Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)

 - Class of 1963

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1963 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 328 of the 1963 volume:

W AN O e TOn e . E 2 Q 2 ! .V: AR TAT Wi AR S 1963 liber brunensis 105th edition brown university providence rhode island i ever vivid mixture of warmth and wonder. Most of us can never fathom that piquant union of growing pains and security, of solidity and change. Individually we ran an emotional gamut from despondency to reckless enthusiasm, and an intel- lectual wilderness from symbolic logic to modern art. We were all different when we started, and maybe we're even more different now. But each one of us remembers a lot of things. Each of us got a tinge of the same feeling no matter how we looked at Brown. We got the feeling at night with our eyes closed, or at home for vacations; and we got it in a multitude of little impressions of old man Brown's personal menagerie. We remember the big little things first. We took the rough with the smooth; Manning Hall's stucco surface has seen a lot of Brown since 1835. Oldness is inspirational; tradition and religion live together in Manning Chapel. Exams at Brown were tough, and that's inspirational too. Because we were wor- ried . . . or inspired . . . or grateful, we visited Man- ning Chapel on Sundays. Ministers preach pro- foundly here. Their chapel rests on a hallowed foundation; we took exams downstairs in Lower Manning. The best part of Manning is that you can go in two ways; front or back. Both front and back have broad steps. In warm weather we stood there and watched the campus stream by. Of course, we left the steps when the bell rang and the lecture in- side began. It took guts to go in the front when we arrived late; that rostrum oversees a lot of indus- trious note-takers. In front or in back, it was nice to know that Someone was upstairs. WE collectively remember Brown with an AYLES Hall is old, too. Those granite blocks sit heavily on our mental college hill. They packed us into Sayles for Freshman Week's orientating lectures. We stood and watched the blackrobed processions march down the aisle before the speech began. We didn't have to ask who each Dean was by the middle of freshman year. Many professors grew familiar too; we were taking distribution courses in a multitude of de- partments. The organ sounded good no matter what march reverberated off those cavernous walls. The choir had a nice tone, too; and some of us craned to see that girl standing at the balcony's rim. The speakers weren't always interesting, but the introductions invariably were. Most of the introductions and many of the speak- ers were funny. College humor tries to be witty. Some- times it's witty and sometimes it's just plain cynical; it's funniest when we're in a good mood before a big weekend. But Deans' humor is very special humor. It's a part of Sayles Hall, like those diversely-sized pictures along the walls. When a speaker was boring, we counted the piclures and wondered what each portrait had done. Some were light and reflected the glimmer from Sayles Hall's tall, august windows. Some were dark; and the shadows ran into the oaken beams which climb to the distant, sloping ceiling. That distant, oblique roof is part of Brown's mental canopy. The Providence weather is dismal, and clouds hung impassively over- head for most of the year. Most of the year we were hungry after convocations. The lines at the door shuf- fled impatiently for the race down to the refeciory. Z T 2, TN LK 1905 OBINSON Hall sits on College Hill water- shed. In the Gothic style, it's an economy of space and function turned into a weird tran- sition. From the outside, though, it's still very Gothic. From Waterman's safe side, it's down- right picturesque. Maybe we needed the Chap- lain's auspices just to cross Waterman express- way. If you slipped on the dash across, you could slide halfway down to R.I.S.D. In rainy weather we almost slipped on the hard marble floor of Robinson's round vestibule. It was dan- gerous to look up at the high, arched ceiling, or at the little catwalk which fronts on the pro- fessors offices. Our footsteps echoed up the bare Gothic dome; the click of economics de- partment adding machines echoed off the white floor below. The classrooms in Robinson are small. The professor stood up behind the steel posts scat- tered through the room. Before class we leaned against those round columns; sometimes, during class, we hid in back of them. Those Gothic days in Robinson were lopsided. The light fil- tered in upside down from the tops of little pointed windows along the floor. sl BEWILDERED faces filtered past the regis- tration desks Freshman Week. Our high school world went topsy-turvy. We stood, and ambled, and relaxed, and talked in Faunce House many times thereafter. In four years, we did everything but drink there; and Mr. Rocke- feller has this much say coming to him. Mr. Rockefeller's monument houses offices for all the campus organizations. We climbed those marble stairs to do our part for well-rounded- ness . . . or maybe to see a horror show on the art gallery movie screen. The Post Office Lobby was a part of our everyday experience. We got our mail there; we bought our notebooks there; we stood looking at the litter on the bulletin board there. Our mailbox combination was part of our names. We grabbed for that little bit of identity as the crowd pushed us past the auto- mat slots. Some of us also played pool or ping- pong at the lobby's far end. All of us climbed the stairs to the magazine stand and Blue Room. Oh, we did buy newspapers and see art exhibits there. But mostly we stood and relaxed there. For Faunce House is a perennial bright spot in the wearingly tangled web of classes and books. 11 LHAYER N F 1 el 1S T O B O N R O 0 e O T i UL AT R , i+ LT L Al EY AL ! ltllrkrlllli.xl A 0 f . 0E . e - By LS L,.LQ Hey LI Ll, i , 4 M , tUHHETT ,,:A 1 E I L - , ; e u .THEfJIwak za - - ot n b J T 1 i'vllll? Sl 1 Ry - w .I-L I.LJ y YLl L TS Vi 1 e O MRS m T, L Tu!w 't g e - l AYLAND Arch is Wriston Quadrangle's of- ficial portal. Freshman year, when rushing began, it was an inscrutable tunnel to society's complex essence. Most of us were plumb scared that winter evening when rushing began. The fra- ternity patios grinned benignly at each hesitant tunneler; making new friends is a four year journey at Brown. Very late at night, if we strayed too long coming back from Wheaton or downtown, we encountered Wayland Arch involuntarily. We went through there every morning, too. From the refectory, the tower clock always read 8:47 A.M. We raced through that tiny cave and blinked in the morning sunshine outside; nine o'clocks and sunrise will happen forever. In the afternoon the rich aroma of chocolate covered or powdered doughnuts caught us on our tired way back from the lab. Those big green vending machines stand in front of that window like a final exam on a little brown desk. The campus cop across the corridor isn't half as easy to spot, especially if you're locked out of your room. Brown's police power and Dean Hill's office on the other side of the arch aren't synony- mous, but a lot of times we couldn't tell them apart. Usually we were lucky and just had to pay for a new room key or a parking fine. Occasionally our luck ran thin, and we stood on the carpet and ar- gued how childish parietal rules are. That big clock on the tower changed whenever we turned our back; particularly right after dinner in the spring. College is a time for study and a time for growing. HE computer doesn't grow; it matured quickly on the assembly line. The computing center doesn't look like the rest of Brown; so maybe it's a good thing it sits a ways off on the East Side. Clean, rust red brick isn't new to Brown now- adays. The computing center's striking glass edifice is. The I.LB.M 7070 and the typewriters up in the Recorder's office don't make mistakes, but the people who work them do. It's impressive to get your mistake on an I.B.M. printed card. We're trapped in the machine age. Even the English de- partment delivers its grades into the computer technicians ungreased palms. The computer does a lot of work for the engineers besides printing grade cards and untangling course registrations. It digests the data of a hundred research projects and extends the usefulness of innumerable less sophis- ticated machines. Still, they say its thinking heart doesn't use grease. Machines at Brown aren't what they used to be. 760 Uuguboas b 1963 fwlm;,i : . St R B A L LSS rolg, Row 3 i T a g N Saturday night the computer shuts its big glass eye. We took a break too. We needed a place to take our Pembroke dates. Of course the Meehan Auditorium is indispensable now. Hockey is no longer a novelty at Brown. We stood in line a long time for seats at that big hockey game; and the walk over to Pembroke added to our spirits. The whole atmosphere of the Meehan arena was spirited. The roof is gigantic, rounded, and brilliantly lit. Everyone could see the glittering ice clearly from the tiers of chairs lining the great hemisphere. Intramural hockey and in- formal skating were fun here; everyone learned to skate when Meehan auditorium came to Brown. But Saturday night marked Meehan's finest hours. We saw Homecoming concerts here and mobbed recitals here. And we goaded and cheered when the players soared over the dancing oval deep in the center of the excitement. HE spirit is more scientific in the new bi- ology lab. The windows are small and in rows; but maybe if you counted them all up there's more glass than in the computer's big eye. We watched the biology lab sprout majes- tically up in the no-man's land between Faunce House and Pembroke. The architecture is mod- ern, but it blends pleasingly with Faunce's time-honored arch. The inside is thoroughly in- spirational. Decorous buffs and cremes greet the visitor of austerely straight corridors and shiny laboratories. Biological research isn't new to Brown. In fact, it is one of our strong points. The complicated apparatus which crams all four stories has its brothers in Arnold Lab and An- gell Hall. Soon the first crop of Brown medical students will operate the apparatus and look out of these linearly arranged windows at the Pembrokers going to class. Pembrokers and a medical school are welcome at Brown. A lot of us met Pembrokers at the library. We met them for the first time, and we met them night after night after night after night over books and a polished table top. We smoked and talked to them in the smoking room. And we glanced at them over the tops of weighty tomes and ponderous pages. Sometimes we talked to them whisperingly in the stacks; and sometimes we paused from Pembroker or book to look out at Providence below. When the commencement procession marched up to the Van Wickle Gates last time, it passed a new lookout post on sprawling Providence. The new library grew slowly. The building crane stood a long time awaiting its envelopment of stone and mortar. The new library waxed spec- tacular in every way; it was bigger and better and more expensive than anything Brown had built for a long time. The building symbolized for us the new Brown; but Brown is new every day and every hour so long as she keeps grow- ing. The new library will hold old books. Brown's collecting dates back two hundred years now. The ever present, ever changing Brown is built on tradition; but the tradition is a reality. True, we have our ethereal tradition. We have our effusive spirit and our college songs. But we have a lot more. We have a campus and a fa- culty. We have positive achievements and un- recorded firsts. Yes, Brown has her books. She has enough to fill up that spectacular new li- brary. We took a lot of books with us when we left Brown. We took the books the bookstore wouldn't pay us sufficiently for and the books we half-memorized. Alongside the books, we took our great collective memory of Brown. We took a volume of knowledge and a chapler of four years growth; and we took that ever vivid mixture of warmth and wonder that we can never fathom or outgrow. -. '- m E 1L u m M LU l il J . . I 1 LT , A !' , h 7 4 W iers Pt AT b 762 . Tremaslio. HE academic spectrum of Brown as both a college and a university can never be adequately experienced by any one person. A college career cannot be captured by words alone. And most students begin to understand the significance of their years on the hill only after their departure. Yet while the under- graduate adjusts to curriculum requirements and struggles with advanced courses, he may gather a few notions about the distinctiveness of his academic community. Like many other colleges, Brown maintains a full range of liberal arts and science fac- ulties. But Brown's uniqueness lies in the close connection between undergraduate and graduate levels, with an accompanying em- phasis on independent work. The availability of special programs and the close association of students with the professors constitute the basis of the academic structure. The increasing emphasis on specialization has not affected the breadth of the curricu- lum adversely; it has enlarged the sphere of advanced study at the undergraduate level. Providing flexibility, the system has pro- duced the IC seminar, the vigor of which in turn was absorbed and perpetuated by the University course. Throughout the scientific fields of study, basic theory, not application, is stressed. Many other colleges have fol- lowed Brown's lead, shifting from the idea of early specialization to emphasis on theoreti- cal analysis. The most recent revision of Brown's curriculum indicates the administrations continuing awareness of the changing complex- ion of students in the University. Embodied in the new per- missive plan is a liberalization of the curriculum designed to accommodate all types of studentsthose students who enter Brown with definite ideas as to their major field of interest can begin concentration immediately. Those who are unsure may wait until their fifth semester to choose their major. The pro- gram will yield greater breadth for some and an enriched con- centration for others. In the changes of the curriculum over the years lies a vital part of the dynamics of Brown. independent studies O the average student struggling through his required quota of courses at Brown, it seems unlikely that there should be those who consciously seek more work. That a sizeable group of such persons does exist is amply demonstrated by the success of the University's several arrangements for individual study: the Independent Studies Program, the Honors Program, and the College Scholar program. All are essentially different routes to the same goal, intellectual independence and responsibility. This is accom- plished by permitting a greater degree of flexibility than is possible through formal course work. Each student, working under a faculty sponsor, is required to submit beforehand an outline of the nature and extent of the material he intends to pursue, his manner of procedure, a list of facilities to be used and a schedule for completion of papers. Outside of this he is on his own. The sponsor is responsible only for scrutiny of the proposal and the assignment of a grade on the basis of work submitted. Thus a degree of originality and creativity that is usually found at the graduate level is encouraged at the undergraduate stage. Naturally, the academic requirements are high, but the large number of students pursuing these courses testifies to the energy and the enthusiasm of the student body. These programs represent Brown University's recognition that most gifted people tend to have abilities in specialized areas rather than a well-rounded capability. They also repre- sent a first step in the providing of more academic opportunity for the tidal wave of talent which has surged into the campus with each class. A KEEN INTEREST in humen genetics motivated Jonathan Lyons to work in independent studies. His project was a study of genetic abnormalities found in mongoloid children and their parents, an area in which he first got started at Albert Einstein Medical School where he worked last summer. Lyons explains, in an attempt to simplify an extremely complex problem, that certain chromosomes as- sociate with each other rather closely leading to the satel- lite pairs. The fact that the chromosomes involved in mon- goloidism usually are those of a satellite pair was a valu- able clue that he proceeded to follow up. He found that when in meiosis the chromosomes of a pair stay together too long, the chances are that they will both go to the same one of the new cells being formed, causing this cell to have one extra chromosomean invariable characteristic of mongo- loidism. In the future, Lyons plans to investigate the genetic effects of radiation, genetic correlates of intersexualism, and the possibilities of mapping genes using satellite pairs as a key. He is an ardent supporter of the Independent Studies Pro- gram, stressing the opportunity it gives the individual to do new and important work in a field in which he is deeply interested. Lyons does, however, see certain shortcomings in the ease with which the system is abused by students seeking the easy A. Most of the students involved are getting more than that out of it, though. A EBLLL LOAD of et cur ricular activities, including positions as president of Faunce House Board of Governors, treasurer of Cammar- ian Club, president of Pi Lambda Phi, a proctorship, and participation in Brown Charities Drive, has not de- tracted in the least from Larry Gross' intellectnal endeavors. Gross has been a frequent inclusion on the Dean's List and is a member of Sphinx in addition to his participation in the Independent Studies Program. His independent studies project was an investigation of The Plural- istic System of Mass Democracy, which he feels gave him, through the depth and scope of reading necessary for independent research, an oppor- tunity to examine and criticize the thought of others and thereby the ability to evaluate the flaws and in- consistencies in his own. The project involved, in his words, ''a study of the system whereby the various in- terest groups within a society are or- ganized within the political frame- work. He was especially concerned with the role these pluralistic groups play in alleviating feelings of aliena- tion and non-participation in the po- litical setup by allowing a greater degree of individual participation. Larry has become so profoundly involved with this problem and all its implied ramifications in the field of political sociology that he plans to continue this research on the grad- uate level. BOUND FORa medical career, Yale Kablotsky has spent his most fruitful hours in biological research at Brown. His experience with laboratory work began in his freshman year and has continued with increasing independent work through his senior year. Even his summers have been spent on campus engaged in aiding professors with research, and pursuing his own interests. For two years, Kablotsky has been doing honors work involving original studies on the salt gland of the duck, a topic about which very little is known. Using about fifty ducks each semester, he has under- taken the project on his own with the guidance of one pro- fessor in the biology department. He is pleased with the opportunity for independent study, but says that the pro- fessor 'has to be there to catalyze the reaction. Kablotsky has also found this to be true in his other area of independent work, one which indicates his diverse interests. Working with the Religious Studies Department, he has studied the Talmudic marriage laws under Mr. Fre- richs and the Dead Sea Scrolls and Gnositicism under Mr. Schoedel. A consistent Dean's List student and president of the pre-med society, Yale plans to study and finally to teach medicine in his post-graduate years. TROUBLE was encountered in the independent studies project of Raoul Smith because of the wide gap which lies between computer science and linguistics. Concerned with the problem of machine translation, Smith divided his work into four parts: an historical introduction, a linguistic anal- ysis of the problems, and engineering analysis of the prob- lems, and a survey of Russian projects. Planning to enter graduate school and to continue his research, Raoul extols the facilities available to the student at Brown. As he indicates, there are only about ten institu- tions in the country, including private firms, which are doing any work in this area; and thus, information is at a pre- mium. Being able to work with Mr. Kucera, a man of end- less talents, and to have the IBM 7070 Computer at hand, left me in an enviable position. As an undergraduate, Smith majored in Slavic Languages leaning toward linguistics, and completed his degree re- quirements in January. He stayed on al Brown during the second semester, however, taking several courses as a spe- cial student. Echoing the words of most who have partici- pated in the Independent Studies or College Scholar Pro- grams, Raoul states that the opportunity afforded him through his research was invaluable, that it introduced an entirely new realm of ideas to him. AS A WRITER. one must be an honest person, says Jeffry Ordo- ver, one who recognizes that he doesn't understand himself, and who's fighting to understand. Writers are good if they face the problems of life in their work, he adds. But few people stick their necks out far enough to come to grips with life. A prolific writer of short stories, descriptive essays, and plays while an undergraduate, Ordover has found his greatest satisfaction in the English Expression Honors program. He discovered more room for creativity in this field than in any other. Through his studies, Ordover met several pro- fessors who have influenced him deeply. They are men who commit them- selves to students. Writing a full length play for his honors project, Or- dover has found that what has made him most content with his college experience is finding that man can do anything he wants to do. Among his writings, several plays were produced on campus, and his Slightly Doric column appeared regularly in the Supplement. Aside from his academic experience, Ordover's four years at Brown have been con- cerned with finding out about people in the raw and being confident in myself. His future plans are extremely varied, ranging from medicine to further writing. AS A JUNIOR at Brown, Axel Kornfuehrer was an honors student in international relations. Now an American citizen from Minnesota, Kornfuehrer was born in Germany and raised in a family greatly interested in history. His specialty is the history of World War II and of the Third Reich. In his Junior year, he examined the contemporary Soviel historical viewpoints about the German-Russian Non- Aggression Pact of 10939 for an independent study project. Honors work in his senior year led him into an examination of the Nuremberg Trials with emphasis on the three men who were acquitted and reasons for their acquittal. The fact that Brown possesses a complete transcript of the pro- ceedings was, of course, a great aid to his research Reading documents in Russian and Cerman is sceond nature to Axel who is a well-traveled polyglot. He has visited Belgium and Russia during two of his undergraduate sum- mers, adding to his already impressive background. History will continue to be Kornfuehrer's main interest in graduate school, where he hopes to find the same personal contact with the faculty which he found so valuable at Brown. And in defense of Brown institutions, Kornfuehrer jokingly com. ments, Pembrokers aren't half as bad as Brown men say thev are THROUGH HIS EXPERIENCE with American Literature, Steve Dashef found the Independent Studies Program: the best excuse that exists at Brown for self-development in whatever way one wishes. He al- so points out that such programs offer one the chance to become conversant with a certain field in depth. Such was the result when Steve pursued his interest in psychological conditions affecting Negro authorship in Ameri- ca. Reading the works of James Bald- win, Ralph Ellison, and Gwendolyn Brooks, he had the perfect oppor- tunity to meditate on wider philoso- phical issues, to consider problems of psychological identity, to listen to the music of Bessie Smith, and to get course credit for this pleasure. He A came to know the instructor, my- self, rather well, through his paper on Negro authorship and his honors thesis. The latter dealt with prob- lems of personal identity in the works of Robert Penn Warren and other southern writers. Although his studies have little to do with his future medical career, Dashef surmises that both medicine and literature meddle with people and their problems. Studies did not prevent him from finding time enough to dabble in varsity track, Tower Club, a dorm proctorship, and Brown Youth Group functions. He also served as vice-chairman of the Brown Charities Drive. Still, he was able to talk to anyone who had some free time or would make some and even learned to appreciate Pembroke. A JUNIOR Viee i SEATT d ow intimately with the re- search for Larry Small's independent studies project, an investigation of The Poetic Evocation of Andalusian Folk Music in Selected Works of Fredrico Garcia Lorca. His time in southern Spain was spent in listening to and recording the deep song or Flamenco music of the area's folk vocabulary. The analysis of poetry depended on primary sources rather than being derived from secondary materials. In this, he was invaluably aided by his faculty advisor, Mr. Alan Trueblood of the Spanish Department, who, through his greater experience, was able to direct Small's disunified thoughts without imposing his own opinions. Small believes that independent studies are truly valuable for those stu- dents who have a strong desire to probe deeply into one specific area. He stresses here the excellence of the faculty guidance at Brown. His academic honors are many. He is a Francis Wayland Scholar and a consistent Dean's List student. Extra-curricular activities include a stint on the freshman hockey squad and participation in the Production Workshop and Pi Lambda Phi fraternity. On at least one important question concerning life at Brown, Larry is somewhat of an iconoclast; and that is the present status of fraternities. He supports the system as it now stands, believing that fraternities give one the opportunity to meet a diverse group of people having certain com- mon interests. This combination has made possible, at least in his own case, a great quantity and quality of friendships. U HISTORIC AL studies of the period following the death of Caesar were the essence of Stephen Tracy's independent studies project. Examining orig- inal sources such as the letters of Cicero and the Philippics, he attempted to trace the movements of the main political figures of the era to discover how they reacted to the death of such a great person. His chief interest lay in the conflict between Antony and Octavian the future Emperor Augustus. Tracy expresses appreciation for this program, in- dicating that it allows the student to organize a body of materials he could not otherwise obtain in a course. e admits, however, that much depends upon the quality of faculty supervision. One sugges- tion he offers is that the system be revised so that a student writes several short papers on various aspects of the field he has chosen to examine rather than the one comprehensive thesis now required. In this way, Tracy feels, a major problem of our edu- cation system could be alleviated: that of relieving the pressure on students. Happy with Brown's size, in number of students, Steve claims it has afforded him a valuable oppor- tunity to get to know some distinguished educators, an accomplishment he feels would have been im- possible had he been at a larger institution. There are certain handicaps involved, though, says Tracy: The school's size creates a situation in which the physical plant lacks sufficient facilities, for example, for students to relax, or to even take a girl on a quiet date. Tracy himself is married. A scholar with an enviable record, Tracy was elec- ted to Phi Beta Kappa as a junior, is a James Man- ning Scholar, and has been a consistent Dean's List student. 7 e by 5 BIBLICAL and liturgical texts formed the background for Joel I. Cohen's honors project: an original musical composition. The Sacred Service is a half hour setting of the Jewish liturgy written for chorus, soloists, and organ accompaniment. Feeling that church music in general has witnessed a gradual decline, Cohen decided to attempt somewhat of a revival. Because the piece was set in the Jewish liturgical tradition problems were encountered. Since the days of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, any har- mony or instruments have been considered an imposition in Orthodox Jewish prayer. Still further difficulties were encountered because of the vast differences in Eastern and Western musical traditions: the former employing a set of scales unfamiliar to the latter. The final product was an attempt to capture the spirit of the ancient Hebrew prayers in modern Western terms. Although composing took up much of his time, Joel still managed to participate in a number of extra-curricular endeavors. He served as a review editor for the Herald, as an executive of the Student Peace Union, and with the Manning Chapel Choir. In whatever spare time remained he gave gui- tar lessons to fellow students and com- posed scores for Sock and Buskin and Pro- duction Workshop. Writing music for the theater was 4 good experience; it taught me the practical side of composing. Planning to continue his studies on the graduate level and then go on to a career of teaching and composing, Cohen lauds the Independent Studies Program as The most profitable of my musical studies. ONE ELEMENT permeating Hal Barwood's life is art. Influenced by Klee's works and the lithographs of Mirg, he has painted abstract works with rich imagery of gently fantastic forms. A product of being thoughtful rather than of action, these paintings have sought to develop a kind of myth, to lay bare the child's heart in man. As a maker of myths, Hal has laid down his brush and taken up his movie camera to take several documentary films in color and sound for his honors project in art. Among them, is a fifteen minute study of Al- brecht Diirer's woodcuts illuminating the Biblical apocalypse. The object is not to illustrate Diirer but to use pace and fluidity as an editing force in order to make the viewer see the wood- cuts in a new manner. He wants to focus attention on the multiplying disaster which confronts man rather than on reli- gious aspects. Diirer's vision of an essentially Christian death in its scale and intensity can be related, somewhat remotely to a secular death without respite by nuclear bomb. Another film is a documentary presentation of an abandoned copper mine. In a series of stills and pans, he tries to portray the record of the mine and its artifacts, exciting a feeling of cor- ruption-old machinery rusting away. Influenced by Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Hal has attempted to convey the waste of wealth produced by a desire for immediate returns. Hal feels that movies are a central portion of American culture and that as a means of art reproduction they have become an art themselves. His plans include graduate work in cinema and then a career in film-making. SEEMINGLY INCOMPATIBLE French and mathematics were chosen by senior Wynn Lee as the bases of his honors thesis. During the past year, he has studied the mathe- matical influences apparent in the works of Paul Valery, a French poet who died recently. As Lee describes him, Valery was involved with the inexactitude of language and thus de- veloped an interest in and a means of employ- ing math in his writings. Although French is his field of concentra- tion, Lee entered Brown as a math major, and has completed enough courses in both areas to be eligible to take his comprehensive exams in either. He expresses extreme gratitude both to Professor Beverly Ridgely, who, being interested in the influences of science in literature himself, first suggested the idea for the thesis, and to Professor C. A. Hackett, his faculty advisor, chairman of the French Department at the Uni- versity of Southampton, a visiting professor at Brown, and one of the world's leading author- ities on contemporary French literature. Noting, too, his opinions of Brown, Wynn is prompt to mention his appreciation of the Uni- versity's willingness to allow students to delve into various fields, regardless of their seemingly disunified nature. Very few universities would have consented so readily to such a topic as mine. He also expresses confidence in the new curriculum changes recently announced by UH, and states that he wishes only that these changes would have been in effect when he was a freshman, MORE THAN DOUBLE the number of Brown recipi- ents named in any previous year for the Guggenheim fellowship were chosen as 1962-3 Fellows by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. These fellowships are intended to assist persons of proven ability to further accomplishments in their fields. Dr. Sol R. Bodner, Associate Professor of Engineering spent the first part of the year at Cambridge University and has since been studying the dynamic behavior of solid materials having rate-dependent properties, at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel. Dr. Robert P. Creed, a 1948 graduate of Swarthmore and now Associate Professor of English, has been spending the year con- tinuing research on a book on the Anglo-Saxon epic poem, Beowulf. He also studied for a brief time at the Royal Library E. R. Goodman in Copenhagen. He joined the Brown faculty in 1956 and served as consultant in etymology for Webster's Third New Interna- tional Dictionary. Associate Professor of Applied Mathematics Dr. Walter F. Freiberger spent his Guggenheim year at the University of Stockholm's Institute of Mathematical Statistics, where he stud- ied the application of random processes to geophysical prob- lems. Now associate director of the Brown University Comput- ing Laboratory, he graduated from the University of Melbourne and received his Ph.D. from Cambridge. Dr. David Gale, Professor of Mathematics and chairman of that department, has been studying at the Institute for Social and Economic Research at the University of Osaka. He is the author of a college textbook, The Theory of Linear Economic Models. J. C. Hawkes S. R. Bodner R. P. Creed J. L. Giddings, Jr. Dr. J. Louis Giddings, Professor of Anthropology, who also has a Fulbright Grant, has been working at the Danish National Museum on the archaeology of the Bering Strait region. A mem- ber of the Brown faculty since 1956, he has spent several sum- mers on Arctic expeditions and has written numerous articles on Alaskan archaeology. Associate Professor of Political Science Elliot R. Goodman joined the Brown faculty in 1955 having graduated from Dart- mouth in 1948. He has written a book widely used in American colleges, The Soviet Design for a World State. Using Paris as 4 his base, he has been traveling through Western Europe inter- u en elm e OWS viewing statesmen on the prospects of political integration in tl;le Atlantic community. He also had a NATO Research Fellow- ship. John C. B. Hawkes, Jr. has spent the year in the West Indies working on a new novel. A Harvard graduate, now an Associate Professor of English, he has written several novels and novel- lettes, the latest of which is The Lime Twig. Another Professor of English, Edwin Honig, has spent his year in Spain and England continuing his research on the seven- teenth century Spanish dramatist Calderon. Having received his A.B. and A.M. degrees from Wisconsin, he came to Brown in 1957 and has written two books of poetry, The Moral Circus and The Gazebos: Forty-One Poems. Dr. Ralph D. Kodis, Associate Professor of Engineering, spent most of the year at Oxford University in research on the inter- action of electromagnetic waves in ionized gases, and the re- mainder of the time he conducted preliminary studies in the same field at Boulder, Colorado. Forrest McDonald, Associate Professor of History, continued his research on the creation and establishment of the American governmental system from 1781 to 1793. He has already pub- lished one major historical work, We The People: The Economic Origins of the Constitution, and plans three more books on the period. Two new appointments to the faculty are among the Guggen- heim Fellows, Carl Bridenbaugh, Professor of History, and Park Honan, Assistant Professor of English. Dr. Bridenbaugh, who taught previously at Brown, spent much of the year visiting Europe doing research on the life of the English social classes C. Bridenbaugh which emigrated to the New World from 1600 to 1640. This will provide the basis for the first volume in a new series. He has already written several major works, including Cities in the Wilderness, Cities in Revolt, and his latest book Mitre and Sceptre. He has also served as president of the American His- torical Society. Dr. Honan spent his year at the British Museum in London studying English fiction in the nineteenth and twentieth cen- turies. He has published many works including poetry, short stories, essays, and a book, Browning's Characters: A Study in Poetic Technique. These twelve men, having received one of the highest honors accorded American scholars, are a tribute to the excellent fac- ulty of Brown. 3 J,. 07 F. McDonald 3 Vi P. Honan E. Honig R. D. Kodis research INSTRUMENTAL to the main- tenance of a dynamic institution such as Brown is the accent upon research in all areas of study. Research has in- creased in importance since the Second World War, and over the past ten years there has been phenomenal growth in funds supplied and research accom- plished. Sponsored research at the University amounted to five million dollars during the period 1961-62. It is estimated that during the present year over five and one-half million dollars will be spent on such work at Brown. This money is channelled through all departments and is devoted completely to basic research. At present there are two hundred and forty projects under way, involving at least one hundred and sixty professors, not to mention the innumerable grad- uate students concerned. Most of these funds are derived from federal government grants. One of the largest sources of aid since 1961 has been the Advanced Research Projects Agency, of the Department of Defense. Such projects are not merely decided by the government. It is up to the Uni- versity in large measure to take the initiative by drafting proposals for proj- ects. These proposals are then consid- ered by such an agency as ARPA for their worth. With equal vigor, the humanities de- partments pursue research in their re- spective fields. However, grants at pres- ent are hardly as frequent or as ample as those directed toward the physical sciences. Nevertheless, it has not pre- vented a majority of professors in hu- manities from publishing. At present, there are few men in any department without intentions of publishing their writings in books or periodicals over the next year. Thus throughout the Uni- versity is manifested the activity ren- dered possible by one of the largest sponsored research programs in the country. HESE men are a small but accurate representation of the faculty of Brown. As leaders of the University and as chairmen of their depart- ments, they have administrative burdens added to their scholarly pre- occupations. But in the tradition of Brown professors, they have endeavored to maintain close association with the students. Not only will lectures and laboratory sessions be recalled; Brown men will remember professors through frequent contact with them after class, at their homes and offices, at parties and during discussions over cups of coffee in the Blue Room. These men have led, both in their personal efforts to impart enthusiasm for learning and in their own scholarly achievements. The following pages portray them in their diverse roles in campus life. e e 1 ! f . ' ' ! a i l-q' 4 4 ! 1 ' i ! f ;' Hiw I , Jsv NOIT ALWAYS a member of the select community of college professors, Mr. Kurt Mayer, Chairman of the Department of Sociology and An- thropology, was once a statistician. After earning his A.B. at the University of Zurich in 1935 and studying at the University of London from 1936-7, he worked with L. F. Rothschild and Co., of New York City. Then, while working for a doctorate which was awarded by Columbia in 1945, he served as Secretary-Treasurer of the Loyal Fur Manufac- turing Corporation of Danville, Pennsylvania. His first teaching was done at Rutgers University in 1948, and he arrived on campus at Brown in 1950 as Assistant Professor of Sociology. Promotions came quickly; in 1953, Mr. Mayer became associate professor, in 1956 he was named a full professor, and in 1957 he assumed the duties of chairman. Professor Mayer is currently Secretary-Treas- urer of the Population Association of America and is on the executive committee of the Eastern Soci- ological Society. In addition he has found time to serve on various committees here at Brown, such as the Honors Council, the Curriculum, and the Lectureships Committees. Of Mr. Mayer's numer- ous publications, a few of the more noteworthy are: The Population of Switzerland; Economic Develop- ment and Population Growth in Rhode Island; and Class and Society. OFTEN referred to as the architect' of the present American Civilization program of concen- tration, Professor Hyatt H. Waggoner of the Eng- lish Department has taught American literature at Brown since 1956. After graduating from Middle- bury College in 1935, Professor Waggoner received his AM. from the University of Chicago, and in 1942 was awarded his doctorate at Ohio State Uni- versity before coming to Brown. Dr. Waggoner taught at the Williston Academy, Ohio State, the University of Omaha, and the University of Kan- sas City. In commenting on Brown, he was quick to state that he is a veteran of many faculties and has always been glad he made the decision to come to Brown. In addition to many contributions to leading periodicals, Dr. Waggoner has written and edited five books, the best known of which is: Faulkner: From Jefferson to the World. The purpose of the interdepartmental American Civilization program of which Professor Waggoner has been chairman, is to offer the student a cross- sectional study of one culture, its history, philoso- phy, literature, and social structure, rather than an intensive study of one subject penetrating many cultures, as other programs of concentration prof- fer. It is to this end that Dr. Waggoner has worked so diligently, and he is convinced that the results of such a program, one not commonly found at other schools, have been well worth the effort. 31 ARTISTIC without appearing affected is Professor George Elliot Downing, Chairman of the Art Department. Born in Marquette, Michigan, Mr. Downing attended the Univer- sity of Chicago where he received a Ph.D. de- gree in 1925. Finally leaving the Midwest, he studied at Harvard and earned an AM. in 1928. In 1930, he went abroad to make a study of Romanesque architecture, returned to Chicago the next year, and then, in 1932, journeyed East once again, this time to establish a per- manent residence in Providence. 1946 was a year of dual significance, one in which a Ph.D. was awarded him by Harvard, and an asso- ciate professorship bestowed by Brown. The final step was achieved in 1953, when he be- came a full professor. Chairman of his department since 1949, Mr. Downing is responsible for some twenty thou- sand slides used by the staff each year. He also maintains a small print collection of con- temporary paintings available to students in- terested in the subject. A specialist in the field of modern art, Mr. Downing is in the process of writing a book which will attempt to relate the thinking be- hind this art with the thinking in such fields as physics and mathematics. Stress in this work will be placed upon the parallel revolu- tions in these various areas of thought, that revolution which emphasizes looking beyond the superficial and the immediate. Downing is especially happy about the geo- graphical location of Providence, which al- lows him to enjoy fully the artistic treasures offered by New York and Boston. In addition, architecture on College Hill, he remarks, is a living history of American building develop- ment. IN 1929, David A. Jonah, present Director of Libraries, arrived at Brown as a graduate student and assistant in the Department of Mathematics and has remained ever since. A native of Canada, Mr. Jonah was born in Sach- ville, New Brunswick, and he received his Sc.B. in mathematics there at Mount Allison University. He earned his ScM. in mathe- matics at Brown in 1931. After serving as a math instructor for a few years, Mr. Jonah joined the staff of the library in 1935, and since then has gained invaluable experience in a number of positions. His pres- ent title, that of Librarian and Director of Li- braries, was conferred on him in 1960. In addition to this steady advance, Mr. Jonah can boast of many other accomplish- ments relating to his library work. He at- tended the Columbia School of Library Sci- ence, and became John Hay Professor of Bib- liography in 1953. In 1960, he was awarded an honorary LL.D. from Mount Allison. The Com- mittee on Scholarly Publication has been un- der his chairmanship since 1946, and the num- ber of publications emanating from that group has increased to such an extent that the Uni- versity has decided to establish a formal press, complete with its own staff. But, even considering all this, Mr. Jonah's greatest achievement will not be realized until the fall of 1964the proposed date of com- pletion for the new library. Working closely with the architects, he claims that he has just about lived with the blueprints for three years! When the program is complete, says Mr. Jonah, Brown will have one of the finest library programs in existence. 5 C Al research has led Jo- sep ck Bunnett back and forth 4Cros tion before he arrived at Broy in Portland, Oregon, he Comple undergraduate work in 1942 at V College, one of the top small sche 10015 in the West. His doctor- ate awaited him three years and al- most 3,000 miles away at the Univer- sity of Rochester. Following this, Pro- fessor Bunnotl returned to Reed, where he tauchi from 1946 until 1952 Af?er this, six years were spent at the University of North Carolina before Brown linally beckoned in 1958 Pro- fessor Bunnett has been Chairman since 1961. Mr. Bunnett is a member of many honorary and scientific organizations, including the American Chemical So- clety, Phi Beta Kappa, and Sigma Xi. In 1959 he was awarded a National Science Foundation grant of $30,900, to be utilized over a period of three years. In the same year he was elected as Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Professor Bun- nett was afforded the opportunity to travel through Argentina during the Spring of 1960, when, under the spon- sorship of the International Coopera- tion Administration, he undertook a seven-week lecture tour of three uni- versities in that country. Contributor of more than fifty re- search articles in various chemical journals, Dr. Bunnett is currently en- gaged in projects involving his spe- cialty, organic chemistry. Naturally, he hopes that his department will grow in this, as in all other areas of chemical study and research. He is confident that with the completion of the new physical sciences building, Brown will become one of the nation's leading centers of chemical research. ClLASSICAL scholarship at Brown is car- ried on at the largest undergraduate depart- ment of classics in the country. Professor John Rowe Workman has been diligent in his ef- forts to enlarge the department ever since he assumed the chairmanship in 1959. A Prince- ton graduate, receiving his A.B. in 1940 and his Ph.D. in 1943, he came to Brown in 1947. He is the author of two books, Aix Antigua: a Selection from the Early Roman Poets and New Horizons of Higher Education and is also a contributing editor of the Encyclopedia Americana. When asked about plans for the future, Mr. Workman is quick to volunteer, . . . every measure for increasing and enhancing the De- partment of Classics and the development of our archaeological place. The archaeological place refers to Brown's position as a contrib- uting associdte in the excavations at Corinth. Specifically, he hopes to offer a graduate course soon which will be conducted both on campus and at the excavations. As head resident fellow of the Wriston Quadrangle, Mr. Workman achieves one of his prime goals: a close association with the student body. An enthusiastic admirer of Brown, he claims, It is always gratifying to see the increasingly enhanced recognition of Brown University as a citadel of scholarship and ideas. : : i COMBINING cconomics with administration, Mr, Merton P. Stoltz is both Chairman of the Department of Economics and Associate Dean of the Graduate School. A native of Glidden, Wisconsin, Mr. Stoltz spent much of his earlier life shuttling between Minnesota and Rhode Island. After earning a bache- lor's degree at the University of Minnesota in 1934, he studied at Brown and served as a Research Assistant here. In 1936, he returned to Minnesota, first as a teaching assistant, then an In- structor in Economics and Statistics. 1940 found him back once again in Providence, where he has resided ever since. Chairman of the department since 1956, he has seen it grow in both size and scope. In addition to his duties at Brown, Mr. Stoltz has been quite active in the affairs of the city of Provi- dence. He served as Director of the College-Community Re- search Program, a co-operative study of the competitive posi- tion of the Rhode Island economy, and as Chairman of the Com- mittee on Municipal Revenue for Providence. Frequent contrib- utor to leading statistical and economic journals, Mr. Stoltz has written a textbook with R, K. Gaumnitz entitled The Elements of Statistics. He also wrote one volume of an economic study deal- ing with the growth and stability of the Rhode Island economy. Mr. Stoltz has expressed understandable pride in the rapid growth of Brown's graduate school, pointing out that last year over one hundred and ninety advanced degrees were conferred by the University. This unprecedented growth, he feels, will be beneficial to the undergraduate, as well as the graduate stu- dent. 34 o WSEARCH Memy o Foonomicy ASSIGNING a big future to engineering at Brown, Mr. Paul Maeder, Chairman of the Execu- tive Committee of that department notes, We have been stabilizing for growth and amassing a large and excellently qualified staff, and now we are ready to expand. Mr. Maeder's undergraduate education was com- pleted at the Eidgemossische Technische Hoch- schule, in Zurich, Switzerland, and he earned his Ph.D. at Brown in 1951. Immediately thereafter, he became Associate Professor of Engineering, and by 1954 was a full professor. In 1962 he became Chair- man of the Executive Committee of the Division of Engineering. Mr. Maeder's work has led him outside the aca- demic world into that of industry and business. He has served as consultant for four different organi- zations, including the United Aircraft Corporation, and the Speidel Corporation. Among his ten pat- ents registered with the government are three on inertia-compensated tape recorders. Author of some thirty-four publications, papers and lectures, he is currently engaged in research on fluid me- chanics and plasmo-dynamics. Mr. Maeder plans to increase the number of un- dergraduates and especially that of graduate stu- dents in engineering in the near future. He points to the fact that the future of engineering is bright, indeed, for as society grows and meets new ob- stacles, it turns to the engineer to solve them. Un- less the biologists come up with an answer soon to the population explosion, he believes, it will be the engineer's responsibility to make life possible under the ensuing conditions. An example of this, according to Mr. Maeder, would be the designing of vast underground cities. The Brown University Division of Engineering must grow to meet these growing demands upon the field of engineering. DEFINING Brown as a dynamic center for intellectual growth, Mr. Edward A. Bloom speaks with obvious satisfaction. From his office within the creaking walls of Horace Mann originates not only such unqualified statements of praise for the University, but also the guiding wisdom for Brown's development in showing the student his responsibility to his language. The present Chairman of the English Depart- ment was born in Michigan City, Indiana, and studied at the University of Illinois, where he earned his B.S., AM. and Ph.D. His first teaching experience was gained at that school as an assist- ant. After serving from 1942 to 1946 as a Captain in the U.S. Army, Mr. Bloom returned to Illinois, this time as an Instructor in the English Department there. He first came to Brown in 1947, became As- sistant Professor in 1950, full Professor in 1959, and Chairman of the English Department as well as Nicholas Brown Professor of Oratory and Belles Lettres in 1960. His goals in his present office may be simply stated: excellence in teaching and scholarship. Change for its own sake does not necessary bring excellence, he is quick to point out. Curricular changes are needed, this is true. But the ul.tirn'ate goal is the student's personal intellectual aspiration to find the contents of imagination and meaning, two words inherent in the totality of literature. Mr. Bloom has already published Samuel John- son in Grub Street, as well as a critical study of Willa Cather's novels, the latter in association with his wife, Lillian, herself an Associate Professor of English at Rhode Island College. In preparation is a critical study of Samuel Johnson's poetry and a text on reading poetry, to be published by the Brown University Press. ALIGNING himself with Brown in 1959, Mr. Donald G. Rohr was appointed Chairman of the History Department just one year later. Possessor of a sardonic sense of humor and an immense wardrobe of three-piece suits, he believes that his- tory must be taught as a way of thinking, that is, something personal, which each person must ex- perience for himself. Mr. Rohr's experience with history on the college level began at the University of Toronto, even though he is an American, born in Toledo, Ohio. His A.B. was awarded by that school in 1943, and his AM was earned there in 1949, During the war years, Mr. Rohr served with the United States Field Artillery, and immediately following the fighting he gained experience in the military government of Germany, a country which was to become his pri- mary interest in historical study. In 1951, he was presented with a Licentiate of Medieval Studies by the Institute of Medieval Studies, also in Toronto. Professor Rohr's doctorate was earned at Harvard in 1958, and his thesis, Social Conditions and Liberal Thought in Germany, 1830-1947, was ac- cepted for publication by the Harvard University Press in 1960, Before coming to Brown, he taught at the University of Toronto and Williams College, and spent one year at Harvard at a teaching fellow, Mr. Rohr's basic idea of history has been put into practice under his chairmanship in the form of an M-course and small discussion groups held twice weekly in addition to lectures. BORN IN SPAIN, Mr. Lopez-Morillas is now Chairman of both the Spanish-Italian Depart- ment and the Committee on Comparative Literature here at Brown. After studying law and philosophy at the University of Madrid, he came to the United States, where he continued his studies and earned his Ph.D. His teaching career at Brown began in 1943, and by 1951 he had become a full professor. Mr. Lopez-Morillas enjoys teaching here and finds the size of the institution conducive to successful study. He believes that Brown has escaped, thus far, the serious problem of the larger schools. Here, he says, students are more than just numbers on an IBM card; they still retain their individuality and identity. He also feels that the three units Brown, Pembroke, and the graduate schoolare mutually beneficial. Mr. Lopez-Morillas is now working on the ex- pansion of the program in Comparative Literature, and it is expected that within two or three years, a Ph.D. will be offered in this field of study. In the Spanish Department, more emphasis will be placed on Latin-American literature. Now in the process of writing two books, Essays on Nineteenth Cen- tury Intellectual History and Studies on Contem- porary Spanish Poetry, he is also a color photog- raphy enthusiast, an extensive traveller, and one who enjoys and pursues the unusual hobby of book-binding. BEARING the responsibilities of chairmanship, Mr. Frank Stewart, of the Department of Mathe- matics, has done much to improve an already- strong curriculum. Proud of the outstanding repu- tation of his department, he notes that since his arrival at Brown, enrollment in upper class courses has more than doubled. After receiving an A.B. from Princeton in 1939, he did graduate work at Harvard, where he was awarded his doctorate in 1947. Remaining in the Ivy League, he came to Brown that same year as an instructor of mathematics. As Acting Chairman of his department, Mr. Stewart feels that a necessary improvement in col- lege mathematics curricula is the introduction at an earlier stage to modern abstract algebra. He hopes that his newly-published text, Introduction to Lin- ear Algebra, which is intended for lower courses, will serve just such a purpose. The Department of Mathematics at Brown is an excellent one, says Mr. Stewart, noting how the new, young look of the members of the staff re- flect the modern ideas in the field. As director of the honors program for the past five years, he has enjoyed much close contact with undergraduates. He is quick to emphasize the quality of his depart- ment to these students, and feels that math is one of the strongest areas of concentration available at Brown. BROWN 24 professor Arlan Coolidge is at present the Chairman of the Music Department. Before beginning his teaching career, he attended the Juilliard Graduate School and played violin with the New York Philharmonic and the Cincin- nati Orchestra under Fritz Reiner. After studying for a year in Europe as an exchange student, he re- turned to Brown in 1930 and joined the faculty of the music department. His present classes cover such topics as Nineteenth Century Composers, Twentieth Century Composers, and American Mu- sic since the Civil War. Mr. Coolidge is by no means only a teacher. He is the Vice-President of the Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra; Vice- President of the Providence Community Concert Association; Chairman of the Executive Committee for the Rhode Island Chamber Music Concerts, sponsored by the Music Department; and a Vice- President of the Rhode Island Federation of Music Clubs. A member-at-large on the board of the Col- lege Music Society, he is also on the editorial ad- visory board of the magazine, Musical America. Aside from their love of music, Mr. Coolidge and his wife are avid auction fans, specializing in American prints. His taste in music favors works of American composers, but he also enjoys Brahms and some chamber music. In his thirty-third year at Brown, he is looking forward to the construction of the new Fine Arts Center which is now in the long-range planning stage. What he likes most about Brown at present is the freedom that the instructor is given in pre- senting his subject as he sees fit. BROMN 38, philosopher and psycholo- ! T A gist Roderick M. Chisholm was born in North Siis SEEEN y Attleboro, Massachusetts. After completing . . four years here, he then studied at Cambridge, where he earned his A.M. and Ph.D. at Har- vard. 37 An academic life was interrupted during World War II, as Mr. Chisholm was sum- moned to work as a Psychologist in the United States Army. Joining the Brown faculty in 1947, he steadily climbed the professional lad- der, becoming associate professor in 1949, Chairman of the Philosophy Department and Director of the Honors Program in 1951, and full professor in 1953. An additional honor was bestowed upon him in 1958, when he be- came Romeo Elton Professor of Natural The- ology. Mr. Chisholm's stay at Brown was again in- terrupted in 1950, when he left, once again for Harvard, where he was a visiting professor, and in 1955 and 1961, when he visited USC and Princeton, respectively. Brown also lost his services in 1956-57, this time to the con- tinent of Europe, when, utilizing a Howard Foundation Fellowship, he journeyed to Eng- land and Austria. He returned to Austria in 1959-60, where he was Fulbright Professor at the University of Graz. The varied interests of this many faceted man are quickly illustrated by a glance at some of the organizations to which he be- longs, including not only ones such as the American Philosophical Association and the Metaphysical Society of America, but also the American Psychological Association, and the International Phenomenological Society. Among Mr. Chisholm's publications are Per- ceiving: A Philosophical Study, and Realism and the Background of Phenomenology. PROVIDENCE -born Arthur 0. Williams, Chairman of the Physics Department, was educated at MIT and here at Brown. At MIT he was honored by being named the second Edison scholar. Early experience in teaching was gained at the University of Maine, where Mr. Williams was an instructor of physics from 1937 until 1940 and assistant professor until 1942, at which time he was lured back to his home town. He became an associate professor at Brown in 1947, professor in 1951, and in 1954 was named as chairman of the three man com- mission which, at that time, directed the Physics Department. In 1956 the commission was abolished, and Mr. Williams became the sole chairman of the department. His past performance in that position has been distin- guished by efforts to diversify the research interests of the department and to make strong new appointments to the staff. These efforts have been largely successful, but Mr. Wil- liams continues to work vigorously toward these goals. He is convinced of the fact that the Physics Department and the research carried on under its auspices will soon gain national recognition, especially after the completion of the proposed Physical Sciences Building. The author of two textbooks, his main areas of research interest accommodate various branches of theory: atomic wave function in quantum theory; acoustic wave propaga- tion; and geophysical problems. He is also a well-known authority on underwater sound propagation. TEACHING is but a small segment of the spectrum of activity pursued by Mr. Harold Schlos- berg, Chairman of the Department of Psychology. Administration of his exceedingly large, sixty-nine member staff requires much patience and many hours; yet, in addition to these duties, he is also currently engaged in an experiment dealing with the span of visual perception. A Princeton man until 1928, receiving all three degrees from that school, Mr. Schlosberg came to Brown in that year as an instructor in psychology. He became an assistant professor in 1930, associate professor in 1937, and full professor in 1947. In 1954 he was named Chairman of the department and in 1960 was awarded the chair of Edgar J. Marston, Professor of Psychology. He views his department as one of the finest on the Hill and notes that the work being done at the Hunter Lab- oratory is some of the most important being con- ducted in its field in the country. Aside from his contributions to Brown, Mr. Schlosberg's work has also aided the American Association for the Advancement of Science, of which he is vice-president. In addition, he is the Consulting Editor of the Psychological Review, and has co-authored a text, Experimental Psychol- ggila which is considered the standard work in its eld. Appreciating the importance of good student- faculty relations, he has, despite his crowded schedule, made it a policy to personally conduct the elementary psychology course at least one semester each year, affording the lower-classman invaluable opportunities. POILITICS is the major preoccupation of Pro- fessor Elmer Cornwell. By profession, he is Chair- man of the Political Science Department; in his spare time he is a volunteer worker for the Demo- cratic Party. Having graduated from Williams with an A.B. in political science, he received his doctor- ate from Harvard and began his teaching career at Princeton. He came to Brown in 1955, became an associate professor in 1960, and last July was named department chairman. Despite a Republican family background, Profes- sor Cornwell became a New Dealer during his un- dergraduate days at Williams. In 1952 he first be- came active in the Democratic Party and in 1960 was named an alternate to the Democratic National Convention. Last summer he was appointed to a commission to recommend redistributing of the Lower House of the Rhode Island State Legislature. Specializing in American government and poli- tics, Mr. Cornwell teaches three undergraduate courses as well as a graduate seminar. He has con- tributed frequently to publications in his field and has written a brief book entitled A Study of Grass Roots Politicians. Last year, on a fellowship from the Howard Foundation, he worked extensively on a new book which is to be a thorough examination of the American Presidency. As department chairman, Mr. Cornwell has at- tempted to expand the scope of political science at Brown. Along these lines, he has tried to keep up with the new emphasis on the politics of non- Western areas; and thus, courses on Russia, China, and Africa have been added to the curriculum. LEARNED and devoted, Professor Stephen Crary has done much for Brown since his appointment as Chairman of the Re- ligious Studies Department. He arrived on the Hill six years ago, after having been a member of the Smith College Department of Religion. Mr. Crary did not start his career as a teacher, however. Graduated from Yale in 1935 with an A.B. in philosophy, he spent the next year abroad in Edinburgh and then returned to the U.S. to study at the Union Theological Seminary where he received his B.D. degree. He then spent three years preaching near Detroit before joining the army and serving in New Zea- land and Japan until the end of World War II. Upon his return to this country he became Chaplain at the University of Roches- ter, which position rewakened academic ambitions. He, thus, returned to Yale for his Ph.D. and then joined the Smith faculty. Having written his dissertation on Tillich, he finds his interest lies in types of contemporary thought, the subject of one of the courses he now offers. As chairman he has spurred a rapid growth in the department. This year two new courses were added, one in religion and ethics, the other in the religions of India. Last spring a series of lectures by visiting professors in Judaism was initiated with such distinguished men as Dr. Wer- blowsky of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem speaking. This series was a product of Mr. Crary's feeling that since Brown lacks a seminary, it is an ideal place for studies in the different Western religious traditions. administration CHAPLAIN of the University, Charles Baldwin was born in Bridgeport in 1928. He attended Illinois College and the Yale Divinity School before coming to Brown in 1958. Upon arrival, he was instrumental in abolishing compulsory chapel and in installing Manning Chapel as a Protestant place of worship. His sermons are always pertinent to the questions and problems of college students. They deal with ethics, morals and the deci- sions that the Brown student must make. He attempts to eluci- date the Scriptures so that they will have power and relevance to current life, both within the University and in the outer com- munity. Chaplain Baldwin is pleased with the support given him and his projects by the administration. His present concern is with making a complete success of Manning Chapel, and he contemplates no substantial changes in its program. He believes that the University Christian Association is playing a positive role in life at Brown and is becoming more important than in past years. A minister for nine years, the Chaplain worked in the Central Congregational Church before coming to Providence. He may often be seen on campus at social functions, always willing to counsel any student who seeks his aid, be his problem of a religious nature or not. A NEW ARRIV AL on the Brown scene this year, Mr. Sipes has assumed the position of Manager of Men's Residences. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he attended Edinboro State Teach- ers College in that state. He began his career as a high school mathematics teacher in nearby Wes- terly, during which time he also coached the school basketball team. Married, and the father of two children, Mr. Sipes is also active in the Naval Re- serve, and has spent a total of three and one-half years in the service. Mr. Sipes' immediate plans in- clude the renovation of several of the older dormi- tories on campus, and the placement of all fresh- men in the West Quadrangle, presently a predomi- nantly upper-class independent living area. In the future he would like to see a Graduate-Senior Housing Center. At first impression, Mr. Sipes says that he likes Brown and enjoys his new position, in which he is able to have direct contact with the problems of many students. He finds both interest- ing and satisfying the tremendous variety in the student body, which he had hoped to find in such a cosmopolitan university. His job has acquired new significance during a time when Brown's residen- tial system is undergoing constant change. WALKING ALONG the main campus in the evenings, one can frequently notice the glimmer of light emanating from the first floor office of F. Morris Cochran in University Hall. As Vice-Presi- dent and Business Manager of Brown, he is often pre-occupied with his work far beyond the usual eight-hour day. Born in St. Mary's, West Virginia, he attended Denison University and received a D.B.A. from Albion College. While still at Albion he taught accounting and economics. Mr. Cochran began his many duties at Brown in 1945. Since then he has also found time for many activities outside the University. For the past two years, he has served as President of the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce, and is also a trustee of the Interfaith Scholarship Foundation. In addition, he is President of the National Associa- tion of Educational Buyers, President of the East- ern Association of College and University Officers, and a trustee of the College Entrance Examination Board. 41 WORKING ALONG the banks of the See- konk with the members of the Brown Yacht Club as often as he can, Mr. Jerrold Franklin has, how- ever, not been able to devote much time to his fa- vorite hobby, as he has recently assumed greater administrative responsibility. Having completed his undergraduate studies at the Cooper Union in New York, the city of his birth, Mr. Franklin did graduate work at the Uni- versity of Illinois. He came to Brown in 1959 as a member of the Physics Department, having taught previously at Columbia for three years. This year, Mr. Franklin was appointed Assistant to the Dean of the College for Freshmen; and as such, he is the head counselor for the Class of 1966. He still regards himself, however as more of a faculty member than an administrator. Besides teaching a course in the Quantum Theory of Fields, he spends much time in the direction of a research project being carried on by graduate students. This project entails an investigation of the properties of some sub-atomic particles discovered within the past few years, with the emphasis upon how these particles fit into the scheme of nature. Spare time is thus at a premium for Mr. Frank- lin; yet, he devotes most of it to his position as faculty advisor of the Yacht Club and intends to continue in this capacity as long as he is still able to do so. ASSISTING students has always been uppermost in the plans of Mr. Gordon Dewart, presently Assistant Dean of the College: Head Counselor. For the past two years, before being appointed to this position, Dean Dewart acted as Assistant to the Dean for the Class of 1964, In both capacities he has al- ways been available to give advice and assistance to any stu- dent who seeks it. After graduating from Amherst in 1941, with an AB. in French, Mr. Dewart traveled south to Princeton. World War 11 interrupted his immediate plans for a further degree, and it was not until 1946 that he was able to return and earn his AM. The next stop was Brown, where he arrived as an As- sistant Professor of French in 1948. He served as assistant to the chairman of the Modern Language Department for five years, and then becam Con- centration Advisor. Now an Assistant Dean, he still finds time to teach a course on the nineteenth century French novel, a field which he considers his specialty. In connection with this topic, he has written a thesis on Zola, and spent the second semester of the 1958-59 school year in Paris on a sabbatical. Mr. Dewart hopes to strengthen the counseling program at Brown; in fact, he points out, this program has already re- ceived a needed shot in the arm merely by the creation last year of his present office. No concrete plans have been for- mulated as yet for the future, but one of the possibilities fore- seen by the Dean is the reduction of the number of counse- lors. Those who remain would then be freed from excess re- search and from classes, giving them more time to work with their students. It has also been proposed to have twenty un- dergraduate resident advisors for the new Freshmen Quad- rangle. In these, and in many other ways, Dean Dewart is strengthening and expanding an all-important facet of U. H. that of advising students. SERVING as Assistant Dean of the College for Student Af- fairs only since May of 1962, Dean Robert E. Hill has already made his presence known to the undergraduate student body through his tightening of University liquor regulations. How- ever, matters of this nature, although sure to draw student at- tention, are not among the most important functions of his new capacity. As a result of his regular contact with the student body, Mr. Hill serves as a link between the undergraduate and a seemingly remote administration. As the University has entered a phase of renovation and improvement, other administrators have had less and less time to meet with students. To bridge this widen- ing gap and to fulfill his personal interest in students, Dean Hill is usually found in attendance at major campus activities. He has said that the only way he can be effective in his position is to get to know the students. Dean Hill received simultaneously in 1946 his Bachelor of Arts degree from Yale and a commission in the U.S. Navy. He served in Korea and also acted as a United Nations observer in Israel for six months in 1948. He came to Brown in 1951 as As- sistant to the Controller and held this post until 1954 when he was appointed Assistant Manager of Men's Residences. In rapid succession he next became Manager of Men's Residences, then moved up to Assistant Dean of Students, and finally assumed his present position. Although a strict disciplinarian, Dean Hill is always eager to spare some time for the student and his problems. He does not like to keep an appointment book but prefers to leave his door open for students to stop in and see him at their convenience. And the student who does accept this invitation is well re- warded. HOPEFULLY CYNICAL isa self char- acterization of Brown's incurable antibureaucrat, Dean Robert O. Schulze. Through his spontaneous wit, bounding stride, and comments on the B. D. H., he has established himself as one of the most color- ful men on campus. Outside interests such as liv- ing in suburbia without succumbing to suburbia and beachcombing in northern Michigan are typi- cal of this outgoing foe of conformity. Also typical are his plans for the future: to decide what the hell I'm going to do on sabbatical next year and simply to survive. After graduating from the University of Michi- gan, Dean Schulze received his A.M. at Columbia and returned to the University of Michigan for his doctorate in sociology. Upon arrival at Brown in 1955, he taught sociology for two years, came to University Hall in 1957, and became Assistant Dean of the College in 1959. He describes his pres- ent position as several-hatted. As Assistant Dean, he is primarily involved with the academic side of Brown life. This involves chiefly the counseling of students interested in graduate work and fellow- ships. He is also chairman of the Pre-medical Ad- visory Committee and of the Masters Program Committee. He feels that the most important duty of a dean, over and above thinking about the whole college, is dealing with individual students and their problems. Through a more thorough knowledge of Dean Schulze, the student's initial impression of him as a humorous and very friendly person is merged with that of a serious and thoughtful administrator. This side of his character is revealed by his thoughts on Brown and its future. Currently Brown is in a transitional stage, during which a re- examination is taking place. One problem is the relationship between the undergraduate and grad- uate schools. Brown is in a position where it can take advantage of being both a college and a uni- versity. The decision of what kind of emphasis and where it should be placed is like burning a candle at both ends. The opportunity is there but so is the danger. EESHE AN CONCERNED with prospective freshmen is Mr. Charles Doebler, Director of Admissions. A stu- dent at Brown in his undergraduate years, he majored in English Literature. After working in the field of advertising for three years, until 1951, he returned to Brown as an admissions officer and was appointed Director of Admissions in 1958. Perpetuating a thorough revision of admissions policy, espe- cially in respect to private secondary schools, Mr. Doebler has also promoted changes in other directions. Sub-freshman con- tact programs have been extended, and an undergraduate group, the Bruin Club, has been organized to increase undergraduate contact with prospective college students. Mr. Doebler's long association with secondary school students and undergraduates has kept him conversant with educational problems. He feels that, due to recent changes in the national atlitude toward edu- cation, students are now more competitive, and are deeply con- cerned with completing their education successfully. With the launching of Sputnik in 1956 and the advent of the space race, intellectualism has become fashionable.' Yet Mr. Doebler emphasized that at Brown the faculty and administra- tion are devoted to the ideal of producing more than a mere community of scholars. Brown graduates, he hapes, will gain an awareness useful for the attainment of their personal goals; moreover they should gain a sensitivity which will lead them to see beyond the business of getting and spending, loward the preservation of one's moral and intellectual integrity in the face of endless challenge. Thoreau said, 'The mass of men lead lives of quiel desperation We hope the product of a Brown educa- tion will give the inner something' to mitigate this sense of desperation. POSSESSING AN EXEMPIL ARY postgraduate record, Dean Robert W. Morse refers to his undergraduate one as mixed. At Bowdoin he played football and tennis, won the college pool and the bridge championships, and was the president of his fraternity and his class. Chemistry involved too many laboratories, so he majored in mathe- matics while taking a number of courses in physics and astronomy. His freshmen week coincided with Hitler's in- vasion of Poland, and the war continuously on the horizon prevented his forming long range plans. Throughout their undergraduate careers, Morse and his classmates felt that the entire world was falling apart and that they had to finish their whole lives in four years within a small, iso- lated community which would soon disappear. Not sacri- ficing everything to get grades for later academic work, they could afford an independence which contrasts vividly with today's subservience to the system. Robert Morse feels that such independence is vital to true success in becoming mature; he describes the object and the essence of education as the creation of self-confidence and a state of mind by which you become aware of who you are and your ability to exercise your intelligence independently. Internal integrity, knowing yourself, is crucial to educa- tion; it is the residual after the specific content of the courses is forgotten. The present rush to enter graduate school is partially a manifestation of insecurity. People often want to stay in school to avoid deciding who they are. Success is defined and measured by others in an arti- ficial environment. Such lengthy academic careers can be excuses for postponing self-identity. Dean Morse also feels that members of the present generation try to com- pensate for an unstable world by overplanning their ca- reers. Life is too interesting, too varied, and holds too many opportunities. One cannot inflexibly plan life ahead, nor should one, for it leads to an underestimation of one's own potential. Graduation was followed by wartime service as an offi- cer in the Navy where Morse was assigned to the amphib- ious forces to set up an instructional program for the navi- gation and piloting of small craft. After being discharged, he attended graduate school in physics at Brown, earning both his master's and his doctorate degrees within only three years. Author of some two score of scientific papers, Dr. Morse has done a great deal of experimental research in low temperature physics, particularly in the application of ultrasonics to problems of superconductivity, and the electronic properties of metals. He has also had consider- able administrative experience through his service on the faculty committee of the curriculum, as Chairman of the Honors Program, and as Chairman of the Physics Depart- ment. A Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sci- ences and of the American Physical Society, he is cur- rently the President of the Faculty Club. Cognizant of Brown during seventeen years of service, Dean Morse cites some aspects which he considers com- ponents of the University's greatness: the high quality of the faculty, the outstanding capability of its president, its ability to compete academically with its few rivals, and the fact that it has the correct attitude towards itself, i.e. it knows what it is: a place with respect for scholarship and teaching where both are closely linked through the freedom of the faculty. Both faculty and students live in a vast sphere of academic independence where an enormous range of opportunities and levels of accomplishment are available. By emphasizing the strong bond between schol- arship and teaching on the part of the faculty, the Univer- sity has successfully stimulated students from the realm of passive learning into the area of active research. Dean Morse maintains that the success of the inde- pendent study programs is attributable to the high intellectual quality of the students and their academic responsiveness, their willing- ness to work. In many cases the level of cre- ativity reached is equivalent to that of gradu- ate work. But Dean Morse feels that Brown's continu- ing growth as a university and the changing times are producing new problems within the undergraduate college. Heretofore, the Uni- versity has concentrated more on developing its scholastic and research potential than on creating a total college community. Student views reflect a dual concept of living within the University. One mode of existence lies within the quadrangles and the other includes all aspects outside of residential quarters. Morse traces this condition to the social situ- ation: the physical plant, the parietal rules, and the pattern of conduct established by previous classes. With respect to the living facilities, Dean Morse is unhappy with the system of adjoin- ing dormitories and fraternities in the Wris- ton Quadrangle because of the inferiority of the former's social opportunities as compared to the latter's. The present situation was de- picted in the detailed Housing Report of Oc- tober 1962. According to student views, the undergraduate can join a social club if he is accepted by a fraternity, or he can retreat to his room and to a small, informal group of friends. In either case there is no real com- munity, for his primary association with Brown is through the classroom. The existing social multiplicity is an important factor in producing the students' dual mode of conduct. As the means of identification, the classroom projects the image of Brown as an imperso.nal agent for distributing intellectual training. dean of the college The result is two-fold. First, a great deal of potential enthusiasm for Brown is dissipated because there is a lack of focus on the institution to which it should be directed. Secondly, there arises a dual standard of conduct: one for the home and the rest of the world, including such public places as the classroom; another for the quadrangle. Thus the nexus between Brown and its students is in need of more vitality. Dean Morse wants somehow to bring the undergraduates back into the University community; he wants to end the present commuting from hotel to work. In short, Dean Morse would like to see a type of residential unit which will be of such a size and dominant character that a student can identify himself with it through an enlarging circle of friendships and a common endeavor. And through his identification with his house, the Brown man could link himself to the Uni- versity as a whole. Dean Morse maintains that a great deal of remedial prog- ress can be accomplished by a few relatively minor changes in the existent living quarters. Dean Morse believes that this can be accomplished through strengthening the fraternities and by creating better non-fraternity units. Some of the present regulations tend to annoy undergraduates. In the freshman year of the class of 1963, there was a rule stating that a student could not rearrange the furniture in his room without permission from the residence office. This situation leads to an unreal pattern of behavior, pro- motes a lack of responsibility, and encourages circumvention of those rules which appear to be overbearing. The trivial incidents in which the Brown man is irked by a petty regulation are much closer and more meaningful to him than the remote efforts of University Hall to build a better community. Dean Morse feels that people like to feel trusted and that a lack of con- fidence on the part of University Hall is reflected by a lack of responsibility on the part of the students. He states, One important purpose of going to college is to learn by making mistakes; that is life's method of teaching. Advice and rules can serve only as a warning. There is no substitute for learning by oneself. One student cannot feel obligated to twenty-five hun- dred unfamiliar people. Dean Morse argues, The people who lose socially are the ones who must enforce the rules according to which they want to live. Housing the students in meaningful, cohesive groups would permit each social unit to sense the effects of misconduct on the part of each member, and thereby the student society would be stimulated into regulating its own conduct, censuring its members for miscreant behavior. This situation would remove the necessity of some rather petty regulations, whose disappearance would cause negative aspects of the administration's present image to vanish. This would facilitate the identification of the student body with the University, thus creating a total college community. In such an environment, the Brown man's enthusiasm could be channeled more effectively to support the institution. Dean Morse's task is large, that of creating a total university which will develop the entire student, not just his intellect. He has stated his guiding concept, The forces which bring about and sustain a balanced student life must come from within the student society itself. TO UNDERSTAND Brown Univer- sity, one must begin to understand the out- look of the man whose task it is to construct and maintain the University's dynamic frame work. No one who has talked with Dr. Keeney can forget his quick rejoinders filled with in- cisive, searching questions. In assessing Brown's status and direction, President Keeney has raised a vital question, namely, Should the undergraduate degree be a preparatory degree for graduate school or should it be terminal? Should it be planned to prepare a person lo study something else or should it stand on its own two feet? The ques- tion really comes to this: Is there any such thing as a liberal education or has liberal edu- cation' been a convenient expression to advo- cate something ahout which we know little or nothing? According to Dr. Keeney, the concept of a General Education is based upon, or has evolved from, three primary assumptions: first, thal an understanding of human affairs depends upon an elementary acquaintance with several areas of knowledge; second, that a common core of knowledge is necessary for all educated men; third, that all students are capable of a basic understanding of all areas of knowledge. Of the third assumption, Dr. Keeney has said, ' know of no better labora- tory for disproving this than the members of our Corporation and our Faculty. I think that individuality is a characteristic of Brown men and women. This individuality suggests the necessity of educational programs tailored to each person's intellectual capabilities and interests. It also points toward the abolish- ment of distribution requirements; no longer would students be asked to master types of knowledge for which their aptitudes are un- suited. Such changes would merely be refine- ments of the present system and apparently must wait for the development of more accur- ate tests. At present, Dr. Keeney doubts that all students are capable of a basic understand- ing of all areas of human knowledge. The availability of more specially oriented courses of study appears to be one of his answers to this doubt. The problem of choosing, commencing and pursuing a college education is further com- plicated, for besides the existence of great variation in individual aptitudes and accom- plishments, more fields of knowledge have been developed, while the scope of each has been enlarged. There has been an avalanche of knowledge in which the mastery of a sin- gle sector of any breadth has become an enor- mous task. President Keeney feels that one re- sult of these changes is that most members of faculties, most students, and most people in general do not make an integration of what they know in several fields. The conception of a common core of knowledge has broken down everywhere, unless the common core is reduced to the least common denominator. The assumption that all men are capable of learning all things has resulted in the tailoring of the level of general education to a point well below the capacity of the most able and only a little above the capaci- ties of the least able. At present, Dr. Keeney knows of no program, where a systematic effort is made to force students in general to at- tempt to put together what they know about the several fields and draw conclusions from their thoughts. By questioning the assumptions of a General Education, President Keeney has thrown open to doubt the present tutelary procedure at Brown. It seems that already the curriculum is revealing the effects of these basic considerations, for it is constantly changing in minor ways. These alterations suggest that eventually students may be offered two types of programs. One would integrate several areas of knowl- edge after the student had become more than superficially involved with them. Aimed at this concept are the University Courses, about which President Keeney says, It is reasonable to assume that it is eas- ier to tie things together if the stu- dent knows something about them, but such common sense should not lead us to abandon any effort to start the synthesis earlier. Another would permit those who had al- ready developed special interests to concentrate on them. Presently, opportunity for intensified study in particular areas is offered by the re- cently inaugurated five-year pro- grams leading to both a Bachelors and a Master's, under which the student's efforts are focused at the very beginning of his freshman year upon his development as a scholar and a teacher in one field of knowl- edge or another. Thus it would appear that Presi- dent Keeney plans to increase the number of five and six year pro- grams in response to two factors: the apparent inability of some peo- ple to master a core of common knowledge abave a very elementary level and the avalanche of knowl- edge whose volume renders mas- tery of only a small sector possible. This plan would also accomplish another of the President's apparent objectives: asserting the under- graduate degree's status as a termi- nal one. Although the undergradu- ate and master's degrees would be awarded together, the former would not be a mere preparation for the latter but an integral part of a co- ordinate program in which the lat- ter would signify the level of at- tainment. Brown is presently expanding the scope of undergraduate work into the sphere of graduate achievement through the Independent Studies Program. Increasing the number of five-year curricula twenty now of- fered would further the evolution in that direction. Emphasizing extended study pro- grams concentrated upon single or related fields is undoubtedly in- tended to encourage creativity and to attract true scholars. President Keeney told this year's freshmen, As you study here, you will be under considerable pressure to be- lieve what the book or the professor says. Your assumption will be that the professor is right and the book is right. Well, since most of you want to do well, you had better read the book and listen to what the pro- fessor has to say. But some of you will discover something as you go along. Although both the professor and the author of the book have made a sincere and strenuous effort to be right, both know very well that they may be wrong, and re- member that they have been wrong many times. A few of you will find out that what really delights a pro- fessor is a student who thinks for himself,not on the basis of thin nothings but on the basis of careful study of evidence and the develop- ment of conclusions. The way to do this is to study the sources, whether they be printed sources or material in the laboratory. In this manner Dr. Keeney envisages the transmission and creation of knowl- edge in the University. Only one fact is certain; namely, that Brown is in a period of transi- tion. The impact of the vital ques- tions which Dr. Keeney has raised will be revealed only in the answers which are found. At present there are only conjectures as to the na- ture of Brown a few decades hence; for President Keeney has said, Please remember that I have been asking questions, not giving an- swers. I do not yet know what the answers will be. the president A o oo, At o - - L4 . - o o s u e g - activities URING four years a student comes into close contact with very few extracurricular activ- ities. Most organizations remain vague concep- tions or superficial impressions limited to its booths on Activities Night, its product, or anec- dotes about its effectiveness. This year, as the number of activities increased, so did their influence and variety. The minority groups were on their way out as no longer could students protest unfair play in Cuba or unfair practices in housing affairs. Replacing them, how- ever, was a broad spectrum of organizations rang- ing from a Jocal chapter of a national scouting fraternity to a Brown Film Society. Of course, passers-by in the post office lobby were still sub- merged by a flood of sales campaigns: Jabber- wocks' Beefeater Flight to Bermuda, buy your yearbook now and save, get your drama sub- scription now! In addition, students vote in straw poles sponsored by the Young Republicans, an- swer IHC or IFC questionaires, or decide crucial Cam Club proposals. But few know or understand the endless hours of work behind the scenes. Who realizes the ex- haustive effort needed to produce a single BDH? How many worked through the night to meet a yearbook deadline? How often is the selfless dedi- cation of BYG members accorded recognition? Only those who have contributed extensively understand the academic and social sacrifices, the hell of neverending effort, and the effects of the organization on themselves and others. AT ;a AT . gf i 1 pELa iR R CTER RS S exhibitions, coneerts, AESTHETIC and intellectual ex- tra-curricular opportunities at Brown were highlighted this year by the Faunce House Board of Governors' American Character Series Lectures. Five men, re- nowned in their respective aca- demic and political fields, were asked to analyze some problems in the contemporary American Character from their own per- spective. Max Lerner, Professor of American Civilization at Brandeis University, regarded America's materialistic and military empha- sis as an impedance to its intel- lectual maturation. Henry Com- mager, Norman Thomas, Fred Schwarz, and William Buckley probed similar problems in their lectures. Hillel House presented diverse speakers on subjects from Eco- nomics to Religious Studies, and Rhode Island's Governor Chafee spoke to the Young Republicans. Hans Hoffman, a noted Harvard psychologist, presented a series of lectures which perceptively and amusingly delved into the question of faith and one's identity. Art Exhibits at Brown, Pem- broke, and RISD provided varied and variegated subject matter for those with aesthetic vision who could jump from the towers of pied imagination to black and white, the Liber's pictorial exhibi- tion of campus events was a pro- vocative collection of Brown's community interests. Outstanding performers contin- ued to gain the acclaim of Brown men and their dates who flocked to Meehan Auditorium and Alumnae Hall on various weekends through- out the year. Pete Seeger sang and spread his political views while a number of lesser known folk talents, including Bonnie Dobson, Jackie Washington, and the New Lost City Ramblers, were given an opportunity to display their talents. Yale Weekend found Dakota Staton and Bo Diddly singing before a loud throng of celebrating stu- dents, and URI Weekend brought the return of Ber- muda's Talbot Brothers and their steel band. The high- light of the year came in early March when a limited number of Brown and Pembroke students were able to see a hoolenanny produced by ABC-TV bringing such names as Theodore Bikel, The Rooftop Singers, and the Journeymen to Sayles Hall. The first major innovation since convocations re- placed chapel services was instituted this year by the University. Many a student who did not take the time to read the instructions in his mailbox at the beginning of the year found himself working for Buildings and Grounds as a result of overcutting. The number of convocations scheduled for each class was reduced from six to five and as a result only one unexcused absence was allowed. This new program eliminated the embarrassing situa- tion of having a speaker but no audience, as was the case at the final convocations for Ihe past several years, Students were also treated to some of the more distinguished and thought-provoking Convoca- tion-Fellows in recent years. In October, Dr. Rex Warner, famed British poet and classicist and a Vvisiting professor at Bowdoin College spoke on such topics as Helen of Troy and The Poetry of George Seferis. Later on in the semester, both Ben H. Bagdikian, a free-lance writer in Washing- ton and a former reporter for the Providence Journal, and James H. Robinson, the executive director and founder of Operation Crossroads Africa were featured at Sayles Hall. convocations Among the forty convocations held this year at Sayles Hall was a special program held in con- junction with the dedication of the new J. Walter Wilson Biology Building at which President Na- britt of Texas Southern University delivered the principal address. Other highlights included the opening convocation in September and the annual Cammarian Club Tapping-In Ceremonies. To mention only the more noteworthy events would be unjust, however, for some of the best delivered and best received talks were given by members of the Brown Community whose pres- ence may not have inspired the audience but whose words did. Dean Morse, Prof. Cornwell, and Dean Schulze were among some of the more popular speakers during the academic year. The University 1963, attempted to make convo- cations more of a series of talks which students would look forward to attending than a compul- sory session lacking any interest except as a nec- essary evil. DIVERSITY was the keynote of the 1962 63 Sock and Buskin season, which included presenta- tions of at least two plays which would not nor- mally be seen on the modern commercial stage. The dramatic group, under the direction of Janice Van de Water Brown, Leslie Allen Jones, and James O. Barnhill, opened its sixty-first year of continu- ous operation with a nineteenth century melo- drama, Under the Gaslight, by Austin Daly. With sets and props just as they were in the original production, the play included such memorable scenes as a split-second escape from under the wheels of an unrushing locomotive. The traditional presentation of a Shakespearean play was aban- doned. Rather, in conjunction with the four hun- dredth anniversary of the seventeenth century playwright, Lope de Vega, Sock and Buskin pre- sented Fuenteovejuna The Sleep Well, his best- known work. The two modern plays presented were Tennessee Williams' Cat on a Hot Tin Roof and Luigi Pirandello's Tonight We Improvise. The former is a moving and provocative drama by one of the best-known and most controversial of mod- ern American playwrights. The latter is an experi- mental piece which denies normal theater conven- tions; resulting in an emphasis of the conflict of il- lusion onstage and reality ofi stage, Mainstays of the cast, which consistently drew enthusiastic ap- plause were John Pleshette, John Simpson, and Bonnie Sour, o1 SOMEITHING OLD-Production Workshop: something newits own platforms for building stages; something bor- roweddevotees of folk music for an adventurous concert; something blue, or green, or redhome-made lights run by a home-made light board. Production Workshop had a successful year rooting itself more permanently into campus life while branching out into new areas. In October the Workshop pre- sented as its first offering two one-act plays, The Words Upon the Window Pane by William Butler Yeats and Escurial by Michael de Ghelderode. Bonnie Sour and Gene Jaleski were the directors. In a break with the past, the plays were not presented in the round, and they were lit by Bill Patterson's brilliant new light board. Under the Workshop's auspices a Student Folk Concert was given at the end of November. It was the first time in Brown's history that students had been the sole participants in such a concert. According to the program, the value of this entertainment lay in the authenticity and spontaneity, rather than polish, which each artist demonstrated. Spontaneous it was, and, although some were overwhelmed by the ethnic at- mosphere, some participants decided nevertheless to cut them- selves a record. In March and May, the Workshop closed out its seasons with performances of the winners of the annual com- petition for original plays. ROLLED CUFEFS and raincoats were the uniform of the day as the Brown University Marching Band, in traditional disregard for appearance in inclement weather, made its first formal home presentation on Yale Weekend. Rain also cancelled the first twao rallies of the year, but this inau- spicious beginning was followed by a relatively successful season climaxed by the fine performance and the spoof on the movies at Harvard. And at the Dartmouth game, the band partici- pated in the tribute to Tuss McLaugh- ry, former Bruin football coach who was elected this year to the football hall of fame. Also memorable was the well-deserved satire of the U.R.L band's Big Ten style. This year also saw the establishment of a Homecom- ing tradition as the band, at halftime, played the Brown Medley, first played at last year's Homecoming game. THE BIG BROWN BAND baton, after two years in the hands of Skip Flem- ming, was wielded this year by Dennis Wyc- koff. Although the band decreased in size from the previous year it numbered about sixty, its spirit in no way diminished. While playing at all the home games and three on the road, it managed at the end of the season to produce several entertaining showsthe product of the band board' Dennis Wyckoff, Bob Eisenbar, Jeff Hanzel, and Lou Marzilli. In addition to playing at the games, the band, directed by Marty Fischer, provided spirit at such occasions as the Homecoming rally and the welcome-home rally after the Colgate game. At the latter affair, its exuberance, which would have led the student body through downtown Providence, was re- strained only by a cordon of police. Following last year's example, the band, or at least parts of the band, also played at most of the home hockey games. CYMBALS clashed and the baton was raised by leader Martin Fischer for the 1962 season of the Brown Uni- versity Orchestra. Through his devo- tion and diligence over the past few years, the orchestra has gained new status on campus and this year boast- ed over eighty members. Packed into Room T usually only once but occa- sionally twice a week, the orchestra was under pressure to prepare for a tight schedule of four concerts. The first of these was presented before an East Providence audience under the auspices of United Concerts and the Brown Club of Rhode Island. Immedi- ately following this performance, the group made its campus debut for the season with a performance of Han- son's Sinfonia Sacra. Just before Christmas, the strings devoted a de- lightful evening to Baroque music. And in what is hoped will become an annual tradition, the orchestra and glee club joined forces during the winter for a performance of Mozart's Requiem, the most serious effort of the year. The final appearance was made in the spring, when the musi- clans' fancies and talents turned to the romantic period. The variety of this year's programs revealed, accord- ing to Dan Rodgers, a cellist and presi- dent of the orchestra, its adaptability and skill. Tts success was evident from wide audience approval. convocatlon chmr SLEEPING is common at Brown Convocations, but this escape from boredom usually does not begin until after the selection presented by the Convocation Choira genuine tribute to the group's proficiency. Besides easing the unbearable, the Choir, un- der the leadership of Mr. William Dineen, presented Aaron Copland's In the Beginning at its annual Spring Concert. During the winter, the group, accompanied by the Rhode Island Philharmonic, sang the Mes- siah, and during the Christmas season rendered carols, both ancient and modern, at the Service of Nine Les- sons. Meanwhile, back at Sayles Hall, a musical convocation was initiated this yeara convocation minus the f. 1 .4 y speaker, that isand was well re- ' ceived by the Senior class, many of whom remained awake for the occa- sion. REHEARSING once again this year at eight o'clock in the morning, the Manning Chapel Choir were awake and in voice for services at 8:30. Under the direction of Hollis Grant, the twelve Brown men in the ' choir sang hymns on three mornings, ' ' Wk, . i1 and presented anthems twice a week ,Immmm ,I P when no sermon was given. In ad- T v m dition to this original choir, another was formed this year to sing at the newly-instituted Sunday services at Manning Chapel. Directed by Mr. William Dineen, this group also in- cluded Pembrokers among its mem- bership. UNlQUE in that it is the oldest and largest student organization at Brown, the Glee Club once again encountered an extremely crowded schedule this year. Last spring, the group made a tour through the Midwest, giving concerts in conjunc- tion with the Brown Clubs of Pittsburgh, Detroit Cedar Rapids, Minneapolis, Chicago, Indianapolis and St. Louis and while in Cedar Rapids, appeared on television in addition to its regular concert. In the fall, under the direction of President-Man- ager H. Blaine Lawson, Jr, the Club appeared be- fore a 'standing room only audience in its first Homecoming Concert; traveled on a week-end ex- cursion to Peterborough, New Hampshire and Guil- derland Center, New York; and performed a dedi- cation concert for a new auditorium in Marlboro, Massachusetts. At the fifteenth annual Latin Carol Service, the Brown and Pembroke Glee Clubs joined to premier Professor Ron Nelson's Trium- phal Te Deum and in their winter concert combined with the University Orchestra to present Mozart's Great Mass. In addition to its many concert performances, the Glee Club cut a record this spring on which it once again demonstrated the wide spectrum of its musi- cal ability. BUFFOONERYis secondary, according to David Buskin, Director of the Brunaires; We are above all a musical group. Thus avoiding the typical obsession with the humorous which plagues most small college singing groups, the Brunaires concentrate on the musical sound they produce. An over- abundance of comedy, which often is merely a poor attempt to conceal simple arrangements and mediocre voices is not to be found in its program. Every member of the Brunaires also sings with the Brown Glee Club, many as soloists. This group, then, is somewhat of a cream of the musical crop. It appears both with the Glee Club and on separate engagements on and off campus. The Brunaires have run the entertainment gamut from local fraternity parties to an appearance at New York's famed Stork Club. Last year, they also performed one weekend at a club in Lake Placid, New York, and appeared at a private club in Newport. Most popular, however, at least as far as the Brunaires are concerned, are the group's many trips to neighboring girls' schools, and Business Manager Tim Witsman is kept busy lining up engagements where the members can try out some new numbers. brunaires jabberwocks i U il i i 1THE JABBERWOCKS, one il : ;'? of the oldest college octets in the i nation, are among the most popular singing groups in the East. The only independent, student-run singing or- ganization at Brown, they have, in re- cent years, made numerous appear- ances throughout the East, both on college campuses and in clubs. In addition, they have made several tours of the Caribbean area and have ap- peared at Carnegie Hall. During last year's spring tour, they sang at many leading resorts in Florida, including the Landmark, the Inn at Ponte Ve- dra, and the Castaways. Musical of- ferings ranging from barbershop to Broadway, laced with parody and strict comedy, guarantee the group an enthusiastic reception wherever they appear. This fall, the Jabberwocks were seen and heard at football weekends throughout New England. During the Christmas holidays they appeared at numerous dinner dances and cut their fiftth record for Decca. February and March, their traveling season, brought them from Saint Lawrence University to the University of Virginia, and as far West as the University of Michi- gan, while, highlighting the season was a one week engagement at the Castle Harbour Hotel in Bermuda dur- ing the Spring Recess. The final per- formance of the year, spectacular both musically and otherwise, was the annual Jabberwaock party. Overall, the season was very successful, both vocally and financially. 