, an alert student can learn more forceful, more fluent French. Discussions in the Commons Room of Marston Hall are always informal seniors reminiscing on their junior year abroad or showing slides of Montmartre, Professor Brown telling an anecdote, students studying a book of French cartoons, and freshmen acting very, veryv Continental. GERMAN CLUB is well known for its balance between the cultural and the festive. The after-dinner lectures are vari- ous and well-organized: topics this year ranged from the Berlin situation through Literatur Geschicht to a discussion on the works of Heinrich Heine. A recording of the German version of the Treepenny Opera, including Mack the Knife was played. Of course, the lectures and dis- cussions are interspersed with merrymak- ing and German stein songs at the parties in the Mead House lounge and the an- nual picnic at Brown Plantations. All this culminated in the large scale spring party, Bier und Tanz Abend. RUSSIAN CLUB, although it received a glance of suspicion from the John Birch Society, was well received by students who desired to learn about Russian culture and thinking. To gain their objective, Chris Johnson showed slides of his trip to the Soviet Union, and to add to this knowledge, a dinner was held at which members spoke Russian fluently and sang Russian folk songs. In addition, current issues, such as the Berlin situation, were discussed. MAJORS CLUBS THE BROWN ENGINEERING SOCIETY Through lectures, panel discussions and field trips the society actively works to supplement the formal education of the engineering student by introducing him to repre- sentative fields, showing him some of the modern work being done in them. The important position of the engineer-scientist in society is a com- plex and often ambiguous one. It is the task of the society to try to inte- grate thie prospective engineer into this changing role. In the fall of this year the society sponsored a discussion at a dinner in the President's Dining Room. Professional engineers representing industry, research, and teaching outlined fields open to the students. In her annual talk on February 22, Mrs. Brothers of the placement office described the summer jobs available to the undergraduate engineer. To explain some of the work being done in the various branches of engineering the society sponsored by the other talks. On October 19 a representative from Western Electric showed the uses of first and second degree gyroscopes in initial guidance systems. On December 12 the problems of Beta radiation guaging in automatic process control were outlined by a man from Tracer Lab. Several other talks and a field trip to the Electric Boat Company showed the students the type of work they might be doing after graduation. BIOLOGY CLUB activities in the past year have been directed toward creating greater student-teacher contact within the Biology Department, as well as toward giving its members a chance for informal contact with biology and an insight into the job and research opportunities in the field. Lectures on The World of Elec- tronmirscopy and Animal Coloration by Doctors Ellis and Quevedo, respective- ly, made the membership aware of two important facets of the biologist's world. Supplementing the lectures were several motion pictures obtained from the De- partment of Agriculture. Typical of these were lecture films by Paul Weiss, of the Rockefeller Institute, and Albert Szent- Gyorgyi, world known research biologist. In addition to its sedentary theoretical ac- tivities, the club also went on a tour of the Rhode Island Hospital to get a look at one of the end products of a study of biology. CHEMISTRY CLUB, under the lead- crship of President Robert Nelson, has endeavored to present a realistic picture of what the future holds for the pros- pective chemist. Discussions on different aspects of graduate schools have been held with members of the faculty, A visit to a large industrial plant, Arthur D. Little Company, continued the year's theme, key- noting the chemist's prospects in vocations other than academic. Increased contact between faculty and students was achieved by informal coffee hours. At the end of the year, which was highlighted by a well attended bangquet, the club sponsored a program at which the chemistry seniors in honors research described their research before the faculty, graduate students, and club members. In the words of Mr. Nelson, the club wel- comes any student who has an interest in the various aspects of chemistry, the current progress being made, and their own outlook for the future. GEOLOGY CLUB president, Tom Fein- inger, began the newly organized group's first series of talks and seminars by pre- senting his interpretation of the Ihe Pleistocene Geologic History of Bermuda. Other lectures were preceeded by dinner at the Faculty Club; speakers from outside the University, and seminar leaders, se- lected by the club, chose their own topics and posted a list of suggested background reading about a week in advance, and after a thirty minute speech, were sub- jected to an hour of questions. Outside guests who gave talks or led seminars in- clude Drs. William van Arx, Carl Bowin, and Howard Sanders from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute and Dr. J. Philip Shafer from the U. S. Geological Survey. Several graduate students as well as professors from the Geology Depart- ment also offered interesting discussions. PRE-MED SOCIETY, a new organiza- tion on campus, appeared in April, 1961. Its purpose, according to president and founder Stan Terman: to give to its mem- bers an appreciation of what it means to be a physician, both with respect to his duities and contributions to the com- munity, and with the reward of respect which he receives in return. With the help of faculty advisor Dr. Robert M. Brenner, the society embarked upon an integrated program of lectures, movies, and discussions. Guest lecturers, including many prominent doctors from the Providence area, spoke on topics rang- ing from research activities to the more practical, administrative areas of medicine. In addition to this, the groun made sev- cral field trips, both to neighboring hos- pitals and to pharmaceutical companies. In conjunction with its activities in intro- ducing the premedical student into the possibilities of a medical career, the society held two meetings during Freshman Week to aid new Brown students in the selection of their courses. Due to the apparent success of this endeavor, the practice was to be continued. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB'S primary concern is, appropriately, providing op- portunity for exchange of information and dis- cussion regarding international problems. During the past year specialists on various areas of world affairs have spoken before the group; among them were Professor Lancaster of the London School of Dtonomics, an expert on the Furopean Com- mon Market and Dr. Reubin Frodin of the American Field Staff, who discussed recent events in Nigeria. William Wood, Brown '62, gave his impressions of a summer spent in Africa. Other discussions have considered Cuba and United States-Latin American relations. Future plans of the club, under the direction of President J. P. Banning, will emphasize an increased number of speakers. THE CLASSICS CLUB offers its members the opportunity to keep abreast of the new discoveries that are being made in the many areas of ancient culture. Speakers from Brown and guest lecturers present talks on archeology, classical literature and history. Outstanding was the series on Mycenae given by Professor McConas. Informal discussions with the speaker and faculty members took place afterwards. Professor John Rowe Workman, head of the department, is facul- ty advisor of the club: president Thomas Quill, pictured with Ralph Bowen and Cathleen Canon, presided over the club's well-attended activities. CHESS CLUB TAKING 2 disputed third place in the Ivy League last year, the Brown Chess Club insured its good standing in the New England chess world by beating all major chess clubs of Rhode Island in the state's Chess League. The intense interest in this contest of mental agility is revealed in the faces of the above contestants. For many, chess, like bridge, occupies a great amount of time; a few claim chess as a major course of studv. Such an interest is borne out in part by the clubs president, Peter Gould, who received his masters rating in chess before his June baccalaureate degree in math. A MULTITUDE of college students came to the National Intercollegiate Pair Tournament for a session hosted by the college Bridge Club this February. In 1961 Brown's Frank Cook and Ed Richmond placed third in this tournament. This event added to a year of exciting competition. With experienced leaders President Paul Klar- reich and Vice-Presidents Richard Hooper and George Davidson, the Bridge Club held weekly tournaments culminating in the annual All-Cam- pus Pair tournament during the second semester. Additional activities during the second semester included full masterpoint games and series awards. BRIDGE CLUB ENTHUSIASTIC and particularly hard- working members made the 1963 Brown Key the most effective in many years. Not only supporting the programs instituted by previous Keys, it also enlarged the scope of the organization, reflecting the chang- ing demands of a growing University. Mustering spirit throughout the football season, the Key began its program with the arrival of the freshmen. Shaping up the Class of '65 required several sessions of learning songs and cheers, culminating in different vocal performances by the nov- ices on the refectory steps. During the week, the Key assisted at the raft of cock- tal parties and receptions, and President Lew Feldstein's Monster Rally climaxed the week of orientation. Spirit functions continued throughout the season, with the Key-sponsored Pem- broke poster contest and a football rally be- fore the Yale game, which Athletic Director Paul Mackesey called the best rally in my sixteen years at Brown. Jim Valeo's expert handling of Homecoming Week- end, and Mike Whitworth's parade before the game and a motored Model T pres- entation of the queen during half-time, as well as the popular Friday night dance, brought the first phase of the Key's ac- tivities to a close. KEY The new emphasis of the 1963 Key found members taking sub-freshmen around the campus and attending alumni club gath- erings. These actions were an extension of previous ideas involving greater effort at personal contact with alumni and high school students. A new experience for the Key members themselves, it provided them with a chance to present views of the contemporary campus scene to special- ly interested groups and to effect closer relations with area alumni clubs. Carry- ing on another tradition, the Key donated money for a swimming records board and aided unrecognized college sports. Among the pictures is included a shot of the twenty-first member, Butch Bruno, whose antics on the field and in the bear- mobile will long be remembered. It must be neted that the crafty Bruno, when realizing the plight of his situation in the car of some URI students, wisely made his presence known to the authorities be- fore his bearnappers had the chance to enjoy the fruits of their underhanded escapade. POLITICAL MINORITIES ON DECEMBER 6th, 1961, the Cammarian Club debated a resolution requiring the fraternities to abolish all written clauses of racial or religious diserimination by January lIst, 1964 In the'comjse of the debate, a representative of the University Torum for Civil Liberities, suggested that it was Brown's responsibility to live up to the United States Conctitution, whieh 10od dbove ol Bo ternity constitutions. There' was spontaneous laughter from the audience in the packed club room. The resolution was, however, eventually passed, largely because of its support from the Executive Board of the Club. The event symbolized the way in which the new political organizations were related to the same old Brown community. It also highlighted the fact that the political tone of the University was slowly changing. Why? Before trying to find deeper reasons for these developments, one must look at the new organizations which have come into being and at what they have stood for and achieved. The University Forum for Civil Liberties sprang into existence in the Spring of 1961, in response to the presentation of the controversial House of Un-American Activities Committee's film Opera- tion Abolition to Rhode Island high school stu- dents and Brown ROTC students under circum- stances not conducive to a fair evaluation of its merits. It was really, however, a response to some- thing deeper: a malaise with the smugness of col- lege; a concrete culmination of the sacred thoughts of a relatively small group of students whose views had been formed in the period of scorn for Stevenson and the eggheads The group spon sored a program which included this film and two debates concerning the film itself and the H.U.AC. The program was a great success. The officers elected for 1961-62 reflected a variety of liberal views, all of which sought expres- sion through the Forum. Michael Naidoff '62 was a moderate President, Linda Newman '62 repre- sented a more vigorous approach toward questions involving civil liberties, Michael Saper 62, also a member of the Executive Board of the Cammarian Club, represented a cautious, concrete approach. The result was that while some members of Forum became deeply interested in the problems of the Negro in Rhode Island and joined the Northern Students Movement, others worked for the removal of discriminatory clauses, and others simply attend- ed the various small scale lectures which the Forum held. No really large-scale program was staged, and it remained to be seen whether the organization could unify itself and move forward in 1962, or whether it would become the cinch- strap of a bag filled with windy platitudes. One major effect of the emergence of a well- defined group concerned with liberal principles which could not be regarded as simply beatnik and hence peripheral, was the appearance of a small conservative Young Americans for Freedom group, For inspiration they looked to Senator Goldwater and William Buckley's National Re- view, emphasizing, however, that it had no con- nection with the John Birch Society. In a letter to the Herald, Jack Lewis and Charles Steger, the leaders of the organization, announced that, The philosophy of the YAF is quite similar to the his- torical liberalism in the Locke-Tefferson tradtion, while the pseudo-liberal New Frontier variety of liberalism is, in reality . . . al kind of collec- tivism. The YAF encountered some difficulty in getting off the ground, because its constitution required that all of its members be Americans, and the Cammarian Club refused to approve an ex- plicitly discriminatory document for a student or- ganization, which they held should be open to all Brown students. A third new student political organization which presented a definite political philosophy rather than concerning itself with a specific issue wasit seem- ed to manythe Fair Play for Cuba group. This group was also founded in the Spring of 1961, when there was considerable uncertainty about just what Cuba was, where she was going, and what the United States relationship to her should be. Many read C. Wright Mills' and Herbert Matthews' work and raised their eyebrows with uncertainty. At this time, the FPFC was distributing pro-Cuban liter- ature in the Faunce House lobby. During the Fall term, however, the approach of the FPFC seemed to swing away from an emphasis on the political rights of Castro's Cuba to something more object- less, and somewhat less positive. In a throwaway announcing their presentation of some films on Venezuela and Cuba, statements such as the fol- lowing appeared: . . . the October 26th showing of the Cuban invasion films was suppressed . . . 120 students were the victim of this suppression; Would the pictures of the armed Cuban people conflict with the propaganda of the American press? Or do the films contain the TRUTH? Leaders of the FPFC group were Barry Walters '63, Carl Weis '63, and Roger Sheppard, a former Brown student now attending RISD. Lk i SAVEUS. i sadissisii o G r HELTERS MLNOD ..,, i Some of the new political organizations focussed upon a single issue. The Student Peace Union, heir to a collapsed branch of SANE, has sought more than anything else to make Brown students a- ware of he dangers which they and their country are in. Linda Newman '62 and Carl Weis '63 were quite active in this group as were many of the self-proclaimed intellectuals of the campus, who donned pins bearing the symbol of the British anti-Polaris protesters. The group sponsored several speakers who came out for varying shades of nu- clear pacifism. Under the leadership of Jesse Victor 63, it picketed the model civil denfense shelter in downtown Providence, on the grounds that the whole principle of civil defense was a recogni- tion of the status quo character of the balance of terror and therefore was lending a false sense of security to the American people. Another new student organization, the Freethinkers Society, proclaimed itself to have been organized because of the demands of reason and conscience for intellectual and moral responsibility on the part of organized reli- gion. Perhaps this was part of it, One feels in the for- mation of this strange group, with Voltaire as its idol and Arthur Evans '63 as President, the same malaise with the establishment of the University mentioned above, On November 1Ist, the Freethinkers projected a plan to picket convocations because they opened with a prayer. They felt that Brown is a bigoted and prov- vincial community in regard to religious belief. The Freethinkers were berated by the student body and squelched by a statement from President Keeney which combined intellectual argument and somewhat less in- tellectual innuendo in a sufficiently potent mixture. While the new student organizations struggled along, sometimes attracting campus-wide attention and some- times gaining only greater familiarity with their own navels, various actions by President Keeney and by the Cammarian Club in a traditionally liberal vein char- acterized 1961-62. Typical of these actions were the Cammarian Club's formal disapproval of the disclaimer affidavit of the National Defense Education Act and its setting of a deadline for the removal of fraternity dis- criminatory clauses. Significantly, both of these actions were approved by a one vote margin. Significant, too however, was the fact that the University withdrew from association with the NDEA and set up a group to investigate discrimination by fraternities. The new political organizations are probably periph- eral to the attitudes of the bulk of the student body. To some extent, these groups represent the formal crystaliza- tion of ideas which have certainly been held by a minor- ity of the student body for several years. Significantly, in this connection none of these organizations are offer- ing any new ideas. They negatively deplore discrimina- tion, atomic testing, American foreign policy and the New Frontier, but they offer no complete scheme to pro- vide direction to the country. They do express them- sclves in action movements and seek to escape the swamp of words into which they are prone to fall. But their action has been of a one shot nature and has seemed more like self-expiation than fulfillment. In a world of complex change, they seemed to prefer relative- ly simple formulae and politically ineffectual action. Why did these organizations come into existence? Several reasons can be offered. The 1950's were, in their own peculiar way, a period of intellectual revolt. Col- leges, in turn, in their own peculiar way, are linked to the intellectual trends of the outside world. As the Eisenhower years drew to a close, and as some of the dire predictions made by intellectuals during those vears began to materialize, the vague atmosphere of discon- tent with complacent acceptance of the status quo began to congeal. The election of Mr. Kennedy, who at least proclaimed himself an intellectual and a leader of youth, gave an impetus to this feeling. This might not have happened if the composition of the student body were the same as it was in the 1920's. But, as the Admission Office has so proudly pointed out, more than half the members in recent classes have come from public schools and not all of these students have been from suburban schools. This new complexion has supplanted the pre- dominant conservatism of the old Brown. A final factor must be considered to be the values which the faculty has endorsed, although not always accepted when they manifested themselves in the student body. Not only is there the traditional emphasis on the merits of being a scholar, but there is increasing encouragement of the maverick who thinks on his own. For on campus student organizations to become political insurgents, this was probably a necessity. : The future of the organizations, founded on these tenuous grounds and guided by a few individuals, is uncertain. There is no guarantee that their successors will filter into the University, or that the University will continue to encourage the mild brand of politcal ques- tioning which it currently does. Nevertheless, that these organizations have existed at all is a more significant fact than the record longevity of the Cammarian Club. 67 v. D. THE YOUNG DEMOCRATS, under the leadership of President Joel Cassel, and Vice-President Michael Shapiro, basked this year in the reflected glow of the Ken- nedy administration. Their project this year was a combined effort with the F.H. B.G. to bring Ayn Rand to Brown. Discus- sions were also held on the possibility of improving the 1962 congressional cam- paigns. National Liason, Charles Negaro, interviewed Senator John Pastore of Rhode Island and reported the Senator's views on the nation's youth movements to the executive committee. A SPARCITY of elections during Brown's 198 th academic year did not keep the Brown Young Republicans from engag- ing actively in politics. Under the leader- ship of Creighton Kern, George Bryant and Jeffrey Wilson, the club promoted the public service appearance of Arizona Sen- ator Barry Goldwater. In Rhode Island politics the Y. R.s prepared for next year's gubenatorial election and enjoved luncheon with candidate John Chafee, himself a former Brown man. However, the primary mission of the Young Repub- licans remained the stimulation of political thought within the Brown community. Y. R. AS ENVISIONED by President Rob- ert Shannon, the purpose of the Brown University Debating Union is twofold: firstly to train those who are interested in debating in excellence, and most im- portantly to present Brown in the best possible light to the public in Providence and elsewhere. The first of these objec- tives was furthered through regular Thurs- day night business meetings and through a training program designed to acquaint freshman debators with the techniques and conventions of college debate. This pro- gram, although carried on behind the scenes, has been the major activity of the Union this year, and was necessitated by. the general lack of experience among the membership. Despite this handicap, the Union spon- sored a highly successful tournament on October 21, which was won by Loyola Uni- versity. Thirty-five colleges and universi- ties debated the national topic: Resolved that labor unions be under the jurisdiction of the anti-trust laws. The Union was res- ponsible, along with the Herald, for the very interesting debate on birth control; brought two English debaters from Cam- bridge to team up with two students from the Union on the question: Resolved that America needs her allies as much as they need her; was represented at the Rensselaer Match Round Robin contest; and schedul- ed three debates, including a home and home exchange with Yale, for the second semester. Looking back on this impressive list of achievements, the Union proudly noted that its major project of the year, playing host to the match in October was cited in Chicago and Boston papers, a- mong others. DEBATING UNION ROCKY MOUNTAIN EMPIRE cLUB 70 EXHIBITING the lingering turn-of- the-century culture still prevalent in Yosemite Sam's unprogressive neigh- borhood, the Rocky Mountain Empire Club strives for unprecedented pin- nacles. Established at Brown in 1959, the club has recently constructed itself on the site of the new biology building and now claims the alluvial sludge of west- ern academic gold-mining. Alternately known as the gold brick- er's union, the RMEC claims to be a strong unifying force for the small con- tingent of Westerners here. It must be admitted, however, that only one of these gentlemen actually lives on a ranch; the rest are from Denver and live in houses. Stemming from widely varying back- grounds, the Westerns congregate annu- ally for the LIBER photo. In the fore- ground is Dave Rust '62, well-known snowshoe-and-boot-wearer. Behind him is Tom Carson '62, who collects western license plates. Slightly above, stands Terry Richmond '65, specializing in beardgrowing and skiing. Next in line are Jim Birney '64, and Randy Barn- hardt 65, demonstrating the new Western style while John Levy '62, is the old-time goldmine-guard type. Final- ly, at the summit yodeling to the photo- grapher, is Black Bart Lilly 62, who climbs, skies and, on occasions, join3 Rust in downing 8-ounce cans of Coors. THE BROWNBROKERS 1961 produc- tion, One Way Out, was opened with a vi- brant song-and-dance routine. The Play's the Thing, but to lift the spirit of the Brown campus, the right thing was certainly this boisterous musical revue. The show, a loose collection of comic skits, songs, and dances, ranged from mad advertisements to a barroom murder mystery. The entire production was zestfully directed by Myrna Danenburg; the chorcography was skillfully developed by Tom Gatch. Among the many highlights, Little Ey- olf Ridinghood veraciously distorted Berg- mann's Virgin Spring down to the last hilari- ous detail. Included were English subtitles, a vampish grandmother, a sinister wolf, and goody-goody Red Ridinghood herself. The tele- phone company was the object of a suitably lav- ish comic advertisement, It's Little, it's Lovely, it Lights. The modern teen-ager who sat be- tween his metamorphosed elders at Faunce House found himself uncomfortably akin to the yowling, contorting, groaning group of rock- and-rollers on stage, while the furtive girl- watcher chuckled nervously at a review of his library study habits, Everybody's Rocking at the Hay. The show ended with melodic boom of the title number, One Way Out, in which the entire cast participated. Although many a- mong the forty who worked in the production might be singled out for special compliment, the huge success of the performance is directly credible to the joint effort of a large and highly- talented cast. All indications are that the musi- cal revue has started a tradition at Brown. Be it true or no, the college community anxiously awaits the lyric exuberance of Brownbrok- ers-1962 . . . . 72 THE 1961-62 DRAMATIC SEASON began with the lights dimm- ing, a silent audience and a rising curtain, as the first of many hard-working, hard-acting Brown and Pembroke students walked upon the stage. The play was Measure for Measurer, a tragicomedy by Shakespeare. The director was Janice Van DeWater. The Duke, Vincentio, was Tom Delaney; the Deputy, Angela, was Bob Elson; Isabella was Leslie Phillips. The set was a raked innovation by Professor Jones, theatre technical director; the production was wholly a success. Outstanding among the low-comedy character parts were Martin Broomfield's fatuous Pompey, Roberta Olsen's sleezy Mistress Over- done, Ted Landon's bumbling Elbow, and Duke Kant's shaky Froth. The sure-fire production of Cole Porter's Kiss Me Kate more than once brought a capacity audience to tears of laughter, Its three hours of con- centrated humor were shrewdly controlled by director Professor James O. Barnhill. The leads were uproariously filled by John Simpson as Petruchio, Diana Ellis ds Katherina, Nancy Otto as Bianca, and Fred Szumigala as Lu- centio. Among the many vibrant numbers, Simpson's Where is the Life that Late T Lead, Ellis's I Hate Men, and Otto's, I'm Always True to you Darling in my Fashion, stopped the show. The two Daymon Runyon gang- sters were word-played and danced to comic perfection by Duke Kant and Carmen DiGennaro in Brush up your Shakespeare. Mary Stuart, the season's third production, was imaginatively staged on a unit set by designer Jones. The directorship of Professor David Unumb was sensitive and careful. The leads were capably plaved by Roberta Olsen as Queen Elizabeth, Bonnie Sour as Mary, Queen of Scots, and Raymond Childs as Leicester. The play, a heavy tragedy by Schiller, is difficult to produce and is seldom attempted by college dramatic groups. Gt rraneae THIS YEAR'S English 23 production of Shaw's The Devil's Disciple, limits the adjective academic to its strictly academic meaning. The play, a masterpiece of Shavian humor, is set in American Revolutionary days. Under the perceptive direction of Mirs. Van DeWater, the leading characters were humorously por- trayed by Raymond Barry as the Devil's Desciple, Hillary Ross as Mrs. Anderson, and Tom Delaney as Minister Anderson. The tone is light, the spirit was good, the result was a hearty success. Sartre's Flies is a modern interpretation of that Greek Legend on which Aeschylus based his Libation Bearers. As such, it has proved an interesting experiment and a test of the Brown actors' mettle. The direction, again by Professor Barnhill, was excellent. The leads were well played by John Pleshette as Orestes, Leslie Phillips as Electra, and Robert Elson as Zeus. The success of the production looks forward to more ultra-modern works on the Faunce House stage. The Sock and Buskin board, official University dramatic organization, is composed of Brown and Pembroke students and of four faculty advisors. These four, members of the English department, Barnhill, Unamb, Van DeWater, and Jones, alter- nate in directing Sock and Buskin plays. This year, again an active one, reconfirms the high place which Sock and Buskin occupies on the slate of New England college dramatic organi zations, and reiterates the pride which the Brown community takes in its dynamic student-players. The lack of an official dramatics department at Brown renders this achievement all the more significant. Besides its obvious artistic function, the Sock and Buskin board serves an intellectual function in promoting the lectures and visits of several important theatre personnel each year. - weis foil J W i 1 N O OO S PRODUCTION WORKSHOP'S citinc was a patio Jeb fry Ordover's play began. The vibrant drone of an airplane engine sounded from the darkness and from the gradually illuminated interior of the plane came Mary's echoing I did not want to go, Father . .7 One after the other, in methodical randomness, six passengers bespoke hopes and fears in a poetic stream, always one picking up where another paused, building a montage of thoughts. First was the troubled adolescent, Mary, poignantly portrayed by Kay Johnsen, and second, Johnny, the stagnant college student played by Dick Nurse. There was Peter, the farmer, and his wife, Lisa, on their way from the rural West to a sophisticated Eastern city, characters evoked well by Rod McGarry and Martha Reeves. There was Vincent Rinella, convincing in his role as Mr. Sallings- man, faking one of his last trips before retirement, and Richard Rubin as the doomed Old Man. In Ordover's When Hawks Die each line gave the audience in Faunce House Courtyard a deeper insight into the problems of the six characters aboard the trans- continental plane. The final stark tableau at the death of the Old Man, first brought to each a focusing of his thought into an im- mediate situation. After sorting thoughts, for all there came a rea- lization: for some a new hope, for some a change, for others an understanding of their isolation. And each continued on his journey to somewhere, as lights dimmed on Mary's Oh Father, I am so afraid to tremble alone. Besides Ordover's winning entry in its annual one-act play con- test, Production Workshop performed the work of another local play- wright, English Professor Edwin Honig's The Widow. Recording the conversation of two women, one a man's wife, the other possibly his mistress, the poetic dialogue at times became effectively farcical. Through- out the plays, however, it became increasingly apparent that whether the man was dead or not was unimportant, for in their discussion of how they loved him each woman lost sight of the man himself, and made of herself a widow. Expanding its personnel to include not only, as formerly, Brown students and Pembrokers, but also to professors and graduate students and their wives, Production Workshop again displayed talent and dedi- cation. Pictured on these pages are scenes from the Workshop's version of Yeat's On Buaile's Strand. Professor David Krause of the English de- partment directed, while Bob Elson, Dick Rubin, Karen Kennerly, and Carmin DeGennaro pictured above assumed the major roles. Aided by its patron, William Surprenant, the Workshop flourished under Chairman Gene Jaleski, and, although formed for the purpose of ama- teur experience, the group received the unsought honor of invitations to both the Yale Arts and the Yale Drama Festival. 75 THE BROWN DAILY HERALD ffices were characterized by an atmosphere of informality during the Holbrooke regime. Never, except for the day on which these photographs were taken, was any member of the managing board found wearing a suit and tie, with the occasional exception of Managing Editor Bob Feldgarden. Taking its cue from the habitual sloppiness of Executive Editor Wally Gordon Con this page, the man with the cigarette in his mouth and his tutor Hol: brooke Cthe man without a tie on this occasion, the Herald Board in its attire reflected the harsh daily routine they had undergone during the year. MEDIA 76 THE INTRODUCTION of cirls to the news staff for the first time in BDH history failed to clear the- air of the traditionally pro- fane offices. Despite the strong tradition, the disheveled appearance of the Board members, and the unflinching opposition of Ted Ever- gates, a confirmed woman-hater, a few Pem- broke journalists remained on the staff to con- firm Ilolbrooke's suspicion that girls could write, notwithstanding all reports to the con- trary appearing in the Pembroke Record. Busi- ness manager Bob Ebin ended up insisting that the seven female secretaries constantly in his office actually improved the Herald, some- how. ADDITION OF personalities, such as Herblock, to BDH publications was hardly the only highlight of the year; the managing board, broken down into individual talent, provided enough manifestations of creative drive to fill myriads of Supplement issues. However, some energies were channeled into other projects. One of these was the task of chasing a dog that had strayed into the office, which John Payne, Photography Editor, assumed. John attempted to disect it with a screwdrive; but the animal had other ideas and scurried off whining. Meanwhile, Bob Feld- garden spent hours off in a corner gaining proficiency at the Twist, as Sports Editor Remy Zimmerman attempted to railroad motions for a cocktail party through each board mecting, always unsuccessfully. 78 DESP E Cor because of the informality of atmosphere, the Herald suc- ceeded in raising the journalistic quality of its publications. The Supple- ment format was changed under Prent Bowsher; it became more compact, contained more articles, and grew to include a book review section under the direction of Ted Evergates. By establishing working agreements with students at the University of Louisiana and at UCLA, the Herald published news of racial problems and student political interests on these campuses. Walter Gordon conducted a trip through the South, reporting on segregation problems. And when the Herald returned to a subscription basis, the diffi- culties of advertising and distribution were solved by Bob Ebin, Reid Alsop, George Mairs, and Dave Cummings. For the first time in at least three years, the Herald Board had the good fortune to agree on most editoral and policy decisions. With the exception of the question of the color of the St. Patrick's Day issue Csolved by Mairs who finally located his vote unanimity was usual- ly the keynote of Herald policy decisions. The most controversial stand taken by the Herald during the year was the condemnation by Editorial Chairman Larry Chase of the irresponsible policies of Providence radio stations. In turn, WICE condemned the BDH for poking its nose into other people's business. For a while it looked as though the BDH might face legal action, but the rumors have since proved false. Despite Staff Director Len Charney's incoherent note-taking during the board meetings, many other things were accomplished. The Herald initiated a lecture series which brought Malcom X, leader of the Black Muslims and Senator Leverett Saltonstall of Massachu- settes. Jules Feiffer and the Herblock cartoon rated the daily editions, while Eric Sevareid entered the Supplement. The Cam Club considered itself jilted by the Herald, as belated issues of the Cam Club newsletter proved, and an abortive Cam Club investigation of the Herald was attempted. The Herald also endeavored to regain the confidence of fraternities in an effort to become a true campus voice. 80 THE BROWN REVIEW, under the editorship of Dan Wexler, underwent a year of testing to see whether the magazine's new name, new format, and redirected emphasis were as successful as new program seemed to be when it was instituted last year. The policy of more and better poetry and fiction, current book reviews by members of the faculty as well as the staff, and more interesting features including interviews with well-known writers - was maintained, and resulted in issues which were received with acclaim from the Brown community's literary-mind- ed. Perhaps the most important contribution of this year's Brown Review was the re-institution of art into the magazine; the striking reproduction of an Aubrey Beardsley drawing on the cover of the fall issue solved the problem of the too-plain medical-journal look. Sherry hours, begun by last year's staff, were continued this year. By meeting creative writing students and their professors in an informal party atmosphere, the Brown Review staff was able to exchange ideas with those with whom it shared a common interest. The sherry hours also brought the magazine new staff members and some fresh and exciting student poetry and fiction. Professor Bloom of the English Department was a special guest of the magazine this year at another party, an informal question-and-answer session which proved to be enjoyable and informative. As it has in the past years, the magazine acknowledges a great debt of gratitude to John Hawkes of the English Department, who served as faculty advisor. A number of his excellent suggestions were carried to fruition, and in this way he was responsible for much of the success which the Brown Review achieved this year. LITERARY ANTHOLOGY Conforming to no tradition, the 1962 Liber here publishes some of the outstanding literary efforts which have appeared at tors have tried to gather a representative deavor, reflecting the thought of Broun selections of fiction, editorial comment, dergraduates for various publications and COME HOME RADCLIFFE When I was in high school, I remember once asking in a Creative Writing class, Is there anything that is beauti- ful? That was a pretty in thing to say at the time I suppose. Now I'm a Brown man, and know lots, and so all I say is It's no big thing. With this in mind, I tell you about My First Home- coming, the only adult story to be playable before children admitted without their parents in all the Avons of America. It is my hope that it will be re-enacted as a sort of Passion Play once every four years so that the Brown soul will not run dry. When I was a freshman, there were still big things, like Homecoming. I had a blind date for that IHomecoming, a Radcliffe girl and that was a big thing too. The first problem encountered was the securing of a room for her. As the pleasure palladiums of Providence were all filled up by the time I got my date, I was forced to rummage through the phone book for a hotel. The one selected did not men- tion anything in its ad about room quality . It did say that it was fire proof. I went down with a friend to find the hotel. It was in the wrong part of Providence. Having arrived there, I chickened out. I couldn't go in. Now I have been in the wrong parts of the Bronx and dated a girl who lived near Harlem, but I had never seen anything quite like the barber shop in this battered-down hotel. I mean the entire Un- touchables cast was recruited there. Well, eventually I went back and took a reservation - the fact that the clerk was rather surprised at my request made no impression on me at the time. Homecoming, in my tweeds, I greeted Radcliffe at the station. Unfortunately, she was better cut out for a Victorian frock coat and vest than for the oh so Ivy plaids. Undaunt- ed we played out the ritual of Go to the Football game. There remained the great house party of the evening. A delight, yes. But alas I was no drinker, and my date was a W.C.T.U. campus representative, So we stood there in the middle of the dance floor of the Everett House lounge while everyone else lay around on the sidelines. Brown during the academic year. The Edi- anthology of journalistic and literary en- men. T he material presented here includes news stories, and rhetoric produced by un- prizes. Roger Feldman, 62, brought a new approach to writing this year with his articles in the Supple- ment. Combining wit, social comments and an off- the-cuff style, he aptly explored many areas com- mon on the Brown scene. About two o'clock, the morale of the party was getting low, and we left. There in the cold hollow eminence of the West Quad, which was echoing with the last happy yells of gentlemen and resounding gently with the fall of beer cans, I made a major decision: was going to be a Brown man. And so, sober though I was, I grabbed Radcliffe's hand and began to run down College Hill. I do believe she was taken unaware. Finally, one of her high heels broke off, and chivalry being the better part of valor I let her walk up the hill and pick it up. Finally we were at the hotel. And then, the experience. Coming in the entrance were a sailor boy and his lady friend. Now it was my date who remarked about the lady's heavy makeup, and I who noticed her rather tightfitting and low cut dress. And it was both of us who suddenly realized what she was, and what the hotel was, Budding young in- tellectuals, we'd seen it all in Eugene O'Neill. The next afternoon we completed the last lap of Home- coming, the open-open house. Now Radcliffe, I have neglected to mention, was a biochemistry major, with a smudge of calculus. This can be fascinating, I am sure, but I am a pedant with a smudge of New York Times. So. after trying to talk to her for a while, I applied some Yankee ingenuity to the problem of passing the required time with her. I took a wastebasket and a tennis ball, set the former in the center of the floor, threw the latter to her, and asked her to join me in the scintillatingly collegiate endeavor of throwing the tennis ball in the wastebasket. An enjoyable afternoon was had by all . . . I kissed her on the cheek at the station. I reccived a week later a letter which read something like McGuffy's Reader, I had a wonderful time. The run down College Hill will be long remembered. I have not visited the hotel since that time, nor have I attended a foot- ball game. I can confidently say, It's no big thing and urge vou all to find meaning in Homecoming as I did. JOSIAH CARBERRY'S SECRET SIN Prentice Bowsher '62, as editor, was in large part responsible for the outstanding quality of the Supplement over the past year. His comments on apathy introduced an issue containg articles ex- cusing and decrying the seeming lack of ferver for anything on the Brown campus. Mother, Country and The Flag are in danger. And no society, regardless of how extreme it is, no columnist, re- gardless of how much verbal frowning he does, can stay this danger in its floodtide. It is everywhere, insidious, un- scrupulous. Mother, Country, and The Flag are in danger of being chucked out the window after years of faithful service by a new shibboleth - Apathy. If Edgar Allan Poe could rewrite his story How to Write a Blackwood's Article making it simply How to Write a Saleable Article for Anybody, I strongly suspect that high in the story would be a line something like, When you are in doubt, write a piece calling everyone but yourself apathe- tic. It cant miss. He would be right; it couldn't miss, un- less there simply wasn't enough space to fit in along with all the other articles saying the same thing. If you think this is exagerating just look at Brown. Stu- dents call each other apathetic; they call the administration apathetic. The administration reciprocates and then adds Just between us, some people in here are pretty apathetic. Convocation speakers talk about it; apologists use it as a crutch; and if Chubby Checker simply recited the word, somebody would probably do the Twist to it. Christopher Petty, whose Twisting ability is unknown, adds a new fillip to the charge that students are apathetic toward extracurricular activities in an article on page five of this issue. He argues that students turn their backs on activities because of the super-emphasis on grades. Eric Sevareid, in his column, makes that point that one of the major reasons for President Kennedy's attacks on extremists in this country is to overcome public apathy. Why all the noise about Apathy? Perhaps it's a part of the great crusade to prove that nothing the United States does is right with the possible exception of rotating the same direction around the earth's axis that all other countries do. Maybe it's just that everybody became tired of Mother, Country, and The Flag and wanted something new. The wonderful part about Apathy is that you never have it. Like accidents and a winning Irish Sweepstakes number, it always happens to the other guy. A catch that must send prospective Congressional investigators into fits of glee is that while you are accusing everybody else of being apathetic, a suspicious unbeliever is also accusing you. Apathy of course is in fact a pretty radical thing. It links itself to the rich and the poor; Jews, Puerto Ricans, and Italians; Negroes and whites; Communists and John Birch- ers. Rumor has it that even Josiah Carberry is apathetic at times. 