59 brown review STATUS SYMBOVLS are many; and the greatest of these is a liter- ary magazine,if you attend Kenyon College. At Brown, this has not been the case. But this year, emphasis on fiction and finance put a successful series of Brown Reviews on the campus news stands. This year's staff set out with solutions for the problems of money and content. They inherited a Review freshly out of debt and worked to keep it that way by publishing larger issues. Editor Mark Freedman chose a staff of contributors and literature majors who could back their enthusiasm with knowledge. Undergraduate fiction, the traditional purpose of the Review, was emphasized over poetry and interviews, with an intangible goal of un- self-conscious writing affecting all decisions on content. What the Review finally produced was a collection of serious writings, not of universal appeal, but of interest to the minority deeply concerned with literature. f SUNSPOTS,or the lack of them, , were the bane of the this year's Radio Club. What with beams going through the ionosphere instead of bouncing off back to earth, the club had difficulty in contacting distant hams with any regularity. This meant that President Joseph Green, who thrives on the thrill from sitting before the micro- phone and talking to South Africa, was seldom able to do so. The fall Hitchcock money-raiser in the Faunce House Theater, although profitable, did not compare with the fun of talk- ing to female and foreign hams this year. The club's equipment was also used for the message-relay service. Located in Faunce House, Room 411A, the only room housing an organization which lacks a glass panel in the door, the club was justly proud of its equip- ment. Already broadcasting at the maximum legal power of one thou- sand kilowatts, the club this year christened a new antenna, the highest one this side of the Seekonk. In five years the antenna will prove particu- larly effective, for the sunspot level shall again have reached its high- point. B e - BO-2+ THE PIONEER VOICE OF COLLEGIATE RADIO el in . BB Fequests ; CFOR MUSICY YOVR ravoRTE Disk JOCKEY WiLL BE GLAD TO PLAY THEM FoR You S60 1 2900 ExT 53 S, 3D F AUECC H, CALL UN OR VISITL BROWHUNILON THE AL BROWN SPORTS ON .. RADIO BROWN WRPTT OLDEST operating college station in the Unit- ed States and founder of the Intercollegiate Broad- casting System, WBRU was founded in 1936 as a closed-circuit system in Hope College. The station has grown ever since, and in 1962-3, its twenty- sixth year, it continued to work towards its goal of providing the complete listening service to the Brown community. This year, in an attempt to ad- just its music programming to the tastes of the Brown student, WBRU, under the leadership of station manager Pete Tannenwald, aired every type of music over 560, from the lowest forms of rock 'n' roar to Schoenberg, Stravinsky, and Shostako- vich. Jazz programming was expanded to a full three-hour show every night of the week, and opera and folk music were installed as regular Sunday features. As a result of these improvements in its music scheduling, planned by program director Mike Gradison, the listening audience of the sta- tion swelled. WBRU also extended its special events coverage. One hour every night during the week was devoted to taped programs of commentary by prominent national and local officials on important problems. A panel discussion, Focus: A University Forum, was inaugurated, which featured speakers such as Dean Schulze; Dean Morse; Professor Kucera; Mr. Sevellon Brown, of the Providence Journal; and other University and local figures discussing topics such as the Housing Report, the feasibility of lim- ited war, and the American image of the Russians. The station news department was also expanded. On Election Night the entire staff worked together for coverage of the important state and national elections, and produced a fast and accurate report of the results for the Brown student body. The reg- ular WBRU sports coverage included all home foot- ball, basketball, hockey, and baseball games and several nearby away contests. Far from being all work, however, the WBRU year provided many opportunities for social gath- erings. Most notorious of these were the station cocktail parties held one each semester. This year the regular parties were augmented by a special get-together at the house of a WBRU alumnus in Boston after the Harvard football game. Another facet of the BRU social activities was the annual banquet held in May, at which the speaker was Jay Dunn of WBZ-Boston. The annual Grease Bowl afforded another outlet for the excess energies of BRU members, as they once again fought a desper- ate battle against the BDH. Rumors had it that BRU's new team was already in practice with a female gquarterback guided by an FM sel in her helmet, 61 I 'm mlll ! . - ACKUIRACY continued to be an elusive goal for the Brown Daily Herald this year, but the campus newspaper did make some notable strides under editor-in-chief David Gubits. One of the more out- standing achievements was a fine pictorial essay, directed by Warren Johnson, which captured the ecstasy engulfing the campus after the football team's first victory in two years. And when the J. Walter Wilson Biology building was dedicated in October, the Herald was on the scene with an extra issue. During the days preceding the national elections, Herald staffers wrote several perceptive articles on the political situations in many of the states and when election day arrived, its coverage was the most extensive of any Ivy League news- paper. In addition, the BDH accurately depicted the battle of College Hill neighbors of the Univer- sity against the construction of the physics-engi- neering building on Manning Street. The Supplement, under the direction of Bill Sil- verman, filled the literary vacuum on campus in many ways. Its style was invigorated by the inclu- sion of excellent photographic content in the form of essays and candids. Literary content was also of high quality. An interesting angle on local color was added in the Slightly Doric columns of Jeffry Ordover, a fresh breeze on campus which was well received. Often devoted completely to the Brown community, the Supplement served as an unusually sensitive reflection of campus vitality. Not all was bliss for the Beady Aitch, though, as the incessant search for the truth sometimes raised a few tempers. In the year's most notable rift, the Herald nearly alienated the entire political science department with a few editorial comments on the competence of some of its members. The editorial page was notable in other respects. Re- apportionment and Contracling Fraternities in an Expanding University were outstanding edi- torials which urged more equitable use of facilities in the Wriston Quadrangle. The efficacy of the Herald's suggestions was manifested in the October Housing Report of the University. Especially cred- itable was the initiative taken by the Herald in its Challenge editorial, to effect a greater response to the Ford Foundation grant at Brown. The Managing Board, under the leadership of Remy Zimmerman, Managing Editor, and Steven Cymrot, Executive Editor, revitalized some of the traditional Herald patterns. In a historic decision, the Board determined that the right to desk edit should not be denied to anyone on account of sex, and thus Mary Jean Mathews became the first Pem- broker to sit at the hallowed desk editor's chair. AEn Also in a move which was notable if only as an in- dication of growing humility on the Herald, each Erratum box was begun with the words: Due fo the incompetence of a Herald staff member . . . On the business side, Business Manager Joel M. Cohen, when he wasn't kicking field goals in the Bear Greeze Bowl and Advertising Manager Steve Goldberger, tried to keep up with fast-rising publication costs, but subscription rates had to be raised a dollar. In addition to providing competent coverage of Brown's athletic exploits, the sports department often went outside the Brown community for stor- ies. When the America's Cup races were held at Newport in September, the BDH was on the scene with a press boat which enabled a Herald scribe to give on-the-spot coverage until the boat was rammed by an Australian vessel Sports editor Justin Vitiello continued to write his controversial column, Heralding Sports, which had little, if anything, to do with sports, but which did give fas- cinating insights into the personalities of . B Poostix and Whitney Lodestone, III. Not ones to let events of the world pass them by, the Managing Board sent a copy of the Herald to the White House when the President cancelled his subscription to the New York Herald Tribune. For their efforts the Board received a letter from H. Lincoln White, acknowledging receipt of the paper, but no new subsecription order. But the Herald's significant, though ticklish, role in our lives was aptly phrased by Dean Schulze during one of the year's dinners when he referred to it as that damned trumpet of truth. liber brunensis publications ! ! i f 7 : f ; f i 1 R ONCE INVESTIGATED for parnography by the administration, Liber Brunensis Publications managed to survive and become the most rapidly expanding organization on campus. Heretofore, the Liber had been put together in a somewhat hysterical fashion by a few people, but this year's five-member executive board was the largest in recent history, re- sulting in an unprecedented degree of coordination and control, which facil- itated long-range planning. The first evidence of success was detected when the staff ordered three times the necessary amount of stationery, half of which was ordered with the wrong date on the letterhead. The beginning was speculative; failure was not totally certain, although it seemed the most likely outcome. Burges LeMonte threatened to upset Rhode Island's morality with an unexpurgated, unedited edition of the Tropic of Cancercorn. Jim Hawley was inspired by the New Yorker but finally cancelled his plans for My Years with Roth because of the inherent obscenity of the subject matter and because of trouble with his English. One pornographic proposal which was banned prior to publication was Ernst Rothe's book of bathroom poetry entitled Rhymes for Dimes. At the outset Jim Hawley President, Burges LeMonte Editor and Ernst Rothe Executive Editor held long conferences about the book's overall layout and attempted to solve a basic conflict be- tween the maintenance of unity without confusion and the isolation of sec- tions without fragmentation. About the only solution was to buy a Volks- wagen's worth of improvements. This gave Jackson Money Grubber Spears Vice President and Bob Laudati Business Manager status-symbolic Ma- dison Avenue ulcers. Phil Sellar and Dick Pandolfo joined them at the pumps, however, and managed to keep the craft afloat financially by raising advertising and sales some twenty per cent each. Meanwhile back in the conning tower, it was decided that Outsiders were really out and that fraternities should move to the fore. The writing of captions got crushed out by the huge load of literate lunacy which almost crushed the literoti led by Dave ever willing, sometimes succeeding, always trying anyway Abram- son. Although purchased to speed the flow of material from the literary department, the new electric typewriter ensnared diligent copiests in red tape and upset the heliocentric theory of the universe for lateworking ed- itors. Dave's deliriums taxed Ernst's imagination. TWICE CASTIGATED after having been once investigated is enough. Even Larry Libertine learns. On this subject Eric said a lot but remained si- lent. This year Wilde did not bother to whitewash fra- ternities, but he got blackballed anyway. Maletz had so- cial difficulties but found Pembrokers pleasing. His co- hort, Cyrus, however, tried to out-swap his wit. And then there was Charnas! The Court Jester who contem- plated his navel never ceasing . . . Hawley and Rothe managed to blunder their way through a few of the ma- jor articles. Jim was skeptical while Ernst optimistical- ly searched for a theme It managed to manifest itself. TyPISTS Plds O A Numds Despite Burges's protestations about the lengthy copy, he succumbed by writing the longest fraternity article. Good enough to be imitated by other colleges, the lay- out staff found past editions not good enough to be im- itated. While Peter Newsted was often a welcome sight up in the office, his layouts were sometimes more of a sight than welcome. Definitely not welcome were Pet- er's perniciously perpetrated and painfully premedita- ted putrid puns which caused him to be collectively collared by his choleric colleagues who recklessly rolled him right out of the room. THRICE EXASPERATED asleader of the newly created art department, Ed Mayer hid from the staff most of the time behind his beard. Removing cartoons from the Fraternities at Brown album, Tip- py Rice added dignity to others efforts. Eleventh hour improvements by Burges and Ernst were so numerous that the layout staff was al- most expendable. This plan was effected briefly when Burges immo- bilized the entire department by burning the sliderule and tossing the moistener out of the window. While there were tens of thousands of words, the pictures were still necessary. Necessary, too, were the or- ganizational efforts of Gerry Kirschenbaum who proved efficient until staff portraits were needed. Barry found that tripods were expedient but not acceptable. The entire staff owes eternal gratitude to Sir Burges who jousted and finally ousted the villainous BDH from the darkroom. They were readmitted only when they realized that Burges could see dirt in the dark. With IBM-esque paternalism, cocktail and dinner parties were held near the deadlines to build organizational spirit and unity, but they failed to resolve the schism caused by vary- ing pronunciations of Liber. Jim Hawley made cryptic announce- ments, Burges LeMonte made implicating comments, and Ernst Rothe always made the most unpopular speech, once rendering a creditable parody of President Kennedy which was applauded with great vigah. Those who left at the end of the year looked forward to forsaking the arduous climb to the fourth floor, while those who were left anticipated heights of inspiration and endeavor. AT EASE in the classroom and on the marching field, the members of the Brown Naval ROTC unit have been prepared both mentally and physically for the years they will spend in the U. S. Navy or the U. S. Marine Corps after graduation. Fundamental instruc- tion is provided in such areas as naval history, gunnery, and navigation, while the midshipmen are introduced to the regimentation and protocol of naval life through weekly drill periods. In addition, practical experience is gained during the summer, which is spent either on a ship or on a naval base. This year, the Brunavians Society, consisting of all midshipmen of the Brown unit and led by President Evans Gost and Vice-President Gor- don Weimiller, was again an active and ambitious group. An extensive athletic program was organized, as the members participated in a complete schedule of intramurals. The Navy could also boast of fine pistol, rifle, and drill teams which entered in com- petition throughout New England. So- cially, the Brunavians sponsored two popular informal parties and co-oper- ated with AFROTC in arranging the annual Military Weekend. In addition, several class dinners were held featur- ing noteworthy speakers, among them Lieutenant Commander Herzog. ATTENTION was given to ex- tra-curricular activities as the largest corps of Air Force ROTC Cadets in many years donned their uniforms. The drill team, for several years in- active, was able to increase its ranks and enter into competition under the leadership of Marc Beresford and Davis Burbank; while the unit's monthly newspaper, Wingtips, pub- lished under the direction of Mircea Manicatide was once again one of the major cadet enterprises. Other activi- ties included a much improved and larger rifle team and a wide range of intramural athletic squads. Socially, the AFROTC staged their annual in- formal party in December and then teamed up with the Navy to sponsor the Military Ball in February. This year also saw the appointment of a new professor of air science, Mr. Wil- liam Grundmann, while the corps was headed by Cadet Commander Colonel Robert Morris and Cadet Captain Gary Seningen. The overall program was rounded out with a number of guest speakers, several field trips to nearby Air Force installations, and monthly orientation flights. GROWING into a fairsized group for the first time in many years, the Brown Young Democrats, about eighty in number, did their best to move forward with the newly-traditional vigah. Concentrating their efforts on Rhode Island politics, the group, led by President More- land Smith, campaigned in the fall for graduate student Arlene Kiven, who was running for re- election to the State Legislature. After the elec- tions, the dynamic Congressman St. Germain was invited to appear on campus. This recent victor at the polls now faced the somewhat more formidable task of justifying Medical Care for the Aged to the Brown student body. During most of the second semester, the Young Demo- crats dedicated themselves to the task of urging un-registered eligible voters to register for the 1964 election. In addition, they served as host to the New England Regional Federation of College Young Democrats, when their annual convention was held in the spring. NG R O became an unexpected topic of controversy this year for the Young Re- publicans; outgoing Dem- ocratic Governor John Notte blasted Club Pres- ident George Bryant for attributing the Gover- nor's poor showing in a YR-sponsored student opinion poll to the ques- tionable taste of a cam- paign advertisement util- izing a full-page picture of Mr. Notte's mother, along with a mouthful of homey anecdotes, which ran for one day in the Providence Jour- nal. The issue seemed to resolve itself into state- ments of mutual pride for their respective moth- ers on the part of Messrs. Bryant and Notte. After campaigning strenuously for Republican candidate Chafee, the Young Re- publicans relaxed with their victorious candi- date at a banquet held at Brown, at which the Governor-elect was the featured speaker. republicans HANDICAPPED by the lack of a coach and the consequent difficulty in training new de- baters, the Debating Union was unable to partici- pate actively in many tournaments. Nevertheless, in October, it held its annual intercollegiate debate tournament in which approximately thirty teams debated the national topic, Resolved: that the non-communist nations of the world should estab- lish an economic community. Harvard, Princeton, and Boston College won individual and team tro- phies. Much of the praise for this highly successful tournament belongs to Charlotte Cook, the tourna- ment chairman and vice-president of the Debating Union, Neil Scribner, the treasurer, and Susan Lee, the corresponding secretary. The remainder of the semester was spent primar- ily in organization, training, and preparation. In February, the Canadian National Broadcasting Sys- tem invited Brown to appear on the television pro- gram, Youth Special, in a debate against Loyola College of Montreal. Steven Comen, the president of the Union, and Bruce Langdon upheld the af- firmative side of the topic, Resolved: that John Steinbeck deserved the Nobel Prize. During the rest of the year, there were a series of debates in which the Union contended against various colleges both at Brown and other cam- puses. The members anxiously anticipated the de- bate against Yale in April. It promised to be even more amusing than last year's when Charlotte Cook, Lucille Martin, and Valerie Trueblood went to Yale to debate the topic, Resolved: that chiv- alry is dead. A similarly resourceful team was ex- pected to debate against Yale again. I Alpha Phi Omega at BrownUnnersity BONE S D115 may now continue their brand of Good Samaritanism on the Brown Campus, as the Xi Eta chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, a national service fraternity, was established here on December 15, 1962. Fulfilling its purpose of service to the campus, community and nation, the group, led by President Chet Bloden, assisted the March of Dimes drive by preparing mailing material, and also provided information about absentee voting to eligible voters on the Brown campus. They provided Boy Scout Commissioners to the Providence area and worked directly with troops, including those at the School for the Deaf and the Mary C. Greene School for the Handicapped. Further excitement was provided by weekend outings, pledg- ing and initiation of new members, and participation in the New England Conference at UConn and the National Convention of Alpha Phi Omega at Kansas City. Highlighting the year was the Chapter Installation Ceremony, conducted by the Zeta Upsilon Chapter of Boston University, at which Mr. William S. Roth, National President of the fraternity, presented the National Charter and gave the Challenge to Xi Eta Chapter. fhe world fargest szpef-iv?er onani3ation A P alpha phi omega a SIT IING around tables in Faunce House every other Wednesday night, the members of the Bridge Club worked earnestly trying to amass mas- ter points and improve their national rankings. President Dick Baum and Vice-President Rich Hooper ably handled most of the administrative and financial matters of these bi-weekly meeting- tournaments. Once again this year, the club spon- sored the all-campus bridge tournament while the highlight of the year was the New England regional inter-collegiate bridge tournament held at Brown for the first time. The club also worked diligently at forming a New England intercollegiate bridge league. Although appealing to only a limited group of students, the Bridge Club was again one of the more active organizations on campus. chess elub THE SIXTN FOLUR SOLIARES of the chessboard, the battlefield of chess, saw more ac- tion than any other field at Brown this year, for the chess set spent days and knights in tourna- ment play. Early in the year Bruce Goldstein de- feated fourteen to become 'king pawn' of Brown chess. Also in the fall the club was co-sponsor of the South East New England Open Chess Cham- pionship for anyone who wants to be South East New England Open Chess Champion. The Bruins also maintained three four-man teams in the Rhode Island Chess Association, but The Ivy League Team Tournament later in the year saw Brown lose ground from last year's third place. 76 4 5 L ONGSTANDING part of the Brown Community, the Classics Club has, since 1924, been a flourishing organization, growing more popular every year. This year it has achieved a new high in membershipincluding seventy Brown and Pembroke students. But, apart from concerns with quantity, President Stephen Tracy and Vice-Presi- dent Colby Cameron were pleased with the reju- venation of interest in the classical world among students. Each fall, the students have been privi- leged to have Dr. Charles A. Robinson, Jr., David Benedict Professor of Classics, deliver the opening addressthis year the subject being Athens To- day, followed by monthly talks throughout the year. In the spring the club held its traditional May Banquet closing out the 1961-62 season, and in December they once again co-sponsored the mem- orable Latin Christmas Carol Service. Although or- iginally founded by and for Classics concentrators and faculty members, the club has since become popular among the entire student body. folk dancing NEVER SITTING outadance, the vibrant participants in the weekly Monday night meetings of the Brown Folk Dance Club were constantly pir- ouetting to the strains of tunes from all sections of the globe. Under the direction of Mrs. Judy Schrier, wife of Assistant Professor of Psychology Allan Schrier, the club put on several exhibitions including one at the open- ing of the latest Cinerama movie, one at the Jewish Community Center, and the major one at the International Ball. Although the club lacked a president, Treasurer Margie Sanders ably han- dled most of the administrative minu- tiae of the young organization. Started four years ago, the club has made it a practice never to specialize; and so it has been dancing everything horas to zillertalers ever since. REVITALIZED through the co- operation and interest of the faculty advisor, Mr. Majewsky, and the activ- ity and industry of the student pres- ident, Enid Rhodes, and vice-pres- ident Karen Chernack, the French Club enjoyed one of its most fruitful years. Guest Speakers at the several dinners included Mr. Laurent of the music department, members of the French department, and a represent- ative from the French Consulate in Boston. The Club has had movies and panel discussions as well, but the primary objective of the group is to give students an opportunity to speak French informally and meet the fa- culty. This goal was successfully achieved at the Christmas Party held at the Pembroke Field House where most of the fifty paid members and many guests enjoyed an extremely entertaining evening. Other events included a Mardi Gras party held in conjunction with the German Club and more informal social gatherings in lounges and halls. RELOCATED,Since its initial meetings in an off-campus attic, the Dachbadengesellschaft, or attic society, today alternates its weekly meetings between the President's Dining Room, and the Commons Room. Mr. Sammons, the faculty advisor, and Etarae Blatt, the president, try to make use of all the German-speaking members of the college community. Lecturers, which have included professors, students, and representatives of the German consulate, have added a degree of culture lo these social gather- ings. The thirty-odd regular members are chiefly interested in improving their German, but also look forward to the occasional parties of the Club. The club has had a long and varied history with phases of growth and decay, but in recent years it has been enthusiastically revived thanks to many activists in the group. russian REILEGATFD:, - position of secondary importance in the discus- sions of the Russian Club, politics has given way to an emphasis on broader aspects of Soviet society. As appealing as the world situation might appear as a conversation rather than Communism. Russian Club mem- bersled by President Axel Korn- fuehrer, and under the guidance of Mrs. Roman and Miss Tumins of the Russian Departmentsing Russian folk songs, read various forms of literature, and are occasionally even treated to an exhibition of native folk dancing. Earlier this year, Professor Joravsky of the History Department spoke to the group, enabling mem- bers to understand more clearly the development of the country whose literature and customs they have been studying. spanish REVAMPED into a more social group, the former Club Hispanico has become a Tertulia, meeting in the house of Professor Kossoff. The for- mal club exists in theory only, as stu- dents, graduates and professors flock to the informal gatherings every Fri- day between four and six at the Kossoff house at 140 Brown Street. This casual club has no officials, no constitution, nor any planned func- tions or entertainment. In spite of this, the warm, friendly atmosphere of the home draws between fifty and one hundred people every week. The house is filled with Spanish objects, furniture, literature, dolls and craft- work; and in the house there is but one rule: speak only in Spanish. ALCHEMY of sorts was dis cussed by the Chemistry Club, as chemists at Brown were afforded the opportunity this year of hearing lec- tures on various fields of chemical re- search by faculty members of the Uni- versity. The club, led by John Sparks, sponsored this series which featured addresses by Drs. Bunnett, Edwards, Ross, Carlin, and Neumer. To further promote undergraduate interest in Chemistry and strengthen fellowship between students and the faculty of the Chemistry Department, the Club held a number of informal coffee hours. Highlighting the social agenda was the annual banquet, held in May at which the guest speaker was Dr. Rothman of the Biology Department. At this time prizes were once again awarded by the Club to those students with outstanding academic achieve- ment in Chemistry. ANATOMY is for these Brown men, strictly a scientific study. The Pre-Medical Society, under LIV TN the leadership of Yale Kablotsky, tries to acquaint interested undergraduates with all aspects of the medical profession. Monthly meetings, which are always open to the public, feature lectures by visit- ing physicians, as well as by Brown faculty mem- bers, in addition to informal discussions held dur- ing coffee hours. The society also has made a num- ber of trips to hospitals and pharmaceutical plants in the Providence area. Each fall, it offers valuable advice to freshmen who want to plan their courses in conjunction with a medical future. v pre-medica society J af - 'y n' H e f v q B - o - .9 CONTACT i Biology on an informal but advanced level is pro- vided for all interested students by the Biology Club. With an eye toward representing all areas of Biology, plus presenting a factual and realistic picture of what lies ahead for the biologist after advancing past the Brown University laboratories, Pres- ident Steven Krawiec planned a pro- gram of activity including both lec- tures and supplementary motion pic- tures provided by the Department of Agriculture. To create greater stu- dent-teacher contact within the De- partment, informal gatherings were held, featuring talks by members of the Biolagy faculty including Doctor Edds, Doctor Goss, and Doctor Mon- tague. A trip to the Rhode Island Hospital enabled members to see first-hand some of the results of bi- ological research. engineering society L IRADITIONAI iy any area of studyexams,, lectures, and the like cannot totally fulfill a student's educa- tion in any subject. Proceeding on such an assumption, the Brown Engi- neering Society attempts to provide for those engineering needs which cannot be met in the classroom. Many undergraduate engineers are unde- cided as to which of the many areas of engineering they should enter. The so- ciety, through a series of lectures and discussions encompassing all phases of the subject, enables these students to obtain a wider perspective of those fields which will be open to them both at Brown and in later life. Headed by President Peter Mayer, the society this year consisted of almost one-half of the entire engineering student body. THE TALU Beta Pi Association was founded in 1885 to mark in a fitting manner those who have conferred honor upon their Alma Mater by distinguished scholarship and exemplary charac- ter as undergraduates in engineering, and to foster a spirit of liberal culture . .. The elite member- ship this year included President Ralph Wood, Charles Boukus, Peter Mayer, and Gary Patterson. The year's activities were climaxed by the semi- annual initiation banquets where addresses were delivered by Professor John A. Dillon in April of 1962 and Professor Barry Marks in December. To aid the newly elected presidents accustom themselves to their offices, an annual convention of local presidents is held in the fall of each year. Inspired with a greater understanding of the Asso- ciation, the presidents thus attempt to communi- cate to the local brothers their own feelings toward Tau Beta Pi. Brown's chapter, the Rhode Island Alpha, this year instituted a monthly luncheon with the head of the Division of Engineering and con- ducted a survey of all engineering students to ob- tain their criticisms of the division's program for the consideration of the faculty. The brothers also continued their informal counselling service for underclassmen and presented the chapter's annual award for outstanding achievement in engineering. sigma xi ASSOCIATES in Sigma Xi, a national honorary society devoted to the encouragement of research in sci- ence, the students pictured on this page are among a very select group. Although actual membership is re- stricted to faculty, graduate students, alumni, and members of faculties at neighboring institutions, a small number of undergraduates are selec- ted each year as associate members. Brown students chosen this year include: Robert A. Brown; David L. Feinstein; Richard E. Francoeur; Yale H. Kablotsky; Steven S. Krawiec; Jonathan S. Lyons; Michael W. Main- en; Michael L. Paquin; William R. Patterson, IIT; Michael W. Prior; Har- old S. Schwenk, Jr.; Barry L. Shemin; Frederick C. Sherman; Ralph T. Weed; Bradford G. Woolley, IJr.; Robert F. Bergeron, Jr.; John D. Garberson; and Garry J. Patterson. With a large membership, the Brown University chapter of Sigma Xi has continually been one of the more active honorary societies on campus. A full schedule of lectures dotted the academic calendar this year, climaxed by an address deliv- ered by Dr. J. Walter Wilson, the Frank L. Day Professor of Biology after whom the new biology building has been named. INIEFIIECT may be fighting a losing battle with the twist on campus, but for at least one group it is still predominant. This year the Rhode Island chapter of Phi Beta Kappa at Brown and Pembroke elected thirty- seven juniors and seniors to membership, one of the largest groups in the chapter's 133 year history. Brown seniors were Hal B. Barwood, Antonia V. Calabria, Stephen S. Dashef, Robert L. Kroin, Herbert B. Lawson, Jr., Robert Novick, Barry L. Shemin, and Justin Vitiello. Juniors were Clifford M. Detz, Jerry S. Dubnoff, Henry J. Friedman, John D. Carberson, Ronald M. Green, Eric V. Johnson, Lawrence A. Derson, Roy Maletz, Alan M. Perlman, Daniel T. Rodgers, Phillip B. Sheldon, Vinson C. Snowberger, Jr., Laurence T. Sorkin, Jay A. Stein, and Allan M. Ward, Jr. The requirements for Phi Beta Kappa are relatively simple; an astro- nomical average. While other factors are sometimes taken into account, one's cumulative average, the sum of those bureaucratic conveniences called grades is invariably the determining criterion. Though juniors out- numbered seniors in the initial vote of the year, the senior membership will ultimately pass that of the junior since the seniors get another crack at it in a later election, Phi Beta Kappa membership is one of the highest rewards the University can bestow for academic achievement, and fitting honor for years of grinding it out, but lest the new members become too enamored of their success, Poet John Berryman gave them this warning at the society's annual dinner. Phi Beta Kappa, he told them, is a society which was not up to scratch. The society does not always represent everyone who has the necessary ability, for many people who do not go to college or who go at the wrong time are also excluded, Berryman said. But for the thirty- seven initiates and the three-thousand more who did not make it, Phi Beta Kappa membership still stands as a recognized symbol of a distinguished academic career. pi delta epsilon Ao ol I e IN RESPONSEto the activities of the Rhode Island Commission to Encourage Mo- rality in Youth and owing to the arrival of another Liber deadline, Pi Delta Epsilon as- sembled to formulate and announce its of- ficial position on this most pressing question, how to get its picture in the yearbook. Since PDE is the only duly constituted hon- orary journalism society at Brown, the mem- bers felt they must take a stand on the issue of obscenity in print. The discussions were seriously impaired by the presence of a rather vocal contingent which persisted in discussing the issue of obscurity. The basic confusion originated in a typographical error on the mimeographed agenda. In one of the most heated and the only meeting of the year, one outspoken member claimed, It is true that there is obscenity at Brown as the Cam Club and the '60 Liber will attest. While another backed this up with, There sure is a prob- lem of obscenity; no one's heard of Brown in my home town. At this point both the obscene and obscure factions of the group raised much protest and the meeting lost all semblance of composure until the question was called. At last count, five were anti- obscenity, six were anti-obscurity, three were isolationists, and four activists were waiting for Spring Weekend to make a statement. Eighteen votes were cast for placing a picture in the Liber, even though the photographer caught the group off-guard in a relaxed mo- ment. HER LADYSHIP, the Sphinx, is the oldest active honorary on the Brown campus. The society's membership includes about thirty-five under- graduates and approximately the same number of faculty members. The officers of the 1962-63 Sphinx were Henry Kucera, associate professor of Linguistics, and Donald Rohr, associate professor of History, faculty pres- idents; Joel M. Cohen, student president; Steven Cymrot, secretary; Ralph Dahlstrom, treasurer; Thomas Drew-Bear, Ronald Green, and Antone G Singsen, members of the board. Her Ladyship closed the 1961-62 season with her scholarship-of-the-year dinner. The honored guest and speaker was John L. Thomas, former in- structor in History at Brown. The first convocation of the Sphinx this year was with Ben H. Bagdikian, a Washington-based reporter and an editor of the Saturday Evening Post. Bagdikian discussed the 1962 elections. At the next meeting Benjamin Clough, professor-emeritus of Classics and curator of Carberriana, gave a lecture on Josiah Carberry: A Legend in His Own Time. The cryptic scrolls of the Sphinx were never further deciphered. It can only be surmised as to what the remainder of the year had in store for the Sphinx. Knowing the leadership of the 1962-63 Sphinx, one can guess that they allowed Her Ladyship to rest on her laurels and relive the great mo- ments of her past Her first dalliance with Oedipus, etc.. One must also conclude in all due respect that this year's leadership felt that quality was more important than quantity. Further probing might lead to implications of indolence, and so the riddle shall remain unsolved; and as Her Ladyship has always said, Qui Solvit Solvitur. 87 EXCEEDING many of the for- mer bounds of tradition, the 1964 Brown Key Society attempted to strengthen its position as a catalyst among campus activities. Acting in correspondence with increasing awareness of extra-curricular life evi- denced by the Brown community, the group also played an important role in keeping contact with alumni and in- troducing sub-freshmen to the Univer- sity. Besides the usual orientation of the freshman class to Brown tradition, the Key, under President Jim Knoll, found itself extremely busy. The high- light of the fall season was the recep- tion organized for the football team af- ter returning from their victory at Col- gate. Crowds of five hundred students swelled to one thousand by the time the team bus drove into Aldrich-Dex- ter. The same spirit endured through the autumn, and the Homecoming Dance was highly successful; Neila Rindlaub was crowned Homecoming Queen at the Cornell game. Butch Bruno, tenderly cared for and trained by the Key, proved faithful as he thwarted a malicious bear-napping at- tempt prior to the Penn game. With the shedding of leaves and a change from rain to snow, the Brown Key turned its attention eastward to Mee- han Auditorium and Marvel Gym. Largely through effective publicity, the Key attracted student enthusiasm fo winter sports and also to several mix- ers with Wheaton. The spring rounded out the Key's efforts, as the Tappin-in Ceremony introduced the new mem- bers from the Class of '65. brown key inter-fraternity council r PRESENTING the views of the seventeen fra- ternities at Brown, the Interfraternity Council at- tempts to coordinate their activities into an effective program. Although most of the members of the cam- pus community think of the IFC co-sponsored Winter Weekend as the organization's major event, this is not the case, for, under President Jim Seed, the Coun- cil this year sponsored and participated in a myriad of activities. Indeed, Winter Weekend was a great success, and the IFC Ball at the Sheraton Biltmore Hotel, featuring Chuck Berry and his band, was ex- tremely popular. The Council's importance, however, lay in its other endeavors. In the midst of a mael- strom of comment, Seed affirmed the value of the fraternity system in the changing residential scene at Brown and added that any fraternity that wants to be on campus, who will work for it, will be here in the future. Rushing policies were deeply involved. Seed, Rick Howard, Bill Zisson, and Nick Spiezio headed the Council's unprecedented succes- ses in revising the rushing schedule and in defining often-abused rushing terms. The work of the IFC was l reflected in the efficacy of this program. inter-house council REPRESENTING the independ- ent dormitories since its initiation in 1958, the Inter-House Council estab- lishes an organizational connection between the various units. Originally two members of each dormitory were elected to represent the dorm inter- ests. Under the present system, the number of members elected to the council is dependent on the number of residents in the dorm. Two mem- bers from the Freshman Class Council are also elected to represent the block of freshman houses. The members are elected each March for a year term, meeting about once every two weeks to discuss the social functions, ath- letic events, and necessities of the independent dormitories. In addition to sponsoring and acti- vating such social functions as the Connecticut College Mixer, and the feature curricula of Winter Weekend, the THC supplies such equipment as hockey helmets for the intramural teams. The Council usually sponsors parties for Brown Youth Guidance children as well. The IHC also offers an organization through which the dormitory inter- ests can be channeled. Thus the new housing regulations were in some ways influenced by the ITHC. THE ONLY coordinate activity whose primary purpose is to enrich the social, as well as the cultural, life of the Uni- versity, Faunce House Board of Governors has a special respon- sibility to the Brown community. This year the board consider- ably expanded its programs to satisfy more fully the Univer- sity's desire for outstanding programs. Taking a cue from the success of the Ayn Rand lecture last Spring, the Board initiated an ambitious program of speakers for the second semester. This series, entitled Lecture '63The American Character, was received quite enthusiastically by Brunonians. Max Lerner, Henry Steele Commager, Norman Thomas, Fred Schwarz, and William Buckley spoke on various aspects of the American character in these years of great politi- cal decision. Ray Charles rocked a Spring Weekend audience of forty-five hundred last year, beginning a series of FHBG concerts. Other performers were Pete Seeger, Bo Diddley, The Talbot Brothers, Dakota Staton, The New Lost City Ramblers and Josh White. Under the leadership of President Lawrence Gross and Vice President Silki Wasserstrom, the Board continued its annual presentation of exam-week cartoons, majors week, weekend movies, and its traditional Christmas party. New additions to its multitude of functions included a club event clearing house and bulletin board, afternoon classical music concerts in the West Lounge, and a schedule of classic movies. Again this year, Bill Surprenant provided excellent advice for the Board's program directors. His suggestions for their first annual Casino Night proved particularly successful. The assist- ance of Mrs. Sampson and Miss Knowlton in the Faunce House Office proved invaluable in issuing information and the great number of tickets for myriad FHBG activities. Generally, the Board's attempt to broaden its own activities and its attempt to help other organizations improve their pro- grams proved successful and led to a more diverse schedule of activities available to the Brown community. e house board of governors cammarian club B 8s Vl OLDEST student government or- ganization in the country, founded in 1894, the Cammarian Club reasserted itself as a dynamic force in University life. The Cam Club tackled some seri- ous and sometimes controversial is- sues, and produced concrete, work- able solutions which were later incor- porated by the University. Under the leadership of Daniel Al- per, attention was focused upon the existing parietal rules, thought by many to border on the Puritanical, and, therefore, to be in great need of revision. A new set of rules was writ- ten and recommended to the Univer- sity, to be implemented in the new Housing Report. A further step was taken toward easing the social situa- tion with relation to University rules, when a Club proposal to allow weekly Open-Open Houses, rather than only on big weekends, was accepted by the Administration. In addition, the Cammarian Club initiated its own scholarship fund and established a library in Bigelow Lounge. A Bruin Club was also founded, with the purpose of publiciz- ing the University, directed by Mar- shall Bedine. Finally, changes were effected in the fraternity rushing schedule. Composed of nine seniors, eight juniors, seven sophomores, and two freshmen, in addition to representa- tives from the IHC, IFC, and Planta- tions House, the 1962-63 Cammarian Club spoke for a true cross-section of the undergraduate body. ONCE A YEAR the members of the Brown community are given the opportunity, through the Brown Char- ities Drive, to help many less fortunate people throughout the world. This year's drive was held October 23-25 under the indefatigible leadership of Chairman Bob Phillips and Vice-chair- man Steve Dashef. Contributing to such worthwhile national organiza- tions as the American Foundation for the Blind, the American Friends Serv- ice Committee, and Medico, students also aided two University undertak- ings: Brown Youth Guidance and the Brown University Blood Service. Al- though falling slightly short of its highly ambitious goal, the drive did collect nearly eight thousand dollars. Much credit for this accomplishment must go to the Executive Committee, each of whose members was responsi- ble for a different sector of the com- munity. Under this committee, the largest number of student solicitors ever employed were sent out to urge participation. Once again this year, the Brown Charities Drive proved to be one of the most vigorously sup- ported endeavors on campus. O3 e x MEKICAN H?IENDS HRVICE LTRITIEE i 0 sl We Are A g 103 Yl 4Ekl AN G S Ol R OGO AT A without the services of Brown Youth Guidance, we simply couldn't function. Such praise as this from Mr. Simmons, head of Nickerson House, a seventy- nine year old institution providing services for un- derprivileged persons of all ages, can be heard throughout Providence. BYG was created about eight years ago by a handful of Brown men and Pembrokers who were eager to manifest their feel- ings in active work with children. By 1956, the or- ganization was working at Bradley Hospital, the Rhode Island Children's center, Smith Hill a girl's home, and Nickerson. In 1957, Butler Hospital was added. In the beginning, members were voted in by a board of officers. That practice has since been discontinued; and today, all applicants receive membership and, in turn, are expected to work at least one day a week for three hours with the children at the institution to which they are as- signed. In 1958, students, thus began to show a marked increase of interest, and membership skyrocketed from fifteen in 1954 to about two hundred in 1958. Funds increased proportionately with membership, and the means of transportation began to improve. The first few years saw automobiles and taxis being used to go down to Providence and back. From 1957 on, however, BYG has been able to sup- port its own means of transportation. This year, well over 200 people participated in the work of this organization under President Steve Perry, Vice-President Bob Brown, and Scretary Sue Ros- enthal. Perry indicated that the organization was helping at Rhode Island School for the Deaf and Maddin Hospital, in addition to the institutions it had aided since its inception. Last year BYG undertook still another endeavor known as the South Side Project now headed by Dick Goldberg. In a small part of southern Provi- dence, where 349, of Rhode Island's youth crime is reported to occur, Brown Youth Guidance extends a helping hand to many pre-delinquent children, whose lives might otherwise be needlessly wasted. But to members and the youngsters they help, BYG is not a thing made up of facts and figures; and, in truth, it isn't. Brown Youth Guidance exists to pro- mote understanding between persons. The human relationship is mutually beneficial; the children are happy to look forward to a once-a-week visit from an understanding college student, and if some hap- piness is obtained through their association with the BYG ,then the job is well done. A member may wonder at times if he is doing any good or is work- ing toward any goal. But, suddenly, at some time, happiness in a child's eyes or a soft Thank You will make him realize that there is a meaning and a purpose behind his work. prown youth guidance university christian association INNOV ATING a series of imaginative programs, the University Christian Associa- tion in 1962-3 enjoyed unprecedented success. For the first time in many years Sunday morn- ing Protestant worship services were held at Manning Chapel every week. In addition, UCA, under the leadership of President Mike Jupin, sponsored a number of highly success- ful lecture series featuring such speakers as novelist James Baldwin on Conversations on Race and Professor William May on the central tenets of the Christian faith. By far the most popular figure, though, was Dr. Hans Hoffman speaking on religion and psychiatry including such topics as Sex as Indicator of Personal Freedom, Ego Strength and Self- Denial, and Functional Faith vs. Pious Con- formity. Other activities introduced by the UCA this year were the suppers and open houses at the home of Reverend and Mrs. Sam Newcomer, given the attractive titles of Sun- days at Six and No Questions Barred. The purpose of these meetings was to afford the members an opportunity to meet with their officers and to provide the skeptical and per- plexed answers to questions concerning relig- ion and faith. Of course, these many new undertakings were merely additions to an al- ready successful program carried over from past years, including service projects in and around the Providence community such as swimming instruction for crippled children, tutoring of underprivileged high school stu- dents, and weekend work camps, and study and discussion programs on such subjects as Sex and Christian Ethics and Art and Revelation. And again this year there was the opportunity for qualified students desiring in- tensive, year-long study to acquire it through the Residential Seminar in Christianity. Once more Chaplain Baldwin, Reverend Newcomer, and the Executive Board produced both an enjoyable and a creative program for Christ- ian students at Brown and Pembroke. canterbury 98 T TS L R Q'? INCRE ASIN C religious awareness at Brown, Pembroke, and several of the neighboring schools, Canterbury serves as the Episcopal Church for these college communities. The business of the church was attended to by the Canterbury Vestry, under the leadership this year of Senior Warden John Fischer, Junior Warden Mike French, and Secretary English Austin at open bi-weekly meet- ings; while the spiritual side was headed by Canon John Crocker. In addition to the Eucharist and Ser- mon every Sunday, the College Church also held Holy Communions Wednesday and Thursday mornings. Study groups were also an integral part of Canterbury this year as in the past. A course for lay readers offered by Canon Crocker and a dis- cussion of the question, can one be intellectually respectable and say T believe . . . '? led by Miss Judith Speyer, Associate to the Chaplain, were presented. On All Staints Day, a novel form of wor- ship was introducted to Brown, as Canterbury sponsored a folk mass at Manning Chapel at which the public was welcomed and asked to join in. Still another important part of the Church program was the retreat to Holy Cross Monastery held in De- cember. Canterbury, again in 1962, served as one of the most active religious groups on the Brown campus. INVITING the participation of all Catholic students at Brown and Pembroke, the Newman Club in 1962 was once again active in three impor- tant spheres of University lifeintellectual, spir- itual and social. Sermons by the chaplains, Msgr. Geoghegan and Father Mullen, a series of lectures during the fall given by visiting priests and laymen, and the First Friday dinner speakers all provided communica- tion between members on an intellectual level. This year the main theme of the Fall Lecture Series was The Second Vatican Council: Possibilities of Reform Within the Church. Other important top- ics covered were The Reform of the Liturgy, The Quest for Christian Unity, and The Role of the Layman in the Church. Masses offered daily during Lent and on First Fridays encouraged the growth of the members as a spiritually unified body. Highlighting the years social calendar were the Annual Fall Smorgasbord Banquet, the Christmas party for underprivileged children, and the Mardi Gras Festival. During the first semester, the coffee hours after Mass each Sunday served as another function through which members could become better acquainted. Under the leadership of Mariano Rodrigues as president, the club continued its cooperation with neighboring Newman Clubs. Through the activities of the regional Newman Clubs, Brown and Pem- broke members were given the opportunity to meet fellow Newmanites from the remainder of south-eastern New England. 100 INAUGURATING a new era at Brown, the B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation relocated its offices in a completely renovated and modernized building midway between the Brown and Pembroke campuses. Known as Froebel Hall, this new home provided the impetus for a vigorous and ambitious program along social, religious, and cultural lines for Jewish students at Providence College, Bryant, Rhode Island College, and RISD, as well as at Brown and Pembroke. The weekly Friday evening Sabbath services in Manning Chapel and the Sun- day brunches with many interesting and proveca- tive guest speakers were continued this year and were complemented by such events as the Chan- ukah and Purim parties, a kumsitz, dances in the second floor auditorium, and buffet dinners. Froe- bel Hall also afforded better facilities for the pro- vision of kosher food, a large Passover Seder, and other religious undertakings. Under the guidance of Rabbi Nathan Rosen and the leadership of Presi- dent Cliff Detz, Brown Hillel was able to make sig- nificant progress. Occupying a unique position on cam- pus, Tower Club continued to social- ize at 286 Thayer Street, a bottle's throw away from Pembroke. Ably guided by Heywood Greenberg and Joel M. Cohen, the Club had a full year of parties, outings, and athletic events. Tower Club's function is primarily a social one: to promote friendship amongst its members and to provide a suitable environment in which social activities might be conducted. Though often harassed by warring factions of twisters and old smoothies, Social Chairmen Bill Levine, Bob Tannen- baum, and Marv Klein managed to ap- pease all by alternating twist bands with more conventional ones. The so- cial year began with a splasha swimming party at Colgate-Hoyt Pool while the annual stag outing at Lin- coln Woods was extremely popular as was the Homecoming Reunion Party. One of the most successful innova- tions this year was a series of dinners at -which various speakers such as Dean Schulze, Professor Wreszin, and the French Consul to the United States, spoke. The Club this year in- augurated a mixer with the Pembroke freshmen which was well attended and enjoyed by all. In the intramural program, Tower Club finished first in the Club Division in tennis and handball and led at mid- semester in points toward the Brown- ing Club. The Club also fielded a soc- cer team for the first time when that sport was incorporated into the intra- mural schedule. D el L g 4 o, 1 e fraternities BROWN has experienced a gradual change in social attitudes on the part of the student body. Taking place over the last decade and a half, the transformation has not been abrupt, nor has it been due to factors wholly within the framework of the University. Somehow the present social struc- ture seems unable to satisfy either the administration or the students. Essentially, the contemporary housing system is a compromise between the pre-World War II concept of a college and the theory which is presently emerging. In the old days, fraternities were excellent country clubs in an urban campus, serving as a cynosure of student attention in an isolation- ist America. But a thorough college education has now become a necessity for personal and national survival in a keenly competitive world. While students can no longer expend large amounts of energy in supporting frivolous activities, they continue to need social institutions in the academic community. The pursuit of academic excellence has forced many of the col- lege country clubs to curtail their programs. Moving the fraternities on campus in 1951 merely accelerated an evolution which was already under way. While the Dbuffer dormitories expanded steadily, fraternity mem- bership dwindled: some houses resisted the change in social attitudes and others adapted to it. The present housing arrangements, particularly the Wriston Quadrangle, allowed the forces of change to operate with a modi- cum of friction, but they could not dispel an uneasiness in the student body. The fraternities still are the supporting members of the social structure, but they have been weakened by adverse rushing arrangements and an a'nachronistic image. Until recently, people preferred to deal in generali- ties rather than to analyze specific difficulties. The Brown Daily Herald publi?hed biased, anti-fraternity views, trying in Quixotic fashion to tumble the institutions of social injustice on campus. In the spring of 1961 the Cammatian Club polled student opinion of the housing facilities, and in 1962 the administration formed the Housing Committee to investigate mat- ters and make recommendations to the Corporation. The war of propaganda and crude generalities had ceased: the need for an objective analysis had been realized. Below are excerpts from he Report of the Housing Com- miftee: the passages were chosen to convey the general views and recom- mendations of the study, not its specific aspects. Any system of residential housing ideally must provide certain general opportunities for its students. First, it must recognize the importance of privacy, not just so that the student may study in quiet, but so that he may indulge in that requisite of intellectual life: reflection. Secondly, he should at the same time, be part of a communal group which both supports and stimulates his growth as a responsible and educated individual. This is necessary for several reasons: to provide an organizing center for his social life; to provide occasions where he can test his ideas with others; to supply, particularly in his earlier years, the necessary informal contacts with upper- classmen and faculty which may influence his values and increase his values and increase his maturity; and, finally, to provide the means by which he may identify himself with the larger goals of the University. The social patterns that exist generally are less than satisfactory. With some exceptions, fraternities are not providing a positive influence in cam- pus life commensurate with their favored position, and in certain cases their influence is distinctly negative. The Committee believes that large improvements can be made within the existing complex of buildings without excessive expense and within a reasonable period of time. The chief goal of these improvements, the Committee feels, should be the arrangement of all housing into well-defined units for living, dining, and social affairs built around a strengthened Resident Fellows program. It must furthermore be observed that the unsatisfactory condition out- lined above has of course become obvious to the undergraduate body. Thoughtful reports and polls have demonstrated this fact. Fifty-three per- cent of the undergraduates, including 357 of fraternity members, have indicated they are dissatisfied or very dissatisfied with present housing. Thirty-eight percent desire major changes and 359 minor, for a total of 73, with over 309 of fraternity men favoring major changes. Twenty-six percent of fraternity men favor a house system; 627, including 517 of fraternity men, favor a Resident fellow in each house. The Committee has been forced to conclude that the philosophy under which the University spent an additional million dollars to make suitable facilities available for fraternity units has failed the test of experience. What then should the direction be? Only two ways of proceeding seem to present themselves. The first would be for the University to take over complete control of the Wriston Quadrangle and divide it into nine or seventeen housing units, as above outlined, eliminating the fraternities. The second would be to enlist the support of the fraternities to constitute themselves such units and take their place in the development deemed necessary for the good of the college. For many reasons the second appeals to the Committee as preferable. The tradition of fraternities is old and they have in the past made valuable contributions to the institution. Moreover, the Committee feels that certain of the fraternities are now making a positive contribution to the Brown community, and that they should be allowed to continue. The Committee, therefore, believes that fraternities should be judged, not as a system, but as individual social units which are to be justified on their own separate merits. 'The committiee, therefore, views the ideal future situation in the Wriston Quadrangle as one where each of the larger buildings would consist of one or two social units which in the latter case may be fraternities, centered around 4 married Resident Fellow located in what is now the buffer dormi- tory. It is our hope that. future developments will allow the abandonment of the buffer concept entirely. DISTINCITIVE in its position among Brown fraternities, Alpha Delta Phi has even given its name to a hair- cut. The National was founded in 1832, while the Bruin chapter was in- stituted just four years later as the first fraternity on campus. Its active and outstanding alumni have continu- ally played a substantial role in the history of the house. AD, once one of the more conserva- tive fraternities on campus, has given up its tweeds in trying to achieve a more well-rounded house. The lit- erary tradition upon which the house was founded, though, has been main- tained through a bi-weekly program of speakers and literary exercises. This year the house had four mem- bers on the Seekonk squad and was also well-represented on the swim- ming and lacrosse teams. Perennial losers in intramural athletics, the AD's surpised everyone this year by win- ning the league crown in football. In keeping with tradition, a 'gracious social season was maintained under host Dick White; and the house, as is almost always the case, again did well in the Homecoming Poster Contest, finishing second. Alpha Delta Phi respects the new Housing Report for its commendable ideals, but feels an adequate solu- tion to the problem has not yet been found. The chapter is doing its best, however, to establish a workable and profitable Resident Fellow relation- ship. e N a7k e Al Ad A ok J.L. ABERNATHY C.B. ARNOLD W.R. BANHART D.E. BASSANI J.M. BIRNEY F.W. CASPERSEN W.A. CLINEBURG, JR. G.E. COOK 5 x.Atx.i fA aad J.5. DOAK C.D. DYER IV G.D. EDMONDS L.W. GOFF J.H. HAYMAN t j' CiFe I'D5ON P.F. JARDINE F.G.K. JONES D.F. KATZ Z. KOBIASHVIL ., 2 CE L alpha delta phi .:A.Mam A M.S. KOLEDA E.G. LANPHER W.B. LAWRENCE W.B. LONG Il G.N. LOVE Il i ALPHA DELTA PHI A WA h G.H. O'BRIEN J.F. PAGE J.0. ROBERTSON P T.A. SPRATT M.G., STENIOWSKI D.W. SUSSUN Q - 1 2 5 7 l h J.A. THOMPSON W.H. TWADDEL R.M. WHITE beta theta pi Foh 87 i:ad lkiAlKA A fmi, ,!, ila R.F. DOWELL G.C. GETMAN L.G. HARRINGTON F.A. HEALY L. JENKINS L.A. KORHUMEL g B - U B d Ahl.l:h, am I. JHA A.E. LABOUCHERE R.E. LONG J.R. MARQUIS T.J. PAOUNO C.R. PILAT J.W. ROBNSON A. SUTTLE xa, xl AJ. iifk A D.W. THOMAS R. TIEKEN P.R. TIMMS S.8. VANSCIVER D.P, WESTFALL W.A, WILDE C.G. YOUNG T W J 'IM h. CW Il G L RO A lost pre-eminence as the Beta sport this year with the addition of hall hock- ey and library handball. Tieken's games became an institution as did Con- nell's wit, Wilde's hair, and Cummings' atroci- ties. Under Dave West- fall, Beta took another outstanding pledge class maintaining a degree of sophistication in the house. This caused Behlke to complain, how- ever, It's not like the old Beta House! A highly successful social schedule organized by Bouch and Bayard was highlighted by the bar parties, Christmas Weekend, Homecoming, and, of course, Spring Weekend. The sounds of Sonny Casso, Marion the Bass Player, and the Raiders could be heard at many of the functions. Always a relatively small fraternity, the Kap- pa chapter naturally found fault with the new Housing Report. As past president Cummings said, The fifty member minimum forces the fra- ternities to take some freshmen they do not really want. Their action goes against one of the main principles upon which fraternities were foundedthat of selec- tion. In campus activities, Beta was represented in the Glee Club, band, Liber, every class cabinet, the chapel board, and various clubs. The house also took part in most in- tramural sports; while it was represented on the wrestling, football, and squash teams. Beta also made a substantial gain in scholastic standing and finally lived up to its academic potential. Among the many speak- ers at Beta Theta Pi this year were Harold Tanner, Chancellor of the Univer- sity; Frederick Brown of the Admissions Depart- ment; and Seth Brooks, president of the national. delta Kappa epsilon ON CAMPLUSES across the country, Delta Kappa Epsilon is renowned for active athletics and social programs. The Brown chapter main- tains this reputation despite the restrictions of a ! limited membership. The Dekes began the year with Herald head- lines on an academic revival. President Kirk Roe- ser announced that the house average had pulled above the allowed fraternity minimum after a dangerous stretch of low grades. Roeser and vice- president Bill Lemire also joined the multitudes in debating the Housing Report controversy. As rep- resentatives of one of Brown's smallest houses, they objected to the size requirement suggested by the report, and the extra responsibility placed on Rush chairman Conrad Cutcliffe. The Dekes enjoyed another year of athletic prominence, climaxed by an intramural hockey championship. On the varsity level, hockey again looked to DKE with John Dunham in command of the Brown goal. Other top athletes included hard-running halfback Bill Lemine and fullback Frank Antifonario. Although Delta Kappa Epsilon continued to stress individuality within a social group. The Housing Report was forcing the chapter to turn its attention toward a decision on a method of survival at Brown. F. ANTIFONARIO J. ciccoLo J. HAVENER D. HILLBROOK B, LYNCH G. PATTERSON W. PRICE 1017 delta Kappa epsilo ON CAMPUSES across the country, Delta Kappa Epsilon is renowned for active athletics and social programs. The Brown chapter main- tains this reputation despite the restrictions of a limited membership. The Dekes began the year with Herald head- lines on an academic revival. President Kirk Roe- ser announced that the house average had pulled above the allowed fraternity minimum after a dangerous stretch of low grades. Roeser and vice- president Bill Lemire also joined the multitudes in debating the Housing Report controversy. As rep- resentatives of one of Brown's smallest houses, they objected to the size requirement suggested by the report, and the extra responsibility placed on Rush chairman Conrad Cutcliffe. The Dekes enjoyed another year of athletic prominence, climaxed by an intramural hockey championship. On the varsity level, hockey again looked to DKE with John Dunham in command of the Brown goal. Other top athletes included hard-running halfback Bill Lemine and fullback Frank Antifonario. Although Delta Kappa Epsilon continued to stress individuality within a social group. The Housing Report was forcing the chapter to turn its attention toward a decision on a method of survival at Brown. F. ANTIFONARIO J. CiIccoLo D. HILLBROOK B. LEMIRE H. LESZCHYN . f -?- Pv 8, LYNCH G. PATTERSON W. PRICE K. ROESER G . SCALERA 107 J.E. GERRY C.W. BERRY B.K. BRAHE G.M. BRYANT E O D. BUCK R.W. BUEHLER L.E. BUGGELN e - N a'hAmh N.O. CLAYTON J.R. DAVIS A.C. ERNST 3 ol B J.J. FERAYORNI D.M. FERRARINI D.H. GALLOGLY W.5. GOODWIN H.C.GORDINIER W.S. HALSEY W.C. HETZEL M.S. HOFFMAN f - 'a B A J. KALKSTEIN 5.5. KRAWIEC B.A. LEMONTE D.J. L'HERAULT G. MEDDAUGH h.h-g,Wi i s Mty B M.E. MENEZES R.D.MERINGOLO R.S. MEYERS M.S. MUELLER T.W. NOY e L0 E . Sadndandm L D.R. PERELMAN S.L. PRENDERGAST 1.B. REARDEN, JR. G.B. RYNNE G.D. SACKMAN f I Py P. SOLOMITA L.H. SPENCE W.A, STEWART R.C. TREMAGLO J.E. YOFFA FEFOR S proved outstanding as Delta Phi re- tained the distinction of being among the most diversified houses on Campus. In practically every organization, in community service projects, and in varsity sports, D. Phi was well represented. The house activities this year were highlighted by the social events. The first semesler's normal array of football and party weekends included Parents, Homecoming and Christmas weekends Santa Tupping Claus presiding. The most anticipated of all the social activities for the second semester was the annual Bermuda weekend. On this occasion the house sponsored an expense-free three days on that glorious island in the sun, for some fortunate brother and his date. Aside from the social life, Manny aided the small but carefully selected pledge class in seeing the light, while George and Zeus put them to good use in renovating the party rooms. The bar ceased to be, much to the dismay of Greg, and it reappeared in the former kitchen. A new tube, fireplace and trophy cabinet now occupy the area where frosties and few warm bartenders once cooled. The Buzzer charged for soda water and usually broke even. Even the dining room received a new look as wallpaper replaced a rather hideous green. Elsewhere Mr. Sipes tried his best to make a compact out of an unwieldy luxury model as he persuaded, invited, and shoved various Brothers into off campus apartments. Issuing forth from the rebuilding program came threats of: if you light the fire in the fireplace, it won't stay there long, and 'the mirror behind the bar cost forty dollars. This promoted serenity around the idiot box and eliminated the impetus of assailing projectiles. From the point of view of an eight ball in vector analysis of momentum distribution and the frequency diagram of antenna shifting, the engi- neering spaces of the house are at least sufficiently active. Upstairs, even the library was looked over for the first time in four years and it was learned that the collection of Libers surpasses the Liber's collection. Out of the archives came such memorable works as: Me and My Shadow by Skip and Flip Trick Driving by Crash Costigan How to Win on Wall Street by Manny Manezes Harmony in the Home by Jack Yoffa THINK BIG by . Kalkstein 1001 Things to Do on a Date by Marty Mueller Wanted: One Sax Player by Rat Ferrarini I Was a Duncan Demonstrater by W.S. Goodwin The Long Road to Wellesley by Jim Davis A final review of the activities of the house found Roman Baths a must, with Geoff as master plumber. The ineligibles made the grade . . . Dale heard dogs barking and finally got bit . . . Gin! that makes it 64,378 to 59,869 . . . Cash register rang up no sale as his wheels collapsed . . . the Ferret played king of the harmonica, Monk quoted Goren and went Italian. Dingle got a new car, body . . . Mad Dog watched Greg, while Bart found that good things are to be found on a bus . and speaking of buses, Gary . . . The Arrow wouldn't bend . . . Kent's a Jarhead . . . Mac interpreted a rhino while Phil played Bruno. Baby Huey pulled the biggest rally ever, while Baby Boo smiled and the house in general enjoyed itself. A LONCG LIST of campus ac tivities can be meaningless if not supported by performance. But the waves of brothers pouring from the Delta Tau Delta house performed capably especially on the varsity fields. DTD began the year with fifty-six brothers involved in such diverse organizations as the Glee Club, Cam Club, Sock and Buskin, WBRU and U.C.A. Headline names on the sports scene include: Kelly, Varis- chi and Lutz with the football team co- captain Jim Kfoury; along with Myshik and Nickson on the soccer field; Gary Nell holding down a forward spot during basketball; and other brothers filling slots on the golf, swimming, baseball, track, lacrosse, and rugby units. Off season, all the muscle comes in handy for the Delt's de- fense of the Swain Cup in intramu- ral competition. The social side of DTD was guided under the watchful eye of Craig Pozzi, who laid special stress on Parents' Weekend and the annual Jungle Party. On Homecoming, Delt had the distinction of displaying the only censored poster. The Christmas sea- son saw the annual party for young townies, this year appended by the brothers' treating of local youths to various varsity athletic contests. Founded at Bethan College in 1857, DTD was first organized on College Hill in 1896. The chapter's size left it relatively unconcerned with the Housing Report. Starting off with over the recommended number of members, DTD needed only good luck and the success of Rush chairmen Dick Stone and George Camper to keep up to strength and up to their necks in activities. J. COLVIN R. DUERRE R. KETCHUM, JR. J. KFOURY . KoLoC J. KOVALCHICK a 9l C 73. ANdrAAR A ARA C. LANE E. LANE L. LATAIF J. MCHUGH R. MUIR ? o Lak A ;4' Am A. ODDEN J. O'NEILL N. OUTCHCUNIS W, ROZELL P. SCHNETSKY C. THOMSEN THE HOLUISE of lacrosse soc cer, and red check hunting shirts, Delta Upsilon was organized at Brown in 1868, the National having been founded in 1834 at Williams College as the first non-secret fraternity. It has been said that one cannot re- ceive a bid to DU without a guitar, but the chapter's forty-five members represented the house in all phases of campus life, including, among other organizations, the Brown Key, Cam- marian Club, and Glee Club. The chapter also contributed its share of leaders in the President of the Class of 1964, Terry Bergeron, as well as two varsity captains. DU was repre- sented in all spring and fall sports, yet carefully avoided the label of jock house. Five members could be found out at the soccer field each day during the fall, four members played lacrosse, while still others competed in base- ball, tennis, track, swimming, rugby, and football. In intramurals, the house finished in third place in the Swain Cup competition. The vear was active and unusual During the spring the house turned in- to a German Beer 1lall for one night, while the toga was another party high- light. The fall season featured a gala Homecoming celebration and the for- mal initiation of pledges at the Uni- versity Club, featuring a talk by J. Walter Wilson, eminent Brown biolo- ist. g President Bill Cruikshank organized a highly successful alumni drive to raise money for the redecoration of the lounge and the addition of new fa- cilities. Another innovation was the installation of a plaque honoring the highest and most improved scholars of each semester. P. GIBB D. GOCKLEY J. HALVERSON J. MARSHALL K. JACOBSON dillaadid J. SMALL delta B. RUTAN D. SHAFNER R. GARONZIK G . GARRIQUES B. HIAT T. HOAGLAND D. HOLT S S g ! . J. POOLE P. RUBIN Y R. ULMER A. WALSH P. WOOD H. YORK upsilon 1HE HOILUISE of liirocee, soc cer, and red check hunting shirts, Delta Upsilon was organized at Brown in 1868, the National having been founded in 1834 at Williams College as the first non-secret fraternity. It has been said that one cannot re- ceive a bid to DU without a guitar, but the chapter's forty-five members represented the house in all phases of campus life, including, among other organizations, the Brown Key, Cam- marian Club, and Glee Club. The chapter also contributed its share of leaders in the President of the Class of 1964, Terry Bergeron, as well as two varsity captains. DU was repre- sented in all spring and fall sports, yet carefully avoided the label of jock house. Five members could be found out at the soccer field each day during the fall, four members played lacrosse, while still others competed in base- ball, tennis, track, swimming, rugby, and football. In intramurals, the house finished in third place in the Swain Cup competition. The year was active and unusual. During the spring the house turned in- to a German Beer Hall for one night, while the toga was another party high- light. The fall season featured a gala Homecoming celebration and the for- mal initiation of pledges at the Uni- versity Club, featuring a talk by TJ. Walter Wilson, eminent Brown biolo- ist. : President Bill Cruikshank organized a highly successful alumni drive to raise money for the redecoration of the lounge and the addition of new fa- cilities. Another innovation was the installation of a plaque honoring the highest and most improved scholars of each semester. - .. P. GIBB D. GOCKLEY J. HALVERSON a2 5 - K. JACOBSON R. JONES - k I 2 5 .. 3 - . s z P . i 4 aillaAdi B. RUTAN D. SHAFNER J. SMALL delta b2 B. BRECHT G .BUCCI L. CAMP B. CRUIKSHANK - I:- - a4 . ? P. FULLER R. GARONZIK G . GARRIQUES D. HOLT - P. RUBIN A. WALSH P. WOOD H. YORK s R e L 113 'i fi? r S.R.W. BRAY R.A. BROWN N.A. CAUFANO 4 S P.M. CHENAULT, JR. .C. . W.O. DOW J. J. DUNDA ol D.A. GARBUS R.G. GOERING J.D. GREENBERG T. HARDING, JR. T.R. LEBACH A.L. MAC ADAMS G.5. MESSING J.L. MONCRIEF 1.G. NORDIN D.D. PEARSON e A, S, R.R. RULON T.J. SCARAMELL G .A. SCHWEICKERT, JR, A.J, SEGAL B.J. SHORE Ch s . W.A. VAN NESS D.K. VEGOSEN G .R, WEIHMILLER SpAGHETTI SUPPER TUES. MAY 1 500+ 830 100 CWLDREN 7S DINVER T Y o unity have been both the bywords and the goals of Kappa Sigma. By combining a spirited social and extracurricular life with the academic and intellectual atmos- phere of Brown, it has striven to provide a pleasant medium for the maturing college student. Moving from the somewhat sedate Christmas Formal and Homecoming Weekends to the less staid, but nevertheless stimulating parties, Kappa Sigs have attained campus-wide distinction in their post-Friday celebrations. The varied cultural and athletic interests of the house have also been of note. The Annual Kappa Sig Minstrel Show displayed the literary and musical talents of Bob Klint and Bruce Shore, while Walt Donnaruma and Larry Rand wrote the music and lyrics to this year's Brownbrokers' show. On the athletic fields, Jan Moyer, Jim Dunda, Chris Eustis, and Don Boyle kept the Brown gridiron well-traveled, and provided many exciting moments in an otherwise unspectacu- lar season. Captain George Schweickert and Jon Davis played steady soccer, while Gil Goering and Jim Deveney aided Brown's hockey forces in their ECAC-recognized successes. Baseball, swimming, wrestling, rugby, lacrosse and crew also saw the men of Kappa Sigma hard at work. Not to be undone by their athletic interests, the Kappa Sigs were also represented in the more refined campus activities. L.A. FLUCK R.E. GIANNI .R. PERRY D. PUMPTON T R EELL of Lambda Chi Alpha at Brown be- gan auspiciously with the initiation of the best pledge class in recent vears. This was an indication of Lambda Chi's success throughout the yvear. The major accomplishment came at the National Convention this summer at Pasadena, where Brown's representatives successfully led the fight to remove the restrictive clauses from the national constitution. Other achievements included the raising of the house's academic standards, Jumping to fourth among the frater- nities in second semester averages and the inauguration of a series of weekends at UCA work camps. The keynote of the year, however, was once again the house's participa- tion in extracurricular activities. Over half the brothers were members of varsity teams, including four team captains: Nick Spezio, football; Col- by Cameron, hockey; Joe Fisler, ten- nis; and Steve Billey, crew. In ad- dition, Spezio and Parker Crowell received War Memorial Trophies for performance and sportsmanship on the gridiron. Athletics were not the sole realm of LXA participation: John Hornyak served as president of the Class of 1963 and several mem- bers were on Class Cabinets. ?'hu' AYA E.C. CAMERON T.W. CHAPMAN R.G. GREGG J.R. HORNYAK D.A. HUGHES R.A. REARDON W.A. SAVICKI, JR. J.P. SAYLOR D.A. BAILEY P.F. COUGHLAN R.P. CROWELL S.F. CUMMINGS C.L. DONAHUE W.G., EARLE, JR. in'f b .r 39 I. KALEPS M.G. KIMBERLY R.S. MAC KENZIE E.P. MARECKI A.T. MATTEO A.Y. SIMONIAN N.J. SAEZIO A.J. SWINBURNE R.E. TORTOLANI C.W. VARNER M.F. WHITWORTH D.W. WITKOWSKI m 117 ph L E NIRRT Al BE of mn b nities is no more than a bond of lip-service, but not at Phi Delta Theta. The Rhode Island Alpha, established here in 1887, stresses a strong national bond with over 100 other chapters. Phi Delt President William Spohn stressed serv- ice to the community this year; and the chapter sponsored such events as Spring Workday, ob- served at Brown by a full day of labor donated by each brother to the Butler Asylum. Off-campus ties were solidified by a regular newsletter pub- lished by the undergraduates for alumni brothers. Y Y 2, M.E, BRUCE J.E. BUTLER J.J. CHEEVER R.W. COOPER T.A. COVALLA 1.R. CRAWFORD G.E. DEFILIPPO R.A. DELORENZO D.A. GUNNESS R.N. HALE ;i ,'A:i g ;13'. i H o d J.5. KINSMAN E.V. KIRKLAND D.J. KRAFCHIK R.P. LAMBERT R.D. LAUDATI R.L. LEBOEUF D.M. MCCORMICK R.T, MINER T.M. MOWERY D.L. MYERS G.R. SHEFFIELD D. SHELDON G.W. SPOHN Il P.E. SYDLOWSKI R.G. TAYLOR R.P. THAYER C.L. TREAT On campus, Phi Delt spanned the entire range of activities with members participating in such diverse organizations as class cabinets, Liber, B.D.H., ROTC units, and religious clubs. On the varsity athletic fields, the house had brothers on the football, hockey, and crew teams, while the remaining members employed their energy in a full schedule of intramural contests. Socially, the Phi Delts planned their party program around the school schedule, with emphasis on Homecoming and Spring Weekend. Phi Delta Theta entered The year of the Hous- ing Report with enough brothers to bolster the position of Rush Chairman Bob DeLorenzo, but with the problem of a national restrictive clause which naturally drew much criticism from the B.D.H. J.H. BOUTELLE J.C. BROD B.C. BRYANT 5.G. COLTIN D.J. FIELD, JR. D.L. KAHN T.E. KILKENNY P Lkl J.1. MACY M.C. MC GARRITY B.R. MCINTYRE 8.H, MORRIS M.M. MORSE G.H. PALMER D.B. AINELES B8.J. SALTER T.P. SCULCO G.H. SHELL D.J. SMITH R.T. SOUERS J.H. STAMPER J. TARANTOLO W.S. TOMY E.W. WISE J.P. WRIGHT C.C. YEGEN UNlQUE parties were the featured attrac- tion this year at Phi Gamma Delta. Through the efforts of Social Chairmen Boutelle and Dep- pler, the house produced some of the most popular innovations in years. Included in the season's busy social schedule were the Home- coming Purple Owl Party, the Norris Pig Din- ner in February, and the annual Fiji Island Party on Spring Weekend. With the initiation of a new speaking program came such distin- guished gentlemen as Carl Woodward, Presi- dent of URI; Judge McKenzie of the Rhode Island Superior Court; and the president of the national. On the varsity athletic fields, Jon Meeker bruised opposing linemen grinding out yardage for the football team, while Bill Hooks and Dave Field represented the Fijis on the soccer field and John Wright on the cross country paths. In other campus activities, Andy Kiley served as president of the glee club; and other mem- bers worked for the Brown Key, Herald, Liber, and chapel board. The Pi Rho chapter, led by President Cliff Rice, has become increasingly aware of its obli- gation to the University and the Providence community; and thus, the members gave up much of their time toward service projects, in- cluding aid to Howard Hospital and a party for underprivileged children around Christmas. In this way, Phi Gamma Delta hopes to help justify the fraternity system here at Brown. F.V. ALBEE K.A. BERUBE A.E. BOOTH D.M, BUSH C.J. CAPERONIS J.H. CARTON W.T. CEDERHOLM W.S. CHUBBUCK B.H. COLLEY H.A. COLUNS - 74 4 E.W.CONNELLY K.A. CUNNINGHAM J.F. DANSTROM G.A. DAVIDSON L.L. DIAL D.M. DONNELLY 8.D. DROUGHT G.M. EGGERT R.A. EISENBEIS R.E. GARABEDIAN J.B. GREENE R.P. GREENLAW W.T. HUNTRESS A.C. KIRKMAN J.M. LENIHAN J.A. LUCAR F.M. LOWTHER R.E. MCKENNA J.5. MCMAHON J.W. MC MAHON G.J. MERRILL T.W. MOSER J.A. NARDINO M.O, SANDERSON A. SASAKI R.M. SIMON R.E. STEUER R.J. TALBOT J.5. THOMPSON E. TULLER R.M. WEBBER E.D. WEDLOCK 0.C. WINSTON phi kappa psi 123 A CAMPUS IMAGE is an intangible quality, often so variable that it defies specific expression. Phi Kappa Psi found that one sure way to maintain an image was to con- centrate on the established practices of fraternity life, such as intramural sports and public service. Phi Psi made an especially strong showing in the intra- mural contests. Having relatively few varsity athletes, the house captured both the volleyball and football champion- ships to begin their defense of the Lanpher Cup against successive waves of out-of-season varsity stars. On campus, the Phi Psis participated in the complete spectrum of activities and marked their weekends with un- usual entertainment. The chapter boasted representatives on the BDH, WBRU, ROTC units, and other campus groups. At Homecoming, it captured its second outdoor display award in three years with the artistic and timely Bruno's Color- ing Book. The party schedule, devised by Social Chairman Henry Collins, followed the usual twist and mood music pattern, but was punctuated by several variations, such as the Homecoming Roaring Twenties party. I ambda ph i 1 RET AINING its almost perennial position atop the fraternity academic ladderone which it has vacated only once in the last twenty-three years Phi chapter of Pi Lambda Phi enjoyed an active year in all phases of campus life. Always providing a disproportionately large num- ber of campus leaders, the members, this year, in- cluded the president and treasurer of the Cammarian Club, the president of FHBG, the managing editor of the Herald, and the vice-president of the senior class. On the athletic fields, co-captains of both the soccer and swimming teams were Pi Lams. Social Chairmen Ed Druy and Jim Schreiber pro- vided more parties for more Pi Lams and their dates than ever before. Popular institutions included mixers with Connecticut College and Boston University; House Weekend, featuring a dinner-dance at John- son's Hummocks; and Parents' Weekend. And the Kelvin Award was once again bestowed upon a de- serving recipient. In intramural competition the Lammies, under the indefatigable leadership of Athletic Chairman Carl Schulkin, exerted every ounce of energy in defend- ing their fraternity championship . . . in volleyball. The house did enter teams in all other sports as well. Under Reges Bill Zisson and Larry Gross, Pi Lamb- da Phi remained one of the most popular and well- rushed houses at Brown and, thus, did not actively criticize the Housing Report. allia dihd D. ALPER S. BLOOM E.J. BRODSKY M.B. BROWDE R.H. CHUSED M.H. DIAMOND E.M. DRUY R.H. DUNN B e Y P PO J.H. FISH R.P. FRIED A.W. FREDMAN J.J. GERARD S A:L-lh NN R. HERSHFIELD M.5. COOPER D.B. DANZER L.R. GROSS R.L. HIRSCH s B8 A Y TN W E.K. KAPLAN J.H. KLEIN R.W. KOCSIS J.L. LEWIS A4 Y ABA Y g M. PETERS S.T. POLLACK M.F. RACZ M.A. RASKIND C.J. REILLY J.E. ROSE R.J. ROSEN J. SCHREIBER e T R.B. HIRSCHLAND J.A. JONES po C.J. NEGARO 'A-y o M.S5. SLONIM J.A. SMALL S.L. SMITH P.D, STANFORD A.L. STANDZLER A - : I 3 z y N LT 58 4 J.M. THOMAS P.R. WEITZ J.G. ZIMMERMAN W.J. ZISSON R.A. ZOUSMER psic upsilon UUNTIL the sands of time are run Psi Up- silon must be respected for maintaining not only an image but tradition, something which few other houses have been either able or willing to do. Psi U has always been a small and close fra- ternity; and through thick and thin, it has main- tained its identity. The New Housing report, how- ever, poses a serious threat to the house whose membership has dwindled to nineteen brothers. As president Dick Howard has said In the long run the report may be beneficial but at the present time it makes things very difficult. Psi Upsilon was founded at Brown in 1890 and can boast of a large and impressive group of alumni. Despite its extremely small size, Psi U has con- tinually provided the campus with its share of enthusiasts. Always active on the I.F.C., the house almost perenially provides an officer to the Council. This year Howard served as its treasurer. John Simpson was a mainstay of some of Sock Buskin's more pleasing performances, while several members displayed their prowess on the athletic fields. The house's size did pose a serious problem when attempting to field intramural teams; and its record in interfraternity competi- tion was far from outstanding. Homecoming and Spring Weekend again high- lighted the Psi U social season, as the big banana, the canopy and the yacht on the Seekonk have become a part of the Brown tradition. G.H. BIGELOW, JR. R.D. CHAPIN IlI D.F. CHESEBROUGH P.S. DAVIS 2 L by 7 M. FEAREY, JR, J. FERGUSON ol W m aA R.S. FORMODONI P.W. GILSON W.G. HARRISS R.A. HOWARD T.L. LAWSON Il P.S. PRENTICE J.R. SIMPSON, JR, 2.7 g 1 i A R Tt R Prwreemray D WITH A KING for president, Sigma Chi entered its forty-ninth year at Brown. The National was founded in 1855 at Miami University and it is today one of the largest international fraternities. The Chis were repre- sented on a number of varsity teams: Al Yodakis captained the track team and threw just about everything for a record; Charlie Jackson was Brown's answer to Donn Bragg; Baxt, Lawson, and Mountain sat in the shell; Manley and Olsen proved to be outstanding for Brown's spectacular hockey team; and other members competed in Rug- by and swimming. The members also participated actively in several key organizations on campus including Freshman Week Committee, Brown Charities Drive, and the Glee Club. Affectionately known on campus as the Turkeys, Sigma Chi had another successful social season highlighted by the traditional Sweetheart Week- end and festivities on the three major weekends. Along with his social du- ties, Al Vandam acted as Rushing Chairman and organized an active and intensive rushing program, based on the notion that the true value of a fraternity lies in the diversity of its members. Although Sigma Chi is reluctant to approve the fifty members minimum, it believes the University policy will have a beneficial effect on both fra- ternities and the University commu- nity. The report establishes a realis- tic direction in which residential hous- ing at Brown may be improved. 128 o Mo wAdA. 5. ARMENTROUT E. ARMSTRONG 7Y t:hlfhlnji 7. BIDWELL, JR. HAMBERZLIN L. CONNOR C. JACKSON H. JOHNSON R. KIENE, JR. J. ING fiml AN E.W. MASON, JZ. J. MILES, Jg, M. MOUNTAIN, JR., An0e fmdn.um n.AmAm- A. YANDAM R. WALLACE C. WARNER J. WEBER, JR. P. WEHMAN . WRIGHT A. YODAKIS, JR. sigma. chi Eabr ABOLITION of restrictive clauses from its national char- ter was the major goal of Delta Lambda chapter of Sigma Nu this year. Months of hard work culminated in the journey of eleven brothers, headed by Commander Lew Feldstein, to the National Convention in Pittsburgh. Though unsuccessful, con- siderable progress was made in preparation for the 1964 Con- vention. Rushing brought the annual and unsuccesstul visits of Harvey Kek and the successful pledging of twenty-one sophomores. A singularly successful faculty cocktail party in the Spring went a long way towards furthering faculty-student relations. Interest in local affairs matched national concerns. Profiting from its academic position second on campus, Delta Lambda became a center of social as well as intellectual activity. Yale Weekend found at Sigma Nu Mickey Gee and the Upstarts, the best rock and roll band ever to hit Brown, and a shortage of nearly four hundred dollars worth of clothing. On Homecoming, the house was graced with the Homecoming Queen, a satisfied Brown Key President Jim Knoll, and a happy Basketball Captain Gene Barth. Cayuga Falls and a log bridge failed to win any prizes but won the approval of an anonymous white duck. Tra- ditional White Rose Weekend and Christmas party were en- livened by the cavortings of Santa Claus Gene DePatie. For the fourth consecutive year, Sigma Nu captured the Fales Trophy for community service. Active as ever in university leadership, Delta Lambda found itself with IFC President Jim Seed, Liber President Jim Hawley, 1963 Class Treasurer and Basketball Captain Gene Barth, 1964 Secretary-Treasurer Dave DeLuca, Brown Key President and Faunce House Activities Chairman Jim Knoll, 1965 Class President Tim Witsman, 1965 Secretary-Treasurer Ted Hawkins, and the leaders of the bur- geoning Rugby and Squash Clubs. M. BUCHSBAUM B. BUTLER T.C. COUGHUN J. COX G.J. CYRUS, JR. D.V. DELUCA - G. BARBEE G. DEPATIE F.M. DRISCOLL M.C. DWYER L. FIFER T. FREDERICY D. GOELTZ P. GRANTHAM T. HAWKINS J. HAWLEY P. HODGE 'Afhl?.n.. AA .fj. R.B. IRONS J. JERRETT J. KNOLL P. KNUTSON D. KOHLER D.A. LANEY R.M. MALETZ R.L. MARTIN S. MAYNE H. MCAVOY - 7 D. MC CLATCHEY D. MCKAY J. NICHOLSON G.J. PATTERSON D.C. ROLLENHAGEN B. ROSEN J. ROSENBLUM P. SCHAEDEL P. SELLAR J. SMALL J.R. SHORTELL T.0. SMITH R. THOMPSON F. WALKER D.T. WHEATON T. WITSMAN J. ZEDER theta delta chi 'f.'!.agf'f Ainila sl o t Las A J.K. BUTLER, JR. R.G. CASHION A.N. COHEN K.A. COHEN R.B. COLBURN AP L o D.J. FARLEY B.W. FARQUHAR R.C. FERRIS A.B. FRUAHAUF D.W. GORHAM S.H. GRINDLE J.T. GUNZELMAN S.J. HAMMER M.R. HENDERSON R.W. HENDON J.L. JONES B.H. LYLE R.T. MAGEE F.R. MICHEL C.E. MOORADIAN 5.G. MORISON f.'tCHE ALl A 'fA'x O f' , fgj,h D.K. RUMSEY T.R. TEMPLE L.E. VODOPVEC B.T. WILUAMS R.S. WOOLLEY J.M. YEARGIN, JR. A.H. YOUNG SEL E-PROCI AIMED campus leaders, the brothers of Theta Delta Chi included a wide range of individuals, varying from an All-Ivy soccer player to a poetic Santa Claus. The Theta Delts supplied a host of varsity athletic captains, with Mike Prior in the pool, Ken Linker on the mat, house vice-president Glen Cashion on the diamond, Dave Farley replacing President John Jones on the cross- country path and Al Young directing the soccer team. The house carried the prowess to the intramural fields too, with a strong showing to follow up last year's second place finish in the Lanpher Cup competition. Always anxious to maintain the well-rounded look, Thela Dell placed influential members on a solid list of campus organizations. Five brothers were members of Brown Key, including Key Secretary Doug Nelson; four more represented the chapter on the Cammarian Club, while a host of members held down offices in campus academic societies. Social life at Theta Delta Chi was the domain of Don Roy. In addition to the usual emphasis on Homecoming, Spring and Winter Weekends, the house inaugurated a Halloween celebration. Roy's co-chairman, Carl Moora- dian took to the red suit at the Christmas festivities to distribute poetry and presents to the bewildered dates. The pledge banquet was once again a gala affair, while faculty and parents' cocktail parties were instituted for the first time. 134 THE MORE things changed, the more they remained the same. Zeta Psi had another good year and so did the Zetes. The house moved up to fifth place academically and one member became a Francis Wayland Scholar. This was a change for the better, part of a continuing program of aca- demic improvement. But house spirit remained the same, laissez-faire and hedonistic. Sports maoved indoors. Jaialai was played in the lounge with a tennis ball and bread baskets from the refectory. Snowball fights also were held inside; one team would control the hallway from the second floor landing, while another would make forays from the lounge and the library. Ammunition was gathered from the windowsills. There was a movement to commemorate bathrooms to various members by placing brass plagues on the doors, one to the Andes, the other to the Crane. Mike held private open houses. At Homecoming a chaperone from Woonsocket donned Cornell's bear suit acquired by Main Street, Dick and Jim. One alumnus re- turned for the occasion, complained that things were dull and was carried out several hours later. Don could not stomach whiskey sours, while Zies- mer and Rothe went to Knuckle Junction. House government continued along conservative lines; Savory succeeded Rhine and took over custody of the Moose. Mother Fletcher rejoined. Fred levied social taxes and Life put Wink in the Drink. Sears remained immobile and lost his Healy. Tim im- ported art work but never unpacked. Liotta turned the tide in the IFC, turning independents out of fra- ternity dining rooms. Weed threw a pie and Rhine threw a fit. Bilken popularized Tullies. Rothe be- came a Supreme Court Justice. Paxson had a loud car. Ted was tweedy. Pancho Villa, el wetback, returned. 5.C. BIKLEN J.M. GARDNER T.R. JACOBS B.R. KING R.C. UOTTA K.W. MILLER R.W. PAXSON J.D. POLLAK T.M. RHINE W.E. SAVORY B.A. SEARS . N B.J. STEEL R. TATLOCK T.J. THEUN R.J. WALLACE J.C. WEED Il R.L. WEST F.F. WINKLER jeta psi . Ki7Y s . R i L o W N dependents 11 AVING expanded from a small minority of outcasts, the independents constitute the major portion sixty per cent of the student body. The campus is usually depicted as two factionsfraternity and independentexisting within their own separate spheres, having their own separate representative councils, separate intramural leagues and separate social func- tions. The independents have the advantage of greater numbers, but the fraternity members are more closely allied and better organized. The latter are able to mobilize resources and coordinate functions for large weekends, not- ably Winter Weekend. Community work proj- ects are also promoted through the Interfra- ternity Council. On the other hand, dormitories have more widely divergent natures. Some close- ly resemble fraternities with house budgets and well-organized governing boards; others lack concern to the extent that members will not answer the telephone. While fraternities make a strong recruiting effort through formalized rushing, dormitories are filled by a gravitational process whereby independents seek residence in certain houses because of their reputation. In both cases, students tend to group according to similarities, but fraternities are able to control their diversity by virtue of their selective nature. Although efforts have been made recently by the Brown Key to revive the all-campus dance, its collapse several years ago divided the two factions even further. The fraternities construct their social life about the major and minor weekends, while the independents tend to build their social program about the Resident Fellow system. But some independent houses have heavier social schedules than the average fra- ternity, since the latter is subject to academic restrictions. In turn, fraternities have expressed a strong desire to adopt the Resident Fellows' system within their houses. The Committee believes that the institution of Resident Fellows was the best attempt made in recent years to make an educational force of the campus. They are not disciplinarians, nor have they needed to be. They are not tutors. They are simply more senior members of the hoped-for 'community of scholars' It is from their presence that the Committee would have the University build, both figuratively and liter- ally; it is they who should in the future con- stitute the organizing influence of each of the residential units. Selection of Resident Fel- lows, according to the Housing Committee, should be drawn from the Providence commun- ity as well as from the University faculty. These men, appointed for a reasonably long lerm, are in turn, to choose others from the com- munity to attend functions held in the residence. Coordination among the Resident Fellows, and direction by them of the Student Resident Advisors, should make possible a good fresh- man housing program. Unless such supervision is possible, the Committee believes it would be unwise to segregate freshmen. The Committee realizes that there is much to be said for the system presently in effect wherein a certain amount of intermingling among freshmen and upperclassmen occurs. Briefly stated, the chief reasons for not estab- lishing freshman dormitories center around the hope of bringing entering students as much into contact with the life of the whole University as possible. It is argued that the cloistering of freshmen unduly prolongs their high school' attitudes. However, such cloistering has less- ened in recent years; secondary school prepar- ation is such that increasing numbers of fresh- men enter relatively advanced courses. Thus they do not share, as a group, a restricted number of courses, an academic freshman year.' Only when freshmen housing as such is established is it possible to design programs, of both a social and an academic nature, suit- able for them. Such programs have been lack- ing in the past at The College. Housing of fresh- men together is an effective way to establish class unity. Today most other pressures within The College work against it. Some relation exists between class unity and school spirit, which, trite as the phrase may be, has relevance for the University, in terms both of the general morale of undergraduates and of each students responses to Brown as an alumnus. A CERTAIN RENOW N was gained this year by Poland House. Lenient and good-fellow Dave Laney, house proctor, was kept busy most of the year; while Resident Fellow Anthony Wohl claimed that he necessarily joined the Poles having found it impossible to beat them. President Pete LeClair made two declarations at the end of the year: that Poland House had the most intimate parties on campus, and that Poland House had more broken windows during the winter than did any other dorm on campus. Among the house's more notable accomplishments this year were a dorm dinner, participation in a wide field of intramural athletics, and an all-out war with Everett House which resulted in one-hundred and thirty dollars in damages. plantations house BROWN S TOWNIES,not to be confused with the local girls who stimulate campus night life, commute daily via r Plantations House. Although serving primarily as a place where f commuting students socialize and sometimes study between ! classes, the house also possesses overnight facilities. Founded ten years ago by Dean Durgin, Plantations House has gradually risen to a position of prominence, this year in- habited by one hundred and fifty students. At the beginning of the 1962-63 academic year, the facilities were moved from George Street to 20 Benevolent Street, directly across from the West Quad. Under the leadership of President Tom Generous, the house engaged in a wide variety of activities. In athletics, Plantations won the Browning Cup for individual intramural sports su- premacy and was a leading competitor for the highly-coveted College Trophy. As a community service project the members sponsored a clothing drive for orphans at Christmas time. Socially, the commuters were able to enjoy a party every weekend, the most popular of which were a Roman orgy and a Polynesian party. The house was best known on campus for its more unusual activities, however. As is almost invariably the case, the mem- bers once again won several cigarette promotion contests, and they participated in the first intramural game to be played as a preliminary to a varsity contest. The commuters' five made the game into a beer party and, needless to say, lost. With a new building and more members than ever before, Plantations House continued to raise its status on campus while maintaining its distinctively local flavor. As one member stated, We're Townies, and we enjoy if! THE SIGNIFICANT arrival of fifty-eight neophyte freshmen, a majority of the total membership, cre- ated a new and different atmosphere at Bronson House this year. These figures belie the dorm's size, how- ever, because of the recent years' introduction of the over-crowded triple. Bronson's activities centered around an extraordinarily intensive social life, as witnessed by the thir- teen parties held each semester. Among the festivities, a hayride high- lighted the events of the Homecom- ing, while the weekend imbroglios were well-oriented and mature mani- festations of the Bronson dorm spirit. Intellectual as opposed to prim- itive stimulation was offered both by Senator Pastori, who spoke and after- wards answered questions over egg- nog during the dorm banquet, and by Governor John Chafee, who spoke at a meeting of the Brown Young Re- publican Club which was held in Bronson. The congenial atmosphere was maintained by the sherry hours of Resident Fellow Amor. Characterized by such social op- portunity, and the comicality of a Jock Chairman as well as a dorm president, Bronson House is an in- stinctively convivial place to live. A SHCRIE I 2l DEPARIURE from tradition was made this year by Everett House. The house added a very creditable performance to the always popular and lively social life. Of course, the dorm maintained the charac- teristic Everett trait: the ability to always find time to have fun. Parties were enjoyed every weekend. The more notorious gatherings went by the names of the Warehouse Party, the Beach Party around Christmas, and a second Christmas Party. In order to ease financial burdens, Everett inaugu- rated a joint arrangement with neighboring Jameson, one dorm having a band one week, the other having one the next, with members of both dormitories having access to these parties. The result: a band party for members every Satur- day night. Another joint endeavor of these houses was a mixer with Conn. College. The Resident Fellows, Asst. Prof. Frank Durand and Assoc. Prof. Walter Schnerr, did more than oversee the stu- dents; they really lived with them. The students many, many times came to appreciate their consideration and involve- ment, SaladLl BT ACTIVE,Archibald House, led by Terry Valz, is one of the best organized dormitories on campus. Of its seventy-six denizens, forty-nine are up- perclassmen. The majority of these mem- bers are candidates for a Bachelor of Sci- ence degree, and quiet hours are strictly observed. The freshmen inhabit mainly the fourth and fifth floors but still retain the fruits of integration with the large num- ber of upperclassmen present. For such a small dormitory, the occasional publication of a dorm newsletter is an unequalled achievement and an indication of the mem- bers unity, An active social life eleven parties for the first semester was coupled with a wide range of extra-curricular activities among Archibald's members. They held a Christ- mas party for Brown Youth Guidance children, and although not outstanding, their intramural accomplishments were above average. Dean Schulze spoke at the dorm banquet for the first semester, a lively addition to the intellectual opportunities offered by the open houses of the Resi- dent Fellow. Although slightly damaged by a fire which promiscuously broke out at the unholy period of semester examinations, Archibald, with the ashes at last shoveled out of its windows and with its members safe, stands firmly with its academic and extra-curricular activity at the fore. A SERIOUS ATMOSPHERE could be found hovering over Jameson house this year. Though one of the largest dorms in the West Quad, only forty of its 106 residents were fresh- men. This fact may account to a degree for the respectable reputation the dorm has earned. Financially, the house was unusally solid, especially after inaugurating a joint social sea- son with Everett. This solvency allowed social chairman Dan Harris much leeway in planning the season's social schedule. The most popular innovation was the Spring Jungle Party, so suc- cessful that it has become an annual institution. In intramural competition Jameson was equal- ly capable. It went through an undefeated spring softball campaign and won the league football championship, losing in the all-campus play- offs to a formidable Faculty Club team. The dorm dinner was again well-attended and well-appreciated, featuring a talk by Dean Schulze. The same was true for the weekly open houses, and the sentiments of the majority of Jameson members were expressed by Pres- idents Bob Shuker and Mike Dennis when they said that Jameson had both the most inspiring open houses and the grandest and greatest res- ident fellow, Associate Professor Elmer Bli- stein. o Jameson house Ry resident iellows +y It i o AR A e N AR . g AS UNDEFINED as his general appelation may be, the resident fel- low has played an integral part in dormitory life since the system's inception in 1951. He is there neither as a disciplinarian, nor as a pundit, nor even as a father image. Yet, he provides the dormitory member an intangible opportu- nity. Whether the student wants to know where to take his laundry, or whether he seeks advice about the nature of women or some other philo- sophical inscrutability, the resident fellow is always available to answer his queries. He is present in the dormitory as an educated adult, one who can add the seasoning of maturity to the often confused potpourri of undergrad- uate life. The resident fellow plays a social role as well as a personal one. The weekly sherry hours offer a welcome relief to those whose brains are ragged with study while often producing some intellectual tantalizers. Under the direction of Professor Kucera, this group of men sponsors the popular Resi- dent Fellows' Luncheon every Tuesday at which distinguished speakers aid in broadening the undergraduate's cultural knowledge. Although the student-fellow relationship is often a reciprocal one, it is primarily through personal initiative that the student can reap the rewards of a fellow's presence. The undergraduate has a choice of twenty-one men to whom he can go for advice, information, or friendship. Whether he listens to a luncheon speaker, takes part in a sherry hour discussion, or asks which is the better laundry, his personal life is in some way enriched. Intemperates Ing homecom e it o i o nad - F 5 u -t a5 it o o E e e I U ey of Tewe om lr-s.l 1 Hro0 e Affe Purcynse TRy OH, SEDATE SCHOLAR, what's Homecoming? The scholar chuckled knowledge- ably. Ie scratched his learned head till the dan- druff fell snowfully; and he gazed in the mirror evilly at the red glow which infringed so seditious- ly upon his print-scorched eyes. Homecoming, he sald, marks the campus's annual rediscovery of Fhe p;lmeval essence. We seek to escape the stifling infusion of bourgeoisie hypocrisy and UH. hege- mony. They've allowed you a dance, a football game, maybe even parties! I said. I haven't fin- ished my gym credits, he replied simply. I went to the Key dance. The royal felines court- ed; the bad seeds germinated tenderly behind the purest white of white carnations. But then in dorm and fraternity, the dance dissolved in the flowing ferment of the hops; and I passed when Venus passed. But first she winked her eye and sent an icicle of starlight over Hill's night-enshrouded top. ST Tl T TR rr N N N .yt G AN - vs NN There were extra lunches in the refectory Satur- day. Everyone went to the game. That guard at the gate is hideous! He found me a poor loser; implicit- ly when he confiscated a volatile oxidant. And ex- plicity when he gave it back! Just because we lost! 1 wasn't bitter. I grew mellow; I ascended fo noble clouds of highness. Comrades, the blockade must end. The imperialist in U. H. jealously wants to extend his administration; his spies are a-field. he's posted his goals. 1 asked a football player. ' What's Homecoming? 1 asked. The foothall player scratched his muscular baclside till the clods of dirt flaked off. Home- coming, he roared, is when I roar back at you guzzling, unsupportive jerks in the stands! Sweat stained his striped garters. It even stained the B. U. on his personalized, fuzzy white socks. His massive head hung; his newly-shined sneaker traced across a breast-like mound of dirt. Do you have to prac- tice tonight? I asked. I have to cram for an art exam Monday, he whispered. The parties Saturday night were all wet. Outside, the papiepmache oozed spirit and paint; inside, the lush displays dripped self-contral and sophistica- tion. The frantic combos reaped crisp applause from violently undulating fruits and vegetables. One e ccedingly mundane old clinging-vine-type Homecoming lily twisted about her corny, stand- on-yourown type poplar partner. 145 The Providence police had outlawed money be- cause their little agents on ice-cream scooters liked to pass tickets better. So we all passed tickets over the bar, and it was all quite legal and above board. Except one hot ticket who got passed over the bar said she was above being bored. And in a corner one old alumnus said he'd come to regain his youthful identity in his one-time cohorts. He mournfully twiddled the olive in his beer, and he swayed up and down when I marched up to him. Oh, venerable alumnus, I asked, What's Homecoming really? The alumnus scratched his tweed-enfolded back pocket till the money spiraled about liberally; and a piercing glance of insuffer- able perturbability lit his wrinkled eyes when I laid a brotherly hand upon his shoulder-padding. Wherefore, oh party guest, dost thou stopper'st me? he inquired. But sir, I quailed, What's homecom-ing; what's hom-c'ming; what's hmm- c'ming, eh? The alumnus rose shakily from the bar stool. I just had to return to old Brunonia, and this is a good excuse to get away from home! he bawled. He stood waving his Brown pennant limp- ly; and he collapsed on a Pembroker's stomach. So I covered him reverently with the pennant; and the Pembroker began to recite Chaucer to him because she thought he was her date. F i PRECIPITATION aside, Winter Weekend 1963 was coolperennial parties. The primeval promenaders oozed down to the Quad and the Biltmore Friday night. Herb Wayne serenaded the suave fraternity men; IFC rascals secured adequate Grace even in Rainier's ab- sence. Art Tancredi enraptured the independents; and the Inmates en- thralled Bigelow's semi-formal bounder. Friday is the time for ex- uberant exertion; Saturday's hockey is a spectator sport. But first, there's the morning before the morning after! Saturday morning's sophistical scholars labored to comport with the climate. Snow subsides quickly in Robinson and Whitehall; prating Professors saw a pre-season bloom of feminine faces in back row love winter weekend seats. But on, on . . . time and winter days are short for post-final fatuous- ness. A bite with the dateless rats at the factory or a gulp at Greggs; Dick Gregory awaited the joyful influx. Comedians con and girls giggle; the funny business was short and sweet. The Brown man more somberly sat and his wallet itched; dates have ex- pensive tastes on big weekends. Downtown, solicitous waiters waited stealthily at Cobbs and the Mansion House. Math is the language of the modern age; but inflated out-of- townies had inordinate appetites for big numbers on menus Saturday sun- down. Oh, wellif crime doesn't pay, maybe felicitous philanthropy does. Brown men calculated Meehan's sports spectacular to cap their cup- cakes' captivation. School spirit puts deadly diseases' infectiousness to shame, Cornell took us 3-1. Our girls cheered hard; out-of-townies have all the luck Winter Weekend. After- wards, for instance, that pitiless ice multiplied in a thousand cups and cocktail glasses. In fraternity cellars and dormitory lounges, the beat gen- eration demonstrated its elan for the last, lively time. And before they knew it the 1:30 curfew arrived in the twinkling of a chandelier. Once a year, on Saturday but never on Sunday! A sentimental stroll under wintry elms precedes the sad good-by. The Hay overlooks the train station; and sidetracked studies superintend the Brown man's dili- gent conscience. The optimists dif- fused with joy in heart. Ecstatic ex- periences preserve in anthropomor- phic brain cells; and life evolves anew every spring. ,4,-,?; -v,t. spring weekend MAKING UP FOR LOST TIME Brown students made the most of the Bacchanalian rites. Remembering that their Spring Weekend had been all but wiped out by the rain the previous year, upperclassmen were out to make this the best weekend yet. Freshmen, of course, took the hint and immediately joined in. From six o'clock Friday, when the last die hards emerged from the organic chem lab to eight o'clock Monday when the faithful few found their way to their first classes, not a book was opened on College Hill. Around noon on Friday the first imports began to arriveWellesley, Smith, Vassar; all were repre- sented. By mid-afternoon, with the traditional rock 'n' roll party at Delta Phi, and the lacrosse match at Aldrich-Dexter Field, the weekend was well under way. Around dinner time many Brown men could be seen escorting their dates to some of Provi- dence's finest eating establishments, those with blind dates risked nothing more than Gregg's, and Pembrokers ate at Pembroke. The University's new Meehan Auditorium was the scene of Friday night's major activity. Over three thousand jammed the scene and were left twisting in the aisles as the incomparable Ray Charles closed his concert with a fifteen minute rendition of What'd I say. PEMBROKERSwere granted two o'clock lates, which meant that parties lasted longer, which meant that more of Herb Knight's vehicles were in use, which meant that Saturday classes were cut. And so, as early as ten o'clock Saturday morning, the crowds began filing down to the Seckonk. By noon, the banks of Rhode Island's Rhine were covered with prostrate bodies. By two, the grass was no longer as cluttered, as some two hundred hearty souls had found the crystal clear waters of the Seekonk too enticing to remain on the shore, while others were twisting and shouting to the tunes of the two bands provided. Recalcitrant townies attempted to disrupt the proceedings by ostentatiously driving by the river on their motor- cycles, while spinsterly ladies wound their way through the throng in utter dismay, obviously re- greting their choice of thoroughfares. Despite warn- ings of possible interference on the part of the police, Providence's finest seemed more amused than annoyed. By late afternoon the crowds had meandered back to Hughes Court, where once again a twist band provided the impetus. Saturday evening Brunonians were again seen descending College Hill for dinner in even greater numbers, as by this time blind dates were close friends. Pembrokers again ate at Pembroke. Saturday night-just the usual parties, but by this time no one really cared. And with the tradi- tional open-open houses on Sunday the weekend had come to a close. Imports were exported, An- drews House was caring for the last of the bruised and battered, and the men in the gray suits were trying to tidy up again, and restore Brown's dignity. Other than the assault of several students Saturday night, and the refusal on the part of the Biltmore to honor reservations, the three days passed by smoothly and, for most, much too quickly. Finals and Comps were coming up rapidly, the last papers of the semester were almost due, but Brown men had thoughts only of one of the best weekends ever witnessed on College HillSpring Weekend, 1962. N pembrokers N L NECESSARY evil is the phrase by which Pembrokers are traditionally referred to by Brownmen. Equally ancient are the debates on whether Brokers are necessary but not evil, unnecessary but evil, or neither neces- sary nor evil. The answers to these questions vary according to the era con- sidered. At the turn of the century when the Women's College in Brown University was founded, strict Victorian morality probably made Pem- brokers simultaneously evil and impeccably virtuous, while the horse and carriage rendered them more accessible than other schools and therefore necessary. When the Twenties roared into Providence, student automo- biles were rare and the parties were numerous. Pembrokers, with a few exceptions, were considered necessary and certainly not evil. The depressing Thirties made them luxuries rather than necessities. Stoics saw Brokers as virtuous, while others rationalized their abstention by looking upon them as evils. At about the midway point in the twentieth century, the question has become exceedingly complex. Brown men possess an impressive num- ber of automobiles; therefore, those with vehicles do not consider Pem- brokers necessary. Students who have close friends owning cars, may consider 'Brokers necessary if a ride to another women's college is un- available. But in the final analysis modern transportation has rendered obsolete the necessity of Pembrokers, for dates can always be imported if enough resources are employed. At present, University rules classify all women as potentially, if not partially, evil. But University officials regard them as necessary and good insofar as they sharpen academic competition. For this reason, Brownmen feel that 'Brokers are definitely evil. Since some of them help their male classroom companions by providing faithful lecture notes, they must be considered virtuous and necessary. Where the truth lies, it is not clear. Thus the clarity of the Pembroke cycle described in the fol- lowing pages is probably deceiving. Of course, no Pembroker will find herself accurately portrayed through the eyes of a Brown man. But it is probable that each will find a moment of her four years captured within a word, a phrase, or hopefully, within a sentence of this first attempt of the Liber to recognize that venerable co-ordinate institution which is so much a part of Brown. Henry James, not quite so pragmatic as William, perhaps, said: Don't neglect your opportunities to live . . . you have only one life . . . live it to the full. Pregnant intellec- tualism didn't entirely bounce off the nine- teenth century Pembroker; but Henry James did. Henry was precocious; and Pembrokers were preposterous. They were repressed; they were dull. They sniveled in moral pro- mers; they choked in quiet proprieties; they shed candlelight on hairy tomes till mankind should call. How things have changed! Mankind is mis- chievous, and no-one is average. What a dif- ference! The cult of experience is all. Pem- broke artists paint passionate portraits, and Pembroke scientists experiment. Every Pem- broker experiments; she is living life man- fully. And is she happy? Is she wiser, is she better, is she prettier? The Pembroker, once asked, doesn't know. She's all in a dither; she spends four action-packed years trying to find herself. And, in the end, does she? The subject merits a Brown man's tender explor- ation. The subject is extensive. Today's Pem- broker's existential predicament is a result of traumatic experiences of her early history subtly interwoven with the forces battling to reshape her current environmentPem- broke, that is. The archetype Pembroker must exist. She's merely hiding in a jungle of un- consciously superficial diversity. She is an immensely logical synthesis. She is all contained in the step-wise assimilating pattern of development which is presently culminating in the decline of Western civili- zation unless Pembroke administration people get concerned about civilization, which may be the solution to the problem. Anyway, I take her for a composite. She's 35 Pascal, and 15 Nietzche, and 15 Law- rence; and she has a suspicious past. What exactly is she? Once upon a time, some dandy dormitories perched on a hill in sight of the quixotic Quakers this-earthly paradise, Providence. Pembroke College was a frail vessel on the rolling seas of the nine- teenth century. Early Pembroke was a part of its socio-economic, intellectual, cultural climate. The weather's still miserable! And why . . . why did she do it then? To be finished . . . that's why the young ladies entered in 1891. That was the crucial year. That was the year of the initial trau- ma. Note the prim and proper, the de- luded and dull, the prudish and peni- tent that populated Pembroke. Were they not frustrated? I submit that they were. For they learned but the superficialities of existence. The lark is in the sky, and nature is emblem- aticwhere does that leave reality, the bare facts? Was one prepared for life, with practical experience limited to carriage-entering without ankle- showing? Documented diaries prove the contrary. Consider March 8, 1891: a night like most nights at Pembroke. After candles-out, the scabrous set read books that hadn't been assigned. Un- doubtedly, some such girls even read that men are animals. Statistics sug- gest they didn't all believe what they read. Some intrepid girls were experi- menters. An undercurrent of do-it- yourself-ism was brewing. But times were primitive; even these bold girls remained in the dark. The Pembro- ker's knowledge came from books and lectures. They didn't live life fully; they weren't Deweying any- thing. That's the rub's nub. Timeseven in 1891were chang- ing. One more newbhorn habe arrived, apologetically basketed and blanketed at Pembroke's door. It was a theory: education should be experimental in nature. Personal research is the means to wisdom? In the here and nowtodaythe Pembroker is steeped in this educa- tional theoryand in other things. To touch, to taste to feel, to live: that is the essence. Witness do-it- yourself crazes; witness the L.C. courses. The latter, as a historical cu- riosity, are metaphysically defunct. Laconic freshmen loathe them. Con- ciseness epitomizes the new age. Anyway, not to be forgotten, by way of summary, is that Pembroke was ahead of its time in 1891. The experimental approach to knowledge hadn't quite caught on, and facts about men and animals were only read about, gained second hand, so to speak. 