82 SPEECH TO THE CANADIANS This year's winner of the William F. Gaston Prize for oratory was William L. Wood '62. Giving a speech that had originally been presented at o men's club in Ottawa, Mr. Wood related some thoughts on his trip of the previous summer to Africa. The American Negro is born into American culture. Its approach to life: its attitudes, beliefs, values and goals, constitute the only approach to life that he can hold. One is a Canadian, not because one chooses to be a Canadian, but because one lives here, and consequently assumes the pat- terns of Canadian life, and the values that regulate it. In a similar manner the American Negro - even as the white American is an American for this simple reason: because of his peculiar situation, his birth and his history, he cannot be anything else. The American Negro exists outside the mainstream of American culture. Having set his eye on commonly ac- cepted American goals, he finds that the means for reach- ing these goals, though commonly accepted, are not com- monly available. He is not allowed to be a real, first-class American; he is not able even to think of himself as a reale, first-class American. But wait a minute, I have just contradicted myself - or have I? Is it a matter of me misrepresenting the truth or of the truth being contradictory? The fact is that the American Negro is irretrievably a part of American cul- ture, history and tradition, but at the very same time is barr- ed from ever feeling, or being accepted as a real American. I tell you this not to comment on the racial situation in the United States, but in order that you may understand or begin to understand the contradictory feelings of every American Negro. His utter commitment to his nation and all that it stands for, and his utter frustration and dejection at his inevitable failure to enter into its mainstream of activity. For without undersanding this state of mind, without at least being aware of it, you cannot fully understand the reaction of an American Negro to Africa. To almost every Westerner, American or European, Af- rica is significant. To the American Negro, however, Africa has a very special significance. The Negroes who participated in Operation-Crossroads Africa this summer did so for a confusing variety of reasons. One reason, however, that could be uniformly attributed to every one of us was this: each Negro went to Africa, in part at least, because he wanted to know if he could feel at home there. He wanted to know if Africa could answer his ache for a society in which he might operate as a whole man a society in which he might be accepted or rejected for exactly the same reasons that everyone else in the society was accepted or rejected. He wished to know if, in Africa, he could be treated as - and come to feel himself as a first- class citizen. The Africans extended all Crossroaders a royal wel- come. But from the Ffirst the Negroes found themselves especially well received. The Africans left no doubt that they were glad to see us - nor did they leave any doubt as to why they were glad to see us. A Nigerian told me as I walked on a Lagos street with two of my white companions Welcome home brother! I am glad to see you all, but particularly you, my brother, in my own color! A girl at a Dahomeyan wedding party refused to believe that I was an American pointing at my skin she would repean, non, non tues moi - you are like me! A Nigerian railroad official bought some pineapples for me and when I offered to pay for them refused the money telling me that I was home now and the pineapples were just part of what now be- longed to me! The American Negro received such a warm welcome that often he could not help think that maybe this was it - maybe he was home. It is difficult to adequately describe the feeling of be- longing an American Negro felt as he walked down a crowded Lagos street. He simply could not get rid of this thought: I am not in the minority. Everyone here is black too! Also there welled up in him a feeling of tremendous pride. American Negroes in important or exacting positions in the United States are far too rare. In Africa there was no end to the positions the Africans filled. He, of course could be seen doing hard, menial tasks, but he also ran the post office and the hotels and the bus companies and the Coca Cola plant and the shipping firms and the nation- al government. The satisfaction, the pride, the exaltation of the Negro on seeing this was immense. To deny the deep and important differences between American Negroes would be a flagrant misrepresentation, vet the longer we stayed in Africa, the better we got to know them, the more convinced we became that the fundamental similarity of people their basic humanity dwarfs the seemingly deepest differences. People everywhere are peo- ple. The man from the most foreign culture is more similar to you than he is different from you. Finally, we met and talked with American Negroes who had made the switch. American Negroes who had discovered that in Africa they found the sense of identity, the calm acceptance that they had been unable to find in the United States. I met expartriate Jack in a Lagos hotel. He had been in Nigeria for six years and intended to stay. What per- suaded you to do this? I asked. You don't know? He had answered. Wait a couple of years and you'll see you'll come running over here too! Africa gave Jack and certain- ly many other Negroes such a sense of being a real person that it was impossible for them to think of living anywhere else. Africa, then is something very special to every Negro. It is a friendly hospitable land where he can be accepted as a man. It is a place that shows him he can meet the responsi- bilities and demands of the most exacting tasks. It offers a solution to the impasse that each Negro faces: it provides him a way of abandoning the frustration role of being a citi- zen of the United States, but not really being a, citizen. This it offers to some Negroes. Most Negroes returned from Africa, however. They returned inspired and enthused by the advances made inspired and enthused by the dy- namic energy that had made possible these advances. But notice I say they returned. The American Negro is an American - he is an American because he cannot help being one. And in Africa he discovered that color - which by itself is enough to keep him out of the mainstream of American life, is not enough by itself to allow him to enter into the mainstream of African life. 83 ONE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY- THREE MOVED As one of a series of articles on off-campus apart- ments Jonathan Leader's piece is an example of extended writing in the Herald. Using the medium of the daily paper, the Herald board produced several such series describing the life of the Brown Community. Dinner in his off-campus apartment may feature turkey one night and tuna the next, but for Walter Gordon, '62, living away from the Brown dormitories means that for the first time since I've been at this college, I feel that I'm a part of the civilization of the twentieth century. Although not all of the one hundred and eighty-three Brown students who live off-campus are quite as outspoken as Gordon, most agree that living away from the Brown quadrangles has advantages that cannot otherwise be found. Nicholas J. Angell, senior class vice-president, summed up the attitude of many of his off-campus mates when he said, Living off-campus provides a much more relaxed at- mosphere. It's like living at home, and you don't feel like a machine. You feel like a real person. Angell, who shares a three room Thayer Street apartment with Senior Class President Robert J. Myles, also added, Of course, vou have to behave yourself or you wind up in the street. Most Brown students who live off-campus have either rented one floor of a two-family home or occupy apartments in reconverted private houses. For the most part, there is a one-to-one ratio between the number of students and the number of rooms in such a unit; usually two to four students live together. Rental amounts to about forty dollars a month per occupant or three hundred fifty dollars for the whole school year. Food bills are quite low, amounting to about eight dollars per man per week. However, every off-campus student must eat one meal a day in the refectory most choose dinner and this represents a cost of an additional one hundred ninety dollars for the vear. The total food bill, then, is close to five hundred dollars a year Cwhich is also the charge for a twenty-meal contract for those students who live on cam- pus. Off-campus menus can be quite erratic. Steak appears every so-often along with hamburgers, chops, and hot dogs. Angell has become an avid persuer of the Women's Page of the New York Times Ca newspaper which he never be- fore read on a steady basis and insists that many good re- cipes can be found there. . Most off-campus residents agree on the fact that female friends whom they invite to dinner either can't or won't cook. Robert Ebin, '62, who shares a four and a half room apartment with Classmate Luis Katzner, said, We've had six or eight girls up here, and none of them can cook as well as we can. But that doesn't seem to limit the number of invitations extended to the distaff side. Angell, for ex- ample, said that he and Myles have invited voung ladies up for dinner parties every weekend since the start of school. But, perhaps, the most frequently mentioned advantage of living off-campus was that given by one student who said, The absence of university paternalism and the escape from the sterile atmosphere of the quads is what I value most in off-campus living. Living away from Brown, I've grown to understand what I must put up with in life, and T've learn- ed how to live in a world of reality. A QUESTION OF MORALS Sometimes New Yorker, Richard Holbrooke '62, became the Herald Editor-in-Chief after three years hard work and trips to Paris and Washington to cover international news events. His editorial on Tropic of Cancer came at a time when the University was vascillating between two evils, an infringement on intellectual freedom and possi- ble legal embarrassment. To anyone who has followed the course of censorship in Rhode Island over the last few years the big question concerning Henry Miller's novel, Tropic of Cancer, was not whether or not there would be trouble, but rather when it would start. Because of what might be called Rhode Island's normal cultural lag behind the rest of the United States, the trouble took a while to get here, but it finally did on Monday, when the noted literary critic J. Joseph Nugent, Attorney-General of the taste, finished reading Tropic of Cancer and announced to a breathless world that it was the foulest, most obscene work he had ever seen. Mr. Nugent's next move was to call for voluntary withdrawal of the book from retail outlets in this state. For the time being, he said, he will not seek any court ac- tion to ban sales of the book in Rhode Island, but will, according to the Providence Journal, rely on cooperation of distributors to keep the novel out of circulation. The word cooperation apparently has a very broad meaning in this civic-minded state. In Westerly, for example, police requested about a dozen retailers to remove the paperback edition from their stands. Tropic of Cancer is not the greatest American novel of the twentieth century, nor is its author the greatest living American novelist Lawrence Durrell's songs of praise to the contrary. But Miller has a real place in American literature, and his books, while they do have an unusual approach toward sexual relations, are not of the same genre as the merely pornographic works so easily available through illegal outlets to anyone who seeks them. Mr. Nugent's actions are not surprising. It is highly un- likely that the cogent, carefully considered, and often elo- quent remarks by college professors - who should be a little better equipped than Mr. Nugent to judge about the merits of the novel and the dangers of literary censorship will affect the actions and attitudes of the self-appointed guardians of our moral health. 84 Faced with the difficult task of producing interest- ing copy on gemerally mediocre teams, the Her- ald sports staff often more-than-met the challenge. The column by Peter LeClair '64, On Spirit, ex- emplified the best of this effort. Back around the end of October, in the midst of the most tragic football season in Brown's history, it was sug- gested in this column that blame for the performances of the team lay in three areas: the apathy of the student body, the attitude of the players, and the coaching. It would seem that the first of these areas might be re-examined in the light of subsequent events. If the students were apathetic toward the football team Cand I think we would all admit that this was true by the time the season ended, then either, the students should be apathetic toward all sports or there must have been some reason for them to be apathetic toward the football team in particular, That the students are not apathetic toward all sports has been rather well demonstrated by the support given the basketball and hockey teams in recent weeks. It will no doubt be argued that it is easy to cheer for a winner, and that the enthusiasm shown by students toward a winning team does not reflect school spirit but rather some baser sentiment like the desire for association with a winner. This theory, although perhaps founded on sour grapes, is certainly true to some extent, but at least two events seem to suggest that this does not completely explain the situa- tion at Brown. Event Number One was the Brown-P.C. basketball game at Marvel Gym on January 3. The fact that the stands were filled was undoubtedly due partly to the reputation of our opponents. Nevertheless, the yelling and cheering of the Brown supporters seemed to indicate that they really cared about the game. In fact, a few Brown gentlemen went so far as to hiss and boo at the referees, which as we all know is a most ungentlemanly thing to do. Event Number Two was another basketball game, this time against Penn on January 12. Brown played rather poorly in the opening minutes of that game; just as poorly, in fact, as the football team had played on numerous oca- sions. One might have expected that the Brown men in the stands might begin to tear apart their team as only, Ivy League cynics can. After all, this was what they were wont to do during the football season. But it didn't happen. Instead, the cheers continued to catch fire. They moved ahead and maintained their lead through most of the sec- ond half, only to lose in the final minute of the game. But they had fought hard, and most people realized it. Anyone who saw the Princeton or Yale hockey games at Meehan Auditorium, or who was unable to see the Cornell game because the stands were filled half an hour before game time, can testify that Brown students can be enthu- siastic. School spirit does not seem to be lacking here: the spirit is there, and it will be expressed if there is something that one can be enthusiastic about while maintaining some self-respect. But back to the football problem. What is it that has caused the Brown man's apathy, or, worse yet, his cynicism, toward a seemingly innocent group of men who play foot- ball? Probably the way the team has plaved. And what causes the team's poor performances? Probably, at least in part, the attitude of the students. It's a vicious circle, and the condition will probably persist until the hatchet be- tween the students and the team Cincluding its coach is buried. Maybe if we started off next fall with an open mind to go along with the team's clean slate . . . FRATERNITY CLAUSES Typical of the best Herald reporting was the work of Kenmeth Sharaga '64. Avoiding personal bias and- extremes of style, the reporting covered the life of the campus with an easy and nearly professional touch. ; An overflow crowd listened in absolute silence last night as the Cammarian Club voted 13 to 12 to adopt a resolution demanding fraternities abolish all written clauses of racial or religious discrimination by January 1, 1964. A student poll on the resolution may be forthcoming next week, said Alan Ashman '62, president of the Club. In a statement issued after the vote, Paul P. Huffard 3rd '62, president of the Inter-Fraternity Council, called the action an injustice. He said speaking for the fraternities that he agreed with the principle of eliminating discriminatory clauses completely but vehemently opposed placing a two- year deadline on local action to remove the clauses from national fraternity constitutions. Before the vote on the main motion, the Club had voted 14 to 12 not to adopt an amendment proposed by George Gurney '62, a member of Alpha Delta Phi, which provided that the deadline be determined at a later date by represent- atives of the Club, the IFC, and the Administration. The proposed amendment was strongly attacked by Michael Saper '62, treasurer of the Club, who argued the inclusion of the provision would totally destroy the effect of the resolution as a measure to wipe out discriminatory clauses from Brown fraternity constitutions. After the 13-12 vote on the main resolution, Van Batchis '63, who had favored the resolution but abstained, said his abstention resulted from the fact that he was not allowed by the chair to speak immediately prior to the voting. Ashman stepped down from the chair to argue for the resolution before the vote. He expressed fear that members would attempt to put off a decision on the question. He said it is unlikely that a southern fraternity like the Sigma Nu national would ever abolish dscrimination voluntarily or under pressure from the Brown chapter. By passing the resolution, he said the Club will insure that there will be no fraternity at Brown with a discriminatory clause in 1964. Opponents of the resolution argued that the two-year deadline is unfair. No person at the meeting disagreed with the basic end of eliminating all forms of racial and religious discrimination at the University, Huffard said no Brown fraternity willingly practices racial or religious discrimination. He said some houses are able to get around the discriminatory policy of their nationals, The others, he said, are actively working for the abolition of the clauses on the national level. He cited Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Chi as nationals that removed clauses under pressure from Brown and other chapters. 85 WASHINGTON SQUARES Some of the most creative writing in several years was produced for the Herald by Laurence Chase '62. Mr. Chase is an English Honors major and served as editorial chairman of the Herald. Living in Greenwich Village can be a rewarding ex- perience, we found last summer. Our two-room pestridden apartment was located between Bleecker and West Fourth, just a brick's-throw from Washington Square. On our sober evenings, when we weren't making the scene in some chick's pad, or writing postcards home to the folks, we often whiled away our time sitting on the edge of the Washington Square fountain, posing for the tourists, and attempting to communicate with the natives. In an attempt to break through the wall of scorn the Villagers throw up when they sense a newcomer in their midst, we tried to show that we, too, were essentially arty folks. We carried around a copy of The Lime Twig, hoping we could tell someone we had taken a course of Mr. Hawkes's, but the natives were hip to the New York review, and we reaped only snickers for our efforts. Next, we brought over a-guitar, but the police threw up an even more impenetrable wall of scorn than the natives, and we were not even allowed inside the confines of the Square. We tried a lot more ways to get in, but failed miserably each time. Even the pigeons shun- ned us when we offered to feed them; they couldn't under- stand English, we were told. Finally, one evening we got to talk with a native. She was small and beautiful, with long straight hair, blue jeans, sandals, and sweatshirt. She slunk up to us and drawled almost incomprehensibly, Hey, man, vou got a butt for a chick? We lowered our copy of dirty haikus from in front of our eyes, ran an intentionally dirty hand through our intentionally dirty and uncombed hair, spat, fumbled in our pocket, and brought out a crumpled Luckie, Here y'are, trash, we snarled back, playing the role to the hilt. She asked for a match, and we threw a package- at her feet. She sat down beside us, and when she fingered our Yanqui, No! button, we knew we had it made. She told us her story. She was eighteen vears old. She had been married. She had been divorced. She had had achild, but it had died young from congenital addiction to heroin. She had spent the past two vears undergoing the cure. She was now writing a novel, which, she said, is about the reality of reality, the substance of substance, the meaning of mean- ing, and all that jazz. We were interested in all of this, but a bit wary. Play- ing the role still, we said You're putting us on. She denied it profusely, and went on to tell us more thoroughly of her life and trials. Unfortunately, however, we never got to hear too much more. It was getting late, and she had to catch the midnight train back to Scarsdale. Her father wculd be obsolutely furious man. Too bad, we thought. And just when we were begin- ning to feel in. AUTUMNAL REFLECTIONS Appearing early in the year in an unobstrusive column, the article by Laurence Chase '62, shoived the breadth of creative thought found in this year's Herald. Giving free reign to an imaginative in- sight, Mr. Chase produced the pleasing vignette printed here. There isn't much within the University proper that moves a person, Maybe it's because the principal object of a college lies in training and disciplining the intellect, or maybe the reason lies elsewhere, but somehow the pre- dominant emotional feeling, for us at least, is one of passive indifference. It was warm and sunny one afternoon last week, and only the fallen leaves from the elms on the college green belied the impression that it was summer all over again. From a distance we saw a boy and girl sitting alone, seem- ingly engaged in the typical, innocuous conversation that Brown and Pembroke engage in while waiting for class to begin. As we drew closer, movement occurred; the girl tried to rise, but was held back by an arm around her shoulders. She sat down for a movement, then tried to break away again, and succeeded. And when we came still closer, we found that it wasn't a game. This, apparently, was for real. The girl hurried into a nearby building, her face red, and contorted by sobbing. The boy sat there, watching her, his hands limply between his legs. He seemed unable to move, unable to speak; but written clearly on his face were the words Don't go. . . We hoped-and found it was the first irrational hope, the first hope unconnected with any intellectual process in a long timethat the girl would turn back. But she didn't; and the boy didn't move. No one spoke. We were only barely able to retain enough prudence, or conformity, or shy- ness, to keep from involving ourselves, to attempt to bring a reconciliation. We tried, unsuccessfully, to rationalize our way out of this irrational emotional commitment. What was it to ys, after all, if two completely unknown persons separate in anger or in sorrow? It happens at the time, and what right have we to become emotionally involved in a statistic? And yet we couldn't rid ourselves of a fecling of per- sonal loss. We kept the image of the boys impotent hands hanging against his thighs in our mind, and a feeling of our own incapacity ran down our own arms. We pictured those hands rising and forming a fist, but then opening to stifle the inevitable yawn that comes with educated boredom, and dropping back into his lap agian. For what can we do, what have we been educated to do in a case like this? We take a girl to the cold, bare plat- form of Union Station, or to the crowded and smelly bus station after a weekend, and say, privately, so that the sailor next to us won't overhear, Don't go. . . . And then what? After the long walk back up the Hill and down the sterile corridors of the West Quad, the intensity has worn off, and we can join once more the intellectual environment. We learn but we learn slowly, that there is more to this world than an intellect trained solely to think critically and rationally can appreciate. Elation over the fact that the mind has become sharpened through schooling turns to numbness when the reality of autumn afternoon becomes impacted in the senses. 86 HERALD VS. IBM As Music Review Editor for the Herald, Joel 1. Cohen 63, usually produced sufficiently ab: struse reviews of the local comcerts to challenge even the connosieurs. Written in a different vein, his article on the application of modern technology to the occult sciences showed the spirit of tenacity characteristic of Herald reporters. Automation has hit the fortune-telling racket. New- berry's a downtown Providence department store, now sports near its entrance a small IBM machine, over which stands a sign: PERSONALITY AND CHARACTER ANALY- SIS. The sight of a large crowd clustered around the ma- chine led a bypassing IHERALD reporter to investigate more closely technology's latest gift to civilization. An eager woman in her mid-forties was delivering the sales talk into a microphone. This wonderful brain has been developed by IBM technicians, folks. It will give you a ninety per cent accurate analysis of your character, and tell you what makes you act the way you do. The ma- chine was a small card sorter. The HerALD man inquired as to the machine's method of operating. It analyzes the data you give it, sonny, she replied, proferring an IBM form to be filled out; the card requested name, age, place of birth, and occupation. Some- what skeptical, the reporter asked how a small card sorter could produce so much for so little. If I tried to explain, young man, I would be here all day. But this morning, the machine told one man that he had an ulcer. There is a service charge of only fifty cents, folks, for the upkeep of this costly and delicate instrument. Several ladies began digging in their pocketbooks for change. T don't think that a little IBM machine can do all that, said the HErALD man. The ladics, somewhat non- plussed at this insolence, stopped digging. At this point the machine operator spoke: Why don't you get out of here, kid? he inquired. Because I'm pretty sure your machine can't do the things you say it does. You're not being honest, the reporter countered. Somewhat nervously, the saleslady coughed into the microphone, This machine is here for your pleasure and entertainment, folks, solely for your pleasure and enter- tainment. But you say it can scientifically analyze personality, and it can't, the reporter interrupted. Why don't you get the hell out of here? This from the machine operator. The HeraLp man by this time saw himself as the spokesman for truth, justice, and honor, thrust into conflict with the forces of greed and corruption. I won't move be- cause you're trying to take in money dishonestly, he cried, rather surprising himself by his courage in the face of Newberry's corporate might. Truth, justice, and honor prevailed at Newberry's for thirty minutes, during which time the HErALD man heckled, and the IBM machine did no business at all. After ten min- utes, the machine operator threatened to call the store manager. After twenty minutes the saleslady called the HeraLp man a Communist. At the end of half an hour, the HeraLp man was forcibly ejected from the premises by a Providence policeman summoned in to silence the left-wing agitation. COPS AND CUBAN MOVIES This article on the Cuban movie fiasco was writ- ten by Kenneth W. Sharaga '64. The Providence police last night stopped the showing of a proCastro movie sponsored by the Providence Young Socialist Alliance at the First Unitarian Church on the corner of Benefit and Benevolent St. The police acted on a complaint by three Brown seniors, Barry Miller, vice-president of the Cammarian Club, Rich- ard Tatlock, and Peter Clark, who reported that the group was illegally charging a 75-cent admission. A list of 41 names of students who had signed for sub- scriptions to the Young Socialist newspaper was reported missing by Roger Sheppard, a student at Rhode Island School of Design and chairman of the Providence group. The Alliance program included a lecture on U.S. inter- vention in Latin American by Pedro Camejo, a Massachu- setts Institute of Technology student, and a film Csubse- quently stopped of the recent US. Central Intelligence Agency-inspired invasion of Cuba. Sergeant Lester L. Aptel, amusement inspector of the City of Providence, said the law requires that organizations obtain a permit from the chief of police before showing a film. Before admission can be charged, a license from the Bureau of Licenses must be obtained, he said. Almost 120 persons attended the meeting, the majority of whom left after the police stopped the showing of the film. Concerning the subscription hlanks that were reported missing, Sheppard said they might have been taken by the police to be used as evidence. Police officers at the Police Station denied that they had taken the blanks. Sheppard lodged a complaint of the theft at the station. The sergeant at the desk said he could not take action until his superior, a lietuenant, arrived. The three students obviously intended to stop the meet- ing, and they had legality on their side, Sheppard said. The police acted as an organ of suppression, he added. If we had known about the need for permits, he said, we would have gotten them. Miller, one of the students who called the police, denied his purpose was to break up the meeting, l wanted to see the film without paying a contribution of 75 cents, Miller said. Miller said he had contacted the Better Business Bu- reau as well as the state attorney general concerning the legality of charging admission. Miller denied he knew the group did not have a permit for showing the movie. Sheppard said the person or persons who allegedly stole the subscription blanks, must have done so to stop delivery of the socialist paper to its subscribers. The 75 cent donation, Sheppard said, was charged to discourage persons who were not interested in the con- tent of the program from attending. We did not want a riot to occur in the Unitarian Church, he said. 87 GREEN APPLES Describing himself as a will be! writer, Jonathan Robbins '62, plans to be a professional writer. As an English Literature major, Mr. Bobbins has contributed several articles to the Brown Review, His imaginative piece, 'Green Apples', was judged one of the best fictional works produced this year. It is introduced by an excerpt from Jeffry Ordover's review. After several housecleanings and unsuccessful resur- rections, the Brown Review has finally been born as a magazine that one can open and read with interest from cover to cover. The Fall issue, under the editorship of Mr. Wexler, was a long time coming; and the body that has emerged is conspicuously thin in the number of printed pages. Undoubtedly, patience and discretion have been lavished in this production and fortunately they do not pass the board in vain: the selected literature in the mag- azine tests on a very high level of achievement, and if prudence has seen fit to put it on the printed page, crafts- manship and passion provide the good healthy slap on the back which sets the Brown Review to breathing. The final work in the Brown Review is Green Apples, a very brief story by Jon Robbins. In rich and flowing mental images a youth records his vounger brother's fall from innocence the young boy strikes a snake with an axe and must watch it die. This experience inspires the elder to muse upon his own demise, which was due to a woman. The powerful interrelationship of images, the axe, the trees, the snake and the woman, carry through the central theme of a man's fall from innocence. The stvle, however, is thefoundation of this piece, often omitting common parts of speech to intensify the description. From the first sentence, As it was with her, so it was with the snake . . . the writing bursts with life and at times almost demands to be read aloud. Perhaps, in a longer work this style would be difficult to sustain, for there are indications of this problem even within the few pages of the story. But short as it is, Green Apples stands out as the richest ac complishment within the cover of the Brown Review. With these five writings, the Brown Review can now call itself The Magazine of Brown University without blushing too red. But there is certainly a great deal of meri torious work being done at Brown that does not find its way onto the printed page: enough, perhaps, to double the meag er girth of this magazine. The absence of poetrv in this is- sue, and the fact that there was more critical than creative prose defends this estimation. Furthermore, the production of a magazine at a university should not be an end in itself. This issue demands discussion and criticism on a scale far above the opinions of one newspaper reviewer. As it was with her, so it was with the snake. An early summer day with my brother old enough now and wanting to use my ax, and so borrowed it and headed for the wood- lot where first father and then father and I and then I alone had chopped, felled and trimmed trees Cweed trees of sec- ond growth in a field long before mowed, but now no more stacking piles of brush in mounds like beaver houses and piling the thigh-thick poles-in parallel layers separated by a cross-laid sapling, for air space-to season and then to drag to the yard and to buck for the stove. Watching him stride toward the woodlot, my ax dangerously slung on shoulder, I cautioned him to beware of the edgeit was well-sharpened-and not to sink it into the rocky sod or to nick hidden field stones and to watch the handle, too, for I had rubbed it down with linseed oil when last I had used it Cnot so many days ago, but only for splitring, not felling and it might yet be slippery, and envied him and cursed the row I hoed. I envied him the loss of self and understanding of all which he would know in his surrender to the swinging rhythm of the falling ax-head the rising, grip spread wide on the smooth curved handle, weight somewhere beyond the right shoulder, left arm across in- breathing chest; then the end of the up and the com- mencing of the down with the right hand sliding down the polished handle meeting the firm-gripped left while the hips, knees pivot giving power to the accelerating arc until the arc stops deep in the tree while the quiver, shake, tremble goes up tree and down back to your hands, arms and torso through the handle and the thrill is ended, and the breath expelled; then twisting the blade free again beginning the upswing to repeat what has gone before until the creak, crash of the fall-down-tree and the trimming, sad and slow vanquishing off the good enemy and so friend and now no more. So I watched, envied, cursed and returned to the awk- ward hoe and the insistent weeds with tender carrot top cowering behind. And hearing him say, I killed a snake, looked up and saw him straddle-legged holding handle with ax-head sunk in turf. Not even feeling angered at the killed snake or snakekiller or at surely dulled ax- edge or duller, I returned to irregular weed hoeing and then heard It isn't dead, it is still alive, said with the compelling realization expressed in a tone which forebade hoeing; and so looking up, saw him again standing Cnearly in the shadow of the ancient apple tree, its trunk riddled with even holes of woodpeckers and boughs beginning to feel the weight of just set fruitgreen apples, leaning now on the handle of ax, he, bent from the waist, watching in the ankle-high grass. Walking to him, I stood by his side we, nearly now the same build and watched his watching and felt his pain and the snake's, it writhing with severed middle-now-end caught sticking by liquid parts of self in the growing second crop of timothy. And knowing that writhing and pain must stop for both the thrashing snake which could go nowhere and for the not contorted but frozen mask-face of the boy- brother who could no longer cry; gently taking the smooth ax of mine from his hand and turning it over blade up, and knowing I had to, I struck the writhing, but not high enough, and so then again to crush along with the triangle- head the pain. Then scooping the head-half up on the ax-flat blade and holding the ten-inch and shorter tail half, I carried both to the base of the apple tree and so consigned the smashed pain to the tall and ripe grass where the mowing bar had not reached. Brother stood with frozen face melting but not running and tried to speak. Rather than asking the inexplicable Why did you do that? , I simply said It's O.K. which we both knew was a lie, I needed to speak and he needed to hear. Handing over the ax and turning I went back to the hoe knowing he would find the why answer in the woods with the ax- swing thvthm and the friend-falling trees. As it was with the snake, so it was with her. An early summer day with my hand holding hers in a way now familiar, and familiar too; the couch of grass and moss where we would lie together in the quiet and the green; with her, her head on my elbow-crook and my hand on her blouse breast; and that only, or perhaps with my shirt somehow off and her blouse gone too, my hand on the smooth callous-catching slip front to feel the soft flesh beneath, or even with slip slid off as shoulder and dropped to waist two torsos with arms wrapped around, lying on sides with long hair with green grass mingled-but mostly to lie side by side and talk to one another or listen to nothing with kisses that dipped my face into hers so that the faces were one, and could not be distinguished. Some- times with a hand on the incredible girl-soft thigh, on the outside only then, feeling a smoothness, warmth and life that man cannot conceive alone, but that only; because it was enough as it had been in the hay in the wagonride and in the dark but near-fire warmth beside the ice pond and had been many days that early summer. And coming hands entwined to the moss-grass counch which held the impressions from our last visit, we lay and listened to the silence more intimate than touch but noth- ing without it. And with familiar movements and flesh touching we kissed to singleness. Then suddenly the slip was gone and all with it and with me the same; still unaware of my nakedness or hers but only of her writhing I tried to comfort her and hold her, pressing down with my body and holding hard; only seeing the sweet face with eyes shut tight saying please, please in their covered silence. And knowing that after this there would be no intimate silence or peaceful head-in-elbow-crook but only the screaming of the want, not need, quiet for so long, Trying to tell her this without words, trying to stop the contortions of face and body, I felt only the writhing beneath me and then with me an unfamiliar motion and with the ax-bite quiver it ended and I lay there face in the moss smelling earth and pine and tried to cry but was too old. Knowing what had ended, I tried to cry and felt the finger tip tickle up my back to the stubble neck hairs and heard the sweet-taste voice say, That's all right, baby, and I believed it. : BURN THLE BEANIE AMPHIGORY EDITORIAL clecticism often results in idiocy which is published in yearbook form. This major section is dedicated to lost minorities who have failed to appear on these pages in the past: to those who are forever blowing up balloons, to those who miss planes but make dates, to those who read Eyeless in Gaza in a single sitting and then look like the title, to those romanticists who go across the river and through the trees and then bring one back to their rooms, and finally to those who manage to cling tenaciously to sanity. MORE MEDIA DECIDING one evening last year to promote themselves to President and Editor of LIBER BRUNENSIS PUBLI- CATIONS, Dave Rust and Mike French usually man- aged to catch each other's blunders, marshall a staff of hard-workers, and produce this volume. Other projects included late publication of Bear Facts, late publication of the '65 Class Album, and publication of Fraternities at Brown early, edited by Sophomore Ed Mayer. Bemoan- ing the dwindling staff of diehards, Rust read-up on Industrial Sociology, organized a massive recruiting cam- paign and acquired a writer and a layout man. Photog- raphy thrived, however, and Photo Editor Burges LeMonte amazed all by showing up at the last minute with crucial pictures. Ex-Air Force photographer John Mohler, Sopho- more Jerry Kirschenbaum and Freshmen Barry Kaufman and Gerry Richman were the usual sources of supply, but Mike and Dave occasionally reverted. LITERARY Editor Jim Hawley had bouts with amnesia, finally managed to locate most of his missing Dead Sea Scrolls. He advocated a Hemingway approach and appear- ance, but hockey undermined his facile facade. Frnst Rothe gave the fraternities a degree of autonomy in their expression, tried to whitewash- the IFC, and was black- balled in the process. Rust tried to look like Napoleon, but his act failed, for LeMonte's crafty ground shots forced Dave and Mike to take to the sky. They both returned with weathery aerial shots which managed to obscure the issue. Burges declared amnesty, while Ernst viewed the results reticently, finally expressing his opinion in a lightly censored amphigory. CREATIVITY, do not disturb! Stay out, way out! - were the admonitions of the editing board. Transgressions of this imperial order by any staff member who dared return to sanity resulted in the immediate dismissal of the unfortunate. The inner sanctum, was precipitously preserved by nine nonentities who initiated defensive maneuvers and ignored the budget. Everyone worried about everyone's else's job; no- thing was accomplished. In spite of this, Pembroker Sandy Toth and Jane Wilkinson Katy Gibbs managed to type some fairly presentable copy; Ed Maver designed book covers; French and Rust debated. Meanwhile Boshetti bemoaned not re- ceiving credit for his layout, but that was purely an academic question. When layouts wouldn't work, Pete Newsted chastised French for his errors while scrambling after his own. Jack gazed in astonishment at the progress. Sophomore Dave Abramson conjured apologies for Brown's athletic endeavors and performed marvelously, while hard- worker Stan Legum saved many a deadline from disaster by thoughtfully depreciating the electric typewriter and typing his own articles. B v n A O s S PRODUCTION DManager Bant Lilly put his finger on the difficulty by writing his own articles. Haw- ley's corrections of Bart's blunders received loud exclamations of approv- al which almost sent Bart out into the wilderness in scarch of surro- gate satisfaction. Advertising Man- ager Jack Spears joined Bill Lewis Money Grubber in worrying about the amount of money. To dispell worry and concern Lewis sought and dispensed liquid relief at the LIBER's Lost Weekend party, while Jack made up the loss by duping adver- tisers. Dark glances of suspicion were cast by Dave Rust into past books. A glimmer of relief and inspiration lit his formidable countenance as he perused a pornographic production previously published. 94 AND MORE MEDIA WBRU was initiated twenty-five years ago when two Brown freshmen, George Abraham and David Borst, con- nected the rooms in their dormitory in a wire network. The oldest continuous collegiate radio station in the world, the Brown network has been a training ground for broad- casting personnel. Today WBRU is a full-fledged com- mercial radio station covering the entire campus and pre- senting sports, news and music. The actual transmission process has been accomplished, thus far, through a coaxial cable in the University's steam tunnels. The inherent static and hum in WBRU's car- rier-current type radio has been the major problem. How- ever, WBRU has been petitioning the University for per- mission to obtain an FM license. Various financial and legal aspects are still under discussion. Station managers Paul Forrest, '62, and Doug Shafner, '63, and their staff have continued the tradition of im- provement at WBRU. A monthly program guide, new equipment, and better programing represent some of the stations 1961-62 accomplishments. RADIO MESSAGES arc transmitted around the world by the Brown Radio Clubs an- tenna atop the East Wing of Faunce House, Members of the club, numbering fifteen, haye contacted hams in such places as Laos, For- mosa, and provinces of Africa, and have covered the walls of the radio shack with QSL cards from more than 100 countries. A new and more powerful transmitter will enable the hams to enjoy even broader reception. The club has facilities to transmit both in code and by voice. The code is international and many club members enjoy practicing the for- eign language they are studying by speaking to fellow radio operators in various countries. Un- der the leadership of Joe Green, the Radio Club held a demonstration on the Faunce House Terrace this Spring, in order to acquaint Brown students with the techniques used in transmitting and receiving radio messages. The Radio Club prides itself on the fact that its members not only transmit for pleasure, but many times perform valuable public services by receiving distress calls and relaying these messages to the proper authorities for help. A GLASS OF MILK may mcan nothing to 2 orth American student, but it is a matter of life or death for many of us. Giving of oneself and of ones resources to those in need is an aspect which could be easily forgotten in the student's drive to advance himself. Fach student has his goal which requires so much each day, and there is little time for others in such a schedule. The members of the 1961-62 executive board of the Brown Charities Drive were no different than other Brown students. However, through closer association with numerous charitable organizations, Chairman Ralph Luken and vice-Chairman Steven Richmond became aware of the urgent needs of our world and the necessity of reaching beyond oneself. The Brown Charities Drive for 1961-62 began its search for the most effective charities in May 1961. It was necessary to restrict the number of charitable organizations supported. However, the following charities were found to have consistent- ly made valuable contributions to the education and well-being of the less fortunate: The Ameri- can Friends Service Committee, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown University Blood Service, CARE, the International Association of Brown University, National Scholarship Service and Fund for Negro Students, Recordings for the Blind, Student Scho- larship for Foreign Students Cat Brown, Week- end Work Camps Cat Brown, and the World University Service. The heaviest portion of this appeal was carried by the more than two hundred and fifty student solicitors, and everyone on the Hill was asked to reach beyond himself. More was received than from any previous drive. Yet, in the opinion of the solicitors, the amount, better than eight thousand dollars, still represented but a fraction of the potential contri- bution of the Brown community. BROWNCHARITIES DRIVE BROWN YOUTH GUIDANCE IS THAT one poisonous? Twelve yearold Michael ad dressed his question to the Brown student who that week had taken his young ward from an overcrowded home in South Providence to see Brown's Biology laboratories. This was part of the weekly effort of Brown Youth Guidance to furnish the boy with an experience and companionship otherwise uriobtainable in his stifling home environment. Meanwhile, at Chapin Hospital, patients, many of whom were victims of bad habit, all of whom suffered from complex lives which had strained, if not broken, their nerves, carried on a different sort of conversation with Brown or Pembroke student volunteers. Besides South Side Project and Chapin Hospital, Brown Youth Guidance maintained programs at Bradley Hospital, Nickerson House, Oaklawn Reformatory, Rhode Island Children's Center and Butler Health Center. Some two hundred Brown and Pembroke students each week left in the familiar Volks wagon microbuses. They selflessly abandoned, for a few hours, the academic life within shelter- ing quadrangles to do something for others in the Provi- dence community. Underprivileged children, delinquents, orphans and the mentally disturbed are those with whom BYG volunteers worked, played, or just chatted. Under George Wales BYG this year added Butler Health Center to its programs, and the success which volunteers encountered in befriending the teenagers thre smybolized the current vitality of the organization. sESEARARANND .'g:::;:::wmmzm;mn i PREEer An DT A A Gammm sENN LG T u Eom fmRgimILl L R BERe 100 GOVERNMENT At Columbia University, student government was voted out of existence. Fred Hechinger, of the New York Times, in an analysis of campus government, mentioned Brown's dissolution of the Student Court as one among several incidents revealing a new trend in which college regimes decline in deference to rising ac- tivity among political groups. Mr. Hechinger cited Columbia's conclusion that the best qualified undergraduates use their time in ways other than as student representatives. From the merspective of the Brown campus, it is questionable whether Mr. Hechinger's view is decisively born out, but a shift in the nature of the Cam Club's role during the year was revealed in the actions it took in passing the anti-discrimination resolution and as it sought out appealing issues over expedient ones. Issues raised originally by the thriving political action groups were, more and more, the subject of debate and resolution for the governing organizations described on these pages. THE CAMMARIAN CLUB was established in 1894 and is the oldest student governing body in the country. In its 1961-62 mcet- ings the Club tried to reflect predominant student feeling on campus issues more effectively than in the past. The long-standing prob- lem of a lack of coincidence between Club issues and campus issues el . L was attacked by opening Club committee meetings to any mem- ber of the student body. Because Club activities usually failed to rate the front page of the Herald, a weekly news broadcast of activities was begun over WBRU, and a first attempt at issuing a regular newsletter was made in December. In addition to these attempts at strengthening the position of the Club on the campus, President Allan Ashman, 62, Vice-President Barry Miller, '62, Treasurer Michael Saper, '62, Recording Secre- tary Stephen Murray, '63, Corresponding Secretaries Joel M. Cohen, '63 and Michael Cardozo, '63, guided Club action on a number of specific issues. In the Spring of 1961 a group of Brown and Pembroke students were sent to Washington to attend a na- tional Peace Corps Conference. Freshman housing, study abroad, a stronger Inter-House Council, coordination of advertising pro- cedures for Brown communications media, rushing policy and residential housing were all discussed; but no single problem dealt with by the Club took on more significance than that of the restrictive clauses included in the charters of several fraternities. After a heated debate on the floor, the members recommended by a majority of one that any fraternity on campus with a restrictive clause still in its charter by January 1, 1964, be banned or be required to repudiate its ties with the national organization. The resolution was opposed bitterly by the IFC and was not supported by the Freshman Council. The Club had clearly touched upon a question of great concern to most of the student body, and the administration responded by creating a committee to give the Club's resolution and the whole matter serious consideration. The breach between Club machinery and student attitudes was most sharply revealed by the announcement early this year that George Wales, Chief Justice of the Student Court, was submitting his resignation and recommending that the Court be abolished. In a letter appearing in the Herald, Wales pointed out that the machinery of the Dean's office is quite efficient and able to function effectively without the assistance of the Student Court. He claimed that an effective honor system is necessary for the successful functioning of a student court. In view of the fact that the Court had handled only one case during first semester, the 102 INTER-FRATERNITY COUNCIL had, as its primary concern, the co- ordination of the activities of the seventeen fraternities on the Brown campus. The essential nature of the IFC was reflective, not governing, for the individual members preserved a large degree of autonomy, while the coordinating body reflected their unified view on various campus issues. By serving as a means of organization the council served both its members and the academic com- munity as a whole. The fraternities gained by the council's sponsorship and direction of the intramural sports leagues and by the arrangement of the activities connected with Winter Weekend. The Brown community and the surrounding Providence area received the fruits of work programs and Christmas parties for orphans and under-privileged children. While the main duty of the IFC was to represent the composite fraternity point of view, the council was not solely concerned with its own opin- jon. In an issue on the question of cafeteria or family-style service in the refectory, the IFC conducted a stu- dent poll in which it received signifi- cantly greater participation than en- joyed by the survey conducted prev- iously by the Cammarian Club. The accuracy of the IFC's stand in this issue was reflected by the fact that ninety-eight percent of the fraternity men agreed with the council's po- sition. Club accepted the recommendation and placed the existence of the Court in the hands of the student body through a refer- endum. This year's Club has sought more power over student activities than past Clubs and perhaps, through a continuing controversy with the Herald over the latter's editorial freedom, the officers of the Cammarian Club have realized the great difficulty in- volved in testing the Club's jurisdiction in this area. Because of the Club's preoccupation with self-appraisal and some campus imperialism, it may have missed the chance to make effective suggestions to the University on campus issues in the manner that so distinguished the previous Club, but because of this year's activities, the Club may now be in a position to make itself more meaningful to the student body than ever before. AMONG the more important functions of the IFC was the determination of the rushing pro- cedure and its schedule. By its surveillance of the rushing program, the IFC protected the life source of its member groups. Under the leadership of President Flip Huffard, Vice-President Tom Wil- son, and Secretary George Gurney, the council expressed its disapproval of discriminatory clauses and advocated that each house have adequate free- dom in solving the issue with its national. INTER-HOUSE COUNCIL difficulties this year may be a reflection of basic pre-existing campus conditions; the Council has attempted to strike a balance between the independent studeiMt's aver- sion precisely because he is an independent to submit to or participate in an all-encompassing student organization, and the real inadequacy of college activities on all levels for such students. Opposing factions within the student body have provided further complications. It was sympto- matic of these factors that last year's Council op- erated at a serious financial deficit for most of its tenure, that attempts this year to organize IHC- sponsored dormitory parties failed outright, and that the Council's treasure has been inadequate to finance its activities this year. 105 IN SPITE OF this situation, the IHC, under the direction of Ted Knox, has attempted to expand its service projects, in addition to continuing basic social functions, among them Winter Weekend. Progress has been moderate at best; one proposed innovation, however, has met with outspoken approval in many quarters; machinery would be set up to acquaint the prospective freshman, during his visit to Brown, with all aspects of University life as a supplement to interviews with the Ad- mission Office and official tours of the campus. In addition, and as a logical complement to this, there would be provision to bring visiting alumni into contact with the undergraduate body. In an area of more traditional action on the part of the IHC - intramural sports - an attempt was made to sct up a bowling league. Also, the IHC has undertaken to provide the intra- mural leagues with necessary sport equipment. The limited success the Council has met with this year in accommodating problems of the independent student body with- out compromising the latter's independence confirms the possi- bility of such action and suggests a revision of attitudes and policies in all quarters of the University toward a more effective student organization. GAMBLING at Brown is usually frowned upon; but when the Faunce House Board of Governors put on Gambling Night in the Spring term, not only did the University consent to these goings- on, but notable professors also served as em- barrasingly skillful croupiers at the tables. In the tradition of the Board of Governors, the oc- casion was a resounding success. The event was typical of the untypical activities brought to the Brown community by F.H.B.G. during the year. President Bill Tingue, with the springtime di- rection of Vice-President Jay Jaffee, brought in- numerable changes to the campus scene. Majors Week of last Spring was a significant innovation in Faunce House activities. During the weck, chairmen of the various departments introduced the sophomores to a survey of disciplines. Its suc- cess was such that the program was continued the following year. Of unusual interest was the de- bate over Red China's admission to the U.N., with Myra Tanner Weiss as the principal attraction. FHBG ESSENTIAL to the smooth regulation of all campus activities are the triumvirate in the Faunce House office on the first floor. Mr. William Sur- prenant and Mrs. Sampson, to whom most every- one is indebted in one way or another, and Miss Knowlton, whose charming smile makes up for the lack of sunny days, together manage to keep organi- zations temporarily solvent, provide Santa Claus suits and give the proper advice about most any- thing,. With them, the Board of Governors co- ordinated to provide such student entertainment as the Classics series of films, the Christmas dance and folk singers like Josh White and The Goliards for weekends. The Yale Russian Chorus was characteristic of the unusual entertainment offered the student body, and offered most conveniently, too; the Chorus even sang for their breakfast at the Refectory. 107 BAND managers employed ingenuity in every field from devising formations to protecting the band members from self-destruction. Rain before the Penn game threatened to douse hopes for a rehearsal until President Skip Flemming and Vice- President Dennis Wyckoff persuaded a garage manager to let them practice on the third floor of his hippodrome in downtown Philadelphia. Many pedestrians were perplexed by the rumblings of Bruno's band. The band moved from the indoor garage for shelter to the zoo for inspiration, pre- senting the first annual Animal Show with field formations portraying the Biology department's amoebas, the Psychology department's guinea pigs and West Quad's squirrels. They stooped to satirize when they displayed their Commercial Show , illustrating a roll-on de- oderant bottle which rolled away, and Metrecal's ef- fect on a fat woman's profile: Notice how the fig- ure is reduced in the right places. And the ten- thousand men of Harvard were presented a Current Events Show from the Brown band, which form- ed an arch for the Berlin Gate and played Don't Fence Me In. John Harvard joined them in the twist as they played Rock Around the Clock. Their bomb formation was followed by that of a mushroom cloud and the comment, Don't worry, the Brown bomb is a small bomb. Their History of the American Brown Bear included the depiction of Daniel Boone and the profile of a plump female figure accompanied by Tune is Busting Out All Over. In the course of the football season it became evident that the Band's performance was the more enjoyable of the two in the stadium. 110 THE BRUNAIRES, sporting straw hats, guitars and banjos, rattles and bongos, have enlivened many a Glee Club concert with comedy and close harmony. Their penchant is for student songs and folk music, their membership is roughly four- teen and their current lecader is Ray Rhinehart - a capable soloist, dictator, and concert-master. This year, the work of many Monday nights by Ray and his lucky thirteen has, more than ever, evoked mingled cheers and laughter from a wide diversity of audiences. Singing alternately with the Glee Club at regular concerts and as an ensemble at numerous private engagements, the Bruinaires have been heard on radio broad- casts and telecasts from Canada to Texas. All of the Bruinaires are members of the Brown Glee Club, and each has a special talent which justifies his inclusion among the tightly-knit four- teen. Many are regular Glee Club soloists. Some play musical instruments; all will take a crack at rattles, bongos, and rowdy comedy routines. An integral part of the Glee Club and the Brown musical scene for over twenty years, the Bruinaires seem destined to retain and expand their role as good-will songsters in the seasons ahead. THE GLEE CLUB, boasting of a wide reper- toire from the Faure Requiem to the Huntsmen's Chorus, from Te Deum to La Pastorella, survived a season of tonsil-busting work as extracted by director Erich Kunzel. Trudging night after night to rehearsals, steaming nervously in heavy tux- edos, standing patiently through endless record- ing sessions; eighty upperclassmen strained to imbue the College with song and represent it ably in the East and on tour. The repertoire was exceedingly wide. It was highlighted, perhaps, by Professor Ron Nelson's Christmas Story and by Mr. Kunzel's arrangements of Kismet and West Side Story. Of the two recordings produced, one included the Peters' Te Deum and the Christ- mas Story, the other a medley of European folk songs. Glee Club performances at Brown featur- ed the Christmas Festival Concert and the an- nual Sayles Hall concert. The spring tour saw a busload of boisterous penguins take the Midwest by storm, This ritualistic admixture of beer- guzzling, snowing, and even a little singing was vindicated in intent and expense by enthusi- astically received concerts in Chicago, Minneapo- lis, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, and other midwestern cities. Throughout rehearsals and con- certs alike, the dynamic supplications of Director Kunzel and hard-working leadership of President Henry Coe predominated. The Brown Glee Club is one of the oldest in the country, dating back to 1857 or earlier. Still, it was hard to match up past years with the 1961-62 season, and with a trip to the Deep South anticipated, plans for the coming year evoke only the gleeful certainty; it will be better than ever! NEW DIRECTIONS in sound, emanating from the Convocation Choir around noontime in Sayles Hall, are no longer a surprise to students. It is expected that as long as Bill Dineen, virtuoso in variety, directs the group, they will continue to excel in performing a startling variety of extremely different musical forms. In traditional modes as well, the choir has been outstanding. A contrast of ancient and modern styles was well executed in the singing of the Service of Nine Lessons, before Christmas. Several times during the year, the Choir joined with the Rhode Island Philharmonic once to present a stirring version of The Messiah, and again in March for a production of the opera Boris Gudonov. With press- ing union problems, the Philharmonic may not be allowed to collaborate with the Choir in the future. The Convocation singers, owing to the breadth and power of their choral activity, are reputed for their ability to shatter the concentration of the most attentive of those who try simultaneously to peruse Sports Illustrated, Time, or even the BDH. CHAPEL CHOIR was formed four years ago when the University eliminated compulsory chapel held in Sayles Hall and instituted Convocation in its place. Chapel services have always been held every weekday morning in Manning Chapel. Members of the choir arrive there at 8:00 each morn- ing and rehearse for about twenty minutes to sing at the service, which begins at 8:30. In addition to the morning services, the chapel choir may be heard at the Christmas Vesper Services and also at the Lenten Services, both of which are held at Manning Chapel. Mr. Hollis has been director of these functions as well as the organist at Pembroke and St. Stephen's Church. A SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA -uith enough instru- ments and enough talents to play the most difficult pieces - is hard to maintain in a University the size of Brown. The orchestra here, however, has just finished one of its most successful seasons and seems to be gaining new popu- larity. Throughout the year small groups from within the larger Orchestra played with Brown choirs and glee clubs. The full eighty piece orchestra cave thiee svmphony concerts during the year at Alumnae Hall. Acquiring a new dignity, according to director Martin Fischer, the Orchestra ex- cluded many specialty numbers from the program and concentrated on selections usually beyond the talents of college orchestras. The renewed interest of many students in classical music and their desire to hear it played well have made Pro- fessor Fischer intent upon improvement and expansion of the Orchestra. Concerts next season were planned to be even more extensive and Professor Fischer began a program to gain recognition for the Orchestra far outside the Brown Community. THE JABBERWOCKS, an evergrowing tradition at Brown, have completed another very successful year. Their completely original arrangements, rang- ing from strict barbershop to show tunes and rock and roll made them the favorites of young audiences from St. Lawrence College to the Castaways night club in Miami. During most of the year the Jabberwocks stuck fair- ly close to home with Sarah Lawrence, Garland, and Skidmore Colleges all providing entertainment for the singers, as well as being themselves entertained. Even St. Lawrence College was only considered a three hour drive, and Boston is, of course, popular with these songsters, being only forty-five minutes in bad weather! Besides playing to many Boston groups this Fall and Winter, the Jabberwocks successfully competed in the Evening of Octets this Spring and played several other springtime engagements there. Spring Vacation this year found them at the Rollins Fiesta Weekend, where their always popular barber- shop number, Stepping Around, and their hilarious parodies of Yale singing groups were well received. From Hollins the Jabberwocks played the Ponte Vedra Club in Jacksonville, the Landmark and the Far Horizons in Sarasota, and the Castaways in Miami. There's always a good atmosphere for col- lege singing groups in Florida at that time of year, and the reception was terrific everywhere they went. The trip ended with a stop in Ft. Lauderdale, where the girls weren't this vear, but the trip was one of their most successful spring trips to the Carribean or Florida in the past several years. The Jabberwocks wound up their successful year by cutting their fifth Decca long-playing record, and it should be available next Fall along with the new '62 edition of Brown's most popular octet. 114 AFROTC FORMING ., officer, according to the AF- ROTC, required an emphasis on aviation science and leadership through classroom and laboratory programs. Beyond the merely military aspect of the AFROTC, cadet teams took part in intramural sports, drill team competitions, and both local and national rifle matches. Base visits and indoctrina- tion were additional activities. The Arnold Air Society, also an important part of the cadet's life, held the Air Force-Navy Militarv Ball at the Bilt- more last February. Directing a list of other social functions, the Arnold Air Society worked with the recently innovated Pembroke Angel Flight. To date, the extent of this collaboration has been classified as top secret. Wing Tips, the cadet magazine monthly, worked closely with these ac- tivity chairmen to spotlight the feature events. The vear was rounded out with representative speak- ers from various universities and eastern Air Force Bases. INDUCTION .. the word that set the Brown INROTC unit in motion in September, as the large freshmen class began the task of orientation. En- couraged by words of wisdom and cruise stories from upperclassmen, the fourth-classmen soon gain- ed the sense of pride and unity that is inherent in all Brunavians. In athletics, the unit maintained its position of first place in most intramural sports, as it has for the past several years. Many a contesting tcam found that sea legs were very effective in moving up and down a basketball court or a football field. In the academic field, the NROTC unit spon- sored, for the benefit of the Brown community as well as for the Midshipmen, a guest lectures series on subjects which ranged from political and economic conditions in Africa to the recent progress in nuclear propulsion. Also under the sponsorship of the unit were a number of social activities. One of the highlights on campus each year has been the Military Ball, which found this year as usual the Midshipmen many times more polished than at weekly inspections. Following the formal dance on Friday night, the next day was spent on a tour of the Naval base at Newport with the ad- ditional attraction of dinner and dancing in the evening at the officer's club. Also on the list of festivities for the social year were several beer parties which proved to be unsurpassed for re- lieving tensions and which ended with many lost sea legs, land legs, and other means of trans- portation, which made navigation to the home port more than a little difficult. Along the lines of military training, besides week- ly drills and several annual parades through the center of Providence, the Navy unit at Brown was very proud of its Drill Team which captured first place in the Rhode Island State Champion- ship Drill Team Competition. The team boasted of a fine routine of fancy drills, all executed by silent commands. Hand in hand with the Drill Team were the Rifle and Pistol teams, which proved to be stiff competition in anv meet they entered. r 4 OUTING CLUB DECLARING it has no other purpose than to have fun, the Brown-Pembroke Outing Club does not try to hide its motives behind a fconstructive' purpose. The B.P.O.C. believes that a good time can be had in the wilderness with a change of environment in the company of others who are similarly inclined. The Club indulges in wind, snow, sleet and ice in their move back to Na- ture, finding this a respite from the monotony of four walls, piles of books and wailing Providence sirens. Perhaps the most conspicious feature of the B.P.O.C. is its variety of activities. The autumn witnessed a mass exodus from Brown and several other eastern colleges to Lake George where, on Turtle Island, people sang folk songs until the glow of dawn. Canoeing back to shore, the Club's members returned to campus and rested a few weeks until the tween semester ski trip. On this particular outing the members had to carry such items as 200 eggs up to the New Hampshire Outing Club cabin in -20 weather at three and four in the morning. Re- turning from this trip, the Club members again rested a few more weeks until the annual excursion to Martha's Vineyard where bicycling was the central activity. A few rugged individuals even dared to try early-May swim- ming. Not satisfied with weckend skiing and bicycling, the Club sponsored several one-day picnics, hikes, and rock climbs when the weather and studies permitted. EPICUREAN SOCIETY BORN OF ousronomical boredom, nurtur ed on the finest vintages of Oyzo and Beau- jolais, and thriving on the choicest of Cherry- stones, the Epicurean Society has, in its brief span of existance, markedly inspired its pro- selytes to undertake the great task of search- ing for and demanding standards of culinary excellence. According to its constitution, the original of which was scrawled on a Brown Refectory placemat in a fit of inspiration dur- ing dinner, the Society was instituted only for those few with exceptmnanv fussy stom- achs and super-sensitive palates. Therefore, the membership is extremely selective. In fact, President Feldstein did not care to com- ment on the plethora of discriminatory clauses, the bulk of which made up the greater part of the constitution. The carryings-on of this group are little known, and perhaps clande- stine; but De Jesus, Chairman of the Board, insisted that the meetings were so long that they extended throughout the dinner and the usual sniff of blandv After having tasted the fare of a noted chef, he added, the Society cordially remits a Duncan Hines. -type criti- cism to the restauranteur. Of world renown, the E. S. recently received a delicious hunk of minced mastadon sent by Tensing Norkey, a noted Sherpa climber in the Himalayas. Member-at-large John Wilson Cpictured in his Brazilian fishing outfit, whose research on pruning piranhas won him a place in the Epicureans, said that although it took him three years of rushing to join the group, he wouldn't leave it even for a year's supply of Peruvian cao-cao. RIFLE CLUB UNDER scvere competition, the independent Rifle Club has im- proved its position over the past few years, copping several second places in matches against eastern clubs supported by ROTC units. In addition, club membership, equipment, and scores have taken an upward swing. A seventy-five percent increase in membership over five years, backed by Uni- versity aid, causes President Den- nis Erinakes to note confidently that the club could only improve, with time. CULTURAL intermingling was accomplished by the Brown Uni- versity Folk Dance Club, found- ed by Judy Schreier two years ago. The club held informal week- ly meetings in the Faunce House Art Gallery, offering dance in- struction to an average crowd of thirty people. Everyone was invit- ed. A diverse repertoire of folk dances was performed: Ameri- can, Greek, Near Eastern, Ger- man, and Slavic dances. Old fav- orites were the widely known Hora and the less renowned Zil- lertaler. Formations were divided into circle dances, couple dances, and mixers. An extra costumed group of more experienced danc- ers performed at dinners held by the International Club, at the Rhode Island Folk Festival, and at Counterpoint, a stage pro- duction in Providence. There was a persistent rumor that the club claimed refugees from Pembroke gym classes and the modern dance group. 120 YACHT CLUB ACTIVE RACING a5 combined with recreational sail- ing for the entire Brown community by the Yacht Club. The Varsity and Freshman teams competed with other colleges in New England under the auspices of the New England Intercollegiate Sailing Association, and occasion- ally they raced against teams from the rest of the United States, Canada, and England. Team Captain Dayton Carr skippered Brown's representative boat in the Danmark Trophy regatta at the Coast Guard Academy and managed to place second, beating such notable rivals as Yale, Harvard, Bowdoin and Princeton. The Yacht Club main- tained an intramural series for those students who were not interested in inter-collegiate sailing, as well as a series with the faculty. Under the captaincy of Commodore Jack Morse, Vice-Commodore Ernst Rothe, and Rear-Commo- dore Richard Hosp, the club acquired eighteen new dacron sails for racing and a new ten horsepower outboard motor for the crash boat, despite the protestations of Treasurer Alan Mac Adams, In cooperation with the Brown Youth Guidance, the Yacht Club opened up its facilities to a group of orphans to enable them to have an afternoon of sailing. Earlier in the year Tom Keith came to Brown to speak on his cruise around the world on board the Yankee; his talk was greatly enhanced by the showing of a color movie of his voyage. THE WETTEST of times, it was the dampest of times; people were loose, people were tight; people were exhausted, people were carousing; people were passing in, others were going the other way. Where was everyone going? The banks of the Seekonk once again resembled Brown's unique version of the good old days of Bac- chanalian festivals, but in the rain yet? The cause of the affair was, of course, the University Administrations reactionary policy that the educational institutions should, by definition, educate their pets, springtime or not. The natives, therefore, incited by reliable reports that the vernal equinox had indeed come and gone, executed their annual revolt on Spring Weekend, 1961. It being that season and all, one must excuse Brownmen's fancies turning to thoughts of . . . supporting their athletic teams, and hence the sopping scene at the Seekonk, location of the crew races. After cheering their team on to victory and either re- laxedly reminiscing about the previous night's popular concert or anxiously debating the relative value of discipline in the total context of an adolescent's education, Brownmen and their dates oozed back to a campus of scrupulously organized parties which features, as usual, display of unanticipated unorthodoxies by certain zealous classmates, The weekend was unforgettable throughout, even before the Providence Fire Department graciously assented to a command performance, matching Wriston Quadrangle students' fantastic feats with fluid by demonstrating their own learning of laudable labor with liquid, dampening a hot time. at Phi Delta Theta and thereby mysteriously saving many of Brown's men's residences. Traditionally, at Brown, big weekends, - which means any weekend involving the awesome pleasure of finding one's company among sublimely sophisticated dates from such exotic places as Vassar, Smith, Wellesley, Conn College and Pembroke College are arranged only for particularly special and sacred occasions. How it was originally decided that the return of the football team from games in the provinces rated this festive occasion has never been satisfactorily explained, but sufficeth to say that Browns big fall weekend is Homecoming. Friday night featured the Homecoming Dance at Pembroke, complete with the selection of a queen, while at Brown, those awaiting Saturday's influx of feminine talent feverishly combined the final construction of displays with the in- cipient destruction of inihibitions. Saturday morning the judges selected the best Homecoming decorations, amidst the gradual assimilation of alumni into the current Brown community. Among other things, the presence of these hordes of former students which gives Homecoming its uniqueness, and so well do the new and the old blend in the spirit of the occasion that not until the half- time of the event Cwhich was the excuse for the weekend did many a student realize the true character of the supposed classmate sitting adjacently; and even then only upon hearing, at the corona- tion of the Queen, something like an anxious There was nothing like that around in '14, and noting the wrist-lock being applied by a sedate Pembroker 12, did the present place the past. The most enthusiastic alumni eventually had to concede, however, that current Brownmen, conditioned by several recent football week- ends, won an endurance contest in post-game celebrations on the chaotic campus. Winter Weekend can usually be distin- guished from other big weekends by the weather, for although red faces prevail on many weekends, one can be sure it is Winter Weekend by observing same even on the Pinkerton men protecting closed parties, and giving the benefit of the doubt by attributing the color to cold winds. An all-college dance precipitated Winter Week- end, and only after the following day's Josh White concert and a multitude of parties did Brownmen return to intellectual pur- suits in a final, determined effort to com- plete as much work as possible before that inevitable weekend in Spring. 123 FOUR YEARS ago if anyone said that he lived off- campus, he was immediately suspected of anything from bribery to a number of psychiatric disorders. Today with close to one hundred and sixty Brown men mostly sen- iorsY living in off-campus abodes, the lone exception has become a decently civilized minority. The university's silence concerning the reasons behind the '61-62 modern exodus caused Change of policy rumors. The conversion of Maxcy Hall into offices after the fire of '59, the similar evacuation of Horace Mann, and the increasing sizes of the Freshman classes seem probable reasons. A 33303143 With vivid memories of beer cans bouncing off window ledees, continuous bridge games, the seremades of the afterparty revellers, huge community bathrooms, and the spacious elegance of Wriston and West-Quad doubles, these one-hundred sixty Brown men have become pioneers of what might become a most successful experiment in civil ized living, It did not take long for most of them to become domesti- cated, and soon Almac's became filled with Bera jackers and long shopping lists; greenstamp books began to fill. different dishwashing soaps were compared; milk and sheet delivery schedules were arranged, and things settled down to a new normal pattern. Everything was not all house-and-garden-y, however, for the problems of shopping, cleaning, paving monthly bills, etc. had to be dealt with. Some resorted to hiring a maid, others let dirty dishes pile up in boxes to be tackled once a week or so; still others resorted to T.V. dinners and Metrecal. Socially, those who had suitable apartments were able to receive guests for cocktails, dinner parties and even large pre-game luncheons. Others found the off-campus hide-away a perfect excuse for not seeing anyone except on the sole diurnal jaunt to the refectory and, of course, in classes. The new frontiersmen cite privacy, quiet, comfort and practical contact with the outside world as the chief ad- vantages, long walks or large gas and garage bills, dirty dishes and rowdy landlords as the disadvantages. What- ever the problems, the overwhelming concensus of opinion among the pioneers is that off-campus living is far pre- ferable to life in the quads. SPORTS 1961 PROVED o be a major year for Brown's minor sports. Youthful coaches, spirited play, and an aroused stu- dent body all contributed to the success of several hereto- fore relatively unknown sports. In the spring, rugby and lacrosse began to draw crowds never before known to these sports at Brown. As the new semester rolled around, soc- cer began to steal the headlines, as the Bruins rose from last place in 1960 to second in '61. With the completion of the beautiful, ultra-modern George V. Meehan Audi- torium, hockey rose to a fame not known on College Hill since 1951 when the team finished second in the INCAA finals. Enough will be said about the Bruin football, basketball and baseball teams. They experienced anything from fair to worst-ever seasons and constantly aggravated their supporters. During the spring, as baseball faded gradually into the background, thereby joining the golf and tennis teams, Coach CIliff Stevenson led an inexperienced lacrosse team to a fine season; and the ruggers reached an all-time high, tying for the Eastern Rugby Union championship. The track team successfully defended its New England champ- ionship and gained a first place in the sprint medley at the Penn Relays. It was crew, however, that held the interest of Bruin supporters. University Hall finally granted the team varsity status, and the orphans of the Seekonk, the Cinderella crew, had found a home. It was soon autumn, and football was in the air. For nine long, fruitless weeks the gridders tried to gain a victory, but the final accounting indicated an 0-9 slate. Brown will long remember the '61 campaign: it was awful. The soccer team provided some consolation, as Coach Stevenson again produced a winner. The other sport of the season, cross- country, was also successful. Spurred on by sophomores, the team produced a highly admirable record. Basketball was the biggest disappointment of the year. A team with unlimited potential could go nowhere. The only bright spot of the season came when Mike Cingiser bettered the record held by Joe Tebo and became the school's all- time high scorer. The winter season also produced the sur- prise of the year. Highlighted by a remarkable amount of spirit, on the part of both the players and the fans, hockey plummetted into the limelight. The swimmers and track- men also experienced fine seasons, with the latter perform- ing especially well in such big contests as the Millrose Games and the Boston Athletic Association Meet. The wres- tling team, suffering from a lack of depth, produced the season's only poor record. With graduation, Brown will lose some of its finest ath- letes. These men will go down in the record books and will long be remembered on College Hill basketball captain Mike Cingiser, swimming captain and multiple recordholder John Morris, quarterback Jack Rohrbach, football and track star Ray Barry, football and baseball star Bob Auchy, grapplers Bart Mosser and Bill Wood, and soccer captain John Sherman. 1961 will go down in the records as a sub-par athletic season for Brown, but it will long be remembered for its fine individual performances and as the year of the minor sport. 127 FOOTBALL EVERYBODY UP FOR THE KICKOFF was cchoed again and again this season, as the kiyiyi's and rahrahrah's faded into the background. With little to cheer about the cheerleaders in their neat white letter sweaters had virtually nothing to do. By the end of the season, however, they had become masters at forcing the crowd to their feet for the kickoff, which they did no less than sixty times. Unfortunately, only five of these came afer Brown scores. As the men with megaphones were standing around trying to think up new versions of Hold that line! and Block that kick!, two members of the Brown cheering squad were continually amusing the fans. The first of these was Butch Bruno whose reluctant antics were a highlight of all Brown games. The fearless cub mascot was even able to ward off two would-be bearnappers from URI, signal the police, and have the fans arrested. It was truly the year of the bear, since the big Brown Bear was played by no less than four loyal Brunonians: Hap Pekelis, Jeff Small, Moose Noonan, and Dave DeLuca. Hap had the fans and even the bulldog howling at the Yale Bowl with his twisting and his antics with a Yale mega- phone. Jeff attempted grand larceny during the URI games, but a lumbering seven-foot ram came to rescue the abducted majorette. John Noonan was a peace-loving bear but always willing to please the crowd. Dave, on the other hand, proved more vicious. He had all of Franklin Field rooting for him as he waged a one-man war against the Philadelphia police. Crime does not pay, however; and the obstinate Bruin was eventually caged. Brown Field patrons were always able to witness a good show on the sidelines. a EXCUSES were in abundance but touchdowns at a premium during the 1961 football campaign. The hapless Bruins not only lived up to pre-season expectations by finishing in last place, but also were able to gain national recognition as the lowest-scoring major college team in the country. One literary magazine even suggested that Brown be given an award for furthering the cause of de-emphasizing football on the American college campus. Coach McLaughry attributed the poor showing to the failure of twenty-two former freshman and varsity players to come out for the team. The players placed the blame on the lack of spirit generated by the student body. The students said the coach was at fault. And the alumni blamed the entire college, claiming that it's not like it used to be back in the good old days. Regardless of the reasons why, the fact remains that the gridders ended the season with an 09 record, scoring only 24 points as opposed to the opnonents 247. Not much cheering on the home side was heard this fall at Brown Field. N S L A i A bl v X 30 y 30 - BRIGHT SPOTS occasionally did penetrate the clouds which hung over Brown Field. Although certainly neither numerous nor momentous, these events merit mention. The fine play of many of the sophomores was evidenced throughout the vear. Althoush not in action as much as their ability would seem to warrant, certain names stood out. Among these were Dave Nelson, John Haren- ski, Jan Moyer, Bill Lemire, Tom Draper, Tony Matteo, and Frank Antifonario. The latter's performance in the U.R.I. game was so outstanding that it merited one of Browns's two selections to the All-Eastern College Ath- letic Conference teams of the week. The other selection was junior tackle Bill Savicki, who until his injury mid- way through the season, looked very impressive. Other juniors plaving kev roles were center John Arata and halfback John Meeker. The '61 campaign also marked the end of a number of fine careers on the Hill. Captain Jack Rohiback, although injured in the early part of the scason and although having fared better in past years, was still able to manage the team with skill and poise. Ray Barry was for the third consecutive year a standout in the fullback position. His hard running and talented toe constantly posed a threat to the opposition. On the line, Bob Auchy and Gary Graham were once more the stalwarts in the guard positions. STATISTICS are embarrassing, but a brief glance at the progress of the season is worth ones attention. The campaing opened at home against Columbia, a league power for the first time in many years. A loud and hopeful crowd was on hand that afternoon, but all wishful thoughts soon faded as the Lions rolled up an impressive 50-0 victory. The next week found Brown down at New Haven and a goodly number of diehards made the trek with the team. In what later proved to be their best per- formance of the year, the Bears put up a valiant struggle to the end but were finally outclassed 14-3. Spirit re- turned to College Hill, however and prospects were bright for the forthcoming game at Dartmouth. The Indians had other ideas and in the pouring rain at Han- over gained a decisive 34-0 victory. Playing away for their third consecutive week, the gridders traveled to Philadelphia to play Penn and once again returned with- out a victory and without a touchdown. On the follow- ing Saturday, before a Parentss Weekend crowd, Brown was figured to win its first game. After all, they never lost to U.R.I. . . . well hardly ever. Although they came close, the team could not gain the needed momentum and eventually lost 12-9. Homecoming had arrived. The revelers were banking on a decade of tradition and were wishfully anticipating an upset. Princeton, how- ever, had its eve on the Ivy League crown and was not to be stopped that day, Final score: 52-0. The team flew to Ithaca the next week to face the one Ivv opno- nent they had defeated the previous vear. But the tide had turned and Cornell handed the Bruins their seven- th straight loss, 25-0. At Harvard the story was the same. Jan Moyer was able to score Brown's only Ivy touchdown of the year, but the team succumbed at the end, 21-6. Thanksgiving Day brought to Providence the return of the holiday morning contest, Brown vs. Colgate. Before a sparse crowd of local townsfolk, Brown completed its worst record in history by losing to Colgate 30-6. The season was finally over. 135 LOOKING FORWARD to the stars of the future may gladden the hearts of Bruin aficionados. The fresh- man team's record was not impressive, but the nucleus of the team was composed of players whose performances seemed to indicate that 1962 would show a marked im- provement in Brown's football fortunes. The vyearlings won only two games, against Dartmouth and UR T while dropping four to Boston College, Yale Holy Cross, and Harvard. Even with these struggles, though, the team Jooked strong. Outstanding members included Captain Ed Marecki. Bill Stone, Herb Linker, John Kelley, Jim Dunda, Al Kirkman, Ron Ferraris and Paul Coughlan. In the varsity ranks, the team elected Nick Spiezio as captain for '62. Throughout the vear they also had the service of a West Point transfer student, Mike Allair, who although ineligible was constantly practicing with the team in anticipation of the '62 season. Once again the cry was heard, Wait 'til next year. 1961 was a monumental year for Brown University's crew. The team's hard work, its fine season, its sweep of the Dad Vail Regatta all faded into the background with the long-awaited announcement from UH that crew had been officially recognized as a varsity sport. Having been known as the Orphans of the Seekonk for years, the crew finally attained the status it deserved. The 1961 Bruin crew was not plummetted into nation- al prominence nor did it shock the crowds at Lake Ononda- ga, yet it did earn the reputation of being one of the na- tion's leading rowing units. The season opened in New York, as the Bears won three of their four races on the Harlem River against Columbia, their only loss coming in the junior varsity event. The boaters then returned home to the Seekonk for their next encounter. Dartmouth came down to Providence with great expectations of upsetting the home team. To their disappointment, not only did they lose the varsity event, and with it the Atlanta Cup; but they also lost the other three races. The Bruin sweep encouraged a sizable and boisterous contingent of supporters to make the trip to Cambridge the next week, where Brown battled Harvard and Syracuse, two of the nation's finest teams. Brown finished third in both the junior varsity and freshman races, but in an exciting varsity event they edged out Syracuse and finished less than a length behind Harvard. CREW THEN CAME Spring Weekend, and although rain prevented the jubilant throngs from lining the banks of the Seckonk, it did not dampen the team's spirit. The variety gained its third victory by defeating Amherst and LaSalle, while the jay-vee also beat the Lord Jeffs. The frosh, however, dropped a close one to the undefeated LaSalle yearlings. Brown's next victim was Iona, The Bruins swept all three events from the New Rochelle crew and in the freshman race also gained a triumph over Tavor Academy. On the following Saturday a record crowd of 7500 gathered on the shores of the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia for the twenty-third annual running of the Dad Vail Regatta. Twenty-three crews rep- resenting schools from Michigan to Florida met to determine the small-college rowing championship. The Bruins returned to Providence victorious, having swept all three events for the third time in the season. This was also the third consecu- tive year that the varsity shell had won the regatta; and immediately following their triumph, they accepted a bid to the Eastern Sprints on Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester. Competing against the leading crews in the country, Brown's var- sity finished a strong sixth behind such perennial powers as Navy, Comnell, and MIT. The following month the team made a noble but fruitless attempt to better their fourth place finish of the previous year at the IRA Regatta at Syracuse. The season may not have been as sensational as that of the year before, but the men that put their time and effort into the making of the strong team that it was deserve much credit. Chief among these are those who manned the var- sity shell: John App, Phil Makanna, Roger Clarke, John Escher, Robert Olsen, Ed Ashley, Marsh Bassick, Bill Engeman, and coxswain Dick McKenzie; their coach, Whitey Helander; and the coaches of the freshman crew; Charlie Moran and Rod Beebe. The Brown community owes its thanks to the latter three gentlemen for gaining prestige for the umni- versity in rowing circles, and it will miss their services in years to come. RECORDS FELL right and left during the swim- ming season, as the Brown mermen chalked up a dual meet record of nine wins and five losses. The addi- tion of ten sophomores and the return of twelve letter- men gave vent to a wave of cptimism, as the captors of last year's New England Inter-Collegiate title hit the water this year. As usual, the team had less depth than some of its two-pool rivals, but strong and broad individual performances made up for this in a fashion unequaled by recent Brown swimming teams. Bolstered with the traditionally spirited coaching of Joe Wat- mough and under the surveillance of Manager John Nicholson, the Bruins toppled Southern Connecticut and Columbia in December. In the former, Captain John Morris bettered his Colgate-Hoyt 440 yard free- style record, and sophomore Bob Martin broke his own pool record in the 200 yard individual medley. Temporarily set back by Navy, the mermen went on to defeat Penn. Unable to pursue their victory over Princeton last year, the Bruins gave way to stronger opposition in most events. Nevertheless, a confident Bruin squad entertained Dartmouth in Providence; the subsequent 48-47 upset of Brown by the Green team was disappointing and unexpected. The remain- der of January found the Bruins in the winning column, crushing Ambherst, Springfield, the Coast Guard, and Holy Cross in order. Morris cut down his 142 220 yard freestyle time, and the Bears' 400 yard freestyle relay team Mike Prior, Dick Paul, Tom McMullen, and Bob Martin broke both the Brown pool and New England inter-collegiate rec- ords with a 3:28.4 clocking. At Holy Cross, Ben Kilgore took the 200 individual medley, Kim Alderman copped the diving, Dave Laney won the 100 butterfly, and Lew Feldstein cornered the 100 freestyle. At New London, the Coast Guards witnessed the Brown swimmers breaking four pool records and one New England mark. The New England junior 100 butterfly crown was captured by teammate Wally Ingram. Suffering defeats from Yale and Har- vard, Brown rallied twice more at M.I.T. and U. Conn for decisive victories. Consistently good performances were turned in by many of the mermen including Bruce Rogers in the breast stroke and Tom McMullen in the sprints. Senior Ralph Giasi provided needed strength in the butterfly and individual medley events, while diver Marty Thomas '64 gave reason for much confidence in coming seasons. Outstanding in diversity was Bob Martin, who lowered the individual medley pool record to 2:13.6. Close competition kept Lew Feldstein and Dick Paul greasing their fins for the 100 and the 50 yard freestyle; Prentiss de Jesus remained essential to Bruin victories in all strokes until Father time and the rule book rendered him ineligible. The highest tallv of broken records goes to Captain John Morris, who continually lowered his 220 and 440 times during the season. The new pool records, 2:10.3 for the 220 freestyle and 4:37.6 for the 440 freestyle, are lasting marks of Captain Morris' athletic contribution to Brown. The culmination of the team's effort brought satisfaction in the New Englands. 