1891 is a notable year. Pem- broke joined Brown that year. 153 Isn't that peachy? Organic devel- opmentthat's Pembroke. Bees buzz and buds bloom. Suppose she arrives and it's today, the here and now. Bully! Yet buds burgeon from culti- vated clods. It's the early years that spell out later characteristics. Mid- dling moralists know how freshman year goes. Fraternity partieswheeee! Smoke-filled splendor, drinking, danc- ing . . . can you imagine what mother would say? Those giggling high-school Prommediennes had heard about them, wondered about them, gazed awe- struck at Saturday night's opulence of Thayer Street Tarzans. And now they were doing them. Pembrokers gulped, goggle-eyed, all ears and stiletto heels, rushing to fraternity bars and lounges in the fury of their starved desires. The joy ride lasted most of Freshman year. Would it last forever? The smoke clears, the fire dies, and miscon- ceptions become manifest. Disillusionment soaks sun-seekerswhere is the new world? In the West Quad? Following the sun as it sets on their year of initiation, Pembrokers probe. When summer approaches, the snow melts. Dizzy, depressed, the experienced Pembroker unchains successively her fraternity and independent escort, and returns to the land of her youth. Solemnly she vows: smok- ingnever; drinking skim milk, datingif worth- while. Despite spasmodic efforts to the contrary, soph- omores are prone to pinning. Freshman year's fireballs are the first to go. Sooner or later, they grab the brass ringand the merry-go-round's over. Others are queasy, unsure; but one never knows till one tries. Subtly, surely, I have seen the pin prick. By spring of sophomore year a bumper crop of shiny status symbols blooms on proud young breasts. The congratulations, mama's remonstrations, and learning the broth- ers from the prolane are scarcely past when fraternity parties become vanities of youth. Tete-a-tete, cigarette to cigarette, two fish can find a solitary trapeven in a sea of envious humanity or womanity. Away from the electric guitars, two can hear themselves think as one That is the goal: a communion of souls. Poor? Lost? It's the spirit that's important. Picture the Pembroke sophomore, alone with her pinmate, finding what he's really like and reminding him he was late. That's togetherness. Hold on, Pembroker. There's a hitch. What remains of her second vear is dedicated to self cultivation, the better nex! year to pick the fruit of out-of-state ivy orchards. The junior year abroad program, featuring New Haven, Cam- bridge, and Princeton, nets all kindsPembrokers. Time for the straight travelogue, now; no punches pulled, no Pembrokers pro- tected. The pining for a pin, the infatuation for independents . . . childs play! Truth, beauty, and kicks; that's why the third year search. Only deserts and wintry elms are brown. Greener pastures and virgin hunting groundsfollow the rustry railroad tracks. All aboard; innocents abroad! Noble naivete begins in Massachusetts, or Connecticut, or New Jersey, or distally desirable Pennsylvania. South, North, just over the horizon or the state line lies an unknown culture, 2 new world Pembrokers pine for the panacea The bored, the disgusted, the anemic, the Isabel Archers and the Daisy Millers; all ache to exhaust the East. Is life there, on the other side of the tracks? Was it there all along? Preparation is paramount; junior explorers don't discover homeopathic diversion unaided, Two years of domestic re- search, featuring a unique, faculty-sponsored travelers' aid program, anticipate the endemic era of enlightenment. It is well!l It is axiomatic; suitcase-carrying suits Pembrokers. All manly moderns agree; suitcase study soothes sterile stay-at-homes. Yet educators diverge. The blue department, the idealists, emphasize: the lucky Harvard lackey can't fail to admire a date who carries her own suitcase through the yard's leafy layout. The red department, the realists, con- tend that, abroad or at home, chivalry is deadand 1891 is past! Pembroke professors help those who lift their own luggage. The road to Cambridge was paved with hope. The Pem- broker activated her all; she exuded her ague. She smiled at the cities, moaned over the motels, and, frowned on the frivolities. She wooed at the winter carnival, and meandered at Morey's and masticated in the M.LT. refectories. Was this the answer? Were the tardy invites worth it with out-of-state postage marks? Juniors learn laborious- ly. It takes a full year to find out: in the dusk of her college career, the Pembroker's horizon is unalterably brown. Pound-wise and dollar foolish, she lugs her suit- case back to the East-side lair. They have one more chancePembrokers. Can Senior year satiate them? Can the sedate senior live life bounti- fully? The smirking weekend sign-outs are gone, along with the Yard and the Bowl. Pembrokers return to their own back yard to take a connoisseur's look at the boy next door. He's worldly and he's wise. He's able and he's old. Of course! The graduate student! Pembrokers are mysterious senior year. They're here, and yet they're not. They disappear diurnally to hun- dreds courses in third floor Robinson, or subterranean Arnold, or rat cages in Hunter. i And on Saturday night, or Tuesday twilight? They navigate nocturnally the winding alleys to off-campus apartments, and plebian-proof par- ties. Furtive felines mount tenement stairs to clutch at straws,and sip Tom Collins' in dusky hideaways. Samovars simmer here, and home- made hi-fi sets purr erotic tribal melodies. This is the upper world; this is the realm of the demure and the detached. Bleary-eyed, pensive and weary, they glide past unsus- pecting fraternity men the next morn- ing. Senior year is a tired year for Pembrokers. They're tired because they study after one, instead of be- fore twelve. And they're tired be- cause campus life is trite, and tried but maybe true. Note the frenetic fourth-year girl. She desires an es- cape from the antithetic academic atmosphere with a memento. She desires more. Through yellow chintz curtains of other peoples homes, she sees a beckoning light, Slowly, surely, the sticky-sweet goal of three years past gathers its san- guinary splendor. Marriage is com- mon, and marriage is mainly ir- reversible. But marriage, at least, is new. She's never done it before. Be- sides, bevies of Brown men are wait- ing. At last, after torture and toil, after anxieties and inhibitions, the harvest is ready. Pity the fatherly Brown man! He endured the Pem- by's freshman frenzy, and her sopho- moric status-seeking, and her appall- ing junior year abroad. He watched, and waited, and suffered. Now, with heart in mouth and clippers in hand, he anticipates the apple of his three w years' pruning. y . 157 h1 DS i rJVb'k ilh o ks ; Hm -.J!JN i The maternal majority end up the same, Pembrokers. That's the only way to pin a Pembroker down. Picture the paunchy Pemby at forty, full of life and gone to seed-he mayn't be a bad egg after all. Peas in a podPembro- kers. Each pea is a little different; each one's striving to grow by learning, and learn by living. And we? Just pick the proper time; it's a lively harvest. Reap, for example, when the crop is fully mature. Reap when senior year simpers to a close, and each spent Pembroker . drops willingly into a very domestic + laundry basket. But are they better for it? Are they fuller, wiser, happier once the cult of . experience is culminated and the post- - harvest life begins? Quest . . . that's the . '. college-time Pembroker. Pity the poor Pembroker. Henry James wouldn't. It's not her fault; it's her environment. It's the frantic apex of Western Civilization a cast-off child of nineteenth century stultification. Old H.J.'s lying, laughing in his grave. She had really done it! Four years' follies added up to a new realiza- tion. She lived life to the full, and she learned. She's older, and wiser, and mostly happier, andmaybe, now, con- tent. The admissions department turns inside out and commencement begins. Agronomists, have a harvest ball! D - - . e e t a RUSTRATION could constantly be seen on the faces of BI:OWD fans dur.- F ing the 1962-63 season. In the spring, the crew constantly improved .untll it came close to winning its last few races, while lacrosse had an epv1able vecord but lacked varsity status which prevented 'the team from gaining any regional or national recognition. In the fall, the entire campus expected a suc- cessful soccer season; and almost everyone, even the most hardened pessi- mist had the lvy League championship in the back of his mind. But the hooters lost one heartbreaking decision after another, and were soon out qf contention. No one had much hope for foothall, not even the most epthusu- astic optimist. Suddenly, though, the Bruins beat Colgate, came within a hair's breath of tying Columbia, and tied Yale, and new rays of hope flooded Brown Field. The newly found enthusiasm was soon squelched, however, as the performance in the Columbia contest proved to be the rule rather than the exception. Brown could put up a good fight, the Bear would no longer be considered a mere cub, but never could the team muster up enough strength to add those few extra points which would mean a victory. The harriers had an excellent squad, as evidenced by their sixth place finish in the IC4A Championships, but followed the general rule by losing the important meets. In the Heptagonals, the Bears might even have won, might . . . but one of the top runners had to drop out of the race. Hockey was, for the second consecutive year, the keyword during the winter sports season. But this year, the Bruins had not only a beautiful new rink, but also a scrappy young team with plenty of talent. Seldom has a team aroused such enthusiastic support on College Hill. For three months at least, diehard Bear rooters were able to relieve their frustrations to a degree. At Marvel Gym, however, the air was much the same. Always an underdog, the Bruin hoopsters somehow managed to stay in contention throughout the first half and often managed to start the second period holding a slim lead. Rarely was the team able to hold this lead, however. The remaining sports assumed their accustomed rollstennis, golf, and wrestling faded still fur- ther into oblivion, swimming again managed a creditable record, track had several bright spots but on the whole was poor, and baseball again failed to produce a winner. THE DIFFICULT we do immediately; the impossi- ble takes a couple of years. Not the best variation on an overworked slogan, but it did offer some support to the Brown man adrift in a sea of superficial score-tell-all critics. And not such bad support at that; the dark and bitter fall of 1961 was quietly buried and forgotten under the pile of j agonies, shudders, and thrills that a competitive football team can bring to an athletically embarrassed university. And 1 the impossible? Some moderate impossibilities just may al- 1 ready be gathering on the defeat-littered horizons of old 1 Brown Stadium. Brown began the difficult immediately with a battling last I quarter against Colgate, and carried through a season high- lighted by closeoh so sadly closescores, bold passing, and a periodically powerful ground game. Although the Bruins were cursed by a tendency to allow end sweeps and pass receptions and an absolute aversion to point-after- touchdown conversions, the good news was obliterated only during the still sad hours of the Dartmouth game. Sophomore development was especially hopeful as the season progressed the Bruins started only one senior in the final contest at Harvardwith Dunda-to-Parry passes putting a bit of spar- kle into many a somber alumni eye. For the optimist, the Bruin JV and freshman squads offered still more hope for the future of a school too long in the Ivy- lined cellar. Both clubs posted solid seasons against many of the same opponents they will soon meet in the loud loneli- ness of varsity competition. For the pessimist, if the season record was not enough, there was and is and ever shall be New England weather, the bane of all Eastern football fans. Now-forgotten, that Colgate back who took Brown's open- ing kick-off should be remembered somewhere as the opening actor in one of the most welcome scenes in Bruin athletic history, a desperately desired victory of tough football and long overdue good luck. Solid tackles ended two Raider threats inside the Brown seven yard line, as Sophomore Al Barney recovered two fumbles to end a first quarter drive and to stop a final drive on the two yard line with seconds remaining in the contest. Determined to preserve the slim lead of his final quarter touchdown pass, Dennis Hauflaire dropped into his own end zone for an intentional safety and a 6-2 win. Sophomore quarterback, Jim Dunda, pegged as a weak passer by pre-season Sports Illustrated round-up, took to the air and came into his own against Columbia. After a score- less first half, he led the Bruins to the improved hopelessness of a 22-14 deficit, with 68 yards and 58 seconds to play. His aerial magic and the strong legs of sophomore fullback John a Kelly, raised hopes for another score, before a rushing Lion broke up the conversion try and the hope for a tie. S It is not always enough to score a game's only touchdown, as the Bruins learned during rain- soaked Yale Weekend. Dunda's touchdown pass to sophomore end John Parry beat the clock at the close of the first half, but it could only tie the talented toe of Eli, Wally Grant, who knicked a pair of 33-yard field goals. Brown's all important PAT was drowned in the soaking rain that did more harm to Brown Stadium than to underdog Brown spirits. The cynics who foresee one smashing defeat for each Brown football team had their way in the Dartmouth game. The only consolation for shat- tered Brown backers was a determined offense, led by defensive quarterback Don Carcieri, which piled up roughly three times the yardage of either of the Indians' previous victims. If the Yale game proved that touchdowns need not be decisive, the Penn game was even more eloquent on the uselessness of yardage alone. The Quakers should have ended the afternoon shaken indeed; Brown's 18-15 loss included three ground attacks that fell short within the Pennsylvania ten yardline. Unfortunately, the freshly blooming ground strength was just as quick to fade; the Bruins could only tie the woeful Rhode Island Rams, hardly a threat by any standard. After an early touchdown, Brown again unable to convert either PAT, had to settle for a 12-12 tie, the first of the 51 year series. A full gale added its power to the complications of the Princeton game, forcing both teams to look for victory on the ground. Though two touch- downs, and four PAT's short of the Tigers, Brown gained well on the field, where halfback Jan Moyer, running on an injured ankle, took all the laurels. In the air, Brown had the saddest day of the season, as Princeton held the Bruins to 73 yards and inter- cepted six passes. It was back to cliffhanging against Cornell. The 28-26 thriller was Brown's third Ivy loss by three points or less; an equal touchdown match where the PAT problem once more made the difference. After failure on two point tries with the first two scores, Brown elected to kick the third attempt to bring the score within range of a field-goal win. Instead of getting the field goal opportunity, the Bruins traded touchdowns with the visitors in the final five minutes. For many observors, the game was an aerial duel between Jim Dunda and Cornell's Gary Wood. Dunda, in de- feat, still won the day with seven more completions, two more TD passes and 170 more yards than his rival quarter- back. A form of glory tinted Brown's final defeat in the ancient and austere Har- vard Stadium. Overpowered by the regularone each quartertouch- downs of Bill Taylor, the Bruins' sky team still managed to win a place in the record books as John Parry pulled in enough Dunda passes to set new Ivy marks for single game receptions 9 and all-season catches 26. Well-im- pressed, even the venerable and aus- tere New York Times predicted a fu- ture for Brown gridiron heroes. Junior varsity football in a college dependent on sophomores for varsity play is a haphazard business at best. But, despite a disturbing resemblance to the varsity, the JV came up with a respectable season. The key game was a last minute passing victory against a Dartmouth JV rated the best in the last seven years. Quarterback Terry Walsh carried the Bruin attack eighty yards in the final minute of play on four passes, including two of 25 yards to Bill Sudell, who also hauled in the touchdown pass for a 6-0 triumph. The JV also scored a triumph against a highly-fouled Harvard team and wound up with a 2-1 record, the final game being rained out. After an unsuccessful attempt last year, JV football in 1962 finally came into its own at Brown. The freshman squad, under Coach Charlie Markham and his assistant, senior Bill Carouselli, ended the sea- son with a 3-3 record. It was not really an accurate indicator of the Ivy League potential of the team. The Cubs' greatest problem was a tendency to stall just short of a touch- down, as in the Harvard game, which they dropped 14-7, where two appar- ent scoring drives were stopped at the goal line. Unbothered by this scoring jinx, Cub tackle Andy McNeal bor- rowed the rainsoaked football from a young Yalie and lumbered 36 yards for a 6-0 victory. After shutting out Co- lumbia in a weather-cursed contest in which the Lion cubs never penetrated the Bruin thirty, the team finished its season agaist URI. Quarterback Bob Hall sparkled as he gained 164 yards, split exactly between ground and air, including two touchdowns, and a key pass interception on the Cub two yard stripe. Other frosh standouts included Bill Peters, Ken Neal, and Bob Arm- strong. Color was added to Brown foot- ball this year by a number of even more prodigious Brunonians. First on the scene was a rare type, the student victory celebrator. Within minutes of the end of the Colgate game, a cheer- ing crowd had greeted with glee the pealing of the University Hall bell and was on its way to a rally at Pem- broke. Later, nearly one thousand die- hard celebrants poured through the UTC tunnel to share their joy with alarmed motorists on the traffic circle. But even such hardy souls were soak- ingly strained by the Yale game. The contest was played in a mass of mud that seemed to catch everything in- cluding the criticism of visiting sports writers. And beneath the sa of um- brellas, many a soggy-toed Brown man must have wondered if all the water draining down the stadium steps was gathering in a puddle around his own freezing feet. The second attraction was the Brown bear. In contrast to the cold and clammy grip of New England, many a startled date found herself in the fat, hot grasp of this sometimes over-zealous creature. While the auth- entic mascot sulked along the side- lines, his larger associate managed to turn every half time show into a rol- licking farce and even struck now and then during the game. Only a Harvard police threat could remove him from the crimson crossbar during the con- test at Harvard Stadium. The third instance was the return of a man whose name is familiar to Brunonians everywhere, Coach Tuss McLaughry. At the one ceremony this year that had no need for the bear's antics, during half time at the Dart- mouth game, Tuss was honored by the two schools that he had coached for 27 years. The ceremonies were occa- sioned by his election to the Football Hall of Fame, a distinction well-mer- ited. Soccer HIGH ASPIRATIONS were evidenced on College Hill prior to the opening of the 1962 soccer season. At a giant rally both Coach Cliff Steven- son and Co-captain Bill Zisson dis- played extreme optimism as they pre- dicted a league championship for the theretofore hapless Bruins. And well they might have expected a success- ful campaign: the Bear booters had just returned triumphant from a pre- season encounter with a highly-touted NYU team. They had displayed such prowess during this 6-2 victory that many coaches picked Brown as THE team to beat in the Ivy League. The record books indicate a totally different story. Brown ended the 62 campaign with a mediocre 5-5-1 rec- ord over-all, 3-3-1 in league competi- tion, and finished in a respectable but disappointing fourth place. The records do not, however, indi- cate the many fine performances turned in by some of the Ivy League's finest soccer players. Although official recognition was accorded to several players in the Coaches' All-Ivy Soccer team-Sophomore Bill Hooks was named to the first team, Bill Zisson, Al Young, and Phil Solomita to the sec- ond team, and Jack Myslik and Al Walsh, honorable mentionCoach Stevenson could have named a num- ber of other players as well who con- tributed much to the Bruin cause. Con- tinually lauded for their fine play were seniors Jon Fish and Co-captain Jim Kfoury, the latter performing excep- tionally well despite injuries. 1962 also saw the inauguration of a junior varsity team. Consisting chiefly of varsity substitutes, the JV compiled a 4-0-1 record, led by Gary Singsen, Gary Sheffield, and Pat Udom. The team served as an excel- lent training ground for prospective varsity players. The frosh, as is generally the case, also sported a fine record. Under Coach Dick Michaud, they ended the campaign with seven wins and two losses. Outstanding among the year- ling booters were George Yales, George Halmos, and Bob Wernesbach. son as only once did a team score more than three goals in a varsity game. Opening the campaign at Wesleyan, the Bruins did not display the spirit which had been evident throughout the previous year; and although they scored first, they suffered a 3-1 defeat. URI was next on the schedule, and the Bears rebounded well, rolling up their highest score of the season, 5-0. After being rained out the fol- lowing weekend, the team rescheduled its game with Yale for the middle of the week at which time they could not seem to produce a scoring punch and wound up on the short side of a 2-1 score. Once again the Bruins were able to rebound as both Dartmouth and the University of Connecticut proved easy victims. The team also managed to salvage a 2-2 tie with the eventual league cham- pions, Pennsylvania. During the following week Columbia all but shattered any remaining hopes for a league title as the Lions eeked out a 2-1 victory; and always-powerful Springfield proved worthy of its reputation and shut out the Bears 2-0. Brown seemed destined for last place, but the team proved as game as ever and on successive Saturdays defeated Princeton 3-1 and Cornell 3-0. The Bears now found themselves in a tie for sec- ond place. The Harvard game would prove to be all-important. Although displaying great skill and a dazzling defense, the team once again was unable to provide the all-important scoring punch and lost a bitter battle, 1-0. The JV played only five games but a had a highly successful inaugural season. Defeating Barrington College, Bradford Durfee, St. George's, and Leices- ter Junior College, and tying a strong Dean Junior College team, the JV made up for lack of experience with an abundance of spirit. Tabor Academy, Wesleyan, Yale, MIT, Andover, and UConn all tasted defeat at the hands of a cap- able freshman squad. Only Trinity and Harvard were able to beat the Cubs, while New Bedford forfeited to give the team a 7-2 mark. Perhaps the season was a disappointment to Brown fans, but the quality of play displayed on three separate levels indicated that soccer remains a crowing sport with great interest on College Hill. o R 5 PERENNIALLY a bright spot among the dark annals of Brown athletics, Coach Ivan Fuqua's cross-country teams again in 1962 produced highly creditable records. Opening the season with triangular meets with the University of Connecticut and Yale, both the varsity and freshman teams gave indications of their ability as they easily defeated their outclassed opponents. The following week at Harvard, the teams faced some of the strongest competition of the season and came up at the short ends of close 27-29 scores. Dartmouth was next on the schedule, and the harriers were again able to emerge with ease victori- ously, the varsity led by Dave Farley and Captain John Jones and the frosh by Pat O Donnell. URI also proved to be an easy opponent and both teams again won handily, the freshmen completing their second consecutive sweep. The next week, the harriers traveled to New York where they faced Fordham, Syracuse, and Providence in quadrangular meets. The Bruins placed a strong second in both the varsily and freshman events, Fordham winning the first and P.C. the latter. This was to be the first of three important meets on the tricky and difficult Van Cortlandt Park course. The next en- counter was the Heptagonal Championships at that park, at which the eight Ivy League teams as well as the Military and Naval Academies participated. Brown placed a disappointing fifth as one of its best runners was unable to finish the race. The Bruins then attempted to defend their New England Champion- ships at Franklin Park. They were successful in doing this as all five runners finished in the top twenty-one positions. P I Y B RO o W o ANNUALLY the highlight of the cross-country season, the IC4A Championship was Brown's final meet of 1962 and brought together many of the nation's leading harriers. The Bears finally lived up to their potential that day as both the varsity and fresh- men finished sixth in their respective races. In the varsity event, Dave Farley led the way finishing sixth, followed by John Jones, Vic Boog, Bob Wooley, and Bob Rothenberg. Although they had finished fifth in the Heptagonals, the Bruins, in this contest, finished four positions higher than any of their Heptagonal foes. The frosh, paced by Pat O'Donnell who finished tenth and aided by the fine showings of Duncan Higgins, John Brandon, John Husby, and John Reifenberg, also turned in their best performance of the year. Although not a spectator sport as are football and soccer, and thus oft neglected, cross-country, through fine coaching and the spirit and determination of the teams, has secured for itself a place of respect and admiration on College Hill. CY NICS chided that they must be glving away Green Stamps at the door. Many swore that attendance at each game was worth ten gym credits to freshmen or a free credit toward their major for failing upperclass- men. Others simply could not believe it. But it was indeed true that hun- dreds of Brown hockey fans con- verged upon Meehan Auditorium for each hockey game as early as one hour before the doors were opened, which was, in turn, another hour be- fore game time. No stamps, credits, or other inducements were offered to cause the phenomenon. No naked girls were available inside in the wings. Brown students were merely being treated to the most exciting ath- letics to hit the campus since the Iron Men. After the first three games of the season, Brown had scored thirty goals, as opposed to five scored against them. The first opponent of the year, Bowdoin, was mediocre. The second, American International College, was unbelievably weak. But in the third outing, the Bruins showed Eastern hockey circles that they could handle the strong with equal ease and polish. Playing possibly their finest and most inspired hockey of the en- tire season, the Brown sextet deci- sively put down a highly-touted Army team by the score of 8-1. The first loss of the year came on the road at the hands of the team that went on to be ranked first in the East, Boston College. But the Bruins would not allow the skids to be placed under them and came on at Cambridge to tie Harvard in a game which saw Brown with the decisive edge until late in the second period, after which the defense was called upon to foil the latent Crimson attack. 'arl': b g 5 e, 171 After being upset at Princeton, the Bears returned to play five straight games at Meehan. Each of the five produced a victory, and the first three combined resulted in the champion- ship of the Brown Christmas Tourna- ment. A severe casualty was suffered, however, as Bruce McIntyre was lost for the rest of the season through a freak injury. Riding the crest of this winning streak, the Bruins easily han- dled Northeastern, 4-2, in a game played in Boston; and before the Brown onslaught was finally halted by B.C., Williams and Dartmouth had fallen, making it an eight game win- ning skein. The loss to B.C., followed by another to Harvard, was the first defeat of the year on home ice. The second guaranteed the Crimson of Cambridge another Ivy League cham- pionship, and Brown's attention turned from the Ivy League to the ECAC ratings. On February 25, after defeating Northeastern and Cornell and then losing to Yale and Cornell, Coach Fullerton announced to the BDH that Brown would play in the ECAC Tournament. The team which two years ago had lost every game, was now ranked as the seventh best in the East. Two days later the team further delighted its fans by upsetting Prov- idence College 4-2. To most on cam- pus, no victory could have been sweeter and no defeat handed to a more deserving group. Second place in the Ivy League was clinched in a 6-4 turn back of Dart- mouth at the Big Green's home rink in Hanover. Brown then flew to Pots- dam, New York, for the opening round of the ECAC Tournament against the heavily favored Clarkson Engineers. WBRU had its largest lis- tening audience of the year, as scarce- ly a student on campus was not tuned in to the live broadcast of the game. Even the ABC-TV Hootenanny was interrupted from time to time by the cheers of fans listening to con- cealed transistor radios while view- ing the concert. The Bruins scored first but could not hold on and suf- fered a 3-1 setbackbut one that gained much prestige for the team. Returning to Providence, the team faced its final en- counter of the year against P.C. the following night. It was a must for Brown: to prove that its first victory over the Friars was not a fluke. Before one of the most enthusiastic crowds of the year at Meehan and a large audience viewing Rhode Island's first intercollegiate hockey telecast, the Bruins could do no wrong. Pushing their intracity rivals all over the ice, the Bears rolled up their second 4-2 victory over Providence College. Brown thus ended the Season with a 16-7-1 record, one of its best in history. Two years ago, a Brown student would have been hard-pressed to name more than one player on the hockey team. But the construction of Meehan Audito- rium changed all that. In fact, to those of us who will not be around to enjoy the new library, Meehan appears to be the most valuable of the new buildings erected by the University in the last few years. Standing-room crowds were registered for every home game, hockey players became campus celebrities, and students who a few years ago could not have identified a hockey puck in an athletic lineup, were now semi-authorities on every rule infrac- tion from icing to high-sticking to overt vulgarity. Practically the entire team contributed strongly to the final . resull, and to single out a few for praise is extremely diffi- cult. Perhaps those who will be missed most sorely next year are Co-Captains Brian Smith and Colby Cameron whose con- sistent excellence made them invaluable assets. But one cannot omit mention of the two sophomore Canadians, Terry Chap- man and Leon Bryant, whose superior skating and sharp shoot- ' ing made these two the biggest crowd-pleasers of the year. Sophomores Don Eccleston, Hank Manley, Fred Soule, and Charlie Donahue were also among the team's stalwarts; while much praise must also be given seniors Gil Goering, Fred Avis, Pat Jones, and Greg McLaughlin and juniors Bob Olsen, Dave Barlett, Jim Deveney, and Dave Gallogly. And finally, pocket- sized goalie John Dunham kept the crowds roaring with con- sistently outstanding play. The Frosh, although not nearly as spectacular as last year's team, provided many exciting moments of play. Rolling up im- pressive victories over Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth, and P.C. the team finished with an 11-6-1 record. One of the more outstand- ing players ever to skate for Brown, Bob Gaudreau, constantly thrilled the fans; while other standouts included goalie Dave Ferguson, Bruce Darling, Bob Bruce, and Ken Neal. Athletic tides will turn, and Brown's hockey team will not al- ways remain in the limelight. The University will even develop other teams of mentionable competence. But those who were on campus to witness the 1962-63 Miracle at Meehan will not soon forget. baskethall UNDERDOGS in almost every game they played, the varsity basketball team was one of the mild surprises of the 1962-63 athletic season. Not only were the Bruin hoopsters able to provide two Ivy League players of the week, but they also placed a man on the ECAC team for three consecutive weeks. Accorded these honors were Captain Gene Barth, Al Young, and Fran Driscoll. The team even managed to produce a better record than did last year's star-studded quintet, finishing the season 11-13. Springfield and Tufts proved surprisingly easy opponents in the opening contest of the year, and the meager crowds that turned out at Marvel Gym for these games were richly rewarded. After then dropping a tight battle to Amherst away, the Bears returned home to host a powerful URI aggregate. In a see-saw battle which witnessed the lead change hands continually, Brown managed to hang on to a one-point victorya startling upset which left the packed house in an uproar. As had been expected, both Yale and Providence College proved much too versatile for the rather inexperienced Bruins who suffered two humiliat- ing defeats. Abandoning the Christmas western tour which Brown basketball teams had taken for the previous two years, this year's quintet instead entered the Downeast Classic in Bangor, Maine. Although this change in the scheduling aided the final record, it ruined the players vacation as the team was stranded in Maine on New Year's Eve during the worst snow storm in the state's his- tory. In the tournament Brown finished second by defeating Colby and then losing to Bucknell in the finals. An unenviable task awaited the Bruins as they returned to school after the winter recess. The varsity had to play the League's top three teams within one week. Yale, Penn, and Princeton all proved too strong, and the Bears record fell to 4-7. The examination break seemed to have helped the team as they bounded right back from their studies with three consecutive victories. The day after finals ended they defeated a highly touted Northeastern team rated one of the East's best small college fives. Then, on successive nights, the hoopsters scored two other mild upsets as they beat Harvard and Dartmouth on the opponents' home courts. The following week, Princeton and Penn descended upon Providence for return en- gagements. The Tigers proved too strong under the boards and won a hard-fousht 71-63 victory, The following night the Bruins finally turned in an all- around first class performance, defeating the league leading Quakers 61-59 in one of the year's major upsets. The taste of victory was a sweet one and the team stayed on the winning track the next week with victories over Columbia and Cornell, sparked by excellent foul-shooting and the out- standing play of the three juniors, Young, Driscoll, and Nell. These same two teams were the Bears' opponents the following week, but this time the shots would not fall through the nets; and, while producing two of its lowest shooting percentages of the season, the team lost both games. The Ivy League season finished with Harvard and Dartmouth playing at Marvel Gym. Despite a good second- half effort the Bruins could not overtake the Crimson and lost another close one. The next night, the team assured itself of a fifth place finish by over- whelming the Dartmouth five. The campaign ended with games against Brown's two intrastate rivals, and the team did not play up to par ow- ing chiefly to the loss of Gene Barth because of injury. While the starting five played al- most all the time, with Sophomore Dave Tarr developing rapidly and filling in well at the center spot, some fine performances were also turned in by a number of promising subs including Bill Oellrich, John Parry, Dave Jones, and John Dodge. The freshmen played under a new coach, Brown's all-time high scorer and 1961 basketball captain, Mike Cingiser, who guided them to a near- perfect 16-3 record. Although lack- ing in height, the Cubs made up for this deficiency with speed and ac- curacy, led by Al Milanesi, Steve Kadison, and Al Urfer. Rolling up impressive victories over such teams as URI, P.C., Harvard, Yale, and An- dover, the yearlings lost only to Dart- mouth, Boston College, and Harvard. Fans arrived early at Marvel Gym this year in order to catch a glimpse of this highly-talented frosh squad. 75 SIROKING THEIR WAYthrough murky waters part of the season, the Bruin mermen garnered a pair of victories in a final and valiant surge over MIT and U.Conn. Coach Joe Watmough moulded a team in the process of its being rebuilt, and masterfully engineered team strategy to gain important victories. Led throughout by Co-cap- tains Mike Prior and Dick Paul, the team underwent a series of ups and downs through the season. Opening at Southern Connecticut, the Bruins routed their opponents and broke three pool records along the way. Ingram did the 200 yd. butterfly, Martin swam the 200 yd. backstroke, and Mark Tafeen swept the 200 yd. breaststroke to set new precedents. Dartmouth and Am- herst were unmerciful to the mermen; but the Bruins bounced right back to hand Penn a 54-39 defeat. In the Columbia meet, in which con- 176 sistent double winners Martin and Prior won again, Feldstein and Paul copped freestyle firsts. After an expected loss to Princeton, the team began to improve with exam period behind them. The Bruins ripped through both Columbia and the Coast Guard Academy, Holt and Tem- ple gaining laurels against Columbia, and the team captured firsts in each event in the latter contest. The Bruins' losses to Springfield, Har- vard, and Yale were offset by consequent victories against MIT and U. Conn. In the final bout with U.Conn., Dick Paul replaced Martin's re- cent 51.4 100 yd. freestyle record with a new Brown record of 50.5 seconds. Two other records were set in the same afternoon in the 400 yd. freestyle relay Ingram, Martin, Paul, Prior 3:27.4, and in the 400 yd. medley relay Ingram, Martin, Paul, Tafeen, with a 3:57.2. This final victory, due to the efforts of the dean of Rhode Island coaches, Joe Watmough, was a far greater one than indicated by the 52-43 tally. Surprising the U.Conn. mermen and coach, it also brought the Brown dual meet season record to a 6-6, and extended Coach Watmough's rec- ord to nine consecutive winning seasons. The day after, there was writ- ten on the pool notice board a simple message whose meaning was much deeper: Thanks for the victory. Joe. In the New England Championships, Martin broke three records with his 200 yd. individual medley time of 2:08.8. Ingram set a new Brown butterfly record of 2:09.1, and diver Marty Thomas took sixth in rough competition. Another note of gratification was the winning freshman season. The squad sported several fine swimmers, including Dave Prior, Pete Van Derzee, Bill Tieckelman, and Pete Dwyer, some of whom broke freshman records. wrestling FIGHTING all the way, the Brown wrestling team nailed down last place in Ivy League com- petition, losing to each of the other seven teams involved. The one successful team effort was reg- istered against UConn, which fell by a score of 27-8 at Marvel Gym. Otherwise, the only con- sistent bright spot in the season was the fine performance turned in by Captain Ken Linker. Wrestling sometimes at 130, sometimes at 137, Linker defeated every opponent in inter-school matches, and also kept Brown from being white- washed in the two tournaments which the team entered. Beginning the year at Springfield, Linker and Sophomore Don Kmieczak gained the only Brown points in a 45-6 losing effort. After placing last in the third annual Coast Guard Academy Invitational Tournament, which was won by a strong Syracuse team, the Bruins went on to lose to MIT, Coast Guard, and every one of their Ivy League oppo- nents. The freshman grapplers, on the other hand, experienced a winning season losing only three of its matches. Led by Captain Bob Bundy, Andy McNeil, and Terry Zerngast, the team turned in many exciting performances. mw wwm 4 HARVARD CHEATED. impercepti- bly for a time, then gradually more overtly the bloody Crimson liberalized, nay satirized, the gentleman's code of decency, fair play, and winupsmanship, until it was apparent to all objective observers, that something was crooked in Harvard Square. For example, there were the curves of the shapely, slim blonde standing above the bat- tlefieldthe suggestive lines of her too small high school sweater, the passionate plaits of her cheerleader's skirt and the sensuous roundness of her pure white rolled-down bobby socks. At the climactic moment, with the match tied, Stephen Goldberg attempted to concentrate on a crucial shot. She winked. He tiddled. Missquidge! The plot became manifest. The subtle sig- nificance of the savage, leader-led cheering became clear. The chorused Use Effective Strategy, If You're Not Harvard, Don't Squap It, and Tiddle That Wink, reverber- ated unceasingly, exhorting Brown's opposi- tion while slyly shattering our good guys' nerves. The scabrous seductiveness of the blonde time-bomb was but one device to which the children of Cambridge had resorted in their struggle with the men of Brunonia. They had been driven to psychological war- fare and diversionary tactics in their obses- sive effort to retain their significantly self-pro- claimed National Tiddleywinks Title. The spiritual identification of the non-in- dulger with the supernal subtleties of the game necessitates a definition of terms. The basic offensive shot, the squidge is but a tiddle toward the tiddlepot. In its original Sanskrit, the word apparently described the arc formed by the flight of a scared pigeon. A squop, on the other finger, is the exqui- site defensive maneuver of immobilizing an opponent by landing on one of his winks with one's own. Of Puritan origin, the word is be- lieved to have been derived, both through its connotation of defensiveness and onomato- poetic possibilities, from the sound made by a Pembroke book bag rearranging the hairs of v ! : 18 a Brown man, following his suggestion that r A L o URAY 5 ' - they observe a fraternity party. i Perhaps if Harvard had confined its mis- d . conduct to mental muscling, Brown could yet b have overcome the oppressors. In fact, how- ever, the opposition was not above using the most flagrantly physical means of attack. There was the matter of undersized winks, for instance. Does Brown ask visitors to play us- ing a peewee football? Do we invite swim- ming teams to swim in the Seekonk? Do we make them use golf balls on our baseball dia- monds? Unspeakable smallness! Then there was the matter of substitutions for Harvard. At the very time that Brown's superior con- ditioning began to tell on the enemy, the scoundrels cleared their bench, invoking a wild-card substitution rule theretofore un- known to the traditions of tiddling! But even the substitutes were tolerable. What finally drained the dexterity from our doughty digits was the opposition's substitution of Argen- tina Fats, a professional from South Amer- ica. This was the first hint that the Crimson were probably Communists, too. IET DOWNbBy several key b members, who for various reasons e Cln 180 were forced to drop out, the Fencing Club still managed to have a fairly successful season. Completely infor- mal in nature, the club met once a week, but without a definite schedule or program. Under the guidance of its faculty advisor, Mr. William Silvert of the Physics Department, it was able, for the first time in many years, to schedule a number of matches with clubs representing other New England colleges. Although small and strug- gling, the Fencing Club interested a small corps of enthusiasts who de- voted much time and effort to the gen- b tlemanly sport. rl e SUPPORTED by University aid, the Rifle Club has in recent years demonstrated considerable improve- ment, gaining in both membership and equipment. The 1962-63 team had twelve members under the leadership of Captain Webb Moniz, Tom Gren- fell, and Mike Kupersmith. Opening the season with a win over URI and a loss to Princeton, the club entered upon a difficult series of matches in the New England College Rifle League, emerging with a much improved rec- ord over previous years. The climax of the season was provided by the club's participation in the New England Sec- tional Tournament in March in which the team again turned in an admirable performance. EXPERIENCED squash players are few and far between at Brown; and thus, the major objective for the Squash Club was to build for the fu- ture. At the beginning of the season, Harvard Freshman coach Corey Wynn came to Providence to give lessons, and regular instruction was held throughout the year. Though not yet ready for intercollegiate play, the Club was quite active in the Rhode Island Squash Racquets Association, entering a total of four teams. In addition, informal matches were scheduled with Harvard, Wesleyan and Portsmouth Priory. The Club Tournament, held at the beginning of the first semester, was won by Dick Pannone, who, along with Captain Jock Jerrett and Freshman John Tulp, gave the Club some of its most ex- citing play throughout the season. IN SPITE of the loss of Terry Richmond's beard and Chuck Townsend's canoeing license, the Brown-Pembroke Outing Club carried out a full round of activities this year. From last spring's bicycle trip around Martha's Vineyard to the rustic square dance in March, the sons and daughters of Pan wended their way through the weeds, the campus, and through Terry Richmond's enormous barns. During the Martha's Vineyard bicycle trip, past president Ray Fischer was acclaimed for raft building, small craft navigation, and submarine tactics; the raft he constructed sank in a vine- yard cove. Homemade shish-kebab and an impromptu pin-ball machine in the sand highlighted the final beach party in May as the club terminated its annual activities. A busy fall schedule featured the Intercollegiate Outing Club Association trip to Lake George. There on a small island with three hundred and fifty fellow out-of-doorsmen from nearly twenty New England schools, they square-danced, canoed, and hiked and just es- caped the rain. Again rain came at the Halloween Party at the Brown Reservation. And again it was avoided. When rain caught the group of hikers unaware, shelter was of course miles away. Between the semesters the club departed for Jackson, New Hampshire and four days of skiing. At the University of New Hampshire's cabin outside of Jackson the club members braved indoor temperatures ranging from ten degrees below zero to nearly normal room conditions; while outside, the thermometer kept going down and the well kept freezing over. Last year's attempts to fix the flue were renewed when the group was smoked out of the cabin. The nature of the club's problems lay essentially in the problems of nature, but the organization per- severed in its attempts to master chaos. . I 234567 8 9WHIR BN VISITORS 0 s, SUCCESS on a southern trip gave Coach Lefty Lefebvre cause to expect a definite improvement over the Baseball team's 1961 record of 1-13. The pre-season jaunt to Virginia saw the Bruins win three of four games, featuring tight pitching and timely hitting. Allowances were made for early schedule mental and defensive lapses. An opening season win over Amherst added to the Bruins' hopes for a successful season in the Eastern Inter- collegiate Baseball League. Gene DePatie fashioned a strong -3 victory over the Lord Jeffs with help from strongman Lynn DiPaoli in the eighth. Double steals in the third and fourth innings indicated speed and know-how in the 1962 Bruin squad. The Bruins proceeded to split with their Rhode Island rivals, Providence College and the University of Rhode Island. DiPaoli lost a tough 2-1 decision to the Friars at PC, scattering four hits going the whole route. Two days later, in the home opener, Brown could get only three hits but managed to de- feat URI 4-2 with tight pitching and defensive work. Sporting a 2-1 record the Bruins began league play only to drop five games in a row. The first two defeats were tight, see-saw battles against Princeton and Cornell followed by a 17-1 rout at the hands of Yale. The Yale fiasco was in turn fol- lowed by two more close losses, to Pennsylvania and Navy. Brown was able to end its losing streak against URI, conquering the Rams 8-4. Trailing 4-3 in the eighth, the Bruins erupted for five runs, led by the hitting of Joe Papa and Dave Deluca. The Bruins lost their sixth straight league game, 6-4 to Harvard at Cambridge, as three eighth inning er- rors provided Harvard the four runs needed to overcome a 4-2 Bruin lead. Brown returned home to drop a wild 114 contest to Holy Cross. The Bruins collected 11 hits in defeat as Al Young and Gerry Bucci got three apiece. Brown then dropped league game number seven, a 5-4 defeat, to Dart- mouth's Indians. This time poor baserunning cost the Bruins the game. Bears were twice caught over- running third base on outfield hits while another baserunner was picked off at second base by the 183 Dartmouth hurler. PROVIDED with strong pitching by Di Paoli and De Patie, the team still lost their last two games against Provi- dence College and Army, because of a lack of clutch hitting. Six unearned runs in the second inning provided Columbia with more than enough as they defeated Brown in the Bruins' season finale, 8-5. For the second season in a row Brown lost all nine of its league games, gaining undisputed possession of the league cellar. The overall record of 3-12 did represent an improvement over the preceding season, however. More encouraging, though, were the fine performances of certain players. Leading the list were Lynn Di Paoli, '62, and Bob Auchy, '62. From the class of 1963 Pete Meenan, who led the club in home runs and RBI's, Joe Papa, Gene De Patie and Bill Oellrich also turned in good records along with a host of sophomores: Al Young, Gerry Bucci, Doug Nelson, Carl Ar- lanson and Doug Nelson. The freshmen too, experienced a poor season, but did manage to score a number of good per- formances. Ending the season with three consecutive victo- ries, the Cubs were able to salvage a 4-4-1 record. The tie came in the Barrington College game, which was called be- cause of darkness. The season was marked by good hitting led by Bud Becker, Pete Kearn, Jim Dunda and Jack Myslick, but was accompanied by poor pitching. Both varsity and freshmen baseball were unable to arouse much interest on the Hill in 1962. The stands at Aldrich-Dexter were almost always empty as lacrosse consistently outdrew the baseball teams. PROMOTED to the first division of the Eastern Rugby Union, the Brown Rugby Club faced some of the toughest competition in the East. Com- piling a 3-4 record, the Bruins, however, showed themselves to be a formid- able opponent. Rugby, in its third year at Brown, is one of the least known sports. Al- though frequently likened to football, it is different in some fundamental respects. Rugby players neither wear protective equipment nor are allowed any time-outs during the period of play and, thus, must always be in top condition. Substitutions are prohibited, and an injured player may not be replaced. The ball may be moved in any number of waysby kicking, run- ning ,or lateral passingand any player is eligible to carry it. The Bruin ruggers displayed their prowess against non-league opponents, easily winning their opening and closing games of the season, against Holy Cross and MIT, respectively. On the other hand, in their first league game, against the New York Rugby Club, Brown faced a group of experienced and well-trained players. On the short side of a 17-3 score, the Bruins were out- classed throughout the contest. As a result, they were unable to regain their composure for the rest of the season against their more skilled opponents. Not wishing to disappoint four hundred zealous fans and their Spring Weekend dates, the Bears swamped Yale for their only league victory of the season. The game was highlighted by the individual efforts of Jan Moyer and Jon Meeker, but the fans were most impressed with the display of team effort, as five different players scored. Individual honors were accorded to three Brown players who were named to the 1962 All Eastern Rugby Union Team. Chosen for wing position was graduate student John Phipps; to alternate back, admissions officer and player-coach Dave Zucconi; and to the second row, Hap Pekelis. Although the young Brown Rugby Club had a disappointing season and was demoted to the second division after the campaign, the Bruins, through game play and outstanding individual performances were always capable of putting up a good fight. The ruggers of '62 were outclassed but not out spirited. The autumn days saw the rugby team resurge under the temporary direc- tion of Paul Hodge and British scrum half, Terry Base. The club, strongly supported by freshmen, gained off season experience in a scoreless tussle with MIT, a victory over Harvard, and a loss to the Boston Rugby Club. INDIVIDLUALS highlighted an otherwise dismal spring track season as Brown failed to win a meet. The campaign began in the warm confines of Coral Gables, Fla., where the Bruins were unable to contain the University of Mi- ami, losing by a score of 99-32. In two other contests, the first a triangular meet with Fur- man and Miami, the second with Miami, Fur- man and the perennially powerful Michigan, Brown again finished at the bottom. Though the competition was tough, the team was sparked by Charlie Jackson's fourteen-foot vault, a forty- nine foot effort by shotputter Al Yodakis, and a 4:19 mile by Dave Farley. Coming north, the Brown tracksters, despite a triple win sixteen point performance by Cap- tain Joe Dyer succumbed to Boston University and John Thomas. The world-famous high jumper garnered five first places and one sec- ond place in leading his team to an 80-56 tri- umph. Against Ivy League competitors Penn and Columbia the Bruins gained five first places in finishing second to Penn. Dave Farley turned in a sparkling mile time of 4:13.4. Brown track records also fell in a dual meet against Holy Cross as Jackson vaulted 1310 and Al Yodakis broke his own University record in the shot put with a prodigious heave of 5814, The Bruins finished the poor season with losses to URI the first in three years, to Wesleyan, and to Harvard and Dartmouth in a triangular meet in which Dyer, Yodakis, and Jackson solely accounted for Brown's meager 9Y, point output. The Brown freshmen team provided some consolation with a perfect sea- son of 7-0 including victories over Harvard and Dartmouth. Freshmen records were set by Bob Rothenberg in the two mile run, Mike Hender- son in the 440 yard run, Bob Egan in the pole vault, and by the mile relay team. 189 The indoor track team began the season aus- piciously with a 59-50 victory over Boston Uni- versity at Marvel Gym. At the same time the freshmen ran up an incredible 101-6 score over the BU yearlings. Owing to the national feud between the NCAA and AAU, the team pulled out of the Knights of Columbus Meet at the Boston Garden and instead engaged in a dual meet with Harvard. The Crimson won both the varsity and freshman contests. The next outing was the Boston Athletic As- sociation Meet at which the varsity mile relay team defeated Boston College, Northeastern, URI, and P.C., while Al Yodakis and Tom Du- hamel placed fifth in their respective field event. Brown also sent relay teams to the Millrose and Philadelphia Inquirer Meets, where they made highly creditable showings. Returning to Ivy competition, the Bruins met Yale and Penn at New Haven and placed sec- ond behind the Elis. The thinclads then took three consecutive dual meets, defeating Bos- ton College, the University of Maine, and Tufts within a period of two weeks. The team closed out its season with the annual Heptagonal and IC4A Meets, at which the Bruin stalwarts again performed admirably. Highlights of the season included a record-breaking mile run by Dave Farley and a record distance in the shot by Captain Al Yodakis. lacrosse : NOTHING SUCCEEDS like success, and for Brown's aggressive Lacrosse Club, the final mark of success was a place on the University sports roster. Official from 1926-37, the Indian game was dropped for financial reasons. Since 1948 it was played, more or less seriously, on a club basis. But under two years of Cliff Stevenson's demanding guidance, Brown teams emphasized stiff training and rugged play, University recognition capped a 12-2 season, distinguished by solid defense, second-half endurance, and high- POWET scoring. Alter three pre-season triumphs, the stickmen opened their schedule on a Southern tour that highlighted all three Bruin strongpoints. In the opener, Penn, 1960-61 Middle Atlantic Champions, tied the Bears again and again. Only desperate saves by goalie Bill Cruickshank gave the Bruins a 6-5 win. A winless Washington and Lee squad was able to offer stiff competition through the first three quarters, but Brown's endurance eventually tri- umphed. Leading 5-4 at the end of the third period, the well-conditioned Bruins pressed for four more goals in the closing period. Always dangerous Duke was in trouble from the first whistle. Midfield Tom Draper passed to Chris Eustis and then carried the ball all alone for two goals in the first minute of play. The Blue Devils, never ahead, were overwhelmed by forty- two shots on goal. The scoring habit was more than enough to down C. W. Post. Excited fans, at this home game, saw the Bruins pepper the Post goalie with fifty shots and twelve goals, including four consecutive scores by rampaging Tom Draper. The always-important Harvard game was a sadder story. The Crimson attack had broken free and converted six sharp passes into goals before Brown could break the ice on a Draper-to-Edgerly scoring play. The second half did offer the Bruins some consolation in defeat, with Brown scoring four goals and Bill Lemire holding All-American Gordy Watts scoreless. The Bruins took solace in routing Tufts, and then broke up an early 3-3 tie in the Wesleyan game by scoring twice in a minute. Both Draper and Pete Gilson contributed four goals toward the 12-6 victory. On Spring Weekend, the festivities opened with the Bears romping over Nichols College by a 13-6 score. But in the next game, against U. Mass., a team that Coach Steven- son diagnosed as outhustled and outplayed for the first time in two years dropped a 9-5 contest. Eager to finish well, the Bruins dumped previously unbeaten New Hamp- shire, and then turned their attentions to the Boston Lacrosse Club. The veteran club led at the quarters, but endurance again made the difference, as Pete Gilson ran free for three goals in the final quarter. The record of the Lacrosse Club was the finest of any '61-'62 Brown team, and there was little surprise on the campus when University Provost Bliss announced that lacrosse was again a varsity sport. 191 tennis Coach Al Palmer's 1962 tennis team would be a somewhat im- proved squad. Thirteen games and twelve losses later, manager Ken Blackman officially conceded the fact that the '62 season had been one of the worst in Brown history. Playing for the second year in the Eastern Intercollegiate Tennis League, the Bruins opened the season with a 5-4 defeat at the hands of the University of Rhode Island. Then, in quick succession followed losses to such traditional rivals as Army, Harvard, Navy, and Dartmouth. Finally, in the penultimate game of the year, Providence College earned the distinction of pro- viding the Bears' only victory, and a 9-0 victory at that. The finale, against Holy Cross, was washed out, and the netmen were able to end the year on a victorious note. In spite of the unimpressive record compiled by the team, two players, number-one man Peyton Howard and Captain Nate Chace, turned in many outstanding performances, the former ending the year as one of the top-seeded players in New England. They were backed up by such other stalwarts as Vic Field, Mike Mayer, John Bassler, and John Flatteau. The frosh did not fare too much better, as they closed their campaign with a 2-6 record, posting their only victories over URI and MIT. They were led through the year by Captain Jock Jerrett, Jim Schreiber, and Gil De Lorme. Tennis was all but forgotten at Brown during 1962; rarely more than a handful of spectators could ever be seen at the north end of Aldrich-Dexter Field. A ; oo AS SOON AS the fairways were opened, the '62 Bruin golfers began practicing, increasing the accuracy of their putts, diminishing the oc- currence of hooks and slices. Such practice ses- sions were to become a rare commodity, as the traditional Rhode Island spring monsoon soon flooded the golf courses. The competitive season was begun on an inauspicious note, with Brown posting losses to Princeton, 2-5, and Harvard, 3-4, in a triangular match at Cambridge. Phil Saylor and John South each beat both of their opponents, providing the only highlight of the afternoon from the Brown viewpoint. But in their debut at the Wannamoisett Country Club in East Providence, Brown evened its record, defeating Wesleyan in a close bottle, 4-3, and swamping a helpless Spring- field team by a score of 7-0. Once again, Saylor and South, joined this time by Jim Deveney and Bob Finn, scored double victories. A loss to Yale in a single meet at New Haven placed Brown once again on the losing side of the scales, a position from which the Bruins were not able to recover for the remainder of the season. Following this defeat, they returned to East Providence, where the team split a match with Amherst and Holy Cross, beat- ing the latter by a score of 4-3, while losing to the Lord Jeffs, by the same score. Brown lost two more matches before finally ending the year on a suc- cessful note with a dual victory over intra-state rivals URI and Providence College, giving the team a final record of five wins and six losses. e THE ClLOCK STRUCK TYWELME and the ball was over for Brown's Cinderella crew during its first season of completely recog- nized rowing. After a string of improbable wins over top Eastern crews, Brown entered the 1962 season with its first full-time coach and a new Intercollegiate Rowing Association membership, in addition to a year-old University recognition. But even full sponsorship is no substitute for experi- ence; the crew had to settle for what is politely referred to as a rebuilding season. The new coach, Vic Michalson, arrived from an assistant coaching position at crew-conscious Syra- cuse with few illusions about the immediate future of his new team. Noting the loss of eight lettermen, he predicted that an unusually heavy responsibility would fall on his numerous sophomores, including Ed Mayer, Burt Howell, and Jim Birney. The regular season opened with a demoralizing defeat in the Harlem Regatta. The Bears finished last, behind M.I.T. and Columbia, in the varsity, J.V., and both frosh events. But the Bruins, led by Captain Ed Ashley, were improving: all four race times were below practice record times. Spring Weekend began with an unusual lecture on spectator propriety by Coach Michalson. Dis- turbed by the deplorable practice of bombard- ing racing crews with clouds of beer cans and con- cerned for the delicate new varsity shell, he prom- ised to end Spring Weekend rowing unless the river-clogging tradition was abandoned. Actually, bad weather was more of a threat than beer cans. The races were postponed for two hours by choppy waters and were finally run after the crowds had left. For the few Brown fans still hud- dled on the shore, the wait was well worth while, as Amherst ran a weak second in all three events. The Lord Jeffs finished fifteen lengths behind the Bruin frosh, eight behind the J.V., and seven lengths behind a Brown varsity that trailed into the final 500 yards. Crew The rains came down all the next week, but Coach Michalson persisted in a series of experi- mental practices. Even the team captain put in some time in the second boat as Michalson searched for a coordinated first boat to defend the Atlanta Cup. Despite all his efforts, Dartmouth cap- tured the traditional prize during the triangular meet, with Boston University finishing second, Brown third, just four feet off the pace. The fresh- mn boats fared better, though, as they captured both the first and second races, the first boat win- ning very impressively with Chris Wright as cox- swain, Bill Clineburg at bow and Dave Katz at stroke leading the way. One week later, it was much the same story, as Brown returned winless from a day on the choppy Charles River with the Indians, Boston, M.L.T., and late-blooming Wiscon- sin. It was not quite the same, however, as the Bruins turned in a considerably more impressive performance. 