6 e W iy PR oy s P4 e Z 47 - STRONG INDIVIDUAL per- formances by such grapplers as sopho- more Ken Linker and senior Bill Wood overshadowed an otherwise poor season for the Brown wrestling team. The Bruins went through the year without winning a match, losing eight and tying one, resulting in a last place finish in the Ivy League. Linker, who wrestled at 130 lbs., had 7-1-2 record, proving himself the outstanding member of the squad. Wood, at heavyweight, compiled a 7-2 record and finished his wrestling career with an overall showing of 18-4. They were followed by Captain Bart Mosser with a 3-2-2 record, Charlie Coe, who wrestled sporadically but well, and John Fish, who, at 123 lbs., won 4 and lost 5. The team, however, was very weak in the middle weights of 147 through 177, and the failure of two and three wrestlers to show their potential, plus injuries to Dave West- fall and others produced the poor sea- son. In their first match, against Sprin- field, Linker was the lone winner, as Brown was downed 29-3. At Coast Guard, Wood, Linker, and sophomore Beohm were victorious, buth the team lost 21-11. In a close match at M.I.T., Brown suffered a 14-12 loss despite vic- tories by Mosser, Wood, Fish, and Linker. After losing to Columbia and Yale, the Bruins put on their best showing of the season, as they tied Princeton 20-20. Linker, Wood, Mos- ser and Fish all triumphed, while Coe tied. After Cornell defeated them 26-0, the Bruins lost a tight match to Har- vard, 16-18. In the last match of the season, a strong Penn team defeated Brown 249, with victory going to Wood, and draws to Linker and Baehm. 144 WRESTLING BASKETBALL GOOD POTENTIAL, possibly a first place contender was Coach Stan Ward's prediction for this season's basketball team. Indeed, the squad pos- sessed good height, five retuming veterans, three of which scored consistently in double figures, and the finest ballplayer to ever attend Brown in Mike Cingiser. Yet, the Bruins suffered a disappointing season. ; Cingiser had the best year of his sparkling car eer, averaged 19 points a game and broke Joe Tebo's 1319 point record to become the most prolific scor- er in Bruin history; Greg Heath came back strong- ly after a poor season last year; junior Gene Barth rebounded well and scored over fifteen points a game; and the backcourt combo of Young, Behn, and Brockway seemed to jell. 146 9e, Brown started off the season with three wins in its first four games, including an upset over strong U.R.I. Then disaster struck, Greg Ileath injured his 1zight hand, was out for a month, and Brown lost ninc in a row. Barry Behn was also injured during this period. In three successive games, the Bruins lost by a total of four points, 54-56 to P.C., 5859 to Ivy Champion Yale, and 57-58 to Penn. Brown finally broke loose, beating Northeastern 62-44, Following repeat losses to Princeton and second place finish- er Penn., the Bruins, led by Cingiser, Heath and Barth, then punished Dartmouth, 71-52, Harvard 71-67, and Col- umbia. In the latter game Brown cxploded for 87 points and 40 field goals as Cingiser hit for 22. 149 Playing at Cornell, the Bruins hit a mere 22.5 per cent of their shots Ceven Cingiser couldn't click and lost, 55- 67. Rebounding from this atrocity, they clobbered Col- umbia again, 84-59, but could not get past Cornell, los- ing 62-66. Thus, with three games left, Cingiser had a career total of 1,257 points, 62 shy of the record. These words, Will he break it? were all over campus. In the Harvard game, which Brown won, coming from behind, 57-53, Cingiser was off his form, but still hit for 19. Sopho- more Gary Nell turned in his best performance hitting 17. Against Dartmouth, Brown had its best night of the year, scoring 93 points to Dartmouth's 78, as Cingiser connected for 28 and Barth for 24. Cingiser's total put him 16 points short of the record with one game to play, and that one against strong U.R.I. In this final game both the Brown team and Cingi- ser played inspired basketball. Heath rebounded vi- ciously, Barth dropped in 24 points while holding Charlie Lee scoreless, and Cingiser not only broke the record by scoring 27 points but passed for many more and played a strong game off the boards. The final score was 90-63. In this, the last game, the Brown team final- ly lived up to its great potential, and Cingiser's per- formance finished a career which earned him a second team position on the Eastern All-American team, and an All-Ivy berth for the third consecutive year. o w fr,q.., 14'?9 7 L IN THE MIDDLE of the week it was not unusual to see a sizeable portion of the campus drift up Hope Street toward Meehan Auditorium. The varsity hockey team drew continual crowds of Brown fans even to as far as Cambridge. It was all brought about by the new spirit and determination of an improved squad. With the advent of the new season much talk on campus centered around Brown's hockey prospects. Stu- dents watched eagerly as the finishing touches were made on the beautiful new George V. Meehan Audi- torium. But would the regencrated team be able to break out of its slump and into the winning column? A sizeable crowd turned out for the first game against Northeastern to find out just that. For the first two and a half periods it looked as though the Bruins might succeed, but eventually succumbed to the more exper- ienced Huskies. A strong Boston College team was the Bear's next opponent. The visitors lived up to their preseason rating and gained a decisive 9-2 victory. Two days later, Brown finally did it. After having gone with- out a win for more than a year, they garnered their first triumph of the season, a 7-0 rout over Connecticut. Two more wins were registered in the next week as the Bruins defeated Amherst and Bowdoin. Over the winter recess, Meehan Auditorium was the site of the annual Christmas Hockey Tournament, where Brown gained fourth place, finishing behind Colgate, Bowdoin, and Williams. On January 6, 1962 the Meehan Audi- torium was officially dedicated before a capacity crowd. After the ceremonies the Bruins encountered their first Ivy League foes in the Princeton Tigers. The result was a last minute 3-2 Brown victory that left the fans on their feet cheering. A heavy loss was sustained, however, as Fred Avis suffered a separated shoulder, putting him out for the remainder of the season. The team then suffered three defeats, to Northeastern, Yale, and Williams, but bounced right back to defeat Princeton for a second time. Many fine individual performances high- lighted the season's record. The defence of co- captains Brian Smith and Colby Cameron, and Gill Goering was exceptional, especially in light of the extended length of time they were on the ice. The first line, of course, did not see much action. In the games that the first line of Avis, Mclntyre, and Bartlett played togeth- er, the trio performed admirably. Backed up by the other Bruin skaters, Guy McLaughlin, Bob Olsen, Ed Ennis, Pat Jones and Jim De- veney, they played a long and hard game. Fin- ally, a man who received acclamation through- out the season was John Dunham, the sopho- more goalic whose ability to make spectacular saves provided many exciting moments. The varsity, though, were not the only crowd pleaser at Meehan Auditorium this year. The Freshman pucksters compiled a fantastic 15-2 record, beating such teams as Boston Col- lege, Harvard, Dartmouth, and Andover. The fine play of cub skaters Terry Chapman, Leon Bryant, Don Eccleston, and Fred Soule pro- mised much for future. years. The bears returned home to take on a strong Yale team, Once again a sellout crowd was on hand and once again they witnessed an outstanding game. Brown emerged victorious, 4-3, on two last-minute goals. By this time, however, the team had lost the services of its entire first line as Dave Bartlett and Bruce Mclntyre were out for the yeur. The Bears refused to give up; and although they lost all of their remaining games, they put up a ood fight in each and every one. Comell and Harvard proved to be too powerlul, having greater depth and more experience. Against Dartmouth, Brown proved to be worthy opponent; but in the end was sent to de- feat both times, the second in a sudden-death over- time game. FENCING A QUICK EYE, 2 dexterous wrist and a driving ambition are combined in the members of the Brown Fencine Club. What beoan in 1960 as informal prac tice sessions has become the Fencing Club, with hopes of intercollegiate competition. Four vears ago Brown had a fencing team which died for lack of interest. This year under the direction of Lawton Smith and some graduate students, interested students are training in hopes of reviving fencing as a sport at Brown. They have planned to challenge Boston University and Bran- deis to matches in the spring. A recoonized sport at sev- en Ivy League schools and several New England col- leges, fencing may well regain its former status at Brown. To this end a dozen men can be seen working out Thursday evenings in Lyman Hall. AFTER WINNING five straight games to capture the Division 2 championship in the Eastern Rugby Union, the Brown Rugby Club entered the play-offs against Villanova, Division 3 champ, and Dartmouth, winner of the Division I title. For the Eastern Rugby Union championship the Bruins came from behind to defeat Villanova, 6-5, and then tied Dartmouth, 0-0, in a bruising battle before 1,500 fans at Aldrich Field to earn a share of the ERU crown. In winning its division title, the Bruins de- feated Westchester 49-0D, Yale 13-00, M.LT. 6-0, Harvard 5-0, and New York Rugby B 6-0. The scheduled game with Cornell was for- feited to Brown. Including the two-game playoffs, Brown's' over-all record showed six victories and a tiec. The Bears scored 85 points and allowed only five by the opposition the best defensive record in the Union. Rugby is only in its second year at Brown Since the sport is under club status it is possible to enlist the services of other than undergraduates, such as Dave Zucconi of the admissions office. All the Ivy schools have teams on this basis, and they are part of the 18-club Eastern Rugby Union, which is broken into three six-teen divisions. The Bruin backfield was stronger than the line, and long runs featured the season's play. John Phipps ran 61 yards to break open the Yale game; Jon Meeker went 80 vards and Phipps 65 in the victory over M.LT.; Zucconi dashed 48 vyards to help defeat Harvard. In the play-off game with Vil- - e . D lanova at Cortlandt Park, Philadelphia, the Bruins trailed, 5-0, until the second half. Then a sudden 70-yard spurt by Meeker set up a penalty kick by Gary Graham which closed the gap to 5-3. Late in the game, Dave Remington picked up a short kick, dodged two Villanova forwards, and raced 50 vards down the sidelines to give Brown its winning mar- gin. Dartmouth, Brown's final opponent, had prob- ably the strongest team in the East. The large and enthusiastic crowd saw a fierce struggle with the Green having a decided edge in the line and Brown showing the better set of backs. Several strong Dartmouth thrusts were successfullv repelled in the first half, but later in the game the Indian de- fense halted Phipps when it looked as though Brown was on the march. The game, although scoreless, represented a gain of prestige for Brown. Capt. Bill Tingue '62 led the scorers with 20 points, 13 of them in the opening game against Westchester. Other leading scorers included Phipps 18, Remington 15, Zucconi 9, Meeker and Tom Wilson 6, and Graham 5. Another im- portant factor in the success of the team was Coach Denys Boshier, a biology graduate student from New Zealand. 157 PLAGUED throughout the season by poor weather and even worse batting, the 1961 varsity baseball team complet- ed its season with a record of one win and thirteen losses. Previous to the official opener, the team made its annual spring training trek to the South, compiling an over-all tally of one victory and six defeats. In the first encounter with William and Mary the Bruins emerged victorious by a score of 32, which was backed by the fine pitching of Dave Walles. All three runs were scored in the fourth in- ning, and after this outburst, Walles kept the opponents in check for the remainder of the game. The second game played against William and Mary ended in a 3-1 loss. After the first victory, Brown never regained its dominance in the South. The Bruins suffered losses of 20-17, in a mara- thon game with Hampton Institute; 3-1, 10-8, and 4-3 a- gainst Fort Lee; and 6-2 against the University of Maryland in the final game of the series. Brown then travelled to Princeton, N.J., for the open- ing game of the regular season. In a hard-fought battle the team lost 4-2, in spite of eleven hits collected off the bats of such regulars as Bob Auchy, Howie Bromage, and Captain Chris Mitchell. The following day the Middies of Annapolis handed the Bruins their most humiliating defeat of the year by driving in sixteen runs to Brown's one. The three-hit pitching of Dave Ricereto led the University of Rhode Is- land to an 8-0 victory in the first Brown home game. First baseman George Espinosa was forced from the game due to injuries, but he was back in action against Holy Cross the following week when Brown scored its only victory of the season. A finc offensive was lead by the consistent hitting of Jim Leonard, Brown's only scorer, and the six-hit pitching of Dave Walles which combined to produce the 3-2 victory. Dartmouth destroyed any hopes of a weekend sweep the fol- lowing day when they outstriped the Bruins with a score of 8-2. In a game highlighted by 22 walks and 8 errors, Brown bowed to the Quakers from the University of Pennsylvania inspite of a 5-4 lead in the 4th inning. The Brown team never found the right combination for victory after the Holy Cross game and lost every game for the rest of the year. Sometimes the blame fell upon inconsistent hitting and at other times upon weak fielding or bad pitching. The scores of many of the games indicate the small margin by which the team lost many closely contested games. In the final portion of the season they lost 7-6 to URI, 6-5 to Army and 4-3 against Yale. In spite of a predomin- ant pattern of defeat, attention must be called to the excellent batting averages of catcher Bob Auchy and outfield Howie Bromage. Chris Mitchell, captain of he squad, turned in consistently admirable performances at third base, as did second baseman Spankv Van Dyke. Occasionally the pitching left something to be desired, but on its better days the team showed real promise. In retrospect, the sea- son may be summed up as one of disappointment and experimenta- tion, but affording valuable experience if not victory. 3 e SOCCER ALL TALK of athletics centered around Brown's chances in football as the 1961-62 academic year opened. When the soccer team opened against Wesleyan concurrent- ly with the Bruin's first football game a- gainst Columbia, a mere handful were there to witness the event. They watched a hard- fought and well-played game which ended with Brown on the short side of a 4-3 score. None of the fans seemed to care too much; the comment heard most often was a wish for something better on the grid- iron. Prospects were soon to change how- ever. In their very next game the team reversed their fortunes with a decisive 8-1 rout of URI. The following Saturday was the Yale game, and while most of the fans who had been watching the first three periods of the closely fought battle filed into the Bowl for the football game, Coach Stevenson's boys tied the game in the closing seconds and went on to win in a 3-2 double-overtime victory. At Dartmouth the following Saturday, the Bruins continued their winning streak as they defeated the Big Green 2-1 in the pouring rain and took over the Ivy League lead. In their next contest, however, the team suffered a 4-1 defeat at the hands of Penn in a sub-par performance. The team also lost to Springfield and Connecticut, two of the East's finest, but this failed to dampen their spirits. Both Columbia and Princeton failed to score against goalie Pete Gilson, and the Bruins took the two Ivy contests by identical scores of 1-0. At Cornell, however, sloppy playing conditions hampered the booters and they lost in a 5-2 decision. The next week was the last game of the season, as mighty Harvard, undefeated league-leaders, invaded Aldrich-Dexter Field. Contrary to conditions during the first game of the year, a boisterous throng of some 2000 turned out to cheer their team, while all comments cen- tered upon the chances for victory, rather than upon the gridiron tilt in Cambridge the next day. Brown was at its best that day, and from the outset it was evident that Harvard did not stand a chance. The final score was 5-0, and the mighty Crimson was so shocked by their defeat that their newspaper had to resort to name-calling to explain the loss. Brown finish- ed second in the Ivy Soccer League with a 6-5 over-all record, an amazing feat in light of the team's 1-10 rec- ord the preceding year. Coach Cliff Stevenson deservedly won unanimous acclaim for the outstanding job he has done in improv- ing Brown's soccer. Much credit must go to the players who put everything they had into every moment of contest, Outstanding among these were Pete Gilson, Bill Zisson, Armando Garces, Al Young, and the three Johns: Sherman, Fish, and Holbrooke. The freshman team continued along in their winning ways this year as they lost only two games while garnering nine vic- tories. Led by Jim Hooks, all-time freshman high-scorer, and Craig Nielson, the yearlings could always be count- ed on for a hard-fought and well-played match. It was an exciting season and one that will long be remembered on College Hill. 164 ABOUT LOWE, Sinisi, and Moreland you could write a book, said track coach Ivan Fugua concerning the stars of last spring's varsity team. Jim Moreland could run any distance for you, Sinisi was one of the top hurdlers in the country, and Lowe was just plain great. You could say they carried our team for three years. It would be impossible to fill their shoes. All of these plaudits are understandable when you remember that Jim Moreland, Angelo Sinisi and Bob Lowe were all nationally known athletes and IC4A champions. It is unfortunate for Brown, in the case of these boys, that college athletes can compete for only four years. Large- ly because of their efforts, the Brown track team had a successful spring. Brown opened its season by beating Penn and Columbia, 79-72-21, while winning nine events. Lowe captured the mile and two-mile events. Moreland, by winning the 100 in 9.8 seconds, equaled the school record set bv Ken Clapp in '40. He also won the 220. Sinisi triumphed in the 120 and 220 hurdles. In their second outing, Brown downed Holy Cross 80-60. Mareland won three events, Sinisi two. Joe Dver, now a senior, was first in the hammer, and second in the shot, which was won by Al Yodakis. Next came the Penn Relays in which the Brown sprint medley team, composed of Moreland, Tom Gun- zelman, Jerry Huetz and Phil Schuvler, triumphed in three minutes thirty-seven seconds. The two-mile relay team finished fifth, as did Sinisi in the 120 high hur- dles. Lowe finished a close second in the steeplechase in 9:27. Then in the URI-Brown match, the Bruins overcame URI sweeps in the broad jump and pole vault with three of its own, to win 82-48. Lowe, Libby and Jones finished first, second, and third in the mile; Huetz and Gunzelman followed Schuyler in the 880, and Morcland, Sinisi and Steve Cummings captured the 220 vard dash. Although Brown finished last in a triangular meet with Harvard and Dartmouth, the Bruins nevertheless turned in some good performances. Moreland won the 220 in 21.1 seconds, while Lowe continued his supremacy in the twomile in 9:12.2, which set new Harvard Field and Brown records. Phil Schuyler finished 2nd in the 880 in 1:52.2, also a new Bruin record. Crawley and Dyer finished one, two in the javelin. In the next match, largely due to an injury to Moreland, Wesleyan edged Brown, 72-68, using sweeps in the broad jump and hundred-yard dash. Sin- isi, however, won three events including the discus. Then came the Heptagonals in Philadelphia, which were won by Yale. Although Brown finished ninth out of ten teams, Lowe still set a new Heptagonal record of 9:05.8 in the twomile run. The most important and successful event of the track season occurred on May 20 when Brown defended its New England Championship at Kingstion, R.L., Brown reversed an earlier decision, and edged Wesleyan 34-31 for the title. Boston University was third with 20 points. Lowe won the twomile, Sinisi, the high hurdles, and Yodakis, the shot, with a record heave of 50 feet, 4 374 inches. The freshman relay team of Rum- sey, Strasberg, Booth and Farley also won in 3:30.5. Brown ended its scason with an eleventh place finish Cout of 23 in the 3,000 meter Steeplechase. Having lost the Big Three plus such valuable men as Huetz, Schuvler, and Bill Scwabb, Fuqua is cautious in judg- ing this vear's squad. Such veterans as Joe Dver, John Jones, Bill Libbv, Al Yodakis and others will return, however. Dave Farley, a sophomore, has great potential, as do Booth and Rumsey. Fuqua can be expected, as always, to make the most of his available talent. TENNIS s STRONG' INDIVIDUALS over- shadowed a losing tennis season, as seniors Paul Putzel and George Torrey, and jun- jors Pevton Howard and Nate Chace led the Bruins to a 6-8 overall record, and a last place finish in the strong Eastern Inter- collegiate Tennis League. The league is composed of the Army and Naval Academ- ies and the eight Tvy teams. Brown opened its season with defeats by Navy and Penn, then went on to win three in a row, includ- ing a 9-0 shutout of Providence College. After an 8Y-'2 whipping by Williams, Brown edged Ambherst, 54, and M.LT., 6-3. Influential in all of these matches was Pevton Howard, the third man in Bruin history to win the University champion- ship three vears in a row. Coach Art Pal- mer regards Howard as one of the top three or four tennis players in the intercollegiate competition. Howard compiled a 9-5 singles record last vear, and Palmer expects bigger things of him this vear, The first doubles team of Howard and Nate Chace, this vear's varsity Captain, was also outstanding, finishing with a 9-4-1 record. Of the last six matches of the season, Brown could win but one, an 8-1 shellack- ing of Holy Cross. Perhaps a lack of depth was the main reason why the team was out- classed in lague play. Princeton was the best team, followed by Harvard, Yale and Dartmouth. The rest of the league, ac- cording to Palmer, is evenly matched. He noted that below-par performances against Columbia, where Brown lost 5-4, and Yale may have meant the difference between a winning and a losing season. Palmer ex- pects a slight improvement in this year's team. Victor Field and John Bassler have gained much experience over the summer, and sophomores Pete Gibb, John Lewis, Jim Greenberg, and Mike Gross, who all moved up from last year's 3-4 freshman squad, should help replace the vacancies left by Putzel and Torrey. There will, of course, be Howard and Chace, number one and two players respectively. 167 THEY'RE A FINE TEAM .5d have had a good year was Coach Ivan Fuqua's comment about the Brown Cross Country team which finished its fall campaign with a dual and tri-meet record of 4.1 The squad opened the season with a 28-46-50 victory over Conn and Yale. Sophomore Dave Far- ley led the varsity runners with a second-place fin- ish behind Yale's Dave Mack. This, incidentally, was Farleys only defeat of the season. Subsequently, Brown suffered its only loss, to Harvard by a 25-30 count. Tom Gunzelman was leading the race for three miles before suffering a muscle spasm. His eventual seventh place finish probably cost Brown the meet. In the next meet, Farley and John Jones finished 1-2 as the Bruins defeated Dartmouth, 22-34. In the Rhode Island meet, which Brown won 19-36, Farley sliced 25 seconds off the 4.5 mile URI course record, with a time of 22 minutes and 57 seconds. Brown completed its regular schedule with vic- tories over Northeagern, Providence College, Bos- A WAL N IE S CROSS COUNTRY ton College and Holy Cross in a five way meet. Farley's winning time was 23:35.3 for the 4.8 mile course. The team, for various reasons, did not match up to its Full potential in either the Heptagonals, where they finished 6th, or in the New Englands, where they lost their championship title, finishing 3rd. According to Fuqua, Farley's potential is great. He came within twelve seconds of the Brown var- sity record held bv Bobbv Lowe '61. The freshman team, which finished with a 5-0 record, is the best at Brown in a number of years. Led by Bob Roth- enberg, Vic Boog and Bob Wooley, they vanquish- ed each of their opponents. i - N i 0 r 4 i ' 4 0 - Revitalized through the persistent efforts of the indefatigable IHC, independents this year found them- selves more organized and more active as a group than in the past. Intramural athletics picked up as hockey was added to the long list of sports in which the dorms participated throughout the year. The West Quad a- gain led in social activities. The other houses did not abstain completely, however, and intermittently throughout the year, all the dorms sponsored festive gatherings. Perhaps the most popular of all independent activities though, were the sherry hours held by the resident fellows of the various dormitories. These func- tions served to stimulate both the social and intellectual interests of the students. Evidence of the new frontier platform of the ITHC was seen in such events as the highly successful Winter Weekend Dance and the dor- mitory snow-sculpture contest. Independents were giv- en the opportunity to participate more actively in cam- pus activities and readily accepted the challenge. 171 ARCHIBALD HOUSE ARCHIBALD, that's the house behind the canteen, where you had to let the phone ring for a minimum of four minutes to get an answer. The reason for this was that the Archibald boys were always off doing something. If they weren't out at Aldrich-Dexter playing football or hockey, the surrounding pictures give evidence of their activities in the party room. The multitude of social func- tions at Archibald marked the house for its continually on-the-go attitude. Spring Weekend '61 brought the melodies of Art Tan- credi and his twelve-piece orchestra to Archibald's all-campus dance in Arnold lounge. The Homecoming 1961 weekend brought Tan- credi back to Arnold, jointly sponsored by Archibald and Poland. Getting on the twisttrain in March, thev hired Amnold Lounge a- gain and shook the shingles of the West Quad roof. The party was so successful that, as shown in the pictures, even Boy Scouts and Brownies Cscouts floated in. Also last Fall, as can be seen in the pictures, Halloween hit the house in the form of a costume party. Last Christmas, a party, complete with Santa Claus, Christmas tree, and presents, was given for fifteen children from the Rhode Island Children's Center. Remarkable to see was the conversion of several of the boisterous types in Archibald into quiet and even an- gelic postures, actually assuming paternal airs in front of small children perched on their laps. Besides social distinction, Archibuld has been up in the top five scholastically for several vears. House dinners, with speakers such as Dean Schulze and Forrest MacDonald have also been a great success, BRONSON HOUSE ik iinl bl ! HQHHH! 1 s Ille! preeltgy THE TWIST was the greatest new institution this year on A- merican campuses, and, at the far left, Mike Jupin shows that Bron- son House wasn't far behind the national trend. In fact, there were many opportunities throughout the year for twisting and what-not at Bronson. Social chairman, Al Vaskas saw to it that the house missed only one party weekend all semester. One of the most remark- able social events was the tradi- tional Christmas party - complete with Santa Claus, gifts for the girls, and six dollars worth of mis- tletoe. Below, five Bronsonites add the finishing touches to their snow- bound Corvette, winner of 1Ist place in the I.H.C. snow sculpture contest. Professor Amor's weekly Resident Fellow open houses be- came a popular event at Bronson, and some members frequently brought dates to the festivities. Bronson also held a dinner at which a guest speaker from Har- vard spoke on human condition- ing. Another cultural feature of the year was a coloquium on the controversial topic of birth con- trol. President George Aikens pro- vided able leadership, with Pete Carmen serving as second-in-com- mand. AS SELF APPOINTED s arty house of the West Quad, Everett boasts of having the largest treasury of any inde- pendent house on campus, It is also the largest social unit at Brown, with 157 members. At the right, two of these mem- bers and their dates enjoy the music of the Hunt Club, Everetts Homecoming feature. Across the hall the ever-popular Everett bar is presided over by a sideburn- ed bartender. In addition to a full social agenda, the house has shown outstanding athletic prowess, capturing both the Barry-Wat- mough Swimming Plaque and the Uni- versity Major Sports Trophy. The Ever- ett quintet also placed first in the John Hay basketball league. Weekly open houses held by Resident Fellow Frank Durand and his wife were always heavily attended a welcome break from a night of concentrated study. Due to the extraordinary size of the house, Ever- ett has two resident fellows, the other be- ing the well-known Herr Schnerr of the Department of Modern Languages. While Everett's team didn't win the In- ter-House Council's snow sculpture con- test, the members felt the effor; worihwhile merely for the enjoyment of making it. A Christmas party for underprivileged EVERETT children was another highlight of the win- ter season. HOUSE MOST MEMBERS of Jameson house recovered from the effects of Resident Fellow Elmer Blistein's Christmas Punch in time to enjoy Festivi des at Spring Weekend plan- ned by social chairman Mer- dll Ruch, '63. In fact, all of Professor Blistein's open houses were memorable, and became so popular that mem- bers began showing up with dates every week. Occasional verbal battles between the house's members of the Con- servative League and the Free Thinkers Society made the open houses even more lively, One memorable event on the year's social calendar was the Jameson Jungle Party. An. other was described by one Jamesonite as The stag party to end all stag parties. At the left, the Jameson Twist is demonstrated. In the world of sports Jame- son fielded teams for all intra- 175 JAMESON HOUSE mural activities including a hockey team composed of members from Jameson and Everett. Members are proud of Jameson's reputation of being a well-inte- grated independent unit. Although 507 of the membership is Fresh- man, the House is close-knit and can count on good support for pro- jects, such as the I.H.C. snow sculpture contest. Below, five Ja- mesonites give conclusive evidence that Jameson is a serious, study- minded house. MEAD HOUSE ACCORDING 6 most members of Mead House, its best characteristic is that of be- ing extremely close-knit. Many of the resi- dents are seniors who have roomed togeth- er for four years. While Mead holds as many parties as most dormitories, the major- ity of them are closed to afford house resi- dents a measure of quiet and informality. The advantages of this type of party are depicted by members and their dates at the left and below. Highly-rated on the social agenda of the vear was a mixer held with Conn. College. Members of Mead House joined for the common cause at Winter Weekend to produce the largest bear on campus for the snow sculpture contest. Nead residents made good use of their skillful snow artistry that weekend to impress their imported dates. Dave Wood led the house as President for the last se- mester, with Al Borden aiding as Vice President. Parties were supervised by Al Erickson, social chairman. 177 ESCAPISM AND DIVERSION were the themes of Poland's social year. Exclusive atmos- phere pervaded the Homecoming festivities, as, on Saturday night, a sophisticated dance band enter- tained Polanders and their dates. In February, Po- land brought the renowned Four Apostles to create the environment of the Peppermint Lounge on a Saturday night. This local twist band pro- duced much excitement but not much money, as the Brown masses performed suitable undulations? The academic year was memorable for the well-at- tended dorm dinner as Chaplin Baldwin elucidated on the problem of fall-out shelters and discouraged a stubborn group of Polanders from considering the bar as the potential center of shelter activities. POLAND HOUSE RESIDENT FELLOWS IN 1952, after the construction of the Wriston Quadrangle, former President Wriston remarked that a student's education is received not only in the classroom and the library but from all the contacts with his fellows and his daily surround- ings. It was this idea that initiated the Resident Fellow program. Since then the program has expand- ed from eight to twenty-three members who reside with their families in the student residences. Bridging the gap between students and faculty, the resident fellow encourages and stimulates intellec- tual and cultural interests on an informal basis. Meeting frequently at open houses, the students and the resident fellow enjoy the opportunity to get together and share experiences over a glass of sherry, a cup of coffee, and other mysterious liquids shown at left in nameless bottles. At top left, Asso- ciate Professor Feinberg, in Hope College, airs his views at an open house. L AN 180 WEEKLY LUNCHEON where students and faculty hear guest speakers talk on a variety of subjects, is a major function in the Resident Fel- low program. Among the broad range of speakers provided by Head Resident Fellow Professor Kuc- era, members of the American Field Staff, visiting lecturers, and clergy spoke at the luncheon. Dr. Ruben Frodin of the ASFS in Nigeria spoke on Freedom in Africa, and Robert Morse explained The Split-Level Fallout Shelter. On a more local level, Mr. George Troy, literary editor of the Provi- dence Journal, spoke on The Author vs. Publisher Today, and the Rev. Howard Olsen outlined the problems of encouraging morality in youth. The Longtable dinner has also become a weekly insti- tution, where faculty members and students enjoy a leisurely meal and conversation, In the President's dining room, Sr. Quinones Cabove right, Presi- dent of the Puerto Rican Senate, listens to ques- tions prior to his speech in which he asserted that his territory's present status aids in serving as a token of goodwill between the United States and Latin America. Mr. Loughton-Smith entertains in the adjoining photo with some impromptu guitar music. Herr Schnerr ponders a difficult philosophi- cal quiestion, eying the carafe for inspiration. TOWER CLUB INSPIRED by the tolling of the bell in Carrie Tower, sev- eral students gathered in the West Lounge of Faunce House in 1937, and formed the Tower Club under the leadership of Rusty Rosen, who is now a liquor dealer in downtown Provi- dence. The Tower Club of Brown University, as it prefers to be called, is oriented mainly in a social direction, giving parties every Saturday evening in its suite atop the Tete-a-Tete. This year's festivities included twist parties, featuring such bands as the Inmates, and Motif Parties or masquerade balls. At one ball with a political theme, a spirited member turned up dis- guised as Lumumba. According to Vice-President Heywood Greenberg, U.H. likes us. The Tower Club members do not derive all their pleasure from indoor activities, for they hold stag and co-ed outings and barbeques at the Brown Reservation, Tower Club's intellectual activities are based on lectures by various faculty members held in the President's dining room. Included in this year's program were Professor Krause, C. J. Ducasse, and Deann Watts. RESIDENTIAL SEMINAR i A e P THE QUESTION asked most often of members of the Residential Seminar in Christ- ianity is What is the Residential Seminar? Sponsored by the University Christian As- socation, the Seminar is an in-residence, ex- tra-curricular study, worship, and discussion program of inquiry into authentic selfhood and Christianity. It is composed of, a group of students from widely divergent backgrounds, beliefs, and interests. As varied as it was, the group members had one thing in common: an intense desire to come to grips with them- selves, their beliefs, and their roles in society. The Seminar gave them an opportunity to explore in depth their personal existence in relation to their education, the demands of modern life, and the claims of a Christian Faith. The Seminar, however, was not an ivory tower in which the timid student could find refuge from conflict and the outside world. On the contrary, the entire program of read- ing, discussion, service, worship, and com- munity, was designed to bring the members into contact with conflicting ideas and values. The close relationship between the students of Stites House and Bates House provided a background for numerous informal bull-ses- sions. The pictures on the opposite page show Mr. Newcomer, Ctop left one of the discussion leaders just after one of the gather- ings, at which Ted Heyk, Faith Schaffrath, Bill Mohn, and Sarah Newton are pictured. Among other activities, the 1961 Seminar read a wide variety of books ranging from Tillich, Buber, and Dostoicvsky, to Salinger's. Catcher in the Rye. On the average, the group spent about one month on each work, introducing past selections to enrich discus- sion. On this page, Bill Wood and Mr. New- comer are seen participating in a discussion, and David Sommers Ctop left points an ac- cusing finger during a hashing-over of The Sickness Unto Death, by Kierkegaard. Hope- fully, out of such activities, the members come to some informed conclusions about their lives and beliefs. 183 Brothers returning, rugs rolled out, draperies hung, and the furniture arranged in the traditional manner. Once again, the fraternity undergoes the process of re- birth and now lives vigorously: the flag is hung out, the halls are filled with laughter, music drifts out of the rooms, conversation fills the lounge and the bar, and the television room contains silent viewers shrouded in semi- darkness. Suntanned brothers bring exciting tales of sum- mer experiences, and renewed enthusiasm courses through the fraternal halls. Pledges are introduced to the ritual of scutting to prepare them for the rite of initiation; house duties are meted out. The first shock of refectory food is met, and only a few succumb. For the first weeks, railing in the dining room approaches the proportions of mutiny; plates and glasses suffer from the brothers' loss of temper, but gradually intestinal acclimatization leads to capitulation. Relief is sought: Knight's zeroes in by radio dispatch, con- vertible tops are lowered, and the brothers speed off to Wheaton, Wellesley, and Smith through the balmy au- tumn breezes of the kaleidoscopic landscape. The first home game signals the start of the social season. The cur- rently popular rock and roll bands resound rhythmically throughout the lighted quadrangle. In the comfortable afternoon, T-shirted touch-football players dig their spiked shoes into the trampled field and defend the athletic prow- ess of their house. Others go down to the Seekonk to cap- ture the exhilirating speed of the stiff fall breezes on out- stretched sails; the dinghy leans threateningly, the girl on the windward rail squeals anxiously, and the cold spray finds its way down collars and into sleeves. FRATERNITIES The pledges are initiated in time for Homecoming, when they wear their pins proudly. A committee is formed, sug- gestions submitted, and construction of an ingenious poster proceeds through the night to completion in the last few hours before noon on Friday. Imported dates arrive in time for the cocktail party, transportation is arranged and a large group finds itself down at the Biltmore for dinner. The spectators roar their approval down from the heights of the stands as the team presses on to victory in the fading light of the afternoon. That evening the walls of the quad throb to the beat of the victory chant; some couples seck the se- clusion of the darkened bar; others twist frantically to the thythm of omnipresent rock and roll bands. The snows come, and skiing parties depart for extended weekends on the slopes of Vermont and New Hampshire. Alumni return for the annual party, while Winter Weekend is climaxed by the IFC ball at the Biltmore. Despite the heavy snow, the Garden Room is packed; so are the elevators. Everyone recovers and reassembles the next afternoon for cocktails in front of the warming fire while the pianist plays soft background music. After-dinner discussions with faculty members and visiting lecturers provide the basis for enthusiastic conversations. Spirited brothers cheer the house hockey team in the intramural competition in the cavernous Meehan rink, and the whole house turns out for the fresh- men and varsity games. The sweet air of approaching summer rouses the wander- lust of the house, and the brothers prepare for the bacchan- ial rites of Spring Weekend which are survived by some miracle and never chronicled herein, L, BT, o P P e HH A Drinking is generally reserved for oc- casions and does not necessarily imply ex- cessive consumption. A rainy afternoon or evening is enough to justify sitting around playing cards, watching television, or hold- ing general bull sessions with their con- comitant bibulous activity. Many of the world's problems have been solved on such occasions. Important events, calling for greater impressiveness, more sophisti- cated conduct and an increase of ego, yield high red and black label indices. The re- sults vary from a loss of sleep to a start- ling reconfirmation of faith in the elixir of life. Some try tocommunicate this feeling intelligibly; others merely glow with inner satisfaction, allowing the rest to deduce their condition. The smoke, noise, and confusion of Saturday night's battle with all its twists have departed by the next noon with its divine proof that life must continue even if hell does follow the hi- balls. Those of stronger constitutions and greater resolution take off to the fields for baseball and other games. Moments of true charity and real personal reward come at Christmas parties given for underprivil- edged children. Santa gives out exciting toys, and invariably the hosts enjoy the party as much as the guests. SINCE its formal institution in 1836 as the first fraternity on the Brown campus, Alpha Delta Phi traditionaly has striven to main- tain and expand upon those ele- ments of social, literary, and intel- lectual development that are char- acterized in the fraternity charter. Under the leadership of president George Gurney, this program has been promoted in every way pos- sible. That the forty-four members M 4 CARLEY T 0 CORCORAN JR. J. W, ROBBINS 4 M. LUDLOW, 3L ABERNATHY D K BURKE 0. v. sussLIN B.RMATZKE JR JH.ALLEN R N CADWGAN of the Brunonian chapter have participated fully in fraternity af- fairs can be seen in last year's vic- tory in the annual Spring Sing and first place in the Homecom- ing poster contest. The benefits of the fraternity are not purely social in nature. An outside-speak- er program has brought members of various faculties to the frater- nity several times a semester. THEN TOO, . wellorganized literary program has helped to develop those apti- tudes for writing and understanding that are painfully inadequate in a significant portion of today's undergraduates. The interest of the alumni in the chapter attests to the implanting of the goals of the fraternity in its members. This inter- est has taken the form of an Alumni As- sociation that has contributed not only such things as a distinctive chapter room, a library, a recreation room, and new lounge furnishings, but an undergraduate scholar- ship program as well. This program has made it possible for many undergraduate members to pursue their goals unhampered by financial strain. BETA Theta Pi, which has the distinction of being the only house on campus to give its name to both a gate and a parking lot, was founded in 1839 at Miami Uni- versity in Oxford, Ohio. Since that time it has grown into one of the largest, general fraternities in the Unit- ed States and Canada. Socially, Kappa Chapter has been prominent on the campus, this year as always. The cock- tail parties on all major weekends featuring jazz star Sonny Casso have been the most popular, while those featuring such artists as the Raiders, Billy Poore, Dick Carusso, and a feriale bass player have also been success- ful. Brother Gene Pfeiffer has won Beta immortality by being the first member to have his date win the annual Hogan Award, presented at the Christmas Party, two out of three years. Beta also has the distinction of being the initiator of the twist among the fraternities at Brown. Beta's favorite girls' schools are Skidmore, Finch, Whea- ton, and Pembroke. The Betas have always participated in intramural athletics with the most notable success in recent years coming in hockey. Leading skaters in- clude Archie Frost, Bob Wachter, and Gene Pfeiffer, a former varsity player. In varsity athletics, Beta's most notable contributions have been Bart Mosser, captain of the wrestling team and Dave Westfall and Wes Tho- mas, two other grapplers, Beta, each year, contributes to various civic and charitable organizations. An Urchin Christmas Party for underpriviledged children is an annual affair, and a popular one for both members and guests alike. The Brown chapter of Beta Theta Pi has always been known for its chapter autonomy. They have kept their membership relatively small but solid. B.H.MOSSER R C. WACHTER J W ROBINSON F A HEALY D P WESTFALL A SUTTLE JR L G HARRINGTON B. A MCNELL R. 6. PINKHAM R.L.DILLMEIER D. L. HAUFLAIRE P C. KENNEY WW.PRICEIRI uren J. R.SNYDER J. M.BRINES C. P. KNUDSEN L. J. HOFFMAN K.G .ROESER F. ANTIFONARIO C. M.CUTCLIFFE DELTA KAPPA EPSILON WHILE. the old Deke house behind the English department was being torn down to clear the area of debris for the construction of the new library annex, good times continued as usual at the new house, which, according to the Dean's office seemed to be in as good shape as the old one. Undaunted by such admonitions, the Dekes maintained a whirling social schedule, relieving academic pressure on the weekends, which somehow always slid through Sundays into the new week. The Twist found its way to the Deke house and only added to the Friday evening frenzy, as indicated by accompanying photographs. As can also be seen, the weekend gatherings were graced with the- traditional melodies of the national fraternity. Even out at Meehan Rink, in be- tween halves, the sounds of DKE were unfailingly present. The hockey team, strong throughout the season, vied with Kappa Sigma for leader- ship in the Spartan league. Snyder, Cutcliffe, and Garces are pictured as triumvirate on the opposite page, obviously exulted over the last vic- tory. ENORMITY is 2 current characteristic of Delta Phi, which expanded rapidly in the last two years to a membership of over sixty. Every campus activity from athletics to the Brown Daily Herald has a representative from D-Phi. A large pledge class completed the renovation of the party room to compliment last vear's new bar. Brother Hetzel donated a pool table to further enhance the physical plant The festivity room and bar were put 1o good use on the weekends during the informal parties that usually featured a local band of some re- nown, much noise and little talent. Highlights of the social aspect of D Phi included a par ents weekend with a football game, cocktail party, dinner and evening dance. The house Christmas party was also a success with a jolly Santa handing out gifts. The social season was only one of Delta Phi's many activities this year. Several brothers volunteered to aid in painting the home of a needy Providence fami- lv and the house also provided a Christmas Party for needy children in the area. The brothers also made plans to adopt a Vietnamese boy. 194 C A SPCAGNA o ezEL . M T REID R K STEWART 5.8 ELLIOTT B A LENONTE LT mioeRsoN W C oRINIER M5 NUELLER P MOLAUGHLIN A ERnST o m BRANT WA STEWAT 5 5 KRAWEC H D PETER 3R SoUTH 0.8 COSTIOAN A 80 cLamuan 4 BerEzERO w3 MaLsEY J E bERAY Ac BT 13 FERAYORM 09 LHeRaRT VT sMiTH M E MENEZES 0 R BARTLETT 3 oavs R C TREMAGLIO L E BUOSELN RV MIRON B RYNKE T MONTIGEL AL SHULL w5 GooowIn L SPENCE A w BUEHLER WILLIAM F REICHENBACH JOHN R ERICKSON o san JOSEPH KOVALCHICK STEPHEN E RICE PHILIP 4 KUCZWA GLADDING LUKE F MAYER JR. RROSS KETCHUM CARMINE V DEGENNARO WENCELL R DAVIDSON WALTER PARRS GARY L NELL JOHN 8 HOOVER FREDERICK SOMMER KNOWLTON J O'REILLY JOHN R D'ENTREMONT. IN THE FALL the Beta Chi Chap- ter of Delta Tau Delta, one of the larg- est houses on campus, welcomed back numerous alumni at Homecoming by winning second place for the display on the patio. It depicted Bruno bowl- ing down a ten-tiger football team in a truly professional fashion. Under president San Gladding, '62, parents' weekend was tried for the first time by the Delts. It was well received by brothers and parents alike, and it pro- mises to be an annual institution. Fri- day night speakers for these two week- ends were President Keeney and Mr. Doebler of the Admissions Depart- ment. Winter brought Christmas weekend, including a party for a group of underpriviledged children. GEORGE ESPINOSA JEFFREY N SIEGEL GEORUE B CAMPEN DAVID C.CHISHOLN JAMES T GUEHRING JOHN P HARENSKI IFC WEEKEND was a hit with the Delts. The annual Jun- gle Party in the spring was topped only by an unbelievable Spring Weekend. But it was not only socially that the Delts had such a successful year. The scholastic average was raised putting the house as one of the highest on campus, and a promising pledge class was taken. Officers for the year were: San Gladding, '62, president; Mike Mayer 62, vice-president; Bob Staudte, 62, treasurer; Bob Keith, '62, rushing chairman; and Tom Giddings, '63 and Kim Sherman, '63, secretaries. 197 B D MOORE J D SHALL J B MILLER 4T HALVERSON AT HIATT W.CRUIKSHANK JR 0 L EDGERLY J E MARSHALL il S A MCKENNEY coBiLLo W E GEORGE WITHOUT SECRET handshake or motto, Delta Upsilon is the only non-secret fraternity on campus. Ori- ginally established as a society for literary advancement over a hundred years ago, DU proposes as its by-word, Tustice Our Motto. The exact nature of the present foundations has not been determined in a detailed manner; it is surmised, however, that they are relatively solid, for they have held firm under the gyrating im- pact of many twist parties. The brothers also expended their bountiful energy in other ways; they won the title in their intramural hockey league. During the evening parties, the bartenders smiled with warm hospitality for their guests, who in turn smiled at the art work hanging over the bar, only to find themselves hung over the next morning. R F BERGERCN JR C W HALLY L G HANELIN E G OCHSNER T M.W. RUTHERFORD c.P BB TWISTING whether in togas at the annual Toga Party, or in more traditional wear, was the hands-down favorite at popular DU parties. And there were plenty of them, since DU was always well above the academic danger point. Variety, however, was not lacking, for the brothers held an outdoor barbeque prior to the homecoming game. Some brothers did social work and the house as a whle contributed to the neighborhood welfare by holding their annual Christ- mas party for orphans and underpriviledged children in Providence. DELTA UPSILON . KAPPA SIGMA, one of the largest national fraternities in the United States, was founded at the University of Virginia in 1869. And since then it has grown rapidly, now encompassing one hun- dred thirty-three active chapters both in Canada and the United States. Kappa Sigma incorporated on the Brown campus in 1898. At present Beta Alpha with its fifty-one mem- bers is represented in almost all campus activities. In taking a large pledge class last year such extra- curricular diversity was maintained. Moreover, Kappa Sigma has also displayed a high scholastic standing, placing second and fourth among the seventeen fraternities for the academic year 1960- 61. In addition to its routine activities during the past year, Kappa Sigma has been involved in a house restoration program which has resulted in the complete redecoration and mahogany-panelling of one of its basement rooms, thus providing another area of social recreation for its members. Socially, the Kappa Sigma calendar was bright- ened by two weekends, apart from the usual Home- coming and Spring festivals. At Christmas a for- mal dinner and dance was held, highlighted by STEPHEN R W BRAY GILBERT S MESSING JAMES G VALEO PETE DAVIDSON JR GOADON R WEIMILLER R GILBERT GOERING DAYTON T CARR JoHN C EUSTIS JAMES C DEVENEY LARRY 4 R UaviD A GATBUS JAN R MOYER G DEWEY MOSER WALTEK E NORAM MICMAEL B XIRSCHNER PETER C RAMSEY Santa's presentation of appropriate gifts to all the brothers. During the spring of every year Kappa Sigma has traditionally invited parents, friends, and faculty to its Minstrel Show, which is more or less a warm-up for the Inter-fraternity Sing, a favorite event during Spring Weekend. Members of Kappa Sigma are not only encouraged to reflect the character of the fraternity itsclf, but also to develop their own individual fortes. The national Chapter offers two cash awards annually to the individuals who display the greatest academic achievement. Academically, socially, and athletically Kappa Sigma feels that is a strong contributor to the atmosphere and environ- ment of Brown University. JAMES R OLSEN JAY STEVENS STEPHEN 5 HOSENFELD DAVID M BLATCHFORD GERGE A SCHWEICKERT JR WALTER DONNARUWA , STEPHEN P SANDEL GHARLES N HIGOINS ANDREW J DEAN TOW ruie 201 0 AMERON A.Y. SIMONIAN L H NNIE N.J.SPIEZIO T F GOTTFRIED F J BALICKI viex aEsocAT senrrany ' LEARY S. D. WOLANSKE J. W. FREEMAN JR. W. J. LAPINSKI J. P TADDIKEN J. J. LEONARD P A. HANSEN J.J. LAVINO JR. HORNYAK S F CUMMINGS M. F WHITWORTH R.E. GIANNI P W. FERGUSON D A BRYNIA z - W. A.SAVICKI JR. R P CROWELL S.F. BILLEY I KALEPS A T MATTEO D. R. LUND J. E.ANDREWS R. J. BRINDLE E. T VERDERBER D. A BAIL LAMBDA CHI ALPHA AC GUINNESS PARTICIPATION in many exira curricular fields was Lambda Chi's forte this year. The traditional repre- sentation in varsity and intramural athletics, long a Lambda Chi tradi- tion, continued strong. John Sherman, Colby Cameron and Jim Leonard captained the soccer, hockey and baseball teams to successful seasons, while Captain-elect Nick Spiezio and Most Valuable Player Parker Cro- well give hope for a more promising football season next year. John Horn- yak led the junior class with ambition and drive toward a successful Spring Weekend. Lambda Chis were found in the Brown Key, on WBRU, ac- companying the Glee Club, as proc- tors, headwaiters and library assistants. A small but ambitious pledge class built a new bar and renovated the house's party facilities. The Christmas formal and Santa Gianni's Christ- mas party for the voungsters were singular successes. Yet, in spite of such an active vear in so many fields, Lambda Chi's greatest satisfaction came from William Potter's outstanding leadership and the chapter's stand on the national faternity's restrictive clauses. Dis- cussion of the clause had been wide- spread for some time, but Potter directed and organized the efforts which culminated in the chapter's local autonomy resolution, and continued at the national convention. X REORIENTATION 1.c been the theme of the Rhode Island Alpha chapter of Phi Delta Theta, as this year brought to the surface several changes which had been mulled over during the past few years. Revision of several of their by-laws has revitalized the chapter and effected initial efforts in a cultural affairs program, a pledging program, and an alumni magazine. The old hazing program has been discontinued, yet other issues involving the national, such as the annual community ser- vice duy, are still subscribed to. Great strides have been taken in the form of a magazine entitled Sword and Shield which the Alpha chapter has produced on its own, for the benefit of the alumni. The cul- tural affairs program has been successful in bringing such interesting speakers as Pro- fessor Thomas Sanders to the house. Last fall, Professor Sanders, of the Religious Stud- ies Department, talked about the new sexual ethic of America. A discussion of the tech- nological race with Russia was offered by Dr. Julian Gibbs, and later, Canon Crocker spoke on racial and religious discrimination. On the lighter side, the chapter built a giant cannon for its Iomecoming display, after great consultation among the house engi- neers. Unfortunately, when the time came for the cannon to work, the tiger obstinately re- fused to be shot out of the cannon. The Christmas formal was a traditional success; and then there were those twisting parties that got a little out of hand . . . 204 BILL BERTSCH TONY THOMPSON HARVEY HANSEN BILL RYAN JEFF STRITAR GEORGE FOSS III BILL BATTY ED ENNIS JEFF PALMER BOB SALTER DEAN ABELON RUS FORMIDONI FRANK ANTONSANTI BRUCE MC INTYRE KERRY KAMM CLIFF RICE ED WISE JON BOUTELLE DAVE FIELD BILL CROSBIE TOM DRAPER BILL GRYSON MIKE BELL ANDY KILEY PHI GAMMA DELTA LIBERALIZATION and modernity seemed to be the key to the improve- ment noticed in Phi Gamma Delta this year. Under the capable leader- ship of President William Ryan and his New Frontier Policy, the House experienced one of the best years it has had in some time due to greater participation and cohesion among the brothers. Evidence of this fact was partially revealed in the redecora- tion of the party room and dining room. The pictures on these pages express to some extent the camaraderie which prevades Phi Gam's parties, particularly the legendary Fiji Island and Purple Owl parties, but the better facilities for social life represent only one of several activities which have 207 made the environs of the Fiji brother more interesting. In keeping with the new Policy the House has continued to provide a stimulating environment in the aca- demic lives of the brothers and has obtained such luminaries as Aldous Huxley, and Judge William MacKen- zie of the Rhode Island Superior Court, as well as Dean Charles Watts to speak on national, community and school topics. In addition, the house recently initiated a scholarship com- mittee to create a more academic atmosphere through more conducive study arrangements as well as through the addition of more books to its al- ready extensive library of over six hundred volumes. PHI KAPPA PSI G. A. DAVIDSON J. W. MC MAHON R. R GREEN J. T GWYNNE J. MORAIS R.A. LYDEN D. E. BACKMAN C. J CAPERONIS D. M. DONNELLY R.E. MCKENNA B. N. CUMMINGS . F V. ALBEE W. T. CEDERHOLM R.J. TALBOT G.M.EGGERT W. T. HUNTRESS R. M.SIMON E.D. WEDLOCK UR. A, E.BOOTH Il 5, s e A 45' i L4 4 PHI KAPPA PSI Fraternity was founded at Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1852. The Rhode Island Alpha has held its charter at Brown since 1902, and at the present, has forty members. Academically, for the past two semesters, Phi Kappa Psi has shown a marked improvement, and is now looking forward to spending its second consecutive semester with its average- above the all fraternity average. In addition to its academic prowess during the past year, Phi Psi has been a strong competitor on the intramural athletic fields. Last Spring at the University Intramural Track meet, the house placed second among the fraternities and third in the meet. The softball team lost only one game enroute to winning the University championship and was undefeated during the short season held last fall. With a five and zero recorg, the Phi Psi touch football team captured the fraternity championship and went on to win the University Championship. Much of the success of all its intramural teams is due to John Danstrom, who was voted the outstanding intramural athlete last fall. Phi Psi was also well repre- sented on the varsity athletic fields. There is John McMahon, a starting halfback on the soccer team; Gerry Eggert, a lineman on the football team; Ralph Sterer, who served as captain of the cross country team last fall; Albert Booth, a quartermiler on the track team; and Robert McKenna, one of Brown's top golfers. As always, many alumni attended the cocktail parties after the home football games, and there was no evidence of dispelled spirits despite the results of the games. Many parents attended the reception held on Parents Weekend after the Rhode Island game. Homecoming weekend got off to a good start with Phi Psi's first theme party of the semester. The setting was the Roaring-Twenties, and the brothers wore double-breasted suits while their dates dressed as flappers. Just before Christmas Vacation, the annual Christmas Party was held, and champagne and shrimp helped all to get into the holiday spirit. The brothers eagerly awaited the arrival of warm weather and the clambake and beach parties. Pl LAMBDA PHI Eodhmis i 7 ADDITIONAL EFFORTS wecre expended this year to destroy any lingering idea in the minds of Brown undergraduates that Pi Lamb is an academic apartment house. A new feature of the revitalized social program, ably headed by Larry Gross, was a farm party held at the Brodsky estate in the Fall. In addition, the house twisted to four guitars and a drum, writhed to the gunfire of a gangster motif, and in sum had a bang-up time. In spite of this apparent gay abandonment, however, Pi Lambda Phi continued to maintain its high level of academic achieve- ment, receiving the scholastic trophy for yet another season. The brothers were also active in numerous athletic and campus activities, ran king third in inter- fraternity athletics. Brother Al Ashman was president of the Cammarian Club and Jon Fish and Bill Zisson were named second team all-Ivy in Soccer. Participation in University affairs did not curtail, however, Pi Lamb's own intrahouse activity. The Sunday afternoon Giant game consistently packed the Tube room, while the patented roof-ball-game threatened to become a recognized college sport. Pi Lambs engaged in other pastimes but most were effectively stamped out by Ken Kahn, who served as Rex, before house damage became excessive. The surrounding pictures show the brothers engaged in one of their favorite weekend pastimes. S. A KNIZNKICK M.EPSTEIN J. H. FISH W.J. ZISSON K. R KAHN S.J RICHMAN C. V. BROWN R E ELSON J. A.CASSEL A J RO ,. F D.TRICKEY L N.GOLDRING R P FRIED M.D SHAPIRO S.G. FRIEDMAN A. ASHMAN M.L.STEIN R H PAUL L.M.SMALL C.J. NEGARO W.E.LADIN JR. D. V. ALPER M. NEZER R. J. ROSEN J. 1 GERARD R. L. HIRSCH H. M CHAPMAN JR A L.STANZLER M W. MAINEN D. B. DANZER LR e A BOEHM M RASKIND J A SMALL J. D. TUNICK C. R.SCHULKIN E.M DRUY R. B.STRASBERG E J. BRODSKY E. K. KAPLAN M. H. DIAMOND Baagpeante Wy Rogedit e TN T AR o . M, i S - : P S P81 UPSILON P 5. 0avIS C.R GRIGG PP HUFFARD il P W.QILSON 1 M P C MANN S W JENKS S W EASTON D.G DEMPSEY UNDER the fine leadership of Peter Gilson the Psi Upsilon house upheld its fine tradition of a wholesome balance of social and academic en- deavors. The house athletic record was not what had been hoped for this fall, and as a matter of fact, the Brown varsity record was the only con- solation offered. But a brighter Spring was ex- pected. As usual the banana failed to net first prize for the homecoming display, but mention was given to the amount of effort expended along this line. Several brothers participated in varsity athletics. Peter Gilson defended the nets for the soccer team while Paul Huffard joined the mermen for his third year. This spring Phil Davis captained the golf team and was assisted by Bill Porter as man- ager. In extracurricular fields John Simpson led the Jab- berwocks between appearances on stage and Paul Huffard headed the I.LF.C. A new phenomenon, the after-dinner spcaker, was met with much favorable response this fall. Forrest McDonald spoke on Sam- uel Insull, and Edward Richards, of Edwards and Angel law firm, expounded on the virtues of a career in law. The high point of the addresses was Brother Dempsey's enlightening talk on the Arap- esh Indians. As usual the boat on'Spring Weekend was a highlight for the house. With its new chap- ter in Puerto Rico the house is broadening its outlook on the point of pledging Bill Harriss' step- brother Csee picture. There was some question as to who played a better guitar. PSI1 UPSILON THE DIRECTION that Sigma Chi has taken this year has been more extroverted than in the past, both within the fabric of life at Brown and in relation to its National Fraternity. A general fraternity decision was made in June to abolish the restrictive membership clause in its constitution, This clause was particularly superficial in the Brown atmosphere. The decision has drawn the Brown chapter closer o its National; it was felt that a strong rapport with the National is worthwhile for a fraternity here at Brown. Within the University itself, Sigma Chi has been diversified and positive, as is evidenced, for example, by six proctors, varsity athletes in a wide range of sports including the track captaincy and the presidencies of the Debating Union and the Glee Club in 1962-63. A new table and chair set, utilized largely by the card-playing brothers, has been placed in the library and a new green carpet now appears in the pine panclled lounge, Downstairs the main bar and two of the smaller rooms have been e vitalized by recent pledge-class efforts. Sigma Chi's 1960-61 IFC championship hockey team was back in contention again this vear with four out of six starters returning, as was its championship All College Wrestling Team with heavyweight champion Tris Coffin back. The traditional Sigma Chi Sweetheart Weekend along with Brown's three major week ends highlighted the social season, well planned by Joe King and Dick Keine. A great deal has been said this year about the Future of fraternities at Brown. Many Sioma Chi alumni gathered at Biown on Homecoming Weekend in response to a campaien completed successtully by Alumni Chairman Blaine Lauson; their response to the fraternity position was wise, helpful and positive. SIGMA CHlI ROBERT LEAvER HENRY SAVAGE JAMES MARKEL DANEL FUNK PRENTISS DE JESUS WALTER UNDA RICHARD WALLACE SCOTT LAMENTROUT H. BLANE Larson C MARTIN LAWYER 1 CHARLES v CHARLES JACKSON FREDAIC HELBIG ROBERT BIDWELL JR HOWARD JOHNSON RICHARD. SIMONS ALBERT VANDAM ARNOLD TULP JOHN MILES ROBERT PHILLIPS JEFFREY CASOW. THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY of the Delta Lambda chapter of Sigma Nu found the Delta Lambdas an eminently active group of individuals in all facets of campus life. Increased activity in alumni contact occasioned by the Golden Anni- versary was culminated in Homecoming festivities when many alumni returned for a banquet and for renewal of old acquaintances. A brief view of the surroundings revealed the maintenance of a tradition of prominence by the brothers. They placed third in academics for the spring term and retired the Fales Trophy for com- munity service by winning it for the third consecutive time, and were on their way to winning it again. The Brown Key, headed by Lew Feldstein, found five more brothers among the membership; sophomore President Jim Knoll and Chair- man Dan Gelfman of the 25th Reunion Fund Gift add to list of Delta Lambda's leaders. SIGMA NU D.T WHEATON D.C ROLLENHAGEN 1 G coumLn W 9 TINGUE G.J PATTERSON 5.5 MAYNE J.PSNALL R L MARTIN P A SCHAEDEL F M DRISCOLL J P BEIL 217 W. K. BRATTON J. A ROY A B FRUHAUF W J ASP J.J. MONNES J. W. MISSUD 11l D.R.REDDING K. A. COHEN J. T GUNZELMAN M.T FITZ GIBEON R.J. MYLES B H LYLE F R MICHEL D. K. RUMSEY F A PARKER R G. CASHION M. W. PRIOR A N.COHEN W.B ALLEN D. K. NELSON J. D. OGDEN D I. NELSON PRESENTATION of the Lampher Cup and a second place standing in the academic role of Brown's seventeen fraternities crowned the 1961-62 season for the Zeta charge of Theta Delta Chi. The fifty brothers of Theta Delt highlighted their most suc- cessful social season in several years with the introduction of the twisting Raiders to campus cir- cles while other parties included themes such as Christmas, Hallo- ween, New Years and Bavaria. Enjoyed by all was the first annual Homecoming Banquet held at the Biltmore. In addition to victory in the Lampher Cup competition, Theta Delt also boasted outstand- ing participants in many varsity sports, including basketball cap- tain Mike Cingiser and baseball co-captain Bob Auchv. Senior Class President Bob Myles headed a contingent of brothers who rep- resented Theta Delt in such cam- pus activities as the Brown Key, Class Cabinets, Sock and Buskin and WBRU. With diversity as the keynote Theta Delta Chi a- gain retained her position of es- teem on the fraternity scene at Brown. PHILANTHROPY was the keynote this year at Zeta Psi, whose parties were swamped by a large number of guests. The traditional party with IHap Snow and his Whirlwinds substantiated the popularity of rock and roll on the campus, causing the more misanthropic brothers to retire for the season to the usual quiet combos mixed with intimate acquaintances. The? house was also generous enough to have the lounge redecorated and improved immeasurably. The spiritual was not neglected, for the chapter room was also redone. Unfortunately, the fraternity's hopes for a large home- coming display were dimmed by the loss of their flagpole, occasioned by the antics of an intoxicated independent who tried to fly, so they paid modest tribute to the prostrate pole by attaching a pillowcase flag to the truncated remainder. This loss was compounded by the interruption of the TV team's activities by a flame-out; there were some enduring members, however, who survived the holocaust. The Zetes also extended their spirit of giving to the intramural football field where they managed to donate victory to their opponents in four out of five games. Not convinced that they had expended their humanistic spirit, the brothers passed a social tax and held a lavish urchin party prior to their Christmas festivity. Only the stern parietal rules of the Uni- versity prevented the juvenile guests from joining their adoptive elders for the ZETA PSI R. L ZIESMER T. M. RHINE B.E. MILLER B.R KING J. M. GARDNER T.J. THELIN K. W, MILLER remaining portion of the evening. The brothers had ac- quired the flavor of the parental role, and whether or not this was extended throughout the rest of the even- ing was an undiscussed issue, like many other matters of taste. Under the encouraging cye of ther scutmast- ers, the pledges magnanimously picked up sticks and stones for the University at Aldrich-Dexter field; no broken bones were reported. The house had their por- traits sketched in a humorous fashion, while an equally humorous food fight obliterated the sketches on the dining room walls with masses of stringy spaghetti satu- rated with sauce. Despite the diligent cleaning afterward, the dining room was locked for a week, much to the sor- row of the pledge class. With the aid of the Providence Young Socialists Club, some reactionary, war-monger- ing, capitalistic conservatives were detected in the re- cesses of the house and quickly sent to the John Birch Society Correctional Institute for psvchoanalytic therapy and Liberal guidance. Also discovered by the world at large were two enterprising brothers who co-authored a popular volume entitled High School Doctor. Pub. lished by Plavbov' with a foreword by Dr. Keeney on the hereditary effects of fallout, the book formed a s qual to Dr. Kinsey's studies, with case histories from Lhe Zeta Psi files. ZETA PSI UNDERGRADUATES As naive freshmen they cntered Brown to be confronted with a puzzling, exciting and challenging new environment. They stood in line to receive papers. They stood in line and were deceived into buying beanies and their enlightening BDH. They were tested; they were lec- tured; they were probed. And after their first battle with the bureaucracy, they were registered. Suddenly the freedom from accustomed restrictions filled them with a heady sense of importance; for they were among the chosen few attend- ing an lvy League School. Freshmen week ended with the beginning of their social life at college as they had their first mixer with those famous 'Brokers. As upper classmen returned, the lowly freshmen were informed that they would soon be forgotten, that along with their new-found liberty they were faced with hard work, and anonymity. They were deprived of their cars and The Girl Back Ilome, and in return received several strange roommates and a note explaining why they had gotten more than the expected one. They were shocked by the spirit and the spirits prevalent among upper classmen. They were dis- appointed that the sophomores were able to retain the Brown Jug and delighted that that group was composed of human beings and tyrannical demagogues using every opportunity to enjoy themselves at the expense of freshmen. During the entire first year they gradually became aware of the complexities of their new existence. The social life and their academic challenges combined to transform them into self-proclaimed erudite sophomores. Instead, what they reached was the nadir of their college career, Thev arrived Freshman Week anticipating the meet- ing of all the lovely newcomers at Pembroke, expecting to impress each and everyone of them after all, they were upperclassmen. It was not quite that easy, however. On the athletic field they began by definding their Brown Jug title with the freshmen and went on to prove themselves as valuable contributors in all phases of varsity sports. They settled down to their studies, hoping desperatelv to avoid that sophomoric slump. Some of them dropped out and others fumbled through their disappointments to continue on to their junior year. The original bewilderment and excitement of college was now the challenge of their final years at Brown. Their adolescent knowledge faded as they began to ponder fu- tures marriage, graduate school, jobs, and even Uncle Sam. Juniors showed themselves to be culture scekers by contracting Ray Charles for Spring Weekend. In April they chose by default their officers for the coming year. They looked toward the senior year apprehensively but also with expectation. As seniors they controlled many of the student activities, but they had to prepare long exhaustive hours for their comprehensives. Seniors began to accept reality, but two- thirds of them began by choosing graduate school to put off entry into the tumultuous world or 10 escape carrying a gun for Uncle Sam in a new jungle. At the end of their senior vear they lcft their ivy-tower to enter into some new en. vironment far from this sheltered hill. FRESHMEN FRESHMAN WEEK COMPLETED, the class of '65 began finding responsibilities in unsuspected places. Besides having to make beds and to keep closets in an enterable state, Freshmen suddenly realized that someone had to do last week's laundry and that talkative roommates and friends are not conducive to study, and needed to be tactfully quieted along with the boisterous games of hockey frequently played in the halls. Money, food, and girls began to fall into a new perspective in a context with dorm parties, resident fellow open houses, and hours of homework. The enthusiasm over extracurricular activities brightened and then dis- appeared as the overwhelming array of teams and organizations vying for membership was viewed. In spite of the temptations and the ease of doing nothing, most of the freshmen studiously applied themselves to learning at a seemingly prodigious rate. Mid-semester marks shocked them even more than the teachers who claimed that the grades were meaningless paperwork. About the same time, the majority of the class belatedly realized that the Cam- marian Club had chosen twenty of the forty members of the class cabinet which, in turn, had chosen the class officers. As the result of this process Donald Pearson and Tim Witsman were elected President and Secretary- Treasurer, respectively. OFFICIALLY RECOGNIZED by the coun- cils of the great and represented by dutifully chosen personages, the freshmen gradually lost their old identities. They substituted new forms manifested by a more comprehensive perspective of life, a certain daily intenseness, and a will to relax whenever the opportunity presented itself. Undergraduate personalities are in a constant state of change. If one observes the freshmen closely, he realizes that Brown has speeded and guided that process, and in so doing has begun to turn them into thinking human beings as well as Brown men. Class of 1964 THE MEN OF 64, as in their freshman year, were led by Jim Knoll, president, and Secretary- treasurer Geoff Sherwood. The class cabinet, head- ed by Knoll and Sherwood, planned and executed a variety of worth-while events during the course of the year. Although their first efforts late in the second semester of freshman year - a joint project with the IFC to revise the fraternity rushing pro- cedures - were rendered fruitless by the admin- istration, the class leaders soon started out on a line of more successful endeavors. On Parents' Weekend in mid-October, thev sponsored a concert which proved to be the highlight of the parents' stay on the Hill. The annual class dinner rounded out the more cultural aspect of the class's activities; and the sophomores sponsored several mixers, the most pop ular of which was held at Smith College in early March. THE YEAR OF RESPONSIBILITY arrived for the Class of 1963, as President John Hornyak, Secretary-treasurer Dick Muir, and the class council of thirty mem- bers conducted the numerous activities which are customarily relegated to the Jun- ior Class. Spring Weekend, the largest of their problems, was conducted with a spe- cial flavor, since the hosts had chosen Ray Charles to entertain a large crowd on Fri- day night. Also, through the efforts of the council, the newsletter was used more fre- quently and effectively during the year. But it was difficult to keep the class together, as it had been discovered in the past two years. Each junior was cutting his own path, and new academic vistas of personal opportunity were laid before the juniors as they delved into their particular academ- ic disciplines. Class of 1963 ENERGETICALLY LED by President Bobby Myles, the of- ficers of the class of 1962 effectively fulfilled the major tasks of a Senior Class. They established a solid foundation for the 25th Reunion Fund and brought the class together in its final vear, publishing a series of newsletters covering class activities. Also, with the advice of the alumni office, a group of enthusiastic seniors sought to gain more alumni support and intcrest in Brown through a program of undergraduate contact with alumni across the country. Bobby Myles had the wholehearted assis- tance of Vice-President Nick Angell, Secretary Ken Middleton, and Treasurer Denny Fitzgerald in coordinating the work. The class council left Brown with a sense of accomplishment, having participated in and affected the changing scene on College Hill. 230 . B Y i i 0 - 0 le L W. K. Alderman S. R. Alsop A. A. Anderson J. E. Andes N. J. Angell B. K. An R. L. Ashcom E. J. Ashley A. Ashman W. J. Asp J. H. Auld C. H. Ayn D. E. Backman D. P. Baldwin F. J. Balicki I. T. Ball M. S. Barrett M. P. Barron N. B. Barstow J. Bassler AS A FORMAL ORGANIZATION, the Class of '62 has been, to put it char- itably, unobtrusive. But this is not the true measure of a class. The character of our class, as with all others, is manifested primarily in the quality of its daily existence: in dormitory and fraternity life; within the broad framework of scholastic activity, in and out of the classroom; and in extra-curricular pursuits, either at billiards, on the football field, or on the newspaper. It is in these aspects of college life, where famil- iarity lends them a deceptive unobtrusiveness, that each class expresses itself. We will not remember our class in terms of any single event; we will recall it rather as a central element in our four year's experience at Brown, the focus of thousands of minor events stimulating or frustrating, agonizing or rewarding which, despite their individual indistinctness, leave a strong total impression. This is the essence of the college experience. It registers the impact of new ideas, of unfamil- iar attitudes and places, and of stringent demands upon us to adjust our emotions and extend our intellects to a new reality. And within this experience lies the mean- ing of the class, because it was most of all with each other that we reacted to the university and struggled with it. Each of us saw his failure and triumphs reflected in those of his classmates. Yet beyond our common condition there was the stimulation of diversity: all of the re- gions and most of the ideologies of the country are represented in the Class of '62; encounters with unfamiliar attitutes, assumptions and allegiances became frequent, if not commonplace. As much can be said for any class. What distinguishes the Class of '62 is its particular situation and its response to it. As freshmen we faced a continually im- proving university; we were characterized as the best class ever. Whether or not our actions have borne out this assertion, we have endeavored to match the pace of the university, to complement the efforts of the faculty and the administration in developing high and meaningful academic standards. This was our historical role; one of a succession of classes in the continuity of Brown University. From the perspective of each class member, our course of four years has been one of unusual opportunity, of stimulation and challenges, and, we hope, of accom- plishment. C. A. Banks R. B. Bowen 233 R. T. Barhe C. Bedottc R. M. Bedrosian B. N. Behn R. O. Bent M. D. Berardinelli J. Berland C. W. Berry R. M. Blackwell F. G. Blakel N. P. Bowsher C. Bradfor K. B. Biller A. T. Billowitz R. F. Bird K. R. Blackman 2349 MENTAL GROWTH and development of the students at Brown is paralleled by the physical growth of their academic com- munity, In a seemingly unconscious Ffash- ion, buildings appear at various locations throughout the city and are integrated as outposts of the expanding campus. Con- tinuously, labor and materials are gradu- ally combined to fulfill the architects' sketches, and their creations are finally given their recognized positions in the com- munity by the dedication ceremonies. The apparent facility of this continual growth obscures the planning and the effort of the administration, just as the graduation cere- mony is a mere external expression of the students development and accomplish- ments during their college careers. The units recently completed and those under construction bring a fresh current of stim- uli to the community, functioning both as an inspiration for and as the means to self- improvement and development. As the calibre of the students at Brown has im- proved remarkably, so has the phvsical plant in order that the development of gifts and intelligence might not be stunted by a lack of equipment. As the buildings graduate from their embryonic stages of scaffolding and solidifying concrete, so the Brown students emerge from the protective shell of the university, intellectually honed and tempered. R. A. Boardman R. C. Boger L. J. Boos T. N. Bosack W. E. Boutelle G. L. Bowen W. K.Bratton J. J. Brenckle B. B. Brown C. V. Brown J. S. Brown D. M. Brockway J. D. Burke W. G. Burke, Jr. C. A. Burkhardt K. Bush, Jr. R. W. Buxton J. A. Calhou R. A. Cappalli W. J. Carlos D. M. Carr G. D. Carr T. M. Carson J. W. Casd 236 N. W. Chace L. J. Charney L. A. Chasin M. R. Chmielewski .. Campagna II J. Caplan A. Chutjian D. B. Casey J. A. Cassel M. P. Cingiser R. D. City N. E. Clark R. H. Clarke H. G. Coe T. D. Coffin K. S. Cohen L : EXPANSION of Brown's facilities co- 2 N , ' m ? incided with the consolidation of the cam- : NN pus when the George V. Meehan Audi N Y torium was constructed at Aldrich-Dexter Ficld. The new building has increased the . University's leisure and recreational facil- N ities, while it has brought its athletic plant NN closer to the College Green. The building - was designed for a dual purpose. It pro- vides the setting not only for all home 2 hockey games and other skating cvents but also for certain convocations and other aca- demic occasions, such as commencement Cif the weather nccessitates a change. Permanent seating is provided by multi- colored rows of some two thousand one hundred seats, and temporary seating and standing room brings the total capacity to five thousand when the rink's concrete floor is utilized. The rink, larger than the one at Madison Square Garden, encloses an area of some seventeen thousand square feet and contains over ten miles of brine- bearing pipes. The circular dome is sup- e i YT ported sixty-two feet above the ice by an impressive spider-web of delicately tapered girders and steel rings. : R RER -5 i This is the setting for exciting Varsity 4 'v Ay hockey games, informal fraternity rivalries, H : and svmpathetic skating lessons from one's 3 3 girlfriend. As a place to meet one's date, - Meehan Auditorium is providing strong competition for the John Hay, and some students are now seen toting skates instecad of books during the evening. TR S, L.5.Coleman, Jr. R. A. Conklin C. D. Conley J. H. Cooper R.D.Coopersmith J. J. Corbett J. R. Craggs D. C. Croll, Jr. R. E. Culver W.H.Cummings,Jr. R.E. Dollase L. J. Dalva T. H. Davies W. R. Dealey A. J. Dean C. V. De Gennaro R. A. Delellis J. R. De Sibour . 