1S The season closed after the end of classes, with entries in the Eastern Sprints and the L.LR.A. meet at Syracuse. Brown finally showed signs of im- provement as they gained a fifth at the Sprints, and then moved to Syracuse after Commencement to train for the I.R.A., where they placed a surpris- ingly strong seventh place. Coach Michalson, how- ever, could only sigh and point his magic wand toward next year. LIP and down the Seekonk, what little color there is, is pro- vided by the members of the Brown Yacht Club. Sponsoring both informal sailing and intercollegiate racing, the club experi- enced one of its most successful seasons this year. Despite the unfortunate and embarrassing Hoyt Trophy competition spon- sored by the club, when six or eight boats entered capsized, the team acquitted itself admirably by placing well in both the Mac- Millan Cup Races at Annapolis and the Danmark Trophy Races at New London. Under the watchful eye of faculty advisor Jer- rold Franklin and led by Commodore Dayton Carr, Vice-Com- modore Betsy Hammett and Rear Commodore Al McAdams, the Yacht Club also sponsored a number of highly successful social events, including the infamous, police-raided spring party at the clubhouse. SAILS raised, the Yacht Club members glided down the See- konk and along the Rhode Island coast to Newport to be spec- tators at the season's main attraction, the America's Cup Races. After this trip, as bad weather began to set in, the boats were properly stored away for the winter, and business, rather than pleasure, was stressed. Under the direction of Larry Read and Marianne Miller, treasurer and secretary, respectively, the club began to expand its facilities and operations. A new crash boat was purchased and the year was highlighted by the increased number of social functions. 1962 again saw the Brown Yacht Club growing in size and stature. 197 intramurals L. OST in the maze of varsity, junior varsity, and freshman sports is the all important intramural athletic program run under the supervision of Mr. Jack Heffernan. Keeping in line with Presi- dent Kennedy's physical fitness cam- paign, intramurals provide students with a sufficiency of vigorous activity to supplement the forty-two gym cred- its required by the University. Frater- nities, dormitories, and clubs battle it out among themselves for their respec- tive championships. Last spring Phi Kappa Psi won the Lanpher Cup sig- nifying fraternity supremacy in major sports, while Hegeman Hall and Plan- tations House copped the I.D.C. Tro- phy and the Browning Cup, respec- tively, the counterpart for dormitories and clubs. Individual honors were ac- corded to seven students in 1962 as Athletes of the Year in their respec- tive sports: Gary Bowen, '62, basket- ball; J. Gillen, '62, baseball; Greg Heath, '62, track; W. S. Goodwin, '64, swimming; Ed Jones, '62, hockey; Dave Jones, '65, football; and John Danstrom, '63, volleyball. With the opening of Aldrich-Dexter Field in 1960, the program received a wel- comed addition. The extra playing area concentrated at a single location provided for a much more efficiently operated system. Today a passer-by will see the vast expanse at Aldrich- Dexter buzzing with activity, as at least five or six football, volleyball, or tennis games will be in progress. FOUND to be so highly successful in past years, the intramural program was expanded over the last year to include dormitory hockey and dormi- tory and fraternity soccer. In 1962, it is estimated that over one half of the student body participated in the rapid- ly-expanding system. And, too, gradu- ate students and faculty members were able to field teams in most sports this year. In this way, students who do not possess the ability to be a member of a varsity team, but who enjoy ath- letics and a true sense of competition and team play, have been given an opportunity to fulfill this desire. 2 R Q uxgaln K L 3? 2 A A s B 4 undergraduates T is a meandering procession which an undergraduate forms from the freshman lines of Faunce House through the Van Wickle gates four years later. The distinctiveness of the conception of a class waxes and wanes with the passing of se- mesters. During freshman week, noth- ing could be stronger than the idea of a freshman class. They take exams and discover the location of Pem- broke together, they match the soph- omores in the Brown Jug competi- tion, and the freshman handbook shows that they have a distinctive identity. This unity can spur curiosity and even incite rallies. However, focus on the freshman world is dissipated by the return of upperclassmen and the renewal of campus life. Football and soccer be- gin, extra-curricular activities become time-consuming, and the undergrad- uate loses concern for all but the im- mediate things outside his studies. Class councils are remote and rela- tively ineffective. Until senior year, they are of limited significance. Other groups could easily arrange weekend festivities and sell blazers. Only in the senior year, when months separ- ate the graduating class from life away from the hill does the class conception gain in importance. The first sign is the Brown Alumni Month- ly stuffed in their mailboxes. Some- what later, reunion funds are planned, and the seniors are asked to be re- sponsible alumni. Together they find themselves doing things for the last time. As a class they leave the cam- pus. But the alumni clubs again dilute the class idea and find unity in their interest in Brown as a whole. If the class concept were ever strong, it re- cently has diminished in importance. 202 5 z . 7 y .A n class of 1966 REPRESENTED and directed by the Freshman Class Council, the Class of '66 participated in a wide variety of activities. The Cabinet, consisting of freshmen elected dormitory officers and, this year, of candidates interviewed and selected by the Cammarian Club, elected their officers as quickly as possible to provide an immediate authority to deal with class problems. Thus in early October George Viles was elected President, David Elton, Secretary-Treasurer, Graham Jones and Larry Aufmuth, Cammarian Club representatives, and Doug Ogden and Charles Atwood, I.LH.C. representa- tives. Viles delegated various problems to committees of Council members. First to begin work was the blazer committee which was able, for the first time, to provide the class jackets prior to the winter recess. The traditional Freshman Class banquet, another committee project, was an equal success, and the class social events, under the auspices of the social committee, staged mixers with Pembroke and several nearby women's colleges, that included skating parties at Meehan Auditorium and an outing at the Brown Reservation. The official organ for the Class of '66 was the Freshman Bulletin, which was published occasionally to report on frosh news and sports. As an addi- tional activity of the class, the Council worked with the Admissions Office to select a group of freshmen to represent the University in different parts of the county. The Freshman Council and its officers, by working for and through the class, provided numerous advantages to the confused freshman while pro- moting class solidarily. TEMPERS were at the breaking point as, true to tradition, freshmen had to stand on line after line to purchase beanies and meal contracts, join freshman athletic teams and ROTC, and discover whether they were privileged to take an extra three hours of exams the following day. From this time on, the freshmen took their places in the Brown community and assumed their routine lives, or so they thought. Mr. Doebler and Dean Schulze wasted little time warning the emigrants to Provi- dence that they should not always expect such preferential treatment; indeed, they would not see it again until Commencement Week providing, of course, they were not among those on the right or left of you who would not be at Brown at that time. With the exams of the first few days behind them, the Class of '66 settled down and the ner- vousness subsided. Attention now shifted to the sister school up the street, to Rizdee somewhere down the hill, and to the bewildered young ladies walking around with black and orange beanies on. Attention was also given to the Brown Jug Compe- titionthat time-honored battle between sopho- mores and freshmen to determine athletic suprem- acybut, alas, the burly sophs proved to be too tough. Attention turned once again, this time to the upcoming first week of classes and the ensuing four years on College Hill. cxpd LTI, !.: TEMPORARY was the term used to describe the fresh- men's living conditions. The Class of '66 was to be, indeed, a close-knit group . . . The Rhode Island liquor laws had been altered, and the freshmen were a bit more hesitant in their actions than had been previous classes . . . The football team should do better . . . soccer might go all the way . . . these monster rallies are a lot bigger than the ones we used to have back in high school . . . Is it true that no one gets out of English Comp after the first semester? . . . Now, if I work for BYG on Mondays and Thursday, WBRU on Tuesdays and Fridays, sing with the Glee Club on Wednesdays, that'll leave all day Satur- day and Sunday to keep up with my studies . . . I thought up- perclassmen weren't allowed into these Pem-mixers . . . how far did you say it was to Norton? . . . Say, if I fail my swimming test does that mean I won't have to go out to the gym during the winter? . . . Hey, don't forget to wake me for convocation tomorrow! s, P s e Tt R NO LONGER lowly freshmen' the Class of '65 was out to prove its members to be men of the world. To do so the Class Cabinet and the myriad of committees stressed all social and intellectual levels of college life. President Tim Witsman and Vice-President Ted Hawkins led the class in its endeavors with the advice of the Cabinet, a group of 20 members of the class appointed to express the opinions and ideas of their classmates at bi-weekly meetings. Class committees concentrated as many as sixty sophomores on to the most important activities. Among these were a well-attended and highly successful mixer with Wellesley and the annual class banquet second semester. While the Class of '65 presented more than its share of individual per- formanceson the athletic fields, extra-curricularly, and aca- demicallythe class as a group also did much to strengthen its reputation. INTELLIGENT leadership and direction were given the Class of '64 by President Robert Bergeron and Secretary-Treasurer David DeLuca while committees of the Cabinet, chosen and organized by the President, handled the class's several tasks efficiently and thoroughly. Perhaps the greatest re- sponsibility of the Junior class cabinet was in creating a new tradition on Spring Weekend in lieu of the age-old crew races at the Seekonk. Indeed, sponsorship of Spring Weekend was the prime concern of the Cabinet throughout most of the year. However, the twenty members and their officers did not shirk their social responsibilities to the class in other areas. Two skating mixers were spon- sored during the year. The first, held in December, was notable in that fol- lowing the skating at the year-old Meehan Auditorium rink, the group ad- journed to the Pembroke Gate for refreshments and dancing. The unique- ness in this was that the young women involved in the mixer were from Wheaton. Naturally enough, Pembroke demanded reciprocity later in the vear, and a tolerably successful mixer with a similar agenda was held with them. In the non-social sphere, the Cabinet sponsored several lectures and during the earlier part of the year raised its voice in protest of the situation at the University of Mississippi. As in past years, it also attempted to keep its constituency informed of its activities through a class newsletter edited by Geoff Sherwood. In general, the theme of the Cabinet was efficiency and its accomplishments could be seen in the many successful events sponsored during the year, the climax coming at a unanimously acclaimed Spring Weekend. STRIVING toward class unity, the Class of 1963 cabinet again under the leadership of President John Horn- yak, worked to bind the class together before finally leaving the Hill. Vice President Remy Zimmerman top and George Bryant handled publicity, and the class funds were guarded by treas- urer Gene Barth left. Rk 1 HE FUTURE interests of the class, there were many concerned. Along with Secretary Blaine Lawson, others devoted extra hours to com- mittee work. Mike Cardozzo ably arranged for the Senior Dinner, and Bill Spohn set up the All-Cam- pus Dance. Looking beyond the impecunious under- graduate days, the Twenty-fifth Reunion Fund committee determined the role of the class as alumni. Dave Meyers, Lew Feldstein, and Dayton ! Carr undertook the basic tasks. Mike Buchsbaum and Gil Messing worked with the alumni office to provide alumni orientation for the graduating class. e AY N R o gr?f STRIVING toward class unity, the Class of 1963 cabinet again under the leadership of President John Horn- yak, worked to bind the class together before finally leaving the Hill. Vice- President Remy Zimmerman top and George Bryant handled publicity, and the class funds were guarded by treas- urer Gene Barth left. -COR e FUTURE interests of the class, there were many concerned. Along with Secretary Blaine Lawson, others devoted extra hours to com- mittee work. Mike Cardozzo ably arranged for the Senior Dinner, and Bill Spohn set up the All-Cam- pus Dance. Looking beyond the impecunious under- graduate days, the Twenty-fifth Reunion Fund committee determined the role of the class as alumni. Dave Meyers, Lew Feldstein, and Dayton Carr undertook the basic tasks. Mike Buchsbaum and Gil Messing worked with the alumni office to provide alumni orientation for the graduating class. A.D. Abelon R. M. Adams G. R. Aikins P. M. Allen S. W. Andree F. O. Antonsanti J. W. Arata B. R. Bainton J. F. Baird R. Bakulski T. G. Bale D. M. Barnes E. F. Barth H.B.B d oo W. G. Baxt M. S. Bedine J.S. Behlke V. S. Batchis W. R Batty 111 ' . . oy l 7 BUILDING AT BROWN was an activity familiar to students whose academic careers coincided with the prepara- tions for the bicentennial celebration. In seemingly unconscious fashion buildings appeared at various locations throushout the city and were integrated as outposts of the expanding campus. Continuously, labor and materials were gradually combined to fullill the architects' sketches, and their creations were finally given their recognized positions in the community by the dedi- cation ceremonies. If students thought that they had changed during their college careers, they undoubtedly believed that the University had altered even more. To many, the University seemed to live around them, growing daily in an almost alarming mannerfor it impresses upon them a realization of their mortality: Brown is an immortal being whose essence is embodied permanently in its buildings and transiently in the spirit of the students who fill her halls. Brown made us what we were; we made her what she was during four brief years. We will support her as alumni, and-she will live on when we pass away. W. S. Armentrout L. H. Axelrod D. A. Bailen diBRiR J. R. Barresi L. H. Barrett J. H. Barry D. W. Bell Jr. A. M. Benson K. S. Bernasconi il R. M. Bernstein ! S P. K. Brandon S F Billey S. R. Bray G. M. Bryant W. C. Bryant D. A. Bryniarski M. S. Buchsbaum J. L. Burnham W. Burten WS Y1 . 1, J. K. Butler Jr. E. C. Cameron C. M. Blank C. Booth W. A. Bovino R. C. Brecht R. A. Breslow R. A. Brown J PROVIDENCE can be bad, good, and even divine. The city has as many faces and moods as the students on College Hill; it is a mirror of our feelings. Like any other city, it is quite likeable as long as one can get away from it periodically. One cannot retreat to Brown, for it is a microcosm within it, from which students gaze upon their surroundings and learn to dis- like them. It doesn't always rain in Providence; sometimes it snows. Why don't they repair Waterman Street? They did this fall It's grubby. The only way to leave the center of town in an effortless manner is by magic carpet; trains are always half an hour late, buses and automobiles become lodged in congested arteries, and travelling to the airport takes half as long as a flight to any- where except Boston. It is not necessary to leave the city to find variety, however. Brown is surrounded by an architecturally eclectic district of houses that vary from the John Nicholas Brown mansion to a modern structure on well-groomed Black- stone Boulevard. The immediate area is fertile ground for art and architecture projects; students are seen wandering around with easel, camera, and notebook. Dental and medical clinics populate the stretch from the University to Wayland Square where luxury clothing, jewelry, and gift shops cater to the city's established wealth. There are few ostentatious homes, and swimming pools are rare; but the heavy backing of gilt-edged D. R. Boyan B. J. Boydell securities is quietly evident in immaculate homes, Rolls Royces, and butlers sweeping the front steps in the early morning hours. e D. G. Brush Two dozen blocks away, a charwoman wakes her brood and sends them forth to school from a house of tattered paint and warped walls. And in the center of the city stands the massive Industrial Trust Building whose beacon shines with unblinking eye at the varied surroundings. But students cannot look down from above without feeling, for they are part of the city while they are part of Brown. A. Cammarosano L. W. Camp III C. J. Caperonis Ir. C. H. Capwell M. A. Cardozo P. Carman W. R. Caroselli D. T. Carr R. G. Cashion F. M. W. Caspersen 21 3 l; D. C. Chalfant R. B. Chaset J. J. Cheever L. D. Cherkis N. O. Clayton R. E. Cleary J. 1. Cohen I S. J. Comen K. Commoss Jr. C. A. Connell Jr. R. W. Cooper R. M. Cooper G B Costiganlr. 214 J. M. Cohen K. A. Cohen A.J. Cohn R. B. Colburn H. A. Collins S. G. Colt I1I D. M. Counihan R. J. Croteau W. Cruikshank Jr. F.S. Crysler Jr. J. D. Cummings S. F. Cummings K. A. Cunningham R. E. Dalessio J. FE. Danstrom R. R. Dahlstrom S. L. Cymrot R. A. Delorenzo E. P. DePatie y 3 r 5 i L T J. B. Dickerson R. E. Dineen Jr. T. B. Delaney D. B. Danzer L. R. Darr S. S. Dashef J. C. Davis D. M. Donnelly A.J. Drescher R. F. Dowell i R.J. Dykes Jr. R. A. Eisenbeis T. D. Elkinton J. S. Ferguson P. W. Ferguson V. J. Field J. H. Fish III J. H. Fish R. J. Fisher T. G. Frederick J. Freeman J. T. Freni K. T. Friday A. B. Fruhauf R. E. Garabedian E S. B. Elliott L. M. Engleman W. E. Farnam Jr. L. M. Farrington L. M. Feldstein 210 J. K. Fisler B. R. Fitch K. F. Foley R. H. Forbes D. B. Fournier R. E. Francoeur G. A. Garland D. F. Garnes A. S. Geller W. T. Generous Jr. J. I. Gerard R. E. Gianni T. E. Giddings J. R. Gier III UTTER extravagance was shown in the purchase of the new paneling which, installed last spring, was admired this year for its splendidly variegated wood grainsso much more ap- pealing than art work. Left hanging, thank goodness, to remind us that we once had a winning season was the photograph of the Iron Men football team, who stared down on a calcium- starved student body. We were cowed by the inability of the new milk machines to produce milk, when their shiny fronts mirrored our images so favorably. When there was milk, there were certainly no glasses; if glasses, no ketchup; if ketchup, no celery or olives. Crashing into the dividers, we raced around the Pit trying to supply our needs. These new dividers separated the hall into four sections distinctively named Dining Rooms A, B, C, and D. It seems quite incomprehensible that the plants in the bellies of the dividers should have flourished when they were fed on such an impotable assortment of undrunk breakfast ' juices. Breakfast-table companions, reflecting the luminous rays of the sun as it filtered through the stained plastic of the divid- ers, were in technicolor. New hues were unable, however, to change the taste of the food. When asked to comment on the Re- fectory's New Look, Mrs. Feeney remarked, The beauty is in the eyes of the beholder. N. J. Giordano R. G. Goering S. L. Goldberg H. C. Gordinier J. H. Hayman W. C. Hetzel T.D. Heyck R. T. Hiatt C. E. Hindermann R. L. Hirsch R. W. Grady H. L. Greenberg R.D. Greene M. S. Greenwood L. R. Gross D. B. Gubits F. W. Guglielmino J. T. Gunzelmar, M. A. Gureasko J. T. Halverson H. L. Hammond C. C. Harmantas S. B. Hauser J. M. Hawley Pit Stop: T. W. Hoagland R. S. Hodavance 4 P L. Ed -, - . Eed o e 2 . L L2 L K. E. Hogberg J. R. Hornyak M. H. Howell T. R. Jacobs G. V. Johnson 11 D. L. Katsky D. H. Katzive R. M. Keith D. T. Kelly J. F. Kfoury R. H. Kiene Jr. J. P. King M. B. Klein A. Kleinhofs F. S. Knox III F. J. Koloc L. A. Korhumel C. A. Huckins D. A. Hughes G. H. Hughes . J. Tori L. E. Jablecki T. P. Johnson J.S. Johnston J. L. Jones Y. H. Kablotsky R.L. Kahn BEAT BEAT beat of the bongos calling lorth students to external indi- vidualitylet us mass with beards, long wooly sweaters and unwashed bodies to satirize the button-down conformity of the Ivy League. Let us imitate Ferlinghetti who denies his association with us, even though he does write imaginative verse at the expense of Madison Avenue's seriousness. Let us all use the same jargon that we may parody the speech of advertising men. Let us all play guitars and sing the same songs with identical themes rejecting the absurdity of the commercial world, which supports our indolence. Let us all imitate each other that we may be creative with beyond originality. Let us all mass together so the world will not notice our individuality, that we may find strength in our number to engulf the mesmerized population, in our craziest of conformities. E. R. Kaufman J. W. Kaufmann A. Kornfuehrer J. Kovalchick g S. S. Krawiec R. 1. Kroin R. L. Krouse P. M. Kuznesof S. S. Labouisse L. L. Laderoute Jr. R. A. LaMacchia C.E. Lane R. D. Laudati H. B. Lawson Jr. C. M. Lawyer ITI W. E. Lee f A CANINE comment on a rally in Patriot's Court was a silent, painful, queasy regard for what remained the morning after. The 'monster rally had been enough to drive local residents to their win- dows, and to send echoes reverberating through the quads and animals quivering and howling through the coal black night. Yet upon returning to the scene of the affair, how could a canine feel but . downcast and scornful, to find that the source of ; his fright had not been worth a sniff? He simply mumbled, Ex nihilo nihil. 224 . MacAdams P. S. Macaulay B. R. MacDonald C. H. Mandell R. A. Lagsdin B. A. LeMonte E. R. Lucier ox M. S. Levine W. L. Levy R. D. Maslanka E. W. Mason P. C. Mayer S. S. Mayne J. N. McCamish D. F. McClatchey R. G. McCord Jr. D. M. McDonald P. McDonald R. T. McGee B. R. Mclntyre R. E. McKenna G. D. McLaughlin J. W. McMahon 2, 2 R. L. Meyer R. P. Miller THE TUTORS and the tutored meet with their children upon the broad green of the main campusa remnant of nature in a concrete city. Indian summer spreads a carpet of autumn leaves gently over the ground and brings toddlers to examine each new daily pattern. With their fresh awareness they cause scholars to forget their books for precious moments. Youngsters trumpet out their glee, or in even more demanding terms, be- seech their elders to acknowledge their presence. W. E. McManus J. A. Mecker 7 Mcman J. H. Mensher 101 I, Merk G. S. Messing R. B. Miller D. W. Mischke B. L. Mishkin J. A. Mohler Jr. A. A. Mongeau Jr. J. W. Moniz R. A. Montecalvo D. L. Myers 4 7 -' X B Z - i W R. H. Morgan SILENTLY spring comes and joyfully spreads her mantle of ease and satiety over the campus. Books are a painful interruption of somno- lent reflection. It is a time when stu- dents wish that growth were as effort- less as the unfolding of leaves. It is the season to accept impulse naturally, without the hardened eye of the skep- tic and the rcasoning of the critic. R. H. Morris C.J. Negaro M. S. Mueller R. N. Nelson R. D. Muir R. N. Nelson S. Murray W. J. Olson Jr. J. J. Panciera J. Ordover R. M. Pandolfo J. R. Nicholson P. A. Nickerson R. E. Nickerson J. S. Nolton T. W. Noy W. G. Oellrich B. H. Orenstein J. P. Paksarian G. H. Palmer W. L. Palmisciano I. A. Papa P. Papadopoulos M. L. Paquin D. B. Park F. A. Parker W. H. Parker Jr. W. R. Patterson 11 R. H. Paul C. W. Peal J. A. Peeler H. A. Pekelis J. C. Pennoyer D. R. Perclman S. H. Perry R. O, Phillips C. R. Pilat MW HEN Providence and schoolwork were too much with us on a warm afternoon in the Spring, the beach was never too distant. Nature called us to her origin where the unfamiliar salt air cleansed our minds of pressing thoughts. Sparkling grains of sand absorbed us in refulgent mystery as we tried to decipher the cosmic handwriting of sea- weed upon the endless stretch of white. Did we really know ourselves? From where had we come? What was our significance? We heard but a sym- phony of the seawaves ebbing and returning, each a different part of a recurring theme: an infini- tude of beginnings, constant suggestions, impulses toward a culmination which is never reached. D. A. Pitassi .M. Pi D. Plimpton H. C. Pollack Jr. S. L. Prendergast W. W. Price III M. W. Prior R. L. Ranges R. A. Reardon Jr. D. A. Reese R. Reiss T. M. Rhine R. C. Rhodes E. Richman D. W. Richter OVERHEARD in the Blue Room among tweeds T1 and T2, Greek majors G1 and G2, and U. H. brass B1 and B2: G2 . .. Prometheus had been singing to the chorus before . . . T1 ... his date found him passed face-up under the table. There was an enormous . . . G1 . . . scene in which Io convincingly lamented her fate. Zeus had . . . T2 ... given her much gas for accepting a date with a guy who . . . G1 ... was chained on this hill . .. B1 ... for another semester until he received his distribution credits. T1 . .. Before the dance . . . G2 ... Prometheus had presented . . . T1 ... personalized match books to her because the dance was non floral . . . G1 ... but all Io wanted now was sympathy from him, although he was in fact even more wretched than she. For when Zeus discovered to whom the fire had been given, he inflicted on him . . . B2 . . . new distribution requirements in biology, chemistry, and physics. The new course announce- WG o . o T2 ... was so loaded that . . . G1 ... Io, in her castigated condition, complained at length in lofty iambics until Prometheus revealed that he B1 . . . had finally achieved language proficiency. V. J. Rinella Jr. W. A. Robbins Jr. M. Rodrigues J. N. Roitman L. H. Ronnie Jr. R. J. Rosen R. M. Rosenberg D. M. Rosenthal P. E. Rubin R. L. Rubin M. W. Ruck J. Ruggieri Jr. G. D. Sackman T. R. Sahagian R. J. Salter D. A. Sanders R. H. Saquet A. Sasaki W. A. Savicki P. A. Schaedel W. C. Schnell H. T. Schrank R. A. Schroder P. A. Sellar D. H. Shafner J. Sidman W. M. Silverman B. M. Smith M. G. Smith Jr. H. S. Schwenk R. N. Scott C. E. Seagrave B. A. Sears J. M. Seed R. H. Seegal P. D. Shamonsey R. M. Shannon B. L. Shemin A. K. Sherman F. C. Sherman J. S. Shronts R. J. Simeone R. J. Sliney G. M. Slovin J. P. Small J. D. Small L. M. Small W. E. Smith C. S. Sokoloff J. W. Sparks J. E. Spears Jr. N. J. Spiezio G. W. Spohn 111 255 M. E. Starzak W. A. Stewart S. A. Terman R. P. Thayer E. C. Tortolani Jr. C. L. Townsend E. 1. Strom Jr. A. G. Tannenbaum D. A. Van Loan J. F. Sullivan Jr. W. A. Van Ness T. W. Walker R. P. Wallace J. D. Summers C. R. Warner P. E. Sydlowski H. M. Webb 5 W. C. Thompson W.S. Tomy S. V. Tracy W. H. Twaddell - v Aib R. G. Tyrrell J. G. Valeo G. R. Weihmiller J. Vitiello R. L. Walker M. H. Weinstein R B Wallace T Walz x ' C R Wl 25 - I P. F. Wehmann E. H. Weihe E. Weissberger WHERE ARE ihe cans and cups? B and G's blad- der must have been enormous to have caused so much leakage. Clothes and books strewn on the floor were swallowed up by the tides. Then, it wasn't your con- 3 science but the radiators blasting you as you squandered an evening admiring their functional beauty. Hegemanly, Wriston Quadrangular, Caswellianthey forced you to sack out in an icebox and awake in a greenhouse. S. M. Welsh L. M. Wilcox Jr. F. F. Winkler S R. A. Wenzel R. M. Woller D. A. Wheatland W. W. White B. G. Woolley Jr. Bmeemnen SR R. P. Whitmore D. R. Wyckoft G. R. Williams Jr. J. C. Wilson A. Yodakis Jr. J. W. Zeder ILITIILE BLUE AGS dancing merrily in the wind . . . little blue Corvettes and large blue Cadillacs setting the stage . . . little men in blue racing frantically up Thayer and George on swift blue motorcycles . . . scattered little pieces of blue paper strewn across the sidewalks, and cars with big blue license plates fleeing back to neighboring states. V. W. Zeller J. G. Zimmermann H. D. Zisserson W. J. Zisson A. Zousmer commencement A Ll ONG LINE of Brown men duly qualify'd for Dis- charging the Offices of Life with usefulness and reputation wound its way slowly about the campus for the one hundred and ninety-fifth commencement. Throughout the preceding week the college had emptied gradually as the underclassmen departed. Only we were left, packing quietly for our last fare- well. Although we had already lost our youth, we permitted ourselves a few moments of nostalgic reflection before the abrupt celebration. We had decided a few issues and had solved some problems, but now we had more questions than answers. We did not feel particularly confident or joyful. The return of enthusiastic alumni, however, cheered us. Dinners and teas were enjoyable, while we found the All-Campus Dance a pro- phetic mixture of friends and strangers. Commencement week presented its serious and inspiring aspect to us through religi- ous services and orations. At last we were ready, keyed up with hope and anticipation. Early on Graduation Day, we as- sembled in caps and gowns to form a long line. Led by the Alumni and the University officers, we marched solemnly through Van Wickle Gates and then down the Hill to the First Baptist Meeting House. Following a brief service, we returned proudly to the College Green to receive our degrees. Our mo- ment had arrived. ipa1aA0d ATnj nok ary P O S TN g INDEX TO ADVERTISERS A. Gasbarro and Son, Incorporated Allen's Towel and Linen supply, Incorporated Asquino's Restaurant Avon Pharmacy Banspach Brothers Billy Poore Brook Street Market Brown University Dining Halls Brown University Duplicating Brown University Stores Campus Pizza Class of 1963 College Launderers and Cleaners, Incorporated Curran and Burton Eastern Scientific Company Ed Drew Egan's Eileen Darling's Restaurant Elhatton Plumbing and Heating Company E. P. Anthony, Incorporated E. Turgeon Construction Company Foreign Cars, Limited G. H. Walker and Company Gregg's Restaurant Hillhouse, Limited Hillside Motor Lodge John Betz, Esquire Johnson's Hummocks Howard C. Barber Dairy Lans Warehouse Company Lloyd's Manchester Hudson Company Mark David, Limited Moller and Rothe Minden Hotel Ms, Incorporated Narragansett Electric Company Nettleton Shoes Oakes on the Hill Parker Pen Company Paul Goldman, Incorporated Pinkerton Detective Agency Phillips Lead and Supply Company Providence Paper Company Providence Gas Company Rhode Island Bus Company Rust Craft Cards Savoy Smith's Restaurant Tilden-Thurber Toy Sun Tripp and Olsen, Incorporated Wayland Manor Hotel Wm. J. Keller Inc. 253 256 283 256 247 273 273 275 283 277 250 248 261 275 273 247 257 272 264 263 270 249 253 277 276 265 271, 277 257 244 267 246 263 281 276 255 258 255 275 269 246 274 251 261 263 252 280 263 282 265 284 255 247 285 advertisements and senior biographies 243 When Proximity Counts! Lans Warehouse Co. 17 Seekonk Street at Wayland Square 58th year Complete Moving Service! Modern Storage Providence Agents: North American Van Lines World Wide Movers 244 editor's notebook The purpose of a yearbook is to present a comprehensive reflection of the college year. In pictures and writing, the 1963 Liber Brunensis has attempted to capture not only the fleeting events of the past year but also that part of Brown which endures. The preceding pages represent our best efforts in this direction. The Editor's Notebook, however, serves as a complement; it attends to the unwritten spirit of Brown which dwells in rumors, comments, stories, and memories. Some of them are included in the following potpourri, without which our work would not be complete. October 2, 1962: at seven o'clock that evening, President Kennedy, with his Declaration of Naval Blockade, temporarily changed our whole pattern of life. While we waited over the next forty-eight or more hours for the Soviet ships to ap- proach, our books, our classes, our well-made plans, all diminished into insignificance. We were on tenterhooks; most of us were thinking about what the next hour would bring, and how we would get home. It was a jolting interlude un- equalled in our four years on the Hill. The whole campus was in a state of, well, nothing less than euphoria, when the hockey team edged out Princeton 3-2, in Meehan. The crowd outplayed both teams though. Every time Brown made a goal it was with over two thousand assists. The team's second effort was extraordinary. An extremely well-known and venerated member of the administration was overheard giving vocal assistance to a Princeton hockey player who was about to enter the penalty box for a few minutes: Get into that cage, you bum! Later, when he began to shower a Princeton fan with crumpled pro- grams and roses in response to a teasing smile from the latter, a whole row of Moses Brown boys followed the ex- ample of the former, as the Princeton man became deluged with hockey programs. They're hard enough to get from the officials as it is. ABELON, ASHER DEAN. A.B. American Literature. Born: March 11, 1942. Prepared at Brunswick High School. Junior Class Council, Basketball Manager Freshman, Varsity. Phi Gamma Delta President. Address: 2 Sparwell Lane, Brunswick, Maine. ADAMS, ROBERT MATTHEWS. A.B. Economics. Born: May 5, 1941. Prepared at Mount Herman School. Class Council, Canticum Glee Club, Cam- marian Club, Jameson House Vice President. Ad- dress: 32 Jenny's Lane, Barrington, Rhode Island. AIKINS, GEORGE ROBERT. A.B. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: May 3, 1941. Prepared at Osgood High School. Brown University Scholarship. Bronson House President, Glee Club, Political Science Club, Brown Engineering Society, Canticum Club, Inter House Council. Address: 227 South Buckeye, Os- good, Indiana. ALLEN, JOHN H. Address: 46 Cleveland Street, Holy- oke, Massachusetts. ALLEN, PAUL McDUFF. A.B. Biology. Born: Pre- pared at Classical High School. Dean's List, Biol- ogy Club Vice President, Premedical Society, New- man Club, Marching Band, Wind Ensemble. Ad- dress: 131 Laurel Avenue, Providence, Rhode Is- land. ALPER, DANIEL. A.B. Spanish. Born: October 23, 1941. Prepared at Brookline High School. Sphinx Club, Proctor, Cammarian Club President, Brown Charities Drive, Student Overseas Service Organ- ization Director, Brown Sales Manager for Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra, Rugby Varsity. Pi Lambda Phi Secretary. Address: 61 Arlington Road, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. ALT, NORMAN CARL. A.B. Psychology. Born: Feb- ruary 12, 1941. Prepared at Chatham High School. Deans List, Manning Chapel Board, Junior Class Council, Canticum Glee Club, Baseball freshman. Phi Delta Theta Treasurer and Social Chairman. Address: 765 River Road, Chatham, New Jersey. ANDES, JOHN E. ANDREE, STEVEN WALTER. A.B. Economics. Born: September 9, 1941. Prepared at Oak Park High School. Address: 73 Bluff Trout Valley, Gary, In- diana. ANTONSANTI, FRANK ORLANDO. A.B. English- Spanish. Born: May 20, 1941. Prepared at West- minster School. Spanish Club, Student Court, Liber Brunensis, Freshman Tennis. Phi Gamma Delta Sergeant-At-Arms. Address: Avenue A-36, Villa Caparra, Puerto Rico. ARATA, JOHN WILLIAM. A.B. American Literature. Born: May 17, 1940. Prepared at Deerfield Aca- demy. Senior Class Council, Football Varsity, La- crosse Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha Social Chair- man. Address: 81 Grand Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey. ARMENTROUT, WALTER SCOTT. A.B. Classics. Born: November 9, 1941. Prepared at Mercers- burg Academy. Classics Club, Yacht Club, Chari- ties Drive Treasurer, Cammarian Club, Brown Daily Herald. Sigma Chi Rushing Chairman, Sec- retary. Address: 103 North Alabama Avenue, Martinsburg, West Virginia. AXELROD, LAWRENCE H. Address: 1226 East 23rd Street, Brooklyn, New York. BAILEN, DAVID ALLEN. AB. History. Born: July 27, 1941. Prepared at Newton High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Tower Club, Brown Charities Drive. Address: 37 Voss Terrace, Newton Centre, Massachusetts. BAIRD, JAMES FRANK. A.B. Math-Physics. Born: April 15, 1937. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. WBRU, Soccer Freshman. Delta Tau Delta Cor- responding Secretary. Address: 11 Forest Road, Glen Rock, New Jersey. BAKULSKI, RICHARD STANLEY. A.B. Biology. Born: August 18, 1941. Prepared at New Bedford High School. Scholarship, Inter-House Council, Bi- ology Club, Newman Club, Alpha Phi Omega. Lambda Chi Alpha Scholarship Chairman. Ad- dress: 373 Raymond Street, New Bedford, Massa- chusetts. BALE, THOMAS GEORGE. A.B. English Literature. Born: June 12, 1941. Prepared at Charles F. Brush High School. Debating Union, Brown Yacht Club, Tower Club, Brown Charities Drive, Brown Youth 245 PAUL GOLDMAN INC. Authorized Dealer RENAULTPEUGEOT TRIUMPHDODGE Expert Service Nites Til 9 P.M. Route 1 So. Attleboro, Mass. MANCHESTER and HUDSON CO. 300 Station Street CRANSTON, R. I. HO 7-8815 246 Guidance, Intramural Council, Sailing Team Fresh- man, Varsity. Address: 1447 Evanston Road, Cleve- land, Ohio. BARNARD, THOMAS E. Address: 2229 Ashley Drive, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. BARNES, DOUGLASS MORSON. AB. Art. Born: June 9, 1941. Prepared at The Choate School. NROTC, Yacht Club, Football freshman, Rugby Club. Psi Upsilon Secretary. Address: Old Dutch Road, Bedminster, New Jersey. BARRESI, JOHN RAYMOND. Sc.B. Applied Math. Born: July 2, 1941. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School. Dean's List. Address: 173 Walter Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. BARRETT, LAWRENCE H. A.B. Mathematics. Born: July 4, 1941. Prepared at North Central High School. Glee Club Business Manager. Address: 3936 Channing Circle, Indianapolis, Indiana. BARRY, DANIEL D. Address: 3309 Highwood Drive, S.E. Washington, D.C. BARRY, JOHN HENRY. A.B. French. Born: Novem- ber 18, 1941. Prepared at Grosse Pointe University School. Deans List. Delta Phi Librarian. Address: 10 Pinecrest Road, Scarsdale, New York. BARTH, EUGENE FRANKLIN. A.B. American Civil- ization. Born: May 8, 1942. Prepared at Lake Forest High School. Deans List, Brown Key Vice President, Jabberwocks, Senior Class Treasurer, Senior Class Council; Twenty Fifth Reunion Fund Committee, Football, Basketball Freshman, Track, Basketball Varsity, Captain. Sigma Nu Sentinel. Address: 1541 McKinley Road, Lake Forest, Illinois. BARWOOD, HAL BROWN. A.B. Art Honors. Born: April 16, 1940. Prepared at Hanover High School, Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List. Address: 6 Pleasant Street, Hanover, New Hampshire. BATCHIS, VAN STAMATIOS, A.B. History. Born: February 25, 1941. Prepared at Penns Grove Re- gional. Debating Union, Cammarian Club, Brown Key, Proctor, Wrestling Freshman, Football Var- sity. Delta Upsilon. Address: 166 West Main, Penns Grove, New Jersey. BATTY, WILLIAM ROCKLEY. A.B. American Lit- erature. Born: 1941. Prepared at Mount Herman School. Brown Key, Interfraternity Council, Howard Volunteers, Football Freshman, Varsity. Phi Gam- ma Delta. Address: 1710 Louisquissett Pike, Lin- coln, Rhode Tsland. BAXT, WILLIAM GORDON. AB. English Honors. Born: March 31, 1941. Prepared at Pomfret School. Dean's List, Brown Crew Freshman, Varsity. Sig- ma Chi. Address: 420 East 55th Street, New York, New York. BEDINE, MARSHALL STEPHEN. A B. Political Science Honors. Born: June 29, 1941. Prepared at G. W. Hewlett High School. Deans List, Brown Daily Her- ald, Brown Charities Drive, Bruin Club President. Address: 1607 Hereford Road, Hewlett, New York. BEHLKE, JOHN S. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 9, ED DREW ORCHESTRAS In a game of Password, in which the word to be guessed was building, one teammate gave the clue edifice; his partner replied rex. Although the Ivy League has a reputation for being pseudo, the truth of the rumors was not established until it was discovered that the ivy plants lining the walls in the Ivy Room are synthetic. In the 1962 Liber, Tilden Thurber jewelers received credit for building the new biology laboratary. A skunk appeared one day at lunch in the refectory; ru- mors that it had materialized from the noodles were denied. In the Brown Alumni Monthly, we learned that there are eighty different English words to identify a weakling pig in a litter. For their Homecoming display, A.D. built a waterfall which fell as soon as it began to rain. The price of admission to Faunce House movies has re- mained the same for ten years. It is an unwritten rule that no Pembroker enters the Brown Jug. It is difficult to determine which party made the rule. Nor are dogs allowed in the refectory. The impossible occurred; the bell ceased ringing for about a week. A Brown student contributed to the Society for the Pres- ervation and Advancement of Wooden Toilet Seats, the Birch John Society. Harkness House possesses the most astronomical flusho- gram in the history of the college. It seems one girl didn't make it to Homecoming because she had to see her eighty year old grandmother. Happy Birthday, Mrs. Fishman! Dale and Greg, unable to enjoy their evening beers with Charlie Chaplain as the latter was out of town, happened by the President's house and conferred with him about the merits and popular acclaim of the Late Late Show. THE WAYLAND MANOR HOTEL Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge 500 Angell Street at Wayland Square 1941. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Beta Theta Pi. Address: 135 East 71st Street, New York, New York. BELL, DUNCAN, W. A.B. Economics. Born: October 6, 1941. Prepared at Warwick Veterans Memorial High School. Brown Yacht Club. Address: 175 Miantonomo Drive, Warwick, Rhode Island. BENSON, ALFRED MONTAGUE. A.B. Chemistry. Born: January 21, 1941. Prepared at Garden City High School. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 4 Clinch Place, Garden City, Long Island, New York. BERNASCONI, KENNETH SHELDON. A.B. English Literature. Born: March 19, 1940. Prepared at Dwight School. Yacht Club, Brown Conservative League, Classics Club, Brown Daily Herald, Wres- tling Manager Freshman. Psi Upsilon Second Vice President. Address: 609 Ocean Terrace, Staten Island, New York. BERNHART, MICHAEL H. Address: 15 Creighton Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BERNSTEIN, RICHARD MELLER. A.B. History. Born: August 22, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Dean's List, Phi Beta Kappa, Francis Way- land Scholar, James Manning Scholar, German Club. Address: 274 Olney Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BIGNEY, BRIAN LAWRENCE. A.B. Psychology. Born: August 2, 1941. Prepared at Oliver Ames BANSPACH BROTHERS Quality Bakers Established 1894 EL 1-1100 114 Delaine St. Providence, R. 1. High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Liber Brun- ensis, Brown Charities Drive, Social Chairman Poland House, Yacht Club, University Christian Association, Crew Manager Freshman. Address: 123 Depot Street, South Easton, Massachusetts. BILLEY, STEPHEN FREDERICK. A.B. Economics. Born: March 16, 1941. Prepared at Plymouth High School. Crew Varsity, Captain. Lambda Chi Al- pha House Manager. Address: 8 Holmes Terrace, Plymouth, Massachusetts. BLANK, CHARLES MALCOLM. AB. Political Sci- ence. Born: March 18, 1942. Prepared at Haver- straw High School. Dean's List, Sock and Buskin, Brown Youth Guidance, Inter House Council, Cam- 247 marian Club, Student Resident Advisor. Address: 108 Gurnee Avenue, Haverstraw, New York. BOOTH, CARTER. A.B. Anthropology Honors. Born: June 25, 1941. Prepared at Shortridge. Brown Youth Guidance, Alpha Phi Omega Vice Presi- dent, Haffenreffer Museum Assistant, Brunavians, Classics Club, Junior Class Cabinet, Spring Week- end Committee. Phi Delta Theta Social Chairman. Address: 5121 Winthrop Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana. BOVINO, WILLIAM ANTHONY. A.B. English Liter- ature. Born: November 12, 1940. Prepared at La Salle Academy. Newman Club, Cercle Francais. Address: 49 Gray Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BOYAN, DOUGLAS ROBERT. A.B. International Re- lations. Born: March 24, 1942. Prepared at Ruth- erford High School. Glee Club, Brown Youth Gui- dance. Address: 36 Daniel Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey. BOYDELL, BRUCE JESS. Sc.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: April 21, 1941. Prepared at Fair Lawn Senior High School. Deans List, NROTC, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship President, Vice-President, Band, Brass Ensemble, Brown Youth Guidance, Sphinx Club, Brown Engineering, Society. Address: 4-49 Summit Avenue, Fair Lawn, New Jersey. BRANDON, PAUL K. A.B. Psychology. Born: May 3, 1941. Prepared at Ardsley High School. National Science Foundation Grant, Deans List, Hillel, Wind Ensemble. Address: 67 Hilltop Road. Ardsley, New York. BRAY, STEPHEN RW. AB. Sociology. Born: 1941 Prepured at New Hampton School NROTC, Min strel Show, Band, Brass Choir, Sailing Team Var- sity. Kappa Sigma. Address: 210 South Street, Hingham, Massachusetts. BRECHT, ROBERT CARTER. A.B. German Litera- ture. Born: April 3, 1941. Prepared at Abington Senior High School. Bruinaires, Glee Club, Brown Chorale. Delta Upsilon. Address: 789 Roslyn Av- enue, Glenside, Pennsylvania. BRESLOW, ROGER ARNOLD. A.B. Biology. Born: July 3, 1941. Prepared at Providence Classical High School. Dean's List, Charities Drive. Address: 89 Dexterdale Drive, Providence, Rhode Island. BROWN, ROBERT ANDREW. A.B. Astronomy. Born: October 11, 1941. Prepared at Hackensack High School. Deans List, Brown Youth Guidance Vice President, Treasurer, Astronomy Club President, Kappa Sigma Treasurer. Address: 48 Euclid Av- enue, Hackensack, New York. BROWN, ROBERT LOUIS. A.B. American Civiliza- tion. Born: July 1, 1941. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Faunce House Board of Governors, Fresh- man Week Committee, Class Council, Tennis Freshman. Address: 40 West 77th Street, New York, New York. BRUSH, DAVID G. Address: 12192 Brook Glen Drive, CLASS OF 1963 EACH TIME THAT YOU LOOK AT THIS PAGE REMEMBER THAT YOUR YEARLY CONIRIBUIIONS ARE ESSENTIAL TO THE SUCCESS OF OUR 25th REUNION FUND, FOR THE GOOD OF BROWN SUPPORT OUR CLASS GIFT 248 Headquarters in the East for Foreign Sports Cars JAGUAR VOLKSWAGON - PORSHE ALFA - ROMEO LANCIA TRIUMPH - FIAT SALES AND SERVICE ST e Koo Coreign Cars . i Rhodegsland Corner of Pine Broad Sts. Providence, R. I. Ralph Sizer found great gobs of glorified gopher . . . dust; and complained bitterly to the B.D.H. about poor room serv- ice. One student left something to be desired while negotiating the Beta Gate. Bone cited vanity. Pembrokers in Morris-Champlin suffered a small burn as the wires in the switchboard ignited and the lounge was warmed by cheery dancing flames too bad the fireplace is still unused. Despite the rise in the price of windows to $5.00, Zeta Psi remained the favored underdog and lost its tenth straight snowball match to Theta Delt. The new head of men's resi- dences was outraged by such a flagrant violation of the uni- versity's rules and closed down both houses that weekend. Later he was informed by Mr. Hill that this was an established tradition at Brown. The emergency entrance to Morris-Champlin made for chilly fare-thee-wells at curfews. However, Brown men ac- cepted lack of couch-filled lounges as they felt compen- sated by the opportunity to view Pembrokers' sign-out cards. Hope College is considering letting itself become accredited by the Providence Garden Club. Political minorities disappeared and turned ethnic as they sang to strains of a guitar on a twelve inch disc. The Liber staff had labor pains over Pembroke's article. Why does the University persist in spreading lime over the grounds in mid-February. The white stuff inevitably lands on ice which is covering the ground; thereby permitting the first rain to wash it all onto the sidewalks. When questioned by a student concerning his final grade, one widely published classics professor replied, B, my boy. What's your name?? ... Nutriment and a few beers became pre-game routine for certain members of the hockey team. Saratoga, California. BRYANT, GEORGE McEWAN. A.B. History. Born: November 14, 1941. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald, Senior Class Council, Brown Young Republicans Presi- dent, University Christian Association, Crew Freshman. Delta Phi. Address: 66 Heights, Ridge- wood, New Jersey. BRYANT, WILLIAM CHAUNCY. A.B. Sociology. Born: January 22, 1941. Prepared at The Choate School. Student Council, Lacrosse Varsity, Phi Gamma Delta Treasurer. Address: 1257 Hay- ward Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. BRYNIARSKI, DAVID ALBERT. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: November 25, 1941. Prepared at Mahar Regional High School. Gilbane Scholar, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Football Fresh- man, Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 171 South Main Street, Orange, Massachusetts. BUCHSBAUM, MICHAEL STERN. A.B. Sociology. Born: June 6, 1941. Prepared at Riverdale Coun- try School. Class Cabinet, Brown Key, Cammarian Club, University Athletic Council, Brown Charities Drive, Baseball Freshman. Sigma Nu Social Chair- man. Address: 120 East 81st Street, New York, New York. BURNHAM, JOHN LANSING. A.B. Psychology. Born: 1940. Prepared at Hebron Academy. NROTC, Bru- navians, Canticum Club, Glee Club. Address: 12 Hawthorne Road, Winchester, Massachusetts. BURTEN, WILLIAM. Address: 86 Benevolent Street, Providence, Rhode Island. BUTLER, JOHN KENRICK. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: June 5, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Tra- velli Scholarship, Class Council, Yacht Club, Orien- tation Committee, Brown Charities Drive, Engineer- ing Society, Tennis Freshman, Sailing Team. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 1 Stinson Road, Andover, Massachusetts. CALABRIA, ANTONIO V. Address: 25 Hawkins Street, Providence, Rhode Island. CAMERON, E. COLBY. A.B. Classics. Born: August 19, 1941. Prepared at East Providence High School. Dean's List, Classics Club, Hockey Varsity, Co- Captain, Lacrosse. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 57 College Street, Clinton, New York. CAMMAROSANO, ANTHONY. A.B. International Relations. Born: November 21, 1941. Prepared at A. B. Davis High School. Dean's List, Inter-House Council, Brown Youth Guidance, Russian Club, Sock and Buskin. Address: 26 South Ninth Av- enue, Mount Vernon, New York. CAMMER, ROBERT. Address: 45 Fernwood Road, Larchmont, New York. CAMP, LOUIS W. A.B. Physics. Born: August 28, 1940. Prepared at Loomis School. Radio Club President. Delta Upsilon Vice President, Pledge Master. Address: 1400 Jefferson Avenue, Akron, Ohio. 249 CAPERONIS, CHARLES JR. A.B. International Rela- tions. Born: December 6, 1941. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School. NROTC. Phi Kappa Psi. Ad- dress: 79 Lawton Avenue, Tiverton, Rhode Tsland. CAPWELL, CHARLES H. Address: 158 Lexington Avenue, Cranston, Rhode Island. CARDOZO, MICHAEL A. A.B. Political Science Hon- ors. Born: June 28, 1941. Prepared at Staples High School. Dean's List, Freshmen Week Committee, Faunce House Board of Governors, Cammarian Club Corresponding Secretary, Inter-House Coun- cil Treasurer, Class Council, Undergraduate Teach- ing Assistant, Basketball Manager Freshman, Var- sity. Address: 7 Hidden Hill, Westport, Connecti- cut. CARMAN, PETER. A.B. Sociology. Born: 1941. Pre- pared at Brookline High School. Bronson House Vice President. Address: 16 Browne Street, Brook- line, Massachusetts. CAROSELLI, WILLIAM R. A.B. Sociology. Born: December 14, 1941. Prepared at Scott High School. Corporation Scholarship, Brown Key, Junior Class Council, Undergraduate Friends of Brown, WBRU, Football Freshman, Varsity, Rugby Club. Delta Tau Delta Rushing Chairman. Address: 1203 Po- cono Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. CARR, DAYTON THOMAS. A.B. History. Born: January 7, 1942. Prepared at New Trier Township High School. Sharpe Trophy, Jefferson Davis Trophy, Yacht Club, Class Council, Sailing Team Captain. Kappa Sigma. Address: 140 Westview Road, Winnetka, Illinois. CASHION, ROBERT GLENN. A.B. English Literature. Born: December 29, 1940. Prepared at Freehold Regional High School. Class Council, Brown Key, Cammarian Club, Intramural Athletic Council, Football Freshman, Baseball Freshman, Varsity Co-Captain. Theta Delta Chi Vice President. Address: 27 McLean Street, Freehold, New Jersey. CASPERSEN, FINN M.W. A.B. Economics Honors. Born: October 27, 1941. Prepared at The Peddie School. Deans List, Yacht Club, Student Court, Class Council, Freshman Week Committee, Jab- berwocks, Crew Freshman. Alpha Delta Phi So- cial Chairman, Rushing Chairman. Address: 170 Ridgewood Avenue, Glen Ridge, New Jersey. CHALFANT, DAVID C. Address: 230 Wyandotte Road, Fairless Hills, Pennsylvania. CHAPLIN, RAYMOND HERRICK. A.B. Economics. Born: June 27, 1941. Prepared at Phillips Andover Academy. Canticum Club, Glee Club Executive Board, Brown Youth Guidance, Chapin House President. Address: 18 Hall Avenue, Nashua, New Hampshire. CHASET, RICHARD BRUCE. A.B. Philosophy Hon- ors. Born: March 29, 1942. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Dean's List, Bridge Club, Biology Club, Tennis Freshman, Wrestling Freshman. Address: 52 Emeline Street, Providence, Rhode 250 Island. CHEEVER, JAMES TEFFERSON. A.B. History. Born: September 16, 1941. Prepared at King Phillip Re- gional High School. Brown University Scholarship, Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Supper Club, Baseball Freshman. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 18 Evergreen Lane, Plainville, Massachusetts. CHERKIS, LAURENCE B. Address: 3260 Bedford Avy- enue, Brooklyn, New York. CLAYTON, NELSON OWEN. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 13, 1940. Prepared at Williston Academy. NROTC, Navy Rifle Team, Seaman's Eye Editor-in-Chief. Delta Phi. Address: 116 Another Fine Food Product From CAMPUS PIZZA Home of BEST STEAK GRINDER in Town Spaghetti and Meat Balls 251 Brook St.Free DeliveryMA 1-7758 West Great Falls Street, Falls Church, Virginia. CLEARY, ROBERT D. COHEN, JOEL ISRAEL. A.B. Music Honors. Born: 1942. Prepared at Classical High School. Buxtehude Premium in Music, Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Phi Beta Kappa, Orchestra, Sock and Buskin, Brown Daily Herald, Production Workshop, Man- ning Chapel Choir, Sphinx Club. Address: 50 Carr Street, Providence, Rhode Island. COHEN, JOEL MARK. Sc.B. Applied Math. Born: September 27, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Hartshorn Math Prize, Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald, Cammarian Club Corresponding Secretary, Band, Sphinx Club President, Tower Club Executive Board. Address: 65 Brownell Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. COHEN, KENNETH ALAN. A.B. Classics Honors. Born: August 31, 1942. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Classics Club. Theta Delta Chi Commun- ity Service Chairman. Address: 200 East 71st Street, New York, New York. COHN, ARNOLD JAY. Sc.B. Physics. Born: Novem- ber 2, 1942. Prepared at Midwood High School. Dean's List, Secretary of Russian Club, Football Freshman, Soccer Freshman. Address: 1206 East 22nd Street, Brooklyn, New York. COLBURN, ROBERT B. A.B. American Civilization. Born: July 5, 1940. Prepared at New Prep. Brown Daily Herald, University Christian Association, Dean Pierrel's top performer in psychological research was a white rodent by the name of Barnabus. D.U. learned not to cool beer by leaving it on their patio. A Delta Phi alumnus returned to a weekend, learned of a new traditionRoman Bathsand willingly participated. After-hours theater parties were numerous and graduates were less numerous. Harvey Kek Dinkus and the Doctor will be missed as the best rushing team ever to hit the campus. Especially savory in the memory of some will be Harvey's deep-throated, inspired reading of Gerald Manley Hopkins, as he stood on a table top in the Sigma Nu lounge among a host of freshmen. Pure poetry from the soul! Is it true that we are going to start singing the Canadian national anthem at the rink? Pedro Camejo made his way back to campus under the auspices of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee. His original interpretation of American history, entitled good guys and bad guys, contained a sporadic grain of truth. There wasn't time for discussion and Pedro's case was weakened by certain incidents in the Western Hemisphere. How many of President Keeney's hats did the hockey team earn this year? INCIDENTAL INTELLIGENCE: The reconstruction of the Biltmore cocktail lounge, now known as the Golliwog, has led to a potentially drastic consequence. The ladies room has been moved. Football, Hockey Freshman. Theta Delta Chi Athletic Chairman. Address: 304 Otis Street, Newton, Massachusetts. COLLINS, HENRY AUSTIN. A.B. Economics. Born: October 14, 1941. Prepared at Red Bank Catholic High School. Phi Kappa Psi Secretary, Vice Pres- dent. Address: 62 North Sunny Crest Drive, Little Silver, New Jersey. COLT, SAMUEL G. COMEN, STEVEN JOEL. A.B. Russian Studies. Born: July 30, 1941. Prepared at Brookline High School. Debating Union, Class Council, Hillel, Russian Club, Brown Charities Drive. Address: 101 Abbottsford Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. COMMOSS, KENMORE, JR. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 2, 1941. Prepared at Thayer Academy. Liber Brunensis, Brown Youth Guidance, Football Freshman. Delta Kappa Epsilon Social Chair- man. Address: 51 Bridgeton Road, North Wind- ham, Maine. CONNELL, CHARLES ALEXANDER. A.B. Spanish. Born: September 14, 1941. Prepared at The Hill School. Beta Theta Pi Treasurer. Address: 54 Noe Avenue, Madison, New Jersey. COOK, GLENN F. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 25, 1941. Prepared at Cubberley High School. Freshman Week Committee, Crew Freshman, Varsity. Alpha Delta Phi Pledge Master. Address: 4127 Willmar Drive, Palo Alto, California. Established 1836 PHILLIPS LEAD AND SUPPLY CO. Wholesalers of PLUMBING AND HEATING SUPPLIES 231 South Main Street Providence 3, R. 1. COOPER, RICHARD WILLIAM. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: August 27, 1941. Prepared at Neptune High School. Brown Engineering Society, Institute of Aero-Space Sciences. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 1315 7th Avenue, Neptune, New Jersey. COSTIGAN, GEORGE B. Address: 711 Blockhenth Road, Long Beach, New York. COUNIHAN, DAVID MICHAEL. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: September 23, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. American Institute of Electrical En- gineers. Address: 14 Williams Avenue, Cranston, Rhode Island. CROTEAU, RICHARD JOSEPH. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: March 13, 1942. Prepared at Cranston High 254 School East. Cammarian Club. Address: 54 West- hill Drive, Cranston, Rhode Island. CROWELL, ROBERT PARKER. A.B. Economics. Born: July 28, 1940. Prepared at Manheim Town- ship High School. War Memorial Trophy, Classics Club, Football Freshman, Varsity, Lacrosse Var- sity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 1493 New Hol- land Pike, Lancaster, Pennsylvania. CRUIKSHANK, WILLIAM. A.B. English Literature. Born: February 4, 1941. Prepared at Phillips And- over Academy. Lacrosse Freshman, Varsity. Delta Upsilon House Manager, Rushing Chairman, Presi- dent. Address: 62-3rd Street, Garden City, New York. RHODE ISLAND BUS CO. 375 PROMENADE ST. Serving Brown University with Excellent Chartered Buses for All Activities UN 1-5000 PROVIDENCE CRYSLER, FREDERICK SAFFORD. A.B. History. Born: March 12, 1941. Prepared at Harriton High School of Lower Marion. Freshman Week Com- mittee, Class Council, University Christian Associ- ation, Manning Chapel Board, Brown Charities Drive, Crew Freshman. Address: 256 Meadow- brook Drive, Northbrook, Illinois. CUMMINGS, J. DAVID. Address: 124 Hosea Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio. CUNNINGHAM, KENNETH ARTHUR. Sc.B. Engi- neering. Born: April 8, 1941. Prepared at Garden City High School. American Institute of Electrical 252 Engineers, Brown Engineering Society. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 80 Eton Road, Garden City, New York. CYMROT, STEVEN L. A.B. Political Science Hon- ors. Born: January 10, 1942. Prepared at The Capitol Page School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald, Sphinx Club. Address: 1317 Avenue North, Brooklyn, New York. DAHLSTROM, RALPH. A.B. German. Born: October 71, 1941. Prepared at The Pingry School. The Cae- sar Misch Prize in German. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Sphinx Club Treasurer, Radio Club. Address: 545 Alden Avenue, Westfield, New Jersey. DALESSIO. RICHARD EMILIO. A.B. English Liter- ature. Born: December 6, 1938. Prepared at Bar- rington High School. Brown University Scholarship, Deans List. Address: 44 Maple Avenue, Barring- ton, Rhode Island. DANSTROM, JOHN FREDERICK. A.B. Economics. Born: July 24, 1942. Prepared at The Casady School. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 7106 Waverly, Okla- homa City, Oklahoma. DANZER, DAVID BENJAMIN. A .B. Philosophy. Born: 1942. Prepared at The Loomis School. Sock and Bus- kin, Pembroke Modern Dance, Beard Society. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 2227 North East 2nd Court, Miami, Florida. DARR., LOREN R. Address: 131 Meadbrook Road, Garden City, New York. DASHEF, STEPHEN SEWELL. A.B. American Liter- ature Honors. Born: November 1, 1941. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Susan Colyer Rosenberger Prize in Sociology, Francis Wayland Scholarship, Deans List, Independent Studies, Sphinx Club, Brown Charities Drive, Proctor, Brown Youth Gui- dance, Hillel, Track Varsity, Tower Club. Ad- dress: 138 Glen Road, Woonsocket, Rhode Island. DAVIES, Stevenson. Address: 11 Sanborn Street, Win- chester, Massachusetts. DAVIS, JOHN CARLYLE, II. A.B. History. Born: July 20, 1941. Prepared at Wyoming High School. Brown University Scholarship, Convocation Choir, NROTC, Brown Charities Drive, Brunavians, Class Council, NROTC Drill Team, Football Freshman Manager. Delta Phi. Address: 15 West Hill Lane, Cincinnati, Ohio. DAY, RICHARD. Address: 111 Euclid Avenue, James- town, New York. DELANEY, THOMAS R. DELORENZO, ROBERT ANTHONY. Sc.B. Engineer- ing. Born: May 10, 1941. Prepared at North Haven High School. Deans List, NROTC, Brunavians, Brown Engineering Society, NROTC Rifle Team Captain. Phi Delta Theta Rushing Chairman, House Manager. Address: 263 Maple Avenue, North Haven, Connecticut. DEPATIE, EUGENE PAUL. A.B. Economics. Born: Three sophomores from Brown and three from Pembroke were expelled for breaking the rules of Pembroke College. The Brown men were implicated by association, and also be- cause of the University rule that either dean must agree with the other's decision when students of both colleges are involved. The Dean of Pembroke, on this occasion, made her opinion known to the Pembroke honor court before the latter had finished its considerations of the case. Several questions of social import must be explored in the future. Is it proper, in an honor system, for a dean to make a judgment before the student court presents its decision? Should there not be some further step before the Dean's judgment if the situation in- volves both colleges? And now that Cornell has declared that the individual is free to solve his own moral problems, will Brown take a similar viewpoint? Or will they wait until an incident occurs involving those students living off campus? It seemed to be generally agreed that Justin Vitiello should leave sportswriting to the sportswriters. LKER CO. oweditneridd MEMBER N. Y. STOCK EXCHANGE Established 1900 G. H. Offices In PROVIDENCE e PAWTUCKET e NEW YORK ST. LOUIS and OTHER CITIES UNion 1-4000 840 Hospital Tr. Bldg. Providence PAwtucket 6-2350 840 East Ave. A. GASBARRO AND SON INC. 485 Atwells Ave. PROVIDENCE, R. . December 31, 1941. Prepared at The Loomis School. Canticum Club, Classics Club, Baseball Freshman, Varsity Captain. Sigma Nu Vice President. Address: 114 Garfield Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. DERBY, THOMAS LEE. A.B. English Literature. Born: May 1, 1941. Prepared at Oliver Ames High School. Belcher Malleable Iron Company Scholar- ship, Laurel Club Scholarship, Canticum Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Community Services Co- ordinating Committee, Goddard House Vice Pres- ident, President. Address: 354 Depot Street, South Easton, Massachusetts. DICKERSON, JOSEPH B. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 9, 1941. Prepared at Pierre S. DuPont. Brown University Scholarship, Manning Chapel Board. Beta Theta Pi Social Chairman. Address: 1306 Copley Drive, Wilmington, Delaware. DINEEN, ROBERT EMMETT. A.B. History. Born: September 21, 1940. Prepared at The Hotchkiss School. Beta Theta Pi Social Chairman, Vice Pres- ident. Address: 2406 East Lake Bluff Boulevard, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. DONNELLY, DAVID MARSHALL. A.B. and Sc.B. Engineering. Born: June 19, 1941. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Deans List, Baseball Freshman. Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 32 Winn Street, Northboro, Massachusetts. DOWELL, ROBERT. Address: 4133 Brandes, Erie, Pennsylvania. DOYLE, THOMAS EDWIN. A.B. Botany. Born: 1941. Prepared at Redford High School. Glee Club, Mann- ing Chapel Choir, Yacht Club. Address: 15732 Minock, Detroit, Michigan. DRESCHER, ALLEN. A.B. Economics. Born: August 26, 1941. Prepared at Bartlett High School. Russian Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Interfraternity Council, Brown Charities Drive. Phi Delta Theta Historian. Address: Dresser Hill, Dudley, Massa- chusetts. DREW-BEAR, THOMAS. A.B. Greek and Latin Hon- ors. Born: September 24, 1943. Prepared at Provi- dence Country Day School. James Manning Scholar- ship, William Gaston Scholarship, Dean's List, Clas- sics Club, French Club, German Club, Sphinx Club. Address: 15 Barnes Street, Providence, Rhode Island. DRYBURGH, GEORGE DAVID. A.B. and Sc.B. Chem- istry. Born: 1942. Prepared at Rye High School. Chemistry Club, Brown Film Socicty Business Man- ager. Address: 37 North Street, Rye, New York. DYER, WILLIAM EDWARD. A.B. English Literature. Born: June 18, 1941. Prepared at Shortridge High School. Freshman Council. Delta Upsilon Steward, Vice President. Address: 401 Buckingham Drive, Indianapolis, Indiana. DYKES, RENO J. A.B. American Civilization. Born: September 19, 1941. Prepared at Coral Gables High School. Phi Delta Theta. Address: 709 Al- bany Street, Brunswick, Georgia. 93 EISENBEIS, ROBERT A. A.B. Economics. Born: April 7, 1941. Prepared at Binghamton North High School. Dean's List, Band, Orchestra, Brass Chorale Wind Ensemble. Phi Kappa Psi Recording Sec- rectary. Address: 3 Inamour Drive, Conklin, New York. ELKINTON, THOMAS DUNHAM. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: June 24, 1941. Prepared at Westtown School. Glee Club, Folk Dance Club, Outing Club. Address: 260 Ridgely Creek Road, Moylan, Pennsylvania. ELLIOTT, STEPHEN B. Liber Brunensis Advertising; Delta Phi Corresponding Secretary. Address: Rye, New York. ELLIOTT, THOMAS F. Address: 59 Preston Street, Providence, Rhode Island. ENGLEMAN, LEWIS MAYER. A.B. Religious Studies. Prepared at Swampscott High School. Brown Uni- versity Scholarship, Hillel, Brown Daily Herald, Crew Freshman. Address: 2 Huron Street, Swampscott, Massachusetts. ERNST, ALAN. FARNHAM, WALTER EDWARD. A.B. Mathematics. Born: November 7, 1941. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Brown Youth Guidance, Swimming Freshman. Address: Rocky Hill Road, Scituate, Rhode Island. FARRINGTON, L. MERLE C. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: January 10, 1942. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High School. Brown Engineering Society, American So- ciety of Mechanical Engineers. Address: 277 Belmont Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. FEARY, MORTON. Address: 174 East 80th Street, New York, New York. FEILD, ROBERT McKEEL. A.B. Art. Born: October 30, 1941. Prepared at Friends School Baltimore. Brown Film Society President. Address: 218 Good- ale Road, Baltimore, Maryland. FEINBERG, WILLIAM E. Address: 65 Floyd Street, Dorchester, Massachusetts. FELDSTEIN, LEWIS MARTIN. A.B. American Civili- zation. Born: May 29, 1941. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Class Council, Sophomore Class President, Brown Key President, 25th Reunion Fund, Epicurean Society President, Swimming Freshman, Varsity, Sigma Nu Presi- dent. Address: 110 Causeway, Lawrence, New York. FERGUSON, JAMES SCOTT. A.B. History. Born: April 21, 1941. Prepared at Port Washington High School, Junior Class Council. Phi Delta Theta Athletic Chairman, Warden, Pledge Master. Ad- dress: 10 Hawthorne Avenue, Port Washington, New York. FERGUSON, PAUL WARREN. A.B. Classics. Born: July 16, 1941. Prepared at Allegheny Valley Joint Schools. Classics Club Steward, Basketball Fresh- man. Lambda Chi Alpha House Manager. Ad- dress: 380 School Street, Springdale, Pennsylvania. FIELD, VICTOR J. A.B. Religious Studies. Born: 1940. Freshman, Varsity Tennis. Address: 77 Pitman Street, Providence, Rhode Island. FITCH, BRUCE ROLAND. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: Dr. Barnaby C. Keeney President of the University University Hall Dear Mr. President: You know that I have always tried my best to promote good relations between Hope College and its younger brother, Brown College. I know that you also would like to keep friendship between the two institutions. A problem has arisen, and, rather than writing to Mr. Morse, who has a very busy schedule, I thought I should take the problem directly to you. The problem concerns Faunce House which, as you know, juts out in the middle on the North and South sides. On four corners of Faunce House there are strong spot- lights. My problem specifically concerns the spotlight at the west corner. When I go to bed at night, this spotlight shines directly into my eyes, causing me much grief and discomfort. Furthermore, the strong light makes me dream that it is day- time, so that even in my sleep I cannot get any sleep. I have several suggestions for remedying this situation: 1 Rotate Faunce House 42 counterclockwise about the point L, located as follows: Stand in front of the Faunce House Newscounter in a direct line with the Winstons and the Juicy- fruits. Move backwards until you hit the line joining the waterfountain and the Brown Bear. Take one Giant Step forward and you are at point L. Estimated cost of suggestion 1: PUrEnasE O WelEmnEin SUHEEE 5000000000 000050006 000000 $ 4.00 NMovingtelbn i e 19.50 IO EB T 50 8 crabio i e BV SR S P PPS .28 23.78 Faunce House rules require someone on duty in the build- ing at all times, and the aspirin is in case this person be- comes nauseated while the building is being rotated. 2 Have the light bulb removed. Estimated cost of suggestion 2: T5 IDEUIY JEDE R0l o 61 o o o e s P B o0 W R S $ 5.95 ILIDENERY 1S15. Giue oo o0 B S e R S I N LY .01 5.96 3 Do not turn on the light. It is possible that this is the best suggestion of all, because it is actually the same as increasing the endowment fund by $547.8734. This is computed as follows: The bulb appears to be 200 watts. It burns 6 hours per day 365Y days per year. A total of 2,191.5 hours per year or 438,300 watt-hours or 438.3 kilo- watts. At 5 per kilowatt-hour this is $21.91Y per year which is, at 49 interest, the income on $547.87'2. I realize the financial position of the University, so I am prepared to bear 207 of the cost of any of these suggestions. Trusting that prompt action will be taken, I remain Your faithful servant, Dean Cohen Mr. Joel M. Cohen Hope College in Brown University P.O. Box 707 My dear Dean: I read with great interest and concern your letter of 17 September and have taken the following steps: A. I have asked Mr. Davis to ascertain whether or not in- deed the spotlight shines directly into your eyes. If the answer ta A is yes, I have asked him to determine whether or not your head can be moved, or whether or not it would be desirable to give you a pair of sleep shades at the expense of the University. Sleep shades are things that fat ladies wear on the beach so they won't have to see people's expressions when they look at them in bathing suits. These sleep shades are quite inexpensive, and I do not think they will mar your appearance. Another possibility is to tear down Hope College. I shall present this to the Committee on New Buildings at its next meeting. If its action is affirmative, it will have to be referred to the Committee on Comprehensive Planning, which in turn will report to the Advisory and Executive Committee whose actions must be ratified by the Corporation. An interesting by-product of our correspondence has de- veloped. The Provost, who is a Director of the Narragansett Electric Company, saw your reference to the rates of the company, and conluded that if you believed that you could get 54 a kilowatt-hour from the University instead of 12 cents, that you should be nominated immediately for the post of President of the Narragansett Electric Company. I hope that this will not inconvenience you or interfere with your further studies. With very highest personal regards, I am, Yours very truly, your colleague, B. C. Keeney On Friday nights there were no seats available in the John Hay. When we drove to Providence last fall, all searching for parking spaces, there were many advertisements for spaces located within walking distance of Brown and Pembroke; the funny thing was that it required long distance phone calls to contact the proprietors. A blank key, a sharp file and the resulta master key for every room, including the bar. The Inebriates penetrated fog to sing at Wheaton and also returned in a fog. The fraternity at Brown is changing. The notion of an isolated social unit devoted to its own carryings-on is being replaced by the conception of a social unit whose purposes center around the Brown community interests. A slow evo- lution will see the fraternities remaining intact, but embody- ing a new social perspective of greater breadth. Expressing disgust with the first exams of the semester, a history professor, about to hand them back, impulsively threw them into the wastebasket. Ms, INC Gifts For All Occasions 278 Thayer Street NETTLETON SHOES Edward Toy Hillhouse Ltd. TRIPP OLSEN INC. Tailors Clothes Individually tailored The Mark of a Gentleman Since 1876 Alterations Done Expertly Special Price for Graduation Suit $200. 053 July 25, 1941. Prepared at Riverhead High School. Liber Brunensis, Rifle Team, Chemistry Club Treasurer. Address: 245 Newton Avenue, River- head, New York. FISH, JOHN HUFF. A.B. Linguistics Honors. Born: August 7, 1941. Prepared at Westfield Senior High School. Deans List, Brown-Pembroke Christian Fellowship, Sphinx Club, Wrestling Freshman, Varsity. Address: 21 Chipmunk Lane, Media, Pennsylvania. FISH, JONATHAN HAROLD. A.B. Linguistics. Born: December 30, 1941. Prepared at Lower Merion High School. Mario DiSandro Premium in Italian, Brown Key, Canticum Club, Glee Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Soccer Freshman, Varsity. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 28 Aberdale Road, Bals- Cynwyd, Pennsylvania. FISHER, RAYMOND J. A.B. American Civilization. Born: January 2, 1941. Prepared at Hingham High School. Brown-Pembroke Outing Club, Soccer Freshman. Address: 22 Prospect Street, Hingham, Massachusetts. FISLER, JOSEPH KANDLE. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 17, 1941. Prepared at Tottenville High School. Class Council, Political Science Club, Ten- nis Freshman, Varsity, Captain. Lambda Chi Alpha Corresponding Secretary, Treasurer. Ad- dress: 86 Hopping Avenue, Staten Island, New York. Compliments of AVON PHARMACY Thayer St. Providence ALLEN'S TOWEL E LINEN SUPPLY INC. Since 1906 Complete Towel and Linen Service 40 Arnold Street Providence 6, Rhode Island GA 1-6026 FOLEY, KENDALL FRANCIS. A.B. Chemistry Hon- ors. Born: September 15, 1941. Prepared at North Attleboro High School. Brown University Scholar- ship, Marching Band, Wind Ensemble, Orchestra, Chemistry Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Baseball Freshman. Address: 386 Smith Street, North Attleboro, Massachusetts. FORBES, RICHARD H. A.B. Art. Born: November 8, 1941. Prepared at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High Marching Band. FORKER, DAVID M. Address: 19 George Street, Providence, Rhode Island. FOURNIER, DAVID B. Address: 111 High Street, 256 North Attleboro, Massachusetts. FRANCOEUR, RICHARD EMIL. ScB. Applied Mathematics. Born: 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. State Scholarship, Brown University Scholarship, Leesona Corporation Scholarship, Freedman Grant for Seniors, Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Canticum Club, Russian Club, Folk Dance Club, Newman Club. Address: 65 Erastus Street, Providence, Rhode TIsland. FRASER, ROBERT A. Address: 516 Washington Av- cnue, Rensselaer, New York. FREDERICK, THOMAS G. A.B. Economics. Born: 1941. Prepared at Oak Park High School. Crew The tiddlywinks rash turned into an epidemic of battle- ship. This was a great intellectual advance over the old game of Sergeant Major. The Brown Bear has seen better days. We remember a 1962 bruin who was so audacious as to steal sweeties from the URI cheering section and disrupt the marching bands with a squirt gun. No drinks allowed in the football games was the cry this year. Many bottles were checked reverently at the gate and their sobering owners were forced to watch our losses without consolation. However, many ingenious methods were devised to smuggle in booze; the best of which was to give the bottle to your date and tell her to hide it in her coat. An addition to the chem department was begun. The con- nection between the buildings encouraged pneumonia as the only way to get upstairs was to go outside. One student, attempting to accurately heave a bottle into the moat from his room was too energetic in the up-swing and conveniently deposited the bottle in the room by way of two panes of glass from the window above him. A.E. has a bill for R.M. for one pair of trou. Five couples in a '55 Buick were celebrating a birthday with three gallons of wine. John Law happened to pass by where they were parked. As he poked his head in the window to survey the situation, he was met by a rather pungent aroma. Man is it strong in there . . . is anyone 21??? The reply was, Nope, want some wine?? After careful consider- ation he concluded that nothing could possibly happen with ten people in one car, so he calmly remarked, Enjoy your- selvestomorrow! and retired. In a fraternity lounge a brother was rounding up volun- teers for the intramural foul shooting contest. Enter Jules . . . Jules, want to do some foul shooting? Sorry guys, I left my shotgun at home. The yearbook editor gave only a half thanks for work done, at the Deadline Dinner because there was more to do. He then proceded by half as-king for continued good work. NROTC, Kappa Sigma Social Chairman, Vice President. Address: 316 Lorraine Drive, Rockville, Maryland. FRIDAY, KENNETH TRUMAN. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: May 21, 1941. Prepared at Phoenixville Area High School. Brown Engineering Society Trea- surer, Brown Band, Brown Wind Ensemble. Ad- dress: 1 Cornish Avenue, Binghamton, New York. FRUHAUF, ANTHONY BRAMLEY. A.B. Spanish- French. Born: February 2, 1942. Prepared at Cranbrook School. Liber Brunensis Advertising, Canterbury Vestry, Spanish Club, Tape Lab Mon- itor. Theta Delta Chi. Address: Brookside Drive, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. FUNK, DAN C. Address: 3976 Canyon Road, Lafayette, California. GARABEDIAN, RICHARD ELLIOT. A.B. Economics. Born: December 10, 1941. Prepared at North- bridge High School. NROTC, Class Cabinet, Ever- ett House Vice President, Interfraternity Council Publicity Chairman, Brunavians Secretary, NROTC Drill Team. Phi Kappa Psi President, Rushing Chairman. Address: 20 Spring Street, Whitinsville, Massachusetts. GARLAND, GEORGE ARTHUR. Sc.B. Applied Math. Born: May 31, 1941. Prepared at Tewksbury High School. Corporation Scholar, Brown Band, Edwards House President. Address: 623 Chandler, Tewks- bury, Massachusetts. COMPLIMENTS OF EGAN'S LAUNDERERSCLEANSERS NEWPORT, R. L. Freshman, Varsity, Basketball Freshman. Sig- ma Nu. Address: 312 Home Avenue, Oak Park, Illinois. FREEMAN, JULIEN WALKER, JR. A.B. Economics. Born: September 23, 1940. Prepared at The Fox Lane School. Brown University Scholarship, AFROTC, Football Varsity, Wrestling Freshman, Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: Harriman Knolls, Mount Kisco, New York. FREEMAN, ROBERT P. Address: 2843 South Jeffer- son, Roanoke, Virginia. FRENI, JOSEPH. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 3, 1941. Prepared at St. John's College High School. HOWARD C. BARBER DAIRY Pasteurized Homogenized Grade A Milk 28 Mary Street EAST PROVIDENCE, R. I. GE 4-2165 257 GARNES, DAVID FRASER. A.B. French-English Literature Honors. Born: August 2, 1941. Pre- pared at Classical High School. Alfred Bushnell Johnson Prize, Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Review Book Review Editor. Address: 101 Sunset Drive, Springfleld, Massachusetts. GASION, EUGENE A. Address: 150 Singletary Lane, Framingham, Massachusetts. GELLER, AILAN STANLEY. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: January 17, 1942. Prepared at New Bedford High School. National Science Foundation Scholarship, Undergraduate Research Assistant in Chemistry, Independent Studies, Tower Club Corresponding o 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 $ Secretary. Address: 142 Brownell Street, New Bedford, Massachusetts. GENEROUS, WILLIAM THOMAS. AB. American Literature. Born: February 20, 1939 Prepared at Saint Raphael Academy. NROTC Scholarship, Dean's List, Brunavians President, NROTC Battalion Commander, NROTC Drill Team, Plantations House Committee, Senior Class Council. Address: 26 North Bend Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. GERARD, JAY I. Address: 103 Tanglebriar Lane, San Antonio, Texas. GIANNI, ROBERT EDWARD. AB. Psychology. Born: June 7, 1941, Prepared at Brentwood High 2560 School. Newman Club, Football Freshman, Var. sity. Lambda Chi Alpha Address: 3767 Browns. ville Road, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. GIDDINGS, THOMAS E. Address: 83 Dawes Avenue, Pittsfield, Massachusetts. GIER, JOHN R. Address: 1405 Hines Hill Road, Hudson, Ohio. GIORDANO, NATALE JOSEPH. A.B. Political Sci. ence. Born: May 1, 1941. Preparcd at Massapequa High School. Junior Class Council, Everett House Athletic Chairman. Delta Tau Delta Guide, Pledge Master. Address: 62 Polo Road, Massa- pequa, New York. GOERING, ROBERT GILLMORE. A.B. Mathematics. Born: February 3, 1941. Prepared at Clinton High School. Brown University Scholarship, Hockey Freshman, Varsity. Kappa Sigma. Address: 18 Kirkland Avenue, Clinton, New York. GOLDBERG, STEPHEN LAURENCE. A.B. History. Born: December 23, 1941. Prepared at Andrew Warde High School. Brown Youth Guidance, De- bating Club, Inter-House Council, Brown Tiddle- winks Club President. Address: 82 Edgewood Road, Fairfield, Connecticut. GORDINIER, H. CAMP. A B. History. Born: April 2, 1941. Prepared at Deerfield Academy. Liber Brunensis, Soccer Freshman. Delta Phi Recording Secretary. Address: 314 Hoosick Street, Troy, New York. GOST, EVANS G. A.B. Mathematics-Economics. Born: November 19, 1941. Prepared at Balto City Col- lege. NROTC, Brunavians, Navy Drill Team, La- crosse Club. Sigma Chi Historian, Athletic Chair- man. Address: 464 Old Country Road, Garden City, New York. GOTTLIEB, STEPHEN MARTIN. AB Mathemaiics. Born: May 5, 1942, Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Address: 6113-30nd Street, Washington, D.C GRADY ROBERT WALTER. Sc.B. Chemistry. Bom: November 13 1941 Prepared at Waltham High School. Chemistry Club, Hockey Manager, Rifle Team. Address: 84 Lyman Street, Waltham, Massa- chusetts. GRANT, RICHARD B. Address: 1243 Kingston Road, Kingston, Rhode Isand. GREENBERG, HEYWOOD LAZAR. A.B. History. Born: February 18, 1941, Prepared at Woodmere Academy. Liber Brunensis, Brown Daily Herald Courier, Tower Club President, Vice President, Treasurer, Political Science Club. Address: 182 04 Aberdeen Road, J amaica, New York. GREENE JAMES BERNARD ScB. Engineering. Born: June 6, 1941. Prepared at Saint Peter's High School. NROTC, Phi Kappa Psi. Address: 5137- 38th Strect North, Arlington, Virginia. GREENE, RICHARD DORR. A.B. Biology. Born: June 12, 1941. Prepared at Jamesville-DeWitt High School. Biology Club, Football Freshman, Varsity. Sigma Nu Marshall. Address: 40 Lyndon Road, Fayetteville, New York. GREENWOOD, MICHAEL SARGENT. A.B. Botany. Born: November 7, 1940. Prepared at Newbury- port High School. Outing Club, Crew Freshman. Address: Indian Hill Street, West Newbury, Massa- chusetts. GREER, G. WILLTAM. Address: 18 Oakwood Place, Scarsdale, New York. GROSS, LAWRENCE ROBERT. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 14, 1941. Prepared at Woodrow Wilson High School. Dean's List, NROTC, Bruna- vians, Bruin Club, Pi Lambda Phi Tripod Selector. Address: 3912 Ingomar Street, North West, Wash- ington, D.C. GUBITS, DAVID BARRY. AB. History. Born: July 12, 1941. Prepared at Beaver Falls High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Editor-in-Chief, Sphinx Club, Tower Club, Crew Freshman. Ad- dress: 3415-7th Avenue, Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. GUGLIELMINO, FRANK WILLIAM. A.B. Classics. Born: July 24, 1941. Prepared at Mount Pleasant High School. Brown University Scholarship, Classics Club. Address: 34 Dover Street, Providence, Rhode Island. GUNZELMAN, JOHN THOMAS. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: April 10, 1941. Prepared at Bloomfield High School. Brown Engineering Society, Track Fresh- man, Varsity, Cross Country Freshman, Varsity. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 49 Collins Avenue, Bloom- field, New Jersey. GUREASKO, MICHAEL ALLAN. A.B. Political Science. Born: June 28, 1942. Prepared at James Madison High School. Brown Charities Drive Ex- ecutive Board, Freshman Week Committee, Inter- House Council Treasurer, Class Council. Address: 1718 Avenue North, Brooklyn, New York. HALVERSON, JAMES TAYLOR. A.B. American Literature. Born: January 29, 1942. Prepared at North Central High School. Deans List, Glee Club. Delta Upsilon. Address: 5464 North Kenwood, Indianapolis, Indiana. HAMMOND, HENRY LATANE. A.B. American Civili- zation Honors. Born: October 31, 1941. Prepared at Baltimore Friends School. Dean's List, Convoca- tion Choir, Proctor. Address: 5007 Falls Road Ter- race, Baltimore, Maryland. HARMANTAS, CHARLES CHRISTOS. A.B. Eco- nomics. Born: June 6, 1941. Prepared at Walter Johnson High School. Everett House Social Com- mittee, Treasurer, Inter-House Council Social Chairman. Address: 9303 Adelaide Drive, Bethes- da, Maryland. HAUFLAIRE, DENNIS L. Address: 6029 Washington Street, Downers Grove, Illinois. HAUSER, STEWART B. A.B. International Relations. Born: March 1, 1942. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Brown Daily Herald, Tiddlywinks Society, Bronson House Vice President. Address: 69 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. HAWLEY, JAMES MARR. A.B. History. Born: March 31, 1941. Prepared at Hotchkiss School. Sphinx Club, Freshman Class Cabinet, Jabberwocks, Ori- entation Council, Brown Key, Student Court, Can- terbury Club Treasurer, Liber Brunensis Presi- dent, Swimming Freshman, Rugby Club. Sigma Nu Community Service Chairman. Address: 40 Sherwood Road, Easton, Connecticut. HAYMAN, JAMES HENRY. A.B. History. Born: November 11, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Andover Academy. Brown Charities Drive, Sock and Buskin, Squash Club. Alpha Delta Phi Secretary. Address: 343 East 30th Street, New York, New York. HETZEL, WILLIAM CORTWRIGHT. A.B. Mathe- matics Honors. Born: November 18, 1941. Pre- pared at Eastport High School. Delta Phi Scholar- ship Award, NROTC, WBRU, Brunavians Sec- retary-Treasurer. Navy Drill Team, Baseball Fresh- man. Delta Phi Vice President. Address: Mo- riches Avenue, East Moriches, New York. HEYCK, THEODORE DALY. A.B. English Literature. Born: 1941. Prepared at Kinkaid Preparatory School. WBRU, Sock and Buskin, Horace Mann House President. Address: 1907 Bolsover, Hou- ston, Texas. HIATT, ROBERT TERRY. A.B. American Literature. 2919 Born: December 6, 1940. Prepared at Washington High School. Faunce House Board of Governors, Class Council, Glee Club, Howard State Mental Hospital Volunteers. Delta Upsilon Secretary. Ad- dress: 1450 Golfview Drive, Cedar Rapids, Towa. HINDERMANN, CRAWFORD ELLIS. AB. Classics. Born. February 27 1941 Prepared at Middlesex School. Classics Club. Psi Upsilon. Address: 3 Worthington Road, New London, Connecticut. HIRSCH, RICHARD LEWIS. A.B. Philosophy. Born: May 4, 1941 Prepared al Columbia Grammer School. Class Cabinet, Brown Charitics Drive. Pi Lambda Phi Recording Secretary. Address: 910 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York. HOAGLAND, THOMAS WALTER. A.B. Economics. Born: February 12, 1941, Prepared at Tabor Academy. Tennis Freshman, Basketball Fresh- man, Golf Varsity. Delta Upsilon. Address: 536 Fair Oaks Ave, Oak Park, Illinois. HODAVANCE, ROBERT S. Address: 178 Tves Street, Providence, Rhode Island. HOGBERG, KENNETH EDWARD. A.B. Economics. Born June 8 1938 Prepared ot Cranston High School. Hockey Freshman. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 75 Grove Avenue, Cranston, Rhode Is- land. HORNYAK, JOHN ROBERT. ARB. Classics. Born: June 24, 1941. Prepared at Lincoln High School. Dean's List, Class Council, President of the Junior Class, President of the Senior Class, Classics Club, Bruin Club, Football Freshman, Captain, Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha President. Address: 2744 Fuller Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. HOWARD, RICHARD A. AB. Political Science. Born: July 6, 1941. Prepared at Milton Academy. Cam- marian Club, Interfraternity Council Treasurer, Soccer Freshman, Lacrosse Club. Psi Upsilon President, Rushing Chairman. Address: Rile Ts- land, Cohasset, Massachusetts. HOWELL, MYRON HAYDEN. AB. English-Italian Literature. Born: January 21, 1942, Prepared at Syracuse Central High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Mario DiSandro Premium in Italian, Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald, Brown Chapter of the American Field Service, Inter-House Council, Italian Club President. Address: 2108 Court Street, Syracuse, New York. 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. HUCKINS, CHARLES ALBERT. A B. Biology. Born: July 4, 1941. Prepared at Paul D. Schreiber High School. Dean's List. Address: Fielding, Towa. HUGHES, GORDON HENRY. A.B. Mathematics- Physics. Born: March 3, 1940, Prepared at Lynd- hurst High School. Cross Country Freshman, In- door and Outdoor Track Freshman, Varsity. Delta Upsilon Athletic Chairman. Address: 428 Page Avenue, Iyndhurst, New Jersey. 260 Charlie Baldwin moved; and apparently his neighbors did not approve of seriousminded students who visit him for early morning consultation. A trash room in the West Quad became an automatic incinerator. Another slide please Mr. Cameron. Babo walked his technicolor ducks on Spring Weekend. The turkey's got one on ice; Wheaton walked their turkey around the Quad in all undue respect. Three pieced smiles appeared nightly in the Ivy Room during rushing scason, until one fraternity, to whose disad- vantage this was, claimed that since other houses were bigger than theirs, Ivy Room rushing was unfair. Non Sequitur. There was one thing we liked about the color radio of WPRO is that it can be turned off promptly. Meehan rink found competition when the lower quad froze over. The Doctor returned after a sabbatical to California. Good luck. Marney really smokes Marlboros. Andrew's house dispensed five gallons of tetanus anti- toxin after Spring Weekend at the Seekonk-some went swimming. We regret that Spring Weekend will never be the same, with students banned from the bonny banks of Loch Seek- onk. We are now forced to splash in puddles in one corner of Aldrich Dexter. Singing in the rain became the word at the football game. It takes sixty-nine steps to go from the basement of Faunce house to the Liber office. The swimming team hag a pool at each home meet to see who can get the most spectators wet . . . Right, Lew? A group of people were arrested en route to Brown from the Haffenrefer estate. The reason the rookie cop gave was that the occupants of the car were college students and that he disliked them. Who said that a grammar school diploma is required to be a Providence cop??? Next year . .. Co-ed Roman baths. Beta pumped gas again this year. The Liber Editor needs a wider rimmed waste basket. Radcliffe girls got into Life while Brown men ooched and aahed and wished Pembrokers could also, but they remained Pembrokers, Kou left the Jug and now Toy Sun's has dishes with personality. Meanwhile the Jug has more grease, and what fun is it when you can understand the guy behind the coun- ter? The band does not know how to play the alma-mater as evidenced by futile attempts at hockey games. However, no one knows the words either. We wonder if Francis Scott Key had anything to do with this tune, too? Caesar returned, unarmed . . . PROVIDENCE PAPER COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1885 160 DORRANCE STREEY PROVIDENCE 1, RHODE ISLAND POST OFFICE BOX 819 Industrial Papers Printing Papers Office Equipment and Supplies IORIO, ROBERT JOHN. A.B. Biology. Born: Septem- ber 25, 1941. Prepared at Cheshire Academy. New- man Club, Biology Club, Pre-medical Society Pub- licity Chairman, Convocation Choir. Address: 2195 Waterbury Road, Cheshire, Connecticut. JABLECKI, LEON EDWARD. A.B. Political Science. Born: March 7, 1942. Prepared at East Provi- dence High School. Address: 223 Don Avenue, Rumford, Rhode Island. JALESKI, EUGENE A. Address: 1027 Constable Drive, Mamaroneck, New York. JOHNSON, GEORGE VICTOR. A.B. Chemistry. Born: 1941. Prepared at Staples High School. Senior Class Council, Inter-House Council Social Chairman. Ad- dress: 10 Winding Lane, Westport, Connecticut. JOHNSON, THOMAS PETER. A.B. Mathematics. Born: August 17, 1941. Prepared at Gardner High School. Dean's List, Mead House Secretary, Jameson House Secretary, Inter-House Council, Cultural Affairs Committee Chairman. Address: 30 Foss Road, Gardner, Massachusetts. JOHNSTON, JEFFREY STOTZ. A.B. International Re- lations. Born: December 18, 1941. Prepared at New- buryport High School. Rowley Scholarship, NROTC. Address: 1 Fenno Drive, Rowley, Massachusetts. JONES, JOHN LEITCH. Sc.B. Physics. Born: May 13, 1941. Prepared at Oxnard High School. Dean's List, Class Cabinet, Brown Key Secretary, Cammarian COLLEGE LAUNDERERS and CLEANSERS, Inc. 223 A Thayer Street BELLE LESTER Where the smile is only surpassed by the service. Club, Canterbury Club, Cross-Country Freshman, Varsity Captain, Track Freshman Captain, Varsity. Theta Delta Chi. Address: Ferry Farms, Annapolis, Maryland. JONES, PATRICK SUYDAM. A.B. Art, History. Born: 1940. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. Platoon Leaders Program, Brown Key, Classics Club, Soccer Co-Captain, Lacrosse Club, Hockey Varsity. Sigma Nu. Address: R.F.D. Far Hills, New Jersey. KABLOTSKY, YALE HOWARD. A.B. Biology Hon- ors. Born: October 12, 1941. Prepared at Classi- cal High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Far- band Labor Zionist Award, Hillel, Biology Club, Dean's List, Pre-Medical Society President. Ad- dress: 120 Meclha Avenue, Springfield, Massachu- setts. KAHN, RICHARD L. Address: 6130 Sunset Lane, Indianapolis, Indiana. KATSKY, DAVID L. A.B. Political Science. Prepared at Lawrence High School. Track Freshman, Var- sity. Address: 475 Arlington Road, Cedarhurst, New Hampshire. KATZIVE, DAVID H. AB. Art. Born: March 23, 1942. Prepared at Great Neck High School. Sphinx Club, Sock and Buskin, Brownbrokers, Production Workshop, Brown Outing Club Publicity Director, Astronomy Club, Swimming Freshman, Baseball Freshman. Address: 41 Lansing Drive, Delmar, New York. KAUFMAN, EDWARD ROBERT. A.B. History. Born: August 6, 1941. Prepared at Longmeadow High School. Tower Club, Brown Daily Herald Associ- ate Sports Editor. Address: 198 Converse Street, Longmeadow, Massachusetts. KAUFMANN, JOHN WILLIAM. A.B. History. Born: October 6, 1941. Prepared at Mount Herman School. Brown Daily Herald, Glee Club, Brown Charities Drive, Olney House President, Wrestling Fresh- man, Varsity. Tower Club House Chairman. Address: 90 Meadowbrook Road, Longmecadow, Massachusetts. KEITH, ROBERT MARSHALL. A.B. Sociology. Born: December 14, 1940. Prepared at Jonathan Dayton Regional High School. Wrestling Freshman Captain Varsity. Delta Tau Delta. Rushing Chairman. Address: 77 Springbrook Road, Springfield, New Jersey. KEK, HARVEY. AB. Interfraternal Relations. Psy- choceramics. Poetry Reading. Varsity Rushing. Natator. Pi Delta Epsilon. Sissler Hill, Athol, Mass. KELLY, DORRANCE T. A.B. Biology. Born: January 21, 1939. Prepared at John R. Buchtel High School. Cammarian Club, Class Cabinet Secretary, Base- ball Varsity. Phi Gamma Delta, Address: 190 Waterman Strect, Providence, Rhode Island. KFOURY, JAMES F. A.B. Mathematics. Born: April 28, 1941. Prepared at Phillips Andover Academy. Newman Club, Soccer Freshman, Varsity Co- 26 Captain. Delta Tau Delta Rushing Chairman. Address: 230 Highland Road, Andover, Massa- chusetts. KIENE, RICHARD HOTCHKISS. A.B. Sociology. Born: March 5, 1941. Prepared at Pembroke-Coun- try Day School. Brown Charities Drive, Brown Yacht Club, Conservative League, Classics Club, Track Freshman. Sigma Chi Social Chairman. Address: 5835 High Drive, Mission Hills, Shawnee- Mission, Kansas. KING, JEFFREY PHILIP. A.B. Mathematics. Born: September 18, 1941. Prepared at Bristol High School. University Scholarship, Deans List, As- tronomy Club. Address: 182 Beyhs Avenue, Bristol, Connecticut. KING, JOSEPH PAUL. A.B. Sociology. Born: November 14, 1941. Prepared at The Kew-Forest School. Glee Club Freshman, Yacht Club, Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil. Sigma Chi House Chairman, Social Chairman, Vice-President, President. Address: 69-02 Dart- mouth Street, Forest Hills, New York. KIRK, ROBERT MARK. A.B. Political Science Hon- ors. Born: October 15, 1941. Prepared at Grosse Pointe High School. Deans List, Eastern Michigan Brown Club Scholar, Brown Daily Herald, Brown Youth Guidance, W.B.R.U. Address: 1696 Hamp- ton Road, Grosse Pointe, Michigan. KLEIN, MARVIN BERTRAND. A.B., Sc.B. Engineer- ing. Born: February 13, 1942, Prepared at The Pingrv School. Dean's List, Tower Club, Brown Film Society Treasurer. Address: 181 High Street, Perth Amboy, New Jersey. KLEINHOFS, AIVARS. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: May 1941. Prepared at Lyman Hall High School. Uni- versity Scholarship, Fencing, German Club, Brown Daily Herald. Address: Cheshire Road, Walling- ford, Connecticut. KNOX, FRANCIS. Address: 814 Woodsdale Road, Wil- mington, Delaware. 262 Suddenly John Hay's bust disappeared and a huge white monstrosity replaced it. The white elephant belonged to Yaleas the rumor went. John meanwhile was safely locked in the vault during the Bust Liftings. Andrews house is offering an extension course, based on compiled accounts of past cases, in How to Bag an exam. Freshman Week should be run by the Brown Key. When they were relieved of the privilege, there was a curious pattern of opinions as to how Freshman Week should be run. It was said that vigilante committees were too harsh. Try the mature approach, U.H. said. The new order was as unpalatable as an uncooked egg. Tee-hee, sixty-three was the result. Since then the freshman classes have received a diluted impression of what Brown is and has been. Igno- rance breeds indifference. The major concern of the Key lies in the realm of Brown traditions. Restoring Freshman Week to them would probably revive traditions at Brown. One experience which involved many of us over a period of four years was the thoroughness of a certain history professor, This is my opinion of the Civil War. You don't have to accept it if you don't want to; but in view of the facts 1 don't see how you can come to any other conclu- sion! Laundronauting replaced the worn out thrill of jamming record numbers of students into phone booths. It's probably an indication of our generation's return to the rugged indi- vidualism of a former era. We were disappointed that Dr. Keeney was unable to at- tend the Shrove Tuesday party. The Conservative League wants to be recognized. They have planted trees in the West Quad courts. It's beginning to look livable. Why does the BDH always jump head over heels in five column headlines every time Brown is mentioned in the newspaper? One alumnus wrote to the chairman of the biology de- partment requesting the re-establishment of easy biology courses. Describing the value of gut courses as a source of pleasant alumni memories, he lamented rumors that the com- parative anatomy course was no longer a snap. After all, the amoeba hasn't changed. Why should the biology course be more difficult? While Beta retained its traditional gate, A.D. acquired a parking lot. Alumni. and faculty members attended a cocktail party at a fraternity; results; eight windows broken, one large oil painting wrecked, two lamps broken, one mantle piece splin- tered, and one couch burned. i Mark Dabiv Lo, Gentlemen's Apparel Open 9 A M. to 6 P.M.Friday til 9 217 Thayer St. Opposite Tunnel 421-3622 Savoy Beverages for any occasion Located next to Brown Campus at 67 Benevolent Street E. P. ANTHONY INC, Apothecary Shop Angell Thayer Streets since 1895 Lic 225 The SPU, Student Peace Union, was accused of plagiarism by the SPA, Society for the Prevention of Automobiles. The latter organization maintained that automobile accidents claim more lives annually than nuclear tests and thus should be the major concern of all thinking Americans. A visiting professor from the University of Adelaide in Australia put ten cents in a Providence phone to call England, failed to make the connection and was returned twenty-five cents, leading him to comment that this was indeed an Af- fluent Society. When the University announced its new housing regula- tion designed to force the departure from the campus of most of the fraternities, the latter responded by hoisting their flags. A day later classified advertisments appeared in the BDH: Wanted35 fillers. Apply Beta Theta Pi, Facing im- pending eviction Bronson House seeks merger with weak fraternity. Contact dorm president. And Zeta Psi placed a KOLOC, FREDERICK J. Address: 101 Harris Street, North Adams, Massachusetts. KORHUMEL, LEE A. Address: Box 370, Lake Forest, Ilinois. KORNFUEHRER, AXEL. A.B. International Relations Honors. Born: December 10, 1940. Prepared at Hopkins High School. Phi Beta Kappa, Deans List, German Club President, Russian Club President. Address: 130 15th Avenue North, Hopkins, Min- nesota. KOVALCHICK, JOSEPH. A B. Economics. Born: Feb- ruary 19, 1941. Prepared at Indiana Joint High School. Interfraternity Council, Brown Charities Drive, Football Freshman. Delta Tau Delta. Ad- dress: 296 South 7th Street, Indiana, Pennsylvania. KRAWIEC, STEVEN STACK. A.B. Biology. Born: November 4, 1941. Prepared at Saratoga Springs High School. Dean's List, Biology Club. Delta Phi President, Corresponding Secretary. Address: 20 George Street, Saratoga Springs, New York. KROIN, ROBERT IRA. A.B. English Literature Hon- ors. Born: June 17, 1941. Prepared at Teaneck High School. Francis Wayland Scholarship, Deans List, WBRU, Tower Club, Crew Freshman. Ad- dress: 529 Rutland Avenue, Teaneck, New Jersey. KROUSE, ROGER LYNN. A.B. History. Born: June 22, 1941. Prepared at Rumson Regional High School. Deans List, Football, Track Freshman. Delta Upsilon. Address: Clover Lane, Rumson, New Jersey. KUZNESOF, PAUL MARTIN. Sc.B. Chemistry Hon- ors. Born: August 13, 1941. Prepared at New Bedford High School. Dean's List, Crew Fresh- man. Address: 1101 Marseille Drive, Miami Beach, Florida. LABOUISSE, SAMUEL S. Address: 201 Brown Street, Providence, Rhode Island. LADEROUTE, LAURIN LEROY JR. A.B. Interna- national Relations Honors. Born: November 29, 1941. Prepared at Wellington C. Mepham High School. Proctor and Gamble Scholarship, Deans List, University Christian Association Vice Presi- dent, Brown Youth Guidance, Charities Drive. Address: 2 Croydon Drive, Bellmore, Long Island, New York. EVERY DAY MORE FAMILIES HEAT WITH GAS PROVIDENCE GAS COMPANY 263 LAGSDIN, RICHARD ANDREW. A.B. American Liter- ature. Born: October 10, 1938. Prepared at Pearl River High School. Sigma Nu. Address: 172 Ann Street, Pearl River, New York. LAINE, RICHARD. LaMACCHIA, ROBERT ALAN. Sc.B., A.B. Engineer- ing. Born: April 25, 1941. Prepared at Loomis School, Windsor, Connecticut. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, ASTM Student Award, Hillel, Brown Engineering Society Secretary, Inter-House Council. Address: 11 Mayflower Drive, Bridgeport, Connecticut. LANE, CARL EDWARD. A.B. Biology. Born: Jan- vary 21, 1942. Prepared at Longmeadow High LAWYER, C. MARTIN. A.B. Political Science. Born; July 15, 1941. Prepared at William Penn High School. Navy Scholarship, Russian Club Publicity Chairman, Brown Charities Drive Executive Board, Erodelphian Society, Cheerleader, Tennis Manager Freshman. Sigma Chi. Address: 2928 Tanglewood Way, Sarasota, Florida. LEE, WYNN EDWARD. A.B. French Honors. Born: July 31, 1942. Prepared at Francis Hammond High School. Dean's List. Address: 311 Monroe Drive, Alexandria, Virginia. LeMONTE, BURGES AVALON. A.B. Chemistry. Born: January 21, 1942. Prepared at Greenwich High School. Pi Delta Epsilon, NROTC, Liber Brunensis P ' JAcKmN i-6000 e ; e 6 A?Aade ngam' School. Newman Club, Biology Club, Brown Char- ities Drive, Delta Tau Delta Social Chairman. Address: 457 Converse Street, Longmeadow, Mas- sachusetts. LANZETTA, DANTE J. Address: 9317 Glenlock Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. LAUDATI, ROBERT D. A.B. Economics. Born: June 1, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Newman Club, Liber Brunensis Sales Manager, Crew Freshman. Phi Delta Theta Community Service Chairman. Address: 335 Wayland Avenue, Prov- idence, Rhode Island. LAWSON, H. BLAINE. Address: 1635 Powell Street, Morristown, Pennsylvania. 264 Editor-in-Chief, Navy Drill Team, Rifle Team, Manning Chapel Choir. Delta Phi Ritual Chairman. Address: 78 Sears Road, Wayland, Massachusetts. LEVINE, MARC STANLEY. A.B. English Literature. Born: February 24, 1941. Prepared at Francis T. Maloney High School. Bruin Club, Faunce House Board of Governors, Blood Drive Committee, Brown Daily Herald. Address: 76 Carpenter Av- enue, Meriden, Connecticut. LEVY, WILLIAM 1. A.B. Biology. Born: July 24, 1941. Prepared at Western Reserve Academy. Hillel, Track Freshman, Tower Club Rushing Chair- man. Address: 10295 Collins Avenue, Miami Beach, Florida. LEWITT, P. J. A.B. English Literature. Born: Febru- ary 26, 1941. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Brown Review Poetry Editor, Soccer Freshman, Skiing Varsity. Address: 24 Chester Street, Nashua, New Hampshire. LIBBY, WILLIAM PARKER. A.B. Economics. Born: January 23, 1942. Prepared at Concord High School. Cross Country, Track Freshman, Varsity. Theta Delta Chi. Address: Revolutionary Road, Concord, Massachusetts. LICARI, JOSEPH A. Address: 65 Jones Hill Road, West Haven, Connecticut. LUCIER, ERNEST R. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: July 28, 1940. Prepared at Warwick Veterans Memori- Diamonds and Fine Jewelry China and Crystal Cosmetics Sterling and Silverplate Leathergoods Exclusive Gifts Watches and Clocks Stationery and Importations Wayland SquawN tch Hill-Garden ity F. B. Thurber President, Brown 05 W. B. Thurber Treasurer, Brown 15 T. G. Thurber, Brown '46 WiLLIAMS 2-4200 Hillside Motor Lodoe ROUTES 2 AND 3 2 MILES FROM PROVIDENCE 107 NEW LONDON AVE. CRANSTON 10, R. I sign in its window: ROOMS, B.C. Keeney Realtors, 55 Power Street. Our freshman week march on Pembroke was led by a rather intellectually-oriented cheerleader; lead: Give me a 63! refrain: 63! lead: Give me a 63! refrain: 63! lead: What have you got? answer: One hundred and twenty-six. It was rumored that the alcoholic Beverages Commission had hired student spies on campus in an effort to tighten the enforcements of Rhode Island's liquor rules. The pledges of one fraternity stole the state flag from the Maryland State Police Headquarters. The Durg remained valiant and received a new command. Babbo returned . . . again. al High School. Plantations House Committee, Brown University Student section of the Institute of the Aecrospace Sciences Chairman, Wrestling Freshman. Address: 93 Broad Street, Warwick, Rhode Island. LUDLOW, JAMES MEEKER. A.B. International Re- lations. Born: July 22, 1941. Preparcd at The Pibgry School. Glee Club, Bruinaires, Jabberwocks, Sock and Buskin, Charities Drive, Lacrosse Var- sity. Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 22 Hobart Road, Summit, New Jersey. L YONS, JONATHAN SPENCER. AB Human Bi ology Honors. Born: March 29, 1941. Prepared at Columbia Grammer School. Francis Wayland Scholarship, Deans List, Brown Daily Herald Editorial Chairman, Inter-House Council, Student Court, Hope College Social Chairman. Address: 175 West 79th Street, New York, New York. MACADAMS, ALAN LOGUE. A.B. Spanish. Born: January 7, 1942. Prepared at North Haven High School. General Dynamics Award, Yacht Club Treasurer, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Uni- versity Press, Baseball Kappa Sigma Scerctaryl Address: 72 Edgewater Road, North Haven, Con- necticut. MACAULAY, PETER S. MACDONALD, BRUCE R. Address: 84 Clinton Street, Glastonbury, Connecticut. MAGEE, PETER Van VHERDEN. A.B. History. Born: May 12, 1938. Prepared at Hoosac School. Brown Daily Herald, Yacht Club, Classics Club, Soccer Freshman, Rugby. Psi Upsilon President, First Vice President. Address: 405 Pueblo Way, Scotts- dale, Arizona. MAINEN, MICHAEL WILLIAM. A.B. Human Bi- ology Honors. Born: 1941. Prepared at Baltimore City College. Dean's List. Pi Lambda Phi. Ad- dress: 7224 Park Heights Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland. MANDELL, CHARLES HERSCH. A.B. International Relations Honors. Born: April 5, 1942. Pre- pared at Classical High School. Dean's List, Tower Club, Political Science Club, International Rela- tions Club. Address: 50 Oakland Avenue, Prov- idence, Rhode Island. MASLANKA, ROBERT DANIEL. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: 1941. Prepared at New Bedford High School. Brown University Scholarship, Dean's List, Chem- istry Club, American Field Services Committee. Address: 16 Homer Strect, New Bedford, Massa- chusetts. MASON, DAVID HAMILTON. AB. Geology. Born: July 13, 1941. Prepared at Summit High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Alpha Phi Omega, Crew Freshman. Address: 37 Valley View Avenue, Summit, New Jersey. MASON, ENOCH WELLFORD, JR. A.B. Economics. Born: August 15, 1942. Prepared at Germantown Friends School. Freshman Octet, Glee Club, Soccer Freshman, Varsity. Sigma Chi Pledge Trainer. 265 Address: 3457 Queen Lane, Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania. MASTIN, DOUGLAS WORTENDYKE. A.B. Mathe- matics-Economics. Born: August 13, 1941. Prepared at Midland Park High School. Deans List, Canti- cum, Glee Club, Sock and Buskin. Address: 339 Wearimus Road, Hohokus, New Jersey. MATZKE, ROBERT R. JR. A.B. History. Born: Janu- ary 31, 1942. Prepared at The William Penn Char- ter School. Soccer Freshman, Sailing Team, Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 3029 West Queen Lane, Phil- adelphia, Pennsylvania. MAVIS, JOHN ANTHONY. A.B. Mathematics. Born: May 3, 1941. Prepared at Hartford Public High School. NROTC Scholarship, Jacob L. Fox Founda- tion Scholarship, Dean's List, Newman Club, Ever- ett House Treasurer, Brunavians. Address: 171 Washington Street, Hartford, Connecticut. MAYER, PETER C. Address: 2401 West Cedar Lane, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. MAYNE, STEPHEN STURDIVANT. A.B. History. Born: September 17, 1941. Prepared at The Thacher School. Class Council, Liber Brunensis, Political Science Club, Bascball Freshman, Rugby. Sigma Nu. Address: 426 Dorchester Road, San Mateo, California. McCAMISH, JOHN NATHAN. A.B. Political Science. Born: December 18, 1941. Prepared at Alamo Heights High School. Liber Brunensis Production Manager, Mu Sigma Zcta President, Golf Var- sity. Sigma Nu House Manager. Address: 705 Ivy Lane, San Antonio, Texas. McCLATCHEY, DEVEREAUX FORE. A.B. Amer- ican Literature. Born: May 16, 1941. Prepared at Henry Grady High School. Dean's List. Sigma Nu Treasurer. Address: 66 Avery Drive, Atlanta, Georgia. McCORD, ROBERT GARDNER. A.B. Biology. Born: August 7, 1941. Prepared at North High School. German Club. Address: 1333 North Avenue, Sheboy- gan, Wisconsin. McDONALD, DANIEL. A.B. Economics. Born: Septem- ber 18, 1941. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfec High School. Solomon E. Summerfield Scholarship, New- man Club, Football Freshman, Varsity. Phi Kappa Psi Recording Secretary. Address: 116 Fulton Street, Fall River, Massachusetts. McDONALD, PETER GARWOOD. A.B. Botany. Born: May 30, 1940. Prepared at Thacher School. Brown Daily Herald, Brown Charities Drive, Ski Club, Ski Team Varsity. Address: 11626 Military Lane, Port- land, Oregon. McGEE, ROBERT THOMAS. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: December 29, 1940. Prepared at Needham Senior High School. Brunavian Society, Cross Country Freshman, Track Freshman, Varsity. Theta Delta Chi Treasurer. Address: 13 Emerson Road, Need- ham, Massachusetts. MCcINTYRE, BRUCE RENDALL. A.B. International 266 The bear found the ice slippery at Meehan. Things were a bit warm at a Kappa Sig party and the band, plus a few brothers, decided to cool off. It's been many years since we've had a Providence to New York Express, non-stop-gotcha . . . An empty taxi was standing in front of Toy Sun's one cold, wintry evening, with its engine running. A couple of Brown students, returning from Pembroke could not resist and hopped in. Pushing the flag down one student asked the other, Where to? Eventually they found their way to Beta Gate where they left itwith its engine running and its meter ticking. Rooms got filled with paper from floor to ceiling, and with water until leaks prevented the water level from rising any further. We regret we weren't invited to the annual Sigma Chi rushing party; and we missed Kappa Sig's New Year's party for freshmen in Short Hills, N.J. May 1962: The Sigma Chi's were royally served with their favorite dish, turkey, as swarms of brothers from neighboring fraternities drifted up behind the turkey-bearing DU's. Ar- riving at the east side of the enemy fortress, one of them stepped back, poised, and swung the white-feathered bird through the Chis' lounge window. Much to everyone's ex- pectations, the Chis did not appreciate their mascot's igno- minious entrance and rejected it from the same window. The poor bird was tossed back and forth until the rushing chair- man from Sigma Chi came out to calm things down; but he was too well known for stirring things up. The Friar scowled, and the crowd dispersed. Relations. Born: October 4, 1941, Prepared at Wellesley High School. Hockey Freshman, Varsity. Phi Gamma Delta Social Chairman. Address: 12 River Bend Drive, South Natick, Massachusetts. McKENNA, ROBERT EMMETT. A.B. Economics. Born: May 31, 1941. Prepared at York High School. Brown University Scholarship, Caddy Schol- arship, Golf Varsity, Captain. Phi Kappa Psi Treasurer. Address: 77 Woodbridge Road, York, Maine. McLAUGHLIN, GREGORY D. A.B. French. Born: October 16, 1940. Prepared at Hebron Academy. Hockey Varsity. Delta Phi Pledge Master. Ad- dress: 67 Old Oaken Bucket Road, Scituate, Massa- chusetts. McMAHON, JOHN WILLIAM. A.B. Economics. Born: February 27, 1942. Prepared at Walt Whitman High School. Brown University Scholarship, Class Cabi- net, Hockey Freshman, Golf Varsity, Soccer Varsity, Rugby. Phi Kappa Psi Corresponding Secretary. Address: 11 Sheep Pasture Lane, Hunt- ington, New York. McMANUS, WILLIAM ELLIS. A.B. Chemistry. Born: January 24, 1941. Prepared at Shelter Island High School. Basketball Freshman. Delta Upsilon. Ad- dress: Box 312, Shelter Island, New York. MEEKER, JON HARON. A.B. Sociology. Born: Jan- uary 19, 1941. Prepared at Westhampton High School. Brown Key, Football Freshman, Varsity, Rugby Captain. Phi Gamma Delta. Address: Brook Road, Westhampton Beach, New York. MEENAN, PETER. A.B. Political Science. Born: No- vember 5, 1941. Prepared at Tabor Academy. Bas- ketball Freshman, Baseball Freshman, Varsity. Delta Upsilon. Address: 655 Park Avenue, New York, New York. MENSHER, JOHN HOWARD. A.B. American Litera- ture. Born: September 11, 1941. Prepared at Brooklyn Friends School. Glee Club, Canticum Club, Librarian, Tower Club. Address: 9 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, New York. MERK. DAVID JAMES. A.B. Philosophy. Born: July 24, 1942. Prepared at Bound Brook High School. Dean's List, Proctor, Classics Club, German Club, Exam period crept up on us. The hot weather kept us drowsy. Patios were filled with white bodies prone before their yellow god burning in the sky. Studying was postponed. These were big days for the rays. At the end of our seventh semester many of us were too busy to reflect that it was almost the last chance we would have to applaud for a professor. Bradford the Great dwells at the Crystal Tap; the P.A. Club went local, and the Corner Tap was tilted by Cisco. The marine Sgt. was completely outclassed as the Annie Get Your Guns from Pembroke took over the rifle range. His remark: If only I could get them into uniform. A newspaper reporter in Minnesota gave a pre-season foot- ball rating and placed Brown's team as number one in the Ivy League. How did this happen? He rated the teams alpha- betically. Lloyd's king size sandwiches 119 waterman street corner of brook TE 1-9242 Rifle Club Treasurer, Sphinx Club, Class Council, Cammarian Club, Inter-House Council, Rugby. Address: 211 Baltimore Avenue, Point Pleasant Beach, New Jersey. MESSELOFF, JONATHAN D. Address: 61 Tenth Street, Providence, Rhode Island. MESSING, GILBERT SCOTT. A.B. Chemistry. Born: June 17. 