0. Cordory J. T. Cox f. E. Damian W. R. Davidson J. S. Dietz R. L. Dillmeier L. J. Dipaola R. Di Pippo K. E. Dobson D. B. Doe J. J. Donovan W. O. Dow D. T. Drury B. C. Dunham B. G. Easterson R. F. Ebin G. H. Efinger R. E. Elson D. C. Erinakes S. A. Ern: G. Espinosa M. Farnum R. Feldgarden R. D. Feldn T. M. Edwards M. Fink P. S. Fishell W. Fishman D. J. Fitzgerald M. T. FitzGibbon J. Flatteau B. Fleming T. Fleron S. M. Foote P. J. Forrest A. M. Forster G. E. Foss A, Franaszek D. 1. Frank H. J. Frank P. M. Frank J. J. Frankel D. R. Friary 242 L1 W. E. Friedel S. G. Friedman S.L. Freedman G. N. Freema M. B. French S. G. Friedman A. Q. Frost S. H. Fuehre! B. Gordon T. F. Gottfried HARBINGER of the new physical science complex is the new Heavy Engineering Laboratory, the first of three buildings in a quadrangle which will eventually contain all the physics and engineering departments that are presently scattered about in various structures ranging from Sayles Hall to a carriage house. The lab- oratory is the latest addition to the facilities of Brown's venerable Engineering Department, which was estab- lished in 1849 during the administration of President Wayland. The civil engineering course offered at that time was the third oldest engineering course of college A. J. Grace level in the United States. The Heavy Engineering Laboratory will house the teaching and research facili- ties that require heavy and vibrationor shockpro- ducing equipment. By concentrating such apparatus in a single building designed specifically to handle it, the engineers will gain much more efficient control of noise and vibration than is now possible. Since Brown is the center for the study of the new concept of plastic failure, the laboratory's equipment includes such items as static testing appartus used in structure and materials research; wind tunnels and shock tubes used in aero- dynamics study; and turbines and internal combustion engines used in the field of thermodynamics and heater G. L. Graham power. Also located in the Enginecring Laboratory will be the Division's main machine shop and smaller shops A. R. Grallq, Jr. for student use, for woodworking, and for metal working and welding. With two floors enclosing an area of some fifty thousand square feet, the building is heated and air-conditioned by an experimental heat pump which operates on the basic principle of a refrigerator. C. Graham D. S. Gregory A. Griffiths H. F. Graves J. T. Gwynne R. Giasi D. E. Gelfman A. Gdrces J. S. Garrison . S. Gladding B. D. Goettel M. D. Goldfield L. N. Goldring C. W. Hally E. R. Halsband H. C. Hansen J. S. Hayden, Jr. J. F. Heckman IlI A. C. Hensel, Jr. SESQUICENTENNIAL celebrations at Brown saw the construction of the Biology Department's first large struc- ture, Arnold Laboratory; now with the approach of the bicentennial year, the second large addition to the depart- ment's facilities is in the last stages of construction. Both the expansion of Brown and the underestimated growth of the biological field has created a pressing need for a Life Sciences complex consisting of five buildings. The Biology Laboratory represents the first step toward this architectural goal. The new building will house the teach- ing and research laboratories of Bio- chemistry, Physiology, Microbiology and Plant Physiclogy. It will have four stories and a basement, and a fifth story entirely occupied by the ma- chinery for air-conditioning, ventilation of fume-hoods, and animal rooms, emergency generators and similar pur- poses. In the basement will be a mod- ern stock room and supply department for the whole department as well as some animal rooms and a shop. The four teaching and research floors will provide space for the program of eight Faculey members with their teaching and research assistants, their gradu- ate students, and their post-doctoral fellows. This impressive edifice is svmbolic of both the rising hopes of Brown and Brown's rising to its as- pirations and commitments to the in- tellectual community. J. A. Herrmann, Jr. S. V. Hershenow R. D. Herstoff J. H. Higgins, Il C. N. Higgins, Jr. R. E. Hillman W. Himsworth, Jr. H. D. Hinman C. M. Hoffman 2495 A. T. Hoke J. D. Holbrook A. M. Honer R. P. Howard J. W. Howes V. Hudzikiewicz G. Javor D. C. Johnson H. G. Jones S. G. Josep ' - K. R. Kahn H. Kashner L. Katzner D. B. Kauffm J. S. Irving, Jr. P. N. Jarvinen R. P. Hugheslll J. M. Jaffe IN THE WINTER everyone's bundled up against the cold, hur- rying from classes to the library or back to his room. Work is inter- rupted only by a glance out the window and a curse for the Pro- vidence slush and cold. But in the Spring, the Green again becomes alive with brightly colored dresses and little children playing. Again people stop to talk or walk more slowly than before, and we wonder at the concentration of the boy on the bench. . B. Keenan, Jr. A. M. Keith P. C. Kenney R. R. Ketchum B. F. Kilgore R. D. Klarsch R. D. Kniss R. Kostelanetz 247 'N. M. Kurk R. P. Lambert E. W. Lampe J. K. Lane R. H. Lane W. J. Lapinski T. F. Lasko D. A. Lavallee 249 J. J. Lavino, Jr. K. G. Layer, Jr. R. A. LeBlanc J. J. Leibowitz J. J. Lenahan J. J. Leonard, Jr. R. G. Levy E. W. Lewis Il R. M. Lo Presti R. A. Luken, Jr. N. Mac Innis, Jr. G. A. Ma P. J. Makanna J. G. Mancuso F. L. Markella H. S. Mar J. H. Lifland G. I. Lindsay Il L. E. Little P. L. Liv R. W. Lochhead R. J. Lodewick, Jr. V. M. Lo Lordo G. Lombardo K. W. Martin D. J. Mc Intosh L. F. Mayer, Jr. D. Mc Laughlin P. L. Mc Cormick T. N. McGrew P. D. Mc Laughlin T. B. Mc Mullen Hmw AT THE UNIVERSITY perhaps more than anywhere else, moments of quiet, moments of complete inactivity are made valuable by their rarity, and the ability to unwind for just a few minutes in the middle of a full day will remain as one of the important lessons learned in our years here. R. B. Merson W. R. Meyer B. E. Miller J. E. Minard B. D. Moore J. Morais J. E. Morris J. W. Missud IlI J. J. Monnes J. F. Morse Il B. R. Morton C. F. Moslener A SENSE OF HUMOR pproaching irreverence has alwavs been one of the few common demoninators among University undergraduates. Our laughter at the ribald inference or incisive wit of our friends is the pervading sound everywhere, and the three untouchable subjects of polite con- versation-religion, politics and sex-com- prise almost completelv the source of this general good humor. Perhaps it is because the nature of the University community leads one to take both himself and his work t00 seriously that e search out and exploit the ridiculous in evervthing and evervene 253 8. H. Mosser N. D. Mauer R. J. Myles M. A. Naidoff C. Newberry Il T. W. Noy . C. Ochsner D. A. O'Connell K. V. O'Leary J. R. Olsen G. W. Oviatt G. A.Padmore, Ji 254 A. J. Parker A. M. Parkman B. V. Pasquele J. E. Payne H. D. Peiter E. A. Petronio G. Peirce C. H. Pinksto W. B. Rawls Jr. R. P. Rhinehart D. K. Richardson P. C. Ring S. J. Richman S. M. Pizer J. P. Pooler W. C. Potter G. J. Pouliot . B. Poulson S. D. Poulter R. L. Prout T. H. Quill Jr. R. C. Ripley J. W. Robbins J. D. Roessner B. A. Rogers S. S. Rosenfeld A. J. Rosenthal S. R. Rosenthal A. H. Rosenus A. M. Roth D. M. R . M. j ' ; . . ' ust T. M. Rutherford W. J. Ryan S. P. Sandell M. S. Saper S. Sargissor P. Schaffer P. A. Shuster P. J. Schwart J. Sedgewick J. A. Shapiro M. L. Shapir J. R. Snyder P. S. Souder Jr. J. R. South C. A. Spacagna J. D. Spiewak B. P. Stark J. F. Stauffer F. D. Stauts R. G. Staudte Jr. L. B. Steele . B. Shattuck P. G. Shea J. B. Sherman R. B. Simms . J. Simpson K. C. Skinner Jr. M. E. Slayton Z. H. Smith s sk L e M. L. Stein S. H. Steinberg R. P. Steinen E. A. Stettner H. J. Stevens Il J. Strasser J. A. Stritar R. W. Suhr W. B. Swarts C. S. Switzer F. R. Szumigala J. P. Taddike A. D. Taylor A. L. Thomas W. J. Tingue J. S. Tomasini L B L. Tannerbaum D. L. Tashjian R. D. Traub A. R. Thompson J. L. Thompson D. I. Trickey G. H. Troughton A. Turco Jr. P. H. Turley W. J. Tweed J. R. Tyldesley D. A. Van Loan 260 THE JON is the day-to-day center of dorm activities. Freshmen are quick to discover its potential as a play- ground, prison and torture chamber. Its showers serve as a quick remedy for the weekender who comes in too late and too loud. On occasion, the dorm lavatory is converted to living quarters, complete with bed, desk and pictures on the wall-all of this usually much to the surprise and horror of the owner of the furnishings. However, its place- ment among the rooms of those trying to cope with the rigors of learning re- quires that the usual condition be one of decorum. Towels mustnt be snap- ped in echo chambers. A. R. Vernaglia W. A. Victor G. M. Vischak R. C. Wachter R. C. Wade W. G. Waldau G. H. Wales Jr. H. F. Whiton D. W. Willia K. H. Walker R. H. Wallace L. F. Willems R. H. Wills T. L. Whang C. J. White 1l D. F. Weeks J. C. Wilson R. M. Wilson T. H. Wilson S. D. Wolanske S. J. Wolin J. Wong D. F. Wood W. L. Wood C. L. Woodruff N. I. Zager F. G. Ziegler P. A. Zoschke COMMENCEMENT THE CLASS OF 62 was the 194th to be graduated from Brown. The first commencement was held for a lone student, William Rogers. This year our class numbered approximately 500. It is probably true that Graduation Day always brings to mind visions of mortar boards and gowns, hot June days and slow processions, forgotten speeches and impressive - diplomas. Yet, it was more than just this. For many of us it was the end of our academic careers. For some of us, alas, it was the last time we marched down the Hill. But for all of us, it was the final act in the most fascinating vears of our lives. Commencement activities began a week prior to the actual graduation cere- mony. These activities, mostly social in nature, embraced the annual produc- tion of the Sock and Buskin Alumni, the Class Dinner and the Senior Dance. But Commencement Week also witnes- sed a great influx of parents and alumni, the latter assembling for class reunions and participation in the graduation ceremony itself. The Alumni Dinner, schedule during Commencement Week, was addressed, as is customary, by the President of the University. Thus, Com- mencement Week was a sort of souffle of dances, dinners, teas, plavs, religious services, and orations all designed to somehow amuse and inspire the sons of Brown. Early on Graduation Day, alarmingly dean and creatly over dressed, we gathered on the College Green o form the snake- like procession. Led by the alumni and University officers and accompanied by the disconcerting strains of pompous marches, we sauntered through Van Wickle Gates and then down the Hill to the First Baptist Meeting House. Following a brief service in that storied edifice, we struggled breathlessly back, hounded still by the music, to join the graduate students filing out of Savles Hall. There, before our intredibly proud parents, we marched forward to receive our degrces. Somehow. all the disappointments, all the tears, all the Frantic cramming of four years, seemed worth it. 263 ofFice service co. NJscuooL s orrice ADVERTISEMENTS EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK On the preceding pages the LIBER has tried to present a comprehensive reflection of the year at Brown. The book has been designed with an aim toward interesting, factual and, hopefully, humorous reading and viewing by the en- tire. undergraduate body. Some important vestiges of the class book concept remain, however, and the Class of 1962 has received more extensive coverage than the others, whose volumes will come. But there were gaps, and we felt they should be filled. Thus the EDITOR'S NOTE- BOOK, originated by the staff of the '59 LIBER, has been revived this year. A collection of anecdotes, facts, legends and unfounded, but generally accepted, rumor, it is a compilation of Brown lore which fits into no sec- tion , but must be included here if the LIBER is to be complete. One thing we do remember about 1958-59 is that it rained almost every day Freshman Week. A schedule of dashing through the rain to exams was the best of the previews we had of the four years ahead. It was the last of the speakers during the orientation period who finally decided that there is no such thing as orientation. By the third week of our stay at Brown we had eaten just about every variety of fare we ever would at the Refectory. PROVIDENCE Charlie Baldwin arrived with us in the Fall of 58, and like us, was accosted by an irate V.C., who wanted to know where his beanie was. Some of us lost beanies during Freshman Week and had to replace them with an I Jost my beanie sign. But the beanies weren't lost; we saw most of them again on upper- classmen at the Pembroke mixer when the week ended. A fried chicken dinner at the Refectory and a sudden epidemic of food poisoning were successfully linked by Andrews House investigators. When a freshman, speaking with President Keeney at a Maxcy Hall cocktail party, defined success as the accum- ulation of wealth, he found himself suddenly sitting alone and very aware of his new environment. Among the first to terminate careers at Brown suddenly were the two Caswell funsters who didn't hear the alarm, It's B.C.! during a water bomb fight. Dr. Keeney rounded the corner just in time to catch a bag of water and a glimpse of the bombers. Dismissed. ot o e J68 ALDERMAN, William Kimbark. A.B.-Sc.B. Eco- nomics-Electrical Engineering. Born: March 22, 1940. Pre- pared at New Trier Township High School. Swimming Freshman, Varsity. Address: 804 Tower Road, Winnetka, Illinois, ALLEN, Richard Day. AB Psychology. Bon: May 21, 1940. Prepared at Worcester Academy. Brown Daily IHerald. Football Varsity, HHead Manager. Address: 220 Rochambeau Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. ALSOP, Stuart Reid. A.B. History. Born: August 31, 1940. Prepared at Glastonbury High School. Brown Daily Herald Circulation Manager. Address: 1240 Hope- well Road, South Glastonbury, Connecticut, ANDERSON, Arthur Alan. Sc.B.-A.B. Chemistry Honors. Born: April 16, 1939. Prepared at Ottawa Hills High School. Dean's List, College Scholar Program. Cam- marian Club Corresponding Secretary, Vigilance Com- mittee Secretary-Treasurer, Chemistry Club President, Class Secretary, Class Cabinet, Resident Advisor, 25th Re- union Fund. Sailing Freshman. Sigma Chi President, Vice President. Address: Macatawa Park, Holland, Michi- gan. ANDES, John Eugene. A.B. Philosophy. Born: July 16, 1940. Prepared at Manheim Township High School. Swimming Freshman. Goddard House Treasurer, Zeta Psi. Address: 1221 Hunsicker Road, Lancaster, Pennsyl- vania, z ANGELL, Nicholas Justin. A.B. Political Science. Born: January 8, 1940. Prepared at Staples High School. NROTC, Class Vice President, Class Cabinet, Glee Club, Brown Charities Drive, Newman Club. Pi Lambda Phi Secretary, Marshall. Address: 22 Crawford Road, West- port, Connecticut, THE SYMBOL OF A 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 goes out of style. billhouse It 135 THAYER STREET I DISTINCTIVE MEN'S APPAREL ANNIS, Brian Kitfield.Sc.B. Physics. Born: August 25, 1940. Prepared at McDonogh School. Dean's List. Phy- sics Club Secretary. Lacrosse Freshman. Address: Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania. ASHCOM, Robert Lewis. A.B. American Literature. Born: June 13, 1940. Prepared at Albermarle High School. Brown Review Book Review Editor, Brownbrokers, Glee Club. Address: Kirklea, vy, Virginia. ASHLEY, Edward John. A.B. History. Born: April 28, 1940. Prepared at Snowden Township High School. Charles Evans Hughes Scholarship, IBM Corporation Scholar. Dean's List. Soccer Freshman, Crew Varsity, Captain. Address: Box 604, Fort Ashby, West Virginia. ASHMAN, Allan. AB. History Honors. Born: July 3, 1940. Prepared at Brookline, Massachusetts. Dean's List, Sphinx Club. Cammarian Club President, Student Court Associate Justice, Brown Youth Guidance, Proctor. Track Freshman and Varsity. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 144 Jordan Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. ASP, Walter .leffry. A.B. Economics. Born: May 30, 1940. Prepared at Technical High School. Dean's List. Class Cabinet. Cross Country Freshman, Track CFresh- man. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 212 Birchland Avenue, Springfield, Massachusetts. AULD, John H. AB. English Literature. Prepared at Perkiomen Preparatory School Outing Club CExecutive Board. Soccer Freshman, Varsity, Lacrosse, Rugby Var- sityD. Address: 201 Waterman Street, Providence, Rhode Island. COLLEGE LAUNDERERS and CLEANSERS, Inc. 223-A Thayer Street BELLE 8 LESTER Where the smile is only surpassed by the service. AYMOND, Charles Henry. AB. Political Science. Born: June 23, 1941. Prepared at Jackson High School. Deans List, Independent Studies. Zeta Psi Secretary, Treasurer. Address: 1912 Fourth Street, Jackson, Michi- gan. BAKER, Bruce Lee. AB. Psychology Honors. Born: Tuly 23, 1940. Prepared at Belmont High School. Dean's List. Brown Debating Union, Brown Youth Guidance CAs- sociate Board. Crew Freshman, Varsity, Senior Man- ager . Archibald House Address: 35 Douglas Road, Bel mont, Massachusetts. BACKMAN, David Emil. AB. Political Science. Born: May 17, 1940. Prepared at Beverly High School. Brown Youth Guidance. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 37 Liv- ingstone Avenue, Beverly, Massachusetts. BALICKI, Francis John. AB DPocholooy Bon: De cember 61, 1939. Prepared at Williston Academy. Brown Daily Herald, Newman Club. Football Freshman, Base- ball Freshman. Lambda Chi SecretaryD. Address: 15 Caylord Street, Chicopee, Massachusetts. BALL, lan Traquair. AB. Spanish Literature. Born: March 23, 1940. Prepared at Choate School Brown Youth Guidance Executive Board. Address: 97 West 2nd Street, Chillicothe, Ohio. BANKS, Charles Augustus, Jr. A.B. Internation- 4l Relations. NROTC. Tootball Freshman and Varsity, Lacrosse Club President, Captain. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 110 Beverly Place, Greensboro, North Carolina. BARBA, Ronald Thomas. AB. Philosophy. Bon: Novemiber 24 1940, Prepared at Hamden Iligh School Address: 57 Grand View Avenue, Hamden, Connecticut. BARRETT, Michael Stephen. AB Chemishy Born: March 1941 Peepared ot New london Tl School. Dean's List. Orchestra, Student String Ensemble, Brown Youth Cuidance. Cross Country Treshmand Address: 1132 Hartford Turnpike, Waterford, Connecticut. BARRON, Michael Peter. A.B. Psychology. Born: October 19 1939 Prepared ar Phillips Exeter Academy Dean's List. Brown Band, UCA, Yacht Club. Address: 666 Main Street, Watertown, Massachusetts. BARSTOW, Norman Brooke. AB. Art. Born: November 12, 1940, Prepared at Mount Hermon School. NROTC. Glee Club Personnel Manager, Bruinaires. La- crosse Club. Delta Upsilon. Address: River Bend Drive, Mystic, Connecticut. BASSLER, John Peter. AB. Economics. Born: April 16, 1940. Prepared at Cranston High School. Corporation Scholar, Caesar Misch Award for Excellence in German. German Club President, Vice President, Treasurer, UCA, Manning Chapel Choir. Tennis Team Freshman, Varsity. Address: 43 Highland Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. BAUM, George Newell. ScB. Engineering. Born: November 18, 1940. Prepared at Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School. University Scholarship. Brown Engincering Society, Freshman Week Committee, Cammarian Club, Brown Rowing Association Secretary. Crew Freshman, Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 6844 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda, Maryland. BEDROSIAN, Richard Michael. A.B. English Lit- erature. Born: April 9, 1940. Prepared at Winooski Iigh School. Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance CAssociate Board, Sock and Buskin. Address: 161 East Allen Street, Winooski, Vermont. BEDOTTO, Carmine. A.B. Biology Honors. Bormn: July 12, 1940. Prepared at Allentown High School. Dean's List. Beta Theta Pi Treasurer. Address: 1936 Ocean Drive, Hallandale, Florida. BEHN, Barry Nelson. AL Classics. Born: Septem- ber 12, 1940. Prepared at Fairhaven Iligh School. Classics Club. Basketball Freshman, Varsity, Tennis Freshman, Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 89 Lexington Ave- nue, Dartmouth, Massachusetts. BEHRMAN, Richard Walter. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: May 14, 1940. Prepared at Naugatuck High School. NROTC. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 77 Dunn Avenue, Nau- gatuck, Connecticut. When Proximity Counts! Lans Warehouse Co. 17 Seekonk Street at Wayland Square 57th year! Complete Moving Service! Modern Storage Providence Agents: North American Van Lines World Wide Movers BENT, Robert Oliver. AB ScB. EconomicsChem istry. Born: May 17, 1961. Prepared at Jackson Memorial High School. Address: 3053 Perry Drive N. W., Canton 8, Ohio. BERARDINELLI, Michael Denis. A.B.-Sc.B. Elec- trical Engineering. Born: July 5, 1950. Prepared at Living- ston High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Engi- neering Society. Crew Freshman. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 24 Mohawk Road, Short Hills, New Jersey. BERLAND, Joseph. A.B. Economics. Born: March 7, 1940. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Brown Daily Herald, Tower Club. Football Freshman, Manager. Address: 5 Sealy Drive, Lawrence, New York. BILLER, Harry Burt. AB. Psychology Honors. Born: October 30, 1940. Prepared at Providence Country Day. Francis Wayland Scholar. Deans List. Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 84 Benevolent Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BIRD, Richard Frank. AB. Political Science. Bormn: April 22, 1940. Prepared at Ambler High School. Political Science Club. Address: 60 Rieff Mill Road, Ambler, Penn- sylvania. BLACKMAN, Kenneth Robert. AB. Economics Honors. Born: May 19, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Francis Wayland Scholar. Dean's List. Brown Band Manager, Ski Club, Inter House Council Treasurer, Secretary, Cammarian Club. Tennis Freshman, Varsity. Address: 241 Fifth Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BLACKWELL, Richard Manning. AB. Economics Honors. Born: March 21, 1940. Prepared at Union High School. Dean's List. Brown Band, Brown Charities Drive. Address: 267 Holly Hill Mountainside, New Jersey. Ya got mono was the gleeful cry that greeted most stu- dents new to the infirmary. Pretty often they were right. Music Professor Ron Nelson's Christmas Story, written for a concert at the Central Baptist Church in Providence, became a best seller and an annual favorite at the Glee Club Christmas performance. Lew Cady was the fastest gun in the west quad. Almost no one remembers the days of the tug-o-war in the field of mud anymore. Ccontinued on page 271 BLAKELOCK, FrederickGoodrich.A.E Economics. Born: ebruary 17, 1940, Prepared at Babylon High School. NROTC. Class Cabinet. Baseball Freshmen, Rifle Team Freshman, Bugby. Sigma Nu. Address: Belmont Lake State Park, Babylon, New York. BLASBALG, Arnold Leo. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 30, 1940. Prepared at Classical High School. University Scholarship. Iillel, Political Science .Club, French Club. Address: 166 Gallatin Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BOARDMAN, Richard Allison. AB. French. Born: June 18, 1940, Dean's List, Degre Superieur from the Sorbonne. Sock and Buskin, Class Cabinet, French Club. Alpha Beta Phi. Address: 276 East Chester Street, Valley Stream, New York. BOGER, Robert Carl. ScB. Applied Mathematics. Born: March 29, 1940. Prepared at North Providence High School. Dean's List. Brown Daily Herald Photographer. Address: 1 Maplecrest Avenue, North Providence, Rhode Island. BOOS, Louis Jotham. A.B. Psychology. Born: July 13, 1940. Prepared at Pittsfield High School. Naval Scho- larship. NROTC. Marching Band, Brown Charities Drive Executive Committee, Class Council, Spring Weekend Committee, Brunavians, Military Ball Committee. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 722 North Street, Pittsfield, Massachu- setts. BOSACK, Theodore Nicholas. A.B. Psychology. Born: December 19, 1940. Prepared at Hartford Public High School. National Sloan Foundation Scholarship. New- man Club. Mead House President. Address: 18 Hamil- ton Street, Hartford, Connecticut. BOUTELLE, William Eugene, Jr. A.B. Psychol- ogy. Born: November 11, 1940. Brown Yacht Club, Pho- tography Club, Glee Club. Address: R. D. Pittstown, New Jersey. BOWEN, James, M. AB. Philosophy Honors. Born: INovember 19, 1940. Prepared at Leonia High School. Brown University Scholarship. Address: East Harriet Ave- nue, Palisades Park, New Jersey. BOWEN, Ralph B., Jr. AB Classics. Born: June 12, 1940. Prepared at North Kingstown High School. Veterans Memorial Scholarship, Rhode Island Department of Education Scholarship. Newman Club, Convocational Chotr, University Glee Club Soloist, Classics Club Vice President. Address: 310 First Avenue, East Greenwich, Rhode Island. BOWSHER, Nelson Prentice Il. A.B. Economics. Born: December 19, 1940. Prepared at University School. Dean's List. Brown Daily Herald Supplement Editor, Sphinx. Soccer Freshman, Varsity, Manager. Pi Delia Epsilon. Address: 13601 Cormere Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio. BRADFORD, Carl. ScB. Flectrical Engineering. Born: June 18, 1940. Prepared at Bloom Township High School. Student Court CAssociate Justice, AIEE, IREE, Brown Engineering Society. Address: 1526 Wallace Street, Chicago Heights, Illinois. BRATTION, W. Kevin. ScB Chemistry Honors, Born: December 5, 1940. Prepared at Belmont High School. National Merit Scholar. Dean's List. Newman Club, Chemistry Club, Class Council, Student Court. Track Freshman, Varsity, Soccer Varsity. Theta Delta Chi Vice President, Treasurer. Address: 40 Warwick Road, Belmont, Massachusetts. BRENCKLE, Joseph John, Jr. AB. Russian Liter ature Honors. Born: June 24, 1940. Prepared at Classi- cal High School. Undergraduate Assistant in Slavic De- partment, Dean's List. Liber Brunensis Sales Staff, New- man Club, Russian Club President. Address: 409 Eaton Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BROCKWAY, David McKenna, Jr. AE Rus sian Studies. Born: May 5, 1940. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. Clarkson Abel Collins Award, Dean's List. Brown Key, Brunavians President, NROTC Battalion Commander. Basketball Freshman, Captain, Varsity, Track Varsity. Theta Delta Chi Secretary. Address: Scarsdale Manor South, Scarsdale, New York. BROWN, Burton Blair, Jr. A.B. Mathematics-Ec- onomics. Born: November 24, 1940. Prepared at Summit High School. Brown Charities Drive. Hockey Freshman, Varsity, Manager. Address: 172 Division Avenue, Sum- mit, New Jersey. BROWN, Christopher Van Dyck. AB. Ilisiory Honors. Born: April 21, 1940. Prepared at Loomis Acad- emy. Dean's List. Student Court Justice, Sphinx Club, Cammarian Club CStudent Affairs Committee, Student Organizations Committee, South Littlefield Resident Ad- visor. Pi Lambda Phi Secretary. Address: 8 Sunny Dale Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. THE WAYLAND MANOR HOTEL Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge 500 Angell Street at Wayland Square ANTHONY'S DRUG STORE Since 1895 Angell and Thayer Streets GAspee -2512 BROWN, John Seely. A.B. Mathematics-Physics. Born: April 24, 1940. Prepared at Williston Academy. Dean's List. Radio Club, Outing Club, Newman Club. Mead House Culture Chairman, Address: IHamilton, New York. BURKE, James Donald. AB. Art History. Born: February 22, 1939. Prepared at South Salem High School. WBRU, Outing Club. Delta Tau Delta Social Chairman. Address: 1945 East Nob Hill Street S.E., Salem, Oregon. BURKHARDT, Clyde Arnold L. AB. Internation- al Relations. Prepared at The Cheshire Academy. Address: Southington, Connecticut. BUSH, Kimberly, Jr. AB. History. Born: Septem- ber 9, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Andover Academy. Glee Club, UCA Howard Volunteers. Soccer Freshman. Delta Upsilon Rush Chairman. Address: 9 Glen Avon Drive, Riverside, Connecticut. BUXTON, Ralph Walling. A.B: Political Science. Prepared at Northeast High School. University Scholar- ship. Brown Charities Drive Secretary, Political Sci- ence Club, Debating Union. Address: 300 33rd Avenue, N.E., St. Petersburg, Florida. CALHOUN, John Alfred. AB. American Litera- ture. Born: December 1, 1939. Prepared at Swarthmore High School. Glee Club Publicity Manager, Class Treas- urer, Cammarian Club. Delta Upsilon Secretary. Address: 214 Elm Avenue, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. CAPPALLI, Richard A. AB. Psychology. Born: September 14, 1940. Prepared at Cranston High School. Wrestling Freshman. Plantations House. Address: 41 Vervena Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. CARLOS, Walter John. AB. Music. Born: No- vember 14, 1939. Prepared at St. Raphael Academy. Curt Ducasse Premium in Metaphysics. Dean's List. Newman Club, Physics Club, Chess Club, Convocation Choir, Stu- iielnt dCourt. Address: 83 Weeden Avenue, Rumford, Rhode sland. CARR, David M. AB. Human Biology. Born: April 25, 1941. Prepared at Midwood High School. Dean's List. Liber Brunensis Layout Editor, Custodial Assistant. Crew Freshman. Address: 1427 East 22nd Street, Brooklyn, New York. CARR, Gorden Demarest, Jr. AB. Psychology. Born: November 10, 1940. Prepared at Quincy High School. Band, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 9 Ryden Street, Quincy, Massachusetts. CARSON, Thomas Martin. A.B. Philosophy. Born: November 12, 1940. Prepared at North High School. Brown University Scholarship. UCA President, AF- ROTC Cadet Commander, Arnold Air Society Com- mander. Swimming Freshman. Address: 2501 Xavier Street, Denver, Colorado. CASEY, David Barry. A.B. Economics. Born: March 5, 1940. Prepared at La Salle Academy. Newman Club. Address: 5 Claremont Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. CASSEL, Joel A. AB. English Literature. Born: Feb- ruary 4, 1940. Prepared at The Choate School. Brown Key CSecretary, Cammarian Club, Brown Youth Guid- ance, Class Cabinet, Young Democrats President, Italian Study Club. Golf Freshman. Pi Lambda Phi Vice President, Secretary. Address: 22 Stephana Lane, Water- bury, Connecticut. CHACE, Nathan Ward. AB. History Honors. Born: September 22, 1940. Prepared at Providence Coun- try Day School. Brown Daily Herald, Brown Youth Guid- ance, Brown Charities Drive Co-ordinator. Tennis Fresh- man, Varsity, Captain. Delta Upsilon Secretary. Address: 44 Whipple Avenue, Riverside, Rhode Island. CHARNEY, Leonard Jack. AB. Psychology. Born: May 1, 1940. Prepared at Pleasantville High School. Dean's List. Brown Daily Herald Reporter, News Director, Staff Director on Managing Board, Class Cabinet, Pi Delta Epsilon, Tower Club. Address: 255 Lake Shore Drive, Pleasantville, New York. CHASE, Laurence Bruce. A.B. American Literature. Born: July 23, 1940. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Dean's List, Pi Delta Epsilon. Brown Daily Herald CEdi- torial Chairman, Features Editor. Address: 43 Cherry Street, Lynn, Massachusetts. CHASIN, Lawrence Alan. Sc.B. Chemistry Hon- ors. Born: July 2, 1941. Prepared at New Bedford High School. Dean's List. Tower Club. Basketball Freshman, Varsity, Manager. Address: 629 Purchase Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. CHATSWORTH, Thomas John. AR Pschology Born: May 27, 1940. Prepared at Nichols School. Dean's List. Liber Brunensis Salesman, Brown Charities Drive, Freshman Orientation Committee. Hockey Freshman, Manager. Zeta Psi President, Vice President. Address: 447 Linwood Avenue, Buffalo, New York. CHMIELEWSKI, Michael Robert. AB. Russian Studies. Born: October 25, 1940. Prepared at Naugatuck High School. Address: 103 Birch Lane, Naugatuck, Con- necticut. CHUTJIAN, Ara. Sc.B. Chemistry Honors. Born: May 23, 1941. Prepared at Bronx Iligh School of Science. James Manning Scholarship, Francis Wayland Scholar- ship, Research Associate in Chemistry, Dean's List. Sphinx Club Exccutive Board, Brown Youth Guidance. Soccer Freshman, Varsity. Address: 511 West 179 Street, New York, New York. CINGISER, Michael P. AB. English Literature. Born: September 23, 1940. Prepared at West Hempstead High School. Tennis Freshman, Basketball Freshman Varsity. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 1089 Walden Place, Wes: Hempstead, New York. CITY, Robert Douglas. AB. Classics Honors. Born: June 24, 1940. Prepared at Wellesley High School. Dean's List. Address: 57 Suffolk Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. CLARK, Nathan Edward. ScB. Physics. Born: February 26, 1940. Prepared at Milford High School. Dean's List. Marching and Concert Bands, UCA Brown Student Director of Weekend Work Camps, Residential Seminar in Christian Thought and Living. Address: 78 Ilome Acres Avenue, Milford, Connecticut. CLARKE, Roger Henry. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: September 28, 1940. Prepared at Milford, High School. ASME CSecretary, Ski Club, Outing Club, Brown Chari- ties Drive. Crew Varsity. Address: 721 West 7th Street, Plainfield, New Jersey. COE, Charles Martin. AB. English Literature. Born: June 20, 1940. Prepared at Loomis School. Uni- 270 versity Scholarship, Schepp Foundation Scholaiship. Dean's List. PLC. Football Freshman, Varsity, Wrestling Fresh- man, Varsity. Alpha Delta Phi. Addresss West Granby Road, West Granby, Connecticut. COE, Henry G. AB. International Relations. Born: July 7, 1940. Prepared at Swarthmore High School. Brown Glee Club Treasurer, Business Manager, President, Brown Key. Basketball Freshman. Delta Upsilon. Ad- dress: 11 Ogden Avenue, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. COFFIN, Tristram DeForest. A.B. Classics. Born: August 1, 1939. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy. Chapman Prize in Poetry, Proctorship Wriston quadrangle. Class Cabinet, Liber Brunensis Sales Manager, Classics Club. Wrestling Freshman, VarsityD, Football CFresh- man. Sigma Chi. Address: 1150 Puritan Road, Birming- ham, Michigan. COHEN, Kenneth Samuel. AB. Biology. Born: August 6, 1940. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List. Tower Club, Hillel, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 62 Firglade Avenue, Springfield, Massachusetts. COLEMAN, Leslie Stinson, Jr. AB. Mathemat- ics. Born: June 25, 1940. Prepared at Glastonbury High School. Brownbrokers, Sock and Buskin, Newman Club, Yacht Club, Inter House Council Cultural Affairs Chair- man, Executive Board. Address: 541 Tryon Street, South Glastonbury, Connecticut. CONKLIN, Robert Allan. A.B. Economics. Born: February 6, 1940. Prepared at Conard High School. Yacht Club, Ski Club. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 54 Greenhouse Boulevard, West Hartford, Connecticut. CONLEY, Clive Davis. AB. Political Science. Born: May 25, 1941. Prepared at Lynbrook High School. Dean's List. Class Cabinet, Political Science Club Exe- cutive Board, International Relations Club. Address: 154 Carman Avenue, East Rockaway, New York. COOPERSMITH, Richard David. AB. History. Born: December 24, 1940. Prepared at Polytechnic Prep- aratory Country Day School. Dean's List. Class Cabinet, Student Court Investigation Committee. Address: 80 Lenox Road, Brooklyn, New York. CORBETT, James John. AB. Biology. Born: July 2, 1940. Prepared at Oak Park River Forest High School. Track Freshman. COX, Jay Trent. AB. FEconomics. Born: August 5, 1940. Prepared at Troy High School. Brown Daily Herald, Brown Charities Drive Treasurer. Address: 11 Prout Avenue, Troy, New York. CRAGGS John Roger. AB Pocholosy. Born. July 5, 1940. Prepared at Northwood School. NROTC Rifle Team. Address: 2nd Avenue 9-60, Zone 9, Guatemala City, Central America. CRESWELL, Taylor L., II. AB. Philosophy. Born: November 18, 1939, Prepared at Westfield Senior 1igh School. Third Prize in Elocution. Sock and Buskin. Ad- dress: 20 South Findlay Street, York, Pennsylvania. CUMMINGS, Bruce N. AB Philosophy Bomn: Jan- uary 30, 1941. Prepared at Belmont High School. Brown Charities Drive. Cross Country Freshman, Track Fresh- man, Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 52 Hastings Road, Bel- mont, Massachusetts. CUMMINGS, William H., Jr. AB. Economics. Born: May 22, 1940. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Address: Old Wharf Road, North Chatham, Massachusetts. DALVA, Leon Julian. AR French. Born: June 16, 1940. Prepared at The Browning School. Brown Review, Young Democrats, Yacht Club, Forum for Civil Liberties. Soccer Freshman, Address: 1067 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. DAMIAN, Walter Edward. AB. Psychology. Born: May 22, 1940. Prepared at Wells High School. AFROTC, Arnold Air Society Adjutant-Recorder, New- man Club Archibald House. Address: 53 Sunnyhill Drive, Southbridge, Massachusetts. DAVIDSON, Wendell Rodney. 1.A. English Literature. Born: October 11, 1940. Prepared at Belmont Hill School. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 95 Marsh Street, Belmont, Massachusetts. DEALEY, William Reed. ScB. Flectrical Engineer- ing. Born: December 28, 1940. Prepared at DeBilbiss High School. UCA, Glee Club, Convocation Choir, AIEE, IREE, Brown Engineering Society. Archibald House Steward. Address: 2534 Goddard Street, Toledo, Ohio. DEAN, Andrew John. AB Ay Born: March 23 1939. Prepared at New Preparatory School. Ski Club President, Treasurer, Brown Youth Guidance. Ski Team. Kappa Sigma. Address: 29 Hundreds Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts. DEGENNARO, Carmine Vincent. AB. Political Science. Born: December 28, 1940. Prepared at Clifford 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 opera- tions. Construction at Brown was a boon to everyone. Midnight requisition probably set the building schedule back only a few months, but many enterprisers found that cinder blocks and planks make fine bookcases. One freshman thought he had figured out the solution needed to avoid the beercan-through-the-windowpane stunt, opened the window but only the lower part. Final score: two panes, six dollars. Arson was suspected when the just-completed Maxcy lounge caught fire in March. Students, just leaving the Re- fectory, swarmed to the scene and pommelled firemen with snowballs, eventually earned a few strecams of water di- rected at their positions atop the Gardner House garage. The firemen themselves topped off a fine day bv somehow managing to get a fire engine stuck onCollege Green. The lounge was a total loss, and Maxcy residents had to evacuate the building and go through the early-first-semester style crowding again as they moved into other rooms across the campus. President Keeney was out of town at the time, but that didn't matter much to the freshmen who snowballed Deans Hill and Watts plus a couple of squad cars full of Proyv- idence police in protest against the University's decision to postpone rush week until after Spring Weekend. One local enforcer caught a snowball in the hat, drew his gun and became the feature of the evening. Ccontinued on next page Scott High School. Sock and Buskin. Football CFresh- man, Varsity. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 115 Hoffman Boulevard, East Orange, New Jersey. DE JESUS, Prentiss Santos. AB. French Liter- ature. Born: September 11, 1937. Prepared at Williston Academy. Chrystal Scholar. Epicurean Society Chairman, Vigilance Committee. Swimming Freshman, Varsity. Sigma Chi Historian. Address: 3761 Camino San Mig- uel, Palm Springs, California. DE LELLIS, Ronald Albert. A.B. Biology CHon- ors. Born: 1941, Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List. Biology Club President, Plantations House. Ad- dress: 206 Carpenter Street, Providence, Rhode Island. DE SIBOUR, Jay Raymond louis. AB Ps chology. Born: July 30, 1940. Prepared at St. Albans. NROTC, Brown-Pembroke Chorus, Brunavians Secre- tary, Jabberwocks, Brownbrokers. Alpha Delta Phi Sec- retary, Treasurer. Address: 4509 Hoban Road, Wash- ington, District of Columbia. DIETZ, James Stratton, Jr. A.B. English Liter- ature. Born: May 22, 1940. Prepared at Christchurch School. Dean's List. Brown Flying Club Treasurer, Brown Debating Union. Address: Route 2, Lovettsville, Virginia. DILLMEIER, Robert L. ScB Flectrical Enginecring Born: March 17, 1941. Prepared at Garden City High School. Lacrosse Club. Delta Kappa Epsilon President, Secretary, Treasurer. Address: 83 Hampton Road, Garden City, New York. DIPAOLA, Lynn Jonathan. A.B. Economics. Born: November 24, 1940. Prepared at Freeport High School. Academic Scholarship. Newman Club. Baseball Varsity. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 249 Randall Ave- nue, Freeport, New York. Dl PIPPO, Ronald. ScB. Mechanica Engineering. Born: June 2, 1940. Prepared at Classical High School. Corporation Scholar. Dean's List. Brown Engineering So- ciety, ASME Treasurer, Tau Beta Pi Engineering Honor Saociety, ASTM. Address: 15 Ursula Road, Smithfield, Rhode Island. Honors. Born: April 18, 1940. Prepared at New Bed- ford High School. Academic Scholarship, Chemistry Labor- atory Achievement Award. Tower Club. Tennis Fresh- man, Basketball Freshman. Address: 351 West Clinton Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. DOE, Donald Bartlett, Jr. AB. History. Bomn: January 20, 1940. Prepared at Mount Hermon School. Brown Youth Guidance. Swimming Freshman. Buxton House President, Social Chairman, North Littlefield Social Chairman. Address: R.D. 2, Kennebunkport, Maine. DOLLASE, Richard Henry. AB Ilisiory. Born. February 23, 1940. Prepared at Linton High School. New- man Club. Basketball Freshman. Address: 889 Emmett Street, Schenectady, New York. DONOVAN, John JosePh- A.B. Mathematics. Born: January 11, 1941. Prepared at Wilbraham Academy. NROTC, Class Cabinet, Newman Club, Debating Union, Physics Club. Phi Kappa Psi Secretary. Address: 16 Hartwell Road, Wethersfield, Connecticut. DOW, Walter Orville. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: June 9, 1940. Prepared at Princeton High School. NROTC. NROTC Dirill Team Commander. Kappa Sigma Treas- iuerD. Address: 89 Shady Brook Lane, Princeton, New ersey. DRURY, David T. AB. English Literature. Born: November 5, 1940. Prepared at Linton High School. Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance, Convocation Choir, Brown- Pembroke Quting Club. Address: 921 Westholm Road, Schenectady, New York. DUNHAM, Bruce Carl. AB. Mathematics. Born: March 20, 1936. Prepared at Shattuck School. G.I. Bill Public Law 550. Brown Youth Guidance. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 1818 D Street, Lincoln, Nebraska, DYER, Joseph Peter. AB. Pulitical Science. Born: October 2, 1940. Prepared at Manchester High School. PLC Marine Officer Candidate. Cammarian Club, Politi- cal Science Club, Newman Club, Classics Club, Univer- sity Proctor. Track Freshman, Varsity, Captain, Football Freshman, Varsity. Sigma Chi. Address: 45 Fairview Street, Manchester, Connecticut. DYSART, Douglas Moore. AB. Economics. Born: September 2, 1939, Prepared at Madison High School. University Scholarship. Brown Rowing Association. Crew Freshman, Varsity. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 2250 Rose- dale Drive, Las Cruces, New Mexico. EASTERSON, Bradley Gay. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: December 17, 1939. Prepared at Mem- orial High School. University Scholarship. Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance, UCA. Football Freshman. Ad- dress: 1727 Lloyd Avenue, Eau Claire, Wisconsin, EBIN, Robert F. A.B. History. Born: September 26, 1940. Prepared at Framingham High School. Pi Delta Theta. Brown Daily Herald Business Manager, Sphinx Club, Class Cabinet, Photography Club, Newburgh Club, Hillel, Brown Youth Guidance. Crew Freshman. Tower Club. Address: 9 Hampshire Road, Framingham, Massa- chusetts. EDWARDS, Thomas Matthew. A.B. Psychology. Born: May 21, 1940. Prepared at La Salle Academy. Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance. Brown Charities Drive. Squash Club. Address: 184 Wyndham Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. EFINGER, Gerald Hayes. A.B. History. Born: No- vember 5, 1935. Prepared at Avon Old Farms. Address: Avon Old Farms, Avon, Connecticut. ELSON, Robert Edward. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 13, 1940, Prepared at Horace Mann School. Sock and Buskin CBusiness Manager, Brown- brokers, Production Workshop. Golf CFreshman. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 225 West 86th Street, New York City, New York. : ERNST, Stephen Arnold. AB Bilbey Bomn: March 31, 1940. Prepared at Troy High School. Class Cabinet, Intramural Sports. Address: R.D. 1, Box 189B, Rennselaer, New York. EPSTEIN, Martin Bruce. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 5, 1940. Prepared at Haverhill High School. Political Science Club. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 42 North Avenue, Haverhill, Massachusetts. ERINAKES, Dennis Christos. A.B. Geology. Born: June 6, 1940. Prepared at East Greenwich High School. Susan Colver Rosenberger Prize in Geology. Brown Fly- ing Club CPresident. Brown Rifle Team Freshman, 272 Manager, Varsity, Captain. Address: 56 Brookside Drive, East Greenwich, Rhode Island. ESPINOSA, George. AB. Economics. Bom: Jan uary 4, 1940, Prepared at Teaneck High School. University Scholarship. Dean's List. Newman Club. Baseball CFresh- man, Varsity. Delta Tau Delta. Addresst 1 Westview Terrace, Teaneck, New Jersey. EVANS, Peter D. AB. Iistory. Born: November 7, 1940. Prepared at St. Georges School. Liber Brunensis, Yacht Club. Basketball Freshman. Sigma Chi Social Chairman, Rushing Chairman. Address: 175 Bast Street, Hingham, Massachusetts. EVERGATES, Theodore. A.B. History. Born: Sep- tember 16, 1940. Prepared at Mount Hermon School Brown Review, Brown Daily Herald Supplement Review Editor. Address. 166 Main Street, Danielson, Connecti- cut. FARNUM, Michael. AB. American Literature. Born: February 1, 1940. Prepared at Tabon Academy. Brown Daily Herald, Brown Charities Drive, Address: 12 Tyler Point Road, Barrington, Rhode Island. FELDGARDEN, Robert. Sc. B. Applied Mathematics. Born: May 7, 1940. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. Francis Wayland Scholar. Dean's List, Sphinx Club. Brown Daily Herald News Director, Managing Editor, Pi Delta Epsilon, Orientation Committee. Address: 150 Beechmont Drive, New Rochelle, New York. FELDMAN, Roger David. A.B. International Rela- tions Honors. Born: April 7, 1943. Prepared at The Final exams were awful. One way to react is to simply burn all papers relevant to the course and even the incriminat- ing postcard, but the boys in South Littlefield were more daring; they staged an old-fashioned book-burning in front of the dorm on the last day of exams that year. 1959-60: this year we stole the beanies. Gregg's opened. Although a little more expensive than Willie Woo's place down the street, it usually filled-up first whenever the meal contracts failed to provide. Jim Abernathy drew some cartoons. One adrpit sophomore offered the telephone installer a couple of beers - and found out how to make bogus calls to anywhere without being detected. Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare, Fleming, took time out from his campaign against cranberries to open the major convocation. The University brough Ralph Bunche, Margaret Mead, Lee DuBridge, Sir Charles Galton Darwin, an impressive list of others, and almost President Eisenhower, to the campus to discuss Man's Contracting World in an Ex- panding Universe. There was the time two young cyclists were making like sport cars in the Bigelow quadrangle. Peace-lovers around the .ad produced water bombs, fire crackers and shouts of Leave your bike and jacket and run, kid! , before the offenders were rescued by a campus porter. A panel discussion decided that fraternities are not the Kingdom of God. Ccontinued on page 276 G. H. LKER CO. e ednerdd MEMBER N.Y. STOCK EXCHANGE ESTABLISHED 1900 Offices In PROVIDENCE PAWTUCKET o NEW YORK ST. LOUIS and OTHER CITIES UN ion 1-4000 840 HOSPITAL TR. BLDG. ROVIDENCE PA wiucke! 6-2350 840 EAST AVE. Diamonds and Fine Jewelry Sterling and Silverplate Watches and Clocks China and Crystal Leathergoods Stationery Cosmetics Exclusive Gifts and Importations $Tilden-rhurher povidimey WAYLAND SQUARE CGARDEN CITY NEWPORT + WATCH MILL F. B. Thurber President, Brown '05 W. B. Thurber Treasurer, Brown 'I5 T. G. Thurber, Brown '46 Bronx High School of Science, Francis Wayland Scholar. Dean's List, Sphinx Club, Phi Beta Kappa. Brown Daily Herald Feature Column Standpoint, Brown Review Business Manager, Circulation Manager, University Forum for Civil Liberties CExecutive Board, Debating Union. Address: 1560 Grand Concourse, Bronx, New York City, New York. FINK, Matthew P. AB History. Born: January 8, 1941. Prepared at George W. Hewlett School. James Manning Scholar. Dean's List, Junior Year Abroad at London School of Economics. Student Court CAssistant Clerk, Sphinx Club, Brown Youth Guidance. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: Mora Place, Woodmere, New York. FISHELL, Peter Sporborg. A.B. Human Biology. Prepared at The Albany Academy. Dean's List. Ski Club, Swimming Freshman. Address: 7 Hawthorne Avenue, Albany, New York. FISHMAN, William Lawrence. AB. American Civilization Honors. Born: August 9, 1941. Prepared at Carle Place High School. Undergraduate Research, Assist- antship in American Civilization. Pi Delta Epsilon, Dean's List. WBRU Station Manager, Ivy Network President. Address: 22 Leonard Road, Syosset, New York. FITZGERALD, Denis Joseph. AB. Bivlogy. Bomn: April 29, 1940. Prepared at Worcester Academy. Class Treasurer, Cammarian Club, Newman Club, Biology Club, Freshman Week Committee, Pre-Med Society, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive, Student Aca- demic Affairs Committee. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 4 Brighton Road, Worcester Massachusetts. FITZGIBBON, Michael Thomas. AB. American Civilization Honors. Born: July 27, 1934. Prepared at Phillips Academy, Dean's List. WBRU Executive Sec- retary, Brown Charities Drive Captain, Production Workshop, Sock and Buskin, Brownbrokers, Class Cabinet. Theta Delta Chi Vice President. Address: Croton Lake Road, Mount Kisco, New York. FLATTAU, John William. AB. English Honors. Born: November 26, 1940. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Dean's List, College Scholar. Brown Daily Herald, Class Cabinet, Student Court Assistant Prosecutor, Jun- ior Year Abroad at University of Edinburgh. Tennis Fresh- man, Varsity. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 205 East 69th Street, New York City, New York. FLERON, Theodore Adams. AB. Fconomics, Born: March 20, 1940. Prepared at The Ransom School. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Review Circulation Man- ager, Canterbury Club. Address: 3 Hearthwood Drive, Barrington, Rhode Island. FLEMING, Farrell Bentley. AB Philosophy Honors. Born: September 28, 1940. Prepared at Morris Hills Regional High School. Annual Scholarship, Irving Harris Band Trophy, Undergraduate Student Teaching Assistantship. Dean's List. Brown Marching Band Drum Major, President, Wind Ensemble Student Director. Address: Dock Road, RD-1, Rockaway, New Jersey. FOOTE, James Adair. AB. English. Born: May 17, 1940. Prepared at The Taft School. Glee Club Pub- licity Manager, Brunaires. Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 180 East End Avenue, New York City, New York. FOOTE, Steven Milbank. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 25, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Crystal Scholar. Glee Club Business Manager, Brunaires Di- rector, Class Cabinet, Faunce House Board of Governors, Political Science Club, Ski Club, Yacht Club. Sigma Chi Treasure. Address: 1 West Road, Cornwall Bridge, Con- necticut. FORREST, Paul Jeffrey. AB. International Rela- tions. Born: November 7, 1940. Prepared at Oceanside Senior High School. NROTC. WBRU Station Manager, Advertising Manager, Technical Director, NROTC Drill Team, Battalion Staff Officer. Address: 136 Rockaway Avenue, Rockville Centre, New York. FORSTER, Alan Moir. AB Lconomics Born: March 14, 1940. Prepared at Alexis I. du Pont High School. Dean's List. Football Freshman. Beta Theta Pi Secre- tary. Address: 1201 Hopeton Road, Wilmington, Delaware. FOSS, George E., lll. AB. Physics. Born: October 9, 1940. Prepared at Noble Greenough School. Brown Nuclear Research Laboratory CAssistant. Phi Gamma Delta Alumni Chairman. Address: 26 Wampatuck Road, Dedham, Massachusetts. FRANASZEK, Peter Anthony. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: February 28, 1939. Prepared at Ameri- can School. James Manning Award, Freshman Award, Tau Beta Pi, Dean's List. Brown Engineering Society. Ad- dress: Av. Copacabana 1227, Apt. 702, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. FRANK, David Tausig. AB At Born: September 15, 1939. Prepared at Mercersburg Academy. Brown Daily Herald National Advertising Manager, Debating Union, Sock and Buskin. Address: 3505 North Front Street, Harris- burg, Pennsylvania. FRANK, Paul Michael. AB. International Relations. Born: July 18, 1941. Prepared at Horace Mann High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Class Cabinet, Tower Club CRushing Chaiman, Secretary. Fencing Club. Ad- dress: 17 Ritchie Drive, Yonkers, New York. FRANKEL, Jacob Joseph. A.B. Religious Studies. Born: April 3, 1940. Prepared at Asbury Park High School. Candidate for Rotary Foundation Fellowship for Interna- tional Understanding. Dean's List. Brown Daily Herald, Sock and Buskin, WBRU. Kappa Sigma Scribe. Address: 1002 5th Avenue, Asbury Park, New Jersey. FREEDMAN, Stanley Lewis. A.B. Music. Born: April 11, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List. Brown Marching Band, Brown Concert, Convocation Choir. Address: 12 Jillson Street, Providence, Rhode Island. FREEMAIv, George Newton. Sc.B. Mechanical Engineering. Born: May 18, 1940. Prepared at Clifford J. Scott High School. Dean's List. Inter House Council, Brown Engineering Society, ASME. Address: 31 Morse Avenue, East Orange, New Jersey. FRENCH, Michael Bradford. AB.-ScB. Relisious Studies-Electrical Engineering. Born: August 9, 1940. Pre- pared at Collegiate High School. Pi Delta Epsilon. Liber Brunensis CEditor in Chief, Student Vestry, St. Stephen's Church. Address: 43 Nelson Avenue, Blue Point, New York. FREUND, John Charles. AB. Iuernational Rela tions. Born: December 10, 1938. Prepared at Shaker Heights CONTRACTORS .a;a:ENsmEERS 285 Pitman Stveet lence 6, Rhode oland 274 High School. Wrestling Freshman, Varsity. Phi Gamma Delta Secretary. Address: 3682 Sutherland Road, Shaker Heiohts. Ohio. FRIARY, Donald Richard. AB. American Civiliza- tion Honors. Born: August 27, 1940. Prepared at Boston Latin School. Dean's List. Newman Club Vice President, President, American Civilization Club, Class Cabinet. Address: 1 Waldeck Street, Boston, Massachusetts. FRIEDEL, William Eugene. AB. Bomn: June 3, 1940. Prepared at Malverne High School. Dean's List. Con- vocation Choir, Pre-Medical Society, Biology Club. Tennis Freshman. Address: 165 Lynmouth Road, Malverne, New York. FRIEDMAN, Samuel Gregory. AB. Classics Born: April 22, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Uni- versity Scholarship. Sphinx Club President, Treasurer, Brown Daily Herald Photographer. Wrestling Fresh- man. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 1700 Ashford Avenue, Santurce, Puerto Rico. FROST, Archie Q. AB. Eudlish Literature. Born: September 10, 1940. Prepared at South Kent School. Cam- marian Club. Beta Theta Pi President, Vice President, Rushing Chairman. Address: Mead Street, Waccabuc, New York. FUEHRER, Sherwood Henry. AB.ScB. Engineer- ing Honors. Born: September 15, 1940. Prepared at Ewing High School. Dean's List. Brown Glee Club, Sock and Buskin, Brown Photography Club, Inter House Coun- cil. Kappa Sigma. Address: 1912 Pennington Road, Tren- ton, New Jersey. GARCES, Armando. AR History of Art. Born: April 4, 1939. Prepared at St. Mark's School. Spanish Club Vice President, Tertulias. Soccer Freshman, Varsity. Delta Kappa Epsilon Secretary, Chaplain. Address: Apartado Aereo 154, Cali, Columbia. GARDNER, Thomas Newcombe. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: March 19, 1939. Dean's List. NROTC, Brown Engineering Society Treasurer, Inter House Coun- cil, IRE, Brown Yacht Club, Poland House House Man- ager. Maxcy Hall Secretary, Treasurer. Address: 12 Aitchison Drive, New London, Connecticut. GARRISON, John Strain. AB. Art. Born: October 4, 1936. Prepared at Millbrook Memorial High School. Dean's List. Liber Brunensis. Address: North Avenue, Mill- brook. New Vork GELFMAN, Daniel Elliot. AB. Economics. Born: July 10, 1940. Prepared at Woodmere Academy. NROTC, Brown Youth Guidance, Class President, Brown Key So- ciety, Class Cabinet, Class 25th Reunion Fund Vice Chairman, Freshman Week Executive Committee. Sigma Nu Treasnver. Address: 889 Princeton Road, Woodmere, Long I ind, New York. GOLDFIELD, Michael David. AB. English Litera- ture. Born: October 12, 1940. Prepared at Conrad High School. Dean's List. Class Cabinet, Freshman Week Com- mittee, Pre-Med Society Vice President, Brown Blood Drive Chairman, Brown Charities Drive CPublicity Chair- man. Crew Freshman. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 61 Craigmoor Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. GORDON, Bruce Willett. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 4, 1940. Prepared at Classen High School. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 1915 N.W. 19th. Street, Okla- homa City, Oklahoma. GORDON, Walter Robert. AB History. Born: August 26, 1940. Prepared at Exeter Academy. Dean's List. Brown Daily Herald News Director, Executive Editor, Pi Delta Epsilon TreasurerD, Forum. Address: 945 Fifth Avenue, New York City, New York. GOTTFRIED, Theodore Franklin. AB Politicdl Science. Born: February 14, 1940. Prepared at Elyria High School. Basketball Freshman, Varsity, Physical Education Instructor. Lambda Chi Alpha Vice President. Address: 200 Miami Avenue, Elyria, Ohio. GLADDING, George Sanford. AB. Economics. Born: August 31, 1940. Prepared at Roslyn High School. NROTC Scholarship. NROTC Drill Team. Delta Tau Delta President. Address: 87 Port Washington Boule- vard, Roslyn, New York. GRACE, Alan Jerome. A.B. Economics. Born: Feb- ruary 23, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Class Cabinet, Band, Brown Youth Guidance. Tower Club Treasurer, Social Chairman. Address: 402 Lovell Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. GRAHAM, Christopher Geoffrey. A.B. History. Born: January 9, 1940. Prepared at Taft School. Address: Nod Hill Road, Wilton, Connecticut. GRALLA, Arthur Robert, Jr. AB. Political Sci- ence. Born: April 5, 1941. Prepared at Bolles School. NR OTC, Political Science Club, Ski Club, Classics Club, Brownbrokers, Brown Charities Drive Captain, Sunday Club, Brunavian Club, Phi Spy CEditor. Phi Delta Theta Treasurer. Address: 3750 North Oakland Street, Arling- ton, Virginia. HARVYEY.fu Clothiers Furnishers I 14 Waterman St. FEOVIBENCE 5 JOLIS GRAVES, Horace F. A.B. Economics. Born: Decem- ber 25, 1940. Prepared at Evanston Township High School. University Scholarship. Brown Charities Drive, NAACP, Class Cabinet. Wrestling Freshman, Varsity. Address: 2406 Church Street, Evanston, Illinois. GREEN, Kenneth Fisher. A.B. Psychology Hon- ors. Born: October 29, 1940. Prepared at Foxboro High School. Rosamund Winslow Lemaire Prize. Band Vice President, Orchestra, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 17 Clark Street, Foxboro, Massachusetts. GREEN, Robert Raymond. ALD. Political Science. Born: June 27, 1940. Prepared at Sleepy Hollow High School. Dean's List. Inter Fraternity Council. Phi Kappa Psi Vice President. Address: 18 Hanford Place, Tarry- town, New York. GREGORY, Douglas S. Ap Chemistry. Born: Jan- uary 7, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Rhode Island State Scholarship. Address: 292 Lonsdale Avenue, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. GRIFFITHS, Andrew S. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: January 25, 1940. Preparea at Western Reserve Academy. Honorary Scholarship. Engineering Student Council, Cammarian Club, IRE. Soccer Freshman, Var- sity. Delta Upsilon Treasurer. Address: 45 Woodbine Avenue, Larchmont, New York. GRIGG, Charles Robert. AB. An Born: Septem- ber 9, 1940. Prepared at John Burroughs School. Dean's List, Psi Upsilon Corresponding Secretary. Address: 4 Berkshire Street, St. Louis, Missouri. GURNEY, George. A.B. History of Art. Born: No- vember 26, 1939. Prepared at The Hotchkiss School. James Aldrich Pirce Prize in Classics. Dean's List. Cammarian Club, Inter Fraternity Council Treasurer, Freshman Week Committee Vice Chairman. Baseball Freshman. Alpha Delta Phi President. Address: The Hotchkiss School, Lakeville, Connecticut. GWYNNE, John Thomas. AB. International Re- lations. Born: December 20, 1939. Prepared at Staten Island Academy. AFROTC. Phi Kappa Psi President. Address: 240 East 76th Street, New York City, New York. HALL, Donald Earl. AB. Mathematics Honors. Born: October 24, 1940. Prepared at John F. Dcering High School. Alexander Meiklejohn Premium in Logic, Phi Beta Kappa, James Manning Scholar, Francis Wayland Scholar, ELECTRIC HOME HEATING is today's big news in TOTAL-ELECTRIC LIVING! Now, the most modern power in your home, electricity, can supply one of its most important needs practical, efficient house heat- ing. It offers gentle, draft-free warmth with nothing to make dirt or noise. Each room's temperature is controlled independently. Stop in or call for more information. NARRAGANSETT ELECTRIC 276 Dean's List. Chess Club. Address: 42 Main Street, Hope, Rhode, Island. HALLY, Carl William. A.B. Economics. Prepared at Swarthmore High School. Intramural Athletic Council President, Class Cabinet. Lacrosse Club Treasurer. Delta Upsilon House Manager, Athletic Chairman, Scho- larship Chairman. Address: 224 North Swarthmore Ave- nue, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. HALSBAND, Earle Robert. A.B. Philosophy. Born: August 16, 1941 Prepared at Marblehead Iligh School. Brown Daily Herald, Tower Club, Hillel Executive Board. Crew Freshman, VarsityD. Address: 18 Marion Road, Marblehead, Massachusetts. HANSEN, Harvey C. AB. Political Science. Born: November 4, 1940. Preparcd at Blake School. Dean's List. Ski Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Class Cabinet, Political Science Club. ITockey Freshman, Baseball Freshman. Phi Gamma Delta Treasurer. Address: 5811 View Lane, Minneapolis, Minnesota. HANSEN, Peter Agnew. AB. Political Science. Born: March 24, 1939. Prepared at Andover. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Yacht Club, Political Science Club. Foot- ball Freshman. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 5 Stony Brook Road. Tenafly, New Jersey. HARRISS, William Griggs. A.B. Euglish Litera- ture. Born: January 2, 1940. Prepared at the Choate School. Brown Yacht Club. Psi Upsilon Vice President. Address: 19 Old Barn Road, Fairfield, Connecticut. HAYDEN, Joseph Steinmetz, Jr. AB. Ameri- can Literature. Born: February 3, 1939. Prepared at The Peddie School. Dean's List. NROTC, UCA, Debating Some RISD students set fire to the statue of Rodger Wil- liams in Prospect Park, Their descriptions of the statue as not a piece of art at all and of their act as one of personal indignation were well-received here. Thought- ful of them not to have begun their crusade with the then new Psych Lab. A skunk visited Sharpe Refectory once and was adopted by Sigma Nu until escorted out by a refectory employee. Homecoming, '59, saw 164 cars ticketed for illegal parking. While the Providence police performed their punitive prowl, a group of AD's demonstrated that it's out to break all the lounge windows in on Saturday night, but it's in to do it Sunday morning in 2 moment of cool reflection. We championed Willie Woo in his battle with the Immigra- tion Service. Ccontinued on page 278 The Path of Nations In the little town of Janesville, Wis- consin, U. S. A., stands a tribute to the many nations where Parker pens are sold and manufactured . . . The Path of Nations. From 85 nations come the stones that form this inspiring pathway fronting our home. Each stone is polished to a mirror brilliance. Each stone bears raised bronze letters identifying its country. On special occasions, each nation's flag flies proudly behind its stone. Here are a few of the reasons for this tribute: Parker pens have signed more peace treaties, more international agreements than any other pens in the world. They signify man's eternal hope for peace. Parker pens are eloquent in all the world's languages. In Malaya the word Parker is synonymous with the word 'Quality. In Nigeria we are pleased to note there is a Society of Parker Pen Owners with the motto: aut calamus optimus aut nihil either the best pen or none. Clearly, Parker pens have earned the respect of thinking men everywhere. They are the world's most wanted pens. The Path of Nations is a daily reminder to us, that the world is looking over our shoulders. The Parker Pen Company Maker of the World's most wanted pens 1962 by $ THE PARKER PEN COMPANY, Janesville, Wisconsin, U.S.A. o . 5 Wim oo 4 L i Nib Union, Brown Youth Guidance, Tower Club CAlumni Chairman, Corresponding Secretary, House Chairman, Bar Chairman. Address: 210 Waterman Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HECKMAN, John F. AB French Literature Hon- ors. Born: September 4, 1940. Prepared at Weaver High School. Dean's List. Debating Union, French Club, Ger- man Club, Sweet Briar Junior Year in France. Address: 50 Durham Street, Hartford, Connecticut. HENSEL, Alden C., Jr. A.B. Economics. Prepared at Washington Gardner High School. Kappa Sigma Social Chairman, Guard. Address: 3124 Strawberry Lane, Port Huron, Michigan. HERRMANN, John Anthony, Jr. AB Hisory Born: December 9, 1939. Prepared at Grosse Pointe High School. Class Cabinet. Beta Theta Pi Rushing Chairman. Address: 280 Kenwood Court, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. HERSHENOW, Steven Victor. AB. Human Bi- ology. Born: April 21, 1940. Prepared at Conard High School. Class Cabinet, Freshman Week Committee, Inter- national Relations Club, Political Science Club, Brown Daily Herald Business Agency for Delivery. Tower Club. Address: Sky View Drive, West Hartford, Connticut. HERSTOFF, Robert David. AB. Biology. Born: May 28, 1941. Prepared at Rogers High School. Brown Charities Drive, Biology Club Treasurer, Hillel, WBRU, Class Cabinet. Hockey Freshman, Varsity, Manager. Mead House Vice President, Athletic Chairman. Address: 151 Kay Street, Newport, Rhode Island. The battle for better food at the refectory hit a high point with the Refectory Harangue editorials in the Herald. We took a poll of the worst meals Ccorned beef hash wonY and suggested new designs for the pit. The food improved some, but while eatingup remaining stocks of corned beef hash, most of us tired of the fight. Iona College crew didn't make the scene at the Seekonk for Spring Weekend, but spirited spectators were bliss- fully unaware that they had watched a ribald race be- tween the freshman and varsity crews of Brown. That was the year we all watched in horror and amaze- ment while some sports-fan swam Cand slogeed his way into the Seekonk to retrieve a beercan. Ccontinued on next page 278 HIGGINS, Charles Nelson, Jr. AB American Civilization Honors. Born: May 21, 1940. Prepared at Shady Side Academy. College Scholar CIndependent Study in Art. Brown Charities Drive, Convocation Choir, Ameri- can Civilization Club. Mead House Sccretary, Kappa Sigma Viee President. Address: 1337 Beechwood Boule- vard, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. HIGGINS, James H., Ill. AB. English Literature. Born: May 8, 1940. Prepared at Governor Dummer Aca- demy. College Scholar, Independent Study Program. Dean's List. Liber Brunensis. Zeta Psi Vice President. Address: North Smithfield, Rhode Island. HILTON, Anthony. A.B.Psychology Honors. Born: October 26, 1937. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Dean's List. Address: Weld, Maine. HIMSWORTH, Winston Edge, Jr. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: October 6, 1940. Prepared at Man- hasset High School. Dean's List. Brown Yacht Club, Class Cabinet Publicity Chairman, Sock and Buskin, Bridge Club, Bowling League. Sailing Team Freshman Ad dress: 76 Plandome Court, Manhasset, New York. HIRSCH, Carl Raymond. AB. An Ilonors. Born: May 14, 1940. Deans List. Address: 340 Murray Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey. HOFFMAN, Cyrus Miller. Sc B Physics CHonors. Born: February 20, 1942. Prepared at Forest Hills High School. Alexander Meiklejohn Premium in Logic, Francis Wayland Honorary Scholarship. Dean's List. Tower Club Executive Board, Glee Club, Brown University Chorus, Brown Youth Guidance. Intramural Athletic Council. Ad- THE BROWN UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS o the ivy room o the coffee lounge e caterer to fraternities e carerer to dormitories For a while, it looked as though student justice had pro- vided itself with a force of secret police to furnish cases to the starved Student Court, but cries of Gestapo and reign of terror brought the investigators' names into the open. President Emeritus Henry M. Wriston was chosen by Presi- dent Eisenhower to head the Commission on National Goals. Someone learned the secret code number used by the Uni- versity when calling announcements in to local radio stations. Then, during the evening of a big snowstorm, a certain Dean Williams had it announced over WPRO and WBRU that all classes were off for the next day. We threw snow- balls at the hecklers who called it a hoax. Refectory trays make the best sleds. The faculty staged their first organized show, Academic License, II, since 1953. An associate justice of the Student Court went wild over fire alarms, set off six in a matter of minutes, and got fifty hours hard labor in the Refectory from his own Court. The ratio of applications for admission at Brown to the number of positions open in the freshman class is higher than for any other Ivy school. The Cinderella Crew captured the Dad Vail Regatta and was on the way to recognition by the University. Not many of us have a copy of the '60 LIBER on the shelf. Ccontinued on page 282 TRIPP 8 OLSEN INC. Tailors Clothes Individually tailored The Mark of a Gentleman Since 1876 Alterations Done Expertly dress: 100-29 75th Avenue, Forest Hills, New York. HOKE, Alberr Theodore. A B Mathematics. Born: December 15, 1941, Prepared at Penn Manor High School. Sloan Scholar. Address: 1836 Temple Avenue, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. HOLBROOK, John Day. AB. Iuternational Rela- tions. Born: January 30, 1940. Prepared at Stony Brook School. Proctor and Gamble Scholar. Sphinx Club. Jabber wocks, Freshman Week Committee, Brown Key, Cam- marian Club, Freshman Proctor Association Chairman, Brown Pembroke Christian Fellowship, International Re lations Club. Football Freshman, VarsityD, Soccer Var- sity. Sigma Nu. Address: 131 2nd Avenue, Westwood, New Jersey. HOLBROOKE, Richard C. A. AB. History. Born: April 24, 1941 Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Alfred P. Sloan National Scholar. The Sphinx, Dean's List. WB RU, Brown Daily HHerald CEditor-inChief, Outing Club. Tennis Freshman. Address: 344 Sprain Road, Scarsdale, New York. HONER, Arthur Michael. A.B.-Sc.B. Classics-Elec- trical Engineering. Born: December 14, 1939. Prepared at Covernor Dummer Academy. Brown Amateur Radio Club President, Secretaryd, WBRU Technical Director. Mead House Social Chairman. Address: 155 West Main Street, Norton, Massachusetts. HOWARD, Richard Peyton. AB. American Civil- ization. Born: June 1, 1940. Prepared at Landon School for Boys. Dean's List. Canterbury Vestry, Senior Warden. Tennis Freshman, Varsity, Address: 3720 Manor Road, Chevy Chase, Maryland. HOWES, James Wilfred. A. B. Economics. Born: June 27, 1940. Prepared at Chatham High School. Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 300 Main Street, Chatham, Massachusetts. HUDZIKIEWICZ, Vincent Joseph. AB. Soci- ology. Born: August 27, 1941. Prepared at Springfield Technical High School. University Scholarship. Brown Charitits Drive, Newman Club, Inter House Council. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 39 Murray Hill Avenue, Spring- field, Massachusetts. HUFFARD, Paul Phillippi. AB. English. Born: No- vember 23, 1939. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Brown Key, Cammarian Club, Inter Fraternity Council Presi- dent. Lacrosse Varsity, Football Freshman, Swim- ming Varsity. Psi Upsilon President, Treasurer. Ad- dress: 28 West Road, New Canaan, Connecticut. HUGHES, Robert Powel. A.B. Spanish. Prepared at Rye Iligh School. Delta Phi. Address: Route 2 Box 649c, Sherbrooke Drive, Charlotte, North Carolina. IRVING, John Stiles, Jr. A.B. Political Science. Prepared at Scotch Plains High School. Degating Union, Inter Fraternity Council, Class Cabinet, Commencement Committee Chairman. Judson President, Beta Theta Pi Vice President. Address: 2253 Woodland Terrace, Scotch Plains, New Jersey. JAFFE, Jay M. A B Mathematics. Born: March 10, 1941. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Dean's List. Faunce House Board of Governors Vice President, Band, Orchestra, Tower Club, Student Advisor. Track CFreshman, Golf Varsity. Address: 340 Green Bay Road, Glencoe, Illinois. JARVINEN, Paul Norman. AB. An. Bomn: Sep tember 18, 1940. Prepared at Rockland Senior High School. EVERY DAY MORE FAMILIES HEAT WITH GAS PROVIDENCE GAS COMPANY BANSPACH BROTHERS Quality Bakers Established 1894 EL1-1100 114 Delaine Providence, R. I. BROWN AND PEMBROKE MEET HERE FOR THE BEST CHINESE AND AMERICAN FOOD TOY SUN 258 THAYER STREET BROWN UNIVERSITY DUPLICATING 8 ADDRESSING SERVICE DEPARTMENT 68 Waterman Street 280 Liber Brunensis CArt Advisor, Photography Club. Rifle Team Freshman, Varsity. Address: 202 Central Street, Rockland, Massachusetts. JAVOR, George Tibor. Sc.B. Chemisiry Honors. Born: April 6, 1940. Prepared at C. E. Hughes High School. Dean's List. Chemistry Club Treasurer, Brown Youth Guidance Treasurer. Soccer Varsity. Address: 315 East 80th Street, New York City, New York. JOHNSON, Barry William. A B. Political Sci- ence. Born: April 10, 1940. Prepared at New Britain Sen- ior High School. Solon E. Summerfield Award For Lead ership and Scholarship. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Key. Phi Kappa Psi Secretary. Address: 130 Buell Strect, New Britain, Connecticut. JOHNSON, David Christopher. AB. Russian Studies. Born: January 14, 1940. Prepared at Saint Chris topher's School. Dean's List. Glee Club, Russian Club Vice President, Parachute Club Vice President, Secre- tary. Address: Laurel Road, New Canaan, Connecticut. JONES, Harold Grover, lll. A.B. Spanish Hon- ors domn: January 4, 1941, Prepared at Miami Edison H.. School. Band, Wind Ensemble, Brass Ensemble, Librarian, Hope College Social Chairman. Address: 550 NE 94th Street, Miami, Florida. JOSEPH, Stephen Gary. A.B. Mathematics-Phil- osophy. Born: November 27, 1940. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List. Hillel, Chess Club, Political Sci- ence Club. Address: 85 Commodore Road, Worcester, Massachusetts. KAHN, Kenneth Robert. AB. Euglish Literature. Born: April 11, 1940. Prepared at The Nichols School. Dean's List. Outing Club, Ski Club, Freshman Week Committee, Brown Youth Guidance. Crew Varsity. Pi Lambda Phi President. Address: 832 W. Delavan Ave- nue, New York. KASHNER, Howard J. AB. Iuternational Relations Honors. Born: May 9, 1940. Prepared at A.B. Davis High School. Francis Wayland Scholar. Dean's List. Brown University Forum Vice President, Executive Board, Brown Youth Guidance, Debating Union, Class Cabinet. Address: 377 Packman Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York. KATZNER, Louis I. AB. Philosophy IHonors. Born: May 10, 1941. Prepared at Park School. Farband Labor Zionist Award. Dean's List. Hillel Program Chair- man, Treasurer, Tower Club. Address: 2700 Queen Anne Road, Baltimore, Maryland. KAUFFMAN, David Berger. AB. At Honors Born: April 14, 1940. Prepared at Lower Merion Senior High School. Dean's List. WBRU Advertising Manager, Production Workshop, Refectory Evaluation Committee. Address: 601 Fairview Road, Penn Valley, Narberth Pennsylvania. , KEENAN, Charles B. AB. American Civilization. Born: March 24, 1940. Prepared at Eastchester High School. Glee Club, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 60 Manchester Road, Eastchester, New York. KEITH, Anthony MacDonald. AB SpanishEng lish Literature. Born: January 9, 1941, Prepared at Wood: row Wilson High School. Sock and Buskin, Brownbrokers Liber Brunensis, Address: 3212 Macomb Street NW. Washington, District of Columbia. L KEITH, Robert Marshal. AB. Sociology. Born: De. cember : Seat belts can reduce severe injuries by one-third a year! And, if every car owner in America had seat belts in his car and used them, we could reduce auto deaths by 5,000 a year! The picture shows how a seat belt can make the critical difference between health and injury -or life and deathfor your child. Or for you. The distance between the child's head and the dash, windshield or car roof is the critical distance for him every time he rides in the car. A sudden panic stopeven when the car is going slowly or a collision can hurdle him through that short distance with brutal force . . . unless he is held in his seat by a seat belt like the boy in the picture. Remember: Drivers kill and cripple more children than any disease! Seat belts can save more of these children than any method! So drive with loving care, and protect your loved ones, and yourself, with seat belts. e i3 Published to save lives, in cooperation with The Advertising Council and Tke National Safety Council w '7,01 i KQ J Hurricane Donna greeted returning Brown men in 1960-61. And Caesar wasn't there. Finding the rent for chapter rooms a little beyond their budgets, most of the fraternities had them replaced with student rooms over the summer of '61. Fourth floor rooms with the picturesque dormers suddenly became the most popular living quarters in the quad. We got telephones. So many in fact that new cables had to be installed and even the editor of the Herald had to wait until Thanksgiving to get one. Two out of three Brown gentlemen were captured by police while inspecting a fire escape at Bryant. The two were quickly released from jail, however, as number three of the group informed the Chief of Police that this is Dean Bab- cock speaking and I don't wish to press charges they were merely having a little fun. Hillhouse and Harvey serve beer at their open houses. It wasn't even very early in the year before we were behind on payments for french fries at Kow Jug's. Kow is the best creditor on campus, and always the first to be paid. There was the Fraternity Evaluation Report Csomehow it wasn't very critical and the Report on Residential Housing. The latter even led the University to establish a committee to studv the future of student housing. It was the AD's who led enraged students into downtown Providence during the winter's worst to protest Santa's pre- Thanksgiving arrival at local department stores. Santa was accused of giving Green Stamps. Life magazine offered an Expert and Realistic Guide for Applicants to college. Brown came out k h on the list, be- ing applauded because Brown men wear coats and .ies for appointments with members of the administration. Hope College Resident Fellow James Mish'lani found that a switch from sherrv to six-packs of beer as the standard re- freshment at open houses caused attendance to double. Election vear. Kennedy came to Providence but Nixon had the edge at Brown: Nixon, 48.67; Kennedy, 46.17. Ccontinued on page 285 15, 1940. Prepared at Jonathan Dayton Regional High School. Wrestling Freshman, Captain, Varsity. D.elta Tou Delta Rushing Chairmany. Address: 77 Spring brook Road, Springficld, New Jersey. KENNEY, Peter Clark. A.B. Born: December 20, 1939, Prepared at Phillips Andover Academy. German Club, Political Science Club. Soccer Freshman, Hockey Freshman, Varsity. Delta Kappa Epsilon President, Vice President, Social Chairman. Address: 15 Lockwood Road, West Newton. Massachusetts. KETCHUM, Richard Ross, Jr. A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born: March 2, 1940. Prepared at Hebron Aca- demy. Delta Tou Delta. Address: 20 Union Street, Marsh field, Massachusetts. - Johnson's Hummocks Restaurant Famous since 1905 245 Allens. Ave. Prime Rib Room Providence Cafe Midnight KILEY, Robert Charles. AB. Political Science. Born: July 15, 1936. Prepared at Browne and Nichols School. Inter Fraternity Council. Wrestling Freshman, Lacrosse Varsity. Lamda Chi Alpha. Address: 20 Chest- nut Street, Peabody, Massachusetts KILGORE, Benjamin Franklin. ScB. Physics Born: July 8, 1940. Prepared at Culver Military Academy. Dean's List. Physics Club Treasurer, Brown Parachute Club. Swimming Freshman, Varsity. Address: 5434 Woodland Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa. KLARSCH, Robert D. A.B. English Literature. Born: July 3, 1940. Prepared at Danville High School. Football IFreshman, Wrestling Freshman. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 211 Ferry Street, Danville, Pennsylvania. KOPF, Ralph Eugene. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 29, 1940. Dean's List. United Fund Cam- pus Drive, Inter Fraternity Council, Class Cabinet, Spring Weekend Committee, Brown Representative on Impact. University Television Production. Wrestling Freshman. Delta Phi Ritual Master, Pledge Master, Corresponding Secretary. Address: 23 Basset Avenue, Warwick, Rhode Island. KOSTELANETZ, Richard Cory. AB Awericon Civilization Honors. Born: May 14, 1940. Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Dean's List. NAACP Secretary, Treasurer, Brown Daily Herald, Hubris CEditor, Brunon- ia, Brown Review Book Review Editor, Managing Edi- tor. Address: 21 Shawnee Road, Scarsdale, New York. KNISS, Richard David. 5. B Engineering. Born: September 15, 1940. Prepared at Suffield Academy. Brown Radio Club, IRE, Brown Youth Guidance. Kappa Sigma. Address: 540 Woodstock Boad, Southbridge, Massachu- setts. KURK, Neal Michael. AB. History. Born: June 8, 1940. Prepared at Great Neck High School. Dean's List. Brown Band, Brown Youth Guidance Executive Board, Freshman Week Committee, Class Cabinet, University of Edinburgh Dialectic Society, Historical Society. Olney House President, Goddard House Treasurer. Address: 44 Colgate Road, Great Neck, New York. LAMBERT, Robert P. AB. History. Born: August 26, 1940. Prepared at Horace Gregory High School. Brown Daily Herald News Director, Special Correspondent. Crew Varsity, Archibald House Manager. Plu Delia Theta Cultural Affairs Chairman, Chorister. Address: 175 Orchard Ridee Road. Chappaqua, New York. LAMPE, Ernest William. A.B. Political Science. Born: November 10, 1940. Prepared at Blake School. Delta Sigma Rho Forensic Fraternity. Debating Union Vice President, Brown Youth Guidance Vice President, Stu- dent Court Justice, NROTC Midshipman Staff, Sup- ply Officer. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 4959 Colfax South Minneapolis. Minnesota. LANDON, R. Theodore. B. Art. Bom: June 30, 1939. Prepared at Wayland Academy. Glee Club, Sock and Buskin. Address: Rural Route 3, Box 659, Delavan, Wis- consin. LANE, John, K. AB. Economics. Born: December 13, 1939, Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Regine Award for Academic Excellence. Dean's List. Class Cabinet. Swimming Freshman, Soccer Freshman, Var- sity. Zeta Psi President, Vice President. Address: 99 Robsart Road, Kenilworth, Illinois. LANE, Robert Hilary. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 3, 1940 Prepared at Brookline lHigh School Class Cabinet, Freshman Week Committee. Tower Club Secre- taryD. Address: 4 Alton Court, Brookline, Massachusetts. LAPINSKI, William John. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 10, 1940. Prepared at Greenfield High School Football Freshman, Varsity, Manager . Lambda Chi Alpha Address: 111 Hope Street, Greentield, Massachusetts. LASKO, Thomas F. A.B. Economics. Born: July 15, 1940. Prepared at Mount Lebanon High School. Lyman G. Bloomingdale Scholar. Political Science Club, International Relations Club, Physics Club. Football Freshman. Delta Tau Delta Recording Secretary. Address: 423 Long Drive, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. THE BROWN UNIVERSITY STORE THE PEMBROKE BOOKSTORE IR o ' 2 I .zm ' A To the Class of 1962: We have appreciated your patronage during the past four years, and hope to see you whenever you are back on campus. Pinkerton's National Detective Inc. Investigation and Security Service 10 Dorrance St. Howard Bldg. DE 1-1543 LAVINO, Jokn Joseph, Jr. AB. Born: September 9, 1940. Prepared at St. Mary's Boys' High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Newman Club. Football Freshman, Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 5 Had- dington Place. Lynn, Massachusetts. LAYER, Karl G., Jr. AB. Music. Born: April 23, 1940. Prepared at Episcopal Academy. WBRU Classical Music Program Director, Brown Youth Guidance, Music Department Student Assistant, Convocation Choir. Ad- dress: 4 Chestnut Lane, Strafford, Wayne P.O., Penn- sylvania. LEIBOWITZ, Jon Jacob. A.B. History Honors. Born: July 5, 1940. Prepared at Great Neck High School. Francis Wayland Scholar. Dean's List. Class Cabinet, Inter House Council, Tower Club Recording Secretary, Vice Psychology. EASTERN SCIENTIFIC CO. DISTRIBUTORS . LABORATORY APPARATUS. MEDICAL AND SURGICAL'SUPPLIES, DRUGS AND CHEMICALS 267 PLAIN STREET PROVIDENCE 5, RHODE ISLAND GAspee 1-4600 Eileen Darling's Restaurant Town n' Country Motel Esquire Motel The finest in food and lodging in a country atmosphere. Just three miles from the University Junctions of Route 6 and IIA Seekonk, Mass. President. Address: 12 Foxwood Road, Great Neck, New York. LENAHAN, John James. ScB. Flectrical Engi neering Honors. Born: November 28, 1940. Prepared at Mattituck High School. Brown University Scholarship, Robert L. Lamaison Memorial Scholarship, Convair AF- ROTC Cadet Award, Sons of American Revolution, AF- ROTC, Newman Club, Radio Club, Brown Engincering Society, IRE Executive Board. Address: Box 974, Matti- tuck. New York. LEONARD, James John, Jr. AB Pychology. Born: January 13, 1940. Prepared at Manheim Township High School. Dean's List. Football Freshman, Baseball Freshman, Varsity, Co-Captain. Lambda Chi Alpha CAth- letic Director, Ritualist. Address: 8915 Ensley Lane, Lea- wood, Kansas. LEVIN, Harvey. A.B. Political Science. Born: De- cember 2, 1940. Prepared at Classical High School. Ad- dress: 53 Ivv Avenue. Cranston, Rhode Island. LEVY, Richard Gilbert. AB. Political Science. Born: July 31, 941. Prepared at Hope High School. Tower Club. Address: 741 Elmgrove Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. LEWIS, Eugene William, Ill. AB. Economics. Born: July 20, 1940. Prepared at Grosse Pointe University School. Liber Brunensis Business Manager. Tennis Freshman. Address: 1023 Yorkshire Road, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. LILLY, Barton Ludlow. A.B. History. Bomn: April 27, 1940. Prepared at Denver Country Day School. Dean's List. Chess Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Outing Club Vice President, Liber Brunensis Production Manager, 284 Wayland IHouse CPresident, Brown Charities Drive. Ad- dl'CSSZ 440 Fndora Streat Denver, Colorado' LITTLE, Lewis Earl. ScB. Physics Honors. Born: December 23, 1941. Prepared at Wayne High School. Curt John Ducasse Premium in Metaphysics, C. F. Brush Hon- orary Physics Scholarship, National Science Foundation Research Grants, Francis Wayland Scholar, Deans List. University Bands, Student Section, American Institute of Physics President. Basketball Freshman Manager. Ad- dress: 4 Kathleen Court, Wavne. New Tersey. LODEWICK, Robert John, Jr. A.B. Internation- al Relations. Born: March 5, 1941, Prepared at Simpson High School. University Scholarship. Dean's List. Liber Brunensis Sales Staff, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 11 Mill Road, Huntington, New York. LOLORDO, Vincent Mark. A.B. Psychology Honors. Born: December 14, 1940. Prepared at Leonia High School. James Manning Scholar. Dean's List. Intra- mural Sports. Address: 28 Brinkerhoff Terrace, Palisades Park, New Jersey. LOMBARDO, Gaetano. ScB. Physics Honors. Born: February 4, 1940. Prepared at Classical High School. Brown Daily Herald Business Board, Brown Charities Drive Executive Committee, Physics Club, Newman Club. Address: 24 Whitney Street, Providence, Rhode Is- land. LOPRESTI, Robert M. AB Pychology. Born: Jan- Uary 23, 1940. Prepared at Regional High School. Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 72 Lake Avenue, Fair Haven, New Tersev. LUKEN, Ralph Andrew. AB. Hisory. Bom: April 19, 1940. Prepared at Culver Military Academy. Dean's List. Brown Charities Drive Chairman, Vice Chairman, Cammarian Club. Squash Club. Address: 3313 Greenwood Lane, Godfrev, Illinois. LYDEN, Richard Alan. AB. Political Science. Born: March 7, 1940. Prepared at Sleepy Hollow High School. Phi Kappa Psi Secretary. Address: 138 Rosehill Avenue, Tarrytown, New York. MAIRS, George Anthony. AB. English Liter- ature. Born: January 19, 1941, Prepared at Waltham High School. Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown March- ing Band, Brown Daily Herald Production Manager. Ad- dress: 85 Canterbury Road, Waltham, Massachusetts. MAKANNA, Phillip. AB. At CHonors. Born: September 17, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Gilbert Stewart Prize in Art. Dean's List. Brown Rowing Associa- tion Secretary, Vice President, President, Section Art Exhibition Co-Chairman. Crew CFreshman, Varsity. Address: 35 Greenlawn Road, Huntington, New York. MANCUSO, Jack Gilbert. A.B. International Re- lations. Born: August 1, 1940. Prepared at Central Catholic High School. Brown University Scholarship. WBRU Sportscaster, International Relations Club. Football Freshman, Varsity, Baseball Freshman, Varsity. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 217 Franklin Street, Reading, Penn- sylvania. MARKELLA, Fred L. AB. American Civilization. Born: November 8, 1938. Prepared at Williston Academy. Class Cabinet, American Civilization Club. Delta Tau Del- ta. Address: 15 Dennis Avenue, Brockton, Massachusetts. MARTIN, Hayes S. A.B. English Literature. Born: July 25, 1940. Prepared at The Hill School. Dean's List. Over 509 of Brown seniors go on to graduate work. Bishop Homer A. Tomlinson stopped here, too, to crown himself king of all the nations of men. He lost his flag in the process, but became DKE of the Month.' Norman Mailer exchanged quips with the audience in the liveliest lecture of the year. The AD's had a rock and roll party one weekendthe only one on campus at the time. Result: the AD house took much flack. One drunk kept emptying drinks into the piano. When asked by another oenophilistWhy?, the reply was that he was putting out a fire. The roof of the hockey rink began to take shape, and then it was discovered that the ring connecting all of the beams at the center was too small. It snowed and snowed one night and some 300-odd Brown men and Pembrokers refused to let the town plough the hills by bodily blocking the streets. Reason was, the re- fectory trays were shding beautifully that night. Some of us devoted our attention to the more immediate problem of scaling the doors of Andrews Hall with the Snow. Ccontinued on page 287 Brown Youth Guidance, French Club. Address: 655 Park Avenue, New York City, New York. MARTIN, Kenneth William. AB. Russian Stud- ies. Born: February 22, 1940. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. University Scholarship. Inter House Council, Russian Club, Cross Country Freshman, Track CFresh- man. Antes House Czar. Address: 435 Webster Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. MAURER, Neil Douglas. A.B. Sociology. Born: January 12, 1941. Prepared at Springfield Technical High School. Convocation Chorale. Archibald House Vice Presi- dent. Address: 107 Blaine Street, Springfield, Massachu- setts. MAYER, Luke F., Jr. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 23, 1940. Prepared at William Penn Charter School. NROTC Drill Team, Inter Fraternity Council, Debating Union, Tennis Freshman, Varsity. Delta Tau Delta Vice President. Address: 410 Cambridge Apartments, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. McCORMICK, Paul Lewis. AB. English Litera- ture. Born: August 21, 1940. Prepared at Loomis School. Brown Radio Club, Brown-Pembroke Outing Club. Everett House Treasurer, Phi Delta Theta. Address: 673 Bloom- field Avenue, Bloomfield, Connecticut. McCREW, Thomas Nolze. AB. American Civili- zation. Born: April 2, 1940. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive, Class Cabinet. Soccer Freshman, Varsity. Delta Phi Vice President. Address: 3233 Foy Hollow Drive, Cleveland, Ohio. McINTOSH, Douglas John. AB. Classics. Born: July 2, 1940. Prepared at West Senior High School. Classics COMPLIMENTS OF EGAN'S LAUNDERERS - CLEANSERS NEWPORT, R, I. Club CTreasurer. Address: 215 Oriole Avenue, Paw- tucket, Rhode Island. McLAUGHLIN, David Jordan. AB. B'otm.ay. Born October 19, 19490, Prepared at West Senior High School. Dean's List. Address: 69 Marbury Avenue, Paw tucket, Rhode Island. . McLAUGHLIN, Paul Dennis. AB. Political Sci ence, Born: July 16, 1940. Prepared at Cranston H!gh School. PLC. Plantations House Committee, Brown Rowing Association. Crew Freshman, Varsity. Address: 328 Gar den City Drive, Cranston, Rhode Island. McMULLEN, Thomas B. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 19, 1940. Prepared at Ann Arbor High School. Brown Key, Faunce House Board of Governors, MANCHESTER and HUDSON 300 Station Street Cranston, R HO 7-8815 HOWARD C. BARBER Class Cabinet. Soccer Freshman, Swimming Varsity. Address: 2206 Hill Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. MERSON, Raymond Bruce. AB. History. Bom: March 11, 1941, Prepared at Barsick High School Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance, Classics Club, Brown March- ing Band. Address: 595 Adantic Steet, Bridgeport, Con- necticut. MESSIER, Lynn Laurent. 4B Sociology. Prepared DAIRY Pasteurized Homogenized Grade A Milk 28 Mary Street EAST PROVIDENCE, R. 1 GE 4-2165 at Classical High School. Rhode Island State Board of Education Scholarship. AFROTC, Brown Youth Guidance, Plantations House Commuters Association President, Alumni Chairman, Newsletter Chairman. Football Fresh- ?33 . Address: 48 Auburn Avenue, Johnston, Rhode Is- and, MEYER, Walter Ralph. AB. Economics. Bom: Au gust 29, 1940, Prepared at Madison High School. Cam- marian Club. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 28 Beech Avenue, Madison, New Tersev. MILLER, Gerald David. AB. Pocholosy. Bomn: June 25, 1941. Prepared at Brockton High School. Brown Youth Guidance Executive Board. Address: 73 Belcher Avenue, Brockton, Massachusetts. MILLER, James Benjamin. AB. American Liter ature. Born: December 17, 1940, Prepared at St. Louis Country Day Scheol. UCA, WBRU CSales Manager. Delta Upsilon Social Chairman, Rushing Chairman, Presi- dent. Address: 571 Westborough Place, St. Louis. Mis- souri. MINARD, Julian Edward. A History. Bomn: December 7, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Glee Club CLibrarian, Business Manager, Bruinaires Business Man- As the number of Greek refugees in Hope College rose, there was some agitation in that group for going local, but the necessary number for a quorum could never be gathered. Most of Hope's residents were on subbatical leave to the John Hay. Some thought there was a fire in the Biltmore 1.F.C. Week- end. At least, that was the explanation given for all the fire hoses being turned on in the back staircase. In spite of the acoustics, i.e., the lack of them, the Four Freshmen were an overwhelming success on Spring Week- end. Spring Weekend, and Andrews House was out in full force looking for a couple of Brown men. They were supposedly locked up with the measles, but who could resist the gaity outside? Besides, the infirmary is dry, so down the back stairs and over the wall to freedom and a Frosty. Spring Weekend, and it rained. Some of us persisted and pitched a tent on the banks of the Seekonk. It was even foggy on Saturday and most of us couldn't find Sayles Hall for the traditional jazz concert. Things brightened up, how- ever, for the band concert on the College Green Sunday afternoon. John Hay's nose needs powdering. After Where the Boys Are Brown men made out even better than in previous years at the Ft. Lauderdale festivities. Cliff Adelman does not roar. Some seniors were cleaning up the chapter room and de- cided that an old TV had been sitting around too long, Needless to say, it didn't pass the RCA bounce test when lowered from the fourth story. Sigma Chi follow suit by tossing a piano onto the patio. That was the year a taxicab disappeared from in front of a coffee shop downtown. It was found a few minutes later, still running, but empty, standing in front of the West Quad. The rapid recovery was accomplished through the cabbie's observation that a couple of fellows in khaki jackets and sneakers Cdirty sneakers were standing outside the shop on that cold night. They all dress the same up there, he said. 1 ;IDLasE IMDIEATE GRADE 1Y 'hg - Flpml Grade MaTnemaTies 1 Prbib iy o o i 5 W; Check rerge in which actuad evert Sccurs L o D 1 E But Bw ma cordy yilf Hein k 7 Hane Yo:f. - 4 C We checked the mail pretty often right after exams. Ccontinued on page 289 ager. Zeta Psi Corresponding Secretary. Address: 210 Main Street, Andover, Massachusetts. MISSUD, Jean Walden, IIl. A.B. History. Born: April 1, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Track Fresh- man, Varsity. Theta Delta Chi Secretary, Treasurer. Address: Middle Road, Chilmack, Massachusetts. MORRIS, John Elliott. A.B. English Literature. Born: April 3, 1940. Prepared at Wyoming Seminary. Brown Key Treasurer. Swimming CFreshman, Varsity, Captain. Sigma Nu Pledge Master, Vice President. Ad- dress: 37 Price Street, Kingston, Pennsylvania. MORSE, John Francis, Ill. A.B. Sociology. Born: May 2, 1940. Prepared at Governor Drummer Academy. Yacht Club Vice Commodore, Commodore. Soccer Freshman, Sailing Team Freshman, Varsity. Kappa Sigma. Address: 8 Hamilton Road, Wellesley, Massachu- setts. MORTON, Barry R. AR Fndlish Literature. Born. September 23, 1940. Piepared at Chelmsford High School. Marching Band, UCA Publicity Chairman, Mission Week Chairman, Tutorial Program for Underprivileged Chil- dren, Residential Seminar in Christianity, Academic Af fairs Committee. Address: 27 Linwood Avenue, Chelms- ford, Massachusetts. MYLES, Robert Johnson. AB Philosophy. Burn: March 14, 1940. Prepared at North Shore High School. Brown Key, Class President. Football Freshman, Varsity, Track CFreshman, Varsity. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 5 Mill Road. Glen Head, New York NADOLNY, Richard Anthony. AB. Biology. Born: July 27, 1940. Prepared at Abington High School. University Scholarship. Dean's List. Newman Club. Basket- ball Freshman. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 10 Arch Street, North Abington. Massachusetts. NAIDOFF, Michael Allen. AB. Biology Honors. Born: August 28, 1940. Prepared at A. Lincoln High School. Brown Daily Herald, Class Cabinet, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown University Forum for Civil TLiberties. Address: 3500 Tudor Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Born: November 4, 1940. Prepared at Lawrenceville High School. Brown Charities Drive Captain, Brown Yacht Club, Sunday Club. Phi Delta Theta Vice President, Rushing Chairman, Alumni Secretary, Chorister, Librarian, Historian. Address: 1649 Forest Hill, Plainfeld, New Jersey. NOY, Thomas Wolff. AB. Political Science. Born: July 9, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Soccer Freshman, VarsityD, Wrestling Freshman, Varsity, La- crosse Freshman, Varsity. Delta Phi. Address: 61 St Ours Road, Sorel, Quebec, Canada. O'CONNELL, Douglus Arnold. AB. Economics. Born: March 23, 1941, Prepared at Watertown High School. NROTC Drill Team. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 51 Dunboy, Brighton, Massachusetts. OCHSNER, Edward Conner. AL conomics Born: April 26, 1941. Prepared at Shortridge High School. Glee Club, Bruinaires, Mixed Chorus. Crew Freshman. Delta Upsilon Treasurer. Address: 4565 Cold Spring Road. Indianapolis, Indiana. ORSINI, Daniel Joseph. AB. English Literature Honors. Born: October 8, 1937. Prepared at Classical High School. Francis Wayland Scholar. Dean's List. Brown Daily Herald Features Writer. Address: 212 Ohio Ave- nue, Providence, Rhode Island. OVERBY, Albert W. AB Psychology. Born: Octo ber 19, 1940, Prepared ar B. T. Washington High School. Intramural Track Medal Dean's List. Track lreshman, Varsity, Football Freshman. Slater House President. Address: 2408 Myrtle Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia. OVIATT, George William. AB Economics Born: December 27, 1940. Prepared at Regional High School 6. Address: West Morris Road, Bantem, Connecti- cuf, PADMORE, George Arthur, Jr. AB. Politicd Science. Born: January 12, 1940. Prepared at Williston Academy. WBRU, Political Science Club, International Relations Club Vice Chairman. Harkness House Social ChairmanY Address: Palmhurst, Sinkor, Monrovia, Liberia. PARKER, Alan Jay. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: Octo- ber 13, 1940. Prepared at Everett High School. Dean's List. Class Cabinet, Inter House Council, Spring Week- end Committee, ASME President. Address: 41 Francis Street. Everett. Massachusetts. PARKMAN, Allen Montgomery. AB. Interna- tional Relations. Born: August 5, 1940. Prepared at Edge- wood High School. NROTC, Freshman Week Committee, Class Cabinet, Spring Weekend Committee, WBRU. Soc- cer Freshman, Brown Rugby Club. Sigma Chi. Address: 431 Maple Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey. PASQUALE, Bruce Vincent. AB. Physics. Born: December 22, 1940. Prepared at Cranston High School. Freshman Week Committee Chairman, Inter House Council, Class Cabinet. Archibald House. Address: 59 Cleveland Avenue. Cranston, Rhode Island. PAYNE, John Edward. AB. Psychology. Bom: May 23, 1941. Prepared at Brookfield High School. Brown Daily Herald Photography Editor, Pi Delta Epsilon Pres- ident, Brownbrokers, Photography Club, Physics Club. Address: 1145 Hiohland Drive. Elm Grove, Wisconsin. PEIRCE, Gilbert Sterling. AB. Political Science. Born: September 12, 1940. Prepared at University School. Dean's List. WBRU, Sock and Buskin, Brown Charities Drive, Cammarian Club, UCA, Political Science Club. frames artists' materials industrial displays OAKES ON THE HILL 10 Thomas St. PROVIDENCE S R GASPEE 1-5137 School. Brown Charities Drive. Harkness House Secretary, Treasurer, President. Address: Box 299M Route 5, Cedar Lane. Vienna, Virginia. PIZER, Stephen Murray. AB ScB. Applied Mathematics Honors. Born: October 4, 1941. Prepared at Winthrop High School. Dean's List. Francis Wayland Scholar. Marching Band, Wind Ensemble, Hillel. Archi- NETTLETON SHOES Louis Levy Hill House Lid. Ms INC Gifts For All Occasions 278 Thayer Street Football Freshman, Crew Varsity. Sigma Nu Secre- tary. Address 2835 Sedgewick Road, Cleveland, Ohio. PEITER, Henry Donald. AR History Bom: Febru ary 6, 1941, Prepared at Grosse Pointe University School Dean's List. WBRU. Delta Phi House Manager, Corr- responding Secretary, Chairman Academic Committee Address: 269 Merriweather, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. PETRONIO, Everett Anthony. AB Political Sci ence. Born: July 10, 1940, Prepared at La Salle Academy Newman Club, Plantations House. Address: 553 Dyer Avenue, Cranston, Rhode Island. PHILLIPS, Donald Robert. AB. Geology. Born: July 19, 1940. Prepared at Nazareth High School. Address: 226 Pleasant Street, Seekonk, Massachusetts. PINKSTON, Charles Howard. AB Iconomics Born: February 20, 1939. Prepared at Wakefield High bald House. Address: 88 Somerset Avenue, Winthrop, Massachusetts. POOLER, John Preston. AR Physics Born: June 10, 1935. Prepared at Weston High School. Francis Way- land Scholar. United States Navy Band, Guantannamo Bagf, Cuba. Psychology Department Rat Watcher. Proctor, Mead House. Dean's List. Brown University Orchestra, Wind Ensemble, Brass Ensemble, Sock and Buskin, Brown Daily Herald. Address: 88 Church Street, Weston, Massachusetts. POULIOT, Gerald Joseph. AB. Political Science. Born: July 11, 1940, Prepared at New Preparatory School. qukness House Vice President, Treasurer. Address: 10 Phillips Street, Lawrence, Massachusetts. POULSON, Donald Boardman. AB. Hisiory, Born: September 1, 1940. Prepared H n Hi ; ; pared at Hamden Hijoh School. German Club, Brown Charities Drive. B0 'Eelagm Freshman. Mead House Cultural Co-Chairman Social Babo graduated. Ccontinued on page 290 Co-Chairman, President. Address: 3 Ingram Street, Ham- den. Connecticnt. POULTEN, Stephen David. AR Russian Studies. Born: August 26, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Undergraduate Assistantship CRussian Department, Dean's List. Russian Club. Address: 249 Warrington Street, Pro- vidence, Rhode Island. POTTER, William Calvin. AB. Political Science. Born: November 21, 1940. Prepared at Jackson High School. Dean's List. Inter Fraternity Council, Political Sci- ence Club. Football Freshman. Lambda Chi Alpha Pres- ident. Address: 1127 South Higby Street, Jackson, Mich- igan. PRESTON, Shea. AB. Spanish Honors. Born: March 2, 1940. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory School. First Philo Bennett Prize in Political Science, Spanish Club Prize. Dean's List. Brown Squash Racquets Association President, Rhode Island Squash Racquets Association Member Executive Board. Address: 421 East Shore Road, Great Neck. New York. PROUT, Richard Lawrence. B Fnglish Litera ture. Born: January 16, 1941. Prepared at Boston English High School. Yacht Club, German Club, Brown Review. Address: 83 Hillsdale Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. RAE, Bruce Alan. AB. Iunternational Relations. Born: February 18, 1939. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Dean's List. Inter Fraternity Council, UCA, International Relations Club, Political Science Club. Crew Freshman. Phi Gamma Delta Secretary. Address: Witherenn Dirive, Greenwich, Connecticut. RAWLS, William B., Jr. ScB. Engineering Born: January 16, 1941. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Dean's List. NROTC Drill Team, Brown Yacht Club. Soccer Freshman, Varsity. Phi Delta Theta Social Chair- mar;g. Address: 1165 Fifth Aveune, New York City, New York. REED, Philip Marvin. AB. Economics. Born: No- vember 26, 1934. Prepared at Nyack High School. Dean's List. NROTC, Glee Club. Track Freshman. Phi Delta Theta Social Chairman, Warden, Vice President, Senior IIVllem;erD. Address: 18 Glenwood Avenue, Cranston, Rhode sland. REID, Michael Thomas. AR Fudlish Literature. Born: September 11, 1940. Prepared at Archbishop Stepinac High School, Delta Phi Chairman House Improvements. Address: 100 Concord Avenue, White Plains, New York. Support the Brown Charities Drive PORTER, William Wharton. A.B. History. Born: May 2, 1940, Prepared at Lawrenceville School. Golf Team Varsity. J'si Upsilon. Address: 712 Rugby Road, Syra- cuse, New York. Buy The 61 Liber Only a few copies left SPECIAL PRICE $5 CHEAP REISERT, John A. ScB. Civil Engineering. Born: January 21, 1938. Prepared at La Salle Academy. ASCE Vice President, President. Track Freshman, Varsity. Address: 25 Fifth Avenue, East Greenwich, Rhode Island. RENOLA, Anthony C. A.B. History: Born: March 20, 1940. Prepared at Mt. Pleasant High School. Delta Phi President, Recording Secretary. Address: 67 Metropolitan Road. Providence, Rhode Island. RICE, Stephen Edgar. ScB. Eugineering. Born. April 15, 1940. Prepared at Clifford J. Scott High School. Brown Key, IRE, Intermural Athletic Council President. Basketball Freshman, Track Varsity. Delta Tau Delta CAthletic Chairman. Address: 19 Argyle Court, Summit, New Jersey. Industrial Laboratories, Co., Inc. Consulting Chemists 1720 Clay St. Denver, Colorado A complete analytical chemical laboratory for the food, feed and related industries. RICHMAN, Stephen Joel. AB Psychology CHon ors. Born: December 6, 1940. Prepared at The Gunnery. Dean's List. Class Cabinet, Debating Club, Brown Youth Guidance Associate Board, Brown Charities Drive Treas- urer, Vice Chairman. Crew Freshman. Hegeman House Vice President, Pi Lambda Phi Treasurer. Address: 70 Greenway Road. New I .ondon, Connecticut. RING, Peter Clarke. 4p English Literature. Born: September 21, 1940. Prepared at Coral Gables Sen- ior High School. Class Cabinet, WBRU, Brown Charities Drive. Football Varsity, Manager, Head Manager, Base- ball Varsity. Address: 1106 Aduana Avenue, Coral Ga- bles, Florida. RIPLEY, Robert C. AR Biology. Born: October 24, 1940. Prepared at Attleboro High School. Biology Club. Ad- dress: 381 South Avenue, Attleboro, Massachusetts. ROESSNER, John David. Sc.B. Electrical Engi- neering. Born: July 20, 1940. Prepared at North Hagers- town High School. Dean's List. Tau Beta Pi Vice Presi- dent, IRE-AIEE President. Address: 511 Gordon Circle, Hagerstown. Marvland. ROGERS, Bruce Alden. AB Biology. Born: May 3, 1940. Prepared at St. George's School. Sport Parachute Club Treasurer, Outing Club. Swimming Freshman, Varsity. Address: Brookridge Drive, Greenwich, Con- necticut. ROHRBACH, Nelson Johnstone. AB. Sociology. Born: April 17, 1940. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Brown Key Vice President, Classics Club, Proctor. Foot- ball Freshman, Varsity, Captain, Baseball Freshman. Delta Phi Secretary. Address: 364 Hillcrest Road, Ridge- 290 Dean Durgin fought world checkers chanipion, Thomas Wiswell, to a draw. After ten years without a score, the University produced a Rhodes Scholar along with the customarily large crop of Woodrow Wilson Fellows, Fulbrights, National Science Foundation Fellows, and others. The varsity crew topped off the year by winning the Dad Vail Regatta for the third time straight. 1961-62 started off with a telling attack on one of the most cherished of traditions. A traitorous Herald staff spon- sored a trip to Wheaton Con the night of the freshman mixer thered for a flock of disguised Pembrokers. The enemy infiltrated Wheatonite ranks, collected front-page material loaded with ungraded views on the Wheaton vs. Pembroke question. Many red faces. The Freshman Class rallied to the spirit of the time Cto some with the cry, Stay Alive, Sixty-five. Idealism ran high. A couple of seniors applied to the Peace Corps and another paid his way to Puerto Rico to help build a church. Over the summer the University painted the Blue Room blue again and stopped trying to confuse things by calling it the Coffee Lounge. Ccontinued on next page wood, New Jersey. ROSENTHAL, Anthony James. AB. Politicd Science. Born: July 29, 1940, Prepared at Francis W. Parker School. Dean's List. Political Science Club, Class Cabinet, Freshman Orientation Committee, Ski Club. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 230 East Delaware Place, Chicago. Illinois. ROSENUS, Alan Harvey. AB Eudlish Honors. Born: July 9, 1940. Prepared at Menlo School. Dean's List. Sphinx Club. Address: 622 Palm Drive, Beverly Hills, California. ROSENTHAL, Stephen Roy. Sc.B. Applied Math- ematics. Born: 1942, Prepared at Valley Stream Central High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Hillel, Russian Club, Inter House Council. Tower Club. Address: 15 Meadow- brook Lane, Valley Stream, New York. ROTH, Arthur M. B. History. Born: April 14, 1939. Prepared at Albany Academy. Freshmen Week Committee, Class Cabinet, Pi Lambda Phi Treasurer. Address: 166 South Manning Boulevard, Albany, New York. RUST, David Maurice. ScB. Physics. Born: De- cember 9, 1939. Prepared at South Denver High School. Martin Foundation Scholarship, College Scholar, Univer- sity Scholar. Dean's List, Pi Delta Epsilon. Liber Brunensis Photography Editor, Associate Editor, President, Faunce House Board of Governors, Physics Club, Photography Club. Sigma Xi. Address: 3102 South Fillmore Street, Denver, Colorado. RUTHERFORD, Thomas Minns Ware. AB. Born: October 19, 1940. Prepared at Guilford High School. NROTC. Soccer Freshman, Varsity. Delta Upsilon. Ad dress: Colonial Road, Guildord, Connecticut. RYAN, William James. AB. FEconomics. Born: February 2, 1940. Prepared at Mountain Lakes High School. Glee Club CExecutive Board, Class Cabinet. Phi Gamma Delta President. Address: 52 Crane Road, Moun- tain Lakes, New Jersey. SANDELL, Stephen Perry. AB. History. Bom: June 15, 1940. Prepared at University School. Year Special Study at University of Minnesota. Applachian Mountain Society. Hockey Freshman, Kappy Sigma. Address: 5027 Woodlawn Boulevard, Minneapolis, Minnesota. SAPER, Michaeal Saul. AB Euglish Literatwre Honors. Born: January 4, 1941. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Dean's List, College Scholar. Cam- marian Club Recording Secretary, Treasurer, Hillel Ex- ecutive Board, University Forum for Civil Liberties Exec- utive Committee, Debating Union, Delta Sigma Rho. Ad- dress: 411 Sheridan Road, Wilmette, Illinois. SARGISSON, Stuart. A.B. Classics. Born. December 10, 1939. Prepared at Brooks School. Address: Groton, Massachusetts. SCHAFFER, Peter Robert. AB. English Hon- ors. Born: May 25, 1940. Prepared at Scarsdale High School. Dean's List, Research Assistantship. Baseball gIFrishmanD. Address: 43 Hampton Road, Scarsdale, New ork, SCHNURD, Mortimer Jay. AB. Psychoceramics. Born: 1764. Prepared at Ever Forward Institute. Carberry Prize in Cycloelocution. Honorary Basket Weaver. Bhery Club, Nebish Society, BMOC, Non-Thinkers Club Presi- dent. Address: Broken Bucket, Arkansas. SCHUSTER, Philip Anthony. AB. History. Bom: March 5, 1940. Prepared at The Taft School. Dean's List. French Club. Address: 193 Delaware Avenue, Waterbury; Connecticut. SCHWARZ, Philip James. AB. American Liter- ature. Born: November 12, 1940. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory School. Brown Daily Herald. Address: 21 Indian Rock Road, New Canaan, Connecticut. SEDGEWICK, John. ScB. Applied Mathematics. Born: July 19, 1940. Prepared at Windham High School. Dean's List. Address: 4020 Rickover Road, Silver Spring, Maryland. SHAPIRO, Joel Alan. ScB. Applied Mathematics. Born: February 23, 1942. Prepared at South River High School. Hartshorn First Mathematics Prize, Manning Cal- culation Prize, Manning Scholar. Dean's List. Debating Union, German Club, Brown Engineering Society. Ad- dress: 71 Canterbury Road, East Brunswick, New Jersey. SHAPIRO, Michael David. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 12, 1940. Prepared at Mount Herman School. Class Cabinet, Sock and Buskin, Ski Club, Italian Study Club, Political Science Club. Lacrosse Varsity. Pi Lamb- da Phi Social Chairman, Marshall. Address: 8 Hillside Road, New London, Connecticut. SHATTUCK, Arthur Bennett. Sc.B. Electrical En- gineering. Born: August 1, 1940. Prepared at West Spring- field High School. Brown Band, Ski Club, Brown Engi- neering Society, IRE-AIEE. Archibald House Treasurer, House Chairman. Address: General Knox Road, Woro- noco, Massachusetts. SHERMAN, John B. AB. English Literature. Born: January 30, 1940. Prepared at University School. Reserve Officers Award. NROTC Marine Officer Candidate. Soc- cer Freshman, Varsity, Captain, Sailing CFreshman. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 60 Buttonwood Lane, Darien, Connecticut. The Brown Club of New York ordered a '62 LIBER, When someone set up a fallout shelter near the railroad station and started handing out pro-shelter phamplets, some of us braved the Providence cold and the unsympathe- tic police to counteract with other phamplets and plackards borrowed from the Boston chapter of the Student Peace Union. The Chiefs should petition for overtime pay when the pledges begin Ivy Room detail for the Brothers. The Raiders from the Lantern Lodge, an old friend to Wheaton fans, packed the Theta Delt partiesmostly with sub-freshmen and their dates. The Meehan Rink was a fabulous success. Everybody was seen at one time or another this year with a pair of ice skates over his Cor her shoulder. exciting new decorations THE PIT best food in town e BRUNCH e GRUNCH e LUNCH Workmen labored through the early part of the first semes- ter to bring a new look to the Refectory. We were cheered. Ccontinued on page 293 SIMPSON, John Ramsey. AB. Fnglish Litera ture. Bomn: January 23, 1940. Prepared at the Choate School. Jabberwocks Leader, Sock and Buskin, Brown- brokers CExecutive Board. Psi Upsilon. Address: Waverly, Pennsylvania. SIMPSON, Robley Justin. ScB Applied Mathe matics. Born: November 19, 1940. Prepared at Rocky River High School. Dean's List. Delta Phi Treasurer. Address: 19470 Laurel Avenue, Rocky River, Ohio. SKINNER, Kenneth Charles, Jr. AB. Sociolo- gy. Born: April 24, 1940. Prepared at Hamden Senior High School. Brown Youth Guidance Associate Board, Executive Board. Cross Country Freshman, Indoor, Outdoor Track Freshman. Address: 210 Woodin Street, Hamden, Con- necticut. SLAYTON, Michael Edward.A B Biology. Prepar- ed at Wakefield High School. University Scholarship. Bio- logy Club, Inter House Council. Address: 4826 South 30th Street, Arlington. Virginia. SMITH, Moreland Griffith, Jr. AB Ilistor. Born: 1940. Prepared at Sidney Lanier High School. NROTC, University Forum for Civil Liberties Treasurer, Canterbury Association, NAACP, Class Cabinet, Young Republicans. Address: 3236 Bankhead Avenue, Montgom- ery, Alabama. SMITH, Z. Hershel. AB Philosophy and Religions. Studies. Born: September 19, 1940. Prepared at Hope High School. Farband Scholarship Award. Address: 134 Brown Street, Providence, Rhode Island. SNYDER, Jack R. AB. FEconomics. Born: June 24 1940. Prepared at Horace Mann High School. Cammarian Club, Inter Fraternity Council, Brown Key. Football Fresh- man, Lacrosse Varsity. Delta Kappa Epsilon Vice Presi- dent. Address: 1711 Brookwood Drive, Gary, Indiana. SOUDER, Paul Sessler, Jr. ScB. Flectrical Eng neering. Born: October 8, 1940. Prepared at the Haverford School. Zeta Psi. Address: South Lantern Lane, Berwyn, Pennsylvania. SOUTH, John Rogers. AB. International Rela- tions. Born: June 25, 1940. Prepared at Escola Americana. AFROTC, Canterbury Vestry Treasurer. Golf Varsity. Delta Phi. Address: 5404 Ridgeficld Road, Washington, District of Columbia. SPACAGNA, Charles Anthony. AB. History Born: June 15, 1940. Prepared a. Classical High School. Hockey Freshman, Varsity, Baseball Freshman. Delta Phi. Address: 52 Forbes Street, Providence, Rhode Island. SPIEWAK, John David. AB. English Literature. Born: 16, 1940. Prepared at Columbia Grammar School. Brown Daily Herald Associate Board, Class Cab- inet, Hillel President, Honorary President, Sophomore Class Newspaper Editor, Student Court Defense Attor- ney, Cammarian Club Committee on Student Affairs, Faunce House Board of Governors, Tower Club. Address: 583 West Fnd Avenue, New York City, New York. STANFORD, Harold Milford. ScB. Chemistry. Born: May 19, 1939. Prepared at Perrysburg High School. Dean's List. NROTC, Brown Charities Drive Treasurer, Navy Drill Team, Fencing Club, Brunavians Vice Presi- dent, Treasurer Baseball Varsity. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 539 West Fighth Street, Perrysburg, Ohio. STARK. Bruce Purinton. A.B. History. Born: Au- gust 7, 1940. Prepared at Old Lyme High School. Brown Guidance, Inter House Council, Brown Charities Drive. Address: Beaver Brook Road, Lyme, Connecticut. Allen's Towel Linen Supply Inc. Since 1906 Complete Towel and Linen Service 40 Arnold Street Providence 6, Rhode Island GA 1-6026 Headquarters in the East for Foreign Sports Cars JAGUAR VOLKSWAGON - PORSHE ALFA - ROMEO LANCIA TRIUMPH - FIAT SALES AND SERVICE S e Kyl Coreign Cars lud. f Rhode dsland 1 RESERVOIR AVENUE PROVIDENCE, R. I. Telephone GEneva 4-9720 Asquino's Restaurant American - ltalian Food Cocktail Bar 580-584 North Broadway East Providence, R. I. The IFC revised the rushing rules and established a very firm policy towards infractions - don't look too hard. Who put that pork chop under the table? Buildings and Grounds waged a losing battle with apathetic students, who were numerous enough to wear increasingly evident paths across the campus greenery. The small white signs reading PLEASE placed near the most prominent paths disappeared almost as rapidly as they were put up. Some of us discovered the Haffenreffer Estate. Ccontinued on page 295 Tel. GAspee -1852 Delivery Service Brook St. Mart. Inc. Beverages for all occasions 144 Brook St. Providence, R. I. Ice Cubes STAUFFER, James Fry. Sc.B. Chemistry Hon- ors. Born: January 9, 1941. Prepared at Nether Providence High School. Francis Wayland Scholarship. Dean's List. Yacht Club, Rifle Club, Outing Club, German Club, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 509 Oak Crest Lane, Wallingford. Pennsylvania. STAUTS, Frank Donal. A B Mathematics - Eco- nomics. Born: March 10, 1940. Prepared at Abraham Lin- coln Iigh School. University Scholarship. Dean's List. Address: 7306 Shelbourne Street, Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. STEELE, Lee Bernard. A.B. Philosophy. Born: March 30, 1940. Prepared at Bethlehem High School. Sock and Buskin. Crew Freshman, Wrestling Varsity, Mana- ger. Theta Delta Chi. Address: Cloverleaf Circle, Bethle- hem, Pennsylvania. STEIN, Michael L. AB. Philosophy Honors. Born: June 19, 1940. Prepared at Evanston Township High School. Dean's List. Cammarian Club Committee on Stud- ent Affairs. Wrestling Freshman. Pi Lambda Phi. Ad- dress: 1632 West Touhy Avenue, Chicago, Illinois. STEINBERG, Stephen Harold. A.B. Sociology Honors. Born: October 11, 1940. Prepared at Winthrop High School. Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive CExecutive Board, Class Cabinet, Ski Club, Italian Study Group. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 187 Bartlett Road, Winthrop, Massachusetts. STEINEN, Randolph Paul. AB. Geology. Born: September 1, 1940. Prepared at Riverside Polytechnic High School, Naugatuck High School. Dean's List. UCA Resi- dential Christian Seminar. Basketball Freshman, Varsity, Manager. Address: 350 Westland Avenue, Cheshire, Con- necticut. Honors. Born: February 18, 1940. Prepared at Lynbrook High School. James Manning Scholarship, Dean's List. In- ternational Relations Club, Class Cabinet, Political Science Club CExecutive Board. Address: 27 Sunset Avenue, Lynbrook, New York. STEVENS, H. Jay, IIl. AB Political Science. Born: January 3, 1941. Prepared at Hillburn High School. NROTC Regular Scholarship Program. International Coun- cil CSecretary, Class Cabinet Chairman, 25th Reunion Fund. Track Freshman, Varsity. Kappa Sigma Presi- dent. Address: 9 Lakeview Avenue, Short Hills, New Jersey. SUHR, Robert William. AB ScB Engineering Born: October 10, 1940. Prepared at Alexis I. duPont High School. ASME. Golf Freshman, Varsity. Address: Brook Valley Road, Greenville, Delaware. SWARTS, William B. Ill. AB. English Literature. Born: March 17, 1941. Prepared at Brunswick School. Zeta Psi Historian, Seargent at Arms. Address: Pheasant Lane, Greenwich, Connecticut. SWITZER, Charles Stephen. AB. American Lit erature. Born: January 31, 1940. Prepared at Portsmouth Priory. Newman Club, Ski Club. Squash Club. Address: 36 Brentmoor Park, St. Louis, Missouri. SZUMIGALA, Fred Roman. A.B. English Litera- ture. Born: July 1, 1939. Prepared at Hempstead High School. University Scholarship. Brownbrokers, Sock and Buskin, Inter House Council, Jameson House President. Address: 26 Lee Street, Roosevelt, New York. TADDIKEN, John P. AB. Pychology. Tuly 1, 1940, Corporation Scholar. Brown Key, Dean's List. Intramural e 55 Hotel Motel Rooms o Completely Air Conditioned e Television Telephone - every room the new deluxe GATEWAY MOTOR INN Routes 6 114A Seekonk, Mass. ED 6-8050 Free Continental Breakfast e Swimming Pool e 4 Miles from Providence e Athletic Council CSecretary. Basketball Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 171 Meyer Avenue, Valley Stream, New York. TASHIJIAN, Dickran Levon. A.B. American Lit- erature Honors. Born: January 25, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Corporation Scholarship, Robert L. Knight Scholar. Dean's List. Cammarian Club, Freshman Proctor, Student Resident Advisor. Lacrosse Club Fresh- man. Sigma Chi. Address: 12 South Cedar Park, Melrose, Massachusetts. : TAYLOR, Albion Dennis. Sc.B. Applied Mathe- matics Honors. Born: August 16, 1941. Prepared at Wash- ington-Lee High School. Manning Mathematics Prize, Dean's List. Address: Hudson Street, Kinderhook, New Club, Radio Club. Rifle Team Varsity. Address: 2319 North Nottingham Street, Arlington, Virginia. THOMAS, Allen Lamont, A.B.History. Born: Sep- tember 30, 1940. Prepared at Ichabod Crane Central School. Dean's List. Address: Hudson Street, Kinderhook, New York. THOMPSON, Anfhony Richard. AB. American Literature. Born: February 27, 1940. Prepared at Bronx- ville High School. Crew CFreshman. Phi Gamma Delta Historian. Address: 6 Edgewood Lane, Bronxville, New York. THOMPSON, James Lowry. A.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: October 5, 1940. Prepared at Fast Grand Rapids High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Trv- ing Lvsander Foster Premium In French. Dean's List. UCA President, Debating Union. Address: 1027 San Lucia Drive S.E., Grand Rapids, Michigan. 294 0 Grist Mill Just the place for that Special Date Fall River Ave., Rt. 114A, SEEKONK, MASSACHUSETTS A. GASBARRO AND SON INC. 485 Atwells Ave. PROVIDENCE, R. I. TOMASINI, John S. AB. Economics. Born: August 6, 1937. Prepared at Wilbur L. Cross High School. Brown Band. Address: 115 Russell Street, New Haven, Connecti- cut. TRAUB, Robert David. AB. History. Born: Feb- ruary 11, 1940. Prepared at Nether Providence High School. Baseball Varsity. Delta Upsilon Athletic Chair- man. Address: 2 Hickory Lane, Wallingford, Pennsyl- vania. TRICKEY, Frederic David. AB. Philosophy. Born: September 18, 1939. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Class of 1952 Award, General Motors Scholarship. Dean's List. Class Vice President, Cammarian Club, Sphinx Club Secretary, Proctor, Student Resident Fellow. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 710 Sunset Lane, East Lansing, Michigan. TURCO, Alfred, Jr. AB. English-Music Honors. Born: August 11, 1940. Prepared at Crenston High School. James Manning Scholar, Francis Wayland Scholar, First Misch Prize in German, William Gaston Premium Scholar- ship. Phi Beta Kappa, Dean's List. Brown Youth Guidance, Student Peace Union, Convocation Choir, Sphinx Club. Address: 2528 Cranston Street, Cranston, Rhode Island. TURLEY, Patrick Haywood. AB. Political Science. Prepared at Palmer High School. Brownbrokers Musical Director, Board Chairman. Theta Delta Chi. Ad- dress: King Brook Farm, Palmer, Massachusetts. TURNBULL, Jerry Robert. A.B. Economics. Born: March 15, 1938. Prepared at Kent School. Ski Club. Phi Delta Theta Pledgemaster. Address: 1414 Wiggins Avenue, Springfield, Illinois. TWEED, Winslow Johnson. A.B. Art. Born: May 23, 1940. Prepared at Thayer Academy. University Scholar- ship. AFROTC. Marching Band. Address: 40 Newcomb Avenue, North Randolph, Massachusetts. VAN LOAN, David Alan. AB. Art. Born: April 15, 1936. Prepared at The Hotchkiss School. Swimming Freshman, Varsity. Beta Theta Pi. Address: Dingletonn Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. VERNAGLIA, Anthony R. AB. Latin Honors. Born: November 2, 1940. Prepared at Classical High School. Francis Wayland Prize in Latin. Dean's List. New- man Club, Classics Club. Address: 131 Olympia Avenue, North Providence, Rhode Island. VICTOR, William Allen. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 22, 1940. Prepared at St. Paul's School. Brown Daily Herald Feature Staff, Freshman Class Secretary, Liber Brunensis, Brown University Band, Brown Youth Guidance, Sophomore Class Secretary, Junior Class Secre- tary-Treasurer, Proctor, Spring Weekend Committee 'Treas- urer, Freshman Week Committee CChairman. Chapin House President. Address: 84 Buckingham Road, Rogck- ville Centre, New York. WACHTER, Robert Catlin. A.B. Economics. Born: July 10, 1940. Prepared at Grosse Pointe High School. Beta Theta Pi. Address: 1152 Lochmoor, Grosse Pointe Woods, Michigan. WADE, Roger Charles. ScB. Applied Mathema- tics. Born: January 26, 1941. Prepared at Trinity Pawling School. Brown Engineering Society, Russian Club, Residen- tial Seminar in Christianity. Address: 57 Romer Avenue, Pleasantville, New York. WALES, George Herrick, Jr. A.B. History. Born: January 15, 1941. Prepared at Priory School, New London High School, King George High School, Balboa High School. University Scholarship. Brown Youth Gui- Beta's gas pump was the hit of the Homecoming poster con- test, but the judges didn't think so. Homecoming was mild. The only significant injury was in- curred in the finest tradition by a celebrant who fell while attempting to remove the Zete flag by reaching from the roof. The pole helped break his fall. Ccontinued on page 297 ESTABLISHED 1836 PHILLIPS LEAD AND SUPPLY COMPANY Plumbing and Heating Supplies 231 South Main Street Providence 3, R. 1. dance CExecutive Board, President Student Court Chief Justice, Newman Club, Proctor, Captain of Waiters. Ad- dress: Commandant's House, Naval Base, Third Naval District, Brooklyn, New York. WALKER, David Hayden. AB. Biology. Bom: June 25, 1940, Prepared at Lyons Township High School. Ski Club, Golf Varsity, Track Freshman. Address: 442 South Park Road, Lagrange, Illinois. WALKER, Kenneth Henry. A.B. Art Bom: June 11, 1940. Prepared at Fieldston School. Dean's List. Ski Club President, Yacht Club, Section Art Show Co- Chairman. Soccer Freshman, Ski Team Freshman, Varsity, Captain. Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 907 Fifth Avenue, New York City, New York. WEEKS, David Fairchild. AB. English Literature CONSTRUCTION Skillfully Executed and Project-Proved BY A1 CY Tilden-Thurher Providimcr WATCH HILL 7, WAYLAND SQUARE + GARDEN CITY NEWPORT Providence, R. I Builders of the New Brown Biology Building Alexander J. Dimeo '50 Thomas P. Dimeo '52 Industrial Papers PROVIDENCE PAPER COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1885 160 DORRANCE STREEL PROVIDENCE 1, RHODE ISLAND POST OFFICE BOX 819 Printing Papers Office Equipment and Supplies Born: March 16, 1941. Prepared at Solebury School. WBRU Special Events Director, Technical Director, Brown Youth Guidance Group Leader, GDI. WHANG, Theodore Lee. AB Classics. Born: Oc tober 3, 1940. Prepared at Thomas M. Cooley High School. Dean's List. Classics Club Steward. Lacrosse Varsity. Address: 17083 Magnolia Parkway, Detroit, Michigan. WHITE, Charles J. Iil. A.B. American Civiliza- tion. Born: December 10, 1940. Prepared at Lincoln High School. Dean's List. Address: 60 Edgar Nock Road, Wick- ford, Rhode Island, ; WHITON, Harry Franson. Sc.B. Mechanical Engineering. Born: November 4, 1940. Prepared at Puna- hou School. Brown Youth Guidance. Crew Freshman. Address: 2630 Halelena Street, Honolulu, Hawaii, Savoy Beverages for any occasion Located next to Brown Campus on Benevolent Street Three years of eating from refectory crockery endeared the stuff to us. So much so, in fact, that we took an esti- mated $7000 worth of it with us when we moved off campus this year. The solidarity of the not-too-solid Class of 1962 took a beating when 150 of us happily went searching for apart- ments off campus. The building program required that Maxcy, Ames and Horace Mann dormitories be converted to office space for the displaced Math, Philosophy, Sociology and English Departments. Nobody objected very loudly about having to take on the responsibilities for keeping the landlord happy and for staying within the Brown code for gentlemen without the help of campus police and port- ers. With 150 of Brown's-best living in apartments, pragmatic Pembroke liberalized, dropped a rule requiring chaperones at all off-campus functions. The Mote Mole should get a raise. Despite some curiosity and a vague desire to round-out our knowledge of Brown's buildings, we never did make a visit to the Ann Mary Brown or the John Carter Brown libraries, and the two will forever remain a mystery. The most popular of all events during any year is the Con- vocatio Latina - Latin Christmas carols in Alumnae Hall. When President Keeney was queried in a discussion con- cerning parietal rules about where I can kiss a girl, he re- plied instantly, Try her forehead. Brown withdrew from the National Defense Education Act. Ccontinued on page 299 Brady Electrical Co., Inc. Electrical Contractors BOSTON PROVIDENCE FALL RIVER WILLIAMS, David Watson. AB. Art - Architec- ture. Born: September 10, 1940. Prepared at St. Mark's School. Brownbrokers, Brown Charities Drive Captain, Yacht Club, Sunday Club. Sailing Team Freshman. Phi Delta Theta President. Address: 200 Stockton Street, Princeton, New Jersey. WILLEMS, Leonard Field. A.B. Russizn Studies. Born: January 7, 1938. Prepared at Fort Knox High School. Brown Daily Herald News Director. Zeta Psi. WILLS, Richard Houston, Jr. AB lnternation al Relations. Address: 459 Bunkers Cove Road, Panama City, Florida. WILSON, John Charles. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 7, 1940. Prepared at Arlington High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive, Student RHODE ISLAND BUS CO. Serving Brown University with Excellent Chartered Buses for All Activities UN 1-5000 PROVIDENCE Court. Baseball Freshman. Sigma Chi Vice President, Secretary. Address: 20 Norfold Road, Arlington, Mas- sachusetts, WILSON, Roger Maitland. A.B. Biology. Born: March 19, 1940, Prepared at Cony High School. Marching Band, Concert Band, University Young Friends, Political Science Club, Forum for Civil Liberties, Brown Charities Drive. Address: Jefferson, Maine. WILSON, Thomas Howe. AB. Economics. Born: April 25, 1940. Prepared at Kimball Union. Class Cabinet, Inter Fraternity Council Vice President. Swimming Freshman, Rugby Varsity. Hegeman House Presi- dent, Delta Upsilon CPresident. Address: 45 Hawthorne Avenue, Barrington, Rhode Island. WOLANSKE, Stephen Dennis. A.B. Philoso- phy Born: March 6, 1939, Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Max Fish Plumbing and Heating Co. I Washington Ave. Providence, R. . Curran Burton Inc. Fuel Oils HO 7-8050 Terminal Office 500 Allens Ave. Main Office 1120 Eddy St. MNB Manufacturers National Bank of Detroit 40 Banking offices serving greater Detroit Complete Banking Services ralph stuart and his musicians Sheraton-Biltmore 576 5th Ave. Hotel New York Providence PL-8-2000 EL-1-0510 Gratefully Acknowledging '62 Esa 108 Waterman St. MENS WEAR SQXW Br TZ Lloyd's king size sandwiches 119 waterman street corner of brook 1E 19247 WBRU Program Director, Newman Club, Inter Fraterni- ty Council, Biology Club, Proctor. Baseball Freshman. Lambda Chi Alpha Social Chairman. Address: 210 Nion Street. Greenfield, Massachusetts. WONG, John. AB. History. Born: August 19, 1940. Prepared at Greenwich High School. Dean's List. Brown Glee Club, Bruinaires, International Relations Club. Ad- dress: 39 Arcade Road. Old Greenwich, Connecticut. WOOD, David Frank. A.B. Chemistry. Born: July 11, 1940. Prepared at Lyons High School. Deans List. Brown Youth Guidance. Baseball Freshman. Mead House President. Address: 73 Broad Street, Lyons, New York. WOOD, William Laurence. A.B. History. Born: December 4, 1940. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy. University Scholarship, Continental Grain Corporation Scholarship. Dean's List. UCA Treasurer, Brown Key, Sphinx Club, University Proctor, NAACP Vice Presi dent, Chess Club. Football Varsity, Wrestling Varsity, Intramural Track. Address: 1140 East 111th Street, Cleve- land, Ohio. WOODRUFF, Charles Lawrence. AR e sian Studies. Born: July 21, 1940. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High School. AFROTC Drill Team, Brown Youth Guidance, Pre-Med Society, Russian Club. Mead House Treasurer. Address: Ellicott Road, Philadelphia, Pennsvlvania. ZAGER, Noah Irwin. A.B. English Literature. Born: May 26, 1940. Prepared at Brookline High School. Brown Band Manager, Orchestra, Student String Quar- tet. Address: 134 Universitv Road, Brookline, Massachu- setts. ZARETT, Michael S. AB. English Literature Hon- ors. Prepared at Polytechnic Preparatory Country Day School. Dean's List. Spanish Club, Brown Charities Drive. Address: 139-03 Newport Avenue, Rockaway Beach, New York. ZEFF, Robert Harris. A.B. History. Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 43 Wellesley Street, Pittsfield, Mas- sachusetts. ZIEGLER, Frederick George. A.B. Geology. Born: 1940. Prepared at Shelton High School. Baseball Freshman. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 8 Hilltop Drive, Shelton. Connecticut ZOSCHKE, Paul Albert. AB. Religious Studies. Born: May 22, 1940. Prepared at Bushwick High School. Second Rosenberger Prize in Religious Studies. Dean's List. UCA Treasurer, Social Action Chairman, Mission Committee. Debating Union. Address: 455 Evergreen Ave- nue, Brooklyn, New York. WATCH FOR THE GREAT '64 LIBER BRUNENSIS The Biceutennial Edition . . . Coming Soon CLOTHIERS-HABERDASHERS 13 EXCHANGE STREET It snowed, and the annual Theta Delt-Zeta Psi snowball championship was up for grabs again. After a period of lackluster volleys, Dean Hill arrived on the scene. Yielding under the heart-rendering pleas of the contestants, he agreed to allow a final five-minute free-throw period. The air was filled instantly with deadly missiles - final score: Theta Delt wins again, thirty-seven windows to twenty-five. Ccontinued on next page The LIBER does not give Campus Paks. In response to reviews by local officials, Tropic of Cancer became a campus best seller. Judging from the myriad ads for the beverage that appear in the Herald before each big weekend, the market at Brown for Club Soda must be tremendous. At last report three Sigma Nus were winging their wav to New Orleans for the Mardi Gras. Under the Elms went under. For The Future of Brown Remember the 25th Reunion Fund of The Class of 1962 Committee: Jay Stevens, Chairman John Garrison Dan Gelfman There was a fire at the Jug, and a LIBER photographer caught Jimmy smiling in the crowd, The Herald scored by issuing a free program for the dedi- cation of the hockey rink. The University offered programs at 50c apiece. Football - next vyear. 300 INDEX ARt S e C O TR 20-23 International Relations Club ---- - 61 Rebmingane s oo 265-301 VR el e i 51 B . 115 e e e 114 Alpha.Delta PHifE e o L m Il 188-189 Jameson Flonice e e 175 AmphigeryiSiaanas on o T R 89 Kappa St o e - ATCH DAl ET e N 1 7 2 N 7 - 28?-3: Bandeeieave e L e mda Chi Alpha : Baseballi it e S L i-feicturers --E ---------------------------------- 40-42 Basketball LIBER BRUNENSIS PUBLICATIONS . 2R B.em et P e e s e e - Literary Anthology - - 81-88 B19103Y Cyi T SN WG GRS e e e e e 179 BT e T b Minority Political Groups - ------- 64-67 Bronson House Newman Club - 5 EROWIE DAILY HERALD NROTC rown Engineering Society 8 Orchicstra - oot BTl i SRR BROWN REVIEW OAm Oy e 118 Brown Youth Guidance Ontsiders . 0 LT e e A 124-125 BYownbrokers esrs e Lo RS LU I WL A PLiiBeta Kappa oL Lol L ELae 0 i S e 46 BriinAires e e R I T e PhiiDelta Theta oo il i s n i i O 204-205 Cammarian Club I A D e 206-207 Canterbu ---------------------------------------- DI RCa T .1 D 208-209 Chap.el I Pi Delta Epsilon - 15 Charities, Brown Pillamda Phil S0 L e s e e 210-211 CRemitiviClibr e s e e Poland Flonse e Lot 0 L0 TS SR 177 ChessECubgaas s o 8, 0 T e 2 Pre-Medical Society - - - 60 ClassHoffilg62 e T o S DT Y Prasident Keeney . o.o.- fi. il o Foi i URuSEIRS 18-19 Glbey s JEIR SR Fe e G T Production Workshop 74-75 ClassEotiSIgeaR s Lo ine Tl D L R Psi Upsiloneoeoie oo L8 SEE T80 TN R 212-213 Classoflilg6op it B iae i 0 aE D i Badic Cliabel i e s e e e P 96 ClEsiclClubiEE e - o W i e 6 Republicans o ie o n Ll EE EE S RS e 68 Comimencement s e i B e b x Resident Eellows, coer, Cobpa R D RSl 178-180 T e S i s e - Residential Semipar 182-183 o Cointsy o o e 0 S SR S 5 Bifle Clib oo fiiiiio i i B 120 DRty Wt Rocky Mountain Empire Club - R 70 Delta Kappa Epsilon - - By oo REWY SR T Ser 154-155 DelABPhilE e s e T L - Ritssian Clab: - 2ioc Lo - o0 LB 5 h s ol e R e R Bl Delta Tau Delta - e Senior Bingjaphies ------------------------------ 265-301 Delta Upsilon o 5 SigmaChil S8t e L R e e 214215 Deweems - Sigmaz Nile Sl 00 B 70 T S AT 216-217 Editor's Notebook Sigmas Xo iR Ea s el A R e 43 EDiCiTcanilS ocic tyA Cotcer o e R SRR S B R 160-163 EverettsElouser s Sl C i il L e Sock and Buskin . SR R R 72-73, Facu!ty ----------------------------------------- X SpanishClubyl it L S Sesn s I T Sl e 56 Fencing TR R s s TP Sphinx JElubleh s 0 2T E e s SR R S T SRR 47 EIBIG RS R s i En gy SR i e e G i B SR AT R e PR T 142-143 Folk Dancing Club Tan BetasPi mooplc it b Eoothal eI RER Rt Ia e s e e 128-137 Tennisie saotie S SRy i, ErenchiClu b g cdrenni s o Y e e 57 Theta Delta Chi GeolopyiClubEER S RN SR G T 60 Tower ElObHEEET L e R GemmanlClub TR e e e 57 TTacks S i L O e e N GleefClnbIE R s T TR 111 WICAY i i o i o S i S 52-53 Ol f i e R TS A NS SRR i 55 WBRU s iee o e r e N e Hockey s EERE e T i 150-152 WeekendSERamaminns Boah USSR DN R SR 103-104 W restling s il iy Tons B N S s 144-145 RO e e R D e ey S 104-105 Yachtl Clnb s a e R 121 Independent Study Program 3339 74 e Al S R e S S e R T L 220-221 ACKNOWL EDGEMENTS Mr. William A. Surprenant '51,1 -ctor of Student Activities Mr. Chesley Worthington, '23, Brown Alumni Monthly Mrs. Winifred Sampson, Office of Student Activities Miss Knowlton, Office of Student Activities Mr. C. Kilburn Roulette, Bradbury, Sayles, O'Neill, Hurley Thomson, Inc. Mz. Carroll Coates, Bradbury, Sayles, O'Neill, Hurley Thomson, Inc. Mr. Marvin Merm Merin Studios Mr. Richard C. A. Holbrooke '62, Editor-in-Chief, Brown Daily Herald Laurence B. Chase, Brown Daily Herald Mr. Peter McCarthy, Director of Sports Information The Office of the Secretary of the University The Office of Public Relations The Brown University Library Brown Station, United Station Post Office All the girls of the Pembroke Sales Staff Sandrajean Toth, Pembroke Sales Manager Martha Marsden, Helen Albert, Pat Burval Barbara, Jackie and Janie Mr. BoydC Mefferd '64 Alma, Tony, Mike and John, Faunce House Custodians 302 LIBER BRUNENSIS PUBLICATIONS President: David M. Rust '62 Editor: Michacl B. French '62 Business Manager: Eugene W, Lewis 62 Jackson E. Spears '63 - - - Advertising Manager Barton L. Lilly '62 - - - Production Manager Robert D. Laudati 63 - - - Sales Manager LITERARY James M. Hawley 63 - - - Literary Editor Ernst Rothe '63 - - - Assistant Literary Editor David A. Abramson 64 Eric A. Meyer '64 Anthony M. Keith '62 Stanley E. Legum '65 William A. Wilde 111, 64 Trevor R. Guy '65 J. Chauncey De Wolfe 65 R. Bruce Irons I1I, '64 George J. Cyrus, Jr. 64 Roy M. Maletz '64 Roger D. Feldman '62 PEMBROKE SALES STAFF Sandrajean Toth Nancy Robbins Jean Martland Patricia Heaguey Karen Green Jeanette Fairchild Susan Schwartz Lynn Huntley Christine Dunbar Barbare Anderson PHOTOGRAPHY Burges A. Le Monte '63 - - - Photography Editor Heywood L. Greenberg 63 - - - Sports Photographer Gerald Kirschenbaum '64 John A. Mohler, Jr., '62 Frank O. Antonsanti '63 Barry C. Kaufman '65 Paul N. Jarvinen '62 Gerald M. Richmond '65 LAYOUT John C. Boschetti '64 - - - Layout Editor Peter R. Newsted '65 Edward A. Mayer '64 Clifton V. Rice 64 ADVERTISING Jackson E. Spears '63 - - - Advertising Manager David A. Clarke '65 Anthony B. Fruhauf '63 SPECIAL PUBLICATIONS BEAR FACTS: David M. Rust '62, Editor Jackson E. Spears '63, Business Manager 1965 CLASS ALBUM: John C. Boschetti 64, Editor Jackson E. Spears '63, Business Manager FRATERNITIES AT BROWN: Edward A. Mayer '64 Editor ABOUT THIS BOOK The specifications of the book are interesting to some, and the editors of the LIBER are happy to take this opportunity to present them here. The 1962 LIBER BRUNENSIS was printed by offset lithography in 16-page sections on 100 Ib, No. 1 White enamel paper. Covers were manufactured by the S. K. Smith Company, of Chicago, from embossed Delta brown and Cordoba brown artificial leather. Throughout the book the copy was set in 10 pt. Fairfield unleaded; head- lines and page numbers were set in 18 pt. Venus Bold Ex- panded. The senior portraits were taken by Merin Studios of Philadelphia and the majority of the other six hundred pictures were taken by an Exacta VX, Ashi Pentax 1, a Nikon, Miyamaflex, Retina Mark II, a Contaflex and numerous others. Flashes were by Heiland; films used var- ied widely, but most pictures were taken on Plus-X develop- ed in D-76 and Microdol-X and printed on Du Pont Vari- lour enlarging paper. This volume contains 304 9 x 12 pages and weighs approximately four pounds. This book was printed by Bradbury, Sayles, O'Neill, Hurley Thomson, Inc. of New York City and Camden, Arkansas. e !'!!!!!!ltm!m .


Suggestions in the Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) collection:

Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959

Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1963 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965


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