1941. Prepared at Choate School. Cam- marian Club, Class Council, Baseball Freshman. Kappa Sigma Social Chairman, Vice President. Address: 52 Joanna Way, Short Hills, New Jersey. MEYER, RONALD LEWIS. A.B. German Literature. Born: September 28, 1941. Prepared at Andover Academy. Caesar Misch Prize German, German Club. Address: 139 Overbrook Drive, Wellesley, Massachusetts. MILLER, RICHARD PAUL. A.B. Economics. Born: August 30, 1941. Prepared at Arlington High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive. Ad- dress: 415 North Patton, Arlington Heights, Illinois. MILLER, ROBERT B. MISCHKE, DONALD WALTER. A.B. Biology. Born: December 15, 1941. Prepared at Warwick Veterans High School. Outing Club. Address: 43 Sevilla Avenue, Warwick, Rhode Island. MISHKIN, BRUCE LESLIE. A.B. History Honors. Born: April 1, 1942. Prepared at Bay Shone High School. Dean's List, Sphinx Club, Brown Daily Herald., Intramural Athletic Council, Crew Fresh- 267 man, Wrestling Freshman, Varsity. MOHLER, JOHN ADDISON. A.B. English Linguistics. Born: September 16, 1936. Prepared at Brooks School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald, Convo- cation Choir, Liber Brunensis, Young Republicans Club Treasurer, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 153 Putnam Park, Greenwich, Connecticut. MONGEAU, ABBOTT ALLEN. A.B. Psychology. Born: February 26, 1942. Prepared at Grafton High School. Brown Youth Guidance. Address: MONIZ, J. WEBB. Sc.B. Physics. Born: May 8, 1941. Prepared at Middletown High School. Corporation Scholarship, Dean's List, Rifle Club. Address: Valley View Drive, Middlefield, Connecticut. MONTECALVO, RAYMOND ANTHONY. Sc.B. En- gineering. Born: August 17, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Brown Scholarship, Dean's List, Brown Engineering Society. Address: 52 Lowell Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. MORGAN, RICHARD H. Sc.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: 1941. Prepared at Pennsburg High School. Dean's List, Sphinx Club, Band, Brass Ensemble, Brown Christian Fellowship. Address: 215 Cubalea Avenue, Morristown, Pennsylvania. MORRIS, ROBERT HALSTEAD. A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born: 1941. Prepared at Wellesley High School. AFROTC, Crew Freshman, Phi Gamma Delta Historian. Address: 68 Beechwood Road, Wellesley, Massachusetts. MUELLER, MARTIN SCHAFFNER. A.B. Political Science. Born: October 10, 1941. Prepared at The Choate School. Wrestling Freshman. Delta Phi. Address: Weinfelden, Switzerland. MUIR, RICHARD DeGROVE. A.B. History. Born: October 9, 1941. Prepared at Plainedge High School. Brown Scholarship, NROTC, Class Council, Class Secretary, Baseball Freshman. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 93 Windhorst Avenue, Bethpage, New York. The bear leaked and the steps collapsed. 268 MURRAY, STEPHEN. A.B. Political Science. Born: January 27 1943 Prepared at The Birch Wathen School, Dean's List, Sphinx Club, Cammarian Club, Class Cabinet, Inter House Council, Fencing Team. Address: 415 East 52nd Street, New York, New York. MYERS, DAVID LINDSAY. A.B. International Re- lations. Born: March 4, 1941. Prepared at The Mercersburg Academy. Class Council, Political Science Club, Lutheran Club, Faunce House Board of Governors, Supper Club. Phi Delta Theta Alumni Secretary. Address: 68 North Second Street, Newport, Pennsylvania. NACHBAR, ROBERT S. A.B. Economics. Born: May 17, 1941. Prepared at Massapequa High School. Crew Freshman. Delta Tau Delta. Address: 2 Sun- set Boulevard, Massapequa, New York. NEGARO, CHARLES JOSEPH. A.B. Engineering. Born: March 7, 1941. Prepared at Crosby High School. Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive, Interfraternity Council. Pi Lambda Phi Corresponding Scribe. Address: 579 Watertown Avenue, Waterbury, Connecticut. NELSON, RICHARD NELS. A.B. American Civiliza- tion. Honors. Born: July 23, 1941. Prepared at King Philip Regional High School. United States Steelworkers Scholarship, Dean's List, Cammarian Club, Flying Club, Ski Team, Rugby. Kappa Sigma. Address: 267 South Street, Wrentham, Massachu- setts. NELSON, ROBERT NORTON. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: November 1, 1941. Prepared at Sleepy Hollow High School. Chemistry Club Vice President, Sock and Buskin, Production Workshop. Address: 37 De- Vries Avenue, North Tarrytown, New York. NEZER, MARC MOSHE. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: 1936. Prepared at Bezek High School. Sphinx, Deans List, History Instructor. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 51 Glendale Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. NICHOLSON, JOHN R. A.B. Political Science. Born: January 7, 1941. Prepared at Grosse Pointe High School. Brown Key, Football, Swimming, Tennis Freshman, Swimming Manager Varsity, Squash Club. Sigma Nu House Manager, Recorder. Ad- dress: 1017 Cadieux Road, Grosse Pointe, Michi- gan. NICKERSON, PETER AYERS. A.B. Biology. Born: February 19, 1941. Prepared at Harwich High School. Biology Club. Address: Bank Street, Har- wich, Massachusetts. NICKERSON, ROBERT ENNONS. A.B. Psychology. Born: November 29, 1941. Providence Country Day School. WBRU, Yacht Club Social Chairman. Address: 20 Derman Street, Rumford, Rhode Island. NOLTON, JOHN S. Address: 626 Park Road, West Hartford, Connecticut. 75 years ago, George S. Parker started from scratch other people's scratchy, leaky pens drove him to invent good ones George S Parker was a telegraphy teacher. Like most teachers of his day he was somewhat underpaid. To make ends meet he sold fountain pens. And because he was an honest man, he personally repaired every pen that leaked. Too many of them did, so he invented the famous Lucky Curve . The Lucky Curvelike many good ideas was asimple one. All it involved was curving and lengthening the tiny channel that fed ink to the point. The result was a little extra capillary action that prevented the crude fountain pens of the day from turning gushy. Seventy five vears and hundreds of patents later, Parker inventiveness is represented by the remarkable Parker 61. The pen that fills itself through the magic of capillary action-drinks enough ink in 10 seconds to write for hours. The pen that can make its own ink out of water. The . pen that's virtually leakproofeven in a jel at 40,000 feet. The pen with a choice of 15 points, all solid 14K gold. The pen that writes smoothly, effortlessly. At $15.00 and up it's the finest writ- ing instrument you can buy. $ PARKERAt 75 years Maker ol the world's most wanted pens GEORGE S. PARKERhe started a revolution in writing -xyxxmxxg The remarkable Parker 61 O 1963 c'P THE PARKER PEN COMPANY, JANESVILLE, WISCONSIN, U.S.A. Builders of the New University Library E. Turgeon Construction Co., Inc. Providence, R. 1. NOY, THOMAS WOLFF. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 9, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Exeter Academy. German Club, Soccer, Wrestling, Lacrosse Fresh- man, Varsity. Delta Phi. Address: 61 Saint Ours Road, Quebec, Canada. OELLRICH, WILLIAM GEORGE. A.B. Economics. Born: April 11, 1941. Prepared at Park Ridge High School. Dean's List, Undergraduate Friends at Brown, Basketball Freshman Varsity, Baseball Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha Correspondent. Ad- dress: 105 Mill Road, Park Ridge, New Jersey. OLSON, JR., WALTER J. AB.S.B. Electrical Engi- neering. Born: July 27, 1941. Prepared at New Hampton School. Dean's List, Brown Engineering Society, Brown Marching Band, Freshman Council, Canterbury Choir. Address: 21 Sunset Terrace, Wayne, New Jersey. ORDOVER, JEFFRY. A.B. English Expression Hon- ors. Born: June 13, 1941. Prepared at Great Neck High School. Robinson Potter Denn Premium, Dean's List, Brown Review, Hubris, Brown Daily Herald, Production Workshop. Address: 8 Strath- more Road, Great Neck, New York. ORENSTEIN, BARRY H. A.B. Philosophy. Born: March 25, 1942. Prepared at New Hampton School. Brown Glec and Perlud Union, Manager of Bas- ketball Team. Address: 660 ILowell Street, Law- rence, Massachusetts. PAKSARIAN, J. PAUL. A.B. Russian Honors. Born: 270 February 27, 1942. Prepared at Franklin High School. Deans List, Brown Daily Herald, Sock and Buskin, Russian Club. Address: 555 West Central Street, Franklin, Massachusetts. PALMER, GEOFFREY HOLKINS. A.B. Art. Born: March 29, 1941. Prepared at Westminster School. Glee Club Publicity Manager, Bruinaires, Chorale. Phi Gamma Delta. Address: North Main Street, Suffield, Connecticut. Turtleback Road, New Canaan, Connecticut. PALMISCIANO, WILLIAM LOUIS. A.B. Economics. Born: July 8, 1942. Prepared at Joseph Case High School. Brown Daily Herald Production Manager, Neuman Club Vice President. Address: 3 Cole Street, Swansea, Massachusetts. PANCIERA, JEFFREY JAMES. B.A. French. Born: December 5, 1941. Prepared at Cheshire High School. Scholarship, University Christian Associa- tion Student Representative for Workcamps, Glee Club, Convocation Choir, French Club Treasurer. Address: 394 Oak Avenue, Cheshire, Connecticut. PANDOLFO, RICHARD MICHAEL. A.B. Economics. Born: September 8, 1941. Prepared at Middletown High School. First Albert-Bushnell-Tohnson Prize in French, Dean's List, Liber Brunensis Publications Sales Manager. Phi Delta Theta Community Service Chairman, Scholastic Chairman. Address: 10 Griffin Place, Middletown, Connecticut. PAOLINO, THOMAS J. JR. Address: 66 East Hill Drive, Cranston, Rhode Island. PAPA, JOSEPH ANTHONY. A.B. Human Biology. Born: July 17, 1940. Prepared at Lynbrook High School. Basketball Freshman, Bascball Freshman and Varsity. Theta Delta Chi. Second Vice Pres- ident. Address: 38 Leaman Place, Lynbrook, New York. PAPADOPOULOS, PETER ANTIS. A.B. Mathematics. Born: May 27, 1941. Prepared at Warwick Veterans Memorial High School. Plantations House Committee. Address: 66 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island. PAQUIN, MICHAEL L. S.B.AM. Applied Mathemat- ics. Born: August 4, 1941. Prepared at Glastonbury High School. Deans List. Theta Delta Chi Record- GO FORTH WITH o BE7 Sl 2 CONFIDENCE, r 108 WATERMAN STREET PROVIDENCE ing Secretary. Address: 6 Longhillter, New Haven 15, Connecticut. PARK, DANIEL B. A.B. Sociology. Born: June 22, 1941. Prepared at Ela Vernon High School. Ad- dress: Box 202, Route 2, Long Grove, Illinois. PARKER, FRED ALBERT. A.B. Political Science. Born: April 24, 1941. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. NROTC, Cammarion Club, Political Science Club President, Interfraternity Represent- ative, Intramural Instructors Staff, Brunauians, Cross-Country Freshman, Basketball Freshman. Theta Delta Chi Pledgemaster. Address: 34 Howard Parkway, New Rochelle, New York. PARKER, WINSLOW H. Address: Cherry Hill Road, Reisterstown, Maryland. PATTERSON, WILLIAM RANDOLPH III. S.B. Phys- ics. Born: 1941. Prepared at Pleasantville High School. Second Prize Caesar Misch German Contest, Dean's List, German Club, Sock and Buskin, Pro- duction Workshop. Address: Old Mount Kisco Road, Armonk, New York. PAUL, RICHARD HAYDEN. A.B. History. Born: November 23, 1940. Prepared at Worcester Acad- emy. Brown Key, Swimming Varsity Co-Captain. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 15 Kensington Road, Worcester 2, Massachusetts. PEAL, CHARLES WAYNE. S.B. Engineering. Born: January 6, 1942. Prepared at Cheshire High School. Okonite Corporation Scholar, Brown Engineering Society, AIEE-TRE. Phi Delta Theta Cultural Af- fairs Chairman, Historian. Address: 1014 Summit Road, Cheshire, Connecticut. 27 PEELER, JOHN ALLEN. A B. Political Science. Born: March 11, 1942 Prepared at Hanover Park High School. Scholarship, University Christian Associa- tion, House President, Political Science Discussion Club. Address: Overlook Road, Route 12, Mor- ristown, New Jersey. PEKELIS, HAIM ALEXANDER. A.B. Sociology, An- thropology. Born: September 16, 1941. Prepared at Mamaroneck High School. Mario Di Sandro Pre- mium 1960, Brown Charities Drive, Basketball Freshman and Varsity, Rugby. Address: 196 E 75th Street, New York City, New York. PENNOYER, JOHN CHRISTIAN. A B. History. Born: March 30, 1941. Prepared at Hingham High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance President, Glee Club, Freshman Week Committee, Council on Community Organization. Address: 115 Bowen Street, Providence, Rhode Island. PHILLIPS, ROBERT OSBORN. AB. International Relations. Born: May 13, 1941. Prepared at Taft School. NROTC, Student Resident Adviser, Faunce House Board of Governors, Freshman Week Com- mittee Chairman, Brown Charities Drive Executive Board Chairman, Brown Daily Herald News Board, NROTC Drill Team, Bruin Club. Sigma Chi Pledgemaster. Address: 62 Taunton Road, 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 11A Seekonk, Mass. August 12, 1941. Prepared at Chatham High School. Young Republicans Vice President, Wind Ensemble, Bronson House Vice President, Convo- cation Choir, Brown Orchestra, Brown Marching Band, Brown Charities. Address: West Larchmont Drive, Rural Delivery 1, Colt's Neck, New Jersey. PERELMAN, DALE RICHARD. A.B. English Litera- ture. Born: January 12, 1942. Prepared at Mercers- burg Academy. Brown Daily Herald Business Board, Soccer Freshman and Varsity. Delta Phi. Address; 24 Fairhill Drive, New Castle, Pennsyl- vania. PERRY, STEPHEN H. A.B. Sociology Honors. Born: 072 Scarsdale, New York. PILAT, CHRISTOPHER RAMSAY. A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born: September 5, 1940. Prepared at Wil- liston Academy. Beta Theta Pi Corresponding Sec- retary. Address: 74 Fairway Avenue, Rye, New York. PITASSI, DAVID ALBERT. S.B. Applied Math. Born: May 15, 1941. Prepared at East Providence Senior High. University Scholarship, Dean's List, Russian Club, Newman Club. Address: 99 Clyde Avenue, East Providence, Rhode Island. PIZER, STEPHEN MURRAY. A.B., S.B. Applied Marh Honors. Born: October 4, 1941. Prepared at Winthrop High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, QOrponution Scholar, Deans List, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma X, Marching Band, Orchestra Publicity Man- ager, Wind Ensemble, Woodwind Ensemble, Hillel, University Christian Association Forum. Address: 88 Somerset Avenue, Winthrop, Massachusetts. PLIMPTON, DAVID. AB. Economics. Born: March 21, 1941 Prepared at Northern Valley Regional High School. Whitehall Foundation Scholarship, Deans List, Brown Charities Drive, Brown Youth Guidance, Basketball Freshman and Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha Secretary. Address: Orchard Hill Lane, Greenwich, Connecticut. Andrew's School. Brown Youth Guidance, Yacht Club, Liber Brunensis. Delta Kappa Epsilon Alum- ni Secretary, Social Chairman, Vice President. Ad- dress: 204 West Mount Vernon Street, Smyrna, Delaware. PRIOR, MICHAEL W. Theta Delta Chi. Address: 122 Albert Avenue, Cranston, Rhode Island. PROUT, RICHARD LAWRENCE. A.B. English Lit- erature. Born: January 16, 1941. Prepared at Boston English High School. Yacht Club, German Club, Brown Review. Address: 83 Hillsdale Street, Dor- chester, Massachusetts. RANGES, RICHARD LOUIS. A.B. Chemisiry. Born: Tel. GAspee 1-1852 Delivery Service BROOK ST. MART. INC. Beverages for all occasions 144 Brook St. Providence, R. I. Ice Cubes MUSIC BY inlly Poore GEneva 8-5670 82 Summit Street DExter 1-5385 EAST PROVIDENCE, R. I. EASTERN SCIENTIFIC CO. DISTRIBUTORS LABORATORY APPARATUS, MEDICAL AND SURGICAL 'SUPPLIES, DRUGS AND CHEMICALS 267 PLAIN STREET PROVIDENCE 5, RHODE ISLAND GAspee 1-4600 POLLACK, H. CLINTON. Address: 20 Greenlawn Avenue, Newton Centre, Massachusetts. PORTER, WILLIAM J. JR. Address: 37 Post Road, Warwick, Rhode Island. PRENDERGAST, S. LAWRENCE. A.B. Mathematics. Born: April 20, 1941. Prepared at Andover. F. W. Wayland Prize Exam in Latin, Newman Club, Athletic Chairman of Buxton House, Track Fresh- man and Varsity. Delta Phi Treasurer, President. Address: Spring Grove Road, Andover, Massa- chusetts. PRICE, WARNER WILDS III. A.B. American Liter- ature. Born: December 18, 1941. Prepared at Saint April 5, 1941. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. Canticum Glee Club, Brown University Glee Club, Band. Address: 122 Lawrence Place, New Rochelle, New York. REARDON, ROBERT A. S.B. Engineering. Born: June 10, 1941. Prepared at Walt Whitman High School. NROTC. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 5 Oakleaf Center, Huntington, New York. REESE, DAVID ANDREWS. A.B. English Literature. Born: September 26, 1941. Prepared at Franklin High School. Address: Route 1, Box 148, Owings Mills, Maryland. REISS, ROBERT. S.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: 23 March 12, 1942. Prepared at East Meadow High School. Second Hartshorn Prize in Mathematics. Address: 116 Sutton Drive, Plainview, New York. RHINE, THOMAS MARTIN. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 1, 1941. Prepared at Mount Herman School. Canterbury, Brown Youth Guidance, Junior Class Council, Interfraternity Council, Cammarian Club Student Affairs Committee. Zeta Delta Psi Rushing Chairman, President. Address: 1600 Asy- lum Avenue, West Hartford, Connecticut. RHODES, RICHARD C. S.B. Engineering. Born: Sep- tember 27, 1941. Prepared at Amherst Regional High School. Science Award, Deans List, Brown Engineering Society, Cross Country Manager, Win- ter Track Manager, Spring Track. Address: 52 North Prospect Street, Amherst, Massachusetts. RICHMAN, EDWARD. S.B. Chemistry Honors. Born: December 23, 1941. Prepared at Cheltenham. Third Place National Intercollegiate Bridge, Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald, Bridge Club. Address: 609 Chelten Hills Drive, Elkins Park 17, Pennsylvania. RICHTER, DAVID WINSTON. A.B. American Civili- zation. Born: September 21, 1941. Prepared at Longmeadow High School. Bronson House Trea- surer and Librarian, WBRU. Address: 118 Vis- count Road, Longmeadow, Massachusetts. RIFFER, ROGER LEE. A.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: January 13, 1941. Prepared at Fairview High School. National Merit Scholar, Dean's List, Col- lege Scholar, German Club, University Christian Association. Address: 21853 Cromwell Avenue, Cleveland 26, Ohio. RINELLA, VINCENT JOSEPH JR. A.B. Philosophy. Honors. Born: May 16, 1941. Prepared at King School. Dean's List, Sock and Buskin, Brown Youth Guidance. Address: 32 Hackett Circle, Stamford, Connecticut. ROBBINS, WINSLOW ARTHUR SR. A.B. Classics. Born: March 30, 1942. Prepared at Thayer Acad- emy. Dean's List, Classics Club Treasurer, Soccer, Varsity Baseball Manager. Theta Delta Chi Alum- ni Secretary. Address: 28 Colonel Hunt Drive, Abington, Massachusetts. ROBERTSON, JOHN O. Address: Brownell Street, Touisset, Rhode Island. RODRIGUES, MARIANO. A.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: March 3, 1942. Prepared at B.M.C. Durfee High. Newman Club. Address: 453 Crandall Road, Tiverton, Rhode Island. ROITMAN, JAMES NATHANIEL. A.B. Chemistry. Born: June 29, 1941. Prepared at Moses Brown School. North Slater Hall Treasurer, Chemistry Club, Sphinx, Rifle Club. Address: 310 Grotto Avenue, Providence 6, Rhode Island. RONNIE, LEONARD H. JR. A.B. Economics. Born: December 3, 1941. Prepared at Saint Benedict's Prep. NROTC Scholarship, NROTC Marine Officer Candidate, Junior and Senior Class Council, Bru- nauians, Semper Fi Society, Track Freshman and Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha Pledge Trainer. Ad- dress: 372 Devon Street, Kearny, New Jersey. 274 Pinkerton's National Detective Inc. Investigation and Security Service serving Brown at its Social Functions 10 Dorrance St.Howard Bldg. DE 1-1543 THE BROWN UNIVERSITY DINING HALLS the ivy room the coffee lounge e caterer to fraternities e caterer to dormitories ROSEN, ROBERT JAMES. A.B. Biology. Born: Sep- tember 13, 1942. Prepared at Columbia High School. Freshman Tennis Tournament Winner, Brown Youth Group, Brown Charities Drive Cap- tain, Biology Club, Senior Class Council, Hillel, Brown Undergraduate Friends Society, Golf Fresh- man, Soccer Varsity. Pi Lambda Phi Athletic Chairman, Rushing Chairman, Vice President. Ad- dress: 318 Forest Road, South Orange, New Jersey. ROSENBERG, RICHARD MICHAEL. A.B. Economics. Born: May 28, 1941. Prepared at White Plains High School. Marching Band, Wind Ensemble, Rug- by. Address: 82 Bolton Avenue, White Plains, New York. ROSENTHAL, DOUGLAS MYRON. A.B. History. Born: July 27, 1940. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Address: 618 Madison Street, Fall River, Massa- chusetts. ROSS, ROBERT WORTHINGTON. A.B. International Relations. Born: 1941. Prepared at Scotch Plains High School. Dean's List. Phi Delta Theta Social Chairman, Vice President. Address: 1811 Quim- by Lane, Scotch Plains, New Jersey. ROTHE, ERNST. A.B. Economics. Born: February 19, 1941. Prepared at Hotchkiss School. Compost Cup for Eilecticism, Pi Delta Epsilon, Yatch Club Vice Commodore, Liber Brunensis Assistant Literary Editor, Executive Editor, Sailing Freshman and Varsity. Zeta Psi Alpha Sigma. Address: 190 o drafting and engineer supplier artists materials o industrial displays OAKES ON THE HILL 10 THOMAS ST. PROVIDENCE 3, R. L GASPEE 1-5137 CURRAN BURTON INC. Fuel Oils HO 7-8050 Terminal Office 500 Allens Ave. Main Office 1120 Eddy St. Stanwich Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. ROY, DONALD F. A.B. English Literature. Born: May 7, 1940. Prepared at Monson Academy. New- man Club, Russian Club, Baseball Freshman. Theta Delta Chi Social Chairman. Address: 96 East Hodges Street, Norton, Massachusetts. RUBIN, PETER ERWIN. A.B. History. Born: October 4, 1941. Prepared at Phillips Academy. Dean's List, Sock and Buskin, Class Council, Canticam Glee Club, Basketball Freshman, Baseball Fresh- man, Rugby. Delta Upsilon. Address: 5 East 88th Street, New York 28, New York. RUBIN, RICHARD L. Address: 279 Brownell Avenue, New Bedford, Massachusetts. D7 RUCK, MERRILL WYTHE. A.B. Political Science. Born: May 30, 1941. Prepared at New Britain Senior High School. Scholarship Freshman and Sophomore, Theodore Francis Green Award in Navigation for NROTC, NROTC Executive Of- ficer of Alpha Company, Jameson House Social Chairman. Address: 27 Hart Street, New Britain, Connecticut. RUGGIERI, JOSEPH JR. A.B. History. Born: 1941. Prepared at Cranston High School. Deans List. Address: 14 C. Street, Cranston 9, Rhode Island. RUGGIERI, NICHOLES L. Address: 80 Fair Oaks Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. SACKMAN, GEOFFREY DOUGLAS. B.A. Anthro- pology. Born: July 6, 1941. Prepared at East Rock- away High School. Dean's List, Baseball Fresh- man. Delta Phi Co-Rushing Chairman, Athletic Chairman. Address: 105 Wilson Street, East Rock- away, New York. SAHAGIAN, THOMAS REGINALD. A.B. Economics. Born: October 20, 1941. Prepared at East Provi- dence Senior High School. Address: 119 Burgess Avenue, East Providence, Rhode Island. SALTER, ROBERT J. A.B. Geology. Born: March 19, 1941. Prepared at Glens Falls Senior High School. Ski Club, Geology Club, Football Freshman, Rugby. Phi Gamma Delta House Manager. Ad- dress: 2819 East 4510 South Street, Salt Lake City 17, Utah. 276 SANDERS, DAVID ALAN. A.B. English Literature Honors. Born: January 14, 1942. Prepared at Bast Rockaway High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Brown University Glee Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Sock and Buskin, Pro- duction Workshop, Tower Club, German Club. Ad- dress: 39 Alexine Avenue, East Rockaway, New York. SANTA, RONALD G. Address: 45 Crescent Road, Middletown, Rhode Island. SAQUET, ROBERT H. H. B.A. Art. Born: June 28, 1941. Prepared at Brighten High School. Dean's List, Band, Chess Club. Compliments of THE MINDEN HOTEL 123 Waterman St. Providence, R. 1. 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. billbouse It 135 THAYER STREET I DISTINCTIVE MEN'S APPAREL THE BROWN UNIVERSITY STORE THE PEMBROKE BOOKSTORE To the Class of 1963: We appreciate your patronage during the past four years, and hope to see you whenever you are back on campus. SASAKI, AKIRA. S.B. Electrical Engineering. Born: November 15, 1939. Prepared at Bridgeton High School. Dean's List, Basketball Freshman. Phi Kappa Psi Secretary, President. Address: 1010 School Lane, Seabrook, New Jersey. SAUNDERS, PHILIP A. A.B. American Civilization. Born: February 12, 1940. Prepared at Shaw High School. Dean's List, Cross Country Manager, De- bating Union, Cross Country Freshman. Address: 1866 Taylor Road, East Cleveland 12, Ohio. SAVICKI, WILLIAM ANTHONY JR. A.B. Sociology. Born: December 4, 1941. Prepared at Stoughton High School. University Scholarship, NROTC, New- man Club, Brunauians, Football Freshman and Varsity. Lambda Chi Alpha. Address: 64 Pleasant Street, Stoughton, Massachusetts. SAYLOR, J. PHILLIPS. Address: 411 Orchard Street, Johnston, Pennsylvania. SAYPOL, BRUCE P. A.B. American Civilization. Hon- ors. Born: May 18, 1942. Prepared at Midwood High School. Dean's List, Glee Club Personal Manager, Bruinaires, Hillel President. Address: 1154 East 24th Street, Brooklyn 10, New York. SCHAEDEL, PETER ALAN. A.B. Political Science. Born: October 30, 1941. Prepared at Choate. Sail- ing Social Chairman of Yatch Club, Intramural Football, Basketball Club, Rugby, Intramural Bas- ketball and Baseball. Sigma Nu Chaplain. Ad- dress: 1321 Sherbroohest Street, Montreal, Quebec, , HUMMOCKS o Five famous rooms x4$$ Internationally Famous for Sea Food s 5 Where Brown Men Have Dined Since 1905 Blue Ribbon Roast Beef in the Rib Room Cafe Midnight open til 1:00 A.M. 245 ALLENS AVENUE PROVIDENCE HOpkins 1-6000 Canada. SCHNELL, WILLIAM CHARLES. SB., A.B. Engi- neering. Born: October 18, 1941. Prepared at Huntington High School. Deans List, Brown Daily Herald Assistant Advertising Manager, Varsity Glee Club. Address: Skunk Hollow, Huntington, New York. SCHRANK, HARRIS T. A.B. Sociology. Honors. Born: September 16, 1941. Prepared at Livingston High School. Sloan Award, Freedman Award, Assistant- ship in Sociology, Charles of the Ritz Award, Dean's List, Debating Union, Cammarian Club Committee on Student Affairs, Inter House Council Vice Presi- dent, Cammarian Club Committee on Academic Affairs Chairman, Student Resident Advisor, NAACP, Student Peace Union Honorary. Ad- dress: 24 Sterling Drive, Livingston, New Jersey. SCHRODER, RICHARD ALAN. A.B. International Relations. Born: September 21, 1941. Prepared at Springfield High School. K. H. Lewis Foundation Award, 1961, Dean's List, University Christian Association Ecumenical Commission, University Christian Association Cabinet, Publicity, Lutheran Club, Lutheran Cabinet, Brown Youth Guidance, Residential Seminar in Christianity. Address: 211 Summit Road, Springfield, Pennsylvania. SCHWENK, HAROLD SPENCER JR. S.B. Applied Mathematics. Born: 1941. Prepared at E. O. Smith School. First Hartshorn Prize in Mathematics, First GREGG'S RESTAURANT For Dinner or a Snack Newest Restaurant on the Hill NI Henry Parket Manning Mathematics Prize, Dean's List, Manning Scholar. Address: 6 Hillside Circle, Storrs, Connecticut. SCOTT, ROBERT NEAL. S.B. Chemisiry. Born: March 8, 1941. Prepared at Tolman High School. Corpor- ation Scholar, Dean's List, Chemistry Club. Ad- dress: 45 Chaplin Street, Pawtucket, Rhode Island. SCURIS, THEODORE C. Address: 6 Defoe Place, Providence, Rhode Island. SEAGRAVE, CHARLES E. A.B. Economics. Honors. Born: 1941. Prepared at Bronxville High School. Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Photography Co- Editor. Address: 2 Midland Gardens, Bronxville, New York. SEARS, BARRY ALDEN. A.B. English Literature. Born: April 20, 1941. Prepared at The Hill School. Swimming Freshman. Zeta Psi. Address: Hillside Road, Northbrook, Illinois. SEED, JAMES MICHAEL. A.B. American Civilization. Born: April 4, 1941. Prepared at Blake School. Class President, Class Council, Faunce House Board of Government, Interfraternity Council Pres- ident. Sigma Nu. Address: 808 Meadow Lane South, Minneapolis 16, Minnesota. SEEGAL, ROBERT HOWARD. S.B. Applied Mathe- matics, Physics. Born: August 5, 1941. Prepared at Rogers High School. Scholarship, Deans List, Swimming Freshman and Varsity. Address: 4 Bliss Mine Road, Middletown, Rhode Island. SELLAR, PHILIP ANDREW. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 25, 1941. Prepared at Port Ches- ter Senior High School. Alfred P. Sloan Scholar, Dean's List, Liber Brunensis Advertising Manager, Senior Class Cabinet, Twenty-fifth Reunion Fund, Classics Club. Sigma Nu Chaplain, Assistant Trea- surer. Address: 54 Robert Avenue, Port Chester, New York. SENINGEN, GARY E. Address: 21 Firethorne Lane, Valley Stream, New York. SEWCHUK, RICHARD R. Address: 4108 Meadow Road, Cumberland Hill Road, Rhode Island. SHAFNER, DOUGLAS HEWITT. A.B. Sociology. Born: February 23, 1942. Prepared at Marblehead Massachusetts High. Pi Delta Epsilon Journalism Society Vice President, WBRU Program Direc- tor, Station Manager. Delta Upsilon. Address: 15 Clifton Avenue, Marblehead, Massachusetts. SHAMONSEY, PETER J. DOUGLAS. A.B. American Literature. Born: September 29, 1941. Prepared at Scranton Central High School. Albert A. List Scholar, Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance As- sistant Head-Chaplain Hospital Division. Address: 3104 West 140th Street, Cleveland, Ohio. SHANNON, ROBERT MICHAEL. A.B. Economics. Born: March 9, 1941. Prepared at Cheshire Acad- emy. Debating Union Prize, Delta Sigma Rhofhom Debating Society, Debating Union President, Trea- surer, Secretary, Orientation Committee. Sigma Chi House Manager, Treasurer. Address: 79 Falcon D7 G MAnning 1-9239 MAnning 1-7280 SMITH'S RESTAURANT jtafian -.American CUISINE Closed Mondays 391 Atwells Avenue Providence 9, R. L. Road, Livingston, New Jersey. SHAW, MICHAEL A. Address: 31 Exeter Street, Prov- idence, Rhode Island. SHERMAN, ALLAN KIMBROUGH. A.B. Mathe- matics, Economics. Born: March 22, 1941. Pre- pared at Montgomery Blair High School. Univer- sity Christian Association Cabinet, Canterbury Ves- try, Manning Chapel Choir. Delta Tau Delta Cor- responding Secretary. Address: 8318 Drapir Lane, Silver Spring, Maryland. SHERMAN, FREDERICK C. Address: 17 Hillsdale Drive, Cranston 10, Rhode Island. SHEMIN, BARRY LOUIS. A.B. Mathematics Hon- ors. Born: December 17, 1942. Prepared at Eras- mus Hall High School. Francis Wayland Scholar, Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Photography Ed- itor, Band, Inter-House Council President, Sec- rcetary, Proctor, Secretary-Treasurer of Olney House. Address: 31 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, New York. SHRONTS, JOHN S. Address: 5111 Orden Avenue, Edina, Minnesota. SHUKER, ROBERT A. Address: 19 Merigan Way, Foxboro, Massachusetts. SIDMAN, JACK. A.B. Psychology. Born: September 29, 1941. Prepared at Albany Academy. National Science Foundation Research Grant in Psychology, Brown Youth Guidance, Inter-House Council, Di- man House President, Wrestling Freshman. Ad- dress: 1518 Union Street, Schenectady, New York. SILVERMAN, WILLIAM MICHAEL. A.B. History. Born: February 7, 1942. Prepared at Columbia Grammar School. Brown Daily Herald Supplement Editor, Junior Class Cabinet, Sphinx Club. Ad- dress: 146 Central Park West, New York, New York. SIMEONE, RICHARD JOHN. A.B. Political Science. Born: August 7, 1941. Prepared at New Cumber- land High School. Canterbury, Classics Club. Ad- dress: College Park Apartments 3A, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania. SIMONIAN, ATKIN Y. Address: 121 Weperan Koosl, Tarrytown, New York. SLINEY, ROBERT JAMES. A.B. Chemistry. Born: July 25, 1941. Prepared at Watertown High School. Inter-House Council Athletic Chairman, Chemis- try Club, Newman Club. Address: 21 Hilltop Road, Watertown, Massachusetts. SLOVIN, GARY MARSHALL. A B. History. Born: July 16, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Address: Betsey Williams Drive, Cranston 5, Rhode Island. SMALL, JEFFREY P. A.B. Sociology. Born: Novem- ber 23, 1940. Prepared at Millbrook Boys School. Faunce House Board of Governors, Sailing, Crew Freshman, Rugby. Sigma Nu. Address: Valley Farm Road, Millbrook, New York. SMALL, JOSEPH DUNNELL. A.B. Political Science. Born: July 18, 1941. Prepared at Richland High School. Brown-Pembroke Christian Fellowship Vice President, Treasurer, Brown Charities Drive Captain. Delta Upsilon Scholarship Chairman, Chaplain. Address: 341 Forestwood Drive, Gib- sonia, Pennsylvania. SMALL, LAWRENCE MALCOLM. A.B. Spanish Honors. Born: September 14, 1941. Prepared at New Rochelle High School. Francis Wayland Scho- larship, Dean's List, Spanish Club, Mu Sigma Zeta Chairman of the Polar Zone, Countess Club President, Video Lancers, Hockey Freshman. Pi Lambda Phi President-Midrid Chapter. Ad- dress: 114 Wellington Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. SMITH, BRIAN M. Address: 72 Hudson Avenue, Montreal, Canada. Hockey Varsity Co-Captain. SMITH, MORELAND GRIFFITH JR. A.B. History. Born: 1940. Prepared at Sidney Lanier High School. NROTC, NAACP President, University Forum for Civil Liberties Treasurer, Young Democrats President, Bronson House Manager, Freshman Week Committee, Class Cabinet, Canterbury, Inter- House Social Committee. Address: 3236 Bankhead Avenue, Montgomery 6, Alabama. SMITH, RAOUL N. Address: Hoxie Center, West War- wick, Rhode Island. SMITH, WILLIAM EDWARD. A.B. Political Science. Born: January 3, 1942. Prepared at Woonsocket High School. NROTC Marine Officer Candidate, Newman Club, Brunauians, Semper Fi Society Vice President, Social Chairman, Track Freshman and Varsity, Cross Country Freshman and Varsity. Address: 260 Second Avenue, Woonsocket, Rhode Island. SOKOLOFF, CHARLES S. A.B. Economics. Born: 1941. Prepared at Abraham Lincoln High School. WBRU Classical Music Director, Program Guide Editor, Advertising Manager. Address: 210 Bright- on 15 Street, Brooklyn 35, New York. SPADOLA, JOHN S. Address: R.F.D. 3 Abraham Road, Barrington, Rhode Island. SPARKS, JOHN WILLIAM. S.B. Chemistry Honors. Born: March 20, 1941. Prepared at Tower Hill BRoOwN ROADRANGLE School. Freshman Chemistry Achievement Award, Deans List, Chemistry Club. Address: 1901 Green- briar Drive, Wilmington, Delaware. SPIEZIO, NICHOLAS JOSEPH. A.B. English Litera- ture. Born: March 10, 1941. Prepared at East Orange High School. WBRU, Interfraternity Coun- cil Vice President, Football Captain. Lambda Chi Alpha. Rushing Chairman. Address: 140 Bed- ford Street, East Orange, New Jersey. SPOHN, G. WILLIAM III. A.B. Classics. Born: Janu- ary 28, 1941. Prepared at Western Reserve Acad- emy. Dean's List, Brown Charities, Class Council, Cammarian Club Committees, Brown Undergradu- ate Friends Society, Class Dance Chairman, Delta Mu Delta Society, Soccer Freshman and Varsity. Phi Delta Theta Rush Chairman, President. Ad- dress: 5992 Darrow Road, Hudson, Ohio. STARZAK, MICHAEL E. Address: 229 Tiffany Street, Attleboro, Massachusetts. STAUDTE, ROBERT GEORGE JR. A.B., B.S. Applied Mathematics, Russian. Born: 1940. Prepared at Centralia High School. Deans List, University Christian Association Seminar. Delta Tau Delta Treasurer. Address: 8 Dawn Drive, Springfield, Illinois. 279 STEIN, JAY A. Address: 180 Cherry Lane, Teaneck, New Jersey. STENIOWSKI, MATTHEW. Address: 130 East 56th Street, New York, New York. STEVENS, JOHN C. Address: 114 Leominster Road, Lunenburg, N. STEWART, WALTER ALEXANDER JR. A.B. English. Born: November 28, 1941. Prepared at New Can- aan High. PLC Marine Officer Candidate. Delta Phi Rushing Chairman. Interfraternity Council. Ad- dress: 6 Gower Road, New Canaan, Connecticut. STROM, FRANK I. II. A.B. History. Born: May 18, 1941. Prepared at Bayside High School. Deans List, Election Delta Sigma Rho, Inter-House Coun- cil, Debating Union, NAACP, Young Republicans, Civil Liberties Union. Address: 245 Beverly Road, Douglaston, New York. SULLIVAN, JOSEPH F. JR. A.B. English Literature. Born: February 11, 1942. Prepared at Mission Church High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Baseball Freshman. Address: 19 Fen- wood Road, Boston 15, Massachusetts. SUMMERS, J. DAVID. Address: 609 Olive Avenue, Sandpoint, Idaho. SUSSLIN, DANIEL. Address: 307 Westman Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey. SWARTS, WILLIAM B. TII. A.B. English Literature. Born: March 17, 1941. Prepared at Brunswick School. Zeta Psi Historian, Sergeant at Arms. Address: Pheasant Lane, Greenwich, Connecticut. SYDLOWSKI, PAUL EDMUND. A.B. Biology. Born: September 27, 1942. Prepared at Moses Brown School. Class Numerals, Treasurer of South Slater Hall, Newman Club, Biology Club, Yatch Club, Pre-Medical Society, French Club, Gourmet's Club, Baseball Freshman. Phi Delta Theta Social Chair- man. Address: 150 High Service Avenue, North Providence, Rhode Island. TANNENBAUM, ARON G. A.B. International Rela- tions. Born: February 19, 1941. Prepared at A.B. Davis High School. Scholarship, Dean's List, Hillel, Astronany Club, Student Zionist Organization, Proc- tor. Address: 156 Forster Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York. TATLOCK, RICHARD. A.B. Political Science. Born: September 22, 1940. Prepared at Williston Acad- emy. Brown Review Managing Editor, Yatch Club, Squash Captain. Zeta Psi. Address: 16 Ward Avenue, Northampton, Massachusetts. TERMAN, STANLEY A. Address: 500 Kopposk Street, New York, New York. THAYER, ROBERT PAUL. A.B. History. Born: July 27, 1941. Prepared at Providence Country Day School. Newman Club, Brown Youth Guidance, Dinner Club. Phi Delta Theta Chaplain, Librarian, Athletic Chairman. Address: 59 Bullock's Point Avenue, Riverside 15, Rhode Island. THOMPSON, WARD CARR. A.B. International Rela- tions. Born: March 23, 1941. Prepared at Mansfield 280 Distinctive Greetingj- Rust Craft Greeting Cards Dedham, Mass. High School. Philo Sherman Bennett Award, Dean's List, Proctor, Semper Fi Society Treasurer, Sock and Buskin, Marching Band, Glee Club, Experi- ment in International Living President. Kappa Sigma Second Vice President. Address: Concord Road, East Sullivan, New Hampshire. TIEKEN, ROBERT. Address: 1607 Canowchet Avenue, Warwick, Rhode Island. TOMY, WALLACE STEVEN. A.B. English. Born: April 8, 1941. Prepared at Union High School. Brown Navy Club Award, Newman Club, Chemistry Club, NROTC, Drill Team, Rifle Team. Phi Gam- ma Delta Recording Secretary. Address: 807 Madison Avenue, Union, New Jersey. TORTOLANI, ROBERT EDMUND. AB. Biology. Born: May 29, 1941. Prepared at Plainville High School. Dean's List, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive, Newman Club, Baseball Fresh- man. Lambda Chi Alpha Community Service Chairman. Address: 51 Maple Street, Plainville, Connecticut. TOWNSEND, CHARLES L. Address: 89 Woodland Avenue, Summit, New Jersey. TRACY, STEVEN W. Address: 173 Williams Street, Providence, Rhode Island. TWADDELL, WILLIAM HAMTSHORNE. A.B. His- tory. Born: January 25, 1941. Production Work- shop, Sock and Buskin, Crew Freshman. Alpha Delta Phi. Address: 78 Oriole Avenue, Providence, Rhode Island. TYRRELL, ROBERT GRATTAN JR. A.B. Religious Studies. Born: December 20, 1940. Prepared at Elmira Free Academy. Brown Youth Guidance, Canterbury. Address: 504 Hoffman Street, Elmira, New York. VALEO, JAMES G. A.B. English Literature. Born: September 29, 1941. Prepared at Kingston High School. Brown Key, Yatch Club, Crew Freshman. Kappa Sigma President. Address: Route 4, Box 240, Kingston, New York. VANLOAN, DAVID ALAN. A.B. Born: April 15, 1936. Prepared at The Hotchkiss School. Swimming Freshman and Varsity. Beta Theta Pi. Address: Dingletown Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. VANNESS, WILLIAM ALLEN. A.B. Economics. Born: July 19, 1941. Prepared at Belleville High School. Dean's List, Band. Kappa Sigma Guard. Address: 41 Vincent Drive, Clifton, New Jersey. VAN RIPER, DAVID N. Address: 25 East George Street, Providence, Rhode Island. VICTOR, JESSE R. Address: 30 Peulin Boulevard, Leonia, New Jersey. VITIELLO, JUSTIN. A.B. English-Spanish. Honors. Born: February 14, 1941. Prepared at Nutley High School. Brown University Scholarship, William Leo- pold Fichter Premium in Spanish, James Manning Scholar, Dean's List, Brown Daily Herald Assist- ant Editor and Sports Editor, Student Overseas MOLLER ROTHE, INC. 285 Madison Ave. New York 17, N. Y. and UNIT PRINTING CORPORATION 204 Eighteenth Avenue Paterson 4, N. J. Service Organization Co-Director. Address: 576 Passaic Avenue, Nutley, New Jersey. WALKER, ROBERT LEWIS. A.B. English Literature. Honors. Born: 1942. Prepared at Poly Prep. Dean's List, Tower Club Rushing Chairman, Bruin Club. Address: 215 Marlboro Road, Brook- lyn, New York. WALKER, THOMAS WOODLEY. A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born: November 12, 1940. Prepared at Gamaliel Bradford Senior High School. Dean's List. Address: 37 Longmeadow Road, Wellesley 81, Mas- sachusetts. WALLACE, RICHARD POWELL. A.B. Political Sci- ence. Born: April 28, 1941. Prepared at The Albany Academy, Class Cabinet, Executive Board of Alpha Phi Omega, Yatch Club, Cananbury Club, Hockey Freshman and Varsity Manager. Sigma Chi Secre- tary, Alumni Chairman. Address: 36 Belle Avenue, Troy, New York. WALLACE, ROBERT BRUCE. A.B. Chemistry. Born: June 5, 1942. Prepared at Port Jefferson High School. Scholarship, Brown Youth Guidance, Ath- letic Chairman of Dorm Intramurals. Address: Wardensliff Road, Shoreham, New York. WALTZ, TERRY. A.B. International Relations. Born: 1941. Prepared at George Washington High School. Deans List, International Association Executive Board, Brown Daily Herald, French Club. Ad- dress: 2 Sharia Mudiriyet El Tahrir, Garden City, Cairo, Egypt, United Arab Republic. WARNER, DANIEL. WARNER, CHARLES RICHARD. A.B. Classics. Born: June 17, 1940. Prepared at Milwaukee Country Day School. Scholarship, Yatch Club, Brown Char- ities Drive, Classics Club. Sigma Chi Community Service Chairman, Chaplain. Address: 5474 North Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. WEBB, HUGH M. A.B. Chemistry. Born: October 22, 1941. Prepared at Lyons Township High School. Band, Yatch Club, Chemistry Club. Address: 4024 Grove Avenue, Western Springs, Illinois. WEHMANN, PETER FYFE. A.B. International Rela- tions. Born: November 22, 1941. Prepared at The Fox Lane School. Inter-House Council, Canterbury, Canticam, Canticum Octet, Glee Club, University Christian Association Cabinet. Sigma Chi. Address: Trinity Pass, Pound Ridge, New York. WEIHI, EDWIN HASSELL. A.B. American Literature. Born: November 7, 1940. Prepared at Longfcllow School. Brown Daily Herald Drama Critic. Ad- dress: 4801 Dexter Street, North West, Washington, District of Columbia. WEIHMILLER, GORDON RICHARD. A.B. Interna- tional Relations. Born: February 17, 1942. Pre- pared at Bay Shore High School. NROTC Regular Scholarship, Dean's List, Brunauian Vice President. Kappa Sigma. Address: 71 Pierrepont Street, Brook- lyn 1, New York. 2 WEINSTEIN, MAYER HOWARD. A.B. Art. Born: August 24, 1941 Prepared at Holyoke High School. Brown Daily Herald, Brown Youth Guidance, Brown Charities Drive, Brown Experiment As- sociation. Address: 22 Carol Lane, Holyoke, Mas- sachusetts. WEIS, CARL ROGER. A.B. American Civilization. Born: April 26, 1941. Prepared at Hanover Park High School. Student Peace Union, L'air Play for Cuba. Address: 14 Elm Street, Florham Park, New Jersey. WEISSBERGER, EDWARD. Sc.B. Chemistry. Honors. Born: 1941. Prepared at Brighton High School. Dean's List, Canticum Club, Glee Club, Chemistry Club, Ski Club. Address: 36 Southern Parkway, Rochester, New York. WELSH, STANLEY M. Address: 10 Brocton Street. Mat- tapan, Massachusetts. WENZEL, RICHARD ARNOLD. A.B. American Literature. Born: March 8, 1941. Prepared at Clin- ton Central High School. Brown University Scholar- ship, Hockey Freshman, Varsity. Address: New Street, Clinton, New York. WHEATLAND, DAVID ALAN. Sc.B. Chemistry. Born: August 27, 1940. Prepared at Milton Academy. Chemistry Club, Canterbury Vestry. Address: Sa- lem Road, Topsfield, Massachusetts. WHITE, WALTER WILSEY. A.B. History. Born: June 10, 1941. Prepared at Ridgewood High School. Canterbury Vestry, Convocation Choir, Manning Chapel Choir, University Christian Asso- ciation. Address: 104 Avondale Road, Ridgewood, New Jersey. WHITMORE, RICHARD PRESCOTT. A.B. French. Honors. Born: August 13, 1941. Prepared at Westfield Senior High School. Deans List, Italian Club, French Club Secretary, Canterbury Club. Address: 526 Sherwood Parkway, Westfield, New Jersey. WHITWORTH, MICHAEL FRANKLIN. A.B. Biology. Born: November 30, 1941. Prepared at The Mer- cersburg Academy. Brown Key, Proctor, Under- graduate Friends of Brown, WBRU, Basketball Freshman. Lambda Chi Alpha. Social Chairman. Address: 812 Buckingham Road, Cumberland, Maryland. WILCOX, LLOYD M. Address: 140 Main Street, Terry- ville, Connecticut. WILKINS, WILLIAM THOMAS. A.B. Religious Stud- ies. Born: August 17, 1941. Prepared at Piqua Central High School. Canterbury Vestry, Univer- sity Christian Association, Swimming Freshman. Address: 711 North Wayne Street, Piqua, Ohio. WILLIAMS, GORDON RYERSON. A.B. Interna- tional Relations. Born: 1940. Prepared at New Preparatory School. Bronson House Chaplain. Ad- dress: 77 Glen Road, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts. WILSON, JEFFREY CHAFEE. A.B. Religious Studies. Honors. Born: May 5, 1941. Prepared at Gov- ernor Dummer Academy. Dean's List, Brown D5 Our bear this year managed to elude one-half of Phila- delphia's finest in the Quaker's own stadium. The other half of the police force managed to move his act to a quieter scene, but the bear found that the jail cramped his style. The Latin Christmas Carol Service is undoubtedly one of the finest traditions at Brown. Mr. Ron Nelson enhanced the festivities with his Christmas oratorio. We strongly support the current idea of creating a Brown Eating Club. It is an incontrovertible fact that the campus needs a social face-lifting, but not to the advantage of any particular element. The fare at the refectory is quite ample, but everyone needs a change. The Eating Club would serve this purpose above all others. At the same time, since in- dependent dormitories generally lack the organization and funds adequate to provide satisfactory social facilities, the eating club might serve as a social supplement, especially if room for dancing and small talk were arranged. The final touch, we feel, would be to call it Barney's. We would like to point out that consensus of opinion, is a redundant tautology. And in closing, we must note the staff's anticipation, with baited breath, of the BDH's annual lambasting of the Liber. In the 1962 article, bitter, harsh, inexorable, blunt, and pre- sumptuous comments,one followed so closely after the other that there was no room for balanced judgment. Of course, on the preceding page of the newspaper, the infallible Herald had misplaced the caption under the countenance of the well-known and retiring George L. Littlefield professor of history. Heralders, we'll forgive you this time, but here- after . .. Footballmext year. Buy the 1964 Liber BROWN AND PEMBROKE MEET HERE FOR THE BEST CHINESE AND AMERICAN FOOD TOY SUN 258 THAYER STREET Youth Guidance, Debating Union Recording Sec- retary, University Christian Association, Brown Young Republicans President. Address: 69 Nayatt Road, West Barrington, Rhode Island. WINCHESTER, HARVEY N. Address: 32 Lake Drive, Needham, Massachusetts. WINKLER, FREDERICK F. Address: 1212 Fifth Av- enue, New York, New York. WITKOWSKI, DENNIS W. Address: 312 North Wash- ington Street, Westmont, Illinois. WOLANSKE, STEPHEN DENNIS. A.B. Philosophy. Born: March 6, 1939. Prepared at Deerfield Acad- emy. WBRU, Newman Club, Interfraternity Coun- cil, Biology Club, Proctor, Baseball Freshman. Lambda Chi Alpha Social Chairman. Address: 210 Hion Street, Greenfield, Massachusetts. WOLLER, RAYMOND M. A.B. Philosophy Honors. Born: May 19, 1941. Prepared at Union High School. ILackawanna Brown Club Scholarship, Deans List, WBRU, German Club, University Christian Association, Swimming Freshman. Ad- dress: 1579 Porter Road, Union, New Jersey. WOOD, RALPH TABOR. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: December 17, 1941. Prepared at Lexington High School. Dean's List, Tau Beta Pi President. Ad- dress: 9 Prospect Hill Road, Lexington, Massachu- setts. WOOLLEY, BRADFORD GILLETE. A.B., Sc.B. En- gineering. Born: June 24, 1937. Prepared at Ver- mont Academy. Dean's List, Brown Engineering Society, Sailing Club, Ski Club. Address: 120 Water- man Street, Providence, Rhode Island. WRIGHT, CHARLES WOODROW. A.B. Philosophy. Born: 1941. Prepared at Sandusky High School. Dean's List, Brown Charities Drive, Brown Yacht Club, Glee Club Freshman, Baseball Freshman Manager. Sigma Chi House Manager. Address: 2207 Milan Road, Sandusky, Ohio. WYCKOFF, DENNIS R. A.B. Art. Born: September 16, 1941. Prepared at Bernards High School. Band, Wind Ensemble, Brass Choir. Address: 88 Lyons Road, Basking Ridge, New Jersey. YODAKIS, ALBERT. A.B. Economics. Born: October 30, 1940. Prepared at The Peddie School. Fresh- men Council, Yacht Club, Track Freshman, Var- sity, Captain. Sigma Chi Corresponding Secretary. Address: 24 Appleby Avenue, South River, New Jersey. ZEDER, JON W. Address: 710 Santurce Avenue, Coral Gables, Florida. ZELLER, VICTOR WILLIAM. A.B. Philosophy. Born: July 11, 1941. Prepared at Austin Central High School. American Academy of Arts and Letters, Russian Club, Young Democrats Club, Physics Club. Address: 1111 Fourth Avenue, Austin, Minnesota. ZIMMERMANN, JEREMY G. Address: 73 Benton Street, New Haven, Connecticut. ZISSERSON, HOWARD DONALD. Sc.B. Engineering. Born: April 16, 1941. Prepared at Classical High School. Brown University Scholarship, Dean's List, Brown Engineering Society, American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Yacht Club. Address: 93 Warrington Street, Providence, Rhode Island. ZISSON, WILLAIM S. A.B. International Relations. Born: April 6, 1941. Prepared at Deerfield Acad- emy. Time Magazine Award for Current Events, Brown Charities Drive, Mu Sigma Zeta Scholar- ship Chairman, Pinned, Interfraternity Council Secretary, Soccer Freshman, Varsity, Captain both Teams. Pi Lambda Phi President. Address: 109 Forest Avenue, New Rochelle, New York. ZOUSMER, ARNOLD. A.B. Human Biology. Born: June 11, 1941. Prepared at Horace Mann School. Cammarian Club, Class Cabinet, Basketball Fresh- man. Pi Lambda Phi. Address: 1150 Grand Con- course, Bronx, New York. BROWN UNIVERSITY DUPLICATING 8g ADDRESSING SERVICE DEPARTMENT 68 Waterman Street Telephone GEneva 4-9720 ASQUINO'S RESTAURANT AmericanItalian Food Cocktail Bar 580-584 North Broadway East Providence, R. 1. 283 pucy 4 The art of being a non-conformist or why many perceptive yearbook staffs prefer a very distinguished publishing house Retaining one's individuality is not easy in these days of mass production and stand- ardization. This is especially true of year- book publishing, in which mass production methods have the tendency to force one to buy just what the other fellow buys. Making of soap or soup or salad dress- ing by mass methods is one thing. But it is quite another to attempt to produce a creative yearbook by trying to squeeze it into some pre-conceived mold. It just can't be done that way. The Wm. J. Keller firm brings together highly trained craftsmen, the very finest papers and ink of superlative quality. Add to these a unique service plan built around the individual school, and, finally, produc- tion by the Velvatone process, which Keller perfected especially for the printing of yearbooks, and you have a truly distin- guished performance. And a yearbook with singular character and individuality . . . we call it THE LOOK OF THE BOOK. The yearbook you are presently leafing through is the product of the Keller custom program. If you would care to see other examples of THE LOOK OF THE BOOK as produced by Wm. J. Keller, get in touch with us now. WM. J. KELLER INC. Publishers of Finer Yearbooks Buffalo 15, N. Y. Roswell Farnham 1 Berwick Road Lexington 73, Massachusetts Phone: VO 2-1928 Area Code: 617 photography credits The main objective of a yearbook is to present a history of the events of the college. For this, pictures are essential. The Liber is proud of its tradition of taking more photographs than almost any other book in the nation. Although we do not rival Life with five thousand pictures taken for every one appearing in an essay, we do consume miles of film in our efforts to present the most professional and appealing photographs possible. We are very grateful, therefore, to the various members of the photography staff who have contributed so willingly and selflessly. First of all, thanks go to Gerry Kirschenbaum for unequalled feats in organizing his staff. Some have said he organized his organiza- tional organizings. Barry Kaufmann deserves credit for many hours acknowledgements Mr. William Suprenant '51, for his unfailing help and loyal cooperation. Mr. Chesley Worthington 23, Brown Alumni Monthly Mrs. Winifred Sampson and Miss Knowlton, Office of Student Activities Mr. Roswell Farnham, and Mrs. Jewell Gates, Wm. J. Keller, Inc. Mr. Harry Horton, Nell Green, Apeda Studios David Gubits '63, Editor-in-chief, Brown Daily Herald Michael B. French '62, Editor Emeritus, and Dave Rust 62 and Dave Carr '61 for inspiration Mr. Peter McCarthy, Director of Sports Information The Recorder's Office, The Office of Public Relations, The Brown University Library index spent in the archives of the photo lab when deadlines approached. Somehow a proposed two hour stint inevitably turned into an all- nighter. Terry Richmond found phenomena in film that startled sci- ence, but produced many fine pictures anyway. Josh Smith battled radiators while Dave Trindade found art in darkness. Woody inter- rupted thoughts of marriage to produce some fine sports pictures. Phil Barry, Stu Aaronson, Dave Stepner, and John Cross, the Frosh contingent of the staff performed well and produced many fine shots also. All in all, the pounds of pictures that arrived shortly before deadlines were many times more than adequate for recording the events and the people. Brown Station, United States Post Office Stenographic Bureau All the girls of the Pembroke Sales Staff Faunce House Police Force Sandrajean Toth, Barbara Anderson, Bonnie Reaugh, Barbara George, Pat, Heather, Ann, Pat, Josi, Sue R. Crazy Arthur Mr. Daniel W. Earle and Mrs. Herbert J. Cohen, The Development Office Dean Morse, Dean Schulze, and Dean Dewart Mr. Thomas J. Watson, Jr., for generosity M. Roget and D. Webster Sherry C. Administration 40-45 Delta Upsilon 112-113 Plantations House 139 Advertisements 242-285 Democrats 73 Pi Delta Epsilon 85 AFROTC 72 Editors' Notebook 242-285 Pi Lambda Phi 124-125 Alpha Delta Phi 102-103 Engineering Society 81 Poland House 138 Alpha Phi Omega 75 Everett House 141 Pre-Medical Society 80 Archibald House 72 Faculty 30-39 President Keeney 46 Band 52-53 Fencing 180 Production Workshop 50 Baseball 183-185 FHBG 90-91 Psi Upsilon 1126-107 Basketball 174-175 Folk Dancing 7 Radio Club 59 Beta Theta Pi 104-105 Football 159-165 Republicans 73 Biology Club 81 French 78 Research 28-29 Bridge Club 76 Freshman Week 204-205 Resident Fellows 144 Bronson House 140 German 78 Rifle Club 180 BROWN DAILY HERALD 62-65 Glee Club 56 Rugby 186-187 BROWN REVIEW 59 Golf 193 Russian 79 Brown Youth Guidance 94-95 Guggenheim Fellows 26-27 Senior Biographies 244-285 Brunaires 57 Hillel 100 Sigma Chi 128-129 Cammarian Club 92 Hockey 170-173 Sigma Nu 130-131 Canterbury 98 IFC 88 Sigma Xi 83 Charities, Brown 93 IHC 89 Soccer 166-167 Chemistry Club 80 Independent Studies 20-25 Sock and Buskin 51 Chess Club 76 Intramurals 198-199 Spanish 79 Choirs 55 Jabberwocks 58 Sphinx Club 86 Class of 1963 208-239 Jameson House 143 Squash Club 181 Class of 1964 207 Kappa Sigma 114-115 Swimming 176-177 Class of 1965 206 Key 87 Tau Beta Pi 82 Class of 1966 203 Lacrosse 190-191 Tt 192 Classics Club 77 Lambda Chi Alpha 116-117 Theta Delta Chi 132-133 Commencement 240-241 LIBER BRUNENSIS PUBLICATIONS 66-69 Tiddlywinks 179 Conflagration 144 Newman 99 Tower Club 105 Convocations, Concerts, Exhibits, and NROTC 70-71 Track Lecturers 48-49 Orchestra 54 11CA 188-189 Crew 194-195 Outing Club 182 96-97 Cross Country 168-169 Pembroke fea.q5s . WERU 60-61 Debating Union 74 Phi Beta Kappa g4 Weekends 145-152 Delta Kappa Epsilon 106-107 Phi Delta Theta 118-119 Wrestling 178 Delta Phi 108-109 Phi Gamma Delta 120-121 Yacht Club 196-197 Delta Tau Delta 110-111 Phi Kappa Psi 122-123 Zeta Psi 134-135 liber brunensis publication James M. HawleyPresident Jackson E. SpearsVice President Richard M. PandolfoSales Manager PHOTOGRAPHY Gerald Kirschenbaum '64Editor Barry Kaufmann '64 David Trindade '65 Philip Barry '66 Stuart Aaronson '66 John Cross '66 Michael French '62 Heywood Greenberg '63 Gerald Richmond 65 David Stepner '66 Joshua Smith '64 James Yeargin '65 Betty B. White '64 BLISINESS John McCamish '68Production Manager Steven Elliott '63 Steven Mayne '63 Victor Noble '66 Donald Weiss '66 Jay Baer '66 James Schreiber '65 Victor Peppard '66 Frederick Keenan 66 LAYOUT Edward Mayer '64 Clifton Rice '64 Gerald White '66 Ronald Hirsch '65 ART Edward Mayer '64 Mario Kujawski '66 Richard Tremaglio '65 Burges A. LeMonteEditor e Peter R. Newsted '65Editor Kathleen Kornet '66 Ernst RotheExecutive Editor Robert D. Laudati-Business Manager Philip A. SellarAdvertising Manager LITERARY David A. Abramson '64Editor Eric A. Meyer '64Assistant Editor William A. Wilde III '64Fraternity Editor Roy Maletz '64 George Cyrus '64 Peter Levin '64 Eugene V. Blanchard '64 Kenneth Noble '64 David Rosenbaum '65 William Boies '66 James Hiltner '66 Peter Broderick '66 Drew Weinlandt '66 Jonathan Charnas 65 PEMBROKE SALES Sandrajean TothManager Barbara George Barbara Anderson Melinda Tucker Edna Beeman Judy Humphrey Judy Nelson Pat Burval Heather Tipping Jane Konheim Ann Redman Regina Kornblith Helen Bedrosian Pat Heagney Debbie Paine Kathleen Kornet Jean Martland Sue Symonds SPECIAL PLIBLICATIONS Bear Facts: Ernst Rothe '63, Editor Philip Sellar '63, Business Manager David Clark 64, Assistant Business Manager Twenty-fifth Reunion Fund: Ernst Rothe '63, Editor Fraternities at Brown: Clifton Rice '64, Editor 1966 Class Album: Michael French '62, Editor James Hawley '63, Robert Laudati '63, Business Managers To some, the technical details concerning a publication such as ours are interesting and valuable. We, the managing board, feel that the specifics of this book are exceptional and would like to take this opportunity to explain about the book The 1963 Liber Brunensis is printed in offset lithography by Wm. J. Keller Inc. of Buffalo, New York. The introductory section is printed in 300 150 line double screened Microtone process, with the art work appearing on 80 pound Teton paper and the photographs ap- pearing on Colophon paper. The section dividers are brown and black Duotones. The paper used in the remainder of the book is 100 pound enamel. This book contains 288 pages in 18 signatures plus 26 pages of tip-ins, comprising a total of 314 9x12 inch pages, The covers for this book were manufactured by the S.K. Smith Co. of Chicago, using 18,268 Brown material with skiver grain. The copy typeface throughout the book is Herman Zaph's Melior 10 point unleaded. The Headings are 48 point Bodoni Campanile all lower case, and the lead-ins are 16 point Weiss Roman all caps. The Senior section and the Senior Biographies appeared in 10 point Times Roman. The unobtrusive page numbers are 24 point Weiss Roman. The Senior portraits were by Apeda Studios of New York, and the other 1200 odd pictures in this volume were taken by the fol- lowing cameras: a Nikon S, a Leica, a Contax, an Ashi Pentax, a Besler Topcon, all 35 mm and a Miyomaflex, a Yashica, a Rolliflex, a Richo Dicord, all 24x2Y, and a Graphlex; with lenses ranging from 25 mm to 135 mm. Flashes were by Heiland; films used were mainly plus-X and Tri-X, developed exclusively in Kodak Microdol X and printed on Dupont Varilour-R enlarging paper. The weight of this volume is . . . Aners A 7 e B R R B o 5 7 e,


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

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, 1962 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

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

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